tom iri THE MEYERSDALE COMMERCIAL WAS MISERABLE COULDN'T STAND Testifies She Was Restored to Health by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Lackawannsg, N. Y.— ‘“ After my first child was born I felt very miserable and could not stand on my feet. My sister- | in-law wished me to feeling. That was six years ago and I ~Ld have had three fine children since. For female trou- bles I always take Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and it works like acharm. Ido allmyown work.”’— Mrs. A. F. KREAMER, 1574 Flectric Avenue, Lackawanna, N. Y. The success of . Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, is unparalleled. It may be used with perfect confidence by women who suffer from displacements, inflam- mation, ulceration,tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, bearing-down feeling, flatulency, indigestion, dizziness, or nervous prostration. Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound is the stan- dard remedy for female ills. Women who suffer from those dis- tressing ills peculiar to their sex should be convinced of the ability of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound to re- store their health by the many genuine and truthful testimonials we are con- stantly publishing in the newspapers. If you want special advice write to Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. (confi= dential) Lynn, Mass. Your letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman and held in strict confidence, Don’t Persecute Your Bowels Cat out cathartics and purgatives, brutal, harsh, unnecessary. Try, TR CARTER’S LITTLE i LIVER PiLLS Purely vegetable. Act gently on the liver, 48 eliminate bile, and scothe the delicate They are bowel. Cure Constipation, Biliousness, Sick Heads R ache asd Indigestion, as millions know. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE. Genuine must bear Signature Coiffures Adapted to Smaller Hats Tre most striking coiffure which made its appearance in midsummet showed the hair brushed back from the face, without curl or wave, and the forehead entirely uncovered. Where the hair is naturally wavy and the forehead well shaped this style was possible. But, even so, only youthful wearers could carry it off; it proved generally unbecoming. Therefore the new off-the-face coiffures are waved and the hair brought down over the forehead for a little way, when such an arrangement is found to suit the style of the wearer. The hair is most conveniently dressed in these new styles by parting off a portion of it all around the head and waving it. This leaves the back hair to be combed up to the crown and coiled into a support for the end of the waved portion. A very small and rather flat hair roll placed around the head before the waved hair is combed back will be found to support it and keep the outline of the coiffure un- changed. In the illustrations here given are the best examples of off-the-face styles in hairdressing. The back hair is turned under in the manner of a French twist but arranged quite close to the head. These coiffures are spe- cially adapted to the smaller hats which are popular for street wear. For wider brimmed hats the pretti- est of the new styles are’ dressed with a small chignon at the back and short, soft curls at its sides. Even in the close-fitting hat shapes brims" turn up- ward at one side so that the hair shows from the middle of the forehead to below the crown. In all coiffures the hair may be without a part, or a shallow part is made either in the middle or at one side. Each wearer is supposed to decide for herself as to what suits her face best. SELDOM SEE a big knee like this, but your horse may lave a bunch or bruise on his Ankle, Hock, Stifle, Knee or Throat, will clean it off without laying the horse up. No blister, no hair gone. Concentrated—only a few “drops required at an application. #2 per bottle delivered. Describe your case for special instructions and Book 8 K free. ABSORBINE, JR., antiseptic finimen: for mankind. Reduces Painful Sweilings, En- Iarged Glands, Goitre, Wens, Bruises, Varicose Veins, Varicositics, Old Sores. Allays Pain. Price $1 and £2 a bottle ot druggists or delivered. Manufactured only by W.F.YCUNG, P.D. F., 310 Temple St, Springfield, Mass. Order now—use it—then LOX PILES fmras CHEMICAL COMPANY, Bisbee, Arizona Our remedy relieves the pain, removes the cause: The Obedient “Help.” Hubby—What do we have for des sert? ’ Wifey—Cottage pudding, I think. 1 told her to have blanc mange. Important to Mothers Examine carefully every boltle of CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for infants and children, and see that it Bears the Signature of In Use For Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria We may never wear a golden crown, but thank heaven we have one already en our tooth. Dr. Pierce’s Pleasanv Pellets regulate and invigorate stomach, liver and bowels. Sugar-coated, tiny granules, easy to take. Do not gripe. Adv. Procrastination increases the de- fights of anticipation. One Way to Lengthen Life Late in life, when the organs begin to weaken, the hard-working kidneys often tire out first. Failing eyesight, stiff, achy joints, rheumatic pains, lame back and distress- ing urination are often due only to weak kidneys. Prevention is the best cure and at mid- dle age any sign of kidney weakness should have prompt attention. | about the hat. ' the collar. | did position for one of those novelties T= three hats which grace this page are entitled to be called faultless millinery. And a hat must measure up to many requirements to be so classed. First of all, it must be beautiful, then it must be per- fectly adapted to the occasions upon which it is to be worn, and it must, of course, be up to the minute in style and show the use of new trimmings in a clever manner. A hat of velvet is shown in the cen- ter. It is made on a frame, which rolls upward at the left side, into a grace- ful and slightly curved brim and is without an upward roll at the right side. The velvet is put on with per- fect smoothness and follows all the curves of the frame exactly. At the top of the crown a soft overhanging puff, in a manner of the tam, is draped to follow the lines of the brim. Be- low this a collar of satin extends At the right side, to- ward the front, the crown is tacked to the brim and is brought down over This point makes a splen. of the season in flowers. In this case is is a rose, with a cluster of Small unopened buds in metallic fabric set in ivy leaves with a mother-of-pearl Doan’s Kidney Pills have made life more comfortable for thousands of old | | folks. It is the best recommended special § | kidney remedy. A Pennsylvania Case Edward Kearns, § | “ : : Euery Picturs 1038 Daly St, || Tells a Story Philadelphia, Pa., P says: “I had terri- > ble pains “ across | my loins, extend- § | ing into my shoul- §| ers. My kidneys § |! were weak and it was hard for me to_ work. Finally *¥ ‘was laid up in f bed for several months and a t || last. I had to be taken to the hos pital. After re- - turning _p-ewntse \ without being e be pein Doan’s. Kidney helped, For i me and I was able to go bach.to work The trouble 8 never returned.” fa Get Doan’s at Any Store, 50c a Box A N 9 KIDNEY DO PILLS FOSTER-MILBURN CO., BUFFALO, N. Y. surface. In this hat we have novelty of shape as well as novelty of trim- | ming, and everyone will concede that it is a beautiful bit of millinery. A sailor hat of plush and silver cloth suited to the winter season is shown on the right. The shape is not new but is graceful and finished with a soft puff in the top of the crown, which is a characteristic of the sea- son. The side crown is a band of plush surmounted by a collar of fur. The only trimming is a small quill of silver spangles fastened with a little jet cabochon. The model pictured here is made up in seal plush with a collar of skunk fur. It may be copied in broadtail plush or chinchilla, using the same cloth-of-silver top crown. With seal plush or any { the brown toned | plushes, o/oth of gold c2un be substi- | Millinery That Is Faultless with the old-fashioned dart seams tuted for the silver with equally good effect. The simplicity which marks the two hats already described is emphasized in the beautiful draped turban shown on the left. This hat is apparently a length of velvet with bias ends tied about a frame. This, at any rate, is what its drapings suggest. But in reality it is not quite so simple as it looks, and the fine hand of the artist is shown in this management of ma- terials. The frame is, in fact, draped with a length of velvet which forms at the same time its facing. But the point- ed ends are made of separate pieces. These pieces are lined with silver cloth and tied together with a single knot. - Yet they seem to be a part of the body of the hat. These three examples of the best art of the milliner are classed as tailored hats. If one is to indulge in but one hat, it should be selected from this class. A tailored hat, possessing the distinction of those shown here, may be worn with almost any toi- lette. JULIA BOTTOMLEY. New Style Features to a Gown. Is it now or is it not new, is the question asked of every gown as it makes its appearance, either at the be- ginning, middle or end of the season. To have one new feature is not to be new by any means. A gown must have several to be thoroughly and complete- ly up to date. A gown of satin with a softly gathered tunic, a semi-fitting basque; a coachman’s cape and sleeves and bodice of chiffon bears the steamp of extreme chic. Fitted Bodices Coming. There seems no doubt nov; that by autumn fitted bodices will be upon us. Some of the most authoritative frocks for summer wear show decided signs of “nipping in” at the waist line and below the bust in frout, and some- times this fitted effect is achieved INTERNATIONAL SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON (By E. O. SELLERS, Director Sunday School Course, Moody Bible Institute, Chicago.) WN LESSON FOR OCTOBER 4 CHRIST ANOINTED FOR BURIAL. LESSON TEXT—Mark 14:1-11. GOLDEN TEXT-—She hath done what she could. Mark 14:8, Event crowds fast upon event dur ing this the world’s most tragic week. Two days before the passover oc- curred, the chief priests and other leaders entered a conspiracy how to rid themselves of this troublesome Nazarene. This plot mentioned in the first two verses of the lesson prob- ably occurred four days later than the anointing. Note the separating para- graph mark; also look up carefully a good harmony of the Gospels. Follow- ing the Olivet discourse Jesus said to his disciples, “In two days the pass- over.” At that very time Judas was scheming with the rulers for his ar rest. John, in his Gospel, tells us that the feast was six days before, and that it was in connection with this that Judas had left the company to go to the priests. Judas Iscariot was angry at our Lord and this incident led immediate- ly to the betrayal. Nowhere else in all history is there a blacker picture of the human heart or the length of iniquity to which it will go. Every- thing at this hour is electric and strange. Events rapidly converge to- wards the cross. For that, grace has been planning and sin is plotting. Amazed the Disciples. I. Mary Criticized, vv. 3.5. Jesus had his inner circle of friends and his favorite places of abode and none was evidently ; more precious than that home of Mary, Martha and Lazarus. In this supreme hour Jesus came to this home to bring it a confirmation of faith and some further spiritual gift. From that time of Peter's confession, several months previous, the Lord has constantly reaffirmed his statement then made, that he must go to Jeru- salem, die, and be raised the third day. This teaching amazed the disciples and fllled them with fear. Jesus did not, however, awaken faith and then quench it with fear, or allow it to lan- guish and die, John 4:46, 54. Now as the darkest hour approaches there ap- peared this one touch of appreciative sympathy. Bethany was of but little dignity but there lived there a man who had been raised from the dead— Lazarus. There also resided one who brought comfort to the heart of Jesus —Mary. She had listened to him, she understood him, believed and loved. With a woman's keen intuition she seems to have realized that he was really going to his death. What that meant to the hopes and aspirations she seems to have divined, and re alized, more than all others, his view- point. How to tell kim was her desire. Out of that love she purchased a box of | ointment representing in value about fifty dollars, an immense sum and the full extent of her treasure. Ordi- nary action will not suffice. The hour and occasion demanded the extraor- dinary. To it she yielded herself, lav- ishly pouring upon him the wealth and fragrance of that sacred ointment in- tended for kings. She had sat at his feet, Luke 10:39, and was ready for this the proper hour for anointing, John 12:7. It was her all, but love does not have the calculating cunning and prudence of Judas. “Memorial of Her.” Il. Mary Commended, vv. 69. The story is beautiful in the record we have of our Lord's words. Mary's compensation for the criticism called for by her conduct was the commenda- tion of her Lord. We do not censure the disciples who «id not understand but we are thankful for the words of the Master which their criticism called forth. Jesus realized the true mean- ing of the act and he named it when he said, “She hath done what she could, she hath anointed my body aforehand for burying.” - Notice that Jesus received the true meaning of her act as for himself, still it was for the world, for he said, “this that she hath done shall be spoken of for a mem- orial of her.” This was not merely a reward for Mary, it was that her act should be an inspiration to incite his followers to like activities and atti- tudes throughout all the ages. This is all that is asked of any disciple (II Cor. 8:12). Love forgets self, sur- roundings, cost or criticism. Love pours out itself to the uttermost and its fragrance fills not alone the house but the whole of creation. Ill. Judas Conspires, vv. 10, 11. This tender story ends with the terrible ac- count of Judas. He had no sympathy for Mary, primarily because he was not in sympathetic relations with Jesus. v ~ Jesus had revealed, called forth, the deepest love of Mary’s heart. In the case of Judas he revealed a heart of treachery. Accepting the adoring anointing #of Mary and also perpetu- ating it, he at the same time calls forth a revelation of that compelling motive of selfishness in the heart of Judas that led to his own self-destruc- tion. Contrast these two pictures. We recall the crushed heart of Mary at the death of Lazarus which brought Mary into the closest fellowship with Jesus. In her shadow and sorrow she learned to pour out her love in sacrificial anointing Hadn't Killed Him. There is a certain young man who used to be notoriously egotistic. Some of his acquaintances were one day speaking of him before an old lady who was not “up” in the slang éxpres- sions of the day. The next time she met him on the street she put out a congratuls hand “Ob, Mr. Smith” she cried, “I am 80 glad you are better. I heard last week that you had a swelled head.” Caused a Coldness. “I wish I had money enough to get married,” he remarked. She looked down and blushed. “And —what—would—you—do?”’ she asked, looking very hard at a little design on the carpet. ; “I would spend it traveling,” he re- plied. And the thermometer fell ten degrees.—Lippincott’s Magazine. London has a fireboat which throws a ton and a half of water each min- ute. Deafness is a terrible affliction to men who like to hear themselves talk. The Popular Mexican As Delicious as it is made in Old Mexice ~ genuine Mexican Chili Peppers, Mexican Chili Beans and selected meats, according te the mative recipe, and it's good. Just the thing when you want something nice } is pull CARTRIDGES For Rifles, Revolvers and Pistols Winchester cartridges in all calibers from .22 to .50, shoot , where you aim when the trigger accurate, | Shoot them and You'll Shoot Well. : Always Buy Winchester Make, THE RED YY BRAND ed. They are always reliable and uniform. Invents a New Chicken. George White has produced by se- lective breeding, the shortest legged chicken in existence after ten years of effort, during which he crossed and recrossed breeds. The result is a big white fowl that continually seems to be sitting, the impression being due solely to the shortness of its legs. When it walks it waddles like a duck. The advantage, says White, is that .the newly “invented” type of chicken is not a roamer and not a scratcher. It canont go very far and has not enough of a reach to scratch. The re- sult is that it lives a quiet, peace- ful existence, never roosts on a neigh- bor’'s fence, and is a busy layer.— Eaton (0.) dispatch to the New York World. TERRIBLE ITCHING BURNING Vernon, Pa.—“When my baby was about two months old the top of his head was covered with brown scales which turned into thick crusty scabs and began to spread to the back of his head. His hair fell out until he was bald where the scabs were. It must have itched and burned, for baby scratched and he was very fretful and cross. He was so bad that he could not sleep and the sores began to run. “We tried several remedies but could not cure him. Finally a friend told us about Cuticura Soap and Oint- ment and I immediately sent for a sample. They healed Him so much that I bought the full-sized Cuticura Soap and Ointment. After using them according to directions he was healed completely in two weeks. His hair Is coming in real thick now.” (Signed) Mrs. Emily Wright, Jan. 28, 1914. Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world Sample of each tree, with 32-p. Skin Bc _k. Address post- tard “Cuticura, Dept. L, Boston.”—Adv. Paper was made from rags in Arabia more than ten centuries ago, the art being brought to Europe in the thir- teenth century. YOUR OWN DRUGGIST WILL TELL YOU Try Murine Eye Remedy for Red, Weak, Watery Byes and Granulated "Eyelids; No Smarting— {oat Eye Comfort. Write for Book of the ye y mail Free. Murine Kye Remedy Co.. Ohieage. Sweden is on the verge of national prohibition of alcoholic beverages and tobacco. Few men smoke for the sole purpose of burning their money. EVERY HORSE OWNER SHOULD KEEP A BOTTLE OF YAGER’S INIMEN There Is Nothing Just 2s Good For SPAVIN GALLS SWEENY SPRAINS WOUNDS SCRATCHES SWELLINGS COLLAR BOLLS, &ec. SOME TESTIMONY: “I unhesitatingly pronounce Yager’s Liniment the most wonderful Horse Liniment I have ever used. Haye been handling and training horses for speed for twenty years and have had hundreds of different brands of so- called horse remedies. 1 wish your Yager’s Liniment the large leit s0 well deserves, and recommend it most highly.” B. L. TUFT, Salem, N.J. Driver and Trainer of Wm. Pen; Record, 3.12% LARGE BOTTLE, 25c., at Dealers Prepared by GILBERT Bros. & Co., INC. BALTIMORE, MD. BOOK ON Dog Diseases AND HOW TO FEED Mailed Free to any address by the author H. CLAY GLOVER, V.S. 118 West 31st Street New York Well equipped Bgvspaper lant FOR SALE first-class conaitons live > ern Kentucky minivs town: Be per now Mpoing Fine o rtunity for hustler, sville, Ky. Address J. Kirk Rowell, 420 W. Main, Loui; AGENTS To introduce our new home reme- dies for Rheumatism 8! Heart, Kidney and Lung troubles. Send for desorl: tive circulars. ROWH ., 400 East 43rd, CHIO. .C. Advice and Rates reasonable, Highest references. Bes Be Clean! | Inside and Outside Golden Medi strengthen all the organs, trial box. Address as below. FREE You can no more afford to neglect it than the outside. . ant that the system be cleansed of the poisonous Impurities caused by weakness of the digestive organs or by inactivity of the liver. DR. PIERCE’S (In Tablet or Liquid Form) Cleanses the system—and more. It puts the liver in such a condition of health that it purifies the blood—as it should. digest food so that it makes good blood—rich, red, blood to nourish and. You may avail yourself of its tonic, revivifying influence by getting a bottle or a box of tablets from your medicine dealer—or send 50c for a “Dr Pierce's Common Sense Medical Adviser” —a French cloth bound book of 1008 pages on receipt of 31 one-cent stamps to cover mailing charges, Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. If you would be healthy, strong and happy. Baths keep the skin clean and in condition. But what about the inside of the body? It is just as import- cal Discovery It helps the stomach ASTHMA MEDICINE Gives Prompt and Positive Relief in Every Case. Sold by Druggists. Price $1.00. ial Package by Mall 10c. WILLIAMS MFG. CO., Props. Cleveland, 0. | WHY NOT TRY POPHAM’S 7 EASY MONEY > tipo la For one smart man op woman in each lo- cality. First one re- y . _Ad- | lyin ts i | dress G. KUGLER, SHICESHINEY, PEN Ne 25 5% ISTRY ATE, | W. N. U,, PITTSBURGH, NO. 40-1914. OVER 100 YEARS OLD PATENTS xen cotomen er, D.C 4 books > t services
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers