The Middleburgh post. (Middleburgh, Snyder Co., Pa.) 1883-1916, July 24, 1902, Image 12

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HARNESS THE WIND.
How thr l'nnii Ilnutr I nil lie I'uily
!uiiil led llli an Atiiinilmire
tl( tilloll nlcr,
For many years we Iiave u!T -rei!
feriiuis iiu-niivi-nit'iu-f in ulitaiitintr a
Mlflii'U'Dt fcUpp'y i".f wan r f"r I:, use
us-e, opi'i'ially for the lal 1 it -0
mouVlis. l'ur mure than ',' iimi.tlis if
this tiir.e luive vairiti! water for
house Use a !istnriee f 4 Til fret and
hail to tramp tip hi!! 4',' feet.. We l;;ive
a tpring- rf water tiisehai ii alu.iu
one barrel if water every In ur vv intrr
nml s-mniuer, wet ur i!ry. This -prii:s?
is 4) feet lower than the Kitelietl door
lUli 470 feet (iistant. I.at summer we
lmi!t a reservoir or tai.k uf stutie laid
tip in l'e.rtJand eeini nt. ov er am! a roiif.ci
the npii'.tr. li -Iilin lt about 1 1 barrt Is of
OiJJIC 5( J
CiSTIP.H
i t --;! i i! alv:in-
iii . y n ) :;i i ; i:r!i-
l.fifli' to Kiteltetl
in l a ! v ;'. I: ii d iron t a nU
hiditlltir ' i.e ba t-n ! f w a : i r it'.- ide
kitvhi n e. ptt: an overtlnvv pipe in
tar.k a ltd i a rt t pipe uitdi r L't'oiim!
iitelies. half way to barn. Here we
built a e i v ! i T n 'It.ed up v it h brieh utid
rf meiiti il, holdini; ham-l.- of water.
We carry water ni.der irrniir.il from
this eUtern to barn where we have a
palvanied iron tank lioMinir kin bar
rels of water. We have a fall of ten
feet from cistern tn tank at barn. In
tank nt barn we have a tlnat valve that
regulates the Mipjih of water, keeps
the tank full at nil times. am! absolute
ly directs and manages this end uf the
business without inn at itanee nn our
part.
We put n force pump in sprinpr nnd a
teel tower .10 feet hiirh. and an eisrht
foot wheel at kitchen door. The pump
is operated with triangle and.whenwe
have a fair wind and want water from
the spring we simply raisoa leverand
et the mill in motion, and the water
(as pure as there i on earth) passes
throuph our kitchen nt the rate of one
barrel every 30 minutes. The outfit
and the wind does the work nnd don't
stop to rest. While many of our friends
and neiphbori are sufferinp preat in
convenience and naTusu'rp rnrVeit-ulMiTr
them by the unusual scarcity of water,
we feel truly thankful that we haveAn
abundance. It is a pood thinptohavea
pood credit nt a pood bank. The next
best tiling is to have n pood sprinp of
water on which we can draw at any
time. Sam .lures says the poet was a
prophet when he wrote:
"PfiiS r'i'i "r i vi ry rait k I rr te
A '. '.'.irk- Ir i v. ry 11 vv r.
Hi. h f r. !..is ::s r. .'..mmh .
Its ! r.- i v. ry I., nr."
- rea'i.-e that a in r
mat-v c:-.st hrU i- v ;. t.d
breee in
trladnes-..
ii 11 with
force vva
e'.ev.ite it
n-t deir
i'l abund
1". inner.
A pa--i.t
W I :l-lil: i '
ter ri iii
4: feel a
ab!" pi,,
JlTlci'.- .I.
br.
i e in I'rl 1:1
'U
lid
pllt It HI t lie
1 cur ilwi llli :
l'a-ii, i:i I'i.i'
TREES FROM NURSERIES.
Hiht 10 llanille Tlii ni ii n to lriurr
1 lirir 1 11 inu H lien I'lneeil ill
rw l.ncntioua.
It is S"im t b'.I.L' of a M '.i-lsee t' t n: u-rl.-u.t
tn s that have l.i-.-n r-e :.i-d
from a :!s:.-.i.t i.ur-, ry atni l.i.ve them
live. It used to be thought that there
jnust always be a large ju reentage of
loss anyway even under the best con
ilitions. I'.oth the nursery men and : In
danters have now learned that trees
f all kinds can be handled in a way
to insure their living when jdai-i-d in
their i.t-vv locatio:.-. A w ;, i
iree has its roots kept nu i-t by being
rolled in daniji moss and tied Ui in
bagging. The ld n l.etio- i f jiulling
trees out ' I the ground. -ji,.ing the.r
rix,ts and sending them away without
iDy jiroteetion was the cause ff many
a tree roiinr a fa II '.re. When these
trees arrived at the distant station
they were thrown out on the tilat f orin
:.i.d left ti.-r- 1 i.),.(.d io the heat id
the sun tr.d the i:ryir,L' trTeets of the
w.cd. Ill ti.e eoi.r-e of time the jur
1 baser drove s.n nnd :itd g"t J.:s con-
igr.ii.it.t. jerhtij-- a curj.je of days
j.fter tl.eiT t-rr.vai. J'.y that time their
roots vvere g, ! and dry. Jle i:r"vi-
J.oint LI,'
01:'.
i.- t rets in a;, v old
way. livi .:. he set tln-m it' the bi ,
)'h-i'jie wav .t i- altoge'l 1 r likelv
ihat a goo-j n.aiy tr,i. would ),av.
jurishu owing to the e-y.rg out if
the roots. Wtu-ii a large J:irt of hii
trees failed to gr w of course the
j;urseryina:i was b!an,e -so the
buy -r said. Jb- ' - 1 i"! t to some i-.v-;er.t
. in that 1 ! r,-i s i-r, .1 i, t away
-.'. !th roo r ' ''; r' ; f :' t , ' e:i. I'i
er'J : -.g t : - i : , r -' , .i - -a ; ei -1i.e
1 '' 1 - a;.; i),,.r n.oi.-1 s 1 ; j ij,i y
furrisl - Vy l.i- fiivMii n. J'roj-
r 1 r ' 1 ' e 1 . 1- ! 1 t i e 1 i tw
jt : t ' i '.- i 'tm ry tow o .the
1 " .' ;' - "'!- ass g- i f,
. ' T '' I: V , t .' Te a g oti
Jieahl.y no , Ir, -?tij-g a hi:m1rJ i,i
these i ! . - mm! b' no failure.
'ari;;er-.' J-. ievv.
J .,..,',. t'ie ),,,;.s s., 1
tljpy l-eome lx ilH arid ijuiet. J'he
lvepprV d isjxsitioii ia ciftn reCe.tel
lu Uie herd.
r
J.
UM ATi:i: SVsTiiM
w at ; r. We ti.it.
i.'t: iri n pi i ' I it
i s : n,;,. r 1 1 , i. ; i f
i-. hit. ai.d
COUNTRY IMPROVEMENT.
InlllTntluB f( the Ilrnatlfnt Sow
tioo llauil In Hand with lalti
vntlun uf thr I art ul.
There r. re places in the cottn
try that will in.t admit of the wi.r.l
iniproveinent. but ns we travel about
anioi.vr the farms we arc cinitp.'Ile.l
to Hi-know b'dire that town improve
ment soeielies arc very much Ueeth-d.
At Idaho Tails, In Idaho, one of I lie
larire.-t clubs in the slate is the Yil
lapc I niprov eii-.ent hneiety, entirely
coinpuse l uf women. The object of
these i bibs should be to make the
tnvts clean aid beautiful, to en-coiira-,re
private owners to keep their
lots nnd farms beautiful, and their
homes teai-hers of j-etineinent. The
wotuc'i of ( Hi. ton, N. V., have placed
fioxes iii the streets to receive waste
ptipers and similar rubbish. The
liural Art society, of the same town,
is planting linden trees, laying out
small parks and looking out for sim
ilar enterprises, which, while not of
little value, are not uf much cost. Ia
one of the Ohio towns 1 notice that
two rival club., are in the field. This
is perhaps a irood idea, for competi
tion in ilo'iuf if.ioil works us well as
in l iili.e-s i.iVairs. The present out
look is for a rally iur uf all enter
prise for lb - public welfare around
the se! Hi. i. ;;s J, center. If this
en n be brought about town oru'ania
lion will lui'i'ii s o:;ii't hin very dif
ferent fioin t!:.' pre-i nt ili'.ii'Lraiiva
tioli. which Ltet lb" state charter. It
will plate i'lte.il-eme nt the frrtit
and t.'i d to ili a' i" the sa'.oim and
similar in il notices.
Meanwhile ci ie i n i prov ctnent pocs
forward on iarallel lines with coiili
t ry improvement. It seems to be ue
eetited as an assured fact that cities
are to spread o'.it hereafter over a
very much larper territory. The ex
ecutive board of the American lcapue
for Civic ImptM'.etnenl met recently
at Sprinplielil, o. The league is to
hold a week's convention at ( haii
tainpt.i for di'-ciissiiiir all sorts of mu
nicipal reforms. It is believed that
political reform and physical reform
must pi mi together. The Spokane
floral association, which is a com
mittee of the State federation on
forestry and Outdoor Art, issues a
year book showinp how best to ad
vance the study and the work of civic
improvement, especially in the way
of plantinp (lowers and trees. There
really is no way any lonper of keep
ing civic art and rural art nepnrnted.
We believe the day in not far off
when every farmer will consider the
cultivation of the beautiful just as
.much a part of his business as the
useful. Then our farms will be con
nected together with long lines of
highways mostly trolley ways all
of which constitute extended niiblic
pnrks. E. V. l'ovvell, in N. V."l'rib
une. BROAD-TIRED WHEELS.
i
They Are Kiir Hrllf fir Ordinary
Farm Work Than Tlione Xow
In (irneral lap.
This liicture of two w heels, oncn wide
tire and the other n narrow, shows
why the former is easier t o draw and
ia better for ordinary farm work than
the latter. The narrow tire sinks into
the soft soil nnd the team is all the time
drawing- the load uphill. while thevv ide
WII'K AM' NAIiltuW TII'.ES.
t :re r".is v . r
Ite-illfs the ,
i by the r.ai r,
the crop by n.a
faee. and cl.i-ck
e surface i n a level,
t-i'tiee in draft the rut
v : ire vv rk- in jury to
i: in 1- vv the sur
1.:' if 1. i t liievinling
all further growtli. and dy n.aKint:
drains into dead furrows or down hills
to carry off lulde fertility, or. per
haps, start L'ui 1, Kv ery fa rmer needs
one wagon with low. broad-tired
wheels. Kami Journal.
henn Vlnirrlnl for Itoadi.
It has been di-cov ered that burnt
putnbo i a in' st serviceable material
for u-e or. ci : t.try roads. It i- not
quite as ruraidi- as is crushed stone,
but is far sup. :."r to i.irt. It- eo-t :
slight, a- ' can i'e jirodiieeii without
the use of skilled labor. 1 he burning
of the gumbo removes the quality
thp.t when the clay is wet causes stick
iness. J his iiuri.t t-lay is used lor cap-
pint' t'tie road. The road-bed must he
well drained and well built before the
top of burnt clay is put on. It h
claimed that if people will adopt the
burt.t- lay ide:.. roads as good as those
in Krai.oe car. be eon-tnieted in this
cmir.try with 1.0 adi.it joi.al txpi-m.i-tun-
over that i.ovv i.eing required hv
) the roads.
Ili.tv li Till I p Alfalfa.
'I his is the way a South Ihikota
farmer put up a . fa I fa: For stack bi t
tiiin use try old material eight or
Hi ii.i l s i ieji. seven or igbt feet
wide and as ii g as von need. Have
." ii.'- goii i'ry hay r straw ready,
tut the tilfaifu when alut half in
bioom n dry est part of day and let it
thoroughly wilt or cure until you can
pres it into a wad between your hands.
Haul to stack and put a layer ef eight
or '.en inches of alfalfa; then dry hay
,r itraw, thin alfalfa a foot; hay or
traw eijrht or ten iiit-hes, arjd to on
until a high ac wanted. Dry mate
rial must be eifht inches In middle to
ijotbitg at the edge cf clack. TbU
is the KtleLtific and only way to cure
alfalfa, ecd it niakea the best all
aruund focd in the world for all farm
LimaU. .
' f
Inrrmnra !m l!tf ttrvn Made lm
mui-l.-ii I. v liirlr l.rlmri In a
arlrt V'U-liIa.
While the w ord "iiiaeadnniie was
rapidly e-tal.!i-liiti its position ir. the
Ei'ii-h kinvriu ire, no less i,n authnrity
than .Kieiiiy I'.enthum fr;lve it a help
ing hail I on iis wc.y by ileela-l::; thl
"tin- success of Mr. Mc.Wlum's system
justilied the perpt t uat ion of his name
ill popular speech."
This i-. pi rliap. the most perfect ex
ample of all i f a spontaneous popular
imptll -e w hereby inentnr, who hud
beiietiied iii.-inkinii, was embalnied, g(i
to say, in his own invention, and his
nnmraamR
JOHN I,. MACADAM.
(Ills Name Will Alvv .ivs Itc Assoeiattd with
Kiiail-.MakiiiR.)
name, connected iniiissolubly with it,
w as handed dovv n t o f nt lire apes w ith 11
certainty that it would endure as lung
tit least as the language initialled to
exist.
I nt. curiously enough, at almost the
same time when the preat roadnmker
vv as achieving immortality, another in
ventor, w ith a no less obv iously Scotch
name, was treading the same path to
linguist ic fame.
The labors in the field of chemistry
which enabled Macintosh to perfect
and patent a new sort of clothing and
that inn time when traveling by stage
coaches rendered it particularly wel
come were almost as prolonged ns
those which qualified his fellow-eoun-t
ryman In a long life to solve the prob
lem of constructing a durable roadway
for wheeled trnflic.
A third notable specimen of the con
version of a name Into n vernacular
word may be taken from France,
where Dr. Guillotin found himself ef
fcually, though not perhaps very
agreably, immortalized in connection
with the lethal implement w hich still
bears his name. The popular belief
that he perished by the machine which
he had introduced appears to be erro
veona. ne Will ne Ihe Flrat Mlnltr at lh
tolled Matea to the New
Cnbnn Republic.
Herbert Goldsmith Sqtiiers, who
vvns prleeted by the president ns the
first rutted States minister to Cuba,
though a Canadian by birth, has spent
nearly all his life in the service of the
I'nited States. He vvns appointed a
lieutenant in the nrmy from Minnesota
in IsTT, but disliked his assignment to
the intantry, because there was 110 In
dian lighting in it, and exchanged into
the cavalry. Here he was'again disap
pointed. Instead of joining his regi
ment, be was sent to the cavalry school
HEUBEHT O. EQUIERS.
'He Will He the First fr.lud Statu Mlnla
ttr to Cuba. J
at l'ort Monroe, Kan. While there he
elojied with und married the daughter
of W. G. I'argo. pioneer in the espreas
business. (In the death of his wife a
few- years later he resigned from the
army, and shortly afterward entered
the diplomatic service us third secre
tary of legation at London. He alao
served in llerlin and St. 1'etersburff,
and wa then sent to Peking, where
his military knowledge and sound
judgment proved i f great value during
the siege of the legations.
TUI Il'iu Ixprra Tobacco.
"Old Peter Jenkins, of our town, bai
the only tobacco-chewing dog- I ever
heard of," tays a Bristol (Pa.) mania
the Philadelphia lieconl. "The dog ia
now over ten yenrs old. and, 10 far a
anybody knows, he ban been a slave to
the habit ever since he wan a puppy.
Peter himself says tie doesn't remem
ber how the pup acquired the tasje;
mavbe he was born with it. At any
rate. Peter never takes a chew without
offering one to the dog If he is around,
und the dog never refused. If Peter
should happen to forget he would soon
be forcibly reminded of bis oversight.
;Jt Is a curious thing to tee the dog
king with his head In his paws, work-
Ing his jaws over a Juicy quid. He swal
lows it. too, and It never seems tomaka
tl-n sick."
SAVED THEIR NAMES.
n
4
pajjifiSarr afi mil iiaiitii
HE TPtUSTEI) RHODES ;
Allied Eeit Always Followed ths
EarjliEhma's Leader ship.
Kowr He In ITte r.teit Mnn In thr So
Calleil i-Kcl.ir liruuii" ami Cno
at lUv- i..i Ii.'mi .Meu In
l lie V 01 lil.
Xow that t'eeil Ilhodes is pone the
attention of those political students
and speculators w ho are follow ing the
course of affairs in South Africa is
naturally directed to the man upon
whom will devolve the burdeu of car
rying out many of the niterpii.-cs left
unfinished by the dead dictator, for
Alfred licit, ti e physically insignifi
cant son of u Hamburg Jew, the secre
tive capitalist of f.ishopgate street,
the mining king of Kimherley and the
Kami, is the central ligure in the syn
ilrate in whose h.tuds now rests the
management of the llhoiies' interests.
Some nun say lin.t A. 'red licit i.-the
richest man in the world, bin that is
probably 1111 exaggeration, although if
the South African war results in an
early settlement advantageous to the
l'.riiish he will resume hi.- money mak
ing upon a. scale which will probably
double nnil even treble, within a few
years his present conservatively esti
mated fortune of $i::o.i;jn.(it:().
It is a coincidence v on h not ing t hat
r.eit was born in the same year as
Cecil 1. holies, lie was well educated,
for his father vva a man of means, if
not of re 11 ne men t . vv h o under -I nod t hat
the eiiueatii n denied to himself might
be of inestimable vali.e to his si n.
When young Alfred left school 1'eit
pere got him a good place in a bank
ing house, where the bey lib play ed lit
tle of the remarkable capacity for
money milking which was afterward
to place him among the world's multi
millionaires, lie left the bank at the
tiffo of 22, drawn to South Africa by
ALFRED IIE1T.
(The Blgceet Man In the So-Called '
' Uroup.")
'Kafflr
the wonderful tales of the diamond
fields in Kimherley. He reac'ieil there
but little in advance of his future as
sociate nnd friend, Cecil John llkodcs.
He made money at Kimherley in a
Email way at first, afterward increas
ing liis store, until he came in touch
with Rhodes and helped the latter to
perfect his great consolidation scheme,
which placed the Kimherley mine own
ers in a position to dictate prices to
the diamond merchants of the world.
When Miotics, licit and the late Har
ney llarnalo becamv life governors,
under the original charter of the De
Peers company, they little thought
that the provision securing them a
fourth part of the protits after a divi
dend of :m per cent, had been paid to
the shareholders would prove in it -elf
a source of enormous revenue. In the
decade iniinei'iately preceding the liner
war this fourth part aggregated near
ly $10.nnn.f;i:o. or Sl.on.'i.oiiO a year. In
addition to this income, licit had the
dividends upon his' lie Peers stock, his
interest in the great banking firm of
Jules Porges tv ( o.. a nervvard succeed
ed hv Wcrnher, P.eit & Co., nnd a pre
ponderant share in several enorinoiislv
lucrative mining vent ures in t he neigh
borhood of Johannesberg.
Xot possessing an aggressive and re
tistent personality licit naturally fell
tinder the spell of t ceil llliodes, w lio.-e
wealth was never more than a fourth
of his own. In the st rongly marked in
dividualit v of the Knglishinnn the tier
man recognized the very antithesis of
himself and readily submitted to n
leadership which he knew it would
have been useless to dispute. Like
many other money lords licit has been
credited with w orking harder than any
of his employes nnd with leading the
life of an ascetic. All this is pure fic
tion. He is not a hard worker, or nt
least he ha the faculty of accom
plishing, a good deal without putting
forth any particularly strenuous ef
fort. He spend much of his time in
entertaining, in n, quiet wny. nt his
house in Park lane and in riding and
playing golf. His oflices are the finest
in London nnd when their quiet, unob
trusive and diffident owner is there, in
his inner sanctum, he is an extremely
difficult man to approach. His staff is
said to he better paid than anyothel
in London.
1 be hitm OKI Slory.
J. A. Kelly relnf en an experlnece
similar to tint which him happmed
in almost every neiKbborhood in the
United StatPH and ban beui told and
re- told bv houHiinds of ot Lei s. He
fays: "Lust Bum titer I bod an attack
of dysentery and purchased a bottle
of libaiuliprlniii'8 (Jolii'i Cholera und
Diairboea Remedy, which limed ac
cording to directions and with en
tirely jutisfactoiy iohuUp. The
trouble was controlled much quicker
tban former attacks when 1 used
other remedies." Mr. Kelly is a well
known citizen of Henderson, N. C
For sale by the illddleburg Drug
Store,
"f'niTW H MlillMl,- fit l1'f j Ufl
F03TMASTKR T0Q E0ICEST-
Could Have Adiaurrd Ills Ottter and
Urrrmrd Ilia I'nr hj n Small
Invratmrut.
"I noticed," said r.n old revi lent; of
rhieago.nccorilingtothe Tribune, "the
recent story of the Nebraska post
master who bought goods, and stock,
and lands with stamps to such an ex
tent that his oilice went into another
rlassilicallon and his salary was
raised several hundred dollars a year.
"That reminds me of another post
master out in Missouri who didn't
know half ns much, and who, witlu ut
any increase in salary, had to buy
drinks for half the town just after
he failed to rise to an occasion.
"It was under the first Cleveland!
administration. The post office had
been in the fourth class till its life,
and ns there had never been any pub
lic stir about putting it into any
other class the new postmaster sat
down on his job and sold stamps nt
current rates, making the usual set-
! tlciueiits and thankful for small fa
I vors,
"lint in the third year of his i.i
I ciinibcncy of the office things took n
spurt, nnd when it came to a final
settlement for the year the receipts
showed that the fourth-class office,
had sold things! mucilaginous to
within $:!.s:, of the $2.0(iu limit, mak
ing it a third-class oilice.
"And, don't you know. Smith turned
in the proceeds of that last quarter
without n thought of buying that
.l!.S."i worth of 's, .Ts nnd a's neces
sary to make his ofaec of the third
class for a whole vcar."
PRESENT VOLCANIC ACTIVITY.
HeKlitnM of Hit A'eNterri llcniiMphcrp
'I lint re thp Most l.lnlile to
in I plietiv ill.
The active volcanic proilps of the
western hemisphere occur in live
widely separated regions, says Prof.
Robert T. Hill, in Century.
1. The Andeaii group of volcanoes
of the equatorial region of western
South America.
2. The chain of some 25 preat cin
der cones which stretch enst and
west ncross the south end of the
Mexicnn plateau.
3. The Central American group,
with its 31 active craters, extending
diagonally ncross the western ends
of the east nnil west folds of the Car
ibbean corrugations, fringing the Pa
cific side of Guatemala, San Salvador
nnd Costa Rica. This is seperated
from the Mexican group on the north
by a large nonvolcnnic area, the isth
mus of Tehuantepec, nnd on the
south from the Andean volcanoes by
the isthmus of Pannmn, where no ac
tive volcanoes are found.
4. The chain of volcanoes of the
Windward islands, marking the east
ern gate of the Caribbean sea, stand
ing in a line directly across the east
ern termini of the Caribbean moun
tains, trending east and west, and
parallel to the Central American
group similarly situated nt tlieir
western termini.
4,T am nKlnrr 11 linv nf fl II n 111 1 1 Or
Uin's Stomach & Liver Tablets and
. I II .1 I. L .!.. .
mm mum me uest hhur ior my
itoinach I ever used.'' says T. W.
llohinson. Justice of the Pence,
Loomis, Mich. These Ta'olots not
iiily correct disorder of the utotn
ich but reuulnte the liver and
boweU. They are easy to take and
pit), sant in effect. I'rice -" cents
nor box. For sale bv the Middle-
bur g Dins Store.
UC1
FREt
The
Grreat American
FARMER
INDIANAPOLIS, IND.
The Leading' Agricultural Journal of the Nation. It
Edited by the HOX. JOS. H. BRIGHAM, Assistant
Secretary of Agriculture of the Uuitod States, Assisted
by an AbleCorjis of Editors.
THIS valuable journal, in addition to the logical treatment of all
agricultural subjects will also discuss the great issues of the day,
thereby adding zest to its columns and giving the farmer something to
think alxut aside from the every day humdrum of routine duties.
TiTorli Fie i One: Itie UiieWi Post
The Leading County Paper and THE AHERICAN FARMER
Both One Year for One Dollar.
This unparalleled olfer is made to all new subscribers
and all old ones who pay up all arrears and renew with
in thirty days, Sample copies free. Address :
POST,
A Good Hearted
Man,
or in ether vo;ds, men
. I L "I
.Rood sound hearts; are not very
numcr.-.m.'' The here a sin,.
......1.. v. .- ,-iuvii yi rtias If,
iica:t uii.'ase
daily chron
icled by the
press, isprrvof
of the n'.ann
ino; preva
lence el this
dangerous
complaint,
and as no one
can foretell
lust when a
fatal collapse J' A Kreamer.
vill occur, the danger of neg
letting treatment is certainly a
very risky matter. If you are
" a r ' breath, have pain in
Arft i i' mothering spells, pal-'
Jlta ion, enable to lie on side,
fKpc-iaTv the left, you shoulj
-2u Asking
Maes-Heart Cure.
J. A. K reamer of Arkansas City, Kan?,
saysf "My heart was so bad it was im!
possible for me to lie down, and I eou'. 1
neither sleep nor rest. My decline was
rapid, and I realised 1 must get hx-l;i
soon. 1 was advised to try Dr. Mil, v
Heart Cure, whveh I did, and candid.y
believe it saved my life."
Dr. Miles' Remedies are aold
by all druggist en guarantee
Or. Mllee Medical Co., Elkhart, Ind.
1 lie llcxl Liniment Tor Strains'
Mr. F. IL Wells, the merchant at
Deer Park, Long Inland, N. Y.,
pays: "I always recommend Cham
berlaiu's Palu lialin ns tho best lini.
inent for strains. I used it lust
winter for a severe lameness in the
side, re-ulting from a strain, and
was greatly pleased with the quick
relief nnd cure it effected." For sale
by the Middleburs Drug Store.
WINDSOR HOUSE
W. II. HI TI.F.K, Proprietor
418 Market Si., Harrisburg Pa.,
(Opposite P. R. R. Ilepot Entrance)
smiled Tor All TrnlDira
Rooms, 25 and 50c. Good Meals, 25c
Good accommodation. It
O. U OWENS-
ATTORNEY AT.LAW
OCB SnClALITT; TYROXB, PA,
Collections and Reports.
References, first National Bank. Neartn
Towns Keprauonted : Bollwood, Altoona, Ilolll
If ilfnature Is on every box of the genulna
.aiative Brotno-Quinine Tbiu
remedy th 'lire a cold In one day
Agents Wanted
MFKOt'T. DF.WITT TAI.M C.E. by IiIh
Hon, HKV. PRANK DUWITT TALMAUE ami
niiHi.ciiite eililors ot Chrinllnn Ilenild. Only
book endorsed by TivhniVKe fiiinlly. Knornious
prollt (or iiKcuts who set iiiiikly. Outllt ten
ri'iitw. Write iinmediiitely tiitrk A- t'o., 'X'i'i
S Ith SI., IMilla., !(. Mention tile Post,
5 It.
To all our
Subscribers
Mlddleburgh.
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