The star. (Reynoldsville, Pa.) 1892-1946, February 15, 1905, Image 7

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BISHOP OWES
AND LIFE
Ministersof All Denominations
Join in Recommending
Pe-ru-na to the
People.
Ihihltc upeaktng especially expose
the throat and bronchial tubes to
catarrhal ajetttont.
Breadline t lie air of crowded awm-
blies, and the ncceweary exposure to nipht
air which many preachers must luce,
makes catarrh especially prevalent anions
their class.
l'emna has become justly popular among
them.
mm .. ;:".-:o.'v& i v.o-vw. ass i c: tkyn j i,'i rTWvn'
1
L.
Ml
3
The Eishop's Strong Tribute to Pe-ru-na.
; L. H. Halscy, Bishop C. M. E. Church, Atlanta. Ga., writes:
"I liave found l'eruna to be a great remedy for catarrh, lhave Hvfl'eredt
with IhlH terrible (Hxciie for more than twenty years, until since 1 have J
! been using l'eruna, which has relieved me of the trouble.
' I have tried many remedies and spent a great deal of hard-earned money J
for them, hut 1 found nothing no effectual In the cin e of catarrh an the
great medicine, l'eruna. i
"1 eel Mire, that l'eruna is not
but it in aim a blessing to sutt'erinn
iwery inoiviuual wno suners wun respiratory diseases wu, nno l'eruna J
a magnificent and sovereign remedy." L. 11. lfalsey, Up. C. M. E. Church.
Peruna is the most prompt and sure
remedy for eatarrh that can be taken.
tinny a preacher has been able to
meet hi engage mentsonlu because h e
keeps on hand a bottle, of l'eruna,
ready to meet any emergency that
may arise.
"I And Caaearets so good thai I woold rot be
without them. 1 waa troubled ft great deal u Itlt
torpid liver and headache. Now ainee taking
Oateareta Candy Cathartic 1 foel very much bettor
I aball certainly recommend them to my friends
a the bent medicine 1 hare ever aeon."
una fiaiinet, uaborn aim No. a, Fall Elver, Mas.
PlMnnft, Ptlntnble, Potnt. Ttf Gfo1. To Ooofl,
Never bicken, Weaken or lirii. 10c, Sttr, Kfti:. r
old In bulk. The Pennine tnhlet Htitmped CCO.
tiaaraaiood to cure or your money tttuik.
8terling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.Y. ftoi
mm SALE. TEH MILLIOH BOXES
WHAT'S THE USE OP
SAYING "GIVE ME A
5-CENT CIGAR." WHEN
BY ASKING l'OU A j i
"CREMO"
YOU GET THE BEST
5-CENT CIGAR IN
AMERICA -
"The World's target Seller"
-.1 i m ....... - i I
0,000 Plants for ISc.
nore fmmens arm wrmn mrm pmnwu w
FMUzera Benin cun mnj outer in
Atueriom. Tuere Ik rotuon t or thli.
We owu over fi.OUO mrmn for tlie nro
duct I on of our warniiited err tie.
Xii ortler to lndaeo you to try them, we
inaKe you me louowiuy anpr i
cetieniea ouart
For 18 Ovntm Pomtpmtd
SOOO rtm latj Tomlp,
niaacBing lottery.
H0O0 ltth NattrUKn. i
HntO BptMMlM OnlB, 1
1000 Rars Lutctau KwlMei, K
1000 Url.ulr MrillUml Viewer.
AboTeterenpAckKitTfi contain enftV
stent eeed to Rrow 1U.0QU plenu, fur
nlfitiintr liunhols of brllllnnt i
flowora aViitk lots and lota of chdue
vegetables, toftothor with our frreal fl
catAtog.telUng all about Flowers, W
itoaeg. Binall Fpults, etc, all for .
AOOinntampe ana (Hie notice, I
tug iio-pageoaUaiuK aioue, w.
JOHN A.SALZER 8HD CO,
di.au La Croseo, Wis
RtPANRTAnrTLM.H.thf.lwtrtM.
prptia mnllcliie evnr made. A tiiin
n rtrt-d millJoiiRof them hare been hold
' burn, tick headavbo, duuineu bad
breath. so ro Uirootatid ernrr lllnxiM
axlalni from a riloriiMri Mnmh
aro tvllftTed or etirtd br HJpaoa Tain
.w. . a "ne win neni'mity dive reliBt
wltDtntwentyroloultM. Tlioftre centpackntrulttenoturli
- awi lUlaJMW tvu MWUb
SEND STAMP lint doscrlptlon of 51 cheapest
farma In Clilo. Q. N. llanorotl, Jolteraoo, U.
tf afllleted
with weak
yea. ne.
Thompson's Eye Vater
P. N. U. 6, 1905.
fiuaft mumc ai i ti .c iah c
M. .L.K (NIL..
neat uuhwo oji ti
or arutmlMa
The6owe!s
W. CANDY CATtUfmC
In tlmA.
iiujr
HEALTH
TO PE-RU-NA.
- mm
'ifffl Ira
mM ' If
llm
''if
link
II M
The Friends of Pe-ru-na.
Despite the prejudices of the medical
profession au'iiiu-t proprietary medicines,
the cleruy have always maintained a
strong coniidence and friendship for Pe
runn. Tlicy have discovered by personal ex
perience that t'eruna does all that is
claimed for it.
onlu a triumph of medical science,
humanity, t
We have on file manv letters of rennm
mecdation like the one given above. Ve
can give our readers only a slight glimiwe
of the vast number of grateful letters
Dr. Hurt man is constantly receiving, in
praise ot nis iamous catarrn remedy, re
runa. l'.Kinon anil ill I-Hk.
Cliolly "But aw wby do yon say
you non t like my face? '
Miss rcrt "Bpcause."
Cliolly "Ali.1 but that's not a pwopcr
answer; there's no reason in that."
Miss rert "Well, ther.Vs none In
your face, either." Philadelphia Tress.
'JTiffmls more Cntarrh in this section of the
country than all other diseases put together,
nnrt until the last tew years was suposeci to
lipti-.i'uriiljle. Fora groat many years doetors
pronounced it a local disease and prescrihed
local remedies, and by constantly falling to
c re with locii treatment, pronounced it in
curable. Science has proven Catarrh to be a
eonstltutloiinl disease and therefore requires
constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh
Cure, manufactured by K. J. Cheney A Co.,
Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional enre
on the market. It Is taken Internally in doses
from 10 dropstoateaspoonful. It acts di rent -ly
on the blood and muvous surfaces of tin
system. They ofier one hundred dollars for
tny ease it fails t.i cure. Send for circular!
nnd testimonials. Addro&i i J. CntxEY X
Co.. Toledo, u.
Sold by Druggists, 75c.
Take Hail's Faaiily Pills for eonstipalloi
Didn't Meed Monev.
Iixon "How is jour artist friend
getting along in New York';'
Tonison "dli, splendidly!"
Dixon "Have you heard from liini?"'-
Tomson "No; thnt's the reason I
know he's prospering." Detroit Free
Tress.
Sleeplecs Fish and Snakes.
There are several species of fish,
reptiles and tasects which never
sleep during the whole of their ex
istence. Among fish it is positively
known that pike, salmon and goldfish
never Bleep at all; also that there are
several others in the fish family that
never sleep more than a few minutes
a month. There are dozens of species
of flies which never indulge in Blumb
er, and from three to five species
of serpents which also never sleep.
AN OLD MAN'3 TRIBUTE;
An Oillo Fruit Rstaor, 78 Tear, olil, Cnred
of Terrible Csae After lea Scar of
Snfferin.
Sidney Justus, fruit dealer, of Men
tor, Ohio, says: "I was cured by Doan's
Kidney Pills of a severe case of kid
ney trouble, of
eight or tea
years' standing.
I suffered the
most severe back
ache and other
pains in the re
gion of the kid-
m v J uese were
,Vi especially severe
when stooping to
lift auvtliinir. nml
Sidney jcbtcs. often I "could
hardly straighten my.back. The n.-hinir
was bad in the daytime, but jnst as
Dad at night, and I was alwavs lnme
in the morning. I was bothered with
rheumatic pains and dropsical swell
ing of the feet. The urinary passages
were painful, and the secretions were
discolored and so free that often I hud
to rise at night. I felt tired nil dnv.
Half a box served to relieve me, 'and
three boxes effected a permanent
cure." s
A TRIAL FREE Addresa Foster.
Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. For sale
by all dealers. Trice CO cts.
m at
1 M-IL
m b iwii?jyunuL
m rs" lis m
Wi C&' 71.
'lit v sr J;?B
Pleklnc Up Shock Corn.
While buskers and shredders are
quite common, the bulk of the shock
corn is still husked by band. Any one
who has tried It knows what a hack
breaking job it is to pick up tbe corn
and throw it into the wagon. A bet
ter way is to take a wide-moutbed
bushel basket, till it, then empty Into
wagon. Better still, where two, men
are working together, take a good-slz.cd
rinc wash tub and when tilled, empty
by each man taking bold of a handle.
Try it, and you will be surprised at the
time and labor saved. Trent Polk, in
Tbe Epitomist.
Killing Wearia.
Killing weeds by spraying Is now
practiced In France. A five per cent,
solution of sulphate of copper has been
found destructive of wild mustard and
some other weeds, without injuring
grain crops. It is probable that it will
not Injure certain kinds of weeds.
Spraying has been found of advantage
in France, however, in destroying
weeds, the cost being about !W per
acre. It is doubtful if surh a measure
will ever be adopted in this country
as tbe harrow, cultivator, weeder and
hoe can be used more effectively where
crops are'cultivatAI in rows, and even
If weeds are growing on broadcasted
plots it is probably cheaper to pull the
weeds out than to spray.
How Milk Hclpa.
Milk as a feed, when combined With
other feeds, bis a veiy much larger
feeding value than when fed by itself.
It also increases the value of the
other feed. Just bow this is, t lie
scientists have not yet worked out.
Thus an experiment was made in feed
ing l'H pounds of skim milk to pigs
weighing about ll'.j pounds. That skim
milk, when lel alone, made five pounds
of pork. Then 100 pounds of corn was
fed alone, and that made ton pounds
of pork. That would Indicate that l'Hl
pounds of corn would make fifteen
pounds of pork. . But when the two
wore fed together tbe experimenters
were surprised to find that they made
eighteen pounds of pork, or three
pounds more than could be explained.
Thus it Is evident that milk in bal
ancing a food makes It possible for the
animal to use it to better advantage
than when the grain is used alone.
Practical Poultry Pninla.
Keep your fowl stock young; old
hens are wholly unprofitable to keep. ;
Cocks as well as hens eat a lot of
food, and no cock is necessary except
during the hatching season.
Grade your eggs as to size; It im
proves the sample, and consequently
the price.
Largo, loose-feathered hens of the
Cochin or Brahma type lay small eggs,
and but lew of theiii. They are also
large eaters and poor rangers.
Close-feathered, medium-sized bens
of the Leghorn type are non-sitters,
good rangers and great layers.
It costs nearly as much to keep a hen
that lays eighty eggs in the year as
one that lays 130.
Fowls should not be fed near tbe
door of your dwelling house, or they
will stand about all day looking for
food.
Fowls roosting in trees and open
buildings seldom lay mnny eggs, and
those they do lay are often laid astray
and lost.
Clean Grain and Chopped Fodder.
In preparing food for horses it is
Important that grain should be properly
cleaned. In a case In which, after a
severe drouth, it was unavoidable to
feed oats containing tares and other
leguminous seeds, symptoms of lathy
rus poisoning were noticed in a number
of horses. The attacks were frequent
ly severe and sometimes fatal. When
the oats were properly cleaned this
trouble entirely ceased.
Cleaning further increases the dens
ity of the oats by removing mineral
matter and dust, which may sometimes
induce attacks of intestinal obstruc
tions, colic, etc. No advantage appears
to be gained by grinding the grain, as
horses, excepting old ones, prefer fo
crush It themselves.
For the last live years a prominent
horseman has chopped ithe coarse fod
ders, using a ration of equal parts of
hay and straw, and this practice has
been found the most profitable for sev
eral reasons. Thus, straw may be
made to form an integral part of the
ration, and the proportions of hay and
straw may be accurately regulated.
Horses waste much less of such fod
der, especially if some other material
than straw is used for the bedding.
American Cultivator.
Talne or Skim Milk For Pice. "
The experiment station at Cornell
University, New York, has recently
made a test on the fedeiug of skim
milk to growing pigs with a view of
determining its value for pork produc
tion. ,
It shows that skim milk when fed
with a ration of grain was worth to
the feeder about three per cent, more
than using it in cheesemaking. .
Tbe pigs were fed lu addition to the
skim milk, pen No. 1, cornmeal only;
pen No. !i, cornmeal ami gluten feed
mixed half Bud half; pen No. o, corn
meal and wheat middlings half and
half by weight. The pigs were fed
twice a day, morning and evening. The
grain was put dry in tbe feeding trough
and the milk poured upon it. The pigs
were given all they would drink up
clean. ,
.In the test it was shown that milk
was worth fifteen cents per 100 pounds
fed to bogs from weaning up to a
weight of 125 pounds.
It was shown also that clear corn
meal is perfectly satisfactory as a
single grain feed, when fed In connec
tion wjtu skim milk. It was also
shown that weanling pigs in close quar
ters during tbe cold weather cau be
made to gain a pound live weight per
day for three months.
Skim milk can be fed economically
at three pounds of milk for one pound
of grain.. Skim milk makes a balancer
and Increases the value of the grain as
well as tbe milk upon combining.
Thlnia Not to Do.
A dairy writer tells a contemporary
some things that are not done on bis
farm: '
I. We do not consider that we know
everything about butter making, as
something new Is being discovered
every month. Not only from our own
work are we continually learning, but
also from the observation and research
of others.
'i. We do not keep a cow that makes
less than 200 pounds of butter a year.
3. We do not put tbe dry cow on
a starvation ration.
4. We do not keep our cows In an
Icehouse, hogpen or dungeon.
fi. We do not allow them to go a
whole year without carding or brush
ing them.
U. We do not depend on pasture
alone for a summer ration.
7. We do not allow tbe milk to stand
very long in the stable to absorb toul
odors.
5. We do not njx sweet cream with
cream to be churned less than twelve
hours before churning. The cream is
ripened in one vessel which holds the
cream for n whole churning.
1). We do dot add scalding water to
tbe cream; nor guess at the tempera
ture with the linger; nor take two or
three hours to churn.
10. We do not gather the butter till
the "dasher stands on top" and then
dip it out of the buttermilk.
II. We do not add coarse salt by
guess; nor work the butter into grease.
VI. AVe do not send our butter to
market wrapped in old rags that may
have seen other service in the house.
TTorae Talk. ,
Feeding should not be suspended be
cause the days have come when the
work horses have less to do.
Manage to give them some work
every day, or turn them in a yard or
paddock to move about.
Feed enough so they will not run
down or get soft, as It wll! cost mueli
more to get them In good condition
again if allowed to fall oil.
They should have at least two feeds
of grain each day. Corn and oats
ground, from four to eight pounds, fed
on cut bay, In two meals, is a good
ration.
Always put a blanket on a horse it
It is kept standing even a short time.
If a horse is heated by driving never
leave it standing exposed to a piercing
wind. Keep it moving or get it in a
barn, and rub dry and blanket warmly.
Never leave Ico nnd mud frozen on
the horse's ankles. It is conducive to
rheumatism, chapped heel and mud
fever.
Rub the legs dry with a wisp of
straw or a piece of old gunnysack.
Cheap Turkish toweling is handy nml
effective; it is easy to wash out when
soiled. I always keep a supply iu the
stable for rubbing.
Never allow the smith to pare the
soles or frogs; during the winter, es
pecially. Make the calks as low as possible,
and let the frog prevent injurious con
cussion of the sensitive inner part of
the foot, on the frozen ground and Ice.
It also acts as a rubber pad and pro
vents slipping. Farm Journal.
Cheap lrnuble Hot; Pen.
The pen here described is not an ex
pensive one to construct, yet it an
swers the purpose of a pen costing
several times as much built on other
plans. This pen may be of logs with
poles for the floor or be built of sawed
lumber, as one desires. While the pen
may be of any dimensions desired, n
length of sixteen or eighteen feet will
be the most economical. The plan hero
described provides for a pen twenty
four feet long and eiuht feel wide, thus
giving one, when divided, two pens,
a '
each eight by twelve feet. Or, it may
be arranged, as shown in the cut, Into
three compartments for each pen. One
a room with board floors fur a feeding
room.
One with earth iiir for a general
living room and one with board floor
to be used as a sleeping room. At
tlie end of tbe feeding room the troughs
are made which may be partitioned off
or not as one thinks best. Tbe plan
of arrangement with the general living
room in tbe middle, between the feed
ing room and tbe sleeping room, en
ablcs the bogs to have considerable ex-
erclse, and with such a room with an
earth floor they will not be likely te
soil tbe beds of the sleeping room. Id
the Illustration 0 0 illustrates the
troughs, B tbe feeding floor, C the
earth floor and V the sleeping room.
The complete pen is shown at the bob
toin of the cut. Indiauapoiis News.
Lucky Kansas.
Statistics, supplement by esti
mates where statistics are not avail
able, show that the average cash in
come of the 180,000 farmers of Kans
as is $2,000 a year. Kansas has now
about $165,000,000 wort'j of live stock
at work converting her rich grains
and grasses into dollars, and her farm
ers have been quick to recognize the
fact that well-bred stock constitutes
better machinery for this purpose than
does the old time scrub.
FTTRnarmnentlv cured. v fl nrervon
nessafter first dav's me of Dr, Kline's Oreat
Nervertestorer.t'Hrlal hottle.md trcHn free
Dr. R. H, KMKC.Ltd..fl archHt.,Phlln.,P
There are 12.520 boys nnd 40W cirls in
the industrial schools of Grt-it Britain.
Mother flrT Sweet Pnwrtera For Millrlrea
Pucccasfully i'e-l by Mother Gruv. nurse in
the Children's Uorne in Nee1 Yo'c. (Vre
Feverislinese, Bit'l Stomnch. Teethint Dis
orders, rnnvc and reimVe the Bowels nnd
JDontrov Worms. Over 30.OJ10 trlieniala.
At alldnidrists. 2.V. Samp'e rnnilcd Free.
Address Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y.
The Swiss nntlinriliea are about to adopt
khaki for soldiers' uniforms.
To Core fold In One lie
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All
iruceist refund money if it fails to curs.
E. W. Grove's aiennture i on box. 2."c.
Ants ore the mopt. brainy of all creatures
In proportion to size.
Mrs. Wlnslow's Soothlnir Synin forehlldren
teethlnir, soften the mans, reduces Inflamma
tion, allays pain, mires wind colic, 25c.abottle
The town ot Chariot tenburg, near Ber
lin, lias an open-air schon!.
Ptso's Cure for Consumption is an Infallihlo
medicine for coughs and colds. N. W.
Bamuei., Ocean Grove, N. J Feb. 17, 1909.
The sale of automobiles in Russia is
trowing rapidly.
The Rothschilds still seem to live
In fear of the old riotous days of tho
commune, and it said that the houses
of the family are full of secret safes
nnd closets.
Regular motor car service has been
established between the eastern
coast of Madagascar and the capital
ot the lBland, a distance of 152 miles.
The V. 8. Dept. of Altrlcnltnre
gives to Balzer's Oats its heartiest en
dorsement. Salzer's New National Oats
yielded in 1904 from 150 to 300 bu. per
acre in 30 different States, and you, Mr.
Farmer, can beat this in 1905, if you will.
Spelts or Emmer, above illustrated,
Rives 80 bushels grain and four tons hay
besides per acre. It's wonderful. Snlzer's
seeds are pedigree seeds, bred up through
careful selection to big yields.
Fer Acre.
Palzer's Beardless Bnrley yielded 121 bu.
Salr.er'e Home Builder Corn... 300 bu.
Speltz and Macaroni Wheat.... 80 bu.
Snlzer's Victoria Knpe... 80,000 lbs.
Palzer's Tcosinte Fodder 100.000 lbs.
Salzcr's Billion Dollnr Grass... 50.000 lbs.
Salzer'i Pedigree Potatoes 1,000 bu.
Now such yields pay and you can have
them, Mr. Farmer, in 1005.
SEND IOC IN 8TAMM
and this notice to the John A. Salpr Reed
Co.j La Crosse, Wis., and you will get
their big catalog nnd lots of farm seed
samples free. A. C. L.J
Our corn crop of this year, if mass
ed together, would cover CO acres of
ground to the depth of nearly 1,000
feet a veritable mountain of corn
over a third of a mile high.
GRATEFUL TO CUTICURA
For Instant ltellef and Speedy Cure of ltaw
and Scnlr Hmnor, Itching Day and
' ight Suffered For Months.
"I wish you would publish this letter so
that others suffering as 1 have may be
helped. For months awful sores covered
my face and neck, scabs forming, itching
terribly day and night, breaking open, and
running blood and matter. 1 hud tried
many remedies, but was growing worse,
when 1 started with Cuticura. The first
application gave ine instant relief, and
when 1 had used two cakes of Cuticura
Soap and three boxes of Cuticura Oint
ment, I was completely cured. (Signed)
Miss Nellie Vander Wiele, Lakesidc.N.Y."
The Norwegian Government has
under consideration a petition that
it should sent the Fram, with Otto
Svcrdrup as captain, on another North
Polo search next year.
The number of sick and wounded
soldiers under treatment in Japan to
ward the end of last month was 45,
000. A Guaranteed Cure For Piles.
Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding
Piles. .Druggists will refund money if Pazo
Ointment tails to cure in 6 to 14 day. 50c.
A piece of lancewood an inch square will
stand a strain of 2000 pounds.
Northwest Canada. .
The number of homestead entries
recorded for the Northwest1 Terri
tories of Canada last year was 32,
CS2, as compared with 22,215 in the
previous year. These numbers, and
the rate of increase do not Indicate
that there is anything near like the
boom that is advertised as going on
In that land of frost and wheat.
Farms are cheap in Northwest Cana
da. In fact, the Government Is prac
tically giving them away, while the
most strenuous efforts are being made
officially and privately to attract emi
gration. Especial inducements have
been offered to Americans. Agents
have been sent to the United States
to spread Information about this
Northwestern country and to assist
pioneers who are willing to go there.
Yet in spite of all this work only 10,
300 people left the United States for
Canada List year. These facts clear
ly show that the great Northwest
Territory has neither the attractions
nor the productivity ascribed to it.
Kansas City Journal.
PUTNAM
Women in Out Hospitals
Appalling Increase in the Number of Operations
Performed Each Year How Women May
Avoid Them.
Going through the hospitals In our
large cities one is surprised to find such
a largo proportion of the patients lying
on those snow-white beds women
ond girls, who are either awaiting
cr recovering from serious opera
tions. Wby should this be the case? Sim
ply because they have neglected them
selves. Ovariun and womb troubles
are certainly on the- increase among
the women of this country they creep
upon them utiawures, but every one of
those patients in the hospital beds had
plenty of warning iu that bearing
down feeling, pain nt left or right of
the womb, nervous exhaustion, pain in
the small of tbe bach, leucorrhrca, diz
ziness, flatulency, displacements of tho
womb or irregnlarities. All of these
symptoms are indieations of an un
healthy condition of the ovaries or
womb, and if not heeded the ponnlty
has to be paid by a dangerous operation.
When these symptoms manifest them
selves, do not drag along.until you are
obliged to go to the hospital and sub
mit to an operation but remember
that Lydla B.v Pinltham's Vegetable
Compound has saved thousands of
women from surgical operations
When women are troubled with ir
regular, suppressed or painful menstru
ation, weakness, leucorrhcea, displace
ment or ulceration of the womb, that
bearing-down feeling, inflammation of
the ovaries, backache, bloating (or flat
ulency), general debility, indigestion,
and nervous prostration, or are beset
with such symptoms as dizziness, lassi
tude, excitability, irritability, nervous-
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Succeeds Where Others Fail.
PLANET MARS.
A Careful Summary of Discoveries
to Date.
We can draw all the geographical
configurations, seas, coasts, islands,,
peninsulas, mouths of rivers or canals
of Mars with accuracy; and wo can
anticipate what district will appear in
the lens of tho telescope, for the
length of the rotation of the planet is
known to the hundredth part of a
second. As the planet turns upon its
axis more slowly than ours, the cal
endar of the inhabitants of Mars is
composed of two consecutive years of
GO'S days und a blsextilc one of GG9
days. It is not many years Bince Mars
entered into the sphere of our obser
vation. And one can also say that
there is but a small number of the
inhabitants of this world who havo
observed it In all Kb details, and of
these tho most experienced Is Slgnor
Schlapnrelli, director of the observa
tory at Milan.
The geographical map of the planet
Mars has Just been made with infinite
euro by the above-mentioned astrono
mer. One might really consider It a
terrestrial sphere of continents, Is
lands, coasts, peninsulas, gulfs,
waters. Moreover, clouds, rains,
Inundations, snows, seasons, winters
and summers, springs and autumns,
prevail as they lo here; and the in
tensity of the seasons Is absolutely
the same as with us, the inclination of
the axis being the same as ours.
Our problem of the habltability of
the stars is limited to observing the
celestial bodies upon which the con
ditions are such that organized matter
enn exist in a durable form.
In tho planet Mars the destiny of a
cubic meter of water, earth or any
matter is only the seventeenth of
what it is here, and the weight is only
38-100ths. A kilogram transported to
Mars would therefore only weigh
3i6 grams there, and a man or wo-
man weighing 70 kilos would only .
weigh 25 there. The years are near
ly twice as long as upon our planet,
and the cliniatological conditions
seem much more favorable than they i
are here. I
The conditions necessary to life
are we know, multiform, as the struc
ture of the organic matter is so com
plicated. Rear Admiral John C. Watson, re
tired, has arrived at Berlin, on his
mission from the Navy department to
learn how other countries make thai
best, morally and mentally, of their
seamen.
TIi3 Great Nonesuch Remedy
ST.
JACOBS
OIL
FADELESS DYES
ness, sleeplessness, melancholy, "all
gone"and ''want-to-be-left-alone" feel
ings, they should remember there is one
tried and true remedy. .
The fol.owlng letters cannot fail to
bring hope to despairing women.
Mrs. Fred SoyAcl, 412 N. r.Uh Street,
West Philadelpnia, Pa , writes: ;'
Dear Mrs. Pinkham:
' I was in a very serious condition when I
wroto to you for advice. 1 had a serious womb
and ovarinn troublo and 1 could not carry a
child to maturity, nnd was advised that an
operation was my onlv hope nf recovery. I
could not bmr to think of going to the hospi
tal, so wroto you for advice. I did as you in
structed me and took Lydla E. Pink-ham's
Vegetable Cotntiound: niid I am not only a
well woman In-day, but have n twantif ul baby
girl six months old. I advise nil sick nnd
sulTering women to write you for advice, as
you have done so much for me."
Miss Ruby Mushrush, of I'.ist
Chicago, Ind writes:
Bear Mrs. PInkhnm: '
" I have heeun great sufferer with irregular
menstruation nnd ovarian trouble, and about
three months ago t he doctor, after using the
X-llay on me, said I had an abcess on the
ovaries and would have to have nn ojierntion.
My mother wanted me to trv Lydia E. Pink
ham's Vegetable Compound as a last resort,
and it not only saved me from an operation
but made mo entirely welL"
Lydia E. P. nkham's Vegetable Cora
pound at once removes such troubles.
Refuse to buy any other medicine, for
you need the best.
Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women
to write her for advice Heradvice and
medicine have restored thousands to
health. Address, Lynn, Mass.
Chic Alvurez is an Indian of the
State of Chiapas, Mexico. She is 18
years old. weighs 598 pounds, and is
still growing.
RESTORED TO HEALTH,
I'M you eVer reallr.e Ihe'rerfect liaiTinem
which cornea ui,u iroltiir nut Into thot.rlirht
aiitwhlne upon a bcuutiful inornlaa alter re
cmerlnir from a lonir m. kni-nr
J'o you now aunr from any dianiw,
rtnynti wish to lie cured;
,.rSi'':',l,.".l!n I'"1' Are yon n!ijc to
fATAH ltll.ANTII.il A or lKAI'iJKMHf
Are you fon eil toemluro rain or dlslreaa, or to
He ;,!, ntehtii. Are yon iil,t toCohla.
( onsilraiion. II VnI'FI'kIA, HIIM .IIA-
Tlt-i't, "BABAC'IIE, KIU.nLy K
J.I Mt troublaf
IIO.VT he mh-erable any loninir.
IMIN'T let 111 health destroy your harpf
neaa, make your lile a burden and haateu ita
melancholy end.
IMI.VT waste any more time, enenry and
B money. IHI.-VTemltire that "Hoi deterred
whli ii makeththe heartsick." tryinir to cure
vnursolf wltl, .ti.i... .... . .
IIO.VT think yon cin't lie cured lieranm
yon have not anuWit relief In the rluht place.
Write to me t once and learn how yon can
he cured, not lor a day or a week, but oreyer.
It Will Not Cost You a Cent
I GIVE FREE CONSULTATION
AND ADVICE
M Ufa t.e A ...
chrome u,: 3
theterrlWem,.niMiJ.T e,rienVe.of
u!ra't'or'''i,',.0,,',,,' "''"
Bon!?y eiluded larire minis of
IV YOIT A HE SfFFERfNfJ are In
rain, distress or ah kness. If n are not ,
01 me real nature of your complaint. If the 'i
rr.nv. uer. yon have tak-n do not rive the relief S
nielf. mown only to
w,r",,',:r'"lr?,n"',nd "xMrena plainly on the
dotte.1 lim-a In the free Medical Adrl. CotJ
UK. Hltlf.HA II, rilnne Eapertend Uao
terlologiat, p. p. Bo, h,, m., mo'
Name.
Address.,
3
PFIKIOrK Un"K ai Si-l-lvtl War. orondl.a
rLtlOI'JKJ blllty anrwarandforwlflowa. Rava
record of moat loy.-i) aohtieia' aervlce. and ace ot
Ohio meo, SB year oractlce. ljiwa and advice KKEI
A.W.Mra otiaim A So M w Hln.it St.. Cincinnati, O
1 TAKE CARE OF YOUR HAIR BY USINQ 9
MONTGOMERY'S HAIR RESTORER. O
5 Promotes the growth. Restores Its
w Natural color. Prevents the falling. P
Freea from dnndrult Used afty years, x
I Sold by all druggists. $1.00. 0
X VYM. C. MONTGOMERY CO. ' q
O 635 N. 8th Street. Philadelphia. Pi- X
t
Ths old monk cure, strong,
straight, sure, has for a large
part of a csntury battled with
and conquered
AchesandPains
the world over,
and 50c.
Price 25c,
$$$'$
A