The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, September 29, 1898, Image 3

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    Pure Blood
Cood Digestion ;
These are the essentials of health. Hood's
Sarsaparilla isthe great blood purifier and
stomach tonic. It promptly expels the
impurities which cause pimples, sores and
eruptions and by giving healthy action to
the stomach and digestive organs it keeps
the system in perfect order.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Is America's Greatest Medicine. $1; six for $5
Prepared only by C.1. Hood & 'o., Lowell, Mass.
Hood's Pills
$100 Reward. $1 100.
The readers of this paper will be pleased to
learn that there is at least one dreaded dis-
ease that science has been able to cure in all
its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh
Cure is the only positive cure now known to
the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a con-
stitutional disease, re quires a constitutional
treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken inter-
nally, acting directly upon the blood and mu-
cous surfaces of the system, thereby destroy-
ing the foundation ¢f the disease, and giving
the patient strength by building up the-con-
stitution and assisting nature in doing its
wolk. The proprietors have so much faith in
its curative powers that they offer One Hun-
dred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure.
Send for list of testimonials. - Address,
F. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, O.
Sold by Druggists, 5c.
Hall's Family Pills are the best.
are the only pills to take
with Hood's Sarsaparilla
Ever Have a Dog Bother You
When riding a wheel, making you wonder for
a few minutes whether or not you are to get a
fall and a broken neck ? Wouldn't you have
given a small farm just then for some means
of driving off the beast? A few drops of am-
monia shot from a Liquid Pistol would do it
effectually and still not permanently injure
the animal. Such pistols sent ostpaid for
fifty cents in stamps by Now ‘ork Union
Supply Co. 135 Leonard St, New York City.
Every bicyclist at times wishes he had one
Mrs. Winslow’ s Soothing Syrup for children
teething, softens the gums, reduces inflammae
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25c.a bottle,
Fits permanently cured. No fits or nervous-
ness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great
Nerve Restorer. 82 trial bottle and treatise
free. Dr.R.H. KLINE, Ltd..931 Arch St. Phila, Pa
At the Strozzi Palace, in Rome, there
is a book made of marble, the leaves
being of marvelous thinness.
To Cure Constipation Forever.
Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10c or 250.
If C. C.C. fail to cure, druggists refund money.
It is said that in some of the farm-
ing districts of China pigs are harness-
ed to smal wagons and made to draw
them.
Educate Your Bowels With Cascarats.
Candy Siang cure constipation forever.
10c, 260. If C. + C.C. ta C. fail, , druggists refund money.
Russian families, when moving to
new homes, kindle the fire on the
hearth with coals brought from the old
residence.
About 65,000,000 pounds of beet sugar
were raised in California last year.
A Retort of Willis.
Mr. M. E. W. Sherwood tells this
anecdote in the new volume of remin-
iscences, “Here and There and Every-
where’’: 1 was present at many din-
ners when Willis was the life of the
compary, and although I did not hear
the famous repartee of the Washington
dinner so often recorded, I will record
it here. It was Mrs. Gales, I think,
who, at one of her own dinners, wrote
| they sow,
a card to her niece at the other end of |
the table, “Don’t flirt so with Nat Wil-
lis.”” She was talking vivaciously her-
self to Mr. Campbell. Willis replied:
“Dear aunt, don’t attempt my young
feelings to trammel,
Nor strain at a Nat while you swallow
a Campbell’—
probably the quickest-witted couplet
on record.
AIDED BY MES. PINKHAM.
Mrs. W. E. PaxToN, Youngtown,
North Dakota, writes about her strug-
gle to regain health after the birth of
her little girl: ;
‘““ DEAR Mrs. Pingnaa:—It is with
pleasure that I add my testimony to
your list, hoping that it may induce
others to avail themselves of vour val-
uable medicine.
‘“ After the birth of my little girl,
three years ago, my health was very
poor. I had leucorrheea badly, and a
terrible bearing-down pain which
gradually grew worse, until I could do
no work. Also had headache nearly
all the time, and dizzy feelings. Men-
struations were very profuse, appear-
ing every two weeks.
“I took medicine from a good doeror,
but it seemed to de no good. 1 was
becoming alarmed over my condition,
when I read your advertisement in a
paper. I sent at once for a bottle of
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com-
ponnd, and after taking two-thirds of
the bottle I felt so much better that I
send for two more. After using three
bottles I felt as strong and well as any
one.
“1 think it is the best medicine for
female woaliness ever Advertised, 2nd
t
fering Re this hE i
Maternity is a wonderful experience
and many women approach it wholly
unprepared. Childbirth under right
conditions need not terrify women.
The advice of Mrs. Pinkham is freely
offered to all expectant mothers, and
her advice is beyond question the most
valuable to be obtained. If Mrs. Pax-
ton had written to Mrs. Pinkham be-
fore confinement she would have been
saved much suffering. Mrs. Pinkham’s
address i is Lynn, Mass.
MITCHELLA COMPOUND
Makes CHILDBIRTH safe, sure and easy.
80 why suffer untold pain and torture (Indorsed by
1sadmg physicians. 'nousands of testimonials).
Sent prepald on recei 4: of price, #1.00. Write us
and we will send you FREE our book, *¢ Glad Tide
ings to Mothers.” LADY AGENTS WANTED.
Those now at work for us are making good pay.
Address: 3 :
DR. J. H. DYE MEDICAL INSTITUTE: .
evt. A BurraLo, N. Y.
The Best BOOK 2 WAR..raameres
nously illustrated: price $2), free to anybody Sending
two annual subscriptions at *1 each to the tverlanc
Monthly, SAN FRANCIS: 20, Samvle Overland. be,
" Thompson s Eye Water
if afflic ted Ww Thy |
sore eyes use
SE FAILS.
as i 00d: Use p=
CONSUME TION: &.
| known in
\ One day the officers of our
boat, the
| boys always turn out good
- pa —,
DVO VV VW VD YOO
CHILDREN'S COLUMN.
VV VY VV VN
A Question,
If you will kindly tell me, please,
What animal I am,
I shall be very thankful—
I'm grandma’s “blessed lamb."’
My brother Archie cays ‘‘that kid”
Upsets our whole big house,
And when I tease my grandpa
I'm just his ‘little mouse.”
I give my aunt Bess a letter, and
She says ‘thank you, my dear. n
And then I'm Papa 's “monkey,”
Which certainly is queer.
And Uncle Charlie says I' m stubborn
As a ‘‘good sized mule,’
My mamma calls me her “sweet hart”
When I've been good at school.
Now, this is all confusing
To a man who i8 so wee,
I call myself just “Teddy,”
Pray, what would you call me?
Patriotic Robins,
Two robins in building a nest in a
tree in the yard of a residence in
Chicago wove into it a small American
flag, and now it can be seen fluttering
in the breeze, to the great delight of |
as well.
the children of the
borhood, not to
folks.
family and neigh-
mention
Dall Boy.
Dull boys oflen become clever and
successful men; but this is simply on
account of the fact that dull bays are
only slow boys and it takes more time
for their brains to grow than the
others.
endeavor that tells. Then again we
forget that a bright boy may be handi-
capped by other qualities; he may not
have the physical strength or, energy
of the other, while the dull bey is
carried forward by never-failing energy
and strength; for it is often his dull-
ness at school which makes the dull
boy's subsequent success so con-
spicuous, = How many dull boys have
become still duller men!
old reproach about minister's sons,
one bright bov that turns out ill is
made to stand for the whole class;
and one dull boy that turns out well
glorifies his whole class. Notwith-
standing all our inventions, all our
progress, the old Scripture doctrine
still holds good—that men reap what
and cannot gather grapes of
thistles nor figs of thorns. It can be
set down, therefore, as an established
rule that bright boys generally do
turn out to be bright men, and
dull boys generally do turn out
to be dull men. This, you see,
gives the latter a chance, which
can be fortified by declaring that good
men, and
generally successful men.
Saved by a Boy Swimmer.
Hurrah for the sailors who can
swim! Now, "that sounds odd, be-
cause it is as much as to say that
th re are sailors who cannot swim.
Well, if the readers of these lines will
take a census of the swimming sailors
their neig hborhoods they
will be astonished to discover how
few seafaring nen can swim.
A man who can swim knows he has
his fate in his own hands in a marine
disaster and can well De cool
and help the really helpless, who are
the women. Every shipwreck brings
to light stories of sailors who haven't
learned the A B C of their calling. Tt
is time that some indignation society
took steps to make the shipping of
such poor timber illegal.
For se protection as well as for
health and pleasure all girls should
learn to swim. It is easier than riding
a wheel, and, girls, here is a secret—
all natural beauty is enhanced a hun-
dredfold when its possessor is swim-
ming like a mermaid.
It is so easy to learn to swim. How
a man with sand enough to go on the |
water at all ever skips that manly art
is a mystery. But for
swimmer the dreaded Spanish
pedoes would have left a
disaster for our navy at
tor-
record of
Santiagq.
torpedo
something in
Porter, saw
| the water making its way toward the
| ship.
It was finally made out to be
a floating torpedo shot from a Spanish
torpedo boat. The ensign of the
Porter, Van Gordon Gillis, is the son
of a gallant sailor and a worthy sea
dog, for he can swim, In spite of the
protest of
threw off his jacket and
leaped into the sea.
the torpedo, he drew
Swimming to
its fangs by
tightening the exploding tip and then |
took the fearful thing on board the
Porter as a trophy. Brave, ves; but
what of it without the ability to swim? |
—Trenton (N. J. 1) 4 American.
The Frigate Bird.
The frigate bird is endowed with
magnificent powers of flight. His
wings stretch to an expanse of ten or
twelve; feet his body is about three
feet in length; his bill is very power-
ful and his feet are webbed, but quite
small; but for these he has but little |
| France.
use, as his home is in the air, hundreds
of leagues away from the land.
He is seen soaring high above the
ocean, but on its bosom he never rests.
When he seeks repose he finds it
aloft. His foot rarely touches land,
except at the time for pairing, making
nests and rearing young.
The expanse of his wing is so great’
and his body is so light that he can
soar with little or no exertion. Still,
it is difficult to ses how this would
enable him actnally
wing, as it is believed he does.
A closer examination shows,
ever, that his bones are hollow,
that there is a large pouch communi-
cating with his lungs and with the
cavities in his bones.
can inflate with air, and thus render
how-
himself buoyant; the sustaining power |
‘tween
the older |
{ made him
| te himself.
{ the middies who came under his sway
' found that he
It is a steady work, ceaseless |
| the
|
{ schoolroom.
Like the !
pockets to
, than he could
retrieving his
I distance each time.
| trained only
{A hundred
a brave boy |
| miles the
| flight.
| to engross the
| common
| birds which reach
{ shortest time.
| been stamped on the wing with the
| race number known only to the stwrt-
{ bird on entering the loft
{ again.
to sleep on the |
and |
This pouch he |
thus acquired, added to that of the
wings, is sufficient to keep him up.
If his home bein the air, if he
neither dives into the sea for fish, nor
searches on the land for other food,
whence does he derive his sustenance?
Impelled by hunger, he descends from
the lofty regions where itis his de-
light to dwell. Whether the sea be
rough or calm, he glides along over
the water, and any unwary fish ap-
proaching the surface is pounced up-
on instantly and swallowed.
But the bird has other resources;
though he cannot dive into the sea to
cateh fish, he avails himself of the
labors of birds that can. He watches
one of them—sees it come out of the
water and fly off with its prey. At
once the frigate bird is down upon
him with a swoop of terrific velocity.
The frightened diver drops his fish in
mid air. The frigate bird poises it-
self again, darts down with another
swoop,and seizes the fish ere it reaches
the water.— Waverley Magazine.
Inventing a Penalty.
Admiral Montague, in the ‘¥Middy’s
Recollections,” tells how he got his
sea-training as a boy, in the years be-
’563 and ’60. Captains were
likely to be martinets and sometimes
they sere not only strict but unjust
Tobias Jones was what
“taut hand,” an offi-
Sir Lewis
sailors called a
cer with a stern sense of duty,
as merciless to others as
Knowing his repu ation,
dreaded him exceedingly; but they
wns a mau to be ad-
mired as well as feared.
Only once did he fall foul of Mon-
tague, and that in a way to snggest
punishments belonging to the
It was a bitterly cold
day, and the wretched middy on watch
| had to walk the lee side of the deck.
| The
| draughty sail
| the winds whistling down the neck of
the most
sending
maintrysail was set,
in the world,
anybody beneath.
Montague was perishing with cold,
and in a moment of thonghtlessness
put his poor little fingers in his
keep them warm. Now
the captain was pacing up and down
the sheltered side of the vessel, and
perhaps he could not realize tha boy’s
excuse for a breach of discipline. To
see a pair of hands in a middy’s
pockets, on the sacred precincts of
her majesty’s quarter deck, was more
bear. He summ ned
the boy, and called to him in sten-
torian tones:
‘‘Pray, sir, who
keep your hands in
the quarter deck?
diately to the tailor
and tell him, from me,
pockets up instantly.
sir, when he has done.
The boy fled, realizing his disgrace,
and knowing that the only chance of
character was to urge
“bear a hand,” for the
allowed - you to
your pockets on
Go down imme-
on the half deck,
to sew your
leport to me,
”
the tailor to
, sooner the culvrit appeared on deck,
sewn up, the better.
The tailor appreciated the situation,
dropped his work, and sewed up the
pockets in a twinkling The boy ran
back to his place,
fright now instead of cold,
fatherly manner,
“Now, my boy,”
gently, ‘‘this is a lesson to you. Do
not do it again. (io below to the
tailor, and tell him to unsew your
pockets.’ = Xeutn s Companion.
Trained Pigeons.
Pigeons are carefully trained.
young homer is taken half a mile the
first day, a mile the second,two miles
the third, and 80 on,
It must be liber-
ated each time only in the same direc-
tion as to its loft, {for
along one
forty miles have been
k’s rest comes between.
are enough for a
time. When
reached a wee
miles
young bird’s first year.
of a season, though they may have
flown their two
year preceding.
however,
of the next season, will, if
| the birds are willing and the trainer
patient, be crowned by the accom-
plishment of a four-hundred-mile
As you get higher in the scale
longer and longer rests
of distance
: : are needed.
his captain young Gillis |
shoes and |
Male birds are generally used for
long distances; family mat.ers are apt
attention of the hen,
though she is still eapable of good
work when she has a mind for it.
Pigeon racing as a form of sport
stands almost by itself. All the emu-
lation is between the owners; the birds
are quite unconscious that they are
competing, their only motive in putting
| forth their powers being to get home
as quickly as possible. “There is no
goal; the winners are the
their lofts in the
All the birds, having
ers, are liberated, say, at Bordegux,
Their owners this side of
the channel watch patiently for their
return. By a simple contrivance, the
on itsyar-
rival is prevented from getting out
This enables the owner to
capture it at once, and he forthwith
dispatches a telegram to the club
centre giving the race mark and the
| exact time at which the birdweached
| home.
| time taken in getting to the telegraph
An allowance is amade for the
office. —Good Wo:ds.
And So Did Bill.
“So they went and hung poor Bill,
did they? TI thought there was a
scheme to have him reprieved on the
scaffold?”
“There was, but it fell through.”’-—
Indianapolis Journal.
which |
| place of the ball,
trembling with |
but to his |
surprise, he was received in the most | Drogaists retind money YE it fails to cure; 25
said the captain
| men strong, blood pure. -
! 2
The |
| above the average and
¢ | be plentiful.
doubling the | :
a bird can be |
route ata |
So essential |
| 18 the training that old birds are taken
| only two miles out for the first lesson | )
3 | began taking CASCARETS and since thenl
hundred and fifty |
The end |
Fell From a Scaffold.
From the Herald, Watertown, N, Y.
John Ycung, of Le Roy, N. Y., is 72 year
old, and is well Ynown in that and neigh
boring towns: While putting some weather
boards on a barn, standing on a scaffold
twenty-two feet from the ground, he fslt
dizzy, lost his balance and fell to the ground.
The side of his face, arm and one entire side
of his body, on which he struck, were badly
bruised. Picked up and carried to the
house, he was under a doctor’s care for sev-
eral weeks. The doctor finally came to the
conclusion that his patient had received a
stroke of par-
alysis and.
was beyond
medical aid.
He could not
use one arm,
or turn over
in bed.
One day,
v hile lying
on the bed,
he read of a
“nse some
thing like his
having been
cured with
ys : TT . Dr. Williams’
Paralyzed by the Fall. Pink Pills
for Pale People. He coaxed his grand-
daughter to get him a box of the pills.
After that box had been used he sscured
another. In three weeks he began to feel a
little life in his arm; at the end of four he
could move his fingers; at the end of two
months he could walk, and in three months
ne could shave himself with the injured
hand.
As he told his story in the Herald office,
he looked the perfect picture of health. He
carries a box of the pills in his poeket, and
whenever he does not feel just right he
takes them. They cured him after doctors
had given him up, and his death was daily
expected.
All the elements necessary to give new
life and richness to the blood and restore
shattered nerves are contained, in a con-
dersed form, in Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for
Pale Peopte. They are an unfailing spe-
cific for such diseases as locomotor ataxia,
partial paralysis, 8t. Vitus’ dance, sciatica,
neuralgia, rheumatism, nervous headache,
the after effects of la grippe, palpitation of
the heart, pale and sallow complexions, all
forms of weakness either in male or female,
Two Interesting Buildings.
Pictures of two interesting Baltimore
and Ohio Railroad buildings have been
reproduced in a recent issue of Truth.
One is the building at Frederick, Md.,
which has been used since 1831 as a
freight station and which is still de-
voted to that purpose. In the little
cupola of the building a bell once hung
which was always rung on arrival of
trains from Baltimore when horses
were the motive power of the railroad.
The other building is the station at
Mount Clare, Baltimore, and it is noted
as being the location of the first tele-
graph office in the world. It was from
this building that Professor Morse sent
his celebrated message in 1844 to his
friends in Washington, forty miles
away.
a
By recent arrangement the voyage
from London to Adelaide through the
Suez Canal will be shortened by nearly
four days.
Beauty Is Blood Deep.
Clean blood means a clean skin.
Nec
i beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar.
tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by
stirring up the lazy liver and driving all im-
patie from the body. Begin to-day to
anish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads,
| and that sickly bilious complexion by taking
Cascarets,—beauty for ten cents. All drug-
gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c¢, 25¢, 50c.
The Orientals of Bokhara indulge in
| a peculiar pastime which is said to re-
semble ‘football on horseback with no
sides.” A decapitated goat takes the
and 200 horsemen
scramble for it.
To Cure A Cold in One Day.
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All
Among the many mysteries of bird
migration is the fact that over-sea
journeys are gene rally conducted in the
darkness and invariably against a head
wind.
No-To-Bac for Fifty Cents.
Guaranteed tobacco habit cure. makes weak
0c, 81. All druggists.
glad to
is far
will
Lovers of sardines will be
hear that the output this year
sardines
PI1cKERT, Van Siclen antl Blake
Aves., Brooklyn, N. Y., Oct. 2, 1894.
DR
{| Piso's Cure is a wonderful Cough medicine. |
| —Mrs. W.
DEVIOUS DEFINITIONS.
Hope—A key with which ambition
{s wound up.
Quartermaster—The colored autocrat
of a parlor car.
Marriage—A synonym for either hap-
piness or misery.
Cupidity—One of Cupid's
terprising assistants.
Anything—What a man will promise
his wife to quiet her.
Death—The only sure relief from the
many troubles a man stirs up for him-
self.
Shadow—
his prospects by standing in his own
ight.
Diplomat—A person who
nean what he means for
think he means.
Flattery—Something women think
much more of than men do, but believe
much less in. ~=Chieago News.
doesn’t
others to
It is announced that ‘fewer Ameri-
can divines are vigiting England this
summer than has been known for
many years past.”
Don’t Tobacco Spit and Smoke Your Life Away,
To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag:
netic, full of life, nerve and vigor, mke No-To-
Bac, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men
strong. All druggists, 50c or &1. Cure guaran-
teed. Booklet and sample free. Address
Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or’New York
The population of Palestine is in-
creasing rapidly. Ten years ago there
were only 15,000 residents in Jeffa; to-
day there are nearly 60,000.
THE EXCELLENCE. OF SYRUP OF FIGS
is due not only to the originality and
simplicity of the combination, but also
to the care and skill with which it is
manufactured by scientific processes
known to the CALIFORNIA Fie SyRuUP
Co. only, and we wish to impress upon
all the importance of purchasing the
true and original remedy. As the
genuine Syrup of Figs is manufactured
by the CarirorNiA Fic Syrup Co.
only, a knowledge of that fact will
assist one in avoiding the worthless
imitations manufactured by other par-
ties. The high standing of the CALI-
FORNIA Fig Syrup Co. with the medi-
cal profession, and the satisfaction
which the genuine Syrup of Figs has
given te millions of families, makes
the name of the Company a guaranty
of the excellence of its remedy. It is
far in advance of all other laxatives,
as it acts on the kidneys, liver and
bowels without irritating or weaken-
ing them, and it does not gripe nor
nauseate. In order to get its beneficial
effects, please remember the name of
the Company —
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.
SAN FRANCIS00, Cal.
LOUISVILLE, Ky. NEW YORK, N. ¥._
OOD AS COLD ip"
for lis: oy
Valuable Formulas: golden opportunity; most
valuable secrets known for office, house, farin;
everyone needs them. Circular, ROWLAND, office
EATON & GO. %7 Union & Square, New York City.
--PATENTS -
Procured on cash, or easy instalments. VOWLES &
BURNS, Pateut Attorneys, 237 Broadway. N. x
Oo PS NEW DISCOVERY; gives
quick relief and cures worst
cases. Send for book of testimonials and 10 days’
treatment Free. Dr. H.H. GREEN ‘8 BONS. Atlanta. Ga.
.e For six years I was a victim of dys-
pepsia in its worst form. i could eat nothing
| but milk toast, and at timés my stomach would
not retain and digest even thut. Last March I
have steadily improved, until I am as well as I
ever was in my life
DAVID H. MURPHY. Newark, O.
CANDY
CATHARTIC
Pleasant. Palatable, Potent. Taste Good. Do
G Never Sicken, Weaken, or Gripe, 10¢. 2c. 50¢.
... CURE CONSTIPATION.
Sterling Remedy Company, Chieago, Montreal, New York. S11
KO0-TO0-BA
iviviviviviviviviv ivivivivivivivivi
Established 1780.
Baker’s
Sold and
RusTanined by all drug-
gists to ©
ERE Tobacco Habit.
Chocolate,
celebrated for more
than a century as a
delicious, nutritious,
Band flesh-forming
beverage, has our
well-known
Yellow Label
on the front of every
package, and our
trade-mark," “La Belle
Chocolatiere,” on the
back.
NONE OTHER GENUINB,
MADE ONLY B
WALTER BAKER & CO. Ltd,
Dorchester, Mass.
SIPI RX XFCE IITIID
PUODDDOUOPRPRDEVHVR DH ODDIDVDODTRDHHHH
RARE
&
{ to her at Lynn, Mass., for advice.
| | only,
MRS. PINKHAWS W ARNING
most en- |
Something a man casts on |
J
POOP TROT ETOOTOOTeLee
Satisfaction oi Watch-word.
Morrison, of Woodenville, King
Corny State of Washington, writes concern-
ing his des aling with us: *“I received the goods
yesterday in good shape and am highly
pleased with them. Hereafter when 1 need
jJuything] in your line you w ill hear from me,”
So they come from all
who buy frem us. A
thousand purchasers {
mean a thousand satis-
1S ropen and busi- 4
T Why don't
send for our new
catalogues, anyway?
They are absolu tely free
for the asking.
Our Carpet catalogue
is lithogrs hed. in ten
1 hand-painted
plates. that show the de-
signs faithfully, and
show als» art squares,
rugs, and draperies in
their real cclors; it als
$5 i Bn RnR
{Our Catalogues is fill
ed with Bargains.
+
contains a sup
$1.40 and not a cent! lace curtains, ©
more for this Cob-| which you save
bler Seat Rocker,| least.
solid Oak or finish Our Furniture cata- 4
ed imitation mahog- logue is the best ever is- 4
any. Built like alsued. If you don’t be-
railroad bridge, it'si lieve us,write forit. The 4
so strong, and easily best of it is the prices, §
worth g2 .50—but our they're 40 to 6o per cent
i a
half, at §
price lower than you suspect. §
9 Write for our cata 4
S81. & logues today. Madame,
and when they arrive do
not PN until you have read them, every 4
word ddress (exactly as below).
JULIUS HINES & SON, )
Dept. 305 Baltimore, Md. 4
oo
PER
CENT.
Payable semi-annually at the
Globe Trust Co., Chicago, Ill.
These bonds are a first mort-
gage upon the entire plant,
inc.uding buildings, land and
other property of an Industrial
Company located ciose to Chi-
cago.
The Compuny has been estab-
lished for many years, is well-
known and doing a large and
increasing business.
The officers of the Company
are men of high reputation,
esteemed for their honesty and
business ability. They have
made so great a success of this
business that the bouds of this
Company are rarely ever offered
for sale.
A few of these honds came in
to our hands during the hard
times from parties who had
purchased them several years
ago. We offer them in issues
of $100.00 each for $80.00 and
accrued interest.
For security and a large
interest rate these Industrial
Bonds are recommended as
being among the best.
First-class bonds and securities
of all kinds bought and sold.
Kendall & Whitlock, Bankers and Brokers,
52 Exchange Place, New Yo.k.
TANTED—Case of bad health that RT PANS
W will not benefit Send 5 cts. to R ipans ( ‘hemical
i Co.. NowYork, for 10 samvles and 1000 testi tale.
T0 WOMEN.
Neglect is the Forerunner of Misery and Suffering—A Grateful Huse
band Writes of His Wife’s Recovery.
Nearly all the ill health of women is traceable to some derangement of the
feminine organs.
These derangements do not cure themselves, and neglect of
the sensations resulting from them is only putting
off trouble.
2 3
Pathetic stories are constantly coming
to Mrs.
’inkham of women whose neglect has resulted in
serious heart trouble
and a whole train of woes.
Here is the story of a woman who was helped
by Mrs. Pinkham after other treatment failed:
DEAR Mugs.
Pinkuay:—It affords me very
great pleasure to be able to state that 1 believe
my wife owes her health to your medicine
and good advice.
5
For three years her
alth failed rapidly; she had heart trou-
ble, often falling down in dizzy and
fainting spells, shortness of breath,
choking and smothering spells, bloat-
ing of the stomach, a dry cough, dys-
peptic symptoms, menses irreg-
ular, seanty, and of an un-
natural color. She had been
treated by physicians with but
little benefit. She has taken
your treatment according to
your directions, and is better
in every way. I am well pleased
with the result of your
treatment, and give you
permission to use my letter
for the benefit of others.—
CAs. H.and Mrs. MAY BUTCHER,
Fort Meyer, Va.
The healing and strengthening power of Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound for all fe-
male ills is so well established that it
needs no argument. For over twenty
years it has been used by women with results that are truly wonderful.
Mrs. Pinkham invites all women who are puzzled about their health to write
and no charge is made.
All such correspondence is seen by women
. A Million Women Have Been Benefited by Mrs. Pinkfiam’s Advice and Medicine
“A Cocd Tale Will Bear Tol ing Twice.”
Use Sapolio!
Use