' I t N . T" LF -W1W I juuxipj oonna Cleanses tlo System Ef fecN unUy, Dispels t'olils nntlHeuil- oches aim To LcmsupoT imsl mill inn: Acts naturally, acts truly as 1 tuy, a uaxauve. 1) w II iV(mrn anil Clulit' JUesl forlMcn yarm Vrktirwl niifl f . yimuj' Mills, WHW lo Act its JWojUMol Effects Always buy the Genuine ninth lias the jull name of the Com pany CALIFORNIA P Syrup Co. by whom it is mnnufacturpil, printed on the trout o i?viry puokiip. SOLD BY ALL LEADING DRUGGISTS. one size only, regular price SCKptr bollle. Mining Made Hazardous. Tlie don Hi s from mine disasters In the United Stales for l!t07 were 3,08ti. The number of seriously Injured was 2,721. Over one-fourth of this slaugh ter was accomplished last month. This should serve to fix the attention of assembling legislatures In tho mining States upon the necessity of more thorough supervision. Comparison with the loss of life In other countries shows that mining In this country is made extra hazardous by reason of gross neglect of suitable precaution. Philadelphia Record. REASOXFOR WOMKX'S "XEHVKS." In Very Jinny Oiscs It is Weakened ' Kidneys. Mrs. Frank Roseboom, 512 South ., Washington St., Moscow, Idaho, says: "Inherited kid ney trouble grew Bteadlly worse with mc until so nervous I could not sleep at night. I was dizzy and spots floated be fore my eyes. My back and hips ached and every cold set tled on my kidneys and made me worse. I have used many different medicines and was discouraged when I began with Donn's Kidney Pills, but now the symptoms that alarmed me are gone." Sold by all dealers, 50 cents a bos. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. For the Housewife. Some active women who prldo them selves In housekeeping seem to forgot that the object of keeping house is that humnn beings may be accommo dated in It. Their solo Idea seems to be this: That the houso may be kept Jn a certain form and order; and to the performance of the form and or der they sacrifice the comfort tho house was established to secure. Piles Cured in 0 to 14 Days. Faro Ointment is guaranteed to cure nny case of Itching, Mini), Weeding or Protruding 1'iles in 0 to U days or money refunded. 50c. An old Dutch rtlble, found In the Humansdorp district of Cape Colony, has a frontispiece depicting Cain shooting Abel with a blunderbuss. London Globe. 3 Mrs. Wlnslow's Soothing Synipfor Children teothing.softons thegnnis,reduccinflntnma tion, allays pain, euros wind colic, 25c a bottle Massachusetts is the most densely populated State of the Union, having about 350 inhabitants per square miio. Itch cured in 30 minutes by Woolford's Sanitary Lotion. Never fails. At druggists. A British scientist has spoken against children praying about dying while fhey are asleep. It Is a great mis- laKe, ne sniu, 10 lei cmiuren minx oi sudden death. Hunting Rifles From the ten different Winchester repeaters you can surely select a rifle adapted for hunting your favorite game, be it squirrels or grizzly bears. N o matter 'which model you select you can count on its being well made, ac curate and reliable. SHOOT VIHCBESTEI CAITBIO0ES IN WIltCBESTEI OURS Keep a Few Sheep, Professor P. B. Mumford, of Mis lour! experiment station, shows that tests have proved that sheep produco more meat from a pound of grain than any other farm anlmnl. It was shown that a pound of mutton enn be produced from about half as much grain as a, pound of beef. Even the mortgage lifting hog requires more grain to produce a pound of human food than the sheep. With the com bination of corn and clover bay for food and a dry Bhed for shelter sheep will always give good account of themselves and respond readily to the care glveu thorn. Farmer's Guide. Cost of Making Milk. 'A Canadian milk producer figures the cost of production as follows: Taking fifteen cows as a unit that one man is capable of taking care of, as well as the product therefrom, and assuming that the man is worth $1.50 a day, we must chnrge up ten cents a day r.gainst each cow for labor. Assuming that each cow averages five thousand pounds of milk a year, which Is about six quarts a day, such cow should re ceive one pound of grain for each three pounds of milk she gives, which would be about flvo pounds of grain a day. Tho cost of tho grain would bo six and one-quarter cents a day. Adding to this the cost before men tioned of producing a specially pure, clean milk, wo have a total of at least seven cents a quart, as tho cost of Its production on tho fnrm To this should bo added tho cost of shipping to the city, which Is an additional burden to the fanner. American Cultivator. rattening Uo;. In tho experience gained at the Missouri Experiment Station Pro fessor Forbes Bays that corn supple mented with wheat middlings and oil meal makes the best and cheapest ration for fattening bogs. Ho says: "For dry lot or pen feeding of hogs the cheapest feed Is corn supplement ed by wheat middlings or oil meal. At tho Missouri station we have made 100 pounds of pork from flvo parts of thirty-cent corn and one part of $24 oil meal at a cost of $2.75 per hundred weight. At the eaino time we made 100 pounds of pork from two parts of corn and one part of $15 wheat middlings at a cost of $2.88. In tho samo experi ment corn alone made pork at a cost of $3.63 per hundred weight." When pasture can bo provided, pork can be mado tho most economic ally on it. Tho same authority above mentioned writes: "Experiments at the Missouri Experimental College show that with corn at thirty cents per bushel, it costs $2.79 to mako one hundred pounds of pork where blue grass is fed with the corn, with rape and corn the cost Is $2.50 per hundred weight, and with alfalfa and corn the cost of 100 pounds of pork Is but $2.13." Ttyo Chaff. I can buy from a local hay presB rye chaff .at $1 per ton. Will it pay to cart this two and one-half miles and put in the barnyard for manure? I have only two cows. Quantity would probably be 100 tons a year, dry ma terial. How can I best turn this chaff to turn hogs on it? Farmers who cart ryo to the press are over run with wild radish. Should I bo running a great risk from this foul "seedt Would the heating of tho chaff prevent the germination of tho radisii seed? Farmers who previous ly bought this chaff say that they have had no troublo with the wild radish on their farms. R. M. D. The rye chaff would contain in a ton something like fifteen pounds of ni trogen and nearly the same amount phosphoric acid, with perhaps seven or eight pounds of potash. When decayed, the phosphoric acid and potash will be there, whllo part of the nitrogen will have disappeared Into the air. Rye chaff is very poor, Jf not dangerous, feed for cows, be cause of the probable presence of ergot, a poison-to all kinds of live stock. There would also be no small danger' from these weed seeds. Cru ciferous plants produce seeds which are Unduly hardy and can withstand hardships. It Is true that tho neigh bors have not reported introduction of radish by reason of the chaff, but there is still uanger. If the chaff is bought, it ought to be well rotted be fore spreading on the fields. At the price mentioned, it would not seem an attractive bargain. Country Gen tleman. Gapes in Chickens. What is true of all disease Is true of gapes. It is better to prevent It it possible, and then there will be no need to cure it. When the cause of gapes is known, and also the means by which it is likely to be spread, it becomes easy to take measures for prevention. The most important measure of all is to keep the bouses, yards, troughs and everything con nected with the poultry yard strictly clean. It is probable that the drink ing water is the medium through which the gapeworm most often comes, and, therefore, the greatest care must be taken to keep the foun tains clean, when conditions are specially favorable to the propagation of the gapeworm. The water supplied should be pure nd fresh. It is strongly advised ttat house, Doors, perchei, coops tel batchlng-boxes should be thor- oughly cleansed with boiling water, and then llmewashed; that food should never be thrown on the ground; that access to polluted water should be prevented; that the rearing ground should be disinfected during the winter season It It Is to be used the following year; and that tho bodies of all chickens that die of gapes should be burned. It is also advlsnble that affected chickens should be removed from the healthy birds as soon ns the symptoms of gapes can be observed; but this la hardly practicable where chickens are reared by hens alone, as chicks of tender age, If removed from their mother, would not survive for wnnt of care and brooding. Where Incu bators and brooders are used, there Is, however, no difficulty, as one of the brooders can be temporarily turned Into a hospital for the affected chicks." II. D. C, in Farmers' Ga zette, Sing n,"l Sail pot re. The cheapest way to supply lime to the Boll is to use basic slag as a source of phosphoric acid for the fer tilizers. Slag carries from thirty to fifty per cent, of lime, and the value of the phosphoric ncld It carries will cover its wholo cost.. In regard to nitrate of potash (salt petre) which cost me about $90 per ton, $4.50 per hundred pounds, the exceeding richness of the chemical makes It tho cheapest source for pot ash and nitrogen that I know. Each one hundred pounds carries forty four pounds of potnsh, In which form It cost me this season, delivered, about 5.20 cents per round. This forty-four pounds at D.20 cents comes to $2.2S, which taken from $4.6u leaves $2.22 for tho value of the four teen pounds of nltrojen contained In one hundred pounds of nitrate of potash, or 15 6-7 cents per pound for the nitrogen which Professor Cioossinan assured me Is equally valu able with the nitrogen derived from nitrate of soda which costs mo de livered this season $58 per ton, or $2.90 per one hundred pounds; one hundred pounds .of nitrate of soda contains about fifteen and one-half pounds of nitrogen, making the cost of one pound of nitrogen in nitrate of Boda sulphate of potash. Monroe Morse, In the American Cultivator. The Future mid Sheep. All who keep up with the trend ot the live stock Industry agree that the demand for sheep will go oh increas ing for many years. In referring to the matter the Shepherd's Criterion, has this to say: Farmers as a class do not yet un derstand sheep well enough to pro duco them successfully, though tho majority of them raise other things that require more care and effort and produce poorer results, Whllo It is true that many are going into sheep for the first time, and hundreds have been converted to tho right way ot thinking, still, relatively speaking, comparatively few of the small farm ers carry sheep. It will take a long time to educate some that sheep are the best live stock they can raise- best for the land and for the bank account. In tho meantime mutton consumption will continue to grow very rapidly, and In our opinion tha time will be far distant when the sup ply will again overtake the demand. The great grazing areas of the West are practically filled to the limit, and so there cannot bo much expansion in that direction. The chief increase must be on the Eastern farms. Here the dos and the stomach worm have to be contended with, and there are at tho prasont time very serious handicaps to tho small farmer. If a man can raise enough sheep to war rant his special and constant and special attention, then the dog nuis ance can be effectually eliminated, but the stomach worm is an enemy In the dark that cannot be easily con quered. All things considered, It is by no meaii3 likely that sheep hus bandry will advance fast enough to make tho business unprofitable for the next twenty years. As long as there is a sensible protective tariff on wool sheepmen will have strong encouragement, but even if they had to depend on mutton quality almost entirely, they are now well enough fortified to go ahead on a profitable basis. It is estimated that fifty per cent, more mutton Is consumed in this country than twenty years ago. The annual receipts at Chicago are more than a million, more than in 1897, while there has been a corre sponding increase at most of tha other Western markets. If under these circumstances mutton can be sold at a record price, then it follows that it has a strong grip on the Amer ican appetite, which is bound to en dure. The slaughter of sheep and lambs, particularly lambs, is going on so rapidly that, producers are now much behind the requirements, and that is why prices are so high. Chi cago for tho first nine months this year falls 400,000 head short of last year, in spite ot tho fact that more people have gone into the sheep busi ness. A supply of 60, 000,000 sheep Is not large enough for a country with over 80,000,000 people, with a million foreigners lauded every year. England's Old People. In England and Wales there are about 1,600,000 persons over sixty- five years of age, and In the course ot year more than a fourth of that number are compelled to accept poor relief. London Lloyd's Weekly News. DUN'8 WEEKLY SUMMARY Easier Money Market Will Probably Lead to Placing of Postpon ed Contracts. R. G. Dun & Company's weekly re view of trado says: "Sentiment has Improved In re sponse to the brighter outlook, com mercial loans being mndo with moro freedom than nt any recent date. A3 much projected business was held back by Inability to raise funds, the easlor money market encourages ex pectation that postponed contracts will now bo placed. "Tho percentage of Idle machinery has perceptibly decreased. Iron and steel revival occurred, out put ot pig Iron nt the beginning of this month being smnller than at any time In four years. This curtailment of out put has maintained prices fairly Bteany, the average now being high cr than on July 1, 1906. "Several contracts for structural Bteel are under negotiation, but most mills nre Idle pending tho accumula tion of more business. Thus far the lower quotations for galvanized sheet! and tin plate have not Btlmulatcd purchases. "Numerous railways are negotiating for delivery of rnlls for the year 1908, and this business should be. placed very soon. "Although there Is no general nc tlvlty In the primary markets for textiles, improvement Is noticed li many departments, especially ns to the number of Inquiries. Buyers find accommodation more readily granted. "No Interest Is manifested In the export division of the cotton goods Industry, although advices from China suggest thr.t orders tuny soon come from that nation. As to wool en goods, the market for staple fab rlc has opened Irregularly. On some descriptions prices nre slightly high or. In no case Is the change morf than 2'4 to 5 rents a yard. Stocks nre held nt a low point by restrict Ing production to actual orders. "Shipments of boots and shoe? from Boston have fallen off notably In recent weeks. Leather is weak Iti tone." MARKETS. PITTSBURG. W beat-No. S red I M 9i Kye No. 2 7' 7t Com No. 2 yellow, nr 77 7B No. a follow, abelled 8! 70 ' Mixed finr '.11 07 Oats No. S while M M No. H whllo M HI Flour Wlntnr patent 4 ft) unit Fancy strnlttltt winters 4 ft) 471 Day No. 1 Timothy 1? r IS vi I'loTor No. 1 17 V) m 00 Feed No. 1 white mid. ton tft Oil an )P llrown middling W no 17 00 Bran, hulk Sfi M Mi 50 Straw Wheat 5 In On Oat UjO 10 0) Dairy Products. Butter Elgtn croamory 8 21 SO Ohio crtmmnry 'il it Funoy country roll H vi CbexBR Ohio, new 11 1? New York, now 16 11 Poultry, Etc. liens per lb t 17 If- Ohlckpns dresspd li If Eggs-l'a. and Ohio, frnih SM St Fruits and Vcgctabloi. Potatoes Fancy white per bu.... 70 73 Cabbage per ton 16 01 15 01 Oiilons or barrol 1 iJ BALTIMORE. Flour Winter Patent S 5 1 S BC WhoatNo. li red , fw Corn Mixed , 71 76 Kkrs m Hi butler Ohio croamory 3i 4C PHILADELPHIA. Flour Winter Tatont f SV ? Wheat No. red ' Corn No. 2 ml led 71 73 Onls No. 8 whllo 41 4 Buttor Croamory HI S3 iCsfiS Pennsylvania firsts 84 4-4 NEW YORK. Flour-Patents B 4 1 7J Whoat-No. 8 rod 1 Corn-No. 8 ? Oatu No. 8 whllo M K Butter -Creamery 4 : HI Kk'ga Slate and I'onnsylt anla.... " LIVE STOCK. Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg. Cattle. Extra. MM to 1,M) b f 191 iTIllie. IjM) to 1.4H I 11), 5 ili 5 7.1 6 61 r, a 4 Hi t 10 4 00 4 m :i Oi) I 0) Ull Good, 1,K) to l.l Ihs 6 III Tidy, 4,11'itl to l.l.KI Hit 4 50 Com moo. VU0 to II I J Iba 4 01 Oxen 3 0) Bulls Mill Cow i si Holforn. 700 to 1.1111 i yi Fresh Cows and Springers li JJ Hogs. 1'rime heary 4 r-j Prime uiodinm woiyut 40-, Boat henry Ynr knr 4 m Hood llKht Yorkers...., 4 in li1"-; 4ii Kouirhs 4 7; 6tea 4ij 4 4 4 4 4 rt 4 'JO 4 40 Sheep. f lime wefhera, otlpped (iood mlxo.l Knlr mlxod ewes and wethers.' Culls and common Lambs ......I, Calves. Veal calTes , Heavy and thin Cairo .1 .1 40 . ft 1)0 . 4 Si . a im . 4 w . 3 01 . i D) 1 01 Ji'5 4 73 8. 1 1 0 -a 1 5) 5 01 Eggs a la Tripe. Peel and cut into rings six medium-sized onions and fry In a little butter without allow ing them to become brown; then take them from the pan and mix with the butter flour enough to make a thick, smooth paste; then thin down with milk, season with pepper and salt. Put tho cnions back Into tho sauce and stew gently until they are quite lender. Have ready six hard-boiled eggs; remove the shells, slice the white part and leave the yolks whole. Put all into the sauce with the onions until quite hot, then pour on to a hot dish. Sprinkle with a little finely minced parsley and garnish with sip irtts of toast. Serve very hot. A loan of $5,600,000 at 5 per cent has been accepted by the Government ot Chile, the proceeds to be used in Improving the port of Valparaiso. It Is supposed to double the capacity of the docks and increase the facili ties of the custom house. INTO UNKNOWN LANDS. . Expeditions To Be Sent by Field Mu seum of Natural History. A series of expeditions constituting one of the most comprehensive ex plorations of unknown lands ever at tempted by nny institution was an nnunced yesterday by the Field Mu seum of Natural History. George A. Horsey, curator of tho museum's de partment of anthropology, will first circle the globe, visiting ninny prac tically unknown peoples and mapping out the lines of Inquiry to bo under taken, He will Ball on the Lusltanla on January 11. The museum has also set out to give to the world of science tho first comprehensive exposition of the char acteristics nnd customs of tho peoples of Thibet, the forblddon land. For this work Pt. Bertholdt Lanier, a dis tinguished Chinese scholar, recently of the faculty of Columbia University, has been engaged, lie will sail on .January 7 for a stay of three years In the country of the Lamas. FITS, Bfc. Vitus' Dance :Nnrvons Diseases per manently cured by Dr. Kline's Oreut Nnrve Restorer. $a trial bottle and treatise free. Dr. II. It. Kline, Ld.,Hl ArchKt., I'hikt., Pa. New Paper Material. Africa may help to save our forests from being demolished for wood pulp. There Is n grass, known ns nlfa, which can be grown In tho desert region to an unlimited extent. It Is cut and harvested like hay. A London dally has for ome years been printed on paper made of this material. TWO CURES OF ECZEMA. Baby Had Severe Attack Grand father Sudered Torments with tiio Disense One Itecovcry to Citticiiru. "In 1RS1 my grandson, a bnhe, had an attack of eczema, nnd after trying the doc tors to the extent of heavy bills nnd an in crease of the disease nnd sufi'cring, I rec ommended t'uticura nnd in a few weeks the child was well. Ho i to-dnv a strong mm nnd absolutely free from the disease. A few years nRo 1 contracted eczema, and liecnmo on intense sufferer. A whole win ter passed without once having on shoes, nearly from the knees to the toes being covered with virulent sores. I tried many doctors to no purpose. Then I procured the Cuticura Remedies and found immedi ate improvement and finnl cure. M. W. LaKue. 845 Seventh St., Louisville, Ky., April 23 and May 14, 1907." Paper Money Stock. Paper for government use In print ing money Is made at several mills In iNew England and is of a kind made especially for the government. Old bills are redeemed by tho Treas ury Department, nfter which they are destroyed by grinding Into pulp. How's This? V'a offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for nny enso of Cotarrli that cannot be cured by Hall's Cntnrrli Cure. F. J. CliK.NKf & Co., Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, hnvo known F. J. Cheney ior the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions nnd tinancinlly able to carry out any obligations made by his firm. Walmno, Kinnan & Mauvi.n, Whole sale Druggists, Toledo, U. IlnU'sCatarrhCure is tnken internally, act ingdirectly upon the Mood and mucuoussur faces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price, 7"c. per bottle. .Sold by all Druggists. Take Hall 'a Family I'iiU for constipation. STILL THE OLD SONGS. For all tho deluge of song writing of recent years the bands at Old Point Comfort found nothing to play off tho fleet with that could take the place of "The Girl I Left Behind Me" and "Auld Lang Syne." Providence Jour nal. Pe-ru-nn Almanac In8,000,000 Homra The Penina Lucky Day Almanac has becomfl a lixture in over eight million homes. It can be obtained from all drug gists free. He sure to inquire early. The 1SWS Almanac is already published, and the supply will soon be exhausted. Do sot put it oil. Speuk for one to-day. The late King Oscar stopped at the Swcdlslp embassay when he was in London nnd didn't cost King Edward a penny. Only One "Bromo Quinine" Thr.t in Laxative Ilromo Quinine. Look for the signature of E. W. Grove. Used the World over to Cure a Cold in One Day. 2ac. Books nro maintained at Russian railroad stations for the registry of complaints of passengers. 25oAU CRUCaSTS-609. 8H0E8 AT ALL PRICES. FOR EVERY MEMBER OrTHI riMILV - , SMACOeS OIL W CONQUERS W PAIN iiiJSSV 8H0C8 AT ALL VMJl oa&ZS PRICES. FOR r-TtTT-Tn MEN, BOYS. WOMEN, MISSES AND CHILDREN. ktb W. L. Domptan mmkm mmd mltm mora A" rtton-w92.BO. 03.OO mnd $3.BOmhomm U1 Ekffwprtd. soeauaa Ihmy hold thttlr "tDS a laps, tit butmr, vai Icuieewv and W. L Douglas $4 end $5 Gilt lin Shoes Cannot mKi. A.' 'T'OW. W. KDoturlaa nan and iwla la aamwl on bottom. Tt Urn Sabatltitte. P"'.'i.h7, ,ht ,no l "Wfwliarfc SlwasmaUert from factory to anT pat of tha world, lllu. HATUE1 AND A MUSH'S WORK Mm LYDIA E. PINKHAM Nature nnd a woman's work com binod have produced tho grandest remedy for woman's ills that tho world lias ever known. In the good old-fashioned days of our grandmothers they relied upon tho roots and herbs of tho field to cure disease and mitigate, suffering. The Indians on our Western riains to-day can produce roots and herbs for every ailment, and cure diseases that baftlo tho most skilled physicians who have siient years in tho study of drugs. From tho roots nnd herbs of the field Lydia E. l'inkham moro than, thirty years ago gave to the women of tho world a remedy for their pe culiar ills, more potent and effica cious than any combination of drugs. Lydia E. Pinkham'a Vegetable Compound is now recognized as the standard remedy for woman's ills. Mrs. Bertha Muff, of C15 N.C. St., Louisiana, Jlo., writes : " Complete restoration to health means so much to me that for the sake of other suffering women I am willing to make my troubles public. "For twelve years I had been suffer. ing with tho worst forms of female ills. During that time I had eleven different physicians without help. No tongue can tell what I suffered, and at times I could hardly walk. About two years ago I wrote Mrs. l'inkham for advice. ' I followed it, nnd can truly say that Lydia K. Pinkhnm's Vegetable Com pound and Mrs. Pinkhnm's advice re- . stored health and strength. It is worth mountains of gold to suffering women." What Lydia E. Pinkhnm's Vege table Compound did for Mrs. Muff, it will do for other suffering women. CHICKENS EARN MONEY! If You Know Ron to Handle Them Property r ucuiu yyuu .iliac vyiiniv- ens for fun or profit, you want to do it intelligently and get the best results. The way to do this is to profit by tho experience of others. We oiTer a book telling all you need to know on tho subject a book written by a man who made his living for 25 years in raising Poultry, and in that time neces sarily had to ex periment and spent much money to learn the best wny to conduct the business for the small sum of 25 25c. in Stamps cents in postage stamps. It tells you how to Detect and Cure Disease, how to Feed for Eggs, and also for Market, which Fowls to Save for Breeding Purposes, and indeed about everything you must know on the subject to make a success. Sent postpaid on receipt of 25 cents in stamps. BOOK PUBLISHING BOUSE, 134 Leonard Street, New York City. P. N. V. 3, lfl.W. DffnPQY DISCOVEHTj W (l.n i-l-k r.ll.r 4 urn want Man. Hook f tMllmnnUI. nni to Day"' traent ? Ur. lU 1L (iUKKX'S bOXH, Ss B, AllwU, to. FOR STIFFNESS, SORENESS, SPRAIN OR BRUISE, NOTHING IS BETTER THAT YOU CAN U8EJ LUMBAGO'S PAIN, RHEUMATIC TWINGE, -YOUR BACK FEELS LIKE A RU8TY HINGE J SCIATIC ACHES ALL PLEASURES SPOIL, FOR HAPPINESS USE ST. JACOBS OIL. Bo Ennllod At Ant Price