The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, June 23, 1904, Image 6
If I Were You. If I were you. whoever you are. And especially if you are young. I should hold to the truth, and .peace or war. No lfe should sully my tongue; Neither a false nor slanderous word Should ever my speech demean; I should scorn the slang of the vulgar herd, I should ban the phrase unclean. If I were you. whatever you be, And especially young 2nd strong. I’d be eyes to the blind who cannot see, And the weak I’d held along; I should give an arm to the aged one. No matter the low estate; I should solace the weary and cheer the lone. And aid the poor at the gate. If I were you, O sweet girl-maid. Or youth in your halcyon morn, I should try to lighten the poor man's lade. And share in the burden borne. I should try to win the ear and the trust Of the erring, tripped into sin; 1 should seek to soften the hardened erust, TUI the love of God shone 'In. If I were you. and especially you. With the strong young heart and hand, I should help, with a kindly word or two, Those wrecked on the social strand— The outcasts who are under eclipse. Derelict on life's tossing sea— And perchance you might near from the Master's line— “Ye have done it unto me!” —Walter c. Howden. Sky-High Orchestra, This. ETery boy or girl who has lost any pigeons to the hawks should know this little trick the Chinese play on the raiders of their pigeon flocks. A missionary in China writes: “Walking near Peking one day I heard a long-drawn whistling in the air. Looking up, I saw a flock of pigeons overhead. ‘What!’ I exclaimed, ‘do Chinese pigeons whistle?’ “There was a Chinaman passing, and I asked him about it. He took from his dress a set of small bamboos, joined with fine wires—as in the ac companying sketch—and banded them to me. It weighed only a few penny weights. “That is what makes the whist ling/ said he. ‘We tie these to the backs of carrier pigeons, looping the strings around the roots of the wings. When the pigeon is flying the wind rushes into the bamboos and makes them whistle. This scares away the hawks, so that the pigeon can bring its message safely. Sometimes there is only one bamboo whistle; but if there are more they are assorted so as to make a harsh sound when blown all at one time.’ ” The little bamboo whistles must be made with care in order not to put too heavy a weight on the pigeons; bat no American boy need be afraid to try to do what a Chinaman can do. Besides keeping off the robber hawks every owner of pigeons can have a sky-high orchestra. Tale of a Mirror. Dear girls and boys, did you ever think of the stories treasured in that large mirror of which you have to be so careful? Would you ever suspect from its shining appearance that the great glass has grown old by looking and reflecting? All kinds of pictures have been set within its frame; many of your own; some laughing and bright, others pouting and sad. The peculiar thing about a mirror is that it always gives you back exactly what you bring to it. There would be the boys and girls sliding down the baluster and father hurrying out to save the chandelier; there you would all be around the pi aao singing “My Country, ’Tis of Thee,” and there—oh! there is your birthday party! Oh, look at the chil dren’s gay clothes and see the pretty decorations! Can you see farther back—there in the corner—where mother’s great-grandmamma looked when she was little? And her cou^i Jack in his pink satin clothes bowing before the pretty little lady. Their games were stately in those days. No romping for them. Little Nellie, dancing up to examine her new dresses, never guesses what sad picture might have been there be fore hers, and how her fresh beauty would brighten it. How the old mir ror must feel like coming from the wall and taking a turn with that round^eyed little maid. It surely must love the little folks even better than the grown-up people, for they do not take it so many cares. Blowing a Penny. This seems hard to do, but boys who have done it say It is easy. Place a penny in the bottom of a wine or mousse glass, cover it with a dollar, and then, without touching either coin, blow the penny out of the glass, while the dollar remains In it. To do this, blow sharply on the ride of the dollar which is next to you. Your breath will cause it to tilt over as though it were on an axis. Keep on blowing, and a current of air will be produced which will sweep up the penny and hurl it out of the ^ass. Try the trick and see what success you have with it. How Shellfish Talk. Many seamen will tell <vt curious clicking sounds heard on calm nights at sea, and the origin oi the noise •Bents so altogether unaccountable that it has often created some alarm among superstitious fishermen. A distinguished naturalist made a ; careful study of the sounds on many .'occasions and found that it was not ia sustained note, but made up of a ’sialtitude of tiny ones, each clear and 'distinct in itself, and rwnging from A high treble to a bass. When the • «nr was applied to the gunwale of the boat the sound grew more intense, and in soiie places, as the boat moved on, it could not be heard at all. On other occasions the sounds re sembled the tolling of bells, the boom ing of guns and the noise of an Aeolian harp. For a long time he was unable to trace the cause, but at length discov ered that the sounds were made by the shellfish, hundreds of them opening their shells and closing them with sharp snaps. The noise, partly muf fled by the water, sounded indescrib ably weird. He was finally led to the conclusion that, as the snellfish made the sounds, they probably had some meaning, and that the clicks might possibly be a warning of danger when the shallow water was disturbed by the boat. A Spool Gun Easily Made. ' Here is a gun that can be made In a few minutes. Get two rubber bands and a good-sized spool from which the \ > X> 30 o K The Gun and Arrow. thread, has been taken. Fasten one rubber upon the spool by binding It tightly with the other. The arrow is any thin stick that will slide easily through the spool. The best arrows are made of dowels which are three feet lon£ and one-fourth inch thick. These may be purchased at any hard ware store at a cost of one cent each. Sharpen one end of the arrow and cut a niche in the other. To use, place the arrow* in the spool, put the rubber in the niche and pull both rubber and arrow* out as far as possible. If the spool is held in the left hand and the rubber is strong enough it will shoot the arrow fully fifty feet away. A Few More Conundrums. What bird is a peddler like? A hawk. Why is a tight boot like an oak tree? Because it produces a corn (acorn). How do you swallow a door? Bolt 1 it. Why is a watchman like a mill horse? Because he goes his rounds. j Wrhy is a thump like a hat? lie- j cause it is felt. Where should a starving man be sent? To Hungary. W'hy is the sun like a man of fash ion? Because it turns night into lay If a farmer raises 365 bushels of wheat in dry weather, what would he raise in wet weather? An umbrella. When is a door not a door? Wrhen it’s an egress (a negress). When is a note not a note? When it’s due (dew). When is wine an eatable? When it is a little tart. Why are e and i the happiest of vowels? Because they are in happi ness while all the rest are in purga tory. Where Rain Comes From. .Where does all the rain come from? From the clouds, you say? Yes; but that doesn’t go very far. What are clouds? Think a bit. Have you ever seen anything close at hand which looks like a cloud? Of course you have. There is the stream that comes out of the spot of the kettle or out of the funnel of a locomotive. Yes, that is cloud, and it is exactly the same thing that you see up in the sky on a rainy day. It may seem a funny thing to say, but a cloud is simply water dust. Watch the puffs of steam coming out of the engine, and you will notice that quite close to the funnel you see noth ing at all. It is only a few inches away from the mouth that it begins to look cloudy. Plant Was Suffocated. A New Hampshire man had a very choice fern which he kept in his store, and fearing that it w-ould be hurt by frost during an excessive cold snap last winter he placed it in a tight showcase with a small lighted lamp 1n one corner of the case. When he came to the store in the morning he found his fern ruined, not by the frost, but by tbe burning out of all the oxy gen in the air in the case. The plant had simply suffocated. Bottle for a Rain Gauge. Any boy can make a rain gauge and. measure the amount of a rainfall for himself. The simplest form of gauge con sists of a funnel with a definite area, say, 12 inches, the neck of which fits in a bottle. The rain that falls into the funnel runs down into the bottle, of course, and the quantity is meas ured by means of a graduated glass. Any boy can measure the rainfall for himself. Having provided the fun nel and the bottle—the metal cylin der outside Is not essential—let him fit them as described, and then put The Home-Made Gauge. them in a level, open place, away from trees and buildings, with the mouth of the funnel about a foot from the ground. The bottle should be fastened in position, to avoid being overturned by the wind, and should rest perfectly level. When the measure is to be taken the water should be poured into a graduated glass, and the number of cubic inches calculated, which will give the amount to the area of the top of the funnel. " A Laughing Plant. \ There is a “laughing plant” that grows in Arabia. It gets its name from the effect upon the people who eat its seeds. The natives in the dis trict where the plant grows dry these seeds and make them into a powder. A small dose of these causes Jhe most staid and sober persons to dance, and shout and sing, and act almost like a madman for an hour. After this the victim falls into a deep sleep, and when he awttkes after several hours he has no recollection of hia antics. t A KITCHEN RANGE TO PUT UP. This diagram represents a kitchen range, though you would not, perhaps, suspect it, A very little cutting and a little more folding will produce it in perfect condition, so that it^can be put into a doll’s kitchen. If you follow the instructions you will find that there is not enough trouble to be worth mentioning about making it. Out around outline. Then fold under I and paste to the under part of the top of the range the parts AAA. Close the front by pasting the flaps B B to the sides. Then fold so that the flaps C paste under the letters C on the sides. Paste the double sides together and p&Bte the flaps D D to the top. Paste E E under the rim of the range and the work is done. DIRE RUIN HIS THREAT. How Constitution and Laws of Ten nessee Were Saved. A good story of a sharp justice of ;he peace is told by J. L. Powhatan 5f Chicago. “It chanced,” said Mr. Powhattan, ‘that this justice of the peace lived in a little town in a far recess of Tennessee. He was the only Repub ‘ican in the district, yet he happened, by some trick of fortune, to hold of fice. “At length, when political excite ment had reached an unwonted pitch, a project was formed to oust him from his office and put in a Democrat “The election was held in an old distillery, and the ballot box was a large gourd. The ’squire was early on the scene, clad in the roughest of clothes. “ ‘Fellow citizens,’ he said, ‘I want to make you a short speech.’ “The audience having agreed, he accordingly mounted a barrel—mag nanimously determined to ‘rise above all party issues and appeal to state pride and patriotism.’ “ ‘Fellow citizens,’ he said, ‘I’ve been a-lookin’ ’round here to see plain enough what’s a-goin’ on. I know what you want. I’ve been jus tice cf the peace here goin’ on twenty years, an’ a good many times I’ve saved many of you from goin’ to the penitentiary, an’ now you’re tryin’ to put me out of office. “ ‘But I just want to tell you some thing. I’ve got the constitution and the laws of the state of Tennessee in my pocket, and just as sure as you turn me out of office I'll burn ’em up —blame me if I don’t—and you may all go to ruin together.’ “The effect of this speech was over whelming. The ruin threatener was elected by a handsome majority. To I be in a state without a constitution j and laws was too great a calamity to be thought of.” Loftiest Lakes in the World. The most lofty lakes are found among the Himalaya mountains In Tibet. Their altitudes do not* how ever, seem to have been very accur ately gauged, for different authorities give widely different figures regarding them. According to some, Lake Ma nasarowar, one of the sacred lakes of Tibet, is between 19,000 and 20,000 feet above the level of the sea, and if this is so it is undoubtedly the loftiest in the world. Two other Tibetan lakes, those cf Chatamoo and Surakol, are said to be 17.000 and 15,400 feet in altitude, re spectively. For a long time it was supposed that Lake Titicaca, in South America, was the loftiest in the world It covers about 4,500 square miles is 924 feet in its greatest depth and 12.000 feet above the sea. In spite ol inexactitude with regard to the meas urements of the elevation of the Ti betan lakes they are no doubt consid erably higher than this or any other Not Heaven. Walter Burridge, the scenic artist, j is a capital story teller, as one ol his recent anecdotes will prove. “A typical New Yorker,” relates Mr. j 3urridge, “bad died and gone to his j happy home. He wandered around, growling as a New Yorker will and telling those whom he met, that heaven wasn’t a bit better than New York any way, and that he’d just as soon be back on Broadway. " ’Why, say,’ he remarked, ‘this place is all undermined with dynamite just like New York, and the buildings are either on fire or falling down as at home. When you're not being blown up you are being ground to death in some sulphurous tunnel or other. I don’t see what’s the use of coming to heaven, any way.’ “ ‘Excuse me, my dear boy,' said the Shade to whom he was talking, ‘but you have made a slight error. This is not heaven.’ ” _____ To Daffodils. Fair Daffodils, we weep to see You haste away so Boon; As yet the early rising sun Has not attain'd nis noon. Stay, stay Until the hasting day Hae run; But to the evensong; And. having pray'd together, wo Will go with you along. We have snort time to stay, as you. We have as short a spring; As quick a growth to meet decay. As you or anytmng. We die As your hours do, and dry Away Dike to the summer’s rain: Or as the pearls of morning’s dew. Ne’er to be found again. _—Herrick A Case of Mistaken Identity. Residents of a certain part of Spruce street have often seen two charming old ladies, twin sisters, who look so much alike that no one ever bothers to distinguish between them, coming out from one of the houses. The fact that they both dress almost alike makes it still harder to tell them apart. Some one who knows the old ladies very well relates that Ann, while mak ing a hurried departure for one of the big department stores last week, put on Susan’s bonnet by mistake. In walking through the store she came suddenly in front of a full-length mir ror, and stepped back in astonishment, saying, “Why, Sue; I didn’t know you were coming downtown this morning.” —Philadelphia Telegraph. Gold in Ireland and Britain. In a paper recently read before the Institute of Mining Engineers in Lon don, J. M. McLaren gave some curi ous facts about gold mining in Great Britain and Ireland. In all gold of the value of $2,094,915 has been found, Of this England contributed barely $3,000; Wales $1,400,000, and Ireland $145,000. The largest nugget, weigh ing 22 ounces, was discovered in Ire land. It was made into a snuffbox for George III. Colorado Grows Apace. Ten million dollars of new capital was put into Colorado agriculture and Irrigation in 1903 and the population of the state was increased between 15,000 and 20,000. One railroad company’s land sales in Colorado amounted to nearly a million dollars for the year. It is estimated that reservoirs now under construction in the Centennial state will add 1.000,000 acres to the irigable area. , Admiral Togo la Defeated. < At a recent race In England nearly everybody bet on Admiral Togo to , win. But he waa not even placed. LIVE STOCK f Thrift in Sheep. In the raising of sheep sight must at no time be lost of the necessity for keeplrg them thrifty. Some human beingu may go without their breakfast and g;t along on a half ration, but this rale must not be applied to the sheep. The thrifty sheep is a healthy sheep, and one that can and will re sist disease, because it is thrifty. Thrift means that there can be an in crease in productiveness and in growth because the internal organs are working well. Both quantity and quality of gain come out of thrift. There is no better way to stave off disease than by thrift. There is if® better way to help the sheep keep away intestinal parasites than by keeping it thrifty. This should be the first object of the intelligent flock master. Not only is the amount of mutton made governed by this matter of thrift, but even the quality of the wool is affected. The elements that go to make thriftiness in sheep are, first, good feed, and all of it that the sheep will eat and digest; second, good and pure water and enough of it; third, good shelter, which means a shelter not too qlose nor too open; and lastly, attention by the shepherd. One wrouId think these to be self evi dent truths and that no attention would need to be called to them. Yet in the matter of food we know that it is quite a common custom on many of our farms to allow the sheep to care for themselves in the summer, even when the drouth has dried up the pasture so that it is a most diffi cult task for these animals to get enough to eat to appease their hun ger. We have known such sheep pas tured on the tops of mountains, where it was a long distance to any water supply, and the sheep would, of course, become very thirsty before taking their long journey to the foot of the mountain. In such a flock there can be little profit either in mutton or in wool. This condition is more likely to occur in late summer and early fall than at any other time. The shepherd will then be hardly likely to notice the lack of thrift, as the wool is increasing slowly on the backs and sides of the sheep and the shrinking carcass is not seen. At this time of year too there is a tend ency for the wool to grow long on ac count of the approaching cold weath er, this being a provision of nature to protect the sheep against the cold of the coming winter. A flock so kept will be a disappointment to the farm er, for he will not be able to get either the weight of wool or of car cass he expected. His greatest disap pointment will come when the car casses are weighed, and he will fail to understand why sheep that seemed to be all right while on pasture should shrink so on dressing. If the pastures do not furnish enough feed at all times to keep the flock thrifty, it will pay well to watch the decadence of the feed in the pasture and supple ment it by feed given at the bams. The Power of Heredity. Man has greatly modified the forms and habits of all the animals that have been domesticated by him, yet he has not been able to eliminate cer tain traits that have come down through thousands of generations from the remote past. Even the house dog, furnished a bed to his liking, will turn round a number of times before lying down, just as did the wild dog, his remote ancestor, who had to do that to break down the tall grass for his bed. Even the cow on the range has not forgotten the habits of her re mote progenitors and hides her calf in the bushes, though the careful herdsman will take care of it, and the cow knows it. Even the custom of the mare in nursing her foal a little at a time, but often is believed to come from habits developed by thou sands and thousands of years of ex perience when the mare had to de pend on herself to keep out of the way of ravenous animals. The colt would not be able to run fast with a full stomach and so the mother was watchful to give him a little at a time and keep him in running trim. If we have not been able in some thousands of years to eliminate such traits, how long must have been the period’ dui ing which they were forming? % The Good Feeder. The hide of the easy feeder should be of medium thickness and should be soft and mellow. The hair should be fine and thick, as this indicates good respiratory and circulatory organs within. The skin tells a more truthful tale of the ability of the steer to make the best use of food than most of us suppose. When the digestive organs lack strength and the circulation is poor and sluggish, the hide becomes thick and unyielding to the touch, and the hair is harsh and wiry. The head should be short, measuring from a line drawn across the eyes to the nose, and should be broad. This indicates the ability to masticate food. The large mouth is indicative nearly al ways of an ability to take care of a great deal of food. The nostrils will generally be large in an easy feeder, this indicating good-sized organs for breathing. This is of importance, as it is by means of the lungs that the carbon In the body of the animal is changed tnto carbonic-acid gas, thus producing force in the change. Skill ful feeders declare that steers that do not have these characteristics seldom give a good account of themselves in the feed lot, and, when sent to mar ket, are a disappointment Torches for Destroying Bugs. During the past few years experi menters have been using the torch in various forms as a means of destroy ing the various beetles that prey on melons and other plants. This is quite effectively done where the insects can be induced to congregate on trap cropr or weeds. It is also suggested that ths torch may be successfully used on the chinch bags that accumu late in the furrows made around corn field* to arrest their march. Bay a bone mill and learn to use it. We do not know of anything that will pay better for the money invested mopticuuim: Dry and Liquid Bordeaux Mixture. There is doubtless room for the use of both liquid and dry Bordeaux mix ture. It is far easier in most of our eastern and middle states to make and apply the liquid form, but we must recognize the fact that in some of our states water is a scarce article, and conditions are such that a dust spray will do the work when a liquid spray would not. Even in the more humid states there are times when the dust might be used with more satisfaction man the liquid spray. There nas oeeu a sharp conflict between the men that favor the liquid spray and the ones that favor the dry 4ust spray. There has also been a conflict between the makers of implements for the throw ing of these sprays. This would natur ally be the case. But we must ac knowledge the fact that each form of the mixture iias certain advantages at certain times. Thus, in a very wet time, the leaves do not hold the spray that comes to them in liquid form, as they are already covered with mois ture. If the liquid spray is used a great deal has to be wasted in trying to get enough on to do the work. At such a time the dust spray would stick readily to the wet leaves, and it would be readily seen just where the spray had settled. This of course it is impossible to do with the liquid spray on a wet day. The dust spray may also be put on early in the morn ing, while the dew is still on the leaves, and it sticks to the leaves as the dew evaporates. The dust spray has an advantage over the liquid spray in the rather dry localities, where there are extensive orchards on hilly land. Many of the new orch ards are being put out on hilly land, over which it is very difficult to drive a heavy wagon carrying a great tank of water. Where water is scarce this is not only difficult to do, but in many cases it would be very expensive, aB the water would have to be hauled a long distance. Yet in those same lo calities the dew on the trees is some times very heavy, and this helps out matters immensely. But there are many things to be Bald in favor of the liquid spray. The first thing is that the mixture can be perfectly made and the poison distrib uted evenly all through. This is not always the case with the dust spray. It Is exceedingly difficult to get a uni form mixture, except with liquid, and a bad mixture means the putting of too much poison on some leaves and not enough on others, with the result that the trees are not protected from fungi in the one case and are injured by the chemicals in the other. So for our level orchards in the states where moisture is plentiful, the chances are that our orchardists will stick to the liquid spray. The liquid spray has this great advantage over the other that it can be applied at times when the leaves are entirely dry, which en ables the sprayers to work all day. In the cases of the dust spray, the work has to be done during a very short time in the morning while the dew is still on the leaves or in wet weather. The men that use the liquid spray have therefore a longer time in which to do their work. Shade and Ornamental Tree*. In the humid states there is no rea son why ornamental and shade trees should not be more extensively plant ed than at present, though we are glad to see that there is an improve ment in this direction. In the semi arid states, where trees have to be ir rigated to get them to start we find the farmers taking much interest in this matter, though they are doing that kind of work under great diffi culties. But in all of the humid re gions one has but to put a good tree into the ground to get it started, and it will afterwards take care of itself. But in the planting of trees great care needs to be exercised as to the place in which they are to be set and as to varieties set. When these trees are in, they are in for a lifetime of man, and a mistake will be felt as long as the planter lives, if he remains on the place. First, we would advise not to set too many trees and not to set them too close together. To be sym metrical, trees must have lots of room. On the farm, shade trees should not be set closer than 50 feet. This of course does not apply to the orna mental trees of small growth like the Arbor Vitae and the ornamental crabs. By the roadside trees for shade should not be set closer than 100 feet Beetles on Melon Vines. Relative to the striped cucumber beetle on melon vines, a bulletin of the Oklahoma station says: In addi tion to the preventive measures of cleaning up rubbish and a thorough cultivation of the melon ground, the use of Bordeaux mixture as a repel lent, and squash as a trap crop are among the most promising of the remedies recommended by those who have successfully dealt with this in sect. Squashes are planted about four days before the melons. One or more rows of squashes should be planted, according to the size of the field. Some of the trap plants may be dusted with Paris green when the beetles gather on them. Others should be left to attract the beetles through the summer. It seems that spraying the young melon vines with Bordeaux mixture not only repels the cucumber beetle, but also poisons some of the insects which feed on the sprayed leaves. Vigor of the Redwood. It Is reported that the redwood area of California has been reduced to about 2,000 square miles. Most trees grow so slowly that it takes a half century or so to get a marketable tree. Not so the redwood. In thirty years trees from sprouts will attain a height of 80 feet and reach a diam eter of 16 Inches. This means that a little protection to the redwood for ests will give the future generations all the wood they need. If a good many chicks aro being an nually raised on the firm, try an In cubator. It will be a good practice to learn how to use one, and may prove very proutabt V ' TOLD IN CALIFORNIA. Helping me k i d n eya is helping the whole body, for it is the kidneys that remove the poisons and waste from the body. Learning this simple lesson has made many sick men and women well. Judge A. J. Felter of 318 So. E. St-. San Bernardino, Calif., says:—“For 18 years my kidneys were not perform ing their functions properly. There was some backache, and the kidney secretions were profuse, containing also considerable sediment. Finally the doctors said I had diabetes. Doan s Kidney Pills wrought a great change in my condition and now I sleep and feel well again." A FREE TRIAL of this great kidney medicine which cured Judge Felter will be mailed to any part of the United States. Address Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Sold by all deal ers; price 50 cent3 per box. The Paris School for Dogs. A school for dogs is the latest devel npment of the educational movement, it has been established in Paris with the objects of teaching, not letters, but politeness. The school room is furnished with chairs, tables and runs, to give necessary “local color” to the surroundings. The dog pupils are trained to welcome visitors by jump ing up, wagging the tail and giving a low bark. When the visitor leaves the dog accompanies him to the door and bows his farewell by bending his head to the floor. He is trained likewise to pick up a handkerchief, glove or fan that has been dropped and return it to the owner. He is taught further to walk with “proud and prancing steps” when out with his mistress. A Request from Tokio. H. Kobayahsi, of Tokio, Japan, has addressed a note to the village Im provement Society of South Orange. N. J., which runs about like this: “The honorable of the South Oranges are asked in what way do they rid themselves of him the much trouble some mosquito? How do they ap proach him in his house among the reeds and marshes, so as to remove him effectually from the dangers that he does to the people of good minds whose skins he much puncture? All this I would like so much to know.” Old Soldier's Story. Sonoma, Mich., June 1!> —That even in actual warfare disease is more ter lible than bullets is the experience of Delos Hutchins of this place. Mr. Hutchins as a Union soldier saw three years of service under Butler Barke in the Louisiana swamps, and as a result got crippled with rheumatism so that his hands and feet got all twisted out of shape, and how he suf fered only a rheumatic will ever know. For twenty-five years ho was in misery, then one lucky day his drug gist advised him to use Dodd’s Kid ney Pills. Of the result Mr. Hutchins says: “The first two boxes did not help me much, but I got two more, and before I got them used up 1 was a great dead better. I kept on taking them and now my pains are all gone and I feel better than I have in years. I know Dodd’s Kidney Pills will cure rheumatism.” Every man is provided with sense enough to mind his own business, but few men have sense enough to let it go at that. FREE TO TWENTY-FIV^ LADIES. The Defiance Starch Co. wilt give 25 ladies a round trip ticket to the St. Louis Exposition, to five ladies in each of the following states: Illinois, Iowa, Nebraska. Kansas and Mis souri who will send in the largest number of trade marks cut from a ten-cent, 16-ounce package of Defi ance cold water laundry starch. This means from your own home, any where in the above named states. These trade marks must be mailed to and received by the Defiance Starch Co., Omaha, Nebr., before Sep tember 1st, 1904. October and Novem ber will be the best months to visit the Exposition. Remember that Defi ance is the only starch put up 16 ox. (a full pouad) to the package. You get one-third more starch for the same money than of any other kind, and Defiance never sticks to the iron. The tickets to the Exposition will be sent by registered mall September 5th. Starch for sale by all dealers. Any man who thinks he is courting an angel may live to think again. This Will Interest Mothers. Mother Gray’s Sweet Powders for Chil dren, used by Mother Gray, a nurse in Children’s Home, New York, Cure Fever ishness. Bad Stomach, Teething Disorders, move and regulate the bowels and destroy Worms. Sold by all Druggists, 25c. Sample FREE. Address A. S. Olmsted, LeRoy.N.Y, Hunger Is a terrible thing, but some men consider thirst more terrible. . HOI POU , ROOEBUB RESERVATION. South Dakota. tMUMSuore* land opmuundrr ti.ltn*. In*. Ro«u*r»«lou b«*Ius Jutr t, •udaSA fltuafiui «xp*rl*nc«ln Oklahoma lamfoponlaK*. M_> Sf«rtkwr*t ern oltteuuSII bu at RoomucI, 8. llZk? Hand tact*, far Land Manual, containing orwlaiuaUon and c«m. pt«ta loforoatlan. Soldlarm Ucalrtn* an a*aut mhauUt writ# xua. D1CX T. kWU.il. T..ik * In the matrimonial game a baseball player isn't always a good catch. The well earned reputation and Increas ing popularity of the Lewis’ "Single Binder. 1 straight 5c cigar, is due to the maintained high quality and appreciation of the smoker. Lewis’ Factory, Peoria. ILL The man who is constantly harping on his virtues has at least one vice. Pirn’s Cure cannot be too hl*hly spokoa of aa a oou*h our*.—J. W. OH tuns, sal Third its* M., Minneapolis. Mian., Jan. A A brick manufacturer needs the earth in his business. Important to Mether*. Examine carefully entry bottls of CASTORIA, a oaf* sad sure vsmody for tnfsats and children, and ass that It Tbs CM Tea Bars Always fieaghl iai JR ft .. - _ BBti