Dakota County herald. (Dakota City, Neb.) 1891-1965, June 11, 1909, Image 7

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    traxrwE to su-ixo.
Ilorlijr Site Ac I mr.re AdTlsed
Ceast-I nlil to t e Ihr lilrnl Sil.
Slr.titjse ns ir nii.y scc:n, after U.tsKl
yenr of tn Ik tuA .- w nlmut t!i( ml
vant;i;js of f.MiH.fn-Sftic's house upon
a Mck, one tlf t!i ( !;, tilings that
modern Inilidcrs tell i!s to nvoid lu se-leitln-
n site Im reK. Tl:it Is princi
pally Invalid of tho ;,'!:;it cost of CXOii
Tilting a c(!l:ir In r xk.v s ill.
Another objtvtl n to roiky soil H
that water nil! not mink tlirnnpli rock
and so runs tln.vn It. Sumo of till
water would lie ahnuFt certain to seep
thrmi!i the cc'ilar walls, lntiUiijt the
cellar damp; or it inlcht undermine the
foui;il;. thins.
Aenin riwli often contains springs. If
a p;rl:nr were opcneil during Masting
It wo;i'd mean ci:lier th.it the water
would have to (Unv through the cellar
or lie deflected n costly operation. A
horse built upon a rock nl.-io vibrates
during thunder storms.
("lay Is perhaps more to be avoided
than rock, says the Circle. Clay col
lects water and spreads under pressure.
It expands In wet or frosty weather
and contracts In summer. Frozen clay
cllnps to brb'.v or stone mid often
causes dislocation of cellar walls and
piers.
Also It Is impervious to water. Thus
an underground layer of clay will pre
vent the proper druliutjro of rain water
and leave the soil foul ami sodden.
Filially. It Is exeremely costly to exca
vate. T'lidesii-Mble for building pur
poses also are made laud, sand and silt.
Made land Is not always stable.
Gravel is the idnal soil for building
purposes. It Is porous and drains per
fectly. At the ;mctlnie it is sulll
ciently stable to support foundations.
A gravelly elevation Is the ideal build
ing site.
Depressions or levels between rocks
are likely to retain water, even though
the depression Is slight and the eleva
tions distant. The ground water thus
retained stands at a level. Small
gravelly elevations form islands, as it
were, in a subterranean lake, and upon
them bouses may be built with perfect
anfety. The cellar floor will lie above
the ground water level and no rain
water will drain Into the cellar.
Those laeleaa 'Uueatioiis.
"Hilly, did you ever pick uy a live
Irolley with your bare bauds?"
"Many a time."
"Didn't it k'ivo you a shok?"
"Give me a slunk? It killed mo dead
ivery time." Chicago Tribune.
Find Help in Lydia E Pink
ham's Vegetable Compound
Winchester, Ind. "Four doctors
told me that they could never make
me regular, and
that I would event
ually have dropsy.
I would bloat, and
pains,cramp9
and chills, and I
could not Bleep
nights. My mother
wrote toMrs.Pink.
ham for advice.and
I began to take
LydiaE.PinkhaBi'B
Vegetable Com-
Eound. After taking one and one
alf bottles of tho Compound, I am all
right again, and I recommend it to
every suffering woman." Mrs. Mat
Deal, Winchester, Ind.
Hundreds of such letters from girls
and mothers expressing their gratitude
for what Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege
table Compound haa accomplished for
them have been received by The Lydia
E. FinkhamMedicino Company, Lynn,
Mass.
Girls who are troubled with painful
or Irregular periods, backache, head
ache, dragging-down sensations, faint
ing spells or indigestion, should tako
Immediate action to ward off the seri
ous consequences and be restored to
health by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege
table Compound. Thousands have been
restored to health by its use.
If you would liko special advice
about your case write a confiden
tial letter to Mrs. Pinkham, at
Lynn, Mass. Her advice is free,
and always helpful.
LARD IRRIGATED LAlta
Perpetual water rights, line water, pro
ductive noil, crop failures unknown. 60
tiiiHlielu wlieut per acre. 3'b to 5 tons al
falfa. Healthful climate, free timber.
Term easy. W'rltp now. Ilnwood Land
C6., Kock SprinKs Wyoming;.
45(0 50
Bushels of
Wheat per Acre
have been grown on Farm Lands in
fVtSTERN CANADA
Much less would be satisfactory.
The general average i s above 20 bushel a
"All are Mud in their praises of the
fre.it iropi and Hint wondeiliil roun'irv "
hutrari bum i- rresiion.irme National
Kdilurial A&sociation of Aui'ubt, moil.
It is nnw riossilile to secure Homestead ol
6o acres ir e and another I Go acres at (too uei
ere.
Hundreds hare piiH the cost of the r farms M
purchased) and then had a balance of from $io u'
to 912.00 per at re from one crop.
Wheat. Uarlev.Oats, Flax-alldo well. Mixrd
Farming is a great uo.ej and LMir iug is hlj;l,ly
proluablc.
Fsce'lent Climate, splendid Srhnols and
Churches, Kaiai.4 tiri-ig most every district
svithtn easy reach iJL market.
Kailwav and Land Companies have lands for
ale at low prices a:id on ca.iy terms.
"tost Bast West" Pamphlet
and maps sent free. l-'or these ; nd iiilurmnliot:
ts to how to secure lowest Railway Kales .i l"' tc
W. I). Scott, Superintendent ol Iiiimii:r.ttion,
Ottawa, - anada. or K T. Holmes, i c j(.ki,oa
Sc., '.St. Paul, Minn, and J. M. Mai I. si hlan, bus
lib W'atertown, tn. Dakota Authorized Oovera
aem Agents,
rieaea su sun rsa saw this tdnitiwassl
DAISY FLY KILLER
pU-'M riv'wtiff'-.
ttr -: and k ill.
itii in. N t,
(?(. It i in.riilftl.
rtMiiiluuI.t'iimp.
I ktii rmmm. ( nil
t)ar. not i
far i ril" rftnjr(tif
tiiiAranlffl t'!tf
tV. OrmiialfKirr,
Jt.- llSr.lJ Mr,
Ia0 W halt i ),
MOTHERS
fD HAVE
MMIERS
mm
.A-piiiPsoi'SfrEtfii
VitYED TH DOCTOR.
Old III Host ,i Kerplnv Watk
t pn lir I'nttpnt.
Thfi I;ito Dr. Dnininin-.ir!. the habit
ant ptict, r.nre rtlatod an aniu.lng an
erdotf Itullratlva of th simplicity of
the rural French Canadian.
lie was FiininiPi Itig lit Mcg.mtlo
co'inty, Quebec, when, early one even
ing, he won vlnlted by a young farmer
nampil Ovlde Leblanc.
"Hon solr, docteur," said Ovlde by
way of greeting. "Ma brudder Molse,
heeni ver' seeek. You come on
d'hctiKP for pee heetn. doo?"
Urummond. always kind-hearted and
oMIjrlng, complied with the request of
Ovblo and found the unfortunate
Molse Buffering from what he diag
nosed dm a falrl) severe case of ty
phoid. "Wlnblns to provide Molso with
some medicine," said the doetor-poet.
"I nslced Ovlde to accompany me back
to the village. The prescription com
pounded, I proceeded to Instruct Ovlde.
The dorp was to be administered every
three hours during the night, and, try
ing to be as brief, plain and explicit
as possible. I snld: 'Be sure and keep
watch on Molso tonight and give him
a teaspoctiful of this at 9 o'clock, 12
o'clock and at 3 and 6 In the morning.
Come and see me about 9 o'clock In
tho morning.' "
Ovlde understood and departed. The
following morning he again presented
himself and Priunmond asked: "Ilow'a
Molsa? Did you do as I told you?"
"Ma brudder MoJ.se, I fink he some
better dan lo.V night." replied Ovlde.
"I give heem do medeclne, but I doan
have no watch in d'house, doc. I tak
d'lcetlo clock d'one what mak d'beeg
deesturb for get up. I keep eet on
hees dies' all night. T'ink eet do
heem good dat. jus' lak d'watch. Wat
you t'lnk. doc?" Harper's Weekly.
SHORT METER SERMONS.
Toleration.
An Immense amount of friction will
be saved when we can learn to toler
ate one another's Idiosyncrasies. Ilev.
C. E. Nash, Fniversallst, Los Angeles.
lminileiice.
Impatience not only strips off the
covering, but lays bare the very quick
in all Its sensitiveness of nerve.
Rev. J. D. Jtemensnyder, Lutheran,
s'ew Yohk City' -
Mnu's I ' 1 1 ii pp.
Christ proclaimed the truth of the
Mosaic system. Man's failure to ap
prehend the truth has always Inter
fered with man's progress. Rev. C.
Ross Baker, Baptist, Spoljane.
('onxtrnctlve Fitrees,
There are certain great constructive
forces operating in the lives of all
men, and it is not always easy to un
derstand what they are. Rev. Luther
B. Wilson, Methodist, Pawtucket. R. I.
Vitality1 Substitutes.
When we try to make organization,
or social service, or theology, the sub
stitute for vitality, rather than Its ex
pression, we ignotniniously fail. Rev.
Lynn H. Hough, Episcopalian, Brook
lyn. The Great Tradition.
Human life is Itself the great tradi
tion. It has been handed down through
parenthood, and when the parenthood
Is worthy the tradition is divine.
Rev. George A. Gordon, Congregation
allst, Boston.
Foundation of I.lfe.
When you assist womanhood you as
sist the nation. She is the foundation
of our lives, she Is the Intermediary
between man and all divinity. Rev.
S. Parkes Cadman, Cpngregatioualist,
Brooklyn.
The Beat In Life.
Xo matter what may befall human
life, the Interpretation of what is best
in life will ever be the family and
what its personal relations lead us to
ward. Rev. Johr, L. Elliott, Ethicist,
New York City.
The MeUerldllst.
The materialist Is looking upon the
things that can be touched and weigh
ed and handled and measured, the ac
tual facts that ake about him and
around him. Rev. E. L. Powell, Chris
tian,. Louisville.
Moral Influence.
The measure of moral Influence U
precisely the quality of moral charac
ter. Ono clear lapse from goodness
and that authority expires. Rev. II.
T. Hcnson, Congregationallst, West
minster, England.
Pel's of Christianity.
Infidelity and unbelief often clad in
a new dress to escape suspicion, fol
low sullenly in the wake of the
church, thus tacitly acknowledging
Its vigor and its triumph. Rev.
Charles F. Wood. Congregationalism
Providence.
The Conquering; f'roaa.
The toss of Jesus goes on conquer
ing, and some day the hosts of Satan
must bow before It and say, in the
words of the leader of the Moors:
"Galileean, thou hast conquered!"
Rev. D. D. Greer, Presbyterian, Saa
Antonio, Texas.
flood Will.
If you are sure of the good will la
your own heart, you will surely find
It lu God, in man, everywhere, and
you will bo able to see that the sun is
shining, all nature is fair and Mends
are kind. Rev. A. G. Singsen. Presby
terian, Providence.
Xevlertluis" the C'hnrph.
To neglect the church in her vari
ous Interests, in her complex and
many-sided missions, and leave her
unequipped, or without the men and
women necessary to do the work
which the Lord has given to her to
do. Is like a personal neglect of Christ
Himself. Rev. Arthur G. Jones, Pres
byterian, h'an Antonio, Teas.
t.lrl tslih Hue I'miiII.
The Soph The only fault 1 find with
my girl Is that her name prohibits the
college yell.
The Junior lb y?
"It's Norah."-- Kansas City Times.
The Su ft rnui'l le' H'.
He And if .-.omen ever do get the
voting franchise, what would jou do?
KheOh, I guess I could fiijd some
thing else to tulk about. Yonkers
Statesman.
Half the wickedness la the world
haa no other foundation than gossip.
HE fake Black Hand let
ter, the bane of the de
tective, the worry of the
chief of police, the Joy
of the sensational re
porter, the "subject" for
the student In the nsy-
UaH-T'Wvl
chology of suggestion and the nuisance
to the general public. Is one of the
most remarkable developments In the
criminal history of America during the
last few years.
The fake Black Har.v! bushiest was
born In Chicago with the Nlcolettl
affair In 11'0-t. This was merely n case
of a Greek citizen writing himself a
Black Hand letter, poking as a man
In great fear, getting himself sworn
In as a special policeman and going
out with his police powers and taking
a good fall out of another Greek citi
zen who had displeased him. Greek
citizen No. 2 came out at tho small
end of a very little horn when the fake
"Black Hand" got through with him.
By the psychology of suggestion.
LET ME E5TJOY.
Let me enjoy the Earth in less
Because the all-enacting Might
That fr.sliinned forth its liveliness
Had other aims than my delight.
Alnnit my path there flits n Fair
Who throws mp not a word or sign;
I will find charm in her loth air
And laud those lips not meant for
mine.
i
From manuscripts of tender song
Inspired by scenes and souls unknown,
I'll pour out raptures that belong
To others, as they were my own.
And pome day hence, toward Paradise.
And all Its blest if stich should be
I will cast glad, afar-off eyes,
Tho' it contain no place for me.
Thomas Hardy.
"And the man." I
"Gave way to temptation," he an
swered with a shrug, "committed the
forgery, was discovered and punished
acording to the law of the land."
"Poor fellow!" She spoke softly and
wl.h a faraway look In her eyes.
"What became of him?" '
The man did not answer Immediate
ly. The story was harder to tell than
he had Imagined, and hi had a great
mind to change the conversation, but
thon, knowing so much, she might as
well know all.
"Ho changed his name," he contin
ued, throwing stones Into the stream
at their feet, "and, going to a strange
country, lived down the scandal. Af-
"t nil i:.isi'AM i;s alikh casks!
ter a while Y.n came hack again, and
hi punishment began."
"I don't understand." she said.
"It was a girl," ho replied. "Then
his life's remorse came to him."
"Did she care for him?"
Woman-like, the hint at a romance
Interested her.
He shook his head.
"Could any woman care for a man
whose story you have heard?"
"No," she spoke with decision "no.
She could pity him, her woman's heart
would go out to the man whom every
one condemned, but she could never
love him!"
He moved his position and turned
his head In the opposite direction.
"She could never love him!" he
echoed. After all, how could he have
expected It to be otherwise?
"A woman." she continued, "likes a
man to be strong, to be able to fight
temptation, and however much sorrow
she felt for him who had fallen, con
tempt would be present."
As he had said, the punishment had
commenced. He roso to his feet and
stood looking out over the broad ex
panse of fields facing them.
"Would you feel like that?" he asked
with difficulty.
She did riot answer directly, for she
was weighing the subject over care
fully. "Yes." she replied at last, "I am
afraid I should. You see I am no dif
ferent to the rest of my sex" here he
would have liked to contradict her,
PhFI
Once Upon a Tims I
tesSL- if
PlAll
,T7f
HOW
INDIVIDUAL V
HAVE OVFMWs.
D A FurULAR.
METHOD OF 6ET-
n VI it Via J iur VSiL,
OK OBTAINING
ruuuciiT.
which a so strong In criminal circles
end among the uneducated, tho fake
"Black Hand" letters have taken
strange twists and turns since the
Nlcolettl affair.
It Is estimated, tho Chicago Inter
Ocean declares, that no less than $t,",
000 ha.ve been collected from Italian
citizens on the quiet by Black Hand
fakers since the Nlcolettl affair. These
cheap criminals know that most peo
ple have swallowed tho Black Hand
fake bodily without stopping to con
sider its truth or falsity. There Is no
Black Hand society In America. There
are certain members of the Mano Ncni,
tho Biliclan Black Hand society, in
Chicago Just sixteen of them. In fact
and they arc well known to the de
tectives, but they have no organiza
tion. Nor have they been bold enough
to try any of the cheap tactics attrib
utable to the Black Hand since tho
first bona fide Black Hand casp fhn
Splro murder of 11)03.
The Black Hand as It exists to-day
In America In nothing more or less
than a splendid example of the psy
chology of suggestion arlsinir out of
the Splro murder and the subsequent
publicity accorded to the Black Hand
method of extorting money and gain
ing publicity. According to Dr. Roche
mm
TOR
B UNCLE
HOMEY ft
HE eagle, the buffalo and
frAm tha WcDlacn ( .. (
i. ...... ., (.raiiics.
I unfit. Now they are to
uhuk notes, ineir last resort, ir the active Imagination of boy
hood be excepted. "Too easily counterfeited," Is the terse ex
planation. Other changes tending toward uniformity and sim
plicity of design for United States notes and coin certificates
are contemplated. At present there are nineteen different designs. Under
the new plan, which embodies the ideas of officials of the Treasury Depart
ment, bankers, business men and currency experts, there will be but nine
designs. The possibility of confusion will thus be reduced.
All classes of notes of each denomination will carry the same portrait.
No portrait will appear on the notes of more than one denomination and
the portraits selected are easily recognizable, excepting, perhaps, those of
Salmon P. Chase and Alexander Hamilton. As Chase's likeness will be on
the $r00 note and Hamilton's on tho fl.OOO note, there Is really no reason
for anxiety concerning them. Men who haudle money on such a scale as
that ought to be as familiar with the lineaments of the Chief Justice and
the first Secretary of the Treasury as the newest alien on these shores U
with the portrait of Washington, which will mark the $1 bill. The $5 note
will carry the portrait of the man whom some hardly count ns second even
to the father of his country Lincoln. Cleveland, who, confronted by a
break In his party, stood for Bound money, will be used on the $10 notes.
As no pictures are hung In the Louvre until after the death of tho artist,
so no portrait of a living individual is used on any of the currency issued
from the Bureau of Engraving Hnd Printing In Washington. Hence the $10
notes will be the first to bear the picture of the only Democratic President
since Buelmnan. The $20 notes will have the portrait of Jackson, the $50
that of Grant, the $100 that of Franklin. Even the new pennies .will no
longer show poor Lo.
The artistic, quality of either our metal money or tho certificates Is not
a minor matter. In a certain sense the money used by a nation Is tha
measure of Its civilization. Always when men reach the stage of exchang
ing goods which Implies a certain form of community lllo, they need a
medium In which values of varying commodities may te expressed. The
Indians used shells. Skins of the beaver nnd muskrat had In the early
days of the Northern trapper a current value. Long ago tho Germanic peo
ples expressed fines In cattle. Oxen were units of value and sheep decimal
parts. Whale teeth among the Fijians; glass beads and brass wiro In
Africa; cacao beads In the land of tho Aztecs; red fenthers among the South
Sea Islanders all theso have been used. Now that man has left tho prim
itive stage far behind and mastered many arts, he strives to make his money
safe, durable, beautiful. The men who are responsible for the contemplated
changes In the notes are also striving to achieve th same result.
but dare not "for I admire a man
who has a will of his own. The man
of whom you have been speaking was
weak at the best."
"Yes, he was weak," the man said.
"There are not many men In this
world I could respect, but but you
are one."
"I ?"
Ho laughed as If the Idea amused
him, and there was silence. Then he
turned and faced her.
"I was that man," he said quietly.
She knew now why he had not told
her of bis love before, knew his reason
for the mysterious silence which had
puzzled her and her relations.
"You."
"Yes, I."
He could not trust himself to say
any more, only a feeling of something
worse than misery had come over him.
and he was prepared for a storm of
reproaches to be hurled at him.
But the girl knew that with her lay
the happiness of both their lives, and
with a trembling heart she moed
closer to hlra.
She felt so proud of him as he stood
there, a still, white figure, and deep
In her heart she was glad that he was
not tho Flint that others had painted
him.
And she slipped her hand Into his,
causing his eyes to fill with pain, to
meet hers.
"After all," she said tenderly, hold
ing up her lips Invitingly and smiling
as she saw his face change, "circum
stances alter cases, Frank!" Waver
ley Magazine.
Fven In the fai-e of the kind of hats
they are wearing this spring, there are
some women who claim they haven't
their "rights."
How many purely ornamental peo
ple there are in every community!
- --a. IV-
cf Harvard, one of tho foremost au
thorities on the psychology of sugges
tion, such epidemics as the Pluck
Hand letters may be traced almost dl
i qi .'.y to nervously disordered persons
who have had the suggestion made to
them by seeing wild-eyed Black Hand
stories, written by cub reporters, in
the dally press, it has become almost
a mania with tho cub reporter to see
Black H.md societies every time he
find' a murder of a foreign-speaking
clti::en. There are thl.ty llve cases of
record In Chicago of persons wilting
themselves Black Hand letters and ap
pealing to the k lice for protection and
asking to be sworn In as speri.tl po
licemen. In order to save themselvet
from their dread tormentors. The
real purpose la. of course, to get to
be a policeman In order to take out a
grudge agr.inst a neighbor.
The Black Hand crime Is In almost
every ca:o a crime of deliberation,
even when it springs from the crazy
brain of a prison who Is nronerlv a
patient for a neuropathic institute.
Hence the small percentage of Italians
on police roco'-ds where even bona fldo
Mack Hand letters are looked u. The
Black Hand Itself has been stamtied
out In Italy. The Black Hands which
have arisen In America are merely
nenropathlc cases of degeneracy, with
a list of names as hybrid as the popu
lation of this melting pot. The Black
Hand letter writer belongs In a hospi
tal. There Is no real Black Hand In
America.
-mum
ul ;
ii
the Indian have well-nigh disappeared
..m T 1 1 1 i . i ,. . ...
cui.-AU! iiuic civilization iouna them
be banished from the crisp, green
SOME MARRIED MEDITATIONS.
By Clarence L. Cullen.
It doesn't hurt any to express occa
sional surprise over the (maybe) fact
that she still remains as a girl at
heart.
Don't overlook the fact that the glr
thler and wheezler she gets the more
she likes to have you call her "win
some" once in a while.
Why Is It that the woman whose
ears resemble sun-dried clams is tha
one who experiences the keenest han
kering for those big pendant car
rings? It Is difficult for a man to under
stand why he should be required to
wear toeless hose when his wife puts
in about nine hours a day needling
Irish crochet lace.
Why is it that dandrufflness, liuty
featheriness and general unkempt
blowslneds are the unfailing exterior
characteristics of the woman who wails
about her "shattered Ideals?"
Tho woman whose husband goes out
before breakfast ard fetches home an
armful of lilacs for the breakfast ta
ble doesn't have to worry about his
curves when he's out of her sight,
either.
In the first place, a man couldn't be
Induced to eat fudge and pickles in
alternate mouthful. But If he coul'd
lie, he wouldn't loll around a linle
later on, wondering what lu the wide
world ulled his sUrmach.
Kveti a married man may I happy
If ho lets his wife have her own way.
Make a woman mad, and she la so
mora polite than a man.
6 A
at
is
Telle of Different !.
Belles of certain Amazonian tribes
tart cone shaped skulls, which are
btnlnc-1 by wearing n mold on the
bead fmi:i babyhood until maturity,
The Arab woman pnlnts her brows
10 ns to aive 11i:mii the appearance of
meeting above her nose.
Tho Tahiti girl, to nopilre n flat,
hrouil nose, sleeps with a compress
on It.
The Turkish woman Imparts a faint
bluish tint to nails and teeth.
The bnlies cf Macassar paint their
teeth red nnd yellow nlternatelv.
Not the Doctor's Knult.
Dr. Fell nt l.'.st explained why the poet
did not liko him.
"He knew well enough why he didn't,"
' said the doctor, "iii'il be could linvp told
the reason if lie hn.l felt likt It. It was
because I had su,-il him for n doctor bill.
Tbst was t!ie orly way I could collect It.
By iriiiccr. I maiu him pay It, too, with
the interest !"
It Is with f.o other purpose tliiin to do
Justice to I'ip memory !' a net 'i iniilieii
rl man. e'-en at f'.iis late dale, that the
PXj.l.U'.it lei herein set for: a Is given to
the pul.li-
SKIN WAS ROUGH AS BARK.
Rahy It or IIikI fin Intents Ilchln
llnmor NerntPhei! ill I Itlootl llan
1'imsil n Cure In t'ntlenra.
"Our son, two years old, was atnict
M with a rash. After he suffered wltb
the trouble several weeks I took hliu
to the doctor, but It got worse. Th
rash ran together and made largo b!l
tern. The little fellow' didn't want to
do anything but tvrutch and we hnd to
wrap bis hands up to keep him from
tearing the flesh open till tho bloot
would run. The Itching was Intense.
The skin on his back hecnine bard and
rough like the bark of a tree. He
suffered Intensely for about three
months. But I found a remedy In
Cutlcurn Soap nnd Cutlcnra Ointment.
The result was almost magical. That
was more than Hio years ago, nnd
there has not been the slightest symp
tom of It shut? he was cured. J. W.
Lnuck, Yukon, Okla., Aug. 28 and Sept.
17. 1W8."
Potter Drug it Chem. Corp., Sole
Props, of Cutlcurn Itemedles. Boston.
Out of it,
"Mrs. Brown says that she'll never
wear one of those fsKi-buttou gowns"
"Why not':"
"Her husbnr.d has only ono arm."
Detrult Free Press.
betteIRM spanking.
Spunking does not cure children of bed
wetting. There is a constitutional cause
for this trouble. Mrs. M. Summers, Box
4, Notre Dame, Ind., will send free to
any mother her successful home treat
ment, with full instructions. Send no
money, but write her to-day if your chil
dren trouble you in this way. Don't blame
the child, the chances are it can't help it.
This treatment also cures adults nnd aged
people troubled with urine Uitlloulties by
day or uighu
Extensive beds of lobsters are to be
planted soon in the waters of the Britinti
Columbia, nnd it is exiiected that In four
or five years the lobster-taking Industry
Will be established on a largo scale.
Pettlt's Eye Mnlve.
No matter how indly the eyes may be
diseased or Injured, restores normal con
ditions. All druggists or Howard Bros.,
Buffalo. N. Y.
Wh,-, Sure!
Tommy Paw, what is concentrated
lye?
Mr. Tucker It's the short nnd and
ugly word, Tommy. Don't bother me."
A cold on the lungs doesn't usually
amount to much, but it invariably pre
cedes pneumouia nnd consumption. Ilnm
lins Wizurd Oil applied to the chest at
ncs will break up a cold in a night.
The Hush to the City.
"Willis, how came you to leuve the
farm nnd move to town to muke your
living?"
"I got tired of the smell of dud's auto
mobile." Mrs. WtusluWs Knollilns; Hrrap for chllit
rtu teething, tofteua tna nums. reduces In
nsuiiMitioti. klluys ualu, cuic-s wlml colic
'iCm Out t la.
I
Ilnil All tlis Symptom.
The learned IidIki was dispensing
knowledge for the benefit of bis less tn
UglitcnisI companion.
"Have you ever been bitten by a
dog?" he asked.
"Mirny's do time," replied the un
enllgliteitttl one.
"Are you not afraid of hvdropho
bla?" "Ms on do hydro."
"'Tls n curious disease. When a per
son contracts hydrophobia, the very
thought of wilier makes him sick."
"Is dat on do level? Youse ntiVt
trlngiti' me?"
"It is a scientific fact."
"Den I bet I've had It all me life,
an' never kuowtd wot wa de matter
wld nie!"
Hed, Weak, Wssrr, Watery Efss
ItellrTed by Murlns F.yt Kemrdy. Com
pounded by Kipeilenred Physlclnns. Mu
rine liopsn't Hmiirt : Soothes Kye f'slo.
Write Murine Kyt Itsmrdr Co., Chicago,
for Illustrated K)t llook Frio.
C'tiBtlrienpe ttniais.
Man With the Bulging Brow Whaf
are you scowling about?
Mun With the Bulbous Nose I'd llki
to punch your head for you. You tolc
me I ought to read "Itefereps of a Ilache
lor." I gut it at the public libra. y anl
put In an hour or two trying to read it
and there ain't the first blamed word it
the book, from first to last, about prixi
fighting !
ALLEN'S FOOT-EASE
Shake Info Your Shoes
Allen'a Foot-Eae, ptwdr.r lor the led. It relieves painful, swol
len, smarting, nervous fct, and instantly takes the sting out of
corns and bunions. Il't tike flreotcsl cornier! discovery ol I he age.
Allen'a Foot -Ease makes titfht-litting or now Shoe feel easy. It
id a. certain relief f,ir Imrmwimrfi-illu ui....t.ln.. -n , .
( tired, achinp feet. It is always in demand for use In Patent Leather
Shoes and for Breaking- in New Shoos. We have over 30,000 testi-
umia. mi it mum. nom oy all uriifjffists and Shoe Stores.
e. Do not octel any Substitute. Bent by mail for 25c. In stamps.
FREE TRIAL PACKAGE sent by mail. Address
SNKh,
a lira a
Mass
ALI.CN S. OLMSTED. LP DOV. N.Y.
r?- t!st.ia..a..ftiS4..sjjj 5V.TfM Sf-"V--S'Mi .. s turn s-i si -a
Ttr -J KAail.V tW A DIAMOND ok WATCH, nrsnmton.u a girt to .onol-itsd
ourlu(ifiiU.-rl.livs-.tl..t. Hu.tv.r..H1s.llh..rt rr",m . ssud Too l.i ru.sl I s.hTTi
BOFTISi
fifth no twuverr. Imivu' ii
tilt) ('Wmt. A MMti HVlaUst
.vih.1
'TV",Lf!:,h,.V,t,!',V1'
mum VolU till UrU iol ftiw
I wsnt erory neron who snfrtrs vrltls
tie form ef Kidney nlhnent. no mntter
now mniir remedies thee hnve tried, BO
tantter how many doctor's they have con
sulted, no mntter how serious the case, to
Klve Mnn.Ton'N Ktdnr-T ItemeflT n trt.il.
Ton will ho astonished to peo liow quickly
It relieves all pilna In the back Inlns
and groins esnserl hy the klrtnera. Yoo
will , a surprised to se how quickly
It reduce the swelling In tha feet ami
legs, nlso rmtllnp,,, un,br the eres, after
Im ." ,::v, ,l""!'''' of "'' remedy. Too
si 111 lie delighted to are the color return
ing to yor.r cheek, ntcl feel the thrill of
vlr and go-id cheer. If your frlne la
.IcS or milk,; If It Is rn'nnd foame, If
It cntiiln sediments or brlekdnst. If ii Is
highly eotore-t or h.is en orTea-slTe stnpll.
If yon virtnite freTiontlT. you should per!
slst In taking this remedy until all nmn.
touts rtKspppflr. We believe this remedy
htis rnrpd more serious kidney ailments
than all the Kidney medicines that baso
been compounded. Trofessnr Junyon be.
1 'T.."1". ,lm teH-H'le death rate from
ltil.-ht a IHsessp nnd Diabetes la unnec
essary and will be grently reduted b this
remedy. '
to nt one to your drnrirlst and purchase
a Imttlo of Munyon's Kidney remedy ir
It fulls to give sntlsfnctlon 1 will refund
your money. Munron.
For sale by all rtrnirgtsfa. Price 2Se.
ffA
Food 1
Products
t'ovor Very In
Quaiily or Taste
because the utmost
care i3 taken by Ub
by's Chofs to select
only the choicest mater
ials, and put these up in
the same careful manner
every time. You are
thus assured of uniform
goodness, and this is
the reason that the use
of Libby's gives such
general satisfaction to
every housewife.
Try these U&hy Foodsi
Dried Doef
Mexican Tamala
Ham Loaf
CftKi Con Carno
Vienna Sausage,
Evaporated Milk
For luncheon,
spreads or every day
meals, they are just the
thing.
Keep a sup
ply in the houie.
y ou never can
tell whfcn they
will come in han
dy. Ask for
Ubby'manA be
sure yoaj o-e(
Ubbtfrn.
Ubby, MoNoSN
AUbby
fMeadlaelhe
"My father has been a sufferer from sick
headache for the last twenty-five years and
never found ny relief until ne begaav
taking your Caacareta. Since he caav
b tfiin taking Cnscnrets he haa never had
the headache. They have entirely cured
liim. Cuscarets do what you recommend
them to to. I will give you the privilcg-a
of usinj,' his nauie." E. M. Dickson,
11 jo Kctiner St., W. Indianapolis, In
Pleasant, Palatable, Potent, Tasta Good.
Do (ioud. Never Sicken.'WeakeB or Gripe.
10c, 25c. ftic. Never sold In bulk. The gen
uine tublet stumped C C C. tiuarantead to
curu or your lauucy buck. 82S
Positively cored by
these Little Pills.
They also relieve Sta
tress from Dyfrpepeia, Ia
dilution and Too Hearty
EuUig. A perfect rent
ed for Dlulueaa, Nausea.
Drowtdneaa, Bad Tnatav
tn the Mouth. Coated
Tonirue, Pain In the Bide.
TORPID LIVER. The
CARTERS
1VDV
il PJULS.
tit.
regtlate the liowela. Iiirely Vegetable.
SMALL PILL SMALL DOSE. SHALL PRICE.
Genuine Must Bear
Fac-Similo Signaturt
REFUSE SUBSTITUTES.
HDII FC pay IF CUWEO.
ur 1 iL Iw o v'nt't. vsrc& Ti
surf t'i,lul Curs.
BEX CO D.st. OS. MlBBaaaUa. Ml as.
s. v. x. r
- Xo. 21 1009.
on, ttnit fur-
lk li. M J 4'U0
ft..lt,liial ta ssfas l..sa . I. ,-t I. .
uiiiiii j isrninju. liMir ursdil is SimmI. Our rii-ssra
luiiorwol.wui.mliT. liriwtodiMdittiDii..r
CkiaMJfs.. liL l.rtu.tkojo.1 riU.kaisw. a.4 ki. L,.la. -w
If AyS
s oa F' snjiuas
a U f . J rf TLS S
mm
CARTERS
TJllTTlE