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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 10 Aug 1905, p. 7

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HABITS OF THE DOVE. TWENTY YEARS OF IT. Opening of the Great Vintah Indian Reservation President Roosevelt on July 15 signed the proclamation providing tor the opening to homesteadera and towns! to entry of the unallotted lands In the great Uintah Reservation in fctah. : The Reservation contains 3,445,000 . lucres, but the Military and Forestry Reserves and such Mineral lands as |j|ave to be withdrawn under existing (16a acres) by written application to be made only on a blank form pro­ vided by the Commissioner of the General Land Office. Registration cannot be effected through the mails or by an agent, except in the case c£ honorably discharged soldiers , or sailors, who may present their appli­ cations and due proofs of their quali­ fications through an agent of their ?' % . tmrorTHE B34TAH RmM Vr tfcf Cam & RV GtuhSnka ' laws will leave 1,069,000 acres avail- able for entry. • ',. Registration for the land will com­ mence August 1st and close August 12th. Registration may be made at Grand Junction, Colo., and Vernal, trice and Provo, Utah. Prospective •ettlers may register at any one of these places from 9:00 a. m., Tuesday, .^ugust 1st, until 6:00 p. m., Saturday, ' /August 12th. , To obtain registration, each appli­ cant must appear at one of the regis­ tration places and show himself duly . qualified to make homestead entry Farming Made Pleasant. ' In the Palouse wheat region they tell you such stories as these: One Ifcrmer on his sulky plow came to the id of his row just in time to meet his neighbor on his sulky plow who had Obme to the end of his row. "Have a cigar, John?" and he offered him a ttrenty-flve cent perfecto. Or this: A farmer came into town to ask at the tyanlf for the address of a neighboring firmer who was traveling with his family for pleasure. The banker took down a series of telegrams and re- idled: "Yesterday he left Atlantic City for Newport. He will be there a •week.--August "World's Work." Out of all the appreciations of John May that have appeared since the death of that distinguished statesman, none has been truer or more sympa­ thetic than the brief editorial in "The Reader Magazine" for August. It is ac­ companied by an excellent and hith­ erto unpublished photograph of Mr. Hay. / , Sit down with "The Country Calen- iiftr" and think of all the things that j4u wish would happen "under the blue sky;" then open it and you'll find how they have happened to others, so attractively presented that you are far inspired to win them for youself. New Petroleum Fuel. The.new petroleum fuel reported "from Switzerland Is in the form of brlcquettes containing four parts of petroleum to one part of secret mater­ ial. At 15 cents a gallon for oil, lbe cost of each bricquette was about two Had one-quarter cents, but on a large Jcale would be much less. Usual Performance. i "Then so far as you are aware," ir* the lawyer who *<vas doing a Cross-examining stunt, "/our wife was performing her usual household duties .When the accident occurred?" . "Yes," answered the witness; "she v* [. %as talking." : own selection, having a duly executed power of attorney, on 4 blank for that purpose provided by the Commis­ sioner. No person will be permitted to act as agent for more than one sol­ dier or sailor, and no one will be allov ed to register more than once or In any other than his true name. The procedure necessary to secure lands in this greatest of government reservations Is outlined in detail in a pamphlet just issued by the Passen­ ger Department Denver ft Rio Grande Railroad. Write to S, K. Hooper, Gen'l P. ft T. A., Denver, Colo. Habits. Ned was watching grandpa put on his shoes. "Why do you turn 'em over to shake 'em before you put 'en on?" he asked. "Did I?" said grandpa. "Why, yes, you did; but I didn't see anything come out. I have to shake the sand out of my shoes 'most every morning." Grandpa laughed. "I didn't notice that I shook my sho^s, Ned, but I got in the habit of shaking my shoes every time before putting them on When I was in India." "Why did you do it there?'\ "To shake out scorpions and centl*- pedes, or other nuisances that might be hiding in them." "But you don't need to do it here, for we don't have such things." "I know, but I formed the habit, and now t do it without thinking." "Habit is a queer thing, isn't it?" Said Ned, thoughtfully. "It's a very strong thing," said grandpa; "remember that, my boy. A habit is a chain that grows stronger every day, and it seems as If a bad habit grows faster than a good one. If you want to have good habits when you are old, form them while you are young, and let them be growing all the iriiile you live." An Explanation. "Gosh," exclaimed Farmer Korntop In the city department store, "I won­ der why all these clerks are yelling 'cash'?" '£i- "I reckon," replied'his wife, "It's to lit folks know they don't trust." ,'Ask Your Dealer for Allen's Foot-Ease powder. It rests the feet. Cures Swollen, Bore, Hot, Callous. Aching-, Sweating Feet and Ingrowing Nails. At all Druggists and Shoe stores, 25 cents. Accept no substitute. ~ mple mailed FREE. Address, Allen S. " LaeRoy, N. Y. Wasteful. Mrs. Chatters--You don't seem to Consider my opinions very valuable. " Mr. Chatters--My dear, I consider : them so valuable that it shocks me to v* eee you giving them out so promiscu- *n»sly. 1 -Over one million acres of land Un the ' Uintah Indian reservation will be thrown open for settlement August 28th. Registration begins August 1st, at Grand Junction. Colorado, continuing till August <12. From Denver, Colorado Springs or Pueblo, the Colorado Midland is the short­ est' route to Grand Junction or reserva­ tion points. Write C, H. Speers. G. P. r jL. Denver, for booklet, giving Uon regarding land, rates, eta . I - . • ' ; . When Your Grocer Says he does not have Defiance Starch, you may be sure he is afraid to keep it un­ til his stock of 12 oz. packages are •old. Defiance Starch is not on!y bet­ ter than any other Cold Water Starch, but contains 16 oz. to the package and r. ,or •ame mo"y"" "• " The August "Arena" contains a number of unusually strong papers on civic, political and economic subjects Vhich will challenge the attention of tjioughtful Americans. - One of the most engaging stories of the season is "The Debutante's Let­ ters," by Reginald Wright Kauffmap Jhi "The Pilgrim" for August, "f - , • ? * 7 The fellow who follows his own in- -tfinations Is seldom In the lead. r ' Ido not believe Piso's Core for Consumption f. •' j|pka in equal for coughs and colds.--Jons P. i" '* BOYKB, Trinity Springs, Ind , Feb. 15,1900. Speaking of the "smart set," will somebody Sound as a Dollar. Monticello, Minn., Aug. 7th.--Mr. J. W. Moore of this place stands as a liv­ ing proof of the fact that Bright's Dis­ ease, even in the last stages, may be perfectly and permanently cured by DOdd's Kidney Pills. Mr. Moore says: "In 1898 three reputable physicians after a careful examination told me that I would die with Bright's Disease inside of a year. My feet and ankles and legs were badly swollen; I could hardly stand on my feet and had given up all hopes of getting cured when a traveling salesman told me that he himself had been cured of Bright's Disease two years before. "He said he had taken-to his bed and expected to die with it, but that he had been cured by a remedy called Dodd's Kidney Pills. "I commenced taking them at once and I am thankful to say that they saved my life. After a short treat­ ment I was completely restored to good health and I am now as sound as a dollar." Needles* Alarm. Excited Passenger--"Here, portftr--• did you find a $5 gold piece amon& the change I tipped you with?" Pullman Porter--'Yessah. What's de mattah--It ain't a counterfeit, is it?" Important to Mothers, liwlwi carefully every bottle of CABWfi, a Mfe and rare remedy for iafaats sad aad aee that It Bears the Signature b Use For Over 30 Year*. Xhs Kind You Have Ahnw* At the Exhibition. Fair Enthusiast--Congratulations, my dear Mr. d'Auber. Your picture is beautiful--and so different from your others."--Tales. " Every person thinking of vtsltln* the Hintah Indian reservation In eastern Utah, to be opened for settlement August 28th, should have a Homeseekers' Guide and sectional map. It tells everything. Sent postpaid for 50c. Address W. H. Em­ mons. 700 17th St., Denver, Colorado. Knowledge and timber shouldn't be much used till they are seasoned.-- Oliver Wendell Holmes. RHEUMATISM CAN BE CURED. _ We have a guaranteed cure for RHEUMATISM, JTSURALUIA and LAME BACK. Guaranteed to care or money refunded. Or? bottle lent prepaid •1.00; I bottles with written guarantee to cure, *5.00, X. B. C*., 187 2d Street, Milwaukee, Wii, Radium has not yet evolved life. The bacteria turn out to be crystals. Try me just once and I am sure to come again. Defiance Starch. If reports be true, the microbe of laziness is extremely energetic. Will they serve ham and eggs in {feat. Mew Xerk actors' tftwal , H Hlitfl," Writer Thinks, Corresponds to Our Kissing. An Englishman, E-dmond Selous, has been watching doves at play and in combat. Of the habit of "billing," In which so many birds engage when they are nesting, he says: "Where birds now merely 'bill,* they once. In my opinion, led each other--or the male fed the female--but pleasure came to be experienced in the contact alone and the passage of'food, which was never necessary, gradually be­ came obsolete. I think it by no means improbable that our own kissing may have originated In much the same way and that birds, when thus 'billing,' ex­ perience the same sort of pleasure that we do when we Mss must be quite obvious to any one who has watched them." Of a peculiarity of the stock dove Mr. Selous writes: "When these birds fight they constantly interrupt the flow of the combat by bowing in the most absurd way, not to one another, but, generally, so to speak, for no object or purpose whatever, apparent­ ly, but only because they must do so. The fact is, ine bow has become a for­ mula of? courtship and as courting and fighting are intimately connected the erne suggests the other in the mind of the bird, who bows, all at once, under a misconception." HATCHED OUT TURTLE'S EGGS. Unfortunate Cat Unwitting!^ Served as Incubator, Alonzo Murphy of Pochuck, Pa., cap« tured a snapping turtle recently which his wife made into soup. The family cat was given a portion of the carcass and a number of eggs, which were found in the reptile. Soon after the cat died. While Mr. Murphy was burying the animal the fur at the stomach parted and eleven small turtles emerged one after the other. Mr. Murphy's theory is that the cat had swallowed the turtle eggs whole and, being unable to digest them on account of the shells, the stomach of the cat acted as an Incubator and hatched the eggs. Then the young turtles clawed and bit their way to freedom, killing the cat. Stock Exchange Elephant. Though bulls and bears and even lambs are frequently seen in the stock exchange, members of this body prob­ ably were never before visited by other menagerie pets until a short time back, when an elephant paid a call at the exchange. This pachyderm, however, came not of his own free will, but was led to the scene by Sal­ vationist Smith. Mr. Smith wanted to secure a subscription for his army's self-denial fund, so requests were made by make-believe Jumbo. The novelty of the presentation resulted in attention, and, best of all, generous donations.--New York Herald. Long Distance Courtships. Sketching one day in Burma, an English artist noticed a man a little distance off glaring straight ahead of him at some object he could not see from his position. The man sat with the same fixed glare the whole after­ noon and was at It again next morn­ ing. The artist had the curiosity to ask an English visitor what it meant. The reply was:' "Oh, he is In love!" And It was explained that this was their method of courtship. The object of the man's attentive gaze was a girl in a neighboring bazaar. When a young man falls in love, he has to seat himself at a certain distance from his adored one and wait for her to do the rest. If she looks in his direction once or twice on the first or second day, he is wildly encouraged, and if on the third day she nod to him and smiles It Is time to go to the parents with reference to the marriage settle­ ments ' Trout Without Hearing. In discussing whether or not trout hear, a correspondent of the Amateur Sportsman asserts that they do not. In his opinion their sensitiveness to approaching danger is due solely to the vibration of the earth along the stream and the consequent vibration of the water. Thus persons standing perfectly still are able to talk and laugh with impunity when the slight­ est bodily movement of either will frighten the shy fish Largest Flower in the World. The largest flower in the world, it is said is the bolo, which grows on the Island of Mindanao, one of the Phil­ ippine group. It has five petals, meas­ uring nearly a yard in width, and a single flower has been known to weigh twenty-two pounds. It grows on the highest plnacle of the land, about 2,000 feet above the level of Lives In Tree. A Massachusetts man lire* house in a tree in sanimer. In a World's Largest Plant. The largest plant in the world i« probably a species of seaweed, which often attains a length of 300 feet. The stems are dried ancl used as ropes by the South Sea lslai Stimulating Appetite; It Is astonishing to what extent the idea prevails that the use of stimulants in the food of poultry is beneficial. There are numerous people that al­ most constantly dope their fowls with cayenne pepper. It is a wonder that the fowls do not quickly show the effects of such unnatural methods of feeding. A healthy bird has no more need of such irritants in its food than does a healthy person need big doses of red pepper. Moreover, when a bird Is fed red pepper the person that gives it does not usually consider the great difference In size between a human being and a barnyard fowl. With a full grown man or woman a very small amount of cayene pepper in the food goes a long ways, but with a bird that weighs approximately five pounds the dose should be correspondingly small. If cayenne pepper is to be fed at all It should be fed In a scientific manner, but such Is not the usual mode of feeding. When the appetite of the bird Is dull it indicates that the diges­ tive system of the fowl is out of con­ dition. Matters cannot be improved by inducing bird to take more food to be ti^pned into-the already sluggish digestive passages. Stimu­ lating the appetite at such a time may result In Increasing the complications in the digestive tract. Bran, Corn and Oats. • I have found that a mixture of bran, ground corn and ground oats in equal parts makes a very good soft food. I simply place what I wish to use in a big wooden pail I have and cover it with boiling hot water, stirring it up. I let the mixture remain for at least six hours. By that time it is thor­ oughly cooked, provided the pail has been kept covered. I think it is un­ necessary to cook such food by put­ ting it in a tank with fire beneath. We heve Only to keep the vessel in which is the mixture tightly covered to have the latent beat in the pail do the work. In feeding bran I get a large amount of bone and muscle-forming material --both lime and protein. By feeding corn I :get some of these and more of the fat-making ingredients. By feeding the oats I get a large quantity of easily digested food that is bal­ anced about as perfectly as it can be. There is also a stimulant called "avoln" in oats, which Is supposed, to greatly increase the vigor of fowls and farm animals using cats. I have ob­ tained good results by feeding this mixture once a day, as it keeps the digestive organs of the fowls healthy and in good condition.--Estelia Har­ per, Carroll Co., 111., in Farmers' Re­ view. ' Keeping Lice Out. It Is entirely possible to keep lice out of the poutyry yard, just as it is possible to keep out poultry diseases. I am aware that the lice are so com­ mon that it is taken for granted that they must be in evidence, but I know now from my own experience that neither lice nor mites are necessary, provided of course that no fowls are brought Into the flock from other sources. I have kept out lice and mites for years, but my flock is a small one. But I know of a flock of over 600 hens where no lice or mites are to be found. They take great precau­ tions to keep out birds that might bring them in. It pays better to get along without some birds rather than have lice introduced into the flock. Large Poultry Yards; On -the farm there is not a great demand for poultry yards during much of the year, yet yards are almost always found necessary at some time of year. If the yards are to be used much in summer they should be large ones that the fowls may have an abund­ ance of room for exercise. The large poultry yard does not become con­ taminated with droppings to the ex­ tent that a small one does. This Is a great consideration in warm weather and also In wet weather. The ground In the crowded poultry yard is soon worked into a fine mud by the feet of the fowls, while if the yard is abundantly large the ground will not be broken up except immediately around the door and not there if gravel is placed to extend ft lew yards from the entrance. Roosting Closets. boosting closets are a new thing in * the poultry world, but they are doubtless of value. One of the greatest causes of colds in fowls has been drafts that have fallen on the birds when they were sleeping. Roosting closets can be made of al­ most any material including canvas. By them the fowls can be kept free from drafts, while the air in the poul­ try house Is usable for breathing. We would like to hear from readers of the Farmers' Review that have given this arrangement a trial. It is worthy the careful consideration of our sub­ scribers that have ventilators in the tops of their houses, which are as­ sumed to be a cause of some of the troublee we have had in the paat. Army Morsee. •• v mmm The demand for horses for araiy use is growing and the military authorities seem to find it exceedingly difficult to get horses that come up to the requirements. It is ' probable that if good horses for army use were abundant the standard would be still higher. The standard is kept where it is because of the difficulty the buy­ ers would have if It were made higher than it is. In time we will probably get around to having almost a breed of army horses. It is evident that the trouble in securing the right kind of horses comes from the fact that they have to be selected from different breeds or no breeds. Javelle Water. This is a home-made cleanser, which although old, may be of interest to many. It is worth keeping on hand, for It removes stains made by grsss, tea, coffee and fruit. The following recipe will pro­ vide enough to last an ordinary house­ hold for a year: Mix in an earth'en jar or a large bottle one pound of salsods, five cents' worth of chloride of lime, and two. auarts of soft water. Emaciated by .Diabetes; Tortured with Gravel and Kidney Pains. Henry Soule, cobbler, of Ham- mondsport, N. Y., says: "Since Doan's Kidney Pills bured me eight years ago, I've reached 70 and hope to live many years long­ er. But * twenty years ago I had kidney trouble so bad I could not work. Backache was persistent and it was agony to lift anything. Gravel, whirling headaches, dizzi­ ness \ and terrible urinary disorders ran me down from 168 to 100 pounds. Doctors told me I had diabetes, and could not live. I was wretched and hopeless when I began using Doan's Kidney Pills, but they cured me eight years ago and I've been well ever since." Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. For sale by all dealsrs. Price, 50 cents per box. Something About Salt. Silt, which is an article in daily use in the humblest homes, has a number of interesting facts concerning It. Salt is used all over the world much In the. same way as water, animals and human beings alike craving for it. In some parts of Africa children will eat it in preference to sugar, and on the Gold Coast a handful of salt will purchase two slaves. The Germans calj salt "the gift of God," and used to believe that prayers were better answered when offered near salt. In the east salt Is consid­ ered sacred; all oaths taken over it are inviolable, and when an Arab of­ fers salt to a guest he guarantees his safety. The Romans believed that if the salt put on a sacrifice fell off It pre­ saged disaster. -Hence the origin of the "bad luck" attendant on salt spill­ ing. NO SLEEP FOR MOTH III Baby Covered With Sores and Scales --Could Not Tell What She Looked Like--Marvelous Cure by Cutfcura. "At four months old my baby's face and body were so covered with sores and large scales you could not tell what she looked like. No child ever had a worse case. Her face was being eaten away, and even her finger nails fell off. It Itched so she could not sleep, and for many weary i.lghts we could get no rest. At last we got Cutlcura Soap and Ointment. The sores began to heal at once, and she could sleep at night, and In one month she had not one sore on her face or body.--Mrs. Mary Sanders, 709 Spring St., Camden, N. J." Robert L. Gerry to Have Stable. Another millionaire's son, Robert L. Gerry, son of Commodore Elbrldge T. Gerry of New York, is the latest pat­ ron of the sport of kings. He Is the proud owner of the steeplechase horse Joe. Gelrry had contemplated such a move for a long time, but as his fath­ er was opposed to it he put it off from time to time. The delay only In­ creased his desire to follow the lead of Harry Payne Whitney, Clarence H. Mackay and other rich young men. In connection with Gerry's advent on the turf the report was spread that Alfred Gwynne Vanderbllt would become his partner. Gerry and Vanderbllt are close friends, ^t the latter's wedding the former acted as best man. Help Daughter of Bret Harte. Miss Ethel Marte, the daughter of Bret Harte, who died in London, is in bad health and the sympathies of English admirers of "The Luck of Roaring Camp" and "The Spelling Bee at Angell's" has been aroused. George Meredith, Sir George Newnes, Sir Gilbert Parker, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and other well-known persons In the literary world have formed a committee to raise a fund in behalf of Miss Harte. Komura's Choice of Society. Baron Komura, while a student in Harvard law school, from which he was graduated in 1877, avoided going into society, although urged to do so by his classmate, Baron Kaneko, and there was no lack of opportunity. With some far-sightedness Komura said he wanted to see American life outside of conventional society. He was a close student of English and American literature. Compound Interest comes to life when the body feels the delicious glow of health, vigor and energy. That Certain Sense of vigor in the brain and easy jKHse of the nerves comes when She improper foods are cut out aniLnredijze&ted Nuts 4- take their place. V If it has taken you years to run down dontexpectone mouthful of this great food to bring you back (for It is not a stimulant but a jRebuilder.) JO days' trial shows such big re­ sults that one sticks to it "Ihefe'i s Reason.' et the little book, (>The Boad to iviLte," in eachpkg nwm unvAT-s, | FUR SALF* 1-'tw *cre farm, ranch, near Burns, I wit «nu, Kansas; 250 aeresculiivated; TOacrea tame grass; balance pasture; IVneed; good Improve­ ments; orchard; rural route: telephone. A bargain at«22 per acre. Also some fine Improved 80. IfiO and 820 acre farm* near Peabody, Kansas, 830 to $.">0 per acre, In the best crop section in Kansas. Liberal terras arranged. For particular* call on or address GEORGE NELLOR, Agent, Peabody, Kans. '•'Ml CLEARBROOK FARM. three tulles Is'orth of Anniston, Alabama. Deiinhtfu], healthful all-year cltmat«; 8)0 acres well watered; dally mall: tele­ phone; KiKid iiuusc; 5 new ienunt iiuuses; 4 large bams. Price •la.StW. Small cash payment, balance time. Will sell part. Mrs. Hattie E. Sexton. ARKANSAS LAND FOR SALE. I will sell, on account of old age, 520 acres good farm­ ing land--will cut 8.000,000 ft. saw timber; alio ^ block grmnd In aO.OOO city with residence and saw null 25.000 ft. capacity on It. All for *5,000.00, (one-half actual value.! Easy terms arranged. H. G. CADY, PINE BLUFF, ARKANSAS. S5 per month buys you a farm; cood soil, excellent water, good markets, sure crops, healthy climate and well eett'ei country. Write for particulars. 203 KorfoLk,Nebraska. PAR QAI f 480 acres nicely located, with smooth, r VI) «HU tlacfe soli, extra large buildings of all kinds. In good shape. This la one of the finest Improved farina in Northern Iowa. Price, »A>. Easy t6rms. For further Information address, C. L. KUDER, LIME SPRINGS, IOWA. Knoxville. Tenn., on Tennessee rlverj hair mile from depot. L. & N. U. It., Monroe county. 880 acre;-:, 2tf5 cleared. 100 acres bottom land; upland good. Improvements good. 9-room dwelling, etc. T. W. HUMES, VONORE. TENNESSEE. LAND FREE I 'o advertise and enrouras-p Immi­gration to Poinsett county. Arkan« •as. we are giving away land In one of tbo heat sect; tlousof the United States. If you are looting for a home for yourself or children this should interest rou and upon receipt of »1 to cover expenses of mak­ ing deed, we will make same and forward to you. Is this an Inducement? POINSETT IMMI­ GRATION ASSOCIATION, Msrrishurg, Ark. The Celebrated Moose Mountain District Is known as the best InWesiern Canada, (iovarn- nieut reports give us the largest acreage cultivated and beat yields. Twenty lar^c grain elevators, two flour mills Within 20 miles in this district speak for themselves. Soil is the best; wheat has avtmged 35 bushels on lands tilled fur -t) years without fertilis­ ing. Farms for sale; easy terms. Correspondence solicited. D. C, McFee Land Co., C*xlyi< GLOBE AGENTS WANTED Uapld manufacture with high carbon wire make GLOBE FENCE a fast seller. GLOBE FENCE CO., Globo Rldjf., HCDSON, MtrillCUH FOR WOMEN troubled with ills peculiar to tiicu wSOw ££ S UVMVUV 1* 3&&.OUT cesstul. Thoroughly cleanses, kills diMaMfperoM, stops discharges, heals isfiammatioa *Bd local •orcness. Paxtine Is in powder form to be dissolved in pom water, and is far more cleansing, healing, germicidal and economical than liquid antiseptics for all TOILET AND WOMEN'S SPECIAL USES j For sale at druggists, 60 cents a bos. Trial Box and Book of loutryctkma Pna, R. PAXTON COMPANY BOSTON. I A Great Combination for THIS SUMMER'S VACATION THE Canadian Rockies the grandest scenery in the world-- unapproachable in magnificence yf and majesty and The Lewis and Clark Centifl#' ntal Exposition at Portland* Oregon. This will be the ^popular trip this summer. , ^ FHMWFC S«rvie« Bahrein St ?a«il and TH« PaciSe CCMI . ; Send for handsome booklet "'Challenge of the Mountains.** CANADIAN PACIFIC RY. A, C. Shaw. G-enl. Agt. Passenger Department^ 233 S. Clark Street. Chicago. SHEER-CUT SHEARS TSS5& Shear Co., 184 La Saiie Street, Chicaco. Beat terms. Credit given. Write at once* . } Thompson's Eye Water 11 afflicted with eore eyes, uae W. N. U., CHICAGO, No. 32, 1905. When Answering Advertisements Kindly Mention This Paper. Truths that Strike Home Tour grocer is honest and--if he cares to do so--can tell you that he knows very little about the bulk coffee he sells you. How cat* lie know, where it originally came from, how it was blended--or With What --or wlien roasted? If you buy your coffee loose by the pound, how can you expect purity and uniform quality t LION COFFEE, th« LEADER OF ALL PACKAGE COFFEES, is ©i necessity uniform In qullty, strength and flavor. For OVEB A QUARTER OF A CENTURY, «UON COFFEE has been the standard coOee fta millions ol homes. UON COFFEE * e«wiy et our factories, and until opened la yovr home, has no chance ot belna adul­ terated, or of mining In contact with <ImI. dlrt.Cerme.or nelen hands. In each package~ of IilON COFFEE you get Oltt full f)Ound of Pure Coffee. Insist upon getting tbo genuine. Lion head on every package.) „ ("Save the Lion-liea&s for valuable premiums.) . : § SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE ^ WOOLSON SPICE CO.. Toledo, s St. Mary's, Notre Dame, Ind. One Mile West of Notre Dame University. •• •. Two Hours' Ride from Chicago. This Institution lor Young Ladies has just completed its fiftieth year of usefulness. It is to-day one of the Ticst equipped schools in tho country ami enjoys an international fepu- tation for giving the best possible mental, moral and physical training to its students. Collegiate, Academic and Preparatory Course*. DECREES CONFKRRKR. Exceptional advantages in Music and Art. A tine Oymna»lum for Physical Culture, a model building of its kind. Ideal and healthy location on an etuinduct) overlooking the romantic St. Joseph River. Modern building*? heated by steam with hot and cold watar throughout. For Catalogue and other information, address THE DIRECTRESS, ST. MARYS, Box M, NOTRE DAME, IND. Conducted by tl>« Siatara ot ti>« Holy Croaa. School Yaar Bogisw Sopt--hor lift. Mull's GrapeTonk (FREE) FOR Hot Weather Dangers CONSTIPATION 6TOMACH AND BOWEL TROUBLE No oae with regu­ lar bowels aad healthy stomach can contract dis­ ease. A person with Constipation and Stomach Trouble is always the first to succumb to Sun Stroke, Heat Debility and Prostration. Cholera, Colic and Diarrhea are more fatal in Hot Weather because vitality is lower--they are the direct result of Constipation. It is a mistake to suddenly check diarrhea, the danger is Blood Poison. A physic is also dangerous as it weakens the patient and reduces vitality. Treat the cause with Mull's Grape Tonic. Constipation and its attending ills are caused by decaying or dying bowels and intestines--Mull's Grape Tonic revives and strengthens the Bowels so that they are enabled to act naturally and eject the poison from the system, everybody should take it during hot weather. It wards off disease, builds up the system and purifies the blood. Typhoid Fever and Appendicitis are unknown in families where Mull's Grape Tonic is employed. Aa a Stomach Tonic it is Unequalled. • SUFFERED ALL HIS LIFB. The endorsement of E. B. McCurdyof Troy, Ohio, proves that Iho severest forms of Constipation are promptly cured by Mull's Grape Tonic--He says: "I cave your Tonic a thorough trial. It is the only remedy that will cure constipation. I do not believe anyone sutiereJ mora >twifw than I. as 1 had been atflicted with it ail myltts. For days my bowels would not act and thenO&ly by the use of strong cathartics tliat wera fast ruining my health. My Stomach andLiverwer# deranged and I suffered with inward piles. tiM pains ot which would at times raise me off W9 chair. I spent much money with various doc tors and medicines to no avail. "Soon alter I started Mull's Grapo Tonic mj bowels began to move regularly-- the pain UA me and my general health built up rapidly. "1 heartily recommend it as an absolute CW to which I aai a living witness." Until Mull's Grape Tonic was put OB the American market there was no COX* for Constipation. Let us send yoa a bottle free to-day to show you that U will do all we claim. 6m4 f«r Ailii| Cfcildrts mi Nsnfc* Wittui. F R E E B O T T L E C O U P O N Bend this coupon with yoar name and address and yonr draggMt'a MJM, te a frao Mlk ft •all'* Grape Toaic, Stomach Tonic. Constipation Cora aad Stoat Imhr, to Vntt MASS TOHIC CO.. 1*8 Third Are., Rook Islaad, 111. Oiva fttU 1 battle contain* nearly thre* times the Me. ana. At number itampad an tha iabal--Ufca no ether firaai yaw write pUial?. TkaCLM H» gamiM 1M a MS «*t v. n irrtffh Wrlm'fi -fi - - . '•VS53?*.- TfT™ '

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