Charlton County herald. (Folkston, Ga.) 1898-current, April 16, 1908, Image 6

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Catching Cold onthe Stréeet:Car Y X 4_g ”adY % g ; e, N r . A ~ B |(| b e e bra sk ) o s, 24 ¥ Z B, e %frl eet 5 grlad MZEREEE L '& AT A W 2 BB\ IR BT 02 | B )T T PART N 04 ¢ G R L »—;-.. =et = oy W A N 3 e (AR k e~ fi“-’- A): g Y \\‘\fiafi% . Ol Dy S ! " WAL ?,:'.,’5,., ,' ) ‘ % ) ‘@ $ i R,,,j, o ,‘? i, s I }' T - ",,.“A' SR v’ e N |lSfe Yy f/';‘" S RosmsEn | o[BG 20| (R SR ol Lond B 10 | Magaese 27 4 7] gt [ R eU < T s YAP IR 28 AAN Y i =l4 i) W 3 i W LYEr A 8 ‘{{.A:»_—,_’,‘-‘ et e RS 0 | lIN ¥ ], &) ,4_{/' ee X e L !Wl \_’ IQE) ey 1 \:»;A' b ‘.“;_{:./ i-t.,zl‘_'f\ FROA fl B L’lm b A s i f/f\;‘fiz” ; 5% lu‘* iTN - - - 2> 2 - Pe-ru-na Pro- Fa: { : \/(/.__...;:41 ' ———~f One Dose in vents Catching - H=-f{[ p=e= " Time, Saves Celd. T i T e Nine. A BIIIPE GOOO 0000000000000 000 490000000040 0080 000949004000 6408090000 04444 i Many peopie persist in riding on the street cars, insufficiently protected by§ clothing. They start out perhaps in the heat of the day and do not teel the need of wraps i The rapid moving of the car cools the body unduly. When they board the car perhaps they are shightly perspiring. When the body is in this condition it is easily chilled. This is especially true when a person is sitting. Beginning o street car ride in the nuddle of the day and ending it in the even ing almost mmvarmbly H‘-{un‘v-s extra wraps, but people do not observe these pre cautions, hence they eateh cold. - Colds are very frequent in the Spring on this account, and as the Summer ad : vances, they do not decrease, I)nrm;i the .\',»rmg months, no one should think of ¢ riding on the car without being provided with a wrap. § A cold eaught in the Spring 18 liable to last through the entire Summer. Great enution should be abserved at this season against exposure to cold. - During the i first few pleasant days of Spring, the liability of catching cold s great. No wonder g 0 many people acquire muscular rheumatism and cafarrhal discases during this season, ; However, in spite of the greatest precautions, colds will be ecaught, At the appearance of the first symptom, Peruna should be taken according to directions on ||ho~ bottle, and continued until every nym‘n,mn disappears, Do not put it off. Do not waste time by taking other remedies, Begin uat once to take Peruna and continue it until you are yusmvv that the cold has entirely disappeared. This may save you a long and perhaps serious illness later on. Bad Effects From Cold. - Mr. M. J. Deutsch, Secretary Building Material Trades Council, 151 Washington Bt., Chicago, 1., writes: *1 have found your medicine to be un usually efeacious in getting rid of bad effects from cold, and more especially in driving away all symptoms of eatarrh, with which | am freqeuntly troubled. “The reliey Perwna gives in catarrhal troubles alone 13 well worth the price per bottle. 1 have used the remedy fer several years now."” Spells of Coughing. Mrs, C. E. Long, writes from Atwood, Colorado, as follows: “When 1 wrote you for advice my little threeyear-old girl had a cough that had been troubling her for four months. She took cold casily, and would wheeze Flare of a Sailor's Trousers. Why the trousers of the sailor man flare 0 at the boftom {is doubtless a problem that has puzzled many a student of the idosyncrasies of dress, and it has generally been put down as the gurvival of a fashion too re mote to unearth, It wag all explain e by a naval man, however, at a recent social session in a downtown case. He gald It was simply to allow Jack to roll up his trousers to the knee when he sets about swabbing decks. “This is a dally duty on board ship" said the elucldator, “anda any ,ggq:wko. has tried to roll up an ord: dnary pale of trousers will under. wor; %Wm uld be. Tho flaring leg Is a real utility, and not a mere continuance of a useless fagh fon, as is shown by the fact that the trousers of officers do not have it."— p}.l Phi @ 2lphia Record. AR B RN N e o o s 3 q' N o - wem, [ - W 4 e g e Bl R Gallien, AV ) N QL Do % _m: Lo T e $ N ; v‘ NV .1 This woman says she was saved from an operniion by Lydia . Pinkham'sVegetable Compound. Lena V. Henry, of Norristown, Ga., writes to Mrs. Pinkham: “ I suffered untold misery from fe male troubles. My doetor said an opera tion was the only chance I had, and I dreaded it almost as much as déath, “One day I read how other women gad been cured by Lydia E. Pinkham's egetable Compound, and I decided to try it. Before I had taken the fitst bottle I was better, and now I am en tirely cured. “Every woman suffering with any {’eimale trouble should take Lydia K. nkham's Vegetable Compound.” FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. For thirty years Lydia E. Pink g::n’s Vegetable (Tomfiound, made m roots and herbs, has been _the standard remedy for female ills, and has positively cured thousands of women who have been troubled with displacements, inflammation, ulcera tion, fibroid tumors, n‘mg'u‘lam.ws, fi;mdxc pains, backache, that bear -down feeling, flatulency, indiges %on, dizziness or nervous prostration. ‘hy don’t you try it ? Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women to write her for advice. She has guided thousands to health. Address, Lynn, Mass. Thore is Only One isßromo Quinine®’ That is Laxative Bromo Quinine : mmmommmnwumomun P 2 6L . {and have spells of coughing that would ! sometimes last for a half hour. [ “Now we can never thank you enough . for the change you have made in our little ‘one’s health. Before she began taking your Peruna she su{fered everyfi)ing in the . way of cough, colds and croup, but now she has taken not quite a bottle of Peruna, and is well and strong as she has ever " been in her life.” Pe-ru-na for Colds. Mr. James Morrison, 68 Last 16th St., Paterson, N, J., writes: “1 have given Peruna a fair trial, and 1 find it to be just what you claim it to be. | 1 cannot Ipruise it too highly. | have used two bottles in my fumH{ for colds, and everything imaginable. can safely say that your medicine is the best | have ever used. DURING THE TIFF. Mrs. Houlihan (sobbing)-—*ll never saw ye till th' day before me un forhnit marriage.” Mr. Houlihan—"An’ I often wisht ve hadn't scen me till th’ day after!” ~—Puck, esl I s i , F ) ‘ o bp::’l‘x‘x;‘:fle}:‘n\‘,‘: Sbl‘:]‘c%:en :l’lllitn goslioc‘k!:;- i hSt A i Now Discovery and Treatment ?T RI 'L’-‘ will give them immeciate rellef, and - S o 0l dlo g i ke . 'ml,l m":k& D': duo. ;;-w send for %] EPILEPTICIDE CURE d ith Faod ar 3 r I o REE Boveas Frepais. Give A& ad bot Aidvom b W. K BAY B DL, 548 Paarl Sirset Hew York, betMR L G G A I uflllcled’l\h ’ E w wiwer [NOMPSON'SEYE Waler e —— Many women have discovered the secret of keoping secrets. GOOD-BYE TO CORNS. You can say good-bye to your corns, bun fons and sore, callous spots when you get ABBOTS'S EAST INDIAN CORN PAINT, the sure quick, permanent cure, It cures the pain ul, soft corns as well as the hard ones and removes warts. 25¢. at druggists or by mail from Tur Assorr Co., Savannah, Ga. The vanity of a girl with a small brother gets many a bad jolt. WAS DELIRIOUS WITH ECZEMA. Pain, Heat and Tingling Were Excru ciating—Cuticura Acted Like : Magic. “An eruption broke out on my daughe ter's chest. T took her to a doctor, and he pronounced it to he eczema of a very bad form. He treated her, but the disease gpread to her back, and then the whole of her head was affected, and all her hair had to be cut off. The pain she suffered was excruciating, and with that and the heat and tingling her life was almost unbeara ble. Occasionally she was delirious and she did not have a proper hour's sleep for many nights. The second doctor we tried afforded her just as little relief as the first. Then I purchased Cuticura Soap, Oint ment. and Pills, and before the Ointment was three-quaxters finished every trace of the disease was gone. It really seemed like magic. Mrs. T. W. Hyde, Brentwood, Essex, England, Mar. 8, 1807.” : The elevator man doesn’t think it wrong to run people down. ECZEMA CURED J. R. Maxwell, Atlanta, Ga., says: “I suffered agony with a sowere case of ecze ma. Tried six different remedies and was in deapair, when a neighbor told me to try shuptrine’'s TETTERINE. After using €3 worth of your TETTERINE and soap I am completely eured. 1 cannot say too much in its praise.” ‘TrrrerlNe at druggists or by mail 50c. Soap 2be. J. T. SHUPTRINE, Dept. A, Savannah, Ga. What man has done woman thinks she can undo. Itch cured in 30 minutes by Woolford's Sanitary Lotion. Never fails. At druggists. It's easier to try to look intelligent than it is to make good. ?. e " Household v, Matters. "'fiaew i 32 i 7 Post Card Bag. Make a handbag of leather post raras, sew four together for each side of the bagz, and two at the bottom slagshed np about three-quarters of the depth to make a fringe, Draw. tozether at the top with narrow stripg of leather for handle.—New York World, : Don’ts For the Domestic Girl, Don’t, because you are clever in household matters, be down on other girls who are less domestic. Don’t, if yon superintend the honse= hold, neglect your personal appear ance, ; Don’t be led into talking too much about food at family meal times, or ahout the servants’ delinquinecies to visitorg, says Home Chat. Try and keep young, although you have grave duties to perform. Try and keep pretty, even though you are busy; and sweet and gentle, though .you have to give orders. Ilconomize on Table Linen. The wise housekeeper of to-day ises doilies instead of tablecloths, gavs the Delineator. Instead of using a larze tablecloth three times a day, it is beiter to have a square for breakfast and luncheon, put on diag ounzally, or else a set of plain doilies, for either of these insure an attrac tive table and also save laundering at least {wo large cloths a week., A few dollies or a square can be washed out and ironed with very little trou ble when ever they need it. 5 With this partly covered table there should ceytainly be a growing plant or fern for the centre, no mat ter how simple it may be. After these things the china really does not mat ter so much, though for breakfast nothing is so charming as a set of blue and white, which may be picked up almost anywhere for a small sum, Graceful shapes can be easily found, —Brooklyn Eagle. Wall Paper Phantasies. The phantasies of the wall paper helped out by a sick brain have been obliterated in an uptown apartment, whose ‘occupant has been through a long and tedious course of illness and unable to be moved for many weeks. Screens of plain dull green denim were made by one of the family and hung from the picture rail. Bach is of the width of the material and long enough to cover the wall, the top and bottom each having a lath run into the hem to keep them straight. The top is finished with a wire by which to hang it. Only the ends of two sides and a corner needed the screens, as the patient faces only in those directions. Only a person who has been ill for a long time 13' one room can appreciate the miser that the cracks on the wall and the figures in the paper can give. A change of the pictures in the room without any previous mention to the sick person in it will sometimes be almost, if not quite, equal to a change from the room to another apartment. The same picture day after day comes to be a monotony hard to be borne by one who is very weak and nervous. It is often in severe illnesses better to take down all the pictures, not only because of their monotony, but because, they gather dust. The few er things in a sick room the better for patient and nurse.—New York Sun. P ol D ol - S C———— MOUSEFOWD | Fried Squash.—Cut in thin slices, sprinkle it with salt and let stand a few minutes, then beat two eggs, dip the squash into the egg and fry in butter. Creamed Cauliffower.—Put well cleaned cauliflower in bowl and place in steamer. Steam until well done and drain (pour off all of the water collected by the steam). Put in deep dish and cover with thick eream and bits of butter. Place in oven for ten minutes and serve. Cauliflower steamed has a much nicer flavor than when boiled. A Mixed Sorbet.—For a mixed fruit sorbet make a syrup that spins a light thread with & pound of sugar and a pint of water and chill it. When ready to freeze add two cup fuls of currant juice, half a cupful of orange juice, a pineapple shredded finely and a bottle of mineral water. Freeze to a mush. Bean '‘Salad.—One cup of beans soaked over night, in the morning pour off the water, put enough fresh on them to boil until thoroughly done. When cool add an onion about the size of an English walnut chopped very fine and moisten the whole with a mayonnaise dressing seasoned rath er highly with salt, pepper, cayenne and mustard. Spice Fig Cake.—One cup of rais ins and one-half dozen figs chopped. Pour over the fruit one cup of hot water in which a teaspoonful of soda has been dissolved. Cream one cup of sugar and one-half cup of butter, add two beaten eggs, a teaspoonful each of cinnamon and cloves and va nilla or lemon extract, Mix this - with the fruit and stir in two cups of flour. A few chopped walnut meats l add to the flavor. 1 FIXING PA. Father—“ What was that silly fel low saying to you when I entered the parlor? Something idiotic, I sup pose.” Danghter—"Yes, papa, I confess it 1 . Father—*“Well, what was it?” ‘ Daughter—“Oh, he was just remark ing what an awfully lucky girl 1 was to have such a dandy pa, and to get such a.lot of pin money for pretty hats and things!’ Silver in the Arts. . The heavy demand for silver in In dia and in the Orient generally, is bhaving, with other influences, a mark ed effect on its price. There has been an advance In the price of sil ver of 20 cents in three years. This advance is expected to continue, and it will have a good effect on the trade in Eastern markets by increasing the purchasing power of the monsy now used in the Orient. In the first four months of the current year Great Britain exported to India $30,000,000 worth of silver. | The use of silver in the arts is rapldly increasing, it being estimated that fully 50,000,000 ounces are con sumed in that way annually. The United States and Mexico combined yield more than 82 per cent. of the world’s output of silver—Jewelers’ Circular-Weekly, Unique British Lighthouse. ' The most extraordinary of all Brit ish lighthouses is to be found on Arnish Rock, Stornoway Bay, a rock which is separated from the island of L.ewis by a channel over 5,000 feet wide. On thig rock a conical beacon is erected, and on its summit a lan tern is fixed, from which, night after night, shines a light visible by the fishermen far and wide. The way in which this lighthouse is illuminated is this. On the island of Lewig is a lighthouse, and from a window in the tower a stream of light is projected on to a mirror in the lantern on the summit of Arnish Rock. “Spare the rod and spoil the child” may be offset, suggests the New York American, bj an adage just as true—*“Ply the rod and spoil the teacher.” FITS,St. Vitus'Dance :N ervoas Diseases per manently cured by Dr. Kline’s Great Nerve Restorer. « $2 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr. H. R. Kline, Ld.,931 Arch St., Phila., Pa GIRL AN INDIAN AGENT. Has Charge of 300 Redskins on 2 Southern California Reservation. Miss Clara True, a petite, daintily clad young girl, has taken charge of the reservation as Indian agent as Palm Springs, and is governing the braves with a firm hand. TUnder her control are the five colonies of Palm Springs, Moringo, Mission Creek, ‘Twenty-nine Palms and San Manuel, 300 in all, who live among the wild: canons of the San Jacinto Mountains. Miss True came to town today to confer with the Federal authorities regarding the shooting by a special agent of one of her charges who was selling liquor on the reservation. She purchased an extra pair of handcuiffs and a heavy revolver to take back with her, to be prepared for possible trouble. She declares her Indians are all geod except when they get whiskey. She wants a bloodless administration. but is determined mot to trust the enforcement of Uncle Sam’'s law among the Indians altogether to, her police. ACCOMMODATIONS NEEDED. “But why do you wish so many clogets?”’ asked the puzzled archi tect. “l want you to understand,” re plied the lady, with dignity, “that if our family isn’t very old it has more skeletons than any other in the so cial bunch.”—Philadelphia Ledger. ‘T'he coal consumption per head is greater in England than any other country. e LOST S3OO Buying Medicine when Right Food ‘ was Needed. Money spent for ‘‘tonics’” anad “bracers’” to relieve indigestion, while the poor old stomach is loaded ‘with, pastry and pork, is worse than losing a pocketbook containing the money. If the money only is lost it’'s bad enough, but with lost health from wrong eating, it is hard to make the money back. A Michigan young lady lost meney on drugs but is thankful she found a way to get back her health by prop er food. She writes: “1 had been a vietim of nervous dyspepsia for six years and spent three hundred dollars for treatment in the attempt to get well. None of ‘it did me any good. “Finally I tried Grape-Nuts food, and the results were such that, if it cost a dollar a package, I would not be without it. My trcuble had been caused by eating rich food such as pug% and pork. 5 *“The most wonderful thing that ever happened to me, I am sure, was the change in my condition after I ‘began to eat Grape-Nuts. [ began to improve at once and the firs: week | gained four ,ounds. .“I feel that I cannot express my self in terms that are worthy of the b?en‘ pefit Grape-Nuts has brought to me, and you are perfectly free to publish this letter if it will send some poor sufferer relief, such as has come to me.” ~ Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read, “The Road to | Wellville,”” in pkgs. ‘‘There’s a Rea son.” 4 F WORTH\ KNOWINGxE] 7y " BT I T, Wegedes qg:_h,'«;;g;?fw Tane British Government owns 29, 000 camels. | S | Reindeer are more numerous in Norway than horses. ; Needlemakers and file cutters seem 1 to foliow the occupation most suscep i tible to the ravages of consumption. 1, There are ten negro banks in Mississippi, and they have organized a State Bankers' Association of their | own. ‘ The Pied Bull Inn, at Islington, is | said to have heen the first house in | England at which tobacco was smoked. In Chira they propose to punish the father or brother of any child above seven vears old who is not sent to school. In Bates County, Missouri, a deaf mute accused his wife, also deaf and dumb, of being quarrelsome, and on this ground got a divorce. There are forty-eight different kinds of material entering into the construction of a piano and they are gathered from sixteen countries. Ostrich feathers can be taken every eight months., The plumes are not, as some suppose, pulled, but are cut with a sharp knife. The stumps wither and fall out. The volume of freight sent by water from the port of New York can betier be realized when we considez the fact that 1250 tons are loaded on ships every hour. The sanctuary of the tomb of the prophet Mahomet, at Medina, Tur key, is to be lighted with electricity. The contract has just been given to an English construction company. In Mexico, the cargador, or car rier, transports bundles so weighty that ordinary men could not even lift them. It is not unusual for him to carry a load of four hundred pounds on his head or shoulders. No city in the world is better pro vided with means for general educa tion in public libraries than is New York City, vet there is an extremely small proportion of residents who visit them, while a very large pro ~portion of the visitors in the cjty is seen in them every day. Byron McNeally, of Louisville, Neb., after fifty-two hours ‘iu an old well in which were a number of dead rabbits, was saved by the persistence of his dog. While hunting MecNeally dropped through the brush cover of the well, twenty feet deep. The dog's antics attracted attention. A NOBLE CABMAN. He Kilis a Rat and Saves San Fran & cisco. That rat catching is going on in all parts of the city and that all classes of people are interested in it is evidenced by the incident of the hackman who, driving a fare slow ly home the other evening, saw a dark shadow scurry aleng the line of the gutter and pause with uplifted nose, as if searching for the scraps of foodstuffs that have been lacking of late. Disregarding his fare, who poked his head out of the window and wanted to know what the matter was, the hackman seized his whip and stepped lightly to the edge of the guiter. The rat heard him, however, and slipped into the hottom of the channel. Then there was no way out of it for the rat, so up and down he fled, pursued by the relentless whip of the eabman, whe lashed every inch of the gutter as the rat tore madly up and down. A crowd had gathered and cabman and.rqt fought their battle amid the encouraging com ments of those watching. At last a faint squeak from the tortured ani mal announced that he had given up. As the eabman took his whip and remounted the box some one in the crowd called out: “Well, you've made ten cents, anyway.”” ‘‘Pooh,” retorted thé cabman with sublime contempt. “‘Ten cents! I've probably saved the life of the whole city.”— San Francisco Call. e A il Bargain Sales in Japan. l Even in placid Japan they have bargain sales, but they conduct them on very different principles from the scrimmages we have over here, says the Engiish Ladies’ Pictorial. An amusing American woman has em bodied her experiences of traveling alone in Japan in a most entertaining volume just published, whence may be gathered a description of a sale at the greatest trading trading house in Japan. The goods are not flung about, They are shown to advantage in locked cases, and the heads of depart ments keep the keys. Remnants, however, are laid on mats,and though there is keen anxiety to secure bar gains, perfect order and quiet prevail, Babies toddle about quite comfort ably; other sleep on their mothers’ backs. However orderly and quiet though the Japanese bargain sale may be, it is not free from the shop lifter, and it is interesting to hear that the detective is as hecessary in the Flowery Land as in England. The kimono slgeve is a useful receptacle tor unconsidered trifles. THE TRUTH OF IT." *Pwas the night before Christmas, and all through the house Not a creature was stirring, not even a mouse; They all had been shopping and spent; their last red, ‘And nervous prostration. had sent them to bed, " Research on the effects of fhigh pres sure of radio-active phenomena has met with negative resuits. MACHINE-GROUND PAINT. Occasionally one hears the “hand mixed” paint of the painter slight ingly spoken of as “unscientifie” and “not thoroughly mixed.” The facts are all on the side of the painter and his hand—prepared paint. ‘ It is the most “scientific” paint there is, because it is made on the spot to suit the particular purpose for which it is to be used. It is as scientific as a good doctor’s prescrip tion. If the painter did not mix it thus it would be as unscientifie ag a patent medicine, Moreover the paint which a good painter turns out is made of genuine white lead ang pure linseed oil. It he does not mix it him self he is not sure what is in it and consequently his client cannot be sure. As for not being (horoughly mixed by machinery, that is simply a mis statement. © White Lead as made by National Lead Company is thoroughly incorporated with 7 or 8 per cent. of pure Linseed oil in the factory, mak ing a paste. This paste need only be thinned with additional linseed oil to make it ready for the brush. The thorough incorporation of pig ment and oil has already been accom plished before the painter gets it. To know how to tell pure white lead is a great advantage to both painter and house-owner. National Lead Company will send a tester free to anyone interested. Address the company at Woodbridge Building, New York, N. Y. With the race-suicide clauss left out, marriage is apt to be a howling suc cess. ¢ SPRING KIDNEY TROUBLE., Vividiy Described by One Who Has Suffered From It. Mrs. H. Mutzabaugh, ¢of Duncan non, Pa., says: “I was sick and mis - erable all last Spring, fm% and as I did not know ARS7 what was the matter, G 00~ I kept going down W% and down until I was tfj B a physical wreck. I ;f’ s had smothering spells, | ?‘“x“':‘ > flashes of heat over \\?\{\‘\Q&(J,’“ \ %f the kidneys, and pain 'lh*,}" 'i\ in passing the kidney e secretions, which con tained sediment. My husband urged me to try Doan’s Kidney Pills, and at ~last 1 did so. They, did me much | good, and I used in all eight boxes, ~ which restored me to perfect health.” . Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. . Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. ! HIS UNFORTUNATE BUSINESS. | “Why it is,” asked the fox, “that } you always look so gaunt?”’ | “Oh!” replied the wolf, “it’s all due ' to the business I'm in. I always have | to keep away from the door until ] there’s nothing left in the house to | eat.”—Catholic Standard and Times, Deafness Cannot Be Cured - dylocalapplications as theycannot reach the tiseased portion of the ear. Thereis only one way to cure deafness, and that is by consti tutional remedies. Deafness iscaused byan mflamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tubeisin flamed yon have & rumbling sound orimper . sect hearing, and when it is entirely closed Leafnessis the result, and unless the intlam mation can be taken out and this tube re stored to its normal condition, hearing will bedestroyed forever. Ninecases out of ten arecansed byeatarrh, whichisnothingbutan inflamed condition of the mucons surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused bycatarrh)thatcan notbe curedby Hall’s Catarrh Cure. Send for tirculars free. F.J.CHENEY & Co., Toledo,o. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation, ‘ON THE JOB. First Angel—Why it is that St. Pe ter has kept the job as dJdoorkeeper for 0o many years? . Second Angel—He’s still hoping for a chance to get at the fellow who robbed him to pay Paul.—Cleveland Leader, Garfield Tea, the herb medicine, insures a healthy action of liver, kidneys, stomach and bowels. Take it for constipation and sick-headache. Write Garfield Tea Co., Brooklyn, N.*Y., for free samples. | No man is so prosperous that he can | afford to dispense with the rest of mankind, { Ladies Can Wear Shoes | One size smaller after uein%l Allen’s Foot- Ease, aypowder. It makes tight or new shoes easy. Curesswollen, hot, sweating, a“hing feet, ingrowing nails, cornsand bunions. At alldr iggistsand shoestores, 25¢. Don’tac | ceptanysubstitute. Trial package FREE by mail. Address Allen B.Olmsted, LeRoy,N.Y. Few people will take advice unless charged for it Hicks’ Capudine Cures Nervousness, Whether tired out, worried, sieeplessness or what not. It quiets and l‘t'frcsHPs braiu and nerves. Its liquid and pleasant to take. Trial bottle 10., Regular sizes 25c¢. and Soc¢., at drugpists, Every man thinks he could go the pace if he wasn’t handicapped. CURES ALL ITCHING ERUPTIONS. Glencoe, Md., Nov. 21st, 1907: ‘I have had eczema on my hands for 12 years, and have tried everything. I have been using TET TERINE 4 days and the results are great. Signed, Mrs. M. Harvey. 'TETTERINE is the surest, safest, speediest cure for eczema and all other skin diseases. Nold by drug gists or sent by mail for §%¢. by J. 1. SHUP TRINE, Dept. A, Savannah, Ga. i i S RS P s . A pertinent query is often a kick ir | disguise,