m filVE FOnEVER. Thomas Edison ha. perfected a J.V battery which he say. will indefinitely and revolutionize the rof Munyon .ay. It 1. only a Mtlon of time until a remedy la Cvered that will supply the waste the human body, so that one may ?,' 0n almost indefinitely, barring Indents. This seem, almost too lit to be true, but nothing seem. JTe impossible In these day. when consider the flying machine and ,ht wireless telegraph. prof. Munyon ha. certainly revolu tlonlied the practice of medicine. He Lf not believe in building hospital, (or consumptives. He say. that con Mmptlon can alway. be traced to a cold Cure a cold and you prevent ccmumptlon. His Cold and Cough Remedy will break up almost any form of a ld ,n few hour, and tonttlvely prevent Bronchltl. and pjeumonlft. To convince the medical world nd people In general of the truth of bis claim, he ha. distributed millions of vials of the Cold Cure, ab lolutely free, from the leading news paper offices throughout the country, ind the cures that have been reported from Its use have been most astonish ing. These little sugar pellet, con tain no opium, morphine, cocaine or sny harmful drug. They .eem to re lieve the head, throat and lung, al most Immediately. In order that no one may be de prived of this remedy he ha. placed It with all the druggist, throughout the United State, for the .mall Bum of 25 cents, or sent postpaid on re ceipt of price, and wltl each bottle he gives this guarantee: "If Munyon'. Cold and Cough Cure doe. not do all that Is claimed for It, I will refund your money." There are four advantage. In tak ing Munyon's Remedies. First, they ire absolutely harmless. Second, they are pleasant to take. Third, they re lieve almost Immediately. Fourth, they cost nothing unless they give satisfaction. Munyon's Guide to Health sent free on request. Munyon Remedy Co., Phlla- Fa. Berlin now has a population of two millions. A greater Berlin would include another million. ECZEMA BURNED AND ITCHED. Spread Over Hund, Arms, Legs and Face It Was Something Terrible Complete Cure by Cutlcura. "About fifteen or eighteen years ago ee lema developed on top of my hand. It burned and itched so much that I was compelled to show it to a doctor. He pro nounced it ringworm. After trying his dif ferent remedies the disease increased and went up my arms and to my legs and finally on my face. The burning was some thing terrible. I went to another doctor who had the reputation of being the best in town. He told me it was eczema. Hia medicine checked the advance of the dia cue but no further. I finally concluded to try the Cuticura Remedies and found relief in the first trial. I continued until I was completely free from the dixeaae and I have not been troubled since. C. Burkhart, 236 W. Market St., Chamberaburg, Pa., (Sept. 19,1908." Totter Drug 4 Chem. Corp., Bole Props, of Cute ira Remedies, Boston, Mass. To The Creation. "Bllllnger has some very ancieni airs In his new comic opera." "Ancient! Say, I'll bet he ha. gone back for some of 'em to the time when the morning .star, sang together." The earliest Bible pictures were painted on the church walls instead of being bound between the book covers. uiin CkaxiscsXhe System Dispels colds and Headaches Acts xvaxxro, acA&Yxy as aLaxaVwe. C3orrien)VbTftcxia.fiC(3t ttw-youxvmaOa. To $eWVs bexeJVco rffecAs. always buy & Qawiuv "onuhctund by tke CALIFORNIA Fig Syrup Ca SOLO BY ALL LEADING DRUGGISTS e Size only, regular price 50 per bottle. tor twMt? . T h i bren afflicted eWiTl y ,nd 1 cu My that Cas- is i meJy nave ever tried. I hll MUJ u Ut they are represented." Thoa. Gdlard, Elgin, m. EmK. K&'aE'w J"' Soot. J" Ub. t.mp.d CCC. OaaraalLE f X WANTED. Stand Hand Bag, and Burlap, Any Kind, Any Quantity. Asyvbere. RICHUOND BAQ CO., Richmond, Virginia. T-iS Tfcompsoa's Eyeyatar MONEY In Chickens 25c. in stamps we will send 100-Page Book giving the experience of a practical Poul try Raiser. lzz rd!: C:::3, IZiUonari Sirtti, Ktm Ytrk Or Cartoon by Triggs, in the New York Press. HOW NEW YORK POLICE HANDLED A CROWD OF 8,000,000 PEOPLE DURING HCDS0N-FULT0N FETE Mighty Human Machine Constructed to Insure Publio Safety--On Move Night and Day--Twenty-seven Signal Stations and Thirteen Am bulance Posts Established--Every Member of the Forooon Constant Duty, With Just Time to Eat and Slsop. New York City. Throughout the Hudson-Fulton celebration there was constantly in motion one of the great est machines ever assembled, in re gard to Its thousands of human parts operating- in unity, in the work of the Police Department of New York City. This great machine, with Us blocks of patrolmen, Its wagons, its shuttling ambulances, its field hospitals, Us squads of surgeons and nurses. Its fleets of launches and rowboats, was practically under the guidance of one man as chief engineer, First Deputy Police Commissioner Frederick H. Bugher, who evolved the elaborate plan under which the millions who thronged the city's streets were as sured the maximum of protection. Plans were outlined to care for crowds of from 7,000,000 to 8,000, 000 on the days of the great parades, and so skilfully were the arrange ments made that this was done with out reducing the regular police pa trols or decreasing the regular re serves which were held at all stations to cope with possible emergencies. Aside from that, too, 4600 policemen were available for special duty throughout the ceremonies. As factors in this monster mechan ism twenty-seven police signal sta tions were established, running in a chain from the St. George ferry, Rich mond, through Brooklyn, up Manhat tan and the Bronx to the railroad tower at the junction of Spuyten Duyvil Creek and the Hudson River. Each of these stations had a direct wire to headquarters, and each was equipped with an ambulanco or a pa trol wagon provided with surgeon and stretcher. On the line of Saturday's naval parade an auxiliary line of twenty four telephone stations was installed. Thirteen separate ambulance stations lay at intervals between the St. George ferry, on Staten Island, and Dyckman street and Broadway. These were supplemented by fifteen field hospitals, each fully equipped with beds and nurses, as well as two float ing hospitals. Another chain of twenty patrol wagons, each In charge of a police surgeon, was run from Tompkins vllle to Dyckman street, while a fleet of fourteen launches and steamers patrolled the water front continuous ly from the Kill von Kull to Spuyten Duyvil Creek. Supplementing the latter there was a fleet of rowboats covering the water front. A three-ply thickness of police au thority was planned lor the entire length of 'Riverside Drive and its fringe of park. Inspectors, each with , six to seven captains under them. and the latter in command of squads of from forty to sixty, had charge of the strip of land between the river and the embankment wall. Another chain of policemen had control of the park slopes from the wall to the driveway; then still another force had charge of the sidewalks and the drive way. By day the field hospitals displayed white bunting flags with gold cross and white bunting flags with green cross. By night each flew balloons with green and white lights attached. Wigwagging signals were used In communicating between police boats and shore stations by day, and green and white lights served the same purpose at night. As planned, too, the army of police men were massed as the crowds shifted their density. For Instance, when the naval parade passed the Brooklyn shore and the crowds in that vicinity .began dispersing, this fact was communicated at once to Deputy Commissioner Bugher. At once he directed that the 300 special policemen on service there take a special elevated train which was in waiting, hurry to the subway, march aboard special subway cars and hasten to Manhattan. In this way every link of the police organization was movable at a moment's notice, so that the maximum of policemen was utilized where the crowd was densest. No policeman had time off during the parade days. All were ordered to wear their uniforms at all times except when In bed. This order ap plied to every member of the force, In whatever capacity. When not on active f".uty each policeman snatched his rest In the station house, thus at the same time acting as a unit in the special reserve system while ob taining his needed rest. An especial letter, issued by the Commissioner, was read six times to every member of the department, pointing out the need of patience and tact in handling the great crowd of visitors. Above most of the hotels flags of various foreign nations were to be seen. Indicating the presence of some of the delegates to the celebration from foreign shores. Over the Hotel Astor the Governor's flag announced that Governor Hughes and his family, had their quarters there. Speedy punishment befell petty of fenders who tried to have "fun" with the populace during the Hudson-Fulton celebration. Not only were the regular police details, in sections where the crowds gathered, prac tically doubled, but the Interborough put in commission a large corps of special officers. The surface lines, with the aid of the police, were In a position to take care of the rowdies who tried to make every day seem like the Sunday of their own partic ular devising. UNVE1X FULTON TABLET. Lancaster, Pa. The Lancaster County Historical Society unveiled a memorial to Robert Fulton In the lit tle hamlet of Fulton House, the birth place of the inventor, twenty miles south of this city. Among those In attendance were Governor Stuart and ex-Governor Pennypacker, both of whom made addresses. 'The exercises were continued In the afternoon, and during the luncheon hour there was an exhibit of Fulton relics consisting of manuscripts, drafts, mementos, etc. The stand from which the speakers delivered their addresses was mod eled to represent Fulton's first steam boat, the Clermont. It was profusely decorated with the national colors. The tablet, which was designed by Miss Mary Magee, of this city. Is ot bronze, about a foot high, and is in the shape of a shield. At the top there Is a has relief of the steamboat Clermont. Directly underneath is a scroll containing the words, "Cler mont, Fulton, 1807." Upon the tab let 'Is Inscribed the following: "Here, on November 14. 1765, was born Robert Fulton, inventor, who, on the waters of the Hudson, Aufnitrt 11, 1807, first successfully applied steam to the purpose of navigation. At this place he spent the first years ot his life. Without a monument fu ture generations would know hlra. Erected by the Lancaster County His torical Society at the centenary cele bration of his achievement, Septem ber, 1909." Standard Pays $5,000,000 For 10,000 Acres of Oil Land. Pittsburg Jennings Brothers, oil producers, officially announced the completion of a deal with the Stand ard Oil Company whereby the Pitts burg company retires completely from development In the eastern Illinois field. For a sum close to $5,000,000 the Ohio OH Company, a Standard con cern, has taken over 10,000 acres ot territory owned by Jennings Brothers In that part of Illinois. The land Is now wild and unimproved. Kewsy Gleanings. President Taft decided to start a new fight for tariff revision while on bis Western trip. The Rio Grande overflowed Its hanks at Matamoras. Mexico, and halt toe town was flooded. French exports to the United States show large increases since the pas sage ot the tariff bill. Four warships are to represent Great Britain at the Hudson-Fulton celebration at New York City. The cruiser Des Moines sank the E. V. Mead, a lumber schooner, la a wH!aloj.lustbelow the Narrows., Judgo Declares Abrogated Right to Jury Trial Inviolate, Mobile, Ala. Jules E. Alford, in the Inferior Court here, dealt the pro hibitionists of Alabama a severe blow when he declared that the portion of the celebrated Fuller prohibition bill denying a defendant the right ot a trial by Jury was unconstitutional. He said that Section 11 ot the Ala. bama constitution stated that right ot trial by Jury must remain Inviolate and that the Fuller bill was In direct conflict with this. All cases on the docket wilt be appealed. Ready To Do Ills Part, An eccentric country squire agreed to employ an equally eccentric rustic to rid his mansion of Its plnguo of UleH, the terms being board, lodgings and beer for three days. At the end of this period there were more flies than ever, nnd the squire interroga ted his new employe thus: "Why ever haven't you made a start You contracted to kill all' the flies.", "I'm waiting for you, guv'nor," re torted the wily rustic, "you've got to catch 'em first. I only promised to kill 'em" London News. He Was Safe Klther Way. An Elk County citizen, who has Just graduated from a law school, wrote to a prominent lawyer In an Arkansas town to find out what chance there would be for him in that part of the country. "I am a Republican in politics," he wrote, "nnd an honest lawyer." "If your are an honest lawyer," came the reply, "you will have no competition, and If you are a Repub lican, the game law will protect you." Kansas City Journal. In rittsbiirg, The City ICdltor Here's a mighty good story about a young follow who runs away with a chorus girl. The Night Kdltor What's that! A good story? Why It's been done to death. The City Erlllor This one hasn't. It's an absolute novelty. The yonn"g fi'llnw Is neither a millionaire nor a I'lttsburger. Cleveland Plain Dealer. rorCOMS and OKIP. Men's rarrmica li the beet ramir rrltfvfit trn ar-Mnff and fpverUhnew cures Uf fold and ri-ttorm normal conditions, It's l!iulil effect Immediate!- 1U&, 140. saw foe, atdruir torr The Zanzibar government's new steamship Cupid, recently arrived from Scotland. It Is primarily In tended for freight and pnrsenger traffic between Zanzibar and Pemba Islands. Dairy maids In Denmark get from about $4 to $9, with board and lodg ing, a month. , Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pelleta regulate ami invigorate atomacb, liver and bowcln. Sugar-coated, tiny granules, Eaay to take as candy. The first printed Green Testa ments were those of Erasmus, pub lished at Basel by Froben in 1516. For RRAItAI HK Mlrttn' I A PVDINR Whether from Colds. Heat. Stomach or flerroui Trouble. Cauudlne will relieve yoa. ft llqutd-plcuant Vo talce-aeu Immodl atelr. Try lu loo.. (Sc. and 600. at drua stores. About Noted People. President Taft spent "Yale Day at the reunion ot the Yale Association at Brookllne, Mass. Prince Kunl and his wife were en tertained at dinner by prominent Jap anese at the Nippon Club, New York City. Lord Northcllffe, In an Interview In Winnipeg, said many persons believed Germany might attack England In 11. WMM . hlt-J , TiUf .U. .1.-.. - cu- . glneer ot the Panama Canal, was 1 elected president ot the Oregon Trunk Ll9eRail7Qjl. Cheap labor has been the princi pal handicap In introducing modern machinery in India. Thousand nf country people know that In time of siirldcn tninhan or accident Main line Vircl Oil in the beet euhaititute for the family doctor. That is why it is so niton lounn upon tne aheif. Berlin has about a hundred fac tories for linen goods forty more than the kingdom of Saxony. Mrs. WlneloWt Soothing Byrap for Child res teething. eoftena thegunM, reduce intium m tun, alWa pain, euree e-uul aotie. tie a bottle. Fortune Telling Mercury freezes at minus forty de grees centigrade. u. N. U., 40. Does not take Into consideration the one essential to wom an's happiness womanly health. The woman who neglects her health is neiilectinit the very foundation of all good fortune. For without health love loses its lustre and gold is but dross. Womanly health when lost or impaired may generally be retained by the use o( Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. Thl Prescription ban, tor over to years. been earlni delicate, weak, palti'wracked women, by the hundreds ot thousands end thla too In the privacy ot tbelr bomea without their having to eubmlt to Indell, eate questioning and offensively repod naoi examinations. Sick women are invited to consult Dr. Pierce by letter frit. All correspondence held at aacredly confidential. Address World's Riipenoary Medical Association, R. V. Pierce, M. D., President, Buffalo, N. Y. Dk. Piprcb's Grbat Family Doctor Boot, The People's Common Sente Medical Adviser, newly reviled up-to-date edition 1000 paget, answers in Plain English hosts of delicate questions which every woman, single or married, ought to know about. Sent frti, in plain wrapper to any address on receipt of 21 one-cent stamps to cover mailing only, or in cloth binding lor 31 stamps. mi For TTOTT'T TTTl,CI,,,nk F-ve Epkootlc Uls! A TlilTl r riW Shippim, re : ver b6 Catarrhal Fever. Sure purw nl fHMielve rtrcviintl. no matter how homw at nr in re Infwtwl nr DmM." LWull. rlPB nn tli torunip: met on Ihf Hlo.nl mo! Olan In. fflD-la the Dnltonoui, ffrma from th- hodv. Cur Dl.t-urD-r In rct aiil 8hp nf1 Chn!r In poultry. Lnr-t ntlllnji live ntrk remedy. Cure Olan la, eipeuj t I.A rlpne nvn banuin belnjr hn i, line Klriner remetly. V. an'l SI tiottle; s and flu rioten. Cut thl. nut. Keep H. H!,nw to jonr 1n:ir?tr. who will rt It for too. free Booklet, "Lnntemper. Oaaeee and Cure. np-niai Mrenie wanina. Cheimlata and rneUCUIlin II C 1 BaotorlolOKlato. UUdllLH, lliu,, u.ii.n. SPOBNKEDICALCO.,, PU TNAM FADELESS DYES S'.'.0Hri0!!I'.,,,hlr,r.l!'",.f"Ce color" f "V.T .,her. rt' n" 10r- P-"" colors nil libers. Thev djo In cold water better th.n anr other dje. Too eu d any garment without ripping apart. Write tor free booklat-Uow w Km, Ulnacn and Ills Colors. MONRO. UU.LU CO., Valuer, Illinois. No Man Is Satisfied. A friend of the Rev. Dr. J. Wilbur Chapman, the evangelist, has receiv ed a letter from the former Phila delphia minister, In which he tells of the great success of his meetings In .Australia. The letter describes the people there as fun-loving, and says he has worked off many stories that in the United States would be labeled an cient. One which he has told with great success to illustrate that there is no real happiness in the world will bear retelling. Here it Is: "Why, even the man who smokes a pipe is not happy," says Dr. Chap man. "If he is smoking his own to bacco he is thinking of how much it cost him, and If he is smoking tha other fellow's, he packs it so tight in the bowl of his pipe that it won't draw." Philadelphia Times. For hundreds ot years mankind used the same style and size of razor and had no thought that It could be Improved until some genius evolved the safety 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 still better safety razor, and for only twenty-five cents. That sum In post age stamps sent to the Book Publish ing House, 134 Leonard street. New York, will secure a razor postpaid A consignment of 5,000 sheep was recently brought to Mombasa from Cape Colony. The sheep are South African merinos from various flocks, and were especially selected for breeding purposes for a certain large estate. DOCTOR ADVISED OPERATION Cured by Lydia E.Pinkham's Vegetable Compound 1 5 PVfO A -1 .'fa 25 ASavinginSliaving It's nothing more or less than cxtmva g.ince topay a big price for a safety razor. The only pnrt that counts fo anything is the blade.. But good blades even lie best of bl ides-1 n't warrant the price usuiU'y demanded for the razor. The biggest pnrt of what you pay for the regular safety-razor Is for the trame and the box detail' that don't tlgurc ut all in the razor's value. Prove this for yourself. in STA. MI'S brings you ono eta J f u of there marvellous Razors, poKt aid, by mall. BOOK PUB. HOUSE, 134 K.aona . Naw York Six oil j a. Graphite Is obtained In Bavaria and Bohemia, although the best pen cil graphite is opparcntly received In Germany from Ceylon and Siberia, It Is also Imported from the United States, Japan, China, Australia, Mexico, Great Brltlan, Italy, Sweden, Belgium and France. An expert on the great Western ranches can shear one hundred sheep a day easily. There are about 20, 000,000 to shear. iZijZy Z'f'ii mation and conges- titi T-0rmP"Zi linn fnr covorol viuu. iui uv v a j Paw Paw, Mich." I suffered tern- ,r..U J lit years. My doctor said there was no I , V" jf hPe for me uut nn tl WiSi oiieration. I began :C- W&m '"k Lydia e. fe ' omit i 3 I'inkham's Veceta- eceta- Me Compound, and I can now say I am a well woman." EMIIA JJUAfEIt. Another Operation Aroided. Chicago, 111. "I want women to know what that wonderful medirine. Lydia E. I'inkham's Vegetable Com pound, has done for me. Two of the best dortors in Chicago said I would die if I did not have an operation, and I never thought of seeing a well day again. I had a small tumor and female troubles so that I suffered day and night. A friend recommended Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and it made me a well woman." M rs. Alvena Spekliho, 11 Langdon St, Chicago, 111. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound, made from roots and herbs, has proved to be the most successful remedy for curing the worst forms of female ills, including displacements, inflammation, fibroid tumors, irregu larities, periodic pains, backache, bearing-down, feeling, flatulency, indica tion, and nervous prostration. It cost but a trifle to try It and the result has been worth millions to man; suffering women. I A DOSE OF f i CURE is a safe a it is effective. Guar anteed to contain no opiate. It is very palatable too children like k. M Casts PILES ii Bltw4ta, l!rlf ttrkl fov-airtfu aftor oo ftpultraUon nr MIMPI.KX PILS: OINTMENT I Lateral auupl audvaltiMM laformaurMft, lev. ' AKOIL BBlia CO.. BaltlNMM. Mat. WHY PEOPLE SUFFER. Too often the kidneys are the cause and the sufferer Is not aware of It. Sick kidneys bring headache and side pains, lameness and stiffness, dizzi ness, headaches, tired feeling, urin ary troubles. Doan's Kidney Pills cure the cause. Mrs. Virginia Spltzer, Buena Vista, Va., says: "For thirty years I suffered everything but death with my kidneys. I cannot describe my suffering from terrible bearing down pains, dizzy spells, headaches and periods of par tial blindness. The urine was full of sediment. I was In the hospital three weeks. Doan's Kidney Pills were quick to bring relief and soon made me well and strong again." Remember the name Doan's. For sale by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-MUburn Co., Buffalo, N. T. Wh?n Jerry Turned Tables. Half a dozen Kansas men who I muvea ami iiuu meir political ueing several years ago were mixing po 1 lltlcal and tobacco smoke the other night In front of a Topeka hotel. As was to be expected, they fell to "yarn ing," and their subject was Jerry Simpson. They told n lot of stories concerning the socklcss Socrates, and here are a few of them: One time Jerry nrrlved at an Ex eelBlor Springs hotel and registered "Jerry Simpson, Wichita." The news reached the parlor, which ad joins the office, and several femi nine guests bustled out to look at the signature. It was at the time when Jerry was at the zenith of his notoriety. "Oh," giggled one of them, ad dressing the clerk, "I wonder if he wears socks?" Mr. Sinipaon wos standing hard by and overheard the remark. The women all laughed at this well-worn witticism, and they stopped suddenly when Jerry said quietly to the clerk: "1 wonder If they wear stockings?" Whereupon the women lied to the pnrlor amid a silence that was knee deep. Kansas City Journal. How He Mmle A Ciitlille, A gentleman went Into a plpemak er's shop with the Intention of see ing the method of making pipes. The proprietor, who was a Scotch man, had arrived from Edinburgh a few weeks before. When the Phlladelphlan got in the shop he found only a boy back of the counter, so without any more ado he thus addressed him: "Well, my callant. I ll give you a quarter If you show me how you make your pipes." "I carina mak' a peep, sir," repli ed the lad. "I ca only mak' a cud dle." "A cuddle'" What's that, my hln ney?" "It's a short peep," replied the boy. "sic as men women smoke oot on." "Ml give you a quarter if you show me bow to make that." "Gle's yer quarter furst," was the reply. The gentleman gave the boy the quarter, and he took u long pipe and broke a piece off It, saying: "There, now sir, that Is the way I mak' cuddles." Philadelphia Times. Sexton, Verger, Sacristan. "It U the same thing under differ ent names," said Dr. Harvey W. Wiley, the government's food ex pert, of some new food preserva tives. "The same thing under different names," Dr. Wiley repeated. "It re in In des me of the old caretaker of an EplBcopal church. "This caretaker, as he sat smok ing bis pipe on a tomb In the ceme tery, dismissed as trivial certain changes in the ritual. " 'The good, old creed keeps the same for all,' said he. 'Look at me here. I used to be the janitor. The new parson railed me the sextant lr. Thirdly gave me the name of virgin. And the young man we've got now aays I'm the sacrilege."'- Washington Post. Shall Smiling Ite Mmle Mandatory? Is there no peace in the world for the man of serious mien? Must one smile, smile, smile from morning till night whether one feels like it or not? Faddists say the dinner table joke is the best aid to digestion and pro motes domestic peace. when dull care intrudes, laugh it away. If your neighbor flies to wrath because your cocker spaniel chases his fowls, dissolve his anger with a smile. In Bhort, keep, on smllllng. And now comes a new social dis ease which this panacean smile is guaranteed to cure. As If man had not already erystallzed his features into a perpetual grin, he is now ad vised to smile to prevent his com mitting suicide! This new doctrine is advanced by a writer in a medical publication. "Play, smile and don't kill yourself Is the slopan In brief. Let us harbor still a kind thought for the man who refuses to smile at society's behest. Not that anyone would discourage smllllng; merely let us not make the rule mandatory. At least, permit the poor fellow some little option as to when nnd how much he shall smile Cleveland Plain Dealer. HcMilt Of Scientific Farming. A forthcoming circular of the Agricultural Department will contra dict the prevailing impression that the fertility of the soil of the coun try la wearing out. but will show that, notwithstanding the abandon ment of farming districts in thi Northeast, not only is there an in crease In the total volume of crops, but an actual growth In the average yield per acre under cultivation. This result is obtained by restoring to the soil those elements and com pounds needed and consumed by tho different crops. The well-Informed farmer of the present day does not blindly send his plants out to grope for their food: but sees that it Is supplied them in proper measure. Recent discoveries in bacteriology have greatly assisted the planter, enabling him to obtain bacteria, with which the growing plant may be Inoculat ed and by which the nitrogen of the air is fixed in form available for plant food and fed to the plant aa required. A few cents per acre spent inoculating tho plants coms back to the farmer in increased yield of many dollars per acre. Mobile Register. Safety. Farragut had just lashed himself to the mast. "Much safer than getting nailed to the Pole," lie observed. Herewith he was pleased to note the absence of controversy. .New York Sun. Source Of Information. Browning I hear yon are engaged to that young widow who Is visiting relatives here. Is it true? Greening Yes. : Browning How did you discover that she was the one woman In the world for an old bachelor like you? Urefnlng Why. she er tolj ine so. Chicago News. The Tennis Champion Says MAV SUTTON Tells American Girls How To He Healthy and Graceful. SAN FRANCISCO, Cal. Don't drink coffee. Don't drink tea. Don't exercise too much. These three don'ts constitute the advice of Miss May Sutton, champion woman tennis player of the world, to girls who would go In seriously and systematically for athletics. Eat what you want. Take long walks. Get all the fresh air you can. These are the three rules Miss Sut ton lays down for girls who desire merely to be strong and healthy. The little champion recently ap peared on courts In San FrancUco In a series of exhibition matches. It had been reported that she was not In the best of health, but she gave no In dication of having "gone back," play ing her strong game that made her world's champion, with her same old dash and accuracy. At the close of the serira Miss Sut ton was asked to tell what system of training she had found most effective nnd what. In ber opinion, is the best form of exercise and diet for the av erage American girl. Inpartshesnld: "While I advocate hearty eating, I cannot say too much against the use of tea or coffee. They are nerve destroyers and no one can be healthy who persists in their use. "Too much exercise Is as bad as too little. Walking Is the best exercise there Is. Early each morning, after urinaing a glass or hot Wojer, dressed In loose clothing. 1 walk for nesrly an hour. , "Athletics should receive some st tentlon from every girl. If her time precludes the playing of tennis or golf she should take long walks In the open air. both before the morning and evening meal, throwing the head and shoulders back and taking long, deep draughta of that which money cannot buy but Is In reach of the poor as well as the rich pure air. "Pure air and a moderate amount of exercise I cannot too strongly im press upon girls as being the only se cret of health and grace. Medicine for that out-of-sorts feeling may cause girls to imagine they feel all right, but what they really need Is more fresh air and not quite so much sit ting around the house in tight-fitting clothes as a great many of there do." Miss Button is declared by physi cians to be a perfect athlete. Tennis experts declared that every movement Is "a picture." iturtBtffo) (A Ltadtr, "Don't Drink Coffee' "Don't Drink Tea "Don't Exercise Tco Much" Very easy when you know how much more satisfactory OSTU M is, as a morning cup. A hot, steaming cup of Postum is as invigorating and bracing as coffee. But instead of enffeint wreeked nerves, headaches and heart troubles that overtake the coffee drinker, Fostum furnishes a liquid food which strengthens head and body. A ten days' trial of well made Fostum (boiled 1 5 minutes) con vinces. "There's a Reason." WOXDERKH WHY Found the Answer Was "Coffee." Many pale, sickly persons wonder for years why they have to suffer so, and eventually discover that the drug caffeine in coffee is the main cause of tho trouble. "I was always very fond of coffee and drank it every day. 1 never had much flesh and often wondered why I was slways so pale, thin and weak. "About five years ago my health completely broke down and I was con fined to my bed. My stomach was In such condition that I could hardly take sufficient nourishment to sustain life. "During this time I was drinking coffee, didu't think I could do with out It. "After awhllo I came to the con clusion that coffee wts hurting me. and decided to give It up and try Postum. I didn't like the taste of It at first, but when It was made right boiled until dark and rich I soon be came very fond of it. "In one week 1 began to feel bet ter. I could tat more and sleep bet ter. My sick headaches were lees fre quent; and within five mouths I looked and felt like a new being, headache spells entirely gone. "My health continued to Improve and to-day I am well and strong, weigh 148 lbs. I attribute my pres ent health to the life-giving qualities. ot Postum." "There's a Reason." Read. "The Road to Wellvllle." lo P. Postum Cereal Co, LtL Battle Creek, Mich., U. S. A.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers