The weekly bulletin. (Florin, Penn'a.) 1901-1912, July 15, 1903, Image 3

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    {
Teal er (to little six-year-old)
reddie, what is.a volcanos
confidence)—
Now; :
“Freddie (with
Oh, I know that!
interrupts all the time!—Life.
great
i
Iowa, is casiher on
v
million women who have been
h by Lydia E. | ing
finn
havlil
restored (9
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compo
A Young New York Lody Tells
a *
\
of a \Wendcerful Cure: --
¢ My trouble was
I am tall, and the doctor said I
too fast my strength. I suf
dreadfu from inflammaties
doctored continually, but go4 no
I suffered from terrible drsgging sen-
sations with the most awful pain
down in the side and pafns in the back,
headaches.
Often
I was sick to tbs stomach, and e~ery
and the most agomizing
No onc knows who? 1 endured.
little while I wuld be too sick
to worl, for tire or four days; I
in a large gzore, and I suppose stand:
ing on my feet all day made me worse.
suggestion of a friend
an to take Lydia
CAL tae 7
my mother’s I be
E, Pinkham’s
a
Vegetable (
'perund, and it is simply wonderful.
I felt better after the first two or
;doses ; it seemed as though a weight
I con-
use until now I can truth-
Young
paying doctor’
was taken off shoulders ;
tinued its
fully
girls who are alway
bills without gettin
ought to take your
costs so much less, and
my
say
am entirely cured.
any helpas
is su
it
cure them. — Yours truly, ADELAII
PRAHL, 174 St. Ann’s Ave., New
City.” — 86000 forfeit if original of above lettar
vroving genuineness cannot be produced,
It's a mountait
with the ovaries,
medicine
\


The Abuse of Society.
The abuse of
occupation with i
not force
not even
preachers
on social
We know how D
Babylonian court
vealed the
Rome.
mg movement,
nard exhorting
cis teaching
1 that
an entrance into it,
new. Cynics and
and how Horace
profligacy of
yo rl
Rousseau and Voltaire poured
French revolution.”

und. |
society is a favorite
nost people who can-<
It
3 satirists
and writers have waged war
amenities all down the ages,
aniel denounced the
is
re-
1 Augustan
Every leader of a regenerat-
whether it be St. Ber-
; the crusades, St. Fran-
is Utopian poverty or John
10x preaching reformation, has de-
nounced the easy morals and the easier
standard of the toleration of current
society. The reformers of every age de-
nounce their own contemporaries in ac-
cents of varying degrees of violence.
out
diatribes from different points of view
against the frivolous society which was
I cut off so abruptly by the guillotine,
but their denunciationsfell on deaf ears.
“Nobody,” said Talleyrand, “could have
any conception of how pleasant society
could be who had not lived before the
: To reform those
who will not be reformed is difficult.
[he grandmother of Ambrosine, hold-
a scented pocket handkerchief to
her nose to keep off the odor of ithe
{ crowd as che tripped to the gaillotine,
| an? Mary, Queen of Scots, yawning in
| tite face of Knox, exactly typify the at-
; titude of all ages toward the Jeremiahs
grav
Seared
and
help.
A of
singular property
| experimented with the
| by
| chemist, Cailletet.
s low
to go | designs resembling those of frost
work LA di
similarly affected.
| quartz are
of .
| signs, r
Jom=- | glue
strain.
three RENEE
ledication exercises in
first question was in
Patch. “Do: you
n, y es,”
‘Shdives in Louisville;
% An, and is now
said Mr.
I did
It
re to
Yorl: I't you please
r that sed
| hammering at the portals of society.
Engraving Glass With Gelatine.
gelatine,
| when spread upon glass, has lately been
French
When a thick layer
| of strong glue that has been allowed to
| dry upon a glass surface is detached, it
carries off scales of glass and leaves
on
a window pane. Polished marble and
With
| glue containing six per cent. of alum
| Monsieur Cailletet produced five de-
embling moss in texture. The
> drying exerts a powerful me-
Roosevelt met a Kentucky
St.
re-
wthor of Mrs. Wiggs of
know
the Kentucky lady
she
Mrs.
Roosevelt,
ay to her when g us
N a De i
vhen, she comes next
[ hope she will make
= = m ~ se
Bi I d O ii § / FITS permaner ured.No {Its or nervous
> © ness after fl 1 18e of Dr. Kllne’s Great
. Dizzy? Headache?
back of your eyes? It’s your
Use Ayer’s Pills.
liver!
Gently laxative; all veget
Sold for 60 years.
Lowel
Pain | NerveRestorer
v.C.Ayer Co,
Dr. R. H, KuiNe
distantly related.
able.
Ladies Can Wear Shoes
1, Mass.

oro ee
un wT
Want your moustache or beara) | tas.
a beautiful brown or rich biack? Use
oUGKINGHAM'S DYE
\FIFIY CTS. OF DROUGISTS OR &. P. HALL & CO., NABH
FE SE
5 Habitual Cosntipation, Sick
COR ache, Gastro - Intestinal Catarrh,
i]
Gastrie Dyspepsia, Want of
i tite, Rheumatic aud Gouty Affe
Piles and other Congestions,
nothing better thar
NATROLITHIC
SALTS.
A Palatable Remedy
Certain in Results.
Fifty cents All druggists, or direct from The
Chemical and Mfg. Company. Washingion, D. C,
Da You Want Your Morey
TO EARN
T % INTEREST)
PER ANNUM ?
Writo nn 'S ©
ment pa)
hundred
there is
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
mail, Addre
JA. N. H, |
Head. | striven,
Appe-
clions,
¥, Boyer, Trinity Rpring
sationalist, but it ¢
next
were
week?
booked
Jelle—Married
you told us you
{
and |
select party.
Marion—Yes, dear.
the personal conductor and
~ | small, select party.—Tit-Bits.
Capital I'm
al bottle and treatisefree
td., 931 Arch St., Phila, Pa
The telephone has closely connected
| many people who heretofore were oniy
One size smaller after using Allen’s Foot.
ase, a powder. It makes tight or new shoes
Cures swollen, hot, sweating, aching
feet, iIngrowing nails, corns and bunions. At
all druggists and shoo stores, 25¢. Don’t ao-
copt any substitute, Trial package FREE b
Allen 8, Olmsted, LeRoy, NY,
Happy accident will often secure for a
man the thing for which he has vainly
-t
ldo not believe Piso’s Cure for Consump-
tionhasan equal for coughs and colds—JoHR
ra, Ind., FeD, 15, 1900.
The parrot may not be a brilliant conver-
n bite convincingly.
Why,
for a
personally conducted tour with a small,
But George is
the




EE ST
‘“ About a year ago my hair was

ATENTS,
TRADE-MARKS AND PENS
Are You Interested?
Millions of doll
end frade-M
sted to pay pensions.
rs have been made out of
Millions of dollars are a
20 years practice.
Yor Information and literature, FREE, writa to
TINE W. Ji. WILLS COMPANY,
Washington,
Wills Building, 31: Ind. Ave.
ALITTLE
WOMER ~The
FRUIT-DRIKR,
e¢tables, ete.
Alwaysreac
Jiferime, It
te for
culars and
terms to .
Price $3
= ’
“4 kahrney, Box 20. Waynesboro, Pa
1SO
CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAIL
Lest Congh Syrup. Tastes Goo
X in time. Sold by druggists,
Ee
y AB
GOLD MINE FOR
‘he U. 8. Cook-Ktove
Dries all kinda
of Frulis, Berries, Cherries, Corn, Veg.
It takes no exra flre,
or use, and will 1
rks while you cook.
a bottle of Ayer’s Hair Vigor.
stopped the falling and made m
TONS
Patents
ta Boydston, Atchison, Kans.
coming out very fast, so I bought
It
»
hair grow very rapidly, until now it
is 45 inches in length.”’ — Mrs. A

D.C.
a
sta
special
. BEB
Lr
heavy. $1.00 a boitle. All druggists.
There’s another hunger §
than that of the stomach. E
Hair hunger, for instance.
Hungry hairneeds food,
needs hair vigor—Agyer’s.
This is why we say that
Ayer’s Hair Vigor always
restores color, and makes
the hair grow long and


NEW DISCOVERY; gives
quick relief and cures worst
ys and 10 days’ t
B SONS, Box B, At'anta, Ga: ’

reatment
If your druggist cannot supply you, B§
send ns one dollar and we will express
you a bottle. Be sure and give the name
of your nearest express office. Address, §
J.C.AYER CO., Lowell, Mass. 8
NS RESTS ” i .

o-Seltzer
Promptly cures all
eadach




THE KEYSTONE STATE
(atest News of Pennsylvania Told in
Short Order.
Mrs. John Houston, who resides on a
‘m near the Lake Erie Railroad, a
miles west of New Castle, was sur:
led by finding a young colored man,
Goodman, in her house. He
cante from Pittsburg about three weeks
ago. The burglar was not aware of
the discovery and was at the house
when neighbors, whom Mrs. Houston
notified, arrived and surrounded the
place. In the meantime Sheriff James
H. Brown and other officers were sum-
moned and captured Goodman. He
was placed in jail.
A band of gypsies, who made their
camp near Iranklin, kidnapped two
girls, Mary and Anna Baker, aged re-
spectively 4 and 19. They were enticed
into the camp late at night and the gyp
sies departed with them early in the
imcrning. Sheriff McCollum and the
Oil City police got on the trail of the
gypsies, but at the forks of a road
lost their game. The search is being
continued.
The family of Martin Whitfield, of
Oil City, consisting of four persons,
was poisoned by eating chicken, the
flesh of which had become impregnated
with some poison, presumably paris
green, sprinkled by a farmer on his
vines. Prompt medical work placed
them out of danger.
About 700 miners at Peale are out
because a few of the men have refused
to sign for the check-off.
Joseph Swihart, a Washington con-
stable, who killed Carles Bebout, who
was resisting arrest, has been exoner-
ated by a coroner's jury.
Attorney H. A. Davis, of Altoona.
announced his candidacy for judge of
Blair county. He will be indorsed by
the Prohibitionists. Martin Bell, the
incumbent, is the Republican nominee,
A. V. Dively, Democratic, and J. S.
Leisenring, Union party.
George and Jacob Walters, aged 11
and 13 years, of Shoffs, went swimming
in the Susquehanna in disobedience of
their parents’ instructions. The
younger was carried ‘into the eddies.
I'he older boy went bravely to his
rescue and in the strueele both sank
and were drowned.

Reports from all parts of Northamp-
| ton county show that there is a scar-
cny ot jehngl teachesr;: ““ountry teach-
§ Tre choosing other lines of em-
ployment, claiming that ‘he pay is too
small and the school terms too she st.
Samuel Kuhns, aged & yea. | of
Reftog, was walking on the Quarryville
Railroad tracks and started to cross
the high bridge spanning lic. Pequea
Creck at! Herrville. When about half
way across a train approached. There
was not room enough for Kuhns to
step aside and so he coolly jumped
from the bridge. Fortunately, he land-
ed in the mud, twenty feet below, and
suffered no material injuries.
William Shaw, 22 years old, of Hope-
well, while waiting for a train at An-
derson’s Station, was killed by an ex-
press train. His mother, father and
sizter wignessed the accident.
The Board of Commissioners of Pub-
lic Records, created by the last Legis-
lature to look after and secure as many
historical records as possible, was or-
ganized at the Executive Department,
Harrisburg. There were present Gov-
| ernor Pennypacker and State Librarian
Montgomery, who were elected presi-
lent and secrctary respectively; John
Wolfe Jordan, Julius F. Sachse, Frank
R. Diffenderfer, Crumrine and
Carnegie Libtarian Anderson, of Pitts-
burg.
While Mrs. W. W. Ouerly, assist=
ant postmistress at Womelsdorf, was
canceling the postage stamps of a
large pile of letters, there was an ex-
plosion which kftocked the dater irom
her hands, and scattered the letters
and packages in all directions. It was
found that a large quantity of paper
caps had been placed in a sealed en-
velope, which caused the explosion. In
an instant the entire pack of letters and
surrounding papers were in a blaze.
Mr. Oberly arrived on the scene in time
to gather up the burning material and
throw it to the pavement. Mrs.
| Oberly's arm was burned and her cloth-
| ing torn by the explosion.
Ix-Register and Recorder Freder-
ick Hess died at his home in Clinton
Township, aged 77 years. :
Joseph Koch, aged 32 years, while
picking huckleberries on the mountain
north of Hazleton, was overcome by
| the heat and died.
During a severe storm near Green
Castle, Harry Taylor, aged 7 years,
was killed by lightning. His father
| was stunned and a 3-year-old child was
burned.
| Mrs. Maria C. Heinitsh died at her
jome in Lancaster, aged 79 years. She
as president of the Ann C. Wilmer
Boyd


|
|
{
organize the Children’s Home
Dorcas Society during the Civil War.
The differences between the Sheet
Metal Workers and the Master Tin.
| ners’ Association have been amicably
| arranged and the strike has been call-
| ed off at Pittsburg.
| Five houses were wrecked and many
! persons had narrow escapes from death
by a mine cave-in at Old Forge, three
miles from Scranton. The settling oc-
curred in the old workings of the
| Jermyn No. 2 mine, and nearly two
acres were affected, the surface sinking
| about five feet. The buildings damage |
| were all located on George street, 1n
! the borough, and were occupied as fol-
| lows: Thomas Jones and family, Sal-
| vatore Bianco and family, Matzia Bon-
| itage and family, Isaac Robinson and
{ family and Clement Maratina and fam-
ily. The occupants of the houses were
{ in bed when the cave-in occurred and
when the structures tumbled from
{ their foundations -and fell over upon
their sides many were thrown to the
| floor and were dazed and filled with ter-
Ihe noise of the cave-in aroused
living near. Some of the
¢ damaged beyond repair.
I
Iv
B
|
|
|
|
i
| ligfin
1
ouses we
The hope of Chief of Police James
wel | West Pittston, was dam-
I by , Jvnamite explosion. Dozens
ines were smashed, dishes
and the porch was demol-
Howells recently had
several persons in the
ests are expected as the
al boys were celebrating
ohn Murray, aged 14.
de chest, he having ap-
prceived. A terrible hole
breast and he died soon
Tome for Aged Woman, and helped |
and |
SO HE TOOK HER.
Said a maid, “I shall marry for cre,”
Then her ma stood right up and
shuckre; !
But just the same
When a chance came
old dame said no
*cbuchre.
The word
—~Chicago News.
SORRY HE ASKED.
Tom—1I say, Jack, what reason have
you for wearing an automobi’p cap?
You never ride in an automobl e.
Jack—Oh, I suppose the reason i»
similar to the one you have been car
"ying a pockethook.—Chicago News.
OPPROBRIOUS.
Ye Scven Wonders of Corea..
Corcn, ike the world of the ancients,
as its “seven wonders.” Briefly stat-
ed, they are as ‘follows: First, a hot
{ mineral spring near Kin-Shantao, the
| healing properties of which are believ-
to
First Insect—I have a good mind ta |
have that professor arrested for libel.”
Second Insect—“What did he say
about you?”
First Insect—“He called me an An
thia
Home Companion.
JUST LIKE MILK.
“My!” exclaimed the little fish thal
had been nibbling at the bait, “this |
worm tastes sour.”
“Well, my dear,” replied the mam’
ma fish, “the weather is very warm |
gad ‘the worm will turn,” you know.
—Philadelphia Press.
MISLEADING.
Mrs. Parvenu—‘“Yes,
nice lamp, but
board.”
Salesman—“Keyboard? I don’t know
what you mean.”
Mrs. Parvenu—‘‘Didn’t you say
Duodecimapunctata.”—Woman’s |

that a very |
I don’t see the key- |
it |
was a piano-lamp?’—Woman's Home |
Companion.
SURE TO COME.
“Skeedicks has named his auto Lil- |
lie, after his wife.”
“Why?”
“I don’t know, unless it’s b:cause ae |
expects it to blow him up et¥ery once |
in a while.”—Brooklyn Eagle.
GOOD SUGGESTIOM.
Stubb—They advertise for a teacher |
at the young ladies’ cooking school.
Penn.—Does the teacher have
sample what is cooked?
Stubb—Of course.
Then they had better €1gage
ostrich—Chicago News.
to
an
JNPREJUDICED EVIDENCE.
Conny—I want your advice abou |
matrimony.
Danny—But
ried.
Conny—That’s why [ wait your aa
vice.—Chelsea (Mass) Garlite,
— —
I've never
IM'HE BRIDE'S TREPIDATION.
Bridesmaid—You poor,
darling. You look scared to death at
the altar.
Bride—Yes, George trembled so I
was dreadfully afraid he'd lose cour-
age and run away.—New York Week-
ly.
HAD HIS SUSPICIONS.
“How did old Hardfax er joy his trip
through the Thousand Isiands?”
“Not very well. He put in all his
time counting them.”’—Chicago Tri
bune.
FIRST AID TO ATLAS.
Atlas nad grown tired of supporting
the world when a ray of hope came.
“At last! At last!” he zried. “Help
has arrived!”
Hastily dumping the old thing on M
Jierpont Porgan’s shoulders, he skip-
ped off to the Olympian Council.—
Harper's Bazar.
THE SLY POLITIC/ AN.
“why don’t you mali, a plain
straightforward statemeat about
whether or not you mean fo be a can-
didate?”
“What's the use?’ answered the pru
dent politician. “Just al present the
only thing that's keeping me before
the public is the doubt oi. that gues-
+ion.”—Washington Star.
ANCHORED.
A little chap four yea’s of age met
with the misfortune to have his hat
blow into the river. Wh» n he reach-
ed hime his father said 10 him:
“It’s a wonder you dién't blow over-
board too.”
“I couldn’t,” was the quick answer,
‘I was fastened to mg: feet!”—The
Presbyterian. *
NEVER QUARRELED.
“1 am proud to say,” remarked Mv,
Meekton, “that my wif® is not what
could be called a quarreitome woman.”
“Indeed?”
“I never knew her to quarrel in my
tife. She merely announces what she
wants, and that’s an end of the mat-
ter.” —Washington Star.
ALMOST RESIGNED.
“Even you might meet with finan.
cial reverses.”
“Well,” answered Mr. Cumrox,
*there’s a silver lining to every cloud.
ff I did, I would not go to fashionable
resorts with mother and the girls. I
could send them away and go to my
office and have a good time making
money arain.”—Washingfon Star.

t
been mar. |
| They earl;
{ medication to the
| neys tha
ray of hope to desperate
frightened | (Ti

ed to be miraculous. No matter what
disease may afflict the patient, a dip
in the water proves efficacious.
The second wonder is two springs
situated at a considerable distance from |
each other; in fact, they have the
breadth of the entire peninsula between
them. They have two peculiarities
When one 1s full the other is always
empty; and notwithstanding the obvi-
ous fact that they are connected by a
subterranean passage, one is bitter and
the other pure and sweet.
The third wonder is Cold Wind Caye,
a cavern from which a wintry wind
perpetually blows. The force of the
wind frem the cave such that a
strong man cannot stand before it.
A forest that cannot be eradicated is
the fourth wonder. No matter what
is
injury is done the roots of the trees,
which are large pines, they will sprout
up again directly.
The fifth is the most wonderful of
all. It is the famous “floating stone.”
It stands, or seems to stand, in front
of the palace erected in its honor. It
is an irregular cube of great bulk. It
appears to be resting on the ground,
free from supports on all sides, but,
strange to say, two men at opposite
ends of a rope may pass it under the
stone without encountering any obsta-
cle whatever! 5
The sixth wonder is the “hot stone,
which from remote ages has lain glow-
ing with heat on the top of a high hill.
The seventh and last Corean wonder
is a drop of the sweat of Buddha.
For thirty paces around the large tem-
ple in which it is enshrined -not a blade
of grass will grow.
or flowers inside the sacred sc
Even the animals decline to protanc a
spot so holy.
Their Ingenious Idea.
The two young women had been in-
vited to take a ride in a big, red devil
of an automobile that makes forty
miles an hour—when no policeman is
about. The ride was to be taken after
dark.
As everybody knows, the roads just
now are so dusty that it does seem
as if they hadn't a solid bottom at all,
and the young women, both clad to
resemble the lilies of the field and Solo-
mon in all his glory (for they were go-
ing to a well-known country club to an
entertainment) could not decide what
to wear to keep their clothes from be-
ing ruined. Their covert coats were
too heavy for the hot night, and alas!
they had no smart pongee affairs, such
as ecvery well-regulated automobilist
should have.
What to do? The young women
thought and thought, but they are not
wanting in ingenuity, and so finally
they had an idea between them. Ki-
monos! Why, of course.
No sooner said than done, and so
half an hour later two girls—one grand-
ly wrapped in a red kimono, the other
covered with the folds of a pink one—
rode away from the door in a very
smart automobile with two perplexed
escorts beside them. But, really, in the
twilight the kimonos looked quite im-
pressive and stylish, and no one not
in the secret would ever have suspect-
cd their bedroomish identity.
Doan’s Kidney Pills
There are no trees | . run €
[here are square..[ disguise to me, for when I first began
SAUATE. | ing it for troubles peculiar to the sex
LATTA HLL LATA AV LAVAL AV AAV LARA ASAD
22VVUVAAVVAAT SIVVIVVVAVVANR”
MERICA is the land of
nervous women.
The great majority of nervous
women are so because they are suf-
fering from some form of female dis-
ease,
Mrs. Emma Mitchell, 520 Louisiana
street, Indianapolis, Ind., writes: x
“Peruna has certainly been a blessing
and a generally worn out system I had lit-
tle faith.
‘“Xor the past five years I have
rarely been without pain, but Pe-
runa has changed all this, and in
a very short time. I think I had
only taken two bottles before 1
began to recuperate very quickly,
and seven bottles made me well.
I do not have headache or backache
any more, and have some interest
in life. I give all credit where il
is due, and that is to Peruna.’’---
Emma Mitchell.
By far the greatest number of female
troubles are caused directly by catarrh.
(vee

They are catarrh of the organ which is
affected. These women despair of recov-
It is reported from Brus: that be-
sides the fifteen million dollars for a
Palace of Peace at the Hague, Mr.
Carnegie has given two hundred thou-
sand dollars for the establishing of an
international library on diplomacy and
international law. The library will be
attached to the palace, which will prob-
ably be built on the site on which the
residence of the grand duke of Weimar
now stands.
The Friends School of Providence,
Rhode Island, will celebrate its one
hundred and nineteenth anniversary on
the twenty-third day of this month. A
fine new gymnasium is to be dedicated
by appropriate exercises at which many

‘NERVE WORN KID
| expected to be present.
NEYS!
o ~
by a horse and badly hurt =

make freedom from kid-
ney trouble ' possible
ve a ind
; @ -
brings a bright
ASS. « ¥
Aching backs aro
and loin pains
Swelling of the
dropsy signs
DADE
and
7 h, Freniroy
Lock HAveN, Pa.
L. W. Ammumen
‘A few weeks ago 1
a trial box of Doan’s Kiin~y
Pills for myself, and they did
all they aro said to do. My
STATE...
1ilh

A SPECIVIC FOR
zy C
‘or free trial box
after he recovered he was in
such misery that he could
he thought he would have to
his bladder, and he was un
NR $ { _able to make his water with
| out so much distress—Fdin.
sisted on hi
so I went to Mason's Drug
Store and got a box, The
1 this coupon to
N.Y,
1f above
ress On sepa

tirely well.”— Mrs.

ausband was kicked last fall
AmyuyneN, Lock Haven, Pa.

r



Ne
Natu
Corned Beef


you want something good and want it quick,
appetizing lunch is ready in an instant.

it m——————
= ) a —
Cottade
We take our choice corned beef, cook it and season
it—all done by exper t }
home. b
it right until you v
Keep it in the house for emergencies—for snppers, for sandwiches—for any time when
Libby, McNeiil & Libby, Chicago.
etter than is possible at
"ht we put it in cans to Keep
\ A
1
When just r
Simply turn a key aud tlie canis open. An
Write for our free bookiet, ‘How
to Make Good [hings to Eat.”
TE Te TEA ITE EW TS man,




- blood; wiad on the stomach, bioated bowels, foul moutk,
pains after eating, liver trouble, salio®’ skin and dizziness.
mon
Bi 5a
Shik
BOWELS
{ former principals and noted orators arc |
hardly walk, and to stoop |
caused him such distress that |
quit work — also, it affected
getting a box |
of your pills and trying them,
first box helped him so much |
that I got the second and also |
the third, and now he is ¢n- |
LW]
SUVA LRVN0N]
ery. Female trouble is so comnj
prevalent, that they accept it as al:
evitable, T reatest obstacle in !
of recovery they do 1 y
that it is hwvhich a
their illness.
nine cases ou
but catarr
ever locatg
Chroni
for years
female dis
ter beginng
Among
recommen
wood, of
Hamilton,
Warren, wi
Wyoming.
If you do
factory result
write at once {
statement of 3
pleased to givd
gratis,
Address Dr. TH
Hartman Sanitar
HAIR 8
Promoted by
“of Cuticura
I
And Dressings of Cutie
Great Skin Cure
—
Purest, Sweetest, Most Effective Ren
for Skin, Scalp and Hair,

his hip was fractured--and |
This treatment at once stops fallin}
hair, removes crusts, scales and dan
druff, destroys hair parasites, soothes
irritated, itching surfaces, stimulates
the hair follicles, loosens the scaled
supplies the roots with energ
nourishment, and makes the hair
upon a sWeeh;-wholesome, healthy §
when all else fails.
Millions of women now rely on Cutl-
cura Soap assisted by Cuticura Oint-
ment, the great skin cure, for preserving,
purifying and beautifying the skin, for
cleansing the scalp of crusts, scales and
dandruff, and the stopping of falling
hair, for softening, whitening and
soothing red, rough and sore hands, for
baby rashes, itchings and chafings, for
annoying irritations, or too free or
offensive perspiration, for ulcerative
weaknesses, and many sanative, anti-
septic purposes which readily suggest
themselves, as well as for all the pur-
poses of the toilet and nursery.
Cuticura remedies are the standard
skin cures and humour remedies of the
world. Bathe the affected parts with hos
water and Cuticura Soap, to cleanse the
surface of crusts and scales and soften
the thickened cuticle. Dry, withou$
hard rabbing, and apply Cuticura Oint-
ment freely, to allay itching, irritation
and inflammation, and soothe and heal,
and, lastly, in the severer forms, take
Cuticura Resolvent, to cool and cleanse
the blood. A single set is often sufil-
cient to cure the most torturing, dis-
figuring skin, scalp and blood humours,
from pimples to scrofula, from infancy
to age, when all else fails.
Oold throughout the warld. Cuticura Rerolvent. 50c.(In
form of Chocolate Coated Pills, 25¢. per vial of 60), Oint.
ment, 50c., Soap, 2ic. TI te: London, 27 Charterhouse
8q. ; Paris, 5 Rue dela Paix; Boston, 127 Columbus Ave.
Potter Drug & Chem. Corp., Scie Props.
#5 Bend for ** How to Cure Every Humour."

Ripans Tabulesare
the best dyspepsia
nedicine ever made,
A hundred milllons
of them have been
sold In the United
States in a single
year. Lvery illness
| arising from a disordered stomach is
i relieved or cured by their use.
So
| common Js it that diseases originate
| from the stomach it may be safely as-
| serted there is no condition of hill
| health
thot will not be benefited or
cured by the occasional use of Ripans
CANDY
CATHARTIS
{ sell
Tabules. Physicians know them and
speak highly of them. All druggists
them. The five-cent package Is
enough for an ordinary occasion, and
| the Family Bottle, sixty cents, contains
a bousehold supply for a year. One
| zenerally gives relief within twenty
is, biliousness, bad breath, bad |
headache, indigestion, pimples,
When your bowels don’t move
5, appendic
regularly yon are sick. Constipation kills more people than all other diseases together, It
{ starts éhrpnic aliments and long years of suffering.
No matter what ails you, start taking
CASCARETS today, for you will never get well and stay well until you get your bowels
right Take our advice, start with Cascarets tgday under absolute guarantee to cure or
money refunded.
booklet free. Addre
The.genuine tablet stamped
Sterling Remedy Compa

it nfllicted with
weak eyes, use
Thompson's Eye Water | A
~
C, Never sold
icago or N
SET
in bulk, Sample and §
fori. 502
IT PAYS |
I (THIS PAPER
BN UW
minutes,

Cures
Prickly Hea?
Cools the Blood.
Cleanses the Stomach.
N
“It's good for children (oo'®:
Ph © &Oc. nna 81.00
THE TARRANT CO.
21 Jay Si., New Yorke At Druggists or by mail.