A Package Mailed Free on Request of nuriYou's PAW-PAW PILLS The best Stomach and Liver Pills known and a positive and speedy cure for Constipation, T.Csl3o-l Indigestion, Jaundice, 44 I Biliousness, Sour Stom- acn, Heaancne, anu an ailments arising from a disordered stomach or sliiKglsh liver. They contain In concen trated form all the virtues and values of Munyon'e Paw Paw tonic and are made from the Juice of the Paw-Paw fruit. I un hesitatingly recommend these plus as being the best laxative and cathartic ever compounded. Send us postal or letter, requesting a free package of Munyon's Celebrated Paw-Paw Laxa tive Pills, and we will mail same free of charge. MUNYON'S HOMOEO PATHIC HOME REMEDY CO., 63d n1 TofTorann Rro Phllndplnhla. Pa. $10 Down, $10 Per Month, $350 VALUE Shipped Mywtacro on 10 dnr' PHEB TRIAL. wm py w p""1 10 d',11 tni 'nt,i Writ TO -BAT ot DIRECT SALE PLAN. F. J. HAGGERTY CO., WARRJN. PA. New Ventilation Plan. A novel ventilating system has re cently been developed, which consists of a small electric fan connected to the window Bill In such a manner that it may be operated olther to draw In air from the outside or to exhaust the air from a room. It is suggested that the value of this will be appreciated in a kitchen on ironing day, or when any .baking is being done, as it prevents the heat from spreading through the entire house, besides making the kitchen Itself more comfortable to work In. Philadelphia Record. - . 29 Try Murine Eye Kennedy For Bed, Weak, Weary, Watery Ey and Gnnuiatei fcyeUda. It Soothes Eye I'nlo. Murine Kye Remedy Liquid. 25c and 500. Murine Eye Naive, 25o and 1.1)0. The Princess Royal. Endeavoring to correct a mistaken Idea that prevails in England that King Cteorge s . daughter, Frtncesa Mary, becomes Princess Royal, a cor respondent writes to the London Times: "The title of 'Princess Roy al of Great Britain and Ireland' is in the same position as that of 'Prince of Wales.' It Is not hereditary, but It must be created, and it is entirely within the will and pleasure of the sovereign to do this. When Queen Victoria died the Princess Royal of this country was the late Empress Frederick of Germany, and It was not until her death, which occurred some time after the accession of the late king, that his majesty was able to recreate the title and confer it upon his eldest daughter, our present Royal Princess (Duchess of Fife), who, of course, retains It during her lifetime." New York Tribune. The Grip of the Hand. Borne misguide bard has sung the praises of the friend whose heart is warm, and the grip of bis hand like steel. We all know that friend, and next time we are going to use a pair of tongs or nut-crackers, or ask him to Insert his fingers In the crack of a door. A Long Island hotel clerk went to the hospital the other day be cause he fell in with such a w ram hearted, steel-fingered friend. The agony abated after the pressure was relaxed, and the victim thought no .more of It till the joints began to swell. It Is thought that with care and rest the strained tendons and 'ig aments can be cured. Of course a true friend should be good at a pinch, but there are limits. An old Floren tine ring with a hidden needle loaded with nonfatal venom would be the proper defense against friends of this boorish sort Springfield Republican. Th perquisites allowed officers in the navy will aggregate nearly three ouarters of. miilion dollars.4o .JQll A Dream of Ease Post Toasties NO COOKING! . An economical hot weather luxury food that pleases and satisfies at any meal. So good you'll want more. Served right from the package with cream or milk. Especially pleasing with fresh berries; - 1 The Memory Lingers" PHgs. 10c. and ISc. Sold by Grocers. Poetum Cereal Co., Limited. , Battle Creeki Mich. if. Ym FARMERS HOME AND 'ACRES k Soft Eggs. When hens begin to lay .soft-shelled eggs It is time to ask yourself, "Where am I falling to give them the food they need?" Don't be satisfied until you can answer that question. Al most always it is due to a lack of shell-making material. The Future of Dairying. The Increasing demand for milk Indicates that there Is money ahead for the wise dairyman. Good cows require the attention of a good man In order to he profitable. Abundant food, congenial stables and kind treat' ment are essential. Wfren these can be assured, fill up the stables with high grade cows and success Is yours. Remember tlint th" low nroducer is 9 fad investment at any price, but that the cow liberally cuuowcil with dairy capacity is always a powerful factor for good upon the farm. The sire is often much more than half the herd and through his purity of breeding the profitable cow must always be sought. Farmers' Home Journal. Supply of Eggs. The development of the cold storage business in eggs has made It difficult for city people to secure fresh eggs, or good quaMty eggs, therefore there Is a good business for the farmers who will supply good linos of strictly freeh eggs. During the ten year pnrlod, ending n 1910, ttiere was a decided decrease In the supply of poultry products, not withstanding the Increase in popula tion. The ten years ending with 1910, will hardly show that the supply haa kept pace with the population. If the farmers can be made to look at the poultry management from a bnslnree point of view, the supply would increase greatly, and yet good prices be secured, better satlsfactkra ell around. B. C, in Indiana Farm- Field Pease For Live Stock. The Wisconsin Station has publish ed a bulletin on growing field pease for feeding live stock. The value of the pea crop lies both In the worth f the peas as a feed for farm animals and in the beneficial effect of the plant as a soil improver. The aver age yield of an acre of peas contains more digestible protein than any other common Wisconsin grain crop, and the yield of pease per acre aver ages above wheat. The heavy yield ing varieties furnish excellent food for pig's, and sheep, may be fed pea straw as roughage with good results, say the writers, since It compares favorably with clover and timothy hay as a feed. Pea growing for soil Improvement is quite profitable upon sandy lands that are especially lacking In humus. Peas are a good crop to sow on clov er or timothy sods the first year after breaking, as they greatly aid In sutj Aulng the soil. The peas should then be followed by a crop of grain, says the bulletin, and the land seeded down to clover. The pea crop also Increases the ni trogen in the soil, as the plant gath ers nitrogen from the air with the odd of nitrogen bacteria. In the case of new land, the authors write, it Is advisable to raise pease twice m suc cession, so that the land may become rich in the nitrogen gathering. , Live Stock and Manure. The Wisconsin agricultural college by Prof. Wall has been carefully look ing into the matter, and haa publish ed a bulletin o nthe subject from which we quote as follows: The conservation of fertility in the soil may bo accomplished by either of two methods. ' 1. By feeding crops and purchased concentrate feeds to live stock and applying the stable manure to the land. 2. By the application of commercial fertilizers and culture of legumes and other crops to maintain the humus content of the soil. But the former nethod if live stock is kept in suffi cient numbers to consume most of the crops grown on the farm, together with a certain amount of concentrat ed feeding stuffs which are pur chased. The care of stable manure is of special importance In connection with Hve stock farming It is pointed out, and proper handling will prevent much of the loss which now occurs. The total value of the manure pro duced annually in Wisconsin is esti mated to be over $64,000,000, which is nearly twice as much as the value of the crops annually removed from the soil. The manurial value of feeds, fully outlined In this bulletin, needs' to be studied carefully by stockmen in relation to fertilization. The use of commercial fertilizer Is necessary to maintain the fertility of arms upon which live stock Is not kept. The use of these fertilizers is constantly increasing in Wisconsin, and their advantages for special crops, ease ot handling, quick avail ability to plants, as well as freedom from" weed seeds are belng'appreciat e. Where the Eggs Disappear. With the arguments now being ad vanced for a restriction to the cold-Btcr- j luminous, it is perhaps inter esting k know that during the spring paaa. five million ewss day pour into Chicago and thence into the stor age warehouses. Few persons realize the magnitude of the egg industry. It is larger in point of dollars than the beef business, and runs around the half billion dollar mark. Eggs come next to corn and wheat in the food items or our country, in the total val ue' of the annual business. Chicago's egg business amounts to about 1,50, 000,000 eggs a year. April eggs are each year stored to be kept to supply the deficiency in No vember and December. This is done for very good reasons, April or early spring eggs are "good keepers." Sum mer eggs are as a rule not in good enough condition to store. In the height of the storing season an average of 7.000,000 eggs a day are received in Chicago. That is about fifty carloads. A car contains 400 cases,' and a. case contains thirty doz en or 300 eggs. Fifty carloads 20,000 cases. There have been times when the Chicago receipts reached 40,000 cases In one day. When the receipts In the spring reach 20,000 cases per day, the cold storage men start to put the eggs away for use ta the fall and early winter when the supply falls rar be low the demand. In the ctty of Chi cago alone the normal, average egg appetite calls for about 2,000,000 eggs per day, the spring is considerably more, seldom falling below 3,000,000 In addition great quantities of eggs are shipped from Chicago to other points where the same spring appetite is In working order. This Is why a supply of 6,000,000 or 7,000,000 eggs per day are necessary In the spring before there is any surplus left foe storage. Indiana Fanner. Keep the Best Stock. Many farmers are in the habit ot selling their best animals because they will bring the highest price. A greater mistake cannot be made. A difference of 10 or even 25 percent In the price of a single animal Is a small matter compared to this difference in a whole herd. By keeping the very best to propagate from, the whole may be made of equal excellence, and in the course of a few years numer ous animals might be produced hav ing the excellent qualities that now distinguish some few of the beet. What would you say of a farmer who sold his valuable varieties of po tatoes and planted other kinds that were Inferior? In consequence of this imprudent measure, his next crop would fall short. Everyone will condemn this course, and few, If any, are so wanting in discretion as to pursue It. Tet many take a similar course in selling their best animals and propagating from the poor. Not only is this true of animals for breed ing purposes, but those for work as well. Who does not know in his own experience of farmers who sell their best work horses and keep the poorer ones? Well, the consequence Is that the poorer one costs a great deal more to keep each year and do lees work, and tn the end is the most ex pensive animal. The policy should have been to keep the better one, and to have sold the inferior. This is true in every case. And doubly so, I believe, when the farmer has animals for breeding pur poses. There Is a vast difference in our cattle in sections where much at tention has been given to improve ments by selecting the best, when contrasted with those where little or no attention has been paid to the subject, and, as a matter of course, the best have'been sold, or eaten, be cause they were the fattest. Every man that raises stock has It tn his power to make improvements, and he should avail himself of all the ad vantages around him to turn his power to the benefit of himself and posterity. W. H. Underwood, in the Indiana Farmer. Notes. . Perfect cleanliness will cut short the louse crop of chickens. With- proper raising, April hatched chicks will be the money-makers next fall and winter. , When the checks can get away fsom It at will, plenty of heat under the hover is a good tiling. Don't crowd the chicks. Small flocks do best and give each individ ual chick a better chance. Just one setting of thoroughbred eggs may be the means of working a revolution in your poultry business. Rape pasture for sheep is most ex cellent. One of our eheep growers tells us that he has tried it for ten years and finds rape very fine for his sheep. Have crates and baskets for ship ping strawberries, raspberries and blackberries on hand, and' arrange ments with your comrjslon mer chants for handling these as soon as ready. Farmers often lack the proper amount of rotten manure for melons and cucumbers. By stacking several loads a year in advance of planting there should be n trouble from this sources. Tomato, pepper and egg plants should be hardened off as soon as they are large enough, in the meantime being kept growing steadily, tout not drawn into spindling plants. A stout stocky plait to what is ueeded. OFT IN THK STILLY NIQHT. (With apologies to Moore.) Oft In the stilly night, Bra slumber's chain has bound BUI Loud yowling- brings the light Of cats a-ltghtln' round 019; . The growls, the spits Of feline fits. The phrases 1 then mutter, The shoes that sail Tell many a tale; The fight ends with a flutter Thus, In the stilly night, Era slumber's chain has bound me, Loud yowling brings the light Of cats a-llghtin' round me. When I remomrer all The cats, so grouped togethor I've seen around nie full Like leaves In wintry weather, . I feel like one Who treads alone Gome prison cell deserted. Whose guards are lied, "Whose Jailer dend, An0 all but me departed. Oft In the stilly night. Ere slumber's cliuin has bound me, Loud yowling brings the light Of cats a-llg-lilln' round me. Judge.. "Are you going to take in summer boarders this year, Josiah?" "All we kin, sir." Baltimore American. "Pa, what's a quadrangle?" "That's where three players rush in to ques tion a decis.ou of the umpire." Chi cago Record-Herald. "Papa, Mr. Blltherlngton eays be will kill himself unless you let him have me." "Does he say that as a threat or a promise?" Chicago Rec ord-Herald. "Your novel is evidently the result of inspiration." "Yee; I didn't start it until after reading the advertising notices my publishers got up." Lou isville Courier-Journal'. Him "I was confused for a bit, I confess, but it took me only a moment to collect my wits ." Her "Yes, it couldn't take any longer than that. Go on." Cleveland Leader. Husband (to wife, packing trunk) "But how am 1 going to get my things In?" Wife "I don't see that you need to take much, my dear. You look very "well as you are." Life. Howell "Does your wife care any thing about baseball?" Powell "Bhe never did until one day when she heard me say that they were go ag to play two games for one admission." judge. "Hilda is at the dishes now. Will you wait?" her mother said. "Glad ly," said the young man, thlnki:ig he had found a prize. Just, then a orash came from the kitchen, and agHin he became undecided. Buffalo Bx.;ress. "I am sorry to say that the noted author of 'Public Honesty and High Civic Ideals' will not be with us at our meeting tonight." "Why can't she come?" "She is detained by the authorities on a charge of smuggling Paris gowns." Baltimore American. Stranger (after an examination) Well, doctor, what do you think? Have I the gout? Great Physician Hem! Br what is your income? Stranger Two hundred a year. Great Physician No.' You have a sore foot. Tit-Bits. "When you make a speech you nev er tell us anything we didn't know," eald the constituent "Of course," replied Senator Sorghum. "The Idea in addressing the people is to express their own ideas. Then they give yon credit for being a smart man be cause you agree with them." Wash ington Star. It was a very strange animal which we bpheld on looking out. "You are not the wolf?" we at onco protested, scenting some irregularity. "No!" re plied the creature, frankly casting off its disguise. "I'm a sheep, to tell you the truth. This is our great oppor tunity. We're all turning in to help the wolf while the high cost of living continues. I'm taking care of a few of the easiest doors, you know." Tuck. My Lady's Maid's Mail. "My new maid always awed me, hut I never felt really afraid of her until I saw the quantity and quality of the letters she receives," said the house keeper. "Her correspondents use ex cellent stationery heavy, creamy pa per, and the writing on the envelopes looks Just like Fifth avenue, trans lated Into script. Some days her mail is heavier than mine, and so much su perior in style that I am ashamed for her to see the common envelopes in which tradesmen, chance acquaintanc es and even dear friends who write to me sometimes inclose their com munications. My maid shows her scorn when handing out my poor little letters. " 'This is for me,' she says, hold ing back her own fashionable corres pondence, with 'this' and 'me' proper ly emphasized. "1 should like to nnow more about my maid's correspondence. If I wasn't so deadly afraid of her, I'd try to find out.' New York Press. What Kleptomania Is.' "When Justice Brewer," said a Kan sas Jawyer, "was on the Leavenworth circuit as a criminal judge he had no patience with the pleas of hypnot ism and such new fangled notions that were coming to the fore. Once I remember, a man was being tried before him for shoplifting. A witness said he thought the prisoner had klep tomania. " 'I presume, Judge," he added, 'yon know what klcptomr.nia Is, eh?' "'Yes,' said the JudRO, 'I do. It Is, a disease that I am sent here to cure.'" Kansas City Journal. Do too think you mw r 1 1 lingering cough, bronchitis, or bleeding at the lungs, it will bring about cure in 98 per cent, of all cases. It is a remedy prepared by Dr. R. V. Pierce, of Buffalo, N. Y ., whose advice h given free to all who wish to write him. Hit great success has come from his wide experience and varied practice. Don't be wheedled by a penny-grabbing dealer into taking inferior substi tute!) for Dr. Pierce's medicines, recommended to be "just as good." Dr. Pierce's medicines are op known composition. Their every ingredient printed on their wrappers. Made from roots without alcohol. Contain no bflbit iorming druiVi. World's Dispensary Medical Association, Pi:fTrlo, N. Y. MEN AND RATS The Dominion of Man Over Beasts Does Not Include the .Rodents: Aurochs, cave bear and mammoth we put down with stoneheaded arrows. We have wiped out the buffalo; the lion and the elephant will soon be gone. But still the rabbits of Australia cost the colonies millions a year; traps, ferrets and poison still fail to make head against the rats, mice and gophers of the United States. While our animal enemies have become smaller Jn size, they have grown more numerous. It is as if nature, after try ing vainly to chastise her Insurgent son with a catapult, had gone after him with a shotgun. The fact is that of all warm-blooded creatures there are Just two that are really dominant, successful, increasing in numbers and range, and able to maintain themselves anywhere in the world against all rWals. These two are man and the rats. The genius Homo and the genus Mus go every where and eat -fcverythlng. They are the two creatures that dwell In houses and travel In ships. Bach drives its other rivals to the wall; but neither, except locally and for brief periods, has ever come near to exterminating the other. Civilised man has fought the common rat for 200 years, and the battle is still drawn. McClure's Mag azine. SOFT, WHITE HANDS May Bo Obtained in One Night. For preserving the hands as well as for preventing redness, roughness, and chapping, and imparting that vel vety softness and whiteness much de sired by women Cuticura Soap, assist ed by Cuticura Ointment, is believed to be superior to' all other skin soaps. For those who work in corrosive liquids, or at occupations which tend to injure the bands, it is invaluable. Treatment. Bathe and soak the hands on retiring In a strong, hot, creamy lather of Cuticura Soap. Dry and anoint freely with Cuticura Oint ment, and In severe cases spread the Cuticura Ointment on thin pieces of old linen or cotton. Wear during the night old, loose gloves, or a light bandage of old cotton or linen to pro tect the clothing from stain. For red, rough, and chapped hands, dry, As sured, itching, feverish palms, and shapeless nails with painful finger ends, this treatment Is most effective. Cuticura Remedies are sold through out the world, Potter Drug & Chem. Corp., sole proprietors, Boston, Mass. One Cow's products $28 a Month. The 130 cows In the Wisconsin dairy cow competition for February produced an average of 1024.7 pounds of milk and 42.884 pounds of butter fat, the highest production for the month, the fourth of the competition, being 78.219 pounds of fat. The pro duction record for 41 cows was over 60 pounds of butter fat each. These were owned by 19 dairy farmers and breeders, 10 of whom are raising Guernseys, seven Hoisteins and two Jerseys. The record cow ot tnc month was Holstcln, Leland Sunbeam, owned by Tompkins Wright of vvani pun. Her actual production was 2011.7 pounds of milk, 234.50 pounds of solids and C8.39S pounds of butter fat, her milk containing 11.06 per cent solids and 3.4 per cent fat. Whether sold as milk or made into butter her pro duction would be worth $28 or more to her owners for the month alone. Milwaukee Wisconsin. ' Pension Bribery. "Pension bribery" Is a new phase with a meaning. According to Dr Elmer E. Brown of Temple University this BOrt of bribery Is "conducted un der the name of benevolence and charity" and "it takes away from the individual the freedom of public utterance and action or the incentive to work." It is one of the things that are rotting us. Philadelphia Record. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets cure eonsti- Sation. Constipation is the cause of many iseases. Cure the cause and you cure the disease. Easy to take. Maud "So Helen and Jack have made up their quarrel, have they? Ethel "Yes, but only, temporarily They are going to bs married soon.' Boston Transcript. DAK) I rLI MLLLriiV.u km. turn. nriu. uumiit ornxmAirtnl, con venient, roeip, LmU fall Mad. of iboiU, oaniwc frpu or up ever, will not null or Injure nr fbrirur ftoaran- tT4llTBrtiv-e. f UdralfM it seat prepaid Cor Wo. UAUMM MUaKHM, ! ItoiMa ATI, VmUjB, H. f Mj-A.mS PII1I1S CKI.fcHUATKO Rhit MHI1 ItKMKIIY lor VOW AM) Ullfcl rl ATIHM. AFK ANU HKLlAbLIW AT tUUtt UUUUU1B1'. PATEtlTSi Wntwm R. Column n.Wtwte iwian, u.u, ihMjjcm i rev, tiiicnt raenxMxm. nest rccuita P. N. U. 25, 1910. Tbompson'sEyeWater Do You Feel This Way? feel all tired out P Do you sometin iust can't work sway at your proir. . Ion or trade any longer P Do yon have poor p" tite. and lav awake at niiihts unable to sleep P Am Tour nerves all gone, and your stomach too P Has S9 bittoa to forge ahead in the world left you P If so, T mitfht as well Dut a stoo to vour misery. You can do it . you will. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medics! Discovery wilt make you a different individual. It will set your lazy lira to work. It will set things right in your stomach, and your appetite will come back. It will purify your blood. If there is any tendency in your family toward consumption. it will keep that dread destroyer awny. liven atter coo sumntion lias almost sained a foothold in the form of a t Bible In a Cracker Box. The BrltiHh and Foreign Bible So ciety recently published nn lmportaaf, edition of the Scriptures in tlio prist- clpai language of Uganda. The ume is In shape very long, but it hi only three inches wide and afcosst three Inches thick. - -A peculiar reason occasioned tkej adoption of this form. In Central Africa the white ants and other la sects raplly destroy a book unless it Im welt protected The represenlatiwM of the society, therefore, recoinmesat eo that the edition mentioned be Is sued in a form that would fit Into Ow tin biscuit boxes of a certain ttnm whloh are very generally uses! I : Uganda. This was done, end the ant-jreaf biscuit 'box is Just large ennnch ts hold this Bible, a small Bible ulatary and a hymnal and prayer book. Dime novel publishers say that Ne York boys have lost their tan to tor Indians and desperadoes. "It's net the Slimy Sam stuff that the boys Kka nowadays," nnlrl one of them. MORE PMilAM CURES Added to the Long List dse to This Famous Remedy. Oronogo, Mo. "I was simply a nes. . vous wreck. I could not walk acrosa the floor w lineal my heart fluttering and I could not ema receive a letter. Every month I had such a bcaringdowsi sensation, as H tkst lower parts woH full out. Lydj B. Pinkham's Vegeta ble Compound haa done my nerves great deal of poo iindliasalsoreliowdl the bearing down. I .recommended it to some friends and two of tlmm bavo been greatly benefited by it." Idra. Mae McKkight, Oronogo, Mo. Another iratcfnl Yoirir. St. Louis. Mo. "I was bothc1 terribly with a female weakness and had backache, Dearing aown pains ana Eains in lower parts. I beptn taking ,ydia E. Pinkham's Vcgctablo Onv pound regularly and used the fcanausa Wash and now I have no more troohfc that way." Mrs. Al. Hekzog, 613 l'rescott Ave., St. Louis, Ma Ilecnuse your case is a diflicnllone, doctors having done yon no good, do not continue to suffer withnni giving Lydia E. rinkham's VegeSaW Compound a trial. It surely hascun-4 many cases of female Ills, Biichaa inw (lammation, ulceration, displacement;, fibroid tumors, irregularities, perioi5w pains, backache, that bearhtg-dosna fooling, indigestion, dizziness, and mrr vons prostration. It posts bint a trifl to try it, and the result is worth ul lions to many suffering women. Salts and Castor a bad stuff never caw. 11 only makes bowels move fce cause it irritates and sweats tiaa. like poking finger in your eye. The st Bowel Medicine is Cascareta, Every Salts and Castor Oil user sbflKSf get a box of CASCARETS and trf them just once. You'll see. Cnscamtn 10c box week's treatment. All (inimrii'W. Kiggvit seller in Um world million boxen a month. Granulated Eyelids Cured the worst cases,' no matter of how sax standing, are absolutely cured by D r.Porterla Antiseptic Healing: Oil .V soothing antiseptic discovered by a Old Railroad Surgeon. AlipruggistsKf ! und money if it fails to cure. 25c, 50c & fL I'iiilt Medkiue Co. Hodges. Iwh Ptir Sin I matt ay that DR. PORTRRH asrrrs. r.ErTlC HEALING OIL ll one o4h.! jrri-atet IHI knows to inv. 1 h.-ul granulattti eyeliu c badly II cameat tilla.laesa tor about alx weeks, I got h Lottie at HXm. I OUTER'S ANTISEPTIC IIHAI.ISG OIL ami wtMtak tin ol thtt writing ba,o vcd atiout halt ot It aA mg eyca are alnvtat entirely will. 1 wiah ff.rry Ixiuy wwaet know the value ot UK. fOKTER'S ANTlSbfTiC lUkaeW INL OIL Youia truly (Sign-ill CI.BMNT B.ttMlg Mad? by . Maker of Laxative Bromo QuJnin
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers