# New Jersey Druggists Stand Back of Reliable Kidney Medicine ‘We have handled Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp- Root for thirty years and we have suffi- cient confidence in its merit to recommend t for any ailment of the kidney, liver or dder. We believe it stands highest in rank of any preparation of its kind on the market and it has been found to be specially valuable in cases of catarrh or tion of the Valter Very truly JENKINS & {EEKER, gists, Dru, Oct. 20, 1916. Washings 0 N. Jd. Prove What Swamp-Root Will Do For You Send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a sample size bottle. You will also receive a booklet of valuable information, telling about the kidneys and bladder. When writing, be sure and mention this paper. Regular fifty-cent and one-dollar size bottles for sale at all drug stores. It will convince anyone. I have sold Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root for the past fifteen years as proprietor and; i for eleven years as a clerk and I heard very favorable reports from on who have used it. The sale for the prepara- tion is very steady and if it did not possess great merit in the diseasés for which it is recommended the demand would not con- tinue. Very truly yours, R. H. VAN DERVEER, Knickerbocker Pharmacy. Oct. 20, 1918. Red Bank, N. J. DISTE sure preventive, manufacturers. HORSE SALE DISTEMPER You know that when you sell or buy through the sales you have about one chance in fifty to escape SALE STABLE TEMPER. “SPOHN’S” is your true protection, your only safeguard, for as sure as you treat all your with it, you will soon be Sle of the {izease. 650 cents and $1 a bottle; $5 and 10 no, bottles, at all good druggists, horse goods houses, or delivered ‘by the SPOHN MEDICAL CO. Chemists, Goshen, Ind, U. S. A. orses It acts as a “exposed.” no matter how are Technically speaking, a hair's breadth is seventeen ten-thousandths of an inch. F Pure blood is essential to Good Health. Garfield Tea dispells impurities, cleanses the system and eradicates disease. Adv. Natural Inference. “Pa, is the sick msdn the doctor was telling you about a carpenter?” “No, child; what made you think 80?” “It was the doctor saying he had the shingles.” Cockroaches ARE FILTHY Kill Them By Using STEARNS’ ELECTRIC PASTE U. 8. Government Buys It SOLD EVERYWHERE —25¢c and $1.00 Rid the Skin of disfiguring blemishes, by quickly- - purifying the blood, improving the cir. culation, and regulating the habits with BEECHAM 5 PILLS Largest Sale of Medicine in the W. Is of Ay in boxes 106. Yolk Relisves and Remedies Nn i hs Rep 2 Taps ir IES BLTLEee TR J Be a Bicycle Repairman—tells how to repair everything from uncture to the HEA El ow Targus for the working parts of all makes of you own or intend to own a bicycle, get this valuable book, ene closing 2c stamp. PIERCE CYCLE SUPPLY Co. HNSTOWN, P. Don’t Suifer 1 fa ontenel, Tomes: prevmonia, Thenmatism and heal your burns, bruises, sores, chapped hands and external and in- por rnal ailments. re us ot for ol sized x Of Sagers’ Gilt-Edge Antiseptic Oini fuiet Great offer to agents and dealers. M & @ C0., 40 Barry PL, Buffalo, N.Y. W. N. U,, PITTSBURGH, NO. 12-1917, Nothing jolts a woman’s sweet and trusting disposition like marriage. GIRLS! GIRLS! TRY IT, BEAUTIFY YOUR HAIR Make It Thick, Glossy, Wavy, Luxur iant and Remove Dandruff—Real Surprise for You. Your hair becomes light, wavy, fluf- fy, abundant and appears as soft, lus. trous and beautiful as a young girl's after a “Danderine hair cleanse.” Just try this—moisten a cloth with a little | Danderine and carefully draw it; through your hair, taking one small strand at a time. This will cleanse the hair of dust, dirt and excessive oil ! and in just a few moments you have! doubled the beauty of your hair. Besides beautifying the hair at once, Danderine dissolves every particle of | dandruff; cleanses, purifies and invig- orates the scalp, forever stopping itch. ing and falling hair. But ;what will please you most will be after a tew weeks’ use when ‘you.l will actually see new hair—fine and downy at first—yes—but really. new | hair—growing all over thé scalp, If you care for pretty, soft hair and lots’ ‘Knowlton’s Danderine from any store 1 and just try it. Adv. Nebraska Leads the ‘World. Now that European production hag: beén shut off, Nebraska leads the world in the potash industry. § es reese eel Good health cannot be maintained where | there is a constipated ‘habit. Garfield Tea overcomes constipation. Adv, . Woman Judges. in Queensland. Woman justices: are ’sitting in the present session of the high court at Brisbane, Australia, for the first time in the history of Queensiopn. { ‘Cure Your Children of croup, with Hoxsle's Croup Remedy _ saves life, suffering and money. No opiu 50 cts. at gruggists or nslieq postpaid. "Kells Co., Newburgh, N Supply Depot. | : ‘ “Wombat seems to be getting rich fast. What's he up to?” “I believe he’s running a service station for fountain pens.” Died of Premature Old Age! (BY V. M. PIERCE, M. D.) How many times we hear of compara- tively young persons passing away when they should have lived to be 70 or B0 years of age. This fatal work is usu- ally attributed to the kidneys, as, when the kidneys degenerate, it ceuses auto- {ntoxication. The more injurious the poisons passing thru the kidneys, the quicker will those noble organs be de- generated, and the sooner they decay. To prevent premature old age and promote long life, lighten the work of the kidneys by drinking plenty of pure water all day long, and occasionally tak- ing Anuric (double strength) before meals. This can be obtained at drug stores. Anuric will overcome such cop- ditions as rheumatism, dropsical swell: Ings, cold extremities, scalding and burning urine and sleeplessness due to constant arising. West Virginia Folks Testify Volga, W. Va.—*Golden Medical Dis- covery proved so beneficial in my past state jof ill- health that {I was glad to try Anuric, the new discovery of Dr. Pierce. I was in a delicate condition and suf- fered from ' many discomforts. I was constipated, all had indigestion, was extremely nerv- ous; another discomfort was shifting rheumatism, something I had had for ached over, Years. At that time it was in my hips and lower limbs. I began taking the Anuric Tabléts according to directions, and can say, and speak in the bounds of truth, that I have not had rheuma- tism since. I have no indigestion and am not constipated. The relief given could not be more satisfactory.”— MRS. JOSEPHINE CORDER RYMER. Canada Offers 160 Acres Free to Farm Hands Bonus of Western Canada Land to Men Assisting in Maintaining Needed Grain Production The demand for farm labor in Canada is great. As an inducement to secure the necessary help at once, Canada will give THE MEYERSDALE £ ae 8% oe | Independence Hail: for the: dast three COMMERCIAL, MEYERSDALE, PA. Washington's ee Teeth in a Baltimore College ALTIMORE.—The Baltimore College of Dental Surgery owns the only set of false teeth in existence which belonged to George Washington. The only other set of artificial teeth Washington possessed was buried with him. ; ; These teeth are the work of Dr. John Greenwood of New York, who was the first American dentist. They were pre- sented to the Baltimore College of Den- tal Surgery by Doctor Greenwood, and are the set worn by Washington at the time his portrait was painted by James Sharpless in 1796. The arti- ficial teeth account for the “calm and benign” expression which he wears in the portrait. The set is a complicated affair, and is ground and carved out of wal- rus tusks and not of solid very. The teeth are plainly those of a large man, and are carved in careful imitation of nature. There are full upper and lower sets. The plate 8f the upper set is’ made of gold, with the teeth carved of walrus tusks, while the entire lower set is made of walrus tusks, no effort being made to imitate the gums such as is found in the methods’ of today. Tiny platinum pins are now used to hold the teeth to the plate, but the set belonging to the Father of His Country contained rather crude wooden pins. The two sets are joined by a gold spring, closely wired. Fake Art Being Ousted From Independence Hall HILADELPHIA.—Desperate efforts to forestall disclosures of the extent to which fake paintings have been foisted on the city of Philadelphia reached a climax when the city council passed an ordinance recently that led to the very revelations which the measure was designed to suppress. 3 The ordinance provides for the creation of a commission to take charge of Independence hall and all its paintings and relics. It is nothing more nor less than a “ripper bill” aimed at the art jury, which has been engaged in cleaning out the fakes from TTT ES months, hy Sh More than a thirg of %hei842 paing- ings in the collectiomat: Independéned’ hall have been passe Japon. by. the ‘arg.jury. The percentage of rejections has not been announced, but it is large. Paintings ascribed to early American , artists of note like Gilbert Stuart and Charles Wilson Peale, and. denounced as fakes heretofore, are to be eliminated: ’ But the big task which the art jury has set itself is to clean, out the “French” gallery at the hall, the paintings by Albert Rosenthal, Philadelphia artist, of which no originals exist. Nearly all these paintings were sold to the- city by’ Rosenthat as copies of originals in the Museum of Versailles. (Andre Perate, Assistant, tor of that museum, says that in at least nine instances the ions are Hat at Versailles, and to the best of his knowledge do not exist. ¥ouchers on file at the’ dty hall, and reached after considerable difficulty, 'show that Rosenthdl was paid from $250 to $1,000 each for these paintings. edi erie e Wy for the Independence Hall Hos, is the ‘work, of: Rosenthal ne : Thus nearly half the entire collec- of it, surely get a 25 cent bottle of | In 2:little more than 12 iE Rosenthal has sold 129 paintings to the city { Remarkable Enterprise of the Junkmen of Gotham EW YORK - —“There are tricks fn” every thash remarked Honest Bill Quigley, the Battery boatman, as he moored his faithful Whitehall in the barge-office basin, “but the stunt I justisaw! pulled'by a South Brooklyn junk- man was the best I have seen lately. “He had a fine lot of old hawsers and ropes piled in his boat. the day of prosperity with the junk- man, and even old hawsers sell for five cents a pound. But this fellow didn’t . Seem to think his ropes weighed enough. Leastwise, he performed a remarkable operation on them. “To begin with, he untwisted all the strands on a rope and then insert- . ed bits of wood between them. He did this until he got a bunch fixed up and then he aropped. ‘the lot over the side and let the rope soak while he untwisted a fresh lot. “After all the rope had been well soaked he pulled iit out of the water and pulled out the sticks that held the strands apart. Then he let the outside of the hawsers dry off and went on his merry way to sell them. Of course they weighed a good many pounds more than before the wetting process.” The junkmen, said Quigley, now have to paint their license numbers on their boats “with white paint a foot high.” Always regarded by the harbor police more or less as pirates, the junkmen are compelled to carry these num- bers conspicuously on the sides of their boats, which these days are usually motorlaunches painted a dark gray or green. Notwithstanding the vigilance of the marine bluecoats, the river pirates are always turning new tricks. Recently one of them was caught boring holes through the floor of the Span- ish Line pier. Profitable streams of cocoa poured into the junkman’s boat until he was Teggitc at it and the practice stopped. Ferocious Rabbit Is Terror of dis New York Zoo EW YORK.—Bunch was exiled the other day from the comfort and warmth of the hayhouse in the Central park zoo to solitary confinement in the small house back of the zebu corral. Bill Snyder, animal lover and head keeper, gave a sort of farewell party to Bunch in the afterncon, when his - on Gr " 5 friends gathered for their weeldly talk- Co i As he held up SS Hugi ) YU ~Q-Y) fest in the hayhouse. : Bunch by his long ears he explained that he was, so far as he knew, the only fighting rabbit in existence and that his banishment had been finally and reluctantly decided upon only after Bunch had nearly killed a cham- pion and valuable gamecock. When the rabbit started first upon his prize-ring career, Bill was very proud of his pet, but Bunch became such a ferocious bully of small animals and fowls that the keeper concluded that a beast so dangerous should be confined where he could do no more harm. As Bill held the rabbit up for the inspection of his friends—Bill’s, not Bunch’s—the small fighter much resented his attentions. One of Bunch’s ears is torn, and there is a scar across the entire top of his head, souvenirs of an encounter with Spot, Bill's fox terrier. One of the rabbit's hind legs is a fighting orang-outang now some time gone to rest. Bunch tried desperately to wriggle from the keeper's grasp, and it was plain to be seen that but for This is” out of alignment also, from injuries received in a three-round bout with Judy, | The Best Known Shoes in the wearer protected against price paid for them, styles are the leaders in the They are made mm a well by the highest paid, skilled s can buy. make. got shoes of the highest st y return mail, postage free. LOOK FOR W. L. Douglas name and ‘the retail price stamped on the bottom. ard of gq W. L. DOUGLAS “THE SHOE THAT HOLDS ITS SHAPE” $3 $3.50 $4 $4.50 $5 $6 $7 & i aN Save Money by Wearing W. L. Douglas shoes. For sale by over 5000 shoe dealers. W- L. Douglas name and the retail price is stamped on the bot- tom of all shoes at the factory. The value is guaranteed and ff high prices for inferior shoes. The [i retail prices are the same everywhere. They cost no more in San Francisco than they do in New York. They are always worth the 1 quality of W. L. Douglas product is guaranteed by more than 4o years experience in making fine shoes. The smart Bh Centres of America. uip) actory at Brockton, Mass., : ies shoeaalses, under th supervision of experien men, working Setermingrion to make the best shoes for the price that money Ask your shoe dealer for W. L. Douglas shoes. If he can- nof supply you with the kind you want, take no other § Write for interesting booklet explaining how to ty for the price, WhoBoncplos $3.00 $2.50 & $2.00 President ¢ W. L. Douglas Shoe Co., 8 wom the World. the direction and with an honest Boys’ Shoes Best in the World 185 Spark St., Brockton, Mass. In Boston. “Now,” said a Boston schoolteacher to her class in English, “can anyone give me a word ending in ‘ous,’ mean- ing full of, as ‘dangerous,’ full of dan- ger, and ‘hazardous,’ full of hazard?” For a moment there was a dead si- lence. Then a small boy raised his band. “Well,” queried the teacher, “what is your word?” Then came the reply: “ ‘Pious, full of pie!’ ”—Tit-Bits. ‘CASCARETS” ACT No sick headache, biliousness, bad taste or constipation by morning. Get a 10-cent box. Are you keeping your bowels, liver, and stomach clean, pure and fresh with Casecarets, or merely forcing a passageway. every few- days with Salts,” Cathartic Pills, Castor Oil or Purgative Waters? Stop having a bowel wash-day.' Let Cascarets thoroughly cleanse and reg- ulate the stomach, remove the sour and fermenting food and foul gases, take the excess bile from the liver and carry out of the system all the in the bowels. A Cascaret tonight will make you feel great by morning. They work while you sleep-——never gripe, sicken or. cause any inconvenience, and cost only 10 cents a box from your store, Millions of men and women take a Cascaret now and then and never have Headache, Biliousness, Coated Tongue, Indigestion, Sour Stomach or Constipation. Adv. i “A Monumént to ‘Pioneer ‘Cowboy. ~ The memory of James (Kid) Wil- loughby, pioneer Wyoming cowboy, who died in Los Angeles recently, will be perpetuated by the frontier days committee, which will erect a monu- ment in Pioneer park to commemorate his early deeds. The memorial will be paid for by popular subseription. Already subscriptions are pouring in from pioneer plainsmen, former asso- ciates of the noted cowboy.—Cheyenne State Leader. The Quinine That Does Not Affect The Head Because of its tonic and Jazative effect, Laxative Bromo Quinine can be y anyone without causing Hervonsness or ringing in the head. There is. only one “Bromo Quini B. W. GROVES signature is on nor Dox Bo An Exchange of Courtesies. “Six cents a loaf for bread? How’s that?” “You'll pay ten before the winter's over,” snapped the baker, “Maybe so, but I won't pay it here.” And Mr. Dumdum walked out. Garfield Tea, taken regularly, will correct both liver and kidney disorders. Adv. Progressive Motion. “The world moves in cycles.” “Yes, and it is fast getting to move on motorcycles.” Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Preseription makes weak women strong, sick women well, no alcohol. Sold in tablets or liquid. —Ady. When a man hears the first spring robin he gives himself all the credit ON LIVER; BOWELS constipated waste matter and poisons | The Cause. “So Gladys has no longer golden hair. What is the reason?” “I suppose it is the high cost of dyeing.” “Can’t Cut Off My Leg,” Says Railroad Engineer “I am a railroad engineer; abou a years ago my leg was seriously Jo in an accident out West. Upon my refus« ing to allow the doctor to amputate it was told it would be impossible to h the wound. I have tried all kinds o salves and had many doctors in the oat 20 years, but to no avail. Fin solved to use PETERSON'’S OINTMENT on my leg. You cannot imagine my as- Tne: when I found it was doing what over 100 things had failed to do. M leg is now completely cured.”’—Gus Hau 799 Myrtle Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. ‘It makes me feel proud to be able to produce an ointment like that,” says Peterson. “Not only do I guarantee Pe- terson’s Ointment for old sores and wounds, but for Eczema, Salt Rheum, Ulcers, Itching Skin and Blind, Bleeding or Itching Piles, and I put up a big box for 25 cents, a price all can afford to pay and money hack Irom your druggist it not satisfied.’ A Trace of Envy. “It appeared to me that Mrs. Binx cried more than you did at the mate nee.” . “Did she?” exclaimed Miss Cayenne, 1 “Trust her to eth her money’s worth!” ————— ————— ro Res Those Wor Nerves ¢Every Picture Tellsa Story " Don't give up. When you feel all unstrung; when family cares seem too hard to r, and backache, dizzy head- aches, queer pains and irregular action kidneys and bladder may mystify ste remember that such troubles often ‘come from weak kidneys and it may be that you only need Doan’s Kidney Pills to make you well. When the kidneys are weak there's danger of dropsy, gravel and Bright's disease. Don't de- lay. Start using Doan's now. DOAN’ KIDNEY PILLS 50¢ at all Stores Foster-Milburn Co. Props. Buffalo,NY. Mother Gray's Powders Benefit Many Children Thousands of Moth- ers have found MOTHER GRAY’'S SWEET POW- DERS an excellent rem- edy for children com- plaining of Headaches, Colds, Constipation, Feverishness, Stomach Troubles and Bowel Ir- regularities from which children suffer at this season. These powders TRADE MARK are easy and pleasant to take and excel- lent results are accomplished by their use. Used by Mothers for 30 years. Sold by Druggists everywhere, 25 cents. Trial package FREE. Address. THE MOTHER GRAY CO., Le Roy, N. Y. PATENTS resin susmes Rates reasonable. Highest references. Beatservices, SEED CORN Watson KE. Coleman, when treated ia Sk yrub or wire worms, birds, ants. iu > that belongs to the robin. T-IT CHEMICAL G0, Spring eld, Hil farm labourers at once. Good Wages Pleasant Surroundings Farm Hands Wanted Western Canada Farmers require 50,000. American Urgent demand sent out for farm help by the Government of Canada. _ Steady Employment Low Railway Fares Comfortable Homes ONE HUNDRED AND SIXTY ACRES OF LAND FREE AS A HOMESTEAD and allow the time of the farm laborer, who has filed on the land, to apply as residence duties, the same as if he actually had lived on it. Another special concession is the reduction of one year in the time to complete duties. Two years instead of three as heretofore, but only to men working on the farms for at least six months in 1917. This appeal for farm help is in no way connected with enlistment for military service but solely to increase agricultural output. A won- derful opportunity to secure a farm and draw good wages at the same | time; Canadian Government will pay all fare over one cent per mile from St. Paul or Duluth to Canadian destination. as to low railway rates may be had on application to 0.6. Rutledge, 301 E. Genesee St., Syracuse, N. Y.; F.A.Harrison,210 N.3rd Si. Harrisburg, Pa. Canadian Government Agents Information ber of stitches should be with great fury. ‘Mending Neatly. Always mend your stockings on the wrong side, and do not begin too close to the hole. Use small stitches and at the end of each line leave a loop which will allow for shrinking. Make each line of stitches a little" longer than the preceding line until you reach the center of the hole, when the num- decreased. In this manner you will have a diamond- shaped darn. Pass your needle under and through the frayed loops of the stocking and bring them to the wrong the man’s stperior strength the dauatless rabbit would have attacked “Bil side. If done correctly nothing should show on the right side of the stock- ing but the woven stitéhes of the darn. . A Unique.Pilow Top. ‘An original -and; unique pillow top can be made of golden-brown satin with leaves of varicus shades and col- ors. . These leaves are cut from "the tops of discarded kid gloves and are appliqued and veined with floss in gold and brown. The effect is decidedly good. No Compulsory Military Service Farm hands from the United States are absolutely guar- anteed against conscription. This advertisement is to se- cure farm help-to replace Canadian farmers who have en- listed for the war. A splendid opportunity for the young man to investi- gate Western Canada’s agricultural offerings, and to do so at but little expense. 8" Only Those Accustomed to Farming Need Apply . For particulars as to railway rates and districts requiring labour, or any other information regarding Western Canada apply to 0. G. Rutledge, 301 E. Genesee St., Syracuse, N. Y.; F.A. Harrison, 210N. 3rd St. Harrisburg, Pa. Canadian Government Agents