The Patton courier. (Patton, Cambria Co., Pa.) 1893-1936, January 26, 1906, Image 6

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    DON'T DESPAIR.
Read the Experience of a Minnesota
Woman and Take Heart,
It your back aches, and you feel
pick, languid, weak and micrable day
- after day--don't wore
ry. Doan's Kidney
Pills have cured
thousands of women
in the same condi
tion. Mrs. A. Heilman
of Stillwater, Minn,
says: “But for Doan's
Kidney 2ilis I would
not be living now.
They cured me ‘n
1809 and I've been
well since, I used to have such pain
in my back that once I fainted. The
kidney secretions were much disor-
dered, and I was so far gone that I
was thought to be at death's door.
Since Doan's Kidney Pills cured me
I feel as if I had been pulled back
from the tomb.”
Sold by all dealers, 50 cents a box.
JFoster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. XY,
Ether and Matter.
The densest matter is more or less
Porous. Gold will absorb mercury
as a lump of sugar will absorb water,
showing there must be interstices or
interatomic spaces in it, but the ether
shows no such property. If a drop
of water could be magnified sufficient
ly one would ultimately see the dif-
ferent atoms of hydrogen and oxygen
that constitute the molecules of
water. If a small volume of ether
could be magnified the indications
are that the ultimate part would look
like the first, which 1s the same as
saying that it is not made up of dis-
crete particles, but fills space com-
pletely. This is expressed by saying
that the ether is a continuous me-
dium and is hence incomparable with
matter.
m———————
STATE OF OmIo, Cry oF ToLEDO,)
Lucas COUNTY. ra
Prank J. CHENEY makes oath that he fs
senior partner of the firm of F. J.CHENEY &
Co., doing business in the City of Toledo,
County and State aforesaid, and that said
firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOL-
rARS for each and every case Of CATARRI
that cannot be cured by the use of Harr's
CaTaRBRH CURE. FraNk J. CHENEY.
Sworn to before me and subscribed in my
wr} resence, this 6th day of Decem-
{man r A.D. 1886. A.W.GLEASON,
—— Notary Public.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally,and
acts directly on the blood and mucous sur-
faces of the system. Send for testimonials,
free. F. J. CuexNey & Co., Toledo, O.
Sold by all Druggists, 75c.
Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation:
A Story of Alexander Dumas.
This story is told of Alexander
Dumas: It is well known that Le
could not refuse a request—at east
not often. One day he gave a man
a letter to one of his intimate friends
in Brussels. The friend, a wealthy
merchant, received him as though he
had been Dumas’ own brother intro-
duced him to his circle of acquaint-
ances, placed his stable at the man’s
disposal and did everything in his
power to make life pleasant for Du-
mas’ friend. After the lapse of
fourteen days the man suddenly dis-
appeared and with him the best horse
in the merchant’s stable. Six months
later the merchant visited Dumas and
thanked him for the kind of people
he recommended to his consideration.
“Dear friend,” he added, ‘your friend
is a shark. He stole the best horse
in my stable.” Astonished, Dumas
raised his hands toward heaven anu
cried, “What, he stole from you too!
Trinkets From Land of Llama.
Tibetan idols and trinkets are
among the souvenirs that Bastern
travelers are bringing home. The
mysterious land of the Grand Llama
will furnish a theme for talks in
reading clubs this winter. The Brit-
ish Ambassador's brother, Sir Edward
Durand, who returned recently from
China, has presented a few specimens
of embroidery to the embassy in
Washington. They are quaint and
surpass even the Japanese in delicacy
of color and design. Dull gold pins
with radiating rays like those of the
sun are among the ornaments the
British officérs brought from Lhasa.
Some of these have been given to
American army men—New York
Press.
MALARIA???
Generally That is Not the Trouble,
Persons with a susceptibility to mala-
rial influences should beware of coffee,
which has a tendency to load up the
liver with bile.
A lady writes from Denver that she
suffered for years from chills and fever
which at last she learned were mainly
produced by the coffee she drank.
“I. was also grievously afflicted with
fieadaches and indigestion,” she says,
“which I became satisfied were like-
wise largely due to the coffee I drank.
Six months ago I quit its use alto-
' gether and began to drink Postum
Food Coffee, with the gratifying ve-
gult that my headaches have disap-
peared, my digestion has been restored
and I have not had a recurrence of
chills and fever for more than three
months. I have no doubt,that it was
Postum that brought me this relief, for
I have used no medicine while this
improvement has been going on.” (It
‘was really relief from congestion of the
liver caused by coffee.)
“My daughter has been as great a
coffee drinker as I, and for years was
afflicted with terrible sick headaches,
which often lasted for a week at a
time. She is a brain worker and ex-
cessive application together with the
headaches began to affect her memory
most seriously. She found no help in
medicines and the doctor frankly ad-
vised her to quitcoffeeand use Postum.
“For more than four months she has
not had a headache—her mental facul-
ties have grown more active and vigor-
ous and her memory has been restored.
“Na more tea, coffee or drugs for us,
so long as we can get Postum.” Name
given by Postum Co, Battle Creek,
To Cure Halter Pulling.
Buckle or tie a long halter strap
around the horse's foreleg just above
the knee, pass the strap through one
ring of the bridle and tie the other
end to hitching post. After a time they
may with safety be hitched in the ordi-
nary way.
Weak Bone.
One of the common troubles in hog
raising In the corn belt is that of
breaking down. Weak legs are due
to improper feeding. The pigs will do
pretty well while with the sow pro-
vided they do not get too much corn,
and they will develop very well on
good pasture, but when confined to a
corn diet they can't develop good,
strong bone. Milk and grass contain
bone making material, but corn does
not. Bone meal, soft coal, wood ashes
alfalfa hay or grasses, and such feeds
as contain plenty of bone building ele-
ments, will balance the corn diet. Go
easy on corn except when putting on
the finishing touches of market hogs.
Just because it is an easy feed to
throw out does not make it a proper
feed.
Turn your hogs and pigs out on a
good pasture and keep them on grass
till fall. Don’t feed swill. They will
spend too much time squealing ‘at the
gate. Give them good water.
Those hogs will look large boned
and gaunt all summer. You may be
ashamed to show them to anybody,
put stick to grass and ‘water. In the
fall, when corn is fit, feed it; or, bet-
ter still, start them on old corn
gradually and then watch these slab
sided porkers fill in the chinks. And
they will do it so rapidly and so cheap-
ly you will be surprised. There's no
sense in feeding corn all summer—if
you have pasture.
For Barb Wire Cuts.
When a horse has been injured on
wire the first thing to do is to stop the
flow of blood; this may as a rule be
done by bandaging it up tight. It may
also frequently be best to apply pow-
dered alum or common saleratus, both
of which will generally be found effec-
tive. In a few hours considerable
gwelling will set in; this should be re-
ditced either by applying cold water
frequently or, what is really better,
apply pure kerosene oil not only to
the wound but also to the swollen
parts. No bandage should be kept on
where kerosene is used as it will then
cause the hair to fall off temporarily
and as soon as it is safe to do so, the
gore should be carefully washed with
soft water and castile soap. This
ought to be repeated daily until the
sore heals. One of the best healing
medicines for horseflesh that I have
ever used can be put up at any drug
store, as follows: One-half pint of
alcohol; one-half pint spirits of tur-
pentine; one ounce of ‘pure glycerine;
mix all together in a large bottle and
shake well before using. Apply only
with a feather at morning and night.
The sore should never be bandaged.
By daily washing #t will in this way
heal up very rapidly. I can person-
ally testify to the effectiveness of this
simple remedy as we have made use
of it in numerous cases with the best
results where every other remedy we
tried failed to heal up the sore on the
horse.—Lewis Olsen in the Epitomist.
Fat and a Persistent Milker,
W. K. S., North Bennington, Vt.: 1
am sixty years old and have dealt in
horses all the days of my life. 1
want you to tell me just how to feed
and take care of a three and a half
year old cow; I know little about cows,
and I raised this one for the fun of
seeing it grow up. The sire is a
Durham, the mother a Devor. She
is a good sized red cow, always fat.
She came in last year on September
10, and had no trouble; she gave lots
of milk. I tried to dry her off six
weeks ago, as she is coming fresh
goon, but I could not entirely. She
commenced making bag about Sep-
tember 16. Now she has got quite a
bag full. She has got a poor pasture.
She has had all summer two quarts
of bran, wheat and corn twice a day
until September 1. Then I stopped.
Now I give her a pumpkin at night
and one quart of coarse bran, a pint
of ground oats and a 2ill of oilmeal
very wet in the morning. 1 thought
this would keep her bowels in better
ghape. She is fat. The front quarters
of her bag are full; the hind ones not
so full. I am keeping her in the barn
nights. If you will let me know what
to do when she comes in and after I
will be very much obliged.
1 have carefully looked over your
letter and manner of feeding and care
of this cow and I have no better ad-
vice to give you than to keep on as
you are doing. This cow for her
breeding is a remarkable milk produc-
ing cow. If you have any trouble
with her it will be, I’ think, with her
going back in milk flow after she
ralves.
As she has been milking up so near
to calving I would not advise you now
to try to dry her up, but continue to
milk her right, along. After the calf
is bora, slowly increase her feed, but
let it be largely wheat middlings and
wheat. bran, with some oags added.
Corn in a cow with an inherent ten-
dency to lay on flesh is not called for
Mich.
‘ There's a reason. Read the litle’
book “The Road to Wellville” in pkgs. |
Should she go heyond a certain limic
diminish rapidly and she will sim-
ply become a beef cow, or a cow that
either will not come in heat, or if she
does will not get in calf. As you are
milking her right along you have little
to fear from milk fever (partuient
apoplexy). —C. D. Smead, V. 8, reply-
ing to above. letter in Tribune Faxr-
mer,
Care of Stock.
According fo the winter care given
them will the pigs, colts and calves
be worth the raising or not. Accord-
ing to the care received will they be
worth much or little in the spring.
How often we see runty, stunted
calves and colts starving out the first
and best years of their lives in a barn-
lot or barren pasture! Some are sure
to die before spring and those that
live through the winter will not be
worth half what they should have
been; and no amount of care and feed
can ever make up to them for these
first starved years. If your colts and
calves are round and plump in the
fall it will cost you far less to winter
them throdgh and they will be one-
fourth larger and much more valuable
in the spring than if you let them be-
gin the winter thin in flesh and with
coats that stand the wrong way. If the
colt, calf, pig or lamb is worth rais-
ing at all, it is worth raising well
Some people have the mistaken notion
that even if farm animals are stunted
the first year or two, they will likely
“come out and make a fair sized ani-
mal in time.” Young stock should be
thrifty; they should be kept growing.
Care should be taken that their growth
is never checked at any time. To do
this they should have plenty of feed.
of the proper kind and of the right
amount. Give them sufficient for their
needs but not enough to be left over
and wasted, and see that each animal
gets the feed intended for it. They
should be fed and yarded by them-
selves where you can give them a lii-
tle extra care and supervision. Clean
up the lots and put things in order. It
not too late to attend to these
things, go out now and see what needs
doing most. See about shelter, bed-
ding, mangers, racks and feed boxes.
Don't forget the wind breaks. Few
farms have a wind break of any sort
and poor neglected stock stands si
ering in the wind on almost ev
farm: not only cold, but hungry as
well.—Epitomist.
Crop Rotation.
The State Experiment Station, lo-
cated at the University of Illinois, is
conducting a series of investigations
in regard to the comparative value of
different crop rotations. Three dif-
ferent systems are being investigated.
First, the continuous cropping with"
corn; second, a two-year rotation with
corn and oats; and, third, a three-year
rotation with corn, oats and clover.
The results of the experiments show
that the largest crop of corn can be
raised in the three-year rotation, and
that when limestone and steamed
bonemeal are applied, the yield
greatly increased.
Where these systems have been fol-
lowed for a number of years the latest
yields obtained (1904) were 40 bushels
per acre with the continuous corn sys-
tem: 49 bushels of corn after oats in
the two-year rotation, and 75 bushels
or cern after clover in the three-year
rotation.
On other fields, on the same kind of
soil, where these three systems have
been followed for twenty-eight years,
the largest corn yields were 22 bush-
els_per acre where corn has been
grown continuously, 36 bushels of
corn after cats in the two-year rota-
tion; and 59 bushels of corn after
clover in the three-year rotation.
The yields of the fields thus cropped
for twenty-eight years have fallen be-
low the yields of the flelds cropped for
only ten years, as follows: Eighteen
bushels decrease‘ (40 to 25) where
corn is grown continuously; 13 bush-
els decrease (49 to 36) where corn fol-
lows oats in the two-year rotation;
and 16 bushels (75 to 50) where corn
follows clover in the three year rota-
tion.
Where ground limestone and steam-
ed bonemeal are being applied in the
three year rotation, the yield for 1904
being 96 bushels of corn per acre.
is
is
only 22 bushels and another which
same kind of soil, and from the same
kind of seed, and both receiving the
lesson not soon to be forgotten.
its Season Never Ends.
try hotel,” said the traveling ban, “is
decent fruit. Meat and vegetables are
generally pretty good, but at the best
hotels in the small towns it is prac-
tically impossible to get good melons,
peaches or grapes.
“The other morning I was in the
leading hotel of a flourishing up-state
town. The breakfast bill of fare read
as usual, ‘fruit in season.’ The sea-
son of canteloupes and other good
things was at its height, but what do
you suppose they had? Prunes! Oh,
the perennial prune—always in sea-
son, and the crop is never a failure.”
—New York Press.
Sixty percent of the matches made
deadly
To see one field of corn which yields
yields 96, growing side by side, on the
same kind of cultivation is an object
“The hardest thing to get in a coun-
Deadly Trades,
“Tobacco workers are
nervous diseases. 1 have
never yet geen a tobacco worker
who is not a nervous crank; who is
not off in his head,” complained the
owner of a large Bowery cigar fac.
tory. “I don’t know why it is; 1
used to be a worker myself, and I
have never recovered from the ef-
fects of the trade. Half the time my
men are away sick or dying, they are
always ill-tempered and flighty, and
a public agitation makes idiots of
them. I don't know the reason, as I
said.” He was advised to consult a
physician and find out.
The forman in a stone-cutting
yard, when questioned, was better
informed as to the evils of his trade.
“See those dust clouds all over the
yard,” he sald. “Consumption there!
and quick, at that.”’—Technical
World Magazine,
Epitome of Whole World.
With the United States sending ma-
caroni wheat to Europe, and wines to
France, the proverb about sending
coals to Newcastle seesm to be practi.
cally realized. It is not surprising,
however, that this country thus com-
petes, in various markets of the world,
in products hitherto confined to ex-
clusive and remote localities, for the
extent and variety of the American
domain are such as make it a prac-
tical epitome of the whole world.
There is scarcely a soil or a climate,
apart from arctic and tropic extremes,
that is not found here—hot or cold,
wet or dry. constant or variable.—
New York Tribune.
prone to
STOPS BELCHING BY ABSORPTION
«NO DRUGS-A NEW METHOD.
A Box of Wafers Free—Have You Acute
Indigestion, Stomach Trouble, Ire
regular Heart, Dizzy Spells,
Short Breath, Gas on
the Stomach?
Bitter Taste—Bad Breath—Impaired Ap:
petite—A feeling of fullness, weight an
pain over the stomach and heart, some:
times nausea and vomiting, also fever and
sick headache?
What causes it? Any one or all of these:
Excessive eating and drinking—abuse of
spirits—anxiety and depression—mental ef-
fort—mental worry and physical fatigue—
bad air—insufticient food—sedentary habits
—absence of teeth—bolting of food.
If you suffer from this slow death and
miserable existence, let us send you a sam-
le box of Mull’s Anti-Beleh Wafers abso-
utely frec. No drugs. Drugs injure the
stomach.
It stops belching
stomach by absorbin
undigested food and by imparting activity
to the lining of the stomach, enabling it
to thoroughly mix the food with the gastric
juices, which promoces digestion and cures
the diseas
SPECIAL OFFER.—The regular price of
Mulls Anti-Belch Wafers is 50¢. a box, but
to introduce it to thousands of sufferers
we will send two (2) boxes upon receipt of
75c. and this advertisement, or we will
send you a sample free for this coupon.
Tris OFFER MAY NOT APPEAR AGAIN.
and cures a_diseased
the foul odors from
| 1606 FREE COUPON. 128
L first humming bird.
——
First Woman Engineer.
The first European woman to adopt
engineering as a profession is Cecile
Butticar, a Swiss, 24 years old, who
recently passed her examinations
with honor at the University of
Lausanne,
FITS permanently cured, No fits or nervous.
ness after first day's use of Dr, Kline's Great
Nerve Restorer, #2t rial bottle andtreatisefreo
Dr. RH. Krixe, Ltd,, 981 Arch 8t,, Phila, Pa,
A modern widow's mite is reported at
a church at Blackpool, England.
" ——— re
Robbed in Chureh,
Just think what an outrage it is to be
robbed of all the benefits of the services
by continuous coughing throughout the
congregation, when Anti-Girinine is guaran-
teed to cure, Sold everywhere. 25 cts,
¥F. W. Diemer, M. DD. manufacturer,
Springfield, Mo,
Tt costs London $20 a year to educate a
child in school,
A Guaranteed Cure For Piles,
Itching, Blind, Bleeding, Protruding Pllas,
Druggists are authorized to refund money it
Pazo Ointment fails to cure in 6 to 14 days. 50¢.
An attempt is being made in England to
popularize the dogfish.
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children
teething, softens the gums, reduces inffamma-
tion,allays pain,cures wind colie,25¢c.a bottle.
A new type of bullet is being served to
the French infantry.
Piso’s Cure cannot be too highly spoken of
psacough cure, —J. W. O'Briey, 822 Third
Avenue, N., Minneapolis, Minn,, Jan, 6,190),
The London Zoo has just received its
The Language of Monkeys.
Prof. Garner is not the first man
to study the speech of the monkeys.
This honor belongs to Sir Richard
Burton, the famous Orientalist and
the translator of the “Thousand
Nights and a Night.”
Lady Burton tells in her biography
of her distinguished husband that Sir
Richard believed firmly in monkey
speech, that he had forty apes con-
tinually with him for several years,
and that he had written down a
monkey vocabulary of sixty words.
This vocabulary, unfortunately was
lost. Prof. Garner can make a
strange monkey drink by saying a
certain word, and with another word
he can make it eat, and with another
he can -frighten it, etc. But Sir Rich-
ard Burton could do all these things,
too. His vocabulary, furthermore,
was larger than Mr. Garner’s. Ern-
est Haeckel, the great German scien-
tist, is in hearty sympathy with th
study of the monkey language. He
says he believes firmly that such a
language, exists.—Philadelphia Bulle-
tin.
The New Drydock in the Orient.
What will probably be the largest
| drydock in the Orient for several
vears has just been completed at Na
g } It can accommodate such
monsters as the Minnesota and the
Send this coupon with your name
| and address and name of a druggist
{ who does not sell it_for a free sample
{box of Mulls Anti-Belch Wafers to
| Muzr’s Grare Toxic Co., 328 Third
Ave., Rock Island, Ill
| Give Full Address and Write Plainly. |
nee
Sold by all druggists, 50e. per box, or
gent by mail.
All He Saw.
had been sent by the home
take an inventory of the
room furniture. He was so
his task that at last the
mistres the house went to see
what was taking place. She found
the man slumbering sweetly on the
sofa with an empty bottle beside him.
It we ident, however, that he had
made a pathetic, though solitary, at-
tempt to do his work, for in the in-
ventory book was written, “One re-
volving carpet.”—The Tattler.
Caused by Sores on Neck—Merciless Itch
ing For Two Years Made Him Wild
—Arnother Cure by Cuticura.
“For two years my neck was covered
with sores, the humor spreading to my
hair, which fell cut, leaving an unsightly
bald spot. and the soreness, inflammation
and merciless itching made me wild.
Friends advised Cuticura Soap and Oint-
ment, and after a few applications the tor-
ment subsided, to my great joy. The sores
soon disappeared, and my hair grew again,
as thick and healthy as ever. 1 shall al-
ways recommend Cuticura. (Signed) H. J.
Spalding, 104 W. 104th St., N. Y. City.”
Dancing in Miles.
A young man fond of dancing rec-
ently took a pedometer with him to a
ball, ard found that in the course of
the evening he had covered 13 1-2
miles. The average length of a
waltz has half a mile, of a polka three-
quarters of a mile, of a galloy or
schottische a mile, and of a lancers
a quarter of a mile. A girl usually
dances more than a man, and is cal-
culated to cover more than 16 miles
in a single evening.
£0000000680000000000000000
°
1f we don't heed prevention, we wi
LUMBAGO
to
STIFF NECRH
IS
PUTN
in laying on flesh her milk flow will
§- Japan are sold in Caina.
lor more goods brighter and fas er color: than a:
\ oan dye any garment without ripping apart,
THE WHOLE LOT
St. Jacobs Oil
is ready always for all forms of muscular aches or pains, from
IT CURES ALIKE THE WHOLE LOT.
E
GRIP, BAD COLD, HEADACHE AND NEURALGIA.
1 won't sell Anti-Gripine toa dealer who won't Guarantee It.
Call for your
F. W. Diemer, M.D., Manufacturer, Springfield, Io.
M FADELESS DY
Write ior free booklei—H w to Dye,
Dakota, having a length of 722 feet
| and a depth of water on the sill at
| high tide amounting to 34 feet. [Its
| chief patrons, no doubt, will be the
| Japanese, who will now be encour-
aged to build bigger vessels than they
yossess at present. The floating dry-
dock which has to be towed from the
capacious, though able to
| handle any warship already in the
vice or likely to be constructed
within the next decade.
bly less
Gossip.
Gossip is a humming bird with
eagle wings and a voice like a fog-
horn. It can be heard from Dan to
Beersheba, and has caused more trou-
ble than all the ticks, fleas, mosqui-
toes, coyotes, grasshoppers, chinch
bugs, rattlesnakes, sharks, sore toes,
cyclones, earthquakes, blizzards, small-
pox, yellow fever, gout and indigestion
that this great United States has
known or will know when the universe
shuts up shop and begins the final in-
voice. In other words it has got war
and hell both backed up in the cor-
ner yelling for ice water.—Guernsey
(Wyo.) Gazette.
Dynamite for Power.
Noting the rapid change in motive
power Sir Alfred Hickman states that
in his own works 24 valuable steam
engines have been replaced within a
few years by electric motors driven
by gas engines. This is estimated to
have brought a saving in fuel alone
of $37,500. If the future motors are
to be driven by explosion, he sug-
gests the use of powder or dynamite,
and predicts fame and fortune to the
man harnessing dynamite for power.
is
To Cure a Cold in One Day
Take Laxative Dromo Quinine Tablets,
Druggists refund money if it fails to cure, E.
W. Grove’ nature on each box. 25c.
Jacob Steiner, of Brooklyn, has a collec
tion of rare pistols.
Chrysanthemums, it is said,
cultivated in China before
eleventh century.
the
000005000000 000000000000000
ill need a cure. The Old-Monk-Cure
RHEUMATISM
SPRAIN
© 00000000000 voo0o00000000000
GUARANTEED TO CUR
MONEY BACK IF IT DOESN'T CURE.
United States to Manila is considera’
were
Rea
Prince a Good Hunte
impression on the Indian rajahs by
his gun shooting. He killed his first
tiger the other day, near Jaipur, om
the run with a long shot. f x
CRISIS OF GIRLHOOD
A TIME OF PAIN AND PERIL
Miss Emma Cole Says that Lydia B
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has
Saved Her Life and Made Her Well
How many lives of beautiful vousg
girls have been sacrificed just as they,
were ripening into womanhood | How,
many irregularities or displacements
have been developed at this im \]
period, resaliing in years of suffering
(nS ¥ Ni | :
Miss Emma Cole \
Girls’ modesty and oversensitiveness
often puzzle their mothers and
physicians, because they withhold their
confidence at this eritical period. :
A mother should come to her child's
aid and remember that Lydia KE. Pinks
ham’s Vegetable Compound will at this
time prepare the system for the comin,
change and start the menstrual peri
in a young girl's life without pain or
irregularities. \
Miss Emma Coleof Tullahoma, Tenn.J
writes:
Dear Mrs. Pinkham:— '
« want to tell you that I am enjoying bebe
ter health than I have for years, and 1owe
itall » Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com-~
ound. '
«When fourteen years of age I suffered al-
most constant pain, and for two or three
ears I had soreness and painin my side
eadaches and was dizzy and nervous, and
doctors all failed to heip me.
“Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound
was recommended, and after taking it my
health began to improve rapidly, and I thi
it saved my life. Isincerely hope my experi=
ence will be a help toother girls who are pass-
ing from girlhood to womanhood, for I know
your Compound will do as much for them.”
If you know of any young girl who is
sick and needs motherly advice ask her
to write Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass.,
and she will receive free advice which
will put her on the right road toastrong,
healthy and happy womanhood.
Drill for Wate
Coal
Prospect for Minerals
Drill Test and Blast Holes
Many kinds and many
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For Horse, Steam or
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Results Guaranteed
LOOMIS MACHINE CO.
TIFFIN, OHIO
UNSEEN IN A SAW
There are unseen things about this Saw. You
cannot see the fine texture of the Steel; takes
a sharp, cutting edge and holds it longer than
any other Saw. You cannot see the toughness
of ‘fibre; bends without a break or a kink.
SILVER STEEL, the finest crucible steel in
the world, is made on. the Atkins formula
tempered and hardened by the Atkins secre
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cannot see the perfectly graduated taper of
the blade; runs easily, without buckling.
But you can see the Atkins trade-mark and
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are saw-makers and our trade-mark on a Saw
means that it is our own make and that we
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Atkins Saws, Corn Knives, Perfection Floor
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dealers. Catalogue on request.
E. C. ATKINS ®. CO., Ing
Largest Saw Manufacturers in the World,
Factory and Executive Offices, Indianapolis, Indiana)
BRANCHES: New York, Chicago, Minneapolis,
Portland, (Oregon), Seattle, San Francisco,
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Accept no Substitute—1Insist on the Atkins Brand
{S000 BY GOOD DEALERS EVERVWERE |
4 A
Now manufactured and sold hi Symething En
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AUSTRALIAN FOUNTAI] A FP
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atour risk, faction guarantes
money returned--Many Sample A
FODEONIAN PENS ABSOLUTS:
Do you wantone? THE P
WANTE
Moving Plcture Outfit, in good
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Frank Durkee, Spriogfield, vhio.
Ve 0 1A
ANTISEPTIC!
* FOR WOMEN
troubled with ills peculiar to
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cessful. Fhoroughly cleanses, kills disease erms,
stops discharges, heals inflammation and 0
soreness, cures leucorrheea and nasal catarrh,
Paxtine is in powder form to bg dissd in pi
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and economical than liquid antiseptics for a:
TOILET AND WOMEN'S SPECIAL
For sale at druggists, 50 cents a box.)
Trial Box and Book of Instructions
THE R. PAXTON COMPANY Boston,
NEW DISCOVERY;
DROPSY id it ani su.
cases. Send for book of testamonials and 10
treatments Free. Dr. H. H. GREEN'S BONS, Atlan]
The Life Saver of Chil
With Croup, Conghs, Colds and Pn
gie's Croup Cure. It pd Ta
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postpaid A. P. HOXSLE, Bufialo, N.
Long experience,
PATENTS &Co.Dept.54, Washing
P. N. TU. 1, 1906.
4 dbase Li FQ
= RE ALL ELSE FAIL
ww Rat Yr hii! gists.
48 p. book free, Highs
t:
They
colors all fibers.
Colors.
ny othe: dye. One l0c package
fo x wt e, Bleach and Mi
“NC CONSUMPTIO
dye id cold water batter than any ot
HONEOE DI JE Co. Univavilig
The Prince of Wales made \a 8008
‘tle roo
nity ir
love a
dooking
beneat
| stormy
/ butt
%o sha
homele
begged
from 1
But a
be set 1
earth,
solely
in .obta
things.
most t
least pl
that a
sarily |
most p:
away 1
Besid
deed, if
bounde
that it
To be
was on
where |
“go large e
of merr
world i
gloomy,
fools tt
are but
and all
lessly tr
All m
over fo
nvrath a
to make
Tam m
ber upo:
beggars
withdre
stalked
Sudde
ed corne
side. I
other w:
second «
time an
sistent,
“The
thought
decently
Just bec
of gold
I paus
the few
wvived ti
flight fro
luminate
;ess, ang
expected
black do
nearly t
wagging
misery b
I was
is the fr
am the f
But to |
when I
general
dog, was
I starte
tongue, v
Doubtles
having d
glare at
generous
I stopp
ging mor
dark ey
mine,
“Come,
language
ly; “come
Look, I 3
to death!
smallest
, to sleep.
} follow yo
for I'm 3
I'm sure
miserable
leave me
you?”
He was
It didn
tell him
patted hi:
derstandi
had read
. with his
little bar
strength
“Come
belong to
He didi
but rubb:
and trott
“Aren't
quired pr
“Gracio
swered tl
“Come
some sup
He acc
alacrity,
rant, wh
soup, full
cacies, an
friend. H
he ate, wi
ly envied