Newspaper Page Text
HAPPY WOMEN. Mrs. Pare, wife of C. B. Pare, pro mlnent . resident of J Glasgow, 6 Ky, says: "I was suffering f|i from a com 111 plication of t kidney trou- Is bles. Besides a bad back, V I had a great f deal of trou ble with the a m tsIt- tuitd * t f * * * 1 1)0 secre t i o n s, which were exceedingly variable, some times excessive and at other times scanty. The color was high, and pass ages were accompanied with a scald ing sensation. Doan's Kidney Pills soon regulated the kidney secretions, making their color normal and ban ished the inflammation which caused 1 can rest the scalding sensation, well, my back is strong and sound and I feel much better in every way." For sale by all dealers, price 50 cents per box. FOSTER MI LB URN CO., Buffalo, N. Y. Don't Work Both Ways. Tne people who are most eager to phare their troubles are usually those ;who are most stingy with their good luck. TEA Schilling's Best is in pack ages; never comes out of a bin or canister. In every package of Schilling's Heat Tea Is a booklet; How to Make Good Tea. Love and the Cottage. When a girl is first engaged she figures on a ten-room house in the .swell part, of town, says the Atchison Globe. As time goes on the house gradually decreases in size until it is a four-room structure. Then all the fancy trimmings are left off, and next the house is located in a remote part of the town. Finally when the wed ding comes off it is announced that the couple will reside with the bride's father. TEA Let it be neither weak nor strong, at least good, if pos sible fine, and brewed by one who knows how. How to Judge Olive Oil. The choicest olive oil is of a pale green color. This appearance is said to be due to the presence of tiny particles of chlorophyll or the green coloring matter associated with the oil in the tissue of the fruit. Many ; of the pure olive oils range in color from deep golden yellow to almost colorless. An intense brown yellow lor a deep green oil should be regard ed with suspicion.—Good Housekeep ing TEA tastes good and makes one feel good besides. Schilling's Best is the tea. Your grocer returns your money if you don't think so. Care of the Eyes. When the eyes tire at night, or are bloodshot in the morning, advice should be sought and the cause dis covered. Bathing them night and morning with cold water Is effective, if weakness be the only cause. Her tea marks the woman; but so does her coffee; and she marks both. Your grocer returns your money If you don't Uke Schilling's Best. Acquiring Grace. Madame Recamier, whose beauty and charm were the marvel of her generation, was asked how she had become so graceful as never to betray awkwardness in the slightest motion. She replied: "By always acting in pri vate as if the eyes of the court were upon me." TEA There is better tea than you suspect; and yours is probably worse than you sus pect. Birds That Live Long. Elder ducks are supposed to live for 100 years and wild geese may ex coed that period, which, however, Is considerably below the time reached, according to the German saw: swans, which certainly live a long time, under favorable conditions, are Mated to live sometimes 300 years. CHARM OF DOLLY MADISON. Gave Mistress of White House Her Empire Over Hearts. To define the charm of a charming woman is always difficult. Dolly Mad ison's features were not regular, nor was her figure perfect. She was not witty, nor was she wise, and she par ticipated little, if at all, in her hus band's Intellectual life. Nevertheless she stands out as the greatest of all mistresses of the White House, and her popularity was unbounded. She ruled over her world In Washingtoi with genial good nature and instinct ive tact. Her nature was warm, af fectionate and impressionable. She loved life and people and her world loved her. Her brilliant coloring, an imated face and well-rounded figure went with a cordial manner and sym pathy for those about her amounting to genius, and she was always ready to bubble into laughter. Who could resist such a woman, the wife of a President? She was the center of observation at the inaugural ball, but she would have been the center of observation at any ball, even if she had not been the president's wife. She had, in fact, ruled as in disputably over the little boarding house in Philadelphia kept by her mother, when she was the Widow Todd, as she did over the White House as Mrs. Madison.—Century Magazine. Cannot Reduce a Rate. It is stated in Washington, that under the Townsend rate bill. If a rate is fixed by the Commission it cannot be lowered by a railroad. Should an emergency arise calling for a decreased rate, tl)e railroads or shippers would have to appeal again to the Commission, there being no latitude allowed, whatever the cir cumstances. Hitherto a maximum rate has been the rule, but no such concession is made under the pro posed legislation. Painted Picture in One Day. Sir Edwin Landseer had promised to send a picture in time for the spring exhibition of 1845 at the Brit ish institution, and did not commence until the day previous to the opening. In twenty-four hours he painted "The Cavalier's Pets." CAPT. GRAHAM'S CURE. Sores on Face and Back—Tried Many Doctors Without Success— Gives Thanks to Cuticura. Captain W. S. Graham, 1321 Eoff St., Wheeling, W. Va.. writing under date of June 14, '04, says; "I am so grateful I want to thank God that a friend recommended Cuticura Soap and Ointment to me. I suffered for a long time with sores on my face and back. Some doctors said I had blood poison, and others that I had barbers' itch. None of them did me any good, but they all took my money. My friends tell me my skin now looks as clear as a baby's, and I tell them all that Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Oint ment did it." Convicts' Jail Earnings. Three-tenths of the earnings of a Belgian convict are given to him on the expiration of his sentence. Somo prisoners thus save more money in jail than they have ever been able to save out of it Dr. I>avl<l Koimodv'a Favorite Kemedy I* oh find all afro**- CureH Kidney and adapted to both Liver complaint, and partlles the blood, tl all druggists. Care Needed to Preserve Beauty. "Society women," says a doctor, "devote an enormous amount of time to the cultivation of health and beauty; but if they did not take all this care they would look old at thirty." How's This? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. .T. CHENEY A CO., Toledo, O. Wo, the undersigned, have known K. .1. Cheney for the last 15 yoars, and believe hlin perfectly hon orable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by Ills firm. Waj-dino, Rinnan A Makvin, J Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, 0. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Testimonials sent free, l'rlce 75 cents per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Family Pills for constipation. Take Hall's No Age Limit for Soldiers. Soldiers have become famous at varying ages. Our own Gen. Winfield Scott was 61 in the Mexican war, and the famous Von Moltke, in the Fran co-Prussian war, scored his greatest triumphs when seventy. Wellington and Napoleon were only forty-five at Waterloo. Important to Mothers. fixamlno carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, a safe and aura remedy for infanta and children, and see that it Bean the Signature of In Ute For Over HO Years. The Kind You Have Always Bought. Brigands Exact Toll. Thff region between the Manchurian cities of Mukden and Sinminttn has for esnturies been notorious for brig andage. The brigands, however, al low any one to travel in safety after paying a certain percentage on the goods carried, in advance. CURING BRAIN BY PROXY. How Balance of Seat of Reason Can Be Restored. With the surroundings of the brain proper there have been remarkable surgical achievements; some of them in operations performed half a body's length from the disturbed organ. Be tween the brain proper and its lining is a shallow sea of fluid which extends all the way down the hollow inside of the spine, around the spinal cord. If this fluid becomes deranged or com pressed the brain is affected. Now, in one part of the head this liquid substance constitutes a little spirit level, like a carpenter's level, wnich serves to keep the human machine properly balanced. Sometimes the fluid in this level increases beyond the normal capacity. Then the patient is annoyed by constant ringing in the ears and presently becomes subject to severe and dangerous vertigo. Is because the unconscious sense of balance is disturbed. A few years ago the medical faculty were at a loss for a cure. Now they know that the brain fluids may be controlled from the spine. So they tap the vic tim of the deranged spirit level near the base of the spine, draw off the sur plus fluid and send him on his way, relieved, balanced and rejoicing. This lumbar tapping is of inestimable value in the diagnosing of meningitis, ab scesses and other cerebral diseases; the examination of the fluid drawn from the spine, in fact, affording diag nosis for all brain diseases other than the purely nervous affections.—Mc Clure's Magazine. This He Wasn't Worried. The Great Ice Age came sweeping over the prehistoric world, wafting its icy warning from the line of glaciers that were crunching their way over the paleozoic rocks and driving herds of hairy mammoths, glyptodons and other affrighted creatures before them. Just then the prehistoric Paul Re vere came bounding along, mounted on the back of his faithful dinosaur and shouting guttural warnings to the Cave men. "Fly!" he cried. "The glaciers are coming! Run for your lives or you will surely perish!" "Tut, tut!" said Abou, the Cave man, emerging from his cavern and calmly munching the thigh bone of a mylodon. "Man, are you mad?" cried the hero, rather nettled. "Don't you know that now approaches the Age of Ice?" "Well, so long as it's not the age of Plumbing, the Age of Coal, or the Age of Graft, I care not!" Whereat the prehistoric philosopher retired calmly to his cave and dressed himself in his glad raiment, so that his fossil remains would make a good appearance upon their debut in an American museum a million years later.—New York Sun. No Weather There, "I lived among the people of Japan for four years," said the Cincinnati man, "and I pledge you my word that not once in all that time did I hear one single person make any reference to the weather. You can judge what a relief it was. Here and elsewhere the weather is a constant topic. "Was nothing said when it was hot or cold or stormy?" was asked. "Not a word—not the slightest hint. No matter whether it was pouring rain or the sun was shining, nobody spoke of it. The nearest I ever heard any Japanese trench on the weather was when my valet one day asked me for half a day off. When I hesitated over it he said: " 'Your excellency, I have a - toe and I want to get thing fixed before next winter thing off! corn on my — the — sets in and freezes the What R. I. P. Means. Charlie was being taken for a walk Suddenly he "What does 'R. I. P.' stand through a cemetery, asked: for? a lot of reading on them, and then at the bottom of the words there are the big letters 'R. I. P.' " Some of the gravestones li^ve "What do you think they mean?" asked his father. Charlie paused for a moment. "1 think, father, they mean, 'Return If Possible."—Harper's Weekly. Modernized. "Here is one of the inns where George Washington used to stop." "You don't say! What has become of the ancient sign, 'Accommodation to Man and Beast?" "They've taken it down and put up a sign, 'Accommodation to Man and Automobile.' "And where is the hostler who used to come out with a can of oats?" "Oh, he comes out now with a can of gasoline." Nemesis. I came to the window where years ago She kept the watch-light burning To safely guide by its patient' glow Her prodigal returning. t I came to the window—'twas dark and lone! The years had with honors crowned me; I would have given them all to atone Could she have coma back and found me! D oes Your Doctor Know What's the matter with you ? If he does, the chances are he may help you. but many times women call on their family physicians, suffering, as they imagine one from dyspepsia, another from heart disease, another from liver or kidney ul#" another from nervous exhaustion or prostration, another with pain here and there, and in this way they all pre sent alike to themselves and their easy going and indifferent, or over- busy doctor, separate and distinct diseases, for which he, assuming them to be such, prescribes his pills and potions. In roality they are all only eymptumi caused by some womb •disease. The physician, ignorant of the cause of suffering, encourages this prac tice until largo bills are made. T he suf fering patient gets no better, but proba bly worse, by reason of the delay, wrong treatment and consequent complications. A proper medicine like Dr. Pierces fa vorite Proscription, Mro'ted to the cause would have entirely removed the disease, thereby dispelling all those distressing symptoms, and instituting comfort in stead of prolonged misery. It has been well said that ,Y a disease known is half cured." In cases almost innumerable, after all other medicines had failed to help and doctors had said there was cure possible, the use of Dr. Pierce's fa vorite Prescription, supplemented when necessary by the medical advice and counsel of Dr. Pierce, has resulted in a porfoct and permanent cure. The genu ineness of these cures is attested not only by the entire disappearance of pain, but by a gain of flesh, a clear complexion and a cheerful disposition. Curbs Obstinate Casks.— " Favorite Prescription " is a positive cure for the most complicated and obstinate cases of leucorrhea, excessive flowing, painful menstruation, unnatural suppressions and irrogularltes, prolapsus or falling of the womb, weak back, " female weak ness," anteverslou, retroversion, tearing down sensations, chronic congestion, in flammation and Ulceration of the womb, Inflammation, pain and tenderness of the ovaries, accompanied with "internal heat." Reliable dealers recommend " Favorite Prescription." With tricky ones, some thing else that pays them better will probably be urged upon you as "just as ea II" The Secret of Good Coflee Even the best housekeepers cannot make a good cup of coffee without good material. Dirty, adulterated and queerly blended coffee such as unscrupulous dealers shovel over their counters won't do. But take the pure, clean, natural flavored LION COFFEE, the leader of all package collees— the coffee that for over a quarter of a century has been daily welcomed in millions of homes—and you will make a drink fit for a king in this way: _ HOW TO MAKE GOOD COFFEE. TTse LION COFFEE, because to get best results you must use the best coffee. Grind your LION COFFEE rather fine. Fse "a tablespoonful to each cup, and one a for the pot." First mix it with a little cold water, enough to make a thick paste, and add white of an egg (if egg is to be used as a settler), then follow one of the following rules: Is*. WITH BOILING WATER. Add boiling water, and let It boll THREE MINUTES ONLY. Add a little cold water and set aside tive minutes to settle. Serve promptly. . . . .. . . 2d. WITH COLD WATER. Add your cold water to the paste and bring tt to a boll. Then set aside, add a tittle cold water, and in live minutes It's ready to serve. (Don't boil It too long. , , , _ , < Don't let it stand more than ten minutes before serving. DO NT'S (Don't use water that has been boiled before. TWO WAYS TO SETTLE COFFEE, let With Engs. Use part of the white of an egg, mixing it with the ground LION COFFEE before ooiling. ... ,, 9d. With Cold Water instead of eggs. After boiling add a dash of cold water, and set aside for eight or ten minutes, then serve through a strainer. 3 Insist on getting a package of genuine LION COFFEE, prepare It according to this recipe and you will only use LION COFFEE in future. .. t~-- ' (Sold only in 1 lb. sealed packages.) I (Lion-head on every package.) (Save these Lion-heads for valuable premiums.) SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE WOOLSON SPICE CO., Toledo, Ohio. W. L. DOUGLAS 1 *3.12 & *3.2° SHOES UNION FOR ■ | MADE MEN. W. K. Dougina Hll.AO ihoita the> grttiiteNt in the world bemuse of their excellent style, easy tilting and rior wearing qualities. They are ju»t as good c»*t from flR.».00 to $T.OO. The only difference is the price. W. L. Douglas 13.AO shoes cost more to inuke, hold their shape better, wear longer, and are of greater value than any otlier!|JI..»Oxhoeoii the market to-day. tV. I,. Douglas guar tees their value by stantolug his name of*each shoe. Look lor it. Take - those that d price on the bstitute. W.L. retail stores in ers everywhere. Mo mat il hin your reach. bolt Dougin* *&:t.i*0 shoes are sold through his own the principal cities, mid by ter where you live, W.L. lb shoe tie •uglas shoes arc IIETTER THAN OTHER MAKES AT A ,V C PRICE. "Ear the Inst three years I have worn W. L Douglas SA.50 shoe and found it not only as ynod, but better than any shoe that l ever had. regardless of noire " Chits. L. Farrell, Asst. Cashier The Capital National Hank-. Indianapolis, Inti. Boys wear W. L. Douglas $2.50 and $2.00 shoes because they fit better, hold their shape, and wear longer than other makes. W, L. Douglas makes and sells more Men's $3.50 shoes than any other manufacturer in the world. $ 10,000 REWaRD h V)WWVJ an y 0ne w |, 0 can disprove thisstatement, W.L.DOUGLAS $4,00 SHOES CANNOT BE EQUALLED AT ANY PRICE. W. U Douglas uses Corona Colt skin in his $3.AO shoes. Corona Colt is considered to be the finest patent leather produced. FAST <01.0 It UTF.I.ETIWIU, NOT WEAK UK ASSY W. I,. Douglas lias the largest shoe mall order business In the world No trouble to iret a fit by mail, 25e. extra prepays delivery. If you desire timber information, write /or Illustrated Catalogue of Spring Styles W.L.DOUCLAS, BROCKTON, MASSACHUSETTS to THE THt GRAND uPBlIEn WATERPROOF OILED CLOTHING RECEIVED THE HIGHEST POSSIBLE AWARD AT THE ST. LOUIS WORLD'S PAIR. Send us the name* of dealer* in your town who do not sell our {oods. and we will send you a collection of pictures, in color*, of famous tower* of the world. «m ^ TOWER CO, ESTABLISHED lOSSl Boston. mw voaa. cmcaoo. TOWER CANARIAN CO . LWUA TORONTO OAtC Kindly Mention This Paper. When Answering Advertisement* ro t/ 1 Perhap* it Is for them, but It good, can't be for you. Buffalo. N. Y.: Dr R V. Pisbcb. Sir—I suffered for four years with falling of womb and general female weak new, had terrible backaches and headaches asDeoially distressing times at monthly SStoSa Oaf Prescribed E^eVal remedies but although he was an old ; Vnd excellent doctor he was unable to relieve Dr Pierce's Favorite Prescription waa brought to my attention and spoken of so highly that I decided to change medicine* ami take that. 1 was Indeed pleased to find j that this remedy relieved my pains within two days, and at the next period, there was a great change for the better. After ten teaks' use of the " Favorite Prescription " I was not only cured but my general health was much better than It had teen for three years i took on flesh, my complexion te smooth and clear, and 1 now enjoy the bS of health, thanks to Dr. Pierce's efficient remedy. DMT I Mrs A E. Bortnbr. 196 Seventh Street. Portland. Oregon. Dr Pierce's Favorite Prescription con tains no alcohol, is entirely vegetable and was the first exclusively woman s tonic on the market—it lias sold more largely In the past third of a century than any other medicine for women. All other compounds Intended for wom en only art* made with alcohol, or alcohol is a large component, This alcohol Injures the nerves. The little red corpuscles of the blood are shrunken by alcohol. All such compounds, therefore, do harm -The People's Medical Adviser con tains several chapters devoted to the physiology of women, with directions for self-treatment which every woman ought to read. A paper-bound copy sent abso lutely free on receipt of 2l one-cent stamps to pay for mailing only; or cloth bound, 31 stamps. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. r-v _* Good temper is Dr. Pierce Sjargely a mate ter of good health, and good health is largely a mat of healthy activity of the bowels. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets cure constlna tion. They are safe, sure and speedy, and once taken do not have to be taken always. One little "Pellet" is a gentle laxative, and two a mild cathartic. They never LJp||fV|-C gripe. By all druggists. I WIWID. ter A CLEAR,HEALTHY SKIN Sandholm'i Ecxema and Skin Remedy Purifies, Then Heals Positively cure* Eoeerna, Pimples, Eruptions. Insect Bites and all die* eases of the skin. An absolute our® for Dandruff or Bcalp diseases. Ask Druggist or Barber or aend for FRKS SAMPLE and BOOKLET, Write to-day. Dept. 6. BAKDHOLM DRUG CO., Dee Moines, la. . I I, i. AS^a. ST. MARK'S HOSPITAL SALT LAKE CITY O. C. HUNTING, Superintendent ALFALFA SEEDl r j BAILEY A SONS S1-#S I. INDIO. BT.. SALT LAKB OITV, UTAH Are headquarters for the best Quality Alfalfa: Seed, also Grass and Garden Seeds, Oratn, Grain Bags, Twine, etc. In seed business 40 y ra. Mall order* given speoial attention. When Answering Advertisements Kindly Mention Thla Paper,