Joke ens t is t in big any lage y of aily. Jom- rder efin- 1 re” alti- coke field liver 1 its 700 ases - the elled ex- ners. n,1BE mpa- Re- 1d is e Or- -Law ithin little shot EET 3, 129 \cting navy fleet which kable. west nt to num- vessel i not (NOWNL over- > join total n the early rrival there t this The action lise. n and He ctions nama Senor ,, for. States he ab- lected Arias, lidacy, conse- baldia Not- ber of e and g ma- orters. Buying ads. which Y, Says d, was ore & Jompa- uthern Island les W. 1. chased indus- er the presi- ational ntence anking e. ommit- party, y Mar- ho, by on for , decid- er and al. arns of Insane $50,000. Much e 2,000 i ee AI ne BED-BOUND FOR MONTHS. Hope Abandoned After Physicians’ Consultation. Mrs. Enos Shearer, Yew and Wash- ington Sts., Centralia, Wash., says: “For years I was weak and run down, could not sleep, my limbs swelled and the secretions were troublesome; pains were intense. I was fast in bed for four months. Three doc- #8". tors said there was no cure for me and I was given up to die. Being urged, I used Doan’s Kid- ney Pills. Soon I was better and ina few weeks was about the house, well and strong again.” Sold by all dealers. 50cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Unburnable Wood. ' Asbestos wood, which seems to be attracting attention as a new strue- tural material, is made chiefly from asbestos fiber, and is stated to be about two-thirds as strong as ordi- nary wood, and to take a higher pol- ish. It is as easily worked as oak and maple, while nails hold in it better. The material is now usually made in sheets three by four feet in size, and is adapted for roofing and walls, but it can be paneled for wainscoting or doors, or molded into ornamental trimmings. Ask Your Dealer For Allen’s Foot-Ease. A powder. It rests the feet. Cures Corns, Bunions, Swollen, Sore, Hot, Callous, Aching Bweating Feet and Ingrowing Nails. Allen’s Foot-Ease makes new or tight shoes easy. At all Druggists and Shoe stores, 25 cents. Ac- cept no substitute. Sample mailed FREE. Address Allen S. Olmsted, LeRoy, N. Y. Private Punished. The London Express mentions a case of a private who for failing to recognize and salute his officer was condemned to march past and salute a. barrack pump for two hours each day for a week DO YOU WANT $5.00 IT CAN BE EASILY MADE SELLING OUR PER DAYP LINE OF HOUSEHOLD SPECIALTIES Clean-Cut Cake Tins, Perfection Tins, Bavory Roasters, Wonder Beaters, Cookers, Poachers, and hundreds of other useful and labor- saving articles. All goods guaranteed. Write for particulars regarding outfit today. Start a business of your own and makelarge profits in an easy manner. We want one agent in every town. Write before someone gets ahead of you. . Weare the oldest and best-known manu- facturing canvassing house in the country, We refer you to any bank, express com- pany, or commercial agency as to our responsibility. HOUSEHOLD NOVELTY WORKS 66-100 Tecymseh St. BUFFALO, N.Y. ' Vienna Sausage You've never tasted the best sausage until youve eaten Libby’s Yienna Sausage. It’s asausage product of high food value! Made different. Gook- ed different. Tastes differentandis different than other sausage. Libby’s Vienna Sausage, like all of the Libby Food Products; 2 is carefully prepared and cooked in Libby’s Great White Kitchen. It can be quickly served for any meal at any time! It is pleas ing, not overflavored and has that satisfying taste. Try it! Libby, McNeill & Libby, Chicago. | = ~1 ® Dampicide Will protect your piano (also - a used in toolchests) #1AR0 OW HERS against rust and the my ©€VilSs of dampness in summer and w.nts.: will a B THIS stay in tune better. Price n x $1.00 per Box. Folder a EAD Ti - 3 1estimonials free The Dampicide Co o.. Dept. 6, Owego, N. Y. WIDOWS’ under NEW LAW obtained — Y JOHN WwW. MORRI PENSIONS "Walingion, ba me TP. NU 50, 19.8, If afflicted sans Thompson's Eye Water hl ’ Burn the Rubbish. Old rubbish is more valuable in the form of ashes to the gardener than any other way. Wood ashes make excellent garden {fertilizer if applied properly. Kerosene Emulsion. One-half pound soap, one gallon water, two gallons kerosene. Dis- solve the soap in water over fire. Remove from fire and add kerosene. Stir violently. Use one part of emul- sion to fifteen parts water. Name the Farm. Name the stock farm is the advice given by an exchange and we think it is good advice. Nothing looks beiter in print or sounds better when mentioned than “John Smith, pro- prietor of the Maplewood farm.” Have your printer print your letter heads ith the name of your farm thereon. Some few back numbers ‘may laugh at you, but remember that this is the twentieth century and peo- ple who laugh are always back num- bers: Dry Picked Capons. Capons are always dry picked be- cause it would be impossible to scald them and leave part of the feathers in. They are killed by the braining process. Feathers are left on the neck, legs, wings, rump and tail. If dressed as ordinary fowls they will not bring any higher price than other fowls. The larger the birds the more they will bring per pound. They are in most demand from December to April. Many of them are dressed as soft roasters and sold as such. Their flesh is more tender and de- licious than the ordinary fowl.— Warmers’ Hom& Journal. Early Cultivation of Corn. This has been a season when the ordinary steel tooth harrow has done good work on the corn ground. improvement the breeder knows what to expect and will not find more than the due proportion of culls from his hatches. ; pssst The Shape of the Wyandotte. There has been a tendency among breeders to confuse Wyandotte and Plymouth Rock form—both by breed- ing the Wyandottes too long of body and more especially by breeding the cocks too blocky. The Wyandotte, as the Standard expresses it, is a bird of curves. The back is short and broad, the body is deep and round. Its shape gives the peculiar attraction of the breed and should be carefully preserved in all the varieties. The cocks should weigh about eight and one-half pounds. The comb is rose, lying close to the head, corru- at rear, curving back over the head. ‘The head itself is short and broad with a short, well-curved beak. The cocks should weigh about eight and one-half pounds and the hens six and one-half, while cokerels and pullets are a pound lighter respect- ively.—B. M. I., in the Southern Cul- tivator. Why Cultivate an Orchard? For the same reason that we cultl- vate a hill of corn. We plant apple trees thirty feet apart, while we plant corn three and a half feet apart, for the reason that the foliage of an ap- ple tree bears the same relation to thirty feet that the foliage of a hill of corn bears to three and a half feet. Also, that the roots of the tree oc- cupy the entire thirty feet of space as well as the roots of cor noccupy the three and a half feet of space. Cul- tivation is as absolutely necessary for the one as for the other. Culti- vation will give thrift to either and unthrift without it. To produce a good chop of corn, break the ground eight inches deep and pulverize a fine g Spli Ri: i ll METHODS OF GRAFTAGE. Other implements have been tried in cleanicg up the fields and keeping the top soil nice and mellow. But the harrow beats all of them. Good farmers have learned to slant the teeth backward, so that they will not catch hold of trash or an old stai: and tear up the hills of corn. Those who commenced by using the harrow this spring just as the weeds were starting, and then kept on using it until the corn was big encugh to cul- tivate, have clean fields and mellow fields. This has been with the re- sult that those who have neglected their fields now find them almost as hard as a public road. After seeing several fine fields of corn this week where the harrow was used two and three times over, I say stick to the smoothing harrow, and you will have to “show me” before I will believe there is - anything Dbetter.—L. C. Brown, in Tribune Farmer. The Wyandottes. Taking the country over, the two breeds most largely represented at the shows are the Plymouth Rocks and the Wpyandottes. There are no shows in which they are not repre- sented and the classes are usually large and good. This prominence of the two breeds is not without reason. They combine the utility and fancy points to as great an extent as any breed, they have prestige and have been bred long enough to a definite standard to give the greatest play to the talent of the fancier. Like the Plymouth Rocks the Wy- andottes are a made breed, but the making is now- an accomplished fact | and while there is always room for seed bed. In cultivating the orchard we break three inches deep only on account of roots, and make tLe same finely pulverized surface. This bed contains moisture to the very surface in a dry season. By this kind of preparation and a fine, level cultivation, we retain moisture to the tree-tops during a drouth, and consequently thrift of trees and large, smooth apples, fit, indeed, for any market. A hiil of corn half culti- vated produces small ears of corn. An apple tree uncdltivated, set in pasture, for the same reason, pro- duces fruit hardly fit for worms. The downfall of thousands of orchards commences when their foolish owners sow them to grass and turn their stock in, and if possible tramp them still harder than they were before. A belt of grass around a tree is about as fatal as a rope around a ecrimi- nal’s neck, especially if it be Timo- i thy, the great robber of moisture. ree comet ate see eet Durable Wood. The most durable wood of which we have evidence is that of which the wooden tombs discovered in Egypt were built and which Profes- sor Petrie estimates to date from 4777 B. C. They were most prob- ably constructed from timber yielded by a species of palm. Oak wood when once it has passed a certain age becomes practically everlasting. - Evidence of this is found in the roofs of Westminster Hall and of the cathedral at Kirk- wall, which have lasted almost a thousand years. gated or indented with small spikes: FINANGE AND TRADE REVIEW BUSINESS SENTIMENT IMPROVES Agreement Without Struggle on Low- er Wage Scale Is Considered Hopeful Sign. New York.—R. G. Dun & Company's “Weekly Review of Trade” says: Improvement is slow, but there is definite evidence of progress in the right direction. One of the best signs is the agreement upon lower wage scales without a struggle, assur- ing resumption of much idle machin- ery that would have been impossible without adjustment to altered condi- tions. Current retail trade is of fairly good dimensions for the season and inventories indicate that recovery is not menaced by heavy stocks. Prepa- ration for fall and winter trade is most active in the West, but there is a growing feeling of confidence ih the future that is stimulated by good progress on the farms. . More business is coming to the steel mills, although operations are still along conservative lines. Senti- ment ig improving more rapidly than actual conditions, are shown by the rapid rise in prices of securities of this industry, the common stocks of the largest producer attaining the highest quotations of 1908 thus far. An interesting interview on the sub- ject of advances in freight rates was given out by James J. Hill, in which the opinion was strongly expressed that charges for freight transportation should be raised in order that the business of the country, which is largely dependent on railroad efficien- cy and on the ability of the railroads to make purchases of supplies, should not suffer. He expressed him- self as 'opposed to a reduction in wages, intimating that the railrcads have already effected a saving through the better ‘service rendered by by their employes. Another interview which attracted a good deal of attention in Wall street was that given out by the pres- ident of the steel corporation, in which the prediction was made that by next January the business of the country again would be normal and the assertion that the piants of the steel corporation are now running be- tween 55 to 60 per cent of normal. MARKETS. PITTSBURG. 85 90 80 82 79 8) © Pes 73 Oats—No, 2 white... 57 53 No. 3 white........ 56 57 Flour—Winter patent.... 500 505 Fancy straight winters. Hay—No. 1 Timothy....... 1300 13 59 Cloyer No.1........... 1050 1150 Feed—No. 1 white mid. ton. 2600 2650 Brown middlings..... 2359 24 00 Bran, bulk..... .... 2250 2300 Straw—Wheat..... s 73 7 50 3 IR nti Re rE RR 725 7 50 Dairy Products. Butter—Elgin creamery § 25 26 Ohio creamery... . 20 21 Fancy country r 17 18 Cheese—Ohio, new.. 15 17 New York, new 16 17 Poultry, Etc. E Heons—per ID... 5 vu. ieiareconsnss 7 13 Chickens—dressed......... Eggs—Pa. and Ohio, fresh 17 19 Fruits and Vegetables. Potatoes—Fancy white per bu.... 125 125 Cabbage—per ton. 100 1 Onions—per barre 55 600 BALTIMORE. Flour—Winter Patent Wheat—No. 2 red Corn—Mizxed..... ® w 5 7 UA wo @ < BEY: rr rear 17 18 Butter—Ohio creamery. 25 26 PHILADELPHIA. Flour—Winter Patent............. $3) 30 Wheat—No. 2 red. 100 Corn—No. 2 mixed 80 82 Jats—No. 2 white. 54 55 Butter—Creamery. 24 25 Eggs—Pennsylvan 17 18 NEW YCRK. FloUr-—PatOntB.ce a stocetarassanss 5 70 Wheat—No. 2 red Corn—No. 2......... 67 Oats—No. 2 white. . of Butter--Creamery 5 23 Eggs—State and Pennsylvania... 17 18 LIVE STOCK. Unlon Stock Yards, Pittsburg. Cattle. Extra, 1,450 to 1,600 lbs. . $68 700 Prime, 1,300 to 1,400 1bs 0 40 67 Good, 1,200 to 1,300 lbs 5% 6 52 Tidy, 1,050 to 1,150 Ibs. b 25 6 1 Common, 700 to 900 lbs.. 4 00 50) Oxon, ..... Lila al 0 .. 5300 » 40 Bulls... 3 0 4 50 OWS... vd td Ld en 150 1 25 Hetfers, 700to L100... i... 2 00 5 05 Fresh Cows and Springers........ is 00 55 00 Hogs. 15 v 715 700 5 40 5 20 1 0) Prime weothers, clipped. ...........3 4 AO 475 Sood mized............, 10 4 25 4 50 Fair mixed ewes and wethers. .... 3560 400 Culls and common................ 2 0 3 50 Lambs swears ess eastinnsnnarase oT OO 13 OF Calves. 795 b> 02 But reforestation is needed for oth- er reasons than mitigation of floods, contends the Pittsburg Dispatch. There is need to provide for a future timber supply. here is need for woodlands for their modifying infiu- ence upon climate. If our corre- spondent is at all familiar with the practice of horticulturists in plant- ing wind breaks, and with the results attained by such practice, he will understand the direct value to culture of wooded areas, agri- FOR HOUSEFLIES. Take 4-2 teaspoonful powdered black pepper, 1 teaspoonful brown su- gar and 1 tak poonful of cream; mix them wel] together and place this mixture in the room where the flies are I troublesome, and they will } soon disappear.—Boston Post. GIVES CREDIT TO BETSY. Secretary Adams Says First Flag Was Made in Her Home. John Quincy Adams, Secretary of the American Flag House and Betsy Ross Memorial Association, author- izes an emphatic denial of the story that Betsy Ross was not the maker of the first American flag. Secretary Adams says that an ex- haustive search of the records and traditions of Philadelphia, made by. a score of patriotic societies has ‘never shaken the truth of the statement that the first flag was made at 239 Arch street, the home of Betsy Ross.” -m mw” €s€WSmimw™>WSWSWw wm5w.wiwb.sw 30 FITS, St. Vitus’ Dance, Nervous Diseases per- manently cured by Dr. Kline’s Great Nerve Restorer. trial bottle and treatise free. Dr.H.R. Kline, Id.,931 Arch 8t., Phila, Pa. Swamp Angel. “The Swamp Angel’ was the name given by the Federal soldiers to an eight-inch Parrott gun which was mounted on a battery built on piles driven into a swamp outside of Char- Itston, S. C., and used during the siege of that city. It burst August 22, 1863. ITCHING HUMOR ON BOY. His Hands were a Solid Mass, and Disease Spread All Over Body— Cured in 4 Days by Cuticura. “One day we noticed that our little boy was all broken out with itching sores. We first noticed it on his little hands. His hands were not as bad then, and we didn’t think anything serious would result. But the next day we heard of the Cuticura Remedies being so good-for itching sores. By this time the disease had spread all over his body, and his hands were nothing but a solid mass of this itching disease. I purchased a box of Cuticura Soap and .one box of Cuticura Ointment, and that night I took the Cuticura Soap and lukewarm water and washed him well. Then I dried him and took the Cuticura Ointment and anointed him with it. I did this every evening and in four nights he was entirely cured. Mrs. Frank Donahue, 208 Fremont St., Kokomo, Ind., Sept.-16. 1907.” A hardness A novel device for hardness of Meter. measuring the metals is called the scleroscope by Albert F. Shore and Dr. Paul Herould, its inventors. A steel ball weighing forty grains, made extremely hard by a special process, is enclosed in a glass tube, and the hardness is indicated by the rebound as the ball is dropped on the metal under test. A scale measures the height of rebound. On this scale 100 is the average hardness for carbon steel, and proves to be the safety limit for steel tools after reheating and tempering. The instrament is valuable in making tools of standard hardness. That Brave Belief. A brave belief in life is indeed an enviable state of mind, but, as far as I can discern, an unusual one. know few Christians so convinced of the splendor of the rooms in their Father’s house, as to be happier when their ‘friends are called to those man- sions, than they would have been if the queen had sent for them to live at court; nor has the church’s most ar- dent “desire to depart, and be with Christ,” ever cured it of the singular habit of putting on mourning for every person summoned to such de- parture.—Ruskin. High Price for Whisky. A bottle of whisky was recently sold for $30 at Ohakune, New Zealand, which is 40 miles from the nearest saloon. One man bought two large “nips’’ for $5 each, and the remain- ing contents of the bottle were put up for auction and knocked down for ZU. A New Move in Greece. The Grecian Chamber of Deputies has just voted a law by which, for the first time in modern Greece women are admitted in the public service. In accordance with this law Director of Posts and Telegraphs is authorized to employ 50 women to be used mainly in the telephone service. One of tHe Essentials of the happy homes of to-day is a vast fund of information as to the best methods of promoting health and happiness and right living and knowledge of the world’s best products. Products of actual excellence and reasonable claims truthfully presented and which have attained to world-wide acceptance through the approval of the Well-Informed of the World; not of indi- viduals only, but of the many who have the happy faculty of selecting and obtain- ing the best the world affords. One of the products of that class, of mown component parts, an Ethical remedy, approved by physicians and com- j mended by the Well-Informed of the World as a valuable and wholesome family laxative is the well-known Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna. To get its beneficial effects always buy the genuine, manu- factured by the California Fig Syrup Co., only, and for sale by all leading druggists. ; They fit your feet. FRED. | { | Many people crowd p In an attempt to make thir feet fit the shoes. Don’t choke your feet in that wz, : wear SKREEMERS. Look for the.asc], and, find these shoes readily, write the makers for directions how to secure them. F. FIELD CO., Brockton, Mass FOUR GIRLS Restored to Health by Lydia Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound.; Read What They Say. Miss Lillian Ross, 530 East 84th Street, New York, writes: “ Lydi E. Pinkham’s Vege ble Compound over~ came irregularities, pe- riodie suffering, and nervous headaches, after everything elso had failed to help me, and I feel it a duty to let others know of it.” for months from ner-| vous prostration.”’ | Miss Marie Stoltz man, of Laurel, Ia.,; writes: “Iwasina run- downconditionandsuf- eréd from suppression, indigestion, and poor circulation. Lydia E.! BH BW Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound made me MARIE STOLTZMAN well and strong.” New me of backache, side Cel ache, and established] LLIN M. OLSON my periods, after the best local doctors h failed to help me.” FACTS FOR SICK WOME For thirty years Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy for female il and has positively cured thousands o women who have been troubled with: displacements, inflammation, ulcera- tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic paing, backache, that bear- ing-down feeling, flatulency,indiges- tion,dizziness,ornervous prostraticns ‘Why don’t you try it ? 3 Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women to write her for advice. She has guided thousands to health. Address, Lynn, Mass. erg Local agents wanted. "HE DAISY FLY KILLER destroys all the ies and affords comfort to every home—in dining room, a rE; > Write for money making plan. 149 DeKalb Ave,. Brooklyn, N, Ya CHICKENS EARN MONEY If You Know How to Handle Them Properly. Whether you raise Chick- pesos ens for fun or profit, you ip want to do it intelligently Pe and get the best results. The way to do this is to profit by the experience of others. We offer a book telling all yow need to know on the subject —a book written by a man who made his living for 25 years in raising Poultry, and in that time neces- sarily had to ex- 5c. periment and spent . much money to in learn the best way to conduct the Stamps business—for the small sum of 25 cents in postage stamps. Li It tells you how to Detect and Cure Disease, how to Feed for Eggs, and also for Market, which Fowls to Save for Breeding Purposes, and indeed about everything you must know on the subject #8 to make a success. Sent postpaid on receipt of 25 cents in stamps. op BOOK PUBLISHING ROUSE, 134 Leonard Street, New York City. RREERN iY SON DOCTOR This is a most Valuable Book for the Household,’ teaching as it does the easily-distinguished Sympe toms of different Diseas auses and Means ok Preventing such D postal notes or pastage HOUSE, 134 Leounar FOR MEN their feet into shoes if you don’t MADE BY 2% Fae FFED(s ~ BROCKTON. MASS, U.S.A,