The ftiddleburgh fost. TLui hilar. Gcj l v.ig jnsEiler, bditor and Proprietor 8u'M'riptiou $1.50 per year. li h .'iti ii p.i' i Hi adVUM wneo sent out side tin county.) HATE! OF AOVf RTIilNO. mi mUMMM advertienvnts not ut IhtwIw SOntraotSd lor will be ObVfBd at the ran; of t OvtiU per line inonpartel measure) (or nrtt luser Uon linn 10 cents per Hue tor every subiuiint Insertion. -Daik notutf. jmlAuhed frt ; obituary yom, mJmv, ,.t rrtptet. fe., thret cmli a ItiM. Cow In the Cotton Delf. In Q recent bulletin of the department f Kfj-rieulture Prof. Ilneekerstntes that tlie farmer of the cotton belt are un dergoing an exjwrienee which come sooner or later to every section of our land. Wheat wag prown almost cx- V clnsivoly In the north until the soil refused to respond. .No one seemed to ! Know why, but wlieu wheat failed tfley I began to depend more upon live stock. As the live stoek increased the land brought better crops, and it gradually dawned upon them that the failure of crops was due to lack of fertility and that by diversified farming they could 1 restore it and secure as good, If not better, returns than they received from ihe virgin soil. In the same wuy the soil of the cotton belt has been im poverished by constant cropping ami inadequate fertilizing. It Is not in the OOtton nor in the oil oxtrncted from the aeeda that the fertility is lost, but it la ill the parting with the cotton seed cake or maul to Europe that the loss Occurs. If the cake and meal be fed to dairy cows nil the fertility will re main on the plantation. The pro fessor's udvicn to cotton growers is, Therefore: "Go Into dairying with the lairy cow." Experiments conducted by the Cali fornia agricultural experiment station seem to indicate that by the Introduc tion of the Australian "salt bushes," hundreds of thousands of acres of hith erto worthless land in our western states will become valuable for grazing. The "salt bushes" uro members of a large plant family, to which the beet and pigweed also belong) but only n few vurieties have any economic vaJue. That which has given the best results in the west is ntrlplex semibaccata. The plants of this family have great drought-resisting power, and will grow on soil too alkaline to sustain even al falfa. They keep green all summer, grow rupidly, yield from two to four crops a year, nnd the root remains in the ground for the next season. They have great fattening and health-giving ! qualities for stock, making the best of ', beef, and wool of unsurpassed even in ms and strength of fiber. The Intro duet ion of these plants is another proof that science pays, even in farming. Crosses at the foot of a letter are out 1 of date now that some girl has dlscov- I cred what is said to be a far better way if sending a kiss to her particular gill chum. The discovery was made by accident, and it wus quite by chance that the young lady who claims the credit noticed a pink impress of her own lips just below the signature of the letter she had Just written. It came about in this way: She hail jus't been out In the wind and rubbed lip salve with its dash of rouge over her Hps, and this was the result a somewhat greary kiss, but n decided Improvement upon the scratchy cross. At all events, the lady persevered, and now it is the fashion in certain quarters for the girls to dust their Hps with powder, slightly damp the paper, kiss it, and ) Bend the mark to her girl friend or ! somebody else. It works wery well, and . the "kisses" don't run. "Cash li." is the curious verbal dis guiae under which, for ten years past, i come generous person, who uses on I Oinuha paper as his agency, has given j many thousands of dollurs to worthy people and deserving objects. Ko one but the editor of the paper knows whrt the hidden philanthropist Is. Vet hap pily, although "Cash K." is able to give large sums of money, he is only a type of many who, In equally self-eiTucing ways, ure offering help and hope to the needy und the unfortunate. An Aurora (III.) man has discovered an effective way of keeping hiB neigh Dors' chickens out of his garden, it is not altogether new. It consists of a reasonably good shotgun and plenty of uinmunition bock of a good steady aim and somo nerve. H is said to work al most every time. The Weekly Witness reports thnt Evunsville, lud., has a proselyting con stable, who has persuaded over 100 offenders to renounce their evil ways. He has the assistance and sympathy of the judge of the local court. lie tried to persuade his criminals to join the church. At a seaside resort near New York a village of real Filipinos is on exhibition. The 10 natives, fresh from Manila, oc cupy a number of bamboo huts hung with gaudy fabrics made in the Philip pines. Music on native instruments is u prominent feature of the show. It is said a German workman has perfected a process for making coal out of earth. This la to be regretted. The rarth at least ought to be retained for Good News fbr Ham Actors. Anybody who has ever walked on a railway track knows what an uncom fortable thing It Is to do. because of the absurd distance of the ties from one another. Tbey are too near to gether for a man of average length of leg to step on every one and they are too far opart for him to step on every other one. Now that the railways have begun to us oil on their tracks to lay the dust there la hope of still fur ther Innovstlona for the comfort of travelers. It la reported that certain western roads are laying new tracks with the ties four Inches further apart than was formerly the custom. The possible effect of this on the drama can scarcely be overestimated. In the old days it used to be the custom for actors returning from unsuccessful tours to step on every other tie and hence came the exaggerated stride of the old-school tragedian. Recently It baa been more the cuatom to try to step on every tie and hence the habit of lit tleness and trivlollty which has been carried Into every branch of the drama. With the ties placed at distances which will allow of a comfortable step It is reasonable to hope that case and grace will be infused Into the naturalistic school of the drama, with lasting artis tic effect. It was an actor who was ex plaining all this to some friends the other day, nnd when he had finished he noticed that they were nil gazing at! him with silent sympathy in their faces. For a moment he looked con fused and then he said: "Of course you know I don't know anything I about this myself. But I know men who are expert trnckwulkers, nnd they I hae been telling me about It." America still sustains its reputation ns being the headquarters of the world for eonomlo entomology. Mr. Ilunter, In a memoir just issued from the Uni versity of Kansas, trents of a locust or grasshopper which is threatening to destroy the alfalfa. "In alfalfa culture, if the grasshopper proves an incentive to cultivation the Insect is a blessing in disguise. Disking alfalfa fields in the curly spring, after the frost has left the ground and before vegctpntlon lias well started, increases the yield of the crop one-third, matures the second crop ear lier, and brings from It un equally in creased yield ; destroys the native grass hopper eggs placed therein, and kills the nutive grasses, which frequently threaten to reclaim the field." A SMALL SPOT MAY BE CANCER. MOST VIOLENT CASES HAVE The greatest care should be given to any little sore, pimple or scratch which shows no disposition to neat uuuer oruin IDDClDCfl IT CIDCT IC ary treatment. No one can tell how soon these Al I LAliLU A I NnO I AO will develop Into Cancer of the worst type. So many people die from Cancer simply be- UCDC PIMPI K cause they 'lo not know iU8t what the di"ea lYlLNL niTir LLOi they naturally turn themselves over to the doctor, and are forced to submit to a cruel and dangerous operation the only treatment which the doctor know for Canoer. The disease Eromptly returns, however, and is even more violent and destructive than afore. Cancer is a deadly poison in the blood, and an operation, plaster, or other external treatment can nave no effect whatever upon it. The cure must come from within the last veatige of poison must be eradicated. Mr. Wm Walpole, of Walshtown. S. D , says: "A little blotch about the size of a pea came under my left eye. gradually growing larger, from which shooting pain at interval ran in all direction. I became greatly alarmed and consulted a good doctor, who pronounced it Canoer. and advised that it be cut out, but this 1 could not con sent to. I read in my local paper of a cure effected by ft S. 8.. and decided to trv It. It Beted like a cliBrm the Cancer becoming at first irritated, and then dincharging very freely. This gradually grew lea and then discon tinued altogether, leaving a small scab which soon drop ped off. and now only a healthy little senr remains where whBt threatened to destroy my life once held full sway." Positively the only cure for Cancer is Swift's Specific S. S. 8. FOR THE BLOOD because it is the only remedy which enr: ro deep enough to reach the root of the disease and force it out of the avateui permanently, A surgical operation does not reach the blood the real seat of the disease because the blood can not bt out away. Insist upon S. K, S. ; nothing can bike its place. S. S. S. cures nlso any case of Scrofula, Kczcma, Rheumatism, Contagious Blood Poison, Ulcers, Sores, or any Other form of blood disease. Valuable books on Canoer nnd Flood Diseases will be mailed free to any address by Swift Specific Company, Atlanta. Cieorgio, ooo0oooc!ooa)ooooo-ooooOoooooooOoo 0 o o o I B & MI KM M A sA.v?y MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS Recording to a decision just handed down in New York, a landlord can com pel his tenant to come to his office and pay his rent. He need not hunt up the tetiuut and ask: "How about that lit' tie matter?" but enn sit down and sue und secure judgment against him. A landlord telephoned his tenant last January and asked him to come around with the- rent, but the tenant said: "Come nnd get it." Wore words passed, with the result that both engaged law yers. It has just been decided in the landlord's favor, and it cost the tenant $200 to find this out. It Is not paradoxical, a it might seem, to call the ending of the college or school course commencement, says Youth's Companion. Every ending is also a beginning. Theory ends, prac tice begins. War ends, peuco begins. Life in one form ends, life in another form begins. Night endB, day begins. So study of books ends, nnd the appli cation of that study to the wider study of the world and to the tasks of life be gins. The schoolboy ends, the scholar ly man begins. That is the purport of commencement, and for it no fitter name could be devised. The American workman is limited only by circumstances within his own life, Uo or bis son may rise to the highest position in his nation withou the favor of heredity. The highest hon ors are attainable without the inter vention of royal favor. This is the in centive to American effort. Not that every Individual American thinks of this or appreciates the boon, not by any means. Dut a great many of them do fully understand what their national heritage means and the remainder are carried along in the irresistible current. The Mennonltea of Pennsylvania, whose general conference recently in terdicted the use of tobacco in any form, do not propose to let this prohi bition interfere with their worldly af fairs. The farmers of the colony keep right on planting tobacco, getting around it by saying that if their indus try is so displeasing to the Lord tho to bacco will not grow. The outlook at present is for a bountiful crop. A Maine farmer who raises fine traw bcrries came to Well village with a fine lot recently nnd commenced peddling them at IS cents a box. He sold quite a portion of his load at that price, when jc found that he must sell at two boxes for a quarter. Then he retraced his route and refunded the difference to all those who had paid the IS cents per box. During a thunderstorm in southern Missouri the other day, lightning struck the hat off a man's head and tore it to ribbons, but did not injure the roan, so it is claimed, but without affidavit. A Watertown (N. Y.) peddler has been aent to jail for four months be cscae he kissed a child without pas mlarioa being first obtained. A great lake steamer can go up to Hudson, 1 17 miles from the mouth; thnt is 130 miles from the nearest point on Lake Ontario nnd 24(1 from the nearest point on Lake Erie. if the. number of people dnily enter ing the city of London were, to be dis patched from any given station by train 1,1177 trains, euch conveying 0U0 per sons, would be required for the pur pose. Moreover, if all these trains were arranged In B straight line they would cover 221 miles of railway. The United States geographical sur vey bus just issued a mnp of New York and vicinity. The map is engraved on ropper and printed from stone. The cultural features, such as roads, rail roads, cities, towns, houses, etc., us well as the lettering, are brought out in black, and Otht r features, like swamps, etc., are clearly defined, making a valu able ehurt of tho territory. More mutches ure used In the United Kingdom than in any other one coun try in the world. It has been estimated that English people use an average of eight matches each person per day, and annually over l,700,000,Oiiu,r)QO are burned. The largest match' factory is in Austria, and each year it UBes 22,000 pounds of phosphorus, turns out 2,500, 000,000,000 mutches, and for the boxes alone 160,000 feet of wood are used. One. pound a day is said to lie the most that an organ grinder ever takes, while, with some exceptions, five shillings is nbout the least, so thnt a London or gan grinder may be regarded as n fair ly prosperous man. An organ can be hired from the maker for one shil ling sixpence a day, while the price of a new organ is 25. The cost of setting an organ to new tunes is about four pounds, and, since novelty is essential, this is a frequent source of expense. If you wish to make a fountain pen, take two ordinary steel pens of the same pattern and insert them in the common holder. The Inner pen will bo the writing pen. Between this and the outer pen will be held a supply of ink, when they are once dipped into the ink stand, that will last to write several pages of manuscript. It is not neces sary that the points of the two pens should be very near together, but if the flow of ink is not rapid enough the points may lie brought nearer by a bit of thread or a minute rubber band. PA AND THE PINS HABITS OF SPEECH. Faulty Uo(it lied la Child hood Is Hard t Correct ia After Life. Why do educated parents allow their children to contract habits of un grammatlcal speech that will have to be conquered in after-life?" asked a spin ster of a mother. "Hecause they hate to worry the poor little things about such matters when they are young nnd should be care free. It seems cruel to be all the time cor recting them and keeping them on their good behavior. Tbey will have to learn the rules of our dreadful language all too soon as it la." "Yes," said the spinster, "and in ad dition to learning to speak properly they will have to unlearn the tricks of speech in which they have been allowed te indulge nil their little lives. I know," laughing, "that there is much ridicule of 'old maids' children,' but I believe that my theory in this case is correct. It Is a positive unklndness to let your child double his negatives and say 'ain't,' when several years from now he will be harshly reproved for such lapses. The child must learn to talk, anyway, and is it not as easy to teach him to say 'It is I,' as 'It's me 7 And is it not as simple for the little tongue to lisp T saw it,' as T seen It 7 I love baby talk, and should not correct a child for his mispronunciation of hard words. As he grows older he will himself see his mistakes in that line and change them. But I insist that it is a parent's duty to make the difficult path to gram matical speech as easy-as possible by never allowing the little ones to stray from It In the beginning.' some 'I'll I n s He Knew Abont Thess und some Others That He Discov ered Vety Vnexpectedlr. Tho parlor lamp shed its peaceful rays on a happy group of five persons. There wus the head of the family and tho one who called himself the bead of the family, their two daughters, aged respectively 1 and 8, and a boy of 11 years. The father carefully removed a bent pin from the seut of the rocking chair and stood holding it between his thumb and forefinger. "My son," ho said, pompously, "did you ever, when you sow a discarded, bent, little pin, pause and reflect how long it took to make It and how ninny different hands contributed toward fashioning it as it is? In the first place there were the miners who dug the metal it is composed of; the men who transported it to the factories; the workmen who made the pins; the work men who sharpened them; the men who packed them; the dealers who sold them to tradesmen; the men that carried them to the stores and the sales men who retailed them over the counters- just think what an army of la borers handled thnt crooked little pin. "Yes," said his son and heir reflec tively, "but you left out a lot, pa." "How so?" asked the old gentleman. 1 In a tone of surprise. "Why, there was the old lady who bought a puper of 'em; there was her I biggest daughter, who took one to pin tip the rip in the wnist of her dress; the young man that told 'em at the office thnt it wos the cat that made 1 that railroad map scratch on tho back i of his hand; the girl's little brother, who borrowed the pin to make into a fish hook; the little sister, whose straw hat he took to keep his angleworms in, and bis old father, who sot down on the bent pin when his little boy got tired of fishing. They all had a hand in it, too." "No," said the old gentleman, aa be threw the pin In the fire and took up j his newspaper. "You ure drawing on I vour imagination, my son. I never ! found a pin that went through such a series of experiences in my life. "Maybe you haven't, but you will,' remarked bis son and heir. "No, no! Run out and play," re plied hla father. "I am going to alt In my " But before he sot down be noticed that hi eldest daughter was mending a tear in her dress, while the little one was wiping the stains from a straw hat) so he pushed his arm-chair aaide with a suspicious glance at a gleaming point on its seat and sank wearily on to the sofa. However, ere he bad. fairly touched Its surface be bounded toward the zenith with a yell of anguish. "The old man couldn't very well have helped finding it," said the small boy to himself, a he stopped to regain his breath two blocks oft, "cause there was a pin on every blamed piece of furni ture In that room. My, but won't ma give it to him for awearin' like that, though I" Harlem Life. No l.luht Drinker. Mudge Yes, I do take a few drinks of an evening, but none during the day. 1 am no daylight drinker. Yabsloy No cne ever accused you of being any kind of a light drinker. The Rival. Pnlnfal llecollectlona. Mrs. SHmdiet You don't seem to like rice very well, Mr. Peck. Henry Peck It is associated with one of the most distressing mistake I ever was guilty of. Tlt-BUa. Anyone Onafht to Know. Mistress (to Norah) What must be the condition of a person in order to be burled in consecrated ground? Norah (In great surprise) Dead, mum! Judge. o i Offer to the public a full line of Corrugated Roofing, Plain Tin and Galvanized Iroa Roofing and Spouting. Fence Wire,Tinware,Gran iteware. Etc. A full line of OIL & VAPOR STOVES for Summer cooking. Call and see our stock and learn our prices. SCHOCH & STAHLNECKER, 0PP. JAIL, MIDDLEBURG, PA. o o o i 0 o 0 ooooootooooflooo CS)OSjO)OOOOOSjOOOOOO0; FIRE, -LIFE -AND -ACCIDENT Insurance. b Snyder's old, and reliable oen'i Insurance Agency, SELINSGROVE, SNYDER COUNTY, PA- Blmor X7S7. Snyder, Agent, Successor to the late William H. Snyder. The Par-Excellence of Reliable Insurance is represented in the follow ng list of Standard Companies, from which to inuke a selection, Noue Better the world over. M k, LOCATION, FIRE Royal, Liverpool, Eng. (including foreign nssoth) $43,0)n,000.(Hi Hartford, of Hartford, Conn., (oldest American Co.) 8,645,788.63 Phoenix, Hartford, Conn. 5,888,088.07 Continental, New York, S, 754.908 7'.! German American, New York, 3,240,088.83 LIFE Mutual Life Inn. Co. New York, !r,:iW,.j38,983.i(i ACCIDENT Employers' Liability Assurance Corporation, Accident Ins. Co. Subscribed Capital of $3,750,000.00 Fire, Life and Accideut risks accepted at the lowest possible rate, jus tified by a strict regard to mutual safety. All just duims promptly and satisfactorily adjusted. Information in relation to all classes of Insur ance promptly furnished ELMER W. SNYDER, At., Telephone No. 182. Office on Corner Water & Pine Stb. Selinsuxove. Pa OCOOOOOOOOOOOOOCOCOOOCOOOO QOOOOOCOCOOOOCOGGC.XOu.: : CARPETS ! MATTINGS ! i i All Kinds. All Qualities. All Prices. THE whole lower floor of my store is taken up with Carets, Rugs, Art, Squares, Curtains, Windon Shades, Curtain Poles, Hassocks, Rug Fringe, Stair and Table Oil Cloths, &c, &. We can show you the largest and best selection of the above $ goods ever shown in Iewistown. oooo oo)oa)o Brunei la Carpet as low as 50 cents and up. Velvet Carpet as low as o cents and up. All Wool Carpet as low as 50 cents und up. Half Wool Carpet as low as 85 cents and up. Cotton Carpet as low as 22 cents and up. Rag Carpet as low as 20 cents and up. China and Japan Matting 100 aolls to select from. THESH GOODS! Compare quality and prices, you will find that our store is the place to buy at The goods are first-class, prices are the lowest, our rooms are cleau and no trouble U) show goods. Respectfully, W. H. FELIX, Lewlstown, Pa. fljQPfoopooflioqoooqooyooooEOOw Liberal Adjustments- Prompt Payments, REMEMBER H. HRRVEY BCHDCH, GENERAL INSURANCE AGENCY, SMILcINSGRGVE FAf Only the Oldest, Strongest Cash Companies, Fire, Life, Accident and Tornado. No Assessments No Premium Notes. Assets $11,055,513.88 9,853,628.54 2,409,584.53 The Aetna Founded A. V., lbiv Home 44 " 3853 American " " " 1810 The Standard Accident Insurance Co. The New York Life Insurance Co. The Fidelity Mutual Life Association. Your Patronage Solicited. AUDITOR'S NOTICE. 1 n tbe Estate of In the Orphan's court Henry Orubb, sr. .deed, f oi Snyder Co., P. The undersigned Auditor appointed by the Orphans' Court of Snyder oouuly, "to distribute tbe funds In tbe hands of Henry Orunb, Jr., Ad ministrator of the fetate o( Henr Orubb, Sr.. late of Centre Township. Snyder Co,, r'a., de ceased, as appears by bis first and final account, and to make report to tbe next term of Court," will alt at the office of Jacob QUbert. Esq, In Mlddlebunr. Snyder County, Ps.. on FKlfiAY. SEPTEMBER 1, at 11 o clock A. M... tor (be purpose of folflUlnr the dntles on bis appoint ment; when and where all parties in interest hall attend, and present their claims on said fUBd. HORACE ALLEM AN, AUff.8,18M. ' f'l ' The Pity of It. Snodgrass The world has a place for everybody. . w i .V. 1 ....V.l. I. 1 here's generally somebody else In It- OPIN AL ISSm'tmVSSS. -Bits. Peerless Pile Cure.- A MARVEL OP PERFECTION nlvi instant relief and permanent curf NO 8ALVB or UNPLEASANT Stl POSIT0RIES. Price to introdao $3.00. PEERLESS HEM ED Y CO. li Cedar St., New York 7.271ruo. OBTAINED- nATCMTQ ril I Lll I U TEEMS EAST Consult or communicate with, the Mitof of this paper, who wui gin sU needed Infori agricultural and residsnoa