SE. 31I0N old air }, and , was team- st be of the Bang”’ Mary hman, herst- eland; w and |, who, Cap- picked while eight- + been was a steps espon- tanoo- of the r the al as- eal by t from States 1essee. torney mation ion of parties ach of should . pt’ of S are ED: | t Con- formed at Ce- oposed yterian as laid union er and th the jer the vterian substi- lowing vterian v. This e with A, "S. from ice ap- riation iressed 1 day Japan- E ¥ Dr, de by so vol- Depart- ays the during of 1906 in any ced of Krupp nd Hal- n lega- ecinary lowship t Wor- Worrell which d dam- in the reached nd half he first ott, of he gen- Presby- ote, re- nmittee made Young e name f Bele- von 1 the » of the sals for DD CuS- ungary. rnor of | to Vi- ns. d mines protests through apanese ypertizas, permis- amount ,000. i he pub- close of tal debt inted to e month ollowing of fish Bowers, Ohio, A. Emin- {1\ AILING WOMEN. Eeep the K!dneys Well an1 ithe Kidneys Will Keep You Well. Sick, suffering, languid women are learning the true cause of bad backs a and how to cure them. Mrs. W. G. Davis, of Groesbeck, Texas, says: aches hurt me so I could hardly stand. Spells of dizziness and sick headache » were frequent and P the action of the kid- ‘® neys was irregular, Soon after I began taking Doan’s Kid- ney Pills I passed several gravel stones. I got well and the trouble has not returned. My back is good and strong and my general health better.” Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. ¥. Diet Kitchens. There has been established in Washington a diet kitchen under the direction of a woman. The patrons of this unique shop are mostly phy- sicians, who send their patients for such dishes or foods as will best suit their needs, very much as they send prescriptions to be filled by the apothecary. It is a practical illus- tration of the belief that proper food is just as necessary’ as medicine. The patient who has not the hospital diet cook to supervise his meals may thus be treated and avoid the ill judged kindness of family and friends. LIMB RAW-AS PIECE OF BEEF. Suffered ¥or Three Years With Itching Humor—Cruiser Newark, U. S. N,, Man Cured by Cuticura, “I suffered with humor for about three years off and cn. I finally saw a doctor and he gave me remedies that did me no good, so Itried Cuticura when my limb below the knee to the ankle was as raw as a piece of beef. All I used was the Cuticura Soap and the Ointment. I bathed with Cutieura Soap every day, and used about six or seven box:s of Cuticura Ointment. I was thoroughly cured of the humor in three weeks, and haven't been affected with it since. Iuse no otherSoap than Cuticura now. H. J. Myers, U. 8. N., U. 8.8. Newark. New York, July 8, 1905.” Poison in Bees’ Eggs. M. C. Phisalix is well known for his researches on snake and other poisons. In the case of the toad and viper he has shown that the specific poison accumulates in the ova, and suggests that it plays an important part in development and inherit ance. His latest studies relate to the poison of the bee’s sting. Bee's eggs, he shows, contain minute quantities of the poison. 475 eggs being required to furnish enough to poison a sparrow. It is a remark- able fact that the unfertilized poison containing eggs give birth to drones, which have no poison. — London Globe. Blind Student's Work. One of the most interesting figures in Harvard University is Edward Ray, a blind student who hails from a small country town in North Caro- lina. He has mastered the most dif- ficult courses in higher mathematics, in geology, won a degree from the University of North Carolina and is now working for the degree of M. A. at Harvard. Here he is taking some of the hardest courses in the curri- culum, Gothic and Anglo-Saxon. Costly Process. It is said that a lot of wine stored in San Francisco was greatly improv- ed in quality by the earthquake and fire. The incident is of interest ta connoisseurs and also to scientists. But it is to be hoped it will not be found necessary to emulate the ex- ample of Charles Lamb’s Chinamen with their roast pig, and have an earthquake and fire every year for the imprcvement of the vintage.— New York Tribune. KNIFED Coffee Knifed an Old Soldier. ‘An old soldier, released from coffee at 72, recovered his health and tells about it as follows: . “I stuck to coffee for years, although it knifed me again and again. “About eight years ago (as a result of coffee drinking which congested my liver), I was taken with a very severe attack of malarial fever. “] would apparently recover and start about my usual work only to suf- fer a relapse. After this had been re- peated several times during the year 1 was again taken violently ill. “The doctor said he had carefully studied my case and it was either ‘quit coffee or die’ advising me to take Postum in its place. I had always thought coffee one of my dearest friends, and especially when sick, and was very much taken back by the ctor’s decision for I hadn’t suspected the coffee I drank could possibly cause my troubles. » “I thought it over for a few minutes and finally told the doctor I would make the change. Postum was pro- cured for me the same day and made according to directions; well I liked it and stuck to it and since then I have been a new man. The change in health began in a few days and surprised me, and now, although I am seventy-two years of age, I do lots of hard work and for the past month have been teaming, driving sixteen miles a day. besides loading and unloading the wagon. That's what Postum in the place of coffee has done for me. I now like the Postum as well as I did coffee. “] have known people whe did not care for Postum at first, but after hav- ing learned to make it properly accord- mg to directions, they have come to like it as well as coffee. I never miss a chance to praise it.” Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Look for the little book, ‘The Road to Wellville,” in pkgs. “Back- AAA AAAANAAAAAAA AANA Xo x ox x x a ¥ XX XX % * * * * x AAA ghosts pelt stones, and I had an occular demonstration of the fact. It was in the month of December eight years ago that I wit- nessed a scene which proved that there are many things in earth and heaven that are not dreamt of in our philoso- phy. I was in the town of Deoghur in my own house situated in an open place. Close to my house was that of one Gonori Mahato, which was also situated in an open place. It came to my notice that ghosts had appeared in his house. Shortly after I had heard this I saw Gonori himself. I asked him about the ghost and he said: “Yes, sir, it is a ‘pichash,”” which means a ghost of very low degree. I was a little surprised to hear this from him. For Gonori had become a Christian, and was not likely to put faith in the existence of ghosts, lower or higher. I asked him what the ghost was doing in his house, but he was not communicative and went his way. 1 forgot all about it, when a strange inci- dent brought the pranks of this ghost again to my notice. Gonori, being a milk man, supplied me with milk, and an Ooria servant of mine went to fetch it. He was brought back almost in an unconscious state by a friend of Gonori just before evening. I asked Shiva, the servant, to explain the reason of his sorrowful plight. He said after great effort, for he could scarcely utter a word, that hearing that ghosts were playing mad pranks in the house of Gonori, he had gone to fetch the milk a little before the usual time he used to bring it—that is, before the sun had gone down. Evening was just setting in, and he was coming with the milk, when, no sooner had he left Gonori’s house, than a black and hideous ‘thing” pounced upon him and inflicted a blow upon his breast, so that he fell sense- less with a groan. Gonori had in- vited a few friends to his house to pass the night with him to protect him from the “pichash,” and thus, when they heard his groan they came to his rescue and brought him home. On the following morning I went to Gonori’s house, which was about two minute's walk from mine, accompanied oy two friends, both of them highly educated and intensely intellectual. His house, as I said before, was situ- ated in an open space only on one side of which there was a cluster of bam- boo trees where the ghost might con- =eal himself, but even this would be impossible in day time if he was a fraud. On entering the house we found a girl about twelve sweeping the yard with a broomstick, the yard being sur- rounded with huts and walls. The other inmates of the house, Gonori himself, his mother, about seventy, his wife, about forty-five, were all absent. Seeing that the girl was the only in- mate of the house doing household work, we went outside chatting at random, nearly forgetting all about the zhost. My friends were a few yards from me talking. together, and I took this opportunity of addressing the ghost in these words: “Sir Ghost, if you are here, please show yourself to us, for we are highly respectable gentlemen and you should behave properly with us.” No sooner had I said this than a clod of earth came rolling down the slope of the hut near which I was standing! This amused me greatly, for I could not believe that it was actually a ghost that had responded to my call So I asked my friends to note the po- liteness of the ghost, which had actu- ally listened to my request. They had heard the sound of the fall of the clod, but had not seen it coming down. So they came close to me te examine the clod. I again addressed the ghost. I said: i “Sir Ghost, this is highly improper. You should be impartial in the treat- ment of your guests. You have satis- fied me, but not my friends. Please show yourself to them also.” No sooner had I said this than there tolled another clod, and this time- all three saw it. Let me confess, this time we were all surprised. But was that girl doing it? No, we could see from pur position that she was busy doing her work of sweeping. I again ad- dressed the ghost: “Sir Ghost, remove all our doubts and do favor us again.” No sooner said than done. Another clod of earth came down, rolling, fol- lowing the other two. We were petri- P OPULAR notion in India is that AAANAAAAAAAAN 3 3% X % 9 NH % * % * ¥ X % % %¥ % % X XX FH: FX XX % % AAA A Stone Throwing Ghost SHISHIR KUMAR GHOSE’S ENCOUNTER WITH AN ATHLETIC PICHASH os ote From the Hindu Spiiityal Magazine. EERIE fied with astonishment. It was about 9 in the morning, the sun was up in the skies, and there was not a speck of cloud. And we three saw this before our eyes in an open field where there were none besides the girl who was sweeping the yard. But no time was allowed us by the good ghost to specu- late upon what we had witnessed, for the merry thing now began to roll down stones of its own accord, one after another, in rapid succession. Then clods and stones began to fall in the yard which the girl was sweep- ing. We ran there, and then com- menced, as it were, a perfect rain of stones, pieces of burnt brick and clods of earth. Where did they come from? From the skies? Perhaps. Perhaps not, for some of them struck the mud walls of the hut horizontally. Of course, we were afraid of being struck by these missiles, but luck’ly we es: caped unhurt; but some were hurt subsequently, though slightly. For the fact of this strange occurrence had gone abroad, and people were running to the house from all sides, even from the town, which was about half a mile distant from the place. The house was thus filled by hundreds of men in a short time. At I said, it was broad daylight, and though there were hundreds present, none could tell whence the stones came, The inmates of the house had come back and they were kept in one place, huddled together so that they might play no tricks. But the scene that pre- sented itself (it was literally hailing stones) convinced everyone that there could be no trick at the bottom. The yard was soon filled with these clods, stones, ete, and they became almost knee deep in a short time. But the most wonderful feats per- formed by the ghost yet remain to be told. A big piece of stone, weighing over a hundred pounds (more than a maund) which it would be difficult for one strong man to carry, was brought out®from the bottem of the well which stood on one side of the yard and thrown in the yard. A little before this we had heard a splashing of water in the well, and the big stone was brought out and made to fall in the yard with a thud. This so terri- fied the sightseers that while some of them fled others took shelter in the huts. I had a notion that the girl was a medium and it was through her that the ghost was playing his pranks. This notion I gathered by observing one fact. It was this: The clods fell most where the girl stood. So I led her and Gonori’s wife to the eastern side of the house in a field where mustard had been grown but gathered. It was an open field filled with clods of earth among which no doubt the ghost had found some of his missiles. I made the girl and the woman sit in the field. There they sat and, wonder of wond- ers, the clods around them began, as it were, to dance. Thus a clod would rise, say, four or five feet from the earth and fall down. At times more than one clod would thus rise up and fall down. Here, then, we had the scene of clods of earth in the midst of the field dancing as if they were imbued with life, and this at about 11 in the day and in the presence of hun- dreds. It seemed to me that in the field the ghost had not power enough to be able to throw the clods to any distance. The intellectual critic, after he has read so far, might exclaim, cui boni? “What do you prove by the incident?” Well, we have not done yet; we have yet to record more wonderful doings of this ghost. Indeed, I succeeded eventually in making it talk to me in its ghostly way. Yet does not the incident, so far as described above, prove anything? Does it not prove that there are more things in earth and heaven than are dreamt of in our philosophy, and that the scientists have yet much to learn? It proves that a thing which has no ma- terial body can pelt stones and can also possess gleams of reason. Did not the thing, by listening to our re- quest in the beginning, show that it could hear and understand us? Does not the incident of bringing the big stone from the bottom of the well prove that it had method in its mad pranks? So the incident, so far as has been described, proves that there is no impossibility in a man losing hig body yet retaining his physical pow- ers and reasoning faculties. Mexican's Riches Exaggerated. Distance seems to multiply millions. [t has been told over and over again here how one of the world’s wealthiest men was Pedro Alvarado, the Mex- (can miner. The Mexican Herald takes occasion to deny that Alvarado offered to pay Mexico's national debt. He is an “estimable citizen of Parral, Chihuahua, and a very lucky miner, though not possessing the fabulous wealth with which he is credited. He has never offered to pay the national debt.” Could Not Explain. A young man was at a table with hig wife and a party of friends, when a tall and imposing blonde passed who gave the young man recognition and a dangerous, questioning leok. “Who is that woman?” the young wife asked. “Now, Gon’t you go bothering me about who she is,” the young man replied. +] will have trouble enough explainisg to her who you are.” The Curse of Warfare, The late General Isaac J. Wistar, of Philadelphia, was condemning war’ fare. At the end of a vivid descrip: tion of war’s horrors, he smiled. “A woman,” he said, “twice married, stood with her second husband beside the grave of her first. ‘Here,’ she murmured, ‘a hero lies. You would not be my husband te-day, Jack, had John not been killed at Gettysburg.’ ‘Oh,’ the man cried fiercely, ‘what a curse war is?’ Great Price For a Busr. At the reception given Ambassador McCormick, in Paris, France, lately, there were shown two busts of John Paul Jones by the sculptor Houden, one being a replica of the bust at Phil- adelphia, Pa., the other the original terra cotta bust made by Houdon ten years after the Philadelphia bust. The last was loaned by J. Pierpont Mor- gan, who paid a Paris art dealer $60,- 000 for it. It is regarded as the finest bust Houdon ever made. Review of . manufacturing plants. FINANCE AND TRADE REVIEW DUN’'S WEEKLY SUMMARY Little Idle Machinery Reported at Manufacturing Establish- ments. R. G. Dun & Company's Weekly Trade says: Business maintains wholesome progress and mercantile collections improve. The week’s aggregate transactions show a good gain is noted in comparison with the corresponding pericd of any previous year. Uncertainty regarding the crops caused unusual conservatism at the northwest until this week, when the outlook became sufficiently encouraging to restore confidence. In many jobbing lines there is no pros- pect of vigorous activity until fall, but wholesale distribution is now heavy and retail business is only re- tarded at points where temporary weather conditions are adverse. Little idle machinery is reported at Railway earn- ings thus far recorded for May ex- ceeded last year’s by 11.1 per cent, and foreign commerce at New York for the last week showed gains of $1,704,681 in imports and $491,743 in exports. Money is returning from San Francisco and more gold has been engaged abroad but the security market rules comparatively quiet. Aside from the strike of founders and molders the iron and steel in- dustry is in splendid condition. No decrease in activity of textile machin- ery has occurred. Footwear factories are supplied with orders that will maintain full activity for two or three months and supplementary con- tracts for fall delivery continually ar- rive from salesmen or by mail. The higher prices announced last week on sole leather came as a surprise, ow- ing to the dullness of the market and tended to make business still smaller. Failures the week numbered 174 in the United States against 198 last year, and 13 in Canada compared with 29 a year ago. MARKETS. PITTSBURG. Graln, Flour and Feed. Wheat—No. 2 red ..$ 80 83 Rye—No.2....... 7" 73 Corn—No. 2 yellow, e 60 61 No. 2 yellow, shelle 55 56 ed Teosvssons 53 58 Oats—No. 2 white 37 38 . 3 white...... 36 37 Flour—Winter patent...... 410 415 fancy straight winters. 4 00 410 Hay—No. 1 Timothy........ «1500 1B Clover No. 1............. «1075 112 Feed—No. 1 white mid. ton. 2250 230) Brown middlings......... i950 2000 Bran, bulk....oss- ivesses 2200 2150 Straw—Wheat..... ,....... 7 50 7 50 ORL eee sant iii bes 759 800 Dairy Products. Butter—Elgin creamery $ 24 25 Ohio creamery.. 20 21 Fancy country r 19 20 Cheese—Ohio, new.... 12 13 New York, new. vee 12 13 Poultry, Etc. Hens—per 1D......ccccvesenersaneses 14 15 Chickens—dressed............ 16 18 Eggs—Pa. and Ohio, fresh......... 17 18 Frults and Vegetables. Apples bbl,....... . Potatoes—Fancy w Cabbage—per ton............ Onions—per barrel........... BALTIMORE. Flour—Winter Patent $ : & Wheat—No. 2 red..... 5 2 5 2) Corn—Mixed..... yr 7 Egoe..... ..... cn: 16 20 Butter—Ohio Creamery.....c....... 24 8 PHILADELPHIA. 52 Wheat—No. 2 red 84 85 Corn—No. 2 mixed 35 Hi Oats—No. 2 white 85 36 Butter—Creamery.. 29 3 Eggs—Pennsylvania firsts. 16 20 NEW YCRK. Flour-—Patents.....................5 3500 51> Wheat—No.2red......ccennnnt 89 90 Corn—Ng, 2.......cce0evrerress 67 68 Oats—No. 2 white............. 36 38 Butter -Creamery ............ 28 25 Hggs—State and Pennsylvania.... 16 18 LIVE STOCK. Union Stock Yards, Pitteburg. Cattle. Extra, 1,450 10 1,600 1bs. ...... .... $5 60 $5 75 Prime, 1,500 101,400 1bs,. heii, O89 5 50 Good, 1,200 to 1,500 1bs,. 5 10 b 80 Tidy. 1,050 to 1.100 lbs... «4 65 515 Fair, 900 to 1,100 1bs.. 4 40 4 75 Common, 709 to 400 lbs... 4 40 4 60 Common to good fat ox 2 4 50 Common to good fat bulls 2 50 4 15 Common to good fat cows. . 2 00 400 Heifers, 700 to1, 1001bs. ....... . 250 4 50 Freeh cowp and epringers........ 16 09 50 00 Sheep. frimewethers.............. ...... $525 5 45 Good mixed...., riley ie soc caieae: 000 510 Fair mixed ewes and wethers.... 4 50 5 00 Cullsana common............ 2 50 4 05 Culis to choice lambs............. 5 6 90 Hogs Irtmebeavy hogs................. $660 6 65 Prime medium weights... 6 65 Best heavy Yorkers... .,.. 6 65 Good light Yorkers...... 6 50 6 65 Pigs, as to quality...... 5 25 5 8) Common to good rough 3 40 5 80 Brags... .... .. w 200 4 35 Calves. Yeal Calves... ...... .,........... $4 30 6 5 Heavy and thin calves............... 3 0) 4 50 ” Oil Markets. The following are the quotations for credit balances in the different fields: Pennsylvania, $1 64; Tiona, $1 74: Second Sand, $1 64; North Lima, 98c: South Lima. 93c; Indiana. ¢0c; Somerset, 91c; Ragland, 62¢; Can- ada, $1.38, Taste grows with what it feeds on. You can cultivate a taste for the best reading by reading only the best books. # A Record Fountain. Londcners, accustomed to the tame display ‘in dirty, dingy Trafalgar square, will hear with envy of what is to be done in the fountain line in| Vienna. It will be the largest in the! world, and will be built on the Schwarzenbergplatz, the "hub of the city. The illuminating apparatus will; give a light equal to a fabulous ume ! ber cf candles, and by means of imv, mense reflectors seventy variations ix light effects will be produced every seventeen seconds.—The Sketch. The Parisian French. It is popularly believed that the French who live in Paris and who speak what is usually described as “Parisian French” represent the gen- uine, simon-pure type of French blood and tradition. The famous Le Petit Journal, however, draws attentition to the fact that Paris has the small- est . indigenous population of any European capital, and that according to the last census only about 36 per cent of the total population of the Frnch capital are Parisians, abori- ginals, or people born in Paris. Sev- eral European capitals can show a far higher rate of indigenous popula- tion. St. Petersburg, for example can show 40 per cent, Berlin 41 per cent, Vienna 45 per cent and London 65 per cent.—Boston Globe. Franklin's Kite Experiment Commenting on Benjamin Frank- lin’s kite experiment, which proved that lightning and electricity are the same, a scientist says: “It was one of the most brilliant examples of luck vet recorded. To attempt the ex- traction of lightning flashes froma lowering sky was. almost suicidal. Even at this late day timid persons occasionally fly to feather beds, sit on glass-legged chairs or find refuge in rubber boots during thunderstorms. A repetion of Franklin's experiment cost his imme@’'ate imitator his life.” Costly Boarders. It cost $17,000 to feed the animals in the London Zoo last year. The principal items of food were 207 horses, 270 goats, 34,921 pounds of fish, 25,196 eggs, 6,855 quarts of milk and 137 loads of hay. Metals Found Together. Silver and lead are generally found together, and some scientists think that lead distinegrates into silver, Gold and copper are also often found together. In New South Wales" the Great Cobar mine furnishes copper containing four ounces of gold to the ton. FITS, St. Vitus’ Dance: Nervous Diseases per- manently cured by Dr. Kline’s Great Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr. H. R. KLixE, Ltd., 931 Arch St., Phila., Pa. John L. Snyder, a Seneca Indian, has received permission to take the New York State bar examination. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma- tion, aliays pain, cures wind colic, 25¢. abottle Real Absentmindedness. Billy Duggan of Palms, loaned his seed drill to someone and has forgot- ten who it was. The fellow who bor- rowed it can’t remember who it was he got it from. As the matter stands, Billy, who can’t identify his drill, is likely to lose it altogether.—Lexing- ton, Mich., News. The new Virchow Hospital in Ber- lin will have 800 beds. The total cost of construction will reach $5,000,000. The attending physicians will have salaries from $1400 to $800 a year. How’s This ? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for apy case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY & 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, Wholesale Druggists, To- ledo, O. WarLpixe, KiNNaNx & Marvin, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O. . Hall’s Catarrh Cureis takeninternally,act= ingdirectlyupontheblood and mucuoussur- faces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price, 75¢c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Take Hall’s Family Pills tor constipation. Ten years ago, with a population of 32,000,000, Prussia maintained nearly 3000 technical schools, representing all the principal industries, with an attendance of over 200,000. His Experience. An aged Scotch minister about to marry for the fourth time, was ex- plaining his reason to an elder. “You see, 1 am an old man now, and 1 canna expect to be here verra lang. When the end comes wad like to have some one to close my eyes.” The elder nodded and said: ‘“‘Awell, meenister, I have had twa wives, and baith of them opened mine!” BOX OF WAFERS FREE-NO DRUGS —CURES BY ABSORPTION. Cures Belching of Gas—Bad Breath and Bad Stomach=Short Breathe Bloating—Sour Eractationse Irregular Heart, Etc. Take a Mull’s Wafer any time of the day or night, and note the immediate good ef- fect on your stomach. It absorbs the gas, disinfects the stomach, kills the poison erms and cures the disease. Catarrh of the head and throat, unwholesome food and overeating make bad stomachs. Scarcely any stomach is entirely free from taint of gome kind. Mull’s Anti-Belch Wafers will make your stomach healthy by absorbing foul gases which arise from the undigested food and by re-enforcing the lining of the stomach, enabling it to ait mix the food with the gastric juices. This cures stomach trouble, promotes digestion sweetens the breath, stops belching and fermentation. Heart action becomes strong and regular through this process. Discard drugs, as you know from experi- ence they do not cure stomach trouble. a cominon-sense (Nature’s) method that does cure. A soothing, healing sensa- tion results instantly. We know Mull’s Anti-Belch Wufers will do this, and we want you to know it. This offer may not appear again. 696 GOOD FOR 25c. 142 Send this coupon with your name and address and your druggist’s name and 10c. im stamps or silver, and we will supply you a une free if you have never used Mull’s Anti-Belch Wafers, and will also send you a cer- tificate good for 25c. toward the pur- chase of more Belch Wafers. You will find them invaluable for stomach trou- ble; cures by absorption. Address Muir's Grape Toxic Co. 328 3d Ave., Rock Island, Jil. Give Full Address and Write Plainly. All druggists, 50c. per bax, or by mail upon .eceipt of price. Stamps accepted. How strange that one who would not take filth into his mouth will gladly take it into his brain! A CRITICAL PERIOD INTELLIGENTWOMEN PREPARE Dangers and Pain of This Critical Period Avoided by the Use of Lydia E. Pink. ham’s Vegetable Compound. How many woe 1 men realize tha the most critic period in a wo- man’s existen is the change life, and that the anxiety felt oy a. women as th hanes time draws near XA AEGH, Jand)] 18 not without ‘ reason ? If her system is in a deranged condi~ tion, or she is predisposed to apoplexy or congestion of any organ, it is at this time likely to become active and, with a host of nervous irritations, make life a burden. At this time, also. cancersand tumors are more liable to begin their destruc- tive work. Such warning symptoms as: a sense of suffocation, hot flashes, diz- ziness, headache, dread of impending evil, sounds in the ears, timidity, pal- pitation of the heart, sparks before the eyes, irregularities, constipation, varia- ble appetite, weakness and inquietude are promptly heeded by intelligent women who are approaching the period of life when woman's great change may be expected. We believe Lydia E. Pinkham'’s Veg- etable Compound is the world’s great- est remedy for women at this trying period. : Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- pound invigorates and strengthens the female organism, and builds up the weakened nervous system as no other medicine can. Mrs. A. E. G. Hyland, of Chester- town, Md., in a letter to Mrs. Pink- ham, says: Dear Mrs. Pinkham: — ‘I had been suffering with a displacement for years and was passing through the change of life. 1 had a good deal of soreness, dize¥ spells, headaches, and was very nervous. wrote you for advice and commenced treat- ment with Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound as you directed, and I am baby to say that all those distressing symptoms left me, and I have passed safely through the change of life a well woman.” For special advice regarding this im- portant period women are invited to write to Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass She is daughter-in-law of Lydia E. Pinkham and for twenty-five years has been advising sick women free of charge. Her advice is free and always helpful to ailing women. : “From the cradle fo the baby chair? HAVE YOU A BA if so, you ought fo have a _ PHOENIX (PATENTED) | “AN IDEAL SELF-INSTRUCTOR.” our PHOENIX Walking Chair bi holds the child securely, pre- #@ venting those painful falls and bumps which areso frequent when g baby learns to walk. “BETTER THAN A NURSE." The chair is provided with a re- movable, sanitary cloth seat, which supports the weight of the child and prevents bow-legs and spinal troubles; it also has a table attach- ment which enables baby to find ® amusement in its toys, eto., with- gE out any attention. »cimase “As Indispensable ag a cradle.” It is so constructed that it pre- ® vents soiled clothes, sickness from § drafts and floor germs, and is recommended by physicians and endorsed by both mother and baby. Combines plessure and utility. § No baby should be without one. { Call at your furniture dealer and ask to see one. UTR MANUFACTURED ONLY BY PHOENIX CHAIR CO. S8HEBCYGAN, WIS. Can only be had of your furniture dealer. J FERRER IR ha ae RRA Drill for Water Prospect for Riinerals Coal G Drill Testand BlastHoles. We make DRILLING MACHINES | For Horse, Steam or Gasoline Power. ates Traction Machine, LOOMIS MACHINE COC. TIFFIN, OHIO. THE DAISY FLY KILLER oro aflords comfort to every home. One ®c. box lasts the en. pT . Harm- I 149 DeKalb Ar cuae, Brooklyn, N. \ ORIEN W.MOR RIS, Ss NS Washington, D.C uccessfu rosecutes i Lato prine pal gly Brogegutes © ims yraiu civil war, 15 adj ndicating claims, atty since Sr . REE-! will send free of charge advice and prescriptions to men and women suf- sell fering fom Abyenee or weakness of any kind. I 0 medicines nor do I ask a cent from any one. Address DR. ARVEDUS, Bridgeport, Conn. y DROPSY YEW DISCOVERY; gives quick relief and eres worst eases. Book of testimonials and £0 Days’ treatment Free. Dr. H. H. GREEN'S S0NS, Box B, Atlanta, Ga. P. N. U. 23, 1906. 48 p. bonk free.” Highest refs. Long experience. Fitzgerald &Co.Dupt 51, Washington, D.Q
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers