Democratic Sentinel, Volume 9, Number 49, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 8 January 1886 — Page 7

A SAVAGE IN SOCIETY.

A Practical Illustration of the Civil and the Social Code of Paris. Where was it that I read the following 'charming story? In Saintine, I think. Some sort of a savage —an Indian, perhaps—came to Pans to live permanently. He made a study of our ways and customs. In a drawing-room he had a discussion, and dealt to his opponent such square logic and common sense as floored him completely. So much was the adevrsary enraged that he slapped the savage’s face. “This is further proof,” said the latter, “that you are not right, for you have nothing but brute arguments left to you,” and, enchanted by this last victory, he looked around him with an air of triumph. In place of viewing smiles, however, he saw only stupefied faces and scornful eyes. He was astounded himself when a gentleman with a grave air, a face graced with whiskers, and wearing the red ribbon of the Legion of Honor, took him by the arm. “You are a stranger, are you not?” he asked. “I am.” “I felt sure you were. You are not familiar with our customs. After the outrage you have received a man of the world would send two friends to ‘demand reason’ from the assailant.” “What reason can I demand from a man that has none?” “Beason, such as you think of, has nothing to do with it. To demand reason simply means to propose single combat with the sword or pistol.” “Indeed! How strange. I shall conform with the custom immediately.” A meeting was had, pistols being chosen. The Indian, who was accustomed to hunt the tiger in his native jungle, promptly inserted a bullet between the two eyes of his antagonist, and killed him as dead as Moses. Shortly afterward he was summoned to answer for it. A gentleman in an official robe of red, wearing the cross of the Legion of Honor, demanded the infliction of severe punishment on the ground that it is time to do away with usages worthy of the barbarous ages. The poor d|vil turned his head to see this terrible accuser, and uttered an exclamation of surprise. “Why,” he cried, “you’re the very man that told me I must fight or be disgraced 1” “Silence!” exclaimed the President of the court. The prisoner was sentenced to six days’ imprisonment and a fine of S4O. When all was over he called upon the Advocate General and said: “What sort of a joker are you? It was you who told me that I must fight!” The amiable magistrate shook him by the hand smilingly: “Of course; when I spoke to you in that way it was as a man of the world; in court I spoke as a magistrate. Do you grasp the shading?” “Faith, I don’t.” “Well, you will by and by. You are not quite used to our ways as yet.”— London World.

Value of Feathers.

Fowls are reared chiefly for their eggs and flesh. Dr. Geargo,>of France, draws attention to the 'value of their feathers. A full-grown hen will yield from two and a half oisnces to four and a half ounces of feathers and down. The feathers serve for bonnet decorations, the ornamentation of military shakos, and for dusters. The averagesized feathers are employed for beds and bolsters; the down for pillows. But the latter' classes are not held in as much esteem as the same from geese and ducks. When the feathers are plucked they are placed for a short time in a baker’s oven, after the bread has been withdrawn, to kill the insect germs. Four sous is the average price for the feathers of a hen, but if from a white cock the price may rise as high as 3 francs. Pea-hen feathers are not employed in industry. Turkey feathers, if good and white, fetch as much as 12 to 20 francs; they are sold as ostrich feathers, and can be dyed all the colors of the rainbow. The feathers of the male are more esteemed than those of the female bird, Im the case of peacocks, the white feathers are most prized. The goose, however, is the bird which yields the most lucrative crop of feathers. Quill-farming having been extinguished, the geese are now plucked three times a year., on the breast and abdomen; their annual value is one franc. In the department of Vienne the goose is skinned before it is sent to market, and the skin, garnished with its down, is sold as swan’s skin, or down.

Rather Weak Whisky.

A saloon-keeper in a certain Texas city was noted for keeping a very thin article of whisky. There was good reason to suspect that he watered his wh'skv. One day there came a fearful •oversow. The river rose twenty feet, and kept on rising. The terrified .saloon-keeper said to one of his customers . “The water is rising every minute. I’m afraid it will ruin the whisky I’ve got in the cellar.” “O, that’s nothing. A few gallons, more or less is not going to hurt the whisky.” “I know that well enough, but suppose the barrels burst when the cellar is full of water.” “If it comes to that you can run a force-pump down the cellar and tap the cellar. The contents will not be much weaker than the stuff you sell now.” Only twe dy-flve cents. Rod Star Cough Cure. Ko opiates or

The Parent of Insomnia.

The parent of insomnia or wakefulness is in nine cases out of ten a dyspeptic stomach. Good digestion gives sound sleep, indigestion interferes with it. The brain and stomach sympathize. One of the prominent symptoms of a weak state of the gastric organs is a disturbance of the great nerve entrepot, the brain. Invigorate the stomach, and you restore equilibrium to the great center. A moat reliable medicine for the purpose is Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters, which is far preferable to mineral sedatives and powerful narcotics, which, though they may for a time exert a soporific influence upon the brain, soon cease to act, and invariably injure the tone of the stomach. The Bitters, on the contrary, restore activity to the operations of that all important organ, and their beneficent influence is reflected in sound sleep and a tranquH state of the nervous system. A wholesome impetus is likewise given to the action of the liver and bowels by its use.

What Your Name Means.

The only Frank I know is short and stout, and a slow thinker, who begins to dribble out his words before his thought is ready, and then has to make a clumsy pause while the poor slow thing is overtaking him. How different from the bright and winning Frank of fiction. How many Georges does one know who slay their dragons? Tom is somewhere near Jack, but less attractive, for these yielding, susceptible sinners are generally very likable. Andrew is not. He is slow and sure, and quite reliable, so far as his own interests jump with yours. I think I should hate to be married to an Andrew ; that is, the typical Andrew. As to John and James, they are either John and James, or else Jack and Jim, and worlds divide these from each other. James and John are fixed stars—Jim and Jack are planets, if not comets, with the exception that not all the science in the world could with certainty predict their movements. Then there is Alfred, often a quite unbearable prig, while Fred is the very contrary. Frederick is a very different man from Fred, and it seems as impossible for Harry to grow old as it is for Henry to be very young. Charlie is surrounded by historic grace, which disappears when we examine into facts, but the name is improved by the cloudy halo that surrounds it. But Charles! Oh, “Charles” is dreadful.— London Truth. Dr. T. M. Coan, writing of cereal foods and milling, remarks that “the virtues of wheat are unlocked first by the miller; second, by the baker. In both processes more improvement has taken place within the last twenty years than during the whole previous history of civilized man.” The millstone is being replaced by a Hungarian invention which pulverizes the grain by rollers with less heat of friction. Dr. Foote's Health Monthly.

Rupture, Breach, or Hernia,

neglected, often becomes strangulated and proves fatal. We employ a new method and ■ guarantee a cure In every case or no pay. Send 10 cents in stamps for pamphlet and references. World’s Dispensary Medical Association, £63 Main street, Buffalo, N.Y. Love laughs at locks—particularly if they are red.— Boston Globe. E. L. Noyes, Revere, Mass., was cured of scald head bj’ using Hall's Hair Renewer. A man with water on the brain should wear a plug hat— Philadelphia Bulletin. A sure cure for obstinate coughs and colds —Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral. The best remedy. You can’t count votes honestly by elect trick light— Boston Star. Every one is perfectly satisfied who uses Buckingham’s Dye for the Whiskers. The lumberman’s favorite drink is logger.— St. Paul Herald. The bowels may bo regulated, and the stomach strengthened, with Ayer's Pills. Wild oats are often sown with rye.— Boston Post.

"As the Crow Flies.”

This interesting bird, as is well known, always takes the shortest route and “gets there” soonest. In this respect he is worthy of imitation by travelers. For example, a man going to Florida, as many do at this season, would naturally take the Danville Route, because that line not only passes through the most interesting country, but makes the ran from Chicago to New Orleans and Jacksonville in forty hours. This unfirecedented performance is made possible >y the new bridge over the Ohio River, near Evansville, which brings Nashville within sixteen hours of Chicago. Palace Buffet Sleepipg Cars run without change to Nashville, and with but one change to New Orleans and Jacksonville, Florida. Send to William Hill, General Passenger Agent, C. & E. I. R. It.. Chicago, for an illustrated copy of “Florida—A Story.”

The Great German Physician.

The remarkable phase m the practice of Dr. Peter W. Schmidt (frequently called Dr. Pete) is, he never asked one to describe their disease 'but tells each one their trouble without asking a question. His success is jihenomenal. His practice enormous. He is sought after by hundreds wherever he goes, because he cures when every other physician and remedy have failed. He has allowed his great medicines, Golden Seal Bitters and Lung Food for Consumption, to be offered to the suffering, and we assert without fear of successful contradiction that there is no disease they will not cure. Thousands of bottles have been sold. Thousands of brokendown and discouraged invalids saved. Send to Golden Seal Bitters Company, Holland City, Mich., for Facts for the Million! Free.

Twenty-four Hours to Live.

From John Kuhn, Lafayette, Ind., who announces that he is now in “perfect health,” we have the following: “One year ago I wm, to all appearance, in the last stages of Consumption. Our beet physicians gave my case up. I finally got so low that our doctor said I could only live twenty-four hours. My friends then purchased a bottle of DR. WM HALL’S BALSAM FOR THE LUNGS, which considerably benefited me. I continued until I took nine bottles, and I am now in perfect health.”

"Put up at the Gault House.

The business man or tourist will find firstelass aceommodatio is at the low price of S 2 and 82.50 per day at the Gault House, Chicago. corner Clinton and Madison streets. This far-famed hotel is io iated in the center of the city, only one block from the Union Depot. Elevator; ail appointments first-class Hoyt & Gaiks. Proprietors.

The “Favorite Prescription.”

Dr. R. V. Pierce, of Buffalo, N. Y., whose name has become known over the world through his success as a physician, and especially through the reputation of his “Golden Medical Discovery,” has done a good work in preparing an especial remedy for the many distressing troubles clashed as “female weaknesses.” It is known as the “Favorite Prescription.” Under its administration all the pelvic organs are strengthened, and the woman becomes that embodiment of health and beauty which God intended her to be. Barnum has treated Jumbo just as he has the public—stuffed him.— Burlington Free Frets.

Greatest Discovery Since 1492.

For coughs, colds, sore throat, bronchitis, laryngitis, and consumption in its early stages, nothing equals Dr. Pierce’s “Golden Medical Discovery.” It is also a great bloodpurifier and strength-restorer, or tonic, and tor liver complaint and costive condition of the bowels it has no equal. Sold by druggists. Bronze is a very fashionable hue nowadays, but brass has not entirely gone out Worms Are the Scourge of Childhood. Thousands of children die or grow up weak and sickly, with disordered nerves and stunted minds, the food necessary to their growth having been eaten by those disgusting parasites. Dr. Walker’s California Vinegar Bitters not only expels worms, but frees the stomach from the unhealthy secretions in which they breed. The flour of the family is usually the latest to rise.— St. Paul Herald. Don’t say there is no help for Catarrh, Hay Fever and Cold in Head, since thousands testify that Ely’s Cream Balm has entirely cured them. It supersedes the dangerous use of liquids and snufls. It is easily applied with the finger and gives relief at once. Price 50 cents at druggists; 60 cents by mail. Send for circular. Ely Bros., Owego, N. Y. For dyspepsia, indigestion, depression of spirits, and general debility in their various forms; also, as a preventive against fever and ague, and other intermittent fevers, the “Ferro-Phosphorated Elixir of Calisaya,” made by Caswell, Hazard Sc Co., of New York, and sold by all druggists, is the best tonic; and for patients recovering from fever or other sickness it has no equal. For over eight years I have suffered from catarrh, which has affected my eyes and hearing; have employed many physicßns without relief. lam new on my secund bottle of Ely’s Cream Balm and feel confident ot a complete cure.—Mary C. Thompson, ( erro Gordo, Pratt County, 111. I have used Athlophoros in my family with entire success, and I take pleasure and have no hesitation whatever In recommending it to all who are afflicted with rheumatism. M. M. Tilton, 104 La Salle street, Chicago, 111. 1 used part of two bottles of Ely’s Cream Balm, and can say I am entirely cured of catarrh.—Charles Biesel, Co. K, 17th Infantry, Fort Custer, M. T. i You will get more comfort for 25 cts. In Lyon’s Heel Stiffeners than in any other article you buy. 3 months’ treatment for 50c. Piso’s Remedy for Catarrh. Sold by druggizts.

Red, Star TRADE MARK. fIOUGHSURE free from Opiates, Emetics amd Poison. sure'. Q KCts. PROMPT. At Dvvggibts and Dealer®. THE CHARLES A. VOGKLER C4L, RALTIIIOCT, WP. CT JACOBS QI! GerSsdy _ft ■ Cures Rheumatism, Neuralgia, 1 ft 11 ft Ift Backache, Haadaehe, Toothache, I OF iQlll p «!ct"'iTFTy'&ST6, ■ ■ •*■■■ AT DRUGGISTS AND DKALKX& THE CH ARIKS A.VOGEI.ER CO., BA I.TIMORE. MB. BUY SALZERTSda Croi.e,WU.)SEEDS, c.ia. Krea. H A MPPD Treated and cured without the knife. 11A 1111 Ri n Book on treatment sent free. Address UrllTUmi F. L. POND. M.D.. Anror i. Kane On . IP *Tf- 1_ I- WAO M V • e 'iru uere aau e „r. I fcWEMnfir 11 1 good pay. Situati uis ■ futwehed. Write Valentine Bros., Janesvilb Wix DR FfIOTF 9 f I. 20 Lexington New York, 11 rUUIL, mvites letters of Pnnciilfatinn from sufferers everywhere; and UUllbul IdllUil in reply sends good advice and vilna'> e l>ooks. wfl ■■ ■ 11 Bw ■ H ■ Painesville, Ohio, f'fc fill I BESYfiiJtfL'Xisialtd VH,. ORAL, iB U 111 nA habits easily cubed II r 111 mBOOK FREE. Dr. J. C. Holl’Mc * I I man. .lefficrson. Wisonnsin. Brace, hands, feet. and *ll tbeir Iniperfwtloni, including Facial Oerel, opment, Superfluous Hair. Birth Marks, Moles, Warts, Moth, Freckles, Red Nose, Aene, Blank Heads, S*'*rs. Pitting, and their treatment. PR. John h. Woodbury, m «. rum stU.BAW.IL Y. Est’Ula’d ISIO. Send 10c far bo*L I wll, ship this HAY i.n<l STRAW PROS to any place on condition that If four men and one team can not press 2.Htx) pounds of hay in one hour and not drive the team faster than a walk 1 wid make you a present of the t ress Forcondl'lons, clrcu e-s rtcaddre s .)■ A. SPENT If, DWIGHT. UAL, of the LonlerfHe and Jeffersonville Ferry Co., Mr. J. 0. Dorsey, who liven on Wall St., .kffersunvllle, Ind., Buffered severely from Neuralgia Id the face, and wm quickly cured by ATHLOPHOItOS. Thh la the only 4ure aud ta/e remedy for N’ev Ja. Aik your drugglat for Athlophoroa If you cau *< get it of him do not iry something else, but order at once from ii. We will send it exp real paid on receipt of price, SI,OO per bottle. ATHIOPHOBQB C 0„ 112 Wall St., Rew York. ■ Ftoo'a Remedy for Catarrh is the I Beat, Easiest to Use. and Cheapest. ■ Also good for Cold In the Head, HI Headache, Hay Fever, Ac. 60ceuia Q|

IP* blood, strengthens the liver and kidneys, and will restore health, however lost. Vinegar Bitters lathe best remedy discovered for promoting digestion, curing neadache and increasing the ywlwif-lUMvk viul P°' Terß - ——————J vinegar Bitter* assimilates the food, regulates the stomach and bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. Vinegar Bitters is the great disease preventer, and stands at the head of all family remedies. No house should ever be without it Vinegar Bitters cures Malarial, Bilious and other fevers, diseases of the Heart, Liver and Kidneys, and a hundred other painful disorders. Send for either of our valuable reference books for ladies, for farmers, for merchants, our Medical Treatise on Diseases, or our Catechism On Intemperance and Tobacco, which last should be in the hands of every child and youth in the country. Any two of the above books mailed free on receipt of four cents for registration fees. . R.H. McDonald Drug Co.. 532 Washington St.. v v 4* CTW Your Newsdealer for THE CHICAGO /a Jfcs LEDGER, the Best Story Pavkb ■fc iAKi rJb Jte in the country. Read it. A GENTS wanted in every cltv and town for Ladies’ A Favorite Tracing Wheel. Will se!l iuevery household. Two dozen m died upon receipt of sl. Sample 10c. Novelty Wheel Co.. 24 Congress St., Boston, Mash. 111 I #sales,bic pay,steady work, no talk, I I I I I I ■ 1/ U an hour for either mi. »11.50 I a sample. free. Send stamp and se■J u I I I I Moure a pleassnt winter's business. ■ * G. B. Merrill a Co., Chicago. 111. CLYDESDALE AND ENGLISH SHIRE HORSES. The on y stud in Americacontainiug the very best specimens of both breeds. Prizewinners ■ mHBwIPMWSINIK Chicago Fair, the World s Fair at New Orleans, the Royal Society of Englund, etc. Large imp arMH rived August 12, and BWH more to follow. Our ■gajMSf- buying facilities being ' iBl - uimqualed. there is no such opportunity offered elsewhere to procure first-class animals of choicest breeding at very lowest prices. Every animal duly recorded and guaranteed. Terms to suit all customers. Catalogues on application. GALBRAITH BROS., Janesville. Wls.

OLD SOLDIERS! ATTENTION! ACENTSIs.®.™IWANTED A TKPQ QOT TITTPT? Q’ It sells without argument CanIHAILI O OVIjLJLJCjIvO AVJCjUUHU. vnsslng outfits now ready. Th* Soldiers’ Record is an Elegant Engraving, lithographed upon Plato Paper, with blank spaces for Recording Date of Enlistment and Discharge, Name of Company, Regiment, Corps, Ac., Battle* engaged in, and everything else required to give a Complete Record of the service of each individual Soldier. When framed the Record forms a handsome picture that will be a credit to th* wall of any parlor. One Agent writes: “I have only had my outfit for lino hours, and have taken six orders." tSrSend for Circulars giving full particulars, with terms to Agents, at onoe. If you want the first chance in your vicinity. Address THE CHICAGO LEDGER, 871 FKAAKLIN HTKBBT. Cl I I<’A <4O. 11,1.. BUY NORTHERM GROWN SEEDS. fiWSAAI liable tested Northern Crown Seeds. Splendid Fann Beede; increases VailWlßiMnl EXAL P.°. n c bu y worthless Seeds when for less money ours uro delivered you FREFiMraBI MAIL. Catalog free. JOHN A. SALZER, La Crosse, Wls.lfcM®

FACTS! The Crop and Market Report a alone are worth ten times the subscription price to any farmer: ail other departments equally valuable. Only *1 25 a year. Sample copies free ; write for one. FARMERS’ REVIEW,Chicago, 111. State where you saw this adv. a. pebry* IMPORTED AND BREEDER OF FRENCH DRAFT HORSES! I offer f-r nile the very best specimens of F ench Draft Horses thatcan be found in France. All parties wishing good, reliable stock are invited to call and see my stock, which now number about lilOheail. Terms and prices to suit purchasers. All stock sold under a guarantee of being breeders. 1 have also some very L'afPrs, all from importe ' stock. JAMES A. PERRY, Riverview Stock Farm, Wilmington. 111., 5.’ miles south of Chicago, on C. A A. R. R. EVERY <’ II I I. If In every land is subject to Coughs, Croup & Whooping Cough. AKA'- V. r • aSBffTOTOroI . \ New Hollander (W. Australia). THEIR PARENTS TO conhum: F*Tioj<r! TAKE IN TIME Taylor’s Cherokee Remedy ol Sweet Gum and Mullein. The Sweet G 'in from a tree of the same name g owing In the South, combined with a tea made from rI s Mu Hem plant of the old fields. For sale by al druggists st 25 confs and #I.OO per bottle. * W > 't E»; V TAYLOB. Atlnnfn. <la. Iunbs.BALSAM Cure. Consiiniptl'n, Colde, PnenmenU, Influenza. Bron tiinl Dlltleullle*. BrnnebltU, ll„ .. e- es Asthma, C’rovp, Wiin .plng Conffh, and al lliNearne* »i the Bi emtlilna <>rUftns. gnnt’irs mid bea h • c Heuibrniie th ’* Lunrq, tn htine>| *»»’d poison rd bv the d’*» mid prrve im tbe night mil ti< ’ ar* rlir « b st wli ch a< eonipnny in not nn Incurable iifa(-*<lv. HALT'S BALSA.iI will cure you, even th on pr tr Minna aid fnll< Cfhe OLDEST MEDIcTNEhTthe WORLD is probably Dr. Isaac Thompson’s U elebrated Eye Watell 'lliis article is a carefully prepared phvsi.-ian's pre•criiiti di, atm ha< b-en iu constant use for nearly a century, a>vl notwithstandiag the manv other preparations that have been introduce I into the market, the sale of this article Is con-ta ,t! y Increasing. If the directions are i< Uow.-d it wdl never fail. Wepa-tlcu-larly invite the stteutiou of ph.vsl'-l ms to Its merits John L. Thompson, Sons dt Co., TBOY N Y

STRICTLY PURE. The BEST and CHEAPEST COUGH AND CROUP REMEDY. As an Expectorant it has no Equal. ALLEY’S LBW BJLSAMt IN THREE SIZE BOTTLES, Price, 25 cts., 50 cts. and $1 per bottle. The 25-CENT BOTTLES are put up for the accommodation of all who desire simply a COUGH of CROUP REMEDY. , Those desiriuz a remedy for CONSUMPTION or DISEASE should secure the large <l.o* Directions accompany each bottle. **“BOLD BY All Dzalebs.'V* J. N. HARRIS & CO. (IJmltei), PropTs, CINCINNATI. OHIO. n A TEUTP R. H- * A. P Laoky. Patent M I I* N I Attorneys. Washington, D.O. I ww ■ fciiw ■ W Instructions and opinion* as to patentability FREE. ZWI7 years’expoilenoe.

WW BITCR An active Man or Woman in every n N I £ ■'county to sei I our good, Salary 4 IK. MIB Per Month and Expenaea. Kxpemea In ad- ■ ■ vancc. Canvaaaingouifll PRkKI Particular* ttee, Htand.ard B'lver ware C!o. Boston. M >m. Have you a frlend ara If so, place in their hands a copy of Mai rnder’e Reply to Inuersoll, Ministers, suportnteudentK teachers, and stude .ts should avail them elvai at once of this masterly and conclusive argument. Price, cloth, »l, O.H.JONEB 77 Clark Bt„Chicago,lll. •These t represent I I r opposite sides of t B. H. DOUGLASS & SONS’ Capsicum Cough Drop* fo * I ‘„ Oo^ gh8 ’ 9 olds and Sore Throats, an. Alleviator of Consumption, and of great benefit in most casos of Dyspepsia, (BEWARE OF IMITATIONS.) They are the result of over forty years* oxperlenMin compounding COUGH REMEDIES. Itctail price 15 cents per quarter pound. FOR BALE UY ALL DEALERN, ■ Plso’s Remedy for Catarrh I* the H Beet, Easiest to Use, and Cheapest. B Also good for Cold In the Head, Headache, Hay Fever, Ac. 60 centa. “Judging from its effects in my case. Plan's Remedy' for Cjiarrh is 'Excelsior.'"—H.l). Knowlton, Hos. land, New York. ■ Piso's Remedy for Catarrh Is the I Best, Easiest to Use, and Cheapest. B Also good for Cold In the Head, I Headache, Hay Fever, Ac. 60 cents. “Piso's Remedy for Catarrh gave me almost immedlate relief."—F. E. Brainebd, Audubon, lowa. Rise’s Remedy for Catarrh Is the I ■■ Best, Easiest to Use, and Cheapest. ■ ■ Also good for Cold In the Head, ■ Headache, Hay Fever, Ac. 60 cents. “Piso’s Remedy for Catarrh is Just the medicine r have been looking for.”—W. Outon, Maysvil.c, Ky. ■ Piso’s Remedy for Catarrh Is the B| Best, Easiest to Use, and Cheapest. ■ _Also good for Cold In the Head, I ’ Headache, Hay Fever, Ac. 60 centa [t« “Piso’s Remedy for Catarrh has done me more goo* a> l SwS^^.^ ) r n “’ ied ”- MIM “• A ’ ■ Piso’s Remedy for Catarrh la th* H Best, Easiest to Use, and Cheapest, ktafc Headache, Hay Fever, Ac. 60 centa “Piso's R« medy to-Catarrh is producing favorabl* results.”—Gao. W. Wituam, Philade.phia, Pa. H Piso’s Remedy for Catarrh Is the I Best, Easiest to Use, and Cheapest. I R Also good for Cold In the Head, I |gj| Headache, Hay Fever, Ac. 60 centa I C- N. U. No. »-%g~ VVHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS, in ZV “ ' aW llllverU ‘ em ««