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Show THE WONDERBERRY OR SUNBERRY two of the cases will be used ttjr ni opponents to show that he is not U sympathy with the cause of saving the natural resources of the country from private ownership. On the other hand it la said, that since the secretary of the interior came into office in the Taft cabinet he has stood like a rock against propositions made to htm to compromise some of the land cases which have been tried in the lower courts and which are now on the way to the supreme court. Secretary Ballinger's Position. No one has Intimated that Secretary Ralllnger did anything excepting to express an opinion that the lower court which' decided adversely to the government In one case had based its decision on good law. This would do nothing more than to show that Mr. Ballinger believed that under the laws as they stood, the men who got possession of Bome coal lands in a certain way, acted within their legal rights. The point is, however, that the supreme court overturned the decision of the lower court so that if Mr. Ballinger agreed wlth'ihe lower court the supreme court also overturned him. Now that Chief Forester Pinchot is out of the service. It is understood that he will be the chief figure in wnat may be called the prosecution of Secretary Ballinger. Of course the Investigation is not a trial, although It may have the form of one, and the lines are drawn with the Pinchot interests on one side and the Palllnger interests on the other, and there is to t contest be an exceedingly before the thing finally is decided. It Is known that to his friends the former forester of the government has expressed his determination to see that the officials who were discharged with him, and one who was discharged some time previously, have tbelr cases presented to congress In the most forcible way in which it is possible to set them forth. Pinchot Is a fighter. He is a tall, slender man who looks more or less like the popular conception of a poet He Is a bundle of nervous energy, however, and bis courage is of the highest order. Secretary Ballinger is a short man with a well-kni- t figure, and with a force of determination that has shown Itself on many occasions. Between him and the chief forester there is little to choose in the matter of pertinacity of purpose. They are champions well worthy of trying each other's metal Hearings to Be Public. The public will be allowed to attend the hearings before the committee of investigation. The proceedings will take the widest kind of range and will go way back of any matters pertaining to the immediate controversy in hand. It is understood that the Pinchot forces, if they may be so called, will attempt to show that the whole trend of the secretary of the Interior's life was toward the corporation inter ests, that is. that be believed that it was far better that In some cases there should be private ownerthlp of mines and water sites and that the people should get their benefit not from leading (he sites and the mines to the corporations, but fiora the service which the corporation by Introducing economy measures could give to them. The secretary of the Interior has plenty of ammunition, it Is said, to use in retaliation. There are all kinds of charges which It Is understood will be hurled at the former chiefs of the RURA L Has Proved a Great 8uccesa Thoi sands Say It'a the Beet Thing They Ever Grew. JEJUNE SAFE The Wonderberry or Sunberry, the marvelous garden fruit originated by Luther Iiurbank, and Introduced by Postoffice Department Has No John Lewis Chllds, the Thought of Cutting Them, Seedsman of Floral Park. N, Y.. has a success proved great all over the Despite the Deficit. country. Thousands of people say H fa the best thing they ever grew. Mr. John Burroughs, the WORTH THE COST INVOLVED author, Naturalist and bosom-frien- d of Theodore Roosevelt, says it Is the most delicious pie berry he ever tasted, Balllnger-Pinchand a marvelous cropper. Row Stirs Up Much A Director of the New York AgriculBltterneas In Washington Public tural Experiment Station says It fruits Hearings Are Likely to Be abundantly even In pure sand. In the Lively. short season of North-westerCanada It is a godsend, and fruits long after Washington. Congress is making frost has killed most garden truck. every effort that it can to find a way D. S. Hall, Wichita, Kan., says thirty to cut down the expenses of governpeople grew it there last season with ment. In former years there has been ,fhe appearance of a striving after perfect satisfaction. K. S. Enochs, Hammond, La., says saving rather than a real saving itit yields $250 worth of fruit per self, but this year results are being acre with him. Mrs. J. H. Powers, accomplished. It can be saidr how4732 Kenwood avenue, Chicago, raised ever, that while there will be paring enough berries on a space 4x10 feet of expenses in practically all the apto supply herself and friends. propriation bills there will be no atJ. P. Swallow, Kenton, Ohio, says its tempt to curtail expenditures which equal for all purposes does not exist will cripple the rural mall deliveries Rev. H. B. Sheldon, Pacific Grove, of the country. Postmaster General Hitchcock was Cal., says he likes the berries served the last of the cabinet chiefs to hand in any and every way. V. T. Davis, Enon, Va., says it Is In his annual report, lie had a hard true to description in every way, and problem to solve. The demands made by the people on the postoffice defruits in three months from seed. Judge Morrow, of U. S. Circuit partment are greater year by year, Court, says the Wonderberry is simply and there la alwBys'resentment of any recommendation that an increased delicious raw or cooked. Mr. Childs exhibited one plant five price should be added to any service months old bearing 10,375 berries rendered by the department to the people. Perhaps the country will have which measured about eight quarts. s Mrs. Hattle Vincent, Hayden, New one-cen- t postage some time Mexico, says it stands the long, hard In the near future, for while the cost droughts of that climate and fruits of maintaining the department is increasing it Is hoped that means will abundantly all summer. It is certainly the most satisfactory be found to make the revenues greater garden fruit and the greatest Novelty costand yet to allow a decrease In the of letter postage. ever introduced. The postmaster general Is a firm believer In the rural route system: Childish Inference. Little Julia was taking her after- The delivery of letters through the noon walk with her mother. Her at- country districts costs the governtention was attracted for the first time ment several millions of dollars a year to a large church edifice on one of the more than the returns, but the immense convenience to the people who street corners. mother!" she exclaimed, live outside of the great centers more "Oh, than overbalances. In the eyes of the "whose nice big house is that?" "That, Julia, Is God'a house," ex- department chiefs, the extra money needed to continue the service. plained the mother. "Some time later it happened that Ambitious Plans on Foot the child was again taken by the Demands will be made during the church, this time on Sunday evening next year to find some place in which when services were in progress. the jostoffice department expenses Julia, noticing the brilliantly lighted may be cut materially, and some windows, drew her own conclusions. means by which the income may be "Oh, look, mother," she called out, increased without affecting the purses "God must be having a party." of the great body of the people. If the present postmaster general can Important to Mother.bottle of put his department on ajmylng basis Examine carefully every he will count It a victory sufficient to CASTOKIA, a safe and sure remedy for make his administration stand In a Infants and children, and see that it bright light There seems to be little Bears the chance, however, that affairs can be ao arranged that the pages of the Signature In Use For Over :tO Years, ledger of the postofTice department The Kind You Have Always Bought will balance themselves at the end of well-know- n well-know- n ot n hard-fough- first-clas- the next year. One thing can be taken for granted, Slight Error. "Nevertheless," said the young the rural route service of the country Roman, "he is an ambitious poet, lie will be strengthened year by year, would the muses all hU life. even though it be necessary to weak"But," replied his elder, "he makes en some of the other branches of the the mistake of supposing that Bac- service. chus Is one of the muses." Catholic Satisfied with Law. Standard and Times. President Taft seems to have found to his own satisfaction, as thown by t VIr r AtXKtl t TR bis recent message, that the Sherman 'Hi an warn arttw'Tin itint yio (bnl antitrust law Is equal to every demand that the country makes of It. The world delights in sunny people. Thin Is the president's legal opinion, more love The old are hunRering for some greater lawyer or lawuntil and than for bread. Drumnmnd. yers or group of judges find to the contrary It probably will have to IM! r ri Rm it to i fiats. Tk7" iiiIll'VTiinmiiii4 t. mrw a?r aa aland. The fact that the Interests .r rr.tr4jibg 1'imm ia af iuh'tm. Kittwi. that have attacked the Sherman law ! lnl rafuajad. km Men who have advice to give are have been ao diametrically opposed to one another seems to have convinced never stingy with It the prraident that the law must be a Patxa rva)at. r 4 tnrlf. pretty good one. At any rate he has Tr r ant h. m,wi. ri. advlprd that It remain unchanged on the statute books. A poor excuse I? better than non There are several celebrated cases If It works. upon which the supreme court of the I'nlted States has yet to pass JudgHER WEIGHT INCREASED ment, cases which came Into the as a reault of the entering of courts TO POUNDS. 140 FROM 100 government prosecution under the Sherman law. The cape of the Standard Oil Company, which was decided Wonderful Praise Accorded to the ereat corporation, Pcrunathe Household Remedy adversely will come before the high court withMm. Marl The lower court Goerts, Orients, Okla- in a short time. which sat In the city of St. txmfs, dehoma, writ-- ! "My husband, children and myself clared the Standard Oil Company to have tJe yonr medicine, and w be a corporation In restraint of trade. k p them in th honae In ceae of This was a Sherman law case and It tiweoitlty. I wn re!ored to health hf Is expected that within a few weeks this medielne, and It. Hartmaa'a in the supreme court will decide It Valuable '!vie and hook. People vk Bitterness In Pinchot Row. about mi from different flees, and are When the members of (he committee do ail of my aorprll thatamiI ean cm Investigation Info the liallirger-Pincho- t wan cored I that the by al"ne, controver-- y get Into the real iorUit of rhrnnie catarrh. My hnntiand was cired of asthma, my daughter of heart of their work the case unque. earache and catrrh of th stomach, snd tlonably will provw to be one of the which has ever been most my fa of catarrh of this throat. When beard Interesting in the It would be hard capital. 100 1 waa I iek weighed pound. Bow I for anyone at a distance to realize rcie1i 1ft. of feeling that there Is "I have regained my health again, and the Intensity for yonf In this city over (he matter, which conI cannot thank y uu dviee. May Ckwl KiT JoU a long life gress ban finally taken Into I's own hand at the renuet of Secretary of and bless your work' the Interior Bsllinr. Indications are that the congressional Investigation which the secretary has demanded, will take on much the form of an acuai trial, a stout deAnti-Tru- st forestry bureau. Conservation to Go On. With the president the former chief forester, Gilford Pinchot, and the Democrat and Republican parties all committed to It the cause of conservation ought to go marching on. The president has said that he want to save the trees, the streams, the; soil and the wealth of the mines. Mr. Pinchot who la now in private life but still a enthusiastic as ever, my the same thing. The Republican party In Its platform declared for conservation, and the Democratic party says that It Is the father of conservation and there you are. As things stand at present two great organizations are leaders In the ttr-'irf- ! !!" ) rwrar-caai- 4, hnu-e-wo- rk Don't Cough! Use resource-fcavlnplan. One of them is known as the National Conservation association and the other aa the Joint Of th Committee on Conservation. former Charles W. Hlliott formerly the head of Harvard college, la the president Walter L.. Fisher of ChicaThomas R. and go Snipp of Washington secretary. Of the latter Gilford Pinchot who waa dismissed from bis office of chief forester by President Taft. la the chairman and Jamea C. Gipe of Indianapolis, who Is now living In Washington, la the aecretary. Pinchot Will Continue Active. Gifford Pinchot has let his friends know privately that notwithstanding the fact he has been ousted from bis place as chief forester he la going ahead with the cause of conservation Just as strongly and Just at enthusiastically as ever he did. It Is probable that because he is no longer hampered by department rules an regulations Mr. Pinchot may feel that be can go more directly at bis work of saving the nations reaotirees than was possible undef old conditions It Is probable that In about a year Jjcre will be a "world conservation conference." President Roosevelt fense and prosecution. planned such a conference, and nearly Several of the lani esses which have every civilised nation has agreed to had or are yet to have their day In send delegates to the meting which court prohably will figure prominent- will be held at The Hague some time ly in the proceedings before they are" In the future, ft Is now absolutely There are several Mrb that all the great powers and a en(d were tried In different parts of the majority of the minor powers will be coHO'ry when Mr. P.Illngr wat represented at tfce meeting which of the land office under the j to report on means for saving the RooeeTelt administration, and It Is natural resource, not of one country, sAld that some of the pinions that he j but of all countries GFORGE CLINTON. expressed as to the resulta of one or I ilit tmCUJRE w.twt m (mm$x& Will tmfan'lf rrtwr fhrnaf. yrrnf chm( There i fK.tt,in like it for Atthme, Bronchitis Very pt "t fynhle. Cnrrtaina to take. and loaf opiate. PROPOSAL Women Healthy Strong and a woman healthy a womanly way, moth If In is strontf erhood means to her but little suUerinf. The trouble liea in the faot that the many women suffer irom weakoesa and disease of the distinctly feminine organiam and are unfitted lor motherhood. Tula can be remedied. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription Cure the weaknesses and diaordera of women. It acta directly on the delioate and important organa concerned la motherhood, making them healthy, strong, vitforoue, virile and elaetio. "Favorite Prescription" banishes the indiapoaitiona of the period of expectancy and makea haby'a advent easy and almost painleaa. It auicken end vitalizea the feminine orient, and insures healthy and robust baby. Thousands of women havo testified to ita marvelous merits. Make Weak Women Strong. It Makea Sick Women Well. Honest druggists do not offer substitute, and urge tbem upon you as " just a good." Accept no secret nostrum in place of this remedy. It contains not a drop of alcohol and not a grain of of injurious Housewife You always seem to enjoy eating my food, but my husband is never suited with ltl Beggar Say, get a divorce and marry me! habit-formin- g Ia a puns glyceric extraot of healing, native American roota. drugs. TO CURE RHEUMATISM Stops that Cured Hundreds Since Published Here. "One ounce syrup of Sarsaparilla compound ; one ounce Torls compound: Add these to a half pint of good Take a tablespoonful bewhiskey: fore each meal and at bed time; Shake the bottle well each time." Any druggist has these Ingredients In atock or will quickly get them from his wholesale house. Good results are felt from this treatment after the first few doses but It should be continued until cured. This also acts as a system builder, eventually restoring strength Prescription Neuralgia Pains and vitality. ' The Ruling Passion. An old Irtsbwouian, in describing a "gone but not forgotten," said: "Mike was the foine man entolrely and he'd b living now, If It wasn't for the dhrlnk. He had a dog and sure thai baste would bring him home from the saloon whin he was so blind wld liquor he couldn't see a nhtep before him. And whin he died 'tis the truth I'm shpaklng his ghost walked at night, both back and foorlh, betune the saloon and his house and bedud 'twaa so dhrunk his dog knew him!" The shooting, tearing pains by excitement of the nerves. of neuralgia are caused Sciatica is also a nerve pain. Sloan's Liniment, a soothing external application, stops neuralgia pains at once, quiets the nerves, relieves that feeling of numbness which is often a warning of paralysis?, and by its tonic effect on the nervous and muscular tissues, gives permanent as well as immedi- WHY PEOPLE SUFFER. Too often the kidneys are the cause and the sufferer is not aware of it Sick kidneys bring backache and side pains, lameness and stiffness, dizziness, headaches, tired feeling, urinary ate relief. One Application Relieved the Pain. Lr. Mr. J. C. of lioo Ninth St., S. E., Washington, D. C, writes? a lady who wat a great sufferer from neuralgia to try Sloan'a Liniment. After one application tiia paiu left her and aha has not been troubled wilh it since." t " I advised troubles. Doan'a Kidney Pills cure the cause. Mrs. N. 12. O r a e a, Vllllsca, Iowa, says: "I suffered from kidney trouble for years. The secretions were disordered, were pains In my back and swellings of the ankles. Often I had smothering spells. I had to be helped about Dean's Kidney Pills cured me Ave years ago and I have been well alnce. They saved my life." Remember the name Doan'a. For sale by all dealers. CO cents a box. Fostcr-MllburCo., Buffalo, N. Y. t loan's there is the best remedy for Rheumatism, Stiff Joints and Sprains and all Pains. COc and ftl.OO. Addreaa on lb Bora sent At All Druggists. I'rice 2.V Sloan'a Treat! Natural. "What is loaf sugar?" inquired Mrs. Fr. DR. EARL S. SLOAN, BOSTON, MASS. Justbicht "Why, It'a sugar in the form of loaves, I suppose," answered her "Why" spcuiM;. "I was wondering," said Mrs. J., "if thaf was what they made sweetbreads of." rem f)irtKATrt mi f:l. 1ttt,t4 riiat). ia fmFH n tn Km to'ld lot Occasionally the human race Is run the course of true love. TO ( t l:r a it I rAV T lli li Wl'tVO niMNi l.U I. not k. a Uu ik, often turns out to Cheap notoriety be an expensive luxury. u'-- ad Breath DYOLA DYES f.CM ctf FOR ALL G003S If nl ra.lrrr. f IS aVl in a m I f Hsr Mail r v-- ma; ! DYE i'f ttilllififiaalt, mrmtatiL DYOLA DYES a ! r i.r str. VT ; ,,.. F- paper de. Readers tmj ia Sit " to but anvtiimff ativrc. ad-dr- columns afioulj incut vpcm hannf whrt tkry eJt (of, tduufif all utrfMukna or innir a anoUiing reif. iiattfinni. PW ai I.ciw shoes and high heels may be fashionable extremes. DEFIANCE STARCH '"For months I lisul prrnt trouble with my stomach an I used all kinds of medicines. My ton;tue has been actually as preen aa fcra, tiiy breath having a bad odor. Two fricnI recommrixlcd Cawarrta and after osing t'.Jcrn I can wiliinnly an cheerfully any Uiat Uicy have cn'ircl cured nc. I therefore let yon know that 1 shall rrcomncnl Uicra to any on aufTrr. in H fnrni mch trouble. " Chna. II. IlaX. ptrn, 114 U. 71I1 St., New York, N. Y. Ctrr Tlli.1 Ot'T, tnU It with roiir to Hutling I'.i iie iljr C'rr ponjr, ChU caen, Illinois, M rrnivn a bamlaom ouvnlr sold l!n lioo HtCE. arr t'v,. la IM Mil li K!ts m FUR Z II I UK (...in. ItlMII. ,.. nits It. wm ch, a. a v'ce-preslde- ly well-define- m A een J i SUE3 BERRY LLT11IR fiLRRAMt'S GREAILST OEATIOX A I cts. rtu tacket. a tackcts tor so cts. postfaih CHf.ATr.ST trnt KO".Tt.TT f Th- th. sctn n.a l prltfretr away front. 1 b The Improved Wonderberry Three Mo.tba Frow Se4 Lclo. IWrry Rfpo.in 2o ewttw time. farta hk nrm no proofs are vrerwbeloitns; la ommmf mn4 GDociiM)e tn (itr ,rt. brawn ta.l ynt br A aua Mmi t itlr. a nxinwnn rrn In W .,M TTn tMt SuajetRnV la aa ImmtrM --mt,is WnMTtmvtia .i4 aiIK h prorr-- l ... rir..i,,... fayrurr. Thim trtnt r t fruit I T wt riU Ilip.''T.m..-i..niir tni. in fcf.t. ril t p.Ii- t rnniiiMa-4. toll,.,,;, tn lh wrT)1 tr, r'w. urte. iT g i ?1c fiTt J 1 for li.OB. iikkl (of J9t tint,, - of rir frrit all tinrnof ,M f I. lk.fr.nwt frW ifi I lOO a hrynk t4 rr'Tf tnt la'k.t f mti rnrtm ! tn. .r. t"."'t trrn-- it tt. fruit. f,fM.ff'i'-1.rfrrf1 f pu .... i ar. iirtKkpAi,. irf.'n. Jam. rmt. j AffOH4 wi ,,i..T Xj!' Wrr4 UTl ff jif'lT.it.rrpri wtt.r4T.I J naton)! tfm th. I Irt. to IplrcKlnr.. an -- - f f"Z CffffS. pfi?r ,v;rn rrr-..t nf n' 'T.t- t t.,ir,ti,nr,4 (nrrwl tl- p ..--.t..(aIf of t1 " V. t.l t H.,li BK-- t Mr, tirrrir l.JUiful TrnlO K.a rHIII U)ilt.j tnI(;T,tv. .i r I m unit f ' rmiwi t f O imra-...f a l,aa m t rrwr tt-- . tntwv f ao mt CATatocue. x, a 3 tta f wi ,t t ftrn lwnrr. -I , rw Urn rTTaravruM'4 Upf'TM'm.r. i ', rr ik tlwl., .1 e tna InrWftt r r l af wiKk ka Una J DTrttMnnmri. tataV t XjruM ,A the Howoerktrr.-- ' k ia h. t t:nrrt nw-fMK- mf f )en1 R...t rrt dr, W'Nt, ""f. r. . . rr a4 fr-t- Address n:av wiai tnrlh. it ff, pr t1A ).r ir. rfrv t,., f'"t"l r. "1 pa" lTLOC'Jt Pr.M .' rt m- - ltn.e ,, t,.'. mtr..liM, f'tn lt f'tii ,,(.... -, 1 r-- ,r Bnttf affpear acaia, ace an v., tatauoera .?a l- -n ... to.. JOHN LEWIS CHILDS. Floral N. Park. Do at nm tor tnerry nt r.T-nt- .t "w ,rr. ,,i.,,it.,, . lrtr 4liv tn. l ef,a oec not Y. feralcct r |