The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, August 03, 1905, Image 3

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    TE —
IGRESS
» of Power
.Xecu-
out of the
Rico, and
sembled in
memorial-
of bring-
es in the
y the con-
3 the sev-
1erican in-
complains
power still
uncil com-
ments ap-
velt.
ments,” it
g nothing
r needs of
after dis-
in the ex-
1e the fate
change in
se of dele-
members
demands
0 the For-
of an in-
ed of two
districts,
cil.
sed senate
ame privi-
under the
'y of Por-
eral, the
> commis-
e commis-
ie in their
sent titles,
f the exe-
ls named
r with the
e and not
d States.”
| by a ris-
ering for
ed a peti-
le insular
nm of the
inting to
ult of the
nt estab-
Known as
gue, with
Juan as
ED.
1,000 and
alty.
Mitchell,
office of
irther the
Mitchell
re., was
1,000 and
1de.
case by
le United
ence will
Mitchell
l.. to the
Judge De
a conclu-
°n consid-
lefendant,
ccount in
and the
ver here-
ding any
=
to Have
ractically
ina trade
been ef-
Iphia has
solidation
nnounced
» kiln ca-
plants in
enter the
1ia banks
But one
I, O., the
any, with
the com-
who run
are also
“Blue-
ist, sen-
for poi-
ves, was
1st 25 by
7 of exe-
xiety on
d never
owed by
le latter
ecessary
ad been
was giv-
lend of
he was
fan mo-
an Steek
1gstown,
extreme-
ere anx-
ich has
and that
0 return
5 at the
e strike
mother
red and
is the
on of a
of Levi
raddock,
vin chil-
100n, at
mourn-
e
i
Thousands of Women
ARE MADE WELL AND STRONG
Success of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound Rests Upon the Fact that It
Really Does Make Sick Women Well
Thousands upon thousands of Ameri-
can women have been restored to
health by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta-
ble Compound. Their letters are on file
in Mrs. Pinkham's office, and prove this
statement to be a fact and not a mere
boast. .
Overshadowing indeed i is the success
of this great medicine, and compared
‘with it all other 1nedicines and treat-
ment for women are experiments.
Why has Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege-
table Compound accomplished its wide-
spread results for good ?
sWhy has it lived and thrived and
done its glorious work for a quarter of
a century ?
Simply and surely because of its ster-
ling worth. The reason no other med-
icine has even approached its success
is plainly and positively because there
is no other medicine in the world so
good for women’s ills.
The wonderful power of Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound over
the diseases of womankind is not be-
cause it is a stimulant—not because it is
a palliative, but simply because it is
the most wonderful tonic and reccn-
structor ever discovered to act directly
upon the uterine system, positively
CURING disease and displacements and
restoring health and vigor.
Marvelous cures are reported from
all parts of the country by women who
have been cured, trained nurses who
have witnessed cures, and physicians
who have recognized the virtue in
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-
pound, and are fair enough to give
credit where it is due. If physicians
dared to be frank and open, hundreds
vf them would acknowledge that they
jonstantly prescribe Lydia E. Pink-
gam’s Vegetable Compound in severe
jases of female ills, as they know by
yxperience that it will effect-a cure.
Women who are troubled with painful
ar ivregular menstruation, backache,
Joating (or flatulence), leucorrhcea,
Jalling, inflammation or ulceration of
the uterus, ov arian troubles, that
‘‘bearing-down” feeling, dizziness,
faintness, indigesticm, nervous pros-
tration, or the blues, should take im-
mediate action to ward off the serious
consequences and be restored to health
and strength by taking Lydia E. Pink-
ham’s Vegetable Compound. Anyway,
write to Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass.,
for advice. It's free and always helpful,
RROWH \WAGON
MADE IN ALL STYLES.
Send for Booklet giving full description,
BROWN MANUFACTURING CO
ZANESVILLE. OHIO.
D R O PS NEW DISCOVERY; Shs
quick relief and 5% Sb
cases. Send for book of testimonials and 10 aye’
.guide,.as he slipped the
treatment Free. Dr. H. H. GREEN'S BONS, 0 De Ga.
A Well-Informed Cuide.
The late John W. Mackay was at-
tending to business at the great Com-
stock mine one day when a party of
tourists approached and asked if he
knew of a guide who would taka
them about. Evidently none of them
knew him. Mackay offered to escort
them and did so, explaining the whole
mystery of gold and silver quartz
mining. When they emerged * the
visitors clubbed together and made
up a small sum for the guide. Among
them was Andrew D. White, re-
cently. ambassador to: Germany,
at that time president of Cornell
University. “Here, my . man, take
this,” he said. “Your explanation of
the working of the mine has been
singuuarly clear and informing.”
“Well, it ought to be,” replied the
. half-dollar
in his overalls pocket. “I dug ’em
and I own ’em.”
A Sure Cure for Gout.
Dr. William Osler, in one of his
Baltimore lectures, recited a quaint
old cure for the gout—a cure, from
a seventeenth century medical work
that was designed to show gout’s
hopelessness.
“First pick,” said the old cure, “a
handkerchief from the pocket of a
spinster of 35 who never wished to
wed; second, wash the handkerchief
in an honest miller’s pond; third, dry
it on the hedge of a parson who
never was covetous; fourth, send it
to the shop of a physician who never
killed a patient; fifth, mark it with
a lawyer’s ink who never cheated a
client, and, sixth, apply it, hot, to the
gout-tormented part. A speedy cure
must follow.”
“
Large Fossils Found.
Scientists of the University of Cali-
fornia. who have been searching for
prehistoric animals on the Nevada
desert for the past few months, have
succeeded in finding skeletons of some
sea mammoths on the dry wastes.
One of the specimens is 29 feet long
and, jacked occupies 54 boxes. This
specimen was found on the great 40-
mile desert in Humbolt county and
is considered one of the most valu-
able fossils ever unearthed. Before
finding this one the scientists suc-
ceeded in locating several smaller rep-
tiles, which must have lived in that
region ages ago.
FITSpermanently cured. No fits orneryous-
ness after first day’s use of Dr. Kline's Groat
Nerveliestorer, #9trial bottleand treatise fres
Dr.B. H. KLINE, Ltd. 931 Arch St., Phila., Pa.
Cabbages were troduced into England
in the sixteenth century.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Chuarei
teething, soften the gums, reduces inflamma-
tion Jallays pain,curesw. ind colie, 25c.a bottle
Cromwell is said to have originated the
board of trade idea.
Piso’s Cure for C Consumption 15 an an infallible
medicine for coughs and colds.—N. W
Samver, Ocean Grove, N.J., Feb, 17, 1900!
A ‘baby was born the other day on &
Gotham trolley car.
Snake Tries to Swallow China Egg.
Mrs. Young, a widow living near
Bellefonte, Pa., was terrified on be-
holding a blacksnake coiled up in a
chicken nest. The snake was killed,
when an investigation revealed that
the reptile had been endeavoring to
swallow a china nest egg.
(Natural
Flavor)
Libby's
Ox Tongues
Veal Loaf
Whan you are at a loss to know what to serve for luncheon, dinner or
when you crave something both appetizing
Food Products
Once tried, you will always have a supply on hand
Chili Con Carne
Ham Leaf
Your Grocer has them
Libby, McNeill & Libby, Chicago
and satisfying—try
Brisket Beef
Soups
coffee without good material.
counters won't do.
for a king in this way:
The Secret of Good Cofiee
Even the best housekeepers cannot make a good cup of
Dirty, adulterated and queerly
blended coffee such as unscrupulous dealers shovel over their
But take the pure, clean, natural flavored
LION COFFEE, the leader of all package coffees—
the coffee that for over a quarter of a century has been daily
welcomed ini millions of homes—and you will make a drink fit
Grind your LION COFFEE rather fine.
extra for the pot.”
LL BOILING WATER.
TES ONLY.
ER. PAdd
set aside,
serve.
o
Don’t boil it too lon
minutes settle. Serve
2d. WITH CO WA
gs.
oiling.
With
COFFE before
2d. With Cold Water instead of eggs.
aside for eight or ten minutes, then serve through a strainer.
Use LION COFFEE, because to get best results you must use the best coffee.
First mix it with a little cold water, enough to make a thick
add white of an egg (if egg is to be used as a settler), then follow one of the following rules:
Add boiling water, and lect it boil
Ada 2 Rue cold water and set aside five
ng.
Don’t let it stand more than ten minutes pefore serving.
Don’t use water that has been bolled befo
TWO WAYS TO SETTLE COFFEE.
Use part of the white of an egg, mixing it with the ground LION
After boiling add a dash of cold water, and set
Use ‘a tablespoonful to each cup, and one
ste, and
our cold water to the 2 Paote and
d a little cold water, and in tive
LION COFFEE in future.
Insist on getting a package of genuine LION COFFEE,
prepare it aecording to this recipe and you will only use
(Lion-head on every package.)
(Save these Lion-heads for valuable premiums.)
SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE
WOOLSON SPICE CO., Toledo,
(Scld only in 1 1b. sealed packages.)
Ohio.
and |
{ at Uniontown,
FINANCE AND TRADE REVIEW
DUN'S WEEKLY SUMMARY
Resumption at Steel Millis Reflects
Confidence in the Future—Im-
provement Over a Year Ago.
R. G. Dun & Co.'s “Weekly Review
of Trade” says:
Commercial tendencies are still in
the direction of improvement, al-
though progress is hampered by
some inflation of prices for the raw
materials of textile and footwear in-
dustries. Confidence expands as
the crops are secured each day put-
ting a large quantity of grain be-
vond danger, and. making sensational
rumors of loss less effective. Evi-
dences of faith in the future are in-
creasing, “more disposition being
shown to provide for requirements
beyond immediate consumption.
The industrial situation is in strik-
ing contrast to conditions prevailing
a year ago, when there was much
idleness, both on account of quiet
trade and labor controversies. Com-
plete returns now available for the
leading apartments indicate that the
first half of 1905 made a better com-
parison with the corresponding six
months of last year, which naturally
increases optimism regarding busi-
ness during the second half.
Foreign commerce: at New
for the last week was almost identical
with the results in 1904. Traffic in-
terests begin to feel the pressure of
crops, but facilities have proved am-
ple thus far, and railway earnings in
July were 9.0 per cent larger than in
the same time last year. Resump-
tion of work at several steel plants
testifies to the brevity of the midsum-
mer period of dullness. Confidence
in the future is so general in this in-
dustry that it would be most surpris-
ing if expected activity failed to ma-
York
‘ terialize. Prices are readily main-
tained.
Failures of the week number 214
in the United States against 220 last
Year, and 27 in Canada, compared
with 18 a year ago.
MARKETS,
PITTSBURG.
Grain, Flour and Feed.
Whegi=—No.2 red.................. $ 093 a6
o—No. 2 eis nse ain 85 £5
Corn—No 2 yoljow, ear............ G1 62
No. 2 yellow, shelled. . 6) 61
Missed ear:............ 43 49
Oats—No. 2 white. . 35 33
No. 3 white.. 3 33
Flour—Winter pate nts... 565 575
Fancy straight winters. 10) 6 50
Hay—No. 1 g mathy oes. 11097 “1. a0
Glover No. l............. 0.;
Feed—No. 1 white mid. ton. 20350 "21.00
Brown middlings..... i017 Ho
Siraw—Wheat 6 75 7
Oat..z.... oe 67 70)
« Dairy Products.
Butter—Elgin gros amery S$ 2 24
20 2
16 1s
13 14
13 14
Poultry, Ete.
Hens—per 1b .--.8- UH 15
Chickens—dressed..... . is 16 18
Eggs—Pa. and Ohio, fresh.. 18 19
Fruits and Vogetablos.
Apples bbl ........,........ : «+ 235) 400
ro.watoss—Fancy white per b 30 3)
Cabbage—per ton........ 18 00 21 0
Onions—per barrel. 250 30)
BALTIMORE.
Flour—Winter Patent. .... 505 5
Wheat—No. 2 red : 93 91
Corn—Mixed,.......... = 51 A?
gos. o........0L us. 16 18
Butter—Ohio creamery 2 22
PHILACELPHIA.
Flour—Winter Patent............. $ 550 aD
Wheat—No.2 red....... 9 101
Corn—No. 2 mixed.... 5) 51
Oats—No. 2 white... 36 rd
Butter—Creamery........ . 20 22
Eggs—Pennsylvania firsts........ 16 7
NEW YORK.
Flour—Patents. .......oooooernieens $ 60) 65)
Ww heat—No. 2 rod...... : 102 104
Corn—No. 8............ 55 a6
Oats—No. 2 white EL 37 33
Butter—Creamery ........ 5 20 22
Bggs—State and cain 17 18
LIVE STOCK.
\ ——
Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg.
Cattle,
Extra, 1450 to 1600 lbs ...
Prime, 1300 to 1400 1bs ..
Medium, 1200 to 1300 108
Tidy, 1050 to 1150...
Butcher, 900 to 1100
Common to fair
Oxen, common to fat .....
Common togood fat bulls and.c Ow 3
Milch cows, each. .......0 ......
Prime heavy hogs
Prime medium weights. ...
Best heavy yorkers and medium.
5
5 35
Good pigs and lightyorkers........ 57)
Pigs, common to good 480
Roughs. 41
Stags 351
Extra, tuiini ee scasivae $ 500 515
Good to choice .. 53 56)
Medium ... 475 5 25
Some to fair., 250 4 0
Lambs.............. .. .... 5 800
Calves,
A Lr ER CI 500 v5)
V eal, good to choice. . 330 4 5¢
Veal, common heavy. . 8) 37)
Much Trouble to Himself.
Gen. Sherman once had occasion to
stop at a country home where a tin
basin and a roller-towel on the back
porch sufficed for the family’s ablu-
tions. For two mornings the small boy
of the household watched in silence
the visitor's efforts at making a toilet
under the unfavorable auspices, but
when on the third day the tooth-brush
nail-file, whisk-broom, etc.,, hab been
duly used and returned to their places
in the traveler’s grip, he could sup-
press his curiosity no longer, so bold-
ly put the question: “Say, Mister,
Xir you always that much trouble to
.vo'se'f?”
The steel plant of the Carnegie
Steel company at New Castle which
has been closed down for a month on
account of a break in the machinery,
has resumed work. Twelve hundred
men were given employment. The
furnaces began work last week.
A barn owned by James Dickson,
near Midway, was destroyed by a mys-
terious fire, with adjoining
buildings. is about $10,000
with little insurance.
The West Penn Railways company,
has increased th 1
car thr ugh the
10 miles an hour.
THE PLAYWRICHT-STAR.
Odette Xyler, Famous Actress, Vziues
Doan’s Kidney Pills.
Miss Odette Tyler is not only one of
the best known dramatic stars in
America, but has written and produced
a successful play
of her own. Miss
>. Tyler has written
the following
grateful note, ex-
f' pressing her ap-
preciation of
Doan’s Kidney
Pills:
Foster-Milburn
Buffalo,
Gentlemen—My
experience with your valuable remedy
has been equally. gratifying to both
myself and friends.
(Signed) ODETTE TYLER.
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
For sale by all dealers. Price, 50
cents per box.
A Sailor’s Burial at Cherbourg.
The most impressive feature, how-
ever, of the day on which John Paul
Jones’ body arrived at Cherbourg was
the real funeral of Seaman Rodgers
of the Chattanooga, who died yes-
terday in .the Civil hospital here
from, nephritis. In the afterncon 100
sailors and a firing squad of marines,
accompanied by the scarlet coated
band of the Brooklyn, marched to the
hospital and received the body. The
escort was augmented there by a
detachment of French sailors and
soldiers and a number of professional
mourners. The route was lined with
spectators. Thousands of the inhabit-
ants joined the cortege as it passed
alonz, the band playing the Dead
March in Saul. The -body of blue
jackets mourning their comrade
marched in perfect alignment and
step. As the coffin passed the male
spectaters removed their hats, and
the women crossed themselves. The
coffin was draped with the American
and was flanked by six mess-
ates of the dead sailor. Arriving at
the cemetery the escort formed a
hollow square about the grave, and
the Episcopal burial service was
read. Then the firing squad deliv-
ered three volleys, mourning taps
wel scunded on the bugle, and
America had given France a sailor
for the one she was to.take on the
next day.
fiag,
The Largest Lump of lcs. |
est mass of ice in the world |
is probably the one which fills up |
nearly the whole of the interior of
Greenland, where it has accumulated |
The larg
since before the dawn of history. It]
is believed -now to form a block
about 600,000 square miles in area,
and averaging a mile and a half in
thickness. According to these statis-
tics the lump of ‘ice is larger in
volume’ than the whole body of water
in the Mediterranean, and there is
encugh of it te cover the whole of the
United Kingdom of Great Britain and
Ireland with a layer about seven
miles thick. If it were cut into two
convenient slabs and built up equal-
ly upon the entire’ surface of ‘‘gal-
lant little Wales,” it would form a
pile more than 120 miles high. There
is ice enough in Greenland to cover
the entire surface of the United
States a quarter of a mile deep.
What May Be Found at Skibo.
The sporting attractions of Skibo,
Mr. Carnegie’s highland home are thus
summed up: The extent of his shoot-
ing is about. 20,000 acres, of which
about 10,000 acres are moor, 6,000 acres
arable and 4,000 acres wood; 600 to
800 brace grouse, 22 stags, 4 fallow
bucks, 42 roe deer, besides black game
partridges, pheasants, snips, wood-
cock, hares, rabbits and wild fowl
may be expected. There is a fair sal-
mon and sea trout fishing in about
15 miles of the Evelix, and good trout
fishing in Lochs Migdale, Laggan, Lars
and Buidhe—Westminster Gazette.
Electro-Magnetic Surgery.
A huge electro-magnet has been set
up in a certain hospital in England.
It drew out splinters of steel which
had become lodged in the eyes of
patients. In one instance it drew
out a piece of a hammer head which
had been driven into the muscles of
a patient’s upper arm, and in another
case drew out a piece of a cold-chisel
in a forearm.
| timid.
EVER TREAT YOU SO?
Coffee Acts the Jonah and Will Come Up
A clergyman who pursues his noble
calling in a country parish in Iowa |
tells of his coffee experience: |
“My wife and I used coffee regularly |
for breakfast, frequently for dinner
and occasionally for supper—always
the very best quality—package coffee
never could find a place on our table.
““In the spring of 1896 my wife was |
taken with violent vomiting, which
we had great difficulty in stopping.
pt seemed to come from coffee drink-
ng, but we could not decide.
a2 the following July, however, she |
was attacked a second time by the
vomiting. I was away from home fill-
ing an appointment at the time, and on |
my return I found her very low; she |
had literally vomited herself almost to !
death, and it took some days to quiet |
the trouble and restore her stomach.
“I had also experienced the same
trouble, but not so violently, and had
relieved it each time by a resort to |
medicine. |
“But my wife's second attack satis- !
fied me that the use of coffee was at |
the bo#iom of our troubles, and so we |
stopped it forthwith and took on Pos-
tum Food Coffee. The old symptoms
of disease disappeared, and during the |
9 years that we have been using Pos- |
tum instead of coffee we have never
had a recurrence of the vomiting. We
never weary of Postum, to which we
"know we owe our good health. This is
a simple sta nt of facts’? Name
given by Po Company, Battle
Creek, Micl
Read the tle book, “The Road to
Wellville,” in each pkz.
| their sex,
| and economical than liquid
THE R. PAXTON COMPANY
A Modern Buccaneer
“The days of piracy may be gone,
but there is a bold buccaneer in the
waters of the North Pacific ocean who
comes perilously near duplicating the
exploits of Lafitte and Captain Kidd,”
said E. R. Birdwell, of San Francisco.
“This rover of the deep, Alexander
McLean by name, is the master of the
famous Carmencita, a craft which has
for a long time been engaged in® selling
whisky illicity to Indians and in
poaching on the fur seal preserves of
Russia and the United States. It is
hinted that the owner of this outlaw
ship has done even darker deeds than
swindling redskins and sealing seals,
but he has thus far escaped capture,
either through his remarkable luck or
the inefficiency of the government
revenue service. The latest McLean
exploits have been committed in wa-
ters that are under Russian jurisdic- |
tion, and right now Russia has her |
hands too full in Manchuria to bother |
with minor affairs.—Washington Post. |
Work and Wages.
Paul Morton gets $100,000 a year,
and Admiral Togo $3,000. That's |
about right. Morton has 600,000 dis- |
satisfied policy holders to placate, |
and Togo has only a few thousand |
Russians to
different life. Besides, Togo’s labors
are over, and Morton’s have
gun and may never end.
has got to do to keep his job and
the esteem of the public is to stay,
afloat, where he cannot spend all!
his money, and to avoid home com-
ings. What Morton must do could
not be told in a day.—Portland Ore-
gonian,
A Queer Thing About July.
How we came to pronounce July
as we do now with the accent on the
second syllable is one of the unsolved
mysteries of speech. Namedy of
course, after Julius Caesar, it should
| really be pronounced to rhyme with
“duly,” and so our forefathers
ally did pronounce it. Spenser, for
instance, has the line, “Then came
hot July boyling like a fire,” and even
so late as Johnson’s time the accent
actu-
was stil] on the “Ju.” It is one of
many words which would startle
those ancestors of ours spoken as
we speak them now.—London Chron-
icle,
Shaking Hands.
When a stranger does not
the hand you offer him, you are en-
titled to doubt his honesty. If he
favors you with a couple of fingers
you may set him
If he gives you the *Amort |
can squeeze,” he is audacious. If
his hand slips away, he is
but if he is good, loyal, sincere, well-
balanced, mentally and physically,
”
lets ‘you have a grip, ample, fi
modest and yet genial.—New York
Globe.
15° YEARS. OF TORTURE.
show how to lead a|
just be-|
All Togo |
grasp |
down as he tugiiy |
{ If his hand lies limply in yours, re is)
indolent; |
|
|
|
|
{
|
MISS ELLA OFF, Indianapolis, Ind.
SUFFERED FOR MONTHS.
Pe-ru-na, the Remedy That Cured
Miss Ella Off, 1127 Linden St., Indian-
apolis, Ind., writes:
“I suffered with a run down con-
stitution for several months, and
feared that I would have to give up
my work.
“On seeking the advice of a physi-
cian, he prescribed a tonic, 1 found,
however, that it did me no good. On
| seeking the advice of our druggist.
he asked me to try Peruna. In «
few weeks I began to feel and actlike
a different etaan, My appetite in=
creased, I not have that worn-
out feeling, EL a sleep splen-
ydidly. In a couple of months 1was
| entirely recovered. I thank you for
| what your mE ieivie has done for
me, ’’---Ella O,
Write Dr. Hits, President of The
Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, Ohio, for
free medical advice. All correspondence
| is held strictly confidential.
THERIRESANETER
€
ul
=
my EER
EBEReAITTE
mE
rms
CREE
CREE
EZ
'
4
ST
=
ee
BREATH
TEI
FEVER
Itching and Painful Sores Covered Head i
and Body—Cured in Week by Cuticura.
“For fifteen years my scalp and fore-
head was one mass of scabs, and my body
was covered with sores. Words cannot
express how I suffered from the itching |
I had given up hope when a |
and pain.
friend told me to get Cuticura.
bathing with Cuticura Soap and applying
Cuticura Ointment for three days my head
was as clear as ever, and to my surprise
and joy, one cake of soap and one box of
ointment made a complete cure in one
week. (Signed) H. B. Franklin, 717 Wash-
ington St., Allegheny, Pa.”
More Plagues in Egypt.
Cairo is now in the throes of a
caterpillar plague, and many of the
older resirents say they never saw
so many of the destructive insects as
are now in evidence. In some sec-
tions of the city they have
destroyed the foliage on scores of
trees, and in a few places - have
even devoured much of the grass.—
Wickliffe (Il1l.) Yeoman.
WE SELL A $300 PIANO FOR 8195
To introduce. Buy direct and save thé dif-
ference. Easy terms. Write us and we'll
tell you all about it.
OFFMANN'S MUSIC HOUSE,
537 Smithfield Street, Pittsburg, Pa.
FOR WOM EN 2
troubled with ills peculiar to rp 4
used as a douche is marvelously sac-
cessful. Thoroughly cleanses, kills disease germs,
stops discharges, heals inflammation and local
soreness, cures leucorrheea and nasal catarrh,
Paxtine is in powder form to be dissolved in pure
water, and is far more cleansing, healing, Sees dal
atiseptics for al
TOILET AND WOMEN’S SPECIAL USES
For sale at druggists, 50 cents a box.
Trial Box and Book of Instructions Free.
ENSIO JOHN W.MORKIS,
S 4 P Washington, B,C.
Favopeneiylly Eroseoytes Slpims,
3yrsin zivi
P.N. U. 31,1905.
ik whe ALL ELSE EH
Bd Best os Syru
in ti ime, Sold 25: gic:
GUARANTEED CURE for all Bowel trond}
blood, wind on the stomach, bloated bowels,
# pains ‘after eating, liver trouble, sallow skin and dizziness.
regularly you are sick.
B CASCARETS today,
jl right Take our advice,
f money refunded. The
booklet free. Address Ste
After |
almost |
BOSTON, Mass. |
or SS.
war, 15 adj adicating claims. atty sinea | ——
Constipation kills more people th ti a
starts chronic ailments and ui years of su ioe DS Mion
for you will never get well and stay well untit yo
start with Cascarets today under absolute gua
ne tablet stamped CCC.
g Remedy Company, Chica ago or New
instantly Relieved and Speedily
. Cured hy Baths with
Soap to cleanse the
gentle applications of Cuti-
skin,
cura Ointment to soothe and
heal, and mild doses of Cuti-
cura Pills to cool the blood.
A single Set, costing but One
Dollar often cures.
Sold throughout the world. Potter Drug and Chem,
Corp., Boston, Sole Props.
BgSend for “ The rat Humor Cure.” Mailed Fres,
| For Boilers and Hot Air Furnaces.
Write for Catalogue.
STAKDARD HEATING AND RADIATOR CO.,
PITTSBURG, PA.
Brartl bad 3
100, pimples,
s don’t mo ve
at
es, appendicitis, BI gg bad
foul ‘mouth, headache, indigesti
When your bo
No matter what ai
Never sold