Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, January 21, 1913, Page 7, Image 7

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    v
(
Bringing Up
i
Around the
By WINIFRED 11LACK
There thoy are out In the open, tho
youngsters.
It Is Saturday, blessed one o the hur
rying seven, Saturday; no school today,
no lessons' no regular task, no smart
little frocks to
keep clean, no stlfC
.pi la I- to wear
iUHt tho right way.
Saturday. and
winter time, with
stores of nuts and
Jiplcs and popcorn,
and the scurrying
hrown leaves, and,
bj;et of nil. tho
honflrv.
They are build
ln It now. Look
out. little brother,
don't Ret too close
to that heap of
erlsn leaves. They
whispered to you nil last summer, don't
you remember, as Ions as you stayed at
Homo and listened, and when you had
gone they peered Into the window of
your room and waved their brown hands
rit you when you were perhaps asleep
and" could not waken.
.-The friendly leaves of the old oak, what
cheery thlngB they were all summer, al
vtiy'fr danolng and slnglns and sosslplng
kindly7 among themselves! How thoy
loved the rain and delighted in the sun
shlno; what pals they were with tho
wind, and how they clapped their hands
when they heird him coming through
tho treetons further toward the green
woods!
What lovely wreaths they made for tho
May party, and what a deep, cool shado
thv east for you and little sister to play
In Dear leaves, so brown now and
withered. Don't you hate to see them
Ko! vou like the smoke, you little
I'agans! Well, so then do I. What Is it
In most of us that loves the sharp tang
nt burning wAod out of doors. It make3
mo homesick every time I sniff It in rhe
"see how blue It Is, and how It curls and
twists, like some careless, vagabond
shaking all his' vagrant finery In a fan
tastic dunce llluc. blue ns the first
loIets that smile to us In tho early
spring from deep, woody places, shadowy
as the old memories stiired by the frag
lanco of a ?pray of apple blossom.
What's that she Is bringing to the fire,
the little girl with all her bright hair
flying In the sunlight? Potatoes! I might
have known, and bacon, too, a feast for
the holiday. Dear me. how 1 wish I could
Join It. too. don't you?
There, she liiis a pan. What a battered
old bit of Iron, found In who dares think
what iccess of the dark cellar! I wonder
If she ever thought of washing it first'
Now she puts the potatoes in the flrr.
-Not in the fire, little girl: In the
ashes, they will be burned If you put
them In the flame. And the bacon.
Don't have It In the flame either or it
will taste of smoke.
"What?" tho wind blows so It Is hard
YouNg
MOTHE
No young woman, In the joy of
coming motherhood, should neglect
to prepare her system for tho physi
cal ordeal she is to undergo. The
health of both herself and the coming
child depends largely upon the care
sho bestows upon herself during the
waiting months. Mother's Friend
propares the expectant mother's sys
tem for the coming erent. and its use
makes her comfortable during all the
term. It works with and for nature,
and by gradually expanding all tis
sues, muscles and tendons, Involved,
and -keeping the breasts in good con
dition, brings the woman to the crisis
in splendid physical condition. Tha
baby, too, Is more apt to be perfect and
strong where tho mother has thus
prepared herself for naturo' supreme
function. No better advice could bJ
given a young expectant mother than
that she use Mother's Friend; it is
medicine that has proven its value
In thousands of
;at?s. Mother's
Friend is sold at
drug stores.
Vrlte for free
OTHER'S
RIEND
took for expect
ant mothers which contains much
valuable information, and many sug
gestions of a helpful nature.
r.icij) REGULATOR CO.. Atui- C ,
' ( : ' " f v' " , , y coMt on ovrr ) I " ) . V
PLrASK 1 PUP-PAH.' . po-ilTOPAND V ' ' rtu .TTri V A JVV MiOMfBTIht v-ttLltLRt r" v
J1 V foLZi THERE A,MT 4 I STRUCK -T J V V - V J I SUltl
3 ?mPS y"J
I
; i
mm
MO
Father
Bonfire
j
to hear-iWhat's that? Oh, well, yes. If
you really want me. I'll come. No, 1
won't wait to change my dress, I'm afraid
somo of tho Joy will melt while fin wait
ing." Here we are In the open. How stuffv
It was In that room all along, and I didn't
even notice It until now; and what a
sweet wild wind! Where does It come
from I wonder?
Over there In the purple hills? No.
there s a tang about It that says It ennio
down straight from the mountains Inst
night and left all the llt,tle fir trees
holding up their green petticoats to catch
tho first fall of snow.
Are the brown streams iced yet. oh,
wind" Vou that knows so much, you that
see and sen and hear and hear and never,
never tell? Ib the deep valley carpctd
In white snow, and do the magpies cry
each to the other from the tall trees like
robber barons planning some new out
rage while the peaceful citizens are all
nway In the warm south?
Did vou piss tho fjreat city. -Wind,
and did you hurry to got away from It?
How Is the great blue lake up there
whoro vou came from, n still sheet of
azure, rs It was when last 1 looked upon
It, or does It cry and moan for the slim
mer that Is gone and toss Its white arms
In agony of remembrance? '
Tell me. Wind, where Is your little hoy,
the one you were teaching to whistle last
winter? I used to hear him practising
in the clilmnoy. What, crown and teach
ing his own to whlstlo now! Well, well,
how time does hurry!
What, the bacon done? Well, y-e-s, von
might call It so. You don't care for It
crisp, do you, IlttloWrl? Not today any
how. There's a good stick for a fork
tho very thing. Ouch! how hot the fire Is
anyhow: but. dear me, how good It is.
This bacon of yours, little boy, tastes of
smoke and outdoors and of all tho gay
winds that ever sang rollicking down a
mountain pass.
And the potatoes; not very done, to be
sure. Tou'd discharge a cook who brought
them to the table like that. But what a
flavor to them!
Clo away, puppy, you are always so
greedy. Who Invited you to this feast?
Why don't you pattern your manners
after tho old dog's there? See how dig
nified he Is. Just raises a tentative .nye
brow In the direction of the bacon, but
no more, on the honor and pride of a
gentleman and a good watchdog, not a
trifle more.
Hair flying, cheeks scorched, hands
blnck. light voices abrlrn w th lnughter.
Oh, Wind! tell me, have you seen a mer
rier sight in all your travel! ?
Saturday, sunkhlne, a wind and a bog
fire, who wouldn't be gay with such
company as this?
Some thnc, little boy. you will sit at
groat tables nnd feast on the best of the
land. Some time, little girl, you may
walk in silk uttlro and be tho guest of
tho rich and great: but never will any
thing tasto to you so good as that bacon
and this scorched, half-done potato.
A heart!- thank you for the Imitation
to your bonfire party. The old world
seems a gay place to me now. and not all
the sad-eyed lamenters alive shall sad
den It to me again while I remember the
blue smoke and the winding wreaths of
the bonfire, there In the windy open with
young hearts and gay for company!
Advice to Lovelorn.
By HEATRICI3 FAIRFAX.
H Mut (Set Over It.
Dear Miss Fairfax: I am a young gill,
15 years of age. and about six months ago
met a young man of -JS. 1 never went with
him. as my parents objected to him lx
cause he was then out of work, nnd even
when he did work could not make a liv
ing. Ho never told me that h loved me,
but only vaguely hinted at It. He told
my friend that he was getting desperate
and how much ho loved me. She told him
them was no use of bothering with me. as
1 did not love him because of his habits.
Now my parents say thut I may go with
him, but he already told his friend that
he meant to inako me love him to such
an extent that I would not he ablo to do
without him and then he would let me
go and break my heart, as ho has already
done to other girls. I now love him very
much. A CONSTANT HEADKIt.
You have given your love to a man who
16 not entitled to respect. If what your
lr end says Is tiut-
Ilave nothing to do with him. Don't let
him have a chance to break your heart,
or cue ou a moment's pant
elthrr U he Man.
Deai Miss Fairfax: I am a young girl
of 18 and In love with a man of 40. I
have no parents and am anxious to get
married. There Is also a young man of
iZ vho 's very mvoh In love with me. I
tl ink I couid love him If the other man
was not aroui-d. Which would yon ad
le me to tnarrvT WORRIED.
Vou ar In love with love; not In love
nlth an j man. If you loved either of
thee men well enoush to mam' him.
there would be no room for thoughts of
tl r other in our head Suppose you
wait till you are old enough to know
THE REE:
Girls, Be Very
Don't Affect Vampire
By (2ABV DKSLYH.
fieeeh, Italian and Spnnl'h women nre,
generally rupposed to une cosmetics nnd
to make up for the street more than tho
Amorloan woman does.
Frankly, I do not think this Is truo.
While the European woman does use
both powder and paint, the young girls
ufe much freer from this uffeetntlon tlmn
girls of a corresponding ago over here.
You seldom see even powder on the
face of a young girl nhroad. whllo here
I have seen girls of good family, care
fully chaperoned and well educated, who
have everything that money can bur
them, nppcnrlng In public with almost as
much paint and powder ns any actress
uses on the stage.
I have tried to find a reason for this,
and think that I have discovered It. Tho
young American girl has too much pocket
money. Her foreign sister Is glad to
have 25 cents a week to spend foolishly,
while the girl over here thinks nothing
of wnstlng several dollars every week on
toilet preparations, candy or flowers for
her own adornment.
Abroad a young girl seldom gets hold
of a well filled purse which sho can
spend according to her own sweet will
until she marries. It is after marriage
only that she Investigate? the rouge
pot and the beautifying possibilities of
the powder puff. Hefore marriage sho
hasn't the money to buy them with. Of
course. I'm not talking now about pro
fessional people, for powder and paint be
long to the actress' trade and are an
necessary to her as the footlights are.
the lights having made the strong paint
necessary.
I nm often appalled at the way the
young American girls make up on the
street. Women past 50 would hesitate
to use so much cosmetic on their faces,
not only because It Is so had for the
skin, but beenuse it makes the face look
so old. But then women of 30 are wiser
than girls of IS, who revel In whitewash
and the reddest of carmine cheeks.
A little while ago some young girls
waited for me at the stage door after
the. matinee. I was delayed a few mo
ments by an accident to my car, and so
had a chance to talk to them. They
were all very young nnd eacli one had
evidently Just used her powder puff over
her little face, leaving thick traces behind.
"Why do you girls spoil your com
plexions with powder nnd rouge when
you don't have to?" I asked them,
frankly.
"Oh, made moUcllc. It makes us look so
much more Interesting," one of the little
girls piped up. "AnyBody enn have Just
a regular complexion."
A regulur complexion; that Is dis
dained! The pretty, healthy skin that nature
gave them Is not enough. I am sure
what tlicso girls would really like to se
semble Is the "vampire" type. The "vam
pire" type, of face Is the last word In
artificiality, nnd It Is resorted to gener-
rr
By RKATRICK FAIRFAX.
"As a rule, women are more t-i be
trusted In affairs of tho heart than men."
Selected.
wha.. r, ,un full in love he hakn't any I
more sense than u'boy In a candy shop.
The letters I receive from the men would
prove this contention If proof outside of
whnt one sees In real life ever any were j
needed.
A man fall lu love with the very wrong
kind of woman so many, many times,
that It Is nothing short or a miracle that
there aro not mote divorces. Ho looks
nt the wealing quality of the cover when
ho goes to buy an umbrella. In his love
i boosing he looks only at tha beauty of
the handle.
One who signs himself "Troubled,"
writes that lie is good looking. Ko many
men write this of themselves and think
It is true! He ys that he has always j X
vvvn popular wuu tuti itiiiirp; iimi iih
doesn't try to make a hit with them, but
they Just take to him naturally.
The poor things see his charms and suc
cumb. They can't help It, and neither
cun he.
lie went on his vacation and met a
woman whom he desorlbea by those, very
objectionable abjectlves "stunning" and
"swell!" questionable because thoy so
often denote two empty heads, one on
the thnuider of the one who utters thorn,
nnd one on the shoulders of the one they
dotes Ibe.
Hlie was Hiiguged. but wlieu khe saw
him she promptly broke the engagement
Hhe Writes aim on "swell" writing jmper
wi'lch h' r former lo- er gave her. gave
1 tm a seal urg which was the- gift t
OMAHA. TUESDAY. JANUARY 21. 11)13.
Careful About Your Walk and Carriage
Type; It is Hideous, Says Gaby Deslys
"IV YOU WANT TO I.OOK YOLNOKU
Dl'JIl, 13XCICFT AT NIOHT."
ally by a woman who has paused the
uncertain age and can no longer attract,
either by youth or charm, so that she
has to call nttuntlon to herself by her
startling and uncanny face.
The vampire face started on the stage,
of course, in plays where the principal
female character was as nearly like n
venomous serpent as a stage character
can he. The actresses who play these
parts affected snnkellko gowns, gray or
ashy faces with red lips and very dark
eyebrows over darkened eyelids.
The vnmplre makeup, as It Is seen In
society and sometimes on the street, con
sists In covering the face with a gray
powder instead of h whlto or pink faco
powder; the eyelids aro tinted n sort of
brown, the eyebrows are painted very
straight and dark and almost meet over
the bridge of, the nose. The Hps are
made very red and the entire effect is
as growsome as possible
I am Blad to say that blondes are
never chosen to play vampire parts, and,
unless 1 went completely out of my mind,
I can't think of myself effecting this
makeup even at one of your Hallowe'en
Senselessness of
her former lover, and gave him a photo
graph of herself, which her former lover
paid for.
All this she regards as a joke on lver
No. One and proof of hor surrender to
the charms of the second man.
"Troubled" suh he loves her; Hint It
was love at fltst sight. He add, how-
ever, that tnero is a gin waiuu iur im
"wno is not mine ru nicn.
Hhe had
been waiting till he could command a
fcalary sufficiently large to wmrant their
marrying, hut now that he has a salnry
he feels that tho girl who Is "stunning
and Kwell" Is better suited to him.
He wants to know what he ahull do.
Musings of a Sport
Ufe muy be a warfare, but the oio
band keeps n-playlng.
The big ones always pass up that game
called "follow my leader."
Not so very long before the blossoms
will bo here ugalu.
Frof the make-good point of view we're
all tlcket-of-loave men.
Frequently we're Inclined to believe ttiat
a fellow Is doing the best he cun until
he says so.
Kven when the old game wus going the
hardest again! us we always felt that
we. hud a chance until w bgan to feel
&oir) tor ourselves.
The tastuw.iv who bellrx s the ihlf l.ep
roop lie t'lingx to is nil unslnkablo bout
! the one who generally Is picked up, -New
York Win la.
Drawn for
THAN YOU
Am:, don't upe row-
ghost parties, for to mu It Is the lust
word In bad taste and ugliness, and n
woman before everything should always
he. ns pretty as she can be.
It Is undoubtedly true that makeup nt
any Kind, even the simplest sort of pow
der, gives the youthful face a hard ox
piesHlon. The sltln Is not Intended to be
entirely dried out and covered with a
white substance. A beautiful skin should
bo like that of u child, which glistens
under the soft, fine down. This dellcato
covering of hair or down Is the skin's
protection; powder coarsens nnd ruins it
and rouge or cosmetics of nny kind
make tho thicker hairs on tho face visi
ble nnd strengthens their growth.
If you want to look younger thun you
are. don't uso powder except at night,
and by strong electrlo light. Hven then
nso It. sparingly and be suru that you
get the powder of tho tight color for
your skin, tho pure wnito snouin never
be used at all except for theatrical put
pones, for almost all complexions have
some yellow In them, and the best kind
of powder Is a careful blooding of white,
pink and yellow.
1,
Men
Marry tho second girl, ot course! I
wouldn't want him to marry the first
girl and bring nny more sorrow Into her
life. I want him to take his conceit and
that beauty which no woman can resist
and lay them at tho feet of the second
love.
She wns outrun to her lover because ot
him. Rlio was untrue to herself In giving
him gifts the former lover had glvon her.
She will bo untrue to this second lover.
And Hint Is what he needs!
It will be good for his houI h Huhnllon
to give his love Into the keeping of u
woman who will walk all over It. Ho
I needs a little humiliation: ho must be
I made to suffer the pain he has Inflicted.
He Is too sure of his charms. Ho Js
Sv ( smothered in his self-satlsfaetlan. A
' i good woman could never apply the rem
jedy ho needs. Hhe would give tars: what
I he needs is scorn.
; He says the girl who has been waiting
for him all these years has been ecoii-
j omlcal. and a grnt h.ilp to him In saving
money. She bus always refused 1 1 let
him take her In a tuxlcab, preferring to
walk or ride In a street car. Sho has
steadily refused to accept any gifts from
him that are costly, and seems to have
been an Idea) little sweethoaert to have.
8ho Is too good for you, Mr. Troubled!
You would have to he born again to de
serve her, and I urn afraid you can never
he that, for the self-satisfied man has no
desire to be un-madf and made nil over
mruln.
For your hnpplii 1 would urge you
to return to your first love. Ilut I am
not sure Is wculd be for li- i happiness,
and It Is with tier happiness l am most
concerned-
The Bee by George McManus
The Snail is a
Has a Family Tree Fifty Million Years Old Its Ancestors
Have Stalked Majestically Down the Eons from the
Silurian Era, Grossing-
lly (tARRKTT I. SHRVISS.
1 read tho tlier da i statement Hint
n. snail can safely walk on the edgn of
.a raxur Tim statement mn) be true, yet
' 1 think I should rather be n riy thun a
I hiiuII In auili a nit -
i nation Uu-.. how-
ever that mav be
there ale fen aul
I mills that pri.Mi.iit
I mam po'nts of In
I tore l than n null
In the fl-ut place,
liu Is, lij tlinccrt.
an nilstocut with
a family t'co at
least H0O0.OC0 years
long. Ah sotnii old
families In Klixliiml
boast that they
"came In with the
Conipirror. ' meaning that their ances
tors may havo held tho stirrup for Will
iam of Normnndy when he set out to In
vadn KiiKland. so the snsll, with his
lnluse on his back ami hln eyes on the
ends of his lunni, iiilglit hoait that Ho
came In with the nnstornpnda. meaning , furnished with retinal cells to recelvn
tho "belly-footi-d" tribe of mnlliisks. who! the lUht. with a vitreous substnnco that
began to spread over the enith In that tesembles n lens and with a cornea, oi
measureless expanse of prehistoric time ' tiunspaient eye-cnvei Inw. which mav be
called by the Imposing name of tho
.Silurian age
l'erhaps that Is why the snail li -,o
proverbially slow. A eieatuio that has
stalked majestically down tho eons from
tho Rllurlan era, eiosslm; the endless
spaces of time that geologists grandilo
quently refer to as Devonian. Out honlfor
ouk, Triangle. Jurassic, Cretaceous,
Koceno, Miocene, Pliocene, nvuy feel that
ho belong to eteinlty, not to .chronology,
nnd may look with contempt upon our
excessive regard for such petty thing.
as minutes, hours, days nnd years.
When I consider how venerable beyond
all comprehension Is tho family history of
tho spall I cannot take ono of his tribe
In my hand. ee him slit Ink Into his
twlBted shell nnd then behold his optlcnl
stulks waving about to aim their little
lenses upon me without feeling Hint I
have fallen under the astonished gaits
of the great Silurian ago Itself. And
when I seo that strange, endless sole on
which he creeps nnd reflect that he hnB
j Inherited It from ancestors who lived lu
the very morning of the world, I think
, ngaln of tho Illimitable tract of time over
j which his kind hnvo traveled,
Tho Gnsteropods are a very laige
lainny, and the. snail, ns wo know him,
represents only a relatively rocont branch
of It. Hut he retains the main char
acterlstles of his most remote ances
tors. Tho family, moreover, has the
distinction of living now Jn the enjoy
ment of what Hppears to' lie tin. very
culmination of Its type. The Clasttropods
have been Increasing In number und
variety ever since their first appearance
In Kllurlun, or oven pie-Sllurlan, times.
They began ns sea nnlmals, although
I even then they had all the family cluir
i acterlstles, and many of thorn are sea
; animals still. Somo of thuni have gotten
rid or their shells, or nearly so. nnd
among theso are the "slugs," so drouded
by gardeners.
In many countries snails are n favorite
article of food. In Trance many are
eaten and oven cultivated for food, or at
least encouraged to multiply, under the
name of nscargots. From this point of
view It may be said In their favor thut
thoy ure vegetable feeders.
The Oasteropods. as I have said, are a
1 large family. Zoologists reckon that tcev
have developed 23,0 f) species, of which
7,fM nro extinct, and 10,00) now flourish-
Wonderful Cures Reported In Germany.
The uie of simple herbs as remedies Instead of the more concentrated and
usually raoro dangerous inorganic substances, his been revived very widely of late.
In Germany new school of physicians has arisen which throws out almost
whole of the pharmacopeia and relies on an adaptation of the method of wild
animals in curing themselves ff. Y. H'orlJ.
It was Dr. ft. V. Pierc chief consulting physician to the Invalids' Hotel end
Surgical Institute of Buffalo, N. V., who first advocated the extended use of some
of our native roots, such as : Goldeo seal and Oregon grapo root, mandrake
and queen's root, black cherrybark. These are the chief ingredients in Doctor
I terce s Golden Medical Discovery, which has ben so well and luvorably known
J. D. Matsobum. Esq.
True Aristocrat
Endless Space of Time.
uu In some of their forms they have
been ory useful to mail. Some make ex
cellent halt foi fish.
The fnmiiiiH Tyrlnn purplo. the ro.ul
color of nntlipilty, which no modern dy
cm equal 'n beauty, was obtained from
two si cell1 of IhiMcropotls, marine rein
tlvis of the siwll, the Murex und tin
Purpura Tim waicr-lnhnhltliig animals
(iillei) dmpet'. ear-shells, prcl winkles
eon lies nnd many others aro memberi
of the family. Their shells nro often ex
ceedingly delicate, uracefiil and beautiful
In color. One of tho fresh water snulls.
calle I the l.tmnneiiH, often turns Itsclr
'belly upward and glide with Its loiu
hole along the underside of tho water
surfuce.
This sole, or ctulles foot, ot tho snail
Is n very curious organ. Ono can readily
believe that nature contrived It when
It was making Its first experiments In
locomotive machinery.. The mall ml
vnncen by contracting the muscles of Its
foot, which h almost ns long as It i
body
jiic eyo on tnoir two long f ex i e
1 stalks are cuually curious. They are
I likened to the similar memhrnne In oin-
eyes. How much they cun sco wo do
not know, hut they certainly do see, und
thrlr eyes ore connected by nerves to a
brnlh. So mo may Infer that snails must
do some kind of thinking, though It Is
probably extremely primitive.
Thoy bnvo tho advantage over us thut
they mn grow new eyes when the original
oiu-b are destroyed. Ono naturullst sayn
that they can renow their eyes twentv
times. Man would probably bo-vntlstled
If he could renew his once.
The snull lays Its eggs In tho around
In tlin spring time, and during- the winter
ho buries himself, cements the opening ot
his hiding place nnd falls Into a long
sleep, which, In particular clrcumstonces.
has been known to he prolonged for
yonrs-during which, perhaps, anecrstrnl
dreams come to him' of that luflntely re
mote epoch, atiea before the appearand
of man, when UU predecessors first
opened their strange eyes In tho waters
of the primeval ocean.
MERRIMENT ON WATER CART
The Manhattan cocktail and dry Mar
tini nrn being t booed by 6t. Uiuls nil i
neiis men ns luncheon und dlnne- drinks.
News Item.
We may ill Ink Kentucky toddleB; v
may congregate In bodies, and Imbibe our
modem modicum of heer; we may even
"rock and rye It." but-and who will tlai i
deny It? we imift draw a line of eleav -ugo
sharp und cleur. Wa may drink out
ule ami whisky (though the latter mar
ho risky); to tho forces that oppose uu
we're a fou; but our business men ha.o
sulci It. nnd we've very gladly read t,
that tho dry Martini rocktall Is de trop -Just
bo; tho old Murtlnl cocktail Is de tron.
lt tho east, with slavish fashions, utir
Its fancies and Its passloni with n drln t
that Is Insidious and swnot; let them hOAe
their Fof t Manhattans from their vespe
to their matins: let them guzxlo till th-v
cannot keep their feet. Hut a truce n
old St. Louis to tho potions that undi
ux, for our labor after lunch has got to
show. After dinner wo may revel; we
may drink to bunt the devil: but at no vi
the dry Martini Is de trop what, ho! thi
dry Martini cocktail is de trop. St, Louis
Time.
i
tor nearly half a century A harmless cleanser and
stomach tonlo that nature has provided.
.. Dokai.d Mathkso.v of Osslnlng. N. Y. says: I suf
fered for ovor live yuars with what tho doctors told mo was
tliufJ condition of the stomach, iwoclatctl with a catai
riat". condition of amr. ttml nm-roti heart. I hail trlpt
onouifli nm. bismuth, gentian, rhubarb, etc., to float a ship
aii'1 naturally thought thcra was no euro for me, but after
rcadluit w hat eminent doctors said of thu curative qualities
of tin Ingredients of 'Goldoit MedlcalDlfcovery I gave It
n fair trial. Took the 'Discovery and also the 'Pleasant
Pollota,' ami can truthfully say I am feeling better now
than I have In year. 1 cheerfully give permission to print
iuis testimonial, ami u any uouuiing unomas' writes me
I will 'put him wlo' to tho best all-around medicine in tha
country to-day,"