IS LEARNING FARMING JOSEPH MEDILL PATTERSON STUDYING AGRICULTURE. Young Millionaire Socialist of Chicago a Student at Wisconsin Univer sity—Plans to Run a Model Dairy. Madison, Wis. —There came to the Wisconsin state university last fall a young man who told the professors that he wanted to learn how to milk a cow and plow and sow and mix bran-mash for hogs—he wanted to learn to be a farmer. This was nothing extraordinary, be cause there are several hundreds of farmers' sons there now taking the course in agriculture. Very many of them are earning their own way. Hut when the newcomer gave his na-me even the staid professors who teach the rotation of crops and the methods of preparing ensilage were surprised. The new student didn't need to learn how to work. He is a million aire and has an income now of $50,000 a year, with more to come. His name is Joseph Medill Patterson, Yale grad uate, who intends to live what he calls "the honest life," despite his fortune and his expectations. He means to do his share of the everyday labors of men less fortunate than he. His golf clubs are left to grow rusty in their bag. HH automobile has been disposed of. Society i" r i e' >ned book now. Whit ho purpoi P.: TO do ii) to S tablish a mo i I <li':y on a large farm near Chicago. He expects to supply high-class dairy products to the sick and ailing. To begin with, he is living the sim ple life. He took his family to Madi son. and they have taken an eight room cottage near the university. Any carpenter or dairyman could well af ford to live in it. Four or five times a day the young man walks over from his modest home to his dairy work at the university. The household consists of Mr. and Mrs. Patterson, their two baby girls and two maids. What little leisure the young man enjoys is spent at home, playing with his babies or read ing. Occasionally he finds time to write for the socialistic press. For these articles he refuses pay, but when he writes for the every-day magazines he demands tha regular recompense that would goto any writer. Just now Mr. Patterson is working so hard over the problems of scientific dairying and up-to-date agriculture that he hasn't had any time to write about his socialistic ideas. The course he is taking is arranged for two years, each term lasting four months. The other eight months of the year are spent in practical work on the farm. Mr. Patterson thinks he can get all he needs in one year. 1 hunder Castle to be Razed. Once Sheltered the"Three Graces," America's Most Beautiful Women. Baltimore, Md. —Thunder castle, the home of the Catons, the notable old buildings from which Catonsville de rives its name, lias been purchased by I Ty v&WP i&sf Sfi-v . fyi Wt?S ptiv'. N||? Thunder Castle at Catonsville, Md. former Senator John Hubner and will he torn down to make way, it is said, for a more modern cottage. The building is in the western part, of Catonsville. It was the property of a relative of Gen. Winfield Scott, and many persons have believed it be longed to Gen. Scott. The old general used to spend considerable time aft Castle Thunder. The old house, tradition says, was at one time the leading hostelry of Catonsville. There the stages used to leave many a weary traveler west ward, who desired a night of rest be fore continuing on. The property originally belonged to Charles Carroll of Oarrollton, first signer of the Declaration of Independ ence, and came into the possession of Richard C'aton through the marriage of Mr. Carroll's 16-year-old daughter, Mary Carroll. Beneath the roofs of Thunder castle have been sheltered three of the most beautiful women of America. They were the three eldest of Richard Caton's four daughters, ■who married abroad and were known as "The American Graces." Before the civil war a private school was conducted at Thunder castle by Mrs. Carrie Coale and her daughter. Since the war it has been occupied as a private dwelling. The building is constructed of stone. Several years ago a large frame wing was added to the structure. The old house is located on what was known in early days of the village as the national pike between Washing ton and St. Louis. It was the govern ment mail route through Maryland, the western part of what was then the state of Virginia and the states of Ohio, Indiana and Illinois, and was the fli'vx great internal improvement Dean \V. A. Henry has arranged a special course for him, and it requires 36 hours a week. The usual course takes only about half as many hours. The studies include the value of dif ferent feeds for livestock, dairying, livestock judging, plant life, soils, se lection of seeds, agricultural engineer ing, veterinary science, farm mechan ics and similar subjects. The young millionaire pays a tui tion fee of $42.75, of which $35 is be cause he is not a resident of Wiscon sin, seven dollars for general inciden tal purposes and 75 cents for the priv ileges of the general gymnasium. He is regarded by the faculty as an excep tionally good student and by his fel low students as an agreeable associ ate. Few of the latter, however, really know who he is because of the short time ho has been at the university JOSEPH M. PATTERSON. (Millionaire Socialist Who Is Studying to Be a Farmer.) and because of his rather retiring dis position. He mingles freely with the 3.000 students in the institution, meet ing many of them on the campus, in class-room, at the gymnasium and libraries. Mr. Patterson has bought a farm of 220 acres at Libertyville, HI., 35 miles northwest of Chicago, and will make his future home there. He is building a new house and a number of stock barns on it, and intends to stock it with thoroughbreds and make it a model farm in all respects. Mr. Patterson's father is Robert W. Patterson, editor of the Chica go Tribune, a graduate of Wil liams, and a son (if the late Rev. It. W. Patterson. His mother is a daugh ter of lii<> late Joseph Medill, one of the founders of the Chicago Tribune. Young Patterson was editor-in-chief of the Tribune during the absence of his | father in Europe in the fall of 1904. that the government of the United States undertook. HEADS NEW RUSSIAN DOUMA. Feodor Gclovin, a Constitutional Dem ocrat, Elected speaker. St. Petersburg . Feodor Golovin, who was elected speaker of Russia's new doumn, or lower house of parlia ment, when that body met and organ ized in the Tauride palace, St. Peters burg, recently, is a man of great ener gy, and throughout the long-continued reign of turbulence has managed to hold the confidence of the people. lie is n constitutional democrat and, al though this faction has only 100 mem bers, Golovin received 331 votes, against 91 for the conservative candi date, the socialists throwing their strength for Golovin. The new speak er represents the Moscow province. FEODOR GOLOVIN. (He Has Been Elected President of the New Russian Douma.) Ho is 40 years old, aristocratic and clever. During the regime of Grand Duke Sergjus he was president of the Mos'cow zemstvo and is said to be well qualified to preside over what threatens to be a stormy session of the douma. A Remedy. "See here, Bridget," said Miss Housekeep, "the dishes you have put on the table of late have been positive ly dirty. Something's got to be dona about it." "Tlirue for ye, ma'am," replied Brid get. "if ye only had dark-colored ones, ma'am, they wouldn't show the dirt al all." CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, APRIL 4, 1907. I PUTNAM FADELESS DYES cost hut' 10 centu per package and color more goods ] ! faster and brighter colors. What we have boon makes us what 1 we aro.—George Eliot Mrs. ■Wtnalow'* Sootbtnif Syrnp. For children teething, eofteun the gtinm, roduces to flaraniailuu,iliuyn jialn,curea wlnitcollu. &cat>ottlß Reticence has been responsible for many a lamentable failure. . A Natural Remedy—Garfield Ten! It is made of simple Herbs. Take it for consti pation. indigestion, Hick-headache; it reg ulates the liver, purifies the blood, brings Good Health. The average woman seems to think she is responsible for all her hus band's joys, but that all his sorrows are due to his own foolish actions. Have You Bought Mining Stock that has turned out worthless? You can save your money. We will tell you how. Address Investors Refunding Association, 42 New Street, New York. Another Silent Benator. In substituting Major Frank O. , Briggs for John F. Dryden New Jer- I sey will send another silent senator | to congress. It is said that Major Brlggs has never made a speech or writ- I ten a public document of any kind, i Nor has he had any legislative ex ! perlence. For a long time New Jer j sey has been represented In the sen i ate by men who have not displayed j forensic ability. Mr. Kean, who is I now serving his second term, has never participated in senate debates. DURING THIS MONTH. ! Excellent Advice Which Our Headers Will Benefit Ey. Now Is the time to get the rheu matic poisons and foul acids from the blood and system, states an eminent authority, who says that Rheumatism | and Kidney trouble are caused by the j blood, which often becomes sour from i excessive acids, and also tells what to i do to make it pure and healthy. | Get from any good prescription phar ! macy one-half ounce Fluid Extract 1 Dandelion, one ounce Compound ICar gon, three ounces Compound Syrup Sarsaparilla. Mix by shaking in a j bottle and take a teaspoonful after j meals and at bedtime. Just try this simple blood cleaner ' and tonic at the first sign of Itheu i matism, or if your back aches or you feel that tho Kidneys are not acting right. Any one can easily prepare this mixture at home. Statesman's Simple Life. Herr Bebel, perhabs the most im pressive orator in the German reiclis tag, usually speaks without notes of any kind, thinking as he goes. Not even well off. he leads the simplest of lives, shunning society and finding his ; chief recreation In t it cultivation of flowers. He told an it.fewer onco that when he wauts to get ready for a speech he goes into his little garden and trims tho rose trees. BUTTON THEIR OWN WAISTS. New York Women Have Surmounted Great Obstacle. Marvelous as it may seem, New York women have lately discovered a way of fastening their waists up the • back without calling for assistance, j Thought not lacking in generosity, they I became so tired of the outstretched j palm of the chambermaids that they I now feel that it is time to guard their J pockets. The Gotham woman discov | ered that if she put her blouse on I hind side before, with the sleeves : hanging free, it could be fastened | from top to bottom, with the excep tion of the hooks at the r.eck, and then turned around and the arms slipped into the sleeves without un duly straining the fastenings. So sim j pie! So strange that no one had thought of it before. Or is it possible ; other women have used the plan and meanly kept it to themselves? Will the waist that buttons in the back now have a new lease of life? GOOD NATURED AGAIN. ; Good Humor Returns with Change to Proper Food. "For many years I was a constant | sufferer from Indigestion and nervous ness amounting almost to prostration," writes a Montana man. "My blood was impoverished, the j vision was blurred and weak, with moving spots before my eyes. This was a steady daily condition. I grew ill-tempered, and eventually got so nervous I could not keep my books posted, nor handle accounts satisfac torily. I can't describe my sufferings. "Nothing I ate agreed with me, till one day I happened to notice Grape- Nuts In a grocery store and bought a package, out of curiosity to know what it was. "I liked the food from the very first, eating it with cream, and now I buy It by the case and use it daily. I soon found that Grape-Nuts food was supplying brain and nerve force as nothing in the drug line ever had dono ; or could do. "It wasn't long before I was re stored to health, comfort and happi ness. Through the use of Grape-Nuts food my digestion had been restored, my nerves are steady once more, my eyesight is good again, my mental fac ulties are clear and acute, and I have i become so good-natured that my friends are truly astonished at the change. I feel younger and better than I have for 20 years. No amount of money would induce me to surren der what I have gained through the use of Grape-Nuts food." Name given by Postum Co., Rattle Creek, Mich. "There's a reason." Read the little book, "The road to Wellville," in ptga. MAN OF DELICATE NERVES. Rc-senthal, the Pianist, Made Much Trouble in Hotel. Rosenthal, the pianist, is one of those entitled to have his crankiness termed "the eccentricities of genius," says the San Francisco Chronicle. When he inspected his rooms at the Majestic upon his arrival very late the other night, he went softly to the ad joining doors, and placing his earn close to the cracks, exclaimed In broken English, "Zgodd, no sounds pass thees." After nodding his ap proval of the grand piano and the fur ; nlture he frowned at the tan-colored window shades. "Must be green." He was assured that a change would be made especially for him the next day. At five o'clock in the morning Ros enthal, clad only in his pajamas, came scurrying excitedly down stairs and into the office, where the drowsy night clerk was nodding at the desk. "Ze street cars! Noise! Must stopped! Nervous me! I cannot sleep." The clerk hurriedly sent for Mana ger Gustav Mann, and Mann spent two hours telling Rosenthal funny stories in German trying to divert his mind while the clerk was upstairs squaring the mangement for waking a guest on the Gough street side and ordering him to move at once to the Sutter street side as a gas pipe had burst under the floor and bad to bo re paired ! A Big Bargain for 12 Cents Postpaid. The year of 190(5 was one of prodigal plenty on our seed farms. Never before did vegetable and farm secda return ouch enormous yields. Now wo wish to gain 200,000 new cus tomers this year and hence offer for 12c postpaid 1 pkg. Garden City Beet 10c 1 " Earliest Ripe Cabbage 10c 1 " Earliest Emerald Cucumber.... 15c 1 " La Crosse Market Lettuce 15c 1 " 13 Dav Radish , 10c 1 " Blue Blood Tomato 15c 1 " Juicy Turnip 10c 1000 kernels gloriously beautiful flow er seeds 15c Total .SI.OO All for 12c postpaid in order to intro duce our warranted seeds, and if you will send 16c we will add one package of Berliner Earliest Cauliflower, together with our mammoth plant, nursery stock, vegetable and farm seed and tool catalog. This catalog is mailed free to all in tending purchasers. Write to-day. John A. Salzer Seed Co., Box W, La Crosse, Wis. Found Out for Himself. Doubts being entertained as to the stability of the steeple of St. Michael's I church, Bath. England, the rector j climbed it and investigated. He is an | enthusiastic mountaineer. SIOO Reward, SICO. Tho rrartors of ttila paper will ho phased to >CArs that there Hut least ouc drcsidod dls«u»e that ncieuce has been able to cure In all Its stages. aud th«t Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure !s tho only pontile rare known to tho medical fraternity. Catarrh bclu: a cmstltutiouul dUeaso, requires a ceutitita tl -n.tl treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure !* taken 'tr torually. acting directly upon tho blood aiid inucojt surface* of the system, thereby destroying th«i foundation of the disease, and giving the patient rtrenßib by building up tho constitution and assUt- Ins nature In doing Us work. The proprietors have «<> much faith In Its curative powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any cane that It fulls to cure. Scud for list of testimonials. Address F. .J. CIIENIiV & CO., Toledo, O. Sold by all Dru&flsti, 73c. Tuko Hall's Family Pills for constipation. We attract hearts by the qualities we display; we retain them by the qualities we possess.—Suard. It Cures While You Walk. Allen's Foot-Eaee is a certain cure for hot. sweating, callous, and vvollcn. aching feet. Sold by all druggists. Price 25c. Don't accept any substitute. Trial package FREE. Address Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. Even a blind man can find trouble without much difficulty. ALL WOMEN I ffmn SUFFER ■*? I*3 from the same physical disturbances, Zjj - 'tR I' I |t>i and the nature of their duties, in S\l 7 TH___ I (/I many cases, quickly drift them into 7fl y the horrors of all kinds of female Yt? / complaints, organic troubles, nlcera- tion, falling and displacements, or lIV'A \vf/wLl\ Wt§t/ P erh . a P s irregularity or suppression \[ i c ? ,, _ ls '? 1 £ backache, nervousness, ir- Women everywhere should re member that the medicine that holds — —' the record for the largest number of MRS. A. M. HAGERMANN actual cures of female ills is Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound made from simple native roots and herbs. For more than thirty years it has been helping women to be strong, regulating the functions per fectly and overcoming pain. It has also proved itself invaluable in pre paring for child-birth and the Change of Life. Mrs. A. M. llagermann, of Kay Shore, L. 1., writes Dear Mrs. Pinkham:—"l suffered from a displacement, excessive and painful functions so that I had to lie down or sit still most of the time. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has made me a well woman so that I am able to attend to my duties. I wish every suffering woman would try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and see what relief it will give them." Mrs. Pinkham's Standing Invitation to Women Women suffering from any form of female illness are invited to write Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mats, for advice She is the Mrs. Pinkham who has been advising sick women free of charge for more than twenty years, and before that she assisted her mother-in-law Lydia E. Pink ham in advising. Therefore Bho is especially well quaiificd to guide sick women back to health. W. L. DOUGLAS/^ $3.00 AND $3.50 SHOES THE I WORLD f' - W. L. DOUGLAS $4.00 GILT EDGE SHOES CANNOT BE EQUALLED AT ANV PRICE. £?s £8& «pK SHOES FOR EVERYBODY AT ALL PRIOESii ! J Moil's Shops, 85 to SI .50. Boys' Shoes, 83 to $1.25. Wuini ii'a Ay Shorn, »4 to W1.50. Misses' & Children's Shoes, to SI.OO. <-« W.L. Douglas shoos are recognized by expert judges of footwear'i to bo tho best in style, lit and wear produced In this country. Each part of the shoe and overy detail of the making is looked after Js> and watcliod over by skilled shoemakers, without regard time or cost. If I could take you into my largo factories atpSjgSflEfc-. Urockton, Mass., and show you how carefully \V. L. Douglas shoes aro made, you would then understand why tlicy hold their shape, tit beiitr woar longer, and'arc of greater value than any other makes. W. 1,. T)oncla> name mid price l» stamped on I lie bottom, wrhirh protects tlic ffnarrr nrnlnrt hlirti prices and interior shiies. l iike Wo Nulistltute. Hold by ihe 1 "">1 shoe dealers everywhere. rait Culor l.uelrt) uicU cxcluHcelu. Culalog mailed frte. W. 1.. DO t U I.AS, Urocklo»,.<tluM. GAIL-STQKE CURE. "Craemer's Calculus Onre" " ti " z Is a Certain Remedy KOR GALL STOHEB, Stonesi in the Kidneys. Hfonesin the Urinnry Hluddprtr Gr.tYci. llillousnrss, Hallow Comidexion. Juuadico aud all Btorauch I'founloHi >su!llricr from Wlioußness. U rKn lor olreiiinr. \\ M.. LUABMKU* 4«00 North Mruud Avcuur.. iT. JLOLIM t MO. PE-RU-NA A MEDICAL COMPOUND In any medical compound as much depends upon the manner in whicn it la compounded as upon the ingredients used. First, there must be a due proportion of the ingredients. Each drug in the pharmacopeia has its special action. To combine any drug with other drugs that have slightly different action, the combination must 6e made with strict reference to the use for which the compound is intended. The drugs may be well selected as to their efficacy, but the compound ENTIRELY SPOILED BY THE PROPORTION in which they are combined. It takes years and years of experience to discover this proportion. There is no law of chemistry, of pharmacy, Dy which the exact balance of proportion can be determined. EXPERIENCE IS THE ONLY GUIDE. In compounding a catarrh remedy Dr. Hartman has had many years' ex perience. In the use of the various ingredients which compose the catarrh remedy,' Peruna, he has learned, little by little,' how to liarmonize the action of each ingredient, how to combine them into a stable compound, how to arrange them into such nice proportions as to blend the taste, the operation and the chemical peculiarities of each several ingredient in order to produce a pharma ceutical product beyond the criticism of doctors, pharmacists or chemists. WE REPEAT, THAT AS MUCH DEPENDS ON THE WAY IN WHICH THE DRUGS ARE COMBINED AS DEPENDS UPON THE DRUGS THEM SELVES. The compound must present a stability which is not affected by changes of temperature, not affected by exposure to the air, not affected by age. It must be 80 combined that it will remain just the same whether used in the logging or mining camps of the northwest or the coffee plantations of the tropics. A complete list of the ingredients of Peruna would not enable any druggist or physician to reproduce Peruna. It is the skiU and sagacity by which these ingredients are brought together that give Peruna much of its peculiar claims aa an efficacious catarrh remedy. However much virtue each ingredient of Peruna may possess, the value of the compound depends largely upon the manner and proportion in which they are combined. The right ingredients, put together rightly, is the only way a medical compound can be made of real value. SICK HEADACHE s —| Positively cored by PA BIT DC the ~° l,ittlc Pin 3' wM !\ 11 Iw Tbey g M trcw ® om Dyspepsia. 11> HH ITTLE digestion and Too Hearty pM 11/r n Eating. A perfectrem jj-J I V'LTI edy for Dizziness, Nauaen. IS PILLS Drorstness, Bad Taste iH_j| to the Month. Coated Tongue, Fain In the aide. 155S™"™H ITORPID LIVER. THEY regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable, SMALL FILL SMALL DOSE. SHALL PRICE IPAQTCP'CI Genuine Must Bear SPITTLE Fac-Simila Signature I PILL?. Bel-J REFUSE SUBSTITUTES* A Positive CURE FOR fcJ&M BAUft\ CATARRHitIw Ely's Cream Balm r i* quickly absorbed. Gives Relief at Once. J" Yk XI clean'ics, soothes, fa. heals and protects ilia diseased membrane. It cures Catarrh %ad drivesiiway a Cold in the Head quickly. 1 tks Senses cf Taste aod SmelL Full rizsSOcts. st Drnpgisu oi by mail; Trisrl eizo 10 c;». by mail. E&y Bsaifcoexj 6® Titgiia fffrwrt, Hew York. Lim TELEGRAPHY. R. R. Agency Work end Type-writing' Largest Sv.-fem <>f Telegraph Schools In America. Kndoi>ed bv Railroad Official.*. Operators alwav« in I demand. We secure positions for our graduates, j btudentscan enter any time. MAIN LINE RAILROAD WIRE IN SCHOOL Write for fr**e illustrated catalogue, terms, etc. ' THE MORSE SCHOOL OP TELEGRAPHY COMPAHY 21 United Bank Bldg., CINCINNATI, OHIO. F- , , I D WI £S INS i'TTfYYYTY'I 1 ffffi Jf Lifetime quality EISSpSSI IM Fences it. more sales" our motto, investigate, look over our etc. Write lor ouliilosiir, FiCEE. DWIGGIN* WIKK fK.XCKCO., &}f T)»!;«1na A»e.. Andrr«o«,!»d. MQTK Of Skin Tortured Disfigured Babies SHOULD KNOW tha [A^^§ Warm Baths With And gentle anointings with Cuticura, the great Skin Cure, afford instant relief, permit rest and sleep, and point to a speedy cure of torturing, dis figuring eczemas, rashes, itchings, and irritations of infants and children when all else fails. . Guaranteed abso lutely pure, ancf may be used from the hour of birth. Sold throughout the world. Depots: T/ondon, 27 Charterhouse Sq.l Paris. 5 Hue do la Piilx: Austra lia. R. Towns Ac Co., Sydney; lhrtla, B. K. Paul. Cal cutta; ('Ulna. Hon? Konu Drus Co.; Japan, Maruya, Ltd.. ToKlo; Ru.s.sia. Ferreia (Aptfka). M«><?row; Bouth Africa, Lennon, Ltd., Capo Town. etc.; U.S.A.. Potter Drue ACheni. Corp., Sole Props., Boston. fltfPoatrfrce. Cuticura Book on Caro of tho okln. Fertile Farming LANDS Cheap Easy Terms In the Best Section ot the South Unexcelled for General Farming- Stock Raising, Berries, Fruit and Vegetables. Cantaloupes, Strawberries, Peaches, Apples, Grapes, etc., give handsome returns. Cattle need but little winter feed. HEALTHY CLIMATE. GOOD WATER. LONG GROWING SEASON. Address G. A. PARK. Gen. Im. & Ind'l Agt. Louisville & Nashville R. R. Go. LOUIBVILLE, KY. PAKHTS there's money in^ lH 6 hi 1 I O SMALL INVENTIONS H an well a» larfce. Bond*for free booklet. ■ MILO H. HTEVISNS A CO., »O'J Hth Street, B Washington. 1). C. ItranrhfH at CblcaKn, ■ Cleveland and Detroit. ICstabliMhed lfcC4. ■ NO PATENT. NO FEE FOR OUR SERVICES £ EACH ARTICLE GUARANTEED ~ TTfXT IT"? 9P H° rse and Cattle Powder g* 8 « 52 II / Superior Poultry Food &UU I£j Certain Worm Powder and I»eant Covernnifint Serial No. 217. Send for price lint and literature. DAVID E. FouTE CO., Mfr«, Baltimore, Md. m W«i«o« T.. Coleman, Patent Attor rE& E r I N ncv - Wanhinijton. 1). O. Ad vie* m Bt*k ■ QhaSti H Ireo. Term*km. iii||bot<t ie( DEFIANCE STARCH A. N. K.—C (1907—13) 2171. 7
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers