ION. W. H. KELBAUGH OF mi VIRGINIA v n PRAISES PE-I ' ., Hon. VV. H. helbaugh. A Cold at Any Time of the Year, Kspe eialty in Hot neat her, is Very Uepresm ng to the System. Fe-ru-na is an Uneqvalrd Jbnt'e For Such Cases. Head What People Say About It. Hon. W. H. KelbatiRh, Ex-Member W. Va. Legislature, 204 9th street, N. E., Washineton, D. C, writes; " You canuae my na m eand word at allttmesforl'eruna as amedl cine and tonie unequaled. lhave tried it for a stubborn cold and badly win down system. 1 tried pU- sorts of other medicines and paid several expensive ' doctor bills. Peruna cured me, strength ened me more than ever, and saved me money. Mrs. Clara Litterst, Seiiheld, Ind., Bays: L&st fall I took a severe cold. I took fcruna, began to improve and kept on so ttitil 1 was able to do my "ork Kinds of West. The numerous kinds of West of which the effete East solemnly dis courses are enough to bewilder a Philadelphia lawyer. It will assure you that besides "the Middle West," a phrase it employs continually and with evident pleasure, there are an eastern West, a northern West and a southern West! Yet there Is only one East, and hardly enough of that to swear by. The Californian. To Wash Glassware. Much of the imitation cut glassware may be ttiudc to look almost like the genuine article if washed in the following manner: Make a strong suds of Ivory Soap and im merse the piece of glassware in it. Hub vigorously with a soft brush, dip up and down in tlie suns and uo not my nut let drain. This will give a beautiful sparkle. Eleanor R. .Parker. Should Have Paid Up, It wasn't a Missouri editor, but a printer's devil who was going through his first experience on "making up" forms. T!-e paper whs late and the boy got the galleys mixed. The first part of the obituary notice of an im pecunious citizen had been dumped in the forms, and the next handful of type came off a galley describing a recent fire. It read like this: "The pall bearers' lowered the body to the grave and as it was consigned to the flames there were few, if any regrets, for the old wreck had been an eye sore to the town for years. Of course there was individual loss, but that was fully covered by insurance." The widow thinks the editor wrote the obituary that way because the la mented partner of her joys and sor rows owed him five years' subscrip tion. Antwerp Bee. Some Dark Statistics. The number of homicides and deaths by violence in the United States in 1905 was 9.212, as against 8,482 in 1904. Suicides, 9,082. as against 9.240 in 1904. Killed on steam railroads, in 1905, 3,142; in jured, 15,904. Killed on electric and elevated railroads, 4C4; injured, 2, G22. These statistics, collected by the Chicago Tribune, are unofficial, but perhnps they are none' the less trustworthy fln that account. We murder and manslaughter nine times as many as the Germans; four times as many as the English, Scotch and Welsh. America seems to be a little careless, to put it mildly. Every body's Magazine. . "NO TROVBLE" To Change From Coffee to Postum. "Postum has done a world of good for me," writes an Ills. man. . "I've had indigestion nearly all my life, but never dreamed coffee was the cause of my trouble until last spring I got so bad I was in misery all the time. "A coffee drinker for 30 years, It Irritated my stomach and nerves, yet I was just crazy for It. After drink ing it with my meals, I would leave the table, go out and lose my meal and the coffee, too. - Then I'd . be as hungry as ever. "A friend advised me to quit cof fee and use Postum said it cured him. Since taking his advice I re tain my food and get all the good out of it, and don't have those awful hungry spells. "I changed from coffee to Postum without any trouble whatever, felt better from the first day I drank it. I am well now and give the credit to Postum." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read the little book, "The Road to Wellvtlle," In pkgs. "There's a reason." &$lMtkM 111 New York City. Waists that close In the back yet give a chemisette effect are among the novelties of the season and are exceedingly desirable from every point of view. This one is among the best and include trim ming of lace over the shoulders that Is very generally becoming. In the Illustration the material is white linen batiste, with the chemisette of tucking, trimming of lace and of banding, but there are a great many thin silks that are in vogue, and these as well as fashionable fabrics are In every way appropriate for the design, which, indeed, is one of those useful ones that can be made available for everything seasonable. The waist is made with a lining, that is used or omitted as the mate rial renders desirable, and consists of front and backs. The backs are tucked for their entire length, the front to yoke depth only, and the chemisette is arranged under the waist, the whole closing together at the back. The trimming portions are cut in one piece each and arranged over the shoulders on indicated line-?. The sleeves are the favorite puffa finished will roll-over cuffs snd can be cut off at the elbowB or extended to the wrists, as liked. The quantity of material required for the medium size is threes and one half yards twenty-one, two and three fourth yards twenty-seven or one and seven-eighth yards forty-four inches wide, with three-eighth yard of tucking for the chemisette, two and one-fourth yards of lace four and one-half inches wide and three and one-half yards of banding to make as illustrated. .No Gloves For Tennis. One doesn't of course expect a girl to wear gloves with her short sleeves when she is playinf tennis or golf, but you do rather look for them when she comes down town. It is al ready a common sight to see arms burned, to the elbow swinging along boldly. Perhaps they are bony, scrawny arms, too, but the wearer cares only for her comfort and a comfortable fashion it certainly is. Serge in Colors. White serge is dally increasing in favor. Every suit that appears is al most sure to sell the material for an other suit. Pure, clear white is as charming astit can be, but there is something especially soft and attrac tive about the creamy tint of the serges. Black .velvet always adds a bright touch to them in the form of collar, cuffs, etc., but blue and green and even red are becoming if in har mony with the complexion of the wearer. . Cluny Lace l'opulnr. There is no diminution In the pop ularity of Cluny lace; la fact, some authorities claim that it is still gain ing ground, so no one will mnko a mistake by buying the real Cluny, expensive though it is, for trimming a handsome costume. I.nce and Chiffon Waist. A baby Irish lace waist made over accordion-pleated chiffon, with yoke of German Val. lace about one inch wide, the edge of the lace overlap piag the under one. The effect was very good. The sleeves-were above the elbow and had a wide band of liberty satin around the arm. Homemade Waists. The girl who is skillful and r.mbi tious but doesn't feel that she can pay say two dollars a yard for one of the stylish all-over embroideries, can evolve a very handsomo waist, yeB, a stunning one, from a fifty-cent bttiste by embrokiering it with large coin spots which are first well padded. Place the dots far apart. Child's Cont. The little coat made of lingerie ma terial is one of the latest whims ot fashion and is exceedingly attractive for the wee tots. This one is espe cially designed for the flouncing in which it is shown, but could be made from any plain material if the straight edges are appropriately trimmed, al though the flounclnc has certain ad vantages, notable among which is the fact that it reduces the labor of mak ing to the minimum. For the very thin coats batiste is well liked and is always extremely dainty, but there are also slightly heavier Bouncings which can be utilized for the every day coats, while still plainer gar ments can be made ot the flouncing that is finished with hemstitching only or of pique scalloped at the edge9. The coat is made with a plain body portion to which the full skirt is at tached. The cape is separate and consists of the yoke and frills and th neck is finished with a turn-over col lar. The sleeves pre full with roll over cuffs. The quantity of material required for the medium size (two years) il four and one-half yards of embroid ery sixteen inches deep, with seven- eighth yard of plain material; or, five and one-eighth yards of ma';erlal twenty-one, four and one-fourtb yards twenty-seven or two and one quarter yards forty-four inches wide. Parasols With Monogram. A very neat parasol to carry wit one's white linen shoppinit or busi ness suit is of plain wfcit linen will a large monogram on one panel. SHI Aieohol may be produced from wast molasses In Cuba at a cost of 10 centr, per gallon, and the residue used as a fertilizer. The resources of this country, de veloped with scientific and intensive culture, would be sufficient for the pop ulation of both Europe and America. In a new British microscope any part of the spectrum can be used for illum inating the object It promises val uable results and proves that different rays show minute details differently, certain diatoms, for instance, being visible under green, but not to be seen with the yellow. It is reported that an engineering firm at Pittsburg has patented a new type of universal plate mill. The mill will be driven by an electric motor of C000 to 8000 horse-power capacity, this, it is said, being the first time that a null of this character and size has been electrically driven. Pr. Charcot is supported by Sir Clem ment Markham and Capt. Scott in the belief that the South Pole where the ice is tolerably level and constant not ever changing, as that in the north may be reached by a motor sledge of special construction. From observations on Mount Blanc and recent discoveries in physics, A. Hausky has concluded that the solar corona, zodiacal light and aurora bor ealis are all electrical phenomena and are due to negatively charged particles detached from the sun and repelled by the pressure of light with a velocity of several thousand miles a second. Contaminated air is drawn from a room through a stove or flue by reason of the lower atmospheric pressure. To detect when the ventilation Is not prop erly continuing, an Italian, Signor Ber tini, has devised an instalment called the noseroscope, which rings an alarm bell when the diminished pressure ap pears. This gives due notice that foul air must be collecting in the room. A great improvement has been re cently made in the machinery for mak ing seamless hosiery. Under the old sBtem, the rib or upper portion of the hosiery was made on one machine, the circular leg work on another, and fin ished on a third, but by the new ma chine the work is performed from start to finish in one operation. The new machine begins on the rib work, and automatically changes to the circular leg portion, then it makes the heel, foot, and toe, and starts on another piece without any intermission. COLOR IN MEN'S CLOTHES. Some of the Rainbow Effects to be Seen in London. The drab dulnesa which has so long reigned over men's dress is showing signs of giving place to the opposite extreme, and men are beginning to vie witli women in the brilliancy of their garments. The favorite color of the moment would seem to be green. A distin guished Academician has been seen wearing a lounge jacket of that color edged with brown. Again, Mr. Mar tin Harvey has adopted it, and so have other actors, but they have so far es chewed the bright grass green which the more advanced young man has adopted. Suits of vivid blue have al so been observed of late. There is apparently no limit to in dividual taste In dress, though it would be rather difficult to outdo a gentle man who was seen a few days ago in the Bayswater road. He was wearing a pair of white flannel trousers, a vio let shirt, a flaming scarlet tie, a bright blue jacket, a parti-colored waistcoat, a pair of yellow boots, and a black silk hat. He was not a' Christy Minstrel, but a more or less ordinary citizen. As for the men's shops, their win dows are a riot of color. Here one njay see waistcoats with crossbars of vivid green and no less vivid white on a gray ground and caps with colossal checks. The ties form not a feast but an orgy of color. Some of them are "shot" until one thinks of Nero's fa mous mullet of Vermillion dying in an ecstacy of azure. The crudity of color, however, is by no means accompanied by crudity of price. Some of the latest designs in shirts literally blaze. Some of the more mod est are light green, with a subtle bil ious tinge worked In, and ornamented with dots, while a light purple material aho dotted, thrusts itself forward to suggest the background of an early Jan Van Beers. The chic thing is evi dently to make the handkerchief match the shirt. Until this year men were generally content fo use a white.hand kei chief with perhaps a border of col or. Now the handkerchief is all bor der, and if there is any suggestion of white at all it is a stripe in the edge as an apology for what used to be. All this flamboyance is not merely outward. All the colors of the rain bow may be found in what our Ameri can cousins call the underwear depart ment If a man so please he may change the color of his undergarments every day of the week and sUep in pajamas of similar tints. Or he may array (himself to resemble a Neapol itan ice, a subtle suggestion perhaps for keeping cool at night during the dog days. London Tribune. Recently the postage on domestic letters in France was reduced from 3 cents to 2. Postal cards, however, will cost 2 cento. A Claim to Gratitude, Industry has Its noble and altruls tlo side, as well as education. Some penerous men endow libraries and colleges. Others build hospitals and homes for the Indigent. Such men command the gratitude and affection of their fellows. But would not even deeper gratitude be felt by all right thinking people for a great packer who should conceive it to be his mis sion to create and maintain an ab solutely ideal establishment, one that should meet with every hygienic and moral requirement and that could not fail to serve for all present and fu ture competitors as the model, the standard, the embodlent of the high est principles to bo realized In that industry. Chicago Record-Herald. FITS,St.Vitus'Danre:Nervons Diseases per manentlycured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. fZ trial bottle and treatise five. Dr. H. R. Kline, Ld.,081 Arch St., Phila., Pa, The growth of girls Is greatest In their fifteenth year; of boys in their seventeenth. Mrs. Wlnslow's Soothing Syrup for Children teething,softenBthenuniR,reducesiii (lamina tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25c a bottle Colored Eyeglasses. Eyeglasses slightly tinged with an orange yellow are said by a French expert, Dr. Motals, to be peculiarly agreeable and soothing to feeble or oversensitive eyes. Patients who cannot use blue or smoked glasses Bee well with these. SCRATCHED TILL BLOOD RAN. Scales on Face and Head Threw Off LIU tU Watery Substance Complete Cure by Cutlciira Remedies. "1 will be glad to give anybody suffering from eciema any information regarding Cuticura Remedies. When my little girl was about a year and a half old there de veloped small pimples on her face, which went into a scale which threw off a little watery substance. Her head was also af fected with it. She used to scratch until it bled, making very bad sores. We tried two or three salves, including borax. They did not do any good, so 1 got some Cuti cura Soap first, and then used the Cuti cura Soap, Ointment and Pills. They com pletely cured her, and we bare had no more bother with it. Wm. Fj Knox, 1216 So. 35th St.,Philadelphia,Pa.,lune 10,1905." Oyster Planting In Pacific. The native oyster found on our Pacific coast is extremely small about one-fourth the size- of an At lantic oyster. Many carloads of Eastern Oysters have been shipped and planted in Puget Sound and along the California coast. Some of the beds are just commencing to pro'duce, one of them affording 700 sacks per day the past winter. The tongers, who gather the oysters, earn from ?0 to $12 per day. DAZED WITH PAI. The Sufferings of a Citizen of Olym pia, Wash. L. S. Gorham; ot 516 East 4th St., Olympla, Wash., says: "Six years ago I got wet and took cold, and was soon 11 at in bed, suffering tortures with my back. Every move ment caused an ago nizing pain, and the persistency of it ex hausted me, so that for a time I was dazed and stupid. On the advice of a friend I began using Doan's Kidnev Pills, and nrain noticed a change for the better. The kidney secretions had been disor dered and irregular, and contained a heavy sediment, but in a week's time the urine was clear and natural again- and the passages regular. Gradually the aching and soreness left my back and then the lameness. I used six boxes to make sure of a cure, and the trouble has never re turned." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Grease Eradicator for Clothing. Mix together two ounces oleate of ammonia and two ounces' ammonia water; shake well and add one ounce ether and five ounces benzine. Shake well again, and then add one ounce chloroform. Shake again, let stand a few minutes, then shake at fre quent Intervals until the preparation is of the consistency of cream. winters: rnt, fiO Iliinhr fw i.uiaiofriif una nainpiwi Ha I .rrKenl 'o.. It ox A. !.. I'd Crona. Win. FERTILIZER LIME For prices. etc.. add rem WALTON OUAHRIKS, llnrrl.l.urir. ra. PATENTS 4H p. book fre. tlighent rpfn. Ixmc?xitl?m'6. FitrircrHlrl &Cu.L)tjt.54, Wail)iiiton.l).C Chickens Earn Money ! . If You Know How fo Handle f hem Properly. Whether you raise Chickens for fun or profit, you want to do it intelligently and get the best results. The way to do this is to profit by the experience of others. We offer a book telling all you need to know on the subject a book written by a man rssasaysL who made nis living tor io years in raising - C Pnnltrv- anrl in thar fim fieressariW YiaA 20C to experiment and spent much money to learn In the best way to conduct the business for the small sum of 25 cents in postage stamps. Stamoa It tells you how to how to teed for Eggs, and also for for Breeding Purposes and indred about everything you must know on the subject to make a success. ' SENT POSTPAID OH RECEIPT Of 15 CENTS IN STAMPS. BOOK PUBLISHING HOUSE, 10A I r-n I n n A If IS lu IWT imCVn H ITS MERIJMS PROVED RECORD OF A GREAT MEDICIHE A Prominent Cincinnati Woman Tells , HOW Lydta E. Ptnkham's Vegetable Compound Completely Cured Her. The great good Lydla E. Pinkhnm's Vegetable Compound is doinff anions; the women of America is attracting the attention of many of our leading scientists, and thinking people gener ally. The following letter is only one of many thousands which are on 111c in the Pinkhnm office, and po to prove beyond question thnt Lydia E. l'ink ham's Vegetable Compound must be a remedy of great merit, otherwise it could not produce such marvelous results among sick and ailing women. Dear Mrs. Finkham: "About nine months ago I was a great suf ferer with female trouble, which caused me severe pain, extreme nervousness ami ire- ?uent headaches, from which the doctor ailed to relieve me. 1 tried Lydia E. Fink ham's Vegetable Compound, and within a short time felt better, and after taking five bottles of it I was entirely cured. I therefore heartily recommend your Compound as a splendid female tonic. It makos the moni hly periods regular and without pain; and what) a blessing it is to find such a remedy after so many doctors fail to help you. I am pleased to recommend it to all suffering wotn;n." Mrs. Bara Wilson, 31 East 3d Street, Cincin nati, Ohio. If you have suppressed or painful periods, weakness of the stomach, indigestion, bloating, pelvic catarrh, nervous prostration, dizziness, faint cess, "don't-care" and "want-to-be-left-alone " feeling, excitability, back ache or t he blues, these are sure indi cations of female weakness, or some derangement of the organs. In such cases there is one tried and true remedy Lydia E, I'lukham's Vegetable Com pound. Food Products enable you to make good meals out ol "hurry' meals. Libby's Food Products are ready to serve wnen you get them, yet are cooked as carefully and as will as you could do it in your own kitchen. Ox Tongue, Dried Beef, Boned Chick en, Deviled Ham, Veal Loaf these are but a lew of the many kinds your dealer keeps. Try for luntheoa or supper tomorrow, some sliced Chicken Loaf. U. "How to M.k. Good" to Lai, mw it you wnkt You Cannot CUE all inflamed, ulcerated and catarrhal con ditions of the mucous membrane such as nasal catarrh, utcrinecatarrh caused by feminine ills, sore throat, sore mouth or inflamed eyes by simply dosing the stomach. But you surely can cure these stubborn affections by local treatment with W Paxtine Toilet Antiseptic which destroj'S the disease germs.checks discharges, stops pain, and heals the inflammation and soreness. Paxtine represents the most successful local treatment for feminine ills ever produced. Thousands of women testify to this fact. 50 cents at druggists. Send for Free Trial Box THE R. PAXTON CO.. Boston. Mass. I'. N. U. 32, lllOfi. If Bttllrted wil h weak ''Thompson's Eyewater cyea. Detect and Cure Disease, Market, which Fowls to Save tlU O I ., II. lffa fk f AfrsSara Wilson il ffAr J & Ihu Ibby, McNeill & Llbby, Chicago 1
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers