Dyspepsia of Women Caused by Female Disorders and Cured by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound A great many women suffer with a ■form of indigestion or dyspepsia which does not seem toyield to ordinary treat ment. While the symptoms seem to be similar to those of ordinary indiges tion, yet the medicines universally pre scribed do not seem to restore the pa tient's normal condition. 112 Airs. M. Wr igh t Mrs. Plnkham claims that there is a kind of dyspepsia that is caused by a derangement of the female organism, snd which, while it causes a disturb ance similar to ordinary indigestion, cannot be relieved without a medicine which not only acts as a stomach tonic, but has a peculiar tonic effect ou the fe male organism. As proof of this theory we call at tention to the case of Mrs. Maggie Wright, Brooklyn, N. Y., who was completely cured by Lydia E. Pink ham" i Vegetable Compound alter every thing else had failed. She mites: "Fcrtwo year; 1 suffered with Ij-spepsio which so degenerated the entire system that 1 was unable to attend to my daily duties. I felt weak and nervous, and nothing that I ate tasted good and it caused a disturbance inniy •tomacn. I tried different dyspepsia cures, but nothing seemed to help me. 1 was ad vised to give Lydia E. Pinkhnm's Vegetable Compound a trial, anil was happily surprised to find that it aeted like a flue tonic, and in a few days I began to eifjoy and properly digest my food. My recovery was rapid, and in five weeks I was a well woman. I have rec ommended it to many suffering women." No other medicine in the world has received such widespread and unquali fied endorsement or has such a record of cures of female troubles, as has Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Few things are impracticable in themselves; and it is for want of ap plication, rather than of means, that men fail of success. —Rochefoucauld. Marion Harland. The celebrated authoress, so highly esteemed by the women of America, says on pages 103 and 445 of her book, "Eve's Daughters; or, Common Sense for Maid, Wife and Mother": "For the aching back—should it be Blow in recovering its normal strength —an Allcock's Plaster is an excellent comforter, combining the sensation of the sustained pressure of a strong warm hand with certain tonic quali ties developed in the wearing. It should be kept over the seat of un easiness for several days—in ob stinate cases, for perhaps a fortnight." "For pain in the back wear an All cock's Plaster constantly, renewing as it wears off. This is an invaluable support when the weight on the small of the back becomes heavy and the aching incessant." Parisian Meat Supply. The last year for which complete statistics concerning the meat sup ply of Paris have been published is 1903. From the reports of that year It appears that 267,027 cattle, 274,390 calves and 2,047,770 sheep were slaughtered at the city abattoirs and produced 156,007,850 kilograms (or 227,616,485 pounds) of meat, of which 123,712,180 kilograms (259,795,578 pounds) were consumed in Paris, and 32,292,650 kilograms exported. Some of the choicest of French beef goes to England, where the fillets and other prime cuts are in demand for clubs, hotels, and the best class of restau rants. During the same year there were killed 282,508 hogs, which yield ed 27,657,350 kilograms (58,080,435 pounds of pork, and 29,370 horses, which furnished 7,305,650 kilograms (or 15,341,865 pounds) of meat, all of Which was consumed in Paris. Saves Farm Machinery pi quickly and leaves a fine black finish. «J-o-4 is entirely different from any other preparation. It attacks the rust chemieall\, dissolves it, fairly eats it up, and renders Iron impervious to further rusting. Very thin, runs into the craeks where the brush can not go. Sold by all dealers. Look for the label as shown above. If not at vour dealers, write us for a can. CROBBY & CO., DETROIT, MICH. 6-3-4 it equally v a lunik /or ttmtt. BARN FOR SMALL DAIRY FARM. One Which Will Accommodate Ten to Twelve Cows. The farm barn here shown is In tended to accommodate ten or twelve dairy cows together with the horses necessary for a moderate sized farm. In size it is 44 feet long by 34 feet J-T ' ||P|j| V r- « P . «• t • • ■/ ; ■ I j] i.i iii "i 111 ijj' Barn and Ground Plan. wide. The main floor is 12 feet wide and the height of posts 18 feet, per mitting loads of hay to be driven in. A basement about six feet in depth can bo utilized to store the manure and to provide shelter for hogs. The frame can bT made of eifiht ir.ch •'•viire hem lock timbers, the floor of three inch planks. This style of building should be suitable for many parts where the number of live stock is limited. THE CALF. Most Rigid Selection Should Be Made in Adding to Herd. The most rigid selection, according to dairy standards, should be made among the calves as they come into profit, those being retained which will raise the average performance of the herd. When it is necessary to in troduce a new sire, he should be of the same type and personal qual ities already determined ui>on as the ideal for the herd. Constant records should be kept of the work of every individual animal, in order that rea sonable treatment may insure the greatest profit, and this is only pos sible when the owner is personally familiar with the characteristics and performance of every cow. Personal comfort, cleanliness, light, air, exercise and water, are as neces sary as feed. Frequent examinations should be made by a competent in spector to make sure of the health of the herd, and any animals found suffering from infectious or conta gious diseases should be immediately removed to hospital stalls for proper ] care. With such reasonable treat ment a pure bred herd will prove itself the best investment that the | intelligent farmer can make, and will be a source of constant satisfaction and pride. TO HOLD A GATE OPEN. Brace Which Can Be Swung Out of the Way When Not in Use. The illustration shows a very handy ; method which I invented to hold a swing gate open at any width, J writes a corre- j I . spondent of Or- j ange Judd Farm- J i ; [ er. Most gates ! [ ;' are hung so they i . ' swing upward a J ,! little in opening, ! i > to clear snow, 1 ; grass, etc. They i /) swing shut «112 // \ their own accord, : // \ hence something ' // ' to hold the gate j // ( open at any place j // while driving ; // \ through or let- j ■■ tln S out stock is a necessity. To meet this need I devised the brace shown herewith. It is simply a piece of wood Ix 2 inches and a little longer than half the height of the gate. One end is fastened by a spike passed through it and driven into the edge of the vertical board at the end of the gate, or it may be put on with a hinge. The dotted lines show its position when not in use, it being swung upward and snapped beneath a spring nailed to the top of the gate. Dairy Facts. Don't overdo the milking tube act. The hand-separator business has s'teadily increased during the past ten years. It is impossible for a cow to be two opposite things, a dairy cow of the highest type and a beef animal of the greatest possible value. The control of moisture in butter is not possible without the control of churning temperatures. Ice and ther mometers are necessary for the mak ing of butter under proper conditions. The New South Wales Farmer and Settler tells of a New Zealand farmer who holds the record as a milker. For a considerable time he and his wifr milked 72 cows night and morning, without keeping any hired help, their family consisting of one small child. We are told that the farmer and his wife were healthy and robust —which they need be —ana line specimens of jhumanity. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1906. A PUBLIC DUTY. : Moritpelier, 0., Man Feels Compelled to Tell Hie Experience. Joseph Wllgus, Montpeller, 0., says: | "I feel it my duty to tell others about i Doan's Kidney Pills. & -jfei Exposure and driv- W sOBi ing brought kidney trouble on me, and I /-tS/t suffered much from I Irregular passages of tho kidney secre | V\OSm|p tlons. Sometimes there was retention and at other times passages were too frequent, especially at night. There was pain and discoloration. Doan's Kidney Pills brought me relief from tho first, and soon infused new life. I give them my Indorsement." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Wouldn't Fit. 3omo visitors from the north at tended service at a colored church in Alabama and were much amused when the good old preacher referred to | John I.and John 11. as "John with one eye and John with two eyes!" But when he gave out a hymn be ginning "Purge Me with Hyssop," there was consternation in the choir and great fumbling around for a tune to fit the words. At last the leading chorister addressed the preacher: "Say, Brother Johnsing, won't you please try some odder yarb?"—Lip plncott's. There !* more Catarrh In this section of the country than ah other difteapes put together, and until the last few yearo WHS supposed to bo Incurable. For a great many years doctors pronounced it a local dl.icuse and prescribed local remedies, and by constantly falling to cure with lornl treatment, pronounced it Incurable. Bclen e hao proveu Catarrh to be a ccnstltutlonn! dlt eaao. and therefore requires constitutional treatment. Haifa Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F.J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, in the only Constitutional cure on tho market. It it takrn internally In doses from 10 dropo to a teaApoonful. It acts Jhtctly oa the blood aud mucous surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars for any cane It fails to cure. Bend for circulars and testimonials. Address: F. J. CHKNEY & CO., Tolcdc, Ohio. Bold by Druggists, 75c. Take Hall's Family rills for constipation. FISH IN NEW PLACES. Wild Ducks Found to Bear Fish Eggs Ready to Hatch. A correspondent from Saffi wrote in our June issue expressing his mysti fication as to how small fish come to be in inclosed waters. A naturalist suggests an explanation. He says: "If th' wild ducks, etc., of Morocco are sir ilar to those elsewhere there is no mystery. For some years there was open-mouthed wonder as to how perch, bream and crayfish could get into newly cut dams near the Mac quarie river in New South Wales. "In some cases the water had hardly settled after the rain had filled the dam than the fish were observed, and the farmers started a large theory of spontaneous production. "This obtained till a Sydney profes sor chanced to pick up a wild duck and found its breast feathers and webbed feet well dotted with fertile and almost hatched fish-ova, on which the 'spontaneous production' theory was promptly withdrawn." Cham bers' Journal. for Infanf XprnSH Ym # The Kind You Have Always Bought TH« CCNTAUR COMHNV. TT MURIIAY «YHBrr.NCWTOnK CITY. RHEUMATISM J|| CURED The Circulation Stimulated - **! and the Muscles and Joints j* lubricated by using SHli Sloe>.ivs MHyLiivimeivt iff "Sloans T .atise On The Free I STAND FIRM i "When you buy an Wr~ks OILED SUIT Mm/Ti OR SLICKER A/THX Frit \r demand //AMV'IAX A/'WYJ/IM\ easiest and ff / ' O'/i ir\ on 'y W AY to get • Ttii \ the best 'M.*& Sold everywhere Fruit acids -will not stain good* dyed witli PUTNAM FADELESS DYES, and the colors are bright and fast. All things come quickly to those who wait on themselves. Mm. Wlnalow'a Soothing Syrup. For children teething, foften* the gum*, lettuce* In A«miuftlion allays pain, cures wind colic. 2£cabottla. "Now, I am ready, how do I look, dear?" "You remind me of a Sioux In his war paint." "Oh, you nasty tiling, you—" "Don't cry, darling; I j only meant you were dressed to kill." j —Baltimore American. WIHE LAXATIVE « F * :jfX KNOWN QUALITY I There are two classes of remedies; those of known qnal- It ity and which are permanently beneficial in effect, acting l''\ W |B*j gently, in harmony with nature, when nature needs assist- i! ./ (jtfjm VinP ance; and another class, composed of preparations of / V/Mg Nf Mg&, unknown, uncertain and inferior character, acting tempo '.l. .A'.IJ&S / &'\ If rarily, but injuriously, as a result of forcing the natural 112 Kc functions unnecessarily. One of the most exceptional of rcme^e3 °f known quality and excellence is the ever ti pleasant Syrup of Figs, manufactured by the California | '' (jFTtJ. Fig Syrup Co., which represents the active principles of plants, known to act most beneflciallj', in a pleasant syrup, which the wholesome Californian blue figs are used to con ■'/ } f\-?i i:§i% their rich, yet delicate, fruity flavor. It is the remedy i/ *.'<? °* aII remedies to sweeten and refresh and cleanse the system 2f: etntly and naturally, and to assist ono in overcoming ccusti. li pation and the many ills resulting therefrom. Its active princi* I i&Jf/ V s *j, v plea and quality aro known to physicians generally, and the | ■ wSf' remedy has therefore met with their approval, as well as wiih »' i* ytitf/Sthe favor of many millions of well informed persons who know K ' ~'f\ ; % ytjii °* their own personal knowledge and from actual experience that it is a most excellent laxative remedy. We do not claim that •V/ lit '"'ffl'M'M 'twill cure all manner of ills, but recommend it for what it really I trS. '*s re resents, a laxative remedy of known quality and excellence. IK Mfs-Mf Mjg containing nothing of an objectionable or injurious character. k»V'*A-' v > There are two classes of purchasers; those who are informed ■ •/Trf r i : * • JJf-Mw 89 to the quality of what they buy and the reasons for the excellence »1 '• «tw °f articles of exceptional merit, and who do not lack courage togo elsewhere when a dealer offers an imitation of any well known article; but, unfortunately, there are some people who do not know, fv'•'t t and who allow themselves to be imposed upon. They cannot expect its beneficial effects if they do not get the genuine remedy. |l To the credit of the druggists of the United States be it said that nearly all of them value their reputation for professional { If &V integrity and the good will of their customers too highly to offer imitations of the j mMM'gmGenuine-Syrup of Figs W$L V manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co., and in order to 112 II • % Ik buy the genuine article and to get its beneficial effects, one has II /'V*' W's?i °nly to note, when purchasing, the full name of the Company— II .California Fig Syrup Co.—plainly printed on tho front of every Vk package. Price, 50c. per bottle. One size only. mm PUTNAM FADELESSDYES Color more goods brighter and faster colors than any other dye. One 10c package colors all fibers. They dye in cold water better than any other dye. You can 4m any garment without rippina apart. Write lor free booklet—How to Dye. Bleach and Mix Colors. MONROE DRUG CO., Unlortvlllo, M!*»tnanL 'I JOIN THE NAVY. Mechanics between the ages of 21 \ and 35 will find good positions open to thein, and for young men be- I tween 17 and 25. who possess no trade, there is every opportunity for advancement. A full outfit of clothing free and liberal pay to commence with. Call or writo U. S. NAVY RECRUITING STA TION, West 6th St.and Superior Ave.. CLEVELAND. 0., and U. S. ; NAVY RECRUITING STATION, P. O. Building, BUFFALO. N. Y. j K £>Tu c Jr« w uLS 112 Thompson's Eye Water I "~A7N. K.—E HURT, BRUISE OR SPRAIN 1 ST. JACOBS OIL THE OLD-MONK-CURE RELIEVES FROM PAIN Price 23c and 50c jl Success in the Gulf Coast Country Here is an example of what YOU could do. S3OO Realized from 5-8 Acre of Lettuce. Mr. W. R. Landrum, of Olmito, Texas, near Browns ville, planted five-eights of an acre in lettuce this Spring. He sold his crop for S3OO. A wonderful return from his was it not? But if you will write Mr. Landrum at Olmito he will confirm it. And if you write to me I will gladly send you other striking examples of success in that interesting country. Investigate the Gulf Coast Country; you will find that there are pood reasons for such results. One of them is the climate. The winter is so mild there that tender vegetables can be growr i placed on the market in early Spring when the price is highest. A • t arly Spring crop the land will raise a second crop and someti r " 1 in: J crop the same year. Even the inexperienced farmers have ;ethan £lo© an acre. Don't you think this is better than a one-crop country, where yont success depends on uncertain weather with irregular rainfall ? J\{otv the land is cheap and you can get it on easy terms. Twenty acres will cost you about SSOO. The cost of clearing it is about $ 5 an acre. The cost of water for irrigation varies. You may want an artesian well of your own; you may get water from some river; or you may get it from your neighbor. Bat the cost is not great, and those who have tried it have netted from the first crop a sum which has paid, all expenses and left a good surplus. Tl.Take a trip down there and see for yourself 111' »tSl\Kr IODIC that's the best way. Every first and third Tuesday ®ach month, we will sell round-trip tickets to UI UI /Mirerica. any point in the Gulf Coast Country and retanv * " I kf at the following rates: J 112 From Chicago, ... $25.00 • J / I From St. Loui«, • • • • • 20.00 V . J \ From Kansa* City, ... 20.00 Vjj //) From Peoria, ..... 2J.00 V r From St. Paul, .... 27.50 \ From Minneapolis, .... 27.50 >j tsEmmn** These tickets will be good 30 days and they \V *§ .will permit you to stop over at any point. Low 1 mhh rates for one way tickets on some days, also. Let me send you our books describing the wonderful crops produced in this marvel ous country. Don't delay, write me to-day. JNO. SEBASTIAN, Passenger Traffic Manager, ROCK ISLAND- FRISCO LINES, 700 La Salle St. Station, Chicago, 11l. t or 700 Frisco Bldff., St. Louis. Mir. 'High Grade Farming Lands) FOR SALE IN OSCEOLA COUNTY Cut over hardwood lands. 801 l a clay or gravel ly loam. Just put on the market in a well sett led country. Good roads, schools, railroads and telephones. Write for maps and literature. iH. W. MARSH, - Manistee, Mich.j pSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSESSSSS I Df? A °' this paper de nL/iULAJ siring to buy any —^thing advertised in ! its columns should insist upon having what they ask for, refusing all substi tutes or imitations. J 7
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers