The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, May 09, 1907, Image 7

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

    ~A Woman's Back
Has many aches and pains caused by
weaknesses and falling, or other displace
ment, of the pelvic organs. Other symp
toms of female weakness are frequent
headache, dizziness, imaginary specks or
dark spots floating before the eyes, gnaw-
ing: sensation in stomach. dragging or
bearing down in lower abdominal or pelvic
region, disagreeable drains from pelvic
organs, faint spells with general weakness.
If any considerable number of the above
symptoms are present there is no remedy
h give quicker relief or a more per-
than Dr. Pierce’s Favorite
t has a record of over forty
most tent
ot} '-
-ipvigorati oni r
vipe known to medical science. 1
of the glyceric extracts of native medici-
nal roots found in our forests and con-
tains not a drop of aleohol or harmful, or
habit-forming drugs. Its ingredients are
all printed on the bottle-wrapper and at-
tested under oath as correct.
Every ingredicnt entering into “Fa-
vorite Prescription” has the written en-
dorsement of the most eminent medical
writers of all the several schools of prac-
tice—more valuable than any amount of
non-professional testimonials—though the
latter are not lacking. having been con-
tributed voluntarily by grateful patients
in numbers to exceed the endorsements
given to any other medicine extant for
the cure of woman's ills.
You cannot afford to dccept any medicine
of unknown composition as a substitute
for this well proven remedy OF KNOWN
COMPOSITION, even though the dealer may
make a little moresprofit thereby. Your
interest in re gain 12 health is paramount
to any selfish interest of his and it is an
insult to your intelligence for him to try
to palm off upon you a substitute. You
know what vou want and it is his busi-
ness to sunply the article called for.
Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Peliets are the
original “ Little Liver Pills” first put up
by old Dr. Pierce over forty years ago,
much imitated but never equaled. Little
sugar-coated granules—easy to take as
The Limit.
A rich man out in the suburbs who
owns a large place has among . the
many people employed to keep it ip
shape an Irishman cf whom he is par
ticularly fond on account of his: un-
conscious wit. This Irishman is
sometimes a hard drinker, and, as his
income is limited, he is more particu-
lar as regards the quantity than the
quality of his liquids! The other day
the employer, who had been awaiting
a good opportunity,’ remarked in a
kind tone, as the closing sentence of
a friendly lecture:
“Now Pat, how long do you think
you can keep on drinking this cheap
whisky ?”’
To which Pat instantly replied:
“All my life if it doesn’t kill me.”
—Harper’'s Weekly
TEN YEARS OF PAIN.
Unable to Do Even Housework DBe=
cause of Kidney Troubles.
Mrs. Margaret Emmerich, of Clin-
ton St., Napoleon, O., says: “For
fifteen years 1 was a great sufferer
from kidney trou-
bles. My back pained
me terribly. Every
turn or move caused
» sharp, shooting
pains. My eyesight
was poor, dark spots
appeared before me,
and I had dizzy
spells. For ten years
I could not do housework, and for
two years did not get out of the
house. The kidney secretions were
irregular, and doctors were not help-
ing me. Doan’s Kidney Pills brought
me quick relief, and finally cured me.
They saved my life.”
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box.
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
A Healthy Monarch.
The Emperor of Austria belongs tc
that category of persons whe
throtighout their lives never ever
suffer from headache. The approach
of age is not visible. The Emperor
who formerly smoked 10 to 15 strong
Virginia cigars daily, now contents
himself with two light ones; he
drinks daily about two glasses o!
beer and some light wine; he sleeps
much, and great care is taken during
his. slee 2D foal cold. | is avoided.
The Small"Buyer of Paint
who takes care that the Dutch
Boy trade mark, shown below,
appears on every keg of white
lead he buys, is perfectly pro-
tected; as perfectly as if. he
were a railroad official buying
hundreds of tons, and with a
corps of chemists at his back
to see that no adulterant is
palmed off on him. -
Pure White Lead and Pure
Linseed Oil are absolutely nec-
essary to good :
painting.
SEND FOR
BOOK
**A Talk on Paint,”
gives*valuable infor-
mation on the paint
subject. Sent free
upon request.
NATIONAL LEAD COMPANY
in whichever of the follow-
ing cities 18 neuresi you :
New York, Boston, Buffalo, Cleveland,
Cincinnati, Chicago, St. Louis, Phila-
delphia (John T. Lewis s. Co.l, Pitts
burgh (National Lead & Gil Co.
All lead packed in
1207 bears this mark
" shire)
“morning duties.
LONG TRIP WITH OX TEAM.
Aged Ezra Meeker Making His Way
to Washington to Establish Mark-
ings of the Oregon Trail.
Making a journey of 3,000 miles
behind a team of oxen, Ezra Meeker,
whe started from Tacoma, Wash,
Jan. 22, 1206, has reached Ohio on
his way to Washington, D. C. The
object of his expedition is to estab-
lish monuments along the old Oregon
trail, in honor of the pioneers who
first used it to travel west. He owns
a large estate in Washington, and
has a wife and five children, 21
grandchildren and four great- grand-
children.
His family and neighbors protested
against the long journey, but he was
determined. Twenty monuments have
been erected through Meeker’'s ef-
forts, one costing $500, and he advo-
cates ‘the establishment by Congress
of a national highway from the Mis-
souri river to Oregon over the trail
of 1852. : 2
Meeker's wagon is one that
used on the old Oregon trail. It is
a typical prairie schooner, and he
calls it his ‘“oxomobile.” He lectures
from. the rear of his wagon. -He has
not slept outside of his wagon since
he started on the long trip. To
President Roosevelt Meeker will pre-
sent his plan, which he says has the
backing of atl the Songrassinon. of
the west.
was
How's This?
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward
for any case of Catarrh that cannot be
cured by. Hall's Cuzarrh C jure.
xy & Co., Toledo, O.
Ss ‘have known F.
Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe
him perfectly honorable in all business
transactions and Fruncilly able to carry
out any obligations made by their firm.
WEST & TruAX, Wholesale Druggists,
Toledo, O.
Wire, Kixyax & MARVIN, ‘Whole-
sale Dru gists, Toledo, O.
Hall's Catarrh Cure is t: er intiina ally,act-
ing directly upon the blood and mucuoussur-
faces of the system. Testimonials sent free.
Price, 75¢. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists.
Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation.
Smallest Raiiroad in England.
The smallest railroad in England is
the Garstang and Knott End (Lanca-
railway, which in the last six
months earned a net revenue of $2.-
380. 'The half-yearly meeting of pro-
‘prietors was attended ry one person,
the secretary.
Tustend. of experimenting with aru s and
strong cathartics—which are clearly harm-
ful—take Nature's Mild laxative, Garfield
Tea! It is made wholly of Herbs. For con-
stipation, liver and kidney derangements,
sick-headache, biliousness ‘and indigestion,
Guessing at Sphinx’s Age.
The great Sphinx of Ghizeh bears
.no inscription by which we can tell
its date. In 1816 Caviglia, who in
modern times was the first to clear.
away the sand, found between _ its
paws a stele of the reign of Throth-
nes IV., and, therefore, it was believ-
ed that the Sphinx was carved by
that monarch. But in 1858 the exca-
vations of Mariette uncovered a
stele bearing the name of Cheops. on
which is a reference to the Sphinx.
The inscription is eveidently of a
late period, but is supposed to be an
exact copy of an ancient carving,
and the translation seemed to place
the Sphinx earlier than the Pyra-
mids, and consequently to prove it
the most ancient piece of work in
the world. Still there remained four
lines carved on the base which could
not be read, but M. Daressy has now
deciphered them, and it appears that
the inscription is in two parts. In
the earlier lines there is no mention
of the Sphinx, but the lines, which
date from the Persian occupation
mention the repair of the Sphinx.
There is, therefore, nothing by which
we can tell the date of the monu-
ment, and the only evidence we have
is the headdress of the colossus. Its
hood is ornamented behind with
three bands, a large one between two
smalier bands. Now this is _a fashion
which existed only toward the end of
the twelfth dynasty in the reigns of
Usurtasen IIf. and Amendment IIL
As the family showed much zeal for
the god Harinaklin, whose portrait
the Sphinx is, it is probable that the
monument is the work of Amen-
dment III.—London Globe.
£Zelluloid That will Not Burn.
The Italians have invented a de-
vice for making celluloid inflamma-
ble, by mixing gum arabic and cola
oil with the ordinary composition.
FRIENDS HELP
St. Paul Park Incident.
“After drinking coffee for break-
fast I always felt lanquid and dull,
having no ambition to get. to my
‘Then in about an
hour. or so a weak, nervous derange-
ment of the heart and stomach would
come over me with such force I
would frequently have to lie down.
“At other times I had severe head-
.aches; stomach finally became .affect-
ed and digestion so ‘impalred’ *that I
had serious chronic dyspepsia and
constipation. A lady, for many years
State President of the W. C. T. U,,
told me she had been greatly bene-
fited by quitting coffee and using
Postum Food Coffee;
bled for years with asthma. She
sald it was no cross to quit coffee
when she found she could have as
delicious an article as Postum.
“Another lady, who had been trou-
bled with chronic dyspepsia for years,
found immediate relief on ceasing
coffee and beginning Postum twice a
day. She was wholly cured. Still
another friend told me that Postum
Food Coffee was a Godsend to her,
her heart trouble having been re-
lieved after leaving off coffee and
taking on Postum.
“So many such cases came to my
notice that I concluded cofiee was
the cause of my trouble i I quit
znd took up Postum. I ‘am more
than pleased to say taat a days of
ve disappeared. Iam well
».“*There's a Reason.”
Wellville,” in
trouble ha
and happy.
Read, “The Rcad to
pkgs.
rope were all tenors;
she was trou-.
—THE—
FUTILITY OF PHILANTHROPY.
By Mrs. Rose Pastor Stokes.
I sometimes think that it would be
a good thing if this whole philan-
thiopic system could be swept out of
existence, because it blinds people to
the real issues. It is not true philan-
thropy. Philanthropy is love of man,
and it is not love of man to take from
him what is his, and then, when he
is lying robbed and wounded upon
the Jericho road, to put him on a
beast and take him to a soup kitchen.
There is little use in trying to relieve
poverty while we are creating it.
Just so long as we go on leaving men
and women on the Jericho road we
will have these problems.
It is a curious psychological fact
that people should want to relieve
distress while they are careless about
what they do to create it. Not long
ago Mr. Stokes refused to become
trustee for a vast estate. He told
the two men who tried to persuade
him to accept the trust that if he
did he would feel bound to see that
those who created that wealth re-
ceived it again. He didn’t think that
the dividends mattered. Now, these
two men are very philanthropic.
They believe that they are so, and
others believe it of them. But they
were very much surprised and hurt
at this attitude. They told Mr.
Stokes that it was not at all his busi-
ness how the dividends “were” pro-
duced. His only coneern was to see
that those who intrusted him with
the estate received them, and finally
they said, as if concluding the whole
matter: “Our duty is to God and not
to the workers.”
This attitude is very common
among the sustainers of great philan-
thropies and churches. They do not
see that taking dividends is taking
from the worker. They live in lux-
ury, denying themselves nothing, and
what they have to spare they give in
philanthropy. They do not see that
they are working at the wrong end,
that poverty can be cured only by
doing justice and seeing that those
who ereate wealth get it and that all
help to create it.
The care of the public health is the
subject in which you are particularly
interested, and sickness is one of the
greatest of our problems under the
present social system. Most of our
treatment of ‘it ‘is merely on the sur-
face. Only a few forces are trying to
remove the cause. There is a section
of our city known as the-lung block.
Many efforts have been made to have
it torn down and replaced by a park,
but nothing can be done because the
proposition touches vested interests.
Even the priest of a nearby church
objects because it would remove his
flock. To be sure, death removes
them anyway, but he dcesn’t seem
to think of that.
Many of our workshops are so bad
that if people don’t get tuberculosis
in them they get something else. It
is inevitable. Recently, in Philadel-
phia, I"met in a settlement which he
himself sustained a wealthy mill
owner. He employed 1200 girls, and
he was much concerned over the way
they dropped off and died. It was
terrible to see, but he didn’t know
how to help it. He said they came to
him well and rosy, but in six months
or a year they grew pale and thin,
and after dropping oyt and returning
to work a few times they died of
tuberculosis. I expressed surprise
that he couldn’t find a way to pre-
vent this, but he explained that he
couldn’t ventilate the weaving rooms,
because the dust from the colored
fabrics blew onto the white ones and
marred their purity. I thought that
human beings were more important
than cloth, and if his heart hadn't
been hardened by business he would
have thought so, tco; but it didn’t
seem to me necessary even to sacrifice
the cloth. He might have woven the
different colors in different rooms.
That would have necessitated more
supervision and more expense, and
perhaps wouldn’t have left him any
money for philanthropy. This man
really wanted to be philanthropic, but
couldn’t see that he was responsible
for the killing of hundreds of girls.
And yet I do not blame him or any
individual. I blame the competitive
system back of it all.
Our Voices Deepen.
The primitive inhabitants of Eu-
their descend-
ants of the present time are bari-
tones, and future generations will
have semi-bass voices. The voice
has a tendency to deepen with age.
The tenor of twenty becomes the
baritone of twenty-eight and the
bass of thirty-six. The inferior races
have higher pitched voices than the
more cultured. The negro has a
higher voice than the white man.
Among white races the fair complex-
ioned man has a higher voice than
his darker skinned brother. The for-
mer is usually a baritone or a tenor,
the latter a contralto or bass. It is
asserted that tenors are usually of
slender build, whereas basses are
stout, but there are too many excep-
tions to such a rule for it to be re-
liable. The same remark applies to
the statement that thoughtful men
have deep-toned voices and vice
versa. The tones of a voice are per-
ceptibly higher before than after a
meal, for which reason tenors are
generally careful not to sing too soon
after dinner.—Pcarson’'s Weekly.
———— orn
~ Overdoing.
You overeat if your is not
honestly earned. You leep if
the mortgage is awake and growing.
You overtalk 1 time to
waste on arwork if
you medd of other
food
oNors
208
ile with the affal
I's
people.
_tucky,
{in one breath,
FINANCE AND TRADE REVIEW
DUN'S WEEKLY SUMMARY
Demand for Steel Exceeds Supply
and Offers of Premiums Are
> Often Refused.
Spring retail trade is backward be-
cause of unusually late season.
Tardy distribution of merchandise is
also causing complaint of delay in
mercantile collections, but there is a
confidence that most of the postponed
business will be made up when ther-
mal conditions become normal .
Dealers purchased freely from man-
ufacturers in anticipation of a record-
breaking season, and deliveries are
still coming from the mills and fac-
tories, with shipments being facilitat-
ed by improved traffic’ conditions.
Manufacturers are active in all lead-
ing industries.
The ~ outlook in
the
the steel business
could hardly be brighter. Projected
building operations promise a good
demand for all materials, but numer-
ous small labor displtes retard activ-
ity in this department. All contro-
versies over wages and hours are not
extensive or alarming.
Only favorable reports are received
from the iron and steel industry.
New business is coming to the mill§
as rapidiy as orders are filled. Few
producers are able to take advantage
of premiums offered for prompt de-
livery. ;
Ore has begun to move freely on
the lakes. Arrangements have been
made for a record year, many new
vessels enlarging the carrying capac-
ity.
Pig iron furnaces are producing as
rapidly as possible, and new plants
are in course of construction, but de-
liveries are tardy. Most concerns
have sold their entire output for this
year.
Larze orders for cotton ties were
placed at an advance of 10 cents &
bundle. The season's needs will be
provided for without delay.
Improvement in woolens has re-
ceived a check. The market is await-
ing developments. Mills are fairly
busy, but the late season is retarding
Progress. Oxtensive preparations
were made for early business, which
has not materialized. Duplicate orders
are chiefly for the better lines of
woolens. vs
MARKETS.
PITTSBURG.
Whtat—Ro2 2 red..
y
Corn—No 2 yellow, ear......... vee
No. 2 yellow, shelled........ see
Flour—Winter patent
Fancy straight winters...
Hay—No. 1 Timothy
Clover No.
Feed—No. 1 white mid. ton...
Brown migaiings
Bran, bulk.. .
Straw—Wheat
19200
«.21 50
.s-10 09
Dairy Products.
Butter—EIgin creamery........... $
Ohio creamery .
Fancy country roll
New York. new.
Poultry, Etc.
Hens—per lb
Chickens—dressed
Eggs—Pa. and Ohio, fresh.
Fruits and Vegstebiss,
Potatoes—Fancy white per bu.
Cabbage—per ton
Onfons—per barrel
BALTIMORE.
Flour—Winter Patent
Wheat—No. 2
Corimalized:
Bo er On1o creamery.
PHILADELPHIA.
Flour—Winter Patent
Wheat—No. 2 red
Corn—No. 2 mixed.
Oats—No. 2 white..
Butter—Creamery
Eggs—Pennsylvania firsts.
NEW YCRK.
Plour-—Patents..........s- sever
Wheat—No. 2 red
Corn—No. 2
Oats—No. 2 white
Butter -Creamery
Eggs—State and Pennsylvania..
LIVE STOCK.
Union Stock Yards,
Cattle.
Extra, 1.450 to 1,600 1bs
Frime, 1,500 to 1,400 1bs
Good, 1,200 to 1.300 1hs .
Tidy, 4, 050, 10 L150 IDE Gn.
Common, 700 to 800 1bs 3
Oxen,
Bulls...
Cows
Heifers, 700 to 1, 100
Fresh Cows and Spriugers
Pittsburg.
Bhawan zaomos
Prime heavy
Prime medium weight .
Best heavy Yorkers ..
Good light Yorkers..
Pigs :
co oaco
Roughs.
Prime wethers. clipped
Good mixed... ...... cua.
Fair mixed ewes and wethers
Culls and ‘common
Neoroe
Oil Markets.
The following are the quotations for credit
balances in the different fields:
Pennsylvania, $118; Tiona, 81 78; Second
Sand, $1 68: North Lina. t4c: South Lima. x9¢.
Indiana, 89¢; Somerset t9¢; Ragland, 62¢; Can-
ada, $1.35.
The Southern mountaineers = are
found chiefly in North Carolina, Ken-
Tennessee and West Virginia.
‘We can never have safety in rail-
road transportation until we cure the
recklessness permeating alike the
public and the management of- our
railroads, laments the Boston Post.
And to effect such a cure the remedy
should be applied first tothe person-
nel of boards of direction.
It takes a college professor to de-
stroy Shakespeare, decide that love is
a myth and repeal the Monroe doctrine
the Baltimore
} a
Sul.
- greatest
MISS ADELAIDE NICHOLS
that period of its terrors. Women
V/aile no woman is entirely free
from periodic suffering, it does not
scem to be the plan of nature that
women should suffer so severely. Ir-
regularities and pain are positive
evidence that something is wrong
which should be set right or it will
lead to serious derangement of the
feminine organism,
Thousands of women, ha ve
found relief from all periodic suf-
fering by taking Lydia E. Pink-
ham's Vegetable Compound, which H
is made from native roots and herbs, |
as it is the most thorough female
regulator known to medical science.
It cures the condition which
causes so. much discomfort and robs
who are troubled with painful or ir-
regular functions should take immediate action to ward off the serious
consequences and be restored to health and strength by taking
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound
Miss Adelaide Nichols of 324
West 22nd Street, New York City,
writes:—Dear Mrs, Pinkham:-*‘If women who suffer would only rely
upon Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound their troubles would be
quickly alleviated. I feel greatly
which has been brought to me by your inestimable remedy.’
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound cures
indebted for the relief and health
Female Complaints
_such as Falling and Displacements, and Organic Diseases. Headache,
General Debility,
system.
Indigestion,
and invigorates the whole feminine
For the derangements of the Kidneys of either sex Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound is excellent.
Mrs. Pinkham’s Standing Invitation to Women
Women suffering from any form of female weakness are invited to
write Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn. Mass. From the symptoms given, the trouble
may be located and the quickest and surest way of recovery advised.
34 {EARS SELLING DIRECT
Our vehicles and harness have been sold direct from our factory to user
for a third of a century. We
uarantec safe delivery.
o style, quality and price.
ship for examination and approval and
You are out nothing if not satisfied as
We are the Largest Manufacturers in the World
is to the consumer exclusively. We make 200 styles of
Vehicles, 65styles of harness.
No. 815, nes Te
tension
Price Te 878. Elkhart, Ind
Elkhart Carriage & Harness Mtg.Co. se;
Send for large, free catalogue. NW \
, 653, SRE Bus wh s]atesyie tthe
Bike RT Cushion
Tires Sami nd &
Prelates Are Good Risks.
Prelates and bisheps are certainly
what insurance men call “good risks,”
no. matter what their
form of faith. |
Still active are the Methodist Bishop |
Bowman at 90, the Episcopal Bishop
Huntington at 8S, the Catholic Arch- !
Catholic |
Bishop McQuaid at 84, and the Meth- !
bishop Williams at 85, the
odist Bishop Andrews at S82.
FITS, St. Vitus’ Dance Ne Nervous Diseases per. |
manently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve
Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free.
Dr. H. R. Kline, Ld. ,981 Arch St., Phila., Pa. |
Vt,
more than
Montpelier,
tion, nolds
Kansas mortgages.
age of over $1,000 for every
man and child in the town.
$6,000,000
man,
Garfleld Tea, Nature's remedy,
relief from many ailments; it overcomes
ronstpatis, regulates the liver and kid- |
Neys, purifies the blood and clears the com- |
plexion, It .is made of Herbs, and is abso-
utely Pure!
One Miner Struck Wealth.
Edward B. CC. Condon, who
to Tanana, Alaska, without a
three years ago, now owns
property worth $1,000,000. On
mas day his friends gave a
in his honor and presented
handsome watch fob. The old
burst into tears. He declared
the only gift he had ever received.
SCIENCE ECLIPSED.
A New York
passes Expectations.
man
New York.—On July 3, 1906, letters pat- |
ent were granted A. O. Leonard on an in-
visible antiseptic ear-drfum. on the mega-
phone principle, for relief of deafness, head |
suc- |
anticipated. |
noises, &ec.,
cessful than the inventor ever
Mr. Leonard was deaf for thirty-five years
and invented this drum for
efit.
scientists are amazed
very prominent ear specialist say will
make more deaf people ir than all other
devices for aiding hearing combined.
Mr.
which is proving far more
who write him at his oflice, 1171 Drouad-
way, Suite 231, to try the drums.
Motor Boats for Africa.
The greatest African demand for mo |
tor boats of all descriptions conies
from Zambesia, where there are hun-|
dreds of miles of navigable rivers,
and where a greater part of thie trans-
portation is by water. The groatest|
corporation interested in the means
of transportation in Zambesta is the
Camparnhia. de Zambesia, which
its head office in Europe, at No. 53
Ruo do Aleerim, Lisbon, and its head |
oflice .in Africa, at Tete, Zambesia.
Alfrea Obrist, of Chinde, at the mouth
of the Zambesia, is also interested in
river and lake tcausportation in
region.—The Engineer.
Bad Luck With Enrihauakes.
One man, a teacher who was" in
San Francisco at the time of. the dis-
aster in that city, went to Jamaica
and entered into partnership at a
private school in Kingston, which
was destroved by the earthquake on
the first day of his new enterprise.
SKIN CURED IN A WEEK
After Suffering Six Months With Dis-
figuring Red Spots and Pimples—
Cleared Away by Cuticura.
“Cuticura Soap and Ointment are the
remedies for skin diseases on
earth. I have suffered six months from a
disease which I cannot describe, but I will
tell you the symptoms. My skin was full
of red spots and my face was full of red
pimples: It made life -miserable for me
and 1 was discouraged with everything.
I went to several doctors, but it was use-
less. I resolved to try the Cuticura Reme-
dies, and after using them for about one’
week I became a new man. The pimples
and the red spots have disappeared and
they made my skin soft as velvet.
Albert Cashman, Bedford Station, 'N. Y.. |
Nov. 29, 190="
as
Since the war with Russia, which
with 6,000 popula- |
of |
This is an aver- |
wWo- |
brings |
went |
doilar |
mining |
Christ- |
dinner |
with a |
Man's Invention Sur. |
his own ben-
Ear specialists, family physicians and |
at the Tesilis and a
Leonard is sending as promptly as |
possible full information by mail to those!
has |
that tals
the teturn to Ja
Saghalie
built 1
connec
terminated
of the southeri rt of
30-mile railway been
island, and
by telegraphs.
ail of it
DROPSY
| Free.
Libby’s Vienna
Sausage
“unequaled for their delicious
taste. They are put up in most
convenient form for ready serv-
ing, requiring only a few min-
utes preparation. They have a
fine flavor and freshness which
will please every one.
An Appetizing Dish.—Drop a tin of
Libby's Vienna Sausage in boiling water
until heated (about 15 minutes) and
serve as taken from the tin on a small
plate garnished with lettuce leaves.
As our grocer fer Libby’s and
ist upon getting Libby's.
Libby, | McNeill & Libby, Chicago
it was |
Help the Horse
No article is more useful
about. the stable than Mica
Axle Grease. Put a little on
the spindles before you ‘ ‘hook
up” —it will help the horse, and
bting the load home quicker.
MICA AXLE
GREASE
wears well—better than any
other grease, Coats the axle
with a hard, smooth surface of
powdered mica which reduces
friction. Ask the dealer for
Mica Axle Grease.
STANDARD GIL COMPANY
Ineorporated J /
_, HEALTH FUL
~ PLEASANT
IF YOU WEAR
OVER
Cy ppa®
WATERPROOF
-OILED CLOTHING
ACK OR YELLOW
Perfect Protection
Longest er
ow in Pen
Sold Everywhere
a. TokEa CO BORTON
10m EAA nO CE im ED omer Sin
DYSPEPSIA
“Having taken jour wonderful ‘ Cascarets” foe
bhree En iY )eing entirely cured of stomach
catarrh and dyspepsic. I think a word of praise is
ue to ''Cascarets’'fortheir wonderful composition
I have taken numerous otner so-called rsmedies
bus without avail and 1 find that Cascarets relieve
more in a gay Jian al. the <thers 1 have taken
would inay
Jersey City. N. J.
James a coace, 108 Mercer 3¢
Best for
The Bowels
Pleasant, Palaiadie Potent Taste Good. De Good,
Never Sicken, Weaken or Gripe, Ge, 25¢. 500. Nevar
sold in bulk. The genuine tables stamped CCQ.
Juaranteed $0 curs or your money hac
Sterling Remedy Co.. Chicago or N.Y. 5g
ANNUAL SALE, TEX MILLIOK BOXES
P. N.
U. 13,1907.
NEW DISCOVERY;
slaes quick relief and cires
worst cases. Hook of testimonials and $0 D Days’ treatinent
Dr. MH. ll. GREEN'S SOX, Box B, Atlanta, Ga,