Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, September 10, 1903, Page 7, Image 7

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    THE AMERICAN BEAUTY.
A CiimiioxHe Made of Tholoßrnphi of
h<»c*lety Women looted for Their
Attru<»tl% eiieo.
Beth in its modeling and composi
tion the typical American face ns en
tirely distinctive. A characteristic
style in architecture or literature in
1 tie I'nited States remains perhaps to
he developed, but the American char
acter, temperament, spirit, call it what
you will, has already stamped itself
indelibly on our physiognomy. The
American woman as a type is famous
for beauty touched with intelligence.
And although the type is comparative
ly new her character is indicated as
unmistakably as that of any of her
~f
TYPICAL AMERICAN BEAUTY,
rrht Result of a Composite Photograph of
Twenty New York Women )
Euporean sisters. The American ■wom
an is recognized the world over. The
type is besides found in bewildering
variety, yet each is unmistakable. The
blending of many familiar types of
American womanhood in the composite
photograph reproduced herewith af
fords a unique opportunity for judging
the typical face.
Familiar as the type, or rather
types, are, few perhaps can call up a
definite mental picture of the general
type itself. The composite face of
American women, therefore, fills a long
felt want. A score or more of artists
have patronized the American girl.
The drawings are almost always in
teresting, many of them are charming
and all may be readily indentified as
the American girl, yet no two are alike
or even similar. No other country in
the world, it is safe to say, affords
such an opportunity to its artists. In
England, for instance, there is a well
la-own type of beauty, somewhat pale
and expressionless, perhaps, but un
mistakable English. And there is only
one. !n America there is often a single
family in which every daughter il
lustrates an entirely distinctive beau
ty, yet without losing the family re
semblance.
TLe composite photograph combines
fsr as possible the most character
istic types of American beauty as il
lustrated by twenty well known New
York women. It is too much, of
course, to claim that the list is com
plete, but it i 6 at least fairly represen
tative Nor can it be claimed for
such a blending that the ideal type of
American beauty has been attained.
Bo varied and distinctive are the types
that hundreds of types woufd have to
be considered in such a balance. The
composite face, however, is as general
and representative as it well can be.
Compare it with the typical beauties
of other countries, allowing for the
impressionistic effect inseparable from
such a picture, and the result to the
most critical eye cannot fail to be re
assuring.
The American woman as portrayed
in her composite photograph contrasts
strikingly with the typical faces of
other countries. The face is perhaps,
less nervous than that of the typical
French woman, especially the young
French woman, but to the American
eye, at least, it seems better balanced,
in contrast with a characteristic Eng
lish face the difference is especially
marked. The two faces express an en
tirely different mentality. The Amer
ican woman, set beside her English
cousin, suggests wider and more varied
interests and an unmistakable air of
independence which strangely becomes
her. Compared with the typical
Teutonic face, the American woman
appears the more alert and
vivacious.
Among those whose photographs
make up the composite are Miss Helen
Morton, Mrs. M. Depew,
Mrs. Payne Whitney, Miss Alice Roose
velt, Miss Nathalie Schenck, Mrs.
Cornelius Vanderbilt, Jr, a*d Mrs.
John Jacob Astor. Kansas City
Star.
Rain Dnth for Pillows.
Feather pillows, if the covers are
quite clean, are benefited by leaving
them out in a summer rain, afterward
cunning them for several days on the
clothesline. l")own quilts may be treat
ed similarly without the slightest dan
ger of injury. There will be some shrink
age.
ritullflotver vrlth M» pon nn lue.
Cauliflower is good eaten cold as well
as hot. Boil without breaking the head
and throw into cold water until wanted.
Tear the roses apart carefully, dry and
putin a salad bowl with lettuce leaves.
Sine with mayonnaise
| TO DEVELOP TB& CHEST.
Kirny Way I>> Which to lnrn*n»e final
Menniirement Two Indira
In Three Month*.
j The neck and chest ran be developed
I finely in three months by the following
rules:
As you walk about raise the shoulders
quickly and then throw them back arid
then down. Count quickly as you do it—
1-2-3 —raising ihem to 1 and so on.
After going through this three times or
more, you are ready to walk properly.
Keep the chest out and be careful each
time not to let the shoulders come for
ward at the last count —3. They must
go down and back, if anything.
As you walk, continually keep the
chest pushed out and the abdomen and
stomach forcibly drawn in. See how
long you can hold your breath, and, as
you hold it, raise the chest higher and
higher. This is what singers do when
they wish to sustain long passages in
one breath.
When you find you roust exhaust your
breath, do not let the chest fall, and take
the breath instantly and quietly through
! the nose only and by pushing out the
j sides. Then instantly begin slowly draw-
I ing in the sides and abdomen and raise
1 the chest higher and higher.
! Any one who will try this will increase
j in measure from shoulder to shoulder
j and around bust two inches in three
months.—Chicago Inter Ocean.
PLUCKY LITTLE GIRL.
; She Conilueta 11 Small Trnek Farm
nii«l Taken Cn*e of n Family
of Seven People.
With the responsibility of a family
of seven on her diminutive shoulders,
little Eleanor Keefauver, of lit) North
j Fifty-seventh street, West Philadel-
I phia, is making a plucky fight for ex-
I istence, and already she is known as
; the youngest and one of the most suc
cessful farmers in America.
This small farmer is only twelve
j years old. and yet she carries the re
sponsibility in supporting her family
with the light-htartedness of the
wealthiest and most care-free little
girl in America.
Little Eleanc/ operates an extensive
I truck patch, and the product she gatli
i ers she sells from door to door, and by
| this means earns, during the summer,
at least S2O a week, besides supplying
| enough to last all through the year.
the table at home with vegetables
\ enough to last all through the yetr.
Her father is a paralytic, and though
jit is true that there is a little Keefau
j ver boy who brings home every Satur
; day a few dollars from a slockiny
factory where he works, and that Mrs
■ Keefauver does an occasional job of
! laundering, still Eleanor is the main
support of this poor family.
Every morning she digs and hoes on
j her small farm, and every afternoon
j she pushes through the streets with
j her little go-cart, selling her fresh and
| excellent vegetables.
She has a host of regular customers,
; and these customers wait for her every
; day. They do well to wait for her,
j ELEANOR AT THE PLOW.
i too, for she always brings them truck
j that nas been gathered but a fe%v
hours.
Eleanor's farm is loaned to her by
the Philadelphia Vacant Lot Cultiva
tion association, a charity of an unusu
ally beneficent kind. This association
has two hundred acres of vacant land
that certain wealthy Philadelphians
have intrusted to it until the time when
they shall need the land to build upon.
These two hundred acres are loaned
in patches to such people as are unable
to keep up the fierce struggle for an
existence in a great city.
The association lends one patch to
a shoemaker whose sight has failed;
another to a laborer whom a blast has
ruined; a third to an aged man and
woman who are childless; a fourth to
the Keefauvers.
And its poor pensioners cultivating
their patches under the eye of the as
sociation acquire in this way enough
vegetables to supply their tables all
the year round.
FrnKrnure am! Color.
Plants with white blossoms have a
larger proportion of fragrant flowers
than any others. Next come red flow
ers, then yellow, and then blue. After
these may be reckoned, and in the saine
order, violet, green, orange and brown
flowers. Spring flowers contain the
greatest proportion of white flowers,
and, therefore, are those most generally
fragrant, while the reds and yellows
belong to summer.
Ilnisin* Afford Sflmnlnn.
Raisins are specially valuable in cases
where sustained physical exercise is nec
essary, affording both nourishment and
stimulus. A bunch of raisins eaten
when fatigued often serve the same
purpose as a glass of wine. Figs and
dates are both valuable in certain con
ditions, but should be thoroughly
washed and looked over before eating.
Green figs an excellent food.
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THCTRSDAY, SKJPTKMBER 10 1903.
MODEL POULTRY HOUSE.
It l« TliorotiKlil y Well llallf nnil It
Cool lu Summer anil Comfort
able In Winter.
A poultry house over 400 feet long
has been built by W. J. Kirwin, of Mid
dlesex county, Mass., who keeps several
hundred head of Barred Plymouth
Hocks. The house, which faces the
south, is 12 feet wide, seven feet high
In front and four feet in the rear, with
a shed roof that slopes one way. It Is
thoroughly well built and has an extra
protection during cold nights of a mus-
I ® ® •» * Wa
I O o gj#
I f I
EASTERN POULTRY HOUSE*,
lln curtain, which is let down over the
roosts. The front is composed very
largely of glass, there being three large
sash five feet high to each pen.
In the accompanying illustration, a
shows the drop boards, d d d the roosts,
c the nests, b the nest door, and e the
floor, which is raised one foot above the
outside surface, and is composed of
loam and straw. The hens enter the
nests from the back and find a darkened
place in which to lay. The floor space
is entirely clear, which gives tLem a
large amount of room for scratching
and exercise. The windows are kept
open much of the time In winter, but
are always closed at night and during
stormy weather.—Farm and Home.
PROFIT IN CAPONIZING.
A Simple Operation ami Some Hrunoni
Wliy It I'iij-n the Farmer to
Perform It.
The chief reason for capcnizing cock
erels is to get a larger profit out of them.
Good capons generally sell for a higher
price per pound than other poultry.
They also weigh more, and are marketed
at a time when the flock is bringing lit
tle return. A flock of capons are quiet,
do not crow and are easily taken care of.
The best breeds to caponize are the
medium-sized varieties, such as Ply
mouth Rocks, Wyandots, Rhode Island
lteds, etc. The Asiatics do not give as
satisfactory results unless kept until
they reach maturity, when they are so
large as to be beyond the reafh of private
families. It does not pay to caponize
smaller breeds, for they do not produce
dressed fowls of the highest quality. Ca
pons are usually marketed at from
six to 12 months of age, and the market
for them opens soon after the holidays.
The best time to caponize is when the
cockerels are three to four months old.
At this age the operation can be per
formed with less danger than w'hen the
birds are older and larger. A bright,
sunny day must be chosen for the op
eration and the birds must have been
fasted for at least 24 hours previous. A
special set of instruments are neces
sary for this purpose, and the work re
quires skill and care. One may easily
acquire the skill by practicing on a few
dead birds. —Orange Judd Farmer.
Fertilize™ on Farmn.
That the fertilizer trade has grown
to enormous proportions is shown by
the figures given for the year 1899.
In that year the total expenditure for
fertilizers in the United States was
$54,783,757, or about $lO per farm.
This was about 1.2 per cent, of the
value of all farm products. The out
lay for fertilizers increased 42 per
cent, in the decade 1890 to 1900. Sugar
farms spent an average of S2BO for
fertilizers. For some other classes of
farms the figures were: Nurseries,
SG9; florists' establishments, ssl; veg
etable farms, S3B; tobacco farms, $27;
fruit farms, $22; rice farms, sl3; cof
fee, cotton and dairy farms, $11; hay
farms, stl; stock farms, $5.
Iteniarknble Machine.
The potato planter of to-day -would
make the farmer of a generation ago
sit up and rub his eyes. It requires that
the potatoes be supplied, but will do
all the rest on its own initiative. It
picks the potato up and looks it over—
or seems to—cuts it into halves, quar
ters or any desired number of parts,
separates the eyes and removes the seed
ends. It plants whole potatoes or parts
thereof, as desired, as near tegether or
as far apart as the judgment of the farm
er on the driving part suggests. Hav
ing dropped the seed it covers it, fertil
izes it, tucks it in like a child put to
bed and paces off the next row with
mathematical accuracy. —■ Philadelphia
Press.
The South'* Cotton Crop.
The world's dependence upon the
product of American cotton fields is
graphically shown in the exports rec
ords of the fiscal year just closed. In
spite of the phenomenally high prices
for our splendid southern staple, ex
ports of raw cotton, $316,000,000, showed
an increase of close to $28,000,000
over the preceding year. The value
of cotton exported constituted more
| than 40 per cent, of the entire exports
1 of domestic products, and was greater
by a round million dollars than the
combined value of ail cereals and
flour. Every effort should be made to
maintain our supremacy in the
world's cotton market.— Orange Judd
Farmer K
Job nltli Honey In tl.
"I've worked at almost all those old gags,"
1 complained the niau with the night- '
ninrith eye, "and'you '-an take my word for
| it there's not lung to 'em.
"I've tried blowing holTs in Swiss cheese, !
: lowering highballs, knitting jtitik tights tor ;
•ausage meat, taming wilu flower*, mend
• ■ ri(r had breaks, making oyster bed.-, and a
bundled others,
j "What. I'm looking for is something new; |
something that ha- a little of the long green
i connected w itli it."
I "Then why don't you putin an app'ica- ;
tion lor the position of I'nited Stalest ens- :
I ury seamstress?" suggested his toolibti i
i (riend.
"I'nited States government seamstress?"
U'-. Sewing silk tlireacs in dollar bill*,
jrou know."—N. V. Sun.
The J. l'.'n Auree.
.Staunton, Ark., Aug. 3Ut.—News come# 1
from Dull, Searcy Co., tins .state, that Mr. j
T. I'. Hccves, a Justice ot use I'eace at tnat 1
place, nas written a letter recommending!
Uuuu'n Kidney Pills in whicii he say.-.:
"1 t.iink Dodd » Kidney Pills can't be beat I
for Kidney Trouble, and 1 wisli them tvery j
•uccert. I
The local J. P. Mr. E. 15. Cox agrees with j
his blot net Ju.-tice oil this puint lor lie -a>r-: |
"1 had a bad case ot Kidney Trouble and |
was not able to do a days work without
great distress. I bought six boxes of Dodd's
Kidney Pills and alter 1 had used three
buxis 1 was all right. 1 am a- well as ever,
and 1 cannot praise Dodd's Kidney I'ills too
s highly.
j "1 have given the other three boxes to
tome friends of mine who had found out
what it was that bad cured me so satisfac
torily and quickly and they all speak highly
of Dodd's Kidney Pills."
No one disputes this unanimous verdict.
In illscli Society.
Mrs. Pusher I met Mr. Bigfish yesterday.
Mrs. Ihgpilc—Which one?
"The one who divorced your husband's di
vorced sister."
"O, yes, 1 know who you mean."—Chelsea
Gazette.
The Itlltle null the ICuiplre State
Eiprena.
A Bible student has recently been figur
ing on how long it would have taken the
people to make tae journey l'rom I'm to
Beersheba It' they could have had the
benefit in the olden times of the Empire
State Express. He ligured that the train
would have made this journey in less than
three hours, althmigh from a reading of the
account in the Bible one would think it was a
long journey, and it was for those days with
their limited means of transportation.
Ezekiel, the Chaldean had in his
mind's eye something like the Empire State
Express when he uttered the words recorded
in the first chapter of his prophecy. Look
this up and see if you do not agree with
the idea. —From the Troy Daily Times.
The New York Central is every day add
ing to the sum of human knowledge by its
marvelous passenger train service.
Vi»-to-Date Anceator*.
Mrs. Upperten—l suppose jou take great
pride in y our ancestry ?
Mrs. Newriche—Oh, yes; the genealogist
assured us that they were t"lie very latest
thing in ancestors. —London Tit-Bits.
Biff r>oo~l*ouit<l Steel lln nffe OflTer.
If you can use the best big 500-pound steel
range made in the world, and are willing to
have it placed in your own home on three
months' free trial, just cut this notice out
and send to Scars, Roebuck <fc Cc., Chicago,
and you will receive free by return mail a
big picture of the steel range and many
other cooking and heating stoves, you will
also receive the most wonderful SI.OO steel
range offer, an offer that places the best
steel range or heating stove in the home of
any family, an offer that no family in the
land, nomatter what theircircumstancesmay
be, or how small their income, need be with
out the best cooking or heating stove made.
„ "Ef some young men," said Uncle Ebtn,
was as industrious' addin' up figgers in
columns as dey is gettin' 'em In rows on
policy slips. 1 reckons de'd be savin'money."
—\\ ashington Star.
To Cnre « Cold In One Day.
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets All
druggists refund money if it fails to cure. 23c.
« . iell >': know, is the silent partner."
At t lie office or at home!"— Cincinnati Com
mercial-tribune.
The Chicago 3: North-Western is the only
double track railway between Chicago anil
the Missouri River.
One consolation about a mean man is. that
assuredly he has no friends. Washington
U<W Democrat.
Piso's Cure cannot be too highly spokc-i of
as a cough cure.—J. W. O'Brien, 3-2 Tnird
; Ave., K., Minneapolis, Minn., Jan.6,1900.
■\\olf—VVhat made you fall down in the
stoci. market? Lamb—Somebodv gave me a
straight tip—Boston Transcript.
The Overland Limited, solid train Chi
cago to the Coast daily. Chicago, Union
Pacific &• North-Western Line.
Games of love often result in a tie.—Chica
go Daily News.
If you want creamery prices do a« the
creameries do, use June Tint Butter Color.
Self-possession is nine points with the
lawyer.—Chicago Daily News.
Miss Willing—"There are some beauti
ful rides around here, they say." Colly—
i How about the walks?"—Siomerville Jour
nal.
Be sure you're wrong; then back up.—Chi
cago Daily News.
| If you think life is a dream you had better
wake up.—N. Y. Herald.
Never judge a man's heart by the size of his
J feet.— Chicago Daily News.
m
The place should not honor the man. but
the man the place,—Age-ilaus.
What a miserable old world this would be
j if retribution were dealt out to each of us
i according to our fool desires. —Chicago Daily
! News.
Hicks—"Did you ever wish thai you had a
j hundred thousand dollars?" Wicks- "No.
If I was going to wish, I'd wish that 1 had a
: million.' —Louisville Journal.
Mr. Reed—"Which do you prefer. Dick
ens or Thackeray?" MissOreen—"l really
, coudn't say; 1 never met either of the gen-
I tlemen." —Philadelphia Bnl let >n.
1 Though sorrow must come, where is the
| advantage in rushing to meet it? It wil l
i be time enough to grieve when it comes,
j meanwhile hope for better things.—St neca.
Muggins—"Men live faster than women.'*
j Buggins—"That's right. My wife am. l
were the same age when we married. I'm
j 45 now and she has only turned ;10.*'—Piiila
| delphia Record.
Personal Reasons: "Hello, sii: kept in
; after school again. What for?" Johnnie —
j "Because Johnnie Williams had a light."
I "Don't talk nonsense. With whom dad he
have a light%' Johnnie—"With me."—Town
and Country.
j Gesler (weather forecaster) —"I'd like to
j know whether to take an umbrella or not."
j Mrs. <l.—"That's a good one! You nay it is
goiiijf to be fair weather." (Jesier "Oh,
tiiat s different. That's my oflicial opinion.'
—Boston Transcript.
She (reading a scientific work) —"Isn't it
wonderful. Charley, dear, that the sun is
supposed to be millions of miles away?"
Charley dear .(suffering from the heat)—
"Millions of miles, darling? Good thing for
«U of 114 Limt it isn't any nearer, Punch.
CATARRH DESTROYS THE KIDNEYS
Was Miserable—Gould Not Stand Up or Walk—
Pe-ru-na Cured.
Many Persons Have
{ Catarrh and Don't
t f Know It.
> vwvwwvvvw>vvv
llr. James M. Powell, <533 ;
Truost street, Kansas City, ! /
Md., Vice Grand of I. O. | c
<». F., of Cherryville, Ivan., | C
writes: 1
"About four years ago I /
suffered with a severe ca- (
tarrh oft he bladder, which S
caused continued irritation
and pain. / was miserable }
and could not stand up or t
walk for any length of {
time without extreme )
weariness and pain. I he- )
gan taking Peruna and it j
greatly relieved me, and in )
eleven weeks I was com- )
pletely cured and felt like |
a new man."—James At. 4
Powell. )
Hundreds of Dollars Spent ,
in Vain.
Mr. Cyrus Her sli no an, <?
Sheridan, Ind., writes: I
" Two years ago 1 was a
sick man. Catarrh had sot- )
tied in the pelvic organs, )
making life a burden and <j
giving me little hope of ,
recovery. I spent hundreds
of dollars in medicine which did mo no
good. I was persuaded by a friend to
try Peruna. 1 took it two wicks with
out, much improvement, but 1 kept on
with it and soon began to get well and
strong very fast. Within two months
I was cured, and have been well ever
since. I am a strong advocate of
Peruna." —C. Hershinan.
Peruna cures catarrh of the kidneys,
liver and other pelvic organs, simply
because it cures catarrh wherever lo
MIGHTY MEAN TRICK.
One \V»y of Scoring a Wife's lOitrava-
Kit nee Wilhunl Raising u
Family Disturbance.
He drew a letter from his pocket, gloneed
at it and hastily put it back; and there was
something in the way he did it that attracted
his wife's attention. He meant that it
thould, says the Chicago Post.
"I wonder," she said to herself, "what's
in that letter? He certainly was mightily
disconcerted when he took it from his
pocket."
Later he changed his coal for his smok
ing jacket and left the coat conveniently
lit :r her.
The temptation was too great to be re
sisted, and when he was out of the room she
slyly ab.-lracted tiie letter from his pocket,
a» he had meant that she should do.
Her curiosity was satisfied, li was the bill
for her latest gown, with comments on ex
travagance written across it. She wanted
to answer them, but she could not without
betray ing what she had.dene. She was angry,
but she dared not show it. When he re
turned she had to sit there and smile as
pleasantly ass-he had before he left ti.e room.
i-ucii a mean man!
Christian Flirting:.
"The present-day behavior ct young peo
ple is a continual source of regret to aged
travelers. "We used to flirt when I was
young. I don't say we didn't." said an
old lady, a Sunday or two ago, who was
traveling in a suburban train to hear tier
favorite clergyman preach. "1 did it my
self, but " with full consciousness of by
gone attractions —"I flirted in a Christian
manner, not as girls do now. .Spectator.
'lne man who marries for money cer
tainly earns it. —Chicago Journal.
SUFFERED FOR FIFTEEN YEARS
Completely Restored to Health.
Mrs. P. Brunzel, wife of P. Brunzel,
stock dealer, residenceßlll Grand Ave.,
Everett, Wash., says:"For fifteen
years 1 suffered with „
terrible pain in my kL ®|hS
back. I experimented Ra VJa?
with doctors and medi- **
cities but got little if
any relief I actually
believe the aching in
my back and through Dw,' ''A
the groin became a., » A
worse. Id id not know
what it was to enjoy a » i ,\
night's rest and arose jfSr.j' ' v A
in the morning feel- 112
ing tired and xinre- >i i i>l
freshed. My suffer- pvV
ing sometimes was •» Jij
simply indescribable.
Finally, I saw Doan's Kitlne.y Pills ad
vertised and got a box. After a few
doses 1 told my husband that 1 was
feeling much better and that the.pills
were doing me good. When I finished
that box I felt like a different woman.
I didn't stop at that, though. I con
tinued the treatment until I had taken
five boxes. There was no recurrence
until a week ago, when I began to feel
miserable again. I bought another
box and three days' treatment restored
me to health. Doan's Kidney Pills act
very effectively, very promptly, relieve
the aching pains and all other annoy
ing difficulties. 1 have recommended
them to many people and will do so
when opportunities present them
selves."
A Free Trial of this great kidney
medicine which- cured Mrs. Brunzel
will be mailed to any part of the United
States on application. Address Foster-
Milburn Co.. Buffalo, N. Y. For sale
by all druggists, price 50 cents per box.
TEXAS, OKLAH<SSVIA,
INSSAN TF.RRSTORY
AND BACK
fiM Final Limit October 6th
VIA
MISSOUR3, KANSAS & TEXAS R'Y
Ask Nearest Ticket Agent
Or Write G, W. SMITH, N. P. A.,
316 Marquette Bklg., Chicago, 111.
P| | fi^KESlS^g^l
une t uilitiiiß, New York
D A "V"CT S%| "IT O 4.5-i)age book fhri:,
■ M I Ca H v r hlk lies i refereneen.
VIZZaiiKAXiD & CO., Uux M., W unhiiiKtoi>. V. C.
| ' JAMES M. POWELL.
| cnted. N'mf'' r ?r c -** > rriic entnrr!) rem
edy has :is ye". '•• .ii devi.->ed. Insist
upon having i'eiuna. There are i»o
medicines tlmt can be substituted.
If you do not derive prompt and satis
factory re.vul t s from the use of Peruna,
write at once, to Dr. Hartman, giving l a.
full statement of your case and he wil i
be pleased to grive you bis valuable ad
vice prat is.
Address Dr. Hart-man, President of
The Hart man Sanitarium, Columbus, O.
fa wjE
PLEASANT
THE NEXT MORNING I FEEL BRIGHT AND NEW
AND MV COMPLEXION IS BETTER.
My doctor naye it acts gently on the stomach, liver
and kidney* and in a pleasant iniativo. Thin d«nk In
inudufr.m herbs, ana is pro:>r.rcd for uso as uutiiy an
tea. ItIA called Tea" or
LANE'S FAM SLY MEDICINE
All druggists or by in ail Sa cts. and f>oct«. Buy it to
day. liuut s Family .ilcdfclnn moves the
IMIWPIN cue I. da> . J' order to he healthy tkiais
necessary, Addrebc, liox JO, L'J Ray, N. Y.
W. L, DOUGLAS
S 3.SB& S 3 SHOESS®
You can save fron $3 to £5 yearly by
wearing\V. X.. Eouylaa $3.50 or $3 shoes.
They equal t'loso
that have boon cost- r?
ing you from §I.OO ip
all other makes',
j Sold by retail shoe
prise on bottom,
that »> (, :■- JL
onaCuit proves thcro is M ■&$&&£& /Bk.
vaiiio in Donibs si. , AflgSS
Corona is tlie hu-h t n-'''
graile I'at.l.i ath."r laade.
Our £4 Gilt htigc!. i >ic (an nut be equal ted at ant; price.
Shoes by mai*, *jr> cents extra. Illustrated
Catalog free. W. L. DOl tiLAS, Brockton, Mass.
f^IFEPWI
if 3 TO WO mE N I
■™ A Largs Trial Package of J
.1 LV/SPCC!ALTV^^^^^^^^^^s
Internal cleanliness Is the key *
to woman's health and vigor. *
Inflammation, Soreness, Pelvic
Catarrh cannot cxiet with it.
8 I'axtine uk< U a* it vaginal tlotich# la n
revelation in combined clcuiiNing and
healing power. It kills ail disease gerius.
In local treatment of female ills it is Invaluable.
Heals Inflammation and cures all discharges. ,
Never fails to cure Nasal Catarrh.
Cures offensive perspiration of arm pits and feet.
Cures Sore Throat, Sore Mouth and Sore Eyes.
An 2» tooth powder nothing equal* it.
Removes Tartar, Hardens the Qums and whitens
the teeth, makes a bad breath sweet and agreeable.
Thousand* ortettemlroni women prove
that it i» t he greatest cure for Leucorrhoea
I ever discovered. We have yet to hear of
the fii'«it cane it failed to cure*
To prove all this we will mail a large trial package
with book of instructions absolutely free. This
Is not a tiny sample, but enough to convince anyone.
At druggists or sent postpaid by us, *»©
ets. large box. Satisfaction guaranteed.
The K. fax ton Co., Dept. 2 C Koiton,M»«s.
if you suffer from Epilepsy Pits, Falling
n*ss, St. Vitus*s Dance, or Vertigo, have chil
dren, relatives, friends or neighbors that do so,
or know people that are afflicted, my New
Treatment will immediately relieve and PER
MANENTLY CURE them, and nil you are
asked to do is to send for my FHKE TREAT*
MKNT and try it. It. has t'URKT) thousands
where everything else failed. Will be sent in
plain package absolutely free, express prepaid.
My Illustrated Hook, "Epilepsy Explained,"
FREE by mail. Please give name, AGE and
full address. All correspondence professionally
confidential.
W. H. MAY, M. D.,
94 Piue Street. New York City.
I PAY SPOT CASH FOR
sxr LAND WARRANTS
issued to
Hit AN Iv IJ. KMiKH »Mr;h Bine'-. Denver. <'«
WATCHBS -18-Jeweled Elgin, 20-vear ease. 90J&
trend tor catalogue. G. I!. (»oomvis Co., Tracy, Min i_
A. N K.-C 19tf 5
■ ••• 111
7