The Syracuse Journal, Volume 5, Number 21, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 19 September 1912 — Page 2

ROYAL CHILDREN OF SPAIN AT GRANADA f®RRH 1 t>®^ z Wr^WOHIWI ; ' ■"' w I i,lW|. . J® £ i t i Wwsjwi I1 S W W ' iHi ‘ ’ 1 y ’ 11 5 '■■ ' ■■■ ‘®RFIWI' ■ _ - —F = F" I<z -*•><? { "^ _-- f * --T—ZZZZmmwMIZTZnrrZrTT-— ■ ' c/y/zz>/?£// oa rw A/z/6 '' ji or spa tn THIS new photograph of the children of the reigning house of Spain was taken at the royal chateau In Granada, in the foreground to the left is the Prince Don Jaime, convalescing from a recent operation on his ear, and his brother Alphonse, the heir to throne. In the background, holding the hand of the governess, is the Infanta Marie Christine, aged three, and the Infanta Beatrice, aged seven months, on the arm of the governess.

TELL OF HARD CLIMB

Parker and Companion Back From Mount McKinley. Brooklyn Man Arrives at Seattle, Wash., Meets Young Wife and Sees His Child for First Time—Will Not Ascend .Again. . Seattle, Wash. —Prof. Herschell C. Parker of Brooklyn, N. Y., and Belmore Browne of Tacoma, who came within 300 feet of reaching the summit of Mount McKinley last June, have returned from Alaska. Prof. Parker was greeted at the pier by Mrs. Parker, a bride of a little more than a year, who had come from Brooklyn to meet him. ,He hastened to Tacoma on the first interurban car to see for the first time his child, a baby of a few - months, born during his in Alaska. Prof. Parker and Mr. Browne left Seward February 3, reaching the foot of Mount McKinley April 25. On their previous expedition they attempted to ascend the mountain from the south Bide, but this time they crossed the Alaska range about twenty miles east of Mount McKinley. They went up Muldrow glacier, taking the route selected by Tom Lloyd and his party of explorers when they ascended the mountain in 1910. At an altitude of 10,000 feet the Par-ker-Browne party relayed supplies with dog teams from the camp below. After remaining at this altitude several days and unable to proceed higher because of a severe storm they decided to await more favorable conditions and ■dropped back to. an altitude of 6,000 feet. The party set out again June 5, going up the northeast ridge and Muldrow glacier. The route s-elected was narrow and hazardous and the ridge steep, but the explorers were able to reach an altitude of 10,000 feet before being driven back by the severe cold and blinding snow blown by a high gale from peak to peak. On the third attempt an altitude of 20,100 feet was reached. There, with only three days’ provisions left, they were unable to withstand the cold and gave uj) hope of reaching the summit. Prof. Parker in explaining the severe cold on the mountain said that

E)CPtORES WILDS OF KOREA American Discoverer Finds Lakes Never Before Seen by White Man. New York.—With three lakes and a iarge section of northern Korea added to his conquests as an explorer, Roy Chapman Andrews, assistant curator of the American museum, has returned from a trip around the world. Mr. Andrews penetrated the north Korean wilderness as far as the mysterious “three rivers.” never before seen by white men. The rivers proved to be lakes on the top of a plateau and the explorer described them as the most beautiful he had ever seen. Their shores are of volcanic dust and the water, which is perfectly clear, contains no fish. The Korean journey covered a distance of 500 miles and during its entire length its leader had to rely almost wholly upon the compass for his location. The main object of the expedition was the capture of certain specimens of gray whales, needed to inake the collection at the museum the most complete in the world. Andrews caught three varieties, whose skeletons he shipped to the museum some time ago. S2O. to Support Family. Wilkesbarre, Pa.—Mrs. John Tilley, wife of a janitor, has told the court here that her husband has allowed her but S2O out of his $65 a month salary with which to provide for herself and eight, children.

EARTH GRADUALLY DRYING UP Scientific Theory That Water is Passing Into the Upper Air as Hydrogen, Never to Return. When water Is decomposed by radi•m or by ultra-violet rays it produces hydrogen and peroxide of hydrogen, gnd it does not form oxygen. Electrolytic decomposition forms oxygen. A German investigator bases a theory relating to the drying at

at a height of 15,000 feet June 15 it was 19 degrees below zero. “I found that pemmican, the special food used by arctic explorers and made of beef, tallow' and raisins, is oil no value at the high altitudes,” said Prof. Parke® “We were soon afflicted with severe cases of indigestion, as the food was too heavy, and we were unable to use a large part of our rations. I found that at an altitude of 13,000 feet I could not smoke without experiencing severe dizziness, while Mr. Browne seemed able to smoke at any height. About the coldest weather we experienced was at 13,000 feet, when the temperature fell to 26 below zero.” Both Prof. Parker and Mr. Browne said they had made their last attempt to reach the top of Mount McKinley. NEGRO’S REST IS COSTLY City Pays sls a Day That Negro “Invader of White District” May Be Free From Annoyance. St. Louis. —To insure peaceful sleep to R. A. Hudlln, a negro, and his family, this city is spending sls a day, or $450 a month, to guard his home from possible attack by whites who resent what they term a “negro invasion" in their residential district. The guarding by policemen began early in May and if it is continued until September 15 the city will have spent SI,BOO.

HAS OWN ORGANIST

Frick Employs Skilled Musician to Play for Him. Salary of $15,000 a Year Is Paid Archer Gibson for an Hour’s Solo Each Morning on Millionaire’s SIOO,OOO Instrument. New York. —Pity the hard lot of Archer Gibson. He gets $15,000 a year for fingering a SIOO,OOO organ an hour a day and rendering “Dearie” between the classical thunderings and groanlngs of the costly pipes. Also he gets a summer home—you’d wish

AUTOS TO CONVICT SELVES Los Angeles City Council Considers Placing Automatic Device on Machines. Los Aageles, Cal. —Automobile speeders in Los Angeles will convict themselves if the city council passes an ordinance recommended by the police commission. The commission wants all automobiles equipped with a speed detecting device consisting of three lights, white, green and red. When a car is going eight miles an hour the white will show, fifteen miles the green, and twenty miles, the speed limit, the red. When a car is going twenty to thirty miles an hour both the white and green lights will appear, and if it.is going more than thrty miles an hour all three lights will flash the tidings to the policeman on the corner. FIND AGED RECLUSE’S RICHES Jersey City Man Leaves an Estate of $200,000 —Nurse and Neighbor Get Much Wealth. Jersey City, N. J. —Former neighbors of Michael Kiley, an aged recluse who occupied a ramshackle house on Bright street here for many years, were surprised to learn that the old man had died possessed of a fortune which the appraisers estimate at $200,000. Os this total $65,000 goes to Mrs. Margaret Jones, who took care of Kiley in his last illness. A big share of the residue goes to Mrs. Catherine paly, a neighbor.

the earth on the fact that one form of decomposition produces oxygen, while the other form does not. Part of the water vapor emitted by the seas is decomposed by the ultra-vio-let rays of the sun; the hydrogen forined rises toward the high atmospheric strata, and all the water does not return to the surface. Therefore, the quantity of water on the face of the globe is always diminishing and the earth is Incessantly, if gradually, drying. _

OLD AGE RiSKS IN FRANCE Number Who Are Registered Under Law Increasing Every Year, Statement Shows. Paris.—Leon Bourgeois, minister of labor, has tabulated statistics up to July 1 of the number of persons who have registered themselves for old age insurance in accordance with the terms of the law of 1910, as amended in February, 1912. According to returns received from prefects of departments, the number of persons under obligation to insure now registered is 7,029,008, or an increase of 273,930 since the previous quarter day, April 1. The number of registered persons in France under an obligation to insure is about 12,000,000. The government, it is regards the returns of July 1 as fair-; ly satisfactory in view f of the fact that it has not been possible to apply actual compulsion, owing to an adverse decision of the court of cassation. A new bill making insurance effectively compulsory for the working classes is to be introduced in the chamber next session, and it will have every prospect of pussint. It is in view of this situation that the date for the practical application of compulsion was postponed till January, 1913. Legless Boy is Swimmer., Philadelphia.—Although legless Tyson Bolwer, aged fourteen, has become an expert swimmer and wrestler.

you owned it if you saw it—and a nice, comfortable automobile. Archer works at the above-mentioned laboj rious task to delight the musical soul of Henry Clay Frick, multimillionaire Pittsburg steel magnate, whose summer home is at Pride’s crossing, near Beverly Farms, Mass. Every day at two p. m. the phone rings in the Gibson house and the organist motors over to the Friels mansion. There in the music hall, the silent, gruff money giant sits waiting for his daily music. While the nimble fingers of Organist Gibson rip out peal after peal of stuff that dead men wrote —the kind that no one could see any merit in while the composer was alive—Henry Clay Frick, the tips of his strong fingers joined, listens in silence. After a particularly weird sudfc>ssion of crashes and thunders from the costly organ the millionaire’s countenance loses its former expression of wrapt interest. He leans forward uneasily as the music bursts in a glorious finishing flare. “Play ‘Dearie!’” he commands. Then the SIOO,OOO organ sends forth the strains of “ that popular ballad, ladies and gentlemen,” strains that the common instalment, go-as-you-please house piano used to know before every began “ doing it” Usually a few repetitions of the above ballad are enough to allow a fresh start on the previous heavy stuff. And so the hour of music passes. KILLS WIFE IN PITY; FREED Austrian Jury Acquits Man Who Shot Consumptive Spouse to End Her Sufferings. Vienna. —Public opinion in Austria is divided over the verdict at Loeben in the case of a Viennese clerk named Haas, who killed his consumptive "wife to end her continued sufferings. Haas shot his wife in a railway carriage passing through a tunnel, and then attempted suicide. The wife died immediately, but the husband was only slightly hurt. The jury acquitted him of murder, but found Haas guilty ol carrying a revolver without a license, He was fined $1.75, and on payment was released.

To cite one example: On the north side of the Alps there is a continual falling off in the depth of the lakes and a gradual formation of gwamps. Two hundred and fifty years ago there were 149 lakes in the canton of Zurich, today ther are seventy-six. The destruction of the forests and the cultivation of the land partly explain this, but the loss of hydrogen is an important factor. The hydrogen accumulated in the higher atmosphere is diffused In interstellar space—Harper’sWeekly.

SUSAN ENTERTAINS How the Old Maid Surprised the Sewing Society. By MAUDE J. PERKINS. “Seeing as this is leap year I suppose there’ll be a mighty lot of weddings in Little River before next January,” remarked Mrs. Simmons with a sly wink that its scope all the married women of the sewing society. “I don’t know as that rightly follows, Hannah —there’s been a sight of leap years that some folks could have taken advantage of if they’d wanted to,” observed Mrs. Sam Brown. “Well, if I had to wait till leap year to get engaged I guess I’d been a single woman this very day.” returned Mrs. Simmons tearing a broadth of pink gingham. “It’s just as well you didn’t wait for leap year, then, Hannah.” smiled Susan Wortly. A little chuckling laugh ran around the circle. Sometimes Hannah Simmons’ sharp tongue found its match. Mrs. Simmons flushed angrily. It was not so amusing when someone turned upon her in this manner. “Os course you know I mean if I’d had to ask a man to marry me I would never been married at all!” She tossed her head. “Well, no one can lay that up against me, either, or you wouldn’t be calling me an old maid today,” laughed Susan cheerfully. “I don’t know who has called you an old maid, Susan! I hope I’ve got some manners in company!” “I hope you have!” retorted Miss Wortly. “If there wasn’t some old maids in the community I don’t know who’d help take care of the married wimmen’s children!” rasped Miss Doxie Post who was bringing up three orphaned nieces. At this moment refreshments were served and under the soothing influence of tea and fresh gingerbread hostilities were suspended for the time. Susan Wortly and Doxie Post walked home together; they represented the unmarried members of the sewing circle. “So they’re going to “ have the monthly sociable at your house, Susan,” remarked Doxie as they walked along. “Yes and I’ve got a plan to entertain ’em in away they won’t soon forget,” declared Susan emphatically. Her brown eyes twinkled mischievously ’and her round pink cheeks flushed like a girl’s. “If you’ll keep it a dead secret I’ll tell you.” Miss Post promised and listened eagerly to Susan’s explanation. When the plump little woman had concluded Doxie shook her fair head doubtfully. “I don’t believe none of ’em would ever write it out!” she asserted. “They’d be ashamed not to,” declared Susan. “Just you be there, Doxie. Come early—Jabez Foote will be there!" Doxie’s fair faded cheeks flushed redly and she looked displeased. “There wouldn’t be anything strange in his being there seeing that he always comes to the open meetings of the society.” •'I didn't mean any harm, Doxie.” soothed Susan as she turned into her own gate. When the night of the monthly sociable of the sewing society came around, it found Susan Wortly’s big old-fashioned house lighted from attic to cellar and well filled with the members of the society and their hus bands. To Susan Wortly and Doxie Post were assigned the honors of being the only unmarried women prosent. To offset this unfortunate state of affairs there was Jabez Foote whose wife had once been a member of the sociey; since her death Jabez continued his attendance at the monthly meetings. The minister was also present; and he was a bachelor. When the time came to play the usual games that were a pleasant feature of the monthly meetings, Susan passed slips of paper to all the company with the necessary pencils. “I do hope you’ve got a new game for tonight, Susan,” remarked ,Mrs. Simmons as she tasted the point of her pencil. “Yes, I have,” smiled Susan. “A real amusing one." “Fire away, Susan,” urged Peter Simmons. “Tell us what we’re going to do with these pieces of paper. Looks like you expected us to play that old game of ’Consequences.’ ” I “All of us folks that are married know what the consequences are!” .chuckled Captain Sam Brown. His jovial mirth died a sudden death under the cool glare of his wife’s eyes. “Os course I meant pleasant consequences!” he murmured. “Well,” began Susan, when all the papers had been distributed; “I thought it would be some fun if all the married women would write on their papers and tell just the words their husbands used when they proposed to them —and all the men write the same thing on their papers. Everybody can sign his name and the husband and wife who can most nearly recollect the same words get the first prize.” I There was an ominous hush in the room. Mrs. Sam Brown was the first to speak. “Well, I ain’t so old but what I can recollect what the captain said to me when he popped the question! How about you and Doxie Post?” I “Let them write down how many proposals they ever had!” suggested Hannah Simmons meaningly. | Susan Wortly and .Doxie Post exchanged glances of amusement while Ebenezer Fitch and Peter Simmons reddened to their ears and looked very uncomfortable. “Don’t seem like that's necessary, Ma,” objected Mr. Simmons in a hoarse whisper. “I don’t know why it isn’t! What’s it to you?” Under his wife’s suspicious stare Peter’s face took on the hue of a ripe tomato. “Tain’t nothing to me!” he muttered hastily. Perhaps Mrs. Simmons’ memory served her well at that moment; pos-

sibly she recollected that at one time Peter Simmons had paid attention to pretty Doxie Post. “Never mind about putting down your proposals, Susan,” she interposed hurriedly. “Who knows but It might be embarrassing.” “It might be,” laughed Susan; “I leave it to the rest of the company.” The company at once expressed a willingness to play the game as Susan had proposed and so they sat themselves diligently to remember the fateful words that had resulted in a visit to the minister. Both Jabez Foote and the minister, Mr. Hazel, had possessed themselves of slips of paper and were knitting their brows over their work. Susan and Doxie busied themselves over counting plates and glasses for the coming refreshments. When the last paper had been turned over to the i minister, for Susan had insisted that to Mr. Hazel should be delegated the delicate task of reading the answers, an expectant silence brooded over the room. Mr. Hazel sorted over the papers until he had arranged them in pairs to correspond with the married couples whose names they bore; He arose and picked up a paper. His handsome face seemed rather constrained as though he were suppress ing a smile. “My first paper bears the name of Mrs. Ebenezer Fitch. It says: “Eben ezer said to me: ‘How soon can you get your wedding dress ready, Mary’ and that’s all the proposal he evei made —but that’s just like Ebenezer Fitch!”’ Everybody laughed, even Ebenezer Fitch himself, who was a lanternjawed, solemn-looking person. Then Mr. Hazel read Ebenezer’s account of the proposal and it coincided with that given by his wife, Whereupon several other views felt somewhat relieved. If their husbands remembered as faithfully as Ebenezer Fitch, all would be well. But it appeared that Ebenezer Fitch was to stand alone as the man who remembered, word for word, the happenings of a fatal day. Mrs. Peter Simmons’ slip read: "Hannah I cannot live without you—will you be my wife?” Mr. Simmons had written: “1 hadn’t got around to it when Hannah said one day: ’lf we ever air going to get married, Peter, <we better be about it this spring!’ That suited me and I said so.” Mrs. Simmons pale with indignation turned the point of attack in another direction. x “If we’re going into such Intimate details I guess may be Mr. Hazel will read out loud what he wrote on a paper to Susan Wortly and-gave to her a little while ago!" Mr. Hazel reddened to his snowy collar and his eyes met those of Susan and asked a question. Susan nodded ever so slightly in response. “Miss Wortly thinks it may save embarrassment if the rest of the papers are returned unread to theft writers. As for the message I wrote to her, I will read it aloud: ‘Deal Miss Susan: Will you marry me? John Hazel.’ ” He smiled down at their startled and confused faces. “Miss Susan has kept me waiting three years for an answer to this question—every yeai I repeat it. To-night she has made me very happy by saying ‘Yes,’ and I know you will all congratulate ms and rejoice in my happiness!” In the confusion of talk and laughter that followed, while Susan and Mr. Hazel received the good wishes of the company, Jabez Foote and Doxie Post talked aside. All at ones Jabez wormed his way to the minister's side.

“Mr. Hazel,” he said hurriedly, “Doxie Post has promised to marry me and I wantyou to tie the knot thia very minute because she’ll change her mind if she gets a chance to think of them orphans! Why, I’ve goi room for a whole asylum full of on phans at my farm” “How about a license, Jabez?” whis pered the minister. “Don’t tell her,” whispered th« bridegroom in return, “but I’ve been carrying it around in my pocket foi weeks waiting for her to make up hei mind!” “I never had so many surprises in all my life!” declared Mrs. ” Sam Brown as they went home that night “It took my breath away,” said Mrs. Simmons and it may be recorded that so far as repeating gossip oi making malicious remarks was con cerned, Mrs. Simmons’ breath had in deed departed forever. Alike, But Different. The teacher had the letters c-a-t on the blackbaord nd was trying to teach little Pamy Peavish to pronounce th« word, but Pansy couldn’t come to it “Think,” saiJ the teacher. “What it is that has some whiskers and cbmes jip on the porcl. late at night when it is cold and begs to come up into the house?” “Oh! I know!” exclaim ed little Pansy, a great light dawning “It’s papa!” History to Burn. Teacher —What ' happened aftei George Washington chopped down th< cherry tree? Pupil—Well, after he chopped it down, I guess he —chppped it up.-« Woman’s Home Companion. City Impressions. “What Impressed you most in oui great city?” asked the native. “Well,” replied the man from th< small town. “I’ve been here for a week and I noticed that nobody wears Sun day clothes on Sunday.” Slow Traveling. Passenger, on s ow train —Wir»t an we stopping here for? Conductor —Got a hot box. Passenger —Huh! Some tram t must have built a fire under it. His Modest Request. “Have you asked your congressmaj for any free seeds,? “Naw; but I wrote to him to find m< two or three good summer boarders? —Lippincott’s. • < To Suit His Taste and Purse. Wise —It’s so sweet of you to let m« have a new hat, dear. What kind shall I get? Hub—A large hat with a small price

AT RISK OF HIS LIFE A REV. DR. PALMORE VISITED THE TOMB OF AARON. Mosque Is Nothing Much to See, but Religious Fanaticism of the Natives Makes the Journey One of Great Danger. Rev. Dr. William B. Palmore of St Louis, who has just completed a tour of Europe and the Orient, said that his most remarkable exploit was a recent nocturnal expedition at the risk of his life to the tomb on Mount ; Hor,‘ in Arabia Petrea, which is re- , vered by three religions as the burial ; I place of Aaron, brother of Moses, and I ; first high priest of the Hebrew theocracy. I Late on the last night of his stay In i Petrea Dr. Palmore silently stole out ' of the city, attended by his guide and i soldiers. When the little party at last stood alone on the mountain top and saw the desert sleeping far below they found the mosque to be a ramshackle building of white stones rudely piled together and surmounted by a rounded dome. The guide without scruple applied his stolen key to the lock and the door swung open. “I found myself in a chapel about 40x40 feet,"says Dr. Palmore. “According to the Moslem custom, it contained neither seats nor altars. It was completely bare save that in the center stood a cenotaph, or empty sarcophagus, covered by a green cloth. Carved in stone was an inscription in Hebrew so nearly obliterated by time that I could not decipher it. I calculated that the inscription was more than 2,000 years old. There was also a legend carved on the cenotaph in modern Arabic. “I had little time to waste, for I was confident that if the Arabs in the valley discovered my departure and traced me to the mosque they /would kill me. In one corner I discovered a hole in the floor, revealing a flight of stairs cut in the rock and leading downward. “Holding my candle aloft, I descended the steps and found found myself in an unlighted cave of no great size. Like the mosque, It was bare and rude. But across one end were stretched two chains like sentinels against intruders and behind them hung a tattered curtain. * “I stepped over the chains and swept the curtain aside. The sealed entrance to a natural vault was revealed and this vault was the tomb of, Aaron.” There was little time for sacred reverie, for, if day broke before he descended the mountain, his errand might be detected and avenged by the Arabs of the valley. So Dr. Palmore, after touching the sealed vault reverently with his hand, ascended the stairs, passed through the mossque and stood again in the open air His guide gravely locked the door and concealed the key once more in his garments. The party made itc way safely back to Petra without discovery, and within a few hours was miles away on the return trip north. Triumphed Over Difficulty. One of London’s remarkable men j is the Rev. Robert Brandon, described | as a Baptist minister, tailor, poet, | and author, who lately celebrated his i ninety-fifth birthday, and who is the | oldest officiating preacher in London. He preaches about once a month at a place in Chelsea, where he has ministered for sixty-four years. He has to be carried to hia church in a bath chair, for he has been a cripple since he was two years old, when one of his legs became paralyzed. He practically educated himself, earning tuition money as a tailor. In spite of his physical disability he has always manifested great activity and energy. —Leslie’s. Safeguarding Letters. From the days of antiquity it has always been a problem unsolved how’ to insure the secrecy of letters. A Frenchman named Phion claims, however, to have discovered the real method, which is as simple as the egg of Columbus. The invention is thus described: The envelope looks very” like an ordinary one, but the tongue is in a kind of loop, prolonged so as to fit the gummed end of the upper righthand corner, which is slit. The tongue is inserted, and further by the stamp struck over it. The system is simplicity itself, and, except for ripping open the envelope or tearing oft the stamp, it is impossible to get at the letter inside. Her Dislike Too Vigorous. A worpan in an English country town took an unusual way of expressing her dislike of the pastor. While the congregation was standing, during the singing of an anthem, she rushed up the chancel steps and began throwing hymn books at the minister, and finally exclaimed: “Take him from .the church!” The minister was greatly astonished, knowing nothing of the disorder until he was struck in the back. He thought a stone had fallen from the roof. In court the woman evpressed regret. Eggshells in Surgery. In a number of skin-grafting operations he has recently carried out, a Philadelphia physician has used the lining of egg shells instead of human skin. One of the patients he is reported to have successfully treated in this way was a woman, -ao had the skin burned off her back. The physician declare;; that the suffering which has been imposed on human donors of skin fqr such operations is unnecessary. Only fresh eggs may be used. “Home, Sweet Home.” The original manuscript of “Home, Sw'eet Home” is said to have been buried in the grave w ith Miss Harry Harden of Athens, Ga. She was John Howard Payne’s sweetheart, but refused to marry him in deference to her father's wishes. After she was separated from her lover she shut herself in the old family mansion, seeing none bat a few' members of the little church to which she belonged.— Independent.

YOUNG WIFE SAVED FROM HOSPITAL ! Fells How Sick She Was And What Saved Her From An Operation. Upper Sandusky, Ohio.— ‘‘ Three years igo 1 was married and went to house-

keeping. I was not feeling well and could hardly drag myself along. I had such tired feelings, my back ached, my sides ached, I had bladder trouble awfully bad, and I could not eat or sleep. I had headaches, too, and became almost a nervous wreck. Mydoc-

j .■ sm

tor told me to go to a hospital. I did i aot like that idea very well, so, when I law your advertisement in a paper, I wrote to you for advice, and have done as ■ you told me. I have taken Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and Liver Pills, and now I have my health. “ If sick and ailing women would only <now enough to take your medicine, they would get relief. ” —Mrs. Benj. H. Stans- ' bery, Route 6, Box 18, Upper Sandusky, | Ohio. I .j If you have mysterious pains, irregularity, backache, extreme nervousness, | inflammation, ulceration or displacei ment, don’t wait too long, but try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound now. ; For thirty years Lydia E. Pinkham’s i Vegetable Compound, made from roots I and herbs, has been the standard remedy for female ills, and such unquestionable testimony as the above proves the value of this famous remedy and should give every one confidence. Eczema from tajtesil Resinol cured him Toledo, o„ May io, ion.—“i have completely cured my eczema. I suffered with It ever since I was a boy. and I am now 47 years old. My arms and face , would break out, and I w-as tortured with itching, especially in the spring, fall and winter. On my cheeks my skin would turn red, itch and crack, and more so on my I wrists. They would split open and bleed. “I was in a hospital one day to see a friend who had skin disease, and I found they had cured him with Resinol ' Ointment, and Dr. —: —, one of the best In Chicago, recommended it for my eczema. I used it with ttrisinol Soap, and to ray surprise they have completely cured me. My skin is clear.” (Signed) Chas. J. Stsobel, 710 National Union Building. Resinol Boanand Ointment aro In-raiti-able household remedies forskln-troubles, boils, burns, wounds, chafings, pimples, etc. Nearly all druggists sell Keslnol Soap (25c) and Ointment (53c), or they will be mailed upon receipt of price. Resinol Chemical Co., Baltimore, Md. _ , Wfttttemoreb *r FINEST QUALITY LARGEST VARIETY They meet every requirement for cleaning and i polishing shoes of all kinds and colors. K C 'STAR" J la f'Wv' GIT.T EDGE, the only ladles’ shoe dressing that positively contains OIK Blacks and Polishes ladies’ and children’s boots and shoes, shined without rubbing, 25c. “French Gloss,” 10c. STAR comoinat ion for cleaning and polishing all kinds of russet or tan shoes. 10c. ’‘Dandy” size 25c. BABY ELITE combination for gentlemen wbo take pride in having their shoes look Al; Restores color and lustre to all black shoes. Polish with a brush or cloth, 10 cents. “Elite” size 25 cents. If your dealer does not keep the kind you want, send us the price in stamps for a full Uze package, charges paid. WHITTEMORE BROS. & CO., 20-26 Albany St., Cambridge. Mass. 2’A« Oldest and Largest Mann fact itrers of ’ Sho6 Polishes in the World. A WONDERFUL DISCOVERY. In this age of research and experiment, all naturs is ransacked byt hescientiacforthecoruforiandhappinessof man. Science h is indeed made giant strides in the past century' and among the—by no means least important—disco- eries in medicine is that of Theri.pion. which has been used with great suceessiu French Hospitals and taat it is worthy the attention of those who suffer from kidney, bladder, nervous diseases, chronic weaknesses, ulcers.skin eruptions, piles, &c., there is no doubt. In fact it seems evident from the big stir created amongst specialists, that THERAPION is destined to cast Into oblivion al. those questionable remedies that were formerly the sole reliance of medical men It is of course impossible to tell sufferers all we should like to tell them in this short article, but those who would like to know more about this retuedy that has effected so many—we might almost say, miraculous cures, should send addressed envelope for FREE book to Dr.LeClerc Med. Co.. Haveratoek Road. Hampstead, London, Kng. and decide forthemselves whether the New French Remedy “THERAPION” No. 1, No 2 er No. 3 is what they require and have been seeking In vain during a life of misery, suffering, 111 health and unhappiness. Therapion is sold by druggists ol mail Si-UU. Fougera Co.. 90 Backman. St.. New io” KODAKS Brownie Cameras $ 1 and up. Mail us your films for Developing and Finishing. Enlargements from your negatives. Catalogue free. M. L. JONES. 112 WEST WAYNE STREET. FT. WAYNE, INDIANA TURMOCRM’C qu‘ckl.v relievescyo > nUtiirvUlT 9 irritation caused water w md. Booklet fro JOHN L- THOMPSON SONS &CO.. Troy. N. V. « A AITS IA f ” p"^’^ e ?n n f e o S Ui Ah l-JAu IUIIIJIIV BROADWAY,N.Y. Mr. JAMES’ TME? C* All QI? sbonW great poem I Ti E. ru w O £■. be read oy everyone. Keep up with the world’s best thoughts. Postpaid 10 cents, stamps or silver. 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