NEW HAIR-DRYING COMB. Electricity from Battery in Handle Forced Through Teeth. Another use has been discovered for electricity. A California man pur poses to use it in conjunction with a device he has patented for drying the hair. Everyone is fasiilier with the difficulties attending the drying of women's hair. The ordinary method j resorted to is to sit patiently in the j jimi Dries by Electricity. sunlight, three or four hours being consumed in the process. With the aid of the comb shown here the hair can be dried in less than half an hour, says the Detroit Free Press. In the handle is a metallic tube, which extends to the end of the comb. Within t lie handle is a small battery for electricity, the latter cir- ■ dilating through the tube to the teeth of the comb. The teeth are perforat- ' ed, to allow the heat 11ms generated to escape and enter the hair when the comb is being used. A heating ele ment is placed with the tube to prop erly hold and distribute the heat. It ' is surprising how quickly the hair can j be dried with the aid of this comb. The heat is forced close to the scalp, the most difficult and the hardest part j of the hair to dry thoroughly. ADJUSTABLE DROP LIGHT. Simple Method by Which the Electric Bulb Can Be Raised or Lowered. Cut a spring shade roller to any cor. venient length for attaching, by the usual sockets at each end to rafters I —l — Adjustable Drop Light. or other supports over the spot where ! you wish an electric light, to be sus-' pended. Attach a cord to the roller i and wind it so as to coil the spring j when it is pulled down, just as a shade would do. Tie the other end of the cord to the insulated wire of your elec- j trie light. Of course, explains a writer j in Popular Mechanics, the latter can I now be made to hang at any desired elevation. Song by Phone Gets Position. A young woman at Reading, Pa., has \ started a new way of securing an oper- | atie engagement, by singing a sample j number into a long distance telephone S •to a manager in Philadelphia. She got j the job. The scheme opens up a vari- i ety of possibilities. In case an aspirant for the stage is long on voice but short on looks or shape the idea of inducing the manager to listen to her singing through the telephone is decidedly clever, for both distance and mystery lend their enchantment. On the other hand, may not this young woman's success in getting an engagement "011 tb" wire" cause such a rush of singers to the telephone booths that managers will absolutely refuse to listen to any telephonic tones, however sweet? Electro-Chemical Colors. The preparation of mineral and arti ficial organic colors by the aid of elec tncity has recently made constrerahle progress, and it is suggested that the products in this now industry may eventually replace those derived from coal-tar. Among the colors now pro duced in commercial quantities by the employment of the electric cur- , rent, says the Youths' Companion, are i vermilion, Scheele's green, cadmium J yellow, Japanese red, cerise, or cherry ! red. Berlin green and zinc whites, be sides a number of organic colors. The process consists essentially in Bending ati electric current through a solution containing the elements required for the production, by precipitation, of the coloring matter desired. Pnor.ograph Burglar Alarm. Many people in Paris are putting in a new burglar alarm consisting of a phonograph with electric attachment to every door and window. If either is opened, voices begin shouting in every room of the house, "Help! Help! Police! Thieves! Murderers!" and keep it up for ten minutes without a break. At the same time the apparat us sends in rrt alarm to the nearest police station SAVED MUCH TIME. Drying an Electric Plant After a Big Flood. The power house of a large Eastern manufacturing concern was recently flooded with water to a height suffi cient to cover the two turbo-generat ors, two-thirds of the switch-board and a large part of the auxiliary ap paratus, including the exciter units and the condenser pump motors. S. L. Sinclair and E. D. Tyree, who were ' called upon to get the plant in opera tion with the least possible delay, tell how they did so, in the Electric Jour nal. Cpon arriving at the power house it was found that the employes of the local company were attempting to dry out the generators by the use of a steam coil enclosed in an air flue. A blower was connected at one end of the flue and the other end opened at the generators so that hot air could be blown through the generator wind ings. This method would have taken an Indefinite time to dry out the gene- I rators. It was therefore abandoned j and an enclosure of sheet iron and tin, | that was found around the works, was 1 built up around the generators. Inside ! of this enclosure were placed a num- j her of charcoal furnaces made of pow- j der kegs. Thermometers were sus pended near the generators and the j temperature inside the enclosure was : maintained at 85 degrees C. While the generators were being | dried by this process a small hoisting ! engine was belted to a 20-hp. motor I for use as an exciter. Arrangements i were also made with the local railway j company to furnish 500-volt direct j current lor making tests of insulation i resistance. Insulation tests were made j with a <IOO-volt direct-current meter j having an internal risistance of 85,000 ohms. After the generator had been drying ; for.'l 6 hours the insulation resistance | was about half the normal value. The j generator was then started on a short- ■ circuit heat run, and at the expiration j of 30 hours, making HO hours in all, j the readings showed that the insula- j tion was thoroughly dry and the gen erator was ready togo into service. The second generator was dried in the same manner, with the same re- j suits. The motors, exciters and switch board were dried by the use of char coal furnaces. FOR THE PHOTOCRAPHER. Homc-Msde Arc Lamp for Making ol Blue Prints. An arc lamp that will save time s arid trouble for those having large quantities of blueprinting or photo : graphic work may be built as fol lows: In a plaster mold, cast two lead up rights as per skteeh. II you want £ fancy job make them of brass. Drill and tap the shoulder for a %-in. bolt ' and the base for a 10-24 machine j screw. Thread two %-in. bolts 4 in j long up to the head (B, Pig. 1), pass ! on a lock nut, N, and then screw one i through each of the uprights. Hush the ends of the bolts to fit. tightly in- I side of a. piece of thin wall brass tube | 2 in. 'long by % in. inside diameter, ! the other end of the tube being double j slotted (T, Fig. 1). Two pieces of %• in. carbon, such as is used for trim- I ming ordinary arc lamps, should be ! forced into the tube, the slotted ends | gripping them firmly (C, Fig. 1). The two uprights should then be mounted on a board, over which lias i been pasted a piece of asbestos in. j thick, at right angles, so that when ! the bolts are screwed clear back the j carbons will be about Vi in. apart. As the lamp will probably have to i operate or 'v 110-volt circuit will be j necessary ya have some sort -if a re- 1 ifrfr 11 ft K ~ y —p. niii o! M n ' s f-fl vn T W ift LiNt: | Blueprint Arc Lamp. sistance to hold down the current to ' the required 50 volts at the arc and j 5 amperes also for regulation. For this resistance we will need 1 about 100 feet of bare German silver > wire No. IS which may be wound on j porcelain insulators on the face of a I board which has been lined with as bestos. A 4-point switch should be | connected into cut out the required i resistance for regulation. Small prints j from linen tracings may be done in from S to 15 seconds, while those from j co-ordinate paper will take from 10 to | SO seconds. With this piece of ap paratus you can do as good work as | can be done with a lamp that would j '•ost in the open market from $lO I to $25. With suitable lenses, declares Popu lar Mechanics, this lamp may also be j used in connection with a stereoptt con. Omnibuses in Big Cities. London has 27 cabs and five 'buses for every 10,000 inhabitants. Paris has 4S cabs and only two 'buses fjir j the same number of persons. Naples has 05 cabs per 10,000 persons; Genoa ! has ten 'bus< s for every 10,000. Kathleen Vanderbilt, daughter ol the "Reggie" Vanderbilts, will sumi day possess millions. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3. 1907. A MISSOURI WOMAN Tells a Story of Awful Suffering and Wonderful Relief. Mrs. J. D. Johnson, of 603 West Hickinan St., Columbia, Mo., says: "Following an operation two years ago, dropsy set in, tand my left side was so swollen the doctor said he would have to tap out the water. There was constant pain and a gurgling , sensation around my j ' f heart, and I could not / raise my arm above my The ney action was disor- I dered and passages of the secretions i too frequent. On the advice of my ! husband 1 began using Doan's Kidney j Pills. Since using two boxes my trou | ble has not reappeared. This is won derful, after suffering two years." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. ; Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. TRUSTED TO THE MOSQUITOES. All Officer Had to Do Was Sit on the Bank and Wait. County Game Warden Charles Dan iel trusts to nature and that accounts for the capture of Dugull Bell, living j on Anchor street, River Rouge. The I other morning Charles went out to ! round up some duck hunters. Down | the oad near the marshlands he saw | Bel! making away with a mud hen. Ho gave chase. Overtaking Dugull, that ! worthy hunter did the only thing left I for him to do —leaped into the bog. i Daniel's 200 pounds didn't permit hira to follow. So he sat down on the bank and waited. I Out in the bog, waist deep, stood I Dugull. On the bank, lazily smoking, j the warden smiled as he saw an army | of mosquitoes approaching. He cov ! ered his head with the automobile j robe. Under cover he could hear the i buzzing and imagine the rest. When j the buzzing ceased he looked at Du ' gull. Big welts covered his face, neck j and hands. He didn't say a word. I Daniel waited. Two hours later Bell said, "I've had enough." He came out of the bog, was arrested and later released on his promise to appear in court. —Detroit News. Horrible Method of Suicide. Most people have at some time wit -1 nessed revolting sights, but the fall ing of a suicide from the cathedral tower onto the pavement, 210 feet be low, into the midst of the hurrying noonday crowd, upon whose faces aud clothes his exploding debris scattered itself, which was seen in Antwerp re cently, beggars description. A mer chant known as Jacques Simons quiet- I ly left his wife and two children at ! home, as if togo on some business | errand, made straight for the cathe ! dral tower, climbed it, and without an : instant's hesitation, hurled himself in j to space. History relates that no one I has jumped from this tower since the J suicide of its architect, to whom a pop | ular legend of the sixteenth century j attributes the same fate, small bits of brass marking the spot on the pavement where he fell. The Real Burden Bearer. "The late Senator Pettus," said a | Sclma man, "came to view with a lit tle alarm, in his later years, the im mense and unrestricted immigration to I our shores. "Walking one evening with him, I ! pointed to a foreigner marching along iat the head of his family. The man was tall, erect, robust, a superbly ! handsome fellow. "'There,' I said, 'is a fine figure of lan immigrant. See how he carries himself.' "Senator Pettus laughed bitterly. "'Yes,' he said, 'and see how he lets his wife carry everything else.' " PUTS THE "GINGER" IN. The Kind of Food Used by Athletes. A former college athlete,-one of the ' long distance runners, began to lose his power of endurance. . His experl j ence with a change in food is interest ' ing. "While T was in training on the | track athletic team, my daily 'jogs' be | came a task, until after I was put.on ! Grape-Nuts food for two meals a day. ! After using the Food for two weeks I j felt like a new man. My digestion was I perfect, nerves steady and 1 was full j of energy. "I trained for the mile and the half j mile runs (those events which require j so much endurance) and then the long daily 'jogs,' which before had been j such a task, were clipped off with | ease. 1 won both events. "The Grape-Nuts food put me in per -1 feet condition and gave me my 'ginger.' | Not only was my physical condition i made perfect, and my weight in j creased, but. my mind was made clear j and vigorous so that T could get out ! my studies in about half the time for merly'required. Now most all of the ! University men use Grape-Nuts for : they have learned its value, hut I j think my testimony will not be amiss j and may perhaps help some one to learn how the best results can be ob ! tained." There's a reason for thr> effect of Grape-Nuts food on the human body and brain. The certain elements in wheat and barley a'-e selected with special reference to their power for re- I building the brain and nerve centres, j The product is then carefully and | scientifically prepared so as to make It easy of digestion. The physical and irental results are so apparent after tv or three week's use as to produce ! profound impression. Read "The Road to Wcllville," in pkgs. "There's ' a reason." TEA FROM THE FLOWERS. This Product Little Known In the United States. Tea, not from leaves, but from the flowers alone of the plant, is rarely en countered in commerce. The petals, stamens, etc., are sun dried, and the resulting tea is of a rich, deep brown hue of peculiarly delicate odor, and gives a pale amber colored infusion rather more astringent in taste than that from the average fair grade leaf. The taste for it is an acquired one, | and even if this tea fcould be made commercially possible, it is doubtful if it would ever become popular. The American tea trade could ad vantageously take a suggestion from the brick tea of the far east. In our country, the tea dust, some of which is good quality, is not properly utilized. In Europe it is a regular article of trade, and it is advertised and sold as tea dust. In America it is sold to thousands of cheap restau rants, who make from it the, mixture of tanic acid, sugar and boiled milk which they sell as "tea." If, as in the orient, this dust was compressed into bricks, good tea could be made from it. FIFTEEN YEARS OF ECZEMA. Terrible Itching Prevented Sleep— Hands, Arms and Legs Affected —Cuticura Cured in 6 Days. "I had eczema nearly fifteen years. The affected parts were my hands, arms anj logs. They were tlio worst in the winter time, and were always itchy, and I could not keep from scratching them. I had to keep both hands bandaged all the time, and at night 1 would have to scratch through the bandages as the itching was so severe, and at times I would have to tear everything off my hands to scratch the skin. I could not rest or sleep. I had several physicians treat me but they could not give me a permanent cure nor even could they stop the itch ing. After using the Cuticura Soap, one box of Cuticura Ointment and two bottles of Cuticura Resolvent for about six days the itching had ceased, and now the sores have disappeared, and I never felt better in my life than I do now. Edward Worell, Band .'loth U. S. Infantry, Fort Crook, Nebraska." KNEW VALUE OF AN OATH. Colore*d Witness at Least Was Aware of Its Pecuniary Worth. Clarence S. Darrow, the well known lawyer and essayist, discussing the Haywood trial, in which he played so prominent a part, said the other day: "Some of the evidence in that trial was so transparently false that it re minds me of a case that came off in Alabama a few years back. One of the witnesses in this case was an ex tremely ignorant man. As his testi mony progressed, his ignorance be came so shockingly evident that the judge, looking sternly down at him said: " 'Look here, sir, are yon acquaint ed with the value of an oath?' "The witness answered anxiously: " '.Jedge, I hope I am. That thar lawyer on yer left, hand gimme six dol lars to sw'ar agin the other side. Thet's the correck value of an oath, ain't it, jedge?'" Wear Pajamas on Cars. "I learned something from the por ter on our train this morning," said a hotel guest. "I noticed him pick up the coat to a pair of pajamas while he was making up one of the berths. Whoever had occupied the berth had got off the train, evidently, and left the garment behind. 'Forgot part of his nightie, eh?' says I to the porter. The porter grinned broadly. 'Wasn't any his about it, boss,' he says. 'lt war a lady that was in that berth las' night. Yes, sah. Lots of 'ein seems to like them to weah on the cabs. I guess they thinks they's better in case of a wreck or sump'n like that.'" There morn Catarrh In thf r . portion of tho country than all othordlneascs put together. and until the lust few years wan supposed to lie Incurable. For * «rcat many years doctors pronounced If a lo< al disease and prescribed local remedies, and by constantly falling to cure with local treatment. pronounced It Incurable. Science has proven < ntHrrh to be a constitutional din ease and therefore requires constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F..1. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only Constitutional euro on the market. It Is taken Internally In doses from 10 drops to a teaapoonful. It nets directly on the blood and mucous surfaced of the system. They offer one hundred dollars for any case It falls to euro, bend fur circulars and testimonials. Ail Iress: F. J. CIIKNEV & CO., Toledo, Oblo. Bold by Drutffflsts, 7,v. Take Hail's Family Pills for constipation. Tennyson's Melancholy. After meeting Tennyson for the first, time, an Englishman asked the poet's friend, Jonas Spedding, if his temperament was as melancholy as his countenance indicated. "Well," Spedding began, thoughtfully, "I fancy when he is alone Tennyson finds him self in very grave company." The Truth of It. She—l always think of motoring as the poetry of motion. He —Yes, until the machine breaks j down. Then it becomes blank verse. ! —Puck. NO PLACE FOR HIM HERE. Alabama Judge Did Not Think De ceased Would Miss Much. "Your honor," said a prosecuting at torney in an Alabama backwoods court,"the prisoner at the bar is charged with killing one of the most exemplary citizens of this county. Thomas Jones, your honor, was in every respect a model man. He was a member of the church; he was never known to bet on horses, play poker, drink whisky or use tobacco. He —" "Hold on a minute," said the judge. "You say he never bet on a horse?" "That's what I said, your honor." "Never was known to play a game?" "Never your honor." "And he never drank liquor?" "Never drank a drop, your honor." "And he didn't chew tobacco?" "Never took a chew in his life." "Well, then," said the judge, "I don't see what he wanted to live for. There wasn't anything in life for him, and I don't see why he ain't about as well off dead as alive. Release the prisoner, Mr. Sheriff, and call the next case." Hindoo Defines Billiards. John Horgan, the champion pool player, told at a dinner in St. Louis a billiard story. "Billiards is a tame amusement be side pool," Mr. Horgan began. "Two ; Hindoos were once discussing the game in Calcutta, and I think that j their idea of it wa<j pretty near tho right ono. " 'What is thin white man's game of billiards I hear so much about?' said the first Hindoo. "'Don't you know?' said tho second. " 'No. Tell me.' "'Well,' said the second Hindoo, 'billiards is a very simple game. Two men armed with long sticks poke at. a ball on a green table, and one says,"l am" while the other says "hard lines." ' " Important to Mothers. Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORTA, a safe and pure remedy for infanta and children, and see that it Signature of I In Ute For Over 30 Years. Tho Kind Yon Have Always Lioug'it. Plague of Frogs Annoy. The Rye and an adjoining spur of the Chiltern hills, near High Wy- j combe. Eng., are nightly overrun with j a countless host of frogs. Local resi dents have had to seek fresh proine- j nades, and a crusade against the frogs is being planned. Architects in many instances are specifying electric plate warmers in new houses being constructed. Overwhelming Proof that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Succeeds. One of the greatest triumphs of Lydia E. Pinkhain's Vegetable Com pound is the conquering of woman's dread enemy Tuinor, The growth of a tumor is so in sidious that frequently its presence is wholly unsuspected until it is well advanced. So called "wandering pains" may come from its early stages or the presence of danger may be made manifest by excessive monthly periods accompanied by unusual pain, from the abdomen through the groin and thigh. If you have mysterious pains, if there are indications of inflammation or displacements, secure a bottle of Lydia E. Pinkhain's Vegetable Com pound, made from native roots aud herbs, right away and begin its use. The following letters should con vince every suffering woman of its virtue, and that it actually does conquer tumors. Mrs. May Fry, of 836 W. Colfax Ave , South Bend, Ind., writes : Dear Mrs. Pinkham : "I take great pleasure in writ ing to thank you for what Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has done for me. I also took the Blood Purifier in alternate doses with the Compound. Your medicine removed a cyst tumor of four years' growth, which three of the best physicians declared I had. They had said that only an operation could help me. I am very thankful that I followed a friend's advice and took your medicine. It has made me a strong and well woman and I shall recommend it as long as I live." Mrs. E. F. Hayes, of 2G RugglesSt., Boston, Mass., writes: Dear Mrs. Pinkham: — "I ha ve been under different doctors' treatment for a long time without relief. They to)<l me I had a fibroid tumor, my abdomen was swollen and I suffered with great pain. I wrote to you for advice, you replied and I followed your directions carefully and today lam a well women. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound ex pelled the tumor and strengthened my whole system." Mrs. Perry Byers, of Mt. Pleasant., lowa, writes : * I W. SL DOUGLAS A ss.oa & S3.SO SHOES TSPWOSLD msk SHOES FOR EVERY MEMBER OF ~ THE FAMILY. AT ALL PRICES. <* ;J « /Vi^" S <«ak $28,0Q0 M |% Reward M&r^ iT' ' ]'' I* oll^l,iS s ' UM 'f? .'ire worn 1 »>, inore • j»I o Ulie selection of the leathers ami other materials !<>i eaeh 'part *^^v / /awtr of tin- shoe, ami every detail of the making is looked after by the ion of suporintemlen ts. foremen and iWt shoe industry, and whoso workmanship i-aynot be excel] '<l, ljpflgU''y it I eouhltake you intmnv larjje factories at Tt rock ton. Maw. Jf Mid show you how carefully \V. L. I)oupbis shoes are imido, von would then under: tand whv tliev hold their shape, tit 1-iter, v <*£* wear longer ami are of pn-ater value than any other make. r.s^jT^eo^ SS.OO GJtf Shops nnnnot bn ccr.v;?Wo«f si any pr/c»- CAUIIOrJ. Ine .jeuumo have \Y . J.. Douglas unine mid price stumped on bottom, Tiiko Ask your doalor for \V. L. Oouglax shoes, if lie eannot supply you, send direct tu factory, bhoossout everywhere by mail. Catalog tree. W.L.Dou,?!/**, Brockton, Mm»> Not Exactly That Kind. "Did you got a complimentary ticket to the show?" inquired the pass fiend. "Well," answered iiif? man with ii* j fluence, "it's a free ticket, but if you | had heard the remarks of the manager I as lie was filling it out you wouldn't I call It very complimentary." !>fr*. Wfnsiow'H Soothing Syrup. For children teething, softens the gurus, reduces I in flammation. alluyß pain, cureo wind colic. iiOc u It isn't, necessary to put up an urn | brella when silence reigns. SICK HEADACHE _ , i [Positively cured by CAm ER.S lhese Li,tle mcgns TUoy also relieve Dla- ITTir tress from Dyspepsia, In ■■« ■■ gc* <li{TPKtiou Jiiid 100 Ilpiirty I £SJ Eating. A perfect rem- Exl j| a f'riy for Dizziness, Nan* BJj r I LLO» sea, Drowsiness, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Coat ed Tongue, Pain in the AAYFRIM J side, TORPID LIVER. , They regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE. nTcoc] Genuine Must Bear uAKI Eno Fac-Simile Signature 1 REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. SPOT GASH FOH SOLDIERS' HOMESTEAD HIGHT9 All soldiers who served ninety days or mora in the federal army or navy between 1861-lbCo, and who made homestead entries for less than 100 acres on or before June 22, 1874, means that an additional right is due someone and that it can be sold to me for spot cash, no mattei whether patent issued or not. If soldier I* dead, his heirs are entitled. The right descends as follows: First, to the widow; arid second, to the legal heirs, or next of kin. Talk to old soldiers, their widows, children, or next of kin, about this class of additional rights. ( Jet busy right now and find some of your relatives who made homestead entries in early days. It's easy money. For further information address Com rade \Y. K. Moses, 80 California Building, Den ver, Colo. TTV' A —Denton Co., raises success* I fully every staple crop grown ir ****• Texas:cotton, wheat,corn,oats, alfalfa,sorghum, millet,barley, rye, tru<tk, pea nuts, fruits, berries, grapes, etc. Artesian wells KM) ft. and up. Improved farm landss2o to SSO an acre. Denton, a town of 7,000 has five schools with annual attendance of 2,500; 2 state col leges. For descriptive literature atul list ot Texas lands and business chances, write LIPSCJOMI3-EDWAKDS COM PAN Y, Dept. A, Denton, Texaat ip Hi I"? Send tie thenamesof 6|terson.'< Interested 1 nan I e<lu<ntiori mentioning this paper.aud we will a I\ljl4 mail our t'ni vcrslty Liu He tin to you i yr. free OPPORTUNITY for voung men and women to procure an education at Final I expense. More than SO Courses of study. Nome* I tlilriar L'ood for every utmh nl. Ask for Catalog. Address Drawer K, OHIO NOKTHfcIIN INIVKKSITY, Ada, O. PATENTS x 1 TRADE MARKS- > 0 M JB +* talneri.(i«>u*;ii!cri aml prosecuted by \I.r.X\MU:R «V IK>\> Patent Lawyers. ( K>tahli.s)ied I?V|7.) 607 7th St.. N*. W M WASHINGTON,I>. U Book A of information sent FREE. A. N. K.—C (1907—39) 2197. Dear Mrs. Pinkham:— "1 was told by my physician that I had a fibroid tumor ami that I would have to be operated upon, I wrote to you for advice, which 1 followed care fully and took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. lam not only cured of the tumor but other female troubles and can do all my own work after eigh years of suffering." Mrs. S. J. Barber, of Scott, N. Y. writes : Dear Mrs. Pinkham:— "Sometime ago I wrote you for advice about a tumor which the doctors thought would have to be removed. Instead I took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and to-day am a well woman." Mrs. M. M. Funk, Vandergrift, Pa., writes: Dear Mrs. Pinkham : "I had a tumor and Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound removed it for me after two doctors had given mc up. I was sick four years before I began to take the Compound. I now recommend Lydia E Pinkham's Veget able Compound far and near." Such testimony as above is con vincing evidence that Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound stands without a peer as a remedy for Tumor Growths as well as other distressing ills of women, and such symptoms as Hearing-down Sensations, Displace ments, Irregularities and Backache, etc. Women should remember that it is Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound that is curing so many women Don't forget to insist upon it when some druggist asks you to accept something else which he calls "just, as good." .Mrs. Pinkham's invitation to Women. Women suffering from any form of female weakness are invited to write Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass., for advice. She is the Mrs. Pinkham who has been advising sick women free of charge for more than twenty years, and before that she assisted her mother-in-law, Lydia E. Pink ham in advising. Thus she is especially well qualified to guide sick women back to health. 7
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers