The Syracuse Journal, Volume 20, Number 7, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 16 June 1927 — Page 3

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| TlntingTlps | i (Copyright 1917) w Here’s the secret of giving lingerie, stockings, etc., the most gorgeous tints. All tints are ready colors. So a»e real dye«. Get an envelope of the actual dye powder at any drug Store, for ftf- ; teen cents. Do your own diluting, which saves money and gives you the exact shade you want. Diamond dyes do perfectly beautiful tinting—in cold water. A dip. ami It's done. And true dyes don’t streak! Dye-tinting doesn't look weak, however delicate a tone you use : nor does it wash out unevenly. When you want the tint to be jiermanent. Just use ■ boiling water Instead of cold! Regular dyeing of all dress mated- I als. drapes etc.. Just as easy. Ask druggist for color cards and suggestions. Or, a wealth of ideas in full colors. In new book Color Craft free and postpaid; write DIAMOND DYES, lb pt. NBO, Burlington. Vermont. Diamond Dyes Dip toTINT-Boil toDYE

—■-■y— -i) Special Offer — CURTAILS 3r *‘ :h 1J ! I--:.' l|lU»t:aUun »hth«y ’/J-Ai'ii s*» f«h , JrL-V.I CroMfd Bar Marqutattr I p/l Ti < WhltM; <J wish Vaiwta M-* and T!< Hacks, F»c»: (’»•■ I —i—- —- jk. yd , )<■!>« OHPUH AT Vt_l„LA‘! ONCE AS PRICK CANNOT . U T ijl’lj LAST FOR THIS VALVE I B - ? fit I H< nd money and order# to i . - «H. »nt Grund Av*, WBhMKM Bronx, Now York. Snowy White Clothes WITHOUT RUBBING N-R-G (Korrxyl L».u»dry TnUeto wa»h etottae | •-oOwwly etaa in mi mtnoum witbunt raH>in». > . OOM «eerytl»ie« Hk» «*».' <«* »“«P h£l in half, , ,R-o»l>e ink. fraM »tnin». iHood. runt. pervpiratiwi ; anu nil rtain* inruntly. ; Goaranteod Not to Intaro the Honda or the Ftnoot Fabrlo ■ AwrtMr woota When N K-U w Si»-M ir. the ww*- f in# macbme.eniwr weetwt ortnta driren. Homo- ! •no r»«n«uy»l. Per •»» nt yvw gnt-vr'in, i« per i. ,a<«. ViioaWe o with every pe-saire. -Oniy fnor rwrairvd fw Sitar TeMJNMa. Sl-yenr (utnalvt. Owe FO other prannmu, TWO WOO PRODUCTS CO.. CHICAGO, ILL. !■ J DIURETIC STIMULANT TO THE KIDNEYS Standard for Generation* "T heartily recommend Dodd’s Pills, m I have taken them for some time and can truly say that they were a benefit to me. I also believe they will help ’nyhody who has kidney trouble of any kind." rSlgned, F. C. Chase. • Welcome Lake. Pa. Buy a box today, 60c, at your drug More nr the Dodd'S Medicine C0.,-700 Mam St., Buffalo. X Y. The best memorial for a mighty man is to Kain lwn»r ere death.—Beowulf.

Why He Succeeded Honored and professionally, during his lifetime. Dr. R. V. Pierce, whose picture appears g her e, made a T*sm success few have Iv* equalled. His pure L k-A £?r herbal remedies which have stood j Byiyr s t l * tcst i** V years are still , among the “best sellers." Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovcry is a stomach : alterative which makes the blood richer. t It clears the skin, beautifies it, pimples and eruptions vanish quickly. This Dis- ' covery of Dr. Pierce’s puts you in hne condition. All dealers have it in liquid or tablets. Send 10 cents for trial pkg. of tablets to Dr. Pierce, Buffalo, K. Y„ and write for free advice. If shaw pinch w’.-> j « feet ache••tired art mt- >/ justihikf c vSallen’s! Wwheise ml i At frtMg and TUbt ft—ds Counters

Special Offer to Victims of Indigestion Yoor Druggist Says Pisssant to Taka, Elixir Must Help Poor Distressed Stomachs or Money Gladly Refunded. Too can be so distressed with gas I and fullness from poor digestion or dyspepsia that you think your heart is going to stop beating. Your stomach may beso distended * that your breathing la short and gaspy. : You are dlxxy and pray for quick | relief—what’s to be done. Just one tsblsqpnimfui of Dare’s Mentha Pepsin and speedily the gas disappears, the pressing on the heart ceases and you can breathe deep and j naturally. Oh! What blessed relief; but wt/ not get rid of such attacks altogether? Why have them at all? Especially when any druggist anywhere guarantees Dare’s Mentha Pep- I sin. a pleasant elixir, to help you or I money back. I

Automatic Radio Receiving Set

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‘ iue ..UQ automatic radio receiving set in the world bus been designed and put into Ration. at the United . States bureau of standards In Washington. It operate, without aid of human hands and «• Wjble ft mmg ] twelve different stations, some of then, being European stations. Dr. L. W. Austin, head of the special radio trans- , 1 mission reseurrh laboratory, is shown in - - ---; ..... <

Mother Left Baby on Ship

Ca’">**in Telli of Terrible Five Days as Nurse to Eskimo Babe. New York.—The duties of the ca|» tain of a "merchant vessel “tramping Its way about the ports of the world while cetnprisinj: isuhi.a slrnnge and ’at times not altogether satisfactory tasks, rarely. If ever before, haw been known to include the iob of playing nursemaid to a mislaid Eskimo infant This, however, is the uidtjue experience enjoyed, if that is the projter word, by (’apt. Arthur W. Wooster, skipper of the British merchantman t'lH <»f Mobile, which recently d«»cked at the wbarvw of the Pouch Terminal. Brookpfn, w\th a cargo of spices from India. . While steaming far off somewhere OR (be otiier -ide of tlo- world the ship came e\entuallv to the port of Kamchatka, Siberia, where it docked to lake on a cargo of canned salmon. While it was lying at anchor a num her of Eskimo women, with their babies strapped Indian fashion to their backs, came aboard to sell fruits and | veget.Hhles and various trinkets ami articles of wearing apparel to the sailors. When the orders to clear ship and weigh the anchor echoed down the mercimntman's decks, the women hurriedly 'Bcrambled for the ship's sides and. tumbling over with many wild cries, made their small craft, taking, it was generally supjaised, all their babies with them It not until the ship had steatneti about SO miles from Kam chatkH. however, that Captain Wons < ter discovered bow wofuily inexact this supis>siti«>n had been. His second othcer came rushing up to him with the startling information that one of the acuiel> juvenile gum-drop emhu stasis had been discovered very much tangled up in a coll of rope between z decks. Following the lead of the second ot fi«vr. Captain Wooster came upon thj* baby, wlilcti. he declared, was "tile dirtiest and ugliest infant imaginable.'* I in addition to this, it was yelling at the top of its lungs. I chucked it under t’he chin," said the captain, who. by the way. is a mar ried man with a couple of youug h«*|M» > fuls of his own in a London suburb “and did all the usual tricks in an effort to restore Its e«wal humor, if ■ any. but »H to i><> avail II howled louder than ever and screwed up its little slanting eyes until they were completely lost in its tear-streaked yellow face. “I suggested that my second officer should take charge of the brat, but he refused the detail point-blank. Remeiubermg that the best way to a

>CXX><><>o<XXX><X><XXK><h>o<><>oooo | This Woman Insists That Her Age Is 160 $ S Constantinople.—The Turkish 0 $ feminist -movement has reached X X the stage where even the claim g , g to being the oldest living TurK X 0 ha»* been taken from the mere g § man who long held it. Zam X 0 Asha. wh«*e age is given e« one g 2 hundred and fifty three years, o | Q has ceded his loncevitr title to g IX Fotina Marten, who has just ar- 0 g rived at Angora front the Thru £ X dan wilds. claiming her age to O | 5 be one hundred and sixty years. X 0 Fatma Hanro’s leu children 0 $ are dead, but «he has many 0 0 great-great-grandchildren living g $ and one four year old great X $ great-great-grandchild

BIG INCREASE IN THE OUPUT OF COSMETICS SINCE WORLD WAR

■ ■ 1 e Value of Perfume* and Toilet Preparations Made in United States Placed at 8141.488.000. New York.—The output of perfumes and toilet preparations in the United • States has multiplied six times in the last ten years, according to a summary of progress made public by the i American Chemical society. Chinese women. It was disclodbd. are j rebelling against native products and are buying American wares to enhance the beauty of their hair and nails The area of United States manufacI tyxre is confined slmoet wholly to Eastern and Midwestern states. New York being far in the lead, with Illinois second. The number of plants is between SOP and aua. | Two prominent causes of expansion ’ are "the much greater addiction of ( girls and women to cosmetics of ail

baby’s heart is through its stomach I ttwik the child along to the steward, hut found that he didn’t know much more than 1 did about acting as valet to an 'enfant terrible,' for he started right off to feed it meat. “I quickly dissuaded him from this idea. We were then confronted with the problem of contriving away to feed It some milk. My second officer seemed to think that the child was constructed on the same principle as a puppy and should be able to lap. But after several false starts and a couple of deluges of milk we gave up the idea as not l»eing practicable. Finally, prompted by vague recollections of nursing bottles, we managed a very creditable imitation from a beer bottle and a piece of rubber tubing. Bath Proved a Knockout. “The nejf thing was to give the child a bath. This was an unfortunate Inspiration, for in our clumsiness we evidently got some soap in its eye. which was the signal for a whole new series of yells. <» “My next worry was where the Infant was to sleep, and as none of the other officers would take it in their cabins 1 finally wrapped it in a rug and put it on my settee. Well, this was where I fell, for after that I had the full responsibility of this awful child. “It had the most powerful pair of lungs for its size that 1 have ever heard in action. And its conception of the time to sleep seemed diametrically opjatsed to mine. After a hard day s work complicated by frequent excursions to attend to the child (and I cannot tell you the awful Jobs i hud to do; It just put years on me) I would retire to a well-earned rest, .lust as things began to get pleasantly hazy and the cares of the day (Includ Ing the baby) were beginning to fall away, a dying moan would rend the silence. My Jangled nerves would, respond with a jerk which completely routed all signs of sleep. And then, with increasing violence, the storm would he upon me. “My combined job of ship captain

New Thermionic Microammeter

ft? ii j N -p / II h IL II

A tenth of a thousandth of a millionth of an ampere change In current can now be uetected by the use of the microammeter, an instrument developed in the standardizing laboratory of the West Lynn works of the General Electric company, as part of the equipment which replaces the human eye in making tests on incan descent lamps, currents in insulators, radio tubes, and other electrical appliance*.

kinds than before the World war." and **the rise of artificial and synthetic aromatic compounds.“ Cream, rouges, etc., according to the latest figures availaole. rank first in annual value, their production aggregating 534.178.0UU. Dentifrices are second with 825.496.D00. Other classes are rated as follows in a total output of 8141.488.000; Talcum and other toilet powders. 821.428.UUU; perfumery and toilet waters. 82U.544.0U0; hair tonics, 80.48 U- . hair dyes, 81.filfi.0W: other cosmetics and toilet pivparations not reported by kind. 88.057.000. ■•Our foreign sales of face powders, rouges, creams. etc„ have developed promisingly In Latin American conn tries, led by Cuba.” says the summary. •‘Men as well as women In these countries are much given to the use of various scents and iolions, and the !• ■

THE SYKACI SI .|orif> i

OOOtXMXXXMXXXXMXXXXXNXXXXK INo Ship in 15 Years; c Just Hears Czar’s Fall o Petropavlovsk. Kamchatka. — q News of the overthrow of the 9 and the establishment of a 6 Soviet government in Russia has $ just reached" a large Island in d the Bering strait between Sihe- $ ria and Alaska, with the arrival C of the first ship in fifteen years. 2 The Slav and Eskimo residents c of the island were much aston- £ ished to learn that Russia no o longer is a monarchy. They § said their last previous contact 9 with civilization had been when X an American trawler brought 9 some supplies from Alaska. c 000<XXXXX>000<XX>0000<XXXXKK

and nurse was making a complete wreck of me. and" I am sure that if our first port had been 25 days distant instead of five. 1 should have dropped the child overboard. However, we reached Karatsu. Japan, on the fifth day. and there I got a sister from the Catholic convent to take charge of the baby and. believe me, 1 was more than thankful to see the last of it." Gwinnett’s Ghost Leads to Long-Lost Documents Atlanta. Ga.—The ghost of Button Gwinnett, one of the signers of the Declaration of independence, has come hack to help Georgia recover valuable historical documents lost for a century or more. Ever since the state filed claim in a New York court to a will, which carries the signature of Gwinnett, sold at an auction last summer for $22,500, hundreds of the papers have been returned almost as mysteriously as they were taken, says Miss Ruth Biair, state historiau. “No questions asked” Is the one condition most of the persons asked in returning the documents. Others mailed them in anonymously. The Gwinnett will |iad been in the state's tiles at one lime, the attorneygeneral contends, and was reported lost about 25 years ago. Look Who'* Here! Kansas tYty. Ma—The five-cent loaf of bread has come back to Kansas City after an absence of fifteen years.

market possibilities are corresponding ly increased. "In the Far East. Japan has been gradually becoming familiar with our toilet creams and powders, and theAmerican colony in. the Philippines has made our trade with those islands of some Importance. "The specialty of the United States, in which it holds the acknowledged leadership in practically all markets. Is dentifrices. “Last year we supplied the world with dentifrices valued at 83.382.000 By far our best customer for these articles ordinarily is England, which takes nearly a third of the total." Mark Historic Spots London.—Simple, artistic road signs revealing hidden historical treasures of English villages and towns are being erected throughout the country, j What of It? Murmansk. U. S. S. R.—The local soviet has selected a worker named Petroff from 500 contestants as the baldest man in the province.

Horticultural News

HOME ORCHARD IS SADLY NEGLECTED

For every apple tree bearing a good I crop it is safe to say that more than a thousand have been planted and al- 1 lowed to die because of diseases and neglect, it is estimated by Dr. H. W. Anderson, associate chief of pomological pathology at the college of agriculture, University of Illinois. If any v I I out of the thousand do survive the diseases they areNtilowed to become a ‘ menace to neighboring commercial or- 1 chards which are cared for properly. ' he said. Better by far that all home orchards should be destroyed than that they should be allowed to breed diseases and insects to Infest commercial orchards which represent the investment of fortunes, he believes. “All of our common fruits suffer each year from numerous diseases. These are due to a variety of causes, such aa, fungi, bacteria and weather and soil conditions. In some years, such as the past, when dry weather prevails during the spring and early summer, the diseases are few, while In a year of normal rainfall or an ex- j cessive rainfall in the spring months, fruit crops that are not carefully protected by sprays are a total failure on account of the numerous diseases. “Spraying is usually effective in controlling diseases, but some of the bacterial diseases such as fire blight of apple and pear have never been successfully controlled. Spraying, however, unless properly done. Is of little value and under any condition is expensive. To those having small farm orchards, the cost of spray apparatus and the time required to make the applications render this method of control highly Impractical. Farmers and ®iry dwellers with small plantings have realized this, as evidenced by the j neglected orchards and small fruit plantations observed in every section of the state. “Roadside marketing, however, has made it possible for those who have , the advantage of such markets to grow 1 small plantations of trees and other, fruits and make them pay. Since spraying operations are costly, these growers should make every effort to reduce their expenses by proper attention to other factors which will reduce | the amount of injury. “When the time comes to spray, study the problem of the type of spray apparatus which will be needed not only when the orchard Is young but several years after it comes into bearing. Buy only the best type of sprav apparatus. On this point you should consult your experiment station experts. Know what you are spraying for and study the varieties. Much ex- j pense can be saved in this way, for it will be found that certain of the varieties never scab or blotch or mildew. “Some plan of co-operation with other growers in the neighborhood can often be put Into effect so that a “spray ring” can be formed and much better apparatus can be purchased. This problem should be carefully studied. since spray rings have not proved successful in many cases, due to lack of efficient organization. “New spray materials recommended by the manufacturers should never be tried without first consulting the experiment station. Many of these are ! not Only more expensive but are less , efficient than well-known and trie-3 preparations.” Black Raspberries Are Different From the Red Black raspberries are different from the reds tn more ways than one; different in color and in flavor of fruit; the bush is larger and more spreading in habit; therefore, the plants require more room. Set two and onehalf to three feet In the row and rows about six The plants each consist of a snaggy bunch of fine roots with a short piece of stem in the center which is of no Importance at all. surrounded by dormant buds which will push up and make fine strong shoots for next year, if—and listen closely to this if or you will surely fait These buds must not be buried deeply In planting or they will never appear above ground and you will lose what you paid for the plants plus your ! time. Cover the roots, of course, but leave the bud center close to the surface covered with not more than an i Inch of loose soil, or set the whole plant three or four inches below the surface, being careful not to cover the buds too deeply. As the shoots grow, hoeing and cultivating will fill the hole. Begone the end of the season, the shoots, three or four of them, will reach a height of three to four feet, each one dividing into two or more branches. The stronger ones should be staked and tied to prevent breaking by wind or in cultivating. " "

Repair Grape Trellises A vineyard chore which should have attention in the early spring is the repair of the grape trellises. Missing staples should be replaced, though not driven so tightly as to pinch the wires, and the wires tightened. Loose posts should be firmed down and rotted ones be replaced. The strain due to heavy cane growth and the pressure of winds is great on the trellis In a good vineyard and much fruit may be saved by caring for it Canes usually are tied with square or granny knots. Time for Grafting Grafting should be done during the dormant season, best just before growth starts In the spring, putting two wedge-shaped scions into the cleft made by splitting the stubs left after cutting off about half the main branches. Graft the center of the tree o« year and the outer branches the next Match the growing layers of both the stock and the scions and wax thoroughly. If the pinching of the deft is not sufficient to hold the scion firmly It may be necessary to tie it j

JsWllk 1

DR. W. B. CALQWEU. • AT THE AGE OF B 3

To Dr. W. B. Caldwell, of Montlrello. 111., a practicing physician for 47 years, it seemed cruel that so many constipated men. women, children, and particularly old folks, had to be kept constantly “stirred up” and half sick by taking cathartic pills, tablets, salts, calomel and nasty oils. While he knew that constipation was the cause of nearly all headaches, biliousness, indigestion and stomach misery, he did not believe that a sickening “purge” or “physic” was necessary. In Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin he discovered a laxative which helps to establish natural bowel “regularity” even for those chronically constipated. Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin not only causes a gentle, easy bowel movement

Important Life Rule Best of all is It to preserve everything in a pure still heart and let there be for .very pulse a thanks- ( giving, and for every breath a song. | —Gesner. Many people Imagine that Worms or i Tapeworm cannot be expelled entirely. A ! single dose of “Deed Shot” proves that they I can. 372 Pearl St.. |N. Y. Adv. Roger Bacon’s Error Columbus was misled into discov ering America by the false reasoning of Roger Bacon, who thought that there was only a small ocean between Europe and eastern Asia. If you use Russ Bleaching Blue in your laundry, you will not be troubled , by those tiny rust spots, often caused by inferior bluing. Try it and see.—Adv. Frat House Chat Ted —An unmarried woman wants you on Ihe phone. Bill—How do you know she’s not I married? Ted—She said not to call you if you are engaged. Must Give Vacations The grand duchy of Luxemburg is i > the only sovereign state in the world I i that has a law making it obligatory for all employers to give a vacation : with pay to all their employees. The Luxemhtrrgers are proud of being in ; the van of progress. More Important Katherine is four and has absorbed | as many grown-up words as one small i head can gather. She went motoring recently with Billy. Bitty s mother was! ; driving. To make conversation, Katherine asked (in the same manner her mother might have used): “Billy, are you married?” “No," the little boy replied; “but I knew a man once who died.” Wright’s Indian Vegetable Fills contain I only vegetable Ingredients which act as a gentle purgative. 372 Pearl St.. N, Y. Adv. Ducal Dig Suz> hne Lenglen said at a dinner In New York: 1 “When 1 began to play golf | friends all poked fun at me. One day I was playing at Mont Agel. tne golf ; course high up in the mountains back of Monte Carlo. 1 was in very badform that day. and the way 1 hacked holes in the green velvet turf was a! caution. ” The duke of Westminster passed as I was hacking away. “‘Ah. mademoiselle." he said. *when you get through it won’t he a matter j of replacing the turf—it will be a matter of returflng the place.'” Bell-Ans Really Sure Relief Thousands of Testimonials From Doctors, Nurses and Dentists Say So. i For correcting over-acidity and ; I quickly relieving belching, gas, sickheadache. heartburn, nausea, biliousness and other digestive disorders, BELL-ANS has been proved of great ■ value for the past thirty years. Not j a laxative but a tested Sure Relief for . Indigestion. Perfectly harmless and pleasant to take. Send for free samples to: Bell & Co., Inc., Orangeburg, N. Y. —Adv. In Yellowstone park a hothouse heated by water from a near-by geyser supplies fresh vegetables and flowers ; throughout the winter.

Now Off the “Ragged Edge” Stages Quick Return to Health Art Sauer’s illness now but a memory. For three months he suffered agony. Nervousness and knife'like pains made life a misery, Tanlac quickly helped him

Arthur Sauer lives at 1034 Berwin Street, Indianapolis. Several years ago he was working at high pressure when his health snapped. Here are his own words: “Plugging away without let-up, day in and day out, put me on the down grade, on the ragged edge of a bad breakdown. M v hand trembled like a leaf and I had knifelike pains in my back, cheat and kidneys. That’s not natural for a young man, but I had to prod and urge myself to go to work. *1 could not rest and when I did elosemveves had disagreeable dreams. Rest time or meal tune did me no good. I grew pale and weak and wasted away to a shadow of my old self. The lightest food caused heartburn. palpitation and bloating. “Since taking Tanlac all these distressing symptoms have vanished. I am my old optimistic self again, have nerves like steel and eat and sleep like a lumber-jack. My weight has jumped from 135 to 153. Tanlac has given me so much strength and stamina that work is play to me and lean only heap praise on this wonderful tomc.fi It only took three bottles to . fix me up. That was a year ago and

Constipation! J I I How to Keep ' L I • Bowels Regular

but, best of all. it never gripes, sickens. qr upsets the system. Besides, it is absolutely harmless, and so pleasant that even a cross, feverish, bilious, sick child gladly takes it Buy a large 60-cent battle at any store that sells medicine or write “Syrup Pepsin.” Monticeillo. Illinois, for a FREE SAMPLE BOTTLE and just see for yourself,"

Z)r Caldwell's SYRUP PEPSIN

REMOVE. YOUR CORN f Instant Relief! Your corns <iin fie removed st once with first application of Pr. Wooster's ■ Famous Corn and Bunion Remedy. Packasw contains enough; for 25 corns. At All Druggists 35c or sent by mail, postpaid, on receipt of 35c, stamps or coin. Dr. Camden Woo ft er Chiropodist, St. Louis, Mo. boils! MflF Theres quick, positive, relief in , CARBOIL For Indigestion,’Dyspepsia, etc. k Relieves Distress after Hurried 1 , Meals or Overeating. Being a I gentle laxative, it keeps the digestive tract working normally. 30c & 90c. At all Druggists. G. G. GREEN, Inc. WOODBURY, N. J. 1 LADIES—*3S weekly Easy; hddresstna •■- I vclopesathome: all material furnished; particulars free. Howall Co.. 135 W Lake. Chtcaao. |j ’'.J..-.. —L AGE.XTS WASTED IN YOLK OWN FEKj ntory to handle store route ta spare tjma. ■ Steady income. No selllnr. No; capital N. States. Box 3. sta. D. Njsw York City. fHAFIHGendRASHES ~ promptly relieved and healed by a few applications cf Resinol Exactly “Marry in haste and repent at leisure.” “Yes. but where are yqU going to get any leisure?”—Life. CHILDREN CRY = FOR “CASTORIA” Especially Prepared for Infants and Children of All Ages, Mother! Fletcher’s (jastoria has been in use for over 30 years to relieve babies and children ,of Constipa- . tion. Flatulency, Wind Colic aud Diarj rhea; allaying Feverishness arising ■ therefrom, and, by regulating the I Stomach and Bowels, aids the assimilation of Food; giving natural sleep without opiates. The genuine bears signature of Signs of Springtime Butter Clerk—What’s the first thing that turns green in the spring? Bookkeeper — Christmas jewelry.— Progressive Grocer.

<Lr

Fve been in fine shape ever since.” Mr. Sauer is but one of man v thousands Tanlac has helped. Over a hundred thousand grateful friends have written to tell us what Tanlao did for them. It is nature’s own tonic, made? from herbs, roots And barks. Your druggist has Tanlac. If overwork or neglect is telling on you. get a trial bottle today. Over 52 million I ■ ■. 1 .