A GREAT ANNOYANCE. Kidney Disease Shows Many Painful and Unpleasant Symptoms. George S. Crowell, 1109 Broadway, Helena, Mont., says: "1 was troubled J with a disordered condition of the kid- Gjpy ,3 neys, some backache jfy and Irregular pass i£9y ages of Becretiona. At v £i times I was obliged to get up out of bed at n 'sht, and the urine was unnatural rfWr' In appearance. On the advice of a friend 1 procured Bonn's Kidney Pills and began using them. This remedy helped me at once, strengthened my kidneys and corrected the disordered condi tion." Remember the name—Doan's. Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster- Milburn Co., BufTalo, N. Y. SWEETLY PUT. Myrtle—And yon never tire of push ing my board walk chair? Jerome—No. indeed. On the con trary, 1 feel like I am carrying every thing before me. Myrtle—Why, I am not everything. Jerome —But you are everything to me. As St. Louis Lawyers Talk. Circuit Judge Reynolds had a*- nounced that he would hear jurors who had excuses to offer for not serv ing, and a dozen American citizens crowded up to the bench to tell their troubles. Their excuses were as varied as those who were bidden to the feast that the bible tells about One had an important engagement and another could not hear very well, and another had sickness In his fam ily, and another had duties to per form which nobody else on earth could perform, and another was going on a journey. And so it went. The last man in the 'lne wanted to be let off because he was a German. He might have been excused if he had not presented his excuse wrong end forward. "Judge," he said, "I can't understand good English." "Oh, you'll do all right," said the judge. "There is no good English spoken In here." —St. Louis Post-Dis patch. They Didn't Have to Change. During the years In which our pure food laws have been put into effect there has been a great hurrying and scurrying on the' part of the food man ufacturers to change their methods to make them conform to the law. The Quaker Oats Company is a con spicuous exception. It was admitted that Quaker Oats was as pure and clean as possible and that it was an ideal food. It is so cheap that any one can af ford it and so nourishing that every one needs it. The result of last year's experiments at Yale and other points where food values were tested is that Quaker Oats has been adopted by many persons as their food on which they rely for adding vigor and endur ance of muscle and brain. The Quaker Oats Company meets all demands in the way it packs Quaker Oats; regular size packages and the large size family package; the latter, both with and without china. 4 Snake Story. "Before he went flishing," said the town story-teller, "he swallowed 'bout a pint an' half of snakebite rem edy, an' of course you know what that is? Well, after the snake bit him, the reptile cut all sorts o' capers, kaze the remedy went straight to its head. Last thing it tried to do wuz to ewal ler its tail, an' it got itself In the form of a hoop, an' I'm a liar ef the chil dren didn't roll it around all day!"— Atlanta Constitution. STAT* or Onio Crrr OP TOLEDO, I LLC A.4 COUNTY. F M FRANK J. CHE.NET makes oath that h« ts KrrA'a Eartner of the firm of I'. J. CIIE.NET A Co.. dotrif urlness In the City of Toledo. County and Hun aforesaid, and that pe.ld firm will pay the sum tl ONE Iff"NDFTI:i> JjOLLAUS for earh and every case of CATARRH that eaanot be cured by the use 01 HALI.'S CATARRH CURE. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed In my presnc* this 6th day of December, A. D.. 1880. J —I A. W. OI.EASO'r, 1 * E * T- F NOTARY I'U'IUO, Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally and »CT» directly UPON the blood and mucous surfaces of TH* •yttcm. Send for testimonials, free. F. I. CHENEY 4 CO.. Toledo. <X Sold t>r all Drucctstfl. 75c. Taiie Hall's Family Fills for constipation. She Took a Pair. "How much are these shoes?" ashed the lady who had the reputation of being a keeii shopper. "Those shoes are not for sale," re plied the salesman, who had some thing of a reputation, too; "we're /jiv ing them away with every pair ol shoe laces at s3.so."—Judge. Shake Into Your Shoe# Allen's Foot-Ease, the antiseptic powdnr. It makes tight or new shoes feel easy. Al is a certain cure for sweating, callous an.) hot. tired, aching feet. Alwuvs use it to Hreak in new shoes. Sold by all Druggists. 25c. Trial package mailed Free. Address Allen S. Olmsted, LeJioy # Ntjw York. Sure Sign of Love. "So you think he's really i n love, eh?" "No doubt about it. Why, he think« she's attractive in auto goggles." The people who don't want to «Uy little must read big books. FRUIT TREES PRUNED JUDICIOUSLY ALL YEAR Good Working Implements Are the First Essential—Begin Work on the Ground and Continue on Up to the Top. How to Prune Fruit Trees. Fruit trees may Judiciously be pruned the whole year around, but the time when the work can be most eas ily done commences with the drop ping of the leaves in the fall and ends with the appearance of the new growth in spritig, writes Gerhard Kol ligs in Garden Magazine. Tools for pruning season pruning scissors, pruning saw, knife, and, for tall trees, the long-handled pruning hook —must be kept sharp and the scissors and hook also lubricated. Besides these tools it is desirable to have a three legged stepladder, which is especially constructed for orchard use. Before starting to prune, consider what you are going to do. Take a good look at the tree about to be pruned and make your plans. The actual work commences on the ground. Water shoots springing from the ground should not be cut oft mere ly on the level with the ground's sur face —dig down to the origin of them and cut close to the root or stem, or wherever they may spring from. This dene, remove or mend all broken branches. Always aim to close up pmpty spaces caused by broken limbs. You may do this by bending and tying certain limbs, or by en couraging the growth of neighboring branches. Walk around the tree and short en last year's growth on the lower branches about one-third, always aim ing toward giving a circular shape to the whole tree. Take the step ladder and again go around the tree, trim ming last year's growth higher up but somewhat shorter than on the lower branches. So continue to the top of the tree, going around it several times until, when finished, the tree presents an almost globular shape, the top branches being shortened to less than a quarter of their previous year's growth. Never attempt to save time by pruning the entire height of the tree on one side; if you do this you will certainly give the tree an ugly shape. The higher up you go, the oftener will it be necessary to cut out, of two or three branchlets, one or even two. In this case cut out the weaker ones or those growing to the inside of the tree, provided they are not necessary to fill empty spaces. This is the pruning of aa orchard tree, which has been attended to reg ularly every year. It is more difficult to prune a tree which has been neg lected for two or more years, and it is very difficult to bring an unshapely tree to a presentable appearance. Trees allowed to grow ad libitum for two or more years will sometmes need heavy cutting back. The more straggling and irregular the growth and the more slender and numerous the branches, the more heavily the tree has to be pruned. On stone fruit trees it is not advis able to cut back to the old wood and this should never be done except in the case of a broken limb. If such is the case, be sure the wound is closed with paint, wax or tar. On apples or pears you may, without injury to the tree (provided it is attended to regu larly afterward), cut off the growth of several seasons, but always see that you cut above dormant buds. Dor mant buds, situated at the base of each year's growth, are often hardly noticeable. Above them fruit buds may have formed very conspicuously. It seems a pity to cut them away, but what good would they do? They will only produces small fruit, or, by the amount of the fruit produced, will break the branches which are too weak to support the weight. Confronted with a tree out of shape or of too thick a growth, remove first the branches growing to the inside and even to the opposite side of the tree, unless by removing them you cause on open space. But such a branch, having been allowed to grow from one side of a tree to the other, and which could not be dispensed with this year, ought to be treated in a way to allow its removal in a suc ceeding year; that is, the branches must be trimmed in order to allow the growth of the neighboring branches dose in and gradually fill the space fken up by this perverse one. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1909. Then the tree may still have too many branches. In removing them, avoid cutting entire branches origin ating directly from the trunk, which would make large wounds. By not healing over quickly these wounds would eventually makes holes in the trunk. Of course such branches ought to have come off while the tree was young, but now it is too late. Be satisfied, therefore, with thinning out the smaller branches, taking care that air and light can sufficiently pen etrate to all parts of the tree and that fruit bud development is en couraged on parts which, in the com ing summer and fall, will be able to support the weight of the rfuit. All this having been done, it will nevertheless be important to pick over the fruit after it has fairly well formed. Break out all the small and unsightly fruit; it is certainly more profitable, be it from the commercal standpoint or simply for home use, to have one big, juicy, well-formed, well-colored and well-ripened apple than four or live small, unsightly and unsavory ones. POISON SPRAYS BENEFIT APPLES Those Who Use Arsenate of Lead Use Too Much at a Time and Usually Spray Too Often. It is very desirable to grow apples free from worms. The codling moth ife the insect that lays the eggs in the blossoms from which the worms are hatched. Arsenical poison sprayed on the blossoms is eaten by the young codling moth wor#ns and they die be fore doing any damage. A great many fruit growers do not spray at all for the codling moth. It has been found, however, by expe rience that those who do spray with arsenate of lead use too strong a solu tion, apply too much at a time and usually spray too often. Four pounds of arsenate of lead to 100 gallons of water make an amply strong solution. A greater proportion of the poison is an actual detriment and waste. The apple tree does not have to be soaked with the poison mixture to kill the larvae of the moth. The minut est drops of the liquid on the calyx of each blossom will effectually do the work. The fineness of the spray is no more importance than the quant ity used. Each blossom shoud re ceive a little. Some in spraying apply so much of the liquid that it runs down the branches and trunks to the roots of the trees, where it does injury. In most cases t\yo or three pounds of arsenate of lead to 100 gallons of water makes a solution strong enough to destroy all of the worms if applied in the right way. Two sprayings at the right time are sufficient, and a saving of material and labor. The general notion that arsenical poison on the trunk and branches of trees is beneficial is a mistake. On the other hand, they do poistive injury, and many trees thus treated die from pois oning. Don't Let Soil Crust. Do not let the soil form a crust. It is at such times that the evaporation of the moisture is very rapid. Run the cultivator through the corn to prevent this condition, and the often er it is cultivated the better the crop will do. Such cultivation puts a fine dust mulch upon the surface which ef fectually prevents evaporation except at a very slow rate. Anyone that has examined a well-cultivated field has been stuck by the dryness of the surface, and only a few inches below it was almost wet enough to make mud balls. After every rain it Is necessary to break up the crust that forms. In this way moisture enough may be accumulated to tide over the period when it is needed most. A little shower often does con siderable damage by destroying the dust mulch, and it shouJ- 1 . be restorad as soon as possible. plgl"©MEM LIFE. and afternoon and night, Forenoon and afternoon and night. Forenoon and—what! The empty song repeats itself. No more? Yea, that is Life! Make this forenoon sublime, Tills afternoon a Psalm, this night a prayer, And Time is conquered and thy crown is won. —Eduard Rowland Sill. Entertaining Guests in the Home. Did you ever have a guest at your table "that couldn't eat this," and" it runs in our family to never like that?" If so, you have met one of the Waterloo's of entertaining. If not, yon have escaped a most disagreeable situation. Of course there are people with idiocyncrasies who must be fa vored, but the majority of people who balk at foods of different kinds, do so because in their youth they have not been trained to enjoy all kinds of food. Children who will not eat certain vegetables and are sup plied with other things which they like will never learn to like those foods. The lazy indulgent parent who will thus pamper a child to his hurt are the ones responsible for this state of affairs. A person may not always relish equally well all foods but there are none that may not be reasonably en joyed if the taste is cultivated. Train up a child in the way he should go and when he is a guest he will not de part from It. A gracious guest is as important as a gracious hostess and unselfishness is as important a matter to be consid ered in entertainment as it is in other phases of life. "Put yourself in his place," and the golden rule might well be the slogan for the entertained as well as the entertainer. Household Hints. Add one cupful of chopped prunes to the brown bread. The prunes add to the flavor as well as to the nutri tive value of the bread. Kerosene is one of the best agents for cleaning sinks and bath tubs as there is no danger of wearing or scratching the enamel. The odor is the objection and that soon disap pears. Use leftover breakfast foods In griddle cakes and gems. It is a de cided addition. to be what you are am. learn to resign with a good Krace all that you are not, and to be lieve in your own individuality."—AmieL So much to do that Is not e'en begun So much to hope for that we cannot see So much to win, so many things to be. —Wm. Morris. A Remedy for Dyspepsia. This is a remedy so simple that It will be hard to convince the conserv atives that just plain water is the agent. Drink from one to three pints ot water one hour before each meal, then seat yourself comfortably in the rocking chair and rock. The rocking will agitate the water in the stom ach, washing its walls and cleansing it thoroughly. The water will be ab sorbed in a short while, leaving the stomach toned up to receive the food and digest it. Get the rocking chair habit. Thorough mastication of the food is another valuable aid in curing dyspep sia. Fletcherizing it is called from the man who has made that operation to mean so much. Masticate the food until it swallows itself. Children may be taught this habit early and it will mean much to them in sound bodies in after life. Things a Woman Wants to Know. A flavoring which is unusual and very nice for a change is made by nixing together in a bottle one tea spoonful of almond extract with five teaspoonfuls of vanilla. Use as usual, a teuspoonful at a time. Spices for flavoring; mix two ounces each of cloves, cinnamon, mace, nutmeg, one ounce of ginger and three ounces of sugar, sift until well blended and 'place in an airtight jar. This spice may be used for cakes, rocks, etc. When wanting a little onion juice for a salad or dressing, cut a slice from the root end of a small onion, then twist the onion a few times on a grater near the side so that the juict may run down the groove on the grater. When sweeping, dampen newspa pers, tear into bits and scatter over the rug or carpet. The paper holds the dust. /LGsC-CcA*-* - Wet Napkins in China. Immediately after eating the Chi nese rinses his mouth out with hot water and the hands and face are wiped with a hot, wet napkin. Every body in China can cook well, and inex pensively, too, although the proper cooks in the family are the women. Steam bread is preferred to baked.— Indianapolis News. t She —I am so foolish about holding resentment. I am always making up. He—Yes, 0110 can tell tliat by you) tv:v. NO FRIENDS. Cashier —You'll have to bring some one to identify you before we can cash this check. Got any friends in the town? Stranger—Not one. I'm the tax col lector. PAINT FAULTS. It is a common occurrence nowa days to hear a man remark with dis gust: "It is impossible to have good painting done these days; either the paint is not good or there are no good painters." This, however, is not true. There is good paint, and there are good painters. But the question is, bringing them together. One cannot expect a satisfactory painting job without pure white lead. There is a way to make sure you are getting pure white lead without test ing it. See that the keg bears Na tional Lead Company's famous Dutch Boy Painter trademark, which is a positive guarantee of purity. However, anyone can test white lead. National Lead Company, 1902 Trinity Bldg., New York City, will send you a lead tester and painter's outfit, consisting of book of color schemes, specifica tions, etc., upon request Changed Farm Life. The dull silence that hung over that New England dinner table has been lifted of late. It is gone like the dew in the sunlight of the new social influences. The isolation of the farm was the chilling cause that drove men into the cities. Now, by telephone and free mail delivery, all the warm world currents are being carried to the country and are vitalizing the ru ral community into a life that is rich and abundant in the variety of its in terests. A real heart hunger has been answered. Over hill and down dale flashes the impulse that electri fies existence with the thrill of human life touching other human life. —De- lineator. Puzzle for the Girls. Every instructor at Chautauqua is required to fill out a paper answer ing a number of necessary and un necessary questions. One year there was a remarkably handsome male member of the faculty in whom all the girl students were much interest ed. "Is he married or unmarried?" became an all-absorbing question. Finally some of them had the courage to approach the college secretary and ask if the files might be looked over. And there the handsome professor, an ticipating some such investigation had recorded his matrimonial pretensions as follows: "Married or single?— Yes." Good Roads Mean Money. The people need to be educated to the fact that money spent for good roads is not money thrown away, whereas money spent for makeshift improvements is worse than thrown away.—Louisville Courier-Journal. If Your Eyes Bother You get a box of PETTIT'S EYE SALVE, old reliable, most successful eye remedy made. All druggists or Ilowaxdßros., Buffalo, N. Y. The devilish thing about worry i 9 that it never counts on God's help. Mr*. "Wlnslow'B Soothing Syrup. For children teething, uoftooH the rupi6, reduces In- Humiliation, allays palu, cures wind colic. 2&c a bottle. The shadow of a trouble is often blacker than the trouble itself. Are Your Bank Deposits 8 ,10 ofi2%? If not, let me send you particulars about the safest and most profit able investments offered United States Gold Coin Bonds "Safest and most profitable." Let me convince you C.E.BRYAN, P.O. Box 728, Dept. C, Chicago Just Lather and Shave NO STROPPING NO HONING a, - - >J v 9 ►Jjj for burns, scalds, carbuncles, shingles, ringworm and a certain cure for % ►J Itching and Inflamed piles. 50 cents a jar, all druggists or sent direct on receipt of price. X RESINOL CHEMICAL COMPANY, BALTIMORE. MD. }«{ I recommend Resinol Ointment to all of my patients and friends for Eczema and *3 A other skin affections. Francis A. Groves, Nurse, Boston, Mass. a r " DISTEMPER |aafe it-*/ \ \ Buro cure and poeltlre preventive, no matter how homos at auy ago aro Infected of Tj) * 1 till "ex posed." Liquid, gl von on the tongue, acts on the Blood and Ulauds; expels the iTtLl* I .X' tKilsntioue germs from Iho body. Cures-Distemper In I>okh and Hhoop and ( holera In iyH «• +]Q'i Poultry. Laraotft soiling llvo*tock remedy. Cures la* Grippe among human bolnge VxvV * u d Is a line Kidney remedy. BOeandfl a bottle. i 6 and 110 a dosen. Cut thin out. Keep it. Show to your druggist. who will get It for you. Free Booklet, '* Distemper, Cause® vy audCurea." bpocln.l agents wanted. SPOHN MEDICAL CO.. GOSHEN, IND., U. S. A. DOCTOR ADVISED OPERATION Cured by LydiaE.Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Paw Paw, Mich.—" I suffered terrl "Tr.vv". — bly from female ills, '43 including inflam £-v f - M matiou and conpes- K < tion, for several years. My doctor jjfr ' ■'.%? said there was no §b i hope for me but an W |fg§P W jf 4 operation. I began K4, taking Lydia E. cjM Pinkham'a Ycgeta- SPlllppfc* ' 41fp Compound, and wp&mid'i' i "'i I can now say lam ■ | a well woman." I - EMMA DISAPEB. Another Operation Avoided. Chicago, 111. —"I want women to know what that wonderful medicine, Lydia E. Pinkham'a Vegetable Com pound, has done for me. Two of the best doctors in Chicago said I would die if I did not have an operation, and I never thought of seeing a well day again. I had a small tumor and femala troubles so that I suffered day and night. A friend recommended Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and it made me a well woman."—Mrs. ALVENA STEKLINO, 11 Langdon St, Chicago, 111. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- Sound, made from roots and herbs, as proved to be the most successful remedy for curing the worst forms oi! female ills, including displacements, inflammation, fibroid tumors, irregu< larities, periodic pains, backache, bear, ing-down feeling, flatulency, indiges tion, and nervous prostration. It costa but a trifle to try it, and the result has been worth millions to many suffering women. SICK HEABAOIE A . Positively cured by CARTERS >MM They also relieve Dl®» 888 ITTLE tresH from Dyspepsia, In* jpJT | I iip |% digestion and Too Heart/ Kg IVrfc R Eating. A perfect rem* n| nil I A eJ y Dizziness, Nov jf3 ■ I fctarSr* w» * c &> Drowsiness, Bad Ta*te In the Month, Coat* ed Tonpue, Pain in tb# ■HIWtfWWM Iside, TORPID LIVES* They regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable* SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE. PADTCD'c! Genuine Must Bear UAKILKo Fac-SimileSignaturo fSlfe mmM I REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. 30 ft. Bowels— Biggest organ of the body —the bowels—and the most important— It's got to be looked after —neglect means suffering and years of misery. CASCARETS help nature keep every part of your bowels clean and strong—then they act right —means health to your whole body. Ml CASCARKTS ioc a box for a week's treat ment. All drufjßists. Kijfgest seller in the world Million boxes a month. '^ 3 ' s Trade-mark \ \ Eft m i na * es AH Uncertainty in the purchase of JPpSjffi«r=j It is an absolute guarantee of pun. ity and quality. wESsii- F° r your own protection, see that it is on the side of every keg of white lead /j£ ? y NATIONAL LEAD COMPANY (JSP 1902 Trinity Building. New Tort C A I C—A 700 acre farm, hiithly Im r vbb OMLC proved with 200 acres of growing corn, situated in Piies County. Call on or address K. 1). Morgan, Assignee, First National Bank Building, Columbus, Ohio. 1% BVP&IVA Wnt«oiiF.rolemnn,Wft«b» I N 1 ingioti, D.C. Booksfree. Hlab. I I fenll ■ W eat references. Best reauiUk DEFIANCE Cold Wafer Starch makes laundry work a pleasure. 10 02. pkg. 10c. W. N. U., CLEVELAND, NO. 40-1909, 7
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers