Nothing I Ate .Agreed With Me is, v-'V - - U ; MRS. UNORA BODENHAMER. Mm. Lrnora Borlenhnmer, R. F. D. 1, Box 99. Kerncrsville, N. C. writes: v "I Buffered with Htomncn triable and Indigestion for iodic time, nnil nothing that I nte Hftroeil with me. 1 wna very servoua nnil experienced n continual feeling of vneas1nen and fear. 1 took snedieine from the doctor, but it did me Bo good. " I found in one of your Penina books a description of my symptoms. 1 then Wrote to Dr. Hartmnn for advice. He said I had catarrh of the stomach. I took Fernna and Manalin and followed his di rections and can now say that 1 feel as Well as I ever did. "I hope t.hi-t all who are afflicted with the same symptoms will take 1'eruna, as it has certainly cured me." The above is only one of hundreds who have written similar letters to Dr. Hart man. Just one such cane as this entitles Perunn to the candid consideration of every one similarly alilirted. If this be true of the testimony of one person what ought to be the testimony of hundreds, yes thou sands, of honest, sincere people? We have in our (ilea a great many other testi monials. PtAtVtM AMI PATAKHU I tHK. INHAl.KNT CATARRHAL JELLY Cure ppsfncus and C'ntarrh. Trial treatment bt nail free. REA CO.. Minneapolis. Minn. If You Are Lost In the Woods, Let the man who Is lost in the woods te very careful npt to overex ert himself. His chief dangers He In panic and oxer-exertion, and, though he may be In a great hurry to' find shelter, I must warn him to go slowly. Two miles an hour, on an average, Ihrough the snow In the woods, Is all that a man in his con dition will be able to stand without overfatigue nnd Us attendant dan gers, overhealing nnd perspiration. By exercising caution, a may may live through a week of what he ts under going. To make this article brief, however, we Khali suppose that he re gains the road by the afternoon of the first day. He doesn't yet know, of course, Just where he Is. He should examine the tracks of the per son who last passed that way. It being afternoon, he must foliow In the direction taken by the last pass ing vehicle or team, as shelter will be nearest in that direction. Had It been morning he would have taken the opposite direction, ns whoever made the tracks must have come from the place whore he obtained shelter the previous night. Outing Magazine. 46 On Being Mean. The question arises, can one be economical without being mean? A man who Is naturally mearwlll al ways be economical. If a man who is not economical attempts to become so he will learn that the easiest way is first to learn to be mean. If he has a generous impulse lie must curb It. During the first part of our lives we should he as mean as we can. When we have accumulated more than we need we should devote the last part to cultivating our generous Impulses. No successful man is a philanthropist before he Is 50. EAGER TO WORK Health Regained by Right Food. The average healthy man or wom an is usually eager to be busy at ome useful task or employment But let dyspepsia or Indigestion get hold of one, and all endeavor be comes a burden. "A year ago, after recovering from an operation," writes a Mich, lady, "thy stomach and nerves began to give me much trouble. "At times my appetite was vora cious, but when Indulged, Indigestion followed. Other times I had no ap petite whatever. The food I took did not nourish me and I grew weaker than ever. "I lost interest ill everything and wanted to be alone. I had always had good nerves, but now the merest trifle would upset me and bring on a vlplent headache. Walking across the room was an effort and prescribed exercise was out of the question. "I had seen Grape-Nuts advertised, but did tot believe what I read, at the time. - At last when it seemed as If I were literally starving, I began to eat Grape-Nuts. "I had not been able to work for a year, but now after two months on Grape-Nuts 1 am eager to be at work gain. My stomach gives me no trou blb now, my nerves are steady as VAr nnH Intdraal In T I I i i I " " . ... V. 1 I.'! L ... ,im ttuu UIUU1- tlon have oome back with the return to health." ' "There's a Reason." Name given by Post urn Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read "The Road to Wellvllle," in pkga. , Ever read the above letter? . A cw one apprara from time to time. Thej are genuine, true, md full of human interrat. Sill the Hams. Sell two or three of your common tock rams and go oft somewhere and buy one full bred to lead your flock this fall. In a little while you will make the eyes of your neighbors open wide with surprise at the fine sheep Jou have. Farmer's Home Journal. Cooling of Milk. The prompt and thorough cooling Of milk is generally recognized to be of prime importance in preventing the development of bacteria, which under ordinary conditions are always present in milk as soon as drawn and to which the souring or curdling of milk Is due. Farmer's Home Jour nal. rnrnlysis in rigs. Tartlal paralysis In pigs may be treated successfully In soni8 cases by dosing with epsom salts, allowing one ounce to each animal, following with a dessertspoonful of cod liver oil, ten grams of phosphate of lime and two drops of mix vomica as a physic, given twice a day for several weeks. Weekly Witness. Don't Snap Produce. Better buy for "cash and sell for cash. Credit costs more than It ought to, and trading in exchange means a good many losses except for men who make trading a business. Even in swapping farm produce for goods at the store the merchant gets the long end of the trade and makes his profit both ways. American Cultivator. A New Market For Vegetables. In Wisconsin an important Indus try has been developed In the manu facture of what are called dehydrated vegetables. The method is about the same as that applied to fruit in pro ducing evaporated apples, peaches, etc. The vegetables, including car rots, potatoes, cabbages, etc., are sliced, dried and compressed into small packages. These condensed vegetables are sold for Bhip supplies and In the mining regions of the Northwest. An order for over 300,- 000 pounds was lately received for the Pacific squadron of the United States Navy. The vegetables are used in making stews and soups. Amer ican Cultivator. Sheep That Paid Well. Some time ago an old sheep grower of Illinois, said in an address on sheep: "My sheep have gained from start of feeding to finish, eight to ten pounds of mutton rer bushel of corn, while the gain of my cattle runs from seven to eight pounds. And my hogs eat corn while my sheep eat grass, and only a little corn to start lambs and finish them. And I find from my shipping bills for twenty-five years that the average price received for my stock in Chicago during that per iod has been $4.9.3 per 100 pounds for sheep, $4.86 for steers nnd $4.85 for hogs. And all were good animals. These figures convince me. that the sheep are, in general, the most profit able stork on the farm, especially on thin and high lands. . But keep none but the best of whatever breed you have. They will pay when poor ones lose. Sheep are easy to handle and easy to retain in an inclosure that would not hold other stock, and are the best weed destroyers on the farm. Taking all things into consideration, the sheep has much to commend it to the farmer." Weekly Witness. Demand For Milk Created. A large portion of tho impurities which find their way into milk are brought to it at milking time. If the cows are not cleaned or brushed Just before milking, more or less loose hair and dirt falls into the milk pail. This can bo entirely prevented by brushing and then washing and dry ing the cowjs udder Just before milk ing. In dairies where sanitary milk that does not sour for several days is produced, tho cow's udder is always washed and dried Immediately hefnre she is milked; the milker then washes his bands, puts on a white suit and milks into a covered milk pall pro vided with only a small opening in the cover to milk into. Careful work of thb kind protects the milk from many impurities and it increases the consumer's desire for more milk when he knows that such precautions are taken against impurities getting into the milk. Many people undoubtedly would want milk to drink if they felt a greater confidence in the purity of the milk than they now have. Their knowl edge in a general way of the barn conditions where many cows are milked is not apt to increase their desire for milk. Weekly Witness. Passing of tiio Turkey. Of late years turkeys have been al most a minus quantity in this part of Ohio. While driving through the country flocks of turkeys might be seen on every farm not so many years ago, but now the bird has almost en tirely disappeared. Wild turkeys were once very numerous here and quite hardy, but It seems they cannot bear domestication and are heirs to man diseases. Black bead, cholera, rheumatism, bowel trouble and many Other diseases have made turkry rais ing a precarious business. Some would-be turkey raisers make the mistake of selling the old turkey hens. These should be kept, for the older they are, the more sense they have. Old turkey hens may be kept for ten years. If healthy birds can be obtained the owner may reasonably expect fair returns for the timo and money ex' ponded, but many of the birds are un healthy, and if they or their eggs are bought the little turkeys are weak and diseased from birth. Some' times the flock is all right till half grown, when one by one they droop and die, and this Is more discouraging than to have them die when young, ns it Is no small task to raise the deli cate fowls. A few years ago we had seven fine little turkeys that appar ently were perfectly healthy when shut In one night. They were nearly a month old and we thought them out of danger, but in the morning every one was dead. The coop stood on a clean plot of grass and they were not killed by any animal, so we never knew why they died. Eight or ten years ago turkeys could be bought for rine and ten cents a pound In the market here, and poultry wagons came In loaded with them at Thanksgiving and Christmas time from all directions, The turkeys that then brought from one dollar and a half to two dollars are now worth from three to five and Very scarce at that. In looking over advertisements for turkey eggs in poultry Journals the prices run from thirty to fifty cents for a single egg, and this may be one reason why so few are raised. Margaret Whitney, Pointers on Urns. From the time the chick Is hatched, correct feeding has much to do with its development. A chick that is stunted is more or less impaired in vitality. Anything that has to do with improper management of the Intended layers affects the number of eggs they will be able to produce, I think a hen can lay from 400 to 600 eggs at a profit, but her greatest profit Is returned from the time she begins to lay until twelve months have elapsed. The first year's laying is invariably the best. Leghorns and MInorcas can be kept until they are two and one-half years old with profit. Quite a number of poultry raisers have told me that they thought hens would return almost as much the second year as the first, even if they did not lay quite so many eggs. They eat far less in their second year, being matured. A pul let Is always more voracious than a hen. I do not think that they re turn as much profit in the second year; however, I always keep my hens until they are two years old. Chicks intended for layers must be well nourished from birth and never allowed to stop growing until they mature. A March or April hatched pullet of the Leghorn breed will com mence to lay in October if she comes from a precocious flock. If she has been hatched in June or July, do not expect any eggs until January. In cold climates this means no eggs, practically, until spring. A pullet that has not commenced to lay before cold weather Is usually hard to coax. Early hatches and continued good care is the secret of early layers and hearty fowls. Commercial Poultry, Dctler Draft Horse Rroeding. American Importers of draft horses seem to have turned their attention to the importation of an unusual number of pure bred draft mares this season, in order to meet a larger demand for these, as well as to do more pure breeding of draft horses In this country. There Is an increasing demand among our farmers who pay special attention to draft horse grow ing, and this has prompted the addi tional importation of pure bred mares. Hitherto, as a rule, American farmers have been content to provide themselves with pure bred draft stal lions and limited their horse breeding to high grades, and for this purpose have used the best grade mares in this line for such purposes, content with growing good grades that sell on the market at $200 to $250 at two to three years old. It is a good indication of the com ing Industry to see this growing con fidence in better horses, and Is in keeping with the forward farm move ment in everything else. The con tinued demand and fair prices for really good grade draft horses is indi cation enough that, notwithstanding the increase of autos and power transfer wagons, the horse will con tinue to fill a place in commercial affairs, and the best of the draft class will be more and more in demand. From all sources we learn that the Importations of draft and coach horses, stallions and mares are now arriving in this country in much greater numbers than in past years, and what is more, American import ers are selecting abroad and buying the best and highest priced horses. Numerous prize winners abroad are being imported, and it looks as if Europe is rapidly lonlng a great deal t the best horse blood she bas, all of which means an advance movement In breeding In this country. Indiana Farmer. WaUtual Constipation May of permanently mercomeoy proper personal efforts with the assistance bftheono truly (jenejicial laxative remedy, Synxn of tigs and Ei'uVr efScimaj JKirK enables one to form regular Kabitft daily So ilml" assistance to na ture may be gradually dispensed wtfh Vtan no toiler needed a$ the best of temedics, when required, arc to assist nature and not to supplant the natur al functions, which mi6t depend ulti tnately upon propev hourislnnent, proper effovts,and rifJit living generally. To get ils beneficial ejjects, alwayd vuy tho genuine SyrutoffigsEl mrtfScnna California Fig Syhup Co. oniy SOLD BYALL LEADING DRUCCISTS one size only, regular price 5t)f po-BUI Right In His Line. Traveling along a country road a man was attracted by frightful screams coming from a house not far from the road. Tying his horse he ran to the house and found that a little boy had swallowed a quarter, and his mother, not knowing what to do, was frantic. The man caught tho little fellow by the heels, and, holding him up, gave him a few shakes whereupon tho coin dropped to the floor. "Well, mister," said the grateful mother, "you certainly know how to get It out. Are you a doctor?" "Nt, madam," replied the man, "I'm a collector of Internal revenue." Mix For Rheumatism. The following Is . Sever falling remedy for rheumatism, and If fol lowed up It will effect a complete cure of the very worst cases: "Mix one half pint of good whiskey with one ounce of Torls Compound and add one ounce Syrup Bnrsaparllla Compound. Take In tablespoonful doses bofore each meal and at bedtime." The In gredients can be procured at any drug store and easily mixed at home. The Wagging Tongue. A prating barber came to train Krlng Achclaus, and said to him, "How will ytm please to have me cut your hair?" Said the king, "Silent ly." And certainly, though a man has nothing to do, but to hear and answer, yet a boundless tongue Is a strangd breast to be worried with. And the misery is, that those who speak much seldom speak well; it is a sign of Ignorance nnt to know that long speeches, though they may please the speaker, are the torture of tho hearer. Owen Felltham. Khedive as Engineer. The Khedive of Egypt, whose great fad is locomotive driving, had a nar row escape the other day while run ning an engine on the State railway. He suddenly found his way blocked by a wagon loaded with pig Iron. Tho royal engineer showed wonderful presences mind. He reversed and used his full brake power and stop ped Just short of the obstruction. PERFECT HEALTH After Venrs of Backache, Dizziness . and Kidney Disorders. Mrs. R. C. Richmond, of North wood, Iowa, says: "For years I was a martyr to kidney trouble, backache dizzy spells, head aches and a terri ble bearing down pain. I used one remedy after an other without ben efit. Finally I used a box of Doan'sKldney Pills and the backache ceased. Encour aged, I kept on and by the time I had used three boxes not a sign of the trouble remained. My health is per fect." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Mllburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Ice Sticki Profitable. In Austrln "Ica Altpkn" arc. manu factured At Ik rtrnfit - A anrlna rf poles is arranged so that the water win iau siowiy over each one in the series. Of course, the water in the winter time freezes, forming large Icicles. When tho IplclP. hin at. tained the proper size the employes Of the "lee nlant" mma Arnnnri with carts, break off the great sticks of ice ana naui tnem away to a placo where they are put In storage. Mrs.WinsIow's Soothing Syrup forChildren teething, soflena thegums, reducex inflamma tion, auuya pain, curea wind colic, 2jc a bottle. City Without Noise. Berlin Is said to be the auletest city in Europe. Railway engines are not allowed to blow their whistles within the city limits. There is no loud bawling of hucksters, and a man whose wagon gearing Is loose and rattling is subject to a fine. - V Or Oaie nakinj Farms in 14 State. Strout's mam. lll.....l..tal.-..f ..... Ak 'jfmUtmi with Stale map, mailed r; we arvc Divas for c a tTPAirrrn WMi-a LariM) Fan Daalara, Uti TilU BU.. Fl A LIVE REPRESENTATIVE WANTED iBMch lowiii,, b, han.lM , aUrsril T.xi, Pan MwiaIs Land PropoaltMii ea llharal eomniiMir.. land In aula for th man. H ror. abundant rain fall.ld.,1 cllm.ta. araranraa ranmrau r run particular writ lAI'ATOH g LA1 VOMI'A.11 V, flrat (. Baak BIUaT..tklcm P. It U. 41, 1901, If flllrlrd eves, use PUTNAM ajamwai wuko-u fleuiac wrb Writ AIT JiWrh I TURNED HER HAIR WHITE Queer Effect of Accident 8uffered by a Chicago Woman. In one day after a broken trolley polo fell on the head of Mrs. Julia Konold, her hair, naturally a chestnut brown, was turned completely white, and the expression of her face changed from the bloom of middle age to that of a woman fifteVn years her senior. The accident occurred on Decem ber 21, 1904. In Judge TuthtH's court a verdict for $17,500 was ren dered Iu her favor against the Unton Traction Company, owners of the line on which she was injured. The verdict Is one of the largest ever returned in favor of a woman In a personal Injury In the history of Chicago. State of Onto, Citr or Toledo, 1 .. Lucas County, I Frank J. C'iiesey makes onlh tlmt he is lentor partner ot the iirm ot K J. Chen BY & to., domg business in the City ot loledn, County nnd Ktnte nloresaid, and thiit unid h'nn will pay tlicsmn of o.nb iiundued ooi I.ahs ior each and every case ot CATAlililI that cannot be cured hy tho use ol Hall's UATAIUUI CUUE. rilANK J. C'IIESEY. bwota to beioro inc and subscribed in my nn-aeuce, tills (Jib day ot December, A. L)., 18S6. A. W. Ul-KASO.N, (8EAL.1 .Notary i'ublic. Hall's Catarrh Cure is tnken internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucotu sur Inces ot the system, bend lor testimonials, Iree. V. i. Cheney 4 Co., Toledo, O. Bold by all Drupaisls. 75c. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. Creek Indians a Vanishing Tribe. Once members of the great Creek family, the Seminoles of Florida have lost their tribe, their traditions and their homes. Their own people htyre forgotten them. The United States has Ignored them since the Seminole war, when their roster was lost. Payment tf the government debt to their tribe made plutocrats of their brothers in the west, but never a dime reached the members of the little band who refused to be driven from their ancestral home. But their Spartan courage hRS departed and In the cowed nnd cringing remnant there Is no spark of the fire that Mashed In "The Seminole's Reply." The government has no agent among the Seminoles, and the Inst guess at their number, made by the United States seven years ago was 358. That fragment of the tribe has now shrunk to 275. Collier's Maga zine. LITTLE BOY KEFT SCRATCHING. Eczema Lasted 7 Years Face wns All Raw Skin Specialists Failed, But Cutlcura Effected Cure. "When my little boy was six weeks old an eruption broke out on big face. I took I him to a doctor, but his face kept on get ting worse until it got to bad that no one could look at him. His whole face was one crust and must have been very painful. He scratched day and night until li is face was raw. Then I took him to all the best specialists in skin diseases, but they could nut do much for him. The eczema got t.i his arms and legs and we could not get a night's deep in months. I got a set of Cuticura Remedies and he felt relieved the first time I used them. I gave the Ctitl cura Remedies a good trial and gradually the eczema healed all up. He is now seven years old and I think the trouble will never return. Mrs. John O. Klumpp, 80 Niagara Bt., Newark, N. J., Oct. 17 and 22, 1907." The Tables Turned. The amenities of political campaign ing are amusingly Illustrated by a story told by a Southern congress man. It appears that during the course of a stump speech delivered some years ago by'John Sharp M'illlams In Mississippi he was Interrupted by a sudden yell from a man In tho audi ence: "I have been robbed by pickpock ets!" "I did not know that there were any Republican present." promptly suggested IJr. Williams, In order to get a laugh. "Oh, there ain't, there ain't!" roar ed the unhnppy man. "I'm tho only one!" Llpplncott's. Without Imagination. There is a certain New York busi ness man, of a rather waggish dispo sition, who contends that his wifo has no Imagination. At dinner one night he chanced to mention a tragic circumstance ho had read In the evening paper on his way home. A passenger on a transat lantic steamer had fallen overboard In mid-ocean and had never been seeji again. "Was he drowned?" asked his wife. "Of course, not," answered the Ir repressible hubby; "but he Bnralned his ankle, I believe." Llpplncott'r Magazine.' PATENTS Btartsi Your Puteni Patsnti mured and tail. Send the coupon at once. Don't give yourself a chance to put It off. keystone law a patent company, 1311 AacH St. Philadelphia, Pa. 90 Bend me your free book on patents. SAME ADDRESS. FOR. MEN A shoe that is too bie may not pinch, but it is a bad fit just the same, What yon want is a shoe that matches the fehape of roar foot at the place where yoar weight rests, not too large or too small, but extctly right. BKREEMERS are shoes like that, and the style is there, too. Look for the label. FRED. F. FIELD CO., Brockton, Maua. FADELESS DYES (or In seoklal How te Ua, Klaaali u4 Mix Oaatn. MOMalOai alalLU V Ijilaar. TlllsalaT Beware of the Cough that hnft;t en persistently, brealclnfr, your nleht's rest and ex la ust wig you with th violent of the paroxysms. A few doses of Pito's Cure will relieve won derfully any cough, no matter how far advanced or serious. It soothes and heals thelrritated surfaces, clears the clogged air passages and the cough disap pears. At all druggists', 23 eta. Earthquakes as Warnings. The belief that earthquakes ara signs or Avarnlnga owes Its origin la part to prophecies In the Bible, where, for example, we read that "there shall be families and pesti lences and earthquakes" as portend ing future calamities. Earthquakes have led to the abolition of oppres sive taxntlon, the abolition of mas querades, the closing of theaters and even to the alteration of fashion. A New England paper In 1727 tells us that a "considerable town In this providence has been awakened by the awful providence In . the earthquake that the women have generally laid aside their hooped petticoats." Na ture. Jewish Chess Players Excel. Jewish chess players have retained the championship at that game for the last forty-two years. Stelnlts held It for twenty-eight years till 1894 and Lasker has been champloa ever since. Restored to Health by Lydia E. Plukliam'sYegetableCompound. Read What They Say. MissLillianRoss.BSe East 81th Street, Now York, writes: "Lydia 10. Pinkham's Vegeta ble Compound over mine irregu larities, pe riodic suffering, and nervous headaches, after everything elm hail failed to help ine, and I feel it a duty to let others know of it." KatharineCrnig.235S Lnfuyetto St., Denver, Col., writes: "Thanks lo Lydia E. Piukham's Vegetable Coin pound I am woll, aftersuffering for months from ner vous prostration." Miss Marie Stoltz maii, of Laurel, la., writes : " I was in a run- ilownconditionandsuf ferod from supproiou. indigestion, and tnor circulation, i.ymais. Piukham's Vegetable Compound made ma well and strong." Miss Ellon M.Olson. of 417 N. East St., Ke wanoo. III., says: "Ly dia E. I'inkham'sVege tablo Compound cured mo ot backache, sid ache, and established mv nnrtodfl. nftpr tliA best local doctors had failed to help me." FACTS FOR SECK WOMEN. For thirty years Lydia E. Finlr ham's Vegetablo Compound, made from roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy for female illi and has positively cured thousands of women who have been troubled with displacements, inflammation, ulcera tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, that bearing-down feeling, flatulency, indigea tion,dizziness,ornervous prostration. Why don't you try it ? Mrs. Plnkhnm Invites all sick women to write her for atlvic. She has guided thousands to health. Address, Lynn, Mass. OUT OF DOOR WORKERS Men who connol stop for a roinv da v.- will 'J find Ihe greatest comforr and freedoi of bodily movement WATERPROOF OILED CLOTHIN SUCKERSQ? SUITS MP Every garment bearing Ihe sign of Ihe fish' guarqrileed waterproof t-ataiog rree a j Towrrt r.n ainTna, a a 7 SYDENHAM REMEDIES Heart, Stomach, Llvtr, Bowel, Kidney, Nerve, Rheumatism and Blood. Absolutely Pure and Effective. Dcacribe your cane: arad in 't-"ic. for trial bottla. VDINHAM TABLET CO.", 146 tait eoth St., - Haw York City. utl P - lnsl on Havlnar fob Dr. MAKILL'S Preparalioa mm r-HI 'i'be KMnnilard Kemeajf. W J 1VI l MM AT UBUUUIBTS. Krnd lor book, "Kellel lor Wainea." HUNCH DRUG CO, 30 W. 32d St, N. Y. City. BHFIIM JTISM """ rumble; thouvinda enrad; r llLumrlllilin ,i,itt)Melv;.1araniiwijlen;prli low.Wrlln .men, im. WttlHH 1 Mbl.UO.,Pru, Ind. FOUR 01RLS kstharine cawcy MABIt SIOITZ MAN f i ii ii &' H
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers