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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 31 Jan 1907, p. 3

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CHANGES ITS COURSE, BUT DOE8 NOT AFFEGT CUM^Tii Study ofthe Peculiar Ocean Current fl- Shows That the e Theory of * v , *m*w. - < • J| Scientists who have studied the p Ji question know that the warm ocean current known as the gulf stream has practically no effect on the climate of gi any part of the United States pt Canada, and none at all on any part of Europe, and yet the old theory ad- ; vanced years ago after the discovery of this strange ocean river that It was a great equalizer and modifier of ^ the climate erf both America and Eu­ rope still prevails in the minds oS most people. It was Benjamin Franklin who gave the name of "Gulf Stream" to this strange current, and jftanklln., like VlihTothers after him erred la " ' I"" £&.; ^commander John E. Pllisbury, ,|f., §. N„ Who Hat Studied , the Qulf Stream. ( v-„ 8f to the gulf streamfiwater influence than it really had. It has bran determined that its effect is practically nil after reaching north latitude 40 degrees and west longitude €0 degrees, where it loses itself in many other slight currents. Franklin thought that the gulf stream had a broad sweep out to sea, and that it made a circuit of the Gulf of Mexico. iSven in his day there was probably •ii much speculation on what the effects || would be if the stream should shift its vj| course. That sort of mental exercise - was not indulged in strongly until fts later, when a United States officer, % Lieut Maury of the navy, published what was one of the most popular scientific books ever printed in the United States up to that time. This book told of the immenseeffect of the gulf stream climate of various parts of the .wtiftf, and it led inevit­ ably to assertions that a mere shift of the stream might make a summer resort the win- ters were kmg and severe, might af­ fect seriously the climate of the Medi­ terranean countries and cause no end of meteorological upheaval generally. The United States government was working on the problem of the gulf' stream for years before it arrived at its present knowledge of the phenom­ enon. It is now known pretty definite­ ly that the gulf stream is caused main­ ly by the distent rates of speed at which the various parts of the earth revolve, by the difference in density of polar and equatorial waters, by the winds which are caused by the revo­ lution of the earth, by the heaping up on titie coast of South America of great masses of water, and by solar and lunar tides. Lieut J. E. Pillsbury of the United •States navy made a careful study of the gulf stream at the northern en­ trance to the Straits of Florida, and determined that the hourly flow there Is about 90,000,000 tons of water an hour. At three knots an hour, about 463,000,000,000,000 tons a day flow through. As recently as 1897, when there was jua abnormally cold winter in Massa­ chusetts, many persons thought that rthe changing of the course of the gulf stream was the principal meteorolog­ ical factoi In May, 1906, a steamship captain said in New York that he found the gulf stream near Florida running .westward at a rate of a knot and a half an hour, Instead of northeast at that same rate, and the ̂ Strength of the stream all along the coast was much more feeble than usual. In June of this year the captain of a Dominion line steamer arriving at Portland from Liverpool, reported that in west longitude 40 degrees he found the gulf stream running In a westerly di­ rection, instead of thfe usual easterly course. Last July it* was reported by the skipper of a Morgan liner that the gulf stream had changed its eastward course southwest of the Florida penin­ sula and was running west. All of those cases have been called to the attention of the United States hydrographic office, but the authori­ ties there laugh at the idea of any but a slight and temjK>rary aberra­ tion of the gulf stream from its usual channels. It was state! that winds changed th? currents in many places, but that the gulf stream waB follow­ ing the course it had always followed and always would follow; and it was said also that as a "river in the ocean," clearly defined and strong, the gulf stream does not exist north of Savannah. NUBBIN CHOPPER. 4 ' ' * -* , 1 - ,h> PET PROJECT OF KAISER. Vv;' •M Among the many ambitions of Kaiser Wilhelm of Germany not the least is that of possessing an all rail route from Hamburg, Germany, . to Bagdad and the port of Koweit, on the Persian gulf. It is said that the emperor is resolved to have the con­ necting lines already projected through Asia Minor pushed on to com­ pletion If he has to get up a war to do it. And the sultan of Turkey ap­ proves the enterprise, for the road would be invaluaBle to the govern­ ment from military and commercial points of view, saying nothing of af­ fording speedy and direct routes to the holy city of Mecca. The Germans are anxious to have |he Bagdad railway speedily finished to open up new commerce for Ger­ many with the 300,000,000 population of BriUsh India. The proposed rail­ way system would cover a large part of the distance on -the direct road to India. When once completed from Constantinople through Asia Minor to the Persian gulf the line, with its Eu­ ropean connections, would enable the kaiser's imperial train to make an unbroken journey from Berlin to Bagr dad and the Persian gulf as well as to ancient cities of Palestine. The flr&t section of 200 kilometers from Konia to Eregli (east of Con­ stantinople), has been completed, and It Is now proposed to begin work on three sections of the line of 200. kilo­ meters each. It is estimated that^the cost of each jsection will average about $10,000,000. Notwithstanding Germany's failures sometimes in colonial policy, as re­ gards Turkey and Asia. Minor the kaiser certainly achieved a brilliant commercial policy. In ten years her commerce in Asia Minor has in­ creased more than tenfold. By her Bagdad concessions Germany has ac­ quired a vast strip of country through Asia Minor. It is about 2,800 kilo­ meters long by 40 broad, for the con­ cession gives her rights of mineral and other developments for 20 kilo­ meters on each side of the line. Ger­ many looks forward in the future to the development of the bituminous and petroleum yielding lands at Ker- kuk, about Babylon and the Tigris and Euphrates Valley, known to be able tit furnish a supply ten times that of the Baku oil fields. She calculates that Anatolia, Syria, Mesopotamia and Irak can, when developed, produce more corn than the whole of Russia. Already the German emperor has studied the carefully di vised plans of the famous German engineer Sieges- mund Schneider for spanning the Bos- phorus with a bridge uniting Europe with Asia. The sultan has seen the plans and approved tfiem, and the mere question of raising the neces­ sary money to complete the work ?long the railroad line will not keep the great monarchs awake o* nights to any extent Down in those vast plateaus and valleys along the Tigris and Euphrates are inexhaustible quantities of petrol- eum and coal. The road will awaken the echoes of the ancient world which built the greatest cities of history, among them Babylon and Nineveh, where vast armies overran the earth and palaees arose on every hand. 'The idea of such an enterprise bringing to life an ancient civilisation is inspiring. Leaving Hamburg or Berlin, the passenger soon arrives at Vienna and takes b^s way down the continent through Budapest, passing through Austria, Hungary, Servia, Bulgaria, down to the north of Greece, through Constantinople, across the Bosphorus, thence toward the Persian gulf, going a little to the north of the ancient city of Troy and to the south of- Armenia, called "the cradlo of the world;" Mount Ararat and the Persian capital, passing the branch lines lead­ ing to Damascus .and the Holy Land, with Jerusalem on the one hand and Mecca oil the other, until Bagdad is reached. Thence a short run takes the . trUn jo» slan gulf. • .* - ji|ftiiiH i »i i iQfli ii a 1 lflft "" If If' If1 1ft Ancient Temple in Mexico For the last two weeks Mr. Leopold Batres has been excavating one of the small artificial hills to the southeast of the Pyramid of the Sun. This is one of the tumuli that form the row of the Street of the Dead. Here-have been discovered a number of rooms which are apparently -a part of an an­ cient temple, with rooms and patios. Below these, stairways lead to a large room some 35 feet in length. Appar­ ently there are other rooms on this level connected with one another. These are the first subterranean houses that have so far been found fa the valley, and they show that in this hailed city the houses were two mad three stories high. The upper stories "had been destroyed by fire, tat the lower remained untouched, and upon them there still remains the red plant which was the characteris­ tic cotar of Teotllhuaean. Among the Interesting things found Is th§ skeleton at a man supposed to bfctt «»• & ancient Toltec kings. Beside the human skeleton was that of a tiger, and both were painted red. In addition to these there were also found large quantities of sea shells, obsidian beads, jade and obsidian idols, knives, snakes and pol­ ished stone masks representing heroes who lived 3,000 years ago. Many spiral shells were also encountered which had holes drilled through them, showing that they had been used as beads. They were beautifully pol­ ished. Mauy copper, bronse, . chichehuite and perite objects were also found among the others, showing that the dead man must have been of great importance in his day. Many of these were beautifully polished and of ex­ traordinary else.--Mexican Herald. Oiw tfcat Can be Made at Horit* and Will Do Good Service. * v. I have a plan for a simple and cheap nubbin chopper Tfrhich I think will be of interest to others, writes a corre­ spondent of the Prairie Farmer. I have used this chopper for two year* ' r ; - \ * r - v ...si .<*• fj WORK IN "THE TOOL SHED. - mm How the Nubbin Chopper Work*. and find it satisfactory. I use it to cut up corn for feeding cattle. The cutting blade is made of a heavy corn knife with a hole drilled in the end and fastened to a crib post wit^i a one-quarter inch lag screw. The bottom of the chopper is made of a 2x6 plank nailed to the crib post un­ der the corn chute with a 1x3 inch strip on the outer edge. The,two form a trough along which I push the corn to the knife. Where a Good Many of thef Winter Days Can Be Profitably Spent. * One of the many profitable winter jobs can be found la the tool shed in going over, cleaning up and iUpMi'ag the machinery that will be used next summer. After a season's work there is nearly always something about a mower, binder or cultivator which needs fixing. When one wants to use a tool he seldom has time to fix It, and If it must be repaired the work is usually done as quickly as possible with an eye only to the work immedi­ ately at hand. > Plows may now be cleaned off and oiled, hoes and mattocks sharpened, scythes ground, etc. Then there are always bolts to tighten, fractures and breaks to patch up, and adjustments of various kinds to make. If any machine needs repairs that must be ordered from a distance this should be done during the winter and the ma­ chine made ready for use. If this is neglected now, remarks Farm and home, you may forget >11 about It un­ til! you want to use it, and then you will be in a hole. A few hours* work at odd times will have all the tools ready for usq when the time comes, if they are stored in a shed or room where you can get at them and the rain and snow cannot If they are left, aa many tools are, out in the weather, they will be in bad shape when you go to use them. So if you have no too! shed it would be a good winter job to build one. WHAT TO FEED WITH CORN. DRAINING LANDS. Much Rlch Land Goes to Waste Oe cause This Work Is Not Done. Many undrained and unprofitable lands can be drained well, or at least considerably improved, should you only spend a day's work in scraping out ditches, with an ordinary two- horse scraper. Some of the ditches need not necessarily be wide nor deep. - It has been estimated that from one to thirty per cent of certain sec­ tions of good farming lands In some sections of the Northwest need drain­ ing. Some of this undrained land is reasonably productive in growing slough grass, which in many cases serves as feed for cattle in the win ter, but a large fraction of these lands lio idle and are hotbeds for the propagation of weeds and undesirable insects. - The soil In sloughs «nd small swamps is usually fertile and rich in plant food, due largely to the de­ cay of plant life, which has been ac­ cumulating there year after year. It is this land that should be brought into condition for the growing of crops. It will support plant growth better than the adjoining higher lands whose fertility has been considerably depleted by constant cropping. When drained well these lands make ad­ mirable fields for grasses, such as timothy and millet grasss, also fod­ der cqrn. There is u work of tills kind done if done at proper time and place but what will easily pay for the expense in the raising of the first few crops from lands.--J. F. Vojta, professor of agriculture, Gustavous Adolphus College. > . ' * SEPARATOR MILK FOR PISS. A Sure Test. do you intend to test his sanity? The Expert--Show him a Sunday comic supplement *!>d |$tj|... wJtqtMr hg laughs.--Puck. 1 '""'V ^ ~ -v •. « . v. * v.w v.' - It Should Prove the Best Kind of Feed When Warm. There 13 an impression among some farmers that the feeding of skim milk warm from the separator ia injurious to pigs. Prof. William Deitricb, of the Illinois experimental station, writing on this matter, says that there is no reason why it should cause trouble since warm milk is the natural food of pigs. It may be that the scouring and running down in flesh that is sometimes observed Is caused by sud­ den changes in feed; such as, for in­ stance, change from cold sour skim- milk to warm fresh skim-milk. The skim-milk in either form is good feed, but it will not do to change from one to the other very suddenly. Another cause of the trouble may be that the pi?y* are being fed too much. Some­ times people think that when the cream is taken out of the milk there is not much left that Is of any value and young animals are fed very liber­ ally and often overfed, and this be­ comes a very serious matter. The skim-milk has relatively more protein than whole milk and a comparatively small excess of protein in the system will very likely bring about, digestive troubles. ? ! FARM ITEMS. 'Tar best results, the food, care and conditions must be of the best qual­ ity.--Farm Journal. j Ventilate the cellar. Keep fruit osoi, but do not let it freeze. Sort the apples frequently. Of all the new money-making schemes, none of them beats the old- fashioned way of earning a living.-- Farm Journal. Spinach is an easily grown garden crop, and there is, perhaps, no other of its kind that will give as good satisfaction. Three or four bunces of seed planted in the autumn after a summer crop has been harvested from the land, will produce an abun­ dance of greens for the average fam­ ily during the late autumn and early aprlng. When Figuring the Accounts. When this year's accounts are all In and ready to figure, dont fprget to give credit to the good wife, sons a^d daughters, for the excellent work they have done toward helping to keep the balance on the right aide ot tfce Missouri Experiment Station Proves That Linseed Oil Is Best. That some other feed should be used with corn to secure the best re­ sults in pig feeding is known by all practical feeders. The gains are bet­ ter than on a pure corn ration, and if the other food is well chosen the gains may be made at lower cost In a test at the Missouri experiment station a comparison of wheat, middlings and other purchased feeds used with corn meal was made. With corn at 25c a bushel H would be an even thing so far as the cost of gain Is concerned, whether corn be fed alone or with oil meal at $30 per ton. Ill these tests, linseed oil meal proved to be better than wheat mid­ dlings as a food to use with corn. The oil meal ration was so much more palatable than the middlings, that much more of it was eaten dally. They made more rapid gains and seemed to thrive better upon this feed. To be equal to oil meal, at $30 per ton, middlings would have to be bought at from $14 to $15 per ton. As oil meal is usually cheaper than $30 la Missouri and middlings worth $15 or more, these tests show that linseed oil meal is one of the best feeda to use with corn. AWFUL ATTACKS OF PAIN. A Mo*t Dreadful Case ef Kidney Trouble and Hew It Was Cured. Thomas N. McCullough, 321 South Weber St.. Colorado Springs, Cola, says: "For twelve or fifteen years I was suffering fre­ quent attacks of pain In the back and kidneys that lasted for three weeks at a tttne. I would be unable to turn in bed. The urine was in a terrible condition, at times a com­ plete stoppage oc­ curring. I began with Doan's Kidney Pills, and soon felt better. Keeping on, I found complete freedom from ktdney trouble. The cure has been permanent. I owe my good health to Doan's Kidney Pills." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Fofiter-Milhurn Co., Buffalo, N. T. . - - ... -- - - * t - ' PUTNAM FADELESS DYES, are light ̂ and iephmg and, color more .goads . 10c pei others. per package. It's just as easy to be pleasant as otherwise--and it pays better. Lewis' Single Binder cigar--richest. ttOSt satisfying smoke on the market. Your dealer or Lewis' Factory, Peoria, 111. • Mrs FOR LITTLE PARISIANS. All Kinds ef Animals as Playmates for the Children. Children play a great role in French society, as all those who have read Gyp's inimitable "P'tit Bob" will read­ ily admit, and now the small Par- isienne insists on receiving on her fete day and at the New Year a live pet, Instead of a costly doll or a me- chanteal toy. The demand has been creating a supply, and a lively trade is being done, not only in puppies and kittens, in tiny monkeys and in lambs, but also in tigers and leopards. Up to a certain age, these small felines are quite harmless, and, of course, as soon as they begin, so to apeak, to show their teeth and sharpen their claws, they are sent off to one of the two magnificent "Zoos" with which the Gay City Is provided. • y" TWO SISTER8 HAD ECZEMA. Mm who make the most money get others to make it .for them. --------4 -- •' TO CITK1A !» «HI BAT fake LAXATIV* BHOI(OQ«MaeTBb4«u. Drag- Sls's refund, mom? If It nil* w gi* a w UliOVK S **• Sheboygan Bottle of Hi* Remedy to Any re­ dress, Ail Charges Paid. •?>, One of the moat nMars f̂llh l̂̂ iir' made by a respoaMftfo ha* recently been snneesMMid' hy Zaegel, of Sheboygan, Wis., a leading chemist of that city. ^ About all the consolation some men get out of losing their money is the: belief that they are dead game sports. byu fnflaaMd ooeuttUoa«Ctip' w Baatacbiu wSsbINb Deafness Cannot Be Cored iSf'S •ppacyto"**. -- tbor esnaoft met «M eased portion of the ear. Tnere Ik may em* cure deatnen, ud tbet U*- DeafMM U eanaed 19 nmcMit lining of tb« tubelainflamed yoo have a rambling oooad or tm- perfeet hearing, ulMm It U oattrely cloaedTbeaf- neu 1* the r* jolt, and aaleaa tfae lnfiarnmaUoo can be taken oatacd tiiM tube restored to tu rmmi»i tl°n, hearing »ltl txi destroyed forenwj nlae oaaoa one of tern are cawed by Catarrh, which to aotMac b ot lh* We vli* |1t*Oik Hundred P-llwi fitrint tiiw if Draftiets (caused by catarrh) that cannot be eure*' hy Kali * Catarrh Cure. Bead for OfKniars, free. Y. J. cftENKY a co., Toledo, a Bold by Drantet* Take Uail'iFam lly ior oonitlpaUon. $ AVE THE WOMfM. Revolving Clothes Horse WMctt the < Wife Will Appreciate. There Is no little thing that will save the household so much as a re­ volving clothes horse, so near the back stoop that the clothes may be hung upon it without stepping out in the snow. A solid post should have a hole bored In the top and the arms may be beveled and spiked to a piece of plank through which a bolt passes into the post, or each arm may be bored to let the bolt pass through ft. Cuticura Cured Scalp Troubles ef Two Illinois Girls---Another Sie» tor Took Cuticura Pftitt **t must give much praise'to all the Cuticura Remedies. I used but one cake of Cuticura Soap and one box of Cuticura Ointment, aa that was ail that was required to cure my disease. I was very much trou­ bled with eczema of the head, and a friend of mine told me to use the Cuticura Remedies, which I did, and am glad ^ bay that they cured my eczema entirely. Since then we have always kent the soap on hand at all times. My sister was also cured of ecsema ot the head by using the Cu< ticura Remedies. Another sister has used Cuticura Resolvent and Pills and thinks they are a splendid tonic. I cannot say exactly how long I suf­ fered, but I think about six months Miss Edith Hammer, R. F. IX No. 4, Morrison, 111., Oct 3. 1906." Rfvelvtnfl Clothea Rack. V; Three, four or five arms may be used as desired and of any length, mrovlded all are of one length. No skill is re­ quired in making it, says Farm and Home, as the rope holds the arms up simply by being tight enough.* It is well to set the post before measur­ ing the arms, so that they may be sure to reach the veranda. Some laths may be nailed together at first to make a model if you are not sure of your ability as a carpenter. BIG OR LITTLE FARMS. The Size Depends on Location Writes an Iowa Farmer. Whether a man should have a his or a little farm depends on his loca­ tion. In this part of Iowa, writes a Clarke county farmer in Farmers' Re­ view, we must depend on the more ex­ tensive methods of agriculture to give us a living. A man that has a farm of only 80 acres or 120 acres will have a hard chance to make a living. He needs at least ISO acres* and if he has 320 acres he will be still more fortunate. It must be remembered that It takes a good deal of land to produce paying crops of corn, wheat and other cereals. If a man raises cattle he must have a large part of his farm in pasture. If he has but 80 acres and there comes a wet year or a very dry year, either of which will cut short his crops, where is he? But even then. If he has 160 acres he will be able to produce enough to meet his obliga­ tions. The 80-acre farm is all right near a good-Blzed city, Where truck farming can be followed largely enough to in- sure the farmer a living. He can then constantly get manure for use on his farm. But in the country away from the large cities it is far otherwise. Sweep's Curious Find. An Atherington (Eng.) sweep, named Joshua Folland, was sweeping the chimney of a house which had been unoccupied for some little time at High Beckington, when, to his great surprise, he swept down seven full-grown, live wild rabbits, which he bagged. < , ' Japs Get British A Japanese shoe manufacturing concern has secured a contract for shoes for the British army in India. It is one of the largest shoe contracts ever placed. Garfield Tea (Guaranteed under the Pure Food and Drug Law) regulates a sluggish liver, overcomes constipation, pu- rifttefl the blood and eradicates disease. It is made of Herbs. If all a man's real want* are grati­ fied be has no excuse for being un­ happy. raKi crass ih • to ta days. PASO Ol.NTMBJTT U guaranteed to core any caae of Itohiiur. JJ'Ind. Bleed in if or f intruding 1'iien la | to U dare or uoaejr refunded. Mo. ' Fate is a female who gives men the laugh for believing her. Lewis'Single Binder st Kxl quality all the time, wir Factory, Peoria, ht 5c our Every noble activity for itself.--Emerson. makes room Mrs. TTln«Iow*» Soot Mil* By rap. Tvt children teething, aoftena the purn*, redoeee tB-SsiHBatiOB, allaya rain, core* wind oollu. tec a bottle. To very a big-headed man the world is s,," - : " Dropping Boards. ^ ̂ When dropping "boards used they should be as low as possible to permit of easy cleansing. In some cases they run down to the floor, In which case It is possible to have the roosts low. W. R. Grahams says: "Dropping boards should be made of matched lumber, and should be 20 inches wide for one roost, and three feet for two roosts, the first being placed eight to ten Inches from the > "WA: HEALTH AND SPIRITS Are Restored by Dr. Williams' Pink Pilie in Cases of Debility and Despondency. General debility Is caused by men­ tal or physical overwork w^jth imper­ fect assimilation of nourishment, or by some acute disease from- whica the vital forces have been prostrated and the entire orgaqjgp weakened so as not to easily rally.' To restore health it la necessary that the blood should be purified and made new. The case of Mrs. E. M. Spears, of 92 Mt Pleasant street, Athol, Mass., is a common one and is given here in order that others may be benefited by her experience. She says: "1 had been sick for a year from indigestion and general debility brought cn by over­ work and worry. I had tried many remedies, but found no'relief. I suf­ fered from swelling of ta« limbs, loss of appetite and dizzy spells, which be­ came so severe towards night, that I sometimes fainted away. I was bil­ ious and my hands and arms would go to sleep for an hoiy or two at a time. I was so sleepy all the time that I could hardly keep awake. I had frequent cramps in my limbs and severe pains at the base of my head and In my back. My blood was im­ poverished. I was afraid to give up and go to bed fearing that I would never get well. "About this time Dr. Williams' Pink PHI# were recommended to me by a friend In South Vernon, Vt I felt better soon after beginning the treatment and continued until I was entirely cured. I consider Dr. Wil­ liams' Pink Pills a grand medicine for weak women." Dr. Williams' Pink PHI* are sold by all druggists, or sent, postpaid, on receipt of price B0 ceats per box. six boxes 12.60, by the Dr. Williams Medi­ cine Cos^sny, Schenectady, M. T. "K * ' Revolt Against Trading 8ta?ajpa. "No more trading stamps." is the slogan of a campaign which English grocerymen are carrying on. One ot them, whose shop is in East London, says: "There is not a small grocer in England who earns 15 per cent on his capital. Ten per cent is average profit and the cost of trading stamps leaves 14m only about 6% per cent tr i •* ' Clover A Grass Seeds*.vf/* Everybody loves lots anil lots of Clover Glasses for hogs, cows, sheep and ewinc. rgest i_ Grasses, Clovers, Oat*, Barley, Corn, Po­ tatoes and Farm Seeds in America. Oper­ ate over 5,000 acres. ran Our mammoth 148-page catalog is maQed- free to all intending buyer*; or send 8c IN SHJOrS and receive sample of "perfect balance ra­ tion grass seed," together with Fodder Plants, Clover, etc., etc., and big Plant and Seed Catalog free, John A. Salser Seed Co., Box W, La Crosse, Wis. * Has Cinch on Position. Various authorities hare passed on a letter received at the post office de­ partment a short time ago and It has finally been sent to the postmastor general. The letter came from a west­ ern postmaster at a small office and read: "In accordance with the rules of the department, I write you to in­ form you that on next Saturday I will close the post office for one day, as I am going op a be*r frapt I am^apt asking yonr permission to <^aafc «p and you can discharge me If you want to. But I Will advise you now that I am the only man in the county who can read and write." It is not likely that the postmaster will be dis­ charged. A f&tr years ago Mr. course of his edwtila ^ discovered a wo&derfnl of certain mineral and which when applied t cuts sores and b* soothed and allayed so constituted a speedy cure. The fame of Z. M. O., as be soon spread far beyond the of his home city' and th> persons in all parta of ttya have been convinced of tH merits. Z. M. O. possesses antlaeptle healing properties which the highest value in and wounds in which theft ger of pus or matter yet it Is so simple Md It may be taken the slightest danger. Its taate h» pleasant and agreeable. Mr. Zaegel has ret!re<| drug business, and will de tire time to extending the Z. M. O. He has determined to give aw solutely free, a liberal stsed bo* Z. M. O. to all who satttt towpn and pains, catarrh, " and paina in back. at once of Mr. Zaegel's gene; every household should have a of Z. M. O. All that is necessary is to wri|f Mr. Zaegel, 47 Main St, She: Wis.) Mttt the trial b>oiH|i ' all lng advantage of tUs Zaegel statea he doe* long he oaa. continue button. » 'rv; f -1' N. K.--A NATURE PROVIDES FOR SICK WOMEN a more potent remedy in the roots and herbs of the field than was ever produced from drugs. In the good old-fashioned days of our grand mothers few drugs wen used in medicines and Lydia H Pinkham, of Lynn, Mass., in her study of roots and herbs and their power over disease discovered and gave to the women id the World a remedy for their peculiar ills more potent and efficacious than .any combination of drugs. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable la an honest, tried and true i During its record of more than thirty years, its loqff we of those serious ills peculiar to women, entitl Vegetable Compound to tbe respect and confidence of every fair person and every thinking woman. When women are troubled with irregtilar or weakness, displacements, nteeratkm or ii ' flatulency, general debility. Indigestion or nervous _ should remember there la one tried and true remedy, Lydia E. ham s Vegetable Cobimbi& No other remedy in the country has such a record of female ills, and thousands of women residing in every part of t States bear willing testimony to the wonderful virtue of LydiaJ ham's Vegetable compound and what it has done for titan. Mra. Pinkham invites all sick women to write her for advise. -five years she haaheen i sr-in-law of Lfdi* KJ decease advaadh Immediate direction. Address, Lynn, Mass. Before You Paint, This beer In mind the fact that it costs you as much if not monto ]_ with inferior paint* than it would to use paints of good qasfity. Mete dissatisfaction is caused by the use of poor psiats than shaft say other article for preserving or beautifying property. „ we the highest grade paints made They contain the parte* snd __v meets ground in Agee I inierd Oil in correct proportion, aie heasssly aee ̂' no more than inferior points and stand every test for exterior sr* "* "~ Before yoe dmrtdf on the kind of paint to use, it wffl be to yew # « . _/ .t .k.A^m irtr •uwWn MM. OBDII WVW w> "• r"-- " --7» -- -- , for oar 1907 color chart of the latest shades lor modem uses, also 1 sHon and paint facts that you ooaht to know. We want every owner of a (wilding in this locaMy tmd address to Matte one of our beautiful Buffalo-head souvemr Jj TU. nnlnn. in annMmus and will I u UTCii IU WK V/ vm' / -- , .7, ZTTTi' ins. The pin is neat and unique in appearance and win be sent ymmm _ name is received before April 1st. BUFFALO OIL PAINT t YAlfflSB CO., SSVMLS. »T. fMLL • Hfs«oae« H» • •JlUdlN ALL-STONE CURE. tntlieJCtdMTS, Stone* tn the Urinary THE---- TICKLE OR. orsors MSMJEM TMUEIt wiHstoP that cough and give yom sleep. A remedy that has stood tbe teat for aoyearsju nafaillngcare for Coagks, JBroachiUa, sen Throat. Leogu. Stoas- acta or Bowels. Soroby wl> <m receipt of SB eeataeer but. f» taUsfel DYSON kRPiciyg coCaieeiirtegfw* naSar j"' ^ la puts of KortawewaM prosiMKoas tamen mmmt

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