Time, or Money? Which do you need most? My work will take most of your time, and I will pay you $j.oo per day, in cash, if you do welL Details for a postal. ATKINSON, 1024 Race St., Philadelphia. (53 EH To oonrlnoo any 1st nun LJ woman 1 11 a 1 mx. 6K1 li3 tlne Anti.rptlo will l H 19 Ct BT improve her lirallli B D B KHi-a anil do all we claim IIKaiEl),, it, w win send her absolutely free a large) trial box of Paxtlne with book of Instruc tions and genuine testimonials. Send your Dame and address on a postal curd. Srsaj, cleanses cl and heals ifa itiucous EL- in e ni brane af fections, such as nasal catarrh, pelvlo catarrh and Inflaimnailon caused bj feint nine Ills 1 sore eyes, sore throat and mnuth, by direct local treatment. Its cur ative power over these troubles is extra ordinary and (fives Immediate relief. Thousands of women are using and reo ommcmllng It every day. fio cents at druggists or by mall. Remember, however, IT COSTS YOU NOIHINII TO TRY IT. THIS K. FAX TON CO., lloeton, Mais. The Queen of Holland discourages running ns far as she is able. She la an ardent lover Tjf animals. FITS, St. VituB' Dance :NervouB Diseases pen manently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. 13 trinl bottle and treatise free. Dr. H. R. Kline, Ld.,081 Arch St., Phila., Pa. Of recent years only six deaths oc cur to each 100 amputations. This la owing to the Improvements in anti septic surgery. Nathan Straus, an Eastern philan thropist, has established In New York City a series of milk booths where pure sterilized milk la sold to the poor foi one cent a bottle. Absolute antiseptic cleanliness is required by him in all branches of the enterprise. In cleansing the milk bottles he uses ,two thinga hot water and Borax. The""gllstenlng bottles testify to the effectiveness of this method. Paper From Bamboo Grass. The agricultural college at Tokyo has been experimenting for some time past with "sasa" or bamboo grass, and the possibilities of making paper pulp from it. It la now reported that unexpected success has been met with, which is very Important for Ja pan, considering the great abundance all over the empire of this bambDo grass. TIED TO A CHAIR. Unable to Move About On Account of , Kklnrjr Troubles. Mrs. Anna Beebe, River and Mon roe streets, Anoka, Minn., says: "I had to sit In a chair day after day unable to move about on nc count of rheumatic pains In my back, hips and legs. I was short of breath and y my neari would nut let siier iub least exertion. I bad dizzy spells and bearing down pains and the kidney Becretlons were much disordered. I thought I would not live long, but since using Doan's Kidney Pills I am a different woman, can do my own work and have no more fear of those troubles." Sold by all dealers. BO cents a box. Foster-Mllburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. CAN'T MAKE GEMS. The Few Made by Man Are but Iml tationi and Too Costly. There has been a great stir of late In scientific and commercial circles, first with regard to the artificial pro duction of diamonds by M. Charret qf Nantes, and next by the experi ments of Prof Bordas, communicated to the Academy of Sciences In Paris end showing that by means of radium ordinary spar may be transformed Into rubies, topazes, sapphires and other gems. It was thought that the effect of these discoveries will be to make all Jewels so cheap that the great for tunes in Jewels to-day might at any time bo reduced to almost nothing, but this alarm was short lived. Charrets have been pronounced by chemists to be napthaline. He dis putes the arguments on which this conclusion la based and says that with the larger apparatus he is now constructing he will prove clearly In a month or two that he has produced real diamonds. Aa to the Bordas gems, Jewelers say they only resemble precious stones. Bordas himself regards his transformation of spar into precious stones simply In the light of labor atory experiments and not a matter of having commercial value, as the process is too costly. In order to transform a piece of spar into a topaz he subjects it to contact with a tube containing a milligramme of radium for six weeks. The whole amount of radium in the world is said to be two centi grammes. Mine. Curie has one cen tigramme. PLEASANT SUMMER Right Food the Cause. A Wis. woman says: "I was run down and weak, trou bled with nervousness and headache for the last six yean. The least ex citement would make me nervous and cause severe headache. "This summer I have been eating Grape-Nuts regularly and feel better than for the six years past. "I am not troubled with headache and nervousness, and weigh more ' than I ever have before In my life. I gained 5 lbs. in one week." Sy Name given by Foatum Co., Battle ' Vjeek, Mich. Read the book, "The Road to Wellvllle," Ifl pkgl. "There's a Reason." Value of Manure. The Vermont Agricultural Experi ment Station In bulletin No. 108 states that the plant food value of manure, in cluding the solid and liquid, on a farm stockeit with twenty cows, four horses, fifty sheep and ten jigs, would ap proximate $000 per year, and that ap proximately one-halt of this would be liquid manure; or, in other words, the value of the liquid manure would be about 300. Work of the Bees. It has been estimated that nectar must be collected from 62,000 clover blossoms to make a pound of honey. This means that bees must make 2, 760,000 trips from the hives to the flow ers. This is one of the cases where the laborer cheerfully works for noth ing and boards himself. It's a mighty good thing for those who like honey that there are no labor unions in bee dom. Farmers' Home Journal. Alfalfa Beats Blue Grass. A city man, who has a country home of 10 acres and who has two acres of alfalfa, says that his wife insists that they put the whole place in alfalfa. She says it beats blue grass, because It has a beautiful green color all through the season, summer droughts do not kill It, and every time it la mown you get a hay crop, of a ton or more per acre, and then find a market for the alfaira hay at $14 a ton. Indiana Farmer. Helping Owners cf Woodlots. Owners of woodlots In Connecticut have been taking lessons from the State Forestry Department. Tho for ester, on request, visits tracta of lum ber and advises the owners how to cut' or htln the woodlots, also what land, if any, may be profitably planted. A sample acre or so is marked out desig nating those trees which should be cut out and giving the farmer on Idea of the plan to be followed In cutting the whole lot. The cost of marking amounts to twenty to fifty cents per acre. In advlsin gand planting of young trees the forester recommends white pine or chestnut, for the most part American Cultivator. Brown vs. White Eggs. At the California station the chief object of the examination of eggs was to determine whether there waB any basis of fact for the popular opinion that eggs with brown shells have a higher food value than those with white Bhells. It has been said by some that the brown eggs are richer than the white ones, but this statement is not borne out by a chemical analysis, and the physical examination proves that the main point of superiority, though extremely Blight, are possessed by the white eggs. The minute differences that are found between the two groups are exceeded by variation between va rieties within the same group. It may be stated that there are practically no differences so far as the food value la concerned. Weekly Witness. Feeding for Eggs. To keep a hen In good condition for laying she should never have a full crop during the day. It is not wrong to give a light meal of mixed food, warm In the morning, in the trough, but such meal should be only one-fourth the quantity the hens require. They should go away from the trough unsat isfied, and should then seek their food, deriving it grain by grain, engaging in healthy exercise in order to obtain it, and In such circumstances the food will be passed into the gizzard slowly and be better digested. Gradually the hen will accumulate sufficient food to provide for the night, going on the roost with a full crop, where she can leisurely forward It from the crop to the gizzard. , Feeding soft food leads to many er rors on the part of the beginner, caus ing him to overfeed and pamper his hens, and by it they will reach a con dition that is entirely antagonistic to laying. It is much better to feed from a trough, unless the soft food is care fully measured. A quart of mixed ground grain, moistened and In a crum bly condition, should be sufficient for forty hens as a "starter" for the morn ing, but two quarts of whole grain should be scattered In litter for them to secure and seek for themselves. Week ly Witness. Advantages of Fall Colts. Fall dropped colts ari more conven ient on the average farm than those born in the spring. Some of the horses on nearly every farm are idle all win ter anyway, and the mares might bet ter be nursing colts and giving them a good start than to be eating their heads off and giving nothing in return, Bays the Horse News. When the spring comes and the mare is needed for farm work the colt can be weaned and the mare can do .her work without annoy ance from the colt. One has to be care ful of a mare in hot weather while a colt Is sucking her, because overheating her gives a colt the scours. By hav ing the colt come in tho fall the mare Buckles him wLilo she la doing no work, and she cau give blm a much better start than when he Is born In the spring. Some farmers think that it Is ex pensive to feed the mares well enough during tho winter to cau.ie an ample flow of milk, but this is a mistake. In feeding her they are feeding the colt and each pound of gain that he makes at that aige is made more economically than at a later date. Very little grain is necessary, or even none at all, for mares suckling colts In winter, pro vided they have plenty of alfalfa hay or oat and pea hay. Clover hay would be good for the milk flow, but the dus tiness of average clover hay is against It for such a purpose. Alfalfa hay, however, hasn't this disadvantage and it Is superior to red clover as a milk producer, and It yields at least fifty percent more per acre. Perhaps the reader thinks alfalfa is only for the Ir rigated fields of the west, but this is a mistake. Anywhere that red clover grows well the land la good enough for alfalfa, but the latter should be Bowed alone or with a light sowing of barley. Some land needs inoculation for alfal fa and some does not, but wherever sweet clover has been growing the land is already inoculated for alfalfa. It will pay a farmer to raise alfalfa for his brood mares as well aa for milk cows, sheep and hogs. Draft Horse Breeding. "If an experiment recently under taken by the Iowa Agricultural Col lege proves successful, Americans will not have to go abroad for their choice breeds of draft horses,' said W. J. Ken nedy, of Ames, Iowa, who recently was sent abroad to buy animals for use In establishing a new American breed. "While in Europe I purchased sev eral animals of the English Shire and Scotch, Clydesdale breeds, which pos sess all the good points considered de sirable for the American draft horse. I secured the finest rnarea that could be purchased In Europe, and these will be crossed In nn experiment to establish an American breed of high character. "The only objection American draft horse buyers have to these two breeds Is that they hnd long hair on their legs. However that is not serious, be cause the animals selected had little hair, and In the course of time you can eliminate this. No breed keeps this characteristic long in America. It was at first thought desirable to make use of tho Percheron, but I could not find any desirable animals of this breed In Eiitrope. It Is a fact that the Percher on breed in France is losing ita char acter very rapidly. Fewer flrat class animals are raised there now, and it seems possible that the breed will die out In that country unless strenuous measures are taken to prevent It. "This is all due to the fact that for many years Franco has shipped out its best horses to America and other coun tries. This has gone on so long that France haB lost all of its fine animals and only inferior ones remain. Under such circumstances the breed is sure to die odt Steps are being taken to protect the breed in America, whence many of the best Percherons have come, although little care has been tak en in the past. Americans depended al most altogether on France for a per petuation of the stock. The United States government Is Interested with the Iowa college In this experiment, which, it Is believed, will be highly suc cessful." Washington Post. Farm Notes. The duck averages ten dozen eggs In about seven months' laying. From thirty-five to forty ducks and drakes are allowed In a pen. - Ten dozen egga a year is the average estimate given as the production of a hen. About four dozen egga are given as an average for the annual output of the turkey. Ducklings "are marketed at five pounds weight, which they should at tain In ten weeks. An Iowa man got rid of the thistles In his pastures by cutting them oft with a hoe just aa they began to bloom, and 'hen Esltcl the stub and turned in his sheep. We have been growing Buch big grain for threo or four years that we have neglected to raise young stock. - There Is a scarcity of colts, calves and plga. Make the next few months count, in the breeding of all kinds of stock. A small farm well cared for and properly tilled is far more profitable than a farm too large to allow of the best cultivation. Intensive and not ex tensive farming is surely gaining In favor with agriculturists of the middle west. The heavy draft horse which is, at home on a sulky plow, or any other of the heavy work about the farm, should not be driven as a roadster. Whenever these big horses have to be taken on tho road, give them a good load, but let them walk. . When English capitalists were trying to establish Angora goat raising in South Africa they paid as much as $2500 apiece for goats, to induce the Turkish owners of fine stocks to risk the severe penalties of the Sultan's laws forbidding the exportation of An goras. A Geographical Farm. The king of the nature fakers is the man who raises for the market Long Island ducklings, Rhode Island geese, Philadelphia squabs and Jersey chick ens on the same Illinois farm. Chi cago Evening Post An American combined machine for making paper boxes and printing the label in several colors la oue of the exhibits at tl.e art exposition In Mann heim. Teak 18 suppose.! to be the most im perishable of wood. It contains an esentlnl oil that safeguards it against the attacks qf insects and the chang es of temperature as well as against moisture. Teak la much used for pil ing and the sills in house building, also in the construction of railway carriages. The dreaded tsetse-fly of Africa Is supposed tobreed in the baunatia plan tatlons. As the banana is the staple food of the country, the plantations cannot be destroyed, and It la pro posed to introduce the Jungle fowl to exterminate the files, , beginning the experiment on the fly-Infested desert ed island of Klmml, in tho Victoria Nyanza. The new theory advanced by Prof. Milton Whitney, chief of the Bureau of soils of the department of agricul ture, to the effect that the growths of plants does not affect the soil. Is held to be heresy by the older scientists. Prof. Whitney claims to have discov ered a new soil fertilization, which may necessitate a complete revision of the science of chemistry of soils. Apparently the BrazllIIan deposits of talc are inexhaustible. The price depends on labor and transportation rather than on supply. Practically all of the principal deposits now be ing worked are in the state of Sao Paulo. Three qualities are produced, the quality depending upon the color. The stone ready for crushing la being furnished in Rio de Janeiro at from 82 to 120 mllreia a ton, or from 525.42 to $37.20 a ton at present exchange. "Lightning" is kindled In the thun derstorm by raising tracks of material substance scattered along its path in to a state of sparkling Incandescence. The ordinary electric spark and the lightning are, in this respect, the same. The sound known as "thunder" Is caused by the electric outburst of tho cloud. The flash and the sound originate simultaneously, but the flash travels to tho eye in an Instant, while the sound is transmitted to the ear so sluggishly that it is some few seconds behind time. It Is pretty well established that the common mackerel, for example, lays some fifty thousand eggs, and that out of that number not more than two come to the reproduction stage. . Pre sumably the loss is equally great In the eggs of other fishes. Tho greater part of this loss occurs of course, while the young are too small to look out for themselves. By hatching the egga artificially and maintaining the young until they can shift for them selves,' it is claimed that in place of one In twenty-five thousand, one In a dozen may live to maturity. UPPER AIR COLDEST AT EQUA TOR. , 148 Below Zero at 12 Miles Altitude; Grows Warmer Above 7 Miles. At the meeting in Dresden, Saxony, of the congress of German Scientists a remarkable, statement was made by Professor Hengesell of Strassburg Uni versity, that atmosphere at high altl tltudes is the coldest over the Equa tor and the warmest above the Poles. This surprising result, he explained, was determined by balloon ascents, made during the month of July in va rious latitudes, under the auspices of the International committee which has been investigating the atmosphere at high altitudes. The observations, which were taken with automatic instruments attached to unmanned balloons have not yet been worked out in detail, but Profes sor Hergcsaell finds his conclusions abundantly proved through the data thus collected. Balloons which reach ed altitudes of eleven to twelve and one-half miles in the tropics were found to have registered about 148 degrees below zero, Fahrenheit, while In the latitude of Central Europe the temperature was only 76 to 85 below tero at the heights indicated. Anothir fact established by theso balloon ascents Is that tho greatest cold of the upper atmosphere is reach ed at heights of from six to six and three-quarters miles, varying some what in different parts of the world. Above that height contrary to the as sumption of scientists hitherto, the air actually grows warmer. This warmer strata of air is deduced to the highest at the Equator and lowest at the Poles, where It is estimated to be gin et about four and one-third miles. Professor Hcrgcsscll concludes that the atmospheric conditions ' affecting the weather do not reach higher than seven miles. Origin of Hand Shaking. Shaking hands originated In military circles away back in the early days. When the fighting men met and want ed to be friendly they extended the Bword hand to show that they didn't have a knife sticking up the sleeve. That Is why we shake with the right hand. Doubtless you have often no ticed and wondered why buttons are placed on the back of men's coats. It is another survival of the fighting days. The buttons were necessary when men wore sword belts. 3rit STOP WOMAN AND CONSIDER First, that almost every operatio in our hospitals, performed upon women, becomes necessary because of neglect of such symptoms aa Backache, Irregularities, Displace ments. Pain In the Side, Dragging Sensations, Dizziness and Sleepless ness. Second, that Lydia B. Pinkhara's Vegetable Compound, made from native roots and herbs, has cured more cases of female ills than any other one medicine known. It reg ulates, strengthens and restores women's health and is invaluable In preparing women for child-birth and during the period of Change of Life. Third, tho great volume of unsolicited and grateful testimonials on file at the Pinkham Laboratory at Lynn, Mass.. many of which are from time to time beinp; publisher! by special permission, give absolute evi dence of the value of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and Mrs. Pinkham's advice. Lydia E Pinkham's For more than 30 years has been Dragging Sensations, Weak Back, Falling and Displacements, In flammation and Ulceration, and Organic Diseases, and it dissolves and expels Tumors at an early stage. Mrs. Pinkham's Standing Invitation to Women Women suffarinff from anv form write Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass. for advice. She is tho Mrs. Pinkham who has been advising1 sick women free of charge for more than twenty years, and before that she assisted her mother-in-law, Lydia E. Pink ham In advising. Thus Bhe is especially well qualified to guide sick women back to health. Write today, don't wait until too late. Real Jade. A Jade mine In Siskiyou County, Cal., Is said to be I he only one of Ita kind in this country. Jade was dis covered there In 1906, and tests show ed thnt the mineral was up to the standard In every particular. (5100 Reward, $100. The readers of this paper will bepleased to learn thnt there is at least one dreaded dis ease that science lias been able to cure in all its slaires, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a con stitutional disease, require! a constitutional treatment. Ilall'i Catarrh Cure is taken inter nally, acting directly upon the blood and mu cous surfaces of the system, thereby destroy ing the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the con stitution and desisting nature in doing ita work. The proprietors have so ftiuch faith in ita curative powers that they ofi'er One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to euro. Send for list of testimonials. Address ' J? J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O. fold by all Druggists. 75c. Take Hull's Family Pills for constipation. New Road Material. A Saxon firm has introduced a new road-binding composition for prevent ing dust. It Is cnlled apokonln, and la a mixture of the heavier residual oils obtained in the distillation of coal tar with high boiling hydrocarbons. BABY'S ECZEMA GREW WORSE. Hospital and Doctors Could Not Re lleve Disease Cnticura Remedies a Speedy, Permanent Cure. "Eczema appeared when our baby was three months old. We applied to several doctors and hospitals, each of which gave us something different every time, but noth ing brought relief. At last, one of our friends recommended to us Cnticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment. A few days after wards improvement could be noted. Since then we have used nothing but Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment, and now the baby is six months old and f j quite cured. All that we used was one cake of Cuticura Soap and two boxes Cuticura Ointment, costing in all 91.25. C. F. Kara, 343 Kaat 65th Street, New York, March 30, 1906." Eight-car trains are to he run on the Boston elevated line in the en deavor to cope with the traffic of fered. Mrs. Winslow'sSoothing Syrup for Children allays pain, cures wind colic, 20c a bottle It Is said that London produces over 200 new designs in penny toys every week. NO MORE MUSTARD PLASTERS TO BLISTER THE SCIENTIFIC AND MODERN Capsicum-Vaseline EXTRACT OF THE CAYENNE , PEPPER PLANT TAKEN DIRECTLY IN VASELINE - ... DON'T WAIT COMES-KEEP A QUICK, SURE. SAFE AND ALWAYS READY CURE FOR PAIN. PRICE I5e. IN COLLAPSIBLE TUBES MADE OF PURE TIN AT ALL DRUGGISTS AND DEALERS, OR BY MAIL ON RECEIPT OF 15c IN POSTAGE STAMPS. A substitute for and superior to mustard or any other plaster, and will not blister the most delicate skin. The pain-allaying and curative qualities of the article are wonderful. It will stop the toothache at once, and relieve Head ache and Sciatica. We recommend It as the best and safest external counter irritant known also as an external remedy for pains in the chest and stomach and all Rheumatic, Neuralgic and Gouty complaints. A trial will prove what we claim for It, and it will be found to be Invaluable in the household and for children. Once used no family will be without it. Many people say " it Is the best of all your preparations." Accept no preparation of vaseline unless the same carries our label, as otherwise it is not genuine. Send your address and wa will mall our Vaeatlna Booklet daaorlblng our preparations which will Intarast you. 17 State L CHESEBROUGH MFG. CO. New York City W. L. DOUGLAS $3.00 & $3.50 SHOES 3SH0ES FOR EVERY MEMBER CF rj-, " THE FAMILY, AT ALL PRICE9. C9ls ntlfl ( TomnyonmwhocmnpnvaW.L. tya,UVV I Douga domm not make mall Reward l mrtMM's h i as.tu ws I than any otharmanuiaoturmr. THE REASON W. I Dougloa ahoeaare worn by more people in all walks ollife thr.n any other makei. becaun ol their excellent style, easy-hcting. and superior weari ng qualities. 1 he .election of the leathern ami other materials for each part of the ahoa and every detail of tha making ielooked after bv the moat complete orgatmat ion of superintendenta, foremen and Bkitled.hoemakere, who receive the highest wagea paid ia tha ahoet ndustry, and whoce workmanship cannot be excelled. If 1 could take you ntnmylargefactoriesat Brockton, Haas., and show you how oaref ull vW.I. Douglas shoea are made, you would then undent and why the-v hold their ahape, fit better, wear! nngerandare of greater value than an v other make. My 04.OO and 0S.OO OILT EDGEShomm oamnot aw moumllmd ml any artbat CAUTION! The genuine have W. I. Douglas name and price .tamped on bottom. Tike Jto Snbetltute. A.k your dealer for W.L. Douglas ahoea. If he cannot eirpply you, send direct tofactcry. Shoeaaaat everywhere by mail. Catalog free. W. L. Douglae, Brockton, Aiaaa. 10,00 TFIFCR1PUTQC WAWTCn a. Ia Aug. of ea-nllwar oacLla BMaMlikad Twelr-oae lean. Mala 11a. it LI B. B. la Sokeel-iooauL Parittoae aarla M pa. autk aaa upward abaal.talj art Write In Oeaaiag. M AXIOM i RMiMMunii a ung m.reafr Aa, TKUMaVaXa Vegetable Compound curing Female Complaints, such as of female weakness aro Invited to Of all the stings published one In 95 attains real popularity. Itch cured in 30 minutes by Woolford'a Sanitary Lotion. Never fails. At druggists. Winchester For Rifles and Pistols Winchester make of cartridges in all calibers from .23 to .50 are accu rate, sure fire and relia ble. In forty years of gun making we have learned many things about am munition thai: no one could learn in any other way. When you buy Winchester make of cartridges you get the benefit of this experience WlNOHISTCn RCPIATINO ARMS CO., N(W MAVCN, OONN. Mule Team BORAX All duller. 8 Am pie, Bootalnt an I Parlor Card Onnv lOoenta, PaelAo Const Barns Co., New Y ark. P. N. U. 48, 1907. If ftmicfetl wlili wenk Thompson'sEyeWatei yea. nao EXTERNAL COUNTER-IRRITANT. TILL, THE PAIN A TUBE HANDY BEST IN THC WOULD tau iit. Man, niah.. eaelaatve TelMrull lartltata. mmt a Bnal Bona, i aa m it w.rk fur yaa- eaaaaaoa UlTIIlTJf. Cincinnati. Ob la. M It o
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers