HE WENT ON CRUTCHES All Medicines Failed Until Dr. Wil liams' Pink Pills Cured His Rheumatism. "Some years ago." says Mr. W. IT. Clark, n printer, living at (ilg Buclmuun street, Topeka, Kuus., "I had a bad at tack of rheumatism and could not seem to get over it. All sorts of medicines fuiled to do me any good and my trouble kept getting worse. My feet were so swollen that I could not wear shoes and I had togo 011 crutches. The paiu was terrible. " One day I was sotting the type of an article for the paper telling what Dr. Williams' Pink Pills had done for a man afflicted as I was and I was so impressed with it. that I determined to give the medicine a trial. For a year my rheu matism had been growing worse, but after taking Dr. Williams' Pink I'ill.s I began to improve. The pain and swell ing all disappeared and I can truthfully say that I haven't felt better in the past twenty years than I do right now. I could name, off hand, a half-dozen peo ple who have used Dr. Williams' Pink Pills at my suggestion and who have re ceived good results from them." Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are guaran teed to be safe and harmless to the most delicate constitution. They contain 110 morphine, opiate, narcotic, nor any thing to cause a drug habit. They do not aet on the bowels but they actually make new blood and strengthen the nerves. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills cure rheuma tism because they make rich, red blood and 110 man or woman can have healthy blood and rheumatism attlio same time. They have also cured many cases of . anaemia, neuralgia, sciatica, partial pa ralysis, locomotor ataxia and other dis eases that have not yielded to ordinary treatment. All druggists sell Dr. Williams' Pink Pills or they will bo sent by mail, post paid, on receipt of price, 50 cents per box, six boxes for s2.f>o, by t lie.Dr. Wil liams Medicine Co., Schenectady, N. Y. | _ NOT YOUR HEART | 5 If you think you have heart dis- ▼ x ease you are only one of a countless 4 number that are deceived by indi- ♦ ♦ gestion into believing the heart is ♦ X affected. Z I Lane's Family; 1 Medicine | 3 the tonic-laxative, will get your 2 ♦ stomach back into good condition, 4 T and then the chances are ten to one 2 that you will have no more symp- 3 Ltoms of heart disease. J Sold by all dealers at 25c. and 50c. J A Positive CATARRH Ely's Cream Balm is quickly absorbed. ■ Gives Relief at Once. It cleanses, soothes heals and protects y the diseased mem torano. It cures Ca- fcjSjKSf < ta:Th and drives away a C'old in tlie fey Head quickly, lie-fIW stores the Senses of FIM 0 I blkß Taste and Smell. Full size 50cts., at Drug gists or by mail; Trial Size 10 cts. by mail Ely Brothers, 50 AVurreu Street, New York. You CANNOT all inflamed, ulcerated and catarrhal con ditions of the mucous membrane such as nasal catarrh, uterine catarrh caused by feminine ills, sore throat, sore mouth or inflamed eyes by simply dosing the stomach. But you surely can cure these stubborn affections by local treatment with Paxtine Toilet Antiseptic which destroys the disease germs,checks discharges, stops pain, and heals the inflammation and soreness. Paxtine represents the most successful local treatment for feminine ills ever produced. Thousands of women testify to this fact. 50 cents at druggists. Send for Free Trial Box THE R. PAXTON CO.. Boston. Mas* hbhbbbmwmembbbi AND LESS From St. Louis and Kansas City to all points Southwest via M. K. T. R'y, June 15th and 19th. Tickets good 50 days returning with stopovers in both directions. To Dallas, Ft. Worth, Waco, Houston, Galveston, San Antonio, Corpus Christi, Brownsville, Laredo and intermediate <con points «P<£U To tlpaso and intermediate points .... $26.50 To Kansas. Indian Territory, Oklahoma and northern Texas points, one fare plus $2.00, but con no rate higher than Correspondingly low rates from all pointa: From « !ik t<o $25 1 ( r .,m Si I ,iul. *27.501 from Omaha and t.oui il Jilull , 522.50. Writ. f.,r fu;: |*rtlcti|ar*. W. S. ST. GEORGE (jen<-!.il I'. ' rand Ticket Agent ST. LOUIS. MO. 11 t mm siiKii. «• Trat'.iun UIU*.. ofalo. l*pj "SOUI MWt>T" %E3sm. 1 OF AID 10 HOSTESS VAHIOUS WAYS IN WHICH TO ENTERTAIN GUESTS. A Charming Floral Card Party—A Jolly Paper Wedding—Some House hold Hints—Good Scheme for Church Bazar. A Floral Card Party. A new idea for progressive card parties given for charity, is to give prizes of potted plants and keep the score with flowers, either carnations, roses, or some blossom that does not wilt quickly. Invitations are sent for a "lloral progressive card party" on cards cut in the shape of a tlower. Jonquils, tulips, marguerites and roses lend themselves admirably to the scheme. To the winners pass vases containing the score flowers. At the finish everyone will possess at least one or more of the fragrant reminders of their good luck. The Ice cream may be molded in lloral shapes, and the email cakes ornamented with candy , roses, crystalized violets and rose leaves may be mixed with the bon bons. Each guest is supposed to con tribute 25 or 50 cents, whichever sum Is agreed upon, to the charity tor which the party is given. The Paper Wedding. The first anniversary of the wed ding day brings the jolliest kind of a celebration, the "paper" wedding. Very pretty tablecloths and napkins come in paper, so they are just the thing for the dining-room table. If these are not obtainable, get plain white paper and make a border of the lace pai*er used for pantry shelves. Use paper flowers in decorating, and beautiful portieres ayd draperies can be made by cut ting crepe paper into strips and hang ing it from grills, doorways and over the lace curtains. The invitations may be inclosed in tiny Japanese lanterns and delivered by messengers, or they may be sent by post in the ordinary way. If one cares togo to the trouble, the hostess may wear an entire gown of paper, and request her guests to do the same. Provide a supply of paper snapping caps, which will afford much merriment. The ice cream or ice can be served in paper cases, also the nuts and bonbons. In fact the resources of paper are almost endless. For amusement hats and aprons of paper could be made, also the cutting of sil houettes and drawing pictures of events in the first year of housekeep ing experiences, prizes being awarded according to vote. If desired, the whole scheme may be carried out a la Japan, for there are so many articles j of paper of this character. A correspondent asks for the proper vegetable to be served with meat. There Is really no cut and dried rule, ! but custom dictates the serving of peas with lamb; roast pork and goose call for apple sauce; and chicken for cranberries, either in the form of a ! sauce or an ice to be served with the meat course; game calls for currant jelly and onions; creamed fish is ac companied by fried potatoes or cro quettes, while roast beef is served with I most any of the vegetables, although , tomatoes, corn and cauliflower are a safe combination; a roast of veal needs a piquant sauce of some kind, aud ! beans are a good vegetable to serve, be ing very nutritious, a quality lacking in veal. j If the reader who asked how a black | straw hat could be cleaned without looking dull afterward will take a stiff brush and thoroughly taKe out the dust, then brush lightly with water which has been colored with good black ink, the result will be satisfac tory. Do not get the hat too wet, and work quickly. Here is a good scheme for the church fair that has had grab bags and fish ponds. Make a flower bed and plant in rows a quantity of paper blossoms; attach to the root of each flower a small article done up in tissue paper. Upon the payment of five cents or | whatever sum is agreed on the buyer I Is allowed to pull one blossom. The ! garden is in charge of "Mary, Mary. quite contrary,'' and this feature of j the bazar ought to be a very profitable 1 adjunct. MADAME Ml" It HI. A Sensitive Skin. Your skin, being so very sensitive. ■ must be treated carefully. Do not ; plunge the face into cold water, nei | ther dash the water over the face i when suffering from sunburn or ex ; posure to wind. The sudden shock Is not only injurious to the whole sys tem, but has been known to perma nently deface the complexion by a 1 species of which left a brown or yellow tinge Impossible to efface. Lotion for Tired Eyes. Lotion for weak, tlrul or inflamed eyes Fifteen drops ef spirits of cam phor, one teaspoonful of powedered boric acid, two-thirds of a cup of boil ing water. Cool, strain through mus lin and apply several limes a day with an eyecup. Don't wear spotted veils and never read In a dim light. Bud eyes are usually the result of abuse or n» gleet. For Aching Feet. H'/afi them every night for half «tn hour In hot water. Head a book to beguile the time. You mw : afterward rub them with a «ood foot lotion made by mixing vaseline with a good niut .llll tallo* half and half I'D verjr lit 'l'*, Just «uc4s»l( M supply the statural wilt, CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 31, 1906. PRETTY DOREEN EDGING. All Kinds of Hand-Made Trimming® Again Have Their Day and Are Highly Prized. Materials, Coats' cotton. No. ::0. A pretty lace edging for d'oyleys or tray cloth —25 eh, turn with 1 d in the four teenth stitch from needle, 1 d In fifth stitch, 1 d In last stitch. —First row. 7 d in each loop of ch.—Second tjw. 7 ch, 1 d in middle stitch of lirst group of d, 5 ch, 1 d in middle of next eroup, 7 ch, 1 d o times in same stitch; .'5 ch, 1 d in next roup; 7 ch, t d 4 times In same stitch.—Third row. 5 ch. Id ia wggm BwilS iSSKala®*'* * **'K4w M fmmm HFMtifSl PRETTY DOREEN EDGING, every loop—9 loops.—Fourth row. 7 ch, 1 d In first loop, 5 ch, 1 d in next loop, 4 times; 7 ch, 1 d in next loop, 4 times —9 loops. In succeeding patterns join by a single to next scallop.—Fifth i'ow. 7 ch, 1 d in next loops 4 times, 5 ch, 1 d in next loop 5 times. —Sixth row. 7 ch, 1 d in fist loop, 5 ch, 1 d in next ] loop twice; then 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 ch, 1 d in ! next loop successively. Join with a I single to next picot but one.—Seventh i row. 3 d, 4 ch, 3 d, 4 ch, 3 d 4 ch, 3 d in first 4 loops, 3 d 4 ch, 3 d 4 ch, 3 d in next 4 loops, 3 In last loop.— Eihtht row. 7 ch, 1 between next l picots; 7 ch, 1 d between next two picots; 7 ch, 1 d between nex*. two pic ots; repeat from first row. The Border—First row. 1 tr in a space; 5 ch, 1 tr in a space, 5 ch; re peat.—Second row. 3 ch, 1 tr in next space; 3 ch, 1 tr in next space; 3 ch, 1 tr in same space; repeat. THE TROLLEY AND BEAUTY A Famous Actress Tells How the In expensive Trolley Is A Fine Beautifier. Amelia Bingham gets up in the •morning and takes a trolley ride. This is the way she keeps her good looks. "Give me your beauty rules," said a caller to Miss Bingham. "How yo you keep your spirits, your complexion, your figure, and your style?" Miss Bingham was making up in front of her mirror. "I keep my complexion and my looks generally," said she with a hurried smile, "by that simplest of all things —keeping busy. "The domestic woman ought to be a great deal better looking than the actress, because she can devote more time to herself. She can rest when she wants to rest; she can stay in the house in bad weather; she can humor herself and save herself, treat herself well, and keep her spirits calm. "With the actress it is different. She must go out in all kinds of weather; she must keep bad hours; she must lose sleep; and she must eat when her work will allow her to eat. Theoreti cally she ought to be a poor looking ; specimen. Actually she is just the re verse. ' "If I were to lay down a set of | beauty laws for any woman 1 would be i gin by telling her to keep up and moving. Women soon rust out. 1 I would tell her to get out and be active. ! I would admonish her to rise early in ; the morning, do her own shopping, keep I her own house, look after her own serv ants. And then have as good a time as I possible. ! "Open air is a splendid cosmetic for j any woman. There never lived a wom an who was not the better for good I ozone. I love to get out and drive. And ! there is 110 reason why any woman alive ' cannot do the same. "I have my horses, and when I drive ! 1 can sit in a handsome carriage and take my ease. But I much prefer trol ley rhflng. It is my great pleasure to j get up early in the morning and get out ' ou top of a bus and take a ride. You can j travel a long way for five cents, and when you come home you feel better and brighter. "That is nne of my chief delights when I visiter! London. It Is delight* ful. and you get the air as perfectly aa if you were driving your four in hand. 1 love to ride on a trolley car. Whizzing through the city Is a great pleasure, and with a clear track ahead of you and a good, capable gripman by yourside. you i are Indeed complete. I"( Jet out early In the morning Take | five cents und give It to the conductor. 1 Take your place on the front tent of the 1 trolley, let the grtpni tii be your chauf . leur. Torchon Lece. Tnrclion Is the newest lace tn be ap- I piled to bloune* torchon beading*, the beautiful handmade kind*. The* are in- I Jit a* the cluuy U» (or »Uip | plug and edging. A LAND OF OPPORTUNITIES. Inducements Held Out by Western Canada Are Powerful. A recent number of the Winnipeg (Manitoba) Free Press contains an excellent article on the prospects in Western Canada, a portion of which ; we are pleased to reproduce. The agents of the Canadian Gov ! eminent, located at different centres in the States, will bo pleased to give any further information as to rates, I ami how to reach these lands. "Just now there is a keener inter est than ever before on the part of the outside world, in regard to the claims of the Canadian West as a field of settlement. At no previous time has there been such a rush of imml | gration, and the amount of informa j tion distributed broadcast is unprece dentedly great. "In the majority of the States of i the Union and in Great Britain the ! opportunities for home-making and ! achieving of even a modest compe tence are at the best limited. More over, according to the social and in ! dustrial conditions prevalent in those t communities, the future holds out no ; promise of better things. It is not j strange, then, that energetic young 1 men should turn their eyes to Can- I ada's great wheat belt, where every ! man can pursue fortune without the , hindrance of any discouraging handi ! cap. "The inducements held out by West ern Canada are powerful and made manifest by the great movement now lin progress. That the prospects are j considerably more than reasonably | certain is borne out by the history of the country and its residents. The I promise of gain is powerful, but when ! added to it there is the prospect of a | corresponding social and civil eleva- I tion, it should prove irresistible to young men of a particularly desirable class for any new country. "The Canadian West is alive with opportunities for the young man who aims at becoming more than a mere atom in the civil and national fabric. Some of the eager young fellows who arrive on the prairies daily aro des tined to become more than merely prosperous farmers. In the near fu ture great municipal and provincial development will be in the hands of the people. The stepping stone to both financial prosperity and civil prominence is, and will be, the farm. For every professional opening there are hundreds of agricultural openings. The Canadian prairies are teeming with opportunities for the honest and industrious of all classes, but they are specially inviting to the ambitious young man who seeks a field for the energy and ability which he feels in herent within him. The familiar cry of "Back to the soil!" is more than a vain soundng phrase when applied to Western Canada." Retort Courteous. "This bread," remarked young Wed- i derly at the breakfast table, "is noth ing like the bread my mother made." j "And you," calmly rejoined Mrs. 1 j Wedderly, "are nothing like the man j 1 my father was." —Chicago Daily News. | I ITS, St. Vitus Dance and *ll Nervous ; Diseases permanently cured In Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. fc>cnd tor Free $2 10 I | trial bottle and treatise. Dr. 1!. 11. Kline, : Ld., 931 and 933 Arch.St., Philadelphia, Pa i Most of these centenarians remem | ber a lot of things that never hap ! pened. i Write Garfield Tea Co., Brooklyn, N. Y., ! j for sample of Garheld Tea. Milll laxative. If men couldn't go Into politics they j I would inveft something else just as i bad to do. —N, Y. Press. """" i CASTOR IA - -—t- For Infants and Children. l The Kind You Have * J >lm P Bought similatinglhcFoodandßeguia- I" $ tingihcSlumuchsandDowclsoi' v tllo M 112 » /(/nV \ • mature / M ness and Rest.Coiitains neither ■£ n & If . a Opium, Morphine nor>!iiu;ral. a 01 /1!\ *V If NOT NAM C OTIC . | fil \\ •,, K fonptofotdaSAKl'ELPtrClOJi 3 . flwyJan SetU~ \ m ■ll B Rack,'l, U* - J TO a£l I Anur Sent * I *|3 A V* • Ift /tawnw - 1 -iv |\ 1 111 Di(<'ri<*mhSoda * I 1 It Ij| ■ 111 ) 1M 112 ' || Aperfpr! Remedy forConslipn ®| ll |V HOC Hon. Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea 'Jgj I ljkK Worms .Convulsions, Feverish | I wF r. M ness mid Loss of £ 1' Q | II V 0 If i TarSiniili: Signature of "jSm jWI BBrS EXACT COP/OF WRAPPER. M PM MI jj»jjjj vj® aw11iM MiN ALLENS FOOT-EASE A C#rt»ln Curu for Tlr«d, Hot, Aching Feat. \ u I DO NOT ACCtPT A SUDSTITUTU. tut if if bux. Lm iw j , fi. kt Women in Our Hospitals Appalling Increases in the Number of Operations Performed Each Year—How Women May Avoid Them. ü b yM u 11 r/\ j 1 Going 1 through the hospitals in our large cities one is surprised to findsuch a large proportion of the patientslying on those snow-white beds women and girls, who are either awaiting or recovering from serions operations. Why should this be the case? Sim ply because they have neglected them selves. Female troubles are certainly j on the increase among the women of this country—they creep upon them unawares, but every one of those patients in the hospital beds had plenty of warning in that bearing-down feel ! ing, pain at left or right of the abdomen, i nervous exhaustion, pain in the small j of the back, dizziness, flatulency, dis- I placements of the organs or irregular | ities. All of these symptoms are indi- I cations of an unhealthy condition of 1 the female organs, and if not heeded , the penalty has to be paid by a danger ous operation. When these symptoms manifest themselves, do not drag along until you are obliged togo to the hos pital and submit to an operation— but remember that Lydia E. Pinlc ham's Vegetable Compound has saved thousands of women from surgical operations, i When women are troubled with ir i regular, suppressed or painful periods, weakness, displacement or ulceration of the organs, that bearing-down feel ing, inflammation, backache, bloating (or flatulency), general debility, indi gestion, and nervous prostration, or are beset with such symptoms as dizziness, lassitude, excitability, irritability, ner vousness, sleeplessness, melancholy, "all-gone" and "want-to-be-left alone " feelings, they should remember there is one tried and true remedy. lydia E. Plnkham's Yeictablc Compound Succeeds M:i',re Others FniL ; — I Positively enred by A DTCD Q t!,esc LUtie I>ills - Ml\ 1 Tliey also relievo Dis gjpjMji tress from Dyspepsia, In- WTTLE digestion and Too Hearty igfjS p\SP* gj Eating. A perfect rem- B V ELK edylor Dizziness, Nausea, ■#lo pISB S Drowsiness, Bad Tasto jaw " In the Mouth, Coated SSljLv Tongue, Pain In the Side, 1 TORPID LIVER. They regulate tho Dowels. Purely Vegetable. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE. PADTPB'cI Genuine Must Bear UAnl Fac-Simile Signature CTITTLE s? IKS REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. A Esau rain ca ® ■OU tf% Send for "Tnvcn- PA FENTSssCSbsS MILO H.BTKVKNB&CO.. 900 14t ki St. ,Wu»hiug«on, !».<'. llrauchca ul C'hlcutfo, Cleveland, .Detroit. A. N. K—C (1906—21) 2127. The following 1 letters cannot fail to bring hope to despairing women. Miss Ruby Mushrush, of East Chicago, lnd., writes: Dear Mrs. Pinkham: — " I have been a great sufferer with irregular periods and female trouble, and about three months ago the doc-tor, after using the X- Kay on me, said I had an abcess and would have to have an operation. My mother wanted me to try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound as a last resort, and it not only saved me from an operation but * 'e me en tirely well." Mrs. Alice Berryhill, of 313 Boyca Street, Chattanooga, Tenn., writes: Dear Mrs. Pinkham: — "Three years ago life looked dark to ir.o. I had ulceration and inflammation of l!;e female organs and was in a serious condition. "Myhealth was completely broken down and the doctor told me that if 1 was not op erated upon I would die within six months. I told him I would have no operation but would try Lydia E. Pinkham s Vegetable Compound. He tried to influence me against it but I sent for the medicine that same day and began to use it faithfully. Within five days I felt relief but was not entirely cured until I used it for some time. " Your medicine is certainly fine. I havo induced several friends and neighbors to take it and I know more than a dozen who had female troubles and who to-day are as will and strong ;\s I am from using your Vega table Compound." Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound at once removes such troubles. Refuse to buy any other medicine, for you need the best. Mrs, Pinkham, daughter-in-law of Lydia E. Pinkham. invites all sick wo men to write her for advice. Her advice and niViicine have restored thousands |to health. Address, Lynn, Mass. W. L. DOUGLAS *3J?& s 3= SHOES a W. L. Douglas $4.00 Gilt Edg-3 Lin© cannot be equalieri at any price. *v :: I JULV 61876 1111 ICAPITAL *2,500,000 W.L. DOUGLAS MAKES A SELLS MO HP. MEN'S 53.50 SHOES THAN ANY OTiltß MANUrACTURER IN THE WORLD. C 1 H nnn REWARD lo anyone who can V> 9 UjUUU disprove this statement. 111 could take you into my three large factories at Brockton, Muss., and show you the infinite care with which evcrv palrof shoes Is made, you ; would realize why ty. L. Douglas SJ.SO jhoes cost more to make, why they hold their shape, tit better, wear longer, and are of greater Intrinsic value than any other s3.soshoe. W. L. Douglaa Strnnn Mada Shacrt for Man, 92.50, 92.00. Bays' School SL Droxm Shocm, S2.SO, $2, $1. 75, SI.SO CAUTION . —lnsist upon having W.L.l>oujr las shoes. Take no substitute. Nono genuine without his name and priro stamped 011 bottom. Fast Color Ei/plets used ; tlwy lutll not wear brassy. Write for Illustrated Catalog. W. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, lino BEST AXLE GREASE E^ME Something new and far better than the poods put out by the old monopolies. Use independent poods and ask your dealer for Sun Lipht Axle Grease. If he does not handle it, write us. MONARCH MFG. CO.. Toledo, O. MAKE EVERY DAY COUNT- T , no matter how (CffllMfiSf /' - t>Ad the weruhP!" \ou cannot JrJt afford to bo -nhr- i \ without a tower's B, UJ VrATF-RPI T \ ATI In OILED SUII I M ' I fq OR SLICKER : |i /,1 When vou buv | jh > 1 look for tfvi | ' \ \ A S!ON OF THE rif.H E 1 1 1/ i . J IH?-— 1 W -\ v rw - •-» «. I 1 ■ ■■ ii 1. ■ 11 7
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers