Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, May 02, 1907, Page 7, Image 7

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    The Evolution of
Household Remedies.
i The modern patent medicine busi
ness is the natural outgrowth of the
old-time household remedies.
In the early history of this country,
EVERY FAMILY HAD ITS HOME
MADE MEDICINES. Herb teas,
bitters, laxatives and tonics, were to be
found every house, compound
ed by the housewife, sometimes assisted
by the apothecary or the family doctor.
Such remedies as picra, which was
aloes and quassia, dissolved in apple
brandy. Sometimes a hop tonic, made
of whiskey, hops and bitter barks. A
•core or more of popular, home-made
remedies were thus compounded, the
formulae for which were passed along
from house to house, sometimes written,
•ometimes verbally communicated.
The patent medicine business i 9 a
natural outgrowth from this whole
some, old-time custom. In the begin
ning, some enterprising doctor, im
pressed by the usefulness of one of
these home-made remedies, would take
It up, improve it in many ways, manu
facture it on a large scale, advertise it
mainly through almanacs for the home,
and thus it would become used over a
Urge area. LATTERLY THE HOUSE
HOLD BUSINESS TOOK
A MORE EXACT AND SCIENTIFIC
FORM.
Peruna was originally one of these
old-time remedies. It was used by the
Meanorutes, cf Pennsylvania, before it
was offered to the ptiblic for sale. Dr.
Hartman, THE ORIGINAL COM
POUNDER OF PERUITA, is of Men
nonite origin. First, he prescribed it
for his neighbors and his patients.
The sale of it and at last he
established a manufactory and fur
nished it to the general drug trade.
Peruna is useful in a great many
climatic ailments, such as coughs, colds,
sore throat, bronchitis, and catarrhal
diseases generally. THOUSANDS OF
FAMILIES HAVE LEARNED THE
USE OF PERUNA and its value in the
treatment of these ailments. They
hava learned to trust and believe in
Dr. Hartman'a judgment, and to rely
on his remedy, Peruna.
HOW CLASSIC WAS WRITTEN.
Bret Hartc's Great Poem Result of sn
Inspiration.
The war correspondent, Frederic
Villiers, has recorded a talk with
Bret Harte apropos of tho poem,
"Dickens in Camp:" "We all felt his
loss most keenly in the States," said
Harte:
"On hearing of his death (I) sat
down about three in the afternoon to
"write an editorial on the great au
thor. I wrote one and then tore It
up. Then another, alter much pains,
was written. This did not please me,
BO I tore it up. I wrote yet another
and threw it into the waste paper
basket; it would not do. It was get
ting late, and I was now keeping the
paper waiting for press. I was drum
ming on my desk, absolutely without
another thought in my head; I had
run dry. Suddenly I mechanically
to write and the result was the
thing you seem to like so much. Well,
Mr. Villiers, you are not far out. I
like it, too."
GONE FOREVER.
Ten years ago a farmer put his ini
tials on a dollar bill. The next day he
•went to the nearest town and spent it
with a merchant. Before the year was
out hegot the dollar back. Four times
in six yeass the dollar came back to
hiin for produce and three times he
heard of it in the pocket of his neigh
bors.
The la"', time he got it back four
years ago. He sent it to a mail order
house. He never has seen that dollar
6ince, and never will. That dollar bill
will never pay any more school or
road tax for him, will never build or
brighten any of the homes of the com
munity. Ho sent it entirely out of
the circle of usefulness to himself and
his neighbors.
Patronize your local merchant who
helps you to pay your taxes, support
your schools and churches, and lends
a helping liana in times of sickness
and trouble.
Great Stunt by Geronimo.
In a single day Geronimo, when In
his prime, ran 40 miles on foot, rode
600 miles on one stretch, as fifet as
he could change horses, ard so com
pletely wore out the cslumn which
finally captured him that three sets
of officers were needed to finish the
chase, and not more than one-third
of the troopers who started were in
at the finish, says a writer in Outing.
Wrinkled and crafty and cruel is
his swarthy face to-day, but tho fire
of his infernal energy has died and
he is no more than a relic of the
Geronimo of whom Gen. Miles said
after their first meeting:
"He rode into our camp and dis
mounted, a prisoner. He was one of
the brightest, most resolute, deter
mined men I ever met, with the
sharpest, clearest dark eye. Every
movement showed power and en
•rgy."
Bishop Potter's Answer.
A young clergyman in a remote
country district wrote last Easter
time to Ilishop Potter, saying that
lie was about to take a wife, and ask
ing \ if, to save some other clergy
mnn a long and weary journey, be
could not marry himself.
The bishop's reply was marvelous
ly concise. It said:
"Could you bury yourself?"
tzir —i J[-V Cf
A SWINE STORY.
One Farmer's Hogs That Made a 1
Great Profit.
The Irish cottager who says that j
the pig "pays the rint" tells a no more j
patent truth than is contained in the j
statements made by Theo. Louis, i
John Cownie, and other great hog j
growers, that hog growing is one of ,
the most surely profitable of all I
branches of farming. Many people i
seem to think, however, that hogs pay ;
well only in the "corn belt." This I i
know to be a mistake, writes a cor
respondent of Farming. My farm is
not in the corn belt: on the contrary
it is in one of the old states, and we
never make any great surplus of corn.
Nevertheless, I can make hogs pay
rr~\- |i
The Shelter That Housed 36 Hogs.
well even when prices are down to
four or five cents. When up to six
cents, profits are a 100 per cent, or
more.
Corn is great feed for hogs; for fat
tening there is nothing better, but it
is not wise to depend on corn, except
where it makes big yields every year.
I cannot do this and here is my meth
od of making cheap pork, and getting
good profits: I have three fields well
fenced, adjoining each other. They
have from eight to ten acres in each,
and in each there is a good supply of
running water. My hogs, in the lati
tude of Washington city, spend ten
months of the year in these fields. At
this writing there is in No. 1 a crop
of late cowpcas on half and clover
and orchard grass on the rest; in
No. 2 there were oats and Canada field
peas which have been eaten off; in
No. 3 there are only early cowpeas.
The hogs ran in No. 1 in spring and
early summer, then in No. 2 till they
ate the oats and peas, and now they
are in No. 3 and will remain till the
peas are gone. Then they will spend
a large part of the winter in No. 1 on
the late cowpeas. There is no kind
of forage better adapted to making
pork than these.
Last fall I bought among a lot of
liogs some half-bred Jersey and
"razor-back" sows that had together
36 pigs. I fed the pigs two tons of
tankage at a cost of $76, and S2O
worth of corn, and let them run in
good weather in a potato field that
had been dug. They rooted up and
ate all the potatoes that had been left.
As soon as the clover and grass got
up enough in the spring in pasture
No. 1, 1 turned in the pigs. They
stayed there till they were six months
old and weighed 200 pounds each and
the market price was $6.10. This
made them average a little more than
sl2 a head. The money cost of these
pigs when sold had been only $4.75
each, showing a gain of $7.00 a head. !
FINE HOLSTEIN RECORD.
What a Nebraska Cow Has Done in
Twelve-Month Test.
A three-year-old cow owned by the
Nebraska Agricultural college was
given a 12 months' official test with
the result below. Every pound of milk
was weighed and tested for butter fat. j
The cow was milked three times a day |
for the first six months of lactation !
and all the feed given her was j
weighed. The results obtained were '
especial?y interesting.
In 365 days this cow produced 18.57S j
pounds of milk of an average test of I
3.34 per cent, butter fat. This amount- j
ed to 620 pounds of butter fat for the j
year, which estimated as butter i
amounts to 734 pounds. At 25 cents '
per pound this butter would be worth i
SISI, making a total value of products !
$228. The value of the milk solids, I
not fats, at 3 cents per pound would
be $47.
The whole cost of the feed for this
cow was s7l. If the 0,000 quarts of ;
milk had been sold for 4 cents per j
quart, the income would have been '
$360, or a net profit over tho cost of
feed of nearly $290, but as the milk 1
was actually sold for 6 cents per quart, :
the net profit over the cost of feed j
was nearly $l7O. For net profit, this !
cow stands close to the record, in fact, '
above any cows that we have ever j
heard of. Can there be any better ar- ;
gument for quality in a dairy cow?
What Might Be.
H. A. Hopper of the Illinois College !
of Agriculture has been testing the
cows o; that state for tho last two I
years. He makes tho statement that ■
if all tho cows in the state were as !
good as the best herd he has tested, '
they would add to the revenue of the
farmers of Illinois over $60,000,000
annually. All this loss traces back
to tho mistaken judgment of the Illi
nois farmer concerning cows. If he
would commence to make a study of
cows, their breeds and types, be
could correct that judgment.
CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 2, 1907.
DON'T GRUMBLE AT TRIFLES.
Tv.tnty-five Bushels Wheat and Forty
five Bushels Oats Per Acre Are
in Western Canada.
Saltcoats, Sask.,
Bth December, 1906.
To the Editor.
Dear Sir,
I willingly give you the result of my
four and a half years' experience in
! the District of Saltcoats.
Previous to coming here I farmed in
I Baldwin, St. Croix County, Wisconsin,
; and as I have heard a great deal, about
| the Canadian North-West, I decided
| to take a trip there and see the coun
! try for myself. I was so impressed
' with the ricl'.ness of the soil that I
bought half a section of land about
i five miles from the town of Saltcoats,
i I moved onto the land the following
June and that year broke 90 acres,
, which I cropped in 1904, and had 39
bushels wheat per acre, in 1903, with
an acreage of 160 acres, 1 had 24 bush
els wheat and 35 bushels of oats per
acre. In 1906, with 175 acres under
crop, I had 25 bushels wheat and 45
bushels of oats per acre,
j From the above mentioned yields
you can readily understand that I am
i very well pleased with the Canadian
West. Of course, I have had to work
! hard, but I don't mind that when I
get such a good return for my labor.
] To anyone thinking about coming to
this country I can truthfully say that
if they are prepared to work and not
grumble at trifles, they are bound to
get on. Some things I would like dif-
I ferent, but take the country all round,
I don't know where togo to get a bet
ter.
Your 3 truly,
(Signed) O. H. OLSON.
Write to any Canadian Government
Agent for literature and full particu
lars.
AGE TOLD BY THE PULSE.
From Birth to Death the Beats Have
a Steady Decrease.
How old are you? Ask your pulse.
The human pulse has a wide range,
even in perfectly healthy persons.
The female pulse always beats fast
er than the male, and from birth to
death the pulse beats steadily de
crease. It has been said by great
authorities that the age and sex of
a person could be ascertained by the
rate of the pulse alone. Babies at
birth have a pulse beat of 160 times
a minute in case of a girl and 150 in
the case of boys. At the age of four
or five the pulse beats will have fall
en respectively to 110 and 100. Maid
ens' and youths' pulses average 95
and 90. Mature men and women av
erage SO and 75. Elderly men and
women have an average of 60 and 50.
An old woman's pulse rarely, if ever,
sinks below 50, but among men a
pulse beat below 50 is quite common.
There are, however, great variations
consistent with health. Napoleon's
pulse is said to have beaten only 44
times a minute.
French Sailors Use Drugs.
The extent to which the narcotio
habit prevails in the French navy was
Illustrated a few days ago by the pro
ceedings of a court-martial at Brest.
The defendants were half a dozen
seamen of ordinary rating, who were
charged with a considerable number
of robberies. All the men were vic
tims of opium or the the ether habit,
or both combined, and were in the
habit of bemuddling themselves daily
with these drugs and the robberitfli
had been committed to gratify their
passion. Severe sentences wer«
passed.
World's Cheapest Gas.
According to the Gas World, pride
of place as the suppliers of the cheap
; est gas in the world Is now shared
j with the Widnes corporation by the
Sheffield Gas company of England,
who have just announced a reduction
i of one penny per thousand cubic feet
in the price, making the new scale Is.
4d., Is. 2d., and Is., according to con
sumption, and Is. for gas used in gas
engines. The Widnes scale is Is. Id.
and Is. 3d., with lid. for gas used for
1 power purposes.
APPENDICITIS.
Not at All Necessary to Operate In
Many Cases.
Automobiles and Appendicitis scare
J come people before they are hit.
Appendicitis ia often caused by too
; much starch in the bowels. Starch is
| hard to digest and clogs up the diges
| tive machinery—also tends to form
cakes in the cecum. (That's the blind
I pouch at entrance to the appendix.)
j AN. H. girl had appendicitis, but
I lived on milk for awhile—then Grape-
Nuts and got well without an opera
tion.
j She says: "Five years ago while at
school, I suffered terribly with consti
pation and indigestion." (Too much
starch, white bread, potatoes, etc.,
I which she did not digest.)
"Soon after I left school I had an at
| tack of appendicitis and for thirteen
weeks lived on milk and water. When
: I recovered enough to eat solid food
I there was nothing that would agree'
| with me, until a friend recommended
| Grape-Nuts.
j "When I began to eat Grape-Nuta I
■weighed 98 lbs., but I soon grew to 115
lbs. The distress after eating left me
i entirely and now I am like a new per
| son."
(A little Grape-Nuts dissolved in hot
water or milk would have been much
better for this case than milk alone,
for the starchy part of the wheat and
barley is changed into a form of di
gestable sugar in making Grape-Nuts.)
Name given by Postum Co., Battle
Creek, Mich. Read the little book,
"The Road to Wellville," in pkgs.
"There's a Reason
Old Sofas, Backs of Chairs, etc., can
be dyed with PUTNAM FADELESS
Di ES, fast, bright, durable colors.
It's usually the man who has some
thing to say who doesn't say it.
Mrs. "Wlnslow's Soothing Syrup.
For children teething, nafrenti the gums, reduces in
flammation, allays pain, cures wind collu. 'OK. a bottle.
A woman invariably tells a small
boy to hurry back when she sends
him on an errand —but what's the
use?
Pure! Pleasant! Potent! Three inter
esting facts about Garfield Tea, the Nat
ural laxative. It is made of Herbs and is
guaranteed under the I'ure Food and Drug
Law.
Australians Will Go Back.
Australia has arranged for the re
patriation of 1,000 discouraged Aus
tralians now in South Africa.
It Cures While You Walk.
Allen's Foot-Ease is a certain cure for
hot, sweating, callous, and swollen, aching
feet. Sold by all druggists. Price 25c. Don't
aceeptany substitute. Trial package FREE.
Address Allen S. Olmsted. Le Roy, N. Y.
Unique Souvenir.
A souvenir issued by a western
cork manufacturing concern consists
of a picture of the company's plant
printed on a sheet of cork one flve
hundredths of an inch in thickness.
Famous Book Free.
Every reader of this paper can get free
of charge one of Dr. Coffee's famous books
which tells of a new method by which
persons afflicted with Deafness, Head
Noises, Sore Eyes, Failing Sight from any
cause, can cure themselves at home at
small expense.
Write a letter immediately to Dr. W. O.
Coffee, 360 Century Bldg., Des Moines, la.
An Animal-Lover'a Ambition.
To be a genuine lover of anlma!»,
end to be able to effect an improve
ment in the breed of those which ap
peal most to one's fancy, is to add a
fresh and lasting source of enjoyment
to life. —Country Life.
Deafness Cannot Be Cured
by local application!, as thej cannot reach the dis
eased portion of the ear. There Is only one way to
cure deaf nuss, and that Is by constitutional rornedles.
Deafness Is caused by an inflamed condition of the
mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this
tube is Inflamed you havo a rumbling sound or im
perfect hearing, and when It Is entirely closed, Deaf
ness Is the result, aud unless the Inflammation can he
taken out and this tube restored M In normal condi
tion, hearing will be destroyed forever; nlno cases
out of ten are caused by Catarrh, which is nothing
but an Inflamed c.oadltlou of the mucous surface*.
We will give Ouo Hundred Dollars fur any case of
Deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured
by Hall's Catarrh euro. Send for circulars, free.
K „.,. , I'} J. CIIENEY & CO., Toledo, O.
Sold hy Druggists, 75c.
Take Hall's Family I'llls for constipation.
Telephone Invadss Slam.
The Siamese minister of public
works has received the sanction of
the king to the proposal to acquire
and install an entirely up-to-date tele
phone system in Bangkok. The sys
tem decided on is the one known as
the central battery system. The in
stallation will goto public tender.
Phya Sukhum is now engaged in ar
ranging for a new cable from Koh-
Si-Chang to Sirachi with connection
to Bangkok.
THE CHANGE OF LIFE
Sensible Advice to Women from firs. Henry Lee,
rirs. Fred Certia and firs. Pinkham.
LEE MRS. FRED CERTIA
Owing to modern methods of living 1
not one woman in a thousand ap
proaches this perfectly natural change
without experiencing - a train of very
annoying and sometimes painful
symptoms.
This is the most critical period of
her whole existence and. every woman
who neglects the care of her health
at this time invites disease and pain.
When her system is in a deranged
condition or she is predisposed to
apoplexy or congestion of any organ,
the tendency is at this period
likely to become active and with a
hostof nervous irritations make life a
burden. At this time also cancers
and tumors are more liable to form
and begin their destructive work.
Such warning symptoms as sense
of suffocation, hot flashes, headaches,
backaches, melancholia, dread of im
pending evil, palpitation of the heart,
irregularities, constipation and dizzi
ness are promptly heeded by intel
ligent women who a-re approaching
the period of life when this great
change may be expected.
Mrs. FredCcrtia, 1014 So. Lafayette
Street, So. Bend, Ind., writes:
Dear Mrs. Pinkham:—
"Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com
pound is tho ideal medicine for women who
When a modicino has been successful in rostoring to health,
actually thousands of women, you cannot well say without trying
it,"l do not bolievo it will help mo." It is your duty to yourself
and family to try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.
W. Lo dOUGLAS/T^
$3,00 AND 53.5G SHOES fee- M
W. L. DOUGLAS $4.00 GILT EDGE SHOES CANNOT BE EQUALLED AT ANY PRICE. WW §S3
Si-WES FOR EVERYBODY AT ALL jffl
Men »Hhoes, t< f *1 .80. lioyn' Shoes. Sato Sfl.!*s. WOIIXII'h foi§4a*\ /V
Shoes, S4 to W1.50. Misses'<£ Children's Slioes, tf'J.aO to tU.OO.
\V . Ij. I >ouglas shoes nro recognized l.y expert judges of footwear 1
to bo tlio best in style, fit and wear produced in this country. Kach * /
part of the shoo and every detail of the making is lookod after Awk&it A.
and watched over by skilled shoemakers, without regard to
time or cost. If T could take you into my largo factories nt.
Itrockton, Mass., and show you how carefullv W. 1,. 1 >ouglas t2
shoos aro made, ynu would then understand why they hold their sharte. lit better
wear longer, and are of greater value than any othor makes. '
Fail Color £t/elets u*ed exclusively. Catalog mailed/t tg. \\. i,f Ik b.lTruc 170 a 112:.? i«#.
Protective Paint
Pure White Lead Paint protects
property against repairs, replacement
and deterioration, it makes buildings
look better, wear better—and sell bet
ter. Use only Pure Linseed Oil and
Pure White Lead made by the
Old Dutch Process, which is sold in
kegs with this Dutch Boy trade mark
on the side.
This trade mark protects you
against fraudu
lent White Lead
adulterations and / JSK) \
substitutes. / \aJoß' \
SEND FOR I M J
BOOK
•• A Talk on Paint. 1 *
give# valuable infor
motion on the paint
•abject. Rent free All lead packed in
uyon requoet. 1907 bears (hi* mark.
NATIONAL LEAD COMPANY
In -whichever of the foliat
ing cities it neareit youZ
Frir York. Be <ton, Buffalo, Cleveland.
Cincinnati, Chicago, St. Lcnis, Philadel
phia (John T. Lewis k Brc*. Co.) Pittsburgh
Lflutional Lead A OU Co.J
A Positive ygSJTSV
CURE FOR /eSNIBAIV\
CATARRHIiS§Jp
Ely's Cr&am Balm
is quickly absorbed.
Give* Relief at Once.
It eleanses, soothes,
heals and protects
tlio diseased membrane. It euros Catarrh
and drives away a Cold in the Head quickly.
Restores the Senses of Taste nnd Smell.
Full size CO cts. at Druggists or by mail;
Trial sizo 10 ets. by mail.
Ely .Brothers, CO Warren Street, New York.
SrTT HICKS'
SII CAPO DIKE
- CURES
ACHES
And Nervousness
Trial beMis 10c Atdra^storea
b KM U Ic ww H ney, Waahington, D. O. Atlviro
■ ■*"» I ESJIW ■ free. Terms low. Highest rof.
nrriANPr CTAPrU ewfeiit to work with and
UurSMIIUC. dlHitun marches clothe# ulcesL
A. N. K.—C (1907—17) 2175.
are passing through Change of Life. FOP
several months I suffered from hot flashes,
extreme norvousness, headache and sleep
lessness. I had no appetite and could not
sleep. I had made up my mind there was
no help for me until I began to use Lydia
E. link ham's Vegetable Compound, my
bad symptoms ceased, and it brought me
safely through the danger period, built
up my system and I am in excellent health.
I consider Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound unsurpassed for women during
this trying period of life."
Mrs. Henry Lee, 60 Winter Street,
New Haven, Conn., writes:
Dear Mrs. Pinkham:—
"After suffering untold misery for three
years during Change of Life I heard of
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.
I wroto you of my condition, and began to
take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com
riund and followed your advice, aud to-day
am well and happy. I can now walk any
where and work as well as anyone, and for
years previous I had tried but could not get
around without help. I consider your medi
cine a sovereign balm for suffering women."
Women passing through this critical
period should rely upon Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. If
there is anything' about your case
you don't understand write to Mrs.
Pinkham, Lynn, Mass., for advice. It
is free and has guided thousands to
health.
BATH OF
f|P
For Preserving, Purifying
and Beautifying the Skin,
Scalp, Hair, and Hands.
Cutfcura Soap combines delleate medicinal, emol
lient, sauatlve, annseptlc properties derived from
Cuticura. the urrat Skin Cure, with the purest of sr.p
onareous Ingredients, and moat refresh Injj of f.owrr
odors. Depots: Loudon, 27 Charterhouse Sq.; Paris,
ft Ruede la Palx; Australia. It. Towns <k Co.. Syd
ney; India, B. K. Paul, Calcutta: So. Africa, L<-n-
Uon, Ltd., Cane Town, etc.; Boston. 137 Coiurtibu®
Ave , Potter i>ruK & Chem. Corp., Sole Props.
to#-Mailed 1-ree. Ilow to Preserve, Purify, and
Beautify the Scaly. Hair, aud iiuncU.
Fertile Farming
Lb A O€l
Cheap
Easy Terms
In the Best Section
of the South
Unexcelled for General Farming.
Stock Raising, Berries, Fruit
and Vegetables.
Cantaloupes, Strawberries, Peaches,
Apples, Grapes, etc., give
handsome returns.
Cattle need but little winter feed.
HEALTHY CLIMATE.
GOOD WATER.
LONG GROWING SEASON.
Address G. A. PARK, Gen. Im, & Ind'l Agt.
Louisville & Nashville
R. R. Co.
LOUISVILLE, KY.
Canadian Government
Free Farms
3fi>J ° ver 200,000 American
farmers who have set
llilP t,rc * * n Canada during
" the past few years testt
wlUlflljity to the fact that Caua
-1 *7 r da is, beyond question,
the greatest farming land !u the' world.
OVER NINETY
MILLION BUSHELS
of wheat from the harvest of 1906',.means good
money to the farmers of Western Canada whc»
the world has to be fed. Cattle Raising, Dairy
ing aud Mixed Farming are also profitable call
ings. Coal, wood and water lii abundance;
churches and schools convenient; markets easy
of access. Taxes low.
For advice and information address the Super
intendent of Immigration, Ottawa, Canada, or
any authorized Canadian Government Agent.
H. M. WILLIAMS, Law Building, Toledo, Obio.
To convince any B
Hr If woman that pax. I
RSI tine Antiseptic will U
BT" improve her health H
K'/cn K™ and do all wo claim ■
for it. Wo Willi
send Her absolutely free a iargs trial ■
box of Paxtlno with book of mstrue- I
tlons and genuine testimonial*. Send R
your name and address on a postal canL ■
PAXTMEU
feetlons, such as na*al catarrh, pelvic i
catarrh and inflammation caused bv femi- |
ntno ills; soro eyes, sore throat and I
mouth, by direct loeal treatment Its cur- I
atlve power over these troubles is extra- I
ordinary and gives Immediate relief, a
Thousands cf women are usini; and rec- 9
oinmendlng it every day. Co cents at I
druggists or by mall. Remember, however, 1
IT COSTS YOU NOTIIINO
THE It. I'AAXOX CO., lioilon, Jtliif.u, 9
Jaupp— — ue— w—naa— bbw —J
NO SI fl«n SERVICES
Bend for booklet. MILO B. BTEVKN3 & CO..
woo 14th Kt., Washington. D. C. Branches ni
Chli-ago, Cleveland aud Detroit. Kstab. lt>o4.
PROTECTYOUR IDEAS
BUY OHLY GUARANTEED GOODS I
rnilT'FfO ,forsa and Catllo Puwier
UISIB ! \ Sl| P cr|or POULTRY rouo
0 Uy I &. U CERTAIN W3RSVI FOIYDEB
are each c-tiaranteeri ami bear Serial N0.817 V. H li.r.'
of Agriculture. Kltlctencr, reliability and i>inlt» I. • -
e*t»hh*he>! Hold t»y ilenl.t-v .v.T-vwli.i ~ 1 r lntcre*' 1
«|(U-Tir.£ tuviu 112; uifrs. <> . i;n. .Ufcll'.iuura.lU.
7