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FULTON COUNTY TRIBUNE, WAXJSEON, OHIO, FRIDAY, NOV. 1 n. 1Q1 Offl BEAl Aii for tet and its MacQtiirU V'cs-. sir, iuj v.ll'e uiwuys finds something to harp on. Mat-Shirk I hope mine does. too. Mac-Quirk What makes you say you hope she does? MacSliirk She's dead. Lohdou Opinion. THt HIGHEST fiUAinr. i SPAGHETTI 36 Pit? &c!?e Book F;ce 'SKIKKER MFG.0DL OMAHA. U.5A tAXCtST MAC &0XI FVCXMW M !!. Their Care and Cultivotioiv -V vssr The man who weds an old flame of ten finds that she has a red hot temper. 1 TITl irvi "i 45 t 1 Bt u ta Z3 u El u ID 11 Fl t-i E3 Fl rl n n M IB El m Ki IT Jra I . I n L. O U O IL .A S y7yvUvSlLli' u ) 7io Flavor Lasts I Rosy cheeks, bright teeth, good appetites and digestions yes, the reward for the regular use of Wrigleys is benefit as well as pleasure! Sealed TlghiKept night Write Wm. Wrigley Jr. Co., Chicago, or free copy of the Wrigley Gum-ption Book. ; A LUfl Wrigley Uum-ption ttook. ; kri A Beautiful Fkiwer Garden. "GI231V it after every tneall" CONTEST ENDED RIGHT THERE fUi Mr. Jigon' Statement All Felt That It Would Be Mere Folly . to Continue. It was the annual reunion of all the members at th Globe Trottera' club. Speech had been made by everybody , who vfts anybody ; this and that prop OHltloo had been seconded by So-and-so, and all the usual business Inevi table at such a (fathering had been waded through. Ifren the chairman rose to his feet, holding In his hand a handsome gold watch. "Gentleman," he sold, Impressively, "by way of a novelty the club will pre sent this watch to the member who tells us all the most palpable He." Then the contest started. AH sorts of yarns were narrated, describing eundry wildly Impossible adventures, and then It was the turn of Jigson, gentleman with a mania for angling. "tlentlemen," he said, apologetically, "I trust thut you will allow me to re frain from entering this peculiar con test." ."Why?", they all cried. "On principle," replied Jigson, proud ly. "I have no Inclination to tell Ilea." Then everybody yelled: "You've won 1" And he had. It Looked Suspicious. They were taking an old-fashioned buggy ride In the mellow twilight and their engagement was still In Its In fancy. "Purling, he said, "are you sure 1 am the first and only man whose lips have ever come In contact with yoursT" "Of course you are, dearest," she replied. "Ton don't doubt me, do you?" "No, no, sweetheart," he answered, "I love you too dearly for that. But when I put my arm around your waist m moment ago and you made a swift crab for the lines. I couldn't help thinking you possessed wontferful Intuition." . Ami the horse meandered slowly on. Peat Is largely uxed in stoking tt railway engines of Sweden. AhrT( Droud to ihow white clothes. Red Crora Ball Blue does nuke theia white. All grocers. Adv. POINTS IN POTTING PLANTS By EVA RYMAN-GA1 LLARD. ! Planta grown for beauty of their foliage should be given rather targe pots, holding plenty of rich soil, while .hose grown for blossoms should be la smaller ones, ' Root-bound plants seem to produce more and finer blossoms, but this should not be construed to mean keep ing them so tightly root-bound that '.hey starve to death. When the pot Is full of roots shift the plant to one an inch or two larger, ind fill the space with good soil. Never fill a pot so full of soil that he water runs off the top instead of iettling Into the soil. Leave a space acant in the top of the pot, an inch or nore, according to the size of the pot ind the amount of water needed by Jie plant. For plants having hard, woody items, the soil may be level on the iurface. and no harm is done as the water standing around the stem will lot injure it, but for soft. crownen tered plants like the primrose, the soil should be higher in the center than at the edge. It is well, too, to avoid pouring wa ter Into the crown of the plant, as the manner In which the leaves come up makes them drain the water down in o the crown of the plant, and pro- Passed Away. "How Is your indigestion?" "It has Just succumbed to cure. Life. a new Important to Mothers Examine carefully very bottle of CASTOItIA, that famous old remedy for Infants and children, and see that It Bears the Signature In Use for Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria Novel Illumination. The city of Seal Beuch, CaU Is now attracting attention because of the novel Idea of Illuminating the entire water front which has been carried out by the otliclnls. A battery of 41 pow erful searchlights, each being of tuor than 25.(XK)-cnndle power, bus been placed on the outward edge of a lone pier which extends out Into the ocean from a point at the center of the wa ter front. The illuminated water front may be seen far out at sea, while the searchlight beams are visible for mile Inland. A GRATEFUL OLD LADY. Remember Value of Time. "Time Is money," said Benjomln Franklin. "If you want to save money, ave time." A whale struck by a hsrpoon has been known to dive at the rute of 300 yards in a minute. It would be a better world If ail In It w ho lose their tempers would never find them I A poet suys thnt hunger nets as Htlnnilnnt to nrlirlnnl thought. - Mrs. A. O. Clemens, West Alexan der, Pa., writes: I have used Dodd'i Kidney Pills, also Diamond Dinuei Pills. Before using them I had suf fered for a number ol years with backache. also tender spots on spine, and had at times black, floating pecks before mj eyes. I also had lum bago and heart trou ble. Since using thit mydlclne I have beeD Mn.AX.Oraens relieved of my suf fering. It is agreeable to me fot you to publish this letter. I am glaO to have an opportunity to say to ul who are suffering as I have done thn I obtained relief by using Dodd's Kid ney Pills and Diamond Dinner Pills Dodd's Kidney Pills 60c per box at your dealer or Dodd's Medicine Co, Buffalo, N. Y, Dodd's Dyspepsia Tab lets for Indigestion have been proved 60c per box. Adv. The turtle Is slow, but.be gets therr In time for the soup. Rabbit fur Is xnid to be supplanting woul in felt-hat imikliiKln Australia Holland bfs 100 inncli'nerv factories illlllllllHUSSEgllll Table Dainties from Sunny Climes it .it 'VJf ' ' v' Cflt! is of the greatest importance. If the ground is not well drained, make little ditches between your plants in the fall. for surplus to run into. If tiny seedlings are to be potted off. then the thumb pot may be best for the first transplanting, but even here I would use small, shallow boxes for 'fiats" until the second or third trans planting would bring the plants up to where they are ready for the three- inch pots, or the open ground. The commercial grower who must economize in space, and gives con stant attention to the plants, has use for the smallest pots, but they are a nuisance to the average grower of plants. COLD FRAMES FOR WINTERING PLANTS A lows: sixty races Plants Grown for Beauty Should Be Given Rathe.1 Large Pots. duce what is known as "crown-rot,' which kills all buds which form. Much is said of using "thumb pots' In which to root cuttings, but (after rooting hundreds) I prefer three-inch pots to the smaller ones. Or, you can heap the earth against It, on the side toward which you propose to bend it, and over this the canes can be bent., I prefer this meth od because it does not disturb the roots. The earth should not be as high where It touches the plant as it Is a few Inches from it. The object is to form a support of soil which will enable you to curve the bushes over It, thus avoiding the sharp sudden bends which do so much Injury to one's plants. Lay all the bushes in one direction, placing the stalks close together. By doing this, much covering' can be saved. - When the plants are laid down, place pieces of sod on them to hold them in place. If this is not done, they will be sure to spring back to an upright position before you get them covered. Cover with dry earth to the depth of four inches. If leaves are used, it will be necessary to make a little pen to confine the leaves. After covering the bushes with soil or leaves provide a second covering of boards, or something that will shed rain. . If water is allowed to settle in to the soil above the bushes, and re main there, they will be greatly in jured by it. One must plan to keep the covering as dry as possible. This By l M. BENNINGTON. Successful gardening depends on early production. Cold frame plant? are more certain to live than hotbed plants and give a larger per cent of good stuff than do the more tender hotbed plants. To construct one use two frames in stead of one. The larger frame is four and one-half feet by seven and one-half feet and one foot deep. The inner one is one foot smaller each way and only eight inches deep. The space all around the inner frame, six inches wide, is filled with dry Bawdust well packed down. The covering for the inner frame Is a glass-covered sash made to fit quite close to the frame to exclude the air The outer frame is covered with an oiled canvassed frame so as to be wa terproof. . A strip of carpet, or other good material, is kept over the inner sash in severe weather. ' We prefer shallow frames to keep the plants from growing spindling. We choose a location free from cold winds and where a good exposure to the sun can be had. In such a frame there are 3,276 square inches, and allowing , three square inches to the plant, one can have over 1,000 plants per frame Good rich soil is used and the under soil is made quite, loose to give i chance for root growth. It is best to grow the plants in the open and' trans plant ' on the approach of severe weather. Frames of a larger size are not easily handled, nor can the same pro tection be given them. - On mild days we give light to the plants by remov ing the outer sash, and if safe we raise the inner sash to admit fresh air These frames are not expensive where one can do his own work and they add a good per cent to the investment. CCORDINO to recent statistics the population of Peru com prises 4.000,000 people. This population is divided as fol One million two hundred and thousand mestizos, or mixed from intermarriages of the whites with the Indians, 600,000 whites, 100,000 negroes, 40,000 Orientals and 2,000.000 Indians. The great problem of Peru Is the problem of the Indian, who is not only numerically the important factor in the country, but is also virtually the only support of the vast majority of the population, according to the Lima cor respondent of the Christian Science Monitor. It is a common saying that all Peru lives off the- Indian. If the Indian was taken out of Peru to day the country would suffer until the remaining portion of the population had learned by necessity to cultivate the land and to make a living. The ancient Inca empire, of which Cuzco was the center and the home of the Inca kings, extended originally from beyond Quito to the southern coast of Chile, Including what is now known as Ecuador, Peru and Chile, and these ancient peoples had here a civilization In many respects more ad vanced than that of the Spanish ad venturers who conquered them. When Pizarro came to Peru there were nearly 8,000.000 of these inhab itants of the Incas realm in Peru alone, industrious, law-abiding, prac ticing progressive arts and having ir rigated farms, traces of which are still to be seen along the high peaks of the Sierra tablelands. Their old homes and fortresses, their temples and their architecture reveal a state and quality of knowledge and architectu ral skill resembling that of ancient Egypt , , When the Spaniards came, not to colonize so much as to conquer, and exploit, the Indians were driven from cupy land on the great estates ot the Sierras (and there are often as many as 400 families of Indians who live in these large haciendas, as their fathers have ror generations) the own er has the right to demand the labor of the Indian for virtually any work he requires and at any time. At time of planting, weeding and harvesting all the Indians are requisitioned to culti vate the great estates, and when the owner wishes to send, his produce tc market he has simply to call upon his Indians, who respond with their trains of llamas, carrying the produce many leagues to the nearest shipping place without charge to the owner, While this appears at first sight nothing- short of slavery conditions the lot of Indians in these mountains is not so bad as it might seem.- They have their own bits of land, which they cultivate assiduously and which yield them a good living, and they have their own sheep, llamas and alpacas and a certain number of cattle. Their grazing lands are apportioned to them and they are protected in their rights. There is no danger of their homes be ing taken from them. In fact, the In dians in the Interior are so truly wed ded to the place where they and their fathers have lived for gen erations that it is virtually Impossi ble to move them from their homes. and when the land changes hands they are practically sold with the land, and simply transfer their allegiance from one master to another Garbed In Gay Colors. There Is no more picturesque sight to be seen in South America, if in deed anywhere in the Orient, man these Indians Journeying on foot be hind their long trains of llamas, laden with alpaca or wool, on their way to the market places. A market, place like that at Sicuanl, where on Sunday many hundreds of Indians gather, leav ing their Hamas and bdrros corralled "THE SHOE THAT HOLDS ITS. SHAPE 3.00 $3.50 $4.00 4.50 & SS.00 kZSVZLI Save Money by Wearing W. L. Doug shoes. For sale by over 9000 shoe delr. The Best Known Shoes in the World. W. L. Douglas name and the retail price is stamped on the bet , torn of all shoes at the factory. The value is guaranteed and the wearer protected against high prices for inferior slices. The retail prices are the same everywhere. They ccat no mcie in Em Francisco than they do in New York. They re alway worth the price paid for them. '"phe quality of W. L. Douglas product is guaranteed by more A than 40 years experience in making fine short. The smart styles are the leaders in the Fashion Centres of America. They are made in a well-equipped factory at Brockton, Masi by the highest paid, skilled shoemakers, under the direction and supervision of experienced men, all working with an honest determination to make the best shoes for the price that money can buy. Ask your shoo dealer tar W. T Douglas anoes. If he can not eupply you with th kind you -want, take no other make. Write for interesting booklet explaining how to get shoe, of the highest standard of quality far ttx price, y return mail, postage free. LOOK FOR W. L. Douglas name and the retail pries stamped on the bottom. J Boys' Shoes f . Beit is lh WoHl 4 aa n cn . eo fits President O O.UU t.OU OS i.uu W. T Douglas Shoe Co.. Brockton. Ms. COULDN'T BREAK UP SYSTEM Synthetic milk . is being produced from peanuts by European clieuJsts. ' Jehnson Preferred to Get Wet Rather Than Disturb the Routine He Had Established. Johnson Is a great believer In sys tem. . He eats system, breathes sys- 'tem, thinks system, talks system and sleeps systematically. His rule of liv ing is as exact and unyielding as the rule of three. On the first tap of the twelve o'clock bell he rises from his desk, on the second tap. he closes the lid, on the thirdhe is donning his over coat and hat. and the twelfth stroke finds him on the sidewalk proceeding lunehward. . . The other day a friend observed him walking toward home In a hard rain from which he was entirely unprotect ed by raincoat or umbrella. "Hey.' Johnson !" cried the friend, haven't you any umbrella?" "Yes, two of them," was the reply. "Why in thunder don't you use one of them, then?" "Weil, you see, it's this way: I've made it a rule to keep one umbrella at the office and one at home, so that I'd be sure always to have one at either end of the line when it rains. If I should take one now from .the office to my home, they'd both be at my home, don't" you see, and that'd break up my system." Every woman's pride, beautiful, cleat white clothes. Use Red Cro&a Ball Blue. All grocers. Adv. Easy. ' , "What does Amen mean, Sissie?" "Why, daddy and uncle, of course" Passing Show. None of Them More Than Plump. ' The latest fashion edicts seem to be framed In the belief that there are no fat women In the world. BAD COMPLEXION MADE GOOD' When All Else pails, by Cutlcura Scap and Ointment. Trial Free. usT, GARDEN NOTES Tuberous begonias that have been growing in the garden should be care fully dug and dried. Withhold watei from those growing In pots and cover the tubers with dry sand when the tops disappear and set them away in a room free from frost. Roman hyacinths and narcissi for early flowering, under glass, should be potted as early as possible. Begonias do best in good rich loam, a little sand, a small quantity of cow manure and a little powdered charcoai thoroughly mixed. Amaryllis bulbs received In the au tumn should be placed where they will be always slightly moist and warm; do not pot up the bulbs before the flower buds appear. When they are first potted, give them Uttle water and promote growth by giving moderate bottom heat. As the plants progress increase the supply of water. Th proper soil is turfy loam well enriched with rotten manure. UcwA vS w : - - ? - . $ OJOWINO THE. POTATO M PLRU, ITS OTUG1NAU HOMfc To withstand these quick climatic changes your rose plants require good winter protection. their homes, the country In many in stances went to waste, people becom ing slaves of their ruthless masters, who proceeded to ' make the quiet, tractable Indians into beasts of bur den, killing them whenever tftey op posed. The present evil traits of the Indian, his dishonesty, suspicion of the white man, and much of his"loth have been the result of the condition under which; he has been controlled for 400 years or more. During the old Inca regime such sins as lying, stealing and adultery were punishable by the 'extreme pen alty, and the home life of these an cient people was far better in char acter than that generally found today among their successors. Trustworthy and Frugal. Nevertheless, you will be told by those people who know the Indian of the Interior especially thut he forms the best and most trustworthy ele ment in Peru today. He is hard work ing and frugal, living on a small patch of land, which is frequently opened by the community or by a large landhold er. He will work day after dayi for his masters, receiving only ten cents In Peruvian money, which is equal to five cents in gold, at the end of the week receiving an additional amount, making his daily wage for the week amount to about 15 cents gold a day. lu the case of the Indians who oc- FROM SUGAR TO CELLULOSE 1 bi raw California Asparagus and Hawaiian Pineapple Ffom tropical Hawaii, home of the sweetest. most luscious pineapple, comes the one; and ' California, vere the tenderest asparagus grows, supplies the other. The Libby care and cleanliness back of both is a warrant of a product that will please you. Insist on Libby's at your grocer's. I III Libby, McNeill & Libby, Chicago II llll IIIII llllllll SAMPLfe FREE- dtifft proof CHM htttld CD' Send Some of Your Potted Plants to Your Church. open face watch run metal (Tared, ANY INITIAL, stem wind and art full GUARAN TKEL)6YKAKM. W will rend Bald ONLY SI. 50. and aall two w will rlTe Ton ONK I '1" r SAMPLE WATCH FREE for - '! ; iJour trouble. Bend thla ad- r vnriB.rn.nl wuu ti.ou uu watch wiU be ncnt by maU Boritpaid. or aenil :l.00 for two and receive ONE EXTRA WATCH IHEX I. L frsst A Co. Ml I. Mtt H, In tsrt ANY INDUSTRIOUS MAN may devote h ttme to good adr&DtaRe selling low priced tires. The Cut-Bate Ttre bttslness is a money maker. IfcxS non-skid callings, Otoerslies In proportion. Sniail capital rnuulred. For full parti c aiari write .r. -ahilh, nm UmmV,hnn loan till PATENTS on E.Co.mtB. Patent Uwmr WanhlnsioB. D.G. AdTtee and books tree. Bates reasonable. Highest references. Best services ICtftlTC CI I ft ow rag. ffOLnig WLL.L experience reqi MW Vernoa Uug Co., Mount Vernon, Mew York grab W. N- U., FORT WAYNE, NO. 45-1916, JUST A FEW REMINDERS He careful not to bruise potatoes. Dig them or a dry. sunny day und let them dry before storing. Store in a cool, dry plueo, spreading thinly. For home use, peaches that ripened on the tros are best. Grass needs food. Rake mossy spots and apply two hai.t'.fuls of hydruted lime to the v,uare yard.. All lawn" 'an be helped by, fertill-Mnjr. Sparaxis. Ixias and Freezias are tine for pot culture. Roses in pots for winter towering require n regular supply of liquid manure. Men Really Not In Vc Hub (with irritation) "Why Is fl that you women insist upon huvint the last word?" Wife (calmly) "V don't. The only reason we get it is because we always have a tlv-en argu ments left when you stupid njpn art ail run u," Boatou Tnmserim Scientists Have Been Unable to Learn From Plants and Trees the Se cret of Its Production. There are certain combinations of carbon and hydrogen known as sugars many of them, but all alike In, that they are made up of carbon atoms strung together as In a chain, with hydrogen atoms stuck on along the side of the chain. Now, suppose you take a number of these sugar mole cules, as the smallest particles Imag inable are called, and bunch them to gether so that a lot of these units are combined Into one big complex one. Then you have a series of resins or gums. This Is what chemists call polymerization. Now let us take these resins and by chemical chicanery and tricks cause them to bunch their mole cules again, to polymerize, and if we carry It far enough we get cellulose. That is, we should if we could. lint treos and plpnts do this as easy as you please; they start with water and carbonic acid gas, from the air, end this th rv.msniogrlfy Into it-jr: MATTERS OF INTEREST There are 2,445,604 autos in use In the United States. In Russia there are about eighty-six public holidays in a year. Peat is largely used in stoking the railway engines of Sweden. The swallow has a larger mouth in proportion to its size than any other bird. The average wage of plumbers throughout the country is $5 for an eight-hour day. on the hillsides, while they throng the central plaza with their wares for sale, makes an unforgettable - pic ture. '''I--'-- The first impression is one of color color everywhere. It Is one vast sea of variegated . ponchos, shawls and head-dresses. Women In gay dresses of red, or blue or purple are sitting In front of their little mats, on which they display the food they have for sale, or the socks which they have made, or the ponchos they have woven, and as they bargain with the passer-by their hands are always busy with the little spindle dangling from their, arm. on which they are spinning wool from which they will make other socks or ponchos. - i They are never Idle, these Indian women, as they trot along the paths behind their llamas, as they herd their sheep on the hillsides or as they coine through the streets of Cuzco; you 'see that little spindle being twirled by the hand which has become so used to the labor that the motion is performed me chanically. Legal marriage among these Indian's of the-Sierras Is not general, although the Indian chooses his mate at an early age, and his loyalty to her and her family is usually lifelong, form ing a striking contrast to conditions found among the cholas or mestizos occupying the towns and villages. the sugar into starch,, the 'starch into gums and other things and finally Into cellulose, of which they are made, tjellulose is the framework of cells and everything that has life is made up of it, with juices and sap and so lutions of one sort or another wander ing around within them. Cotton nearly pure cellulose. Paper is cellu lose, little filaments of it, matted or felted together. Journal of Commerce. Campaign Slogans. Webster's "the past at least Is se cure," and "Liberty and Uulon, now ana iorever, one ana inseparable, are imperishable. Clay's declaration, " would rather be right tnan be presi dent," will long remain In the book of quotations, and along with it will run recollection of the retort of Tom Reed, when a congressman had quoted It with an emphatic flourish. "But you will never be either." May Make Soap From Lemons. The humble lemon-pip, - of which great quantities are every year accu mulated by Australian lemon-squash manufacturers, appears likely to earn respect as an article of commercial value. The federal analyst has re cently furnished a report to the effect hat the dried pips contain a large pro portion of oil. By ether extractions the yield of oil was 23 per cent, and by extraction with petroleum benzine 21 per cent. The oil obtained from the pips is clear, of, pale straw color, wholly saponifi- able, and hasSsliht but rather persis tent bitter taste. ' Possibly the oil expressed from the pips by direct hot pressing would not possess a bitter taste; If so, It would be of value for edible purposes, and. being wholly saponlfiable. could, as an alternative, be used for soap-making. If you are troubled with pimples blackheads, redness, roughness, itching and burning, which disfigure your com plexion and akin, Cutlcura Soap and Ointment will do much to help you. The Soap to cleanse and purify. th Ointment to soothe and heal. Free sample each by mail with Book. Address postcard, Cutlcura, Dept. L? Boston. Sold everywhere. Adv. No Mistakes. "I don't beUeve that is a live wire." " "Well, touch It if you want to be dead sure about it" The longest river in Japan U the Tone, its main course being about 200 miles long. - "A Soft Answer," Etc ; Mrs. Netvcomb Good morning. Is this Miss fWise's private academy? 1 Mrs. Binks (hotly) No, it is not I This is a private house, and these are my own children. Mrs. Newcomb (hastily) Why, "1 thought it must be a school, because the children looked so educated and scholarly and refined, you know. Mrs. Binks (genially) Oh, yes, of course, come in ana sit aown. Lucy, call your six brothers and five sisters, and in'-oduce them to the lady, while 1 just pi, on my hat to show her where Miss Wise's school is. Tit-Bits. Nerves All On Edge? Just as nerve wear is a cause of kidney weakness, so is kidney trouble a eause of nervousness. Anyone who has back ache, nervousness, "blues," headaches, dizzy spells, urinary ills and a tired, worn feeling, would do well to try Doan's Kidney Pills. This safe, relia ble remedy is recommended by thou sands who have had relief from just such troubles. An Indiana Case jtuftorar Mrs. Ida M. Tay lor, 816 Ashland Ave., Muncle, Ind., says: "My . back was so lame, weak and sore that I could hardly straighten after stooping:. I was al so bothered by dis zy spells and head aches. The kidney secretions were Ir regular in passagre and there were puf fv kjum under mv eyes. Doan's Kidney Pills have given me great relief from all these ail ments." GtDeesti Asty Stsr. BDeaBaa ' DOAN!8W FOSTER-MH-BURN CO. BUFFALO. N.Y. "Math." x Pop Are you familiar with mathe matics? Weasel Sure ; I call 'em "Math" for short. Where Ignorance Is Bliss. "How much does It cost you to run this yacht, old chap?" "If I knew, I wouldn't do it." Life. Call a man a diplomat. Instead of a liar, and he will be pleased. Yet it amounts to the same thing! ' - Of all animals dogs-appear to evince the keenest musical susceptibility. The; Army of Constipation Is Growing Smaller Every Day. CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER FILLS are responsible they not only give relief they perma- nentiycureCoi stipatioa. Mil-. lions use. them for i Bilioasness. hdifestioa, Skk Hesdscke, 5Dow Skis. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE. Genuine must bear Signature 'LWliat-MI l When You Follow The Trail GO f Equipped With Sawed-Off Sermon. Some girls seem to have a great deal of music in theiu und the neighbors are always sorry when any of it es--;!i-s. I n 1 1 1 a u u polls Star. Men's shoes fastened with pieces of spring metal instead of laces have been invented. It is said Jonas Hopkins, a farmer of Fitzwilliam, N. H., has grafted rosea on an apple tree. There are about 10,000 electric trucks and wagons in service in the United States, operating in 124 lines of trade. Under the operation of a new drain age law. Prince Edward island is ex pected to increase its farm value by $4,000,000. listA Msriwfc'ull-!Jf"i't"iiT s''frWsaisrisljiltsLK-aiM PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM A toilet preparation of merit. Helps to eradicate dandruff. For Restoring Color and Beauty to Gray or Faded Hair. 60c and 81.00 at PragelBta. Watt Florida 'Thfe last great West uneqnaled oppor tunities forGenera) FarniinKjjive Stock, information tree. West Florida Cnamber Oomriierce..Buiiitay,Fla. Every Woman "Wants FOR PERSONAL. HYC.IFNR Dissolved in water for douches stops pelvic catarrh, ulceration and inflam mation. Recommended by Lydia E. Pinkhnm Med. Co. for ten years. A hesding wonder for nasal catarrh, sore throat and sore ayes. Economical. Hu CAliamdbmiy draining and (vrmickial power. SampU Frn. 50c. H draisba, or patpud by mul The Paxton Todrt Ompany. Port on. lAnm.A f'BPMPU nn BITS "Rt"1" Rnts, Mlre.Bn iiwvsiivuuriv iiieoutduura. lttciuaa Ffl DSAI F Bt owner, lSSanfl 10scre farms nw. I T rr . good land desirable location, c. I Address JACKSON, 21 M. J add Su. Woods look, lit