Walkerton Independent, Volume 34, Number 20, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 30 October 1908 — Page 8
( For the I Children i |To succeed these days you a must have plenty of grit, courJ age, strength. How is it with 3 the children? Are they thin, S pale, delicate? Do not forget gAyer’s Sarsaparilla. You I know it makes the blood pure 1 and rich, and builds up the a general health in every way. | The children cannot possibly have good health B unless the bowels are in proper condition. Cor- ■ rect any constipation by giving small laxative ■ doses of Ayer’s Pills. All vegetable,sugar-coated. Al Made by J. C. Ayer Co., Lowell, Mase. J* Also manufacturers of /.I HAIR VIGOR. Z ■ 1 fZ> f*C AGUE CURE. A. O CHERRY PECTORAL. We have no secrets ! We publish the formulas of all our mediciues. mmmmbwb—iiiiiiiiiibiiibi Mil ill wiriiww* - BUSINESS & PROFESSIONAL. DR. M. S^DENAUT^ Physician. Surgeon. O Sloes and residence In Denaut Building, Seventh Street. reLEPHONE No. 0. NIGHT BELL. W. F. Miranda, M. D., Physician and Surgeon The Treatment of all Diseases of Women and Children a Specialty. ■>-♦ Office Con»ulte*'on Free. Office In new building near residence on; Avenue E. Telephone No. 34 S. P. TRACY, 8.5., M. D. Physician and Surgeon, W ALKKRTQN. - - - INDIANA. Office: Rooms formerly occupied by J. W. Arlington, M. D. TELEPHONE NO. 35. NIGHT BELL. DR. R. NEVILLE, Physician, Surgeon and Obstetrician Dropsical Cases a. Specialty. Calls Promply Answered. Day or Night. OFFICE AND RESIDENCE PHONE No. 79 Walkerton, Indiana EYES : EXAMINED : FREE Glasses fitted at moderate prices. Satisfaction guaranteed. DR. J. BURKE & CO. OPTICIANS. Paxson Bldg. Established 1900 230 So. Michigan St., South Bend, Indiana Dr. H. S. Dowell, DENTIST. Crown Bridge Work and Orthodontia a Specialty. Teeth extracted without pam or sleep, by tha use of local anaesthetic. Leaves no bad after efiects. Teeth filled without pain by the use of antalgie. PHONE 56. MB. Slick, LL. B. Harvey J. Curtis, LL. B. SLICK & CURTIS, ATTORNEYS and COUNSELLORS AT-LAW, NOTARIES PUBLIC AND U. S. PENSION ATTORNEYS. Settl ment of Estates, Abstracts of Title, Rea Estate, Loans, Insurance and Collections, SUCCESSORS TO W. A. DAILEY, TRUSTEE’S NOTICE. GEORGE~P. ROSS, TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE, Hereby gives notice that he will be at his office in Ross’ Hardw-.re Store Wednesday and Saturday of each week for the transaction of township business. Hours: 9 a, m. to 3 p. m. Miller Guy Gyrus E. Pattee -- GUY & PATTEE Attorneys-at-Law 117 North Main Street. SOUTH BENO, IND. UNDERTAKING^ SMITH & CO. Funeral Directors, A, > . M Llg v'#'- * Personal Attention Given to All Calls. LADY ASSISTANT. OFFICE 'PHONE, No. 14. RESIDENCE, No. 4. WALKERTON, IND.
LOCAL HAPPENINGS. Try “Reiss” shirts. The Walkerton Military Band now has twenty members. Try our steam baked bread. Everybody likes it. At Shirley’s. The best legacy any man can leave his children is willingness to work. Subscribe for the Independent and keep posted on the Walkerton markets. Those wishing hardwood lumber to build cribs and sheds should call on D. W. Place. Both the corn and potato crops are turning out better than was anticipated a few weeks ago. The aged inventor of the Mauser rifle has now perfected a weapon which fires 25 shots at a single loading. Veal calves bought at highest market prices. If you have any to sell let me know at once. W. D. McDaniel. Our home-made bread is getting better all the time. Don’t miss trying it. Orescent Bakery and Restaurant. DeWitt’s Little Early Risers, the famous little liver pills. They are small sure, safe pills. Sold by B. E. Williams. Sid Ewing, barber, one door west of Hotel Starr. Revolving chairs, compressed air and other modern conveniences and appliances used in the barber’s art. Everybody should be careful about burning leaves in dry weather. Some bad fires have been caused in some parte of the country from carelessness in this respect. Envelopes with your name and address printed on them for 50 cents a single hundred. In larger quantities they are cheaper per hundred. Call at the Independent office. Don't let the baby suffer from eczema, sores or any itching of the skin. Doan’s Ointment gives instant relief, cures quickly. Perfectly safe for children. All druggists sell it. Mrs. Rev. Yager left Tuesday for Angola, Ind., called there by the fact that her brother, Geo. Zabet, had a stroke of paralysis and was unconscious.—Plymouth Chronicle. Why not get in line? Yes, it is a special—a very special—rate—fl.7s for this paper and the Weekly Inter Ocean and Parmer for one full year. Don’t let it get away from you. A drizzling rain which continued most of the day Monday did considerable good on top of the rain Friday night and Saturday. The wheat has been greatly benefitted. Ina test case appealed from Wabash county the Indiana supreme court recently held that wheat must be tagged as such. The sale of the stuff under any other name is a violation of the pure food law. John C. Ellsworth, Samuel Leeper and Charles Frazer of South Bend made a trip to this place Thursday in Mr. Ellsworth’s magnificent $7,500 touring car. They called on quite a number of friends while in town. We have arranged with The Weekly Inter Ocean and Farmer so that our patrons can secure that sterling pape r together with our own, at the exceedingly low price of $1.75 for one year. This is a rare opportunity and should be taken advantage of. A welcome rain came Friday night after several weeks of drouth. The rainfall was light, but as it continued the [greater part of the night much relief was afforded by the settling of the duet and emoke which had filled ths air almost continuously for about two months. The long winter evenings will soon be here and if you are not now a subscriber to the Independent you should be. The paper is worth the money, but perhaps it will not cost you a cent, and you will be money ahead, by watching the special announcements of Walkerton’s enterprising merchants from time to time. A strange incident occurred at Warsaw a few nights ago wherein Joseph Hosier, aged seventy, awoke from the effects of a weird dream. His wife noted his agitation and thinking to relieve his mind insisted that he relate the dream to her. Hosier dramatically pictured every event as it came to him in his last sleep and when he uttered the last word of his recital, fell back on the pillow and was dead, At any time when your stomach is not in good condition, you should take Kodol, besause Kodol digests ail the food you eat, and it supplies health and strength for the stomach in that way. You take Kodol just for a little while when you have slight attacks of indigee gestion, and you take it just a little longer in order to get relief from severe attacks of Indigestion or Nervous Dyspepsia. Try Kodol today. Sold by B, E. Williams. Stranger Than Fiction. A Valparaiso young man pinned a Blue Ribbon on hie coat and started out to get a taste of High Life. He looked into the Silver Foam, but fell backward into the Anheuser Buech and tore Schlitz in hie pante. Now he ie a eadder Bud-Weieer boy,—Ex. Had a Close Cail. Mre. Ada L. Croom, the widely known proprietor of the Croom Hotel, Vaugnn, Mise., says: "For several months I suffered with a severe cough, and consumption seemed to have ite grip on me, when a friend recommended Dr. King’s New Discovery. I began taking it, and three bottles affected a complete cure.’ The fame of this life saving cough and cold remedy, and lung and throat healer is world wide. Sold at B. E. Williams drug store. 50c. and $1 00. Trial bottle free.
DIDN’T THROW UP THEIR JOBS. However, a Party of Sickened Guests at a Coon Supper Threw Up Everything Else. Some declared that six months had elapsed. Others, more conservative, thought that not more than several weeks had intervened. But that a coon which Wm. Frazure roasted a few days ago for a party of wild game epicures had been dead for a considerable period, all agreed, and for some hours following the feast the head waiter who, luckily, had not yet feasted, stood in readiness at a telephone to send in a riot call for the doctors. Mintel Wolfenberger supplied the coon which was to furnish the chief delicacy for the intended gorgeous spread, but just where and when he secured the critter are matters which those who partook of the feast are trying to figure out. Chef Frazure did a very clever job in cooking the rarebit, but when the steaming carcase, nicely covered with luscious dressing, was placed upon the table, an aroma arose which was so distinctly foreign to the aesthetic nostrils of the assembled gueete that some of them commented right there upon the venerablenees of the cooked animal. However, an aeeuring word from Wolfenberger that the coon bad been killed within a period of easy reckoning led the guests to open an assault upon the carcase and soon the platter wae licked clean. M. M. Foster, who had eaten heartily of the delicacy, wae the flret to notice that the rich potion was not settling well on hie stomach, and with a few spasmodic hiccoughs he ruebed for the back yard. Nick Barth presently discovered that hie etomach aleo wae about to take a working-out and he, too, made a eneak for the back alley, It wae only a few minutes until the stomach disorder became general and soon the lot at the rear of the Foster cigar ebop was comverted into a field hospital. It wae while the sickened epicures were “unloading” that the question arose ae to how long the coon had been dead before reaching the roasting pan. Mr. Foster declares that it was the same one he saw crawling under a barn last fall to die. Mr. Frazure announces that hie next spread will be a skunk fry. Reporter. * FINE INSTITUTION. Young Men s Christian Association of South Bend Dedicates New Building Ihe \oung Men's Christian Association of South Bend dedicated ite new building Sunday afternoon. This building, with its entire equipment costing over a quarter of a million dollars, ie t he unconditional gift from the Studebaker Bros. Manufacturing Corporation. During the past 50 years the Young Meo’s Christian Associations of this country have accumulated fifty-four millions of dollars which have been invested in their buildings. It is a very remarkable fact that thirty three millions of this amount have come to ite treasuries within the past seven years. The Studebaker gift to South Bend is the largest single gift that has ever been made to the Young Men’s Christian Association by any corporation in the world. The South Bend building, while not as large as some association buildings which have recently been erected in the large cities of the country, is however, one of the most elegant in its appointments. One of the features of this building is its dormitories. Seventy six bedrooms, each furnished in elegance and equipped with every modern convenience, are open to Y, M. C. A- members at very low rentals. The association will conduct a lunch department, which is destined to de a very popular feature of ite work. Thie building has one of the most modern swimming pools in this section of the country. The size is 60 by 24 feet, it ie a two-level pool and contains 75,000 gallons of pure artesian water. The business men of South Bend have a section of the building for their own use. This section ie equipped with a most elegant Turkish bath establishment, and contains 165 full size steel lockers for their use. The young men and boys of the association have separate locker rooms, with 1200 lockers at their disposal. The gymnasium floor is attracting great attention. It is made of rock maple and ie laid on end, similar to a bowling alleyfloor. The building was thrown open to the public Saturday, Oct. 24, and the Y. M. C. A, planned a series of events to cover an entire week. On Sunday afternoon at 3 o’clock the building wae dedicated. Some 3,000 seats were erected in the street in front of the new building for the dedication services. On Monday evening, Oct. 26, the association held an interurban reception. A committee of 80 of South Bend’s most prominent |bu3iness men formed a special committee of arrangements. This re ception was attended by large numbers of people from towns and cities con nected with South Bend by interurban railways. Rheumatism More than nine out of every ten cases of rheumatism are simply rheumatism of the muscles, due to cold or damp, or chronic rheumatism. In such cases no internal treatment is required. The free application of Chamberlain’s Liniment is all that is needed and it is certain to give quick relief. Give it a trial and see for yourself how quickly it relieves the pain and soreness. Price 25c; large size, 500 For Sale by B. E. Williams.
| NEWS LETTERS | P Items of Interest From Our Able L £ Corps of Correspondents. C BARBER. Dixon Garret and family of Lakeville were guests of friends here recently. Wm. Walterhouse and family and Mr. and Mre. Frank Head and children spent Sunday a week ago with Mr. and Mrs. Lewie Schmeltz. E. E. Hargrave wae quite ill a few days laet week. Mre. Millie Wright of Plymouth wae the gueet of Mre. Jane Wright lyMr. and Mre. S. Unger epent Sunday a week ago with Mr. and Mre. Stough at Plymouth. Frank Schmeltz and wife vieited Mr. and Mre. Robert Beagles near Tyner Sunday. coupSyTine. Lola Koontz ie ii| Niles, Mich,, helping take care of her aunt, Mre. Charles Sheatsley. "" Artie Blockeom p slowly improving. Miss Nellie F^cbar -of Valparaiso visited fro®^6w'4y’ay until Wednesday with Mr. and Mre. Tillman Snyder. Mre. Dan Kelloi g who hae been sick the past two weeks is up again. Mies Marie Mi *3ormick of Hamlet vieited her aunt, Mrs. Hulda Snyder, from Monday until Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Obe Mitchell and little son visited in Nappanee the past week. Tillman Snyder was in Hamlet Monday on business. Mr. and Mre. B. F. Rinehardt spent Sunday with D. R. Kellogg and family. S. R Dingman who hae been in Peru on business returned home Saturday evening. Mr. and Mre. John Wolford of Plymouth are visiting at the Fuller farm.
STILLWELL. Thanks for the rain, though it was but little. I’he supper and dance given by the Gleaner lodge last Saturday night was a complete success in every * respect. ' Tables were spread at 5 o’clock p m., and supper served until 8:30, when the , hali wae cleared for the dance which I lasted until shortly after midnight Everybody reports a good old fashioned time. Mr. and Mre. J. A. Wherrett were in ! Chicago visiting relatives and friends Saturday and Sunday. Our town wae well represented at Laporte Saturday at the Taft and Marshall meetings. Mre. Silas Baker of Walkerton was in our town Friday, j Mrs. Campbell and son Charles returned to Chicago’ Saturday. Mre. August Draves and Mrs Wm. Draves are spending a few dajs in Chicago. Tired mothers, worn out by the peevish cross baby have found Cascasvveet a boon and a blessing. Cascasweet ie for babies and children, and ie especially good for the ills so common in hot weather. Look for the ingredients printed on the bottle. Contains no harmful drugs. Sold by B. E. Williams. OVERTAXED. Hundreds of Walkerton Readers Know What it Means The kidneys are overtaxed, Have too much to do. They tell about it in many aches and pains— Backache, eideache, headache. Early symptoms of kidney ills. Urinary troubles, diabetes, Bright’s disease follow. Edwin Gibson, of Michigan street Plymouth, Ind., says: “For several years a weakness of the kidneys and backaches seriously annoyed me. At the period when the pain was at its height, it was hard for me to stoop, bend or lift and when I caught cold it settled in my kidneys. Though I used many remedies to cure is trouble nothing got at the cause bf the disease until I took Doan’s Kidne\ Pills. A short use of this remedy stc iped my many aches and pains and 1 find that my general health ie much better. ^There ie nothing too good for me to qw in favor of Doan’s Kidney Pills.” 1 ’ For sale by allj dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-M/jlurn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole ngJlts for the United Statee. ■—W Shoe Repairing. All kinds of shoe repairing neatly and promptly done by Samuel Blockeom next to Independent. Bring in those old shoes and have them made as good ae new. Kennedy’s Laxative Cough Syrup ie ueed nearly everywhere, because it not only heals irritation of the throat and etops the cough, but it drives the cold out of the system through ite laxative principle by aeeuring a free and gentle action of the bowels, and that is the only way to cure a cold. You can’t cure it as long as you are constipated. Insist upon Kennedy’s Laxative Cough Syrup. Sold by B. E. Williams. Burns, bruises and scratches, big and little cuts or in fact anything requiring a salve, are beet and quickest soothed and healed by DeWitt’s Carbolized Witch Hazel Salve. The best salve for piles. Be sure you get DeWitt’s Sold by B. E. Williams. In Morocco the law obliges you to tip the policeman who arrests you. He is the greatest who gives most of himeelf to men.
Thu November American Magazine. 1 he November American Magazine ie a periodical without a dull line in it. The leading feature is a character sketch of the Sultan of Turkey, who, according to the author of this article, is so base that he will not only allow thieves and grafters to wreck his country, but will commit murder with his own hand. Evidently the wave of democratic ideas which ie sweeping over the world is drowning out in Turkey as tine a hand of pirates as ever practiced the art of op preseion. In the same number Ida 'l. Tarbell begins a series of two articles entitled “How Chicago is Finding Herself.” She calle Chicago the moet wonderful and inspiring city in the United Statee, Otie Skinner, the actor, reports the story of how Edwin Booth, in the dead of night, burned the papers and costumes which had belonged to bie brother, John Wilkes Booth. Dr. William Lee Howard, writing on “Helpless Youths and Useless Men,” advocates the separation of boys from girls in our high schools, “The Interpreter" presents an ingratiating character sketch of Thomas A. Edison, in which a mass of new facts is produced. Prof. W. I. Thomas writes of “The Psychology of Woman’s Drees.” “Mr Dooley" talks on “Uplifting the Farmers.” Notable Action is contributed by O. Henry, Myra Kell^, William. J. Locke and Brand Whitlock. “Had dyspepsia or indigestion for years, No appetite, and what 1 did eat distressed me terribly. Burdock Blood Bitters cured me.”—J H, Walker, San dusky, Ohio. Sfl Sales FOR OCTOBER We lead in quality, price and delivery. Many people look to us for their wants. How about you? UNDERWEAR
Ladies’ Fleeced Vests & Pants, 25c quality, 15c. Better qualities 25c, 35c to 50c. ('hildren’s Fleeced Underwear, ! 15c and 25c. Misses’ 50c Union Suits, 25c. Men’s Heavy Fleeced Shirts & Drawers at 37Ac. Men’s Ribbed Fleeced Underwear. brown, tan. blue, 45c. A M<»od line of Staley’s UnderH DOMESTICS Standard Prints. 4c and sc. Standard Ginghams. 5c and 6c. j foil du Nord, cut lengths, 10c a yard. Chester, new full pieces, 10c yd. Hope 4-4 Bleached Muslin, cut lengths, 6L Lonsdale 1-1 Bleached Muslin, cut lengths, 7Ac yd. 72x90 Bleached Sheets. 39c. bl\9o Bleached Sheets, 49c. 36x45 Pillow Cases, 10c. Bleached Crash, 16 inch, 3ic. Brown Honeycomb, sc. Best Linen Crash, Bc, 10c and 12k yd. BLANKETS Crib Blankete, 20c each. Crib Blankets, 35c pair. 10 4 Blankets, 37^0 pair, white, gray and tan; others at 50c, 60c and 75c pair. 11 4 and 12 4 Blankets, $1 A $1 25 pair. All Blankets way under price. Eiderdowns, 25c yard. Cloaks at Half Price We offer a manufacturer’s line of Children’s Cloaks at half price, $195 $2 50 to $3 50. There are 300 Cloaks in this lot, sizes 2 to 14 years—just received. Ladies’ and Misses’ Cloaks, mixed cloths and black, all long, at $3 and $5; about half price—just received from the 1 manufacturer. Ladies’ Black Mercerized Sateen Petticoats, special 95c; embroideried mercerized Taffeta Petticoats, special at 95c. COME AND SEE U 5 WW&CII South Bend. Indiana. WE HAVE A CUSTOMER — For a good 40-acre far»n near Walkerton, who will exchange city property in South Bend; aNo a customer for an 60-acree farm near Walkerton. See °r address Northern Indiana Investment Co, Rooms 416-417 Jefferson Bldg. Home Phone 1368 SOUTH BEND. IND. LODGEo. MASONIC. \VALKKKTON LODGE, F. & A. M. ’ ’ No. 619. Regular meetings the first and third Thnrsday of each month. Visitors welcome. C. E. Baxter, W. M.. J. Carson, Secretary. Sour StomacK No appetite, loss of strength, nervoonow, headache, constipation, bad breath, general debility, sour risings, and catarrh of the stomach are al! due to indigestion. Kodol cures indigestion. This new discovery represents the natural Juices of digestion as they exist in a healthy stomach, combined with the greatest known tonic and reconstructive properties. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure does not only cure indigestion and dyspepsia, but this famous remedy eures all stomach troubles by cleansing, purifying, sweetening and strengthening the mucous membranes lining the stomach. , Wr. 8. S. Ball, of Ravenswood, W. Va., says:— " 1 wae troubled with sour stomach for twenty years. Kodol cured me and we are now using ft in milk for baby." Kodol Digests What You Eat, Bettles only. SI.OO Site holding 254 times the trial else, which sells for 50 cents. Prepare* by B. O. DaWITT A 00., OKiOAOIX FOR SALE By B. E. WILLIAMS.
j T I BRIGH FENS the home as nothing else ./ 1 H will do, by renewing the finish of furni- / n "^tureand woodwork. It is highly bene- / Z ,1 ficial to the finest finish, even that of a / [i £I,OOO Piano, and its price is low / cnough to admit of its use cn the / ■ t / I / Liquid X- / Ven « ri » Q) / ■ > 1 * 'a™* w / ish but a surs/ /face food and / cleaner. It removes / scratches, stains, dirt / and dullness. Applied / with cheese cloth. Leaves ’ / no coating or streaks and is / not inflammable. It nourishes and builds up the finish instead of ultimately destroyk v x mg it as do all preparations containing / benzine or similar ingredients. Test / Liquid Veneer for yourself; it will not ignite. / It is wonderful for dusting. Try it and f you will always buy it. / NEW SIZE PACKAGES y 4-ounce bottle, 25c. 12-ounce bottle, 50c SOLD BY The Central Drug Store, j. j. Fink S THAT s I MIAMI RANCH| s Located Near Springer, N. Mex. g aS Is worthy of your careful investigation is best evidenced E S by the judgment of a party of prospective investors who E |Tj recently visited the ranch. In a party of seven there E g were seven purchasers—m other words, every one of cp 1-3 the party found conditions satisfactory and BOUGHT « “ BEFORE LEAVING. THEIR decision will be YOURS § iS after you investigate. H s With every acre sold is included Perpetual Water E Q Right, and the water is there ready tq use now. g g Price in forty-acre tracts from $35 to S7O per acre. Car c* ra fare refunded to purchasers of forty-acre tracts. Next & g excursion days, Oct. 20, Nov. 3 and Nov. 17. Write us. g K 1 STEELE BROS. I g WALKERTON. IND. g W*ln answering this ad., please mention the Independent E IMITATION TYPEWRITTEN CIRCULARS Printed at the Independent office. Fine for circular advertising.
END OF NOTED PERSONS. Lovejoy was murdered. Aristides was ostracized. Lafayette was imprisoned. Aristotle had to flee for his life. Marie Antoinette was beheaded. Schiller suffered poverty and arrest. David Livingstone died in the wilds; of Africa. Victor Hugo was compelled to fly ( to Brussels. Florence Nightingale became a chronic invalid. Paul suffered martyrdom, being probably beheaded. Tasso was incarcerated in an insane asylum and exiled. Sir Henry Vane was beheaded because he asserted liberty. Spinoza was hunted, tracked, cursed and forbidden aid or food. Huss, Wycliff. Latimer and Tyndale were burned at the stake. Garibaldi was condemned to death and compelled to flee his native land. Ha.wks* Burdock Creates appetite, purifies the blond, cures rheumatism, kidney, bladder and । stomach troubles. Large one dollar size bottles for 35 cents. For sale by J. J. Fink. 1 Lots of sour people wouid be tolera- | ble if they did not prate so much about their honey, A Healthy Family. “Our whole family has enjoyed good health since we began using Dr. King’s New Life Pills, three years ago,” says L. A, Bartlet, of Rural Route 1, Guilford, Maine. They cleanse and tone the system in a gentle way that does you good. 25c. at B. E. Williams drug store. The saddest thing about some is that they never are touched by the sorrows of others. Where Bullets Flew. David Parker, of Fayette, N. Y., a veteran of the civil war, who lost a foot at Gettysburg, eays: “The! good Elec trie Bitters have done is worth more than five hundred dollars to me. I spent much money doctoring for a bad case of stomach trouble, to little purpose. 1 then tried Eclectric Bitters, and they cured me. I now take them as a tonic, and they keep me strong and well. 50c. at B. E. Williams drug store. There are a lot of people trying to light the world by painting their lan terns. I
Alphonse Daudet, the author of Sapho, often worked twenty-four hours at a stretch. Constipation cures headache, nausea, dizziness, languor, heart palpitation. Drastic physics gripe, sicken, weaken the bowels and don’t cure. Doan’s Regulets act gently and cure constipation. 25 cents. Ask your druggist. Machine Oils AT A.T. KALEBS I I g Backache g Such agoniest is some womer i H sufier, every month, from back* ache I M Is it necessary? No. It can B| HI be prevented and relieved, when H caused by female trouble, by takO ing a medicine with specific, cura* O the action, on the female organs |H and functions, which acts by re- Ils lieving the congestion, stopping ES the pain and building the organs and functions up to a proper state Bl of health. Try. Ba " CARDUI WOMAN’S RELIEF “I suffered for 15 years,” writes Mrs. Malinda A. Akers, of Basham, MB E| Va., “with various female troubles. M I had such a backache that it |B Bp drew me over, so I could not stand |B straight. The doctors could not M help me, so I tock Cardui, and g 9 now 1 fee) like a new woman.” ■ At All Druggists ■ WRITE FOR FREE ADVICE, | H stating age and describing symp- ■ B toms, to Ladies Advisory Dept., OS B The Chattanooga Medicine Co.. |B ■ Chattanooga, Tenn. E 38 |K
