The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, August 31, 1905, Image 3

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5 Mr.
on
SENATOR SULLIVAN
Says He Has Found Doan’s Kidney Pills
Invaluable in Treating Sick Kidneys.
Hon: Timothy D. Sullivan, of New
York, Member of Congress from the
Eighth New York District and one ot
the Democratic
leaders of New
York State,
strongly recom-
mends Doan’s
Kidney Pills.
Sénator Sulli-
van writes:
It is a .pleas-
ure to endorse a
remedy like
oe Doan’s Kidney
434899 Pills, having
found them of the greatest value in
eliminating the distress caused by sick
kidneys, and in restoring those organs
to a condition of health. My experi-
ence with your valuable remedy was
equally as gratifying as that of several
of my friends. Yours truly,
(Signed)
TIMOTHY D. SULLIVAN.
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
For sale by all druggists. Price, 50
cents per box.
Togo’s Salary.
It is stated on high authority that
Togo has a salary of $3,000 a‘year.
There is also the highest possible au-
thority for the statement that he
@arns it. A modest estimate of what
his services were worth’ to Japan
during a recent ‘interchange of cour-
tesies at sea is a million a minute.
But for the virtue of the Emperor he
never could have rendered them. He
says so himself, and he ought to
know.-—Brooklyn + Eagle.
SALT RHEUM ON HANDS
Suffered Agony and Had to Wear Bandages
All the Time—Another Cure by Cuticura.
Another cure by Cuticura is told of by
Mrs. Caroline Cable, of Waupoca, Wis., in
the following grateful letter: “My husband
suffered agony with salt rheum on his
hands, and I had to keep them bandaged
ell the time. We tried ‘everything we
could get, but nothing helped him until he
used Cuticura. One set of Caticura Soap,
Qintment and Pills cured him entirely,
and his hands have been as smooth as pos-
sible ever since. I hope this letter will be
the means of helping other sufferers.”
A Note to Novel Readers.
‘Well worth pondering by a gen-
eration of novel readers too apt to
imbibe a code of ethics from irres-
ponsible purveyors of fiction, are
these words in Harper's Magazine
from William Dean Howells, himself
the dean of American novelists: “If
a nove] flatters the passions, and ex-
alts them above the principles, it is
poisonous; ‘it may not kill, but it
will certainly injure; and this test
will alone exclude an entire class of
fiction, of which eminent examples
will occur to all Then the whole
spawn of so-called unmoral TO-
mances, which imagine a world where
the sins of sense are unvisited by the
penalties following, swift or slow, but
inexorably sure, in the real world,
are deadly poison; these do kill. The
novels that merely tickle our preju-
dices and lull our judgment, or that
coddle our sensibilities, or pamper
our gross appetite for the marvelous
are not so fatal; but they are innutri-
tious, and clog the soul with un-
wholesome vapors of all kinds. Na
doubt they, too, help to weaken the
mental fibre, and make their readers
indifferent to plodding perseverance
and plain industry, and to matter-of:
fact poverty and commonplace dis
tress.”
STOP, WOMAN!
AND CONSIDER
THE ALL-
IMPORTANT FACT
That in address-
ing Mrs. Pink-
ham you are con-
fidingyour private
ills to a woman—
a woman whose experi-
ence with women’s
diseases covers a great
many years.
You can talk freely
toa woman when it is
revolting to relate
our private trou-
les to a man—
besides a man
does not under-
stand —simply be-
cause he is a man
fTany women
suffer in silence and drift along from
bad to worse, knowing full well that
they ought to have immediate assist-
ance, but a natural modesty impels
them to shrink from exposing them-
selves to the questions and probably
examinations of even their family
physician. Itis unnecessary. Without
money or price you can consult a wo-
man whose knowledge from actual ex»
perience is great.
Mrs. Pinkbam’s Standing Invitation,
Women suffering from any form of
female weaknessareinvited to promptly
communicate with Mrs. Pinkham, at
Lynn, Mass.
open ed, read and answered by women
only. A woman can freely talk of her
rivate illness to a woman; thus has
pe established the eternal confidence
between Mrs. Pinkham and the women
of America which has never been
broken Out of the vast volume of
experience which she has todraw from,
it is more than possible that she has
gained the very knowledge that will
help your ease. She : nothing in
returnz except your good-will, and her
advice has relieved thousands. Surely
, rich or 28005: is S¥oty foolish
pensvots offer of assistance
If you are ill, don’t he
bottle of Lydia E. Pink
Compcund at once, and w
ham, Lynn. Mass., for spe
All letters are received,
Selling is Half the Crop.
It makes me tired to hear farmers
kay there is no sale for their produce,
when tliey don’t even let any one know
that they have some commodities for
pale. Last summer [ visited neighbor
8. I noticed he had a few trees of
summer Rambo apples as fine as they
grow, going to waste. I asked him
why he did not sell them. “No one
wants them,” he replied. I told him
such apples were in big demand in
York at more than $1 per bushel
“Well, John,” he said, speaking to his
gon, ‘I guess you will have to take
them down and sell them, and you will
have half the money.” So John put
the apples nicely on straw in the
wagon box and covered them all up
with blankets and ®tarted to York to
sell the apples. He drove up town
about a mile, thoseapplesnicely covered
up all the time, expecting, no doubt,
that some telepathist or mind reader
would divine what he rad, come out on
the street, stop him and buy the ap-
ples, but he was not so fortunate. By
mere accident, a grocer discovered that
he had apples, and on sight bought
them all for about half what he could
have sold them for had he only let
people know that he had apples for
sale. Think of a merchant closing all
his show windows, taking down his
sign and- absolutely stop-all advertis-
ing, how much business do you suppose
he would do?—L. W. Lighty, in Massa-
chusetts Ploughman.
—eceeer
To Kill ITawks,
A Louisiana reader asks how to give
nux vomica to chickens and how often
to give it to kill hawks, and if it is
dangerous.
It undoubtedly is dangerous to the
chickens, if our reader intends {o give
it to those that are alive, especially if
more than one dose is given.
Of course if nux vomica could be
esiven to ome chicken only, and the
hawk be made to select that one and
eat it, there is a bare possibility that
Mr. Hawk might die or at least become
30 sick of chicken that he would not
return for another.
Still, we think this would be an im-
possible task, and other methods would
he more effective. We have heard that
arsenic or strychnine put in the car-
eass of a dead chicken, which is placed
in view of the hawk out of reach of
other chickens and cats, has been found
to kill not only the old one, but the
entire brood of young hawks to which
it is carried.
Scarecrows have but littie terror for
hawks, especially when they have a
brood of young ones to feed, and we
doubt if there is any better way of
making way with them than with a
good shotgun. It may require a little
patience to lie in wait and get a shot
at a hawk, but if one or two are thus
gilled the others are not likely to give
further trouble.
Bare yards, with no grass or weeds,
offer an inviting place for the hawks,
and the chickens l:ave no way to es-
cape from them.
A marten box erected near the chick-
en yard will be of material aid in fight-
ing hawks. One little marten or blue
bird will. put a big hawk to flight
and will often chase him fully a mile
away
A nest of martens and a few wells
directed shots will do more than all
the poison that one can arrange.—
Home aud Farm.
Increasing the Yodder Supply.
Fine and well-rotted stable manure
will also often pay in the increase of
rowen, when spread on the land shortly
after the first crop is secured. Another
method of obtaining a good second crop
as advised by Professor. C. S. Phelps
in a crop report of Massachusetts
Board of Agriculture is to cut early.
plow and seed at once to clover and
mixed grasses, using at least fiftcen
pounds of clover to the acre. With
seeding done early in July, a good crop
of clover should be obtained late in
September or early in October, and a
strong growth of grass and clover the
rtollowing year.
Taking up the specific crops that can
be grown to supplement the hay crop,
Professor Phelps’ gives those that are
best adapted to the purpose, time of
seeding, quantity of seed per acre.
time of cutting and method of use,
whether for hay, silage or green fodder.
The crops mentioned are corn, Hun-
garian grass, the millets, soy beans,
cais and peas, bariey and peas, winter
vetch, rape and cabbage. Hungarian
grass is, all things considered, probably
the best crop that could be sown in
July for hay, and should be cut early,
even before all the heads are formed.
as it tends to grow woody as it ripens.
Soy beans are a valuable crop, particu-
larly for silage. ' Late cabbage can
often be grown to profit as a market
crop, and the unmarketable portions
will furnish valuable fodder. Profes-
sor Pheips says that he has found
apple pomace ‘to be a valuable feed
for milch cows, and there are many
sections where it can be obtained for
the ‘hauling.
The article closes with some excel-
lent advice as to feeding the hay
after all possible has been done to sup-
plement it. Fo obtain the best results,
about one-half the dry matter of the
ration should come from the grain
feeds. The cheaper dry fodders, such
as corn stover or oat straw, may then
be fed in connection with liberal silage
Cron
and grain feeding. and d results
will “follow.— Massachusetts Plough-
man.
ro i
Stacking S{raw.
» taken the Indiana Far
‘mer for
When a mec icine ha
in restoring to health S
you Senn; well say,
“I do not believe it will
.ground up on the opposite side from
a recent number under caption “How
to Save Straw.”
It appears to my mind that the Vigo
County farmer (though a good fellow)
lacks the courage and tact of a good
Jap soldier. Before blowers were
heard of, any man was expected to
take his place on the straw stack, if so
requested. Sometimes as many as five
men wrought on a stack until it was
cormapleted rightly. and would preserve
itself for future use (perhaps for sev-
eral years). Along with the blower
came the declaration “That all hand
stacking was at an end,” for the blower
completed the stack. I discredited it
from the start. I knew the declaration
was a fake the first Dlower stack 1
saw. It had a shed roof from the
the machine, and shapeless pile of
finely cut straw, from top to bottom.
A perfect spring to receive and retain
moisture, and thereby spoil the good
feed in it. The first blower we had on
our farm, we started in with two good
stackers to follow the rotating pipe,
to tramp the middle and arrange the
straw evenly over the surface. Then
we gave orders to blow the straw
where it was needed to complete a good
self preserving top on it. We have
never lost our straw, buf get much
good feed out of it during winter. We
then tear down the residue for fall fer-
tilizer, and put it all back on the soil
in twelve months again. Am not
prophet enough to divine just where
American farmers will drift to. Too
tony to be found on the blower straw
stack, for love or money, afraid of little
outside dust when the Good Book says
he is made of dust. We may save
our straw in stacks about as we for-
merly. did, if we go at it rightly.
My rule is to go on my neighbor's
stack provided he will work on mine,
or furnish a man.
Pay stackers extra, if they desire it;
it will be money well spent. We have
a couple of pairs of goggles to be used
on threshing days. Also furnish a
damp sponge to tie over nose and
mouth to exclude dust, if so desired.
Blower stacks need steeper roofs on
them, and the middle kept very solid.
A few days after threshing and the
stacks settles a little, make the root
a little steeper and higher, and fasten
rails or poles on the ridge against
heavy fall winds.—J. Beebe, in Indiana
Farmer.
Resisting Potato Blight and Rot.
Thorough cultivation tends to con-
serve the moisture of the soil in a dry
season (when there is little danger of
rot), and: in a wet season it helps to
Keep the ground frem becoming wet
and soggy. Ridging the rows holds up
the vines from the ground, and thus
aids in a quicker evaporation of mois-
ture from the foliage and ground, and
in so doing aids in retarding the
spread of the blight, It also covers the
tubers deeper in the soil, and so pre-
tect them better from the blight spores
that fall from the leaves. Where
spraying is practiced it also makes this
operation easier. The objection to ridg-
ing is that in a dry season it may cause
the plants to suffer for lack of mois:
ture.
By far the most satisfactory type of
spraying outfit for thoroughness of
work. is a two-wheeled cart, of suf-
ficient reach to straddle two rows of
potatoes, which carries an erdinary
barrel pump and a man to pump and
drive. Two men follow the cart. each
using a twenty-five-foot hose with a
single nozzle, and they each spray
three rows without moving from the
row, in which they travel backward.
The man drives the length of the hose
and the men spray their rows up to the
cart, which then moves on again. In
this way the ground can be gone over
fairly quickly, and the spraying can
be done as thoroughly as desired. Two
nozzles to & hose seem to be a little
better than one.
Another apparatus is a type often
used. In this case the stationary noz-
zles are attached to the end of an or-
dinary cart carrying a barrel pump,
and the pumping is done by hand.
This, too. has some of f the objections of
the geared machines By very slow
driving, however, more spray can be
placed on the vines, but because of the
stationary nozzles it will not be done
very thoroughly or evenly.
ticular apparatus better work would
have been done if the pump had
been stronger It not powerful
enough to readily supply the eight
nozzles used.
The results of spraying with: hor
deaux mixture vary wiih different sea-
sons, but depend largely on the thor
oughness of the treatments and their
application at the proper time. It is
much easier to secure an increased
yield of potatoes from spraying than
it is to prevent rot in these afterward.
This increased yield varies from almost
nothing to sometimes over 100 pe:
eent., and the rot of the tubers is
usually less in the sprayed than in the
unsprayed fields. An average gain of
fifteen to twenty per cent. should be
had in order to pay for the g¢xira cesi
and trouble of spraying; any gair
that ‘is profit.—G. P. Clinton,
Connecticut Experiment Station, New
Haven.
was
above
short Sporty Cicoos
For many y a certain
practiced medicine in a little
town in Wyandotte County. He was
careless of his dress. Half the ti
perhaj were not mat
Finally the doctor moved his far
to Kansas City, Ka and began te
spruce up. He insist on wearing
0
doctor
country
)S, his socks eS.
r of years, and like it. Have | socks that were mates. This made
impre adn to answer some | his wife suspicious. Sue thought he
ibutors, but have delayed | was getting sporty. The: doctor has
1 could not bet-|{ moved back to the country.—Kansas
‘Have just read in | City Journal.
In this par- |
FINANGE AND TRAGE REVIEW
CONFIDENCE IN THE FUTURE.
Prominent Feature in Most Reporta
Received in Ccuntry by R. G.
Bun & Co.
Distribution of autumn -merchan-
dise is in progress unusually early
this year, and the volume ‘of for-
ward business is so heavy that the
last half of 1905 promises to estab-
lish a remarkable record of com-
mercial © activity. Current retail
trade is well maintained, the urgen-
cy of orders received by jobbers in-
dicating that dealers’ stocks are be:
coming depleted, and there is littlo
complaint regarding collections.
More labor disputes have reached
settlement, and no serious contro-
versiess are threatened, while in’
many sections the supply of wagd
earners is inadequate. Freight
blockades and insufficient rolling
stock cause delay despite widely,
axtended facilities as compared with
last year.
Special reports regarding manu-
facturing conditions have been re-
ceived from about 40 leading indus-
trial centers, and there is surprising
unanimity in the statements. With
scarcely an exception plants are
working close to full capacity, with
little idle machinery, except where
alterations or improvements are in
progress, and. contracts on hand far
sxceced (hose held at this date in
1904. Equally gratifying is the con-
fidence expressed in the future; a
prominent feature of most reports.
Encouraging crop prospects provide
a large share of the good feeling.
Railway earnings in the first half
of August surpassed last year’s by
5.2 per cent, .
Sentiment has improved in the
iron and steel industry. Actual
transactions are still somewhat lim-
ited, but confidence in the future is
becoming more widely diffused.
Mills making textile fabrics are
enjoying a larger degree of activity
and appear to have more business
in sight than any other branch of
manufacture. This is due in part to
the low position to which stocks
were allowed to become depleted be-
fore purchasing became general and
also to the firmness of raw material,
which does not encourage delay in
providing for future requirements.
REARIZIETS,
PITTSBURG.
Grain, Flour and Feed.
Wheat—No. 2 Ted... ci reeesonss $ 80
Rye—No.2......... 85 £5
Corn—No 2 yellow, ear. 61 62
No. 2 yellow, shelled 6) 61
43 49
: s 31
30
cess 5 10
5 90
eae 14 00
Sasvinssnrrsy 11 50
2000
eesnr 17 ¢0
17 90
700
700
24
1
1x
12
12
Hons—per 1b......cceeveurnnnnns $ u 15
Chickens—dressed........ > 16 13
Eggs—Pa. and Ohio, fresh......... 19 21
Fruits and Vegetantas,
ADDIE DDI ,.. inves cersister varsreas 25% 300
Fotatoes—Fancy white perbu.... 50 65
Cabbage—per ton . 18 00 21 v0
Onions—per barrel. 50 300
BALTIMORE.
Flour—Winter Derenss Se S 505 52
Wheat—No. 2 red.. . 93 94
Corn—Mised..... . >. 51 52
-- 16 1
Ho creame 3 . 20 22
PHILADELPHIA,
55 59
99 101
HU 51
§ -- 36 37
Buiter—Creamery. . . £0 22
Eggs—Pennsylvania firsts........ 16 17
NEW YORK.
Flour—Patengl......coevveiiinnnnns 3
Wheat—No. 2 red Heir
Corn—No. 2........
Oats—No, 2 le
Butter —Creame ve 0
Bggs—3tate Ye be nnsylvania.. 17 18
RET:
Union Stock Yards,
Cattle,
Pittsburg.
ii Xtra, 1450 to 1600 1bs . V6)
Prime, 1300 to 1400 Ibs .. 535
Medium, 1200 10 1:00 lbs 510
Tidy, 105 to 1150 4 5S
Butcher, $00 to 1100. 170
Common to fair
Oxen, common es fat ; X70
Common togood fat bulls and cows 25)
Milch cows, each 16
Prime heavy hogs.
Prime medium wei 8
3 6 6
Good pigs and Bentyorkers visas 575
gs, common to good . i 183
ROWEHE = ee cae 4 1t
Blass... .ccc iene isa 300
Extra. ln. obi ani, 2
Good to choice 35
Medium A
Common to f air. 400
Jambs.......... ooo Sul
Veal, extra. ....... 5 00 79
Veal, gcou to choice ‘ 39) 4 51)
Y tai, common he: wv. SJ) 375
Strange Gift to King.
Alfonso has received one of
gifts ever presented to
is in the shape of twyu
§ us from the hides of tha
‘hich were killed by the bomb
the g Spanish g
- recent visit to
MOON MAN.
old
FOOLING
As they sat
she looked away to the
skies.
“Wouldn't it be
ed, “if the skies were
THE
out on the lawn
summer
she ventur-
clear? >
Stories of a Crown Prince.
Several good anecdotes are cur-
rent in the foreign press concerning
the German crown prince as a boy.
According to one of these, shortly af-
ter Prince Bismarck was dismissed, the
little boy was talking to his father,
and in the course of conversation
said, with childish naivete: “Father
they say that now you will be able
to tell the people what to do all by
yourself. You'll enjoy that, won't
you?’ Unfortunately, history has not
yet recorded the kaiser’s reply; or, if
it has, not for publication. Everyone
knows the remarkable close intimacy
and affection which have always ex-
isted between the Kkaiserin and her
children, and how fully the feelng is
reciprocated was shown one day when
the crown prince was told that all
people were sinners. “My father may
be a sinner,” he replied hotly, “but I
know my mother fis not!”
Some Very Ancient Laws.
King Amraphel, of Babylon, who
lived 2,250 years B. C. formulated
a code of laws. His statutes, which
were operative five centuries before
the laws of Moses, numbered 282. and
contain the following:
“If a woman who sells beverages
gives bad value for the money paid
her, she shall be thrown ‘into water.
“If a wife be spendthrift or if she
otherwise neglects her duties, her
husband may put her away without
compensation, but if a man put away
his wife for no other reason than
that she has no children he shall re-
turn her whole dowry.
“If a bethrothal be rescinded, the
man shall pay the woman compen-
sation.
A widow with grown up children
may not marry again without per-
mission from a judge.”
Norway's Merchant Marine.
The earnings of the Nerwegian mer-
chant marine, especially of vessels
engaged in the carrying trade Dbe-
tween foreign ports, constitute a large
portion of the national revenue. Nor-
way’s merchant marine is fourth in
size among the merchant marines of
the world, being exceeded only by
those of the United Kingdom, the
United States and Germany. Its
total tonnage is nearly 11% million
tons, as against 625,000 tons for
Sweden. Its total earnings in 1902
were 29.7 million dollars, as against
13.4 millions earned by Swedish mer-
chantmen, while the amount earned
by Norwegian vessels, in carrying
freight between foreign ports only,
$22,375,000, as against $3,644,000 earn-
ed by Swedish vessels for similar
service.—Haper’s Weekly.
Wheat Growing Profits in Kansas.
Many 100-acre wheat fields in
Rooks county, Kansas, are paying a
clean profit of $1,500 after counting
all the work done on them as cash
expense. Where the work is all done
by the man himself and his family the
cash returns in many cases are about
the $2,000 mark.—Kansas City Journ-
al.
Profits of Farming.
Elisha Harding, a Kiowa county,
(Kan.) farmer, raised 7,050 bushels of
wheat this year on 52 acres, for which
he received 85 cents per bushel. He
received $6,000 for one year’s work
and says, aside from his own work,
will realize $4,500 profit.
Cheap for the Money.
In the window of a Manchester
(England) drug store was a card of
cheap microscopes marked one shill-
ing each, with the notice: “These are
the cheapest microscopes ever offered
for the money.”
FITSpermanently cured. No fits ornervous-
ness after first day’s use of Dr. Kline’s Great
NerveRestorer, $2trial bottleand treatise free
Dr. R. H. Kuixe, Ltd.,931 Arch St., Phila., Pa.
Former Archduke Leopold has become a
CLEMENTINA GONZALES,
OF CENTRAL AMERICA,
RESTORED TO HEALTH.
PE-RU-NA THE REMEDY
smi
Miss Clementina Gonzales, Hotel Pro-
vincia, Guatemala, C. A., in a recent letter
irom 247 Cleveland Ave., Chicago, Ill,
writes:
J took Peruna fora worn-out con-
dition. 1 was so run down that 1
could not sleep at night, had no ap-
petite and felt tired in the morning.
“J tried many tonics, but Peruna
was the only thing which helped me
in the least. After 1 had taken but
a half bottle 1 felt much better. I
continued itsuse for three weeksand
I was completely restored to health,
and was able to take up my studies
which 1 had been forced to drop.
There is nothing better than Peruna
to build up the system.’’--Clemen-
tina Gonzales.
Address The Peruna Medicine Co., oi
Columbus, Ohio, for instructive free litera-
ture on catarrh.
wl he WISDOM!
THE ORIGINAL 14,
AuED
NOTHING ELSE WILL
TAKE NO SUBSTITUTES/
y CATALOGUES FREE
SHOWING FULL LINE OF GARMENTS AND HATS.
A. J. TOWER CO., BOSTON, MASS., U.S.A.
TOWER CANADIAN CO., LTD., TORONTO, CANADA.
YSPEPSIA
“Having taken your wonderful ‘‘Cascarets” for
three HEI SH eing entirely cured of stomach
catarrh and dy spepsia, 1 think a word of praise is
due t 00 Ssoatels For thelr wongertul composition,
Iha et numerous other so-called remedies
but aos avail and I find that Cascarets relieve
more in a day than all the others 1 have taken
would in a year
ames McGune, 108 Mercer St., Jersey City, N. Jd.
Best For
The Bowels
CANDY CATHARTIC
) iP :
private in the Swiss AY.
Mrs. Winslow's Sodtiing Syrup for Children
teething,soften the gums, reduces inflamma-
tion ,allays pain,eureswind colie, 25¢c.a bottle.
Governor Stokes, of New Jersey, favors
taxation of bachelors.
Iamsure Piso’s Cure for Co onsumption saved
my life three years ago.—Mrs. Tuoxas Roz-
ERTS, Maple St. Norwich, N.Y., Feb. 17,1900
London bas over 115 miles of tram-
ways. :
Went Back to Barbarism.
Advices by letter from Missionary
Stullts at Freetown, West Africa, an-
nounce * the death there of Daniel
Flickinger Wilberforce, an educated
African, for many years a miss lonary
who some time ago resumed the life
and belief of his native tribesmen.
Pleazant, Palatable, Potent, Taste Good, Do Good,
Never Sicken, Weaken or Gripe, 10¢, 25¢, 50c. Never
sold in bulk. The genuine tablet stamped cCccC.
@uarantced tO cure or your money
Sterling Remedy Co., ntoniy or N.Y. 592
ANMUAL SALE, TEN MILLION BOXES
FO R WO Mm E N
troubled with ills peculiar to
their sex, used as a douche is Arve suc-
cessful. Thoroughly cleanses, kills disease germs,
stops discharges, heals inflammation and local
soreness, cures leucorrhcea and nasal catarrh.
Paxtine is in powder form to be dissolved in pure
water, and is far more cleansing, healing, ermicidal
and economical than liquid antiseptics for al i
TOILET AND WOMEN’S SPECIAL USES
For sale at druggists, 50 cents a box.
Trial Box and Book of Instructions Free.
WE SELL A $300 PIANO NO FOR $105
To introduce. Buy direc save the dif:
ference. Easy terms. Write us and we'll
tell you all about it.
RONFMANN'S MUSIC HOUSE,
537 Smithfield Street, Pittsburg, Pa.
ARM FOR SALE
300 AC ® nS ~uitivation. Land
room house.
{) bearing trees
miles of Clin-
road. Good
Price $3000.
Larger and small arms bargains 3 trouble
to answer questions. WRITE RS 0-DAY.
ROGERS BROS, JOANIE Ee.
WE MANUFACTURE
Gas Saving Gas Burners
For Boilers and Hot Air Furnaces.
Write for Catalogue.
STAKDARD HEATING AND RADIATOR CC.
One Tenant 5
andother Improve me
ton, Anderson Co
schools and chu
PITTSBURG. PA.
oN SR
E FAILS,
s Good. Use
“Of col ” replied the roman-
tic young in. “What chance weouli
Cupid have if there not clouds
the moon man's face occas
Se Not,
were
And blush
the maigen
she did not
cverca
THE R. PAXTON COMPANY BOSTON, MasG.
STYLES.
full description,
BROWN MANUFACTURING CO
| ZANESVILLE, OH O.
MADE IN ALL
Send for Booklet giving
BRIOFEN MORRIS
Ak ashing 1. BO
5 e Cla
31 Pen HA ams
ating claims, atty since
P. N. 1]. 85, 1505.
NEW DISCOVERY; gives
Is and 10
8 ey Atlanta, Ga.