The star. (Reynoldsville, Pa.) 1892-1946, September 09, 1908, Image 8

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    What is Pe-ru-na.
Are we claiming loo much for Pcruna
lrhcn va claim it to be en effective
remedy for chronlo 'catarrlff Have we
abundant proof tht Pemna Is in real
ity such a catarrh reincdyT Let tie ee
what the Cnlled States Dispensatory
aye of the principal ingredients of
Pemna,
Take, for instance, the ingredient
hydrastis canadensis, or golden seal.
The United States Dispensatory says
of this herbal remedy, that it is largely
employed in the treatment of depraved
mucous membranes lining various
organs of the human body.
Another ingredient of Peruna, eory
dalis formosa, is classed in the United
States Dispensatory as a tonic.
Cedron seeds is another ingredient of
Pemna. The United States Dispensa
tory says of the action of cedron that
it is need as a bitter tonio and in the
treatment of dysentery, and in inter
mittent diseases as a substitute for
quinine.
Send to U9 for a free book of testi
monials of what the people think of Pe
runa as a catarrh remedy. The best
evidence is the testimony of those who
have tried it.
The World's Wheat Supply..
The pessibllltlrs in increasing the
world's supply of wheat, as well as
that of the United States, are mani
fold and impossible of estimation.
Vast regions of land In South Amor
lea, North, Africa and Aslo are await
ing the demand for "still more wheat"
which shall bring to them tho steel
pluw nnd the self-binder, and cause
them to yield a food-product sufficient
to feed a new population of untold
millions. And were modern agricul
tural implements nnd ' agricultural
knowledge In the hands of the Rps
sian and European peasants, another
naamon, ine extent, or wnicn can
hardly be guessed, could be made tn
the world's wheat supply. September
Century.
; 30
II Kit GOOD FORTH Mi
After Venrs Spent In Vain ICffort.
Mrs. Mary E. II. Rouse, of Cam
bridge,. N. Y.. says: "Five years ago
I hod a bad fall and it
affected my kldnays.
Severe pains In my
back and hips became
constant, and sharp
twinges followed any
exertion. The kidney
secretions were badly
disordered. I lost
flesh and grew too
weak to work. . Though constantly
using medicine 1 despaired of being
cured until 1 began taking Doan'e
Kidney Pills. Then relief cams
quickly, and In a short time I was
completely cured. I am now In ex
cellent health."
Sold by all dealers. 60 cents a box.
Poater-Mllbura Co., Buffalo. N. f.
ACTIVITY IN AERONAUTICS
The Period from 1885 to 1900 One of
Hopeful Experimenting.
The period from 1885 to 1900 was
one of unexampled activity In aeron
autics, and for a time there was
high hope that the age of flying was
at hand. But Maxim, after spending
$100,000, abandoned the work; the
Ader machine, built at the expense
of the French government, was a fail
ure; Lilienthal and Pilcher were kill
ed In experiments, and Chanuto and
many others, from one cause or an
other, had relaxed their efforts,
though It subsequently became known
that Prof. Iangley was still secretly
a,t work on a machine for the United.
States government. The public, dis
couraged by tho failures and trage
dies just witnessed, considered flight
beyond tho reach of man, and classed
Its adherents with the inventors of
perpetual motion. -i
We began our active experiments
at the close of this period, In October,
1900, at Kitty Hawk, N. C. Our ma
chine was designed to be flown as a
kite, with a man on board, In winds
of from fifteen to twenty miles an
hour. But, upon trial, It was found
that much stronger winds were re
quired to lift it. Suitable winds not
being plentiful, we found It necessary
in order to test the new balancing
system to fly the machine as a kite
without a man on board, operating
the levers through cords from the
ground. This did not give the prac
tice anticipated, but it inspired con
fidence In the new system of balance.
September Century.
REMAINS THH 8AMB
Well Brewed Postum Always Pal
atable. The flavour of Postum, when boiled
according to directions, is always the
same mild, distinctive, and palata
ble. It contains no harmful sub
stance like caffeine, the drug In
coffee, and hence may be used with
benefit at all times.
"Believing that coffee was the
cause of my torpid liver, sick' head
ache and misery In many ways,"
writes an Ind. lady, "I quit and
bought a package of Postum about
a year ago.
"My husband and 1 have been so
well pleased that we have continued
-to drink Postum ever since. We like
the taste of Postum better than
coffee, as it has always the same
pleasant flavour, while coffee changes
its taste with about every new com
bination or blend.
"Since using Postum I have had
no more attacks of gall colic, th
heaviness has left my chest, and th
old, common, every-day headache it
a thing unknown." "There's a Rea
son." Name given by Postum Co., Battls
Creek, Mich. Read "The" Road to
Wcllvillo." in pkgs.
Ever trad the above letter? A new
one npp'-ars from time to time. Thoy
arc genuine, true, and full of human
interest.
Household Matters.
C. A:A lMZ 'fa-j
Bride's Cake Icing.
Beat the whites of three egg to a
stiff froth, then add gradually one
pound confectioner's sugar, beating
all the time. Bent until the mixture
will not run when spread and then
add flavoring and a few drops of ul
tramarine or Indigo blue. Mix care
fully so it will not streak. This blue
is harmless and not only makes the
bride's cake a snowy white, but keeps
it from taking on that yellowish tinge
that frosting Is apt to get in time.
New York Telegram.
Fruit Cake Hint.
Always steam fruit cake; you will
not have to worry about your oven
being too hot or there being a hard
crust on your cake. Put on your boil
er, being sure there Is a good fire;
put bricks in the bottom, so as to
bring your cake about the centre of
the boiler. Invert u tin on the bricks,
set your cake on this, cover with an
other tin, so the steam can not drip
on the cake. Keep the water at boil
ing point and steam three hours. Set
in a slow oven one-half hour. In
dianapolis News.
Potato Klosse.
Mix with three-fourths pound
mashed potatoes ono pound bread
soaked lu milk, a few finely minced
chives and one tablespoonful flour.
Season with salt and a small quantity
grated nutmeg and stir In three well
beaten eggs. Work the mixture until
quite smooth, then divide Into por
tions with a tablespoon, making the
mark of the spoon on each ns fin
ished. Have ready a saucepan of
boiling water, throw in the balls nnd
cook ten minutes. Cut two or three
slices of bacon into small pieces and
fry crisp and brown. Put the potato
balls on a hot dish, garnished with
the bacon; pour the bacon fat over
them and serve very hot. New York
Tribune.
Green Pen Puree.
Elmmer gently for one hour and a
half a pound of lean lamb and a slice
of bacon in one quart and a half of
water. Add a sprig of mint, a tea
spoonful of minced onion, salt and
pepper to taste, and n quart ot green
peas. Simmer one-half hour, then
press through colander. Make a rich
white sauce, using a tablespoonful of
flour and a heaping tablespoonful of
butter, with one cup and a halt of
hot milk. Add salt, pepper and su
gar to taste, then the prepared peas;
gently bring to a boll and serve hot
Dried or split peas may be soaked
over night then cooked until tender
(It may take several hours), then
pressed through ' a colander and
treated like the fresh peas. New
York Telegram.
Hints for then
II O U S EKEERE fcJ
If a cork Is too large for a bottle,
soak it In boiling water for halt an
hour; this will make it so soft and
supple that it can easily be pressed
into the bottle.
Dirty finger marks on light paint
may be quickly taken off by rubbing
them with a bit ot clean flannel
dipped In paraffin and then with a
clean soft cloth.
Egg cups or dishes stained with
egg should not be washed in hot soda
water, as it makes the stain harden.
If placed in cold water, the stains
will come off quite easily.
Common alum melted in an Iron
spoon over hot coals forms a strong
cement for joining glass and metals
together. It Is a good thing for hold
ing glass lamps to their stands.
Squares of cheese that are left over
should be dried and grated. A deli
cious flavor is given to soups, salads
and vegetables by sprinkling a little
cheese on the top just before the con
coction is taken from the fire.
To iron table linen dampen very
thoroughly and evenly, then fold and
wrap in a heavy cloth, Use heavy
Irons, first on the wrong side until
partly dry, then on the right Bide
unlil dry.
Glasses which have held milk
should never be washed In warm wat
er while the dregs of the milk still
cling round the edges. It the glass Is
first rinsed out in cold water it can
safely be washed in warm water.
To remove grass stains from jvilto
material rub the spots thoroughly
with soft soap and baking powder.
Let this remain on for twenty min
utes, then wash well and put in the
sun to bleach.
If tinware Is so badly stained that
whitening will not clean It, make a
weak solution of ocallc acid and wat
er, dip a bit of soft rag in It, rub the
article with it, and dry it with whit
ening on a cloth.
To clean bronzes wash with pulver
ized whiting or powdered saffron un
til the surface Is smoothed. Then
rub with paste of lumbago and saf
fron; then heat the articles before a
slow wood fire.1 Large statues which
cannot be removed may be washed
with a weak solution of alkali and
soap water.
Cheese wrapped In a cloth pre
viously steeped in vinegar and water
will keep fresh for a considerably
longer time than It kept in the store,
rcom In the ordinary way. A dry
cloth should be kept wrapped round
the saturated one, nnd the latter
rcsteeped lii vinegar and water from
time to time.
..THE SAND DAB.. :
Through ages numberless to man
the sand dab family lived and throve
wonderfully upon the floor of the sun
lit sea around Catallna Island, off the
coast of California. Although born
In a lowly sphere, the sand dabs were
noted for ' their delicacy, a certain
fresh ingenuousness of flavor that
made them much esteemed and
sought after by their finny neighbors.
When in due course, of time gold was
found in California and men flocked
thither from all over the world, fish
ermen began to ply their trade in the
waters near San Francisco, and soon
discovered sand dabs among the
catch. "Drat the sand dabs!" or
words to that effect, they cried many
a timet and oft. For these were small
fish, like baby soles, flounders, flat
fish or hake, white below and gray on
the topside, and of most humble and
unobtrusive demeanor.
Chinamen flocked to San Francisco
in their thousands, nnd the fishermen
breathed a sigh of relief. They sold
the humble sand dabs to the unbo
truslve Chinamen for a song not a
Chinese song, of course and thanked
their stars that they had found even
a very cheap market for the bother
some little fellows that persisted in
being caught in good company. This
went on for forty years.
One day after the great flro an af
fable philosopher lunched In a Chi
nese restaurant nnd nte a fish that
seemed to have come from heaven.
"Wong," he said, "you catcbee him
fish from Hongkong?"
"Xo," replied Wong. "Him 'Meli
can flshee. Come floni Catallna. Him
name callec sand dab."
That was enough. The philoso
pher told the wise men at the Bohe
mian Club, and they consulted with
all the leading hotel and restaurant
men In town. To-day you can buy
the sand dab at any really excellent
table in San Francisco. He Is at his
best crisply saute to a delicate golden
brown, and served with drawn but
ter and a pinch of lino herbes a la
maltre d'hotel. M. Lleb will tell you
exactly how he should be done. The
said dab's cute little bones all rattle
oft like a row of fairy piano keys
(you know the fairies have very tiny
pianos) and then you discover the
said dab meat, white as alabaster,
dainty as brook trout of early April,
delicate ns a sonnet to my lady's eye
brow, satisfactory as a check from a
long lost undo. Indeed, Mr. Wilson,
the king ot nil California epicures,
says that the sand dab is a soulful
sole. Harper's Weekly.
GREAT DROVES OF CARIBOU.
Hunter Snys Big Game is Still Abun
dant in Alaska.
Ed. Tinker, of East Los Angeles,
has returned from a nine-year so
journ in Alaska.
"It's a life," said Tinker yesterday,
"of some hardships, but I enjoyed
every day of it. I hunted as much
with the gun as with the gold pan.
'.'One winter, before the law pro
hibited the sale of caribou for food,
my partner and I hunted for market.
We were 140 miles up the river back
of Dawson, and brought out the meat
on sleds, my Bix dogs bringing out
two sleds at a time. We sold upward
of $6000 worth of meat, killing 230
caribou. I had eighteen caribou on
the sleds the first trip out to Dawson.
They weighed 2380 pounds, and I re
ceived $1 a pound, including skins.
"You might think the game would
soon be killed oft at that rate, but If
you were to see the droves of caribou
that I have seen In that country you
would readily Lelieve that there will
be game In Alaska indefinitely for
the one who is willing to endure
hardships with the mercury twenty
degrees below. Of course, It a man
is accustomed to a steam heated office
and has not the pluck to subject him
self to hard work and zero weather
he can shoot a fine specimen of moose
or caribou with a $100 bill right on
the streets of Dawson." Los An
geles Times.
True Worth.
It will be but a little while until
those who knew us and those who
never heard of us will pass along
through the green mounds In the
cemetery and read the epitaphs on
our tombstones. And those who
knew us will-summarize our entire
life Into a few essences ot truth born
of the knowledge ot how we lived
and what we did to help make life
brighter and better for others. They
may add, casually, that we left a for
tune, but they will dwell rather upon
the roses wo strewed along the path
way than upon what we put away In
our safety boxes for heirs to squab
ble over. For tho money wo left
they will speak no eulogy upon us,
but for the good-we did and the per
fume of charitableness and gentle
ness we l?ft behind, they will weave
the only wreath that can give glory
to the dead and Joy to the living.
Western Publisher.
Toor Judges of Frnit.
"It is curious," remarked the
grocer on the corner, "that there is
no fruit In fiie world which people
are such poor Judges of as canta
loupes, and what is more curious is
that they do their best to spoil them
after they buy them. The first thing
a woman does with a cantaloupe is to
stick it Into the ice box. Now, canta
loupes, like most of our fruit, are
picked a trifle green, and when they
come from the grocer's they should'
be put out In the sun for a whole day,
turning them over every few holir,
and then putting them Into the ;ce
Ijox at Bight." New York Sun.
THE SILENCE CURE..
How swiftly runs the hypochondriac's
tongue
On all the various symptoms that afflict
him!
The ills Hint chiefjy rise from nerve un
strung Are all described to hia unhappy victim.
Who, at I lie close, is called on to endure
A disquisition on the latest "cure."
Proud is that' sufferer with the pride ol
kings;
He ssks no more congenial employment
As to the restive buttonhole he dings
And rambles on with obvious enjoyment,
Just as the Ancient Mariner impressed
His grew-some tule upon the Wedding
U uest.
Therefore the world will hail with grateful
tears
The latest cure which bids the creature,
thirsting
To pour his tale into unwilling ears.
To practice silence to the point of burst
ing, Since he will quickly lose, beyond a doubt,
The symptoms which he cannot talk about
Sweet is the silence of the wild, hut oh!
Far sweeter, if it be not past achieving,
The silence of the wretch who made us so!
For thus we find a double cure relieving
Not only him who now must save his
breath "
But ns, who have been nearly bored to
death!
Londonr Daily Mail.
"What do you expect to be when
you come ot age, my little' man?"
asked the visitor. "Twenty-one,"
was the little man's reply. The Her
ald and Presbyter.
Barber "Try a bottle of this prep
aration, sir. Splendid thing for bald
ness." Customer "Don't doubt it,
but I've got all the baldness I want,
thank you." Times.
He told her the old, old story
Until she believed it true.
Rut after they were married
T lieu any old story would do.
What-To-Eat.
"Is your husband haviug any luck
at the racetrack?" "Some luck," an
swered young Mrs. Torkins. "H
hasn't caught cold nor had his pock
ets picked." Washington Star.
Mr. Howe "I suppose you have
studied all the authorities on social
and economic questions?" Mr. Wise
"Not quite all. My daughter's
graduation essay Is not out yet."
Life.
"You didn't use my manuscript,"
said the visitor, severely. "It was
not adapted to our purposes. W
couldn't use it." "How about the
stamp that was enclosed?" "Oh,
that was all right. We used It."
Philadelphia Public Ledger.
Binks (who ordered a pancake ball
an hour previously) "Er I say,
will that pancake be long?" Wait
ress "No, sir; it '11 be round." Then
he waited patiently another hall
hour. Philadelphia Inquirer.
Meanraan "It seems a shame,
after slaving for it all these years,
to think that I can't take a blessed
sovereign with me."
Grabbe "My dear sir, what would
be the use? It would only melt."
Bystander.
A certain young girl in East Lyn
Tried writing like Elinor Ulyn;
After taking one look
Mommer burnt up the book
And Popper be spanked her like syn.
Lipuincott s Magazine.
The King of France had just
marched up the hill with forty thou
sand men.
"It is cheaper than a battle-fleet
cruise," he explained.
Herewith he marched down again.
New York Sun.
Merchant "I'll give you a position
as clerk to start with and pay you
what you are worth. Is that satis
factory?" Applicant "Oh, perfectly; but er
do you think the firm can afford
it?" Illustrated Bits.
"Does this car go to Twenty-fourth
street?" inquired the elderly lady.
"No, ma'am, but I have something
Just as good," replied the conductor,
who was formerly a drug clerk. "I
can let you off twice at Twelfth
street." From the Bohemian.
WORDS OF WISDOM.
It is easy enough to tell where love
is. You love those, and only those,
whom It makes you glad to serve.
A. G. Singsen.
By doing nothing we learn to do
111. Watts.
The heart is a small thing, but de
slreth great matters. It Is not suffi
cient for a kite's dinner, yet the whole
world is not ' sufficient for It.
Qjiarles.
Grit Is the grain of character. It
may generally be described ns hero
ism materialized spirit and will
thrust into heart, brain and back
bone, so as to form part of the physi
cal substance of the man. Whipple.
Cold hand and warm heart. Ger
man. Some women are just naturally
homely, and others wear big pompa
dours all the way around. Nashville
American.
As the moon and earth light each
ther because they face a common
sua, so shalt thon give God's reflected
light to other souls In present need,
and thon thyself shalt see God's light
In their face when comes thy hour ot
darkness. W. E. Barton, D. D.
Your daily duties are a part of
(our religious life just as much as
four devotions. ... In this world
It Is not what we take up, but what
he give up, that makes u rich. II.
IV Boecher.
TRAMPS HAVE GOOD MIND8
Vagrants Are Said by Investigator
to Keep In Mental Condition
by Travel.
London. Dr. A. F. Tregold, who
made expensive investigations in be
half of a royal commission on the fee
ble minded, makes the astonishing
statement that tramps as a class are
the sanest people In the community.
He says the percentage of feeble
minded among the tramps Is less than
any other class. This he attributes
to the method and the fixity of pur
pose that must be employed by an
Itinerant in getting about from place
to place.
The general conclusion of the com
mission is that the American meth
ods of dealing with feeble English
methods, which are behind the times.
CURED HER THREE CHILDREN.
Girls Suffered with Itching Eczema
llnby Had a Tender Skin, Too
lulled on Cutlcura Heine dies.
"Some years ago my three little girls bad
very bad form of eczema. Itching erup
tions formed on the backs of their heads
which were simply covered. 1 tried almost
everything, but failed. Then my mother
recommended the Cuticura Remedies, 1
washed my children's beads with Cuticura
Soap and then applied the wonderful oint
ment, Cuticura. I did this four or live
times and I can say that they hare been
entirely cured. I hare another baby who
is so plump that the folds of skin on his
neck were broken and even bled. 1 used
Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment and
the next morning the trouble had disap
peared, time. Napoleon Duceppe, 41 Du
luth fit., Montreal, Que., May 21, 1907."
Teetotal Bartender.
Chicago has a novel organization In
the Bartenders and Saloonkeepers'
Total Abstinence Society, which Is
now said to have 2,000 members.
Many saloonkeepers In the Windy
City, it Is reported, are bound by an
agreement not to employ men who
drink. While New York grog sellers
have no such society and no such
agreement, so far as the public has
ever heard, all the better class of
drinking places strlotly enforce rules
against employes drinking while on
duly, and there are scores of bartend
ers in this city who never drink a
drop of the liquids they dispense. The
head drink mixer In a downtown cafe
an expert cn liquors of all kinds
hns been In the business for 25 years
and does not know the taste of his
own wares. New York Tribune.
Tea for Travelers.
Essence of tea Is tho new product
claimed by an Edinburgh firm. Its
preparation Is the result of twenty
years of research, as the fixing of the
volatile constituents that give tea Its
aroma and cheering qualities has been
a difficult problem to solve, and had
been previously- given up. The
brewing of the fragrant beverage now
becomes a matter of dropping a tea
spoonful of essence Into a cupful ot
water.
How's This?
We offer One Houdred Dollars Reward
lor any case of Catarrh that cannot be
cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure.
K. J. Cheney k Co., Toledo, O.
.. We, the undersigned, have known P. J.
Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe
him perfectly honorable in nil business
trnnsactions-and financially able to carry
out any obligations made by his firm.
WAl.nisn. Kiknax 4 Marvin, Whole
sale Druggists, Toledo, O.
Mnll'sCatnrrhCure is taken internally, aet
mgdirectly upon the hlood and mticiious sur
faces of the system. Testimonials sent free
Price. 7.1c. per hntlle. Sold by all Druggists.
Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation.
Flood Helps Town.
The flood has been kind to one
town. For years Missouri City, about
IS miles east of Kansas City, in Clay
county, has been off the river map
and the steamboats couldn't get with
in miles of it because of ji change in
ma cnnisnei. uut recenuy tne nign
water began to flow through .an old
channel. A few hours later the steam
er Chester passed the old landing
and Missouri City's cup of Joy was
full.
One of the
Essentials
of the happy homes of to-day is a vast
fund of information as to the best methods
of promoting health and happiness and
right living and knowledge of the world'i
best products.
Products of actual excellence and
reasonable claims truthfully presented
and which have attained to world-wide
acceptance through tho approval of the
Well-informed of tho World; not of indi
viduals only, but of the mai.y who have
the happy faculty of selecting and obtain
ing the best tho world afTords.
One of tho products of that class, of
known component parts, an Ethical
remedy, approved by physicians and com
mended by the Well-informed of the
World as a valuable and wholesome family
laxative is the well-known Syrup of Figs
and Elixir of Senna. To get its beneficial
effects always buy the genuine, manu
factured by the California Fig Syrup Co.,
onlj', and for sale by all leading druggists.
Duff's College
A post card will b in z illu (rated
catalogue-and "The Proof."
6th Street and Liberty A venae,
PITTSBURG, PA.
MULE TEAM BORAX
by oftt.alaj thm water cleaas (ha skla thorotitfhly nnawi
odor of persplratloa mu4 rand era tha akla a ft aad valvatjr.
411 dealera, lu and ibe pic., aim ft lb. hoxea. ftunpl?, Booklet and Parlor Card Oaaua -WHIZ," 10a,
r A CIVIC COAI OMAK CO Amm V.
This woman says that sick
women should not fail to try
Lydia E. Phiklinm's Vegetable
Compound ns she did.
M's. A. Gregory, of 2355 Lawrence
St., Denver, Col., writes to Mrs.
Pinkham:
" I was practically an invalid for six
years, on account of female troubles.
I underwent an operation by the
doctor's advice, but in a few months I
was worse than before. A friend ad
vised Lydia E. Pinkhnm's Vegetable
Compound and it restored me to perfect
health, such as I have not enjoyed In
many years. Any woman suffering1 as
I did with backache, bearing-down
pains, and periodic palns,should not fail
to use Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound."
FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN.
For thirty years Lydia E. Pink
ham's Vegetable Compound, made
from roots and herbs, Las been the
standard remedy for female ills,
and has positively cured thousands of
women who have been troubled with
displacements, inflammation, ulcera
tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities,
penouio pains, DaeKacne, uiai near-mg-down
feeling, flatulency, indiges
t ion, d izziness or nervous prostration.
liy don't you try it r
Sirs. Pinkhnm invites all sick
women to write hep for advice.
She has guided thousands to
health. Address, lynn, Mass.
TOWER'S FISH BRAND
WATERPROOF
OILED
GARMENTS
, are cut on larga
patterns. designed
to give the wearer
the utmost comfort
, LIGHT-DURME-CLEAJI
.OUATUDVOTHW'W'j
SUITS 322
SLICKERS322
Mt 'SttM 'fWt 'tiUhtttff
m m mam m
AjTOWf ( BOSTON VIA
icura soap
In the promotion of Skin
Health, Cuticura Soap, as
sisted by Cuticura, the great
Skin Cure, is undoubtedly
superior to all other skin
soaps because of its influ
ence in allaying irritation,
inflammation, and clogging
of the pores, .the cause of
disfiguring eruptions. In
antiseptic cleansing, in stim
ulating sluggish pores, in
emollient and other proper
ties, they have no rivals.
Hold thrnnrhnat t fin world. f)nnta- Ism Arm. ?
Chrtrhiii.Si. : Part,, Hnadola Pali : Aurtra.
II. Ft. Town n A &, Srdnj ; Ind), B K. Paul,
t'xtrtuti; rhino Modi Kong Prug Co. Japan,
Marti tr, Ltd., Toklo Rumta, Frreln, Moarowj
Ho. At rift, f.enuon, l.td., ap Towii,t!. ; U-H.A
Potter Drug t Chein. Cnri., !oI Prni.. Boalrw.
tr-Putt-fr-M, Cuticura lkk or i'-j of tb tiklu.
f. w. o. s& iwa.
If ffl.rt4
with wek
ye, dm
Thompson's Eye Watei
I v vvV.
.1 1 if m m w ii
Mioiea
and cm