RHEUMATISM 1 want rtTery cddiiic uu-uuipin; iu sway U medicines, all Hutments, all TI8M REMEDY a trial. No mutter whnt yonr doctur may say, no mutter what your frlenda may Bay, no mutter now prejudiced you may bo against all adver tised remedies, iro nt once to yonr ilriiR- alst anil get a bottle of the ifUbbM.v TISM HKMKDY. If It falls to Rive kMIs- faction,! will refund your money. aiunyon Remember this remedy contains no sal- levilC m ill, IH1 UIIIUIU LUI'"'! i'-."- other bnrniful ilrus. It la put up under the guaranteo of the Pure Food and Drog Act For sale V. all dr"t, Price. Vr,e. Pies and Profits. When Solomon Andrews died at his Cardiff home in England not long ago he left a fortune of $750,000 which In Cardiff Is looked upon as a mighty estate. Solomon Andrews was the prince of piemen. His pies were meat pies and Solomon peddled them from a tray. They were good pies, made on honor, and Solomon's trade Increased. As custom came to him he Invested In a horse and cart but he didn't let increased expenses affect the standard of his pies. In time he added a bake shop, and then people came to him for the pies, and the peddling cart be came a delivery wagon. A confec tionery department BtlU further In creased his trade, and later on he branched out in varied mercantile di rections. He became a commercial Pooh Bah, being In later years not only a baker and confectioner, but also a bus line owner, a tailor, an un dertaker, a cab proprietor, a restaur ant keeper and a coal mine owner. We are told that in each of these lines of trade he proved successful. Cared Sweeney und Removed a , Spavin. Dr. Sloan's Liniment and Vet lnary Remedies are well known all over the country. They have saved the lives of many valuable horses and are a permanent institution in thou sands of stables. Mr. Q. T. Roberts of Resaca, Ga , R. P. D. No. 1, Box 43, writes: "I have used your Liniment on a horse for sweeney and effected a thorough cure. I also removed a spavin on a mule. This spavin was as large as a guinea egg. I regard Sloan's Lini ment as the most penetrating and ef fective Liniment I have ever known." Mr. H. M. Glbbs, of Lawrence, Kans., R. F. D. No. 3, writes: "Your Liniment Is the best that I have ever used. I had a mare with an abscess on her neck and one 60c. bottle of Sloan's Liniment entirely cured her. I keep It around all the time for galls and small swellings and for every thing about the stock." Dr. Sloan will send his Treatise on the Horse fre-e to any horseman. Ad dress Dr. Earl S. Sloan, Boston, Mass., Station A. One of the Signs. "Colonel Gunnsome is getting to be a pretty big man in politics, isn't he?" "Yes; whenever he calls on the president he has to be careful to ex plain to the reporters that his visit has no political significance." Chi cago Tribune. $100 Reward, $100. The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded dis ease that science has been able to cure in all its stages, 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, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's 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 assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers thot they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by all Druggists. 75c. lake Hall's Family Pills for constipation. Supported. California was making its biennial declaration of war upon Japan. "The President is opposed to us." said the sponsor of the movement, "the people of 45 benighted States are opposed to us; but " he passed for effect; "but Hobson is with us." Nippon was Jarred by the mighty cheer that went up. Itch cured in 30 minutes by Woolford'i Sanitary Lotion. Never fails. At druggists. A Stickler for Words. "Does Mrs. Peck's husband com mand a good salary?" 1 "He earns a good salary. , She commands it." FarinForSaic' A 3ln(C Firms in 14 Statn ooo Profit-Pay- States. Strout't Momlilv bulletin oi Keal Bargains, profuselv illustrated, midree: wepav your R. R. fire. E. A. STROUT CO.. Book C 1. WtrU'i Uml tarn Dsslsrs, Lud Ti :U EWg.. Phils. MOTHER GRAY'S SWEET POWDERS FOR CHILDREN, A OsrttfD Onr for FfTer.vtine i' HstafliaW firm. VarwinOhtld- VMt' Ham, DruniM BtunpV milr1 FREE. Addrww. A. S. OLMSTED. Lc Roy. N. Y ARTIFICIAL EYES LARGEST STOCK. LOWEST PRXES. EUGENE HEARD & CO. - Op'ssMtriits, 70S Pn An., Pttsfcurn. f - . r. h. u. is. liwa. D R O PG Y sSSra mm. MsTMWdiHiMaWkMasBl Im Urn. U. M. auaa-t KM, Bm a. III l, s Cotrpens For Cows. . Cowpeas make an excellent food for dairy cows when combined with Other grain and fodder in proper pro portions, but they are so highly con centrated and nitrogenous that they should be fed in moderate quantities and mixed with cut feed in bran. Weekly Witness. Milking Farming Pay. Secretary Wilson in a recent ad dress summarized in a few sentences the processfs of a farmer who suc ceeds In making farming pay. This1 successful farmer he thus describes: "He rotates his crops. "Ho has good pastures. "He has a good garden. "He tile-drains his lands. "He keeps up good fences. "He puts all manure promptly on the fields. "He keeps dairy cows or mutton sheep, or both. "He breeds draft-horses, and does farm work with brood-mares- and growing colts. "He has a library with periodicals and standard works, and a musical Instrument. "He keeps Improved stock which respond to their keeping and put on the greatest per cent, of meat on the when she needs it, has a spring vehl prlme parts. "He helps his wife in the house cle for her to visit in, and drives her to church himself." Pittsburg Chris tian Advocate. A Haiuly Rarn. Here are plans for a handy barn. It will hold Beven head of horses and about ten head of cows. A crib op posite the feedway will hold about 600 bushels of corn and an oats bin adjoining this will hold from 1000 to 1200 bushels of that grain. This leaves a space fifteen by eighteen for Implements, hay or anything that the farmer may wish to-put in it. The jES- DOOR ccsh' crib; r f rWCMINH KOOM em i r-r r -car A Handy Barn. doors on the cow shed are wide enough so you can drive through them with a wagon or manure Bpreader. The horse stable has dou ble stalls ten feet wide and fifteen feet from inside of manger to the wall. This, together with the fact that the doors are eight feet wide, enable you to get out with your team very easily. The size of the struc ture is thirty-five by thirty-eight feet, with a hay mow over the lower floor. The eaves are six feet, affording more than usual protection to the outside of the building. The accompanying plan, says the Journal of Agriculture, will give the reader a better under standing of the interior arrange ment. riowing Vndcr Green Crops, My experience in trying to improve land by plowing under green forage crops leads me to believe that unless we make a wise selection of crops to be turned under our work is often done at a loss. To be of value the crop that is plowed under must be one that obtains a large percentage of its plant food from the atmosphere, either directly or indirectly, or else one that has a deep rooting system and brings up much of its plant food from below the depths reached by the plow. Any plant that obtains all of Its food from the top soil adds nothing to the fertility of the land when plowed under, except that it may in some land make the soil more pro ductive by improving its texture or mechanical condition. Red clover we have found espec ially adapted for 'this purpose. It and other members of the legume family are, in my opinion, the only plants we can afford to use In the work of Improving our soils. The clover and legumes alone can not maintain soil fertility, but when they are rotated with- other farm crops, and where these crops are fed to live stock and the manure saved and returned to the field, they make it possible to increaso the fertility of the soil every year. Epltomist. Caring For the Earn. The management that should be given rams, young or old, before and after service will depend largely on the size of the flock. If a strong. -well-grown ram lamb runs with a flock of eight or ten sheep which have an ample provision of variable pasture the two may run together during the season of service and It will not be necessary to feed grain. The same will be true of a vigorous shearing ram running with a flock of, say, twelve to twenty ewes. But should the number of the ewes be in creased beyond the limit named. then the management should be ap proximately as stated below. The rams should be confined to a stable or shed having at the same time access to a paddock. They should be fed good hay and some good green food such as rape or cab bage. They should get in addition from one to two pounds grain per day, according to the service exacted of them, and an ample water supply. Half the grain by bulk may be com posed of bran, the other half being almost any kind of grain, but pre ferably oats or wheat. The ewes should be driven to a yard, say in the morning. The ram turned in with them will soon single out the ewes in season. These should be kept in till the next day. After the season ot service is over. the grain ration given to the ram should be gradually reduced, but It is usually not wise to withhold grain altogether during the winter. Ram lambs want It to further development and old rams to sustain yield. Pro- fe-- Vhomas Shaw, Differences in Dairy Salts. The leading brands seem to be, none of them, wanting In the main constituent chloride of sodium for the chemical anaylses of ten brands show that a variation of only 1.05 per cent, in the quantity of salt present the difference between a maximum of 98.62 per cent, and a minimum of 97.47 per cent. Surely there Is enough clear salt In any of these samples to make one as good as another if there were no other in nredlents. and If there was nothing in the granular formation of one brand to give it superiority over an other. Some of the other substances, even in the small quantities in which they" exist, vary five per cent. The most objectionable matter In salt is chloride of calcium, which is found only in the Onondaga, and to the presence of which may be attributed the milky appearance of solutions of that salt. Sulphate of lime, which is found more largely in foreign than in domestic brands, Ib objectionable, if found in large quantities, but there is not enough found in any leading brand to have any effect. To the other Ingredients separately no seri ous objection is made in view of the very small percentage in which they exist. We must believe, however. that In combination they all help to produce certain chemical results, which more or less affect the flavor ot butter. From all these facts I am forced to conclude that there are es sential differences In dairy salts, and that the actual superiority between the best makes depends more upon the character of the foreign sub stances present, and upon the texture and grain of the salt and the process by which that grain is formed, than it does upon the mere percentage of chloride of sodium in any given quan tity. Weekly Witness. Be Gentle to the Cow. "The cow Ib an Intelligent animal," Bays Mrs. Howie, of Elk Grove, WiB., who, like Mrs. Durand, of Lake For est, 111., is foremost in cow culture. She adds: "It Is not good form to be rude to the sensitive cow." Mrs. Howie is assisting Professor Hoverstad, of the North Dakota Agri cultural College, in his institute work in the State. She is instructing the farmers In the temperament ot the cow, and she asserts that tho gentle creature Is iacteally responsive to con siderate treatment. At. Mrs. Howie's dairy farm, seven miles from Milwaukee, each cow is groomed every day. The bovine is brushed, washed and her hoofs and horns polished. "Some people might laugh at this," says Mrs. Howie, "but it has brought results." The gentling Improves the cow's self-respect, and self-respect In cows is profitable to the owner that is Mrs. Howie's proposition. The cow, like the prima donna, is possessed of a temperament, which must be consulted if maximum results are de sired. The cow has a psychology, but, like the psychologies of every other living .thing, it yields to treat ment. Mrs. Howie's prescription Is simple; "Good, common-sense prin ciples, soap, fresh water and kind ness." What kindness will do for horses is notorious. Why not for cows? This agricultural business every year becomes more interesting. It is getting fashionable, moreover. The day of the "rube" Is about over. The farmer is becoming every day more the scientist. All he can know ot chemistry, of botany, of zoology, he can pretty well apply. And now, lo and behold! he Is lectured to by so ciety women, like Mrs. Durand and Mrs. Howie, . who, having become bored to death with stupid society, have turned to cow culture in order to be interested. Minneapolis Jour nal. , The Psychology of Arbitration. Different nationalities are so afraid of what they might do to each other it their blood was up that they make provision beforehand for a third par. ty to rush in between them in case of dispute. "Don't let me at him or I will murder him," is the feeling all round. Irish Homestead. Maytacmaxiex overcome oxaVvv6 tewie&y Syxup cjHs &tVr V)s Aoiy soW assistance o wait& may be to&xaji dipetvse4. wN vvhen. wo waisr needclas oj rtma'vcs wknrccyYrc& axe o nsss nawe,aw&wA o suypaw6wantt moJ&Aji wfetivfo tvoutsvmeTvV, proper ots.owittVvttt To WHWeSvojJts.olwoysbiy ttw (ennixu, aiANuroCrunrO O rve CALIFORNIA Fio Syrup Co. SOLD BY ALL LEADING DRUGGISTS s OMtSlIEONLY-PltOUmH PRIlt 50 PER BOTTLE New Charity Scheme. The United States Tobacco Journal tells of a curious scheme In use In Germany for ruining money for char ity. Boxes for cigar and cigar ends have been placed In cafes and public buildings by a charity organization, and enough money Is expected from the sale of this class of refuse to teed and clothe 1.728 children during the winter months. What becomes of the stumps is a secret fortunately kept from the smokers. CHILD ATE CUTICURA. Spread Whole Box of It on Crackers Not the iieast Injury Resulted Thus Proven Pure anfTSweet. A New York friend of Cuticura writes: "My three year old son and htir, after being put to bed on a trip serosa the At lantic, investigated the stateroom and lo cated a box ef graham crackers and a box of Cuticura Ointment. When a search was made for the box, it was found empty and the kid admitted that he had eaten the contents of the entire box spread on the crackers. It cured him of a bad cold and I don't know what else." , No more conclusive evidence could be offered that every ingredient of Cuticura Ointment is absolutly pure, sweet and harmless. If it may be safely eaten by a young child, none but the moat beneficial results can be expected to attend its appli cation to even the tenderest skin or youngest infant. Potter Drug & Chem. Corp., Sole Props, of Cuticura Remedies, Boston, Mass. Both In the Same Boat. "Sir, could you give me a little as lstance?" Bald the weary wayfarer. "I don't know where my next meal is coming from." "Neither do I," re plied the prosperous-looking individ ual. "My cook loft this morning, too." Philadelphia Record. - Rhematlsm Cured In a Day. Dr.Detchon's Relief for Rheumatism radi cally cures in 1 to3days. Its action is remark able. It removes at once the cause and the disease immediately disappears. First dose greatly benefits. 75c. and $1. At druggists. Even. Scientist We are now getting mes sages from Mars and answering them. Inquirer But you can't understand their messages, can you, Scientist No. But then, they can't understand our answers either. Cleveland Leader. "Red, Weak, Wenry, Watery' Eyes Relieved by Murine Eye Remedy. Compounded by Kxperienced Physicians. Conforms to Pure 1-ood and Drug Laws. Murine Doesn't Smart; Soothes bye Pain. Probably Followed Advice. "I notice a man who had a cold in his head has committed suicide." "Poor fellow! Now what fool friend could have advised him to try that remedy?" Philadelphia Ledger. In case of accident, cuts, wounos. bums, scalds, sprains, bruises, etc.. nothing will so quickly take awny all pain and soreness as Hamlins Wizard Oil. Poor Lo, the Indian. The bureau of Indian affairs Is en deavoring to save the Indian. The menace which it is fighting is tuber culosis. Unless this is successfully fought, the race will follow the buffalo into utter extinction. While the In dian roamed free In his hunting grounds, living In the open air, and taking the storms as they came, he was safe from the white plague, but when he was subjected to the pains and penalties of civilization, he be gan to suffer, his people to decrease. The bureau contemplates a scheme of education, in the way of sanitation, personal cleanliness, and preventive measures, and by this way It is hoped to cut down the frightful death roll that has been Increasing year by year. It is said the Indians are dy ing off this now of this malady at the rate of a thousand a year, and this number Is Increasing, so that in a few years Poor Lo will be no more. The bureau takes Its stand on the hu manity side of the proposition, but still, there is something romantic In the Idea of letting the Indian live on. A Reminder. "You were south, weren't you?" "Yes. And It was so interesting watching the peasant women carrying around great heavy jars on their heads." ' "Yes. They are almost as strong as some of the New York women car rying their hair." New York Herald. J5 Incredible Brutality. Moud My fiance Is a heartless wretch. . Belle What's the troubleT Maud I've got a better offer and he won't release me from our engage ment. Boston Transcrfnt. PUTNAM ww mow nnu Drujnter saa xsrr ooton sou maj Saa anjr aaxaMBt wll&out rlpptac awn. Writs) "MEMOIRS OF DAN RICE," Tllfl CLOWN OF OUR DADDIES. At Last, There Is on Sale a Booh nrlmful'of American Humor. Any bookseller will tell you that the constant quest of his customers is for "a book which will make me laugh." The bookman Is compelled to reply that the 'race of American humorists has run out and comic lit erature is scarcer than funny plays. A wide sale is therefore predicted for the "Memoirs of Dan Rice," the Clown of Our Daddies, written by Maria Ward Brown, a book guar, anteed to make you roar with laugh ter. The author presents to the pub lic a volume of the great jester's most pungent jokes, comic harangues, caustic hits upon men and manners, lectures, anecdotes, sketches of ad venture, original songs and poetlcnl effusions; wise and witty, serious, satirical, and sentimental sayings of the sawdust arena of other days. These "Memoirs" also contain a series of adventures and Incidents alternat ing from grave to gay; descriptive scenes and thrilling events; the rec ord of half a century of a remarkable life, In the course ot which the sub ject was brought Into contact with most of the national celebrities of the day. The book abounds In anecdotes, humorous and otherwise; and It af fords a clearer view of the Inside mysteries of show llfs than any ac count heretofore published. Old Dan Rice, as the proprietor of the famous "One Horse Show," was more of a national character than Artemus Ward, and this volume contains the humor which made the nation laugh even while the great Civil War raged. This fascinating book ot 600 pages, beautifully Illustrated, will be sent postpaid to you for $1.50. Address Book Publishing House, 134 Leonard street. New York City. Historical Footnote. Socrates had just swallowed the hemlock. "There's no benzoate of soda In It, anyhow," he said, "and I'd rather take my dose all at once and have It over than to linger along for years as a member of a poison squad." But Plato, who was paid by the line, worked up this simple Incident into a story ot several thousand words. Chicago Tribune. Discontent of a Sailor's Wife. Noah was plainly downcast. "I brought along plenty of clothes for my wife, but she says they look as if they came out of the ark!" he cried. Herewith he saw that the salvage of baggage was a mistake. New York Sun. Only One "Bromo Quinine" That is Laxative Uronio Quinine. Look lor the signature of K. W. Urove. Used the World over to Cure a Cold in One Day. 2Se. Earth In a Quiver. Prof. G. H. Darwin, son of the great Darwin, In a recent lecture In London confirmed the discovery of the Ger man astronomer, Hecker, that there are tides in the earth's crust Itself, similar to those of the ocean, but very much less, of course. In other words, the earth's cru3t moves up and down one-third as much as If it was liquid throughout. In the latitude of Lon don, the speaker said, the vertical rise and fall was from 4 to 5 Inches dally. For six years, Prof. ' Hecker worked, day and night, inside of a chamber, cut Inside of a well, 80 feet deep, and discovered this regular undulation of the earth s crust ,and at the same time he learned that the earth Itself was about as stiff as steel through out. It does not seem that the patient professor, has evolved any theory from this Interesting fact, or to Illustrate with It, any phase of the cosmlcal evolution. That will probably come after. It is quite sufficient to know now, that the earth Is a steel bubble, tnat is constantly in a quiver. A Composite Product. Mrs. Boggs Mr. Meekman Is a splendid example of what a man ought to be. Mr. Boggs Not on your life. He's a splendid example of what a wife, two sisters, a grown-up daughter and a mot,her-ln-law think a man ought to be. Puck. Didn't Act Like It. Son Pa, when ,vou licked me this morning, did It hurt you, too? TO t Vinv TKfol 1 at van Son It didn't bother you a bit when If you suffer from Flu, Falling Sickness. Spasms or nave children, or friends that do so, my New Dis covery will relieve them, and all you are asaexl to do Is to send for KKEE Bottle of Dr. Slny'n Epileptic fare. If has cured thousands where everything els railed. Beut free with directions. Express Prepaid. Guaranteed by liny Meilleal Laboratory, under the National Food and Drugs Act, June SUth, lam, Ouar. auty No. Please give AQE and lull address, 04S Pearl htreet, .New ork City. 1 V- - s SLICKERS wear well and they keep you dry while you are wearing them $300 EVERYWHERE CmWTEED WATEPPR0OTX CAAIOG fN AJ.IbWEP CO. ftOS,TAM 11 .V" ' Tower Canadian Co. uxmw. towmto. Cm. in 1 FADELESS DYES dra. Ons 10c packs colors all Sban. They dya ta oola water bstur ttaaa anr ntbar 4j. tm tat bm hooklat-ilow lo uj III aa aa4 aUx Colon. U Ok it OK UU.VU VU ialar. tlllaaaa. WORTH MOUNTAINSi OJJIOLD During Change of Life, j says Mrs. Chas. Bprclajr Granltevllle, Vt "I was paasin through the Change of Life and s 11 (Teres! from nervousness andother annoying symptoms, and I can truly say thai LydiaK.I'inkham'fl Vegetable Com pound lias proves! worth mountains of gold to me, as it restored my health and strength. I never forget to tel my frli'iuls what LvdiaK.l'inkham'si Vegetable CouiDotmu has done for mm during this trying period. Complete restoration to health means so nioeu to me that for the sake of other suffetv lug women I am willing; to make irr trouble public so you may pubttafc this letter." Mrs. Chas. Babclat. K.F.D.,(iraniteville, Vt. No other medicine for woman's Dto has received such wide-spread and mm qualified endorsement. No other medU iclne we know of has such a recori. of cures of female ills as lias Lydia S. rinkham'8 Vegetable Compound. Tor more than 80 years it has bm curing female complaints such am inflammation, ulceration, local weak nesses, fibroid tumors, irreRularitfesj, periodic pains, backache, indigestion and nervous prostration, ami it unequalled for carrying women safely through the period of change of lif. It costs but little to try Lydia K. rinkham's Vegetable Compound, ar4, as Mrs. Barclay says.it is "worth mosm talna of gold " to suffering women. Too Risky. "Do you approve of the plan ? teaching pupils to box?" "Nt,t unconditionally," replied lfca country pedagogue, remembering km husky 19-year-olds. "Might be am right, though, if you'd authorize tftw teachers to carry guns." PhilatW phla Ledger. To have more of Health and more of IiaV take Uarfleld Teal This Natural laraaaa regulates liver, kidneys, stomach and hmm eis uurrt-urtj uuiiHMiinuuu, Jjunuus UH I anu eradicates aisease. Regular. The Preacher Do you go to yaw place of worship every Sunday? The Layman Yes, that's the day I have time to call on lierv Cleveland Leader. Contracts have been let for Wlnst peg's new municipal electric power plant to cost approximately tJMr 700. METALLIC HEELS :ounters 1 Made of Steel 'For Miners, QuarryBti, tanners and All In Who Do Rough WnL Will cut down vow bIioc bills. You can buy shoes fitted with them from your dealer, or any cob bler can put them on. They wis! make your old shoes good as new. Will outlast three pairs of leather heels. Let us send you booklet that tells all about them. UNITED SHOE MACHINERY CO D08TON, MASS If; 5 t! EXTRA A SAVIN 3 IN SHAVING It's nothing more or los tuan extrrrav canoe to pay a big price lor a ssu'ety-razur. The only part that counts for anything Is the blade. But good bladn-eveu ilia best of blailes-dou't warrant llu prks) usually domanded fur the 1 azor. The bla-irest rrt of what yon par for tberrirular safetv-raior In for tnerrama and the box-deialH that duu't b-uiS all la the razor's value. ftovi this for younelf. O CZ. ln STAMPS brlnea yow Ijfj.one of these marvellous Razors, postpaid, by mat BOOK PIB, HOl'BE, 134 Leonard Street, New Tartu . MadbUL 7TT w 1 m
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers