The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, October 03, 1907, Image 7

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    UNITED STATES SENATOR
FROM SOUTH CAROLINA
» PRAISES PE-RU-NA.
Sa
\
-
\
—— = mn oN
—
ey 3 a
Ex-Senator M. C. Butler.
Dyspepsia is Often Cauzel by Caturrh
of the Stomach —Peruna Relieves Catarrh
of the Stomach an 1 is Therefore a Remedy
Jor Dyspep:i-.
PEPSI IIIITEI 000000040040
Hon. M. C. Butler, U. S. Senator
from South Carolina for two terms,
in a letter from Washington, D. C,
writes to to the Peruna Medicine Co.,
as follows:
“J can recommend Peruna for
dyspepsaand stomac’i trouble. I
have been using your medicine
jor a short period and I feel very
much relieved. It is indeed a
wonlerful medicine, besides a
good tonic.”’
C0484 0000042000000090
0688800000000 00000000
YyATARRH of the stomach is the correct
( name for most cases of dyspepsia. Only
an internal catarrh remedy, such as Peru-
na, is available.
Perunia Tablets can now hs procured.
+ BELIEVE MARS PLAYED OUT.
2 Z
British Scientist Scouts at Lowell's
Idea of Artificial Canalis.
Three photographs -accompanying
I.owell's account of his observation
of the planet Mars, show with strik-
ing «clearness the various canals
hitherto unknown in Europe The
evolution of these canals confirmed
Lowell in his theory of the presence
on the planet of intelligent life.
But at the Royal Observatory at
Greenwich, A. S. Eddington, F. R. S.,
chief assistant astrenomer royal, said
he was not prepared yet to
the American savant's = theory
final.
“I can't quite see,” said Eddington,
‘““‘that Lowell has proved his case
His wonderful photographs show the
evolution he predicted on Mars and
its canals, but we are inclined here
to accept the thecry if Prof. Picker-
ing of Harvard, that these canals are
not artificial, tet the result of the
planet's natural shrinkage. We are
inclined to believe Mars is played
out; its career is finished. There
may have been intelligent life on the
nlanet” many millions of vears ago
but this is mere speculation.” = 40
as
$100 Reward, $100.
The readers of this paper will be pleased to
learn that there is at least one dreaded dis-
case that science has been able to cure in all
its'stages, and thatisCatarrh. Hall’'sCatarrh
Cure is the only positive cure now known to
the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a con-
stitutional discase, requires a constitutional
treatment. Hall’s Catarrh Cureis takeninter-
nally, acting directly upon the blood and mu-
cous surfaces of the system. thereby destroy-
ing the foundation of the disease. and giving
the patient strength by building up the con-
stitution and assisting nature in doing its
work. - The proprietors have so much faith
in its curative powers that they offer One
Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to
cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address
*. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, O.
fold by all Druggists, 75c.
Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation.
Civorces in One Family.
An Idaho attorney in a divorce ac-
tion has uncovered the following state
of fact, which he thinks without pre-
cedent. - He says: “Each. party to
the action now pending has hereto-
fore had another spouse, and each
been divorced; a daughter of the
plaintiff (tbe woman in the case) has
been divorced; plaintiff's father and
mother are divorced, the mother
having been divorced three times;
plaintiff has four brothers and sisters
living, each of whom has been mar-
ried and divorced, some of them as
often as three times, with the excep-
tion of one, who has not been getufilly
divorced, but has been estranged and
separated from his wife on three dif-
ferent occasions.”"—Case and Com-
ment.
TIRED BACKS.
The kidners have a great work to
do in keeping the blood pure. When
they get out of order
it causes backache,
headaches, dizziness,
languor and distress-
sing urinary troubles.
pe lseep the kidneys well
and all thesp suffer-
ings will be saved you.
Mrs. S. A. Moore, pro-
prietor of a restaue
grant at Waterville,
Me., says: “Before
using Doan’'s Kidney Pills 1 suf-
fered everything from kidney trou-
bles for a year and a half. 1 had
pain in thé back and head, ard al-
most continuous in the loins and felt
weary all the time. A few doses of
Doan's Kidney Pills brought great
relief, aud I kept on taking them un-
til in a short time | was cured. |
think Doan’'s Kidney Pills are won-
derful.”
Sold by alldealers. B50 cents a box.
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. %.
accept.
GARDEN, FARM and CROPS
Bib SUGGESTIONS Fie
Sh
FOR THE
UP-TO-DATE
AGRICULTURIST
Cost of Cultivation.
How many cultivations of a crop is
necessary? Well, just as many as the
ground will permit of, rathér than as
few as possible. The original prepara-
tion of the land and the planting is
much more than haf the work and i
expense up to the time of harvest. It
is poor economy after having gone thus
far, to skimp in the cultivation. The
cost of cultivating a field of corn or
potatoes is not more than 50 or 60
cents per acre. If the planting has
been. done the increased yield from
each cultivation will much more than
pay the cost. Keep down.the weeds
and let in the air to the plant roots.—
Indiana Farmer.
The Egg Eating Habit.
The egg eating habit is a.very com-
mon and costly one to those who keep
poultry and is also very troublesome.
It can generally be traced to the break-
ing of an egz in the nest or élsewhere.
When one acquires the habit it is ran- 4
idly taught to all ‘the flock, causing
complete demoralization. It may be
prevented by having ddrkened nests
and soft nesting material ‘so ‘that the
eggs are not liable to break, and by
the use of china nest eggs. Give the
hens at all times sufficient shell pro-
ducing material, such as oyster or
clam shells and-mica crystal grit and
this trouble will not be so_apt to cc-
cur.— Weekly Witness,
: Cleaning Rusty Steel.
The best way to thorcughly remov=
rust from tools is to send them to the
grinder, or some one who has a wheei.
This gets rid of rust much more ef-
fectively than the slow and laborious
method of rubbing witlf ens®ry paper.
The stone, emery and leather
remove she rust and polish the steel
with much less labor. If this cannot
be done, the work of removal by rub-
bing with an emery paper will Le
greatly facilitated by thoroughly scak-
ing for some time in paraffin oil. For
rough and ready work in partly clean-
ing tcols nothing will act more quick-
ly than gasoline rubbed om several
times at short intervals.—A. R. J, in
American Cultivator.
Curing Sheep Skins.
is sent: in “by ‘ons who
knows.” Take a spoonful of alum and
two of saltpetre; pulverize and mix
well together, then sprinkle the pow-
der on the flesh side of the skin and
lay the two powdered sides together,
leaving the woel outside. Then fold
the skin up as tight as you can, and
put it in a dry place. Ip two or three
days, or as soon~as it is dry, take it
down and open and scrape the flesh side
with a blunt knife until it is clean
and supple. This completes the pro-
cess, and makes an excellent saddle
cover. Other skins which it is desired
to cure with the hair on may te treat-
ed in the ‘same manner. If iv is de-
sired to use the skin for a rug, it should
be well washed in soap suds, rinsed
in running water, and let get partly
dry, then rubbed together until it is
soft and dry.—American Cultivator.
This
Grade Up the Cattle.
who wants to improve
his cattle and make more money cut
of them can, by keeping a pure bred
bull in a very few years grade up his
common cattle and make them worth
at least one-third more than they are.
It only takes six cattle generations of
breeding to make all pure breeds in
this way. This is what pure blood at
the head of cattle herds will do. And
what is more three or four years Oo.
such breeding will so increase * the
value of the herd as to cover twice over
the original cost of such a bull, to say
nothing of the saving in fcod while do-
ing to. Growing and fattening five
good grade steers per year will in-
crease the income more than one hun-
dred dollars annually, whca compared
with the marketing of common ones.
This is the reason why a pure bred
bull is regarded as more than ‘half the
herd,” as we often hear it said by
those who are familiar with the matter
of cattie growing. —Indiana Farmer.
The farmer
Mea! fer Milch Cows.
How much cectten-seed meal can be
fed daily to milch cows without de-
teriorating the butter? According te
Dr. Allen, of the office of Experiment
Stations, Department of Agriculture,
northern dairyvmen incline te the be-
lief that nct to exceed two pounds
should be fed daily. “It is the general
experience,” -said Dr. Allen, ‘that co:l-
ton-seed meal produces a hard butter
and in some instances a small amount
of such feed is given simply to secure
this result. = The Mississippi Experi-
ment Station hes made scme experi-
ments with large feedings of coiton-
seed meal which aie interesting, and
they show that liberal rations of cot-
ton-seed can be fed with no bad re-
sults. The station herd was fed daily
for a period of two weeks on a ra-
tion composed of 10 pounds of cow
pea hay, 20 pounds of corn silage, 4
pounds of wheat bran, 5 pounds of
cotton-seed meal, and the milk dur-
ing the last two days of this period
was made into butter. In the two
weeks following this 6 pounds of corn
and cob meal was substituted for the
cotton-seed and the butter made as
before. The butter was sent to St
the production of winter eggs.
wheels’
Louis where it was scored as follows,
on a scale of 100: Butter from cotton-
seed meal 9571; 2 points; butter from
whole cotton-seed 96 points; butter
from corn and cob meal 96 points.
“The finding of the station was that,
as- there was practically no difference
in the score the quality of the butter
was not injured by feeding as much as
5 pounds of cotton seed, meal or 6
pounds of cotton seed. 8he test also
showed that this cotton-seed butter
melted at 00.1 degrees F. while that
from cows fed on cotton-seed melt-
ed at 96.8 degrees 7., thus showing the
former to be a better shipping but-
ter.”
Hastening the Mouit.
The natural season for the casting
of the feathers is during August and
September, but to some extent the
process can be hastened by artificial
means. If the summer is wet and cold,
the moulting period is frequently pro-
tracted, with the result that new feath-
ers are not formed ere the winter
negins, which has a very serious effect
uron the laying. By some it is thought
advisable, therefore, to try to force the
moult, so that the change of feathers’
can take place during fine, ‘warm
weather, which nraterially-
plan is to feed the fowls on a very
low diet for a few weeks.
feeding should commence during July
and continue for four or five weeks—in
fact, until the feathers are observed
to be falling. It is essential to ex-
creise the greatest care when following |
this plan, as it is easy to do the birds
a considerable amount of harm, event:
ually retarding the moulting period.
As scon as the first feather is seen to
drop out, the low diet must be stopped
and more nutritious foods supplied ir
mere generous quantities. It is doubt-
ful whether it really accomplishes as
much good as is often claimed, be-
cause the birds become too thin, and
are unable to form the new feathers
in a satisfactory manner.
Hatchirz of ducklings may continue
thrcughout this month, as it is not yet
too late to hatch a quickly-maturing |
strain of ducks for breeding purposes
sext winter. Such birds will
to be very generously fed upcn nu-
iritive foeds in order to encourage
growth as much as possible. Geese and
turkeys may also still be hatched, but
it is getting late.: l.arge size
very important a factor in determining
the price at Christmas that it is ad- !
as
vantageocus to get the birds out
early as possible in the season, so as
to give them plenty of time in which
to grow. The youngsters should be
given plenty of exercise, especially the
geese, as only in this manner is it pos-
sible to build up a strong and healthy
frame upon which the flesh can after-
wards be laid.—American Cultivator.
Cruelty to Horses.
In the matter of cruelty to or ne-
glect of horses, it is not, unfortunate- |
ly the obvious troubles that really
cause the most discomfort and suifer-
ing, but the generally overlooked lit-
tle things and seemingly inconsequent- |
ial details that really make or mar |
the only real pleasures which the pa- |
tient creature is usually fated to en- |
of |
mind. Curiously enough, it is not the |
joy—comfort of body and ease
lame horse (that is, the animal not
too disabled to still perform his usual
tasks) who suffers most, for the very
limp or shortness of stride and stiff- |
ness of gait, which call out attention |
rouble, are an evidence not of |
to his
pain,
to prevent
but of the creature's precaution
suffering—just as in our
own case we limp and “go short” not |
hecause corn or bunion troubles us, but |
{
so that they will not.
This point is cone always iznored by |
those well-meaning but impracticable
neople who, lacking experience and or-
dinary ‘horse sense,’ are governed en-
tirely by the eye in making their deci- |
sions upon the condition of horses, and
their fitness for work, and strain at the |
ineguality of gait, while
ountenancing for years, in the care
and training of their own cariiage
horses, the most pernicious practices,
znat cf an
is destructive to health and durability |
is to comfort and ordinary ease
universal as inexcusable.
Of such there are but too many who |
busy themselves with other people's af-
fairs in the administration of our vari-
‘ut societies for the prevention
erueliy to animals—organizaticns
which, werthy in themselves of
highest praise and most liberal sup-
ort, prove
lisgust the practical horseman, who
an but view their abortive proceedings
with mingled feelings of contempt and
imusement.
Every animal lover hopes for the
time when the management of such
hodies shall be placed in the hands of
nen competent to decide and alert to
idminister, and not left to the indiffer-
nt, the inert and the inapt in matters
~hich concern animal care and man-
wgement.—F. M. Ware, in the Outing
Magazine.
The Italian Sfate Railway has
bought 200,000 tons of American coal,
to be delivered at Genoa, at $5.64 a |
ton., The Welsh coal-owners, it is
:aid, asked $6.12.
assists in |
The |
The low *»~
‘| %spiritless ¢reatures who never
aT
require |
is so |
as |
of |
the |
almost without exception, |
:0 ill managed and so impractical as |
o discourage the philanthropist and |
*
dLasaow STREET CARS.
| Points of Contrast and Comparison
with American Cars,
Municipal ownership of street rail-
roads, which all good Americans have
{ been taught to think an altogether
| wrong and unworkable plan, seems in
| Glasgow to be a complete success. The
| conditions, however, are so very dif-
{ferent from those existing in New
York that comparison is almost out of
the question. In Glasgow politics do
not enter into the matter at all. Graft
has not to be taken account of, and,
in fact, all the arrangements that
make the street car system in Glasgow
so admirable, would be impossible to
apply din American cities. The cars
are. all double-deckers, some with cov-
ered taps and others without—these
last providing an almost ideal mode of
seeing the city. The fares (no trans-
fers) paid in so different a way from
ours, are about a cent a mile; so that
vou tell the green uniformed conductor
your destination: and -he charges you
accordingly. For long distances this
is more expensive than oursway, but
as Glasgow is crowded into-a compar-
atively small district it makes a great:
saving in going about in the business
quarter of the town. One thing that
strikes a New Yorker as superfluous is
the giving of a small ticket to show
| that the passenger has paid his fare.
ing disputes as to whether or not you
ha'vi¥¥id your fare, and it also stops
these free rides that on the New York,
cars are so numerous, but it litters the
floor of the car with discarded tickets,
which ig perhaps not so great a draws
“back after all, as they are the only dirt
fhe Glasgow’ cars have, and one or two
flaws are always needed, if only to
{ keep general interest up.
| outside. of the car, and as the cars are
Cnever crowded and the conductors are
shout
{ or push, an atmosphere of restfulness
| is really felt in these foreign cars.
At “tlre crowded hours the cars fol-
| low so.¢insély on one another that it is
one, cgptinuous train, and if.in a few
of thesears (the ones that have strong-
est jspring and that the makers felt
were equal to an extra cram) some
half dozen extra passengers -are 2i-
lowed to stand, every one exclaims
and says: “This is a terrible jam, isn't
12 The ars go at “a very good
speed, are not upholstered in dusty
carpet, but. have not uncomfortable
hardwcod seats, and though the alight-
ing passengers are not allowed to get
off before the cthers crowd on, per-
haps this hardly matters either, as the
need Ay step lively” is never felt, and
every, one bumps into every one else
| in an extremely cheerful way. What
to all masculine minds is highly im-
portant is that the car lines pay very
well indeed, while feminine passengers
are cheered by the knowledge that
neither their clothes nor their dispo-
sitions will be epmpletely ruined by a
half hour's ride on a tran.
American women have never been
called unprogressive—they -have been
called other things, but so far this one
word has not been applied to them—
{ now let them look to their laurels. The
women of.Scotland are ahead of them
in one respect. They board the cars
when they are moving, and moving at
| a goodly speed, too. The cars, which
| stop at red posts and nowhere else,
| will consent to slow down to half
speed if people signal, and then wom-
en with bundles hop on and women
| with babies in their arms swing them-
selves off, and the poor American girl
who has never reached this stage of
recklessness, is left blinking amaxedly
at the fast disappearing car.—New
! York Evening Sun.
San
Comfort for Gout Victims.
Sufferers from gout need not ab-
| stain from any of their favorite foods
| with the idea of humoring their enemy
was the effect of a statement made by
Dr. Hale White, a London physician,
at the medical congress at Exeter. He
contended that there was not an atom
of evidence that any particular food
| influences chronic gout.
| Physicians sometimes forbade suf-
ferers to eat proteids, including, of
| course, meat, but how was it, he asked
that gout was less common while the
| consumption of meat had inereased
enormously? As to alcohol, how was
it thas:-teetotal persons suffered from
cirrhosis of the liver that could not
be distinguished from that ascribed
to alcohol?—London Cable to the New
York Sun.
Pettus And His Bible.
The late Senator Pettus of Alabama
was a “forty-niner,” going overland
| to California in the early days and en-
gaging in placer mining. He took with
| him on that long and tedious journey
the Bible, Shakespeare
He said of them at
| one time not long since: “I read the
Bible from cover to cover; I read the
| side notes; I read the captions of the
chapters; 1 learned great parts of it
by heart, and I haven't forgotten them
yet. I learned many of Burns’ poems
by heart and much of Shakespeare
| in the same way, too.” Such readinz
of these three books was an educaticn
in itself. It is not likely that many
miners engaged in that search Zor
wealth spent their leisure in as profii-
able a way.—Indianapolis Star.
ern
| three books,
and Burns’ poems.
Value Of Advertising.
A Kansas man is convinced that ad:
vertising pays. He advertised for
a lost five-dollar bill and a stranger,
who had picked up one on the streetg,
read the advertisement and restored
the bill to the advertiser. A few
days later, while looking over a vest
he had laid off, the original bill was
found in a pocket. He says adver-
tising pays 100 per ceit—TUtica Press.
It, of course, deprives one of the excit-"
The adver+¥
| 1isements are,-oddry enough, all on the
. Supplies Department of the British
canned meats.”
Women Avoid
Operations
When a woman suffering from
femdle trouble is told that an oper-
ation is necessary, it, of course,
frightens her.
The very thought of the hospital,
the operating table and the knife
strikes terror to her heart.
It is quite true that these troub-
les may reach a stage where an ope-
ration is the only resource, but a
4 great many women have been cured
| by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetab'e
Compound after an operation has
been decided upon as the only cure.
The strongest and most grateful
MISS ROSE MOORE
statements possible to make come from women who by taking
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound
made from native roots and herbs, have escaped serious operations, as
evidenced by Miss Rose Moore's case,
of 307 W. 26th St . N.Y. She writes:-
Dear Mrs. Pinkham:-'‘Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has
cured me of the very worst form of female trouble and I wish to express
to you my deepest gratitude.
I was unable to attend to my duties
I suffered intensely for t
rears so that
and was a burden to my family. I
doctored and doctored with only temporary reliefand constantly objecting
to an operation which I was advised to undergo. I decided to try Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com
d I am now in better healt
und;
than
it cured me of the terrible trouble
I have been for many years.”
) This and other such cases should encourage every woman to try Ly-
dia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound before she submits to an operation.
Mrs. Pinkham’s Standing Invitation to
omen
Women suffering from any form of female weakness are invited to
promptly communicate with Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass.
From the
symptoms given, the trouble may be located and the quickest and surest
way of recovery #dvised.
.
ERE
W. L.. DOUGLAS
$3.00 & $3.50 SHOES 251080
fes™ SHOES FOR EVERY MEMBER OF
HE FAMILY, AT ALL PRICES.
“Gf
more Men’s $3 & $3.50 shoes
s
$25,000 A L113 fiks Laat!
Reward
than any other manufacturer.
. THE REASON W. L. Douglas shoes are worn by more peopld
ingadl walks of }Jife than any other make, is because of their ,
excellent “style, easy-fitting,
and superior wearing qualities.
The selection of the leathers and other materials for each par
of the shoe, and every detail of the making is
looked after by
the most completeorganization of superintendents, foremenand
skilled shoemakers, who receive the highest wages paid in the
choe industry, and whose workmanship cannot be excelled.
If Feounld 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.
$4.00 and $5.00 Gilt Edge Shoes cannot be equalled at any price.
AUTION! The genuine have W. 1. Douglas name and price stamped on bottom. Take
No Substitute. Ask your dealer for W. I. I
youglas shoes. If hé cannot supply you, send
direct to factory. Shoes sent everywhere by mail. Catalog free. W.L.Douglas. Brockton. Mass.
50,000 miles of navig-
rivers and 38,000 miles of rail-
yadg. © At last accounts the river
amounted to 30,000 tons a
Russia
thle
C
y
1as
7
traffic
year.
FITS, 5t. Vitus’ Dance: Nervous Diseases per-
manently cured by Dr. Kline’s Great Nerve
Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatige free.
Dr. H. R. Kline, L.d.,931 Arch St., Phila., Pa.
Members of the church defense
committee of England are pledged to
make church and schoel for foremost
consideration in voting aft elections.
Mrs. Winsiow’s Soothing Syrup for Children
teething, softens thegums, reducesinflamma-
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25c a bottle
Frem Vine to Rose.
Main, French vineyards are
to be turned into rose gardens The
perfume factories pay 3600 per kilo-
gramme for pure essence of roses and
the demand is greater than the sup-
ply.
likely
in the Moon Legend.
There is a quaint tradition about
how the belief in the man in the
moon originated that is worth retell-
ing Like so many of these beliefs,
it began way back in Bible times,
and in quite another dress. By
many nations the old man is sup-
posed to be the one who first maae
his appearance in the Book of Num-
bers (Chapter xv., verse 32.) 'I'hen
he was found by the children of Israel
gathering sticks on the Sabbath aay.
He was taken before Moses and con-
demned to death. He was taken
later outside the camp and stoned
until he died. One would think that
was punishment enough even four so
awful a crime, but superstition took
him in hand at that point and con-
signed him to the mcon, where, with
a bunch of sticks on his ured oid
back, he was destined to climb for-
ever up the shining hill and never
reach the top. The story goes that
his ‘ faithful dog was permitted to
&hare his fate, and if you look care-
fully when the night clear and
dark you will see the pair toiling
away upon their endless climb. The
face of the old man also grew out of
the oldtime tradition. but the figures
are quite plain if one puts on the
classes of imaginaticn.— Washington
tar.
Man
is
BRITISH GOVERNMENT AND
AMERICAN FOODSTUFKES,
Contract For Canned Meats Placed in
Chf®aigo—DBritish War Office Has
Every Confidence in the Stocg-
yard Product.
Ancther large contract for tinned
meats for the British Army has been
placed with Libby, McNeill & Libby,
of Chicago, through the Director of
War Office. This contract "vas a com-
petitive affair, England, Canada, Aus-
tralia and Brazil entering with teu-
ders. Jt was quality and method of
packing tuat got the Chicago firm
the business. General Clayton, of the
War Department, in an interview, ac-
cording to the London Standard,
stated that the British Government is
highly satisfied with the foodstuffs
supplied by Chicago, and they have
every confidence in the manufactures
entering Britain from the Stockyards.
“TLe food for the Army will be
packed under the supervision of Brit-
ish representatives at the invitation
of the packers,” he said, “although
the Government is ready to rely upon
the new Pure Food regulations re-
cently ‘inaugurated in the United
States. All ‘he talk about the inef-
ficiency of the new law is sheer non-
sense. British officers in America
have gone fully into the matter and
the authorities are perfectly satisfied
to place orders .n Chicago when con-
ditions call for outside supplies of
Effects of Comets.
Has this year’s comet affected the
weather? A century ‘ago the answer
would have been yes. Thus, to the
charge of the comet of 1811 were aid
the facts not only of the excellent
vintage and abundant crops of that
vear, but also that wasps were then
few and flies blind and that a shoe-
maker's wife in London had four
children at a birth. Besides such
calamities. as invasions, pestilences,
and the like, the comets of various
years were considered responsible
for many minor tragedies, including
the destruction of a church clock bv
a meteoric stone, a fit of sneezing
that became prevalent in Germany,
and in 1638 an epidemic among cats
in Westminster —Chicago News.
FURIOUS HUMOR ON CHILD.
Itching, Bleeding Sores Covered Body
—Nothing Helped ITer—Cuticura
Cures Her in Five Days.
“After my granddaughter of about seven
vears had been cured of the measles, she
was attacked about a fortnight later by a
furious itching and pamful eruption all
over her body, especially the upper part of
it, forming watery and bleeding sores, es
pecially under the arms, of considerable
size. She suffered a great deal and for
three weeks we nursed her every night,
using all the remedies we could think of.
Nothing would help. We tried the Cuti-
cura Remedies and after twenty-four hours
we noted considerable improvement; and,
after using only one complete set of the
Cuticura Remedies, in five consecutive days
the little one, much to our joy, had been
entirely cured, and has been well for a long
time. Mrs. F. Ruefenacht, RR. F. D. 3. Bak-
ersfield, Cal., June 25 and July 20, 1906.” .
There is received daily at the port
of New York an average of $274,000
in gold and silver imports.
Maine Woods
For
Big Game
C0ZY, COMFORTABLE CAM?3
Quickly Reached via tha
Boston & Maine
Railroad
Through Parlor, Sleeping
; and Dining Car Service
Send four cents in s'amps for
booklets ‘Im the Fish and Gams
Country” and “Game Laws Worth
Kunowing.”” Address Passenger De-
partment, Boston, Mass.
C. M. BURT, Gen. Pass. Agt.
FR E EF: convinco any
f t. We will
tions and genuine testimpmials., Scnd
and heals
fections, such as nasal ecatarrh, pelvie
mouth, by direct local treatment. Its cur-
Thousands of women are using and reo-
STS YOU NOTHING TO TRY IT.
woman that Pax.
tine Antiseptic will
improve her health
and do all we claim
or
send her ghsolutely free a large trial
box of Paxtine with book of instrue-
your name and address on a postal card.
AX IN i
i : me m-
brane af-
catarrh and inflammation caused by femi-
nine ills; sore eyes, sore throat and
ative power over these troubles Is extra-
ordinary and gives immediate ef.
ommending it every day. 50 cents at
grog ists orby mail. Remember, however,
THE R. PAXTON CO., Boston, Mass.
P. N. U. 40, 1907.
ars Thompson's Eye Water