' NEWS OF PENNSYLVANIA 4 FAKMKKS niO I'IMKJHAM. State College (Special). - The first half of January will he an Important season to the farmers of the State. First, an Interesting program has been arranged hy State College au thorities for the Farmers' Week, to b held here from .Tanuray 1 to 8. The schedule shows that the days hire been divided Into five periods and for seven days of exercises there will be eighty-eight lectures and prac tical exercises on crop growing, feed ing, breeding, meat dressing, cattle Judging, batter making, Ice cream making, poultry, 'cooking, forestry and horticulture. The list of speakers Includes thirty three men and women who are mak ing a success of their work, scientific or commercial, as the ease may be. Following this will be the annual convention of the Pennsylvania Dairy Union at Wllkes-narre, on January 14, IB and 16. The program will Include men prominent In the com mercial and scientific sides of dairy work, who will lead in the discussion of the problems vital to, the dairy business. Silver cups and cash prizes will be awarded exhibitors of dairy and creamery butter. Five pounds of butter are required for an exhibit. The Dairy Union will furnish a pack age for the butter, will pay the ex press charges on the exhibit and is sue a certificate of membership for the year 1908, the butter to become the property of the Dairy Union. A banquet will be held Wednesday evening, January IB, to which all In terested in dairy matters are invited, tickets for which can be secured from the secretary. A silver cup will be awarded to the highest entry of certified milk; also a silver cup to the highest entry of market milk, not certified, and a diploma to each entry scoring 90 and over. The contests will be held In the armory, where there will be an In teresting display of mnchlnery con nected with buttermaklng and dairy ing. FREE MIHIARY SITE. Norrlstown (Special). The first step towards a permanent home for the Free Library of Royersford has been taken by the library paying $1000 to S. B. Latshaw for a lot 183 by 166 feet at Fourth Avenue and Washington Streets, that borough. In the deed of conveyance from Mr. Latshaw to the Royersford school district, which was recorded Tuesday, there Is some fine senti ment contained In the instrument which Is not usually found in the bare matter of fact papers in the Recorder's office. The deed recites that the Free Li brary Association, having In mind the erection of a suitable building for library purposes at a future date, had advised the purchase of a suit able lot, when the authorities of the school district, having recognized the propriety of such action and wishing to stimulate interest in the perma nent establishment and maintenance Of such a library, both as to books and building as will be a help to the schools and a credit to the commun ity. The Royersford Free Library is considered one of the most progres sive small town affair? of Its kind in the State. It supplies an abundance of sound literature and pays the rent of cheeful well-lighted rooms without any direct cost to Its patrons and sup porters. Its chief source of suste nance consists of a series of lectures given every Winter, and as these are of an elevating kind, the people re ceive twofold Intellectual benefits in supporting the association. According to a resident of Royers ford, the association has taken the action of the School Board as Indi cating a wider appreciation for a bet ter means of perpetrating the spirit of library projectors, and consequent ly has decided to uphold the hands of the school authorities In fostering a collateral branch of learning not within the original scope of the pub lic school system. LANDLORD IS KIIOT. Pottsvtlle (Special). A shocking Christmas tragedy occurred at Don aldson when, after a trifling quarrel over a Christmas dluner, Stanislaus Coteash, a boarding boss, lay dead under Ms own table and a double barreled gun with which he tried to shoot one of his boarders, lay under him. The trouble began when Frank Cashmere, aged 21 years, complained that no turkeys hail been provided for dluner. After hot words Coteash rushed to the side of the room where his loaded double-barreled gun was hanging and flrd at close range at Cashmere. The heavy discharges shook the little home but the shot mlBscd the intended victim. In a frenzy of fear Cashmere rush ed upstairs annd getting his own gun be shot from the head of the stairs and killed Coteash, who was about to come up after him. Cashmere im mediately gave hlmselt up and Is now In Jail here. Struck By Truin. Altoona (Special). Henry Miller, aged 64, of Bedford, is probably dy ing In the Altoona Hospital from In juries received by being struck by a train near Kvereit. tie naa a ticket to Philadelphia In his pocket and in tended to spend the holidays In the Quaker City. ASKING MORE PAY. Scranton (Special) Following the lead of the switchmen, the freight and coal conductors, engineers and firemen of the Lackawanna Railroad are asking for an increase. The con ductors are asking for an lncreaso of 60 cents a day, while the engineers and firemen are asking for one of 40 cents per day. A committee representing the con ductors has already waited upon the officials of the company and an an swer is expected before the first of the year . Freak Kar Of Corn. Hamburg (Special). Solomon Bhollenberger. of Pleasantvllle, this county, has quite a curiosity in the form on an ear of corn of varlouj colored kernels. There are twelve rows of grain, of which seven are yellow four partly yellow and the other 'red. Strangely, there Is not another ear of red corn in the entire Held. f the London underground railways paM oel surface. This is the record for sub Z auean transportation. THE PACIFIC LIMITED. Black Hand In Court. Pittsburg (8peclal). Five more alleged members of the Black Hand woro sent to the workhouse after testimony was given that assassins could be hired for $B and 110. Of the prisoners, three Paulo, Nicola and Natale Alampn are brothers, the others are Oulseppl Paxllmonal and Domonlc Barre. Domonlc Sapone, across whose face Is a long gash, testified that it was inflicted by Paulo Alampa because he did not accede to demands of the Black Hand and produce money. Ha Insisted that, he was dragged from his bed one night, carried to a dense woods and there initiated Into the so ciety against his will. He said that he was compelled to put up 810 on this occasion, and that he was so scared he does not remember what occurred. He Is only IS years old. Barre admitted that assassins could be hired for $5 and $10, and that he gave Paulo Alampa $5 to kill Sapone. The trouble occurred in a railroad camp In Ohio, and as the men were picked up here as suspicious persons, no further action can be taken against them here. The men sent to the workhouse came here to spend Christmas, and Sapone Informed the police they were here. They make their headquarters In this city, conse quently the police decided to send the mto prison. Nicola Alampa at first wns let off with n fine, but he made a sign to Borne person In the courtroom and Magistrate Brady at once added a prison term of 60 days to his sentence. The otherB all were sent up for 60 days. For Masonic Cathedral. Philadelphia (Special). For the purpose of selecting a site on North Broad Street, on which It has been proposed to erect a $1,000,000 Mason ic Cathedrnl, a meeting of th Scottish Rite Consistory, the highest order In the Masonic fraternity, will shortly be held. The plan for the erection of the edifice Is necessary because the apartments occupied by the consistory In the Masonic Temple hnve grown too small for the membership and larger quarters must bo provided. A committee has been working on the plan for months, but no word of It became public until Thursday. Two sites will be presented to the meeting for consideration that on which the old Muhr Building now stands, at Broad and Race Streets, and the lot recently purchased by Os car Hammersteln, at Broad and Pop lar Streets. Of the two It Is under stood that the former will be selected, as it is nearer to the center of the city. Money is no object, so far as the enterprise Is concerned, as the order has at present $!.".. in ready cash in the treasury and each member stands willing to give $100 at a week's notice. Km i. tii ics At A DaH. Philadelphia (Special) Miss Mary Astor Paul, duughter of James W. Paul, Jr., of the Drexel firm, made her debut at Horticultural Hall at a ball that for grandeur, costliness and general unusual ness eclipsed the fam ous "Ball of the Four Seasons," with which four years ago Mr. Paul Intro duced his elder daughter. The flowers alone cost $3B,000, and for the occasion a brand-new rose, a cross between the A merican Beauty and the Sofrano, which it took nine years to develop, was a rare feature. The favors were costly. At a certain hour 500 brilliant but terflies, gathered from Brazil, Peru and even India, were let loose over the guests. These butterflies flitted everywhere, amid the cries of delight, from the guests, Costly silken and painted butterflies formed one of the features of the decorations. All the Drexels were there, and in fact everybody prominent In Phila delphia society. Col. Anthony J. Drexel, his beautiful wife and his daughter, Miss Margarette, came over from London for the ball. Mr. and Mrs. Reginald Vanderbllt had been Invited, but did not come. Just why Is one of the mysteries of the affair. The ballroom at the hall was turn ed Into a replica of a French garden, cop.ed from the Louis Seize period. Sixteen boxes, fashioned of plaster parts, lined the room, having been built specially for the occasion. A great fountain had also been con structed in one end of the room. Es timates to the total cost of the ball place It at $100,000. TEST INFERNAL MACHINE. Erie (Special). Chief of Police Wagner made a test of the contents of the bottle found in the infernal machine mailed to Archie Carr, 2208 Cherry Street, this city, at the South Erie post office. He poured two drops of the white liquid on a piece of wood and taking It to the open air touched a match to the fluid. When the blaze reached the stuff a sheet of flame at least four feet high Bhot Into the air, proving the solution to be a dangerous one. Carr is employed as delivery man in a local department store and is in poor circumstances. He Is married and has three childrn. Carr says he has not the faintest Idea as to who mailed the package and that so far as he knows be has not an enemy in the world. PEACEMAKER SHOT. Chester (Special). Joseph Jacobs, a colored man, was shot at Felton by Alexander Harklns, an aged negro, because he interfered with him while ho was scolding his wife. Jacobs was shot In tho head, and at the Chester Hospital, where he was taken after the shooting, an op eration was performed in the hope of saving his life. The physicians say that he cannot live. Harklns was brought to the city Jail and locked up. Hurt In Runaway. Bloomsbiug (Special). Taking fright at a trolley car a team of horses driven by Frod Fausey, of Greenwood Township, ran away on Fifth Street and Mrs Fausey, who was In the carriage, was thrown out and seriously hurt. A popular Instrument in Mada gascar Is the bamboo guitar, mode from a bamboo cane six feet long. The cavity serves a the sounding board. Strings are cut out between the Joints and are stretched by bridges. -Week's Cleverest Cartoon by Maurice Ketton, in the New York Evening World. THE SOUTH HAS JUST FINISHED ONE OF THE GREATEST CHANNEL-MAKING UNDERTAKINGS IN HISTORY b1M New Orleans, La. One of the greatest channel making undertak ings In the history of American river Improvement will be brought nearly to completion when the Jetties at the mouth of the Southwest Pass of the Mississippi River are finished. These jetties, after some dredging between them is completed, will give the South one of the deepest harbors in the world by openings to the access of the largest steamships afloat the 100 and 200 foot depths of the lower Mississippi River. The harbor thus made accessible has navigable water connection with at least a dozen States bordering the Mississippi and Its tributaries the Ohio, the Missouri, the Arkansas and the Red rivers. About $6,000,000 is being spent on this improvement by the United States Government, which has the work in charge. The new Jetties were begun four years ago. They are on a larger scale and more substantial than the famous jetties at the Mississippi's South Pass, an outlet which for more than thirty years has been tiie river's commercial entrance. They are near ly parallel walls, one about three and the other about four miles long, lying more than half a mile apart and built in the shoal water at tho Juncture of the Pass with the Gulf of Mexico. Their purpose is to con fine and thus accelerate the river's current across a mud bar about three miles broad, so as to produce a chan nel at least 1000 feet wide, with a minimum depth of thirty-five feet. The swift current which they have produced, aided by dredging, even before their completion, has caused a tremendous scour and has already made fifty to eighty-five feet of water in some places, where at the begin ning of the work the depth was only a little over a man's head. To make the uniform contract depth there is till in several spots about ten feet of mud to be removed. It is expect ed that the high water due within a few weeks will sweep the remaining mud deposits out to sea by the be ginning of next summer. Probably few walls ever have been constructed under greater difficul ties than were these jetties. They are made of willow, scantling, stone and Concrete. Although in some places they are not six feet deep, and although their greatest depth is barely fifteen feet, they have cost $2,700,000. Every material entering Into their construction has been brought from distances of one hun dred to five hundred miles. The jetties have no foundation, but rely for stability upon their ex tremely broad bases, being from 100 to 150 feet wide at the bottom. In contrast to this great width of base, the concrete capping which forms the top of the jetties, and which Is the work receiving Its finishing touches this week, is only a few feet wide. The capping Is a sea wall four and one-half feet high and is the only portion of the jetties not submerged. The wall weighs between two and three tons to each linear foot. The submerged structure support ing this mass of concrete is made almost entirely of willow poles and brush. With the aid of frame works of scantling the willows were formed into so-called mattresses broad, flat structures resembling bed mattresses In form each about two feet thick, 200 feet long and varying In width from thirty-five to 150 feet. The mattresses were sunk one above the other, with the widest at the bottom and those above uniformly diminish ing in width as they approached the surface. The topmost mattresses were uniformly thirty-five feet wide, and on a level with the surface of the water. Heavy broken stone was spread evenly over the mattresses to sink them, so that a layer of stone rests between each of these willow structures. The greatest number of supperlmposed mattresses is five. The Mississippi has done some In teresting work in addition to scour ing out a channel, for It has mado the mattresses practically indestruc tible to any normal agency of nature in this region by burying them under hundreds of tons of mud. These de posits follow closely the contour of the Jetties, in conjunction with which they form new banks of the river. The only change likely to occur in the Jetties Is their gradual sinking, until in time the concrete capping entirely disappears. This sinking already has occurred to the jetties at South Pass. In the course of many years a new bar may form by silt deposits in the Gulf in the now deep water beyond the mouth of the Jetties, and then the remedy will bo the extension of the Jetties a short distance further. The rate of bar extension during nearly seventy-five years preceding the starting of the jetties was between 160 and 250 feet annually, and the deposits responsible for this advance were made when conditions, now greatly changed, favored such accre tions. Part of the $6,000,000 allotted to making the channel is being spent in safeguards several miles above the jetties to prevent any Increase in the flow of other large outlets from the main river to the Gulf. Thin Is being accomplished by placing stone covered mattress sills on the river bottom across the entrances to those outlets. Several small bayous leading from Southwest Pass to the Gulf will be entirely closed up. THI8 ADVANCED WESTERN SCHOOL HA8 A CLASS IN WOOING Courtship Formally Adopted as a Course In Illinois Town and Has 23 Pupils--Some of the Subjects That Will Be Taught. Greenville, 111. Professor H. G. Russell, superintendent of the High School, has Introduced Instruction in lovemakklng into the school curri culum. Parents of some of the pupils declare they do not. want their chil dren's thoughts turned so early to love, but Professor Russell and his wife, who Is his assistant, say they will see the experiment through. Russell thinks In time courtship will be taken out of the realm of en pyrlclsm and lifted Into the realm of exact science as chemistry followed alchemy. Twenty-three pupils, ten of whom are girls, constitute the first class In Hi.' world to receive formal instruc tion In courtship. Professor Russell has given them three lectures and they have written essays. The In struction will be chiefly through study of the literature of love, includ ing the courtship of Miles Standlsh, "Romeo and Juliet," and other stand ard works of fiction. Pupils will be expected to learn: How to take heart by storm or by siege. How to detect the advent of the grand passion. How to behave if parental objec tion is manifested. How to pay a compliment. How to encourage a bashful suitor or corner an elusive girl. How to allay unfounded jealousy. How to propose. How to ask papa. The etiquette of the engagement ring. Deportment during engagement. Girls will learn how to promise to be a sister. The year's course will take the students all the way from the first sweet sting of love to the altar. British Government Orders Discouragement of Immigration. Halifax, N. S. The Canadian Gov ernment has adopted a policy of dis couraging immigration to Canada during the winter season as tho re sult of the great volume which the influx of colonists attained in Oc tober Bud November. The govern ment has Instructed ageuts to stop all efforts to Induce immigration to Canada, and an extensive advertis ing campaign setting forth the ad vantages of the country bos been stopped. Women in the Day's News. The Duchess of Marlborough visit ed Ellis Island Woman suffrage In Finland prompt ly brings a prohibitionist triumph. "Be polite to women! " is the motto of a new reform society started in Paris. Mrs. Russell Sage is said to be tired of recelviug suggestions as to what she ought to do with ber money. Miss Margberlta Arllna Hamm, a magasine and newspaper writer, died from pneumonia at the Woman's Hos pital, Nsw York City. Miss Hamm mkm twlca married. Norfolk Druggists Soil Large OjuuutlMcs of Dope. Norfolk, Va. According to Dr. R. L. McMurran, of Portsmouth, there Is a Norfolk druggist who dispenses fifteen gallons of laudanum dally, and another druggist whose cocaine sales average $90 dally. The start ling statements were made In the course of a paper Dr. McMurran read before the recent meeting of the Seabord Medical Association on "The Evil Effects of the Drug Habit." A crusade will be started for the sup pression of the evil. HaUs of Congress. Mr. Frye was mado president of tho Senate pro tempore. Congress Is expected to take up she ship subsidy question again. Secretary Cortelyou was asked by thH St ii.ilf tn furnfuh Ri .... k, ., on tho recent financial stringency. Senator Aldrlch gave assurance that a currency bill would be Intro duced soon after the holiday recess. A committee presented a memorial to Vice-President Fairbanks and Speaker Cannon asking an appropria tion of $20,000,000 a year for water way Ironrnvaraant- New Jetties Ready For Big Ships Lower Mississippi Gets One of World's Deepest Harbors. AGAINST KRKEATJVHRTISraa. Bound Views by an Iowa Editor on Gratnltoos Publicity. At n recent editorial oonfab In Davenport David Brnnt, editor of the Iowa City Republican, gave his views on the subject of gratuitous advertis ing. If newspaper men are Imposed upon by nil sorts and conditions of dead beats they have themselves to blame for It, Mr. Brant said. He thought it was a mistake even to ac cept tickets to entertainments, be cause by so doing the editor places himself under an obligation that he will be called upon In somo way to discbarge. Editors, like other people, should pay for what they get and charge for what they do, in Mr. Brant's opinion. Among the most persistent seekers for free ads., said Mr. Brant, are churches and charitable organiza tions. Managers of country fairs, Chautauqua assemblies und street carnivals are in the same class. The carnivals are generally promoted by business men who are friends of the paper, possibly advertisers In it, and often, said Mr. Brant, ask of the pub lisher such favors as they themselves would not think of granting to any body. A plea Is sometimes made that a newspaper ought to support a street fair because it brings business to the town, but no such argument is used as a reason why persons who render other services than advertising to -the enterprise should give their labor for nothing. Mr. Brant continued: "Let a new enterprise be pro posed in a city and the newspaper la expected to push It, and It should do so to a reasonable extent. Yet the editor gives what costs many dol lars, while his business associates generally push business all day and only at night are they willing to do committee work. I have known oi cases where business men were paid for their time soliciting stock for a corporation to be engaged In manu facturing while the newspaper was whooping it up free of charge day after day. "I submit that it would be only a matter of Justice, for the promoters of such enterprises to go to a news paper and engage spaco and pay for It, at least in stock of the concern being promoted. In such cases the newspaper is the only vehicle of free use and if there is any reason wby j this should be so, I fail to see It. "The publisher who gives his I space free is doing himself an Injus tice, for If he happens to owo any I of these merchants or bankers any thing and lo not able to meet his ob- i ligations promptly, he is at once des ignated a poor business man and the query is made why newspaper men cannot do business as others. And we ask the same question to-day. If ho would say, 'Gentlemen, w have space to sell and here Is the price list,' there would be more respect for the publisher." As a result of Mr. Brant's talk the association to which he belongs passed a resolution declaring that county fairs, Chautauquas, etc., should pay for their advertising. FIVE MONTHS I. HOSPITAL. Discharged llersuae Doctors Could Not Cure. Levi P. Brockwsy, H. Second-Ara, Anoka, Minn., ssys: "After lying for five months In a hospital I was dis charged as Incura ble, and given only six months to live. My heart was affect ed, I had smother ing spells anl some times fell uncon scious. 1 got so I couldn't use my arms, my eyesight wss Impaired and the kidney secretions were bsdly dis ordered. I was completely worn out and discouraged when I began using Doan's Kidney Pills, but they went right to the cause of the trouble and did their work well. I have boea feeling well ever since." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Mllburn Co., Buffalo, N, Y. Ducks Kline On Ice. Ezekiel Crawford, of Northport, L. I., has a flock of Muscovy ducks which quite accidentally have Invent ed a new game. They were In the habit of flying from the barn to the duck pond upon Crawford's farm and entering the water with a rebound ing splnsh. When winter arrived and the pond was coated with smooth Ice the ducks flew from the barn as UBual. Near lng the surface of the pond they ex tended their feet and quit flying, evidently expecting to Bplash Into the water. They did nothing of the kind. Their feet slipped out from under them and they sat down hard and slid swiftly acrosB the ice until they bumped against the frozen shore. "Quack, quack!" said the ducks, and hurried back to tho barn to try It again. The result was the same. Again and again they arc said to have tried the stunt. Now It la said they show signs of joy when, upon retiring at night, they note evidences of freezing before morning. New York Times. A Distinction. A Journalist at a dinner was talk ing to William Dean Howells about literary fame. "But, after all," cald Mr. Howell with his gentle smile, "literary famf Is not so highly regarded by the people. It Is" I remember when I was In San Remo some years ago seeing in a Frenoh newspaper n notice that bears upon this question. "It was a notice Inserted by a rat trap maker of Lyons, and It said: " 'To Whom It May Concern M. Pierre Lotl, of Lyons, Inventor of the automatic rat-trap, beg? to state that he Is not the same person, and that he hns nothing In common with one Pierre Lotl, a writer.' " Washing ton Star. Only A Pretext. Ardup had made half a dozen at tempts to borrow money of hia friends, but one and all had pleaded the prevailing financial stringency. "That's all pretense," he said, with bitterness, as he gave It up. "It's nothing but a case of financial stingy see?" To such base uses of the language may adversity bring a man. Chicago. Tribune. Colorado's New Industry. "There was a time when Colorado was regarded as principally a mining State, but that time has passed," said A. E. De Rlcqules, general manager of a live stock company, of Denver, "This winter, for Instance, the State will take care of 1,000,000 sheep thai were raised on the grazing lands ol Wyoming. Montana, Idaho, Texas and other States. This has become one ol our great industries, the number of the sheep taken care of being about the same as last year. The beet Bugar Industry 1b large and the fodder from the beets is fed to the sheep, also hay and corn. Pens are built, and tho young lambs, taken from tbelr moth ers who reared them In other States, put In these pons, fattened and then In the spring killed for the best ho tels ami markets In the East." Watihington Post. London's Cannibal Birds. For years past n hollow elm lu Kensington Gardens has been occu pied every winter by a pair of brown owls, which arrive and loave at about the same time as tho blackheadod gulls. They feed on tho London sparrows, as Is plainly shown by the relics of the feast at the foot of tho tree, and doubtless they find It an easier way of getting their living to snatch up the incautious sparrow as he sits at roost than to hunt every winter in tho open country for birds concealed In the thicket and for field mice, which in frosty weather are generally safely asleep. Besides such regular visitors as gulls, owls and carr.'on crows thero are many other birds which wander Into London dur ing spells of hard weather and van ish again in tho thaw. London Globe. How The World (.rows. In a little more than 100 years, according to government figures, the population of the world has grown from 640,000.000 to 1,600,000,000, an Increase of 150 per cent. At the end of so many hundreds of cen turies. In other words, there were In the world In 1800 only 040,000,000 of persons, and 106 years, from 1800 to 1906, to this number had been ndded 960,000,000. The total commerce of the world tn 1800 was about one .and a half billions of dollars; In 1900 It was more than twenty billions of dollars. Other figures show that in wealth and the growth of various industrial agencies the Increase has been far swifter than that of population. The overpopulation of the world Is not a present menace to the think ers of today, but the thinkers of a period when there were less than half as many people In the world as there are now seriously debated the Imminence of the catastrophe that tho overcrowding of the earth would produce. Boston Globe. A Silent Household. James L. Williams, a hatmaker, and his wife have occupied the same house, taken their meals; at the same table together, and been in each oth er's company almost continually for five years without speaking a word to each other. Five years ago they quarreled and Williams made a vow that he would never again Fpeak to his wife. He has kept It religiously, and so com pletely was their affection for each other severed In the quarrel that the wife has not once begged for a word from her husband. Their eldest daughter, Alice, nineteen years olJ. took sides with her mother, and dur ing the five years she had never ad dressed her father, although she Is a member of the household. The couple hnve two young chil dren and have carried on what com munication was necessary through these. Even this meanB was used only in rases of extreme necessity. New York World. FIT8,8t. Vitus'Dance iNervous Diseases per tnanently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. fJ trial bottle and treatise free. Or. H. R. Kline, Ld..0Hl Arch St.. Phiii , Pa. Stat or Onio, City op Toledo, i Lucas Couhtv, I hank J. Cheney make oath that he i aniur partner ol the linn ol K. J.CllB-NKV A Co., doing busmen in th City of Toleilu County and Mule alorcaaul, and thnt ni i linn will pay llieainii ol ON K IIUNUKED Dot I aiis lor uch and every cum ol CATAKIti' that cannot he ruml hy the us ol II u t -L'ATAIinil UUM. FlIANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to uelori. me and ubcnlci1 id SB preaence, tins Bin day ot December, A. 1) 18S. A. W. UUMfHR. (seal.) .Notary I'ubb. Hull Catarrh Curcialaken internally, an acta directly on the blood and mucoiia m face ot the system, tiinil lor lo.liinoniiil- iree. r, J. ISBMM 4 CO.. I oledo. J Sold hy nil Uruggiita. 75c. Take Hull's Family I'ills for '.nstipatit n Tho lack of railroad transportation has been the m In cause of keeping the State of Sinaloa from taking her position oh one of the leading and largoHt states of Mexico, it having 35,000 square miles of splendid farm ing land and thousands of rich un developed mines. SUFFERED TWENTY-FIVE YEARS Makes Novel Tool Chest. William Baurichter, an eccentric German of Columubs, Ind., who has speut the greater part of his forty five years of life at carving walking stickB and experimenting In an effort to build a perpetual motion machine entirely of wood, has Just completed a tool cheat, which he has been work ing on for tho last year. In the chest are more than one thousand pieces of wood, and the wood Is of forty dif ferent kinds, each kind of which is a native of Bartholomew County. He has placed a combination lock on tho ehest, which he says no one In tho world except himself can open, and he has offered $1000 to any person who will discover the combination and thus opeu the chest after he has onco locked it. Iudlanapolls Newt Larger dividends from its chief subsidy companies enabled the New York Central to declare Its regular quarterly rate of 1 H per cent. The fact that this company and the Penn sylvania have acted in concert In this matter looks as If the "big folks" did not wish to have any unfavorable developments occur at this time. With Eczema Her Limb Peeled and' Foot Was Raw Thought Amputa tion Necessary Believes Her Life Saved by Cuticura. "1 have lieen treated by doctors) for twenty-five year for a bad case of eczema on my leg. They did their ht, but failed to cure it. My doctor had ndvised me to hnve my leg cut off. At this time my leg was peeled from tlic knee, my foot was like a piece of raw flesh, and I had to walk nn crutches. I bought a set of Cuti cura Remedies. After the first two treat ment!! the veiling v-ent down, and in two months my leg was cured and the new skin came on. The doctor wns surprised and said that he would use Cuticura for his own patient. I have now bocn cured over seven year, nnd but for the Cuticura Rem edies 1 might hove lost my life. Mrs. J. B. Renaud, 277 -Montana St., Montreal, Que, Feb. 20, 1907." Escaping from a menagerie, a large bear patrolled the town of Aaran, capital of Argovie, Switzerland. Streets were deserted and houses closed for several hours, while the bear raided the fruit stalls. It wast, shot In a cafe. A newspaper clipping forwirdeor by Connul Harry A. Conant, of Wind sor, states that many depositors from the I'nited States have been opt nlng accounts In Canadian banks, an l es pecially branches In that city. Piles Cured in 0 to 14 Days. Peso Ointment I guaranteed to cure nm esse of Itching, lllind.Itleeilingor i'rotrudnn. Pile in 6 to 14 dayiormnnev refunded. St)- Arguments are to be avoided. They are always vulgar and oftn convinc ing. Mrs. Window's Soothing Syrup for Children tec thing, softeus thoguiiia,raiucebfufuuumii tion, allays pain, euros wind colic. Hoc a bottlt Men who hold It a divine right to abuse women ar strangely popular with women. Itch cured in 30 minute by Woolford Sanitary Lotion. Nevr fail. At druggiat. Self-denial I not a virtus; It Is mere ly the effect of prudence upon ra-cullty. How to Do It. An Irishman out of work applied to the "boss" of a large repair shop in Detroit. When the Celt had stat ed his sundry and divers qualifica tions' for a "job," the superintendent began quitting him a bit. Starting quite at random, he a.,i. .. "Do you know anything about car pentry?" "Shure!" ' "Do yott know how to make a Ve netian blind?' "8hure!" "How would you do it?" "Shure, I'd poke me linger in his o: riilti'.acii.nu Ladaer- Onljr One "llromo (juiiune--That is Laxative Broin I (Juiuiuo. Look for the signature of E. W. Grove. Used the World over to Cure a Cold in Ons Day. 28c. An I'uiueutloued Ancestor. Mr. B. is very proud of his ancient lineage, and never lets slip an op portunity to boaBt ot It. At a dinner where he had boon unusually ram pant on this subject a fellow-guest quieted him by remarking: "If you climb much further up your family tree you will come face to face with the monkey.'' Philadel phia Inquirer. The General 'Demand of the Well-Informed of the World hai always been for a simple, pleasant antf efficient liquid laxative remedy of known value; a laxative which physicians could sanction for family use because its com ponent parts are known to them to be wholesome and truly beneficial in effect, acceptable to the system and gentle, yet prompt, in actiun. In supplying that demand with its ex cellent combination of .Syrup of l'igs and F-lixir of .Senna, the California Fig Syrup Co. proceeds ufong ethical lines and relics on the merits uf the laxative for its remark able success. Th:it is one of many reasons why Syrup of rig and Elixir of Senna is giver the preference by the Well-informed. To get it beneficial effects always buy the genuine manufactured by the Cali fornia Fig .Syrup Co., only, end for sale by all leading druggists. Price fifty cents per bottle. 'UNFORTUNATE- U tho man or woman who, loving good dinner, must curb r.ielr appetite through fear of after i tia)q ken . Parsons' Pills are an aid tu digestion, iiuure aui nuta tion of food, and make hatirty eating poaikble without diatreaa or regrete. Price ibc., five bottlee.. All druggist. I. t. mum A CO., Bo. ten, float. DAIENTS I'.- you wun to know v. i: aik.su- no rou with a know .iuoir THAHM.MAKIC4' I Po you wlib lo know aho'it t-KSHlOM.Hf U tnii im o snow Ruoul I'll ami HOU.TV Ihsn writ to W. II. Willi. Alt..!:. l.Uv Notary Publlrl. WfiU Hulldlns. si: raliatiiA. 'tins, tVsahlnston. U C. . .:, in U,:,ir, ,. nn. Union Soldlari anu fcrllori war UHU-1 -- iitUIt1 lo lienllwi on azj tlar lli.v ru:ti . i ' .K.ii, a!l.jru wllo in ..... b iullli . I hid 1 1 ' i 1 i i DROPSY SWSPJi ortl eairt. Uu M..Ua.,-UU u4 ta ltr.- irrulaaomJ Jrart. I. M. M. UK1H-H aOUta, Bes ft, AiUau, . A DVERTISB IN 1 HIS VAVIH. IT WILL PAY AN IMITATION TAKES FOR ITS arAii nil. KLAL I IfLC There was never an lm tators always counterfeit th what you ask for, because Ken Imitations are not advertised. ability of the dealer to sell yo good" when you ask for the k on the imitation. Why accent ulne by insisting? nation made of an imitation. Imi- geuuine article. The genuine la ulne articles are the advertised ones. but deiiend for their busl u souisthlng claimed to ba "tuat enuine, because he makes more profit lumutlons when you can get the gen- RF.FHSF TMTT A TTONTC " what you V .M. w-u AATU 1 n A 1V11 kl" AMI,' aVt I .-r-TVWWW-