f
WOMAN COULD
NOT WALK
She Wat So 111?Restored to
Health by Lydia El. Pinkham's
Vegetable
Compound.
Pentwater, Mich. ? "A year ago I waa
very weak and the doctor said 1 had a
rtmrwt 8er*ous ^s^^ce~ i
BC^e Bud bearing
down pains bo bad
iW I could not sit
pijja ^ ^ fjpjjli in a chair or walk
wpjR ^ 5n||p across the floor and
Ifiifk ^ Jill I was in severe pain
^me- *
discouraged as I had
il'l I f yy/jl taken everything I
l/l [ ' / /1 Hi I could think of and
?? was no better. I
began taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound and now I am strong
and healthy."?Mrs. Alice Darling,
R.F.D. No. 2, Box 77, Pentwater, Mich.
ReadWhatAnotherWoman says:
Peoria, 111.?"I had such backaches
that I could hardly stand on my feet. I
would feel like crying out lots of times,
and had such a heavy feeling in my right
side. I had such terrible dull headaches
every day and they would make me feel
so drowsy and sleepy all the time, yet I
could not sleep at nigTit.
"After I had taken LydiaE.Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound a week I began to
improve. My backache was less and
that heavy feeling in my side went
away. I continued to take the Compound
and am cured.
" You may publish this if you wish."
?Miss Clara L. Gauwitz, R.R. No. 4,
Box 62, Peoria, 111.
Such letters prove the value of Lydia
E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound for
woman's ills. Why don't vou try it?
A good beginning is half the battle, ;
but a good ending is the whole thing, j
Get it to the bottom of the affected
part. Adv.
One way to hold a job is to do the
work
INVIGORATING TO THE I'AI.E AND
SICKI.Y.
Tho Old Standard uunrriil Kt rrnKthrnlns tonic,
GHOVK"STASTKI.BSS chill TONIC, ilrlvw ..ut Malaria,
I'tirlclK'n the blood and build* up tin* system.
A auro Appeliicr. for adult* und children. bU eta.
\
Just Like a Man.
A man suffered from inflammatory j
rheumatism, and his wife nursed him
patiently. He had a very fault-finding
disposition, but she was very patient
and also very fond of him.
After an especially severe attack, a
friend called to inquire after him.
The patient wore a mournful expression.
"Well," said the friend, cheerfully,
. "how are you today?"
"Very badly," replied the rheumatic
sufferer, "and it's all my wife's
fault."
"Why," cried the friend in astonishment.
"Is it possible?"
"Yes," moaned the invalid, "you
know, the doctor told me always to
avoid damp places; and there my wife j
sits and cries Just to make the air
moist around me."
Aged Survivors of Our Wars.
I ain informed by the United States
pension office that the last soldier of
the rebellion will die in 1055. That
is the estimate made by those who
make a study of vital statistics. If
the last veteran survives until that
date he will have lived ninety years
after the surrender of I.ee.
Kronk, who died a couple of years
ago in New York state, was the last
soldier of the War of 1812, and he
lived considerably more than ninety
years after peace had been signed.
Uakeman, the last soldier of the
Revolution, lived for eighty-six yenrs
after the peace of 17S3.? Philadelphia
Public Ladger.
"LIKE MAGIC"
New Food Makes Wonderful Changes.
When a man has suffered from dyspepsia
so many years that he can't remember
when he had a natural appetite,
and then hits on a way out of
trouble he may be excused for saying
"it acts like magic."
When it is a simple, wholesome
food instead of any one of a large number
of so called remedies in the form
of drugs, he is more than ever likely
to feel as though a sort of miracle has
been performed.
A Chicago man, in the delight of restored
digestion, puts it in this way:
"Like magic, fittingly describes the
manner in which Grape-Nuts relieved
me of poor digestion, coated tongue
and loss of uppetite, of many years
standing.
"I tried about every medicine that
was recommended to me, without relief.
Then I tried Grape-Nuts on the
suggestion of a friend. My the time
1 had finished the fourth package, my
stomach was ull right, and for the past
two months I have been eating with
t a relish anything set before me. That
* la something I had been unable to do
previously for years.
"I am stronger than ever and I consider
the effects of Grape-Nuts on a
weak stomach as something really
wonderful. It builds up the entire
body as well as the brain and nerves." !
Name given by tho Postum Co., Rattle
Creek, Mich.
"There's a reason," and it is explained
in the little book, "The Road
to Wellville," in pkgs.
Ever rrml the above letter? A new
one nppenra from time to time. They
are Branloc, true, and fall of human
Interest.
BEST BEANS TO GROW
Some Like Bush and Lima Varieties
Because Easy to Grow.
Others Prefer Pole Llmae on Account
of Quality, Quantity and
8eaaon of Profitable Bearing
?Also Large.
A -writer Bays that both bush and
lima heana are more satisfactory and
easier to grow than the pole litnas.
Now, every one for his choice, but
we prefer the pole limas every timo
for quality, quantity and long season
of profitable bearing, says a writer in
an exchange. It is true that setting
poles for plants to vine on requires
more work than when no poles are
used, but the results more than pay
for all the work. The trouble with
most of us in our gardening and farming
is that we try to grow things in
the easiest way, but the easiest way
is seldom the best way. We should
never be satisfied with anything short
of the best.
Pole lima beans are the largest and
best beans grown. Make the soil as
loose and rich and fine as possible.
Harrow, disk and harrow till the surface
is a smooth, fine and mellow as
an ash heap. Lay off rows, both ways,
about four feet apurt and plant three
seeds to tho hill at the rrMMKitiir r>f
rows.
Cultivate young lima beans as for
other garden plants, keeping the surface
clean, fine and level. Allow no
weeds to, grow close to the cultivated
plants, as llmas will not thrive in tho
presence of strange company. Some
people to reduce labor plant corn or
sunflower in the same hill with pole
lima beans for the vines to climb.
This is a grave mistake, for two good
plauts cannot grow in a place where
there is room enough for only one. A
Hamper of Pole Lima Beans.
poor bean crop always results from
this method, as one good, old gardener
puts it, "It is tlio lazy man's
way of gardening."
We pc!e our beans with round poles
nhntlf plight fr?t lontr onW
ness of one's wrist. They are set one
pole to each hill and the four poles
form a square brought together and
tied with common binder twine, about
nino feet from the ground. Tills gives
a wigwam frame with firm, broad base
and so substantial that no ordinary
storm will blow it over.
Almost all other members of the
bean family are quick maturing plants
and the life of the crop covers only
a part of the growing season. Not
so with polo lima beans; they are
rather slow growing. It requires
no;?rlv nltiofv ilnva fnr tlm vlnni
fully mature and come into heavy
bearing. Hut after the vines begin to
bear they continue to produce blossoms
and fruit all through tlio remainder
of the growing season, so
long ns the green beans are regularly
picked and more allowed to ripen,
providing there is sufficient moisture
in the soil to sustain growth. Keeping
out all weeds and grass and keeping
the surface raked loose and flno
will help to conserve soil moisture at
dry times. A light sovering of straw
on the surface will also help to copservo
soil moisture during August
and September, when rains are often
infrequent and evaporation great.
ADVANTAGES OF DAIRY FARM
Increases Productivity of Soil, Insures
Monthly Income and Even
Distributes Labor.
Prof. P. L. Kent, of the dairy husbandry
department of the Oregon
Agricultural college, states as follows
the advantages of dairy farming in
the Oregon Countryman, a monthly
magazine published by the students
at O. A. C.:
"Ilriotly stated, the advantages of
dairy farming are: Increasing productivity
of the soil, a regular ihonthly
income putting the business on a
cash basis, a better distribution of
the labor of the farm than is possible
under a single crop system, and
supplying a product for the market,
all of which should be of the highest
grade and for which thero is always
a ready sale."
Building Dairy Herd.
Oet a purebred dairy Biro and raise
your own cows.
BEGINNING WITH THE SHEEI
No Profit Can Reasonably Be Expectei
Until One Has Learned All the
Little Details.
"The love of money la the root o
all evil." It lures men Into things tha
prove disastrous. The greater th<
profits, the more certain that a largi
number will fail in the'undertaking
Why? Because when profits are larg<
men are sure to rush In on a big scale
says a writer In an exchange. Tw<
hundred per cent profit on one shee]
is big. Then why not get 600 or l,00i
sheep and get rich quickly? That'i
the argument that traps everybod;
who has a get-rlch-quick bee In hi
hat.
Remember this, that no man cai
succeed with sheep who has not firs
learned how. Big profits do not comi
Yearling Full-Blood Karakul Ewe.
to greenhorns. There,may be no pro
fit at all for a year or bo. Sheep an
the mcsi helpless of all domestic ani
mals. They "don't know enough ti
come In out of the rain." They don'
know much of anything. They bav<
been cared for so attentively for cen
turieB that they quit making any effor
to care for themselves. The man win
is not willing to give them this can
is unfit to bo a sheep man. It re
quires gentleness, for they aro meel
and helpless.
Our advice is to go 6low with sheep
By all means, raise Bheep. The;
should bo on every farm. But star
with a few, one or two dozen at most
and learn how to care for them. The;
will multiply as fast as your skill ii
sheep raising will warrant. If yoi
can't save the lambs, then you an
unfit for a larger number. If you cai
save them you soon have the larg<
number. A dozen sheep will shov
you all the holes in the fences as com
pletely as 500 will.
Prices are ulluring, but keep a leve
head. There is no telling anyway, be
causo they benellt the farm whethe:
prices are up or down.
RATIONS FOR DAIRY CALVE5
Little Bloodmeal Frequently Recom
mended as Preventive and Cure
for Calf Scour6.
That while linseed meal sometime
gives very excellent results, yet on tlv
whole other preparations are to be pre
ferred, says Hoard's Dairyman. Corn
barley, oats and bran are recommend
ed for this purpose. With tho youni
calf a mixture of low grade lloui
sieved ground oats, corn meal or lin
seed oil meal mado into a jelly b;
boiling, continuing such feed for tw<
or three weeks, while the stomacl
is small and incapable of utilizim
coarser feeds, is suggested. As soot
as possible, however, change to whoh
corn or whole oats with or withou
a little oil meal fed dry.
Among other mixtures proposed 1
one consisting of 20 pounds of corn
meal, 20 pounds of oatmeal, 20 pound
of oilmeal, 10 pounds of bloodmea!
5 pounds of boneineal. Change t<
corn, oats and bran when calves art
three months old. A little of tie
bloodmeal as a part of the dairy ra
tion is very frequently recommended
It seems to have in some way a ton it
effect, and is also claimed to bo botl
a preventive and a cure for cal
scours.
i pqelwwp
^ i i ~ *
Straw and hay make good nestini
material.
Keep your breeders healthy and do
ing well.
On the farm you should keep util
ity uppermost.
Shade for the chickens is very im
portant in hot weather.
No ono can foretell the sex of th<
chicks while still in the egg.
Keep the egg pan in the cooles
place you can find about the farm.
May-hatched chicks, properly grown
make profitable fowls the coming win
ter.
Sickness nnd lice are scarce article:
where poultry quarters are kept dr;
and clean.
Begin early to work up a trade ii
broilers. The market never will b<
overstocked.
The working hours of the poultry
man extend from early till late; then
are no holidays.
As a rule hens that lay steadil:
during cold weather are indifferen
| hot weather layers.
Little chicks need a feeding cooj
where they can eat in peace awaj
from the older fowls.
Hardiness does not go by color o
plumage. Hardiness depends upoi
tho care given to fowls.
All eggs should he tested by tin
seventh day, which often makes it pos
sible to reset some of the hens.
A quiet, gentle hen with the mothei
Instinct strongly developed, Is wortl
money in the chicken business.
If your Jlock is properly managet
and cared for there will bo little 01
no use of medicines and tonics.
So many set too many eggs under i
hen. Few hens can cover more thai
15. and then only in warm weather.
! SOLEMN WARNING TO PARENTS.
The season for bowel trouble is fast
i approaching and you should at once
I provide your home with King's Dlar'
rhoea and Dysentery Cordial. A guar|
anteed re.medy for Dysentery, Chol!
era Morbus, Flux, Cholera Infantum
I and all kindred diseases. Numerous
3 testimonials on our illes telling of
a marvelous cures can bo had by ro;
quest.
5 Mr. Robert Yount, who is employed
by me at Fullers, N. C., was quite 111
3 recently with a stubborn attack of
C dysentery. He was treated by physlP
cians without benefit, and continued
B to grow weaker. Half a bottle of
f King's Diarrhoea and Dysentery Cor9
dial completely cured him, nnd he said
unless he knew where more could bo
3 obtained he would not take ten dollars
I for the other half of tho bottle.?A.
E W. Fuller,
Sold by all medicine dealers. Price
25 cents the bottle. Adv.
WASN'T GOING INTO DETAILS
Four-Year-Old Had His Own Idea of
Propriety of Not Airing Strictly
Personal Affairs.
One little four-year-old boy who
doesn't live far from Central park
west, New York, has as his particular
playmate a little girl of about the
same age. The children frequently
spend their evenings together, and the
y other morning the girl came to the
E fence and called him.
[. j "Alton," she cried, "come out and
a play."
t Alton's mother heard the call and j
a said to him:
i- "Tell her you can't come over Just
t now because you have to take a
3 bath."
a So Alton went to the front window.
>- "Elizabeth," ho called, "1 can't come
t over now."
Then he turned back to his mother
i. and added:
y "1 don't link the rest of it need be !
t saided."
y Be Happy Today.
3 He that hath so many causes of Joy, |
i and so great, is very much in love j
3 with sorrow and peevishness, who ,
3 loses all these pleasures, ami chooses
3 to sit down upon his little handful of
' thorns. Enjoy the blessings of this
day, if (lod sends them; and the evils
of it bear patiently and sweetly; for
' this day only is ours. We are dead to
yesterday and we are not yet born to
r the morrow. Hut if we look abroad
and bring into one day's thoughts the
evil of many, certain and uncertain,
J what will be and what will never bo,
our load will be as intolerable as It
is unreasonable.?Jeremy Taylor.
Kept in Suspense.
Scene?one of the piers at South
a ampton. A group of boys playing in
e dangerous proximity tn the edge. Sud- ,
>- denly un old salt, who has been a
i, lidgety onlooker of their gambols.
I- leaves his favorite post and proceeds
g soundly to cuff ono of the lads in
\ question.
i- Surprised by his actions several in
y terrogated the old tar thereon.
3 i "Well, sur." was his reply, "it be like I
i this. 'Tisn't as I care a hang whether
g they fall in or whether they don't, but
i it's the bloomin' uncertainty about it
e that 1 can't stand!"?Pittsburgh Chront
iclo Telegraph.
s Womanliness.
'* Perhaps it would not be so < asy to
a lose "womanliness" as some people
I. seem afraid it would lie. Perhaps all
3 the pow-wow about becoming desexed
13 is superfluous. Weininger calls atten0
tion to the faet thai while there are
L* people who are anatomically men and
I- psychically women, there is no such
c thing as a person who is anatomically
1 woman and psychically man. Howf
ever masculine her appearance, a ,
woman's psychic qualities remain distinctively
feminine. At least, -Mr.
I Weininger says so.
Considerate.
My little brother William had been
staying up rather late and went to bed ;
5 without saying Ills prayers. Mother
said to him: "Why, Willie, I'm suri
prised at you! You haven't said your
! prayers." "Aw, gee!" he answered.
[ ] "What's the use of waking the Ix>rd up
at this hour of the night?" -Chicago
i- Journal.
2 The Drawback.
"I don't like to attack a fat
t man."
"Why not a fat man?"
,, "Because he is apt to offer a stout
resistance."
3 ' Made since 184C- llanford's ltalsam.
y Adv.
i Again the unloaded pistol, which,
by the irony of fate, never misses its
aim!
RAILROAD SURGEON DISC0V-;
! ERS WONDERFUL REMEDY
Pot Man and Beasti the Old Reliable
Dr. Porter's Antiseptic Healing OiL
Relieves Pain, Stops the Bleedingf
and Heals at the same time.
Thousands of Farmers and Stockmen
know it already, and atrial will con\ince
you that DR. PORTER'S ANTISEPTIC
HEALING OIL is the most wonderful
Remedy ever discovered for Wounds,
Hums, Old Sores, Carbuncles, Granulated
Eyelids, all Skin or Scalp Diseases, and
also for Barbed Wire Cuts, Gulls, Sores,
Scratches, Shoe Boils, Warts, Mange on
Dogs, etc Continually people arc finding
new uses for this famous old Remedy .Sold
by nearly all Druggists. vlf your Druggist
I hasn't it, sendus 50c. in stamps for medium
size,or $1.00 for large sire, and it will
! be sent by Parcel Post. Money .refunded
i if not satisfactory. We mean it. Paris
I Medicine Co. 2622 Pine St., St. Louis, Mo.
MIGHT HAVE MADE A MISTAKE
Cindy Claimed Caller Was Her Brother,
But She Was Willinp to
Take Another Look.
The woman left the girl arranging '
the dinner table and went to the
kitchen for something. A great, hulking
negro was sitting in the kitchen
rocker. Indignant, the woman hurried
back.
"Cindy," she deinunded, "what have
I told you about having your beaux in
the kitchen?"
"Laws, miss, ho ain't no beau! Why,
he's nuffln but my brudder."
Somewhat mollified, the woman
went back to the kitchen.
"So you are Cindy's brother?" sh^
said kindly.
"Law bless yo' no, miss," he answered.
"I ain't no Tation 'tall to her.
I'se jes' keepin' comp'ny wif her."
The woman sought Cindy again.
"Cindy." she asked sternly, "why did
you tell me that the man was your
brother? He says he's no relation."
Cindy looked aghast.
"Ko" de Lawd's sake, miss, did he
say dat? Jes' yo' stay here a minlt
an' lemme go look ng'in."?Chicago
Record-Herald.
ECZEMA ON CHILD'S FACE
R. F. D. No. 5, Islington, Tenn.?
"My little boy broke out on the face
with that terrible disease, eczema,
when ho was Just one month old, and ;
I just thought sure it would kill him.
as it killed our other baby at five
months old. It would l>r?n If out In
pimples and scab over, and he cried 1
day and night. I thought that there
was no cure for him at all. His face
would itch and burn so bad that 1 had
to tie his little hands clown so he could ;
not scratch his fnce.
"We began at once to have him
treated until he was jseven months old
and he got worse all the time. I sent
and got a box of Cutieura Ointment
and one cake of Cutieura Soap. I had
not used them a week until I could
seo a great change, nnd they cured
him sound and well and never left a
single scar." (Signed) Mre. Lillie
Sikes, Feb. 17. 1912.
Cutieura Soap and Ointment sold
throughout the world. Sample of each
free, with 32-p. Skin Hook. Address
post-card "Cutieura, Dept. L., Boston."
Adv.
Something They Hadn't Seen.
Following a baseball game, in
which the Yankees came to ignominious
defeat. Irvin S. Cobb, the humor
1st. approached Frank Chance and
said:
"Would you mind if 1 gave your
team a little surprise?a little treat?"
"Not at all." responded Chance. "It
might even cheer them up."
"Well, then." continued Cobb, "call
them over here and I'll show them
third base."
Stick to Your Intentions.
Don't put off getting Iluuford's Balsam
of Myrrh until something happens.
Get it now and be prepared for
accidents. You will find frequent use
for it in your home and in your stable
for cuts, burns, bruises and any sore,
any lameness. Adv.
One of Many.
"l>o you believe in the saying that
suceess is sweet?"
"Ileally, I never tasted it."
For Kt'MMKIl IIRVnACIIES
Hicks' CAPUPINE is the best remedyno
matter what rauses them?whether,
frnm tin- heat, sitting In draughts. feverish
condition, etc. inc., 25o and SOo per
bottle nt medicine stores. Adv.
Literals.
"Walls have ears."
"1 should say so with nil those dictagraphs
hanging on them."
Keep 1 lanford'a Ilalsain in your stable.
Adv.
Reason to Be Afraid.
"I ant afraid 1 am falling in love."
"Why are you afraid, does she take
domestic science?"
The Effects
THAT INFANTS aro peculiarly
preparations, all of which are i
smallest doses, if continued, th
tions and growth of tho cells which a
imbecility, mental perversion, a cravinj
Nervous diseases, such as intractable
itowers aro a result of dosing with opia
in their infancy.# Tho rulo among pi
receive opiates in tho smallest doses f
only then if unavoidable.
Tho administration of Anodynes, ]
other narcotics to children by any bat
decried, and the druggist should not 1
need tho attention of a physician, a
dose them willfully with narcotics.
Castoria contains no narcotics if i
signature of ('has. II. Fletcher.
(ii'iiuluo cusloriu ulwujs bears the Bi
QUININE AND IRON-THE MOST
EFFECTUAL GENERAL TONIC
Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic combines both
in tasteless form. The Quinine drives out
Malaria and the Iron builds up the
System. For Adults and Children.
You know what you are taking when von
take GROVK'S TASTELESS chill
TONIC recognized for 30 years a3 the
standard General Strengthening Tonic.
It has no equal for Malaria and Fevers,
Weakness, general debility and loss of
appetite. Removes Biliousness without
purging. Relieves nervous depression and
low spirits. Invigorating to the pale and
sickly. It arouses the liver to action and
put ifies the blood. A true tonic, and sure
appetizer. Guaranteed by your Druggist.
We mean it. 50c..
There isOnly One * BROMO QUININE"
That is LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE
Look for signature of E. W. GROVE on
every box. Cures a Cold ia One Day. 25c.
FOLEY KIDNEY PUS
RICH IN CURATIVR QUAUT1X8
rOR IAOKAOHK. RHRUMATISM,
KIDNKYR AND BIAODU
and l>n?? Ilablta u-?t
III led at hoc. > or at Sanitarium. Book oa
IftJImblictrrM. DR. B. M.W()OLI,ET.
BW f 1CT0B UltTAIin. ilLUTt, UOUU
$u KODAK FINISHING
UliliT? I'T photocntphlo apaclallita. Any roll te>
I rIt II Tolopod for 10c. rrlau Ic to Be. Mall Tour
fe|8X? Alma to Popt. K. PARSONS OPTICAL.
CO., 244 King St.,Cnarl??ton,S.G.
KLKHtl lltALItl.
Tutt'? PUIs keep the ay stem In perfect order*
Tbey regulate the bowels and produce
A VIGOROUS BODY.
Remedy for sick headache, constipation.
Tuft's Pills
FREE TO ALL SUFFERERS.
' If TO* f**l 'OUT or lu>TS"BUM DOWN'w'OOT IMS HLI SB*
BUFFER from EIDNEV. BLADDER. SIIVOVI DISEASES.
OH RON IC WEAKNEESEB.ULCSBB.IKIN ERUFTIONE. FILEB,
writ* for my PRtl book. TlfE MOST tNSTRUCTivS
MEDICAL BOOR EVER WRITTEN.IT TELLS ALL Rb*?t lb**S
diseases and tt>* rkuarkable ci res ErrBCTED by
TNI NIW PRINOH RIWIDY, N.I. N*2. N4L
therapion .
kit's lh* r*m*dv for tour own Rllm*af. Dost aand a cent.
Ab.olut.lTFRCk. No'followup'clrcular*. PR LECLERO
Med. Co. h averstoce Kj>, Ham tetrad. London, emo.
Why Scratch?
"Hunt'9Cure"isguaranteed
to stop and
permanently cure that
terrible itching. It i9
compounded for that
frtit / jK| purpose and your money
Jf m will be promptly refunded
mm wirh?vr question
I dm Mill ^ hunt's Cure fails to cure
LiCL.lt/fJII tun 'tch, Eczema, Tetter, Ring
vmkJBB/l <lul Worm or any other Skin
Direase. 50c at your druggiat'a, or by mail
direct if he hasn't it. Manufactured only by
A. B. RICHARDS MEDICINE CO.. Sherman. Teus
I Now Well I
ra "Thedford's Black-Draught
M is the best all-round medicine
n lever used," writes J. A. H
S Steelman, of Pattonville, Texas. H
"1 suffered terribly with liver
fl troubles, and could get no relief. BE
M The doctors said 1 had con- H
ffl sumption. 1 could not work at H
9 all. Finally I tried H
I THEDFORD'S I
I BLACK- I
i DRAUGHT I
SI and to my surprise, I got better, H
|H and am to-day as well as any Uj
jffl man." Thedford's B1 ack- ?
al Draught is a general, cathartic, BE
wj vegetable liver medicine, that Hj
Q| has been regulating irregulari- Efl
H ties of the liver, stomach and Hj
fja bowels, for over 70 years. Get Hj
M a package today. Insist on the H
j#l genuine?Thedford's. E-70
of Opiates.
susceptible to opium and its various
larootic, is well known. Even in the
cbo opiates cause changes in the funoro
likely to become permanent, causing
; for alcohol or narcotics in later life,
nervous dyspepsia and lack of staying
ton or narcotics to keep children quiet
lysicians is that children should never
or more than a day at a time,
Drops, Cordials, Soothing Syrups and
i a physician cannot be too strongly
m? a party to it. Children who are ill
ud it is nothing less than a crime to
b bears the
gnataro
ESanMWBMHBH
SPECIAL TO WOMEN
Do you realize tho fact that thousands
of women are now using
A Soluble Antiseptic Powder
as a remedy for mucous membrane affections,
such as sore throat, nasal 09
pelvic catarrh, inflammation or ulceration,
caused by female ills? "Women
who have been cured say "it Is worth
its weight in gold." Dissolve In water
and apply locally. For ten years the
Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. has
recommended Paxtlne in their private
correspondence with women.
For all hygienic and toilet uses it has
no equal. Only 50c a large box at Druggists
or sent postpaid on receipt of
price. The Paxton Toilet Co., Boston,
Mass.