Cape May Herald, 16 July 1903 IIIF issue link — Page 7

Te*chtr (to bttl« ta-yeM-old)— Now. (■ rcilait. what •» » volcano? 'FrcJdic (with Oh. 1 know that! interrupts all the tme!—Lii

at it a volcano? f reat confidence)— i't a mountain that

Mrs. F. Wright, of Oelweia, Iowa, is another oae of the million women who have bees restored to health by Lydia E Piakham’s Vegetable Compound. r New York Lad Wonderful Cure ■" My Uoubla w»a with the oTarlas, I am tall, aad the doctor aaid I rriw too fast for my strength. 1 suChr-ed urwadtuiiy trom m&ammasive cad doctored continually, but got no help. 1 suffered from terrible dragging sensation! with the most awful pains low down in the tide and pains in tha back, and the most agonising headaches. No oae knows wha] 1 endured. Often I waa ajck to tha stomach, and e-cry

“At the scggestioi my mother s f began E. Pinktiam’a Vegetable Compound, and it ia simply wonderful. I felt better after the first two or three doses ; it seemed as though a weight vfaa taken off my shoulders; 1 continned its use until now I can truthfully aay I am entirely cured. Young e rla who are always paying doctors lla without getting any'helpaa I did. ought to take your medicine. It oosts so much less, and it is sure to cure them.—Yours truly, AOKUatna Pas ax. 174 St. Ann's Are., New York City." — tsooo /orftlt lf eriftef ■/

Bilious?

Pain back of your eyes? It’s your liver I Use Ayer’s Pills.

Gently laxative; all vegetable.

Sold for 60 years.

Want your moustacbe or beart? a beautiful brown or rich black? Use BUCKINGHAM’S DYE

F ry r» Habitual CosnUratlen. OR £ h .tne* , ^*46?$& tile. Rheumatic aud Onutr affeclline. riles snd other CougMttona thaxe U aothiac better than HATROUTHIC SALTS. A Palatable Remedy and Certain in Results.

Do Toil VaotToor Mooef TO K4XX • 7% INTEREST PER ANM'31 r cr rartiruUn ef s ssta —sure ir. ▼ad Se. Tii* nftrntm. a ‘ > L aOHJh Vara. Praam.

Are Yea Interested r

-irrLK COLD MIDI TOR

DROPSY^^STSI^

The Abuse of Society. The abuse of .society is • favorite occupation with most people who cannot force at> entrance into it It il not even new. Cynics and satirists preachers and writers have waged, war on social amenities all down the ages. We know how Daniel denounced the Babylonian court and how Horace revealed the profligacy of Augustan Rome. Every leader of a regenerating movement, whether it be §L Bernard exhorting the crusades, St. Francis teaching Utopian poverty or John Knox preaching reformation, has denounced the easy morals and the easier standard of the toleration of current society. The reformers of every age denounce their owa contemporaries in accents of varying degrees of violence Rousseau and Voltaire poured out diatribes from different points of view against the frivolous society which was cut off so abruptly by the guillotine, but their denunciations fell on deaf ear*. •Nobody.” said Talleyrand, could have any conception of how pleasant society could be who had not lived before the French revolution.“ To reform those who will not be reformed is difficult The grandmother of Atnbrosine, holding a scented pocket handkerchief to her Doee to keep off the odor of the crowd as the tripped to the gaiUotine, an$ Mary. Queen of Soots, yawning in •he face of Knox, exactly typify the attitude of all ages toward the Jeremiah* hammering at the portals of society. Engraving QUss With OwlntloAA singular property of gelatine, when spread upon glass, has lately been experimented with by the French chemist. QailleteL When a thick layef of strong glue that has been allowed to dry upon a glass surface is detached, it carries off scales of glass and leaves designs resembling those of frost on a window pane. Polished marble and quartz are similarly affected. With glue containing six per cent of alum Monsieur CaiUetct produced five designs, resembling moss in texture. The glue while drying exerts a powerful mechanical strain. President Roosevelt met a Kentucky lady at the dedication exercises in StLouis. and his first question was in reS rd to the author of Mrs. Wiggs of • Cabbage Patch. "Do yon know her?" "Oh, yes." the Kentucky lady replied. "She lives in Louisville; she was Miss Hegan. and is now Mrs. Rice." "Well,” said Mr. Roosevelt, "won't you please say to her when you see her that 1 have enjoyed 'Mrs. Wiggs.’ and that when she comes next to Washington I hope she will make herself known.”

One atse smaller after eaSsz Allan's PootEsae, s powder. II makes tight or saw shoes easy. (Sires swollen, bet, sweating, aching feet. Ingrowing nails. cozDe end bunion*. At all druggists and aho* stores. Me. Don't accept any substitute. Trial package Fax* by mall. Address, Alice B. Olmsted. LeBoy, X.T. Happy accident will often secure for a man the thing for which he baa vainly

NEW JEISEY STATE NEWS. Ocean comity authorities have tha* far rimed no doe to the burglars who broke into the Toms River Postoffice, blew open the safe, ransacked the office and left town behind former Sheriff Downey’s fast pacer. The burglar* only obtained a few registered letters for their-trouble. The deed waa accomplished so successfully that no one in the town knew of it until the postmaster opened the office in the morning. The safe is a small one and was I used by the postmaster as a protection i against fire. This it the second time l the postofficc has been robbed. Immediately following the portoffice robbery an attempt was made to break into the | Ocean county jail. One of the iron . bars of a rear window had been cut out, when the watchful guarflian. for- ; mer Sheriff Downey, in making hit I rounds, surprised the men at work. He : gave chase, but the men duded him and

; escaped.

| During a thunder storm Charles Pa1 vard. a farm laborer, employed by Allen • Roberts at Evesham, was struck by • lightning and instantly killed. He wat ' working in the field with Mr. Roberts , and his two sons. Mr. Roberts called to the man that it was going to storm and that they had better return home I It had not started to rain at that time I Distant thunder was heard and a flash I of lightning •.-=» s-—Psvsri's herse ' ran away and it was seen that he wat i lying on the ground. When the men | went to his assistance he was dead • He was 27 years of age. I Richard Clark, of Williamstown, is | the owner of an intelligent setter dog ' which no money will buy. The children : have taught the dog to being in wood. , ind Mrs. Clark never finds the wood1 box empty. The cows are brought 1 from the fields, and the farm help re- ■ freshed with luncheon and fresh water. I carried by the animal, j Professor Paul Ambrose, of New York, has just been appointed to be head of the music faculty of the State schools, to succeed Professor Charles S Skilton. who resigned to become j dean of the faculty of fine arts of the I University of Kansas, j Dr. Davis J. Boon, of Philadelphia. I resigned as house physician at Mercer | Hospital. Trenton, and will this week ! sail for Europe, to take the summer | course at the University of Heidelberg • William Hafr.e. an old resident of | Bordentown. is suffering from a slight 1 stroke of paralysis at the home of W illiatn H. Rcickard, his son-in-law. It is not an nnnsual sight in iowes^ I New Jersey to see women and girls ^ | working in the fields doing men’s work. Men willing to do farm work in that ( section arc very scarce. I At the annual meeting of the Glou1 cester City Board of Health George W. ( Turner was re-elected president. Daniel j F. Lane, secretary, and William C. ; Hawkins inspector. The report of In1 spector Hawkins showed that fiot a case of contagious disease has existed ' 1 that city in three months past.

the

Ido not b*M#v* Mao's Oars lor Coasoap- ! loth*# aeoqual for coughs and oold*—Joxx t.Borxa, Trinity Hprlags. tod-Tafl.P. HOB, rot rosy r t, but.it a

Belle—Married next week? Why, you told us you were booked for a personally conducted tour with a small, select party. « Marion—Yes, dear. But George is the personal conductor and I’m the small, select party.—Tit-Bits.

Long Hair

“ About a year ago my hair waa coming out very fast, so I bought a borne of Ayer’s Hair Vigor. It stopped Hie falling and made mr hair grow very tepidly, until now ft Is 4Mocbes tn length. —Mrs. A. Boydston, Atchison, Kant.

There’s another hunger than that of the Stomach. Hair hunger, for instance. Hungry hair ne6ds food, needs hair vigor—Ayer*. This is why we say that Ayer’s Hair Vigor always restores color, and makes the hair grow long and heavy, eat * mo*, ai ****

y—a bowls. Ba son andftva tk* maa ofyoorBssxsst cxp**»*aflScs. Address, J. C. AYER CO., Ltrwsll. Him.

During the summer stores in Pennsgrove will close early two nights •*“

week.

I from Nicholas Elk, of Quinton, besides a pair of flynets and other gears. > Mark Miller, of Alloway, has a new | variety of strawberry. Besides being : later it is white when ripe, and has a | banana flavor. Harry, the farm dog of Richard Fox, I of Lower Alloway, is dead. He was j known as the largest dog in Salem county, and was nearly 15 years old. I Rev. J. B. Umbei I years pastor of the _ ley Presbyterian Church, has accepted a call to the First Presbyterian Church, of Wyoming, Pa. From the Swedesboro Station only a few crates of tomatoes have been shipped. Same week last year, 4000 had been shipped at $2.10. This year the price is $1.50. John Huber, of Williamstown, set a bantam on five duck eggs. All were hatched out and soon grew larger than their foster mother, presenting a funny sight as they followed her around. Washington Camp, No. 6i, P. O. & of A., of Fkmington, has elected these officers; President. G D. Peterson; vice president, W. B. Chamberlain; master of forms, William V. Fisher; inspector, A. J. Marker; guard, Harry Carr; trustee, J. H. Dean.

Bromo-Seltzer Promptly cores all Headaches

k Vi

nuRIAL OF CANINE ACTOR. Dog Given Honorable Interment In New York Cemetery. After playing on the stage before the czar of Rusaia, the empress of China, the mikado of Japan and others leas notable, Tyras, a great Dane dog. has bees bnrted wjth honors to New York's dog cemetery at Scarsdsle. His body Jay to a rosewood coffin, the bead on a pillow of Cowers. and was followed to the cemetery by nine automobiles, containing forty fflWJrners. Tyras was 13 years old and bo longed to an actor. He had appeared on the stage In nearly every country of the world. He had been twice around the globe, and at the time of death wore a beautiful collar giver to him by Cecil Rhodes. Tan yean ago Prince Charles of Denmark gar* the dog to the actor, who Unperson ated “great men of the past and pres enL" The actor always had tha dot by hit side to bis Impersonation ol Bismarck, as Bismarck tor yean war always accompanied by his, relchs bund. While retumfog from AustFplla ins' J ate ary with bis master lEe dog be came .tltod as the ship crossed tbi equator. Arriving to New York hi was taken to a dog hospital, when he died of Brlgbt'H disease. A largt granite monument win mark Tyres last resting place.

Tha Seven Wonders of Cores.. Coren, 'ike tbs world of the ancients, Bat its 'Seven wonder*." Briefly stated. they are at follows: First, a hot mineral spring near Kin-Shantao, the healing properties of which are believed to be miraculous. No matter what disease may afflict the patient, a dip in the water proves efficacious. v " The second wonder is two springs situated at a considerable distance from each other; in fact, they have the breadth of the entire peninsula between them. They have two peculiarities. When one is full the other is always empty; and notwithstanding the obvi- | ous fact that they are connected by a | subterranean pasaage, one is bitter and the other pure and kweeL The third wonder is Cold Wind Cave, a cavern from which a wintry wind perpetually blowa. The force of the j wind from the care is such that a strong man cannot stand before it. A forest that cannot be eradicated is •be fourth wonder. No matter what injury- is done the roots of the trees, which are large pine*, they will sprout up again directly. The fifth is the most wonderful of all. It is the famous "floating stone." It stands, or seems to stand, in front of the palace erected in its honor. It is an irregular cube of great bulk. It appears to be resting on the ground, free from supports on all sides, but. strange to say, two men at opposite ends of a rope may pass it under the stone without encountering any obstacle whatever! __ n wonder ~ remote 1 u. „^-t on the —r — m - --- seventh and last Corear wonder is a drop of the sweat of Buddha. For thirty paces around the large temple in which it it enshrined not a blade of grass will grow. There are no trees or flowers inside the sacred square. Even the animals decline to profane a spot so holy. Their Ingenious Idea. The two young women had been invited to take a ride in a big, red devil of an automobile that makes forty miles an hour—when no policeman is about. The ride was to be token after

dark.

As everybody knows; the roads just now are so dusty that it does seem as if they hadn't a solid bottom at all. and the young wromen, both clad to resemble the lilies of the field and Solomon in all his glory (for they were going to a well-known country club to an entertainment) could not decide what to wear to keep their clothes from being ruined. Their covert coats were too heavy for the hot night, and alas! they had no smart pongee affairs, such as every well-regulated .automobBist

should have.

What to do? The young women

thought and «- 1 -

wanting in

they had an monos! Why, of course.

No sooner said than done, and so half an hour later two girls—one grandly wrapped in. a red kimono, the other covered with the folds of a pink one— rode away from the door in a very smart automobile with two perplexed escorts beside them. But, really, in the twilight the kimonos looked quite impressive and stylish, and no one not in the secret would ever have suspect-'

e<f their bedr00mish identity.

SUFFERING WOMEN

Tired, Nervous, Achiue, Trembling, Sleepless, Blood-less—Pe-ru-ua Benovates, | Beeulates, Restores—Many ' Prominent Women Endorse : Pe-ru-na.

The crest majority of nervous romen are 1 **-— — —

frnng from

Mrs. Emma Mitchell, 520 Louisiana ! prevalent, that they accept it as * ... —v «at obstacle i

oor me young women d thought, but they are not ingenuity?) and so finally n idea between them. Ki-

street, Indianapolis, Ind., writes: ; evitable. The greatest obetacle in the way "Peruna ha* certainly bees a blessing 1 of recovery u that they do not undmtand in diaguite to me. for when I first began “ ; 1 —*—*■ - • u - “*

taking it for trouble* peculiar to the aex and a generally worn out system I bad lit-

tle faith.

“For the past /toe year* I haoe rarely been wttAosrt pa<«, bttf Feruno hoe ehanoed oil this, end <« a oery ekort time. 1 think 1 hmd only taken tics bottles before I be yam to recuperate oery quickly, and aeoem bottle* made me spell. I do not have headache or backache any more, and hate eomc interest <n ll/e. 1 give all credit sphere it h due, and that it to Peruna.”-— Emma Mitchell. By far the greatest number of female troubles are caused directly by catarrh. They are catarrh of the organ which is affected. These women despair of recov-

eatarrh which ii

their iffneas. In female complaint-ninety-nine cases out of one handred arc nctbiafl bat catarrh. Peruna cures catarrh wher-

ever located.

Chronic invalids who bare languished for years on sick bed* arHb some form of female disease begin to improve at once after beginning Dr. Hartman's treatment. Among the many prominent women who recommend Peruna are: — Bella Lockwood. of Washington. D. C-; Mrs. CoL Hamilton, of Columbus, Ohio; Mr*. P. E. Warren, wife of U. 6. Senator Warren, of If you do not derive prompt and satisfactory reauit* from the use of Peruna, write at once to Dr Hartman, giving a full statement of your case, and hr wiD be pleased to give you bis valuable advice

gratia.

Address Dr. Hartman, President of The Hartnfan Sanitarium, Columbia. O.

It is reported from Brussels that besides the fifteen million dollars for a Palace of Peace at the Hague, Mr. Carnegie has given two handred thousand dollars for the establishing of an international library on diplomacy and international law. The library will be attached to the palace, which will probably be built on the site on which the residence of the grand duke of Weimar now stands. The Friends School of Providence. Rhode Island, will celebrate its one hundred and nineteenth anniversary on the twenty-third day of this month. A fine new gymnasium is to be dedicated by appropriate exercises at which tnany

e present

Loex Ha vex. Pa.—Mia ■ A few weeks ago l sat for t trial box of Doan's KUnty Pfils far myatlf, sad they did all they sra said to da My tusbasd was ttetad last fall

that I got the second and also the third, and Dow be R entirely wen.-—Rra L.. W. Axxmua, Lock Bavsa, Pa.

Natural Flavor

■ -Cottage

HAIR GROWTH Promoted by Shampoos of Cuticura Soap Ind Dressings of Cuticura tire Great Skin Cure

PwbI, Sieetesl, Nest Effwftrt far Skis, Scalp ud Halt. This treatment at once stops Ctlltoi, hair, removes crusts, scales and dandruff, destroys hair parasites, soothes Irritated, Itching surfaces, sttmulaies the hair foil idea, loosens the scalp akin, supplies the roots with energy tod nourishment, and makes the hair grow upon a sweet, wholesome, healthy scalp when all else falls. Millions of women now rdy on Cnn- ; curs Boap asdlstcd by Cuticur* Ointment, the great akin core, for preservi ug, . purifying and beautifying the skin, for deansing the scalp of crusts, scales and ! dandruff, and the stopping of (ailing 1 hair, for softening, whitening and 1 soothing red, rough and sore bands, for 1 baby rashes, Itching* and chafing*, fur annoying irritations, or too free or offensive perspiration, for ulcerative * and many sanative, on:l-

themselves, as well os for a poses of the toilet and nursery. Cuttcura remedies are the standard aklo cures and humour remedies of the world. Bathe the affected parts with hot water and Cuticura Soap, to desose the surface of crusts and scales and soften the thickened cuticle. Dry. without bard rubbing, and apply Cuticura Ointment freely, to allay itching. Irritation and inflammation, and soothe and heal, and, lastly, to the severer forms, take : Cuticura Resolvent, to cod and deanse the blood. A stogie ret la often sefudent to cure the most torturing, Cofiguring akin, scalp and blood hcronars, from pimples to scrofula, from infancy to age, when all else fails.

Corned Beef

• - k right aatO yon warn U.

UhOy, MdWM *. LDby, CMtafo. rSggffasgt Bt

Ripens Tabuies are the best dyspepsia I medicine ever made. A hundred millions of them hare been sold to the United States to a single year. Every Illness arising from a disordered stomach ia relieved or cored by their use. 80 common is It that diseases originate from the stomach it may be safely asserted there Is no condition of ill health th-.t will not be benefited or cored by the occasional use of Ripens Tmbulea. Physicians know them and speak highly of them. All druggists •ell them. The flre-cent package is enough for an ordinary occasion, and the Family Bottle, sixty cvnta, contains a household supply for a year. One generally gives relief within twenty

i 4DYERTISE“JW““ ITPAYS