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Show 'Y' WORN WAY TO CLEAN UP HOME RECIPE FOR COLDS. OUT WOMEN Will Find Encouragement in Mrs. i rltts Advice. SYSTEM AN IMPROVEMENT ANNUAL OVERTURNING. ON W.V Mrs. Merritt, 207 S. First Ave., Anoka, Minn., says: Last win- ter I began to suffer with my kidneys. I had pains in my Instructor in Domestic Science Points Out Proper Method of Getting Rid of Dirt and Preserving Health. back and hips and felt all worn out spells ered me and the secretions kidney were Irregular. The first box of Doans Kidney Pills brought decided relief. I am sure they would do the same for any other woman suffering as I did. Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-MilburCo., Buffalo, N. Y. class in a prominent college for wom-en- , where not mathematical logarithms or Greek meters but principles of household management are considered, says the New York Tribune. And out of such an experience, says the instructor, come points deserving to be widespread. Thorough cleaning of a room dofis not mean a cleaning. As a clever woman said: House cleaning? Dont! There are certain things which need to be done annually or as such painting, whitening of walls, cleaning stoves, but with the modern house it Is more sanitary and more economical to keep clean all the time than to try to do it twice a year. Following the regular sequence of processes is the most effective way to clean. If the mistress kno&s this sequence she can instruct the maid. First, collect your materials dusters, mops, brooms. Next, look out for the piano. Dust and clean it thoroughly with an oiled cloth preferably kerosene, because this is cleansing, evaporates quickly, is cheap and is always at hand; hut sweet oil or salad oil may be substituted. Clean the white keys with alcohol, the black keys with soap and water. Dust the case after (Closing the piano and cover the instrument carefully. Now open the windows wide, if the weather permits. Dust and cover all large, permanent articles of furniture. ,The best dust covers are made of glazed goods some smooth, washable stuff which may be starched. Then, jin order, take down the draperies land, if possible, put them out of doors (for the wind and sunshine to purify. jDust the window shades and roll them to the top.. Remove from the (dose l window, after dusting, all the easily i movable furniture tables, chairs, etc. Next dust the pictures, both glasses, frames and backs. Newspapers make excellent coverings for pictures. And, by the way, study the use of newspapers. (Wash the picture glasses after 'the sweeping is over.) As to books: There Is an admirable process expressed in four words clap, snap, blow, wipe. As to rugs, roll them Inside In; spread out, If possible, on the grass or snow, or hang out on the clothesline If there is no other place. Better still, hang them over two or three lines, as this will relieve the strain. ,Let your rugs have the sunshine for the sake of your health; never mind the fading. Last of all, remove the plants, from the room and dust and tie up the chandelier. Then, while the dust is settling, go outside and do some of the work needed on rugs, draperies, plants. When the dust has settled clean the walls and ceiling, and dust or sweep or wash the floor. Clean the paint and the windows at the end, after the room is cleaned. The final process is very simple. Remove all the large articles of furniture, the draperies, etc. Fold the sweeping covers in and put all your cleaning materials Into their places, in readiness for the next time of use. n What Becomes of the Coke? teacher was explaining to her class the various ways In which gas Is obtained. Much of the gas we use la extracted from coal, she said, "and after the gas has been taken out, the coal becomes coke. In some parts of this country gas is obtained by boring deep holes in the ground and such gas is called natural gas. Does the natural gas come from the fires down In the bad place? inIf it does, quired a boy eagerly. what does Satan do with all the coke he has left? It is needless to say that the teacher did not answer the question. Ulustrated Magazine. semi-annu- Thousands of American women Iftmg along from bad to worse, towing well that they ought to Ive help to overcome the pains and hes which daily make life a burden. It is to these faithful women that .YDIA (vegetable compound .omes as a boon and a f blessing, as it did to Mrs. F. Ellsworth, of Mayville, K Y, and to Mrs. V. P. Boyd, of Beaver Falls, Pa., who say: I was not able to do my own work, owing to the female trouble from which I suffered. Lydia E. Pinkhams Vegetable Compound helped me wonderfully, and I am so well that I can do as big a days work as I ever did. I wish every sick woman jvouid try it. FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. For thirty years Lydia E. s Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, has been the "standard remedy for female ills, and h as positively cured thousands of women who have been troubled with Pink-ham- t displacements, inflammation, ulceration, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains,, backache, that bearing-down feeling, flatulency, indiges-- '' tion,dizziness,or nervous prostration. Why dont you try it ? Mrs. PInkham invites all sick women to write her for advice. She has guided thousands to health. Address, Lynn, Mass. HAD LISTENED TO DADDY. Force of Example Exemplified in coclou Youngster. Pro-- - There la a certah man living not fee Aaft New temper Is not of the longest, and when he feels that his rage is justifiable he is very apt to Indulge in fluent, versatile and Tbik-who- sw varied profanity. And It is' when using the telephone that this talent of his is seen and heard at Its maximum of speed and endurance. Central bhs but to say Doesnt anWire busy now, or, swer, to evoke a flood of language. . - One day he had been having an unusually stormy session, and did not son was notice that his sitting In a corner of the room, "his face rapt and absorbed. A few hours .later the childs mother came in and ' was horrified beyond words to hear her baby giving voice to a stream of expletives, some of which began with a very large capital D the rest with a variety of letters 'quite unmentionable in this connection. She descended upon him in righteous wrath. Dont you ever let me hear you use such words again, she said in no ' . uncertain tones. , mother," expostulated the Why, baby in an injured voice, Im tele, phoning! : V , , - ' . Not for Murphy. " 01 want to buy a pair Mr. Murphy of gloves. , , - Clerk Heres something I Relieve a suede glove. will Just suit you. Its IMr. Murphy Nlver, begorra! 01 want Irish gloves. Swade gloves, Kansas City Times. e! This is the law of men: The one ought what he has given; never to forget what Seneca. benefits between to forget at once the other ought he has received. ' , ' Dont worry about your complexion-ta- ke Garfield Tea, the Herb laxative and An improvement will be seen in a week. blood-purifie- What a man thinks he knows about womens a woman knows he doesnt 'know, ; ONLY ONE ?rOMO QUININK 0U1NINK. Look fa That la LAXATIVE BBOMO tbe signature of B. W. GROVTHJ. Used (he World over to Cure a Cold in One Day. 25c. easy for the average man to make a bad break. Its V ijnniiTi sv ITUUU'I) A semi-annuall- Moravian Barley and Speltz, two great cereals, makes growing and fattening hogs and cattle possible in Dak., Mont., Ida., Colo., yes, everywhere and add to above Salzerg Billion Dollar Grass, the 12 ton Hay wonder Teosrate, which produces 80 tons of green fodder per acre, Emperor William Oat prodigy, etc., and other rare farm seeds that they offer. I JUST CUT THIS OUT AND RETURN Object Lesson. Johnny, said Mrs. Blobbsrsevere-ly- , I am going to punish you. Please open the windows. What fer? asked Johnny, beginning to cry. 1 heard our next door neighbor say I had no authority over my children, and I want her to hear you getting a spanking. Now, come here, sir! ' In the Language. "Some one has said that a kiss Is the language of love, remarked the young man in the parlor scene. Well," rejoined the fair maid on the far end of the sofa, why dont you get busy and say something? NEURALGIA, STITCHES, LAMENESS, CRAMP TWINGES, TWITCHES FROM WET OR DAMP ALL BRUISES. SPRAINS, A WRENCH OR TWIST THISSOVEREIGN REMEDYTHEY CANT RESIST Price 25c and 50c Neatly Put. t Homer Folks, the secretary of the State Charity Aid society of New York, referred in a recent address to the awkwardness that charity workers feel In making public appeals for funds. And few charity workers, Mr. Folks added, can carry off that Awkwardness with the neatness of the colored pieacher who reminded his congregation that: Brudren, Ah kaint preach hyah an board in hebn. . 1KS W. L. makes and aella more men aDouglas $3.00 and $3.50 ahoes ' $2.50, than any othor manufacture In (is wor ld, becauaa they hold their fit better, wear longer , and ahape, are or Ingreater value than any other ahooa the world to-d- ay Sad Memories. Gilt Edge Shoes Cannot Be Equalled At Anj Price No Nob.tUi-tc- . W. L. Dondas name and price ia stamped on bottom. WOAIJTIOW. Sold by the best shoe dealers everywhere, bhoee mailed from factory to any part of the world Ulus DO L GLAS, Brock. ton, Alasa. W. dated Catalog free to any address. W. The commuter handed the brake-maa flve-cecigar. he said, why does Say, George, the engine always let off such a heartrending howl just as we pass Long Oak? George shook his head sadly. Ah, said he, it was here that the engineer, poor fellow, first met his wife, n L Douglas $4 and $5 SIOK HEADACHE i Positively cured by these Little Pills. They also relieve Distress from Dyspepsia, Indigestion and Too Hearty Eating. A perfect rent edy for Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsiness, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Coated Tongue, Pain in the Hows This? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any Case of CatarrU that cannot be cured by Hall a Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY CO., Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney 15 for tbe last years, and believe him perfectly honorable In all bnalness transactions and financially able ta carry out any obligations made by bis firm, Wadding, Kinkan Marvin, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo 0. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken Internally, acting of the directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces aysteml Testimonials sent free. Price 75 cents pet bottleJ Sold by a! Druggists. Take Hall's Fam ly Pills fur constipation. j , Sing at Your Work. Whenever the baby at midnight Is inclined to be noisy and tearful, Whatever you do. As you tramp the house through, Oh, (lo not forget to be Cheerful. 1 Mr. Winslow'. Soothing Syrap. For children teething, soften, the gum., reduce, to flammetioii, allayB pain, cures wind collu. 25c bottle. . Da good constantly, patiently and wisely, and you will never have cause to say'tfeatiifertvasf not worth living. Tntf Side, TORPID LIVER. They regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE. Genuine Must Bear Signature Fac-Simi- le j ROT CASH FOR SOLDIERS AND HEIRS All federal soldiers and sailors who served 90 days between ltiGl and ibbband who homesteaded less than U0 acresbefore June ii, 187, are entitled to additional homestead rightswhich I buy If soldierisdead his beirscan sell Talk to old soldiers, widowsand heirs. Find s me soldier relative who went West or South after the war and homesteaded government land. Get busy and make some easy money Write H- nky N. Cofp, W ashingtoQ, I). C., for further particulars. READERS of thls peper d8 smng to buy anything advertised in its columns should insist upon having what they ask for, refusing all substitutes or imitations. REFUSE. SUBSTITUTES. FARMOreOPPORTUNITIES The , Cherry City on the beautiful pear Salem, Willamette River. Hop walnut and fruit farm spay 00 to $500 per acre, net, dairy farms pay $100; im&00 $25 to farms per acre; unimproved, $5 to proved $26. Excursion rates to Salem In March and April. For information address, Board of Trade, Salem. Ore. onnce, the package ounces Rama other .terche. only i price end 18 SUPERIOR QUALITY. DEFIANCE DEFIANCE STARCH LIVE STOCK AND MISCELLANEOUS ELECTROTYPES In great variety for sale at the lowest prices by X. KkLLOGti NKWSPAPLH CO., 1$ If afflicted with eore eyes, use W. Adam fit., Olesgo Thompsons Eye Water nrriERirr ilWlldl UUIMlib CT1RPU easiest to work with end lurches clothe, nicest. 1 W. N. U., Salt Lake City, No. 5, 1908. j, ipo8. -- fssi; t Herbert Knox Smith, whose zeal in the Chicago. They terminate at Dolton, from which large shippers In the territory had been guilty. cause of economic reform has been in no wise point entrance id made over the Belt Line, Considering the fact that these shipper inMr. butter, one small sliced onion, three level tablecups brown stock, spoons flour, 1 d level teaspoon salt, level teaspoon pepper, 12 medium sized olives. Melt the butter and cook the onion In it until browned slightly. Remove the onion, and, when the butter is well browned add the flour and allow that to brown. Add the stock gradually, stirring until thick and smooth; then the salt and pepper. Rgmove the stones from the olives, keeping the meats as perfect as possible. Cook the meats in boiling water for five minutes, then drain and add them to the sauce. abated by the panic which he and his kind did Whiting, where the oil freight originates, is not so much to bring on, is out with an answer to on the lines of the Chicago & Eastern Illinois, President Moffett, of the Standard Oil Com- which receives Its Whiting freight from the pany of Indiana. The publication of this an- Belt Line at Dolton. The former practice, now swer, it is officially given out, was delayed sev- discontinued, in filing tariffs was to make eral weeks, for business reasons, because it them read from a point on the line of the filwas not deemed advisable tc further excite ing road, and it was also general to state on the public rqind, which was profoundly dis- the same sheet, that the tariff would apply to turbed by the crisis. Now that the storm Other points, e. g., Whiting. The Chicago & clouds have rolled by, however, the Commis- - Eastern Illinois followed this practice in filing its rate from Dolton, and making a note on sioner rushes again into the fray. Our readers remember that the chief points the sheet that is applied to Whiting This was In the defence of the Standard Oil Company, as in 1895 when this method of filing tariffs was presented by President Moffett, were (1) that In common use. the date of six cents on oil from Whiting to Now let us see In what way the intending East St. Louis has been Issued to the Standard shipper of oil could be misled and deceived by Oil Company as the lawful rate by employes the fact that the Chicago ft Eastern Illinois rate on file had not filed a rate of the Alton, (2) that the reading from Whitmg. with the Interstate Commerce Commission was Commissioner Smith contends that conceala class and not a commodity rate, never being ment is the only motive for such a circuitous Intended to apply to oil, (3) that oil was arrangement, i. e., that this method of filing shipped in large quantities between Whiting the rate was intended to mislead intending and East St. Louis over the Chicago & East- competitors of the Standard Oil Company. ern Illinois at 6 cents per hundred pounds, Suppose such a prospective oil refiner had apwhich has been filed with the Interstate Com- plied to the Interstate Commerce Commission merce Commission as the lawful rate, and (4) for the rate from Chicago to East St. Louis rate on oil was entirely out of over the Chicago & Eastern Illinois, he would that the proportion to lawful rates on other commodi- - have been informed that the only rate filed ties between these points of a similar char- the commission by this company was 6 acter, and of greater value, such, for example, cent8 from Dolton, and he would have been as linseed oil, the lawful rate on which was further informed, if indeed he did not know eight cents. President Moffett also stated that thig aiready, that this rate applied throughout thousands of tons of freight had been sent by Chicago territory. So that whether he wished other shippers between these points under to locate his plant at Whiting, or anywhere substantially the same conditions as governed else about Chicago, under an arrangement of the shipments of the Standard Oil Company. long standing, and which applies to all the inThis defence of the Standard Oil Company dustrial towns in the neighborhood of Chica'was widely quoted and has undoubtedly exert- go, he could have his freight delivered over ed a powerful Influence upon the public mind. the Belt Line uto the Chicago & Eastern IlliNaturally the Administration, which has nois at Dolton and transported to East St staked the success of its campaign against Louis at a rate of 6 cents. Where then is the trusts upon the result of its attack upon the concealment which the Commissioner of this company, endeavors to offset this influ- Corporations makes so much of? Any rate ence, and hence the new deliverance of Com- from Dolton on the Eastern Illinois or Chap . i missioner Smith. ' pell on the Alton, or Harvey on the Illinois We need hardly to point out that his rebut- - Central, or Blue Island on the Rock Island, tal argument is extremely weak, although as antic's 'tl'rouamout Chicago territory to no doubt, as the circumstances would' ments from any 6ther point in the district, warrant. He answers the points made by PresI- - So far from the Eastern Illinois filing its rate dent Moffett substantially as follows: (1) The from Dolton' in order to deceive the shipper. Standard Oil Company hada traffic department, it is the Commissioner of Corporations who rate either betraj s his gross Ignorance of transpor-ha- d and should have known that the not been filed, 12) no answer, (3) the Chi- - tation customs in Chicago territory or relies rate on the public ignorance of these customs to cago ft Eastern Illinois rate was a because it read, not from Whiting, ut from deceive the public too apt to accept unques- Dolton, which is described as a llage of tioningly every statement made by a Governabout 1,500 population just outside ol hicago. ment official as necessarily true, although, as Its only claim to note is that it has ;en for in the present instance, a careful examination many years the point of origin for his and shows these statements to he false. ner s Tbe, Commis , similar secret rates. The final 'point made by President Moffett a that mits in describing this rate that tb other c )mmodities of a character similar note attached stating that the rate lid also to oil were parried at much lower' rates than be used from Whiting. 18 cents, the Commissioner of Corporations The press has quite generally h ed this discusses oily with the remark that the statement of the Commissioner of prpo ra- reasonable!) ess of this rate Is not in question, te tions as a conclusive refutation of w The questio; i is whether this rate constituted dently' recognized as the strongest discriminc tion as against other shippers bf argument advanced by the Standard. 'oil," and he also' makes much of the failure of In facL.lt is as weak and inconclusl as the President Moffett to produce before the grand remaiader of his argument' The line .of the jury evidence of the alleged illegal acts of Chicago ft Eastern Illinois 'do not r l into which the Standard Oil official said that other 18-ce- One-eigh- 18-ce- Why Flannels Shrink. Soap has, been rubbed on them instead of soap jelly being used. Second They have either been washed or rinsed in water too hot or too cold. Third They have been allowed to lie about wet, instead of being hung up to dry immediately. Fourth They have been dried tpo , , slowly., Fifth They' have been' dried so close to an open fire that they steamed. Sixth They have been Ironed while wet with a very hot iron. Delineator. First ship-stron- Narcissus for Table Center Piece. If a table center piece Is desired in white, a Chinese sacred narcissus, In a cut glass bowl, can be used, and will stay in bloom for two weeks. Or a clump of paper white narcissus, repotted in an ornamental fern dish, or fine china bowl. Take your own dish or bowl to the florist and he 'will make the transfer from the pot to it, and no one would suspect but that the Jmlbsr were , grown there. Vogue. ( - OUCH, OH MY BACK one-hal- From the Railway World, January Olive Sauce. Drop Cake. Mix palf pint of good whisky with two ounces of glycerine and add one-ha- lf ognee Concentrated oil of pine. The bottle is to be well shaken each time and used in doses of a teaspoonful to a tablespoonful every four hours. The Concentrated oil of pine f comes In ounce vials packed securely in tin screw top cases which are intended to protect It from light and retain all the original ozone.. It is a product of the laboratories of the Globe Pharmaceutical Co.; of Dayton, Ohio, and is guaranteed under the National Pure Fopd and Drug Act. Dont use bulk oil of pine or imitations of Concentrated. They are Insoluble and work havoc to the kidneys. Any druggist has the Concentrated oil of pine. J&immissionor Smith us. Tho Standard Oil Oo. Two level tablespoons Thre six-ce- sret ad-wa- - t , otie ' cupful, pf brown. cupful, of molasses, one eujgar,,, pne, l cupful of- good shortening,., onq, of. ginger,, one taWespoonful of,cit Lamoa, one cupful of hot water one f blespoonful of baking soda ahd flve.cupfuls rof flour. Add currants if i t pfqlferreO eggs.1" 1 V , , Bl eak Up a Cold In 24 Houra or Cur Any Cough That Is Curable. Will IT with 10c in stamps for packing, etc., to the John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse, Wis., and get their big catalog and lots of farm seed samples. K. & W. i one-thir- both- Dizzy It is a unique experience and one worth chronicling to visit a large in' our homes 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 "pught on and they suffer in silence, Mer-- - v evl-hutt- I il , cluded the packers and elevator men of Chicago the action of the grand jury in upon President Moffett to furnish evid their wrong-doin- g may be interpreted mand for an elaboration of the obviou the fact that a rate-boocontaining' freight fates for other shippers was offered in evidence during the trial and ruled out by Judge Landis, was kept out of sight. President Moffett would not, of course, accept the invitation of the grand jury although he might have been pardoned if he had referred them to various official investigations by the Inter- state Commerce Commission and other departments of the Government. We come back, therefore, to the conclusion of the whole matter, which is that the Standard Oil Company of Indiana was fined an amount equal to seven or eight times the value of its entire property, because its traffic department did not verify the statement of commodthe Alton rate clerk, that the six-ceity rate on oil had been properly filed with the Interstate Commerce Commission. There is no evidence, and none was introduced at the trial, that any shipper of oil from Chicago territory rate had been interfered with by the nor that the failure of the Alton to file its rate had resulted in any discrimination against any independent shipper, we must take this on the word of the Commissioner of Corporations and. of Judge Landis. Neither is it denied even by Mr. Smith that the indeV pendent shipper of oil, whom he pictures as being driven out of business by this discrimination of the Alton, could have shipped all the oil he desired to ship from Whiting via Dolton over the lines of the Chicago & Eastern Illinois to East St. Louis. In short, President Moffetts defence is still good, and we predict will be so declared by the higher couit. The Standard Oil Company has been charged with all manner of crimes and misdemeanors. Beginning with the famous Rice of Marietta, passing down to that apostle of popular liberties, Henry Demarest Lloyd, with his Wealth Against the Commonwealth, descending by easy stages to Miss Tarbells offensive personalities, we finally reach the nether depths of unfair and baseless misrepresentation in the report of the Commissioner of Corporations. The Standard has been charged with every form of commercial piracy and with most of the crimes on the corporation calendar. After long yeats of strenuous attack, under the leadership of the President of the United States, jhe corporation is at last dragged to the bar of justice to answer for its misdoings.' The whole strength of the Government is di- rected against it, and at lasL we are told, the. Standard Oil Company is to pay the penalty of m . its crimes, and It ia. finally convicted of hav t r. f Jb-t- l ing failed to Verify the statement of. a rate I t. clerk and is forthwith, ned a, prodigious un i W h measured by the car. Under, the old oriminalii t law, the theft Of property wprfh.more than $ i,i ft shilling was "punishable ,by death, nUfldeit the.,,,) Interpretation 6f the Interstate Comiphrcq law by Theodore' Roosevelt and Judge ICenesaW,-- , , (Latidis, a technical error, of a .traffic official jsj made the excuse for the confiscation of a vast ,'i ';s t aj v j amount of property. k six-ce- nt M . A, 1 u |