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JTHE PROFESSIONS ATTORNEYS H. C. LOUNSBERRY, :,, ATTORNEY Probate aw and matters pertaining to settlements of estates made a spe cialty. Abstracts examined. Notary public. Ofl'ice over 105 East Main street. F. L. MEEKER SMARiHALtTOWN, IA. EXAMINATION of ABSTRACTS BANKRUPTCY proceedings and PRO BATE] matters given special attentioa. Office. 16 Weit Main 8treet, MARSHA Ll.TOWN .... IOWA F. E. NORTHUP, Lawyer OVER LuShelle's Cigar Store Marshailtowri, Iowa. P. L. HAYZLETT, Lawyer Office Over Whitton & Whitehead Ct 31 WEST MAIN ST. Q.C. CASWELL Attorney Probata Law Given Special Attention, Estates Economically Settled, Ab stracts Examined, Notary .•••• Public. .' v* -r Ov«r State Bank MARSHALLTOWN .... IOWA &ENTI8T DR. F. L. HUMESTON •v DENTIST DENTAL PARLORS Over Whitton-Whitehead Co. ALL WORK GUARANTEED PRICES REASONABLE Office Hours' 8 to 12 and 1 to 9 S. MILLARD, Justice of the Peace FIRE AND TORNADO INSURANCE, SURETY BONfrS. -NO. SOUTH FIRST AVENUB Now 'Phono 909. PHYSICIANS and SURGEONS. DRS. I. II. 1 UC. FRY HOMEOPATHIC PHYSICIANS -V and SURQEONS. General practice. Mrs. Fry makes dis eases of women a specialty. I. K. Fry, the eye. ear, nose and throat a special ty. Office and residence in the 102.t3.04 West Main. Glasses Fitted. DR. THOMAS ARNOLD PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Over Wheeler & Hoag'a , r- Drug Storo "I MARSHALLTOWN towA Telephone 895—2 Rings. DR. GEO. JOHNSON A Physician and Surgeon Office, Binford Block, Phono 617 Whlto A Corner Mlain and First 8ts. MARSHALL/TOWN IOWA OCULISTS AND AURIST8 THE WOOD Sanatarium Throat Catarrh GLASSES FITTED. DR. PERCY R. WOOD —Specialist— Opposite Pilgrim Hotel. Established 1893 1ARSHALLTOWN IOWA DR. F. P. LIERLE SPECIALIST Eye. Ear, Nose and Throat Catarrh Glasses Properly Fitted •fremont Blook, Marshalltown, Iowa. ARCHITECTS CHAS. H. EGKMAN ARCHITECT Room 13 Woodbury Building HAR&HALLTOWN IOWA J. M. BYRENS MCHITECT t. SUPERINTENDENT {V: MARSHALLTOWN, IOWA, 1 and 2 Kibbey Bldg. Li AUCTIONEER M. M. KENDALL, Auctioneer, j-op a good general mercaan. false stock. Invoice $6,000. pop fta|e Hardware, all good, o.aan Mads Invoice about $2,500 also good friST building in the heart of town. ^Thatfse^al good properties to sell »t a bargain. Make your sale dates with fce, Office 'yhone_64 residence 4o7 red. *, /. sraf-^r r, J. M. HOLT, Attorney Published Daily By The TIMES REPUBLICAN PRINTING CO. TERMS: Evening edition by mall $5.00 By the month by mall 46 Delivered by carrier by the month. .50 Later edition for morning circu lation 4.00 i-turai route edition per year 4.00 Twice-a-Week edition, per year.. 1.00 Entered at the pocioffice at Marshall town as second class mall matter. EASTERN OFFICE R. J. Shannon, Manager, Brunswick Building, New York. N. Y. The Association of American Advertisers has examined and certified to the circulation of this publication. The detail report of uuch examination is on file nt the New York ofhco of the Association. No other figures ot circulation guaranteed. A BRAVE OLD MAN. Ex-Governor Hoies is an example of brave old man one of those who refuse to die before their time and go living in. the world, part of its •activities despite 'the advance of years and the knowledge that death Is not many months away. He is past SO year." old, but ho has just bought a California ranch he proposes to plant with orange trees. And theso trees can not be expected to bear fruit under a live-year period. 1.. Whether or not he lives to gather where he is sowing he bas done a brave thing and one that .stamps the man who does it ws the right kind. Too many men "lie down" under tho weight of years or affliction and look forward to death with a lamblike sub mission. The old governor refuses to die until his time comes. His interest In life remains because he keeps on living and refuses to become a living corpse. He is brave, and his bravery may bring him past -his 85th year to eat the fruit of his orange grove. Let old men take example and cour age from Governor Boles. There is nothing in life but what wo put Into It. The secret of a happy and brave old age is In the interest men retain in their fellows and the world they live in. Many a man Is dead ait forty and doesn't get ready to be buried un til he has existed years after his de mise to all practical and useful pur poses, while others like the old gov ernor keep on planting* and sowing content to reapUhe harvest if they may buit serene in the knowledge that it will be reaped when it has come *.o fruition, if not by themselves by those who, shall need it more than they. DESERVED REBUKE. The rebuke administered to Jamieson by the senate yesterday was deserved. The senator from Page county was willing and anxious to make such capi tal for himself and his party as he might toy fourflushing in the face of work to be done with a lond-vvinded rigamarole calculated to advertise Jamieson and to do little else. The senate shut him up, pushed him out of the way, and went on working, after the fashion of state senates. The impression forces itself that "there Isn't much to Jamieson." He is one of the accidents of politics, a senator because a better man moved out of the state and left a loophole whereat Jamieson crept in over an unpopular candidate a congressman succeeding a man of the most marked ability because his predecessor thru long years of officeholding forgot the source of his elevation and remem bered too well the politicians and in terests commoners .believe opposed to the agricultural interests and the square deal. From an Incubator of un toward circumstances and party fac tionalism Jamieson was hatched. He was a casualty in a collision between popular disgust and congressional neglect a result of deafness walking on the tracks before the engine of popular disapproval. Mr. Jamieson appears to be a very ordinary man of a very mediocre type. That he is axdemocrat is neither here nor there. Dan Hamilton Is a demo crat, and the state was not ashamed of him on the delegation. Jerry Sulli van is a democrat and a man big enough for the state to be proud of. Mr. Jamieson Is a very respectable sort of citizen and a good fellow to meet, but he will rattle around in Pete Hepburn's seat like a mustard seed in a brass kettle. It Is a supreme pity that Hep burn might not have deserved and kept the confidence of his district and the state at large, for Jamieson is not of Iowa congressional size. A PRODUCT GF CARELESSNESS. The jail at Eldora holds a product of carelessness—and something more. When Winters goes out to the gallows or the penitentiary this product will have been fairly finished—for he is a product of manufacture more than in heritance and we must not deny our responsibility. •He read cheap novels that glorify Crime or at least invest it with a quasi heroism and admired its heroes to the point of emulation. But many a boy has had the dime novel period and turned out a decent man and good citizen. There was more behind his criminal outbreak than dime novels and the impulse toward crime. He wae lazy. Most boys are if they are permitted to follow their own course. Wit iiout doubt ho hated sell owl. Hoys naturally gravitate to the river bank and a fish pole if they are left to (heir own devices. He sought evil com panionship, for the Idle and ignorant di-generate, easily. The lack of parental authority breeds contempt for parental command and resentment at parental interference. This boy has been ill managed. Ho was instinctively bad. with a mental tendency to degeneration and. a. moral obliquity that seems to have had little to Oppose it. None of tills perhaps falls on t.lio community, but the community had its leg .hand In the manufacture of .tho tin- I,'J"1"111 islieil product. As ho grew older ho toted a gun. Dozens of people knew it. Without doubt peace and police nfli cers knew it. No youth packs a pist about, with him in a small town or a country community without the knowl edge that he carries jt becoming gen eral. When he came to manhood he added another and went about a peace ful land armed as for a wild and des perate country. There came to him I tho abiding sense that lie.carried men's The IS.000 lives in the holsters beneath his arm land, O.. wl pits and to the degenerate and tho fool the ability to deal out death at an instant's warning is an Incentive to murder. Without doubt mon said to one another, "that follow will kill some one some time." But lie continued to carry pistols and defy the law. And thousands of other fools and degener ates are toting guns and growing to ward homicide as he did. He had no trouble buying a revolver. No fool does. Any criminal can get a gun as easily as a loaf of bread If he has the price. The hardware stores s*ll them as they do fishhooks. The catalog houses feature them. Any degenerate Wiith money can arm himself with tho lives of a community without ques tion. And most of them can carry concealed weapons without fear of arrest or even search. What does any person want or need of a murderous revolver in a country like Iowa? As a defense? The lack of a pistol is usually the best defense for men who carry large sums rarely are foolish enough to depend on personal prowess for their defense. How little a pistol means against a desperado with the "drop" Is Illustrated by tho fato of Trimble whose motion in reach ing for his poeketbook was miscon strued by his murderer and doubtless brought on his death. There is little defense in a pistol. Nine-tenths of tho men who are packing them about have nothing to defend. Why do they carry them? We woi '.d have less of the product lying in jail at Eldora if fathers and mothers did their duty. There would be still less of it were officers less slack with the pistol toter. How many guns are being Jugged about every town today without a thought spent upon the consequences and possibili ties wrapped up in their cylinders? Wouldn't it be surprising if their owners were gathe. ?d In some morn ing, -their arsenals confiscated and' the limit of the penalty applied? And wouldn't it be an excellent) thing for Iavv and order and a feather in the cap of the chief of police who made the "pistol toter" walk in fear and gave others the sense of security that enforced law brings? Why not try it and limit the product? Topics of the Times. Harry Thaw Is coming west. Harry should forget his effete eastern meth ods of gun play the first thing after he crosses the Appalachians. Otherwise: he wiU not be likely to ®et far^heur th4"? Omaha, where somewhat of the old western spirit and accuracy of aim still exists. When a man meets you in January and asks "is this hot enough for. you?" do your duty. Lieutenant Governor Clark seems to Representative Boettger, of Scott has his sixth bill filed. His special stunt is the raising of the salaries of county officers. He Is the youngest member of the house and probably feels that he is still in line for a county office. •Senator Gill-Hand is busy making a poet laureate out of "Tac" Hussey. It is a -tacky proposition as appears on the face of it. The Iowa City Republican is worried over what might happen were the gov ernor empowered to remove derelict Henzoate of soda has received "Of course It Is all right for those who want to go to California to do so. But they are missing a winter that is open In tho en can have old fashioned notions. He assumes compelled to do their duty. This that the state senate is in Des Moines once accomplished the value of these to work. and incompetent officials. A number of the Webster City Freeman-Tribune. High Price of Lumber and the Tariff The destruction of the forests and the ruin that has followed, together with the high price of lumber that has naturally resulted, has awakened in tense interest in these states in forest conservation and in the repeal of the luanber tariff, which is generally re garded as intimately associated with conservation. In fact, many of those years. As the cost of labor and other deeply interested in forest conserva- Items entering into the cost of produc tion regard the tariff of $2 to $3.50 per thousand as a virtual reward for the more rapid destruction of the remain ing forests. The better grades of fin ished lumber are entirely kept out of the import .trade by the tariff, and the volume of lower grades reported Is greatly restricted by the $2 tariff. So, with the demand for lumber growing! publication above referred :to, -which, 10 per cent per annum notwithstanding I of course, contends for the retention the introduction of cement and other of the lumber tariffs, says: substitutes, the tendency is to apply "In spite of all the explanations Tfntea-iiqnTURcm^ TOarsliiantmwtr §ta£ |[ammn 2S IOC9 editors close to interests that find a complaisant county attorney handv as a pocket a shirt, feel the same wnv. Thev «.rc afraid of what might, hap pen. ft The best .thing about the multiplica tion o! legal holidays 'Is that each cuts one dav ot pernicious activity off the saloon business. A Jap movement always brings a corresponding lingo yap movement. Helen- tllic sanction It has been led to ool- I cent years as Jumher and building ma legc men and thev survived. Hut a col- 1 man who can stand on a depot II for an hour about find lioilung oug it to be able to withstand, ,ivft nary persons. California Is considering a law to .prevent foreigners owning land in the state. However there Is no movement, on to prevent Californlans from re ceiving money from "lungers," selling orange plantations to the easy mark from tho interior or handling the: ftranger a package of "mining stock." young people of Cleve pledged themselves to live a.s Jesus Christ would for a period of two weeks, ended the experiment Inst Suifday with enthusiastic meet ings. and most of them promised to continue so to live for the rest of their lives, thus making the movement a permanent one. W. D. Price, the school student who started the movement, said hp would exert every effort to spread It to other cities. IT these young' people actually try to live up to the literal injunctions of the sermon on the mount them will soon be a shortage of overcoats. However they may pay most attention to the command which would enjoin a young woman to walk two miles with the young man who asks her to walk one. Since the T'nited States began work on the Panama canal in May. 1904, the excavation has been 59,000.000 cubic yards, of which .17.000,000 cubic yards, yards, of which 37.000,000 Is credited to the year 1908. Tho excavation part of the work can now be closely esti mated. The Nebraska legislature Is consld- er'nS' a requiring hotels to be in- speeted annually and that all bedding be aired at least once every three months. Clean bed linen and individual towels are to be provided. The three months' interval between airing bed clothes is one of the strong points in the bill. ICWA OPINIONS AND NOTES. The Sioux City Journal fears "the man who fails to get a bill thru the legislature will return to his dom icile with the stigma upon him of hav ing done nothing for his constituents." "Yes, Governor Carroll's message was a little wea kand badly rambling," says the Charter Oak Times, "but Mr.1 G-arst had used all the good thunder. accepted Mrs. Miller's generous offer and he had to take what was left over. gjve free to every sufferer a regular That is the disadvantage a man is in. .... .. n-i„, treatment of her mild home who becomes the third governor of a great state within the short space at From every civilized country come ten weeks." thousands upon thousands of kind. "If the fool killer would get busy: among the members of the vaVious "Let's don't fool ourselves by believ ing that we would bo better satisfied if the circle was placed back on the ballot again," says the Mason City Times-Herald. "There would soon be a demand for its removal. While we have It off, let's leave it off." j(](iie," remarks the Dav- *nport Democrat "No state in the union has done more than has the state, of Iowa far Its blind and deaf children. But it has lain dormant for a long number of years," points out the Vinton Eagle. "It has not done what it could have done. An effort is being made now to develop some plan whereby the par-j «__j |3e reached so that they may children can not Eagle hopes the its work." be computed. The state will complete "Give state reporters more pay," de mands the Des Moines News. "The1 fact that Iowa pays the lowest com pensation for the services of its cour»-. reporters should be sufficient cause for a careful consideration of the bill now before the general assembly providing foS( '^plight.advance." "What geese these geese are to come north in January," exclaims the Sioux Ci'ty Tribune. "There is plenty of time to consider Dolliver's successor," calmly obsrves the axe and saw without mercy to the timber that still stands. Few persons, even regular buyers of lumber, fully realize how greatly lum ber has increased^ in price in recent years. According to a lumber trade publication white pine has ascended in wholesale list price all the way from 83 to 1S9 per cent in the last fifteen tion has not at the outside increased more than 25 per cent, this tremend ous increase largely reflects the dimin ishing supply of white pine and rep resents profits either for the manufac turer or the owner of the timber. White Pine's Fate the End of All. Speaking of this contrast between prices now and fifteen years ago, the that can be made the bald comparison! Is a startling case. It indieates how far the cutting nwav of our while pine resources has progressed, and is sig niflcent of the future thai confronts every one of our great commercial woods. eiiow pine lias already gun lo feel the Influence {l| restricted limber supply and within a, few years mote the west coast woods even lir. now so abundant will testify in their prices lor stumpage that thev will be the last great resource of our, timber users." Relative Price of Commoddities to 1907. (100 represents average price 1 S90-1899). Farm products Pood, etc Clothes and clothing Fuel and lighting Metals and Implements Lumber and building materials. Drugs and chemicals House furnishing goods Miscellaneous All commodities She Will Grateful Letters From All Over the World Tell of Wonderful Cures With Mrs. Miller's Mild Home Treatment. Over a million women have already I grateful letters h«a,rts state legislatures and the national con- this pleasant vegetable remedy has gross," says the Knoxviiie Journal,' restored them to old-time health and commenting on the proposed tax on jj bachelors, "the obituary liars and un dertakers would have a season's job on their hands that would make an Ital ian earthquake look like, a musical farce comedy." 1 No other commodity in common use lias increased as much In price in re- trials generally. Taking an average tcrlals of all kinds of lumber, some of which, is not. much In demand, and showing much o| a price Increase, the conserva- ljljrpml lab tluvt. ihiii the btonuu.hs of departincut of commerce Mml „r rnitf labor sets these tacts forth in prosaic fashion in the following table: 1890 for Million Women Bless Her Name from ladies whose overflow with gratitude because Sf Mrs. Francis M. Harris of Dover, 'La., writes: "I feel like a new woman and can do my work without having I am happy .to.knQW that I am well again." "It has relieved me of my constant suffering and have not words to ex press my gladness. It was surely a Godsend to me, and I thank Him that there is such a wonderful medicine on earlh for suffering women."—Mrs. Car rie Bailey, Pickneyviile, Ala. Mrs. Miller's remedy is the surest in the world. She asks no one to take her word, but only wants to prove it to any sufferer. Mail the coupon if you are a sufferer from any female complaint to Mrs. Cora B. Miller, Kokomo, Ind. Prove for yourself at Mrs. Miller's ex pense that this marvelous remedy should cure you. Do not delay send the coupon now. There Is Some One Near You Cured By Mrs. Miller There is hardly a country, city, town or village in which there does not re side some grateful lady who has been relieved after years of suffering and permanently cured by Mrs. Miller mild home treatment, even after doc tors and physicians failed. No matter where you live, she can refer you to ladies in your own locality who can and will tell any sufferer that this mar velous remedy really cures women. Only bear this in mind. Her offer will not last long, for thousands and thousands of women who are suffering will take advantage of this generous means of getting cured. So if you are ailing, do not suffer another day, bu send the free coupon to Mrs. Miller without another day's delay. Lumbermein lying Low. In view of tim facts it is not surpris ing that the effort to retain the duty on lumber meets with llttln encourage ment in this part of the country, even from lumbermen. One of fho greatest lumber manufacturers in the United States remarked the other dav that while lie would prefer to have tho tar ill .slay where it is lie didn't "have the nerve publicly to commit himself to opposition to the repeal of the lumber taritl. Another big lumberman, who I occupies much the same position a.no is doing little to encourage the agita tion being conducted bv the lumber trade lor the retention of the tariff on lumber, Is illustrating by Ills own ac tlvitics the effect of the tariff on the 'conservation or, rather, exhaustion ot American forests. Tills lumberman, Thomas Shevlln. and his associates have mills on the Ftamv river on tile Minnesota, anil Ontario sides, with [about the same capacity, (50.000.000 feet I of lumber per year, and wit.h about, the same amount of timber tributary to each. Originally it was Intended to op erate both mills to their full capacity, but owing to the limitations of the mo 2 mos 1904 190 1906 1907 "0.5 1 IS S 120.2 124 2 123 6 137.1 111.:t 107 I 107.2 10S 7 112 6 117..S 102.0 ll)( 109. 112 0 120 0 126.7 a 4..'! ll!» 1X2.B 128 8 131 0 135.0 117.2 117 6 109.6 122 5 135 2 143.4 118 S 121 4 122.7 127 7 140 146.9 114.2 112 6 110.0 109 1 101 O 109.6 1 12.2 1 13 0 111.7 109 1 111 0 11X.5 114.1 1 13 6 111.7 112 8 121 1 127.1 112.-J 1 13 113.0 115 122 5 129.5 -.- Mrs. Cora B. Miller Gives A In the past few years iMrs. Miller has given $125,000.00 in sending medi cine to afflicted women. c. Several years ago Mrs. Miller learned of a mild and simple preparation that cured herself and several friends of female weakness and piles. She was besieged by so many women needing •treatment that she decided to furnish it to those who might call for it. She started with only a few dollars capital, and the remedy, possessing true and wonderful merit, producing many cures when doctors and other remedies failed, the demand grew so rapidly she was several times compelled to seek larger quarters. She now occupies one of the city's largest office buildings, which she owns, and almost one hundred lady clerks and stenographers are re quired to assist in this great business. Some time ago it was announced that she would give to women who suffered from female diseases another $10,0.00.00 worth of her medicine. She has ful filled this promise, but as she is still receiving requests from thousands upon thousands of women from all parts of the world, who have not yet used her remedy, she has decided to give away $50,000,00 more to those who are suf- Mrs. Miller's Home. From Here She Directs the Distri bution of Her Medic ne to Those Who Suffer. How to Cure Any Case of Piles I want to tell you flatly and plainly that any woman, or man either for that matter, who suffers from any form of piles, may place their-faith absolutely in my treatment. They won't be dis appointed. It's intended for piles as well as the diseases peculiar to women. It heals diseased membrane surfaces, no matter where located, and I verily Canandian murket the Minnesota will this year run to Its full capacity while the Ontario ml'I will produce only about one-tenth of what it could. In his annual report tor 1907 J. Rhodes, secretary of the Northern Pine Manufacturers' Association, made this sinking statement: "Since 1X95, 24N linns, representing an .aggregate annual output: of pine lumber of 4.r0(i iHi(i.()00 feet have re tired from business, due to exhaustion of t.heir timber supply. Plants repre senting approximately 500.000.000 feet capacity, which sawed in 1900, will not bu operated in 1907." THE LONG LIVING DUTCH. Huriington Hawkeye] .-• a Pella. with a population of about ri.'.OO, reports seventy-two octogenar ians. It Is thought that the ratio will prove greater than In any other city in the state. Perhaps the character of the population ought to be taken into consideration. Pella was settled by bard-headed, slow-going, phlegmatic Hollanders, who, as a rule were pretty sure to have things go right, and were wise enough not to worry over-much whep things did not go right. As a rule, they prospered. They were ex cellent citizens, and their example must, have made itself felt. There was little of the strenuous life in Pella, but there was thrift and cleanliness and prosperity, and the result is to be found in the largo number of hale and hearty, young old people in the tine town. No doubt, he lieves long who lives right. Spend $50,000 In Giving Medical Treatment Absolutely Free to Suffering Women.! Will Be Sent To Every Woman Who Is'Ailing Send No Money. Just Your Name and Ad dress, If Ycu Are A Sufferer From Any Woman's Disease or Piles fering and unable to find relief •Mrs. Miller's wonderful remedy is especially prepared for the speedy and permanent cure of leucorrhea or whit ish discharges, ulceration, displace ments or falling of the womb, profuse, scanty or painful periods, uterine or ovarian tumors or growths also pains in the head, back and bowels, bearing down feelings, nervousness, creeping feeling up the spine, melancholy, desire to cry, hot flashes, weariness and piles from any cause or no matter of how. a Every woman sufferer, unable to find relief, who will write Mrs. Miller now, without delay, will receive by mail free of charge, a 50-cent box of her simple home remedy, also her brok with ex planatory illustrations showing why women suiter and how they can easily cure themselves at home without the aid of a physician. All that is necessary is to cut out the coupon at the bottom of this page, fill in your name and address and send jit to Mrs. Miller, Kokomo, Ind. The medicine and book will be sent to you at once. Send now before the 750,0^0.00 worth is all gone. believe that this remedy has cured more bad cases of piles of all^Jynds than all the so-called "pile cures" ^nd doctors in the country. A cure with my remedy Is speedy, it's safe and It's lasting. The intense torture, the burn ing, smarting and itching stop at once and you feel better right from the start. Send for my free treatment at once and see for yourself. THE LODGES. A MASONIC NOTICES. Hall over 105-107 West Main. Ail visitors welcome. ",• MARSHALL LODGE Regular communication Feb. 18. Signet Chapter—Regular convoca tion Feb. 22. Sf vv St. Aldemar Commandry—Stated Conclave Tuesday, Feb 23, work on ordt of Temple. There Is no case on record of a cough, cold or la grippe developing in to pneumonia after Foley's Honey and! Tar has been taken, as it cures mosll obstinate deep seated coughs and colds* Why take anything else? MeBride &J. Will Drug company. The Sad Feature of It. "You surprise me, Mrs. Hunkinson. Here I find you In tears, and your hus band has Just been elected governor. You ought to be one of the happiest and proudest women In the world." Tm very proud of Henry and all that, but I can't help feeling eorry ha was elected. Now he'll have to stand bareheaded for half an hour on a re viewing stand while the Inaugural procession Is passing, and colds seem to pull him down just dreadfully." HSiSf c'/o (L'A -s. Ti -a 4' 3%^ I*.*} i. -T i- l'r- Why Men Desert Their Wives. Eighty Per Cent of the Wife Desertions and Divorce Due to Female Weakness. I should have taken better care of myself, I suppose. I was sick and suf fering. No one but. a woman can ever know how I suffered. I was Irritable. I couldn't be to my husband the wife that I ought to have been. He being a man, couldn't understand. We drifted' apart. He sought his pleasures else where. Finally there yras nothing but the divorce court that could settle our differences. That's the sad story feat eight Out of every ten women who .have passed thru the ordeal of the divorce court, as well as the countless thousands of deserted wives who are not divorced, knows deep down in her heart was the real cause of her trouble. A eick wife, a neglected home, and the publicity and disgrace of the court iroom to end it all. There wwuldn't be half as much talk of the divorce evil in the world if only every wife and mother would realize her duty to preserve her health and strength. No woman has the right to expect her husband to devote his -leisure hours to his home and her when she is lead ing a dragged-out, hopeless, down-in the-mouth existence that would dis courage the greatest optirfiist on earth. Mrs. Oora B. .Miller's marvelous home remedy has done more to pre vent divorce than all the messages to congress and conventions in the world. The woman who Is bright and cheerful and well h^s a home that reflects her own good feeling and discontent finds no place therein. Mrs. Miller's aid and advice is as free to you as God's sunshine or the air you breathe. She wants to prove to you her common-sense home treatment will cure you just as surely as it cured her years ago in her humble cottage. If you are a sufferer from any fe male trouble, no matter what it is, send the coupon below to Mrs. Cora B. Miller at once. Put Your Faith In Mrs. Miller My word that my home treatment should unfailingly relieve you of female diseases or piles doesn't necessarily mean anything. But when my word and medicine is backed up by over a million ladies, that's evidence you cannot doubt. There is hardly a coun ty or small village in the land that does not number some poor srufferer cured. I didn't force them to use my medicine. They took it of their own free will and it cured them. You can put your faith in that sort of a remedy every time. Just cut out the coupon, send it today and prove what this (mar velous treatment will do for you. This Noted Divine Says: 'I am personally acquainted witJl Mrs. Cora B. .Miller. I most cheerfully and voluntarily testify that myself and family have been greatly benefited by the use of Mrs. Miller's home remedies and heartily recommend them to the general public."—Rev. P. G. Roscamp, D. D., Presbyterian Minister. Do not delay. Send the coupon to day. Free Treatment Coupon. This Coupon is good for a full sized regular 50 cent package of Mrs. Miller's Mild Home Treatment. Just All in your name and address on dotted lines below and mail at once tQ Mrs. Cora B. Miller, 6934 Miller Bldg., Kokomo, Ind., and you will receive the remedy in plain package at once.