DISPENSATORY is the principal ingredients Contained In Pe-ru-na. . re claiming too much for Pe fien we claim It to be an effce mcdy for chronio catarrh? e abundant proof that reruns ttlltr such a catarrh remedyT see what the United States Ills- lory says of the principal in- lnts of Pcrnna. ie, for instance, the Ingredient Litis canadensis, or golden senl. (United Sin tes Dispensatory says (is hrrbnl remedy, hat it is large Fnployed in the tr atment of de led mucous membranes, chronio litis (nasal catarrh), atonic dys- lia (catarrh of the stomach), nic intestinal catarrh, catarrhal lidlce (cntarrh of the liver), and .sensed mucous membranes of the lc organs. It is also recommended lief rentment of various forms of Isel peculiar to women. otter ingredient of 1'erann, cory- loVniostt, l classed in tne united Dispensatory us a tonic. So also bs classed as a stomachic and nlc for the mucous membranes. ron seeds is another ingredient Jhn, an excellent drug that has .ry largely overlooked by the I profession for the past fifty lars ars.i Tlie seeds nre to bo found in "ry f w drug stores. ,TIio United Ijntes Dispensatory says of the action lot ceil on that it is used as a bitter 'tonic 4ntl ",0 lr,atiiirnt ' dysen tery. a lid in intermittent diseases as a tie for quinine. Oil fif copaibu, another ingredient ! of IVr una, is classed by the United States Dispensatory as a mild stimu lant an d diuretic. It acts on the stoin aefh an il intestinal trait. It acts as a uiinuljint on the enilo-urinary niein bilincsj. Useful in chronic cystitis, chfronle! dysentery nnd diarrhea, and scene chronic diseases of the liver and ki(ney. Am ikI to us for n free book of testi monials of what the people think of PetVliiit as a catarrh remedy. The besar rideneo is tho testimony qf tho ho have tried it. I tTL)ismal Swamp Changing. InyistlBationg of the scientists at Washington have recently developed the fyict that at present the area of tBs rUsmal Swamp is slowly sinking and Bake Drunimond, In its center, Ja gnVvIng larger. Similar changes have occurred in the past, periods of elevatiAn and subsidence gradually succeeding one another. The aver age elevation above sea level Is bo alight that natural drainage is lusufll- cient tra remove the rainfall XT1T0 nl llllln l nL' 'lit, f Urt I JLUOAS C'OU.NTV. ( Fhaxk A Chrmcy makes onlh thnt he is eniur pnrtiiVT of the lirm of l' J.Ciiexev & Co., doing lYisiness in tlie City of Toledo, County nn 1 tstnte aforesaid, and thnt said firm will pay I heium of one hundred Dot, LAtis for en'i-fi nd every case of rATAl'.Rlt that cannot lie cured bv the use of Hall's OATARIIH Ctf IB. F'hANK J. dlEXEV. bworn to bfli'ire me and subscribed in my ttiii tlHh day of December, A. v., A. V. ULEASO.N, t Notary rublic. IS A ' tarrliV'ure is taken internally, and V :! I llv on the lilood and mucous sur- he svatf'm. Send for testimonials, t . J. ClUENEy a uo., loleao, u. all DnfSfuts. i. amily illa are the bent. hoi'i v Mall's ling Pictures That Talk. rehronoiiiegaphone" Is the elciitinclname gien to a new appa ratus invented Py V- ieon uaumom of Paris. A movlngilcture Is thrown on a screen, and as line figures move the chrpnomegaphonV gives them peech. AVe thus geta combination of cinematograph and Inhonograph. Tndnn Macav.lno of Cottnmerce, Onlv One "Hromo OVilnlnc" That is Laxative Bromo QuinVie. Similar ly named remedies sometimes iljeceive. lhe first and original Cold Tablet is a White Package, with black anil red let lering.jmd hpara me aianauue ui n. it . uiuv. A pamphlet was written In 1,679 by Francesco Lana expounding the theory of airships, Pure White Lead is the Natural Paint Pigment Numerous compounds are being -offered to take the place of white lead as a paint, but no real lubstitute for it has yet been. (mind. Pure White Lead has a peculiar property of amalgamating with the wood upon which it ii used added to this it has an elasticity which permits the paint to follow the natural expansion and contraction of tlie wood. Pure Whi:e Lead (with its full natural te. nacity and elasticity, unimpaired by adulterants), alone fulfills all the re. quircment of the ideal paint. Every keg which bears the Dutch Boy trade mark i positively guaranteed to be ab solutely -. Pure White Lead made by the Old Dutch Process, SEND FOR BOOK iTlkmllBt.,, valaahlt in for- mauirm on nm pwinu Aft tend pocktd nhjeet. Foot XxM IM7 Wort thi Mrfe,, mpom rmpMMfc. NATIONAL LEAD COMPANY in wktchrr of ts follow ing nUlam J Marvaf Mf VcwTork, DoMon. BoftUa, ClmtuS. ClnelaaL rilw, St. Loall. Pkil. Srlpkl IJokm T Lcwte KroLOe.lt fill karak INUloul hmti Oil Co l ""ntll . Mol WW GARDEN, FARM and CROPS SUGGESTIONS FOR THE UP-TO-DATE AGRICULTURIST Shod Too Much. The farm horse is shod too much. Un less much road work is required, little shoeing is necessary. A foot keeps In natural cc-nditlon longer unshod. The frog performs its natural functions better. The horse works more easily over plowed land or in mud. A bare foot clings to a floor or other slippery places better than a smooth shoe. Bos ton Cultivator. Feed and Fatten on the Farm. Some one has wisely observed that the farmer who sends his corn to mar ket in the shape of fnt oxc:i, sheep and pigs is always sure of getting paid for his crop. The manure pays for the cost of feeding. The man who sells his grain direct enrirhes another man's farm at the expense of his own. The best way is to feed on the farm as fur as practicable. New York Witness. A 'Good Dairy Combination. The cow and bow are surely a great combination when handled right, 'he quickest, easiest end keep-coming money maker Is a good cow, and when . you can keep just over In the next lot a good sow with seven or eight lusty plKS, calling for all the skimmllk you can give them, It is surely easy money. More farms today are making milk ami pork their main products than ever be fore. Where the milk is skimmed at home, and the fresh, sweet milk fed to the pigs, there Is the best opportunity in the world for making cheap pork. Experiment stations claim that skim mllk is worth for feeding from 20 to 25 cents per hundred. It Is worth much more if we take Into consideration the boost It gives the pigs just at the right time. Work the combination sow and cow. They will pay well for you. Indiana Farmer. Two Hindrances to Growth. They seem to come to all hogs and we should be ready to combat them. They are lice and worms. The man who never does anything to keep away lice I believe is losing money. There Is no more effective method of getting rid of lice in mild weather than by dipping. But whether you have a dipping, plant or not there should be some provision for applying a disinfectant by spraying or sprink ling. We use a cheap quality of kerosene and apply very lightly but often. Oth er liquids may be better, but the kero sene is useful for many things and It is always ready. We have a five gallon can for oil for the stock and poultry. It Is good to apply a few drops to the feed which serves a purpose similar to that of the exter nal application. This seems to be an effective remedy for the coughs com mon among hogs. For worms we give turpentine mixed with the feed. The proper use of these liquids requires that they be adminis tered frequently and la small quanti ties. Good Sheep Good Property. Th3 Farm Stock Journal says that the sheep of the past were kept chiefly for wool, which sharply fluctuates, but In recent years there has developed a world-wide demand for mutton. This demand is increasing. It will continue to Increase as meat consumers better understand the excellent qualities of multou. This Insures for the sheep keeper, two stablo market products from his flock wool and mutton. Sheep keeping comes nearer being a safe and surely profitable Industry than ever before. Yet, it must be remem bered that, the scrub sheep with her scanty, uneven fleece, and runty lambs, Ties successfully with the scrub cow In leading her owner to the gates of bankruptcy. It is the full and halt breed sheep and lambs that top the markets, the full and half-breed fleeces that lead the wool market quotations. They are' yielding handsome divi dends, and In times of depression, will enable their owners to keep clear of the rocks of disaster. It pays to breed the best, whether it be sheep, swine, cattle or horses. Indigestion of Fowls. For mild attacks of indigestion oc curring when there is no reason to sup pose the trouble is due to the quality of food, there is nothing better noth ing so good, in fact as fasting, letting the fowls go without food, excepting green food, for one or two days, then feeding them sparingly. In highly fed hens the digestive system is often over worked. A system of feeding and quality of food that one hen or one flock stands all right may be too much for another. The poultry keeper has to Judge of what and how to feed, not by someone else's results, but by re sults in his own yards. To get good growth and heavy egg production we must feed heavily, and in feeding heav ily we are always running risks of breaking down the digestive systems by overwork. So the poultryman should watch closely for signs of indigestion, especially lack of appetite or loose ness Of the bowels, nnrf uhn c.oK I symptoms appear let the hens go with out, gram ior a ieea or several feeds, as ,th case may seem to reauire. Care- fful attention to this point is the best preventive of digestive disorders I aave found it a good plan to omit one feed a week as a regular thing, and for many years have made It a practice to give the fowls one less- feed on Sun day. Farm Poultry. How to Make the Farm Pay. There are a great many standpoints from which this subject can be taken up. In this talk I will consider It from the standpoint of soli fertility. The one crop systerii has reduced yields faster thau.lt would seem that it ought to, and especially where the soils were very rich to begin with. In order to get definite data in regard to the effect of the one crop system as compared with a rotation, a set of fields were set apart for this purpose at the Minnesota Experiment Station. One Held was grown to wheat for five years, another Held to wheat, clover, wheat, oats nnd corn manured. A third plot to corn for five years, and a fourth Held to oats for 5 years. These fields had grown the same crops and had tlie same treatment before being brought Into the experiment. At tho beginning the soils were ana lyzed as to their nltrogca and humus content. Nitrogen is the most import ant plant food, nnd also gets away the easiest; It Is also the most expensive to replace. At the end of the five years there had been a loss of 855 pounds of nitrogen per acre, of which 98 pounds were re moved in the crops, the remaining 757 pounds bekig lost, at luc per pound, IU13.55, w hich makes it quite clear why the one cropping system is hard on the land. It was also found that the loss in humus had been 7300 pounds per acre In the 5 years, which explains in part why tho nitrogen had escaped, as the organic matter or humus holds the nit rogen In a way that It cannot waste. On the field where there had been a rotation of crops, including clover and corn manured, the gain in the 5 years was 313 pounds, of which 225 pounds were removed in the crop, leaving a net gain of 118 potMids, which at 15c pur pound amounts to $1710. There had also been a gain of 13,830 pounds of humus per acre. The difference in the results of the .two fields are very mark ed; tho one containing at the end of the 5 years, J130.G5 worth of nitrogen more than the other and 21,130 pounds more of humus, besides having raised by far the larger crop. This one was a fertile field, in fine tillh, while the other was lacking In both fertility and tilth. At the beginning of the experi ment the soils weighed 75 pounds per cubic foot; nt the end of the five years the soil of the field grown to wheat weighed 77 pounds, while tho soil of the rotation plot weighed only 72 pounds. There was a loss of 425 pounds of ni trogen per acre In the soil of the plot grown to corn. Of this 280 pounds were removed in the crop, leaving a net loss of 145 pounds, which, at luc, would amount to $21.75. Tho loss of humus was 5532 pounds per acre. The field grown to oats for 6 years suffered a loss of 980 pounds of nltro gen per acre, of which 230 pounds were removed in the crop, leaving a net loss of 750 pounds, which, at 15c, umounts to $112.50. The loss of humus was 60S5 pounds. These figures help explain why stock raising and dairying are profitable. It is not only In the returns but also In the Improvement that comes to the soil through the crop rotations practiced; which keep an abundant supply of hu mus in the soil, to retain the nitrogen and to make the soil mellow. Address before Marion County Farmers' In stitute, by Prof. W. C. Palmer, Win ona Agricultural Institute. Farm Notes. Good stock will find quicker sales at good prices than poor stock at any price. All profitableness begins and ends in the excellence or low grade of the sheep. Mutton sheep give the best returns, If fed for that purposo while they are young. The sheep business will be on the Eafeat basis when the fleece and car cass are both well developed and val uable. No animal will deteriorate so rapidly from neglect or show bo marked an Improvement for good keep as well bred sheep. ' Not all colds develop into roup, but colds are apt to "wind up" with toup troubles If there is a taint of constitu tional roup in the flock. How can one expect good and profit able results from an Industry in which he spends neither time nor energy? Poultry keeping i3 an Industry. The Babcock test registers the amount of butter fat, which Is not the same as the amount of butter, be cause butter contains from 12 to 15 percent of water besides butter fat. Add about 12 percent to the Babcock indication in reckoning the product of the churn. To prevent sore shoulders of work ing horses, H. E. Cook recommends perfectly fitting collars fitted to the shoulders by working the horse in them after thorough soaking of tho collars. He would avoid sweat pads under all circumstances except where they become absolutely necessary be cause of lack of properly flttlncj col lars. American Cultivator. ENGLISH 8CH00LS The Flogging Custom and the Way It - Is Regarded. About corporal' punishment In Eng land two curious facts He beyond dis pute. One Is that while the working class and the lower middle class dis like and resent It and will not in gen eral allow their children to undergo It, the aristocracy tolerate it without complaint. The time Is coming, one might nssert paradoxically, when it will be impossibla to flog anybody but the son of a peer. And the other fact is that public school boys have often felt a spectnl affection for the rasters who have punished them most. In Westminster abbey stand side by side tho tombs of a master and his pupil. The mnBter was Dr. Busby who vas head master of Westminster school for so long a time as 58 years. Nobody ever flogged so many boys as he. The pupil was the theologian, Dr. South. It Is told I am sure the story is truq that when South came as a small boy to Westminster Busby greeted him with tho ominous words: "I see grent talents in that sulky lit tle boy, nnd my rodhnll bring them out." If so, ho was no doubt as good as his word. But when South lay up on his deathbed it wns his last prayer to be burled at his old master's feet, and the master and the pupil now rest Bide by side. Nineteenth entury. FITS.Rt. Vitus'DnneetNervous Diseases per manently cured by Dr. Kliuo's Grent Nerve Restorer. ?i trial bottle nnd treatise free. Dr. H. It. Klluo, Ld.,)l Arch St., Phila., Pa, The Society of Assurance for Wi dows and Orphan? was the first known Insurance company, and was estab lished In London In 1099. Garfield Ten. the Herb limitive, is mild nud potent; tnko it to roRiiluto a sluggish liver und to overcome constipation. Life Without Mind. The possibility of life without mhid, while not subject to positive proof, is a theory that has gained consider able strength recently through its (idvocacy by Dr. h. Laloy, librarian of the Academy of Sciences, Paris. He believes that many of the smaller liv ing organisms, as Insects, are mere moving machines, having no more in telligence than may be ascribed to plants. Ho refers to the well-known fact that insects are attracted by light, often to their own destruction, and ascribes it to the same cause that Inclines the plant to grow toward the light. HARDSHIPS OF ARMY LIFE Left Thousands of Veterans With Kidney Troubles. The experience of David W. Mar tin, a retired merchant, of Bolivar, Mo., Is Just like thousands of oth ers. Mr. Martin says: "I think I have had kidney disease ever since the war. During an engagement rC my horse fell on vwt me. stralnlne my back and injuring the kidneys. I have been told I had a floating kidney. I had Intense pain in the back, headaches and dizzy spoils and the action of the bladder was very Irregular. About three years ago I tried Doan's Kidney Pills, and found such great relief that I con tinued, and inside a comparatively short time was entirely rid of kidney trouble." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Mllburn Co.. Buffalo. N. V. A Military Exigency. -Military circles have been convul sed over a case of discipline that re calls the problem of the irresistible force meeting the Immovable obstac le. An officer ordered an enlisted man to go to church and the man re fused. The officer had no right to give tho order, but the enlisted man had no right to refuse. This extra ordinary situation has been solved by transferring the enlisted man to an other post as a mark of disapproval, and sending the officer to another post of temporary duty. Philadelphia Record. TERRIBLE ITCHING. Eczema Affected Whole System Un ablo to Rest Night or Day Suf fered 4 Years Cuticura Cures. "I suffered severely for four year from poison oak and ivy. My condition was serious, as I could not rest night or day and be free from a terrible itching sensa tion from scratching on my hands between the fingers, my feet and face. I got the beat of advice and treatment from six dif ferent doctors who were anxious to cure me. One of the doctors told me that when the poison was cured, eczema (a worse disease) would follow, which became true. My eyesight was affected, and 1 went to a hospital especially for the eyea and got relief, but eczema got a terrible hold on my system. I waa about to give up all hope of ever beinf cured, yet I could not be recon ciled to such results, as my health had been good and free from any disease all my life. My age is seventy-three years. In my ex tremity I happened to read of Cuticura Remedies for skin diseases. I was anxious about my condition and desired to evade any spurious imitation. This was in July, 1905. -and I called on a cerf ain druggist for the Cuticura Remedies. I bought five boxes Cuticura Ointment, alto some Cuti cura Soap and Cuticura Pills as I required them. In four weeks' treatment my face was smooth, and the - itching gradually left my hands and feet and I could rest comfortably, for which 1 am grateful and happy. W. Field Cowen, Justice of the Peace and Notary Public, Hartly, Del., May 15, 1906." Carnegie and Eden. Mr. Carnegie tells it to Illustrate that a Celt is always a Celt In Scot land as well as in Ireland. In a ser mon preached in a small church In Glasgow the pastor, after Inveighing against slothfulness, said, by way of climax: "Do you think Adam and Eve went about the Garden of Eden with their hands In tielr pockets?" Harp er's Weekly. , timnmSU AILING WOMEN How Many Perfectly Well Women N Do You Know? MISS GRACE E.MILLER "I am not feeling very well," "I em so nervous it seems as though I should fly." "My back aches as though It would'break." How often do you hear these signi ficant expressions from women friends. More than likely you speak the same words yourself, and there is a cause. More than thirty years ago Lydla E. Plnkhnm of Lynn, Mass. discovered the source of nearly all the suffering endured by her sex. "Woman's Ills," these two words are full of more misery to women than nny othcrtwoj words that can be found in the English language. Sudden fainting, depression of Bpirlts. reluctance to go anywhere, backaches, headaches, nervousness, sleeplessness, bearing down sensations, displacements and irregularities are the bane of woman's existence. The same woman who discovered the cause of all this misery also discovered a remedy. Lydla E. Pink hatn's Vegetable Compound made from native roots and herbs holds the rcoord for a greater number of absolute cures of female ills than any other one remedy tho world has ever known and it is the greatest blessing which ever came into the lives of Buffering women. Don't try to endure, but cure the cause of all your suffering. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound at once removes such troubles. The following letters prove this t Coal Tar Color Industry. Out of the making of gas has grown the great coal tar color industry. The history of the discovery of aniline, the basis of the various aniline dyes, is interesting. By the distillation of in digo M. Unverdorben produced a sub stance which he., named crystalline. Some nine years later, viz., in 1835, Runge discovered In coal tar a sub stance which produced a beautiful blue color when treated with chloride of lime. This he named kyanol. Five years later a substance was obtained by treating indigo with caustic potash, and named anillno, from "anil," the specific name of one of the indigo plants. Then it was found that cry stalline, kyanol, and nniline wore chei 'cully the same. Thus It was shown that aniline, the basis of the Indigo dyes, occurred In the waste product of the manufacture of gas, and the possibilities of a flew source of tliese dyes hinted at. And in 1858 Dr. Perkln took out a patent for the manufacture of a dye stuff made from aniline which became widely known as "Perkln's purple." Others follow ed In quick succession, and the great coal tar color Industry was estab lished. London Globe. Tiles Cured in 0 to 14 Days. Pazo Ointment is gnnrnnteed to cure any caseof Itching,Blind,Bleedingor Protruding Piles in 0 to 14 days or money refunded. 60c. In a New Haven V. M. C. A. a Bible class of Hebrew boys Is studying the Old Testament in English. Mrs. Wlnslow'sSoothing Syrup for Children allays pain,cnres wind colic, 25ca bottle Record Price in America for Picture. The highest price ever paid for a painting in this country was given for a Troyon canvas, which brought $65,000 at the auction sale of the H. S. Henry art collection. The canvas is entitled "La Retour a la Ferme," and depicts two cows on their way to pasture. The picture was bought by Herman Schaud. The Henry collec tion consisted of 30 pictures and brought $352,800. Senator Clark paid $24,000 for a Corot. A mechanical man that can do a great many things a human being can do is the invention of a German. The machine has 305 compartments and several electric motors. It is poor economy to use inferior paints on your building, and you can't afford to do it especially whenyou consider that the labor is the moat cosdy part of painting. If yon paint, this spring, use Buffalo A. L. O. Paint, and feel satisfied that you have the Best. Buffalo Paints look best, protect and preserve your property long-eat, because they contain the best and moat laating- pig-menta OXIDE OP ZINC and WHITB LEAD, (round in Ad Linaecd Oil in correct proportion, makinr a Perfect Paint. Before you decide on the kind of paint to uae, you ouaht to know about Bullalo Palala. Send lor our 1907 Color Chart and valuable Paint Information. BUFFALO OIL PAINT & VARNISH CO. BUFFALO CHICAGO JtaaBtHtiavri ti 34 YEARS SELLING DIEfcCT Oorveftk-lc axl haf .third of acetrtwr. wo fcJp JtiiN am to an,wry. yoa w tyU, a.wlity tad pvtca. Wc arc Om Urfe t, 756. BfoWifoawftk rftttir to l wjuii w omUalyofy. Wa auk mt ttylas of m Wtat Dun. Automo VasiUes. W atrloa of Hmim tond fat lam. fro cattlwtav iSR?ft!C,?2: EUd-rt Carrta MRS.wrSTFORD Mrs. W. S. Ford of 1938 Lansdowne St., Baltimore, Md. writes : Dear Mrs. Pinkhnm; ' For four years my life was a misery to me. I suffered from irregularities, sup pression, torrible dragging sensations and extreme nervousness. I had given up all hope of ever being well again whfin Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound was recommended. It cured my weakness and made mo well and strong." Miss Grace E. Miller, of 1213 Michl pan St., Buffalo, N. Y. writes Denr Mrs. Pinkham : "I was in n very bad condition of health generally; irritablo, cross, barkacho. nn" suffered from a foiulnino weaknoss. Lydia K. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, cured mo uftor all other medicines had failed." What Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table J'ompound did for Mrs. Ford and Miss Miller it will do for other women in like condition. Every suffering woman in the United States is aslied to accept the following Invitation. It is free, will bring you health and may bave your life. Mrs. Pinkham's Invitation to Women. Women suffering; from any form of female weakness nre invited to promptly communicate with Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass. From the symptoms given, the trouble may be located and the quickest and surest way of recovery advised. Out of her vast volume of experience in treating female ills Mrs. Pinkham probably has the very knowledge that will help your case. Her advice is free and always helpful. Instinct Saves Animals. With the exception of nesting birds, few wild animals polish in a forest fire. They have, Instinctive knowl edge of it long before it reaches them and fly to swamps and large rivers. They can generally outrun the flames. Human lives have been saved by horses instinctively taking to water. Garfield Tea is mndo r f Herbc a great point in its favor! Take it for constipHtion, indigestion and liver disturbances. Guar anteed under the Pure Food and Drugs Act. Germany's loss in the number of sheep reached 60 per cent, in the years 1878 to 1904. Argentine com petition largely accounts for It. The Old-Monk-Cure will straighten out a contracted muscle in a jiffy. ST. JACOBS OIL Don't play possum with pain, but 'tends strictly to business. Price 25c and SOe GREGORY'S U 1 1 U pom) on. ('tlsoe naXtr 4 tin the kind too n lXo V J J. ii. Goati? I Sm, Mtnunai, Kua. P. N. U. 9, 1907. npnPQY Di8covEKTi I V W I iriraa NlM u4 aani wnrH mm. Beh nt iMttwinUI, nmi AO ImtMrt rm. or. a. u. tiaait.vs no.ia, a, uuwtn, . ...xjlsJ:-.. 1 bm told ftrt froa oar Uctorj to ar for OMtwinBilco ina BirTri aa m awuag u wot muaam m m mix fiimi la flu WrU. Bane Mia. Co. MUSCULAR j AILMENTS j lft, ffW. laj7l a4 MyiwWaa. Vrtaaaw I awe-
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers