Dakota County herald. (Dakota City, Neb.) 1891-1965, September 21, 1906, Image 7

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    WOMEN'S IDEA OP BUSINESS
Taeeaaada of "Uim((" Glree Caa
at Matae Out Mommy Reeelpt.
Thousands of (Iris art tent out hits
tli world wTth whnt Is en Hod finished
educations who cannot even Rive a prop
tr receipt for money, to ssy nothing
of drawing a promissory note, a draft
or a bill or understanding the slgniu
cance and Importance of bustuess con
tracts, says O. 8. Madren, In Success.
Such a woman presented n check for
payment to tbe paying teller of her
bank. He passed It back to her wtth
the request that ahe be kind enough to
Indosae It. The lady wrote on the back
of the check, "I have done business
with this bunk for many years and 1
believe It to be all right" Mrs. J a mil
B. Brown.
Another society woman In New York
presented a check for payment at the
bank and the teller told her that It
wus not signed. "Oh. do they have to
be signed?' ahe responded. "What on
awful lot of red tape there Is about the
banking business."
1 1 know of a womnn whose husband
made a deposit for her In a bank and
dive her a checkbook so that she could
fay her bills without annoying lilin.
line day she received a notice from the
ibank that her ax-count Wns overdrawn.
jShe went to the bank and told the teller
ytuat there must be a wistflKe nuoui :u
because she still had a lot of checks left
In lior lutnlr Kh L-llfftr ko Utile nbont
business that she thought that she eoiild
keen drawing ans- amount until the
checks were all gone,
This sounds ridiculous and almost In
credible, but the very girl who laughs
at It may make even more absurd blun
ders. Many on occoinpllshed woman
when given n pen nnd asked to sign nu
important document drawn up by an
attorney or a long-headed business man,
will sign It without rending It or even
asking to be Informed of Its centeuts,
only to learn afterwards by disastrous
results that she has signed away bar
property and tented herself out of
home. Only a short time ago I read
of a woman who had won a suit la
volvlng abont $20,000. New evidence,
however, was brought forward, which
caused the court immediately to reserve
Jts decision. It was proved that tse
lady had sworn falsely. She was per
fectly Innocent of any such Intention,
but she had sworn that she had never
signed her Wine to a certain document.
The document was. produced, and, to
her utter astonishment, she saw her
signature affixed to it She acknowl
edged at once that the signature whs
hers, although she had Just sworn that
she had never signed the paper In que
tion. It apieared that, during her htis
band's lifetime, whenever papers were j
to be signed, he told her where to write ;
her name, and she did as sue was toiu,
without having the slightest Idea of thi
contents of the papers.
Andrew MoConnelU a practical philan
thropist of Washington, will attempt to
place libraries in all the small towns o?
the South.
fit Wtf 1T TTYTTBIli
y and coTVsid&ir
the n ivfrr r
IIKI ALL
WATERFROOf
CLOTHING.
Is made of th but
rMkriiib.infelAtkor)tllijw
fully f JifMi'rel.inJ uli b'
rrlidBf dealers nwwhtre.
" STICK TO THt
90,000,000 BUSHELS
That's (he
WHEAT CROP
in
Western Canada
This Year
This with naarlr W. 000, 000 Bashela ef
Osts ad 17,000,000 Buhels of Barter
cam e continuation of good tliuti
tor the larmeri ol Western Caaida.
free farms Big Crops
Lew Taxes, Healthy Climate, food
Churches and Schools, Splendid Rail
way Service
The Cana;M Government offers 160 acres ot
land l'Kt-K to every settler willing and able to
comply w.lh the Homestead Regulations. Ad
vice and iuforn.atioo may be obtained tree (rum
W. D. Scott, S'.p tnt nd'-nlof Imm aiMiun, O tant,
Cftiiadu. or K. I. liulniM. SIS 4a. It-on r,l.. SI. I'a'iI.
Muni., nr1 J. M. Mcl.'liiuii, llws 116. IVtwrutwu, bt.
Laaotll, Aulliurtcnd UftvHrnu.eut Arfoiits.
fleM ! lif " tbUadvarti
tar-Sioux Cit, Lias
You Cannot
n n
n
It. "T-71
LTC1
all inflamed, ulcerated and catarrhal con
ditions of the mucous membrane such as
nasal catarrh, uterine catarrh caused
by feminine ills, sore throat, sora
mouth, or inflamed eyes by simply
dosing tlie stomach,
liut you surely can cure these stubborn
affections by total treatment with
Paxtine Toilet Antiseptic
which destroys the disease germa,checks
discharges, stops pain, and heals the
Inflammation and sorentfcs.
Paxtine represents the most successful
local treatment for feminine ills ever
produced. Thoasinds of women testify
to thla fact. 50 cents at druggists.
Send for Free Trial Box
TUB at. PAXTON CO- BssUa. Ms
tvE f
mm
mam
A rnin In the ground Is worth two I
on the hay In the windrow.
Io not "stuff" your chicks in your
endeavors to make them grow. They
will do more harm than good.
Kill tlx. head lice of the chicks with
vaseline. Urease their heads slightly
and see that none gets In the eyes.
Repeat the dose In ten days.
Bad roads are unprofitable. They
- i
put a farmer out of business and make
nothing for any man. Who is respon-jto
sible for a bad condition of the roads?
There Is always more profit In rals-
ln one good colt and In raising It right
than in raising half a dozen mongrels
and not raising thorn ns they should be
raised.
The man who goes to his stable, wa
ters his horses and gives them a light
feed the last thing every night before
he retires, always has round, sleek,
good-looking animals.
Low-headed trees are growing la
favor, not only because they are likely be determined only by boring and rath
to suffer less from the wind, but be- er costly development work. The prob
cause thev nrotect the bodies from sun- ability is that potash rilts are fairly
scald. Early prunlngs should be made
to produce these low heads.
rrovlde shade for tho fowls and
chicks. In the absence of natural
shade, build some frames six or eight
feet square and cover the top with old
boards, leaving all four sides open so
that the air will have free circulation.
The uD-to-date farmer Is not a miner
of the soil, digging out wealth, after-
wards abandoning his farm, but he is
a manufacturer. The miner always
leaves a location as soon as it la work-
ed out Not so with a farmer who Is
nntn Ida lob.
A half-dozen good roots of rhubarb
should be set out very early and heav-
lly manured, spading the manure In the
soil before setting out the roots. If
weil cared for, a few using may be
made the first year, but It Is best to
wait until the second.
If "the head or tne nouse cannot.
see tne benent or cultivation in an or-
chard, or thinks he must use tne or-
chard for pasture or meadow, see what
can be done by pruning the trees lor
two or three years. Try pruning on
the near approach of the growing sea-
ob-
. . . ,
Milk as a food for pigs has a feed-
Ing value far beyond its actual food ele-
ments If given in the proper comwna-
tlon with other rations, but lt Is a
. 4 i.
f. hMr riAntifoi it
"""" " - Z", .hM
may be. Middlings and grass should
be fed with It, and so double the num-
JVr of pigs kept with the same amount
o-: milk.
A successful fruit grower says: "I
plw my orchard every year. By plow
ing lt I get a good growth on the young
Vees, and get rid of a great many pests
xat would otherwise hinder their
gvVwth. I find that orchards not
plowed have small apples, and the trees
are stunted In their growth. It Is a
good plan to trim out all broken-down
limbs, for Insects will hide in the
epllnters.
Eight gallons of water a day Is the
averago quantity required for a cow,
and tho nil'k given is about 87 per
cent water. In some pastures there Is
no water, the cows being supplied night
and morning, which forces the cow to
drink four gallons at a time in order
annk rour gauous at a uum iu uiu
to be supplied. As the cow does not
know that she mnst drink four gallons,
she may use less, and she will reduce
her milk supply accordingly,
When hay has been put In the barn
In a damp condition nine out of ten
persons will leave the doors of tjjo mow
open so lt will cool off. The opposite
is the correct thing to do. Hay that
Is heating Is safer and better by hav-
Ing the mow closed up tight, with open-
lngs. If any, at the op. The niolsure
In the hay will rise as vapor and will
make its exit at the top, as the roof
l Is kept hot, but in tne omer case ir.
would condense at tne ip or mo nay
ny tne cooler uir uuuuueu lurougu i"
ditors.
Mine for insert.
D.y hydrate of lline formed by slak-
Ing fresh lime with Just water enough
to crumble lt Into n line iowder 1s used
as an Insecticide. It Is still very caus-
tic and fatal to the larvae of aspara-
gtis lKetles, slugs or currant, iear,
plum, etc., nnd other larvae having a
moist surface, says an ex-change. Ap
plications ore best made In the morn
ing, while plants und Insects are yet u
little dump.
Hull? Food for llu
Tho function of bulk In the feed Is
more than the mere furnishing of nu
triment, for In a mechanical way lt
aids digestion. Tigs require less bulky
feed than other domestic iinlmals. but
recent exiwrlmcuts kIiow that to it cer
tain extent hay feeding Is very valua
ble In pork production. Where herliiv
eroiis nnlninls have been maintained
for an extended ier!od on feed which
was exclusively of a concentrated na
ture, derangement of digestion has re
sulted. O. M. Koiniiiel.
Yiilue of ( oiviini for liar.
The cifwpcsi lb to the fanner south of
ithe clover belt what clover U to the
farmer in the clover belt, and south-
tYistern Kansas is pretty nearly on the
Hue between the ranges i t these two
legumes, says Wallace's Former. Either
may be grown as a forage crop, or as
a seed crop, or as a fertilizer, or as all
viliree combined. The cowpea la an an
mini ; clover n bicnnlol, or, If not nl-
lowed to go to sevd, a short erennlal.
Clover will stand the winter's frost ;
the cowpen Is killed by the first severe
frost. Therefore the eowpea belongs
to the South and clover to the North.
There Is not much difference In the
value or cowpen ami emver nay.
The Sni,ply of Poll,,h.
Most of the I(tnsii s0li fertilizers
In all countries has come from the (ior-
man mines, which, strange to say, seem
nnve a monopoly on uus mineral,
Lately, however, the attention of sci
entists has been called to this fact anil
.tI . .par,., made for deposits elso
.norp i order to escape the prostiect
. tl . i.ij,!,,,- prices which the German
potash mine owners are trylmr to force
on the fertilizer makers of the world.
It appears that there are seven locall-
ties In the United States which liuti-
cate tho presence of potash mines.
Most of these places are In the far
west, but there Is one In New Jersey
and one In Massachusetts. The actual
extent of potash In these deposits can
common, but the location Is hard to
determine on account of their existence
below the ground with no prominent
signs appearing at the surface.
Avoiding ling Cholera.
An Illluols stockman tells the follow
ing story anent his exjerlence In rais
ing hogs amid menacing conditions: "I
believe Implicitly in the proposition
that an ounce of prevention is worth
a iound of cure. Our neighbors' hogs
were dying of cholera and of course it
was only a question of time, we
thought, when the dlseaso would attack
and decimate our herd. But we took
a stitch In time and It saved the entire
herd. We crnve the hoes calomel. it.
ncta n9 a pny8Ci thoroughly purging
the bgta aU(I this Is of the most vl-
tlll unportance. Tlaee ten grains of
cni011M,i tn a niece of "crackling" about
tne 8ze of a wainut and see that each
animai gets his dose. One dose Is suf-
flclent In most cases, but no harm will
h rloun If nnnthnr lift elven a few days
. .
u ,g Beifvident that if proper meas-
. rwtnrtml tn nrlor to the lntro-
ducUm of thft dlseaso Into the herd it
. nol,lo(i tVnen once lt has at-
j. tue hogg tuere l9 nttlo or no
hQpe of gupI,rossirlg it Hog cholera
may successfully be combated, how-
ever, by buttressing, as lt were, the
b s muy not fluJ
, , lod , lace8 Farmera.
yole
' .
When Hones Have Indlietton.
Uonn are subject to attacks of in-
rtlficsUou and someUmes the trouble Is
...,.. ... .... .... H1
almost wholly due to the bud condition
of the teeth. Every horse on tho farm
should have its teeth examined at In
tervals by a competent veterinarian,
and uut In proper condition. If the
stomach trouble Is not duo to tho teeth,
look closely to the diet of tho horse".
Change its food entirely, and see that
the bowels are lu good condition. Add
frequent feeds of root crops to the
dally ration. The rougluigo should bo
of the best quality, and if it Is hay
it would be well to try moistening it
with warm water before feeding, diviu-
Ing it into two parts and feeding one-
halX of It chopped uuite flue.
8 a tonic and digestive give the fol-
howUui : Take two parts of powdered
wood charcoal, one part each of
puwdered hydrustic" canadensis and
ground ginger root, and oiie-half yurt
of bicarbonate of soda. Mix these iu-
Eredlents thoroughly and put a table-
gredlenta thoroughly and put a table-
8pooufui of tLe mlxture lu tue grouud
food twlce dully. Seu tuat tue U0r8O
Las proper exercLso, and that it is not
worked too long or too steadily. The
Htublo should be comfortable and well
ventilated and the bedding abundant
Clover lu Northern Climates.
It wus found at the North Dukota
experiment station that seeding clover,
or clover and timothy, with a gruin
Urlll, gives much greater assurunee of
a stand than broadcustlng. With one
exception during nine years, medium
rj clover needed with a nurse crop
paHSP!i through the 2rst winter without
kHihig out. Allowing the second
growth to remain as a winter protec-
tlon gave good results lu preventing
winterkilling ana remrorcing mo siuim
by means of tho new seed. It was ob-
served that the average stubble field
wus lu must seasons einoieut us u win
ter protection. Inspection after each
of eleven winter seasons did not reveal
u cane of heaving by frust. Where an
ice sheet covered tbe plants, however,
the clovers, alfnlfu, timothy, and red-
top were killed out, while brome grans
and the weed tpnu-k grass had with
stood this ad ve rue condition. Satisfac
tory resul' - have ln-en obtained from
using lifii-. 1 pounds of clover H-od per
acre, and a mixture of live pounds of
red clover Hrd and einlit pounds of
timothy lias given a mixture of from
one-half to three-fourths of timothy
plants In the resulting stand. Ten
pounds of Mammoth clover with f,nir
pounds of timothy seed have given an
average of more titan throe-fourths cl
ver In the hay. The results for four
years show u difference of only ninety-
one pounds in the yield of hay from
medium rod clover and from a mixed
crop of clover and timothy. Ked clover
also gave promise or goon seen proouc-
tlon while clover from Southern grown
seed or from most of tho foreign
sources was less satisfactory. Ited
clover alone and grown with timothy
as a mixed hoy crop gave in ten trials
an average yield of 3,37fl pounds of
hay per acre. The average yield of
hay from Mammoth clover for two
- 1 jeare was 8,W5 pound.
SEARCH GLOBE FOR RUBBER.
Manr I'erlls Are Eaeoaatered ta
Oatberlaa- Ike (Jam.
From Southern Mexico In the north
to Northern l'orsguay lu the south;
from the At!an?c on the east right
through the di-vlous wandering of the
ninny branches and tributaries of the
mighty Amazon ami right on, out to the
I'ncinc, on the west; through the mys
terious, trackless nnd utterly unknown
solitudes of tho 1'arsgunyau and Bo
livian C'hocos out Into I'eru, the rub
ber hunters are at work on the plants
and trees put ready to their use by the
bounteous hand of nature. Where they
go on their Joifueys or precisely what
they do, no white man knows to this
day, or Is ever likely to know, says the
riitladclphla Ledger.
IiOss than a year ago I met with and
spoke lu Kngllsh to an Italian mer
chant lu the wilds of Matto U rosso, the
northwestern province of Brazil, win we
capital city Is five weeks' Journey from
tho seat of government nt Itlo do Jane
iro. For twenty years he had not hoard
the sound of English voice and during
all those years rubber has tx-en flow
ing through his hands, down the giant
Uiver l'araguay, on its way to the mar
kets of the world, via Buenos Ayres or
Montevideo. Yet of its actual produc
tion he knows little.
To skip, In spirit, from tho north
east coast of South America across the
south Atlantic to tropical Africa, the
Congo, the Gold Coast, the Zambesi,
Uganda and other parts, is not a dif
ficult undertaking, nut Here all Is
changed, and, Instead of having noble
forest trees nt his dltiosal, tho rub
borhunter finds himself dccndcnt on
snaky, climbing, twisting vines for his
rubber supplies, vines which usurp ev
ery Inch of territory they can Invade,
and render a passage through the for-,
ests a matter or great ainieuuy ana
some danger.
These vines, known as "lnndolphlas,"
of which there are several species, are
members of the natural order apocy-
naces? and are common to the wholo
of tropical Africa. They differ from
the American trees, in that they pro
duce rubber In the center of the stem,
as well as from the cells underlying
tbe Inner comblum, but what quantity
each plant will produce there are no
data to base an estimate upon.
Although the landolphlas form the
main source of the African rubber sup
ply, yet there Is at least one family of
trees which yields a supplementary
contribution to the sum total. The
funtumla or klckata, of which there are
two species, elastlca and Afrlcanla,
was worked to a considerable extent
a quarter of a century ago, but lt does
not now seem to be a fashionable plant
to cultivate a close assoclationshlp
with. It resembles the hevea to some
degree, but Is smaller, of softer growth,
and requires a little less rainfall to;
luxuriate.
xumiug to iiiuin, nuu to scurr
ally, It will not be found that the con
tinent is rich in indigenous rubber
bearing plnnts. The flcus elastlca, the
Indian rubber plant of the window
gardener, Is found lu Ashoju and Bur
ma and the federated Malay states, but
Its produce Is of very Inferior quality.
Certain climbers also yield rubber, the
three chief ones being the urceola,
chonemorpha, and the Willoughbla.
The fact that Para and otlier rubbers
are being cultivated In India, etc., Is
sufficient proof of the poorness of the
continent of Asia In Indigenous rubber-
bearing plants. I
Ceara rubber Is collected by stabbing
the tree In a number of places close
together, and as tho Juice exudes lt
coagulates In tho air, and is rolled up
Into balls by the collectors. It Is
usually In a dirty state when It comes
to the market.
The product of the flcus elastlca and
the otlier Asiatic plants Is usually sim
ply sun-dried; the rubber from tho
former can be identified at a glance by
Its peculiar red color.
URANUS IS A VAST PLANET.
Immense Distance from the Eartb
Cannes It to Look Small.
If Uranus, which Is a star of aboul
the sixth magnitude, were a planet llk
those little ones called asteroids, which
are being discovered by the dozen every
.".-".i,c,1,, ,
year. It could not have much cUlm upon
popular attention, but Uranus Is really
a ntlc world, more than sixty times
as large as the earth. Its vast distance,
about 1,700,000,000 miles from tho
earth, is what causes lt to look so small.
Uranus has four moons, which re
volve backward In their orblte that is
to say, they Tevolvo from west to east
around Uranus, while Uranus goes, like
all the other planets, irom west to east
around the sun. It Is believed that
Uranus rotates backward In Its axis
also. Moreover, the axis of that great.
etrange globe lies In such a direction
that in the course of its year, which I
eiunl to eighty-four of tho earth's, the
SUIl Bhlnes almost perpendicularly first
upon one pole and then uion the otlier.
Measured by tho terrestrial time
standard there are forty years of con
etnut daylight, followed by forty yeurs
of unbroken night, around the olos of lying.
I'rnnus. And the sun risen In the west Don't give to tho Iord and then go
and sets lu tho east there. Hut thej out and rob a widow,
sun looks very small when viewed from j Don't acquire the borrowing habit
Urn mis only 1 4ki as large os lt up-: or the day will come when you will
pears to the earth's Inhabitants. Stlll run out of friends.
it sheds upon that planet 1..KMI times us Doa't marry an Indolent mini expect
much light us tin- full min.il sends to Ing him to brace up, or you may have
the earth, so that daylight upon Urn-i to take In wushlng to puy for tho
' a
II H s.
M-ltll.. fitnt imared vt 1 the
bl.r.e of a terresirht! noonday, Is uev-t-rllieless
a respectable Uilid of llltliul
nation. Ilvi-rj lit-re.
The 1'reaclMr--And now, brethren, 1
remember that we lu'lst nil appear be-I
fore that dread tribunal where nil our ;
inlsilivds shall be brought to light. j
The Hearer- tinat Scott: Is this
min k rnkliif Ix-lng taken up by tho
ehruches, too Cleveland Leader.
A l-re Ntihodr.
"He Isn't much of it traveler, Is he?"
"No, Inch-cil; why. be can't bJl a sin
gle story c having nlniist been nlxnird
a train or 11 steamer that was subse
quently wrecked," Philadelphia
Ledger.
Mystery lonter.
"I see l'rof. Held says the earth has
a big hole in Its center."
"Ah, pcrhHps that explains why the
world f such a hollow mockery."
VOMEfPSJlEGLECT
SUFFEBINGTHE8UREPEKALTV
fiealth Thus Lost la Bestored toy Lydla
K. Ptnkbam'a Yog stable Compound.
IIow many women do yon know who
are fwrfeclly well and strong? We
hear every day the same story over and
over tfraln. " I do not, feel well I am
o tired all the time I "
More than likely you sneak the same
tvorda yourself, and no doubt you feel
far from well. The cause may be easily
traced to some derangement of the fe
male organs which manifests Itself In
depression of spirits, reluctance to go
anywhere or do anything, backache,
bearlnadown pains, flatulency, nerv
ousness, sleeplessness, or otner fe
male weakness.
These symptoms are Tout warnings
that there is danger ahead, and unleiui
heeded a life of suffering or a serious
operation Is the Inevitable result
The never f allin g remedy for all these
symptoms is Lydie E. I'lnkham'a Veg
etable Componnd.
Miss Hate McDonald of Woodbrldge,
N. J. .writes:
Dear Mrs. Tinkbain:
" Raitornd health has attaint so timet te me
t&at I oannet help from telling al-out it for
ths ak of other sulTerinc wanua.
I " For a long tiaie I suffered untold ajrony
with a female trouble aad irregularities,
wtkich made me a physical wrark, and no one
thought I would recover, but Lydla K. Pink
taams Vegetable Compound has entirely
enred me, and made me well and ttrcng, and
I feel It my duty to tell other suffering women
what a fpUmdid medialne it Is."
j For twenty-five years Mrs. Pu&kham,
daughter-in-law of Lydla B. Flnkhaaa,
baa ander her direction, and alnae her
deoeaaa, been advislaf sick women tree
of eharre. Bar advice la free and
always helpfnL Address, Lynn, Maav
. i i i. i - , i. . . l .. m
Me la A tea a, Prlater.
The yersattlltj ef printers 1 aptly
Uruatrated by the following advertise
ment which recently appeared In a
, Weetean paper:
j Wasted By a prlater who la capa
ble of taking charge of a publishing
and printing plant a position aa fore
man. Can give valuable advice to per
,aons contemplating marriage, and hat
obtained a wtde reputation aa a
,polntlMnt M pMtor a im. tTan.
.ll.l -hnrt, a. inhiHrnts nruik.
er. lias had experience aa atrlke
i breaker and v,ould take work of thla
character west of the Missouri River.
Woold have a objection to forming a
email bat select class 0f young ladles
to teach them In the higher branches
or to give them Information as to the
cause of the Trojan war. Can do odd
Jobs around a boarding house or would
! accept a position aa aasaylst of a min
ing company. To a dentist or a chiropo
dist his services would be Invaluable,
and an fill with satisfaction a posi
tion as baas or tenor singer In a Meth
odist choir. Address, etc.
What the result of this advertise
ment was I did not learn. LJppln
cott'a. .
NO BEST NIGHT OS DAY.
With Irritating Skin Humor Hair
Began to Fall Out Wonderful Re
sult from Cuticura Remedies.
"About the latter part of July my
whole body began to Itch. I did not
take much notice of lt at first, but it
began to get worse all the time, and
then I began to get uneasy and tried
all kinds of baths and other remedies
that were recommended for skin hu
mors; bat I became worse all the time.
My hair began to fall out and my scalp
ttohed all the time. Especially at
night, Just as soon as I would get In
bed and get warm, my whole body
, M . H t ,t and mT fluer
pon Dej in to , iim. i o y
nbefor. I could not rest
fc m f
- . - ", Tax7
mVTJ LU VUIAUI a aiu t v-m w, auu a a
sod the first application harped me
wonderfully. For about four weeks I
would take a hot bath every night and
then apply the Cuticura Ointment to
my whole body; and I kept getting bet
ter, and by the time I used four boxes
of Cuticura I was entirely cured, and
my hair stopped falling out. D. E.
iUankenshlp, 819 N. Del. St, Indlauap
vUm, Ind. Oct 27, 1905."
Dh'I.
Here are a few helpful don'ts for a
roan who doesn't know anything about
it:
Don't
Jnst plain dont.
Don't be reckless especially In your
urnce.
Don't be so mean-mlndetl that you
can see no good In 11 man. lie may
be the first to loan you money lu time
I At is KateAlcDonaldfr
of need.
Don't spread butter on both shies of
your bread Just liecause you have ?'l in !
your lockets. An eurl!nua!; may come
along and shake tho change out of
them. Denver News. 1
riirrnrel. j
Adnra Zawfox Have you named the 1
new baliy at your hounu? i
Job Bturky (with a resentful imlfT) !
Tea; but we haveu't fuuud a uiuue for hi
twin sister yet. :
The firat oeutral atatiun for incnnVa
tnnt lijliUng was built by Hie Kilium
lompsny on Ilolboru viaduct, Loutlou,
PUTNAM
J a. alV . a at a . I av
M aaraaat aaittal rSeauj aaarU rtta lef Ira
tWSOW'8 rMGMT FOfl PATENT.
Clalata Vaaea daMee Laws Give Lit.
tie Ft-oiee-clan lavenrsri
"I happened to be chettlnft with
Thomas A. Edison, In his laboratory
at Ornnjps i"ew Jersey, one night while
he was wtrrklnir on his most recent
creation the Intensified dynamo,"
says a writer In Success Magaxlne,
"and heard hun discuss thoroughly the
Injustice that la done Inventors In the
United States. 'This very day, be
said, 'several of my well known pat
ents expire, and become the property
ot posterity, which means Tom, Dick,
and Harry. The government professes
to protect the Inventor for seventeen
years, and after that tlaie his crea
tion Is no longer his own. nut, as a
matter of fact, the government does
no such thing. It lets any poacher
run in nnd bring suit, or apply for an
Injunction, disputing the luventor's
patent, already granted by the patent
ofllee, and In all the courts, pending
the long-drawn-out litigation which
follows, the other fellow is permitted
to go on manufacturing and selling tbe
thlug he claims to have Invented before
tbe real Inventor made lt.
" 'Do you see that little lamp there?'
asked Mr. Edison, as he arose, full
length, in his ragged old linen duster
of the workshop, and he pointed with
his pencil to an ordinary Incandescent
electric light beaming brightly over a
drafts man's table. 'It was my inven
tion, known aa a primary Invention,
because I took two things, a piece of
metal and electricity, and made a
third thing out of them light. Now,
I fought fourteen years In the courts
for that little lamp, because a French
man bobbed up and claimed it after I
had secured the patent. During all
this litigation I had no protection what
ever, and when I won my rights, after
fourteen years, there were but three
years of the allotted seventeen left for
my patent to live. It has now become
the property of anybody and every
body. There la no protection given an
Inventor by the courts or the patent
department'
Natalaar Btges Abeat the Title.
"Did yon aecore your title of 'colo
nel' in the armyT asked the formida
bly frank person. i
"Certainly not," replied Colonel Stll
wU. "It la the expression of genuine
esteem by my friends and neighbors,
net a mere formality ef red tape.
Washington Star.
lataa-eTlaar Tlaaee.
"Darting, lt seema to me that yon
are mora beautiful every tlma I aea
yoe.
"Ton annet come and ass ma oftener,
Jack." -Brooklyn Life.
Dr. B. O. d'Brf Ben woe, explorer la
the Orient fc the British Natural HI
tory Society, speaks twelve languages.
FADED TO A SHADOW.
Were Dewa r rive Taave ef Bn4
feerlaar froaa KiSaer Oaasatelat.
VI rs. Romethe Myers, of 100 South
Tench (ft., I ronton, Ohio, says: "I bare
worked hard la my time aad nave been
exposed again and
again to changes of
weather. It is no
wonder my kidneys
gave out and I went
all to pieces at last
For Ave years I was
fading away and Anal
ly so weak that for
alx months I could not
get out of tbe house. I was nervous,
restless and aleepless at night, and lams
and sore In the morning. Sometimes
everything would whirl and blur before
me. I bleated so badly I could not
wear tight clothing, and had to put on
shoes two sties larger than usual. The
nrlne waa disordered and passages were
dreadfully frequent I got help from
the first box of Doan's Kidney Pills,
however, and by the time I had taken
four boxes the pain and bloating waa
gone. I have been In good health ever
alnce,"
Bold by all dealers. 50 cents a box.
roster Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. X.
A Celaaorev la the Great Warta.
"Whsfs all this racket about?" de
manded the policeman, who had beard
sounds indicating a disturbance while
passing the building, and deemed It his
duty to Investigate.
A meek, crestfallen man was sitting
en the floor in a corner of the room, amid
an array of overturned chairs snd mlscel-
" -
tanac
Cm
; MJ
Isoeous furniture, while over aim stood a
resolute, red faced woman, who turned
faced the officer.
' lnc J' L
' '
Ask Tear Dealer for Attea's Foot-Eaae
A powder te ehake Into your ahoaa. lt reata
the feet. Cum Cerae, uunloaa. Swelloa,
tore, Hot. Calloue, Aeblas, Hwaattnc ftet
aad laci-owla NaUa, Allan's Poet-Kane
nakea new or tight aboea eaay. Bold b? all
Dnifflata and bbee Rtorea, 25c Sample
malld ritEtt. Addreaa Allen H. Ol mated.
Le Boy, N. X.
II el pi nar oat.
With an exclamation of delight tbe
hardened tourist rushed out on the bag
rage platform and started to smash his
trunk with an ax.
"Hold on I" shouted the baggage maa.
"Are you crazy?"
"Not at all," replied the hardened
tourist as he continued to smash. "I
read that baggagemen were overworked
at this season, so I thought I would
; Biiutnu uijr uwu iruna uuu iuii juu tue
trouble."
Mr. Wlatltw-i Boorerae oner tr miliar
.1 1 t tig) MhlM tfc IUIH, fHtM kttll&MiaM
tar. il. .Mr wljtd ooiis. mu a toul
Appalllnu- lCffert tif I'roaperlty.
The milling uiithor opined the letter
thn poHtmnn hud just IiioiikIiI.
It wus fniiii Ida imblisher and coutain
eJ a clipck for a In rite amount.
"Well." lit' cliueklcd. "1 n'cin to hsvn
found the secret of writ( livini; nt ln !"
Sale Ten Million Boxes aYear.
ttl THE FAMILY'S
U)c
154. UX.
BEST FOR
Urn
a CANDY CATHARTIfJ
-TT- Ill , -,.e-"
FADELESS DYES
.aa... aVa tiV. k ... - .ft fttaM Ttaoaa aU laa Hlal a.atae J ' ' t m taTM -
kaeaM -aWe U Ura,iaa a4 MU Cater. NOI
LJ JL .- Ul'h
VTtAt 12 YoaT
lay yon feel weak, Mred, epnrr
Bar frnqnaM fcaadeeaes, eeeied tee-j
btuar or bad tests ta soorakng, "heaa-J
burn,' belohlnc of gas, acid rising W
throat after eating, stomach gia on
burn, foul breath, diuy apeCa, peat or
variable appetite, nausea at times etfd
kindred symptoms f
If yoTNuye aey considerable number ef
thsvabovs gysafitoms you are tuffefwff:
froX1louai7vpld lleer with tadl'
retlonscje?rleTtw Pr firrcn'i
Mwligsl rjloverv larne.e so of thel t
yalnaHe mc'.lelnal BrlacJjTesJtqasU t.
mxlical srlfnco for Utt yfM-mar.erit tt
surh abnormal n.-nnmm?. n is a dmm
niclvnt liver tnvlgorator. stomach toniot
bowel regulator and nerve strengthens
TheOolden Mealral Discovery is no
a patent nWlclne or secret nostrum, a
full list of Its Ingredients being printed
on Its bottle-wrapper and attested under
eata. A glance at its formula will show
that It contains no alochol, or harmful
habit-forming drugs. It is a fluid exUaea
made with pure, triple-reaned glycerine,
of proper strengtbpom the roots of &f
following native itaterican forest plants,
vlt., Golden 8f al rm, Btons root, Blac.
Cherry bark, Queen's root. Blood root, and
Mandrake root
Tbe tollowlna leadlna medical authorities,
among a hont of otriere. 11K1I the fores-nine?
roots fur the cure of Juot surh ailments as the
alAvsymptoms indicate: Prof. R. Hartholaw.
l. 1)., of Jeffenton Med. College. 1'hlla : Prof.
H.0 Wood. M. U .of Knlv of Pa.: Pn)tKdw.lav
M Hale, tt. D. of Hahnsmuna Md. Col lose.
CUlcaa-o; Prof. John Kins. H. D., Author ot
American Dispensatory i Prvt. Jna M. Scnu
der. M. D., Author of SueclSe Medicines: Prof.
Laurence Jobnsun. M. D.. Med. Dept. Univ. of
N. V.t Prof. VMr F.DInewood. M. D.. Author
of Materia Med'.ra and Prof. In Bennett aksdl
cal Collere. CUlsaso. Seat name and efl
nrnss on Poetei Crd to Dr. R. V. Pierce. Buf
falo, N. V., and receive frtt booklet e-lvryc
extracu feotn wrltlnrs of all the above medi
cal eulbom and manr others endorslns. tn tne
M.hJ. tm, eu-n and ernrr ta
raUnt atwhlcli "Ooldea Uedlcai Dlsaov-
err " Is composed.
ipuvavvt, a
rce s Pleasant Pellet rectilat" and
Dr. Pie
tnvlaoraie stomach, liver sad bowels. rmr
li
ilu
mar e usee in coniunciioa "r-
Medical Dieoovery
it bowels are much
ssiaated. They're tiny ana sugar-coateu.
CURES CONSTIPATION
Relief that comes from the use of
ptlla or other cathartics is better
than suffering- from the results of
MmfinaSnn tnt VlWf and CtLTO
combined may be had at the earn A
price and more promptly, xor
Lane's Family
Medicine
la a cur for constipation, and the
baa dacha, backache, aid ache axA
e-enaeel debility that cerae from
J
ooaatipation atop wheat the bowel
do their proper work.
Sold by all dealers at ;cand oo.
ABSOLUTE
SECURITY,
Cenulno
Carter's
Little Liver PUls,
(Must Beatr 8lgnatur of
gee Fec-Slmile Wrapper Below.
Tear aasalt ansa aa
IDI RIA8ACRL
FBI DIXXMEle.
roa uiioomst.
FOR T0RF1I LIVU.
FOR COHSTIPATION.
FOR SALLOW SKIR.
Ftfi TMECOMPLtXtl
anrety Vegetal
CURE SICK HEADACHE.
W. L. DOUCLA0
3.50 &'3.00 Shoes
BUT IM THI WOIH.D
W.LDoagltt $4 BiH Edgw llw .
oannotDt equiiiiaiianypnot t
W.U hoiUUT Joa
btsf nouw I tin uioat
uuiylaM i Oil tvuitrt
Xmdor C'uiuiue
bhuks roa
kf n'a SSoae, Ss to
Uitl.BS. Wma1
Sum' Si CHUSnM'
Try W. l. loU(tjui Wvuiea'a. aaisaas mm
itkiMH.i. fn atjrlA. atauulwaaw
thev m1 eatier anakaa.
If I could take you lot my larga
factories at Brockton, Masa.,and alsosk
you how carefully W.L. Douglas akoea
. m.ta una, avnuld then undereatatM
htf thev L0m helr shape, fit bettetr,
, wear longer, aSKl are Of greater
than anv other make.
Wherever you live, yoa aea obtain W. L.
Douclaa ahoaa. H naana aad prlea U rtaaar!
inimm whlch nrutecta mid
pHcea and Interior atiuea. T m n a g jfc
tut: Ak your dealer ter W.U Doug-tea eaoe
.... I..t ..ruin h.hln. trhABB.
fait Ualar
Write tor
,r llluatratd Catatocel Fall IKrtea.
W. U UOUULAa, Dept. 14, Breuetta, MaaS)
It'll N WniTINO TO ADTHRTiaMUl
plMua auy yoa aae ike adTortliaunt
V Uila iwiKf.
s c. v r.
- No. 3 leen.
1 en w,.t
Im
FAVORITK MKDtOINB
THE BOWELS
rT"
iJtmM
uSaavi
Oat VQ CO VaaviWe, ftUtmtmi
r
to take aa em
CARTER'S
ft
W9
Vtil6oflT At ILL tllTU
saM. M as K ilXa .