The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, April 29, 1909, Image 3

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    EIS,
ATH
Floe amd
Goes
Five men
amer Eber
vy ice floe
f here.
mes Perry,
[cKay and
t Mate A.
‘rank Bald-
. Shipman,
ch, August
, A. Quinn
aped in a
tom in one
Straits of
tal loss to
orn. She
se to Port
ly was the
red by the
> that she
) stern al
qught with-
bunks and
he sinking
ho happen-
ime of the
to float a
ked up by
ALTAR
n, Pa., Ex
.
g all the
, for ‘health:
ride of W.
nding attor™
thel Leona
\lder, Colo,
o the altar.
er of Birt
' the Penn-
came here
ch was be-
yvoman was
heart trou-
t attendant
1 within a
0 her old
r. Ferguson
| TAFT
isits White
‘ime. In
ator B. R.
ina paid &
Vhite House
t his first
ington, who
» President.
visit to the
years. He
President
Tillman, “to
1d fried any
hey haven’t
visited the
seven years
ntleman got
inations.
dent made
1S: Envoy
er plenipo-
C. Dawson, -
oms for the
George W.
ssistant sur-
t. Ziegler, of
F. Clark, of
err, of New
' New York;
f Columbia.
V. Stock."
ement was
thn, Loeb &
yproximately
stock of the
ay Company’,
ilroad Com-
th the pre-
>ennsylvania
s the Penn-
out $37,500,
' Norfolk &
al control.
erce.
authoritively
Houston Oil
e over the
Jaters-Pierce
uncement is
days. The
hich is cap
last Friday
ver’s hands.
in its head-
aps.
or entertain-
of the Jap-
zo and Soya,
erican ports,
ng in Mayor
will be left
tal guests a
ot soon for-
t of appeals
rehearing in
of Alabama,
of the state.
st secure in-
me court of
y the law.
Grain.
> supply of
es Saturday,
the New
was as foi-
bushels, de-
corn, 5,051,-
60,000 bush-
ls; decrease
000 bushels,
barley 3,716,-
000 bushels.
at in Canada
000 bushels,
shels.
a
(of
"gover reams of paper.
' forced to confine their agitation to a
4
"of
&
HILDSNHINTS
Jor Your Summer Outi
rn #
VACATION LAND.
WRITE TO-DAY
for a copy of
NEW ENGLAND
VACATION
RESORTS
FREE FOR THE ASKING.
Every Vacationist and Tourist
should have a copy at once. *
Tells you Where to Go,
Bamboo In China.
The greatest blessing in-the matter
of natural productions that exist in
China is the bamboo. To recite the
different uses to which it is put would
It is‘ thought
that over 60 varieties of the bamboo
exist, and it can be properly termed
the national plant. It is applied to
domestic, commercial and industrial
uses.
BraTE oF OHIO, C1TY OF TOLEDO, | 4
Lucas County, tae
FRAKRK J. CHENEY makes oath that he is
gesior partner of the firm of ¥.J. CHEREY
., doing business in the City of ‘Loledo
County and State aforesaid, and that said
firm will pay thesum of ONE HUNDRED DOL-~
LARS for each and every case of CATARRH
that cannot be cured by the use of HALL'S
CATARRH CURE. K KJ. CHENEY.
Sworn to betorc me and subscribed in my
nce, this 6th day of December, A. D.,
. A. W. GLEASOR,
{SEAL Notary Public.
iI’s Catarrh Cureis taken internally,and
acts directly on the blood and mucous sur-
faces of the system. Send for testimonials,
‘F. J. CHENEY & Co., l'oledo, O.
Sold by all Druggsts, 75¢.
~ Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation.
Not Easy for Suffragettes.
Antiquated laws prohibiting women
from forming political associations
seem to exert a depressing effect on
suffragettes in Austria. They are
series of mild lectures, and even these
are attended by a police official, who
sees that the speakers keep within
the bounds of moderation.
er Tr =
© A Famous Health Builder.
* A medicine that will cleanse the bowels
snd put them in condition to do their
proper work unaided will do more than
anything else to preserve health and
nek uch a medicine is the tonic
ve herb tea, Lane’s Family Medicine..
a 25c. package to-day at say druggist
dealer. No matter what you have tri
ore, try this famous herb tea.
Where Women Are Shy.
Among some African tribes, when a
man professes his love for a woman
and asks her in marriage, she invari-
ably refuses him at first, lest it should
appear that she had been thinking of
fim and was eager to become his
wife.
Do Your Feet Ache and Burn?
Shake into your shoes Allen’s Foot-Lase, a
powder for the feet. It makes tight or
id shoes feel easy. Cures Corns, Bunions,
wollen, Hot, Smarting and Sweating Feet
and Ingrowing Nails. Sold by all Driggicts
Shoe stores, 25 cts. Sample sent
oe "Allen 8. Olmsted, LeRoy, N. Y.
Women’s Rights In Belgium.
The bill passed in the Belgium Par-
lament giving women the right to
vote for the members of the Coun-
gells des Prudhommes also gives them
the right to serve on these councils,
requiring that a certain proportion of
the councillors shall be women.
~ “Rheumatism Cured in a Day.
Dr. Detchon’s Relief for Rheumatism radi-
sble
curesinlto3days. Its action is remark-
It removes 4 oes the cause ihe
disease immedi pears. d
greatly benefits. 5c, $1. At druggists.
Exposed.
“You call yourself a naval expert?”
sneered one member of the committee
in the heat of debate. “Where's your
proof?” ¢
+ No proof was forthcoming, the ac-
cused having to admit that he bad
never written a magizine article in
his life.—Philadelphia Ledger.
A Domestic Eye Remedy
Com ded by Experienced Physicians.
a to Pire Food and Drugs 3
Fos Friends Wherever Used. A
gists for Murine Eye Remedy.
Hungarian Partridges.
Sixty-five thousand Hungarian part-
ridges, a bird about twice the size of
our quail, have been imported and
liberated during the last two years
by the Connecticut game commission.
i i d indicate in-
Pain and swelling seldom nd} mally
f local cold or inflammation
fhe Jeet be uickly femoved by a little
Hamlins Wizard Oil. Try and see.
Ivory Nut.
The ivory nut, which is so much
used by button manufacturers, is the
fruit of a species of palm which
grows in Central and South America.
It forms a valuable crop, particularly
in Panama, Columbia, Ecuador and
Peru.
“pale Garfield Tea! Made of Herbs, it is
, potent, health-giving—the most ra-
oe remedy for constipation, liver and
At all drug
Kidney diseases. At stores.
Man wants a great deal here below;
if you don’t believe it, read the want
columns in the newspapers.
i ir mies
The Goosefish,
By IRVING A. FIELD.
The goosefish is well known to At-
lantic Coast fishermen by its singu-
larly ugly appearance. The body is
flat dorsoventrally and very broad
across the head, from which it tapers
abruptly back to a short tail. The
mouth is very wide, is surrounded
with a fringe of barbels, and has an
enormous capacity.
Each jaw is set with a double row
of teeth, which are directed back-
ward. .The dorsal fin, of six spines,
has the first of these located on the
snout just behind the upper jaw and
bears on tHe tip a flaglike membrane.
In color the goosefish is a mottled
brown on the upper parts, with the
under portions white. The average
length of the adult is about three
feet. :
The singular appearance and habits
of the goosefish have gained it num-
erous appellations. In Massachu-
setts the fishermen know it by the
names goosefish, angler or fishing
frog. In Maine it is the monkfish, in
Rhode Island the bellows fish, in
eastern Connecticut the molligut and
in South Carolina all-mouth. The
early Colonial writers refer to it as
the greedigut. It is also known as
the wide gap, kettle-maw and sea
devil.
The goosefish is fairly common on
both the east and west shore of the
Atlantic. On the west coast it ranges
from Newfoundland to Cape Hatter-
as, and on the east coast from the
Shetland Islands to the Mediterra-
nean Sea. It is most abundant in
the northern waters.
Very little commercial use has
ever been made of the goosefish. It
is rarely eaten by man, although the
flesh is said to be palatable and used,
in Italy and in certain parts of Great
Britain, It is sometimes used for
baiting lobster pots when other kinds
of bait are not available, and it has
also been used with menhaden for
guano.
The food and feeding habits of
this enormously voracious fish form
a subject of considerable general in-
terest.” Its reputed manner of cap-
turing prey is very curious. Lying
concealed in weed on the bottom, it is:
said to hold erect its first dorsal spine,
which is tipped with the flaglike
membrane. The flag serves as a lure
to attract hungry and unwary fishes,
which come and nibble at the tender-
looking morsel; but as soon as the
flag is touched a cavern is opened
and the innocent fishes are engulfed
between the jaws of the goosefish.—
New York Press. %z" wes
" «The King's Son.”
Critical moments are not an-
nounced with flourish of trumpets.
The coronation of a king is set for a
far-off date and the pageant is
months in preparation.
The crowning of a hero is a totally
different business. “Never shows the
choice momentous till the judgment
bath passed by.”
* 1t is only the trained eye and ear
and mind which discern both crisis
and fitting deed. When these come
together, opportunity leaps into ‘be-
ing. i :
E. R. Sill years ago put the whole
secret of courage in a nutshell in the
poem which he happily called “Op-
portunity.”
This I beheld, or dreamed it in a dream:
There spread a cloud of dust along a plain 4
And underneath the cloud, or in it, rage:
A furious battle, and men yelled, 'and
sWO :
Shocked upon swords and shields. A
prince’s_banne:
‘Wavered, then
emmed by foes.
‘A craven hung along the battle’s edge,
‘And thought, “Had I a sword of keener
steel—
That blue blade that the king’s son Jbears—
Tr
staggered backward,
ut this
Blunt thing —!” he snapt and flung it
from 3 hand,
‘And lowering crept away and left the field.
ip ER i’
Then came the king’s son, wounded, sore
estead,
‘And weaponless, and saw the broken
8WO. 3 AE ey ar TTY wn, dr a -
Hilt-buried in the dry and trodden sand,
And ran and snatched it, and with battle
shout
Lifted afresh, he hewed his enemy down,
‘And saved a great cause that heroic day.
= ' —Youth’s Companion.
~
Mm—————————————— Af »
The Ear-Sounding Steamboat Whistle
Have you ever wondered what
sounds travel the farthest? If you
live in a great city you are constantly
enveloped in such a multitude of
noises that it is very seldom that any
particular one attracts the attention
unless it be unusually sharp or strid-
ent, and although piercing, such a
sound is not likely to carry any great
distance. ~The higher notes aro ex-
ceedingly penetrating for a short ra-
dius, and unquestionably more start-
ling than the lower ones, but the lat-
ter are much more far-reaching.
The ability of a sound to carry de-
pends upon its vibrations, and any
one who has listened to the deep
notes of a pipe organ in a church
will admit that he could almost feel
the air vibrate. But probably a
steamboat whistle, such as are com-
‘mon on the Ohio and Mississippi
packets, can be heard as far as any
sound that may odinarily be met with.
The deep resonance of its tones, float-
ing steadily out into the air, seem to
stretch away indefinitely into space,
especially in the stillness of a night
in the country. It is a sound that
cannot be mistaken for any other,
and when once its acquaintance has
been made you will never forget it.—
Harper's Weekly.
———————————
Unobservant Male Dramatists.
_Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children
ihe softens the gums, reduces inflamma-
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25ca bottle.
a ta
Success comes to those who count
every cent and make every cent
count.
Masculine dramatists are old-fash-
joned enough to make their women
“catty.” It shows a lack of observa-
‘l tion to make the feminine character
{n a modern pla; behave in the man-
FINANCE AND TRADE REVIEW
WEEKLY TRADE SUMMARY
Spring business Disappointing, Condi-
tions Unchanged and Irregular-
ity Still Leading Feature. ’
R. G. Dun & Co.'s “Weekly Review
of Trade will say: :
“Faith in the future is more pro-
nounced than satisfaction with imme-
diate conditions, and there is no more
noteworthy, feature of the trade out-
look than the steadily growing confi-
dence that, with the tariff discussion
out of the way and with the year's
principal crops assured, the progress
toward a full industrial prosperity
will be rapid. Therefore, the better
prospect of a comparatively early
final vote on the tariff and the im-
proving weather and crop conditions,
coupled with = the knowledge that
abundant money and big gold out-
put are favorable to expansion, in-
spire courage. The fact that lower
prices are stimulating a more active
demand for iron and steel products
also aids in this development.
“Iron and steel conditions reflect
a broader demand in some divisions,
notably in pig “iron. Current busi-
ness is of good volume, but competi-
tion is keen and further price reduc-
tions are reported on certain grades.
“A better market is in evidence on
coarse yarn goods, which have been
quiet for some time, and the bag
trade is inquiring for considerable
quantities of both heavy and print
yarns.
“In the hide market” pronounced
strength has developed in all lines
and active buying has been in pro-
gress throughout the week. ‘While
there have been no further sales of
unusual size in the leather market,
there is a steady demand from small
buyers, and the market on the whole
shows an improvement over last
month. Prices are firm, owing to
the rapidity advancing hide market.”
MARKETS.
PITTSBURC.
Wheat—NoO. 2 red....c.ccvevseraenns $
Rye—NO.2..ccvverennnisncnnnees
Corn—No. 2 yellow, €ar.........oe0 83 84
No. 2 yellow, shelled 7 78
68 609
53
53
5 8)
14 50
12 50
30 00
28 0)
28 00
00 8 50
srense sine eee. 800 85)
Dairy Products.
Butter—Elgin creamery........... $ 9 3)
Ohio creamery...... . 28 30
Fancy country roll. 19 22
Cheese—Ohio, new.,.. 14 15
New York, new.... . 14 15
Poultry, Etc.
Hens—per 1D.......ccieeeeessnneens $ 17 19
Chickens—dressed.......... . 20 22
Eggs—Pa. and Ohio, fresh 21 23
Frults and Vegetables.
Potatoes—Fandcy white per bu.... 100 10
Cabbage—per ton .........eee .es B50) 60 00
Onions—per barrel............,. oe LAO 1130
BALTIMORE.
Flour—Winter Patent 57 59
Wheat—No. 2 red 183
a 7 71
R7 23
31
PHILADELPHIA.
Flour—Winter Patent............. 6 00
Wheat—No. 2 red........ 139
Corn—No. 2 mixed....... 70
Jats—No. 2 white........ 62
Butter—Creamery............ 28
Eggs—Pennsylvania firsts.... 23
NEW YCRK.
Flour—Patents....c.ccoeeeecasenseed $ 590 6 00
Wheat—No. 2 red.. igal
Corn—No. 2........ . 80 82
Qats—No. 2 white. . 57 58
Putten Creamery . 28 29
Kggs—State and Pennsylvania.... 22 23
LIVE STOCK..
Unlon Stock Yards, Pittsburg.
CATTLE
Extra, 1450 to 1600 pounds.......... 650 @ 5 60
Prime, 1300 to 1400 pounds, 635@ 6 50
Good, 1 to 1300 pounds 610 @ 63)
Tidy, 1050 to 1150 pounds, 57% @ 600
Fair, 900 to 1100 pounds .500@ 575
Common, 700 to 900 pound .410@ 49)
HS ercciei saith, ves 350 @ 0 50
COWS... .0ccinncarsannsnesersersnerss 200) @550)
HOGS '
Prime, BOavy.. ......ic0receesinien T@ 775
Prime, medium weight.. . 765
Best heavy Yorkers. . 755 @ 760
Light Yorkers....... T0@ 720
EH, cco ensnnens .660@675
Roughs, .... . 600@ 665
Btags.ceeeesereeens eesvirrevesserinens 5008550
SHEEP
Prime Wothers...cc:.aseecsessinsscss 500@ 520
Good mized...........:.....0\0 .475@ 49)
Fair mixed ewes and wethers . 400@ 460
Culls and common. 20) @ 325
Spring lambs....... L450 @ 700
Veal calves......... 30) @7 0
Heavy to thin calves...........ouuue 35) @ 40)
A retired officer asks the “Army and
Navy Journal” why it seems a criminal
offense for a man in his position to
apply for a recruiting detail. “We
can certainly see mo reason,” reply
the editors, “why a retired officer
should not apply for a recruiting detail
nor why he should not get it if he
meets the requirements. We believe
in making as much use as possible
of retired officers to relieve the strain
of details upon the officers on the
active list; but it should be remem-
bered that recruiting duty is not easy
work and means early and late hours,
requiring the strength and vigor of
youth.” .
There are signs, to the St. Louis
Post-Dispatoh, that the American suf-
fragettes have learned a lesson from
the experience ot their English sis-
ters. So far there have been no riots,
but there is an unmistakable purpose
to push the cause along. if men will
not pay attention to modest, ladylike
pleadings they may expect to have
their ears wounded by the shrill cries
of women determined to be free.
A family in this city, notes the New
York Herald, has just celebrated the
twentieth anniversary of the entrance
ner of the eighteen-sighties.—~London
Sketch.
of the cook into their service. Truth
, Is stranger than fiction.
FLYING SQUIRRELS RARE
Once They Were Common in the New
York Woods. t
Several flying squirrels were seen
in the woods in the central part of
this town the other day says the Den-
mark correspondent of the Utica Ob-
server. They are not very common
znd few of them are seen in this sec-
.tion, although 35 or 40 years ago near-
ly every old hollow birch tree had its
family of little striped air navigators.
The flying squirrel, be it explained
for the benefit of the many who have
undoubtedly never seen one, does not
“fiy”’ in the proper acceptance of the
word, but is able by spreading the
web-like strips of thin skin that ex-
tend from its fore to its hind legs on
either side of its body to sail several
rods on a gradually downward slant
from the top of one tree to a point
lower down on the limbs or trunk of
another. Then by running higher up
the tree it has alighted om. it is able
to repeat the performance and thus
avoid its enemies by sailing from tree
to tree.
These squirrels were once numerous
in northern New York, but like their
kinsman, the black squirrel and the
fox-squirrel, have all but vanished
from the northern woodlands.
CURED ITCHING HUMOR.
Big, Painful Swellings Broke and Did
Not Heal—Suflfered 3 Years—
Tortures Yield to Cuticura.
“Little black swellings were scattered
over my face and neck and they would
leave little black scars that would itch so
I couldn’t keep from scratching them.
Larger swellings would appear and my
clothes would stick to the sores. I went to
a doctor, but the trouble only got worse.
By this time it was all over my arms and
the upper part of my body in swellings
as large as a dollar. It was so painful that.
I could not bear to lie on my back? “The
second doctor stopped the swellings, but
when they broke the places would not heal.
I bought a set of the Cuticura Remedies
and in less than a week some of the places
were nearly well. I continued until I had
used three sets, and now I am sound and
well. The. disease lasted three years. O. L.
Wilson, Puryear, Tenn., Feb. 8, 1908.”
Potter Drug & Chem. Corp., Sole Props.
of Cuticura Remedies. Boston. Mass.
Tunnel Disasters.
The 10 or 15 tunnels which the lar-
ger cities on the Great lakes have
bored out under the water to bring
them an improved water supply have
all witnessed a fatal accident. Storm,
ice, explosion, rock and water were
active to swell the list of disasters.
“MEMOIRS OF DAN RICE,” THE
CLOWN OF OUR DADDIES.
At Last, There is on Sale a Book
Brimful of American Humor.
Any bookseller will tell you that
the constant quest of his customers
is for “a book which will make me
laugh.” The bookman is compelled
to reply that the race of American
humorists has run out and comic lit-
erature is scarcer than funny plays.
A wide sale is therefore predicted for
the “Memoirs of Dan Rice,” the
Clown of Our Daddies, written by
Maria Ward Brown, a book guar-
anteed to make you roar with laugh-
ter. The author presents to the pub-
lic a volume of the great jester’s
most pungent jokes, comic harangues,
caustic hits upon men and manners,
lectures, anecdotes, sketches of ad-
venture, original songs and poetical
effusions; wise and witty, serious,
satirical, and sentimental sayings of
the sawdust arena of other days.
These “Memoirs” also contain a series
of adventures and incidents alternat-
ing from grave :to gay; descriptive
scenes and thrilling events; the .rec-
ord of half a century of a remarkable
life, in the course of which the sub-
ject was brought into contact with
most of the national celebrities of the
day. The book abounds in anecdotes,
humorous and otherwise; and it af-
fords a clearer view of the inside
mysteries of show life than any ac-
count heretofore published. Old Dan
Rice, as the proprietor of the famous
“One Horse Show,” was more of a
national character than Artemus
Ward, and this volume contains the
humor which made the nation laugh
even while the great Civil War raged.
This fascinating book of 500 pages,
beautifully illustrated, will be sent
postpaid to you for $1.50. Address
Book Publishing House, 134 Leonard
street. New York City.
To His Sorrow.
Knicker—Has your wife
from the world for 40 days?
Bocker—Yes, but on full pay.—New
York Sun.
retired
Because some people parade a
cross is no reason they will wear a
ONE DAY
CURED IN
Munyon’s Cold Remedy Relieves the
head, throat and lungs almost immediate-
ly. Checks Fevers, stops Discharges of
the nose, takes away all aches and pains
caused by colds. It cures Grip and ob-
stinate Coughs and prevents Pneumonia.
Price 25c.
Have you stiff or gwollen joints, no mat-
ter how chronic? Ask your druggist for
Munyon’'s Rheumatism Remeédy and see
how quickly you will be cured.
If you have any kidney or bladdar trou-
ble get Munyon's Kidney Remedy.
Munyon’s Vitalizer makes weak men
strong and restores lost powers.
PUTNAM
Color more goods brighter and faster colors than any
can dye any garment without ripping apar&
A woman who is sick and
condition.
benefit of this valuable remedy.
could hardly stand.
Ave., Camden, N. J.
at last was almost helpless.
me no good.
Since we guarantee that all
ing from the same trouble.
female ills.
Made exclusivel
has thousands o
free and always helpful.
Our Liberal Givers.
Men and women little known out of
an immediate and small social ac-
quaintance give away more money
than the richest man in America pos-
sessed in Washington’s time. A few
families have not yet cornered the
wealth of the country, and there is
much more distribution than the
stump orators would have us believe.
Lists of millionaries are printed, but
these lists are as remarkable for
omissions as inclusions. It is a mis-
taken notion that every rich man in
America is ostentatious and is con-
For 30 years Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound has been the standard remedy for
No sick woman does justice to
herself who will not try this famous medicine.
from roots and herbs, and
cures to its credit.
If the slightest trouble appears which
P you do not understand, write to Mrs.
Pinkham at Lynn, Mass., for her advice —it is
sumed with a desire to hold a diplo-
matic post or to marry his daughter
to a foreign nobleman, or even to
have a villa at Newport—New York
Globe.
Pretty Women Criminals.
It is difficult to obtain a verdict of
guilty against any woman charged
with capital crime, triply difficult if
she happens to be young and of at-
tractive personality. Preachers” of
woman’s rights have held that wom-
en should be tried by female juries.
No jury of women could possibly be
more lenient to a woman than is the
usual male jury in this country. It is,
even, not- impossible that women hear-
ing a case against a woman would be
less swayed by sentimentality than
are the masculine juries that almost
invariably fall victims to a pretty face
and a woman's tears.—Cleveland
Plain Dealer.
Driven to Drink.
“My next Academy picture,” said
the artist, ‘“will. be entitled, ‘Driven
to Drink.” ”’
“Ah! Some powerful portrayal of
baffled passion, I suppose?’
“Not at all. It is a study of a four-
wheeler approaching a watering
trough.”’—Philadelphia Inquirer.
Truth is the conqueror of all error.
ATISEPTI
THE TEETH Paxtine excels any dentifrice
in cleansing, whitening and
removing tartar from the teeth, besides destroying
all germs of decay and disease which ordinary
tooth preparations cannct do.
Paxtine used as a mouth-
THE MOUT wash disinfects the mouth
and throat, purifies the breath, and kills the germs
which collect in the mouth, causing sore throat,
bad teeth, bad breath, grippe, and much sickness.
THE EYES when inflamed, tired, ache
: and bum, may be instantly
relieved and strengthened by Paxtine.
CATARRH Paxtine will destroy the germs
that cause catarrh, heal the in-
flammation and stop the discharge. It is a sure |
remedy for uterine catarrh. |
i powerful =
deodorizer. fmm——r0o
0 a
Paxtine is a harmless
germicide, disinfectant an
Used in bathing it destroys odors and §
leaves the body antiseptically clean.
FOR SALE AT DRUG STORES,50c. §
i
OR POSTPAID BY MAIL. i &
LARGE SAMPLE FREE!
=
Write tor free
THE PAXTON TOILET CO., BOSTON, MASS. |
FADELE
other dye. a 15. package colors all fibers.
They
suffering, and won't at least
try a medicine which has the record of Lydia E.Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound, is to blame for her own wretched
There are literally hundreds of thousands of women in
the United States who have been benefited by this famous
old remedy, which was produced from roots and herbs over
thirty years ago by a woman to relieve woman's suffering.
Read what these women say :
Camden, N. J. — “ It is with pleasure that I send my testimo-
nial for Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, : Boars it
may induce other suffering women to avail themselves of the
“1 suffered from pains in my back and side, sick headaches,
no appetite, was tired and nervous all the time, and so weak I
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound
made me a well woman —and this valuable medicine shail
always have my praise.” — Mrs. W. P. Valentine, 902 Lincoln
Erie, Pa. —¢ 1 suffered for five years from female troubles, and
J I tried three doctors but they did
My sister advised me to try Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound, and it has made me well and strong. I
ope Siffening Women ri just give Lydia E. Pinkham’s
retable Compound a trial, for it is worth its weight in gold.”
— Mrs. J. P. Endlich, R. F. D. 7, Erie, Pa. 2 z
testimonials which we pub-
lish are genuine, is it not fair to suppose that if Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound had the virtue to help
these women it will help any other woman who is suffer-
LYDIA E PINKHA
Electric Organ.
An electric organ has been invent-
ed. A series of vibrators take the
place of the reeds. Switches and
magnets operate the mechanism.
Itch cured in 30 minutes by Woolford’s
Banitary Lotion. Never fails. At druggists.
One way to convince a woman is te
let her think that she is convincing
you.
bm 7,000
FAT For Sale 1.922
ing Farmsin 14 States. Strout’s
mmr N ew Monthly Bulletin of Real
Bargains, profusely illustrated, mailed free; we pay
vour R. R. fare. E. A. STROUT CO., Book C 1.
World’s Largest Farm Dealers, Land Title Bldg., Phila.
* ESTABLISHED 1899
TIES 1S NOT A SPRING
OproHETRISTS
Qos frase toh,
FOR OUT DOOR WORK
IN THE WETTEST WEATHER
2 NOTHING EQUALS
§ THEY LOOK WELL~ WEAR WELL
AND WILL NOT LEAK
LONG COATS -$320 _#350
SUITS $322
CATALOG FREE.
A.J. Tower CO. BOSTON, U.S.A.
ToweER CANADIAN CO. LIMITED = TORONTO, CAN.
A
Puy at? : SS
4300 SHOES $350
—
Y The Reason I Make and Sell More Men's $3.00
and $3.50 Shoes Than Any Cther Manufactures
is because I give the wearer the benefit of the
i ained ex-
Douglas shoes are made, you wi
’ § why they hold their shape, fit better, and wear longer
than any other make,
the Soles makes then Move
ring 7: ty ers.
: Fle L - Wearing tian any ot
Shoes for Every Member of the Family,
Men, Boys, Women, Misses and Children
‘or sale by shoe deale verywhere
out W. L. Douglas
tamped on bottom.
CAUTION ! Tone Snips
{ Fagt Color Eyelets used exclusively. “Catalogue Mailed Frees
W.L.DOUGLAS, 167 SPARK STREET, BROCKTON, MASS.
P. N. U, 18, 1909
|
If afflicted
| ivi Thompson's Eye Water
SS DYE
, One 1 y dye in cold water better than any other dye. You
bookiet—How t@ vye, Bleaca and Mix Colors. MONROE DRUG CO., Quincy, 1llinois