The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, July 26, 1906, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Nw.
OTTER
e Lava
Mani-
d.
ing be.
actically
orro, 160
No loss
rer, who
ares he
Winckler
tire side
1 in and
in every
n a pan-
3s leaving
3 thought
10t more
y and the
aps the
with the
. Socorro
5 in tem-
that this
internal
1 nature
rbed at
» vicinity -
box cars
» people
Santa Fe
pirals of
he direc-
bly from
ic mani-
| passed
> discom-
D
in © With
nts.”
spiritual
n arrest-
formation
* the bor-
with vio-
- fortunes
rs. Craw-
n all the
, having
ney from
it accom-
y carry a
riverside
s:in it in
ys. Mrs.
rs in the
$500 and
iting the
RMS
Shop and
f District
soft coal
ania, will
the terms
the lead-
the locals
ention at
liscussing
t the set-
242.
provisions
1 arbitra-
vitter and
1 the elo-
1iry-Treas-
rict Presi-
ntion over
1S shown
istinct en-
A hopeful
on the
rowers to
lips. The
|. are; in
usiness is
e moder-
-ades are
s follow:
wd above,
3. 1, 37 to
unwashed,
unwashed,
bod, 23c;
hed, 32 .to
3c;
ENTS.
m Rocke-
2 the Mu-
son, Wis.,
democratic
Visconsin.
mala and
nd peace
te on the
vik, which
two Jap-
1904, that
. Sakhalin,
hat swept
battleship
n with the
sey. Both
r damaged.
ntoists in
tribute to-
> Christian
were de-
ne ago.
» of a New
mped from
cor of the
d from the
Petersburg
siderations
in Russia,
ndoned his
informed
fect.
1ilding oec-
3. firm of
ansas City,
causing a
ge.
1 decorated
n of Honor,
the
yn could be
ques-
Aa i ER BR
SRITIXX
TERRIBLE TO RECALL.
Five Weeks in Bed With Intensely
Painful Kidney Trouble,
Mrs. Mary Wagner, of 1367 Kos-
Bridgeport, Conn., says:
“I was so weak-
ened and gener-
ally run down
with kindey dis-
ease that for a
long time I could
not do my work
and was five
weeks in bed.
There was con-
tinual bearing
down pain, terri-
ble backaches,
headaches andat
times dizzy spells when everything
was a blur before me. The passages
of the kidney secretions were irregu-
lar and painful, and there was con-
siderable sediment and odor. I don’t
know what I would have done but
for Doan’s Kidney Pills. I could see
ar improvement from the first box,
uid five boxes brought a final cure.”
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a
box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo,
N.Y.
suth Ave,
What one Negro Has Done.
During his recent visit to Oklahoma
Booker T. Washington spoke very
highly of what the negroes of the
territories had accomplishea. If all
of them were like G. W. Spraigns, a
negro bricklayer in Guthrie, hig
praises would be more than justified.
Bpraigns, who is now 52 years old,
has acquired a tract embracing about
14 lots, which he bought when they
were cheap, and they have improved
in value. He has 14 children, all of
whom have received a common school
education. Three of them are grad-
uates of the negro university at
Langston and are now teaching
school, while three more are students
in the university. One son is in the
army and another is a prosperous
farmer in Oklahoma. The old man
says that all of the younger children
shall go on and receive a college
training so as to give them the right
sort of start in life.—Kansas City
Journal.
Origin of an Old Phrase.
“Every dog has its day.” The first
person who said so, many good
Shakespeareans may have supposed,
was Hamlet, who observes ‘The cat
will mew and dog will have his day”
as his exit words in the church-
vard scene. But two earlier instan-
ces of the saying were unearthed for
Dr. Murray’s dictionary. = Forty years
before ‘‘Hamlet”” Heywood wrote:
. ‘‘But, as every man saith, a dog hath
”
his daie;’’ and the first recorded per-
son to say it was none other than
Queen Elizabeth, who remarked:
“Notwithstanding, as a dog hath a
day, so may I perchance have time to
declare it in deed.”” The origin of
the saying is lust in antiquity.—Lon-
don Chronicle.
First to Reach the Top.
King Victor Emmanuel of Italy has
received a dispatch from his brother,
the Duke of Abruzzi, stating that he
had succeeded in reaching the sum-
mit of Mt. Bowenzori, which had nev-
er before been climbed. The moun-
tain is situated between Lakes Al-
bert Nyanza and Albert Edward
Nyanza, and is 18,000 feet above the
sea level. The duke who has ae-
cemplished this feat is the same in-
dividual who has the honor of having
succeeded in getting nearer the North
Pole than any other white man.
Nansen Approves Women’s Rights.
Dr. Friatjef Nansen, the Arctic ex-
plorer, who has been appointed Nor-
wegian Ambassador to Great Britain,
is a firm believer in woman’s rights.
He and his wife are almost equally
proficient in all that relates to ath-
letics and the strenuous life. Apart
from his fame as an explorer Dr.
Nansen is well known as a writer on
scientific topics.
DACK TOG PULPIT
What Food Did For a Clergyman,
A minister of Elizabethtown tells
how Grape-Nuts food brought him
back to his pulpit: ‘‘Some 5 years
ago I had an attack of what seemed
to be La Grippe, which left me in a
complete state of collapse and I suf-
fered for some time with nervous
prostration. My appetite failed, I
lost flesh until I was a mere skeleton,
life was a burden to me, I lost inter-
est in everything and almost in
everybody save my precious wife.
“Then on the recommendation of
some friends I began the use of
Grape-Nuts food. At that time I was
a miserable skeleton, without appe~
tite and hardly able to walk across
the room; had ugly dreams at night,
no disposition to entertain or be en-
tertained and began to shun society.
“I finally gave up the regular min-
istry, indeed I could not collect my
thoughts on any subject, and became
almost a hermit. After I had been
using the Grape-Nuts food for a short
time I discovered that I was taking
on new life and my appetite began to
improve; I began to sleep better and
my weight increased steadily; I had
lost some 50 pounds, but under the
new food regime I have regained al-
most my former weight and have
greatly improved in every way.
“I feel that I owe much to Grape-
Nuts and can truly recommend the
food to all who require a powerfui
rebuilding agent delicious to taste
and always welcome.” Name given
by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich.
A true natural road to regain health,
or hold it, is by use of a dish of
Grape-Nuts and cream, morning and
night. Or have the food made into
some of the many delicious dishes
given in the little recipe book found
in pkgs.
Ten days’ trial of Gruape-Nuts helps
many. ‘‘There’s a reason.”
Look in pkgs. for a copy of ‘the
famous little book, ‘The Road to
Wellville,”
i 20080800 6 a
rma nabmmans foe
Humor and Tragedy of
San Francisco's
Day of Terror
By james Hopper.
UT of that experience several pictures remain detached but
veeses vivid. At Fourth and Folsom streets, by some freak, a hy-
3 drant was still eiting out water. I still see the firemen who
stood there, rushing a hose down the street flaming on both
3 sides; I can see their chief standing at the corner, his white
OOO eOORee |cimet rosy with the flame, his long slicker dripping, lis
mouth pouring out a volley of jolly oaths, and then these
Sessions men, the hose upon their shoulders, their helmets tilted
toward the terrific heat, rushing in between the roaring
walls. The whole city, mind you, is burning beyond them. They have one
hose, one stream of water; they are four. It was something big, the very
futility of their effort, of their immense determination to do, with their whole
world crashing to ruins about them, their single duty—to fight to the last
the hopeless fight.
On Valencia street, at the corner of Eighteenth, a four-story wooden ho-
tel collapsed, and now seems but one story high. Upon the ruins four police
men and 50 volunteers are working. I see them, a rope ncosed about a fallen
partition, tugging in concert. A hundred men are buried in those ruins. The
fire is only a few blocks away. They tug, their yellow faces distorted with
the effort, beads of cold perspiration welling from their pores. At intervals
they stop, all of them; they look toward the fire, their weary faces rosied
with the glow. puckering in an expression of anxiety almost simian, and then
with new courage they tug again.
At the end of the third day I was standing on the top of Russian Hill.
The fire had then swept the city, but was still burning in the North Beach dis-
trict. To the south, a little below me, was the Jones Street hill. A strange
hallucination possessed me. I thought I heard strains of music. It was no
hallucination. Up on the tip top of the Jones Street hill, in the middle of the
street, the only thing standing for miles, was a piano. A man was playing
on it; I could see his hands rising and falling, his body swaying. In the wind
his long black hair and a loosened red tie at his neck streamed. The wind
bore the sounds away from me, but in a lull I finally heard the musie. It
was Saint-Saens’s “Danse Macabre”’—the death dance. His hands beat up
and down, his body swayed, his hair streamed, and from the crest down over
the devastated city, like a cascade, poured the notes with their sound of
shaken dry bones.—Harper's Weekly.
V 3
0900099000000 0000000000060
Preservation of Forests gn
By John F. Lacey.
HE destruction of our forests has been going on at so great
a rate as to alarm the public mind ard prepare the people to
accept some remedy.
The interests of irrigation and navigation have called
attention to the necessity of preserving the sources of our
water courses by retaining or restoring the forests from
which they flow.
Fortunately many millions of acres ef wooded {ands are
still held by the national government, and about 85,000,610
acres of these lands have been set apart in 83 permanent national forest re-
serves. The primary purpose of these reservations is to conserve the streams
and provide means of irrigation and also, in some degree, to influence the rain-
fall. They are well scattered in the far west, and are generally upon land
which is of little value for agricultural uses.
They are reserved for the use of man and not reserved {rom his use. The
ripened trees will be cut as they may be needed. There has been much lo-
cal opposition to many of these reservations, but time and observation have
greatly changed the local sentiment. The experimental stage has passed
and they can therefore be accepted as an established fact, and the question
naturally arises as to what extent they may be utilized for the preservation
of the remains of our birds, fish and game and be used as sources of propa-
gation and supply. At least a portion of these lands should be so used. The
writer of this article has for many years endeavored to secure legislation to
this end. Wyoming has shown her sympathy with the movement by declar-
ing a permanently closed season in the part of the forests reserves adjacent
to the Yellowstone National Park.—The Outing Magazine.
6000090900000 00000000000600
Rich Men’s Sons 1
& Generally Are Worthless
& By Rabbi Emil G. Hirsch.
Brivo £3 Nn teppei any
feogeseaTorTe od rl oH men’s sons, inheritors of great wealth, millionaires of
the Pittsburg school, who virtually fell heir to their millions,
: in the main are cumberers of the earth—purse proud, intol-
3 erant, idle and utterly useless when they are not actually
4 and actively vicious.
* From my personal observation and acquaintance, I am
Er As “3 convinced that 95 percent of all rich men’s sons are practi-
fe feoge 3 a cally worthless. Among this great majority are some who
observe ordinary decency and even conform to the ap-
pearance of elementary virtues, but even their good qualities are of a negative
sort. Often they receive praise, not for good they have accomplishd, but for
evil they have refrained from.
The money-getting faculty, the desirability of which may be debatable, is
only one of the qualities that do not seem to descend from father to son. It
was the great grief of the late Marshall Field's life that his son proved worth-
less, and that he had to leave his vast interests in the hands of others. Georg
M. Pullman declared in his will that his two sons were no credit to him. So
he cut them off with annuities of $3000. I am not familiar enough with the
Rockefeller family to be positive about it, but I imagine that John D. Rocke-
feiler, Jr., is no exception to the rule.
It is rarely that any good quality descends to the sons of the rich. Such
youths go to college, not to learn, but tomake a display of wealth and to amuse
themselves. Such persons cannot exercise charity. When they try it they
make it a hateful thing. Charity of that particular kind is mischievous. What
is needed is philanthropy—all too scarce. It will continue to be so, I fear, so
long as the means of giving are so generally accumulated in the hands of the
rich and their degenerate children.
CoS
rr
BORE 2
o
o
4
*%
CoC DO D00000000000000000
IgA pian Fag, A
A Word to Husbands ¢
senshi By Senator Albert J. Beverige. eran
ET into the habit of happiness. It is positively amazing how
we can turn every little incident into a sunbeam. One om
the most worth-while families I know always joke at the
table. It is as good as a vacation to take a meal with them.
And, mark you, it is quite as easy to take the other course.
But what a coward a man is who releases in his home all the
pent-up irritability, disappointment and glcom of the day!
There is no sense of such a course. It does not make you
less gloomy to fill your house with gloom. You cught not
to do it even from the point of view of good heaith. If you eat your meal
in a sour silence which almost curdles the cream and scares your wife half
you do not and cannot digest your food.
to death, Forget it then. If you
have had a hard day say to yourself: “Well, that was a bard day! Now for
some rest and fun Get into the habit of being happy, I tell you. You can
do it. Practice saying to yourself when you waken in the morning,
“Bvery-
surprised how nearly
of tke day will really make
thing is all right’—and keep on saying it. You will be
“gll right” the mere saying of it at the beginning
everything.—American Motherhood.
FINANCE AND TRADE REVIEW
DUN’'S WEEKLY SUMMARY
Reports of Industry and Transporta-
tion Are Also Exceptionally?Good
for Present Season.
R. G. Dun & Co.’s weekly review of
trade says:
“Exceptionally encouraging reports
for this time of the year are received
regarding trade, industry and trans-
portation, but there is no response in
the market for securities. The best
news of the past week comes from
agricultural sections, where progress
is fully maintained, harvesting of win-
ter wheat promising a larger yield
than expected, and of good quality,
while corn and oats exceed anticipa-
tions; caiton picking has begun in the
early districts and hay alone of the
leading crops threatens to be short.
‘“As results on the farms become
assured there is a growth of confi-
dence that brings out large orders for
fall and winter delivery of all staples.
Saw mills at the Northwest are run-
ning night crews, new coke ovens are
in course of construction and there
is a general disposition to extend fa-
cilities in order to keep pace with ex-
panding needs.
“More textile mills have voluntarily
advanced wages 5 per cent to take ef-
fect after this month and the only im-
portant labor trouble that threatens is
a local building complication that will
be averted if conservative counsel
prevails.
“Official returns show that foreign
commerce in the fiscal year ending
June 30, 1906, far eclipsed all records
both as to exports and imports while
the new year promises still better re-
sults because of the surplus on the
farms available for consumers abroad.
‘““For the last week at this port
alone exports were $1,352,245 larger
than in 1905, and imports gained
$914,253. Railway earnings thus ‘far
reported for July show an average in-
crease of 7.2 per cent over last
year’s.
“Restoration of foundry pig to $14
is probably the best development of
the week in the iron and steel in-
dustry.
“Improvement is noted in the pri-
mary markets for cotton goods after a
prolonged period of indifferénce on
the part of buyers.
‘“Bfforts to secure still further ad-
vances in the hide market encounter
some opposition, but the general lev-
el continues about the highest on
record.
“Failures for the week numbered
192 in the United States, against 193
last year, 2nd 22 in Canada, compar-
ed with 23 a year ago.
MARKETS.
PITTSBURG.
Grain, Flour and Feed.
Wheat—No. 2 YOQeuei cri einnesanes $ SO 82
e—No.2......... . 2 73
Corn—No. oo ellow, ear 61 62
No. 2 yellow, shelled. 60 61
60 61
44 45
43 44
410 415
ancy straight winters 4 410
Hay—No. 1 Timothy 1500 1525
J 1073 1195
2:50 230)
i950 200)
200 215)
750 759
7 50 800
Dairy Products.
Butter—Elgin creamery 22 3
Onlo creamery......... ie 20 21
Fancy country roil.. . 19 20
Cheese—Ohio, new......... 12 13
Now York.new..:.............. 12 13
Poultry, Etc.
Heng—=per Ib... oi ciccn avin. $ 11 15
Chnickens—dressed................. 16 13
Eggs—Pa. and Ohio, fresh......... 19 20
Frults and Vegsishies,
Potatoes—Fancy white per bu.. 85 9)
Cabbage—perton............ «+ 1300 1500
Onions—per barrel............ = 200 2%
BALTIMORE.
Flour—Winter Patent............. $ 5 5%
Wheat—No, 2 red..............,... > 0 86,
Cori==Mized, Ns eis dane cae es 46 7
sr rarresivevicavisairirevares 16 20
HL Obio creamemy..........., 2% 28
PHILADELPHIA.
Flour—Winter Patent 505 52
Wheat—No. 2 red.. 84 85
Corn—No. 2 mixed 35 51
Oats—No. 2 white. . 35 36
Butter—Creamery. 29 3:
Eggs—Pennsylvania firsts 16 20
NEW YCRK.
Flour—Patents...........2.auuzsa.s $ 500 515
Wheat—No, OrTed. dee, 89 9C
Corn—No, 2..........»c.0ve0seenneee 67 68
Uats—No. 2 nn deessursishieiaerien 86 #8
Butter -Creamery ................. 28 25
Hggs—State and YS oiissivania) iv. 16 18
LIVE STOCK.
Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg.
Cattle.
Exira, 1,450 101,600 1bs. ...... .... $075 $6 00
Prime, 1,800 101,400 lbs H0 5 7u
Good, 1,200 to 1,360 lbs. 2 9
2
ps
<
Tidy. 1,050 101,150 lbs.
Fair, 900 to 1,100 lbs.
Common, 700 to $00 1bs.
Common’ to good fat oxen
Common to good fat bulls.
wWmWAEACTOTOO
~y
58
OF wn a Wi oa ia WO
or
S
Common to good fat cows. 00 00
Heifers, 700 to1, 1001bs. 250 50
Fresh cows and springers........ 16 00 45 00
Sheep.
Fair mixed ewes and weihers.... 4 75
Culls and common. - “
Culls to choice lambs.
“1 vor ot
2
&
Hogs.
Primeheavy hogs .. $705 7 10
Prime medium weigh 7 10 7 2A
Best heavy Yorkers 72 720
Good light Yorkers 6 90 7 00
Pigs, as to quality. 6 70 6 80
Sommen to good rou hs 5 40 5 80
Binge... . 0a nLLl 4 00 4 35
Calves.
Veal Calves... 5 .. $4 00 6 50
Heavy and thin “calv .. 300 4 50
All tonnage men in Lebanon work-
ing vnder the jurisdiction of the
Anialgamated association stopped
Work in response to a strike order is-
St which affects ail mills in the
east. The demand upon which the
strike is based is for an increase from
$4 to $4.50 a tom for puddlers and a
proportionate increase to finishers.
The school board of Centerville,
Washington county, will ask the court
to dissolve the board owing to trouble
over the erection of an $8,000 high
school building. The board is dead- |
locked on the building question and
also the election of teachers,
. where we might expect better things.
Kitchen of the Sultan.
The imperial kitchen of the Sultan
of Turkey is more like a fortress than
a place to cook his meals, 1or it has
an armor plate door and is fitted with
locks which can be opened by only
one man. As each course is prepared
it is placed on a silver dish, which is
sealed with red wax by the kelardjhi,
the official responsible for his sov-
ereign’s food, and then a black vel-|
vet cover is placed over the dish to!
keep it warm. A procession of peo-
ple follow the meal into the imperial |
chamber, the seals being broken in
the Sultan's presence, and often the
kelardjhi is requested to taste some
particular dish. The cost of the Sul-
tan’s food does not exceed £1,000 a
year, for it is mostly entrees and |
boiled eggs, but to feed the numerous |
members of his househo:d and pay ail: |
domestic expenses lessens his annual |
income of £2,000,000 to £14,000 a
week.—New York Herald.
To Cure Thumb Sucking.
Taking an appropriately sized thin
rubber ball, an oval hole is cut to
loosely fit the wrist, and the surface
ventilated by very numerous punches
with a stable harness punch. A
cheesecloth bag is sewed on to the
oval hole, and a tape run in and out
of ‘the cloth at this aperture, which
can be gently tied at the wrist. A
woolen mitten can be worn within
this if required for cold weather. Sev-
eral sizes have to be made at inter-
vals of two months, to allow for
growth. For half an hour night and
morning these are removed and the
child taught gradually to pat a cake
and play with her own hands. After,
four months the child will be com-
pletely broken of the habit, but still
must wear them at night as a pre-
cautionary measure.—New York Medi-
€al Journal.
Grammer of the Horne.
In many families the education of
the children is committed almost ex-
clusively to the schools, and this suf-
ficiently accounts for the atrocious er-
rors of speech often noted in circles
It matters not how faithful the teach-
er may he, the child will inevitably
imitate the language heard at home,
and forget the instruction of the
school. ‘When the child hears incor-
rect language in the family and im-
bibes it freely from vicious books he
is probably going to speak ungram-
matically as lonz as he lives. A
writer on the educational process says
that the years from eight to twelve
constitute the habit-forming period. |
“This is the time to break the human |
colt, in some sense the wildest of all!
animals.” Errors in the use of the |
mother tongue adopted during this!
time are difficult to correct—Philadel-
phia Ledger.
FITS, St. Vitus’ Dance: NervoneDiseases per
manently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerva |
Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free. |
Dr. H. R. Kline, Ld., 931 Arch St.. Phila., Pa.
A steel chimney 260 feet high was re- |
cently completed in South Wales.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children
teething, softens thegums.reducesinflamma-
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic,25ca bottle
Selling Baptismal Water.
A company has been formed in;
Berlin for the purpose of selling
water from the River Jordan for the
purpose of baptism. The water is to
sell at 15 marks ($3.60) a bottle, and |
every pastor who sells a bottle of it
is to be entitled to a discount of 4
marks. i
SPENT $50 WIT WITH DOCTORS.
Got Barber’s Itch From Shaving- Worse |
Under Doctor's Care—Cured by }
One Set of Cuticura— Cost ®1.
“I want to send you a word of tharks |
for what the wonderful Cuticura Reme- |
dies have done for me. 1 got shaved and
got barber’s itch, and doctored with my |
own doctor, but it got worse all the time. |
1 spent in all about fifty dollars with doe-
tors, but still it got worse. A friend of
mine wanted me to try the Cuticura Rem-
edies. As I had tried everything, 1 was
discouraged. 1 bought one set of the Cuti-
cura Remedies (Soap, Ointment and Pills,
cost $1.00), and they cured me entirely, so
I cannot praise them too much. 1 would
be willing to do'most anything for the pro-
motion of a cause like the Cuticura Reme-
dies. They are wonderful, and 1 have rec-
onfmended them to every one where occa-
gion demanded it. I think every family
should know about the Cuticura Remedies
where they lave children. Allen Ridg-
way, Station Master, the Central Railroad
Company of New Jersey, Barnegat Sta-
tion, N. J., Oct. 2, 1905.”
One Way to Advertise,
A preacher in Leavenworth, Kan.,
is evidently a believer in advertising.
On the scoreboard of last Sunday’s
baseball game appeared this notice:
“If you are a fan go to the Presby-
terian church tonight and hear the
Rev. Dr. Elwood line out a few hot
ones.””—New York Tribune.
A PRETTY MILKMAID
S Thinks Pe-ru-na Is a Wonderful
Medicine,
MISS ANNIE HENDREN.
ISS ANNIE Rocklyn,
Wash., writes:
“I feel better than I hau> for over four
ears. I have taken several bottles of
eruna and one bottle of Manalin.
“I can now do all of my work in the
heaise, milk the cows, take care of the
milk, ‘and so forth. I think Peruna is
a most wonderful medciine.
“I believe I would be in bed to-day if
I had not written to you for advice. I
HENDREN,
| had taken all kinds of medicine, but none
did me any good.
“Peruna has made me a well and
happy girl. I can never say too! much
for Peruna.”
Not only women of rank and leisure
praise Peruna, but the wholesome, usefnl
women engaged in honest toil would not
be without Dr. Hartman’s world renowned
remedy.
The Doctor has prescribed it for many
thousand women every year and he never
fails to receive a multitude of letters like
the above, thanking him for his vice,
and especially for the wonderful benefits
received from Peruna.
your table in a kitchen as clean as your
own.
Ready to serve any time—fit to serve
anywhere.
“All are economical—and all are good.
Whether your josie be for Boneless
Chicken, Veal Loaf, Ox Tongue, Potied
Ham, Dried Beef, there is no way i can
gratify it so well as by afing § for oss: s.
Try Libby's delicious gnu
for Th or sliced cold
Booklet free, ‘ “How to Make
Good Things * Write
Libby, McNeil s Libby, Chicago.
You CANNOT
all inf] amed, ulcerated and catarrhal con-
ditionssof the mucous membrane such as
nasal catarrh, uterine catarrh caused
by feminine ills, sore throat, sore
mouth or inflamed eyes by simply
dosing the stomach.
But you surely can cure these stubborn
affections by local treatment with
Paxtine Toilet Antiseptic
which destroys the disease germs,checks
discharges, stops pain, and heals the
inflammation and soreness.
Paxtine represents the most successful
local treatment for feminine ills ever
produced. Thousands of women testify
to this fact. so cents at druggists.
Send for Free Trial Box
THE R. PAXTON CO., Boston, Mass.
Wheat, 60 Bushels per
acre. Catalogue and samnles
FREY SiizerReod Oe + F
« La Crosse,
3%) pe bo ik free. 2 ghest refs,
g experienc Fir ald
Lennon 54.W hr mn, n.o
P. N. U. 30, 1906.
Cte Thompson’ s Eye Water
Chickens Earn Money !
If You Know How fo Handle Them Properly.
Whether you raise Chickens for fun or profit, you want to |
do it intelligently and get the best results.
is to profit by the experience of others.
all you need to know on the subject—a book written by a man
who made his living
know on the subject to make a success.
SENT POSTPAID ON RECEIPT OF 25 CENTS IN STAMPS.
TTUREIEE TERIOR SR PETES
BOOK PUBLISHING
It tells you how to Detect and Cure Disease,
how to Feed for Eggs, and also for Market, which Fowls to Save
for Breeding Purposes and indeed about everything you must
134 LEon4rp ST, N. Y. CITY.
The way to do this
We offer a book telling
for 25 years in raising
§ Poultry, and in that time necessarily had
25¢ to experiment and spent much money to learn
in the best way to conduct the business—for the J
Stamps. § small sum of 25 cents in postage stamps. Sh
AR
HOUSE,