Mrs. Emma Stolt, of Appleton, Wisconsin. mA neighbor advised me to ua Ftruna. bttfttn to improve at onee.n ! IRw$rR3T& BR- tE':' 'Sim Korea's Tragedy. By WILLIAM T ELLIS, Paraonal Representative, the Philadelphia Preea MRS. EMMA TOLT. Mra. Emma 8tolt, 1060 Oneida St., Ap pleton, Wis., writes: "Peruna has done me great deal ot good aince I began taking it, and 1 am al wavs glad to apeak a good word lor it. 'Three yeara ago 1 waa in a wretched con dition with backache, bearing down paint, and at time waa so sore and lame that 1 could not move about. I bad in flammation and irritation, and although I used different remedies they did me no good. "A neighbor who had been using Pe runa advised me to try it, and I am glad that I did. I began to improve as soon aa I took it and I felt mu-h better. "I thank you for your fine remedy. It is certainly n 'andMnil to sick women." Catarrh ot tbt Internal Orgini. Miss Theresa Uertles, White Church, Jio., writes: "l suffered with catarrh of the stomach, bowels and internal organs. Everything I ate seemed to hurt me. I never hao a passage of the bowels without taking medi cine. I was so tired mornings, ana ached all over. 1 had a pain in my left side, and the least exertion or excitement made me ahort of breath. "Now, after taking Peruna for six months, 1 am as well as I ever was. Pe runa has worked wonders for me. 1 be lieve Peruna is the best medicine in the world, and I recommend it to my friends." m HICKS' CAPUDINE immuiatclt cuaxe HEADACHES Breaks up COLD9 1 m a to is nous. Trial Isnb Kk. At A ltnd Killer. Father Mend your ways, or you'll fill a drunkard's grave. Son (after a night of hard luck) Don't worry, dad, I couldn't take the deck and fill a bob-tailed flush. Puck. FITS,St.Vltui'Dftnce:Nprvotis Diseases per manently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. trial bottle and treatise free. Dr. H. R. Kline, Ld.,9:il ArchSthila., Pa, Any coward can get married, but It takes a hero to stay married. SCALY ERUPTION ON BODY. Doctors and Remedies Fruitless Suf fered 10 Vears Completely Cured by Three I loses of Cutieura. "Small sores appeared on each of my lower limbs and shortly afterwards both of thoae limbs hern mi so sore that 1 could scarcely walk. The sores began to heal, but small, scaly eruptions appeared. The Itching was so severe thai 1 would scratch the sores until the blood began to How. After I suffered tliUH about ten years 1 made a renewed effort to effect a ure. The eruptions by this time had appeared on every part ot my body except my face and hands. The best doctor in my native county and many remedies gave no relief. Finally ray hair be on to tall out and 1 was rapidly becoming bald. A few months after, having used almost everything else, I thought 1 would try Cutieura Ointment and Cutieura Soap. After using three boxes 1 was completely cured, and my bair was restored, after fourteen years of suf fering and an expenditure of at least $50 to SO in vainly endeavoring to tind a cure. B. Hiram Mattingly, Vermilliou, S. Dak., Aug. 18, 19uC." There are as many different kludii of husbands a there are married men. E. H. Queen's Sokh.oI Atlanta, Ca., are the only successful Dropsy Specialists in the world. See their liberal offer in advertise ment in another column of this paper. A ltlllh'tproof Leather An Italian barrister has Invented a flexible fabric, somewhat resem bling leather, which no bullet or hard steel Instrument Is able to pierce. A motorcar the tires of which have been covered with this material, wan driven along a street where nails of large dimensions were stuck In the ground point upward, and the car passed over them with out damaging the rubber tires. The Minister ot Marine, of Italy, person ally experimented on a piece of this fabric, Which he unsuccessfully tried to perforate by firing several re volve shots at it. We do not treat street curs In America as the lowest Japanese coo lie feels freo to treat a Korean gen tleman. Only ( this morning, the Japanese porter carrying my bag (Koreans are not allowed to ply any lucrative occupations on or near the railways or steamboat landings) wanted to pass an elderly Korean who stood with his back toward us, In the railway station. Did the coo lie turn to one side, and ask the Dther to move? Not he; with an Im precation he gave tho man a shove that knocked him out of the way. That sort of thing Is so general that the sixty thousand Japanese now In Korea are feared by tho twelve mil lions Koreans to the point of abject nesB: for an appeal to Japanese official justice seems to bring noth ing but increased trouble. A Japanese broke Into the house of an English-speaking Korean whom I know, because the latter would not sell his property at the Japanese figure, and smashed the furniture, ornaments and a hanging lamp. The Korean, with the help of another, tied the offender to a chair and sent (or a policeman. When the latter came tho only crime he would con sider was that of "a barbarian tying up a civilized man," and he took away as evidence the rope with which the Korean had committed this hentous offense! Is It any wonder, as one of the leading natives In all Korea said to me, that the villagers throughout the country would rather see the black death enter their community than a Japanese? So much of this sort of thing have I seen with my own eyes, and so thinly veiled has been the hostility and Insolence of the lower class Japanese toward myself and all for eigners, that, bearing In mind the repeated assaults upon white men known to me, I have armed dally for the first time In my life. Yet the word that Is ever passing among the foreigners Is, "Don't pay any atten tion to Insolence and Insults, and do not hit back unless your life is endangered." The self-conceit, arrogance and license of the Japanese In Korea knows no bounds. Nor can the gov ernment, which so completely con trols the people In Japan, truthfully disclaim responsibility for this Btate of affairs. From all parts of tho countr- come reports of the forcible dispossession of Koreans from their homes In order that they may be occupied by the Japanese. "Military necessity" has been the convenient pretext under which thousands of acreB have been seized without compensation and thousands of Koreans compelled to work without pay. And military operations, on a large scale, really are In evidence In many parts of the land. I have seen small cities where al most the entire business section has been taken possession of by the Ja panese. Even the wealthy have ex hibited to me the same terror which possesses the poor, namely, that the Japanese will seize their lands and homes. One American friend of the natives showed me a bundle of deeds to houses and lands that was three feet in circumference. The deeds were dono up in packages, of which 1 counted forty-four; the aggregate of individual documents must have been more than 200. These have all been brought to the American for safety by alarmed Koreans, and he has bought them for a penny apiece. Thus far, a foreigner's ownership of real estate has been usually re spected, and the natives have turned over their property in this manner in order to keep it out of Japanese hands, hoping for the day when se curity for life and possessions will come to Korea. Japan's conduct In Korea, as any traveler may see It (though trav elers seem to be far less welcome In this picturesque country since Japan gained control than they are In Ja pan Itself), Is such as to afford the best materinl for a new Zola to arise and startle civilization with a "J'ac cuse!" For instance, It Is undeni able that up north the military whether officially or unofficially matters not quartered their female camp followers upon the natives with such scandalous results that the church officials compelled the Korean Christians to abandon their homes rather than to endure and witness the demoralizing use that was being made of them. Everybody knows that the Japan ese have put Into high places some of the worst rascals In that choice collection of superlative rogues, the Korean officeholders, thus making ludicrous her pretense of "reform." While I was In Korea the story was published, and later authenti cated, that a young Japanese had tried to force an old Korean out of his home. The latter refused to give up his ancestral habitation. There upon the Japanese set upon him and beat him, tied a beam to his shoul ders, weighed It with stones, and then strung him up to the eaves of his dwelling, where he died In agony. When the murdered man's son returned and discovered the crime, he and some friends started in pursuit. The murderer fled across a river; the avenger, with a knife In his teeth, swam after him. The fugitive was caught and killed, and remember that Korea Is In the Orient, with Immemorial customs the heart and liver of the criminal were offered as a sacrifice to tho spirit of the slain Korean. Of course, this wan wrong one crime never justifies ar other; but the deterrent effect will doubtless be greater than the example made of another Japanese slayer of a Korean, who was sentenced by the Japanese to an Imprisonment of two "ears! The Instance Is one of several re ported of late which would seem to indicate that, driven to bay, the long submissive Koreans are desperately refusing to play the role of "dumb, driven cattle." Will Korea's day ever come again? Is Japan going to succeed In her apparent purpose of eliminat ing the Koreans, as she once elimi nated the AlnuB, and as the white men eliminated the North American Indian? Where is help to come for the poor Korean, who, while he lacks the enterprise and self-confidence of tho Japanese, Is In certain important respects his pronounced superior? His present afflictions, by the way, are really waking up the Korean's dormant qualities. Some Koreans are looking hope fully to the meeting of The Hague tribunal. Others expect that Russia when rehabilitated will make com mon cause with her, or that Ger many will express her belief in the "yellow peril" doctrine by coming to the help of Chosen. Still others, more far-seeing, point out that Ja pan's conduct In Korea, of which China must be perfectly aware, will prevent the Japanese from ever getting a foothold in China, and may eventually lead Korea's ancient suze rain to reclaim her former depen dency. Foreigners seem to think that an enlightened and aroused public opinion in Great Britain will do what force of armr may not do, for Japan cares more for the public opinion of civilization than for any other power. Succor for poor Korea surely will come from some quarter, for the unendurable cannot be Inter minable. From an article in Tho Independent. JJ Good Roads, g A Tain of Wide Tires. A good and practlcnl suggestion to road supervisors and others who have charge of road maintenance may be found In the following tale of the use of tho wide, Instead of the nar row tires. The story was told to Paul D. Sargtnt, Highway Commis sioner of the State of Maine, by a county commissioner of the same Btate: "The heavy teaming In our town Is confined mainly to the three miles of dirt road, over which lime rock is hauled from the quarles to the kilns. This teaming has been done for years on 2. 5-Inch tires, with hind wheels 66 Inches and front wheclo 60 inches In diameter. "The resulting repairs, made nec essary by the contfnual hajillng of heavy loads on narrow tires, has cost this town thousands of dollnrs. In order that this might be remedied we made an agreement with the lime rock haulers to furnish them with the wlde-tlred wheels fitted to their wagon axles, with tho understanding that If upon fair trial and experiment should prove to be of mutual ad vantage, the fJlgn should buy the wheels of the town.' "On consultation with the manu facturers we ordered the sizes above given (rear wheels 4 4 inches; front. 38 Inches). They arrived about the first of July, 1903, and from that time until about the 21st of August I used my best endeavors to get thorn adjusted to the wagons, and used: "But the haulers claimed that the 44-Inch wheels were so much lower than the old ones that tho rocks and ruts would 'trig' them; also that they would lower the body so much that the tongue would 'slat' and break the horses' legs. And: Who will pay the damage? was the ques tion. "As a last resort wo put the wheels on one of their wagons and hauled rock for them one day. Our team ster hauled the same loads, and fol lowed in the old tracks. The road waB in a very dangerous condition at thla time, and badly rutted, so that even 'Ight driving wagons sank to their hubs in some places. The wide tires soon filled the ruts so that the wagons with the narrow tires actually hauled more rock, on the last turn that day, than they did in the morning. "After seeing the work of theso wheels for one day, the owner of the wagon wanted tho wholo equip ment immediately, and applications for the other three seta came so faBt that we were unable to shift the gearing quickly enough. In fact, one teamster drove his team for a week without brakes, in order to have the wide tires sooner. Since that time the wheels have been In constant use, summer and winter. "At the time of this writing the same amount of rock is hauled In three turns that was formerly hauled in four turtiB by the same toams, and the drivers claim that Jhe work Is done easier for the horses. The sand stretch which was the hardest place for the narrow tires is now crossed easily." The Demeanor of Lawyers could hardly totter about. Working women In the fruit fields of California will henceforward work only eight houra a day Instead of working from sunrise to sunset, as they have hitherto done. Use or Incorrect Word. The use of "data la" has become eo common lately In technical papers, and even In books written by en gineers, remarks the American Ma chinist, tnat it Is apparent that proofreaders, ai well aa engineer, need some elementary Instruction In regard to the plural form of nouns taken directly from Latin and Oreek, euch as datum and phenomenon. The expressions "memoranda la" "phenomea la," "strata Is" are seen In print In journals which otherwise generally use good English. i ...... Ik ... TV. 1 . ....1 Casslus Ham I played In one ot j the largest houses In thla country, I sir I Brutus Bacon How large was it f Caaalua Ham Well, to give you an idea of Its enormity I'll just say that the eggs thrown from the rear seats were hatched before they reach ed the stage. Chicago News. Rich ...nl Prosperous Indians. "The 6000 Indiana who occupy the While Eaith Reservation in Min nesota are going to celebrate the thirty-ninth anniversary of their first settlement next month," said Chaun coy E. Richardson, ot White Earth, Minn., former secretary to Senator Clapp and now legal representative of the tribe. "These Indians have a good deal to celebrate, for they are further ad vanced in their civilization thau any other tribe in the United States. They have more money than any other tribe, except the Osagtri ot Indian Territory, who came into a lot of it when a claim was paid to them by Uncle Bam last year. They are pro gressive and are not dying out, as some people claim many tribes are. I am inclined to think that this dy ing out business is a fiction, for the Indians of the tribe 1 live with are prolific. Thgy marry early and haVe many children. Most of them are engaged In professional work or farming. Some of the best business men I ever met In a small commun ity are to be found among them. "When they have their anniver sary they will have a great powwow. All the old chlefa will be there, not in war paint and feathers, but In good, ready made suits and with u handebake and genial grunt for all the red aklnned brethren." . -i.-ltigton Post. I'nsutisfiictory British Recruiting. In spite of all that has boon done to improve the social condition of the soldier and to make the army a career, recruiting is not satisfactory. Men of the right class do not come forward in any number, and there has been a marked falling off in the number of men willing to enlist. The matter is engaging the attention of tho Army Council, but it 1b difficult to see what more can be done to make the service more attractive un less the authorities give an assurance of employment at the end of his color service to the well behaved sol dier. The pay Is good, and the sol dier is to be taught a trade while In the service, but apparently some thing more remains to be done, it has always been contended In these columns that the only real solution of the recruiting difficulty is a guaranty of work on returning to civil life, and until the authorities make arrangements for finding the soldier who bad behaved himself a situation ut the end of hla service with the colors recruiting will always be a source of anxiety to the authori ties. Court Journal. Conservatism a Hindrance. Few intelligent men will deny that conservatism adhering to the existing order of things has done more harm to humanity than has ever been dono to mankind by the most daring of enterprises; yet op position to improvement in ways and means for doing tho world's work still comes often, if not always, from men whoso duty is to be quick to find and udopt better methods and superior appliances for doing the tasks assigned to them, or chos en by them. Perhaps the most charitable ex cuse for this conservatism would bo that the opponents of progress are too lazy mentally to try to learn, or too stpuld to succeed In learning whether a proposed change would be better or worse for them, it is so much easier to stick to ancient ways and means than it is to try to determine whether a new device is better than the old. Possibly this is the reason so many pathmastcrs and others who are charged with caring for our public roatb. still oppose, secretly or openly, all proposed changes from the an cient ways of spoiling highways, which tney continue to call road making. If such opponents could shake off their mental hostility to mental ef fort, and use tho opportunities and advantages their office gives them to become leaders of their fellows, they might profit largely themselves and do much good for their neigh bors. Good Roads Magazine. Woman's Aim. The Younger Mau Strange that women can't throw ulraigbt. The Older Man Yes er ray wife tells me she threw herself at another fellow missed und caught tne. Denver Post. Bruve Girl. Jean Did you notice from my dancing that ray ankle wan lame? John No, you didn't show It at aJL Harvard Lampoon. 'Am an' Altches. Once in Banbury I dined with an English farmer. We had ham for dinner a most delicious bam, baked. The furmer's son soct finished his portion and passed hi pluto again. "More am, father," he said. The farmer frowned. "Don't say "am, son; say 'am." "I did say 'am,'' tho lad protested, lu an injured tonu. "You said am," cried tho father, fiercely. " Am'B what it should be. 'Am, not 'am." In the midst of the controversy the farmer's wife turned to me with a little deprecatory smile. "They both think they're saying 'ami" sh said. Baltimore Sun. Spread of the Consolidated. "What building la that In the swamp?" asked the capitalist. "That's the great consolidated grist mill," replied the real-estate agent. "And that shiny affair by the rail road track?" "That, sir," said the agent, "t the monster consolidated water tank." "Well, well! And how far are we from the town itself?" "Sir," said the agent, drawing himself up, "we are now In the vej;y oentre of Greater 'Possum Trot!" , Atlanta Constitution. An Effort in Cuba. Oood roadB in Cuba are a crying necessity which the Provincial Gov ernment is trying to supply at all possible Epeed. The last Cuban Cou- gress appropriated $5,600,000 for building highways und bridges i throughout the island and this nion j ey la being expended on 230 different I contracts ranging in size from $1000 i to (100,000. The presen plan ot road development calls for an expen diture ot $13,000,000, the work to be finished within three years. The means of internal communication in Cuba are in such deplorable condi tion that any interests trading to pro vide passable highways is one of the I principal steps toward the commer cial bemrmect of the island. Kn glueerlug News. By JUSTICE W. J. GAYNOR. Much harm la done to law student by sending them out with exaggerat ed notions about others and the ex amples they are to follow. They are i told that Ersklne, Scarlett, Webster, Rufus Choate. Evarts, O'Conor, and so on, never lost a case, or seldom, when they probably lost more than they won; for as a lawyer's ability and fame grow more difficult cases come to him. Butler prevailed over Choate right along after he got under way as a young man. And a false notion Is conveyed about orators and oratory. They are pictured as phe nomenal. You are told, for Instance of the Godlike Webster, and his tow ering presence. But the late Sena tor Hoar tells us In his memoirs that Webster weighed only 167 pounds, and was only five feet ten Inches high. He was of quiet and ordinary appearance, and even sluggish, un less aroused. In the trial of a law suit he was methodical and painstak ing to tho Inst degree. He relied on the facts and the law, and not on the mere use of words. Without the facts words are useless. The requisites of oratory are, first, the matter; second, the man of pro bity and character behind the matter, and last and least, the manner of de livery. If the matter and the man be not there, your orator Is not there, however brilliant his rhetoric. I do not depreciate a good delivery. But a mere rhetorician la not an orator. There Is a vast difference between a rhetorician and an orator. If there be the matter and the man and a fair delivery, you have the orator. But the most brilliant delivery with out the matter and the man does not make the orator. Most of the great orators of the world have not been brilliant speakers, but only fairly good speakers. You need to know all of this so as not to attempt too much In speaking. Do not try too hard. Be plain and simple. If your sub ject naturally leads you to some warmth and vehemence at certain points, let It be In due proportion. But do not keep It up all the time. Remember that the ocean never lashes Itself into a tempest merely to waft a feather or drown a fly. Read and memorize Hamlet's speech to the players. It you un derstand your subject you will make others understand It, and that Is the 1 all-essential thing. Lawyers who are merely glib are a bore. They talk as though they had been to a feast of languages and stolen the scraps, but they sny nothing and do no good. They weary every one. Do not try to be overpollshed in speech or manner. It palls. If any one recommend that you practice oratory before a mirror, say to him nay. No one guilty of such foolery could huvo the genuine heart and nature which are essential to an orator. The ora tor is more rugged than polished. My experience is that able men are. as a rule, simple in manner and or dinary in abearance. Cicero tells you what an ordinary looking man Caesar was as he sat adjusting his hair so nicely and scratching his hend with one flngi' No one would Bvspeef. the vast de signs ho was capable of conceiving and accomplishing. The Almighty seldom puts a large mind in an im posing exterior, and never In a pom potiB one. Use simple words, alwayp of one syllable instead of two if you can get them. Cultivate condensation and brevity of speech. If ono word suffice, do not use two, and court? 'and juries will bless you and you wi!' grow in fame. Nay, more, the pdwei of silence Itself Is often beyond that of words. Be natural and courteous to the court and your opponent, but not servile or effusively polite, for that is offensive and the greatest of impo liteness. Be natural. Do not try to be witty. It is annoying. If you have the faculty of wit it will now and then show itself naturally. And, of all things, never be pompous. The able lawyer who goes Into his case simply will grow larger all through It while his pompous adversary grows smaller all the while. Tho contrast is ludicrous to Judge and Jury, and sometimes painful. Be a man first and a lawyer sec ond. Do not become in appearance and manner a mere parchment law yer. You cau avoid this by devoting yourself to general literature as well as the law. Read tho Bible, Shakes peare. Bacon, Milton and your classics, and, wheu tired, the great book of Cervantes, which will solace and amuse as long as the world lasts; also Git Bias and the autobiography of Benvenulo Cellini. Read history, especially the philosophy of history, like Draper's "Intellectual Develop ment of Europe," Lecky's "European Morals" and Emll Reich's "Success Among Nations." Study political economy, beginning with Adam 8nilth's "Wealth of Nations" that master ot moral and political wis dom, as Gibbon calls hlra. AIbo, If you have had a taste for mathemat ics, do not let It die out. Oo over your Euclid, and even your conic sectlAns, again. In this way you will broaden your mind and become strong and cogent as a man and a lawyer, Instead ol degenerating Into a mere parchment lawyer, In face, heart and soul. A Vlrld Description of the Moat In sidious of Diseases. Miss Emma Shirley, Klllbuck, N. Y., wrltoi: "Kidney disease mys teriously fastened It self upon me two yeara ago and brought awful head aches and dizzy spells. I win all un strung, weak and nervous, could scarcely totter about. Pains In the side and back com pletely unnerved me. My food dis tressed me, I looked badly and tho kidneys were noticeably deranged. I sank lower aud lower until given Hp, and at this critical time hPRan wlt!i Doan's Kidney Pills. Detalla are un necessary. Twelve boxes cured me and I weigh six pounds more than over before. They saved my life." Sold by all doalers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Mllburn Co.. Buffalo, N. Y. 1 "flc Vns, Hut He Xin't." "I was In a Germnn barber shop up at Stockton." said E. P. Hllbort:. general manager of the Central Cali fornia Traction Company, recently, "when a nervous and excited Ger man fellow dropped In to be bgrber ed. He was very nervoua Indeed. 1 suspected thnt he wanted to cutch a train. At any rate. he whs ho nervous thnt he couldn't keep his seat. He began pacing up and down the floor, waiting his turn, and this did not seem to calm bis tierv he stepped outside and began pacing up and down the sidewalk. He came back In a moment and discov ered, much to his horror, that some one had got In ahead of him ami had taken the first vacant chair The nervous man stalked up to the head barber biusterlnpjy and said. " 'If a man comes In und goes oud, has he vent?' "The hend barber looked at blin senrchinglv and replied with dig nity and emphasis: " 'He vas. but he ain't." "Whatever that meant. It ended the dixputo quite effectively." A Nevada Verdict. A Chicago lawyer lells how the ! most popular man In a Nevada town I got Into difflculty with a dlsreputa I ble tough- for a long time the ter j ror of the place and proceeded to "do him up" in a manner eoitroly satisfactory tn the community at , large. It becoming necessary, how- ever, to vindicate the majesty of the i law the offender was brought up for I trial on the charge of assault with Intent to kill. The case soon went ! to the jury. When they had been ! out about two minutes they returned. I "Well, gentlemen of the Jury," 1 asked the Judge In a familiar, off I hand way, "what have you to aajft" "If It pleases the Court," respond I ed the foreman, "we the Jury fin. I thnt the prisoner Is not guilty of itrikin' with intent to kill, but sim- ply to paralyze, an' he dono It." So the prisoner was acquitted ! amid applause. Chicago Dally News. The Smallest Of All Flail. The most diminutive vertebrate creature in the world Is said to be I a small fish caught a mountain lake In the Luzon region of Hie Philippines. The largest of the species is lesi than an inch long, but Ha smallne.; I may be best gauged by the fact thnt : It takes about 6,00(1 of them to make I a pouud. Although so tiny, however, i the fish, which Is named llnnrapan, I Is an Important article of diet among i the Philippine natives. ObvloUkl) It Is too small for any net and is ; caught in course ntnallQ sheets The fish are pi nn ed by being i mixed with pepper a id other ipltto and then dried In the sun. They are I a great native delicacy. Telephonic1 (Jnrdrna. Every year It Is necessary to Intro duce !iiinr new feature nt the amuse ment parks, and the novelty thla year la the "telephone garden." By means of transmitting Instrument located In the trees and other points, the muetc of the orches tra Is to lie heard at every point over the groiii d, sfemlnirly Issuing from the cloiidB. The effect is per plexing and ut th" rame time plnna Ing. Tlie Innovation wbb triad v perinientnlly Inst year In Chlcugo and It has been In induced latb Dumber of other parks In different parts ot tlie OOtSDtfy. MM "i:t!.e.f" Him. A you eg nan who ha 1 no! b"en married Icnp remarked at the dinner tiible the other day: "My dear. I wish you could iiiako bread such as mother used to mske." The bride arnirM and answered In a voice that did not tremble: "Wall, dour. I wish you could make the dough thai father used to nmke." Wa ten word nnyton. Ohio). The naaen pitlMnnatrna lmvr so mneli money Is Ihey don't lak advice ahftkll Iwiw l' I r clt. htit p; It. Tone Up With Good Paint It is good btteiiMM to keep prup. crty "toned up." A coat of PurcWhite Lead Paint not only makes tilings look Ix'tter and i;ivc them a hipher selling value, but it snakes things wear liettcr and givrs then a Junker value fur long vear. Pure White Lead gives an upaquc, durable coat that prutactl and pre serves fmm the ravages of time and weather. Prospective buyers of Pure White Lead have heretofore been subject to much attempted fraud in adulteration and sub stitution. You are now pro tected by the Dutch Buy trade mark which Is found on the ?idc of kegs containing only Pure White Lead, made by the Old Dutch Process. Look for the boy. SEND FOP. BOOK "A Talk on MS," fiVN VSlllHllI" Itifor mntiou (in tli.'.int SansM t. .rit fres NATIONAL LEAD COMPANY in whtehtvtr qf th tilntr tug ttitti ta nmrtBt vn i Now York. Hiwton. Uuffuln, 0.1ur.rt. Ctnt'inngiii, Obtctgro. M. .'. la. I ihia .i "i.,i T. 1 i k I: I v i ; i,i., I . i t UU . ; 9 MEW 7 ood 1 Temperature of Ala re. Hitherto the chief obstacle to the belief that Mars Is habitable by un such beings as Inhabit the earth baa been the extremely low temperature probably obtaining on the Martian surface, hut Professor Lowell ihoWf that by taking all the phenomena Into consideration this obstacle may be removed. Previous calculations of the temperature have been de duced solely from the relative dis tance of Mars from the sun. and a recent investigation gave 33 degrees Fahrenheit as mean temperature of the planet. He finally deduces, by taking all known factors Into nc count. that a mean temperature of 47 degrees Fahrenheit Is obtained. 4 Food Products Corned Beef la a mill, c red a n -1 per f cct 1 y 00Olcd corned Beef, and c-irWully packed in Libby' Great While K nchena. It is prepared as cart fully as j"u would make it in your own kitchen. It has the characteristics and delicious flavor of the riht kii.d of corned beef. For Owtck Srrvlng-. LH;' Corned h I cut into thin allies, arninxed nit a Lfl.uicr and garnif-licd with Lii-b's Chow Chow maV.es a tnnpl inp diiih lor luncheon, dioncf or sttMMrf. A il. your !!.. r for I ibb'a mu4 U-Ut Upon Ki Ulnar l.lbh)' Llbby, McNeill a Libby, Chicago A SMALL SECRET Couldn't Understand tlie Taste of his Customers. A Musical People. Australians are the most truly Mu sical people on the earth. There la do town or settlement, however out-of-tbo-way or rough, where the community does not do Its beat to encourage and develop local music talent. Caaatii's MkjeUi. EmtMireaaed tho Hoy. A Now York business man was telling some trlends not long ugo ot tho disadvantages ot having two tele phones in his business ofllce. "A new olllce boy eutered upon the discharge of hla duties last week," snld the merchant, "among which duties Is that ot auswerlng the telephone calls. The very first call resulted In his coming to me with the statement: " 'You're wanted at the phone by a lady, air.' " Which one?' I UBked, thinking ot the two 'phones. " Well, sir,' said the boy, after an j embarrassed pause, 'I I think It's your wife, alrl' " Harper's Weeily. The Tress and State. Twonty-flve years ago thero was not a ntngle newspaper In the United States whose news columns were ab solutely free from partisanship. To day there Is no reputable newspaper In all tho land which does not give reasonably honest reports of events. To be sure, the effects ot perscnal bias aud prejudioe are found In the chronicles of the press, because, like all other writings, they roceive some coloring from prejudices of their au thors, but as statements ot fact they are, as a rule, reliable. Coincident with th' development of the press toward higher etandtngs has been a gradual growth along lines of Inde pendent thought among the masses of the people, from which has un doubted)' aprung the reaction against Uleglmate method lu poli tics aad in busiuew, which has stirred the country, during the past twelve montLs. Houaton Post. Two men were dlscusssfng the various food products now being sup plied in such variety and abundance. One, a grocer, said "I frequently try a package or so of any certain article before offering It to my trade, and lu that way sometimes form a different Idea than my customers have. For Instance, I thought I would try Postum Food Coffee, to aee what reason there was for sucb a call for it. At breakfast I didn't like It and supper proved the same, so I natur ally concludod that my taste waa dif ferent from that of the customers who bought It right along. A day or two after, I waited on a lady who was buying a 25c package cad told her I couldn't understand how one could fancy the taste ot Pos tum. 'I know Just what la the matter' she said, 'you put the coffee boiler on the stove for Just fifteen minutes, and ten minutes of that time it sim mered, and perhaps five mlnutea it boiled, now if you will have It left to boll full fifteen minutes after It commences to boll, you will And a delicious Java-like beverage, rich In food value of gluten and phosphates, bo choice that you will nover aban don It, particularly when you see tho great gain In health.' Well. I took Another trial and eure enough I joined the Postum army for good, sand life seeais worth living sine I ttave gotten rid of my old time atom aoh ml kidney 1 roubles." Postum Is uo sort of modlclno, but pure liquid food, and thla, together with a relief from coffee worked the chauge. "There's a Reason." Read "The Rcd to WeUvllla," la Mica Axle Grease lengthen, lbs life of the wagen saves horse power, time aud tem per. Dcst lubricant in the world contains powdered mica which , 'formai a smooth. hard coating on axle, and reduces friction. If you want your outfit to last and earn money while it lasts grease the axles with Mica Axle Grease. STANDARD Oil COMPANY In I II iV I -ssl f It i II r f I UK ffUk saw BBS ' any J Mm woman t i mm nc tfn Ibbj Uns BJ luijitcmi ii, f .. ...ii fmmi Ht mill i.. i all l "torll, V. v nl send her ab.tulutely free a large ti LI box ot Paitlne with book of Instruc tions and gi nuina niilinonl.il - is e u .1 your nanie auu address on a postal curd. c I '-.Til -.I anil In-ais mucous e m - hrun,. Af fections, sucb as nasal catarrh, peine cat&rih aud Inflammation oauttHl bv fur.t nkis Ills i sore eyes, sors throat and mouth. lr direct loeul treatment Its dil ative, power over 1 lie o trouble ti o itrn ordlnary and gives lnimc.ll.iU) relief. Thousands of women are. using- anil rec ommending It every duy ou rents at drumrlKts (it by mull Kemernlmr. hna ITtoSTS VOtt KOTIIINll TrfTtn IT. TDK K. tXTON CO., Uoslou, MaasSa PAXTINE DROPSY SV-ra ay, a a. a. enaajBt, saw, a. a, 'alha,s DVKRTISIC IN TatM PAMSll. IT WILL V UN U run wtau to know TaPS Tat Do uu aUh oou toaik-m sngi PATENTS I I Ho rou jrtrt lo kuo about r-KNHIOfcHT Oo irou wUn to snuw about PAY aud boi-nti Then writs to VV. H. Mills lit'ilnrv i i. (Notary Public!. WnifBiMhL ai 7 JlT.? .no, ftaiihliujrton. D 0. ar In Maslun ion. tJnlou boldlnrs aad tailors-war UaUJrE suttdea to passion on oao altai th, rsaou lij
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers