OPERATION AVOIDED EXPERIENCE Of MISS MERKLEY Bhe Was Told That an Operation Waa Inevitable. How She Escaped It. When a physician tells a woman s.n- , fering with serious feminine trouble ' that an «>«•••••.<« ion is www ry, thevery . thought of the kniie and tin- operating | tahiw st:-;!;--- to L~? heart, u~;i j our liospit a! sa re full of women coming for just such op<.. -lions. ' J w'® H, cJ \ IX r I If 1 j SWiff Aiargrot/??en[foy | There are cases where an operation is the only resource, but when one con siders the great number of cases of menacing female tronliles cure 1 by Lvdia 10. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound after physicians have advised operations, no woman should submit to one without first trying the Vegetable Coir pound and writing Mrs. I'inkham, Lynn, Mass., for advice, which is free. Miss Margret Merkley, cf 275 Third Street, Milwaukee, Wis., writes: Dtnr Mrs. Pitikham; "T«r, of itrength, ert'"rr." jier- ousn ehc itir.g pain: through the pelvic organs, bearing down pa;ag KM sramps compelled me to seek medical advice. Th<i doctor, after making an cximiiimtiou, said I had a female trouble and ulceration and advised an opera tion. To tliis i strongly objected and decided to try Lvdia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound. Tlio ulceration quickly healod, all the bad symptoms disappeared and 1 tim once more strong, vigorous aud well." Female troubles are steadily on the increase among' women. If the month ly periods are very painful, or too fre quent and excessive—if you have pain or swelling low down in the left side, bearing-down pains, don't neglect your self: try Lvdia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. ALL. FOND OF PEANUTS. Delicacy Relished by All Animals- Even the Hippopotamus Devours Them with Pleasure. "The peanut is a delicacy relished by all creatures," said a New York animal lover. "I have come to this conclusion after having offered it to every animal In the Central Park zoo, and having it refused by none. "Oh, I know it Isn't, allowed; but I'm not one of those individuals who offer animals indiscriminate numbers of hard-boiled eggs, frankfurters, cheese sandwiches and cigar stumps. It's for that sort of nuisance the rule about feeding is made. A single peanut can't ruin the digestion of a camel —or of any other creature, for that matter, j and I never visit the zoo without a bag or two of those legumes to dis tribute. "Yes, the camel is fond of them— j very; and so are the peacocks. The | hippopotamus obligingly opens his mouth to let me toss one in, but the mouth is so large and the peanut so j small that I doubt if he can quite de cide whether he likes it or not. "The kangaroo pokes his funny,| horse-like head out to me, munches the peanut with relish, and then begs for more. The elephant, deer, ostrich, and j even the lion, are all lovers of the pea- i nut." Fundamental Difference. Teach —"In what why do the j Quakers speak differently from us, ' Johnny?" Johnny "They don't j swear." DOCTOR'S SHIFT. Now Gets Along Without It. A physician says: "Until last fal I used to eat meat for my breakfast anil suffered with indigestion unti: i the meat had passed from the stom ach. "Last fall I began the use of Grape- Nuts for breakfast and very sooi ! found I could do without meat, foi | my body got all the nourishment i necessary from the Grape-Nuts, and | since then I have not had any indi gestion and am feeling better and have increased in weight. "Since finding the benefit I derived from Grape-Nuts I have prescribed the food for all of my patients suffer ing from indigestion or over-feeding and also for those recovering from disease where I want a food easy to take and certain to digest and which will not overtax the stomach. "I always find the results I look for when I prescribe Grape-Nuts. For ethical reasons please omit my name." Name given by mail by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. The reason for the wonderful amount of nutriment, and the easy di gestion of Grape-Nuts is not hard to And. In the first place, the starchy part of the wheat and barley goes through various processes of cooking, to per fectly change the starch into Dextrose or Post Sugar, in which state it is ready to be easily absorbed by the blood. The parts in the wheat and barley which Nature can make use of for rebuilding brain and nerve cen ters are retained in this remarkable food, and thus the human body is eupplled with the powerful strength producers so easily noticed after one has eaten Qrape-Nuts each day for a ■week or 10 days. "There's a reason." Get the little book, "The Road to .Wellville," in pkgs. ,| fill How to Sscare a Beautiful Neck. Lemon a Good Whitener —Massage Will Reduce Double Chin and Superfluous Flesh. The skin of the throat and the gen eral condition of the neck registers ! accurately just how much or how lit- I tie care a wnniau is giving herself. rflp^ W V :I V/ • 4 \<j [ 1;-# ] | A FIRM, WHITE NECK. It also points the first finger to the flight of time. Even a small double i chin gives the impression of maturity to a young face, while a very thin ! neck with prominent cords makes an otherwise healthy person look deli cate and haggard. YOUNG GIRLS NEED A CALENDAR BY MARGARET E. SANG3TER. T wonder if you ever think, dear 1 firl, what story the calendar is tell- ! ing for you. Perhaps you have a tiny pocket calendar tucked into your ' jmrse that you may consult it if you i liappen, as careless people sometimes ! <o, to forget the date; not that I fancy j you belong to that set or that you do j uot keep tally of the days of the t month. A good plan for us all is to remem- | ter just where we are, so that we j vever have to pause and ask somebody to tell us whether it is the Sth or j the Sth, the 10th or the 12th day of j the month. You may keep a calendar on your dressing bureau, tearing off a leaf every day, or it may hang sus- \ pended from a nail by a ribbon or a chain, or be fastened on the wall. | Whatever sort of calendar you have ! it is simply a device to remind you [ that Time is flying and that it is well j to make the most of him and of his : opportunities before he is gone out ! of sight. Just one day at a time is yours and mine, and according as we j use or abuse the single day, we shall get the good that is waiting for us j and earn the reward that comes to faithful workers. I am very fond of all sorts and j conditions of girls, but there is one ; variety with which I have no patience; j the girl who dawdles, who sits around j talking about what she means to do and never accomplishing anything, is | not the girl who commends herself to | me. She is not only idle herself, but she sets a bad example to every one 1 else and commits the mistake of throw- j ing away the most valuable asset she j will ever have. A day when one is I young and strong and light-hearted as j girls are or should be, is worth ten times as much as a day will be when the same girls are older and know more about care and trouble. Is your story of the calendar a story of work well-done and of play undertaken with all your heart? Whatever you do, never dawdle. • * • * • There is something else to think about in the story of the calendar. Tt Isn't the thins yon do, dear. It's the thing you leave undone. That Rives you a bit of a heartache At the setting of the sun. The tender word forgotten; The letter you did not write; The flower you did not send, dear. Are your haunting ghosts at night The stone you might have lifted Out of a brother's way; The bit of heartsome counsel You were hurried too much to say; The loving touch of the hand, dear, And the gentle, winning tone, That you had no time or thought for With troubles enough of your own. Those little acts of kindness So easily out of mind, Those chances to he angels Which we poor mortals find, They come In night and silence. Each siid, reproachful wraith, When hope i» faint and flagging And a chill has fallen on faith. For life is all too short, dear, And sorrow Is all too great. To suffer our slow compassion That tarries until too late; And it isn't the things you <lo, dear. It's the thing you leave undone That gives you a bit of a heartache At the setting of the sun. I do not want the girls I care for togo about with the weight of the World on their shoulders, or would I CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, JULY 19, 1906. Our throats are much abused. Prob ably for this reason so few pretty ones 1 arc seen at the opera or at the theater, ! where the English fashion of wear ing slightly decollete gowns is steadi ly gaining in favor. Not only are the throats of nine i out of ten women not well propor- ] tioued aud anything but "Columnae" i as the artist describes a beautiful neck. But most of them are not even white. The skin has fairly been tanned by high collars which keep in the perspiration anil often 'the dyed ! material ol' the dress collar leaves an ' almost eradicable stain. Dyed furs are another cause of unsightly throats. These furs unless very carefully pre- j pared now and then cause a slight skin eruption, particularly if they aro allowed too near the skin, and this is not properly cared for afterward. In this case the pores of the neck become coar.se, the skin looks red and pim ples appear. Peroxide of hydrogen ap plied on a piece of absorbent cotton will serve both as an antiseptic and a bleach and help to bring the skin hack to its former whit ness. For evcry-day purposes lemon j lico will i do. Hub i piece cf lemon over the' skin, wipe oti with a bit of lemon and i repeat until the cloth is no longer j discolored. Pure alcohol can be used j to good advantage daily as a cleanser for the neck, but it has not the j bleaching qualities of the lemon. Be fore using any one of these three j methods, however, plain hot water and soap must not be forgotten. So much for the skin; now for the; contour of the throat. When the neck i is too short it inclines to fat at a \ very early age. The double chin api pears and the roll of flesh all around j the edge of the collar. Massage will j recttice the flesh. ' like to see them always bothering; ! about the impression they are making ! i or the number of things they were j | accomplishing from Monday until Sat- ' i unlay. It is quite possible to make I such a fuss over one's duty that one ! tires all one's friends and succeeds in frightening the average person out ] of one's neighborhood. But our sins of omission foot up a ] I long account against us. Let us look , candidly at any day we choose. -Per-! ! haps for convenience, we will take to- ; I day. When we came downstairs this | morning, had we a pleasant word for every one; did we bring our smiles | ■ to the breakfast table; did we goto ■ | the door with daddy or pin a flower | in his button-hole; did we watch for j j a chance to help mother and were we ! j nice and kind in our manner to the ! ; maid in the kitchen? Some of the 1 | maids in our kitchens are themselves ! ; young girls, and they are very far j I away from their own homes. Thoy ! have mothers and fathers and friends j , and neighbors across the sea, and ■ i sometimes they are home-sick and a ; little cross because they have not had j : a letter, or it may be, because they j j cannot very easily write their own i letters. A girl like you, Dorothy or | Katherlne, a girl who is just a daugh- I | ,er at home may do ever so many love | )y things to make life easier for the | maid whose work is In the kitchen, j over the tubs, or over the range. Although you seldom think of it, the story of the calendar is writing 1 itself on your face. Every day that ! j you live is either making you beau- ! ! tiful or making you plain. If you I j never pout or frown or screw your ! | forehead into a tangle or draw down ; ! the corners of your mouth into a sullen droop, you will gain a sweet, sunny expression that will make peo ple glad when they look at you. I can think of two or three young people whose faces seem to glow as if from an inward light. If every day you have pure thoughts and never Indulge in one that is unwholesome, your face will have in it something as fresh and innocent as the soul behind it. Not so much beautiful features as a beau tiful soul can make a beautiful face. To be kind in your judgments, inter ested In your friends, simple and sin cere in all you do, every day of your life will give you an attractiveness that cannot be described. The story of the calendar for you, too, must be a story of health or ill ness. God gives us plenty of bright sunshine and clear bracing air, but some of us seem to prefer to shut our selves up in close, stuffy rooms and to live In the dark. If we do that every day we may expect to be pale and sallow, to have headaches and backaches and aches too numerous to mention. On the porch of the house where I live there is a crimson ram bler rose. You never saw anything grow so fast as this rose. It climbs higher and higher, flings out its wreaths of bloom and is a perfect Joy. Girls should be like this, growing, reaching upward, filling their little world with bloom and fragrance, and living day by day in the air and in the sun. You are in God's world, my dears, see that day by day you mak« the most of it. (Copyright, ISO 6, by Joseph B. Bowles.) LAXATIVE I' V''"'There arc two classes of remedies: those of known qwnl- » I . .rajr \ W Ity and which cro permanently beneficial In effect, acting | ! » ~\)lwb gently, In harmony with nature, when nature needs assist- gj : A ance ' and another class, composed of preparations of g i> y- unknown, uncertain and inferior character, acting tempo- | y VSfe' rarily, but injuriously, as a result of forcing the natural fi j '"T / if'- "•■'ls functions unnecessarily. One of tlio most exceptional of 1 J: • - the remedies of known quality and excellence ia the ever B pleasant Syrup of Figs, manufactured by the California 8 F'ff Syrup Co., which represents the active principles of I [ V: '..V: •* U : "•#) plants, known to act most beneficially, in a pleasant syrup, I &'■'- ■ : i ■;'■>' in which the wholesome Californian blue figs are used to'con- £ [•'/ } 1 i /?.%/.■ /'/tribute their rich, yet delicate, fruity flavor. It is the remedy I i--"V'' 8 &^^^K ; vS?y.'.' r K' °* a ' l remedies to sweeten and refresh and cleanse the systora | '"i M/f///•'' : pently and naturally, and to assist one in overcoming consti tP //</ " ".-/j pation and the many ills resulting therefrom. Its activo princi- 1 * *" H "v " I*' C3 and quality arc known to physicians generally, and the gfl P 3 WsJ'*.'i : M rrnu'iiy has therefore met with their approval, as well as with -88 j2 \)l. I/ the favor of many millions of well informed persons who know §| 1" 8 w .-v /' /. of their own personal knowledge and from actual experience 8 J HI " y that, it is a most excellent laxative remedy. Wo do not claim that 81 3" ■; 3 Wf'-:/ -; -'■// J :$? it will cure all manner of ills, but recommend it for what it really SB g/VW| ?/*& represents, a laxativo remedy of known quality and excellence, l§ '&/■' containing nothing of an objectionable or injurious character. a' • 8 There are two classes of purchasers: those who are informed 08 w&pvM&W as t0 *he quality of what they buy and the reasons for the excellence e ; j | of articles of exceptional merit, and who do not lack courage togo Fr| a: elsewhere when a dealer oilers an imitation of any well known jag .w. article; but, unfortunately, there are some people who do not know, £1 #;? and who allow themselves to be imposed upon. They cannot expect |a avlts beneficial effects if ti ,r y do not get the genuine remefly. || xs¥ To the credit of the druggiats of the United States be it said gj B that nearly all of them value their reputation for professional |i £Jm\, integrity and the good will of their customers too highly to offer iuiitatiou3 of the Genuine— Syrup of Figs II 1 manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co., and in order to §jf II- buy the genuine article and to get its beneficial effects, one has el IB only to note, when purchasing, the full name of the Company— || y g California Fig Syrup Co.—plainly printed on the front of every RS package. Price, 50c. per bottle. One size only. /ly II If whsLjP.-jmFs- Mate your boy's food tasty —Mother —for it has to do some big things. It has to make flesh, blood, bone and muscle and supply boundless Energy. Remember, the boy of today is the man of tomorrow. Don't injure him physically and mentally with indigestible meats, pastries, rich puddings, etc., that on his nervous •11 there Is In wheat—and hell be your heart's Joy —strong, healthy, bright, smart and quick at his studies. You won't have to coax him to eat It either, Mother, for its delicious rich 11avor when eaten with cream and sugar is Just what he craves most for. Egg-O-See keeps the blood cool and is the ideal summer food. Give him some tomorrow—"there won't be no leavin's." Prepared under conditions of scrupulous cleanliness. Every grocer in the country sells EGG-O-SEE—the whole wheat cereal. If your grocer has not received his supply, mail us 10 cents and his name (15 cents west of the Rocky Mountains) and wo will send you A a package of EGG-O-SEE and a copy of the book, "-back to nature." FREE "-back to nature" book Our 32-page book, "-back to nature," outlines a plan of right living, Includ- Ing menus for 7 days and recipes for preparing the necessary dishes, based on a whole wheat diet, with suggestions for bathing, eating and exercise, illustrated from life, exceedingly simple and attractive. By following the precepts, abounding and vigorous health is sure to result. TiT^iiOlrwlH Published to sell at 25 cents a copy, this handsomely Illustrated book will y*fSPS be mailed FREE to anyone who writes, as long as this edition lasts. Address EGG-O-SEE CEREAL COMPANY No. 10 Firot Street Quiacy, Illinois J ALLEN'S FQOTEASE nJ^TI^T A Certain Curt for Tired, Hot, Aching Fe#t. WUvJb*!*— DO NOT ACCEPT A SUBSTITUTE. on ever? box. Lci(o;,M.vl SICK HEADACHE r — ; —I Positively cured by these I,ittle puis * vM i\ I LJ\O Tlicjr 11150 rcUcT ° Dis " MKjH _ tress Irom Dyspepsia, In- Mgsl ITTLE digestion and Too Hearty spa Q\tr* n Eating. A perfect rcm yj| I V LI) edy lor Dizziness, Nausea, gpj PILLS Drowsiness, Bad Taste iij 1 mF •In tho Moutli, Coated , Tongue, Fain In the Side, regulato the Bowels. Purely Vegetablo. SMALL FILL. SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE, PADTHKI Genuine Must Bear KBitt Fac-Simila Signature .1 REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. WHOOPING COUGH DUNHAM'* SPECIFIC Shortens and Lightens the I>i*<>a»e. Warranted to Cure. Used in the Cleveland Orphan Asylum*. Kndoi-ped by Physician*. Kohl l»y IruKiciHtß or mailed. ft o* bottle fiOo., 13 oz. bottle I§l,. Lickes Drug Co., Mfrs., CLEVELAND, O. SONG! BIG HIT!! WHEN GRIM DEATH CAME AT DAWN 1 Descriptive Of Han Frunelaco disaster. Bend 25c Vox 0. Bucyrus,Ohio. Food S Products malt« picnic* mora enjoyable by alfing I the preparations easier. Easier to carry; easier to serve; and just right for eating as they come from the can. Libby s cooks have first pick of the best meats obtainable—and they know how to cook them, as well as pack them. If you're not going to a picnic soon you can make one tomorrow at your own table by serving some sliced Luncheon Loaf. It is a revelation in tho blending of good meat and good spices. B°°Uet free. "How to Mako Good Things to Eat" Write Libby, McNeill B Libby, Chicago For Preserving, Purifying and Beautifying tiie Skin, Scalp, Hair, and Hands. Cmicura Soap combine*.del lent* medicinal and emoI» Uent properties derived from Cutk'iira, the grMtßkin Cure, with the purest of cleansing ingredients. and th» mom refreshing of flower odors. Depots: London,*! Charterhouse So.: Paris. 6 Rue do la Paix: Boston. 139 Colnmbua A ve. Totter Drug Chem. Corp., Sole Prop*. Mailed Free, "How to Preservo, Puriiy, a.nil Beautify the Skin, Scalp, Hair, and liauds." SndianTerritoryLanc! All the news of the new state. All the land laws and rules in THE NEW STATE TRIBUNE, a twelve page weekly—with more than three times the circulation of any othkr paper in the Territory, for |i.oo per year. MUSKOGEE, INDIAN TV. D ATE&IT& S2i&££isn IT ■ P|l | "I'olnU on |>n»lo^" 9 §H B HBtiv 6 Ksl lib 1 iRIKMI ISM. MILO B. SJTKVKNB &CO.. DP? ftl QJ A fitfi 9UO UthSU.WMhlnftoa, D. C. T~ EL I Will® Brauehet at Chicago, Cleveland, Betrelt* 60 Bus* Wirier Wheat Per Acre That's the yield of Salzor's Red Cross Hybrid Winter Wheat. Send 2c in stamps for free sample of haute,as also catalogue of Winter Wheats, Rye, ltarley, Clovers, Timothy, Grannes, Bulbs, TreeJ, etc. for full planting BALZEB NKKI) CO.. Box W.l.LaCrowe, Witt. I MISCELLANEOUS ELEGTROTYPESI U In great variety for pale at the lowest prices by V ft A. S.kIiLHUJG NKItfIi'APbUCOs,IS W. Adaia«Bt.«i'hleaKM fi "»™ c eye d .r'i t .e[ Thompson's Eye Water A. N. K.—C (1006—28) 2134. 7
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers