Newspaper Page Text
7 é . J X ] i [
o 7| Sl 1 o f 2 &
Toh g e T ) 2
| TR el %
A r‘é»?":{a‘ FoR. ” lE" yA \7
v 'y A . - 4
@:? o " “)"‘\% u’- ;';'“ -. K .
Ge ig, ¥ o AT
3%% A AND G 2 2
g st
Bbeh S 0 0 h e . P T /e
N - Gt
Wiy o S 26 F
A i, 2 PN L N > o 5 £2 T 4 Y
- s “Si% 5 - A 4 A o P :
Chicks in the Garden.
Tne small chicks can run in the
garden just as well as not. They
will do no damage and the vermin
they will pick up will help the gar
den. Place the coops or brooders
alongside the garden fence and make
a few openings through the fence to
admit the chicks. They are safe
while in the garden, too.—Farmers’
Home Journal,
Remedy For the Worms,
A small striped worm has bezn cut
ting the young corn off, after it is a
few inches high, 1 would like to
know what it {s.—A, J.
1t is one'of the climbing cut worms.
It is too late to treat him, he has
disappeared; but another geason you
can kill him by soaking some clover
leaves in water saturated with Paris
green, and scattering them around in
the part of the field where the worms
are at work. They will eat the clover
leaves and die.—lndiana Farmer,
# Comfort For Hens. !
The hen that is kept under com
fortable conditions will produce more]
eggs that if given no care in that
respeet. Cool quarters at night in‘
summer correspond with warm quar-!
ters in winter; that {s, it is comfort
that assists in securing desired re
sults. The material used on the fioorl
and in the nests should not be bulky. ‘
Cut straw makes not only excellent
nests, but provides Jtter for the floor
of the poultry house, and assists in
keeping it clean., When grain is
thrown in cut straw, as litter, the
hens will work and scratch in it in
dustriously.—Farmers’ Home Jour
nal.
it P B OO
Drag, Rrother, Drag.
1f l,;om' road is soft or rough,
rag, brother, drag;
Once or twice will te enough :
l)mf, brother, drag;
Wheels won’t sink mto a rut,
Every time you strike a cut
Teams won’t werry if you'll but
Drag, brother, drag.
"Twon't take long to fix your road,
an, brother, drag;
1t l;:“d t]))ull a bxsger load,
ag, brother, drag; :
It means dollars in the end, . y
Saved on teams and wagons, friend,
So D‘ron ,thbu y&ur h:i;t ear lend—
ro! y . v
J - —%&w T (Mo#) Bazoo.
And “if at first you don’t succeed,”
Drag, brother, drag; :
And once or twice don't fill the need,
Drag, brother, drag;
When a shower of rain has passed, !
And the sun shines out at last, S
- While the-roads are drying fast, . W
Drag, brother, drag. i
Every time you drag the road,
Drag, brother, drag;
The highter to your team the load,
Dmfi, brother, drag;
It will pay you every time,
Just to see your horses smile,
As they quickly trot a mile, i
Drag, brother, drag, 1
And “Gabe” will come along and see,
Drag, brother, drag;
Just how a Tnd roa(q ought to be,
Drag, brother, drag;
When he gets home ge’ll take his pen,
And write you up the best of men.
And you'll be mighty famous then (?),
Drag, brother, drag.
~Prpublican f‘ress, Butler, Mo.
LT T D 0 Ly e ima—————
Hay For Hens. |
Possibly there are fine bits of pea
hay,or hay from alfalfa, or clover,
lying about in the barn. If these are
soaked up with hot water, they will
make happy hens and aid the egg
business. Do not feed the hay wet.
Use just enough water to moisten the ]
leaves and see what a nice color they
become, If desired, bran can be
added to the hay to dry it and to sup
ply mare egg feed. Cornmeal may
also be used with the hay. Do not
feed long bits of hay and do not fail
to feed it in clean troughs. Have the
mixture as cool as blood temperature
before feeding it. — Progressive
Farmer,
Ropy Milk, i
Concerning this trouble, which is
caused by an outside germ which gets -
into the milk after it is drawn, Pro-;
fessor Farrington recommends the
following: |
The best way to{overcome this
troubje is to carefully’wash the cow's
udder and brush her legs, afterwards
drying both with a clean towel; then
the milker should wash his hands,
thoroughly steam the pail into which
he milks, and after throwing away
the first streams of milk drawn, milk
the cow with dry hands into this clean
pail. The milk should- be protected
as carefully as possible from dust,
and then strained into cans, in
which it is to be transported, or in
which it is set for cream rising. The
strainer cloth, carrying cans and sep
arator, if one is used, should be given
an extra washing and scalding in or
der to destroy any of these germs
which have been the cause of the
ropy milk. There is no doubt that
this trouble may be overcome in this
way, and the success cne has in doing
it will depend entirely upon how
carefully he protects the milk from
the germe, which must get into the
milk that is drawn from the cow.
| The Top Notch Farmer.
’ That farmer or stockman who han
| dles the best stock and feeds the best
is the top ncteh farmer, the one that
| gets the most out of the business, and
!you never hear him growling around
and saying that there is nothing to
:be made in farming. There are a few
_of this kind in nearly every commun
ity, model farmers, whom we would
all do well to follow. Right here let
m 2 state that most of us would be
greatly benefited for our business if
we would spend more of our time
with our neighbors and these model
farmers. Probably the workings of
one of these farmers, with whom the
writer has had considerable dealing
in the capacity of a live stock trader,
would be of interest to the readers.
My first deal with him was for his
spring fed hogs and they were so good
that I reached higher than usual for
them. These hogs were fine blooded
Polands and they all look=d the same
age and as if they were all out of the
same mold. They were real fat and
toppy, the kind that any man ought to
be proud of. And he was proud be
cause he produced the best in the
neighborhood and received the top
price. He says that when he began
with them he was surprised that they
kept in fine fix and fattened on so
much less feed than the nondescript
type that was so common.” No other
kind for him now. I happened
around again in time to buy the next
litter and they were fine. He had
another litter, just come, of the same
type and all about the same age. The
sire cost a lot of money, but it was
well spent, for he was a fine indi
vidual. His brood sows were selceted |
mothers, gentle, large and long. |
The other stock on the farm was |
of the same good quality, The horses
and mwes were of a type that at
tracted buyers and included a high
priced harness mare and the toppy
mule colts of his own raising. His
cnttle showed good judgment in the
selection, and the cows for home use
numbered only two, but I have seen
half a dozen that altogether could not
make such a fine showing in milk and
butter. Besides furnishing his table
with such fine dairy products, enough
was sold to meet most of his store
bills, lln the production of lambs and |
wool he ranked well up towards the
front, for he had tried to make up
for whatever was lacking in the qual
ity of his ewes, in extra care and
feeding. Most of the ewes in tegs
‘section are from the mountain coun
ties and with good care and feeding
~may be made to produce toppy lambs.
' Our model farmer uses good sires,
feeds his ewes at lambing time, and
together with blue grass, he is able
to produce lambs that are toppy. So
|muoh for the stoek, The farm is
{made to produce feeds nearly all to
‘gether, but wheat must figure in the
imtauon and it is* of good enough
| quality to sell for seed wheal at about
twenty cents premium. The corn,
though used for feeding only, is of
the same good quality.—E. W. Jones,
in Agricultural Epitomist.
Ambassador Tower's Popularity.
At the Philadelphja Club a Phila
delphian adverted to Charlemagne
Tower's great popularity with the
Kaisor and the German court. “Mr.
Tower has a pretty wit. My sister,
who lives in Berlin, tells me that the
Kaiser, inviting Mr. Tower to dine
with him intormally, called him in
the invitatiot ‘the most engaged man
in Berlin.’ Mr. Tower in his reply
said: ‘The most engaged man in
Rerlin will be but too happy to dine
with the most engaging one.’ *
FEAST OF THE GARLANDS.
Q : oy ) ongale o
ueer Swiss Marria uauaz,f- ot
Peculiar Ways Men a:: Women
. Seek Mates. Hie
The marriage market (or fair)
Which was held recently at Ecaussines
In Belgium has many counterparts
elsewhere, e
In several of the more remote Swiss
cantons, for example, there is held
What is known as the feast of the
garlands. The marriageable maidens
assemble at sunset, sing, dance and
make merry. Bach wears a chaplet
of flowers on her forehead and carrfes |
a nosegay tied with bright colored
- ribbon in her hand. i |
If a lad is attracted by a mui_i’?;h@
plucks a flower frem her bunch, Sh o
pretends not to notice, but whenvth; !
merrymaking breaks up at dawn she
will, if she reciprocates his feelings,
tie the entire bouguet by the rlbinotii
to the handle of the door of tha
cabln wherein he resides or alternas
tively filng it through the open case
ment of his bedchamber. ‘
The famous Tunis marriage mart,
of which so much has been written,
is held twice a year, in the spring
and the autumn. The Tunisian girls
attend in their hundreds, each with
her dowry in coin and jewelry dis
posed about her person. The *“golden
girdle of maidenhcod” encircles her
waist, and in it is an unsheathed dag
ger. When this is gently removed
by a passing gallant and presently re
turned it means that a proposal has
been made. A
A prettier custom prevails among
the Ocraon maidens, who at stated
intervals assemble in the market
place. In front of each is a lighted
lamp, emblem of conjugal fidelity. A
young man feels attracted. He gent
ly blows upon* the flame, extinguish
ing it. The girl relights it; it is a
rejection. If she leaves it alone the
offer is acceptable. )
Even in England these curious mar
ketg are not unknown, although they
are not openly acknowledged as such.
One has been held on St. Martha's
Hill, Surrey, on each recurring Gecod
Friday during some-centuries. Amd
the statute and mon fairs that are
still celebrated in variois rural lo
calities are marriage marts in all but
name.—Pearson’s Weekly.
London’s Chief Rabbi.
In answer to the inquiry of a cor
respondent “The London Times”
SAYS: :
“The chief rabbl of London is real
ly the head or the archbishop of the
Jews. He ig elected by representa
tives of the one hundred congrega
tions, which have votes in keeping
with their donations to the fund from
which the chief rabbi receiver £2.
000 a year. Besides being the su
pervisor of all religious matters per
taining to the one hundred thousand
Jews in the English congregations,
he issues the permit for every Jew
ish marriage which takes place with
in their jurisdiction. = The present
incumbent is the Rey. Dr. ffim‘
Adler, who succeeded his father, who
came into the office in 1845.”
Arabian Nightg Stories. t
The “Arabian Nights” ig an exten:
sive collection of tales forming part of
the Arabic literature, and the exaet
title of which is “The Book of the
Thousand and One Nights”” They
were first made known to Europe by
Antoine Galland, between 1704 and
1717. He was a French Orientalist,
who succeeded, after much effort, in
obtaining a manuscript, which he sup
plemented by gathering tales from
professional story-tellers, whom he
met during his travels in the East.
A MODERN ROMANCE.
“Why don't they marry?”
“Family objections.”
“As if a real man couldn't over
come those!”
“It's not always so easy. His, wife
won't agree to a dlvorce."—Plttsbur;
Posl., A
MOTHER AND CHILD
Both Fully Nourished on Grape-Nuts.
The value of this famous food is
shown in many ways, in addition to
what might be expected from its
chemical analysis.
‘Grape-Nuts food is made of whole
wheat and barley, s thoroughly
baked for many hours and contains
all the wholesome ingredients in
these cereals. {
It contains also the phosphate of ‘
potash grown in the grains, which
Nature uses to build up brain and
nerve cells. |
Young children require proportion=-
ately more of this element beeause
the brain and nervous system of the
child grows so rapidly.
A Va. mother found the value of
Grape-Nuts in nqt only building up
her own strength but in nourishing
her baby at the same time. * She
writes: Bk.s
“After my baby came 1 did not re
cover health and strength, and the
doctor said I could not nurse the baby
as [ did not have nourishment for
her, besides 1 was too weak. by
“He said I might try a change of
diet and see what that would do, and
recommended Grape-Nuts food, [
bought a pkg. and used it regularly.
A marked change came over both
baby and I \ e
“My baby is now four months old,
is in fine condition, I am nursing m&
and doing all my work and never felt
better in my life.” “There's aR%
son." L
Name given by Postum Co., Battie
Creek, Mich. Read “The Road to
Wellville,” in pkgs. ' bl
Ever read the above letter? A new
one appears from time to time. hey
are genuine, true, and fall of b
e Progressive Winnipeg.
- Statistics show that Winnipeg Is
pow- the fourth largest manufactur
ing city of Canada, and those who
have gtudied the benevolent econo
“mie conditions which must control
. her future see a repetition of the
histd*y of St. Louis or Chicago be
fore the capital city of Manitoba.
~ In 1902 the city of Winnipeg had
- a population of 48,411; at the open
- ing of the present year the official
figures were 118,000. In that same
year five years ago the total assessa
ble property of the city amounted to
- $28,615,510, and in 1907 had jumped
to. $106,188,000. In the same space
of time the bank clearings increased
from $188,370,000 in 1902 to $599,667,
000 in 1907.—Cement Age.
. The Best Hammers.
In a recent address - before the
Utica Chamber of Commerce Sec
retary Cortelyou told the story of a
manufacturer of hammers in central
New York, who, having been asked
how long he had made hammers, re
plied: “I have made them for twen
ty-eight years.” “Well, then,” said
the questioner, “you ought to be able
to make a pretty good hammer by
this time”. ‘“No sir,” was the old
manufacturer's reply, “I never made
a pretty good hammer. I make the
best hammers in the United States.”
A SIMPLE SAFEGUARD IN BUY
ING PAINT.
Everybody should know how simple
and easy it is to avoid all uncertainty
in buying paint materials. There are
many so-called white leads on the
market, which contain chalk, zinc,
barytes, and other cheap adulterants.
Unless the property owner takes ad
vantage of the simple means of pro
tection afforded him by reliable white
lead manufacturers, he runs great
risk of getting an inferior and adul
terated white lead.
It is to protect the paint-buyer
against fraud and adulteration that
National Lead Company, the largest
makers of genuine Pure White Lead,
place their famous “Dutch Boy Paint
er” trademark on every keg of their
product, an absolute guarantee of its
purity and quality. Anyone who wants
to make a practical test of white lead,
and who wants a valuable frec book
about painting, should address Na
tional Lead Company, Woodbridge
81dg.,, New York, and ask for test
equipment.
| MAKING BELIEVE.
~ “Your Mwife seems to be in some
- trouble.”
“She seems to be, but she isn’t.
Things are going so well with us
- now that the best she can do is to
~ pretend.” — Louisville Courier-Jour
} nal. 2 t
’ To Drive Out Malaria and Build Up
| the System
~ Take the Old Standard Grovw's Tasre
~ Less CriLL Toric. You khow what you
| mnk'l.ngb’l‘ho,tormphx.splainly qruxted
| onev:fi ttle, showing it is simply Qui
- nine Iron in a tasteless form, and the
- most effectual form. For grown people
: She Overtook Him: -
. Intently the judge listened to the
~man’s story. The man was the plain
tiff and had charged his wife with
~cruel and abusive treatment. He
was a small man and his wife—well,
it was at least evident that the
charge rested on a basis of possibili
ty. After’ the plaintiff had finished his
testimony the judge decided to ask l
a question. “Mr. Frouble,” said he,
“where did you meet your wife, who
has treated you this way?” “Well,
judge,” returned the man, somewhat
meekly, “you see, it’s this way. I
never did meet her. She just kind’
of overtook me.”
ECZEMA CURED,
J. R. Maxwell, Atlanta, Ga., says: *I
suffered agony with a severe case of ecze
ma. Tried six different remedies and was
in despair, when a neighbor told me to try
Shuptrine’s TETTERINE. After using 3
worth of your TETTERINE and soap lam
completely cured. I cannotsaytoo much
in its praise.”” TETTERINE at druggists or
by mail oc. Soap 25¢c. J. T. SHUPTRINE,
Dept. A, Savannah, Ga.
CONVINCING HIMSELF,
“Only fools ar® certain, Tommy;
wise men hesitate.”
“Are you sure, uncle?”
*“Yes, my boy; certain of it.”-—The
Tatler.
Hicks' Capudine Cures Headache,
Whether from Cold, Heat, Stomach, or
Mental Strain. No Acetanilid or dangerous
drugs. It’s Liquid. FEffects immediately.
10¢., 25¢., and 530., at drug stores
NOTHING OPERATIC. ‘
“We met brigands in Bulgaria.”
“That must 'have been romantic.”
\ “It might well have been, but, as
{t happened, it wasn't. We had no
tenor to sing a sole of greeting.”—
| Pittsburg Post.
; THREE CURES OF ECZEMA.
Woman Tells of Her Brother's Terrie
. ble Suffering—Her Grandchild and
Another Baby also Cured—
, Cuticura Proved Invaluable.
“My brother had cczema three different
summers., Each summer it came out be
tween his shoulders and down his back,
and he said his suffering was terrible,
| When it came on the third summer, he
bought & box of Cuticura Ointment and
1 gave it a faithful trial. Soon he began to
| feel better and he cured himself entirely
of eczema with Cuticura. A lady in In
diana heard of how my daughter, Mrs.
| Miller, had cured her little son of terrible
| eczema by the Cuticura Remedies. This
| lady’s little one had the eczema so badly
that they thought they would lose it. She
used Cuticura Remedies and they. cured her
{ child entirely, and the disease never came
1 back. Mrs. Sarah E. Lusk, Coldwater,
1 Mich., Aug. 15 and Sept. 2, 1907.”
: INFORMED.
| “Can I sell you a set of books on
_ the ‘Requirements of Modern Life? "
1 “Nix. I know what the require
| ments of modern life are: advertising
- and push.”—Louisville Courier-Jour
| ual
L g
L 5 ;",“_;_ = :_“_":: 2 1:«}- o "
‘c mh<" o y" A
"POPULAR \ g
%/ 4 SCIENCE > p
Pure iron in the presence of pure
oxygen does not rust,
B < a
The nectar of flowers from which
bees make honey contains seventy to
eighty per cent. of water, but honey
contains only about twenty per cent.
The problem of producing ice in
small quantities quickly and cheaply
has, apparently, been solved by a
French inventor, who has perfected a
machine which is cheap, simple of op
eration, practically everlasting, and
thoroughly practical. It may be op
erated by a belt connected with a
steam engine, by a small electric mo
tor, or by hand cranks. *‘
To render wall paper adaptable for
washing with soap and water without
destroying the colors, make a solu
tion of two parts of borax and two
parts of stick lac, shellac or other lac
in twenty-four parts of hot water.
Strain the solution through a fine
cloth filter, rubbing the latter with a
soft brush after every application till
a brilliant polish is obtained. It is
immaterial whether the paper is al
ready pasted on the walls or still in
rolls. 5
Electricity excels all other methods
of transmission for convenience, says
the Scientific American. An electrie
cable may be strung where required,
and machinery may be arranged
in any position without reference
to line shafting. There are in
stances, however, where rope drive
will save both in first cost and in cost
of operation, particularly when the
process of manufacturing calls for a
number of parallel shafts with ma
chines in one plane.
The connection, long suspected,
between atmospheric conditions on
earth and conditions on-the sun ap
pears to be reasonably well estab
lished by the investigations of Profes
sor Bigelow. The fact that sun-spot
areas wax and wane in an eleven
year cycle was noted years ago, as
was the coincidence that the most ex
tensive was frequently marked by un
usual magnetic and electrical phe
nomena on earth.
ROCKET TORPEDOES.
Germany Said to Fancy a Swedish
Military Invention.
Several years ago a Swedish army
officer devised a novel weapon. In
consisted of a case in the head of
which was a charge of dynamite or
guncotton. The contents were so
placed that an explosion woiuld follow
when the head of the missile hit any
thing hard. Provision for projecting
it was made not by firing it from a
gun or forcing it under water by au
tomatic mechanism. It was equipped
with a charge of powder in the lower
end, which behaved like the charge
in an ordinary skyrocket. It would
force its way upward in the air by the
violence of a stream of fire emitted
behind, or, more accurately, below.
To assist in steering it the torpedo
was supplied with a stick. When it
was to be dispatched it was mounted
on a light metal frame, which could
be so inclined as to give it the neces
sary angle.
Nothing has been heard of the in
‘vention for a long time, but a recent
report indicates that the German War
Department has secured the right to
use it. The British authorities also
studied the device, but did not think
enough of it to invest. From that
fact it may be inferred that there is
much exaggeration in the statement
that the torpedo “is the deadliest
weapon known.”
Colonel Unge, its author, was for a
time employed by the firm started by
Nobel, the inventor of dynamite. The
German cannon and armor plate con
structors, the Krupps, are said to
have secured the right to use it in
countries outside of Sweden.—New
York Tribune.
Licking the Editor,
In some portions of the United
States it has always been a favorite
pastime when a man was not satis
fied with what appeared in the local
paper to go and lick the editor. Some
unwise guy imported the scheme into
the Southwest recently. It was tried
in Ell Paso, and the editor is still
doing business, while the man who
wanted to lick him is buried in Okla
homa. Last week an Albuquerque
peliceman tried it. He was six inches
taller and weighed fifty pounds more
than the editor. The policeman was
taken to the hospital in an ambu
lance, and when he recovered con
sciousness the nurse gave “him a
message from the Mayor announcing
that he was fired from the police
force. It is probable that the editor
of the Liberal and Colonel Max Frost,
of the New Mexican, are about the
only editors in the Territory whom
it would be safe for an ordinary man
to try to lick.—Lordshurg Liberal.
Grace of Gypsies.
The Gypsies are nearer to the ani
mals than any race known to us in
Europe. They have the lawlessness,
the abandonment, the natural physi
cal grace in form and gesture of ani
mals; only a stealthy and wary some
thing in their eyes makes them hu
man.—Arthur Symons,
e ————————————— —
Perhaps a Gentle Hint at Hari-kari.
. It was a ludicrous mistake to offer
a sword to the head of the Standard
oOil Compgny. Its favorite weajpon is
the rebate.—New York Evening Post,
D e
% 3 -,.‘:‘-\.'.. ol m 3
e | SN
B |
' g T
kY TR S S L W Tk ..‘\
e ey ‘@ 3 §
S AN
P el )
I i y[[ ("} vy .\“@3 :\\‘\§n’,’.fl b
2 M )'{pfi\\d
B e O
Thousands of American women
in our hemes are daily sacrificing
their lives to duty.
In order to keep the home neat
and pretty, the children well dressed
and tidy, women overdo. A female
weakness or displacement is often
brought on and they suffer in silence,
drifting along from bad to worse,
knowing well that they ought to
have help to overcome the pains and
aches which dail{y make lifea burden.
It is to these faithful women that
LYDIA E.PINKHAM’S
VEGETABLE COMPOUND
comes as a boon and a blessing,
as it did to Mrs. F. Elisworth, of
Mayville, N. Y., and to Mrs. W. P.
Boyd,of Beaver Falls, Pa.,who say :
I was not able to do my own work,
owing to the female troublé from which
I suffered. Lfl‘dia E. Pinkham’s Vege
table Compound helped me wonderfully,
and I am so well that I can do as big a
day’s work as I ever did. I wish every
sick woman would try it.
FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN.
For thirty years Lydia E. Pink
ham’s Vegetable Compound, made
from roots and herbs, has been the
standard remedy for female ills
and has positively cured thonsands of
women who have been troubled with
displacements, inflammation, ulcera
tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities,
periodic pains, backache, that bear
ing-down feeling, flatulency, indiges
tion,dizziness,or nervous prostration.
Why don’t you try it ?
Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick
women to write her for advice.
She has ided thousands .to
health. Aggress, J.ynn, Mass.
AN EARLY BIRD.
The gilded youth had entered his
father’s bank to learn the business.
“Son,” said the gratified banker.
‘m glad to see that you get here
promptly at 9.”
“I could get here even earlier, dad.
Our club, you know, closes at 5.)—
Washington Herald.
T~ SIOO Reward, SIOO.
The readers of this paper will be pleased to
learn that there is at least one dreaded dis
ease that science has been able to cure in all
its stages,and thatis Catarrh. Hall’s Catarrh
Cure is the only positive cure now known to
‘the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a con
stitutional disease, requires a constitutional
treatment. HaW’s Catarrh Cureistaken inter
nally, acting directly upon the blood and mu
cous surfaces of the s{vstem,thereby destroy
ing the foundation of the disease, and giving
the patient strength by building up the con
stitution and assisting nature in domg‘ its
work. The proprietors have so much faith
in its curative powers that they offer One
Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to
cure. Send for list of testimonials. Addresa
F. J. CuexEY & Co., Toledo, O.
Sold by Druggists, 75¢. :
Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation.
Bishops Counted.
The Protestant Episcopal church
has eighty-five bishops, including the
presiding bishop, in the TUnited
States; two in China, two in Japan
and one each in West Africa, Cuba,
Haiti, Brazil and Mexico. The
Methodist Episcopal church has nine
teen bishops and seven missionary
bishops. The Methodist Episcopal
chyrch south has eleven bishops.
H. H. GreeN’s Sons, of Atlanta, Ga., are
the only successful Dropsy Speclnlfsts in the
world. See their liberal offer in advertise
mentin ancther column of this paper.
A 1908 PROPOSITION,
He—Would you like to take a spin
with me on the bridle path?
She—Church .or park?—Yonkers
Statesmar.
| A TEXAS CLERGYMAN
| s e
| Speaks Out For the Benefit of Suffer.
i * ing Thousands.
| Rev. G. M. Gray, Baptist clergy
| man, of Whitesboro, Tex., Bays:
; “Four years ago [
§ AR suffered misery with
| > : lumbago. Every
' rea ® movement was one
; \:Ab;:;“ A > of pain. Doan’s Kid
= B : ney Pills removed
i = the whole difficulty
5 v.. 7#m. after only a short
. @ &~ Jl)time. Although Ido
| «6’ . not like to have my
f vfi/? ‘ pname used publicly,
| I make an exception
| m this case, so that other sufferers
from kidney trouble may profit by my
experience.” ;
i Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box.
. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
Electric Railway in Holland.
| The Dutch government has granted
| & concession to the Amsterdam and
| North Holland Electric Tramway Co.,
{ to build and operate an electric’ rail
| way system in Holland. The route
| will be nearly 50 kiloms, running
| from Amsterdam north through Zaan
. dam to Kromeminie, from Zaandyk to
. Wyk-aan-Zee, and Wormerveer to Pur
i merend. The Holland Development
i Company, of Amsterdam, will build
| the entire system.