Nothing I Ate Agreed With Me Photography and Crime. ! COMMERCIAL COLUMl Weekly Review o! Trade and tales' Market Reoo'ts. PKRKKtTr HEALTH MRS. LENORA BODENHAMER. Mm. I ra ilodenhamer. K. F. D. 1, lioi ttfl. Kernrtvillt N. C, writes: "I suffered with Htomach trouble and indigestion for mime time, nod nothing tlint 1 ate agreed with me. 1 was very nervoug and experienced a eontinun) feeling of NttWMfMMM and fear . I too); medicine tram the doctor, nut it did me uo good. "I found in one of your Peruna booka n description of my symptoms. then wrote to Dr. Hartmnn for advice. lie said had catarrh of the s'.omach. 1 took Peruna and Manalin and followed his di rectiona and can now say that 1 feel as well aa I ever did. "I hope that all who arc alHicted with the Mine symptoms will take Peruna. aa it has certainly cured me. " The above ia only one of hundreds who have written aimilar letters to Dr. rlart man. Just one such case as this entitles Peruna to the candid consideration of every one similarly afflicted. If this be true of the testimony of one person what ought to be the testimony of hundreds yes thou sands, of honest, sincere people. We have in our tiles a great many other testi monials. A Government Lottery. Why does the lnlted States Gov ernment, which enforces with great rigidity the laws against lotteries, even to excluding foreign newspapers which contain advertisements of them, conduct lotteries Itself In the disposa. of public lands, as witness the rectnt distribution of the Kose bud farms? It would be ensy to de vise a different and Indeed a more equitable system of allotment. Per haps some form of auction would be fairest and best of all. Anyway, Is the appeal to chance In any respect more moral when administered by the United Stntea than when propos ed by the Spanish monarchy or the municipality of Paris? New York Sun. crRF.iHpii.r. (4 AMPLE TREATMENT of Red Cross Pile k. and Fistula Cure and liook explaining Plies wilt I,;:.. UFA I U ..Dfyi H'l.Mllillfl.oolN Minn Painting The Toun Red. "That expression, 'Painting the town red,' Is not," writes a corre spondent, "the creation of some un known genius. Its birth has been traced to 'The Divine Comedy.' Dante, led by Virgil, comes to the cavernous depths of the place swept by a mighty wind whore those are confined who have been the prey of their passions. Two faces arise from the mist the faces of Francesca and Paola. " 'Who are ye?' cries Dante In alarm, and Francesca replies sadly, 'We are those who have painted the world red with our gins.' " Can Or Can't Cahn? Charley Cahn says he's going to knock our block off. We don't be lieve Charley Cahn. Henderson (Nob.) Tribune. How To Kill Surplus Cats. Haw to destroy surplus kittens or puppies In a painless way, without calling into use the old-fashioned method of a bag and a pail of water, is told In the annual report of the London Institute for Lost and Starv ing Cats. The directions are as fol lown: "Take a dish cover, place it where It can be pressed Into the mold of the garden, or In default of this, on an old cushion, so that the latter bulges out all around and makes the cover airtight. Place the animals beneath and pour four ounces of pure chloroform on wadding. Push the wadding under the cover, hold the cover down for three or four minutes and then leave undisturbed for an hour. The body must be stiff lioforo burial." A recent exhibition In Vienna, In stituted by a Berlin chemist. Dr. Paul Jeserlch, who devotes most of His time to legal nnd criminal mat ters, has fairly astounded the press 3f that city by Its demonstration of ;he value of photography la the de tection of crime. Every large city oow has Its rogue's gallery, and spreads broadcast photogrnohs of tuspects. The photographing of the tceneg of crime for the enlighten ment of jurleo is still another devel jpment with which the "general pub lic Is familiar. But few people real ize that In many other ways photog raphy has become of enormous value In the nctual detection o? crimlnnls. To Illustrate this remarkable devel spment was the prime object of Dr. leserlch's display of the eighty en larged prints which constitute his nfttMHott. The sun sees everything, however fallible the human eye. Even when reinforced by, the microscope or the magnifying glass, th,e ordinary ob ierver is apt to overlook little things in themselves of great Importance. Moreover, a detective, or nn expert employed by the oollce. might behold through a magnifier something which he would regard as evidence, but about which a Jury might fall to take his word. By means of the enlarge ment of a negative, proof of a crime may often be shown to a Jury which would otherwlso be practically un available. This is Dr. Jeserich's con tention, and his demonstration of It impressed observers ns convincing. For instance, he exhibited two let ters which had originally contained money, and had been received with out their enclosures. To the eye, they had not been tampered with in any way, and there was nothing to show whether they had been sent without the money or whether they had been opened en route. An en larged photograph solved the mys tery. It showed plainly that one of the envelopes had two lines of mucil age, while an unevenness in the post office stamp on the flap showed that there had been a slight variation in the reseating, ft was obvious that this letter had bean tampered with; the other proved not to have been, for the paper sheets enclosed In place of the money showed, when photo graphed, the imprint of the post offfce stamp which It had received through the envelope. The tell-tale blotting paper has figured In many a novel and play. Hitherto It has been read by means 5f a looklng-glnss. Dr. Jeserlch ..'JU a divorce case by first photographing the blotter and then enlarging the print; the resulting evidence that the defendant was guilty by Itself suf ficed to convince the court. A mur derer was convicted by means of the cord with which he strangled his victim; a piece of It was found in his pockets, but not until photog raphy was called In was the fact be yond dispute that both pieces of cord had originally been one. Another victim of a murderer clutched In his hrnd a mere scrap of a ttnen mask; a search of the rooms of the sus pected criminal revealed another piece of linen. When both were photographed, It was found that the weaving was Identical; In each piece four dark threads were alwnys fol lowed by fourteen light ones. A stolen wedding ring, when found on the thief, bore the number 12, 12, 93 C. S. A magnifying glass re vealed nothing, but the camera brought out th original mark, 8. 6. 2. 88. Faint traces of blood stains dot otherwlso discernible are also re vealed by the photographic plate. Not even the most careful expert has as yet been able to re-photograph that picture of the murderer on tho retina of the victim's eyes, which has betrayed the crlmlnnl In more than one novel. But Dr. Jeserlch was able to capture ono criminal who used part of an envelope bearing his address as an extrtt chnrgo In loading his old-fashioned revolver. The pa per was apparently charred beyond hope, but tho camera ended specu lation as to the identity of the crim inal by furnishing his name and I street number. In the same way, a photograph of a bullet that had end ed a life showed very faint mark ings, which could only como from a slight unevenness In the barrel of the revolver from which It was fired. The wenpon of one suspect was used again and again, and each bullet fired showed the same faint lines. In the discovery of forgeries, hand writing experts have long resorted to tho camera, and Dr. Jeserlch ex hibited some startling examples of tho ease with which tho work of the cleverest forgers was revealed. All of this shows clearly that If now inventions and tho advances of science furnish new weapons to the criminal, they in turn make it harder fOT him to escape punishment. Some day we may yet see men like Dr. Jeserlch Included In the detective staffs of our great cities; and not only photography, but all the other sciences, v111 contribute to the de tection of wrongdoers. Not even in Scotland Yard have the police gone into partnership with scientists to the extent possible. In this city our detectives, when not corrupt, are often Incompetent or wholly behind the times. When they have scored successes. It has generally been by good luck, by breaking down the prisoner's nerve through methods often Indistinguishable from torture, or because of the stupidity pf the crlmlnnl. Gen. Bingham has dreaniod of the time when he could appoint civilians to his detective corps; but ho has not yet asked for that alliance between science and de tection which modern developments n.ako feasible. New York Post. I'll E THAMP PRINTER. NOISE NUISANCES. EAGER TO WORK Health Regained by Right Food. The average healthy man or wom an Is usually eager to be busy at some uueful task or employment. But let dyspepsia or Indigestion get hold of one, and all endeavor be comes a burden. "A year ago, after recovering from an operation," writes a Mich. lady, "luy stomach and nerves began to give me much trouble. "At times my appetite was vora cious, but when Indulged, Indigestion followed. Other times 1 had no ap petite whatever. The food I took did not nourish me and I grew weaker than ever. "I lost Interest In everything anil wanted to be alone. I had always had good nerves, but now the merest trifle would upset me and bring on a violent headache. Walking across the room was an effort and prescribed exercise was out of the question. "I had seen Orape-Nuts advertised, but did not believe what I read, at the time. At last when It seemed as If I we're literally starving, I began la eat Qrape-Nuts. "I had not been able to work for n year, but now after two months on Orape-Nuts I am eager to be at work satn. My stomach gives me no trou ble now, my nerves are steady as ever, a, id interest In life and ambi tion have come back with the return to health." "There's a Reason." Name given by Post im Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read "The Road to wellyllle," In pkgs. EveV read the above letter? A nuw one appears from time to time. are genuine, true, and full of """ma interest. Passing of n Once Familiar Figure in Newspaper Offices. What has become of the old time printer, once so familiar before the Invasion of the linotype mnchine? He used to show up with the first frost. You found him in the office early some October morning, toasting his back before the stove. His first request was, "Boss, may I look over the exchanges?" and he was soon pawing around among the papers on the editorial table. By 0 o'clock he had levied sufficient tribute upon the boys to get a shave and a drink, and after dinner he was picking up bre vier In a way to make an expert en nous. All winter he worked as stead ily as a clock. Many were the stories Ue told around the back room fire on Sunday afternoon. Though with out much education, his very wander ings had made htu. au entertaining personage. lu the spring, however, when the tiny bees buzzed lazily against the i.: r.ny window pane and the lilac hushes in the courthouse yard were putting forth their fragrant lavender plumes and the night air was pungent with the odor of burning brush piles and sweet with earthy exhaltlons of upturned sod and everywhere could he heard the laughter of children ... tying In the twilight, a change came over the spirit of the tramp printer. He felt the call of the road, with Its luxurious days of animal de ilt'jt under the clear skies of spring, with Its privilege of work when you wish and Idle when y.u will. He wished to see the Doys again, to visit tho fifty offices where he had friends, so one Monday morning in mid-April when you entered the office you missed his form at the case, the months' familiar figure with one gal Ins down and a short oil stained cob pipe protruding from under n slightly 1 .millions nose. Yet with all of his vagrant Impulses you felt kindly to ward your nomadic brother in the ut preservative and were ever ready for him to come again. Before it is too late some gifted I'M should tell tho story of the tramp printer. It Is one teeming with ro mance and the very best possibilities of good literary effort. True, to-day almost every office has the remorse less, speedy and ever ailing machine, but no one can wax either enthusias tic or reminiscent over a mere ma chine. Shawnee (Okla.) Herald. Some Eurly Efforts Toward Thell Suppression. "It Is so quiet uptown now that the patient listener may now and then catch somo of the softer noises of the world," said a semi-invalid lawyer who spends most of the day sitting by the open window of his Harlem Hat. "I have naturally taken a groat deal of Interest in the present crusade against unnecessary noises, and have been reading up on sporadic attempts to suppress them," he continued. "The earliest case that I have found was In the reign of George III, when a circus band was silenced by injunc tion on the ground that its noise was a nuisance. In another old English law report it telU of a plaintiff recov ering damages because a flock of wild ducks was frightened by tho persistent firing of a gun. Th learned Judge held that this consti tuted a public nuisance and waB a prejudice to private rights. In Ueorgia 'gathering in a noisy way at a pigeon shooting' has been Judi cially decided to be a nuisance. A North Carolina court held that the stamping horses In a livery sta'oKi near the plaintiff's dwelling was suf ficient annoyance to entitle him to damages. "Even the noise Incident to an or dinary business may be a nuisance. A gold-beater pelting a thin sheet of told Into shape, the hammering, of the anvil In the blacksmith shop, the noise of a skating rink, and so on, have all been held to be abatable nuisances. "The test 'aid down In the bnckt is that any 'noise which constitutes an annoyance to a person of ordinary sensibility to sound so as materially to interfere with the ordlna-y com fort of life and impair the reason able enjoyment of his habitation, li a nuisance to him.' "It Is within the bounds of possi bility that in great centres of popu lation a new class of experts will arise to draw salaries from the muni cipality as noise specialists. Un usual noises long continued undoubt edly Induce deafness, aside from Irri tating nerves and murdering sleep. At any rate, they destroy a discrim inating nicety in hearing, especially In those who have what Is call'd a musical ear." From the New oik Times. R. O. Dun & Co.'s Weekly Review of Trade says: "Decided Improvement Is noted 'n most trade reports this week, espec ially In respect to distributive de partments. Orders have come to manufacturers more freely, In many caseB accompanied by requeitB for immediate or very arly delivery. Evidences on Increased confidence are numerous and prices are moio firmly held where concessions have been offered recently without at tracting buycrB. Many mills have resumed after months of Idleness, sufficient orders hav'ng accumulated to assure active capacity during the bnlance of the yetr, and there Is a general belief thnt contracts will be placed freely during the next two months. "Recent moderate reductions In prices of pig Iron nnd tlm large amount of steel huslncss nbo.it to be placed have resulted In Increased in quires for material. Purchases are no longer confined to iTttmeutntt needB. deliveries during the first quarter of 1909 being arranged, nnd still longer contracts! Could be tak" l If producers would MOM current prices. Orders for Bteel rallB are be ing placed for both heme and ox port account, some Idle plants hav ing secured enough IuibIiiob.-i to re sume operations, while pinto Dtttts are busy on material for recent big orders for cars. Minor mctils nri firmer because of a decidedly broud cr demand. jrrv2 WW Wholesale MarkeM. New York. Wheat Receipts, 8,-., 000 bush., exports, 287.050 bush. Spot steady; No. 2 red, 1.09 ele vator; No. 2 red. 1.10 f. o. b. afloat; No. 1 Northern Duluth, 1.13 H f o. b. afloat; No. 2 hard winter, 1.10 f. o. b. afloat. Corn Receipts. 12.900 bush. 8pot steady; No. 2, 77 new elevator and 77 f. o. b. afloat; No. 2, 84 spot for old. Option market was without transactions, cloBlng net un changed. Oats Receipts, 83.400 bush.; ex ports, 2,505 bush. Spot Btendy; mixed, 2C to 32 lbs., 52 (ft 52 Vfe ; nat ural white. 26 to 31 lbB. 50 52; clipped white, 32 to 40 lbs., Sl'Afc 57. Poultry Alive, weak: Western chickens, 13; fowls, 13; turkeys, 14; dressed steady: Western spring chickens, 1149 Hi fowls, 12 14; spring turkeys, 10 16. Eggs Firm. Receipts, 7,040 crates. State, Pennsylvania, and near-by fancy selected white, 43 45; do., fair to choice, 3342; brown and mixed, fancy, 33; do., fair to choice, 2932; Western firsts, 2627; seconds, 2325. Philadelphia. Wheat Dull and unchanged. Corn Dull. He. lower; No. 2, for local trade, 83 84c. Oats Steady; No. I white, nat ural, 53 53 VsC. Butter Firm; extra WeBteru creamery, 28; do., near-by prints,. 30. Eggs Firm; Pennsylvania and other near-by firsts, free cases, 29c, at mark; do., current receipts, In re turnable cases, 28c. at murk; West ern firsts, free caBes, 29, at mark; do., current receipts, free cases, 28, at mark. Cheese. Quiet; New York full creams, choice, 13MiC, do., fair to good, 12 Vi 13. Poultry Alive, firm; fowls, 11 12c; old roosters, 88c; spring chickens, 10V4&11V4; ducks, 10V4 11. Baltimore. Flour Dull and un changed. Receipts, 9,826; exports, 2,351. Wheat Steady. Spot, contract, 1.02 1.02; spot, No. 2 West ern, 1.044 1.06; October, 1.02 1.02; November, 1.02 1.02; December, 1.03; steamer, No. 2 red, 99 99; Southern, on grade, 99 1.02. Receipts, 35.248. Corn Firm; year, 66)66H; January, 66 66. Receipts, 15, 560; exports, 700. Oats Steadier; No. 2 white, 62 52; No. 3 white, 51 51; No. 2 mixed, 50 61. Receipts, 14, 229. Rye Nominal; No. 2 Western ex port, 82 82; receipts, 25,786. Butter Steady; fancy Imitation creamery, 22 23; fancy creamery. 293; fancy ladle, tOOIli storo packed, 16 17. Eggs Steady; 27 28. Cheese Quiet; new large, 13; new flats, 13 new small. 14. After Years of Hnrkix-he, IMzatlnrs ami Kidney Disorders. Mrs. R. C. Richmond, of North wood, Iowa, says: "For years I was a martyr to kidney trouble, badkacbe, dlzsy spells, heuii acheB and a terri ble bearing down pain. I used one remedy nfter an othor without ben efit. Finally I used a box of Doan'sKldnov Pills and the backache ceased. Encour I aged, I kept on and by the time 1 had j used three boxes not a slgu of the trouble remained. My health Is per fect." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents ;i box. Foster-Mllbnrn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Must w.irh Before DarUgtit TT.it llfr- is not all a bed of roses for the cojlego professor. Is a fart that Is being experienced by Prof. B. F. Nichols, of the physics d diri ment of Columbia tTnlvtrslty. Every morning, promptly at 1.30, Dr. N r!i ols tumbles from his comfortable bed nnd wends fail way to Fayerwi tthl r Hull, where he works In his labors tcry from 2 until 4 A. M. The professor Is not taking an out door tuberculosis cure, nor Is ho seeking to perpetuate health, youth and beauty. The truth ia, that , Prof, Nichols is perfecting a new type of galvanometer, it i for this thai ho seeks his lboratory every morning Dr. Veholr, hns found that dur ing the day he 's Unable to experi ment with his delicate apparatus he cause cf the voj't amount of electri cal activity surging about bis labora tory. Hence, It is thnt, with the tager ness of the sportsman who seekH hla game at tho first streak of dawn, the professor risen at this mystical hour and steals cautiously on li s Initiatory In the hope of surprising nnd capturing some w Id. elusive I secret of science. New York Her ald. Consumption And The Telephone, Tho panic recently created on the subject of the assumed danger lurk ing In the transmitter of the tele phone Is not precisely now. It is but the development of n fear which has mused misgivings for some years, ns is pointed out by the British Medical Journal. On the supposition, It Bays, ti nt various gartal of dis ease probably collect in the receiver and transmitter of the Instrument, Bt any rate In public telephone sta tions, some medical alarmists havo thrown out suggestions that uutirnp- j tics, both In a dry state and In s: '.il ium, sr.o-.nn oo applied c,r tlie BC.te ty of the telephone User, The recent dictum goes one step further, In asmuch as it 1b now nn established fact that tubercle baccill. the casual mlcro-nrganlsnm of consumption, have been found alive nnd In robust condition in the instrument, It 13 e.ulte natural, In view of such a llnd that a feeling of alarm might seize ho'd of the more nervous. Current Literature. Ikptii At Wlilrh Miners din Work. Below 60 feet the temperature rises In the proportion of one degree for every 65 feet of depth accept whore currents of water carry the heat away. The result Is that at a depth of about 4,000 feet wo reach a temperature of 98 degrees, or blood heut. This renders It exceedingly difficult to work coul pits below that depih. Yhls is the reason that Great Britain's coal commission has decid ed that mlnee are not workable bo low 4,000 feet. The thickness of the solid rocks building up the crust of the earth Is at Ir.-.st 30 to 40 miles. At Mm depth the heat Is such ns would re duce everything on the surface of tho earth to liquid. Hut the pressure of the overlying rocks is so grent that until the relation of the heat to the pressure Is known It ennnot be said whether the earth at thnt depth j fluid or solid. Chicago Trlbuuo. FOfJIM.8 Restored to Health by JLydtn E. Pink! i n m's Vegetable Coin pound. Head What They Say. State or Oino. UR ot Ioi.f.do, I m Iaica Cott.vrr, i KnANK .). CMK.tRY makes nath that he i senior part Ml M tiie firm ot K.I.Ctni.vnv & l'o., doing busnics in t lie? 'Jity ot lo!Ho. County mid Mate tfOrfSBMi, niiil thai MM hrni iv, li pay thssunt ot ess nuxmnu not, i Ana lor each sad every ease o( cATAniiu that cannol he rartU bv the use of Hall's L'STASSU CCSS. FKAMK w, CMK.NEV. Sworn to bslitre me an i suowhhsd in mi practice. tni t'tb Uuy ot Ufrelaaber, A. I)., 18f8 A. V. . Ui.eason. IfsftM -Notary Public. Hall s Cntarrli Cure is taken intci nallv,und acta directly on the L'louil nnu miMOSS sur faces ot thes)steni. Semi lor testimonials Irae. f, .. Cucni v & Co , Toledo. O. Sold by all l)i u;its. 75c. Talit Hall's Fainiltr 1'ills for constipation For Safety! lake, "So Oils is the Brooklyn Bridge. Sure Ol would doive off meself for fifty dollars." "Ol don't want to see yez get kilt but I'll give yo twenty-folve avc ye doive half way." Life. HSA'f TvV. LITTLE COY KEPT SCRATCHING. Eczema Lasted 7 Venn Fare was All liniv Skin gpectallsts Failed, Hut Catlcnva Kffcctvd Cure. "When my little bey Was six weeks old r.n eruption Li.ikl' out on nis face. 1 took him to a doctor, bat his fare kept on get ting worse aattl it p.ot s: bad that no one could look nl him. His whole face was one crust and must hove been very painful. Be scratched (lay and night until his face WSJ raw. Then 1 took Siiin la nil the best specialists in skin diseases, but they could not do much for him. The SCSSBM got t i his arms and legs and Ave cculd not get a night'a sleep in months. I got a act of Catiettrs Remedies n;l bt ftli relieve! the first limn I used them. 1 gave the Cuti cura Remedies n gojd trial and gradually the eczcua healed all up. lie is now seven years old and 1 thin); the trouble will never return. Mrs. John U. Klumpp, 80 Niagara St., Newark, N. J., Oct. 17 and 'J2, 1007." The outcome of n ,1 rip on the matrimonial sea depends' largely ou the ballast. The Anttauttr r Snap. Thi word Snap or Bope, froai tho Grc-k sapa, first occurs, in the works of I'll ny Qaiea, Pliny states ioap t.i rave been discovered by the Qauls, ti nt It was composed of tallow and DBhcq, and that the Germ. in snap Was reckoned the best. According to piamondl a soapmaker was taoluded In the retinue of Charlemagne. At Pompeii (overwhelmed by an erup tion of Vesuvius. A. D. 79), a soap boiler's Bhop. with soap In It. wns discovered during an excavation made there not m.inv years ago. Hence the manufacture of soap is of very ancient origin; Indeed Jere miah figuratively m' titions it "For though thou wash thee with natron, and take thee much sope, yet thine Iniquity Is marked before mo." ler. 2:22. Iflrks' C'npmllne furcs Nervousness, nether tiroiintil. Worried, overworked, or n-hnt not. It refreshes the brain and nencs It's l,nitud and pletinanl to take. lUc.. i5e.. and .Vie., at dina afore, Labor Ou the I a nil. It Is no good saying airily that the ' tiling of the fields comes naturally to all men. It certainly does not ronte natural to half the unemployed men to be met with In large cities, even wheu these menhave a atucere desire to get work. For agricultural labor requires a large measure ot training and skill. Just as other spe cialised work does. Sheffield Telegraph. Octopus at the Font. a couple in a country village took their baby to be Christened, and on the clergyman asking what name they had chosen tho happy father replica, "Octopus, sir!" "What!" ejaculated the astonished divine, "but you can not call a child by so eitraordlnary a name." "Yet, sir, please," wss the reply, "you see it's our eighth afid we want It called 'Octoput.' " Gen Live Sti.c New York. Beeves Receipts, 1, 141; no trading; fsellng steady. Calves Receipts, 241. Veals steady; no trading In Western calves' feeling weak. Veals told at 5.00 oj 9.25 per 100 pounds; grassers and fed calves, 26 4.00. Sheep and Lambs Receipts, 3. 771. Sheep unchanged; lambs glow, but steady. Sheep sold at 8.60 lo 8.70 per 100 pounds; culls at 2.09 te 2.26; lambs at 6.25 to 6.15, and culls at 3.50. Hogs Receipts, 8,179; feeling tteady. New York 8Ute and Penn sylvania hogs, 5.9o6.00 per 100 pounds. Chicago Cattle Receipts esti msted about 8,000; market steady to strong; steers 4.40 7.60; cows, 8. 0096. 00; heifers, 2.506.26; bulls, 2.60 4.60; cslves, 3,00 H' 8.00; stackers and feeders, 2.50 4.66. Hogs Receipts estimated about 30,000; market 5 10c. lower. Choice heavy shipping, 6.00 6.20; butchers, 6.956.10. Sheep Receipts estimated about 20.000; market 10 20c. lower; sheep, 4.205.00; lambs, 4.75 6.00; yearlings, 3.855.16. In after years what a man doesn't know his son can teach him. To Drive Out Malaria una Uuild Up the System Take the Old Sta.udu.rd Gkovb's Tahts less Chill Toxic. Yo i kuow what you ure taking.. Th. formula is pl.uuly printod on overy iiottie, HU'iwiir it 1.4 simply Lj.ti uiuonndlruu in tt tailteietS form, and tho lnuat effectual tonu Wat grown pooplj nnd child'n. Me You are not entitled to much credit for doing the things you want to do. Capwllne cures indigestion Pains, Itclchin'. Sour Sto'iiach. nnd llearthtirn. Jroin whatever raiixe. It's Mnuiu. Klfects Immediately. DoctOTt prescribe it. 10c., 2.c, and 50c.. ut druiz stores. Poor Judgment is the blossom nnd bad luck is the fruit. B. N. U. 40. IhiiRom.SW 8tre-t. NSW York, writes: " Lvlls K. Piukhniu's Vegeta ble Compound over c.irnnirrec'ilnritioa.pe. riodio suffering, nnd nervous headaches, after everything olso had faiW to help mo, nnd I foci it n duty to let ntheia know of It." iiit!iarii.eCrai:' '.'Stlo Dafayctto St., Denver, Col., writes: "Thanki n LydlaB. Plnkhani'i YegstsblaComsnaail I am well, aftt rMirl. ring for months frMti ner vous proatrath .i." Miss Marie ft"ltz tnmi, of L:'.'iv !, Is., writes: "I wns in a run- d owmondi Men umlaut fci .-d f roin Bumiresslon. Indigestion, and poor circulation, i.yitla K. 1'iekl. utu's Von, 'table Compound mado me Well and strong." Miss rtllen M.Olson, of 417 N. KastSt., Ke waneo. III., says: " Ly dinE. IMnkhum'tVege tahle Compuund cured mo of backache, side acho, and established my porlodt, after the best local doctors bad failed to help me." FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. For thirty years Lydia E. link hom's Vegetable ComjHiund, mado from roots and lierlis, has licen the standard remedy for female, ills, at 1 1 1 has pos i t ively cured t hou. ands of women who havo been troubled with displacements, Inflammation, ulcera tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, that bearing-down feeling, ilatuleney,indiges t it u,diziness,ornervous prostration. Why don't you try it t Mrs. Pinkham invites nil sick women fo write her for advice. She has guided thousands tc health. A - . Lvtio, Mass. Tiirring Ami Feathering, Tarring and feathering, it seems, is a Kuropenn invention. One of Richard Coeur-de-I.lon's ordinance for seamen was "thnt If any me: were taken with theft or pickery and thereof convicted, he should have his head polled, and hot p'tch poured upon his pate, and upon thai life feathers of some pillow or cush ion Shaken aloft, that he might th- by be known for a thief, and n" U next arrival of the ships to any 1 be put forth of the company t- - nfe his adventures without all hi ye cf return unto his fellows." r Or Oate mkllU Karms in 14 State. Strout's mam- motli illuFtiatrdcatalotr .! bar gains with Mate niapa mailed re; ws oav S.R. Lire. F A STHOIlYCO.. Werla'i Unwt FsrmDcsW Luis' rule Bids .. ClulaJ.lulua PATENTS BOUNTIES sfaUeu; jroat iir your i i .'.!"-M ( v '' v r M .1 - K t iVminirt, rl turs, oto. Sw act n to Ujjtity (or oi.Uen lllfir rol.ltlVtM, eTllu nrVKl .U ItlM imvi; wrf, 1441 . ItiaVe wfcjurtfdi jvr ia.iwj.uo iur ttitmi. feor oiuti and i I'll- it'ii'HH, AtiUregd, tV. li, WlUa, .lit'-: Law, t Notary guoite,i Vul litllldiag, it 1 lu.L Avf SaaUiartou,i, O. -. ica' prjt.ji, upi fa Insist on Having: for Dr. MAKlKL'S rriitiarittiii! votviEN "" -nr.."::: ' rsf-nd lor bnult. Iteliei lor Women." . iW.il PKUU CO., 30 W. 32dSt.. N. Y. C!t. KHr MllISM " '" " i- ur.Hli M- lllLUlHtt I IUIM ut,, .in ,.. I v ; JUIir.idl,.,- ,ii !,, ; r. i'" iOW. Wrttl .iu.oIc Tim WKkiltt Ur.P. CO., Ktu. ln,l. Thompson's Eye Water i' iiiiii'iiii run arts THE J. R. WATKINS MEDICAL CO. WINONA. MINNESOTA Miikt. li OlftVrriil Ar-fllvi Household Srmnllr.. F1h oritur Eslniel. oil Kind.. Tollrl Prr-mrntlona. Vlo- Stout- Me. CantJajferf Wanted in E)ery County. a liar. ahfWrtSSMVa tS.INMI.WMI Output. BEST PROPOSITION E!i2 nERED AGENTS SAFETY RAZO AT LOW PRICE. SUPERIOR TO BEST SOLD AT ANY PRICE. Mrs. Winalew's Soothing Syrup forChilrlrcn (Ml hing. soften, tho gums, retliuvs uitl.ini tiiu tion.altftysimin.curcii find colic, 2 jc a bulile. The average man keeps a lot of ready-made excuses on tup. Habitual Constipation lay bo permanently oercomcby proper persona! efforts wilMrtc assistance f 11 rr enejiciiil laxative i li'iru'cty, Ovruuc V ' II ' o i - kabitfc cai,tv gaual asMnfonce To na ture may be gradual) ilif.pcnst'dw'ttri wKcn no (anger needed a$ the best of rerveiltcft.when Yeauirtd, are to assist r-ftture ani not to aupplant tke nut ur. a) functior.8, which Must depend uHi itiAccly upon prober nourishment, pnyper cjjorts,ano right living gt-iirraily. To get itii bcneciat effects, utwayg buy tho genuine SyrupfRgsElix.rf Senna California Fig Sybup Co. only SOLP BY ALL LCADINC DRUOCISTS one trie only, regular Jnct 5(K f Bo icon? iruiv oencnciai i c.mcciy, wJiTUMcines ana HiUstrat Jesns. Mont of the building oak In thia country comet from the section In wettern North Carolina, toutbweet ern Vlrgtala. West Vlrgiala, north eastern Tennessee sad southeastern Kentucky. New York City has twice at many , Some of the finest French tapestry telephones as London, four times as Is manufactured so slowly that an I many as Berlin nd tlx limes as ' artltt cannot produce more than r. ' many at Parlt. quartar of a square yard in a year. The experiment of paving streets with iron-slag blocks, now under way at Brooklyu, N. Y., was tried Philadelphia 10 years ago and con sidered a failure on account of the extensive chipping. The total crop of figs is now more Uiaa 121,000 camel loads a year 4H r j ii i ktas raiPT j mi The small pries Is made possible by the great demantl for this Razor. The amall profit on each aggregating at largo a um If we told fewer at a greater price. The benefit Is the ooniumtr'i. The) Blade la of the reat steel, scien tifically made and tempered by a secret process- -and the blade, of oourae, Is the Impor tant part of any Razor. Tho frame Is of satin finish, silver plutorj, and "angled" correctly for aafa, quick and olean shaving. Tho tough bearded man finds this Rssor a boon, the soft boarded man finds it a delight. These blades can be stropped. Buy one and you will reoommend It to all your frlende. That la the beat teat of any article. In postage stampa or oath brings It prepaid by mall In a speolal baa. Write navne and full address vary pla' ily. i-l m ishinu HOtiss, ass Leonard atreet. M. V. ot. inane t nai ia ine bssi leer c 25 cts. 5 EXTRA BLADES 25f PUTNAM FADELESS DYES tUr more Ltui1 brlutiur uuil (aValttr t'Olon iu.m isuv num. ,1... rw. .. o.a dy. smroisut wttnoul rlpplu uparu Wrll. lor (w toktaiT . .JTI. ".'."..I' SZVVi S'.'flT SSt " fee, - - wwuwm. uiuiissua I'nVU W.i tju.uo. Illinois. Beware of the Cough that bt of oq nUtant))-, bfsMsdu your nifht't rt aria cjL.uuftUnf yem wtili ttse violtuxa of the nn iraTit A lew dow I IHbo's Owe wilt relieve wot derftstly iur cough, no matter l.wsY far atiTicca or atrtom U aVaWHrsce a nd heafa tht IrriUied atari ccst, elaart tha clnHrd air Ltaa&Agoa and tha omigh dtaap paara. Al fl dru4fisU'. 28 eta. FOR MEN A shoe thst is too bin may not pinch, but it is a bad fit Inst the suns. What yon want is s shoe that matches the thape of your foot at the place where your weight rests. not too hues oi too small, but (- h. lK. BVDSVUSDfl..!.. til .1 . the style is there, too. Look for the label. HIED. P. FIELD CO.. Brockton. Mass.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers