The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, September 19, 1917, Image 3

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PAINS SHARP
AND STABBING
Woman Thought She Would |

Die. Cured by Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound.

Ogdensburg, Wis.—*I suffered from
female troubles which caused piercing
pains like a knife
through my back
and side. I finally
lost all my strength
so I had to go to
bed. The doctor
advised an oper-
ation but I would

not listen to it. I
| E. Pinkham’s Vege-




bottle brought great
trouble of any kind should try Lydia I
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound.”
Mrs. ETTA DORION, Ogdensburg, Wis,
Physicians undoubtedly did their bes
battled with this case steadily and cot i
do no more, but often the most scientifie
treatment is surpassed by the medicinal
properties of the good old fashioned
roots and herbs contained in Lydia E,
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound.
If any complication exists it pays to
write the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine
Co., Lynn, Mass., for special free advice.
thought of what I
had read about Lydi: }
table Compound and |
tried it. The first | In America. It became the fashion
t | after Appomattox and remained in
relief and six bottles have entirely |
cured me. All women who have femal L

In 1917,
The other day a farmer boy with
a load of hay pulled up before a crowd
of men in Indianapolis.
“Where is the nearest blacksmith
shop?’ he asked.
“Not a single man could tell him
what he wished to know.
Then a dusty touring party from
somewhere In America | s
“A garage ?” the driver started
to query
“Half a block down,” answered half
a dozen of the crowd in a chorus,—In-
dianapolis News.
ed up


NEVER KAD A CHILY
After Taking ELIXIR BABEK
“My little daughter, 10 years old, suffered
nearly a year with ¢ and fever, most of the
time under the doctc care. I was discour-
aged and a friend advised me t ry Elixir
Babek. Igaveittoherandshehasnever had
a chill since. It complet 1 her.” Mrs.
Cyrus Helms, 302 E St., N. E., Wa ngtdn, D.C.
Elixir Babek 50 cents, all d gists or by
Parcel Post prepald frcm Klocze weki & Coo,
Washington, D, C.
SMASHED ALL SPEED LIMITS
As Cal Sized Up the Situation, That
“Cyah” Certainly Must Have
Been Traveling Some.

 








H. O. Frick said in Birmingham,
where he had come to attend a liberty
loan meeting:
“The crack troops of the kaiser—
some call them cracked troops now—
are hiding in caverns forty feet under
ground. The man who now thinks
German militarism a wonderful thing
is as badly doped as Cal Clay of Nola
Chucky.
“Cal was escorting some ladies from
Nola: Chucky to Paint Rock, and as
they passed a planter’s the planter was
playing with a powerful searchlight
he had just put on his water tower,
and he happened to turn it down the
road, where it streamed into the eyes
of Cal and his two girls.
“‘Here come one o' dem powerful
racin’ cyahs, to jedge by dat 'ere head-
light, said Col. ‘We'll jest hustle to
de side o’ de road fo’ safety till she's
parst, ladies.
“So they hustled up against the
hedge, and the planter, after playing
the light along the road for about, a
minute, suddenly turned it off.
“Cal gave a grunt of astonishment.
“‘Jee-rusalem!’ he said. ‘How fast
dat cyah muster been a-goin’! Here
she’s done parst us by, an’ we didn’t
even see her!”
His Chief Desire,
General Pershing told in Paxis a
story about a young American s¢ ldier.
“He talked a lot on the voyage/over,
said the general, “of the delight he
would take in ghtseeing when on
leave.
“Don’t miss Notre Dame cfithedral
in Paris,’ said a French volunteer.
“‘You bet, I won't!’ said he.
“Don't miss Westminster, gibbey in
London,’ said a Scot. {
“No, siree! But, say, fellows,’ the
young soldier declared, ‘the fthing I'm
craziest of all to see is the Church of
England.'” !
)

No Doubt.
Upson—Smith's wife has Jockjaw.
Downey—It must be a vegry painful
sort of affliction. i
Upson—Yes; unspeakably
2

Coffee Drinkers

after they
change }o the
delicious, pure, food-
drink—
OSTU


5


| study clothes. Its origin was in the
THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY,
USTLE EFFFCT -
IN FALL STYLES
New York.—It would be odd if the | tive women adopted the fashion with
ediet for elimination of waste material | enthusiasm, but if a skirt is to be ex-
in clothes that has gone forth from | ceedingly narrow, it cannot be long.
the governing factors in dress on both | It would be too utterly inconvenient
continents, would be responsible for | for women who are plunged into a
the incoming of the bustle. series of activities,
So far as the expert observer can Jackets of Two Kinds.
see into the near future of autumn It has already been announced that
costumery which is now being planned, | two Kinds of jackets will prevail in
shown and bought, the only actual | the autumn, One is hip-length and
elimination of material is in the width | one is hem-length, The latter is
of the skirt. called a polonaise and the former is
There is little sense in being obstin- | called a jacket,
ate about the width of skirts; they're The revival of the polonaise is
going to be narrow, and it is quite | merely a contribution to the fashion
as well that dressmakers and women | for top coats, One can use a polon-

| accept this fact without cavil. | aise over any kind of skirt and blouse,
Once before in the history of clothes | and if it is lined in the colorful and
| there was a tight skirt which was said | interesting way that prevails among
to have been caused by the Civil war | tailors today, it presents itself as a
garment of rare merit,
The short jacket, however, as it
fashion for a decade and a half after-| will be worn this autumn, is a bit of
ward. It was also caused by the ne-| costumery that is taken by the back
céssity for economy in material, as the | of the neck and pulled out of the fams-
four years’ war had nearly exhausted | ily album. :
the commodities of this country. Whether or not the peculiar vaude-
That skirt was called the tie-back. | ville trick of presenting a family
The front and sides were pulled | album in song and living pictures,
across the figure so that the wearer | which has spread over New York
could barely step, and rubber bands | through the success of one of the
were put across the back below the | musical revues of the season, was the
waistline, to draw the material up | predecessor of this short, tight jacket,
into a series of little puffs. This was | nobody can tell. It is a far-fetched
as much of a bustle as was permitted. | idea, no doubt, but don’t you think it
jis rather interesting that the stage
folk should get up a family album
scene that runs through vaudeville
fashions as ddncing does, and that,
i now, suddenly, that coat and skirt
| should be launched into costumery?
Persistence Is Amazing.
The persistence of this fashion has |
been an amazing thing to those who

One of these jackets which will un-
doubtedly prove a success because it
has been issued by a dominant house,
and it has a bit of an upward pull
from knees to waistline at the back—
a pull so slight that it is not always
noticeable.
The jacket fits the figure, curves in-
to the waistline at the back and then
flares out into a series of folds that
give the bustle effect. It is buttoned
in a straight line down the front.
There is a band of velvet above the
hem of the coat. The buttons are
covered with the wine-colored velour
that makes the suit. The collar is
very high, soft in its folds, rolls over
backward to the neck line and is trim-
med with a band of velvet.
Fasten From Chin to Hem.
Revers are abandoned by the tailors
and dressmakers. Where one coat
will have them, sixteen others will be

chin to the lower edge. All tie col-















has a little bustle all its own. It be- |
longs to a skirt that is quite narrow, |




Opping Vat for Lradiclion of Sheep Ticks | got g word in till just now
i the nights are cold,
without feed and water for long peri
ods before and after dipping,
use of dogs in the corral, ¢
the common mistakes sheepmen make
Dipping Lambs.
In dipping young lambs,
to separate them from the sheep,
'r to minimize the danger of
drowned in the vats.
especially true of very young
keeping the sheep

The sheep Hee is a wide ly prs Vi ale nt
which it infests, making them so rest-
less that they do not feed well,
indirectly the
| injured by the animals’ scratching and
| rubbing themselves. A loss of approx-
nts a head for lambs and it is perfectly
any more than a month old.
damage done to infested flocks.
Control by Dipping.
Sheep ticks can readily be controlled
will grow and thrive much more r
fastened in a straight line from the | }
ticks has been







degree of certainty whether this skirt
will be widely accepted when the au-
tumn comes. Reporting, and not
prophecy, is the duty of those who try
to give the news of dress as it comes
out week after week.
the French one, has gone in for this
upward tilt of material at the end of
the spine and it may be that the later
fashions will accentuate it.
though, at any spectal spot on the
skirt, those who are regarding the
question of new clothes must remem-
ber that the hem will be almost as
narrow as it was in the days of the
hobble skirt.

the sheath skirt in several of thg new
costumes. The material slinks into
the figure after it leaves the waist,
and the hem provides only a stepping
width.
Seen on Ribbons Which Are Manufac-
Here is an evening gown on early
Flemish lines. The material is heavy !
crepe satin, with girdle of cloth of
gold. The bodice and train are em-
| broidered in Flemish design. The lin-
| ing of the train is gold-brown velvet.
fashionable way of walking called the
Grecian bend, which was the absurd |
predecessor of the equally absurd de-
butante slouch.
In the days of the tie-back skirt
little girls would secure safety pins
by indirect means, and pull the fullness
of their skirts back and up, thus hav- |
ing a little fluff of their own below the
waist. They were always caught at
| this by their mothers and nurses, be-
‘ause the safety pins tore the material |
| and made gaping holes.
Again, in this day of elimination of
waste through the necessities of war,
we are to be put into the tight skirt
with its fullness arranged at the back |
in a series of slight flares,
It is not possible to say with any
The American designer, as well as
Whatever may be the fullness,
There is a marked tendency toward
The shortness of the skirt for street |
| wear is necessary. In the spring |
there was a decided tendency to |
lengthen skirts, and many conserva-'
~
‘BLACK CRYSTAL TO BE USED
tured in Paris and Are Declared
Bits of Art.
the neck and chin in the manner that
ee terrae leap seat mite
no matter how strenuous is the sport | permanently in the sheep
{ indulged in. however, or if {here is a I
population is of pure white blood.
shapes, and already the public has
learned to appreciate it as a wonderful |
| bit of decoration in the house.
livened with a cherry red rim. Vases, Siriukage in
lars are high, but soft und enve Ding | gipping solutions. These are described
+ : hi In detail in a new publication of the
was considered correct in the eight | ypiteq States department of agricul-
eenth century. : ture, Farmers’ Bulletin 798. A num-
Mind you, this style is not the only | por of solutions, such as coal-tar cre- |
powerful note in fashion : that iS | (cota and nicotine, may be purchased
brought out for jackets. It is one of ready-prepared. The lime-sulphur-ar-
several other details, and. a woman
will have the chance to accept what | y+ is difficult to prepare and it must
she wishes. . 3 ; | always be remembered that it is poi-
I'his latter situation will be the | (© The proper precautions,
hope and the downfall of many Wom- | tporefore, invariably must be taken
en. Left to themselves to choose in handling and using it. The meth-
among a heterogeneous mass of ma- | (45 of making and applying this pre-
terial, the best minds will grow con- paration are described in the bulletin
fused and go wrong. On the other .,.. ac mentioned. Another disad-
hand, highly trained judgment will | vantage which it possesses is the fact
give to women the chance to express
genic dip can be made at home, but
that there is no way of testing, as in
their navn and look a little | ,, case of some of the other prepara-
unlike their Regd or Api tions, the strength of the solution in
It may he Shed; noweyer, Shay fhe | the field. It is well known that all the !
coat that fastens in a line down the | solutions used for dipping sheep de- |
+ | front, the buttons running straight | ooo 40 with use and may, if not test-
through the high, rolling collar, Will | 4" graquently become so weak that
[be the most noticeable change in| sheep to pass through will receive |
street costumery that will take place | litle or
no benefit.
in the fall. There should be two dippings at an
I'he narrow skirt has already been interval of 24 days. The first may be
accepted here and there, and there are | 1:04 upon to kill all the mature in-
hundreds of women who have never
given it up, so its widespread accep-
tance will not cause quite the same
ripple of interest that will be given by |
this family album coat with its upward
tilt at the back, its point in front, its
| long, slim waistline under the arms,
| and its row of colored buttons on
which one will be tempted to say the |
old nursery rhyme, “Richman, poor-
man, heparan, thief.”
(Copyright, 1917, by the McClure Newspa-
| reach those which are in what is
for from 19 to 24 days, when it
| emerges as a mature insect.
Cost of Dipping.
Although the sheep tick is most

| where sheep are herded in 1
| flocks, it is known to occur practical
per Syndicate.)
ly everywhere where sheep are kept.

The Shirtwaist Dress. | 1t is difficult to keep sheep infe sted | V
The shirtwaist dress, sometimes | with this parasite in a thrifty condi |
made of tub or shirting silk, again of | tion, and the most 2conomical and ef
crepe de chine and frequently of shirt- | ficient method of dealing with the |
| ing flannel, is one of the favorites of | problem is the dip. The cost of dip-
| the present season. No well-ordered | ping will vary, of course, with
wardrobe is considered complete | conditions—Iabor, fuel and the neces- |
without one of these charming little | sary materials for the vats and the
frocks, which are as attractive for sim- | dipping solution being the most im- |
ple morning or porch wear as they are | portant items. In the western range
for tennis or other sport. Usually a | states it is estimated that the cost |
local
0
striped weave is selected, with collar | should run from 2 to 31% cents a
and cuffs of white or plain blending | head for each dipping. Where only
color, giving a pretty trimming touch | few head of sheep are kept, the farm-
to the garment. Obviously in the most | er need not construct a v
useful type of shirtwaist dress, waist | make use of either the port: able gal- |)
and skirt are securely joined, so there | vanized iron vat or of a canvas an |
but may

no uncomfortable “slipping apart” | ping bag. If he expects to contim
indu str; y:
cr fi gr


to handle, a permanent dipping
is really a necessity. The const
tion of such a pant discussed in
| Bulletin 798. Thi
attention to the fact that some set-
back to the sheep must be expe ted
the immediate re sult of diy
the
A good deal of this crystal is en- | may take the forn
weight or con

Only a third of South America’s


lletin also ¢




of a
 
es, Such

PTT TTT
FRESH BEETS IN WINTER
They SEE be placed in ven-
tilated barrels,
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They should be pulled and the
tops cut off when the soil is dry.
If sufficient space is available
it is a good plan
to place them in small
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Storage in large piles should
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SXOOOOOO TOLATOTN ©, TOTOTOTOTOI TOIT a7
FLIES CAUSE LOSS
TO STOCK FARMERS
Insects Which Gather Around
Stables and Yards Are Cause
of Irritation and Worry.

| seets on the sheep, but it may not |
known as the pupal stage, in which |
they are protected by a hard brown |
shell. In this shell the tick remains |

Oklahoma A. and



| | prevalent in the western range states, |
aree |

ers in various ways,
estimate the damage
| which gather around stables nih
most difficult to handle.
f ever oo direct
f death to Bi
in ey and ¢imi-
probable shonenit oy
are practiced
in handling these pests.
heaps and decaying or

ra |
y washes are practical


e flock |}

1 ed an ne.
or two times per week.

BEES NEED SOME ATTENTION
Not Necessary to Fecod Them If There
Is Supply of Sealed Honey Intact
in Their Hives.

making the new ribbons for autumn
and the manufacturers who are mak-
ing crystal for the new winter blouses,
| must have had some secret method of
communication that made them join The extravagance of *oday’s fash-
hands in prometing black. :
be used on walls
decoration; rather than on gowns. | says Harper's Bazar. The straight,
They have black foundations, on slim n
which are worked wonderful Chinese | the ¢
designs They look as though they | and um I
ame out of the fifteenth century, | one look at the marvelously beautiful | ervation of the milk is man’s part.
’s a Re n” (gH
\-{ iS ~» never seen or used it. It is now | fill an ordinary-sized window, is the
»
flower bowls, fruit plates, baskets and
candlesticks are some of the smaller
articles of decoration that are shown
| in black erystal.
That Simple Gown.

1¢ 1
The manufacturers in Paris who are
y
ions lies in the beauty and sumptuous-
‘he cables say that the ribbons in | ness of the fabrics and the enormous |
Paris are bits of art; that they should | amount of handwork which is put on |
and as household | even the littlest sort of little dress,

iorning dress of chiffon strikes
al observer as being modest
issuming, but the initiate gives


when no man was hurried and each | embroidertes, the layers of chiffon un-
man loved his task. | derneath and the softness of the sat- |
The black crystal is not exactly a | in slip, and realizes at once where the
new note in decoration, at least not | expense comes in. =
as far as Paris and a few ultra-fash- | en
onable houses in America are con-| A flower stand, normally of small
‘rped, but the majority of people | size, but which can be expanded to
- produced in amazingly lovely | recent invention of a German,

If bees have a plenty of sealed honey
to result from
I not necessary



  


ping the flock 1

do not run short of
dipping late in the aft
AAA AAA AAA AAA AAAI AIAN NANI
Separator Saves Money:

Dairy Cow’s Share.
The dairy cow will be



 
Where Bacteria Comes From.
Most £1 the > bz acter ria 3

Heavy Yielders.


trom the > utensi S,
  
Feed the Fighters! Win the Warl!
Harvest the Crops — Save the Yields
On the battle fields of France and Flanders, the United States boys and the
Canadian boys are fighting side by side to win for ‘the World the freedom that Prus-
sianism would destroy. While doing this they must be fed and every ounce of
muscle that can be requisitioned must go into use to save this year’s crop. A short
harvest period requires the combined forces of the two countries in team work, such
| as the soldier boys in France and Flanders are demonstrating.
The Combined Fighters In France and Flanders and the Combined
Harvesters in America WILL Bring the Allied Victory Nearer.
A reciprocal arrangement for the use of farm workers has been perfected between the Departs
ment of the Interior of Canada and the Departments of Labor and Agriculture of the United States,
under which it is prop se d to permit the harvesters that are now engaged in the wheat fields of Okla
homa, Kansas, Iowa, North Dake South Dakota, Ne Draeks, Minnesota and Wisconsin to move
over into Canada, with the privile # of later returning to the United States, when the crops in the
United States have been conserved, and help to save the enormous crops in Canada which by that
time will be ready for harvesting.
HELP YOUR CANADIAN NEIGHBOURS WHEN YOUR OWN CROP IS HARVESTED ! I{
Canada Wants 40,000 Harvest Hands to Take Care of its
‘13,000,000 ACRE WHEAT FIELD.
One cent a mile railway fare from the International boundary line to destination and the same
rate returning to the International Boundary.
High Wages, Good Board, Comfortable Lodgings.
An Identification Card issued at the boundary by a Canadian Immigration Officer will guarase
tee no trouble in returning to the United States.
AS SOON AS YOUR OWN HARVEST IS SAVED, move northward and assist your Canadian
neighbour in harvesting his; in this way do your bit in helping “Win the War”’. For particulars as to
routes, identification carde and place where employment may be had, apply to Superint
of Immigration, Ottawa, Canada, or to
J. P. JAFFRAY, Cor. Walaut and Broad Sts., Philadelphia, Pa.
Canadian Government Agent,








Art's Inefficiency. Spoken With Feeling.
% successful marine painter ac- “There are all sorts of synonyms for
knowledges that he can’t even row a {money in this country,” said the talkas
boat.’ ian. “We call it ‘tin,’ ‘mazuma®
“Well, well!” ‘kale,’ ‘dough, and a dozen othe
“That's nothing. There's many a {names I don't recall just now.”
sweet singer of the bucolie life who A solemn-looking man seated in one
doesn’t know how to milk a cow.” corner opened his mouth as if to say
mething and then closed it without
pid llver prevents proper food assim- _ a
I r with Wright's |¢ YJ
They act gently. Adv. “What is your favorite synonym for
money ?”’ asked the talkative person.
Not What She Thought. “ “The unattainable,’ ” the solemn mam
Horace- [here is something 1 Ve | replied, and then fell once more inte
be n trying to tell you for a long | jeep thought—Birmingham Age-Herw
ime, but— ald.
Marie—Oh, Horace, not here hefor
all these people. Walt. Come this
toracetes meres at von ove «| Getting Old Too Fast?
Sirenl: of Gury cow Is of your Late in life the body shows signs of
nose, but I couldn't wear and often the kidneys weaken
first. The back is lame, bent and achy,
: and the kidney action distressing. This
MOTH ER! makes people feel older than they are.
. Don’t wait for dropsy, gravel, harden-
St ——— ing of the arteries or Bright's disease.
Have you ever used MOTHER'S JOY | Use a mild kidney stimulant. Try
SALVE for Colds, Coughs, Croup and | | Doan’s Kidney Pills. Thousands of el-
and Head Ca- derly folks recommend them. ‘


life of me


’neumonia, Asthma,
tarrh? If you haven't get it at once. A Virginia Case
It will cure you. ~A40y, Mrs. R. H. Slater,
—_— 2 Roanoke Ave.
His Plea. Newport News, Va.,



: “My back pain-
» badly, it felt as
1 sharp knives
were piercing me. Of-
A negro who was well-known to the |
judge had been haled into court on a
charge of having struck a relative |§ ten I had to scream
with a brick. After the usual prelim- | § With the pain. I could
th a prick, Afi Sos Dre) hardly take a deep
inaries, says Everybody's Magazine, breath without having
3 sharp twinges across
my kidneys. Hearing
Doan’s Kidney Pills
praised so highly, I
used some and they
the court inquired:
“Why did you hit this man?”
“Jedge, he called me a black rascal.”

“Well, you are one, aren't you?” | § relieved the trouble.
“Yessah, mavbe I is one. But, jedge, Whenever I have used
[TX ws ous Jedg them since, they have
s'pose some one should call you a helped me."
black rascal, wouldn't you hit 'em?” Get Doan’s at Any Store, 60c a Box
“But I'm not one, am 1?” D OAN ® KIDNEY
“Naw, sah, naw, suh, you ain't one; PILLS
but s’pose some one’d call you de kind FOSTER-MILBURN CO., BUFFALO, N.Y.
1



of rascal you is, what'd you do?”

YOU MAY TRY CUTICURA FREE | visor sts 2 er tether or got
love ¢ girl 11 enough to mar
That's the Rule—Free Samples to Any- I a } gir Wo enong Ty
one Anywhere. | “Well, my boy, imagine~her on &
day, bending over a wash=
g your underclothes as



{ hot, sticky
tub, scrul

We have so much confidence in the
wonderful soothing and healing proper- vour mother used to do. Picture her,
ties of Cuticura Ointment for all skin | vou enter, stopping her work and
troubles supplemented by hot baths wiping the perspiration from her face
with Cu ra Soap that we are ready | with the corner of her apron. If you
to send samples on request. They are | feel that vou weuld still care to kiss
Ideal for the toilet. her; tha he'd still look as good te
Free sample each by mail with Book. | you as s does in her party togs, ge
Address postcard, Cuticura, Dept. L | right ahead and marry her. She's the
Joston, Sold everywhere.—Adv. girl.” '







SMALL BOY HAD NOTICED
That He Knew Man in Khaki as
Marine Did Credit to His Powers
of Observation.
A New Excuse.
“James, you are a dollar short im
your pay this week.”
“Yes, my dear. I had to meet the
t on my Liberty bond.”



installmen


A group of youngsters was playing | Some clubs cause scolding wives
on River drive, says the New [and some scolding wives cause clubs.
York Times. A military man, dressed gy

in khaki and accor
lied by a young AGUARANTEED REMEDY FOR
lady apprasel 1ed the
ady, approa he > The boys
sto d the and, with nudges F
: o-
and gesticulation, were evidently try-
stopped t r playing
idontifv x TRAY Y hali
Ing to identify the man in khaki. Your MONEY WIL’ BE EEFUNDER by your druggies
As the young lady and her escort without any question if this remedy does not bene
. : every case C ea, Bronchial Asthma and the
drew nearer, one youngster with an Asthmaticsy yuk accompanying Has Beves Nev
: 3 I inf rin , matter how violent the attacks Or obstinate the cas®
alr >f super knowledge informed
his comj
anions: “He's a United DR. BR. SCHIFFMANN’S
States marine.”
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lady questioned tl OY ©
do vou Enow he is t AND ASTHMADOR CIGARETTES
] KNOW he iS a Tet
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your money if you ame
SY by do “hot ny fairer proposi!
which we could make.
R. Schiffmann Co., Proprietors, t. Paul, Wins,

   

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Humor of Kultur.
“Here's ¢
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t
  
dered 1 cov -
France. Piles
The young officer saluted stiffiy and All Drugglsts.)
 
% Pure > Sulphur.
 

 
too good to mi
ZN PARKER
“Mi oht \ Work { 3 HAIR BALSAM
t 1 et preparation of merik |
Helps to eradicate dandruff.
For Restoring Color and
' Beauty toGray or Faded Hi
50c. and $1.00 at Druggista.
 




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An exquisite 7 Face C ome: >. giving
vel Ivety radis nple. when Send
- mailing. Corym Pro ducts Co,, 509 Dake i. x
——— -
gy) $ Watson E. Coleman
ON WHEATLESS DAYS Pen Le ashi
Advice and books
Eat Rates reasonable. Highest references Besteervices,
$5000 to $13,000 From One Acre of Land
POST HS fae 130 thd
want to hear about something bes
IF YO ier ARAN! Sil of HME .
 
tion you ever heard
John A. Nicol, Woodward Bldg., Washimgtom,
Start a Mail Order Business {3% fox
manufacturing formulas; So twe aie i
two for 25c. Com late classified des
silver. BD, Wa 5428 Hyd