—— BANK Slumbers, attie ’ the Rus- ‘arterville, was dyna- d. The r and the ere await- exploding who was the bank, pon reach- t through was. sta- ‘ Pulley oused the slop the away with in which ed. The > and an in pursuit. us i 40 Feet ands. keleton of - long and n the Bad Mont., by Z, connect- [useum of has been t took 16 y the rail hing 4,000 fossil as a 1g of the LED Ex-Gover- rror. ed States granted a ecision of in which rit of ha- K. Thaw yankruptey > case will Argument ~ ex-Gover- urg, attor: the local avy, with | extended eading do- s follows: eces: XX, 0. 1 wash: hed, 21 to 24 to 25c; 3%-blood | combing, '35¢c; de I; the Atlan- e 19th aft. lobe. The uth navy auled, and bama cast +The Te: entertain. battleships rom their wail. Viissions. riation of “nthe jossessions tion of the ry society 1° church. this sum by varicus untry, but represent: the coun- al support. ms. e conven- ualists as- 1 to force and “false eir profes: g commu- ms whese establish yeyongd re- from this ress Com- ular semi- ent, paya- Company emi-annual. yn its pre- mber 2 to nited Rail re approx- equal to the earth- says the ouse Elec- han 50,000 ave been 1 the de- committee, ral of the ands with- ec Pennsyl- yw on busl- Death. oose flled to a Union lown from unction by vere killed 3 injured. canyon at ose rolled ant to the e car was the unfor- ugh and is in a? - a HON. R. S. THARIN. Hon. R. S. Tharin, Attorney at Law and Souneel for Anti-Trust League, writes from ennsylvania Ave. .,, Washington, D. C., as follows: “Having used Peruna for catarrhal disorders. 1 am able to testify to its 3 great remedial excellence and do not hesi- ~ -tate to give it my emphatic endorsement and earnest recommendation to all persons affected by that disorder. Tt is also a tonic of great wsefulness.’”’ Mr. T. Barnecotf, West Aylmer, On- tario, Can., writes: “Last winter I was ill with pneumonia after having la grippe. took Peruna for two months when I became quite well. I also induced - 8 young lady, who was all run down and confined to the house, to take Peruna, and after taking Peruna for three months she is able to follow her trade of tailoring. I can recommend Peruna for all who _ are ill and require a tonic.” : i Pe-ru-na Tables. Some people prefer to take tablets rather than to take medicine in a fluid orm. Such people can obtain Peruna tablets, which represent the solid medicinal rodients of “Pcruna. Fach tablet is cquivalent to one average dose of Peruna. {CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS) CURE FOR PILES JAMPLE TREAJLMENT of Red Cross Pile i and Fistula Cure and book explaining Piles sent free. REA CO..Dept. B4 Minneapolis. Minn Tax on Cats. It is really difficult to understand :, why the cats have escaped their share of public responsibility. Few thinkers will dispute the . statement that such animals are entirely too . numerous. The weil-fed, well-groom- ed cat, that stays at home and attends to its knitting by the family hearth is not a menace to the public wel- _ fare, but who will defend the sad- eyed tomcat with the tragic voice that sings wild dirges at dreary mid- night’s cheerless hour? And his name is legion. = One cat-of that description is a reater nuisance than a dozen dogs. d it may also be said of the cat that it is a born thief and porch- climber, and it is also a vehicle for disease germs and many other things which are unpleasant. If cats were taxed, the useful ones would survive and the masterless ones would have to die the death; and there are few who will argue that such a consum- mation is net devoutly to be wished for.—Emporia Gazette. — 44 Use fer Hammocks. Take an cld hammock, and if worn through in places cut out the good part and make bags according to the size of the pieces. These bags are useful for rag bags, stocking bags, ete. These bags can be improved ~ by making a fringe along the bot- tom from the cords of the hammock. Curing Vagaboids. The Luxemburg government is treating incorrigible vagabonds to bread and water for the first four days of their imprisonment, and {o the low. est scale of ordinary diet twice a week afterward. The prisons are said to be emptying fast. ASTONISHED THE DOCTOR Old Lady Got Well With Change of Food, A great scientist has said we can put off “old age’ if we can only nour- ish the body properly. To do this the right kind oM™food, of course, is necessary. The body manufactures poisons in the stomach and intestines from certain kinds of food stuffs and unless sufiicient of the right kind is used, the injurious ele- ments overcome the good. “My grandmother, 71 years old,” writes a N. Y. lady, “had been an in- - valid for 18 years from. what was cailed consumption of the stomach and. bowels. The doctor had given ‘to die. hen go much about Grape-Nuts that I persuaded grandmother to try it. She could.not keep anything on her stcmach for more than a few min- utes. «gh, began Grape-Nuts with only a teaspoonful. As that did not distress her and as she could retain - it, she took a little more until she could take all of four teaspoonfuls at a meal. “Phen she began to gain and grow strong and her trouble in the stomach was gone entirely. She got to enjoy good health for one so cld, and we know Grape-Nuts saved her lite. : “The doctor was astonished that instead of dying she got well, and without a drop of medicine alter she began the Grape-Nuts.’ “Theres a eason.” Be given by Postum Co., Baule Creek, Mich. Read “The Road Wellville,” in pkgs. Jiver read the above letter? A tow one appears frem time to time. They rine, true, and full of human + LC are gent interest. PEARLS OF THOUGHT. No man is too dull to be a bore. The man who buys his friends hasn’t any. 3 All men may have equal rights, but only a few get them. It doesn’t require nearly so much ef fort to run into debt as to crawl out. It is one thing to catch on, but quite another thing to know when to let go. : : It’s: a toss-up between the quitter and the fellow who never knows when he is licked. : We seldom appreciate the good things of life until they have assumed the past tepse. ; If a real man should make love like the hero of a play the girl would be scared to death. - Most men would like to be rich enough to feel that they could afford to marry for love. It may be better to have loved and lost than never to have loved at all but it isn’t so cheap. A woman can’t be expected to know how to manage a husband until “she has had at least three. If a woman is pleased with herself the opinion of the rest of the world is of secondary importance. It takes a man. half his life to find out who his friends are, and the oth- er half to locate his enemies. When a girl refuses a fellow and he threatens to blow his brains out,.it merly proves that he hasn't any. Some people acquire the habit of looking for trouble to such an extent that they weculd be lonesome without it. : There are people who always im- press me as looking for the worst and being terribly disappointed if it doesn’t happen.—From “The Gentle Cynic” in the New York Times. THE CHILTERN HUNDREDS. One of the Political Curiosities of Great Britain. This is a survival of the time when the people were very jealous of the crown and were constantly in fear that the throne would destroy the in- dependence of the commons by cor- rupting members with offices, a use of patronage not entirely unknown in present day America. To prevent that, it was wisely required that a member inust give his constituents an opportunity -te approve or disapprove of his course by expressing their con- fidence by a re-election to parliament or showing their displeasure by de- feating him. Of course, nowadays a seat in the cabinet is not at the dis- posal of the sovereign, but is solely the gift of the prime minister, the party chief, s0 that no question of bribery can enter into the acceptance of a place under the government. But the electorate still reserves to itself the right of approval, and the new minister, after he has accepted office, but before he can take his seat in the house of commons as a minister of the crown, must have the assent of | his constituents. 7 Curicusly enough—and this is inter- esting as showing “how the English people cling to tradition—there is no provision made for the resignation of a member cf parliament and the only way in which he can resign is for him to accept an office of profit and trust under the government and decline re- election. There is a nominal and fic- titious post known as the stewardship of the Chiltern Hundreds, a district in Buckinghamshire, © whose steward some centuries ago was charged with he duty of suppressing robbers and who was, of course, compensated for | his services. ~~ “A member who desires to retire or to seek re-election because he has en- tered the government, applies to the prime minister to be appointed stew- ard of the Chiltern Hundreds, which vacates his seat. The appointment is duly published in the official gazette, and the vacangy in the house of com- mons is thus created. There is, of course, no limit to the number of per- cons who may be appointed stewards of the Chiltern Hundreds, although it is the unwritten law that the appoint- ment must not be conferred twice on the same day. If there were a dozen men who wanted to resign at the same turn.—Maurice Low in Forum. Too Much Business. Mayor Speer of Denver was talking the other day about a pair of political tricksters. ! “They gave themselves away,” said. “Don’t tricksters always give themselves away? It reminds me of the two men who wanted to sell their corpses for dissection. “These two men, miserably clad, called .on the dean of a medical col- lege in New York. “‘We are both on the verge of star- vation, sir,” the spokesman said. ‘We are well on. in years. and it is clear that we haven’t much longer to live. Would you care to purchase our bod- ies for your dissecting room?’ “The dean hesitated. “ ‘It is an odd proposition,” he mut- tered. “ ‘But it is occasionally done,” said the spokesman in an eager voice. “ “Well,” said the dean, ‘we might arrange it. What price do you ask? “*Over in - Philadelphia,’ said. the spokesman, ‘they gave us $40. "— Washington Star. Goodness Nose! When the clerk inf tomer that the h seven dollars and fi latter remarked, “No, That’s too he ormed the caus kerchiefs were cents each, the sirree! much mon- rary. ey to blow in!”’—Judge’s Li time, thcy would have to take their | FINANCE AND TRADE REVIEW WEEKLY TRADE SUMMARY Usual Dullness Prevails, but There Is Gratifying Decrease. in Idle Machinery. ‘R. G. Dun & Co.’s weekly review of trade says: ew Ante-election. lassitude is general in the commercial world, especially as to the placing” of contracts for mew undertakings, but there is a gratifying decrease in idle machinery at manu- facturing plants, testifying to confi- dence in‘ a.-good. demiand when the present uncertainty is over. Lack of rain has been a scricus setback, low water retarding mill work and river shipments, while winter wheat is get- ting a poor start and forest fires cause great damge. Collections im- prove:in farming sections as the crops are sold, but are still only fair cn the whole. - Considering the amount of business in the iron and steel industry that is known to be held back until after election, this week’s new orders are encouraging, although the sales of pig iron were at prices most favorable to the buyer. i Textile plants are more fully occu- pied and a befter tone is apparent in the primary ‘markets, buyers exhibit- ing a greater degree of interect. Prospects are considered most fa- vorable” im the footwear industry, in- dications: being seen in certain quar- ters of a disposition to purchase on a more liberal basis than at any previ ou time this year. Thus far, how: ever, actual improvement is irregular. “Bradstreet’s say: Business fail ures in the United. Siates for the week ending October 22 number 231, against 244 last week, 220 in the like week of 1967, 184 in 1906, 178 in 1905 and 180 in 1904. Business failures in Canada for’ the week ending with October 22 number 81, which com- pares with’ 29 last’ week and 39 in this week last year. Prime wethers...........1...+ froin nants Good mixed . Veal calves THE PUMPKIN. For all general uses the pumpkin ig dryer and sweeter baked. Cat in quarters or halves, remove all seeds and place in a large dripping pan. Bake, without adding water, for about one hour, or even less, according to size. The skin will then be soft and crispy and the flesh. dry and mealy. Scrape out with a spoon, put into a colander and press through. It is then ready for pies, pancakes or croquettes. All the watery juice that exudes should be saved to make a loaf of delicious pumpkin juice brown bread. The seeds are appetizing and among the Italians take the place of our salted nuts. Wash fre2 from the sticky shreds that surrcund them, hen dry in the sun or a rather cool y to salt, spread on oven. When read a baking pan, salt liberally, then set in a hot oven, shaking and stirring often until cricp.—New York Tele: gram. “Alone for my ear art thou sing- ing,” occurring in a poem of recent vintage, indicates, to the Louisville Courier-Journal he author was under the i of the {uito during the act cf compo- MARKETS. PITTSBURG. Wheat—No. 2 red 85 9) Rye—No.2..: Corn—No 2 yellow, ear.. 95 93 No. 2 yellow, shelled. 87 88 Mixed oar.....#......: nd 73 Oats—No. 2 whito:....... o 54 55 —= INO. While. ve deme sess vees ten . 1 2 53 Flour—Winter patent............. %80 3 90 . Fancy straight winters........ IFay—No.1 Timothy.............. 15 CO Olover No, 1,.)......cciiv vie 12 5) Feed—No. 1 white mid. ton....... 31 00 Brown middlings.......... 28 50 Bran, bulk.......-...... 3 - 26 57 Siraw—Wheat..... ..........sve § 0 BUG sata sales frente nena 8 C0 Dairy Products. ; Butter—Elgin creamery........... $§ ‘0: £2 Ohlo creamery............. “ 21 26 Fancy country roll 19 23 Cheese—Ohio, DOW. ..c..vuvuunee. a. 4 15 New York. now................. M- 15 Poultry, Etc. Hens—por 1b... isciivvirnre ied 8H 15 Chickens—dressed................. ‘8 20 Eggs—Pa. and Ohio, fresh......... 2) 20 Fruits and Vegetables. Potatoes—Fandcy white per bu.... 8). £5 Cabbage—per ton............ ove '3% 150 Onions--per barrel...: «0200 R25 BALTIMORE. Flour—Winter Patent.............$ 0 5 90 Wheat—No. 2 re vi 102 Corn—Mixed., 71 8 BES vies cid si Eder es i I~ Butter—Ohio creamery.....c..ueees £ 22 PHILADELPHIA. Flour—Winter Patent............. $ 590 57D “Wheat—No. 2 red.......... or Corn—No. 2 mixed -8 3 Jats—No. white 3 4 Butter—Creamery........... 30 51 Eggs—Pennsylvania firsts....... g «6 “9 NEW YORK, Flour—Patents............. eduee. SF B80 5 9) Wheat—No. 276d. ...ccearniinnensres iy CorR—No:8,...... 00. css neiase 9) 90 Oats—No. 2 white................. . Lod ab Butter -Creamory .............. os 20 £X Eggs—State and Pennsylvania... 27 33 LIVE STOCK. Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg. CATTLE. Extra, 1450 to 1600 pounds.......... 575@ 600 Prime, 1300 to 1400 pounds. 295i @ 534 Good, 1200 to 1206 pounds.. 50 @ 530 Tidy, 105) to 1150 pounds. 44) @ 50) - Fair, 90) to 110) pounds... L350 @42 Common, 70J to 900 pounds 30) @ 400 HE sete ea ies aan ..300@ 450 Cows... ...... saasis san nerssoytasaic rae 160) @54 0 : HOGS Prime, heavy... ........... .600@61) Prime, medium weight. >@ 57H Bost heavy Yorkers .. ) @ 5 60 Light Yorkers..... 515@ 625 Plus 475@5 00° Rough yh @D To Stags... 40) @4 75 SHEEP Truth and Quality appeal to the Well-Informed in every * walk of life and are essential to permanent guccess and creditable standing. Accor: ingly, it is not claimed that Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna is the only remedy of known value, but one of many reasons why it is the best of personal and family laxatives is’ the fact that it cleanses, sweetens and relieves the internal organs on which it acts without any: debilitating after effects and without having to increase the quantity from time to time. It acts pleasantly and naturally and truly as a laxative, and its component.| parts are known to and approved by physicians, as it is free from all objection- able substances. To get its beneficial effects always purchase the genuine— manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co., only, and for sale by all leading drug- gists. Chinese Constitution. China’s proposed new constitution has been proclaimed to the people. While it is cpen' to much criticism from the Western viewpoint it is such an enormous advance in China that its defects may be overlooked. In any event, it is only a beginning and if brought into successrul operation it will be improved by the most pa-| tient people on earth. It .is remarkable that the granting of this constitution is the voluntary act of the Chinese rulers. That nine years is given for its gradual intro- duction is characteristic of the Chi- nese Empire. A Nation that has en- dured for so many centuries as China need not be in haste to change its governmental forms. But of one thing we may be sure. The Constitution in China is the be- ginning of a new era, in which Oceci- dental civilization shall have a larger part. - The awakening has begun. We may not anticipate a duplication of Japanese developments, for the Chi- nese nature differs in important par- ticulars, but we may expect as wonderful metamorphosis, with more faithfulness in copying the American: model.—Pittsburg Dispatch. Rheumatism Prescription. The increased use of whiskey for rheumatism is causing considerable discussion among the medical frater- nity. It is an almost infallible cure when mixed with certain other ingre- dients and taken properly. The fol- lowing formula is effective: half pint of good whiskey add one ounce of Toris Compound and one ounce of Syrup Sarsaparilla: Com- pound. Take in tablespconful doses “To one-.| before each meal and before retiring.” Toris Compound is a preduct of the laboratories of the Globe Pharma- ceutical Co., Chicago, but it as well as the other ingredients can be had from any good druggist. Lemon Extrac:. As this is the season of the year when lemons are plentiful, it is econ- omy for housekeepers to make their own extract. This is the recipe: Cut the rinds of three lemons into one-half pint of alcohol. Let stand for six days, then pour into bottles and add one ounce of oil of lemon. A few drops will flavor a cake nicely. An Cunce of Prevention. If your cellar is dark and you are afraid of accident when going down the steps, have the last step whiten- ed, so that you will easily know when you are at the bottom. You can see Ast pr The cleanest lightest and most comfortable POMMEL Atthe same time / cheapest in the end because it wears longest / *390 Everywhere f= Every garment, \ guaranteed : waterprcof Catalog free 3 308 AJ TOWER CO. BOSTON, U.S A, E TOWER CANADIAN CO. LIMITED, TORONTO CAN. PU A New Crop. The newest pioneering crop is milo. It is a sort of corn which has made itself staple in the drier uplands of Texas, New Mexico, Colorado, Kansas and Oklahoma. This territory takes a carying annua] rainfall of 17 to 25 inches. Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma- tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25¢ca bottle. The Country Will Survive. This country is greater than its parties, and business will adapt it- self to conditions, not to theories of misfortune or prophecies of politi- cians. It is even certain, in the Im probable event that we chall exper- ience a continuance of administration assaults upon confidence, State or na- tional, that it will be checked either by its own antitexins or by the con- servative effect of our courts adminis- tering our constitutional safeguards of prosperity.— New York Times. im- The Standard Oil Company has in- TNAM FADEL Color more goods brighter and faster colors than any other dye. can dye any garment without ripping apart, Write for free booklet—How to stituted barge service across the At- lantic Ocean for the transportation | of oil in bulk, Two large steel! barges will be towed back and forth | by oil-carrying steamers. : INVENTS YOUTH MACHINE After Forty Years’ Study Paysician at Seventy-Six Restores Youth : and Vigor. Sir James Grant of Canada, who delivered the closing address at the meeting of the British association, is seventy-six years cold, but has all the vigor of a man of fifty. on It is a remarkable ifact that Sir James, for many years the most fa- | mous of Canadian doctors, attributes his own recovery of youth-to a sim- ‘ple add ingenious -little machine which, after forty. years of experi- ment; he discovered last year. He delivered a full account of i{ to the psychological section. a The instrument, called a neuros- trone, for which the electrical force is provided by .a dry cell, acts direct- ly on. the -inactive centers, which be- come largely poiscned by noxious gases as people’grow older. Clean- “ing them out by electricity in conse- quence adds new vigor to the system, and .greatly lengthens the span of life. In his own case Sir James said that he had been enabled to give up spectacles, which he had used for a generation, as well as to increase general activity by means of his in- strument. The discovery is the first successful application cof electricity to human digestion. BABY'S AWFUL ITCHING HUMOR. Nothing Would Help Him—DMother Almost in Despair—Owes Quick Cure to Cuticura. “Several months ago, my little boy began to break out with itching sores. I doctored - him, but as soon as I got them healed up in one place théy would break out in an- other. I was almost in despair. I could not get anything that would help him. Then I began to use Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment, and after using them three times the sores commenced to heal. He is now well, and not a scar is left on his body. They have never returned nor left him with bad blood, as one would think. Cuticura Remedies are the best I have ever tried, and I shall highly recom- mend them to any one who is suffering likewise. Mrs. William Geeding, 102 Wash- ington St. Attica, Ind., July 22, 1907.” y Rural Free Delivery. There is little doubt that the spread of the free delifery system has had a potent effect in carrying a greater degree of enilghtenment among hosts of voters. The rural carriers now number approximately 40,000 or the strength of a full army corps; and their vehicles are in evi- dence in all the thickly populated States of the Union. The aggregate influence of the prompt dissemination of the news, which is made practica- ble through their agency, is bound ‘o be lasting and important.—Philadel- phia Bulletin. To Wash Pongee. To launder pongee silk and keep it from spotting, wash as follows: Make good suds with any good soap, wash gently with the hand, and then rinse in luke-warm water. Press, not wring, the water out; then, when | nearly dry, iron with a moderately hot iron, and the ilk will look new, while if dampened in the usual way after the silk has dried, it turns very spotted after being ironed. How's This? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by his firm. : Warning, KiNNAN & Marvin, Whole sale Druggists, Toledo, O. . Hall's Catarrh Cure istakeninternally, act- ing directly upon the blood and mucuous sur- faces of the system. 'lestimonials sent free. Price, 75¢. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Take Hall's Family Piils for constipation. Excavations carried out in the sac- red precints of Olympia, Greece, near the great altar of Zeus, have resulted in the discovery of interesting re- ‘mains of the neolithic period, includ- ing house vessels and implements. Thus it is believed to be evident that Olympia was a place oi numan habi- taticn more than 2,000 vears before Christ. 7 SYDENHAM a . Former Governor James K. Varda- man of Mississippi, has made a defin- ite announcement that he will re-enter ; Send for book, “flelief tor the -field of journalism. HELP Insist on Havinzx | FCR Er. MAK] EL’S Preparation | > ‘The Siand i nif WOMEN “heSmadar a. Hf | ro al} NiBors colors all fibers. One 10e. pack FeenfRoh § Pe SEE poco uss, Ea, 3 U.S.A, PB | Bec. Us oar orm | RHEL: CAN A WOMEN LOVE TWO MEN AT THE SAME TIME = Love them both equally, but in a different way? Mrs. Ruth verett in her novel, “THAT MAN FROM WALL STREET” (the best forbid- den love story published), claims that a woman the author right, I the two, second best, one on either side, $10 each. on- tzstcloses Mch. 1,1 Awards paid Mch_ 21, '09 can. What do you think aboutit ? { 5 0 00 For the best letter, 500 = pay $25. For the best letter which proves Two, third-best, one on either side, $5 each.. Four, fourth best; two on either side, $2.50 each. Forty, Regular Price $1.50--My Prics By Mail $1.0 L. H. HAMMITT, 400 MANHATTAN AVE., NEW YBRK CiTv words or less, showin { I her in error, $25. fifth best, twenty on each side, $1.50 each. mg EMEDIES Heart, Stomach, Liver, Bowel, Kidney, Nerve, = Rheumatism and Blood. : Absolutely Pure and Efféctive. Describeyour case; send us 25¢. for trial bottle. SYDENFKAM TABLET CO., 146 East 50th 8t., - New York City. b>" BFor Sale i200 ms Wea in-14 States: Strout’s mame " mothillustrated ei of bare World's Largest Farm Dealers, Land Title Bldg., Pi il Baseball and Politics. To speak of the general enthusiasm of the country over baseball, would be mere repetition of what was: said when the two leagues were having their final battles for the penants last week. It is worth a moment’s at- tention, however, to consider the fact that five games of baseball in a world’s championship series, at grand opera prices for admission, piayed in two cities, have brought gross receipts in excess of $100,000. If money talks, it, too, : declares th popularity of baseball. : And now let us catch our breath and watch the curves cf Mr. Taft of Chio and Mr. Bryan of Nebraska.— Chicago Herald-Record. A Sense of Security. “Weren’t your worried about the members of your family during their long absence from home?” “Not at all. I don’t own an auto- mobile and none of them think: they can swim or sail a boat.”—Washing- ton Star. Proof is imexhaustible ihat Lydia E. FPinkham’s Vegetable Compound carries women safely through the Change of Life. Read the letter Mrs.”E. Hanson, 304 E. Long St., Columbus, Ohio, writes to Mrs. Pinkham: “I was passing through the Change of Life, and suffered from mnervous- ness, headaches, and cther annoying symptoms. My doctor told me that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- pound was good for me, and since tak- ing it I feel so much better, and I can again do my own work. I never forget to tell my friends what Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound did for me during this trying period.” FACTS FOR SICK WORIEN, 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- ing-down feeling, flatulency, indiges- tion, dizziness or nervous prestration. Why don’t you try it ? Mrs. Pinkham invites all Cir Sh has guided thousands bealtli, Address, Lynn, M=a TIOEE NOW C1 ARGH or: wriie quick. DR. 5 i ow, ESS DYES wo They uye, Lleaea aad Mix Coior Po. N. U. 44 av. If afliictesd wer Thompson'sEye Wate You incis. dre in ¢ ; 0. r better than anv othe: dye. s. MONRe { RUG CU. Guiney, IH Es The foundation of shoe comfort must be at the bot- tom, and if the bottom of the shoe is different from the bottom of your foot it 10 SKREEMER shoes are built from the round up to FIT. Loo or the label. If you don't easily find these shoes, write us for directions how to secure them. FRED. F. FIELD CO. BROCKTON, MASS. Te If every cough you catch s n't let the cor} a with I It acts prom reduces the congestion, frees the s the cough. throat of For nearly ha 3 oxst forms cf coughs, colds and ch PISO’S CURE