Evening Republican, Volume 18, Number 72, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 25 March 1914 — Page 3 Advertisements Column 2 [ADVERTISEMENT]
9 WRIGLEYSk. | | U is now electrica lly sealed with a B 3 Ull Wsjl I “SEAL OF PURITY” so | a I a^so^u^e that it is | 9 /CWW/ d am P‘P r °°f, dust K n inVV I • impurity- E 9 /L\ \M proof —even C 3 Jy air -p roofl £ h Jr Give B M y&p,/f I regular aid I S kJ ■//j\\\ to teeth, breath, B 9 Fl ' /JI appetite and diges- B 1/ I \/1 i tion. It’s the safe A>X B ctZ/JL besides delicious and h I BUY IT BY THE i 9 for 85 cents—at most dealers. Each box twenty B J 5 cent packages. They stay fresh until used. M It’s clean, pure, healthful M if it’s WRIGLEY’S. CHEW IT AFTER | I Look for the spear EVERY MEAL !
Then the Apparatus Is in Demand. A visitor was being shown through a lid lifting “athletic” club. The chief attraction seemed to be the liquid gymnastic department. However, there was a cheaply equipped gymnasium which showed evidences of disuse. There was dust on the Indian clubs and cobwebs on the dumbbells. “Don’t the members ever use this equipment?” the visitor asked, i “Oh, yes, occasionally—when a fight starts,” was the reply. ~' -
WATERY BLISTERS ON FACE Smithville, Ind.—“ Six months ago our baby girl, one year old, had a few red pimples come on her face which gradually spread causing her face to become very Irritated and a fiery red color. The pimples on the child’s face were at first small watery blisters, just a small blotch on the skin. She kept scratching at this until in a few days her whole cheeks were fiery red color and Instead of the little blisters the skin was cracked and scaly looking and seemed to itch and burn very much. “We used a number of remedies which seemed to give relief for a short time then leave her face worse than ever. Finally we got a cake of Cuticura Soap and a box of Cuticura Ointment. I washed the child’s face with very warm water and Cuticura Soap, then applied the Cuticura Ointment very lightly. After doing this about three times a day the itching and burning eeemed entirely gone in two days’ time. Inside of two weeks’ time her face seemed well.** That was eight months ago and there has been no return of the trouble.” (Signed) Mrs. A. K. Wooden, Nov. 4, 1912. Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world. Sample of each free,with 32-p. Skin Book. Address postcard “Cuticura, Dept. L, Boston.”—Adv. Ugliness a Qualification. Some bygone housewives appear to have regarded ugliness as a quality to be-desired in their servants. When Eliza Coke, daughter of Coke of Norfolk, was about to marry, she wrote to her prospective mother-in-law: “Pray, have the goodness to decide as you think best about the pretty housemaid. I wish she were less pretty and less fond of dress, but if her conduct and principles are good neither are really objectionable faults. I think our establishment will be a pattern of mortality, particularly- if Mr. Stanhope engages the squinting butler and the terrible housemaid he mentioned to me." Their Breed. “Your father has a lot of very fine chickens,” observed the young man. “Has he Incubators?” "No,” said the sweet young thing just home from boarding school, “I think they’re Plymouth Rbcks.”—Dallas Newb. » Your family Doctor can’t do more for your cough than Dean’s Mentholated Cough Drops; “they cure”—oc at Druggists. Many a proverb la merely a smartsounding saying that cannot bear analyst*. .
