The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, November 19, 1908, Image 7

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

    hs,
HARMFUL
en's Clubs
ors of
dred dele-
teenth am-
ite Federa-
session in
dirty liter-
Wagner, of
something
mmunicate
in on the
form of a
3 for Octo-
kman, was
a leading
even char-
r marriage
relations.
President
keeping of
is commit-
erations to
think it is
olled mem-
leration of
a note of
and to pro-
ous slime,
ly the day
)CKS
Deal Will
ions.
M. Schwab
eel Compa-
Union Iron
ed that the
sed a con-
1 Francisco
. owns two
nt, in San
a number
| vessels.
the docks
the Union
r establish-
ing marine
1d of dock-
he Pacific
n the deal
rther than
vab that it
ons.
NDICTED
vitalized at
ble.
charge of
tent to de-
connected
1d Develop-
xd at $10,-
the federal
re:
lent of the
- Company;
the Horn-
y; John RE.
aystone Se-
H. Horn,
der, former
of Kansas
the Central
Company.
Senate.
W. Kern,
ndidate for
that he is a
es Senator
enway. The
be Demo-
majority of
's probable
mb of Ter-
‘ge of Dem-
ers at Chi-
campaign;
y National
. Ert Slaek,
d Edward
ement.
his arrival
M. Schwab,
Bethlehem
d that the
orks, which
el corpora-
arged, add-
lS may un-
un into the
'S.
Watterson,
1» of Henry
Louisville
0 his death
of the of-
treet. His
10 feet and
Story build-
every hone
d crushed
ous.
roves.
New York,
-ailroad -cir-
rtant points
, revival of
st week in
isiness was
st year, the
g the great-
wnfall.
Cameron
1e Farmers’
1 guilty to
n the bank
ee years to
MeCallum
gambling in
orse racing.
nator.
ncement is
., a leading
> Mahoning
Il be 2 can-
Senator to
He was in-
opening and
campaign
ident of the
Valley Pig
inent in the
State.
ONE KIDNEY GONE,
But Cured After Doctors Said There
Was No Hope.
Sylvanus O. Verrill, Milford. Me.,
says: “Five years ago a bad injury
paralyzed me and
affected my Kkid-
neys. My back
hurt me terribly,
and the urine was
badly disordered.
Doctors said my
right kidney was
practically dead.
They said I could
A never walk again.
f read of Doan's Kidney Pills and be-
gan using them. One box made me
stronger and freer from pain. I kept
on using them, and in three months
was able to get out on crutches. and
the kidneys were acting better. I im-
proved rapidly, discarded the crutches
and to the wonder of my friends was
soon completely cured.”
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box.
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
47
Dermark’s Bounty on Rats.
A Paris journal suggests that in
order to rid the world of rats the va-
rious governments should offer a re-
ward of one penny for each rat Kkill-
ed. Denmark, it appears, has al-
ready set the example. There, since
a law was passed giving a halfpenny
a head for dead rats, the school boys
of Copenhagen devote their playtime
to hunting rodents. The bodies are
taken to the fire brigade station,
where the tails are cut off in order
that the reward may not be claimed a
seéond time. The bodies are burned
the same night in a furnace at the gas
works.—New York Tribune,
Origin of Sundae.
The sundae is said to have orgin-
ated in New Orleans, where a pro-
gressive but unlucky soda water dis-
penser found himself one warm Sun-
day afternoon entirely out of carbon-
ated water, with no chance to renew
his suuply. There was a constant
demand for his services, and after re-
peatedly answering the embarrassing
question why he was unable to pro-
duce the driuks, in desperation he
hurrriedly mixed ice cream and fruit
8yyups into a frozen concoction which
greatly delighted his customers. Dur-
ing the following weeks days he had
s0 many calls for “that Sunday re-
clipe” that the idea flashed over him
that it would be a good thing to put
it regularly on his bill of fare. A
well-meaning, but uneducated clerk,
whe prepared the menu, did the trick
of transforming “Sunday” into ,‘sun-
dae,” and the palate-tickler has re-
mained ‘sundae’ ever since. No af-
fidavit goes with the story, but it is
recpunted by one of the vldest soda
water apparatus salesman in the bus-
inéss, and it seems reasonable.—
‘What to Eat.
Swiss Have Public Telescope.
The only genuinely public vbserva
tory in the world is at Zurick, Switz.
erland. It is open every evening to
the public, and during the last six
months was visited by no fewer than
25,000 people. The telescope, which
ifs mounted in an entirely new and
ingenious way, is 17 feet 6 inches long
and weighs fourteen tons. Its ob-
ject glass is twelve inches in diame-
ter. Attached to the instrument is
a projecting screen upon which ob-
jects in the heavens are thrown for
the benefit of those waiting to get a
peep through the telescope itself.—
Popular Mechanics.
Breaks a Cold Promptly.
The following formula is a never
failing remedy for colds:
One ounce of Compound Syrup of
Sarasaparilla, one ounce Toris Com-
pound and one-half pint of good
whisky, mix and shake thoroughly
each time and use in doses of a ta-
blespoonful every four hours.
This if followed up will cure an
acute cold in 24 hours. The ingre-
dignts can be gotten at any drug
store.
UPWARD START
After Changing From Coffee to Pos-
tum.
y a
Many a talented person is kept
back because of the interference of
coffee with the nourishment of the
body.
This is especially so with those
whose nerves are very sensitive, as is
often the case with talented persons.
There is a simple, easy way to get rid
of doffee evils, and a Tenn. lady’s ex-
perience along these lines is worth
considering. She says:
“Almost from the beginning of the
usd of coffee it hurt my stomach. By
the time I was fifteen I was almost a
neyvous wreck, nerves all’ unstrung,
‘mo strength to endure the most triv-
fal thing, either work or fun.
“There was scarcely anything I
cold eat that would agree with me.
TH? little I did eat seemed to give me
mere trouble than it was worth. I
finglly quit coffee and drank hot wat-
er, but there was so little food IT
could digest, 1 was literally starving;
was so weak I could not sit up long
at g time. |
“It was then a friend brought me a
hot cup of Postum. I drank part of
it and after an hour I felt as though
I had had something to eat — felt
strengthened. That was about five
years ago, and after continuing Pos-
tum In place of coffee and gradually
getting stronger, to-day I can eat and
digest anything I want, walk as much
ag’ I want. My nerves are steady.
“1 believe the first thing that did
me any good and gave me an upward
start, was Postum, and I use it alto-
gether now instead of coffee.”
““There’s a Reason.”
Name given by Postum Co., Battle
Creek, Mich. Read “The Road to
Wellville,” in pkgs.
Ever read the above letter? A
new one appears from time to time.
They are genuine, true, and full of
human interest.
Homer pigeons, in calm weather,
can travel at a speed of 1200 yards
a minute. With a brisk wind prevail-
ing and blowing in the direction of its
flight, a pigeon has been knewn to
make 1900 yards a minute.
In the total number of mammals,
birds, reptiles and amphibians (4034)
on exhibition, the New York Zoolog-
ical Park stands to-day at the head of
all the zoological parks and gardens
of the world. Berlin comes next with
a total of 3149,
John Ruskin, the great English es-
sayist and critic on art, at the age of
seven wrote verses in rhyme and kept
a diary.
nist.
It is claimed that the harbor facil-
ities of Montreal are almost as good
as those of Liverpool and have cost
much less.
A great tunnel has lately been
found at Gezer, in the land of the
Philistines, in Palestine.
A locomotive engineer remarked
that he never made a run in his life
at night that he did not strike sev-
eral skunks.
imc,
As a rule the white flowers are
more fragrant than those of other col-
ors.
nt
Though Russia has much coal and
fron her industries are quite undevel-
oped. Russia produces only one-
tenth of the quantity of iron produced
in the United States, and only one-
twentieth of the quantity of coal.
There never was but one oil por-
trait of Daniel Boone painted from
life, and that was by Chester Hard-
ing, a distinguished artist of Boston.
New York City has 133 department
stores.
nn
Twenty million feathers are sent
from Germany to England every year
for millinery purposes.
It takes about 2,000,000 cords of
wood a year to make the newspapers
that go through the presses of New
York City.
ssa.
There are 20,000 dangerous crim-
inals in Paris who are capable of do-
ing murder and 100,000 who live by
dishonest means.
————————————————
900900000000 0000000000000
HOW WHALES :
3 ARE KILLED ¢ :
The feature attracting the casual
observer is the vessel’s harpoon gun,
situated forward of everything, from
which the formidable harpoen is fired
into the whale. The gun loeks like
a small cannon, and about a pound
of powder is used to discharge the
harpoon, which is rammed home in
the same manner as a shet would be,
and tied from the outside end with a
small cord, this breaking, of eourse,
when the gun is fired. The harpoen
is a very heavy missile, weighing sev-
eral hundred pounds, which neeessi-
tates its being fired only at pretty
close range; the lance head pierces
the whale and soon afterwards ex-
plodes a bomb contained in it, while
still farther back on the shaft are
barbs, which expand on entering the
whale, making it next to impossible
for the harpoon to be drawn out
again. Each harpoon, after being
fired, has to be straightened by a
blacksmith in order to again fit the
gun-barrel. A stout hemp rope, four
inches in circumference, is attached
to the harpoon about eighteen inches
from the point; this line is of great
flexibility and strength, and is manu-
factured solely for whaling in Nor-
way. A few fathoms of this line are
coiled on a plate directly under the
gun, the remainder being below
decks clear to run. There are two
of these lines each 1800 feet in
length, and sometimes they are none
too long for the purpose.—From
“There She Blows,” by C. R. Patter-
son, in the Metropolitan Magazine.
One-Sided View.
“A member of the Georgia Legis'a-
ture,” he remarked, “has introduced
a bill whieh provides that any man
who is lured into marrying a weman
who has by artificial means eahaneed
her beauty may, if he wishes, have
the marriage declared null and void.
That is to say, if the bridegroem dis-
covers that the bride is eompelled |
when she goes to bed to hamg any
of her supposed charms upen a chair
he may consider himself free te wed
again.”
“And what about it,’ asked the
lady, “if a bride discovers after the
ceremony that the groom wears a
wig or dyes his mustache?”
“Any woman wko is foolish enough
not to know a wig or a dyed mustache
when she sees one ought never to
make any complaint about it.”’—Chi-
cago Record-Herald.
Insulted.
The big stray dog loomed up from
behind an ash barrel.
“Look here,” he growled savagely,
“I have a bone to pick with you.”
The multi-millionaire’s bull pup
looked up with wounded dignity.
“What!” he responded, in the dog
language, ‘pick a bone? Why, 1
never ate anything but boneless
chicken and ham in my life. On
your way, you tramp!”
And leaping into his master’s
$20,000 automobile he was whisked
off to tbe park.— Chicago News,
FINANGE AND TRADE REVIEW |,
BETTER DEMAND FOR GOODS
Pig Iron Prices Higher—Business
Failures Show increase, Over
Corresponding Weeks.
New York.—R. G. Dun &. Compa-
ny’s weekly review of trade says:
“Expectations are being fully real-
ized in the increased demand for
manufactured. products that' each day
reduces the percentage of idle ma-
ehinery and the number of unem-
ployed. The depleted condition of
stocks in diselosed as business ex-
pands and throughout all industrial
channels there is a sudden pressure
to meet requirements that assures ac-
tivity for some time at least.
“Higher prices for. pig iron follow-.
ed the increase in demand, consum-
ers providing for requirements well
into the future, including material for
finished steel to be delivered in the
spring. Furnaces have added still
further to the active capacity and
some have contracted for much of
their output up to July 1. The bet-
ter feeling is also reflected in the ore
market.
“Bradstreets’’ says:
“Expansion continues in trade and
industrial lines, shipments over the
railways are increasing, idleness is
being diminished, prices in numerous
lines are higher, collections are bet-
ter, and sentiment is brighter than
it has been for two months past. In
many sections retailers’ stocks are
badly broken, owing to conservative
purchases heretofore made, and as a
result requests for immediate ship-
ments are quite the rule. On this
account and because of more seasona-
ble weather, sorting up orders in
wholesale and jobbing lines are of
larger volume. Spring business is
also developing quite freely, although
widespread improvement in this di-
rection is not looked for until after
the turn of the new year.
“Business failures in the United
States for the week ending November
12, number 267, against 205 last week,
249 in the like week of 1907; 222 in
1906; 198 in 1905, and 190 in 1904.
MARKETS.
PITTSBURG.
Wheat—No. 2 TOR....scrnrnveseei.§ 85 J)
Rya—N0o.2....0.i cen essdeanse.s
Corie hin. 2 hry GBF .vsns verses 95 95
No. 2 yellow, shelled. . 87 58
ized ear,............ "a 73
Oats—No. 2 white..... 54 5
0.3 white........ AR 53
Flour—Winter patent 580 5 90
ancy straight winte
Hay—No. 1 Timothy...... 130) 14 00
lover No.1... 115% 125
Feed—No, 1 white mid. ton. .. 2950 3000
Brown middlings....... 260) 270)
Bran, bulk.......-..... ++ 240) 2450
Straw—Wheat... avs 70) 810
OBibe. ss reeresdessedsvisinnnsares 0 8 00
£0 32
0 creamery...... 24 26
: Fancy solary roll. 19 22
Cheese—Ohio, N6W........ . 14 15
New York, or ative sy eed 14 15
Poultry, Etc.
Hens—per Ib 14 15
Chickens—dressed 18 20
Bggs—Pa. and Ohio, fresh.. 25 21
Fruits, and Vegetables.
Potatoes—Fancy white per bu.... 8) 85
Cabbage—per ton............ es, 18% 150
Onions—per barrel.............. .. 2060 225
BALTIMORE.
Flour—Winter Paton: Se meaiiiin $57 59}
Wheat—No. 2 red............. 2a 1.02
Corn—Mixed. cece . 71 78
BBEB./c..ooiosvavnss 17 1%
Butter—Ohio creamery 28 :
PHILADELPHIA.
Flour—Winter Patent 575
Wheat—No. 2 red. . 97
Corn—No. 2 mixed 8
Jats—No. 2 Foie 54
Butter—Creamer 31
Ba to Yin firsts. 26 29
NEW YCRK.
Flour—Patents... 59
Wheat—No. 2 red
Corn—No. 90
Oats—No. 2 White: . a5
Butter -Creamer 30 8!
Hggs—State and FL onnsyivanin. ses 27 33
LIVE STOCK.
Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg.
CATTLE
yup ios
SF lixire na
acts senlly vel prompt-
Ep
fhe system effectually
WI mn vrais
habitual constipation
evmanent! ly. welipet us
iy effects uy
the devine.
anuf factured by the
ALIFORNIA
Fic Syrup Co.
SOLD BY LEADING DRUCGISTS - 50¢ pe-BOTTLE
{CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS)
CURE FOR PILES
JAMPLE TREATMENT of Red Cross Pile
and Fistula Cure and book explaining Piles
sent free. REA CO..Dept.B4.Minneapolis.Minn
Emperor William®s Appetite.
The Emperor was a fine-looking
had that Old World manner which is
as’ attractive as it is rare. He was
full of gayety and chaffed some of
the young people present. It was a
mystery to me how he survived what
he ate and drank, although he was
doing a cure. He began with pvach-
ed eggs and went on to potted meats
and various strange German dishes,
added many cups of strong tea and
ended with - strawberries, ices and
sweet, tepid champagne. He talked
banalities:; it was not very exciting.
—From Lady Randolph Churchill's
Reminiscences.
A Cure for Hog Cholera.
Hog Cholera or Swine Plague as it
is sometimes called is a highly con-
tagious disorder.
When a hog shows any symptoms of
this disease, he should be isolated at
once and the pen fumigated in order
to save the other hogs if possible.
Mix one part Sloan's Liniment with
two parts milk in a bottle and give
every sick hog a tablespoonful of this
mixture night and morning for three
days. Sloan's Liniment is a power-
ful antiseptic, kills the disease germs,
soothes all inflammation and acts as
a tonic to the animal.
A. J. McCarthy of Idaville, Ind,
says:—“My hogs had hog cholera
three days before we got Sloan’s
Liniment, which was recommended to
me by a neighbor who was using it
with success. I have used it now for
three days and my hogs are almost
well. One hog died before I got the
Liniment, but I have not lost any
since.”
Mr. G. W. Balsbaugh of Peru, Ind,
p writes: —*I had four pigs that were
coughing and were not doing well. I
gave them some of Sloan's Liniment
and they got better at once.”
Sloan’s book on Horses,
Hogs and Poultry sent free.
Dr. Earl S. Sloan, Boston, Mass.
Cattle,
Cheaper to Move.
This notice has been displayed in
a London suburb: “Why pay rent
when you can hire a horse, man and
a dark night, for 1s 6d an .hour?
Night removals, without disturbing
your neighbors a specialty. ”’
SEVERE BLEEDING HEMORRHOIDS,
Bores, and Itching Eczema—Doctor
Thought an Operation Necessary
—Cuticura’s Efficacy Proven.
®] am now eighty years old, and three
years ago I was taken with an attack of
piles (hemorrhoids), bleeding and protrud-
ibd us mo 16 Bo Frvoeees 7 59 2 he ing. The doctor said the only help for me
Good, 1200 to 1300 pounds 1.550 @ 575 | Was to go to a hospital and be operated on.
2. 475 @ 540 | I tried several remedies for months but did
1a 2 33 not get much help. During this time sores
300 @x3 50 appeared which changed to a terrible itch-
1600 @°500.{ ing eczema. Then I began to use Cuticura
! Soap, Ointment, and Pills, injecting a
PMO BOATY.. ... ioe brant 600@6 20 | quantity of Cuticura Ointment with a Cuti-
frims mwealun weight i, in 8 5 2 Sze Suppealiery Syringe. It took a on
tereerenans .. i of this treatment to get me in a fairly
Liens Yorkers : ie 510 25 > healthy state and on I treated mysel!
LBD oy once a day for three months and, after
40) @4 71 | that, once or twice a week. The treat-
ments I tried took a lot of money, and it
410@4 25 | is fortunate that I used Cuticura. J. H.
Ie 4 Henderson, Hopkinton, N. Y., Apr. 26, 07.”
15) 2 25) { YT
40) @b 20 At last count there were 1,318,000
32 a7 3 , persons in India dependent on state
An Oklahoma Curiosity.
Oklahoma has made a reputation
of going to extremes in whatever it
undertakes ever since its admission
as a State. It mow presents a eiti-
zen who for weight and breadth prob:
ably has ne equal in the eceuntry.
At a little town called Binger there
is a living curiosity in the person
of Seekousito, an American Caddo
Indian, who is wider than he is long.
He measures seven feet four inches
around the waist and is less than
six feet tall. He is twenty-six years
of age and weighs 696 pounds. For
obesity he is conceded to be a world
beater, and is considering an offer|
to tour the world.—Utica Press.
QUINCES WITH SWEET APPLES.
Sweet apples are often preserved
with quinces, allowing one-third of
quartered apples to two-thirds quince.
The apples do not require as long
cooking as the quinces, and must be
removed from the kettle ten or fif-
teen minutes before the quinces. Put
the quinces and apples in
layers
cn Star.
alternate |
the cans, and pour the boil- |
p over, as with quinces alone. |
aid.
' Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children
teething, softens thegums, reduces inflamma-
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25ca bottle.
Manhattan is the most densely pop-
ulated island in the world, 99,150 per-
sons to the square mile.
Itch cured in 30 minutes by Woolford’s
Sanitary Lotion Never fails. At druggists.
Steel rails
} metal te the mile; irom, 145 tons.
Color more goods brighter and faster colors than any
Coasting Spells
are promptly relieved by a sin-
gle dose of Piso’s Cure. The
regular use of this famous re-
medy will relieve the worst
form of coughs, colds, hoarse-
ness, bronchitis, asthma and dis-
eases of the throat and lungs.
Absolutely free from harmful
drugs and opiates. or half a
century the oid remedy
in millions of homes.
I ? At all } devegiate’s 25 cts.
man, nowithstanding his age, and he
Address.
MULE FINDS GOLD MINE
Fly Bites His Flank, Idaho Denkey
Responds and Kicks Into
Rich Ledge.
The famous Coeur d’Alene mining
district of northern Idahe has preved
to be a pretty successful factery for
the production of millionaires. Rich
men are in the making there... ;
The records of this milli
factory are crammed full of pi
que, even romantic pages. ;
stanger than fiction throughs yt the’
entire story. ~The largest si pro-
ducer shows a net profit for the year
of $2,264,213. |
And for all this vast itaasise, says
the Technical World, the millionaire
owners have a donkey to thank. It
was a plebeian burro, Bill by name,
who, in kicking at a tormenting fy. |
uncovered the ledge of rich ore a cou-
ple of decades ago which has been
developed into the great mines of
today. The donkey deserves the
credit, "for the courts of Idaho decided
in his favor; the records still show
it.
Butter in China.
It is only a few years since butter
was unknown in China and even .the
milk from the cows could not be pur-
chased. But recently Chinese res-
taurants have taken to the serving of
“European style dinners’ and the bet-
ter class of Chinese are becoming
large consumers of butter and other
European luxuries.
Catarrh Cannot Be Cured
With LOCAL APPLICATIONS, as they cannot
reach the seat of the disease. Catairh isa
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 1s not a quack
medicine. It was prescribed by one of the
best physicians mn this country for years
and is a regular prescription. lt is compos:
of the best tonics known, combined with the
best blood purifiers, acting directly on the
mucous surfaces. The perfect combination
of the two ingredients is what produces
such S renderinE results in curing catarrh.
Send for testimonials, free.
EB. J. Cugner & Co, Props. I'oledo, O.
Sold b ists, price,
Take a 8 amily Pills fo ‘constipation.
Shameful Wood Cutting.
The cuttings in Uncle Sam’s woed
lot during 1907 were the most severe
on record. They weére 7 per cent
more than the cut reported in 1906,
and amounted to considerably over
40,000,000,000 of board feet. Texas,
possibly because of this year’s mere
accurate reports; ros: from eighth te
third place among lumber-producing
States. The supply in the nerth is
giving out; in the south the forests
are being ruthlessly destroyed. Prices
for lumber have climbed for half a
century, while the average cemsump-
tion per capita has risen frem 250
feet in 1850 to 460 in 1900 and 480
feet in 1907. It has been a stupid
waste of sylvan capital, witheut
thought of interest. — New York
Times.
Electro-Plating on Wood.
The prime requisite in producing
an electrolytic coating on wood, pa-
per, cloth er other nonmentallic ma-
terial, is that the latter shall first be
made capable of recelving such a
coating. One vf the best receiving
processes for making the surface eof
the article an electric conductor cen-
sists in giving it an impalable coat-
ing of metallic silver, says the Optic-
jan. This can be done by first im-
mersing it in a 10 per cent alcoholic
solution of silver nitrate, and letting
this dry on; then dipping it in a 10
per cent solution of yellow phospor-
us in carbon bisulphide.
All Abyssinian male children over
twelve must go to school. The state
provides the education, and is build-
ing many schools.
M
For Sale 35% Firma
A] in 14 States. Strout’s mame
cota mothillustrated catalog of bar
2 pay x x. fare. E. A. STROUT
Poh vial ki Land Title Bldg. Phitd hohe
. Farquhar
Engines, Gorn Shellers,
¢ Boilers, Cotton Planters,
Saw Mills, Stocks,
AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS GENERALLY,
Send for free catalogue.
3 A. B. Farquhar Co.,Ltd., York, Pa.
FES 9 00S EPI E ISIE
ILLIARD TABLES POOL TABLES
BILLIARD ABI £5 POOL TABI ES
Bar Fixtures Bowling Alleys Supplies
Low Prices. Easy Payments.
You cannot afford to experiment with un-
tried goods sold by commission agents.
CATALOGUES FREE.
THe BRuUNswicK-BALKE-COLLENDER CO.
20 WOOD ST., PITTSBURG, PA.
SYDENHAM
REMEDIES
Heart, Stomach, Liver, Bowel, Kidney, Nerve,
Rheumatism and Blood.
Absolutely Pure and Effective.
Describe your case; send us 23c. for trial bottle.
SYDENHAM TABLET CO.
146 East 60th 8t., - New York City.
IYSEFINANCIAL “REMEDY prescribed. A simple
Busriness ‘Tonic’ within easy reach of BE
Pank Depositor. 2c. stamp or booklet free.
F. DAVIS, 1004 Broadway, Oakland, Cal.
average 130 tons of
RHEUMATISM 30% Spesveuranice riven price
low. Write quick. Tre WRIGHT MD. CO,, Peru, Ind.
A SURGICAL
OPERATION
1* there | is any one thing that : a
woman dreads more than another it
is a surgical operation.
We can state without fear of a
contradiction that there are hun-
dreds, yes, thousands, of operations
performed upon women in our hos-
pitals which are entirely unneces-
sary and many have been avoided by
LYDIA E.PINKHAMW’S
VEGETABLE COMPOUND
For proof of this statement read
the following letters.
Mrs. Barbara Base, of Kingman,
Kansas, writes to Mrs. Pinkham:
“ For eight years I suffered from the
most severe form of female troubles and
was told that an operation was my only
hope of recovery. I wrote Mrs. Pinkham
for advice, and took Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound, and it has saved
my life and made me a well woman.”
Mrs. Arthur R. House, of Church
Road, Moorestown. N. J., writes :
“YX Teel it is my duty to let people
know what Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege-
table Compound has done for me. I
suffered from female troubles, and last
March my physician decided that an
operation was necessary. My husband
objected, and urged me to try Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound,
and to-day I am well and strong.”
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 Hs
and has positively cured thousands o
women who have been troubled with
displacements, inflammation, ulcera-
tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities,
periodic pains, and backache.
Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick
women to write her for advice.
She has iy thousands to
health. Address, Lynn, Mass,
TOWERS FISH peAND
WATERPROOF \
OILED CLOTHING ./%
looks better-wears longer -
and gives more
bodily comfort \ /
because ‘cut on
lorge patterns. yet
costs'no more than
the “just as good kinds
1505390 SLICKERS3%0
SOLD EVERYWHERE
-,
Every Ste pr a5
ik the fish i (< >
ay “ry BRAD (CATALOG Free]
TOWLR CO BOSTON US A
Journ A CO LIMTED TORONTO CAN'
eC———
WLDOUGLAS
300 SHOES #330
W. L. Douglas makes and sells more
men’s $3.00 and $3.50 shoes than any
other manufacturer in the world, be-
cause they hold their shape, fit better,
and wear longer than any other make.
Shoes at All Prices, for Every Member of the
Family, Men, Boys, "Women, Misses & Children
y L. Dogsias 34 99 aM 3 $5. 20a) Gilt Edge iy Sennos
at any pr las $2.50 an
bo eqn) 2.00 shoes are the esti in ml
lk D Eyelets Used Hieelusivalys
89 Take No Sabstitute. W. Douglas
name and price is stamped on Noo old
everywhere. Shoes mailed fro factory to any
art A the world. Cataloune fre
WL ” DOUGLAS, 157 Spark St. Brockton, Mass.
Insist on
HELP Dr. MAKTEL’S Preparation
WOMEN
Send for book, ““Relict for Wome:
FRENCH DRUG CO., 30 W. 32d St. , N. Y. ity.
A_LIVE REPRESENTATIVE WANTED
in each township tive Texas Pan Han
Land Pre; eon a ally i Best land in iw
for the Dery: Sal d erops, abundant rein fall ideal climate.
References r For full particulars write LOCATORS
LAND CO) PANY, First Nat. Bank Bldg.,Chicage
The Standard Remedy.
AT DRUG
P. NW. 47, 1908
DROPS NEW DISCOVERY;
gives qulek relief and enres
worst eases. a of testimonials and 1@ Days’ irestmeni
Wreoe. Dr. H. II. GREEN'S SOKS, Box B, Atlas, Atizota, @a.
other dye.
Celors TS. : Mo
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES
One 10c. package colors all fibers. They dye in i ee better than anv other dye. You
can dye : any garment without ripping part. Write 1 1or free _booklet—How to El
IR ra CO. Quincy, Vifinols:
FOR MEN
16 bottom of your
shoe ifferent from the
bottom e your foot, it pushes the
bones out of place, strains the cords,
causes foot-ache and lameness.
SKRY: EMER shoes are made like
human feet, and so really do fit.
Jo0k for the label. 1f you do not
find the<> shoes readily, write us
for directions how to secure them.
ERED. E. FIELD CO., Brockton, Mass.