és 2 X rr What's in a Name? Everything, when you come fo medi- cines. oA sarsaparilla by any other name peculiar combination, proportion and pro- peculiar to itself, and by eohen all other medicines fail. Cures scrofula, salt rheum, dyspepsia, catarrh, rheumatism, that tired feeling, efc. Sarsaparill - Never Disappoints Evil Eve Leads to Divorce. New York World: ger of Patterson, N. J.. who has brought suit for divorce, believes that her husband was hypnotized by Marie Koch, who was employed as a servant in the family. Miss Koch is 18 years old and plain ing, Mrs. goesser says sho has the “evil eye. Twice. she says, Elsoesser ran away with Marie, leaving a prosperous bake- shop. Elsoesser says he will not de- fend the suit. loo but AND BOWELS (,LEANSES THE SYSTEM 0 SS EFFECTUALLY DISPEL jguiRnecs tg 6 0x 2? G0 HEADACHE ve RS OVERCOMES I& TS ‘ Long Swim, . Ernest Whitehead captured a young geal near Anacapa island, California, and took him on board his As the ously. The little captive barked re- sponsively. After reaching the whart deck. Soon after coming to anchor gack and The mother with her sharp She had followed in the sack, it was the Miss Amy Castles sang at Melbourne, Aus tralia, before 14,000 people, Critics say she will rival Patti and Melba, Deafness Cannot Be Cured by local applications, us they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by constitu. tional remedies. Deafness is caused by an in Eustachian Tube. When this tube flamed you have a rumbiing soaind or imper. fect hearing, and when it is entirely closed Deafness is the result, and unless the inflam. mation can be taken out and this tube re: stored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever. Nine uises out of ten are oaused by catarrh, whichis nothing but an in. flamed condition of the mucous surfaces. Wo will give One Hu { Dollars for any case of Deafness {caus satarrhithatoan. not ba eured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send tor ciroulars, free F. J. Cuexey & Co, Toledo, O. Sold by Dragaists, The. Hall's Family Pills are the best. An Austrian 0 000 on pOLOry maxes annually, Don't Tobaceo Spit and Smoke Your Life Away, ¢ and forever, be mag aloes nerv \ 11 il of life, wr #1. Cure free wrong. All drugeists, Bx ed Booklet aud sampie ling KHemedy Lint ii not in BOL in hns iw ler and Hermann To Care Constipation Vorever. Take Cascarcts Candy Cathartic It C. C. C. fail to cure, dr § red T foal eo “ ugrists refund Luuey We think TY Yn AR, Springiield, % The Mar Educate Your Nowoels With Casearets. Cande Cathartie ctire stination 1 100, So. It " reve CC CO « Grup sin refund moudy. <0 GEp TS BN ERcraL EF BUY THE GENUINE ~-MANTFTD DY @usiNiA ic SRP Vv my, 8 ~ oY prave. PONE $ Sf 30s PIR OTTIL Simple Life at the Elysce. of life at the Elyse simple as al as is his a ’ imporiance of are fare, is full; maintaining y of his office; and i may b«¢ or granted that he will, be returns Paris from Rambouill and Montelimar, between which pla« he will, if all goes well, spend his well- earned summer holiday, put himself in- to training for severe social duties which the of t will have harge during the ex- hibition year, wh to he adores good, as the spiders begin all Xo-To Bae for Fifty Cents Guaranteed tobaoco habit men strong, bicod pure MWe 8 are All dugg isis Dr. Debt of the Deaf to Meyer. In th last twenty-Dve FOUDE persons wo lifelong lifelong f these obstructing glaads Wad fe ’ as Eh from deafness already to that handreds of thHusands hundreds of thou- sre will be delivered this ter times Dir enough to know recognized the from font ble affliction in [future yy gp # , 2 + 4 woman stulc il reasoning and Ss wvomen to-day seven but B N ———— i cine. wos leucorrhoea, had a * ay Her inkham for compe ite to her if you are ill. Absolute “1 su and would surely have died help,” writes Mrs. GEO, Mass. advice. Lal 1 was Sometimes I ing-down pains, or tired feelings, and am well and hearty. Ishall recommend Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege- table Compound to all my suffering friends as the greatest remedy for all female weakness.” Mus. Susie J. WEAVER, 1821 Callowhill St., Phila- & delphia, Pa., writes: “DrAr Mrs, PixguaM—I had inflammation of the womb and painful men- gtruation, and by your advice I began taking Lydia BE. Pinkham's Vege- table Compound. Have one package of BSanative Wash and feel like a new woman. I thank you so much for what your medi- cine has done for me.” Chicago, Ill, writes: k woman ¥ FARM AND GARDEN NOTES. NOTES OF INTEREST ON AGRI- CULTURAL TOPICS. on the Farm-Poultry for Profit==-Dairy Yersus Creamery, etc, eic. Packing Fruit in Grain Chaff. There no better preservative of fruit in its natural state than packing it clogely in the chaff of grain kept dry for that purpose. It holds more im prisoned air than anything else, and fits closely around each specimen of fruit better than any other material we know of. When the advantages of chaff as packing are better there will be a demand for it for this purpose that will make it an advantage to farmers to it. | straw Is chopped finely enough, nearly as good as the « haff, but is understood, preserve more care must be used in packing so as not the fruit with the cut of the straw, to bruise Serious Leak on the Farm By far the sik on the farms is the wa odder. When the t tells iO per of the feeding value of the corn Crop is heat Inrgest le ste of corn [ chemis us that over contained and as the le show part of the farm, important and 08 Ava of and statist that less than one-third the ©r¢ } on we very saved il how serge his waste be stopped saved and utilized in soi ast few years machine: been perfed tend mo that wlling the ¢rop oan saved , ahredd Lien egEs are high and salable? The same business ability that is applied to other branches of farming will make a profitable one also Turkey Raising. Some consider turkey rai precarious business, but foresight it may be « fully results - 1 ¥ arried ot and this too and the should in Hen turkeys are second year fon In well matured, r and better t § she fie i at. and =o are the gobblers ar old in ean hardly the birds Yo gobblers wi fail to in a or produce eges thie even Fo puns . uree ve teh, providing are good condition, not feel becanse is no tse in trying to raise tur If one would consider, it would readily be seen that late set eggs stand just as good a chance yes, better than those hatched very early. In the first place, when the eggs nro get late they will batch out when Tae weather ig quite warm, and there will be no danger of chilling the young turkeys. This means a good deal. It fa best to keep the young fowls in a coop for a few days, perhaps a week, 5 0% ROVE, na, Jegs, By that time they will be strong wherever her spirits leads. If you find that any of the young turkeys are weak, and not able to follow the hen turkey, give this weakling to a hen. She is gentler, and is more careful as the turkey ix, and will not lead the young poults such a chase, We have found this a good plan, and once when some young turkeys had been stepped on by their careless mother and were pretty badly injured, they were given to # hen: they recuperated and made good fowls. It ls sometimes thought that young turkeys are very tender, but this Is a mistake. 1 know of no fowl that will endure more than the young turkey, providing It has a good inheritance of strength. But those that are weak from constitutional enuses might just as well be killed at the start, for they will likely suceamb, The polats I hold most essential in successful turkey raising are these: Strong birds, and the male no relation to the females. 1 do not know of any place where Inbreeding is more disay trons than in the turkey family. The hens will lay all right and a good many of the eggs will hateh, but then the trouble begins, and its ends very I know of people who set con- siderably over a hundred turkey eges tar It i not necessary to keep a gobbler run ning the hen They are better off without him; after they have once mated the entire “eluted” of eg fertilized and will hateh perfectly. tut I want Inte hatched turkeys are just as When fall cones they are not old enough to molt while the thelr feathers, is with turkeys, to give one more reason earlier ones and so older turkeys are shedding hatched fowls nnd erowth. and will not be pin feathery to plek, which is a great of the fowls when they are made ready for the market, We raised lolx of turkeys under hen t one has not fi RI4re, egg these Int ire strength He merely gaining item in the looks have 3, and if be Prune 8 may in the in the business There af turkeys hased cheaply a little late REY Ke start 1 expensively, Inrge breeds bry demand Miller, | 8 FOR THE DAIRYM | HINTS fel cows do no AN. t.4 oe to estaniish is just as go even if much about it A “practical dairy s MaxKes a profit ott of If your cows «hrin g stormy weather have not given them sufficie tion from the elements You cannot perpeiuate g and let ihe COWS graze maker thermometer an who uses his for a Was known to produce regular suppiies of good butter or cheese The the best prepared soil most nutritions grass grows on The man with a well filled silo usual Ivy takes precedence when if comes to a profitable farm and substantial buildings, Carelessness and sour milk go hand in hand, Every year is a good dairy season for Why is it not so far ali? The dairyman with the longest head is apt to carry the longest pocketbook. neat, some, The Milk Belt. An Investigation of the milk-con. densing industry brings out some de- cidedly unique discoveries which are new to the general public. The pro. of milk are subject to interesting varia- through the United States contains about 12 to 13 per cent. of total solids, The princi vary with locality and season, but all of the combined would hardly make a noticeable trace. Cows south of the Ohio River will not average above three pounds and fourteen ounces of butter to the 100 pounds of milk. The cows of Texas only show 11 per cent. of solids in thelr milk, Cows through Indiana and the strip running east and west will produce milk that runs four and a half pounds, Cows in Minne sota and Manitoba will produce milk that will give out five pounds and five ounces of butter to the 100 pounds, A TALE OF BURIED TREASURE THAT IS EXCITING OHIO. Law Suit Reveals a Romance-~A Ses Captain Secures Wealth Buried on as Island Many Years Ago, and & Son of His Former Shipmate Claims Hall A tale of buried treasure that would cause Captain Mayne Reid or Robert Louis Btevenson blush was made public when a young man named How ard ¥. Summers filed a petition in the County Court at Ohio, in which he to from Cap tain Charles A. Henderson the sum of £86.600, which, he alleges, is half of a buried which Henderson cured from an island in the South At- lantic, The story unfolded in the peti tion reads like a tale from the J rabian Nights, that the story Is true, but requires that Sum to Jackson, seeks recover treasure Lad Henderson admits mers prove his claim upon the treasure, In 1860 Willlam H. captain of a clippe: built brig the Lark, and for following the pr ofession Summers Was called had of fn woe irs he been rder with uniform SNCCess, Henderson, the and offered thie ¢ born at et IM ’ fe fey vga at Baltimore, nosition of first mate on Henderson, away Ff coe Ber, vo, and who had run ile a boy, ad pled the « 1 he did fo sea Wh not time bat the lard TOW in. however, » hywont and rowed mas The 1 of the ave chase. Os pinned to n fort to he money which was in the chest So he told Henderson briefly existence freasure ffered 1 I him conve) and of {0 im half of it if he would help it to a place of safety. the They a «mall boat over the from the man In this they placed the chest, Henderson jnmped at offer quickly lowered i side of the brig away { of war, { and then rowed quietly ashore, with by the crew, were intent « pursuit of the long boat. As s00D = they reached the they pulled their boat up .nto underbrush, | seizea the chest and ! 3 | made off {ato the woods; nor did they : placed several { out being discovered manof war's who a the shore the between them i ¢top until they had { miles between themselves and the cove, | They concealed the ches. and them selves remained in hiding until the | next day, “vhen they ventured to creep down to the cove, There was no sign of the man-of war, {but the Lark had been scuttled and { sunk in the cove and the long boat in ! swhich the crew had landed was smash. not been discovered and was intact. An exploration of the island showed them i that none of the crew of the Lark had been left upon jt and hence they cone | eluded that they had all been taken | prisoners, The island was a small one | and was uninhabited. Summers and : Henderson concluded that the best | thin for them to do was to try to reach | one of the larger islands of the group {In their boat. They were ' however, to rigk ne chest in the small | boat, for fear some accident might hap | pen it, and so determined to leave it be- hind. They had found a natural cove { fn the course of their wanderings about ! the island and in this they buried the | wtones. Then they rigged a small sail ‘on their boat and soon reached one of { the larger islands, which was inhabit. Led. Here Captain Summers was strick. Lon with smallpox and died, leaving Henderson the sole possessor of the se- eret. Hendorson knew no one on the isl ands whom ke cold trust, and at last | determined to veturn bome and ft up | an expedition to go after the treasure, | After a weary period of walting, he f fonts secured passage on a ship bound . . M—————————————— til three years later that he reached his old home at Jackson, Here he endeav- ored to secre the money necessary to fit out an espedition to go after the story and thought Henderson wis a He could find no one who money pindman, advance the derson determined to return to his old fi earn enough money 1o fit out a vessel, How he his heart out during those Weary years, hie 4 how nat end he snilor and nate how gaved every cent an thie of had enough money He bought the Laura ‘hiladelphia in 1855 Atlantic. But off Ci vessel 1 into fifteen years he cnn be si Over, nt arted for the » Hatteras and Houth gale and the nn foundered saved the nth Wis the Henderson 7 » ollon OS Hien. «ition CURIOUS INSTITUTION IN LIMA. it 1s Known as the Refugio San Joselts Purposes Ther which 3 on the Legation. It 3 ' PE RELI Pra FO0KIM building. ugio man ge from a cruel and Ww ere a husband Wh IST REN Ai ii may place a an ind ith the discipline Gnpal- of the Tigris religious approval and ible wife Ww priest, nrove her temper and her morals. Divorce is unknown except on the rarest occasions, when a d tion must be obtained from the vatican at Rome: but an unfaithful wife can be sentenced to perpetual ment in the Refugio de San Jose by the archbishop, when the evidence of her infidelity is made clear to him. The pens - wes $y Nay TiPrison- or quarterly to of the convent certain sum monthly the sisters in charge for her support. During her imprisonment a woman is not allowed to communicate with people outside or leave her cell without ties several hours a day. 1f she shows willing to take her back, or her par ents agree to take charge of ber, she return to her bishop. There are a good many sto- There 18 no such institution for the discipline of husbands who are une faithful to their wives, That goes without saying. The woman has al ways been wrong, ever since that affair of the apple.~ William E. Curtis In the Chicago Record. a oe A Crisis Safely Passed. Newpop GoyTuliyr—You just ought to hear some of the cute tings my boy says! Freshdad (gleefullyi-—~And you should
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers