L E S S M A J E S T E IN ENGLAND;
|
Old F a vo rite s
$
t 'a l u g
S ta m p
U p «!d e D o w n
(• lia b le .
la
Pan-
O R AS8ES / ND CLOVER.
Wasps readily succumb before the
Increasing cold o f autumn. The few
that escape the merciless scourge of
m ortality are the queens o f next sea
son. They pass the winter In some
warm cranny, and when the spring
arrives each comes forth from its hid
ing place and seeks a suitable place
fo r the nest that Is to be. This found,
the queen repairs to a fence or tree
trunk and with her Jaw rasps off a
bundle o f
wood fiber which when
moistened wtb saliva and
kneaded
form s the paperlike substance o f which
the nest is entirely constructed.
Just as bees have Invented a peculiar
nest building material In wax. so wasps
have prepared a special durable paper
fo r the same purpose.
The queen
mother lays the foundations o f the
c ity with her own Jaws. She attaches
s sort o f stalk o f wood paper to a
chosen support This may be the
branch of a tree, a root In a cavity be
low ground or a beam In a garden shed.
T h e stalk prepared, the queen builds
a few shallow cells. In each o f which
she lays an egg.
As these mature,
hatch and develop Into worker wasps
the labor o f the little colony Is turned
over to them, and thus a vast nest
with thousands o f cells Is evolved.—
Chicago Tribune.
A ll things come to him who w a it»- «
•van tha almshouse and potter's field.
And It la a good plan to cultivate tha
habit o f getting your money's worth.
Tht
(<u od
T in a *
C o m in g .
There’s a good time coming, boys,
A good time coming;
The pen shall supersede the sword,
And Bight, not Might, shall be the lord
In the good time coming.
Worth, not Birth, shall rule mankind,
And be acknowledged stronger;
The proper impulse has been given—
Wait a little longer.
Tb*»re’s a good time coming, boys,
A good time coming;
W ar in all men’s eyes shall be
A monster of iniquity
In the good time coming.
Nations shall not quarrel then,
To prove which is the stronger;
Nor slaughter men for glory's sake—
Wait a little longer.
There's a good time coming, boys,
A good time coming;
Hateful rivalries of creed
Shall not make their martyrs bleed
In the good time coming.
Religion shall be shorn of pride,
And flourish all the stronger;
And Charity shall trim her lamp—
Wait a little longer.
There's a good time coming, boys,
A good time coming;
And a poor man's family
Shall not be his misery
In the good time coming.
Every child shall be a help
To make his right arm stronger;
The happier he the more he has—
Wait a little longer.
There's a good time coming, boya,
A good time coming;
Little children shall not toil
Under, or above, the soil
In the good time coming;
But shall play in healthful fields
T ill limbs and mind grow stronger;
And every one shall read and write—
Wait a little longer.
There’s a good time coming, boys,
A good time coming;
The people shall be temperate,
And shall love instead of hate.
In the good time coming.
They shall use, and not abuse.
And make all virtue stronger—
The reformation has begun—
Wait a little longer.
There’a a good time coming, boys,
A good time coming;
Let us aid it all we can.
Every woman, every man.
The good time coming.
Smallest helps, if rightly given,
Make the impulse stronger—
"Twill be strong enough one day —
W ait a little longer.
— Charles Mackay.
GUNS T H A T BLAKE NO NOISE.
M ay
M a k e A a x a s a ln a tlo n a
M ach
S a fe r C r im e to E n g o ffe In .
W ith the modern high powered rifle
great battles not only can be. but have
been fought without the two armies
engaged getting more than occasional
glimpses o f each other.
Now eoineth
Hiram Percy Maxim and patents a
“ muffler” for the high-powered rifle. It
will, he says, make the gun “ compara
tively noiseless,” and be genially de
scribes bow easy It w ill be for skir
mishers armed with such weapons to
work along an enemy’s outposts and
shoot the pickets without alarming the
main force or revealing their own po
sition, says the New York Times.
W ar has already censed to be a spec
tacle. and hereafter, apparently. It is
to become as dull for the ear ns for
the eye. A silent gun, however. Is a
rather alarming thing to contemplate.
Not since bows and arrows went out
o f fashionable use elsewhere than at
an occasional lawn party has there
been on engine that would kill t*t a
distance without attracting the atten
tion of everybody In the neighborhood,
and. while this fact has not prevented
all homicide by any means. It yet has
had a decidedly restraining Influence
on the less formal kinds, and In the
days when murder was fa irly certain
to be punished by death the noise j e
made In committing his crime brought
many a murderer to the gallows.
One can easily Imagine the Interest
with which the accounts o f Mr. Max
im’s Invention w ill be rend In Breath
itt County, Kentucky. There the re
portless gun. using smokeless powder,
w ill make assassination ns safe ns it
Is popular. There w ill be many other
demands for the new weapon, hut none
o f them that we can think o f at tht
moment entirely innocent.
W a i p 'i
Jana
M ake
C o lo n y'm
I f e e l.
We Trust
Doctors
Possibilities o f l*s Successful G rowth
In N r h »m Idaho
Many people blissfully Imagine that By H. T. French. Director Idaho Experiment Sta
tion. Moscow.
lese majeste— that is, insulting royalty
Much interest in being manifested in
—Is a crime petuliur to foreign coun
tries aud unknown iu free and happy the possibility of grow ing g ru .e s .nd
Britaiu. That, however, Is where they i lovers in the section .b o a t Moscow
make a mistake, Bays IVarsou’a Week snd other | o ■!. ns of Northern Idaho.
This matter is of special interest at
ly-
this tim e, for many new settlers are
There are all aorta o f pains and pen
coming into this atste fr m the older
alties on the statute book relative to
states, where the-e crops oenstitute a
peculiar British forms o f lese majeste.
very important part of farm produc
Many o f them have fallen into oblivion tion.
or abeyance owing to one cause or an
Oar experience e x te rd i over several
other, hut they could still be enforced seasons and we thought it m ight be of
If those in high places claimed all they profit to some to know what is being
are strictly entitled to do.
done in this direction on the exp e ri
It is, for instance, technically a pun
ment station farm.
tshuble offense to stick a penny stamp
W e have undertaken to establish a
bn a letter upside down. Doiug so is seeding of clovers and glasses on a por
to Insult the K ing through his effigy, tion of the farm and herewith give a
aud a few centuries ago—supposing brief account of the results of our work
s
penny stamps to have been then in during the past season.
Last A p ril w e plowed up ten acres of
vented— might easily have landed the
offender in prison on a charge o f seek land on which wheat was grown the
ing to bring ridicule on the sovereign, year before, and Btted it for the seed
or to express contempt for is author by hariow ing twice with a fine toothed
W a then sowed
ity by causing his picture to stand on smoothing harrow.
b r a d cast the follow in g m ixture, cov
Its head.
ering six acres, leaving the balance un
Also It Is a punishable offense to de
til Inter, on account ol the ground being
face a coin o f the realm bearing the
in a lower portion of the field and too
royal Image and then deliberately put
wet to wo k.
It into circulation again.
40 pounds common red clover.
0 pounds A la ike clover.
Any private Individual who auda
26 pounds orchard Knots.
ciously hoisted the royal standard over
6 pounds m eadow fescue.
6 pounds Enffluih rye
his dwelling would get into serious
10 pounds tim othy,
trouble. He would be peremptorily or
4 pounds tell meudow oat
dered to take It down and abjectly apol
This made lb pounds ot the mixtnre
ogize, and if he escaped a heavy fine per acre.
The tialanee of toe field
would have to thank his majesty’s fo r was sown to the same combination, at
bearance tor his good luck. The royal the same rate per a< re, except eight
standard is the emblem o f the K ing’s pounds of alfalfa seed wus added to the
regal authority, to be displayed only m ixture in place of the alaike clover
where he is personally present, and for and tiraothy eeed.
No nurse crop was sown w ith the
a subject to hoist it Is nominally equiv
And here ia where
alent to high treason. The union jtfek. grass m ixture.
as the flag o f the nation, la a different many farmer* make a mistake, by sow
thing altogether, and can be displayed ing wheat, oata or barley w ith the
gtasa or clover. I t la the experience
by anybody.
It is popularly supposed that In this of the beet farmers now that it is not
country a man can get up and say wise to sow a crop of grain w iih the
seeding. The more rapidly grow ing
whatever he likes about the sovereign
grain crop take, the moisture away
with Impunity. This Is true only witfi-
from the tender grass, and clover
In strictly defined limits. A Socialist
planta, aud when the grain is out the
orator can publicly denounce the tbeo- hot
burDI) th(, e ,ender p |anta up.
retleal evils o f monarchlal Institution! The wild
which „ 80 abundant in
and announce a decided preference for ,h„ , oi) o( this luaility ¡, q „ lte eno„gh
« republic, and nobody can touch him. o f a n o n e ctop, end s- m • attention
But i f he once begnn to speak in should be given to cutting this out of
sultingly or slightingly o f the K ing per the way when it reach»* the proper
sonally he would be at once "run In” stage. W e cut tw o crops o f w ild oats
or at least effectually suppressed by from our field. The first crop made a
the nearest policeman.
fair yield of hay. In cutting the wild
T o strike the K ing would, according oats the mowing machine should be set
to the strict letter o f the law, render high enough so that it w ill not out the
the ussailant liable to the death penalty alover or young grass.
The last of November, whan the yield
no m atter bow trilling the blow was In
was last examined, there was a fine
reality.
Lieut. Pape, who Is usually reckoned •tend o f clover and of all the grasses
among those who attempted the life o f sown, so ter as we wars able to detect
the late Queen Victoria, could not have them. Much of the clover headed out
actually contemplated murder. ' He last season m aking a growth ona foot
had no lethal weapon In his possession high or more.
Unices last season was an exoeption-
at the tim e o f the outrage, but he
struck her majesty across the fac- with •h ly favorabla ona there is no reason
w hy elovars and grasses should not ba
bis walking stick. This was sufficient
grown in tha h ill lands in this section.
to bring him within the shadow o f the
The yield o f wheat w ill not be less
scaffold. He was condemned to death
whan the farmers learn to grow tbeaa
and would hare been hanged had his
crops which restore fertility , and tha
sentence not been commuted.
possibilities of diversified
farming,
Apart from direct methods o f com with stock as an important factor, w ill
mlttlng lese majeste In England— and ba greatly strengthened.
the foregoing does not by nny means
V A R Ih T IE S O F F R U IT .
exhaust the list— the unwary subjects
can be guilty o f the ofTense in a more
Washington P ro fe s s o r M akes Study
roundabout way.
It ia lese majeste to bring the King's
o f Each Region.
By J. L. Ash lock, Washington Stato Colle*-«.
uniform Into contempt.
Members o f
Pullman.
theatrical companies who have appear
During the past year numerous in
ed on the stage as comic characters at
quiries have come to the State college
tired in discarded m ilitary or naval
1,1 T.‘ .u
department o f horticulture asking quea-
uniforms have occasionally been un- tjo q l wbicb generaliy can be summed
pleasantly reminded of this fact Care- |
¡ n tbe Qne
t i ’ D. . . W h a , kind„
ful stage managers put themselves on ; J
w i„ do bpgt wbere l ,iveT„
the safe side by seeing that no uni- Thjg oU|| o( quiliea h„ given the , tatf
form, whether ta be worn by the hero, j of the 8tate experim ent station consid-
villain or low comedian o f the piece. Is erable trouble, since, as etated by Pro
an exact copy of the real uniform o f lessor Thornber, head of the department
any branch o f his majesty's forces.
0f horticulture, unleea the staff mem
bers know exactly the clim atic and to il
S O C IE T Y E N T E R T A IN E D I N HUT. conditions of the region from which tha
question came, erroneous inform ation
W o m a n o f W e a l t h S e e k » H e a l t h In
may be given, leading the seeker for in
a M o u n ta in S h a ck .
formal ion to plant trees not at all
The veriest cottage by the wayside
adapted to his region.
may conceal treasures and the hum
“ N ow w e have eolved the p roblem ,’ ’
blest shelter prove u palace, says the
said Prolessor Thorher, recently. “ Dur
Denver Times. Costly bangings, deli
ing the last year w e have made a care
cate draperies, tinkling wlndbells, rare ful survey of the state with reference to
books and beautiful pictures have trans the particular varieties of fruits which
formed the little tent-house o f Mrs. •re adapted to eacli region. W e have
Josephine Tabour, woman o f wealth, classified the lists into ‘ Western W ash
promineut w riter and well known in ington,’ ‘ Inland V alleys,’ and ‘ Upland
New York society, and made life not V a lle ys .’ In this list ia included ap
only bearable hut pleasant fo r her dur ples, pears, cherries, peaches, apricots,
ing her enforced sojourn in this land plums, raspberries, prunes, blackber
o f sunshine fo r the benefit o f her ries, got ae berries. currants, strawber
ries and nnta.
Early, medium early
health.
A m ile south o f Englewood, back and late varieties are given where it Is
from the road, a little tent with a necessary. W e submit these lists to a ll
rough unpointed two-room addition I inquirers now, and from a dozen or so
stands, givin g no hint from the outside ®c°d varetiea of apples, pears, etc., he
o f the beauties contained within. T o I
1*5!?;
the west is the long unbroken line o f adaptability of the fruit for his region.
“
Another
experim
ent we have in
mountains with nothing between to ob
band is one in which we have selected
scure the view.
sixty-five good varieties of apples from
In the front room o f the little house
,. .
. . . . . .
tha eight hundred or so varieties In the
one eon d be entertained for hours by , itaM> eIprrim eD t « atlon 0Ieh .rd , and
the curious and rare decorations. In , , e tm dlnK two T, rie, le, 0f each ol the
various plnce* are photographs o f celeb •ixty-fivs varieties to ten termers or
rities with International reputations. Iruitcrowsrs ef Washington.
W s wish
One stands on a genuine ceremonial to determ ine by this experim ent how
rug, woven and used by the N avajo In ra h variety w ill do in tha p artlcn llr
dians thirty years ago, to examine a region in which It is tried, and in thia
doeskin hanging on the wall which was way wa hope to collect much valuable
killed on Thunder mountain years ago date concerning the possibilities fot
by a member o f Mrs. Tabour’s family, Daw varieties of tDDlas in this region.”
who was the first white man to ascend
l-otata • • * . .
the peak. A ll the while little Chinese
Brown one-half cup o f butter and
wlndbells are tinkling out their sweet two large onions (chopped) together
music. Among Mrs. Tabour's most cher- until well done. Slice one pint o f po-
Ished possession« Is an old book, yellow tatoee and add to tha onions and but-
witb age. " A Treatise on R eligion." 1er. Add enongh water to covar and
published in England In 1006.
took nntll tha potatoes ara s o ft Bea-
r,lke the Chinese. I celebrated New sou to taste with w i t and pepper, and
Year's this year on the day I wanted, last o f all, add about a cupful o f rich
Barra while vary hot
and so a few days ago I had a little
reception. W e called If that, although
atm at It.
there were only about a dozen here. From hymn« that tell of martial deeds
Some folks would try to wean us:
Fort Logan and Denver people.
W»
had such a good time. That’s what Which wilt recall to one and all
The mollycoddle genus.
makes life worth living any place. I f
— Cleveland leader.
.
I hadn't had friends out here I couldn't
have stood It. Aa It la I never got lone
cab b .e e S a la d .
some."
One head o f cabbage chopped fine,
two cupa o f vinegar, ona cup o f auger,
T b s H a r t P a rt.
“ H ow Is your son getting on In his tne cup o f water, one tableepoonful o f
nustard. tw o eggs; place thte on tha
new position?”
“ First r a te !"
answered
Farmer ■tore and let It come almoet to a boll,
Dobbs.
“ Ha knows more about the then pour over the cabbage, add a lit
bnslneaa now than his employer does. tle salt and pepper, and mix well to
___________________ t
A ll be has to do now la to convince his gether.
em ployer!"— London Express.
A ll paper, left on the train* of the
There's a good time coming, boys,
A good time coming ;
We may not live to see the day.
But earth shall glisten in the ray
Of the good time coming.
Cannon balls may aid the truth.
But thought’s a weapon stronger:
W e’ll win our battle by its aid—
Wait a little longer.
C f r s a n s e ta m tfla l
Belgian State railway* are appropriated
by the government and are utilised ia
the manufacture of card for tickets.
i
If y o u are suffering from
impure blood, thin blood, de
bility, nervousness, exhaus
tion, you should begin at once
with Ayer’s Sarsaparilla, the
Sarsaparilla you have known
all your life. Your doctor
knows it,too. Askhimaboutit.
U se
Too mint look well »fter the condition o f
your liver and bowel*. Utile** there i* daily
action of ill* bowels, pniaom.ii* product* are
absorbed. cbus I iik htturlitclte, biliousness, nau
sea. dvspeuai*. »nd thus prevention the ftar
«Knurl1 U from doiii|f It* be*t work. Ayer’*
(Mils »re liver pill*. Act Kentlv. all vegetable.
The do*« i* only one pill at bedtime.
An
by J. C. Ayer Co., Lowell. M u i
▲loo B eoufeoturere o f
. , -
I
T O
C J V I O
HAW VIGO«.
AGUE CUBE.
CHERRY PECTORAL.
Ir lfn r r .
Sir A. Conan Doyle, at the Authors’
Club Christina* dinner In London, re
lated that In America some colored
iwople were keeping the festival of
Christmas and they were told to hang
up their atocklngs at night. One poor
fellow bad no stockings, and so be
bung up bla trousers. In the morning
be was asked what be bad got. He re
p lied : “ 1 guess I got a man, for my
pants are gone.”
(o r
O ld
HAD CATARRH THIRTY YEARS.
T ta .
Old tin la put to a variety o f uses
For Instance cheap trunks are covered
with tin from discarded tlD cans and
other utensils, the tin having been flr*t
cut to desired size and straightened
aud smoothed out. There are also con
cerns In different purt* o f the country
which make a business o f removing the
tin coating from old tin cans and scrap
tin.
_____
F o r t k s H o a e e c e lf a .
Borne active women who pride them
selves In housekeeping seem to forget
that tha object o f keeping house Is that
human beings may ba accommodated
In It. T h eir sola idea seems to be this
that the house may be kept In a certain
form and o rd e r; and to the perform
ance o f tba form and order they saert-
fire tha com fort tha house waa estab
lished to secure.
MOORE
O PEX ALL
C latsop H ack
“ Tu g
■ ns
TH E YE A R
S easide , O s c a »
Directly
tke b u ck oeerloeklnr
the ocean. Hot salt
« a lt both*
both« end
I C uff H ouse K
S '»
ST
tleo I S
piar
for Ä
hiking.
r
■ I n
QF
rira-
l •*■
e e parlor*.
parlora. Electric llrku.
11, hu. Fire-
Hr plaoo **4 ete»u kook, t loo wotko
u i t'I'ro. Sr» tondo a
nBEflOM”
I « O
I R
H I C U I M
I por A*y.
U lt y . Uotrs, »S.60 0*4 (,____
Serial n t.» kr Ito wook.
■ D O W . t . M O O OX, I'r o p r lo to r
■ a tlr o lr
lo p t r lo o «».
" A word to the wise It (ufflclent,”
remarked tha man with tha quotation
habit.
“ W rong again " rejoined the contrary
parson. “ A word to the wise la unnec-
l * *ko Loop A g o .
Cardinal Wolaey had fallen.
“ I waa trying to dodge an automobile,"
ho explained, "and a roller skater ran
‘nto me."
The historians, however, with singular
ehtueeneu. have persisted in placing the
blame on Henry V III.— Chicago Tribune.
$100 Reward, $100.
W om an
R a ilw a y
W ork ers.
In tba South o f France one may see.
at the little wayside stations, women
attending to the signals o f the h alf doz
en daily train s; while the companies
regularly economize at the level cross
lugs by employing fem ale labor. The
husband can be seen at work at bis
vines upon the hillside, while the w ife
waves the green flag aud keeps the chil
dren quiet.— D etroit News-Tribune.
CONGRESSMAN MEEKISON RECOMMENDS PE-RU-NA
General Debility
Day In and day ont there is that feeling
of weakness that makes a harden of Itself.
Food does not strengthen.
*Sleep does not refresh.
It Is bard to do, hard to bear, what
should be easy,—vitality is on the ebb, and
the whole system suffers.
For this condition take
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
It vitalizes the blood and gives vigor aud
tone to all the organs and functions.
In usual liquid form or in chocolated
tablets known as S a rs a t a b s . 100 doses $1.
Tha readers o f this i aper w ill be pleased to
(earn t..a t th ere is at least one dreaded disease
that science has been able to cu te in a ll iia
stages, and th a t 1* Caiarrh. H a ll’s Catarrh
Cure ia th e o n ly positive cure now known to the
m edical fratern ity . Catarrh be n r a constitu
T e le p h o n e G ir l* « R o m a n c e .
tion al disease. requires a constitutional trea t
ment
H a ll’s Catarrh Cure i* taken internally, Conscientious Carrit always tried to do
her L sst;
acting d irectly upon the blood and mucous sur
face* o f the system, thereb d e «tpo y in g th e fo in- Never lost her temper— she was different
dation o f the disease, and g iv in g t e pat ent
from the rest;
strength by building up the constitu ion and
assisting nattirs in doing its w ork. Th e pro Carrie was a “ central," with a voice of
prietors h ave so much faith in it s ' ura tivepow
sweetest tone,
ers h at th ey offer One Hundred Dollars fo r any
ease th a t it fa ils to cure. Bead fo r lis t o f ▲nd that is why Miss Carrie has a cot
testimonials.
When Mrs. Carrie she became she didn’t
quits forget;
Sho took her low, sweet voles along, and
has It sven yet.
But if hubby's just a little slow to answer
to her call
She can jar him with a voice that cracka
the paper on the wall.
— Chicago Tribune.
S y r u p «ffTgs
^ElixirsfS erma
acts geniiyj/ei
gently yet promp
ly on tke bowels, cleanses
m e system oj|ectually,
assists one in overcoming
h a b it u a l constipation
perm anently. To get its
o e n e jic ia l e j e c t s buy
t k e < ienuine.
CALIFORNIA
t r u p
C
o
.
SOLD BY LEADING DRUGGISTS- 504 ^BOTTLE
Bears tha
MEMBER OFTHE FAMILY,
m e n . b o y s , w o m e n , m is s e s a n d c h il d r e n .
Signature of
th a
D im
Mothers w ill find Mrs. W inslow 's Soothing
Byrup tho best rem edy to use fo r th eir ciLldx-Ul
lu r in g the teeth in g period.
U n c le
A lle n .
“ Some men," muttered Uncle Allen
Sparks after the tiresome speaker had
sat down, “ remind me of an old water
mill that’4 running with empty hoppers.
Their wheels keep on geing, but they
don’t turn out any grist.”
In
S o u th
A fr ic a
In South Africa, where thunder
storms are terrific, lightning often
strikes the beds o f Ironstone, and blue
flames, sometimes firing buildings, are
alleged to play about such Ironstone
outcropp’ ngs two or three hours after
a s t o r m . ___________________
A
'O ff MM*
S u r p r is e .
Teartier— F re d ilj Faugle, yon may
liv e the German name o f the river
Danube.
Freddy— Dunno.
Teacher— I)onuu ! T h a t la lig h t I
am glad you b a r . «tudied your lesson
so w e ll
Freddy Is rorprlaed, but keeps .till.
\
SLICKERS, surrs
AND HATS
qra tha man who
put them to the hard
est tests in the rough
est weather.
O e t the oriainol
C le a t .,
tk .
I . e ld .n l.
The famous ball player waa looking
through the aporting eolumoe of the
newspaper!.
“ I eee they’ ve quit mentioning me," be
Towers Pish Brand
Mny
Upon doing which be »ecured one more
mention In the newepapera.
“©ft
W. L Douglas $ 4 and $5 Gilt 'dga Shoes Cannol Be Equalled At Any Price
_ * * " * * 'A IT’F I O N .
W . L. Dt'ujilA* name and prica Is ntumped on bottom. T n k p V o
Sold hy the he«t shoe d ra in * evnywhere. Shoes mailed from factory to any part o f the world. Ilia»»
bated (,'aUloM free to any add re»".
W . JL.. 1 * 0 L O L A S , U r o c k l u u , M am a.
J u v e n ile
U n c le
Ig n o ra n c e .
“ Paw, why do we have to pay for the
The proposed Henry Hudson memorial
bridge will be the largest span of con water we use? We don’ t have to buy our
crete or stone in the world. It will be air.”
703 feet in the clear. There are some
“ That only shows, my son, that you
larger spans of metal.
have never had to pay a gaa bill."
C IT C flt- Vitus* Dance end all Nervous Diseases
T H E S U P E R IO R
Q U A L IT IE S O F _
W. L Dougtmm mmkom a n d mafia m o re T C a
m a n 'a $ 2 . SO, $ 8 .0 0 a n d $ 3 . BO ahoam ^
th an any at h a * m a n u fa c tu re * In t h a ____
f haemumo th e y h o ld th a lr
r f i t b a fta r, w e a r lo n p a r. a nd
P a s t.
Samuel Woodworth had just written
“ The Old Oaken Bucket.”
“ Nothing in i t !” he muttered as he read
it over and reflected upon the probable
price it would bring.
But posterity evidently found some
thing in it.
I I | O pv-rma.imitiy cured by D r. K iin e ’ » (ir tu l
k e r v e R estorer. Hond fo r F R K B |2trial bottle and
treatise. Dr. It. I L Kline, Ld.,931 A r c h bt., PbU*k.,P».
THE MEN WHO KNOW
W .LD O V G LA S *
The Kind You Have Always Bought
L .la r h t n ln s
^Manufactured by the
S
Manufactured by the Peruna Drug Manufacturing Company, Columbus, Ohio.
C For A Infanta
S T and
O CMldrcn.
R IA
O at a t
i o
OTHER REMARKABLE CURES
M r. Jacob L. Davie, Galena, Btone county, M o., writes:
“ I have been in
«<1 health fur th iity aeveu years, and after taking tw elve bottles o f your I'eruna
i am cured.’ ’ M r. C. N. Petereon, 132 buutli Main St., Council Bluffs, Iowa,
vritee: “ I cannot tell you how much gooj i'eruna has done me. Constant con-
inement in my etoie began to teil on my health, and I felt that I wve gradually
breaking down. I tried eevetal remedies, but ontuined no permanent relief un
it I took Peruna. I fe lt better im m ediately, and five bottlee restored me to
om p:ete h ealth .”
A SINCERE RECCMMENDATION.
M r. D. C . Proa.ar, Btavo, Allegan Co., M ich , w rite«: “ Two years ago I
■vas badly afflicted w ith catarib of the atoms* h. I had had a run of typhoid
fever, waa \cr> depleted. I could find nothing I could eat without causing d is
tressed and eour stomach.
Final y I came to the conclusion that I had catarrh
of the Btomocb, and seeing Peruna advertised, began to take it.
Ic helped me
coon, and alter taking three or four bottlee I was en tirely cured of atumaub
rouble, and can now eat anything.”
tage of her own.
— Portland OregoniAn.
Address F. J. CHENEY A CO., Toledo, O.
Bold by a ll druggists, 76c.
Taka H a ll’s F am l.y P ills fo r eonatlpatlon.
J
‘ ‘ I have used several botiles of Perun. and I feel grtolly benefited thereby
from my catarrh o f the heed.
I feel encouraged to believe that if I use it a
short lime longer I will be fully able to eradicale the dbcaae of thirty years*
standing.” — David Meekison.
S.S.S
A lle n .
“ It’s a mystery to me,” said Uncle Al
len Sparks, "that Senator La Folletta,
when he was counting up tho men that
control the money of the country, forgot
to include Mrs. Hetty Green.’*
FOR
BAD BLOOD
T h e m ost im p orta n t part o f the hum an system is th e blood. E v e r y m us
cle, n erve, tissue, bone and sin ew is depen den t on th is v ita l fluid for nour
ishm en t and stren gth necessary to m ain tain them in health and enable each
to p erform th e d ifferen t duties nature requires. E v e n th e heart, th e v e ry
“ e n g in e “ o f life , receives its v ig o r and m o tiv e p ow er from the blood. S ince
so m uch is d ep en d en t on th is v ita l fluid it can v e r y re a d ily be seen how
necessary it is to h ave it pure and uncontam inated j f w e w ou ld e n jo y the
b lessin g o f g o o d health. Bad blood is resp on sib le fo r m ost o f th e ailm en ts
o f m a n k in d ; w hen fro m a n y cause it becom es in fected w ith im purities,
hum ors o r poisons, disease in som e form is sure to fo llo w .
M u d dy, s a llo w
com p le x ion s , eruptions, p im ples, etc., sh o w th at th e blood is infected w ith
un h ealth y hum ors w h ich h ave ch an ged it fro m a pure, fresh stream to a
sour, acrid fluid, w h ich forces out its im p u rities th ro u gh th e pores and
gla n d s o f th e skin . A v e ry com m on evid en ce o f bad blood is sores o r ulcers,
w hich break out on th e flesh, o f t e n ______________________________
from a v e r y in sig n ific a n t bruise o r
Your S. S. S., in my opinion, is as good a
even scatch o r abrasion. I f the blood
medicine as can be had; it simply cannot be
was pure and h ea lth y th e place w ou ld
i mproved upon as a remedy to purify and enrich
heal at once, but b ein g loaded w ith
the blood and to invigorate and tone up the
system. This spring my blood was bad and I
im p u rities, w h ich are discharged in to
was run down in health, and having seen your
the wound, irrita tio n and in flam m a
medicine highly advertised I commenced its use.
tion are set up and the sore continues.
Today my blood is in fine condition and my
Bad blood is also responsible for
general health is of the best. Am filling posi
A n aem ia, Boils, M alaria, etc.; the
tion as fireman for a large concern here, and
w eak, p ollu ted circu lation cannot fu r
if I was not in good physical condition it would
n ish th e nourish m en t and stren gth
be impossible for me to fill the place.
Your
requ ired to sustain th e body, and a
8. S. S. has been of great service to me and I do
not hesitate to give it the credit it aeeerves.
gen eral run-down con d ition o f health
WM F. VANDYKE.
results.
S. S. S. is natu re’s blood
• I f Fifth Street, Beaver Falla, Penn.
u rifier and t o n ic ; m ade e n tire ly o f
eatin g, clea n sin g roots and herbs.
It goes dow n in to th e circu lation and rem oves e v e ry p a rticle o f im p u rity
hum or o r poison th a t m ay be there, restores lo st v ita lit y , and s te a d ily tones
up th e e n tire system . It add* to th e blood th e h ea lth fu l p roperties it is in
need o f, and in e v e ry w a y assists in th e cure o f disease. S. S. S. n eu tral
izes a n y excess o f acid in th e blood, m a k in g it fresh and pure, and p erm a
n en tly cures Eczem a, A cn e, T etter, and a ll o th er skin diseases and ernptions.
S. S. S. cures R heu m atism . Catarrh, Sores and U lcers, M alaria, and all
oth er diseases o r disorders arisin g from bad blood.
Book on th e blood and
any m edical a d vice desired free to a ll w h o w rite
THE SW IFT SPECIFIC CO., A T LA N T A , 04 .
Therm Im O n ly Ona
“ B ro m o Quinine 99
That Im
L a x a tiv e B ro m e Q uinine
•r.
Always
for
1
PUTNAM
thin
remember
signature
the full
on
name.
every
bos.
Look
tk e.
FADELESS
DYES