The Abbeville press and banner. (Abbeville, S.C.) 1869-1924, September 15, 1909, Image 3
I WORTH
MOUNTAINS
OF GOLD
Daring Change of Life,
says Mrs. Chas. Barclay
Graniteville, Vt. ? "I was passing
through the Change of Life and suffered
" from nervousness
t - oirmntnmo anH I
, i.s It is to the entire suit, and if liked s
! t can be worn without the belt as t
ihown in the smaller view. o
The coat is made with fronts, side- c
Ironta, back and aide backs. The t
I about his task. He picks out unerringly
the weak spots in the rockj
wall before him, probes them deep
with cunningly slanted drills and
then breaks the solid bluff into tiny
fragments.
All the time 7000 workmen are
toiling in the yards about him, and
the trains are coming and going every
four minutes. His position is
onerous, yet his responsibility rests
lightly on his shoulders. He is as
quiet and unassuming as a boy and
his laugh is as merry and jovial as
though he had not a care in the
world.?Alcolm.
London was somewhat shocked
I and amused the other day to discover
that the glass front of the portrait
of Prime Minister Asqulth at
the Royal Academy exhibition had
been placarded with a bill inscribed
"Votes For Women."
To aid in the study of high voltages
a short experimental transmission
line has been built in Sweden
adapted to operate at 500.000 volts.
THREE REASONS
Each With Two Legs and Ten Fingers.
I A Boston woman who is a fond
mother writes an amusing article
Kor ovnorionno foo/linP' VlPr
ttUUUb UVil ?vuvv
. boys.
Among other things she says:
I "Three chubby, rosy-cheeked boys,
Bob, Jack and Dick, aged 6, 4 and 2
1 years respectively, are three of our
reasons for using and recommending
the food, Grape-Nuts, for these
youngsters have been fed on GrapeNuts
since infancy, and often between
meals when other children
would have been given candy.
"I gave a package of Grape-Nuts to
a neighbor whose 3-year-old child
was a weazened little thing, ill half
the time. The little tot ate the
"Jrape-Nuts and cream greedily, ana
the mother continued the good work,
and it was not long before a truly
wonderful change manifested itself
.n the child's face and body. The results
were remarkable, even for
^rape-Nuts.
I "Both husband and I use GrapeNuts
every day and keep strong and
well and have three of the finest.
Wealthiest boys you can find in a oay s
march."
Many mothers instead of destroying
the children's stomachs with caniy
and cake give the youngsters a
handful of Grape-Nuts when they are
begging for something in the way .of
sweets. The result is soon shown in
greatly increased health, strength
and mental activity.
"There's a Reason."
Look in pkgs. for the famous little
book, "The Road to Wellville."
Ever read the above letter? A new
one appears from time to time. They
are genuine, true, and fuB of huiuaa
Interest.
h . .
pan truly say that
?! v Hm LydiaE.l'inkham's
Vegetable ComH.
^ sT^EF Pound has proved
;) wortb mountains
Bf : to me> as ^
restored my health
^r-^aBwpl^ never forget to tell
HF m5* frieri<^s what
**> ?/^vsr*cia?w LydiaE. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound has done for me
during this trying period. Complete
restoration to'healt'n means so much
to me that for the sake of other suffering
women I am willing to make my
trouble public so you may publish
this letter."?Mrs. Chas. Barclay,
R.F.D.,Graniteville, Vt.
No other medicine for woman's ills
has received such wide-spread and unqualified
endorsement. No other medicine
we know of has such a record
of cures of female ills as has Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.
For more than 30 years it has been
curing female complaints such as
inflammation, ulceration, local weaknesses,
fibroid tumors, irregularities,
periodic pains, backache, indigestion
and nervous prostration, ana it is
unequalled for carrying women safely
through the period'of change of life.
It costs but little to try Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and,
as Mrs. Barclaysays.it is "worth mountains
of gold to suffering women.
A Skewer of Frogs.
IS the Paris Halles more than 4,C00
pounds of frogs' legs are sold
daily. They come mostly from the
Vendee, where the soil is flat and
Bwamoy. Frogs are exported now in
I large numbers to London clubs and
hotels, where they occasionally figure
on the bill of fare as "nymphes
en brochette." The best frogs fetch
along about a dollar, more or less,
for a skewer of ten. Tbe new frog
season closely follows the snail season,
which finishes with May for the
time being.?Argonaut.
A Wag's Answer.
A sentry while on duty was bitten
by a valuable retriever, and drove his
bayonet into the dog. Its owner sued
him in the County Court for its value,
and the evidence given showed that
the soldier had not been badly bitten
after all. "Why did you not knock
the dog out with the butt end of your
rifle?" asked the judge. The court
rocked with laughter when the sentry
replied: "Why didn't he bit me with
his tail?"?London Daily News.
The Man Behind the Blast.
At the head of the rock drilling
and blasting gangs in the New York
Central yards is a little Irishman whc
knows the science of breaking up
granite cliffs from alpha to omega
He knows rock as well as a Southern
epicure knows possum.
It is a rare pleasure to see him go
I New York City.?Tiie misses coav.
! that is finished with a belt, giving a
j mggestion of the Norfolk idea, is one 0
)f the latest and smartest. It will be
worn during the between-seasons ^
| ilme and* the early autumn, and is
i Idapted to every material appropriate
!o the season. This one, made of
1 jerge, is finished with a collar of satin 0
ji matching color, but the coat is?P
+r> tho eonaratp wrat) as well I 1
1 ^ * u
\
\
I seams extend lo the shoulders, so giv- t
ing slender and becoming lines and a
the shawl collar finishes to neck. The c
sleeves are in regulation coat style, t
| When the belt is used it is slipped i
| through slashes, which are cut and r
I bound on indicated lines, and there c
] are tne paicn pocKeis wuicu
such a feature of the season arranged
over the side-fronts.
The quantity of material required
I for the sixteen-year size is five and a
I half yards twenty-seven, two and
three-quarter yards forty-four or
two and three-eighth yards fiftj*two
{ fticbes wide with one-quarter yard of
| satin for collar.
Separate Skirts.
New linen skirts for everyday weai
are made with fifteen gores, and they
button directly down the middle of
the front. These buttons, by the way,
are somewhat new, for they are made
in the same way as those pearl buttons
used in men's shirt fronts, and
the bars are put through a small eye|
let in the skirt, so that it is easy to
I remove tbem when the skirt goes to
[ the laundry.
- *
H iu?- JUUtr
The white lace veil is now the veil
of the day. It is more widely worn
tten the black and brown lace veils
which came in last season. It is made
of a soft Brussels net, usually in aj
Taint cream tone, with a tiny seal- ;|
loped edge and a network of vines
above. If the design is sprawling,
reaching up over the cheeks and nose,
'.he effect is grotesque and should be ,
avoided. t
Parasol is Japanese. j
The much-ribbed parasol, called y
ihe "Japanese," is very prominent a
this season. J
?. ->.
Block Silk Cravat.
The cravat of black silk, messaline
r some other weave, seems to be a i
eature of many gowns of linen as
.'ell as cloth.
Conceal the Ears.
Many of the very newest styles of I
ressing the hair entirely conceal the
ars. These are invariably the modes j
rhich include the centre parting.
Black at the Neck.
The touch of black at. the neck is !
aore fashionable than ever. It is
hown in many jewel studded bands ;
f black velvet to be worn at the top I
f the collar.
I
Amethyst the Color.
At the Paris theatres it was shown j
hat the dressmakers there have gone !
uite wild over amethyst. Both tones :
f this semi-precious stone are used, j
'here is the deep rich purple and th( j
ale hyacinth. Both are popular, and j
re brought out in every kind of fab- i
ic. Lovely as these shades are, they j
rill not stand the sun. The heat
raws the amethyst out of the fabric
nd leaves it a dirty gray.
Tucked Blouse.
The simple tucked blouse is always
smart and a useful one. This mod- i
1 has the advantage of allowing a .
hoice of sleeves of two lengths, and j
: will be found appropriate ior every ;
aaterial thin enough to be laid in '
mall tucks. It is just as well adapt- !
d to the entire gown as it is to the
dd blouse, and it is altogether as
ractical as any waist of the season. 1
'he tucks are tiny, providing just
ufficient fulness to be becoming, and i
he neck can be finished as illustrated
r with a stock collar as liked. Mer- i
erized batiste is the material illusrated.
The blouse is made with fronts I
ind back. The sleeves are made in j
me piece eacn, and wnen tnree-quarer
length is desired are gathered
nto straight cuffs or bands. The
leek can be finished with a neck band
ir regulation stock collar.
The quantity of material required
or the medium size is three and
hree-quarter yards twenty-one or
wenty-four, two and three-quarter
ards thirty-two or two and an eighth
ards forty-four inches wide wtth one
md a quarter yards of banding, two
ards of edging.
?.
"AD." OF NEXT CENTURY.'p
1
IT WILL DISPLAY NOYEL FEATURES, s
s
0
Sampled Prepared by a Writer With an Eye t
and Pen to the Future. * c
p
0
Advertisements of to-day do not s
usually make very thrilling reading, j;
but those of to-morrow, if we could \
read them now, would be compact
of sensation and romance, says the v
New York Tribune. The following j,
is a forecast of the advertising sec- h
tion of a magazine of the fuYure, a +
glimpse of the coming age, deduced ^
from present actualities:
HELICOPTERS.?-We have left a v
few dozen, model of 2002, which we a
are disposing of at bargain rates, t
Magnificent machines which shoot up n
at the mtp nf fiftv miles an hour. I o
Oxygen tanks, natty vacuum suits p
and other gear attached. Physicians jsay
there is no better appetizer for n
breakfast than a ten-mile shoot into y
blue space and sunshine. Every com- a
muter ought to have one in his back a
yard, for his own health and the r
pleasure of his children. Send us a s
wireless call and our representative
will fly to your home or office. t
SLABBS & SAGGS, Five-Mile Build- f('
ing, New York. c
IT IS ALL VERY WELL to be up ,
in the air, but the human system e
needs protection against the terrific \
cold of space?not clothes and blan- t
+/\ Troon ftiO hnrl V 4-}
nets SU mutu as luci w "J t
warm. One tablet of our predigisted q
Ohio petroleum (solid) contains as
much heat as ten pounds of whale a
blubber! Do not confound this scien- j a
tlfic product with the cheap mineral a
fakes not suited to the human stom- i jj
ach and only good for lubricating ma-1 ^
chinery. WARMO COMPANY, 26 a
Broadway, New York. j
FLIES.?Everything from Individ- s
ual wings to leviathan planes and \
dirigibles, 900 feet long. Our hunt- e
ing planes are just the thing for a
polar bear, elephants and condor. c
For mining prospectors we have an r
attachment which instantly reveals q
the presence of precious ores within o
one mile and a half of the plane; the t
ground can be staked and claim re- b
corded without leaving the air. Our y
shopping plane is for the conveni- E
ence of ladies who live between New j.
York and Chicago, say, and wish to i
visit those cities every other morning;
a conservative machine, which ?j
travels at 140 miles an hour; easy to g
drive and control. AEROBILE ^
COMPANY, Staten Island and every- t
where. ^
RUBBER EARS.?It reported s
that 10,000 commuters flying to work t
last month lost their ears on account t
of the blizzard. Can we supply you p
with a pair of handsome substitutes? c
FACIAL PARTS SUPPLY COMPANY,
Union Square, New York. J
ON THE GROUND.?Once in a,
while you must touch earth, even
though you don't hit the high places
in travel. Our steel landing stages
and air garages cost from $86.54 to j
$50,000. (Special noiseless roof
platforms for married men who want *
to break into their homes after lodge
meetings.)
TOURS.?Personally conducted ex- t
cursions circumnavigating the earth j
across the poles, with three-day stops ^
at the North and South poles. Our t
passengers are housed in first class t
hotels in Arctic and Anarctic, and j
Viniro +Vi o nrivilotro of hnnHnir with
free equipment. Chaperons pro- t
vided for moonlight trips am'id the c
icebergs; guides to explore mysteri- j
ous caverns; able lecturers to tell t
the wonders of the Aurora Borealis. f
See the earth! Investigate the poles c
as the coming health resort, resi- ^
dence section and real estate propo- a
sition. Circular free. WILLIAMS j
& WILLIAMS, N. Y. Est. 1937. f
WANTED.?Information of the
whereabouts of Elias S. Phinney, who f
last answered a wireless 'phone call c
from equatorial Africa and said ho a
was bound for Northern Siberia; j
this was March 28; no answer since, j
His vibration number is B36789, his a
voice is recorded under phono, title t
SY57463, and his photograph may t
be reproduced on Xavier's screen by c
using American composite No. t
72508A. Unlecs his creditors hear <;
from him in forty-eight hours a war- e
rant for his arrest will be etherized r
to the board of international sheriffs, -v
T. B. ESPER, attorney, 99th floor, t
Sky Big., Phila. ^
FOR SALE OR EXCHANGE.?! t
am tired of being up, and propose to ^
go down; wish to trade my 600 h. p. t
Marvin plane-dirigible for a comfort- a
able and well furnished dwelling at a
least 900 feet underground. Home c
must have speedy lift to surface, ven- r
tilation and connection with hot c
water supply in earth interior; no ?
disused mines masquerading as
homes; must be cosey, substantial
and large enough for family of six
persons, including St. Bernard dog. 1
L. ,T. B., this office. c
HORSES.?This rare animal will I
soon be extinct., and you should *
stock your pleasure parks with a few {
choice specimens. "We are breeding c
them for the government zoological *
park. The horse is an adornment to 2
any landscape and is always convertible
into cash, horse steak being <
quoted at eighty cents a pound. WIL- 1
KERS BROS., Spireville, N. J. <
AERIAL DRYDOCK COMPANY. 1
?Is prepared to mend and refit all
damaged vessels, without bringing
them to earth, within a radius of
200t) miles from Montauk Point. Our
code number flash will bring immediate
help at any time, day or night. J
No matter what hit you?cyclone,
hrijricane or another skyboat?we
ca/i fix you up and send you on your
way rejoicing. Do not accept offers
from salvage tramps, who may claim i
full value of your hull for rescue. j
INVESTMENT.?Why waste your t
money in terrestrial enterprises when *
roan's true empire is of the air and 1
yields profits beyond the dreams of ?
ancient oil kings and steel barons?
The International Airway Company t
has exclusive franchises on circum- *
navigating trade routes at the 500, 1
900 and K>00 foot levels: no inven- 1
tion can take away the value of these a
highways, indispeusable to commerce
and travel; the roadbed will remain
-
ternally Intact and require no reiairs;
every air craft must pay a
Icense for the use of the routes; the
ystem of electric fences absolutely
huts ou.t trespassers. A bond issue
f $5,000,000,000 has just been made
o acquire new franchises and convert
Id debts. Interest is seventy-five
?er cent., payable semi-annually. We
ffer to the public, subject to prior
ale, these bonds at par and accrued
Qterest. SNYDER, PLOTZ & BILKS,
Vail Street, New York.
WHY IS A VORTEX??No man
fho calls himself a sky pilot and is
ntrusted with the lives of his fellow
lumans can afford to be ignorant of
he vital theories and principles of
avigation. Suppose you were caught
n an anthroscopic whirl with the
erometer pointing to one-half zero
nd the inflation needle at fortyhree,
what allowance would you
lake for the compass in order to esape
disaster? Do you know that
rotonyms of a negative cohesion are
ikely to be encountered at the third
leridional peridox? You may equip
ourself thoroughly for your duties
nd pass all governmental examin
tions by taking a three months corespondence
course in New York Air
chool. Write to-day.
AFFINITY.?Young Martian genleman,
eighteen feet high and seven
eet broad, pleasing appearance, good
haracter, would like to carry on
rireless correspondence with spiritulle
Earth girl, blonde preferred.
Vill send photo by ether route in reurn
for same. Object, to exchange
he soul kiss. Address MARS,
169571048.
SANATORIUM.?Victims of the
erial speed mania, those who have
cquired the habit of using oxygen
nd ozone in excess, persons who
ave broken down through practicing
he pernicious "no sieep" theory, and
11 "who suffer from shattered nerves
rom whatever cause are quickly retored
to health at our institution.
Ve draw off every ouu.ce of impovrished
blood from Hie human body
nd refill arteries r/ith pure, fresh
hemical blood containing synthetic
ed corpuscles guaranteed by U. S.
rovernment; we also remove wornut
nerves and replace with healthy
issue of selected goats. Get relooded
and renerved, and live fifty
ears longer! Only $5 a yard for
icrve instalf.tion. Book of testimonals
free. WALLABOUT HEALTH
NSTITUTE.
TRAINED NURSES WANTED.?
Tie Red Cross Society wishes to en;age
immediately ten (10) trained
lurses, good looking young women,
o attend wounded on Patagonian
attleflelds. Must own their own
aachines and fiy to the scene of acion
at hour's notice. Nurses will
ransport patients to General Hoslital
near South pole. RED CROSS
SOCIETY, New York.
\n Ancient Indian Village
By DILLON WALLACE.
Down by the sea, hidden amongst
. maze of network of lacunas, some
eagues north of San Bias, lies the
indent Indian village of Mexcaltaan.
You will not find it on the map,
nd you will find no mention of it in
he official raports of Mexico, for in
hat respect, at least, this unique relc
of the past seems to have been
[uite forgotten by the government,,
hough its fisheries make it perhaps
he most important town of its size
n the republic.
Mexcaltatan was originally built
ipon piles, and hidden in this seluded
spot amongst the myriad of
agunas, which are characteristic of
his section of the western coast, to
rotect it against the warlike Indians
if the mainland, just as Tenochtitlan
vas built upon piles in Tezcuco Lake
.s a safe retreat from the surroundng
tribes with which the Aztec
ounders were at war.
Tradition says that the town was
ounded by the Aztecs, in the course
?f their migration to the southward
md that it is therefore older than
Mexico City. Of this no man can
;now for a certainty. The Spaniards
md their priests of the Conquest in
ilind, unreasoning bigotry so effectlally
destroyed all records of anient
Mexico that the country's hisory
is veiled behind a curtain of
leepest mystery through which no
ye can see, and her past will forever
emain silent. But one is brought
rery close indeed, in fancy, at least,
o those forgotten ages, and that
vanquished people, as one traverses
o-day the canals of this Mexican
Venice in primitive dugout canoes, in
he same manner as her founders did
iway back in that forgotten period,
md realizes that it is the only one
>f the old pile-built villages now renaining
on the North American
:oast.?From "Beyond the Mexican
Sierras," in The Outing Magazine.
A FouiVTrunk Tree.
One of the interesting features of
Bridgewater's most attractive thor>ughfare,
Summer street, a village
lighway lined on both sides with
<evr England's favorite elm, is the
our-trunk tree of that popular spe:ies
which'forms a natural archway to
he mansion house of the late Elea;er
Carver, of cotton gin fame.
It was this same reputable Massa;husetts
mechanic who also gave
3ridgewater its four-trunk tree curijsity,
and so unconsciously at the
ime reared a monument for himself
vhich is likely to last for years to
:ome, for the people of the immediate
leighborhood are very proud of their
Carver tree attraction and they will
jreserve it for future generations
vith most zealous attention.?Boston
31obe.
Only One?
m an Ohio town there is still mainained
a stage coach system of transudation,
the steeds whereof are of
hat sad appearance presented by the
lorses attached to the Fifth avenue
ine in New York not so many years
igo.
One day a Cincinnati man. visiting
he town in question, boarded a stage,
laving no other currency than a $5
till. This he proffered to the driver,
rhe latter took it. looked it over for
l moment or so and then asked:
"Which horse do you want. Bill?"
?Harper's Weekly.
MUNYON'S EMINENT DOCTORS AT
YOUR SERVICE FREE.
Not a Penny to Pay For the Fullest
Medical Examination.
If you are In doubt as to the cause
of your disease mail us a postal requesting
a medicalexaminationblank,
which you will fill out and return to
us. Our doctors will carefully diagnose
your case, and if you can be
cured you will be told so; if you cannot
be cured you will be told so. You
are not obligated to us in any way, for
this advice is absolutely free; you are
at liberty to take our advice or not as
you see fit. Send to-day for a medical
examination blank, fill out and
return to us as promptly as possible,
and our eminent doctors will diagnose
your case thoroughly absolutely free.
Munyon's, 53d and Jefferson Sts.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
Work of Head and Hand.
The head and the hand constitute
the winning forces in life. Man
comes to his kingdorcuthrough the instrumentality
of their combination.
MUST BELIEVE IT.
Every Reader Will Concede the Truth
of This Statement.
One who suffers with backache or
any form of kidney trouble wants a
fcure, not merely temporary
benefit. Rev.
Maxwell S. Rowland,
of Toms River, N. J.,
makes a statement In
this connection that
is worth attention.
Says he: "I was suddenly
taken with an
attack of kidney
trouble, had severe
pains in my back
and loins and was
generally run down.
Doctors were not
helping me, so I be
: w gan using Doan's
] Kidney Pills. They brought me
prompt relief, and as I continued takj
lng them the pains in my back disap1
peared and the kidneys were restored
to normal condition."
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box.
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
Plans are being made for the elec1
triflcation of the more important
State railways of Sweden.
'DIST
I /^/ f ^ \>\ 6nre core and poeltl
/mm,/ I M \ I Infected or "exposed."
|L/l J njtln gl i.l Olonds, expels the polso
I 14 1 K' ?Illll-and Sheep and Cholera 1
llll\* 'Ift, I La Grippe among hamai
\ Jvw /v*/ bottle; |ts and |J0 a doxe
V a\ rOIWL. A.!/ who will get It for j
/ SP?0'4' agents wanted.
SPOHN MEDICAL CC
London Literary Note.
Mrs. Harriet Beecher Stowe on
; June 14 celebrated the ninety-eighth
i anniversary of her birth. Fifty-nine
| years ago Mrs. Stowe sent into the
world a work that had a far greater
I effect than any other on the progress
and destiny of America.?Publishers'
I Circular.
CONFESSIONS OF A CLOWN. ,
I At Last, There is on Sale a Booh
Brimful of American Humor.
Any bookseller will tell you that
the constant quest of his customers
is for "a book which will make me
laugh." The bookman is compelled
I to reply that the race of American
j humorists has run out and comic litj
erature is scarcer than funny plays,
j A wide sale is therefore predicted for
the "Memoirs of Dan Rice," the
Ctown of Our Daddies, written by
Maria Ward Brown, a book guaranteed
to make you roar with laughter.
The author presents to the public a
volume of the great jester's most
pungent jokes, comic harangues,
saustic hits upon men and manners,
lectures, anecdotes, sketches of adventure,
original songs and poetical
efTusions; wise and witty, serious,
satirical, and sentimental sayings of
the sawdust arena of other days.
Old Dan Rice, as proprietor of the
famous "One Horse Show," was more
of a national character than Artemus
j Ward, and this volume contains the
numor wnicn maae ine uauon iaugu
even while the great Civil War raged.
This fascinating book of 500 pages,
beautifully illustrated, will be sent
you postpaid for $1.50 by Book Publishing
House, 134 Leonard street,
New York,
The greatest cotton crop in the
. United States was that of 1008, i
which, on the farm, was valued at
, $722,000,000. N.Y.?35
Mrs. Winalow'8 Soothing Syrup for Children
teething, softens the gums, reduces inflammation
, nI lay s pai n, cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle.
j Canada produces nearly all the world's
| asbestos.
Lame back and Lumbago make a young
man feel old. Hamlins Wizard Oil makes
an old man feel young. Absolutely nothing
like it for the relief of all pain.
Zola's yearly income was at one time
*60,000.
The Ideal PALATAL ^.Cr?anVSf
Cathartic 1 Castor Oil
*ii11 nilEN LICK THE SPOON. Kelt* * rlattiUncy, Coirectr
Srlplng. Aid* Digestion. 25c. ALL DKUOQISTS.
npOPCY NEW DISCOVERY;
gives quick relief and care*
norst ca*o?i. Book of t??timoniali i 10 dnrg' treatm* Bt
Vree. Dr. H. H. GREEN'S SONS,Box B,Atlanta.Ct?.
Chicks Dc
If Not, Learn Why Fi
Less Than the Value
Whether you raise Chickens for fun 01
get the best results. The way to do this is
offer a book telling all you need to know
who made his living for 25 years in Raising
to experiment and spend much money to le
for the small sum of 25 CENTS in postage s
Disease, how to Feed for Eggs, and also fo
ing Purposes, and indeed about everything
euccecs. SENT POSTPAID ON RECEIPT
BOOK PUBLISHING HOUSE.
I s r
It is no use ad
I you fyave the Gc
i having the Go<
advertise.
- ' ' " '
' - "
?1?? 1 ?
Si
?1*1 -W? y|
rOK LilILt
FAT FOLKS
Most grateful and comforting is
a warm bath with Cuticura Soap /
and gentle anointings with Cuticura.
This pure, sweet, economical
treatment brings immediate , !
relief and refreshing sleep to skintortured
and disfigured little ones ,1 ; rj
and rest to tired, fretted mothers.
For eczemas, rashes, itchings, .
irritations and chafings, Cuticura
Soap and Cuticura Ointment are
worth their weight in gold.
8oId throughout the world. Depots: London. 27,, : y
Chart*rhouse So.; Paris. 6. Rue de la Patx; Australia.
R. Towns A Co.. 8ydney; India, B. K. Paul.
Calcutta; China. Hong Kong Drug Co.; Japan, '
Maruya. Ltd.. Toklo; Russia, Ferreln, Moxcow;
80. Africa. Lennon, Ltd.. Cape Town, etc.; U.S.A.
Potter Drug ? Chem. Corp- Sole Props. Boston
EMPER?^0C ":'fi
mi6 Catarrhal Kcvcr.
ve preventive, no matter bow horse* at anv ace art)
Liquid, given on the tongue; acta on the Blood awl
nous germs from the body. Cures Distemper In D?m ii
n Poultry. Largest selling lire stock remedy. Cure*
1 beings and Is a fine Sidney remedy. Sue. an<i #1 a
n. Cut this out. Keep It. 8bow to your dragglston.
Free Booklet, "Distemper, Causes and Curw> *
l#j Bacteriologists. GOSHEN, IND., U.SJ.
The Natural
Laxative
acts on the bowels just as some
foods act. Cascareta thus aid
the bowels just as Nature would.
Harsh cathartics act like pepper
in the nostrils. Soon the bowels
grow so calloused that one must.
fha rinc0 m
uiiuuj/ijr uik uvdvi ?Vest-pocket
box. 10 cents?at drugr-stores.
Each tablet of the genuine is marked C C C% - .Aag
YOU CAN PAY MORE MONEY
You Can't Get a Better Shave |
THAN BY USING OUR ft n
SAFETY RAZOR, W |
COSTING ONLY 11 U U
SO E2PTRA. f :: |
^^^BLADES
. A SAVING IN SHAVIN8 E
It's nothing more or less than eitrara- H
gance to pay a big price for a safety-razor. H
The only part that counts for anything H
is the blade. But good blades-even the H
best of blades--don't warrant thr yrice
usually demanded for the razor. R
The biggest part of what ron pav for
the regular safety-razor is for the frame H
' and the box-details that don't figure at M
| all In the razor's value. fig
| i Prove this for yourself. Qp
c In STAMPS brlnR3 you
/JjC one of these marvellous
mm w Razors, postpaid, b" mai|
BOOK PCB. HOISE,
154- Leonard street New York.
.r..i
Of W ~ A & HQ
V ^
>ing Well ?
rom a Book Costing
of One Chicken
: profit, you want to do it intelligently and
to profit by the experience of others. We
on the subject?a book written by a man.
; Poultry, and in that time necessarily had
arn the Dest way to conduct the businesstamps.
It tells you how to Detect and Cure,
r Market, whicn Fowls to Save for Breed
you must know on the subject to make a.
' OF 25 CENTS IN STAMPS.
134. Leonard St.. N. Y. City.
vertising unless
ods, and no use
}ds unless you j
I
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J
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