Newspaper Page Text
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Now Well
"Thedford’s Black-Draught
is the best all-round medicine
lever used,” writes J. A.
Steelman, of Pattonville, Texas.
“1 suffered terribly with liver
troubles, and could get no relief.
The doctors said I had con
sum prion. I could not work at
all. Finally I tried
THEDFORD’S
BLACK
DRAUGHT
and to my surprise, 1 got better,
and am fp- day as well as any
man.” Xhedford’s Black
Draught is a general, cathartic,
Vegetable liver medicine, that
has been regulating irregulari¬
ties of the liver, stomach and
bowels, for over 70 years. Get
a package today. Insist on the
genuine—Thedford’s. ^ E-70
A self-satisfied man is merely a case
of arrested development.
Paradoxical Agility.
“How did he work his wonderful
feat?”
“With both hands."
INVIGORATING TO THIS PAI.E AND
The Old Standard SICKLY. strengthening tonic,
GROVB8 TASTBLBSS general chill TONIC, driwee Ma¬
out
laria, enriches Appetiser. the blood and builds children. up the system. 60
▲ sure **or adults and eta
No Use Looking Within.
“Is Dobblitz introspective?”
“Of course not. There is nothing to
see in a vacuum.”
RUB-MY-TISM
Will cure your Rheumatism and all
kinds of aches and pains—Neuralgia,
Cramps, Colic, Sprains, Bruises, Cuts,
Old Sores, Burns, etc. Antiseptic
Anodyne.. Price 25c.—Adv.
Their Location.
“I have been looking over your
master's wardrobe. Where are his
spats?” •
‘‘Mostly with the missus, sir.”
No Work for Him.
Bill—I hear Gill is looking for work?
Jill—No, he’s not. He’s trying to
get a political job.
Hope for Us All, Then.
“Even Dobblitz has his good
points.”'
“A remark that is enough to make
the average man an optimist."
Reasons Therefor.
‘ “Mrs. Prim’s dear little house looks
good enough to eat.”
“That is because she keeps it in
apple pie order.
In the Grand Stand.
“Papa, what is the umpire saying?"
“Heaven only knows, child; he’s an¬
nouncing the batteries."
His Pessimistic Views.
“Why don’t you try to be more
popular?”
“Aw, what does a popular man get
out of life except a bigger crowd at
his funeral?”
During the Family Grouch.
Mr. Snapperly (reading)—Man com¬
mits suicide by jumping off ferry¬
boat.
Mrs. Snapperly—Just like a man!
Why didn't he jump off a dock and
save 2 cents?—Puck.
* ‘‘At Home” Days.
Edith and Jack were at a loss for
a game.
“Let’s play at being ‘at home’ and
have ‘a day,’ ” said Edith.
“‘A day'?" asked Jack. “What does
that mean?”
“Why, don't you know?” said, Edith
wisely. “All fashionable people have
‘days.’ God's day is Sunday and moth¬
er’s is Tuesday.’’
Breakfast
A Pleasure
when you have
Post
Toasties
with cream.
A food with snap and
zest that wakes up the
appetite.
Sprinkle crisp Post
Toasties over a saucer of
fresh strawberries, add
some cream and a little
sugar—
Appetizing
Nourishing
Convenient
“The Memory Lingers”
Sold by Grocers.
Postum Cereal Co.. Ltd.,
Battle Creek, Mich.
f<£ 3
IMS
PARKS AND PUBLIC HEALTH
Close Connection Between the Two
Has Not Been Given the Import¬
ance It Deserves.
The public parka occupy so promin¬
ent a place in the furtherance of
health in the public mind that even
the health authorities rarely deem it
necessary to formulate rules for the
conduct of those who resort to them
for health or pleasure. The most
prominent signs on the street cars of
the city tell the wayfarer “Spitting is
| forbidden under penalty of the law,”
That the enforcement of this regula¬
tion of the board of health would pre¬
vent infection from germs contained
in the expectoration there can be no
doubt.
The frequent cleansing of the cars
and the absence of sweeping air cur¬
rents in the modern street car, how¬
ever, preclude to a great extent the dif¬
fusion of germs from this source. Un¬
fortunately the law is difficult of en¬
forcement by reason of lack of public
interest. How much more facile in
the dissemination of disease germs the
dust of public parks is appeared to
have escaped the park authorities.
This fact has been brought to public
attention in Paris by a petition to Its
municipal council, signed by numerous
well known physicians and sanitari¬
ans and printed in the Presse Medi
cale, calling attention to the fact that
spitting is very common along the
paths and roads of the public parks
and squares. It was pointed out that
“infection by the hands and shoes of
little children” is thus facilitated, and
the council is urged to issue regula¬
tions to forbid spitting under severe
penalty of the law. This danger is
very real, indeed, far more menacing
than that from the less agitated air of
the street car. While in the cars in¬
difference of the conductor and the
absence of authorized supervision by
a sanitary officer frustrate the en¬
forcement of this important health reg¬
ulation, its operation would be facili¬
tated in the parks by the almost con¬
stant presence of the police in the vi¬
cinity of benches and at 'crossings
where crowds assemble.—New York
Sun. *
LANDSCAPE BEAUTY AN ASSET
No Man Can for Long Be Indifferent
to the Beauty or Sordidness of
His Surroundings.
Beauty is not quite as necessary as
bread; but it has its place in the
scheme of human life. A man need
not be indifferent to the surroundings
because he has to grow potatoes, nor
be blind to ihe estnetic value of a
tree because it yields him a bag of wal¬
nuts or a crate of cherries. His euca
lypus trees will pay for their board
in firewood and honey, but meantime
they are a delight to - the eye and an
addition to the landscape.
Emerson puts it in homely verse;
One harvest from your field
Homeward brought, your oxen strong;
Another er^p your acres yield,
Which I gather in a song.
And it may be that a wise estimate of
life would show that this unseen har¬
vest is as valuable as the one we haul
into the barn, or sell In the market
place. It does not count on the ledger,
but does in the growth of life. We
may be so related to the fields we
cultivate as to get out of them some¬
thing for the character as well as the
purse.
Classification of Pigeons.
In certain western states the raising
of pigeons on a large scale has become
an extensive industry, which has
brought about a demand for a new
judicial determination as to the rights
of pigeon raisers. The only case in
this country in which pigeons have
been classified is from Massachusetts
in Commonwealth vs. Chase, in which
the court holds that the pigeon or
dove is a ferae naturae, or wild ani¬
mal, because “it is difficult to dis¬
tinguish them from other fowl of the
same species since they often take
flight and mix in large flocks with
the doves of other persons.”
Work That Pays.
In many of the smaller cities efforts
are now being made to beautify them.
The movements for the abolition of
the billboard and handbill nuisance,
the cutting of the weeds and grass
about public and private places, are
all in tlie right direction. Well-kept
lawns, clean streets and alleys, va¬
cant lots well delivered of weeds are
all part of the work of making a city
clean and beautiful. These things help
any town. They attract residents and
draw capitalists.
That Neglected Garden Plot.
j Thousands of city dwellers pursue
j learning their lives the year advantages after year to be attained without
I
through a back yard garden. They are
neglecting one of the things which
make urban life pleasurable and over
looking a health resource of incalcula
ble value.
Leave thoughts of the counter, the
-bench and the lathe at quitting time
and form the friendship of a keen
edged garden tool. It will add years
to your life and put cheer in your soul.
Mount Apo.
The highest mountain in the Phil¬
ippines is Mount Apo, on the Island
of Mindanao, according to a statement
by the United States geological sur¬
vey. The height of this mountain
above sea level is given in the Ency¬
clopedia Rritannica as 10,312 feet.
Bachelor Girl.
“She’s a bachelor girl.”
“She seems rather young to be
called a bachelor girl?” *
“She is, but she’s engaged to three
bachelors.” I
MANY SEEK HER PICTURE
Young Woman’s Face Has Been Se¬
lected to Adorn One of the New
' Treasury Notes.
Washington.—-A little Texas girl—
Ellen Evelyn James of San Antonio—
now a student in sculpture in the Art
Students’ league in New York city, is
destined to become much sought after.
In fact, the possession of her picture
will be the ambition of countless mil¬
lions. V
Why? Well, because Kenyon Cox
has used Miss James as the model for
the figure ^nd head of “Plenty,” a god¬
dess appearing on one of the new bills,
which Uncle Sam will soon issue. “I
am so sorry people have found out I
*
Ellen James.
posed for the figures, because all m>
friends will remind me of it to the
end of my days, I suppose," said Miss
James. She is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. S. H. James of San Antonio.
YELPS WHEN CARUSO SOARS
Wcmirf Takes Dog to Opera and
enor Suffers When Rival
Cuta Loose.
Baltimore, Md.—Just as Caruso at
the Metropolitan Opera house recently
reached the part in the third act of
"Aida,” where he takes the highest
notea of the opera, the silence of the
big horseshoe was suddenly broken by
the parently (piercing yelp of a small dog. ap¬
in misery.
“Ki-yi, yi-yi-yi,” went the startling
yelp, high above the note of the far
niuuB tenor.
p’or a share hesitate. of a moment, agonized Caruso
was . seen to An
l<iok came over his face, but he got a
ffluick grip on himself and proceeded.
} ’"Ki-yi-yi,” went the dog In a sec¬
ond shrill shriek of pain, and then a
n. uffled, half-uttered yelp indicated
th'at the owner of the animal had ob¬
tained a strangle hold.
There was a commotion, especially
in the neighborhood of the shrieks. A
weli-dressed woman with crimson face
was seen struggling with something
fluff^. (canine A few near pet and her caught began a to glimpse titter,
a
il ushers rushed In her direction,
ie look of unconcern she had as¬
sumed by that time made them hesi¬
tate. Those who were aware of the
epWide f wondered if the owner of the
dog pinched its ear on purpose or had
accidently jabbed it with a hatpin.
Anyhow, the owner’s name could not
be learned and just what Caruso said,
under his breath, was likewise lost.
ILDIERS TO ACT AS MAIDl
New Duties of Austrian Troops In
\ elude Housekeeping Work and
v Washing Officers’ Dogs.
Vienna.—A new service manual for
Austrian soldiers who act as servants
to officers has just been issued, writ¬
ten “by one of us who has had long
years of experience.” It is’ laid down
that a soldier-servant must know a
housemaid's duties thoroughly and al¬
so have a complete knowledge of val¬
eting. He must know how to wait at
table and be an expert at opening
champagne bottles. He should also
have practice in washing dogs and
cleaning out bird cages. These are
his duties in times of peace.
When on campaign he must on ar¬
riving at a strange place immediately
forage for suitable furniture for the
officers’ quarters. He should then
close the windows and kill all the
mosquitoes, fleas, and other vermin,
and scatter insect powder on the
floor.
SPARTAN TEST FOR BOYS
Asked to Stop Eating Pies, Cheap
Candy and Crullers in New
York City.
New York.—New York schoolboys
have been asked to start, and continue
at least a month, a test in self-denial,
in which they will abstain from using
cheap candies, unwholesome pies, crul¬
lers and greasy pastry, and soda water
flavored with highly-colored sirups.
The pubic schools athletic league
makes the request, and promises the
boys who keep their pledge that they
will excel in all athletic contests to be
held in Central Park when 10,000
young aCnietes will participate in a
festival of sports.
The league also has obtained pledges
from the boys not to use alcoholic bev
erages or smoke cigarettes.
Gas Fumes Kill Children.
Brockton, Pa.—While picking wild
flowers in the woods. Thelma Me
Connell, aged ten, and Louise McCon
nell, eight years old, were asphyxi¬
ated. Fumes from a leaking nafural
gas pipe crossing the farm, formed a
pocket or trap under some bushes,
into which the little girls strayed.
When found ,their hands stil! held the
flowers they had gathered.
Sponge Left in Abdomen.
Alliance, O.—A sponge, left in her
abdomen after an operation for ap¬
pendicitis. ia declared to have been
the cause of the death of Mrs. Sarah
Tracy. The operation was performed
a year ago in a Cleveland hospital,
and it is said a later operation dis¬
covered the presence of a sponge
whicn had been left in her abdomen.
Pimples — Boils
are daa&er aisrnals—heed the warning In
time. When the blood ia impoverished of
the gateway ia open for the germs
disease to enter and cause sickness.
Dr. Pierce’s
Golden Medical Discovery
eradicates the poisons from the Wood bf
rousing and the liver into Tigorousaction—puri¬ blood, and thereby
fying Invigorating enriching the system. Skin end
the whole
•’scrofulous** di s ea ses readily disappear after
using this old-time remedy.
H«b been sold far druggists for over
40 yoarB-gnri always s atisfa ctorily
Mf WW ANTED—A MAN
To To start start In in proatable profitable bust- bust- “
• ness DPI A of of hflAWTICAllintr hisownsellinsr our our Big Rlir Line Tina rtf of
Necessities direct to farmers. Con¬
tract given for exclusive territory. Man must
be honest, sober and industrious. Two
Thousand Rawieigb salesmen now making
9100 to $300 Per Month
Experience A few choice rot Territories necessary. still Ws will If you teach yon. fur*
nish team and little open. can write
m expense money, us
stating age, occupation, etc.
The W. T. Rewleigh Medical Co., Meapfcla, Teas.
Import era—Chemists Manufacturers
NOT EVEN ONE RAY OF HOPE
Depressed Little Man Knew Too Well
the Resourcefulness He Had
to Cope With.
He was an enthusiastic canvasser,
and even the sounds of battle raging
within did not prevent his knocking
at the door.
A depressed and worn little man
with a battered expression opened it.
The caller expatiated on the .beauty,
excellenece and usefulness of the book
he was selling. All was of no avail. At
last a brilliant thought struck him.
“We sell this book padded covers
with round corners and would cover
all your books cheaply to match.”
The battered one showed a gleam of
interest as he fingered a bump on his
forehead, but the gleam faded.
“It would be no use,” he said, dole¬
fully; “there would still be the flat¬
irons.”
The Main Question.
“J. Pierpont Morgan,," said a clergy¬
man, “hated the dissension that some¬
times springs up between high church
and low. Apropos of all such reli¬
gious dissension, he used to tell a
story about a wise old colored 'man,
Calhoun Clay.
“ ‘Cal,’ a gentleman once inquired,
‘what denomination do you belong to?
I thing I see you sometimes making
for the chapel, but don’t you think
you’d do better to come to us?’
“ ‘Bress yo’ heart, sonny,’ chuckled
old Calhoun Clay, ‘hit’s dis-away.
Dar’s free roads leadin' from here to
Noia Chucky. Dar's a straight road,
to de right, and dar’s a level road to
de left. But when Ah goes to Nola
Chucky wif a load o’ grain, do you
think they asks me, “Uncle Cal, what
road you come by?» No. suh! What
they asks is, “Uncle, is yoh wheat
good?’ ”
Mr. Winkle’s House to Qp.
Two buildings in Birmingham asso
sociated with Dickens have been de¬
molished, and a third. Mr. Winkle's
house, is being pulled down.
When Mr. Pickwick asked the wait¬
er at the Old Royal where Mr. Winkle
lived he replied; “Close by, sir; not
above 500 yards, sir. Mr. Winkle is a
wharfinger, sir. at the canal, sir.” And
Mr. Pickwick found in “a quiet, sub¬
stantial looking street stood an old
red brick bouse with three steps be¬
fore it, bearing, in fat Roman capitals,
the words, ‘Mr. Winkle.’ ”—Pall Mall
Gazette.
Room for the Cat.
The doors of a certain new house
had shrunk horribly, as is the way
of the modern door made of uttBea
soned wood and left to shrink in
use. The builder would not send the
joiner to replace them. So the
householder tried the irouclad meth¬
od and wrote:
“Dear Sir: The mice can run un¬
der most of our doors, but our cat
cannot follow them. Will you please
send a man at once to make room un¬
der the doors for the cat, and much
oblige?”
Next day the joiners came.—-Man¬
chester Guardian. ®
Tramp Defrauded Lawyers.
Four Ammanford (Carmarthenshire)
solicitors were alleged to have been
duped by George Sullivan, otherwise
Murphy Finnegan, a laborer on tramp,
who was recently committed by the
magistrates for trial on charges of ob¬
taining money by false pretenses.
Representing that he had been knock¬
ed down by a motor car, he asked, it
was stated, each of the solicitors to
act for him in a compensation claim,
and they all gave him money when
he told them hg was penniless.—Lon¬
j don Mail.
j Pardonable Curiosity.
“I see the cake quite plainly," said
the guest at the restaurant table
I d'hote, as the waiter brought him
j strawberry shortcake for dessert, “but
j there’s "Yes, one sir?” thing replied I’d like the to waiter know.” in a
; tone of respectful inquiry. “What is
| that?”
j “Merely this, what does the straw¬
} berry represent?"
'
Wives Like Unto Job!
At a dinner party in New York not
long ago the talk turned on the
virtue of patience as personified in
j the patience of Job.'
: At this a French woman at the ta¬
ble exclaimed with comic pathos:
j “Talk about the patience of the
j late ■ Monsieur Job! Any woman is
entitled to a like immortal reputation
.
who has ever had a husband at hom^
with a cold in his head!”
Compliments are the small coin of
conversation; very convenient and
mostly counterfeit. ’
You Look Prematurely Old %
Because of those ugly, grizzly, gray hairs. Use “LA CREOLE” HAIR DRESSING. PRICE, $f.OO, retaf9.
COULDN’T BE TOO CAREFUL
Modern Method by Which Prudent
Father Guards His Daughter’s
Future Happiness.
“Your habits are good?”
The prominent millionaire looked
keenly at the young man who had ap¬
plied for the hand of his daughter.
“Yes, sir,” came the firm reply. “I
rarely play bridge after midnight,
never gamble In Wall street, and make
a point of staying home at least one
night a week.”
“Have you a good disposition?”
“Fine. I can live with my sister for
hours at a time."
“You are in good health?"
“Excellent.”
“You love my daughter?”
“Passionately.”
‘What are your assets?”
The young man handed him -a pa¬
per on which appeared a list of his
properties. The prominent millionaire
looked it over carefully.
“You are prepared to corroborate
this?”
“Certainly, sir.”
The prominent millionaire reached
forward and shook hands cordially.
“My dear boy," he said, “I am per¬
fectly satisfied and only hope you will
pardon me for being so particular. But
you see. I want <o be quite sure that
when you have married my little girl,
after her divorce, you will be able to
support her in the same style in which
she is now living with her present hus¬
band.”—Life.
ECZEMA ON CHILD’S FACE
R. F. D. No. 5, I-exington, Tenn.—
“My little boy broke out on the face
with that terrible disease, eczema,
when he was just one month old, and
I just thought sure it would kill him,
as it killed our other baby at five
months old. It would break out In
pimples and scab over, and he cried
day and night. I thought that there
was no cure for him at all. His face
would itch and burn so bad that I had
to tie his little hands down so he could
not scratch his face.
“We began at once to have him
treated until he was seven months old.
and he got worse all the time. I sent
and got a box of Cuticura Ointment
and one cake of Cuticura Soap. I had
not used them a week until I could
see a great change, and they cured
him sound and well and never left a
single scar.” (Signed) Mrs. Lillie
Sikes, Feb. 17,1912.
Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold
throughout the world. Sample of each
free, with 32-p. Skin Book. Address
poet-card “Cuticura, Dept. L, Boston.”
Adv.
Last Civil War Veteran.
I was informed by the United States
pension office that the last soldier of
the Civil war will die in 1955. That is
the estimate made by those who
make a study of vital statistics. If
the last veteran survives until that
date he will have lived 90 years aft¬
er the surrender of Lee.
Kronk, who died a couple of years
ago in New York state, was the last
soldier of the war of 1812, and he
lived considerably more than 90 years
after peace had been signed. Bake
man, the last soldier of the Revolu¬
tion, lived for 86 years after the
peace of 1783.
Here is hoping that some man who
wore the blue or gray may fool the
pension office and round out a full
century after Appomattox!—Philadel¬
phia Ledger.
Profiting by Superstition.
After having sat on many juries the
observant man is of the opinion that
the whole human race is still strongly
tarred with the brush of superstition.
“I am confirmed in that belief by
the amount of damages invariably
voted to plaintiffs, whose injuries
smack of superstitious origin," he
said. “If a load of bricks should fall
from a fifth story window on to the
head of a man who happened to be
walking under a ladder he would get
twice as much damages as if the lad¬
der were not there. The element of
bad luck that attaches to a ladder
would insensibly influence every
juror, and the sum awarded would re¬
flect their prejudices and sympathies.”
Such Is Life.
, “He used to come back two or three
times for a kiss.”
"And now in the mornings?"
“Never unless he forgets his over¬
shoes or umbrella.”—Kansas City
Journal.
Some people have a knack of turn¬
ing everything tb their own disadvan¬
tage.
The Effects of Opiates.
(HAT INFANTS are peculiarly susceptible to opium and its various
preparations, all of which are narcotic, is well known. Even in the
smallest doses, if continued, these likely opiates cause changes in the func
tions and growth of the cells which are to become permanent, causing
imbecility, mental perversion, intractable a craving for alcohol dyspepsia or narcotics and lack in later life.
Nervous diseases, such as nervous of staying
powers are a result of dosing rule with opiates physicians or narcotics children to keep children quiet
m their infancy. The among is that should never
receive opiates in the smallest doses for more than a day at a time, and
only then if unavoidable.
The administration children of Anodynes, by but Drops, physician Cordials, Soothing be Syrups and
other narcotics to any a cannot too strongly
decried, and the druggist should not be a party to it. Children who are iU
need the attention of a physician, and it is nothing less than a crime to
dose them willfully with narcotics.
Castoria contains no narcotics if it bears the
signature of Chas. H. Fletcher.
Genuine Castoria always bears the signature of 1
Fresh Layers.
Customer—I see you have fresh
eggs at 35 cents and extra fresh eggs
at 40 cents. Is there much differ¬
ence?
Grocer—Well, ma'am, the extra
fresh ones were laid in the early
morning when the hens themselves
were fresh..
A hen sitting on a porcelain egg is
a pathetic example of misapplied con¬
fidence.
NO. SIX-SIXTY-SIX •
This is a prescription prepared es- :
for Malaria or Chills and j
Fever. Five and or if taken six doses then will break tonic j
any case, as a :
the fever will not return. 25c.—Adv. {
'Correct.
“Hey!” yelled the guest. “You ad¬
vertise hot and cold Mater in this
dump, and all 1 have in my room
is a pitcher and a Mash basin.”
“That’s right,” replied the landlord.
“If you stay here long enough you'll
find the water is hot In summer and
cold in winter.”
Mn. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children i
teething, Uon,aUaj6 softens psin,cures the sums, wind colic reduces Jbe inflxmmx- boltlcJtat j '
n
But She Hadn’t.
“What's the matter, old chap? You j
look as if you hadn’t had a wink of'
sleep all night.”
“I haven’t. You see, my wife threat- j
ened never to speak to me again if
I didn't come home last night before
ten o'clock, and I didn’t.”
“I see; you're finding out the lone¬
someness of solicitude because she
kept her word, eh?”
“Not by a jugful. 1 wish she had.”
His Future Assured.
“How on earth did you gain all
your popularity?” inquired the new
senator.
“Why, you see, it was this way,” j
replied the older statesman. “When
men asked me for my candid opinion
about themselves I gave them my
candid opinion, and when they asked
me for my candid opinion about their j
friends, I gave them my pickled opin- ] |
ion. Popularity followed as a matter
of course."
DOES YOUR HEAD ACHE f
Try Hickg) CAPUDINE. It's liquid —pleas¬
ant to take—effects immediate—good to prevent
Sick Headaches and Nervous Headaches also.
Your money hack if not satisfied. 10c., 26c. and
50c. at medicine stores. Adr,
No Room for Speeding.
Mr. Atkins was driving over his ]
property with his daughter and a
young man whom hij was beginning to
took upon as a possible and very de¬
sirable son-in-law.
The chauffeur, not unnaturally, was
inclined to show off the motor car, but
Mr. Atkins himself had higher
thoughts. As John, the chauffeur,
quickened his speed, he leaned over
near him, and said, in a whisper;
“Not so fast, John, not so fast.
You make my estate look too small."
Tack Hammer for Surgeons.
Scientific hammering of the spinal
column, technically known as spondy
lotherapy, Is one of the latest treat¬
ments to be adopted by members of
the Philadelphia medicai profession.
It consists of tapping certain pori
tions of the spine for patients suffer¬
ing with heart, lung, stomach, and
liver trouble.
The “tack-hammer treatment" was
discovered by Dr. Albert Abrams, a
nerve specialist of San Francisco.—
Philadelphia Dispatch to the New
York American.
It Puzzled Him.
Newedd—Did you spend so much
.money as this before I married you?
Mrs. Newedd—Why, yes.
Newedd—Then I can’t understand
why your father went on so when
I took you away from him.—Boston
Transcript.
Modern Conditions.
“I'd like to get that son of mine to
spade up the yard.”
“Well, why don’t you direct him to
do it?”
“I don't know if I have a right to
without consulting his Scout commis¬
sioner.”
No one is too old to set a bad ex¬
ample.
RAILROAD SURGEON DISCOV¬
ERS WONDERFUL REMEDY
Fof Man and Beast) the Old Reliable
Dr. Porter's Antiseptic Healing Oil,
Relieves Pain, Stops the Bleeding!
and Heals at the sa me time.
Thousands of Farmers and Stockmen
know it already, and atrial will convince
you that DR. PORTER’S ANTISEPTIC
HEADING OIL is the most wonderful
Remedy ever discovered for Wounds,
Burns,OldSores, Carbuncles, Granulated
Eyelids, all Skin or Scalp Diseases, and
also for Barbed Wire Cuts, Galls, Sores,
Scratches, Shoe Boils, Warts, Mange on
Dogs, etc Continually people are finding
new uses for this famous old Remedy.Sold,
by nearly all Druggists. s If your Druggist
hasn’t it, send us 50c. in stamps for me¬
dium size,or $1.00 for large size, and it will
be sent by Parcel Post. Money refunded
if not satisfactory. We mean it. Paris
JHedicineCo. 2622 PineSt., St. Louis, Mo.
| IfaJaLa KOdaKS ?S„S FILMS AND SUPPLIES in n.^
e Maf. B
o
piven prompt attention. Send 1or catalog.
Glenn Photo Stock Co. Atlanta, 6a.
PERFECT HEALTH.'
Tutt’s Pills keep the system in perfect order.
They regulate the bowels and produce
A VIGOROUS BODY.
Remedy for sl£k headache, constipation,
Tirtfs Pills
WOMAN COULD
N01 WALK
She Was So ID—Restored to
Health by Lydia E. Pink
ham’s Vegetable
Compound,
_♦_
Pentwater, Mich. — “A year ago I was
very weak and the doctor said 1 had a
fig “:3
began taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veg¬
etable Compound and now I am strong
and healthy.”—Mrs. Alice Darling,
R.F.D. No. 2, Box 77, Pentwater, Mich.
Itead What An o the r\Vo man says:
Peoria, III.—“I had such backaches
that I could hardly stand on my feet I
would feel like crying out lots of times,
and^iad such a heavy feeling in head^hes my right
side. I had such terrible dull
every day and they would make me feel
so drowsy and sleepy all the time, yet I
could not sleep at night y
“After I had taken Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound a week I began to
improve. My backache was less and
that heavy feeling in my side went
away. I continued to take^the Com¬
pound and am Cured.
“ You may publish this if you wish.’*
—Miss Clara L. Gauwitz, R.R. No. 4,
Box 62, Peoria, 111.
Such letters prove the value of Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound for
woman’s ills. Why don’t you try itT
{ 7/8 Off!
J) Why pay a high price
a [ for ready-made stock and
J poultry food when it is so
• much cheaper to prepare
your own stock or poultry
gi food? Mix a teaspoonful of
Bee Dee
STOCK & POULTRY MEDICINE
£ with ground oats or corn gi
at meal, and you will have a a
2 stock or poultry food equal Z J
• [ to one-eighth the best its made, cost. at Try about it l J
4P Price 25c, 50c and $1. per cafl. w
• -- “It’s saving proposition to use •
H a I xa
2 Bee Dee Slock it Poultry Medicine." 2
V —Ira Johnston, R. F. D. I, O’Neill, Neb. .*
P A. II
tttmttiittt
Scratch?
fi%) {‘5‘
Disease. 50c at your druggist’s, or by mail
direct if he hasn’t it. Manufactured only by
«. D. RICHARDS MEDICINE CO.. Shura. Tim
QUININE AND IRON-THE MOST
EFFECTU AL GENER AL TONIC
Grove's Tasteless chillTonic combines both
in tasteless form. The Quinine drives out
Malaria and the iron builds up the
System. For Adult s and Children,
You know what you are talcing when you
take GROVE’S TASTELESS chill
standard TONIC recqgnized General Strengthening for 30 years as Tonic. the
It has no equal for Malaria and Fevers,
Weakness, general debility and loss of
appetite. Removes Biliousness without
purging. Relieves nervous depression and
low spirits. Invigorating to the pale and
sickly. It arouses the liver to action and
purifies the blood. A true tonic, and sure
appetizer. Guaranteed by your Druggist.
We mean it. 50c..
There is Only One ‘ ’ BROMO QUININE” QUININE
That is LAXATIVE BROMO
Look for signature of E. W. GROVE on
every box. Cures a Cold ia One Day. 25c.
DAISY FLY KILLER ££ MV £
flies. Neat, dean or¬
cheap. namental, convenient)
Lasts all
season. M ade of
metal, cantBpill or tip
over; will not soH o**
injure anything.
Uuaranteed effective.
Ail dealers orfisent
express paid for 11.00.
HAROLD 80MF.R8, 150 DeHalb Ave , Brooklyn, N. t.
MACKLIN’S PLANTS NO WAITING
IMMEDIATE SHIPMENT OR MONET REFUNDED
“Norton SWEET yam,” POTATO ‘•T’rovidenoe PLANTS, ’ and “Sugar “Nancy Yam” IU!l,”
91.50 per 1000.
TOMATO and EGG PLANTS, tUm per 1000,
10,000 for 915.00.
RUBY KING PEPPER PLANTS, •2-50 per
1,000, 10,000 for 920.00. Fiant catalogue free.
WM. MACKLIN, DINSMORE. FLAj
FREE TO ALL SUFFERERS.
I( you /ou feel feel ‘OUT OL- OF SOR iV'KUN ------------------------- DOWN’or'GOT THE BLUES* ‘
SUFFER JFFER from from KIDNEY, BLADDER, NERVOUS > DISEASES, DISEASE!
_
CMKONIC WEAK NESSES. ULCERS, SKIN ERUPTIONS.PILES. IONS,PILE!
write write for for my my FREE FREE book. dook. THE the most most INSTRUCTIVE INSTRUCTIV
MEDICAL BOOK EVER WRITTEN,IT TELLS ALL about thes
TH ER APION^r
If it’s the remedy for YOUR OWN ailment. Don't sendcent.
Absol lutelyFREE. No'followtip’circulars. Dr LeClkrc
USD. . Co. CO, haverstock Rd. Hampstead, London, eng.
AFFLICTED PEOPLE
Rheumatism. No Medicine, Neuralgia, ‘db dayVfree cured for |1 or Wbr money sulfur re¬
turned. triaI.
longer? Write Sli«t<Ueu»«*>«•**Oclexnv todar Tor par¬
ticulars. Ref.; Metroiioii tao Bank Trust lo. t New Orleaa*.
EVEKVIiOfiy wants lieanh and pleasure. \»*»
have all amusements, good aci-oumioaauons. Writ*
for full Inlormauon. Rhea Spring, I <>.,Hbea Spring,,Tenn.
W. N. U., ATLANTA. NO. 22-1913."
ment. I had back¬
ache aud bearing
down pains so bad
that I could not sit
in a chair or walk
across the floor and
I was in severe pain
all the time. I felt
discouraged as I had
taken everything I
could think of and
was no better. I
“Hunt’sCure” is guar •
anteed to stop and
permanentlycure that
terrible itching. It is
compounded for that
purpose and your money
will be promptly refunded
WITHOUT QUESTION
if Hunt’s Cure fails to cure
ftch, Eczema, Tetter, Ring
Worm or any other Skin