‘A Bold Step. To overcome the well-grounded and reasonable objections of the more intel ligent to the use of secret, medicinal com- pounds, Dr. Ri Vi. Pierce, of Buffalo, N. Y.. some time ago. decided to make a bold departure from the usual course pursued put-up medicines for do- so has published broad- Fy: to the whole world, a full e list of all tho ingredients 1position of his widely es. Thus he has taken Atrons and patients jnto Thus too he has re- FEAR OF SPACE. /[|NIGEAND TRIE RENEW A Disease LiKe the Fear of Shut-in | Places. DUN'S WEEKLY SUMMARY Factory Wheels Begin to Whirl Again and Jobbers Are Secur- ing Orders. 2 more potent remedy in the roots and herbs of the field then was ever produced from drugs. : In the good old-fashioned days of our grandmothers few drugs were used in medicines and Lydia kK. Pinkham, of Lynn. Mass., in her study of roots and herbs and their power over disease discovered and gave to the women of the werld a remedy for their peculiar ills more potent and efficacious than any combination of drugs. who should seek a shelter that their forefathers would have scorned. The habit has not yet been fully ac- quired by all ‘our race, for we even at this late day, many persons of human status to whom the shel- ter of a roof is abhorrent, and who prefer, in the worst of weather, to lie out under a hedgeside rather than submit to the restraint of roof and walls. Agoraphobia (or - fear of open not nearly as common a malady as its antithesis, claustropho- bia (fear of shut-in places.) Both are curious and somewhat anomalous states of mind, in which an aversion known and admitted by the subjects of it to be irrational and absurd, nevertheless dominates conduct, prompts the execution of irrational spaces) is celebrated his numer phe the country are reported for the first time in several months. The response is immediate in all branches of business. Crop prospects have im- proved . greatly, : although: there still remains much lost ground to re- gained. Weather conditions throughout seasonable of doubtful merits, and made emedics of Known Composttion. is bold step Dr. Pi be LYDIA E. PINKHAM crud > Not only does the wrapper of every bottle of Dr. Pierge's Golden Medical Discovery, the famous medicine for weak stomach: torpid liver or hiliousness and all catarrhal diseases wherever located, have printed upon it, in plain English, a full and complete list of all the ingredients composing it, but a small book has been compiled from numerous standard medical works, of all the different schools of practice, containing very numer- ous extracts from the writings of leading practitioners of medicine, endorsing in the strongest possible terms, each and every ingre- dient contained in Dr. Pierce’s medicines. One of these little books will be mailed free to any one sending address on postal card or by letter, to Dr. R. V. Pierce. Buffalo, N. Y., and requesting the same. - From this little book it will be learned that Dr. Pierce's med= fcines contain no alcohol: narcotics, mineral agents or other poisonous or injurious agents and that they are made from native, medici- pal roots of great value; also that some of the most valuable ingredients contained in Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription for weak, nervous, over-worked, “run-down,” nervous and debilitated women, were employed, long years ago, by the Indians for similar ailments affecting their squasws. In fact, one of the most valuable medicinal plants entering into the composition of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Pre- scription was known to the Indians as «8quaw-Weed.” Our knowledge of the uses of not a few of our most valuable native, me= dicinal plants was gained from the Indians. As made up by improved and exact pro- cesses, the "Favorite Prescription” is a most efficient remedy for regulating all the wom- anly functions, correcting displacements, as prolapsus, anteversion and- retorversion, overcoming painful periods, toning up the nerves and bringing about a perfect state of health. Sold by all dealers in medicines. ELECTROCUTES GERMS How Cliicago Chemist Preserves Milk | —Can Make-Water Pure.’ The bacillus "will meet death by electrocution, ould a new method of sterilization proclaimed by: Dr. Corl H. von of Chieago come into general practice. ” wires charged with sitive and caative “currents and tallic preferably cop- per, are his w of” 2 With one w yiied to the out- side ; i the fluid it contains, he and e ath is meted out unwelcome i “Steril said Dr. Kl&eh= “not.- only all the ordinary germs and bacilli; but it likewise kills f Klein death. the other resting claims to hod,” kills new met Yon the fermentive germ f. becomes a most wonderful tive. 1 tried it en'a bowl of milk last Thursday.. That milk is as sweet and pure as possible” Dr. von Klein purposes trying it on fruits and vegetables. Iie also hopes to evolve a plan by which a copper mesh incerted the = water mains can sterilize every drop of water that passes through. 1806 the Most Fatal Year. The year 1906, according to in- surance company, established the most fatal record of disasters on land and sea, of any year in the history of this country. Motor: cars contributed to fatalities not quite deaths; 1,184. persons were killed-in burning buildings, 2,985 were drowned. Explosions killed 623. Falling and collapsed buildings cut off 483 lives. Five hundred and ninety-nine persons were killed in mining accidents, 760 in cyclone storms, 205 died from lightning strokes, and electricity numbered 176 persons as its victims. Six hundred persons were killed by the accidental discharge of firearms, and exactly the number per- {shed because of elevator accidents. Seven thousand pedestrians met death ¢n the public streets. Teas killed 5.000. The loss of life by ocean disasters during 1906 was 2.193, and on the great lakes and riv- ers lives were lost. Deaths due to hunting accidents totaled 74. Thir- ty-four thousand were killed while doing their day's work. Sixty thou- sand ners maimed and lost pita hie : arms or eye- sgight.— Chicago Journal. 26 Old Game Revived. of 1907 prom- gratifying to note that this famions game of the sixties, which at one time had become prac- tically extinct, bids fair to revive its bygone glory. in an 560 same 18% were foal less. The ercquet ise well, asnects avd 3 3 ana. 1t is DOCTOR'S FOOD TALI. Belection of Food Ore of the Important Acts,in Life. Most ‘A Mass. doctor says: “Our health and physical and mental happiness are so largely under our personal con- trol that the proper selection of food should be and is one of the most im- portant acts in life. “On this subject, I may say that I know of no food equal in digestibility and more powerful in point of nutri- ment than the modern Grape-Nuts, four heaping teaspoons of which is sufficient for the cereal part of a meal, and experience demonstrates that the user is perfectly nourished from onc meal to another, “I am convinced that the extensive and general use of high class foods of this character would increase the term of human life, add to the sum total of happiness and very consider- ably improve society in general. 1 am free to mention the food, for I personally know of its value.” Grape-Nuts food can be used by dpabes in arms or adults. It is ready gooked, can be served instantly, either cold with cream, or with hot water or bot milk poured over. All sorts of puddings and fancy dishes can be made with Grape-Nuts. The food is concentrated and very economical, for four heaping teaspoons are sufficient for the cereal part of a meal. Read the little book, “The Road to Well- ville,” in pkgs. ‘There's a Reason.” -tall, vertical structure. closed acts and renders certain rational and desirable acts impossible. If I had to speculate on the origin of these curious antl spuriaus instincts, for such they may be termed, I should assign them to the revival of in- stinets which existed in full force and had great biological value in our remote ancestry, but which in most of us have long been obsolete. When our ancestors were arboreal in habit, this habit was their salvation from extinction. Feeble in body, destitute of weapons and of defensive armor, devoid of means of concealment, their safety from carnivorous. foes lay in the agility with which ‘they climb out of reach, and in the accu- racy with which they could-leap from bough to bough and from tree to tree. Whenever they descended to the ground they were in danger. It is on the ground that the greater carnivora pursue their prey, and adapted as our ancestors were to arboreal life, their progress on--open ground - Was un- doubtedly less rapid than among the tree and most probably less rapid that of their principal foes. Among the tree tops . they were secure. There no enemy could vie awith them in activity or hope to overtake them: but on the ground they were at a disadvantage... On-the flat they had no chance against the spring of the panther or the speed and wind of the wolf; but once let them attain the security of the forest and they could grin at their enemies be- low. The further they ventured from their secure retreat the greater the . peril they. were in; the .nearer their refuge, the more complete their of security. Sinee instinets, using the term in the ef -men- tal-eravings, become adapted to modes life, which in turn they dictate, may be sure that in the arboreal stage of their existencé aversion ex. isted to any extended excursion from their places of security and refuge. Near to trees, they were in safety; far from trees they were in continual danger, and therefore in continual un- easiness. In such a situation they had an abiding and well founded dread and sense of impending danger. This is the state of mind which, as it seems to me, is reproduced in sim- ilar circumstances in -agoraphebia. The craving of the subject of this malady is to be near, not trees nec- essarily, it is true, but near to some Away from such a structure, he has just the feel- ing of dread, of impending danger, of imminent disaster, of something dreadful about to happen that a man would have who was walking through a jungle infested by tigers, or that a child has when alone in the dark. And this is just such their natural habitat. I have seen a woman af- fected with agoraphobia get from one side ‘of a court to the other by not only going around by the wall, and: touching it = all the way, but squeezing herself up against it, and clutching at the bare surface. Suffer- from this malady cannot cross an open space. They cannot venture more than a step or two from some vertical surface. They feel no un- easiness in a -colonnade, open all around them though it be. Their reasen them that their dread groundless, but reascn is powerless against instinct, and an imperious instinet shouts “danger” in their ears. tops, than sense sense of we ers tells is The opposite malady, claustropho- bia, seems to me to reproduce a state of affairs of much later occurrence in our racial history. When habits‘ at length began to doned, and our anthiopoid began to shelter low in caves ground, there must often have been a conflict between the immeasurably old, primitive habit of recosting under the open sky and the modern inno- vation - of taking shelter from. the weather. The of confinement must been very irksome. Wg nray that there was no sur- den revolution ‘in the mode of life. The new. habit ‘was adopted very gradually. Only in very vio- lent storm would the first indwellers creeps into a hole for shelter, and they would soon find their circum- scribed quarters intolerable, and brave the elements as soon as the weath- er began to moderate. Perhaps the new instinct was first implanted in the young by the par- ents bestowing their tender offspring in holes during their own absence or when cold and rain became severe. It- is not easy to teach an old dog new tricks; but a young wild rabbit or squirrel, taken at a very - early age from the nest, never acquires the untamable wildness that is so conspicuous a feature in the charac: ter of thefiold. In any case, the habit of taking shelter in more or less spaces was a habit of slow and gradual acquirement, and we may be sure that it was not ac- quired without many a relapse and many a backsliding. "We can ahnost hear the jeers and scoffs of the Stout old Tory anthropoids at the effem- inacy of their degenerate juniors, arboreal be aban- ancestors themselves in hol- trees, and holes in the Sense have be sure sone could | ‘was It is to the imperfect acquisition of this later instinct to seeking shel- ter in confined spaces, or is to the reassertion over more remote and earlier craving for the open sky, someness . of confinement, that the malady of eclaustrophcbia seems to me to be due. In the subject of this malady is revived in its original strength that craving for open sky and open air, for possibility of move- ment in every direction, which were ingrained in our ancestors Dy their free arboreal lives, and which were overcome with such difficulty when first they descended to inhabit terra firma. Like the sufferer from ago- raphobia, he who suffers from claus- trophobia experiences -the- revival of an ancestral instinct that has been lost more recently than_that revived in agoraphobia. Since it, existed down to a later date, since. it has been more recently lost, it is more easily. revived, and this is the rea. son, I think, that claustrophobia is it of the instinct of and irk- so much less rare than agoraphahia: Whatever their origin, the two mal adies are inveterate. They are refractory to : remedies. They are recalcitrant to treatment endure for years, and often lifetime.—IlL.ondon lancet. equally for a HEN’S FAIR NAME SMIRCHED. Helped the Geose Chicks From Four The proudest goose on belongs to Alexander B. Riverhead. She has put of the talents to the blush put most get-rich-quick shanic. Swe is running close second to the goose of golden egg fame. She is the best business proposition on Long Island. % For out of hatched two goslings. Geese are not commoaly to perform prodigious, feats. there notorious lack of "initiative, common sense and executive ability has led to the application of their generic name to certain humans from time immemorial. But this goose of Sovars’ is different from her tribe. By way of fooling her masger she first laid just four eggs. That's a very small shawing for ‘a healthy goose, and Soyars was downright mad. So he put the Queen Goose in a little nest box all by herself, boarding up the exit, threw in some feed and said: “There set now, darn your feathers,” and went away. Jut the Queen Goose refused to set. So to speak, she had something under her wing, and upon the morning of the third day, when Soyars went back she modestly arose from the nest and departed, Hatch Five Eggs. Long Island Soy of She the parable She Las Zanres to one egg this = godse supposcd In fact By this time Soyars was mad clean through. To shame the recreant goose he got a hen and put it on the eggs. The hen was surprised, but obedient, and sat three weeks tor all she was worth, while the Queen Goose languished in disgrace. At end of the third week, when the egus failed to produce, the hen quit in disgust. She didn‘t know that it tales an extra week to hatch a gosling. Next day the Queen Goose saunter- ed back to tie nest.” Soyars found her calmly setting and was so enrag- ed that he feared he'd wring her neck if he pulled her off the eggs. He decided he would stay away from her altogether, and thus the goose got her chance to make the miracle, Z00se +e Soyars: and his family sat on their front stoop Sunday night drinking in the nectar of the belated spring. He telling his that if all the were such geese as the Queen Goose they'd have to sell the hateh- ery and open a roadhouse or a clgar stand. wife gcese Then a parlous théir®*cars, and the house, head her soul for mor: trinmph, waddled with little the “Quack, quack.” passed by the and paraded progeny quacking around the high and exultant means of the Queen GOOSC goslings paddling reached corner five rear, quack, .quackety, quack thunderstruck fa round the corner 1er chasing ludicrously hind, A second time. the Queen mother passed the porch in her triumphal march. ‘While they were out of sight she had taught her quintet to help in the cheering, and this time they helped her out with a chorus of “yap-vap-vaps’” that made the discon: certed Soyars wonder if they weren't taking English and hurling opprobrium at him. Sovars rushed from the piazza to the goose house. He thrust his hand into the nest of the Queen Goosa ana pulled out just four broken shells. And as he turned in amazement the Queen Googe strutted up with 3 quacking laugh and the Miracle Gos ling began ironically caressing its bill with its claw.—New York Ameri can. . rather iti. ‘makers of pig They! of | searching in| she boasted stridently as enc, With scarcely an exception the week's news is encouraging, espec- ially from the West. Confidence grows with the crops. Orders: come forward to the leading centers for large fall and winter shipments of all classes of merchandise. Most man- ufacturers are fuily occfipied on old contracts. There is little prespect of much idle machinery, except on ac- count of the customary midsummer repairs and inventories. I.ess new business is received iron, partly . because consumers have provided tor rcquire- ments well into the future, and- in part on account of the large contracts already placed with furnaces, which prevent any pressure to obtain. or- ders. It is also abour tunie ior in- ventories, and aetivity is sea- sonable. There is not the: yielding in quota- tions that would accompany a setback in business. The new monthly reec- ord of ore shipments June not suggest expectation of idleness at pig iron furnaces. Some -~ building operations hav been deferred by monetary cer crop uncertainties. but“diMarge tonnage of less in does “shapes is offered each week, particu- larly in bridge and construction work. Less ‘activity is reported in the primary cotton market, but: there no evidence of fveakness. on contrary, several quotations higher, print cloths Tulng close to 5 After the recent unprecedented tivity some diminution in demand ‘natural and wholesome. [t is no less diffi¢ult to Secure ea deliveries. Most manufact have as much forward business they “are willing to: accept. There i3: constantly legs tion to undertake contracts for vear’s shipments. Conservative mill owners are striving to eliminate ihe speculative feature . ‘e” of the uncertainty regarding deliveries new crop raw 1 is the ac- is disposi hecayce” material bility of cancella is light. MARKETS. PITTSBURG. Wheat—No. 2 red Rye—No. 2 Corn—No. 2 yellow, ¢ No. 2 yellow, shelled Mixed ear.. Oats—No..2 white............i.. No. 3 white Flour—Winter patent... Fancy straight winters. Hay—No. 1 Timothy Clover No. 1 Feed—No. 1 white mid. ton. Brown middlings....... Dairy Products. Butter—Elgin creamery Ohio creamery Fancy country ro Cheeso—Ohio, new.. New York, new Poultry, Etc. Hens—per 1b Chickens—dressed... Eggs—Pa. and Ohio, fresh..... Frults and Vegetables. Cabbage—per ton. Ontons—per barrel BALTIMCRE. Flour—Winter Patent Wheat—No. ¥ red... Corn—Mixed,...... Bees... 0. - Butter—Ohio creamery PHILADELPHIA. Flour—Winter Patent.. Wheat—No. 2 Corn—No. 2 mixed Oats—No. 2 wt Eso Butter—Creamery... ae Eggs—Penasylvania firsts red. NEW YCRK. Flour—Patents..... Oats—No, 2 white. . Butter -Creamery ..... i Lggs—State und Pennsylvania... LIVE STOCK. Union Stock Yards, Cattle. Pittsburg. Fresh Cows an > Hogs. Prime héavy. 5. 0... is Prime medium weight | Bést heavy York . Good light York 10 £8 Prime wethers, cli] Good mixed.......5. Fair mixed ewes and wethers Culls and common. .... Calves. Vealcalves....... ....... 0... Heavy and thin calves Scientists say that a sea has been known to live for anemone 50 years. The St. Louis Pocsi-Dispatch “I{ is a good thing to tak : of interest in sports; the mere est refreshes mind and is a better thing to take par! it means healtl, strength and life—the betterment of the individual and the betterment of Any body. - Bu in sports; longer the race.” The railroads are making money, asserts the Birmingham Age-Herald, but the sfock halted in the midst of several large uncut me: ons, nr waterers are by \ - FITS. St. Vitus'Dance: Nervous Dice: next’ ia 3Y ble C 1 . 7 Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound is an honest, tried and true remedy of unquestionable therapeutic value. During its record of more than thirty years, its long list of aetual cures of those serious ills peculiar to women. entitles Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound to the respect and confidence of every fair minded person and every thinking woman. When weakness, displacements, women are troubled with irregular or painful functions, ulceration or inflammation, backache, flatulency, general debility, indigestion or nervous prostration, they should remember there is one tried and true remedy, Lydia L. ham’s Vegetable Compound. Vink- No other remedy in the country has such a record of curés of female ills, and thousands of women residing in every part of the United States bear willing testimony te the waenderful virtue of Lydia E. Pink- hams Vegetable compound and what it has done for them. Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women to write her for advice. She has guided thousands to health. For twenty-five years she has been advisit f+ sick women free of charge..She is the daughter g in-law of Lydia E. Pink- ham and-as her assistant for years before her decease advised under her ¥ immediate direction. indian Sign. Language. When an Indian: paints his cheeks! caubs a the yellow world in scarlet lines -and square on his forehead that he is in love. "hen he covers his: face with black upon an ochre se to—ah. I'm it—to- get as he possibly can, ircles are on each cheek- angle of blue ison ithe voung brave 1s going out face horse. aints white rings around running for office, he te for medicine .man d: the white ‘rings ouzht to be elected the wisdom of the “Times-Pemocrat. knows siz- base almost just as or sig- nianently cured by Dr. Kline's Gre Nerve Restorer: 32 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr. H. R. Kline, Id..931 Arch &%., Phiia., Pa. nericans Excel British. the American more aceurate ers.and of English than 1glish” themselves. At Harvard there are 20 professors of hile at Oxford tirere is. only America, Germany. ang. France, s, ‘are all outdoing England: in schol a critic becoming writers Whole Body Covered With Cuban Itch—Cuticura Remedies Cure at Cost of 75c. “My little boy, when only an infant of three months, caught the Cuban Itch. Sores broke out from his head to the hot- tom of his feet. He would itch and claw himself and cry all the time. He could not sleep day or night, and a light dress is all he could wear. I called one of our best doctors to treat him, and his treatment did not do any good, hut he seemed to get worse. He suffered so terribly that my husband said he believed he would have to die. I had almost given up hope when a lady friend told me to try the Cuticura Remedies. 1 used the Caticura Soap and applied the Cuticura Ointment and he at once fell into a sleep, and he slept with ease for the first time for two months. After three applications the sores began to dry up, and in just two weeks from the day 1 commenced to use the Cuticura Rem- >s my baby was entirely well. The treat- nent only cost. me 75¢.. and 1 would have gladly paid $100 if I could not have got it any cheaper. 1 feel safe in saying that the Cuticura Remedies saved his life. He is now a boy of five years. Mrs. Zana Miller, Union City, R. F. D., No. 1, Branch Co,, Mich., May 17; 1008.” L000 (G00 acres It. would take It to 1 which prod mount of grain per. | Postal has development : the rev city Here are names. E DAISY FLY KILLER !estroys ail the Te fires and affords comfort ro every Home -—1t ( Ee) sleeping EP ! HARGLD SOMERS, PERFECT is what'every mk owl." prided; For #100, Aver Wat : .»- 1101 Real Esta ust Bldz., otent.” or (1 nik Y Guaranteed to cure or you Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.Y. 59§ ANNUAL SALE, TEN MILLION BOXES To convince hy wonman tliat Paxa- tine Antiseptic 1 rove her do all kv. send her box of Pa ttons and your namie and ¢ PART fections, such catarrh and inflar nine ills; sore mouth, by direc ative power over t ordinary and give Thousands of wor ommending it eve aay; druggists orbs n Remember, IT COSTS YOU NOTHING TOT! THE R. PAXTON {0O., Bostoi, free a hook genuin P.N. U. 26, -1007. If afllicted sini Thompson's Eve Water imports from. abroad. eyes The different gil Stove The improbed gil Stove Gives best results. Reduces fuel ex- pense. A working flame at the touch of the match. “Blue Flame” means the hottest flame produced by any stove. The New Perfection will make your work lighter. Made in three sizes, with heat the kitchen. Will not over- one, two, and three burners. Every stove war- ranted. pearest agency. If not at your dealer’s, write to our Te Kayo Lamp gives a clear, steady light. latest improved burner. Fitted with Made of brass throughout and beautifully nickeled. Everylamp warranted. Suitableforlibrary, dining-room, parlor or bedrocm. If not at your dealer’s, write to our nearest agency. eT ATLANTIC REFINING COMPANY (incorporated) = ANI IR nod