Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, September 14, 1899, Page 7, Image 7

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    GIRL WITHOUT TALENTS.
6 lie May I.lve a Life of Fulfillment by
Making the Mont of Her livery-
Day Qualities.
"Man}' a modest, unselfish girl, who
does not regard herself as remarkable
either in mind, appearance or manner,
asks: 'Where is there a place for a girl
to-day who is not beautiful or talented,
who cannot play or paint or sing, can
not, permit herself to write an essay f,or
a literary club, and has no ability for
leadership?' " writes Mary Baldwin in
the Woman's Home Companion, of
"The Girl Without Great (lifts.'' "For
Bm'h a one the history of an every-day
pirl who met fulfillment and wrought
from common material a wonderful
life-fabric may be offered. She was the
plainest of a family, and as she grew to
maidenhood gave no sign of possessing
anything that would not seem possible
to the most ordinary person. Her sis
ters had each a 'gift.' Hut nobody ex
pected anything great from 'Miss Mar
garet,' and she never dared to hope that
she could fill any place of importance
even in the smallest circle. As is often
the case with the inconspicuous girl of
the family, sli» became a general help
er, and was called to assist and fill gaps
In the home service. She learned
through all this to get away from her
self, and in effect said: '1 cannot do
this, but my sister can.' As soon as she
could accept this she was no longer a
lonely girl, but imagined that she had a
sort of partnership in the achievements
of those whom she helped. Let it not be
imagined that she had never experi
enced a regret that she herself had been
overlooked in the distribution of gifts;
there were bitter moments when she
suffered on account of the fact, but this
w as before she had given herself wholly
to the purjKise of forgetting her loss
and helping others. As soon as this be
came a fact she began to receive of the
blessedness of giving, and the mental
and spiritual enlargement of her com
pensation worked itself outwardly, so
that she. became a very attractive per
son. Finally the prince came, and the
slipper fitted the stay-at-home sister,
and she became a princess before
whom many hearts bowed in the sincer
e»t reverence."
HOW TO BOIL CLOTHES.
Much llnrm Is Done l»v LeaviiiK Them
in Ihe Holler ( n til Tliey are
Ylrtuully Cooked.
The purpose of boiling clothes is to
expand the fabrics by steam and thus
to loosen the dirt and allow it to drop
out; there is no good, but actual harm
derived from "cooking" the clothes;
they do not require "cooking," but
cleansing, and when they are cleansed
that is sufficient. Hence, within half
an hour after the water first begins
to bubble they should be immediately
removed and plunged into clear, cold
water. While the clothes are. boiling
they may be turned with aclothes-stick,
but must not be punched or lifted in
such a manner as to tear them. The
common custom in many households
of putting the second boilerful of
clothes into the boiling dirtied water
from which the first boilerful has been
taken is wholly opposed to good laun
dry work. When the cook wishes to
keep the juice in the meat that is to be
cooked by boiling she plunges it into
boiling water. When she wishes to ex
tract the juices and have them in the
water for soup, etc., she puts the meat
on in cold water. If you wish to get
the dirt out of the clothes instead of
driving it into the fiber, put the clothes
on in cold water, and do not allow them
to remain in the boiling water soiled
by them till they are dyed yellow.—
Gentlewoman.
VERY LATEST STOCK.
It Consists of Wide Itnnili mid Fluffy
Trimming?*. and 1M Cnllcd
tlip "Adelaide."
Fortunate indeed is she who possesses
that physical virtue—a swanlike neck,
for the prettiest new collars and stocks
are so tall and "fussy" that the short
necked sisterhood can only look at
them with longing eyes: and si/h.
The "Adelaide," the latest stock, is
higher than any yet seen. It has its
THE NEW ADELAIDE COLLARETTE.
redeeming feature, however, in the lit
tle frill which finishes the lower edge.
Slightly low-cut bodices of a summer
ago which could not possibly "pass"
this season are enabled to do duty by
the addition of the "Adelaide."
A stock of plain silk covered with fig
ured tulle or embroidered chiffon is
made and finished with a frill also of
the diaphanous material or, to secure
an effective contrast, plain goods is
used. The frill extends below the de
fective neck finish concealing it and at
the same time looking like an original
feature of the bodice.
The True Political Poll.
Seeker —It means a great deal of
hard pulling if a man gets a nomination
for an office nowadays.
or leg?— Puck.
SALT WATER BATHS.
SALT WATER BATHS.
They Cilve Tone to the Entire System
and Keep the Sktn Healthy.
Soft and (>ieur.
For a hand bath (a bath given to the
body by use of the hands only, or by
sponge or cloth) place a handful of salt
in a basin as ordinarily filled for wash
ing. Allow the salt to dissolve, or
hasten the action by stirring it with
the hand. The water should be as cold
as you have vitality to withstand. Lse
110 soap. Hathe the entire body. J>o
not neglect the face and neck in the
free use of the salt water. This bath
has an exhilarating influence, tones
the entire system, and gives to the skin
a healthful condition that amply repays
for the time and trouble involved. If
used in the winter it will be an excel
lent preventive of colds, besides being
a substitute for face cosmetics. No
chapping, no roughness of the skin and
no clogging of the pores will trouble
the person who systematically and reg
ularly takes a bath of this sort. Or
dinary table salt or rock salt will do,
but will not do so well. The sea-salt
contains medicinal properties not
found in the others. Whether one ex
ercise or not, the body should receive
a daily hand bath of cold or cool water,
especially in the suntmer, either upon
rising or before retiring. —Edward B.
Warman, iu Ladies' Home Journal.
COSTUME FOR NURSES.
Cool and Comfortable Model hlch Is
ileinfc Adopted l>y Ilonpltal*
and Sanitarium*.
Trained nurses will hail with delight
the comfortable new costume which is
here illustrated. It fs a close-fitting
COSTUME FOR A NURSE,
affair consisting of skirt and waist
which are joined upon the same waist
band. In institutions where the rank
of a nurse is designated by the color of
her uniform, the "head" nurses wear
costumes of white duck while their
subordinates don the familiar blue
gingham gown. The only trimming
upon these uniforms is a double row of
stitching around the yoke and sleeves.
Worry Hinder* Dinextlon.
The cat has served to teach mankind
fir. all-important lesson concerning the
working of the stomach. The X rays
directed upon a cat's stomach have
demonstrated that any irritation or dis
agreeable nervous excitement arrests
the progress of digestion. I)r. Fritz
Lange, of Alunich, who makes a special
study of the stomach, performed a
series of experiments, which resulted in
this interesting discovery. After the
cat had eaten the X rays were turned
on, and I)r. Lange watched the animal's
stomach through a fluorescent screen.
Then he irritated the cat by placing a
live mouse just beyond its reach. Hr.
Lange was able to observe that diges
tion was absolutely interrupted by the
irritation of the animal. Briefly stat
ed. the lesson for man is: Don't let
anything bother or interrupt your din
ner.
lion to Make O rail Re Sponge.
Into a saucepan place a pint of cold
water, the thinly pared rind of one
lemon, and three or four ounces of
sugar. Stir until the sugar is dissolved
and add one ounce of gelatine which
has been soaked in cold water. Stir
and strain and when cool add the juice
of one lemon and three oranges and
more sugar if needed. Whisk the whites
of two fresh eggs, add them to the half
set jelly, whisk again, and turn the
frothy mixture into a wet mold to be
placed on ice until serving time. Thei.
turn out the sponge and serve with tin
grated peel of an orange scattered
over the top.
Ilolero Cornet Covers.
Bolero corset covers are just as fash
ionable as bolero* jackets. One of the
daintiest of these is formed entirely of
biaek Italian lace insertion and white
cambric, as fine as the finest of hand
kerchiefs, set in alternate strips and
drawn together with a light blue rib
bon over the bust. Another, to be
worn with a pink corset, is of ecru lace
and pink mull. The material is laid in
line tucks; the neck is ornamented by
a narrow collar edged with lace.
llellelon* ltiee Illneuitn.
These are delicious if properly made.
Take equal parts of flour, sugar and
ground rice, say a half pound of each,
and half a teaspoonful of baking pow
der. Mix all into a paste with two well
beaten eggs. Shape into biscuits, and
bake in a brisk oven.
Curled <iiii«erhread Ileelpe.
Beat seven ounces of butter to a
cream, add eight ounces of brown
sugar, eight ounces of Hour, quarter of
a nutmeg, and mix all with nine ounces
of treacle. Drop a very little with p
spoon on tins, and bake in a slow oven
They should be crisp.
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1899
1 dfr JL%
AN EXCELLENT PLAN.
Catehintc. Mo* ln«e and Shipping Holes,
Sheep and Yearling Cuttle
Made Busy.
My plan of crating live stock, hogs,
calves, sheep and yearlings is to have
four pieces three by three inches and
three feet long (or more for large
stock), as corner pieces. Then four
boards, a, six inches wide and six feet
or more long are nailed securely as side
pieces. Double end boards are two feet
ten inches long and nailed securely. At
one end of crate, two boards, b b, are
4S:s||p:
CRATING HOGS MADE EASY.
slid between the end boards and held in
place by a bolt through top and bottom
af each. From bottom up, side boards
are nailed on three, four and five inches
apart respectively.
To handle hogs, take three planks
one foot wide, place one end in rear of
wagon, other on ground, as shown at
c. Two men take the crate at each end,
follow up and drop over the hog and
then walk the hog under the crate, up
the plank on the wagon. In this way I
have loaded alone hogs that weighed
400 pounds. Keep crate close to ground
or the hog will poke her nose under and
crawl out. If hogs are wild, feed them
and while eating set crate over them. I
lead hogs from pen to pasture in this
way. C. A. Phoenix, in Fatm and
Home.
STOCK ON THE FARM.
No Matter Hint Small the Premises It
W ill Pay the Owner to Keep
liiiK) or Sheep.
No farm so small but there are some
wastes on it if the produce is sold direct
from the farm. It is impossible to raise
and sell grain and hay without losing
some portion of it which might have
been saved if live stock were kept.
The man with a large farm may be
able togo on raising and selling grain
and let the wastes go, but the small
farmer cannot allow these losses.
For the small farmer horses or cattle
are out of the question as they require
too large an area lor pasturage, but
with hogs or sheep the case is different.
They can be kept with profit in com
paratively cramped quarters. Either of
these kinds of stock may be used to
make meat of grass and grain. Feed
may be sold in the shape of mutton;
wool or pork to better advantage than
in its original condition. The small
farmer should be an intensive farmer
and intensive farming is impossible
without the help of live stock or the
purchasing of large quantities of fer
tilizers which is not good farming.
The man who owns a small farm and
keeps a small herd of hogs or a small
flock of sheep is likely to become an en
thusiast and if this is the case the stock
kept will get much larger prices than
common stock and the profits will be in
creased.
As a matter of fact the small farmer
with a few animals is in a position to
take the very best care of his animals
whether they are to be used for market
or are pure-breds which are to be sold
for breeders and in either case the re
turns will be larger than they could be
where larger flocks with less care are
kept.—Farmers' Voice.
When to Tiny Mill Food.
At this time of year inilleis need all
their spare store room to hold grain,
and will sell bran and wheat middlings
much cheaper than they can afford to
do later in the season. There is often
a saving of two or three dollars per ton,
even though the price of grain does not
advance if the mill feed needed for win
ter and spring use is purchased now. If
farmers have spare rown in their barns
that can be kept always dry they can
profitably use it for storing bran,
though it is very bulky in proportion to
its cost, and for that reason room for
it cannot be afforded where storage is
expensive.—American Cultivator.
Potash for Sacar Ileets.
In several foreign experiments with
the culture of sugar beets noted by the
department of agriculture it was found
that whereas nitrogenous fertilizers in
creased the yield of beets per acre,
they also decreased the sugar content
and purity of the juice, but that the
application of potash and phosphoric
acid fertilizers improved the quality of
the beets. The greatest increase in
sugar was due to potash fertilizing.
Beets grown from large seeds gave bet
ter yields and were richer in sugar
than those grown from small seeds. It
was concluded that 14 inches was a
good depth for plowing.
Knowing: a lilt Too Much.
Another difficulty with those who
manage incubators is that they know
too much. They know more than the
man who made the machine, and do not
always follow directions. Each one
will have some whim, or make some
fancied remarkable discovery by which
he is to electrify the poultry world,
and they do not realize that they know
nothing at all until they spoil one or
two hatches (for which they condemn
the incubator); but after awhile bet
ter results follow and the operator i«
somewhat satisfied.
LOSSES FROM WEEDS.
They Alunj N ( mine A ShrlnWase ot
the < ro|i Anionic Wliieh They
Arc Allowed lo Grow.
It would be difficult for most farmers
to calculate how great is the loss from
the prevalence of weeds in crops. In a
season when dry weather prevails these
losses are comparatively small, though
even then the weeds take water from
the soil which is not all returned when
they are uprooted and buried in :t. Ihe
weed that is buried is surrounded by air
spaces, keeping the soil more porous
than it otherwise would be, and there
fore drying it out faster. The case is
still worse as regards the fertility that
the weed has taken. It was originally
entirely soluble, but the weed has to
ferment and be resolved into vegetable
mold before it can be putin the same
soluble condition. Vet we have known
farmers to delay cultivation of hoed
crops so as to have more grass and
weeds to be plowed under.
It is often said that weeds are a pre
ventive of good farming; that there
would be much less cultivation of hoed
crops if it were not that the growth of
weeds made it necessary. Yet where
the cultivator is kept going all through
the season so often as to prevent any
weed from reaching the surface, the
weed killed as quickly as it sprouted
has done the soil more good and less
harm than it could do at any subse
quent stage of its growth. At this ear
ly period, about all the plant substance
has been directly furnished from the
swelling and decomposition of the seed
in germination. At this time the car
bonic acid gas which the seed gives off
when it germinates makes its plant
food more soluble than it ever can be
after the plant puts forth roots and be
gins to draw from (he soil. Finely pow
dered malt has been used as a fertilizer.
When it has been applied in contact
with seed grain of any kind, it has pro
duced remarkable results, though it is
too expensive a fertilizer to be usee! on
a very large scale. But the ordinary
weed seed is much smaller and has far
less fertilizing material in it than has n
, lin of barley.
t is the peculiarity of most weeds
tl t most of their growth is taken di
rei jly from the soil, and that both it
ane, the moisture to make the plant food
solu le are needed by growing crops.
Each day's growth of a weed among
hoed crops lessens the yield. It' the
weed is left until late, its roots will be
so intermingled with those of valuable
crops that one cannot be destroyed
without uprooting the other. A little
care in destroying the weeds while
small v\ ill save much labor later, besides
the inevitable shrinkage of the crop
among which the weeds have been al
lowed to grow.—American Cultivator.
CHEAP COLONY HOUSE.
nooxtiiiK Plaee Protected from Hlud
and Hnln IN All FonlK Need iu
the Early Pall.
Fowls do well colonized out in r>mall
flocks in summer and early fall. They
need little more shelter than a roosting
place that is protected from storms and
showers.
The cut shows an A-shelter boarded
with matched lumber to the ground on
one side and end with nests and roosts
inside. But the tight side and end to
ward the direction of storms. Fowls
AN "A"-SHEI/TER.
can thus be colonized in many flock*
on pasture and other rough land, ob
viating the necessity of building many
yards, and of furnishing all the feed.
Fowls 011 free range will get half theii
living themselves. The plan reduces
the number of permanent chicken
houses required, since the flock is usu
ally much larger in summer and fall
than in winter after the market chick
ens and the old hens have been culled
out. —Farm and Home.
Remedy for the Hornlly.
The hornlly is becoming trouble
some in some sections, and the Kansas
experiment station reports that they
have found the following mixture to
effectually prevent them from troubling
the agricultural college herd: Two
quarts fish oil, one pint crude carbolic
acid, ten ounces of oil of tar, one ounce
oil of pennyroyal, one quart kerosene.
All except the kerosene can be obtained
at any good drug store, and the cost is
but 85 cents a gallon, l'ut it on with
brush, cloth, or in fine spray from
atomizer, about once in two or three
days. The cost is from one-half to one
cent a head each day.and these flies and
all others will carefully avoid it.
Owes No Man Anything.
Sheep are unlike all other stock, if de
cently managed. A good sheep can
never die in debt to a man. If it. dies
when weaned it lias consumed nothing,
if it dies the first winter the wool will
pay for its keep up to that period If it
lived to be sheared once, it brings its
owner in debt to it, and if the ordinary
course of wool production and breeding
goes on, that indebtedness increases
with great rapidity as long as the sheep
lives. If the horse or steer dies at three
or four years old or the cow before
breeding, the loss is almost a total one.
—Free Press, Ontario. Canada.
Cabbages are gross feeders. They re
quire a rich soil and thorough cultiva
tion if the best results are obtained.
Be careful about potato vines which
have been sprayed with paris green, |
that the stock cannot eat them.
Kngllnh Secret Service Money.
The t< ;rm "secret service money" is
usually applied to a fund placed at the
disposal of ministers to be expended
at their discretion, in promoting or
protecting; the interests of the coun
try. These moneys consist of a sum
of £35,000 annually included in the
estimates, in respect of which minis
ters are only required to make a dec
laration that the moneys spent have
been expended in "accordance with
the intentions of parliament." As jnin
irtcrs are required to give 110 account
of their steward ship, it is obvious we
have 110 means of knowing how these
moneys arc expended. The reader,
however, who carries his mind back
to episodes within his knowledge, such
as the collapse of the Fenian conspira
tors, or of their later development, the
"Irish Invincibles," will have little dif
ficulty in realizing how indispensable
a fund of this kind is to the protection
of a state, and of understanding the
infinite variety of uses to which it may
be applied. —Chambers' Journal.
Not So Bad.
"How did the family come out in the mat
ter of nettling the estate'/" was asked of one
of the brothers.
"Might have been, worse, but we finally
succeeded in effecting a compromise with
our lawyer by which he agreed to let us
have half." —Detroit Free Press.
W hut 11 e 11 a<TT
Guest—What have you got?
Waiter—l've got liver, calf's brains, pig's
feet—.
"I don't want a description of your phys
ical peculiarities. What vou have got to eat
is what I want to know.' Boston Traveler.
Can't Succeed.
Some men are so deficient in the elements
of success that they would never set the
world on fire even if the world were insured
in their favor.—Detroit Journal.
"Oh, that I should have married a funny
man!" she wailed. "What is the matter,
lovely, dear?" asked her most intimate
friend, "fie came home and told me lie had
a sure way to keep jelly from getting moldy
at the top, and when 1 asked him now, he
said turn it upside down."—Uoston Trav
eler.
Fact in Physiology.—"They say a man
who turns pale when he gets mad is the most
dangerous.' "1 guess that is so. A man
who is seared nearly out of his boots will
put up an awful fight."—lndianapolis Jour
nal.
Knew His Capacity.—"Poor l!i'kins is
dead. He drank 11 gallons of straight whis
ky, 14 high balls and a half a keg of beer
night before last." "Is that so? What was
the cause of his death?"— Chicago Times-
Herald.
She—-"l'm sure T've cast my bread on the
water many a time, and I don't see any re
sults." He—"No; I guess your bread would
sink, dear."—Yonkers Statesmtn.
We do not always realize what a privilege
it is to be able Is work —just to have the
strength and vitality to take up our tasks
day after day.—Uoston Watchman.
The man who tries to say smart things
makes more breaks than other people.—
Atchison Globe.
It's a good memory that sometimes ad
mits oi discreet lorgettulness. Chicago
Daily J
Can . mental rust.—Ram's Ilorn.
Does a light-headed, lantern jawed cyclist
aced any other lamp?—L. A. W. Bulletin.
Time and tide wait i'or 110 man, but they
just have to slow up a little for the woman
who is trying to get her het on straight.—
L. A. W. iSulletin.
Mrs. Crimsonbeak —"Has Mr. Crimson
beak got home for dinner vet, Bridget?"
Bridget—"No, mum." "I thought 1 heard
him downstairs." "Sure that was the dog
jou heard growlin', mum." Yonkers
Statesman.
time did Mr. Lippincott leave last night.
Gracie?" Grac-ie —"Why, grandma, he
started home at —Grandma (mildly)—
"Never mind when he started; 1 asked you
when he left." —Brooklyn Dife.
Not Sure of the Name.—"l have an awful
pain in my back," said an old lady to her
doctor in Topeka. "Probably you have rheu
matism," responded the doctor. "Mebby it
is, doctor, but Sister Maijy thinks I've got
the limburger."—Kansas City Journal.
Mrs. Newed —"Oh, Jack! The cook was
in such an ugly mood to-day, I thought it
best to call in a policeman. Newed (as
tounded) —"What! To arrest her?" Mrs.
Newed—"Oh, no —to paoify her." —Brook-
lyn Dife.
Visitor—"Do they treat you well here?"
Prisoner—"Yes, indeed. Ihe only thing I
have to complain of is their lack of confi
dence in me. They refuse to give me a
latchkey."—Sondags-Nisse.
A Ready Retort. —The Vulture—"lt's
hardiv polite to read your paper at table,
Mr. Ballroom." The Victim —"I know,
M«s. Skinnem, but it takes my mind off
what I'm eating."—What-to-Eat.
"There's poetry in everything," observed
the poet. "You're right," replied the ed
itor, "for instance, there's a stove full of it!"
—Atlanta Constitution
Sicn l ea ! v e 1 >od ioet di
gest well, appetite poor, bowels con
stipated, tongue coated. It's your
liver! Ayer's Pills are liver pills,
easy and safe. They cure dyspep
sia, biliousness. 25c. All Druggists.
" )
Wuut your moustache or beard a beautiful «
1 brown or rich Mack? Then use
BUCKINGHAM'S DYE Whiskers j
I __ OF DWU(»FT'«TS, ow R p H»ll A Co. NMHI A, N. H.
r ST"' V, V/ i
Hvvvu\vcAb OV<L \\M WV\CU/VCVV> WT AU «%<*• UWRUA'ITI KWTWJUI.
£oU \uu\ir <n\ AY>«o\a3T& GUARANTEE, *o cuceovMsnwv R* W\si&
Wjfijuuw mm $\MiK/v pfttktiiy (WATUVV\X\ouk<VJU YTV^E,.
UORTHWLS~LRH PHARMACOL CO. MIIWftUKLL, WIS. BOX^Sto.
$60.00 PER MONTH.
"We desire a limited number of trustworthy, energetic men in each
state. To acceptable parties we will pay a regular salary of SIXTY
DOLLARS per month. All applicants must furnish references. Thl«
advertisement will only appear in this issue, therefore address at oqc^
J. H. CHAMBERS «t CO., St. Louie, Mo.
Irony.
"Did ve ivernotice a mon from St. Louis?"
inquired the janitor philosopher. "Will, if
ve didn't it's worth ycr whoile. Up fV
boulevard he struts wid hid ilevated. Sud
dinly thor's a big commotion an' he's lift
ed off his fate by an autyrriobile. He picks
himsilf up, goes home an' tills his frinds Ik*
horseliss carriages av Chicago are run by
jackasses; hut thot th' jaeku.«-os are insoide.
Oh, lie s a hitter lobster." —Chicago Kvecuig
News.
Lnne'n Family Medicine.
Moves the bowels each day. In order to
Se healthy this is necessary. Acts ;zent!yon
the liver and kidneys. Cured tsicL. Jjiuid
ache. Price 25 and 50c.
Family I'ride.
The ITusband—Hut we can't afford to keep
a carriage.
The W ifc- —I know we can't, but I want in
show that stuck ui) .Mrs, Brown that we cau
have things we can't afford just as well as
they can. —X. V. Journal.
The Nickel I'.ato Road, with its Peerless
Trio of Past Express Trains Daily and Ua
excelled Dining Car Service, offers rates
lower than via other iincs. The Short Dins
between Chicago, Buffalo, New York and
Boston.
Feminine Exhortation.
A Boston paper says that about 300 women
have been licensed 10 preach. Ihe rc*»t have
not taken the trouble to get a license.—ist.
.Louis .Republic.
To Core a Cold In One lliiy
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All
druggists refund money if it failsto cure.
Sort of "Short Dock."
The boss dynamiters of .Japan are Pak
Ki Yank, Pak Chung Yung and Pak Yung
Hyp, and they are a very bad pack.—Balti
more Herald.
IIHII'M Catarrh Cure
Is a Constitutional Cure. Price, 75c.
The car conductor's motto is: "Let u».
put off till tomorrow the man who cannot
pay to-day."—L. A \Y. Bulletin.
I can recommend Piso's Cure for Con
sumption to sufferers from Astluna.- K. D.
Townsend. Ft. Howard, Wis., May 4, '94.
Samson was a professional strong man,
whose last act brought down the house.—-
Spare Moments.
H The debilitating drains and
■ discharge's which weaken so
■ many women are caused by Ca
i g|j tarrh of the distinctly feminine
gg organs. The sufferer may call
fjja her trouble Leuchorrhoea, or
jKS Weakness,or Female Diseaseor jrcj
some other name, but the real ■
81 trouble is catarrh of the female H
H nently cures this and all crthei B
, The microbes that cause chills and
fever and malaria enter the system
through mucous membranes made
porous by catarrh. Pe-ru-na heals the
mucous membranes and prevents the
entrance of malarial germs, thus pre
venting and curing these affections.
W. L. DOUGLAS
53&53.50 SHOES
t Worth $4 to $6 compared with
other makes.
Indorsed bv ov«r
1.d00.000 "wearers.
ALL LEATHERS. ALL STYLES
Tint (iKNI INK ho*p W. L. Douilu'
cauio and price ilum|)rd »n bottom.
Take no ftub*tftute claimed
to be as good. I,ardent maker*
of and $8..% shoes in th#
world. Your dealer should keep
them—lf not. we will send you
a patron receipt of price. State
kind of leather, size and width, plain or cap tea.
Catalogue 11 Free.
W. L. DOUGLAS SHOE CO.. Brockton. Mast.
READERS OF THIS PAPER
DESIRING TO BUY ANYTHING
ADVERTISED IN ITS COLUMNS
SHOULD INSIST UPON HAVING
WHAT THEY ASK FOR. REFUSING
ALL SUBSTITUTES OR IMITATIONS.
C&RTEKSINK
Too good and too cheap to be
. without it.
C 1 BTO Permanently Cored. No fits or nerr
■ 8 B O ousuessafter tlrstdav'suseof Dr. Kline's
Great Nerve Restorer. H't trial bottle and treatlM
free. Dr R. H. KLINE. Ltd., 881 Arch St.. Pfaii*., Pa.
A. N. Iv.—C 1777
WBIEX WRITING TO AIIVKRTIfICRf
pl«*.'IMC stale that you aaw the Advertl*#*
meut lu thl* paper.
7