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About Dakota County herald. (Dakota City, Neb.) 1891-1965 | View Entire Issue (June 28, 1907)
V as: TO READERS OF THE NATURE PROVIDES FOR S!SK WOMEN a tnoro potent remedy in the root and herbs of the field than was erer produced from drugs. In the good old-fashioned days of our grand mothers few drugs were used in njedicines and Lydia E. Pinkbam. of Lynn. Mans., in her study of roots and herbs and their power over disease discovered and gave to the women of the world a remedy for their peculiar ills more potent and eCicaclous than any combination) of drugs. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is an honest, tried and true remedy of unquestionable therapeutic value. During its rocord of more than thirty years, its long list of actual cures of those serious ills peculiar to women, entities Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound to the respect and confidence of every fair minded person ana every imnking woman. When women are troubled with irregular or painful functions, weakness, displacements, ulceration or inflammation, backache , flatulency, general debility, indigestion or nervous prostration, they 6houid rcmemDer there is ono tried and true remedy, Lydta u. nnn- bam's Vegetable Compound. No other remedy in the country has such a record of cures of female ills, nnd thousands of women residing in every partof the United States bear willing testimony to the wonderful virtue or Lyuia L.. rink ham's Vegetable compound and what it has done for them. Mrs. Vinkhara invites all sick women to write her for advice. She has guided thousands to health. For twenty-five years alio has been advising, sick women free of charge. She is the daughtcr-in-law cf Lydia E. Pink ham and as her assistant for years before Tier decease advised under her Immediate direction. Address, Lynn, Mass. SPECIAL EXCURSION FARES 1907 FROM CHICAGO Boston and return - - - $21.00 Double Track Golndtes July , 13. 22. XI. 2S, TP, 27. 28. A u runt 6. 10. 20, 24. September 10, 14. 24, and 29. 1W7. Jamestown Exposition, ( Season tickets via New York one way, $J6.S0 Norfolk, Va., and return (60 days $30.70 Other route and fares. Going- date dally until Mot. 30. 1907. Philadelphia, Pa., and return - $20.00 Only through aleeplnc car rout rla Nlvrara Falls, Going- date July 12, 13, 14. 15 and 16, 1907 Saratoga Springs, N. Y., and return - - - - $18.76 Going dates July 3, 4, 5, 6 and 7, 1907: also in September (or Grand Army meeting (go.ng dates and fares to be named later). Various New England Resorts, one fare plus $2.00 for round trip. Based on one way tare la effect January 1, 1907. Going data July , 13, 22. 23, August 6. 10, JJ, 24, September 10. 14, 24, and 28, 1907. : Various Canadian Resorts, one fare plus $2.00 for round trip, Based on one way fares in effect January 1, 1907. Going dates daily June 1 to September 30, 1907. Attractire opt lonal trips by Lake and K ler, Including St. Lawrence Hirer and Rapids in some cases without additional charge, are also offered in connection with the a bore. Llbeiai stopover privileges. . Full particulars can b obtained by writing I GEO. W. VAUX, Assistant CUneral Passenger and Ticket Agent 135 ADAMS STtfEET, CHICAUO TKeFlas rints oir i Alonn th street there come A blare of bugles, a sifTle of drama, A flush of color beneath the sky ; lints off! The flag Is passing by I Blue and scarlpf anil white ft shines. Over the steel-tlppeil. ordered line. Hats off! The rotors Ix-fore us fly ', But more than the flag Is passing by. Pea flehts and land fights, grim and great. Fought to make and to save the State; Weary marches and sinking ships; Cheers of victory on dying lips. flays of plenty and years of pence : March of a strong land's swift Increases Equal justice, right and law, Stately honor and reverend awe. Sign of nation, great and strong To ward her people from foreign wrong J Pride and glory and honor all Live Id the colors to stand or fall. lifts off! Along the street there comes A blare of bugles, a ruffle of drums 1 And loyal hearts are beating high : Hats off! The flag Is passing b; 1 SICE1 HEADACHE Positively cored by these Little Pills. They also relieve da s'1 i tress from Dyspepsia, la- L jJITTLE digestion, and Too Hearty I I l C D Eating, A perfect rem I I IV ti) edy for Dimness, Nausea. I I PILLS. Drowsiness. BaA Taste I 3r I la the Mouth. Ocated Tongue, Pain la the Bide, " i 1 TORPID LIVES. The regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. SHALL PILL SMALL DOSE. SHALL PRICE. CARTERS IflVER Jlpjjia. Genuino Must Bear . Fao-Simila Signature REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. 1 a ALLEN'S EMU For Hot, Tired, Aching, Swollen Feet. 173 MS rm ALLLNS FOOT" CASE SHAKE MO YOUR SHQE5 Allen's Foot-Eiise, a powder. It cures painful, Bmurtiiit,', i.orvous feet nnd ingrow ing nails, and iuMaiitly taktss the sting out f corns and Luuiora. It's the greatest com fort discovery of tUo age. Makes tight or Baw shoes easy. A lertain cure for sweating, callous and hut, lind, aching feet. 30,000 tasUmonuils. Try it toiay. 8oMly all Drug gists and bhne stores, 25c. Jtn't aerept a oubttituU. Trial package FHEE. Address, C a ei reAnvL . AllenS.OlmsUd, WLv&vti Le Boy. N. Y., Benaine bears above sisnatura. U. 6. A. H Hti&a To oonvlnos any J tine AaUaeptlo 1I !j improve ucr her.nn and do all we clulru LJI fn. I w iii end bar absolutely free a large trial bos of Paxilne with book of lnatruo- mailt (fllUJIia IPV.IHIVUiniB. t) T 11 U your aauie and addrerj on a postal cud. elesnses and beals ra uoous m s m tmjM . . Draua ai- ir,.K V V . na' eatarrb. pelvlo eatarrh and Inflauim.uon caused by feuiW Buth,bydUeotiocuibeatment. lueur "va sower over these troubles Is eitra ordlnary and gives lnimedlata relief. TnouMUids of women are usli.g and ro onuneudlug It every day. io"ints a druggliUorbymall. Remember, however XHJI Is. FAX TOM OO - J ' CITY BTJBBISH MA.KE3 LIGHT. loourtnars uf New York Streets AI4 In SappJyicsT Illamlnatlon. A great corps of street cleaners If bard at work in New York City gath ering up every bit of rubbish and mak lni; tbe streets as spick and span as ship's deck. These workers are a mu nicipal staff and tbey are employed by the city not only for hygienic purposes, but chiefly for economic reasons. They save the city many thousands of dol lars a year by supplying food for a large electric lighting plant, says the Technical World. ' This le the first time that rubbish has been systematically collected and used as fuel and the big plant where the woi' is done, located at Tompkins and Delaney streets, is attracting gen eral, interest. Hundreds of carts, each carrying 1,000 pounds of all sorts of odds and ends, drive up to tho plant dally. There commences a thorough sorting and dis tributing of the refuse. Picturesque sous of Italy swarm the sorting rooms, where they gather around the long slides down which the rubbish passes to the great furnaces eagerly search ing out buttons, rags and other odds and ends which they deem valuable. For these prizes they pay tho city so much a pound as "nags," and many queer things are stowed away in their linsey-woolsey bags. Occasionally an old coat or vest or a disreputable purse slips along the trough and is quickly snatched, out by an alert watcher, who has visions of riches tucked away la pockets or in the compartments of the purse. These dreams are sometimes realized, for both money and jewels at rare Intervals are swept into the city's huge heaps of rubbish and filthy garb age. All long day a stream of wagons and of sorters passes In and out of the yards of this Incinerator, and all day long tbe workers are rapidly separating the combustible Voni tbe non-combustible, feeding the huge furnaces with the former and disposing of the latter In various ways. Previous to tbe construction of the present plant and a smaller incinera tor at Forty-seventh street this mate rial was dioscd of by dumping It into Hie sea or placing it as fll.er on low land. It is estimated that the disposal in this manner has cost GO cents per cubic yard and that the Incinerator, treated simply as a means of destroy ing the rubbish, will' effect a saving of $10,000 n vfi'ir. The lluay Dec. When you eat a spoonful of honey you have very little notion as to the amount of work and travel necessary to produce It. To make one pound of clover honey bees must deprive C2.000 clover blossoms of their nectar, auiXTo do this requires 2.750,000 visits to the blos.soui by the bees. In other words, one bco to collect enough nectar to make one pound of honey must go from hive to flower and bm-k 2,750.f0() times. Then when you think how far these bees Hometlmes fly in search of these clover fields, of tener than not one or two miles from tho hive, you will begin to got a small Idea of the number of miles one of the Indus trious little creatures must travel lu order thut you may have the pound of honey that gives them so much trouble. It may also help yon to understand why the bee is unumiable enough to sting you If you get in Its way. When one has to work so hard to accomplish so little. It Is quite irritating to be In terfered with. Philadelphia Keeord. The Ciry of Mexico has contracted for leverage works and pips laying, to cobt (OOO.OOO. Mrs. window's Soothing svrop far CnJIdrui t i Ling j tartans tbs giuu. reduoos laAaiam Uan, aUsa faun, vum visa sail, tM bvui. Scores of years have passed since the first Independ ence Day, and the scattered, impoverished, struggling, half-united coloutes have grown to be one of the most powerful nations on earth. y The handful of men who sat In Independence Hail and listened to the grievances which they were called together to redress, far-seeing statesmen though some of them were, in their wildest moods of prophecy did not dream of an empire extending even beyond the Mississip pi, much less one that should extend far into tbe Pacific and Into the Gulf of Mexico. The Commonwealths of that day, sparsely settled, straggled along the Atlantic coast from Maine to Florida, having no outlet upon the Gulf and scarcely daring to peep over the Alleghany Mountains. Grinding necessity had brought them together for a common purpose, but the men of the hour had no thought of building up a nation that one day would astound the world. They resolved that the United States were and of right ought to be free and Independent, but what would come after independence was won they hardly da red to say. But tbey easily saw that the day of the declaration would be a memorable epoch in American history, and sturdily John Adams gave expression to it "I am apt to believe said he, "that It will be cele brated by succeeding generations as the great anniver sary festival. It ought to be commemorated as the day' of deliverance, by solemn acts of devotion to God Al mighty. It ought to be solemnised with pomp and pa rade, with shows, games, sports, guns, bellsbonflrcs and illuminations from one end to the other, from this time forward forevermore." v And bucIi have been our methods of celebration for a century and a quarter, only that we have bettered tbe instructions by the introduction of the Chinese fire cracker. That noisy and mischievous device, with the toy cannon and the toy pistol, has caused our national fete to be a most fatal and expensive day. It Is high time, therefore, that more rational methods of rejoicing should be observed. Let us have the pomp and parade, the games and shows and sports, but dili gently discard the bonflres, the firecrackers and the use of firearms by tbe unskillful. Celebrate we must, for pa triotism demands It, but let it be done In a rational manner. The exuberance of youth Is past with us. We no longer need a loud noise to proclaim the glory of out' ancestors and our Iovecof country. Chicago Journal.- CELEBBATUT' THE FOURTH. - When the eats Is still a-prowltn' Round the corner of the fence. While the dogs is still a-howlln' Jes' fer lack of better sense. While yer grand'p'.'s still a-sleepln', An' yon near yer daddy snore, Then't the time to go a-creepln' Like a mouse across the Boor, Till you find yerself a-peepln' At tbe clock to see 'f It's four. When tbe baby's quit its cry In', An' yer mammy's gone to sleep, Then's tbe time to be a-tryin' How a boy the Fourth can keep. - Jump Into yer pants an' Jacket, tio out barefoot In the dark, Fer It's time to raise a rocket. An' it's time to have a lark. Take yer cannons, crackers, rockets, I'lstol, drum, an' other toys. Put some matches In yer pockets, Fer It's time to make a noise. Then if no one's near to hinder. Strike a light an' start the fun Jes' beneath yer daddy's winder, Keepin' ready fer to run. Tbund'rln blazes, what a busier I Guess you'd better stop a while. Such a giant cracker muster Waked the people fer a mile. Hush ! somebody's speakln' : "Sonny, Ild you bear the breakfast bell,? Beems to me It's very funny That you like your bed so well." Hang It all I I've been a-sleepln', Ule folks up ahead of me. While I dreamed I'd been a-keepln' Fourth July since bap-pas' three. t-Norman II. i'ltman, Llppincotta. a raw potato, place on a piece of soft linen and use as a poultice. Bicarbonate of soda the ordinary baking soda Is ex cellent for burns whether the skin is broken or not If broken apply the dry soda, if unbroken dampen the soda with water to make a paste and apply to the spot. TTie pain will be Instantly re A SWISS CELEBRATION. The Experience of an American In Geneve, on Jalr 4. "The last time I was Ih Geneva ! ar rived on the evening or July J. says a a correspondent of the Philndi'phia Press. I "The next morning I left my hotel It was not one affected by American tour , lets for a stroll through the city. From the upper window of one of the shops - which looked on the narrow cot.hle paved street hung an American flag beside the flag of Switzerland. I was p'jrzlcd for a ' minute. Then It flashed over me that It was the glorious Fourth and that in my home In the States at that minute huu : dreds of thousands of flags w re flying ! and millions of crackers exploding to I celebrate the anniversary. It was odd to ! bo reminded of the occasion bv the peo ple of another land so fnr from my own a people speaking another language and alien to me in everything hu their love of freedom. "Turning Into another streor I saw more decorations, and a I reared the business center of the city they grew still more profuse. The big hrtels show ed the blended colors from In any win dows, and from tho flagstaff of the Na tional hoJel, which is the ono most fre quented by Americans, flew the Stars and Stripes. "It was Inspiring. I felt '.li throw ing my hat into the nlr nnd crying 'Hur rah!' That is what a gond nriny Ameri can whom I met were Impelled to do. Moreover, some of tliPiu wer? retting off bombs unmolested. On every land were the evidences of national sympathy. The exuberant American found encouragement and not reproof in his efforts to make nn American Fourth of July in (Jtneva. "In the evening, they toh: me, there would be the annual moot,li;ln excursion down the lake in honor cf Iiiieicndeiice day. Think of It! A Four'L of July excursion 4,000 mile from Kme! 1 went, of course. The steame- uas Ix-an-tifully hung with Swls.4 and Aim-rli-an flags and with hunting of red a Lite nnil blue, and lanterns displaying on; rational colors were swurg from iIm awning. About one-sixth of the passerer were American tourists, the remaimrg excur sionists were 8wis. "There was a band on hoarc a very bad band, I must admit, but its enthu siasm atoned In some neasui for its lack of harmony. It began with 'The Star Spangled I tanner' aud wound up with 'Hall Columbia,' the Ameiican con tingent singing words of the uutional hymn with more vigor than accuracy and concluding each verse with whoops end yells which highly entertained tbe more stolid natives." Ueuiedle fur Uura. On the Fourth of July always have some remedies for burns at band. When tbe skua is not broken by a burn scraps "Hurrah for I" He was an old, old man. His hair was white as snow, his back was bent, and he was almost blind and deaf. When the morning of Fourth of July came they noticed a look of longing on bis face, and they placed him in his invalid chair and wheeled him out on his veranda. He nodded and a smile came to his wrinkled face.. .. lie could scarcely see the moving throng or hear the popping around him, but be had been a boy once nnd he knew how things were going. He knew that flags were flying all around him, and that here and there drums were beating and some old veteran had brought out his fife and was showing the younger generation how marching was done In his day. . Then the old man's thoughts went back a hundred years and more to the stamp act to throwing the tea overboard to the scores of acts that drove the Ameri can colonies into rebellion. His father was at Bunker Hill, and Saratoga and Yorktown, and as a boy he had listened to many stories of war. He had heard how the patriots starved and suffered at Valley Forge he had heard' and read of the treason at West Point he bad been told of Cowpens, King's Mountain and Lundy's Lane. It seemed to that old man as he sat there that he could hear the ringing of the Bell of Liberty after tbe names had been signed to the Declaration of Inde pendence. There was the popping of the farmers' rifles nt Lexington there was the roar of the musketry at Bunker Hill. His face lighted up, his dim eyes opened, and those who watched him whispered to each other : "No man is ever too old to love lib erty." Then the old man remembered his own battles in Mexico and in the sunny South tiow he marched with Scott and Taylor how he fought under the banners of Grant and Sheridan, nnd all at once he lifted up a palsied arm, and from his wrinkled throat there enme the cheer: "Hurrah! Hurrah for !" That was all. IFe fell back, and when they went over to him they found him dead. It was his last Fourth of July. Ileal Independenee Day. ' On the 8d of July, 1770, says Paul Le land Ha worth in Harper's Magaslne, John Adams, then one of the Representa tives of Massachusetts In the Continental Congress, wrote to his -wife Abigail: "Yesterday the greatest question was decided which was ever debated In Amer ica, and a greater, perhaps, never was nor will be decided among men " In a second lottor, written the same day, he said: "But the day is past. The 2d of July will be the most memorable epoch in the history of America. I am apt to be lieve that It will be celebrated by succeed ing generations as the great anniversary festival. It ought to be commemorated as the day of deliverance by solemn acts of devotion to God Almighty j It ought to be solemnized with pomp and parade, with shows, games, sports, guns, bells, bonfires and Illuminations from one end of this continent to the o.-her from this time forward forevermore." When the resolution wa. taken up on the 2d, all tbe States except New. York voted to accept It. Thus on the 2d day of July, 1770, the independence of tho thirteen United Colonies ftom the throne of Great Britain was definitely decided upon. The 2d, and not ihe 4th, may be called the true date of toe separation. Don't for the Fourth, Don't allow the firecrackers to go off In the grass unless you wast the lawn ruined. Don't wear a thin inflammable frock. Put on' a cloth skirt If there are fire crackers about. Don't attempt to set off complicated pyrotechnics without thoroughly compre hending the process. Don't lay away left-over fireworks for another year. They are dangerous things to pack away where mice can get at them. Buy only so many as can be used on the day appointed. Don't allow tho children to bend over fireworks which will not "go off." They sometimes do it unexpectedly with unfor tunate results to the little meddler. Don't .neglect to send for a physician at once in tho case cf a serious burn, to prevent a possible scar or worse still, blood poisoning, from Ignorant or im proper treatment of tho wound. THE SPIRIT OF 78 DOWN TO DATE. 9 LADIES' HOME JOURNAL: Did you read the article published by The Ladies Home Journal. In May 1904, attacking Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription ? xlat you seen the statement more recently made by Mr. Bolt, the Editor of: that magazine that his company "has not paid a single penny to Dr.. R. V. Pierce's concern in settlement of any suit " ? W. wish you to know the truth. The facts are these : Four days after the article in May 1904, appeared, Dr. Pierce's company sued The Ladies' Home Journal publishers for libel. The trial was had in April last. Dr. Pierce proved that the attack made by The Ladies' Home Journal wa9 false. He proved that Dr. Pierce's Fa vorite Prescription does not, and never did contain either alcohol or any of the injurious drugs which The Ladies' Home Journal falsely stated it did contain. This was so conclusively shown that the attorneys for The Ladies' Home Journal were forced to admit it. The jury rendered n, verdict against The Ladies' Ilotue Journal in favor of Dr. Tierce' company for $16,000.00. This was a complete vindication of Doctor Pierce nnd his "Favorite Prescription." It judicially established that the libel was wholly false, ard w.thout any justification. Dr. Pierce, however, believed that his company is justly entitled to a verdict for a mucli larger sum. Through his attorneys he has,; therefore, applied to ths court for a new trial of the case. For this reason, and for this reason alone, has The Ladies' Home Journal not yet paid "a single penny to Dr. R. V. Pierce's concern." Dr. Pierce has simply chosen not to collect the judgment until the motion for a new trial has beentiecided. In the light of these facts docs not this boastful statement that it "has not paid a single penny to Dr. R. V.' Pierce's concern" look like a cheap and common bluff, a half trutb intended to mislead you ? During the trial of tbe libel suit against the above mentioned publishers, Ir. Leo II. Bmith, Vice-President o( the World's Dispensary Medical Associa tion, stated under oath that the ingredi ents of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescrip tion were wholly extraoted from tie following nativarooU; Golden Seal, Bhie Cohosh, Lady's Slipper Black C&rqih and Unicorny means of pure glyVenoe of proper $S(ngtk, Ha was askCu htar he knew, as ahysician and experienced medical manhat the "Fa vorite Prescription " wat aVvrc for lbs diseased pechliar to womanSsuch as " female XweaAnesi.C wtskJuVsNiralvio catarrhal XdraiM. drsJsrbius, VetfVer ion, irregular aiTopainful periods, other diseases o( the womanly or and he stated that ha knew such the fact because of his professional ex perience and the many thousands' of women whose ills, to his personal knowledge, had been cured by this "Proscription." This experience of Dr. Smith wsi corrob oratod br the stsndsrd Mrolcsl Authorities, of the severs! schools of practice, andorsint the various Ingredients in the ttrensst terms. Dr. Smith belnc asked to asm suroe ot these authorities as to tbe curative value of the above roots read from the standard works, such as the United States Dispensa tory 1 Tbe American DlBpeusaniryt Orranle Medicines, hi Ororer Cuo. M. 1). 1 Materia Modles, br Professor Flnlvr Elllnswoodef the Ilenr.ntt tfedlral Cgllvye. Chtcaa-o; "New fcdwln M Kuuiedle. by Prof. I lilcajroi Text-Bool Uobart A. Hare, V Bale. M. D . of irsDeutlus. t Dr. Voir, of Penn'ai Laurence Jobnson, M. P.. Prof, la University of New York; Prof. John Kins, Author ot Woman and Her Diseases " Professor John M. Scudder, M. v.. Author of a treatise on Tbe Diseases of Women") Horatio C. Wood. M. P., Author ot Therapeutics "1 Roberts Bartbolow, A. M., M. P.. Professor ot Materia Medlca, Jefferson Medical Colloee ot Phil a. All these recognised and standard authorities praise, in the strongest pos sible terms, each and every ingredient which enters into ths " Favorite) Pre scription " of Dr. Pierce for tbe cure of woman's peculiar weaknesses and ail ments. In fact the "Favorite Prescrip tion" $tnd alone as being the only medicine for woman's special ailment wtjlch has any such professional endorse tAnt of its several ingredients which fact is generally recognized as entitled1 to much more weight than any amount' of lay, or non-professional testimonials.! The "Favorite Prescription" Hand' alont as the only non-seoret, medicine' for woman's ailments. Its manutact-j urers are not afraid to publish its in gredients, aa th$y do, broadcast thru cortint; tbe fullest scrutiny. The "Favorite Prescription" has been on trial in court and came out fully vindicated as containing no harmful or habit-forming drugs. What other medicine lor women could st ana such a test T No invalid women eaa afford t accept a secret nostrum of unknown composition for this tried and proven remedy or" khowm composition. Lead iag physicians often prescribe it because they know exactly what it is made of" and that tbe ingredients ef which it ia composed are the very best known Ux medical science for the cure of woman' peculiar weaknesses and delicate -ailments. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription Is no . advertised as a "Cure All " but admirably fulfills a singleness of purpose, being s superior and most posLlve remedy for ona class of diseases only those easily recof nlted weaknesses, derangements, Irregu--larities and painful disorders peculiar to women. It Is a powerful, vet gently act ing, Invigorating, tonic ana strengthening nervine. For weak, worn-out. over-worked women no matter what has caused the break-down, whether it be from too frequent bearing of children or from much . worry, caro, or over eiertion of any kind. "Favorite Prescription" will be fonneV most efficient In building up the strength, regulating all the womanly fanetionsv -banishing pain and bringing about a rev ular and healthy, vigorous eondltlM of the whole female system. (With apologies to ths creator of a famous painting.) QUcage Hews, TiicRIEW PEW Wick Blue Flame Oil Cook-Stove The different Oil Stove The improbed Oil Stove Gives best results. Reduces fuel ex pense. A working1 flam At the touch of ttfe match. "Blue Flame" means the hottest flame produced by any stove. The New Perfection will make your work lighter. Will not over heat the kitchen. Made in three sizes, with one, two, and three burners. Every stove war ranted. If not at your dealer's, write to our V u Y A nearest agency . A The gives a clear, ateady light. Fitted with latest improved burner. Made of brass throughout and beautifully nickeled. Every lamp warranted. Suitable forlibrary, dining-room, parlor or bedroom. If not at your dealer's, vrite to our nearest agency. STANDARD OIL OOMPANV (Incorporated 1 Lonarevllr of Car Wheel. Has anybody ever stopped to think bow many tules tbe wbtels of a rail road car travel before they wear out? Statistics gathered from various roads show that perfect car wheels often roll from throe hundred thousand to four .hundred and fifty thousand miles be fore they have to be turned down. Wheels with flaws In them run only about fifty to ninety taousund miles. Fl mP 2 St Vita.' Dun mI .H S.r.ra PlNMe IO Feraum.alirt vreabr Sc. Sim um tm. Imi,i ft. iid fur Free M to' -I bol 404 mtttM H. M. M. KL1.MS- U.. Ml Ant SkmV rklUfelrkia, SUUITIOH T" rim ram wsmn wm uiuniK 8. O. N. V. No. 26 1907. A Skin of Beauty la m Joy ForevIW T. fella Gouraud'a Oriental Cream or Magical Beeutlfloct BenoTts Tul tUU. tad fckls . mas .v.rr sit 00 bMiitr, s4 e 1 fie. (Utscfloa. a Dm HOO IAS WSJ ol iwi mi U m ksrmlMS UM.SUbuaiesV ! DTOMrlT SMMlS. oo.pl as Kau nn ef S.rre' ssU D" 2 M XX S.rre mm a. Wf of tfe keef (a pailMDI "a, yea twfiat- I r.t. fin' M Hi taut harmful all Ike r ulfl by &U dr&cc 'u eaa feer 1 United 8u!M,CauU ftra Keieee 'naarnnS'e Cream M Oi Wat kanni 110 preparation..' liuuiu D.Urs Id Um F33.T. K3ri!H3, Prop 37 Bfcit Jonas Stnst, Isslai About the first thing the doctor says How are your bowels ? Then, "Let's see your tongue." Because bad tongue and bad: bowels go together. Regulate the bowels, clean up the tongue. We all know that this is the way to keep well. You can't keep the bowel healthy and regular with purge or bird-shot pills. They move you with awfc. gripes, then you're worse than ever. Now what you want Is Cascarets. Co and get them today Case ' rets in metal box cost xoc Bat them like candy, and they will work gently while you sleep. They cure, that means they strengthen the muscular walls of the bowels, give them new life. Then they act regularly and natur ally. That's what you "rant. Cure guaranteed. Be sure yea. get Cascarets. Sample and booklet free. Address tHarlios Remedy Company, Chicago or New Yoik.