Is : Pe-ru-na Useful for Catarrh? Should a list of the ingredients of Pe. runa be submitted to any medical ox- pert, of whatever school or nationality, he would be obliged to admit without reserve that the medicinal herbs com- posing Peruna are of two kinds, First, standard and well-tried catarrh reme- dies. Second, well-known and gener- ally acknowledged toniy remedies. That in one or the other of these uses they have stood the test of many years’ experience by physicians of different schools. There can be no dispute about this, whatever. Peruna is composed of some of the most eflicacious and uni: versally used herbal remedies for ca- tarrhal diseases, and for such conditions of the human system as require a tonic. Each one of the principal ingredients of Peruna has a reputation of its own in the cure of some phase of catarrh or as a tonic medicine, The fact is, chronic catarrh is a dis- ease which is very prevalent. Many thousand people know they have chroniccatarrh, They have visited doe- tors over and over again, and been told that their case is one of chronic catarrh. It may be of the nose, throat, lungs, stomach or some other internal organ, There is no doubt as to the nature of the disease. The only trouble is the remedy. This doctor has tried to cure them. That doctor has tried to pre- scribe for them. No other household remedy so uni- versally advertised carries upon the label the principal active constituents, showing that Peruna invites the full inspection of the critics. their head emerging from come under the Chickens shells surely of live issues. Capudine Cures Indigestion Pains, Belching, Sour Stomach, and Heartburn, from whatever tause. It's Liquid. Effects immediately. Doctors prescribe it. 10e., 25¢., and 50¢., at drug stores. Effects Of Lightning. belief is that safety tree, A widespread dur- ing a thunder storm may found under a beech and that the danger f lightning is 156 times as g A resinous {ree and 50 times as great under Dr. A.W. the naturalist, tirely without is not avoided by lightning, selects one species as readily as an- other, but the taller {rees in a neigh- borhood appear to be the ones liable to be struck. The effects of lightning also are commonly misunderstood The cells of a ruptured or torn by of ste as so often stated, but or shrink up w TOOLS seem 10 escape be an oak British finds thiz view to be en foundation. The beech which not ion they tree are the format collapse tearing. The damage thout blame has for kick- another's One can't ing when he bills. man foot on personal efforts withthe assistance es one to orm ve wlar habits daily so thal dofom x 0 Nii ture may be gradually dispensed with when no longer needed asthe best of ies, when requ , are lo assist nature and not to supplant the natin. al functions, which must depend ulti upon proper nourish ’ nyoper cfforls,and right living generally. Toget is beneficial effects, always buy the genuine Syrup Figs="Flixirf Senna ranufaclu red by the CALIFORNIA Fic Syrup Co. ony SOLD BY ALL LEADING DRU T fy Battie Which ena mat one gize only, repular price 504 per 2 =2:9r ~ IESE. MURDERS BOTH FATHER AND SON Old Feud Results in Sensation:| Tragedy. A CRIMNAL SHOOTS ~~ HIMSELF. Benjamin De Gildo, Having Shot Down Enemies, Tries to Escape - Being Closely Pursued He Turns Weapon Upon Himself and Dies Instantly Patrick Murphy, Struck by Bullet. i i 1 | Westchester, Pa. (Special). —Ben- | jamin DeGildo, of Philadelphia, shot and killed Benjamin DeFelix, fatally i wounded Pasquale DeFelix, father of the murdered man, here and then ' to escape capture at the hands of an infuriated mob, committed suicide by shooting himself. The sensational shooting is sald to be the outgrowth of a feud that has , existed between the ltaliang for a long time The bad feeling wa recently increased by the arrest of DeFelix, the murdered man, charge of keeping a ‘speakeasy’ and being identified with a counterfeiting | plot DeFelix was cleared of the i charges at a hearing in Philadelphia at which time he openly DeGilldo of having offered Black Hand agents $75 to Felix. to kill Bive fx | Angella Diermernegildo. The met Benjamin DeFelix on the street A few words passed and DeGildo irew a revolver and shot DeFelix in , the breast. sent another bullet into his The shooting ocurred not far ithe DeFelix home and Pasquale , Felix, father of the murdered | ran to the ass stance of his son { felled DeGildo with a brick and he struggled to his [eet igain hig revolver, sending a { bullet the elder DNDeFelix’'s ab- lomen. DeGildo fled, pursued by an ingry mob including many friends of tie DeFeiix family Unable shake off his DeGildo stopped running { the mob turned his himself, dying Inztan sensational : the entir body D man, He used into to shooting struck and Sargeant said, by was severely arrested So ar ment ’ ¢ fore settlement were put attempt Felix friends gildo. BIND on Quty to pre on the to lynch gible AND GAG WOME N, Hobbers Force Way Into House In Search OF Cash, Washington, Pa = inl masked men entered Miss Maria De Carmo part of the county down the De Garmo d.dzzie Hartman house, and Jewelry and a small amount of cash Carpets were g'ashed, matiresses rip ! ped open and chests broken j When no large sum of money found the women were tortured the elder one fainted and the left. Miss Hartman, bleeding cut, at last freed herself! from ropes and released her aunt hundred dollars which had been re. ceived the day before for a tract was found where the had overlooked it CIGARETTE HABIT GROWS Average Of 2.216 A Year For The Smokers Alleged, Washington, D. C. (Special) That the cigarette habit is decidely on the increase in this country door Vijasm the into Was sei dd ULL and robbers | just jssued. In during the last year 565.402.336.112 cigarettes were smoked. Figuring that 25,000,000 men and boys smok- ed, this gives an average per smoker of 2,216. Taking into consideration it brings the average for the ciga- rette smoker very high, and shows an increased tendency of the American people to use this form of tobacco. THREE HURT IN WRECK. Passenger Train Runs Into Open Switch. Niles, Ohio (Speeial).—A passen- k ER : Booklet, Sample and Parior Curd All dealers, Game “WHIZ" 100, PACIFIO COAST BORAX 00, New York Loca! agents wanted. Write far money making plan. A 550 ds I A Thriller. Slow Waiter—Have | ever been In the country, sir? No, sir. Why do you ask? Tired Customer-—1 was just think- ing how thrilling you'd find it to sit on the fence and watch the tortoises whiz by.—Pick-Me-Up, Nn OA AA By The Court's Decree, “Whose little girl are you?” “This month I'm road from Ashtabula to New Castle was wrecked here about 8 o'clock A. M. Three trainmen were injured, Men on a handear passed a switch and did not close it. The passenger took the siding and ran Into a freight train, William Walker, conductor on the passenger train; Charles Bryan, brakeman, and George W. Cheffell, mail clerk, all of Ashtabula, were hurt, TAFT BUYS ANOTHER HORSE, it's A Prize Winner, 16 Hands High, And Weighing 1,200 Pounds, Lexington, Ky. (Special )-—William H. Taft, through an agent, bought a Southern plantation horse, sixteen hands high, weighing 1,200 pounds, of Shelby T. Harbison, of Lexington. The horse won the first prize at the Blue Grass fair, The horse will be shipped to Mr. Taft this week. - ns on TROOPS COME FROM PANAMA. Part Of Force Sent To Preserve Order At Election Reaches New York, New York (Special). The steam- or Colon, which just arrived here from Cristobal, Panama. brought 153 United States marines and officers, Capt. O. W. A. Patterson being in command of the party. k rde NEW TORPEOD BUN PLEISES THE EXPERTS Commander Davis’ Weapon Is Tested at Boston. Boston, Mass. (Special). — Ord- nance experts of the Army and Navy expressed great satisfaction at the performance of the new Davis tor- pedo gun, invented by Commander Cleland Davis, U, 8. N. The were made at Fort Strong, harbor; the first part of last week, three of the projectiles being fired, and in every test the target was overturned. Brigadier General Mur- ray, chief of artillery, was among the officers who witnessed the tests. The Davis torpedo is a combina- tion gun and projectile in itself, and effective at at least 5,000 feet, baving its own motive power, similar to that on the ordinary Whitehead torpedo. The projectile is in two parts. It i8 45 centimeters in diam- | eter and five meters long. The outer | tube is about two-thirds the length { of the inner torpedo, and behind | the torpedo proper is 40 pounds of i high explosive. When the nose of | the projectile comes in contact with obstacle which stops its progress preferably the enemy's ship-—the { concussion, no matter how slight, | 821s off that 40 pounds of explosive Fhe explosion drives the projectile through the object struck and at he game time starts a time fuse that causes the torpedo proper to cxplode a few seconds later It is this double action that gives the Davis projectile its great value, The two objective points in aiming at the enemy's vessel are naturally the { magazine and engine-room. 1f the | magazine is struck, the result is ob- viofig; If the engine-room receives the force of the blow, the least that i can happen to stop all the ma chinery of the vessel and make the ship so defenseless a8 a canoe, Commander Davis has been work- ng on his idea for the past two vears, and for a year he was balked i want of a metal that would hold when the first 40 pounds of explosion let go His first tube weighed 1,006 pounds and was so avy that could not float it to point Then he began with steal Processes find something that him the necessary ngth together with 1 ness He found what wanted in vanadium, 3} with chroninm and nickle that the tube used today pounds instead of 1.000, till gives tensile strength to hold when 40 pounds explosive is Ignited This ht was found only afte: trying experiments at Steel Works under of Commander Davis. tests of the torpedo later in Boston Har- was fired at a Sheep Island and it accom- of inventor, target without charge, the of the inner in i feny is Ie he objective perimenting an effort to 1 give he ined result wi the eEBary sf 4] we IR cate and thle hem mon ote Be the dire we veral were made torpedo Oh eset ] the ough the the real and the resistance target resisting the outer and bottoms, and three bulkheads of a si ticship Officials of both the wrmy and Navy and others interested it experiments were wilnesses f the test ckness : An order was issued by the Inter. | state Commerce Commission extend- {ing irom Eeptember 1 to November { 1, the date when the new bill of { lading shall go into effect : Word was received from Consul { General Harris, at Smyrna, that 60 | naturalized Americans had renouficed { thelr citizenship and were no longer entitled to protection. 1 W. F. Thomas, a Washington theatrical manager, has asked the Department of Justice to proceed { against the theatrical combination. i A contract has been awarded the | Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad for | the transportation of 250 sailors from | Newport to San Francisco Mehmed All Bey, deposed Turkish minister, fears for his life. The le | gation at Washington is guarded by | Becret Serve men. The Forest Bureau has called at | tention to the profits in willow cul { ture, an industry that is neglected in this country. ; The Navy Department is preparing to test the speed of the new scout cruisers, Fodds of every description espec- ially prepared for Infants and in- valids will be scientifically investi- gated by the bureau of chemistry of the Department of Agriculture to determine whether or not they are injurious to health. Brigadier General Daniel H. Ruck- er, who is 96 years old, has been officially pronounced dead, an insur- ance company having tired of car- rying him on its books and settled the policy. Mundi Bey, the new Turkish charge, says he doesn’t give a 4 about the ambassadorship, and pre. fers being a newspaper man, It is proposed to begin the na- tional highway between Washington and Gettysburg at Port Stevens. Librarian Ainsworth R. Snoniardy of the Congressional Library, di in Plymouth, N. H. Baron Alexander de Pury-Herve, who married 4 princess and who died in poverty, was interred by friends, Mehmed All Bey, the Turkish min- ster, has been recalled owing to a change in the Turkish ministry, A mail pouch left in front of the building of the Department of Com- merce and Labor was stolen and rob. bed of checks worth nearly $2,000, Dr. Robert Koch, the German scientist, will attend the Internation al medical con to be held in Washington in ember. Gen, James Allen, chief signal of- ficer, announces taat the Army will buy the Baldwin balloon. It Had To Come, “We are now making a special cash register for country editors.” “What's special about it?” "IL has keys for potatoes, turnips. squash, pie-plants, pumpkins, cord wood and hard cider.’ Waghington Herald, Custom Dies Hard. She—1 suppose vou will suicide if I refuse you? He—Ah—that has been tom! The Sketch. commit my cus- THE TIME TEST. That is What Proves True Merit, Doan's Kidney Pills bring th- quickest of relief from backache and kidney troubles. is that relef lasting? Let Mrs James M. Long, of 113 N. Au- gusta Ft, Staunton, Va., tell you. On Januzry 31st, 1903, Mrs. Long wrote: “Doan's Kidney Pills have cured me” (of pain in the back, On one-half June Years rations, ete.) and 20th, 1807, later, she 1 repeat my testimony.” Sold by all dealers 60 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffule, N.Y. Miners And Tuberculosis, A mining journal Scranton has been calling attention tLat in coal min- there Is a marked from tuber- published at communities localities. This is a phenomenon B. H. Thwalite to Mr. Thwaite, the effects noted may be dué to the physiological effects of carbonmonoxide, for he finds that engaged about. blast furnaces According nen cuilarly free It is suggested that the in the lungs may | of production of CO, i this will serve explain immunily of miners from the digseas T? tubercle bacillus i= a me tenacity arbon dust Creat ii is an § es it of diffusion ti congidered & reach the pty subtle manner, fo: be perceived Fi ta ig i$ iid Life, Margulis 41 Rudin the led the Led A Strenunous The late [talian statesman, itfe At 22 he was one of lieutenants in wres the Bourbons, having time succeeded In evading sentence which the Neapo glrenvous iribaial fr i » tiling Sicll fore he was 30, jermo he put down brigandage, sup- Ans ma tion that kiil- policemen was same thing as murder. Througout his life, which has just ended at threescore and len Le was an examplar of that tireless too apt to think the Teutonie the is monopolized ©» Boston Trans« A Rare Coin. A keen struggle for the possession of an extremely rare coin between the Pope and King Victor Etnmanne! of Haly, both numismatiste, has just ended in favor of the former. The Vatican collection, which consists of some 17,000 pleces, i now the richer by an exceedingly rare speci. men-—a golden crown struck by In- nocent IX. The coin was found in a garden at Acqui and was secured a‘ter spirited bidding by an admirer vivid Sd the Vatican. SELF DELUSION Many People Deceived by Coffee, We like to defend our indulgencies and habits even though we may be convinced of thelr actual harmful ness, A man can convince himself that whisky Is good for him on a cold morning, of beer on a hot summer day-—when he wants the whisky or beer. it's the same with coffee. Thou- sands of people suffer headache and nervousness year after year but try to persuade themselves the cause ig not coffee-—because they like coffee. “While yet a child 1 commenced using coffee and continued it." writes 4 Wis. man, “until I was a regular coffee fiend. ing and in consequence had a blinding headache nearly every afternoon. “My folks thought it was coffee that alled me, but 1 liked it and would not admit it was the cause of my trouble, so | stuck to coffee and the headaches stuck to me. “Finally, the folks stopped buying coffee and brought home sdme Pos. Mum. They made it right (directions on pkg.) and told me to see. what difference it would make with my head, and during that first week on Postum my old amMiction did not bother mo once. From that day to this we have used nothing but Postum in place of coffee headaches are a thing of the past and the whole fam- ily in in fine health.” “Postum looks good, smells good, tastes good, ts good, and does good * “There's a Rea: Namo given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read, “The Road to — ——— ——————— ————— — —————— — it. So ———r—_n Monkeys Like Scrapping. “Monkeys are in a class by them. #elves,” sald the circug man, “If}] one of them has red half he is sure to be a dandy scrapper. The best | fighter is always the leader. They | hang together and bow and scrape | before the boss just like a good many | people. Monkeys with red faces and | flat heads will whip the life out of | those smaller than they are, but will | run like the wind when it comes to | an even break. A monkey riot is a | funny spectacle Even in the same cage you will find groups horded to- gether as if there was some class distinction and the lines were drawn | tightly. If two of the big ones come | together in a row the others gen- erally stand off and let them have | it out. But if any of the little ones | get to scrapping, then the father and | mother are sure to mix in, and the | next step is a general row. We sepa- | rate them by turning on the hose and | punish them by locking up the den This woman says that after nuts from the crowd, and hold back | their meals. This plan puts them on | their good behavior for a while ai least. The monkey likes to eat and likes to be noticed.” —New World Few Thin People Have “Doubles.” “1 have been told,” said the thin woman, “that there is a woman over in Brooklyn who looks just exactly like me.” “If there is, it is an unusual case of a double,” sald a photographer. “Thin people very geldom have dou- bles In my business | meet many pairs of people who look alike. In Mande E. Forgie, of Leesburg, Va, “1 want other suffering women to For suffered from feminine ills like a pew woman. | am now For thirty years Lydia E. Pink. are between Scientifically likelihood of heavy- | possessing the same chin, and expression Maybe ig because the flesh fills all! angles and hollows and destroys in- dividuality of outline’ New York resemblances who are stout not explain the weights persons 108¢, eves, up Hicks’ Capudine Cures Nervousness, it the brain and Liquid and pleasant to take. +" snd 50c., at drug stores. what not refreshes nerves. It's 10c., 25¢., Peat Alcohol. manufacture of alcohol from Danish company, with one experimental plant in Denmark and France, found the cost one-fi h of that made the process or sulphuric in the peal a one in has 10 is mrt in cellulose ig converted bs bohydrate and special ye: about fro potatoes of ifacture., the fiher . emi pent a soluble nted by a inlo ferme To Drive Out Malaria and Baild Up the System Gunove's Tasre what Standard Tox Yoi know the Oid HILL ia Ko : Fan { are taking. The formala is plain on every botlia, showiag i uine and Iron in a tasteless form, iT form. tor grows p . ; ArH nos eflectus PJ is sin and children 1 That's nothing, I'll ent him out; » i8 beautiful Hous- BABY CRIED AND SCRATCHED All the Time—Was Covered with Tor turing Ecoema—Doctor Said Sores Would Last for Years—Per- fect Cure by Cuticura. *My baby niece was suffering from tha terrible torture, eczema. It her body, but the worst was on her face and bands. She cried and scratehed all the time and could not sleep night or day {rom the scratching. I had ber under the doe | tors care for a year and a half and he peemiad to do her no good. 1 took her to | the best doctor in the city and be said that she would have the sores until she was six vears old. But if 1 had depended on the doctor my baby would bave lost her mind and died from the want of aid. But | used Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment and | she was cured in three months. Alice I. i Dowell, 4760 Easton Ave. St. Louis, Mo., | May 2 and 20, 1907.” . was all oven Arms, Legs, And The Man. How many of us have noticed tha! | w2 walk with our arms as well as with our legs? Sitting on a grassy ; slope .overiooking a seaside promen- | ade the other day 1 waz struck by the mechanical swing of the arms of the stream of passers-by-—the right arm always keeping position | with the left leg and the left arm | with the right leg. By attempting to reverse the order of the swing 1 : found that I had a tendency to pro- | gress like a crab, while the effort to keep them fixed by the side was like the shutting off the steam from the engine. Arms and the man must be amended to arms, legs, and man! His Finest Act, “How was your speech received at | the club?” asked one of Chumley's | friends, “Why, they congratulated me very heartily. In fact, one of the mem- bers came to me and told me that when 1 sat down he had sald to him- self it was the best thing | had ever done.”—Youth’s Companion, SA MOS in, OES S00 ol into s 4 JR. WATKINS CO. Winona Minn, | 1a8 been the remedy for female Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick thousands to wen. Mass. guided Ar - has irado currant bush will least gallon of fruit will yield 10 times this A Cole #l plants The pro one i. WHY NOT TRY POPHAM'S ASTHMA REMEDY Gives Prompt and Positive Relief in Every Case. Sold by Druggists, Price $1.00 $ Trial Package by Mall He WILLIAMS MFG, C0,, Props. (leve'and, 0. Peerless Dried Beef Unlike the ordinary dried beef—that sold in bulk— Libby's Peerless Dried Beel comés in a sealed glass jar -in which it is packed the moment it is sliced into those delicious thin wafers. None of the rich natural flavor or goodness escapes or dries out. It reaches you fresh and with all the nutri- ment retained. Libby's Peerless Dried Beef is only one of a Creat number of high-grade, ready to serve, pure food products that are prepared in Libby's Greal White Kitchen. Just try a package of any of these, such as Ox Tongue, Vienna Sausage, Pickles, Olives, etc., and see how delightfully dif- ferent they are from others you haveeaten. Libby, McNeill & Yh. AP VER iN mh Sabha, IP Wilk rat Saves Thompson's Eye Water CHICKENS HE A he HSL LARRISON, J15 NX Seward SL Selmore, M4 If You Know How to Handle Them Properly igently ‘and