FOR HIE. tfCTSf AVa . r- w -J - r IT, w a. hi P to fourl ,rl a prti o ibarp i ill the Farmer; ed'ng Young Ducks. ig young ducks start with of chopped hard-boiled egg lart bread crumbs for sov- Then begin to use equal oatmeal and cornmeal, with id for grit. Let them have ireen food they will eat. Home Journal. Expei inent t to cattlj steers m wMle th the (am iSHage Fed Steer. nents by the Iowa experl- nn on the feeding of ullage show that the sllage-fed Be a profit of $4.10 per head same grade of steers fed on food except silage, lost ni.47 ne. head. More silos should be built fi summer use and It is not yet too Ue to plan for the crop. Farmers' lonie Journal. lfnlfa For Hog. It Is egfscially Important that al falfa tntuded to be fed to hogs ihoultl be?ut early. An experiment at the Rasas station showed that a ton of far-' cut and well-cured alfal fa bay f with grain produced 868 pounds o.pork, while a ton of late tut and p'irly cured, fed with grain, produced nly 333 pounds. For fat tening hos It is well to feed about one ton f well-cured alfalfa hay with each 250 bushels of grain. From Cobrn's "Swine In America." Oregon station, as reported to the D partment of Agriculture, It was found that vetch hay and vetch silage are valuable protein feeds for dairy stock, while steaming vetch silage reduces Its digestibility. "Over fifty six per cent, of the protein In the tin steamed silage Is digested," says the report, "while less than fifteen per cent, of that In the steamed silage is utilized by the animals. The aver age per cent, of dry matter, ash, fiber and fat digested Is from ten to fourteen per cent, lower In the steamed silage. The digestibility of the extract, or carbohydrates, is ap proximately the same In each." In diana Farmer. Repairing Buggy Wheels. , Make a box eight or .ten inchei square at the bottom and six Inches square at the top, 2 to 3 feet tall, as shown In Fig. 1. Have your Dairy Notes. Salting cows regularly has much to do wit the ease or difficulty with which thibutter will come. As a )e milk Is unfit for use at least twe weeks before calving time. However some cow's milk sema to be good alxist up to calving time. Milk is iBii ally not saved for house use unto the eighth or ninth milking ifterwsd, although it has been known o be perfectly good after the fourth nllking. A man who makes fine butter says tat she skims the cream of two or thre days' milk together, letting It all our at one time and churns as munis it Is sour. She makes pound rolls rjd her butter always commands the Ugliest price, her customers pre-ferr-ng it to creamery butter. yire good cows are now going into ialy lu-rds than ever before. Keep leg the records of cows and what thy ".ill do In a year Is weeding out lb pn r oneB. Indiana Farmer. . n A Remedy For Lice. - A correspondent Ins Epltomlst fowmends dipping chickens to rid ttm of lice and chlggers. He says: "Select Bftme warm, sunny day and H all of them In warm water in Mrh is put som-1 good stock dip. U'i one tablespoo Tul of creosote to or. gallon of wate.- and wet the fowl thjroughly, holding the head out of '.h) water. Turn them loose and they wflsoon dry. While they are dry Inrtn the sunshine renovate the hen boiies, using plenty of coal oil and lime it is well to wash the roost In coal nil, as there is where most of the jittes are to be found. If one does ot care to dip all the poultry It is a (nod plan to dip all hens just befnts putting them off with chkk'ns. If there be lice on the younj chirks they may be destroyed by eprinkling with insect powder and In th if way both hen and chicks are free trim lice to begin with and that U half the battle in raising poultry." Experience With Sheep. Much depends on-the quality of the heep aid the care and management of them o give' the best result. With a flock of forty-nine ewes and a rarh one ouslit to raise at least sixty laitbs. tntll the pasture gets a good start In spring the breeding ewes should be fed on clover or alfalfa hay and a ml .ed ration of grain, .such as ground cti-n, oats and bran. A feed of oats occasionally will be relished by them. The lambs will begin eat ing the grain when but a few days old and If fvrnlshed with a feed lot to themselves until selling time will nake bettfer lambs than can be pro duced othtfwlse. These sixty lambs will g(ai any time between the latter partjjof July and the first of September at six dollars per head, or $360 Tbelflfty shoep sheared 400 pounds of wool and at the present Price of twenty -Ave cents will amount to 92, making a total of f 452 for the lambs and vool. Then the cost of train and pasture for the fifty head of old sheep for one year would not exceed $100 and for the sixty lambs until sold, if fed grain, about 152, hica will leave a net profit of $300, which I think would be a safe esti mate to make. But, of course, we faavo got to give them the best of csre and attention if we expect to (et the best results. E. K., In the Indiana Farmer. Stat ote Pennsylvania DOG RKVKAI.S DEATH. HKXTIMKXT MAKKS MILLION. Fig. 1 Wheel Ready to Paint. blacksmith make a screw hook and eyebolt ot half-Inch iron of a com bined length to match the box. Screw the hook Into the shop floor, explains Whines Lend To Discovery Of Miff tress' Ilody In Trunk. Pittsburg. A dog's mournful whines at his mistress' door resulted In the finding of Mrs. Annie Graham dead in her trunk in her home here. She was a widow, 53 years old, and lived alone. Coroner's deputies re ported that she fell accidentally, her neck being broken by striking a trunk. Into which her body tumbled. It was evident by the state of the body that she had boen dead several dnys. "Jack," a little yellow cur, was Mrs. Graham's only companion. When neighbors were awakened by the barks and whlnea and saw him leaping against the widow's door they paid no heed. For five days "Jack" persistently continued his tactics and finally was rewarded. An insurance agent went to the widow's home. Several knocks on the door were unanswered, so he lifted a boy so he could peer through the tran som. The little lad shrank back at what he saw inside. A policeman found the body. TABLKT TO (JOVKRXORS. Memorial Proposed For Famous Meeting At Altoona In 18(12. Altoona. A movement has been started by veterans of the War of the Rebellion to erect a memorial tablet to commemorate the famous meeting of War Governors here September 25 and 26, 1862. The Governors were called by Governor Curtain, and they met at the Logan House, still standing, and It is proposed to place the tablet In the Logan House Park. Committees are being appointed by the Grand Army posts, Legion encampments and Sons of Veterans to arrange the details, and Congress man John M. Reynolds will probably be invited to solicit Federal aid in the project, since the meeting was so lnrgely Instrumental In maintain ing the Union. The Governors pledg ed President Lincoln their moral support, as well as their troops, and so well did they uphold his hands that much of the disaffection In the North disappeared. DYXAMITK HAZLKTOX STORE. Fig. 2 Support For Wheel. the Prairie Farmer, place the box over It, catch the eyebolt Into the hook, place the wheel on top of the box with a board washer and tight en the nut on the eyebolt .to hold the wheel while at work, as In Fig. 2. Black Hand Gang Demand Refused, Curries Out Threat. Hazleton. The entire front of the store of James Antinozzi, an Italian merchant here, was blown out with dynamite. No one was Injured. Last winter Antinozzi received a letter demanding money and direct ing him to place it under a rock near a reservoir. On July 22 the demand was made again, this time with the threat that his place would be dynamited, If he did not comply with the request. He treated the letters as a joke. Beyond the fact that the letters came from a Black Hand gang, there Is no clew to the writer. Women Who '1hip Homestead To Cash Become Rich. Pittsburg. Two sisters, Mrs. Jo seph R. Stewart and Mrs. L. C. Coop er, of Fayette County, about fifteen years ago In making a division of their father's estate with their three brothers, elected to take the home. farm rs their share. The farm to them had a greater sentimental than Intrinsic value. They have Just sold the farm, un derbid with fine coking coal, to J. V. Thompson and others, of Union town, for $1,190,000. The track lies In the lower Con- nellsvllle coke region. It is known as the old R. Hop farm, and since the death of Mr. Hogg, father of the women, the land has been greatly advancing In value from $40 to ? 1.700 an acre. The land was purchased to go Into the $70,000,000 coke merger, which win Include all the independent plants in the Connellsvllle region. FIXD CAl'KK OF EPIDEMIC. Well On Fnctory Premises Spread Typhoid In Dublin. Doylestown. The typhoid fever epidemic, which for a time threat ened the whole of the borough of Dublin, a few miles from here, is now under the control of the State Department of Health. Nineteen cases had been reported when the cause of the Infection was found. A well on the premises of a clothing factory has been for the past year receiving tho refuse and utensil bacteria of all kinds from the factory and dwelling which adjoins. It Is alleged that when an Inmate of the dwelling had typhoid there being no other drainage, the refuse of the house and sick room went directly to the well, which contained the only water for the employees of the factory to drink. WOMEX RESCUE MAX. COMMERCIAL Weekly Review of Trade and Market Reports. R. G. Dun & Co.'s weekly review of trade says: "With the disturbing tariff question soon to be out of the way and withe) crops that give promise of satlsfac- i tory dimensions and of an aggregate, value ot hundreds of millions or col lars In excess of the best previous . record business confidence is devel oping rapidly, although it is notice- able that enterprise is not yet out I running conservatism In buying for the distant future. "Prices continue to advance In several branches of the iron and steel trade and higher quotations are expected on some products that have ruled on a very low basis. It is 1 believed that the leading Interest will shortly follow the action ot In j dependent producers In asking better I terms for steel bars, plates and j shapes, which have been In active i demand since the general recovery set in." I Bradstreet's Kays: I "Improvements In the crops, rather better advices as to ultimate outcome of the leading cereals, eas ing in prices of breadstuffsconBequcnt thereon or because of a larger wheat crop movement, a good distri bution at retail under the stim ulus of clearance Bales and a slight enlargement of fall trade with jobbers and wholesalers are the leading features this week. Connect ed therewith In some degree are the advices from leading Industries of enlargement of output, of a con tinuance of the upward tendency In ; values of manfacturcu goods, a larg i er demand for money lor crop-mov-j ing purposes and a perceptible in I crease In the friction visible between ! employers and employes in a num j ber of lines. This latter is a nat ural phenomenon of the Industrial situation, possibly made more no ; ticeable this year by reason of the i high level of prices of commodities ' and the consequent cost of living. "Business failures in tho United I States for the week were 239, against 206 last week, 263 in the like week of 1908, 155 in 1907, 171 In 1900 and 197 In 1905." Ml'XYON'S EM1XKXT DOCTORS AT VOCR SERVICE FREE. Not a Penny to Pay For the Fullest Medical Examination. If you are In doubt as to the cause of your disease mall us a postal re questing a inedlealexamlnatlonblank, which you will fill out and return to t!s. Our doctors will carefully dlag nrse your case, and if you can be cured you will be told so; If you can not be cured you will he 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 poFFlble, and our eminent doctors will diagnose your case thoroughly absolutely free. Munyon's, F3d and Jefferson Sts., i Philadelphia, Pa. Deposits of copper in the Caucas us present vast opportunities, and enormous beds of coprolites exist in Central Russia and In the Dniester basin, the quantities in the latter alone being estimated as high as 27,000, 0n tons. ITCHED FOR TWELVE YEARS. Eczema Made Hands and Feet Swell. .Vol and Get RawArms Affected. Too Gave l'p All Hope of Cure Quickly Cured by t'titii inn. "I suffered from eczema on my bonds, nrms and feet for about twelve y-ur: my liiirdu nnd feet would swell, sweiit Hnd itch, then would become cnlloun iinn Ret, very dry, then peel oil and net raw. 1 tried mot every kind of naive nnd ointment without success. I tried several doctors, but nt Inst gave up thinking there wan a cure for eczemn. A friend of mine in sisted on my trying the Cuticura Hemedies. but 1 did not give them n trial until 1 cut to bad 1 hnd to do something. I secure I a set and by the time they were used I could see a vast improvement and my hands and j feet were healed up in no time. I have had i no trouble since. Clinrles T. Hauer, It. K. : D. 65, Volant. Pa.. Mar. 11, 198." ! Potter Drug & ( hem. Corp., Sole Props. I of Cuticura Remedies. Boston. Mass. j New York City will have a new i fire alarm system costing $100, 0U0. ! The Old Man (.tinned. "Duke," said the heiress, eagerly, "did you see father?" Yes." "Well?" "We tallied about the weather. "What! Ixise your nerve aalnT Why don't you brace up and talk like a man? a subject of a king on whose domain the sun never sets!" "Can't," moaned the link-. "All the time I was in your father's of fice he kept grinning at u big paint Inn." "What painting?" "The Battle of Bunker Hill." About IHO.ouo automobileg are now In use In the Cnlied States, of which 20,'mil are electric. About' 69,000 of the total number are own ed In New York slate. The policy of the I'ruguuyan gov ernment Is to send young men to Europe to be trained for electrical engineering, who, on returning to that country, are placed in govera nient. positions. Leaf and twig diseases, difficult to combat, are gradually lessening In dia's annuul production of coffee. Olio members. B N. I'. The antlclarctte. league has 87,- I WIFE SLAYER HANGED. Vetch nay as Feed For Cow. -Common vetch Is a great nitrogen Gatherer and Is used as a farm crop In many different ways. In some lo calities It bait proved valuable as a ctch crop and also as a cover crop In orchards, in Francrf it haa been Srown to furnish honey-making ma rlal for bees. In the eastern united State the common vetch has t proved to be bo valuable as other Jegumes, but In western Oregon It become a standard stock teed and ' used as hay, silage, pasture and as soiling crop. It makes a very pal pable hay and dairy cattle prefer tcn adage to that irad of red cioTf8r- 0 gome taPmg vetcn i re. facing clover In the regular rota tion. Veteh i,...oii l th. The Cntalpa Timber For Posta." "I never see a catalpa tree, that It does not Immediately recall to my mind a fact stated by the late Gen eral W. H. Harrison in an address before the Hamilton County Agricul tural Society of Ohio in 1831. In the address mentioned General Har rison said: "The wood ot the Ca talpa affords perhaps a more lasting material than either that ot the lo cust or mulberry; la of a very quick growth and easily cultivated. Its ability to resist decay has been suf ficient tested In the neighborhool of Vlncennes, both under ground and In contact with It. Over the little stream of the Desha, five miles from Vlncennes, one ot these trees had fallen before any Immigration had taken place from any of the States, to that place. It was certainly there In the year 1785, when a colony of Vir ginians, from the south branch of the Potomac, emigrated to that place, and for many years served as a foot bridge over tfie stream. I was In formed by a gentleman of undoubted veracity, that It wag only partially de cayed a few weeks since (that is Id the spring of 1831). The same gen tleman (Dr. Hiram Dickson) in formed me, that bar poBt which wai made by his father and put In the ground at a little stockade work, which was erected in the year 1770 and which has been taken up and re moved to his own farm by hli brother-in-law. Major Andrew Powell, Is still sound and answers the purpose for which it was originally intended." The above extract is copied from an article contributed by Dr. Gideon B. Smith, of Baltimore, Maryland, and which wag published in The Cul tivator (now the Country Gentle man) tor September, 1844. The stories here credited to General W. H. Harrison of the wonderful dura bility ot the catalpa wood, have often been reiterated in the columns ot the Indiana Farmer, and elsewhere, but this is the first and certainly authen tic version that I remembor to have met with. I believe your jroaderi will appreciate, aa I have done, th opportunity of reading the above ex tract, which Is but a brief quotation from Dr. Smith's interesting contri bution, which is among the earliest references to the Catalpa Speclosa. now go often mentioned In connecttoq with the all-Important subject of for estry. W. H. Ragan, in the Indiana Farmer. 1 or Vanhlse Officiates At Execution Italian In Scranton. Scranton. Nicholas DeMarro was hanged in the Lackawanna County Jail for the murder of his 16-year-old wife, who left him after she had discovered that he had a wife in Italy. The trap was sprung by Vanhlse, the Jersey City hangman, who was engaged by Sheriff Calpin to do the work. DeMarzo showed no trepida tion as he mounted the scaffold. The wife he deserted in Italy and his aged father recently came here to bid him good-by. ARSOX CHARGE FAL.SK. Man Admits He I. led Against Two Men In Jail. Mahanoy City. Tortured by his conscience since ho swore a few days ago he saw William Wilde and Wil liam Smith firing Kalser'B Ice house, Charles Hostler admitted under oath before Justice Coombe that he per jured himself and was drunk when he gave the information. 'Hostler's mother-in-law says he was home In bed when t'.e Are broke oat. Smith and Wilde are in Jail on the man's evidence. wun wheat or rye to support the w'M. and is cut tor hay when the Fee3 . hft Ina tsx fn.n. In k. rora two to four tons of hay to the ere are yielded while an acre gives nueen to thirty bushels of seed. From etnerlmeotg made v Ibe Germs in Old Books. The bookseller displayed a kind oi muzzle a contrivance of silk and wire to fit over the mouth and nos trils. "Reading mask," he said. "Latr est thing from Paris. It is worn at the Btbllothequa Natlonale by tin students of old books and ' manu scripts to prevent the inhalation ol disease germs. "Those aged volumes are nests el germs. In the great French llbrcrj masked readers are as common si masked motorists in the boulevard." Philadelphia Bulletin. Indian Girls Xot Touring South. Carlisle. Superintendent Fried man, of the Carlisle Indian School, denied the report emanating from Atlanta, Georgia, to the effect that twenty-five Carlisle Indian School girls were touring the South on horseback, in native fashion under the guidance of two prominent Phil adelphia society girls. Superintend ent Friedman says no such party has left the Carlisle School. Clergyman Weds School Teacher, Lancaster. At the home 'of the bride, In Lltlz, Rev. Jacob K. Maur er, of Mt. Carroll, III., was married to Miss Alice Stormfeltz, the cere mony being performed by Rev. A. 15. Cooper, of Manhoim. The bride was a teacher in the Lltlz public schools, and a teacher In the county Loyal Temperance Legion. Took Too Much Poison, May Live. York. By taking a dose of Paris green, which poison was used to kill potato bugs, Michael Gentzler, a farmer, of North Codorus Township, attempted suicide. It Is said that Gentzler swallowed enough of the mixture to kill seven persons, but the tact he took an overdose may save his life. No cause was given by the farmer for trying to end his life except that he was tired of liv ing. It was noticed by Gentzler's family that he had been melancholy for several days. Miner Blown To Atoms, Pottsvllle. Blown to atoms was the fate of Joseph Turk, aged 48, employed as a miner at the Wades vHle colliery, an operation of the Philadelphia and Reading Coal and Hon Company. He prepared a blast and went back to see why it did not go off, In time to receive Its full force as he stood over the charge. Die On Reading Trolley Car. Reading. Oeorge Watson, aged 76 years, a prominent retired citizen, died on a trolley oar while return ing from a park, where be had be- ran IJJ Fight Off Desperate Highwayman Who Was Attacking Victim. Wilkcs-Barre. Three women sav ed Major W. O. Coolbaugh, of this city, from a footpad In a lonely sec tion of the city. He had been at tacked and knocked down and was struggling with tue man who was try ing to strike him with a blackjack when three women, hearing his calls for help ran to his aid. The assailant showed fight, and the women attacked him and speed ily put him to flight. I hen they took Coolbaugh to his home nearby and saw him safely in side. He was so dazed that he did not ask the women who they were. He reported the assault to the police this morning. IT WAS A REAL KID. Widow Of Ex State Treasurer Matliues Fooled Ity Sister. Media. Mrs. Marguerite Mathues, widow of ex-State Treasurer William L. Mathues, received a letter from her sister, Mrs. Eva Swartly, of Al dan, saying: "Dear sister, I have a dear little kid. Come down and bring a gum blanket with you." Mrs. Mathues gathered up all the childrens' clothing which she had In her home, and went to her sister's home in Aldan, expecting to And a new arrival brought by the stork. Much to her astonishment, when she reached her sister's home, she learn ed that the "kid" was ot the goat species. Turkey Gobbler Mothers Chickens. Reading. Joseph T. Seyfert, of Upper Bern Township, has a tarkey gobbler, who hatched a brood of eleven chickens and now he cares for them, better than a mother hen could do. He takes them away In the morning on long trips and al ways brings them home to the barn yard every night. Injured Fighting Dream Burglar. Lebanon. Oscar Weltmer, of this city, dreamed the other night that there was a man in his bedroom, and In seeking" to grapple with the In truder he plunged through a second story window, landing on the pave ment, thirteen feet below. His rlgnt leg was cut to the bone from hip to ankle by shattered glass. Green Apples Cause Child's Death. Pottsvllle. Dorothy, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Valentine Reed, of Schuylkill Haven, while allowed to play for several hours In an orchard filled her stomach with green apples. Shortly afterward she was taken violently ill and died from acute cholera morbus. Several other chil dren were resuscitated in time to es cape a similar fate. Dies Of Fall From Hay Wagon. Bethlehem. Mrs. August Snyder, of Perkasle, while helping the farm hands to gather a crop of hay be fore an approaching thunder storm broke, fell head first from a hay wagon. Her Injuries resulted fatally at a local hospital not long after her admittance. STATE ITEMS. G. Samuel Flick, one of the best known contractors in the State, died at Lancaster. He was 69 years old. While chopping wood, the hatchet he was using, struck an obstruction and a piece of the steel broke off, hitting Charles H. Rebert, a North ampton Heights merchant, in the eye, knocking out the optic. - A. J. Haag, of Shartlesvllle, has stocked the dams at Bchollenberger's and Sbomo's mlllB. with a number of cans ot catfish try, William Krum, an aged Lockland merchant, who has been behind the country store counter for fifty years, was stricken with paralysis and his condition, is very serious. The automobile passenger car operating between Reading and' Bernville, Berks County, collided with a wagon loaded with bricks. The sixteen passengers escaped in jury, but were delayed for several hours. The Leo Fire Company, of Red Lion, has accepted an invitation to attend the Labor Day parade at Reading on September 6. Nearly the entire company will go to that city. Wholesale Markets. Xew York Wheat Receipts. 23, 900 bu. Spot barely steady; No. 2 old, 142c, nominal, in elevator, and f. o. b. afloat; No. 2 red, 1.20 te. f. o. b. afloat; No. 1 Northern Duluth, 1.41, nominal, f. o. b. afloat; No. 2 bard winter, 1.33, nominal, f. o. b. afloat. Corn Spot firm; No. 2, old, 79c, elevator and 78, f. o. b. afloat; No. 2 new, 65, winter ship ment, f. o. b. afloat. Oats Receipts, 38,125 bu. Spot quiet; mixed, 26 32 lbs., 66c, nominal; natural white, 26Q 32 lbs., 63 57; clipped white, 34 42 '.bs., 57 62. Butter Creamery specials, 27 c. (official price, 27). Eggs Irregular; receipts, 13, 883 cases. Slate, Pennsylvania and nearby fancy, selected, white, 29 32c; do., fair to choice, 24 29. Philadelphia Wheat Weak 2c. lower; contract grade, July, 117 118c; August, 1.151.16. Corn Quiet but steady; July, 76 77c; August, 76 76. Oats Quiet, unchanged. Butter Firm; solid, c. high er; extra Western creamery, 29c; do., nearby prints, 30. Eggs Firm, good demand; Penn sylvania and other nearby firsts, free cases, 24c. at mark; do., current re ceipts, in returnable cases, 22 at mark; Western firsts, free cases, 24 at mark; do., current receipts, free cases, 21 23 at mark. Cheese Firm, fair demand. New York full creams, choice, 14 14 c; do., fair to good, 13?i 14. . Live Poultry Dull and .lower; fowls, 15 16c; old roosters, 10 11; spring chickens, 17 21; ducks, old, 12 13; do., Bpring, 14 16. Baltimore Wheat The market for Southern was about two cents per bushel lower on graded lots, and demand active for all offerings. Salee of cargoes on grade were made at 119c for No. 2 red; 1.14 for No. 3 red; 1.14 for special bin steam er No. 2 red; 1.14 for stock steamer No. 2 red; 1.10 for special blu re jected; 1.08 for stock rejected, and 1.03 tor regular rejected for the drier. Steamer No. 3 red sold at 110c. per bu., the same price as spe cial bin rejected. Irregular rejected for the drier sold at 9 Sc. Small bay lots, as to quality and condition, sold at 105 to 117c. per bu. Corn Western; July, "CV-iC. The market remains sluggish. At the midday call July was quoted ut 77c. Sales, car yellow, domestic, in No. 2 elevator, 79 c Oats Stock in elevators. 139,876 bushels; shipments from elevators, 5,640 bushels. The quotations for oats on spot were: White, No. 2, 6657c; do., No. 3, 54 55c; mixed, No. 2, 63 54c. Cheese We quote, per lb., 15 16c. Butter Creamery separator, pet pound, 27 28c; Imitation, pound, 22 24c; prints, -pound, per pound, 27 29c; do., 1-pound, per pound, 27 29c; blocks, 2-pouud, per pound, 26 28c; dairy prints, Maryland, Pennsylvania and Virgi nia, per pound, IP 17c; Virginia and West Virginia, store packed, per pound, 18 c; Ohio, store packed per pound, 18 c. Eggs Maryland, Pennsylvania and nearby firsts, per dozen, 21 c; Eastern Shore, Maryland and Vir ginia, per dozen, 21 c; Western firsts, per dozen, 21 c; West Vir ginia, per dozen. 21 c. Live Stock. Chicago Cattle Market steady. Steers, $5.'607.65; -cows, $4 5. 50 ; heifers, J3.6O06.5O; bulls, $3.40 4.85; calves, f38.60; stockers and feeders, 13.76 4.70. Hogs Market 10c. lower. Choice heavy, 8.158.20; butchers', 18.05 8.20; light mixed, $7.60 7.70; choice light, $7.80 8.05; packing, $7.757.85; pigs, $6.60 7.65; bulk of sales, 17.90 8.10.' Sheep Market steady to strong. Sheep, . $4 5.40; lambs, $6.50 8.25; yearlings, $4.60 . Kansas City Cattle Market steady to weak. Calves 25c. high er. Choice export and dressed beef steers, $6.407; fair to good, $4.25 6.25; Western steers, $4.25 6.40; stockers and feeders, $3.35 6.20; Southern steers, $3.606.60; South ern cows, $2. 25 4; native cows, $2 4.75; native heifers, $3.25 7; bulls, $3.754.25; calves, $4 7.25. ' Hogs Market 10 15c. lower. Top, $7.85; bulk of sales. $7.40 7.75; heavy, $7.807.85; packers and butchers', $7.60 7.85, light, $7.257.75; pigs, $5.767.25. for IIKADACIIK Ulrica' I A IM'fllNK Whether from Colds. Heat, Ktnmsi-li or Nervous Troubles. t?iMiUlne will relieve you. It's liuul'l (ilctstnt to tske-i-tj Immedi ately. Trf It. IUc, 25c. and 6oc U drug biuret. It Is a misdemeanor to tamper with electric light wires in Colorado. Sore throat is no trifling ailment. It w;ill omctirnes entry infection to the entire vstem throuuh the food thnt is eaten. Ilamlins Wiiinl Oil is a sure, quick cure. On the Bowery a dope gun is call- i ed a sewing machine. ('nil at 111 Dru ( Slur Tj-1) it let a b '.tlH of D-. Uitrs II iitkleherry Cirdiiil for Uuirrlnvi. I,-s.ticnry. Chll drea t'o !t:iini?,'it'! V. tr wjUci 23uu 1 5Jo. Are You S. B. L.? Did you ever notice how the tail ors, when measuring a man for a suit of clothes, mix in a few letters occasionally among the numbers? Whenever I have been measured for a suit of clothes the tailor always said S. B. L. in a subdued voice as he took tho measure for the length of my trousers. I often won dered what this secret signal meant, and on one occasion made so bold a to nsk, but was put aside In some .casual way, which plainly showed me !that the tailor did not wish tne to know the meaning of the mysterious S. B. L. Well, 1 never knew wiiat those letters i.ieunt until one diy, when I stumbled across the soluti in by accident. I was walling to have my measure taken, while u strap ping bit-' fellow was on the rack As he measured tho length of the tronser leg the tailor said: "ll.'i, S. B. I.." "Yes," came luicl the re piv from the big fellow, "and d d bo'w-leiiued. too." All these years tailors had been accusing me of be ing "slightly bow-legged." and I had never caught on until I was prac tically told the nnswei in the ac cidental way. Liverpool Post. Absolute Proof. A writer tel'i3 of the sister of I llouirhton. who was frequently noved at the g.iestH whom her hr cr brought to the house. 'Do you remember, my dear." n?kri her at dinner one day. "wit er that fatuous scoundrel X. hanged or acquitted?" "He must have been hanged." replied, "or you would hae him here to dinner long ago." Bits. .ord an- ot ti ll e cth- w as she had Til- How AiKiut -Tlii-iii! ! The teacher was d-scribing the , i dolphin and Its habiis. I "And, children," she said, Impres- j ! tlvely, "a single dolphin will have ! : two thousand offsprings." i I "Goodness!" gasped a little girl In ! tho hack row. "And how about ; married ones?" Kverj body's Magu- I line. I Measure has been passed by the j Connecticut legislature providing for ; the compulsory extension of tele- , j phone lines. I An official report In Chicago as to relative cost of school buildings of the same general character makes this estimate; Chicago, l.i; si. Louis, 19; New York, 23; Boston, 25. The chief causes of this differ ence are better buliutngs and better labor conditions. Plans are on foot for holding an agricultural and crop exposition in Mexico. This may assume tho shape of an agricultural congress to be beld In September, 1910, as a part of the celebration of the Mexican centennial. Every package of Post Toasttes Contains a little book "Tid-Bits made with Toasties." A couple of dozen recipes Of fascinating dishes, A help in entertaining Home folks or company. Pkgs. 10c and 15c At grocers. : 3 r H I ar l s.v in mi mm s v j r Food Products Lihby's Vienna Sausage Ii distinctly different from any other fautjge you ever tasted. Just try one can and it it sure to become meal-time necessity, to be served at Irequent interval.. Ltbby'a Vienna Saw Sago just suits (or breakfast, it fine for luncheon and satisfies at dinner or .upper. Like ill of Libliy'. Fond Product, it is care fully cooked and prepared, ready to-serve, in Lfbhy's Croat Whlto Kltohon- the cleanest, most scientific kitchen in the world. Other popular, ready-to-Ktve Libby Pure Foods are: Cooked Cor nod Boot Poor loss Drlod Boot Voalloaf Evaporated Milk Baked Boons Chow Chow Mixed Ploklos Write for free booklet, "How to make Good Thing, to Eat". Init on Llbby's at your grorrrs. Hbby, McNeill & Libby Chicago Suicide Slow death and awful suffering follows neglect of bowels. Con stipation kills more people than consumption. It needs a cure and there is one medicine in all the world that cures it CASCARETS. 891 (flcart'M Iftc. bo - wffk'n (r( nu nt. All (lrui;;riti. Hifctfc'Cit iHief in ti.o world UiiiUuu buitua a tnuntlu IGiLET ANTISEPTIC NOTHINC LIKE IT FOR TI4C" YFCTH rM,'ne hi ny denufric I 13 Ci I CLa I II in cleansing, whitming moo fmovmg tattai from the teeth, besides dctlroymf nil f-rnn ol decay and disease which orduurj trxjth ptrparations cannot do. TUT MAI ITU Paxtine used ai a mouth. Kilt mUUIIi wh dUinlect. ihe mouth rj throat, purifiw the breath, and killi I he Kern, which collect in the mouth, causing sore throat, baj teeth, bad biealh, grippe, and much aickneu. TUP FYFQ wnen Med. arhe 1 1 1 b b I E0 and burn, may be uututty elieved and strengthened by Paxtine. fATARRU F'"1 wil' destroy the (term. Wf I Hnntl uS ouu catanh, heal the in flammation and stop the discharge. It u surf emedy or uterine catarrh. Paxtine it harmless vet Dowerfut sermicicle.disinfeclant and deodorizer. I Used in bathing it destroys odors and leave, the body anturpocally clean. f OR SLI AT PRUO STOPItS SOe OR POSTPAID BV MAIL. LARGE SAMPLE FREE! THS PAXTON TOILET CO.. EOSTON. MASS 131 I. .L t JmI ul flrri taWiM, mIm. W tm tmn iti I in.- Has an. No vcuom. mmd UootkMpua. NxxituiKi. PwuWap. 1 rtwwnswi. Ia Btapv. ht. 1 hrtw torn tuv) by nuul tin. " Loading Ttuilntu colUft logth el ttw fstaast. rtvar." '" orp,. AtU. C M. SM1THDEAL. pw-t KJlVt. Florida Lands ROY ALL. TERRACE Suburb of Greater Jack.oDvilla. .oU anion, 1X: U "0 iion. !0m w. ?! rill m im ibm iio hr'r o Ml l. Ik. tltnall IU1; l.rw . r.M. rl u ta M nt luhahl. I(.,rm-Mli.a (arauluMl. W. W. CtlCA. Itt l. JckwTllle. Flat. PATENTS SB BOUNTIES Trio-Mr. Ooprn-ul roiu Booto, Wnimn. na ture vfcs. tul M V) afcattaU ft aotOMS. af. tliir ru"va, wlw mrrmii sua etnl wac. latl-A, tiata awul ovaf a,M tt loai, au( buaal sua luairuoliooa, a Ural. W, tL Wulay Alff-aa-L a, . rutubU UaiJ Uoa. silt, Afta, a7aa&ui-lou. U. VA, Oracalfaaia pfaatwe, , . IT arts
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers