The star. (Reynoldsville, Pa.) 1892-1946, May 30, 1906, Image 3

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    Mrs. Mittl Huffaker.
Jill
iiiii
HI
X. V Of
HAD GIVEN UP ALL HOPE.
CONFINED TO HER BED
"I Owe My Life to Pe-ru-na,"
Says Mrs. Huffaker.
Mn. Mittie Huffaker, h. K. No. 3,
Columbia. Xenn., writes:
"I wag afflicted with dyspepsia for
several years ana at last was con
fined to my bed, unable to Bit up,
"We tried seeral different, doctor! with
mt relief.
"1 had given up all hope of any re
lief and was almost dead when my
husband bought me a bottle of i'e
Tuna, "At first 1 could cot notice anv benefit.
but after taking several bottle! 1 wai
cured so oca ana well.
"It is to l'eruna 1 owe my life to
day. "1 cheerfully recommend it to all suf
ferers." Revised Formula.
' Tor number of year requests have
jome to me from a multitude of grateful
friends, urging that Peruna be given
right laxative quality. I have been ex
perimenting with a laxative addition for
Suite a length of time, and now feel grad
ed to announce to the friends of Peruna
that I have incorporated such a quality in
the medicine which, in my opinion, can
only enhance its well-known beneficial
character. S. B. Hahtmax, M, D."
Queen Alexandra's Attendants.
There are in all 15 ladles In per
sonal attendance upon ' Queen Alex
andra, the first being mistress of the
robes, then the ladies of the bed
chamber and maids of honor.
DON'T MISS THIS.
e Ctore For Stomach Trouble A Wew
Method, by Absorption No Drags.
Do Yon Belch?
It means a diseased Stomach. Are yon
afflicted with Short Breath, Gas, Sour
klructations. Heart Pains, Indigestion, Dys
pepsia, Burning Pains and head Weight in
Pit of Stomach, Acid Stomach, Distended
Abdomen, Dizziness, Colic!'
Cad .Breath or Any Other Stomach Tor
ture? Let ns send yon a box of Mull's Anti
Belch Wafers free to convince you that it
eures.
Nothing else like it known. It's sure
and very pleasant. Cures by absorption.
Harmless. No dregs. Stomach Trouble
can't be cured otherwise so says Medical
Science. Drugs won't do they eat up the
Stomach and make you worse.
We know Mull's Anti-Belch Wafers cure
and we want you to know it, hence this
offer. This offer may not appear again.
esea
GOOD FOR 25c. 144
Send this coupon with your name
and address and your druggist's name
and 10c. in stamps or silver, and we
will supply you a sample free if you
have never used Mull's Anti-Belch
Wafers, and will also send you a cer
tificate good for 25c. toward tbe pur
chase of more Belch Wafers. You will
find tbem invaluable for stomach trou
ble; cures by absorption. Addrevs
Unix's Grape Tonio Co., 328 Sd
Ave., Sock Island, 111.
Givt Full Addreit and Write Plainly.
All druggists, 60c. per box, or by mail
upon receipt of pi-ice. Stamps accepted.
In J'ilan there are 38,000 families
living in one room each.
W. L. Douglas (4.00 Cilt Edge Lino
cannot De equalled at any price.
W. L. DOUGLAS MAKES A SELLS MORE
MEM'S S3.BU SHOES THAN ANY OTHER
MANUFACTURER IN THE WORLD.
1 1f1 finn REWARD to anyoni who can
0IU,UUU disprove this statement.
If I could take you Into my three large factories
at Urockton, Mass., and show you the infinite
care with which every pair of shoes Is made, you
would realize why W. L. Douglas S3. 50 shoes
cost more to make, why they hold their shape,
lit bettor, weer longer, and are of greater
Intrinsic value than any other $3.50 hoe.
W. L. Douglaa Strong Made Shoam for
Man, SX.aO, $2.00. Boy a' School A
Droaa Shoam. $2. 60,$2,1.7a,$1.60
CAUTiQN.iusiMt uiHin iiaving V.L.lxua
la hliues. Xulte no substitute. None fpnuiue
without bis name and price stamped on bottom.
fast Color Eyteti used ; thuu will not tutor brat$y.
Writ for illustrated Catnlog.
W. L. uutULAH. Brockton, Haas.
jar vm
r-r
Rossis rSrV
k5iSH III! Capital Hmoooo
SCIENCE
AND
INDUSTRY
Akonia is the name of a substance
manufactured In England which, dis
solved In tbe water with which the
streets are sprinkled, is said to pre
vent dust from rising.
The heat developed by the firing of
heavy guns is remarkable. During
some recent tests a gun that had been
fired seventy-live times melted solder
placed upon the chase, while another
was hot enough to soften lead. Indi
cating a temperature of U00 degrees F.
According to information gathered
by the American Iron and Steel As
sociation, seventeen Mast furnaces
were In course of erection in the United
States at the close of 1003. and three
furnaces were being rebuilt. Of the
furnaces building two were lu New
York, four were In Pennsylvania, one
was in Tennessee, two were in Ala
bama, three were in Ohio, two were In
Illinois, one was In Michigan, one was
in Wisconsin, and one was in Colo
rado. With the exception of the Mich
igan furnace nil of these furnaces,
rvben completed, will use coke or mixed
anthracite coal and coke for fuel. The
Michigan furnace will use charcoal.
Tbosphate rock varies, according to
the mines from which it Is taken. A
ton of material from the mines may
contain fifty, or even as much as
eighty, per cent, of phosphate of lime,
the remainder usually being iron and
alumina. The percentage of phos
phoric acid applies to the pure phos
phate of lime only. The rock is not
generally sold In this country until
acidulated, so as to render tbe phos
phoric acid soluble, about 100 or 115
pounds of sulphuric acid being re
quired to acidulate 100 pounds of rock,
the lime 1hen being changed in com
position to sulphate of lime, leaving
(he phosphoric acid free and nncom
bined. The sources of phosphate rock
are Tennessee, Florida and South Car
olina. The experiment of growing tea, on a
commercial scale, on American soil
has been made at Summcrville, South
Carolina. A writer In the Technical
World says that this year 12,000
pounds of tea will be shipped from
what is at present the only tea farm
in the western hemisphere. Tbe experi
ment has been conducted with the ad
vice and assistance of the Department
of Agriculture, and Is said to have
demonstrated that we can. If we
choose, grow the finest kind of tea at
borne. Tbe greatest practical diffi
culty in competing with China, India
and Ceylon is the high price of labor
here. Tbe fact that the tea-plant would
flourish in some of our Southern States
was experimentally established 100
years ago in a garden on the Ashley
River, near Charleston.
A Strenuous Dentist.
"Do not stir. I am going to extract
all the defective teeth in your month,
and you will not have any more to
pay than if one was taken out."
"But I have only come for one,"
replied the patient, a young man, who
was already suffering horribly.
"I tell yon that I shall extract the
lot, and instead of thanking me you
object. You see that revolver. Well,
if you move I shall shoot you," and
the dentist laid a revolver on a table
by him.
The luckless patient, perceiving that
he had fallen into the hands of a luna
tic, resigned himself to his fate, and
had an awful time. When, however,
it was all oer, the dentist was as good
as his word. He only asked for a
very trifling sum, and after express
ing the hope that his victim would
send him some customers, and would
himself re tiii n some day, hade him
farewell. As soon as the young man
was clear of the place he proceeded
to the nearest police station with the
story of his woes, and the dentist, who
was known to have bees in a queer
state of mind for sonic time, has been
removed to an asylum. But this will
not restore 1 lie lost grinders, aud the
patient has received such a thock to
his system that some tima must elapse
before he can be himself again. raris
correspondence of The London Tele
graph. Must ths Hausemaid Co T
Consul Covert reports that during the
mouths of July nd August, 1900, there
will be held in Lyons, France, a gen
eral exposition of all electrical devices
that ean be applied to domestic uses.
It will be conducted under the auspices
of the Agricultural and Scientific As
sociation of Lyons, and no motor will
be accepted for exhibition which is
over one-horse power. The object of
the exhibition is to bring cheap elec
trical appliances nearer to the people,
in order that the great mass may de
rive some beuefit from them motors
that may be used ou embroidery, sew
ing and knitting machines, ventilators,
vacuum carpet and rug cleaners, house-
cleaning machines, honr polishers,
carts for transporting objects, turning
spits in cooking, etc. Motors for
weaving are excluded, lhcy have
been in use in and around Lyons for
the last three years, and It is deemed
advisable to have an exhibition at an
early day expressly for such motors.
Americans wishing information may
apply dire.-tly to Consul Covert.
tnlted States Consular Reports.
An inventor promises a boat thnf
win cross the Atlantic in two days. v
The Point of ths Trovei-D,
'An old proverb advises the sho
maker to stick to his last. It moans
that a man always succeeds best at
the business be knows. To the farmer
It means, stick to your plow; to the
blacksmith, stick to your forge; to tbe
painter, stick to your brush. When we
make experiments out of our line they
are likely to prove expensive failures.
It is amusing, however, to remark
how every one of us secretly thinks h
could do some other fellow's work bet
ter than tbe other fellow himself. Tin
painter imagines he can make paint
better than the paint manufacturer;
the farmer thinks he can do a Job of
painting better, or at least cheaper
than the painter, and so on.
A farm hand In one of Octave
Thanet's stories tells tbe Walkiug Del
egate of the Painters' Union, "Any
body can slather paint;" and the old
line painter tells the paint salesman,
"None of your ready made mixtures
for me; I reckon I ought to know how
to mix paint."
The farm hand Is wrong and the
painter is wrong: "Shoemaker, stick
to your last." The "fancy farmer"
can farm, of course, but it Is an ex
pensive amusement. If it strikes him
ns pleasant to grow strawberries at
fifty cents apiece, or to produce eggs
that cost him five dollars a dozen, it
is a form of amusement, to be sure, If
he can afford it, but it's not funning.
If a farmer likes to slosh around with
a pnint brnsh and can afford the time
and expense of having a practical
painter, do the Job right pretty soon
afterward. It's a harmless form of
amusement. If the painter's customers
can afford to stand for paint that
comes off in half the time it should,
they have a perfect right to Indulge
his harmless vanity about his skill in
paint making. But in none of these
cases does the shoemaker stick to his
last.
There Is Just one class of men In
the world that knows how to make
paint properly and have tho facilities
for doing it right; and that is the paint
manufacturers tbe makers of the
standard brands of ready-prepared
paints. The painter mixes paints; the
paint manufacturer grinds them to
gether. In a good ready-prepared paint
every particle of one kind of pigment
is forced to join hands with a particle
of another kind and every bit of solid
matter is forced, as it were, to open its
mouth and drink in its share of linseed
oil. That is the only way good paint
can be made, and If the painter knew
Low to do it he has nothing at hand to
do It with. A paint pot and a paddle
are a poor substitute for power-mixers,
buhr-mills and rolier-mills.
The man who owns a building and
neglects to paint it as often as It needs
paint is only a degree more short
sighted than the one who tries to do
his own painting or allows tbe painter
to mix his paint for him. r. G.
Rich est Gold Field.
Kalpoorlie, Western Australia, is
one of the newest and richest gold
fields in the world. The following
advertisement was prominently dls
played" In a recent issue of the Kal
goorlie Miner: "Watch the progress
of the British elections. Balfour, the
coercionist, is defeated. Should his
mate, Chamberlain, be also defeated,
all comers can Indulge In a little
'light refreshment' free of charge for
a period of six hours, from 10 a. m. to
4 p. m., at Paddy Whalen's Sham
rock Hotel."
ULCERS IN EYES.
Awfol Discharge From Kres and Nolsw
Grateful Mother Kdomgly Itec
omuienils Cuticura.
"I used the Cuticura Remedies eight
years ago for my httle boy who had ulcers
in the eyes, which resulted from vaccina
tion. His face and nose were in a bad
state also. At one time we thought be
would lose bis sight forever, and at that
time he was in the hospital for seven or
eight months and under specialists. The
discharges from the eyes and nose wera
bad and would have left soars, 1 feel sure,
had it not been for the free use of the
Cuticura Remedies. But through it all
we used tne Cuticura Soap, Ointment and
Resolvent, and lots of it, and I feel grate
ful for the benefit he received from them.
The Cutionra Resolvent seemed to send
tbe trouble out, the Ointment healed it
outwardly, and the Soap cleansed and
healed both. He is entirely cured now,
but since then I have bought the Cuticura
Resolvent to cleanse and purify the blood,
and the Soap I cannot speak too highly of
as a cleansing and medicinal beautifier.
Mrs. Agnes Wright, Chestnut St., Irwin,
fa., Oct. 16, 1905." ,
The Universal Washday.
"Wash-day Is Monday every
where," said a. globe-trotter.
He made a gesture of amazement.
"How strange that Is," he said.
"We believe In the Bible, the Al
gerians believe in the Koran, but
both of us believe in the same wash
day. "The Germans, the French, the
English, the South Americans, the
Arabs, the Japs, the Chinese, all
have Monday for wash-day. Go
where you will over the world, and
on Mouda1 clothes, white and wet
from the tub, flap lazily in the
wind. Philadelphia Bulletin.
TWICE-TOLD TESTIMONY.
A 'Woman Who Has Buffered Tells How
to Find Kellef.
The thousands of women who suffer
backache, languor, urinary disorders
and other kidney ills,
will find comfort la
the words, .of Mrs.
Jane Farreli; of 608
Ocean Ave., Jersey
City, N. J., who says;
VI reiterate all I have
said before In praise
of Doan's Kidney
Pills. I bad been
having heavy back
ache and my general health was affect
ed when I began using tbem. My feet
were swollen, my eyes puffed, and
dizzy spells were frequent Kidney
action was Irregular and the. secretions
highly colored. To-day, however, I am
a well woman, and I am confident that
Doan's Kidney Fills bare made me so,
and are keeping me well."
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents- a box.
Foster-Mllburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
Ti
MANUFACTURING BOOMS
Returns Indicate but Few Strikes and
Little Idle Machinery Railway
Earnings Increase.
R. G. Dun & Co. 's Weekly Review of
Trade fcays:
"Higher temperature accelerates
the movement of seasonable mer
chandise and Improves agricultural
conditions, except where the precipi
tation has been Insufficient. . The
season was somewhat backward on
the farms until this week, but lost
ground is being regained, although
(ho scarcity of labor delays opera
tions. "Customary quiet prevails In cer
tain lines that are between seasons,
and mercantile collections are still
Irregular, yet the future Is regarded
with Increasing confidence. Manufac
turing returns Indicate few strikes
and little Idle machinery, some sec
tions of the Iron and steel Industry
having secured contracts covering
output more than a year ahead and
shipments of footwear from Boston
are surpassing all records, while tex
tile mills operate freejy, notwithstand
ing the high prices for raw materials.
"Despite the coal strike and Inter
ruption to freight handling at lower
hike ports, railway earnings for the
first week of May were 10.2 per cent,
larger than In the corresponding week
last year. Foreign commerce In April
.surpassed the same month In any pre
ceding year, both as to exports and
Imports, and it Is especially gratify
ing to note the gain In shipments of
manufactured products. At New
York for the last week Imports gniii
pd $:l,42t,92n and exports lost $1,280,
f09 in comparison with last year's
figures.
"Strength still prevails In the hide
market, although large tanners are not
operating freely, but numerous smnll
orders make a good showing in tho
aggregate, and there Is no evidence of
trading below full r.-Ues. leather Is
well maintained on 1he whole.
"Failures this week numbered 211
In the United States, against 234
last year, and 16 In Canada, compared
with 11 a year ago."
MARKETS.
PITTSBURG.
Grain, Flour and Feed.
Wheat No. 2 red t SO si
Hye No. 'J 't 73
Corn No 'i yellow, ear HO 61
No. I! yellow, shelled 55 in
Mixed ear 51 t'R
Oats No. white 37 88
No. 3 white 3B 37
Flour Winter patent 4 10 4 15
Fancy straiKht winters 4 00 4 10
Hay No. 1 Timothy 15 00 15 25
Clover No. 1 10 75 II 25
feed No. 1 white mid. ton 50 23 0)
Brown middlings 19 50 10 01
Bran, hulk 'A' 00 21 50
Biruw Wheat 7 50 7 51
Oat 7 50 800
Dairy Product.
Butter Elgin creamery I 24 25
Ohio creamery in 21
Fancy country roll 19 20
Cheose Ohio, new 14 18
New York, new 12 13
Poultry, Etc.
Ht-ns per In $ 14 15
Chickens iirosel IS IS
Eggs I'a. anil Ohio, fresh 17 IP
Fruits and Vegetables.
Apples bbl 8 51 s v)
I'oiatoes Fanoy while per bu.... 75
Cabbage per ton j$ no jj K)
Onions per ban-el .. g 00 i 2i
BALTIMORE.
flour Winter Patent .$ im 5
Whoat No. ii red pa
Corn Mixed 4n ty
Eros........ 18
Butler Ohio creamery yj s
PHILADELPHIA.
Flour Winter Patent $ j 05 5 25
Wheat No. !l red m Kb
Corn No. 2 mixed 35 fil
nam No. Ii white 35 m;
Butter Creamery ' 2y a
Kggs Pennsylvania firsts m al
NEW YORK.
Flour ratents t 5 00 5 1)
Wheat-No. SI red H9 90
Corn No. 2 67
Oats-No. 2 while 8fi
Kuttor -Creamery SH M
Kggs State and Pennsylvania..., 16 ID
LIVE STOCK.
Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg.
Cattle.
txtia, l,4.'i0 to 1,600 II, IS (15 $5 75
Prime. 1,800 to 1,400 lbs 5 40 5 60
Wood, 1,100 to 1,301) lbs 5 !TJ 6 40
Tidy. 1.OS0 to 1.160 lbs 4 65 5 16
Fair, two lo 1,100 lbs 4 40 4 r.i
Common, 700 to 100 lbs 4 40 4 60
Common lo good tat oxon 2 75 4 50
Common to good fat hulls 2 60 4 15
Common to good fat cows 00 4 to
Heifers, 7U0 tol, lOUIbs 2 50 4 50
ireali cows and springers 16 OJ 50 00
Sheep.
j'rlme wethera f g 65 8 75
(iood mixed .. 5 aj 5 m
alr mixed ewes and wethers.... 4 75 A 2
Cullsaml common 250 4(10
Culls to choice laiulx 6 60 690
Hogs.
1'rinieheavy hogs f 6 60 8 61
1 rime medium weights 6 as
Best heavy Yorkers...., 6 65
Good light Yorkers g 50 8 65
l'lirr ah In niiutt,- 11c .
"V"" ' . . " o m
Common lo good roughs J 40 lai
otags 4 00 4 si
Calves.
Veal Calve. j5 00 6 51
Ueavy and thin calves 3 tw 4 60
Oil Markets.
The following are the quotations for credit
balances in the different field:
Peiinnylvunin, $1 (A; Tlona, II 74; Second
Rand, 11 64; North Minn, 9n: Month Lima !
Indiana. 90o; ttomnrset, !(i; Uuglund, OJo; Can
ada, !.'.
The sport on the diamond attracts
through no side Issue of the betting
book or o purses for events. Us
appeal Is made, declares the New
York World, by the measurement of
man against man In strength, skill
and quickness. Men who play for 'Chi
cago or Boston one year are cheered
as heartily on appearing for Net
York or Pittsburg another year, 'ine
game is national, tho interest very
human. Tbe name on the uniform
rhlrt stands only for local color.
Voters Emigrating.
Ban Marino, the smallest" republic
In the world, will soon be without
voters If its rate of emigration
keeps up. It has only 1.700, Includ
ing widows, but it is still a good
republic. Recently its assembly de
cided to abolish the executive coun
cil, the members of which have been
elected for life. Hereafter memehrs
will be elected by the people for
three years only.
Richest Senator.
Senator Clark, of Montana, the
richest man in the Senate, and one
of the richest men in the country, Is
the most solitary man In public life In
Washington. He has no close
friends.
FITS, Pt. Vitu' Pan.'o: Nervous DlMwr per
manently curpd by Pr. Kline's Great Nerve
liestorer. ti trial bottle nnd treatise free.
Pb. H. . Bunk. Ltd., 931 Arch St., rhila,, l'a.
Between 5,000 nnd 8.000 alcohol engines lire
now in operation in Gcrmnny.
Mrs. Wlnslow's Soothing Syrup for Children
teething, soltens the gums.reduees Infltimma
tton, allays pain, euros wind oollo, 20c. a L ottie
The premium on gold In Haiti now varies
between 100 and 90 per cent.
Go8d Field for Surgery.
The surgical operations on the
skulls of boys In Philadelphia and
Toledo, by which they were con
verted from Incorrigibly bad boys to
models .of good behavior, suggest
that the scientists might find a field
of work in the Senate. There is a
possibility that they might discover
some pressure on the brains of
Senators at times.
There Is more Catarrh In this section of the
Country than all other diseases put together,
and until tbe last tew years was supposed to
be Incurable. Fora great many years doctors
pronounced It a local disease and prescribed
local remedies, and by constantly tailing to
cure with local treatment, pronounced it In
curable. Kcience has proven Catarrh to be a
constitutional disease and therefore requires
constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh'
Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney a Co.,
Toledo, Ohio, is tbe only constitutional cure
onthe market. It la taken Internally in doses
from lOdropstoateaspoonlul. It acts direct
ly on the blood and mucous surfaces of ths
system. They offer one hundred dollars for
any case It tails to mire. Hend for circulars
and testimonials. Address F. J, Cbenii A
Co., Toledo, O.
6old by Druggists, 75c. '
Take Hall's family Fills tor constipation
Superstitions of Farmers.
Farmers "stick to the moon" in
regard to planting corn and other
crops. Some of them will not under
any circumstances plant com in
moonlight nlgljts, claiming that' corn
planted then will produce a tall
stalk with a short ear. Others Just
as successful plant when they are
ready, when nights are dark or
moonlight, as the case may be.
Other notions are indulged In,
such as throwing the cobs lnrunnlng
water to keep corn from firing. Some
farmers would under no considera
tion burn plnder hulls, the seed of
which Is lo be used for planting;
they must be scattered along a path
or highway, to be trodden upon in
order to secure a good crop.
Green butter bean hulls must be
thrown In a road after being shell
ed fori table use from day to day to
Insure a good crop the following sea
son. Charleston News and Courier.
The New Postal Notes.
Postmaster General Cortelyou's
new postal note of smnll denomina
tions, designed to obviate the busi
ness necessity of transmitting
stamps through the malls in lieu of
coins, include? special forms for 1, 2,
3, 4, 5, C, 7, 8 and 9 cents, to be sold
at their face value without a fee.
The regular postal notes would repre
sent sums from 10, 20 and .25 cents,
graded by fives nnd tens up to $1, be
sides notes of $1.50, $2 and $2.50.
Mr. Cortelyou has asked Congress to
appropriate $130,000 to establish the
change, commencing with the new
fiscal year, July 1.
BREAD DYSPEPSIA.
Ths Dlg-stAis; Klement Left OnU
Bread dyspepsia Is common. It af
fects the bowelB because white bread
Is nearly all starch, an? starch is di
gested in tho Intestines, not In tbe
stomach proper.
Up under the shell of the wheat
berry Nature has provided a curious
deposit which is turned into diastase
when It is subjected to the saliva and
to the pancreatic Juices iu the human
intestines.
This diastase is absolutely necessary
to digest starch and turn it into grape
sugar, which is the next form; but that
part of the wheat berry makes dark
flour, and the modern miller cannot
readily sell dark flour, r.r nature's val
uable digester is thrown out and the
human system must handle the starch
as best it can, without the help that
Nature Intended.
Small wonder that appendicitis, peri
tonitis, constipation, and all sorts of
trouble exist vChen we go so contrary
to Nature's law. The food experts that
perfected Grape-Nuts Food, knowing
these facts, made use in their experi
ments of the entire wheat and barley,
including all the parts, and subjected
them to moisture and long continued
warmth, which allows time and the
proper couditlong for developing the
diastase, outside of the human body.
In this way the starchy part Is trans
formed into grape-sugar iu a perfectly
natural manner, without the use of
chemicals or any outside ingredients.
The little sparkling crystals of grape
sugar can be seen on the pieces of
Grape-Nuts. This food therefore is
naturally pre-digested and its use in
place of bread will quickly correct the
troubles that have been brought about
by the too free use of starch in the
food, and that Is very common In the
human race to-day.
The effect of eating Grape-Nuts ten
days or two weeks and the discontin
uance of ordinary white bread, is very
marked. The user will gain rapidly in
strength and physical and mcutal
health.
"l'cert's a reason."
CORDIAL INVIVATIOII
ADDRESSEDT0 WORKING GIRLS
Miss Barrows Tells Bow Mrs. Pink,
ham's Advice Helps Working; Qirls.
Girls who worst
r e particularly
susceptible to fe
rn a 1 e disorders,
especially those
who are obliged
to stand on theli
feet from morning-
until night in
stores or facto
ries. Day in and dat
out the girl toils.
and she is often the bread-winner of
the family. Whether she is sick or
well, whether it rains or shines, she
must get to her place of employment,
perform the duties exacted of er
smile and be agreeable.
Among this class the symptoms of
female diseases are early manifest by
weak and aching backs, pain in the
lower limbs and lower part of the
stomach. In consequence of frequent
wetting of the feet, periods become
nninfuf and irrecular. nnd f renucntlv
there are faint and dizzy spells, with
loss of appetite, until life is a burden.
All these symptoms point to a de
rangement of the female organism
which can be easily and promptly
cured by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta
ble Compound.
Miss Abby F. Barrows, Nelson ville,
Athens Co., Ohio, tells what this great
medicine did for her. She writes t
Dear Mrs. Pinkbam :
"I feel it my duty to. tell yon the good
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound!
and Blood Puriflertiave done for me. Befort
I took them I wai very nervous, had dull
headaches, pains in back, and periods wera
Irregular, I had been to several doctors, and
they did me no good.
"Your medimie has made me well and
strong. I can do most any kind of work
without complaint, and my periods are all
right.
''I am In bettor health than I ever was,
and I know It is all due to your remedies. 1
recommend your advice and medicine to all
who Buffer."
It Is to such girls that Mrs. Pink
ham holds out a helping hand and ea
tends a cordial invitation to correspond
with her. She is daughter-in-law oi
Lydia B. Pinkham and for twenty-five
years has been advising sick women
free of charge. Her long record ol
success in treating woman's ills makes
her letters of advice of untold value te)
every ailing working girl. Address,
Mrs. Finkbum, Lynn, Mass.
THUKNOfira
li
K&J stool for tnt BEST
during seventy yttn of
incrtMind Mies.
Remember this whenou wont woter
proof oiled coots, suits, hots, or hors
jfoods for t.11 kinds of wet work,
IKOIAJAHTtf. EVW CARMthT jif
. J T0WM 0 M5T0H. MASS U S A.
tOWU CANADIAN CO lt TOI0NT0. CAN.
"From the cradle to the baby chair"
HAVE YOU A BABY?
H to, you ought lo have- a ;
PHOENIX
VALKIIIG CHAIR
(Parotid)
"an Ideal self-instructor."
QUR PHOEKIX Walking Chair
v holds the child securely, pre
venting those painful falls and
bumps which are so frequent whoa
baby loams to walk.
BETTER THAN A NUR8C."
The chair is provided with a re
movable, sanitary cloth seat.which
supports tho weight of the child
and prevents bow-legs and spinal
troubles ; it also has a table attach
mont which enables baby to find
amusement in its toys, etc., with
out any attention.
"As Indispensable cradle."
It is so constructed that it pre
rents soiled clothes, sickness from
drafts and floor germs, and is
recommonded by physicians and
endorsed by both mother and baby.
Combines pleasure and utility.
No baby should be without one.
Call at your furniture dealer
and ask to see one.
1UHCTACTDBID OJTLT BT
PHOENIX CHAIR. CO.
BHBBOVaaW, WIS.
Cm only bs had ol your furniture dealer.
ill for Water
Prospect for Minerals
DrillTeslandBlastHolss.
W mika
DRILUN8 MACHINES
For Horss, Steam or
Gasoline Pawer.
Latest
Traction Machine.
LOO IS MACHINE CO,
IIFFIN. OHIO.
r. N. p. ai, lqpa.
. IriLmm
I
Coal
' Gas if
PATENTS S
heir fw. Hithftt rW.