Copyright 1908, by The Maunalin Co. MAN-A-LIN Is An Excellent Remedy for Constipation. There rectly are many ailments di- dependent upon constipa- such biliousness, discol- and dyspepsia, tion, as led skin, inactive overworked kid- || ored pimy liver, dache. constipation and | iments dis- || neys and hea Remcv: all cof these appear. oe MAN- A- Lin can be relied up-| on to produce a gentle acticn of || the bowels, making pills and dras- tic ecathartics entirely ~unneces- A dose or two of Man-a-lin is advisable in slight febrile attacks, la grippe, colds and influenza. THE KMAN-A-LIN CO, COLUMBUS, OHIO, U. S. A Peruvian Sand Dunes. The crescent shaped sand dunes which move in thousands across the desert .of Islay, near La Jova, Peru, have been investigated by Astronomer S. I. Bailey, who found the points of a crescent to be 160 feet apart, while the “convex side measured 477 feet, ‘and the greatest width was more than 100 feet. The estimated weight was 8.000 tons. vet it was carried 125 feet a veur by ‘the. prevailing south winds, FITS St. Vitus'Dance: Nervous Diseases per- manently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr.H RK ine, Ld..231 Arch h St. + Phila, , Pa. instcad of an give his future silk, to be lover, may beautiful The Japanese enzagement ring, bride a piece of worn cs a Mg Winslow’ VaSoutiing Syrup for Children teething, softens thegums, redugesinfinmmma- tion. allays pain, cures w ind colic, be a bottle Rice Lands. It is estimated that 21,600,000 acres are available for rice growing in Louisiana and Texas, and the value of such a crop would be $400.000,000. This would make the rice crop fifth in point of value among the gereals of this country. it storms - dont confine. yourself indoors- PROVIDE FOR YOUR by wearing OVERS | aig! 2p gan® ‘WATERPROOF QILED CLOTHING Lach oA VEL Every Garment Guaranteed Good enough te to last years 2 Towle co @O8TON La C Tow (8 CHA An €O LILO TARDE Can The horse can éraw the load without help, if you ‘reduce friction to almost nothing by applying 3 - = ¥ “ to the wheels. No other lubri- cant cver meade _ wears so long and savesso much horse power. Next time try Mrca Axiz Grzase. Standard ar fo. RE EVERY MARRIED WOMAN should read “Childbirth made easy and painless ort, con- cise treatise containing he best thought of former writcrs on this subject with edditional informa- tion £leannd from a large practice by the anthor. Practicing its teach- ings saves woman mus h suffering. Price by mail $2 (0. HH. Baker, M.D..Brisbane Bldg.. Bufialo, N.Y. 5, 1907. P.N. U3 DROPSY Xv, pucovesy gives quisk rellel and ave Worst cases. Ihink of textimuulnls and 1G Kays’ treatment Free. Ur. H. bh. GRELZN'S UNS, Sux B, atlacta. un One Good Horse. One good horse, cow or pig is bet- ter than two poor ones. It is a great deal better to sirive tog have your ani- mals of the very best quality than it is to see how many more you can have than your neighhor.—Fainer's tiome Journal. Soil for. P!s A. 1.71; in ibe says: coil fon made from a mixwure tained from the woods. and good 1ich loam, adding tle fine earth -eud mnanuie fiom the poultry yard and a.littic fine charcoal, After plants are potted they should be given a gond watering and shaded with newspapeis. fer a few days. to prevent drying out teo. quickly. Anrerican Clinton potted plants is ot leat mould ob- littie sand tise 0 1it- Good the Pride .in Farm Houses. made beautiful just to the extent t their.ewners co-operate with nature in surrounding them with those things mest atractive in lite. The humble cottage, embowered in trees and flowers, commands love; the pal- with its merble pillars and paved only acmiration. Out in the (try there are tices and meadows, flowers and running brooks. gifts the wealth of which no city can boast, and those who live im the country have unlimited possibilities tor makiig the home acre a place of beauty.—Souath- west Magazine. Homes are ra A Horse and .a Cow, The cow that vou think may the very one you ought to get rid of. Find out about that. ‘Test all your cows, Don't be satisfied with once. Keep at it till you know. Then do something about it. — If you dc nol own a Lorse, zet one. The landscape looks fairer and the outlook in life much more cheerful from the back of a horse half ‘hour's ride than from any other point of view. [It is no Jecessary that you should keep « horse exclusively for riding. He may be used for other purposes, only look out for cne that is gaited for the saddle as well. The farmer is entitled to the best that is going.-——Farm Journal. good saddle sda a &iter a What the Hog Will Do. It bas been that the a machine; that oils itself, puts ten bushels of feed into less space than a bushel measure and in so doing doubles its value, then can carry it to market on his back. Corn, bariey, oats, grass, rape, clover or any of the by-products of these, loaned to a wellshred, thrifty hog, is money at big interest. In fact, it is a mint; the grains and grasses are the bullion which, put into the hog, is transmuted into coin. It is an honest mint and gives 16 ounces of avoirdupois of cdikle meat, says the San Antonio Express. Properly bred, fed and intelligently handled this auto- matic porker will pay off our debts, furnish the money to improve the farm, place a piano in the home, a carriage at the door, as well as means to educate our boys at the agricultural college. said A Mode! Henhouse. This is what G. Arthur Bell, assist- ant animal husbandman of the bur- eau of animal industry at Washington, has to say of the proper quarters for the hens: The best -house for fowls is 20 by 14 feet; front elevation 6 1-2 feet, back elevaticn 5 1-2, with double pitch roof of unequal span. The roof, if it is shingled, should have not less than one-third pitch. If the rocf- ing paper is used, ene-guartei pitch will answer. In the front or south wall there should be placed two win- dows about ene foot from the top and three feet from the ends; 8 by 10 inches is a good sized pane to use in a twelve light sash, making the sash about 2 feet © inches high and 2 feet 5 inches wide.- “A door 21-2 by 6 fee. may: be made in one of the end walls, and also a small door in the front wall forthe fowls to pass in and ont of the baild- Ing. The rouvst room should be placed in the rear of the house, extending the whole length. The platform should be about three feet wide und three feet from the floor and the perches be placed about eighi or tea inches above the platform. The nests should be placed against the erd of the house opposite the door ar under the roost platform ard should be darkened. Sev- eral small boxes for shell, grit, beef scraps, ete., should be placed against the walis about sixteen inches from the floor. If cement or wood floors are used, a dust bath should be provided for the fowls. ffly to. sixty Salt in Animal Diet. It has long been well known that salt is a most important part of the diet of animals, and that without it they wiil not thrive. Just how far the necessity for salt is imperative in the animal economy is not so generally known. The Wisconsin State Experiment Sta- tiontion tested the effect of salt on cat- tle and other domestic animals. Dry cows, Dr. Babcotk, of that station, found, required about three-fourths of an ounce of salt daily for maintaining than the most of hog is their best condition, and a cow milk requires a great deal more salt than one that is not producing milk, and it is estimated that such a cow should have, in addition to the amount of chlorine in her ration, about one ounce of salt per day, while a very heavy milker may need still more. The function of salt in the animal economy is noi fully known, but it is accepted that it aids in facilitating the albumenocids of from the the. food in passing caral into the blood. Salt increases the circulation of the juices: in the ho and stimulates the an L to: grcater-nctivity. Thus a liorse at hard lator more salt orne~-not at work, and for the Same reason a cow producing a large amount of milk requires more sali than one that is dry. The amount of salt animal dlso dizesiive 1 d1=20 requires required by depends to an some extent upon the character of the food con- sumed. Such foods as potatoes, root crops and small grains are rich in po- tassiuni salts, which increase the ‘secre- tion cf sodium salts (common salt) in the urine, and hence the necessity of supplying more salt when foods of that kind are uséd to a large extent. Valuable Farm Experiments. More “Practical Farm Experiments" are included in a farmers’ bulletin (No 296) now on the press of the Depart- ment of Agriculture, Washington, D. C. The little pamphlet is full of good things, complied from the results of government experiments and the most alnable of the work of the various experiment stations throughout the country. There is no publication of Uncle Sam's of more general value than these farm experiment bulletins. The one in question contains some fifteen short condensations of practical exper- iments, many of them covering a series of vears, and being the results of the werk. of several separate scientific in- vestigations. They contain real in- formation, written in non-technical language, and can any of them be read in ten minutes or less. The first item discussad is “Wells and Pure Water.” one knows the value of a pure water supply, both for the household and stock, and its relation to the wholesomeness of dairy and other products sold trom the ‘arm; but not everybody pays encugh atten- tion to the location or conztruction of the well. Rvery Another subject is the need of phos- phates in acid soil and tests to determine its acidity. ue of good seed over poo: set forth in some statistics of clover planting. This is another instance where everybody concedes that to plant questionable seeds is poor policy, yet thousands of acres of good lands are regularly prepared with care and then planted with seed whose germinative qualities ard purity are unknown, with a resulting poor crop The de- partment is doing its best to stop the sales of impure or dead seeds: but the question rests after all with the indiv- idual farmer. If every one tested the seeds he bought, and especially if he reported cases of adulterated or dead seeds to the government the sale of such seeds would he immediately stop- ped. In one sample of seed examined, an acre of alfalfa planted from this lot would have resulted in 167,000 weeds, includiniz dodder, plaintain, tox tail, ete. In another sample there were 34 different kinds of weeds. In one case of clover seed—taking fifreen pounds to the acre as the standard for sowing —owing to impurities, it would have been. necessary to sow seventy-three pounds, while the weeds would have smothered the crop. Certainly this seed as a gift would have been most expensive. the necessary The val- strikingly Farmers who have been troubled with a dying out of their clover will do well to send for this bulletin, as it con- tains an account of a fungus disease which has been attacking and in some instances almost destroying, clover fields. The remedy seems to lie in pro- curing seed from selected healthy plants. The work of the government along these lines is very encouraging to the eradication of the disease. Oat fields infested with wild mustard vere rid of the weed by spraying of iron sulphate, und many other weeds were killed at the same without detriment to the oats In hothouse and cold-trame plant growing an inexplicable dying off of Seemingly healthy plants frequently oc- cuts. This is the: resu of harmful hacteria, which get the soil, es- pecially if it is used several seasons. Sterilizing the soil will kill these germs while at the same time it is shown that seeds germinate quicker and plants develop better in sterilized soil. Dry burning of brush or trash is a simple method of sterilizing. time into A Heart-Interest Drama. “Jack, I am going away.” “Going away, Madge?” “Yes, going away. But, before 1 go, I have something to say to you.” “Something to say to me, little wife?” “Yes, something to say to you. Don’t send me any poker stories in lieu of the weekly remittance. That'll be about all.”—Washington - Star. giving | -to stop machinery until FIANCE ID TA0E RENEW DUN'S WEEKLY SUMMARY interior Merchants Ficck to York to Lay in Their for Falk R.. G. Dun & Co's view of Trade save: Jobbing markets: are by inferior buyers and country mer- chants, who operate with great freo- dom, considering financial string: ency, which has ccmpelied the post: ponement of much contemplated structural work. Yet mauy Western and Southern cities report building operations in excefs of last vear. As the harvests progress there is more disposition te inercase preparations for future needs, Retail stocks ‘have Leen depleted by the ‘customary . bargain: sales. Preparations for fall and winter trade indicate confidence in ac- tivity. At most domes no comuplaint r but reports from many requests for Leading occupied. Many put sold far into Inquiry for pig iron has chiefly for small lots and livery. Customers for are: notably urgent fo: ment, but searcely earlier than October. In most sections of steel industry, conditions quiet at this. time than at month of the year. The moderate crease. in. new business of late received more - attention han circumstances warrant®&d, 1 the phenomenally active ceding. Conditicns in the cotten g dustry ccntinue satisfactory mills have contracts covering duction through ost of next Manufacturers find no difliculty maintaining their prices at the top. Some plants have heen compelled the produc- tion of gray goods is caught up, but otherwise the industry is fuily occu- pied and prices are readily main- tained. One element of strength is the high position of the raw ma- terial. Weekly shipments of footwenr from Boston again exceed seven fino fom the vear. The volume of new busi- ness has improved over recent wWeo hs. Yet huyers persist in cperating only in accordance with actual require- ments ; Pusiness is more West St. Louis manufacturers are receiving orders more {reely than those in New ners and MARKETS. PITTSRIIPA, Yohea Ne 2 red Rye—N Corn—No ve sllow, ear... No. ? yeliow, shelled... Mixed ear. 2 Oats—No. Stocks Weekly well the continued there is collections, indicate points ilies 1608. ott improved, prompt de- Hesscier iron guick ship- any can te had the and more other de- has the a ally peried pre- Gas in- Some active in -the 2 whiie.. Flour—Winter patent... Fancy straight winters Hay—No.1 T iinhy Clover No. Feed —No. Thr mid. ton. Brown middlings Bran, bulk.. Siraw Whos, Dairy Products. Butter—Elgin creamery Ohio creamery Fancy country roll Cheesse—Ohio, new............ New York. new Pouliry, tte. Hens—per 1b Chickens—dressed Eggs—Pa. and Ollo, fresk.. Fruits and Vegetahlos. Potatoes—Fancy white per) bu. Cabbage—per ton. Onions—per barrel. BALTIMORE. Flour—Winter Pndent Wheat—No. 2 r Corn—>Mixed Eggs Butter—Omrio creamery PHILADELPHIA. Flounr—Winter Patent Wheat—No.2 red...... Corn—No. Zz mixed.. Oats—No. 2 white... Butter—Creamery . Eggs—Pennsylvania firsts... NEW YCRK. Fiour—Paternts. Wheat—No.2red. Butter -Creameory Kggs—State and Pennsrivania.... LIVE STOCK. Union Stock Yards, Cattle. Extra. 1.450:t07 1.600 bx... LL ay Prime, 1,300 to 1.8) [bs Ci te Good, E20) 10-13% the: ........ bY) Tidy, 4000 to LI dbs. ............ HO Common, 700 10 9 Ibs. Se 6 Oxen,-.... Sees aaean AY 30) 3 eal Dl Heifera, 700 to 1, wi Lei) Fresh Cows and Springers:... Pittsburg. Prime heavy Prime medium weight .... Beat heavy Yorkers Good light Yorkers... > Roughs .... Stags Prime wethers, clipped Good mixed Fair mixed ewes and wethers. Culls and common. Lacked Mentality. Harold's mother was a devout fol lower of mental science. The twe were crossing a field while in the country, and when the lad saw a goat in the distance he shelded himself! in- stinctively behind his parent’s skirt. “Harold, I'm ashamed of you,” she told him. “Don’t you know there is no such a thing as pain and that the goat can't hurt you?” “Y-yes,” he admitted timidly. «1 know it and you know it, but the goat don’t know it"—Kuansas City Times New | attended | industrizl plants well - nothing but engines for twenty-five We guarantee the Olds Engines will run properiy. The engine is reliable and simple. an agent near by to sce everything ENGINES "BEST BY EVERY TEST. U.S.GOVT REPORT Do you want an engine? We have one you can afford to We have been building years. The price is right. We treat you right. There is is right and kept so. We have a liberal proposition to make to you, besides turnishing you the best engine made el us tell vou about it, We i desired. 2 to 8 b. p., have to be set up—no piping switch, Easy to start winter or sumer, 8TAlIONAry power, because it will surely interest you. an furnish you our Type A engine, set ap on skit: ready to run when you get n—does not to connect, binld-—simply tll with gasoline (or distitlzte), turn the wheel and it goes. The cheapest of all engines tor tarm and l1as removable water toardalion to throw oa the no 1ncket, all latest provements, and bas been adopted by the United States Government, ra Send {or our catalog of to 50 h. p. engines, and he sure you take advan- tage of our proposition ad. save money. OLDS GAS POWER CO. Malu Ofiice v2 60.78 Washington St N 987% Beazer St., amton, N. XY. Lansinz, ted Wean TW. L. DOUG LAS BEST IN $2.00 & $3. 50 SHOES THE WORLD Bag ™LHHOES FOR EVERY MEMBER OF THE FAN IL YY, AT All PRICES. Yo any one who cza prove WW. L. \ Cougias does not make & self a 25,0080 “of 50 shoes ners 8lon's $3 & $3. fe Ws gf a any other manufacturer. THE REASON WV, L. Dot glad shoe all walks of life t} an 21 ot} er make, 1s ali style i The selec tion of 1 tion of super skilled shoemik shoe industry, and whose workman and show yon liow carefully W. L, would then understand why they and supe rior w 2 rsa id ther mater 1 of ‘the muking is Sahar a fter by ‘intendents.foremenand who receive the highest wages paid.dn the . in cannot be excelled. If I conti tke yon into mv large factories nt Brockton. Masy., Douglas shoes are made, you jold their shape, fit better. re worn by more people bec. cause of their Sas a wear Jonzer and are of greater value than any other mas $46 UTION No A As ! The zenuine have W. Git t Bape and $5 Gold Bond Shoes canmot L. Donglias name and price stazsped your dealer for W. L. Douglas shoes. be egunllied af any price. as Take If he a ny you, soad direct to factory. Shoes sent everywhere by mail €atalog free. W.L Douglas, Beginning at the Top. “Talk about ‘The Making of an American,” '" said a settlement work- er who is constantly ealled upon to run over to Ellis Island. ‘a while ago I happened to take particular notice of a young Polish girl who had just bean released from Ellis Island with a lot of other immigrants. The girl vas met by two women, one of them apparently her sister. The trio crossed. Battery Park just ahead of me, and I soon saw. that they were bound for the same ferryvhonse as I. They reached the upper deck only a moment before me. but bv the time I got there the shawl that covered the voung immigrant’s head and shoulders had been pulled off, her hair fixed a bit and a brand new hat and. wrap put..on: her by the other two women, who had brought along the finery to make the newcomer fit to be seen song home with them.” TERRIBLE ITCHING. Flerema Affected Whole Systeme. able to lest Night or Day—Suf- fered 4 Years—Cuticura Cures. “1 suffered severely for {our vears from and ivy. Mv condition was could not rest night or day from a terrible itching sensa- tehing on my hands between my feel and face. and eczema My evesight was affected. and | went ta a hospital especially for the eves and pot relief. but eczema zot a tervible halidd on my system. | was about to give up all hope of ever being cured. vet 1 could not he reconciled to such results, as my health” had been good and free from any tisease alt ny life. My age is seventy-three vears. In ay extremity 1 happened to react of Cuticura Remedies for skin dis- eases. 1 bought tive boxes Cuticura Oint- ment, also some Cuticura Soap and Cuti- cura ills as | required them. In tour weeks” treatment my tace was smooth, and the itching gradually left my hands and fect and 1 could rest comfortably. for which | am grateful and happy. WW. Field Justice of the Peace and. Notary Hartly, Del., May 135. 1906.” J oison oak sorioux, as | and be free tion trom sera the fingers, followed. (Cowon, 'avlic, Care of Straw Hats. been trying an hats this year, = far to. he a decided mrrked the man. with a eyreriments.: “Last summer: | had to bur a new "straw the end of July. and 1 came to the conchision that it was riding in the subwav that had gotten my first one s0 © dirty. This year I. started out brushing my hat when I went home ard potting it in its box in the office, and 1 have been surprised at the dif- ference in the appearance of the hat. I always brush & felt hat every day, but I confess I never thought of do- ing the same thing with a straw until my bg sugzested cit. From. the looks of things that tip is going to cost him the sale of just one less straw hat than he has disposed of to me for the last half a dozen years.” Kina Edward's Pockets. who values the ok 5! his clothes, King Edward carries very little in his pockets be- sides a handKkerchief.. In his waist- ceat pocket he carries a gold pencil case, a cigar cutter, a little pass-key, a gold watch carefully regulated by Greenwich time. and half a dozen sovereigns. In his coat pocket he carries a tiny notebook, and in the winter puts his gloves in the pocket of his topcoat. The king never car- ries a cigar case, except a gold case which holds one cigar, but he aiways has a small box of lozenges. Unlike his nephew, the kaiser, he never car- ries a fountain pen in his pocket. economy in and it seems success,” re- taste for simply hit by “I'vo traw + tor l.ike everv man Serum Against Typhus. Two German bacteriologists claim to have discovered an effective serum against typhus fever. It is obtained from horses, and as the result of many tests carried on independently fn Berlin, Vienna and Prague, it has been shown to assuage the fever, regularize the pulse and arrest diar- rhea. The names of the two bae- ‘teriologists are Dr. Meyer and Dr. Bergeil. - direction. All Want Fighter's Badgas. The war department is besieged by incuiries regarding the campaizm badges, of which thousands are to be issued on account of service readered in the Civil war, Indian campaigns. the Suanish war, and campaigns im China and in the Philippines. Alto gether there are nearly 120600 of these badges being struck at the United States mint at Philadelphia. The distribution will be made by the adjutant general vf the army. who has all the records in the cases of those who are entitled to these em blems. There has been a delay of two years in getting these campaizn badges ready for distribution. This is due to some extra work which was under way at. the Philadelphia mint which could not be laid aside in favor of ‘the campaign badges Baltimore Sun. 35 Betmont as a Farr August Bélmont, on his-Long Island country place, as sumeés the - roie of farmer with thoroughness. | Those who kuow hime only in his Nassau street offices would find it hard to identify August Belmont, farmer, who is not too proud to pull up on the country road to give a neiznbor a “lft” with the stiff person of New York financial circles. A stranger from the Scuth, walking oui near Hemstead fase week, was hailed by Mr. Itefmont who was driving his trap in the same He gladly accepied the the course of the mile or station learned thal one of the team of smart roadsiers hard been purchused by Mr. Beinonis father inere than a score of years ago in Canada. --New York Times. Few Piners Like Hun Lord John Rus=ell, when oa »v visi? to Queen Victoria, at Balmoral, asked Her M:jesty’s own piper to have someone play in his presence. “What kind of piper do you waut?” asked the man. “Just such ano‘her as your self,” said the English statesman. Drawing himseff wy, (he musician raid. grandly: “There's pleuty o $ rds like yoursel, Dut vers few pipers Hke “wel” It’s a when he 13 down lift, and fn two to the Time now mood can be te see what 2 “stayiag™ breakfast mude withoud high-priced Meat 4 Litfle Frull, A Dish of Grape-Kals and Cream, A Seil-Beiled Egg, Some Nice, Grisp Teast, Cup eof Postum Foed CLofiee. hat’ gestion and full lo the brim with nourishment and strength. TRY s all, and a) very easy of dt- REPEAT FOR LUNCHEON OR SUP- PER, and have a meat and vezetahds dinner either at noon or evening. as you prefer. We predict for you an increase In physical and mental power. “There’s a Reason.” Read the ~ ne health classic Fellvitle,” in ples. “The Rosi