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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 30 Jul 1908, p. 7

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r: * t~k ~ - .... »' ' wy '|jt ^ ' ->^7S mm s -- 1 <* W " A * 4* fc1 - f , i i-, 2 ; Vt K How England Has Held Down India By ST. NIHAL SING (Copyright, by Joseph B. Bcnvtes..1? While the educated people of India appear to be content with carrying on wordy warfare over political questions and arraigning the British administra­ tors of Hindostan for inaugurating a reign of terrorism In the country, im­ pending famine is hanging orer the beads of the country's 300,000,000 in­ habitants. Crops have failed In many sectiong, and already half-famished Hindoos are face to face with tha npecter of starvation. During the latter portion of the Brit­ ish administration of India, famine has followed famine with direful fre­ quency. Within the last 25 years 19,000,000 Hindoos have died of abeer starvation. Grinding poverty is bo omnipresent in the country that many millions of East-Indians are perpet­ ually in a half-starved condition. The scarcity of food becomes more pinch­ ing and accentuated, when times are harder. Then the poor Hindoos, in­ stead of starving inch by inch, are quickly blotted out. < The impoverishment of the masses defies portrayal. It Is much uglier, much more poignant and painful than that which is to be found in the Ghettos and poor quarters of Amer­ ican cities. It is estimated that an average East-Indian requires at least a dollar to a dollar and a half a month merely to exist; but since his income is computed by recognized British au­ thorities to be only 50 cents a month, it will be seen that he lives consider­ ably below the poverty line. During the last two years the government has expended out of the revenues collect­ ed from the East-Indian tax payers over $130,000,000 in trying to keep the impoverished millions of Hindostan alive. One out cf every 16 of the 300,000,090 inhabitants has been in receipt of actual charity re­ lief. This was the case in practi­ cally normal yelirs. Now that the scarcity is assuming vaster dimen­ sions and appears to be developing into a colossal famine, A greater pro portion of the people will have to be saved at the expense of the public". The abnormal poverty has augment ed the death rate. Figures collected from official records show that mortal­ ity has increased from 25. per 1,000 to 35 per 1,000 within the past ten years. Chronic starvation has led to the propagation of cholera" and plague to such a fearful extent that during the last decade 5,000,090 Blast- Indians have perished from the latter. In such desperate straits the masses of India find themselves to-day. The very existence of the farmer, the artisan, the workingman, the laborer ..by day or month, the petty business mau and Che clerk, is in serious jeop­ ardy through famine and plague. That India should be sunk in the mire of fearful and agonizing pov­ erty is no cause for wonder. For two centuries or more India has been in the position of a pig, whose throat has been slit, and the animal hung up by the heels to permit the blood to drain from its body. Hindostan has been bled--bled profusely, unmerci­ fully, continuously by a conscienceless and mercenary alien government. The knife thrusts have been directed toward the most vital parts of ths body politic. The arteries of indus­ try, manufacture and agriculture have been slashed and the life-blood of the country drained away to enrich the occidental island which controls af­ fairs In India. The aim of the English in India has been to crush the native East-Indians, grind their substance into powder, and then employ it as a fertilizer to enrich the British soil. England ha^ built her empire In the orient at the expense of the East-Indian tax payer, and East Indian men and money have helped even to extend Britain's dominion in Africa, Malta, Crete, etc. It was a company of British com­ mercial! sts who founded the British rule in India. To students of his­ tory it is patent how the British mo­ nopolists, under the aegis of British East-India Company, used notorious and unscrupulous methods to plun­ der Hindostan. When the British crown took the reins of India in her hands in 1858, the policy of governing India remained unchanged. As in the days of the East-India Company, it continued to be the exploitation of Hindostan for the benefit of the Eng­ lish. It still continues to be the came. As a direct result of this policy, every means, fair and foul, overt and covert, has been utilized to hold down India and to tighten the British bonds on the unfortunate and famfshing peo­ ple. The lucrative government ap­ pointments havo been reserved for Englishmen. Each year the British government in addition to paying princely salaries to its own men and women In India, transships $100,- 000,000 to Englahd. Seventy-five thou­ sand British soldiers are year after year nurtured and equipped at the ex­ pense of the East-Indian tax payer, nominally to protect India from Rus­ sian aggression, but virtually to ex­ tend and preserve the solidarity of the British empire ill the orient, Africa and elsewhere. hi* power to keep Che congeries of East-Indian populaces from fusing into one mass of people with a community of interest and with patriotic, national­ ist ideals and ambitions. By means of playing the Hindoo against the Moham­ medan, the Sikh against the Hindoo; by petting the military races of India and leaguing them against the non- military East-Indians, 150,000 British­ ers have despoiled -300,000,000 natives. The same policy is responsible for emasculating the people in general and the martial races of India in par ticular. An arms act has been en­ forced which haj made it impossible for the natives of the land to carry weapons or learn to defend them­ selves with skill and success. The manhood of India has been cauterized to such a fearful extent th,at the Brit­ ish recruiting officer is finding that it is almost impossible to fill the ranks of the native soldiers who drop out of the army through death, resignation and desertion. ill Sfl DELIVERING MAIL. A spurious system of education re­ tailed from schools and universities built and engineered by British offi­ cials, with East-Indian money, has also been used to weaken the people. The young men on graduation from col­ lege have fouad that their physique* have been ruined. Physical cult*,** has been conspicuous in the educa- tional system by its woeful absence. The instruction has been of a nature that has invested the young men and women with a contempt for agricultu­ ral and trade work; and has engen­ dered within their hearts a hatred for ifien and women of sects and castes other than their own. Nothing has been taught in the schools and col­ leges that would tend toward uniting the people and evolving an East-In­ dian nation. The history of India has not been given so that it would stimu­ late the pride of the people and in­ vest them with the desire to emulate those who have gone before them and to keep abreast of the march of civ­ ilization. In the school text books em­ phasis has been laid on the achieve­ ments of foreigners; on what aliens did for India; and much has been made of the degradation in general, and especially of the defeat at arms of native East Indians when combat­ ing the aggression of the greedy Brit­ ishers. Trolley System for Bringing Letters from the Road. Where the bouse stands some dis­ tance back from the highway a trolley can be rigged up to save- steps in getting the • mail, suggests Farm and Home. The box is hung on two pulley door hangers, as shown in cut. A strong post, with a bent |rm, is set uext the highway, and a wire, a, suspended between it and the house, on which the box runs. A pul­ ley is fastened in, or to, the post, and over it runs a cord, b c, to pull the box back and forth between the house and the road. The box is sent down to meet the carrier, who places the mall in it, and then it is quickly pulled back to the house. The universities were established in India with a purely economic motive. "The nation of shopkeepers" started the educational system with a view to prepare East-Indian young men to fill the lower ranks in government serv­ ice. The native agency being as effi­ cient and much cheaper than the Brit­ ish, was given preference. Moreover, the occidentals, unacquainted with the language, customs, religions and modes of life of the natives, and with a very poor capacity for adjusting themselves to the climate and other conditions prevailing in India, and for learning languages, could not carry on the plunder of the country without the assistance of the natives. That altruistic motives were not re sponsible for the establishment oi schools and colleges in India by the British government is evident for many reasons. The first and foremost is the sad insufficiency of school- houses antf teachers in India. Four- fifths of the East-Indian vintages ar« without a school. After a century and a half of British administration, more than 99 per cent, of East-Indian wom­ en and 90 per cent, of Hindoo men are utterly illiterate. To show the con­ trast, It may be mentioned that in less than one-fourth of the time the little kingdom of the mikado has been able to educate its masses almost to the extent of those living in wide-awakG occidental countries. Another and a very powerful proof of the sordid.^mo­ tives with which the educational pol­ icy was framed and engineered in India is that the British authorities have done practically nothing to train the natives in the use of up-to-date farm and manufacturing machinery and methods. The -East-Indian agri­ culturist and artisan have been al­ lowed to play with their industries In their old-fashioned ways. While the education has been of a nature which has utterly failed to modernize the people and render them capable of employing the new meth­ ods of tilling land and making articles of merchandise, the law has been so made and administered that the peo­ ple have been reduced to the state of hewers of wood and drawers of water, and their Industries have withered and died. The policy of England has been to force India to remain a pro­ ducer of raw materials, for the benefit of British laborers and manufacturers. The Indian mart has been utilized for the industrial advancement of Eng­ land. HAY STACKING DEVICE. Handy Device That Will Do Good Work Anywhere. This handy device for stacking hay In the field can be set up anywhere in a very short time. It consists of V*; ^ - v*" Plait of Hay Stacking Derrick. two telegraph poles, two guy ropes, and an iron rod of cable, on which runs a carrier. By this method, says the Prairie Farmer, one can build as large a stack as he wishes, and do it Quicker and better. OYSTER SHELL BARK LOU8E. It Is a Hard Pest to Fight, But Ksep at It--Destroys Shade Trees. The oyster shell bark louse is a bard customer. Last season two neighbors called my attention to the shade trees in front erf their resi­ dences. They were seven black ash trees of 15 to 20 years' growth. Three trees were covered with the louse on the trunk and out to the extreme end of the branches. Many of the limbs had died, and two trees had been cut down two years previous, having been killed by the scale. These trees, explains the writer in Farm and Home, I soon discovered, needed radical treatment in order to be saved in one season, so I decided on one careful application. Making a kerosene emulsion of one to seven strength, arming myself with scrub brushes, a ladder and saw, I started to work as soon as the scales began to lift, which was the first of June. All limbs that were dead or quite sure to die were sawed out to be burned, and the remainder, with the trunk, were scrubbed with the emulsion until all scales were rubbed off. The work was out of the ordinary method for large trees, but had the desired effect. They started at once into new growth and now are in a very promising condition. The own­ ers were well satisfied to pay for the work. The kerosene emulsion was made of one gallon kerosene, two gal­ lons boiling water and half pound soap, then agitated while hot for ten minutes with a foot pump. By adding five gallons water I had sufficient mixture to go over the seven trees. U8E OF THE DISK PLOW. THI HAY CROP. •ems Suggestions for the Stacking In the Field. Now that we have an unusually heavy crop of hay to secure, some fartners will be obliged to stack some of it. A foundation can be made of rails or poles laid close enough to hold the hay up from the ground and allow the circulation of air under­ neath to prevent the hay at the bot­ tom gathering moisture from the ground and spoiling. Begin the stack at the bottom con­ siderably smaller than you intend to hav« the body of tbe stack. Lay the hay in the middle first and pack it very firmly and work outward until you get the size of the bottom. Carry it up a little ways and then begin to lay out a little at each course. Keep the middle fullest and pressed down, but do not walk close to the side while laying the outer course. I usually keep away from the edge three or four feet. When you have enlarged the stack as much as you intend to, says the Orange Judd Farmer, carry it up even­ ly on the outside until you have fully two-thirds of the hay in that you in­ tend to put in that stack, and then prepare to draw it in to top out. Keep the middle fullest and well packed and draw gradually until you have com­ pleted the top. Put a cap of marsh hay on, and put on hangers, as good hay is too valuable to be wasted by exposing it to the storms. Keep in mind from the beginning, that if you keep the middle of the stack the fullest and well packed, and the outer course looser, the hay will droop on the outside and shed the rains perfectly from top to bottom of stack. A man who has a mechan­ ical turn of mind can make a stack that looks well and in which the hay will keep as well as in the barn. Hay for stacking needs to be perfectly cured before it is hauled. DONT MUTILIATE THE ROOT8. TM gpfifiw it; ALCOHOL 3 PER CEN',„, A\£gc<able Ph^afionfarAs-l ([ siraifaiingtfteFlJwfaiKlRegite-l riing Use Stomachs aMBowis of] Infants H IIDM N Promotes Dt^imCfeerful- ncssandRestXealaias Opium.Morphine monMiaaaL Not Narcotic. AptafMikwmnam RmrfASsd" ,MieMfe ££$•*-- .j&tkeSmf * Msw Stsd- gF&tStmr. AperffecC Remedy for Ose^s-1 fion, Sour Stomach WorrasfGHvnlsieas Jurist- f guess and LOSS OF SHEER ftcSirafe Signato* of NEW YORK. Al b monll v oii1 Dosr*. - 1 %rK!srs •<0.4 The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over SO years, has borne the signature of and has been made under his per* Bonal supervision since its infancy* Allow no one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and "Just-as-good" are but Experiments that trifle with, and endanger the health of Infants and Children--Experience against Experiment* Whet Is CASTORIA Castorla is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, P&re- goricp Drops and Soothing: Syrups. It is Pleasant* It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other jSJarcotlc substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Coiistlpatloia aad Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the -Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natosai She Children's Panacea--The Mother's F/iand, "' v > oenuink CASTORIA A«-way» M&um Signature of & JS P0M Guaranteed under the 1 Exact Copy of Wrapper* The Kind You Hare Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years tm ccurraun oobmutv. tt mwmuv btiwct. mwn on* NOT ONLY COULD, BUT DID. Careless Methods Will Reduce the Amount of the Yields In the cultivation of any farm crop, do not mutilate the roots. Careless­ ness in this regard has caused the loss of more In the way of farm crops than almost any other thing unless It be weeds. Take note of how long a tree stands still in its growth after it has been set out. That is because the roots hatfe been mutilated and are ma­ king repairs before the growth of the tree can be resumed. In the cultivation of a field crop, says the Farmers' Review, the result of destroying a part of the roots is not so obvious, because the roots have not been mutilated to the same degree as in the case of the tree, and also because the crop was. growtng so rap­ idly that the result is only in a les­ sened speed of growth. But the result is along the same line and exists evton if It be not so noticeable. Yet the speed of growth counts for a great deal in the development of a crop, and nothing should be done that will lessen that speed of development. A loss of 5 to 10 per cent may be caused and the farmer not suspect it, because he has no standard by which to judge it. Before entering on the cultivation of any fast-growing crop, the farmer should make a careful estimate as to where the roots are likely to be In the soil and avoid them. To leave the roots undisturbed is to leave them In the very best condition for growing, as the cultivation has broken up the crust above them and let In the air, which plays a large part in the prepar­ ation of plant food. M*. Qrandon Able to Bear Testimony to Wife's Accomplishments. Sometimes there is a drop of regret in the cup of joy served by fate to the husband of a brilliant talker. "! should think it would be a privilege to sit at the table with your wife three times a day," said one of Mrs. Grandon's ardent feminine admirers. "Only twice a day," said • Mr. Qran­ don, with a bow. "I do not go home at noon." "Too bad!" said the admirer. "We could not get on without her at club I'm sure. Why, I believe she conld talk intelligently on a thousand top­ ics!" "She can--and does," said Mr. Qran­ don, and with another bow he slipped out just as his wife appeared. -- Youttu*QDmpa»ion. CRIMSON CLOVER. A Good Plant for Localities Not Too Far North. This is sometimes called Italian clover and Qerman clover. It Is hardy enough for locations sonth of the Ohio river, but winter kills it in the north. It Is a beautiful plant, and a mass of crimson clover has a pleasing effect Melba in Paris. Mine. Melba has seldom received such a remarkable ovation as that which greeted her appearance at the recent opera gala performance in Paris. It cannot, however, compare in delirious enthusiasm with one she received some years ago in St. Peters­ burg. On one memorable night, after the close of the opera, she was called before the curtain again and again for more than an hour, until she was so exhausted that she could scarcely stand. Her enthusiastic admirers then followed her carriage to the ho­ tel, where they serenaded her, al­ though it was a bitterly cold night, until three o'clock In the morning. On the following day when she reached the station to depart the platform was crowded with hundreds of adoring music lovers. As the train was leav­ ing they took the pencil with which she had written her autograph for all who could get near her, bit It into small pieces and passed them aroonfl as souvenirs. As an essential feature of this pol­ icy of repression, England has cease­ lessly endeavored, and with great suc­ cess, to keep fanning the flames of religious and racial animosities among the people. Divide and rule has been the rootto of the British official in Jnd'a. aud he has done everything In England's repression of India Is un­ rivaled in the history of the world. As a direct result of the mal-admlnistra- t!on of Hindostan the people are sunk in poverty, superstition and Ignorance, festered with plagues arid fauiines, weak in mind and body. From the standpoint of unity, the teeming mil lions of India are the worst situated in the world. But the most heart-rending feature of British exploitation is that the peo­ ple have been kept under a state of hypnosis for such a long time that only a small percentage of them are alive to the seriousness of the situa­ tion. But the educated community it increasingly awakening to a full realization of the white man's pur­ pose and work in India, and this awak­ ening is developing into a revolution­ ary attitude toward the Britisher. Famines and plagues are wielding their combined influence in breaking the crust of fatalism native to the East-Indian. The wolf of hunger and the fell epidemics are slowly but steadily making the Ignorant millions pause and consider that something is positively wrong in the "system." They have not yet come into a realiza­ tion that their country has been woe­ fully bled and that the resources of the land have been misappropriated by foreigners. Their awakening Is yet in Its infant stage. It is hazy and undefined and as yet a mere speck on the "horizon. But it is fast developing, and as the educated East-Indians have s®BjjE®eeed^ air aggressive campaign for the uplift of the masses, it Is des­ tined to assume greater proportions day by day. Where It Is tr end, no one can prophesy. The Twenty-Four inch Size Is the Best Says a Colorado Farmer. According to H. M. Bainer of Colo rado "the 24-inch disk plow can safely be recommended as being superior to any other size. The smaller size pnlls easier, but it does not pulverize the •oil so well. "Do not try to cut a furrow wider than eight or ten inches with a riisk. The wider the furrow, the deeper will the corrugations be and the poorer will be the work. It is better to use two 24 inch plows, each cutting ! ight inches In width than to use a single 28 or 30-inch plow cutting 16 inches. "The disk plow is capable of handling ground that has becofie too dry and hard for the mold board plow. It is of somewhat lighter draft, does not require sharpening so oft»;n, cuts through trash better and does not clog so easily. "The moldboard plow must be recommended as able to do the best work In all places, where the moisture conditions are favorable. In nearly all irrigated and huf?.id sections, and often in dry farming sections, this type of plow is mu»'h better than the disk. The disk cai- be recommended for dry and hard conditions of soil." Late Chicks. Late chicks wil< make rapid growth If they are given n well-balanced feed. Such chicks should not be left to the kind of feed thty can pick up, but should be fed food containing all kinds of ingredients, inc'udlng ground bone and meat. We hu^e seen Plymouth Rock pullets hatched the first of Sep­ tember make such tapid growth as to begin to produce aggs in five months from the sheli. It was about the same time that the May chicks of that year began to lay, v»n the farm In question. The May chicks had been k>ft to their dfwn resources In food get- t&ng, while the late chicks had re­ ceived more attention in thia regard. Pigeon Joins Recessional. A little fellow who sings in the choir of a Long Island village church Is the happy possessor of tame pi­ geons. One of them follows him to the pretty vine covered place of worship and during the sermon coos and flat­ ters among the crimson ramblers at the open window. One recent Sunday when the recessional began the bird flew in and circled about the little fellow's head until he reached the choir room door. It then flew out and waited to escort its small owner home. . Costly Popularity. France's cruiser Leon Qambetta Is named after the famous politician, who died on December 31, 1882. In the times of his intense popularity Gam- betta had an experience which he was wont to tell against himself. In Paris admirers unyoked his horses and dragged the carriage to his house. Gambetta would narrate thlB with an air of pride, and he would add. with a smile: "Bat I never saw my horses again!" HEALTH AND INCOME A PERFECT TERROR, Horace--Yes, I'm a tearful fellow when I'm roused. Maud--Really! What time do they waken you? CUTICURA CURED FOUR Southern, Woman Suffered with lteli< ing, Burning Rash--Three Little Babiea Had Skin Troubles. "My baby had a running sore on his neck and nothing that I did for it took effect until I used Cuticura. My face was nearly full of tetter or some sim­ ilar skin disease. It would itch and burn so that I could hardly stand it. Two cakes of Caticura Soap and a box of Cuticura Ointment cured me. Two years after it broke out on my bands and wrist. Sometimes 1 would go nearly crazy for it itched so badly. - I went back to my old stand-by, that had never failed me--one set of Cuti­ cura Remedies did the"'work. One set also cured my uncle's baby whose head was a cake of sores, and another baby who was in the same fix. Mrs. Liille Wilcher, 770 Eleventh St., Chat­ tanooga, Tenn., Feb. 16, 1907." A Sensible Literary Chap. 'Tm not runnln' a ten-acre farm ilk connection with the literary business,"' says the Sweet Singer of southwest Georgia, "and so, the outlook is mom > cheerful. I hope to make enough cot-.J; ton to have my poems published in at book and enough corn to feed the fam­ ily while I'm waitin' for the public to> buy the book. I also take contract* for the digging of wells, and these lit» tie side issues will enable me to ahowr American literature just what I do!"--Atlanta Constitution. Lewis' Single Binder cigar--richest, satisfying smoke on the market. Your dealer or Lewis' Factory, Peoria. 111. We tarnish the tplendor of our b actions by too often speaking of th€ When money begins to talk people*^ sit up and take notice. 4 ;,£* Allen's Foot-Kaae, a Powder rorywollen, sweatingfpet, titTesioataMlaM. W original powder for tbe feet. So at an 7 I Druggists^ The right kind of a doctor leave well enough alone. 25 "Guar®11' Crimson Clover. in the flower garden. In tbe sonth a big field of crimson clover is a pleas­ ant sight. On the Atlantic seaboard it has been grown successfully as far north as Delaware. As a green crop for plowing under it is excellent. PRACTICAL POINT8. Keep flies out of stables where the cows are. It is possible to do it. ^ If rats are bothering your corn get. some wire netting of half-inch mesh and line the corn crib while it is empty. The man who persists In growing noxious weeds will never sit in the legislature or win prizes at the coun­ ty fair. The "man with the hoe" is no long­ er typical of the farmer. He rides in an auto and plows with one If he wishes. Sweet clover has some value for pasture, but little for hay. It is of some "good as fertilizer or to plow un­ der in thin lands. It grows well on waste lands ai^l is a good thing to hold new hillsides froHi exneaaite washing. Both Kept Up on Scientific Food. Good sturdy health helps one a lot to make money. With the loss of health one's income Is liable to shrink, if not entirely dwindle away. When a young lady has to make her own living, good health Is her best asset. "I am alone in the world," writes a Chicago girl, "dependent on my own efforts for my living. I am a clerk, and about two years ago through elose ap­ plication to work and a boarding house diet, I became a nervous in­ valid, and got so bad off it w<\s almost impossible for me to stay in '.he office a half day at a time. "A friend suggested to me the idea of trying Grape-Nuts, which I did. making this food a large part of at least two meals a d^y. "Today I am free from brain-tire, dyspepsia, and all the ills of an overworked and improperly nourished brain and body. To Grape-Nats I owe the recovery of my health, and the ability to retain my position and in­ come." "There's a Reason." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, ilich. Read "The P.cad tc Wsli- ville," In pkgs. Ever read the above letter? A new one appears from time to time. They are genuine, titie, and full of human Interest. Proof Positive. There Is usually some convincing ar­ gument to a question of doubt, If one is only bright enough to think of it at the time of controversy. The farmer was able to produce the indisputable without delay of circumlocution. A number of people were gather*-ii 'round the bulletin board of the Rea>; ing Eagle, on \vhich was announced ; "Death of Frank Miller." Two farmers from the extreme I backwoods were gazing at the various items of news, when one of them spied the lugubrious statement, and 1 pointing it out to his rustic comrade, remarked innocently: "It says on that board: 'Death ol Frank Miller ' Is that you?" "No," replied the other, In all seri­ ousness. "My name is John." §>yrup^rtgs enna acts gentjy^et prompt­ ly on the bowels, cleanses fh SICK HEADACHE CARTER'S Kittle FIVER H PILLS. jMmM Positively cared fcyi; these Little Pills. They also relieve tress from Dyspepsia, dlfrestloa and Too Hciurty - " i Eating. A perfect rem-1; S edjr for Dizziness, sea, Drowsiness, Ba4-<.': ' Tteste iu the Mouth, Coat^ - ed Tonjrwe, Pain iu thai? Side, TORPID LIVER, £J§ Thev regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. SMALL PiLL. SMALL DOSE, SMALL mm, CARTERS Genuine Must Bear Fac-Siffiiie Signature IT TIE i VER FsLLa. REFUSE SUBSTITUTES* assisfs one in overcoming habitual constipation permanently. 1o get its benejicial ejects buy the genuine. Hanufacturodl bvthr CALIFORNIA floSlfRUpCo. SOLD BY LEAD! NCDRtXKXSTS-504 p^BOTTU. TOILET ANTISEPTIC bodr DAISYFLTT KILLER I laevd any wben ft" n*< ami k: U4 nil Hi**, S tra t. cktm.oroAnH'nUil, < om eutezic.cheap* ull • o»i. Alwotute!y harmless, cannot or tip over, mil no! roil or tu ^ ure any t h 1 ttveJ "W all mi prr% Wc^ns lUhOLU sullKft, USLN" l4ll» A**., BIO PROMTS FOR IOC-Invest $10 monthly for tlx months and earn 13.50 QiunUilj for lif«« Ohio Inrestment fcnvunties Cotupany, William* ton BmUim*. CIvtcISOIU, Obto. K®cpc. ehc breath„ *e<rih8 mouih uu •nii^cpiacally cicaa tree iroiu ua« healthy germ-life and disagreeable odors, which water, soap and tooth preparation* alone cannot do. A germicidal, disin­ fecting and deodor­ izing toilet requisite ol exceptional ex­ cellence and econ­ omy. Invaluable ior inflamed eyes, throat and nasal and uterine catarrh. At drug end toilet stores, 50 cents, or by mail postpaid. Largo Trial Sample WITH "NCALTH AND 8CAUTV ftOOK »|NT I THE PAXTON TOILET CO.. Bflsloa, Mais. 2500 P«r Cent. On Yoyr Money is ibe chance 1 ttiM u> who <xiiua tnu> inn eTKloitatioti sobfme. If you uai'm- tted iue*ns ihisiis ihe time w bus* and protli# tor tbe rmurt*. Write ue (or iNtrnculars. I caa CvlDTIDCe you sco. w. vrvBas. . _ Box *U. Ai.Bujt'maQPS. N. M. AQTIIH1 and HAY FEVER ltd 1 llfVlM I'osrriv t LY ( I KKD ny K I N M O N T H S A S T H M A C U R E Ov«r oun;;; > >"*** 4 Wceot trial boUl® seat <<> T acts. US. J1.S.KUOIOSTH,AstarjPukitJ. , lartf* Hat of Oof leva araiai trxmi 40 to 1009 vrfs, r.»n»'av i»> prtea from i-»0 to f SOU ;•< r acre. Write us ki«J »j**"a and WH'iitivMi jou waut. We cai> furulaa 11. Cora Beit Lua « We Have £ WIDOWS'®11" _ ^ JOHN W MOKfttS. P1£NS10;N$ Vanuatu*, to. A. N. K.- (1908--31)

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