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| oung women may avoid much sick- |
1 . s e
ness and pain, says Miss Alma Pratt, if
i » - ®
they will only have faith in the use of
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound
¥ €g pound.
" 4Dear Mrs. Pingram: — I feel it my duty to tell all young women
how much Lydia E. Pinkham’s wonderful Vegetable Compound has
done for me. I was cqng»letely run down, unable to attend school, and
did not care for any kind of society, but now I feel like & new person,
and have gained seven pounds of flesh in three months,
f “I recommend it to all young women who suffer from female weak
‘ness.” — Miss ALua Prarr, Holly, Mich.
- FREE MEDICAL ADVICE TO YOUNG GIRLS.
— Al youngl{lrls at this geriod of life are earnestly invited to
write Mys. Pinkham for advice; she has guided in a motherly way
hundreds of young wemen; her advioe is freely and cheerfully
given, and her address is Lynn, Mass.
Judging from the letters she is receiving from so many young girls Mrs.
Pinkham believes that our girls are often gjushed altogether too near the
Mmit of their endurance nowadays in our public schools and seminaries.
Nothing is allowed to interfere with studies, the girl must be pushed to
the front and graduated with honor; often physical collapse follows, and it
takes years to recover the lost vitality,— often it is never recovered.
A Young Chicago Girl Saved from Despair.
- “DeAr Mrs, Pingnay: —I wish to thank you for the help and ben
efit I have received through the use of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege=
table Compound and Liver Pills. When I was about seventeen
REESTEE years old I suddenly seemed to lose my usual good
(RN, health and vitality. Father said I studied too
NEE /;:, E; [ hard, but the doctor thought different and
{K:;},’f'.;fj‘\i e= N prescribed tonics, which I took by the
RS e 0 g;;\\;\\,,;;,, qttluxrt without relief. Reading one day in
A 0 RS ‘*9"‘,'4.{’ the paper of Mrs. Pinkham’s great cures,
W i and finding the symptoms described an-
NEE R swered mine, I decided I would give Lydia
S/ \“/Hfi E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound a
T N \;,4’4 trial. I did not say a word to the doctor;
AL AN W&/ 1 bought it myself, and took it according
/\\«\Jg‘%,\ to directions regularly for two months,
L y SSSSE” and I found that I gradually improved,
R\ \ and that all pains left me, and I was my
W , old self once more. — LirLie E. SINCLAIR,
17 E. 22d 5%., Chicago IIL”
; Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com;t)ound is the one sure rem
dy to be relied upon at this important period in a young girl’s
fife; with it she can go through with coura?e and safety the werk
she must accomplish, and fortify her phis cal well bein% so that
her future life may be insured against sickness and suffering.
21T if we cannot forthwith produce the original letters and signatures of
5000 fb&? t;gggom:l:, c\:rl\xll‘c‘h v;irll grovep’;?xe?: :bscfiggoggg:ui;mness. .
Lydia E, Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass.
CURES DYSPEPSIA, SICK HEADACHE, BILIOUSNESS, NERVOUSNESS
Act
TYNER’S DYSPEPSIA REMEDY .0
FREE BOOKLET. Write, Box 138, Atlanta, Ga. ASK YOUR DRUGGIST.
ptedtse STORE FRONTS
s 7’:-' =% For all kinds and sizes of Store I}ufldmg\fi: We furnish all material entering
.' P ~.’ ¥ '.} l into the (‘onstr}xctiup' ntlbmre l"rontg. Yrite us about ‘yonr‘vrol\\‘wml’b‘uil\l
e B M {| Ingund state dimensions and style of front and we will send you, FREE OF
ol B bel eME M| CHARGL, an elegant Blue Print Plan, and quote you an extremely low
FEaaE .Z‘,':,"_.f;‘;,.,‘ 5 price on one of our popular
- Beautiful, BEverlasting
I!’Ti‘ § ,i' i . Modern Store Fronts. Wegive you all the st,ylo of an elegant New York or
:"i | ' dl‘-i - Chicago store at moderate cost, Mend for Catalogue.
fempnekee—opatie—y SOUTHERN FOUNDRY CO., Owensboro, Kentucky
1t afilicted with ’ L . | Give the name of this paper when
weuk eyee, use INOMPSEN’s Eyo Water . iing to advertisers—(At23.o4)
| Very Nervy.
~ Star Boarder—The landlady objects
to you .complaining about the fare.
She says all the food she serves is
‘nerve food.
~ Mr, Kicker—l don’t doubt her as
“sertion. It takes a great deal of nerve
to serve such food as this.—St. Louis
Star.
! A —————————————
- FITS permanently cur *d. No fits ornervous -
goss nfberfirat day’s use of Dr. Kline’s Great
Nerveßestorer.s2 trial bottle and ttea?me free
E Dr. R. H. KLing, Ltd., 931 Arch st.,Phila., Pa.
' Many a man who starts at the foot of
the ladder is down at the heel at the finish.
g Feet Hurt,
Sweat, iteh, blister? Rovan Foor Wasn
cures them. Removes odors of feet, armpits,
ote.; stops chafing. If not at druggists send
25c to EAToN Drua Co., Atlanta, Ga., for
full size, postpaid;sample for 2¢ stamp.
One application proves its merit. Money
back if not satisfled.
Advertising a Town.
The marvelous growth of Seattle,
Wash, is credited mainly to newspaper
publicity. The business men of that
community raised a considerable.sum
to be expended for space in Eastern
newspapers, and the returns were
prompt and generous.
There is more Catarrh in this section of the
eountry thanall other diseases put together,
and until the last few years was supposed to
be incurable. For a great many years doetors
pronouneced it a local disease and prqscnbed
local remedies, and by constantly failing to
cure with local treatment, pronounced it in
curable. Science has proven Catarrh to be a
constitutional diseass and therefore requires
constitutional treatment. Hall’s Catarrh
Cure, mgnufactured b{ F. J. Cheney & Co.,
Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional cure
on the market, It istaken internallyindoses
from 10 drops to a teaspoonful. It acts direct
ly on the bl%od and mucous surfaces of the
gystem. They offer one hundred dollars for
any case it fails to cure. Send for circulars
and testimonials. Address F.J. CHENEY &
Co., Toledo, 0.
Sold by Druggists, 75¢. :
Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation
People Must Be Told,
A writer on advertising says it is the
aim of nearly every business comncern
to have a special and original feature.
“But when such a speciaity shall be
found it must be advertised. No arti
cle can sell itself without the ald of
advertising.”
Having a Pic-nic,
There is something %«%rticular]y enjoyable
about going to a Pic-Nic. The very word
Pic-Nic brinfi‘s pleasant anticipations of a
good time. The idea of going out to the
woods and fields or down by some brook or
lake, with luncheon to be served on the
frass and under the trees, hgs a peculiar
ascination. The fresh air and exercise
contribute to give a hearty appetite to all
and everything at luncheon seems far
better than the finest coutrse dinner that
a French chef ever served. Wooden dishes
supplant Dresden china, and paper boxes
silver trays, when the ‘‘good things to
eat” are spread upon the ground.
Pic-Nies are never complete without the
sandwiches, sweet white bread with a gen
erous layer of meat between. Libby’s
canned meats are ideal for Pic-Nies and
outings. The cans are so easily opened
and the contents so fresh and palatable
that no Pic-Nic is a success without
Libby's “Natural Flavor” Food Products.
When a young man tells a girl he loves
her for herself alone it’s equivalent to an
injunction against interference from the
rest of the family.
Could You Use Any Kind of a Sewing
Machine at Any Price?
If there is any price so low, any of
fer so liberal that you would think of
accepting on {rial a new high grade,
drop cabinet or upright Minnesota,
Singer, Wheeler & Wilson, Standard,
White or New Home Sewing Machine,
cut out and return this notice, and yon
will receive by relurn mail, postpaid,
free of cost, the handsomest sewing
machine catalogue ever published. It
will name you prices on the Minnesota,
Singer, Wheeler & Wilson, Wahite,
Standard and New Home sewing ma
chines that will surprise you; we will
make you a new and attractive proposi-
I tion, a sewing wmachine offer that will
astonish you.
If you can make any use of any sew
ing machine at any price, if any kind
| of an offer would interest you, don't
‘ fail to write us at once (be sure to cut
| out and return this special notice) and
get our iatest book, our latest offers,
l our new and most surprising proposi
tion. Address
SEARS, Rorsuck & Co., Chicago.
_ I all ®omen who look back were turned
into salt pillars the streets would be ful)
of statues. .
HAWK, DEAD, CLUNG TO BRANCH.
Man’s Strength Required to Release
Grip of the Talons.
George M. Lee, engineer of the
Farmington River Power Company at
its Tariffville power station, was look
ing out across the Farmington River
from a window' in the power house one
day last week when he saw a big
hawk light on one of the topmost
branches of a tree about 200 yards
away.
Mr. Lee took from its rack a Lee
navy rifle of the pattern of which his
father, the late James Parish Lee,
was the inventor. Returning to the
window Mr. Lee took sight and fired.
The hawk fluttered and changed po
sition somewhat, but as.i did not
fall, Mr. Lee thought at first he had
made a poor shot and missed. He
started to sight for a second shot,
when he realized that if his shot had
not taken effect the hawk would cer
tainly have flown away after the loud
report.
Mr. Lee’s assistant crossed the river
to the tree, but the hawk never stirred
from its perch on the treetop. Com
pletely mystified, the man then climb
ed the tree. He found the hawk hang
ing head downward, its talons still
encireling the branch on which it was
perched when Mr. Lee fired. The
tendons of the hawk’s legs were rigid
and it required all the man’s strength
to release the claws from the branch.
The bullet, which was of only .22
calibre, had cut a clean hole through
the hawk’s neck, killing it instantly.
But the hawk’s grip on its perch had
grown rigid instead of relaxing at
death and tSe body simply dd the
“giant swing” around the branch,
much as an athlete would around a
horizontal bar, except that the hawk’s
body did not complete the circle.
Mr. Lee found tkat his prize meas
ured 5 feet 4 inches from tip to tlp
of outstretched wings.—Hartford
AFTER THE SALMON.
Not the Expensive Spert in Newfound
land That Many Suppose.
Acording to popular belief, salmon
fishing is of necessity a sport for the
rich alone, no man of even moderate
means presuming so much as to think
of indulging in it, says Country Life
in America. In the British Isles and
other parts of northern Europe this
is undoubtedly true. Even in this
country and in Canada in the last few
years the salmon waters have been
taken by clubs and individuals, so
that now the fishing is restricted to
the few, but Labrador and Newfound
land are left free and moderately ac
cessible to the fishing public living in
the Eastern states; and improved
traveling facilities have made the
trip to Newfoundland a matter of
ease, so the number of sportsmen
visiting that island is increasing enor
mously. Fortunately the island is
large—more than 300 miles each way
—and the rivers very numerous, so
that it will be some time before the
country is crowded. Thus far only
a very few of the most accessible
rivers have been fished in at all.
Along the east coast and the northern
peninsular are many rivers that have
never known a fisherman. At the
present time these are rather difficult
of access by land, it is true, but by
<harterirg a small vessel fishermen
ean, at moderate cost, visit the most
remote of tkem and be sure of almost
unlimited salmon.
Her Papa’s Cleverness.
Robert B. Mantell, who is starring
in "The Light of Other Days” and
Bill Nye were great friends. When
the humorist first engaged in newypa
per work he _took a house on Staten
[slanfi, and one day Mr. Mantell went
to dinner with him. Nye exploded
some new stories, and Mr. Mantell,
turning to his host’s little girl, said:
“Very clever papa you've got, my
d'ear.” l“Yes," responted the demure
little miss, “when there's company.”
Denmark sends 49,000,000 dozens of
eggs to England every yesr,