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SHE GOT WHAT SHE WANTED Q ' ft-n? This Woman Had to Insist strongly, but It Paid ChJcafO, suffered from a fe. Baato weakness and stouttoh trouble. and I went to the ?tore to get i' bottle of Lydla K. Wnk ham*? Vegetable Compound; but the clerk did not want to let me have it be maid it was no good and wanted me to try eoinething else, but knowing all about it 1 in. ?isted and finally got it, and I am ?o gutu x out, lor it na* cured me. "I know of so many cases where wo Ku have been cured by J,ydia E. l'ink n's Vegetable Compound that I can ?ay to every Buffering woman if that medicine does not help her. there is nothing that wilL"?Mrs. Jaxktzxl #008 Arch bt., Chicago, 111. This is the age of substitution, and women who want a ctare should insist upon Lydla E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound JuBt as this woman aid, and not accept something else on which the jjUmggtet ?mi make a little more profit. Women who are passing through this critical period or who are suffering from any of those distressing ills pe culiar to their sex should not lose night of the fact that for thirty years Lyala Ifi. pinkham's Vegetable Compound, which is made from roots and herbs, baa been the standard remedy for fe male ills. In almost every community you will tind women who have been restored to health by Lydla E. Pink, barn's Vegetable Compound. - If you don't believe honesty Is the best policy, try it. Garfield Tea corrects constipation by arousing the digestive organs to their in tended activity. Composed of Herbs. Isn't It shout time to bury the dead languages? HE WOULD DO. Mr. De Wealth?Have you any ex perience as chauffeur? The Applicant?Well, I can show you the receipts for the fines I have paid. Properly Thankful. Clark Howell of Atlanta tells of the sad case of an elderly darky in Georgia, charged with the theft of ?ome chickens. The negro had the misfortune to be defended by a young and inexperienced attorney, although it is doubtful whether any one could i have secured his acquittal, the com mission of the crime having been proved beyond all doubt. The darky received a pretty severe sentence. --"Thank yo' sah," said he cheerfully, addressing the Judge when the sen tence had been pronounced. "I)at'6 mighty hard, sah, but it ain't any thing what I expected. I thought, aah, dat between my character and dat speech of my lawyer dat yo'd hang me, Bhore!" The Real Reason. "I am going to send you my little kitten to keep you company." "How good of you." "Don't mention it. Besides, we are moving." Remember, there is a limit to hu man endurance. The friends who ?tand up for you may tire in the course of time and proceed to sit down on you. Breakfast A Pleasure when you have Post J Toasties with cream A food with snap and zest L.that wakes up the appetite. Sprinkle crisp Pott Toasljes over a saucer of fresh strawberries, add some cream And a. little smzar? Appetizing Nourishing Convenient , "The Memory Lingers ?3ZTI2' tf-u SoUL* JTT POSTUM CBREAL CO.. ?aula Cr*?k. Mich. Seeking Wives for Titled Noblemen NICW YORK.?American heiresses who amy be pining for alliance* with Austria'* titled youth need pine no longer. The way Ih open to theiu, and the method of acquiring a prince or a count of either the Bohemian or Tyrolean variety la ao almple tha^ it la within reach of nil. There ia no mystery about It. Miss Yrma Bleyer of Vienna hua arrived hero to arrange It all. "AVe In Vienna know," aaya the pret ty matchmaker, "that In the United States there are many daughters of millionaires who have had every pos sible luxury showered upon them since their birth, but who long for what has always seemed to them unattainable, namely, pride of family and social po sition. 1 can give them both. "I have on my list two princea, brothers, one twenty-three and the Other twenty-five years. Both are offi cers in tU? Austrian army, aud their regiment*!* stationed at Vienna. Their family Is of ancient lineage and they own two castles In Jiohemla. Each has a fortune of 13.000,000. A coudl tlon which must be met In the casus , of both my princ??, should I find wiv??? for them. U (hut the American girls must bring them fortunes equal to their own. "Another of my client* lit a Bohe mian count, lie Is thirty-eight yWur? old. He has traveled extensively and Is familiar with American customs. Then there Is a baron, a Tyrolean no Neman, whose social rank Is so high that only an archduke precedes him at social or ofDclal functions. He Is thirty-four year* old. ... "There Is one of my clients of whom I cau speak freely because be has re turned to Austria after a visit to this country, during which he made jour iieys to several American cities, In cluding H< Ix>uls. Chicago and Cleve land. 1 refer to Count Hugo Chris IuIiiIkk His family estate Is at Ysterela, Austria. ?'Count Chrlstalnlgg. who Is about thirty, visited America on a furlough of two months and returned to Aus tria about six weeks ago after meeting Beveral heiresses. Two of them he found to be Impossible. -,Cne wm very pretty of face, but so fat that her fort, tune of many millions poesassed no attraction for the couut. Another par took of fried potatoes with her fingers, which may or may not be good form here, but which is abhorrent to a well bred Austrian. But he has hopes of finding one that will be possible." City of Winnipeg Owns Its Utilities WINNIPEQ,,Man.?Before the cloBe of the present year this city will be looked upon hb the greatest ex ponent of public ownership on the American continent. Its Investment In public utilities is now more than $30,000,000. It Is nearly a quarter of a century since the city council laid the founda tion of municipal ownership by buy ing out the Winnipeg Water Works company and establishing a municipal plant. So successful did the venture prove that when the city decided to lay asphalt pavements some years later it was decided to Install a mu nicipal asphalt plant and the many miles of pavement in this city have been laid by it. Trouble with the Winnipeg Electric company, which controls the street railway franchise, gas, electric light an'd power franchise, resulted In the city voting $3,000,000 for a municipal power plant. Out on the Winnipeg river. "65 miles from the city, a plant Is now nearing completion. The near completion of this plant and the proB pectB that the city would build Its own street railway system, led the Winnipeg Electric company to sell out to the city. The purchase price is $18,000,000. Winnipeg's telephone system It also conducted under public ownership, for I QELIEVE ' IH OVVKINC PUBLIC UTILITIES ? IT ?A VtS UTROUfcLB it ia a portion of the system extend ing all over the province and owned by the Manitoba government. In this city there are over 17,000 telephones, the- rates being $24 a year for resi dences and $48 for office phones. Winnipeg owns its stone quarries in the vicinity -tot the city, and there, Under a staff of clvl^employes, mines the products for paving the macadam streets and the crushed stone for many purposes. A force of city employes also col lects the garbage and refuse and takes It.to the civic lnclneratora for destruc tion, and when a Wlnnlpeger dies he can be burled, if he so wills, in the Municipal cemetery, for the city owns a large plot of land on the western outskirts of the city, in which its dead have been buried for many years. . Thirty years ago Winnipeg was a fur post. Now It is one of the most rapidly growing cities on the conti nent and Is the largest wheat market In the world. Whistle Takes Place of Curfew Bell KANSAS CITY. Kan.?Curfew must ring in Kansas, and its Bounding must be heeded. The \V. C. T. U. has determined that too little attention is paid to the curfew law. particularly in Kansas City. Kan., and asked thi city commissioners to Bee that It 1b enforced. In this city, where, the sounding of a steam whistle on the packing plant takes the place of the old-time bell, it Is alleged that It Ib no longer "the curfew whistle," but is generally spoken of as "the nine o'clock whistle," from the fact that it sounds at that hour In the evening. Ten years ago the W. C. T. U. took up the matter of the boys' remaining out late at night and determined to put a stop to it. They secured the adoption by most of the city councils of the Sunflower state of ordinances similar to the New England curfew laws. In this city, which was far too large for any bell to be heard In every Bection, a grave question arose aa to how the boys were to know when to "make it home." After some discus sion the packing houses solved the problem by agreeing to blow the whis tle at nine o'clock. All was well,-and when the loud blast of the big steam siren, which can be heard forty miles on a clear day, sounded at nine o'clock the boys scampered home. If they did not tho policeman took them to the station and they were warned "never again to be out after curfew/' The women were satisfied and all went well. But the boys grew up and neglected to Impress on their younger brothers a dread of the curfew. The brothers did not Bcaraper home at the sound, and the people began to think little of It. Meantime the housewives had be come accustomed to regulate their clocks by the sound, and at nine o'clock they went to see if the time piece lost or gained. The habit spread, and one by one the inen greW accus tomed to regulate their watches by the whittle. Now every night the watch of each man who works In the city comes out of his pocket almost by force of habit at tfte first sound of the whistle. State Is to Have Egg-Laying Contest Mountain grove, mo.-ad egg laying contest to begin Septem ber 1 and last one year 1b being ar ranged by the Missouri Agricultural college and will be held at the state poultry experiment Btatlon here. It will be the first contest of Its kind held In America and will no doubt at tract much attention among breeders of fine poultry. Australia pnd New Zealand have similar coutests and plans for Bome thlng of this sort are under way both In Philadelphia and In San Francisco, but the first In the field with a defi nite arrangement 1b Missouri. * Entries will be limited to fifty, and the first 50 breeders to make entries will furnish the hens. Each owner Is limited to six hens, with the priv ilege of substituting a hen for one that become* sick or injured. Fifty pens will be built, exactly alike, and each pen of hens will have the same food and treatment. ' Managers of the' contest have made rule so that each tries win be designated by number. The owner and the management will know who owns the hens, but no one else will have this Information, unless the owner cares to give It out. This Ir dono to protect an owner In caso Ills hens make an Indifferent showing. There will be a number of prizes offered for the best showing at the end of each month, also special prizes for the best showing made by repre sentatives of different breeds. For the result of the year's contest there will be other valuable prizes and own ers who capture one of these will And It worth much to their business, for report* of the contest wUl be pub lished in newspapers, magazines and poultry, journalsall over the country. Considered Oum as Food. It-la said that pa*i^ pound* of chewing cum were consum ed In tho United 8tatoe lest yaar. This had hardly the sustaining value of cum ? whlcW waa chewed by Mexican soldiers at the tlm* of the Spanish In* v salon, and la Mentioned by sarly Spanish writers. A piaea of gum la the month was enough food (or a dams march. The gum was obtained from sr. . ^ Origin of "Blackguard." mack guard Is said to com* from a nickname applied to m.group of boys always on band to black tlbio-boota of the horse guard? who paarded at St James park. JLondon, although Web iter gives tta probable origin as com tng from the eculttons. smutted from handling kitchen utensils. Uy now a person of Km character, es SHE KNEW ALL ABOUT SILAS Mr*. Hopkins Well Understood ths Frugality of H?r Esteemed Fallow Townsman. Mr*. Wiggins had "run In" for a minute to talk over the latest newt of the village with her friend, Mrs Hopkins. "Do you know," aha aald, "they tall me that Mr. Magee didn't aub acrlhe hut 60 ceuta to the mlnlater'a aalary. That doean't aeem possible, doea It T" "To anybody that kuowa Btlas Ma fee real well, It doea," replied Mrs. Hopkins. "You haven't lived in this town all your Ufa, Mia* Wiggins, and you don't know what Kllaa ia capable of. Why, 1 remember once when he wan a youug fellow, going to singing school with the rest of ua, we got up a picnic. "One of the girla apoke up and said ahe'd bring some chicken eAudwich.ea "I'll bring aome froated cake,' nay* "I'll brlug aome froated cake,' bays another. "'I'll brlug some sliced ham,' Buys another. " Til fetch aome Jelly and cookies,' auya somebody else, and no It went on till we had moat everything we could eat, promised. Then one of the boys who had no sister* said he would bring the coffee. That gave Silas his | chance. He'd been sitting by. listen | lng to It all, and now he spoke up real brisk, and says he: " 'I'll bring the water for the cof fww!' . "No, Mlu* AVlgglns, I ain't surprised a mite at hla subscribing only BO cents. The only surprising thing la that It wasn't a quarter."?Youth's Companion. THREE CURED OF ECZEMA "When a child, I Buffered fight years with ecrema. I could not Bleep at night, and had sores all over iny chest Wo had doctors and none could do any good, until my mother saw the advertisement of the Cuti cura Remedies In the paper. We used the Cutlcura Soap, Ointment and Resolvent, and they cured me of eczema. I also used them on my five children. Two of them had eczema very badly. When my children had eczema, I was not worried at all, as I knew the Cutlcura Remedies would do their work. * They had sores all over their heads, their hair would fall out, and they would scratch all night and day. They had It on their heads, face, and In back of the ears so that 1 thought their ears would drop off. 1 washed their heads and bodies with Cutlcura Soap and they are as clean as the driven snow. Cutlcura Soap and Ointment also cured my children of ringworm. I would not be without the Cutlcura Remedies. They are wonderful." (Signed) Mtb. Violet Cole. 26 8. Red field St., Philadelphia, Pa., Oct 29, 1910. Cutlcura Soap and Ointment are sold throughout the world. Send to Potter Drug & Chem. Corp., sole props., Boston, for free book on Bkin and scalp disease* and their treat ment And They Adjourned. The Mutual Admiration society and was called to order. "What of all the things in this world do you like best?" psked the girl angling for a compliment. "Beefsteak!" cried he, taken ur> awares, and a moment later the *o clety adjourned. DI8TEMPER In all its forma among all ages of horaes, as well as doga, cured and others in earn* stable prevented from having the diseaM with SPOHN'S DISTEMPER CURE. Every bottle guaranteed. Over OOO.OOfl bottles Bold last year $.80 and $1 00. Any good druggist, or send to manufacturers. Agents wanted. Spohn Medical Co., Speo Contagious Diseases, Goshen, Ind Prlvlleflo. VlBltor?Why don't you get out of this town? You can never make a success In this dun hole. Native?No, but 1 can always tell what I could have done elsewhere If I'd ever have gone away.?Puck. SHAKE] INTO YOUR SHOES ?lien's Foot-Base. th? sntlseptlo powder. It's tin greatest comfort discovery of the age. Allan's Foot Base makes tight or new shoes feel easy. It Is a certain relief for sweating, callous, swollen, tired aching feet. Always use It to Break In New shoes Try It today. Sold everywhere, 24 cents. Dnn'l acrdpt any iub$Utut*. For FRBB trial packs** address Allan B. Olmstod, Le Roy, N. Y. Getting On. "Well, little boy, did you go to the clrcuB the other day?" "Yes'm. Pa wanted to go, so I had to go with him." .HILL TONIC. You know what you are taking. The formula Is plainly printed on every bottle, showing It Is simply Quinine and Iron In a taste torm. Tho Quinine drives out the malaria end the Iron builds up the syitem. bold by sJJ dealers for 10 years. Frio* 60 cent*. But few novels are written for think ing people; most of them are written for the entertainment of women. PorfOLDt Slid GRIP Hicks' Capudink Is the best remedy?re the aching and fe^rlshness?cures the Cold and restores normitl conditions It's liquid?sfTeelH Immediately. 10c., 2&c., and 60c. At drag stores. And lots of people who think they hav^ nothing but trouble don't know what trouble really 1*.' Ere Salve la Aseptic Tabes Prc^anta Infection?Murine Eye Salve In Tubes tor nil Eye Ills. No Morphine. Ask Druggists for New Rtze 26c. Val* uable Eye Book in Each Package. It It difficult to convince the head of the house that two heads are bet ter than one. . Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets first put up 40 years ago. They regulate and invigor ate. stomach, liver and bowels. Sugar> Wrath and wine nnvell the heert of friend to friend.?Plutarch. T.?'. . Start afresh this Spring?cleanse and purify the system by a coarse of Garfield Tea, Herb laxative and blood ourifier. ? halting speech may be the result of s-jhrne excuse. *^~a? ^sas-ia.. ? n ..*??_ , - - ? -a ? MV mMwk? Hootmwjr nymp ror i niiafft t teething, softens the guvs, reduces |?r tlesu aMajrs swtLa. eurse wta4 oollc. He i YOUTH LIVES IN THE PAST I Wisconsin Boy Rur?d by ? Talante* Rocluae la a Most Accom plished Latlnlat. Hayton. Wta.?Guatave itauman ot tliI# place U so complete a 1 .ntlnlwt that, could he b?> transported to *n dent Home. Km language would be en tirely familiar to him. Aalde from hU unique knowledge of lwiiln be la alto gether untaught. He bun never attend ed school u day. can apeak Kugllnh not at all and German only In tl\e col loquial foriu common here, lie la II year a old. When he waa {bree yeara old he waa adopted by Henry Uauinan, a tal Gustave Uiumin, ented recluse who has lived here In u hovel that was once a stable, for many years Disgusted, he said, with everything pertaining to modern life. Bauman determined to rear his footer son In the atmosphere of a bygone age. The clasBlc tongue of Home was the only language taught to the boy by his eccentric parent, who was well able to follow his part, he having been a noted Latin scholar In Europe. When the lad was ten years old he possei-stnl a knowledge of Latin that the school taught youth of twice his age could not hope ever to equal. Now, he speaks the ancient tongue so well find reads and writes It with Buch fluency that he may well be said to have revived a dead language. The elder Bauman's desire to bring up the boy In an atmosphere of aloof ness from all that Is modern has been well carried out. The youth has never ridden on a train, used a telephone or In any way mingled In the life of the vlllago. which, narrow as It is, repre sents to him the great outside world, full of evils and temptations. BIBLE THAT BROUGHT $50,000 Rare Book Which Henry E. Huntlnfl ton Bought From the Robert Hoe Collection. New York.?This Gutenberg Dlble, from the Robert Hoe collection, was Rold In New York City at auction to Henry E Huntington, nephew of the late Collis P. Huntington, for $50,000 The Gutenberg Bible was printed some time between_L4iiO_and 1455. The value of the copies of the Gutenberg Bible lies not alone in their beauty, great as it is hb an example of the bookmaker's art. nor In their rarity, for there are thirty-four copies known The Gutenberg Bible. to be in existence. The Gutenberg Bible 1b the first book known to have beert printed from movable types. The catalogue of the Hoe auction says of the copy recently sold: "Printed on vellum of the finest quality, It Is In remarkably clean and fresh condition, the bold gothic char acters standing out with undiminished grandeur. Whereas all copies vary slightly, the above is one of the few known to exist with headings at the commencement of the Epistle of St. Jerome, and the First Book of Genesis printed in red. it being presumed that on account of the difficulty encoun tered In printing in a second color this undertaking waa discontinued. In the British museum copy these apace* were left blank. The other chapter headings throughout are written In red In a contemporary gothic hand, thui preserving the symmetry of the page, while the beautiful Illuminated initials and decorations, taken in con junction with the antique and maHslve appearance of the binding, contribute to make this a truly magnificent ex ample, if not one of the finest in exis tence. The two leaves, Fo. 269 and 640. which are In facsimile, constl tute the only defects." 1,800 Foreign Girls Lost. Indianapolis, Ind.?^'Eighteen hun dred Immigrant girls were lost track of after having been received at Ellis , Island, and put aboard trainn for Chi cago and other points in the west, in the last year and a half," Miss Grace Abbott of Hull House, Chicago, said I? discussing in the biennial conven tion of the Young Women's Christian association of America, the pit>blem of caring for immigrant girls. Miss Abbott advocated a federal trnmigrs-JI tion bureau in Chicago, Maaji check ~0h the wort of the white slavers," Immigrant girls deserted tbe\gualnt shawls and aprose of their native lands for 'the hobble skirt all too tmtcbty. Abbott said. Australia Rfcf? In Llbrarl?a. Victoria's (Australia) five hundredth | free library wan open* d lately One I and all of iho older Ulnar! are well patrouUed. The gro?a revenue re ceived by them In the aggregate from halls, members' subscription*, and grants Is about $340,000. There are j ubout u million books In these libra ries, and It was claimed that some tl??nk like 3,600,000 vlgits are i>Hld to i them In the year. While works of rtc tlon are read to the greatest extent, general literature and history receive a good dial of attention. Appalling E*cu?o< "This 1b the fifth time have been brought before ine this term," said the Judge, frowning severely up on the prisoner at the bar. "Yes, your honor," said the prisoner "You know a man Is judged !>y the company l>** keeps, and 1 like to be seen talkin' to your honor for the sake of me credit." "All right," said the Judge. "Officer, take this man over to the island and tell them to give him a credit of 30 days."?Harper's Weekly. MAI.ARIA AND KI.NIUUCD IIIKBANKS Cured by that wonderful remedy i-iuir Ilatek. Once used, nothing else will be even considered. It removes the atrona eat and most obstinate Fevers "I have used 'ICIUIr llitbrk' for pust eight years as a. preventive and cure 'for Mularia. 1 take pleasure in recom mending It to my friends.-? P. A. Simp son, W. U. Tel. Co., Washinaton. I). C. lOIUIr llabek GO cents, ail druggists or Klocsewskl & Co., Washington L). C. Hypnotic. Margaret?I think Mr. Haker could easily hypnotize people, Katherlne?Why do you think ao? Margaret?He often holds my hand till It fulls asleep,?i'uek. Vor IIK A DA <11K? Mlcka* CAPi niNK Whether froo) Colds, Heat, Htomach or Nerroni? Troubles. i'av>uilliie will relieve you. Ii'm Itutild pleatmut to take acts immedi ately Try U. lOv , H&o , and GO cents at drug stores. Many a mail has discovered that popularity ls.not worth the price. Garfield Tea regulates a lazy liver. Lots of city farmers make a spe clalty of sowing wild oats. Hood's Sarsaparilla Cures all humors, catarrh and rheumaus/h, relieves that tired feeling, restores the appetite^ cures paleness, nervousness, builds up the whole system. ('?et it (<><Ihv in unual li<juki (brna ov chocolated taliieta called fartSUlb?< HUNTS CURE OUAHANTKfcO For FEATHER BEDS SEND US TEH DOLLARS nnd we will nhti> jrou, paid * nW Hfl pound FEATHER BED ?nd ? pmwd P?Ur Pillows. TURNER 4 CORN WELL FulKtr DetUri C>?I>?W?.RC KODAKS ItVVHIIV ora.rKvtrwk***. olut Attention. Prtcc* w??W? Horvtve prompt. 8?u<t for TrUs? Uat uimit ar* fttouu HiiiiiwM, ?. ?l If jrou h*T? two hand* Trmt- t?. <K ' yon. ???# UonaSfloSK VPC If rott h?twohanOt Y KjS Uraiwinff will U*aU * - col leg*T?'W. S. with nro led ; ISO for oou r?c, tools ftild potltiua ftt ?r?gea. CouainlaatonpuM for Vrlngtttff Mmd All.,,.. B.rb.r C?lUt?.H E. WUckrilK. l<?Kl? WANTEDS few wvtik*. Tool* gtTi Hooklst mailed froe. COLLEUK, KICllM' W. N. U.f CHARLQTTB, NO. 28-1911. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription la the beat of all medicinea for the cure of dii diaordcra and weaknesnea peculiar to women. It ia the only preparation of its kind devised by a regularly gradu ated phyaician?an experienced and akilled apccialiat in the diaeaaea of women. . ...... It ia ? aafe medicine in any condition of the ayatem, THE ONE REMEDY which coutaina no alcohol and no injuriqua hnbit-forming drug* and whioh create* no craving for such atimulanta. THE ONE REMEjDY ao good that it* mutn are not afraid to print Ita every ingredient on cach outaide bottle - wrapper end atteat*to the truthfulneaa of the same under oath* It la sold by medicine dealers everywhere, end eny dealer who h?n't It aO get it. Don't take ? substitute of unknown composition for P* IW known composition. No counterfeit is m good as Jhe {emtio* tad the who asya something elae ia "juat u |ood ?? Dr. PUreeV la ? . ,, .. ^? m. -n or ia trying to deoeive you for hia own adlfiah benefit. Suoh ft Mtn tft not to W truated. He ia trifling with vour moat prioeleeft possession yoiMT niey be your life itself. Set that you git what yon ask for. :;l ON the can and IN the can I HOGLESS NOWDRIFT product. It i been imitated colors and snow-FAKE names, but it has never been imitated INSIDE! Thev cannot approach its quality! See that you get SNOWDRIFT outside and inside the can, and you will eat the best of shortenings. One-third less expensive, one value. Buy in tins only. Insist on your rights. Sold by all leading grocers ivho avoid Substitution. Made by The Southern N?w York. fcvMMk, All Need Cardiri Women of all ages need a building, strengthening took; at times, to help them through the hard days that come to all women. Young girls, young women, and matUrf ladles ?all need such a medicine as Cardul, the woman'* tonic. Thousands of women have found Cardutto what they needed, and have told their friends of thtfc bene- i fit received. So, Cardui has come to be known everywhere and has grown more popular each year. You have heard of Cardui; you know about it?but have you triedit? t.rvr'Ti TAKE The Woman's mmAm If not, you are not giving yourself a Cardui has become the standard remedy ?its merit has long been estabHshtt Q^Mrt. Jennie &. Iftfby, Valley "1 was very sick for nearly a Ckath, and was so weak, I coul pillow. In April ! j five bottles. || am glad to I think Cardui is the CardukJl