PAGE SIX IESE SIX LETTERS From New England Women Prove that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Come pound Does Restore the Health of Ailing Women. Boston, Mass.~*1 was from hemorrhages (sometimes lasting for weeks), check them. 1 began taking Lydia E, Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound (tablet form) on Tuesday, and the following Saturday morning the hem- orrhages stopped. 1 have taken them regularly ever since and am steadily gaining. *I certainly think that every one who is troubled as I was should give your ( ompound Tablets a faithful trial, and they will find relief,”=Mrs, GEORGE Jupy, 802 Fifth Street, South Boston, Mass, Letter from Mrs, Julia King, Phenix, R.L Phoenix, R.L-=*1 worked steady in the mill from the time I was 12 years the Change of Life and suffered and could get nothing to passing throug! old until I had been married a year, and I think that caused my bad feel- ings. I had soreness in my side near my left hip that went around to my back, and some wes I would have to lie in bed for two or three days. 1 was t able to do my housework. “ Lydia E, Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has helped me wonderfully in every wav. You may use my letter for the good of others, I am only too ad to do anything within my power to recommend your medicine."—Mrs. Juria King, Box 282, Phenix, R.L Letter from Mrs. Etta Donovan, Willimantic, Conn. llimantie, Conn.—** For five years I suffered untold agony from female s causing backache, irregularities, dizziness, and nervous prostra- i ] ne to walk up stairs without stopping on the me something different. I received med to suffer more. ‘The last doctor ing as nothing would restore me to + Ei. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound would do, and by tak seven bottles of the Compound and you adv sed, I am restored to my natural health,”—Mrs, 762 Main Street, Willimantic, Conn. m but se fo e to take an So I becan taking I to see what it Other treatme ErTA DONOVAN, Letter from Mrs. Winfield Dana, Augusta, Me. Augusta, Me.~*Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has cured the backache, headache, and the bad pain I had in my right side, and I am perfectly well.”—Mrs. WINFIELD DANA, R.F.D. No. 2, Augusta, Me, Letter from Mrs. J. A. Thompson, Newport, Vt. Newport, Vt.—*1 thank you for the great benefit Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has done me. I took eight bottles and it did wonders for me, as I was a nervous wreck when 1 began taking it. I shall always speak a good word for it to my friends.,”—Mrs, JouN A. THOMPSON, Box & Newport Center, Vermont. Letter from Miss Grace Dodds, Bethlehem, N.H. Bethlehem, N.H.—* By working very hard, sweeping carpets, washing, ironing, lifting heavy baskets of clothes, ete., I got all run down. I was sick in bed every month, “ This last Spring my mother got Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- und for me, and already 1 feel like another girl. I am regular and do x have the pains that I did, and do not have to go to bed. I will tell all my friends what the Compound is doing for me.”—Miss GrRAciE B. DopDs, Box 133, Bethlehem, N.H. For 30 years Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has been the standard remedy for fe=- male ills. No one sick with woman’s ailments does justice to herself who will not try this fa=- mous medicine, made from roots and herbs, it has restored so many suffering women to health. ‘Write toLYDIA E. PINKHAM MEDICINE CO. (CONFIDENTIAL) LYNN, MASS., for advice. Your letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman and held in strict confidence. ATR er A HOTEL MCGINNIS § The undersigned having remodel- ed the old Mooney Hotel, adding a number of sleeping rooms, bath, etc., is now prepared to entertain trans- ient and regular guests. shaving Hair Cutting Massaging Razors Honed RESTAURANT oo . : In connection with hotel where he 4 >hampooing Toilet Waters & Will serve in season. i Singeing Shaving Soaps OYSTERS and CLAMS in any style % TURTLE SOY P, Ete. Ete. i : : TURTY te t t Opp. First National Rank r Priv ini f ies. rivate dining room for ladies MOUNT JOY, PENNSYLVANIA Jd. WW. McGinnis. PROPRIETOR Agency For Elkhorn Laundry i THE BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, PA. np FORESEES SoU RANI an BSG sido 30 ) Wednesday, September 18, 1812, - - e— or m— r w - 'B £xposition ier Garments | fieging Saturday, September 21, 1912 At Lancaster's Home of Fashion Che store for the Woman who holds anthorative stole and her pocket book in equal esteem HE styles displayed in this store are the fashions of the hour in New York. ‘he m st exclusive and highest priced house in the Metropolis has neither the abil ty to get the correct styles more quickly, nor to reproduce them more faithfully than we have. (OR Outergarment section which gives one the im- pression of a big metrovoolitan store. is the argest : and most complete depar ment of its kind in this State, with the single exception of Philadelphia. Our prices are already famous from one ed of the county to another. We hav: established the ‘act that under our system of co-operation with our New York office and a leading American manufacturer. a suit or a coat which sells in upper Fifth Avenue at $50.00 may be reproduced in model, material and lining, and sold here for cne-half the original price. T is to be a distinctly coat suit season, with models and 3 fabrics different from anything seen in recent ye irs, A depending largely upon the French bouc e t_ndency in W woolens. The Dcnovan display of coats and suis at : from $10 to $40, embracing every new tvle el ‘mont is i an exhibition which no woman in this couniv can afford to omit. : JNCLUD™D n this Autumn showing is a s: ecial disslay . of garm children and the young Miss, entirely © § different sty course from the grown-ups; separate departments for our young friends, and special sales= people to wait on them. ag fierp Style Without Extravaganre Costs You Nothing When Idle— Almost Nothing When It Runs HEN an I H C engine is at work, it is the cheapest dependable power you can use; when not working it costs you nothing. It will work just as hard at the close of the day as at the start—will work overtime or all night just as readily. It is ready to work whenever you need it; always reliable and satisfactory. You can use an IHC Oil and Gas Engine to pump water, to run the wood saw, cream separator, churn, grindstone, washing machine, feed grinder, corn husker and shredder, en- silage cutter, or any other farm machine to which power can be applied. I H C oil and gas engines are constructed of the best materials; built by men who know what a good engine must do; thoroughly tested before leaving the factory, They are made in all sizes from 1 to 50-horse power; in all styles— vertical and horizontal, air and water cooled, portable, stationary and mounted on skids, to operate on gas, gaso- line, naphtha, kerosene, distillate or alcohol. Kerosene-gasoline tractors, 12 to 45-horse power. Ask the THC local dealer to show you an IHC engine and explain each part, or write for catalogue and full information. International Harvester Company of America (Incorporated; Harrisburg Pa. I HC Service Bureau The purpose of this Bureau is to furnish, free of charge to all, the best infor yn obtainable on better farming. If yo > y worth tions concerning soils, cr and drainage, i gation, fertilizers, etc.. make irinquiries sp and send them to I H C Serv e - Building, Chicago, US A i 1c ice Bureau, Harvester OS le | ly, ¥ ww . # m KATIE FL RAEI 1 EC 4 An Ideal Stare for Out-of-towm Folks ik Free Car Fare to Lancaster and return: Wereturn yeur car or r: an exclusive Donovan feature. d fare, on purchases exceeding $10.00. Goods deli ered Free : Lancaster County. Telephone orders m reversing the charge to us. All merchandis vithin a reasonable time. Cash ref led if desired, promptly and cheerfully. ¥ i fee room for women, writin mat®rials, newspapers, telephones; all | ; ot where dainty and appetizing meals may be had ery modest charge. out-of-town tolks. rticuiarly for the needs of FRET LIN A SE EET VY Ss TAT MAS oe {r 6H) ¢, A 3 Bo mm «+ ; 1 SLJONOVAMNL © Successors to Foster & Cochran 32-38 East King Street 0, “/ Lancaster, Pa. a pa Se pat RT EP TSAR rs on wi The Week in Grain : | Mompiled for the Mount Joy Bulle-| (tin, at Mount Joy, Pa., by Wm. Li; | Bear & Co., Pennsylvania Building, Philadelphia, Pa., by D. B. Lehman, ' | Manager, Woolworth Building, Lan- raster. Penna The feature of the week has been De- Agriculture, showing the largest cereal production in the the September Report | partment’ of of the {history of the nation. With all crops much in excess of normal | corn and oats are both establishing [new high records for abundance. Speculatively, Wheat and Oats {have been very firm with Corn showing an easier tendency. A, liberal movment of old corn has! {served to make some reduction in the enormous premium that has pre- vailed in this cereal for immediate delivery, and the decline in the cash {article considerable volume of selling pressure to the de- {ferred deliveries. Much of the strength elsewhere in {the list has been due to brought a conditions | abroad, Europe taking heavily of both Wheat and Oats, and prices | there stubbornly advancing in the face of recessions here. Conditions mills size) in Germany are very bad, the official | | t late in the week| cabie | Prussian confirming report recent private claims of wide areas where grain is spoiling in the fields from continued | Exports of oats are heavy rainfall. a liberal interior movement classes of grain, stocks are no accumulating in normal amount. Minneapolis reports an excellent demand for flour, and Minneapolis continue to take a heavy | movement of kigh stiff premiums liveries. The to be movements over tone as a and while modest, fair commission desired, are good activity and house particpation. m——— li ——— For Save Several good Building Lots front- [team is quite ing 95 feet on South Barbara Street, | their danger Mount Joy and extending in depth of | tain the middle of the road until al- There is a good | Most too stable on these lots that could very | misjudging the easily be converted into a double |mobile. particulars | driver epply to Lewis Seeman, Mount Joy. {approaching that width 154 feet. dwelling. For further security from over running much in excess of any pre-| the vious season, and not with standing Most difficult to be seen at night by of all the occupants | ¢ | Poles, depressions in the white road | the enactment of no laws to compel way, quickly under the rays of the auto-|States do compel mobile peculiar an unlighted team that can only be comprehended jventured on the road at night in an 'automobile. light grade wheat at deferred de-; whole leaves little price there is angle will the paint of glisten | ii pao ito ! automobilist cannot definitely see 5 5 | i ” p | Drivers of teams feel a degree of | the team until donger So at night | For his own safety the driver should provide his team the right; 2—In over taking another vehicle pass it on the left side; 3—In allowing another vehicle with Yights 50 it | tO pass turn to the right side of the Safety on the Highways being struck automobiles that as a rule is i 4 ai [road so it can pass you on your left $i Ne : 4 3 y is-| y estimated. Of all objects on fo i a Son wile iy hi, thereby taking upon itself any road a team is probably the ance off. tis so obviously 8 danger that may exist; 4— Display | duty to take equal measures to pro- . lights at night, [tect himself that it should require g g of ——— Eee an automobile. iti . Prolific, Sure However, many cities and some Th the Zara oh 3 the carrying of garden on the premises of ic. Aaron D. Peters, in Rapho township | lights by teams. k : : 2 is growing a vine of the “Paddy pan’ variety of squashes which at the present time bears fifty-five up | it, fences, buildings, all loom there are against seeing| Nor does the danger of collision l exist solely between autemobile and one has | team; two teams are as likely to | collide. Many collisions between of | unlighted teams being driven along at a certain |the roads at a rapid pace at night that vehicle | have been avoided more through Sometimes | the sense of the horses striving to searchlight, but difficulties fully when size. John Hostetter, supervisor Rapho township, a few days dgo plucked from a vine in his yard a bunch of fine grapes of unusual size. the rays Only fall upon the team when of by reflection, this may happen when the team is,DPrevent a run-in than by any effort (wpen pe counted the grapes he still at a safe distance away and|of the drivers. found it to contain ninety-six, ali again it 1 not occur until the| For the greatest degree of safety good and fully matured. close. Not knowing on the road everybody who uses — many drivers will re-jthe highways, automobilists and Stung to Death | / i | | drivers should adopt the recognized | measures for preventing accidents of the auto-|and faithfully and promptly practise thing is certain, the | them, these being the fundamentals: the automobile | 1—1In meeting a vehicle approach- the distance, the |ing from the opposite direction turn A horse on the farm of Christi Umble near Gap, was stung so badly by bees that it died soon thereafter. Mr. Umble, in his effort to rescue the horse, was stung in hundreds of places, but will recover, late to turn out through speed One can see in 4 squashes, many of which are of good