University of South Carolina Libraries
Facts About Motherhood The experience of Motherhood Is a trying one to most women and mark* distinctly an epoch In their lives. Not vOii?I woman in a hun dred is prepared or y understand? how to Jproperlvcare forber ?ell, Or course near. | ly every woman now aday* baa medical ;treatment at tha tftne of child-birth, )but many approach the experience with an organism unfitted for the trial of strength, and when the strain is over her system has received a shock from which It U hard to recover. Follow ing right upon thle comes the nervous ?train of caring for the child, and a distinct change In the mother result*. There is nothing more charming than ? happy and healthy mother or chil dren, and Indeed child-birth under right conditions need be no hazard to health or beauty. The unexplaluuble thing is that, with all the evidence of shattered nerves and broken health resulting from an unprepnred condition, women Will persist In going blindly to the trial. ' It ian't as though the experience caitye upon them unawares. They have ample time in which to prepare, but they, for the most part, trust to chance ana pay the penalty. In many homes once childless there Sire now children because of the fact that Lydla E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound makes women normal, healthy, and strong. Any woman who would liko ?p?cial advice in regard to this matter is cordially Invited to write to Mrs. Plnkfinm at I^ynn, Mann. Her letter will be held in strict eoniidence* If ARI ||A nntl High Gratia HUUAIVa FinUUlnjf. Mull ,or<lert? Ktven Hpe ?cl?l Attention. PrW-en rrikHonnlile. t Servloo pjronpk Seixt for Price tilt. LAKIKiL'S AUT bTOUK. ClUBUfcTOK, H. C. Churches and Tuberculosis. Statistics showing- how serious a problem tuberculosis Is to the ordi nary church congrogatlon have been Issued by the Nutlomi! Association for the Study and Prevention of Tuber culosis. From reports received from over 725 churches, with a meruburshlp of over 312,000 communicants of twenty denominations, and from 208 cities and towns in 12 states In vari ous parts of the country, out of nearly 7,000 deatliB in 1910, over 700 or 10 per cent., were caused by tuberculosis. This means 2.24 deaths for every thou sand members or communicants. While the percentage of deaths from tuberculosis compared with other dis eases is not higher in the churches, according to these figures, than in the country . at large, the tuberculosis death rate, as shown by the church returns, is higher per thousand com municants than that for the general ^population in the registration area of r the United States, which the census bureau gave as 1.67 In 1909. Double-Edged. The man whose daughter had Just been united to the husband of her t^^ked a little pad. "I tell you, squire," he ssld to one of the w > uomg gu?sts, a man of his own ago, and himself the father of a num ber of unmarried girls, "I tell you !t is a solemn thing for us when our daughters marry and go away." The squire asseuted not altogether heartily. . "I suppose It Is," he conceded, "but I tell you it Is more solemn when they don't."?Youth's Companion. A Herford Bon Mot. "Oliver Herford and a friend were strolling through a section of town that was plentifully strung with pul ley lines on which many a family "wash" was waving in the wind. Mr. Herford'B companion called attention to the manner In which these gar ments shut out the sky and otherwise disfigured the landscape. Mr. Herford gazed at them thoughtfully and then gently murmured: "The short and simple flannels of the poor." A WIDOW'S LUCK Quit the Thing That Was 8lowly In* Jurlng Her. A woman tells how coffee kept her from insuring her life: "I ^suffered for many years chiefly I- from trouble with my heart, with severe nervous headaches and neu ralgia; but although incapacitated at times for my housework, I did not I' realize the gravity of my condition till I was rejected for life insurance, be cause, the examining physician said, my heart was so bad ho could not pass me. "This distressed me very much, as I was a widow and had a child de pendent upon me. It vtas to protect her future that I wanted to insure my life. ? "Fortunately for me, I happened to read an advertisement containing a testimonial from a man who had been affected In the same way that I was with heart trouble, and who was bene flted by leaving off coffee and using Postum. I grasped at the hope this held dut, and made the change at once. "My health began to Improve imme diately. The headaches and neuralgia' disappeared, 1 gained in flesh, and my spntUts earns back to me. Greatest of all, my heart was strengthened from the beginning, and soon all the distressing symptoms passed aws&r. No i more waking up In the night with my heart tryin# to fly out of my mouthl J "Then I again' mp.de application for life Insuranoe, and had no trouble In j passing the medical examination. "ft mi iPv?n:|AfirH ago that I be gan to use Postum and I am using it still, and shall continue to do so, as 1 find it a guarantee of good health," Namo given by Postum Company, B?|rj . tie Creekr -Mjfifc. - ~ * ?**?** ?h'j if riv*** . - -.ti "*1**^ Read the big little book, "The Road ? to Wellvllle," in pkgs. I gl<?r tfce-rt?Ti-!??#?** :*??*? * d|e iMMr* twm tlnU ?? ?Ibm. Tk?y ?re kmsIM, IIM? ?M Ml of huum. Passing of Old-Time Janitor NliW YOKK.?There was a time when tbe beat trottera that went up (he fashionable driveway* of New York were owned by tbe men who had charge of the big building* In New Y&rk; but that waa long ago. To day that man whose occupation has become subject to the surveillgnce of a manager who represents the Inter ofcts Intrusted to blm in no half-heart ed way and whose system will not permit of the pickings which were ao long the recognised perquisites of the Janitor who is content to make a frac tion of what he formerly received each year. These are days of centralization and system, and the old-timers who found it easy to raise a big family, bave fast horses and maintain a country resi dence bave either retired in disgust or adjusted themselves to the altered conditions. The practice for many ye^rs was to pay a Janitor a salary, sometimes as much as $2,600 a year, but more fre quently $100 a month. He was sup posed to havo the waste paper of the tenants to sell, and It will probably be matter of surprise to som^ readers to Warn that thin yielded In a tic bull ing r.s much aa $1,000 a year, while Ih some of the very large onea it woul4 bring In very much more, up to $1,000 at the highest. Then there waa the matter of a communion on the let, and towel* supplied to patrons, which would run anywhere from 16 per cent* upward. Christmas was naturally the occfe sion when everybody around the build* tag would be in quest of a present, snd the Janitor waa invariably the most assiduous searcher after gratui ties; in fact, some of them were a*> tints at the practiced Nowadays under the new system* the Janitor gets $60 to $100 a mouth, lie is under the control of the assistant manager of the building, and he In turn is subject to the manager where there are several properties under one 'control. There 1b a purchasing agent directly under the eye of tho manage*-, who buys all supplies, and thesa are checked carefully. The system of tipping has beon re-, duced to a minimum In most of the best corporations, no Christina# pres ents from anybody with an office In the building, though that doesn't mean that no presents are made, for there are no more liberal givvrs of gratuities than these same corpora tions, and faithful service is Invariably rewarded, but the petty grafting that formerly prevailed Is a thing of tho past. Bride's Feet Cause Sensation ST. LOUI8.?Miss Young Oy became the brldo of Yeong Wing Jow at the city hall. Attaches of the marriage license of fice 6ay that, though she lu a Chinese, Miss Oy was one of the most attrac tive young women who ever went there. Dainty anil graceful of carriage, she was a vision of coy loveliness as she stood at the desk, blushing and screening her face from the view of the curious by drawing about the soft folds of the Chinese silk automobile veii which she wore In lieu of a pic ture hat. Her long gray traveling coat was tailor-made and up to the minute in style and finish, and her gown, also in American style, was of blue Ellk. From beneath the hem of her skirt peeped the tiniest of feet, not bound and de formed like those of many Chinese women, but perfect in outline and shod In American shoes. Clerks at the marriage license of fice say her feet are the smallest they ever saw?her choe, according to their export estimate, t>3lng not larger than No. 13, children's site. Yeong Wing Jow, also clad in Amer ican style, wore a tailor-made dark sack suit, patent leather shoes and a a fedora hat. Both gave their addresB as 931 Clarendon avenue, where the bride groom has a laundry. He explained that two of Miss Oy's cousins are his partners in business, and that she has been living there under the chaperon age Of her male relatives since she came to St. Louis from San Francisco a year ago. Miss Oy and Yeong Wing Jow were born and reared In San Francisco. In St. Louis they have both been mem bers of the First Christian church Sunday school. Both signed the license application In Cheese characters, and then touched.'the pen while the clerk wrote the names In English. They were married in the anteroom of the license office by Justice Krue ger. The bride speaks little English. "But I shall teach her pretty soon," said the happy husband. So far as records show this is the first time a Chinese couple was ever married in St..Louis. Frand Oauding and Miss Anna Brln* haus, both of 2514 Newhouse avenue, entered the license office while the Chinese were being married. They were spectators at the ceremony, and when it was finished Oauding said to Justice Krueger, "We've decided to let you marry us, too." Short-Weight Thieves on Run CHICAGO.?Wabbly swings the steelyards of the "short weight crook" In Chicago. No more do grocers, butchers, can dleraaker8, coal dealers and cordwood men glvo short weight to the purchas ing public. In the early days short weighting was popular In the ranks of th? #hort weight people, but Pro Bono Publico, the prize kicker, has had an awaken lng and today he is looking for sixteen ounces to the pound and 2,000 pounds to the ton, as a result of the work of the retiring Inspector of weights and measures?John KJellander. exploited as the "terrible Swede." "There are tricks in all trades but ours." That's an old story. It was King Solomon who said: "A false scale Is an abomination unto the Ix)rd, but a just weight is his de light." For many years dishonest dealers went unpillorled In Chicago. Feos were collected by this official and an other, but until KJellander went Into office and with the assistance of Wil* liam F. Cluett, his chief deputy, the offenders were not brought to book I and forced to pay heavy fines. As a result the short-weight fellow is a rarity today. In the last four years the city of Chicago has prosecuted 1,162 suits against short-weight offenders, and they have paid in fines and costs $35,? 670. Thousands of crooked scales have been condemned. There are sixteen deputy inspectors engaged in field work- Their work has attracted muni cipal' officials in all parts of the Uni ted States and foreign countries. Short-weight swindlers have invented many contrivances to fuiluwr their ends and cheat the consumer?the ultimate buyer. Lead and even beer bottle openers wore tied to scales and, although the end of gain was small in the individual purchase, yet the ag gregate of the swindle was large. FalBe bottoms was a popular trick among peddlers. These have been picked up by the Inspectors. Peck and gallon measures have been out down. These cheats have been confis cated by the hundreds.? -? Bread Is being weighed and no longer is coal being sold by the basket or bag. It must be weighed. Milk bottles have been brought to an even standard, so that quarts and pints are quarts and pints in strict reality. Even taxlcabs are required to report an honest Journey. Flowers as Antidote for Crime B08T0N.?The wayward boy?the boy with criminal or mischievous tendencies?may be served with great er advantage to himself and his future development by being apprenticed to a gardener or floriet than by going Into any other line of work, Is the opinion held bjr Prof. Charles Sargent of Harvard. "There la no doubt that the line of work In which a man engagea acta upon hla personality and that garden ing has an elevating effect upon the men .employed In it," he aftya. '1 am told that a surprisingly large percent age of murderers are men Who haw at one, time or another beenemployed aa butchers,. That Is an extreme , in stance or oocupation. but I might say that at the other end of the pfopoai. tion It gardening. No man can make a suooeaa aa a.*ardener . unless,', he lovea his planta. > I **A wayward boy thrown Into work; among growing plants would brought vnder a better influence than under almost anj, other oocupation he might find. Any association with plants and flow era cannot fatf to have an elevating effect on the human mind. "Regarding the way to lntereet a wayward boy in flowers, an absorbing .Question Ja- open ad, alnoeu general liking for llowera Is not generally found in children. The fondneea for flowers generally cornea later in Ufa. Still, If a wayward boy waa eet to vrerlt under the elevating direct km of a gardener or florlat, who woqld tin preea upon him regularity of habits, together with a Working knowledge of Alnntaand their rnltnre, it -would go a great way toward putting a hoy on the right track.** ?Lv\ CHINA'S GREAT WALL Wonder of World is Literally Wall of Blood. m" For Twenoy-One Centuries It Hat Ho maln?d the Moit Amazing Con struction of Human' Handa? Builder's Name Curaad. Pekln.-Best known by repute of all the woudera of the world. the great wall of Chlua haa remained for 21 oenturlea the moat amazing construe* tlon of huinau bauda. liulued and broken aa It la, it la clear at first sight that the amount of human labor required to build thla majestic barrier (a without parallel on earth. Fifteen hundred inilea Ion*, with additional loops that add another 1,000 inilea, there were originally 26,000 watch towera upon it. The wall waa built at the end of the third century before Chriat by the drat, and perhapa the greatest, of all Chluese emperors. Che-H wang-te, -prince of Tain, succeeded as a boy to '.he throne of a comparatively small kingdom und at once began to put Into a state of order and defence a territory that long had been allowed to degenerate Into a mere prey to an nual northern invaders. After a few rears the young king assumed tlie ityle of emperor end organized the forces of what for the first lime In Natory wna China. For he at ODce lave to the whole of this new empire '.ho name of hla own small state. Mo then marched out against the Tar 'urn, hla hereditary and perennial tnemles In the north. After routing 'hese marauding pests he waa re called for the usual oriental need of 8ec'tion of Great Wall of China. crushing out the seeds of rebellion at tome. It was probably In order that ?e should not again And himself thus between two enemies that he con :elved the gigantic defense of which the larger part remains to thlB day. Undeterred by the magnitude of the task and the terrible loss of life -.hat its construction must Involve, Che-Hwang-te gave the word and the ?luge structure slowly forged its way from many centers at once along the entire northern boundary of what was then the Chinese empire. Che-Hwang te enlisted the workers in many ways and from many quarters. Some of his presB gang work was hardly cred Ituble. for It Is on record that the mere possession of a book condemned the wretched owner to four years' hard labor on the wall. But as the Chinese proverb has it: "The annihilation of one generation has proved the salvation of others," and for many centuries the great wall| served Its purpose well. Disappointment generally await* the mortal who has heard much about some celebrated object and does visit It; bo seldom does the reality come up to expectation. But the great wall Is not overrated. Be hold it by starlight or moonlight, gaze on it In twilight or In sunlight; view !t through tire haze or a dust fog, or the spindrift of a rain shower, or botween the flakes of a snowstorm, ever is the wall one great, gray, gaunt, still specter of the past, crest ing the' mountain peak or reposing In the shady valley. So vast is it that perhaps alone of all man's handiwork It could be discerned from the moon. So vast is It that were its materials disposed around the earth at the equator they would provide a wall eight feet high and three feet thick. When we reflect on the labor need ed to erect It we slowly divine the toll exacted from countless thou-, sands, the sweat and tears and blood that must have been shed and we are prepared to hear that after two mil lennia the name of Che is cursed all along the wall by the descendants of those who were driven to the hateful task. Who labored In deathly fear lest when fletfh and blood failed to re spond to the taskmaster's scourge, flesh and blood should be hurled Into tho mass of concrete to provide more material for the all devouring mon ster. It is a wall of blood! BOGUS COIN MADE IN SCHOOL Scholar*' Parents Used Structure as Counterfeiting Plant at Night? Outfit Found. Buda-Pesth.?A remarkable ator> of tbe manufacture of spurious money comes from the little village of Oros slama. The educational authorities had been advised that the village school house heedeJrcpalrtng,xna 6HS day a commission srrlved ur?xpect edly to examine-the building Daring the course of the inspection fn one of theclassrooms a strange looking apparatus waa found; which proved to he a press for *hii? manu facture Of bank notes further searches revealed a small cloaet which liad been turned Into a rrRuJar were bsgfuls of copper coins. iSfe New Farming Opportunity SPUR FARM LANDS ARE FERTILE FARM LANDS We sre cutting up the great Spur ltanch into farm* and sru Helling di rt it as owners (no selling commis sion loads the price) in quarter sec tions and upward* to actual home seekers only?no simulative pur chasers desired. The developing former add* to tho value of the lands while the speculator takes profit without contributing to it. No where in the farming world is there an equal opportunity to secure a fine farming home in a wonderful new country at low prices and easy terms?$12.00 to $18.00 per aero, one-fifth down. No boll weevil; 110 hog cholera; fine, invigorating, healthy climate. The man who now rents or wants to farm mora acres has here the chance of a lifetime. The Wichita Valley Hail road runs to the heart of our holdings of G?3 square miles. For full particulars with free il lustrated pamphlet address OH AS. A. JONES, Mgr. for N. M. Swenson & Hons, Spur, Dickens County, Texas. AS HE UNDERSTOOD r THEM Apprentice Carried Out Orders of His Employer, but the Result Was Sad. "Now, William," the old fnrinor Bald to his new apprentice, "I want thee to mind what 1 do nay to thee, to he sharp and attentive and to delay not in carrying out my Instructions." "Ay. ay, zur," replied William. "First, now, I want thee to take out the old white mare and hav^e her shod." "Ay, ay, zur," said William, and de parted. He returned two bourn later und the old fanner questioned him. "Thee hast not been quick, lad," he Raid, reprovingly, "but If thee ha?t done thy work as I ordered thee tho^ shalt he forgiven. Didst thee have the mare shod, as I t-elled thee?" "Ay, ay, zur!" replied William, beaming. "Didst thou not hear the gun? I shot her myself and I've Ju*.. buried her."?London Answera. SCRATCHED TILL BLOOD RAN "When my boy was about three monthB old his head broke out with a raBh which whh very Itchy and ran a watery fluid. Wo tried everything we could but ho got wotbo all the time, till it spread to hiB arms, legB and then to his entire body. He got so bad that ho cam? near dying. The rash would itch so that he would scratch till the blood ran, and a thin yellowish stuff would bo all over his pillow in the morning. I had to put mittens on hiB hands to prevent him tearing his skin. He was so weak and run down that he took fainting ?spells as if he were dying. He was almost a skeleton and his little hands were thin like claws. "He was bad about eight months when we tried Cuticura Remedies. I had not laid him down in his cradle in the daytime for a long while. I washed him with Cuticura Soap and put on one application of Cuticura Ointment and he was so soothed that he could sleep. You don't know how glad I was he felt better. It took one box of Cuticura Ointment and pretty near one cake of Cuticura Soap to cure him. I think our boy would have died but for th? Cuticura .Remedies and I shall always remain a firm friend of them. There has been no return of the trouble. I shall be glad 1 to ^iave you publish thlB true state* ment of his cure." (Signed) Mrs. M. C. Maltland, Jasper, Ontario, May 27, 1910. THE WRETCH. Mrs. Appleworm?Mercy 1 My hus band has left me and eaten half the house before he went. CURE THAT CATARRH Our climate with Its sudden changes is conducive to catarrh?which is a chronic inflammation of the mucous membrane surface of head?nose or throat. One month's local treatment / with Pa*tine Toilet Antiseptic will con vince the most skeptical that Paxtlne is not a paliatlve but a specific for all catarrhal conditions. Paxtine is a perfectly harmless ah* tlseptlc and germicide In powder form which contains all of the antiseptto qualities of liquid antiseptics, but with other valuable cleansing, germi cidal, and healing Ingredients added. Just a little la a glass of water as needed?used as a spray and gargle, will not only remava tha-aoeumulated secretlons, but heals the Inflammation, destroys the germs of disease, and dis pels the disagreeable odor caused by chronlo dttarrh. ~ .. For sale at all druggists. 26c and. 500 a boa^ or postpaid upon receipt ef price. -The Paxton Toilet Company, Boston. Mass. Send for a free sample. Love never clogs a man's memory. He is scarcely off with the old udtll h? Is on with the new. . ? - ..... ... MOW TO CUHM KHRt'MATlSH. 1 The c*u?o of rlveumattam I* excea* u.u? **14 In the blood. To curc rheum a?t?..'? till* *cld mu*t be expelled from the Uhnuinttlim la an Inter nal u'4 rmjuir** an Intermtl ' I emedy, Itubb.i.v With oil* and llnl went* may en#* tl?? pain, but they will no mur? euro rheuui?M*n> thun (mint will change the fiber of rotten wood. t;?rf? It hrutuntlaiw To ??ay I vtti Hclt-nco ha* discovered a perfect and complete cure called It heumaelde. Te*t~ id In hundred* of o?ie?, It Iihi effected nmrvelou* cure* Hheumaclde remote* t)i? ciuim., get* at the Joint* from iix? tn?lde, *Mreep? the polaon* out of the *yktein. tone* up the *tomach. regulate* the bowel* and Kidney* Bold by drug' kI*i* at 60c, and tl; In the tablet form at IRc. *nd 50o., by mall. ltooklet free. Jtobbltt Chemical Co.. Baltimore. Md. ??U At The Jwlut* frwu* The Inalde. Subject to Rsttrlctlons. "I was cleanln' to' u new lady lur' week an' de dirt In her kitchen whi u Might, po' thing." vald Rose, Mr?, Fro ser's durk?klnned charwoman. "Hut why did *h? let" It get like that7" a?ked the lady, "I duiino', ma'am. Guess she never seen It. Home cooks, you know, In mighty psrtic'lar 'bout 'lowln' de madam In de kitchen. IJey 'Jes take dere orders from her upstairs an' uhe don't have no call to go into de kitch en at all." Met Hll? Match. Alkali Ike?They have Just taken Roaring Hill to the hospital, t'iulol Pete?What happened to him? Alkali Iko?He tried to break up a suffragist meeting.?Judge. Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CAHTOHIA, a safe and vure remedy for Infants and children, and see that It Dears the Signature of In I'se For Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria ' Tho alleviation of (suffering is one of the meaiiH by which the advance- , ment of our race Is secured.?Sir .lumen Criehton-Hrowne. For RIIC A I>A<II ? III<lib* ( AIM DINK Whether from Coldtt, Heat. B|uuiac(i or Nwyoiin Trouble*, ('upuUliie will rellrv* you. \ lt'M 1 lull lit lllfllkHllt to t Akv -ItClM llUtU*<M utrl.v. Try It. 10c , Wiiv., ttnd to eri(lM ul ilruif wtorrx. All married men lire heroes, but they etin't always prove it. Jlr? Wlnelow'n Soothing for Children t?rlhlu|(. ?i>ft?im th?! Kti'tix. rnlucfk in lift muni tion, hMu.vm pnlu.i'urvi wind cylic. it*: u Uilllr. , A man 1h seldom arrest.eu for strik ing an attitude. ARE YOU FREE ?FROM? Headache*, Colds, Pains, Constipation, Sour StomarH, Dimness > If you are not, the RMt c0cdivc, prompt and pleaiaat method of getting rid of then m %? take, now and then, a d^w itux w (ui of the ever refreshing and IwAf beneficial laxative remedy?Sywp of Kiss and Elixir of Senna, It m : well \nown throughout the wmAI at the best of family laxative rowan i dies, because it acts so mAy/mA strengthens naturally wimoiA ins tating the system in any way. To get its beneficial effects it i? always necessary to buy the i foe, manufactured by the GaT Fig Syrup Co., bearing the _ of the Compariy, plainly printed the front of every package. Ia GUARANTEED to Stop and perma nently cure that ter rible itching. It im compounded for that: purpose and your money will be promptly ntnl?| WITHOUT QUB0TION if Hunt's Car? feile to cms* Itch, Bcmidi, Tetter, Rhwg Worm or ?ny other DUeaee. 50c At your druggist's, or by < direct if he hmn't it Manufactured ocUv tijr A. B. RICHARDS MEDICINE CO.. Stem.Km DAISY FLY KILLER B&SSSSm5? VmUh*.?>i mn m UiftOMIflHBM IWhlUAlM. fcnH|^?wU? EVERYTHING FOTOGRAtlC I'rof.-HMtuiUil *1 HiMlittiK for tniMuni bjr wll. AttnitH fur Kenyon Purt?bl?T?k?-Dowttllouw*. Willi' tuduy for )iterntur?. A?b? ttfreM fwt* AiKi: rtiilng, Atlaittn, Ga.and Wfl?hUlrfW*M?cMI CL \/ P Q if J'rtil have two band* PrttT. O. Oc. Y I* Driuiiituir will touch jruu. <Mr \ ^ oolle?(a iu U. S. Witfc-?ho|Mi ?w Si'Ttr.l; $30 for i'oUi'w, u>oU*iid position?t (too*' wiiuci*. CiitnixlKHiiSii iiald for biinsrlOtf ?Knd<nt?u Ailkui* Uarber ColU<?, 10 E.-MttctaUll. ilUak,l<k. Weak Heart Many people suffer from week heart*. They ?T Mpcrir ence shortness of breath on exertion, pain over the he*rcr or dizzy feelings, oppressed breathing after mesbMrlUt' eyes become blurred, their heart U not lufielMthr a to pump blood to the extremities, and they bar* mUI and feet, or poor appetite because of weekeoed blood I to the stomach. A heart tonic and alterative should bet which has no bad after?effeot. Suoh is Dr. PierooV* Medical Disoovery, which oootain* no dan^eroon.narootiee nor aloohol. . - Tb? InmdlmU, u attested under oath, an Stone root (Cc ?<?), blood root (Smajmlaarim Canadensis), OoMon Soal root ( . 9 /*), Queea't root {Stilllag I* Srlvmtlcm). Block Cherrybarfc (Prvmit VU\ Mandrake root (Podopkyfluat RtlUtum), with triple refined glycerine, in a acUatllk: laboratory In ? way that no druggist could Imitate. This tonio oontains no aloohol to shrink up the red blood oorpusoleef the other hand, it increases their number and they become round'fftd! . It belps the human system in the oonstant manufacture oi rich* red bloti. help* the atomaoh to assimilate or take up the proper elements from thereby helping digestion and ourinj dyspepsia, heart-burn and man (ortable symptoms, stops exoeesive tissue waste in oooyalesoence from fsfMj for the run-down, ansemio, thin-blooded poople, the " Pisoorery " k ffc and vitalizing. Stick to this safe and sane remedy, and ret use all *' jwtasj medicines offered by the drujiist who is lookinM (or a Iar| but Dr. Pieroe's Golden Medical Discovery will do you Jisooverr MMmWf efuee all")?tMiMl* larger profit. ,.wiMfl rou hall m nih |mU ilia COLT DISTBMPB1 ?0?n b* h*Bdl?d T?rr Tb oagua of lu fewI i?l? on nn <onn? or dliterop?r. B?l r*e? i On? bottl* auarant?ed to car* oai j VlDdoiMOT <1ruj(gllt??nd h*rjMM< rn?hnfkc*arer?. Cut (how* how 1 Ik>4kl?tfrlT<MfT*i7thlnir. Lootl* boi*? rfiuedy laexliUao*?tw?lr?] SPOHN MEDICAL Mm U w<1 BMtoriol.?UU, ? . ^y1.' ? "I'.1 A Country School for Girls in New York City Beat Feature* of Country and City Ufm Out-of-door Sports on School Park of 35 acres near the Hudson Academic Course from Primary Class to Graduation. Upper Class Special Studetits. Music and Art. Certificate admits to College. School Day Pupils. MUs Bangs and Miss Whiton, Riverdale Ave., near 2$ ? ^ Douglas Spiring Styles include more I and Up-to-Date Shape* in Oxfords [ and High Cuts than ever before produced. | W.L.Douglaa warrants evory pair of hie shoes to hold th&? ihuyb, m look ?iid nt hotter and wear longer than any other make, giving ? you better value for the money than you can obtain olaowhero. VrBKWARC OF MUBMTiTUTEM.*T? The genuine have W. L. DonglM nam* and the retail price ilmnpcil on the bottom, wlifrh gunrantMi full Tklne ?D<J PK>tMt? the wearer Hgiilntt high price* ami Inferior shoes* _ If your <1?*lercannot iur ? ~* * " for Mall order A " pttpetd. ? m Iiiti wtiircr M^ltlllBl Illgll llllgnor inOM? ler eannot supply you with the genuine W.L.Do*rU? ?hrv#ji wrlta r #"<>*? ??nt direct from furtorr to wearer, all chArges Wi jL Bwugliit, 141 Bpmrk Ml.t ilrockua, MUM. BOYS' met ?a.oo,?? ?oiim? Constipation 3 is at the bottom of most common family comp as headache, biliousness, pimples, sick stomach, in colic, etc. Treatment of these symptoms only, enough to bring about a permanent cure. What it is a remedy that actually relieves constipation, the the trouble, and cleanses the blood from the which the system has failed to throw off in manner. If you suffer from any of these symptoms, use Black-Dra the favorite remedy wherever It is known, for all mon ailment* of stomach, liver and bowels. Armstrong, of Blackwells, Qa., says: "During t years, 1 have used Thcdford> Black-Draught: and would not be without it in my the children for colds and it cures tfrttto, with constipation very bad, and not ttfttil ! used your rented?* ^It is^worth I The true value and merit of this rell tested by ite immense popularity, I Try it Price 25c." Be sure to insist?