The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, May 28, 1908, Image 3

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    \ND
hoot and
»d a car
vas fired
shot and
car was
he down-
ce after
was held
le motor-
d. The
boulevard
st serious
The car
n termin-
og placed
d it was
oters hid-
ge. Im-
shooting
rew and
J. James
the fire.
vere e€x-
progress
one thou-
I and its
the flree-
's poured
burned to
e notified
y the res-
with bul-
proceeded
1s shot in
rge Alex-
car, were
Burlin-
wd which
ot in the
'OSED
E. Church
turn
of Bishop
John 8S.
Women's’
Senator I.
he M. E.
ed before
the M. P.
an invita-
Protestant
e Mother
rarated in
1zie, Pres-
gical sem-
resenting
e Congre-
the over-
n the pro-
s.
. the fruit
wwest this
history,”
immigra-
and-Frisco
in Pitts
e little or
* the coun-
»asons for
mper crop
r the corn
x, particu-
s, Oklaho-
1e may be
is the ex:
five crops
is year.
of the ex
h cannon
re a salute
leet, Isaac
lled; Miss
vas struck
nd had an
iss McDon-
d, Eugene
roken, and
painfully
sed.
nment of-
alleged to
possession
been writ
or Thomas
Wood, ac:
nent intro-
he hearing
r divorce
R 35,000
te Return
ek.
five thou-
ri, Kansas,
1embers of
f America,
ince March
rk. The
signed the
joint sub-
and opera-
ement was
lls of the
pany, that,
1tire plant
dule, after
k for near
rent states
to operate ©
eral weeks.
bout 1,000
ies.
»hn Sparks
11 for some
near Reno.
vould have
~~ He died
S. Disgker
Srnor.
ns.
» confirmed
rd T. San-
ited States
wstern and
essee, and
ana, to be
ue.
led the bill
o gold and,
‘In God We
icken from
hs ago.
a
|
|
“df
M
tN b |
Bh on
nen nently overcome by
Tle ef; wis withthe ry
on v
Te > Syrap of Bie oe,
1
b
habits daily so He ol nee
ure may be gradually dispensed with
when Be onier weeded asthe best of
temedics,when vequired, le assist
nature and not to Supp ant e natun
al funclions, which must de, pend ulti-
ately upon proper mer:
1s, and right livi neral
lela ding genre
ty the genui
Syrupifigs-f Elixir Senna
CALIFORNIA
Fic Syrup Co. onty
SOLD BYA LEADING DRUGCISTS,
one suze only, Tegular price 50¢ per Bottle
Ivory Market.
The ivory market at Antwerp, or-
ganized only a decade ago, has be-
come the largest one in the world—
larger than the two other great mar
kets, those of London and Liverpool.
FITS, St. Vitus’Dance: Nervous Diseases per
nently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve
storer. §2 trial bottle and treatise free.
. H. R. Kline, Ld.,081 Arch 8t., Phila., Pa.
According to the report of the geo-
logical survey of British India the pro-
duction of coal in that country in 1907
was 9,783,250 tons.
rn 22
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Calida
teething,softens thegums,redu
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25ca bottio
Accounts All Balanced.
A remarkable condition arose in the
Muskogee (Okla.) clearing house the
other day. When members of the as-
sociation met at 11 o'clock to adjust
their bank clearings it was found that
there was $40,000 in checks in the
day’s business, and that when settle-
ment was made the accounts of each
bank against all other banks balanced
to a penny. No bank had to pay a
cent to the other.
Ladles Can Wear Shoes
One size smaller after using Allen’s Foot-
ng a Jo wder. It makes tight or new shoes
Jures swollen, bot, sweating, aching
fact ‘Ingrowing nails, cornsand bunions. At
druggists and shoe stores, 25c. Don’tac-
cept anysubstitute. Trial package FREE b;
mail. Address Allen 8.Olmsted, LeRoy, N. Y
Concrete Fly Wheels.
For slow speed pumps in the Rand
mines, South Africa, a novel flywheel
has been adopted. High freight rates
make iron and steel machinery very
costly, and the, use of concrete rims
for the flywheels of ten pumps is
stated to have realized a saving of
about $10,000. The flywheels are driv-
en by electric motors through worm
gear about twenty revolutions per
minute. Each wheel is fourteen feet
in diameter, with a cast iron bosses in
which sixteen spokes of four-inch tube
are screwed, and the rim has a base
and an outside of one-fourth inch
sheet iron strips, senarated by dis-
tance pieces. The strips are bolted
together, the concrete rim between
being thirteen inches wide and thir-
teen inches deep, strengthened by four
one-fourth inch wires Interlaced with
the distance pieces. The weight of
the wheel is 8,000 pounds and that of
the rim 6,000 pounds.
Mark Twain in his lifetime has
earned $700,000. ©
More proof that Lydia E. Pink-
ham’s Vegetable Compound saves
woman from surgical operations.
Mrs: 8. A. Williams, of Gardiner,
Maine, writes:
“J was a great sufferer from female
troubles, and Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege-
table Compound restored me to health
in three months, after my physician
declared that an operation was abso-
lutely necessary.”
Mrs. Alvina Sperling, of 154 Cley-
bourne Ave., Chicago, Ill, writes:
“I suffered from female troubles, a
tumor and much inflammation. Two
of the best doctors in Chicago decided
that an operation was necessary to save
my life. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound “entirely cured me without
an operation.”
FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN,
# For thirty years Lydia E. Pink-
ham’s Vegetable Compound, made
from roots. and herbs, has been the
standard remedy for female ills,
and has positively cured thousands of
women who have been tr oubled with
displacements, inflammation, ulcera-
tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities,
periodic pains, backache, that bear-
ing-down feeling, flatulency, indiges-
tion, dizziness,or Nervous prostra ition.
Why don’t you try it ?
Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick
women to write her for advice.
She has guided thousands to
health. Address, Lynn, Mass.
sant Thompson's Eye Water
Shade For Hens.
Have a shaded yard or good sized
pen in which tQ keep the hens and
little chicks, and keep’the weeds and
grass down short in this yard. A good
precaution for both chiggers and dis-
ease is a liberal sowing of lime over
all the yard, and in the coops.—Farm-
er’'s Home Journal.
Day Mash Focd.
Experiments which have been con-
ducted at the New York Cornell Sta-
tion indicate that “for young fowls of
the laying varieties, kept for commer-
cial egg production, the feeding of a
dry mash in a feed hopper which is
accessible at all times during the day
is to be recommended.”
Pure Air and Water.
Pure air and pure water are as es-
sential to the health of brood mares
and the best condition of the foals that
ihey are carrying as is pure food. Do
not forget, however, that taking a
large quantity ot ice-cold water at
one time into the stomach of a preg-
nant brood mare endangers the life
of the foal. It is one of the most
frequent causes of abortion in the
North.—American Cultivator.
Use of the Mule.
Why not raise mules? They are
subject to fewer diseases than horses,
they mature quicker than horses, cost
less to breed and raise, there is al-
ways ready demand for them at any
age, they have great endurance under
trying conditions and great stress of
labor; they are sure-footed, steady, not
rattle-headed, active when well bred
and well nourished and are safer than
Horses.—Farmer’s Heme Journal.
Setting Out Fruit Trees.
The farm home that does not have
a good orchard, vineyard and plenty
of small fruits 1s missinz something
worth while. Why are there so many
farms without fruits? Surely not be-
cause the family does not care for
fruit. The real reason is because of
the ‘rush of farm work during the
spring there is not time to get the
ground ready and set out the trees or
plants. Then many make a half-heart-
ed attempt at it, and having poor suc-
cess give up the orchard to weeds and
live stock. Go at the work right. Pre-
pare the ground thoroughly, and set
out the best trees and plants you can
get. Apples, plums, pears, grapes,
blackberries, raspberries and straw-
berries may all be- grown easily and
within a few years. . Order your stock
early and when it comes don’t leave it
dying around the freight depot for two
or three days. Get it home and if
your ground is not ready heel in the
trees until you are ready to set them
out.—Indiana Farmer. ®
Forcing Hogs for Killing.
Many farmers are now forcing their
pigs to make the greatest possible
gain in weight before “killing time.”
The office of experiment stations of the
Department of Agriculture summarizes
some Wisconsin. station pig feeding ex-
periments covering a period of ten
years, with the following conclusions:
‘Where there is plenty of time for ma-
turing the pigs, and it is not necessary
to secure the maximum daily Zain, it
Is doubtful if it pays to grind corn
for pigs. The test shows that where
quick maturity is an important item,
better results are secured from corn
meal. ‘Pigs fed corn meal eat more
grain and make somewhat larger daily
gains. Corn meal ean doubtless be
fed to good advantage in finishing off
a bunch of hogs which were first fed
shalled corn. Changing over to corn
meal near the close of the feeding
period also furnishes a change in the
character of the ration which will be
satisfactory to the animals. When
fitting hogs to show, sale, or in high
pressure feeding for mdrket, the feed-.
er will consider it advisable to grind
the corn, even though it is expensive
to do so.
Raps Pastures.
Although we have never grown rape
on our farm, writes a correspondent, it
has been grown by several of the
neighboring farmers and I have paid
close attention to their success with it.
I intend to try a few acres next sea-
son.
As pasture for hogs in the spring
and early part of the summer I do not
think we can find anything equal to it.
Young hogs that run on rape pasture
through the monthe of April, May and
June are very healthy and heavy boned
they are in excellent condition for the
feed lot.
Rape seems to grow much better in
rather moist ground.. The plant, which
slightly resembles cabbage, thrives
best in rich soil. The ground should
be in fine condition. Give the ground
several harrowings. The best time to
sow the seed is in March or first half
of April.. Sow broadcast. Rape can
endure considerable cold weather, but
not very much dry weather during the
summer, if there is a scarcity of rain
the plant becomes tough, and there is
very little growth.
Rape also makes a fine
pasture for
sheep.
It is more Yalunble for sheep and
also steer all or winter. When
i raised for the puri > it is- better to
: drill it, in rows al
| along in May. Very
crops can be cut in one season.
makes excellent feed for lambs. ,
Many farmers do not know the pos-
sibilities of rape, and it is not as ex-
tensively- grown as it should be or as
ana Farmer.
New Life on the Farm.
New York, in a recent talk to the
farmers of that state said that schools
should be well in touch with affairs of
farm life, and further:
“I believe in the rural schools.
like other social institutions in
But
the
development, as compared with the
like situations in the city. With the
telephone, the multiplied means .of
transportation, the ¢ountry is not go-
ing to tumble-headlong into the city,
but the city is going to move out into
the country, forming small suburban
centers.
“There is going to be more difficulty
in ge'ting a living from farm lands
hereafter. ‘The problems the farm will
have to face are twenty times more
numerous and more complex than fif-
ty years ago. So we are brought to
a new point of view towards agricul-
tural life and industry. If you be-
lieve there are possibilities of making
a gcod living on the land, and life
on the land is highly honorable, stick
to it. If the city life gets the best
young men and women who are
brought up in the country, it will be
the city’s glory and the country’s fault
for not developing this point of view,
the appreciation of the science of agri-
culture, and for not keepiflg in touch
with social instructions of our age in
the rural districts as well as in the
city. And this reorganization of the
rural school #¥ goinz to be a great
part in this development of the rural
life and community.
“The farm labor problem will not be
settled until you train up farm arti-
sans who have pride in their work as
the shop artisan has in his work.”
Notes for The Farmer.
The barrel churn is not excelled for
making good butter.
The general market prefers butter
with color like what is usual in June.
Excessive washing may remove some
of the volatile oils from butter and
lessen is delicate flavor.
Consumers of butter are very often
the best to sell a high grade to, but
the seller should consider the cost of
delivering.
Cows that have to drink unclean
water do not give choice milk; and af-
ter they have waded in nasty water,
their udders are filthy and defile milk.
Do not keep on churning till the but-
ter .gathers in large lumps. Stop when
the butter granules are the size of
wheat grains and float freely on the
buttermilk.
If starting with a cream separator,
study carefully the directions of the
manufacturer. He knows what his
machinery can do and how to use it
to the best advantage.
If a barrel churn is run too fast,
the cream will not fall from one end
to the other as is should; and if run
too slow, the cream will slip along the
sides of the churn and fail to be agi-
tated enough.
If the buttermilk is strained through
cheese cloth or a hair-strainer, crumbs
of butter will be caught that would
otherwise be lost. Keep the cheese
cloth or the rair strainer scrupulously
clean, or the butter may deteriorate.
Under cleanly farm conditions, the
lactic acid bacteria predominates over
all other kinds; and the lactic acid
ones are the helpful kind. The bad
cnes are carried in dirt. Keep dirt out
of milk, and the bad ones will be
largely kept out. The importance of
4-cleanliness is so great that the subject
will bear being recalled to mind now
and then.—From “Drops of Dairy
Cream” in the Progressive Farmer,
Wolf Hunter's Record.
Ninety-three timber wolves killed in
less than a month’s time is the record
made by James Macintyre of Quatsino,
who has presented a. bill to the govern-
ment agent here for $1395, the amount
of bounty at the rate of $15 a head. _
An examination of Mr, Macintyre’s
account showed that some of the
wolves were killed before February 1,
the date on which the increased boun-
ty came into effect, and on these he
will be allowed only $5 per head, but
he has evidence enough of February's
work to make his claim when revised
amount to about $1000.
It is reported that Indians up the
coast, who have learned of the in-
creasecvcvx vxv X shrd s ta setaoinn
crease in bounty on panthers and
wolves to $15 a head each, have tak-
en to the woods on a hunt, and it is
expected that they will soon have
large sums to collect from the govern-
ment.— New Alberni Press.
Nightingale for London.
Would it not be possible to form
wildernesses of undergrowth in Hyde
Park and the other parks, and so, per-
to induce some of the warblers
? one's
le bur
Imagine
z a nightinga
ngton
+
St
| into
The Co
Side.
unt fv
it will be in the near future.—Indi-
Prof. Bailey of Cornell University, |
country they are in a state of arrested
the absolute necessity of deweloping :
Gardens!—
FINANCE AND TRACE REVIEW |
| ALL REPORTS ENCOURAGING
| Satisfactory “Trade Exhibits Are Giv-
en on All Sides.
New “York.—R. G. Dun & "Cos
weekly review of trade says:
+ Encouraging reports - prédominate,
‘and for the first time in six months
| the indications of improvement are
well distributdd throughout “all de--
partments. Gains are small in many
cases and unfavorable weather has re-
'tarded retail trade at. some points,
while comparisons with last year still
show decreases, but as compared
with preceding months -\ satisfactory
exhibits are found ‘everywhere. In
all the J6ading manufacturing indus-
tries orders increased over the low
point touched on May 1.
Textile markets show distinct im-
provement, buyers exhibiting interest,
and prices “of some cotton goods are
gh Sales for the week were
larger than at any recent date.
Footwear salesmen in the western
‘territory have secured fair contracts,
but New England manufacturers re-
port that business compares .very fa-
borably with previous years. A bet-
ter feeling is apparent in the leather
market.
Bradstreet’s gives the following as
to the grain exports for the week:
‘Wheat, including flour, exports
from the United States and Canada
for the week ending May 21, aggregate
2,930,254 bushels, against 2,701,806
last week, 3,684,683 this week last
year and 5,184,839 in 1902.
MARKETS.
PITTSBURG.
Wheat—No. 2 red. $ 85 90
yo—No.2.......
CorE Rn. 2 yellow, e 8) 81
No. 2 Joiow, shelled. 79 80
y Mized ear....... ..isersvasnine 7 73
xed e
Oats-No g ite. 5
No.3 white......... bl 57
‘FloaroW inter patent
Fancy straight winters. .
thy.. 1500 155)
1400 1450
% 29 00 50
Brown middlings. 2300 - 27 0)
Bran, bulk......... «2150 2700
Biraw Wheat Sessa Lesssessensen 870 9 00
ORY 2 Jeeta cansi degesrnivivens 85) 9 00
Dairy Products.
Butter—FElgin creamery........... $ 25 26
Ohio creamery. 20 21
Fancy country rol 17 18
Cheese—Ohio, new.. 15 17
New York, new.. . 16 17
poutiry, Etc.
Hens—per 1b . ised 7 13
CRICKANS—Aressed. ........ocunemme Rr 13
Eggs—Pa. and Ohio, fresh......... 17 18
Fruits and Vegeiables,
Totgtoss Fancy white per bu.. 85 9
Cabbage—per ton.....7...... 215 19
Onions—per barrel............,. « 550 600
BALTIMORE. ;
Hour Winer Patent. 58
Wheat—No. 2 red.......
Corn—ixed eT 1
esttave-taasscnsnvsivie 18
PHILADELPHIA
Flour—Winter Patent yr 1iste ns sis aes $53) 57
Wheat—No.2 red.........ccee0nenue > 1.03
Corn—No. 2 as 80 82
Jats—No, 2 white 54 53
Butter—Creamer: 24 23
Eggs—Pennsylvania 17 18
NEW YCRK.
Flour—Patents 560. 5170
Wheat—No. 2red.. 107
Corn—No. 2........ 63 63
Oats—No. 2 white 52 57
Butter -Creame 25 20
Eggs—State and 17 18
LIVE STOCK.
Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg.
Cattle.
Extra, 1,45
Prime, 1,3
—t
Prime heavy............. 357°
Prime medium weight 57 515
_Best heavy Yorkers . 573 5583
Good light Yorkers.. 540 550
Pi 53) 5 40
47 52)
395) 1 0)
Prime wethers, clipped. ........... 52
Good mixed... ...on.0 00 Ll... 525
Fair mixed ewes and wethers. 450
Culls and common 3 50
Lamba,.........c..i. 1300
Veal calves.......,............... 72
Heavy and thin calves............. 5 00
LABOR WORLD.
Shipwrights recently organized a
union in Chicago, IIL
British coliery enginemen decided
at a“‘Tecent mesting to join the Na-
tional Federation.
The. hod carriers’ international
body has 292 branches of the associa-
tion distributed in the United States
and Canada.
Every Kansas City brewery was
tied up by a sirike of 800 workers
for an Jagreage in wages averaging a
dollar a week.
The number of persons employed
in the mines of the United Kingdom
in 1907 was 940,618—an increase of
58,273 over 1906.
The men employed on the railroads
fn Kansas earn on an average of $1,-
183.74 a year, while it costs them
$773.77 a year to live:
A charter has been granted for the
formation of an eleciricians’ union in
San Mateo, Cal., to be under the juris-
diction of San Francisco.
The Federated Council of ‘the or-
ganjzations of the shopmen employed
at all points of the N. Y.. N. H. and
H. Railroad was made permanent re-
cently.
Representatives of organized labor
denounced and defended Mayor ‘Mec-
Clellan for his veto of the bill pro-
viding vacations for New York City
employes.
The Scotch ir by
ballot decided the
proposed reduc one
shilling a wez seek
to enforce the 1
At the
Coal Cc
INO
for
loon to every 10,000.
three |
1S CHRISTIANTY DECLINING
The Rev. Thomas Dixon Points Out
. Slumps in Churches.
There are fewer Baptists, Metho-
dists and Presbyterians in New York
today than there werg 25 years ago,
though the city’s population has been
more than doubled. The rapid ex-
tinction of churches of these denom-
inations in Manhattan during the past
decade shows this. In 1896 the Bap-
tists reported 64 churches. Last
year they only claimed 48. Many
of these claims are pitiful absurdities
-—mere names of mission halls and
soup kitchens, supported by the char-
ity of one or two rich men. One-
half of them represent hopes as yet
unfulfilled, declares Thomas Dixon,
Jr., in Broadway. Magazine.
- The - same thing is true of the
Methodists, who reported 73 churches
in 1896 and only claim 59 in 1907.
The Presbyterians reported 71 in
1896 and only 57 last year.
In the year 1840. New: York City
had one church to every 1,800 in
population. Last year we could not
find one church to 4,000 population,
counting all our soup kitchens and
mission halls as “churches.”
There are many sections of the
city which are practically pagan. One
district of 16,000 population, which is
typical of many more, has one saloon
to 111 inhabitants, and ome church
to 8,196.
In another large district there are
some 50,000 ichabitants, with a sa-
In the section
between Twenty-fourth and Fifty-
ninth streets west of Ninth avenue
there is but cne church to 15,000;
while the district between Fortieth
and Sixty-fourth streets west of Tenth
avenue contains 46,563 people, and
has but one church. /
And the sad part of the story is
that many of these churches that are
reckoned on the map as living and
performing their duties to these vast
it.
Crime Increasing.
Crime is increasing rapidly in New
York city. There were more com-
plaints, more indictments,
charges preferred and more cases
tried during the last half year than
i In any six months in the history of
( the city, and the increase has been in
much larger proportion than the in-
crease in population, which is estimat-
ed at 65,000.
Catarrh Cannot Be Cured
With LOCAL APPLICATIONS, as they cannot
reach the seat of the disease. Catarrh is a
blood or constitutional disease, and in order
to cure it you must take internal remedies.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and
acts directly on the blood and mucous sur-
face. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is not a quack
medicine. lt was prescribed by one of the
best physicians in this country for years,
and is a regular prescription. lt is compos
of the best tonics known, combined with the
best blood puritiers, acting directly on the
mucous surfaces. The perfect combination
of the two ingredients is what produces
such Onin Tee in curing catarrh.
Send for testimonials, free.
F.J. CHENEY & Co., Props., Toledo, O.
Sold by Jruggists, price, 75¢.
Take Hall’s Family Pills for “constipation.
Electric Heat for Plants.
The. growth of plants is known to
be stimulated by weak electric cur-
rents applied to the soil, but it has
not been supposed to be economical
to use electricity for conversion into
heat for warming hotbeds, as has been
done by G. Hartman in his experi-
ments at Turbine, Ont. His heater
consists of about 260 feet of one-
twelfth-inch iron wire wound in seven
two-inch coils on one and one-half-
inch iron pipe, the coils, connected in
series, being mounted o porcelain
knobs on a piece of abestos board. A
frame about 6 by 8 feet in size has
a floor, on which is about five inches
of soil, and the top of the frame is
covered with two sashes. The heater
is placed under the floor. Current is
taken from a 110-velt circuit, but the
encrgy actually received last year was
fifleen amperes at eighty-volts. This
gave sufficient heat. The hotbed was
kept quite warm, and tender flowers
and vegetables developed rapidly in
the early spring weather.
The Bristol to
land) express covers 11815
two hours.
Class
by wire
of
miles in
telephone poles reinforced
are being used in some parts |
Germany.
populations are dead and don’t know |
more |
Paddington (Eng- |
HEALTH VERY POOR---
RESTORED BY PE-RU-NA.
Catarrh Twenty-five Years
---Had a Bad Cough.
Miss Sp Kittlesen, Evanston, Il-
linois, U. S. A., writes:
“I have been troubled with catarrh for
pearly twenty-five years and have tried
pany cures for it, but obtained very little
hel
“Hen m
| Peruna, and I
| “My health Li “very N° or at the time I
began taking Peruna. My throat was very
| sore and 1 had a bad cough.
“Peruna hascured me. The chronie
catarrh is gone and my health is
very much improved.
“I recommend Peruna to, all my friends
who are troubled as 1 was.
ERUNA TABLETS: —Some people pre-
fer tablets, rather than medicine in a fluid
| form. Such people can obtain Peruna tab-
lets, whic: represent the medicinal ingredi-
cents of Peruna. Each tablet equals one
average dose of Peruna.
brother advised me to try
Man-a-lin the Ideal Laxative.
MANUFACTURED BY PERUNA DRUG
HANUFAGTURING COMPANY, COLUMBUS, 0
Curbing the Chauffeurs.
A Seattle (Wash.) jury has found
guilty of murder an automobilist who
ran over and killed a little girl. Con-
viction is in the second degree, car-
rying a penalty of from one to 20
years’ imprisonment and a fine of
$5,000. A Boston automobilist who
caused the death of a woman has been
held for court and an effort is to be
made to provide another object lesson
for criminally careless chauffeurs.
The police authorities of Chicago and
leading automobile owners and deal-
ers have joined hands in an endeav-
to suppress the scorching motorists,
and the penalty for infraction of the
speed laws hereafter is to be imprison-
ment instead of a fine.
ET Wm— 1
The laymen of the various denom-
inations in Atlanta have pledged
themselves to raise $100,000 for for-
eign missions during the coming year.
A new process has been discovered
in China by which ramie fiber be-
comes a soft filasse in a few minutes.
psy) I
8 If you suffer from Fits, Fallin, Sickness
Spasms, or have Children that LE 80, my o
i New Discovery and Treatment
= will give them Immediate relief, and
all you are asked to do is to send for
a Free Bottle of Dr. May's
EPILEPTICIDE CURE
Complies with Food and Drugs Act of Congress
June 30th 1906. C. ‘omplete directions, ose tes.
timonials of CURES, etc., FREE by mail,
Express Prepaid. Give AGE and full address
W. H. MAY, M, D., 548 Pearl Street, New York.
AIN CURE---2 guaranteed vegetable house.
nold remedy for external and
internal pain coughs colds, catarrh. Acts like
magic. Simple, safe, sure. In powder form, by
mail, 25¢. Pain Cure Co., 147 W. 66th St., N.Y. City,
P. NU, 22, 1933.
| WIDOWS under NEW LAW Obtained
| PENSIONS "vialiiln! 56>
WE GIVE AWAY OVER 1000
Valuable Household and Fancy Articles Free, in
Exchange for Carton Tops and Soap Wrappers
from “20 Mule-Team”
Team”
” Borax Products.
40-page Illustrated Catalogue.
Borax and “20 Mule-
Send Postcard for
Address
PACIFIC COAST BORAX CO.. NEW YORK.
FOR
7”
MEN
The standard average of the bottom of the male foot dictates the
shape of SKREEMER shoes.
in structure.
label.
They fit because they are scientific
They have fit along with smart style.
If you do not find these shoes readily,
‘Look for the
write us for directions how to secure them.
FRED. F. FIELD CO., Brockton, Mass.
oF SHOES AT ALL
# FRICES, FCR EVERY
MEMBER OF THE FAMILY,
MEN, BOYS, WOMEN, MISSES AND CHILDREN.
A Pouglizs makes and sells more “<8
= Ww.
BE™ hen ’'s $2.5
8, $5.08 and $32.50 shoes
than any other manufacturer In the
- world, because they
hold thelr “G38
shape, (if better, wear longer, and
are of greater va
shoes in Ihe Sorid fo-day.
nd $5 Gilt Edge St
V. L. De
fue than any other ==8
oes Cannot Be Equalled At Any Pri