The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, October 21, 1909, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    ANOTHER
WOMAN
JDRED
By Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound
Gardiner,Maine.—“I have been a
great sufferer from organic troubles
and a severe female
The
would
have to go to the
hospital for an
operation, but I
could not bear to
think of it. 1 de
cided to try Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Veg
etable Compound
and Sanative W ash
—and was entirely
cured after three
months’ use of ”—Mrs. S. A.
Williams, R. F. D. No. 14, Box 39,
Gardiner, Me.
No woman should submit to a surgi
cal operation, which may mean death,
until she has given Lydia E.Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound, made exclusive
ly from roots and herbs, a fair trial.
This famous medicine for women
has for thirty years proved to be tho
most valuable tonic and renewer of
the female organism. Women resid
ing in almost every city and town in
the United States bear willing testi
mony to the wonderful virtue of Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound.
It cures female ills, and creates radi
ant, buoyant female health. If you
are ill, for your own sake as well as
those you love, give it a trial.
Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass.,
invites all sick women to write
her for advice. Her advice is free,
and always helpful.
Don't whip the
bowels witha harsh
cathartic. You can do
just as much, and gently, with
a candy Cascaret. Harsher physic
makes the bowels hard, so you
increase the dose. Cascarets
leave the bowels normal, so one
tablet is enough.
Vent-pocket box, 10 cents—at drug-stores.
Peer!'* now use a million boxes monthly. 858
FOR SALE—€ per cent mortgage bonds
with stock bonus; safe investment; local
agent wanted. Sherman Collins, Ithaca, ;
N. Y.
AGENTS—Make $f> daily selling motal
weather strips; 200 per cent profit. Easy
sales. Write today. A. C. Wandelken,
Marietta, Ohio.
SIOUX CITY P'T’G CO., 1,317-43, 1909
From the Chicago Tribune.
“Algy, did you call on Miss Peachley
last evening, as you intended?”
‘‘I went as far as the front door, dear
boy, but I was so thoroughly drenched
by a sudden storm that had come up that
l merely asked the servant for a rain
check and came away.”
Stop guessing! Try the beat and most
certain remedy for all painful ailments—
Hamlins Wizard Oil. The way it re
lieves all soreness from sprains, cuts,
wounds, burns, scalds, etc., is wonderfui.
Salesmanship.
From Judge.
“It makes you look small,” says the
saleslady to the big woman, who is trying
on the hat. Sold.
“It makes you look plump,’ she says to
the slender woman. Sold.
“It makes you look young,” she says to
the obviously middle-aged woman. Sold, j
“It makes you look tall,” she says to
the short woman. Sold.
“It brightens your face,” she says to
the dark woman. Sold.
“It brings out your color,” she says to
the pale foman. Sold.
And all the hats were alike.
Descendant of the Ark.
From the Philadelphia Ledger.
The great editor carefully read the aspir
ing contributor’s joke, then, looking up
from the copy, inquired:
“Where's the other?”
“Other?” Why, there isn’t any other.” j
“Um! I thought that Noah took two of i
every kind into the ark.”
Autumn.
There is beauty everywhere
When the scarlet leaves appear
And the ripened nuts are failing from
the tree.
All enchanted is, and gay;
While sweet chords of nature play
And I’m fonder, ever fonder, dear, of
thee.
There are harmonies I feel
That no language will reveal.
As I taste the pleasant fruit thou offerest
me;
And the calmness of the air
To my peace cannot compare,
For I’m fonder, ever fonder, dear, of
thee.
All the colors thou hast blent.
All the music thou hast sent
To enthuse me with their rapturous
harmony,
All the beauteous autumn trees,
And the soft October breeze,
Makes me fonder, ever fonder, dear of
thee.
-C. R. S. Nichols.
Mri, Wlnlow’i Boothiwo Stiutf tor Children
teething, softens the gums, reduces Inflammation,
a Hayspain, cures wind colic. 25c a bottle.
AND BEFORE CHRISTMAS. TOO.
“Jeanette, you are the light of my life.
You're my sun. my a tars, my alL You’re
my”
“Yea. George. I know all that; but
von’re broke.**
BABY’S WATERY ECZEMA
Itched and Scratched Until Blood
Ran—$50 Spent on Uaelesa Treat
ments—Disease Seemed Incurable
-—Cured by Cuticura for $1.50.
“When my little boy was two and a
half months old he broke out on both
cheeks with eczema. It was the itchy,
watery kind and we had to keep his
little hands wrapped up all the time,
and if he would happen to get them
uncovered he would claw his face till
the blood streamed down on his cloth
ing. We called in a physician at o*ce,
but he gave an ointment which was so
severe that my babe would scream
when it was put on. We changed doc
tors and medicines until we had spent
fifty dollars or more and baby was get
ting worse. I was so worn out watch
ing and caring for him night and day
that I almost felt sure the disease was
incurable. But finally rending of the
good results of the Cuticura Remedies,
I determined to try them. I can truth
fully say I was more than surprised,
for I bought only a dollar and a half’s
worth of the Cuticura Remedies (Cuti
cura Soap. Ointment and Pills), and
they did more good than all my doc
tors’ medicines I had tried, and in fact
entirely cured him. His face is per
fectly clear of the least spot or scar
of anything. Mrs. W. M. Comerer,
Burnt Cabins, Pa., Sept. 15, 1908.”
Potter Drug & Chem. Corp., Sole
Props, of Cuticura Remedies, Boston.
Heroic Remedies.
From London Answers.
“According to this magazine,” said Mrs.
Biffingham, "sliced onions scattered about
a room will absorb the odor of fresh
paint.”
"I guess that’s right,” rejoined Bifflng
ham. “Likewise, a broken neck will re
lieve a man of catarrh!”
PERRY RAVIR' PAINKILLER
costs only 25c. 35c or 50c a bottle, but It contains many
dollars’ worth of virtue In curing colds, rheumatism,
neuralgia, uud kindred Ills. At all druggists.
It Is not every man who would be
willing to pay for tracing hiB ancestors.
Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets regulate
and Invigorate stomach, , liver and
bowels. Sugar-coated, tiny granules;
easy to take as candy.
Those Twins.
From the New York Sun.
An upper Harlem man named his twin
sons Theodore Roosevelt and William
Taft, says the New York Sun. A friend
asked him the other day how they were
getting along.
“Famously,’ was the answer. "William
digs steadily into his breakfast bowl while
Theodore yells and pounds him over the
head with a spoon.
~The Sick Are Mad^Wel"!
i And the Weak Are Restored to Full Vigor and Strength at ||
the Hands of the Greatest Specialists of Modern Times.
'I Are you a perfectly strong, active, rigorous, healthy, happy man or woman? If not, you ^B
- should not delay one day before you consult a specialist, one to whom the human body is an ’■
open book, and who understands every phase of weakness and disease and to whom tho J -
proper treatment for a euro is as simple as the adding of a column of tigurcs.
|| The Leading Specialists If
For over 20 years Dr. Hathaway A Co. have been tho leading specialists of this til
country. Their practice has been for years larger than that of other specialists. Their v
cures of all sorts of diseased conditions have ikyi
been the marvel of the medical profession i
and the people generally. Their fame has |JS]
spread into every town and every hamlet.
Those atllietod with all manner of diseases
have sought their services in order that they
■! might he made whole by the administering Wm
l of their wonderful system of treatment. *«iir
&j VVreeks of humanity have como to them for
I consultation and modlclnes who, a few
i months later, have returned to them In most
vigorous health to give them their thanks. fgpj|
All Chropic Diseases ^
Dr. Hathaway & Co. treat all chronic dis- §p|
eases thoso peculiar to men and those
\ peculiar to women-Vital Weakness, Debll
■ i ty, Female Troubles, Varicocele. Piles, I? is- $$1
tula, Catarrh, Rheumatism, Kidney and pjsf
Liver Complaints, Skin Diseases, etc., etc. |5j||
Every Case Specially Hi
T reated ji
• Every case taken by Dr. Hathaway A Co. iwf
Is specially treated according to its nature,
m all under their general personal supervision. if§
and all remedies used by them are prepared
from the purest and best drugs in their own
laboratories under their personal oversight, IH
and all from special prescriptions of their y
own.
& Dr. Hathaway A Co. make no charge for
consultation or advice, either at their office
jjp or by mail. Hp
fl BIB eiATUBlMSV 9. riffI 205 bolton- block §
1 ll§f» MAI HAW AI ©Luis- sioux city, iowa §f
Remember—the Little Member.
foil may keep your feet from slipping
And your hands from evil deeds.
But to guard your tongue from tripping,
What unceasing care it needs!
Be you old or be you young.
Oh beware.
Take good care
Of the tittle-tattle telltale tongue!
fou may feel inclined to quarrel
With the doctrine that 1 preach.
But the soundness of the moral
Sad experience will teach;
Be It said or be It sung
Oh. beware,
Take good care
Of the tittle-tattle telltale tongue!
—St. Nicholas.
SENSITIVE ANIMALS.
Washington Star: A noted trainer
of thoroughbreds, who dropped into
Washington the other day to pick out
stable room for his string at the Ben
nlng track for the forthcoming fall
meeting, was talking of the sulking
propensities of a certain clever race
horse now running on the metropolitan
tracks
"If the people behind that horse
could only find out what trifling little
thing he Is sulking about,” said the
trainer, "It would be worth tens of
thousands of dollars to them. They
could easily remedy whatever little
matter It might be that is causing the
horse to carry such a vast amount of
poutlshness about In his midriff, and
then, with his wrong redressed, he'd
go right ahead and win good races un
til the end of the season.
"You often hear the remark that
thoroughbred horses are as capricious
as women. I’d rather put it that
they’re as whimsical as children.
“Their likes and dislikes are formed
all of a sudden, like a child’s, and as
often as not a thoroughbred horse has
the same sort of distinctive guidance
behind his whimsical notion that a
child has. For example, a naturally
sneaky, treacherous man has no more
chance to gain the good will of a highly
bred race horse than he has to gain the
confidence of a child.
"There Is something In both the horse
and the child that tells them that the
bad hearted man isn’t right. That
something, I suppose, Is pure Instinct.
“But horses of high caliber have an
even wider range of whims. That's
why every good trainer studies the
kinks of every one of the horses in his
charge.
"About ten years ago I trained a
great race horse—one of the greatest
of his time—who was as calm and self
contained as a priest, except for one
thing. He couldn’t tolerate the sight
of a man with a beard.
"It was pure nervousness, of course,
but you can’t tell me that that horse
didn't get that aversion somewhere.
We hear about children being 'marked'
with some trait or characteristic by
their mothers. Don't you believe that
that Immortal old four footed boy I’m
talking about wasn’t marked Just In
the way that children are, before his
birth, with that hatred for a bearded
man. I believe Just as thoroughly as
I believe that I'm wearing a hat that
that horse's dam had been abused by
some fellow with a beard, and that
she transmitted her fear of and hatred
for bearded men to the son, who made
her name glorious as a stud matron.
It may not be scientific and all that,
but I know a lot of plain old facts
about horses and other things that are
not embraced in any system of science.
"Most race horses are devoted to
women. Yet I’ve trained thorough
breds that had such an innate dis
like for women that It was dangerous
for a woman to get anywhere near
them.
I ve got a sjveil horse in my string
now who is ‘dead gone’ on the young
wife of one of the owners for whom
I train, except when she approaches
him with the frou-frou of a silken
skirt. Then he won’t tolerate her
around him at all.
"The hiss and the swish of the silken
skirt startles him and finally drives
him into a sort of frenzy of nervous
ness or resentment or whatever you
want to call it. When she isn’t wear
ing any rustling silken skirt to bother
him, however, he is as gentle with her
as a Newfoundland dog' with a baby,
and bends his ears forward to her to
have her rub them and muzzles her
face and fair with the affection of a
child.
“Early environment has pretty near
as much to do with the formation of
a horse’s character as of a child’s.
Southern bred horses, for instance, are
devoted to their black care-takers, and
when such horses are switched to own
ers whose stable employes are all white
men the horses suffer severely from
lonesomeness for the negroes for a long
time, and they never become entirely
used to the white stable hands. On
the other hand, race horses bred up
north, in New York or Pennsylvania or
New Jersey, say, and reared under the
guardianship of white men, have an in
tense aversion for the black man.
“I recall the case of a fine handicap
horse which had a sensational record
as a two-year-old and a three-year
old on the southern tracks before he
changed handB and was brought to New
York tracks to show his mettle. His
new owner had tremendous expecta
tions of that colt, but the horse raced
at least thirty pounds below his true
form from the outset.
“From a manger glutton he became
a poor feeder as soon as he was brought
east, and only munched enough oats
to keep himself from starvation. Two
or three expert veterinarians examined
the colt and found nothing that matter
with him, and yet he continued to mope
and to lose flesh and to go about his
work in a hopeless, lackadaisical way
which made it out of the question to
get him to any sort of a racing edge
worthy his known grand capabilities.
His people couldn’t make it out.
“One day a negro stable hand from
another barn wandered into that colt’s
stall. As soon as the colt saw and
smelt the black hand, he almost ate
him up alive with pure, unrestrained <
Joy. He licked the black man’s hands !
and muzzled his shirt and whinnied
and pawed the dirt and danced around ■
like a cra»,y horse. The trainer of the
colt happened to be standing by at the
time.
“ 'I know what alls that colt,’ he said,
the light breaking on him. ’He was
born and brought up with the coons,
and he’s lonesome for ’em,’
“The trainer promptly engaged three
black stable hands to devote their ex
clusive attention to that horse. He be
gan to gorge his oats as soon as he
made up his mind that the darkies were
around him to stay, picked up meat and
muscle, went at his work like an un
leashed hound, and the next time he
went to the races he bowled over his
field as if they were dachshunds.”
Proportion Small.
Johnson—According to statistics the
proportion of bald headed men among
criminals is small.
Tomkins—Well, I’ve always been an
advocate of the theory that marriage
has a tendency to keep a man from
crime.
The extreme severity of Jast winter
In Maryland and Virginia Interfered
seriously with the usual birth rate ol
crabs in and about Chesapeake bay,
and the supply of the shellfish from
that part of the world has been much
smaller this year than in previous sea
sons.
Fith Hooks of Oceania.
Prom Harper's Weekly.
Modern fishing tackle, as displayed
In the window at the sporting goods
shop, consists of an immense variety
of patent appliances, each warranted
to be Infallible for attracting and en
snaring some particular member of the
Hah tribe; but the hook, that simple,
though Important feature, is absolute
ly essential and has remained prac
tically unchanged In form during many
centuries. Probably tho earliest exam
ple of a metal hook Is one that was
found In Switzerland, and dates back
to the bronze age. There Is no es
sential difference between this ancient
hook and the finest ones of steel that
are produced today.
To go back as far as the stone age,
wo have only to turn to tho Inhabitants
of Oceania, because these natives have
never progressed any further In tho
art of capturing fish than did their
ancestors oenturies ago. Their hooks
are of two main classes, those to be
baited and those to be used without a
bait. The former are of wood or turtle
shell, fashioned either from a single
piece or having tho point fastened to
the shank. Most of these are intended
to penetrate the mouth of the fish al
though there are others that act as
gorges and catoh athwart the mouth
or gullet, and thus enablo the fish to
be drawn up. The largest types are
used In New Guinea and Micronesia
for the capture of sharks, while tho
Solomon Islanders have tiny shell
hooks for taking mullet.
The Polynesian hooks are generally
barbed and some curlousf specimens
have been collected In New Zealand.
One of these Is made from a section
of a dog’s Jaw-bone, a single tooth,
which has been filed to a sharp point,
being left for the barb. In this same
country a hook that has been pointed
with human bone is regarded as pos
sessing exceptionally fine qualities for
attracting the fish.
The best workmanship is exhibited
In the hooks which are used without
bait and which correspond to our
spoons. Pearl or other Iridescent sljell
furnishes the part which attracts the
fish, and frequently the shank consists
of the ribbed part of a shell, near the
hinge of the valve, thereby giving the
hook a spinning motion os It Is
drawn through the water. More elab
orate designs have a wooden shank,
neatly curved and Inlaid with a silver
of halletts shell, while the barb is of
sharpened bone. Tho extreme delicacy
required In accurately piecing togeth
er one of these composite hooks may
be Imagined, and a great expenditure
of time and labor Is necessary. Hence
they have been preserved very care
fully and only used on lines of heavy
vegetable fibre which seldom break
except under extraordinary strain.
THE KEASON.
Mr. Br°wn—Did you enjoy youreelf at
the afternoon tea?
Mrs. Brown—Yes; I was the only
woman there who had a new hat.
A NURSE'S EXPERIENCE
le a Good Guide for Any Pereon
Who Does Not Understand Kidney
Troubles.
A nurse has to know Just what to
do for common ailments, and those
who suffer backache,
languor and other
common signs of kid
ney trouble, should
heed the example of
Mrs. Judson Ellis, 414
Francis St., Jackson,
M4eh„ known for
many years prior to
her marriage as
‘‘Nurse Baker.”
“My back ached a good deal and
was lame and weak, so that I had
difficulty In straightening up or turn
big in bed,” said she. ‘‘Doan’s Kidney
Pills benefited me wonderfully, and
since using them I have been able to
do my own work again.”
Remember the name—Doan's. Sold
by all dealers. 60 cents a box. Eos
ter-MUburn Ob., Buffalo, N. Y.
ANOTHER DOUBLE EAGLE.
Little Known Pattern Piece Made in
1906 by the Chief Mint Engraver.
In the Interest excited by Che Saint
Gaudens designs tar coins the existence
of an entirely different double eagle
made by the chief engraver of the Unit
ed States mint In 1906 seems to have en
tirely escaped the notice not only of the
general public but even of coin collect
ors, who usually keep In close touch
with everything pertaining to the coin
age of this country.
Charles E. Barber, chief engraver of
the mint, who executed Che designs for
the present nickel five cent piece, the
dime, the quarter and the half dollar,
engraved the dies for a new $20 gold
piece when a change In certain United
States coin designs was proposed a few
years ago. From these dies two speci
mens were struck, one In gold and the
other In base metal, gilded, to show
the obverse design. The two pieces
were placed In the coin cabinet at the
Philadelphia mint, but even the coin
experts have overlooked them.
The obverse shows a large head of
Liberty of original design. Around the
borders are 13 stars and below Is the
date, "1906.” The reverse Is distinctly
different fro many other United States
coin design.
A standing female figure fills the cen
ter of the field. She holds aloft In her
left hand a pole, surmounted by a tiny
Liberty cap, while the right hand Is
placed on the hilt of a hword, the point
of which rests upon the ground.
Directly behind the figure Is an ag
gressive looking eagle, with partly
opened wings, In an attitude of protec
tion. Behind the head of the figure Is
a series of radiations, between them be
ing the motto "In God We Trust.” Be
low the figure of Liberty Is a fasces
placed In a horizontal position.
The edge of the gold pattern coin con
tains a series of stars In rather high
relief Instead of the usual reeded edge,
while the edge of the piece struck In
base metal Is smooth.
The cabinet at the mint contains oth
er pattern pieces of whloh little Is
known. The reverse design of this
double eagle was used by Engraver
Barber as the obverse of a half dollar
pattern piece struck In 1891, a specimen
of which is on exhibition. On the re
verse of the 1891 fifty cent piece was
a small spread eagle, with wreath, stars
and a band of clouds above, similiar
to the reverse designs of the silver and
gold pieces issued during the early part
of the 19th century.
Another half dollar pattern piece of
1891 has been pronounced unusually
handsome. It shows the same kind of
central device as the first half dollar,
but without the wreath, thus permit
ting the design to stand forth promi
nently.
These patterns and others were exe
cuted In anticipation of the change In
deslfen which teak place in 1898. when
the well known device of a seated figure
of Liberty, used since 1849, gave way to
the bust of Liberty now familiar.
Beware of Ointments for Catarrt
that Contain Mercury,
as mercury will surely destroy the sense of
smell aud completely derange the whols
system when entering It through the mu
cous surfnnea Sudh articles should never
be used exempt on prescriptions from reputa
ble physicians, as the damage they will d«
Is tpufold to the good you can possibly
derive from them. Hall'S Catarrh Cure,
manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., To
ledo, O., contains uo mercury, aud Is taken
Internally, act-lug dlreotly upon the blood
aud mueohs surfaces of the system. In buy
lug Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure you get the
f:enu!ne. It la taken Internally aud made
u Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Cheney & Co.
Testimonials free.
Sold by Druggists. Price, 75c per bottle
Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation
A Quito Natural Hesitancy.
From Sucoesa Magazine.
Mr. Brown, looking for his wife, asked
the cook:
"Bridget, can yeu tell me of my wife's
whereabouts 7"
Bridget, evidently embarrassed, hesitat
ed before replying, “I think they are In
the wash, sor.”
Whether you can eat your cake and
have It too, dopends upen how com
pletely it may be able to withstand the
processes of digestion.
THE SOURCE OT TROUBLE
raait be reached before M can be cured. Allen', t.uni
Balsam coea to thm vat of your cough, and CU&xa It.
Hnrmjss* and sure. At at! drugcIsU.
It Is now claimed that William Tell
didn't sheet an apple from his boy's
head; It was simply a Ben Davis,
Exact Copy of Wrapper.
GASTORIA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have
Always Bought
!
i
Thirty Years
emu
When You’re Hoarse Use j
m stst sum m (|iws#%ia
11 Gives immediate relief. The first B
1 dose relieves your aching throat and 1
| allays the irritation. Guaranteed to ■
1 contain no opiates. Very palatable. jfl
(81 All Druggists, 25c.
DR. T. Felix Oouraud’s Oriental
Crum or Magloal Beautlfler.
. tSSS 2& SKS2
EPS7ibd S»“ Li.fult
and every bltroii*
on beauty, and dw*
fles detection, nf
has stood (ho toofi
of so yean, and
l» so harmless w#
taste (t to bosareti
Is properly madia
A ccept no oounte^*
felt of aim liar
name. Dr. L. A*
tjayre aald to A
lady of tha haul*
SfS.'VPtai
will use tbeay
__ X tecomniil
Goods Dealers ih tha united States, Canada and EttropA
FEHD. T. HOfUHS, Pros.. 37 Great Jones Sind, IwToA
.. ■■ . -d
Song. 1
Give me back ray heart, fair child;
To yeu as yet ’twere worth but llttlei
Half beguller, half beguiled,
Be you warned, yaur own Is brittle.
I know It by yoifr redd’ning cheeks,
I know it by those two black streak*
Arching up your pearly brows
In a momentary laughter,
Stretqhed In leng and dark repose j
with a sigh tne mement after.
"Hid Itl dropt It on the moorsl
Lest It, and you cannot And It”—
My own heart 1 want, not yours;
Yeu have bound and must unbind It.
Set It free then from your net.
We wtU love, sweet—but not yeti
Fling It frem you—we are strong;
Love Is trouble, love Is folly;
Love, that makes an old heart young.
Makes a young heart melancholy.
—Aubrey Do Vera
Cheers and Laughter.
From the Kansas City Journal.
Friend—Where there laughter and cheer#
during your speech?
Young Statesman—Well, there weren't
any cheers, but now and then people la
the audience looked at one another ai>4
laugheu.
Aids Nature
The great success of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Dis
covery in curing weak stomachs, wasted bodies, weak
lungs, and obstinate and lingering ceughs, is based on
the recognition of the fundamental truth that “Golden
Medical Discovery’’ supplies Nature with body-build
ing, tissue-repairing, muscle-making materials, in con
densed and concentrated form. With this help Nature
supplies the necessary strength to the stomach to digest
food, build up the body and thereby throw off lingering
obstinate coughs. The “Discovery” rs-establishes the
digestive and nutritive organs in sound health, purifies
and enriches the blood, and nourishes the nerves—in
short establishes sound vigorous health.
// your dealer otters something “lust as gootI,,cl
it Is probably better FOR HIM—it pays better.
But you are thinking ot the care not the profit, so
there’s nothing 4‘last as good” tor you. Say so.
Dr. Pierce’s Common Sense Medical Adviser, In Plain English; or, Med-'
Icine Simplified, 1008 pages, over 700 illustrations, newly revised up-to-date
Edition, paper-bound, sent for 21 one-cent stamps, to cover cost of mailing
y only. Cloth-bound, 31 stamps. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y.
For DISTEMPER Fever *and PC«tarrliaI Fever
Sure cure and positive preventive, no matter how horses at any age are
infected or “exposed.” Liquid, given on the tongue, acts on the Blood an<ft
Glands; expels the poisonous germs from the body. Cures Distemper la
Dogs and bheep and Cholera in Poultry. Largest selling live stock remedy.
Cures La Grippe among human beings and is a fine Kidney remedy. 60c an4
$1 a bottle; $5 and |10 a dozen. Cut this out. Keep it. Show to your drug*
gist, who wiU get it for you. Free Booklet, “Distemper, Causes and Cure#?*
Specia' agents wanted. |
Spohn Medical Go. Bacteriologists Goshen, Ind., U.S.4.
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES