Valentine Democrat. (Valentine, Neb.) 1900-1930, September 09, 1909, Image 3
. " I , . , . It. . , . , . . , , , . , . . " . . . . . . . .I , . . ' " . . p. . , If " . rl , rle , ' id 4 i-e jr a 10 Ii- lt' $18 $ shj at-1 , ow ire. : ng "nj . " .thd . ; r T * - th ' 4 3 , . , # , , . - CONSTIPATION , : RELIEVED . b&albi H tafSJ . , : . PRICE 25 Cls. ' Mailed postpaid on re ceipt of price ' . .tTou ; can't have a beautiful complex-i Ion If your blood Is impure or if : you Bluffer with Indigestion or any stomach or _ liver ailment Munyon's | Paw-Paw Pills regulate the bowels , correct indigestion , constipa- Uon , biliousness , torpid livers ) [ , jaun- Glce , sallow and dull complexions. They \ , . imrlfy the blood and clear the skin of I , : pimples , sores and most eruptions. I. : . ; ! 'One pill is a gentle laxative ; two ' fcllls a thorough physic. They do not J { gripe ? , they do not weaken. Price 25c. MUNYON'S : REMEDY CO. , I G3rd and Jefferson Sts. , Phila. . Pa. I . Yon Eiid@o . ' People I must give the bowels help. ' Your choice must lie be 4 ' , tween harsh physic and candy ' ' Cascarets. Harshness makes I the bowels callous , so you need , increasing doses. Cascarets do just as much , but in a gentle way. Vest-pocket boz. 10 cents-at dru -storos. 851 , Eac& tablet of the genuine is marked C C C. - - - r - "What Wew York "Wastes. I Now York City wastes officially , 150,000,000 a year-this apart from . the amount lost by thett and grafting , says Franklin Clarkin in an article in Success " Magazine. This equals the losses of the Balti more fire or the first cost of the Erie oanal , or the national expenditures of the Kingdom of Sweden , or those of ! the Dominion of Canada. It is more that Gerat Britain will , require this year to pay its old-age pensions. It is a waste of the energy of every tired straphanger , of the leisure which - better transit facilities would yield the every day worker. . ' " . It is a waste of the wages of the poor. On these < all frauds and ex . : travagances of government finally bear. It is also a melancholy waste of hu man life. The income from these wasted : millions would stamp out not . only tuberculosis , but also typhoid . and diphtheria. a - - Most American cities are equally vr- I misgoverned , yet in the same world , with human nature just the same , there are many cities which adminis . ter so ably that they collect no taxes some which actually pay dividends to their citizens. . - DON'T DESPAIR. , Ren l the Experience of a Minne- . xota ' Womnn and Take Heart. , If your back a hes and you feel sick , languid : , weak and miserable day after ! * Jay - - don't worry. Doan's Kidney \ Pills have cured thousands of women in the same condi- tion. tion.Mrs. Mrs. A. Heiman of , Stillwater , M : inn. , says : "But for Doan's Kidney Pills I would not be living now. They cured me in 1S99 and I've been well since. I used to have such pain in dUy back and once I fainted. The kid- fney secretions were much disordered lfiUld I was so far gone that I was thought to be at death's door. Since Poan's Kidney Pills cured me I feel as if I had been pulled back from the , tomb. " ! Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co. , Buffalo , N. Y. EnrUsh Pauper's Ingenuity. How a pauper obtained wool to knit I Bocks and mittens , which he sold to I enable him to buy tobacco , was de- Bcribed to the West Ham magistrates < recently ; , the London Chronicle says. : . . . ' . iThe , pauper was Thomas Ledgett , aged . ! 49 , an inmate of the Stratford branch Of the Poplar Union , and he was ( charged with damaging a number of ! I blankets , the property of the guard' ( ians. ians.The ' The master of the workhouse found that the wool binding the edges of " . ' blankets was being removed , and that " 4& in five days no fewer than 345 blan. I kets were so damaged. A search fail ed to discover who was taking the , { Wool , but when Ledgett was removed | to the farm colony at Laindon it came , to the knowledge of the master that . he had been seen knitting with pink I fwool. ! Friday the master went to Laindon , and on searching the prison- er's bed he found a bag filled with balls of pink wool , evidently stripped from the blankets , and three socks knitted with pink wool. . Ledgett , who ' . , denied ! that he had stripped 345 blan : . ' ; kets was sentenced to two months' . 't ' . " " j hard labor. . . ' - .1 I : L . . Ioi. . . ,1' f . D , a I I I I I t p /1 I I ; ! . . % . I . ' ; I- i - l " . 75aGuar t1 . - . . . . . . .Ii. _ ' " ; \ ' " ' * ! ' - \ . . . . - ' . . ' I r-P1 ' - t' . I : i I b \ I ri - . 1 Li't 't I ( Cultivation of Corn. At the several experiment stations corn has received more than its share of attention , and many experiments have been made in order to learn how to derive the largest yields and to grow the crop most economically. Opinions : differ , however , as climate , variety and soil are factors governing every crop. The Indiana station found that the best results were obtained by planting seed in May. It has been shown that the greatest average yield of both ears and stocks have been ob tained when the stalks stood about twelve or fourteen inches apart in the rows. Thick planting , however , re duces the size of the ears , and the per- centage of grain , but thick planting has , in dry seasons , produced the heaviest yield of stalks and the high- est yield of ears. So far as depth of cultivation is concerned , the yields , when corn was cultivated one , two and three inches , have been equal. In continuous * ' corn culture heavy appli- cations of fresh horse manure have not been profitable , but the effect of a very heavy application of manure Has been noticed for many years. There does not seem to be much differ- ence in yields due to any particular implement used , while hill and drill plantings of corn have produced the same average yields. The "checking" of corn is still the most popular and profitable mode of growing the corn at the least cost of labor. The results at one station may not correspond with those obtained elsewhere , but where the work 'has ' extended over a number of years the results should be accepted as important , if not conclu- sive. A Yard Scraper. Besides its use in the barnyard , this Is handy for covering potatoes , level- ing rough ground , filling ditches , etc. rt : should be made of 2-inch lumber , and hard wood if possible ; the scraper should be 6 to 8 feet long , and 2 feet high ; its life will be prolonged If . . . . . . HAXDY BABXYARD SCRA'ER. 6iod with a piece of iron of steel , as skown ; moreover , it will do good work without the iron. The evenei must be at least 4 feet from scraper , to allow for load , and to keep same from under the horses feet. A very large barnyard may be cleaned in a short time , and several loads of manure saved. Simply drive the load where wanted , lift scraper up by the handles , leaving load , and repeat the operation. Cooling ; Cream. Different conditions on the farm w1ll govern arrangements for the cool- I ing of cream. Y/here windmills are used , many farms have cheaply con- structed milk-houses in which can be placed a tank or half barrel , through which all water is led from the wind mill to the stock-watering tanks. With the cream cooled and held in these tanks the arrangement is everything required. Where windmills and- milkhouses are not used , a half barrel can be set near the pump and a cheap shade con- structed. The water can be pumped by hand with small expenditure of time and labor. TIle cotfling of the cream will heat the water. Run out the warm water and pump a fresh supply in which the cream can set over night or through the day before being added to the supply can. When another lot of warm cream is to be cooled , the operation cav be repeated. A large box can be set over the barrel to protect the cream from the sun. The farmer's ingenuity may suggest some other protection equally as good. There are a dozen or more arrange- ments , inexpensively and easily made , which can be devised on every farm for the proper care of cream. These remarks suggest only the principle of keeping the cream in good condition. , Growing , Bush Beans. Bush or dwarf bean : are easy to grow and are one of the best and most , popular of garden vegetables. A suc- I cession of them should be planted and be coming on from the very earliest summer till after the first frosts of autumn. "Beans of all kinds are some- what tender and are easily killed by late spring frosts , yet they are easily and cheaply planted and risk should I be taken in planting extra early. If the first crop happens to be caught by frost , it is a very easy matter to plant the same space over again and little will be lost by the trial , as one prep- aration of the soil will , serve for a succession of crops. For bush beans prepare the ground early in a dry condition , working it down to a very fine and even seed bed. Make the surface soil especially fine and loose , since the bean some - times has difficulty in coming up in three or four days. Give the young plants clea" and light surface cultiva- - . . , . . . . ' 'iF . : - . : . . . ' : ' - { - ' ' . " ; , . . _ , , _ , . . , . ' , . " " . . , . ' . . . . ; ' " . / . " ' ' . : . : " . . ' " . _ : , . 'f- , " . ' . . , " - - - . t ' . tlon to conserve soil moisture. A three or four-shoveled horse cultivator may be used , but never in them while the vines are In the least wet or moist , as this will bring on disease. Plant a succession , about three weeks apart , up to the last of August in central lat itudes. Pick the beans clean while they are green regularly and the vines will bear longer. If bea.i3 are allowed to ripen on the vines the vines will soon die. Treating Homo Corns. Dr. A. A. Holcombe , inspector of the United States bureau of animal hus- bandry , says of treating horse corns : "As In all other troubles , the cause rnuflt be discovered If possible and re moved. In a great majority , of cases the shoeing will be at fault. For a sound foot , perfectly formed , a flat shoe with heels less thick than the toe and which rests evenly on the wall proper is the best. In flat feet it Is often necessary to concave the feet as much as possible on the upper surface so that the sole may not be pressed upon. If the heels are very low the heels of the shoe may be made much thicker. ! : If the foot is very broad and the wall light toward the heels a : far shoe , resting upon the walls , may aid to prevent excessive tension upon the soft tissues when the foot receives the weight of the body. A piece of leather placed between the foot and shoe serves largely to destroy concussion1 , and its use is absolutely necessary on some animals to enable them ! work. - Among the preventive " I measures may be mentioned those which serve to main- tain the suppleness of the hoof. The dead horn upon the surface of the sole not only retains moisture for a long time , but protects HOUSE CORNS the living horn be- neath from the effects of evaporation. For this reason the sole should be pared as little as possible. MIIlc : Contamination. There are a hundred and one placet where milk can be contaminated from the time it is drawn from the udder till it reaches the table in the form of sweet milk , cream or butter. First , a great deal of bacteria , impurities and disease germs get into the milk at the barn or lot in which the cows are kept. Second , a great many more of these owe their existence in milk to the attendant and the place in which the milk is kept. The moment the cow shows signs of being ill , or when even a slight eruption is noticeable , a person may contract disease by partak- ing of her milk. Impure water is an- other way in which milk is contami- nated. If the cow is compelled to drink out of a mud hole , filled with disease germs , she cannot help but drink a large number of those germs into her system , some of them being sure to reach her milk. Milking the cow into an open pail when the barn is filled with dust , and from which there hangs an untold number of dirty cobwebs , or milking her in an offens- ively smelling lot , where the filth is ankle deep , or milking a cow whose udder , flanks and legs are covered with dirt and filth-in such cases it is im possible to avoid contamination of the milk. It is believed that more disease germs are given the human family through milk than are given in any other agency ; and we also believe that less attention is paid to the care of milk than to any other food consumed upon the table. When Haying ; Is Done. There's a smile of relief and a spirit of fun Comes over the farmer when haying ' " is done ; With his haylofts all swelling with sweet-scented hay ; His smile is as cheery as sunshine in May. The summer's half over , and out In the field He sees the approach of a bountiful yield ; As tall as his hat is the golden-topped corn , Which waves Its long arms in the breeze of the morn , As fair and as fragrant as gardens . old Are his fields with their stubble as yellow as gold. With his barn full of hay and his bed- ding stacked high , A smile on his face and a gleam . . .in his eye ; The cattle provided with winter re- past , While apples and pumpkins are ripen- ing fast. There's a smile of : relief and a spirit of fun Comes over the farmer when haying is done ; The turnips are growing , the melons are prime , The harvest approaching , his boun- teous time. Ah ! Lucky the farmer who wanders afield . And sees the approach of a beautiful ' yield ! -Boston Herald. Electric Agriculture. I William Low of Scotland will ex periment on a large scale with the application of electricity to agrIcul- ture. About twenty-three acres , di vided in a number of fields , will be utilized for this purpose , each field including a nonelectrified or controlled plot for the purpose of comparison. A network of wires will be run over the fields at a height of about 16 feet" from the ground. The poles will be put 200 feet apart one way and 300 feet another way. By means of trans- formers the voltage for the network will bo raised to 100,000. . ' . . > . , . , . , ' " ; - ! . . . ' . " < -r ' " L. " ; : , . 'jt \1 . . . ' < - , . : . . ' f : ; ' ' < - " -j . ' . . . ' . - - ; ' ' . . _ ' , - - ' . . . . - : r" . , , " ' . " " " 4 , , . , ' . - ; - . ' . . . " - , - ' , - , , Value Painted On. Well painted is value added whethei . ! the house be built for one thousand i dollars or ten thousand. Well painted means higher selling value , and higher occupying value-for there's an addI- tional pleasure in living in the house that is well dressed. National Lead Company 'have made It possible for every 'building owner to , be absolutely sure of pure white lead paint before applying. They do this by putting upon every package of their white lead their Dutch Boy Painter Trademark. That trademark Is a com- plete guarantee. National Lead Company assist in making the right use of the right paint ) bj sending free upon request to all who ask for it , their "Houseowners' Paint- ing Outfit No. 49. " This outfit includes a book of color schemes for either ex terior or interior painting , a book of specifications and an instrument for detecting adulteration in paint ma- terials. Address National Lead Com pany , 1902 Trinity Building , New Yort City , and the outfit will be promptlj sent to you. The use of wind motors as genera- tors of electric power is greatly on the increase in Denmark. BABY : HOBBIBLY BURNED : By Boiling Grease : - SUln All Came Oft One Sltle of Pace and Head Thought Her Disfigured for Life - Used Cutlcura - 3Vo Scar Left. "My babyx was sitting beside the fender and we were preparing the ' full of breakfast when the frying-pan boiling grease was upset and it went and head. all over one side of her face Some one wiped'the scald with a tow- el , pulling the entire skin off. We took her to a doctor. He tended her a week nnd gave me some stuff to put on. But it all festered and I thought the baby was disfigured for life. I used about three boxes of Cuticura Ointment and it was wonderful how it healed. In about five weeks it vas better and there wasn't a mark to tell where the scald had been. Her skin is just like velvet. Mrs. Hare , 1 , Henry St. , South Shields , Durham , Eng. , March 22 , 1908. " Potter Drug & Chem. Corp. , Sole Props. of Cuticura Remedies , Boston. In Paris there are thirty-two miles of underground railways , which carry 35,000 passengers a day. Twenty-five miles more road are under considera- tion. n.CASTORIA Sto Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the # Signature of . . 444 English Diillcult to Pronounce. , The difficulty of English for stran gers does not lie in its orthography , but in its pronunciation. Abroad , peo pIe will constantly say that they can read and write English readily while unable to utter a word or to under- stand a word of the spoken language ; as , of course , vice versa , a great many English and Americans can read and write French long before they can understand , or make themselves un derstood ; the other languages are just as difficult for them to pronounce as English is for others. The only difference is that English stands alone with its system or lack of system , of pronunciation. When a Frenchman knows how to write German , he is at the same time able to speak the lan guage , if not beautifully , at least so as to be understood ; the same holds for a German speaking French. - Prof. Albert Schinz , in the North American Rev ies. ' Ask Your Druggist For Allen's Foot-Ease. "I tried ALLEN'S FOOT-EASE recent- ly , and have just bought another supply. It has cured my corns , and the hot , burn- Jng- and itching sensation in my feet which was almost unbearable , and I would not be without it now. - Mrs. W. J. Walker , Camden , N. J. " Sold by all Druggists. 25c. Prussia is introducing special cars ! fo dog travelers. WortU Its Welsrht In Gold. It's PETTIT'S EYE SALVE , strength ens eyes of the old. tonic for eye strain , weak and watery eyes. All druggists or Howard Bros. , Buffalo , N. Y. Not more than 3,000 stars are visible to the naked eye. IN THE SUMMER SEASON children overindulge eating fruit -with ! stomach pains an a consequence : mothers should hare on band Pain- killer ( Perry Davis' ! ) . 2e. : ! 3c. : and 50c. bottles. Wltli n IVevF Tvrist. ! "Give me the core o' yer apple. " "There ain't goin' to be no core. " Thus far the story is familiar. But It is incomplete. The rest of the con- versation was as follows : "Why ain't there goin' to Le no core ? " " 'Cause this is one o' them Burbank seedless apples. " It is wrong to mislead the public by publishing a garbled version of an in- cident. Choose Your "Words. ! A lady who was very plain-looking called on a friend. This friend's little girl came into the room and her mother introduced her. "But , mamma , isn't she awfully homely , " said the "young hopeful. " "Why , Laura , you mustn't say such things ; it isn't polite. " "I meant it only as a joke. " "But , dear , how much more of a joke it would have been if. you had said 'how pretty she Is. " -Success Magazine. ; ak1nlr Americans Outside .the.blg , public ' school 147 , m Henry and Gouverneur streets tb other day , several thousand alien mothers stormed the gates and scolded the police and shrieked for their chil- dren. It was an hour of hysteria. Inside the building the children were marshaled to their classrooms , where the habit of order asserted it- self. Sixty boys , constituting the po lice force of No. 147 , took the situa tion in hand , some of them guarding the yard from intrusion , while others sallied through the . gates to reassure the hysterical women. Within ten minutes the disorder was over. Event- ually such mothers as insisted i after the others had gone away were taken to various rooms to see their children at work. Nowhere else in the United States is an event possible just like this at No. 147. The shrieking mothers out- side the school , the quiet children in the classrooms , the steady-voiced moni- tors at their appointed work of restor- ing peace and order-these went in their several ways to form the most striking spectacle possible in these days of a new American in the mak- ing. - New York World. I I OPENING OF THE STANDING ROCK AND CHEYENNE RIVER INDIAN RESERVATIONS. The opening of the Standing Rock and Cheyenne River Indian Reserva- tions in South Dakota and North Da kota in October will give thousands of people 160 acres of fertile farming lands for a small sum per acre. Aberdeen , South Dakota , on the CHICAGO , MILWAUKEE & ST. PAUL RAILWAY , and Mobridge and Lemmon , South Dakota , on the CHICAGO , : MIL- WAUKEE & PUGET SOUND RAILWAY , are points of registration. You can regis ter any day from Oct. 4 to 23. The drawing will take place at Aberdeen on October 26. This land opening will also give you a splendid opportunity to see the coun- try via the new line to the Pacific Coast. Descriptive folder free. F. A. MILLER , General Passenger Agent Chicago , Mil waukee and St. Paul Railway , Chi- cago. Only 35 per cent of Spain's 20,000,000 population are able to road and write. Mrs. : WInslo v's Soothing Syrup for children teething , softens the gums , re- duces inflammation , allays pain , cures wkind collie. 25c a bottle. Bad Enotisrli Now. Real Estate Agent ( rattling off de - scription of house to Mrs. Fradley , a prospective tenant-Here's the kitch- en-splendid room-all modern conve niences - hardwood floor- Mrs. Fradley ( interrupting-O , it won't do at all. My present kitchen has a softwood floor , and the break- age of dishes , even on that , is some- thing frightful. - "Rrnnklvn Life. r - , MER ' " . DOCTORS FAILE0 Lydia 13. Pinkliam's egeta ble Compound Cured fieri J Willimantic , Conn. - "Por five years I suffered untold agony from femaI troubles , causing backache , irregularii ties , dizziness and nervous prostrai tion. It was impossible for me td & . . - walk upstair . without stopping on the way. j . ---i tried three differ } : ent doctors and i : ? each told me som * thing different. I _ _ . . received no benefit ! . from any of thern : _ _ _ _ _ _ 4 ; " : _ _ _ _ but seemed to suf4 . . .1.1 ; : . . ; . , , _ _ _ for more. . Thelasi Ioq.t I : " 4 " ' ; - : < N doctor said notty ) . : f t , r : ? U , . 4. , , . ' ing would restord < ' " : - ; -tv health. I . : . myhealtb.Ibega taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound to see what it would doj and I : am restored to my natura"f health. " - Mrs. ETTA DONOV.AN , Box Willimantic , Conn. The success of Lydia E. Pinkham' Vegetable Compound , made from roota and herbs , is unparalleled. It may be used with perfect confidence by womeq who suffer from displacements , inflam mation , ulceration , fibroid tumors , 1 ± regularities , periodic pains , ba kach fj bearing-down feeling , flatulency , indfi gestion , dizziness , or nervous prostnU tion. J f For thirty years Lydia E. Pinkhara' ; Vegetable Compound has been th ( standard remedy for female ills , an suffering women owe it to themselyei to at least give this medicine a triali Proof is abundant that it has cured thousands of others , and why should it not cure you ? - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - This Trade-mark \4 \ ( Eliminates All Uncertainty in the purchase of paint materials. ) ; r:4 It is an absolute guarantee of pur . ity and quality. For your own protection , see that it is on the side of every keg of white lead you buy. . HATIONAL LEAD COMPANY 1902 Trinity Building ! , We * York - . . , . . ftlENTION TillS PAPER WHXK warn" FO.ADnanaaas. . - - - S. C. N. U. - Wo. 37 - 1909. - L No Man is Stronger ' Than His Stomach A strong man is strong all over. No man can be strong who is suffering from weak stomach with its consequent indigestion , or from some other disease of the stomach and its associated organs , which im pairs digestion and nutrition. For when the stomach is weak or diseased there is a loss of the nutrition ( contained in food , which is the source of all physical strength. /When a man "doesn't feel just right , " when he doesn't sleep well , has an uncomfortable feeling in the stomach after eating , is languid , nervous , irritable and despond- ent , he is losing the nutrition needed to make strength. Such a man should use Dr. JPierce's Golden Medical Discovery. It cures diseases of the stomach and other organs of digestion and nutrition. It enriches : the blood , invigorates the liver , strengthens the kidneys , nourishes the nerves , and so GIVES HEALTH 21KD STRENGTH TO THE WHOLE BODY. You can't afford to accept a secret nostrum as a substitute zor this non- alcoholic medicine OP KNOWN COMPOSITION , not even though the urgent dealer may thereby make a little bigger profit. Ingredients printed on wrapper. . I Fnrr- TA Vf&I I MV QIQT5FD Free to 1 Yon and Every Sister Sil- , FREE IU YOU - Ml 5SolLlt fering iram Woman's Ailments. ' I am a woman. . . I know woman's sufferings. < ; I have found the cure. c I will mail free of any charze , my home treat. , * , .SS ment with full Instructions to any sufferer from 4' / ; \ woman's ailments. I want to tell all women about , ) \ this cure - you , my reader , for yourself , your daughter ' ' ' , : : ; ' . . . : . ; . , ; . ; . : . . . . \ your mother or your sister. I want to tell you ho , jJ : - . . ' " ? -W. : ; ; \ to cure yourselves at home without the help of a i . 7. ' i ; ; 1. : iML " : : ! ff = < ' \ doctor. Men cannot understand women's suffe1" nn. /'Z'y , j7.f.:9. ; ; : " * : \ What we women know from experience we knofl { , : ; ; " 6. ' . " ' . 'J : ' * : iii : ' . , , , .J . , - ; . . : . . . ' . better than any doctor. I know that my home treat. , ' : i@ : . . , . : : ' , : : : 1r5.c : ; f . . ' :1 : .mi.i : ment is a safe and sure cure for Leucorrhoea me ) t1t ; ' ; : : . ; . : , , \P ; : : : : tf.tNM1l : , . . J Whitish Discharges. Ulceration. Displacement { ' : % ; 4kf.WX' : ; . " * ? ' . . I or Falling of the Womb. Prof use , Scanty or Pain. . ' , c ; ; ; , : . . , , ; , : . . . . . ' , _ . , u. . , ' , , . . : : . . : . . . > > : ' j : < ' ' : ' ; : - ' r.9 : ' ; : " : ' , : , , . , " , : : ' . w : , " : " : : : : < < : ' j ful Periods , Uterine I or Ovarian Tumors cat . : z : . . . . ) ? : ; L : . . . . : ? :3 : : ; : : : Ar : htj Growths ; also pains In the head back ana : , + W . . / " . . > . , . . : : . . : . . . . : : . . : : . . : . : . . : . : . : . - . . ; . . . ' ' < : . : ' . ; , ; . : . . : ; . . : . . ' : . : . : . : tbowels. . . . : . . , , ; , bearing down feelings , nervousness ; T. . , : : % A. : . , : Jt . ? : ; : : : . ; : : ; : ' ( : ; . . . : f t ) ; _ t.- : : : : : . : , ; creeping feeling up the spine melancholy _ , de + I . : : ilb : . . . . % : : . . : { : Ku . . . : : , -d } : \ . ; : : sire to cry , hot flashes , weariness kidney and : t\ , , : , : : : : ? 44y : - J . . i7 , . . : ; ; . " bladder troubles , where caused by weaknesses . ' : ,0 : . : : ' : ' : : : : : ' ; ' ; : Jf:1 f : : : : ' . : : ( : : . , " peculiar to our sex. ' : : : : : : N:1UWi1T : : : : : . ; : : . ' : ; . . . / . . . , . : . , : I want to send you a complete ten days'treafe ' : : : : . : : ; : : . : : : : : : ' : . ( : : : ; : ' " . . . . : ' ment entirely free to prove to you that you can cnra ' ' : : ' ' : . : < " : : : " yourself at home. easily , quickly and surely. Re-i . member , that it will cost you nothing to rive the treatment a complete triai ; and if you should wish to continue. it will cost you only about 12 cents . week , or less than 2 cents a day. It will not interfere with 3 our work or occupation. Just send ITH ? your name and address tell me how you suffer if you wish and I will send you the treatment for you case entirely free in plain wrapper. by return mail. I will also send you. tree of cost. ntf book-"WOMAN'S OWN MEDICAL ADVISER" with explanatory illustrations ! showing why women suffer and how they can easily cure themselves at home. Every woman should have it , and leanQ to think for her clf. Then when the doctor says-"You must have an operation. " you can decide for yourself. Thousands of women havecured themselves with my home remedy. Itcures all , Old or young. To Mothers of Daughters I will explain a simple home treatment which speedily and effectually cures Leucorrhoea Green Sickness and Painf or Irregular Menstruation in YOnnL Ladies. Plumpness and health always results from its use. Wherever you live , I can refer you to ladies of your own lcxllitywho know and will gladly tell :1.D7 sufferer that this Nome Treatment really Cures all women's diseases , and makes women well stronjr. plump and robust. Just Send me your address , and the free ttn days' treatment is Your . also the book. Write today. as you may not see this offer aga : in. Address - MRS. M. SUMMERS. Box I. . . . Notre Dame , Ind. , V. S. "X. K.U _ _ -U , -l , For ' 1\1 T M J'O ; Pink Eye. Epizoofh . Shipp1a . ) fa/1 I IIJ1" n- . . Fever and Cotarrhal Fever" \ . , . . Sury cure and positive preventive ! , no matter how horses at any age arft ) & mfccted or "exposed. " Liquid , pi\en cn u . e tonsiue , acts on the Blood and Glands ; expels the poisonous germs from the body. . Cures Distemper in- ; . D . g di Dogs and Sheep and Cholera in Poultry. Largest selling ! live stock remedy ! ; ; t . 1 Cures La Grippe among heman beings and is a fire Kidney remedv. 50c an rs ; ; v' , S a bottle.15 aml0 n dozen. Cut his out. Keep it. Show to your dru4 . ' ' gIst"ho WIll for . " Causes and . . gIst : get It you. Free Booklet , "Distemper , Cures. ls , SpecIal agents wanted. Spohn Medical Co. ; or. . Goshcn , Ind. , U. S. I. - . . . OILTHAT ' " - - - - - - - PUTN AM FADELESS DYES . 2 * s ioods brillhler aad losler colors Ibaa any oUler dye. ODe 1 Oc packaGe colQrs all libers. tiler dye II I colli wiler ! teller IbillllY GUier dye. Yeu CIII dy . &Sf gal1lcut wiUIOaJ ripplDil Im. Writ.c . Ilr flu IIoDkJct-l.w" DC , CIaci ndMlx Cel rs. MOJV'ROE DRVG co" . Quincy.111fnfli4t. , , - . \ - - /