BACKACHE !S KIDNEYACHE. Cure the Kidneys and the Pain Will Never Return. Only ono way to cure an aching back. Cure the cause, the kidneys. Thousands tell of Doan's Kidney Pills. \ prominent merchant were affected, and I aru j night. I was languid, nervous and lame in the morning. Doan's Kidney Pills helped me right away, and the great relief that followed has been permanent." Foster-Milburn Co.. Buffalo, N. Y. Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Not So Long. There was so much ceremony con nected with a church cornerstone lay ing in New York city a few weeks ago that the moving picture machine man felt warranted to take a couple of miles of photographs. These pictures proved to be very good, and large crowds were delight ed with the exact reproduction of tha dedicatory exercises. "1 like the moving pictures better than I did the original service," con fessed a prominent member of the congregation. "You do," gasped a devout elder. "Tin surely painad to hear you say 30. Why should yo'j prefer tho pictures?" "Because the picture man," an swered the prominent member, ple43- •utly, "cut out ail the sermono.'* SPECIAL TRAINS. National Editorial Association and Christian Endeavor Conventions. Personally conducted special trains via the Chicago, Union Pacific & North-Western Line leave early in July for the Pacific Coast. Special all-expense tours at very low rates for round trip, including sleeping car accommodations, meals, etc. All the advantages of a delightful and care fully arranged tour in congenial com pany. Write for itineraries and full particulars. S. A. Hutchison, Manager Tourist Department, 212 Clark Street, Chicago. His Favorite Descent. "But why don't you care to take children?" asked the lady who wa3 hunting for a flat. "Because they take up too much room in the elevator," grumbled the despotical janitor. "Well, my little boy won't use the elevator. Will that satisfy you?" "No; if he don't use the elevator ha will scratch up the steps every time he comes down." "But he won't come down the steps." "What? He won't come down the steps?" "No; he will slide down the banisters." To improve the general health, take Garfield Tea daily for a time; it purities the blood, eradicates rheumatism and 'many chronic ailments and keeps the health good. Garfield Tea is made of herbs; it is guaranteed under the Pure Food and Drues Law. Garfield Tea Co., Brooklyn, X. Y. A Bright Man. "Yes, he is very bright." "Always •says the right thing at the right time, I suppose?" "Better than that; he al ways keeps still at the right time." PULE, WEAK PEOPLE MADE STRONG AND ENERGETIC BY DR. WILLIAMS' PINK PILLS. General Breakdown Caused by Defi cient Blood Quickly Corrected by This Tonic Remedy. A feelirg of general weakness, poor appetite, loss of breath after tho slight est exercise and broken sleep aro soino of tho symptoms of general debility. You may think that t hey have no relation to each other and that you will worry along, hoping all the timo to feel better EOOD. This is a mistake, for every ono of the symptoms is caused by bail blood, which must be made pure anil new beforo health will bo restored again. A tonic treatment is neeess.'iry anil for this purpose there is no better remedy than Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. Mr. ,T. <J. Havey, of 05 Willow St., Chelsea, Mass., says:"l was sick for a number of years from general debility and indigestion. I was never free from stomach trouble and my nerves were so shattered that the least excitement un fitted nie for auy serious work. My sleep was restless on account of terrible pains in the small of my back. These pains would sometimes liist for a month or two. My sight grew weak, there seem ing to bo a blur constantly beforo my eyes. I couldn't concentrate my mind on my work, and the attempt to do so completely exhausted me. "I was finally forced to give up a position I had held for twenty-eight years. After trying several medicines without help, I read of Dr. Williams' Pifik Pills and gave them a trial. They made me feel so much better and so much stronger that I started in business for myself here in Chelsea. I have never had a return of my former sick- Miss and cheerfully recommend Dr. Wil liams' Pink Pills as an excellent nerva ami] blood tonic." Dr. Williams' Pink Pills have long been recognized as an excellent tonics remedy in cases of indigestion and gen eral debility, where tho stomach and ether organs of the body are weakened and disordered simply through lack of proper nourishment. They have also been especially successful in curing anaemia, rheumatism, after-effects oft ho ip and fevers. A pamphlet. on "Diseases of tho Blood'' and a copy of our diet book will lie sent free on request to anyone inter ested. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills aro sold by all druggists, or sent, postpaid, on receipt of price, 50 cents per box, six boxes for $3.50, by the Dr. Williams Medicino Company, Sclieuootady, If. Y. |( w<wt«Eg SHED PROTECTION FOR BARN. Floor Joists Extended Six Feet Be yond Sides of Barn to Support Roof. An lowa correspondent sends a sketch of his method of attaching a shed roof to the side of his barn in such a way that it protects the doors and enables the owner to pass from one door to another without being obliged to expose himself unduly to severe weather, says Prairie Farmer. When the barn was built the corre spondent says that he had the floor As —\ Tffl ffl P Bi ill tj] ft ife ffl 61 fflTin* The Shed Protection. Joists extended six feet on the out side of the barn so as to enable him to erect this shed roof, as shown in the illustration. Rafters were used to connect the outer end of this joist with the siding so as to permit a half pitch roof. He is well pleased v.iih tho idea. BETTER HIGHWAYS. The Use of Tar and Oil in Road Im provement. In all parts of the civilised world men are testing various materials that can be used in road improve ment. In most countries the matter of road dust is something that excites the concern of people. It is one of the great inconveniences of living in the country. In the United States the country roads are all wide and all have more soil uncovered by verdure than in perhaps any other country. These wide roads give a large surface for dust production and in some local ities the dust blows in clouds from the roads, till the verdure is anything but green. It gets into the houses and permeates every nook. To get rid of this nuisance is a task worthy of our best thought. Some road experiments have been in progress in the neighborhood of Jackson, Tenn. Most of the tests were made on roads in the city, but some also on tho neighboring country roads. The tar was applied during hot weather to the repaired, cleaned and thoroughly dried surfaces of roads in and near the city. The tar was kept at a temperature of 200 degrees while being conveyed over the roads in a tank wagon, from which it was distributed over the road surface by a hose with a special nozzle and spread evenly in a thin layer by . laborers using stiff brooms. The tar was ab sorbed by the road in eight or ten hours, after which a light coat of sand or screenings was evenly spread over the surface and the road rolled by a steam roller. The average amount of tar used per square yard was 45 hun dredths of a gallon. The labor cost less than one-tenth of a cent per square yard. These roads stood well for at least seven months, says Farm ers' Review. The tar surrounded the stones and gravel and formed a hard surface about one to two inches in thickness. In other place 3 some experiments have been made with oil and tar, both of which are fairly good under right conditions. On tho dusty country highway, however, the oil is too light for permanent results, but tar proves to be very effective wherever used. BEANS AND CORN FEED. It Makes an Excellent Combination to Feed the Pigs. This is an excellent combination in pig feeding. Beans strong in protein and corn in fat. Young hogs thrive rapidly on such a combination. Prof. Shaw has this suggestion as to the preparation and feeding of beans. He says: "Beans can be fed to swine only in the cooked form. Tho pig seems to be unable to utilize beans which are at all hard or firm, even though they have been boiled for some time, hence it is very essential that they be thor oughly cooked. To supply a single feed of half-cooked beans to a pen of hogs, robs them of their apetites and relish for their food, if indeed it does not put them off feed. The cooking should be conducted in an even more careful manner than it would be in preparing them for human food. It will materially shorten the cooking period and give better results, if the beans* are soaked an hour or two, or better, over night, before tho cooking proper is begun. "Pails used should be rinsed after each feeding and especial care should be taken to clean the kettle or barrel after each cooking and not allow sour or moldy material to collect about the food receptacle. More than one case of supposed hog cholera has been traced to ignorant or careless neglect in allowing old swill to accumulate in a barrel instead of emptying the bar rel each time before the new mate lial is dumped into it." Harrowing the Corn. It won t hurt the corn to harrow it until it is three or four inches high, that is, if tco much trash or corn stalks have not been left in tba ground. CAMERGN COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, JUNE 6, 1907. THE NEW INSURANCE AGENT. He Comes in With the New Law—Paul Morton on His Opportunity. The new insurance law of the State of New York has opened up a promis ing field for both men and women with brains and energy in the sale-of life insurance. The law now provides standard forms of policies, each of which practically bears the hall mark of the State of New York, and this new order of things has established the sale of life insurance on a correct basis. The prohibition against rebating and extravagant allowances to agents has driven out of the business the old type of insurance agent, who in many cases virtually bought business, with large rebates, instead of selling it. His place is being taken by profes sors, lawyers, school teachers of both sexes, and others, who find that being a life insurance agent under the new system offers greater reward than their previous vocations. The law has ' reduced commissions but all of the | commission now goes to the agent, j Life insurance is something that everyone needs and under the pres ent system its sale is being conducted with becoming dignity and propriety. Paul Morton, president of the Equita \ ble Life Assurance Society, has taken ! the lead in building up an agency or ganization that is in keeping with the demands of public sentiment, and the standard he has set for his company. He says: "We want new agents, both men and women, but none except en ergetic, able and truthful people need apply. For such there 1J a splen'lid 1 opportunity." Mr. Morton's policy of injecting new I and vigorous blood into the agency force of the Society is meeting with success in all parts of the country. "Tainted Money" No New Thing. "'Nay, nay, nay!' said the arch bishop, waving a white, jeweled hand as the chief began to divulge some of his larger pians. 'Tell me not of thy wicked schemes! Thy methods T must condemn utterly, but if thou bringest me the money, well, 1 can at least see to it that it be not used for bad pur poses. And speaking of money, we need for the walls of the apse a hun dred bags of gold. Dost think thou couldst manage it?' " 'Ay,' said the Gentle Robber, and that night he despoiled nine men. lulling three that resisted longest, for he was a great lover of holy church, and a devout believer, nor could she ask of him any service that he would not perform."—"The Gentle Robber," In McClure's. Ghosts of Dead Lakes. In the great basin between the Rockies and the Sierra Nevadas lie the ghosts of many dead lakes. Riv ers still How down to the dry edge of these one-time great reservoirs and are licked up by evaporation and the Chinook winds. Of all the lakes that once lay there, only Great Salt Lake, Lake Tahoe and Rear Lake are left. The Southern Pacific rolls for 165 miles across the bed of what was once Lake Lahontan, and the passengers gazing idly from the windows may see the terraces and wrinkles in the crust of the fossil lake which nature robbed and defrauded of its crystal treasures ages ago.—Exchange. Return of the Prodigal. "I do play in tough luck sometimes," i declared the impecunious girl. "Last night, you remember how it rained. I happened to be in the neighborhood of some friends of mine whom 1 had not seen since the last hard rain. I concluded to call. Reforo they asked ; me in they grabbed the umbrella I carried, hurried across the room with it, placed it in a closet there and locked the door on it. "Thank heaven!" they cried. "At last! Our long lost umbrella!" Sunshine the Great Disinfectant, Let pienty of sunshine into your house. Sunshine is the greatest of dis infectants. It will also discourage "bugs" of all kinds, great and small. No room is fit to inhabit if the sun doesn't shine full into it for a couple of hours daily. Carpets and hangings? Yes, of course it will fade them. If you value your carpets and hang ings more than the health of yourself and family by all means keep out the sun. DR. TALKS OF FOOD Pres. of Board of Health. "What shall I eat?" is the daily in quiry the physician is met with. I do not hesitate to say that in my judg ment, a large percentage of disease is caused by poorly selected and improp erly prepared food. My personal ex perience with the fully-cooked food, known as Grape-Nuts, enables me to speak freely of its merits. "From overwork, I suffered several yea s with malnutriton, palpitation of the heart, and loss of sleep. Last summer I was led to experiment per sonally with the new food, which I used in conjunction with good rich cow's milk. In a short time after I commenced its use, the disagreeable symptoms disappeared, my heart's ac tion became steady and normal, the functions of (ho stomach were proper ly carried out and I again slept as soundly and as well as in my youth. "1 look upon Grape-Nuts as a per fect food, and no one can gainsay but that it I:aa a most prominent place in a rational, scientific system of finding. Any ono who uses this food will soon be convinced of the soundness of the principle upon which it is manufac tured and may thereby know the facts as to its true worth." Read, "The Road to Wt'llvllle," in pkgs. "There's a Reason." Krause's Cold Cure. l or cold in head, throat, chest or back. Rest remedy lor La Grippe. Druggists, 25c. It is frequently easier to be sure you are right than it is togo ahead. Improved Farms Within 50 Miles of St. Paul. ('heap and desirable for homes. s(r; profit for investment. Write ÜB. Evans ileal Estate < 0., St. Paul, Minn. Many a man has lost his mental bal ance by attempting to entertain two or more ideas at the same time. STATE OF I.S'I. CITY OK TOLEDO, R .. I.l'i'AH CoUTY. ( FRANK J. CIIENKY makes oath that lie ts senior purtuci of the llrui of F. .1 CIIENKY & Co., doing business In 110 City of Toledo. County and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HI'NDKEU DOIXAKS for each and every rasa of CATARRH that cannot be cured by the uae of UALL'B CATARRH CURE. FRANK .! CHENEY Sworn to before me and subscribed in iny presence, this Gth day of H. temUci, A. XJ., 18H6. ( —■ — A. W. GLF.ASON, j BEAI. J KoTARY PCBLIO. Hall's Catarrh Cure ts taken Internally and acts directly on iho blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonial*, free. F.CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. Sold by all Druggists, Jsc. Take Hall's Family I'llls for constipation. One Hundred Years Ago. Gen. Zebulon Pike was discovering the peak that bears his name. "The reason why I know I'm the first white man that ever saw it,"he said, "is that it hasn't got any patent medicine Bigns on it." Regretting that he couldn't spare the time to stop and dis cover the gold that lay hidden all around him, he took a parting look at the snowy summit of the peak and re sumed his toilsome march. Seven Billion Gallons of Milk. The 7,500,000,000 gallons of commer cial milk annually consumed repre sents an enormous white rivor pouring across the U. S. in every direction and yet. few people realize that it is fast becoming a veritable river Styx, for it is so disease laden that millions of people are day-by-day drinking disease in various forms from this greatest of disease-spreading agents. Chiefest. among these diseases is Consumption. Health office reports show that 25% of the Dairy Cows have Bovine Tubercu losis and through the milk and meat are dealing out Consumption to the people at an alarming rate. An effec tive remedy is recently claimed in the simple feeding Rasawa in small doses to the cattle. The remedy is cheap and a few cents worth procured at any Drug Store will render a cow entirely immune is the claim made in a free booklet issued by The Mutual Mercan tile Co., Cleveland, O. Ask your Drug gist for a booklet. "Whiskers." "■Whiskers" was a word formerly used to designate the hair on the up per lip. Scott more than once speaks of "whiskers on the upper lip" and so does Defoe in "Robinson Crusoe." Johnson defined a "whisker" as the hair growing on the upper lip or cheek unshaven; a mustachio." It seems to have taken its name from a fancied resemblance 'to a small brush, to "whisk" properly meaning to sweep, and a "whisker" having been a par ticular* kind of feather brush —also, in the slang of a former time, a switch or rod. In the seventeenth century a "whisker" signified among other things a brazen lie, a "whopper." BABY ITCHED TERRIBLY. race and Neck Covered with Inflamed Skin—Doctors No Avail—Cured by Cuticura Remedies. "My baby's face and neck were cov ered with itching skin similar to ecze ma, and she suffered terribly lor over a year. I took her to a number of doc tors, and also to different colleges, to no avail. Then Cuticura Remedies were recommended to me by Miss G —. I did not use it at first, as I had tried so many other remedies without any favorable results. At last I tried Cuti cura Soap, Cuticura Ointment and Cuticura Resolvent Pills, and to my surprise noticed an improvement. After using three boxes of the Cuti cura Ointment, together with the Soap and Pills, I am pleased to say she is altogether a. different child and the picture of health. Mrs. A. C. L.'estlin, ITI N. Lincoln St., Chicago, nl., Oct. 20 and 30, 1906." The better some people are the more violent the reaction. ImmTtUFFEBI ' / \ yoVi Many women suffer in silence and [f/ f.y-U\ Y\\ drift along from bad to worse, know -111 [ rf : : \ \vV we 'l that they ought to have I / nSSlIbw \\\ immediate assistance. I [■ ■ \\ How many women do you know I "' J: = r' .1 I who are perfectly well and strong? I : : - :r ;" * L ■ 1 I Tliecause may be easily traced to \ '■■ I I BOln t.' feminine derangement which 112 W T:-J HI manifests itself in depression of ' r ■ 1 111 spirits, reluctance togo anywhere L ,vJ II or do anything, backache, dragging sensations, flatulency, nervousness, I f//~\ au sleeplessness. \Vx / These symptoms are but warnings J that there is danger ahead, and tin less heeded, a life of suffering or a rvTT „ serious operation is the inevitable Imias oui.it FLORENCE WALSH reS ult. The best remedy for all these symptoms is Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound made from native roots and herbs. No other medicine in the country has received such widespread and unqualified endorsement. No other medi cine has such a record of cures of female ills. Miss J. F. Walsh, of 32ii W. 30th St., New York City, writes:—"Lydia 1| E. I'inkham s Vegetable Compound has been of inestimable value in V restoring my health. I suffered from female illness which caused | dreadful headaches, dizziness, and dull pains in my back, but your [a medicine soon brought about a change in my general condition, built R B me up and made me perfectly well." ™ Lydia K. I'inkliam's Vegetable Compound cures Female Complaints, B I such si backache, Falling and Displacements, Inflammation and Ulcera- B tion, and organic diseases, se is invaluable in j-rcj.-aring for child-bir«M B and during the Cliautre of Life. Itcures Nervous Prostration, Headache, « General Debility, and invigorates the whole system. m Mrs. Piikham's Standing Invitation to Women I Women suffering from auy form of female weakness are invited to gj write Mrs. Pinkliain. at Lynn, Mass. Her advice is free. Mr*. WlnMow's Soothing Syrnp. For children teething, softens the Ruins, rpflur.cn In fluniinatlim.aliayiii.ulu, cures wind colic. mcubouia. Love is fellow-service. Arthur Hugh Clougli. Perfectly simple nnd simply perfect is dyeing with PUTNAM (FADELESS DVES. 10c per package. Women love secrets because of the pleasure they derive from letting them escape. On her wedd'-i? day a young widow always wonde. how many men will commit suicide on her account. FITS, St. Vitus Dunce and all Nervous Diseases permanently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. Send for Free $2.00 trial botlle ami treatise. Dr. R. H. Kline, Ld.. 931 Arch St.. Philadelphia. Pa. We cannot understand a character greater than our own until something congenial to it has grown up within ourselves. —Whipple. To be on good terms with human na ture Be Well! Garfield Tea purities the blood, eradicates disease, regulates the di gestive organs and brings Good Health! Manufactured by Garfield Tea Co., Brook lyn, N. Y. Sold by druggists. Good Point About the Auto. Prospective Purchaser —I like the looks of this automobile, but suppose I should run over somebody and —" Salesman —"The springs are so easy, ■ir, you'd scarcely be jarred at all." ' _j For Infants nad Children. || 112 iSTOii The Kin d Yo « Have |r ™J Always Bough! filii PreparalionforAs- ~ § |S|iiß! BeaiS til ft M * \ tin § ti'gStomachsandDwelsof C Wh/ fJo lp,| Signature fJ kS> Promotes Digpslion£heerful-i n f //[ ! r ffi 0 c ncssandßest.Containsnciihcr vl /\\ llj "SSu Opiimi.Marphinc nor Mineral.: #i \\ If* Not Narcotic. y JJ lis: HecipeofOMDrSAMi'lirntm j |y' \ •terS ; , i ;l jfhrqpkta Sctd~ . \sL !»fft i 1 jt/x-Snuin * \ 1/ a R JibM/rSiUs- I _ % fl jft fefpO' utilise Seed * I #\ t fk \» £» «J ?'' ftmammt- ) I \ i j| * K 3 I PPilfl'ft 1 MuiiionulrSiia* I ill ft i m ktT.,5 MrmSeed- 1 li If W .. Eprrta l " Qarifml Sumr • 1 I H^| o HSnfaj/imiFlavor. > ! rTr ilj II Q A Aperferl Remedy for Conslipa c a » iigiftli tion,Soui-Stomach,Diarrhoea' I H; —, _ ilSffi jjj Worms .Convulsions, Feverish \ a Cam || n?#> m |SoV:S' ncss and Loss OF Sleep. v/ lUI UV<h 112 S3SI' 0 2 :l W2 FacSintilc Signature of n ■ ■ «• pi Thirtv Years E liSillh Exact Copy of Wrapper. THC CCNTAUH COMNNT, NEW YORK OITV. rn STRONG-DURABLE 1 Compact, all the parts accurately made, finely ad- Ml" justed and working together smoothly; and at the I same time, stronpr, well built, easy to keep in order and 1 light running these are the features you want to rag I find in a cream separator before you buy one. And (Bo ! JLs 11 CREAM W Iffv/ niM :: y SEPARATOR Lg © Mhl llJll]you wont have to look any farther. It has thetu all. BS \C® JrJM 11/ If/.---- —% That's why it outwears all other makes. » \t~~ r^' —" Durability is what the "cheap" separators lack, jjf» yet it is most important. We have received letters SB from many users of the U. S. Separators who have run their ma- K fcpj if : Chines everyday for 10 years and more with entire satisfaction. I I Our bijj, handsome, new catalogue shows plainly all about the GHB I \\\ construction and wonderful skimming records of the U. S. It Rgj; ,v Mi V\\ «\ will interest you. For frea copy and name of nearest local spiling B ff aimi agent, just write: "Send catalogue C Addressing / SL- JV VERMONT FARM MACHINE COnPANY, Bellows Falls, Vt. gftj . v\ Prompt dnllrortoH of U. S. Servirators from warehouses at Auburn, Me., Buffalo, N. Y. Km » Toledo, 0., Chicago, 111., L.iCrosse, Wis., Minnca|jolis, Minn., Sioux City, la., 853 —-j/| A, wr""* Kans.\s City, Mo., Omaha, Neb., San Francisco, Cal., Portland, Ore., Shcrhrook® JJI nnd Montreal, Que., Hamilton, Out., Winnepcg, Man.and Calgary, Alta. /¥£& Work of Trained Oar:r> cn. Eight trained oarsmen pulling s boat exert about two horsepower. A Positive VTR CURE FOR BAU\jl CATARRH Ely's Cream Balm §* PM it quickly absorbed. wSfJ Gives Relief at Once. 60c. Kly Bros.. Mi Warren St.. N. Y . BUY OHLY GUARANTEED GOODS I rnilT79o Horse and battle Powder rill I I / \ Superior POULTRY FOOD I WUIL U CERTAIN WORM POWDER , are each guaranteed and bear Berinl No. 217 L*. S. Dept. of Agriculture Efficiency, reliability and purity long established- Sold by dealers every whera. If interocteu I WitteTHE DAVID E. FOUTZCO, Mfra.,Baltimore. M«£ Canadian Government I Free Farms i/tDvi farmers who have set *'cc* 1 11 Canada during p* I| 9the past few yearn testi t.oll,<' 'act that Cana- I t j a i s# beyond question, ! the greatest farming land in the world. OVER NINETY MILLION BUSHELS I of wheat from the harvest of 1906 means pood j money to the farmers of Western Canada wheu the world has to be fed. Cattle Raising, Dairy- I ing and Mixed Farming are also profitable call | iiißs. Coal, wood and water in abundance; chinches and schools convenient; markets easy of access. Taxes low. For advice and information address the Super intendent of Immigration, Ottawa, Canada, or any authorized Canadian Government Agent. H. M. WILLIAMS, Law Building, Toledo, Ohio. MTBTSgSSgggS {■ Thompson's Eye Wate? A. N. K.—C (1907—12) 21 SC. 7
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers