The Syracuse Journal, Volume 17, Number 45, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 5 March 1925 — Page 6
Back Bad Since the Grip ? Hm i or grip eapped your strength* Do you Buffer conxUnt backache, feel nervoux and depressed? Then look to your kidneys! Many eases of kidney trouble are tbe reault of mfectidUß disease. The kidnwrj often break down under the strain of filtering action. wmliwd kidnev* with Doan't PMs. Doan'S* have helped thousands and ahouW, bdp yon. Ask gottr neighbor I . An Ohio Case Mra William Davie. 3<JW E. Cen-1 -a-,*-. ter St.. Carding-ffifU W ton. Ohio. Mya:Bß^r M rr*>ts "My kidney sF»WI _<**}* caused me to have’jOWO | r«rs« a constant I ache. When stooped, my was so lame. 1 could hard!ymy. ■ — . •traichtexL I very»/l VTZinfcif often bad head-«l* EZfaW ache* and spells of disslnesa. My kidneys acted too, often, also. I used Doan s Pills and they relieved the attacks, strengthening my back DOAN’S STIMULANT DIURETIC TO THE KIDNEYS FoaSar Milbum When Children Cough Act Qmddjr ’ Watch your child closely when M gets a ’*oold“ and begin* to cough. Many a case of croup and serious Hines* ha* been turned aside with a few doses Os that fine old medicine. Kemp's Balaam. Act promptly. Don't be disco tn aged because ordinary cough syrups fall to help—stick to Kemp’s Balsam. Just a few doses grtng the relief you are looking for. Only >»cect* at all store*. , For Sale—3Bß-Acre Rice and Stock Farm with full equipment. A good farm, with good equipment. Healthful, mild Himate. Write for description and price. Owner: R. M. FRANCIS Hunter • Arkansas
/ibmorrow Alright! f Get a 1 I 25c.
Women—Ta Ml BeMtilal. Haarf - *r»<l kuaae Brexaex and tub frocke. II T* •ack: wmmlwiM Ila each. Full or part time I Cahn. Silt WhaMr! Ara.. Chle«a.
nYOU CAN’T CUT OUT A l*Bg fipavk* ** has yvo can alaan tbaxn off procn*<ly with - •nd you work th* hor** sass* tiox Dm* m* MMnt ■or r*mov* th* hair. *2.50 per bottle, delivered. Will tall you more if you writ*. ■MmH •■MkdAftM | mtea.axlUfobMliH.BMx. cj — Beauty and the Brute “He had pretended to be what aha thought him, a strong, ruthless brute. Women liked that kind of man. only there weren’t any, really. No men that he knew were strong, or brute*. They were weak, really, and *hy. and lonely, only they couldn't admit it. because their women wouldn’t love /h<em If they did.”—From "Three Pilgrim* and a Tinker.” by Mary Borden. DEMAND “BAYER” ASPIRIN Aspirin Marked With “Bayer Cross" Ht* t**n Proved Safe by Million*. Warning! Unlea* you see the name "Bayer" on package or on tablets you prescribed bf for 23 year*. Say “Bayer” when you buy Aspirin. ImltaUoMTaay provedhngeroq*.—Adv. Music Score The word score ba* several meanings tn mnalc. Full score has all the parts of a composition. Instrumental score, for Instruments only. Short score, generally applied to a vocal score with a piano or organ accompaniment. Vocal score, where each voice lias a line to itself. Piano score, where the orchestral or vocal parts are into a piano part I do voc ddrow That ont-quar:er fraxpoon of Cademet Bakin* Powder totted Thoroughly with th* flour In roaklns pastry help* produe* a fluffy, flaky crust* {/*• for Shagbark The bark of shagbark hickory has a high fuel value, burns with intense beat and irqaowd for It* crackling a* It burns. * v — .I,— The highest radio station tn the world Is situated on top of Mount Corcovado. 2.000 feet above Rio de Janeiro. Brazil. ’
Sure Relief FOR INDIGESTION f 5B ELL-AN S L\ jWfrdr KJ Hot wte** |»|y, Sure Relief Bell-ans SHAND 7HIWCKNSES EVBWWHEMI ***fiTgfti
MY FAVORITE STORIES By IRVIN & COBB (Copyright.) Driven Beyond Hi* Strength The late Paul Armstrong had two favorite stories. One of these be called by the title “Pansy and the Pilsener,” and while it was funny, it would never do for publication In a newspaper having a family circulation. The other was what is known as a z parlor story. It dealt with a down-and-outer, who made a precarious living as a sandwich man. Encased front and back, like a turtle In Its shell, between broad boards which bore advertisements for a dairy lunch, he marched the Bowery all day long for wages barely sufficients to keep body and soul together. One day, a* he plodded hl* weary route, be saw a shining coin lying upon the sidewalk, instantly be set his foot upon it, and then, stooping with a difficulty because of his wooden waist coat, he clutched it In hi* eager fingers and raised it to his eyes. Then his heart inside of him gave a great throb of joy. It was a twenty-dollar gold piece. He was wealthy beyond his wildest ambition* Across the street was an excavation for a new building. He hurried thither. Standing on the edge of the digging he unbuckled the straps which bound the squares of planking to him. and. kicking them to pieces with a glad exultant cry. he flung the shattered emblems of Ids servitude down into the hole below. Then straightway he departed for the nearest saloon, and stalking in. a triumphant figure even In his flaunting tatters, he dapped hi* precious gold piece down upon the bar and called for a drink of whisky, it was to have been the first of a long and gorgeous succession of drinks of whisky. Someone jostled him in the side. He turned his bead to see who might be interrupting his happy dreams, and when he looked back again his double eagle mysteriously had vanished, and the barkeeper was motioning him to depart. He protested, naturally. Whereupon the barkeeper reached for the bung starter, swung It with a skill born of long practice, and struck him squarely between the eyes. A moment later the ex-sandwich man found b|mself sprawling on the sidewalk, his happy visions gone forever. • A prey to melancholy, filled with deep disappointment and a yet deeper sense of injustice, he got upon bis feet and started to limp away. Next dour to the saloon was a basement barber shop. From it at this instant there emerged a Bowery mission worker, an elderly gentleman of a benevolent aspect, his pink jowls newly scraped and bls face powdered. As He climbed up the steps to the level of the sidewalk this gentleman bent over to refasten a loosened shoelace. Now, to the best of hi* knowledge and belief, the derelict never before had seen th* missionary, but a* the latter stooped, presenting before him an expanse of black coat tails, the misanthrope hauled off and dealt the gentle stranger a terrific kick. With a yell of astonishment and pain the clergyman landed ten feet away. * “What did you mean by thatY’ he demanded, rubbing the seat of hl* trousers with both hands. “Why did you kick meF “oh," said the ex-sandwlcb man. in tones of an uncontrollable annoyance, “you're always tying your shoestring I” In Permanent Storage Once upon a time. In rhe middle part of the state of Georgia, there lived a banker who was known far and wide I as the Human Safety Clutch. In his day he was accused of many things, but nobody ever charged him with being a spendthrift Hi* home was on a piantation a mile from town. One Sunday be remembered that he had some important papers on his desk, and he gave an aged negro servitor on the place hl* keys and sent him for thf documents. It was a hot day and the road waa dusty, but In an hour the old darky had returned with thd paper* Intact. The owner felt in all bl* pockety one after th* other. . "That’s too “bad. Uncle Jim,” he said finally. “I thought I had a nickel here that I was going to give you.’ “Cap'n Henry.” said Uncle Jim. “you look again. Es ever you had a nickel you got it yit“ A* a Favor to the Railroad A New York theatrical magnate had a bad attack of grippe in the winter and went South to recuperate. He stopped a few day* in a small town in South Carolina. When he got ready to leave for the North he found the official bus had mysteriously vanished; probably the driver had gone joy riding. There was no conveyance, public or private, to be had; ami tn order to catch bls train the Northern- ■ er waa compelled to labor afoot over a mile and a half of dusty road, with a valise in each hand. When he staggered op to the tiny station there was no one in sight except an old darky who was sitting on the platform. “Unde.” inquired the New Yorker, “why in the name of goodness did they build this depot so far from the town?" The old man scratched bis head. “I don’t know. be said, “onless it wuz because dey wanted to git closer to de railroad !” ■ — Eskimo Race j The Eskimos are between 62 and 64 inches in height with broad, round i faces and high cheekbones. They are i well built, usually far. and many of the men have remarkable muscular de- I relopment; the eyes are narrow, the hair I* straight and jet black, the beard is very thin and often entirely wanting. Th* skin is light brown or dark brown. They are a short-lived people, rarely attaining an age much beyond sixty years. The conditions of life are too hard.
f /i Hue Marcelle Cold Cream and MamUt Vanishing Cream rdieve the dry. parched condition es th* akin which come* with exposure to th* weather. Tn* cold cream is a deanatn* •nd healin* cream and lea vex the •kin M>ft. To do the moat good It should ba applied at night. On dry skins it may be used as a foundation for powder. Marcelle Vanttrun* Cream b the _— better cream for daytime use and —a foundation for fact ■E3& po*dar. as it ia greaxdoa and cannot reappear B powdar u|i!E I w frfcP The creams are E on ad* m both tube* and WOULDN'T STAND FOR CHANGE OF KEEPERS Love of his old keeper. *n aged employee of the Paris zoo. Is the only explanation of an unusual strike on tbs part of Bobby, a famous elephant, whose back has carried children, rich and poor, for 22 years, says the London Mail. Every day during that time Bobby’s caretaker filled buckets with water, potato peelings and oats. But he was growing old and the government decided to replace him without consulting the elephant. The first two days the beast refused to eat and bellowed loudly whenever attendants attempted to make him carry his usual load of youngsters. His fury increased until he began to demolish benches and tear holes in the sides of the elephant house, rushing everywhere looking for his old master. To stop the destruction the old keeper was recalled and received an affectionate welcome from the elephant, who caressed the tip of his ear with his trunk, making noises which the old man interpreted as cooing. A alnsl* dore of Dr. Peery's •'Dtid Shot" F enough to expel Worma or Tapeworm, why not try It T ITI Pearl 8t„ N. T. Adv. One Sauingr Grace The nice thing about a phonograph Is that It doesn’t read telegrams between numbers.—Duluth Herald.
When You reelaßjt> Cold Com* If \UV-Vz /Bromo j \Quininej to work off the cause and to fortify the system against an attack of Grip or Influenza. A Safe and Proven Remedy. Price 30c. Ito box bears thia signature I I wCSxK^ 1 Jhtefavl ■'poli* .$' 4™ Druggists I FOR OVER ZOO YEARS haarien oil has been a worldwide remedy for kidney, liver and bladder disorders, rheumatism, gQjU>M£H|» SHGDEBBEMBB correct internal troubles, stimulate vital organs. Three rises. AH druggists. Insist tn the original genuine Gold lUfwrvrrCHILDREN WHO ARE SICKLY Z'rHtZ'V Mothers who value the health of their children, should never be without ROTHE! GMT’S SWETT POWDERS tar CMt MEN, f for nee when needed. / They tend to Break up Colds, Relieve Feverishness. Worms. Constipa- * Krw> HMilarhe Teething 1 Vu'< if non, neaoscne, reetnina nlna xjjtu disorders and Stomach Troubles. LWbyJfof*shqf dhshuttaaSes era jpsr oesr tnrrry yearn wCWmOtJFe MOTHEg t GWAY CO.tuTgQY, M. T. juoxs ca» jobwbuxgm, x.
'l'm? SYRACTTTSI? Al<
Qomimmiltj Buildinq Planning to Clean Up "Back Yard*' of Cities The “back yards” of American cities and towns are to be cleaned up and made comparatively a* attractive as the front yards. Investigation has developed the fact that industry and population have been lost to towns be- . cause of unattractive, or. *ne might say repulsive, condition along the rail- - road’s approach. The glimpse one gets of a place through the window of a speeding train has been known to Influence decision* which have resulted tn serious losses? It Is related that a capitalist refused to buy the bonds of a certain little city because, a* be frankly admitted, th* place did not look worth while to him. Asked if he had ever visited the place he said he had not and did not Intend to because he had teen enough of It as he passed through on a train. Some time later he did visit the city. He expressed regret that he had libeled the place. It happens that the city is very attractive after one hqs got beyond the railroad tracks and the station. The real estate men of the country are organising a movement that will bring the beauty of American towns right down to the railroad tracks. Under the auspices of the National Association of real estate boards, the “back yards" of towns and cities are to be tidied up. Paint, whitewash and shrubbery are to be employed In the work. Ash and rubbish heaps. If they must exist, are to he screened from the eye* of the traveler. Pride In the appearance of cities’ back yards is to be developed, so that lh a few years America may refute the charge that Its back yards are not as attractive as those of foreign countries. Large and Small Cities Have United Interests The larger towns and cities cannot make progress and prosper without the smaller communities and rural sections. Nor can the latter expand and succeed in achievement of the things that are worth while without general co-operative Impulses from the centers of population. They are dependent one upon the other. Here Iles a wide opportunity for service by the city, town and rural press through realization of their mutual interests and constructive efforts in their advancement. The closer the cities and rural sections are drawn together, both In their social and Industrial relations, the better for both. Let no city publisher or country publisher imagine that he can live unto himself. He cannot. Quick communication through the automobile. rural free delivery, telephone and many other means of intimate association have made centers of population and rural communities increasingly dependent upon one another. —Birmingham Age-Herald. House Tells Own Story , No expenditure is so Important as that which you make for a home. You are to live In it for a period of years; you will see it every day, and every day your neighbors will see it. It must have the quality of strength and durability—that is, it must wear, and It must have style. The quality you want for the comfort, safety and welfare of yourself and family; the style you want to satisfy your own and their taste. Both, you want for your neighbors and even passing strangers to judge you by. The manner of the house Indicates the manner es the man within. It indicates, as It were, your standing in the community; and certainly, If circumstances lead you te move elsewhere, you want in your house, a* a commercial asset, both strength and beauty, for these are sure to get you a better return In rent or sale—that Is, from every point of view, an attractive h°me will prove t* be a wise investment •■ t ’ Home Purchase The South Bend (Ind.) real estate board has been making a special feature of a real estate sales plan whereby it is possible to purchase a home with a 10 per cent cash payment "The present efficient machinery of finance," one of their advertisement* point* out “makes it possible for the buyer to start with a small sum of from *10(1 to *1:000 and purchase a good horue’ranging in price from perhaps *2.500 to *10.000.” *Ju*f What You Make IP* Oneonta ts just what you make It. If you don’t like the town, you will probably find that the town. doesn’t like you. But If you have the right attitude, then you will find the community friendly. It Is a mirror in which you will find a reflection of your disposition.—Oneonta Southern Democrat Good Time to Brash Up fearing the leisure, dull season there are *0 many things that might be done to repair and paint up the old home, that would prove the best investment of the year. Don’t neglect « forget thia.—Talladega Home. Home Ownership Best A community whose units are rooted to the soil thinks twice before it Indulges in industrial revolution. Home ownership breeds patience and consideration. « y Got Wrong Point of View Short—l say. old man, can you lend me a fiver? Long—lmpossible. Fve tried to lend you money several times, but you always seem to look upon it a* a gift.— Drexerd. , .. r Well, Take a Chance Frenchman (after listening to cabaret singer)—Marvelous, maoMnofaeiie, marvelous. I will make of you a diva I
Well-Merited Success Honored politically and profcss.on*Hy, Dr. R. V. Pierce, whose picture
appears here, made a success few have equalled. Hi a pure herbal remedies which have stood the test for fifty years are still among ■ the “best sellers." Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery is a blood medicine
and stomach alterative. It clears the skin, beautifies it, increases the blood supply’and the circulation, and pimples and eruptions vanish quickly. This Discovery of Doctor Fierce’s puts you in fine condition, with all the organs active. AB dealers have it Send 10 cents for trial pkg. of tab> lets to Dr. Pierce. Buffalo. N. Y. Say “Otiose” Not “Lazrf Ar* cross-word puzzles helpful? The other day we were doing one when we had to find a six-letter synonym for “lazy.” As a starter we already had “o” and from somewhere within us came the wljjsper “otiose.” We hurried to the dictionary and verified it* meaning. “Otiose” has now become fixed in our vocabulary. Net only that but we have directed the attention of friend wife to the word, with the hop* that when next she feels like characterizing us with the shorter and uglier term, she will substitute “otiose.” It Is much less jarring.—Boston Transcript Children'* handkerchiefs Took hopeless when they come to the laundry. Wash with good soap, rinse in water blued with Red Cross Ball Blue. —Advertisement Rats in cm Organ The famous organ in the Trocadero In Paris, said to be worth *125.000. is in danger. This magnificent instrument, the third finest in France, is suffering from old age. Five men could blow It at one time, but today It takes ten men to provide the necessary power. Many of the pipes are out of use because rats nest in them. No matter how careful you are. your eyatem needs a laxative occasionally. Wrlrht'a Indian Vegetable Pills help nature gently, but surely. S?> Pearl St. N. T. Adv. Seeing Troubles First Taking troubles cheerfully as they come is to be commended, but still better is the habit of seeing them coming and taking the necessary steps to head them off.—Fort Wayne New*Sentinel.
Ejjohn's KM w Medicine KuJumM OVER 69 YEARS of success NO DRUGS l vr . ■.■■ l
Thousands Recommend it 'pHEY have jnf±. X learned KKn rom expericnee that no matter how mariy other I y WjjMMhC treatments I have been tried without ooccewl Resinol Ointment b often the one that brings speedy relief from chafing, ecaama or similar itching.' embarks soothing Reeling action b brought about by qualities . £t is absolutely harmless Shd does riot smart or burn when applied to the most irritated surface. To keep the skin healthy many people have adopted the daily use of Resinol Soap. Unsurpassed for toilet and bath. Ail druggists sell Resinol products. _Resinol_ QoicA JtdteFFrom Coughs and Coldl b Exceedingly Dangerous to Lot Cough* and Colds Develop. Easy t«> Chech Thw. < For fifty-three years Porter’s Pals King has stood In the front rank ot home remedies for the relief of colds coughs, croup, hoarseness and similar ailments. Porter’s Pain King Is made of pure wholesome ingredients, perfectly harmless and amasingly effective. By merit alone it holds an honored place In hundreds of thousands of American irnmet now is a good time to read th circular wrapped around every bottle Many families who have this good oldtime liniment in the house suffer needlessly because they do not know all oi its many uses. Porters Pain King It more than a remedy for colds. It Boothes aches and pains, soreners , swollen joints, tired muscles, lame beck and rheumatic misery. It heals burns scalds, cuts, chapped hands, frost-bltt-i feet. Why not use it tpdayT Made and guaranteed hy The Geo. H Rundle Co., Piqua. O. Sold by dealert everywhere. K BABIES LOVE ■ SYR.JP ■ n.Mian’odauUrra’.RnvlUer I - - iy OtPer ilK® ul*u«O4!TS» -rS *1 Th® OXIOII published fanmlß ®d pears co KKWII
0‘ THE KTTEHCNEI CABINETSi (©> ISM. Wax tern Newspaper Union.) Some have much and some hav* more. Some are rich and some are poor; Some have little, some have less. Some have not a cent to bless Their empty pockets, yet possess True riches in true happiness. —John Oxenham. GOOD THINGS Here Is a soup that is good enough for anybody and liked by all:
Queen Victoria’! Favorite Soup.— Chop one cupful of baked chicken, add one pint of chicken broth, one cupful of sweet cream, salt and pepper to taste, and lastly add the
mashed and riced yolks of three hardcooked eggs. "Lettuce and Pepper Salad. —Prepare heads of lettuce cut into quarters, if large, and sprinkle over “the lettuce chopped onion, celery and shredded green peppers. Season well and serve with a French dressing. Salmon Salad.—Chop five good-sized pickles and the whites of five hardcooked eggs. Rub the yolks of the eggs until smooth with a tablespoonful of soft butter, add two tablespoonfuls of diluted vinegar, one teaspoonful of salt, a speck of cayenne and one-half cupful of cream. Arrange the salmon on lettuce, sprinkle with the chopped pickle and pour over the dressing. Spanish Steak. — Sprinkle a thick steak with salt and pepper, one tablespoonful of chopped onion and threequarters of a cupful of flout. Cook in a hot iron kettle in butter until well browned, then add boiling water to cover and simmer slowly for two hours. Serve with the gravy from the kettle. Stuffed Eggs.—Take six bard-cooked eggs. Cook by dropping them into six pints of boiling water, cover tightly and let stamLon the back of the stove for half an hour. Cut the eggs into nalves, mash the yolks and mix half of them with a little ground ham or sausage, seasoning well. Refill the whites and add the other half of the egg yolks to two cupfuls of white sauce. Arrange the halved eggs in a baking dish and cover with the white sauce, making two layers if necessary. Bake twenty minutes. Garnish with parsley and small cooked sausages. Pink Toast.—Put three tablespoonfuls of butter into a saucepan, and when bubbling hot add three tablespoonfuls of flour, with one-half teaspoonful of salt; stir in gradually one and one-half cupfuls of stewed strained tomatoes in which one-qnar--01 a teaspoonful of soda has been solved. Add one-half cupful of scalded milk and pour over six slices of well-buttered toast and serve at once. Fried Oysters Delaware Bay Style.— Take one pint of crab meat, chop fine and mix with bread crumbs of equal quantity, season well with salt and pepper and dip the oysters into this after dipping them Into egg. Fry In deep fat For the Family Meal. A nice supper dish which is not hard to prepare and is wholesome and
- A
Cheese With Celery.— Take the outer stalks from a bunch or two of celery, cut into half-inch pieces and cook until tender, saving the liquor ’to use with the white sauce. Prepare a white sauce taking two tablespoonfuls of butter, two
of flour and cook until smooth, then add one-half cupful of milk and one-half cupful of the celery liquor; cook until thick. Put a layer of white sauce over a layer of the cooked celery In a buttered baking dish, cover with a layer of grated cheese, repeat, finish the top with a layer of buttered crumbs and bake In a moderate ovep until the crumbs are brdwn. TapidC* Pudding.—Cook one tablespoonful of tapioca in a pint of milk for 15 minutes. Dissolve a ' tablespoonful of gelatin in one-half cupful of cold water. Add one-half cupful of sugar, the yolk of an egg to the first mixture. Pt»ur over stewed dried apricots or peaches and one-half of a sliced banana. When cool add onehalf cupful of whipped cream. Baked Lima Beans.—lt is the tough outer skin of beans which most peoplfi. find so troublesome to digest. Soak a cupful of lima beans in cold water to cover, over night; In the morning drain and cover with boiling water; repeat when cool. Slip off the skins and place the beans in a baking dish, cover with scalding hot mßk and bake slowly for two hours. When the mlik is all absorbed remove the cover, dot with bits of butter, add cayenne and brown lightly. Serve from the baking diiffi. Spiced Prun*w-—Soak one pound of prunes oyer -night in water to cover. In the morning simmer in the same water until tender, adding ten doves, the rind of a lemon, and the juice. When tender, drain and add one cupful of honey, onerhalf cupful of vinegar to the liquid. Simmer the prunes In this after bringing it to the boiling point for a half hour. Chill and serve. ■ Ton of Gold Allowing 2,000 pounds to the ton. and 16 ounces to the pound, a ton of gold would be worth about *640,000, for it* assay weight is *2O, plus, per ounce. That would make the a/krage person weighing 160 pounds worth about *51,200, if they were given their weight in gold. Progressist We have progressed when we are equal to our one-time *uperlora, and superior to our one-time equal*
Smet at all times f After eating or smoking Wrigleyb freshen* th* mouth and sweeten* the breath. Nerve* are soothed, throat t* refreshed and digestion aided So easy to carry&Hffie packet! WRIGLEYS -afterevery
Wanted —A Grandmother Maizle Ellen played with some children next door and they were always talking about their grandmother doing this or that for them. Maizie Ellen had no grandmother, and it worried her because she could not refer to one She asked her mother, but, of mother could not provide a grandmother for her. Finally she approached het Aunt Kate, whom she was visiting on« day: “Aunt Kate, I want a grandma. You got gray hair and idok just like a grandma. I believe I'll just call you grandma. I want one. All the othei little girls have one.” The charm of a bathroom is Its spotlessness. By the use of Red Cross Ball Blue all cloths and towels retain their whiteness until worn out —Advertisement p Apples Important Food Apples are one of the best sources o» Iron for the diet. Raisins have been advertised for their iron content. It is true that both fresh grapes and raisins as well as plums and prune* furnish this element, but the apple I* the heaviest Iron-carrying fruit that w* can eat, having 39-100 per cent of irox in its makeup.
Efier since the birth of the Industry From the first days of the gasoline baggy to the present day automobile Mona Motor Oils and Greases have been leaders in the lubrication field. Thirtyfive years making motors run smoother and last longer! You buy thirty-five years of quality and reliability in each quart oi MsaaMstEi OiL Monarch Manufacturing Co. Council Bluffs, lowa Toledo, Ohie MonaMaiSl Oils A Greases
ft iFgx w I A Cuticura Soapi Bestfor Baby BMd. OinfiTwt, Twicfwn wold iwywbtrfi. SamplMiK truiat Ostiwtv.XabwttviM. Dw«. M. Wilfce, Mua| please help a hard working stomach that's to got awngi Q7aque/&prute or two A a raaUoW' oPwater after the ®»4 frbnd <ht Prohet 81se Me. Heme Slse SSe DR. HUMPHREYS' 99 Ibestß[ qfqr| v * jii m * s ■
