The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, January 18, 1906, Image 3

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    a,™,, a CASTORIA
_|1 For Infants and Children.
I The Kind You Have
,_J Always Bought
AVfegetablePrcparalionforAs- |j|
slmilating the Food andRegula- l! _ ,,
ting the Stomachs andBowels of i| 1363X8 til©
2 ——— H Signature
T Promotes Digestion,Cheerful- |||
! ness andRcst.Contains neither jig
Opium,Morphine nor Mineral. ||| 111
Not Narcotic .
Jbctpcof Old Dr SAMUEL PITCHER
Pism-Jan Seed" \ i
Alx.Senna * I m
Rochelle Salts — § I M
Anise Sent e 1 f ;■
&E332U*. | ■»
J'Hrrp'SceA- 1
Clarified Sugar I ff) ■
h&tirryMvi nawn / 11 ©' £)
A perfect Remedy for Conslipa- VwU
Ron, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea
Worms Convulsions .Feverish- !***„ ||iin m
ness and Loss of Sleep. I* 01 ll ¥ U I
Facsimile Signature of
Thirty Years
toria
I EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. ■ IB |||
, TM* 9FNT0VH 40MNNV. MW FOUR OITW
fill lPOIDIIIC
sWtrn the grip A mm
^•IN ONE DAY liVfMil TOlBBfl I VB k
linn rnsraur L ls guaranteed to cure
AllHlIfjriiT wk 6RIP* GAD cold, headache ahd neuralgia.
nicHnMn.. 5 , C^ I won’t sell Antl-Grtpine to ^dealer who won’t Guarantee It.
TO HO EQUAL FOR '&v>^ Cal1 f0T >'our MONEY BACK. IF IT DOESN'T CUBE.
_ ■ ^.r- td^ka jpt w, metner, Jfl.D., Manufacturer, Spriixqfl&Mt Mo.
A Delicate Task.
From the New York Tribune.
George C. Boldt, the noted hotel man, |
Bald In an address to an audience of hotel
clerks: “There are no perfect hotel
clerks. We can only try, in our imperfect
human way, to read our guests, and some
times, naturally, we make mistakes, like •
Mr. Blank.
“Blank was the excellent clerk of an ex
cellent hotel. There entered one clay an !
elderly farmer. The man wore expensive .
clothes, but Blank knew h'.m for a farmer !
Insurance Pointer.
Insurance Superintendent, suspiciously— j
How did your husband happen to die so !
Boon after getting insured for a large j
amount?
Widow—He worked himself to death try- !
"tag to pay the premiums.
Robbed in Church,
Just think what an outrage it is to
be robbed of all the benefits of tlie
services by continuous coughing
throughout the congregation, whvn
'Anti-Gripine is guaranteed to cure, j
Sold everywhere, 2i> cents. F. W. I ho
mer, M. D., Manufacturer, Spring
field, Mo.
A Dampener.
From the New York Weekly.
Auctioneer—pot-boiler sale—Going!
Going! Gone’ Here, sir, it’:; yours.
Great bargain, sir. The frame alone is !
■worth the price.
Connoisseur—ripping out the picture !
•—The frame was what I wanted.—New j
York Weekly.
TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY
Take LAXATIVE BUOMO Quinine Tablets.
Druggists refund money if It fails to cure.
K. \V. Grove's signature Is oil each box. ”5e.
A Postponed Dinner.
From Harper’s Weekly
A Californian relates the following
as illustrating- the aptness evinced by
a Chinese servant In his employ for an
easy assimilation of American methods
of dealing with the "hobo” type that
Is not less common in California than
in the east.
A hungry tramp knocked at the
kitchen door of the Californian's house
one Tuesday afternoon', when he was
promptly challenged by Lee Yuen. The
"hobo'' delivered himself of a long tale
of wofe to the Chinaman, concluding
with a petition for something to eat.
"You like flish?” suavely Insinuated
the. Chinese.
"Yes'!” eagerly assented the tramp.
“Call Fliday,” responded Lee, with '
an imperturbable smile, as he closed ;
the door. |
Suicide and the New Woman.
“Women, as they become more highly
educated, tend more to commit suicide,”
said the president of a girl’s college. “In
the past they only killed themselves for
love.
"But now, being educated, they live like
men. Bike men they write, paint, build,
run groceries, drug stores, brokerages.
And like men they commit suicide.
“They committed suicide in the past
from love alone, but now from disap
pointed ambition, from loss of money,
from a to: k’s failure, from a fall in stocks,
from a rise in drugs.
“But the higher education of woman is
a good tiling, even if It does cause her
now and then to kill herself.”
AN EVERY-DAY STRUGGLE.
Too Many Women Curry tlie Heavy
Bond of Kidney Sickness.
Mrs. H. W. Wright of 172 Main
street, Haverhill,
Mass.. says: "In
180S I was suffering
so with sharp pains
in the small of the
back and had such
frequent dizzy spells
that I could scarcely
get about the bouse.
The urinary pas
sages were also quite
irregular. Monthly periods were so
distressing 1 dreaded their approach.
This was my condition for four years.
Doan's Kidney Pills helped me right
away when I began with them and
three boxes cured me permanently.”
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box.
Foster-Milburu Co.. Buffalo, N. Y.
A Lively Catch.
From Harper’s Weekly.
Mrs. £1. “And so you are to leave us,
Bridget? And what are you going to do?”
Bridget. “Please, mum, I’m going to get
mprried.”
Mrs. S, “Dear me: Isn't that rather
sudden? Who is the happy man?”
Bridget. “Dou you remember, mum, me
askin' you about four weeks ago to go to
the funeral of a friend? Well, I do be goin’
to marry the corpse’s husband. Sure, he
told me then I wuz the life o’ the party."
Tale of Travelers.
From the New York Weekly.
First Traveler—While in Africa I
faced two lions, a tiger and three ele
phants, in the same jungle—and I’m
alive yet.
Second Traveler—Huh! That’s noth
ing. While in Texas I bowed to a
girl that three Mexicans were in love
with.—New York Weekly.
Norway’s New King as Naval “Middy'*
From Review of Reviews.
It was my fortune to make the
prince's acquaintance when he was an
apprentice in the Danish navy. I was
a midshipman at the time, and just one
notch higher rank. We were thrown a
good deni together on various ships,
and I believe it is this rough-and-ready
training in seamanship at an early age
which contributed strongly toward
■ making a man out of the prince, who
as a boy wjs very much like what mid
dies call a "piece of furniture."
There were seven apprentices in the
mess to which the prince belonged on
shipboard, and of which I was the
eighth and mess master. We all called
him by his eighth name—that Is, Karl
in Danish—and he had to eat the same
"grub” and stand the same hardships
ns all the other apprentices. He was al
lowed to have no advantages or "ex
tras" over and above his comrades, and
although everybody knows him to be a
prince of the realm, no deference what
ever was paid him as such. On the
contrary, ho was "hazed" and made
miserable in good, old midshipman
1 style. He took his medicine bravely
enough, though there were times when,
by his looks, he must have wished for
"home and mother,” or that he was
ashore, where he, as a prince of the
realm, would have a right to command
a salute from any man and any of
ficer In the fleet! ,
On board ship he had to mend his*
own clothes, darn his socks, sew on but-l
tons, and keep his weapons and ac
coutrements in order. He slept In a'
regulation sailor hammock, with his
clothes, rolled up under his head, for a
pillow, without a nightshirt, and wear-’;
ing only a sailor’s woolen striped un-'
dershirt, and bundled up in a woolen’
blanket, sometimes with his sea bootfj
dangling by the hammock rope. As(
an apprentice, one of his duties in
cleaning ship early at dawn was to pass]
buckets of salt water and go over the!
quarterdeck with a huge sage-broom^
When polishing would begin he was as-,
signed to the big binnacle lantern on,
the bridge, inside which the compass is.
He became quite an expert at polishing^
and used to make that brass binnacle,
flash like silver mail. He could never!
quite get used to chewing tobacco,
which in the eyes of every true appren
tice is one of the cardinal virtues; and,
whenever he was seasick, which often!
happened, he used to sit in the gang-,
way on a bucket ’and chew rye bread.
This close intimacy with boys of his
own age, and subsequently when he
was appointed midshipman and cadet,,
his contact with manly naval men and1
real human conditions of life,.are the.
I factors which eventually made out oil
j this boy—who was originally little more,
than a "court kid”—one of the ‘ mosty
I real and natural living royal princes. It,
! opened his eyes to the forces and exi
| gencies that govern real life. It substl-,
i tuted within him for the lassitude of
1 the courtier the ambition of the healthy,
S young man of action.
i -—
Worth Knowing
—that Allcock’s are the original and
only genuine porous plasters; all other
60-called porous plasters are imitations.
Mark Twain’s Story for Schoolboys.
From Harper’s Weekly.
Mark Twain on his last visit to his old
home—Hannibal, Missouri—told to the
school children a true story about a school
boy.
“This boy,” he said, “awoke one morn
ing very ill. His groans alarmed the house
hold. The doctor was sent for, and came
post-haste.
“ ‘Well,’ said the doctor, as he entered
the sick-room, ‘wlfat is the trouble?’
“ ‘A pain in my side, said the boy.
“ 'A pain in the head?’
“ ‘Yes, sir.’
“ ‘Is the right hand stiff?’
“ ‘A little.’
“ ‘How about the right foot?*
“ ‘That’s stiff, too.’
“The doctor winked at the boy’s mother.
“ ‘Well,’ he said, ‘you’re pretty sick. But
you'll be able to go to school on Monday.
| Bet me see, today is Saturday, and—’
“ ‘Is today Saturday?’ said the boy in a
vexed tone. T thought it was Friday.’
"Half an hour later the boy declared
himself healed, and got up. Then they
packed him off to school, for it was Friday,
after all.”
i A Sanctum View.
I Office Boy—“Oh, Mr. Scratcher, d’ye
| mind that man ■who wras in here jus’ a little
i while ago?”
I Country Editor—“Yesslree, I do. That
| was Mr. Hayseed, and he came in and paid
I five years’ back subscription that I’ve most
I run my legs off trying to get.”
“Well, he'd hardly got Out of the office
before he was hit by a runaway team an’
killed.”
“My! My! That’s shockingl Well’
ther’s one consolation anyway, Yle went
straight to heaven.”
An Enigmatic Answer.
A newspaper writer of New York wras
praising Mme. Bernhardt.
“She has a great deal of tact and
finesse,” he said. “When, in an interview,
you broach a subject she dislikes, she
doesn’t come right out and say so, but
she makes you such puzzling, such enig
matic answers, that perforce you shift to
another topic.
“I once wrent to get a very Intimate in
terview with the famous lady. I want to
find out what colors she liked best, what
food she ate, wrhat wine she drank, what
hours she slept, and all that sort of thing.
“She talked freely enough till I came
to the food question. That, it was plain,
she regarded as too gross a subject for dis
cussion. So, when I opened up with the
query, ‘And have you a good appetite,
madam?’ she smiled strangely and an
swered :
“ ‘I sometimes eat more than I do at
other times; but never less.’ ’•
LOST EYESIGHT
Through Coffee Drinking
Some people question the statements
that coffee hurts the delicate nerves of
the body. Personal experience with
thousands prove the general statement
true and physicians have records of
great numbers of eases that add to the
testimony.
Tiio following is from the Rockford,
111., Register-Gazette:
Dr. William Langhorst of Aurora
has been treating one of the queerest
eases of lost eyesight ever in history.
The patient is O. A. Leach of Beach
county, and In the last four months
he has doctored with all of the spe
cialists about the country and has at
last returned homo with the fact im
pressed on his mind that his ease is
Incurable.
A portion of the optic nerve has
been ruined, rendering his sight so 11m
ited that lie is unable to see anything
before hiru, but he can see plainly any
thing at the side of him. There have
been but few cases of its kind before
and they have been caused by whiskey
or tobacco. Leach has never used
either, but has been a great coffee
drinker and the specialists have decid
ed that the case has been caused by
this. Leach stated himself that for
several years he had drank three cups
of coffee for breakfast, two at noon
and one at night. According to the
records of the specialists of this coun
try this is the first case ever caused
by the use of coffee.
The nerve is ruined beyond aid and
his case is Incurable. The fact that
makes the case a queer one is that the
sight forward has been lost and the
side sight has been retained. Accord
ing to the doctor’s statement the young
man will have to give up coffee or the
re»t of his sight will follow and the
entire nerve be ruined.—Register-Ga
zette.
Let it be remembered that the eyes
may be attacked in one case and the
stomach in another, while in others it
may be kidneys, heart, bowels or gen
eral nervous prostration. The remedy
is obvious and should be adopted be-<
fore too late.
Quit coffee, if you show incipient
disease.
It is easy if one can have well-boiled
Postum Food Coffee to serve for the
hot morning beverage. The withdraw
al of the old kind of coffee that is do
ing the harm and the supply of the ele
ments in the Postum which Nature
uses to rebuild the broken down nerve
cells, Insures a quick return to the old
joy of strength and health, and It’s
well worth while to be able again to
“do things” and feel well. There’s a
reason for
POSTUM
r--*....
Farm Facts
From the Farmer and Breeder.
Now don’t neglect that Ice supply.
It's a nice Job and you will be glad you
put It up, long before July 4.
• In Texas It has beefi shown that
1 cotton seed meal mixed with corn
makes a tip-top feed for hogs.
Haul In your hay and straw now
while the fields are hard frozen. Don’t
wait till spring, when It will take twice
as much help.
If you can't think of anything else
to do, tackle the woodpile. There Is lit
tle time lor wood cutting after the
spring wortt commence*.
By all means attend the short course
at the agricultural college this season.
The cost Is trilling and the Instruction
will be along practical, helpful lines.
Feed the ewes liberally, but do not
overfeed. Good clover hay, plenty of
exercise and warm shelter will keep
them In fine condition. Do not feed too
•heavily of protein feeds.
Be sure that your farm scales are In
perfect order. Dirt easily accumulates
nbout the levers and prevents free ac
tion. Make frequent tests of your
Iscales.to see whether they are weigh
ing correctly.
; It Is to the credit of American farm
iers that more attention Is now given to
farm crops than at any previous time
In our history; and' with the result that
(farmers are making more mbney than j
r” ver before.
In Nebraska It has been demon
istrated that medium size ears of corn
►used for seed gave a better yield than
ilarge ears. It was also shown that
.different varieties did better In differ
ent sections of the state.
; Tlie straw pile can be made valuable
by working it into manure. Keep all
stock well bedded, and haul all manure
[before its substance is wasted, and you ;
[will not have much trouble In keeping
tup the fertility of your farm.
! When shipping stock, it pays to con
sign to some reliable commission firm.
One may ship his own stock, but the
Commission men are better acquainted
with buyers and will nine times out of
ten get a better price than the shipper
Jiimself could get.
( It should be remembered when se
lecting tree3 for a wind break that it
is quite an Item to have them of a
close growing habit and of as nearly
[uniform shape as possible. Then by
(planting a double row of them reason
ably close together the effect desired
may be easily secured.
Have you ever noticed that the farm
ers who buy corn, clover hay and oil
cake, for feeding their stock, always
'have the most fertile farms. The man
Iwho practices selling his grain crops is
talking just that much fertility from
his own farm and selling it at the price
of grain. It is a very bad practice.
The seed bed is very Important if we
expect perfect germination of seed. The
' rmost vigorous seed will not bring forth
la good stand unless it is placed in such
ja condition that It can get both warmth
[and moisture. It is also essential that
'the soil be worked to a fine tilth so that
the root hairs may reach it and draw
•nourishment.
A subscriber asks whether it Is prof
itable to grow sweet corn for canning
factories. When one is situated close
to the factory, and is paid a fair price
for his corn, he can realize from $12 to
$20 per acre, and have the stalks left
to feed as green fodder. It does not
cost much more to grow sweet corn
than it does ordinary field corn.
The first year of the calf's life deter
mines to a great degree its value as an
animal of profit. It must be kept thrifty
and growing from the start. The sooner
the calf can be grown up to a cow or
steer size the more profit there is in the
business of raising cattle. Give warm,
dry quarters and give a sufficient va
riety of food to keep up a good appe
tite.
To develop and fix profitable as well
as desirable qualities, and at the same
time to increase the vigor and consti
tution of the produce with due attention
to the beauty, attractiveness and sell
ing qualities should be the aim of the
teally scientific breeder and there has
certainly been proved thus far no limit
to development in the directions of a
(perfect type.
The report of the executive commit
tee showed the association in a most
[prosperous condition. There are at
•present 85,462 cattle recorded in the
herd book. There were 1,274 more en
tries than last year. The total ap
propriation for 1906 for premiums is
$12,000, of which the International gets
£4,500. There were 111 new members
f.aken Into the association during th’e
past year.
It is not altogether the amount of
work that is done'on the farm that tells
so much as the manner in which it is
done. There is a best time to do every- ;
1 Jhing. Farm work to be the most suc
cessful must be done at the right time.
iLate planting and late sowdng cuts off
(the yield and diminishes the quality of
pH crops. In nearly all cases nature in
dicates by the seasons when the work
should begin.
Several hundred adherents of the
(Aberdeen-Angus breed of cattle met
iJn annual conference at the Palmer
House in Chicago and elected the fol
lowing officers: President, Judge J.
IS. Goodwin, Chicago; vice president,
jC. J. Martin, Churdan, la.; secretary
(and treasurer, Thos. McFarlane, Chi
taigo. Three directors were elected as
(follows: Judge J. S. Goodwin, Illinois;
C. E. Marvin, Kentucky; Geo. Kitchin,
Jr., Missouri.
The oats crop of thi3 country is be
coming a very important one. It has
been a badly neglected crop, usually
sown on the poorest fields, and put in
with less care than other crops. Just
bear these things in mind and you will
Increase your oats yield 25 per cent,:
Sow ample seed—from 2% to 3 bushels
to the acre; sow chean, heavy seed of
one of the hardiest varieties. While
no variety 1b yet proved rust proof,
yet some sorts are mote so than others.
The main point is to sow vigorous seed,
in well-prepared soil, and the crop will
do its best to hold its own.
The ingredients of commercial fertil
izers on which both agricultural and
commercial value chiefly depend ar#
nitrogen, phosphoric acid and potash.
(Besides these more valuable ingredi
ents, sulphuric acid and lime are al
ways present in the superphosphates in
considerable quantities being a neces
sary accompaniment of phosphoric acid
os it exists in nearly all fertilizers.
Nitrogen is the most costly of the three
Important ingredients mentioned and
pdds largely to the value of all the fer
tilizers sold with but few exceptions.
In applying these three in nearly all
cases a sufficient amount of ail other
elements needed will be supplied.
DOMESTIC SCIENCE.
Gecngetta Witter, 13. L., professor in
the department of domestic economy,
state college of agriculture, writes that
the short course in domestic science
will be offered at Iowa college, Ames,
la., January 2-lj.
This course is intended for the women
of the state and is open to them for the
small fee of $5. This is the second
short course. Last winter there was an
attendance of almost 100 women.
Corn may be bred to raise or lower
the ear on the stalk, and to Increase j
or decrease the height of tne stalk. J
WHO SHE WAS
SKETCH OF THE LIFE OF LYDIA E. PINKHAM
And a True Story of How the Vegetable Compound
Had Its Birth and How the “Panic of *73” Caused
it to be Offered for Public Sale in Drug Stores.
h
This remarkable woman, whose
maiden name was Estes, was born in
Lynn, Mass., February 9th, 1819, com
ing from a good old Quaker family.
For some years she taught school, and
became known as a woman of an alert
Mid investigating mind, an earnest
seeker after knowledge, and above
all, possessed of a wonderfully sympa
thetic nature.
In 1843 she married Isaac Pinkham.
a builder and real estate operator, und
their early married life was marked by
prosperity and happiness. They hud
four children, three sons and a
daughter.
In those good old fashioned days it
was common for mothers to make
their own home medicines from roots
and herbs, nuture's Own remedies—
calling in a physician only in specially
urgent cases. By tradition und ex
• perience many of them gained a won
derful knowledge of the curative prop
erties of the various roots and herbs.
Mrs. Pinkham took a great interest
in the study of roots and herbs, their
characteristics and power over disease.
She maintained that just as nature so
bountifully provides in the harvest
fields and orchards vegetable foods of
all kinds; so, if we but take the pains
to find them, in the roots and herbs
of the field there are remedies ex
pressly designed to cure the various
ills and weaknesses of the body, and
it was her pleasure to search these out,
and prepare simple and effective medi
cines for her own family and friends.
Chief of these was a rare combina
tion of the choicest medicinal roots
and herbs found best adapted for the
cure of the ills and weaknesses pecu
liar to the femalesex, and LydiaE.Pink
ham's friends and neighbors learned
that her compound relieved and cured
and it became quite popular among
them.
All this so far was done freely, with
out money and without price, as a
labor of love.
But in 1873 the financial crisis struck
Lynn. Its length and severity were too
much for the large real estate interests
of the Pinkham family, as this class
of business suffered most from
fearful depression, so when the Centen
nial year dawned it found their prop
erty swept away. Some other source
of income had to be found.
At this point Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound was made known
to the world.
The three sons and the daughter,
with their mother, combined forces to
restore the family fortune. They
argued that the medicine which was
so good for their woman friends and
neighbors was equally good for the
women of the whole world.
The Pinkhams had no money, and
little credit. Their first laboratory
was the kitchen, where roots and
herbs were steeped on the stove,
gradually filling a gross of bottles.
Then came the question of selling
it, for always before they had given
it away freely. They hired a job
printer to run off some pamphlets
setting forth the merits of the medi
cine, now called Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound, and these were
distributed by the Pinkham sons in
Boston, New York, and Brooklyn.
The wonderful curative properties of
the medicine were, to a great extent,
self-advertising, for whoever used ii
recommended it to others, and the de
mand gradually increased.
In 1877, by combined efforts the fam
ily had saved enough money to com
mence newspaper advertising and from
that time the growth and success of
the enterprise were assured, until to
day Lydia Ii Pinkham and her Vege
table Compound have become house
hold words everywhere, and many
tons of roots and herbs are used annu
ally in its manufacture.
Lydia E. Pinkham herself did not
live to see the great success of this
work. She passed to her reward years
ago, but not till she had provided
means for continuing her work as
effectively as she could have done it
herself.
During her long and eventful expe
rience she was ever methodical in her
work and she was alwayscareful to pre
serve a record of every case that, came to
her attention. Theimse of every sick
woman who applied to her for advice—
and there were thousands—received
careful study, and the details, includ
ing symptoms, treatment and results
were recorded for future reference, and
to-day these records, together with
hundreds of thousands made sinee. are
available to sick women the world,
over, and represent a vast collabora
tion of information regarding the
treatment of woman’s ills, which for
authenticity and accuracy can hardly
be equaled in any library in the
world.
With Lydia E. Pinkham worked her
daughter-in-law, the present Mrs.
Pinkham. She was Carefully instructed
in all her hard-won knowledge, and
for years she assisted her in fier vast
correspondence.
To her hands naturally fell the
direction of the work when its origina
tor passed away. For nearly twenty
five years she,, has continued it, and
nothing in the work shows when the
first Lydia E. Pinkham dropped her
pen, and the present Mrs. Pinkham,
now the mother of a large family, took
it up With women assistants, some as
capable as herself, the present Mrs.
Pinkham continues this great work,and*
probably from the office of no other
person have so many women been ad
vised how to regain health. Kick wo
men. this advice is “Yours for Health”
freely given if you only write to ask
for it.
Such is the history of Lydia E. Pink
ham's Vegetable Compound; made
from simple roots and herbs ; the one
great medicine for women's ailments,
and the fitting monument to the noble
woman whose name it bears.
READ _ ^i208
THIS COUPON IS GOOD FOR $1.00 ON PURCHASE
FREE pon receipt of your name_■
Address__ !
good for Druggist’s Name
ONE DOLLAR ~
purchase His Address_
And ioc in stamps or silver to pay postage we will mail you a sample free,
if you have never used Mull’s Grape Tonic, and will also mail you a cer
tificate good for one dollar toward the purchase of more Tonio from your
druggist. Address
^^^lU^^RAP^TONI^a^lJ^ir^^Roc^Islra^m^^i
YOU WRONG YOURSELF TO SUFFER
from Constipation and Stomach Trouble.
Why sutler or take needless chances with constipation or stomach troubles when there is a
perfect, harmless, natural, positive cure within your reach ? i
CONSTIPATION AND STOMACH TROUBLE
cause blood poison, skin diseases, sick headache, biliousness, typhoid fever, appendicitis, pile*
and every kind of femalo trouble as well as many others. Your own physician will tell you that
all this Is true. But don't drug or physic yourself. Use
MULL’S GRAPE TONIC
the natural.strengthening, harmless remedy that, builds up the tissues of your digestive organs
and puts your whole system In splendid condition to overcomcrall attacks. It Is very pleasant
to take. The children like It and it does them great good.
35 cent. 60centand91.00fbottles at all druggists. Tlie $1.00 bottle contains about slx.tlmee as
much as the35 cent bottle and about three times as much as the 60 cent bottle. There Is a great
saving In buying the 91.00 size. y
MULL’S GRAPE TONIC CO.. 21 Third Are.. Rock UUnd. HL I
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