The Meyersdale commercial. (Meyersdale, Pa.) 1878-19??, November 05, 1914, Image 7

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    336.75 &
)00.00
300.00
[71.62
60.14
168.414 f§
)00.00
100.00
200.02
)00.00
368.39
168.41
Jashier
ondition-—
to Renew
| greatly in-
remaining
the raising
sal. Every
at is worth
to sell it.
knowledge
1at fact lies
present un-
1 lot. So
knows less
the timber
s farm, he
true value.
osts, poles,
, ete.), are
e locality?
est adapted
should the
at unit of
board foot,
501d? What
1 the basis
purchaser?
> questions
be able to
tion before
is wood lot
may be at
ling singly
more expe-
1 may have
* the local
18 wood lot
heir timber
'y as in the
etables, or
e only way
3 full value.
success in
in the reec-
rees are a
1en this is
d and the
eir produec-
ther crops,
tly be ex-
the most
arm.
| for dairy
sirable for
is they are
d stimulate
rain is re-
> fed. The
lore grain
ly, adding
ind for ten
ce.
money to
costs quite
a rundown
rtant parts
rg, is the
orner and
I posts de-
fence, and
d not be
nly.
ERSTE a 4
TER ER TST
THE MEYERSDALE COMMERCIAL
“i
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
A HOLBERT
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
SOMERSET, PENNA.
Office in Cook & Beerits Blk, up stairs
VIRGIL R. SAYLOR
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
SOMERSET, PENNA.
&! G. GROFF
JUSTICE OF THE PEACE
CONFLUENCE, PA.
Deeds, Mortgages, Agreements and
all Legal Papers. promptly executed.
Sodieedredoaloaloafoodrefredodtoddodoied
FOR A FIRST-CLASS’
Galvanized or
Slate Roof,
PUT ON COMPLETE AND REASONABLE
WRITE TO
J. S. WENGERD
as we can furnish you anything
you want in the roofing line,
outside of wood shingles, at the
very lowest prices.
o 0.0 00 0 0
WPVIPOVY
a aA fi SO BB BS OB OS OO
POV PPL PPVVTIYY
R. D. No. 2
MEYERSDALE, - PA.3
SOPBP IPP I IS OBPS HO
emember
That every added’ sub-
~ seriber helps-to make this
paper better for everybody
PROPER USE OF WASTE FATS
Saved From Any Kind of Meat They
Are Valued by the Economical
Housewife.
Have you ever noticed how enticing
sweet potatoes are when served with
Maryland pork and beans? Somehow
the pork greases make them seem
more like a dessert than a plain vege-
table.
Neither cream, lard, butter, nor
beef can take the place of pork fat
for sweet potatoes. Pork fat also
gives a tang to beets, parsnips and
carrots which cannot be duplicated in
any other way.
The waste fat from beef makes a
better cake, a better pie crust and
better candies than the highest priced
butter. Cookies, puddings and cakes
have a savoriness so enticing when
made of beef drippings that not even
the most delinquent appetite can say
them nay.
The fats, oils and greases from
lamb or veal all lend themselves to
the economical housewife as a great
improvement over costly butters and
cheap lards for: frying, broiling and
preparing food in all sorts of other
ways. One part of these fats will
give a happier flavor to fish, beans,
carrots and peas than ten times as
much butter. Indeed, a spoonful of it
will do the work of a whole pound of
butter.
Then there are the ‘“grube,” so
called by the Jewish cooks who re- |
move the fat and grease from geese
and fry it with the goose flesh into
crisp, brittle flat cakes. The grease
from the geese and other fowl is wide-
ly used in Jewish homes. Some stu-
dents think its use has much to do
with the relative absence of wasting
distempers, among the people of this
ancient nation.
IDEAS FOR THE HOUSEKEEPER
Seven Little Things of Moment With
Which All of Them May Not
Be Acquainted.
When it is necessary to boil a
cracked egg add a little vinegar to the
water. This will prevent the white
from boiling out.
If you have difficulty in cleaning
the candle grease from metal candle-
sticks try setting the candlesticks in
a hot oven for a few minutes. This
will melt the grease. Of course, care
must be taken not to leave them in
too long or the candlesticks will melt
as well as the grease.
If you wet a spoon before using 4t
‘to serve Jelly you will find the jelly
will not stick to it and the serving is
more easily accomplished.
To clean-fly specks from varnished
wood, wipe with a soft cloth dipped in
‘equal parts of skim milk and water.
To pick up little pieces of broken
glass, wet a woolen cloth; lay it on
‘the floor where the fragments are and
pat it. The little particles will ad-
here to the damp cloth.
The skin of new potatoes is more
easily removed by rubbing with a stiff
little brush than by scraping with a
knife.
If curtain rods or poles are rubbed
with hard soap before being put up,
the curtains will slip on them easily.
Homemade Wall Paper Cleaner.
The following mixture is more easily
applied, and does the work more effec:
tively than any of the baked prepara-
tions that are sold at a good price for
a small quantity—one generally paying
the sum for the label and tin, to box
it up for sale. Take one part sal am-
moniac, four parts rye flour, and water
enough to form a dough, then use on
the soiled parts as if the mixture was
a sponge. As the dirt is transferred
from the wall to the cleaner, turn the
soil in, and work out a clean part of
dre mixture. A little practice will soon
show how easily this is accomplished,
without waste to the mixture. Never
g@ontinue rubbing the soiled surface of
the cleaner into the wall.
THE CHARM
| Compound, a most valuable tonic and
-I-are now children be- {
OF MOTHERHOOD
Enhanced By Perfect Physi-
cal Health.
The experience of Motherhood is a try-
ing one to most women and marks dis-
tinctly an epoch in their lives. Not one"
woman ip a hundred is prepared or un- |
derstands how to properly care for her-
self. Of course nearly every woman
nowadays has medical treatment at such
times, but many approach the experi-
ence with an organism unfitted for the
trial of strength, and when it is over
her system has received a shock from
whieh it is hard to recover. Following
right upon this comes the nervous strain
of caring for the child, and a distinct
change in the mother results.
There is nothing more charming than
a happy and healthy mother of children,
and indeed child-birth under the right
conditions need be no hazard to health or
beauty. The unexplainable thing is
that, with all the evidence of shattered
nerves and broken health resulting from
an unprepared condition, and with am-
ple time in which to prepare, women
will persist in going blindly t_<e trial,
Every woman at this time should refy
upon Lydia E. Pinkbam’s Vegetable
invigorator of the female organism.
In many homes
once childless there
cause of the fact
that Lydia E. Pink-
ham’s Vegetable
Compound makes
women normal,
healthy and strong.
If you want special adviee write to
Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. (confl=
dential) Lynn, Mass. Your letter will
be opened, read and answered by a
wroman and held in strict confidences
Twenty-four washings Peerless Sheet Wash Blueln 10 cents.
tory. Descr:
HBeonomical, clean, satisfac iptive liter
ature free; agents wanted. E. Pare, Yolk St. Pittsburgh, Pay
W. N. U., PITTSBURGH, NO. 45-1914.
Greek Meets Greek.
The two oldest inhabitanlg were
very ignorant, neither of them being
able even to tell the time of day. A
friend of Uncle Ben's gave him a
watch, of which he was very proud.
One day, before the crowd at the cor
ner store, old Pete, being slightly
jealous of such wealth and wishing
to embarrass his rival, said: “Say,
Ben, what time have you got?”
The other old fellow drew out his
watch and turned its face toward his
inquisitor. “There she be!” he ex
claimed.
Pote was almost at a loss, but he
made a magnificent effort and retort
ed: “Blame if she ain’t!”—Every
body's Magazine. ’
i ir——
’ Three Ages. :
The new Berlin botanical gardens,
says Lustige Blatter, was wonderfully
beautiful, but to small children they
are a forbidden paradise. Boys and,
girls under ten are not permitted to
enter.
Herr and Frau Muller found this
out to their disappointment when they
planned to take their little Paul on a
Sunday trip to view the beautiful gar
dens; nevertheless, they gave their
young hopeful a few instructions, and
started out.
“ “How old are you?” he inquired.
Paul answered, “Six for.the electrics;
really eight; for the botanical gar
dens, ten.”
PRESSED HARD.
Coffee’s Weight on Old Age.
When people realize the injurious
effects of coffee and the change in
health that Postum can bring, they are
usually glad to lend their testimony
for the benefit of others.
“My mother, since her early child
hood, was an inveterate coffee drinker,
had been troubled with her heart for a
number of years and complained of
that ‘weak all over’ feeling and sick
stomach.
“Some time ago I was making a
visit to a distant part of the country
and took dinner with one of the
merchants of the place. I noticed a
somewhat anusual flavour of the ‘cof-
fee’ and asked him concerning it. He
replied that itt was Postum.
“] was so pleased with it that, after
the meal was over, I bought a package
GERMANS CLAIM
GAIN AT YPRES
British Bombard Turkish City
and Force Its Evacuation
ALLIES REPORT SUCCESSES
French Officers State That Allies Hold |
Positions in Western Belgium and
Northeastern France That"
Are Impregnable.
Berlin.—Steady German. ‘gains in
the campaign having Calais as its ob-
jective were announced here.
The following statement was issued
by the German general staff:
“German troops concentrated for
the Calais campaign have driven the
enemy back 20 miles in the vicinity
of Ypres. The resistance of the al
lies appears to be weakened and they
are making desperate efforts to refill
their depleted ranks.
“Every attack on the position about
Lille has been repulsed by our troops
“In the eastern theater, the situa
tion in Western Poland is unchanged.
On the East Prussian front our troops
are making gains, though opposed by
forces numerically stronger.”
Lieutenant General Karl F. L. J.
von Meyer, of the Hanover troops,
was killed in battle on October 28. He
was struck by a fragment of a shell
and died within an hour of his injuries.
A French aeroplane was brought to
earth by a well directed shot near
Dueren, 19 miles from Aix-la-Chap-
pelle, Monday afternoon, according to
a dispatch from Essen. The aviator
was killed and the observer wounded.
TEUTONS STRIKE
AT NEW POINT
Barred Along the Coast Ger-
mans Attack Southward
FIGHT ON THE WHOLE FRONT
Turkish Ambassador to England Was
Handed His Passports — Turkey
Apologizes But Continues Af-
fronts—Move Against Egypt.
London.—The Germans continue to
strike hard blows on the allies’ lines
in their endeavor to get through to
the coast. Thus fdr they have found
every road blocked, but, apparently
disregarding losses, they continue to
attack. :
The floods, the Belgian army and
the British fleet having barred their
way southwestward along the coast,
the Germans are now striking on a
line stretching from Ypres, in Bel-
gium, to La Bassee, farther south, in
France, but seemingly with no more
success:
The stubbornness of the fighting
along this line may be gathered from
the fact that the town of Messines,
which the Germans now occupy, has
been taken and retaken no less than
four times, each time with enormous
losses in killed or wounded.
Attacks also have been made along
the entire battle front as far east as
the Vosges region, but, according to
the French report, with the Germans
having no more success than in the
northwest.
Paris.—The following official report |
was issued by the French war office:
In a statement it is announced that
the allies have been driven back 20
miles in the vicinity of Ypres. Itis al-
so said that the allies’ resistance /ap-
pears to be weakening and that every
tions about Lille has been repulsed.
London.—Although diplomatic ef-
forts to prevent a war between Tur-
key and the allies were continued on
the surface, it was made apparent by
an official announcement from the ad-
mirality that hostilities had been be-
gun by Great Britain at the porte’s
possessions.
The admiralty stated that the Brit-
ish cruiser Minerva had bombarded
the forts at Akaba, a Turkish town on
the gulf of Akaba, an arm of the Red
sea extending into the coast of Arabia
southeast of the Suez canal. The
troops of Akaba evacuated the place.
The admiralty statement follows:
“}. M. S. Minerva arrived at Akaba
and found the place occupied by sol-
diers, one of whom had the appear-
ance of a German officer. The Minet-
va shelled the fort and the troops in
the town. They evacuated the place
and a landing party destroyed the bar-
racks, the postoffice and stores.”
Paris.—The advantage which the
Germans gained by securing a foot-
hold at terrific loss of life on the left
pank of the Yser river has been aban-
doned, according to an official an-
nouncement issued here. It states that
the Germans have withdrawn and that
the allied troops have regained. the
crossings of the Yser.
That the allies hold positions in
Western Belgium and Northeastern
France that are practically impregna-
ble was the claim made by French of-
ficers who have just returned from
the front on a military mission. They
declare that the German offensive, no
matter how aggressive, will be unable
to break through the allied front.
If Germany could hurl a fresh army
of 400,000 men upon the Nieuport-
Yres line they would stand a good
chance of success, it was said, but Ger-
many has no more troops to spare for
the western war zone at present.
The fury of the attacks around
Ypres is now believed to have been in-
spired by the presence cf Emperor
William, who is reported to have vis-
ited the battle zone in Belgium to in-
fuse spirit into his soldfers. :
The Germans, under cover of a fu-
rious cannonade, hurled vast masses
of troops against the allied lines
Ypres was to be taken at all costs.
That was the order, and the German
to carry home with me, and had wife
prepare some for the next meal. The
whole family were so well pleased
with it that we discontinued coffee and
used Postum entirely.
“] had really been at times very
anxious concerning my mother’s con-
dition, but we noticed that after using
Postum for a short time, she felt so
much better than she did prior to its
use, and had little trouble with her
heart, and no sick stomach; that the
headaches were not so frequent, and
her general condition much improved.
This continued until she was well and
hearty. = ‘
“I know Postum has benefited my-
gelf and the other members of the fam.
ily, but not in so marked a degree 28
in the case of my mother, as she wis a
victim of long standing.” Name given
by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich.
Postum comes in two forms:
Regular Postum—must be well
boiled. 15¢ and 25c¢ packages.
Instant Postum—is a soluble pow-
der. A teaspoonful dissolves quickly
in a cup of hot water and, with cream
and sugar, makes a delicious bever
age Instantly. 30c and b0c tins.
The cost per cup of both kinds is
about the same.
“There's a Reason” for Postum.
gold by Grocers.
commanders, prodigal of life, attempt-
| ed to carry out the imperial com-
| mand.
The losses of the Germans were
enormous. The allies suffered heavily,
but at the end of the'day Ypres was
still untaken.
The fighting on the coast line is
less violent now, owing to the with-
drawal of German forces from the
range of French and British warships.
An aerial raid was made upon
Theil, Belgium, where German field
headquarters were located. Three
German staff officers are reported to
have been killed by bombs dropped by
the airmen.
The Belgian town of Passchendaele,
11 miles north of Ypres, has been car-
ried by the allies after a series of
brilliant charges by the British. The
Germans were driven from their trench-
es and many prisoners were taken.
Southwest of Lille and along the
Aisne the Germans are still keeping
up brisk attacks in order to divert at-
tention from their activities in the
northern sphere. The German general
staff logically figures that, so long as
the invaders keep up a stiff demonstra-
tion along the center, the French will
not send any troops from that region
to reinforce the army of the north.
\
“At our left wing the German at-
tacking movement continued with the
same violence in Belgium and in the
north of France, particularly between
Dixmude and the Lys. In this region,
attack they have made upon the posi- | in spite of the attacks and counter at-
acks of the-Germans, we have made
slight progress on nearly the whole
front, except at the village of Messin-
eas, of which a part has been again
lost by troops of the allies. The ene-
my attempted a great effort against
. the suburbs of Arras.
“He was checked in a similar move-
ment against Lihons and Le Huesnoy-
| en-Santerre.
Berlin.—The following official state-
ment regarding operations in both the
| western and eastern theaters of war
was issued:
“The progress of the battle in the
porthern French localities is consider-
ed here as highly favorable. The
French have been thrown across the
Aisne near Soissons and operations
have already extended to the west
front of Verdun. Letters from the front
describe the fighting between Nieu-
port and Ypres as probably the fierc-
est of the entire war. The Germans
have forced their way southward by
repeated night attacks. The toll on
both sides is very great.
“The battle in Poland has not yet
been recommenced. In Galicia the
battle, however, seems to be approach-!
ing the decisive stage. 3
London.—The Grand Vizier of Tur-
key has apologized for recent events
in the Black Sea.
The text of the Turkish apology
was not announced. It had been in-
timated that: Great Britain was de-
laying hostilities waiting for eleventh-
hours amends from the Porte. That
this , would be forthcoming was se-
riously doubted. Nevertheless in the
absence of a formal declaration of
war all hope had not been abandoned
even though the British press treated
the situation as beyond repair.
Getting Even.
Friend (to returned trevelery—1 [
suppose you has some thrilling experi- |
ences over in Europe. ;
Traveler—Yes; 1 was arrested as a |
spy, and who do you suppose was my |
captor—a waiter I once refused to |
tip over’ hero. He recognized me and {
1 barely escaped with my life. \
|
|
|
A Necessity Ing Every Rural Home |
Is a bottle of good liniment. Yager’s
Liniment is the best external remedy
for man or beast. John Abermen. |
Clermont Mills, Md., writes, “For 4
years I suffered with rheumatism, had |
to walk on crutches and the doctors
said my case was chronic and incur-
able. I tried Yager’s Liniment; it is
the best Liniment to relieve pain 1|
ever used, its action is so prompt and |
effective.” Large 25-cent bottles at
dealers. Gilbert Bros. & Co., Inc,
Mfrs., Baltimore, Md.—Adv. ~ |
Dyspepsia and pessimism have a lot
in common.
HOXSIE’S CROUP REMEDY SAVES LIFE,
suffering and money. No nausea. 50c.—Adv.
|
|
|
. |
A mean man isn’t always a man of!
means. :
Attar of Roses.
The rose gardens of Kaziulak,
‘Brouse, Uslak, Acdrianople, Ghazepore,
‘Damascus and the Isle of Cashmere
produce the famous attar gul, attar of
iroses. Two thousand rose leaves yield
‘but one dram of attar, and 500 pounds
of leaves produce but one ounce of
'the precious oil.
eee
Retaining Individuality.
Individuality is the salt of common
life. You may have to live in a
!erowd, but you do not have to live like
‘it, nor subsist on its food. You may
{have your own orchard; you may
drink at a hidden spring. Be yourself,
if you would serve others.—Henry
‘van Dyke.
Holland's Invulnerability.
Holland's safety ‘in time of war lies
A Home-Made Poison
Uric acid, unknown in the days of a simple.
natural, out-of-door life, is a modern poison
created inside the human body by a combination
of meat-eating, overwork. worry and lack of rest.
Backache or irregular urination is the first ge
ys. When the kidneys fall be-
icine acts more gq. -&
have a world-wide reputation as a rell
kidney tonic.
A Pennsylvania Case
fresh air, exercise - —-4 sleep Increased, the
Sy . 8
John Sloss, 96 Eu-
fW reka 'St., Pittsburgh,
Pa., says: “I coul
hardly stoop on ac-
ff count of the awful
cold made the trou-
ble worse. I lost
weight and often
thought I couldn't
be cured. When I
had almost despaired I heard about Doan’s
Kidney Pills and used them. Hight boxes cured
me. I gained in weight, was stronger
gnd haveaq’'t had a sign of kidney trouble
since.”
Get Doan’s at Any Store, 50c a Box
DOAN’ KIDNEY
PILLS
FOSTER-MILBURN €O., BUFFALO, N.Y.
in her ability to flood great tracts of
land. William of Orange flooded the
jcountry in 1574, and by so doing drove
lout the Sparish invaders. The same
policy was adopted on the occasion
iof the French invasion of 1672.
Great Discovery.
“Why do you constantly spray your
throat with that g@l-smelling com-
pound?” “Greatest discovery of the
age, my boy. My wife never accuses
me of drinking now.”—Kansas City
Journal.
EE
Flattering Him.
Mrs. Green—'Do you ever
your husband?”
sometimes ask his
|things.”—Boston Transcript.
re ———————
Daily Thought.
Judge not the friend until thou
standest in his place—Rabbi Hillel.
Billie, aged three years, was play
ing with his sister, when they bega
to quarrel, so she left the room and!
closed the door, Billie became very:
angry and immediately screamed:
““Unbutton that door!”
ee —————————————————
Early Playgrounds.
The first public playground®was es”
tablished in Boston in 1886. Since
that time the playground moyement|
has spread all over the country. In!
1894 Chicago built her first public]
playground.
ee ee eee—
The Real Winner.
It is not the man who reaches the!
corner first who wins, but the mani
who knows exactly what he is going
to do when he reaches the corner.—;
C. E. Hughes.
Good Wood for Matches.
Aspen wood is used almost a
sively in making matches in Sweden,
as it is easily cut and porous enough
to be readily impregnated with sul-
phur or paraffin. :
en tee
Then He Knows Better.
The average man thinks housework
is one continuous round of pleasure,
until his wife is ill and he tries to’
get his own breakfast.
i —————
Paper Made Many Centuries Ago.
Paper was made from rags in!
Arabia more than ten centuries ago,
flatter | the art being brought to Europe inj
Mrs. Wyse—"“Yes, Ig the thirteenth century.
advice about!
. At Least Not Always.
When a woman wants te make up!
for lost time it isn’t absolutely neces-|
sary for her to go to a beauty parlor.!
—Exchange. !
3 to 6 doses often
manufacturers, e
Hard on Some People.
«Americans must learn to use home-
grown tobacco,” a trade journal de-
clares. This will go hard with those
persons who haven't been in the habit
of using any kind of tobacco at all.—
Youngstown (O.) Telegram.
The Finest Horse Liniment
Is Yager's Liniment. B. L. Taft,
Salem, N. J., says, “In 20 years’ ex-
perience of training horses, Yager's is
the most wonderful Liniment I ever
used.” For spavin, gall, sweeny, collar
Vienna.—The. following official an-
nouncement was made public here:
“On the Russian-Turkish frontier
near Trobizond battle has commenced
between Russian and Turkish troops.”
LONDON,—The Turkish ambassa-
dor to England was handed his pass-
| ports. This is tantamount to: a
| declaration of war. He is expected
ito go to Berlin. The ambassadors of
{ England, Russia and France have al- |
ready received their passports and
have quit Constanstinople.
A dispatch from Berlin says the Rus-
! sian Black Sea fleet has been dispers-
ed by the Turks.
A dispatch from Constantinople
says that Turkey has already in-
{ vaded British soil. Two thousand
| armed Bedouins are reported to have
entered Egypt.
The latest news of a disquieting na-
ture comes from the Balkans. It is re-
ported that strong German and Turk-
| ish influences are at work in Sofia to
line Bulgaria up on the side of Ger-
many. The agents of the kaiser and
the sultan are playing upon the feel-
ings of Bulgarian statesmen, who are
still smarting under the defeat admin-
jstered to the Bulgarian army by
Greece | and Servia.
Sebastopol Cable Reported Cut.
London.—A dispatch from Amster
dam says a Sofia telegram reports that
the cable between Varna and Sabasto-
pol has been cut.
Brussels War Indemnity $9,000,000.
London.—A telegram from Berlin
by way of Amsterdam says that, after
protracted negotiations, the war in-
demnity proposed by the Germans up-
on Brussels has been fixed at $9,000,
000 instead of $40,000,000, as original
ly demanded.
boils, wounds, etc., it has no equal.
The finest external remedy for man or
beast. Large 25-cent bottles at
dealers. Prepared by Gilbert Bros.
& Co., Inc., Baltimore, Md.—Adv.
Many a man gets a reputation * for
dignity when he really is suffering
from a stiff neck.
Money for Christmas.
Selling guaranteed wear-proof hosi-
ery to friends & neighbors. Big Xmas
business. Wear-Proof Mills, 3200
Chestnut St., Philadelphia, Pa.—Adv.
Occasionally we meet a man who
speaks his wife's mind when he talks.
YOUR OWN DRUGGIST WILL TELL YOU
Pry Murine Kye Remedy for Red, Weak Watery
Hyes and Granulated "Eyelids; No Smartire—
ite for Book of the Kye
fuse Hye Comfort. Write
y mail Free. Murine Kye Remedy Co.. Chicago.
No, Cordelia, a prudent girl isn’t
necessarily a prude.
Catarrhal Fever
cure.
One )-cent bottle SPOHN’S guaranteed to cure a case.
Safe for any mare, horse or colt.
Dozen bottles $5. Get it of druggists. harness dealers or direct from
xpress paid.
SPOHN’'S is tho best preventive of all forms of distemper.
SPOHN MEDICAL CO.,
Chemists and Bacteriologists, Goshen, Ind., U.S. A.
ree
Make the Liver
Do its Duty .
Nine times in ten when the liver ‘is
right the stomach and bowels are right.
CARTER’S LITTLE
LIVER PILLS
gentlybut firmly coms,
pel a lazy liver to
do its duty.
Cures Con-
stipation, In-
digestion,
1
Headache,
and Distress After Eating.
SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE.
Genuine must bear Signature
Soe Ferrel,
— rr ——— erp
POPHAM’S
{ WHY NCT TAY
ASTHMA MEDICINE
Gives Prompt and Positive Relief in Every
Case. Sold by Druggists Price $1.00.
Trial Package by Mail 10c.
WILLIAMS MFG. CO., Props., Cleveland, 0. ¢
Best Union Tobacce Made
Clark & Snover
“STRIPPED”
SCRANTON PENNSYLVANIA
mane
You are nervous.
feel old and look old.
one-cent stamps for trial box.
To
Realizes She Needs Help
You have “crying spells.”
dejected. You don’t sleep well.
have lost ambition for your work. You are beginning to
These symptoms, more than likely, are produced by some weakness,
derangement or irregularity peculiar to the feminine wiganism.
Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription
(In Tablet or Liquid Form)
will aid you in regaining youthful health and strength—just as it has been
doing for over forty years for women who have been in the same condition of
health you now find yourself. It soothes and invigorates. It upbuilds and uplifts.
Your medicine dealer will supply you in tablet or liquid form, or send 50
Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y.
Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets regulate Stomach, Liver and Bowels. Easy to take.
the Woman Who
You are
You have backache. You
RET SR
IAT, REA
nico in