WW otg )owgs; ceoxvs system &J$ccuoNly ; To ges bewejcic MAMurflCTUPCD BY THE CALIFORNIA Fig Syrup Co. SOLD BY LEADING DRUGGISTS SQ'A BOTTLE A Change for the Better. The life-long domicile of an old lady was situated several feet south of the dividing line of Virginia and North Carolina, and when that section of the country was re-surveyed it waB dis covered that the line ran a few feet south of the property In question. They broke the news to the old lady that from then on she was to be a ' resident of Virginia. "That's good," she exclaimed: "I've always heard that North Carolina was an unhealthy state to live in." Success Magazine. Piles Cared In fl to 14 Days. Pico Ointment is guaranteed to cure any easeof Itchmg.ftlina.Weedingor Protruding Piles in 6 to 14 days or money refunded. SOo. Knocked Out by Dead Man. While Don McVean, of the under taking firm of Glllen & McVean of Toungstown, Ohio, was embalming the body of a muscular iron worker, ho met with the biggest surprise of hiB life. In turning the body the muscles of the right arm relaxed and the fist caught McVean square on the jaw, knocking him down and out for a few seconds. He was found by some of the employes on the floor. He did not finish the job. Mrs. Window's Soothing Syrup forChildren teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 26c a bottle. 6 If we could see ourselves as others tee us, It would just about put the looking glass people out of business. METALLIC HEELS and COUNTERS For MINERS, FARMERS, QUARRYMEN, and All Men who do Rough Work. 1 Will make your thoet last longer. They are eaiy to attach. Any cobbler can put them on. They will make your old ihoet good at new. You can buy hoet fitted with them from your (hoe dealer. Send (or booklet that telU all about them. Ilnltori Shnn Msr-Mnoni Pn Boston, UIIIIUW WIIUU IIIHUHIIIWtJ Vt Jfl A PP. ONION SEED -,k I Par 8aleeTi catalog, paga 129. Largest grower of onion and Yegetable , feeds In tbe world. Biff catalog treat or, end 16c in itampi and raoetTe catalog and 1000 kernels each of onions, carrots, celery, radishes, 1900 each lettuce, rutabaga, tur nips, 100 parsley, 300 tomatoes, 100 melons, 1S0O charming flower seeds, In all 10,000 ker nels, easily worth $1 of any man's money. Or, send 30c. and we will add one package of Earliest Poep O'Day Swoet Corn. SALTER SEED CO., Box A. C, U Crosst, Wit. ESTABLISHED 1809 IK ONI SUNDAY CREEK CO. 5S 1944 KEYSTONE TELEPHONE 1st 5S 1935 LONDON UNDERGROUND SCRIP & BONDS DEALT IN. E. BUNGE 20 Dread 8trtt. Nw York City. fsr I TOUR PATKNTbr our newmethnd, I NaT I I monlro1 ,( l, the loading ettptiaiisU and W lsi8simnniif'ft(iurernai Mad I ion Ht uare (iartlfn, few Vwk. Wr'tt Ji A TlON AL rAl ENT A NOVtCU'Y kJUilBi'i'lQN CO., 1UU-&-; ileal Iwtaie tiidg., r,tUla.tr,a WANTEI AfP'ntu; mores; every where: handwma p roll is,; M'll our pnrftvt brw, kerottune, iiinutl tAbl4'laiip; haiwtn.; or bracket -lamp; lUu can lie power: kcroMMie uiwil; a wonder; wttU on Unt; retail IXbO. Webster siwulalty Co., Wausrburj , Ot. I. W. U. 5. 1J9 DROPSY DISCOVEETf ; W U ,nlh rsllrf mud or ra mm. Bni mt tfttlnaaUls m1 to limym' IrraUaMoA I I licit Court) Syrup. I Vm In So!' 5s If For MINERSrrTfl-'A rti i law mm GARDEN. TARM and CROPS SUGGESTIONS FOR THE UP-TO-DATE AGRICULTURIST Palatable Foods. To have palatable and wholesome vegetables during the winter months, proper care and attention are Just as essential in harvesting and storing as In cultivation. Roots and vegetables, as they are often thrown in a heap promiscuously about the cellar, soon lose their freshness and flavor. Most house cellars are too warm for the proper preservation of vegetables, and It Is therefore advisable to store only a limited quantity for immediate uso in the house, while the main stock should be kept in a cool barn cellar or outdoor pit. Farmer'B Home Journal. Coat of Calves. The rough coat of calves and colts their first winter Is always due to troubles of digestion, from changing suddenly from succulent to dry feed. But a part is due to drinking too lit tle water, because water in winter Is always cold. If water, for young ani mals, was warmed to a temperature near that of animal heat they would drink more freely, and their food would digest, Instead of remaining In the stomach breeding disease. Do away with constipation in young stock and most of the difficulty In keeping them thrifty will be overcome. Epf tomlst. Home-Made Land Roller. Get four old mowing machine rollers and two mowing machine axles. Have "the blacksmith, weld tbem, which will make the axle for the roller. It is seven and one-half feet long. For the Blats take oak scantling 2 l-4x 4 1-4, cut In lengths of 3 feet, 4 inches. The slats are fitted around the wheels and fastened with wagon tires at the end of each roll Instead of bolts. The frame is made of scantling three-quarter inch, mortised together and fast ened with bolts; and you have a roller at a small cost equal to any you can buy for three times the money. It is easy running, and with care will last a lifetime. Charles A. Umoselle, in the Epitomist. Good for the Goats. For about five years flocks of goats have been doing a good work on foul underbrush farms in Dearborn county thlB state. When they clear up a farm in one place they are transferred to another In the neighborhood. It only takes a fe wmonths, or a year at most, to clear up one of these farms, and then a neighbor takes the flock to clean up bis farm. Dr. Tllley of Harrison town Bhip that county has now bdtight a flock of 40 goats to do the work on his farm, and expects to have it cleaned up in a year at most, possibly sooner. Goats have long been not ed for this work, and are Bald to be worth many farm hands, for they do it thoroughly, ready for the plow. Indiana Farmer. Value of Barnyard Manure. Harry Snyder gives the following valuations of barnyard manure based on chemical analysis: If applied to a worn out soil at tho rate of eight tons per acre, the Increase In corn the first year will be twenty to twenty-five bushels per acre. This would be worth $7. The next year the land will pro duce six bushels more of wheat, worth say $4.50. If seeded to clover It would yield at least a ton more of hay, worth $5. Following the clover with wheat again, a gain of eight bushels per acre, worth $6. will follow. Then will come twelve to fifteen bushels more of oats, worth ?3. The increase in the five crops, due to the dressing of eight tons of farm manure and the production of clover, Is alone worth $25, making the value of the manure $3 per ton distributed over five years. Profit In Waste Places. Many poor soils, now waste spots on the farm, would become profitable if planted with the right kind of for est trees, and cared for in tho right way. Trees will often grow where grain and grass will not. Swamps, stony ridges, exhausted fields, and washed hillsides need not be aband oned. There is money in most of them If they are set to work produc ing woodlots and forests. But knowl edge and judgment are necessary, and a bad guess may be costly. Many trees do well in '.heir soils cone-bearing trees in particular. The farmer Is fortunate whose land has no poor spots. Few landowners are so well oft. Fertile acres ore usually fair ly profitable, but the gravel bars, rocky knolls, marshy swales, nnd ex hausted and eroded slopes are not. Scarcely one of them need remain un productive. They will grow timber pine, locust, poplar, osage orange, oak, chestnut, or some other kind. But the soil must be studied, and the species selected to suit. Failure might fol low the planting of walnut on soil stilted to white pine, or vice versa. Studies of various regions 'and trees that suit them have been made by the Forest Service at Washington. He salts and conclusions have been pub lished, and may be had for the asking. The aim of these studies has been to point out how the farm's waste and neglected corners may be turned Into woodlots where the farmer may grow his own posts, poles, fences and even awlog!!. Indiana Farmer. Time to Water Horses. . A horse should be watered before feeding, and never given a large quan tity of water after a meal, for the simple reason that the water will wash the food out of the stomach be fore stomach digestion has taken place and the food will not be well prepared for absorption; and besides it is sometimes the cause of colic. There is a popular idea that a warm horse should not be allowed to drink and, unlike a great many other popu lar ideas, there is little truth in it If you water a warm horse in the or dinary way, letting him drink all that he will, you are likely to have a foun dered horse on your hands. This is especially so If, at the time, the horse Is fatigued. Nevertheless, it is al ways safe to allow him from six to ten swallows, no matter how warm he Is. It this be given on going into the stable and he be allowed to stand and eat hay for an hour and Is then offered water, he will not drink near ly so much as he would had none been given before. The danger Is not in the first swal low, as we often hear it asserted, but in the excessive quantities he will drink if not restrained. The most dangerous time to give a horse a full draft is when he has cooled down from fatiguing work and has par taken of a meal. John Splan, the great trainer, writes: "As to water, I think that a horse should have all that he wants at all times. A man says: 'Why; will you give your horse water before a race?" Yes, before the race, In the race, and after the race, and any oth er time that he wants to drink." When I say give your horse all the water he wants before the race, I do not mean that you shall tie him in a warm stall where he cannot get a drink for five or six hours on a hot day, and then take him to the pump and give him all he wants. What I mean is to give htm water often and, in that way, ho . will take only a small quantity at a time." After long, continuous exertion the system is greatly depleted of fluid. Nature calls for its replacement, and this Is the cause of a thirst which is so intense that, If the animal is not restrained at this time, he may drink much more than he needs. The general custom, almost univer sally followed, of giving the morning meal before water. Is not very objec tionable, either theoretically or prac tically. At this time there is no de pletion of fluid, consequently the horse is not very thirsty and does not drink rapidly or excessively, and apparent ly very little evil results from this method. However, the writer much prefers that the horse should have an opportunity to drink before the morn ing meal. Personally, I much prefer keeping horses, both summer and winter, in an open shed, with a large water tank In the yard, to tying them by the head In a barn. This brings us to the ar rangement of farm buildings, which I hope to discuss in some subsequent paper. F. W. Culver, M. D. C, in American Cultivator. Farm Notes. Wheat rust is limited to no section or grade of grain, but Is encountered all the world over. It is said that this year will be re corded as a banner year for dairying all over the United States. Laws for the compulsory eradication of weeds are now in force In twenty-five states and territories. If tools are given a coat of crude petroleum before being put away It will prevent the metal from rusting and preserve the wood. It .is estimated that in the United States this year 3,198,000 acres were planted in Irish potatoes, an increase over last year of 2.4 percent. - New York Is the leading buckwheat producing state, with Pennsylvania second, Michigan third, Maine fourth, and North Carolina fifth in the list. The best way to ventilate the cellar is to have the windows and doors op en at night Instead of daytime. Of course, this can not be done in freez ing weather, and at all times there should be heavy screens to keep out rats, dogs and cats. It is said that the quail has been known to destroy sixty different kinds of weed seeds, and it is a fact that about 5 percent of his food is made up from seeds that are harmful to the farmer. He also annually destroys large numbers of injurious bugs. Cowpea hay Is very nutritious. It Is nearly equal to wheat bran as part of a ration. It is satisfactory for work stock, and for beef or milk produc tion, and it gives good results when fed to poultry. The grain is a rich feed, excellent for poultry, but little used for other feeding. When necessary to draw a nail or screw that is hard to start, very often a sharp tap with a hammer will loos en It. Should this fail, put on kero r.ene oil and let it soak a while. It Is a good plan to put a jlttle linseed oil on screws and nails before using, for not only will they enter the wood with less force, but can be drawn more easily. Bad Taste In I the Mouth, Appetite Bad, i Head Heavy, StomachSour, $ A general feeling of being tired and X duties or pleasures of life. Is that the Wqy You Feel T If It i, yon should know that the famous toulo laxative, I Lane's Family Medicine (called alio Lane's Tea) will give that perfect Internal clean, liness and wholesomeness which pro duces health and the feeling of com. fort that makes life enjoyable. All druggists sell it in 25o. and 60o. packages. Don't Complain. Don't kick because you have to but ton your wife's waist. Be glad your wife has a waist and doubly glad you have a wife to button a waist for. Some men's wives have no waists to button. Some men's wives' waists have no buttons on to button. Some men's wives who have waists with buttons on to button don't care a con tinental whether they are buttoned or not. Some men don't have any wives with waUts with buttons on to button any more than a rabbit. Lacon (111.) Journal. BABY'S SKIN ERUPTION CURED. Was So Sore, Irritating and Painful That Little Sufferer Otmld Mot Sleep Scratched Constantly Cutlcura'a Efficacy Proven. "When about two and a half yean old my daughter broke out on her hips and the upper parti of her legs with a very irritat ing and painful eruption. It began in Octo ber; the flrat I noticed was a little red sur face and a conatant desire on her part to cratch her limbs. She could not sleep and the eruptions g it aore, and yellow water came out of them. I had two doctors treat her, but ahe grew worse under their treat ment. Then I bought the Cuticura Rem edies and only uaed them two weeks when he waa entirely well. This was in Febru ary. She haa never had another rough place on her skin, and ahe is now fourteen years old. Mrs. R. II. Whitaker, Winches ter, Tenn., Sept. 22, 1908." Potter Drug & Chem. Corp., Sole Props, of Cuticura Remedies, Boston, Masa. Ostrich Feather Auction. The quantity of ostrick feathers of fered at the recent auctions in London was extremely large, the weight being 105,000 pounds against 84,790 pounds in July and 102.850 pounds in August last year, says South Africa, a London publication. A leading firm reports that considering this was the largest quantity ever sold, the result must be regarded as satisfactory. There was a good attendance of buyers, but prices all around showed a decline, which was Important In white boos, floss, and all inferior goods. The amount realized was about $1,100,000. Bed, Weak" Weary.Watery Eyes Relieved by Murine Eye Remedy.. Compounded by Experienced Physicians. Conforms to Pure rood and Drug Laws. Murine Doesn't Smart; Soothes Eye Pain. A Long Sentence. The prize for the longest sentence ever written may fairly be awarded to the elder Dumas, who probably holds a further record for fertility of pro duction. In the seventh of the twen ty-nine volumes which compose the "Impressions de Voyage," there Is a sentence describing Benvenuto Cellini, which fills three pages, or 108 lines, averaging 45 letters apiece. The sen tence is broken by 63 commas and CO semicolons; but as it contains 195 verbs and 122 proper names, the read. er Is somewhat bewildered before the end Is reached. London Chronicle. Only Ono "Bromo Quinine" That la Laxative llromo Quinine. Look lor the signature of E. W. Orove. Used the World over to Cure a Cold in One Day. 25c. "Henry asked you if you had made that cake, did he? Well, what was there in that to wound your feelings, child?" "It was the the way he said it, mamma. He he said, 'Darling, d-dld you perpetrate it?' "Chicago Tri bune. Deafness Cannot Bo Cured nylocal applications as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to euro deafness, and that is by consti tutional remedies. Deafness is caused by an inflamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is in flamed you have a rumbling sound or imper fect hearing, and when it is entirely closed Deaf noss is the result, and unless the in nom ination can be taken out and this tube re stored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever. Nine cases out of ten are cause J bycatarrh, which is nothingbut an Inflamed condition of the mncons surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused byca tarrh) that can not be curedbyHall'a CbUrrh Cure. Send for circulars free. F.J.Uhknky & Co.,Toledo,U Sold by Druggists, 75c. Take Hall's Family Pills for constioatloa, 6 Dolly, who Is C, had been sent to a boarding school. When she came home for a time she voiced her ob jections. "I don't like to stand in a straight row," she said, "and I don't like to drink out of a mug with a big 'Be Good' on it, and I don't like to have my face washed round and round, as if it was a plate." Love Is sweet In fact a good bit of it la taffy. PUTNAM Color more goodi hrlghtnr And faster colors than any an dye uj gariueiit wltlwut ripping apart. Writ A Crying Need. What is really wanted at the pres ent time is a standard of mlsconduoL We are constantly doing things in doubt, as if we hadn't a right to do them. The confusion caused by people doing things which in their circum stances we had no right to expect is the principal cause of our troubles. It ought to be definitely settled, for example, that any millionaire who has, say, over a hundred millions, will thereafter lead an honest life. If he has only fifty millions his life should be semi-honest, and if he has only a paltry ten millions, then it ought to be conceded that he can loot a few railroads or bo until he gets on his feet. k Up to say, ten thousand a year no man can afford to be dishonest. He ought to get up in the cars and give up his seat to women Under 35 at least, and of course he will not take the chance of robbing any safe. From ten thousand up to one hundred thou sand he can engage In little dishonest flyers by making one of a pool 'or put ting through a land deal or so for variety. When he gets fifty millions or more together, however, every man ought to ask himself plainly the question whether from now on.he ought not to be a philanthropist. Doesn't he owe this to his fellow-man? Life. Every Woman Will Be Interested. T . t....A n.iln. In Via V n fir T T-1 o rv li TUB UBTDWMun u u w, . .u w j , Bladder or Kidney trouble, and want a pleasant neru cure iur wtuunu a mo, vry Mother Gray's Australian Leaf. It is a re- li.t.1. um.l.(n. All rrrnrnriRtaAftptfl. Rrtti. plerasi. TheMotherOray Co.,LeRoy,N.Y. Cargo of Five Thousand Cats. Japan, it seems, is infested with rats, and the reason is explained by a Paris contemporary, via., that the Ja panese cats, which are not prolific, are pampered to an extraordinary de gree. During the last few days, the chronicler proceeds, a ship has left one of the principal German ports with 6,000 cats on board. These on arrival are to be settled In the various mari time towns of the Mikado's domin ions, and we further learn that the present consignment of cats is to be followed by four others, each of 5,000. The name of the principal German port is not given. London Globe. "Why do they have those glass cases with the ax, hammer, crow 'bar, etc., in on these cars," asked a traveler on the railroad going to New York. "O, those are put there to use In case any one wants a window open," replied the facetious man. Yonkers Statesman. Tbe immense Northfleld schools and colleges for the training of missionar ies and preachers were erected out of the profits derived from the sale of Moody and Sankey's "Sacred Songs and Solos." Donald (7 a. m.) Come and have a wee drop o' whisky, Dugald. Dugald Na, mon, it's ower Boon for drlnkln' besides I've had twa al ready. Town Topics. n A filllDlurrtm vAND PREVENTIVE uuteniwr. inn.. W. Epltootlc ai rt . . T v.MUToai rever. r. cm..., -.i '- Pharyngitis. CutfM t Kaon Raaiedifer Miifi Gwatejiofatln.i. animals " W - For Croup Tonsilitis and Asthma A quick and powerful remedy is needed to break up an attack of croup, Sloan's Liniment has cured many cases of croup. It acts instantly when applied both inside and outside of the throat it breaks up the phlegm, re duces the inflammation, and relieves the difficulty of breathing. Sloan's Liniment gives quick relief in all cases of asthma, bronchitis, sore throat, tonsilitus, and pains in the chest. Price, soe soo., and Si.oo. Dr. Earl S. Sloan, Boston, Mass. FADELESS DYES othar 1re. Ono 10c, package color all fiber. They dya In eold water better than an 7 athar d Tl for fret booklet, Uow to ijr, Uloaou and Ulx Ootora, AlONUOK iilttU CU atinay. Hilnafc WANTS HER LETTER PUBLISHED For Benefit of Women who Suffer from Female Ills Minneapolis, Minn. "I was a great sufferer from female troubles which caused a weakness and broken dowm condition of the system. 1 read se much of whatLydla E. Finkham's Veg etable Componnd had done for other suffering women I felt sure it would J help me, and I must say it did help ma wonderfully. My pains all left me. I frew stronger, and within three months was a perfectly well woman. "I want this letter made public to show the benefit women may derive) from Lydia E. Finkham's Vegetable Compound." Mrs. John O. Mold ah; 8115 Second St., North, Minneapolis. Minn. Thousands of unsolicited and genu ine testimonials like the above prove) the efficiency of Lydia E. Pinkbam't Vegetable Compound, which is mads) exclusively from roots and herbs. Women who suffer from those dis tressing ills peculiar to their sex should not lose sight of these facts or doubt the ability of Lydia E. Pinkbam't Vegetable Compound to restore their health. If you want special advice write) to Mrs. Pinkliain, at Lynn, Masa. She will trentyourlettcrassfrietly confidential. For 20 years she) lias been helping1 sick women la this way, free of charge. Don't hesitate write at once. Italians of the poorer class general ly enjoy good health. This Is partly attributed to the fact that the work ing classes of Italy eat less meat that those of other European nations. Do not neglect constipation, for this con dition poisons the blood and leads to chronie ill health. Garfield Tea, the mild herb laxative, corrects constipation, keeps tba blood pure, and the health good. The first piano ever brought west of the Mississippi was exhibited la Jackson, Cape Girardeau county, re cently. It was bought by Major George Frederick Bollinger for bis daughter in 1816. Itch cured in 30 minntes by Woolford'e Sanitary Lotion. Never fails. At druggists. Many a fellow has discovered that It Is easier to make love than to i good. "SPOHNS" As this very remarkable preparation is mow called, is the grentest t'onntitutional Remedr ever known for Brood Mnrea. Colta, Stallion and all other horses; alao Distemper amooc Dogs and Sheep. This compound is made of the purest ingredients and not an atom of poisonous or injurious nature enters into ite composition. Manv persons nre now talrroc SPOHN'S for La Grippe, Colds. Coughs. Kid ney Trouble, etc., nnd it is always safe, ft expels the Disease Germs from the bodv; acta directly on the Blood and Glands. SPOHNTI ia now sold by nearly every druggist and har ness dealer in the land, and any can get it for you, or send with remittance of price to the manufacturers, who will ship to vour order, express pnid. Fifty cents and $1.00 a bottle, and 5.00 a. ' $10.00 the dozen. Record of Annual Sales. 1st Year 1.053 Bottles 8oM 2nd Year 4,3(14 " " 3rd Year 9.2.16 " "." 4th Year 19.1.1 ' - 6th Year 40.2S4 6th Year 72.3S0 7th Year .....100,532 8th Year 124.500 " . 9th Year 172.4R5 " 10th Year 221.700 11th Year 287.620 - 12th Year 378 902 13th Year 508.720 " 14th Year 548.260 " Send for our Booklet of twelve good reci for family and atock medicines, FREE. SPOHN MEDICAL CO.. Chemists and Bactcrtclogltit, GOSHEN. IND., V. S. A. -MTV 1 ! 1
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers