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COLDS
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"I regard my cold cure at being better than
a Life Inturance Policy. " —M UN YON.
A few doses of Munyon’s Cold Cure will
break up any cold and prevent pneumonia.
It relieves the head, throat and lungs al¬
most be instantly. These little sugar pellets
can pocket for conveniently carried in the vest
Price 25 use at any druggists. time or anywhere.
cents at any
If you need Medical Advice write to
Munyon’s Doctors. They will carefully
diagnose mail, your case and give you advice
by under absolutely free. They put you
no obligations.
Address Munyon’s Doctors, Munyon’s
Laboratory, 53d and Jefferson streets, Phil¬
adelphia, Pa.
You Indoor
People
must give the bowels help.
Your choice must lie between
harsh physic and candy
C ascarets . Harshness makes the
bowels callous, so you need in¬
creasing doses. Cascarets do just
as much, but in a gentle way.
Each Vest-pocket box, 10 cents—at drug stores. 851
tablet of the genuine is marked CCC.
Important News
FUR DEALERS
and TRAPPERS
OEND FURS and SKINS direct to MEN who
KNOW their value. We save you money,
because we KNOW the Fur Market, and pay
highest prices on liberal assortments. Price
list especially arranged for your Territory.
It ia YOURS for the asking. Convince
YOURSELF by making us a trial shipment.
We pay all expressage. charge no
commissions, and remit promptly.
LEOPOLD GASSNER FUR CO.
34 Em 118th St., New York City
Capitalised at $ 250 , 000.00
Tuff’s Pills
The dyspeptic, the debilitated, whether from
excess of work of mind or body, drink or ex¬
posure In mi*
MALARIAL REGIONS,
will find Tutt's Pills the most genfaI restora¬
tive ever offered the suffering invalid.
ONEYn
Wa tell you how; and’
pay Wrlt« bf*( for market pHfat and , 3 t
reference*
weakly price list
M. SABEL & SONS, UR
LOUSY I ILK, lit.
Dealer* In Fora, Hide*,
Wool. Established 1956.
REMEMBER
for Couchs It Colds
A Garden of Friends.
A garden of friendship is a
fancy and one that gives last¬
ing pleasure.
NEWSPAPERS TAKING IT UP
Metropolitan Dailies Giving Advice
How to Check Rheumatism and
Kidney Trouble.
This is a simple home recipe now
being made known in all the larger
cities through the newspapers. It is
Intended to check the many cases of
Rheumatism and dread kidney trouble
which have made so many cripples,
invalids and weaklings of some of our
brightest and strongest people.
The druggists everywhere, even in
the smallest communities, have been
notified to supply themselves with the
Ingredients, and the sufferer will have
no trouble to obtain them. The pre¬
scription is as follows: Fluid Extract
Dandelion, one-half ounce; Compound
Kargon, one ounce, and Compound
Syrup of Sarsaparilla, three ounces.
Mix by shaking well in a bottle. The
dose is one teaspoonful after each
meal and at bedtime.
Recent experiments in hospital
cases prove this simple mixture ef¬
fective in Rheumatism. Because of
Its positive action upon the elimina¬
tive tissues of the kidneys, It compels
these most vital organs to filter from
the blood and system the waste im¬
purities and uric acid which are the
cause of rheumatism. It cleanses the
kidneys, strengthens them and re¬
moves qtflekly such symptoms as
backache, blood disorders, bladder
weakness, frequent urination, painful
scalding and discolored urine. It acts
as a gentle, thorough regulator to the
entire kidney structure.
Those who suffer and are accus¬
tomed to purchase a bottle of medi¬
cine should not let a little Incon¬
venience interfere with making this
up, or have your druggist do it for you.
BANNER WHISKEY YEAR
GOVERNMENT REPORTS SHOW
MORE WHISKEY THAN
EVER BEFORE.
<S»
“MOONSHINING” INCREASING
1,911 Illicit Distilling Plants, Mostly
in the South, Were Closed
During the Year.
Washington.—The United States
has just passed through a banner
year for drinks and smokes and oleo¬
margarine. Here is the nation's rec¬
ord for twelve months ended on June
30, as it shows in the figures of the
internal revenue bureau:
One hundred and sixty-tliree mil
lion gallons of distilled spirits—30,
000,000 gallons more than the year be¬
fore.
Fifty-nine million four hundred and
eighty-five thousand one hundred and
seventeen barrels of fermented liquors,
an increase of 3,000,000,000.
Seven billion six hundred million ci¬
gars, 160,000,000 more than in 1909.
Six billion eight hundred and thirty
million cigarettes, an increase of a
solid billion.
Four hundred and two million
pounds of plug, fine cut, cube cut,
granulated or sliced smoking or chew¬
ing tobacco or snuff, 4,000,000 more
than the year before.
One hundred and forty-one million
eight hundred and sixty-t\V*o thousand
two hundred and eighty-two pounds
of oleomargarine, 50,000,000 pounds
increase.
Illicit distilling and other manufac¬
turing of moonshine whisky—on the
increase, "especially,” the bureau
says, "where there are state-wide
prohibition laws.
The internal revenue receipts on all
those things, and certain other things,
such as playing cards and mixed flour,
amounted to more than $289,000,000 ;
Commissioner Cabell's organization
collected it all at a cost of about $5,
000,000. It cost a penny and a little
more than seven mills to collect each
dollar.
When the present year is ended
next June 30, Commissioner Cabell
estimated his men will have collected
at least $308,000,000 at practically the
same cost.
Only three years have surpassed the
year 1910 as an internal revenue pro¬
ducer, since the bureau was estab¬
lished in 1863.
Commissioner Cabell’s report, speak¬
ing of Illicit distilling, says Alabama,
Georgia, North Carolina and South
Carolina led In offenses of that char¬
acter. such During plants, the year 200 officers than closed
1,911 more the
year before.
Cudahy, the Packer, Dead.
Chicago.—Michael Cudahy, founder
of the packing firm bearing his name,
died at a hospital here of pneumonia.
Mr. Cudahy had been ill for five days.
Mr. Cudahy was born in Callan, coun¬
ty of Kilkenny, Ireland, December 7,
1841. He came to the United States
with his parents in 1847, the family
settling at Milwaukee, Wis. In 1855,
while a boy ot 15, Mr. Cudahy be¬
came an employee in a Milwaukee
packing house, and this marked the
beginning of his career in the packing
industry.
25 Girls Burned to Death.
Newark, N. J.—Trapped in an in¬
ferno of flame, 400 men and girls
fought for their lives when the six
story building of a paper box manu¬
facturing concern was destroyed by
fire. In ten minutes twenty-five girls
were burned alive or crushed to death
on the pavement in leaping from the
windows and fire escapes. The rush
of flames was incredibly swift and
threw girls unreasoning the top terror into the The hud-J oil
died on story.
soaked floors were the cause of the
terrible loss of life.
Carlisle’s Body Laid to Rest.
Covington, Ky.—To be laid to rest
among the scenes of his youth and
many of the activities of his life, the
body of John G. Carlisle, three times
speaker of the house, United States
senator and secretary of the treasury,
arrived here from Washington, where
it has reposed in a vault since his
death recently.
Mexican Rebels Routed.
Chihauhua, Mexico.—In an engage¬
ment near this city, which lasted five
hours, six hundred Federal troops
routed a force of four hundred Ma
derists, driving them repeatedly from
strong positions and compelling them
to take to the wooded mountains. The
revolutionists lost fifteen killed and
many wounded. There were no fatal¬
ities on the Federal side, but several,
including three officers, were wound¬
ed. General Navarro was in command
of the Federal troops.
Population of Ohio.
Washington.—The population of the
state of Ohio is 4,767,121, according
to statistics of the thirteenth census.
This is an increase of 609,576, or 14.7;
per cent, over'4,157,545 in 1900.
Doctor Crippen Hanged.
London, England.—Dr. Hawley H.
Crippen, the American dentist, was
hanged for the murder of his actress
wife, Belle Elmore. Crippen bravely,
mounted the scaffold and was compos¬
ed until the drop fell. He made ng
confession.
A TIMELY WARNING.
Backache, headache, dizzy spells
and distressing urinary troubles warn
[you of dropsy, diabetes and fatal
!Bright's disease. Act In time by cur¬
ing the kidneys
S'; with Doan’s Kid
| ney Pills. They
have cured thous¬
ands and will cure
J you.
Mrs. Joseph Bry¬
son, 217 Perry St.,
C o 1 u m-b i a, Pa.,
says: "My feeband
ankles were badly
swollen and my
relatives expected
me to die at any
moment. Doctors
did not understand
[my agine case and surprise could at not obtaining help me. almost Im¬
my
Instant relief from Doan Kidney Pills.
|l continued until permanently cured.”
Remember the- name—Doan-’B.
For sale by all dealers. 50 cents a
box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
McLean Met His Match.
John R. McLean stepped In front of
a lurching Irishman one evening,
and obstructed the sidewalk so that
the Irishman was obliged' to stop and
look at him. McLean said:
"Here’s that half dollar I borrowed
of you. Now you must quit telling
the neighbors that I never pay my
debts.”
Half drunk and wholly dazed, the
Irishman took the#ilver piece, looked
at it Intently, and then said:
“Be dad, yez can’t get off thot. aisy.
It wor a whole dollar thot yez
borryd; so fork over.”
And he forked over another half
dollar, and went his way, laughing
heartily at the quick wit of the Irish¬
man.—Illustrated Sunday Magazine.
A Sure Cure.
Mother—I’m afraid Gwendoline is
setting her heart on that young Pen¬
niless.
Father—You think so?
Mother—I am almost sure of It.
Father—Well, he is not a fit person
for her to marry. He is as poor as a
rat and has no prospects. Something
must be done to set her against him.
Mother—I have thought of that and
have hit upon what I think is an excel¬
lent plan.
Father—Yes? What is it?
Mother—We must tell her that we
“want her to marry him.
BUSINESS IS BUSINESS.
littl a
§j $
i r
' • m
v*
V ■ „ .....
Mr. Kicker—Your bill actually
makes my blood boil.
Doctor Slick—Then, sir, I must
charge you $20 more for sterilizing
your system.
END STOMACH TROUBLE NOW
Dyspepsia, Ga j, Sourness or Indiges¬
tion Go Five Minutes After Taking
a Little Diapepsin.
If your meals don’t fit comfortably,
or you feel bloated after eating, and
you believe it is the food which fills
you; If what little you eat lies like
lead on your stomach; If there Is dif¬
ficulty in breathing, eructations of
sour, undigested food and acid, heart¬
burn, brash or a belching of gas, you
can make up your mind that you need
something to stop food fermentation
and cure Indigestion.
A large case of Pape’s Diapepsin
costs only fifty cents at any drug
store here in town, and will convince
any stomach sufferer five minutes after
tnkine- Id King a a Single bIocIp Gose rfneo that tuat rermenta Fermpnta
tlon and Sour Stomach is causing the
misery of Indigestion.
No matter if you call your trouble
Catarrh of the Stomach, Dyspepsia,
Nervousness or Gastritis, or by any
other name—always remember that a
certain cure Is waiting at your drug
3tore the moment you decide to begin
its use.
Pape’s Diapepsin will regulate any
out-of-order Stomach within five/min¬
utes, and digest promptly, without any
fuss or discomfort, all of any kind of
food you eat.
These large 50-cent cases contain
more than sufficient to thoroughly
cure any chronic case of Dyspep. la.
Indigestion, Gastritis or any other
Stomach trouble.
. Should you at this moment be suf¬
fering from Indigestion, Gas, Sour¬
ness or any stomach disorder, you can
surely get relief viithin five minutes.
A mother makes a fatal mistake
when she leads her children to be¬
lieve that they are wingless angels.
A true friend is a link of gold in the
chain of life.
You Look Prematurely Old i
Because vflhose u**y, gray Halt*. Use “ LA CRECK.E” HAIR RESTORER. PRICE, 51.00, retail.
UNKIND JOLT FROM ADAM
As if Eve Hadn’t Sorrow Enough,
Her Partner Had to Add to
the Affliction.
Adam had just received his notice
of ejectment.
He stared at It a long time in
.silence, while Eve crouched in a
dusky corner, softly whimpered:
Presently the father of mankind
looked around.
As Eve caught his angry eye her
whimper changed to a gulping sob.
*7ell,” he sternly said, "you've cer¬
tainly* put us in a fine mess with
your silly curiosity! And yet when I
refused to have anything to do with
your apple scheme you called me a
poor fool. Do you remember that
you called me a poor fool?”
"Ye-es,” sobbed Dve.
"Well, there*s just one question I
want to ask you?” said Adam.
“What is It?” gasped the first
mother.
"Who’s looney now?” he harshly
demanded.
Then-he turned away abruptly and
started to pack up the family gourds
and the tent poles.—Cleveland Plain
Dealer.
TRY MURINE EYE REMEDY
for Red, Weak, Weary, Watery Eyes
andGranulated Eyelids. Murine Doesn’t
Smart—Soothes Eye Pain. Druggists
Sell Murine Eye Remedy, Liquid, 25c,
50c, $1.00. Murine Eye Salve in
Aseptic Tubes, 25c, $1.00. Eye Books
and Eye Advice Free by Mail.
Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago.
Costly Talent.
"You are sure that airships will
make war so expensive as to be utter¬
ly impracticable?" said one military
expert.
“Quite sure,” replied the other.
“The flying machines won’t cost so
much, but ,we won’t be able to pay
the sums required by aviators for go¬
ing up in them.”
Free Cure for Rheumatism and Bon*
Pains.
Botanic Blood Balm (B. B. B.) cures
the worst cases of rheumatism, bona
pains, swollen muscles and joints, by
purifying the blood and destroying the
uric acid in the blood. Thousands of
cases cured by ft. B. B. after nil other
treatments failed. Price $1.00 per large
bottle at drug stores, with complete Blood direc¬
tions. Large sample free Department by writing
Balm Co., Atlanta, Ga., B.
He Never Shaved Again.
Marmaduke—What do you suppose
that wretched barber said when he
shaved me?
Bertie—T don’t know.
Marmaduke—He said ft reminded
him of a game he used to play when
a boy called “Hunt the Hare.”
Important to Mothers
Examine carefully every bottle of
CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for
infants and children, and see that it
Bears /the
Sign a iVure of 0
0
In Use For Over 80 Years.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
The Lawyers Won.
Askit—Old Sklnnerd left quite a
large estate, did hb not?
tives Noijt—Yes; contested but his some will. of his rela¬
Askltt—Was there much left after
it got through the courts?
Noltt—Nothing but tse heirs.
No Wonder.
“I thought I would introduce a real
cow Into my comic opera.”
“How did It work?”
“Didn’t work at all. The milkmaids
frightened the cow.”
TO DRIVE OUT MALARIA
Ola AND UUItjlJ til' THE SYSTEM
Taka the Standard UHOVB’N TAHTJSLKSS
CHILL TONIC. You know what you are taking.
The formula 1# plainly printed on every bottle,
showing less form. It la The simply Ouinine Ouinine drives and Iron the In a tame¬
out malaria
and tne Iron builds up the system, bold by all
dealer* for 80 years. Price 60 ce nts.
A Sure Cure.
Randall—How did she cure her
daughter of that disagreeable habit of
crossing her knees?
Rogers—Bought her a hobble skirt.
The Simple Life,
Mrs. Knlcker—You will have to get
up to light the fire.
Knlcker—Unnecessary, my dear; I
never smoke before breakfast.
-
For headache—H icks’ CAPIIDINF
Whether from Colds, Heat, Stomach or
Xervous Troubles, Capudine will relieve you.
it’s liquid —pleasant It. to take -acts immedi
ately. Try 10c., 25c., and 50 cents at drug
stores.
Good sense is not a merely in tel
lectual attribute. It is rather the re
suit of a just equilibrium of our facul
ties—spiritual and moral.—Lavater
Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets cure consti¬
pation. diseases. Constipation Cure is the cause of many
the cause and you cure
the disease. Easy to take.
At sixteen a girl thinks about roses
and poetry; at twenty-six her
thoughts run to cabbages and money.
Rheumatism, Neuralgia and Sore
Throat will not live under the same roof
with Hamlins Wizard Oil, the best of
all remedies for the relief of all pain.
It is no use preaching on the father¬
hood of God so long as you do not like
boys.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Svrup for Children
teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma¬
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25c a bottle.
Some men marry for money and
women for
Aids Nature 4
The great success of Dr. Pierce's GoldeO Medical Dis¬
covery in curing weak stomachs, wasted bodies, weak
longs, and obstinate and lingering coughs, is based on
the recognition of the fundamental truth that “Golden
Medical Discovery” supplies Nature with body-buiid
ing, tissue-repairing, muscle-making materials, in con¬
densed and concentrated form. With this help Nature
supplies the necessary strength to the stomach to digest
food, build up the body and thereby throw off lingering
obstinate coughs. The “Discovery” re-establishes the
digestive and nutritive organs in sennd health, purifies
and enriches the blood, and nourishes the nerves—in
short establishes sound vigorous health.
It four dealer offer* something “Inst as stood,’*
It Is probably better FOR HIM-’-lt pays better, >i
But you are thinking ot the cure not the profit, so
there’s nothing “/nat as &ood ” for yon. Say so.
Dr. Pierce’s Common Sense Medical Adviser, In Plain English; or, Med¬
icine Simplified, 1008 pages, over 700 illustrations, newly revised up-to-date]
Bdition, eloth-bound, sent for 31 one-cent stamps, to cover cost of wrapping
and mailing only. Address: Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y.
An Experience
Weak and delicate ladies need Cardui, to bring roses
into their pale cheeks and energy into their weary frames.
Read this letter from Mrs. Albert Root, of Amanda, Ohio,
giving an account of her experience, and how she found
relief:
“I was hardly ever without a headache, and often had
a misery in my back and sides,” she writes. “I was sick
in bed half the time, and suffered a great deal from neu
ralgia of the stomach. Since taking Cardui, the woman’s
tonic, I have gained 10 pounds, and now 1 can do all of
my own house-work, and washing, and my friends say I
ook like a different person.”
c i 1 { C C56
The Women’s Tonic
No harmful effects can possibly come to young or old
from the use of Cardui the woman’s tonic. Thousands of
women have written, like Mrs. Root, to tell of the great
benefit they obtained from its use.
Cardui is a reliable tonic. Its ingredients are mild,
medicinal herbs, acting mainly on the womanly constitution,
and building up both nervous and vital energy.
Pure, strictly vegetable, safe and reliable—Cardui is an
ideal remedy, for delicate, ailing women.
Try it. At all druggists.
'ZLsz**?' Shaking!
& l ft Aching!!
A V\N NS Shivering!!!
Quivering!!!!
(is
Hi \ ' I ’HAT’S malaria. Malaria is
murderous. It kills the vital
i powers. To cure malaria you
must do more than stop the
t V shaking stamp out and the aching. last spark You of must dis¬
pi 9 ease the strength and put and back vigor into the that body dis¬
ease has destroyed.
OXIDINE
—a bottle proves.
does this so quickly and surely that it stands alone
amon g malaria medicines as a perfect cure. It drives
out Chills and Fever, and then begins its tonic action,
rebuilding and revitalizing the entire system.
The tonic body-building properties of OXIDINE
make it the most effectual of all remedies for dis¬
orders of Liver, Kidneys, Stomach and Bowels when
these organs are failing in their functions.
If you want to cure malaria, get OXIDINE. If you
are weak, get OXIDINE and be strong.
SOc. At Your Druggists
PATTON-WORSHAM DRUG CO., Mfrs., Dallas, Texas
(»
m 9
l*j
« 9
The Rayo Lamp is a high grade lamp, sold at a low price.
Thnre are lamps that cost more, but there is no better lamp made at aur
price. Constructed of solid brass; nickel plated—easily k^pt clean . an
THE ornament to any room in any house. There is nothlme known to the art
of lamp-making that can add to the value of the RAYO Lamp as a light¬
STEADY giving device, fcverv dealer everywhere. If not at yours, write fat
White UC*T« J descriptive circular to the nearest agency of the
STANDARD OIL COMPANY UacornoraUd)
For DISTEMPER Pink Eye, Epizootic
Shipping Fever
Catarrhal Fever
Sure cure and positive preventive, no matter how horses at any stage are infected
or ••exposed.” Liquid, given on the tongue: acts on the Blood and Glands- expels tbs
poisonous Poultry. germs from the body. Cures Distemper In Dogs and.fche^pH*y3 Cholera la
Largest selling livestock remedy. Cures La Grippe amOJlg human being#
.A and Keepit. i8aflne show Kidney to your remedy. druggist, 60c who and will #1 a get bottle, it for to you. and Free »I0 a Booklet, dossen. Cut "Distemper tffl* out,
Causes and Cures.” 8 pedal Agents wanted.
[pg SPOHN MEDICAL CO., GOSHEN, IND., U. S. A.