The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, June 15, 1911, Image 7

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    \ WOMEN
MAYAVOID
OPERATIONS
8y taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound
The following letter from Mrs.
Orville Rock will prove how unwise
It is for women to submit to the
dangers of a surgical oiteration when
It may he avoided by taking Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound.
She was fourwecks in the hospi tal
and came home suffering worse
than before.
• Here is her own statement.
Paw Paw, Mich.—“Two years ago
I suffered very severely with a dis
placement. I could
not he on my feet for
a long time. My
physician treated
me for seven months
without much relief
and at last sent me
to Ann Arbor for
an oiteration. I was
there four weeks and
came home suffering
worse than before.
My mother advised
me to try Lydia
'getable Compound,
and I did. Today lam well and strong
and do all my own housework. I owe
my health to Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound and advise my
friends who are afflicted with any
female complaint to try it.”—Mrs.
Orville Rock, R. R. No. 5, Paw Paw,
Michigan.
If you are ill do not drag along until
an operation is necessary, hut at once
take Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound.
For thirty years it has been the stan
dard remedy for women’s ills, and haa
positively restored the health of thou
sands of women. Whydoa’tyoutryit?
FREE RUBBER GOODS X«- XXX
write postal now. M.rford Co., Dept. 4, Chi cage, 111
Grateful.
"How does Slithers feel about that
chauffeur who ran off with his car and
his daughter?” asked Wilkes.
“He’s mighty grateful,” said Bil
dad. "He says the poor idiot relieved
him of his two most expensive po&
^ sessions.”—Harper's Weekly.
Should Report Tuberculosis Cases.
The National Association for the
study and Prevention of Tuberculosa
says that the first requisite for a com
prehensive campaign for the elimina,
tion of tuberculosis in a state or city
is well-enforced law, requiring that ev
ery living case of tuberculosis be re
ported to the health authorities. Such
reporting is now required by law 01
health regulations in 25 states, while
In 28 states and territories no provi
sion whatever is made for keeping rec
ords of cases of this infectious disease.
Several cities in non-registration
states, as for instance, Chicago, Cleve
land, St. Louis and New Orleans, have
local ordinances requiring that tuber
culosis be reported. In all, there are
about 100 cities in the United States
which have ordinances of this nature
CREATING ENVY.
1 ’” “* ——— -■— _
&
Bronson—What do you find la the
greatest pleasure In living In the
country?
Woodson—Getting in town and tell
ing people about the cool breezes,
•whether there are any or not.
COMES A TIME
When Coffee Show* What It Ha* Been
Doing.
"Of late years coffee has disagreed
(* with me,” writes a matron from Borne,
N. Y.
“Its lightest punishment being to
make me 'logy' and dizzy, and it seem
ed to thicken up my blood.
"The heaviest was when It upset my
stomach completely, destroying my ap
petite and making me nervous and ir
ritable, and sent me to my bed. After
one of these attacks, in which I nearly
lost my life, I concluded to quit the
coffee and try Postum.
"It went right to the spot! I found
It not only a most palatable and re
freshing beverage, but a food as well.
"All my ailments, the ‘loginess’ and
dizziness, the unsatisfactory condition
of my blood, my nervousness and irri
tability disappeared in short order
and my sorely afflicted stomach began
quickly to recover. I began to rebuild
I and have steadily continued until now,
Have a good appetite and am rejoicing
In sound health which I owe to the us«
of Postum.” Name given by Postum
Co., Battle Creek, Mich.
Read the little Book “The Road td
Wellville,” in pkgs. “There’s n reason.*
Ever rend *ht above letter? A new
one appenrn from time to time. TheJ
■ re genuine, true, und full of bumnl
Intercut.
*
College Women as Mothers
What is the effect of a college train
ing on a woman considered as the fu
ture mother of a family? Tiie charge
is frequently made that although it
may make her fitter to cope with life
as an Individual, it unfits her for ma
ternity. Critics point out that man's
education is largely designed to in
crease his efficiency us the head of a
family. Should not woman's training be
similarly shaped? And how may
we accomplish this? These mat
ters, according to an editorial
writer in The Interstate Med
ical Journal, are destined soon to be
rigidly investigated; and physlcalns, he
says, must take a larger part in these
investigations, for the question of
physical and nervous fitness is the
paramount factor after all. He Says:
“The marriage- and birth-rates of
alumnae are of vital importance, for
though we must confess that some
of these women are of types
not worth perpetuating, yet as
a class they should produce
a more intellectual generation
than girls too stupid to accept educa
tion. ft is charged and denied that too
few alumnae marry, and too late at
that, and even these produce too few
offspring. We are soon to receive more
accurate information, but in its inter
pretation we must not forget that a
woman who raises two of her three In
fants is doing better social work than
she who raises only two of her eight
or 10, and this irrespective of the pos
sibly higher intellectuality of the for
mer two, who receive better nourish
ment and care as a rule—and the cost
Is far less for the result.
“There are hosts of women, by the
way, who assert that the divinely im
posed task of replenishing the earth
has been completed, and that an aver
age family of two surviving children Is
i all that God now demands. Those who
! persist in raising large families are
only prevnting the marriage or repro
duction of others, if the average num
ber of children can not be more than
three. In this view of the case the
alumnae may size up better than the
rabbit-iike lower types.
“The physique of college girls, there
fore, seems to be of more importance
than that of boys, and we, as a profcs j
sion, are vitally interested in tlio re
peated charge that too many of the
female students are injured by poor
food and excessive indoor confinement
in rooms badly ventilated and other
wise unsanitary. Making due allow
ance for exaggerations and even base
less assertions, there must be some
truth in the charges or they would
have been refuted long ago. There
must be room for Improvement at
least. ... It really seems that the fe
male physique Is getting frailer in
civilization, making a reduced birth
rate necessary. If the colleges turn out
women strong enough, we need not try
to make them stronger. The point to
prove is whether they are not made
weaker.
"The character of female education
may seem foreign to our sphere of
sanitation, yet it has a close relation to
the physique. Coeducation now seems
doomed, from the overwhelming proofs
that the rates of mental development
of boys and girls are so different, and
the mental characters also, that the
two sexes can not possibly keep pace
without one lagging and keeping back
the other, or being unduly strained to
keep up. Girls naturally surpass the
boys and yet are dreadfully strained In
some ways in the competition. The
curriculum In the female college should,
therefore, not be patterned after that
of male schools, and we notice as a
fact that the trend is now toward do
mestic economy in the former with a
view of making the alummae better
partners in a life team, not necessarily
wageworkers.
"Nevertheless, the woman who Is
born with more brains than necessary
for a human cow, must not be starved
intellectually. Her higher life is of
great importance and Is entitled to con
sideration in education—not to be made
masculine, but for sheer enjoyment of
living. ... To make fine mothers may
be a big part of the aim of college life,
but it is not all by a long shot; nor
should It be, for Sparta tried It, but
Spartans in time became noted for stu
pidity. and sank into nothingness by
the side of more intellectual neighbors,
who did not try such absurd eugenics."
Wish Less and Work More
Herbert Kaufman, In Woman's Woi'Ul.
Failure Is only postponed success so
long as courage "coaches" ambition.
No one wave can batter down the
rocks; it’s the ternal pounding away
: of the surf—it’s the age-long, relentless
snslaught of the sea, that changes the
shore line.
No one axe-stroke can clear a forest;
the woodman who chops and stops
l Wastes time and timber.
The habit of persistence is the habit
I of victory. Continued effort is irre
sistible, If you quit at the start you
must keep starting anew and you’ll
spend more energy in a list of half
hearted efforts than is needed to carry
one determined enterprise to comple
tion.
Fortune does not locate, her prizes in
time-worn highways. Beaten paths are
only for beaten men. They would not
be roads if others hadn’t traveled ahead
! of you, and those who went before
! grabbed everything that was worth the
owning.
This is the price you must pay for a
better lot: You must stand stanch be
fore hardship and difficulty;
You must make mistakes, yet con
tinue to believe in yourself:
You must stumble, yet rise with un
diminislied enthusiasm;
You must bruise your patience, yet
wear your grin until you win;
You must be tired, yet dash on with
all the might of you and all tlih hope
of you at full tide.
But the reward will be in proportion
to the straining and paining that yon
undergo. The world is lilled with men
and women habitually in want because
they continually want the best, but
shrink from the test.
Those who are not brave must slave.
Defeat only exists in its acknowledg
ment.
Struggle is the keynote of progress.
To try is to grow. Each attempt adds
to strength.
The heart and soul and brain must
be exercised into firmness and elastic
ity and resistance Just as the biceps
and sinews.
Nobody ever achieved anything ex
traordinary except through unswerving
tenacity.
Idle wishes are unplanted seeds. Ideas
must be buried in the soil Qjf oppor
tunity and cultivated with patience be
fore they will bear results.
If Edison had merely desired the In
candescent bulb, we would still read
by gas light and lamp glow.
If the Wrights had only aspired to
fly. transportation would still be con
fined to the surface of the earth and
water.
If Westinghouse had simply guessed
at the air brake, we would still ride on
ftrains limited in speed instead of lim
ited trains.
If Watts had just considered the
steam engine, we would still hew and
draw with horse and man power.
If Bell had relied upon Providence to
; change his vision of the telephone into
a speaking reality, we would still walk
acfoss town to ask a question.
Every great invention demands a
great intention—it calls for undeviating
fidelity from the first attempt.
You cannot exceed set standards—
you cannot better your condition or the
condition of your time without making
trial and meeting trials.
Laziness and cowardice are the only
Insuperable obstacles.
All normal men and women are
equipped with the same outfit of po
tential abilities.
Every human chest is filled with a
standard set of tools, but determination
must not be permitted to dull; ambl
Ition must not be allowed to rust: cour
age must be put to use—you cannot
gain an advantage if you do not em
ploy your advantages.
Method and plan must underlie
achievement. Will must guide skill.
Knowledge cannot become power until
it is utilized as a power.
How a Road Made a State
--—
How a Road Made a State. factured salt, the locality was named
From the Deadwood Pioneer-Times. Boon’s Lick.
The most famous highway in the Two years later a settlement of
central west was the Boon’s Lick road. English speaking men and women was
Surveyed in 1815 from St. Charles, 25 made near Boon’s Lick and shortly
miles west of St. Louis, to Old Frank- afterward the town of Old Franklin,
lin. Mo., 150 miles farther west, it 12 miles distant, upon the Missouri
turned immigration toward central river, was founded. Then arose the
Missouri and six years later brought necessity of a highway between Old
Missouri into the union as a state. It Franklin and St. Louis and St. Charles,
was the father of the Santa Fe trail the large cities of the new west, each
which extending west from Old Frank- with several thousand Inhabitants,
lin, brought commerce and immlgra- The Boon's Lick road was the result,
tion to Kansas, Colorado and New It was not much of a road as roads
Mexico. The making of roads means go now. It was not macadamized or
the building of commonwealths. The paved or graveled. Indeed It was llt
Boon’s Lick road is a notable, though tie better In Its early days than a
almost forgotten example. mere ’’trace” or hint of the road’s di
In 1804, two sons of Daniel Boone, rection. The two Boones, with sur
the great pioneer of the west, Daniel veylng parties, ran a line that followed
and Nathan Boone, made salt at salt the ridge or watershed between the
springs found in central Missouri. The Missouri and Mississippi rivers. The ]
Boones and their companions were the smaller streams were forded. On the
only white men In the. territory west large rivers were primitive ferryboats,
of St. Charles. They boiled the spring hollow log canoes locked together,
water In huge iron kettles and the There were no bridges. The sign posts
crude salt which formed the residue were the “blazes or marks” cut In the
they floated In hollow logs down the forest trees along the roadway. The
Missouri river to be sold at the French road machinery consisted of a rifle, an
village of St. Louis. Deer had come to ax and a grubbing hoe. Into a wild
the salt springs to lick the salt. The erness where hostile Indians were on
place In western slung was a "lick” every hand the Boon’s Lick highway
and because the Boones there manu- ran.
Hasty Marriages Among Eskimos
From the 'Wide World Magazine.
In civilization it is said that a wife
does not always add to ber husband's
case or render his life more support
able, but up on Hie Barren-grounds
the worst of wives would be better
than none.
There, among the heathen tribes.
If a man's wife dies—provided he be
not a polygamist, in which case there
is less need for hurry—he often mar
ries again within the week, and even
the Christian Eskimo widowers are
with difficulty persuaded by the Mora
vian missionaries to allow six weeks to
elapse between the death and re
maTidage. Certain it is that on the
very’ day after the six weeks have
lapsed the hunter presents himself
with a new bride, and asks that the
marriage service may be speedily
read.
Nor is the reason for these tilings
far to seek. We say in civilization
that “a woman's work is never done,”
and far more is that true of the help
mate of the savage and the semi
savage, the woman of the Barren
grounds or of the ice-edge. She makes
and breaks camp, cooks, outs up and
carries to camp her husband's kill: she
dresses the skins of deer and seal (a
laborious process as the skin often has
to be chewed to make It soft for sew
ing) : she Is responsible for the fash
ioning of foot-gear and clothes: on a
journey she often paddles the canoe,
and on portage she carries a heavy
load.
In fact. It Is easier to write down
tlie duties not expected of a squaw
than those which by immemorial cus
tom sbe must perform. Indeed, the
Northland is a country calling aloud
for a woman's movement, a crusade of
emancipation; but sucli will never
come, even in a thousand years, for
in the wilderness the provider of food,
Man the Hunter, has reigned, reigns
and. and ever will reign. Having
slain his deer or his bear, he will take
his ease in the best place in the lodge,
deputing all the lesser offices to the
mother of his children. It Is a law,
anil the laws of the Northland do
not change.
Presence of Mind.
From the Washington Star.
"What does your father do when you
ask him questions?" asked one small
boy.
"He generally says. 'I'm busy now
don't bother me,' " replied the other’
"Then when I go out of the room he
looks in the encyclopedia." .
One of the Six Best.
"John, whatever Induced you to Duy
a house In this forsaken region?"
"One of the best men in the busi
ness.”
AN OUTSIDER,
Gwendolyn—She Is not going to
atop at that resort any longer.
Genevieve—What Is the reason, no
men there?
Gwendolyn—Not thRt exactly. There
is one lone man, who has proposed
to all of the girls but her, and she
feels so out of place when they are
holding an experience meeting.
Publicity Law Badly Needed.
Connecticut, District of Columbia,
Kansas, Maine, Maryland, Michigan,
Mississippi, New Jersey, 'New York,
Rhode Island and Vermont, have laws
which provide specifically for the re
porting of tuberculosis and which
make provision for the proper regis
tration of living cases of this disease.
In 14 other states, laws or reg
ulations of the state boards of health
require that tuoeroulosls bo reported
simply as one of a list of infectious
diseases. The following 28 states and
territories have no provisions what
ever for the reporting or registration
of tuberculosis cases:—Arizona, Alas
ka, Arkansas, Colorado, Delaware,
Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Idaho, Illi
nois, Kentucky, Louisiana, Missouri,
Montana, Nevada, New Hampshire,
New Mexico, North Carolina, Ohio,
Oklahoma, Philippine Islands, Porto
Rico, South Carolina, South Dakota,
Texas, Virginia, West Virginia and
Wyoming.
DOCTOR PRESCRIBES
CUTICURA REMEDIES
"I wish to let you know of a couple
of recent cures which I have made
by the use of the Cuticura Remedies.
Last August, Mr. - of this city
came to my office, troubled with a
severe skin eruption. It was dermatitis
in its worst form. It started with a
slight eruption and would affect most
parts of his body, thighs, elbows,
chest, back and abdomen—and would
terminate in little pustules. The Itch
ing and burning was dreadful and he
would almost tear his skin apart, try
ing to get relief. I recommended all
the various treatments I could think
of and he spent about fifteen dollars
on prescriptions, but nothing seemed
to help him.
“In the meantime my wife, who
was continually suffering with a slight
skin trouble and who had been try
ing different prescriptions and meth
ods with my assistance, told me she
was going to get some of the Cuticura
Remedies and give them a fair trial.
Bnt as I did not know much about
Guticura at that time I was doubtful
whether it would help her. Her skin
would thicken, kredk and bleed, es
pecially on the fingers, wrists and
arms. I could do nothing to relieve
her permanently. Wien she first ap
plied the warm baths of Cuticura
Soap and applications of Cuticura
Ointment she saw a decided improve
ment and In a few days she was com
pletely cured.
"I lost no time in recommending
the Cuticura Remedies to Mr. -,
and this was two months ago. I told
him to wash with warm baths of the
Cuticura Soap and to apply the Cuti
curu Ointment generously. Believe
me, from the very first day’s use of
the Cuticura Remedies he was greatly
relieved and today he is completely
cured through their use. I have great
faith in the Cuticura Remedies and
shall always have a good word for
them now that I am convinced of
their wonderful merits.” (Signed) B.
L. Whitehead, M. D., 108 Dartmouth
St., Boston, Mass., July 22, 1910.
An Uniaureled Hero.
Here is a niche in the Hall of Fame
for Seth A. Eaton, a rural mail car
rier from the Middleboro post office,
who, surrounded by woodland fire, his
horse lying on the ground stifled with
smoke, his own hair singed, his hat
burned and one side of his face and
hands blistered, was still mindful of
duty and saved the mail he was car
rying by burying it in the sand, before
he fought through the line of fire to
safety. Not all the heroes tread the
battlefields.—Fall River Herald.
Some Contrast.
“Morn' Sis Judy,’’ called a neigh
bor's cook to our good old mammy,
“I heah dat Skeeter Jim is dun got
him a new wife. I hope she leetl fat
ter*n dat spindlin', no-’count streak-o'
lean!"
"Fatter ’n him?” Mammy replied,
roiling her eyes and clasping her own
fat hands. “Lawsy, chile, day jus lak
a needle an’ a haystack!’’
Progress of Civilisation.
Lady—And did you make your con
gregation give up caniballsm?
Missionary (suppressing a grin) —
Not quite; but after much trouble I
persuaded them to use knifes and
forks.—The Throne.
A bachelor is a man wke thinks it)
wise to view matrimony from a die- !
tance. j
First and Second Choice.
Uncle—Johnny, wouldn't you like to
be an angel?
Johnny—Not as long as there's a
shovv for me to become a baseball
pitcher or a circus clown.
Ungracious. Drops.
Stella—Did they give the bride a
shower?
Bella—Well, all her friends threw
cold water on the bridegroom.
Garfield Tea overcomes constipation,
sick-headache and bilious attacks.
Our idea of a true philosopher is a
man who is able to explain away his
faults to the satisfaction of himself.
--—,
JAMES BRAID SAYS:
No Athlete can do himself justice if his
feet h#rt. Many thousands arc using daily,
abroad and in this country, Alien s Foot
Ease, the antiseptie powder to be shaken
into the shoes. All the prominent Golfers
and Tennis Players at Augusta, Pinehurst
and Palm Deaeh got much satisfaction
from its use this Spring. It gives a rest
fulness and a springy feeling that makes
you forget, you have feet. Allen’s Foot
Jiase is the greatest comfort discovery of
the age and so easy to use. It prevents
soreness, blisters op puffing and gives rest
from tired, tender or swollen feet. Seven
teen years before the public, over 30,000
testimonials. Don’t go on your vacation
without a package of Allen’s Foot-Ease.
Sold everywhere, 25c. Don’t accept any
substitute. Sample sent FREE. Address
Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y.
PleasantRefrestiing
Beneficial, 0
Gentle and Effective,
BdMUi&MLaMill Ifl
CALIFORNIA FIG SYUL
in tfi« Clrcte,
on everu Package of the
DO NOT LEI
SYRUP
UNIVERSAL SATISFACTION
PAST. AND ITS WONDEI
SCRUPULOUS MANUFACTI
INFERIOR PREPARATIONS
COSTING THE DEALER LEf
NotetfeMName
VllVltfiHltlTUSlF«941ilU
PRINTED STRAIGHT ACROSS. NEAR
TOE CIRCLE.NEAR THE TOP OF EVERY
GENUINE REGULAR PRICE SOc per bottle one size
ONLY. FOR SALE BY ALL LEADING DRUGGISTS.
3YRUP OF FIGS AND ELIXIR OF SENNA IS THE MOST PLEASANT, WHOLE.
SOME AND EFFECTIVE REMEDY FDR STOMACH TROUBLES, HEADACHES
AND BILIOUSNESS DUE TO CONSTIPATION. AND TO GET ITS BENEFICIAL
EFFECTS IT IS NECESSARY TO BUY THE ORIGINAL AND ONLY GENUINE.
WHICH IS MANUFACTURED BY THE
California Fig Syrup Co.
Getting Acquainted.
When a new family moves in next
door the old boy and the new boy
climb up on the fence to get acquaint
ed and it i& done as follows:
•'What’s your name?”
“None of your business—what's
yours?”
"None of your business. You are
sassy."
“So are you.”
“Don’t you talk back to me!”
“And don’t you to me!"
“i’m an awful fighter when I’m
mad!”
“And I'm awfuller than you are!"
‘T’ve got a dog.”
“And I’ve got a goat."
And five minutes later they are
good friends.”
Important to Mothers
Examine carefully every bottle of
CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for
infants and children, and see that it
In Use For Over 30 Years.
Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castoria
All There Is to It.
"What constitutes a first-class so
ciety drama?”
"Three acts, b!x gowns, and nine
epigrams.”
Charged.
Willis—He calls himself a human
dynamo.
Gillis—No wonder; everything he
has on is charged.—Judge.
Garfield Tea keeps the bodily machinery
in order; it regulates the digestive organa
and overcomes constipation.
Some girls are afraid to go down
town by themselves for fear a man
may not try to flirt with them.
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children
teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, Sic a bottle.
You can’t reform a man by sug
gesting that he ought to be as good
as you are.
When a laxative is needed, take the al
ways potent Garfield Tea. Composed of
Herbs.
It’s easier to put up a bluff than
It is to put up the stuff.
DAISY FLY KILLER SSfWteS
filet. Neat, dess.
omamryt.il, convex
lent,cheap. Lxatexll
enxaox. Can‘t spill oe
tip over, will aot soil
or injure anything.
Guaranteed eBect
iv- Of all dealer* ot
sect prepaid for 20c,
luitoLD Boacaa
16(1 De Kalb Ave.
BreeUfS, I. Y.
Your Liver
Is Clogged Up
That’, Why You’re Tired
—Hava No Appeti*
CARTER’S LITTLE
LIVER PILLS yz-rr
will put you rig] CARTERS
in a few days. SPITTLE
They do IlVER
their duty - SPILLS.
Cure Coo* akadl
Biliousness, Indigestion and Sick Headach.
SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE.
Genuine must bear Signature
Why Rent a Farm
and be compelled to pay to your landlord most
of your hard-earned profits? Own your own
farm. 8ecure a Free Homestead in
ba. Saskatchewan or
Alberta, or purchase
land in one of theso
districts and bank a
fvolit of $10.00 or
$12.00 mm acrs
•very year.
Land purchased 3
years ago at $10.00 an
acre haa recently
changed hands at
$25.00 an acre. The
crops grown on these
lands warrant the
advance. You can
Become Rieb
by cattle raising,dairying,mixed
farming and grain growing in
the provinces of Manitoba,
Saskatchewan and Alberta.
Free homestead and pre
emption areas, as well as land
held by railway and land com
?antes, will provide homes
or millions. 38
Adaptable soil, healthful
climate, splendid schools
end churches.dood railways.
For settlers' rates, descriptive
literature*'Last Best West.'^how
to reach the country and other par
ticulars, write to Bup'tof Immi
gration. Ottawa. Canada, or to tbs
Canadian Government A genu.
n«. 315 JadaM St, St Fad, Mas.
Drawer i§7, Wjfertm. $ I.
nett, Rasa 4. Bee Building, Oaalu, Nek
1 SIOUX CITY PTG. CO., NO. 24-1911.
If the blood is poor and filled with the
poisons from diseased kidneys or inac
tive liver, the heart is not only starved
but poisoned as well. There are many
conditions due to impure blood—such
as dropsy, fainting spells, nervous debil
ity or the many scrofulous conditions,
. ulcers, “fever sores,” white swellings,
A etc. All can be overcome and cured by
Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery
This supplies pure blood—by aiding digestion, increasing assimilation
and imparting tone t& the whole circulatory system. It’s a heart tonic
and a great deal more, having an alterative action on the liver and
kidneys, it helps to eliminate the poisons from the blood.
To enrich the blood and increase the red blood corpuscles, thereby
feeding the nerves on rich red blood and doing away with nervous irri
tability, take Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery and do not permit
a dishonest dealer to insult your intelligence with the “just as good
kind.” The “Discovery” has 40 years of cures behind it and contains
no alcohol or narcotics. Ingredients plainly printed on wrapper.
Dr. Pierce’s Common Sense Medical Adviser is sent free on receipt of
stemps to pay expense of wrapping and mailing only. Send 31 one-cent
stamps for the French c'.oth-bound book. Address: Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo,N.Y.
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