Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, March 29, 1906, Page 7, Image 7

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    HAD HEART PAINS
A Critical Case of Rheumatism Cured
By Dr. Williams' Pink Pills.
Wliilo Mr. W. 8. Geisel, of No. 125
East. Contca street, Moberly, Jin., was
steadily working at Ins trade in u foun
dry at that place, ho became tbo victim
cf an attack of rheumatism, and his ex
perience is that of thousands who are
compelled to work in similar surround
ings. lie describes his situation as fol
lows :
" I had boon at work for a long time
Jn a foundry where I was exposed to
dampness. First my feet began to '-flit
mid to swell, then my knees and my
fchoulder joints began to bo affected in
tbo same way. Finally I could not walk
without great dilliculty and suffering
aud had to stop work altogether. My
appctitowas feeble and I grew very pale
and weak. 1 began to have pains about
my heart and it fluttered n great deal.
I became greatly alarmed about my con
dition. My mother knew about the vir
tues of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, as tlioy
bad given her back her health when she
was nearly wasting to death, and when
she found that they were good for rheu
matism too, sho began to give thein to
mo about a month after I was attacked.
That was in the early part of March,
J!>o3, and by June they had driven away
the pains and swelling and had restored
my appetite and color. Then I felt
strong enough to take up a line of out
door work and now, in October, I re
gard myself as entirely well and I am
about togo into a foundry again at St.
I»uis."
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills also cure
other diseases springing from iin.
pure blood or disordered nerves, such
ns sciatica, locomotor ataxia, partial
paralysis and all forms of weakness in
male or female. They may be had at
nil druggists or directly from the Dr.
Williams Medicine Company, Schenec
tady, N. Y.
Didn't Have the Opportunity.
Duzen had just returned from a busi
yie.-s trip to a little town, and lie was
telling about the hotel there, which he
described as the very worst lie ever knew
To cap his troubles there, he awoke in
the night and found the gas escaping.
"Hut then," said lie, "you couldn't blame
the gas. 1 would have escaped myself if
there had been another hotel in the
jiiace."- Stray Stories.
Popular Line to the East.
The splendid passenger service of the
Nickel l'late Road, the care and atten
tion shown passengers have made it a
favorite with the inexperienced as well as
those accustomed to travel. Every feature
necessary to the comfort and convenience
<>f the passengers, especially ladies travel
ing alone or accompanied by children, is
provided. Colored Porters in Uniform are
in attendance to serve the wants of all
and to see that cars are kept scrupulous- j
iy clean. Pullman Sleepers on all trains,
and an excellent Dining service, serving
Individual Club meals or a la Carte at
moderate cost. When traveling East pur
chase your tickets via the Nickel Plate
Road. All trains depart from the La
Salle St. Station, Chicago. For full in- j
formation regarding tickets, rates, routes,
•sleeping car reservations, etc., call on or
address .T. V. Calahan, General Agent,
No. 11l Adams St., Chicago, 111.
Bothered by Lawyers.
Widow —If .lohn had only made a will
there wouldn't be all this difficulty about
the property.
Visitor —Do the lawyers bother you?
"Hother me? They almost worry mo
to death. 1 declare I sometimes wish j
that John hadn't died."—'l'it-Ilits.
The Best Possible Health
conies to those who perfect the digestion ni:d
keep the blood pure by the use of Garfield
Tea, the mild laxative,'made of herbs. Ham
pies free. Garfield Tea Co., Brooklyn, N. Y.
«.
The effect of liberal education is get
ting to be generally diffused. Almost
anywhere, now, and not merely in the
cast, as formerly, you will hear boys
calling their father pater and their
mother the mater.—Puck.
Sore Throat, Croup and Tonsilitis will
iromptly yield to an application of Dr.
iayvr's Penetrating Oil on a cloth around ,
the neck. 25c a bottle.
We have seen men jostle and cheer for
two hours at a football game and then r
home and complain that the sound of
the children running across the floor make*
them nervous.
Good housekeepers use the best. That's 1
why they buy Red Cross Hall Hlue. At
leatling grocers, 5 cents.
The man who says he will have satisfac- i
tion at any cost usually pays a big price j
lor it.
THE BEST COUGH CURE J
Many a lonesome and expensive J
trip to Florida, California or the 2 ;
4 Adirondacks lias beea saved by m ;
w the use of •
I Kemp's Balsam |
i the best cough cure. If this great i
(# remedy will not cure the cough, no #
& medicine will, and then all hope 9 j
rests in a change of climate—but £ 1
J try Kemp's Balsam first. J
i Sold by all dealers at 25c. and 50c. \
CATARRH
la all its stages. Jffc- C °<o,j7
Ely's Cream
cleanse?, soothes ami heals yT s m
the diseased membrane. fl
It 1 I drives M
•way a cold la the head M Nf*
quickly.
< n .iiu II .• 1111 Is placed Into tilt nostrils, spreads
over the membrane an<l is absorbed. Iteiief in iia
nv.'inte nail acure follows. Ills not drying—does
not produce iivMlng. I !tr<„'t; Si/.e, cents uL Drug
glsu or by malt; Trial s.ue, 10 cents.
i LY lIHOTIIKItS, 6<i Warren Street, New York
A GUARANTEED CURB FOB
EPELEPTBC FITS
Will refund your money if imffured.
Write for term* uud testimonials,
JAS. T. CHUNKY, M. IJ. 112
tlalvu Nshussl iUuk •niUiuf, • tOI.LMBLJ, OUiG
OIIR SMART SOCIETY
DO NOT THINK RICHES AND VIR
TUES CANNOT HARMONIZE.
A Minority of Our Wealthy Citizens
Included in the Smart Set—A Re
cent Popular Novel Depicts the
Smart Set as Cruel and Corrupt—
The Picture Even If Overdrawn
Points a Warning—America Must
Heed the Lesson or Suffer the Fate
of Greece and Rome.
BY MARGARET E. SANGSTER.
Those of us who are outside the
smart set and who have no wish or ex
pectation ever to be within it, have of
course only a vague idea of the life it
leads. What is called the smart set
includes only a few among the great
mass of Americans, most of us being
working people, to whom each day
brings a rotK.ne of duties and who are
perfectly satisfied if we make both
ends meet, and have a little over at '
the end of the year.
It would not be fair to say of the
smart set that it is composed of the
idle rich. They, too. are in the minor- I
ity. A great many wealthy men and j
women are anything but idle. They
toil as strenuously as the poorest, they
do a great deal of good, often without
ostentation, and they are not even on
the edge of the set about whom we
are thinking.
A woman may wear sables and dia
monds, goto Europe every year, live
in great elegance and entertain royally |
and still be as sweet and simple and ;
gentle as her neighbor who manages a
small income with economy and makes .
bright her little home.
It is not what we have, but what we
are that makes true womanhood lively
and charming. A man may adminis
ter millions and be as good and true
and honorable as the humblest clerk
in his employment. It is a dangerous
doctrine which teaches that the poor
are better than the rich, because of
their poverty, or the rich worse than
the poor because of their wealth. Au
tomobiles are not inventions of the
devil, nor are sumptuous houses dens
of iniquity.
We who have no acquaintance with
the smart set except as the society co,
umn in the newspapers report its go
ings to and fro, its weddings, divorces
and remarriages, have recently been
afforded a peep at it in the pages of
a popular novel, said to be wiitten j
by one who has had special opportuni
ties for knowing whereof she speaks, j
The glimpse of the smart set given us
in this romance is distinctly depress
ing. Gathering about a central figure,
that of a beautiful orphan girl, are
men and women who seem to have
about as much of the milk of human
kindness in itteir veins as wolves in a
pack. The women gamble, the men do
worse. As for any ethical standard,
If the"House of Mirth" is to be trust
ed, It does not exist in the smart set.
Men and women are openly or furtive
ly unfaithful to their marriage vows;
a married man does not hesitate to
take a contemptible advantage of the
helplessness of a girl who has been his
wife's intimate friend. Men sneer at
virtue, think the worst of each other,
and of the women who are their kin
dred. Chivalry is apparently a lost
art. Honor is a faiat mirage on a re
mote horizon. A girl incurs financial
obligations from a man, and .hence
forth becomes more and more entan
gled in a web of duplicity, and in
meshes which fatally ensnare her. Her
intentions are not evil, but her very
Inability to comprehend that any
values beyond those that are financial
are known in the world, complicates
the situation for her. Married women
write compromising letters to men
whom they meet socially, who are sup
posed to be friends of their husbands,
and in one case the man who is more
nearly a gentleman than any other in
the tiook, simply tears such letters in
two and tosses them into the waste
basket. There is hardly, in the whole
story, a character who could decently
pa3S muster among ordinary men and
women, the two who are supposed (•
b3 patterns of goodness being singu
larly destitute of humor and common
sense.
If the smart set be like this, so
heartless, so corrupt, so cruel, our con
clusion is that its career must be short.
There is far too much essential reality
in America to endure very long that
which is wholly false and meretricious.
* • *
We are fain to believe, however,
that the picture 13 overdrawn. There
must be behind the silken portieres
ami velvet hangings of these exquisite
homes some who have kept unharmed
a fairer Ideal. All the young women
who go to French dressmakers and
wear gowns that cost a fortune are not
like poor Lily Bart, who from baby
hood had been taught that the only
Uie worth living was a life of display,
and that it were better to die and be
done with it than to he out of the
fashion. All the men who understand
the ups and downs of finance and
whose names are spells to conjure
"'lth ill the market, are not sordid and
mean and rapacious. Our Hebrew
friends have a right to protest, against
their representative in these pages that
profess to depict with truth the Suc
re -ful climbing of one of thf»ir race to
tin perch which seemed to him a tilt nu
gout for hi ambition. Notwithstand
ing the melancholy muddle of it all.
then* must linger shreds of human
Itli'dtu -■ and commonplace goodness in
th« smart set.
i t the picture points a moral and
Indicates a warning. It l.i like a dan
ger blgni.l on th>» road. We. in Ameri
ca, are striding forward at a tretaen
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, MARCH .?9, IQC6.
dons pare. We are becoming nomadic;
not contented with permanence ami
stability, with homes that gather to
themselves the sweetness of fond asso
ciations and the glory of old traditions
—we are becoming accustomed to a
migratory life.
A man need not be a multi-million
aire to own three or four home.4 and
spend only a fraction of the year In
any of them. Families, not of the
smart set are too prone to disintegrate.
The wife and daughters are not unwill
ing to let the ocean roll for months
together between themselves, and the
hard-working father, who is busy ac
cumulating more millions at home.
Young men too early allowed control
of large sums grow irresponsible and
wasteful and, alas! end by filling the
grave of the drunkard or the suicide.
I All history combines to prove that, 100
1 much luxury breeds corruption, tempts
j individuals to dishonesty, and menaces
] the very continuance of a dominant
: people. That which happened in the
dim past to Greece and Rome may hap
| pen to America in the twentieth cen-
I tury of the Christian era, if we shut our
eyes to lessons that are given In the
! glimpses we have of the smart set.
I (Copyright, 1906, by Joseph B. Bow :ea )
CHILDREN'S PARTIES.
Do Not Make the Mistake of Having
Too Many Guests and Have Only
Simple Refreshments.
You ask how to give a children's party
: successfully. In the first place do not
make the mistake of asking too many.
I Fourteen is a good number, or ten, for
! little people need a great deal of indi
j vidual attention. If possible have one
j or two friends to assist in the entertain
j ment. Such games as "Going to Jerusa
i !em," "Drop the handkerchief," "Here
i we go round the Mulberry bush," "Lon
don Bridge" and "Pussy wants a corner,"
are always favorites with the children
and never seem to lose their novelty.
Most of the games are more interest
ing if played to music.
Provide a low table with the red
chairs, such as are used in kindergartens
and infant class Sunday school rooms.
Red candles, with a bowl of scarlet
flowers, red candles in the cake in rose
holders make the table very pretty.
j Small red paper holders come to contain
bonbons, which should be sugar pepper
mints for the wee guests.
Place cards may be made by pasting
dainty childish pictures on red card
board, using black, gold or white ink
for lettering the names and date.
Invitations for children's parties may
J be written on the quaintly decorated pa*
i per that comes especially for the pur
i pose, or small sized note paper may be
I used. Refreshments should be simple;
j plain sandwiches, cocoa, animal crack
[ ers, bread sticks. Some of the Swiss
; milk chocolates are delicious as bon
bons. Serve ice cream in ramekins and
there should be small cups and spoons.
Bibs for each one are appreciated by
the mothers, while paper napkins
should also be provided as the children
love the gay colors, especially the Jap
anese ones that come folded in shape of
animals.—Madame Merrl.
j A BUTTONHOLE BORDER.
No Decorative Needlework Is More
Favored Now and Always Comes
In Well on Flannels.
This border is suitable to be workel
on the edges of fiianel petticoats, in- i
fants' flannel head-squares, or any flan- j
nel article requiring a simple yet
A NEAT BORDER,
strong Hnish. The outline should be
run out twice with soft cotton, then
worked over in buttonhole with flannel
embroidery silk or soft mercerised cot
ton, of which there are many excellent
makes to be purchased.
NEEDLEWORK NOTES.
The marabout fans are beautiful,
some having sticks of real tortoise
shell, others mother of pearl.
The batistes and dimities offered fo'
12 and IB cents a yard are simply too
attractive to pass. They come in a va
riety of designs and colorings.
Unbleached linen will be very popu
lar for runabout frocks and the blousej
are usually tucked to yoke depth and
embroidered sparingly in some small
design.
An original bracelet consists of a sea
serpent, the head and fins of massiva
gold, the scales of gold and silver,
each one set with a different precious
stone, emerald, opal, sapphire ame
thyst, sardonyx, etc. This bracelet, coil j
around the arm from the shoulder tj
the elbow and with the present dec
olette styles and small shoulder straps,
after the fashion of Greece and the em
pire, has an extremely fascinating ef
fect.
A nouveaute from Paris are ruffles |
made of leather, which are sewed I
around the bottom of the skirt to pro- !
tect them from the dust and dirt of the j
btreets. The ruffles are made of leathe'
of moderate weight dyed to match the j
color of the gown. They are fulled on
to a leather band which is attached by j
means of buttons and button-holes t - i I
the bottom of the gown. In this way
these ruffles need only to be worn in
the street and can bo taken off and
brush"'! and cleaned. They protect the !
••!<wn better than one can Imagine,
well u'i giving the required stiffness tc
hold out a sUlrt well around the bot
torn. -Chicago News.
To Keep Young.
And to net back to keeping youn<
tin- \fy best of common sense is foi •
imtvy woniM.i to look uer bes>t eierj
untune of her life.
HISTORIC BITS.
It Is thought that the fame of whist ;
was first played in the time of King !
Henry VIII. of England.
The first steamer to sail from Liver*
pool for New York was the Royal Wil- |
Ham, 107 tons, commanded by G.
Swainson, 11. N.; she sailed July 5,
1838, and was 1!) days on the trip. The
first transatlantic screw steamer wa-i
the Masaschusetts, taken out in 1847 j
by Capt. K. B. Forbes.
In the middle ages swings were hung |
by an Ingenious pulley device. The
rope was passed over a grooved wheel
that was fastened to the ceiling by »
bracket. The one who was swinging
was not only pushed from behind bv
one of his fellows, but was also helpel
from the front by striking with h's
foot the outstretched foot of anothe
comrade. This sport was a favorite
pastime of pages.
The first steamer to make a voyage
across the Western ocean was the Sa
vannah of 350 tons and a length of 100
feet. She sailed from Savannah Mae
! 24, 1819, and arrived at Liverpool June
20. Her steam was purely auxiliary,
for when the wind was lair or the sen
high the paddle wheels were unsliippel
and stowed on dteck. Her voyage wat
1 continued to Russia, and on the return
from St. Petersburg .she reached New
I York direct in 26 days.
An archaeologist poin's out that the
hat band in the modern man's hat caa
be traced to a fillet which in ancient
times held in shape a simple piece of
cloth. Sometimes this fillet was tied
In a bow behind, the tails of which sur
vive in the Scotch cap, the sailor hat
and the bishop's miter. A little bow in
side in the lining of the hat is a sur
| vival of a lacing which kept the lining
In shape, or possibly it dates back to a
time when a hat was made by putting
a string through holes in a flat piece
of leather and by drawing it together
for a crown.
CHURCH CELEBRITIES.
Joseph Nix, the Wesleyan reformer,
took 3,845 signatures to the pledge in
a nine days' gospel temperance meet
ing recently held in Bradford, Eng
land.
Rev. Silvester Ilorne has a billiard
room at Whitefield tabernacle, London,
says the Ram's Horn, and he says it
has been the best recruiting ground
for his church.
Rev. Mr. Rowell of Porter, I. T.,
wields the sledge in his blacksmith
shop on week days and attends to his
ministerial duties on Sundays. He r2-
cently married Anna Gardner and Sam
Acre in his blacksmith shop, not even
stopping long enough to wash his face.
Father Boulet, a venerable Oregon
priest, blessed with an abundance of
this world's goods, has decided to dis
pose of some of his wealth by building
churches. He is now building a church
at Blaine, in that state, and has offered
the Catholics of Lyndon to erect one
there, provided only that they secure
the site.
Father F. Ramsey, after 40 years o!
labor in the wilds of Asbantiland, Af
rica, is spending a brief vacation in tiie
United States. One of his experiences
was when he was captured by the
Ashantis, who, while they allowed him
self and family freedom during the
day, bound him in irons every night.
Mr. Ramsey still carries his shackles
about with him on his travels.
Rev. Robert Hurley is the only Con
gregational minister who is a member
of that famous London club, the Athe
naeum, and he is also a F. R. S. It i'-s j
curious to reflect that whereas he has I
made a world-wide reputation as a
mathematician, he showed but little
aptitude for mathematics as a boy, and
was 14 before he really knew his mul
tiplication table.
!|
GRAND TO LIVE
And the Last Laugh Is Always the
Best.
"Six months ago I would have
laughed at the idea that there could
be anything better for a table bever
age than coffee," writes an Ohio wom
an —"now I laugh to know there is."
"Since childhood I drank coffee as
freely as any other member of the
family. The result was a puny, sick
ly girl, and as I grew into woman
hood I did not gain in health, but was
afflicted with heart trouble, a weak
and disordered stomach, wrecked
nerves and a general breaking down,
till last winter at the age of 38 I
seemed to be on the verge of con
sumption. My friends greeted me
with 'How bad you look! What a ter
rible color!' and this was- not very
comforting.
"The doctors and patent medicines
did me absolutely no good. I was
thoroughly discouraged.
"Then I gave up coffee and com
menced Postum Food Coffee. At first
I didn't like it, but after a few trials j
and following the directions exactly,
it was grand. It was refreshing and
satisfying! Tn a couple of weeks I no
ticed a great change. I became
stronger, my brain grew clearer, I was
not troubled with forgetfulnegs as In
coffee times, my power of endurance
was more than doubled. The heart j
trouble and indigestion disappeared
and my nerves became steady and
strong.
"I began to take an interest In
things about, me. Housework and
home-making became a pleasure. My
friends base marveled nt the change
and when they Inquire what brought
It about, I answer 'Postum Food Cof
fee, and nothing else in the world.' " j
Name given by Postum Co., Battle
Creek. Mich.
There's a reason. Read the little I
book. "The Road to Wellvllle," In j
pkgn. I
A TRAINED NURSE
After Years of Experience, Advises Women in
Regard to liheir Health.
Mrs. Martha Polilman
of 55 Chester Avenue,
Newark, N. J., who is a
graduate Nurse from the
Blocltley Training School,
at Philadelphia, ami for
six years Chief Clinic
Nurse at the Philadelphia
Hospital, writes the letter
printed below. {She has
the advantage of personal
experience, besides her
professional education,
and what she has to say
may be absolutely relied
upon.
Many other women are
afliicted as she was. They
can regain health in the
same way. It is prudent
to heed such advice from
such a source.
Mrs. Pohlman writes:
" I am firmly persuaded,
after eight yearsof experience
with Lydia E. Pinkliam's
Vegetable Compound, tliat it
is the safest and best medicine
for any suffering woman to
use."
" Immediately after my
marriage I found that my
health began to fail me. I be
came weak and pale, with
severe bearing-down pains,
fearful backaches and fre
fluent dizzy spells. The doctors
prescribed for me, yet I did
not improve. I would bloat
after eating, and frequently
become nauseated. I had
pains down through my limbs so I could
hardly walk. It was as bad a case of female
trouble as I have ever known. Lydia E.
Pinkliam's Vegetable Compound, however,
cured me within four months. Since that
time I have had occasion to recommend it to
a number of patients suffering from all
forms of female difficulties, and I find that
while it is considered unprofessional to rec
ommend a patent medicine, I can honestly
recommend Lydia E. Pinkliam's Vegetable
Compound, for I have found that it cures
female ills, where all other medicine fails. It
is a grand medicine for sick women."
Money cannot buy such testimony as
this—merit alone can produce such re
sults, and the ablest specialists now
agree that Lydia E. Pinkliam's Vege
table Compound is the most univer
sally successful remedy for all female
diseases known to medicine.
When women are troubled with ir
regular, suppressed or painful periods,
weakness, displacement or ulceration
of the female organs, that bearing
down feeling, inflammation, backache,
bloating (or flatulence), general debili
ty, indigestion, and nervous prostra
tion. or are beset with such symptoms
as dizziness, faintness, lassitude, excita
Lydla E. Plnkham's Vegetable Compound Succeeds Where Cthers Faff.
112
The Double Action Oldsmobile (Model L), has a two stroke cycle £
motor, 20-24 h. p., shaft driven like a chainless bicycle, 102 inch wheel base, J
weighs 2000 pounds, detachable rear seat. There is an explosion every stroke. j
It sounds and acts like a four cylinder car without the four cylinder price. [
Actually gains speed going up a hill and has tremendous power on muddy and |
sandy roads. Full demonstration at our nearest agency.
Four Cylinder Palace Touring Car (Model S), 26-28 h. p. Price, $2250.00. ?
Oldsmobile Standard Runabout (Model 8),7h. p. Price, $650.00.
THE AUTO-SHOP CO M 731 Vincent Ave,N. E. OLDS MOTOR WORKS,
CLEVELAND, OHIO. LANSING, MICH. * I
INFORMATION COUPON (Mail to u>)
Kindly send me information regarding Model I am interested. I
Name - 112
City State I
ANTI-GRIPINE
AUiirnineur v Js ls guaranteed to cure
ANSrarlNt cofe GRIP, BAD COLD, HEADACHE AND NEURALGIA.
HAS NO EQUAL FOR HEADACHE ZXtT.VIVMVXWStZ
" " —■ '-i ivrr I, /■'. IK. Mic liter. JIM. Manulaoturcr,Af/jWiio/ie/d, JH<t,
"When you buy
WET ,£>_
WEATHER „ n J&4 <
CLOTHING
you want '/ -0 r "-w7-jV
complete & x/tJf""! i
protection / jtp- 1
service? fib
These and mam' ' // u' J I'y
other good points . '4
are combined in c~J5P¥* I
TOWER'S /[
FI3H BRAND 112 • / \
OILED CLOTHING/ I
"You can't afford / / )
to buy any other // i J
tOWMS 1 ll
*» t
• jTOwUO BOSTON V «A. r AS- 4| J
TQwt v^rv?'r^ 0 °
New Prize Puzzle' Pcsrade"
lup for yoiiiiftr ntiil old. Mny •-..!%•«• it on<*e tltrn fall
I'ritu W. At MK HIK to,,' I 111 Uirwuuiil A*r., 7*llllo.
DON'T BUY stock sk.
r. Hows I ieh, liuv a I»MIC ill N. v .„J.. ai:! f<-i t>. t.
yourMlf. Ml bulk lalln yon how. Fine. KCNf.
U2J U4l Jani'-i Homl bl<k'. b.n Fr.incuco. Cat.
LEGAL ADVICE
i.N t hii > t A 1 r. t .\ >\ lil lihAl .I Vvi( l« > UiaUtUUi.CtiioAHU
A.N. K. C til 18
PATENTS
k l llvkliMAJ \ tO„ llt»* U, Wttfali'tftutt, l> t
bility, irritability, nervousness, sleep
lessness, melancholy, "all-pone " and
"want-to-be-left-alone"' feelings, blues
and hopelessness, they should reiaem
ber there is one tried and true remedy.
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable (lom
ponnd at once removes such troubles.
No other female medicine in the
world has received such widespread
and unqualified endorsement.
The needless suffering of women froju
diseases peculiar to their sex is terrible
to see. The money which they pay to
doctors who do not help them is an
enormous waste. The pain is cured'
and the money is saved by Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.
It is well for women who arc ill to
write Mrs. Pinkham. at Lynn, Mass.
The present Mrs. Pinkham is the
daughter-in-law of Lydia E. Pinkham,
her assistant for many years before her
decease, and for twenty-five years
since her advice has been* freely given
to sick women. In her great experi
ence, which covers many years, she
lias probably had to deal*with dozens
o* cases just like yours. Her advice
is strictly confidential.
CuresL&meß&ck I
LinimcaitOl
Prica2jfJomoo
———■ n b— B
SOUTHERN FARM LANDS'
whore diversified crops, grnssctu grainn, frw <%
ind vtgotAblM grow, wbere tin rearetiue< i- -r
lunltlaa for stockmen and dair)men, qa) :•«•
had in Bo itheiii Ka • ij feri lorj . •
prices and »"i oaaj terms. A little InvrKtnifnt
Hill a lotiu v\!i\ , The ttiiPfei climate is" »
Irrigation in'i (i» .i. I'ni/i, ..!,s mi iii
' i i • M. V. KM'II A ICIIM, ) | |
Industrial Airent* WAHHINtJTON I •
/<7S MOTHER GRA Y'S
(112 SWEET PO WKffRS
yf 112 FCR CHiIDREN,
I«» n • IIi» aH u ?. •
'lVunblVKi 'I 4" Inli'M
MOtliitt lilt %t . | Worm*. Tlu \ tin uk n<» < <>:•!«
1 ",.' >;i , «• I.i ' ■ lit J I
Nc* Vurk« u> (A. t>. OLWfJTtD, Lu Ro*. N V*
WHOOPING COUGH
IK Nil Ml H M H II Ii -
Wm1Inui • lt' * uif*. • t ll illi. "It • » Ml
112 it I
Jiiitfu. If «.I . . I.n . AOv., I . »•'
Litres Drug Co., Mfri., LLtVfcLAND, Q.
7