Occasionally we meet a man who acts as if he was living his life by contract. Constipation onthe and aggravates many serious diseases, It 1s thorougnly oured by Dr. Plerce's Pleasant Pellets. The favorite family laxative. Adv. Its Welght. “Cholly complained of having some- thing on his mind.” “I know what it is. I saw him strike his head against a lot of cob- webs in the corner.” WOMAN'S ILLS DISAPPEARED Like Magicafter taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable used Lydia E. Pink- {it my duty to write and tell youabout it. I was ailing from fe- male weakness and had headache and the time. Iwaslater and so sick that I had to go to bed. Unavoldable. Would you marry a man who | inferior. If I marry at all | oe SUMMER HEADACHES Hicks’ no EE AST Jane was your Mary what causes them-—-whether from the heat, sitting In draughts, ish condition, ete. 10c, &ec and We bottle at medicine stores. Adv. por Good Polish. To make a polish for patent leather make a mixture of one part of linseed oll and two of cream. Mix it thor oaghly and apply with a flannei, af- ter removing every particle of dust from the shoes. Then rub the leath- er with a soft cloth AND BILIOUS ATTACKS aused by Malaria removed by the use of EMxir Babek cure for such aliments “Myself and whole household had suf- fered very much for some time with Fever ‘Elixir HBabek' has cured us perfectly, so that we enjoy at present the of health /'-—Jacob Eb- surt House, Va, cents, all druggists or wt prepald from Kloczew- Washington, D, C. best virfax Co by Parcels P ski & Co. Wanted an All-Day Whistler. Somebody advestised for a man who whistle all day for good pay. s the grouchy man in the suite the hall doesn't whistling the way, what rates whistling Deal like are the union Cleveland Plain ACTOSS He Wasn't Sure. gentleman was out his sorely of pa some blunder of new Anger, way have recommended the Compound to many women who have used it success- fully.’’—Mrs. JAMES J. Stacy, R.F.D. No. 3, North Bangor, N. Y. Another Made Well Ann Arbor, Mich.—* Lydia E. Pink- bham’s Vegetable Compound has done wonders for me. For years I suff terribly with hemorrhages and had pains so intense that sometimes I would faint away. I had female weakns 80 bad that ! had to doctor all the t and never found relief until I took your remedies to please my husband. I recon in end your wonderful mediein to all sufferers as I think Lisa bles for all women.’ —Mrs. L. E. WYCKOFF, 112 S. Ashley St., Ann Arbor, Mich. There need be the ability of this grand old remedy, made from the roots and herbs of our fields, to remedy woman's di We 59 volumes of proof of this fact, enous; to convince the most skeptical. Why don’t you try it? Hale’s Honey Of Horehound and Tar ered q no doubt about 1 } YASO], » POSS rh Loosens the Phlegm Allays Irritation Arrests Tickling Soothes and Heals Contains no opium od anything ingurion [kas Toothache Drops Cure in Ons Minata Tut? Pills enable the dyspeptic to eat whatever he wishes. They cause the food to assimilate and mourish the body, give appetite, and DEVELOP FLESH. Dr. Tutt Manufacturing Co. New York. LEARN 0 be an anto « youaveryth t ploy youn w Seorni ng. F oust. Baty par mer : y C1 Amtomshile Kogineerieg Cotiege of Waah's, wg , Wash w, BO ymmer blooms the roses wor right and fragrant posies ek. Sam and Bi and Moses or Often b ye hat t Three Pure Silk He andkerc hiefs, White Bpottad, by mall for one Flitz Nigel Co, 150 Boadway, New York Agenta—830 needles They are 8 Pr yoyml td Cortland Cn FOR #ALE F ONTO “i , Md. ; 400 1 1 Or $” hard, ' 8310 ¢ , 4468 F, Sproce St Clearfield. Pa. ge #8 POOLE WHITE forsgie. On es AW, of 8. Louis: baat corn land, Bottom land, no Swamps or overflow, Fi) peracre-to trades, Bee FARM : rocn Rock [sland and Frisco KL R Address WD. H. C. OTTE, Beaufory, Mo. FORMULA -Tongh and resilient making printing rollers Geo. L Shiver, 11 Irabella St, Ogdonsbarg. N composition for a ummer and winter nse Age X. AGENTS -Hoaling Herb 8 alties bring big com. missions; quick asilam: get Free herd booklet, te rum, territory. Universal, 718 4th Ave. Brookiyn, N.Y Hand Com fills the § SKIEN CRIB FILLE oribs; 82 a bushel HENRY SKIEN, Braman, Oklabowa LEARN watehmaking. clock and jewelry repairing: modern scientific corres pondent coues particulars fron. Beanlion Wateh Sehool, Commereial Bldg, Woonsocket B10 fall “Majestic” 3 bellows vacunm clean AGENT er; big seller; enormous profits; axe sive territory. Home ¥seanmCloanerte. | Wabash, Chieago RAVE Your Silver! Don’t use polish! treated chamois skin makes of id sliver ne size Tw, large Mo Het rom Trial Lowe Labarstory T0027 hae Chiengoe JOIN Black's No- Profit Co bership $1. Reduce high cost bers. Organizers watited 60 ON the Stage. Will toll you how Write for do seriptive cirenlar. ITS FREE Gibson Thentricnl Co., 14108, Western Aeanue, Chlenge, 1ilinoie on White Renners Se MY BOOKLET par to opus BL.50 per is Mrs. A LIVE AGENTS Banticesusaler osm dog Ruth J. Keleh, Dept. 4, Osawatomie, Kans. with tive Stores, Mem. living: farmer mem. Inciose stamp. Cincinnati Bogs 8 Buff Rock and iL |. Hed Thompson, Sertew, Ola DO IT NOW!I-J, HL. MEYER, Modelo, Fin, has {rape me and orange land cheap, Frostunkngwn ndependence in 4 years. Healthiest place lo LU. 8 25 ASSORTED POSTCARDS 3 folding fan; ail for Be. Ww " Wash PATENTS Sel Seema va AGENTS Unlimited flold for thi jal is bolls on 2 hit; J Oe EE TE oid platad stick ns and | Ja panoes Bax 635, Baltimore Wd, sure repeater, rove 16 iN, Ge answer the he asked, If Thrifty Scot john Car The kni record and near us Nelson mony Meat Bearing Tre ows a meal for the reason flour ford casy FRIENDS HELP, Paul Park Incident, St. “After drinking coffee for breakfast I always felt languid and dull, having no ambition to get to my morning duties. Then in about an hour or so a weak, nervous derangement of the heart and stomach would come over me with such force 1 would frequently have to lie down Tea is just as harmful, because it contains caffeine, the same drug found in coffee, “At other times I had severe head aches: stomach finally became affect ed and digestion so impaired that I had serious chronic dyspepsia and constipation. A lady, for many years State President of the W. C. T. U,, told me she had been greatly ben. efited by quitting coffee and using Postum: she was troubled for years with asthma. She said it was no cross to quit coffea when she found ghe could have as delicious an article as Postum. “Another lady who had been trou- bled with chronic dyspepsia for years, found immediate relief on ceasing cof- fee and using Postum. Still another friend told me that Postum was a Godsend, her heart trouble having been relieved after leaving off coffee and taking on Postum, “So many such cases came to my notice that I concluded coffee was the suse of my trouble and I quit and took up Postum. I am more than ble have disappeared. I am well and happy.” Look in pkgs. for the famous little book, “The Road to Wellville.” fiver rend the above letter? A new | are genuine, tras, and of human , Interest. 4 ——— “IMPROVING HEN FLOCK | Great Deal Depends on Selection of Setting Eggs. Should Be Those From Year Old Birds, as Chicks Will Be Larger and Stronger Than Those From Pullets. (By A. J. WILDER.) Care should be taken to save settings only the eggs from the best hens. A very great difference can be made in a flock in a few seasons by the selection of the eggs for hatch. ing. By choosing the largest eggs the fowls will be much larger In size, but there is a great probability that they will not be good layers. The hen that lays an unusually large egg is quite likely to only other day. By setting ber eggs and again the next season setting the largest eggs, you will develop a strain of large fowls that will lay very large eggs, but will lay only every other day, or even less On the eggs from laid during ter, and such hens, of early winter layers The eggs for settings from r old hens, be larger and stronger from pullet eggs. It is for lay every other hand, the hens, get the as pullets their first and win- coptinue to eggs from will develop a strain if you that fall get Fou should be yea as the than best to Should for Confining Every Poultry Home Have Convenience Hens, Some Broody nstead ocks Je as the eges a more apt fertile and there i! be alarg- cockerels of old « these her to be percents well il is ure and t and to break slacked CEES A Hime is I Rive two HET ever) O0On das the Feed wheat, Ores trod pro le grain 'y Lot ction th oats be a light gweel corn the mash them fresh and give scraps twice a wes k Feed plenty of green 11 fowls have range where they for the wi can Keep them n dris y naeives hs ris lon h pt clea ittle ) ue i always srt ity uan ¥ L same qt for the table hens must be their grain in healthy and are to atching for the he must good condition if strong. healthy chicks, A diseased condition of the hen transmitted to the egg and will pear in the chick when hatched. be in i you ia ap- Protection for Trees. Some orchardists have been suc cesaful in protecting their trees by smearing the trunks near the ground with mixtures which are distasteful to rabbits. For this purpose white- wash, a mixture of glue and copperas, decoction of quassia chips and blood or grease, have been used. Mechan- fecal protection by means of some wrapping is more permanent and ef. fective than any form of wash. Effect of Animal Husbandry. Live stock make it necessary to divergify crops and grow more crops upon which there is a wider margin of profit. Animals also distribute la- bor, furnish employment in time of bad weather, or when fleld work is not possible, Animal husbandry is the logical way to insure soil improve- ment, as the increased fertility from manure is often sufficient to justify raising animals, Converted Wagon, From the standpoint of conveni- the farm wagon that has been with wide steel tires has a strong ap peal. It is easily loaded, and over comes all the ebjections to high wag onus of the old type. Hearty Eaters. All cows that are hearty eaters are not profitable producers, but all profit producers are usually hearty wal, hia | i Varied Diet Necessary for Best Re suite From Layers—Dry Mash Always Before Fowils. A method which has given very sat isfactory results for the American breeds has been worked out by Prof. J. C. Graham of the Massachusetts Agricultural college. dry mash ia kept In hoppers before the hens at all times and a scratch feed is fed night and morning. The dry mash is composed of equal parts bran, wheat middlings, corn meal, finely ground oats, ground alfalfa and beef scraps, and the scratch feed of two parts cracked corn, one part wheat and one part oats, says the Farm and Home, The scratch feed is varied, depend ing somewhat upon the condition of the hens. If on examination they are found too fat more and wheat and less corn are fed. Sometimes we feed three parts of corn to two parts of wheat at night and the morning. At detain geasons of the year more grain is fed at night in the litter than B | ns will eat, so there will be some for them to work early the next morning This is found to be a very satisfactory method At times oats are fed alone, for when the three are mixed together the wheat and corn are picked up first the hens that the fastest get littl the oats If it A oats Oats In the left on and very ent a of to force the hens, in grain, it is desired mash and getting crumbly sta placing it what f This is fed oyster shell the and they l i night and grit water, are before kept Mangels and « hens au whole when but at least fed bages are ble, every day possi times a week BIG FACTOR IN INCUBATION Lack of Ventilation Given as Cause for Many Failures in Artificially Hatched Eggs. ques gic n = hatehin gracierizes compared CEES are about v knowledge Cus theories ed and sever: been to the 1its ure th CXCPOER ity greater od Several aut support of the meas BUPPOS to an horities are there is a larger amount surrou naturally oxide In the air that in a well are ventilated | wcubator is raised whether extent it mn question ag to ay be an essential or in incubation Full Directions Given for Construc- toin and Materials Required-—Use Apple on Trigger. In response to a query for directi to make a rabbit trap, Doty makes the following New Yorker Material required feet feet Herbert reply in the Sides, two p pieces, inch bottom #x8% In one ece, by % by Pp ch: tof piece, 8% inch; back, one piece, 2 feet 10%x% inch. In the picture T, ger about 10 inches long; B, brace which fits in notch at N; P, wooden pin used as hinge at X. After box is constructed from material given above, bore a hole in the back a little larger than the trigger. take a stout cord, fasten it at 8, draw through notch at R, apd tie to center of brace, Stick sa apple on trigger, as ghown in cut, and the trap is ready for the rabbit by trig- Save the Early Layers. Hens that lay but few eggs are ani mal weeds. If we breed from them they are more than likely to yield daughters that will be weeds also Farmers and small poultrymen who cannot afford to use trap nests can pick out the pullets in September and October that are about commencing to lay, and save a pen of them for next season's breeders, The pullets that commence laying early usually continue to lay well. In this way most of the weeds can be kept out of the breeding pen. Halter-Breaking Colt. Never let a colt grow to any cone siderable age and size without halter breaking him. Hundreds of valuable young horses are much injured in dis position by letting him run until they are two and three years of age, and then for the first time cornered in a stail by several farm hands, which may be a frolic to the latter, “RULE BY COMMISSION House Expected to Approve Bill Already Adonted in Senate HAS A SWEEPING EFFECT Affects All Except Four Cities of State ~Most General Piece of Legisia- Session—Council of tion of Five Elected, One as Mayor mdence.) of fT four piece Only law as Philad and the are ton third-cla special mbers express their ures, then Bpeaker.” Schuck shia Defends Motion was offered, Humes of Crawford Rules Com the “It for a that will resolution Representative moved to mittee. Schuck fense his in response to a public business ending to session 1 present this resolution. Nothing ever bring this House to senses but the realization that a certain lim- {ted time remains in which to consider the legislation before it We are be coming the laughing stock of the peo ple of the State, the object of deri gion when deliberative procedure in legislative matters ia concerned. Let us not magnify our importance and deceive ourselves into the belief that our constituents are expecting us tw remain here indefinitely.” Mr. Schuck refer it 10 the then came to de Saving demand of resolution is this its ———— — —-— “the indefinite and inde policy of the ‘Graveyard on Rules” Calling Rep- Flynn, Democrat, of Elk, chalr, Sps¢ Al took the and re ted thi tion be sent to After re overinduiging the said oy r th objec tad terminate Committee’ resentat to the fo fve aker ter que the wir or ¢ ferring repor ember - thd $4 1 hink thi time fo time for no way OCEEDINGS OF LEGISLATURE. SENATE Bilis Passed ter [mith, of hiladelphis ponsors appeared commit! Senate Seat Stays Vacant Governor Reynolds an he would not issue a ection of a Senator in ambria district the vacan by t death of Senator He said there was no ne an as the Legis ably adjourn before would be held. Lieutenant announced that writ for the ¢ to fil Mid the C caused he Stineman coseity cy election, iid prob Dining Cars Remain “Dry.” After a but somewhat heated debate. the House defeated the bill of Representative M¢ Aleer, of Philadel phia, to raliway dinine cars, 74 aves to 11 noes short Ha id icenge Overrides Tener's Wish. Twenty-four dual officehniders, in- retary agd the Executive Controller, adjudged gMity of contempt by the House Judiclary-General Committee, dual officeholders’ investigating com: the wishes of the Governor and sen ators McNichol and Vare. mitted, after observing the greatest and another since then, refused to, accept the report of the Governor. Veto to Mit Powell, Governor Tener let it be known that will veto the bill increasing the salaries in the Auditor General's of- fice. This is the measure which caused Auditor Generalelect, o withdraw his opposition to the con: Bigelow. He was assured by the Or | ganization leaders that the Governor would approve the bill. Senator Pow. ell declared that if the Governor ve. toes the bill he will fight every Or ; ganization bill in the Senate. A lively ; ; fight will no doubt result,