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KEOWEE COURIER (ESTABLISHED 1840.) (Published Every Wednesday Morning Subscription $1 For Annum. Advertising H?ten Reasonable. -Hy-. (BT ECK, 8IIEI/OK & SCHRODER. Communications of a personal char acter charged for aa advertise ments. O&ituary notices and tributes of re ined, of not over ono hundred words, will bo printed free of 'charge. All o?er that number joust bo paid for at tho rato of ono cent a word. Cash to accompany manuscript. WAMIALI/A, 8. C.: W KILN ESI ?AV, MAY 15, 1012. NEW PASTOR LOK GREENWOOD. Kev. .Limes I). Kl na rd Goes to Im manuel Lutheran Church. (Newberry Herald and News.) Rev. .las. D. Kimmi, pastor of the Newberry pastorale and president of tho Kvangelloal Lutheran Synod of South Carolina for tho past. two .y< ,irs, bas received and accopted a unanimous cull lo become pastor of Immanuel Evangelical Lui beran church, of Croon wood, and will ns* sumo pastoral charge .lune 15, 11)12. Rev. Mr. Winard bas been engaged i:? the active work of Ibo Cospel min istry in the Lutheran Synod of South Carolina since bis ordination to the ministry nearly 17 years ago. Ills continuous residence and service in his home synod make him one of the liest informed men of Hie body. Then, too, ho is a cautious, lad ful and con servative man and member of the synod who has filled thc various of fices of trust and responsibility, hav ing been secretary of the body for live years and now president of the same ecclesiastical body, whose complete ?.on li dence ho enjoys, Por eight years he was pastor of v.Vie Leesville pastorale, seven years pastor (M* the st. Matthew's pastorate, 'Cameron. S. C., and for two years .fiastor of ibo Newberry pastorate. Mr. Klnai'd bas likewise boen ac tive, devoted and loyal lo tho educa tional Interests of the synod. For eight years he ba., bien a faithful member of tho board of trustees of Newberry College and tho painstak ing'secretary Of Ibo board. Ho is at pi osent t li o president of tho Alumni Association of Newberry Cololge, his alma mater. In all these places of trust atol responsibility ho has made good, and proven himself lo be thor oughly abreast of the limes and a consecrated, conscientious, modest and withal an ever faithful preacher of the pure Cospel of Hod's graco in ('brist Jesus. Good things ami a hopeful future f??l of good fruits, are predicted as .ie result of tho united efforts of pas tor and people in Immanuel Evangel ien! Lutheran church at Greenwood. Proclamation. \'\ herons, t here is lo be held in Columbia, the capil.il of South ('aro lina, from January 27th to February Sth, i !. i ::. a groat National A griouL tura! Exposition, under ibo auspices of tho National Com Associa; iou ; and whereas, .ii thal lime ?here will be visitors lo South Carolina from ill sections of Ibo count r\ men and women who are concerned a.-^ to ibo uiopi lon ol' ad \ an e.I mel bods in agriculture ?ind ?is to the general de-1 .'dopmcni ol' tho counlrv .don.; all lines; and whereas, it ls Ibo general desire of Ibo people ol' South Caro lina that those of our kindred and ?lends who have loft this State lo male their homes in other portions t">f tho country should bo Invited and urged to rel u rn for a visit on the oc . Oil Of this Kr-?a? Na! ional Agl'l enl ' ii ra 1 Kxposit iou : Thoreforo do I, Mayor of (lie city of Walhalla, hereby call upon al', our people io write their relatives ?ind friends, of South Carolina binti and j pa reola KO, now residing lu ol her j Slates, ami direct Ibelr attention to h\< home-coming event, and further . ? i. b.\ ; ins proclamai ion, request ?il those of our people having rel ative! and friends of South Carolina birth ?md parentage living lu oilier ;; .> ' . s do sei.d Hie na mes and nd . of these relatives and friends "> the N'allouai Coin Association, Columbia, s. c., In order that they may be kopi dul> informed ns lo the ida ii.--, in i s ope ol I he said exposi tion and ?is to tho railroad rates and oilier arrangements for that occasion. <. : \ on nude:- my b and and seal I his 1 I : '., da v ol' \';.y, 1 '.i I '2. 1 ) w. M, Hi-own, Mavor. Branchville Merchant Shot. Hranoh\ Hie, May .'.. w. w. All. a iroininenl young merell mt of (lils dace, w as shot md seriously wound >d lad night le Noon Evans, a no .;ro railroad hand. Tho neuro os ( .?ped, but a hug posse of men aro si eking him. il ls understood thal tho shooting we.VJ the result ol n quarrel over a r.Vfftd owed by tho negro to Mr. All. M vans bore the reputation of a quar relsome negro, especially when -drinking, and ho was drinking last, viigbt. Ile passed Mr. All's storo and .Mr. All asked him for tho money; ..Ivans replied roughly and Mr. All walked after him. whereupon the ne gro drew a pistol and fired five times, .only the last shot taking off oct, en tering Co loft side two I nebea below tho heart and passing through the ??ody. JtlOJIKSON A MORMON ELDER? Woman Make? Afllduvlt Tlwt He Has Been for Your?. Boston, May 10.-Clarence V. T. Ricbeson, under sentence of death for tho murder of Avis Linnell, has been a Mormon elder and secretly connected with tho Mormon organi zation for several years, although preaching from a Baptist pulpit, ac cording to a sworn statement just made before \V. A. Thlbodeau, an at torney and justice of tho peace. Tho author of the affidavit, Mrs. Louie 10. Brittain, claims to have been formerly connected with the Mormon church, and to have been a celestial wife of a New York man who ls ?it tho head of tho Mormon organisation in the East. In thc statement Mrs. Brittain as .sorts that she has known Itlcheson for several years. Ilrst meeting him three years ago at a Mormon confer ence on Staten Island, where she says tho Baptlsl clergyman was recogniz ed as one of tho Mormon ciders, and was particularly active in tho af fairs of the conference. She lias since seen him many times in and about Boston, and has given him the Mormon signs, which always were answered, sho claims. She says she attended a Mormon conference at Providence, K. I., al little over a year ago, ?it which Itlcheson was prosent, and that she receive 1 commands from him ?is a Mormon elder ?it a Boston gathering of the leaders of the church. Mrs. Brittain luis become known during the past few years to evangel- j leal workers in and about Boston. In ? an interview to-night she said that to Mic best, of her belief Klchoson was converted to Mormonism while a student at William .lowell College in Liberty, Mo., from which he was expelled III 1880. Led to Mormonism hy Woman. In that time Ricbeson became at tached to a young woman who now j makes her homo In Salt Lake City. To this young woman ls due Rlche son's trend toward Mormonism, Mrs. ? Brittain believes. Tho afllduvlt, which was given out I prior to tho Interview, described some of tho meetings ?it which sho I said sin? had seen Ricbeson, and con . (duded as follows: "I have always considered Elder Clarence V. T. Ricbeson a member of the Mormon organization in good land perfect standing, and do to tho : present day. and believe that he is considered so by the Mormon organi za! lon. "While it is liol common, it is not unusual to Unit the ?nore educated of tho Mormon elders preaching in the pulpits of evangelical churches which baptize by immersion." Robeson's Sister Appeals. Miss L. v. Itlcheson, who arrived here last evening from her homo in Virginia, talked to-day with Gover nor Poss on behalf of ber brother, C. V. T. Rhdieson. She was accom panied lo tIto Stale House by two of her brothel's lawyers. The subject discussed was tho plea which has boen made for commutation of Rlche son's death sentence on tho ground thal Ibo former clergyman is unsound mentally and has boen so a I w II y A. Miss Itlcheson visited her brother in jail previous lo calling upon the ( ?ov ernor. Woman Loses $1,(100 in Ki iv. Kershaw, Maj Pire which de stroyed Mrs. Alberta Kees' col lage at midnight 1.?->t night consumed sisieeji hundred dollars in currency in a box in a closet. Tho loss was i iv o thousand besides the money. Tile insurance was twelve hundred. A courting couple ai i; late across :he streel probably saved Mrs. Kees, the only occupant, who got out barely in time. EAGLE-THISTLE Mark Twain's Criticism, Mark Twain was visiting ll. il. Rogers, who leading tlie humorist to ! his library, said, as be pointed to a bust of white marble. "What do you i bink o;- t hat ?" lt was a bust of a young woman coiling her hair, a very graceful ex ample of modern Italian sculpture. Mr. Clemons looked at ii a mo ment and then he said: "It isn't true to nature." "Why not?" Mr. Rogers asked. "She ought lo have her mouth full Of hairpins," said tho humorist. Chamberlain's Cough Remedy Cure? Colds, Croup ?nd Whooping Cough. WK SELL EGOS ABROAD. Lost Your 150.000,000 Wer? Export/, od to O dior Countries. Exportation of oggs from the Uni ted States last year, notwithstanding high prices, was tho largest ever re corded, says the National Provision er. While market reports havo indi cated unusually high prices in the domestic markets tho Bureau of Sta tistics ls reporting a larger exporta tion than ever before The number of eggs sent to for eign countries lu tho year ended with December, 1911, was 13,250,000 do zen, valued at $2,750,000, while the highest record for any earlier calen dar year was 8,250,000 dozen, val ued nt $1,750,000, In 1907. In ad dition to this there were sent to Hawaii and Porto Pico about 150, 000 dozen. Meantime tho Importa tion of eggs in 10 11 amounted to less than 1,000,000 dozen, valued at about $ 1 30,000. Tho reduction tn tho importation of eggs occurred immediately follow ing tho enactment of the tariff law of 1S90, which placed a duty upon that article of commerce, and the im port of eggs, which had ranged as high as 10,000,000 dozen per an num, exceeding 15,000,000 dozen in tho fiscal year 1900, dropped to 4, 000.000 dozen In 1890, 1,750,000 do-I zen in 1894, less than 1,000,000 Inj 1890 and 250,000 in 1899, since which time the number seldom ex ceeded 300,000 dozen until 1910, when the number Imported Increased .to over 800,000 dozen, and In 1911 to 1,500,000 dozen. In tho calendar year 1911, as above indicated tho total was slightly less than 1,000, 000. On the export side the number sent cut of tho country was in the calendar year 1880 but 80,000 do zen; In 1900, practically 6,000,000 dozen; In 1007, 7,000,000 dozen, and in thc calenda.- year 1911, as al ready indicated, 13,250,000 dozen, I valued at $2,700,000. 1 Cuba, Canada, Panama and Mexi co aro the chief countries to which eggs are exported from the United States. Tho quantity exported in the fiscal year 19 11 was, to Cuba, 4,500, 000, valued at a little less than $1,-j ooo,ODO ; to Canada, 2,500,000 db-i zen, valued at a littlo loss than j $500,000; to Panama, a little more j iban 750.000 dozen, and to .Mexico I a little less than 750,000 dozen. On the other hand, t herbu Ik of the eggs imported In the fiscal year 19 11 ; Caine from longland, which is itself a I very large Importer of eggs. Of the 1,500,000 dozen eggs imported in' the fiscal year 1911, 1,250,000 dozen I were from longland and about 250,- \ 000 from China and Hongkong. This item of eggs imported does not In- : I dude; the yolks brought from other; .countries, of which the quantity im ported from Canada amounted to 350,000 pounds and from Germany 75,000 pounds in tho year ended .loni, 30, IPI I. This large exportation of eggs In tho lace ol" tho extremely high prices existing In the United States, sug gests that prices of this class of merchandise must also bo higher in other parts of the world, and this is confirmed by consular reports reach ing ibo Department of Commerce and Labor, which indicate that prices of eggs and other provisions are unu sually high in longland. Prance, Aus- j 1 ria, Gormany, spain. Japan and many oilier countries. New Way of Digging Huit. (Abbeville Press and Pinner.) Sandwiched between Please and! Jones literature in The Piedmont, wo find n very odlfying paragraph on digging bait, something new and unique in that line discovered by Col. Hill Sherrotte. it is n. great labor saving device in halt digging and ls as follows: " You take a broom handle throe and a half reel long," says Sherrotte, j "drive it Into thc spot likely to bo Inhabited by ungle worms. Heave an j end sticking up about six inches. Then take a rough hoard and rub lt over tho lop of tho broom handle. This causes a vibration Of tho earth and the worms, angry and disturbed, will work their way out of the ground. A fellow can get a pail full of worms In a short time." "Hut, Colonel," asked a reporter, "doesn't il take work to rub the board on lop of the slick?" j "Cot a negro to rub the board!" exclaimed I be Colonel, j lt ls very clear that Hooker wants to gel down to Peedy and fish for mud cats and homey hoads. You can't do it. Harold, you've got to stick to Please and Jones and Wilson I and Harmon and scissors and glue. Ifs the price we pay for being worth while. j No can of bait and fly book for us with careless hours of sunshine and rest. Only the happy folks can en joy such beatitude But we will re member how to dig bali hereafter member how to dig halt hereafter any way. Buck! en's Arnica Salvo 1 The Best Salve In The World. -- POULTRY D W. II. COE. EDM RICHLAN Communication Regarding Poultry Addressed to TIio Groat Egg Contest. For thc past several weeks we have been watching tho egg-laying contest at Storrs, Conn., which ls being conducted by tho Stato Agri cultural College and Experiment Sta tion, with much interest, as it ls the most extensive experiment along this line that has ever been attempted, and we look to see some of tho con troversies as to which breed ls supe rior, from an egg-laying standpoint, conclusively settled. Tho article quoted below bas proved so interest ing to us thal we decided to print it for the bonedl of poultry lovers In Oconee. The article follows: What Those BOO Hens aro Doing. (American Poll 1 try World.) Our readers will recall thal tho North American, one of Philadel phia's great daily newspapers, is conducting, at Storrs, Conn., in con nection with the S*ato Agricultural College and lSxperiment Station, what is known as thc "North Amer ican International Egg-Laying Com pel Ilion." This egg-laying test seems to be getting on favorably. Wo are In re ceipt of a tabulated report for the nineteenth week, March 6 to 12, in clusive, and while tho period is yet young, having a total of nfty-two weeks to cover, nevertheless this table contains some interesting hg ures and averages. There are fivo hundred layers In the contest, divided into one hun dred pens of five birds each. Twenty three different varieties are repre sented as follows: Barred Plymouth Rocks ...12 Pens White Plymouth Rocks .... 5 Pens Partridge Plymouth Rocks . 1 Pen Columbia Plymouth Rocks. 1 Pen Silver Wynndottes . 1 l'en Golden Wyandottes . I Pen White Wyandottes . S Pens Bulf Wyandottes . 1 Pen Columbia Wyandottes .... I Pen American Dominiques . 1 Pen S. C. Rhode Island Reds.. . . ?) Pens R. C. Rhode Island Reds ...?5 l'eus lilack Lan gah a ns . l Pen S. C. Brown Leghorns . 2 Pens S. C. White Leghorns .30 Pens S. C. ButY Leghorns . 3 Pens Dark Cornish Fowls . 1 Pen Black Minorcas . 4 Pens Anconas . 1 Pen S. C. Buff Orpingtons. -1 Pens S. C. White Orpingtons .... 5 Pens Moudans . 1 Pen Buttercups . l Pen The competition started Novem ber 1st, 1011, and we have just pass ed through the most severe winter that this country has known in a long term of years. Probably this accounts, in part, at least, for the comparatively poor showing made to dato in the North America ontesl FINANCES RUNNING LOW ? Washington Dispateli Indicates Clark-Wilson Ban-ids Have Busted. Washington, May 4.-The cam paign funds of Speaker Clark and Governor Wilson have shrunk until they look like 30 cents compared with their former selves. The mana gers of the respectivo headquarters here are curtailing to meet ex penses. A number of Held boosters hnvo been called In. Senator Stone, of Missouri, who has had much to do willi promoting Ibo boom of Mr. Clark, lias com plained to friends that the money has stopped coming In. The Wilson workers have been financially de funct, live times since the campaign opened, lt. is believed that tho discontinu ing of contributions to the clark canipai;;'i jusi at this juncture is part of the plan to check tho pro gress of the (Mark band wagon. Hp to a week ago, before he carried Mas sachusetts, tho Clark managers had money for the birds, but now some Of the O nico forco is oui of work. For a month or longer 2.", or 30 persons have been bu By al Clark headquarters at tho libbitt. The Wilson publicity bureau in tho Mun sey Building has had two rooms full Of young men and women, sending out Wilson literature. This has changed. Tho money Is giving out. and contributions aro not coming in as they did in March and April. What H Man is Made Of, ( Leslie's. ) Tho average man lias "ingredi ents" lo make fat for osvon bars of soap, Iron for a medium-sized nail, sugar to fill a small bowl, salt, to fill a shaker, lime to whitewash a chicken coop, phosporus to make 2, 200 match tips, magnesium for a dose of magnesia, sodium to neutral ize a pint and a half of water, potas sium to explode a toy cannon, sul phur to rid a dog of fleas, and al buminoids to make a caso of eggs. --4 * m? J. W. Jordan, a well known den tist, of Hopklnsville, Ky., recently had an operation ror his kidney trouble, but ho says: "Tho first real relief I got was after taking Fo ley Kidney Pills. They eased the terrible pain in my back and accom plished more good than anything I had tried. 1 gladly recommend them." J. W. Bell. EPARTMENT. - rOIUS .J. M. HUGHS. D, S. C. Diseases and Remedies Should Do tho Editors. hy tho Leghorns, oil varieties. Storrs, Conn., is we?, to tho north, geographically, and no doubt the weather has boon "something ilerco" in that locality. Up to tho close of the nineteenth week, November 1-March 12, Inclu sive, the performance of tho twenty three different varieties may bo stat ed as follows: Barred Plymouth Rocks: 12 pons of flvo hirds each, laid 1,920 eggs; average per pen, 160 eggs; average per bird, 3 2 eggs. while Plymouth Rocks: Five pons of five birds each, laid 059 eggs; av erage per pen, 131 4-5 eggs; average per bird, 26 1-6 eggs. Partridge Plymouth Rocks: One pen of five birds, laid 207 eggs; av erage per bird, ll 2-.r> eggs. Columbia Plymouth Rocks: Ono pen of five birds, laid IS2 eggs; av erage per bird, 36 2-5 eggs. Silver Wyandottos: One pen of live birds, laid 97 eggs; average per bird, 19 2-r> eggs. Golden Wyandottos: Ono pen of five birds, laid 77 eggs; average per bird, 14 1-5 eggs. White Wyandottos: Eight pens of five birds each, laid 1,505 eggs; av erage per pen, 188 1-8 eggs; aver age per bird, 37 3-5 eggs. Buff Wyandottes: Ono pen of five birds, laid 229 eggs; average per bird, 45 4-5 eggs. Columbian Wyandottes: Throe pens of five birds each, laid 491 eggs; average per pen, 183 2-3 eggs; average per bird, 36 3-5 eggs. American Dominiques: One pen of five birds, laid 22 1 eggs; average per bird, 44 4-6 eggs. S. C. Rhode Island Reds: Nine pens of five birds each, laid 2,188 eggs; average per pen. 2 3 5 1-3 eggs; ' average per hird, 17 eggs. R. C. Rhode Island Rods: Three pons of live birds each, laid 693 j eggs; averago per pen, 231 eggs; av-j erage per hird. 46 1-5 eggs. Black Lnngshans: Ono pen of five birds, laid 10!) eggs; average per bird, 38 eggs. S. C. Brown Leghorns: Two pons of (Ive birds each, laid 331 eggs; av erage per pen, 165 1-2 eggs; aver age per bird, 33 eggs. S. C. Whtto leghorns: Thirty pens of five birds each, laid 5,58 7 eggs; averago per pen, 183 17-30 eggs; averago lier bird, 2 6 1-5 eggs. S. C. Buff Leghorns: Three pens of five birds each, laid 183 eggs; aver age per pen, 13 1 eggs; averago per bird, 26 1-5 eggs. Dark Cornish Powis: One pen of five hirds, laid 17 1 eggs; averago per hird. 34 4-5 eggs. Black Mi?onas: Four pens of five birds each, laid 286 eggs; average por pen, 7 1 1-2 OK.I?S; average per bird, 14 1-5 OKgs. BARGAIN SA For balance of the season of $1.00 on ali S. C. White anc of fifteen. Incubator eggs $5 p The season so far has bc chicks will have to be hatched are wanted. Book your order? WE GUARANTEE Progressive I Xticililnn Luxury for Dogs. A select boarding house for dogs and cats, situated in 'i beautiful su burb ol' Paris, advertises itself in a prospectus, of which the following is a translation; "Boarding for dogs and cats, health, comfort, exor cise? in courts and gardens food ca rc fu ly supervised daily promen ades: cared fur by English nurses; daily balli .ind toilet. Terms Small dogs, 2 francs a day; very small dogs, :'. francs a day. A heall h bulletin is sent every month." The pro spectus fails to ?'.ive lerins on which cats are received and cared for. FOR THE WOMAN WHO Some women complain that they pei ings, or dizziness in thc bend, ncrvousnt should no* occur to thc normal healthy v to thew poins nt mme time in her life, ns corsets, over-taxed strength, hud air, liver, etc. A regulator mut female toni pure glyctrin, nod without thc use of ale? ?lt. PIERCE'S FAVOI has proven ks value in thousands of casei MRS. DONA M. IV "1 thou ?ht I won lu i dono for mo. I nit ?nd Rcnornl wcnkiir rno hundrodn of dolli tlon'nnd Golden M wnndlimppoInU*! In thom to nny BufTcrin flvo I took your mo easily and loft mo f ''if any Indy cn tho good wojk of y i DR. Ponton's Common Sense ? edition-of 1008 which every wo Sent free in olot Mus. MARTIN. one?oen? stomps, A noonan: One pen of Ave birds, laid 112 eggs; average per bird, 22 2-5 eggs. S. C. Buff Orpingtons: Four pens of five birds each, laid 1,089 eggs; average per pen, 272 1-4 eggs; av erage per bird, 54 2-5 eggs. 5. C. White Orpington -: Five pens of five birds each, laid 1,052 eggs; averago per pen, 210 2-5 eggs; av erage per bird, 4 2 eggs. Houdans: One pen of five birds, laid 50 eggs; average per bird, 10 eggs. For the period of nineteen weeks the seven leading pens rank as fol lows: 1. Pen of S. C. White Leghorns, 3 0 9 eggs. 2. Pen of rt. C. Rhode Island Reds, 315 eggs. 3. Peu of S. C. White Leghorns, 3 1 1 eggs. 4. l'en of S. C. Rhode Island Reds, 3OS eggs. 6. l'en of S. C. Rhode Island Reds, 304 eggs. G. Pen of White Wynndottos, 301 eggs. 7. l'en of S. C. Buff Orpingtons, ?5 0 1 eggs. lt will Pe noted by tho above av erages thal the S. C. Buff Orping tons laid the most eggs during the nineteen weeks-an average of 27 2 1-4 eggs per pen and an average of 54 2-5 eggs per hen. The S. C. Rhode Island Reds aro next with a pen averago of 235 1-3 eggs and a per hen averago of 4 7 eggs. (Mose on tho heels of the S. C. Riiodo Island Reds is tho Rose Comb variety with a pen average of 231 eggs and a per bird averago of 46 1-5 eggs. Then come the Buff Wyandottes with a per bird average of 45 4-15 OggB. Next are the S. C. White Orping tons with a pen averago of 210 2-5 eggs and a per bird averago of 42 eggs. Taking the Orpingtons and Rhode Island Reds as competing breeds In this egg-laying competition, the Or I pingtons have the better of it, as fol ! lows: Nine pens of Orpingtons-four S. j C. Buffs and live S. C. Whites-laid a total of 2,111 eggs, giving an av erago of 237 S-9 eggs per pen and of 17 2-5 eggs per bird. Twelve pens of Rhode Island Reds -nine of S. C. and three of R. C. Reds-laid a total of 2,8-11 eggs, giving a pen average of 23 1 l-l eggs and a per bird average of 46 4-5 eggs. One jien of S. C. White Leghorns jd all competitors, laying 369 eggs j during the period, and it is an inter esting point that this poa contains Fnglish birds owned by Thos. Bar ron, of Catforth. Klngland, Tho Leaders in Contest. ! It will bo noted from the above that a pen of While Leghorns is ahead by a good margin at the end Of the nineteenth week, and that Or pingtons laid the highest average number of eggs per bird, with tho Rhode Island Rods a good second. LE QF EGG S? we will make a special price I Buff Leghorn Eggs per setting cr 100. .en so backward that lots of in April and May if early layers i now. A GOOD HATCH Poultry Farm, id, H. CJ. Mind Over Matter. ?? - ( Judge. ) '..Mamma, I just now fell down stairs and hit every step all the way down!" exclaimed little Mary, who attends tho Christian Science Sunday school. "Did you hurt yourself, dear?" "No, mamma. I kept, saying. 'Truth, truth, truth!' every step I hil, and I didn't burl myself a blt. Bul I had Fido In my arms when I fell and l think he is pretty badly hurt." .'What, makes yon think so, dear?" 'Why. every step wo hit he yelled, 'Krror, error, error!' > THINKS AND FEELS. riodically suffer from dull and heavy ?cel as, pain ?nd hearing-down feelings which roman. But most every woman is subject , due to abnormal conditions in life, such poor or improper food, wet feet, sluggish io made from native medicinal roots with Dhoti called UTI: PRESCRIPTION, s, like tho following : lARTtH, of Auburn, Nebr., Rout? 1, Box M, anya: ,vrito you In regan! to whnt your medicines hava vo Used thom for thirty yenra for female troubla BM with tho very beal, result, nnd they have saved ira in doctora' bill?. I buy Ibo 'Favorito Froacrlp cdli al Discovery ' ?nd tako them together. I never your remedies nnd take pleasure in rccommcndlntc if Indy. I nm now nlmoat fifty years old ? at forty dicincs, bulli kinds, and I passed that period very at nnd healthy. I feel Uko a young Kiri, res to writo mo, I will gladly tell her moro about aur medicines." GKRAT FAMILY DOCTO? BOOK, The People's Medical Adviser, nowly revised iip-to-dato pages, answers hosts of del i cn to questions mau, single or married, ought to know, h binding to any address on reoeipt ol 31 to cover cost ot wrapping end mailing onlyr