TRAST, estion 1d full ) race, dition. ecured teenth v, pro- yursuit teenth re the of the was a Four=- gener- ed the ended. nt has in the nd the ion to- f elec- square r. Taft on of a step in eo fairly. In time lear to an ig- can be | laws 1g both 1g edu- ‘thought ar elec- ntrol of erefore a time athized y strug- ight to tection, inst the South. be a stronger intelli- bial ele- ial edu- encour- e them- he com- Ir. Taft, e preju- on of its ay heart bse who n it, and a policy C. ” *. al fran- race who » will be . to vote the ig- of both Vir. Taft 1ssed the nterstate or injury, employ- f fellow- v rule as and sub- d rule of a model ied, taat promote rgislation ngly con- it should to em- Oy as an n is made 0 its em- whenever afety de- duce the x railway. ss to re- tate rail- ural Ad- 1as arisen st excited espect to courts to trial dis- onvictions m courts, the. power > disputes, eged class e the law- >m a most o all men * business “he propo- y property, an be pro- ion is ut- precedent is usually, the sec= h a propo- the Amer- 10 support ymitted to secondary, f tyranny, gitimate. yorary re- tice has in ised by its to remedy, hich I was ormulation ions under restraining statute can to embody, , and can ely to the 3 to make kely in the if I under- e authority tained and 1ge in the owers of a d the fear- stration of e questions y Adminis- essed in a on which I mendations 1duct as an considerate my fellow mighty God responsible D TAFT, ily Shot. Ohio, nine on the Bal- vad, Patrick the Belmont and fatally rominent of- Workers of o the recent e shooting se, but the rtained. in pur- asd % Tm, Z y 5 - » «|i ~A For Miners, Quarrymen, Farmers and All Men Who Do Rough Work. Wit save you from sprained ankles and § chafed heels. They can be attached to your old shoes and i them good as new. Your shoe dealer has shoes fitted with them, or any cobbler can put them on. They will never break down. % Send for booklet that tells all about them. UnitedShos MachineryCo Boston, Mass. Venus Has No Day. Inhabitants of Venus, if there are any, must find it extremely difficult to establish units of time. Venus al- ways turns the same face toward the sun, so the planet has no day, and the lack of a°' moon, deprives it of a month. Finally, it has no year, for its axis of rotation is perpendicular to the plane of its orbit and the latter is almost circular. YEARS OF IT. A Dark Picture to Look Back Upon. John Corey, Constable, Attica, N. Y., says: “From September, 1896, : to March, 1897, 1 was confined to the house, an invalid, from kidney trouble. For months I had tottered about on crutches, a discour- aged and despairing man. 1 was prac- i tically crippled with lumbago. I decided to try Doan’s Kidney Pills and a short while after I began using them I was able to walk. After taking seven boxes I threw away my crutches and the lumbago has not returned from that day to this. Through using Doan’s * Kidney Pills I am to-day a healthy man.” Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Stiff-Necked, But Not Rebellious. ‘While the landlady and the board- ers bent their: heads devoutly above the table the new arrival sat bolt up- right. The good landlady was shocked. “Atheism?” she sharply asked. “No, ma’am,” said the new boarder, “biles!”’—Cleveland Plain Dealer. Beware of Ointments -For Catarrh That Contain Mercury, as mercury will surely destroy the sense of smell and completely derange the whole sys- tem when entering it through the mucous surfaces. Such articles should never be used except on prescriptions from reputable ph sicians, asthe damage they will do is ten fold to the good you can possibly derive fro Shei. ar s Catarrh gtte, Mi i] by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, contains no mercury, and is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of thesystem. InbuyingHall’s Catarrh Cure be sure you get the genuine. It.is taken in- ternally and made in Toledo, Ohio, by I, J. Cheney E Co. Testimonials free Sold b, Ra Bm ce, 75¢c. per. bottle. i Take vs ’® Fomily DI ills for constipation. Langteges an and Dialects. According to the accepted authori- ties there are 3,424 spoken languages in the world today; or, perhaps, it would be more accurate to say dia- lects. Of this number 937 are Asiatic, '587 European, 276 African and 1,624 American. By far the greater number of these long to savage and semi- savage tribes and nations. 11 You will respond ve: unickly to the Gar- field Tea treatment, for this this Natural laxa- tive corrects constipation, purifies the blood, and benefits the entire system. Good breeding is a letter of credit all over the world. Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma- tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25ca bottle. They Know Their Man. “No, sir,” said the red-faced Alder- man with great emphasis, “I’m in the franchise fight to stay!” “I suppose, then,” said the little man with wide ears, “that they don’t give you your wad until the whole thing’s ended.” — Cleveland Plain Dealer. 1f you suffer from Fits, Falling Sickness, Sore or have children, or friends that do so, my New Dis- covery will Jolicve pas, and all La are asked to do is to send for a F EE Bottle of 3 r. May's s, Epileptic Cure. has ra thousands “where everything else toned. Sent free with directions. Express Prepaid. Guaranteed by May Medical Laboratory, under the National Food and Drugs Act, June 30th, 1906. Guar= anty No. 18971, Please give AGE and full address. R. L 548 Pearl Street, New \ ork City, Stop Congling! ! Nothing breaks down the health so quickly and positively asa persistent cough. If you have a cough give it attention now. You can relieve [SHS it quickly with PISO’S CURE. : Famous for half a century as the J reliable remedy for coughs, colds, BBY hoarseness, bronchitis, asthma and kindred ailments, Fine for children. At all druggists’, 25 cts. : - t Farm Topics $ 2 WISE POULTRY KEEPERS. Wise poultry keepers do not feed milk, sweet or sour, in troughs or open vessels. They get the whole good in milk products into a crumbly BI mash. Slop the hogs, but not the chickens or turkeyc.—Farmeors' licme Journal. ROTATION FOR TOBACCO. The is no greater need of the to- bacco growing sections of our terri- tory than a system of crop rotation that will increase soil fertility and the production of tobacco without seriously reducing the quality of the product.—Progressive Farmer. MANNER OF MILKING. Milk freely and rapidly, with as lit- tle movement or jerking as possible. Even avoid loud talking while milk- ing. Anything which attracts the at- tention of the cow from the operation of milking affects the secretion, and this secretion goes on during the drawing of the milk.—Farmers’ Home Journal. A GOOD CHEAP PUMP. This consists of a “stock” of com- mon piping; size should be one and one-half inches, and must be clamped to the casing. Spout and handle brace can be put on by a blacksmith in a few minutes. Suction rod must be attached to handle as shown in cut. The hook on the end of the handle is an essential feature. The cost is comparatively nothing.—Jno. R. Sater, in the Epitomist. AUTOMOBILE ON THE FARM. Recently, in the presence of a number of farm neighbors, Frank Hardart, Jr., of Glenloch, Pa., gave an exhibition of the use of his auto- mobile to grind corn, cut foddet and other things where power was need- ed. He had jacked up the auto from the ground, and used one of its wheels revolved by the auto engine as a driving wheel for the belt to operate the feed grinder and: fodder |’ cutter. It is likely that many uses for the auto will be found when the roads are too bad for travel, and when power is needed and can be utilized in the operation of farm ma- chinery.—Epitomist. INSTRUCT THE COLTS. The first year of a colt’s life should be devoted to instruction. It will learn more easily when six months old than when a year old. It can al- so be controlled more easily. Hence it is wise to handle the colt early. Its early training should not stop with breaking to the halter. It should be handled until it will drive as well as lead. To teach it all this and to keep it from forgetting what it has learned, is a little trouble, but if it is of good stock the trouble will be paid for. Practice a little common sense with the young stock and note the high rate of interest coming back to you as the result of the invest-, ment, TUBERCULOSIS. Cows are all subject to tuberculo- sis. This disease exempts no breed— it is a simple matter of coming in contact with the germ. Some indi- vidual cows are more resistent than other cows. There has never been found a tuberculosis cow on the Island of Jersey. The laws of the island pro- hibit the importation of any cattle to the Jersey Isle, and the disease has thus never been introduced there. During 1909 resolve to make every cow return a profit. A great many cows do not pay for their feed. Even in the dairy State of Illinois about one-third of the cows barely pay for their feed and return no profit. Ver- ily the dairyman earns his living and by an excessive sweating of ‘his brow and all because of his own ignor- ance or neglectfulness, too.—Inland Farmer. IS IT $1 OR $2 PER HEN? Colorado Agricultural College News Notes says that Colorado pays annual- ly to States east $23,000,000 for poul- try and poultry products, while the average net yearly profit per hen in Colorado when handled by an expert is $2—double that of States east. The average Colorado farmer loses money raising poultry. He does not know how. We need experienced poultrymen. The hen is a welcome immigrant in Colorado, according to this statement, but we will not admit that she dies twice as well there as here. Many of our average farmers make $1.50 per hen and more, at present prices of eggs. Experts do much better, for they cull out the non-laying mem- FINANCE AND TRADE REVIEW IMPROVEMENT IS NOTED Price Readjustments in Part Respon- sible and Administrative Changes in Part. New York—R. G. Dun & Co.'s “Weekly Review of Trade’ says: “Already the price readjustments are beginning to work toward the expected improvement in demand, and this and President Taft's inau- gural declarations favorable to ‘that measure of stability,’ which is ‘essen- tial to the life and growth of all busi- ness,” are important contributions to financial and trade confidence, and make stronger the hope of full indus- ‘trial recovery. “Both in sentiment and amount of new business in sight the iron and steel trade shows some gain. New business that is being figured on ag- gregates a good volume. “Dullness is still pronounced in | pig iron, ‘with quotations on a lower basis. “In spite of the upward tendency of raw material, buyers of cotton goods make a determined effort to se- cure a lower level of quotations. There i$ an entire absence of export demand from China, although it is believed that sellers will now accept prices that were refused in January. No new business is reported in wool- en goods, but it is believed that buy- ers will eventually need considera- bly - more merchandise to meet their season’s requirements. Trade in wool goods, such as Xkerseys and thibets, is exceedingly quiet, but dress goods are generally well sus- tained, with staple lines leading in strength. “Quiet conditions continue in the New England shoe market. | New or- ders are small and for immediate re- quirements only, and there is no dis- position to contract ahead for large quantities. Some factories are still busy on old orders, but a number have laid off part of their cutting staff. The demand for hides contin- ues slack, with a further seasonable weakness in prices on both packer and country hides.” MARKETS. PITTSBURG. Corn—No. 2. yellow, ea. vom 7? No. 2 2jellaw shelled.. . 69 7) Mix ar 64 60 Oatg No. 2 Tite: 5 3 Plone Wi paten 6 08 Fancy straight winters Hay—No. 1 Timothy. 1475 Clover No.1 : 11 0) Feed—No. 1 white mi 30 00 Brown middlings 28 00 Bran, bulk 24 00 Straw—Wheat 8 50 OBL. dcr ssensssssrssnssssssrasne 8 5) Dairy Products. Bogor Nigh creamery.. 35 io creamery.. 28 Qnioe country ro 2 Cheese—Ohio, new. 15 New York, new.. . 14 15 Poultry, Etc. . Hens—per 1b.. vsaeinrelencos S11 15 Chickens—dressed. ves duly annie ile 18 20 Eggs—Pa. and Ohio, fresh......... 34 35 Frults and Vegetables. Potatoes—Fancy white per bu.... vi] 0 Cabbage—per ton............ .s 33 0) 38 0) Onions—per barrel............ ..se 140 7190 BALTIMORE. Flour—Winter Petent..v: Sevens $ 5 90 Wheat—No. 2 red...... . p Sonne Wiuacisesenr's 71 vss epstans onions srsrs 36 Ee Otis creamery 34 PHILADELPHIA. Flour—Winter Patent 6 00 Wheat—No. 2 r 112 Corn—No. 2 Ry 70 Jats—No. 2 white 54 Butter—Creamery % 5 84 Eggs—Pennsylvania firsts........ 32 30 NEW YORK. Flour—Patents.......oeeeveeeeaes . 80 6 00 Wheat—No. 2red.. Corn—No. 2. 72 Oats—No. 3 ‘white. . oD Butter--Creamer; ay : 34 Eggs—State and Pennsylvania.... 40 LIVE STOCK. Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg. CATTLE Extra, 1450 to 1600 pounds 640 @ 5 60 Prime, 1300 to 1400 pound 615@ 6 35 Good, 1200 to 1300 pounds 59) @ 6 10 Tidy, 1050 to 1150 pounds.. 56) @ 585 Fair, 900 to 1100 pounds..... .. 490 @ 5 50 Common, 700 to 900 pounds. . 42 @ 47D Bulls selsienrisrs suv eanrnitnnnr ims . 8350 @ 550 COWS... oisrenciniirransinninncanres 1600 @55 00 HOGS Prime, heavy. ....... I... ......... @ 685 Prime, medium weight Best heavy Yorkers Lane Yorkers...... Prime woiherS.... .. 5s 00.0000... 3758.53.83 Good mixed. ,.................. .. 540 @ 565 Fair mixed ewes and wethers.. .450@5H Culls and common . 25) @ 400 Spring lambs 550 @ 7 00 eal calves.. 70) @ 950 Heavy to thin c¢ .400@6W = Easy Come, Easy Go. fp ———— we Tired Women can get back the strength they used to have if they will take a treatment of the famous tomnic- laxative herb tea, Lane’s Family Medicine (called also Lane’s Tea) Its cost is only 25 cents a package and a package will last a month. It curesbackache,sideache, bearing-down pains, indiges- tion and constipation. All druggists sell it, 25c. Safely Promised. He—Your father does not withold his consent to our marriage because I am his employe, I hope? She—O0, no! He says he’ll give his consent as soon as you get your sal- ary raised.—Stray Stories. BABY HORRIBLY BURNED By Boiling Grease—Skin All Came Off One Side of Face and Head— Thought Her Disfigured For Life —Used Cuticura: No Scar Left. “My baby was sitting beside the fender and we were preparing the breakfast when the frying-pan full of boiling grease ‘was up- set and it went all over one side of her face and head. Some one wiped the scald with a towel, pulling the entire skin off. We took her to a doctor. He tended her a week and gave, me some stuff to put on. But it all festered and I thought the baby was disfigured for life.’ I uséd about three boxes of Cuticura Ointment and it was wonderful how it healed. In about five weeks it was better and there wasn’t a mark to tell where the scald had been. Her skin is just like velvet. Mrs. Hare, 1 Henry St., Sos Shields, Durham, Eng. land, March’ 22, 190 Potter Drug & bom. Corp., Sole Props. of Cuticura Remedies, Boston, Mass. Diagnosing Her Case. . He—If I were rich, darling, would you love me more than you do? She—I might not love you any more, Henry, but I know I should look forward to our wedding day with a degree of impatience that never seems to possess me at present.—Chi- cago News. Every Woman Will Be Interested. If you have pains in the back, Urinary, Bladder or Kidney trouble, and want a leasant herb cure for woman's ills, try Fae Gray's Aistralian Leaf. Itisa re- liable regulator. All Druggists 50 cts. Sam- ple *REE. The Mother Gray Co.,Le Roy, N.Y. Mrs. Weeperly—Yes, we pay spot cash for everything. Mrs. Whipperly—Ah! I often speak to my husband about the time when we had to.—Puck. Piles Cured in 6 to 14 Days. Pazo Oiwment is Li to cure any case of Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Piles in 6 to 14 days or money refunded. 50c. 11 Of the ladies of quality let us have them in ‘quantity. H. H, GreEN's Sons. of Atlanta, Ga., are the only successful Dropsy Specialists in the world. See their liberal offer in advertise- ment in another column of this paper. A bird on the hat is worth two in the milliner’s shop. Itch cured in 30 minutes by Woolford’s Banitary Lotion. Never fails. At druggists. Mrs. Maria Ludiam of Oadly, Lei- cestershire, England, is 100 years old. She has long been’'a smoker, and her friends have marked the anniversary of her birth by sending her parcels of tobacco. «/ to on the bodily comfort it gives in \ the wettest weather MADE FOR —— HARD SERVICE AND GUARANTEED WATERPROOF sco AT ALL GOOD STORES | CATALOG FREE CO. BOSTON. U.S.A. an A passerby at Broad and Lombard streets in Philadelphia once heard the following dlalogue between a laborer who was digging in a sewer and a stout, beaming lady with a capacious market basket on her arm: ‘Ah, good marnin’ to you, Pat,” «aid she, leaning over and looking into the pit. “And what are you doin’? “Good marnin’, Bridget,” he replied, looking up. “I'm a-earnin’ alirnony for yees. And what are you doin’?” “Sure, I'm a-spendin’ it,” replied Rridget, airily as she trotted off.— “rom Lippincott’s. DYEING FEATHERS AND TIPS. Anyone having white tips or feath- » Everybody loves earliest vegetables suid and brilliant flowers. Therefore, to i { &ain you asa customer we offer: “3% 1000 kernels Fine Onion Seed. 1000 Rich Garrot Seed. | Celery, 100 Parsley. Juicy Radish Seed. ButteryLettuce Seed. ‘Tender Turnip Seed. § Sweet Rutabaga S'd. 1 100 Melons, 100 Tomato. DO * Drilliant Flowering Annuals f In all 10,000 kernels of warranted Een, grown seeds, well worth \ $1.000 man’s money (including infiam Caiatos all postpaid for but 160 , Tool a Sted ia ye to infending To Write for | [VERY RICH RICH MAN Ic money through real Be- | estat bers of the flock, and get an ave of fifteen dozen eggs per hen in a year, which, at twenty-five cents, is $3.75; or $2.50 above cost of feed. Indiana Farmecr. as new when dry —Boston Post. | Elaborate Thermometer. Some curious thermometers were made. Otto de Guericke, Burgomas- ter of Magdeburg, made one which was 20 feet long and gorgeous with blue paint and gilt stars. It con- sisted of a large globe fastened to a tube, both of copper. The tube was bent upon itself to form a very nar- row U, in which was placed the re- quisite amount of alecchol. One arm of the U was shorter than the other and open at the top. On the liquid was a float, to which was attached a cord passing over a pulley. At the other end of this cord was hung a gilt angel, its finger pointing to a scale on which the degrees were painted. : Not Cause for Consternation. “My boy says his ambition is to grow up to be a man just like his father.” < “I wouldn’t let that worry me. When I was your boy's age I had a burning desire to be a pirate.—Stray Stories. Eels Too Numerous. There has been a pest of eels along the northern coast of California, and the visitation was such a serious one that it threatened to interfere with the operation of the plant of the Snow Mountain Power Company. Only One “Bromo Quinine” Dat is Laxative Bromo Quinine. Look for the signature of KE. W. Grove. Used the World over to Cure a Cold in One Day. 25¢c. Progress of Foreign Railroads. According to the latest report of the French Minister of Public Works, relating to European railways, which brings the figures down to January 1, 1908, the total length of railways in Europe on that date amounted to 198,634 miles, of which 2,733 miles were opened for traffic during 1907. The largest amount of new mileage was built in Russia, in whose system is included that of the Grand Duchy of Finland, the new lines aggregating 1,072 miles, while 1,040 miles had been built during the previous year; 434 miles were opened in France, 415 in the German Empire, 236 in Austria-Hungary, 142 in Sweden, 125 in Spain, 110 in Italy, 66 in Switzer- land, and only 27 in the United King- dom. How It Worked. Ned—I ran across a very pretty} girl this morning. « Ted—Did she flirt with you? Ned—No; after she regained :con- sciousness she had me arrested for scorching.—London Answers. A Simple and Safe remedy for a cough or Throat Trouble is Brown’s Bronchial Troches. They possess real merit. In boxes 25 cents. Samples mailed free. John I. Brown & Son, Boston, Mass. You can’t always judge a man by PHYSICIAN! ADVISED Taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Columbus, Ohio. — “I have taken Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- pound during change of life. My doctor told me it was good, and since taking it I feel so much better that I Vegetable Com. pound a fine remedy Jfor all woman’s troubles, and El never forget to tell my friends what it has done for me.” —Mrs. E. HANSON, 304 East Long St., Columbus, Ohio. Another Woman Helped. Graniteville, Vt. — “I was passin throughthe Change of Lifeand suffer from nervousness and other anno oying symptoms. Lydia E.Pinkham’s Vege- table Compound restored myhealthand strength, and proved worth mountains of gold to me. For the sake of other suffering women I am willing you should publish my letter.”” — MRs. CHARLES BARCLAY, R.F.D., Granite- ville, Vt. Women who are passing through this critical period or who are suffering from any of those distressing ills pe- culiar to their sex should not lose sight of the fact that for thirty years Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, which is made from roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy for female ills. In almost every commu. nity you will find women who have been restored to health by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. ESTABLISHED 1899 THES 15 MOT A SIMS NEL INVISIBLE - gl AN Neat OLEATE. 8 OpromETHISTS Ruese C5 pn Ar fh, JOHNNY CONNORS, Riverbank, Conn, yiles hay bid $2 hs Rap lent With our How n C , WORTHEP CO., Angeticn Ny; Pre? ay PN. U. 11, 190). NEW DISCOVERY D R 0 P S gives quick relief and e the looks he wears. 5d Sheep and Cho! bottle; 85 and 10 a dozen. Special agents wanted. SPOHN MEDICAL CO worst cases. Hook of testimonials and 10 Days’ t ree. Dr. H. I. GREEN'S SONS, Bex B, Atlanta, Gag! For Pink Eye, Epizootic| TEMPERS we & Catarrhal Fever, Sure cure and positive preventive, no matter how horses at any age infected or “exposed.” Liquid, given on the tongue; acts on the Blood an Glands, expels the fjsonois germs from the body. Cures Distemper in Poga era in Pouitry. Largest selling live stock remedy. a Grippe among human beings and is a fine Kidney remedy. 50c. 1 a Cut this out. Keep it. Show to your druatisy who will get it for you. Free Booklet, “Distemper, Causes and Cur: Ww eShemists and GOSHEN, IND., U.S.A An aching back is instantly relieved by an application of Sloan’s L iniment. This liniment takes the place of massage and is better than sticky pla sters. It penetrates— without rubbing — through the skin and muscu- lar tissue right to the bone, quickens the blood, | relieves congestion, and gives permanent as (well as temporary relief. Sloan's Liniment has no equal as a remedy for Rheumatism, Neuralgia, or any pain or stiffness in the muscles or joints. Price 25¢., 50c¢., and $1.00. Dr. Earl S. Slecan, Boston, Mass., U. S. A. Sloan’s book on horses, cattle, sheep and poultry sent free. ers or even feather boas who would come a real estate agent, and earn from $1000 to . : - y $10,000 a year. We furnis u the information like to save them can do so hy and the property. No tos all for you | . . : ¥ to operate in. SOUTH C ry a Ov : inse woll BEAC washing with ivory soap, rinse Well | Go nen won Mune man. Won BEACH LAND in a strong bluing water, and they will come out a pale blue, then put on a plate in the oven, or hold over the heat and they will be as go00d | Color more goods brighter and faster colors than any other can dye any garment without ripping apart, Write for free ori: —How dye One 10c. pa c Ss all fibers. They Ble a and Mix Color PUTNAM FADELESS DYES dye in cold wat er n any other dye. You s. MONRC( YE ORO G Co, "Quincy, 1llinvise