DACK QAVE OUT. A Typical Case of Kidney Trouble and a Trpical Cure. Chloe Page 510 :S. lox xandi favs: me Pit “My terri- sharp, pains, a dull, ache. 1 not stand for any length of time and. my back hurt me when I sat down. My feet and ankles were badly -swollen every cvening and 7 my stomach was out of order. Doan’s Kidney ills cured me of these troubles in 1902, and for five years I have had no return.” Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a hox. Foster-Miiburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. A Bath Tub for the Birds. In regions where there are brooks or lakes birds must some- times fly miles for a drink. A pan shallow encugh for wading, deeper one supplied with stones the drinkers to stand on safely, nishes more interesting sights household, and pure fun, than any other object you can watch through- out the season. Children keenly. Sixty-nine different of birds, many rare - warblers migrants among them, came in season to drink in a suburban although a tiny, aggressive wren cocksure that he alcne owned basin. Mrs. street, nad shooting couid and one barn, felt that Deafness Cannot Be Cured bylocalapplications as theycannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to curs deafness, and that is by consti- tutional remedies. Deafness is caused byan inflamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tubeis in- flamed you have a rumbling sound orimper- fect hearing, and when it is entirely closed Deafnessis the result, and uniess the inflam- mation can be tuken cut and this tube re- stored to its normal condition, hearing will bedestroyed forever. Nine cases out of ten are causa: d bye atarrh. which isnothingbutan inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused bycatarrh) that can- not be curedby Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars free. F.J.CrENEY & C0.,Toledo,O. Sold by Druggists, 5c. Take Hall's F amily Pp ills for constipation, Missicsipp i's First Steamboat. worthy of note, in con- President Roosevelt's Mississippi, that the voyage on that Roosevelt—Nicholas New York, one: of useful and gifted asso- steamboat was built at Mr. Roosevelt's di- ready for its jour- 1811. Mr. Roosec- ied on his journey in whom he had been ried. The steamer was orl and. MM and evelt were received dif- along their not less: than Roosevelt has steamer and ran that city and It may be nection with journey cn: the first steamboat was made by: a J. Rooseveli— TFulton’'s most ciates. The Pittshurg rections, ney, velt by recently mar called New Mrs. Roos ferent places an enthusiasm which President greeted. The pioneer New Orleans safely, some years between Natchez. It was an enterprise: that called for indomitable courage and efiergy, which Nicholas J. Roosevelt evidently possessed in no less de- gree than his illustrious namesake. The Pitfalls of Language. Critics whe dwell in glass houses are scldom afraid to throw stones. Dr. Samuel! Johnson. who was afraid of anything, except, the [foolishness of Boswell, stones at writers who used the dundant phrase “‘from whence,” forthwith used it himself. Prof. Lounsbury of Yale, who knows more about usage among writers than any- body. writes in the November Har- per’'s Magazine of the “Cause of Expletives,” and points to the good old ductor’'s inconsistency in using he expletive “form” as a passing moral to purists and others. Milton says “Ascend up’ in Paradise l.ost; we ‘say, “Hurry - up”. in everyday speech. Chaucer said, “All his whole heart;” and Shakespeare says in As You Like Tt. “To fight the animals and kill them un.” Prof. Lounsbury also considers the usage of the words ‘“‘up” or ‘upon,” which is a pit- fall dreaded by many. TAKE THEM OUT Or Feed Them Food They Can Study On. under and ptemier, accompiar iv mn wlie, ans, at route that been reach- for re: When a student begins to break down from lack of the right kind of food, there are only two things to do; either take him out of school or feed him properly on foed that will rebuild the brain and nerve cells. That food is Grape-Nuts. A boy writes from saying: ‘““A short Jamestown, N.Y., time ago I got into a bad condition irom overstudy, but Mother having heard about Grape- Nuts food began to feed me on it. It satisfied my hunger better than any other food, and the results were mar- velous. 1 got fleshy like a good fel- iow. My usual morning headaches disappeared, and I found I could study for a& long pericd withoyt feel- ing the effects of it. z “My face was pale and thin, but is now round and has considerable color. After I had been using Grape- Xuts for about two months I felt like a new boy altogether. 1 have gained greatly in strength as well as’ flesh, and it is a pleasure to study now that I am not bothered with my head. I passed all of my examinations with a reasonably good percentage, extra good in some of them, and it is Grape-Nuts that has saved me from a year's delay in entering college. “Father and mother have both been improved by the use of Grape- Nuts. Mother was troubled with sleepless nights, and got very thin, and looked care worn. She has gained her normal strength and looks, and sleeps well nights.” “There's a Reason.” Read “The Road te Wellville,” in pkgs. | described the effect | tuberculosis on the lactation of milk amount of milk produced. no | or ali for | fur- | to a | enjoy it | species | Home river | with | not | perhaps, | cast | more. hy | and | for as to | what | to go without i wall | split; | side constructjon of the foot becomes so thin, which often results in bruised | tendons and Tests I'or Pishercalar Milk. Before the American Veterinary Medical Association at Kansas City, Mr. S. H. Guailliland, of Marietta, Pa., of the test for cows. He that sail in experiments | on 658 cows none of the healthy ani- in the Animals tubercular showed a de- crease as soon an the tests were be- gun, He said there should be no fear on the part of dairymen to have their cattle tested. Peach Mildew. Phe Colorado experiment station has been paying special attention to peach mildew. Mildew is a foneas disease that affects plants. The bulletin says it is not a serious disease and can easily be controlled by spraying with a standard fungi- cide. The lication should be thorough and :hould be done during fair wcather. 7lrees with an open head that follow free circulation of air and ligh: suffer the least injury. Setting to distances that will allow free circulation o around the trees: is also desirable.—Fa..- 3° coMaaal, mals showed any decrease that were app air —— Making Haystacks Safe. When hay is stacked, it will petter waste less if put large stacks as possible. It is often convenient to let animals feed out of the stack, and unless something is done to prevent it, there is danger of their undermining the stack and be- keap and Keeping a Stack From Falling. —~—— : : toming suddenly buried under ’t, aoc the importance of securing the ack, as shown in the iliustration. ae How is stacked around a stout | pole in the centre, explains Farm and Home, the top o” which is allow ed to project enough so that three ropes or heavy wires can be attached to it and | the other ends of them fastened to | stakes | ground driven sccurely into the ed ~~ Breed Draft Horses. ‘I'nereis'a greater inclinaticn to ao ceeding of draft horses than several ye Many will increase this class of Breeding next spring. ars | This is due to the fact that there is a steady advance prices ~f good this country The in the demand and draft horses both in and in Europe. American draft horse has (achieved th. distinction of being the | leading market horse, the industrial horse of the ~ge that more money, whether bred, than the grades or pure breds of any other stock. He has brough: a. new prosperity to the farm never before accorded tc American horse breeding.- -Indiana Farmer. breeds grade or pure into Th: ITorse and His Hoof. It is no longer a question as whether the horse's hoof should le given special care that he should be enabled to render longer and satis- factory service to his master, as well have comfort to himseif. We are now where it is not necessary that the horse must be shod only one or two times during the twelve months, as in early days, but he must be kept wita ‘shoes on the entire twelve months. ‘ The question comes, should not hoof of the horse receive careful attention as any othe: his body, the much part ol 25 if the hoof gives away, is Your horse worth? Early shoeing ofteniimes stops the develop- ment of the hoof and gives to horse a much smaller foot th: as the { wise it would have been. Again, the horse has shoes until the c¢utsid» of the foot hecomes broken and the inward covering of the in- often is followed corns and chronic lameness. When possible the horse should he shod as nature would have ic. Dur- ing the summer months the horse should be shod with plates in front, with the heel cut real low, thus re- lieving the frog pressure of the foot. Then tlere should be care taken that the smith who shoes the horse should not hurn the hoof with the hot shoes, which cannot! help being injarious to the ho. In caring for the some soft oil, would prefer the use of tallow, well rubbed in just at the upper «dge of the hoof, wiil ofien strengthen the growth an? help to sustain the with hoof _he use of | Or : I under in as cof I flavor 10 | | reputation of that factory. in other- | been* allowed | fool, and where life is! there is growth. When the hor: is allowed to be out in the dew it will often prove injurious to the hoof. Care should be taken that the horse used on the ro:.d should not be al- lowed to run in the dew, as if so he will have hard and dry hoofs. Keep the hoof in a growing condition.—T. E. K,, in the Indiana Farmer. Nature and Insects. Before man placed the woods and prairies under cultivation, excessive increase of any insect species was perhaps unknown, or, at most, very rare. Nature has always provided forces which operate against each other, as it were, and insects, as with other creatures, a balance between the numbers of different species has been maintained. Modern methods of farming have often decreased the natural enemies of injurious insects, and in other cases have afforded conditions favor- ing the rapid multiplication of in- sects not formerly present in danger- ous numbers The practical entomologist of to- day, while not discounting the value of poisons and sprays as implements of war against the six-footed host, recognizes that really satisfactory control is brought about by a partial total restoration of the conditions which nature formerly pre- vented the different species from be- coming too numerous. The entomol- ogist accordingly studies parasitic en- emies and diseases which destroy the injurious insects, and oftentimes he is enabled to encourage the parasites to such an extent that they largely entirely . control the injurious forms.—Coleman’s Rural World. or Cooling Milk. One of the most general methods adopted for cooling milk is to place the cans in a vat containing water which reaches a point slightly above surface of milk. The water may be kept cool by running fresh water from well or spring through the vat, carrying off the heat as it passes the sides ‘of the ‘milk cans. The cold water should enter the vat at the bottom and the warm be drawn off from the top. If the water is al- lowed to run constantly through the vat it would not be well to have the vat contain more than from one to two times as much water as there is milk to be cooled. If the supply ot water is limited and cannot be al- lowed to run constantly, then the vol- ume of water should be at least two or three tines the volume of ithe mill: to be cooled. Where ice is :.vailable, the water will be kept cold by addi- tion of ice instead of cold water, and the volume of water should not be more than that of the milk to be cooled. The milk should be stirred occa- sionally but not vigorously while be- mg cooled. It would hasten cooling to insert in the centre of the milk a barrel-shayed can containing cold or ice water. Arrange the details of your cooling method Lo suit individual circumstan- ces, keeping in mind the necessity for removing the animal heat quickly and cooling to as low a temperature as your water ice will permit. Cool, and cool quickly. Insist upon all your co-patrons cooling carefully. Every can of milk entering a lot of cheese or butter should b~ properly cooled if the make is to be of high standard. One can inferior milk will spoil the fine of the whole. One make of poorer grade than the standard of the factory will affect adversely the Eternal vigilance will be the price of our advance to and maintenance of the first place as producers of high- class dairy products.—Bulletin, On- tar.o Departm.-t of Agriculture. Cows Love Each Other. “Do cows love home?” is the ques- tion asked by Prof. Gowell in the New England Farmer. His reply to the question is as follows: “One of the meanest acts of my life, the one I would give most to forget, was the selling of an old cow that I had raised from calfhood. Every time she could! break away from her new home she would comec. back to us, sometimes through the rough storms of winter, because she was homesick. Were You ever homesick?” In reply to the question “Do cows iove each other?” he says: “We have 2 four-year-old Shorthorn, a great, luscious, handsome roan; and an other, one of the most beautiful five year-old Guernseys that I know of that was bred in York County. They were brought home at different times Those two animalg, that are so much unlike in everything except beauty, express strong friendship for each other, and whenever in the loose herd with forty others, in yard or pasture, they are constantly together, fre- quently expressing themselves in ex- changing laps of love, true cow lan- guage.” The Catskill extension of the New York City water supply, on which work was recently begun, will cost $160,000,000, and will give the city an additional supply of 500,000,000 gallons a day. FINANGE AND TRADE REVIEW CHEERING TRADE REPORTS Despite Bank Flurries the Railroads Handle Promptly All Traffic Of- fered—Outlook Satisiactory. R. G. Dun & Co.'s: Weekly Review f Trade says : ninated this eral bank- gerious panic Monetary pressure cul: week in the ing institutions, closing of sav but a by the prompt action of who assumed the leader- movement to while the cominit- House confi- was averted Mr. Morgan, ship of a concerted strengthen the situation, formation of a trust company tee similar fo the Clearing committee did much to restore dence. Trade reports are - irregular, the events of the week in this city tending to cause conservatism in prepara- tions for the future, but current re- tail trade is active throughout the nation, and the leading industries, maintain active machinery at most plants. An encouraging sign is the absence of cancellations. Transport- ars are unable to handle promptly all the freight offered, and railway earn- ings in October thus far surpass last vear's by 6.8 per cent. It is most encouraging to note in dispatches from Pittsburg and other leading centers of the iron and steel industry that nc cancellations have been received, and that specifications on old contracts maintain -activity at most mills and furnaces. New busi- ness is light; as might he expected at such a time, but plants are’ fairly well occupied, except tin plate mills, which have shut down about 50 per cent of. their: capacity. = Many plate and structural steel mills have con- tracts covering output up to the end of the year. 3radstreet’'s savs: Trade and dustry have tended toward quiet sympathy with reports of financial settlement at New York and a other cities; the continuance of weather, affecting as it dees retail distribution: the natural seasonable slowing down of jobbing trade and the influence upon retail trade and collee- tions of the continuance of the hold- ing movement of crops. On -.the other hand the financial situation at New York, generally speaking, seems to be well in hand. Business failures for the w ing October 24. number 217, against 194 last week, 184 in the like week of 1906, 178 in 1905,:180 in 1904, and 217 in 1903. in- in un few mild § i i i eek end- MARKETS. PITTSR!IRG. Xo (LOTT oT Wheat—No. £ red Rye—No.2.... Corn e-No Z yel How. Ze) sy ale Daa Hay—No. 1 Timothy.. Clover No. 1. Feed—No. 1 white ‘mid. ton Brown Titans Bran, bulk...... Bieaw = heat. Qa SBE Am HS LAS Uy ToS i ut tht 2 AC RE dk ek Dairy Products. Butter—Elgin creamery.. Ohio creamery Fancy country roll Cheese—0hio, new. ow Chickens—dressed : Eggs—Pa. and Ohio, fres Fruits and Vegetables. Potatoes—Fane¢y white per bu.... Cabbage—per ton Ontons—per barrel.. BALTIMORE. Flou r—Winter Patent Wheat—No red Coru—Mized. PHILADELPHIA. Flour—Winter Patent Wheat—No. 2 red Corn—No. 2 mixed. Oate—No. 2 white. Butter—C reamery. Eggs—Pennsylvania firsts NEW YCRK. Flour—Patents Oats—No. 2 white Butter -Creame Kggs—State and rina LIVE STOCK. Union Stock Yards, Cattle. Extra, 1,450 to 1,60) lbs Prime, 1,500 to 1,40) lbs | Good, 1,200 to 1.300 Ibs.. Tidy, 4,050 to 1,150 lbs... Common, 700 to 9)) lbs Pittsburg. Co bo = os ce da ia OY CUNO LD rnd Cwww er COCO "— Fresh Cows and Spriugers........ Prime heavy Prime medium weight . Best hoavy Yorkers Good light Yorkers. Pigs Roughs.. Prime wethers, clipped Good mixed.. Fair mixed owes and wethors. Culls and common Lambs Veal calves Heavy and thin calves Emperor William is going to make a crusade against the introduction in- to the German language of so many words from other languages. Archbishop Glennon, of Milwaukee, | kas strongly expressed his disap proval of the raising of money for the erection of churches by giving ice cream suppers and dancing parties He declares that church buildings and’ maintenance was a duty that should be met by the parishioners in accord! ance with the dignity of the respon sibility. “Hz is subject tc spontaneous com- bustion,” said a Virginia judge of a Governor. GIRLHOOD TO Lydia E. Pinkham’'s ELLEN M. OLSON The responsibility for a daughter's future largely rests with the mother. The right influence and the infor- mation which is of vital the daughter imparted at the proper time has not only saved the life but insured the success of many a beau- tiful girl. When a girl's thoughts become sluggish. with headache, dizziness or a disposition to sleep. pains in .ack or lower limbs, eyes dim, desire for solitude; when she is a mystery to hersclf and friends, her mother should come to her aid, and remem- ber that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege= table Compound, made from native roots and herbs, will at this time prepare the system for the coming change, and start this trying peri fod in a young girl’s. life without” pain or irregularities. It has been thus depended upon for two generations. Hundreds of letters from young girls and their mothers, expressing gratitude for what Lydia E. Pink- ham's Vegetable Compound has done for them, are constantly being re- ceived. Miss Ellen M. Olson. of 417 N. Last St., Kewanee, 111. writes:— Dear Mrs. Pinkham: — “I have had the best doctors in our town for my sickness and they all thought that an operation was necessary. I had headache, No other remedy has such ills. Thousands of $25,000 (Toi Reware | THE REASON W. IL. Do: in all walks oflife than ar excellent style, easy=fitting, and The selection of the le athe rsand oth of the shoe and every detail of the the most complet skilled shoemakers, who rece shoei ndustry, and who e¢ work! If I could take you ntom and show you how ca would then underst wear’ onger and are of gre sup +} e hig! 1858 We hip ct nnot 1 No Substitute. Ask your des ler. for W.1.. \(\ TELEGRAPHERS WANTE lege. In charge of ex-railway officials. R. R. in School-rooms. graduates under £15 10,000: Write for Catalog. PERSONALITIES OF Guaranty INVENTORS. Some. Strange Deviaticns from Reg- ular Occupations. Of course, outside of the independ- ent and salaried professional inven- tors is the great army of men who, while actually engaged in occupa- tions embracing every line of human endeavor, develop new ideas, often of great value and just as often al- together out of their line of regular work. An inquiry into of a few dozen the personalities inventors to whom patents hava been granted during the last year, shows ome remarkable facts, says The Engineering Maga- zine. Among them a sea captain has patented a steering gear for automo- biles, while a carriage builder has invented a ship's capstan. A blacksmith has papers for .. a fishing reel, a shoemaker for a type- writer, a physician for a door lock and an undertaker for a hoisting derrick, afid many others show just as strange deviaticn from their regu- lar walks of life. Wasos Do Jo Good. Wasps prey on flies—a fact is well known in Italy. On any sum- nier or early autumn day in the Tus- can country parts, when the luncheon table is blackened by flies, one may see a waspssail in at the open Win- dow, ‘select a fly, roll it over, curl it up and carry it out into the sun- shine and soon return for another. which BABY IN TERRIBLE STATE. Awful Humor Eating Away Face— Body a Mass of Sores—Cuticura Cures in Two Weeks. “My little daughter broke out all over her body with a humor, and we used every- thing recommended, but without results. | called in three doctors, but she continued to grow worse. Her body was a mass of sores, and her little face was heing eaten away. Her ears looked as if they would ‘drop off. Neighbors advised me to get Cuticura Soap and Ointment,and before 1 had used half of the cake of Soap and box of Ointment the sores had all healed, and my little one’s face and body were as clear as a new-born babe’s. | would not be without it again if it cost five dollars, instead of seventy- five cents. Mrs. George J. Steese. 701 Ce- burn St.. Akron? Ohio. Aug. 30, 1905.” Freak of Lightning. Near - Wolcott, N. Y., lightning A not struck a house and killed a cat. child playing with the cat was injured. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children teething, softens thegums, reducesinflamma- tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25e a bottle Sometimes they say it is a case of mother-in-law when it is a plain case of bad husband. 1 interest to | t Brockton hees are m ade, vey 4 eir shape, fit reater value than anv other mak My $4.00 and $5.00 GILT EDGE Shoes cannot be egualled at any price. CAUTION 1 The genuine have W. I. Douglas n: an Douglas direct tofactcry. Shoessent everywhere by mail. Ca Positions pay jing So a NATIONAL TELEGRAPH TN WOMANHOOD Vegetable Compound CLARA E.DARMSTADTER sideache, and my feet were so sorel could hardly stand. I took two bottles of Lydia E, Pinkham's Vegetable Compound when my periods were established and now I am perfectly well. Mama says she wont be without your medicine in the house. I have told one girl what Lydia I. Pinkbham®=s Vegetable Compound has done for me and she is taking it now.” Miss Clara E. Darmstadter, Breckenridge St.,Bufialo,N.Y., Dear Mrs. Pinkham: — ‘“‘For about a year, except during the past few months, I suffered with sevére pains every month, with backaches and headaches. I had the blues so bad that I was in despair. It is a pleasure to tell you that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has cured | me. The change in my appearance is won- derful and I desire that this good may come to every sufferer. Any one ting to know further details may write to mie and I shall be glad to give them,» If you know of any voung girl who is sick and needs -motherly advice, ask her to address Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass., ang tell her every detail of her symptoms, and to keep nothing She will receive advice abso- | lutely free. from a source that has no rival in the ‘experience of woman’s ills, and it will, if followed, put her on the right road toa strong, healthy and happy womanhood. Lydia E. Compound and herbs a record of actual cures of female of 453 writes: back. Pinkham’s made from cures where Vegetable native roots others fail. women residing in every part of the United States bear willing testimony to the w onderful virtue of Lydia BE. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and what it has done for them. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound; a & Woman Ss Remewy for Woman’s lls. W. L. DOUGLAS $3.00 & $3.50 SHOES figs SHOES FOR EVERY MEMBER OF ey, of fia5 ALL PRICES. o anyone whe can prove W. LL. Dowgias does not make & self more Men's $3 & $3.50 shoes than any otf:er manufacturer. BEST IN THE VJORLD las shoes are worn by more peonle other makeis because of 11 ir rior wearing que alities, : Dr ioaaa yorganiz ation of superintendents, foren age 3 paid-in in be excelled. Mass, better pr Hoorn ol bottom, T'uko : f he cannot supply you, send Mog fred / w. ~ Douglas, Brockton, Mass, From thie institute befors next March. This is an exclusive Telegraph Institute, not a Business Col- -Kstablished Twenty-one Years. Main lines of L. & 3 r men Hn) tpn rd Antti ly guaranteed on ¢ t Xp nses. Bor oF Wd yo NSTITU TH %».C nat; yur Chis Steamship Ring. Although all the steamship running frem New York to South Africa are in the “ring” with those from England, and under agreement to maintain freights, the American exporter is much more independent than the English shipper, inasmueh, as the former is not granted rebates. lines FITS, St. Vitus’ Dance: Nervous Diseases pers maunently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. §2 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr.H.R. Kline, L.d.,931 Arch 8t., Phila., Pa. captain who died the other day at SO had crossed the English channel 30,000 times in his H3 years of service. An Englis® sea Woolford’s At druggists. 30 minutes by Never fails. Itch cused in Sanitary Lotion. It always ist snort winning makes an equal suffrag- 0" hear a woman taik of Back Her Husband's Love. A Horse and Rig, some extra time, and business sense—this is all you need for my work. No capital required, and I pay $3.00 per day, in cash, to good workers. Write to-day for details. AT KINSON. 1024 Race St., *hiladelphia. SRY TT Send her BpSajutely free a large trial box of Paxtine with book of Instrue- tions and ge nuite testimonials. Send cleanses and heals mucous : brane af- fections, such as nasal catarrh, pelvic catarrh ‘and inflammation caused by femi- mouth, by direct local treatment. Its cur- ative power over these troubles is extra- ordinary and gives immediate relief. ommending it every 60 cents at druggists or by mail. Rennes, however, IT COSTS YOU NOTHING TO TRYIT, a sf 20 Mule Team kitchen ordining voom. All dealers. Sample, Beoklet nnd Parlor Gume **Whiz,”’ 10c. PACIFIC C OAST BO=A X¢C 0.. New York. To convince any woman that Pax- tine Antiseptic will improve her health and do all we claim for it..- We will your name and address on a postal card. m e m-=- nine ills; sore cys sore throat and T Thousands of women iy using and rec- THE R. PAXTON ©o., Boston, Mass. will cleanse every article in your laundry, P. X. v. 44, 1007. saat Thompson's Eye Water
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers