x Af hundred of year mankind aarf the same stylo and size of razor Aid hf"1 no h0"8nt tnBt 11 could be jnproved until lome genius evolved de rjafety razor. That genius reaped the benefit of his Inventive talent by charging from $3 to $5 for each Im plement, people being glad to buy at those figures. Now comes another Inventor who has made possible a Hill better safety razor, and for only twenty-five cents. That sum tn post age tamps sent to the Book Publish ing House, 134 Leonard street. New York, will secure a razor postpaid " Tit For Tat. An Irishman was sitting In a de BOt smoking when a woman cama ind, sitting down beside him, re marked: "Sir, If you were a gentleman you would not smoke here." "iMum," he said; "If ye wux a lady ye'd sit farther away." Pretty soon the woman burst out again: "If you were my husband I'd give toii poison." "Well, mum." returned the Irish man, as he puffed away at his pipe, "If you wuz me wife I'd take It." Kansas City Independent. State of enrisylvania TO WW) IIKHKIITKII GIKL. Consul Harry P. , Dill, of Orlllla. Ont., notes that the silver ore ship ments from the Cobalt district for tbe first six months of 1909 were about 14,500 tons, or 68 per cent. In crease over the first halt of 1908. Giraffes, porcupines and armadillos are some of the few animals that are voiceless. Food Products Lihby's Cooked Corned Beef There'i a marked distinc t i o n between Ubby'm Oooked Oorned Beet and even ;the best that's told in bulk. Evenly and mildly cured and scientifically cooked in Ubby'm Croat Whlto Kitchen, all the natural flavor of the fresh, prime beef is retained. It is pure wholesome, delicious and ready to serve at meal time, Saves work and worry in summer. Other Libby "Healthful" Meal-Time-Hints, all ready to serve, are: Poorloaa Dried Bee f Vienna Sausage Veal loaf Evaporated Milk Baked Boann Ohow Ohow Mixed Ploklea "Purity goes hand in hand with Products of the Libby brand". Write for free Booklet, "How to make Good Things to Eat". ' insist o n Ubby'm at your grocers. Ubby, McNeill k Ubby Otiffs rottstown Man (.iillnntly Prevents Pretty Hutigut'liui's Departure. Pottstown. Annie Taklr, a pret ty Hungarian girl, Is being detained at Kills Island by the immigration authorities, waiting for her Potts town fiance to claim her as his bride He sent her a ticket to come to Amer ica, but when she landed at Kills Island he refused to marry her. For a time It seemed certain that she would be deported, when John 8cuto, also of Pottstown, gallantly arose to the occasion and said he would mar ry her. For years the girl was the sweet heart of Edward Turk, of Pottstown, when he lived In his native land. Turk decided to come to America, and when he left he secured her promise to become his bride. A short time ago Turk sent her a steam ship ticket and Annie left for Ameri ca. Turk's love grew cold and lie abandoned the girl. Settto heard of the predicament the girl was in and has gone to New York to marry her and bring her to Pottstown. THKEH 1U11T IX AtTO (HASH. Touring Car Crashes Into Market Wagon - At Columbia, Columbia. A large touring auto containing Harry Gotz, H. Melhorn, Harry Delong and Bert Hoffman, all of York, while crossing the river bridge here collided with a market wagon containing Harry Paup and his daughter-in-law, Mrs. Ida Paup. The wagon was completely wreck ed, .the Paups being buried in the debris, but escaping with only slight injuries. The occupants of the auto were thrown fifteen feet from their seats. Oetz sustained a dislocated shoulder and Melhorn's right wrist was frac tured. Delong was taken to the hos pital In an unconscious condition suffering from concussion of the brain. His condition is serious. Hoffman, who escaped injury, was so excited that he deserted his com panions by running away and his whereabouts are unknown. The auto was only slightly damaged. KKADING AHATTOIIt ISl'ISXKD. Company Which Is Controlled lly I'liilailclphiiiiix looses $7.",HM. Reading. Fire at the Reading Abattoir Company's plant, resulted in a loss which the firm estimates at close to ?75,0u0, about two-thirds of which is covered by Insurance. From basement to roof tho flames raged with great fury. Two alnrms were turned in, and not until several hours after the first had been sound ed was the last vestige of lire blotted out. The plant is In ruins. The origin is unknown. About sixty hands' are thrown out of work. The plant is owned by Reading and Philadelphia parties. John De Long, of Philadelphia, is president of tho company. Eloping Couple Not Kidnapers. Harrtsburg. Detectives from St. Louis, who arrived at Duncannon, took a look at the children with the couple, who have been held as sus pected kidnapers for several days and announced that they were not the Vtvlano children. The officers boarded the first train for St. Louts. The story told by the couple has been verified. They eloped from Al toona. Pa., and the husband of the woman is now on his way to Dun-cannon. Ht m.KD OVKH CM I I'. , Four Men Seriously Injured As Mn lilnc Drops Into Creek. Wllllnmsport. Hurled with their automobile over a sixty-foot cliff at the narrows of the Lycoming Creek Road, a few miles north of this city, four men narrowly escaped with their lives and, as it was, were all se verely Injured. Clyde H. Kauffman, owner of the machine that plunged over the pre Piplee; Constable George V. Klett, Arthur C. Runkle, a restaurant pro prietor, and Charles T. Shibe, were the occupants of the machine, and were enroute to the city, when the breaking of the steering gear of the car threw It across the narrow road, pver the bank and sent It whirling Into the creek. Pinned under tho machine, the men were all in danger of drowning until Klett, a powerful man, suc ceeded in spite of his Injuries, in raising a corner of the ear. Klett, Kauffman and Runkle got out, but Shibe was wedged more tightly un der the wreckage, and by the time he was extricated, was unconscious and almost drowned. It took an hour's strenuous work to resuscitate him. Klett sustained a broken leg and was hurt Internally. He is In the hospital, as is Shibe, who had a leg badly mashed and waa extensively cut and bruised. Kauff man and Runkle escaped with severe cuts and bruises. WAXTKI) Foil MCKDKU. York Prisoner Held For Larceny Identified Ity Photograph. York. C. R. Urquhart, arrested by Chief of Detectives Charles S. White, now In the county jail on the charge of larceny, has been identified by the Virginia authorities as being that of Colonel Urquhart, wanted at Waverly, Va., for murder committed In Sussex County. Chief White had the man's picture taken a short time ago and sent it to Virginia. He has Just received word from R. W. Ar nold, Mayor of Waverly, stating that they had identified the man as the one wanted In that county for mur der. The prisoner was arrested charged with the larceny of $35. He threat ened to bring suit against the officers for false' arrest. When taken before i Alderman Keech his courage failed I him. ! His actions were such as to arouse suspicion. Chief White made an in vestigation and to his surprise dis covered that Instead of arresting a supposed thief he had captured an escaped murderer. FKKK.IIT TRAIX HfXS AWAY. DYSPEPSIA r.,'l"?Vic?,"1ten J wonderful "Csaca reu for three months and being entire! cured of stomach catarrh and dyapepatZ 1 Unnk . word of praise U due to "c7!t for their wonderful composi 1 bnve taken numerous other so called remedies bnt without avail, and I ?h ,c,8Caret relieve more in a day than all the others I have taken would ia year." James McGune, oS Mercer St., Jersey City, N. J. SolTJ. t',"',b'"-, P"""- T"' Good. i.500' """"Miobulk. The tea lb1Un,pICCC. Guarantor To eur. cr youx mono bask. S19 TOILET ANTISEPTIC NOTHING LIKE IT FOR TUp TFFTU razt'IM nctl any dentiirici ' I I a in cleansing, whitening ant Rmovmg Urlai Iron the teeth, betide deitroyini, sU scrroi oi decay and dueaie which ordinar) preparation cannot do. TUT lift I ITU Paztine uted a a mouth, fit IVlUUIn waihdwnfecUUunouUi eat) throat, purine the breath, and kilU the germi riich collect ia the mouth, causing tor throat, M1 teeth, bad breath, grippe, and much akkneu. TUt PYCC when inflamed, bred, ache "LCI DO and bum, may b uuianlly relieved and lengthened by raxtine. fATADDU Fu,'q will destroy the gernu VA I Atinn (hat caute catarrh, heal the ra. ninmalion and atop the diachargo. It it a tur remedy tor utefin) catarrh. . Purine it a harmleit yet powerlul lerauciot.duinl eetanl and deodorizer, ed in bathing it detnoyt odora and the body antucplically dean, '".saic at onus storis.boc. OH POSTPAID 1 MAIL. LARGE SAMPLE FREE! TH PAXTON TOILET CO.. BOSTON. MANS, If PATENTS fMi four iOUNTIES K7 ' yvur BUVa W nilCUT. r- ir ,,r?ar ." nwui. w o.u N- umruolloiM. w. U. WUIa. itl-.l- SlTbl; '"'''""Wl WuUBuuaiajUlilM. , Electric tramway competition re uced the suburban traffic of tbe ,r( - Eastern Hallway around I.on by 3.292,817 passenger. In the 1 ' months of last year. Pennsy Fighting Forest Fires. Shamokin. So many forest fires are raging about here that the State Forestry Department was notified of the serious condition of affairs, made more grave by the long drought. The most threatening fires are along the Pennsylvania Railroad And a big force of employees are trying to conquer the fires, which are causing great damage. Breaker Boy Torn To Pieces. Mahanoy Oity. William Becker, a 19-year-old breaker boy, of Maha noy Plane, was torn to pieces In the scraper line at East Bear Kldge Col liery, soon after , beginning work. The boy's coat caught up by the wind became entangled In the ma chinery and .dragged him in. Hutltlen Numinous For War Veteran. Pottsvllle. David Thomas, aged 72, was found dead in his bed at this place. He retired In perfect health and succumbed to apoplexy. Thomas was a veteran of the Civil War and was repeatedly praised for courage on the battlefield. Frenk Booster Huh. Five Toes. Reading. Darius Glouser, of Bally, this county, owns a freak roos ter, with five toes on each foot and with wings turned up Instead of down, as on other fowls. . Child Killed By Train. Mahanoy City. Crossing the tracks of the Philadelphia and Read ing Coal and Iron Company, at Ma hanoy Plane, 8-year-old Eleanor Mc Laughlin was struck by. a train and killed. The child was going to the mountain for spring water. i i - Hands Back Marriage License, Reading. Harry Kuller, of New York, handed back a marriage li cense, to Register of Wills George H. Gregory, stating that he intended to get married In New York Instead of Pennsylvania. The marriage li cense was made out in the names of Harry Kuller, and Minnie Marmon, New York. The Idea of securing the nccessnry papers here was to go back to New York and get married without having any of their friends know it. Put as the paper was not good in New York State it was returned. Boys Accused Of Train Wrecking. Pottsvllle. Three boys were put under arrest by Philadelphia and Reading Coal and Iron Company's police for train wrecking and placed under 1500 bail each for court, by Justice of the Peace W. J. McCarthy. They are: Sterling Weiss, aged 14 years; Frank Weiss, aged 13 years, and Daniel Gelger, aged 16 years, who were charged with wrecking a locomotive and several mine cars. Tliis was done by tampering with a switch. The train was derailed at a point between Hickory Culm Bank and Wadesvllle, It being sent over an embankment. No one was Injured, One .Man Killed And Six Injured At llnrrihhiirg. Harrisburg. A freight train on the narrow guage road between Dau phin and the sawmill of the Zartman Lumber Company got beyond con trol and ran two miles down a steer grade until the engine and seven cars leaped from the track and tumbled over Into a field. Nicholas Stola was killed. Among half a dozen injured was W. P. Zart man, proprietor of the road. Dairyman Commits Suicide. Bcllefonte. Ephrlam Shock, a prominent dairyman of Lower Penn? Valley, committed suicide by placing the muzzle of a shotgun under hie chin, pressing a trigger with his toe and blowing the entire fore part of his head away. Melancholia caused by a protracted Illness Is assigned as the cause. Fire May Close Colliery. Locust Gap. Fire in the Locust Spring Colliery, owned by the Phil adelphia & Reading Coal & Iron Company, has spread so rapidly dur ing the past two weeks that residents fear the entire plant will be closed down unless two large dams, now filling with water, do not extinguish the flames. Several thousand em ployees would be rendered Idle. Ieaves Kstnte To Poor Children. Shamokin. The will of Elmer Scott, Just made public, directed a bank to divide his estate among poor children of Shamokin and vicinity next Christmas. KM AND J.W.'.'.Viii-ri, i'mWmmmmw mm WlrV I tTIT M M AM. MA. m T .'., Vl J,?ii. IfSfT)inAf.Kn WOMH.Y. Mart : m Shell Forming. A remarkable experiment In con nection with the shell-forming mech anism of the hen Is described In a recent Issue of Science. A' surgi cal operation was performed upon a hen by which the feces or excrement were made to pass through the canal where the egg ordinarily receives Its shell coating. In this instance the fecal matter or manure as soon as It reached the proper place was coated with a shell and then passed from the hen, showing that the shell-making operation Is Independent of the rest of the egg-producln6 process. Farmers' Home Journal. Canada Thistle. Enclosed you will find two plants, one of some kind of grass that is get ting quite plenty; the other is some kind of thistle, that has been on the farm for about three years. In one square of about three rods we have cut them down rud done everything we can think or to get them de stroyed. Please name them and oblige a farmer and subscriber. G. V. L. Answer: The thistle Is the Cana da, a very bad pest. You will have to cultivate the three rods square in potatoes, or something else that will require frequent hoeing, or working with the hand plow. The grass Is orehard grass and you won't care to get rid of It. Indiana Farmer. . Farm Gate. On a farm often a long gate Is nec essary, but It Is very heavy and hard to open and shut. The sketch which I send Is an easy way to overcome the difficulty of handling the heavy gate. Take a piece of 2x4 about three feet long and size one end down until it will enter the hub of an old culti vator wheel. After the wheel is fas tened to the end of the 2x4, fasten the latter to the gate with two or udder to the butter tub, and you will never be troubled with, the "animal odor." Another ghost has been laid, another witch has disappeared." F. W. Moseley, in the Farmers' Home Journal. Hurled To Death AgnliiNt Walk. ' Plttston. While attempting to re pair a leak In a six-inch compressed air pipe, Ralph Polln, of West Pltts ton Exeter .Mine, a machinist, aged 25, was instantly killed. The pipe burst at a joint and Polin was burl ed with terrific force against a con crete wall fifteen feet away. Nays Old School Books Will Do. Sunbury. Taxpayers of Mt. Car mel Township asked Court to restrain the school directors of the district from purchasing new books, alleg ing that the old ones In use are good enough. Two Fatally Burned In Kxplosloii. Shamokin. An explosion of gas In the Locust Spring Colliery fatally burned George Burginnls and Daniel Strauns, of Mt. Carmel, and serious ly Injured Frank Latvataski and W. H. Kernan, of Locust Gap. $0,000,000 In Freight Kqulpnient. Pittsburg. In addition to the ,", 400,000 In car orders placed last week by tbe Pennsylvania Railroad, the Pennsylvania line west of Pitts burg awarded contracts for approxi mately 3,000,000 worth of freight equipment to the Standard 8teel Car Company and the Cambria Steel Com pany. This makes a total of more than 19,000,000 expended this year by the Pennsylvania for freight equipment alone. Game Keason Promising, Lock Haven. Most encouraglag reports come from ths various hunt ing sections of this county, stating that game of all kinds will be more plentiful this season than In years. Squirrels, It Is claimed, are more plentiful thau In years, and rabbits and pheasants will likewise be numer ous. It Is also reported tbat mors deer have been seen In the mountains hereabouts tbls summer than at any time In years, and the indications are that hunters will find rare sport when tbe season opens. three strong bolts. Place the 2x4 and wheel just high enough so the gate will clear the ground when swung to one side. When the gate Is shut tbe wheel stands between the end of gate and the post as shown In illustration. A child can open and shut It without difficulty. Mrs. Blanch Cublne, in tbe Epltomist. Combination Sod and Tillage. For apple orchards, in particular, some combination of sod and tillage often gives good satisfaction. While the trees are small, some hoed crop may be grown for a number of years, but this should bo discontinued when It becomes difficult to properly culti vate the trees, or when the crops oc cupy the feeding ground of the tree roots. After that, the centre of the space between the rows cf trees may be seeded to clover in June, and the strip at either side of the trees culti vated for another month, when a cover crop may be sown. The ne::t year the clover crop is turned under parly In June and the land cultivated for two or three weeks, when mam moth clover may asaln be sown in the spaces running nt right angles to those seeded t'.ie previous year and the strips along the tree rows may Bgalu be cultivated. Farmers' Home Journal. The Bnt Problem. The rat Is believed to be tho worst mammalian pest known to man. Not only does It destroy property worth millions of dollars every year, but it Is now known to be the principal ngent In disseminating bubonic plague ease in the ordinary- sense. The In fection Is sprer.d from rat to rat and from rat to m.-.n solely by means of tiie rat flea. The United States Department of Agriculture, through its Biological Survey, lias recently given to rnt problem serious attention. The re- The Thoughtful Cow Owner. The thouKhtfuI cow owner certain ly will not want to keep In his dairy herd any cow that does not Bhow a reasonably good profit. The man that flnd3 out just exactly what each cow is doing will not hesitate to dis pose of every row that Is not paying for what feed the Is consuming, plus the cost of caring for her and a rea sonable per cent, of profit on the in vestment. I must say that it is really astonish ing that after this matter has been discussed nt so many different times nt different places for about the last quarter of a century, that every In vestigation that Is made by on ex periment station In any State shows a great percental; of dairy cows that do not pay any profit. Still it Is well known that dairymen do not kep cows for pleasure or health. The fact is they do not take time to plan, or pains to apply good business principles as they should do. The thoughtful cow owner will not be long delayed in discovering his most profitable cows and will only use them In breeding for dairy purposes. The dairy cow that dons not yield any profit should be prepared for the beef market and sold at once. She should not be bred and the owner ought not to wait for her to dry up at the end l of her lactation, because It she Is not giving any profit what Is the use of keeping her any longer than Is necessary to get her In shape for the butcher. It is because dairymen do not actually study out these cow problems that there are In this conn try to-day as many cows that are un profitable to the men tbat own and care for them. Indiana Farmer. Vetch liny ns Feed For Cows. Common vetch Is a great nitrogen gatherer and is used as a farm crop in many different ways. In some lo calities It has proved valuable as a catch crop and also as a cover crop In orchards. In France it has been grown to furnish honey-making ma terial for bees. In the eastern United States the common vetch has not proved to be so valuable as other legumes, but in western Oregon it has become a standard stock feed and is UBed as hay, silage, pasture and as a soiling crop. It makes a very palatable hay and dairy cattle prefer vetch silage to that made of red clover. On some farms vetch is replacing clover in the regular rota tion. Vetch Is usually sown in the fall with wheat or rye to support the stalks, and Is cut for hay when the seed begins to form in the pods. From two to four tons of hny to the acre aie yielded while an acre gives from fifteen to thirty bushels of seed. From experiments made at the Oregon station, as reported to the Department of Agriculture, It was found that vetch hay and vetch sil age are valuable protein feeds for dairy stock, while steaming vetch sil age reduces its digestibility. "Over fifty-six per cent, of the protein in the unsteamed silage is digested." i says the report, "while less than fif- teen per cent, of that In the steamed silage is utilized by the animals. : The average per cent, of dry matter, ash, fiber, and fat digested Is from j ten to fourteen per cent, lower in ( the steamed s'lage. The digestibility of the extract, or carbohydrates. Is j approximately the same In eaMi." , Weekly Witness. j A Word of Hope For DcpalriiiK Ones. Kidney trotihloninken weak, weary, worn women. Ila'kachf, hip pains! jllzinces, henda-hes, nervousness," laiicunr, urlnnry troubles make wont- en suffer untold mis fry. Ailing kidneys IPO the on Kim fWA Mrs. 'n. G. 7jLA . t Fvri Corbln. Si v ti St., Dalton.Gn., says: "My body was rncked with kidney aches and nains. nmi cr.,- tlnies my armB were numb. I was fltill and miserable all the time and hoped fnr death to relieve me. boan's Kidney Pills soon brought Improve ment, and finally made me a well woman." Remember the name Doan's. Sold by ail dialers. r,0 rents a hot. Kos-ter-MIlburn Co., HiifTalo. N. Y. I til J5A fiems From Buskin. To know anything about God you must beuln liv liplnir iimf ; See that no day passes in which j yon do not mal e yourself a some what bitter creature; and In order ! to do that find out, first, what you j are now. The weakest among us has n gift i however seemingly trivial, which is ! peculiar to him, and whirh, v.nrthllv used, will be a gift also to bis race ; forever. Violate ' truth wilfully, In the : slightest particular, or at least, get into the habit of violating it, nnd all kinds of failure anil error will : surround and haunt you to your full. ; We should be afraid of doing i roiig. and of that only, otherwise, I ,f w'e only don't do wrong for tear of being punished, we have done wrong in our hearts alreadv. The best prayer at the beginning of a day is that we may not lose its moments. Washington Herald. Senegal consists of four communes St. Louis, the capital; Dakar, the military headquarters; Ruflsque, the chief commercial town, and Goree, a good communal town. The total area Is 438 square miles and the to tal population IDS, 000. IN AGONY WITH ECZEMA. Whole Body n M,K 0f Raw, Pleedlntt, Torturing Humor Hoped Death Would Knd I cp rf nl HnffiTlng In Despair: Cured by Cttti. urn. "Wonlo (nt,riiit ilewrihe t lie tiy.rilile eo znrn I mil'iTrd v;t'i. It bmfce nut on my br-ail fin-1 Kept pptemling until it rnverr.ll tny whnli. li,,.y, I waa almost a wil, 1 m,i of sure, from hrnil to foot. I ookrl mors like a pk-.-e of rnw bncf tlinn a human heintf. Tlie pain rod upony 1 endured neemeil mors tlinn I cniild hear, lllood and pua oo7t from the crr.it aure on my acnlp. from urn rier my finder tmil, and nearly all nrtr ttijf body. My earn were o criiKted and BWolUn I wan afraid they would breiik off. Kvnry hair in my head fell out. I could not n't down, for my clothes would iitick to the raw and hire ling flriih, making me rry out from the pain. My family doctor did all he could, but 1 got worse and wore. Mv condition van awful. I did not. think I could live, and wanted death to come and end my frightful rc.i(Teritig. "In thia condition tny mottier-inl.iwr beared me to try the Cuticuru Remedies. I mid I would, but had no hope of recov ery. Hut oh, what blenxcil relief I experi enced utter applying Cutieura Ointment. It co'ie,! the ieP,ljnn and itching tlenh and brought me the first real pleep i ha 1 had in week. It war. an grateful ns ice to a burn itiil turiKue. I would bathe with warm water uri.l Cutieura Soap, then niily the Ointment frciy. 1 also took Cutieura He anlvent for the Mood. In a abort time the ores Flopped runiiiiiu, tbe Hesh bean to heal, nrl I knew I wax to gt well auaiti. I I lien the hair on my head began to prow, j and in n abort tune I was completely cured. I I wish I could tell everybody who linn ec ! zrma to use t'liticiitn. M. Vm. Hunt. 1IU i 1 honias St., Newark, N. .1., Sept. 2H. !!)'." Potter Drill? & ( hem. Corp., Sole Props, of Cutieura Ketnr'lirj. liospei. Mas. The newest telephone mouthpiece Is of glass, which can be readily cleaned by boiling. Vur CMs aim f.KII. titck's raprrtsa Is the liet remwlr relieves the arhinir and tcverWImes-. cures the Cold and restores normal eonOltiotiH. It's llijuld-cnects Immediately. luc., ii and loo. atdrutr stores. The world's postal business Is in creasing at the rate of 7 per cent, per annum. Vessels of the German navy have been equipped with a novel life sav ing apparatus resembling a huge basket with Its sides made of rope ladders. Lowered over the sides, several persons can climb it at the same time. Ir. Hl:i ters II ickleaur-y Cir.lll Will oonvln to tin most slt')tloil whn It tmn to ouriun Di.iTh ) ia. Dvntiterv. Children T'.hin r. v 2"ii m I W ; r vt; Nearly all Oregon's copper comes from a single mine In Josephine County. Recent experiments seem to Indi cate that bees have the homing In stinct like the pigeon. Mrs, WinslnWH SoothtnR Symp forChildren milling, soften t lie gums, reduce intl.uumit tiuu. allays pain cures wind colic. '25c a OuUle. It is estimated that Kngland an nually consumes the milk of .1,000, 000 cows. Ii. X. U. 31. Chicks Doarag Well? If Not, Learn Why from a Book Costing: Less Than the Value of One Chicken......... Whether you ruise Chickens tor tun or piofii, you want to do it intelligently and pet the bet results. The way lo do this is to profit by the experience of others. Wo offer a Isjok telling nil jou need to know on the subject a book written by a man who made his living for 'i years in Raising i'oultry, and in that time receasarily had io expei nueoi ami spemi mucn money 10 learn me nest way lo conduct the busine jor me sniaii sum oi i i i.a i a in postage stamps, it lens you now to Ueteet ano (Jura I)isease, how to Feed for Kgt's. and also for .Market, which Fowls to Save for Breed ing Purposes, and indeed about everything vnu must know on the subiect to make a auccess. SKNT POSTPAID ON" RF.CEU'T OF 25 CKNTS IN STAMPS. BOOK PUBLISHING HOUSE, 134 Leonard St., N. Y. City. Tbe Difference. j Cauterized. Sydney Rosen feld once wrote a j "yHs," said Mrs. Lapsling, "John comedy entitled "The Optimist," ny's all right now When he was which achieved success after the i bitten bv the strange dog I took him production, but was a long tlmeito a doctor's and bad the wound os reaching the Btage. Manager after ; tracised right away." Chicago Tii manager refused the manuscript, and 1 bune. one day Mr. liosenfeld. whose pa- I tience was exhausted, blurted out j Doctor Hits Knew, to bis sole auditor: I fllobbs The doctor told Guzzler Or course, you don t appreciate Tlnklnt( was the verv worst thinu the play: You don't even know the : no could do. meaning of Its name." Slobbs I guess that doctor didn't "Yes, I do, protested the im- know Guzzler or he would have real- presarlo. 1 xoct that drinking Is the best thing "Well, Insisted Mr Rosenfeld, i lt. does." Philadelphia Record "what's ihe difference between an . optimist and a pessimist?" The manager barely hesitated. "An optimist is an eye doctor," he said; "a pessimist is a foot doc tor." Harper's Weekly. Domestic Kconomy, Alollie, the Irish domestic In the service of a Wilmington household, was one afternoon doing certain odd bits of work about the place when her mistress round occasion to re- Jokers Meet. "Did ihe boat rocker rock tbe boat tbls time?" "No; he v.as very quiet this trip There was another Joker aboard with an unloaded pistol." W'ustnnmon Herald. Vice Consul Dirk P. De Young, of Santos, reports that there Is a plan in the City of Joinville. the btike her for one piece of careless-1 '',in,'rl'"1 trade centre of the ,..kq u. .u, v,l U.ilia V. UL 11UI U1H , "You haven't wound the clock, Mollle," said she. "I watched you closely, and you gave it only u wind 1 Why didn't you complete i tessruiiy to build an electric railway to Lake Sagaus.su, an ocean harbor 10 miles distant, where vessels can enter sue- Chickens and Garden. Many times we read advising glv. In-, tho rhlelrena th run of the nHf- Thls Is not a contagious dls- j den, after plants havo medf g-owth, in order to allow the chicks lo de stroy Insects. A few weeks ago I read an article to this effect, saying thut if the bens did scratch they would only cultivate tho garden. In our garden we are planting fresh Beed, or setting younn; plants, stilts of that work have appeared In I almost each week, until very late, so a bulletin of The Urown Rat. There I the plan of giving them the run of are several species of rats, but the the garden wouldn't do here, common house or barn rat. the so- There might be only good from called "Norway rat," Is the most such a .plan, were the garden very widespread and by far the most de- j large, and the chicks fw, but how structive. By means of shlpB It has about the cabbage, the tomatoes and been carried to almoBt every part of j corn they would bodily eat, saying the world, and wherever landed It nothing of the plants they kill, or has proceeded to make Itself at home. I damage, by scratchli3? They will N,li- ianloo hfl. WAnrfn.ritl .ilonlahlL ' . 1. 1. . . I . I . ...... ..... vai chuu8!;q truiii mti moo uuu ijuib or two. the Job? "Sure, mum, ye haven't forgot that I'm leavln' tomorrer, have ye?" ask ed Mollle. "I ain't goin' to be iloiu' anny of the new gyurl's work!" llurper's Weekly. People of fresh air habits and dis cernment almost instantly and un consciously are able to tell tho pres ence of deleterious and Injurious agents in the air, although these give no sign or warning to the The population of riueni.s Ay res senses On tbls account an Indl.in on March 'M was l.lO.SOi;, or 58,-' has an unbearable sense of oppres fcji more than a year previous. I sion in a closed room. Ready The species has wonderful adaptabil ity to climatic and other conditions. In North America it Is found from Panama to tbe Yukon Valley. and to Greenland. out the plants until all the cabbage Is gone, If they are given the chance. They will also pick pea pods lo pieces, jump and eat roastlns eav?, and pick each and every tomato as ft8t as they turn, even If they must Jump' for the tomatoes. vided and proper bedding and enough I This it the way our chicks will do, of It Is used, the udders of the cows and they are well fed with wh-at, will be fairly free from objectionable , corn and table scraps, also have a matter, but what little thero may be good run on grass, Home Dairying, If Ihe right kind of atall.i are pro.- Cooked The crisp, brown flakes of Post found on them should be carefully brushed off, before putting the pall In place to begin milking. I will not go Into all the details of milking, but will say It should be done quietly, Quickly and gently. It Is better that each cow has the same milker all the time. . If all the, details from the stabling and bedding of the cows to the draw ing of ths milk have been correctly and carefully attended to there will be no odor. 80 called animal odor Is the odor of manure nothing more, nothing less. Of It T. II. Hosklns, M. D., wrote many years ago la tbe Rural New Yorker as follows: "Ventilate your cow stables, keep yourself and ths cows clean, give them good pure food and water, keep yoursrlf and your aurroundlngs clean Turn the poultry among the berry bushes as soon as fruit Is gathered; they do no damage to speak of snd destroy lots of Insects; also give them the garden patch In late fall and winter; but through tho growing season I greatly prefer having the chicks kept strictly out of the gar. den. Birds will destroy hordes of In sects where they are not scared away by cats, guns, or throwing boys, and are eucouraged to build on the prem ises. The amount of cabbage worms a pair of wrens will carry to their young through the season la almost unbelievable. There Is no damage at all from birds bunting and de stroying Insects In the garden. Get rid of tb worthless, surplus cats, and encourage birds to live near Tt! ir''-s p.jjtt?!, from tkt ' you. -B. C, In tb Indiuua Faioitr, Toasties Come to the breakfast table right, and exactly right from th2 package no bother; no delay. They have body too ; these Post Toasties are firm enough to give you a delicious substantial mouthful before they melt away. "The Taste Lingers. Sold by Grocers. . Made by POSTUM CEREAL CO., LIMITED. BATTLE CREEK. MICHIOAN.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers