The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, January 21, 1909, Image 3

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UICIDE
Confessed
e at
. horrible
hurch at
the Rev.
hage, Ill.
> by cut-
ve circuit
r of Gid-
carpenter,
er he had
ckets the
ied to the
Michigan,
3 identity
sheriff to
the Meth-
e and the
g his old
suicide
e of Mrs.
look lodg-
7;
‘Michigan
) confirm-
he stated
otic influ-
osition is
‘michael’s
rity over
ister was
cribes in
me might
he manu-
‘michael’s
ng’s body
the stove
nembered
partialiy
o heating
Columbus,
St. Clair
that the
armichael
the neigh-
estigation
n named
ficers are
near the
vered the
the cross-
him to
He was
floor, * the
1ion table
ements of
11 around.
HIPS
:d by Re-
,000,000.
ie of the
0,000 was
committee
gram for
sion was
Two bat-
ylacement,
t destroy-
's, $3,600,-
0,000; one
ymmended
f four, as
ry depart-
destroyers
epartment
ION
Vigorous
ire.
ecial mes-
ernor Pat-
prohibi-
profoundly
licy. He
and most
ction and
stroy the
ithout re-
id, is con-
tion,
choice lay
control or
He made
ion.
N.
ance with
» and sen-
and voted
Congrese-
Cleveland,
Foraker.
tates Sen-
of New
elf as the
cticut for
ates Sena-.
s re-elect-
legislature
G. Perk-
tates sena-
vote of 56
32 to 8 in
legislature,
an, two
ct Joseph
es senator
2, Republi-
e March 3
issippli.
f Minneso-
authoriza-
> $20,000,-
proving of
tween the
d the city
11 provides
ypropriated
t 108.
lome Sell-
laughter of
to be the
land, died
VIL. Mrs.
town and
Pittsburg-
Price, also
on, Wash.,
eed to life
Wash.
~ CATARRH IN HEAD.
Pe-ru-na---Pe-ru-na,
MR. WM. A. PRESSER.
N R. WILLIAM A. PRESSER, 1722
Third Ave., Moline, -11l., writes:
.+TL have
in the head for the past two months and
tried innumerable so-called remedies with-
been suffering from catarrh
out avail. No one knows how I have suf-
fered, not only from the disease itself, but
from mortification when in company of
friends or strangers.
. "1 have used two bottles of your med-
icine for a short time only, and it effected a
complete medical cure, and what is
Letter yet, the disease has not returned.
“I can most emphatically recommend Pe-
runa to all sufferers from this disease.”
Read This Experience.
Mr. A. Thompson, Box 65, R. R. 1, Mar-
tel, Ohio, writes: “When I began your
treatment my eyes were inflamed, nose
was stopped up half of the time, and
was sore and scabby. I could not rest at
night on account of continual hawking
and spitting.
“1 had tried several remedies and was
about to give up, but thought I would try
Peruna.
“After 1 had taken about one-third of a
bottle I noticed a difference. 1 am now
completely cured, after suffering with
catarrh for eighteen years.
“I think if those who are afflicted with
catarrh would try Peruna they would never
regret it.”
eruna is manufactured by The Peruna
Drug Mfg. Co., Columbus, Ohio.
Ask your Druggist for a Free Pe-
runa Almanac for 1909,
Sample treatment
J RED Cross Pile and
Fiwula Cure -and
; ; Book sent by mail
EEE FREE.
REA CO.. DEPT. B. 4 MINNEAPOLIS, MINN.
Austria Has New Oil Heater.
An Austrian inventor has patented
an oil stove for heating purposes that
almost promises to do away forever
with the coal problem. © Galician kero-
sene sells here for one-third of a cent
a pound and the new stove, which com-
fortably heats a sitting room of ordin-
ary size, consumes no more than one-
third cent’s worth of oil an hour.
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. CuexEY & Co., Toledo, O.
We, the undersigned, have known F. J.
Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe
him perfectly henerable in all business
transactions and financially able to carry
out any obligations made by his firm.
Warping, KINNAN & MARVIN, Whole-
sale Druggists, Toledo, O.
Hall’sCatarrh Cure istaken internally, act-
ingdirectly upon the blood and mucuoussur-
faces of the system. Testimonials sent free.
Price, 75¢. Be bottle. Sold by all Druggists.
Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation.
Tough for the Wives.
Cuyahoga county, Ohio, has a fund
for capturing and punishing husbands
who desert their wives. In some
cases, undoubtedly, this works a hard-
ship on the poor wife.—Chicago Tri-
bune.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children
teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma-
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25¢ a bottle.
Coming of the Comet.
The coming of Halley's comet will
be the astoromical event of the
heavens of 1909. For 38 years it has
been traveling toward us at the rate
of 2,246,000 miles every day, and is
now about 460,000,000 miles away.
By the middle of May, 1910, it is ex-
pected to reach its perihelion—the
nearest point it will reach. Then it
will turn back and travel out beyond
the confines of the solar system, ©
reverse its course only after three
billion miles of wandering has been
undergone. It comes once every 75
years. “ .
COULD NOT SHAKE IT OFF.
Kidney Trouble Contracted by Thou-
sands in the Civil War.
James W. Clay, 666 W. Fayette St.,
Baltimore, Md., says: “I was trou-
. SBS " bled with kidney
complaint from the
time of the Civil
War. There was
constant pain in the
back and head and
the kidney secre-
hp tions were painful
¥- and showed a sedi-
e A M7 ment. The first rem-
edy to help me was. Doan’s Kidney
Pills. Three boxes made a complete
cure and during five years past I have
had no return of.the trouble.”
Sold by all dealers. 50c. a box.
Foster-Milburn Co.; Buffalo, N. Y.
A well-equipped testing plant has
been established at Boulder, Col., un-
der the auspices of the State Univers-
ity, to investigate the matter of util-
izing the great amount of fire-killed
timber which is to be found in that
State.
Results obtained in tests of the
Maxim silent firearm before the United
States Army board are reported to
have been encouraging, the explosion
being only faintly audible. The
muffling is obtained at some expense
of velocity.
In New York City considerably
more than one-half of all the people,
or about 2,800,000 persons, have de-
posits in the savings banks.
[
} MAKING UNCLE SAM’S §
2 WORD GOOD, :
3 : [From Success Magazine.] e
)CeS0CE60806C003000080020¢€
General Tom Edgar, the first white
child born on Galveston Island (his
birthday was in June, 1837), was re-
turning to.Galveston from Houston,
where he had been an honored guest
at the dedication of a tablet placed
on the site of the first capitol of Tex-
as, at Houston. We were seat mates
in the smoking car. He, told many
amusing stories of the early days.
Among others, he narrated his ex-
perience as a juror in the case of a
negro on trial for stealing a mule.
It was in 18665, while United” States
soldiers were still- in charge at Gal-
veston. The negro pleaded not
guilty, but the testimony was pretty
clear against him. His lawyer, ignor-
ing the testimony, based his defense
upon the assertion that the negro
could not possibly be guilty.
“Is it not a fact,” he ‘said, “that
the Federal Government promised
every freedman two mules and sixty
acres of land? No man can deny it,
because it igs a fact. My ¢lient has not
received his promised span of mules.
He has, indeed, got but one mule, as
these witnesses have testified, and the
United States still owes him another
mule and sixty acres of land. .I leave
it to you, gentlemen,” he said, turn-
ing to the jury, ‘‘if the facts do not
prove conclusively that my client is
not guilty of stealing this mule and
can not,” under the circumstances,
have been guilty.”
‘“That argument,” said General Ed-
gar, ‘tickled us so that we actually
returned a verdict of ‘not guilty.” I
don’t believe the darky ever did get
the other mule and the sixty acres,
but we did all we could to make
Uncle Sam’s word good.”
"mono ese
@
WORDS: OF WISDOM.
The universe is but one vast sym-
bol of God.—Carlyle.
A man should never be ashamed to
own that he has been in the wrong.—
Pope.
If at first you don’t succeed, don’t
fritter away- your time explaining
why.—Puck.”
Sleep is sweet to the laboring man.
=Bunyan.
The weakest erm is strong enough
that strikes with the sword of jus-
tice.—John Webster.
A rascal grown rich has lost all his
kindred.—Italian.
The real secret of an unsatisfied
life lies in an unsurrendered will.—
J. Hudson Taylor.
Life is at best but a froward child,
which must be coaxed and played
with until the end comes.—Sir Will-
iam Temple.
Sin let loose speaks punishment at
hand.—Cowper.
There is no Christian duty that is
not to be seasoned and set off with
cheerishness—whieh in a thousand
outward and intermitting crosses may
yet be done well, as in this vale of
tears.—Milton.
Great floods have flown from little
sources.—Shakespeare.
Best of all is it to preserve every-
thing in a pure, still heart, and let
there be for every pulse a thanks-
giving, and for every breath a song.
—Plutarch. yr
A mon who is young in years may
be old in hours if he has lost no time.
-—Bacon.
Moral courage is more worth hav-
ing than physical—not only because
it is a higher virtue, but because the
demand for it is more constant.
Physical courage is a virtue which is
almost always put away in the lumber
room. Moral courage is wanted day
by day.—Charles Buxton.
Life's a long tragedy; this globe
the stage.—Watts.
The duty of man is not a wilder-
ness of turnpike gates, through which
he is to pass by tickets from one to
the other. It is plain and simple, and
consists but of two points: his duty
to God, which every man must feel;
and, with respect to his neighbor, to
do as he would be done by.—Thomas
Paine.
rr t——————r
Our American Towers of Babel.
In a single block in New York
there are 1400 people of twenty dis-
tinct nationalities. There are more
than two-thirds as many native-born
Irish in Boston as in the capital city,
Dublin. With their children, mainly
of pure Irish blood, they make Bos-
ton indubitably the leading Irish city
in the world. New York is a larger
Italian colony to-day than Rome; hav-
ing 500,000 Italian colonists. It con-
tains no less than 800,000 Jews,
mainly from Russia. Thus it is also
the foremost Jewish city in the world.
Pittsburg, the centre of our iron and
steel industry, is another tower of
Babel. It is said to contain mcre of
that out-of-the-way people, the Serv-
ians, than the capital of Servia itself.
—W. Z. Ripley, in the Atlantic,
FINANCE AND TRADE REVIEW
WEEKLY BUSINESS REVIEW
Orders for Spring Trade Show Signs
of Improving Conditions.
Bradstreet’s weekly review says:
“Change in the general business sit-
uation are largely favorable. Spring
orders are being placed in fairly lib-
eral quantities at the larger Eastern
centers, and traveling salesmen are
sending in conservatively optimistic
reports.
“In various lines the prospects of
tariff revision tends to develop a cer-
tain degree of hesitancy in making
large future commitments, and as a
matter of fact some contracts now be-
ing entered into contain clauses which
provide for new prices in the event of
existing tariff schedules being rear-
ranged. ?
“Exceptions “to. the
rule of slow, but steady improvement
are furnished by cities in the South-
ern cotton belt, where trade is still
backward, and where confidence as
regards the future is so marked, but.
in the industrial centers things are
certainly improving. Although busi-
ness in the iron.and steel lines is not
appearing in the volume expected, he-
lief in forthcoming tariff revisions be-
ing somewhat of a deterring influence
industries in general are in better
shape. : :
“Lines especially favored this week
at retail were heavy wearing apparel,
footwear and coal, while cotton goods
are more active at first . hands at
large Rastern centers. Heavy sales
of print cloths have been: made at
are quarter of a cent higher. Export
trade in cottons to China has improv-
ed, and takings of sheetings since
January 1 are estimated at 25,000
bales. Demand for shoes from first
hands has improved, but the leather
market lacks snap. However, stocks
do not accumulate.
“Business failures in the United
States for the week ending with Jan-
uary 14 were 316 against 329 last
week, 431 in the like week of 1908;
234 in 1907; 279 in 1906, and 304 in
1905. Business failures in Canada
for the same ‘period period number
36, which compares with 41 last week
and 44 in the corresponding week of
1908.”
MARKETS.
PITTSBURG.
Wheat—No. 2 red.......... serene 85 9)
R M0, 2 ene sneessse
Corn—No. 2 yellow, ear.... 70 n
No. 2 yellow, shelled... 67 63
o. 64 63
b4 53
52 53
580 3 9
Cieiee 1350 14 5)
ney 1p
2953 3000
260) 270)
2400 245)
8 00 8 50
ie 800 85)
Dairy Product-.
Butter—Eigin creamery........... $ 34 35
Ohio creamery......... 24 26
Fancy country roll 19 x
Cheese—Ohio, new... 14 15
New York, new... 14 15
Poultry, Etc.
Hens—pOr 1D.....xvseesnsvarsasnees 14 15
Chickens—dressed............. 1 20
Eggs—Pa. and Ohio, fresh. 3t 85
Frults and Vegetables.
Potatoes—Fandy white per bu.... 85 90
Cabbage—per ton
Onions—per barrel...........
BALTIMORE.
Flour—Winter Patent............. $ 5 5 95
Wheat—No, 2 red. 1 2
ed 71 76
34 33
32 84
87
Nn
83
54
33
34
NEW YCRK.
Flour—Patents.......cceevveeeense$ 580 59)
Wheat—No.2red.. evs vreees 1)
Corn—No, 2........ 9) 9)
Oats—No. 2 white. 54 55
Butter -Creame 33 34
Kggs—State and Pennsylvania 83 40
HINT FOR THE CLOTHES
CLOSET.
First—A shelf for hats just below
the door top; this holds three good-
sized hats. I use hat rests made
from mammoth spools, covered with
cretonne and placed over large
najls or spikes hammered into the
centre of shelf. In this way you can
adjust your hats according to size
and trimming without injury to
plumes, etc. :
Second—A pole set into the hook
rails at either end by cutting a
groove in the centre of each (I used
a broom handle; a wider closet
could have two); this will hold from
five to eight coats or suits by using
the combination coat and skirt hang:
ers, and leave plenty of room to get
at things as they will slide back and
forth easily. Now we still have the
row of hooks next the wall for odd
skirts, etc.,, and room in the corner
for the soiled linen bag.
Third—A box on the floor for
shirt waists, made from an old crack:
er box covered with cretonne. 1
have five or six sheets of thin card
board, sprinkleg¢ with a little sachet
and covered with crepe paper, that
just fit inside the box; these I lay
between the waists so they will not
crush. Now there is still room on
the floor for my shoes, which I al-
ways keep stuffed with paper when
not in use; this keeps them in.shape
and they will last donger for it.
There ig very little room left in
this closet for litter or dust, but to
avoid any I have a cretonne curtaln
hung from a sash curtain rod just
over the door, on the inside; this
The United States marketed clay
worth $158,942,369 in 1907, accord- |
ing to the Geological Survey. More |
than three-fourths of it was used for
brick or
}
looks tidy if the door is accidentally
left open or to let air in.
I hope this will help some who
have small closets, or are obliged to
share them.— Post.
quite general
Fall River, and some printed goods
TEETH CAUSE INSANITY
Distinguished! Cleveland Specialist
Conducting Experiments to
Prove Theory.
Prominent criminologists throughout
the country are interested in the ex-
perimental work of Dr. Henry Upson,
a distinguished neurologist of Cleve-
land, O., who believes that criminal
‘instincts, as well as many nervous
disorders and. even . insanity, are
caused in numerous instances by de-
fective teeth. Dr. Upson has al-
ready produced marked beneficial ef-
fects upon patients at the Newburg
insane asylum by simple dental oper-
ations. : oe
Arrangements have been made by
which Dr. Upson will begin experi-
ments’ upon prisoners at the work-
house. : :
** ‘The X-ray machine is used to de-
termine whether the teeth or their
“roots are defective. This test also
develops any pressure of the roots on
the various nerves leading from the
mouth to the brain. Dr. Upson bases
his belief upon the theory that In-
sanity and crime are co-related.
The series of experiments will ex-
-tend over six: months and the results
will be embodied by Dr. Upson in a
monograph addressed to the medical
profession. :
A Baby on the Throne.
‘Whether the divine right of kings
and emperors to rule their fellow
mortals is or is not acknowledged,
the direction of the destinies of a na-
tion of 400,000,000 and mere 1s no
child’s job. The hills of Chang, the
hidden fastnesses of Shensi, the vale
of the turbid flood of the Hoang-ho
cry aloud for a ruler worthy of the
land of Ghengis Khan, Confucius ana
Lao-Tse, who shall with a firm hand
and a single mind mete out justice
and leave the land no longer to be
fuled by a sickly puppet of a ruler or
y
An infant crying in the night,
An infant crying for the light,
And with no language but a cry.
—Philadelphia Public Ledger.
An Automobile Disease,
George La Fond, a chauffeur, is
confined in a hospital in Menominee,
Wis., in a critical condition as a re-
sult of a hip distase contracted while
running an automobile. The con-
stant jar of the machine and the use
of the right foot upon the levers of
the machine have developed the dis-
ease in an aggravated form, the right
leg being useless.—Baltimore News.
Only One “Bromo Quinine”
That is Laxative Bromo Quinine, Look
for the signature of E. W. Grove, Used the
World over to Cure a Cold in One Day. 25¢.
No Safety in Puerto Rico.
The supreme court’s decision that
Puerto Rico is a territory within the
meaning of the federal extradition
statutes is in harmony with previous
definitions of the statues of our West
Indian dependency. The exchange
of fugitives from justice is not a po-
litical transaction in the narrow
sense, and it would be unreasonable
to hold that for the purpose of so
elementary a function Porto Rico was
not included in the domestic circle.
‘The United States never meant to set
up a refuge here for Puerto Rican
fugitives, or to found a retreat in
Puerto Rico for those who leave
these shores with a detective in pur-
suit.—New York Tribune.
Many Children Are Sickly.
Mother Gray's Sweet Powders for Children,
used by Mother Gray, a nurse in Children’s
Home, New York, cure Summer Complaint,
Feverishness, Headache, Stomach Troubles,
Teething Disorders and Destroy Worms. At
all Druggists’, 25c. Sample mailed FREE.
Address Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y.
‘Women of China are said to be
keenly anxious to have a voice in pub-
lic affairs, and a movement is afoot
among the daughters of the Orient
to establish themselves ‘on a level
with men as far as social and politic-
al affairs are concerned.
Strong drug cathartics simply aggravate
the condition—the true remedy for consti-
tion and liver trouble is found in Garfield
ea, the mild Herb laxative.
Hunting for Hippopotamus.
A dead hippopotamus invariably
sinks to the bottom of the river if
shot while swimming, and it is only
after an interval which varies be-
tween two and eight hours that the
body rises ‘and floats on the surface.
For this reason, if you kill’ ‘a hippo-
potamus in a river the current of
which is at all rapid, you must, in
nine cases out of ten, give up all
hope of ever recovering your quarry.
The carcass may be carried a great
distance under the water, reappearing
at the surface miles away, where it
furnishes a providential feast to the
native inhabitants on the banks, who
call down ironical blessings upon the
infallible rifle of the white man.—
Wide World Magazine,
“Why, Nellie, dear,” said the little
girT’s teacher, “I haven’t seen you for
several days.”
“Nome,” replied Nellie; “I’ve been
on an exertion with mamma.”—Har-
per’s Bazar.
The German empire consumes
85,000 tons of tobacco a year.
SIMPLE LIFE IN FINLAND
In Sunmmer All Classes Spend Most
of Time Out of Doors.
In Finland everybody lives the sim-
ple life in summer. They camp out
on islands, in the forests, and always
near the water, for everybody swims
and bathes. Almost all classes eat
and sleep al fresco at this time, and
towns in this progressive and alto-
gether delightful little country pro-
vide public fireplaces and public bath-
ing sheds in all places where the
working classes go in search of fresh
air, says the Ladies Pictorial.
But the simple life is by no means
dull with the frisky Finns. They
combine it with a surprising amount
of gayety. They eat, drink and are
very merry in their picturesque lit-
tle log cabins outside the cities.
:“When they are tired of bathing and
spashing, they dance, they sing, they
watch fireworks and practice gymnas-
tics; they all become like children
and are the happiest, merrlest, most
good-natured, most easily pleased and
most healthy holiday makers in the
world.
FRIEND SAID TO USE CUTICURA
After .Specialist Failed to Cure Her
Intense Itching Eczema—Had Been
Tortured and Disfigured—Was
Soon Cured of Dread Humor.
“I contracted eczema and suffered in-
tensely for about ten months. At times I
thought I would seratch myself to pieces.
My face and arms were covered with large
red patches, so that I was ashamed to go
out. I was advised to go to a doctor who
was a specialist in skin diseases, but I re-
ceived very little relief. I tried every
known remedy, with the same results. I
thought I would never get better until a
friend of mine told me to try the Cuticura
Remedies. So I tried them, and after four
or five applications of Cuticura Ointment I
was relieved of my unbearable itching. 1
used two sets of the Cuticura Remedies,
and I am completely cured. Miss Barbara
Kral, Highlandtown, Md., Jan. 9, 1908.”
Potter Drug & Chem. Corp., Sole Props.
of Cuticura Remedies, Boston, Mass.
Pointed Paragraphs.
If every man was taken-at his own
valuation there wouldn't be half
enough halos to go around.
It is easier to tell how a thing
ought to be done than it is to make
good when you try to do it yourself.
It takes an awful lot of self-con-
trol to enable a man to go up in the
attic every time he feels like swear-
ing.
“A man never realizes how old-fash-
ioned his clothes are until he be-
holds his son’s glad rags on his re
turn from college.
And it sometimes happens that one
can judge by appearances. Many a
woman seems strait-laced- because
she is laced that way.
The first time you meet a woman
she’ll begin to tell you her troubles
if she has a chance; the second time
she will make the chance.—Chicago
News.
Distemper
In all its forms, among all ages of horses
and dogs, cured ahd others in the same
\ stable prevented from having the disease
with Spohn’s Distemper Cure. Every bot-
tle guaranteed. Over 500,000 bottles sold
last year. $.50 and $1.00. Good druggists
or send to manufacturers. Agents wanted.
Write for free book. Spohn Med. Co.,
Spec. Contagious Diseases, Goshen, Ind.
Oranges and Gold. 2
Last year California produced gold
worth $16,863,500. It was 18 per
cent of the gold mined in the United
States, Alaska included. Only three
countries in the world, outside of
America, beat that ome American
State. The California gold yield was
equal to about $10 for every man,
woman and child in the State.
This year California has shipped
eastward oranges valued at $24,375,-
000. The golden fruit of the groves
was worth nearly 50 per cent more
than the metallic gold of its mines,
probably fully that proportion above
the gold yield, taking account of the
oranges consumed in the ' State—
Cleveland Leader.
Heavyweight Cat.
A short time ago the cats of South
Portland were weight in, with a view
of locating the heaviest pussy. Some
citizens owned an 18-pounder as a
maximum. Mrs, Charles Léwis has
a Boston born cat that evens the
scales at 21 pounds. He is a cat
with a pedigree, too. His mother
was a Filipino, raised in Manila, and
came to the States as a mascot of
one of the companies of the First
United States infantry. Mr. Lewis,
who is a discharged soldier from that
regiment, obtained one of the Fili-
pino cat’s kittens. The kitten now
weighs 21 pounds and is still growing.
—Kennebec Journal.
Piles Cured in 6 to 14 Days.
Pazo Ointment is guaranteed to cure any
caseof Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding
Piles in 6 to 14 days or money refunded. 50c.
‘Wheeler—Did. you hear about
Scorcher? He ran into a ditch and
was knocked speechless.
Spinner—What about his wheel?
Loy heslere-1¢ was knocked spoke-
ess.
The last edition .of the New York
telephone book weighed 2,000 tons.
Added to the Long List due
to This Famous Remedy.
Camden, N.J.— “It is with Dleasure
that I add my testimonial to yeux
already long list —hoping that i¢
induce others to avaii themselves
geome this valuable medi
cine, Lydia E. Pink
ham’s Vegetable
Compound. I suf
Jones fom terribia
eadaches, pain im
my back and ri
and made me feel like a new per
and it shall always have my Peston
—Mrs. W. P. VALENTINE, 802
Avenue, Camden, N. J. @
Gardiner, Me. — ‘‘I was a great suf-
ferer from a female disease. The doe-
tor said I would have to go fo the
hospital for an operation, but Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound com-
picialg cured me in three months.” —
RS. S. A. WirriAms, R. F. D. No. 14
Box 89, Gardiner Me. }
Because your case is a difficult one,
doctors having done you no goed,
do not continue to suffer withouk
giving Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetables
Compound a trial. It surely has cured
many cases of female ills, such as im
flammation, ulceration, displacements,
fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodie
ains, backache, that bearing-dowm
eeling, indigestion, dizziness, and nexr-
vous prostration. It costs but a trifle
to try it, and the result is worth mil.
lions to many suffering women. .
Improved Methods Insure Cheaper
Goods.
For hundreds of years mankind
used the same style and size of razor
and had no thought that it could be
improved until some genius evolved
the safety razor. That genius reaped
the benefit of his inventive talent by
charging from $3 to $6 for each im-
plement, people being glad to bay at
those figures. Now comes another
inventor who has made possible a
still better safety razor, and for omly
twenty-five cents. That sum in post-
age stamps sent to the Book Publish-
ing House, 134 Leonard street, New
York, will secure a razor postpaid by
return mail. This low price is only
"made possible by the inventiom of
scientific machinery which produces
wonderful results at small cost.
Phonographic Weakness.
Silence is indeed golden, and the
pity is public taste won't permit the
‘phonographs to reproduce more of it.
—Puck. -
Miss Ross Becker = has been ap-
pointed a claim agent and Unite@
States pension attorney at Missouri.
She has been known for years as ene
of the most successful women im Bt.
Touis, being a notary public and am
insurance agent.
Itch cured in 30 minutes by Woolford's
Sanitary Lotion. Never fails. At druggists.
Women may be the weaker vessel,
but it is generally the man who gees
broke.
Kemp's Balsam
Will stop any cough that
can be stopped by amy
medicine and cure coughs
that cannot be cured by any
other medicine.
It is always the best §
cough cure. You cannot §
afford to take chances om.
any other kind.
KEMP'S BALSAM cures
coughs, colds, bronchitis,
grip, asthma and consump-
tion In first stages.
It does mot contain alce-
hol, opium, morphine, or
any other narcotic, poisen-
ous or harmful drug.
- fRREGORY’S Seed Book
of Sica and Sar
Hahn Teis fuil FREE
of wise and practical instructions.
J. J..H. GREGORY & SON, MassiEneas, Mass.
ANTED—Agents; stores; everywhere; handsome
profits; sell our perfect brass, kerosene, mantfs
table-lamp; hanging or bracket-lamp; 106 candle
sed; a wonder; sells on sighs
power; }{ kerosene u
retails $3.50. Webster Specialty Co,, Waterbury, C2.
YOUR PATENT by our new method. De
monstrate it to the leading capitalists and
S EL manufacturers at Madison Square
New York. Write NATIONAL PATENT & NOVELTY
EXHIBITION CO., 1023-57 Real Estate Bldg., Phils Pa
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES
Color more goods brighter and faster colors than any other dye.
One 10c. package colors all fibers. They
dye in cold water better than any other dye. -Yom
can dye any garment without ripping apart, Write for free booklet—How to bye, Bleaca and Mix Colors. MONROE DRUG CO., Quincy, Ilingis.
An ideal ogads for children.
ND
RESPO
BAD COLDS
are the forerunners of dangerous diseases of the throat and lungs. If
Jou have a cough, you can stop it with Piso’s Cure.
oarseness, sore throat, bronchitis or pains in the lungs, Piso’s Cure will
soon restore the imitated throat and lungs to normal, healthy conditien.
Free from opiates and dangerous in-
gradients, For half a century the sovereign remedy in
omes. Even chronic forms of lung di
TO PISO’S CURE
If you suffer from
thousands of
1seascs
SEED OATS %:
[ESE Per Salzer’s catalog, page 129. 85 3
Largest growers of seed oats, wheat, bari oT, bE
il apeltz, corn, potatoes, grasses and clovers and 58
farm seeds in the world. Big catalog free; or, BS
send 10c in stamps and receive sample of 3
lion Dollar Grass, yielding 10 tons of Dey £0
per acre, oats, speltz, barley, ete., easily wert: 5
$10 of any man’s money to get a start 3
and catalog free. Or, send 14¢ and we add = §
fl sample farm seed novelty never seen befors
y you. x
SALZER SE
ED C0., Box A. C., La Crosss, wie J
P. N. U. 4, 1909.
If afflicted
mawetk Thompson'sEyeW