The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, February 28, 1907, Image 3

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

    U.S. DISPENSATORY
Describes the Principal Ingredients
+ Contained in Pe-ru-na.
Are we claiming too much for Pe-
runa when we claim it to be an effec-
tive remedy for chronic catarrh?
Have we abundant proof that Peruna
is in reality such a catarrh remedy?
Let us see what the United States Dis-
pensatory says of the principal ine
gredients of Peruna.
Take, for instance, the ingredient
hydrastis canadensis, or golden seal.
The United States Dispensatory says
of this herbal remedy, that it is large-
ly employed in the treatment of de-
praved mucous membranes, chronic
rhinitis (nasal catarrh), atonic dys-
pepsia (catarrh of the stomach),
chronic intestinal catarrh, catarrhal
jaundice (catarrh of the liver), and
in diseased mucous membranes of the
pelvic organs. It is also recommended
for the treatment of various forms of
discases peculiar to women,
Another ingredient of Peruna, cory-
dalis formosa, is classed in the United
Btates Dispensatory as a tonic. So also
is cubebs clas: as a stomachic and
as a tonic for the mucous membranes.
Cedron seeds is another ingredient
of Peruna, an excellent drug that has
been very largeiy overlooked by the
medical profession for the past fifty
years. The sceds are to be found in
very few drag stores. The United
States Dispensatory says of the action
‘of cedren that it is used as a bitter
tonic and in the treatment of dysen-
tery, and in intermittent diseases as a
substitute for quinine.
Gil of copaiba, another ingredient
of Peruna, is classed by the United
States Plispensatory as a niild stimu-
lant and diuretic. It acts on the stom-
ach and intestinal tract. It acis as a
stimujant on the genito-urinary meins-
branes. Use rol in chronic cystitis,
chronic dysentery and diarrhea, and
some chronic diseases of the liver and
kidney s,
o us for a free book of testi-
Soni ot what the people think of
Peruna as a catarrh remedy. The
best evidence the testimony of
those who have tried it,
is
Dismal Swamp Changing,
Investizations the scientists at
Washington have recently developed
the fact that at present the area of
the Dismal Swamp is slowly sinking
and Lake Drummond. in ‘its center,
is growing larger. Similar changes
have occurred in the past, periods of
elevation and subsidence gradually
succeeding one -another. The aver-
age elevation above sea level is so
slight that natural drainage is insufii-
cient to remove the rainfall.
F¥ Ono, Cry TOLEDO, |
Sass Corny, me
TRASK J. CHENEY makes oath that he is
senior part: ier of the firm of I,J. CHENEY &
Co., doing business in the City of Toledo,
Coun: ty and State aforesaid, and that said
firm will pay thesumn of ONE HUNDRED DOL-
LARS for each and every case of CATARRH
that cannot be cured by the use of HALL'S
CATARRU CURE. FRAXK J. CHEXEY.
Sworn to before me and subscribed in B
rescence, this 6th day of December, A.
fse6. A
STATE ©
Qi
J. GLEASOR,
{3uaL 2} Notary Public.
{all’s Catarrh( _ureis takeninternally, and
acts direet)y on the blood and mucous sur-
faces of the system. Send for testimonials,
free. F. J. Cnesey & Co., Toledo, O.
Sold by all Drug 18te, 5c.
Hall's ‘Family i are the best.
Moving. Pictures That Talk.
The ‘‘chrenomegaphone’” is
scientific name given to a new appa-
ratus invented by M. Leon Gaumont
of Faris. A moving picture is thrown
on a screen, and as the figures move
the chrenomegaphone gives them
speech. We thus get a combination
of cinematograph and phonograph.—
London Magazine of Commerce.
the
Only One “Bromo Quinine”
That is laxative Bromo Quinine. Similar-
ly named remedies sometimes deceive. The
and original Cold Tablet 1s ‘a= White
with black and red lettering. and
bears the signature of 12, WV. Grove. Z5c.
A pamphlet was written in 1679 by
Francesco Lana expounding the theory
of airships.
PureWhite Lead
is the Natural
Paint Pigment
Numerous
compounds
are being
offered to take
the piace of
white lead as
a paint, butno
real substitute
for it has yet’
been found.
Pure White
Lead hus a
peculiar
property of
amaling
with the wood
ich it is used—added to this
it has an elasticity which permits the
paiut to follow the natural expansion
contraction of the wood. Pure
White Lead (with its full natural te-
nacity ‘and eiasticity. unimpaired by
adulzerants). alone fylfills all the re-
gnirements of the ideal paint. Every
keg which bears the Dutch Boy trade
mark Is positively guaranteed tobe ab-
solutely Pure
White Lead
made by the Gld
Dutch Process.
SEND FOR
BOOK
**A Talk on Paint,”
gives valustble infor-
mation on the paint
subject. Sent free
upon request.
ovat ir
amaiy
upon wi
and
All lead packed fn
2907 bears thas mark.
NATIONAL LEAD COMPANY
tn whichever of the follow-
tng cilies is nearest you :
New York, Doston, Buffalo, Cleveland,
Cincinnati, Cnicago, St. Loals, Phila
delphis [John T Lewis & Bros. Co.]: Fitis
burgh [National Lead & Oil Co}
Illinois Man Tries New
The new Cincinnati waterworks are
now ready to furnish about 12,000,
000 gallons daily to the high service
system of the city. This supply is not
filtered, as it will be some time before
purification works are built.
Shafting in use throughout the coun-
try generally cme-sixteenth of an
inch less than two inches, two and a
quarter or three inches, as the case
may be, that is one and fifteen-six-
teent two and three-sixteenths, etc.
This is because it is generally turned
from the rough iron or steel and one
sixteenth is lost in the turning.
is
Vecal or instrumental music as a
therapeutic agent has been found by
Dr. F. S. Kennedy to be a useful aid
in -melancholia, insomnia,
family affliction, business reverses;- de-
lirum, pain and mental or physical fa-
tigue. A German physician has used
music to lessen the distress and after
effects of applying anaesthetics.
the electrolytic copner re-
fining industry has undergone enor-
mous expansion, chiefly in America,
and the number of electrolytic refiner-
ies in existence in 1905 was stated to
be thirty-two, distributed as follows:
United States, nine; Germany, nine;
United Kingdom, six; four;
Russia, two; Austria-Hungary, two.
To this total of thirty-two must be
added-four refineries, which are report-
ed to be working in-Japan. :
Since 1891,
German military authorities are ex-
perimenting with a device by which
the location of troops using smokeless
powder may be easily discovered. . By
this device it is propoged to survey
the landscape through pale red glass-
es. The flash of smokeless powder ap-
ars strong in red light, while ordi-
nary objects are dimmed. By furnish-
ing field with the device in
question, which is provided = with
screens of the proper tint, the posi
tion of concealed marksmen can be
detected.
1N¢
P¢
glasses
The Heroult electric process for the
production of steel is now in practical
operation at Remscheid Haston in Ger-
many, and it is reported that the steel
produced is much superior in many
ways to that made by older methods.
Steel of great purity and homogeneous
quality is made from ordinary scrap-
iron rubbish, melted and then sub-
jected to the action of an electric oven,
in which the necessary carbon, man-
ganese, nickel and other substances re-
quired to produce steel of various
qualities are added to the liquid metal.
The oven has a capacity of from one
and one-half to two tons, and is heat-
ed by a current of 100 volts. The new
steel is said to be stronger and more
resistant to wear and tear than the
old-fashioned crucible steel.
MOLASSES FOR PRIZE CATTLE.
Method of
Feeding With Success.
Molasses liberally fed, may have
had considerable to do with the suc-
cess of Jacob Funk, the veteran stock-
man of Bloomington, Ill., in winning
the first prize at the International
stock show held in Chicago, and also
in reaching the record breaking price
of $17 per 100 on the hoof for this
herd of 15 black angus cattle.
Mr. Funk has been trying for many
vears to reach the goal which is the
ambition of every scientific stocd
breeder and feeder. He won Sanit
prize last year and in the year preced-
ing. This year he tried a little differ-
ent process in feeding. In addition to
the regulation feeding of the pasture
and of corn and oats he introduced in
the final month and a half before the
big show a little different diet. In the
morning he would feed oil meal and
cats and in the evening cern with a
sprinkling of molasses.
The cattle greedily licked up the
sweet stuff and it appeared to give an
added glossiness to the hides and im-
prove their appearance in every way.
In addition he confined the herd to
the acre lot near the barn during the
final week on the farm, not permitting
the usual run of the pasture. This
gave an opportunity to dress up the
animals and get them in the finest pos-
sible condition externally as well
internally.
Mr. Funk also found it an advantage
goak in water 211 of the corn fed
from 15 to 20 hours before feeding.
This softened the kernels and the
grain was more casily digested. This
was only resorted to where the corn
was dry and hard during the recent
summer.
While the catfle were given all of
the corn and oats they could eat they
were not gorged and the feeder care-
fully watched their diet, gaging their
rations by the weather,
On certain days the cattle were
more hungry than on others. Every
day had to be studied and the feeding
governed accordingly. There is dan-
ger of foundering the animals by over-
feeding, and this had to be guarded
against.
to
Mr. Funk belicves that the black ap-
gus breed is preferable to all others.
He has found that herefords ard short-
horns when fattened are inclined to
become lumpy, while the angus are
free from this fault. :
The herd of 15 head was sold to a
New York butcher, who will exhibit
them in the east as the champion
herd of the west, bringing more mon-
ey than any other herd in the records
of the stock business.—New York
Herald.
hysteria,”
Ccompany
as-
surest guarantee: of peace,
FINANGE AND TRADE REVIEW
BIG IRON DEAL
Cherry Valley Company Sells Out to
New Concern.
The &
has
United Tron Steel Company
purchased the holdings of the
Cherry. Valley Iron Company, com-
prising blast furnaces, ore, coal and
limestone properties, and their ap-
purtenances. The deal involves $7,000,-
000.
The properties
the Cherry Valley
tonia, O., with an
taken over include
furnace, at Lee-
annual capacity of
70,000 tons: the Fannie furnace, at
West Middlesex, Pa., with an annual
capacity of 44,000 tons; ore properties
in the Meszaba range, Lake Superior
region: coal lands, mines and coking
plants in Fayette eounty, Pa and
limestone properties in Pennsylvania
and Ohio. All the properties are be-
ing operated by the Cherry
and are said to be among
the most profitable in the country. The
new owners will enlarge and improve
the properties. .
The Boston Weel Mz tarist,
The wool market is quiet but
No upward is noted,
ever. ' The demand for fine is
good. For pulled grades there is al-
so a fair request. Foreign wools are
firm. Leading domestic quotations
follow: Ohio and Pennsylvania XX
and above, 31 to: 34%c¢; X, 32 to 33c;
No. 1, 40 to 41c; No. 2.39 to 40c; fine
unwashed, 26 to 27¢; unmerchantabhle,
29 to 30c; half blood, unwashed, 331%
to 34c: three-eights blood, unwashed,
34 to Jc: quarter blood, unwashed,
3315 to 34c; delaine washed, to
38c; delaine, unwashed, 36¢
MARKETS.
‘PITTSBURG.
firm.
tendency how-
wools
om
ol
2 yellow, ear..
yellow, shelled....
3 white..........
Flour—Winter patent. .
Fano y straight winters........
J | Timothy
4 00
19 00
18 0)
22 50
20 00
«21 50
10 50
Feed—No. 1 white mid. ton..
Brown middlings........
Dairy Products.
Butter—Elgin creamery
Ohlo creamery
Fancy country
Cheese—Ohio, new
New York, new
Peuir, Etc.
Hens—per Ib
Chickens—dressed
Eggs—Pa. and Ohio, fresh
Frults and Yogstabies,
Potatoes—Fanc¢y white per bu.
Cabbage—per ton
Onions—per barrel
BALTIMORE.
Flour—Winter Phony
Wheat—No. 2
Mira
PHILADELPHIA.
Flour—Winter Patent
Wheat—No. 2 red
Corn—No. 2 mixed..
Oats—No, 2 white..
Butter—Creamery
Eggs—Pennsylvania firsts
NEW YCRK.
Flour—Patonts
Wheat—No. 2red..
Oats—No. 2 white,
Butter -Creame
HKggs—State and etna vania
LIVE STOCK.
Stock Yards, Pittsburg.
Cattle.
Extra, 1.450 to 1,600 Ibs....
Prime, 1,300 to 1,400 1bs ..
Good, 1,200 to 1,300 lbs...
Tidy, 4,000 to 1,150 1bs.....
Common, 760 to 950 1bs......
Union
oa
or
=
ll
oN
Fresh C OWS and Springers
Prime heavy
Prime medium weight .
Best heavy Yorkers
Hood Hen Yorkers.
i
Prime wethers...... . cs. ives, $5 6
Good mixed... :.........5 b «
Fair mixed ewes and wethers
Culls and common..... es
Lambs. ir on ere Ta Ln
Calves.
EGGLES3 FRUIT CAKE.
in as being per
been in use: In
will make three
This recipe is sent
fectly 1eliable, having
the family for years;
medium-sized loaves.
Two coffee-cupiuls of brown sugar
one coffee-cupful of molasses (not
glucose), one pint ¢f streng, boiling
coffee, one pound of fat salt-pork
chopped fine, one tablespoonful of
soda dissolved, one teaspoonful « each
of ground cloves, cinnamon, spice,
zinger, and a liftle less of pepper, one
pound of seeded raisins, one pound of
currants (washed and rfectly dry)
one-half pound of mixed shredded
orange, lemon and citroen peel (equal
parts), one-half po sund of chopped nut:
Free the pork from the rind
and grind or chop very
this pour the boiling cof
fee, then melasscs with toda stirred
in, then the sugar and spices, using
flour to mix quite sti®, add the fruit,
well floured, stirring in well,
bake slowly for twa houss.—)M. S. H.
Tha Commoner.
al
meats.
and lean,
fine; over
News:—"Our
our surest
a faithfal
Says . the .. Detroit.
method of making Japan
friend, indeed our only method, is
to have a navy, have it as soon as
the ships can be turned out, and
have it floating in the Pacific, to
which that of no other Power or com-
bination cf Powers on that ocean can
compare.”
Valley .
and.
ENGLISH SCHOOLS
The Flogging Custom and the Way It
Is Regarded.
About corporal punishment in Eng-
land two curious facts lie beyond dis-
pute. One is that while the working
class and the lower middle class dis-
like and resent it and will not in gen-
eral allow their children to undergo it,
the aristocracy tolerate it without
complaint, The time is coming, one
might assert paradoxically, when it
will be impossible to flog anybody but
the son of a pear. And the other fact
is that public schoel boys have often
felt a special affection for the ; asters
who have punished then most.
In Westminster abbey stand side
by side the tombs of a master and his
pupil. The master was Dr. Busby who
vas head master of Westminster
school for so long a time as 58 years.
Nobody ever flogged so many boys as
he. The pupil was the theologian,
Br. South. It is told—I am sure the
story is true—that when South came
as a small boy to Westminster Busby
greeted him with the ominous words:
“I see great talents in that sulky 1lit-
tle boy, and my rod shall bring them
out.” If so, he was no doubt as gocd
as his word. But when South lay up-
cn his deathbed it was his last prayer
to be buried at his old master’s. feet,
and the master and the pupil now rest
side by side.~—Ninecteenth Century.
FITS, St Vitus’ Dance:Nervous Diseases per- |
marie ntly cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve
Restorer. #2 trial bottle and treatise free.
Dr. H. R. Kline, Ld.,931 Arch St., Phila., Pa.
The Society of Assurance for Wi-
dows and Orphans was the first known |
insurance was estab-
lished
company, and
in London in 1699.
Garfield Tea. the Herb laxative,
and potent: take it to regulate a
liver and to overcome constipation.
is mild
sluggish
Life Without Mind.
The possibility of life without mind,
while not subject to positive proof,
a theory that has gained censider-
able strength recently through its
advocacy by Dr. L. Laloy, librarian of
the Academy of Sciences, Paris. He
believes that many of the smaller liv-
ing organisms, as insects, are mere
moving machines, having no more in-
telligence than may be ascribed to
plants. He refers to the well-known
fact that insects- are attracted by
light, often to their own destruction,
and ascribes it to the same cause that
inclines the plant to grow toward the
light.
HARDSHIPS OF ARMY LIFE
Left Theusands of Veterans With
Iiidney Troubles.
The experience of David W. Mar-
tin, a retired merchant, of Bolivar,
Mo., is just like
thousands of oth-
ers. . Mr. Martin
says: “I. think 1
have had kidney
disease ever since
the war. During
an engagement
my horse fell on
straining my
back and injuring
Ihe Riaters. I have been told I had
a floating kidney. I had intense pain
in the back, headaches and dizzy
spells and the action of the bladder
was very irregular. About three years
ago I tried Doan’s Kidney Pills, and
found such great relief that I con-
tinued, and inside a comparatively
short time was entirely rid of kidney
trouble.”
Sold by all dealers.
Foster-Milburn Co., Pu
A Military Exigency.
Military circles have been convul-
sed over a case of discipline that re-
alls the problem of the irresistible
force meeting the immovable obstac-
le. An officer ordered an enlisted
man to go to church and the man re-
fused. The officer had no right to
give the order, but the enlisted man
had no right to refuse. This extra-
ordinary situation has been solved by
transferring the enlisted man to an-
other post as a mark of disapproval,
and sending the officer to another
post of temporary duty.—Philadelphia
Record.
50 cents a box.
a
fiale, N. ©
TERRIBLE ITCHING.
Eczema Affected Whole System—Un-
able to Rest Night or Day—Suf-
fered 4 Years—Cuticura Cures.
“I suffered severely for
four years from
poison oak and ivy. My condition was
serious, as I could not rest night or day
and be free from a terrible itching sensa-
tion from scratching on my hands between
the fingers, my feet and face. I got the
best of advice and treatment from six dif-
ferent doctors who were anxious to cure
me. One of the doctors told me that when
the poison was cured, eczema (a worse
disease) would follow, which became true.
My eyesight was affected, and 1 went to
a hospital especially for the eyes and got
relief, but eczema got a terrible hold on my
system. I was about to give up all hope of
ever being cured. yet 1 could not be recon-
ciled to such results, as my health had been
good and free from any disease all my life.
My age is seventy-three years. In my ex-
tremity 1 happened to read of Cuticura
Remedies for skin diseases. I was anxious
about my condition and desired to evade
any spurious imitation. This was in July.
1905. and I called on a certain druggist
for the Cuticura Remedies. I bought five
boxes Cuticura Ointment. also some Cuti-
cura Soap and Cuticura Pills as I required
them. In four weeks’ treatment my face
was smooth. and the itching gradually
left my hands and feet and I could rest
comfortably, for which 1 am grateful and
happy. W. Field Cowen, Justice of the
Peace and Notary Public, Hartly, Del.,
May 15, 1996.”
Carnegie and Eden.
Mr. Carnegie tells it to illustrate
that a Celt is- always a Celt in Scot-
land as well as in Ireland. In a ser-
mon preached in a small church in
Glasgow the pastor, after inveighing
against siothfulness, said, by way of
climax: “Do you think Adam and Eve
went about the Garden of Eden with
their hands in taeir pockets?’—Harp-
\ er's Weekly.
is |
AILING WOMEN
How Many Perfectly Well Women
Do You
GRACE E. MILLER
“I am not feeling very well,” “I |
am so nervous it seems as thongh 1 |
should fly.” **My back aches as though |
it would brealk. |
How often do you hear these signi-
ficant expressions from women
friends. More than likely you speak
the same words yourself, and there
is a cause.
More than thirty years ago Lydia
E. Pinkham of Lynn, Mass. discovered
the source of nearly all the suffering
endured by her sex. ‘Woman's Ills,”
these two words are full of more |
misery to women than any other two {
words that can be found in the |
English language. Sudden fainting, |
depression of spirits, reluctance to |
go anywhere, backaches, headaches,
nervousness, sleeplessness, bearing-
down sensations, displacements and
irregularities are the bane of woman's
existence.
The same woman who discovered
the cause of all this misery also
discovered a remedy. Lydia E. Pink=
ham’s Vegetable C mpour 1d made
from native roots and he holds
the record for a greater number of
absolute cures of female ills than any
other one remedy the world has ev er
known and it is the greatest blessing
which ever came into the lives of
suffering women.
Don’t try to endure. but cure the
cause of all your suffering. Lydia E.
Pinkham'’s Vegetable Con ;pound at
once removes such troubles. The
following letters prove this:
1
ros
Know ?
Mrs. W. S. Ford of 1938 Lansdowne
St., Baltimore, Md. writes :
Dear Mrs. Pinkham —
“For four years my life was a misery to
I suffered from irregularities, sup-
sion, terrible dragging sensations and
extreme nervousness, 1 had given up all
hope of ever z well again when Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound was
recomnmendad. It cured my weakness and
made me well and strong.”
Miss Grace E. Miller,
gan St., Buffalo, N. Y.
De ar Mrs. P fnkhan —
of 1213 Michi-
writes :
ane
es
hens s Veg ten lo C al. Cur «d
ine after all other medicines had failed.’
What Lydia I. Pinkham's Vege-
table Compound did for Mrs. Ford and
Miss Miller it will do for other women
in like condition. Every suffering
woman in the United States is asked
to accept the following invitation. [t
is free, will bring you Trealth and may
save your life.
Mrs. Pinkham’s Invitation to Women.
form of
invited
Women suffering from any
female weakness are
promptly communicate with
Pinkham, ‘at Lynn, Mass. From
symptoms given, the trouble may -
located and the quickest and surest
way of recovery advised. Out of her
vast volume of experience in treating
female ills Mrs. Pinkham probably
has the very knowledge that will
help vour case. = Her advice is free
and always helpful.
the
be
Coal Tar Color Industry.
Out of the making of gas has grown |
the great coal tar color industry. The
history of the discovery of aniline, the |
basis of the various aniline dyes, is
interesting. 3v the distillation of in-
digo M. Unverdorben produced a sub-
stance which he named crystalline. |
Some nine years later, viz. in 1835,:{
Runge discovered in coal tar a sub- |
stance which produced a beautiful |
blue color when treated with chloride |
of lime. This he named kyanol. Five |
vears later a substance was obtained |
by treating indigo with caustic potash,
and named aniline, from “anil,” the
specific name of one of the indigo !
plants. Then it was found that cry-
stalline, kyanol, and aniline were
chemically the same. Thus it was
shown that aniline, the basis of the
indigo dyes, occurred in the waste
product of the manufacture of gas,
and the possibilities of a new source
of these dyes hinted at. And in 1858
Dr. Perkin took out a patent for the
manufacture of a dye stuff made from
aniline which became widely known
as “Perkin’s purple.” Others follow-
ed in quick succession, and the great
coal tar color industry was estab-
lished.—London Globe.
Piles Cured in 6 to 14 Days.
Pazo Ointment is guaranteed to cure any
caseof Itching. Blind, Bleeding or Protruding
Pilesin 6 to 14 days or money refunded. 50c¢.
In a New Haven Y. M..C. A. a Bible
class of Hebrew boys is studying the
Old Testament in English
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children
|
{
i
i
teething, softens theguins, re duc esinflamma- |
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25¢ 2 bottle |
|
{
|
|
|
in America for Picture.
ever paid for a
this country was given for
which brought |
sale of the H.
Record Price
The highest
painting in
a ~Troyon canvas,
$65,000 at the auction
S. Henry art collection. The canvas
is entitled *‘l.a Retour a la Ferme,”
and depicts two cows ¢n their way to
pasture. The picture was bought by
Herman Schaud. ‘The Henry collec-
tion consisted of 30 pictures and
brought $352,800. Senator Clark paid
324,000 for a Corot.
price
A mechanical man that
great many things a human
do is the invention of a German.
machine has 305 comparumeats-
several electric motors.
can- do a
being can
The
and
land fiy
| Eree.
Animals
ption of nesting birds,
perish in a forest
instinctive knowl-
reaches them
large rivers.
the flames.
saved by
to “water.
Instinct Saves
With the exce
few wild: animals
fire. They have
edge of it long before it
to swamps and
They can generally outrun
Human lives have been
horses instinctively taking
Gartield Tea is made Herb
point in its favor! Take it io
indigestion and liver disturd ©
anteed under the Pure I'ood and Dx
Germany's loss he number
sheep reached 66 cent. in
years 1878S to 1904. Argentine
petition largely accounts for it.
Of
of
the
com-
in
per
MUSCULAR
AILMENTS
The Old-Monk-Cure will
straighten out a contracted
muscle in a jiffy
Don't play possum with pain,
but "tends strictly to business.
Price 25¢ and S0¢
GREGORY'S
are the kind you can de- Ly
pend on. Catalogue FREE,
J.J. H. Geecory & Soa, MarsLenero, Mass.
P. N. U.. 9,
DROPS
worst cases.
Dr.
1907.
NEW DISCOVERY ;
gives qolek relief and eurcs
Book of test!moninis and 10 Days’ treatment
H. H. GREEN'S BONS, Eox B, Atlanta, Ga,
AR Ha
iiss 35
— Te when you consider that the oes is
this spring, use Buffalo A. L. O. Paints, and feel satisfied that you have the
the most oT part of painting.
Best.
Buffalo Paints jook best, protect and preserve your property longest, because they contain the best
and most lasting
in correct Eran making a Perfect Paint.
pigments OXIDE OF. ZINC and WHITE LEAD, ground in Aged Linsecd Oil
Before you decide on the kind of paint to use, you
ought to know about Buffalo Paints. Send for our 1907 Color Charts and valuable Paint Information,
BUFFALO OIL PAINT & VARNISH C0. BUFFALO CHICAGO
a YEARS SELLING DIREC I
Our vehicics and harness have been sold direct from out Inetory to user fog
a third of a century. We ship for examination an
antee safe delivery.
style, quality sad price.
You ars out
d approval and guas
nothing if gs satisfied as to
We are the Largest Manutactarers tn the World,
sellin
Velicles, 63 styles of Harness.
to the comsumer exclusively.
We make 230 styles of
Send for large, free catalogue.
Elkhart Carriage & Harness Mig. Co, a
Elkhart, Indiana