The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, June 11, 1908, Image 7

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General
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British
silver panes in mosaic
en —————
wf
One of the
Essentials
of the happy homes of to-day is a vast
fund of information as to the best methods
of promoting health and happiness and
right living and knowledge of the world’s
best products. Z
Products of actual excellence and
reasonable claims truthfully presented
and which have attained to world-wide
acceptance through the approval of the
Well-Informed of the World; not of indi-
viduals only, but of the many who have
the happy faculty of selecting and obtain-
ing the best the world affords.
One of the products of that class, of
known component parts, an Ethical
remedy, approved by physicians and com-
mended by the Well-Informed of the
World as a valuable and wholesome family
laxative is the well-known Syrup of Figs
and Elixir of Senna. To get its beneficial
effects always buy the genuine, manu-
factured by the California Fig Syrup Co.
only, and for sale by all leading druggists.
Conincidence.
Now that the government mint has
begun coining gold pieces once more
with the old time motto, “In God We
Trust,” it is of interest to recall the
significant coincidence that the panic
of last year began just about the time
the new coins without the motto made
their appearance. We may indulge
the hope, therefore, that coincident
with the appearance of the coins now
being minted we may note a marked
boom in our reviving national prosper-
ity.—St. Louis Republic.
24
TORTURED FOR SIX MONTHS
: By Terrible Itching Eczema—Baby's
ering was Terrible = Soon
: Entirely Cured by Outicura. :
®¥Eczema appeared on my son’s face. We
went to a doctor who treated him for thiee
months, : Then he was so bad that Lis face
and head were nothing but one sore and
his ears looked as if they were going to fall
off, so we tried another doctor for four
months, the baby never getting any better.
His and legs had big sores on them
and the poor little fellow suffered so ter-
ribly that he could not sleep. After he
had suffered six months we tried a set of
the Cuticura Remedies and the first treat-
ment let him slesp and rest well; in one
week the sores were. gone and in two
months he had a clear face. Now he is
two years and has never had eczema again.
Mrs, Louis Beck, R. ¥, D. 3, San Antonio,
Tex., Apr. 15, 1907,”
Better Colored Glass.
An improved ornamental glass—
more transparent than the old and
designed to reflect and transmit light
of substantially the same color—has
been developed by Fritz Puhl and Au-
gust Wagner of Berlin. The gold or
work have
been made by pouring melted glass
upon a metal film and then causing a
thin sheet of glass to adhere to the
film by heating, the product being a
glass reflecting gold or silver light,
but almost opaque, the feeble light
transmitted being of a dirty yellow or
gray color. In the new process the
metal ‘is made to thoroughly coalesce
with the glass. The film is applied
to the first layer of glass mechanical-
ly or by chemical or electrolytic meth-
od, and melted glass is then poured
on to form the second layer, giving
perfect union and great transparency.
The panes have a beautiful golden or
silvery luster by reflected light, while
the trasmitted rays are more or less
colored and give a pleasing antique
effect. Mosaics may be made up
with both the new glass and the old,
and the new material is adapted not
only for windows, but for lanterns,
lamp chimneys and other uses.
This woman says Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound
saved her life. Read her letter.
Mrs. T. C. Willadsen, of Manning,
Iowa, writes to Mrs. Pinkham:
“I can truly say that Lydia E. Pink-
ham’s Vegetable Compound saved my
life, and 1 cannot express my gratitude
to you in words. For years I suffered
with the worst forms of female com-
plaints, continually doctoring and
spending lots of momey for medicine
without help. I wrote you for advice,
followed it as directed, and took Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and
it has restored me to perfect health.
Had it not been for you I should have
been in my grave to-day. I wish every
guffering woman would try it.”
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 troubled with
displacements, inflammation, ulcera-
tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities,
periodic pains, backache, that bear-_
fl tulency, indiges-
-
Tis
ing-down fee
tion, zzing
0
‘Why don’t you try it?
Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick
women to write Ler for advice.
She has guided thousands to
health. Address, Lynn, Mass.
miei Thompson'sEye Water
FINANGE AND TRADE REVIEW
IDLE MACHINERY NOW
LESS
Progress Shown in Primary
Goods Market—Good Volume
of Contracts.
Dry
New York.—R. G. Dun & Compa-
ny’s “Weekiy Review of Trade’ says:
“Improvement continues in com-
mercial channels, increased manufac-
turing activity ahd seasonable weather
being the dominant influences of the
past week. In all leading industries
there is less idle machinery and sta-
ple lines of merchandise at retail
quickly respond to the larger pay
rolls. Mercantile collections are al-
£0 more prompt. While the first
week in June compares favorably with
any previous week this year, there
still appears a large decrease in com-
parisen with the volume of business
in the same week of 1907.
A lower price for steel bars was the
most significant event of the week in
the iron and steel industry. It came
as a surprise because at the recent
meeting of leading interests it was
agreed that no reduction would be
made, and the trade is now waiting
for better terms in other depart-
ments. Much pending business will
be deferred if there is any prospect
of a genera] cut in prices, although
special conditions existing in the bar
market do not prevail elsewhere, no-
tably the competition of iron bars for
the season’s requirements for agri-
cultural implement makers that must
soon be met.
“Primary dry goods markets have
made further progress, recent reduec-
tions in prices bringing out a good
volume of contracts indicating that
no better terms are anticipated. In
the jobbing trade the only noteworthy
activity comes from duplicated mail
orders. Woolen mills are somewhat
more active, but supplemented orders
are not liberal, and the season’s trade
thus far is much below normal.
‘“‘Better buying of footwear con-
tinues. Large ‘buying of glazed kid
indicates: that morocco leather foot-
wear is displacing patent and enamel
shoes to some extent.”
MARKETS.
PITTSBURG.
Wheat—No. 2 red..
. o—No, 2
CornaRo 2 Yellow, ear..
0. 2 yellow, shelled..... 79 80
Mizeq ear................ . iT 73
Oats—No. 2 white. 57 58
No.3 white,.............. “ 56 wy
Flogp-Wanset Patent. : 515 5 20
‘ancy straight winters
Hay—No. 1 Timothy 1500 15 5)
Clover No. 1..... 1400 14 50
Feed—No. 1 white mid. ton 2000 29 50
Brown middlings........ 2,00 2709
Bran, bulk...........civenmennns 250 27 00
8 raw heat..... .e 850 9 00
Oatley, Sire eeeriirsviosdnndtevorsne 85) 9 00
Dairy Products.
Butter—Elgin creame: 23
Ohio creamery. . 20 21
Fancy country 17 18
Cheese—Ohio, new... . 15 17
New York. new.............+e.0 16 17
Poultry, Etc.
Hons—per Ib.......ccoaevvecnnn oe: 17 13
Chickens—dressed......:..ceeeeens 12 13
Eggs—Pa. and Ohio, fresh......... 17 18
Fruits and Vegetables.
Fotaioes Pandy white per bu.... 1 2 3 2
abbage—per ton............ en: 3
Onions—per barrel............ ee =D 50" 6 00
BALTIMORE.
Flour—Winter Patent.............! $3 38)
Wheat—No. 2 red.... vie 102 5
Corn—Mizxed....... 7 7i
BB vrissrrrssnsrsis crane 17 18
Butter—Ohio creamery........... . 2) 2;
PHILADELPHIA.
Flour—Winter Patent............. $ 3) -575
Wheat—No. 2 red. 10
Corn—No. 2 mixed 80 82
Jats—No. 2 white. 54 55
Butter—Creamery. 24 25
Egge—Pennsylvan 17 18
NEW YCRK.
Flour—~Patonts...., ..ecoessssse 5 70
Wheat—No. 2red.. i
Corn—No. 2...... oi
Oats—No. 2 white. ht =
Butter -Cream od
. ~
¥ggs—State and Pennsylvania.... 17 18
LIVE STOCK.
Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg.
Cattle.
Kxtra, 1,450 to 1,60) 1bs....... an W085 7 10
Prime, 1,300 to 1,400 1bs 66) 680
ood, 1,300 to 1.300 lbs... 64) © 60
Tidy, 4,050 to 1,150 1bs...., 61> 64)
Common, 700 to 90) 1bs,... 52 600
A 45) 20)
30) 500
oe 353) 4+ 8)
, $00 t 33) 555
Fresh Cows and Springe; 13) 59)
Hogs.
Prime heavy........... $57 i
Prime medium weight 5 70 5:0
Best heavy Yorkers . 570 5 50
Good light Yorkers. 5 40 551
Plus. iiucini. 538) 54)
ROUGE... 00, leas 47 5 2)
tags ....... as ancsecsh 85) +0)
Sheep.
Prime wethers, clipped. ...........8 4 50 46)
Good mixed... ....oceiuvunnn.nnesee 423 450
Fair mixed ewes and wethers..... 400 4%
Culls and common . . 200 3 30
MDB..ouvassssers viasvinsaes 700. 130)
Calves.
Veal calves .......cocenneerv erence «300 719%
Heavy and thin calves............. 2 00
Among well-authenticated cases of
age, asserts the New York American,
may be mentioned the following: In
Great Britain, Mrs. Margaret Fagan,
104; Samuel Goldstein, 106; Mrs.
Mary Coleman, 107; Catherine, Coun-
tess of Desmond, 140. The records
proved cenclusively that Sir Moses
Morteflore and Admiral Wallis lived
into their second century; that M.
Conerbe, a French farmer, survived
his 112th birthday; that another
Frenchman, M. Soule, died at 115; that
Pascal Vicarn, a Roumanian, lived
120 years, and that an Armenian nun
entered a convent at Jerusalem and
never crossed its threshold to the day
of her death, ninety-eight years later.
These are well-established case, and
others might be given.
Bernoldo in his Calendar says that
in medieval times there was more
food than money given for church
tithes.
A REFLECTION.
“That fellow works for the city.”
“In its panhandle department?”—
New York Press
WAR AGAINST MOSQUITOES
Ninety Separate Species of the Ime
sects Discovered on the Isth- ~
mus of Panama. 7
A government bug hunter has been
down on the Isthmus of Panama col-
lecting mosquitoes in the Canal Zone.
He secured larvae of eighty-three spe-
cies, of which thirty species were new
to science. With seven additional
species already known, this constitu-
tes the largest number recorded from
any one locality on earth, says the
Washington correspondent of the New
York Evening Post. Anybody who is
interested may see the mosquitoes for
himself in the National Museum,
where they have been deposited. Au-
gust Busck is the name of this scien-
tific collector who now holds the mos-
quito record. He spent three months
on the Isthmus during the mosquito-
breeding time, covering the end of
the dry season and the early part of
the rainy season.
It has cost, and is costing, a lot of
money to protect the lives of the men
working in the Canal Zone from the
90 separate species of
now known to exist along the route
of the waterway. Mosquitoes do not
fly very far from the place where
they are born. They keep close to
their food supply. Those that affect
the inhabitants of a town or camp
normally do not come from a distance
greater than two hundred yards.
FITS, St. Vitus’ Dance, Nervous Diseases per-
manently cured by Dr. Kline’s Great Nerve
estorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free,
Dr. H.R. Kline, Ld.,931 Arch St., Phila., Pa.
The Scientist’s View of It.
According to Prof. Hereward Car-
rington of the American Institute for
Scientific Research, twelve ounces of
food daily is enough for any many or
woman.
— ree 24
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children
teething, softens thegums, reduocesinflamma-
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25ca bottle
Fanatical Destroyers.
There is a distinct reminder of the
hard riding and hard praying adher-
ents of Cromwell in this Kentucky
night riding element. The Kentucky
riders do not hesitate to gallop over
law and order to carry out their de-
structive purpose, and now we are
told that they pray as well as destroy.
If the story told by a young couple
who were returning from a party and
fell into the hands of a night riding
band is true, the marauders are shown
in a new and interesting light. The
band at a signal from the leader is
said to have knelt in the roadavay, the
moonlight flooding the bowed heads,
while one of the party offered up a
fervent petition. Then when the amen
was spoken the destroyers sprang to
saddle and were away on their law
defying mission. Before the crime
was committed the young couple were
led down the roadway and told to go
home. But with the recklessness and
curiosity of youth, they lingered until
the torch was applied to a huge ware-
house barn. A As’ the filames arose
high in air the watchers turned home-
ward, the strains of a popular hymn
coming’ to their ears as they passed
1 down the hillside.
It is quite pdssible that these barn
burners and sheriff defiers have con-
vinced themselves that they are jus-
tified fn the raids that have made
night rider a term of terror. If there
is a fanatical taint in their minds—
which is ‘altogether likely—they can
easily believe that a divine providence
favors their scheme of reprisals and
looks with approval upon the smok-
ing embers that mark their ruthless
way.—Cleveland Plain Dealer.
Astronomy in Japan.
So rapid has been the advance of
the Japanese in western civilization
that the party of Japanese merchants
now in London are perhaps much less
astonished at what they see than the
man in the street imagines. The vis-
it to Greenwich observatory may pos-
sibly have been a nevel experience—
as it would be to most Englishmen—
but not because modern astronomy is
unknown in Japan. There are sever-
a] well-equipped observatories in the
Land of the Rising Sun, and the re-
built Naval observatory at Tokio, un-
der the directorship of S. Hirayama,
F. R. A. 8S, is doing work as admira-
bly performed and as permanent in
value as is being done at any similar
institution in the world.—Westmins-
ter Gazette.
Pilea for a Sane Fourth.
There is an article in the June
Century, by Mrs. Isaac L. Rice, on
“Our Barbarous Fourth.” As an evi-
dence of its barbarism, ‘she shows
that during the celebration of five na-
tional birthdays, from 1903 to 1907
inclusive, 1,153 persons were killed
and 21,520 were injured. Of the in-
jured, 88 suffered total and 398 par-
tial blindness; 308 ‘persons lost arms,
legs or hands, and 1,067 lost one or
more fingers.
BUILT UP
Right Food Gives Strength and Brain
Power.
The natural elements of wheat and
barley, including the phosphate of
potash, are found in Grape-Nuts, and
that is why persons who are run
down from improper food pick up
rapidly on Grape-Nuts.
“My system was run down by ex-
cessive night work,” writes a N. Y.
man, “in spite of a liberal supply of
ordinary food. :
“After using Grape-Nuts I noticed
improvements at once in strength and
nerve and brain power.
“This food seemed to lift me up
and stay with me for better exertion,
with less fatigue. My weight in-
creased 20 lbs. with vigor and com-
fort in proportion.
“When traveling 1 always carry the
food with me to insure having it.”
Name given by Postum Co., Battle
Creek, Mich. Read ‘‘The Road to
Wellville,” in pkgs.
Ever read theabove letter? A new
one appears from time to.time. They
are genuine, true, and full of human
{ interest.
mosquitoes
i ing in number
Er —————
The conditions of the Arctic atmo-
sphere are so favorable for the trans-
mission of sound that it is possible
for two persons to converse through
a mile of space.
A Yale professor has just completed
a series of tests which. he claims vin-
dicate diet without flesh foods. For-
ty-nine physicians examined the sub:
jects, which included Yale students,
physicians, nurses and college in-
structors, and the results indicate that
uin-flesheaters have greater endur-
ance than those accustomed to the
ordinary American diet.
Engineers are harnessing mauy of
the walers of the world to the use of
man. A great project is under way to
catck the floods which rush dow: the
Western Ghats, near Bombay, aal to
use the water-power in cotton-mills
ad other factories.
of rocky formation, and with dams at
the lower ends can be made into tignt
reservoirs. Three valleys will be clos-
ed in by dams respectively half a
mile, a mile, and a mile and a Lalf
long.
A’ correspondent of Science, who
has spent many pears in China, where
ingect pests are plenty, writes that
she. fourid alum to be a perfect means
of preventing the ravages ~ of the
clothes ‘moth. After making this dis-
covery the alum was tested severe-
ly in some woolen picture cords,
which were treated to a solution of
the alum and then exposed to the at-
tacks of the moth for several years,
during which time there was not to
be noted the least evidence of their
presence.
The reason why the stomach and in-
testines do not digest themselves was
once thought by Weinland, a German
experimenter, to be that they defend
themselves by anti-enzymes, or anti-
ferments. Dr. Nandor Kiug, of Buda-
Pesth, mow reports these anti-ferments
not to be found, but that the mucin
present in the inner half of the gas-
tric mucous membrane resists the di-
gestive action of the trypsin and the
gastric juice. The digestive organs,
therefore, protect themselves by the
mucin they secrete.
By the best reckoning, the earth's
population, for two centuries or so,
Las been increased at the rate of
about a million a year. From now on,
on account of improved material con-
ditions ‘and the diminution of the
slaughter ‘consequent to war, the ir-
crease’ bids fair to be much grezter.
It has recently been estimated that
the wearth, under present conditions;
might-be able to support a number
treble that of its present population—
that is, about 4,500,000,000—four thcu-
sand five hundred millions. By means
of scientific appliances, and the rec-
lamation of arid and swamp lands,
it has been calculated that the figure
given might be doubled or even irch-
led, giving - ten, or possibly fif%:-n
thousand millions as the ultimate lim-
it of the earth’s: population. »
THE SUN'S HEAT FOR POWER.
Engine of 3 1-2 Horsepower Run With
out the Use of Coal or Wood.
Coal and wood are rapidly becom-
ing scarce. Inventors are turning
their attention to some new fuel
The sun is the cheapest fuel, and of
course, the most plentiful. Concen-
trating the heat from the sun by
means of mirrors, it has been found
possible to make it boil water, and so
drive an engine. The cost of this
process, however, has prevented any
invention on these lines being of prac-
tical importance,
An attempt has been made recent-
ly in this country to solve the problem
in a simpler way, and it bids fair to be
a commercial success. The principle
adopted is that used by the gardener
in his frame, or glass, house. The
heating rays of the sun pass freely
through the glass into the frame, and
escape by radiation much less read-
ily. The heat is “trapped.” To
“trap” the heat in sufficient quantities
to be: used as a source of power, a
large, shallow box is made and cov-
ered with two layers of glass an inch
apart. These two layers of glass and
the inclosed air “trap” hold the heat
much more effectually than the single
glass. Inside the box are coils of pip-
ing, blackened so as to absorb the
heat more readily. In the pipes is
water, or other liquid, which is thus
converted into steam and drives an
engine.
An experimental box of this kind
has bee rected in Philadelphia, and
seems tu be a practical success. The
area of the glass is 1080 square feet,
and by using ether in the pipes a
force of -3 1-2 horsepower has been
obtained in the engine. The initial
cost of construction was $1500, and
the cost of operation is small. The
great advantage is that there. is no
charge for fuel. It is thought that
such a method of utilizing the sun’s
heat will be specially advantageous
in tropical regions.—New York Trib-
une.
Fewer Children.
Facts are steadily accumulating to
prove that the child population of our
large towns is surely decreasing.
From the latest returns of the regis-
trar general it appears that the birth
rate is the lowest on record. Is Great
Britain following the c(xam;le of
France, Australia, and the United
States? And are occidentals diminish-
as Orientals are in-
The valleys ire.
. Lot's Wife. :
A preacher at Atlantic City has
been indulging in some enterprises
that have not been panning out just
as he had calculated. In order to
attract the men to his church and get
them interested in religious matters,
he has been having some “smokers”
at which moving pictures were shown
in connection with the talks he gave.
One evening the theme drew out
Lot’s wife in the act of turning into
salt, when the minister said, “There
she is now, salt, because she turned
her head just as any other woman
would do. Woman is a creature who
cannot resist the command of curios-
ity.” :
It was all spoken in a jocular spir-
it, but when the men told their wives,
they didn’t tell it as a joke; it wasn’t
their business to; they wanted the full
moral lesson to have the effect. And
it did. Those women became indig-
nant. The idea of imputing curiosity
to women, and to have their husband
tell them of it, was too much for the
feminine patience to bear.
So the women broke up the smok-
ers; wouldn't let their husbands go
any more to hear such horrid things
said of them. And then they moved
on the preacher; threatened to stop
going to church; demanded that he
refract, etc. Things became pretty
blue for
promises to take it all back—that he
had mistaken sugar for salt. That
was all—Ohio State Journal.
Busy Days at Mint.
These are busy days at the mint.
There are no signs of industrial de-
pression in the big government build-
ing at Seventeenth and Spring Garden
streets.; The activity in that magni-
ficent structure is due to the unusual
coinage of gold. Since the panic the
New York assay office has sent over
$50,000,000 in gold bullion to the Phil-
adelphia mint to be coined.
Since the first of the current year
the inflow of the glittering metal has
been so great that it forced the offi-
cials of the mint to add more than 40
women adjustors to that department.
The mint turns out more than $800,
000 daily, and within the last four
months more than $70,000,000 has
been coined, which exceeds the
amount coined all last year by $20,-
000,000.—Philadelphia Telegraph.
FIVE MONTHS IN HOSPITAL.
Discharged Because Doctors Could
Not Cure.
Levi P. Brockway, S. Second Ave.,
Anoka, Minn., says: ‘‘After lying for
= five months in a
hospital I was dis-
charged as incura-
ble, and given only
six months to live.
My heart was affect-
ed, I had smother-
ing spells and some-
times
fell uncon-
scious. I got sol
couldn’t use my
arms, my eyesight
was impaired and
the kidney secretions were badly dis-
ordered. [I was completely worn out
and discouraged when I began using
Doan’s Kidpey Pills, but they went
right to the cause of the trouble and
did their work well. 1 have been
feeling well ever since.”
Sold by all dealers. 50cents a box.
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
Messages To a Balloon.
On May 13 several ‘officers of the
signal corps, with Lieutenant Frank
P. Lahm as pilot, made an ascent in
one of the army balloons from Wash-
ington at 1 p. m. and landed at Patux-
ent, a small place near Baltimore, at
4:10. During the course of the flight,
messages were received on board the
balloon from the government's wire-
less station at Annapolis. A special
antenna was suspended from the
basket, and the latter was also envel-
oped in a wire netting. So successful
was the experiment, that Major Rus-
sell believes that balloons will soon be
equipped with wireless apparatus,
which will enable them not only to
receive messages, but also to send
them. With this improvement, the
use of the balloon will be greatly in-
creased in time of war. —Scientific
American,
As History Might Be Taught.
Another way of teaching history
which the schools might adopt has
apparently not yet appealed to them.
A goed newspaper, if the teacher
knows how to interpret its daily rec-
ord, may stimulate an interest in his-
tory itself. If the pupil can be taught
the continuity and relation of events,
an awakened interest in daily happen-
ings will arouse a desire to trace
them back through preceding stages.
It is the break in continuity between
the past and the immediate present
that deadens enthusiasm. By study-
ing history backward from the imme-
diate present this chasm. would be
bridged and the passion for tracing
effect to cause stimulated. — Boston
Transcript.
Do Your Fect Ache and Buran?
Shake into your shoes Allen’s Foot-Ease, a
powder for the feet. It makes tight or
new shoes feel easy. Cures Corns, Bunio:
Swollen, Hot, Smarting and Sweating Fee
and Ingrowing Nails. Sold by all druzgists
and shoe stores, 25 cts. Sample sent E.
Address Allen 8. Olmsted. LeRoy, N. Y.
Spain’s King is the only monarch
who does nct sign his name to docu-
ments and edicts. His signature is
awhile, and the preacher.
QUEEN OF ACTRESSES
PRAISES PE-RU-NA.
7:
25:
MISS JULIA MARLOWE.
“I am glad to write my endorse-
ment of the great remedy, Peruna. I
do somost heartily. ’--Julia Marlowe.
Any remedy that benefits digestion
strengthens the nerves.
The nerve centers require nutrition. If
the digestion is impaired, the nerve centers
as anemic, and nervous debility is the
result.
4400000000000 00 000090900040 04 0000
4
Peruna is not a nervine nor a
stintulant. It benefits the nerves §
by benefiting digestion.
Hv ottdel
+4-0044-0-0-01
Peruna frees the stomach of catarrhal
Songestions and normal digestion is the
result.
In other words, Peruna goes to the bot-
tom of the whole difficulty, when the dis
agreeable symptoms disappear.
Mrs. J. C. Jamison, Wallace, Cal,
writes
.“I was troubled with my stomach for
six years. Was treated by three doctors.
They said that I had nervous dyspepsia.
I was put on a liquid diet for three months.
“I improved under the treatment, but as
soon as I stopped taking the medicine, I
got bad again.
“1 saw a testimonial of a man whose
case was similar to mine being cured by
Peruna, so 1 thought I would give it a
trial.
“1 procured a bottle at once and com-
menced taking it. I have taken several
bottles and am entirely cured.”
Against Cremation.
A court decision that many will
consider reactionary has been handed
down by the highest Prussian eourt,
to the effect that cremation, as a
method of disposing of the bodies of
the dead, is without sanction of law
and may be forbidden by the police
authority in any jurisdiction. Ac-
cording to statistics made public from
time to time, the practice of crema-
tion is slowly but surely growing in
popularity in America. In thickly
populated sections the method has
much to commend itself. For those
who have no religious or sentimental
scruples on the subject, cremation ap-
pears a reasonable and proper meth-
od for disposing of ‘the dead. Hygien-
ically it has nearly everything in its
favor.
The Prussian court elaborates its
decision with the statement that cre-
mation is repugnant to religious sen-
sibilities and therefore it be discour-
aged for more than mere legal rea-
sons. Even though this be the last
word of the highest court of Prussia,
it would appear more than probable
that the decree will be attacked, for
the cremation propagandists will net
be content without making a fight for
reversal or modification of the order.
Mrs. Elizabeth Custer intends to
build a home for impoverished liter-
ary women as a memorial to her hus-
band, who fel] in the Little Big Horn
fight with the Indians 30 years ago.
suffer from Fits, Falling Bickn
or have Bhiideen i 80, in a
New Discovery and Treatment
a ‘will give them immediate relief, <Q
RSV: UI Ti) ive thom Immediate eller, and
j a Free Bottle of Dr. May's
EPILEPTICIDE CURE
Complies with Food and Drugs Act of Oo;
June 30th 1508. Complete directions, also
timonials of CURES, etc., F by ma
Express Prepaid. Give AGE and full sddre
W. B. MAY, M, D., 548 Pearl Street, Kew You
It you
Spasms,
comfort to every g room,
ED
JHE DAISY FLY KILLER jor # all the
ER a
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$] Try them once
§ -and you will nev-
EIN
a Pp
HAROLD SOMERS, 149 DeKalb Ave,, Brooklyn, N. Y.
SAVE THE CARTON TOPS
and Soap Wrappers from
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Products and exchange them for
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40-page illustrated catalegue of 10a
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AIN CURE—2 guaranteed vegetable house.
hold remedy for external and
internal pain Co! 8 col Catan. Ack os
magic. Bimple, safe, sure. In powder form, by
ln Pain Cure Co., 147 W. 66th St., N.Y. Cf
P. N. U. 24, 1903.
PE ew Game
T
simply “Yo, el Ray.”—I, the King.
creasing 7—Second itducation,
men. um sar. OR
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If Toe want a pair of Sho that you Son have to squeeze y,
and wear a week until they get stretched into the shape o ur foot,
buy SKREEME iL
aan foot where your weight comes,
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FRED. F. FIELD CO,
foot into
They, are made to ft the
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Look for the label.
Brockton, Mass.