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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (April 20, 1913)
THE (YNrAHA RTXDAT REE: APTlHi 20, mX 5 B Mexico Sells Sulphur from Its Volcanoes t i-EXlCO C1TT Do you want to I rVR I y a Toicano- I IV j K - ""30 to Mexico and may have to take your Ufo In your hands on account of the Zapatistas and ot?".er rebels cantped near Its foot, but row wilt bo moderately safe at the top. Popocatapctl In the highest nmoklng volcnno on the North American continent, and I am told that as soon ns mntters aro quiet It enn be made to jy big dividends on the pr'co now asked for It. The old mountain han been for sale, jff and on. for the last twenty-five years. It was bought In UM by a syndicate of Americans, headed by Captain Charles Molt of Now York. The consideration was SlOOOO.CtO Ii Mexican money, and tho American sym'tcnte had an authorized capital of 11 0 0,000 In gold. The plan was to work thn enormous sulphur resources or the volcnno and at tho same time to supply Iro to Mexico City from the Ice fields which cover tho peak. Tho prin cipal forests about tho base of tho moun tain were also to bo converted Into a beautiful park and an Inclined railway to tho top was to bring tourists here from all over the world. This snlo was only half consummated. The title was disputed and the Mexicans could not de liver tho Roods. After several years the project was abandoned and the mountain camo back to General Sanchez Ochoa. one of tho great mining engineers of Mexico, who has owned It theso many years. I am told that the Pearson syn dicate, backed by lord Cowdray. has sinco considered the purchase and that its plans Includo cogged railroads, not oi'ly to the top of old "Popo." but also to tho top o Ixtncclbuatl, or "The White Woman." that mighty extinct volcano which rises Into the clouds on'.y a few miles away. -3rVN a iHome Furnit OHE9KSI a ii f h I b umana 1 lot One Day- .very Day Hawaii, volcanic built up mass of the sea S'llntmr fur All the World. Popocatapctl Itself Is a live volcano, or, lit best, it is only sleeping. Since the time of Cortez It has had ten mighty erup tions. It Is tho Vesuvius of America, and Is liable to breuk out at any time In an other great burst of fire and lava. Its lust eruption was In 1S02, but It Is still bteathlng brimstone fumes from the (treat holes In its crater. These holes are ! frt-ni seven to twelve Inches In diameter, 4.bome -,i t, H... ..... those of uivj ni(uiu nuipuur, mailing ine emter a great brimstone factory. The crater of old Popo Is about a mile wide at the top and something like 1.000 feet deep. It is shaped like a bell, thn diameter at the bottom being one fourth of a mile and the floor, which Is pure sulphur, going down, It Is said, 1,000 feet deeper. The mountain Is spit- ting out sulphur at the rate of more I than 1,000,000 tons per annum. Blnco the conquest of Mexico more than 100,000,000 tens havo been taken out of it, and It is os-tlmtitcd that there Is half as much more on tho floor of the crater, running down to a depth of 500 feet The supply is far boyond the demands of all tho world, and If It could be mar keted It represents wealth beyond the dreams of avarice. The annual consump tion of sulphur In the United States and Europe Is perhaps 600,000 or 700,000 tons. The most of the product comes from Italy, and It sells for 120 a ton. If It could be supplied by Mexico, It would mean a gross Income of (14,000,000 a year, and the sulphur In sight at half of above mte would be worth $1,500,000,000. As Colonel Sellers said of his famous eye-water: "There's millions In It" of Tbpocafapet-l ago with an explosion which was heard In southern Australia, 2,200 miles away That eruption took away two-thirds of the island, and the sea Is now 1.000 feet deep where the center of tho mountuln onco stood. Tho biggest volcanic crater in Java is In tho eastern part of tho Is land. It is known as the Sund sea; It Is burrounded by craters and It has other volcanoes In Its center. I rode across the Eand sea on a pony, and climbed to tho top of the Bromo volcnno, which is still active within It. Our Volcano 1'nrk. of tho finest, volcanoes aro tho Hawaiian Islands, and tho most wonderful volcano park that can bo Imagined Is that which Uncle Sam is now making on tho Island of That Island is composed of materials, nnd It has been from tho sea bottom. This lava Is now 14,000 feet above level and It extends from the bed of the ocean up to tho surface of the water, a distance of 10,000 feet i more. Therefore the oicanlc pllo i which ends In tho crater of Mauna Loa is really 80,000 feet high, or higher than Mount Everest Is above the level of the Bay of Bengal. Mount Everest In the Himalayas, Is the high est mountain on earth. The crater or Mauna Loa, In our new park, la three miles long, two miles wide and a 1,000 feet deep. The floor Is hard, but quite hot; and there are cracks through which you can see the hot liquid rock far beneath. Mlnlnir tlio Snlphar. In case the mountain is sold, the min ing of this sulphur will be by modern machinery, nnd tho cost of bringing It to tho market will bo comparatively small. The millions of tons already pro duced have been dug up by the Indians and carried in bags by means of rop ladders out of the crater to a point where It could be drawn up with a windlass and rope, worked from the rim. As soon ns the sulphur comes to the top It Is handed over to men who place It on straw mats and slide with It down over the snow to tho timber line, from whero It Is cnrrled by horses and mules to tho cars. Although tho crater Is exceedingly hot, It Is threo miles above tho sea and Its rim Is boredered with perpetual snow. With the exception of the holes, its floor la solid, nnd the workmen can move about freely over It. Sow and then water bursts In, and this, striking tho floor, causes steam, which rises high over tho mountain. Tlio World's (ironies! Volcnnoc. Popocatapctl Is next to the highest point on the Mexican uplands, being only surpassed by Mount Orizaba, It Is tho fourth highest mountain In North Amer twi, kissing the clouds at 17,80) feet above the sea. The only mountains on our con tinent that aro higher aro Mount St. Ellas and Mount McKlnley in Alaska, the lat ter beJng over 20,000 feet. Pike's Peak Is more than 3,000 feet lower and Mount Washington not much more than one tlilrd as high. I havo Fcen most of the world's great volcanoes One of the best known Is Stromboll, called the lighthouse of the Mediterranean spa, down the side of which lava Is continually pouring. It la not far from Sicily, whero Etna Is now In mild eruption, and near Vesuvius, whoso smoky cone is less than one-fourth as tall as old Popo. I have been on Vesuvius during a mild eruption and have seen tha golden lava flowing down In narrow streams. One could cook an egg over them by holding It In a wire basket. The Klre Island of Java. Tho Island of Java Is made up of so many volcanoes, tho fires of which you can see as you go along the coast, that It Is called the fire Island. Between It and Sumatra Is Krakatoa, the top of which blew off about twenty-seven years Stops Tobacco Habit in One Day, Sanitarium Publishes Free Book Sliawlng How Tobacco Habit Can lie Hiuiislied in From One to Five Days at Home. The Elders Sanitarium, located at 1090 Main St., tit. Joseph, Mo., has published a free book showing the deadly effect of the tobacco habit and how it can bo banished In from one to five days at home Men who have used tobacco for more than fifty years have tried this method ana say it is entirety successful, and In uuuuion io uaiusiunR me aesire lor to uacco nas improvcu ineir neaitn won derfully. This method banishes the de sire for tobacco, no matter whether It Is smoking, chewing, cigarettes or snuff dipping. Aa the book Is being distributed free anyone wanting a copy should send thejr unuie ana auurtsN at once. Aavertlse- mani. Mather Earth's Volcanic Belts. All of the Sandwich Islands are vol canic, and Indeed two-thirds of the volcanoes of the world are said to be upon islands. They seem to run In cer tain belts over the globe. One belt nearly encircle the Pacific, girdling that ocean, as U were, with mighty smoke stacks, from which pours forth steam. This belt begins with the southern part of South America, and runs up through the Andes to the Culebra cut whero steam has been oozing out of the great gash made for our canal. From thern the bolt goes northward through Central America and Mexico. I saw somo of Its steaming craters last winter while, was in Costa Ittca and Guatemala. and we have It again hero In Pniwrn. tapctl and the now steaming volcano of Collma not far away. The belt widens in the United States, but there aro no active volcanoes there, und It narrows again when It gets to Alaska. As It reaches Asia. It has spasmodic eruptions, now and then throwing an Island up In the sea, only to take it away a few months or years later. The volcano zone seems more active as It goes south through Japan to the Philippine Islands, and thence on to the Dutch East Indies, New Guinea and New Zealand. The volcanoes of tho West Indies are said to be ono of Its branches, but tljoae of tho Mediterranean are apparently Independent of It or of any other volcanic zone. There aro some volcanoes In Africa and many extinct ones In Asia. Among the most beautiful volcanoes of the world are Fujiyama, Japan; Mount Egmont, In New Zealand, and the Moyon on Luzon, In the Philippine Islands. They are all perfect cones. There are fow mountains, however, more beautiful than Popocatapctl and Ixtacclhuatl; or, as they are commonly called here, "Old Popo" and the "White Woman." And there are none so high which may be so easily ascended, and whloh pay bo well for the trip. Both mountains are covered with snow, and standing on tlio cathedral here in Mexico City any evening you can seo this snow turn to silver and then to burnished cop per by the rays of the setting sun. "Popo" Is a llttlo more than 1,000 feot higher than his sister. Old Izzy, and his form Is, perhaps, more majostlc. Ixtacclhuatl Is called tho "White Woman" because the top of the mountain is shaped like the gigantic snowllko fig ure of a woman who lies on her back with her feet facing "Old Popo." As one stands on the cathedral he can plainly see the outlines of the head, with Its pro truding eye, the swelling breasts covered with snow and the rest of tho snow-clad covering through which tho mighty kneos and feet seem to peep. The mountuln Is over 18,000 feet high, and the figure makes one think of a giantess lying on a mighty bed and covered with white. A Love Story of the (JimIi.. According to tho Aztec tradition. In the days of the beginning of things u mighty god named Popocatapetl came to earth, and there fell In love with one of the prettiest of the Aztec maidens. The girl had a perfect form, and her skin was as white as the driven snow. "Old Popo" made her his wife and took her to hoavon to reign with him. She proved too hand.' some, however, and soon all of the young gods wero running after her. At last "Old Popo" learned that she had been unfaithful to him, and he changed her Into this mountain. As she turned to snow and lay dormant on the top of the rocky mass of his creation, ho gTcw remorseful. Ills heart froze with regret and he asvumed the form that he now has In the mountain of Poiwcatapetl. At times he grows angry, and then he spits forth, tha fir and brlmston that r: :v ru. :cK -v. MWfc Tobogganing cZowxl jtopocaspeI come out of the volcano. The natives say that the earthquakes aro his groans and tho steam and sulphur fumes his perpetual sighing. Cllmbtiur Poporatapetl. The ascent of Popocatapetl can be made In about three days, at a cost of $25 or 30 In gold. One needs warm clothing, Btrong shoes and several good guides. You can ride on tho railroad to the foot of the mountain, stopping at Amecameca, a town of 11.000, which Is about a mile and a half above the sea. Here you can get your outfit and horses and by night fall can reaoh, a rest house where you may sleep. This Is TIamacas, at about 12.SO0 feet above the sea. You will find It bitter cold about midnight and colder still toward morning. You rise early and at 7 a. m. are again upon horseback. Two hours later you have gone, up 8,000 feet and aro at about .the altitude of Tike's Peak or Fujiyama In Japan. Tour breath is now thin. You debate the worth of your thoughts nnd whether It will pay to use the strength needed to utter them. Your feet have grown heavy and you can not walk fust. The first part of your way Is through looso shifting blnck sand, and tho latter part is all Btiow. You are soon far up In the clouds above tho rest of the world, and If the day Is clear you have magnifi cent "views of the valley of Mexico and the great capital, which lies In a basin surrounded by mountains. Higher still nnd the "White Woman" lies below you, nnd all around nro tho grent hills which form the most striking features of the Mexican plateau. Most of tho time you nre In the clouds and now and then you can see the clouds both above and below you. They look llko live things and you enn watch them crawling to your feet nnd chasing each other from mountain to mountain. Now they envelop you In a mist and then pass onward and up wnrd until they are lost In tho crater. As you rise tho snow, which Is wet at the start, grows harder nnd dryer, and near tho top there aro pillars of Ico which tear your hands ns you pull yourself from rock to rock. Tho glaro hurts your eyes and you drop us you stand at last on tho edge of the crater at ono of the topmost points on the roof of tho North American continent. In th l" rater. If you are very venturesome you can crawl down a short distance In tho crater and peep over. The walls are stoop and of black obsidian. You can see tho yel low sulphur far down, and the gas rising out of tho crevices In the floor. It Is difficult to make pictures on account of tho steam, and It Is dangerous to play round the rim. Going dowrj Popocutapei Is easy If you havo the norve to take the toboggan Bllde of your life. When the snow Is smooth and hard this Is done seated on a straw mat, and guided by an Indian, who carries an alplne-stock and directs your way through the rocks and cre vasses. The Indian sits at tne front of the mat and uses his stick as u brake. You sit behind and grab the man around tho waist It takes only a few minutes to reach the snow line, and you go down as far in one minute as you made In an hour coming up. In climbing lztacclhuatl you may rlda a great part of the wuy. The timber line Is at about 13.000 feet and the region of eternal snow begins a little moro than 1,000 feet higher. You are In perpetual snow at the summit, and as you tramp over tho White Woman you find that she Is really a mountain saddle more than two milos In length, the outllnos of the female figure being lost. On .Mount OrUulm, 1 Btopped at Orizaba on my way from Mexico to Vera Cruz. Tho town lies on tho slopo of the highest peak on our con tinent, south of Alaska. This Is Mount Orizaba, which is surpassed only bv Mount McKinley. Orizaba City Itself Is us high us the top of the Alleghcnles, but It Is sur rounded by coffee plantations, and the thermometer there was ninety degrees In the shade, while the hot, humid air was that of the topics. The perspiration stood on my face as I looked up at tho top of tha mountain. ajgy nj jjj Uw Its mantle of perpetual Mount Orizaba la over 18,000 feet high and It la harder to ascend than Popo catapetl. The first men who ever reached the top were some of our American offloers during tho Mexican war, and the next man who went up waa a French man. Ha made the ascent in 1851 and found on the peak a tattered American flag floating from a staff In whloh was cut the date, 184S. A few jraars later this same FrenOhmon attempted a second ascent and nearly lost his Ufa while do lag BO. The present starting point for Mount Orizaba Is a little rillare at the snow line, and I am told that there are several dry cavea on the way near tha trail, where one can camp during tha ttlp. The peak Is shaped like a gTeat anthill, and an Iron cross now surmounts it. Thore aro no avalanches and one may take a mat and ride down Just as on Popocatapetl. Mrxlno's Sinnklnic Mountain. In addition to these mountains Mexico has many other volcanoes, the most of them extinct, but some liable to break out Into action. The region abojt Guada lajara has been recently troubled with earthquakes and many think t only a question of time when that one of the largest cities In Mexico, win dtnappenr. The volcano of Collma, which Is moe than two miles In height, 'a perpetually active, and nearby Is a splendid volcanic peak, EI Novado, which Is as tall as Fujoyama and almost as beautiful. Co llma Is frequently hidden by the dens masses of steam which aro always Toll ing" out of Its crater and at night this steam Is colorfd with flames. The crater Is almost circular and It has a diameter of about one-third of a mile. It Is m re than 100 feet deep. Mount Collma has hnd many cruptlms and a half dozen vlolont ones within the last three centuries. Its eruptions nio usually accompanied by earthquakes, when It throws out ashes which cover the sky for many miles, flying as far '.s Guadalajara. Zacatecas and San f.uls Potosl. One of the queerest volcanoes of Mex ico Is Mount Jorullo, which Is still steam ing. This mountain rises out of a rich farming district which was once as flat ns a floor. Then all at onco then was a rumbling of the earth nnd In the midst of a great estate of Indigo and sugar a volcano arose In tho form of n great bladder to a height of 1,700 feet. It thn burst. The mud camo forth In sheets. Clouds of steam ascended nnd aU The country about was covered with r-cks and ashes and molten Iavt. Two large streams wero swallowsd t,p by tho eruption nnd somo distance nwny two new rivers burst forth. The ruo tlon .continued for nenrly a year, and ri w the steam Issues here and there hrjugh cracks In the earth. The crater la ib iuf X)0 feet deep. Its area Is about eighty acres and I am told that the volcano neh of which It Is composed produces excel lent crops. FltANK O. CAUPENTEIt. LIVELY Y0UTH0F 90 YEARS Knocked Down lr Alio nn Dally Stroll, lit- ASkM Only for it Whlakhroom. For tho first time In msny a day Henry Schmltz, a retired manufacturer, tayed Indoors at his home, 221 Weft One Hun dred and Thirtieth street, New York. Notwithstanding his 90 years he has been accustomed to taking a two-mile walk evory pleasant afternoon and morning. He missel his afternoon walk because Mrs. Schmltz put her foot down. Mrs. Schmltz took a firm stand becaunn she hud heard what huppened to him on his morn ing walk. He hfid been knocked down and run over by an automobile, but she heard of It Indirectly, because when he catne home to luncheon he was careful not to mention It. On his way home he was crossing Ienox avenue at One Hundred and Twenty-fifth street when Mrs. Ada Port flllo of C01 West One Hundred und Sixty eighth street came along In her auto. Though a flue, upstanding veteran, Mr. e&mjtj 1 not as ajila as bp vu tbrtt- em re Ml, h r Mill with a Leonard He! rsgerator (Full carload just received) Your choice of SO C 26 styles, from... J , J ET U 6x9 Seamless Brussels at 9x12 Seamless Brussels at 9x12 Seam- $-f less Velvet at.. ' 9x12 Axmin- 9 ster Rug at . . . iES See our large line of Body Brussels and Wilton Rugs much below Omaha prices Watch Repairing AIbo Jewelry By oxpertB. All work guaranteed. DHOLIY1 10th and Xarnsjr E quartern of a century ago. He did not clear the path of that auto In tlmo and It bowled him over. Also, according to Patrolman Morrlsscy, one of the front wheels passed over his body. The patrolman ran forward and his eyes grew wide with wonder when Mr. Schmltz got to his feet unaldod. "Do you want an ambulance?" asked tho patrolman. "Young man," said Mr. Kchmltz, "what want moro than anything else Is a whisk broom." So they brushed off the telltale streaks of dust and he walked briskly homo, de termined not worry his wife with any roferenco to what had befallen lilm, Patrolman Morrlssey mentioned It nt tho station, though, and the story quickly went the rounds, so that It was a re porter who lot tho secret out when ho went to the Hchmltz homo to ask after tho health of tho head of tho house -New York Times. A Wonderful Mlxrr. Jimmy Itritt, who once worked as n bartender, was employed by u wealthy German In New York because ho had been recommended as tlx greatost bur tender In the world. Tho employer wish ing to see If ho had made a wise choice dropped Into tho bar ono evening and watched Hrltt perform. Ho sav. him mixing cocktails In one hand and u Kin fizz In the other while, with marvelous dexterity, ho would pauso just long enough after a shako to make change, ring up the purchase on the cash register and take tho order for the next round. Tho German watched tho performance one hour and could stand It no longer Hushing excitedly to tho bar, he shouted: "You are fired! Illmmel!, If you can do all that In one hour, how much will you bo able to stenl from mo In a week?" Popular Mugazluo. HiinlshliiK IT nrnsl liens. The engine had gone to pieces, tho screw revolved no more, nnd the yacht of tho millionaire rolled )iolplcssly In the trough of the sea. Anxiously signaling for help was the wireless operator. He was approached by the owner of the craft. "I wish," said tho latter, "that you would advise my wlfo. In Hrooklyn, of our accident." "Shall I tell her tho engine Is broken, sir?" asked the wireless man. "lly no means!" exclaimed the million aire. "Those bald words would be dis comforting to tho sensitive woman. Send her a messago which, while not trans gressing the truth, will make her think our accident Is only a trivial one. Tell her our screw driver Is broken."' Judge. DuBcmj F Bailey. Sanatorium This institution Is tho only ono In tho contral west with separate buildings situated In their own amplo RroumlB, yet entirely dis tinct, and rendering It pucslble to cllsslfy casos. Tho one building being fitted for and devoted to the treatment of non-contagious and non-mental diseases., no othurs be ing admitted; the other Uest Cot tage being desigiied for and dn voted to the eicluslvo treatment of select mental cases requiring for a tlmo watchful care and spe cial nursing. Drs. Mach &Pfach THE DENTISTS uocaasoii to Ballsy IB Ma oh Tho largest and beat equipped dental office In Omaha. Experts In charge of all work, moderate prices. Porcelain fillings Just like the tooth. All Instru ments aterllxed after using. 3d rioor Pazton Slock, Omaha, nab. aBaSawlMBiBir BiiiiiiiiVBBiiiflisfeK. tsaaaHBnaHBaflP illllllllllllllllllllllllllllllHfc m n. 7KeD0CT0R STPr. lems jBafier The questions answered below are gen' eral In character, the symptoms or dis eases aro given and tho answers will ap ply to any case of similar nature. Those wishing further advice free, may address Dr. Lewis Haker. College Bldg., College-KIwood Sts Dayton, O.. enclos ing self-addressed stamped envelope for reply. Full name and address must ba given, but only Initials or fictitious nam will be used In my answers. The prescrip tions can bo filled at any well stocked h! t?r6, Any druK1"t can order of iiuicoaicr. "Aznts X." writes' "I m to dull and lilt Irn mol of tha time thtt I cn carclr cumplUh mjr 4utlei. I am colorlMa and hat llttl appeUte, aulfar wltb tieadacha and am far llow normal weight. At on Ulna I waa quit plump and then I felt kock! all tha time, au l( you ran preacrlba aumathlnK to lncrea my weight I tlilnk I aliall auuu be myaelf again." Anawer. Kor anyone In your condition thtro la nothing I can glva that would be bo effec tive aa thorough courae of three grain Hypo Miclane tablet. Thla little lablnt aupplles ele ment which Increautt the red blood auppljr and aid to utract the nutrition from food, Improve the appetite, overcome nirvouineaa, and plump neaa with healthy colur and atrength return. They ar patked In eealed buies with full Ul-recllona. "Farmhand" wrllea "Please give me a pre scription for my rheumatism. I auKer greatly. A friend tried your prexrlptlou, waa cured, but can't remembr It." Anawer: Here U my favorite prescription for rbeumailsm Iodide of potassium, S drama; aodlum aalleylate, 4 drama, wine of eolrhtcum one-half ounte, iomp. eaarnce cardlol, 1 us.; romp fluid halmwoit, 1 oc ; and syrup ot sirsa parllla romp , 4 ois Take a tableapoontul at meal lima and at bedtime "W Z." write "I have such a very severe ouuKh and cold and have not been able to get anything lo help ino. it la weakening my sji- tim." Answer. Use the following and jour cold and uuii will vanish ami ou will Boon be strong again net a IVs oi. bottle ot concentrated es lenie meutho-laxeae and lakt- every hour or two. Thla can be taken pur or made Into a full pint ot honic-made syrup Pull directions aa to usa will b found on buttle. Thla la a mild laiatlve and will drtte the cold from the aystem. "Helen J" writes: "What would you advise ma to take. 1 autfer with tndlgratlon, constipa tion, gas on my stomach and my breath Is bad. I am afraid of appendicitis." Answer Many casea of appendicitis are cauant by neglecting iuat auch troubles aa you Jescrlbe You should start at once and take regularly for several wefts at least, tablets trlopeptlne, which are sold at all drug store and are packed In reeled cartons with full directions far taking. The tablets are pink, white and blue. The pink tablets should be taken after breakfaat, tha whit alter dinner and the blue after aupppr. I think a great many eases of appendlcltla could be cured by using trlopeptlne "Minnie" raya "I am on the verge ot nerv ous prostration and tha doctor's medicines do nn ... m ti halt, ni. f am .. thin - n . .n getting tbiaosx aver day. What would you pra- mi Va r:. Tlllf ,n 100,9 rreacrlbaa uxi nn will be strong In a few weeks. Ton wnt autn iT.hr f"4. "I" ba restored to tbV natural strength. Oet syrup of hnophMDhltM con-p, 6 ot. j tincture c.domene gml., I oZ not card.monj. Mix and .hake well Ufor t log. Take a teaspoonful before eaoh meat, e a Miss nslva asks: "i am sorely affllotM an goitre and too much flesh or fat How eai cure the one and reduc. tha other!" Minr " Mn coming noda, '".n---n Tl-lded to treatment and 1 41 r?ff"r Jll",0,,. l0,'"-'- Tne Iniredlenti Tin t goitre and to remove superfluous tat on thn human body. I advlae you to obtain a saslad tuba with, directions aocompanylng M e e a "Valeria" writes: "I am Buffering with bilious, neaa. atoinach and kidney trouble. I . gattlna worse all the time. What shall I takeT" Answer: Vot tha troubles you mention tha best remedy to purify the blood and act Ton th ,Mr,Ztt? "ft"' .'V, Three "" 'ulpherb tit! lets (net aulphur tablets'. Oet these from your druggist l sealed tube with full dlrictlona. These, act pleasantly and If taken regularly the will gradually effect a cure, lly pirlfylng the blood your biliousness will disappear If yoj are dyapeptla you should take tableta trlopep tlne with the sulpherb tablets. nilldreu" Your children should ba given the following to cure them of bed wetting Tine lure cuUba, 1 dram, tincture rhua aromatic 1 drama, comp fluid Ulmwort, 1 os. Give 10 to, 11 drops lu water one hour before meals. Thla Is good for young and old. Doctor- "I ahould be very grateful for a rem. edy for ratarrb I have suffered a great deal for the past year with bad breath, pain In sir head and throat. Haase tell me what to do.' Answer: 1 have found anttseptlo Vllaae powder to be the beat remedy for catarrh ot the bead and throat Many letttera are received from, people who are thiukful to be cured ot this dreadful disease. Uo to any well stocked drug store and purchase a two ounce original pack age ot antiseptic Vllane powder. Cleanse the nostrils thoroughly by snuffing from the palm ot the hand a wash made by mlilng one-halt tea spoonful of the powder to a pint of water tse this two or three times a day In addition to this use the following balm In the noatrlls daily One teaspoonful of Vllane powder and one ourna of lard or vaseline, t'so thla treatment at In tervals to prevent a return. "Aniloua Mabel'' writes- "My hair ta falUnf out ao rapidly that I am vary much afraid that I ahall (oon be bald. 1 have also a great deal of dandruff which oauses my scalp to Itch." Anawer You can atop you hair froca falling, cure dandruff and make your hair soft and fluffy If you will purchase a 4 os. Jar of plain yellow) mlnyol and uaa It according to dtrectrooa. I will promote a healthy growth of hair ant brim kevck Uu uvUaae uturti aeloav