The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, October 31, 1907, Image 7

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    26o.-ALL DRUGGISTS—SOo.
$■ JACOBS OIL
CONQUER
PAIN
FOR STIFFNESS, SORENESS, SPRAIN OR BRUISE,
NOTHING IS BETTER THAT YOU CAN USE;
LUMBAGO’S PAIN, RHEUMATIC TWINGE,
YOUR BACK FEELS LIKE A RUSTY HINGE;
SCIATIC ACHES ALL PLEASURES SPOIL,
FOR HAPPINESS USE ST. JACOBS OIL.
W. L. DOUGLAS
$3.00 & $3.50 SHOES tb%"»t0I>".i.
*!^E®»SHOES FOR EVERY MEMBER OF-jg^fi
THE FAMILY, AT ALL PRICES.
(toe fotftifll ( To any one who can proveW.L.
V* I Douglas: does not make & sell
) more Men's $3 A $3.50 shoes
n%Swf€SB M { than any other manufacturer.
THE REASON W. L. Douglas shoes are worn by more people
in all walks of life than any other make is because of their
excellent stvle. easy-fitting, and superior wearing qualities.
The selection of the leathers and other materials for each part
of the shoe and every detail of tho making is looked alter by
the most complete organization^ superintendents, foremen and
skilled shoemakers, who receive the highest wages paid in the
■hoe industry, and who e. workmanship cannot be excelled.
If I could take you into my large factories at Brockton, Mass.,
and show you how carefully \Y. L. Douglas shoes are made, you
would then understand whv they hold their shape, fit better,
wear longer and are of greater value than any other-make.
My $4.00 and $5.00 GILT EDGE Shoes cannot be equalled at any price.
CAUTION ! The genuine have W. L. Douglas name and price stamped on bottom. Toke
No Substitute. Ask your dealer for W. L. Douglas shoes, if lie cannot supply you, -end
direct to factory. Shoes sent everywhere by mail. Catalog free. W. L. Douglas, Brockton, Mass.
To convince any 1
woman that Pax- H
tin© Antiseptic will
improve her health,
and do all we claim
for it. We will
fend her absolutely free a large trial
box of Paxtine with book of instruc
tions and genuine testimonials. Send
your name and address on a postal card.
PAXTINEil
fections, such as nasal catarrh, pelvio
catarrh and inflammation caused ny femi
nine ills; sore eyes, sore throat and
mouth, by direct local treatment. Its cur
ative power over these troubles Is extra
ordinary and gives Immediate relief.
Thousands of women are using and rec
ommending It every day. 00 cents at
druggists or by mall. Remember, however,
IT COSTS Ton NOTHING TO TRY IT.
THJB R. PAXTON CO.. Boston. Mass.
BIOUX CITY P'T'G CO., 1,214—44, 1907
The Prose of It.
Wife (from tho bed)—What are you
doing there with my false teeth?
Husband (at the bureau)—Just cut
ting the end of my cigar, dear.
From the Houston Post.
“What made you marry a widow?"
“You’ll have to ask her. I don't
know."
From the Washington Post.
A Kansas man asserts that he re
cently saw a rat with horns. As the
authorities insist that the prohibition
law is being enforced in Kansas, there
must be something wrong with the
soda water in that state.
From the Chicago Tribune.
Magazine Editor—Your sonnet has
literary merit, but I can't use it be
cause it does not conform to the estab
lished rules of sonnet writing.
Ambitious Young Contributor—That
is its chief merit, sir. It establishes a
new form for the sonnet.
Pointed Paragraph.
Chicago News.
Often a nmn imposes on himself when
he taxes his memory.
A man isn’t necessarily generous because
he gives himself away.
Poor coffee furnishes grounds for much
domestic dissatisfaction.
Much of the charity that ought to be
gin at home doesn't begin anywhere.
Instead of calling a man a liar it Is moi'e
polite to say he is unhistorleal.
The farmer is the most independent per
son on earth—when his wife is away from
home.
A man never realizes what :i sponge he
is until he falls into a puddle of water
and mops it all up.
It's so much easier to congratulate a
man on his success than it is to sympa
thize with him in his misfortunes.
BACK GAVE OUT.
A Typical C««e of Kidney Trouble
and n Typical Care.
Mrs. Chloe Page, of 010 S. Pitt
itreet, Alexandria, Va., says: “My
back hurt me terri
bly; l had sharp
shooting pains,
changing to a dull,
dragging ache. I
could not stand for
any length of time
and my back hurt
me when l sat down.
My feet and ankles
were badly swollen
every even lug and
my stomach was out
of order. Doan’s
Kidney Pills cured me of these trou
bles in 10012, and for five years I have
liad no return.”
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box.
Poster*Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
Would Not Commit Himself.
There Is a well known man In Wash
ington, a man of such conservatism
that he is rarely known to answer a
plain "yes" or "no" to the most triv
ial question, says Harper's Monthly.
On one occasion two women of hts
acquaintance were discussing this pe
culiarity of the clubman, when one of
them announced that she was willing
to wager that she could make the con
servative individual say "no” flatly.
The wager being accepted, she ad
dressed the clubman thus:
"bet me see, Mr. ltoblnson, you are
a widower, are you not?”
"As much a widower, madam,” he
answered with a polite bow, "us it is
possible for a man to be who was
never married."
Atchison Globe Sights.
It Is so easy for a person not in so
ciety to be shocked by it.
As soon as some people know each
other well, they are ready for a
quarrel.
When a new girl comes to town, we
can’t help feeling sorry for the old
ones.
It is easier to apologize when you
are in the right than when you ars
in the wrong.
Physicians Recommend Castoria
CASTORIA has met with pronounced favor on the part of physicians, pharma
ceutical societies and medical authorities. It is used by physicians with
results most gratifying. The extended use of Castoria is unquestionably the
result of three facts: tint—The indisputable evidence that it is harmless:
Second—That it not only allays stomach pains and quiets the nerves, but assimi
lates the food : Third—It is an agreeable and perfect substitute for Castor Oil.
It is absolutely safe. It does not contain any Opium, Morphine, or other narcotic
and does not stupefy. It is unlike Soothing Syrups, Bateman’s Drops, Godfrey’s
Cordial, etc. This is a good deal for a Medical Journal to say. Our duty, how
ever, is to expose danger and record the means of advancing health. The day
for poisoning innocent children through greed or ignorance ought to end. To
our knowledge, Castoria is a remedy which produces composure and health, by
regulating the system—not by stupefying it—and our readers are entitled to
the information.—Rail’s Journal of Health.
■I
Exact Copy of Wrapper.
Letters from Prominent Physicians
addressed to Chas. H. Fletcher.
Dr. B. Halstead Scott, of Chicago, Ills., says: "I have prescribed your
Castoria often for infanta during my practice, and find it very satisfactory.”
Dr. William Belmont, of Cleveland, Ohio, says: "Your Castoria stands
first in its class. In my thirty years of practice I can say I never have
found anything that so filled the place.”
Dr. J. II. Taft, of Brooklyn, N. Y., says: “I have used your Castoria and
found it an excellent remedy in my household and private practice for
many years. The formula is excellent.”
Dr. R. J. Hamlen, of Detroit, Mich., says: "I prescribe your Castoria
extensively, as I have never found anything to equal it for children’s
troubles. I am aware that there are imitations In the field, but I always
see that my patients get Fletcher’s."
Dr.Wm. J McCrann, of Omaha, Neb., says: "As the father of thirteen
children I certainly know something about your great medicine, and aside
from my own family experience I have in my years of practice found Cas
toria a popular and efficient remedy in almost every home.”
Dr. J. R. Clausen, of Philadelphia, Pa., says: "The name that your Cas
toria has made for itself in the tens of thousands of homes blessed by the
presence of children, scarcely needs to be supplemented by the endorse
ment of the medical profession, but I, for one, most heartily endorse it and
believe It an excellent remedy.”
Dr. R. M. Ward, of Kansas City, Mo., says: "Physicians generally do not
prescribe proprietary preparations, tut in the case of Castoria my experi
ence, like that of many other physicians, has taught me to make an ex
ception. I prescribe your Castoria in my practice because I have found it
to be a thoroughly reliable remedy for children’s complaints. Any physi
cian who has raised a family, as I have, will join me in heartiest recom
mendation of Castoria."
GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS
In Use For Over 30 Years.
THE CENTAUR COMPANY. TT MURRAY • TRECT. NEW VONR CITY.
EHMBWTTnirBlMMMfBnnnil—W————mm—HMT—mw—m—miiiii—— iTl
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES
Celar aen geads brighter aed faster calars Iban aay alber dye. Oae I Oc package calars all libers. Ibey dye ia cald water belter Ibaa aay alber dye. V aa caa dye i
W geraesl wllfceal tieciug apart. Write far tree bgeklcl -lew le Dye, Blescb aH Nli Celen. MOJSHOt. xrlt VC CO., Quincy. Illinois
PRESERVATION OF FENCE POSTS
AND OTHER FARM TIMBER.
F.xperimental tests made by the gov
ernment with a number of inferior
f.oods have shown that it is prae
tieable to subject them to preservative
treatment by which they will be ren
dered durable and as lasting as the
soundest oak in many cases.
This is of the highest importance In
i connection with the use of fence posts.
1 telegraph and telephone poles, cross
tii's and constructive timbers of many
kinds, It is of special Importance to
farmers In many parts of the country,
tor with them the fence post problem
is serious.
Almost every farmer in the south and
cast knows that the supply of locust,
white oak. cedar and other durable
woods has become so restricted in the
last few years that their cost has be
come almost prohibitive. In the middle
west the supply of good post material
always was limited. while in many
places in the far west it is becoming
more and more expensive to build
fences because good timber for posts
is becoming very scarce. The fence post
problem, therefore, appeals to the farm
ers of the whole country, and they will
be benefited by any process by which
a poor post may be made to give double
or treble service.
The preservative treatment can be
employed more successfully with cer
tai ' kinds of woods than with others,
but it fortunately so happens that the
open-grained, quick-growing, quick
decaying timbers are the easiest of all
woods to treat. Among these are old
field or loblolly pine of the south, lodge
pole and western yellow pine, cotton
wood, willow, buckeye, beech, syca
more, and others in the west and mid
dle west.
Woods which decay most rapidly In
their natural state, with few exceptions,
are best adapted for preservative treat
ment. This is important because it ren
ders cheap and abundant timbers avail
able and makes use of what would oth
erwise be wasted.
The process of treating farm timbers
is simple, and the cost is low. The ap
paratus may be set up and operated
by a farmer on bis own premises, or
two or more farmers or timber users
may join and lessen the expense for
each. The only apparatus required is
an open iron tank, large enough to re
ceive fence posts in an upright posi
tion. Shingles, stakes, and other small
timbers may be treated in the same
tank.
The cost of the treatment, after the
apparatus is ready, depends upon the
size of the timbers and whether the en
tire posts or only the butts are treated,
and the thoroughness of the treatment.
Where freight rates permit the ship
ping of the preservative at a moderate
expense, the total cost of a treated
post of old field pine, lodgepole pine,
cottonwood, or similar timber, ought
not exceed that of a high grade post in
its natural state, and is often less.
The government considers the investi
gations in the preservative treatment
of timber of such importance that the
business of one branch of a bureau in
the department of agriculture—the “of
fice of wood preservation” in the forest
service, is given over entirely to
the work of experiments in co-oper
ation with railroad companies, mining
corporations and individuals in pro
longing the life of railroad ties, mine
props, bridge limber, fence posts and
transmission poles. Advice and prac
tical assistance is furnished all who
request it of the Forester. The length
ening of life of timber means the sav
ing of thousands of dollars annually
through doing away with the heavy
expense of labor and cost of material
for renewals.
A PROSE POEM ON BLUE GRASS.
Hut for the grasses, man could not
have existed upon the earth, nor could
any of what are now known as the do
mestic quadrupeds have been possible.
Long before any of the grains were
known, the grasses supported the flocks
and herds and these in turn supported
man. All the grains are the fruit of
cultivation; the grasses were indigen
ous, but not until a soil was capable
of producing grass was a higher order
of animal life possible. While all the
crops are perishable, being the results
of single seasons, grass is perennial
and practically indestructible. Flowers
flourish and fade; trees, though often
long-lived, eventually fall down; all
other kinds of vegetation fails at times,
but the hardy grasses are always with
us, proof against mutability and decay,
defiant of the weather and seasons, the
one earthly occupant that seems to
enjoy immortality. Sad is that part of
the earth where they cannot grow. It
means practically the lack, if not the
impossibility, of animal life. The j
characteristic of the desert is the ab- !
senee of grass. Where there is grass 1
there is hope; where it does not ap- ,
pear there is despair.
Among all the grasses there Is one i
that rises supreme. The blue grass is
not only king of its kind, but its pres
ence means the best blessings of man- j
kind. It means fat cattle and all that
they imply, abundance of wholesome
milk, exhaustless supplies of sweetest
butter. It means the horse in perfec
tion, the rapid racer, the graceful tmt
ter, the hardy roadster, the us#ul
draughter. Where the blue grass is.
nothing else remains to be desired. It
is the forerunner of progress, the in
surer of plenty, the one thing needed.
The man reared in a blue grass country
is never happy anywhere else. Wher
ever there Is blue grass there is abund- i
ante of living water. Wherever then
is b -o grass great crops will grow, of 1
corn, of wheat, of all the cereals. It '
means rich land; it means the presence 1
of soil-fertilizing limestone. There are I
other grasses, many of much value. |
The clover Is indispensable, the alfalfa
in invaluable, the timothy and orchard
are useful. Hut all these have their
drawbacks. Most of them come and
go, but the blue grass is Immortal. It
is indigenous and indestructible. The
worst winters have no terrors for it;
proof against drought, it defies the hot- j
test summers. Invaluable and invul
nerable, it beautifies while It blesses.
Fine are the flowers in native glade
or cultivated in bed; beautiful the I
bloom of the orchards, the newly J
leaved trees, the fair hedge-rows, but
the most rapturous sight that ever
meets the gaze of man is a field of
blu** grass when its green-seeded sterns
are waving in the gentle breezes.—
American Farmer.
FARM FACTS.
The main thing in earing for seed
corn is to thoroughly dry it, before it
has a chuuce to freeze, and then keep
it well ventilated and above freezing
point all winter. No matter how well
corn may be dried now. if it is left to
freeze, or where it can absorb moisture
during the winter or spring, it is al
most sure to be injured.
Now is ft good time to dean up the
garden, (lather the w'eeds, before the
see ls drop, and put them in piles and
burn them, it is not a good plan to
use weeds for mulching, or to throw
them on the compost heap. Too many
weed seeds are thus preserved.
A big feeder says all the condiments
lie uses are ashes, salt and copperas.
The cobs in the feed yards are raked up
once a week and burned. Then occa
sionally a load of coal ashes are hauled
in. The salt and copperas are mixed
with wood ashes and kept m a trough,
where tile hogs cun gel at them any
.time. [
Girlhood to Womanhood
‘^ydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound
ELLEN M. OLSON
CLARA E. DARMSTADTER
Tlie responsibility for a (laughters
future largely rests with the mother.
The right influence and the infor
mation whioh is of vital interest to
the daughter imported at the proper
lime has not only saved the life l>nt
insured the success of many a beau
tiful girl.
When a girl's thoughts become
sluggish, with headache, dizziness or
a disposition to sleep, pains in back
or lower limbs, eyes dim, desire for
solitude; when she is a mystery to
herself and friends, her mother
should come to her aid. and remem
ber that Lydia E. 1‘lnkham’s Vege
table Compound, made from native
roots and herbs, will at this time
prepare the system for the coming
change, and start this trying period
in a young girl's life without pain
or irregularities. It has been thus
depended upon for two generations.
Hundreds of letters from young
girls and their mothers, expressing
gratitude for what Lydia E. l’ink
liam's Vegetable Compound lias done
for them, are constantly being re
ceived.
Miss Ellen M. Olson, of 417 N. East
St, Kewanee, 111. writes:—
Deur Mrs. Pinkhatn:—
“I have had the I test doctors in our town
for my sickness and they all thought that
an operation was necessary. I had houdacho,
sideneho, anil my met wore so sore i could
hardly stand l took two bottles of Lydia E,
l'lnkliam'H Vegetable Compound w boa my
periods were established and now 1 sun
perfectly well. Mama says sho wont be
without your medicine in the iiouse. I Imve
tolcl one girl what Lydia E. Finl.hum's
Vegetable Compound ims done tor me
anu sho is tuking it now.”
Miss Clara 15. Dnrmstadter, nf 4T>3
Breekenridge St.. Buffalo, N.Y'., writes:
Boar Mrs. Finkham:—
“For about a year, except during the past
few months, 1 suffered with severe pains
every month, with backaches and headaches.
I hud the bines so bad that I was in despair.
It is a pleasure to tell you that Lydia E.
l’inkhnmv Vegetable Compound has i nreil
me. The change in my uppearunce is won
derful and I desire that t his go"<l may come
to every sufferer. Any one desiring to know
further details may write to lue and I shuU
be glad to givo them. ”
If you know of any young girl who
is sick and needs motherly advice,
ask her to address Mrs. Finkham, at
Lynn. Mass., and toll her every detail
of her symptoms, and to keep nothing
hack. She will receive advice abso
lutely free, from a source thut has no
rival'in the experience of woman's
ills, audit will, if followed, put her
on the right road to a strong, healthy
and happy womanhood.
Lydia E. Pinkhatn’s Vegetable
Compound made from native roots
and herbs cures where others fail.
No other remedy has such a record of actual cures ot female
ills. Thousands of women residing in every part of the United
States bear willing testimony to the wonderful virtue of Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and what it has dono for them.
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound; a Woman’s Remedy for Woman’s Ills.
Why the Horse Acted So.
From the Philadelphia Record.
"I, wonder what's the matter with
that horse," said u man to Ids wife
while he was in the act of unhitching
the animal at Thirty-fourth street and
Girard avenue yesterday. The horse
was rearing and plunging and display
ing signs of terror whenever his mas
ter came near him. A passerby came
to his aid, and while quieting the ani
mal. explained to the owner. “I no
ticed." said ne, "that you Just came
out of the zoo, over there. A slight
scent of the wild animals has clung to
your clothing, and, although your horse
has probably never situ anything wild
er than a cow, his instinct t^lls him
that where that scent Is there Is dan
ger. Ii will wear off soon and you
will have no more trouble"
Catarrh Cannot Be Cured
with LOCAL APPLICATIONS, ns thej esu
not retch the a*at of the dtspnse. Catarrh
Is t blood or constitutional discs***. and in
order to cure It you must take internal reiu
edict Hall's Catarrh Cure 1* token Intern
ally, and acts directly oil the blood and mu
cous surfaces. Hall a Catarrh Cure is not
a quack medicine It was prescribed by on**
of the beat physicians iu this country for
years and Is a regular prescription. it is
composed of the beat tonics known, com
blued with the beat blood purifiers, acting
directly ou the mucous surfaces The per
fact combination of the two Ingredient* N
what produces such wonderful results hi
curing Catarrh. Hand for testimonials, free.
F. J CHENEY & CO.. Props.. Toledo. O
Sold by Druggists, price 75c.
Take Hail's Family Pills for constipation.
From Fllegende Blatter.
Dentist—You know that more than '
three months ago l supplied Baron von |
Halestein with a new set of teeth. Well, '
I went the other day to collect the !
money which lie owed me for them,!
and not only did he refuse to pay me. ,
but he had the effrontery to gnash at
me—with my teeth.
"My mistress isn’t at home, ma’am." I
"Please tell her when 1 saw her peep
ing from the front window as I came !
up. I felt so afraid she was." Haiti- i
more American.
PJ» a M. *itu» •i.'t all t»T»a-*r*.
,f I I O Permnnently * nrc*l l>> Dr Anna » (u«,at
flerva ll«(ti>tti Handtvr F r«*e V® ml 1**41 la irnl
Ilk. 1L. II. ItLlNfC. Lu , *11 Aren Mrwi. FUiladalyhia. »'»
From the Cleveland Leader.
"Remarkable phenomenon in our 1
neighborhood thin morning."
"So?"
"Yep. The ice man left hailstones as
big as hen’s eggs!"
London lias .?00 clubs, with a mem
bership of 2S0.UUU.
From the Philadelphia Press.
"Well, if there is one thing 1 hate |
more than another,” said Gassaway, •
"it’s a long winded bore."
“Yes,” remarked Miss Knox. "It
seems I've misjudged you then.’’
"Why, how do you mean?”
"1 always had an idea you were stuck
on yourself."
From the Baltimore American.
"Did Knowitall declare anything spe- •
cial when he returned from his Ku- j
ropean trip?"
"I believe he deviated war with Ja
pan.’’
BABY IN TERRIBLE STATE.
Awful llumor kullnu A wu y lm->» ■
llody h of —Cutieura
Cure* In Two \\ eekn.
"My little daughter broke out all
over her body with a humor, and we
used everything recommended, hut
without results. I called in three doc
tors. blit she continued to grow worse.
Her body was a mass of sores, ami tier
little face was being eaten away. Her
ears looked as if they would drop o(T.
Neighbors advised me to g-*t Cutieura
Soap and Cutieura Ointment, and be- ,
fore 1 bad used half of the cake of
.Cutieura Soap and box of Cutieura
Ointment the sores bad all hen led. and
• my little tine’s face and Ixuiy were as
clear ns a new-t»on» lmhos. 1 would
not be without it again if It cost live
dollars. Instead of seventy-live cents.
Mrs. George J. Steesc. 701 Coburn ^t..
Akron, O., Aug. 30. 100*.’*
New and Liberal
Homestead
Regulations
IN
Western Canady
NEW DISTRICTS
Now Open for Settlement
Some of the choicest lands In the grain growing
belts of Saskatchewan and Alberta have recently been
oi'enedfor settlement under the Revised Homestead
Regulations of Canada. Thousands of homestead*of
160 acres each are now available. The new regula
tions make it possible for entry to be made by proxy,
the opportunity that many in the United flutes have
been waiting for. Any member of a family may make
entry for any other member cf the family who may
be entitled to make entry for himself cr lerseif.
Entry may now be made before the Agent or Sub
Agent of the District by proxy (on certain conditions',
by tho father, mother, son. daughter, brother or sis
ter of an intending homesteader.
"Any even numbered section of Dominion
Lands in Manitoba cr the North- West Provinces,
excepting 8 and 26. not referred. may be home
steaded by any person the sole head of a family,
ormaleover 18 years of aye. to the extent o!
one-quarter section, of 160 acres, more or less. **
The fee in each case will be $10.00 Churches,
schools and markets convenient. Healthy climate,
splendid crot s and good laws. Grain growing and
cattle raising principal industries
For further particulars as to Rates. Routes. Beat
Time to Go and Whsre to Lcca*e apply to
NY IV Scott. Superintendent *.l 1 muuuration,
Ottawa. Canada, or li. T. Holmes. uS Jackson
St .st. Pam. Minn.iJ. M. RlacLachbui, Box nS
Watertown Soutli Dakota, and W. V Bennett,
Koi New York I .lie Building. Omaha. Neb.,
Authorized Government Agents
•»; where you eew thia advertisement.
The Handy Doctor in Your
Vest Pocket
"tT'S a thin, round-cornered little
Enamel Box—
When carried In your vest pocket
It means Health-Insurance.
It contains Six Candy Tablets of pleasant
taste, almost as pleasant as Chocolate.
Each tablet Is a working dost of Cas
carets, which acts like Exercise on the
Bowels and Liver.
It will not purge, sicxen. nor upset the
stomach.
Because it Is not a "3Ue-drlver.'' like
Salts, Sodium, Calomel, Jalap. Senna, nor
Aperient Waters.
Neither is it like Castor Oil, Glycerine,
or other Oily Laxatives that simply lubricate
the Intestines for transit of the food stepped
up in them a! that particular time.
# # #
The chief cause ct Constipation and
Indigestion is a weakness of the Muscles
that contract the Intestines and Bowels.
Cascaret3 are practically to the Bowel
Muscles what a Massage and Cold Bath
are to the Athletic Muscles.
They stimulate the Bowel Muscles to
contract, expand, and squeeze the Diges
tive Juices out of food eaten.
They dorJt help the Bowels and Liver In
such a way as to make them lean upon
similar assistance for the future.
This is why, with Cascarets, the dose
may be lessened each succeeding time
Instead of increased, as it must be with aX
other Cathartics and Laxatives.
* * *
Cascarets act like exercise.
If carried in your vest pocket, (or carried
In My Lady’s Purse,) and eaten Just when
you suspect you need one, you will never
know a sick day from the ordinary Ills of life.
Because these Ills begin in the Bowels,
and pave the way for all other diseases.
"Vest Pocket" box 10cents, 7S7
Be sure you get the genuine, made only
by the Sterling Remedy C ompany, and never
sold in bulk. Every tablet sta.mced ”CCC."
KSuSTtepson'sEifeWatBr