BfCNVON'S EMIXEXT DOCTORS AT JfOCR SERVICE FREE. Not Penny to Taj For the Fullest Medical Examination. If Ton are fn doubt as to the cause of your dtaease mall us a poBtal re questing a medical examination blank, which you will fill out and return to us. Our doctors will carefully diag nose your case, and If you can be cured you will be told g0; If you can not be cured you will be told so. You are not obligated to us In any way, for this advice Is absolutely free; you are at liberty to take our advice or not as you see fit Send to-day for a medi cal examination blank, fill out and return to us as promptly as possible, and our eminent doctors will diagnose your case thoroughly absolutely free. Munyon's, 53d and Jefferson Bts.. Philadelphia, Pa. Providential. Mother Why should we make VtiHie a doctor when there are so many new doctors every year? Father But think of all the new ailments! Meggendoif Blaetter. For COLDS and OKI P. tick's Cartmins In the. bent remedy the achlne- and feveilshneM-cures the Cold and restore normal condition. It's liquid effect Immediately, luc, 26a. and Wc., at drug tores. Separate the Cockerels. 'As soon as the cockerels can be identified they should be separated from the rest of the flock and fed to make the best possible gain In weight, for it means considerable profit. Do it before they get to fighting among themselves and there will he llttln nr no trouble afterward when they be come well acquainted. Farmers' Home Journal. The Best Place Gone. One of the wives of a Mormon coming down stairs one morning met the physician, who was attending her husband. "Is he very ill?" she asked, anxi ously. "He Is," replied the physician. "I fear the end is not far off." "Do you think," she risked, "I should be at his bedside during hi last moments?" "Yes, but I advise you to hurry. The best places are already being taken." Human Life. What's In A Name. A crabbed bachelor and an aged tpinster one day found themselves at a concert. The selections were ap parently unfamiliar to the gentle Charcoal Is Knsentinl Whatever method of fpcrlino- u adopted the chicks must have a con stant suppiy 01 water, nut so arranged that they will not make a hnthinh nt of it. Charcoal la very essential, as it aias digestion, neutralizes the gases of the stomach and helps to prevent oowei ixoiiDie. When chicks are giv en a grass run they will supply them selves with green food, although dan delion leaves and rape are relished vy tnem in addition. Farmers' Home Journal. A Hen House. A house large enough for 100 lay ing hens should be from twelve to six teen feet wide and from twenty to twenty-five feet long. The roof should slope to the north and all openings placed on the south side, with the exception perhaps of a door, which may be placed in one end. Make the back wall of the house four and a half to five feet high and the south one from seven to nine feet. Then place the windows high, so the sun s rays will fall well back upon the floor. Farmers' Home Journal. Any Season For Hatching. If you use incubators and brooders you can commence hatching and rais ing chicks at any season, early or late, If you have the eggs with which to do business. If you confine vourself in uu..ui. vv e- ; coo. n juu uunnne yourseir to man, but when Mendelssohn's "Wed- i the use of hens, you must wait her Awt Mit"ni " ii a hAaim Vi nrtnkod I CO H VP Pi t PT1 TO a a in Hmn u-.-u, ding March" was begun he pricked up nis ears. mac sounds iamu iar," he exclaimed. "I'm not very strong on those classical pieces, but that's very good. What is It?" The spinster cast down her eyes. 'That," she told him, demurely, "is the 'Maiden's Prayer.' " Cleveland Leader. In good condition the hens are bound to thrive and when they thrive the farmer thrives, also, financially. New Vegetable, the Udo, Without reservation of any de scrlptlon. we now positively pro nounce this Japanese salad plant a decided acquisition to the American laoie, ana nence to the American veg etable grower. It Is extremely diffi cult to describe it. It "favors" both celery and aspara gus, but Is very different from either of them. Eaten raw it is simply de licious, and has struck all sorts of tastes, immediately becoming popu lar with old, middle aged and young of both sexes. Cooked, if cut up and stewed like celery, it make, on or. tremely pleasing addition to the list of creamed dishes. Cooked like as paragus, and served with drawn hut. ter, butter and vinegar, or any other asparagus dressing, it is Just as marked a success. We have proven rnnrlnnlvf.lv that It can (by hilling) be cut in the open at any time from Christmas to the middle of the month nf Mnv ai Christmas extremely delicate blanched snoots irom tnree to five Inches long and from one-ouartcr tn throo-eihth inches in diameter are obtained. In April or May the stalks urn from eight and one-half tn ten tnrhea Inn and three-quarters to one and one- I quarter inches in diameter. Six stalks equal the size nf tho roiriiioti, bunch of asparagus, and these six I siaiKs weign one pound. It has many State "O 1 of a ennsyivania HOMS VP WOMKX. Highwayman Three Shot, Hit. ting Cart'lnge. Norrlstown. Mrs. Anna I'ccliln . . . ,, . ,,, iiiiic. tnneeding govern and her daughter. Dolly, and Miss PUprs from t(e Blac Ham) sla, had an exciting experience with!"' L ''rchpr' a "-"nown bust- - ! , VWIII IH '.IHPtl Ifl rif'IHiHII n iHrge sum of money tinder a flu M.ACK HA XI) ntRXs IIAKX. DomiintN ("nlio-dcri, llHppointc(l Criminal., Carry Out Threat. I ottsvllle. Unheeding several Vegetables Cheaper, "It Is nearlv si months i nave tasted meat. "On a diet, ch?" "Yes." "Have von noticed any chanpo In your condition?" "I should pay I have. I've been able to pay up nearly nil mv old debts. In another month I'll be absolutely Independent. Chicago Itecord-llernld. I a highwayman while driving hIoiik the road between Port Kennedy nnil King of Prussia. The women were passing alongside of a woods when a ninn stepped out in the road mid tried to stop tho horse. Mrs. Pnehln struck the beaut with the whip and tho horse leaped in the air and almost knocked the highway man down. As tiio animal dashed down the ronrl. the roliher flreil thrro shots from a revolver. One of the bullets struck the horse In the fleshy part of the lea. another knocked n spoke out of the wheels and the third bullet went wild. Mrs. Pechln succeeded In reaching the King of Prussia Hotel before the horse collapsed from loss of blood. A posse was orunnized and thev are starching the woods for the hinn wayman. iIRL OVKItCOMK BY i.S. Found InconscioiiK In llathroom And Hurried To Chester Hospital. Chester. Shortly after she hud been sent upstairs by her mother, seventeen - year-old Elsie Phillips, daughter of William Phillips, 421 Kast Tenth Street, was found on the floor of the bathroom unconscious, with the gas pouring from an open jet,. advantages over either celerv or as. 1 . ol"S to the foot of the stairs, narast.a T il I Mra- Phillips failed to her daughter, nlanteH if i ... a,8ParagU8' , once ! but failed to receive an answer She planted it is always there, rnmlnv ii n ; ..i j j ' o i' ' ws.-icvi.cu an 'Ml u I ui (inn null I uniting annually and erowlne to a height nr I uoatnira fmmrt knr Aahtn i,.i four or five feet. It is a bushv shrub i In a cramped position on the floor. wim a smaii wnite tlower and berries l"e lrl WBB Hastened to me tries A "Rebellious Wife." The current issue of the American Magazine has for its opening number "The Confessions of a Rebellious Wife." We have no reason to doubt that the story is true, and that it tells the tale of the tragedy of love as enacted in many another home. An ideal courtship; a genuine love marriage. The young lover and hus band deferring in everything to his sweetheart and bride, and the radi antly happy young woman idolizing her beau ideal of a man and ambi tions to anticipate his every want. Then the cares, anxieties, demands of business Increase. They grow more insistent and imperious. The young husband becomes absorbed In his business. How can he help it? Suc cess means so much to him, and he is bound to succee I. Slowly but sure' v. and all uncon sciously, too, he ti :-ns from wife to business. The love he once lavished upon her he now gives to his business. She notices the change, She grows rold, cynical, careworn and her life Is embittered. The end is a nervous breakdown, premature perhaps a Filicide grave, or more frequently, the divorce court. Milwaukee Sen tinel. Jimmy's Luck. "Hear about Jimmy?" asked the lanky youth with the bat and balls. "No," responded his chum. "What's happened to him?" "Lots. He found a quarter in de street, went to de ball game, got hit wid a bail an' den got licked when he got home." - "Gee whiz! I guess dat's what you'd call trouble coming from an unexpected quarter." Chicago News. I 1 ' 4 I 1 Student (angrily) Curses on this j ing. He wrote reading, anvhow. instructor wnat s that? convenience as to tlm nf h.i.hu. and perhaps have to market or eat your early eesrs. Emr Hnrin. winter season command high prices, sua pernaps pay better by selling them than taking chances on raising canj- chicks, wnatever price you may get for them. One thing is certain, you do get a paying price for your eggs, but you have ail linrprrnln nfAr.. ositlon in raising a paying lot of wriy cnicKB. farmers' Home Jour- Feeding Silacc AH Who ar PrnArlon in fMji the cows silage agree that in order to avoid a taint to the milk it must be fed after milking is done and re moved from the barn. Professor ""app, touenmg the matter, says: First, silage must be fed nnlv nffor milking. Second, the floora mnpt h epi ciean and no silage allowed to accumulate in the alleys. Third there should not be more silage fed ".au mo stocK win clean up at once Fourth, the stable must be well von. tilated. Fifth, corn should not be put. in too green. Sixth, don't feed moldy silage. Silage properly put up and properly fed is a very cheap and most excellent feed; improperly put n Uu improperly red, it may be an expensive and hazardous experiment." Alfalfa For StVine. 3. E. Woodford, of Coffey County, Kansas, April 1, 1905. placed ten choice pure bred Poland-China brood sows from twelve to eighteen months old, that were due to farrow in the latter days of June, on a five-acre Held of alfalfa. They were given no other feed than the alfalfa pastur age until they had farrowed and their pigs were a week old. After that the sows had in addition to the alfalfa some bran slop until about August u, wuen new eirn wn flf t j ..Ha VI i irn- The sews from the " a . i will llic time they were turned nn fh oiri stdQnMoi .h ' .. . i uaul lne 'ast week in June mad a FauBt, sir. Harvard Lampoui. remarkable growth, besides gaining rsntning xnorc. i m un. iney did well Upshaw Ever have your pockets , wltl their pigs, reared an average of eked? 1 apvon , ?. Picked? Bickerdyke Not since I began to "ep an automobile. Chicago Tribune. SURPRISED HIM Doctor's Test of Food. A doctor in Kansas experimented with his boy in a teBt of food, and gives the particulars. He says: "I naturally watch the effect of different foods on patien'i. My own little son, a lad of four, bad been 111 with pneumonia, and during his con alescence did not seem to care for any kind of food. "I knew something of Grape-Nuts nd its rather fascinating flavour and particularly of its nourishing and nerve-building powers, so I started the boy on Grape-NuU and found from the first dish that be liked it. "His mother gave It to him stead ily, and he began to Improve at once. In less than a month he bad gained about eight pounds and soon became o well and strong we had no further anxiety about him, "An old patient of mine, 73 years old, came down with serious stomach trouble, and before I was called bad 0' ,B0 weak be could eat almost nothing, and was in a serious condl wiH; He h8d trled almost every avail 0t fd f0P tba ,lck wltDOUt "I Immediately put blm on Grape- ii.0., wlth ooo:' ricn n'm and lust a ""la pinch of sugar. He exclaimed wnen I came next day. 'Why. doctor, 'never ate anything so good or that made me feel so much stronger.' am plea,ed to say that he got ,h1 .n GraP8-NK. but he had to ik v " lor two f three weeks, inen be began to branch out a little seven to each sow, and as sucklers they were a sieht tn tv, i. were the most attractive bunch ever raised in Coffey County, as admitted by our breeding competitors. We weighed a gilt from this lot when six months and five days old, and her -eiBui oi ax, pounds was not above the average of the whole lot. In our life long experience in rearing swine we have found nothing as a grazing crop for swine that In value ap proaches alfalfa." From Coburn's "Swine in America." Coarse Food. There is no reason whv hin. sin,.u be fed almost exclusively on concen trated food any more than the other tocK on tne rarm should, says Mirror and Farmer. Hens should be fed as eows, on a varied diet, and largely upon uuiKy toodi. Hay, grain, en silage, cooked roots and also ground meat and bone all are Important In the food of the flock. Concentrated food is expensive and la alan in.i... to tne fowls if they are fed too largely upon u. a cow mat is fed exclusively on grain will not thrive and viva h. same amount of milk as ono that has ueen iea on grain with all the above mentioned foods and In good propor tion. Green food, and that is the roost bulky of any, is what the fowls need as well as the cows. Hens will eat grass In summer and will also consume a large quantity of it in winter provided It is chopped fine for them. It is also good if steeped in a little warm water and mixed with bran, or some other soft food. Hens on the farms, where they have access to the fields, should not x tA more than once a day at the most. very much like elderberries it ran be started from either seeds or roots, as Is asparagus. It demands no par ticular care, but occasional Ctlltl Vfla tlon; keeping It free from weeds will pay, as does this practice with all other crops. Off Long Island it requires no fer tilizer of any description. It grows well in distinctly clayey loam, also in light sandy loam. Its yield per root is greater than asparagus. It can be cut freely the second year, and a test of four years shows that the stalks rapidly increase In number, in diame ter and in height. Each new stalk, if left hilled up, throws out roots at joints under ground, hence having started a small patch it Is an easy matter to secure plenty of plants for extending the beds. It can be Intro duced commercially through clubs, hotels and hleh-class rpat Like olives, asparagus and grape I nun, some people would have to learn to like it. But a ninnt that fur. niBhes a clear white, crisp stalk with out a particle or waste, that can be served whole or slireri Just as celery is served; that makes' an extremely pleasing salad, that can be stewed and creamed or sptvpH in any of the methods used for aspara gus, certainly is entitled to a place on the American bill of fare. H. B. Fullerton, Experiment Station, Hun tington, Li. i., n. Y. ter Hospital and the physicians put up a hard battle to save her life, later stating that she had a chance to recover. Elsie is unable to make a statement. SIRRKXDKKS FOH JIKL. S'Olle. AH u'Qa A m r. . ..A I. klo . ' wi-iuii in, i-u , nan inn nam and large warehouse at this burned during an early hour. 1 tie Hie was clearly of incendiary origin, and there l3 no doubt it whs the result or the disappointed crimi nals who sent the letters. The sinto constabulary arc now working on clown. Mr. I.tther sus tained n loss of several thousand dotlnrs. KlI.M li ix WilKCK. Rtmiuviiy Cm, c-rnVh Into Fast Freight tin l.tkHniin:t. Pen Arpyl.A wreck that blocked the tracks of the Delaware. Lacka wanna & Western Railroad for many hours, mid resulted in the death of one man, occurred at Kdelman's Sta tion. A string of coal cars standing on a grade broke loose and ran ir.vav just as a fas- freight train was np proaehing. The runaways ran into the freight nml caused the greatest pile-up of chi-s ever seen hereabouts. Joseph Troxell, of Nazareth. (Ire man of the freight train, was killed. Consul Frederick M. Ryder, of RimouBkl, reports that the latest ! government publication shows that, capital to the amount of $7,360,000 is represented by the Joint stock mining companies Incorporated in ycarPr90snCe f Q"fibCC tl"r'ng the "NTIWO" IX (.SH nilAWF.IS. Robber Leave Placard After loot ing York (iocery Sloro. York. Charged with robbing En glehart Benedict, a groceryman. Jo seph Robinson. 10 years old, and Jo seph Grove, 20 years, were arrested here. After carrying away 2.'i boxes of cigarettes and lati clears an;l con siderable money, the robbers wrote a placard, "Stunp," and placed It In a cash drawer. BABY'S SKIN ERUPTION CURED. Wxr.nt0n?r 'rr',n,i" ,'" I'-inful J mit Little Sufferer f'oulil t Mcep .Scratched Constantly t utii lira's Klllcncy Proven. "When al;t two and u half years , my dniiRhtrr broke out on her hip ,,,! ,i upper pnrt. of .r Wl) wj(h 4 ,l mg ami painful eruption. It benn in (ki. J'er; the hr.-t I noticed was a little ml aur !V,nt" ?"":"" ,l'-''-e on her part to cratch her limb.. She could not alcep and the eruptions (nt .ore. nn-l vellow water earn out of them. I had two doctor- treat m..'. r, Wor"c "n'lrr ,llPir t, ment. I hen 1 bought the Cutirura Rem ediea and only uhcI then to weeks when .he was entirely well. Tin., was in Kebrn. . ,,R.n"':,r, ''! another rough plate on her akin, and she j tlow fourtef.D w r w K- ,:- "'"'"kor. Win, he., ter, lenn., Sept. 2l, xi8 " rotter Drue 4 ( hem. Corp., Sole Prop, of tut.tura Remedies, IWton, Maw The cruder battleship "Invinri Ide. of the Rrltlwh I Hill I1J 1 CI iUtJU I a speed of 32 U miles an hour fori hours In a recent test. ' nr iii:aim m -iiirn., , A P, :DHR Whether from Colds. Heat, ftomarh or Nervous 1 roublea. Cainidlne will relieve vcu Iti llgulrt-pltanl to take-a.-u Iniinciti- tely. Try lu iw;.. Vic and 60c. at diu In 1908 the American merchant marine carried only 1 4 per cent, of tho freight between the Cnitcd States and Uruguay. STATU IT F.MS. Porch Climber Who llrok? Jail At c..J.;..,' nZ?r '"e"1,uT, of .,, , StroudBhurg Board of Education, and Allentoun Returns. , mS8 Ellzaheth HeardRlee. of New York, were married in New York by Rev. Dr. Forbes. Allentown. William Meckes, the : porcn cllniuer, of Philadelphia, who , Tne w,fe of Gpo flf O Il.ll ffn tntl 1 1 , - ennl nn (kn I J . . . . .. , . . . v..,,v ..,.,. j j '"6 me nent or tne ueatimg Hallway I oni-thirty-foot wall, enclosing the pris- j pany, sent a ehfck for $100 to the on yard, was brought back to prison I Woman's Club, of Reading, to as by his sweetheart, a Bethlehem girl, sist in promoting the plavground Warden Wieand remembered that movement. The monev will be used Meckes has been corresponding with ! to purchase needed apparatus, this girl. When he called on her Bhe j Bernard Cndelboro, while workiiiB confessed that Meckes after his es-: at the Kurtz Stone Quarrv at York capo had come to her and begged I was caught In the eleva"tor which her to elope. The warden threaten-1 carries crushed stone to the top ot ed her with prosecution in abetting the chute. When at the topmost Io Your et ,rlie and Hnrn? Shake into your shoes Allen's loot-Kane s powder for the feet. It makes tiK-ht ot rew shoes feel easy. Cures Corns, Hunions, (Swollen. Hot, Smarting and .Sweating Feet and Ingrowing Nails. Sold bv a.i OruMistf und Shoe stores, i ts. Sample sent Kiite. Address Allen S. Olmsted, l.tlloy, N y WANTS HER LETTER PUBLISHED For Benefit of Women who Suffer from Female Ills Minneapolis, Minn. "I was a great iiifferer from female troubles which caused a weakness and broken down condition of the system. I read so much of whatLydia K. J'itikham's Veg table Compound htid done for other suffering women I felt sure it would help me. and I must say it did help me wonderfully. Mv n.nina nil h.'t't T grew stroiiter.and ithin three months 1 was a perfectly well woman. "1 want tl.is letter made public to show the hem-fit women mav derive from J.ydia i;. Pinkbunrs Vegetable ( (impound."-- Mrs. Jon.v ;. Mnu v, 211.-, .second St., North, Minneapolis, iTJ ill II Thousands of unsolicited mid genu lne testimonials like the nbove lirove the eiliciency of j.ydiii K. I'inkliam's Vegetalile 'oiiipoiind, which is made exclusively from routs and herbs. Women who siilli r from those dis. tressing ills pecti!i:irto their sex should not lose sight of these facts or doubt the ability of l.vdia K. Pinkbam's V erretablo C'oiniiound to restoru their health. If rou want spr-Hal advicri write to Mr. rinkliam, at l.vnn, Mass. She tvill tr.-at .MHirlcltcrasstrictlv confitleiitial. Fr years she lias In tn liHpiiifr sirk wmiien in tins way, fn-c of charge. Don't hesitate write ut once. The oldest waiter in ( aged 77, recently retired work at Elbing. Germany, from his the PHcnnn Rather than see his sweetheart go to Jail Meckes eonsenteH tn aiirrnn- i der. Hurned To Death Ry Molten Metal. Altoona. Knocking out the wrong prop under a cupoli; at the Pennsyl vania's Smith Allnnnn Vnnrwlrlno Ludwig Achactz, was caught under ! . ,,flen M'Cormick, 2 years oh a shower of molten metnl nnrl hnrn. i.ost creek, near Snenandoah. d I from head to foot, dvine a few I ' .. cnfents of a three-ounce, b ed from head tn foot rlvimr a fn,.. I hours later. The accident hniitumoj i on his forty-second birthday, and hlB family had prepared a celebration of j ,the anniversary. Refuse To Throw Out Votes. part he dropped a distance of twenty uve teet, nrcaKing Uoth legs. Elmer Altland, a farmer livinp near Stoverstown, York County, wat drawn Into a threshing machine. Ik was saved from being ground to pieces by another farm hand aftoi he had his right arm badly torn and lacerated. Helen .M'CormicU, 2 years old. of ran li a three-ounce, bottle A feelinit ot security and freedom from nicty pcrvadns the home in which llam btis izard Oil is kept constantly on hand Mothers know it can always he depended upon in time of need. The Swiss watchmaking Industry has shrunken to half of its onc-tlme size. These candy tablets do just as much as salts or calo mel. But Cascarets never callous the bowels. They never create a continuous need, as harsh cathartics do. Take one just as soon as the trouble appears, and in an hour its over. Vest-pocket box. ID cents at dnnr-atorr. 855 Each tablet of the eenutoe is marked C C C. T,ks Ir. Bl;r Hucklet.orry C rilll I r'or all U iwil lY-viMe (Vil D.-n:erv, Ch'tlera irons. C i r t Infantum. Chit Iren' I Teotuing. etc. At Drn ,','h:i iJ;:J5i,., Farm Notes. During all seasons remember the fowls demand plenty of clean, fresh drinking water. Egg eatinsf hens am naimllv t,anD that do not have sufficient meat Mat Give them plenty of meat scraps or uuks, worms ana insects and they won t eat eggs. Regulate the nnmher of hana in the size of the yard and house. Do 1 not keep too manv. but keen hinia ' that are productive, and give them j good care. That is the secret of sue- I cess In poultry raising. ' It should be an ironclad rule nn . every poultry farm that the moment ; a fowl lg ailing it at once ahnnlrl ho I separated from the rest of the flock. If placed In a cage in a dry, warm I room it can be best treated. Successful Incubation of chicks lies : of iodine and fell to the floor uneon scions, a physician who was on a professional call in tho vicinity, saw the child and saved her life. .Mrs. Polly Wnrr, wife of Clifton Warr, formerly of Tiloomxburg, is wanted at llazleton on a charte oi Brazilian scientists have succeed- ed In developing a new varietv of i roffee, with unusually iarge, ' fine i berries, which ripen very early. ' Pottsvllle.-Puzzled by tho over- ! j ,1 ng her lai n JL ,W ' ! whelming fraud In the returns from J 7on tho o L o n, I,"' , the Fourth and Fifth Wards, of doned he, "ntau! " bhenandoah, the County Commission- llenrv rai l ,,no r.t i . , I n. refused to throw out any of the resiS of Ilerks c ,,,tv " ,n T'; i vote. althoiiEh Ktl ner cent of th ' .. . V0" l,,l"', died at j l.:t7 0 votes are declared to be frau- dulent. The CommisHioners declnr- ; ed they will leave the entire matter : with the court. Mr Winsloir's SoothinR Syrup forfhildrcn tifi hinu, hoi tens thuuuiiia.reilin es intlaintna lion. allun omiii.i'uivk wmil i-olir.'J.'.ca ooiile. Kngland has l,2oo golf courses U ll oliftft ,nd first I'unnrtt eoaVse in Vs. lo own mbuild in87f "ne onf" 'lc"'au' ld, snd CntmiMi. Bookkeeping. borlnd, Pen-nsnil-.ip. 'iVpewnuag. IcU suphy. tf. T W lir taueht by mail llio. Ludln( business colltje south ot thi Pottoti rlvtr." ei'x tuw,o. Ad,lre. C. M. SM1THDEAL. Prlci. hicKn.ood.Vs. PATENTS BOUNTIES -ttut f ju u.. M i UoM,ty lor uilisrt oJ lieir r.ilst.vos, wuo rlm uw civu r 1,-lA Us-ca;- ,vt tor tnia. jr sua m.L.u.-i,,,..,, Aiarsu. w. it, A:t t." Ijiw.' Vi'kj cua.it.) vvuisuauiittit ilJluA I.- UtotOVEHY ; 'or ...... ii,l(ik ... .... 1 i... . Broo. lie. II. II, tltl IVs Sols, Bul .r-.l.t.ot "1 Us. Heading, aged 78 venrs 11.. engaged in the shoe business ai Womelsdorf for over half a century iwemy-iwo cans or baby eatlish. commonly known as "bull-l.n.-iHa ii . ,. have been received bv Pottstow'n Silver Plate ,,,, l is. ; ( nni), No. 21, l;nitpd J" Lancaster. A receiver was np- ; Pennsylvania, and planted in the pointed for the Lancaster Silver Plate 1 Schuylkill Kiver. Mana'uwnv Creek Company. Its assets were stated to and the Schuvlklll Canal The fish .0, J2?'.',o3-13 Bnd thB lint'flities ' were sent here from the Stat- hatch .J4,901..I3. Numerous creditors arc S cries at Torresdale. threatening to press claims and the! By the will of the late William property rights and credits of the j K. Lachman. wl.lch has Jti 1 o, company In New York have been at- probated. Trtnltv Heformed Church laonea- ;)f Pottstown. receives $L'00 ,u,d rl .. ... " .. 1 Swamp Reformed Church a similat n, ..ini.r '.verioioe sty lias. 1 amount I SAFETY AT LOW PRICE. SUPERIOR TO BEST SOLD AT ANY PRIC2. Tainan 11a. Kleiiteen limn nmnlnif. ed in the Lehish Coal anrt Xaviga tion Company's o. 11 mine wore at the fnnnHntinn oimnaeB..! . 1 i overcome hi' trim, hut u-nm Kfn... vs. om-itani Ul ljuui 4 , - ' " us 1111111 The necessity of fre-! , u'mlc l""e save ttieir VJl'Wt ,C J( Mill! A TT1 rid try keeping. quently renewing the flock makes it ! i,Ve ,GeorKe Zeigler and Amos imnerativB tha .u.C!?.jl ! Ha"ranft were unconscious for sev- . - H . u u . t j iiiuuttLiuu erai noiira methods should be avolrlerl. mho.. ' wise loss of vigor in the stock will ' Killed l Trollev ColliKion very soon result. Professor James Oil Cltv. Homer Heeu uryden. emnloveri nn a hjk.i, h j ""s'lu.vii on a worK car on tne Citi- ,i " "niuure ec Start with a good thoroughbred I ZGn' Traction lines, was caught in afillin'"nn Railroad Company from wl. Don't invest in Door stock Thn H rear-end collision between trollev I r.n"n.p.tnK. lJlflr ,rark. at rhcyney, on with .1 Miuuu uui a uitie uuy at tne most, Dtlr 1 C rin e" or tW0, He ot I for they Wl" ecure untity of . j . 1 .u 1 1 1 1 nr r. 1 m . 1 n. .. . a h 1 1 . ii h m miiriii wnmr la . . hopeless Cnndltlnn t, ... ,1. .1 .u. .... . " .v Pounds in two months, which at his is remarkable. .tNnt h worked wonders." There's a Reason." Read "The od to WelWiii. ta pkg". Ew remd Um abo ltu-rr A ! on "Ppesurs from Ume to Ume, THeir air treoulsse, trie, and fuU a muuwi latere. ' ter for them than the food from the granary. It pays to sow rye in the fall and oats In the spring, for the hens will derive great benefits from such foods and it will also be cheap Investment for the farmer. The gizzard can do its best work when the hens hare variety of food nd better digestion results, and very poultryman and farmer knows th when the difstiv organs art fowl. Don't invest in poor stock. The inoroURODrea Will coat a trlfla rr,,.. there, however, the difference in ex pense ceases. They do not require any more care or mat nnv i... ,n feed, but when you sell them to breed or their eggs for hatching, you will find the balance greatly in their favor. The sooner farmers fact that poultry raising should be followed on the same lines that dairy ing is giving food and care to secure results the sooner will they begin to reap their share of profits and be come competitors of practical poultry raisers. The Idea that "anything is good enough for hogs and chickens" is a mistaken one that has anchored many a farmer on the wrong side of the road, so far as profits are con cerned. 1 a rear-end collision between trolley cars near Monarch Park, sustaining injuries that resulted In death. A cousin of the deceased, John W. Beck, was killed in a railroad acci dent near Wooster.- Ohio. Both bodies were burled together at Venus. A refusal of a famllv to dellvet a key to a fire alarm box, despite the fact that the fire could be seen resulted in the destruction of the home of A. C. Olbboney. at Altoona When the key was denied tho tele phone was used to summon tho fire- j men. out tho wrong address wss . given, causing further delay. Judse Johnson, at. Media, dissolv ed the temnorary Injunction prevent ing tne runatieipnia. Haltlniore & 1 Washington Railroad Company from : Wife Klnyer Released On Bail. Altoona. Frank McMillan, agad 32, who shot and killed his wife In mistake for her paramour a week ago. was released on 13.000 bail. Judge Martin Bell, who heard the habeas corpus proceeding, decided In homicide cases the defendant was en titled to ball, unless the testimony tended to prove murder in the first degree. Joys and Trials of Tenting. It is not all Joy nor Is It all pain to be a camper-out. The true sportsman will take to the woods little of both. In August he must expect scorching sun; in May and June, the rains. Everv uiun h Its hardships, just as every season um us joys, it is only after he has learned how to deal with th. ,1,1, evil, rain and wandering cattle, and knows the arts of washing and cook insr. anil how in ilh ,.. " - vu aupiJljr, that the camper can come with good lumper ana gooa neaith to the en joyment of fair days and good fish ing, dreamless nights, and the long, lazy hours before the campflre 01 under the stars. Kansas City Star. A cable line la to ha laM New York and Newfoundland and win there connect with a cable to Europe. sue new section win c 1700 mllsi long. Woman, Revolver, Punic, Arrest. Altoona. In a street crowded with shoppers, Mrs. Henrietta Sell, of Dun cansvllle, brandished a revolver In the face of her daughter, Mrs. Elda Nale, of Windber. while persons clote 10 xne impending tragedy fled to get out of range. Thomas Leonard, a street cleaner, wrenched the gun from the womans' hand. Doth wom en were arreted, and Investigation later disclosed that the mother heard her daughter had eloped and wanted to find the man. The elopement was untrue. Inearth Sample Of Primitive Coal. Pottsvllle. In raxing the walls of the oldest building In Pottsvllle, on the property of Lee Brothers, a cas ket was unearthed, which contained lumps of primitive coal and a unique document. The piece of parchment states that these lumps were chip pings from peculiar "black stones," by Colonel George Shoemaker, of Pottsvllle, taken in 1829, before the commercial value of anthracite was known as a commodity for domestic or even Industrial purpose. The re lics will be turned over to tbe Schuyl kill County Historical Society. I the West Chester division, so an to ! pass the new station. The petition I for an Injunction was presented by I Joseph Sager, owner of the land through which the railroad runs. 1 Judge Broomall, at Media. Issued i a temporary Injunction against the i Delaware County & Philadelphia j Electric Railway Comnanv nmvon,. I ing them from constructing double tracks on Baltimore Avenue, Lans downe. an aa tn tntr f ,iu , . nun ac cess to the conduits of the Bell Telo nhonn Comnanv. Company II, Sixth Regiment, N G P., of Media, will go Into camp with out a captain. Three ballots were taken for the captaincy to succeed Walter R. Johns, resigned, but no one was elected. Out of work and despondent, Prokop Nazar. of Newport, drowned himself In tho canal. The Columhla Cnnnt era have decided that hi,..ii.. .11 tax collectors must make a monthly report. Failure tn An thin state, will result In criminal prosecu tions. City Engineer Edmund B. Ulrlch. of Reading. Is lying critically ill with lead poisoning at his home in that city. How be contracted the disease Is a mystery. He has lost entire control of bis limbs. The srrialJ price Is made possible by the great demand for this Razor. The small profit on each aggregating as targe e sum as if we sold fewer at a greater prlca. in benefit is the consumer's. Tho Blade Is of the finest steel, scien tifically made and tempered by a secret process. .and the blade, of course, Is the impor Untpartof any Razor, The frame Is of satin finish, silver plated, and "angled' correctly for safe, quick and clean shaving. The tjugh bearded finds this Razor a boon; the soft bearded finds it a delight. These blades eon bo stropped. Buy one and you will recommend It to all your friends. That Is the best test of any article. n postage stamps or cash brings It prepaid by mall In a special box. write na BOOK PVBUtlHIKO IIOl'Bi:, 13 25 cts n"WMTsfslsli j rA 1 jMaa EXTRA BLADES 25 ia and full address very plainly. Leonard Mtreet. IS. . V. city. Owing to the new law dealing with the publication of booka in Korea, and which will shortly coma Into operation. It Is believed that nearly half the books now in the book stores will be confiscated. Korea liaiiv News. Chicks Doing Well? If Not, Learn Why from a Book Costing Learn Than the Value of One Chicken......... hi"1Cr yof! r't t'l'Hkena lor fun or profit, you want to do it intelliaeotlv and get tbe beat reaulta. The way to do thn la to prolit by the eztierienee ol othara Wm Oder . book telling all you nd to know on the aubjecV-W Si .ttn br mu who made bia living lor !U ytara in IU,.,ng Poultry, and in thit tiina neaiarifv hid to rxper.mrm and apend much money to learn thbaat way to condirt tuTbiine for the small sum of 2.", C KN IS in poatag. .tamp.. t tella roufowtobeMmltt ihaeaae, how to Keed for Keg., and alo for Market, whirh Kowl. to blrii'i HrSl inR Purpoae.. an.l m-WI aonut everythin. yn mut know on Tthe ubitct to maiT. tucreaa KKNT POSTPAID ON RKCKIIT OH M CKNTS IN bTA&UU BOOK PUBLISHING HOUSE, 134 Leonard BU. N. V. City. The Mexican postal law does not nhllaata tha nnatal nanaWm...., . . ' " v u. 11 . . v deliver mall addressed to a city on which the name also ot the state does not appear. Pure tunasten Is hard anousrh tn scratch glass. 1 It is no use advertising unless you have the Goods, and no use having the Goods unless you advertise.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers