TUB BEE: OMAHA, TUESDAY,,, JULY 1!U3. 9 Mag ale 1 C Fn . : The Egg Man and ' By JAMES J. MONTAGUE. Tho yegg man's chin was bristly; the egg man's chin web not. The egg man's hoad was level; the yegg man's head was not; Thayegg man' was a roughnock; the egg "man's brow was high: And (both were much devoted-to Miss- Susanna Spry. I Thqy took her to tho movies on alternating nights; They took her down to Coney to seo the gladsome sights. (In .Justice to Susanna this statement must bo made She never once suspected that either was in trade.) f ,Sho had a million dollars and social aspirations! "She findn't any father'or other male She thought she'd Uko a husband, as .And Bho, had mo,t our heroes along Flth avenue. Sho never aBked their business; enough , It was for her That both of them wero pontons' of presence and hauteur. Sho, knew that they were handsome; sho know that they1 wore rich; ' 'Bho krojfr hat one. would win her; but sho couldn'.t make out, which. The yegg nran showed her diamonds; rare Jewels ho displayed, 4Dut jdldn.'t ,toay he got them while working at his trade. ShevBald.ithat It was lovely' to see them flame and glow, But waited for tho egg man to see what ho' could show. , r Tto egg man had no Jewels -ho-merely showed her kegs, 'And bxes, bales and barrels'-of pallid, pearly eggs. , Sho threw her arms about him. "My darling," murmured she, ; ?T think you must be richer than even old John D." . -., - The egg man now wears diamonds; tho yegg man now does time; The yegg man slugged the' egg man, which constitutes a crime. The eggs the egg man showed here, were phony that, is, paste, v Susanna- is not happy Bho wed in too much haste. tjCertified Brides ;and Bridegrooms r - :' " J "1 my WlNDFTlED .BLApK. '.Once, there was, a clever little boy who was' always takihg clocks to pieces and ' meddling with locks. and making wheels, and"ln,veftting ways of shutting the old , , door so that It , wouldn't be locked and yet the dog could; spring; tho 1 t o. h uch' a cUVef; clever boy " kyU I. -always hated, ;! to have him come to ',1; visit at our house. Ton tree, he could ' t a .k t a clock to plece'ss- worideffully Well and pat it to " gather Jtist mod. , erately well. Tfio - clock -jvould ,go af Jtervhe bad' put it "together' again, but tomehow there was always something wrong wlttv'lt pome, wot,. Sometimes it" ',' lold the time all right, but struck wrong . b ,.....( t. minr all Hcrht Yint tnld tha chour wrong,... .tHgalh it. Wtafcthe-j ' alarm that never Quite got over the clever ' hoy's handling. t t Sometimes' Twc-nder about him he's a 3ctlP-cibw, -a ver'y" successful -surgeon; ' Uway. taking -people, to .pieces..., I wonder $T theF run qdlte" so well when he is Ithrough with them as they did before he touched them he and his "science." I see he read a paper at a great medl tal convention yesterday It wan all about "eliminating the unfit." ': He doesn't want anyone to marry but ,' people In perflct health. He thinks phy i slclans should regulate marriage and regulate It legally. No one should be allowed to marry at all without the "yes, Indeed" of the whole medical profession. .Klne Idea, progressive, and all that. 1 wonder If it is quite practical? v Now, there's the' doctor himself, for instance. I happen ,to know that his mother was an old-fashioned consumptive. She took twenty years a-dyimr, and one of h brothers died of the old-fashioned "illness out In Colorado not so many weeks The doctoff fa alive 'yet, and Very lively, too, thank. -you. He wouldn't be here at all If his advice had been taken thirty years ago-and Just think how we should tave mlssedhlny and hla. experlmenta 4 th the clocks and with peoples', inter- ' $ We knew. good ipany .of the-same jieo tjpjple, the doctor and I, when he waa taking t; rlocks to pieces. , . One of them died of cancer; herjnother .died of It, too! and she' married and '"hud three children One'of ttiem is the clever est, all-around woman I know, one Is , mediocre and one has made himself a r. fortune In a country town and la spend- , Ing It helping sick babjes get well. , Now ' If that woirian had not oeen auoweo 10 aiitrry. what 'then? To The Young Expectant Mother Women of Experience Advito the XJ of Mother's Friend. rm..- I- - .i-tdln Ar-trrfti of trCDldltlon til tbe minds of most women In regard to- the iuVIect of motherhood. Tbe longing to possess la often contradicted by the lahef. tf tbe fact that we have UBSS remedy in what is known a Mother!! Friend. This Is an external W that has a wonderful lnflu,Jc,;?h50l,";1 over the muscular tissues of the abdomen. .' ...ii T . . ......im. rords. tendons the slllhtest strain; there is Jto. n nausea, no nervousness: what wm dreaded as a severe physical ordeal becomes a c m, wen, joyful anUclpaUon that has -IU im press sacn as pur, foremost teaeiera o Eugenics are. attiring to drill Into the minds of tbe present generation. In almost every community there are women who bare tied Mother's Friend, and they are the ones that recovered quickly, tSnierved their health and Strength tc .thus . r.miii dntined bv every ruie of physlolcry and the history of n tul men an.l women to repeat toe story or peater acb' ment. .h i.I.k. VrtmttA la nrvnar.ll after tuS t . nnit fatallT doctor by the rr.rtflM neaulator Co.. 138 Lamar Bldg., Atlanta, ia. Write tbem for their instructive poos i 'Mtxsctint wethers. lou twin ,noa mouk" 'Slend loa i b.v all oius otowa at U toole. the Yegg Man relations; , spinsters often do; K. The best family In the town where we both lived had three sons every one of them had turned out a failure. One'a an Invalid, one'a a criminal and one is a drunkard. Father was sound as a hick-oi-y nut,' and mother never had an"lll day In her life. How about that family 7 ' How 'tar "back have you (rot' te go to get at the sourco of Infection and who's Coins to do. the "going?" "I can find enough degenerates in, any family on earth to Ret any client off for murder In the first degree," sold a clever lawyer to me Just the other day. don't suppose there's a family In America' without somebody "queer In It." fust how "queer"' havo' ypu got JO' be and who's going to decld6 abp'ut It when you try to get a marriage license and can.'?. - , "Eliminate the unfit" well, well, Mr. Physician, who ure the unfit? There's Robert Louis Stevenson, for Instance, lie hover drew a breath of good' health In his life. Would you have "elim inated" 4ilm? . ' How about Julius Caesar, how about Napoleon, how about Mohammed, how 'V!'' "A"17 how aboutsrSt Unfit every one of them from the doc tor's point of View and there are ' still more Illustrious oxamples of tho. -unfit who survived and made tho world oyr. just td suit their own Ideas while the fit" stood around and looked on and wondered about It. It'a a glorious idea you have, doctor, and one that every civilized nation 'should tudy Carefully but are you quite sure how you are going to manage It? I got the "sterilized" fad once and wouldn't let anyone have a drop of water that wasn't boiled; till ray old doctor came along and told mo I had boiled all the lite out' of It, and ho said he'd risk few germs If he were me on. the prl- clple that he'd rather be an aquarium than a cemetery and I got over my fad. "Drink water all youcan,' shouts-, the water-cure fiend. . - Don't touch water till you have to," insists the new specialist. "When your brain is tired, work your body," advises the doctor who is sup posed 'to know, i "Don't overwork a tired system,", says his neighbor. "Rest is the oUIy thins to euro fatigue." And so it goes we're all so. Interested in this "eliminate ' the' unfit" idea, and Parker Ooinplexion lis BEATRICE FAIRFAX William writes me: "I am in. love with a -biue-eyea oionae. one is so- ana i am 26. Wo earn IS a week, each, but I do not work all the time, and she does. Do you think it advisable to get married on such .prospects, or had we better wait awhile?" -. . Blue eyes and blonde, hair sound en trancing, but I am' afraid, my dear Wil liam, if you marry with no other thought than the possession of this fair creature ; you' will find life of a much darker com plexion. 11 a man a a man a1 r and knows any. thing of rents, the price of beefsteak and potatoes, and the advancing tendency of tho cost of clothing, he knows that J1S a week isn't enough these days to supply two with all their wants. lie knows that manna Is no longei dropped from heaven for material sus tenance, arid that the. day when the robins supplied the babes In the woods with covering Is long since past He knowa also that when a blonde with bue eyes finds it, is her 13 a week which la caring for two, her husband not working all the time, her hair loses ts gold and her pretty eyes fade, . Thla Is sertoUa enough (for men demand that the perishable qualities that attracted them be imperishable), but what is more serious, no girl, blonde or brunette, -ever becamo the main support of an able bodied man and. retained any Joye or re spect for hlm It one ever did, then t am ashamed of her, for to give a good woman's love to aueh a man la greater folly than cast ing pearls before awlne. Were you to marry thla ' girl, I will grant that you would have perhaps a whole month of happiness. Then tho bills will begin to come In. You begin to grow tired of making loving eyes at .tich nth.tr unit rrnv. Uimi4 nutftlrin m,i.t!.Bn, uaUnz the sense r.f humor -" - , T I with which you should view your own r . . ii i ii How to Acquire a Beautiful Figure Through Dancing by za'ajllllll'-'-BBB-e'i tats Copyright, 1913, Internat'l News Service. To me classical dancing means three things: The sanctlflcatlon of tho body, the elevation of the mind nnd the Joyous appreciation of living. And out of these three THmdry purposes of classical danc ing grows naturally the bodily grace that la what the world feoks first from the nrt of tho dance. I have always thought It a very sad thing that children should be taught to be anhamed of tho bodies that Ood gave to them. Tho body Is a beautiful and holy thing a temple and every child BhoUld be taught to regard It In tills way. To keep It clean, and pure, and healthy Is not enough it should .bo reverenced as jspmcthlntr that, was given by. 'God and must be returned to . Him undetlled. Through this reverence false shame that Is really immodesty, will bo done away with. Then the next step Is to have In the mind thoughts worthy of, its own ideals of bodily beauty. Bo through the beautiful .movements of ppontaneous Joy that go to mako up the classical dance we perform a splendid' service for both body and mind. The .modern costume that "half reveals and half conceals' la tho object of much criticism, -,some of -It adverse, and soma of It on the lines of 'argument that "to the pure ' all things are pure." To me clothing; is -Immodest whenever It is sug 'geslye In a shomed-faced way that seem' to hint; here Is a little glimpse of ankle or rounded arnl Just a hint, for more would be Improper. Now, on the other hand, consider the Greek tunic, a soft drapery of clinging material, that clothes the body in a little cloud of mystery, but yet Is all-reveallug and so makes beauty- an absolute essential. Our bodies today are defective because we know how easy It Is to hide defects. The ancients.- on the other hand, had to overcome, defects nnd moke . for beauty so great that it could bo unselfcon sciously revealed. This is the whole secret of Immodesty, to have the mind dwelling on the body In an apologetic way. Npw, let us enter upon the study of how to make the body so beautiful In line and contour that w may .-accepti'tf-asf; simply as we do' beautiful lily or rose. After a fairly exhaustive study of tho subject I am practically convinced that nothing so .surely gives bodily beauty combined with purjfy- of mind as do. the. Ideal movements of the revival of classl- cat dancing- Today 1 wish to Illustrate my theory with three exorcises, poses or movements of the dance that make a good beginning for the study of how. to beautify the hu man figure through dancing. In the first figure the figure Is poised firmly ' on the forward foot, while the other leg la raised toa position parallel with the floor, and stretched back as far as possible; the arms; too, are stretched yet when I look around among my friends, a. pretty decent lot of people as the .worjd goes, I can see dozens of them who woqld' never have been born at all If this Idea had been strictly carried out, and somehow I can't think the world vrould have been much better off for that, . Take the old clock to pieces, doctor; all ou will, but please, good friend, be, quite iUro you know how to 'put It together igaln so It will' strike twelv at mid ileht and not at 8 of the morning. folly and which la enough to make the gods laugh. . You. 'want to go to the theater, to an amusement park, to a moving picture show, You count the cost, and find that to take both of' you to the cheapest amusement means the price- of tomor row's meat. You give up the amusement and decide to stay at home and make loving eyes at each other, but the eyea are not so loving as they were, and you begin to taste, while the honeymoon is atlll full, all the bitter boredom that attends matri mony. . ' Tho day comes, William, when you can npt contribute your 8 a week. Your wife cannot afford the innocent little outings and foibles 'Of- fashion her matea, enjoy, for she is supporting a muni K great big, hungry man, who eats all she can earn, wears out hla clothes, must be cooked for, mended for, washed fori ah, William, the day comss only too soon when she beglna to feel aa If aho wero pouring her heart and aoul and body Into a great big hopper, with no more feeling for her than If you were really made of ateel and Iron. Love la a fragile thing. It Is a tragedy to treat It aa if It were double-seamed sfeel with copper rlveta. It may endure so little, and then It perishes! You are asking that it endure so much) You are not making of love something to hold' deep In one'a heart, to cherish' and pro tect. You are making of It something to feed and clothe and shelter you. Instead of becoming its protector you would make it protect you, William, I am ashamed of youl You would plan your future so that your wife fcculd support you. Don't you know that a man plans to support his wife? I wish I could talk to your blue-eyed blonde. I am sure I could open her eyea to the tragedy that cornea to every woman who gives her love and get in return a. sentiment similar to that Inspired by a meal tukot Lady Constance Stewart Richardson to the utmost, while lite una motion ex tend to tho very flnger-tlp. The ten sion In tho stretched muscles will keep tho, body, educated to, tho point -ot ab solute? muscular qontrol. ' , f- rigure 2 shows lightness .of polso. It will help arch the. instep and flex the wrist Into graceful lightness. Finally,' figure 3 combines lightnoss of polso with ease of motion. Notice tho graceful sway of the body, the flexible wrist and the slmplo readlnoss of tho wholo body to leap from this position of llfo and light into the next movement of tho dance. If these exercises aro faithfully prac ticed the limbs wljl soon como to havo a flexibility and lightness that are tho first essentials of grace. That unpleasant consciousness known as the sensation of being all arms- and legs is trained into ways of muscular control and lightness. But what is easy for the very young is a task in later years. Little children New Revelations of Ultra By EDGAR LUOIEN LAJtlCIN. The names Zslgmondy and Sledentopf are as household words in every labor atory in the world. They are of two great German physicists nnd mlcroscop- Ists, and more uira-mlcroscoplsts. They were first to peer into realms approach ing the molecular, and into deeps hitherto unseen by human eyes. Before these ipen, mlcroscoplsU had always viewed minute particles by means of bright field Illumination, the light coming up through the plates and drop of water containing the minute objects,' but this made a glare around them and so filled tho eye with extraneous light that millions of particles could not be seen. The German mlcroacoplsts passed tho light against the sides of the particles at 'right angles. Bay from 'the right or (eft, with the most beneficial result that tho field of view became dark, the trouble some shimmer 'and glare vanished, and only light reflected from the sides, and at tlrn.es actually from the Interiors of the minute spots, entered the eye through the lenses'. This improvement waa so great that comparison la useless; the nltra-mlcroscope at 'once becamo an In strument of quntupledpower. At once, regions all unknows before were re vealed, and an Immense field ready to be explored was' presented to life-work-era with the microscope. The old-fashioned microscope had reached the average power of seclnx objects whose diameter ranged around and about the 1.100,000th part of an inch. But these are huge chunks in the new ultra-ultra, beyond the ylslble, violet-waye-energy dark-field microscope. Suppose I should write, "Sunlight '.a invisible." The reader might say, "Im possible; sunlight is visible " I shut up our optical and physical laboratory on June 30, fastened windows, and drew down double black closely-fitting cur tains, but left the helostat where I could reach it without opening the door. Then I" hied myself to the World's Columbian exposition and returned In September. I opened an aperture, set the hellostat so that It would reflect a powerful beam of light direct from the sun Into the room and across to a distant screen. Then with extreme care I opened the door, looked In and saw no light. Thla waa an impressive experiment A band of light four Inches In diameter, from the aun direct, was passing my eyea, but invisible- Then I took an eraser from a ledge on the blackboard, gave It a little tap under the band, when instantly there were seen millions of par Tlicso pictures of Lady Itlchnrilson should be taught to adjust thcintelver readily to motions of grace. In later life patience will work wonders, and the woman' who will faithfully study these general movements wilt soon have her reward In a certain flexibility that will ticles of chalk dancing In the brilliant beam. ThiS-.I repeated all along tho band for-thirty feet across the room, and brought , but its glories by reflections from billions of particles, of dust. The German savaM-saw such a beam In the Interior of the best specimens of medically prepared pure distilled water at first. But now this band of harassing fight has almost disappeared from nearly pure water. They had troublo; human skill was taxed to carefully distill water, yet the diffused light appeared. They could not think of the cause, until finally they thought of the ground glass stoppers of bottles. Tho huge mountains aftd deep canyons of the sides of tho solid gins. Stopper held particles. This distressing difficulty was overcome; now and highly Ingenious cells were made to hold pure water, and new methods devised of plac ing particles for examination, clean, free from the smallest particle of dust, from nlr contamination and all others, under the. object glass of the mlcroscopo for Btudy with the eye, and for a thousand tmcs greater for ultra-violet energy pho- )rtate of skilled manipulation; not the jhelght of human mind by any means; for all whatever subsides In the ineffable majesty of higher methematlcs. I 'Gold Is a noble metal, it has been, chemically divided Into such excessively iijnute bodies that their dimensions are well along toward the moleeulur. Colloidal solutions of metals are where they are dissolved Into particles so mi nute and auspended In liquids so Unit -they do not settle to the bottom. Where liquids contain particles musslve enough o be brought to the bottom by gravity, the cases are merely that of suspension. On account of the possible .minute subdi vision of gold Its colloidal solution has .been more olosely studied with the ultra- mlcroscope than any other metal. .The Greek letter Mu, represented by the Eng lish M, 'Is the coarse standard of measure, and la the M.OOOth part of a millimeter, or equal to 1-25,-WOth part of an inch, while refined measures in ultra-violet microscopy are. the l-l,000,000th of a milli meter, represented by MM, and equals tho 1.1,000th of M, or the l-,400,000th part of an ihoh. Once In each year I publish an at tempted explanation of the mysterious Brawnlan, motions. Hvery article In a colloid solution moves with a set speclflo speed, at high rates. No matter what the substance, minute particles Inces Article No. 2 Flexibility and Poise, KiKuro 1. Teaching tho hotly muscular enntrut. JMKuro To ncqulro llRht noss of poise. This will bullil up tho arch of tho foot niul innko tho wrlt light nnd graceful. I'lguro It. Swaying tho hotly luto thin graceful movement of tho tlnnco will train It to com bine lightness of polso and case of motion. wero especially poHcd for this pngo. mako her feel as If sho were renewing her precious youth. Tho simple practice of dancing as they danced In those lCtyHum days "when all the world was young" la Indeed tho secret of renewing youth today. - Microscopy santly move hither and thither. But col loidal gold, particles move faster and farther without turning abruptly in an other direction than . those of any other matter so far examined. A colloid set aside ' during 'two years, ' when again viewed;- revealed the- ceaseless motion. And' these flying partl61es are-now pho tographed. Cynical Musings The circumstances that alter cases are generally financial circumstances. The prince of darkness doesn't always wait for the sun to jco down . The things that come to those who wait are generally pretty wen worn out Many a man has 'reached-tho-1 heights by putting up n bluff. Tho k fact that talk Is cheap 'is what makes It so exnenslve In the eniL Few things are as hard to beat aa your way tnrougu lire. A half-heurted kick la worso than none. Throw your wholo sole In to It .. Possibly the reason all the world loves a lover fa because the world likes to be amused. It is extremely doubtful If the man who leads a double lire naa twice as mucn fun. One good turn makes a man expect that you are going. to no mm anotner. The reason some people never put their nest root tor warn is Dccause tney. reserve It exclusively for kicking purposes. New York Times. WonderfuS Cures Reported Bn Germany. Tho use of simple herbs as. remedies instead of the more concentrated and usually more dangerous inorganic substances, haa been revived very widely ot (ate. In Germany o new school of physicians hrs arisen which throws out slrocst is viole of the pharmacopeia and relies on an adaptation of the method of wild animals in curing themselves N.Y. Wtrld, It waa Dr, R. V. Pierce, chief consulting physician to the Invalids Hotel and Surgical Institute of Duffalo, N. Y., who first advocated the extended use of socno of our native roots, such as t Golden seal and Oregon grape root, mandrake and queen'e root, black cherrybsrk. These are the chief ingredients in Doetor nerce a uoiuen Medical Discovery, which has bea ao well and favorably known nSS & D. Uatoussow, Esq. country to-day " CONSIDER FATHER ft" -?K home life and responsibility in connsotlou with r tar in a family u - xv -4 By DR. C. II. PARKIIURST What la the extent of the parental ob ligation which a father owes to his chll. dren? Tho question deserves conaldera. lion because of its close bearing upon tlu purposn of domes tic life, which Ih to produce chil dren ii nd mako them serviceable to the Interests of their times. It has bean pointed out that tho terms "father" and "feeder" aro but variable forms of one and the samu word. Bo tin- dtrstood the, father Is merely tho one who pro visions the family und stands to It In tho relation of uommlssAry. In the more primltlva forms of ramuy hood, when Increasing the numan ojrcu, rather thnn Improving It. met an recog nised requirements, nothing more would naturally be demanded of the ratner man ih votiiia- of the family, like the young of the flock and herd, should be amply supplied with what will sustain me ami promote growth. So that tho faithful father would simply bo he who was the attentive feeder, with no responsibility that looked beyond what tho children needed aa young nnd growing animals. It Is one of the features of more tin- l.hwl civilisation thatln oomo. respects It continues to cherish customs and modes of thinking and feeling Inherent In clvl llnatlou of n more primitive type, but wlilph wa should suppose1 would nave be;n outgrbwn and loft behlifd with th" process of tlmo and the broadening and mellowing tof sentiment Wo have an example of this in the rnthor general continuance to tho pres ent tlmn of the primitive habit of looking uiKjn the fnther as the domestlo commis sary, and of considering that ltho obll. gntlons with which ho hae been capcclally charged haVe.bcen fulfilled when his chil dren havo had furnished them all that Is required by their creature necessities housing, clothing and food. Ho Ih reckoned a dutiful father If h keapB up tho house and leaves it to the mother and her ptoxlre' to furnish edu cation, morals, religion and' all the finer accessories; hn to tako care of the child as an nlmnt, and sho to look after him as a person. Without raising tho question as to whether exclusive tnntornnl lnttuenco will suffice for the successful upbringing oi a family of girls, It la distinctly Insuf ficient for th-J development of young masculine nature. There la a certain per sonal quality Inherent In the normal man hut ot which tho normal woman Is des tituteand without which no male child n.nh,becoirio,,a porfectly constituted, man; so that it he bo submitted, exclusively to maternal treatment he haa email chance of nchlevlng an Ideal manhood. Of course, thrre aro mannish women a species of human freak with which our generation Is bolng made painfully familiar but freaks play no part In the economy of nature. Mannlehncsa Is a cheap counterfeit of manliness and can not render to the boy the office of mas culine ennutnencoa. Thero Is a certain special type 5f ro bustness and stability which the lad will gain by social contact with tho father which only In rare Instances will ho ac quire from hla mother; and the unfor tunate feature of our family life' atx pres ent Is that the father, as a rule, Is, so engaged and" engrossed with what ilea outside- ot the real Inner life ot the home that contact between father and son Is reduced to a minimum. The twofoldnosa of parentage answers, to tho twin energies in nature by which tta Bterner and gentler forces combine with eacx. other in tho production of the finest forms of vegetable and animal life. The Idea of duality runs through every, thing. Everywhere there Is the balancing and tbe co-operation of complementary forces. Tho mothor makes her contrlbutlbn to the developing character of '.the child, a contribution full of wealth and tender, neas, without which the lad, aa he comes Into mature years,, would be destitute of charm and lncapablo of tho finest ef fects of personality. But underneath the maternally conferred graces of character, and sustaining them, there requires to be a foundation made out of sterner stuff, exactly as the tree la unable to achieve the purposes of Its existence by, virtue of the foliage with which It la clad or the blossoms by which It Is decorated, but also by the solidity of its anchorage In the firm soil in which It is planted. Family life as it la maintained in these hurried days of business engrossment is such that fathers and their boys, In hosts of cases, ' hardly knbw each other. The withholding of paternal influence la bound to leave lta mark in the one sided development- of the boy; and it doej leave its mark. The young fellow, as ho leaves the warm home nest commits himself to flight that lacks the sustaining power which can be secured only by the im press upon him of what is definitely and distinctly masculine. It lies In the order of nature; beauty combined with stamina, grace married unto grit for nearly half a century, K harmless cleanser and stomach tooio that nalur has provided. J. Donald Matheso of Osslnlng, N. Y. saysi " I suf fered for over five years with what the doctors told me was diluted condition of the itomach, associated tftth a catar rhal condition of tame, and nerwui heart. I had tried enough nux. bismuth, gentian, rhubarb, etc., to float a ship aim naturally mougnt tnero was no euro lorme, dui a iter reading what eralnont doctors said of the curative qualities ot tho Ingredient of 'Golden Medical Discovery' leave It a fair trial. Took the 'Discovery ' and also the 'Pleasant Pellets.' and can truthfully say I am feeling better now than 1 hava In years. I cheerfully give penniulon to print this testimonial, and If any 'doubting Thomas' writes moi I will 'pat him wise to the best all-around medicine) la the.