HIS FOUNTAIN PEN LEAKED. And Annabel Googan's Face Bore Evi dence Convincing and Con demning. "Annabel!" culled a Manchester mother over the banisters, aa aUc heard the front door close. "Ves, mamma," replied a sweet, girlish voice, and Annabel Uoogaii slowly framed herself 111 the darkness ot the staircase, relates London Tit-Bits. "Was that Mr. Tmberry, Annabel?" "It was, mamma." "Do you know it is 20 minutes past 11?" came in cold tones from the wrap pers! iigure in the upper hail. "Mamma, we hadn l tiie slightest idea it was so late," said the )oung girl, earnestly. "You see," she continued, "Mr. Tinberry has been telling me about China and Japan, lie said everybody, ought to know about them, and it was so interesting, we never thought how late it was setting. Do you know, mamma," added the sweet girl, as she reached tiie landing, "that 111 China they—" "Did Mr. Tinberry draw a map of China on your face, Annabel?" asked Mrs. tioogan, sternly. "Why, mamma?" asked the girl in startled tones. The young girl rushed to a mirror and saw with horror-stricken glance that the left side of her face was streaked and stained with ink. "Heaven and earth!" she screamed; "his fountain pen must have leaked into his waistcoat pocket!" and with a shriek of horror the beautiful girl fell fainting to the floor. The Doctors Failed. Kilgore, 0., April 11. —A rutlier re markable case has just come to light in this place. Mr. John T. Kieglc had been suffering for some time with an aggra vated form of Kidney disease which had caused him a great deal of discomfort. He tried the treatment of several doc tors, but did not get any better. At last he chanced to read an advertisement of Dodd's Kidney Pills, a remedy which has been making many wonderful cures, and he bought some at once and began to use them, lie says of the result: "Dodd's Kidney Pills do just what they are advertised to do. 1 can praise them for the good they have done for 111 c. They cured me completely after the doc tors had failed, ana 1 wish that every poor sufferer could hear of them, for I know they will cure Kidney trouble." There seems to be 110 case of Kidney Trouble, Rheumatism or Backache that Dodd's Kidnev Pills will not cure per fectly and permanently. Mabel —"Why didn't you scream when be put his arms around you?" Ethel— "l wanted to, but couldn't, and when i could 1 didu t want to."—Butte lnter mountain. It Cures Whfle You Walk. Allen's Foot-Ease is a certain cure for hot, sweating, callus, and swollen, aching feet. Sold by all Druggists. Price 25c. Don't accept any substitute. Trial package FREE. Address Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y". 'O7 (after slapping the wrong man fa miliarly on the back) —"Oh, pardon me, sir. 1 thought you were some one else." 'o4—ou are quite correct. 1 am."— Harvard Lampoon. "1 received a cool but satisfactory let ter from home." "ilow s that?" "it con tained a Uratt."—lale Record. Orser, of Boston, Mass., is in teresting to all women. "Deak Mrs. misery for several years. My back ached and I had bearing-down pains, and fre quent headaches. I would often wake from a restful sleep in such pain and misery that it would be hours before I could close my eyes again. I dreaded the long nights and weary days. I could do no work. I consulted differ ent physicians hoping to get relief, but, finding that their medicines did not cure me, 1 tried Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound, as it was highly recommended to me. I am glad that I did so, for I soon found that it was the medicine for my case. Very soon I was rid of every ache and pain and restored to perfect health. I feel splendid, have a fine appetite, and have gained in tveight a lot." Misa Frank ie Obser, 14 Warrenton St., Boston, Mass. — ssooo forfeit If original of aboue letter proving genuineness cannot be pro duced. Surely you cannot wish to re main weak,sick an«l discouraged, and exhausted with each day's work. Some derangement of the feminine organs is responsible for this exhaustion, following any kind of work or effort. Lydia E. Pinkliam's Vegetable Compound will help you just as it has thousands of other women. DOUGLAS $4.00, $3.50, $3.00, $2.50 UNION BEST IN MADE O S « W Lii O THE WORLD. W.L. IJouglas shoes are worn by moro Mm men than any other I*4 make. The reason ipl is, they hold their p/ shape,fitbetter,wear M longer, and have Ij&jM 112 greater intrinsic \ si value than any Jhs. other shoes. .Zglpw Sola Everywhere. f.ook lor nnd |>rie<* oi» bottom. Douglas itxi-s Corona Collskhi, wlileli is ev4'i v\vli« r« < oim < t«> l>«'t lie finest Patent leather yet nroiliiciMl. Past Co or €ijrlcls ust.d. Shoes I»v mill,i;". •••■nt* ••\tr.i. Writtt lor C:tUtlOf{. W. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton. Mass, MOTHER GRAY'S SWEET POWDERS ff FOR CHILDREN, A Gortnin Cure for Fcvrrifllineflfl* nJpjK Constipation* He ntlaolie, V Y 1 Htoinueli Trouble**, Tec*tliivifC »- 112 Disorders, and Destroy Mother Gray. WorniM. Thejr Hrenk up C'oltl« JNtirnoinOhila- * n hours. Atll Druggists, i:oouu r«m'»i HOIIIH. Bamr>lo muilod FREE. Add row, Am Koctuif. A. S. OLMSTED. Le Roy, H Y. PARASOL DAYS ARE COMING Next Summer's Sunshades Are No ticeable for Their Novelty and Real Artistic Worth. Parasol days seem pretty far distant Just now, but the shop folks believe in anticipating the calendar, and in the sunny south, whence so many north erners have gone, the parasol is as nec essary as the furs that the New Yorker finds so comfortable. From Paris have come this season many charming sun shades, and a particularly attractive type is illustrated in the accompany ing sketch. It is of white taffeta silk, with frill of filmy lace headed by an ap plique of La France roses and foliage in panne velvet in natural hues. A SOME PARISIAN NOVELTIES. Huffy bow and long ends of chiffon adorn the handle of light tinted wood. In parasol handles, the detachable kind that has come to us from the French capital and is among the essen tial accessories of the modish woman, are novelties more noticeable as novel ties than for their artistic worth. Two are shown here. Both are of crystal with magnifying qualities. The round top on one handle incloses a tiny au tomobile, perfect in detail —a minia ture toy—while within the transparent sphere surmounting the other handle is to be seen the realistic head of a pug dog. From another glass handle of this sort peers the head of a bulldog as unprepossessing as in real life. Popu larity is not predicted for handles of this sort, but the woman who likes to advertise her fondness for dogs or au tos, or to have something different from the ordinary type in the way of a parasol, is likely to take a fancy to the novelties. —Brooklyn Eagle. Black Spots on Dishes. Salt rubbed on the black spots on dishes will remove them, and salt placed over a fresh claret stain on the table linen will assist it to disappear when washed. A Nursery Table Cover in Applique and Embroidery THE authorities responsible for ■ some of the best needlework de- j signs have at last learned that the women of to-day prefer to spend their , time and ingenuity upon pieces of good needlecraft which are quickly and ef fectively accomplished; and a glance j around any of the exhibitions where I specimens of the latest needlecraft oc i cupy a prominent place is sufficient to show that applique work, aided by ef fective embroidery stitches, is becom ing more and more popular," says the : Ladies' Field. "This vastly interesting work is in ; so many simple forms that it is passing J easy for the beginner to select a sub | ject which may be carried out without ( | the dread of failure ever before her } ! eyes. Perhaps the simplest designs ! I are those in which outline plays the j | more important part. The accompany- j j ing design illustrating a nursery table- j I cover, would be most useful and effec ! tive if arranged in various colored ! linens applique upon a pale blue linen j j ground. The birds, expressed in bright j J yellow linen, may be cut in one piece, j ' and then when placed upon the ground i work are decidedly more boldly effec- ' tive if outlined by a narrow chocolate- ! j brown cord. The bills, feet, and eyes j ' are best when worked solidly with the [ CAMBRON COUNTY PRBSS THURSDAY, APRIL 21 1904. DAINTY CASE FOR RECIPES. Clippings Laid Within Its Folds An i More Accessible Than If Placed in a Drawer. For those who have felt the need ol j some little article which will hold the j new recipes tfiat promise so well, yet must be laid aside until a convenient j time comes for trying them, there is I provided a holder shaped like a minia- i ture portfolio. The outer case is made j of water-color paper, cut as indicated j in the accompanying diagram, gummed j on the flaps and folded in the middle, j Clippings laid within this folded paper, r**i A r" I'ff ) —1 I npn I CASE FOR RECIPES. which is then slipped Inside the case, I are more readily accessible than when laid on a shelf or in a drawer or with- 1 in the leaves of a cook book, and they j never slip out of their own accord and disappear, with apparent malice, as | clippings have a habit of doing. By j way of showing the use for which it is j intended, suitable cooking utensils are marked in ink and tinted in color on the case, and its top is cut on their out lines. The inner paper is finished to correspond, and as it is a trifle longer than the outer case, a prominent uten sil serves as a handle to withdraw it when necessary. The illustration shows I the finished case, also the separate | parts.—Agnes Warren, in Modern Pris cilla. An Island of Women. On a small island in the Greek archi pelago there is a colony which is com posed entirely of women. It is a sort of religious order, which considers it ft disgrace for one of its members to even look at a man. When a fisherman ap proaches the islands the women pull the gray cowls of their cassocks over their heads and turn their hacks. Provisions are never imported, as the women raise their own products, being strictly vege tarians. Only the matron, who is an nually elected head of the colony, is ever allowed to leave the island. The others remain on the island all their lives, tak ing their turn at tilling the soil, wash ing, housekeeping and fishing. Making a Real Lace Gown. Darned lace is greatly esteemed by connoisseurs. A whole dress made in ; this way is very beautiful. Take white j | Brussels net or point d'esprit for a foun- : i dation and make a princess gown well ' j fitted to the figure. Cut a paper flower— i | a daisy shape is a good model--pin it on I j the net, and run a white silk outline j around the edges. This may be done at intervals all over the net, the interven- J ing spaces being afterward connected by 1 a running line. After the flowers have been sketched in, so to speak, with the needle, the petals may be darned solid \ with coarse white embroidery silk, leav i ing a round center to be filled in with I several French knots. —Chicago Post. • ordinary satin stitch; the birds' mark ings, however, need to be carefully traced in fine lines of shadings. "The quaint Noah's ark-looking sort ! of trees may be treated in quite the 1 same fashion, viz., the stiff upstanding j foliage being cut in one piece and then outlined with a darker green cord, and j their branches also expressed in satin ; stitch. The frogs can he made very | decorative by being treated in a judi- J cious mixture of applied work and darn ing. Carried out in brown frog coloi with black and yellow markings they j would be a delight to little eyes. It | will naturally suggest itself to workers j that in carrying out this sketch a great j I deal of individual taste and skill may ! be exercised, and almost any amount ol I detail may be introduced. For instance, j a little filoselle introduced here and | there in birds and frogs will be found j useful, while the amount of crewel and i satin stitch lies purely at the will ol I the worker. | "Less skilful —or less patient—work j ers might carry out. this good nursery j tablecover design almost entirely ir j outline, witn feet, bills of birds j branches and all so treated, even tc the frogs, though these alone, owing I their needlework existence to filling, [ would not come amiss." MODEL COOP FOR CHICKENS As a Labor Saver the Contrivance Here Described in Detail Has But Few Equals. Sketch and description of coop and run for setting hen and chicks. They can roost in it till the hen leaves them. Ends 1 inch thick or more; make ends first 2 feet, 2y 2 inches long, back edges 2 feet 3 inches, front edge 1 foot 11 inches. Front and back should be one half-inch thick. Nail box together and nail two pieces on inside of back and front of coop 3xl, on which put a loose floor. Now take two pieces 7 feet long. Nail one on each side of coop at top edge of front, keep back one same distance from bottom. Let them overhang G inches at each end, to form handles. Put two on bottom C feet long; A HANDY LITTLE COOP. nail cross pieces same size, between the ends to form the run. Now, cut plaster er's lath in half for end of run and leave a space of 5 inches to slide a thin board in, another space inches to slide a piece in. Space the remainder and nail on. Cover front, back and top with lath or wire netting. Make an opening in end of coop for hen, and cover with a sliding board from back to front to keep hen in and skunks out. Now make your roof. Let it project 3 inches both ends and front; put leather hinges all the way along the back and shingle the joints to keep rain out. Now putin nest, and you can carry it around any where. To make the above give the best results it needs two pieces in be tween the rails, thus, X. Then nail the laths on V/ 2 inches apart. When you want to confine the chicks in the run, put loose laths in between them. When they are big enough to run around, take the loose laths out, so they can go in and out at will. Now put a piece 2xl on each end 12 inches from the floor to put perches on, and put dirt, water, feed and grit in the coop when you set the hen. —J. Hagley, in Epitomist. POULTRY YARD CHATTER. Cheap food is always at the expense of quality. No food is cheap that does not bring paying results. Provide plenty of nests where there are many hens or pullets. Damaged food invites indigestion and various bowel troubles. It's "trouble" to look after a flock of poultry in the way It should be done — but it pays. Grit, either oyster shells or crushed granite, should be kept under cover Hccessible to the poultry. Air the poultry house once a day, no matter how cold it is. Don't neglect to clean out the h'ouse every morning because "it Is so cold." Keep the cockerels and pullets sepa rate until a couple of weeks before you commence saving eggs for hatching. Both will be the better for the plan. The best "condition remedy" for poultry is good care, cleanliness in the houses, variety of sound food, grit, pure water, etc., and making the stock exercise in a scratching shed. Keep the poultry busy scratching. Plenty of short, dry straw litter or leaves under a shed or in the house is the way and place. Scatter a little cracked corn or wheat several times during the day. Late in the evening give enough warm food to provide for the required amount. THIS CCOSE IS A JUMBO. Truthful Reporter Says Fowl Weighs 144 Pounds and Wears Rub bers in Winter. Harry Pinkham, of Nevada, Story county, lowa, owns a Toulouse goose which is indeed a monstrosity and has attracted a great deal of attention at the various places at which it lias been exhibited by Mr. Pinkham. The fowl, which is a little over two years of age, weighs 144 pounds, and has been ex hibited at the fat stock show at Chica go, at Des Moines at the lowa state fair, and will be t#.<en to St. Louis to be exhibited this summer at the Lou isiana Purchase exposition. The enor mous weight of the goose has been too heavy for its web feet, and in order to protect the goose from the frozen ground this winter Mr. Pinkham made for the fowl a pair of rubber shoes which fit on the two web feet. The goose has been in the habit of laying an egg about every day, and these eggs are of enormous size, being as large as an ordinary water bottle, and the land lady at Pinkham's boarding house re cently made 14 pies out of one of the eggs which the goose had laid.—Chica go Inter Ocean. Diversified Farming Safest. The one-crop farirfer is at the mercy of both excessive drought and rain, poor crops and low prices. There are too many things against him to suc ceed well. In diversified farming if one thing fails another succeeds. Then if there is a universally good crop he is better off than if he had only one crop. It is all right to do one thing particularly well, but keep every dish you have right side up.—Midland Farmer, Occasion for a Story. I A man had a story about a gun which he delivered himself of upon all occasion*. At a dinner party one evening he writhed in his chair for over an hour waiting for a chance to introduce his story, but no j opportunity presented itself. Finally he slipped u coin into the hand of a waiter ! ami whispered: "When you leave the j room again, slatn the door. ' I The waiter slammed the door as direct -1 ed, and the man sprang to his feet, with the exclamation: "What's that noise—a gun?" "Oh, no" returned his host, "it was only the door."' "Ah, I see. Well, speaking of puns re minds me of a little storv." —Tit-Bits. SKIN PURIFICATION. Cnllcorn Soup, Ointment and Pllla Cleanse the Skin and Blood of Torturing II u mom Com plete Treatment SI.OO. The agonizing itching and burning of the skin, as in eczema; the frightful scal ing, as in psoriasis; the loss of hair and crusting of scalp, as in scalled head; the facial disfigurement, as in pimples and ringworm; the awful suffering of infants, and anxiety of worn-out parents, as in j milk crust, tetter and salt rheum—all de mand a remedy of almost superhuman virtues to successfully cope with them. That Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Pills are such stands proven by the testimony of the civilized world. Kentucky Breakfast Food. "What's become of Henry?" asked the neighbor of the Kentucky mountaineer. "Hen? Why, he's gone up to Michigan to work iii one of tYiem thah breakfas' food places. All he has to do is to put th' breakfas' food in one o' these hyah pas'ebo'd boxes." "In a pas'ebo'd box?" "That's what, he says." "How in time can a man pit a chew o' ! tubacker an' a jiggeh o' whisky in a ■ pas'ebo'd box so s Li• t won't spill?"— Bo ston Post. TeoMlnte and Million Dollar (irais. The two greatest fodder plants on earth, 1 one good lor 14 tons hay and the other SO tons green fodder per acre. Grows everywhere, so does Victoria Rape, yield ! ing 60,000 lbs. sheep and swine food per ai re. [K. L.J JUST SEND 10c IN STAMPS TO THE John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse, Wis., and receive in return their big | catalog and lota of farm seed samples. I Good breeding shows itself most where i to au ordinary eye it appears least. —Ad- I dison. I There is no remedv like IToxsie's Croup Cure for Coughs, Colds, Whooping Cough anil Pneumonia. No opium. .No nausea. ; All druggists, 50 cts. It is a terrible shock to us, when we have told a tnentl something that was told to us in conlideuce, to nud tnat he . has told some one else. —i'uek. Piso's Cure cannot be too highly spoken of as a cough cure. —J. W. O'Brien, 32'J Third j Ave., N., Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. (i, 1900. A good memory often comes in handy ! to forget with.—Chicago Daily News. i June Tint Butter Color makes top of j the market butter. i A man's best friends are his ten fingers, j —Robert Collyer. I"- jjCKTORIfi i ' ' 2Tor Infants and Children. MSTOifIA • The Kind You Have If- -^ll Always Bought AVcgctable Preparation for As- ;J| similatingiheFoodandßcgula- H _ M ting the Stomachs andßowels of JjGcirS tllß Jr t '"HI Signature f/\xr Promotes Digcslion£heerru!- h® w - 112 Ihg" ness and Rest .Contains neither ® wi JP «Br | Opium, Morphine nor>liiicra 1. 11l 01 gf a\ *\ IT KOTKAHCOTIC. Hp J5 V\|B» Jtxi'p? of f)ld DrStVtUELPITCKEIi 11 | Pumpkui S&ul m » 1 Q W ■ jilx.Sen/ux * 1 k flS| 1 /I _ KochelU ScJlx ll2 if: ifglLß n _ ytrtijtr Sreel + 1 '# A rT vi % J±ut>envmb - _ / '•••. |\ A Jl iL yy/ CariwHftfcScitd'* A ,j® I 1 ■ m ®■ ■ | HTFRP SCPCI - I JF| \ A ■ Ctfutfied. Wigar I JWA. if P ■■ / /If 112 II Q Q Aperfecl Remedy forConstipa- $1 112 )| fl* HOC Hon, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea |t I 1 Ajr ! Worms,Convulsions,Feverish- | I IT £* rt ! ness and Loss or Sleep. | IU F (J WUI ! ij FacSunile Signature of Thirty Years THE CENTAUR OOMPANV. NEW YORK OITV. 1 Cure Colds 1 by keeping- your bowels open. CASCARETS will do it without $5 a* grip or gripe and drive the cold right out of you. Just as soon >5 as you "feel like taking- cold" take a CASCARET— there is SB NOTHING SO GOOD. S Pi }£ ] [ J b f's A sweet bit of candy medicine, purely vegetable, absolutely harm- V< k'ss, never grip nor gripe. A sale of over TEN MILLION boxes «j§ ?i' a year—lCc, 25c, 50c—proves their great merit. Be sure you get j'j L$ CASCARETS, the only original, genuine Candy Cathartic. ;! Best for the Bowels I '5 §5 a | S * w ° to* WOMEN BREAK DOWN. Sometimes women drift into a con fl dition of "half invalid." \ Continual languor—all ' tired out, run down, backache, nerves shat tered, headache, terrible pain, no appetite, poor digestion. In nine cases out of ten it's because tlie kidneys fail to do their work of filtering' the poisonous system waste from the blood. The kidneys are weak and need the strengthening help of Doan's Kidney Pills. Read how these pills repair a weakened physical condition when this condition is caused by sick kidneys: Mrs. (Sadie Mettles of 394 W. 4th Ave., Columbus, Ohio, says: "Prior to the year 1898 I suffered considerably from backache, pain in the head, languor and depression and weakness of the action of the kidneys. The pain was always worse in the morning and 1 felt miserable. I was induced to procure a box of Doan's Kidney Pills and I began j their use. They proved prompt and effective. They cured me and there has been no return of the trouble since taking them. I owe all the credit to Doan's Kidney Pills." A FREE TRIAL of this great kidney medicine which cured Mrs. Mettles will be mailed on application to any p;irt of the United States. Address Foster- Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. V. For sale by all druggists, price 50 cents per box. i DADCI manufacturing TUI^|cOM^JjY Made Easy by the TWO-SPEED GEAR A new equipment of Chainless Bicycles Low Gear for up-hill High Gear for level stretches Any catalogue mailed on receipt of a 2-cent stamp. Western Department, Eastern Department, CHICAGO, ILL. HARTFORD. CONN. Llß— iii i ww—in i—ii id ■ i l ll iW iki" ' ii in rim 7
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers