The Syracuse Journal, Volume 1, Number 22, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 24 September 1908 — Page 3
HELPFUL ADVICE
liSOShii IK vfl '/JiRS®
You won’t tell your family doctor the whole story about your private illness — you are too modest. You need not be afraid to tell Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass., the things you could not explain to the doctor. Your letter will be held in the strictest confidence. From her vast correspondence with sick women during the past thirty yeans she may have gained rhe very knowledge that will help your case. Such letters as the following, from grateful women, establish beyond a doubt the power of LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S VEGETABLE COMPOUND to conquer all female diseases. Mrs. Norman R. Barndt, of Allentown, Pa., writes: “ Ever since I was sixteen years of age I had suffered from an organic derangement and female weakness; in consequence I had dreadful headaches and was extremely nervous. My physician said I must go through an operation to get well. A frie B nd told me about Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, and I took it and wrote you for advice, following your directions carefully, and thanks to you I am today a well woman, and I am telling all my friends of my expedience.” FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. For thirty years Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy for female ills, and has positively cured thousands of women w ho have been troubled with displacements, inflammation, ulceration, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, that bear-ing-down feeling, flatulency, indigestion, dizziness,ornervous prostration.
WLDOUGLAS *3OO SHOES *350
/ jbl li & \ /COi ET iiWa l u I \ BK fa J "1* ill \\ / 1
W. L. Douglas makes and sells more men's 83.00 and 53.50 shoes than any otheg manufacturer in the world, because they hold their shape, fit better, and wear longer than any other make. Shoes at All Prices, for Every Member of the Family, Men, Boys, Women, Misses i Children TZ.L.Douglajf $4.00 and $5.00 Gilt Edge Shoes cannot be equalltd at any price. W. L. Donglaa $3.50 and $3.00 ehoee are the beet in the world Fast Color Eyelets Used Exclusively, Take No Substitute. W. L. Doug lan name and price is stamped on bottom. Sold everywhere. Shoes mailed from factory to any part of the world. Catalogue/ree. W. L. DOUGLAS, 157 Spark St., Brockton, Mass.
DYSPEPSIA
“Having taken vonr wonderful “Cascarets” foi three months and being entirely cured of stomadh catarrh au.d dyspepsia, i think a word of praise is due to “Cas carets’/for their wonderful composition. I have taken numerous osher so-called remedies bnt without avail and I find that Cascarets’relieve more in a day than all the others 1 have takes Would in a year. ” James McGune, 108 Mercer St., Jersey City, N. J.
Best for H The Bowels bvdcoiUto Pleasant, Palatable, Potent, Taste Good, Do Good. Sicken, Weaken or Gripe, l&c, 25c, 50c. Never ■old in bulk. The genuine tablet stamped OCQ, guaranteed to cure or your money back. Sterling Remedy Co.; Chicago or N.Y. 591 IHNUAL SALE, TEN MILLION BOXES ( Let us do your Printing 5 -using < { > for your office stationery. > j You ciin get the paper s ' and envelopes to match. '" f I > It U the real thing. Take no other. (
a i r finest lands in the FOR SALE ™ 40,000 ACRES v at choice land in the celts bratcd CLOVER BELT OF WISCONSIN, all within a few miles of three railroads; good roads a d schools; tirms and price on tracts of 40 acresand up reasonable. Write for information. SETTLERS ESPECIALLY DESIRED. John S. Owe« Lumber Co., Owen, Wis. Copper, Vulcan, the multimillion dollar Key mine to Lawsons Trinity. National and Balaklala. Smelters ; Exploration stock 25c. Will advance 1.000 per cent, and again. “Brains and Bullion” ready to mail you. Shasta Brokerage Co., Dunsmuir, Cal. GE.nti.emeN :—lf* you send me your name and address we will send you free particulars concerning a mechanical device that will please you. International Mfg. Co., Hagerstown, Md.
DEEP CRACKS FROM ECZEMA. Could Lay Slate-Pencil tn One— Bands in Dreadful Slate—Permanent Cure tn Cuticnra. “I had eczema on my hands for about seven years and during that time I had used several so-called remedies, together with physicians’ and druggists’ prescriptions. The disease was so bad on my hands that I could lay a slate pencil in one of the cracks and a rule placed across the hand would not touch the pencil. I kept using remedy after remedy, and while some gave partial relief, none relieved as much as did the; first box of Cutlcura Ointment. I made a purchase of Cuticnra Soap and Ointment and my hands were perfectly cured after two bqxes of Cuticnra Ointment and one cake of Cuticura Soap were used. W. Ek Dean, Newark, Del.. Mar. 28. 1907.” Saving Time. “Well,” bawled the bill collector in th* hallway below, through the mouthpiece pertaining tothe occupant of the top flat, ‘‘are you ready to settle that little account? Will it be of any use form« to climb the stairway? Why speak up?” • “Because, sir,” answered a soft, gentle voice through the tube, “I am trying to speak down. No. it won't be of any use.”—Chicago Tribune. In a Pinch. Vse Allen’S Foot-Eaae. A powder to shake into your shoes. It rests the feet Cures Corus. Bunions, Swollen, Sore, Hot. Callous. Aching. Sweating feet and Ingrowing Nails. Allen’s Foot-Eaae makes hew or tight shoes easy. _ Sold by all •>rugglsts and Shoe Stores, 25c. Sample mailed FREE. Address Allen S. Olmsted, I* Roy, N. Y. Goaatp. “So there is a coolness between Count Fiieash and his wife’s relations*’ “Yes. They say his conduct was atrocious.” ' • “Surely he didn’t beat his wife!” ‘‘No. But lie beat bis father-in-law out of several hundred thousand.” — Washington Star. Pettit’s Eye Salve for Over 100 Years has been used for congested and inflamed eyes. removes film or-scum over the eyes. (11 druggists or Howard Bros.. Buffalo. N. Y. '„■ Her Withering Scorn. “My dear.-is it possible you paid $7.50 for that bathing suit? Why, it doesn’t weigh more than about four ounces, and I could hide, it in my fist I” . “George Alfred, if I had known that you judge a bathing suit by its size and weight I would have bought a gunny sack.” Don’t Spoil Your Clothes. Use Red Cross Ball Blue and keep them white as snow. AU grocers, 5 cents a package. A Common Error. “May I examine the children a little as to their knowledge of the language?” asked the visitor at the grammar school, an old gentleman with a benevolent aspect of countenance bdt a shrewd twinkle in his eye. *** “Certainly you may,” smilingly answered the teacher. • The' bld gentleman stepped to the blackboard and wrote this senterfee upon it: “Pennsylvania abounds in anthracite coal.” ‘‘Now,” he said, “I should like to have some child point out the mistake in that sentence.” . ’ One of the older girls came forward, picked up the chalk, and rewrote the statement thus: “Anthracite coal abounds in Pennsylvania.” “Not so bad,”, said the visitor, “but you haven’t found it.” Another changed it as follows,: “Pennsylvania abounds with anthracite coal.” “Still incorrect,” was the comment. . “Anthracite coal is abundant in Pennsylvania,” wrote a third. “That will not do. either,” said Mr. Baxter. One of the big boys tried his hand, with this result: , “Pennsylvania is abundantly supplied with anthracite coal.” “No, that is not so good.” Then a little boy stepped forward, and with his finger erased the’ word “coal.” “That word isn’t needed.” he ■ said. “‘Anthracite’ means hard coal.” “Right,” said the visitor. “You have one bright pupil, anyhow. Miss Adair.” AFRAID TO EAT.
Girl Starving on 111-Selected Food. “Several years ago I was actually starving,” writes a Me. girl, “yet dared not eat for fear of the consequences. “I had suffered from indigestion from overwork, irregular meals and Improper food, until at last my stomach became so weak I could eat scarcely any food without great distress. “Many kinds of food were tried, all with the same discouraging effects. I steadily lost health and strength until 1 was but.a wreck of my former self. “Having heard of Grape-Nuts and its great merits, I purchased a package, but with little hope that it Would help me-—I was so discouraged, “I found it not only appetizing but that I could eat it as I liked and that it satisfied the craving for food without causing distress, and if I may use the expression, ‘it filled the bill,’ “For months Grape-Nuts was my principal article of diet. I felt from the very first that. I had found the right way to health and happiness, and my anticipations were fully realized. “With its continued use I regained my usual health and strength. To-day I am well and can eat anything I like, yet Grape-Nuts food forms a part of my bill of fare.” '"There’s a Reason.” Name given /by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read “The Road to Wellvllle,” in pkgs. Ever read the above letter? A new one appears from time to time. They are genuine, true, and full of human interest. «
I Dairy Idols. Cows becomes, favorites with their owners, altogether by reason of the milk thiey J produce. Vve have known cows that their owners thought, a great ileal of because, of the kindly disi>osition of the anintajs.' One cow that the ■writer remembers gave' but a few quarts of milk a day. but she was a pet of the family. Site would prefer the company of members of the family rather than that of other cows. If the cows were being taken to pasture she would insist on walking by the side of the one in charge of the herd. It is hard to order a cow of this kind sent to the butchift, and many people will not do it. Instead, the animals are kept for a dozen years, and not only allowed to eat up the provender without returning aI compensation for it. but are slowed to add to the herd more cows after their own ability not to produce milk. These may fairly be called dairy idols. Their owners claim great things for them without being able to substantiate the truth of what they say. But the family pet is not the only brand of dairy idol. There are the general purpiose cows that quite generally have the entire confidence of their owners as to their great value. They are idols that the single-purpose cow men have deniiolished again and again to their own Satisfaction, but they are still to be found all over the land. The dairy idol is a thing that can l»e with to the advantage of the owners of the cows. The warfare against them will be kept up. and little by little the factors we are warring against will disappear. It may. however, take* about as long to eliminate them as it took Christianity to drive the idols out; of.the pagan world.—-Farmers’ Review. [To Fatten Fowls. Shut the fowls up in a darkened place with just enough light for then! to see to eat, and feed on cornmeal, ground oats, cracked wheat and shorts, which may be mixed in equal proportions and scalded. Feed as often during the day as they will eat up the food clean. That is to say. stuff them. Take a light and feed again just before your bedtime, and as early in the morning; as possible. / Supply them with grit and water and keep the preiiiises clean. Half a dozen fowls together will fatten more quickly than a large number, as they will not pine for cohijpany. Cooked potatoes, rice, cornbread, ' bracked corn and whole wheat ina.t also be fed. Give no green stuffs, as It is too tilling and will do.no good. Fpijrls‘(crowded this way should be in fine'condition in two weeks. Shut up longer, they are likely to begin.to tope and will go back rather than increase iii {weight Rural World. i Hjundy for Sorting Potatoes. In sorting potatoes a time-saver cart be made of boards and common wire. The best wire should be smooth and about the thickness of ordinary clothes
1 FOR SORTING POTATOES.
line. The side-boards should be about IS inches wide' to keep the potatoes from j rolling off the sides. The wires are fastened to a pulley at the top to tighten them so they will not sag and let the large potatoes through. Shovel the potatoes iu at the top and the small potatoes will drop through the screen into the box. To Tell the t Ages of Swine; • ■ It 'mayjlie'dhteresting to those Who do not' already know it. to learn of some} way to. arrive at the age of pigs, so we give the following: Pigs having their corner permanent incisors cut will be considered as exceeding six months. Pigs having their permanent tusks more than halt’ up will be considered as exceeding nine inonihs. Pigs having their central perjnanteut incisors up and any of the first hree permanent molars cut will be •onsiidered as exceeding twelve months. Pigs having their lateral temporary inciSsorS shed and the permanent appearing will be considered as exceeding fifteen months. Pigs having theft lateral permanent incisors fully up will .be considered as exceeding eighteen months. " Not the Formers This Time. Prof. Trueman of the University of Illinois, after making a searching investigation, declared that milk dealers of Chicago systematically adulterate and water milk’ delivered to families in the poorer sections of the city. Iu many instances the stuff is entirely unfit for food. In the better residence districts, however, the milk was nearly always up to standard. . Shoeing Moles. The hoof of the mule, being smaller and tougher than that of the average
horse, does not need shoeing unless worked on hard roads a great deal. It is better not to have them shod if confined to work on the farm, unless used I to haul heavy loads mi frozen ground. ; L Nutrinient* Jn Milk. Bulletin No. 51 tronk the Storrs Ag- i ricultntal Experiment Station. Con { necticut, is a most excellent one on the , origin or sources of those small or- ; ganisuis called bacteria, which an ( found so abundantly in milk. The bulletin also contains some rather ; startling statements and some wholesome suggestions. I ' j Among’ the statemejits which ought • to make the average num sit up and think are the following: “A quart of uiilk at! 8c is equivalent in food value to a pound of beef at 18c. Tills means that Ic worth of milk giv as much food energy Ju the body as tic worth of beef. 1 “The average .. individual consumes three or four times as much meat in a day as the body actually needs for re pair, and for its highest physical con- ; dition. ■ ' ' . { “If the American people would eat one-half less meat and consume onehalf more milk, they would save about | $159,000,000, in money and in health, ■ enough to make the doctors’ bills look ■ small.” • Improved Hog Pen. A large hog pen with space for both sleeping and feeding can be arranged with a flooj on one-half to ensure a
PEN WITH SECTIONAL FLOOR.
dry bed. The size of; the whole-pen is 8 feet by 16 feet, sq that, the floored section of the pen is 18 feet square. It is made of strong materials, usually 2 in. by 4 in. stuff, and! rests on cleats in the bottom of the pen. . j ' ‘ ■ i New Cloveri.l)i-seasc. The Tennessee Experiment Station reports a new clover disease in that State. For several yeArs the Tennessee farmers have had t’dilures in the red clover, crop, and the trouble seemed to be gets-ig worse. The new disease belongs to the class called anthracnose. It is a definite fungus or germ disease, which attacks first the stem of the leaf stock of ; clover and eventually destroys the entire plant. It appears usually about the end of .Tune, but this season it came earlier. I The plants first assume an unhealthy 1 appearance, whii’ti is followed by black spots or dead areas on the stock. The Tennessee Station has been experimenting on a clover that will re< sist the disease, and has been able, by selection and elimination, to produce plants which apparently are not subject to it' Fnless there is some mishap. the propagation of the new clover will enable the State to begin distribution of the -seed in about two years. j 4 ’ • 1— . ‘ Water for Cows. It is claimed that a cow needs eight gallons of water a day. and will con ! sume that much if; it is vVithin reach. ! Milk is composed o,f about 87 per cent water. Cows epnfined to pastures in j which there is no i running water and! the. cows are watered inorning and' night, it would necessitate that a cow would have tt> drii k four gallons at a time in orddr to be supplied. As. the cotv does not] know {that she must drink four gallons, she will naturally use less and reduce her milk supply accordingly. The Milli Machine, There is mighty littlje sentiment about a cow. She’s- nothijig but a delicately organized milk-making machine. Ilier nervous organization is well developed, though, apd is -easily disturbed, but if she is well- Supplied with milkmaking material and is let alone she will turn out a good product and plenty of it, provided, ol{ course, she is built on the right lines.: A poor machine of any is a cursje to the owner. Milk Vessels. t'se no wooden milk; vessels, and after washing milk vessels set them .out to dry scaldilig hot:! Never rinse out with cold water after the final scalding. Leave them hot, so they «>ill dry quickly and not get musty. Notes on Orchard Work. Select only standard varieties. Spray. frequently and thoroughly. Clover crops pievent soil washing Buy only of responsible nurserymen. Go slow about! planting dwarf varieties. Sell direct to the consumer whenever possible. j ■■ Form strong {symmetrical heads on ah trees. Prepare the ground the fall previous to planting. ! Supply an abundance of plant food at all times. Clover crops perform many useful functions. Fruit farming has been styled gentle men’s farming. Poultry and fruit growing make a good com-binatiqn. The finest friiit is grown by thinning the fruit on the trees. Sow clover erpps so that they will be thick and cover the ground. Keep up to date by reading what the most successful men have to say. Fruit growing and fruit eating make people sunny, happy and sweet
Br
For Opening Fruit Jars. Any person »’ho has ever struggled with a fruit jar that had the lid stuck will be grateful to the Idaho man who
has given us the fruit jar opener. This device is constructed on the principle of a pair of pliers,, and the jaws, which are semi-circu-lar and made to tit around the top of a jar. are serrated in such away s s to obtain a firm grip. Heretofore it was impossible to get a good purchase on the tops, as the hand would slip before thd top would turn if the latter stuck very badly.
// WRENCH.
-Then. too. the opener eliminates all danger of cutting the hands on the metal of the top or the glass qf the jar. Many a case of- blvod[>oisoniug has develoiied from a wound Sustained- in this way and. taking a different view of the case, many a family has sat down to the table without preserves because the jars coold not be opened- In I the old days a prolonged soakjjig in ! hot water was the only remedy for au {obstinate top. ; Sauce For Nut Loaf. ■ To three tablespoons melted blitter add one teaspoon chopped onion and i one-half sour apple, two tablespoons .flour. Cook to a clear brown, add one pint milk, one cup hot water, in which the glaze from baking pan has! been • melted. Stir until boiling hot. add { chopped hut meats ■ and one tablespoon Femon juice and one-half teaspoon salt Apple Butter. f Cook fwo parts apple and one part rhubarb until tender. Rub all through colander. If set in the oven lit will cook without spattering the; stove. Sweeten with sugar and flavor with cinnamon. For grape butter take two. parts seeded grapes and one part apple run through colander. Apple gives a much better flavor to the grapes. I Chocolate Cake. One cup sugar, half-cup butter, halfj cup milk, two eggs, two cups flour,, two I teaspoons baking powder. Before beginning the cake take half a'cake of chocolate, put .it on the stove to melt, let ; it come to a boil, add the yolk of.one »gg, then pour on the cake batter while lot. Bake in long shallow (tin. Put together with boiled icing. Chop Suey of Beef. Break into a kettle a half packagt spaghetti, cover with salt water and boil. When almost tender add half can tomatoes. Put butter in frying pan and fry three large-sliced onions till brown. Add two pounds beef run through the machine. When all are well browned add spaghetti and tomatoes, boil a few ( minute and serve hot. ' ( German Kuchalupf. i Half-pound of butter, three table- ! spoons sugar, pinch,, of salt, rind of lemon, cake of compressed !yeast, dissolved in a cup of lukewarm water, twelve ounces flour and two ounces cornstarch. Stir half an hour, Put into form with tube in center and let rise until light. Raisins may be added if wished. j Cake Custard.. Soak a coffee cupful or less of the cake left oyer from the pudding in a sufficient quantity of milk to nearly fill a small pudding dish. Beat two eggs with a cupful of sugar; add to mixture with any desired flavoring. Put in • a small quantity of raisins, currants or citron and bake until brown. Serve with cream. Masked Potato for Fried Fish. ‘ Pare and boil the potatqei as usual, in salted water, then drain and press them "through a slicer or vegetable press. Add a generous piece of butter, plenty of salt, and cooked tomatoes, pressed through a sieve, and moisten as needed. Serve in a Separate dish or on the plate with the fish. Baked Squash. Peel, boil and mash two small squashes and when cold. beat in two tablespoons melted butter, two whipped eggs, a gill of cream and salt and pepper to taste. Turn into a bake dish, Sprinkle with bread crumbs and bake half an hour. » Scotch Woodcock. Chop fine four hard-boiled eggs. Take ' one pint of milk, thicken with one ta-■ I blespoonful of butter. Creamed with one i tablespoonful of flour. Season with i salt and pepper and pour over the eggs, i Serve on toast. , Canadian Cake. Two cupfuls each of sugar, water ■nd raisins, one-half cupful of butter, I 'one teaspoouful each of allspice, ciiina- ' mon and nutmeg, two teaspoonfuls of I ■baking powder, two quarts of flour, mix and bake. Trninink Day Gingerbread. One cup sugar, one cup molasses, one •up butter, one cup sour milk, two eggs, one tablespoon saleratus, five cups flour, cinnamon and ginger. Whipped Cream Sandwiches. Whip cream light, add to It ground peanuts, salt to taste and spread on thlu bread and butter for sandwiches.
CHILD LABOR IN HOLLAND. Boys Start to Work as Soon as They Leave School, at Early Age. As an American goes about among the ; Dutch people he is greatly surprised at ■ the state of niind the ayetage Hollaniier has in regard to affairs generally, says . the Boston Herald. It might well be described as that of $ man well on in ! years who has amassed a fair fortune ' and now takes things easily and loves ' to talk over the somewhat wild doings (of youth. INothing is more common than to hear ! the remarks from‘both the young and 'old: “We have been great.” “We have had our time,”, , i They hate to be interfered .with and {resent the advice of friends. They cannot reconcile the old-world methods I with the advanced ideas. Methods of ' agriculture are all equally old-fashioned 'and the peasants equally behind the {times in thought and dress.- In fact. ; cleanliness in Holland has become atj most a disease, and scrubbing goes > oh {from morning until ii|ight, due to- the ! abundant supply of water. j The condition of the working class ’ families of some of the manufacturing ! towns is deplorable. Wages are low land the standard of life cannot be ( maintained unless mother and children I take their places in the factory side by side with the head of the household. As soon as the Dutch law allows the child to leave school—-which is at the age of 12—he enters the‘factory workshop. Although the government has passed a law recently forbidding boys under 16 to be employed In factories, most of the boys go in as soon as they leave school. Children leave, their beds frequently at 5 or 6 in the morning or. earlier, summer and winter, gulp down some hot coffee, or what is commonly called so. swallow a huge piece of wellknown Dutch “roggebrood.” or rye bread, and then hurry in their wooden shoes through the quiet streets of the town to their place of work. Sometimes they have to return home at 8 or 8:30 in the morning for a second hurried breakfast, which as often as not is the first, for many of them start the day's work on an empty stomach. Those who cannot run home and back in the half-hour usually allowed for the first “schaft” or meal time, take their bread and butter with them in a cotton or linen bag: and their milk and water or coffee in a tin, and so shift as well as they can. No less than 7.876 artisans and laborers were employed on government co-op-erative works (roads and railways) in New Zealand during May.i
CASTOR IA For Infanta and Children. The Kind You Have Always BougN
ROSEBUD GOVERNMENT LANDS BEST REACHED FROM DALLAS Dallas and Gregory, S. D., are reached only by the Chicago North Western Railway. They are the only towns on the reservation border. Dallas and Gregory are the main registering joints. President Roosevelt has designated Dallas for the , final drawing October 19, 1908. S; .k DAKOTA - m , MN . T/ ~ I »cseßV»Tio« I 'l/i Uo) i Mt B R A S K A ,iowA , a? 0 " 1 * jTo| The Chicago & Jforth Western Ry. is the only * all-rail route to the reservation. A million acres of fertile agricultural and grazing land in the great Missouri Valley Corn Belt is to be opened to Homesteaders October 5 to 17, 1908. I For information- about how to get a. I j homestead with details regarding rates,” train J, . 11 schedules, address „ fl IT|! j I W. B. KNISKERN 11 [LLMgSwnn Paes'r Traffic Mgr., C. A. N. W. Ry. NW7BI Chicago, 111. i-k—.. aani i ■ issrrrrMnmw«.w-"^— iibiiij Shortest Line to Rosebud Reservation * The opening of the Rosebud Reservation. October 5 to 17, next, will give over 5000 people each a choice farm in Tripp County, South Dakota, for a small sum per acre. 838,000 acres will be i , opened. People drawing one of these f irats must”pay £6.o(fan . acre; one-fifth down, balance in 5 years. Chfimberlain and Presho, Sputhr Dakota, are places of i egistration. Both are located on the shortest line to the reservi ion from Chicago—the CHICAGO MILWAUKEE & ST. PAUL RAILWAY The best of these lands are located in the Northern part of Tripp , County, easily reached from both Chamb irlain and Presbo. All persons, except certain soldiers, must b ■: present in one of these towns for registration. Presence at t e drawing is not required. Those who draw cne of these farms will be notified by mail. Rosebud folder, containing reap, and giving full particulars free on request. F. A. MILLER. General Passenger Ag< int. -v Chicago.
Syrupufßgs Senna acts gently yet promptly on me bowels, cleanses me system effectually assists one in overcoming habitual constipation * permanently. To Oet its beneficial effects buy the genuine. flanufncturcd the California fie Syrup Co. SOLD BY LEADING DRUGGISTS-50? p«,BGTTLE. A Skin of Beauty l» a Joy Forever, DR. T. Felix Gouraud’s Oriental Cream or Magical Beautifler. 25 5-U Removes Tan, 'Sk Freckles, Moth Patches Radii, and Skin *cs o_ vs an<l CVS| T WeintaM On eaut y« *• //5),//fies detection. It tiSa- II Ua^stood the teat 60 Jr— • S J la'so banhlesa we ta»te ittobesurelt ••• ® nJ I Is properly mads. O l-K u/ Accept no counter \ name. Dr. L-, A. vjSifT / < i \ Sayre Bald to a f f jIS / • I bant* X. I petienOt I y f PA i J “Aa" 'ladles J k. wlB nse ’them. x. I recommend *G our fund’s Cream’ as the b*ast harmful of all the skin preparations.” For sale by all druggists and FancyGoods Dealers in the United States, Canuda and Europe. FEBD. T. HCPRIMS, Prcjk 37 Great Jones Street Ihw'fclb TOILET ANTISEPTIC Keeps the breath, teeth, mouth and body antiseptically clean and free from unhealthy germ-life and disagreeable odors, which water, soap and tooth preparations alone cannot do. A germicidal, disinfecting c..a deodor- - ’ izing toilet requisite i - of exceptional excellence and econ- # omy. Invaluable 4 for inflamed eyes, i 3'■ LL -“l®' a throat and nasal and zdftto ’ , uterine catarrh. At . ! ; drug and toilet ll;|| i stures, 50 cents, or j ( by mail postpaid. Large Trial Sample WITH "HtALTH AND BUUTV'jIOOK •KNT PRKC THE PAXTON TOILET Cft 3 Boston. Mass. F. W. N. U. - -.-- No. 39—1903 When writing to Adverti.ers pleu»o •ay you saw the Adv. in this paper.
