6 INSOMNIA CURED Or. Williams' Pick Pills Restored Wrecked Nerves to Normal Con dition and Good Health Followed. The sufferer from sleeplessness too of ten resorts to habit-forming drugs in order to secure the coveted rest. But sleep obtained by the use of opiates is not refreshing and the benefit is but temporary at best. Mrs. 11. A. Fletcher, of 59 Blodget street, Manchester, N. H., is living evi dence of the truth of this statement. She says:"l received a shock of an apoplectic character. It was so severo that the of my right eye was af fected, causing me to see objects double. I was confined to my bed about four weeks, at one time being told by the doc tor that I could not get well. When I could leave my bed I was in such a ner ■vous state that I could not sleep at night. I would get up and sit on a chair until completely tired out and then go Suck to bed and sleep from exhaustion. "I had been under the doctor's care for six weeks when my sister, Mrs. Loveland, of Everett, persuaded me to try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Palo People. I began taking the pills with the result that I soon experienced relief. One night soon after taking them I lay awake only a short time and the next night I rested well. From that time I slept well every night and soon got well and strong. I have recommended Dr. Williams' Pink Pills a number of times, and my niece has taken them for weak nerves and poor blood and found them very beneficial." Dr. Williams' Pink Pills have cured many severe nervous troubles, headache, neuralgia and sciatica as well as diseases of the blood such asantemia, rheumatism, pale and sallow complexions and many forms of weakness. All druggists sell Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, or they will bo sent by mail postpaid, on receipt of price, BO cents per box, six boxes for $3.50, by tlio Dr. Williams Mediciuo Comx>auy, Schenectady, N. Y. Boston Society Fad. Dealers in pet stock say that su burban residents of Boston are adopt ing as the latest fad the raising of game chickens. The stately carriage and brilliant plumage of these bellig erent fowls make them valuable for decorative purposes on the lawn to people who would, however, never dream of putting their combative qualities to the test. The dealers are prophesying that before long the old time fancy of keeping gamecocks chained with silver chains on the lawns of country houses will be r© vived.—Boston Record. A MISSOURI WOMAN Tells a Story of Awful Suffering and Wonderful Relief. Mr 3. J. B. Johnson, of 603 West Hickman street, Columbia, Mo., says: t "Following an oper ation two years ago, dropsy set in, and my left side was so swollen the doctor said he would have to tap out the water. - There was constant ■ ' ;> v sen satio.'. aronnd my 'v-'-VF* heart, and I could ■- ! * not raise my arm above my head. The kidney action was disordered and passages of the se cretions too frequent. On the advice of my husband I began using Doan's Kidney Pills. Since using two boxes my trouble has not reappeared. This fs wonderful, after suffering two years." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co.. Buffalo. N. Y. Four-Footed Thieves. Tn Winchester, England, a grocei began to miss money from his till, and set his wife to watch. After two weeks the wife was not able to de tect the thief, though money was stolen almost every day. There were two clerks in the store, and the grocer finally called them thieves and discharged them. When two others had taken their places the money continued to dis appear, and the case was given to the police. An officer who hid under f 'je counter solved the problem. He found bits of paper representing about SSO that the mice had made nests of. They had entered the till through a hole in the baok and taken the bills one at a time. The two clerks who had been dis charged for dishonesty brought suit for damages, and the other day the grocer was compelled to pay them S3OO each. enlists for four years young men of good character and sound physical condition beiwccn the a#cs of 17 and 25 as apprentice seamen; opportunities for advancement; pay 110 to S7O a month. Electricians, machinists, blacksmiths, coppersmiths, yeomen {clerks), carpenters, shiptttters. flremen, musicians, oooks, etc.. between 21 and '65 years, enlisted in special ratings with suitable pay. Ketlreraent on threo-fourths psiy and allowances after 30 years service. Applicants must be American citizens. First clothing outfit free to recruits. Upon dis charge travel allowance 4 cents per mile to place ot enlistment. Bonus four months' par and increase In pay upon ro-enlistment within four months ol diseharKe. 17 H. ftAVY HK(KI ATATION, West 6th Htreet and Superior Av#». CLKVKLANI). O-. and U. 8. NAVY KKi KUITKNG V 0. Uuildirig, BUFFALO, N. Y. THE GREAT SANDTOWN TURKEY THEFT A Story of a Mean Man and a Mean Deed That Was Its Own Reward. No«-h Wamsklttle was a mean man; jne of those mean people who hate to jee others prosperous, even though it does not Interfere with them at all. He lived in Sandtown and raised turkeys, like everybody else. I-Ie earned a lot of money, because he fat tened his turkeys well. It was his only generous deed, for he begrudged even the food that he gave himself, and as for others! Well, Deacon Yan dertassel once said that Noah Wam sklttle was so mean that he would walk three miles to borrow a match rather than use one of his own to light hi? fire in the morning. Noah Wamskittle did not like Dea con Vandertassel at all, and he liked him even less after he heard this. So some days before Thanksgiving day, he went to a poor man in Sand town and said to him: "You know that we will all have to ship our turkeys to-morrow. Now, you have only 50 and if you do not get a good price for them you will be hard pressed for money this winter. Well, I know a way to make the prices higher for you. If you will go to Deacon Vandertassel's place with "I See It All " He Moaned. me to-night we can cut holes into his turkey houses and let all his birds fly into the woods. He will be quite un able to catch them again in time for shipment and the people in the city will be glad to pay you high prices for yours." The poor man, whose name was Bill Leggo, made believe to agree with the mean man. But really he did not agree with him at all, for he came of poor but honest parents, and was very much like them himself. So he devised a cunning plan. That night he went to Noah's house and said to him: "Let us goto do this deed. But we will have togo into the woods just behind your house and work around through them for sev eral miles, so as to approach the dea con's place through the underbrush in the back. It would never do for us to be seen." "That is a good idea," said Noah. "But I do not know the way through the woods." "I will guide you," said poor but honest Bill. "I fear, however, that you will find it rough going, for we cannot dare to carry a lantern." He took hold of Noah's arm and off they went, up and down and in and out, through thick and thin and thorn and swamp, this way and that way, THE FESTIVAL OF HOME. Thanksgiving Pre-eminently the Day of Family Gatherings. The good old New England festival of Thanksgiving is one that age doe 3 not wither nor custom stale. Original ly, and still nominally, a distinctly religious festival, it appeals to all, whether old or young, whether pro fessedly religious or not, and what ever may be their religious belief or convictions. To college and football teams the day may seem to be of special sig nificance in reference to triumphs or disasters on the gridiron field, but even to these it carries another and deeper significance which will grow with the years. And to those of ma ture years, men and women past 40, for example, this gracious, time-hon ored festival serves to punctuate their MQOSCOSCOSOCQGOOOCCOOCOQQOOCISCOOGOCCOOOOOOOOQCOOOOOO INCOGNITO. > Rooster—For heaven's sake, Btru t, old boy, what are you doing in that garb? Been in a wreck? : Gobbler—Psst! No; not so loud ; /ou know it is not wue for ma to recognized this time of year. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1906. twisting and turning, till Noah was nearly dead and only his great mean ness kept him going. At last, scratched and bruised and full of mud, weary and suffering, he fell into a deep mudhole, which, strangely enough, had been avoided cleverly by poor but honest Bill. "Never mind," whiGpered Bill, help ing him up, "we have arrived." Noah looked through the under brush, but he could see nothing ex cept a black mass of something in the darkness. "Those are the barns," said Bill. "Here, take this saw and saw hole 3 into the walls there and I will creep around the other way and scare the turkeys so they will come out." Noah, madder and meaner than ever, worked hard and sawed big holes, out of which the turkeys scut tled. Then, as Bill scared them up, off they flew into the woods until the whole big flock had vanished. As soon as the last one had gone, poor but honest Bill seized Noah and said: "We must hurry back and we must go the same way we came." "Oh, dear, oh, dear,'' groaned Noah. | But he followed, and once more ha was dragged through mudholes and creeks and over stumps and rocks until his shins and nose were skinned and every part of him was sore. At last they emerged on a road and in a few moments they were at No ah's front gate and the mean man hur- I ried to bed. The next morning he could hardly : got up, because he was so sore. But J he crawled out to feed his turkeys. When he got to the barnyard, his ! heart nearly stood still. There was j not a single, solitary turkey in the place. He stood with his mouth open, won dering. Then, slowly a terrible sus i picion entered his mind. He limped ; as fast as he could to the back, and, sure enough, there he found great 1 holes in the walls of the houses. "I see it all," he moaned, sitting | right down in the mud. "That vil i lain took me through the woods and ! back to my own turkey houses." He was quite right. When poor but honest Bill went by the house, carting his 50 turkeys to the town, Noah Wainskittle shook his fist out of the window, but Bill Leg go only laughed, and so did every body else in Sandtown when they heard of it. I lives, so to speak, and marks the pass 1 age of years perhaps even more dis tinctly than New Year's day or birth | days. For Thanksgiving is pre-emi j nently the festival of home, the day ol : all others when home ties and associa -1 tions assert their sway the strongest, 1 linking the present with the past and I binding all to the future. All who are ; happy enough to have a home and hearth turn gladly to it for rest and refreshment of body and mind, and, whether present or absent from the home circle, that is the center and in spiration of their thoughts. Perhaps to none is the day more full of associations and memories than to those who cannot thus join the home circle. The toller in the city or in the country, unable even for a day to quit his duties, still takes pleasure in thinking of those at home, and in im agination, at least, takes his place at the annual home gathering and shares the pleasure of the day. A NEW WAY OF SCRAPING FLOORS. Few people would have been willing to admit that a machine could have been devised to scrape a floor, get into every corner and close up to the base board, and bring a floor to a smooth and even surface, for one-tenth the ex pense that such work is done by hand. r J 112 ISI 1 *l, j The "Little Giant" at Work. Every house owner knows the cost of keeping hardwood floors in repair The "Little Giant" Floor ? raper will do the work of six men iu sjraping doors of all kinds. The Hurley Machine Co., of Chicago and New York, who manufacture them have over five thousand (5000) in use, and the difficulty heretofore experi enced in scraping floors by hand has been eliminated by the use of this machine. It pays for itself in one week. Contractors who have floors to scrape are lo«.ing considerable money if they are n jt using the "Little Giant." Catalogue und full particulars of this remarkable machine will be sent free to anyone. Write for it to-day. WHEN CUBA WAS FOR SALE. Offered to France for $6,000,000 In time of Louis Philippe. It is not generally known that Cuba very nearly became a French Colony in the reign of Louis Philippe, for Spain, being without means of raising money, Queen Christina of fered some of the principal Spanish colonies for sale. Secret negotiations were carried on at the Tulleries between Senor Cam puzano, the Spanish ambassador; Senor Aguado, the banker; Prince do Talleyrand, and King Louis Philippe, and the flrst article of the treaty, ly which Spain was to sell Cuba to France for 30,000,000 francs, or $6,- 000,000, was quickly agreed to. But the second article, relating to Porto Rico and the Philippines, broke off the negotiations, for Spain asked $2,000,000, whereas France would of fer only $1,400,000, King Louis Phil ippe asserting that the acquisition of the Philippines might very easily in volve him in a war with England. It is significant that in those days neigther party paid the slightest at tention to what the United States might think; but the Spaniards must now regret that they did not accept for it would have saved them many millions in the ensuing years.— London Sketch. A Well-Known Remedy. One of the oldest, safest and most favorably known remedies in the world to-day is Brandreth's Pills —a blood purifier and laxative. Being purely vegetable, they can be used by old or young with perfect safety, and while other remedies require increased doses and finally cease acting alto gether, with Brandreth's Pills the same dose always has the same effect, no matter how long they are taken. One or two pills taken each night for a while is the best thing known for any one troubled with constipation, in digestion, dyspepsia or any trouble arising from impurity of the blood. Brandreth's Pills have been in use for over a century, and are for sale everywhere, plain or sugar-coated. Cosmopolitan America. Is there a type of "average Ameri can workman?" Dr. Arthur Shad well, an Englishman, author of "In dustrial Efficiency," tells how in one of the older towns of Massachusetts he witnessed a procession of cotton operatives on strike. "They were marshaled by nationalities with a cu rious effect. The different types, cheek by jowl, stood out in vivid con trast—the French, the familiar Eng lish, the Celtic, the Scandinavian, the Slav, the small Portuguese and the swarthy Greek. Such a sight can be seen nowhere else. It brought be fore my eyes in one living picture the amazing cosmopolitanism of Ameri can labor and made me think with a smile of that convenient abstraction but almost mythical person of whom we have heard so much—the 'average American workman.'" Workman's Pride at Rest. Joseph Mowbray, who was building a chimney at the Westwood church, Kalkaska, having raised it to the height of 25 feet, and run out of brick descended to the ground. He had scarcely done so when lightning struck the church. The point where Joe would have been, had he re mained, was that at which the bolt did some of its worst work. Joe feels grateful for being out of brick, as had he been killed at work he would al ways have thought Providence dis satisfied with the job, and Joe prides himself that no man this side of Jor dan can build a better chimney than he. —Detroit News. Immense Pecan Orchard. Maj. John S. Horlbeclc, of Charles ton, S. C., is .said to own the largest bearing pecan orchard in the world. He has more than 60 acres in bearing trees and his main grove consists of 550 acres. Men are often capable of greater things than they perform. They are sent into the world with bills of credit and seldom draw to their full extent. —Walpole. FEARFUL PAINS SUGGESTIONS HOW WOMEN MAY FIND RELIEF. While no woman is entirely free from periodical suffering, it does not seem to be the plan of nature that women should suffer so severely. This is a severe strain on a woman's vitality. When pain exists something is wrong which should be set right or it will lead to a serious derangement of the whole female organism. Thousands of women have testified in grateful letters to Mrs. Pinkliam that Lydia E. Pinkliam's Vegetable Compound overcomes woman's special pains and irregularities. It provides a safe and sure way of escape from distressing and dangerous weaknesses and diseases. The two following letters tell so con vincingly what Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound will do for women, they cannot fail to bring hope to thousands of sufferers. Miss Nellie Holmes, of 540 N. Division Street, Buffalo, N. Y., writes: Dear Mrs. Pinkham:— " Your medicine is indeedanideal medicine for women. I suffered misery for years with painful periods, headaches, and bearing-down pains. I consulted two different physicians but failed to get any relief. A friend from the east advised me to try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound." I did so, and no longer suffer as Idid before. My periods are natural; every ache and pain is gone, anil my general health is much improved. I advise all women who suffer to take Lydia E. l'iukliuw's Vege table Compound." Mrs. Tillie nart, of Larimore, N. D., writes: Dear Mrs. Pinkham:— " I might have been spared many months of suffering and pain had I onl\'known of the efficacy of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Ask Mrs. Plnkham's Advice —A Woman Best Understands a Woman's Ills. Success in the Gulf Coast Country Here is an example of what YOU could do. SSOO Realized from One Acre of Onions. Mr. Geo. Hoffman, of Kingsville, Texas, planted early this Spring five acres in carrots. In March, he sold his car rots to Dennj'- & Co., of Chicago, for $5 per crate. His net returns on five acres of carrots were $320 per acre. One acre planted in onions yielded more than 20,000 pounds, for which he received 2 1-2 cents a pound. Result: SSOO per acre. Mr. Hoffman is not a m5 r th, hut a real, live, up-to-date farmer; write him at Kingsville and he will tell more about his wonderful success. Such results may seem beyond belief, but they are facts. You might do as well in the Gulf Coast Country. It has a mild climate; tender vegetables can be raised almost every month in the year. Tha farmer there puts his crop on the market in Winter and early Spring, when the price is highest. By irrigation he insures himself against crop failure; rivers or artesian wells give a bountiful supply of water. I wo and sometimes three crops a year are raised and twenty acres there will make as much as fifty acres in other places. Don't you think this is better than a one-crop country where your success depends on uncertain weather with irregular rainfall ? Come to the Gulf Coast Country and win success as others have done. Woiv the land is cheap and you can get it on easy terms. Twenty acres will cost you about SSOO. The cost of clearing it is about $5 an acre. The cost of water for irrigation varies. You may want an artesian well of your own ; you may get water from some river; or you may got it from your neighbor. But the cost is not great and those who have tried it have netted from the first crop, a sum which has paid all expenses, and left a good surplus. It is not only a good place to make money, but it is also a good place for a home. The sunny, mild winters are delightful and the summers are tempered by the cool breezes from the Gulf. 'OieMflterVegefable Oar^ftCffAmer^a, GardpcjfAmerica Let me send you our books describing the wonderful crops produced in this marvel ous country. Don't delay, write me to-day. JNO. SEBASTIAN, Passenger Traffic Manager, ROCK ISLAND-FRISCO LINES, 700 La Salle St. Station, Chicago, 111., or 700 Frisco Bldg., St. Louis, Mo. J Carpets pin l>e colored on the floor with' 1 PUTNAM FADELESS DYES. Aekyouc druggist. 10c per package. The man who laughs last fails to see the joke first. Mrs. WiiiHlow'rt Soothing Syrap. For children teetliiiiir. aoftenn tlin (ruma, reduces fa. tlaiiuualiou Allay* pain, cures wiud colic. -we u bottle. Worldly fame is but a breath of wind that blows now this way, and now that, and changes name as it changes direction. —Dante. Compound sooner; for I have triea so many remedies without help. "I dreaded the approach of every month, as it meant so much pain and suffering for me, but after I had used the Compound two months I became regular and natural and am now perfectly well and free from pain. lam very grateful for what Lydia E. Pinkliaiu's Vegetable Compound has done for me." Such testimony should be accepted by all women as convincing evidence that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound stands without a peer as a remedy for all the distressing 1 ills of women. The success of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound rests upon the well-earned gratitude of American women. When women are troubled with pain or irregularities, displacements or ul ceration of the organs, that bearing down feeling, inflammation, backache, bloating (or flatulency), general debil ity, indigestion and nervous prostra tion, or are beset with such symptoms as dizziness, faintness, lassitude, ex citability, irritability, nervousness, sleeplessness, melancholy, they should remember there is one tried and true remedy. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound at once removes such troubles. Kef use to buy any other medicine, for you need the best. Don't hesitate to write to Mrs. Pinkhaiti if there is anything about your sickness you do not understand. She •will treat you with kindness and her advice is free. No woman ever regretted writing her and she lias helped thousands. Address Lynn, Mass. Take a trip down there and see for yourself— that's the best way. Every first and third Tues day of each month, we will sell round-trip tickets to any point in the Gulf Coast Country and re turn, at the following rates : From Chicago, - - $25.00 From St. Louis, - - - - 20.00 From Kansas City, - * - 20.00 From Peoria, - 23.00 From St. Paul, - - -- - 27.50 From Minneapolis, - - 27.50 These tickets will be good 30 days and they will permit you to stop over at any point.