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Weekly Watertown leader. [volume] (Watertown, Jefferson County, Wis.) 1908-1909, September 04, 1908, Image 3

Image and text provided by Wisconsin Historical Society

Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn85040723/1908-09-04/ed-1/seq-3/

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What Is Pe-ru-na.
Are we claiming too much for Peruna
when wo claim it to be an effective
remedy for chronic catarrh? Have wo
abundant proof that Peruna is in real
ity such a catarrh remedy? Let us see
%hat the United States Dispensatory
•ays of the principal ingredients of
reruna.
Take, for instance, the Ingredient
hydrastis canadensis, or golden seal.
The United States Dispensatory says
of this herbal remedy, that it is largely
•mployed In the treatment of depraved
mneous membranes lining various
organs of the human body.
Another ingredient of Peruna, cory
dalis formosa, is classed In the United
States Dispensatory as a tonic.
Cedron seeds is another Ingredient of
Peruna. The United States Dispensa
tory says of the action 6f cedron that
It Is used as a bitter tonic and In the
treatment of dysentery, and In Inter
mittent diseases as a substitute for
quinine.
Send to na for a free book of testi
monials of what the people think of Pe
runa as a catarrh remedy. The best
evidence is the testimony of those who
have tried it.
QUININE IN ITALY.
State Sells It and Uses the Profit to
Fight Malaria.
The sale of quinine in Italy is carried
on in a peculiar fashion. The government
sells the drug to the peasants in malari
ous districts and then uses the profit to
tight malaria.
The first aim is to protect the peasauts
from mosquitoes. But it is almost im
possible to get them to take care of the
wire screens which are given them for
their houses.
As for their './earing veils and gloves
when they go abroad, as they are urged
by the authorities to do, anybody who
knows the Italian peasants can guess
how many of them will do it.
The government has therefore to de
pend chiefly on draining and filling up
tiie pools where mosquitoes breed and on
what is called bonificamento, or the im
provement of the land in various ways.
Last year the government sold to the
peasants about $3100,000 worth of qui
nine, with a net profit of about $7d,000.
—New York Sun.
SICK HEADACHE
f 5 Positively cured by
PADTrDQ these Little Pill?.
l\ t Llaw They also relieve Dis
tress from Dyspepsia, In-
BNPITTLE digestion and Too Hearty
pa IW p Eating. A perfect rem
fhf 1 w edy tor Dizziness, Nausea.
m PILLS. Drowsiness, Bad Taste
JM " In the Mouth, Coated
Tongue, Pain In the Bide.
SSESS 1 TORPID LIVER. They
regulate the Bowels, Purely Vegetable.
SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE,
CARTELS! 6 enu * ne Must Bear
■IiTTiE Fac-Simile Signature
pt!s R
“MLlrefuse substitutes.
and Culicura Soap
In the promotion of Skin
Health, Cuticura Soap, as
sisted by Cuticura, the great
Skin Cure, is undoubtedly
superior to all other skin
soaps because of its influ
ence in allaying irritation,
inflammation, and clogging
of the pores, the cause of
disfiguring eruptions. In
antiseptic cleansing, in stim
ulating sluggish pores, in
emollient and other proper
ties, they have no rivals.
Sold throughout the world. Depot?: London, 57,
Charterhouse Sq. : Paris, 5, Kne <le la Pali: Austra
lia, R. Towns ,t Cos., Sydney; India, B. K. Paul,
Calcutta; China. Hons Rons Drug Cos.: Japan,
Waruva, Ltd., Toklo; Russia, Ferrein, Moscow;
So. Africa, Lennon, Ltd., Cape Town, etc.; tT.S.A..
Potter Drug Jt Chem. Corp., Sole Props., Boston.
aa-Post-free, Cuticura Book ou Cara of the Skm.
I
Kußmiiete'
I rcs gowas me) tms .
Vnu-ss-CC . v>- e
. a!t > ;
Stack Cover.
The accompanying illustration shows
a cheap device for covering a stack
of clover hay, where there Is no slough
grass at hand to put on top.
In making this cover common boards
may be used from 32 to 1G feet long,
a foot or more wide, putting one on
top of the stack first, then slipping one
on each side under the top one, about
two inches and fastening by driving a
common fence staple over a smooth
wire just at the edge of the upper
board, so as to make a sharp bend In
the wire ever the edge, and so on
down as far as wanted. Six or eight
boards on each side will generally be
sufficient; then fasten a post, stone or
STACK COVER.
weight of some kind at the end of the
wires and the thing is done. This ar
rangement also saves the trouble of
putting on hangers as it answers the
same purpose. Two wires to each length
of boards, about two feet from the
ends, and as many sections as may be
needed for the length of stack, putting
the middle section on last with the
ends lapping over the next one, is all
the material that is needed. In using
the hay a section of this cover may be
taken off by drawing out the staples
and the stack cut down so as to leave
the cover on the remainder. The same
boards can be used over and over again
for a number of years.
(ifl .After tlie Fly.
Flies are one of the most aggravat
ing pests we have on the farm. If
we give them a breathing spell the
poor cows, calves and horses have to
suffer and the, supply of milk will run
short. It is either “fight or lose.’’ It
is not sufficient to just spray the ani
mals with a fly-repelling mixture in
the morning and then turn them out to
pasture.
A few hours later, when I go to look
after them in the pasture, they are
often covered with blood-sucking flies
again, sc I take a hand-sprayer loaded
with a liquid of which kerosene forms
a large portion along and spray this
right upon the flies on each animal.
The cows soon learn that spraying
means relief and they will hold still
while you spray. The flies quickly let
go of their hold and fall to the ground
when the kerosene touches them. Vis
iting the animals once or twice a day
in this manner is a great help to them
during the fly season. —B. It. Johnson,
Illinois.
Guido for Dial! Sai..
Avery simple method by which one
man can manipulate a drag saw to
cut down trees lias been devised by a
Y J'-jg- Western timber
man. In using
these saws two
/pi-eC men have hereto
i fore been neces-
I sary, one at each
/T." of ,he s “";
A US\ Ihe arrangement
J , JL;' of tlie drag-saw
u < guide is shown in
___} the illustration.
glides THE saw. Resting against
the tree is a rod, from which is sus
pended a cord. At the end of the
cord is an adjustable clamp, to which
one end of the saw is secured. At the
other end of the saw is a handle. In
operating the saw to cut the tree, the
end opposite the handle is supported
by the cord in the same position as if
operated by hand. With the -employ
ment of this guide the necessity of an
extra man to manage one end of the
saw is eliminated.
A Help In Fruit Picking.
In commercial orcharding it is gen-i
erally most economical to have pick
ing and packing work going oil concur
rently. This saves putting the apples
on the ground and having to handle
them again. A portable sorting table
upon which pickers can empty their
bags is placed on low truck wheels and
a single horse can move it to any de
sired point as the work proceeds. It
should be made large enough to hold
not less than two barrels of fruit.
The rear bolster is higher than that
at the open end. so that the culls can
be rolled out. A long, heavy plank is
placed on the ground on each side of
this table on which the barrels are set
for filling. The culls are allowed to
roll into a pile from the lower end of
the grading table.
Potatoes and Dairying.
Potatoes are a crop that is well
adapted to most farms where dairying
is being carried on. They come at the
time of the year when the dairy work
is not pressing, and outside of digging
they are as easy to handle as the same
number of acres of corn. When we
buy large amounts of commercial food
stuffs and mill feed the amount of fer
tility removed by selling the potatoes
is more than offset by what is brought
on the farm by buying grain food for
the cows. Then the same amount of
help required to manage the dairy
work can handle the potato crop. Plant
a large enough field to make it profit
able to own a digger, as this saves the
nest disagreeable part of the work.
Preserving the Morgan Horse.
Colonel Battel! of Middlebury, Vt..
is entitled to the honor of preserving
the Morgan horse from extinction. lie
has enlisted the United States Depart
ment of Agriculture in the work of re
storing to its old-time standard this
beautlfu' horse, and for that purpose
has deeded to the government 000 acres
of pasture and woodland. The horses
now on the farm are headed by a stal
lion that cost $4,000.
Farming on Arid Land.
Successful farming on arid land with
out artificial watering has been
brought to the notice of the Agricultur
al Society of Germany, with an expla
nation of tiie method. In Syria and
Palestine, with practically no rain
from April to October, the fields in
July have a flourishing abundance of
watermelons, cucumbers, tomatoes and
other products, and plants continue
green and thriving until autumn The
secret lies in so plowing that the win
ter rains are absorbed and retained in
the subsoil. The plowing is shallow,
averaging only 4 to G inches in depth,
and after the full harvest it follows
each heavy rain as soon as the ground
begins to dry, the purjiose being to keep
a loose and friable surface to take up
the water from the subsoil. In the
spring the laud is plowed to a depth of
about G inches. The seed is dropped
by the plow upon the moist subsoil and
it is covered by the closing up of the
loose soil. Protected by the loose cov
ering, the subsoil furnishes sufficient
moisture for plant growth during the
entire dry season.
Denlroying Weeds.
In destroying annual weeds one
method is to disk the stubble fields,
causing the weed seed to germinate,
after which they can be killed by sub
sequent cultivation or by frost. Anoth
er method Is to turn live stock, espe
cially sheep into these stubble fields to
eat up the weeds and weed seeds. The
value of cultivated crops, rotations and
summer fallows is also discussed.
The eradication of perennials Is more
difficult than in the case of annuals.
B’or these they tried smother crops,
bare fallow, chemicals and tar paper.
For small areas of quack grass, cover
ing with tar paper was found effective,
but was too costly for field applica
tion. As quack grass is similar to Ber
muda grass in its habit of spreading,
and it equally persistent, this method
may lie of interest to those who wish
to kill small areas of Bermuda.
Tiie HorKe’s Teeth at Nine Years,
At nine years the mark in the corner
teetli of the upper jaw is clearly de
fined; the mark is still visible in the
middle teeth, but has almost disap
peared from the nippers.
A side view of upper jaw at nine
years. The point D is the indentation
usually seen in corner tooth.
Strawberry Borer.
Frequent crop rotation is the only
practical remedy for the well-known
strawberry crown borer. The infested
field should be burned over in the fall
and the next year planted to some
other crop, upon which the pest can
not thrive.
A ole* About the Farm,
The liens ought to have a little grain
every day all during the summer.
Feeding heavily on whole corn has
a tendency to induce hens to become
broody.
Try to arrange to give each horse on
the farm a three weeks’ vacation on
grass.
Keep the stables and the yards clean,
so that flies and insects have no breed
ing places.
Beets or mangel wurzels make fine
food for poultry. They should be
chopped tine.
Do nut fail to provide a shelter un
der which the young chicks can scurry
in case of sudden storms.
Boiled eggs should never be fed to
very young chicks and should never
be fed more than twice a week.
The poor cow seems to be continual
ly with us. Get rid of her and thus
reduce the cost of production.
Keep the milking stable darkened
and screened, and spray the cows
every day. It will pay in dollars and
cents.
The man who starts with little
money in the dairy business is likely
to make the most in the end. for he
must be careful enough to acquire the
habit.
Clover is a very valuable feeding
crop, because it contains so much of
the element of protein, which is the
element in feeding crops that costs the
most.
Acidity in milk is incipient decom
jiosition. and it is the most delicate
flavored oils which suffer first of all
among the fats of which butter is com
posed.
Eveby successful breeder has some
hobby, some originality that leads him
to improve some particular character
istic of his cows and improve them in
someone particular point.
Never dose a healthy horse. All he
needs is good care and good feed. The
good care includes, of course, regular
exercise. It is just as bad for a horse
to he 1 ! fhe time taking medicine as it
is fur > man. Do not da it.
vav.v.. v!viv^3
This woman says that sick
women should not fail to try
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound as she did.
Mrs. A. Gregory, of 2355 Lawrence
St.. Denver, Col., writes to Mrs.
Pintdiam:
“I was practically an invalid for six
years, on account of female troubles.
I underwent an operation by the
doctor’s advice, but in a few months I
was worse than before. A friend ad
vised Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound and it restored me to perfect
health, such as I have not enjoyed in
many years. Any woman suffering as
I did with backache, bearing-down
pains, and periodic pains.should not fail
to use Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound.”
FACTS FOR S!CK WOMEN.
For thirty years Lydia E. Fink
ham’s Vegetable Compound, made
from roots and herbs, has been the
standard remedy for female ills,
and has positively cured thousands of
women who have been troubled with
displacements, inflammation, ulcera
tion, flbroid tumors, irregularities,
periodic pains, backache, that bear
ing-down feeling, flatulency, indiges
tion, dizziness or nervous prostration.
Why don’t you try it ? >
Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick
women to write her for advice.
She has guided thousands to
health. Address, Lynn, Mass.
HUNTING WILD HORSES.
A Favorite Sport in New South Wales
—How Animals Are Broken.
Whether “brumby” is a survival of
the aboriginal name for a wild horse or
a corruption of “uubranded,” appears
to be a question which philologists have
left undecided, but brumby hunting is
still a favorite sport in New South
Wales.
Districts like the Clarence and Ste
phens and Manning river watershed are
still the home of numerous droves of
brumbies, and hunting them is declared
to be a very exhilarating pastime. The
first step taken is to stake out a corral
and make all secure except a narrow en
trance, which can subsequently be gated.
On either side of the entrance and pro
jecting from it fuuuelwise a "booby
fence” is prepared.
To the simple minded brumby it pre
sumably looks like a stockade, aud
pieces of fluttering cotton make it look
impregnable. When this is ready the
young bloods, well mounted, gallop out
aud x-ound up the wild horses, driving
them with shouts and much loud snap
ping of stock whips toward the mouth
of the funnel.
In a group of brumbies there is al
ways a leader, aud when,once the hunt
ers have got the leader heading for the
corral they are pretty certain of ■he rest
of the drove. The fluttering cotton rags
of the sham fence are sufficient to deter
the brumbies from breaking through the
flimsy barriers, and in less time than it
takes to tell the wild horses are safely
corralled and the big gate shut on them.
Then they are left for four and twenty
hours without food and water to reflect
on the situation, and fter that they
can be broken in without much difficulty.
—London Standard.
Tea Much Maligned.
One is always being warned against
tea as bad for the nerves, but one con
tinues to drink it aud seems none the
worse. We think tea must be maligned
to a great extent. A survey of the cus
toms of Russia has convinced us of this.
Russians drink tea which is composed of
the stems of the plaut compressed by
adhesive gum into cakes of various sizes
at the rate of about twenty pints a day.
If human beings can stand that sort if
thing then we hold that the ordinary tea
consumed in England cannot do much
harm. It is curious how the success of
one’s day really depends on tea. The
practice of taking a cup in the morning
before breakfast has become almost uni
versal nowadays. One’s state of mind
for at least a part of the day depends
almost entirely on Avhether this cup is of
the right sweetness aud temperature or
not. Men have done their best to break
up happy homes by exhibitions of ma
tutinal temper, which might have been
avoided had their morning cup of tea
been satisfactory. Aud it is a well known
fact that woman deprived of her after
noon tea becomes a thing of nerves and
irritability. Tea is like tobacco. It must
be taken in moderation and not too
strong. And it has this advantage, that,
unlike coffee, it does not suffer from
“just as good” imitations.—London
Globe.
Children’s Fishing Contests.
Five hundred children from Sheffield,
members of the Rechabile lodges aud
bands of hope, have had their annual
outing and fishing competitions at Eck
ington, Derbyshire. This is the sixteenth
year of the competition, which begun
with thirty-two children. The children
pay three-halfpence a week, and each
child received a prize worth S shillings o
pence, while the thirteen who caught
fish received extra prizes proportionate
to their catch. The catches ranged in
weight from a quarter of an ounce to 2
ounces.—London Standard.
REMAINS THE SAME.
Well Brewed Poatam Always Pala
table.
The flavor of Postum. when 'b f Jed
according to directions, is always the
same—mild, distinctive, aud payable.
It contains no harmful substance like
caffeine, the drug in coffee, and hence
may be used with benefit at all times.
“Believing that coffee was the cause
of my torpid liver, sick headache and
misery in many ways.” writes an Ind.
lady, “I quit and bought a package of
Postum about a year ago.
“My husband and I have been so well
pleased that we have continue to
drink Postum ever since. We like the
taste of Postum better than coffee, as
it has always the same pleasant flavor,
while coffee changes its taste with
about every new combination or blend.
“Since using Postum I have had no
more attacks of gall colic, the heavi
ness has left my chest, and the old,
common, every-day headache Is a thing
unknown.” “There's a Reason.”
Name given by Postum Cos., Battle
Creek, Mich. Read “The Road to Well
ville,” in pkgs.
Ever read the above letter? A
new one appears from time to time-
They are genuine, true, and full of
human interest.
CLEVELAND—THE COMMONER.
He Was Fond of Old Clothes, Simple
Life, and Was Unaffected.
Of all the heterogeneous celebrities
whom it has been my business to meet,
I have never known one as simple and
unaffected as Grover Cleveland. He had
absolutely none of that veneer of vanity
which makes most great men ridiculous.
He was the only Democratic Presi
dent since 1SC1: and no career in Amer
ican history had been more triumphant
and sensational than his; yet he contin
ued to the last to be as simple-natured
and as ready to listen to the small talk
of the people, as though he had speut
his life raising chickens on a bush farm.
The older he grew, the more attached
he became to the simple life of the coun
try. He was fond of old clothes and
loose slippers and the soft grassy earth.
Once he told me with great gusto how
George Washington fled to his farm
from the flatteries and intrigues of pub
lic life, writes Herbert N. Casson in the
New Broadway Magazine.
“In 1797,” he said, "when the coun
try demanded that Washington should
leave his farm and return to public life,
he squealed like a pig. lie always pre
ferred his farm to the while house.”
He had no aristocratic instincts—not
one. He was a commoner to the core.
Every man was a man. to Grover Cleve
land. The richest individual had no
glamour; and the poorest had no smudge
in his eyes. One morning, while he was
dictating an interview, a very ragged
tramp came up the path to the house.
Mr. Cleveland opened the door, listened
to the man’s story, and sent him away
with half a dollar and a "good luck to
you.”
"Who is that man. papa?” asked little
Dick Cleveland, who had been romping
in the hallway.
“That is a poor man out of a job,
Dick.” replied his father. "He is a long
distance from his home, and he is try
ing to walk back.”
A Grateful Concession.
The Reporter—My dear, I'm going to
try to tell you the story of my great
love for you. I’m afraid 1 can't find
words properly to express my feeling,
but
The Society Editor (interrupting)—
You may boil it down to a stickful,
George.—Brooklyn Life.
Too Early.
“You’ll have to pay your subscription
to the paper in advance, hereafter,” said
the country editor to the caller.
’•But I hain’t got no vegetables up yit!"
replied the bearded farmer.—Yonkers
Statesman.
CURED HER CHILDREN.
Uirl Suffered tilth Itching Kczemii
—Baby Had a Tender Skin, Too
Helled on Cutlrura Kemedlea.
“Some years ago my three little
girls bad a very bad form of eczema.
Itching eruptions formed on the backs
of their heads which were simply cov-
I tried almost everything, but
fmled. Then my mother recommended
the Cuticura Remedies. 1 washed my
children's beads with Cuticura Soap
and then applied the wonderful oint
ment. Cuticura. 1 did this four or live
times and 1 can say that they have
been entirely cured. I have another
baby who is so plump that the folds of
skin on his neck were broken and even
bled. I used Cuticura Soap and Cuti
cura Ointment and the next morning
the trouble h*td disappeared. Mine.
Napoleon Duceppe. 41 Duluth St.,
Montreal. Que.. May 21, 1907.”
—Three out of the four of the Old
South prizes given in Boston have been
won by girls.
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES
Color more goods brighter and faster colors (ban any other dye. One lOc package colors all fibers. They dye In cold water he.ter than any ether dye. Too can dye
any garmcL't wilhool ripping apart. Write for free booklet How to Dye. Bleach sod Nix Colors. MOJ'/'ROE T>K.\o G CO., Quincy, IHinoij
Come to the WISCONSIN
J3L STATE FAIR as Our
/JA Guest - Let Us Pay
/JUrol our x P® ilses
\Y/ E WILL PAY every cent of your expenses from the |M
time you leave home until you get back there —we will B
■ pay } r our railroad fare, hotel bills and the entire cost of B
I mm We make this unparalleled offer simply that we may B
fi have a chance to show you our extensive stock of slightly B
I Jill used automobiles. We have some of the greatest bargains &■
S PV/jjBSSB * n automobiles that you ever saw. The prices range from M
S6OO to SI2OO and many of the machines cost from double B
Um yßk Now, we want you to come and look these machines over fl
Jy|r when you are in the city. We have bargains on our floors fl
which you cannot afford to overlook if you have any thought m
at all of purchasing an automobile and if you find a machine B
-wuurfiau MMiitnm that SU A S you and purchase it we will refund you the entire Ip
C ost of your trip. •• >;
‘ YOU OUGHT TO OWN YOUR OWN AUTO” I
PR?CES The day of the horse for trips to town is rapidly passing B
and the automobile is coming more and more ihto common 3|
S6OO use. Do not overlook this opportunity to inspect our stock IM
to of automobiles. You owe it to yourself to see them. L
Ig* afi And if you buy you effect a double saving — -you get a m
good machine at an extremely low price and at the same time B
CASH have a FREE TRIP to the Wisconsin State Fair. fz
RamblerßarageCompany of Milwaukee. I
455-459 BROADWAY PHONE MAIN 1139 j||
CUT OFF" TWE COUPON AND MAIL. IT" TO U S §Ht
RAMBLER GARAGE COiVSPANY OF MILWAUKEE. p
lam interested in your proposition, and will probably he in to look over your stock on or m
about September ...., 1008. ||
I —————— l ’osf-ffi-'r State
QUEER WEDDING EFFIGY.
Mock Attention Paid by Bride’s Party
to Bridegroom’s Relatives.
There is a curious custom still preva
lent in the Bellary district of India in
connection with the wedding ceremonies
among certain Brahmin families.
Just prior to the close of the feasting,
a hideous effigy of a male figure, fan
tastically robed in rags, supposed to
represent the bridegroom's father, is
carried along the streets in procession,
under the shade of a sieve adorned with
tassels of onions and margosa leaves.
Every few yards during the procession
the feet of the effigy have to be reverent
ly washed and its forehead decorated
with a caste mark by its living spouse,
the bridegroom’s mother. The bride
groom's other female relatives have sev
eral mock attentions paid to them by the
women of the bride’s party.—Loudon
Standard.
HER GOOD FORTUNE.
After Year* Spent in Vain Effort.
Mrs. Mary E. H. House, of Cam
bridge. N. Y., says; “Five years ago
1 had a bad fall and It
affected my kidneys.
Severe pains in my
back and hips became
constant, and sharp
twinges followed any
exertion. The kidney
‘i secretions were badly
j. disordered. 1 lost
H ~ flesh and grew too weak
to work. Though constantly using
medicine 1 despaired of being cured
until 1 began taking Doan's Kidney
Pills. Then relief came quickly, and
In a short time I was completely cured.
I am now in excellent health.”
Sold by all dealers. r>o cents a box.
Foster Milburn Cos.. Buffalo. X. Y,
Blessing Free.
“And will you give ns your blessing?”
asked the eloping bride, returning to
the parental roof.
“Freely,” replied the old man. “No
trouble about the blessing, but board
and lodging will be at regular rates.”
—The United Presbyterian.
One Tiling that Will Live Forever,
PETTIT'S EYE SALVE, first box sold
in 1807, over 100 years ago, sales increase
yearly. All druggists or Howard Bros.,
Buffalo, N. Y.
—ln amount of capital of national
banks New York U>ads with $157,057,-
000, with Pennsylvania next and Ohio
third. Pennsylvania, w’th 704, leads in
the number of national banks, with Tex
as second and Illinois third.
WE SELL GUNS A.VI) THAI'S CHEAP
& buy Furs & Hides. Write for catalog 105
N. W. Hide & Fur Cos., Minneapolis, Minu.
—ln a well-proportioned man the dis
tance between the tips of the middle
fingers when the arms are stretched our
laterally should be equal to the length
of his body.
MRS. WINSLOWS SOOTHING SYRUP for
Children teething: softens the gums, reduces In-
Bammatlon. allays iiain, cutes wind colic. 23
cents a buttle.
—Acting on the suggestion of Mrs.
George F. Lowell the women of Newton,
Mass., are investigating the question
whether the women teachers of Newton
are getting fair pay.
K? ■ *W“ St. Vitus' Dance anti Nervous Diseases per
■ II ilianenl l.> cnri'd by Dr. klinea Ureal Nerve
Restorer Send for KRKK dtt.OO trial bottle and treatise.
DR. R. H. KLIM:. Ld„ 9SI Arch Stieet. Philadelphia, Fa
—A Siamese jungle is described as a
forest of fish hooks and knives laced
together with barbed wire.
Cupid carries his bow and arrow in
one band and a copy of Brudstreet’s in
the other.
The
General Demand
of the Well-Informed of the World has
always been for a simple, pleasant and
efficient liquid laxative remedy of known
value; a laxative which physicians could
sanction for family use because its com
ponent parts are known to them to b
wholesome and truly beneficial in effect,
acceptable to the system anti gentle, yet
prompt, in action.
In supplying that demand with its ex
cellent combination of Syrup of Figs and
Elixir of Senna, the California Fig Syrup
Cos. proceeds along ethical lines and relic*
on the merits of the laxative for its remark
able success.
That is one of many reasons why
Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna is given
the preference by the Well-Informed.
To get its beneficial effects always buy
the genuine—manufactured by the Cali
fornia Fig Syrup Cos., only, and for sale
by all leading druggists. Price fifty cents
per bottle.
“PICKLES AND PEPPERS.”
The Great March and Two-Step.
Of the numerous marches and two
steps submitted to campaign managers
"Pickles and Peppers” has been selected
ns the one with the most catchy melody,
it is said by many to be greater than
"Hot Time.” If was written by a Wis
consin woman and it is considered the
best Uag march ever published. A.
piano copy will he mailed to you for 17c
by addressing the publisher, Joseph
Planner, Milwaukee, Wis. Complete
catalogues free.
TOILET ANTISEPTIC
Keeps the breath, teeth, mouth and body
antisrptically clean and free from un
healthy germ-life and disagreeable odor*,
which water, soap and tooth preparation*
alone cannot do. A —^
germicidal, disio- ~^
feeling and deodor- f - \
izing toilet requisite y ;
of exceptional ex
ceilcnce and econ- i &SL
omy. Invaluable 'itf
for inflamed eyes,
throat and nasal and SjV ;-2?3
uterine catarrh. At ||il
drug and toilet IwC-'g® I til
•tores, 50 cents, or 3ft' rr
by mail po u tpaid. lay*; ‘ Itr
Large Trial Sample
WITH '*H UIiTH AND BUUTV" BOOK MNT re
THE PAXTON TOILET CO., Boston, Nlasi.
FOR SALE h;:,t'r.".rs
“ v vj-na m- WIJLF COAST
TEXAS LANDS, (ktnenl far in lug, fruit, truck raining N*
Inigatiou. Rich noil, £o**l wafer and sKcellent climate Sumuur
and Winter Writ* for |uirtl<'ulars, low rate excursion. eta.
i;. I>. lIIKU CO.. Ifrir Mftrtjar 110 Uldff-, i hlcuir*
Illf n't, ’ Ttiompson's Eye Water
M. N. U NO. 36, 1008
WHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS
please say you saw the Advertisement
in this paper.

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