MRS. LENORA BODENHAMER, Mrs. Lenora Bodenhamer, R. F. D. 1, Box 89, Kernersville C.; writes: “1 suffered with stomach trouble and indigestion for some time, and nothing that | ate agreed with me. 1 was very nervous and experienced a continual feeling of uneasiness and fear. 1 took Medicine from the doctor, but it did me no fa in one of your Peruna books a description of my symptoms. 1 er wrote to Dr. Hartman for advice. He said had catarrh of the stomach. 1 took Peruna and Manalin and followed his di- rections and can now say that 1 feel! as well as | ever did. “1 hope that all who are afflicted with the same symptoms will take Peruna, as it has certainly cured me." The above is only one of hundreds who have written similar letters to Dr. rart- man. Just one such case as this entitles Peruna to the candid consideration of ev ery one similarly afflicted. [f this be true of the testimony of one person what ought to be the testimony of hundreds, ves thou- sands, of honest, singere people? We have in our files a great many other testi monials, Farring And Feathoering. Tarring and feathering, it seems, is a European Invention. One of Richard Coeur-de-Lion’s ordinances for seamen was “that if any men were taken with theft or pickery, andi thereof convicted, he should have his head polled, and hot pitch poured upon his pate, and upon that the feathers of some pillow or cush- ion shaken aloft, that he might there. by be known for a thief, and at the next arrival of the ships to any land be put forth of the company to seek his adventures without all hope of return unto his fellows.” , A Government Lottery, does the United States Gov- ernment, which rigidity the laws against even to excluding foreign news; whic contain advertisements them. conduet lotteries disposal of public lands, of Why lotteries, as ibution the Rose. would be and indeed a allotment Per- yf auction would be of all. Anyway, is in any res; im stored prop distr chance yorget rt ~ 5 unicipality of New York un. at Ho How To Kill Surplus Cats, How to destroy surplus kittens or puppies in a painless way, without calling into use the old-fashioned method of a bag and a pail of water, ifs told in the annual report of London Institute for Lost and Stary- ing Cats. ows: ‘Take a dish cover, place it where it can pressed into the mold of the garden, or in default an old cushion, 82 that the bulges out all around and makes the cover a rtight, Piace the animals beneath and pour four ounces of pure chloroform én wadding. Push the wadding under the cover, hold the cover down for three minutes and then leave for an hour. before burial.’ EAGER TO WORK Health Regained by Right Food, be The average healthy man or wom- an is usually eager to be busy at some useful task or employment. But let dyspepsia or indigestion get hold of one, and all endeavor be- comes a burden, . “A year ago, after recovering from an operation,” writes a Mich. lady, “my stomach and nerves began to give me much trouble. “At times my appetite was vora- cious, but when indulged, indigestion followed. Other times I had no ap- petite whatever. The food | took did not nourish me and | grew weaker than ever. “1 lost interest In everything and wanted to be alone. 1 had always had good nerves, but now the merest trifle would upset me and bring on a violent headache. Walking across the rooin was an effort and preseribed exercise was out of the question. “1 had seen Grape-Nuts advertised, but did rot believe what 1 read, at the time, At last when it seemed as if I were literally starving, began to eat Grape-Nuts. “1 had not been able to work tor a year, but now after two months on Grape-Nuts I am eager to be at work again, My stomach gives me no trou- ble now, my nerves are steady ns ever, aad interest in life and ambi. tion have come back with the return to health.” “There's a Reason,” Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read "The Road to Wellville,” In pkgs. Ever read the above letter? A new one appears from time to time, They are genuine, true, and full of | human interest, i em. ————— ops S———— ———— nh RA rh P—— So —————— SUFFRAGETTES VETO VIOLENT AGITATION Members of Pennsy.vana Assoc ation Favor, Instead, Tactful Educa- tion to Further Cause, Success of the cause of the suf- LL fragettes lies in tactful educativa rather than violent demonstration, according to Mrs. Rudolph Blanken- burg, president of the Pennsylvania Woman Suffrage Association, deliver- ed at the fortieth annual association, which in the Y. M. C. A. buik ristown. “In writing to a clergyman, send him Bible ations in support of suffrage; in writing to business men, show them its economic and when enlisting the aid of teachers, show Its educational she cautioned in her response to the address of welcome made on behalf of the borough by Burgess Samuel Roberts. Addresses of welcome on behalf of the Montgomery Woman's Suffrage Association by Miss Ellen L. Thomas, and on be- half of the Norristown Women's Christian Temperance Union by Mrs, Sarah Simpson, were also delivered. Other responses were made by Mrs. Elizabeth B. Passmore and Mrs. Minora F. Phillips. Also Work For Man's Rights. “We are not working to secure woman's rights alone, but to pre- serve man's rights as well," declared Mrs. Passmore. Miss Thomas stated that the purpose of the movemen! is that “men and women should stand together in the State as they do in the home.” “Mrs. Simpson observed that “suffragettes do not identify themselves for enfranchisement as a means of popularity, but to work out faitufully and humbly a noble end.” Mrs. Olive Pond-Aimes encouraged the delegates by a contrast of the present with the former attitude of the W, C. T. U. toward the cause. said: “Time —— ——————————— was held at Nor. side, to mention the woman at a W, ast a shad- when of C. T. U. meeting was to ¢ over the proceedings Now that discussed at every W, C meeting with relish.” address of the day was livered by Mrs. Lucy Hobart State organizer, on “The Value Organization.” In answer to “Is there any relation women who go into world and the increase Miss Day said iy women vote there is less crime where they do no: posses the chise." The association rs asking on woman's didates for Congress of Sinnamehoning, Pa “I handed your let: and asked her to give on the subject. Al q hi was de- Day. of the The the tween the business than fran- sent let- xpresgion of opi v-iwWo <an~ ' recently ters an ex rights te the matter she f« present time vote As she tter, I tink | h: inti] she «¢ } C. Pratt, answered: “I have no objection voting from the man's standpoint, but I have a most cided objeciion from the woman's standpoint, In my estimation, business bas within the past twenty-four years taken away about.i0 per cent. of all qualities that go to make woman lovable, and 1 would most earnestly plead that the other 50 per cent. might not be destroyed Ly politics. Let woman vote if she wants to, but protect me from the woman who wants to.” The convention resented bitterly the published statement of Mrs. Humphrey Ward that “woman's suf- frage in this country is dying out.” As an effective answer fo any such insinuation, the Pennsylvania Agso- ciation will join with other associa- tions in getting up a monster peti- tion, which shall be sent first to Con- gress and then abroad. FALLS TO DEATH INTO AREA. RB. F. D. Carrier Breaks Neck Dar ing Election Jollification. Easton (8pecial).—John Walters, a rural free delivery carrier, who lived on the outskirts of the city, broke his neck and died a short time after being carried to a hospital, He was one of a party of election enthusiasts who had congregated at the corner of Fourth and Northamp- ton Streets, and was leaning against a temporary railing that gave way and precipitated him into the base nent, she # n ows of New Mi lford, to the Lat Litigation Eats Up Estate, Pottsville (Special). —By long liti- gation in the Schuylkill courts, the P. Haupt estate has been so eaten up with expenses that now when a settlement has been reached there Is little for disiribution. The receipts and expenditures filed with the reg- ister aggregate over $80,000, leaving but $6, 000 to be distributed. Bride ‘May Die of Burns, Selinsgrove (Epecial).—Mrs. How- ard Rechenbach, a young North umberland, bride was fatally burned by the explosion of a kerosene famp which she attempted to blow out, Mrs. Rechenbach arose early and was cooking her husband's break fast before daylight, As the sun appeared, she tried to extinguish the lamp. Her screams, as her cloth- ing caught fire, aroused her husband, who beat out the flames, but not be- fore his wife had been severely burn- ed. EXON ERATE bu NKLE. Investigators Find He Exercised Due Diligence, Washington (8pecial).—Chlef Ex- aminer Finch and E, W. Lawrence, special assistants to the Attorney General, who investigated the charges made to the President that ing to F. Rinehart, ex-cashier of the Farm- ¢18' & Drovers’ National Bank, Waynesburg, Pa., which in December, 1906, have made a re- port that there has been no proper States ting the Dunkle in but, Attorney cases, cure a speedy trial, Bank Examiner Starek the cases until indictments were turned, but, of the evidence, the cases were continued until January 4, 1909. The investigators also find that unusual difficulties were encoun- tered in preparing the evidence on account of the condition of the rec- ords of the bank. TO BE NE FIT MINERS, Mitchell And McHenry To Confer Over A State Tax. Shamokin (S8pecial).—~John Mitch- ell and President Thomas A. Lewis, of the United Mine Workers, and several prominent coal operators of the State will meet with Congress- man John C. McHenry in this city November 25 to consult on the fram- ing of a bill to provide for a State tax to be used for the ald of in- jured miners and families killed the mines, Congressman McHenry have the bil sented to sylvania St: Asse mbly duced a in the gress, but it was killed. in the He intro- Ww REC K A T PITTSBU RG. Caboose Hits Freight. Pittsburg J. D. Ne« ed and C. A. 23 years old, while W. J. 23 vears. in a wreck on the of the Pen North side, this city, The wreck is sald to caused. by ders. A freight was changing other when an engine wit containing the victims it Seven of the freight smashed (Special). — Grimes, a brakeman, was fatally injured, Penn, a flagman, aged train h a caboose bucked Cars Matches Lead To Death, lent eclal) Ethel, the ghiter of Wav- result pmpanions the in the yard of matches, with hearing (5; Jacob of ing ghe set of rubbish The mother, gFeream, shed to her and extinguished the was severely burned her- ST ATE ITEMS. Michael H. Moore, the oldest mill | er in Lancaster County, died, 90 years. He wae one of the wealth- residents of northern Lancaster County, and was a director ofthe | First National Bank. Francis Anderson, Butler County, died Wednesday. fest of the Sixth Artillery. Benjamin K. Hall, formerly asso- eiated in Carlisle banking circles, who has been living at Mt. Holly springs, died there, aged 60 years. While removing debris from ghe cellar of the Mayer Bullding, at Erie, ecentiy destroyed by fire, two men were killed and three injured by a collapsing wall. The Snyder County Sabbath Ob- servance Association was organized at Selin's Grove, with a large mem- bership of ministers and laymen, Rev. George W. Genzler, bf Selin’s Grove, was elected president. James H. McCullen, aged 50 years, engineer at the Aberfoyle Manufac turing Company's textile plant at Chester, was severely burned by steam, when one of the mill's malin pipes bursted, Cornelius Chadwick, of Chester, announces that in the Spring 66 houses will be built on Fifteenth Street, in that city, by Philadelphia capitalists, James Boland, of Archbald, is su- ing the Delaware & Hudson Com- pany in Federal Court for injuries received on his wedding journey last September. He is unable to walk without crutches on account of the accident. George Michael, of Dalmatia, while gunning was accidentally shot in the right leg by a companion and ampu- tation will likely be necessary, Howard F. Angel, who left York, Pa., four weeks ago to find employ ment, was killed on the railroad at Newark, N. J. The Butler County Courthouse, re- modeled at a cost of £150,000, was dedicated with Judge James M. Gal- breath presiding. Samuel Dorsey, a conductor on the Chester Traction Company's Up- land division, was pinned between two cars and his left arm and breast were crushed by the impact. He was adjusting the trolley pole when a car which was following clasely bore down on him. ——— PR A eR AEROS HHP CHAR atm dheoatiesn mange " 3 l Depth At Which Miner Can Work. Below 50 feet the temperature hr Bend i for: every 65 feet where currents of ‘water cafry the heat away, ~ The result is that at a depth of about 4,000 feet we reach a temperature of $8 degrees, or blood heat. This renders it. exceedingly difficult to work coal pits below that depth, This is the reason that Great Britain's coal commission has decid- ed that mines are not workable be- low 4,000 feet. The thickness of thé solid roeks building up the crust of the earth is at least 30 to 40 miles. At that depth the heat duce everything on the earth to liquid. But the the overlying rocks i8 so great until the relation of the heat to bemeficetd effects 5, always pressure Is known {t cannot be uy e genuine whether the earth at t depth is luid or solid hicago Tribune, SyrupdFigs="Fluxir{Senna iis iia i menafactared by the For Safety's Sake. CALIFORNIA “So this {8 the Brooklyn Bridge kL G fay r Bure Of would doive off SOLD Uk Co. ONLY fil: y iollars i oue > Di 0) Tor want eH, LEADING RUCCISTS Te ml price UF per Bottle Ce od po rth when required are lo assist i and nol to Lvl Tk e nalun of Sncliens, which must depend ulti- Yon roper nourishment, proper cff or nd igh i Vivid Sencrally Togetits pressure of hat LO see hut I'll glve ve tw nty-folve ye dolve half way ~Life. STATE oF Ono, Cry or Torepo, le Lucas Couxry, RAXK J. CHEXEY makes senior partner of the firm of ¥.J. Cliexey & Lo., doing business tu the City of Toledo, County and Btate aforesaid, and that said | firma will pay thesum of OXE HUNDRED DOL Given The Mitten, One cold day a lovesick young Fr his atten- behind this very young lady when be perceived, with delight, something CATARBE Crone FRANK J. CHENEY. drop from her muff to the sidewalk. Eworn to before me and subscribed in my Picking it up, the gallant young frsaence, this 6th day of December, A. DD, man rushed ahead and, accosting her, | 1588 A. W. GrLeasox, smilingly held out her recovered | (SRAL) Notary Pubfic Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous sur faces of the system. Send lor testimonials, free, F. J. Cnexev & Co, Toledo, O. Sold by all Druggiste, 0c. Take Hall's F amily hill s for eonstipation ( ousimption And The “Telephone. the or jurk- Without deigning to accept it, she it's my mitten.” PERFECT HEALTH After Years of Backache, Dizziness and Kidaey Disorders, pre Mra. R C. Richmond, of North. |} 07 » development of a wood, lowa, says: “For years I was & {po oon ooeoog orn " martyr to kidney | ,. 1s vointed ou trouble, backache dizzy spells, head {at aches and a terri- | ble bearing down pain. 1 used remedy after an. other without ben. created on The panic subject of the recently assumed dang f the tele- rot new, It is fear which Years British 1 Journal supposition, says, that various germs ease probably collect in the receiver and transmitter of the strument at any rate public teleph gla tions, some medical alarmists have thrown out suggestions that ant efit. Finally 1 | tics, both in a dry state and in #8 used a box of ton ‘should be applied for the Doan'sKidney Pills ty of the telephone urer. The . dictum goes step further, the backache ceased. Encour- asmuch as it is pow an fact that tubercle baccill, the micro-organisms of consu bave been found-——alive and in 1 condition—1in instrumer it. te natural, in view w of such a find, iB iy gs for some out by the On the ¥ ¥ ¥ i one in one one and CAE trouble remained. My health is per- fect.” Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box the qui bold of the mo SrYOUs C ature urrent Murt Work Before Daylight. i ) tor That life is not all a bed of en. : : for the college professor, is a St t] To Drive Out Malaria and Duild Up that is being experienced by PLO the Sy stem e F. Nichols, of the physics depart-| Take the Old Standard Unovr's Tasrs ment of Columbia University Bret p 3 Sia K rg Jus: e lors Jou i a morning, promptly at 1.20, Dr. Nic h- i | ald. tla, hein Hg it is simp! y Qai- ois tumbles from nis comfortable bed | gineand Iron in a tastaions form, and wends his way to Faverweather | most effectual form For gr Hall, where he works in his labora- | and children, Se tory from 2 until 4 A M The professor is not taking an out. door tuberculosis cure, nor ig he seeking to perpetuste health, youth and beauty The (ruth is, that Prof. | wh " Nichols is perfecting a new type of} Hicks Capudine galvanometer. It is for this that he! '\ bether tind " Bo seeks his laboratory every morning. | wh 2 He i § anh Dr. Nichols hus found that dur-| joc. 2c, and 5c. at is unable to experi-| ment with his delicate apparatus be | amount of glectrl. afd he Wa people entitled io you You credit to do are not for doing the things Cures Nervousness, ried, overworked, or os the brain and pnd and ple to take. Tug stores, in after years what a man know his son can teach him, wwnnl doesn’t i tory. Hence, It is that with the eager ness of the sportsman who seeks his | game at the first stresk of dawn, { Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children teething. softens the gums, edu er inflamma tion, Raya pai un, cures wind colic, 25ca bottle. The average man keeps a lot of hour and steals castiously on his! { ready-made excuses on tap. end capturing some wid, elusive | gocret of sciemee.—New York Her-| IREFES: ASYERTcENants) ald. iia ——— GAMPLE TREATMENT of Red Cross Pil The only pleasure a man gets out SN and c BEA Cure and 1 5% Minbeas ining Pies {0 ¢ 3 4 i Poor judgment is the Yossom: and ' bad luck is the fruit. B. N. U. 46. THE J. R. WATKINS MEDICAL C0. WINONA, MINNESOTA. Makes TO Different Articles: Household Remedies, FP Extracts all Kinds, Tollel Preparations, Fine Soups. arn. Canvasserse Wanted Jn A Every Counry. . rience, 88, #2 BEST PROPOSITION FYE OFrents AGENTS ELE her playing the way he couldn't oth Ons 100, paoitage FOUR GIRLS | Restored to Health by Lydia | Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, Miss Ilan Ross, 530 East Bith Street, New ok writes: * Lydia Pink’ ni's Vegeta Bs Cooipmmd over fe camo regularities, pe- Sl riodie ‘suffering, he wvervous headaches, after every thing else bad failed to help me and I feel ft a daty 10 let others know of iL” KautharineCralg, 2355 Lalayetio 8t., Denver, Col., writes: “Thanks to Lyd ia KE. Pinkham's 7 Vegetable Compound I J am well, altersuffering for months from nes- vous prostration.” Miss Marie Btoltz. of Laurel, Ia. “Iwas ina ran. wnconditionandsut- fered from suppression, ofl, and poor Ls ydi: v E. } Vegetable Com pr ur d mads me well and 1 _Btron 2.” ikham’sVege- a cured backache, side established 2 1048. after the best local doo tore had failed to help me.” | FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. For thirty years Lydia E. Pink- | ham’s Vegetable Compound, made | from roots and herbs, hb as been the | standard remedy for female ills | and has positively cured thou wsandsof { women who have been troubled with | displacements, inflammation, ulcera- | tion, fibroid tumors, irre eularitios, seriodic pains, backac he, that bear- mg-down feeling, flatulency, indiges- | tion, dizziness ornervous ; prostratior 1 Ww hy don't you try it? Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women to write her for advice. She has guided thousands tc | health. Address, Lynn. Mass. A man's enjc not governed Pleasure misery { upudine Cures Indigestion Pains, Sour Btomsch, and Heartbarn, ever cause. it's liouwd, Effects ! tely. Doctors presc w it. ie. 25¢., and 50c., st drug stores RAT i hang, Tm wha moneda oo can always find something ceited about, if it's only A man eon LITTLE BOY KEPT SCRATCHING. Eczema Lasted 7 Years—Face was All Raw — Skin Specialists Falled, But Cuticura Effccted Cure. “When my little boy was six woeks old an eruption broke out on his face. 1 took in to a doctor, but ‘his face kept on get- WOTSe ae wmil it got so bad no one could look at him. His whole crust and must have been day and night uati Then I took hi inlists in skin dises for him arms and legs end ght's sleep in mon sticura Remedies and | ime 1 used lemedies a good eczema healed all ug ¢ and I think the tr Yer Ie turn. Mrs. John G Kh , Newark, N. J. 3 ratched t oS 1 } THuCH them. outcome of a trip rimonial sea depends ballast on largely Sooo Money. making Farms Strout’s mame a, World's Laseest 01% Dalen. Lu Wiese, Neg PATENTS ==: BOONES Trade. piacys Uoprrignt your Books, Writings Pl. imres, ota, New act as 10 Bounty for soldiers aad tiwir relatives, who served in the civil war, 18614 Have secured over $1,099 doe — For bisaks and lastraoctie wake o lia, Arpad. Law, ( Notary Pa Pabi } Wi Sutiding ia Fig Washington, b. @ [pre Praction, H br, MAKTEL'S Preparation HELP ros The stnndard Remedy. AT DRUGGINTS, WOMEN send lor book, “ielief tor Women.” FRENCH DRUG CO, 30 W. 320 8t_N. Y. City. RHEUMATIS 22 ao curabio; thousatds curad; ve ody Brantoo give pr ow, Write quick, Ter GHT Mab, 00. Pr ~. i go iFor Sale din 14 States. pay 2.x. fare, — your afMioted £32 Thompson's Eye Water SS DYES An Imitation Takes For Its Pattern the Real Article There was never an imitation made of an_ imitation. the genuine article. The genuine is what you ask for, vertised ones of the dealer to sell genuine, because he is more } you can get the genuine by insisting? Imitators alwa counterfeit es are the ad- ess on the ability when you ask for the
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers