Newspaper Page Text
THE CELINA DEMOCRAT. CELINA, OniO 7-. HrVAr V7 urn uvi i l ' I heir Care and Luiuvotiorv l" ' 1 f 0 f. til 2, . V 2"VVK . v , .x 'it Z v ft 1 f t TJ An Excellent Treatment of the Fror.t FLORAL HINTS By E. VAN BENTHUYSEN. Considering the small amount of care It requires, there is no flower iniore satisfactory and beautiful than the dahlia. Such hardy bulbs as hyacinths, tu lips, lilies, crown imperials, phlox, iris and the like, do better, as a rule, If allowed to remain in the ground un disturbed for years. If you have any cold-frame plants, such as violets, roses and carnations, don't fail to expose them more and more to the air for gradual hardening off before planting. Try growing geraniums this year. Next to caunas, they will give more satisfaction for the trouble expended than almost any other flower mention ablo. Be suro you get those, however, adapted for growing in beds. When your Easter lilies get through blooming, water them until the leaves begin to fade, then withhold water un til the tops die. When that occurs you can put the pots in the cellar and leave them there until autumn. (lailiolus bulbs will blossom a year earlier if peeled before planting. Be iug dry, the husk requires a long time to soak up so the new growth can penetrate it, but if it is removed growth starts at once. For a perpetual delight all summer few vinos are better to grow than the Madeira and the Columbian climber. Their foliage is of a very rich, glossy green, and the delicate white flowers, or ilower clusters of the Madeira vine are not only abundant, but deliciously fragrant. Both vines are easy to grow end in a fairly good soil will attain a height of 20 to 25 feet. Although the asparagus sprengeri produces only tiny (lowers, its foliage is so glorious, so green and restful to tho eye, that it is a plant much to be desired. Not requiring a great amount of sun, it can be placed back of other plants and, if somewhat above them, its rich beauty will act as a charming foil. For speedy results there is no an nual vine more desirable than the morning glory, in all its varieties. While it is true that the blossoms are not lasting, they present a lively spec tacle in the morning, adequate to re ward anyone rising in time to review them. It is doubtful if there is any other one thing in the culture of house plants so little understood as the proper application of moisture. Gen erally the best way to determine when a plan needs water is to take a pinch of the soil and rub it between the thumb and finger. If dry enough to become powdery, water should be ap plied; but if it is still so damp as to mold between the fingers no more wa ter will bo needed for a time. Lilies are, of course, an exception to this rule, and, in fact, almost all kinds of bulbs. Pansies are a desirable flower to have and a 5-cent package will be sufficient for one ordinarily to grow. They want to be started indoors in a box full of rich soil and kept In a slightly shaded place. The dirt should be damp all the time, to insure which requires frequent watering; and when the pansies are planted out it is better on this account to have the bed on the north side of the house. There, if m-1 A Pretty Arrangement for a Table. YbTZ A ITT' m . a ii k .'1 f 1 9 1 K Door With Ivy Trained Over the Pillars. given a little care, they can be made to bloom till frost conies in the fall. MAKE SPARE-MINUTE GARDEN By L. M. BENNINGTON. No. 1. Annuals for a sunny garden with planty of water. Flowers from June until November. One packet cosmos, early flowering three to four feet; blooms In July un til frost. Start seed indoors and trans plant 6ix feet apart iu the garden Id May. One packet 1 to 114 feet; blooms June and July. Sow in the garden in May thin or transplant ten inchep apart. One packet rhlox drummondl six Inches to one foot; bloomB June and July. One packet dahlia 18 inches to 2 feet; bloom September and October. Start seed in tho house. Bet in garden one foot apart. One packet sweet alyssum six inches; June to November. Sow seed In the garden early. This alyssum will thrive in a damp place as well. No. 2. Garden In a dry, sandy soil. These plants will require no watering during tho driest summer, if weeds are kept out and the soil is mulched with old manure or clippings from the lawn, or if the plants are set close enough together to shade the ground after July 1. One packet climbing nasturtium, four to six feet; blooms July until j frost. Set seed one inch deep. One packet nicotiana affinis two to three feet; July until frost. Set seed ; one inch deep. One packet candytuft one foot, June and July. Sow seed early in the gar den. One packet poppy 1 to 1 feet. July and August. Mix seed with Bifted soil; sow the earlier the better. Firm the soil with a board or the hand, but do not cover. Not easily transplanted One packet petunia dwarf six inches ; July to September. Start in the house for early bloom. Grown anywhere Portulacca (rose moss) is another an nual for a dry soil. Grows in a sand pile, six inches. Sow the seed middle of May. GLOXINIAS FINE BLOOMERS By E. VAN BENTHUYSEN. Spread the tubers out on pieces of old carpet made and kept quite warm and damp, to sprout. When the sprouts appear, pot the tubers in a light, spongy soil. A six-inch pot for each tuber. 1 Gloxinias come in white, crimson and purple, and in a combination of all those colors. Some varieties are bordered with a contrasting color, others have a throat of light or dark color, while still others have spots of dark color on a light or white ground. These plants are easy to grow and are one of the most beautiful of our garden plants. They are a good type for the busy woman who wants to have a garden that will give a showing for little effort. If the seed is started early in the season the plants bloom the same summer. They do best in a light, rich soil, and are fine pot plants for the window garden. M2 , , ' 1 , i His Father's House By HAROLD CARTER lCilyrlfilit, WW. by W. O. Cliaiiiuuii.) "It has always been my practice," Bald the dean, "to baptize a child on Kaster eve. I ask the members of my congregation to help me to continue this practice," Everybody knew the dean's love of children. He bad had three of his own, one, a girl, had died, another girl was married and living In the West; and of the dean's son only a few peo ple knew anything. Aftor a wild col lege career he had disappeared abrupt ly from his father's house. The cause of the quarrel nobody knew, but all know that the fault lay with the son. Since that day father and son had never communicated with each other. It lacked five days of Easter, and, prolific lu births though Madsbury was, no child had been born lately that had not been baptized, except the oc casional child that was not destined to be baptized. In vain the good-hearted women of the congregation hunted tnrough tho lists of tho parishioners. "There's Mrs. Martin's baby," said one to another, as tho news came of tho tenth child of 'the baker's wlfo. "But you can't take a baby six days old to be christened In wimther like this." "We've got to get somebody," said Mrs. Latour. "Have you tried the hos pitals, dear?" They hunted through the hospitals, aud at last their quest was rewarded. There was a colored baby, tw and a half weeks old, In perfect health. But the parents belonged to an ob scure sect which insisted on baptism by its own ministers. "It you'll help us not disappoint the dean, Mrs. Washington, I'll give you ten dollars," said Mrs. Latour, "And "But I've Never Seen Dean Farrell." a silk dress. And a new suit of clothes for your husband. And a Job in our garden." "Do you think Ah'm going to sell mah baby's soul for silk and gold?" demanded the indignant Mrs. Washing ton, sitting up fiercely among her pil lows. The women beat a hasty retreat. The last hope seemed gone. And then it was that the great discovery was made. There was a baby and Mrs. Latour found it. It had been born three weeks before, in a rooming house at the other end of the town. The mother, a delicate, frail young thing, listened in awe as Mrs. Latour told her of the dean's wish. "But I've never seen Dean Farrell," she whispered. "That makes no difference," an swered Mrs. Latour. "Now don't be a foolish girl, but do Just as I tell you. I'm going to let the dean know an hour or so before the christening." She did not tell any of the other women of the congregation, and Mads bury was agog to know whether or not Dean Farrell would be able to carry out his long-cherished custom. And, as the days went by, and the scramble to find a baby became more and more acute, without visible result, it was confidently anticipated that the dean would not. Dean Farrell was greatly distressed. He had kept to his custom for more than thirty years. In fact, the first baby that he had ever baptized had been his own wayward son, of whom he thought constantly. Like every father, he saw him, not as the grown man who had defied him, but as the lit tle child whom he had held in his arms and yearned over. Where was he now? His heart was very heavy. The boy might be dead. Worse things than death might have befallen him. Some where on the broad face of the earth was the man whom he had held in his arms at the 'baptismal font and who had filled all his life. It was at the eleventh hour that Mra. Latour came to the deanery, when the dean had long given up hope. Her face was alight with triumph. "I've found him!" she cried happily. "Him!" said the dean vaguely. He bad been seated in his office, thinking ot his son at the time when she was announced. The words seemed like an answer to his prayer, and he con nected them with him. "Tho dearest little boy baby. And he'll be here with his mother in half an hour. She's a girl from the other end of the town, and I found her by accident. I'm going to be god mother, my husband will be one god father, and the verger has Just said he'll be the other." "But the father?" queried the dean. "Dean Farrell," said Mrs. Latour eriously, "you know you said that you would give anything to have a baby to baptize, and It was pretty difficult to get one for you. This is a case of pri vate troubles, and jrou mustn't com plicate matters by asking questions, plftwo " I ill 1 "I won't, then," answered the dan Half an hour later he stood befor the christening font, looking thought fully Into the face of the girl-mother, who was opposite him. Uoslde hei stood Mrs. Latour, holding a baby thai behaved with all o baby's traditional goodness at baptism. It neither stlrrod nor cried, but lay in Mrs. Latour's arms with its blue eyes wide open, and fixed on the Dean's face. The sorvlco proceeded, and all the time he was speaking the Iean wan thinking of his own lost child. Hl bun had lain In his arms in the same tranquil way, and he had never guessed what trouble was to come after. But there was trouble now. There was trouble on the young mother'! luce. Timid and shy, he seemed un ablo to conceal her grief. The Dean saw the tears well into her eyes and roll down her cheeks as he took the infant into his arms and asked 1U name. Aftor a slight pause Mrs. Latour stepped forward and whispered it. And the Dean stared into the face of the child he hold. It was his own nunio that she had spoken. One little hand clutched at his sur plice. The face, upturned to his, the eyes that looked gravely, almost que tioningly, Into his own, told him the secret. It was his own grandson that ho was holding. He traced his ami's features, as a child's, in this child's face; It might have been his own boy that he held lu his arms aguin. His prayer had been answered, although not as he had asked it. He felt that as lie poured tho water over the head of the babe. Then the ceremony was over. The mother held the babe in her arms again and the register had been signed. Mrs. Latour and her husband hud slipped away. Tho mother had gone, and Dean Far- rell stood alone in the vestry. Only a minute, but iu that minute lie summed up an eternity. Then he went through the church. At the door ho came upon the young mother. She was Just leaving, and at her side, be hind tho pillar, where he had stood throughout the ceremony, he saw his son. For just one instant the two men hesitated. Then the Dean's arms were about the grown man, as if ho were tUe little boy whom he had lost. "You must come home," he said. "This day I have taken two children into my Father's house." SOME NATURAL SOAP PLANTS Weeds of the Southwest That Will Produce a Copious Lather. In western Nebraska and Kansas, in Colorado, New Mexico and parts of Utah, Arizona, Texas and Mexico, grow the plants commonly known as Spanish bayonet, bear grass or soap weed, the Philadelphia Inquirer ob serves. The first name is suggested by the stiff, sharp-pointed leaves that stand like a cluster of bayonets round the crown of the plant, as If to protect tho tall spike of large, greenlsh-whito flow ers that shoots up during tho early summer. The last named comes from tho use that the native peoples of these regions have long made of the plant, for it contains a substance known as saponin, whloh forms a lath er in water much like that of Boap. The material can be used to wash articles that would be injured by the alkalis oi" ordinary soaps. The roots of the plant, which contain most of the soap like substances, are generally used. The Indians bruise these roots be tween two stones and put them into cold water to steep for a few minutes. Then they stir tho mixture vigorously and rub it between their hands, an operation that soon produces a copi ous lather. Then they throw away the root fibers and use the suds they have produced. Soap manufacturers have begun to use soap weed in making a mild soap for the toilet and for washing deli cate fabrics. Ranchmen, on whose land the soap weed is a nuisance, can often sell it for enough to pay for clearing the land. The weed can be dug at any time, dried, baled and sent by rail to the soap factories. The spe cies of soap weed most commonly em ployed is the large fruited Spanish bayonet, Yucca baccata, the fruits of which were formerly eaten, when dried, by the Indians. Another com mon species, Yucca glauca, is also em ployed as a source of the vegetable soap. A Crab's Ingenious Disguise. There is a species of small crab found upon the English coast that is so afraid of its enemies that it has found out, or perhaps been taught, a clever way to hide itself. An English man had one of these crabs as a pet, and he was lucky enough to visit the creature when it was in the very act of making his "wig." The crab first tore off a piece of green, ribbonlike seaweed with his pincers and placed one end tn(his mouth. This, he sucked and nibbled and mplstened with some secretion of the nature of glue, that hardens under water, and then he pressed the sticky end upon his back. By and by his back was covered with a regular green and waving wig, so that, as he crawled about, he looked like a bunch of seaweed in gentle motion. It is to be presumed that such a- crab makes a sweet mouthful for a hungry fish, and that he makes the wig to prevent his being gobbled up. From time to time, of course, the wig requires repairing. Ancient History. Jonah had Just been swallowed by the whale. Gazing about his narrow quarters, he said: "Oh, well, this isn't any worse than the flat I've been liv ing in." Whereupon he doubled him self and proceeded to take a nap. Result of Association. "This aviator's assistant takes too readily to the business." "In what way?" "He has been at it only a week and here he wants a raise." "Something Just a Good." During the prevalence of high prices for drugs many citizens have taken to fresh air, sunshine and good foods, with excellent results. Chicago News. GINGHAM Gingham is coming back Into fash ion. Its more luxurious Bister, 5hecked linen, has been raised to tho Uip notch of atyle, and tho American Afternoon Frock With Yellow Taf feta Bodice end Organdie Skirt Trimmed With Bands of Blue Vel vet. The Collar in the Bodice and the Sash Are of the Velvet. makers of the commonplace Scotch fabric have Immediately put it out on the counters. The wide and the small checks form the leading design. The square of color may be bright or dark blue, black, apple green or golden brown, and if you want t be in the fore front of fashion, remember to use the check rather than the stripe. The prophets say that the popu larity of the latter is on the wane and that polka dots and squares will grow in power with the sun. The polka dot is already dancing about the town. One already has the chance to wonder, with Peter Sewell, that if, when passing a girl wearing a polka dot frock, one played a little tune, would the dots come out to dance? The trouble is that one does not have a flute or a mouth organ in the pocket at the right moment. Well, the polka dots and the chocks will surely shelve the stripes, and linen, tussor and gingham are the fabrics that bear these designs once again, as In the sane and wiser days when women dressed according to the climate. For decades, It has been an American Joke that if a man turned up his trousers. It was rain ing in London, which was merely an admission to man's slavlshness to Eng lish fashions; but recently, women have worn the fashions of icy St. Moritz on tho hottest days of an American August. The American climate calls for cot ton, linen and Chinese silks when it is at its worst, from the fifteenth of June to the fifteenth of September. Gingham is cheap and most admir able frocks of it can be made at home; and with its advent into fash ion, women should make the best of it. The blue and white checked linen is also admirable, even if a bit more expensive than gingham, and the dressmakers have already turned to it for frocks for garden parties and even for afternoon weddings in the open. The emphasis that fashion allows us to put upon belts and girdles ukr lows us to swing a gown into signifi cance through this means. USE FOR CRASH REMNANTS Great Number of Useful Articles May Be Made If One Has the Time to Spare. Often in her rambles In the shops tho watchful needlewoman will be able to pick up small remnants of crash. Just a little too long for towels or of too fine a quality. These she can make up into numerous artistic and useful articles if she but takes the time. There is a new kind of fudge apron which calls for a fine crash toweling. A straight piece of toweling about three-quarters of a yard long makes the front of the apron, reaching to the shoulders. To this are attached straps which pass over the shoulders, cross in black and fasten to the front piece Just at tho waistline at the sides. This is a little cooler apron than the kind which slips over the head, and has an entire back of the crash and re- SMALL THINGS THAT COUNT Good Supply of Adjustable and Wash able Collar and Cuffs Makes for Appearance. Like Phoebe Suow, of travel fame, the girl, who Is well supplied with adjustable collars and cuffs of wash able and cleanslble materials will al ways be smart and good to look upon. These are requisites of the wardroge one can hardly do without, if we are to be presentable with a limited ward robe at home or traveling abrond. Widely different in design nnd fabric they are, yet excellent in style and easily obtained, for shops generally are supplied with very good assort ments of these essentlul accessories of dress. The severely tailored set is to be had In crash, linen and woolen fab rics that are easily cleaned. Machine stitching and covered button molds give the snappy trimming touch. Dain tier and more feminine Is the crisp white organdie set with ruffles of accordion-plaited net. Orgundle-covered buttons set out In trim rows, nnd well- IS BACK quires less material, a yard being al most enouvh. A suitable cross-stitch design is worked at the bottom of the apron, and the entire edgo Is blmikct Btltched with bltio, even to the Join ings of the Btraps at the shoulder lino Snups under covered bnttonB hold tho straps at the Bides. A mending bag of generous propor tions can be mado from a, length of narrow crash. The top Is slightly curved out to fit the waist nnd a bi'lt of crash starts from one side and snaps at the other. The bottom is turned up Into a deep pocket, which is embellished on the outside with a design of scattered buttons, spools of thread, scissors, etc. The entire edge of the bag Is blanket-stitched. COLORING RUGS AND CARPETS If Not Too Much Worn It Will Pay to Freshen Them How It Should Be Done. If the faded Ingrain or other carpet shows no holes, It will pay to color It. After denting It nnd cleaning ull NpiiU with noni and water or pi"1""' lay It Hut on the Moor and follow the directions on the package. Apply while hot with a Kcrubbrush. This will color one iile. Fiber rug and plain carpets tuny lie fivsheiied wonderfully la this Iiiiiiiikt. L'se light blue mi a blue rug, tan or orange for brown, liuht givi'ii for a green rug. Do not get the dye too J:irk or the rug will look niuihly. To remove Ink from a run 'or cnipef, Immediately sop sweet mil It over the spot and dry lis much ns possible with a dry cloth. Then apply gasoline to take out the grease that the milk would otherwise leave. To remove soot from a carpet sprinkle the spot with salt. Let the salt remain on the spot for about twenty inlnuies, then sweep it hard with a broom. The spot will disappear. TAKES WASTE FROM ICEBOX Refrigerator Drain That Will Be Found a Great Convenience in the Kitchen. A great deal of time can be saved and trouble avoided by disposing of the waste water from your refrigera tor as Indicated by the accompanying sketch. Every housewife knows the advan tages of this simple device. Any size of hose or funnel will do. as the holes are bored to tit. The funnel is set Just low enough to allow the refrigerator to be rolled out from the wall without disturbing the appa- jnoar piece. Of GM9CM Hose- notes eaco ro fir Hose ratus. The hose may also be led to the cellar drain if such connection is convenient. Dakota Farmer. SUMMER FASHIONS . The peplum Is still with us. Many summer blouses are made with a short skirt like Russian blouses or a shorter peplum that Is worn outside tho skirt. Striped parasols are effective with plain colored or white suits. Some of the new boudoir caps which are often called negligee caps now, by the way are made like chil dren's bonnets, with strings to tie un der the chin. Pockets are more and more capa clous. Many of the new linen frocks for summer wear have huge pockets, almost like bags, applied on the skirts. A charming new hat is trimmed with real butterflies, properly dried, and placed under white tulle for pro tection. New Coiffures. Brush the hair smoothly back from the forehead, then place three little curls at the nape of the neck. Wave the hair, part in the middle and place a few curls over the ears and a topknot at the crown of the head, or the hair may be combed straight back with two curls falling over each ear. Draw the hair softly back over fore head and ears and place two puffs at the crown of the head. Brush the hair very smoothly back In French-knot style and place a large fancy pin in the moBt becoming place. spaced tucks give distinction to this set. Quilt Protector. Quilt or blanket protectors, stamped for embroidery, cost 35 cents. They are strips of sheer lawn to tack over the end of the quilt or blanket that comes at the head of the bed, in con tact with the face. They can be sim ply hemmed or edged with a nar row val lace, fulled on. The pat terns for embroidery are slmpfe and can be done in white cotton or in colored cotton to match the stripe in the blanket or the figure in the com forter. Shade of 1830. A quaint dress of brown satin at tracted much notice on Fifth t- enue the other day. The skirt was ruffled to the hips with scant bias frills two inches wide. The front was slit to the waist and rippled back over a white organdie petticoat, trimmed with Innumerable rows of ruffled black moire ribbon. The coat waist was short and tight fitting and fastened ia the front by two fcojs of gold braid. 111 B V ft " 1 r in ni AVOIDS ' OPERATION Medicine Which Made Sur geon's Work Unnecessary. Astoria, N. Y. "For two yeara 1 Was feeling ill and took all kinds of tonics. 1 was ecu i n b worn e every Jay. 1 had chilis.my bead would ache. I was always tired. I could not walk straight because of the pain In my back and 1 had pains in my stom ach. I went to a doctor and he said I must go under an operation, but J did not go. I read in the DaDer about Lydla E. Tinkham's Vegetable Com pound and told my husband about it I aaid 'I know nothing will help me but I will try this.' I found myself improv ing from the very first bottle, and in two weeks time I was able to sit down and eat a hearty breakfast with my hus band, which I had not done for two years. I am now in the best of health and did not have the operation." Mrs. John A. Koenig, 502 Flushing Avenue, Astoria, N. Y. Every one dreads the surgeon's knlfa and the operating table. Sometimes nothing else will do; but many times doctors say they are necessary when they are not Letter after letter comes to the Pinkham Laboratory, telling how operations were advised and were not performed' or, if performed.did no good, but Lydia E.Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound was used and good health followed, If you wnnt adrfoe rrit" to Lydla i;. I'inkhaiii Medicine Co. (conli'lcutial), Lynn. Alnss, PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM A tollrt preparation of merit. Ilolpt to rswilt at dandruff. For RaMtorinc Color and BtMut? to Gray or Faded ft-Ulr fcin. and at nn. FOR ACUTE ACHES OF THE FEET Hprlnkle one or two AUeo' Foot-Eime powder lu the t oot liulii aud 8ouk unci rul the fret. II tJikr. the Httug out of 1'orn. uud HunlouM and Binurtluir, acuilij( frrt. Tueu for lumiutr comfort, .liuke A.li-u's Foot-Kue luto your huosh. All dealer, wll It, 'i'x'. hanijjie (mi'kuKB JTRKU, AdJrraH, Alleu 8. Olumti'd, La Buy, N. Y. f Every Woman W anta FDD prDCONll HYf.lFNF. Ditaolred in water for douches stops pelvic catarrh, ulceration and Inflam mation. Recommended by Lydia E. Pinkham Med. Co, for tea years. A healing wonder for naal catarrh, am throat and tore are. Economical. Hu extraordinary clean iini and germicidal power. ISampI Fra. 50c all draggBU, or mtpaid Of ninnTltPajrtnrOroroTTUMyBoit Investigate the Onion. Tho homely onion bus been the sub ject of an Inquiry by a ltrittah com mittee whose duty it was to eo Into the matter of Its high cost. The re port of the committee reveals the fact that the present lil'h rate- of the onion Is due to the stoppage of Import from Holland and P.elgium and to the dimin ished import from Kgypt and Spain. It Is pointed out that onions can be grown In England, and to woman gar deners of even quite amateur experi ence the contemplative cult of the onion is to be recommended as real and useful war work. HEAL YOUR SKIN TROUBLES With Cuticura, the Quick, Sura and Easy Way. Trial Free Bathe with Cuticura Soap, dry and apply the Ointment. They stop itch ing instantly, clear away pimples, blackheads, redness and roughness, re move dandruff and scalp irritation, heal red, rough and sore hands as well as most baby skin troubles. Free sample each by mall with Book. Address postcard, Cuticura, Dept. L, Boston. Sold everywhere. Adv. Activities of Women. Thirty women are practicing dentis try in Missouri. Miss Mary ltobertson Is a United Stntes deputy marshal In Topeka, Kan. Fifteen women will attend the Demo cratic national convention as dele gates. For the first time In the history of the Republican conventions, women were employed to ussist in guard duty. Mrs. Robert Lansing, wife of the sec retary of state, is one of the "rookies" in the woman's camp near Washing ton. Druggists Know Best Mm for Kidney Troubles During the twenty-five years that I have been selling Dr. Kilmer's Swamp Root I have never heard a complaint, as my customers always tpeak favorably re garding it. Three parties have informed me that they have been restored to health by the use of Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-ltoot after suffering from Rheumatism, Liver trouble and Gravel. It is a pleasure to me to sell Swamp-Root as I believe it is the best medicine on the market for kidney, liver and bladder complaints. Verv truly yours, ED. ROETHLKIN, Druggist, , 1101 12th St., Cor. Monroe, Lynchburg, Va. Personally appeared before me this 1st day of November, 1915, Ed. Roethlein. who subscribed the above statement and made oath that the same is true ia sub stance and in fact. W. E. HAWKS, Notary Public. Prove Whit Swamp-Root Will Do For Ym Send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton. N. V., for a sample size bot tle. It will convince anyone. You will also receive a booklet of valuable infor mation, Celling about the kidneys and blad der. When writing, be sure and mention this paper. Regular fifty-cent and one dollar size bottles for sale at. all druf stores. Adv. The fatter a woman gets the easlet it is for her to believe other women are unable to notice it. Red Cross Ball Blue, made in America, therefore the best, delights the housewife. All good grocers. Adv. Kvery dreamer expects to accom plish wonders when he wakes up. Honesty Is a good thing in connec tion with Insurance policies. 1 11!' .'i I p:Jl I ,-. .,,...t-,--..i I ii