Business Cards 1 inch apace, $4 a year. j Seamans & Koby Attorneys at Law Since sua Floor 6.1 Grsnby Building. \t/ GEO. L. TO BEY, $ General. insurance jp! If You Want Insurance, SEE ME I Hew Brick Hotel Well VenUl»ta4 I'.cuhdin Koumt Ktcum Heat Bath Room Lander House, John Lander, Prop. Special attention to commercial fniie Atlanta N.Y Heated by Steam. Lighted with The Naples J. X. Brown, Prop. Rates Reasonable. fcomple Room. NAPLES, N.Y ? - DENTIST > y .Modern Work at Moderate Prices. 112 \ Office over Evoritt's, Gran by Building. \ ESTABLISHED IN 1882. THE fjiraii) G.R. Granbu ll'l'd'q, AW,*, N. 1' ...Practice In all Courts... EDMUND C CLARK NOTARY PUBLIC WITH SEAL. Pension Attorney and Conveyancer AH Clerical work carefully doneatrea (enable rates. Twenty-five years exper ience. Office in Naples News Rooine First floor, Fox Block, Naples, N. Y. I BE SUCCESSFUL! , | I QTII HANDWRITING. IT WILL HfcCp i i I ° 1 VJ " you to select TIU'K I'RIKNDH j 0 Y mid to avoid deceivers. firapnoiogy F°° DK VON HAGEN S BOOK ••Reading Character FROM HANDWRITING*' It will teach you how not to fail 8-vo. bound in cloth. 14-1 illustrations By mail, postpaid, for SI.OO. GRAPHOLOGY PUB. CO.. QO3 Fifth Avenue, New York City ban A Paying Invaatmant HBJi tor Bill Heads, Letter Heads, Fine Commercial Job Work of All Kinds, Get Our Figures, NO MORE HEADACHE GENERAL WEAKNESS AND FEVER DISAPPEAR TOO. How n Woman WIIR Froed from Tronblei That Had Made Life Wretched for .Many Year*. The immediato causes of headaches vary, but most of them come from poor 1 or poisoned blood. In anunnia the blood is scanty or thin ; the nerves are imper- j fectly nourished and pain is the way in which they express their weakness. Iu i colds tho blood absorbs poison from the j mucous surfaces, and the poison irritates ! tho nerves and produces pain. In then- I mat ism, malaria and tho grip, the poison , iu the blood produces like discomfort. In indigestion tho gases from tho impure matter kept in tho system affect the blood in tho same way. Tho ordinary headache-cures nt best give only temporary relief. Tliey deaden tho pain but do not drive the poison out of the blood. I)r. Williams' Pink Pills on tho contrary thoroughly renew the blood and tho pain disuppears perma- 1 uently. Women in particular have found these pills an unfailing relief in head aches caused by anaemia. Miss Stella Blricker recently said: "Dr. ! Williams' Pink Pills did me a great deal j of good. I had headache nearly all tho ; time. After I had taken three boxes of these pills I became entirely well." "How long had you suffered?" she Was asked. " For several years. I can't tell tho exact date when my illness began for it ; came on by slow degrees. I had been 1 going down hill for many years." " Did you have any other ailments?" " I was very weak and sometimes I had fever. My liver and kidneys were af fected as well as my head." " How did you come to tako the rem edy that cured you?" " I saw in a southern newspaper a statement of some person who was cured of a like trouble by Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. My physician hadn't done me any good, so I bought a box of these pills. After I had taken one box I felt so much better that I kept ou until I became en tirely well." Miss Blocker's home is at Leauder, Louisiana. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are sold by all druggists. Besides headache they cure neuralgia, sciatica, nervous prostration, partial paralysis and rheu matism. CURRENT CONDENSATIONS The number of insane in London ex ceeds 20,000. Rifle bullets are now photographed in their course by means of the elec tric spark. The Michigan, "Old Ironsides," tho only United States warship in fresh water, will be dismantled. The locomotives on the new fast ex presses between Cologne and Berlin are built after tho American pattern. I The Jews celebrate this year the \ two hundred and fiftieth anniversary of their settlement in the United \ States. By buying tea in packets it is cal- 1 culated that in 190.'5 the British public ' paid tea prices for 5,088,048 pounds of I paper and twine. Addressed on the gummed side, a postage stamp, says the Dundee Advor- j tiser, has been delivered at Fife, Scot- \ land, as a letter. The water is so clear in the fiords j of Norway that objects one and one- | half inches in diameter can be dis- j tinctly seen at a depth of 150 feet. Electro-plated lace may yet he the : fashion. A French writer says that a complete set of ecclesiastical vest ments has been made at Lyons of these plated laces, and suggests that society people adopt them for ball dresses. When Children Are Truthful. "My little boy never tells a lie —" "Aw. come off!" "When there are visitors present; Wait until I finish, can't you."—Cou rier-Journal. EVER TREAT YOU SO? Coffee Acts the Jonah and Will Come Up. A clergyman who pursues his noble calling in a country parish in lowa, tells of his coffee experience: "My wife and I used coffee regu- j larly for breakfast, frequently for din- j ner, and occasionally for supper—al- j ways the very best quality—package i coffee never could find a place on our "In the spring of 1890 my wife was taken with violent vomiting which we had great difficulty in stopping. "It seemed to come from coffee drink ing, but we could not decide. "In tho following July, however, she was attacked a second time by the vomiting. I was away from homo filling an appointment at the time, and on my return I found her very low; she had literally vomited herself al most to death, and it took some days to quiet the trouble and restore her utomach. "I had also experienced the same trouble, but not so violently, and had relieved it, each time, by a resort to medicine. "But my wife's second attack satis fied me that the use of coffee was at the bottom of our troubles, and so we stopped it forthwith and took on Postum Food Coffee. The old symp toms of disease disappeared, and dur -1 ing the 9 years that we have been I using Postum instead of coffee we ' have never had a recurrence of the vomiting. We never weary of Pos tum, to which we know we owe our good health. This is a simple state ment of facts." Name given by Pos tum Company, Battle Creek, Mich. Read the little book "The Road to Wellville," in each pkg. COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 10, 1905. UNIQUE LAMB TROUGH. Swinging Device Recommended by a Correspondent of the Breed er's Gazette. There are a good many ways of plac ing grain before lambs in order to fos ter their growth, but the accompany ing illustration will give a new idea to many readers. This device Is skill fully designed to play upon the inquis itive nature of the lamb. He notices the swinging movement and in investigat -1 J j — SWINGING LAMB FEED TROUGH, ing is lead to taste the ground feed placed there for him. The man who designed the plan says that it works with marked success. In addition to this feature there is the minimum danger of the grain becoming fouled iri any way. In a late issue of the Breed ers' Gazette a correspondent gives the following directions for construction: Take two pieces of lumber, r,ay two by four's, each six feet long, allowing two feet togo into the ground; on top of these two timbers is placed a four by four, as seen in the sketch. Sus pend two wires from timber, B, fasten to trough as shown, a a. Let the trough hang 18 inches from the ground." BEDDING FOR HORSES. Needed in the Summer Time Just as Much as During the Win ter Months. Some horse owners seem to think that because it is summer and no heat is needed that a horse can be comfort able without bedding. Such men ought to try sleeping on the hire springs of their beds for a while, says the Mid land Farmer. Is is no waste of ma terial to make the bed of the horse as comfortable during the summer as in the winter; it is not necessary to be so liberal with the straw as on a cold night, but there should be enough so that the bed is comparatively soft. If one wishes to economize try the plan of buying a load of shavings fthe short ones), from a planing mill and use these in the stall several inches deep, then cover them with tne long straw or other material used. It re quires less straw and the shavings will absorb much of the liquid excrement. By using them liberally a top layer may be removed and the rest will do for a night or two. Do not, however, use these shavings too freely in the manure pile. Some will not injure the manure, but will act-as an absorbent. If one has too many shavings to putin the manure pile, use the cleanest of them in the hog pen or in the corner of the hog yard where the animals lie during the day; in this way they will be converted in the hog droppings to good fertilizer and without injury to the hog manure. THE ORPHAN COLT. Suggestions as to the Care of the Foal When the Brood- Mave Dies. If one is unfortunate enough to lose a brood mare at foaling time, and he has an orphan colt on his hands, the question is how to raise it. A couple of suggestions may be in order. First, the milk of the mare is much sweeter than that of the cow, nature providing for tho young thing the kind of food best adapted to its development, says Midland Farmer. Cow's milk, there fore, when fed to the orphan colt, should have a tablespoonful of white, granulated sugar added to each quart. As a matter of course the sugar should be dissolved in hot water before it is added to the mlik, but do not use more water than necessary. Every farmer knows that the colt takes a hltie n.'ilk at a time and takes it often. If there fore, the farmer is compelled to raise an orphan colt, he should adopt na ture's method and feed it about as often as it naturally feeds Itself when running with the dam. One of the most convenient ways is simply to take an old teapot and put a kid glove on the spout, puncturing the glove full of holes. After the first few days the time between drinks may be lengthened just as it is when the colt raised by the dam is left in the stable after she has gone to work in the field. It goes without saying that all milk fed to young things should be given at about the same temperature as that of the dam, say at aluut 100 degrees. Dipping Sheep. Dipping sheep as a remedy for ticks is the subject of a bulletin just issued by the Minnesota experiment station. Lambs suffer most from the ticks just after the older sheep have been sheared, as they then leave the sheep and take refuge on tho lamb. It is roughly estimated that a tick will take from a lamb four drops of blood per day, or possibly one-fifteenth of a fluid ounce. As many as 100 ticks be found sometimes upon one lamb. If only half that number lie taken the result would be 200 drops of blood b»- jng sucked from the lambs daily. WHAT SHE WOULD TAKE. Something That Would Enable Her to Escape Those Hash try Jokes. "Gimme a little cold polar bear," said the man in the basement restaurant to the Waitress who, having brought hnn a glass ot water, had stopped to get his order, relates trie (Chicago Tribune. "Polar bear's all out," she replied, with £ far-away gaze that went past hi* head wit limit seeing him. "Got any leed watermelon?" Want some?" "No, not if you've got it. llow about that piekled tongue?" "\S all right. U'u want that?" "Not any for mine. I'm married. Well, I don't see anything here on this hill that's cold enough for a hot day in Ju'y, except hot pancakes and coffee. Hurry 'em along will you? They are bound to be cold by the time I get 'em." The waitress swept away, still without seeing tin customer. He called her hack. "Here." said the customer, "that was just a joke. I want a boiled dinner. NVhut'll you take to laugh the next time 1 get funny?" "Chloroform." said the waitress, as she started for the kitchen. Voice from Arkansas. Cleveland. Ark.. July 31st. (Special).— Nearly every new-paper tells of SOUK* won 6i CO.. ilox 1%, Waslliugtou, D.(i . i M I y&lyf n |#4, Mw I '/f'r') I _ • '/✓-x/j A x V\ 2-N . -*»> ..a Instantly Colisvci' en:.? Spocdi'y Cured by Baths with Soap to cleanse the skin, gentle applications of Cuti cura Ointment to soothe and heal, and mild doses of Cuti cura Pills to cool the blood. A single Set, costing but One Dollar often cures. Sold throughout tlip worid. Totter Drug ami Clicnv. Corp., Boston, Sole Prop*. OuT Send for " The Great liumor Cure." Mftiktf Free. "Where Ignorance Is Bliss 'Tis Folly to Be Wise" In some parts of the world they still use a sharp stick and a cow to plough their fields and goodness only knows how they can ever make that kind of agriculture pay, even where labor Is cheap. In many parts of this glorious up to-date country the women still make abject slaves of themselves over the wash-tub, the same as their great, great grandmothers did more than a century ago. In the one instance, the antiquated heathen doesn't know a plough from a pumpkin and would be afraid to use one if he did. On the other hand, what shall we say of a woman of the present day who clings to the old method of washing clothes when the small sum necessary to buy a Majestic Rotary V/ashing Machine will save her labor, time, money and fatigue and give the most absolute satisfaction in every way. Write for a circular to The Rich mond Cedar Works, Richmond, Va. 7