MRS. LYONS Have All Gone Since Taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg- etable Compound. Tere Hill, Pa.—* Kindly permit me | to give you my testimonial in favor of | Lydia E. Pinkham’s | Vegetable Com- | pound. When I first began taking it 1} 1 was suffering from female troubles for | some time and had | almost all kinds of | aches— pains in low- er part of back and | in sides, and press- ing down pains. | could not sleep and had no appetite. Since I have taken Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- pound the aches and pains are all gone and I feel like a new woman. I cannot praise your medicine too highly.”'—Mrs, AvcusTtus LyoN, Terre Hill, Pa. It is true that nature and a woman's wore uas produced the grandest remedy for woman’s ills that the world has ever known. From the roots and berbs of the field, Lydia E. Pinkham, forty years ago, gave to womankind a remedy for their peculiar ills which has proved more efficacious than any other combination of drugs ever com- pounded, and today Lydia E. Pinkham’s | Vegetable Compound is recognized from coast to cosst as the standard remedy for woman's ills. In the Pinkham Laboratory at Lynn, Mass. are files containing hundreds of thousands of letters from women seek- ing health — many of them openly state over their own signatures that they have regained their health by taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound; and in some cases that it has saved them from surgical operations. Make the Liver Do its Duty Nine times in ten when the liver is right the stomach and bowels are right CARTER’S LITTLE LIVER PILLS gently butfirmly com-g§ pel a lazy liver to do its duty. ol Cures Con- stipation, In. digestion, : CARTERS, a Sick IT | Ey IVE ALLY Headache, and Distress After Eating. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE Genuine must bem re jg ons x rashes, hives, red- ness and skin blemishes can be quickly removed with Glenn’s Sulphur Soap Delightful in a warm bath before retiring — soothes the nerves and induces refreshe ing sleep. Druggists, “Hill's Hair ond Whisker Dye, Black or Brows, S0c. |, PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM A toilet preparation of merit, Helps to eradicate dand raf, For Restoring Color and Beauty to Gray or Faded Hair Bo. aad $10 at Drugyista on ———— Swift Heredity. “l have the blood of many fighting men running in my veins.” “Yes, and | bet it runs all the faster when it smells bowder. DONT VISIT THE CAL IFORNIA EX. POSITIONS Without a supply of Allen's Foot Ease the an septic powder to be shaken into the | Shoes or #1 soived in the foot-bath. The Siandarg Remedy for the fest for 25 years 1 gives instant folie fo tired aching foot and prevants sw lien Bot feet Ore mdy writes. | enjoyed every minute of my stay at the Faxpasitions, thanks to Allen's Foot-Eese n my shoes.” Cet it TODAY Adv A man is mighty fearless and plain spoken when he is talking to his wom- en folk. YOUR OWN DRUGGIST WILL TELL YOU Murine Bre Remedy for Hed W k Watery ee and Grasulaied Rayelids No Bmaring. Bie comfort. Write fo te of of the ® Free. Remedy Oo. Chicago 9 mail Murine kre A man knows less than a woman but a rart of what he knows is true. AreYour Kidneys Weak? ou know that deaths from kidn Wis Lu are 100,000 a year in the U. q alone? That deaths have increased 72% in 20 years? If you are run down, los ing ~~ nervous, “blue” and rhe matie, i Jou have backache, di Holle and urinary d , act quiel Use Doan’s Kid Pills. No ther medi- cine is so wi used, none so highly recommended, Pa., says: ney disease clung to me so long clusion there was no hope of m ing cured. ned to get up severai times at night to pase the kidney Fi secretions an d Back k sot #0 bad 1 noe Po Doan’ wheel EW B0c » Box DOAN’S ®}bNEY FOSTER-MILBURN CO., BUFFALO, N. Y, KEEP SWINE HEALTHY | Scours in Pigs Often Caused By Improper Feeding. To Correct Trouble Give Sow Dose of Sulphate of Iron in Her Slop— Keep Young Animals in Dry, Sunny Quarters. (By A 8B. ALEXANDER) When young’ nursing pigs begin to scour it is evident that the milk of the sow is disagreeing with them and immediate attention, therefore, should be directed toward improving her ra- tions. Most often the trouble comes from overfeeding on corn, or other rich food, just after farrowing, and pigs of fat, flabby, cross, nervous, con- stipated sows are most apt to suffer. Sudden changes of food, or feeding sour swill, or food from dirty troughs: also tend to cause diarrhea either in been weaned, and all such cases should be prevented or removed. To correct scouring in nursing pigs, give the sow 156 to 20 grains of sul phate of iron (copperas) in her slop night and morning and, if necessary, slightly increase the doses until fective. Lime water may, with ad vantage, be freely mixed with the glop as a preventive when there is a ten derangement, or after the trouble has be<s checked, and also is an excellent corrective for weaned pigs showing a tendency to scour on slop or skimmed milk. When, little pigs are scouring severely, each may be given a raw egg and five to ten grains of subnitrate of bismuth twice Jaily in addition to changing the food of the sow and mixing copperas in her slop. In cases which do not respond promptly to treatment, Success may follow the administration of a dose of castor oll shaken up in milk. In all cases it is important to set right all errors in diet and sanitatic and to provide the pigs with dry, sunny, well-ventilated quarters. The derangement is most apt to occur aanell Tr i Erize-Winning Mule-Footed Hog. among pigs kept in insapitary condi tions. Inactivity of the bowels most often gives trouble in pregnant sows and other adult hogs when given too little and too much rich foed. In imals the liver is torpid. the tem feverish and the muscles and organs overloaded with fat Constipation seldom troubles where hogs are fed laxative foods, such as bran, flaxseed meal, roots or al’alfa during the winter season, and in addi tion are made to take abundant out- door exercise In common such an the diseases of young pigs known as rickets, there is en argement, bending and distortion of the bones of the joints and limbs, and fractures of leg bones are not uncom mon. The bones of the body in af fected pigs lack their normal propor tion of mineral material and have an excess of vegetable matter. The ten dency to the disease is hereditary and most likely to be secn in closely in bred hogs or those of herds kept under insanitary conditions and long imperfectly nourished upon unbal anced rations. The excessive feeding of corn to generation after generation | doubtless induces a weakness of con- stitution conducive to rickets and the disease may appear as a result of any aggravating circumstance productive of malnutrition. BREEDING ONLY BEST CATTLE Counterfeit Dairy Cow Has No Place on Pasture or in Feed Yard Discard Poor Producers. — M'CANN, Colorado Rxperi- ment Station.) The development of the increasing demand for well-bred dairy cattle = based upon the recognition of the fact that under present production eondi tions, the counterfeit dairy cow has no place on the pasture or in the feed: yard. During the past few years difficulty of replenishing and starting herds with good animals has confronted the dairy farmer at every turn. High feed bills have demonstrated the fu- tility of expecting satisfactory returns when keeping poor producers, and the wideawake, progressive, businesslike dairymen are centering their demands on merit, of which there must be a greater supply to meet this demand. Foreign competition hes created a well grounded impression that the most effective way of evading it ie by greater production per animal and better products, (By ROUD Silo Pays Well. No building on the farm will pay better returns than a good silo, if properly built and filled on time, and in the right way, Reduces Farm Drudgery. The modern equipment in the way of litter carriers and feed carts re duces the drudgery of the barns to a minimum, HANDY AS POTATO MARKER Wheelbarrow Arranged With Pine Strips Hinged to Bottom Center Board Proves Satisfactory. a very stumpy piece of gandy new ground for early potatoes. The ont work because of 80 many stumps, wheelbarrow being near with seed up on it a happy thought struck me--this would roll over the rough ground roots, ete, and leave a distinet mar} in the soil, besides running easily writes G. A. Randall in Farm anc Home. A half-inch hole was bored throug! the bottom center board and tw pieces, ¢, of inch pine strips 26 inches long were hinged, as shown, to a cen ter section, e, fastened with a wire through the holes, f, to the bottom board. On the outer ends of these Handy Marker for Potatoes, strips a light runner, a, ground and slants back. ners with the wheel in make three distinet marks pushed across the field a stump either or both sections ar easily folded back until the obstruc tion is passed, then dropped to posi tion again to mark. Being light and mounted on & conte These the center marks clear across the fielc made with When not ir to guide; being straight as thos. line and very distinct use for a marker the quickly removed. Burial of Dead Animals Not Approvec by Nebraska Statien—Excellent Plan ls Described. The burial of hogs dying of cholers is not advised by the animal pathology at the Nebraska ev periment station. The germs of the disease will last a long time in the earth under favorable conditions ant are liable to cause a new outbreak The safest way to dispose of a carcass is to burn It Burning may be easily accomplishes in the following manner: ig tw renches a few Dp intersect ing each other at right angles. At the intersection of these, cornstalks, or other fuel may be laid. Over the trenches may next be laid strips o metal to support the carcass. Be being placed over the supports, abdominal and thoracic cavities shoulc be opened and be liberally sprinkles with Then the hog shoul be placed downward over the fuel. trenches fs Ignited. it will #pread to the kerosene and the body will be quickly consumed If a large iron department o inches dee cobs forse the Lerosene belly rapidly for the trench and fron bars. IMPROVE YOUR POTATO SEED Wisconsin Experiment Station Gives Six Excellent Rules for Farm. ers to Follow, The Wisconsin experiment station tells the farmers of that state to im prove their potato seed. 1. By co-operating with thelr neigh bors in securing pure seed. 2. By planting this foundation btock by itself where it will not be mized with other varieties, 3. By learning the vina and tuber characteristics of the variety one plants, 4. By discarding as seed all hills which do not have these characteris ties. 5. By selecting seed for next year on the field at digging time. 6. By organizing the growers, deal ere and others in your community who are interested in the development and improvement of its potato b Industry, TREATMENT ¢ OF COVER CROPS Thoroughly cut Up Clover or Other Crops With Disk Marrow Before Turning Over, Never turn the clover or other crop under without first thoroughly cutting up with a disk harrow, as the material plowed under in a layer seriously in terferes with the capillary action of the moisture in the soil. The effects of turning under in © layer are what is sometimes called souring the soll with green manuring crops. Double disk the cover crop two or three times with a sharp disk harrow before plowing; plow well by taking a narrow furrow and edging rather than inverting the furrow; then double disk the land again rather woeeply, and no injurious effect will re sult however large the growth may ba, Bulls in Same Enclosure. If dehorned, bulla of the same or different ages may be safely kept In the same enclosure. When two bulls are kept in adjoining enclosures they #honld be separated by a strong, high board fence, so they are unable fo see ench other, . edTh en, WAY Ne UR we NW Contents 15 Fluid Drac ALCOHOL~ 3 PER CENT. AVegetable PrepamtionforAs- similating the Food snd Regula Hing the Stomachs and Bowels of § 13 Promoles Digestion, Cl erful ness and Rest.Contains neither Opium Morphine nor Mineral Nor NARCOTIC. Recipe of Ghd Dr SANUEL PITORER Pumplin Seed Aly Senne + Rochelly Salts» Anise Saud * Ban aspongle te. Soda = fr Se darilied S intergresm Haver A perfect Remedy for Conslipa- tion, Sour Plowiuf Diauriwen, Worms, Feverishness and LOSS OF SLEEP. - 14 + —————— Fac Simile Signature of A * Tue CEXTAUR COMPANY, NEW YORK. Exact Copy of Wrappes DRIVER WAS BUSINESS MAN Saw More Profit in Hauling Stranded | Automobilist Than in Selling Him | Gasoline. Mack Sennett was iXego fair in his seloek in the miles fron is supply Ere Was 1 nowhere side of the : to con do when |} ceeded fo few minut of wheels or WAREOR whe dark There's a ten spot me to town hai The Mack settled down ride I burg way on driver re hey were drawing int when Mack rather ear! thie re ad “Yes, start customers.” Ard as Mack handed for his work, the man ox marked thst for the driver to rem have 11 he replied, "but carly to get around f a ntinued soe, | the the small around | Photoplay Magazine | -— i pot You stores in peddle gasoline to towns here’ Satisfied. ther baseball Everybody “1 see where ano player | hag been fined for having a row with | an umpire.” “Do you sympathize with him? ‘Not at all. My observation is that | the average plaver who is fined for | assaultimg an umpire that he got his money's worth.” feels The Place. were stung lately "Baltimore “You say “Yes: at a spelling bee American you CLEAR. HEADED. Head Bookkeeper Must Be Reliable. | | i i The chief bookkeeper in a large business house in one of our great Western cities speaks of the harm | coffee and tea did for him: “My wife and 1 drank our first cup of Postum a little over two years ago, and we have used it ever since, to the entire exclusion of tea and coffee. It happened in this way: | “I had an attack of pneumonia, which left me with dyspepsia, or neu- raigia of the stomach. My ‘cup of cheer’ had always been coffee or tea. but | became convinced, after a time, that they aggravated my stomach trouble. 1 happened to mention the matter to my grocer one day and he suggested that | give Postum a trial. “Next day it came, and we liked it so much that we will never change back; for | am a well man today and have used no medicine. “My work as chief bookkeeper in our Co's branch house here is of a very confining nature, During my cof fee drinking days | was subject to nervousness and the ‘blues’ In addi tion to my sick spells. These have left me since I began using Postum and | can conscientiously recommend it to those whose work confines them to long hours of severe mental exer Name given by Postum Co., Dattle Creek, Mich. Read “The Road to Wellville,” in pkgs. Postum comes in two forms: Postum Cereal--the original form must be well bolled. 15¢ and 26c pack: nges, Instant Postum-—a soluble powder dissolves quickly in a cup of hot wa- ter, and, with cream and sugar, makes a deliclons beverage instantly, 300 and 60c tins. Both kinds are equally delicious and cost about the same per cup. “There's a Reason” for Postum. CAs 5 AR 4 WN he SHEN Cry For 4 - contzins neither Opium, Pare It is pleasant. It It destroys Worms has been in constant use for Flatulency, Wind Colic, all Pilarrhoea, the relief of Constipation Teething Troubles and sleep, "Twas Ever Thus. Have you } operating market of late’ een in the stock “No Judge I've been operated upon ny NEVER HAD A CHIN After Taking EIIXIR BAREK “yy tie Quughie 10 year t or oh fever. flered CRY B yras 5 Bn at of the me ponder { iI was disecour wy Blixir never had # cme ped a a frie Advised me § > Ha boek. "Iga tic herand she § Helms SS ESN Elixir Ha bek © Parceis Post Was DON'T MIND PIMPLES Cuticura Soap and Ointment Will Ban- ish Them. Trial Free. emol- These Hents fragrant sug much t« eErcreamy nse, hat afford do so clea SCA Pp, in " t mes that you cannot be them, Besides every want in tollet preparations and are most economical Sample each {ree by mail posteard, Cuticura, Sold everywhere — thes with Book. Dept. XY, Boston ~Adv Boston's Advantage. Gotham — But are so crooked Hubb-—And you Mrs in Boston Mrs Four sireets rez in New York But sren’t straight streets an ad “Why, no. Now in Boston walk and walk and get but in New York one Can some place you can walk Britons have the sweetost next. if the statis for consumption of sugar mean An Englishman eats anno 924 pounds, an American oon 792 pounds. In Denmark the consumption fs 72.6 pounds in Switzerland it Is Holland, Swed in from 39% to 44 in France, pounds: in 33; in Austria, 24.2; in Rus in Portugal, 156.4 11; in Italy, Roumania and Serbia, from $6 pounds ally ae aed per capita; pounds: fn Germany, 35 pounds; 19.8; tions is found in the relative highness Famous Feats o” Archery. In the days when the buffalo wak found in vast herds on the western plains there were Indians who, while riding at a gallop, could send an ar row through a buffalo’s body. Re markable as this archery was, it did not equal that reached by the archers of ancient times. It is of record that the MacReas of Gairlock, Scotland, were such skilled archers that they could hit a man at the distance of 500 yards. In 1794 the Turkish am: bassador at London shot an arrow in a field near that capital 415 rds against the wind. The secretiry of the ambassador on hearing the ex. pressions of surprise from the Eng lish gentlemen present, said the Sul tan had shot 600 yards. This was the greatest performance of modern days. but a pillar standing on a plain near Constantinople recorded shots rang ing up to 800 yards. Sir Robert Alns lis, British ambassador to the Sub lime Porte, recorded that ni 1798 he was present when the Sultan shot an arrow 972 yards Washington Star, NEW YOMR CITY, i branch office in ich there ig a loafing woman Trouble every maintains home in wi | man or gossiping i An ng woman is one who {| permits a man to talk abut himself [3 y Allen's “Hair [Isr A entertain | A Soluble Antiseptic Powder to be dissolved in water as needed For Douches In the local treatment of woman's fla | such as lencorrhoea and x flammation, bob { douches of Paxtine are very efficacious | No woman who has ever used medicated | douches will fail to appreciate the clean and | bralthy condition Paxtine produces and the prompt relief from soreness and discomford which follows ita use.T his is because Paxting | prasesses superior cleansing, disinfecte fo and healing properties. —— Yor ten years thas Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. Las reo. ommended Paxtine in their js private correspondence with wo. men, Which proves ita superi- ority,. Women who have Po | relieved may it is * worth its weight in grid.” At dmgrists, B0c, large box or by mail. Sample free, | The Paxton Toilet On. Boston, Mass, sss em ————— —LADIES!!— USE GILBERT'S JEWEL TALCUM POWDER The Teicum of Quality, for refined people, Perfume rich, , and ex quisite, Powder of vairsty flueness i In Glass Jurs—18c. and 28¢ Sold by all dealers MADE 5% GILBERT BROS, % CO. BALTIMORE, MD | win injure ihiure anzihing. HAROLD BONERS. 100 De Kalw ava, Ave. Beestirn. ¥ A AH A Ss A SE Hb 53 ey TAA ony ovo Crean rb rs i GRASS, dependable mmol pid ied sr a aut * tok, . ran tend Val ant Sorina Rute Ek TD Sth feos. Nisa. tapiash. Pen, W. N. U, BALTIMORE, NO. n-1,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers