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d Insurance Left Service in But Doan'sSoon His Trouble. ing ea - hief 1i.,,t-wain SS. Navy. 471) M.dIford Mýae. ,a say: "Every I surnered ir,,m my kil a result of expo,,ure at sea. pra t cally an intal. l. iy kI ,iness |,ccame mr t., irregular all the time an:l some night- I was i reed't to get up etery half h' ur. The kidney secretioni burned !:ke tire and were filled with hrick-dust-like sediment. My j i nt swelled and were intiamed. I couldn't bend over to lace my shoes and had to be helped up and -ibt after my retirement I tried to get insured, but down ~.eau-" of kidney I ban tak:ne Doan's Kid. -d nued txt:., n boxes. By pmny sign of k:dney tr ,ub!e my daci was like iron; se pain left. I tried for and was. deci lr d a ve Doan's Kidney Pills me in p.rfect health." lad swuorn to before -tgaE L. DOHERTY. Notary Public. _ Am SAwe. -0 a llx AN'S IDNTL CO.. BUFFALO. N. Y. GPIN TOBACCO good kind" ft-and you know whu ... r rr- ,.b .r .rm.. btl. ea.... d·rk, - Now4-dajs, housekeepers who are particular, keep the livng room an d kitchen rores well polished wit bout hod, dirty work by uasing E-Z Stove Polish tAsN Msu - Radg is Shim Sserll Z-. try others and send es a im rtin. Mfrs. chicagD LOGGED UP HEAVY COLD? it a chance to W -"-use Dr. Kin's lre Discorvery dagerous stage where a or cough or case of grippe get the better of you may than you think. Prompt Dr. King's New Discovery a long siege. years It has loosened con s. dissipated tight-packed ,broken vicious colds and re it to the youngsters- If. There will be no dLsa er-effects. t$1.0 a bottle. At your Give it a trial Become Normal up, bile flows freely Sbiliousness, tongue-fur, disappear when Dr. Life Pills get in their Uortable action. never pleasantly corree. habit-forming, should to rack the system vio Sway Is the way of Dr. Life Pills-gently but Ing the iowels, eliml-. tstintloe-lggfr g waste, and te amost gratifying results. system with them and ossf regular bowels. 2Zo _ lEC A it with Sloan's befaor it gets Qe, don't rub. let it Pe. - 7 twinge! Same for pain, strains. stiffness mdes lameness, bruises. lIf without mussiness or Reliable-the biggest year after year. Eco *mo n of enormous sales. .bglt ready at ail times. - guit for Sloan's Lini 0. i.MAIL 3 I..is 514g., Kanas Litl. ho O'S -rL O!!S APES HELP MEN TO OUTWIT AGE Par.s Doctor Says Grafting of Tissues Brings Back Youth. EXPERIMENTS ARE SUCCESS Interstitial Glands Are Taken From Apes for Use in Treating Human Beings-Operation Is Quite Simple. Paris.-Rlestoratlin of youth Is no longer an ur .ncertainty, but by grafting of nerw inrrtlItial glands is us sulr as tit,. :u;. - of chetristry. Dr. L. II. Vori.ioff (d'el; z: i]. IDr. Voronotlf. director of the physic logical lalora:tory of the (',IlCt'- e of France. says the operutl ins are tsilple. The interstitial glands are taken friru Ialpes for use in treating human beings. "A local anesthetic is all that is necessa:ry," IDr. Voronoff said. "It is merely a task of opening the skin, In Serting the new tiksue, sewing up the slight wound, and nature does the rest." "Seven months ago," continued Dr. Voronoff. "I operated on a well known tarisan Inln of aflfairs, % ho at the age of 6-1 was in a decrepit .tatt,. The experitnlllt was a c'iiomplete success. Thoug;h his hair rertauinus white andl his faet' is wrinkled, he wal!ks eire'it. his uiuld is uis active alnd his alppetite La us good as that of a yun Illman. Defies Age With Another. "Three months ago I performed a sImilar grafting optration on aniother aged r:an. lEver-rthin in his case in dlicates th,, result will be the' same. blt It Is too early as yet to give a statte mlnt as to his renewed vitaity. "The secre t of my methodl is hbsedl on the following general knwhleg;e: In Various parts of thet botly, nature has lprvideid glands which secrete fluids havsin vital functioins in hiltlan organi!s. For instancet', If I renmove the thyroid lanid fromn a snisn's necl'k. he will Iecoiite nitl idiot within six months. Al-c- when the interstitiail glandes, whic. 'n:!nut:i'ture fluid whlich WAR MEMORIAL MADE FOR MONTREAL i~ir ......... .. ...: :¢ - ... . iii, A ii ,:,: ? r ' .. .5%>. .4. 1 . , .1...2 .::.. .. -A .. DiJvvhl Edltrl,,m of Net, YorL bedqitle tile nllzpreise war Illeluori:ll tie has ciecuted. The tablet is to be erected in honor of heroic dead at MontreaL rmnad-t. GERMANY SEEKS LOST TRADE Would Regain Her Prewar Place in Commercial World-Cunning Is Shown. Brussels.-Signs are not lacking here of the attempt being made by Germany to regain the place in the commercial world which she lost through the war. (;oods now in the market in Belgium are often typically German. They are supposed to have been Introduced se cretly Into the country via neutrals such as Holland and the Scandinavian countries. One outstanding feature of these goods, however, is the disappearance of the GCerman trademark, but the German cunning does not halt at this. The imperial crowns are now replaced by American eagles In an attempt to make the goods pass off as American, while others bear British and French trademarks. The names of German firms are completely absent, but the manufacture is too typically German to go undetected. IN SCRAP OVER MAUSOLEUM New York Woman Objects to Having Uncongenial Company in Her Last Resting Place. New York.-Miss Mathilda Carlson is sixty years old and has no present intention of dying. but, according to her own story told in supreme court. when her tilme does come, she does not want to await the Angel Gabriel's trumpet in unlllongenlal company. For upwalrds of forty years Miss Carlson told Justice Greenhaum, she and her sister. Sophia Carlson,. toiled as domestic servants in various New York households and saved their money with a view toward providing themselves with "suitable last resting places." With the accumulated sav nlgs a mausoleum in Woodluwn ceme tery was built. At the time the purchase was made the Carlsons made provision for the Interment of their nephew. Nila Fegel ¶ren. and his wtfe and daughter in 'be same vault. The two families f is absorbed by the blood, and tilus give-s to the wh-le body its vit::l!ty. I,,e c'rne worn iout or are retued. the whtle I.dly fall-l into decay. "Foreign tis.se',, which have thu, L nii iitrodutl Id into a i orti-out t . - Stteil aire ilourish.'dI byV the blood circu ilatlion of th* hdy hii'li Is the new hil,ie for the t1't-suis. It turn the tis - I.,s iaullfll:t ure a vital fluidl. which 'ir"il:htinl thr, ,ugh the body. restores it4 yointihful vior. ".S,,. eof mt mi ,t produitive exper It. it- wore earried out on an aied rli. Tihe rtuin att 14 eorrespoiinded in : t,' to a t:in lit 7'. Ir. so far as the &Xt:it-tion ofi or;ianuin.s is c4oncerned. "'Taking the eid, decrepit rain in Mnhy. 191. I put into his body intter -i t;:il Iglanis t:ikin frilill ia ioung rimtn. - Withii to niontihs hle hail r.gainedi f hi t, Iuiithl l -vij r ald activities. HELPS SOLDIERS TO SECURE JOBS Chlenig.-From n report just issllse by the blureau for returning soldiers :1and sailors alnd marineol in th!s city. it is possiblce to get adequate inforlma Lion concerning what has been done in behallf of thlli e of our returned dle felnd.ers who h:ave sought ellployllent iand other :id. In the di:trict of which Chicnago Is the leIh'vlU:rtters, the plan of the hu rea. for giving assisttnce to dis ch;large service men iLas fornmed by Maj. t:en. Letonarid Wood. who acts as the chalirman of the headquarters comi tI:;ttee, and who from the first has ia :eno person:tl intere-t In the work. The hullreau was established :last Apr!l and Its records today show that 43i.315 service men have registered a:t hiad qijarters. IOf this numbiter 2.Z.5) :isked for :sist:lnce in obteailnintg emplloy ment. At the present titme the files of the bureatu show that only 2.'-0 imen still remain t:tl th' "n'i,t hire'd" 1.<t. This nei,:cis that !4.:3 per cent of the meltn se'kilng e1l::;illy!i lit have CUTS BARLEY'S BEARD Professor Performs Feat of Benefit to Farmers. University of Alberta Agronomists Remove the Barb From Whiskers of Grain. Edmonton, Alberta.-Trimming the beard of barley is the accomplishment claimed by the agronomists at the University of Alberta this summer. Specifically what they d!d was to at tempt to remove the beard altogether, succeeding only in taking the barb out of the beard. This, it was de clared. Is of immense potential agri cultural benefit. It Is the barb in barley that makes all the trouble In handling and feed ing the grain, It ls said, and unsuc cessful efforts have been made for years both In Canada and the United States, to remove the beard. But with were then on good terms. Recently there was a falling out between the relatives and now Miss Carlson is s' eking to have the names of the Fegelgrens stricken from the mau soleum hdeed. The plaintiff said she and her sis ter paid $7,000 for the plot of ground and the mausoleum, which she testi tiedl. was built with a window in it and large enough for a person to walk about inside. The body of Sophia Carlson. who died a short time ago. is now entombed there. Bunko Cop Fines Stranger. Los Angeles, Cal.-"I thought he was a policemean and I paid him $30 he fined me for crossing the street." Ramon G. Gamboa. Mexican, explalned to the central detective bureau. "He told me I had no right to cross Central avenue." Gamboa was very angry when told he had been a victim of the new est kind of bunko artists working on ignorant foreigrmm "ThIn. In order to pirove it wag nut mere, 3 a fl::itier of good care that hadii eaule.l the change. I re:aii'.ed the gra (tel. gland-. I fount I heml in per feet statre, as t he hadl noirt beefln c444' l pletily issirlii.itedl by the rtrlneu e\d or Age Reclaims Victim. *Tlie raini i114444ilIte'iy a, "I and lie (:4Il. evenl Iin re l"crijlit tI itllII f Ire. I .rice noir. iutril~tic.rl the ;g'ai !g faun ay Y-: i zat. whiIhA I .L11iu pro Iu""wl youth and vigor. "lThere w'ill at he the slithtist Inn lIilltkey- ti -su, s lwhch I u-." !n tr..::t ug1e11 m.1 1111 Eti1II ay 1111A1 inrl y lvery iI.4l' ',IV rufhl1,t," that of tinan. I.iii'e the t .ti.e of I' the III aire P411.41 -iv lee~riolnnts in this lir.'.ti.zi :Ire 4411. lined Ia rgelv to4 ri"jtven:ititlt atrn.l j~r:441"al.Ie. I "! i4llt gill: raul.,". 1 ha~ve tItiirill the ii U4'.tii 1 r ItIiI idl4'"tiy My ýý.rki are ii f nn1 1\14ri11441:tl 11:4 11. Ii.~ 1 x11. n~ntgtyitv~ia fund It through the Instrumentality of the hbitraiat. Rumors Are Refuted. There have been rulmors \ hich some 'peopl have lieit busy in passlng :along to the effect that hutriais for aidirn tl:e olhliers and sailors to get re-eta:lli eld in civil life were not dl. in, n nhl ,;:;ae wiork. To a considerahle extent lhis sort of thing. It Is said, has been propaanlda for no gool pur lio'e. So far as the district which has *'hlcano for its headquarters is con Iorned, the attested records which Sh, w that t11.3 per cent of the anplpl a:ints have found work, spoak for Shernielve,<. In the d::ily life of the huritn there Is llllh to lie found of l:human !ntrest. Of tho 41.3415 non who regiterd :lout S.0INP naked for assistance along lines other than that of cmtployment. They wanted to secure vorcational training, to he g=Ven Information con ierning ilia'Iti n!i work. and in some ('anes there I'e. reqtIe t for clothing andl for terllnlrary loans. Every case was imet. (ilut of the groat luntiner of min who anlpl!ed at the bureau only 4:N. aItually needed food. Between 3.,() and 4.iwW) of the men did not know how to secure their honuses froml the government. Every man was toll how to go at it and every man got his money. Of the applicants for as sistance 3.-a00 have entered courses of voc:tional training. Much of Interest. The activities of the bureau as they have gone on day by day are tnterest ing to watch. From the returned sol diers and sallors one gets the after the-war viewpoint. The comments on the war and its aftermath and the 'onclusions which the men have drawn shosw almost invariably thoughtful cormidera tlon of the problems Involved. Col. IHalstead Iorey, who served with the Third Division In France and who was four times wounded. Is ac tively In charge of the Chicago bu reau. With him are MaJ. John S. Bonner. who formerly was a United States consul, and Lieut. W. E. Stan Iey, an ahl de camp of Maj. Gen. Leon ard Wood, and a son of former Gov ernor Stanley of Kansas. Bird Darkens Town. Eau Claire. Wis.-A hlacklird roost ing on the edge of an insulator of the Wisconsin-Mlnnesota Light and Power company's line resulted in shutting off of electricity between Altoona and Milwaukee for 20 minutes one eve ning. The current jumped the wire, electrctuted the bird and passed down the pole into the ground. the barb gone the experts say the beard doesn't particularly matter. If the claims made for the improved barley are horne out authorities hold It may become a staple variety of western Canada. Two varieties of harley are grown In Alberta-the two rowed and six-rowed. The former Is used for beer-making, but six-rowed barley Is the chief crop of central Alberta for feeding purposes. It is a sure crop. favored In mixed fr.rming regions, and yields from 40 to 50 bushels to the acre. Aged Woman Dances. - Marion, Ind.-One of the features of the annual reunion of the Octogena rian Club of Grant county held recent ly at Matter Park. was the dancing of old persons. Mrs. Sarah Jones, ninety-one years of age, one of the oldest women in the county, danced as an orchestra played tunes she had heard In her girlhood. Posed as Girl 22 Years: Paid $100 for Deception Harry Campbell, who said ihe had posed as a woman 22 years,. was fined $100 by Justice J. J. Shapard, at Kansas City, for impersonating a woman. Campbell, who went by the name of Henrietta Campbell, gave himself up to the police because a man threatened to re veal Campbell's impersonation. In court Campbell wore a wom an's dress and hat and would have passed for a woman ex cept for the two days' growth of beard on his face. lie said he had been a rooming-house keeper in many cities, posing as a woman. No Rent to Pay. There Is a city on the coast of south ern California which Is wholly built em stlts and whore no rent Is pau POLLEN IS QUITE ESSENTIAL Variety of Strawberries With Perfect Flowers Can Produce Fruit Planted by Itself. (Prcpar.rd by the i'nite.! Stat,'s Pe:art rment of Agricultur...) Tuw type.s o f flowertr, implrfect or pi-till:lte. and plirfec t or statninate, are produced by different strawhl rry varieties. Imperfct flowers conta:in pistils hut no st:amen, while perfect t11wer.rs 'ontain both. I'-lhler which is pr-lu',ed in the stamens is e.snti:al to the settinc of fruit. A variety with pe'rfet flowers, therefore,. can proitduce fruit when planted by itself, but one with imperfect tflwers a':nnot set fruit unless perfect-flowering plants are nea:r to furnish pollen through the " " S . With the Hedgerow System, Here Illustrated, More Berries Are Pro duced Than by the Hill System. agency of bees or other Insects. Where Imperfect varieties are used the usual t ractice in planting is to set one row of a perfect variety for every two or three rows of an imperfect one. tNew varieties are being constantly Introduced to the trade, but according to the bulletin, few of them possess any special value as compared with others already more or less well known, and most of them soon dis appear from the nurseryman's list. or, at least, remain of only local impor tance. HOW TO GRAFT APPLE TREES I First Thing to Do Is to Secure Young Trees About Size of Pencil Any Time in Winter. I-- To graft apple trees the first thing to do Is to have young trees a little larger than a pencil. Any kind of apple seed will do to plant to grow these trees, which should be planted during the fall. Any time until the 15th of March, these trees can be grafted. Cut the little trees off about six Inches above the ground, pulling the knife up ward and making a smooth slope or slant about one and one-half Inches , long. Split straight down the pith for about an Inch. Then take a limb of the current year's growth from any tree of a good variety, and Icut just reverse of the above, so that the two pieces will fit together. It would take a picture to show ex actly how this Is done. Wrap this well with grass or wax cord. In two years the trees are ready to plant in the orchard. NATIVES OF COOL CLIMATES Currants and Gooseberries Are Not Adapted to Long, Hot Summers of Southern States. (Prepared by the anited States Depart ment of Agriculture.) Both currants and gooseberries are natives of cool. moist northern cli mates and in the United States sue ceed best in the northern half of the country and east of the one hundredth meridian. They are Injured by the long, hot summers of the southern states, except In the higher altitudes of the Appalachian mountains. Even in Missourl and Kansas they do not succeed very well. They are not adapt ed to the hot interior valleys of Call fornia, but are grown in the northern coast counties of that state. SMALL FRUITS NEED MULCH Any of Ordinary Materiala Are Good for Raspberries, Blackberries and Currants. Any of the customary mulching ma terials are good for small fruits like raspberries, blackberries and currants. These are shallow roorers and the ground around them should be mulch ed for the winter. Strawberries should also be mulched but care must be exercised that the manure does not come in contact with the crown of the plant. If the weather is very severe and the plants very exposed it is not a bad idea to lay down raspberries and blackberries and cover them. Remove Superfluous Branobe. It is a good policy to look over yomng trees during the growing season and remove superfluous branches and shoots. Prepare Soil for Orchard. Land Intended for the orchard should be prepared early. Much depends up on thorough preparatioa of the soil Pick Apples Carefully. Pick the apples carefully without bruising if yoe want them to keep well. Net Contents 15Fluid Drachm I I I For Infants and Children. nk . __ Mothers Know That i -C 3 Genuine Castoria J. ý " ALCOHOL 3 PER ENT" So,tabkrcpV.m Always $imilatingtbood by l:"' Stmaionss ºan - Bears the --- l ty h;ODi 'stilt Signature STherect Prinoio he Ceffuness and R Cest.~taiO neither Opium.M rphice n Of . ineral. oTr A coirr 1 Aheipfu1RcmcYtfed U e Gonstlpaion and Di@2rroen | $ i and tep vrishnecs aIndk sta ...lo For Over ac Simile Si natcr r "SPO Thirty Years eaCASTORIA xoat opy ofd Wrppe. 4, tonure .. wr i cern. THE RIGHT WAY... L all cases of Distemper, Pinkeye, Influ* enza, Colds, etc. " of all horses, brood mares, coltn stallions, is to "SPOHN THEM" On their tongue or In the feed put Spobna' LIquid Compound. ;til, the r- na dpy to : il of th,.m. It na.,s on t:ae blod.I ;?aln e:. ndI . It routs the dia. ,t s by expeilng the disease germs. It wards off th.' trouble no matter how they are " ixl ,edi." .\bolut. ly fr,+e from any thin. iuuriov:. iA ct'uld can sfl" t ike it. Sold by druggists, harnes. dlealrs. or rent expr- ss pai I by the manu iacturers Slpecial Agentm s sated. SPOHN MEDICAL CO., GOSHEN, IND., U. S. A. No Wear and Tear. "Why IId yiiu alw:ays type your let te'r' ill heaui':" ">S v,s lr:yin f:a, ,lar ili, boy. I just t.ý1.' "M.Iy I :irlin;.' ;ind then tap aw:a.' at the .jolly chi X. ande-er-well, there youi are:"--I'.ar-sol't Weekly. HOLD ON TO YOUR HEALTH Health is the most important thing in life. but you can't be healthy unless you keep your liver working right. Today. go to your druggist and get a 25c bottle of Bond's Liv. r PIlls. Take one each night for two or three nights -you'll be surprised at the results. Bond's Liver Pills are better than lax atives - for they produce not only prompt relief, but lasting benefit Try Bond's Liver Pills. They will help you hold on to your health. Sold by all druggists at 25c.-Adv. Rather Twisted. "You iean believe anythilng Albert tells you." "I arnl glad ti lear:n lie is suc'h a voir:'aei.ous youllng IlIant." Baby's little dresses will just simply dazzle it ReId Cross Ball Blue is used in the laundry. Try It and see for your self. At all good grocers, 5c. The only etl'inrall;l'-eennt a loater has Is that Ihe can Ihold a plare as long as he w\ants ti). -- ~- - (4 oOne 3o can of Bee Dee Stock & Poultry Medicine Oeuuwrt caled Dmck-DansM Stock & Poetry Medicie) will make Two Big Sacks of Tonic Food. Thousands of stock and poultry ralsers make their own toek food in th way and SAVE MONEYI Bee Dee Stock & Poultry Medicine Is a coacentrated iver mdicine for chcken hogs, hoses, cattle shesp etc. It bhas b Used Successfully For Over 35 Years! Recommiaded for simple stock and poultry troubles, such as Constpation, Indigestion, Liver Troubles, Loss of Appetite and Colds. Buy a can, today; At Your Merchant's. oeeSo Wite for a co of the "Bee Dee Bee Almanac" to Dept. W., De Dee Sck SMdciea. Co.. Chaatasse. Time. Tells bow to teat stock and poultry desage nv Y eM r so b am a D.l Ems r" rykebberAsk if )as8 SEDEaangQ His Method. "Oh. MIr. S,.rihhblr." tcrihd the _ush Ing yotin :ulllll'.i r t0o the . we."l,';, f, l novt'li~t. "how 4104 ti . et i. r delight fill dialgtt"? Perfect '',..- 'inl- of life. I call it? Whe're do 3 ou ever iindl it'" "I'.rflc.tly ~c.i , I1my dear .young ladly," rellid ithe iifted. aillther. "I have a party linie. and %h ieiever I hwanlt alnyhin. ,,f the kind I imierely ilnhalbk the reeiv-r nlll Ii'ten fot r a fewv ininite.. It never fails."--',allnum State of Ohio, City of Toledo. Lucas County-ss. Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he It senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney & Co., doing bustness in tile City of To ledo, County and State aforesali and that said firm will pay the suln of oNE HUN DRED D ,LL.tARS for any case of Catarrb that cannot be tured by the use 01 HALL'S CATARRII MEDI'INE. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed Is my presence, this 6th day of December, A. D. 16. iSeal) A. W. Gleason. Notary Public. II.\LL'S CATAI~lih MEDIc'INF is taA en internally and arts thr,,ugta tlhe Blooi on the Mucous Surfaces of the system. F. J. Cheney & ('o., Toledo. Ohio. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio. A lbt of leophle :l4ic it hiot,.y i~s th, bes~t pIhlley lIe,'iui, they''v tritel both. It's a esie of ostill life whein the sp-iktely is run nil on the Eilliet.