The Meyersdale commercial. (Meyersdale, Pa.) 1878-19??, January 04, 1917, Image 7

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e Newspa.
THE MEYERSDALE COMMERCIAL, MEYERSDALE, PA. 4
Why That Lame Back ?
Morning lameness, sharp twinges
when bending, or an all-day back-
ache; each is cause enough to sus-
pect kidney trouble. Get after the
cause, Help the kidneys. We
Americans go it too hard. We
overdo, overeat and neglect our
sleep and exercise and so we are
fast becoming a nation of kidney
sufferers. 72% more deaths than
in 1890 is the 1910 census story.
Use Doan’s Kidney Pills. Thou-
sands recommend them.
A West Virginia Case
Oliver Lane,
No. 1, Kenova,, W. Va.
says: “A fall brought
on my kidney trouble.
My back pained me so
severely I couldn’t lie
still at night. My kid-
neys acted too often
and the secretions
were { 3
burned: like red hot —
coals. I had been suf- p
fering about four FEN
months when I heard \
about Doan’s Kidney ] i
Pills. The first box relieved me and
Ne axes cured me. The cure has
¢ GetDoan’sat Any Store, 80c a Box
9 ‘KIX
DOAN’S =i3¥ex
FOSTER-MILBURN CO.. BUFFALO, N.Y.
TREES —FRUIT
Save the middleman’s profit by dealing
direct with the grower. * Solve the high
cost of living by planting fruit in the waste places—
like your father and grandfather did. *$4.45 buys
our Complete Collection ’’ of 5 to 7 foot trees and
No. 1 plants, which provides the home with an
ce of ripe fruit from June to January.
* Send postal for catalogue.
GEO. A. SWEET NURSERY CO.
44 MAPLE ST,, (EswbldlS)) pangyiiiw N,v.
Wanted—Colonia! Furniture, Barly American Silver-
ware, China or Pottery. Will buy single pieces, or
large quantities. Spot cash for desirable Dieses.
Correspondence solicited with private parties or
dealers. A.W, Clarke, $21 Avenue N, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Should They ail our 25¢ comes back. Pilsner Tablets
F r constipation, headache, dizzi-
ness, biliousness, drowsiness, distress after eating.
Advance Pharmacal Co., 1480 First. Ave., New York.
Watson E.Coleman,Wash-
ington, D.C. Books free. Hien
est references. Best results.
“ROUGH on RATS’ rds Bate, Mico, Bugs.
Piety leads to prosperity, but pros-
perity does not lead to piety. It is
well to have piety to start out with.
Hoxsie’s Croup Remedy for croup, coughs
and colds. A distinguished physician’s great
prescription. No opium. 50 cts. Druggists or
inallsa postpaid. Kells Co., Newburgh, N. Y.
v.
A Pessimist. #2
“Ever expect to git on Easy street?”
“Mebbe as a sweeper or something.”
—Louisville/ Courier-Journal.
TAKE PARMINT FOR YOU
COUGH | :
: ! h your head off!! Go to your
druggist and get 1 oz. of Parmint. Take it
home and add to it 3 pint of hot water
and 4 oz. of sugar. Take a teaspoonful as
often as necessary. Should promptly re-
lieve the worst cough, entirely stop the
tickle in your ‘throat and soothe and heal
your irritated throat. If your druggist
does not have it insist that he get it for
you at once. Costs little, is easy to pre-
pare and wonderfully efficient. —Adv. !
¥
Don’t co
Kansas Women Office Holders,
Kansas leads the rest of the United
States in the matter of women office
holders. The ‘late election swept a
lot of them into offices, sweeping out
of office, of course, an equal number
of men. But so far there has been
no complaint heard about the matter,
for the women elected recently are
said to rank very high in intelligence
and integrity.
Fifty-eight women were elected
county superintendents of instruction
in the state. The women lead in that
office, which seems to be a favorable
one for them. But there were also
elected 36 registers of deeds, 25 clerks
of district courts, 15 county treasurers,
6 county clerks and 2 probate judges.
There is not another woman probate
judge in the nation.—Dayton News.
Caring for a Monkey Mascot.
The newest addition to the Berlin
zoological garden is a monkey which
was the mascot of the U-85 for a con-
siderable time.
The monkey originally was the mas-
cot of an English merchantman that
was halted by the German submarine.
He made trip after trip with the U-35
and was “in at the death” of several
merchantmen. His transfer to the zoo
was ordered only when it became so
cold that he was Hkely to suffer if ex-
posed.
It takes both “sales” and “steam”
to make progress on the sea of busi-
ness.
4 more pain from day to day; but if the
WOUNDS OF HORSES
Punstured Injuries Involve Feet
Most Frequently.
ORIFICE IS USUALLY SMALL
|
|
¥
|
Produced by Penetration of Sharp-
Pointed Substance, Such as Thorn,
Fork, Nail, Etc.—Symptoms
and Treatment.
(Prepared by the United States Depart-
{ ment of Agriculture.)
Punctured wounds of horses are
| much more common than others. They
are produced by the penetration of a
sharp or blunt-pointed substance, Such
as a thorn, fork, nail, ete, and the
| orifice of these wounds is always
small in proportion to their depth.
P involve the feet most frequently,
next the legs, and often the head and
face from nails protruding through the
stalls and trough. They are also the
most serious, owing to the difficulty of
obtaining thorough, disinfection and
the lack of attention that they at first
receive. The external wound is so
small that but little or no importance
is attached to it, yet in a short time
swelling, pain, and acute inflammation,
often of a serious character, are mani-
fested.
‘ The most common of the punctured
wounds are those of the feet. Horses
worked in cities, about iron works,
around building places, etc., are most
liable to get “nails in the feet.” The
animal treads upon nails, pieces of
iron, or screws, and forces them into
the soles of the feet. If the nail, or
whatever it is that has punctured the
foot, is fast in some large or heavy
body, and is withdrawn as the horse
lifts his foot, lameness may last
for only a few steps; but unless prop-
erly attended to at once he will be
found in a day or two to be very lame
in the injured member. If the foreign
body remains in the foot, he gradually
grows worse from the time of punc-
ture until the cause is discovered and
removed. If, when shoeing, a nail is
driven into the “quick” and allowed
to remain, the horse gradually evinces
nail has at once been removed by the
smith, lameness does not, as a rule,
show itself for some days; or, if the
nail is simply driven “too close,” not
actually pricking the horse, he may
not Show any lameness for a week or
even much longer. Considering how
thin the walls of some feet are, the un-
easiness of many horses while shoeing,
the ease with which a nail is diverted
from its course by striking an old
piece of nail left in the wall, or from
the nail itself splitting, the wonder is
not that so many horses are pricked or
nails driven “too close,” but rather
that many more are not so injured. It
is not by any means always careless-
uess or ignorance on the part of the
borseshoer that is to account for this
accident.
Productive of Lameness.
From the construction of the horse’s
foot (being incased in an imperme-
able, horny box), and from the elas-
ticity of the horn closing the orifice,
punctured wounds of the feet are al-
most always productive of lameness.
Inflammation results, and as there is
ao relief afforded by swelling and no
escape for the product of inflammation,
this matter must and does burrow be-
tween the sole or wall and the sensitive
parts within it until it generally
opens ‘between hair and hoof.” It
may thus be seen why pain is so much
more severe. why tetanus (lockjaw)
more frequently follows wounds of the
feet, and why, from the extensive, or
at times complete separation and “cast-
ing” of the hoof, these wounds must
always be regarded with grave appre-
hension.
Symptoms and Treatment.
A practice which, if never deviated
from—that of picking up each foot,
cleaning the sole, and thoroughly ex-
amining the foot each and every time
the horse comes into the stable—will
reduce to the minimum the serious
consequences of punctured wounds of
the feet. If the wound has resulted
from pricking, lameness follows soon
‘after shoeing; if from the nails being
driven .too close, it usually appears
from four to five days or a week after-
wards. Always inquire as to the time
of shoeing and examine the shoe care-
Why Wait
Mr. Coffee Drinker, till
heart, nerves, or stom-
ach “give way?”
The sure, easy way
to keep out of coffee
troubles is to use the
pure food-drink—
POSTUM
Better quit coffee
now, while you are
feeling good, and try
Postum, the popular
American beverage.
“There’s a Reason”
Hi
is to be removed.
fully, and see whether it has been par-
tially pulled and the horse stepped
back upon some of the nails of the
clip. Shooting pain is caused by
these wounds; the horse is seen to
raise and lower the limb or hold it
from the ground altogether; often he
points the foot, flexes the leg and
knuckles at the fetlock. Swelling of
the fetlock and back tendons also fre-
quently is seen, and is liable to mislead
us. The foot must be examined care-
fully, and this cannot be done prop-
erly without removing the shoe. The
nails should he drawn separately and
carefully examined. If there is no es-
cape of pus from the nail holes, or
if the nails themselves are not moist,
continue examination of the foot by
carefully pinching or tapping it at all
parts. With a little practice the spot
where pain is greatest can be detect-
ed cor the delicate line or sear left at
the peint of entrance of the foreign
body discovered, The entire sole is
then to he thinned, after which esire--
fully cut down upon the point where
pain is greatest upon pressure, and,
finally, through the sole at thig spot.
IVhen the matter has escaped, the sole,
so far as it was underizined by pus,
be poulticed for one or two days aad
of oakum saturated with carbolic acid
solution or other antiseptic 'dressing.
If a nail or other object is found in
the foot, the principal direction, after
having removed the offending body, is
to ent away the sole, in a funnel shape,
down to the sensitive parts beneath.
This is imperative, and if a good free
opening has been made and is main-
tained for a few days, hot fomenta-
tions and antiseptic dressings applied,
the cure generally 1s easy, simple,
quick and permaneni. The horse should
be shod with a leather sole under the
shoe, first of all applying tar and
oakum to prevent any dirt from en-
tering the wound. In some instances
the coffin bone, or enter the coffin
joint. Such injuries are always seri-
ous, their recovery slow and tedious,
and the treatment so.varied and diffi-
cult that the services of a veterinarian
will *be necessary.
Punctured Wounds of Joints.
These wounds are more or less fre-
quent. They are always serious, and
often result in stiffening of the joint
or the death of the animal. The joints
mostly punctured are the hock, fetlock,
or knee, though other joints may, of
course, suffer this injury. As the symp-
toms and treatment are much the same
for all, only the /accident as it occurs
in the hock joint will be described.
Probably the most common mode of
injury is from the stab of a fork, but
it may result from the kick of another
horse that is newly shod, or in many
other ways. At first the horse evinces
but slight pain or lameness. The own-
er discovers a small wound scarcely
larger than a pea, and pays but little
attention to it. In a few days, how-
ever, the pain and lameness become ex-
cessive; the horse can no longer bear
any weight upon the injured leg; the
joint, is very much swollen and pain-
ful upon pressure; there are well-
marked symptoms of constitutional dis-
turbance—quick pulse, hurried breath-
ing, high temperature, 103 to 106 de-
grees Fahrenheit, the appetite is lost,
thirst is present, the horse reeks with
sweat, and his anxious countenance
shows the pain he suffers. He may lie
down, though mostly he persists in
standing, and the opposite limb be-
comes greatly swollen from bearing
the entire weight and strain for so
long a time. The wound, which at
first appeared so insignificant, is now
constantly discharging a thin, whitish
or yellowish fluid—joint oil or water
which becomes coagulated about the
mouth of the wound and adheres to the
part in clots, like jelly, or resembling
somewhat the white of an egg. Not in-
frequently the joint opens at different
places, discharging at first a thin,
bloody fluid that soon assumes the
character above described.
Difficult of Treatment.
Treatment of these wounds is most
difficult and unsatisfactory. Much
can be done to prevent this array of
symptoms if the case is seen early—
within the first 24 or 48 hours after the
injury ; but when inflammation of the
Joint is once fairly established the case
becomes one of grave tendencies.
Whenever a punctured wound of a
joint is noticed, even though appar-
ently of but small moment, apply with-
outt the least delay a strong can-
tharides blister over the entire joint,
being even careful to fill the orifice
of the wound with the blistering oint-
ment. This treatment may be ef-
fectual. It operates to perform a cure
in two ways—first, the swelling of the
skin and tissues underneath it com-
pletely closes the wound and prevents
the ingress of air; second, by the su-
perficial inflammation established it
acts to check or abate all/deep-seated
inflammation. In the great majority of
instances, if pursued soon after the ac-
cident, this treatment performs a cure
in about one week, but should the
changes described as occurring later
in the joint have already taken place,
then treat by cooling lotions and the
application to the wound of chloride
of zine, ten grains to the ounce of wa-
ter, or a paste made of flour and alum.
A bandage will hold these applications
in place, which is only to be removed
when swelling of the leg or increasing
febrile symptoms demand it. In the
treatment of open joints the chief aim
must be to close the orifice as soon as
possible. The only probing of an open
joint should be when first the wound
is examined for foreign bodies or dirt,
and after removing them the probe
must not again be used. The medi-
cines used to coagulate the synovial
discharge are best simply applied to
the surface of the wound, or pledgets
of tow, and held in place by bandages.
Internal treatment is also indicated in
those cases of open joints in which the
suffering is great. At first administer
a light physic and follow this up with
sedatives and anodynes, as directed for
contused wounds. Later, however,
give quinine or salicylic acid in one-
dram doses two or three times a day.
Wounds of Tendon Sheaths.
Wounds of tendon sheaths are sim-
ilar to open joints in that there is an
escape of synovial fluid, “sinew water.”
Where the tendons are punctured sim-
ply by a thorn, nail or fork, after a
thorough exploration for any remain-
ing foreign substance, treat the wound
with the flour-and-alum paste, ban-
dages, etc, as for open joint. Should
the skin and tendons be divided, the
case is even niore serious and is often
incurable. There is always a large
bed of granulations (proud flesh) at
the seat of injury, and a thickening
more or less pronounced remains.
When the.back tendons of the leg are
severed. apply at once a high-heel
shoe (which is to be gradually low-
ered as healing advances) and bandage
firmiy with a compress moistened with
Tha fect must now
afterwards dressed with a compress |
nails may puncture the flexor tendons, |
The KITCIAEN
CABINETZ=5
Do not be troubled because you have 3
not great virtue. God made a million.
spears of grass where he made one
tree. The earth is fringed and car-
peted not with forests but with
grasses. Only have enough of little
virtues and ‘common fidelities and you
need not mourn because you are nei-
ther a hero rior saint. — Henry Ward
Beecher.
AUSTRIAN RECIPES.
For occasions it is pleasant to de-
part from the usual and enjoy some
of the dishes that our
cousins across the water
use daily.
Austrian Dessert Cof-
fee.— Make a regular
strong drip coffee, add-
ing sugar and cream
while hot, then set away
to cool. Place on ice, and
when cold serve in cups with a tea-
| spoonful of vanilla ice cream in each
| cup.
Coffee Cup.—To a pint of strong cof-
fee strained through linen, add one-
third of a teaspoonful of almond fla-
voring and heat to the boiling point
in a double boiler. Add two beaten
egg yolks, two tablespoonfuls of cream
and two tablespoonfuls of sugar. Stir
until it thickens to a custdrd, remove
and cool, pour into a serving pitcher
with a pint of sweetened, ice cold
whipped cream, a quart bottle of
charged water and a pint of shaved
Ice. Serve by placing in tall glasses
some shaved ice, then some of the cof
fee, then twice the quantity of charged
water, and on top of this the cream.
Fried Chicken.—Prepare a chicken
as for frying, marinate for three hours
in lemon juice and olive oil with herbs
to season. Drain and place each piece
In beaten egg, well seasoned with salt
and pepper, then in crumbs; fry in
deep fat. Drain and place on a serv-
ing platter and pour around it sauce
made of half a pint each of milk,
chicken or veal ‘stock, thickened with
the yolk of egg, seasoned with parsley
and lemon juice and mixed with a
dozen mushrooms quartered.
Chocolate Schnitten. — Melt and
strain one-fourth of a pound of but-
ter and add, one at a time, four eggs,
beating thoroughly as each egg is add-
ed. Add a half cupful of sugar to the
butter and eggs, then add a half pound
of softened chocolate, chopped raisins,
almonds and currants to taste, then
a cupful of sifted flour. Bake in a
shallow greased pan in a slow oven
until done.
Celery in short lengths filled with
highly seasoned cream cheese is a
diinty relish to add to any menu.
O helpless body of hickory tree,
‘What do I burn in burning thee?
Summers of sun, winters of snow,
Springs full of sap’s resistless flow
O strong white body of hickory tree,
How dare I burn all these in thee?
~Helen Hunt Jackson.
: 1
MORE GOOD DISHES.
Dates as nutritious food are not well
appreciated ; they have more heat units
pound | for pound than
beef and cost much less.
Oatmeal Date Cookies.
—Take two cupfuls of
oatmeal, ‘a cupful of
shortening, two cupfuls
of brown sugar, a half
cupful of water and a
teaspoonful of soda;
flour to make a. soft
dough. Roll out as thin
as possible and cut with
a cooky cutter. Put two cookies to-
gether with this filling before baking:
One pound of dates, chopped, two ta-
blespoonfuls of sugar and a little hot
water to mix, but do not cook. The
oatmeal if browned in the oven will
make much more appetizing cookies.
Date Waffles.—Take a pint of flour,
two teaspoonfuls of baking powder, a
half-teaspoonful of salt, two table-
spoonfuls of melted butter and a cup-
ful and a fourth of milk. Stir in three
tablespoonfuls of cornmeal and the
stiffiy-beaten whites of two eggs, and
a cupful of chopped dates. Spread
with honey when serving.
Potato Salad.—Boil eight potatoes
in their skins, putting them into boil
ing salted water. Cook until they may
be easily pierced with a fork, peel and
cut into dice while hot. Add three ta-
blespoonfuls of grated onion and a
tablespoonful of chopped parsley.
Make a French dressing in the propor-
tion of three of oil and one of vinegar,
(using tarragon vinegar), season with
salt and peper. Pour a liberal quan-
tity of the dressing over the potatoes
and after mixing well let stand a few
hours to thoroughly season. This
salad is better made the day before
using. ”
Chestnut Salad.—Shell and blanch
the nuts, boil until tender, drain ang
peel. Add an equal quantity of chopped
celery and some bits of pimento; mix
all together with mayonnaise dressing.
Old-fashioned tarts are always a
dainty enjoyed by all and they may
be made from leftover pastry.
Tomato Salad.—A thick slice of to-
mota placed on lettuce, on top of each
slice, finely. chopped celery and green
peppers with a blanched almond or
two. Serve with a rich boiled dressing
or with mayonnaise.
Coconut Candy.—Take a cupful of
molasses, two-thirds of a cupful of
miik, two tablespoonfuls of butter, all
boiled until it hardens in water; then
stir up a cupful of fresh grated coco-
nut, if possible, although the dry grat-
ed coconut may be used.
8 ten-grain chloride of zine solution.
-
THOUSANDS HAVE KIDNEY
TROUBLE AND DON'T KNOW IT
Wesk and unhealthy kidneys cause so
much sickness and suffering and when
through neglect or other causes, kidney
trouble is permitted to continue, serious
results may be expected.
Your other organs may need attention —
but your kidneys should have attention
first because their work is most important.
If you feel that your kidneys are the
cause of your sickness or run down con-
dition commence taking Dr. Kilmer's
Swamp-Root, the great kidney, liverrand
bladder remedy, because if it proves to be
the remedy you need and your kidneys
begin te improve they will help all the
other organs to health.
Prevalency of Kidney Disease.
Most people do, not realize the alarm-
ing increase and remarkable prevalency
of kidney disease. While kidney dis-
orders are among the most common dis-
eases that prevail, they are almost the
last recognized by patients, who usualy
content themselves with doctoring the
effects, while the original disease con-
stantly undermines the system.
A Trial Will ‘Convince Anyone.
Thousands of people have testified
that the mild \and immediate effect of
Swamp-Root, the great kidney, liver and
bladder remedy, is soon realized and that
it stands the highest for its remarkable
results in the most distressing cases.
s Symptoms of Kidney Trouble.
Swamp-Root is not recommended for
everything but if you suffer from annoy:
ing bladder troubles, frequently passing
water night and day, smarting or irrita-
tion in passing; brick-dust or sediment,
headache, backache, lame back, dizzi-
ness, poor digestion, sleeplessness, nerv-
ousness, heart disturbance due to bad
kidney trouble, skin eruptions from bad
blood, neuralgia, rheumatism, lumbago,
bloating, irritability, worn-out féeling,
lack of ambition, may be loss of flesh or
sallow complexion, kidney trouble in ite
worst form may be stealing upon you.
Swamp-Root Is Pleasant to Take.
If you are already convinced that
Swamp-Root is what you need, you can
purchase the regular fifty-cent and one-
dollar size bottles at all drug stores.
SPECIAL NOTE—You may obtain a sample size bottle of Swamp-Root by enclosing
ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y
to prove the remarkable merit of this medicine. They will also send you a book of
valuable information, containing many of the thousands of grateful letters received
from men and women who say they found Swamp-Root to be just the remedy needed
The value and success of Swamp-Root are so
mm kidney, liver and bladder troubles.
This gives you the opportunity
well known that our readers are advised to send for a sample size bottle. Address Dr.
mer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y. When writing be sure and mention this’ paper.
Three Chinese girls who recently ar-
rived at Vancouver are the first women
stowaways to land in Canada.
Only One “BROMO QUININE”
To get the genuine, call for full name Al BH
BROMO QUININE, Look for signature of at
GROVE. Cures a Cold in One Day. 2bc.
He Never Knew Temptation.
Rev. Fred Winslow Adams, pas-
tor of St. Andrew’s Methodist Episco-
par church in West Seventy-sixth
street, who recently read from his pul-
pit answers to the question, “What
are the greatest safeguards against
temptation?’ received a reply to his
question from Thomas A. Edison. He
said :
“I cannot answer the question as 1
have never had any experience in such
matters. I have never had time, not
even five minutes, to be tempted to do
anything against the moral law, civil
law or any law whatever. If I were to
hazard a guess as to what young peo-
ple should do to avoid temptation, it
would be to get a job and work at it
so hard that temptation would not
exist for them.”—New York Mail.
THICK, GLOSSY HAIR
FREE FROM DANDRUFF
Girls! Try It! Hair gets soft, fluffy and
beautiful—Get a 25 cent bottle
~ of Danderine.
If you care for heavy hair that glis-
tens with beauty and is radiant with
life; has an incomparable softness and
is fluffy and lustrous, try Danderine.
Just one application doubles the
beauty of your hair, besides it imme-
diately dissolves every particle of
dandruff. You can not have Tice
heavy, healthy hair if you bg ve
dandruff. This destructive scurf rops
the hair of its lustre, its strength and
its very life, and if not overcome it
produces a feverishness and itching of
the scalp; the hair roots famish,
loosen and die; then the hair falls out
fast. Surely get a 25-cent bottle of
Knowlton’s Danderine from any drug
store and just try it.—Adv.
Sausage Skins of Silk.
The packing of sausage meat in the
old way has long been an objectionable
proceeding to fastidious persons. It
also has been declared insanitary, so
that many families have tabooed the
link sausage. Now thin silk cases are
being provided, which can be sterilized
to the last degree of sanitation. Being
of chiffonlike texture, they would hard-
ly be noticed if taken into the mouth,
although they can be easily removed
at the table. These thin silk cases can
be supplied at a cost little greater than
the sausage skins now in use and ure
proof against the attack of vermin.
Important to Mothers
Examine carefully every bottle of
CASTORIA, that famous old remedy
for infants and children, and see that it
Bears the
Signature of >
In Use for Over 30 Years.
Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castoria
The Way of It.
“Esau gave up his birthright for
mere pottage.”
“Yes, and he made a mess of it.”
In matters of principle stand like a
rock. In matters of taste swim with
the current.
Small Sums to Charity.
John Skelton Williams, comptroller
of the currency, says that our inter-
national charity during the past two
years has amounted to one-twentieth of
1 per cent of our total income. This
is equivalent to an annual gift of 75
cents from a man earning $1,500 a
year. ! ’
Garfield Tea was your Grandmother's
Remedy for every stomach and intes-
tinal ill. This good old-fashioned herb
home remedy for constipation, stomach
ills and other derangements of the sys-
tem so prevalent these days is in even
greater favor as a family medicine
than in your grandmother’s day.—Adv.
Merely Weary Them.
Tell people how good you feel, but
don’t bother them with a recital of
your aches and pains; they won't be
interested, anyhow.
Credit is always second to one’s
daily need.
‘Ticket Seller—'* Nearly all the ladies in our show ride
Farmer Stubblefield—** Gosh all hemlock! I'l go and
look ‘em over. Don’t they get cold bein’ so much exposed?’
If you are exposed to rain or snow you
- should take two or three doses of
Boschee's
German Syrup
the universal remedy for colds or bron-
chitis. Stands pre-eminent today after
more than half a century of su ul
treatment of the many disorders aris-
ing from exposure. 25c. and 75c.
at all druggists and dealerseverywhere.
: YOU CAN'T CUT OUT A :
Bog Spavin or Thoroughpin
but you can ¢lean them off promptly with
A BSORBINE
TRADE MARK REG.U.S. PAT. OFF.
~ and you work the horse same time.
Does not blister or remove the
hair. $2.00 per bottle, delivered.
Will tell you more if you write.
Book 4 M free. ABSORBINE, JR.,
the antiseptic liniment for mankind,
reduces Varicose Veins, Ruptured
Muscles or Ligaments, Enlarged Glands, Wens,
Cysts. Allays pain quickly. Price $1 and £2
a bottle at druggists or delivered. Made in the U. S. A. by
W.F.YOUNG, P.D. F., 310 Temple §t., Springfield, Mass...
a
Don’t let this winter be a series of
coughs, colds and sore throats.
Use RED CROSS COUGH
DROPS regulaily.
RED CROSS
586%
“A trial box of RED'CROSS
COUGH CROPS will convince
you. Use them freely, children
or adults. Purity guaranteed.
GALLSTONES
Avoid operations. Positive Liver & Stomach
(No oe Rem Cpe: Rome remedy. Write tana
Gallstone Remedy Cd. Dept. W-1, 219 S.Dearborn St.,Chicage
W. N. U., PITTSBURGH, NO. 1--1917.
ONE
NICKEL—
NO
TICKLE
Sold by all
leading
Druggists.
area remed
Wertie Maguart
When Tired and Nervous
If the end of the day finds you weary ot ‘iffi-
table,withachingheadand frayed nerves,youneed
something to tone and strengthen the system.
BEECHAM'S PILLS
't which quickly helps in restoring normal
conditions. They acton the stomach, liver and bowels,
and so renew the strength, and
A few doses of these world - famed family pills will
Bring Welcome Relief
Directions of Special Value to Women ith E
Sold by druggists throughout the world, oS EIver Bay
——
steady the nerves.
In boxes, 10c., 25¢.