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| You won’t tell your family doctor
the whole story about your private
illhess — you are too.modest., You
need not be afraid to tell Mrs. Pink
ham, at Lynn, Mass., the things you
could not explain to the doctor. Your
letter will be held in the strietest con
fidence. From her vast correspond
ence with sick women during the
past thirty years she mag have
gained the very knowledge that will
elxi) yourcase. Such letters as the fol
low nfi, from grateful women, es
tablish beyond a doubt the power of
%’!DIA E. PINKHAOM’g
GETAELE COMPOUN
to conquer all female diseases,
Mrs, Norman R. Barndt, of Allen.
town, Pa., writes:
“Ever since I was sixteen years of
age I had suffered from an organic de
rangement and female weakness; in
consequence I had dreadful headachea
and was extremely nervous. My physi
clan said I must go through an opera
tion to get well. A friend tn]& me
about Lydia 11. Pinkbam’s Vegetable
Compound, and I took it and wrote you
for advice, following your directions
carefully, and thanks to you I am to
day a well woman, and T am telling
all my friends of my experience.”
FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN.
For thirty years Lydia E. Pink
ham’s Vegetable Compound, made
from roots and herbs, Rns been the
standard remedy for female ills
and has positively cured thousands of
women who have been troubled with
displacements, inflammation, ulcera
tion, fibroid tumors, irre%ularities,
fériodic pains, backache, that bear
ng-down feeling, flatulency, indiges
tion,dizziness,ornervous prostration.
*——-—_—.—_—.—._____—___
He who gpeaks from expericnce
leaves a lot of things unsaid.
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Cures Constipation, Diarrhoea, Convulsions,
Colic, Sour Stomach, ete. It Destroys Worms,
Allays Feverishness and Colds, It Alds Diges
‘mu. It Makes TErTRING Fasy, Promotes Cheer
nlness and Produces Natural Sleep,
QNE SOUTH'S FAVORITE COFFEE )
o Why? Y ;
Because it is— / - :
fi Imported direct from the best)
coffee markets in the world.\ \
_ Roasted and blended accord-))
m'x to the old Creole formula,
fwhich has made New Orleans 2
coffee famous for 50 years.\) <@
\Goes)hot from roasters am& -
grinders into air-tight tin cans,
rrescrving its strength and de
icious flavor.( ) B
Sold\at a medium pnce)and“\
requires only \half as) much as)
tother kinds. \\ () (/¢ 5
\\* ASK YOUR GROCER FORUT. ) § :
TI{ERRILY-Tz\\'LOß\CO..
“7 \NEW{ORLEANS, LA. \\&
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Oh! Papa don't forget to buy a
bettle of CHENEY'S EXPECTO
RANT for your little girl.
You can buy it at any Drug
Stare and you know it never fails
£o cure my Croup and Cough.
TO CURE A COUGH OR COLD,
Doctor's Prescription Cures Coughs
and Colds in a Day,
Mix twc ounces of glycerine, one
halt ounce Concentrated Oil of Pine
and one-half pint of good whiskey,
ghake thoroughly each time and use
in doses of a teaspoonful to a table
spoonful every four hours. The true
Concentrated Oil of Pine comes put
up for medicinal uses only in half
ounce viais gealed in tin screw top
cages and is a product es the labora
rtorles of the Glohe Pharmaceutical
‘ Co., of Dayton, Ohio. The ingre
dients all can be gotten at any drug
store,
Tears of joy and gadness come from
the same tank,
R SRS S R e Y
Many Professional Men,
clergymen, teachers and singers use
Brown's Bronchial Troches for cur«
ing hoarseness and coughs,
Tt wag too much apple sauce that got
old Adam into trouble.
M e
Taylor's Cherokee Remedy of Sweet
Gum and Mullen is Nature’s great reme
dy--cures Coughs, Colds, Croup and Con
sumption, and all throat and lung troubles.
At druggists, 25c., £oc. and §I.CO per bottle,
OBLIGING JAILER.
Mayor—Where are you going?
Village Consgtable—The three
tramps 1 just locked up want to play
whist, and I'm looking for a fourth.
~Transatlantic Tales.
T How Ty T
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward
for ung' case of Catarrh that cannot be
cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure,
| I. J, Cuexey & Co., Toledo, O,
_We, the undersigned, have known F. J.
Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe
him perfectly hcnorable in all business
transactions and financially able to carry
out any obhf\ntions made by his firm.
WarLping, KiNNAN & MARvIN, Whole
sale Druggists, Toledo, O,
Hall’s Catarrh Cure istaken internally, act
ingdirectly upon the blood and mucuoussure
faces of the system. Testimonials sent free.
Price, 75¢. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists,
Take Han’n Family Pills for constipation.
THE LIMIT. &
Clarice: “I think Mr. Gunson i 3
dreadfully stingy.”
Clarence: “Stingy? Why, that
man wouldn't even tell a story at hig
own expense!"—Harper's Weekly,
SHE COULD NOT WALK
lor Months—Burning Humor on
Ankles—Opintes Alone Brought
Sleep — Hezema YieMed to
Cuticura,
“I had eczema for over {wo years. I had
two physicians, but they only gave me re
lief for a short time and I cannot enum
erale the ointments and lotions I used to
no purpose, My ankles were one mass of
sores. 'l'he itching and burning were so in
te?e that T could not sleep. T -could not
walk for nearly four months, One day my
hu;bun_cl said T Mdm try the Cuticura
o' e oplate. | T'used ore set of
U’lmm flo.fi, "\»",n. M
my ankles healed in a short time. It is
now a year since I used Cuticwira, and there
has 'been no return of the cozema. Mrs.
David Brown, Locke, Ark., May 18 and
July 13, 1007.”
The better you do your present work
the more apt they are to keep you
thers instead of promoting you.
How to Make Your Milch Cows More
Profitable,
Write Pacific Coast Borax Co., New
York City, for “Successful Dairying,”
being valuable information on the
mostgprofitable selection of cows,
their feeding and care, the handling
of milk to yleld the highest price
product, and the protection and pres
ervation of these products from de
terioration; with article on diseases
of cows, and recipes for their cure.
The book is free. A post card request
only is necessary,
When a woman ig really in love with
a man she feelg certain the train she is
traveling on will be wrecked,
Millions in Oats and Barley. .
Nothing will ‘my you better for 1908
than to sow a plenty of big vielding oats
and barley with oats at 40e to 50c a bu,
(Salzer's new Emperor William Oats av
eraged 50 bu, per acre more than any
other variety in 1007) would %q‘y immense
ly while Salzer's Silver King Barley which
gn_wed itsel{ the biggest Syiolder at the
Visconsin Agricultural Station duri
1007 if you had planted 50 acres wourl‘s
have given you in 1807 just $3,500.00 on 50
acres. It is an enormous yul&er.
JUST SEND THIS NOTICE AND 10¢
to the John A, BSalzer Seed Co., La
Crosse, Wis, and we will mail you the
most ongimi secd catalog published 'in
America with samples of Emgeror il
liam Oats, Silver King Barley, Billion Dol
lar Grass which produces 12 tons per acre,
Sainfroin the dry soil luxuriator, ete., ete.
and if you send ldc we add a package of
new farm seeds never before seen by
you,
Heads of sensible women are never
thatched with dyes tresses.
Wouldn't you like to try Nature's mild
luatg\‘{ea %a’rfiehl T{al?fl éierit.l:chc Po:::
ders an igestive Tablets also upon
ueet. Bend posteard to Garfield Tea Coy
glrooklyn, Ne X\
Doctorg are in business for health of
others, but not for their own.
Onl{ Ono “Dromo Quinine"
That is Laxative Bromo Quining, TLook
for the signature of K. W. Grove, Used the
World over to Cure a Cold in One Day. 25,
Young men think old men fools, and
old men know young men to be so.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children
mmmmmm
tion, allays pain,cares wind colic, 35ca
The greatest truths are the simplest;
and so are the greatest men,
e e ——— e i
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< UPINTERESTEIO-WOMEN S
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el ee e 1
New York City.—Every new de
sign for a pretty blouse finds its
place. No woman ever yet had a
sufliclent supply and there is always
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room fm: the traditional “one more.”
Here is a very chamring and novel
model that is adapted to silk, to
flannel and washable materials and
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that is a bit more dressy than the
severe tailored sort while at the
same time it is eminently practical
and serviceable. In the illustration
it is made of the fashionable plaid
taffeta with frill of ribbon, and ‘with
turn-over portions of collar and cuffs
of velvet. The frill, however, could
be either of the material or of silk :
or of something still thinner and
more dainty while the turn-over por
tions would be pretty in any contrast
ing material, or of white lawn or
other dainty fabrics with scalloped
edges in lingerie style. The big but
tons make a feature and are always
effective, and the waist is altogether
one certain to win approval. When
made of silk or flannel the lining is
often desirable but is not obligatory,
While inexpensive wash fabries are
tlways left unlined, : ;
The waist is made with fronts and
back. The fronts are tucked to pro
vide becoming fulness and the backs
to give the tapering lines essential
to correct style. The sleeves are of
the reguiation shirt waist sort with
straight cuffs and a stock collar fin
ishes the neck. '
The quantity of material required
for the medium size is three and five
eighth yards twenty-one or twenty-
The Latest in Ball Frocks.
Chiffon and mousseline de sole held
their own as the lightest and daintiest
fabries’ for dancing and there are
some deliclous models, up-to-date,
diaphanous confections that look too
delicious to wear, whereof the only
substantial part is the silk founda
tiod, which supports them. Net is
likewise very effective, esnechlgy”u
trimmed with the sequins or 193‘31&
which are so favorite a feature of our
wear just now, o B
| four, three and three-eighth yards
thirty-two or two yards forty-four
inches wide with one-eighth yard of
velvet and one and one-cighth yards
of ribbon for the frill. i
Smocking Used Again,
Smocking is greatly favored again,
and to be effective it must be ex
quisitely done. Many odd designs
are to be seen, some of them intri
cate and entirely unlike the conven
tional design, which is the only one
known to many as smocking,
Breakfast Jacket.
The need for a pretty, tasteful and
becoming breakfast jacket always ex
ists, and each new one is therefore
certain of its welcome. Here is a very
charming mode] that is tucked after
a most satisfactory manner, that has
the roll-over collar which is so com
fortable and the three-quarter sleeves
that are the hest of all for garments
of the sort. In the iilustration it is
shown made of dotted challis and
held by a ribbon belt, but cashmere,
veiling, all similar light weight ma
terials, the pretty India silks and tbe |
inexpensive wash fabrics that many
women like at all seasons of the year, ‘
are appropriate. ‘
The jacket is made with fronts \
and back. The back is tucked from
the neck to the waist line and the
fronts to yoke depth only. Hems
finish the front edges and the turn
over collar is attached to the neck.
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The sleeves are of mederate and
graceful fulness and are finished with
turn-over cuffs.
Short Skirts Worn.
Walking skirts that escape the
ground by at least five inches are
not too short to be in the height of
fashion; but be sure your feet are
shapely. :
O — —
Pheasant Winged Hat.
A pheasant's wing bearing a bright
Bpot of blue near the base is the only
relieving note on a walking hat of
brown, and the effect is very good
with an all brown costume.
| PLEASANT QUESTION.,
“What in the world are you doing
under there so long, dear?” shouted
the wife to her husband, who had
crawled under the machine, in the
mud, to try to ascertain why the
blooming motor would not “mote.”
“Oh, darling,” came back the al
most smothered reply, “I'm just pick
jing a few daffcdils and daisies for
iyou, loved one.—Ycnkers §tates
man, :
TROUBLED WITH SERVANTS,
PERHAPS.
“Well, how do you and your wife
like housekeeping?’ asked ¥lder.
“Well,” replied Youngman, “we—
er—don’t think we like it as a whole.”
“Not as a whole, eh?”
“No, we think we'd enjoy it better
broken up.”—Catholic Standard and
Times,
Vo b o e
» '+ PURE FOOD :
¥o Food Commissioner of any State
has ever attacked the absolute
L purity of Grape-Nuts.
Every analysis undertaken shows
this food to be made strictly of Wheat
and Barley, treated by our processes
to partially transform the starch
parts into a form of Sugar, and there
fore much easier to digest.
Our claim that it is a “Food for
Brain and Nerve Centres” is based
upon the fact that certain parts of
Wheat and Barley (which we use)
contain Nature's brain- and nerve
building ingredients, viz., Phosphate
of Potash, and the way we prepare
the food makes it easy to digest and
assimilate,
Dr. Geo. W. Carey in his book on
“The Biochemic System of Medicine”
says:
“When the medical profession fully
understands the nature and range of
the phosphate of potazsium, insane
asylums will no longer be needed.
“The gray matter of the brain is
controlied entirely by.the inorganic
cell-salt, potassium phosphate.
“This salt unites with albumen,
and by the addition of oxygen creates
nerve-fluid, or the gray matter of the
brain.
“Of course, there is a trace of other
galts and other organic matter in
nerve-fluid, but potassium phosphate
is the chief factor, and has the power
within itselfl to attract, by its own
law of affinity, all things needed to
manufacture the elixir of life. There
fore, when nervous symptoms arise,
due to the fact that the nerve-fluid
has been exhausted from any cause,
the phosphate of potassium is the
only true remedy, because nothing
elga can possibly supply the de
ficiency.
“The ills arising from too rapidly
consuming the gray matter of the
)raln cannot be overestimated.
~ “Phosphate of Potash, is to my
mind, the most wonderful curative
‘agent- ever discovered by man, and
the blessings it has already conferred
on the race are many. But ‘what
shail the harvest be’ when physicians
everywhere fully understand the part
this wonderful sait plays in the pro
cesses of life? It will do as much as
can be done through physiology to
make a heaven on earth.
“Let the overworked business man
take it and go home good-tempered.
Let the weary wife, nerves unstrung
from attending to sick children or en
tertaining company, take it anl note
how quickly the equilibrium will be
resiored and calm and reason assert
her throne, No ‘provings’ are re
quired here. We find this potassium
salt largely predominates in nerve
fluid, and that a deficiency produces
well-defined symptoms. The begin
ning and end of the matter is to sup
ply the lacking principle, and in
molecular form, exactly as nature
furnishes it in vegetables, fruits and
grain. To supply deficiencies—this is
the only law of cure.”
Please observe that Phosphate of
Potash is not properly of the drug
shop variety but is besst prepared by
“Old Mother Nature” and stored in
the grains ready for use by mankind.
Those who have been helped to better
health by the use of Grape-Nuts are
legion. :
*There’s a Reacon.”
BRAIN POWER
Increased by Proper Feeding,
A lady writer who not only has
done good literary work, but reared
a family, found in Grape-Nuts the
ideal food for brain work and to de
velop healthy children. She writes:
“I am an enthusiastic proclaimer of
Grape-Nuts as a regular diet. 1 for
merly had no appetite in the morning
and for 8 years while nursing my four
children, had insufficient nourishment
for them.
“Urable to eat breakfast I felt faint
later, and would go to the pantry and
eat cold chons, sausage, cookies,
doughnuts or anything I happened to
find. Being a writer, at times my
head felt heavy and my brain asleep.
“When I read of Grape-Nuts I be
gan cating it every morning, also
gave it to the children, including my
-10 months old baby, who soon grew
as fat as a little pig, good natured
and contented. .
“I wrote evenings and feeling the
need of sustained brain power, began
eating a small saucer of Grape-Nuts
with milk, instead of my usual indi
gestible hot pudding, pie, or cake for
dessert at night.
“I grew plump, nerves strong, and
when I wrote my braln was active
and clear; indeed, the dull head pain
never returned.”
POSTUM CEREAL CO., Ltd.,
_ Battle Creek, Mich.
= & \ .} & « ]
(7 NeHINGS
>l fi' R <
S orth T poiing|
A ,"20..{: A ._QJQ, £-p :
Greenland glaciers averaze 1000
feet in thickness, move fifty feet a !
day, and discharge into the sea four)
square miles of ica yeariy 1000 feet
thick,
There arvs only 30,000 Jews in
Jerusalem. In London there are 80,-
000; in Berlin, 95,000; in Vienna,
150,000; in New York, 700,000, {
In 1800 Germany had not a single
city of 200,000 inhabitants, and only,
two (Hamburg and Berlin) had over.
100,000, To-day there are forty-one
cities of 100,000.
The area of the Philippines 1s
114,300 square miles, about the'
same as the State of Nevada. The!
area of Japan is 155,629 square/
miles, very nearly that of the State’
of California. i
Cocoa importations into the United
States are now averaging mora than!
$1,000,000 a month, against $250,-
000 per month a decade ago. Mean-|
time importations of both tea and|
coffee show a decline, 2
A bill for the taxation of whiskers
has been introduced by a Neiw Jer~
sey legislator. The proposed tag iß]
to range frcm $5 for the ordin"aryi
whiskers to SSO for a goatee, and!
red whiskers {wenty per cent. extra. 4
No fewer than 12,000,000 acres of|
barren land have been mads frui}tljl'
in the Sahara Dgsert, an enterprlsoi
representing perhaps the most res
markable example of irrigation by;
means of artesian wells which can’
anywhere be found. 4
Piedmont, Ttaly, produces about
three times as many cocoons as _a,ny;!‘
other Italian province, and in prg
portion to its size is perhaps thq
most prolific silkworm district of thel
world, the yield during 1506 amount«
ing to 11,001,647 pounds, with &'
value of $3,956,582. 3
a'—;‘,‘
Probably the oldest horse in ex'a;
istence is an old bhay mare, thirty
six years old, owned by Mr. J. RJ,
Maddoz, of Gallatin, Tenn. The ani<
mal still continues faithful - and
active, often traveling daily ma‘ngi
miles drawing a heavily loaded wags
on, besides doing service as a familfl
carriage horse. : w?‘,jg
. e dgeind
King Leopold, of Belgium, has
been playing his royal joke about his
unroyal pranks for many a year, _laz'-i-:
ing every story of his unscemly béy
havior to his “double” in Pariy, M.
Fouret, of the Hachetie publishing
house. But M, Fouret, who is emi
nently respectable, is getiting ;iréd{
of the joke, and proposes to bring as
suit for libel against the king. Klna
Leopold’s reputation is of no sort
of consequence at this date, but M,
Fouret’s is valuable. 2
A woman has died at the age of
eighty-two in Mercer County, Pa.,
who tried the luck of thirteen often
enough. She was born Sepitember 13}
1825; married twice, each time on
the 13th of the month; was one ofi
thirteen children, and the thirtepnth.l
to die; had thirteen children, thirtys
four grandchildren and twenty-one!
great-grandcbildren—the difference!
between the last two numbers being!
thirteen—to go well with this story,!
her name was Delilah Syling, and!
there are thirteen letters in it "
gl
MAXING ROMAN CANDLES. *
A Goed Deal Like Solitary Confinga
ment—-Cne Man to a Hut. ?‘
The most solitary person in the,
world during working hours is the
maker of roman candles. a ;
He occupies an isolated cell, says
the Technical World, and nobod}
comes near to him while he is en=
gaged in his patient toil. "
The wages he gets are high, but,
not by reason of the lonelingss tol
which he is condemned; he is paid
for the risks he is obliged to take. 24
The quarters occupied by this ere«
mite artisan are a tiny house, which!
might almost be called a hut, with &
floor space not more than six feet
square. Standing by itself, at leat
sixty yards from any other struct®
ure, the little building is of wood, of
the simplest architecture. Yl
I it were to be blown up the finans
cial loss would be almost nil—al
point of some importance inasmuch!
as its diurnal tenant is obliged to use,
considerable quantities of explosives
in the business which engages his!
attention, for a roman candle is a‘
sort of magazine or repeating gun“(
with a papér tube for a barrel an&
balls of fire for projectiles. : 1
i R 3y
The Goat Comes First, &
Switzerland is the only country in
the world where the goat is placed
ahead of all other animals, and even!
of human beings. If a boy plagues’
a goat, he can be fined and sent to;
jafl, If a person meets & goat 9;1“
= path and drives him aside, he cauj
he darrested. If a goat enters the
vard of a person not his owner, and!
is hit with a club or stone, the pere|
con gullty of the offence must pl']q
thirty cents. If a raiiroad train sees
2 #oat on a tracik, the train must Lalf
+ntil the animal can be coaxed to re-!
sove himself, There’s many-a boy,
i America who wishes he were
.at in Switzerland.—Weekly Wi
LCBB, ~~»J