McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 6 Dec 1906, p. 7

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/- & V 4 - _• * • '*'4 •V £ > i""V ... 1 | -* , ? * Wif^V k .vV, ; k> '< ' V< ,-<?' W : Mi '•VfXn. of St. HhM^ Somerset "I yoa «nU mu#>». My CiuM«mab&rI«fi and my ears were like wax. I bad 1 and they pronaauoed 1117 tronhln--»a--is. I had spells «f vomiting, could mat eat, is laot,did I had aneb-dia- trass after «atfag. My stamacfcwaaillled with gas which caused me awfnl apiny. The Jaackaelie laoffered was a* times alrasst tuihearatitoaud the laa* swrtmi naadenqrhantTt beat so fast that I ooold hardly heeathe. Bat the worst of aS was the splitting stenralgia headache which never left mefor seven weeks. About this time I had ha^ssrertl numb spells. Itj limbs would be ©old and with ant avy feeling and £h« most deathly settsaiaocn W<6ald oowe'ever me. •"Nothihg had helped me until I begat* taking Dr. WiUaams' Pink Pills, in faert, I had p rowju worse -every day. Alto-1 laadtaJceu the piHs« short time I eou'M see £lmt they kbn benefiting me p*uj. one morning I awoke entirely free from pain. The distress after eating disap- psaaedaud iu three weeks I could ea* suiything I wanted and cuifer no imw- •enience. I also «lept soundly. I have take* several iboxes of the pills and have gained in weight (from 120 to 154ponads said aas perfectly well 110w." Dr. Williams' Pink Pills cure unwmk beeasae they actually make new blood. For rheumatism, indigestion, nervons headaches and many forms of weakness tfeeysme recommended .even if ordinary medicines have failed. They are sold by all druggists, or willibe sent postpaid, ou receipt of price, 50 cents per box, six boxes for $2.50, by the Dr. Williams Medicine Company, Schenectady, N. Y. POINTS ON BVY1NQ A HORSE. Whs* to Have in Mind Whan Select- V ing a N«w Animal. Too many people bay horses with­ out considering the purpose tor which they are to be used. They think a horse is a horse the world round, and that there is but little difference ex­ cept in size an dweight. Experience and observation has taught me that the slope of the shoulder has more to do with the horse's ability than disposition or other points. The %t>rse with the shoulder i HAKES BEAUTY Among the ladies no other medi­ cine has «ver had so strong a fol­ lowing, because, excepting pure air and -exercise, It is the source of more beautiful complexions' than any othec agency, as Lang's Family Medicine <&e t»nlc4axative. It packs pure blood in the veons, and no woman eaa be homely when the rich, red blood of health oourses in herveins. Soadbyalldeale«4ct 25 c. and 50c. MMtMMIiMMMM*MM fU Buffalo Aged Unset* Oil • Ready-Mixed f ,s * . , •. " . ***-, M ' v / no 8. different Types of Homes. show* 3a fig. 1, which is almost per­ pendicular, will be able to pull a heavy- load without injuring his shoulders. The collar will not work up and choke him and his shoulders will' stand up well under heavy work. A horse with shoulders like Fig. 2 will stand ordi­ nary wort: and drive well, but a horse with very sloping* shoulders like Pig. 3 is suitable only for use as a saddle horse. Such a shoulder usually goes with a short coupling and well sprung ribs, which are characteristic of a good saddler, says Farm and Home. A horse with very sloping shoulders cannot Jbe worked at heavy drafting without a specially designed collar or it will work up on his neck and choke him, if It doesa*t make his shoulders sore. Whers ;*$|b)r Can Be" Advantage. SPRAYING AND DIPPING CATTLE. Stand Every Test for exterior and interior work !• «SA. L. O. PHat coafcftwonlT the bmmMWU pAs, selected with the gwatest care andtixmly combined ia proper psapprtiow* with ""l '• • '» Aged |Npi.ls«er JuSer. Thisirltot f---- «-«*- illustrates the »tw toe on caeraued dunaottt in mm ftttfsrss&sszivic A- L. O. Patet h groond An pswrfol nttW M apedal coMtruction which mmifi propMr Malmilation and knittiat togetkar ci ill psrti- |1m, and produces a paint aneqnalad in covco tag power, durabaity, finaneet «f testuie ami (iMinjr.of finish. It. L O. Mot Is the best paint tor all «• it ia possible to produce. Every t 1 atom is pan. It is the most aconon at made. WiU last longer, iook better and ilwrther than any other paint. kfoar dealer fo» Bafiaio A. V. O. Rerff- Ml Paiuu. Folders caotaining valuable ialonnatioa and chart of j Folders cantaiaiiur vali if jo beanmal 1 mfaest. For sab by Haidaant leeeiywheia. Nhb OU Mat« Varmiak Cb. las MS* SaShla. H. f . : SICK HEADACHE ' • 4 "TPositively eared by i*A DTTD O these little Pills. llAll! Ll\y Bmt also relieve Wa- Wn,li fc" treas insaD^apeptfa. In- digestJoa and Too Hearty Eating; A perfect rem­ edy «or Dtatoesa. Kaosea. Drcnrdaass. Bad Taste la the Hooth. Coated Tongas, Pain In the Side, TORPID LIVER. Hiay regnlsts the Bowels. Purely Tegetabie. SMALL PILL SMALL DOSE SMAaPffiCL Gnuina Must Bear Fao^Siniie Signature REFUSE MISTITUTEt. Latter Process the Only Method Where Many Cattle Have to be Treated. In South Africa is a disease very similar to Texas fever but the result of a different germ. It is, however, spread In the eame manner as is Texas fever, by means of the tick. The stockmen, therefore, are fighting the ticks, and various methodB are being H used Jn this warfare. One of these is the dipping of the tattle, as in this country,' and another method is the spraying of the cattle. In this spray* Ing, kerosene is used, and to It is sometimes added arsenle, to make the effect of the spraying more pro­ nounced. Kerosene mixed with water is said to be harmless to the skin of the cattle and to cost only about four cents per head. The cost of dipping is not much more, but the cost of the dipping plant is considerable. This Is the claim of the men that practice the spraying and believe in It. The men that hold to the dipping as the most effective means state their side, of fthe argument thus: Spraying requires five times AS much time as does dipping . On a small farm spraying may he the cheaper, but oa a large ranch where a thooaand cattle must be treated, the matter of time is a great one. It re­ quires as long to spray 200 cattle as it would require to dip a thousand. Dipping destroys the ticks much more effectively than does spraying. For this reason the dipping arrangement has displaced the spraying apparatus oa nearly all cattle ranches that carry large numbers of cattle. r&r': LIVESTOCK NOTCSk v ' ~ Y-i A Positive OURC FOR CATARRH, J Ely's Creas Bill ' T is entekhr absorbs*. Sim IMM at Ones. •̂ P r-o It cleanses, soothes, heals and protects """~ the diseased membrane. It cures Catarrh and drives away a Cold in the Head quickly. Restores the Senses of Taste and Smell. •1 Full size 50 cts. at Druggists or by mail< iTrialsiselO cts. by mail. '£fothers, 56 Warren Street. Mew Yock. READERS 1 thins advertised in . Should insist upon having ask for, refusing ail substi- • - PATENT* THERE'S MQRETffl • HI Kll IO SMALL INVENTIONS NO PATENT, NO FKS F0« QUI SSBMCEt The beat medicine you can give a sick hog la to atop feeding till he shows some signs that he wants some­ thing to eat. The end in view in keeping sheep Is profit, and the question is how best to conduct the business to obtain a profit from the growing of wool or mutton. Keep the best animals in the most economical manner and so breeding and manipulating the flock and fleece as to secure the best price for what is sent to market. To know how to eare foe {heep so as to make them grow the largest and finest fleeces and the most vig­ orous lambs is the most important part of flock management. As far as can be done, the flock should be selected and culled so that there will be but one grade of wool-- well-treated fleece--as no matter how meritorious each may be; the, beet prices cannot be realized. Don't want your horses to have the heaves? No, of course not. Then stop feeding them dusty hay. If you must use it, sprinkle it well with water, with a little salt added now and then. ftw tke theoretical atandptfnt sheep can be successfully raised in «very state of the American union and especially in the south. As a master of fact, however, Sheep are raised In flocks of thousands princi­ pally In the semi-arid states of the west, while most of the sheep kept in the humid states are in small flocks. The writer of this was talk­ ing with a 8heep rancher from the west who much wanted to move his sheep breeding operations to the "sun­ ny sputh." But after investigation he came to the conclusion that the plains of the west were better adapted to sheep raising than the south, on ac­ count of the smaller rainfall. Where the rainfall is considerable the sheep have to be provided with shelter and looked after more carefully than else­ where. In the west the sheep can be allowed to stay out the year around. Ia the summer the rain is not constant enough to injure them, and in the winter the snow Is not deep enough to cover the grass on which they feed. This gives the advantage to the ranges, so far as the raising of large flocks of sheep is concerned; that is, the raising of sheep by the thousands. But in other parts of the country sheep can still be raised to great ad­ vantage, especially in the rougher sec­ tions of the country. In a recent trip through New England I noticed that in much of that country the pastures have grown np to brush to such 'an extent that they now produce less grass than they used to. I could not help thinking how admirably these pastures were adapted to sheep and how the sheep would have kept down the shrubs and brush. I expect to see the time when those hillsides, now growing up to arboreal growths, wi}l be covered with flocks of gracing sheet). I do n6t expect to see sheep ever largely on the farms where the soil is a rich prairie loam and all cul­ tivable, says a writer in Farmert' Re­ view. Such land is luiapted to more intensive farming thanW indicated by the grazing of sheep. But the wild wastes that are increasing in some parts of the country can be made Into rich sheep pastures by the sow­ ing on them of grasses adapted to sheep pasture. ^ " "r I f ' *• , • • : ^ Ut fr-V . HORSE tALK.,. • •* , • i' •' ~ • ---x. * < ... * Some Points Worth Remembering About Man's Best Friend. The little colt should have a feed twice a day of oats, bran and oil meal--3-2-1--beginning with a pint and increasing to a quart. A colt fed in this way, and given a run in a paddock every day, will never have unsound feet and legs unless by accident. Weak food will make a weak colt-- weak legs and unsound Joints. As soon as the grass is frost-bitten, wean the colt if it is old enough, and give It the grain ration and second- growth clover or alfalfa. If too young give the mare plenty of nutritious food, and give them a roomy box stall at night Many colts are given ugly tempera by cruel and c&reless currying. To scratch and hurt a colt or horse will cause him to hate the operation and the operator; Look at your curryoomb. They are often instruments of torture. Teach the boys to use it gently'and keep it in order. Good grooming should be done every day to keep the pores open, the skin healthy, and the hair silky. Soft hair is very warm and is a non-con­ ductor of heat. Never leave a reeking mass of wet straw and manure uadet> the horses. It ruins the health and eyes, and is a disgrace to aay horse owners'--Farm JovrnaL According to the theories of the pes­ simist it la foll:jP to circulate them. Lewis' Single Binder costs more than ther Be cigars. Smokers know wiiv. Your dealer or Lewis' Factory, Peoria, I1L Ducks haven't the better of lawyers and doctors in the matter of big bills. In. WtnaJow'e Soothing Syvnp. for ehlMren MttUuz, mfimi U>e teuton, l-Mucee la alia?* cui«t> wind colic. (SeabntMn. About the only difference between a family jar and a family row is that the Jar is a trifle smaller. National Pure Food and Drugs Act. The Garfield Remedies meet with the highest requirements of the new Law. Take GartieTd Tea for constipation. Department's Good Record. The colonial secretary of the Baha­ mas states In his report of the islands for 1905-1006 that no complaint of error or delay has been received by the telegraph department for 14 years. Deafa$ds Cannot Bo Cum! hy local appUmtkp*, aa the; ,, hey can00* reasfc the dla- a « Wt W. Tber® ft only one way n caradeataeaa. aad that laby coastitoMooal reiuediee. Daafaeaa le caaaad by a* Scfiamntl coaditua of &ue Kanachlan Tube. WheathU ftw tt jaBtmxl yon h»ye <-\ rumbUng totxud or loo* o a t o t ' S e a ' a r a l o r e 7 e ^ n t n ^ c a w s * hataa Inflamed Wa via give One Catarrh, vhtch to nothing of the maooBi aarfecee. caated bjr d eoatttlon J One Hundred Dollare for any ease of catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall a Catarrh Cure. Sand for circulars, free. Sold by CBE!iET * C° ' T°led0' °- Taka fieU'a family P1U» for constipation. Depew Writes Remlnlscen While Senator Chauncey M. Depew was enjoying his long rest at Ardsley- on-the-Hudson he did a good deal of work on his reminiscences. He Is not sure that they will ever be published, his idea being that they might be of interest to his son. In his fifty years of public life Mr. Depew has known ^a great many prominent personages )|nd his reminiscences can hardly fail to be exceedingly readable. BOVI HEAD ONE SOLID 80RE. RACK FOR HAY AND GRAIN. How a Serviceable One Can Be Made 4 of Pine. pine. The one shown makes the most complete rack and trough I have ever t Let Sheep Catch CttkL is often contracted in the fall of the year through exposure to storms. After the sheep take cold several times the affection becomes chronic and catarrh sets In. Colds are often brought on by strong, cold drafts in damp quarters, often the re­ sult of improper ventilation. Remove the cause, if possible, and guard against it in the future. Smear the nose of the affected animal with tar. Be Careful. t - Be eareful how you handle ^rna- mite or any of its compounds when blowing out stumps. It Is a most dangerous way of getting rid of nfnmpB if you use it at all have* y>fia one with you who understands the use of the explosive. If a fuse appears to go out, wait a day or two before you go to see what is the mat- tar. This precaution may save yon a tot of trouble.--Farm Journal. " Hair All Came Out--Under Doctor Three Months and No Better-- CuScura Works Wonders, Xr. A. C. Barnett, proprietor1 at a general store in Avard; Oklahoma, tells in the following grateful letter how Cuticura cured his son of a ter­ rible eczema. "My little boy had efe- sema. His head was one solid sore, all over his scalp; his hair all came out, and he suffered very much. I had a physician treat him, but at the end of three months he was no bet- er. I remembered that the Cuticura Remedies had cured me, and after giving him two bottles of Cuticura Resolvent, according to directions, and using Cuticura Soap and Oint­ ment on him daily, his eczema left him, his haii grew again, and he has never had any eczema since. We use the Cuticura Soap and Ointment, and they ke<«p our skin soft and healthy. I cheerfully recommend the Cuticura Remedies for all cases of eczema. A. C. Barnett, Mar. 20. IWp." ' ' ' Ta Represent Italy and Spain. The two great Catholic countries of Surope, Italy and Spain, are sending new ambassadors to the court of St. James. The marquis di San Oiuliano, Who will represent Italy, 1b compara­ tively a young man. He comes of an old Siclllaa family of Norman descent, and Is highly Cultured, having traveled extensively with good results. He i« an enthusiastic student of Dante, and is president of the Italian-Geographical society. Senor Villa Urattia, the new Spanish ambassador, accompanied King Alfonso to London on the mo­ mentous occasion that eaded in his en­ gagement to Princess Ena, and won goldea opinion* for his tact and oour- tesy during that visit. Tlte growth of the Postern Cereal Go. is like a fairy tale, but it ia true, every word of it. J "The Door Unbolted" is the title of a Charming little booklet just issued by the Company which tens, and il­ lustrates, the story of this remark­ able growth. It takes the reader from the little white bam In which the business was started Jan. 1, 1895, through the palatial offices and great factory buildings of the "White City" that comprise Postumville» Battle Creek, Mich. The little white barn, so carefully preserved, is a most interesting build­ ing, for it represents the humble be­ ginning of one of the country's great­ est manufacturing enterprises of to­ day, an enterprise that has grown from this little barn to a whole city of factory buildings within hut little more than ten years. No less interesting is the quaint of­ ficial home of the Postum Cereal Cor. The general office building of Mr. Post and his associates 18 a reproduction of the Shakespeare house at Stratford- on-Avon, and upon the house and its furnishings has been expended vast sums of money, until the rooms are more like the drawing rooms of the mansions of our multi-milUonalrea than like offices. That Mr. Post haa believed thor­ oughly in the Idea of giving to his employes attractive and healthful work rooms is proven not only by the general office building of the Company and Its furnishings, but by his fac­ tories as well, and of all of these things this beautiful little booklet tells It will the interesting story, to anyone on request be aent LIKE A FAIftY TALE. DYES color colors, with lest goods, brighter work than o therm. ef PoBtum Cereal In Words «ad Pictures. E. PINKHAM SKETCH OF THE LIFE OF LYDIA And a True Story of How the Vegetable Compound Had Its Birth and How the "Panic of *73" Caused it to be Offered fer Public Sale In Drag Stance. remarkable woman, whose maiden name was Estes. was born in Lynn, Mass., February 9th, 1819, com- ing from a good old Quaker family. For some years she taught school, and became known as a woman of an alert Autos In German Army. The German Volunteer Army Corps Is provided with 37 automobiles in apd investigating mind, an earnest seeker after knowledge, and above all, possessed of a wonderfully sympat­ hetic nature. In 1843 she married Isaac Pinkham, charge of uniformed drivers, which i tt builder and real estate operator, and .i.a .m . . . .. I 1.. : . J 1U I* J 1 carry staff officers to and fro. In the maneuvers last month the speed and convenience of the machines were highly praised by the tacticians who watched the developments 6f the mimic campaign. \ Oood Sheep Rack. used. Grain and feed are both put in from top. The bottom ia as wide as the top. There is none lost, as the bottom has a two-Inch side piece nailed to It The Blats passing by center* piece alternately leave no^ place for anything to clog.--Charles Edminster, Lewis County, Mo. _ •I Market Grade Known as 8tagfc Stags are hogs that at one time were boars beyond the pig stage and have been subsequently castrated. They sell with a dockage of 80 pounds. If they are of good quality and con­ dition and do not show too much stagginess, they go In with the vari­ ous grades of packing hogs. When they are coarse and staggy In appear­ ance they are sold in the same class with boars. The Intermediary grades sell for prices ranging between these extremes, dependent upon their free­ dom from stagginess and their qual­ ity and condition.--Illinois Experl- tpf)Rt».S$atibn. „ ---: v,, . Had No Hog to Sell. - Tfce fupply of pork was getting at a grocery in a Maine town, and word was indirectly received that a certain farmer living some miles distant in the country had a hog to sell. A man was sent out, says a writer in the Lewis- ton Journal, to make the purchase. He found the farm, and his rap brought the farmer to the door. "I hear you have a hog to Bell," he began, briskly. ^ "Well, no," replied the farmer, de­ liberately, '1 can't say that. I have a hog; I've had it 12 years; and as long as I have to keep a hefc l may as wall keep that hog." Bounded Praises of 8osp. , In a guide to etiquette published early in the last century the writer says that "soap does not irritate the complexion; some of the finest com­ plexions we have known have been regularly washed with soap every day." The same authority remarks that "the dally bath is now the rule rather than the exception, and cpmmon sense has triumphed over the decision that wash­ ing was injurious." And then the writer has a dig at her great-grand- mother, "whose only ablutions con­ sisted in wetting her cheeks with a cambric handkerchief "dipped in rose-, water." "In all our directions with re< gard to the bath," adds this early Vic­ torian dictator, "it must be borne in mind that we only refer to those la sound state of health." - MEW YEAR'8 CALL8. A New Drink to.Replace the Old-Time "Apple-Jack." Keep in Good Health. There are many thousands of peo. pie all over the world who can at­ tribute their good health to taking one of two Brandreth's Pills every night. These pills cleanse the stomach and bowels, stimulate the kidneys and liver and purify the blood. They are the same fine laxative tonic pills your grandparents used, and being purely vegetable they are adapted to children and old people, as well as those in the vigor of manhood and womanhood. Brandreth's Pills have been in use for over a century and are for sale everywhere, plain or sugar-coated. High. Position for Admiral. Rear Admiral Wlllard H. Brownson, who has just taken command of the American naval forces In the East, will, it Is understood, soon be recalled to take what has become to be regard­ ed as the most important post in the navy--namely, chief of the bureau of navigation. Admiral Brownson would, In the usual course, be placed on the retired list next year on account of old age, but owing to his excellent physical and mental condition it Is un­ derstood he will continue at the head of the navigation bureau at least ̂ dur­ ing the present administration. -> ^ Mix Soap With Deugh. . From a communication read to the Association of Belgian Chemists it seems that continental bakers are in the habit of mixing soap with their dough to make their bread and pastry nice and light. The quantity of soap varies greatly. In fancy articles like waffles and fritters It is much larger than In bread. W. L. DOUGLAS *3.50 di.*3.00 Shoes aaaT IN TMI WOULD W.LQwgte $4 BUI Edgi eannottoaqiiaiMitmjrprloe their early married life \%$as marked by prosperity and happiness. They had four children, three sons and a daughter. In those good old fashioned days it wss common fon mothers to make their own home medicines from roots and herbs, nature's own remedies-- calling in a physician only in specially urgent cases. By tradition and ex- Serience many of them gained a won-erful knowledge of the curative prop­ erties of the various roots and herbs. Mrs. Pinkham took a great interest in the study of roots and herbs, their characteristics and power over disease. She maintained that just as nature so bountifully provides in the harvest- fields and orchards vegetable foods of all kinds; so, if we but take the pains to find them, in the roots and herbs of the field tnere are remedies ex­ pressly designed to cure the various ills and weaknesses of the body, and it was her pleasure to search these out, and prepare simple and effective medi­ cines for her own family and friends. Chief of these was a rare combina­ tion of the choicest medicinal roots and herbs found best adapted for the cure of the ills and weaknesses pecu­ liar to the female sex, a nd Lydia E. Pink- ham's friends and neighbors learned that her compound relieved and cured and it became quite popular among them. All this so far was done freely, with­ out money and without price, as a. labor of love. But in 1B73 the financial crisis strnck Lynn. Its length and severity were too much for the large real estate interesta oi tne Pinkham family, as tbis class of business suffered most from fearful depression, so when the Centen­ nial year dawned it found their prop­ erty swept away, 8ome other source of fnoome had to be found. At thia point Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound was made known to the world. 3 •1 restore the family fortune. argued that the medicine which «u so good for their woman friends ittsA neighbors was equally good for the women of the whefte world. The Pickhams had no money, Ht little credit. Their first laboratory was the kitchen, where roots asm ^ herbs were steeped on the alosrp, ̂ gradually filling a gross of bottlee. - Then came the question of selling it. for always before they had givett it away freely. They hired a printer to run off some setting forth the merits of cine* now called Lydia Vegetable Compound, and thcBe were distributed by the Pinl|lMUa pooa ill Boston, New York, and The wonderful curative _ the medicine were, to a great extent* self-advertising, for whoever nsed it recommended it to others, and the de­ mand gradually increased. In 1877, by combined efforts tbt fam­ ily had saved enough money to mence newspaper advertising and fraas that time the growth and saeeCBS of the enterprise were assured, until to­ day Lydia E. Pinkham and her V«g» table Compound have become fionsn hold words everywhere, and BUli^' tons of roots and herbs are used annu­ ally in its manufacture. Lydia E. Pinkham herself did not live to see the great success of thia work. She passed to her reward yean ago, but not till she had pronrldsA means for continuing her work aa effectively as she could have don* 14 ,, herself. JSi During her long and eventful expe­ rience she was ever methodical in her work and she was always careful to serve a record of every case thai her attention. The case of woman who applied to her for adviee and there were thousa careful study, and the details* ing symptoms, treatment and na were recorded for future reference, to-day these records, together ^ hundreds of thousands made sine available to sick women the over, and represent a vast tion of information re^ treatment of woman's ills* authenticity and accuracy can hi be equaled in any library in world. With Lydia B. Pinkham woriied daughter - in - law, the present Pinkham. She was carei in all her hard-won know] for years she assisted her in correspondence. To her hands isH direction of the work whan tor passed away. m five years die has Mil ive years lothing ii in the dkwi first Lydia E. pen, and the preeei now the mother of a itnp. With women capable as heraelf, Pinkham continues this _ probably $f«at the oikee of person ljup vised bow­ men, thiaadvieeis "Yorni for freely givfenrif yoa only vnrite to Suchiathehlstoryof Lydia E. Pink- ham's Vegetabto • Compound; «aad» '< from simple roots and jMcbs; the «a*K; _ ^ . ,g*«at medldfca foa wotnenX ailiMftta, daughter, and the ip^P^nnrtnt to the nohia With their mother, combined forces to (woman wbmm it besora. -- -- • . .11* ̂ Twenty-five years ago the custom of making New Tear's calls was a (de­ lightful one for all concerned, until some of the boys got more "egg-nog' or "apple-jack" than they could suc­ cessfully carry. Then the ladles tried to be charit­ able and the gentlemen tried to be as chivalrous aa ever and stand up at the same time. If anyone thinks there has not been considerable improvement made in the last quarter of a century in the use Qf alcoohlic beverages, let him stop to consider, among other things, the fact that the old custom of New Year's calls and the genteel tippling is nearly obsolete. The custom of calling on one's friends, however, at the beginning of the new year, is a good habit, and an other good habit to start at that time ia the use of well-made Postum in­ stead of coffee or spirits. A Staten Island doctor has a sen­ sible daughter who has set Postum before her guests as a good thing to drink at Yule Tide, and a good way to begin the New Year. Her father writes: "My daughter and I have used Postum for some time past, and we fed sure it wholesome food material. 1 shall not only recommend it to my patients, but my daughter will be most pleased to give a demonstration- yt Postma to our Christmas and New four's Read "The Road to Urethra*"la*** Hsn'itraaoi.- To Sbo* Oealert: W.L. Dourta* Job. Mns ROOM I* UM moat onnuaatoln Uliaooantry Stud for Catalog 'aH. brtfetta NO MORE MUSTARD PLASTERS TO BLISTER. TOE SCIENTIFIC AND^MODERN^ EXTERNAL COUWTlHK^mANT. CAPISICUM V A S E L I N E EXTRACT OF THE CAYENNE PEPPER PLANT >1^ A QUICK. SURE, SAFE AND ALWAYS READY CURE FOR PAIR--MUCK I8C.--IN COLLAPSIBLE TUBES-AT ALL DRUGGISTS AND DEALERS. OR BY MAIL ON RECEIPT OF 15c. IN POSTAGE STAMPS. DON'T WAIT T I L L T H E P A I N C O M E S - K E E P A T U B S H A N D Y . A substitute for and superior to mustard or any other plaster, arid will net blister the most delicate skin. The pain-allaying and curative qualities of the article are wonderful. It will stop the toothache at once, and relieve Headache and Sciatica. We recommend it as the best and safest external counter-irritant known, also as an external remedy for pains in the chest and stomach and all Rheumatic, Neuralgic and Gouty complaints, A trial will prove what we claim for it, and it will be found to be invaluable in tks household and for children. Once used no family will be without it. Many people say "it is the best of all your preparations." Accept no preparation of vaseline unless the same carries our label, as otherwise it isnotj SEND YOUR ADDRESS AND WE WILL MAIL OUJ LINE PAMPHLET WHICH WILL INTEREST YOU, CHESEBROUGH MFG. CO. 17 STATE STREET. NEW YORK CITY [nameiiite DO STOVE POLISH AGENTS WANTED lKissra and SHOE* _ „ S8toSt.HO. awn SboM. Try W. L Dous^* Woanra' Children's shoes; for atyle, thay •icel other mi If I could take you Into my laige factories at Broclcton, Mass..and show you bow carefully W.L. Douglas shoes are made, you would then understand why they hold their shape* fit better, wear longer, and are of greater value than any other make. Wherever yoa live, ytm can obtain W. L. _BMS>-- NlseaewaaS prtnbit«iM| •atCbottoM, whldi protect* yoaagaiMt h%ti prtcaa aa« tahftor Smm. tmt*. Ask your dealer fer W.L. DoMgtassfco** a5»--mMp-- aevtf ... . . Fait CoiorYmoltU "ill motmfmrbiwy Write for ninetretod Cmtajogm* Fell SMm. W.L.D0U3UUfcDa»t. Ul ttecfcf. JMaea. To sell our LinUneat, Cough Cure, i Salve, Flavoring Bitrarts, Spices, Articles, etc.. through ikecntti^lf i No experience or investment required. Ourarents make from t|.M to I wait; write at once for full particulars and our liberal terms to Satesi MEDICINE AND EXTRACT CO., SSS E. DOtt0laa Street. OR I Don't Know Who You Are where tm are, wtai 70a are. or what yon hare to MllTSat f*• Iumw.(tit les farm. 1 eaa SaS row a barer. Mr aiiailislaa ta pay flaa, atkis It eaa 7 to Soao. CUSTOMER* WAITING If^oe waat 10 a.hra la g. a or tiaaaSa, aeaate Teaiata, OHIO ABO. Canadian Government Free Farms Over 200,000 American farmers who have set* tied la Canada duriag the past few years test*, fy to the fact that Cana­ da is. bevond craeatioa. t h e g r e a t e s t f a r m i n g l a n d i a t h e w o r l d / ^ OVER NINETY MILLION BUSHELS of wneat from the harvest of 1906 means good mouey to the farmers of Western Canada when the world has to be fed. Cattle Raising. Dairy­ ing and Mixed Farming are also profitable call* inga. Coal, wood ana water in abundance; churches and -choola convenient; markets easy of access. Taxes low. For advice and information address the Super­ intendent of Immigration, Ottawa. Canada, or any authorised Canadian Government C J. BXOUGHTON, Rasa* 430 f Clicage. II.; W. H. BOGUS, Tractfaa Tirahil BUg, T. 0. CURtlC. Km* 12 1, tiMsa Wta. You CANNOT wwl, vanMa, or rnroent Agent iis>.tt» miiili Hj| ftwsh a»e eoas- utetau. fioyecty rinfctat the Boat traeft alastvis nttpsnS ta < lit thai CUR all inflamed, ulcerated andcal»|M<iB# ditioas of the mucous membrane 1 nasal catarrh,uterinecatarvfc < by fcmlafne ilia, sore threat, moot*! c? 'tHamod eyee by H/Vaiwflr ttemiA But yon surely can care these stnl affections by local treatment with, Paxtine Toilet An which destroys the disease | discharges, stops pain, a inflammation and soreness. Paxtine represents Um most 1 local treatment lor ~ produced. Thoosaw to this fact $oceot»at< WANTED

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