Nappanee Advance-News, Volume 29, Number 31, Nappanee, Elkhart County, 31 March 1921 — Page 7
miserabirWlvi half-«ick? Then it’d tin)e you lound out what ia wrong. Kidney weakness causes much suffering from backache, lameness, stiffness and rheumatic pains, and if neglected brings danger of serious troubles—dropsy, gravel and Bright's disease. Don’t delay. Use Uoan'i Kidney Pills. They have helped thousands and should help you. Ask your neighbor! An Indiana Case
Mrs. J.' C. Cain, 616 Missouri Ave., Jeffersonville, I n d . , -anya: ”1 had kidney complaint, and suffered with backache and pains all through me. At night my hack hurt and mornings I felt tired out. 1 was -dull und languid and if I stooped, I would get so <lizzy r I could h ardl y stand. A friend told me to
ÜbsStorg*
ta,ko Doan's Kidney Pills, so I did. Doan’s * c ured me.” Get Doan*« at Ant Store, 60c a Box DOAN’S ■V.’L’iV FOSTER -MILBURN CO.. BUFFALO, N. Y.
Much Worse. “You'll liuYi; to work lmrd if you want to win Miss Bond, tire heiress.” . "Yes. mid 111 have to work a deuced -sight-harder if I~ dotfilV" "* T —~ The housewife smiles with satisfaction us she looks at the '-basket of clear, white clothes and thanks Red Cross Ball Blue, At grocers, sc. Sounds Strange. “They must he very good to their servant.” "Whnt makes you think so?” “I understand she wouldn’t even leave them to get married,” Cutlcura for Pimply Face*. To remove pitnplea and blackhead* sjnear them with Cuticurff' Ointment. Wnsh off in five minutes with Cutl--Cura Soap and hot wuter. Once clear keep your skin clear by using them for -dally toilet purposes. Don't fall to inr elude Cutlcura Talcum.—Adv. Question. “Oijr hotel accommodates 400." “And hmv many do you crowd In?” —Louisville Courier-Journal. If a limn is able to collect his thoughts he, can pull through without borrowing trouble. No; one ever saw a girl wear n’glove to iiide an engagement ring.
Oh, Dear! My Back! When your kidneys get sluggish and clog, you suffer from backache, sick-headache, dizzy spells, or twinges and pains of lumbago, rheumatism or gout; or sleep is disturbed two or three times a night, get Dr. Pierce’s Anuric, it will put new life into your kidneys and your entire system. Elkhart, Ind.—“ When I started to take Anuric the kidney excretion was thick and cloudy, sometimes I was disturbed fifteen times in one night. I. took one package of Amiric and my rest at night is unbroken, and consequently my general health is greatly improved.” Mrs. S. J. Anderson, No. TOO Marion Street.
Tomorrow Alright NR Tablets stop sick headaches, telieve bilious attacks, tone and regulate the eliminative organs, make you . feel fine. '' Etltrt li.tr til,"
DON’T CUT OUT BjPKnHj A Shoe Boil. Capped Hock or Bursitis will ieduce them and leave no blemishes. Stops lameness promptly. Does not blister or remove the hair, and horse can be worked. $2. 50 a bottle delivered. Book 6 R free. ABSORBINE, JR., for minklnd. .Jbe antiieptlc liniment for Boil*. Brultc*. Sore*. Swellinfi. V*rico*e Vein*. Alityi Pain and Inflammation. Price 11.25 a bottle at druggi*t* or delitered. Will tell jrou more if you write. W. F. YOUNG, Inc., 310 Temple St., Springfield. Mass. TyT/T, __ you wish “sorrterr/IC/lbody would invent something new to eat” you need Beecham’S Pills Even when digestion is good,poisons are formed during its processes that unless eliminated irritate mind as well as body. BEECHAM’S Sold •▼•ry- | ■ ■ A Lar«Mt In boxes. ■ I 10c ,25c. ■ World. ENT l CKY* TOBACCO: CHEWING AND hMOKINfi f» lbs. $1.50, 10 lbs. $”75 poHtp.l. John A , Kalryouth, Ky .. K. 4 For Sale-r-Any kind of farm you waht, Fred Gade, R. 3, Grand Haven, Mich. BOYS AND GIRLS You mak** oOc .llstribuling only 12_packa*:es Summit Silver Cleaner., the h.-vrinlens cleaner (hit rbans without rubblnk, at 16c package. Write today and start earning now: L;Gnk 3 0-15. Summit Agency. Box dO(i, Akron, Ohio. MEDIAEHONE Natural Tone^-Attachment for Phonographs sl* postpaid 'PIXIE PHONOGRAPH CU., 241 O' Josephine St.. NEW ORLEANS. LA “ ftWteKl < COY KB SEED AND HONEY DIRECT from producer. Prices. circulars on request. John A. Sheehan. Falmouth, Ky..K. 4. FRECKLES SiS
COMMUNITY HAULING CONSERVES * FARM LABOR AT BUSY SEASONS
■f -. $ -/T £ £ :-./'/. \ ■ W. ’Aw-'amok*' jfggywM aaynHßX- A^^^^^K»KA;]wTOreK®Sffl^
Autotruck Delivers Farmers’ Produce (Prepared by the! United States Department of Agriculture.) 'Td. almost he- money ahead If I dumped this milk into the brook til's morning instead of carrying it to the (•reuinery. With thebeslhorge In the barn It’s a two-hour Job towarry 300 pounds of milk three miles, and it has to be done every day. Those strawberries simply must be picked this forenoon, too. Rain last night and sunshine today ; all the berries not In the cooling room by noon will be spoiled.” This farmer bad encountered one of the periods in his farm work when . the proprietor's presence is 'desperately needed in tw„o places at the same time, Turning to save.a profit on Isis dairy, he was likely to lose one on Ills strawberry crop; if he saved the berries he lost tbehiilk, for milk and strawberries wait for no roan.
Starts on the Trip. “Welt, I've got the milk ready to go, but I Jinven't picked the berries'. Here goes for the milk." Two minutes- later lie guided , old Jim and the buekboard around the maple on the corner and urged the horse into his best_gait when . they reached the main road. Every minute was valuable this morning.- A half mile from home a forewheel began to give foil slip) t, com plain! ng sounds; “A .dry axle,” groaned the farmer. ‘‘l’ll bine to stop at Yelp's and grease (lie wheels.” When lie reached Yelp’s farm two more of the huckhoard's wheels were squealing wildly. “Can I borrow your wagon wrench, jack, and some axle grease?” he called, catching sight of Ids neighbor, oddly muffled in gauze and gloves under a tree In the orchard; ... ; “Sure! Help yourself.” 'came the hearty reply. “I’d- find the things for you niyscif. Ijnt I'm so busy 1 can't spare a minute. I'm. trying to hive some of lhy bees that swarmed llihv nmrnlng. and I’ve got a dozen crates of lettuce all packed that must go on the noon train." “There's another man in the same fte,” thought Stevens, as he worked. “He's got to stop profitable work to haul stuff into town. ITolmbly Hamilton and firosner and Phillips and Jones are TTo belter oil. titill’!' I cun t afford a truck to haul just my own produce, luit if those fellows would make it worth my while to buy a truck and carry.their stuff to market, too. there ought to be a way out of this for all of us.” ~ lie-thought the matter-out to a conclusion, and that evening-drove around to his neigliftoH" Willi ills proposition, lie called only at the farms that lay between hbeown place and tlie village, and to-their owners la- made a proposition that ran something like, this. How much would it be worth to you to have your milk and farm produce
EXTERMINATING RATS THROUGHOUT COUNTRY Work Is Now Being Carried.on in Vigorous Manner. County Agricultural Demonstrators and Rodent Control Experts Mak-* ing Determined Efforts to Destroy Little Pests. /Prepared by Hie United—'States Department of Agriculture-L-i. .‘A'ccsiKlfiui 1° JTliurt* til. .lL‘£ states Lippartniout of Am*i« iiluire, i rat PXttTinlnaiioii work throughout | the country is bailie « arrictl forward i vigorously under the •oinbihed es- ! forts of the county lUjri*\ulujraJ deni- ; i>iistrnlors n t out B b\ the states relations sei‘\i<;v and ihe t'tMleni conirol experts pppivsont in;u the bureau of bio- , logical survey. At Jtlackstone, Va,, tin* home deuitYn-'i st ration a.L r ent and ilie btok>L r ical sur-j vey i, re|)re>euiaTive joined in , a rat •ampaiLii which, to send 12.000 rodents"dnto the rat hereafter. When' tin 1 final <;o>mt of hat tails was taken if\\vas toumt Hint .‘JO.OULLi of. i l,f*‘ "}»ests Had UcCtl killed ill the one town. * * At Fargo* >.'. I)., the citizens .were! annoyed -by a he a\ v —iftf e sUO|o n of rats. A • burejwi representative ofn listed tlie co-opcrjition -of the City'coinmission, tlie commercial' club, the. health department, the hov scouts, women's dubs, and other orgauiza- j rtons, jrrrd / cofr4ue4od -a—Yei , y: .s>uc(,essfnl cnmpnign aLofTrist the pest. In this instneee-the poison, barium carbonate, I wus P’l !•'■! I “Fed mi ijua nt it ies and us. d as a destructive agent with excellent ! results. - ' * 1
and Collects Purchases at City Station. carried into town for you every day? There are days when you have to make a trip that takes an hour or more of your time at the busiest season of the year just to haul your milk to th*e creamery, and there are other times when you'll have a load of things that you want to send. Suppose I buy a light truck —would you be willing to pay me enough for hauling your prodduce to make it worth my while?” “Yes; we’d be willing to do that, providing your charges aren’t too steep. How would you regulate the prices?” “I’ve been consulting a bulletin on this subject issued by the United States Department of Agriculture. Maryland farmers have already put an idea like. this into execution, according to the department's representatives. They own and operate a truck on co-operative basis, and the rate is In cents per- hundredweight for first-class goods. I believe I can haul -your produce with a light truck for' ”0 cents a hundred pounds during the summer months. The cooperative idea in Maryland ia not managed to secure a. profit, but I shall have to make'a profit to pay for the time I am taking* from my own work.” 'How will We manage when we want things brought out from town?” "Telephone your , orders and, have the merchants -deliver the goods at the creamery where I can pick them all up at once ana I’ll bring them out to you.” The scheme was adopted and these farmers found the solution to their hauling problems. Whore there are only a few farmers and the route Is short it Is sometimes .possible to organize motor-truck service in this way, if a farmer can bo found who is wiillng-to undertake the work. In most cases, however, the -Volume of business increases so rapidly that it cannot lie handled by one truck or one .man, and when this stage is reached a co-operative, motg.r--tru.ck association is the best solution.Forming an Association. Such an Association can be organized ns a regular-stock-campany. ..Bulletin 541. United States Department of Agriculture, .which may, be had on" request, contains information regarding the by-laws under which a co-oper-ative association- should be and fanners’ bulletin 1032 tells how the motor-truck route .ought to he operate?!, how prices are fixed, and the running expenses met. In thejiands of the scrupulous individual, or as a co-operative* ent.erprise, tin' inotor- I nirlc rOUTty*wH I'Off<■ r quirky economical transportation to those fanners who,must reach the market every day or two with small loads of milk or farm .produce and whose business does not warrant them In. .purchasing a truck solely for their own use. *
| TREATMENT FOR LIMBERNECK Ailment Is Generally Associated With Indigestion or Eating Spoiled Grain or Meat. Tlie condit ion know4i Jhilbenfeek in: chickens .is hi ivality not a disease. hwt ji symptom of several diseases \vhich< at:e «-haVircterized by paralysis of tlie'muscles of the neck,, mi.king it impossible for the bird to • raise its head from the ground. This condition, the bureau of animal industry of the Tinted States Department of Agriculture says, is diie to life absorption of poisons from the ininstilies,-. \> ! M"!! the IuTVOUS system and causo_paralysis. 1 .imberiieek i< generally associated with indigestion or the eating of moldy grain or puti'id meat or with Intestinal •v <-nns. Tho best treatment is to give a full doso of- purgative medicine—that. is. f,O to (it) grains of Epsom salt < r: • \j<Mt or* four teaspoons of castor Oi! for a grown fowl. Of ton the birds will he ciiTTal within 24 hours. In lease they are hot heifer within three or 4 days it is not advisable to keep them. • ' / - CAREFULLY TEST OLD SEEDS Moistened Blotting Paper and Two Ordinary Dinner Plates Make Satisfactory Contrivance., "Tpst—irtt -off-1- pfn nl l m-, . Make n Hester from two dfrtner plates, l'ut a piece of moist blotting paper in one plate, place some seeds on it, put another piece "of moist blotting paper over the seeds, and invert .the other pliite over‘all. In a few .lays, remove tlie plate, turn back the blotting paper. figure the percentage of germinated seeds, and if below ninety per cent, buy new ■seeds; » - •
THE NATTASEP A BVA YCF YEW#
NEW SOtMT IS GREAT FIND Removes Paints, Varnishes, Enamels and Shellacs Without Injuring Wood. WAS DREAM OF ALCHEMISTS Dissolves Rubber, Glues, Hydrocarbons and Many Substances Heretofore Regarded as Most Resistant to Chemical Agencies. Lincoln, Neb.—New properties of a dquidedescrihed before the students of the department of .chemistry at the University of Nebraska show that it almost, realizes the dream of the alchemists of old who sought the universal solvent. As described by Dr. Victor Lenher, professor of chemistry at tlie university of Wisconsin, who has come here to deliver a series of addresses oif the subject, further teste have shown that selenium oxychloride as the solvent Is called, Is moro-^powerful— even than was indicated In his preliminary announcement made before the American Chemical society. It dissolves rubber, gluesr enamels, hydrocarbons and many other substances which hitherto have been regarded as most resistant to all chemical agencies except lire. Other Substances Dissolved. Such products as redmanol, tmkeilte Und comjeqsl.te, which are used as substitutes for amber in the making of pipe stems and for many other Industrial purposes, and have been until now regarded ar insoluble In all known solvents, are readily dissolved by selenium oxychloride, according to the announcement of Dr. Lenher. By
BIG DRIVE ON OPIUM TRAFFIC
Nation-Wide Campaign Being Made to Keep Illicit Drugs Out of the Country. FAIL TD GET SMUGGLERS Authorities Admit They Have Been Helpless in Preventing Addicts From Securing Dope---Where Opium Comes From, .New York.—A nation-wide campaign Is being, made against the saie of illicit drugs in the United States. Federal investigators have reported that more morphine, heroin, cocaine am) straight opium arc lelng used in New York city, Chicago, San Francisco, Philadelphia and Riston than ever before. , While the authorities In these cities huve the laws necessary to deal witp tiie situation, they declare they cannot stop something they cannot see. ' When it Is considered, that one mr.n can cross the. Canadian border or the -Rio Grande and. without..changing his appearance in any imfnner, return with - several thousand dollars’ wort I'. of-drugs, it may tie realized how difilcult it is for national, state and municipal authorities to cope with the situation. Besides, this difficulty, the government’ has . announced 'that the illegitimate use (if habit-forming drug* has increased anywhere from 2g toOf*' per cent since the- eighteenth -amendment, been mo an appendix i" the Constitution. Virtually nil of the opium lawfully sent to the United. States comes from
AID IS ASKED FOR AUSTRIANS World-Famous" Physicians Picture Stunted Growth and Diseases ' From Hunger. Vienna. Three lnterpntTonnlly known Austrian physicians -have "joined in a statement to the effect tha' Austrian children will remain permanently 'Stunted in growth unless adequate relief is given immediately. The physicians are Dr. Eiselberg, Vienna brain specialist and one of the leading surgeons of the city, and T>rs l.orenz and I’ii'quet, the latter inventor, of the-tuberculin test uud for two Years professor at Johns Hopkins university. - , "At the end of juvenile growth the average four inches below normal Jieight about sixteen paunds below. nornnU....u'aigjig Girls are correspondingly. 'stunted," they say. “We also believe from a medical standpoint these children will never have, their normal weight and height, but will go through llfe in this stunted condition.”
FUTURE FOR PLANES
Von Tirpitz Considers Airplane Superior to Zeppelin. • Admiral Doubts,- However, That They Will Become Serious Menace to Vessels. St. Rt nisei:. Padem—Admiral Alfred Von Tirpil/. Gorman naval rtiilbority, in nh Interview, gave his views on the Influence of aircraft upon future wars. He discounted ,the .Zeppelin airship a*»Mh> infli'li iihJoi'l .rci-Aand and tod' Vulnerable for ordinary recpnnoltering. The airplane. In ids opinion, has. a much gri'ater future, ns it has-an-eco-nomic importance for traffic which will tend to pel'4* - J.it .-for war |iiirj..i-r-e' Wliile tlie alrplanedins taken a high .place In land fighting as n KultsUtute for cavalry. Admiral von Tirpitz said it had not developed its usefulness to
New Mechanical Cotton Picker
'^3
"This combination of a two-headed meetaiilcuL cation. picker, operated by a small electric motor and mounted on a compact garden tractor, Is said to be able to nick T4O pounds of cotton an liotir. After the picking head tins removed the burr, the fluffy cotton is drawn by a small blower through the big flexible tubing into a container tin the tractor.
its use ordinary paints, garnishes and shellacs can be removed from furniture and carriages und other objects without injuring tiie wood, and enamels can be taken from automobiles without affecting the steel body. “Its solvent powers are so vigorous,” said Dr. Lenher, “that It will remove the bitumen from soft coal, but will-not attack the pure carbon of anthracite:" Dr. Lenher also sees a military pow-
London and Edinburgh. In these cities three manufacturers send out more opium than all tne rest of the manufacturers in Great Britain. While some of the opium smuggled luto this country comes from India, a larger portion comes, from Turkey, Persia ami Syria. In New York city the narcotics squad o| the Internal revenue bureau has made frequent raids ngatnst-tbe smuggler, the dispenser, apd the addict. They have discovered that much cocaine and opium are briiugiiji in by sailors on passenger and freight-' stearnTnc nuthorttics realize tlfitt It Is an easy matter for a harbor boatman to loud his clothing with “dope" during the night. Lip is not subjected to dally soar Tb. Tt.Y haig a.s ht umtntnlns rensotnihle care "and. observance of common sense in his methods lie can continue indefinitely. Drugs are easily concealed. Federal authorities have found opium “in women's Imir, sewed into men's hat hands, contained in artificial limbs filling tiie inner tubes of automobile tires. In (,’otvsignments of lumber and vegetables ami even In collars worn by dogs trained to umke -daily trips across tiie Canadian border. The solution of |he problem lies In a federal act prohibiting the iiupoftation, manufacture ami exportation of habit-forming drugs, except in surfi limited amounts as are necessary for tiie legitimate uses of tiie medical profession, according to Royal S. Copeland, health commissioner of- New York -tity. lie said' every .honest pharmacist 'should lie made ..an agent of the government to tlundle opium and its derivatives.
Letter Traveled Nineteen Years
Ik'D I,'n.T.vrFmH j
This.ls « photograph of .the envelope containing a letter wrftfcS and mailed, in 19U2, and which his JusT been delivered to Mrs: 'Fred'"l’.' I’ratt at Dedham, Mass. The letter was addressed to Mrs. Pratt, who was visiting In Moscow. Russia. It arrived there after her departure, and has Sincte, accord? ing to the maiiy postmarks, passed through Germany, Francs-England-and other European countries. It was finally sent hack to the Uulted'states.
tlie same degree in sea reconnoltering, hat tliul was probably due to the new-ness—-of (lie airplane, which watorplanes of tlie fnttire might conceivably overcome. Tlie admiral reserved his opinion on ilie possibility of effective attacks by airplanes upon battleships; hut clearly showed that fie that airplanes will become a great menace to- the warships, as, tje polrit(?d out, the latter will d(*velop devices for detenSef while 1 heavily, loaded airplanes wilt always lie in danger of counter attacks froin lighter machines. • < . . - r Tn~eofiil«iTiw)n'wltli-shlpsZ'-hc. saJULj “’airplanes wilL always- have a fundamental disadvantage in tlieir small loading capacity, especially when they are to he used on a wide expanse of Ciceun. From a study of the history of navnT Ava'rraTiY tile Vente-st-jMcponfintJ of which was an American, I am persuaded that the nature'it-naval forces will not effange with a jerk, hut will 1
er In tills powerful solvent, as It canbe employed in making more porous charcoals contained In the filter material of war gas masks, g process known as activation. ' "Tiie-coconut charcoal used In the gas uiusk," gghtlmii'd Dr. Lenher. "ran be activated by tills new reagent by treatment at ordinary temperatures, which Is a .considerable advance over the older sieum activation at a -white heat.” The use of activated charcoal in the V'ronJ.m of gasoline from natural gas Is one which is Interesting chemists today, and still leaves the gas available for household and-industrial purposes. As a laboratory reagent, Dr. Lenher said that the properties of selenium oxychloride are so unusual that it is likely to come into common use wherever research is conducted. The solvent, which was formerly regarded as merely n laboratory curiosity, is finding its place.ln. many industries. The original statements concerning Its exceptional, powers have been anfply verified, the speaker as : seated, by him and a group of students who have been- attracted to the laboratories of the "University of \YTsconsln ‘during the Inst yea-. Once a Waste Product. Tlyj raw material from which It Is obtained was once a 'waste product .frum.the-electrolyti-e refining :of'copper, for: until- recently flte-se-lenium fthsiti these electrolytic slimes, while known to the chemist as a rare element, had been considered as almost valueless. The solvent Itself Is a heavy liquid, i and nearly odorless. It can he readily ; handled' in o commercial way, how- , ever, for were ll I lie “universal solvent” of alchemy It could not Be trailsj ported, as no vessel could withstand. .It. * ; This discovery rtf everyday uses for a substance formed from discarded material is regarded hv scientists ns a typical illustration of tiie value of research. — Lion Tamer’Gharms Woman. I’htlndelnhln. I ’a, Mrs. Sadie Kramer of Dayton, <>., told.the court she \.as so charmed lay Wilbert Bauman's Bat n.s a lion tamer that site eloped with him. Site was held in SI,OOO bail for- further hearing--—The* woman- Is alleged to have sold her HrrnlUtre and taken' her two-year-old daughter, with her when she joined Bauman, who lives in. Minersville, I’a.
| develop organically, _for development takes some tltile which only In Imagination and faneies-will lie skipped. In this respect, tlie late war has no) effected any fundamental alteration, although: of course; the rate of tech nieal development is'much faster that/ formerly.” . OLD SAFE HELD “TREASURE” North Dakota Blacksmith Used Chloei When It Was Learned Boore - Was in It. *• j -Fort Yates, A. I*. After years o, ! exposure to the weather, a large safe, ; locked and combination unknown. ! yielded to the efforts of a blacksmith’s fthd hammer here. When it lie. ; came known that a pint of whisky j was a parrot the contents. ■ The safe has been a roosting place for story tellers ■in the past, as it rpsted? upon the' porch- of the office |of the chief cl erk of the Indian; agency. Itecords pertaining to the agency from early days of the.settlement were rw 1 covered
Sir- saw® Relief y im»-L ' Hot water Sure Relief RELL-ANS WfQR INDIGESTION
WATCH" THE BIG 4 Stomach-Kidney s-Heart-Liver Keep the vital organs healthy by regularly taking the world’s standard remedy for kidney, liver, bladder and uric acid troubles - * GOLDMEDAL The National Remedy of Holland for centuries and endorsed by Queen Wilhel* mina. At all three sizes. Look for the name Gold Medal on every box and accept do imitation
Ups and Downsr A New Yurk publisher was discussing thi' brilliant and during Margot Asquith. lire British ex-premler's wife. 21 once heard .Mrs.. Asquith,” he snid, “describe a great lady-killer at a London dinner-party. •• 'He told me,’ she said, ‘that he ' play oil women exactly us you.play fish, Only lc. added, in the oHe case you angle to make them rise, and in the oilier to make I item fall.’” ' Constipation, Indigestion, slrk-h'ead- * ache and bilious conditions arq overcome by a cour -' of Garfield Tea. Drink before retiring.—Mv. ' No Room for the Much of the work done In this world has to be undone. Ineompetency is tiie greatest drawback to progress., Incompetents arc the most costly members of society, and always will be. That's why there is always a premium on brains nud skill, which combine to produce efilciency:—'Exchange. Granulated Eyelids. Sties, Inflamed Eye» relieved overnight by Homan Ey«T Balsam. One trial proves Its merit. —Adv. * * Brings It On Himself. Mabel—Sojne glrla marry for mon-, pf. some. for love. Harold —And all because some silly man asks them to.—London Answers. A little money is often a dangerous thing.
50 good cigarettes for 10c from one sack of GENUINE BULL" DURHAM /tn TOBACCO
Children Who Are Sickly When your cb ; ld cries at night, tosses restlessly in its sleep, is constipated, feverish or has symptoms of worms, you feel worried. Mothers who value their own comfort and the welfare of their children, should never be without a box of Mother Cray’s Sweet Powders for Children for use throughout the season. They tend to Break jCuJTS. up Colds, relieve Feverish* ness. Constipation, Teething Disorders, move arid regulate the Bowels and «L T destroy Worms These [ powders are pleasant <0- Ak take and easy for parents to give. They cleanse the w 1 * stomach, act on the Liver Trade Mark. and give healthful sleep Don't accept by regulating the child’s any substitute. system , Used by mothers for oi>er 30 jyar r i ' by all druggists. Sample mailed FREE. Address, Mot her. Cray Co.. I.e Roy. N, Y. Be sure you ask for and obtain Mother Graj'i Sweet Powders tor Children.
Clear Baby’s Skin With Cuticura Soap and Talcum So»Ry2sc, Oiatment 25 and 50c, Talcum 25c.
ColdsjGrippe, Thin, Watery or 'Poisoned Blood Bloodless, thin, anemic people should «r tlie refreshing tonic powers oY a good alterative and hloodpuriWr. Dr. Pierce’s Golden MedicalYOLscovery is a standard remedy wiiat. ejan be obtained in tablet or I\quid form. Mu.ncie, Ind. “When I had a i-eiere cough, night sweats, lpvs. of weight and appetite. I . tried Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery. I took it faithfully for about 40 days, and gradually I gained; the cough disappeared and I put on flesh and got strong again. I have had no" cough since, for 14 vears.” —Mrs. Lucy McCoy, 512 E. Howard St.
