“ frt'cly to > Burelr hi irtmce In t
eTer, it is a mistaken and USCll-tMl UC1U1MU.
Women seem to listen to every call of duty except the supreme
one that tells them to guard their health. How much harder the daily tasks become when some derangement of the female organs makes every movement minful and keeps the nervous system unstrung? Irritability takes die place of happiness and amiability: and weakness and suffering takes the place of health and strength. As long as they can drag themselves around, women continue to work and perform their household duties. They have been led to believe that suffering
is necessary because they are women. What a mistake! The use ol Lydia K. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound will banish
painand restore happiness. Don't resort to strong stimulants or narcotics when this great strengthening, healing remedy for women is
always within reach.
, FREE MEDICAL ADVICE TO WOMEN.
it case about wht . > Mrs. Plnltham. No man will
**P y ou * f° r no P«v»ou In America
a such a wide experience in treating female Ills as she has bad. 8be has helped hundreds of thousands of women bock to health. Her address is Lynn. Mass^ and her advice is free. Yon are very
foolish If yon do not accept her kind lnvitatlpn.
For proof read the symptoms, suffering and cure
recited in the following letters:
“Draa Mbs. Pixiiiam :—I wish to express to you the great benefit I have derived from rour advise and the use of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. My trouble was female weakneu is iu worst form and I was in a very bad condition. I could not 'perform my household duties, my back ached. I was extremely nervous, and I could not eat or sleep, and the bearing-down pains were terrible. My husbsnd spent hundreds of dollars to get me well, and all the medicine that the doctors prescribed failed to do me any good; I resorted to an operation which the physician said was necessary to restore me to health, but 1 suffered more after ft than I did before; 1 had
hemorrhages of the womb that nothing could seem to atop.
“I noticed one of yofcr advertisements and wrote you for advice, I rereived your reply and carefully followed all Instructions. I immediately began to get stronger, and in two weeks was about the bouse. 1 took eight bottles of l<ydia E. Plnkbnm's Vegetable Compound and continued following your advice, and to-day I in a well woman. Your remedies and help are a Godsend to suffering 'women, and I cannot find words to thank you for what you hare done for me."—Mbs. Lor tie V. Nstlob, 1128 K. J.
Ave.. N.W., Washington, D. C. ^
“ Desk Mbs. PnncHAX : — I write to tell you whtt Lydia E. Pink-
ham’s Vegetable Compound has done for me.
I was completely cured. I am now a well woman and able to do a]
orld.”— Mbs
'Tr„
I think your medicine one of the best remedies in the
J. M. Lee, 141 Lyndal St., Newcastle, Pa.
“Dub Mbs. Pixkham Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Comnd has done a great deal for me. 1 suffered so much from falling of the mb sad all the troubles connected with it. I doctored for years with
rs'and other remedies but received only temporary relief. I began taking your medicine, sud had not taken It long before I •
g better. * * ‘ -
My husband said that 1 should keep right on taking it as long
feeling b
as it gave me renet trom my _ r — one or two bottles. I did so and am now able to be on my feet and hard all day, and go to bed and rest at night. Thanks to your Vegetable Com- - pound I am certainly grateful for the relief it gave me. It is the mother's great friend. I would not be without it in my bouse, for when 1 feel tired
or out of sorts I, take a few doses end feel all right.
“ I would recommend your medicine to all tired mother*, and especially to those suffering as I was."—Hits.'fi. F. CnorBXRs, Bennet. Neb.
trnnn ffOBFtlTifw.esm-sfcA.vMkp.^.mtS.orisir VwUUlf * toT *‘■'■np.ah. which sr*’~ —
m: prere iWr ahsolots syn«!*Tiea«*.
LjdU E. MadtcAae Ca, Xm. Mass.
It is something to have an influence on the fortunes of mankind; it is greatly more to have influence on their intellects. Such is the difference be--tween men of office and men of genius, between computed and uncomputed
Dizzy? Appetite poor?*/ Bowels constipated? Tongue coated? Head ache? It’s your liver! Ayer’s Pills are liver pills, aill table. -StSL fc&inSfc
r aut your moustache or beard brown or rich black? Use BUCKINGHAM'S DYE — - - -jaaaabaiBbfcr
Bipans Tabulesar* the best dyspepsia [medicine erer mads. A hundred millions of them have been sold In the United States la a single Every Illness d « or cared by their use. So i Is It that diseases originste b It may be safely aether# Is no condition of Ul i thet will not be benefited or toy the occasional use of Ripens Physicians know them and
hem. The fivo-eent package 'I for an ordinary occasion, a 7 Bottle, sixty cents, contains I supply foe a year. One ire* relief within twenty
Faith and Art. j was, says a mod the typical art of the ages sculpture was that of paganism. It was the result of an inrinflible impulse to realize the spiritual, to present, as far as might be, in material, visible form, the stmematura! truths of an invisible world, to perpetuate in permanent form the traditional events of sacred history, and to find an adequate vehicle of expression for the highest religious imaginings, aspirations and beliefs. Until such an aim, based npon profound religious belief and crystalized by deep meditation on these, shall again take-^possession of artists, the art of painung will run low on the ground, and amidst the things of earth, instead of rising to the heights h at one time attained.
The Congo state sells abroad annually over $13000,000 worth and buy* less than $5000000.
rang* made la the world, sad si bar* U placed la your own hoi Booths' tree trial. Just sot thh sad send it to Buss, Boxsccx d . . . eago' sad you will receive bee by * mail.a Mg pMm of the stool mags . Baay other cooking sad boattaa stoves:; will also receive tha mom woadsrfal $1 steel reage oiler, an oBse that plsass best steel range or heatlu stove la tha h< of say family; such an olfer that ao fan In the load, ao matter what thetr etzei
NEW JERSEY STATE NETS,
Fires
under two furnaces cl
and all four operation but for a shortage of boj help. The firm will keep within tin limit of the law as to the age of lad employed and only those iboye 14 y** r will be hired. This will greatly handi cap the plant and be a < many families whose bov employed at the works, air _ less of age. Any family with a husk; tot of.lads will find a hearty welcome ii. this town, both by the glass firms and blowers, as the latter measure tbeit day’s work by good boy help. An unknown man was run over by a freight train at West Moo re Mown and killed. It is thought he attempted to board a freight car whe^, he fell under the train, the wheels pasting over his body. He was about 50 years of ige, six feet tall, sandy tnnstache. Wack hair, streaked with gray, and was fairly well dressed. There w^s nothing on his clothes by which he could be tden
ttfied.
Joseph Pcdrick. of Pedricktown, ii endeavoring to learn who fired a revolver into an upstairs window a few nights ago and why it was done. The weapon was directed toward the bed occupied by Pedrick’s daughters, and (here is considerable mystery concerning the affair. The question of tarrying arms at nights has been dismssed frequently by the officials, and t is now probable the practice will be broken up The panning factories thaj have started in South Jersey the past week have had little to do. Growers arc getting high prices elsewhere, and where they are not under contract tribe factories they ship to some other
points.
A mowing machine ert off a leg of 1 horse belonging to William Shimp, in Canton, while it was hitched to the machine. the annqal having become fast in the mud, and the other horse pulling
the mower along.
A peculiar theft took place at the home of Patrick Claneey. Pennsvillr when five gallons of kerosene were taken from the shed, several quarts of cream from the well, and a good sup-
ply of wood from a shed.
From the stump of a broken peach free on the farm of John A. Finlaw. at Canton, a fine apple tree is growing. One hundred chicken* were stolen from William Donnclson. of Lower. AHoway. in two visits of thieves. The new scale of wages adopted h) the Gloucester City Carpenters Union
went into effect Tuesday.
No watermelons have yet been shipped from the Swedesboro station—an mutual procedure at this time of thr fear. _ A special town meeting, held at Hammonton. appropriated $500 to purchase aew fire ho5e for the fire departmentWith the full capacity of the eight canning factories in Lower Allow-ay that town will soon be turning out tie.000 cans of tomatoes daily—if the to-
matoes can be had.
Washington Sickler, a well-knowr farmer, states that for twelve years » pair of robins has come 4o his place regularly in the spring, built a nest and
reared young ones.
The blackberry and wild cherry crop of Salem county has been immense anc*
many qua
going the fermenting process to restore poor appetites the coming winter. Parties along the river front in Salem county do not fear contagion froir the anthrax outbreak, as they are crab bing every day. catching immense num bers. and no ill effects base been ex
perienced thus far.
An intoxicated matt threatened to shoot Officer Martin, of Glassboro. He was overpowered and a revolver cor. uining three bullets was taken from him Wore he could shoot. He was
taken to the Woodbury Jail.
Thieves gained an entrance to the store of £1 C. Batten, on Hudson street. Gloucester City, by prying open a back dbor and earned off goods val-
ere frighte...
off. and left behind a. bag of plunder. Permission was given in the United States Court at Trenton for the Robert
Receiver James Smith, of the Sutes Shipbuilding Company, for ■terials furnished in the coast ruction of the government torpedo boats now building at the Crescent .yard, Elizabethport. Trento Crawford, — Larina Rice, of Newtown, who was shot during a negro row, and as soon as he is sufficiently recovered from what is believed'to be a self-inflicted bullet wound, be will be removed from St. Francis’ Hospital to the county jafl. Fears are entertained for the recovery of the woman who was shot
Love Let Ur Rernacce ' Half a century ago a young Englishman, while travelling, met a beautiful girl and promptly fell in lore with her. A few days later be returned home, and his first act was to write her a love letter. In it he told her that be eould not be happy without' her and that if she regarded bis proposal favorably he would expect a reply by the next mail To this letter he received no
occurred recently, hr shut himself up in his home and lived like a hermit. Most ol bis time was spent in reading. and the day alter his funeral the heirs began to search the books in his library, for they thought it quite possible that the eccentric - old. man might have hidden some bank notes in them. They found none, but in a tattered old pamphlet they found another kind note, the love letter which was wi ten fifty years ago. and which the writer had forgotten to mail. Taking Life Too Seriously.
ances. it would seem to Le world wide, for, go where you may. you will find the proportion "of serious, not to st}* anxious, faces ten to one as compared with the merry or happy ones. If "the outer is always the form and shadow of the inner" and if "the present is the fulness of the past and the herald of the future" (and how can we doubt it?), how many sad histories can be read in the faces of those we meet every day! The phy of it is, too, that the sadness is a self-wdren garment, even as is the joy with which it might be replaced. Kuskin says: "Girls should be sunbeams not only to members of their own circle, but to everybody with whom they come in contact. Every room they enter should be brighter for their presence." Why shouldn’t all of us be sunbeams, boyi
HE REVIEWED THE’SERMON. •porting Reporter Take# the Place of tha Theological Expert. - The theological reporter being out of the city, the sporting editor was sent to church, with Instructions to carefully review the sermon that waa to be preached by an eminent rutting divine. The sporting editor waa up agairst a hard p.oposlUon, but ha proceeded to make good aa follows: "The weather was perfect, sad the grandstand and" bleachers were packed. The Bar. Dr. Blanketyblaak was In the box for the Unitarians, and ha certainly toed everything fa the book. When he tackled the New he oaed the stow tlcaily, but
The Coach Still In Favor. There it something delightfully reposeful and old-fashioned about driving on a coach. The gentle crawl of the team is possibly delightful after a 1 course of whizzing through the on one’s friends’ motors. We live and move in such a distracting hurry that I .foresee a time when a reaction will set in and we shall look upon the Chinaman who tears up railways and telegraphs and lives on tea and rice with far greater respect that we now bestow on the energetic inventors of mechanical and electrical herrors. If proof were needed of how tired we have grown of motoring it would be found tn the rapture with which people accept invitations to drive on a coach. Nobody says "Thank you” to an offer to mote down to Ranclagh on a grilling day-in a cloud of dust, but moit people will take a considerable amount ol trouble to angle for an invitation to proceed thither by coach, more especially if occasion favors them with an opportunity of displaying themselves previously at a meet of the club in Hyde Park To be bright and cheerful often quires an effort. There is a certain art iu keeping ourselves happy. In thii reject, as in others, we require to vafeh over and manage ouaaclves almost at if wc were somebody else. TMchm Get a Tear Or, Supcfss.'nl tenchera of Cblccgo schools who wish to continue their studies In colleges, universities, etc., now may be granted leave of absence for the period of one year, trader the authority of the superintendent of the schools -New York Commercial Ad-
GRATEFUL, HAPPY WO WEN
How'. TWI.r We offer One Bandied DoUan Bewar.1 for any ease of Catarrh that cannot ba enrsd by Hall's Catarrh Cun. F. J. Cxxxxr A Co.. Toledo. O. undersigned, hare known F. J. for tbo last li yean, sad hellers hl«r
sed financially able to carry jatlons made by tbelr firm. Wear * Tcosx. Wholesale Druggists, Toledo. O. Waunixo. Kixxzx 4 Maavn, Wholesale *»v«i»d« 0. Hall'a CalHlh Curs Is taken internally.actlag directly npon the blood and mucous surlaess of tbs systsm. Testimonials sent free. Price, 7Sc. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. J HaUls FBmUy PlUs are the next. Largest Battle In the World. The largest glass bottle aver blow* as recently been made for exhibition at the SL Louis Exposition. It hold forty-fire gallons, aud'required forty pounds of moKen glass, drawn from the furnace and shaped on the end of a huge blowing pipe.
The source of agreeableness or disagrreablenest is in the thought life sre lead.' It is in thought that the social climate is made. Think pleasantly and you will act pleasantly.
Mother
' Thank Pe*ru-na for Their Recovery AfUr Years of Suffering.
lid prr.i.1 SI..: i.fcc .1 r»r»lerlr. 1 tboofbi tin. .tw i«-.i t could do, arc i.rocutvd a U-lilc 1 ku*w •a aoon as I began taking .1 Inal .1 aaa affecting me d.llertnuy Irirm aiKib.ng I bad used beiore, and ao I Sepl **«. taking It. 1 kept tbla U|. Iff *.» .i.-.l Uia, • and steadily gsmed strenril. and i.rsitb. land when I bad uwd i.fr. . In.Mies I 1 .ouaidered mrar:f entirely rurvJ 1 am a grateful, happy soman u>-«lay."—Aiwa
Muriel Anr.irace.
Peru mi rtirt-a catarrh of the pel vie organa srith the aarnr surety as it cure* catarrh of the heed. I’erona ha# Pe-nw-nta. .imply brvauae T.e sii- • mostly doe to catarrh. Caibe cause of the trouble. Pae catarrh. The symptoms
. disappear.
Female Weakness is Pelvic Catarrh. A'wavs Half Sick Are the Wcmwi Who Have Pelvic Ca'rrrh.
aelf ill enough to go to bed. but ahe la far fioc. bring able 10 <1o t.ri «ork without liw greatest exhaustion, fills ix'a aery fuiauiou tight, and la almost always due to ^It is uoiw loan foolish tor so many women to .offer year alter tear witb a disease that can be permanently cured. IVruna cine, catarrh TprnnancnUy. It cures old riuoUK caare aa well as a slight attack, I lie only difference being in the length of time that it abould be taken 10
(fleet a cure.
prompt and aatialscuae of 1‘enma write
Catarrh of any organ, if allowed to progreaa. snll affect the whole body. Lat-nh without dctvuu.iic.. is eery n»ie, but |h.-1-vic catarrh and uertouabcaa go hand tn
hand.
What is so distressing half-sick, nenroua noma the many almost nube.rabh- symptom. "• j pelvic catairhT She dora nol tunauier her-1 Uartmai. Sanitarium. C0I1
1 tory results flora t 1 ace 10 Dr. ’’
SV
billouanrca, had bramtb, bag
rar mod a. acwrtache. Indigestion, pimples, 1 ditiinm. When poor bowels dao't more • poopta than all other diseases tacetber. U lag. No matter what ails yast, start taking tl an* star well uatil yea get your bowels - - today under absolute gaareatao te —
ped C C C. Newer sold I* holy ~ New Vort.
! in bulk. Sample asd
Tie Gouw TOWERS POMMEL SLICKER HAS BEEN AtoVSTUED /.NP SOLD FOB A OGAUtS OF A CENnSff MKE ALL ■S^smoof aonw;
■etatola n Mad uryefcx. ft^rjfBillwAesdMld^ fCmsae dcakii twi/xbtre snot to me 5K*N OF THE FISH
Straighten Yon r Hair
Tkke the ourii omt ^ O- ass>e It eefl ead glowr Capeattr’s OX iuttOV P011BE PRICE, 29 CENT*
s CARPENTER * CO., LwalsvflU, Ky.
1 “My mother wa» troubled with { coniumjtlon for many ye*r». At ' last she wg* riven up to die. Then ehe tried Ayer * Cherry Federal, end was speedily cored. ’ I dTp. UOr, Avoea, N. T.
W. L. DOUGLAS *3.ri A *3 SHOES SE 7 equal thorn are bean era*-ir.R-s.'K » sola of W. L.
tan nUNfMSH! Viiiiic; AMIN’STEipi

