Valentine Democrat. (Valentine, Neb.) 1900-1930, June 17, 1909, Image 7

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A f'n'IUC'H IJracle. : : I
Norman Duncan , at a dinner In'
Lawrence , raid of a brother author : I I
"His nature studies are fascinatnig
I
but false - - false as so many of our
Kansas cyclone yarns. They are hard
. . to beat. I heard a new one yester
day. A stranger , on the way through
the fertile farm lands of the State ,
pointed to a tall pinnacle-like some
thing. that ' rose up in the clear sky
at the distance.
' "What's that tall chimney doing
there ? ' he said. 'Is somebody starting
to build a factory ? '
" 'Oh , no , ' said a native. 'That's no
chimney. It Is Jabez Greene's welL
Cyclone turned her Inside out. ' '
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Sounds Plnn.slble.
"What is your principal object , any-
how " asked the visiting foreigner , "in .
building that Panama canul : : " ,
" , , " 'eH , " answered the native , "we have
an idea it will limit the size of futura
Dattleships : ; . , . " - Chicago Tribune.
I
I -
You Cnn Get A Heir' * ' Foot-Ease FREE.
Write to-day to Allen S. Olmsted , Le Roy ,
N. . Y. , for a FREE sample of Allen's Foot-
Ease , a powder to shake Into your shoes.
It cures tired , sweating , hot , swollen , ach-
ing feet. It makes new or tight shoes easy.
A certain cure for Corns and Bunions. All
Druggists and Shoe Stores sell It. 25c.
Origin of the Corset.
The Corporation of Glovers and Stay-
tinkers of Paris has just celebrated
the seventh centenary of its industry
with a banquet and ball. The origin
of the corset is essentially unaristo-
cratic. A butcher in. the thirteenth
century had a talkative wife , who was ,
In addition , something of a virago. To
reduce her to silence he imprisoned her"
body in the first pair of stays. Wives
have imitated and improved upon the
f dea of the thirteenth century butcher ,
but stays and silence have ceased to
be synonymous. As lately as two cen
turies ago they were forbidden in
France in churches , at the King's Court
when the King was present , and in the !
courts of law. In the first part of the
eighteenth century they almost passed 1
out of fashion , but Paris followed Lon-
don id such matters , as it does to-day ,
and when in 1S39 it was known that the
London dandies wore six different
kinds of gloves each day , the fashion
returned to Paris and has never left
It - Dundee Advertiser.
' Doesn't Work : Both Ways
The long-haired orator had gathered a
.
little crowd around him in one of the
' public parks and was making a fervid po-
" \
litical
speech.
' " - "Yez'll have to stop that , " said one of
' - the sparrow cops , sauntering up to him.
"We don't allow that kind o' talkin' in
this pa'ark , sor. "
"I see ! " roared the orator , descending
from his soap box. . "You want to keep :
your ; park system in politics , but you
won't allow politics in your park sys .
system
tem ! " ,
1
.
Conversational Opportunities.
"So your wife is a suffragette ? Why $
does she want to vote ? " a
'She doesn't want to vote , " an-
_ swered M. Meekton. "She wants to i
make speeches. " - Washington Star.
, y
PRESSED HARD.
Coffee's Weight on Old Age.
When prominent men realize the in.
jurious effects of coffee and the change !
in health that Postum can bring , they
are glad to lend their testimony for i [
The ffenefit > of others. ?
A superintendent of public schools
.
in one of the southern states says :
"My mother , since her early child-
r
hood , was an inveterate coffee drinker ,
C
had been troubled with her heart for a
' . number of years and complained of e
' - a
; 'that 'weak all over' feeling and sick
S
stomach.
h
"Some time ago I was making an
Official visit to a distant part of the ! I a
*
' country and . took dinn.pr wit h one of I I f-
the merchants of the place , I noticed _ I
f [ somewhat peculiar flavor of the cot.
fee , and asked him concerning it. He
replied that it was Postum.
VI ; was so pleased / with it , that after 1
the meal was over , T bought a package t
to carry home with me , and had wife
prepare some for the next meal. The
whole family were so well pleased
with it , that we discontinued coffee
and used Postum entirely. '
"I had really been at times very
anxious concerning my mother's condi
tion , but we noticed that after using i
Postum for a short time , she felt so r
much better than she did prior to its E
use , and had little trouble with her ! :
heart and no sick stomach ; that the I
headaches were not so frequent , and (
her general condition much improved. !
This continued until she was as well
and hearty as the rest of us.
"I know Postum has benefited my-
' self and the other members of the famI I
I ily , but not in so marked a degree as '
in the case of my mother , as she was i
. J a victim of long standing. " Read "The . -
'
Road to Wellville , " in pkgs. "There's
" t
a Reason. .
Ever read the above letter ? A
new one appears from time to time.
They are genuine , true , and full . !
'human interest. . '
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WHY GOOD . PAINT PREVENTS : ; RUST.
\ By William II. V Iker.
Inasmuch as both moisture and oxygen are
I i3 necessary in order that corr.osion may pro-
ceed , it can easily be seen that the duty of
/1111 a protective paint is to exclude both of these
elements. It is well known that a linseed
oil film is an expansive p'oroua structure \ act-
L ing somewhat as a sponge toward moisture
and fre'ely allowing the passage of oxygen.
The function of the pigments employed in
paint is therefore-at least threefold. First , the more ob-
vious one of imparting a color thereto ; second , the most
important one of 'filling up the pores or interstices in
the oil film , thus rendering it as little impervious to
moisture and air as possible , and , third , to aid the com-
posite film in drying or oxidizing to a compact impen-
etrable covering. Very little work has as yet been
done upon paints from this point of view , but with a
clear conception of the factors involved in the corrosion
of iron , an intelligent study is made possible and val- .
uable results can be predicted with certainty.
The porosity of paint fikns containing no linseed , oil ,
but composed of various bituminous materials which
may be adapted for the purpose , is also a field which
can be studied with profit , with a view to increasing
their moisture and oxygen-excluding properties.-Engi-
neering Magazine.
WEALTH OF THE UNITED STATES
By Vice President James ShermUa. .
We have to-day 80,000,000 of people , occupy-
ing 3,000,000 square miles of territory , and
they own $120,000,000,000 of wealth. On farms.
valued at $25,000,000,000 we produce annually
agricultural products valued at 8000000000.
It is nothing that we produce annually 2,500- '
000,000 bushels of corn and 11,000,000 bales
of cotton , if there is no demand . . . . for the corn
- - - - - - - - - - - -
and cotton and if the demand is not at a fair
return. But we have the market. Our 5,500,000 of peo-
ple who produce $15,000,000,000 of manufactured prod-
ucts annually , and receive in wages $230,000,000 , make
the market. These figures apply only to' finished ! prod-
uct. - We . - . get - . . . . . - the ; products ; . - - - - - to - , the consumer by 250,000
miles railroad , which is three times the railroad mile-
age of Great Britain , France and Germany combined.
When side tracks are taken into account , we have more
railroad mileage than all the rest of the world. On
these railroads we . have 100,000 engines , carrying mil
lions of cars and hauling 2,000,000,000 tons. of freight.
This praotically equals all the tonnage carried by all
the railroads and all the ships of all the rest of the
world- This monstrous task is performed by 5,500,000
of ainployes , who are yearly paid $2,300,000,000 , and
this vast business is conducted by $150,000,000,000 of
bank clearances.
Do we prosper ? Only two decades ago we were sec-
.
ESE : PASSING OF H. H. ROGERS.
Former Grocery Hoy of Fnlrhaveii ,
Mass. , Who Dccamc a 31 oney Kiiiff. :
The death of Henry Huttleston Rog-
irs , , multi-millionaire and Standard
Oil magnate , came as a shock to the
men of the financial world. Mr. Rog-
2rs died of apoplexy , an ending which
ae ! had reason to anticipate , for nearly
two : years ago he had suffered from a
stroke which compelled a temporary
retirement from business activities ,
Henry H : Rogers was a native of
Mattapolsett , Mass. , and _ was 60 years I
3f age when death brought to a close .
ills marvelous career. As a boy he
attended school In Fairhaven , Mass. ,
sphere ; his father was a grocer-a town
svhich ; years afterward was the recip
ient of his financial favor in many
ways. ; He began his business career
selling newspapers and driving a de-
ivery wagon for his father. Then he :
worked . as a clerk In New Bedford for I
$3 ; a week. After five years he became i
i railroad brakeman and baggageman
it $1.16 per day. Shortly after reach-
ng his majority he went with his
poung wife to the Pennsylvania oil
ountry , taking with him his savings
of ) $600. There he came into contact
tflth ' that group of Oil City boys many
Df whom later were to be numbered
imong the financial.kings of America.
n 1866 , after five years in the oil
fields , he went to Brooklyn as partner
n the firm conducting the Charles
ratt Oil Works.
In Standard 011.
In 1874 the union of the chief oil
refiners in New York , Philadelphia ,
Cleveland and Pittsburg brought into
jxlstence the Standard Oil Company '
ind Rogers was in on the ground floor.
Second ; only to Jotin D. Rockefeller ,
lie was responsible for the remark-
ible success of that organization and
ecQll.lr ! ! to * him * * * he * * reaped the
Y
greatest : { financial" * reward.
"Two gfeat ideas Mr. Rogers contrib
uted to the development of the oil
business. He invented , the machinery
by which naphtha was first succes -
ully separated from thev crude oil ,
hus making the way for all that has
been done since in the use of naphtha
and its kindred products , and making
the handling and use of the residual
oil far safer than It had even been
before because the volatile constituent
had been removed.
Of late years Mr. Rogers , with Will- ,
am Rockefeller , left the matter of- oil'
production ) and distribution with oth-
ers , and devoted' himself to the man-
agement of the many millions of dolr
arse which make the Standard Oil
Company one of the great financial
powers of the world.
Mr. Rogers' first wife was Libble T.
Quilford. of Fairhaven , Mass. ' She
died fourteen years ago and a year
later he married Emma Augusta R n-
dall , daughter of the head of a big
Diamond firm , and former wife of Lu-
-iijs R. Hart whom she had divorced.
rTi ? wife and four children survive
him. His children are : Henry H.
Rc ; x-rs. : Jr. ; Mrs. W. Benjamin , Mrs.
"Tbnn H. Broughton and Mrs. William
1. ( ' ! 'e. The youngest daughter , Mae ,
ut the age of 17 . , eloped in 1893 with
. f , .
, .
I 1'iI' . . ' , . . " ) , . .h , . ; : ' . . . , ' I , . . . : " : , t r : . ; . . . M :
4
.
-
ond , to Great Britain in the output of iron and steel.
To-day our output equals all the rest of the world. We ,
live well and have happy homes , filled with comforts
.and luxuries. Yet we are a saving people.
We have in savings banks $3,500,000,000 , in national
banks $4,500,000,000 and in State banks $5,000,000,000
in all , $13,000,000,000. The per capita of money In thB
country Is larger than in any other save one , France ,
and amounts to $35 for each of our 80,000,000 people.
The business of the country amounts to over $3,000-
000,000 annually. How do we do such a monstrous
business which is also profitable ? It. Is because we
have confidence in ourselves and the other nations of
the , globe have confidence in uS.-Leslie's Weekly.
LEARNING FROM THE CHILDREN.
Rv Woods 9utchinson
best and sincerest compliment ever paid you. We dwell
greatly upon what parents teach their children , but we
forget to record in equal detail on the opposite side of
the . ledger what our children teach us.
It would be difficult to say on which side the balance
vould be found to- fall. The child is not merely the
ideal pupil , but also the greatest teacher in the world.
The lessons that we learn from him , if we approach
him with proper humility , are the most valuable part :
' of our education.--Success Magazine.
.
FLEET'S TRIP MONEY : WASTED
WASTED.By
By Justice Brewer.
I _ . The , assert : : ion that tho Jmof way tn preserve !
, - - - - - - -
I Joseph C. Mott. but ker parents se
cured a divorce for her and later she
became Mrs. Coe.
Mr. Rogers' wealth is estimated at
from $50,000,000 to $75,000,000. He
was exceedingly generous In his benev-
olences and had devoted at least $3-
000,00 to making Fairhaven a city
beautiful. His summer estate has long
been recognized as one of the show
places of America. Among his gifts to
Fairhaven were' a grammar school , a
library , a town : hall building , a Ma \
sonic building , a magnificent Unita-
rian church , parish house and parson-
age. He also purchased a mosquito-
Infested swamp , filled it in , converted
It into a .park and gave it to the city.
Chiefly at his own expense he macad-
amized every street in town , placed
walks at all crossings. , curbed all the
sidewalks and paved the gutters.
Mr. : Rogers was recognized as the
closest friend of Samuel L. demons
( Mark Twain ) , and the two were to-
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e
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' THE LATE HEXRJ H. ROGERS.
gether whenever possible. Mr. dem
ons was on his way' ' ' to call on Mr.
Rogers when he learned of hs death
and was so overcome that he could
barely express his grief.
Henry H. Rogers was a man of
striking and contradictory characteris- !
tics. He was a tremendous worker
and all his life it was his habit to be
up by 5:30 or 6 o'clock in the morning.
He was a devoted friend to those
whom he liked and an Implacable ene-
my to those who saw fit to fight him.
He. was at once a man of tenderness
and a man of steel. On Wall street
he was adamant ; at home and among
hla friends he was genial , warm-heart
ed , lovable. His intimate friends were
drawn from two extremes of life. The
brilliance of Mark T , rala and the late
Tom Reed was his delight. To them
he showed a side of make-up that few
others outside of his family appre-
ciated. On the other hand , there have
been for years in Fairhaven 'natives
who would never speak to , him except
as "Hen. " They were his intimate
frtends also , each in his own way , and
the/ saw a side of the man that Wall I
. . " ; < : .
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.
.y . , - . . _ . _ . .u. . . .
Treat the child more as an equal-not as
a hopeless inferior. There isn't so much need
of coming down to his level as of giving him
ap opportunity to come up to yours-which
will not require such a frightful effort on his
part as you sometimes imagine : If you can
get a child to recognize and treat you ; as his
equal you will have gained the highest posi-
tion . . of influence over him and earned' the
.L UV . . . . . . . _ . w _ _ _ , _ _ w w _ _ _ . . . .w . . -oJ W 1- _ _ _ . -
peace Isto build up a great navy and army
shows an ignorance of history. The trip of
the fleet around the world , as a boastful show
of our naval strength , has been nothing but
a waste of money.
After all its folly , its influence on the
Orient has not brought peace one day nearer.
Over five millions of the people's money has
L _ _ _ _ _ H _ - h'1s fl- _ J _ _ _ " 'In. . _ . . ' -n.
UGcIl ajJcllL : : : : iUi " coaling iuia : fleet : alone. What benefit
has the nation received from that expenditure ? Over 65
per cent of this country's expenses are due to the army
and navy. In 1907 the sum spent in this way totaled
$365,000,000 = the largest sum spent by any nation.
There never , has been a nation that built a great army
or navy but that got into war. Peace born of force
is only temporary. Not until all nations settle their
differences by arbitration will the world enjoy peace.-
Leslie's Weekly.
I street would find it difficult to undei
stand. , ,
'
THE , GIRAFFE.
Africa's Second Story "Worker ivit
tlje Long Distance Xeck.
The giraffe is the second story work
er of the animal kingdom. It is a
merger of the zebra and the camel and
is also a distant relative of the palm
tree. The giraffe consists of eight feet
of neck equipped with a body at one
end and a head at the other. In the
matter of neck it has all the rest of
the animal kingdom beaten by a
length ! The giraffe's mouth is located
so far from its stomach that it has tc
eat to-day to appease to-morrow's ap
petite. Many : a giraffe has starved to
death while the first meal it had eaten
for two weeks was slowly traveling its
transcontinental esophagus.
The giraffe looks as if it had start
ed out to be a zebra , but , having reach
ed the shoulders , had kept on going.
It is very dark in color , marked by
yellowish'brown stripes in a handsome
linoleum pattern. It lives on tree tops ,
eagles' nests and rainbows. During the
Boer war the British army had some
difficulty with giraffes , which , formed
a great liking for war balloons and
frequently nibbled them during their
flight in order to inhale the gas.
"Why does the giraffe have a long
distance neck ? Persons given to the
use of common sense will realize that
Africa Is rich in insect life as well as
animal life and that all African ani
mals carry innumerable parasites on
their hides. The giraffe's head is so
far from his body that a long neck is
absolutely necessary in order that he
may reach down and grab off a tick
from his fetlock when necessary. Even
a child could see this.-Collier's "Week-
,
iv 1 :
She Followed Instructions.
In a certain city , which shall be
nameless , a literary man had asked his
wife , as she was starting down-town ,
to buy a pair of shirts for him. She
asked him what kind , and lie answer *
ed , "Size fifteen. "
"Yes , but - "
"Two dollars. "
"But I want to know- "
"Oh , the color ? Well , I've plenty of
white shirts. , Get me something that
- - -
won't show soot. Now don't bother
me any more , please. I'm at work. "
She did not bother him any more.
She went away , and in the afternoon
returned with her purchases.
"Here are your shirts , John , " she
said , laying them down before him.
. "Why , they're coal-black , Lucinda ! "
he exclaimed.
"Yes , that's the only kind that won't
show soot. They are just what you
told me to-buy : Now don't bother me
by talking about them. I have got to
go and look after the children. "
Being , "game , " John took his medi
cine without protest. .
At what age does the ; devil develop
in a boy ? We saw a 4-year-old boy
spitting on another 'boy's shoes this
morning , because they had Just been
shined. :
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A Dynpuptla Order.
Miss Cary Thomas. the head of
Cryn T.Iawr College ! , said at one of the
. teas to undergraduates that are a
charming feature of each college
term :
"Fren h h i : the lansuojrp of elegance.
It is quite indispensable abroad. Mas .
ter it and avoid the error committed
by a Bangorian. The Bangorian en
tered a Bouillon ETuval in Paris and
starpd confusedly at the menu. To
him : a caneton a la presse only differed
from a supreme de sole in price. He
twiddled the menu in his fingers , turn-
ed unconsciously to the back , which
contained the advertisement of the
big department store in the Rue du
Bac that is called the ! Bon Marche , and
ordered of the waitress-in French ,
but r translate him :
. .
" 'One paper of pir.3 two sav/V. a
box of envelopes , a clock , and - - er - a .
bo ; ) . ' "
PERMANENT. : : '
A Statement Confirmed After Five
Years.
Elder A. Pirrkerill ; 1303 W. Fourth
St. . Mnrion. 1m ] . . says : "I was
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.
caused a good deal
of misery by the
painful passages of
the kidney secre-
tions. I always felt
dull and languid and
suffered from severe
pains across the
loins. A number of
remedies I tried fail-
ed to give relief , but
I used Dojin's Kidney Pills 'and at- I
tribute to them my present good
health. In 1UOG I publicly endorsed
Doan's : Kidney Pills and have no hesi-
tation now in confirming that 'state-
ment. " .
Sold by all dealers. ; > 0 cents a box.
Foster-Milburu Co. , Buffalo ; , X. Y.
The telephone directories of the cur-
rent lame : in Xew York City would make
a pile seven and n. quarter miles high , if
placed one -on. the other.
People Ti-12 Each Other About Good
' ' ' '
Tiling .
Fourteen years. ago few people in the
world knew of such a ( / preparation as a
Powder for the Feet. Today after the
jenuine merit of Allen's Foot-Ease has
been told year after year ; by one grati-
Oed person to another , there are millions
who would as soon go without a dentifrice
as without Allen's Foot-Ease. It is a
cleanly , wholesome , healing antiseptic
powder to be shaken into the shoes , which
has given rest and comfort to tired and
aching feet in all parts of the world. It
cures while you walk. Over 30,000 testi-
monials of cures of smarting , swollen ,
perspiring feet. It prevents friction and
wear of the stockings and will save in
your stocking bill ten times its cost each
year. Imitations pay the dealer'a larger
profit , otherwise you would never be of-
fered a substitute when you ask for Al-
len's Foot-Ease , the original powder for
the feet. Imitations are not advertised
because they are not permanent. For
every genuine article there1 are many imi-
tations. The imitator has no reputation
to sustain .the advertiser has. It stands
to reason that the adverti d article is-
the best , otherwise the public would not
buy it and the advertising could not be
continued. When you ask for an article
advertised in this paper , see that you get
it. Refuse imitations.
- -
Of the races of the } world. GOO.000,000
are white , 700,000,000 yellow , 215,000,000
black , 33,000,000 : : > brown , or Malayan , and
15,000,000 red , or North and South Amer-
ican Indians.
Strong Winds and Sand Storms
cause granulation of the eyelids. PET-
TIT'S EYE SALVE soothe's and quickly
relieves , 25c. All druggists or Howard
Bros. , Buffalo , N. Y.
A cooking school and a nursery are
among : the innovations at the First Pres-
byterian Church in Seattle.
Sirs. WInslow's Soothing Syr p for child
ren teething , softens tho gums , reduces In-
flammation allays : pain I cures wind coU .
25c a bottle. -
In forty years (18GS ( to 1908) ) Japan's
foreign trade increased from 20,000,000
yen to 814,000,000 yen.
Try Mnrlnc Eye KemecJy
For Red , Weak. Weary , Watery Eyes.
Compounded by Experienced Physicians.
Conforms to the Pure Food and Drugs Law.
Murine Doesn't Smart. Soothes Eye Pain.
Try Murine for Your Eyes. You Will Like It.
*
The Xova Scotirj government has ap
pointed a commission to examine into and
report on the feasibility old-age pen-
sions for workmen.
QUICK RELIEF
TAKE
Gold Medal Haarlem Oil
O- a. : ES IT "E : * " 33 23
.
Odorless and Tasteless" ,
Your pains and aches from KIDNEY , LIV
ER , BLADDER OR STOMACH TROU
BLE will begin to disappear the first day
you take GOLD MEDAL HAARLEM OIL
CAPSULES.
' "After ; : ivingyonrOold Medal Haarlem Oil Capsules
a thorough trial. I find them to be the best kidney and
liver remedy I have ever had the good fortune take.
and thoy arc truly a blessljic to fflanKlnd. I heartily
recommend them to all sufferers ofwealc kidneys and
Uver as the superlat1\"e remedy. "
W. H'-WARRES , 1&0 BIeecker
New York. March 251909.
Haarlem Oil Capsules 25 and 50 cents
per box. Bottles loc. and 35c. , at all
druggists.
Send for Free Fall Size 25 : Box o ! Capsule
_ If you are suffering from any kind of
LIVER , STOMACH or BE&JDER trou-
ble , fill out and mail this coiipon now to
Holland Medicine Co. , Scranton , Pa. , and
receive a free box of Capsules for trial.
IIolland Medicine Co. . " Scranton.Pa. :
PleMe send me at once. free tullitza 25c box
Gold Medal IIzLarlem OU Capsules.
Name " . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
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YOUR L 1
BACKACHE
WILL YIELD
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To Lydia E. Pinkfaam's - - r
Vegetable Compound
Rockland , Maine.-"I was troubled ) t
for a long time with pains in my back
and side , and was miserable in every -
, , : . N : . . > o : way. I doctored /
/ : * : ' > < . f until I was dis
. l" . ; { . " . ? t couraged , and'
1 thought I should
never get well. I
j. : _ ' . : . . , ' , , _ read a testimonial
l . . ( > : Jf' ! : < ' . . . ' Ji about Lydia E.
. : .Tt : { : . : : . .N ; Pinkham's Vegeta . .
, . = : > < w > ble and . . .
, 1 Compound ,
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Fl. ' : ; ,
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> . >
;
. . .i.t < > "x . : , : .i , , . ; . . , . : - . . . . ' . _ .n : ; ' , ' , : A - , thought : I would
: > / . " 4. ' k ' " , . n . , ' ' try it. After tak
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: , M. . ' : . \ 1- Mr . - (
.t ,
w' : - . ; ' : . iI. ; ; . ; , : , ; ing- three bottles I
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. : . : ' .
w.K'.y.1" \ > > -'J : -
: , * . : : " > ' , . ' ; > : . . , ; " ' : . ; was cured , and
' ' . , never felt so welJ ]
in all my life. I recommend Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound to all
my friends.-Mrs. WILL YOUNG , 6
Columbia Ayenue , Eockland. Me.
Backache is a symptom of female
weakness or derangement. If you
have backache , don't neglect it. To
get permanent relief you must reach
the root of the trouble. Nothing wo
know of will do this so safely and surely
as Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com
pound. Cure the cause of these dis
tressing aches and pains and you wilJ
become well and strong.
The great volume of unsolicited
testimony constantly J pouring proves
conclusively that Lydia E. Pinkham'a
Vegetable Compound , made from roots
and herbs , has restored health to thou.
sands of women. .
Mrs. \ Pinkham , of Lynn , Mass. ,
invites all sick women to \vrite
her for advice. She has guided
thousands to health free oJ
charge
chargeO h' Tfcai Jtami !
: 'J Gas
Did you hear It ? How ernbar
rassing. These stomach noisesmake
you wish you could sink through-
the floor. You imagine everyone
hears them. Keep a box of CAS
CARETS in your purse or pockei
and take a part of one after eatin c cr > ,
It will relieve the stomach of gas. 01J
CASCARETS IOc a box for a 'Wee 's
treatment. All dru : : ists. Biggestseller !
in the world-million boses a month.
The frigate bird , with a record of 300
miles an hour , is ! the fastest flyer.
AGONIZING ITCHING '
Eczema for a Year - Got No nclle'
Even at Skin Hospital - In Desjiulsr-
Until Cnticnra Cnrcd Him. . . . .
"I was troubled by a severe itching.
and dry , scurfy skin on my ankles ,
f
feet , arms and scalp. Scratching made-
it worse. Thousands of small red pim
pIes formed and these caused intense-
itching. I was advised to go to the
oospital for diseases of the skin. I did '
so , the chief surgeon saying : 'I never
M
saw such a bad case of eczema. ' But
[ got little or no relief. Then I tried , ;
many so-called remedies , but I became
so bad that I almost gave up in de-
spair. After suffering agonies for
twelve months , I was relieved of the
almost unbearable itching after two or
three applications of Cuticura Oint-
ment.I continued its use , combined .
with Cuticura Soap and Pills , and I
was completely cured. Henry Searlo
Little Rock , Ark. , Oct. 8 and 10 , ' 07. " j
Potter Drug & Chem. Corp. , Sole .
Props. of Cuticura Remedies , Boston.
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FASHION HINTS " }
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For a little morning dress this would b.-- : '
attractive made of cotton voile. Thest- ,
voiles wash beautifully and this seaion" . , .
they come in the prettiest patterns. They I
are most inexpensive which is anotherpoini , : ,
in their favor . '
S. O. . U. . .
N. - - Xo. 25 - 1909.
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GREAT ff
FOR '
tAT PENETRATES PA I N f
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