The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, December 21, 1905, Image 3

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3
THE OLD-MONK-CURE
St. Jacobs 0il
has traveled round the world,
and everywhere human
Aches and Pains
have welcomed it and blest
it for a cure.
Price, 25¢c. and 50c.
5000000000000003000000000,
‘ Slavery Still Exists.
Slavery still exists in British East
~ Africa, the English government hav-
ing refused to abolish its legal status.
FITSpermansntiyenrad. No fitzor narvons-
nessafter first day’suse of Dr. Kline’s Great
NerveRestorer,$2trialbottleand treatise free
Dr.R. H. Kuinr, Lid, $81 Arch St.. Phila.,Pa
In some parts of Hungary serfdom of the
Russian type still prevails.
To Cure a Cold in One Day
Bromo Quinine Tablets,
Druggists refund money ifit fails to cure, BE.
"W. Grove’s signature on each box. 25c,
Valuable dogs are often vaccinated nowa-
ays.
Mrs, Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children
teething,softensthegums,rednecesinflamma-
tion,allavs rain cures wind eolie,26¢. a bottle
In Spain drug stores are permitted to
sell drugs on Sunday.
H. H. Greex’s Sons, of Atlanta, Ga. are
the only successtul Dropsy Specialists inthe
world. See their liberal offer in advertise-
ment in another column of this paper.
St. Petersburg is to have a school of
agriculture for women only.
Piso’s Cure for Consumption is an infallible
medicine for coughs and colds.—N. W,
8aMUEL, OceanGrove, N.J., Feb. 17, 1900.
The London County Council now uses
motor repair wagons.
AN ‘AWFUL SKIN HUMOR
Covered Head, Neck and Shouldergs—Suf-
fered Agony For Twenty-Five Years
Until Cured by Cuticura.
“For twenty-five years 1 suffered agony
from a terrible humor, completely covering
my head, neck and shoulders, discharging
matter of such offensiveness to sight and
smell that I became an object of dread. I
consulted the most able doctors far and
near, to no avail. Then I got Cuticura,
and in a surprisingly short time 1 was com-
pletely cured. I advise all those suffering
from skin humors to get Cuticura and end
their misery at once. 8. P. Keyes, 149
Congress Street, Boston, Mass.” :
Destroyed by Wolves.
It is said that 800,000 domestic ani-
mals, valued at $6,000,000 are slain by
wolves every year in the Russian em-
pire.
A Guaranteed Cure For Piles,
[tching, Blind, Bleeding, Protruding Piles.
Druggists are authorized to refund monay if
Pazo Ointment fails to cure in 6 to 14 days. 50c.
Celery is the cultivated variety of the
English weed, smallagé. ;
Mexican Banks Prosperous.
Banks: in Mexico are prosperous.
The only bank failures recorded since
the first Mexican bank charter was
issued is that of a promoters’ bank
organized in the United States and
several smaller private banking enter-
prises.
How’s This ?
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for
any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by
Hall's Catarrh Cure.
F. J. Carxey & Co,, Toledo, O.
‘We, the undersigned, have known F. J,
Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him
perfectly honorable in all business transac-
tions and financially able to carry out any
obligations made by their firm.
West & Truax, Whotesale Druggists, To-
ledo, O.
WALDING, KINNAN & Marvin, Wholesalo
Druggists, Toledo, O.
Hall's Catarrh Cureis takeninternally, act-
ing directly uponthe blood and mucuous sur-
faces of the system. Testimonials sent free.
Price, 75¢. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists.
Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation.
Dangerous Prescriptions.
A: London Coroner remarked recent-
ly that a law should be passed against
the use of old medical prescriptions.
Prescriptions useful at one time, he
said, may be deadly when used again
by people whose physical condition
has whoily change
SEVEN YEARS ACO
A Rochester Chemist Found a Singularly
Effective Medicine, .
Wiliam A. Franklin, of the Franklin
& Palmer Chemical Co., Rochester, N.
Si : ==3 Y., writes: -
“Sever years ago
4 I was suffering very
much through the
§ failure of the kid-
fl neys to eliminate
the uric acid from
i my system. My
back was very lame
and ached if I over-
exerted myself in the least degree. At
times I was weighed down with a feel-
ing of languor and depression and ,.suf-
fered continually from annoying irreg-
ularities of the kidney secretions. 1
procured a box of Doan’s Kidney Pilis
and began using them. I found prompt
relief from the aching and lameness
in my back, and by the time I had
taken three boxes I was cured of all
irregularities.”
Sold by all dealers; 50 cents a box.
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. ¥.
ETT
THROUGH AFRICAN SWAMPS.
©3% N Harper's Magazine, Henry
W. Nevinson, who is now
© © in the interior of Africa in-
vestigating the slave-trade
K for the magazine, teiis of a
trip through the deadiy
Swamp country after leaving the coast:
“Hearing that only a few miles
away there was real solid ground
where strange beasts roamed,” says
Mr. Nevinson, “I determined to cut
a path through the forest in that di-
rection. Engaging two powerful sav-
ages armed with ‘matchets,” or short
heavy swords, I took the plunge from
a wharf which had been built with
piles beside a river. - At the first
step I was up to my kness in black
sludge, the smell of which had been
accumulating since the glacial per-
iod. Perhaps the swamps are forming
the coal-beds of a remote future; but
in that case I am glad that I did not
live in Newcastle in the remote past.
As in a coronation ode, there seemed
no limit to the depths of sinking.
One's only change was to strike a
submerged trunk not yet rotten
enough to count as mud. Sometimes
it was possible to cling to the stems
of branches of standing trees, and
swing over the slime without sink-
ing deep. It was possible, but un-
pleasant; for stems and branches and
twigs and fibres were generally. cov-
ered with every variety of spine and
spike and hook. -
“In a quarter of an hour we were
as much cut off from the world as on
dhe central ocean, The air was dark
with shadow; though the tree-tops
gleamed with sunshine far above our
heads. Not a ivhisper of a. breeze
nor a smell of fresh air could reach us.
We were stifled with the smell. The
sweat poured from wus in the intol-
erable heat. Around wus, out of the
black mire, rose the vast tree trunks,
already rotting as they grew, and be-
tween the trunks was wovea a thick
curtain of spiky plants and of the long
suckers by which the trees drew up an
extra supply of water—very unnec-
essarily, one would have thought.
“Through this undergrowth the na-
tives, themselves often up to the mid-
dle in slime, slowly hacked away.
They are always very patient of a
white man’s insanity. Now and then
Wwe came to a little clearing where
some big tree had fallen, rotten from
bark to core. Or we came to a ‘creek’
—one of the innumerable little water-
courses which intersect the forest and
are the favorite haunt of the mudfish,
whose eyes are prominent like a frog's,
and whose side fins have almost de-
veloped into legs, so that with the
help of their tails, they can run over
the slime like lizards on the sand.
But for them and the crocodiles and
the innumerable hosts of ants and
slugs, the lower depths of the man-
grove swamp contains few living
things. Parrots and monkeys. inhabit
the upper world where the sunlight
reaches, and sometimes the deadly
stillness is broken by the cry of a
hawk that has the flight of an owl
and fishes the creeks in the evening.
Otherwise there is nothing but decay
and stench and creatures of the ooze.”
UNACKNOWLEDGED PRINCESS.
" The life of Elizabeth Patterson,
grandmother of Mr Charles J. Bona-
parte, the new Secretary of the Navy,
was as full of romance as any novel.
Brilliant as was its beginning, its halo
of riches and royalty soon faded in the
shadow of the clouds of disappoint-
ment and desertion. The love story
of Jerome Bonaparte, brother of the
great emperor, and his marriage to the
belle of Baltimore are well known.
Napoleon's rejection of his brother's
bride and the separation of a hus-
band and wife are matters of history.
Through a long life Madame Bona-
parte bore her troubles unflinchingly
and was ever a woman of courage.
Prince Jerome Bonaparte was a.
young man who seldom denied him-
self anything which took: his fancy.
This characteristic was well displayed
in the accounts which his brother was
continually called upon to settle. One of
these bills was for a magnificent shav-
ing set valued at twenty thousand
francs. Prince Jerome was only fifteen
at the time he bought it, and showed
not the sign of a beard. Napoleon
indulged his brother in all his ex-
wravagances until it came to his mar-
riage. Against that he absolutely set
hig face,
But the beautiful bride was un-
daunted, and urged her husband to
take her to France. The prince put
off the evil day as long as possible.
At last he yielded against his better
judgment. and the young couple sailed
from Philadelphia. A terrific gale
sent the vessel on to = sand-bank. and
the lives of its passengers were in
danger’
Madame Bonaparte showed no fear.
She clambered on to the sloping deck
and began to give orders to lower
a boat, The captain was dumfounded.
*Pray, are you commanding {this
ship?’ he asked.
“Yes,” replied Madame
“if necessary.”
“How do you propose reaching the
boat?’ asked the captain.
‘“You are to throw me in.”
The captain meekly obeyed the de-
termined young woman's orders, But
in lowering her into the boat, his
strength failed and she fell into the
water. Her heavy silk pelisse weighed
her down, but the sailors manaced
Bonaparte,
to pull her into the boat. Even her
sudden plunge did not cenfuse her.
“Where is Prince Jeroma?’' was
and then she continued |
The boat made its way |
her |
=.5t question.
her orders.
to shore, and soon the young couple
found shelter in a farmhouse, and
made merry over their adventure. -
As a sea trip the second vogagc
was more successful, although, as
Prince Jerome wrote to his father-
in-law in English, “Elizabeth is very
seasick, but you know as well as any
body that seasickness never has killed
anybody.” .
The voyage was over all too soon,
however, for with it ended Madame
Bonaparte’s happiness. Napoleon an-
nulled the marriage. Jerome became
King of Westphalia and married a
princess of Wurttemberg,
. CURIOUS FRIENDSHIPS.
Zhildren and snakes appear to get
o~ well together in Australia. A
writer in Chambers’ Magazine, who
lives in Sydney, says he has never
Leard in the bush of a snake biting a
child, nor*do the children show any
fear of snakes. The bigger the snake
the greater the joy in’ getting near it,
and the stronger the desire to play
with it. The snake's bright eyes and
sinuous motion probably charm. And
snakes, even the most vicious, respect
the confidence.
At Koondrook, a little settlement in
Victoria, a woman heard her child,
eighteen months old, laughing as if
she was having great fun. The child
was supposed to be asleep in bed. The
mother went to the room and found
the child scrambling over the bed after
something she could not see. That
happened several times. Once, how-
ever, the mother went in suddenly
and heard something drop off the bed.
Tooking hurriedly: under tae bed she
distinctly saw a large snake, that
turned upon her with evident infen-
tion to fight. When the husband came
neme he pulied up the boards of the
Loor but there was -no sign of the
snake. Next day, however, snake and
child were discovered lying together
on the floor, the child asleep and the
snake apparently so.
That night the husband tried a plan.
He placed a candle on the floor, along-
side the child, and asked his wife to
play a slow air on the harmonium.
Movements of the snake could be
heard; but the rustle was all he vouch-
safed. Next night the child was simi-
larly posted, and the mother tried.the
effect of working her sewing machine.
The sound was too tempting. The
snake wriggled to the child with alac-
rity, and was promptly despatched by
the father. it was a tiger-snake near-
ly five feet in length, and when killed
was fondled by the child as an old ac-
quaintance.
A WARNING SHOT.
One of the strange incidents of the
war, especially during a state of
siege, is the friendly relations which
exist between enemies when off duty.
At one moment the soldiers of the
opposing armies will be chatting so-
ciably and exchanging favors, the
next—shooting each other down as
deadly foes, A little incident told
by Mr. Ripley in his “Story of Com-
pany F,” gives a glimpse of a genial
interlude in the grim Civil War.
During the siege of Petersburg, it
was the custom of the opposing pick-
et® to grant temporary truces for
the purpose of preparing food. Half
an hour perhaps, would be agreed
upon, and its limit would be scrupu-
lously observed when “time” was
called. Then every man would hurry
under cover.
On one occasion a Confederate was
slow to respond to the warning.: He,
to all appearances, did not realize
that he was (in sight. While the
others hurried to their posts, he sat
quietly blowing his coffee and munch-
ing his hardtack, Fortunately for him
he was in plain sight of a sentinel less
bloodthirsty than some. This man
thought it only fair to give him far-
ther warning.
“1 say, Johnny,” he shouted,
“time's up! Git into your hole!”
“All right,” replied Johnny,
Blowing his coffee.
‘Just hold that cup still a minute
and I'll show you whether ‘it’s all
right or ‘not!’ shouted: the sharp-
shooter.
The Confederate began to suspect
that he was in fact visible. and he
held his cup still for an instant as
he looked up and around. This af-
forded tire desired © opportunity for
the sharpshooter. With a well-sent
bullet he knocked the cup clean out
of the owner's hand, With sudden
agility the surprised Confederate made
haste to disappear, amid the jeers
and laughter of both lines of pickets.
still
GIANT WHALE TOWS STEAMER
The whaling steamer Orion, which
Captain Balcom and his associates are
operating in connection with their mod-
ern station at Sechart, on the west
coast of Victoria, British Columbia,
figured in an exciting adventure last
veel, the outcome of which was for
two hours in doubt, while a monster
“sulphur bottom” whale, seventy-nine
feet in length, towed the steamer sea-
ward at better than fifteen knot speed.
The whale had been harpooned in the
ordinary manner, but was not killed,
its usual, the bomb attached to the har-
poon failing to explode at the critica’
instant. As the monster was only
wounded and enraged there was noth:
ing else to do but pay out line and
play the big fish until it should become
exhausted. For two hours the whale
traveled seaward, towing the steamer
It kept under water the greater part
of the time, coming up at quarter how
intervals to blow; and so hard did it
pull that the blades of the harpoon
loosened in its flesh.
The whale’s pace grew steadily less
however. until it finally became Yery
weak. The gh speed at which if
had traveled and the heavy drag of
the steamer told, and the effect of the
| tow was intensified by reversing the
ship's engines. I'inally one of the ship's
boats crept up on the whale and four
hand lances were buried in its vitals,
|
FINGER TRAE REV
DUN’S WEEKLY SUMMARY
Holiday Trade Surpassed All Records
—Many Firms Will Increase
Wages to Workmen.
Holiday trade has become the prin-
cipal commercial feature, retail sales
surpassing all records, while it has
been found necessary to place liber-
al supplementary orders. Yet this
activity in specialties detracts little
from the steady movement of staples,
and in jobbing and manufacturing de-
partments there is unprecedented
preparation for the spring season.
Little machinery is idle and the
outlook for the future is brightened
by several announcements of higher
wage scales to become effective Jan-
uary 1. These are in every iastance
voluntary on the part of employers
and one concern will thereby distrib-
ute about $1,000,000 more per annum.
Building activities are scarcely re-
tarded by the advancing season, new
permits being constantly granted and
dealers in some materials find their
stocks nearing exhaustion. Railway
earnings steadily show gains over
ast year’s figures, for December thus
far exceeding those of -1904 by 4.4
per cent. Foreign commerce returns
for November made much better ex-
hibit as to exports than was expected
partly because of the outgo of bread-
stuffs which surpassed all monthly
records for over two years. ° oa
Two gratifying features are noted
in reports regarding the iron and
steel ‘industry. New business con-
tinues to come forward, raising the
rate of producticn above all previous
records, While conservatism prevails
as to quotations, and there is still no
evidence of the reckless inflatién that
has hrought a sudden setback:in so
many previous periods of similar ac-
tivity. Basic conditions of the tex-
tile markets are still most sound. As
to woolen goods the men’s wear sea-
son is’ opening ‘slowly on “lines for
next fall and the only urgency: comes
from certain buyers of worsteds: who
fear a repetition of the past season’s
unsatisfactory deliveries. 3
Failures this week numbered 239 in
the United States against 276 last
Year and 27 in Canada, compared
with 25 a year ago.
MARE LETS,
PITTSBURG.
Grain, Flour and Feed.
R 1
Corn—No 2 yellow, ear..
No. 2 yellow, shelled.
Mixed
Flour—Winter patent
Fancy straight winters..
Hay--No. 1 Timothy.........
Dairy Products.
Butter—Elgin creamery...
Ohio creamery
Fancy country roll
Cheese—Ohio, new....
New York, new. res
Poultry, Etc.
Hens—per 1b
Chickens—dressed
Eggs—Pa. and Ohio, fresh.
Frults and Vegetables.
Apples bb) ,...,,........... .
Yotatoes—Fancy white per bu....
Cabbage—per ton
Onions—per barrel
BALTIMORE.
Flour—Winter Patent.............3
Wheat—No. 2 red
Corn—Mixed,...
Eggs seas
Butter—Ohioc creamery
PHILADELPHIA.
Flour—Winter Patent
Wheat—No. 2 red....
won
WG
©
[2
Butter -Creamery ....c.....c......
Eggs—State and Pennsylvania....
LIVE STOCK.
Unien Stock Yards, Pittsburg.
Cattle.
450 10.1,600.1D8. ..... .\.... 5
00 to 1,100 1bs,
-*»
Lc
© 4 00 00 co ih Cr TT OT
he o
Tidy, 1,050 to 1.150 1bs..
Fair, 900 to 1,100 1bs.
Common, 709 to $00 1b
Common to good fat ox .
Common to good fat bulls.
‘ommon t
or
Good light Yorker
Pigs, as to quality
common to good roughs
Stags
and common
*hoice lambs
Railway Mileage.
On January 1 of this year there
were 557,105 miles of railroad in the
world, of which 270,386 are in Ameri-
ca; 187,776 in Europe; 46,592 in Asia;
15,649 in Africa, and 16,702 in Aus-
tralia.
Rev. J. W. Campbell, pastor of the
First Methodist church of New
astle, has notified his official board
that lesired to temporarily leave
isterial work next fall to take
post-graduate course
John Bender, 40
crushed 3
“in Buhl
a wife and
. ‘Ole, 10 years old, of Cam:
/, was killed by a:teain. An-
, August Shuhi, was serious-
the same time.
PAINFUL PERIODS
Suggestions How to ,Find Relief from Suc
Suffering.
While no woman is entirely free from
periodital suffering, it does not seem to
be the plan of nature that women
should suffer so severely. Menstrua-
tion is a severe strain on a woman's
vitality. If it is painful or irregular
something is wrong which should be
set right or it will lead to a serious: de-
rangement of the whole female organ-
ism.
More than fifty thousand women
have testified in grateful letters to Mrs.
Pinkham that Lydia BE. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound overcomes pain-
ful and irregular menstruation.
It provides a safe and sire way of es-
cape from distressing and dangerous
weaknesses and diseases.
~The two following letters tell so con-
vincingly what Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound will do for
women, they cannot fail to bring hope
.to thousands of sufferers. .
Miss Nellie Holmss of 540 N, Davi-
sion Street, Buffalo, N. Y., writes:
Dear Mrs. Pinkham:— ~*~
‘‘ Your medicine isindeed an ideal medicine
for women. I suffered misery for years with
painful periods, headaches, and bearing-down |
ns. consulted two different physicians
ut failed to get any relief. A friend from
the East advised me to try Lydia E. Pink-
ham’s Vegetable Compound. did so, and
no longer suffer as 1 did before. My periods
are natural; every ache and pain is gone, and
m general ‘health is much improved.
bi all women who suffer to take Lydia
BE. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound.”
Mrs. Tillie Hart, of Larimore, N. D.,
writes:
Dear Mrs. Pinkham: —
“I might have have been spared many
months of suffering and pain had I only
known of the eflicacy of Lydia E. Pinkham’s
~
Vegetable Compound sooner; for I have tried
so many remedies without bain,
1 dreaded the approach of my menstrual
period every month, as it meant so much pain
and suffering -for me, but after I had used the
Compound two months T-bééame regular and
natural and am How pertertly well and free
from pain at my monthly periods. Iam very
grateful for what Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege-
table Compound has done for me.”
‘Such testimony should be accepted
by all women as convincing evidence
that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound stands without a peer as a
remedy for all the distressing ills of
women.
The success of Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable. Compound rests upon the
well-earned gratitude of American
women.
When women are troubled with irreg-
ular, suppressed or painful menstrua-
tion, leucorrhcea, displacement or ul-
ceration of the womb, that bearing-
down feeling, inflammation of the
ovaries, backache, bloating, (or flatu-
lency), general debility, indigestion and
nervous prostration, or are beset with
such symptoms as dizziness, faintness,
lassitude, excitability, irritability, ner-
vousness, sleeplessness, melancholy,
they should remember there is one tried
and true remedy, Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound at once removes
such troubles. Refuse to buy any other
medicine, for youneed the best. :
Don’t hesitate to write to Mrs.
Pinkham if there is anyshing
about your sickness you do no
understand. She will treat you
with kindness and her advice is
free. No woman ever regretted
writing her and she has helped
thousands. Address Lynn, Mass,
Ask Mrs. Pinkham's Advice—A Woman Rest Understands a Woman's Iiis,
-GRIPINE
IS GUARANTEED TO CURE
GRIP, BAD COLD, HEADACHE AND NEURALGIA.
Iwon’tsell Anti-Gripine to a dealer who won't Guarantee Xg,
Call for your MONEY BACK IF IT DOESN'T CURE.
¥. W. Diemer, }M.D., Manufacturer, Springfield, Mo.
Where Flower Seed Grows.
It is in California that most of the
flower seeds are produced, including
the bulk of the petunias, verbenas,
aasturtiums and sweet peas.
DON'T MISS THIS.
A Cure For Stomach Trouble—mA New
Method, by Absorption—No Drugs.
Do You Belch?
It means a diseased Stomach. Are you
afflicted with Short Breath, Gas, Sour
Eructations, Heart Pains, Indigestion, Dys- |
pepsia, Burning Pains and Lead Weight |
ir Pit of Stomach, Acid Stomach, Dis- |
tended Abdomen, Dizziness, Colic?
Bad Breath or Any Other Stomach Tor- |
ture?
Let us send you a box of Mull’s Anti-
|
|
Belch Wafers free to convince you that it |
cures.
Nothing else like it known. Tt’s sure
and very pleasant. Cures by absorption.
Harmless. No drugs. Stomach Trouble
can’t be cured otherwise—so says Medical
S
Science. Drugs won't do—they ‘eat up the
Stomach and make you worse
We know Mulls Anti-Belch Wafers cure *
and we want you to know it, hence this
offer.
SPECIAL OFrER.—The regular price of
Mull’s' Anti-Belch Wafers is 50c. a box, but
to introduce it to thousands of sufferers |
we will send two (2) boxes upon receipt
of 75c. and this advertisement, or we will
send you a free sample for this coupon.
12235 A FREE BOX. 114
Send this coupon with your name
|
|
and address and druggist’s name who
does not sell it for a free box of Mull’s |
Anti-Beleh Wafers to
Muir's Grare Tonic Co., 328 Third
Ave., Rock Island, Til.
Give Full Address and Write Plainly. |
Sold at all druggists, 50c. per box.
In manufacturing
occupations the |
average life of soap boilers is the |
highest and that of grindstone makers
the lowest.
THE MAN ~~ &
BEHIND THE SAW
Haseasy work if it’s an Atkins.
The keen, clean cutting edge
and perfect taper of the 4
blade make it run easly
without buckling.
No “humping ’’ to RN
do with the Perfec- Ba
tion Handle.
& : pak)
But there are other men behind Fn
the Atkins Saw. The originator of 7
SILVER BTEEL, the finest crucible % 1:
steel made, was a good deal of a hs
man. The discovererof the Atkins NN
secret tempering process was likewise a man of
brains and genius.
And there are high-class workmen behind
this saw, masters of their craft, whose skill and
pride of workmanship have helped to make the
Atkins Trade Mark an assurance of quality as
reliable as the Goverment assay stamp.
We make all types and sizes of Saws, but
only one grade—the best.
Atkins S8aws, Corn Knives, Perfection Floor
Scrapers, etc., are sold by all good hardware
dealers. Catalogue on request.
E. C. ATHINS ®. CO, Inc.
Largest Saw Manufacturers in the World.
Factory and Executive Offices, Indianapolis, Indiana.
BRANCHES: New York, Chicago, Minneapolis,
Portland, (Oregon), Seattle, San Francisco,
Memphis, Atlanta and Toronto, (Canada).
Accept no Substitute—Insist on the Atkins Brand
—
SOLD BY GOOD DEALERS EVERYWHERE -
JOHN W.NORRIS,
CG
peso Washington, D
Successfully Prosecutes Clai
ate Principal oS jes Staims.
yraiv oivil war 15adj sdicating claiis. etty sinoe
$3 an ACRE [15° nnd im ealthy,
Xo CoLONY, Swann Sta, Moore Co., N. C.
TRAVEL WITHIN THE REACH OF ALL
Have you longed to know what it would
mean to stand in the great places of the
earth? Travel, with .its possibilities of
culture and education, is now practicable
for those of modest income as well as the
fortunate few, by means of the
Underwood Travel System.
This of the truest
system is travel
| kind, yet it does not utilize either ship or
railroad. Such a statement is so extra-
ordinary as to seem at first unbelievable,
but many have proved its truth. To ex-
perience sensations of pleasure or pain in
the presence of famous objects and places
which inspire thoughts and produce states
of feeling enriching life and adding to hap-
piness is to travel truly. By making use
of a simple scientific principle, and spend-
ing twenty years in its development, there
has been perfected the means of actually
securing. right in one’s home - these very
experiences, and benefits which actual
travel gives.
Dr. James H. Breasted, of C!'-1go Uni-
versity, s : “By this means the joys
of travel are extended to that large class
of our people ivho thirst for an acquaint-
ance with the distant lands of other ages,
out are prevented by the expense in-
volved, or by the responsibilities of home,
business or profession.”
More information about this truly re-
markable system, and strong endorsements
of it by hundreds of our greatest educa-
tors, can be had by addressing
UNDERWOOD & UNDERWOOD,
Dept. B, 3-5 West 19th St., N.Y. City.
e : aL
rill for Water
Prospect for Minerals Coal
Drill Test and Blast Holes
Many kinds and many
sizes of improved
Drilling Machines Mn as
For Horse, Steam or AR eR
Gasoline Power ’ STR
Results Guaranteed Lp
LOOMIS MACHINE CO.
TIFFIN, OHIO
hs
FOR WOMEN
troubled with ills peculiar to mn
their sex, used as a douche is marvelously suc-
cessful, Thoroughly cleanses, kills disease germs
stops discharges, heals inflammation and local
| Boreness, cures leucorrheea and rasal catarrh,
Paxtine is in powder form to be dissolved in purs
water, and is far more cleansing, healing, Fomiadal
| and economical than liquid antiseptics for al
| YHE R. PAXTON COMPANY
| br
| postpaid A. ¥
"DROPS
TOILET AND WOMEN'S SPECIAL USES
For sale at druggists, 50 cents a box,
Trial Box and Book of Instructions Free.
Boston, Mass.
The Life Saver of Children
V ith Croup, Coughs, Colds and Pneumonia is Hox-
sie’s Croup Cure. It prevents Diphtheria and Mem -
wus Croup. No opium. No nausea. dle. Mailed
>. HOXSIE, Buiinios N. Y.
NEW DISCOVERY; gives
quick relief and cure; worss
Send for book of testunonials and 10 Days’
cases.
| treatment Free. Dr. H. H. GREEN'S HONS, Atlanta, Ga.
| #8 pn. book free. Highest refs
Long experience, nln
P &Co.Dept.5d, Washington, D.Q
P.N. U. 51, 1905.
ep D
S WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS,
8yrup. Tastes Good. Ul
Bold by dr gis
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