MAYOR OF 8UNBURY Says Pe-ru-na la a Good Medicine. Hon. C. 0. llrooks. Mayor o Sunbory, Ohio, also Attorney for Farmers' Bank ud Sunbury Building and Loan Co., writes: "I have the utmost confidence in the virtue of i'enina. It ia a (treat medicine. 1 have used tt and I have known many of my friends who have obtained bene ficial results from it use. I cannot praise Fcruna foo highly. Detective Methods of Scotland Yard. How the London Sleuths Catcli Criminals. HON. C. C. BROOKS. rpllKKE aro a host of petty ailments X which are the direct result of the wenther. This ia more true of the excessive heat of summer and the intense cold of win ter, hut ia partly true of all seasons of the year. Whether it be a cold or a cough, catarrh of the head or bowel complaint, whether the liver be affected or the kidneys, the cause is very liable to be the same. The weather slightly deranges the mu cous membranes of the organs and the re sult is some functional disease. Peru tut hatt become a standby in thousands of homes for minor ail ments of this sort. Ask Tour Druggist for Free Peruna Almanac For 1907. HICKS' CAPUDINE immediatc.lv cures HEADACHES Bre.h. up COLDS IN 0 TO 11 HOURS Trt.1 Souk 10c. At DnutftS) New York (iirls Don't HIiinIi. "It's funny, but It's true," sighed the gray-haired man, "that most all the blushing that Is done lit New York now-adays Is done by men. Novelists ought to make a note of that. If they want to be strictly ac curate In their attempts to portray contemporaneous New York life they must cut out. that old-fashioned phrasr 'He blushed like a girl.' That doesn't mean anything now. Girls don't blush any more; that Is New York girls don't. Not for an age have I seen a feminine face suffused with the flush romantic. But I've seen men blush, lots of 'em. it be hoves authors to bear that physiolo gical change In mind and whenever they write about a G. B. S. epigram or anything else that proves a little too strong for feminine sensibilities they will have to describe its effect on the abashed auditor by saying, 'She blushed like a man.' " N. Y. Sun. Seamstresses And f'olors. The seamstress, passing her needle through and through the fabric on her lap, said: "I love to sew white. Hove to sew green, too. Pinks are easy. So are most of the clear, pale tints. But black! But red! But shep herd's plaid!" She threw back her head In horror. "Bright red, when you sew It, In flames your vision; It angers you; It makes you nervous. "Black strains the eyes out of your head; the stitches In It are so hard to see. Black Is a depressing color, too "But worst of all is that combina tion of black and white called shep-i herd's plaid. Work on shepherd's plaid an hour or two and the black and white squares will dance under your eyes like living things. "Polka dots dance, too," she end ed. "They polka. Hence the name." Philadelphia Bulletin. Dog Went To School. A little Indian boy who attended the government school at Keshena had a habit of going to school every morning at 8 oTlock with his black dog, Nigger, and returning home every evening at 4 o'clock. One day the little boy became sick and was unable to go to school, but Nigger was on deck and went alone at 8 o'clock and back at 4 o'clock every day for a whole week. St. Paul DUpatch. Only One Danger. At the crowded downtown corner the frightened pedestrians were scur rying out of the way of street cars, automobiles, delivery wagons and policemen on horseback. "Gosh! " exclaimed the window washer, looking down on them from his perch on the narrow ledge of a fifteenth-story window. "I'm glad I alnt' In that crowd." Chicago Tri bune. f AWFUL ATTACKS OP PAIN. A Most Dreadful Case of Kidney Trouble and How It Was Cured. Thomas N. McCullougb, 321 South Weber St., Colorado Springs, Colo., says: "For twelve or fifteen years 1 was suffering fre quent attacks of pain In the back and kidneys that lasted for three) weeks at a time. I would be unable to turn in bed. The urine was In a terrible condition, at times a com plete stoppage occurring. I began with Doan's Kidney PiUa, and soon felt better. Keeping on, I found com plete freedom from kidney trouble. The cure has been permanent. I owe my good health to Doan's Kidney Pills." Sold by all dealers, BO cents a bos. Foster-Mllburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Away along the Embankment, close to the Houses of Parliament, Is a big, businesslike red brick build ing, the headquarters of those whose business It Is to solve mysteries. Scotland Yard is the home of thrilling occupations, and has many tasks undreamed of by those who re gard It merely as tho directing office of the army of blue-coated London constables, and among those tasks Is that of probing the mystery of lost persons a mystery touched often by romance, often by tragedy, and occasionally surrounded by a black obscurity Into which no human Inge nuity can pierce. It Is part of the work of Scotland Yard to endeavor to extract from the bewildering hu man continent of London those In dividuals who have suddenly walked off the track of human knowledge, who In ordinary speech with friends and acquaintances In one hour bttve In the next, for no reason and with out a word, disappeared. Some of these mysteries never havo been solved and never will be solved, but they aro astonishingly few compared to those which Scot land Yard unravels every week. Only one case here and there Is heard of, because the work Is in the ordinary Toutlne of the Yard, and the force has no eye for romance, rigidly re strlcting itself to practical thoughts and practical work. Stretched over twenty square miles of London, with its population of a nation, are the nervous tentacles of Scotland Yard, ever alert for the work, responding In a moment to an Impulse from that centre of Intel ligence the red brick, businesslike building on the Embankment, Fre quently throughout day and night the agents of Scotland Yard are scouring London in the search for missing persons. The great organiza tion spread for miles works like a machine. To give an idea of the work It will be best to take an instance of what happens In an individual case. A prosperous, middle-aged civil servant living at Clapham is amazed and alarmed to find that his son, a bank clerk, aged twenty-four, does not return home one night after business. He is a well beiaved young fellow and has never before stayed away all night. In the morning his father hurrlef to the branch of the bank in Kensington where his son is employed, and finds that he left at about half-past five on the night before !n quite his usual manner, giving no Indication that he was not going straight home. From the time he left the bank door he has not been seen. His accounts are In perfect order; he was a young man on the way to promotion. The bewildered father takes a cab to the nearest police station and re lates his story to the Inspector In charge. "Oh, I daresay he'll be found in a couple of days," says the cheery inspector. "We'll get on to It at once. What is his descrip tion?" Thereupon the father gives a de scription of his son, running, per haps, something like this: Height, five feet eight inches; fair hair; slight, fair moustache, gray eyes, slim build; wearing silk hat, morn ing coat, dark-striped trousers and glace kid lace boots. The Inspector enters thlB in a book, together with some details as to the disappearance. He hands the book to a policeman clerk and turns to give another word of reassurance to the father. Within a minute the latter hears the "tick tick' tick" of a telegraph Instrument In the hands of the po liceman clerk. The description he. has given is being telegraphed to ev ery police station In the London area, and Is also being sent to Scotland Yard. Thus within a few minutes the police depots from one end of the metropolis to the other ure on the qui vlve for the slim, fair-habed young man. But the process has only just be gun. As soon as the father has left the police station the inspector call out from another room two "special Inquiry officers," who are expert searchers for missing persons and who have a wonderful knowledge of their district, with Its doubtful re sorts, low-class clubs, boarding houses and other places where lost people drift. They hear the details and they go out on their quest, start ing first with Inquiries at the hos pitals within their reach In order to make Bure that no accident has be fallen the young man. By the time they are in the street headquarters at Scotland Y.avd have the matter In hand. At Intervals throughout the day the private printing presses at the Yard pro duce a printed Bheet with the latest confidential information on police matters, and this sheet Is distributed hot from the press to every police station In London, and as there are three or four lBSues every day only an hour or two elapses between each edition. As a reBult, by midday the description of the young man has been printed and Is being distributed broadcast to the police. Every ex pedient Is used to get it round quickly, and in the case of some of the Isolated stations mounted men convey it from place to place. As soon as the Gazette Is received at a station the officer In charge sees the description and lakes action Every hour or two batches of con stables are paraded before him pre vious to going out on duty In the streets. To each of these batches be reads aloud the description of the missi.ng man, and every constable goes out to his work with a picture of the fair-haired, slim young man In his mind. Within twenty-four houra every member of the force has hot rd of that fair-hatred young man aid Is looking out for him. But perhaps there has entered ibe mind of Scotland Yard the idea that crime Ilea at the root of the mys tery, that the young man has been murdered, If that thought comes to Scotland Yard another part of the great machine is set to work. The criminal investigation department la invited to lend Us aid, and a detective-Inspector, with a little band of clever subordinates, sets to work independently of all that Is being done In other directions. The young man's employers, his relatives, his friends, his acquaintances every person he has been known to speak to during the past week is exhaus tively questioned, and people against whom there may be some kind of shadowy suspicion are unobtrusive ly watched without cessation by care less young racing men, omnibus con ductors or city clerks, all of whom aro really Scotland Yard detectives. And while the newspapers know nothing, the police force of London Is humming with the search for that fair-haired young man. Perhaps after two days the Scot land Yard squadron gets a clue, and uniting with the local special Inquiry officers, tracks the falr-halred young man to a shady lodging house In North Kensington, where, half starved, dazed with the effects of drugs, he has been locked In a cellar for forty-eight hours. He had been by somo plausible means lured to the house In question and piled with drink by well-dressed scoundrels, who believed he carried keys belong ing to the bank. Finding he had not what they required they had temporarily locked him up, with what ultimate object can only be guessed. There are hundreds of simpler cases which are solved In a matter of hours. It will be safe to say that the chances are ten to one In favor of Scotland Yard finding the where abouts of a missing person within a week. London Dally Mall. NEW YORK DAY BY DAY. Some of the Things Done Daily in the Metropolis. Dynamite For The Whole Block. An Innocent-looking pall, contaln- Ing enough dynamite to blow a block to atoms, and a large number explosive dum-dum bullets were found In a tub In the bathroom on the third floor to a furnished-room house at 205 W. Eleventh Street early the oth er morning. The dynamite and bullets were wrapped In brown paper thick with dust. George WItham, a young electrician living In the house, found the pall on Monday night, but. did not say anything about It until the next morning, when he told the landlady, Mrs. Frederick Peters, who promptly notified the police of the Charles Street 8tatIon. Policeman Walsh took the stuff to the station house, first taking the precaution to fill the pall with water. Later it wan removed to the Buieau of Com bustibles, and Inspector Wolf, who examined the contents, Raid there was enough dynamite to blow up the block, and that the bullets were of the explosive kind. The bullets were in boxeB bearing the name "New York and Boston Drug Company." The police do not believe that who ever left the explosives there Intend ed to use them 'herc they were found. They are trying to connect the finding of the explosives with tho threatening lettcss received late ly by a wine merchant named Mar chinl living nearby, who received an order a day or two ago to give up $2000 or havo his place blown up. Estimates of the country's copper production this year place the output at between 940,000,000 and 70, 000,000 pounds. Last year's produc tion was 901,000,000 pounds. There is more Catarrh in this section of the country than all other diseases put to gether, and until the last few years was sup posed to be incurable. For a great many years doctors pronounced it a local disease and prescribed local remedies, and by con stantly failing to cure witli local treatment, pronounced it incurable. Science has proven Catarrh to be a constitutional disease, and therefore requires constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J, Cheney Co., Toledo, Ohio, ia the only con stitutional cureonthemarket. It is taken in ternally in doses from 10 drops toa teaspoon ful . It acts directlv on the blood and mucous surfaces of the svstcm. Thev offer one hun dred dollars for any case it fails to cure. Send for circularsand testimonials. Address F.J. Chknfy ft Co.. ioledo, O. Sold bv Druggists. 7Sc. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipatioa. The sea-level canal from Mar seilles to the Rh -ne River Is to be completed In seven years at a cost of $13730,000. FITS,St.VituK'Dnnce:Nervous Dlsenses per manently cut nd by Dr. Kline's Hrent Nerve Restorer. U trinl bottle and treatise froe. Dr. H. R. Kline, Lai. ,961 Arch St.. Phtlu., Pa. Time may be money, but no barber is wttllnK to accept ns payment for the shave the time a man wastes while awaiting his turn. BURDENS WOOD WILL CARRY. Strength and Elasticity Show Singu lar Variations. Some tests which have been made during the last year lead the Depart ment of Agriculture (Forest Serv ice) to declare that a wooden beam which for a short period will sus tain safely a certain load, may break eventually If tho load remains. For instance, wooden beams have been known to break after about fif teen months under a constant load of only sixty per cent, of that re quired to break them in an ordinary short test. There is only little def inite and systematic knowledge of the Influence of the time element on the behavior of wood under strain. This relation of the duration of stress to the strength and stiffness of wood is now being studied by the Forest Service at Its timber testing stations at Yale and Perdue univer sities. The experiments of the Forest Service show that the effects of grad ually applied loads are different from those of an Impact, or sudden stroke, provided that the stress ap plied by either method is within the elastic limit of the piece under test. For example, a stick will bend twice as far without showing loss of elas ticity under Impact, or when the load is applied by a blow, as It will under the gradually increasing pressure ordinarily used in testing. These experiments aro being extended to determine the general relations be tween strength under impact and gradual loads. As the case now stands, however, there would seem to be a good excuse for those loco motive englnecia who think It wiser to take a weak trestle at high speed than to slow down for it. The Department of Agriculture mentions the common belief among polemen that the continual vibration to which telephone poles Is subject ed take the life out of the wood and render it brash and weak. Nothing is definitely known as to the truth or falsity of this Idea. Tests will be undertaken to determine the effect of constant vibration on the strength of wood. Tried by Telephone. At Tarrant, Wis., a Justice of the Peace entertained a charge against a rural resident who failed to appear for a bearing. Straightway the Court called up the alleged offender on the 'phone and the following dia logue ensued: "Hello. John." said the Court. 1 wish you would come down to-day." "What for?" "The Town Marshal hits sworn out a warrant against you for beating him up Election Day. I want to try you." "Can't do it. Judge. I'm too busy." "I'll have to send a constable after you." "But I'm busy huskln' corn and buildln' a fence around my east forty. Why don't you try me now?" "All right. Are you guilty?" "Yep." "Five dollars." "All right. Judge. I will send It down by the rural mall carrier. Good-bye." Philadelphia Ledger. II. 11. l,luk.. a aMke,iM At, aula, Ga. .are the only successful Dropsy Specialists intha world. See their libcrnl offer in advertise ment in another column of this paper. One srood thlnr about havlnsr plenty of money is how much more you can try to net with It. Loot Factories Of $15,000 Goods. Cutting their way through a heavy wall strung with burglar-alarm wires, thieves gained entrance to the skirt factory of Samuel Berry, on the eighth floor of 3 West Eighteenth 8treet, almost In broad daylight and carried away silks valued at about $4,000. The burglary was the cli max of a serlex of robberies In the vicinity. Equally successful was a raid of robbers recently who carried away $5000 worth of bilks from the establishment of James B. Goggln, of 29 East Nineteenth Street; plun dered a rravenette factory In West Twenty-sixth Street of goods valued at $3500 and took silks worth $2500 from another skirt factory. After boring through the Berry establish- I They boarded a train going east, ment wall with drills the robbers cut j and Just as they alighted at the ter- n hole about 14 inches between two minus a large bar or iron on a aruj Alligator Joe's Collection. Alligator Joe, tho well-known alli gator trainer, has just come off a hunt in the Everglades, where he captured seventeen monster alliga tors and crocodiles, and added them to his great collection of these rep tiles, numbering now over seven thousand. Joe has the distinction of being the only living man who captures and handles with easo the largest or alligators and crocodiles. The act is easy. He Jumps on their backs end has them in his control In a very tow seconds. His alligator and croco dile farm Is situated a mile up the river, and a new rock road which has been built, making It a pleasant ride by conveyance. The farm has been greatly en larged since last season, and people who have never seen Joe perform, will find a novel treat in store for them this winter. Miami (Fla.) Metropolis. Plies Cured In 0 to 14 Days. Paso Ointment is guaranteed to cure nny case of Itchi ng. Blind, Bleedin g or Protr l'ling riles in o to H aaya or mouey retunaeu. ooo. Scotland Forever. An American tourist on a visit to Glasgow, n short time ugo. on emerg ing from the railway station, was accosted by a lad with the usual cry of "Carry your bag, sir?" The gen tleman, handing the boy the bag, requested to be shown around Glas gow. Crossing George's Square they came opposite Sir Wnlter Scott's monument, and the boy sitld proudly, "That's one of the largest monu ments In Scotland." "Oh," said the Yankee, with an air of Indifference. "We have three cent cigars as big as that in Ameri ca. beams. Through this one of the men crawled, and, entering tho fac tory, passed out more than 800 pounds of silks. It Is believed the thieves had a wagon at tho door of the building, less than 30 feet from Fifth Avenue, and carried their loot off by th!-i means. "Beat Me, Rut Not My Birds." "I could forgive my husband for beating me, but not for killing my pets," said Mrs. David Gruntz, of 132 West Twentieth Street, In Jeffer son Market Court when her hus band, David, was charged by the Janitor of the building In which they lived with breaking furniture in the Gruntz's flat. "My husband Is a waiter," continued Mrs. Gruntz, "and Is often away at night. My canaries were very tuneful, and their night singing kept me cheerful and unafraid during his absence. When he drank he would imagine things about me that were not true, and Wednesday night he came home and beat me. For that I pardon him, but for breaking the bird cage and killing the birds I find no leniency In my heart. It was cruel." "It was cruel," said the Magistrate. "Gruntz, $500 bonds to keep the peace for Blx months." drawn by 12 horses came up the street. The American asked the boy what that was for, and the lad re membering the cigar, replied; "Oh, a new hotel has been built In the city and that's the kitchen poker." Tit-Bits. Anarchists To Have Love Feast. The case ogainst Emma Goldman, Alexander Berkman and John R. Coryell, charged with having made Incendiary speeches in a public, meet ing, was dismissed in the EsBex Mar ket Court by Magistrate Moss. As she left the court room Miss Gold man announced that the Anarchists would hold a "love feast" to cele brate her release. When tho case was called Assistant District Attor ney Keough asked for the release of the prisoners. He said the Grand Jury a few weeks ago refused to in dict Miss Goldman for making an al leged Incendiary speech at the Man hattan Lyceum. He declared that the case against the three defend ants was of a similar nature, and that it would be useless to prosecute them. Doctor Hits A "Press Agent." Huddled up in one corner near the radiator, the book agent saw a man who was fairly sneezing his head off. "Seem to havo a had cold," ven tured the agent. "Awful," sneezed the sufferer. "Got a doctor?" asked the agent. "No," said the other man. "Better get one," the agent ad vised. "If you have no regular phy sician I can give you the name of a man who cures colds like magic." He gave the doctor's address and offered to stop and send around, if the man with the cold so desired. That night the book agent reviewed his day's work. "Nary a book sold," he said, "but I discovered four patients for that Jay doctor around the corner, and be'U give me half of his day's fees. He owes nine-tenths of his practice to me. He didn't have a patient when I met him. I volunteered to keep my eye open fpr sick people while In pursuit of the elusive trade, and when I found one who was a stranger In town and had no regul ir doctor to try to work him In. 1 succeeded so often that he now has a decent practice, and I earn more off my commissions from lilm than through my regular business." N. Y. Sun. NATURE PROVIDES FOR SICK WOMEN a more potent remedy in the roots and herb of the field than was ever produced from drugs. In the good old-fashioned days of our grandmothers few drugs wen used in medicines and Lydia E. Pinkham. of Lynn. Ma in her study of roots and herbs and their power over dlReiiKo discovered and gave to the women of the world a remedy for their peculiar ills more potent nnd efficacious than auy combination of drugs. 131 LYDIA E. PINKHAM Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is an honest, trieii nnd true remedy of unquestionable therapeutic value. During its record of more than thirty years, its long list of actual cures of those serious Ills peculiar to women, entitles Lydia E. Pinkham Vegetable Compound to the respect and confidence of every fair minded person and every thinking woman. When women are troubled with Irregular or painful functions, weakness, displacements, ulceration or inflammation, backache, flatulency, general debility, indigestion or nervous prostration, they should remember there Is one tried and true remedy, Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound. No other remedy in the country has such a record of cures of female ills and thousands of women residing in every part of the United States bear willing testimony to the wonderful virtue of Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable compound and what It has done for them. Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women to write her for advice. She has guided thousands to health. For twenty-five years she has been advising sick women free of charge. She is the daughter-in-law of Lydia L. Pmk hnm and ns her i.sslstant for years before her decease advised under her immediate direction. Address, Lynn, Mass. First Mother 1 am extremely well satisfied with my sons tutor. Second Mother But didn't your son fall to pass his exam.? First Mother Yes. but the tutor Is going to marry my daughter. Hon Vlvant. PHILIPPINE " DOBIE ITCH." Swiss Timepieces Dearer. Importers of Swiss watches and clocks announced advances In prices, varying from 5 to 15 per cent, on all except the highest grade of time pieces, thus following the load given by American clock manufacturers, who recently put up their prices. Up to this time the American manufac turers of watches have not made any change, but the public will find nearly every other kind of device for telling tho hour more coBtly after this. It Is likely that many retail dealers will add a. greater percentages to the prices than the wholesalers did. The cheaper watches, which are the most affected by the increase, conre In cases made of plated and oxidized silver, gun metal and nickel. Boiling Blood Miracle. The faith of the Neapolitans has, according to tho Berliner Tageblatt, received a violent shock. At. the Llceo Moderno, In Naples, Professor Arnaldo Imitated, before an audience of professors and students; the famous miracle of Saint Januarlus, whose blood, preserved at the ca thedral, Is said to boll twice a year. The Professor employed for the ex periment the same counter, the same flask and the same number of can dles as In the cathedral, and with out the prayers of the clergy the "miracle" was duplicated. In the museum of the Louvre, Paris, ie a pearl necklace belonging to the Thiers family. The necklace was once worth $1,260,000, but the pearls are dying, and in a lew years they, will be worthless. Measles And Pneumonia Futal. Measles and pneumonia caused the death of 23 out of 800 coolies on the steamer Indus, from Calcutta for Trinidad, B. W. I., according to a report brought here by the Indus. After landing the surviving coolies at Trinidad the Indus sailed for Cuba, where she took on a cargo of sugar for New York. She was de tained at quarantlno upon her arri val, and will be thoroughly disin fected before she Is released. Cylinder Kails Eight Stories. A cylinder fror - a lithographic; press, weighing more than three tons, fell eight stories from outside a window of the Puck Building, crushing a heavy truck like an egg shell and starting a runaway. By the merest chance, two riggers standing "at the eighth -story window were thrown Inside the building Instead of outside when the the breaking tackle caught them. The lithograph ic firm of J. Ottman Company was moving to. Ellzabethport, N. J., and Charles Brltlon ft Co., riggers, of 66 Gold Street, were moving them. Millionaire Under a Sundial. Those who care about sundials, and a good many who do not, will be interested in a story that ccmes from England. The late George Herring, a millionaire and a philan thropist, requested that after his death his body be cremated and the ashes burled under a sundial on the grounds of a certain charitable insti tution which he bad founded, called the Haven of Rest. His wish was complied with. New York Tribune. With His pipe, An old Hungarian countryman had smoked the same pipe for more than fifty years, and, as a natural conse quence, had grown to love It as a companion. One day, however, hir Infant grandson smashed the pipe be yond all hope of repuir. The old man was so brokenhearted at his loss that he hanged himself on a peg. In his pocket was found a scrap of paper on which was scribbled: "My pipe Is done for and 1 must go, too." Aluminum sliver Is now quite ex tensively used for the parts of type writers most exposed to corrosion. The properties of the alloy are ex treme stiffness, together with a white color and sound cuslliig qualities. It has replaced steel forglngs or malle able iron castings, which were for merly uBod for the purpose. WISEMAN! Rosettl "Yes, Strlnghattl, poor devil, has lost all hU money, but he has retained all his friends." SIgnora Rosettl "Well, that is strange." HosefU "No, ho died on the same day." II Riavolo Rosa. Itching Pimples Covered nody Dls charged For Disability Found Cure in Cutlcura Remedies. "I enlisted in the Corps of Engineers as a telegraph operator, and, while, stationed in the Philippines, I became subject to the 'Dobie Itch, as the natives call it. Id this disease small, white, itching pimples form under toe skin, generally between the toes, on the limbs, between the fingers and under the arms. I never knew of a case originating outside the Philippine Islands, but have known of many cases where it has returned in this country and Invariably at the same time of the year as the original attack. The cause, so far as I could learn, was some tropical parasite or germ peculinr to that region. "I got so bad that I was confined to my quarters a week at a time. The Army Surgeons applied some carbolic solution, and it would disappear for a time, when it would break out again. I was discharged from the Engineers by reason of disability contracted in line of duty, and when I had the trouble ug.iin, my druggist, Mr. Z , of Brooklyn, recommended Cuticura Remedies. The immediate relief was mani fest with my first purchase, and the inulady quickly yielded to the Cuticura Remedies. It has never recurred or both ered me since I began to use and continued to use the Cuticura Remedies. You may quote mc as a believer in Cuticura Rem edies from personal experience. John 8. Woods, 221 Sands St., Brooklyn, N. Y., Oct. 21 and 20, 1906." No. Atonza, men and hogs are not In the same clnss. (togs sometimes know when they huve enough. Toad I ish In Oyster Shell. A tond fish obout the size of a human finger was received at the museum of the Fish Commission late on Tuesday afternoon with which there Is connected an Interesting story. It Is stated that the fish w: found In a closed oyster shell. whi was purchased by Mr. John H. Mi: ! ler, of No. 331 G Street Southwe. ' i when he secured a lot of t lie bivalve In the shell yesterday from a dealer. While opening the oysters, Mr. Mil ler found the fish Inclosed between the shells. It was alive and he car ried It to the museum. It was placed in an aquarium, and today Is reported to be "well and thriving." It Is said the toad fish, which is an uply looking member of the finny tribe, can live several hours out of tho water. The theory Is that the fish was hatched from an egg which became accidontly imprisoned in the oyster shell. Washington Star. :--fr:"Xx:M":-x-:M-:x- I RHEUMATISM AND NEURALGIA Invigorate the Digestion. To invigorate the digestion and stimu late the torpid liver anil bowels there's nothing ao good as that old family remedy, Bfandreth's Pills, which has been in use for over a century'- They cleanse the blood and impart new vigor to the body. One or two every night for a week will usually be all that is required. For Constipation or Dyspepsia, one or two taken every night will in n short time afford great re lief. Brandreth's Pills are the same fin lax ative tonic pill your grandparents used and being purely vegetable are adapted to every system. Sold in every drug and medicine store, either plain or sugar-coated. Klther men kirk because they can't get government Jobs. or. If they get one, because It wasn't better. ST. JACOBS OIL V The Proved Remedy For Over 50 Years. X Price 29c and 50c A Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrupfor Children allays pttin.curos wind colic, 25c a bottle All heroes are Rood nnd nil villlans are bad on the Stage, hut It is often otherwise In real life. To Cure a Cold in One Day Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. Druggists refund money if it fails to cure. E. W. Grove's signature is on each box. 25c. And what a grand and glorious thing it would be if we could only exchange our Christmas presents for the things we really want. Itch cured in 30 minutes bv Woolford's Sanitary 'xition ; never fails. Sold by Drug gists. Mail orders promptly filed dv Dr. E. DetchonMed.Co..Crawfordsvllle,Ind. $1. Unless there Is a cuddling girl In a novel women will never recommend It as having any sentiment. DOCTORS MISTAKES Are said often to bo burled six feet under ground. But many times women call on their family physicians, suffering, us they Imagine, one from dyspepsia, another from heart dlsoasc, another from liver or kid ney dlsoaso, another from nervous pros tration, another with pain hero and there, and in this way they present aliko to themselves and their easy-going or over busy doctor, separate diseases, for which ho, assuming them to be such, prescribes his pills and potions. In reality, thoy aro all only numpttnns caused by some uterine disease. Tiio'DrWlclun,ltTjiorunt of the cuuteot sunVriugYKyops upTHajreatment until large bills arc nrade. Ttujlerlng patient gets no lM'tlerJWmisYHLO.t lie wrnno- treatment, hut nrubablv won lino nr i-nTi;nfc em nr , Wtar---kstfsWlsi MULE TEAM BORAX FOR WASHING WINDOWS Use hot water and 20 Mule Team Borax wipe dry and polish with old newspaper. All dealers. Sample, Seuvsiilr PlotSM in 10 colors aud tHMklet le. and dealer's Dame. Address PACIFIC COAST HOHAX CO , New York. Snowdrift Hogless Lard $ None anywhere near so good, so pure, so eco nomical, so satisfactory. U. 6. Government Inspeoted. toner rcctyd L Ifti' minf won Iv reiiU'Ved tlu- disease, titer iii Fri-K'f Iption by dispelling "alrfhosu distressing' Pyrap- toms, and instituting comiort ipsieau or prolonged misery. It has been well said, that "a disease known is half cured. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is a scientific, medicine, carefully devised by an experienced and skillful physician, and adapted to woman's delicate system. It Is made of native American medicinal roou and Is perfectly harmless in Its 'ecU In 7 WI Whdlflim uT"lhc Temm As a powerful Invigorating tonic "Fa vorite Proscription" Imparts strength to the whole system and to tho organs dis tinctly fomlnlno In particular. For over worked, "worn-out," run-down," debili tated teachers, milliners, dressmakers, seamstresses, "shop-girls," house-keepers, nurslngmothors, and feeble women gen erally, Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is the greatest earthly boon, being un cqualudus an appetizing cordial and re storativo tonic. As a soothing and strengthening nerv ine "Favorite Prescription " is uneuualed and. Is Invaluable In allaying and sub duing nervous excitability, Irritability, nervous exhaustion, nurvous prostration, ncutalgls, hysteria, spasms, St. Vltus'B dunce, and other distressing, nervous symptoms commonly attendant upon functional and organic disease of the uterus. It Induces refreshing sleep and rolievea mental anxlutv and despondency. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets uivtgoruto the stomach, Hvur and bowels. One to throe a dofeb. Easy to take as caudf. You Feel Well when your stomach takes proper care of the food you eat. Parsons' Pills aid digestion, gently expel all refuse matter from the system make new rich blood and insure health. Put up in glass vial. Price 25 Cents. At all dealers. I. S. JtMSSM 4 CO., lotos. Nan. - OAT E NTS patI lih to know abotS ? Do vou with n about TkAllILMAHKBl S Do you WISH IO anott alniut TENSIONS? bt nu wlnh to know nbout PAY and Bot!Nlfl II, .u wrile to W. i . Wills. Attorner-at-Lav (Notary Pnl.H ) vt 111- funding. 3W Indiana Af num. VYathingioii, 1. C. '.'4 y. art In ashln ton. Dnton Soldiers and Bailor. war 1SS1--1 entitled to penslou ni lit slier thty reach el II pensioner drtens wile the may be tin I tied 1S half his pension. 'IHHOOS TVI CBUM. 4 r. US Trr m 1 HMrtSieal i.Aeiis sv, -, rrl, ersf'UM ! rtMU,e umsci r arrLii. r-KAtuaa. rl I'lsHi aprtoau. SM-aa, ruta, atrwkinlM, Sm rlHiriuulisMBaisW iMsiwa tm J. . WJLTK.IXS A BUt, NAN SSTSIj Ma SIUUI I U K VS. OSUIAISMkf At usM'Ha Sao snii)i fUivulu To DIMOTSBl I ' DROPSY UVKBTI'X IN 't ills Pins ItwjTA
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers