The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, October 18, 1906, Image 3

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913,590.
What Ails You?
Do you feel weak, tired, despondent,
have frequent headaches, coated tongue,
bitter or bad taste in morning, “heart-
New Field for Tobacco.
The newly appointed Government
tobacco expert for the Transvaal, in
South Africa. has informed the Trans-
vaal Agricultural Union that the col-
burn,” belching of gas, acid risings in ny can produce as good cigaret, cigar
throat after eating, stomach gnaw or
burn, foul breath, dizzy spells, poor or
variable appetite, nausea at times and
kindred symptoms?
pid liver with indi-
+ J Pierce's Golden
ical Di y s made up of the most
yaluable medicinal principles known to
edical science for the pe nt cure o
8) abnorm jtions, It is a mos
efficient liver invigorator, stomach tonic,
bowel regulator and nerve strengthener.
The "Golden Medical Discovery ” is not
a patent medicine or secret nostrum, a
full list of its ingredients being printed
on its bottle-wrapper and attested under
oath. A glance at its formula will show
that it contains no alcohol, or harmful
habit-forming drugs. It is a fluid extract
made with pure, triple-refined glycerine,
of proper strength, from the roots of the
following native American forest plants,
viz., Golden Seal root, Stone root, Black
Cherrybark, Queen’s root, Bloodroot, and
Mandrake root.
The followinz leading medical authorities,
among a host of others, extol the foregoing
roots for the cure of just such ailments as the
above symptoms indicate: Prof. R. Bartholow,
, D., of Jefferson Med. College, Phila.: Prof.
.C. Wood, M. D., of Univ.of Pa.; Prof. Edwin
. Hale, M. D., of Hahnemann Med, College,
Chicago; Prof, John King, M. D., Author of
merican Dispensatory; Prof. Jno. M. Scud-
er, M. D., Author of Specific Medicines; Praf.
aurence Johnson, M. D., Med. Dept. Univ. of
. Y.; Prof. Finley Ellingwood, M. D., Author
of Materia Medica and Prof. in Bennett Medi-
cal College, Chicago. Send name and ad-
dress on Postal Card to Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buf-
falo, N. Y., and receive free booklet giving
extracts from writings of all the above medi-
cal authors and many others endorsing, in the
strongest possible terms, each and every in-
gredient of which “Golden Medical Discov-
ery” is composed.
r. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets regulate and
invigorate stomach, liver and bowels. They
may be used in conjunction with ®Golden
Medical Discovery ” if bowels are much con-
stipated. They're tiny and sugar-coated.
Dream Made Plumber Rich.
Waltts, a plumber in Bristol, made
$60,000 through a dream. One night
he dreamed that while soldering up
some defect on the roof of a church
he let the ladle of molten metal slip
from his hand into the street below.
On hastening down. to recover the
utensil he found to his surprise that
the lead which it contained, instead of
lying in an intact mass, was scatter-
ed around in a myriad minute globu-
les. On awakening his curiosity
prompted him to repeat the experi-
ment, when to his surprise the falling
metal behaved as it had done in his
dream. This discovery, which he at
once adapted to the making of lead
shot, brought him in the above sub-
stantial fortune.
A TERRIBLE EXPERIENCE.
How a Veteran Was Saved thie Am-
putation of a Limb.
.
B. Frank Doremus, veteran, of
Roosevelt Ave., Indianapolis, Ind.,
says: “I had been showing symp-
toms of kidney trou-
was mustered out of
the army, but in all
my life I never suf-
fered as in 1897.
Headaches, dizziness
and sleeplessness
first, and then dropsy.
# I was weak and help-
less, having run down
Fy from' 130 to "i125
pounds. I was having terrible pain
in the kidneys and the secretions
passed almost involuntarily. My left
leg swelled until it was thirty-four
inches around, and the doctor tapped
it night and morning until I could no
longer stand it, and then he advised
amputation. I refused, and began
using Doan’s Kidney Pills. The swell-
ing subsided gradually, the urine be-
came natural and all my. paint and
aches disappeared. - I have been well
now for nine years since using Doan’s
Kidney Pills.”
For sale by all dealers. 50 cents
a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo,
N:. Y.
Plenty of Maple Sugar.
There is a plant in Chicago’ which
manufactures more jmaple sugar in a
month, said Dr. W. H. Wiley in a
recent address, than is produced by
nature in the whole of the State of
Vermont in a year.
The newspaper files of the British
Museum have been moved to a spec
ial depository at Hendon, seven miles
from London, where they occupy six
miles and a half of shelving.
W. L. DOUGLAS
£3.50 &.°3.00 Shoes
BEST IN THE WORLD
W.L.Douglas $4 Gilt Edge line
ocannotbe equalled atany price
To Shoe Dealers :
. IL. Douglas’ Job-
bing House is the most
complete in this country
Send for Catalog
. 0,
25. Wom , $4.00 t .50.
TER Ohildrers Higes, B00 to 1.00.
Try W. L. Douglas Women’s, Misses and
Children’s shoes; for style, fit and wear
they excel other makes.
If I could take you into my large
factories at Brockton, Mass.,and show
you how carefully W.L. Douglas shoes
are made, you would then understand
why they hold their shape, fit better,
wear longer, and are of greater value
than any other make.
* Wherever you live, you can obtain W. L.
Douglas shoes. His name and price is stamped
on the bottom, which protects you against high
prices and inferior shoes. Take no substi:
tute. Ask your dealer for W. L. Douglas shoes
and insist upon having them.
Fast Color Eyelets used; they will not wear brassy.
3 Write for fllustrated Catalog of Fall Styles.
W. L. DOUGLAS, Dept. 15, Brockton, Mass,
ble from the time I |
i In pkgs.
and pipe tobacco as America and
Cuba. He regards the industrial pros-
pects as very bright.
Beware of Ointments For Catarrh That
Contain Mercary,
ag mercury will surely destroy the sense of
smell and completely derangethe whole sys-
tem when entering it througa the mucous
surfaces. Such articles shonld never be used
except on prescriptions from reputable hy,
sicians,.as the damage they will do isten fold
to the good you can possibly derive from
them. Hall’s Catarrh Cure, manufactured
by E. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O., contains
no mercury, and is taken internally, acting
dircetly upon the b'ood and mucous surfac: 3
of the system. In buying Hall’s Catarrh Cur>
be sure you get the genuine. It is takenin-
ternally and made in Toledo, Ohio, by F.
J. Cheney & Co. Testimonials free.
Bold by Druggists;.price, 75¢c. per bottle.
Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation.
Mail Record Beaten.
The Canadian Pacific Railway Com-
‘pany is boasting that it has ac-
complished the feat of landing Brit-
ish mails in Hongkong in 29 days from
the dispatch from London, or nearly a
week less than the previous record.
FOUR YEARS OF AGONY.
Whole Foot Nothing But Proud Fleshe
Had to Use Crutches — ‘““Cuticura
Remedies Best on Earth.”
“In the year 1895 the side of my right
foot was cut off from the little toe down
to the heel, and the physician who had
charge of me, 6 was trying to sew up the
side of my foot, but with no success. At
last my whole foot and way up above my
calf was nothing but proud flesh. I suf-
fered untold agonies for four years, and
tried different physicians and all kinds of
ointments. I could walk only with
crutches. In two weeks afterwards I saw
a change in my limb. . Then I began using
Cuticura Soap and Ointment often during
the day, and kept it up for seven months,
when my limb was healed up just the
same as if I never had trouble. It is
eight months now since I stopped using
Cuticura Remedies, the best on God's
earth. ‘I am working at the present day,
after five years of suffering. The cost of
Cuticura Ointment and Soap was only $6,
but the doctors’ bills were more like $600.
John M. Lloyd, 718 S. Arch Ave. Al-
liance, Ohio, June 27, 1805.”
In Germany more than 500 out of
every thousand women reach the age
of 50 years, while only 413 men live
so long.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children
teething,softens thegums,reducesinflamma-
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25ca bottle
Doctrine of Hatred in War.
It is a fresh experience to take up
a book which preaches a doctrine of
hatred on the ground that a ‘living
personal hatred is a most valuable
fighting asset, and this is all that
can. be said in favor of these
“Hersies of Sea Power.”” Mr. Jane
quotes Nelson to support his curious
theory, and declares that a crude de-
sire to kill Russians contributed ma-
terially to the success of Japanese
arms ‘in the late war. It is unfortun-
ate for his argument that Nelson
should have been so consistently
chivalrous to opponents and that the
Japanese seem to have been anxious
to spare and save life whenever kill-
ing served no useful purpose. This
atemipt to connect blood lust with
victory shows how difficult it may be
for a civilian to understand the pe-
culiar sympathy which exists between
fighting men of different nations. “I
am going, I hope and trust to join
Nelson,” said Gravina on his death-
bed, and fiom what we know of Nel
son he was probably the first to
greet his cold enemy in the Halls of
Valhalla.—Saturday Review.
Analine Dyes Don’t Go.
Some time ago the Ameer of
Afghanistan forbid the import into his
country of carpets colored with ani-
line dyes. The Kashmir of Durbar
has now decided to charge the high
duty of 45 per cent on all aniline
dyes at the frontier, and at a certain
distance within the frontier to con-
fiscate and at once destroy them. By
this measure it is hoped the beauti-
ful arts for which the Vale of Kash-
mir is famous will be preserved from
deterioration. ‘
NO DAWDLING
A Man of 70 After Finding Coffee
Hurt Him, Stopped Short.
When a man has lived to be. 70
years old with a 40-year-old habit
grown to him like a knot on a tree,
chawi.ces are he’ll stick to the habit
till he dies.
But occasionally the spirit of youth
and determination remains in some
men to the last day of their lives.
When such men do find any habit of
life has been doing them harm, they
surprise the Oslerites by a degree of
will power that is supposed to belong
to men under 40, only.
“I had been a user of coffee until
three years ago—a period of 40 years
—and am now 70,” writes a N. Dak.
man. ‘‘I was extremely nervous and
debilitated, and saw plainly that I
must make a change.
“I am thankful to say I_had the
nerve to quit coffee at once and take
on Postum without any dawdling,
ind experienced no ill effects. On the
contrary, I commenced to gain, losing
my nervousness within two months,
plso gaining strength and health
otherwise.
“For a man of my age, I am very
well and hearty. I sometimes meet
persons who have not made their
Postum right and don’t like it. But
[ tell them to boil it long enough,
and call their attention to my looks
now, and before I used it, that seems
tonvincing.
‘““Now, when I have writing to do,
or long columns of figures to cast up,
[ feel equal to it and can get through
my work without the fagged out feel-
Ing of old.” Name given by the Pos-
tum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read
the book, “The Road to Wellville,”
‘“There’s a reason.”
Dr. Jean Charcot is organizing an
expedition to the South Pole and the
Belgian Oceanographic Society one
to the North Pole.
Pe
The range of years over which can-
cer is likely to occur is practically
the.same in both sexes—46-44—but
the mean age of incidence of the dis-
ease is 55.2 years in males and 49.9
years in females.
Instead of the long celluloid film, a
London photographer uses circular
glass plates for the cinematograph.
The pictures are taken in a spiral,
and a plate fifteen inches in diameter
holds several hundred, recording a
story lasting about four minutes.
Aluminum, cadmium, zine, mag-
nesium, ete., affect the photographie
plate, though not classed as radio-
active. A late remarkable observa-
tion is that the electric spark some-
times increases the effect, sometimes
lessens it, while this influence—
though so superficial that slight sand-
papering removes it—persists for
months.
In the latest fight against the rab-
bit pest in Australia, the attempt is
made to destroy the animals in their
burrows. A specially constructed
boiler is used with a length of flex-
ible metallic hose, and steam at high
pressure is forced into the burrow,
after first closing all openings except
that for the hose. The early results
have been very encouraging.
Ordinary clothing, it is pointed
out, keeps the skin of man in almost
complete darkness. A London physi-
cian advises that consumptives wear
white clothing and that it be of linen
or cotton, never of silk. Blue and
violet pass the higher rays fairly well,
and might be worn, but red, black,
yellow and green transmit little but
heat rays, and should be avoided.
Two languages have died out in
modern Europe, according, to Rev.
W. S. Lach-Szyrna. In a recent pa-
per to British archaeologists, he
doubted whether anybody could fix
the time or place when Prussian dis-
appeared, for the death of a language
may be a lingering and obscure one,
but Cornish seems to have passed
away in its English home in quite
recent times. The last Cornish drama
bears date of 1611. A considerable
Cornish literature is preserved in
manuscript and printed works, and
the language has left its impression
in the names of places and families.
A few words, including the numerals,
are still used by the miners.
According to a description of his
experiments given by Mr. Marconi,
the confining of the electric waves
used in wireless telegraphy to certain
predetermined directions is a prob-
lem admitting of an easy, if not a
complete, solution. A simple method
is to substitute for the usual vertical
antenna employed as radiator or ab-
_sorber of the waves, a straight hori-
zontal conductor, placed at a com-
paratively small elevation above the
surface of the ground or water. Ex-
perience shows that the radiation
reaches a maximum in the vertical
plane of this horizontal wire, and
gradually dies out on each side of it.
Similarly at the receiving-station the
maximum effect of the waves is felt
in the vertical plane of the horizontal
absorbing conductor. To attune the
transmitting and receiving apparatus,
their conductors are pointed in the
same direction.
. THE BRIDE'S FIRST KISS.
“Best Man's’ Protest Against Plea
For its Abolition.
The Vicar of Tintwistle, England,
having declared that the ‘foolish and
irreverent’’ custom of kissing the
bride after a wedding ceremony
should be stopped, he is thus an-
swered by one signing himself “Six
Times a Best Man” in the London
Mail:
‘““As I have on six occasions filled
the invidious position of best man,
I trust you will grant me space to
deliver an emphatic protest against
the abolition of this good old Eng-
lish custom, which is, apparently,
wished by some clergymen and many
curates. .
“Is there to be no reward for the
unfortunate ‘best man,” who has
borne for hours on his shoulders all
the worries and responsibilities of
the important ceremony; the rally-
ing of the trembling bridegroom, the
supervision of all the social arrange-
ments, and the departure of the
happy pair from the church, to say
nothing of the lavish scattering of
largesse to every hanger-on within
and without, for which, by the way,
he is very seldom reimbursed? 1 re-
peat, is there no reward for all these
manifold difficulties .successfully ac-
complished ?
‘““To the bride and bridegroom it is
the solemnly joyous moment of their
lives. All the playfulness of eager
friends and even the ecclesiastical
chivalry of the minister should not
be allowed to rob the parties of a
kigs, the remembrance of which will
remain with the happy pair all their
lives.”
English Praise of Baseball.
In many ways baseball is a game
particularly suitable for the youth of
England. To excel at it requires
many of those qualities which are
particularly lacking in British sport
generally.—Fry’s Magazine, London.
FINANCE AND TRADE REVIEW
WEATHER AFFECTS BUSINESS
Stimulates Sale of Heavy Weight
Wearing Apparel—Crop Reports
Say Cotton is Short.
Lower temperature brought out
much business in seasonable lines of
wearing apparel and most reports
from wholesalers tell of the largest
volume of trade ever transacted.
Shipping departments are limited in
activity by inadequate railway facili-
ties, and” this difficulty is becoming
aggravated by the free movement of
grain and coal as the season ad-
vances. Crop reports covering con-
ditions cn October 1 is in most cases
satisfactory in grain, But damage
has reduced the yield of cotton and
caused a violent rise in prices. To
this fact is due some irregularity in
trade and collections at a few South-
ern cities, but most centers report
expanding business and confidence re-
garding the future. In the leading
industries it is impossible to secure
prompt deliveries, even contracts for
shipment during the first quarter of
1907 being difficult to place with the
steel mills and the long-continued
lassitucde in primary markets for cot-
ton goods has been suceeded by an
eagerness to purchase that is ad-
vancing quotations.
Conditions im the primary markets
for cotton goods show a radical
change from the recent indifferent
demand and endeavor to obtain con-
cessions in prices. Now that the raw
material has advanced beyond general
expectations ‘and there is prospect of
higher prices there is a sudden rush
to provide for future needs, but the
producers exhibit as much indiffer-
ence as was formerly shown by pur-
chasers. Conditions in the woolen
industry do not show a similar
broadening of interest, few duplicate
orders having been placed, and the
market still waits for some definite
attitude by clothing manufacturers.
New England footwear manufactur-
ers reserve the usual spring orders
from jobbers in all sections of the
country with the best demand for
heavy stock such as grain and split
goods. Producers have large con-
tracts on hand for winter amd spring
lines in addition to supplementary
orders for late fall delivery.
That the early advent of snow and
frost has done some damage is evi-
dent in reports of injury to fruit or-
chards, vines and tobaco plants at
the West and rumors of frost damage
to colton at the South.
The railways seem to be finding
increased difficulty in handling the
traffic offering, and fears of future
great congestion are expressed.
MARKETS.
PITTSBURG.
‘Wheat—No. 2 red 70 72
Rye—No.2............ = 73
Corn—No. 2 yellow, ear.... 35 59
No. 2 yellow, shelled 58 59
80 61
45
43 39
430
4 10
16 75
16 25
23 0)
20 00
Bran, bulk 21 50
traw—Wheat 7 50
Qatic. sheet emresniveavetiv vise TDD 800
Dairy Products.
Butter—Elgin creamer; 25
Ohio creamery.. 22
Fancy country r 20
Cheese—Ohio, new.. . 13
New YOrk, D8W.,...cccrerersee . 13
. Poultry, Etc.
Hens=—p6r ID...c.0sicsrnrieensesees $ 14 15
Chickens—dressed................. 16 18
Eggs—Pa. and Ohio, fresh......... 19 20
Fruits and Vegetables.
Potatoes—Fancy white per bu.... 55 60
Cabbage—per ton............ .'.. 1800 1500
Onions—per barrel............,. « R00 22
BALTIMORE.
Flour—Winter Patent.............! $ 505 52
‘Wheat—No. 2 red 5 » 76
Corn—Mixed 47
HEgEs:.....; . 2 23
Butter—Ohio cre 28
PHILADELPHIA.
Flour—Winter Patent 5
Wheat—No. 2 red. it)
Corn—No. 2 mixed 58
Oats—No. 2 white. 36
Butter—Creamery......... . 25
Eggs—Pennsylvania firsts........ 21 23
NEW YCRK.
Flour—Patents.. $5 00 51>
Wheat—No. 2 red 75 8
Corn—No. 2...... 67 68
Oats—No. 2 white. 86 38
Butter Creamery ssriseasssassans 28 d
Eggs—State and Pennsylvania... 16 18
LIVE STOCK.
Unlon Stock Yards, Pittsburg.
Cattle.
Extra, 1,450 101,600 bs. ........... $65 §5 90
Prime. 1,800 101,400 1bs,......ce.. rns 0 30 5 cb
Good, 1,200 to 1,300 1bs 5 00 5 20
Tidy, 1,050 to 1,150 lbs. 4 65 4 90
Fair, $00 1c 1,100 1bs.. 3 65 4 40
Common, 700 to 900 Ibs. 3 30 3 50
Common to good fat o 275 4 00
Common to good fat bulls. 27 4 00
Common to good fat cows........ 150 37
Heifers, 700 to1, 1001bs............ 250 4 35
Tesh cows and springers........ 16 00 48 00
Hogs.
Frimeheavy hogs.... $695 7 I0
Prime medium weig 7 00
Best heavy Yorkers. 6 95 7 00
Good light Yorkers. . 6 80 6 90
Pigs, as to quality....... 6 60 6 70
Common to good roughs... . 530 5 90
Bags... civic irene. 400 4 40
Sheep.
Prime wethers. vs 5 75
Good mixed....,..... 5 50
Fair mixed ewes and 5 00
Cullsand common........... 3 50
Culle to choice lambs 7 30
Calves.
YealCalves............0 000.0 000s... 58.00 8 2
Heavy and thin calves............. 3 00 4 50
Tn recent years much of the growth
business of the department of
attributable to the enormr
sion of commerce and trans
n legislation. At present,
trust prosecutions are swelling the
volume of the department's business.
Attorney General Moody expresses
the opinion that as time goes on the
government will, by appropri-
s, exercise more and more its
lena power over commerce within
its control.
And a True Story of How
This remarkable woman, whose
maiden name was Estes, was born in
Lynn, Mass., February 9th, 1819, com-
ing from a good old Quaker family.
For some years she taught school, and
became known as a woman of an alert
i NA
“yf
LK
band investigating mind, an earnest
seeker after knowledge, and above
all, possessed of a wonderfully sympa-
thetic nature.
In 1843 she married Isaac Pinkham,
a builder and real estate operator, and
their early married life was marked by
prosperity and happiness. They had
four children, three sons and a
daughter.
In those good old fashioned days it
was common for mothers to make
their own home medicines from roots
and herbs, nature's own remedies—
calling in a physician only in specially
urgent cases. By tradition and ex-
perience many of them gained a won-
derful knowledge of the curative prop-
erties of the various roots and herbs.
Mrs. Pinkham took a great interest
in the study of roots and herbs, their
characteristics and power over disease.
She maintained that just as nature so
bountifully provides in the harvest-
fields and orchards vegetable foods of
all kinds; so, if we but take the pains
to find them, in the roots and herbs
of the field there are remedies ex-
ressly designed to cure the various
1s and weaknesses of the body, and
it was her pleasure to search these out,
and prepare simple and effective medi-
cines for her own family and friends.
Chief of these was a rare combina-
tion of the choicest medicinal roots
and herbs found best adapted for the
cure of the ills and weaknesses pecu-
liar to the female sex, and Lydia E. Pink-
ham’s friends and neighbors learned
that her compound relieved and cured
and it became quite popular among
them.
All this so far was done freely, with-
out money and without price, as a
labor of love.
But in 1873 the financial crisis struck
Lynn. Itslengthand severity were too
much for the large real estate interests
of the Pinkham family, as this class
of business suffered most from
fearful depression, so when the Centen-
nial year dawned it found their prop-
erty swept away. Some other souree
of income had to be found.
Vegetable Compound was made known
to the world.
The three sons and the daughter,
with their mother, combined forces to
At this point Lydia E. Pinkham’s|y
———]
WHO SHE WAS
SKETCH OF THE LIFE OF LYDIA E. PINKHAM
the Vegetable Compound
Had Its Birth and How the “Panic of ’73’’ Caused
it to be Offered for Public Sale in Drug Stores.
restore the family fortune. They
argued that the medicine which was
go good for their woman friends and
neighbors was equally good for the
women of the whole world.
The Pinkhams had no money, and
little credit. Their first laboratory
was the kitchen, where roots and
herbs were steeped on the stove,
gradually filling a gross of bottles.
Then came the question of selling
it, for always before they had given
it away freely. They hired a job
printer to run off some pamphlets
setting forth the merits of the medi-
cine, now called Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound, and these were
| distributed by the Pinkham sons in
Boston, New York, and Brooklyn.
The wonderful curative properties of
the medicine were, to a great extent,
self-advertising, for whoever used it
recommended it to others, and the de-
mand gradually increased.
In 1877, by combined efforts the fam-
ily had saved enough money to com-
mence newspaper advertising and from
that time the growth and success of
the enterprise were assured, until to-
day Lydia E. Pinkham and her Vege-
table Compound have become house-
hold words everywhere, and many
tons of roots and herbs are used annu-
ally in its manufacture.
Lydia E. Pinkham herself did not
live to see the great success of this
work. She passed to her reward years
ago, but not till she had provided
means for continuing her work as
effectively as she could have done it
herself.
During her long and eventful expe.
rience she was ever methodical in her
work and she was always careful to pre-
serve arecord of every case that came to
her attention. The case of every sick
woman who applied to her for advice—
and there were thousands—received
careful study, and the details, includ-
ing symptoms, treatment and results
were recorded for future reference, and
to-day these records, together with
hundreds of thousands made since, are
available to sick women the world
over, and represent a vast collabora-
tion of information regarding the
treatment of woman's ills, which for
authenticity and accuracy can hardly
be equaled in any library in the
world.
With Lydia E. Pinkham worked her
daughter - in-law, the present Mrs.
Pinkham. She was carefullyinstructed
in all her hard-won knowledge, and
for years she assisted her in her vast
correspondence.
To her hands raturally fell the
direction of the work when its origina-
tor passed away. For nearly twenty-
five years she has continued it, and
nothing in the work shows when the
first Lydia E. Pinkham dropped her
pen, and the present Mrs. Pinkham,
now the mother of a large family, took
it up. With woman assistants, some as
capable as herself, the present Mrs.
Pinkham continues this great work,and
probably from the office of no other
person have so many women been ad-
vised how to regain health. Sick wo-
men, this advice is ‘‘Yours for Health”
freely given if you only write to ask
for it.
Such is the history of Lydia E. Pink-
am’s Vegetable Compound; made
from simple roots and herbs; the one
great medicine for women’s -ailments,
and the fitting monumdnt to the noble
woman whose name it bears.
Loaded Black Powder Shells
CRIEW RIVAL”
Hard, Strong, Even Shooters,
Always Sure Fire, ’
The Hunter's Favorite, Because
They Always Get The Game.
For Sale Everywhere.
‘When you buy
WET
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allinflamed, ulcerated and catarrhal con-
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If afflicted
wwe Thompson's Eye Water