Page 3 of 13 May 1910 Issue of The Kadoka Press in Kadoka, South-Dakota

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The Kadoka Press (Newspaper) - May 13, 1910, Kadoka, South DakotaUncovered a Burled Town. Every once in awhile excavation tn southern Arizona results in the dis- covery of a burled village. The most recent discovery of this kind was made by Frank C. Erwin at his home. 14 miles from Cochise. Three from his ranch Erwin started to dig an Irrigation ditch. Only a few feet under the surface he began to uncover utensils of a shape and material which Indicated that they had been used by a race prob- ably as old as the Cibolas. that strange people whose “Seven Famous Cities’’ was tho lure that brought Father Niza and the negro Estevanicio from the Spanish mission at Culiacan north along the Sonora river to the old city of Tabac, near Tucson, which expedition was the beginning of civilization in Arizona. After digging deeper Erwin came across a wall, which he followed for 20 feet. Further Investigation brought to light hundreds of bones well pre- served, one skeleton being intact. When an attempt was made to take up the skeleton it fell to pieces. Among the treasures unearthed was a slab on which were written curious figures representing men and birds and ani- mals. Erwin took several of the relics Into Tombstone and will send others to the Smithsonian institution. Able to Retaliate. Byron was writing his "English Bards and Scotch Reviewers.” “They’ll find I’m no Keats!” he ex- claimed. “I'm a ba-ad man from the headwaters of Bitter creek, and I can hit back—darn ’em !” Regretting that his lame foot was not ¦ real club, so he could use it on them, he dipped his pen in the vitriol again and confided some more of his burning thoughts to the sheet of paper before him. iIASJE WELLAND STRONG By Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Jefferson, lowa. —“When my baby "7 1 ¦ was justtwomontha 001(1 I was com-pletely run downand my internal or-gans were in terri-ble shape. I begantaking Lydia E.Pinkham's Vegeta-ble Compound, andmother wrote- and told you just how I was. 1 began to gain » t / i r f 'it, ¦ at once and now I ¦ ' ' ’ lam real well.” Mrs. W. H- Burger, 700 Cherry St., Jefferson, lowa. | Another Woman Cured. Glenwood, lowa. “ About three years ago I had falling and other fe- male troubles, and I was nothing but skin and bones. 1 was so sick 1 could not do my own work. Within six months 1 was made sound and well by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- pound. I willalways tell my friends that your remedies cured me, and you can publish my letter.” Mrs. C. W. Dunn, Glenwood, lowa. If you belong to that countless army of women who suffer from some form of female ills, just try Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound. For thirty years this famous remedy has been the standard for all forms of female ills, and has cured thousands of women who have been troubled with such ailments as displacements, fibroid tumors, ulceration, inflammation, ir- regularities, backache, etc. If you want special advice write for itto M rs. Pink ham. Lynn.MasSi It is free and always helpful. WESTERN CANADA What Prof. Shaw, tho Well-Known Agri- culturist, Says About Iti ———— B, — •*! would *OOIIO r raise cattle in Western Canada than in the corn belt of the United State*. Feed 11*11 ' 4 chottp* r ind climate • r the 1 IIlour murker will im- It>rove than your , Ifarmers will produce the ¦ Itaipplie*. Wheat ran be A Igrown up to theftth var- | Mallei (MHO mile* north of A - <bf VS <kj Vour vacant land Wv A will be taken at a rate X present concep- j*nKZ UuM'ion. We hn <« e- n«h n Rtatea alone who want r homes to take up thia land." Nearly 10,000 Americans w illenter and make their homes in Western Canada thia year. 1909 produced another large crop of wheat, oata mid barley, in addition to which the rattle export* wan an iinmenae item. Cattle mining, dairying, mixed farming and grain growing in the province* of -Manitoba, baakat- chowun and Alberta. Free homewtoad and pre-emp- tion areaa, a* well as lands held byrallwny and land companies, will provide Domes for millions. Adaptable anil, healthful cli- mate. splendid school! and churches, and good railways. For settlers* rates, descriptive literature “Last Best West,” how to reach the country and other par- ticular*, write to Bup‘t of Immi- gration. Ottawa. Canada, or to the following Canadian Gov't Agents E. T. Holmes. I Sift Jackbonist., bt. I‘aul Minn., and J. M. MacLacl lan. Box 116. Watertown, bjuth Dakota. (Use address nearest you.) Please say where you saw this advertisement. A I ¦¦ ¦—l KloKeflt Petticoat Ready to Wear with- out the slightest alteration. Perfect fit. 11.50 to >5.00 Write for catalog. Agents wanted. Quantre’l Gartnent Co., 2136 7th Avß., New York. WASTED-FLORIDA LAND AGENTS. \\ t ha ve the ba t selling t ruck and Grape I'rultland in Florida. East Coast near Palm Bead). Absolute and guaran- teed drainage and protection from over- flow New commission plan. .Make more money than ever before Prefer agents ?who have handled Florida land. Write today for literature. Ths Jupiter Laud Co., P. J. Franklin, Gen. Mgr, .Mercantile Library Bldg, Cincinnati, Ohio. pOR SALE... 1 Printing Oilice Outfits for large or rmall eetabUalimrnte. K*tltuate* funuenetl promptly. For fullparticular* addre-* the CHICAGO JIEWSI'AriK t 5105,411 IMhrI..SL.MIoaxctty.u. niTPIIYO WalMi F..<’«lema»,WaauFATENTS Trial Bottle Free By Mail Tf yen •uffcr from Fiti. Pnlllrc fltctr.ces, Bpaamt. or hnve < tnlritm that do no. n*y New Dh- covery will relieve inc:.;. and all are a*ked to do ia to tend fura Free Trial82 Bottle ofDr. May • Epl!optioide Ouro llh&a cured tbontaeda ’?here everything eiae failed. Giiauntrtd by Mav MedUal L« ( M»nito yUnder Pure Food ax>r. Drt gs Act, •inn* »“ih. IKX Guaranty No J* *7l Plrtt-e w»)t* fur UiH-vm,Free f*Bou.e aud riva AGE and complete addtvyt* DR. W. H. kAf. 5-18 Pm I St’Ut. «s«i Yo-L A womun may point the finger of scorn at a man, but she poties it in the eye of another woman. Iler Sculp Itebeil Intolerably. “Just about two years ago. some form of humor appeared on my scalp. The beginning was a slight itching but it grew steadily worse until, when I combed my hair, the scalp became raw and the ends of the comb-teeth would be wet with blood. Most of the time there was an intolerable itching, in a painful, burning way, very much as a bad, raw burn, if deep, will itch and smart when first beginning to heal. Combing my hair was positive torture. My hair was long and tan- gled terribly because of the blood and scabs. This continued growing worse and over half my hair fell out. I was in despair, really afraid of becoming totally bald. “Sometimes the pain was to great that, when partially awake, I would scratch the worst places so that mj finger-tips would be bloody. I could not sleep well and, after being asleep a short time, that awful stinging pain wonjd commence and then I would wake up nearly wild with the torture. A neighbor said it must be salt rheum. Having used Cuticura Soap merely as a toilet soap before, I now decided to order a set 6t the Cuticura Remedies —Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Pills. I used them according to directions for perhaps six weeks, then left off, as the disease seemed to be eradi- cated, bu,t toward spring, eighteen months ago, there was a slight re- turn of the scalp humor. I com- menced the Cuticura treatment at once, so had very little trouble. On my scalp I used about one-half a cake of Cuticura Soap and half a box of Cuticura Ointment in all. The first time I.took six or seven bottles of Cu- ticura Pills and the last time three bottles —neither an expensive or tedi- ous treatment. Since then I have had no scalp trouble of any kind. Stand- ing up, with my hair unbound, it comes to my knees and had it not been for Cuticura I should doubtless be wholly bald. “This is a voluntary, unsolicited tes- timonial and I take pleasure in writ- ing it, hoping my experience nv.y help someone else. Miss Lillian Brown, R. F. D. 1, Liberty, Me.. Oct. 29. 1909.’’ I,oat Fee Inside Patient. Many a surgeon has had to repeat an operation to recover bits of sponge or other medical equipment left in the victim on the operating table. But the story is going the rounds here, says a Paris correspondent of the St. Louis Republic, that a brilliant French surgeon has distinguished himself by leaving his fee in the sufferer’s abdo- men when he stitched it up. The patient was a merchant, who saw to all the arrangements himself, up to the commencement of the opera- tion for appendicitis. The last thing he did before going under the anes- thetic was to pay the surgeon the fee with a check for SI,OOO. The great man tossed it aside on a pile of ab- sorbent wool that was presently in use. Later, when the last stitches were being put in after the operation, he looked for the fee and could not find it. He opened the patient again and found the boodle, according to the story that is diverting medical circles. Women are supposed to be the slaves of fashion, but it's a mistake. Men are the real slaves, inasmuch as they have to pay the freight. For Red, Itching Eyelid., Falling Eyelashes and All Eyes That Need Care Try Murine Eye Salve Aseptic Tubes—Trial Size—2sc. Ask Your Druggist or Write Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago. Looking llackwurd. On the night following the Yale- Princeton game last fall, a young man who bad slipped and fallen was as- sisted to his feet by a passer-by. "Just a little shelebratlon of vlc- t’ry,” the young man explained as he waved a bedraggled bit of orange and black ribbon. "But Princeton lost," the other told him. The young man looked painfully surprised for an instant. “How do you know?" he asked. "Why, it was on the bulletin board an hour ago," the other said. "Yale won to-day's game. "I wash referrln',” said the young man with great dignity, "to th’ game of 1903.”—Lippincott's. > Jj .irr win i THE WHITE PLYMOUTH ROCKS. After twelve or fifteen years’ ex- perience in raising nearly all kinds of “pure-bred” poultry, and having had real practical experience, 1 am impelled to speak largely in favor of ¦White Rocks, writes E. R. Freeland in Stockman and Farmer. They have several advantages over the other branches of the Rock family, of which might be mentioned. They are easier to breed true to color than the Barred or Buff Rocks. They are easier to dress; being snow- white there are no black or dark pin feathers to contend with. Take a coop of White Rocks into market and you have no trouble to find a ready sale for them. The next time you go back people are wanting to know if you have any more of “thf white chickens" for sale, or at least this Is my experience. Take a coop of White Rocks, with snow white plumage, yellow skin, shanks and beak, with red or bay eyes, why should they not be attractive to the public's eye and appetite, too? Speaking of yellow shanks and beak, there is another advantage over the Barred Rocks especially. 1 bred the Barred Rocks for years, having had many different strains and paying all kinds of prices, and they would invariably breed dark legs and beaks, especially in fe- males, and occasionally jet black feathers in plumage. The White Rocks have none of these objectionable faults. They are good sitters and mothers, though not persistently broody, quick and hardy growers, always plump and nice at any age. They are fine layers of large brown eggs, are fine winter layers. My fleck furnishes me with eggs in winter the same as summer. If a hen doesn't lay eggs in winter I have no use for her. Feed is too high-priced to have her loaf all win- ter, when eggs are bringing high prices. In conclusion, I say got a good laying strain of White Rocks, and , they will please you every day in the year, both in beauty and as money-makers. My stock is from one of the most noted breeders of White Rocks in the United States. They cost a good bit of money, but it pays to start with good stock, and not waste time and money on inferior blood. THE FEED AND CARE OF DUCK- LINGS. “For the first four days feed broad and cracker dust moistened with wa- ter or sweet milk, with a little meal stirred in, about 15 per cent hard boiled egg and 5 per cent sand. Feed four times a day. Their drinking vessels should be deep enough for them to stick their heads under the water, but they should not be allow- ed to play in the water. From five to twenty days old feed wheat bran, two parts, corn meal, one part, rolled oats, 50 per cent of this bulk, beef scrap, 5 per cent, sand, 5 per cent, green food 10 per cent. Mix to a crumbly state and feed four times a day. Feed only what they will clean up. Personally, whilst I prefer a ration such as the above, I have had good results with young ducks on a feed of corn meal alone, and if 1 found they were getting too fat, 1 would add bran. Like most farmers, I have often been too busy or too indifferent to feed properly, and have fed what was most convenient. I have had at times fairly good results feeding laying ducks com and oats, but always found they responded to a good soft food ration with beef scrap added, and particularly so in the fall, or in a dry season, when they could not get insect life. 1 trust that others who have fairly tried this duck will report their ex- perience, for if they be as good as 1 think them to be, they will prove a most valuable addition to the aver age poultry yard.—W. W. Henry, in Southern Planter. GREEN FOOD FOR POULTRY. More than half of the poultry of this country do not have a green thing to eat from December to May. At Green's fruit farm we grow each year several acres of beets generally known as Mangel Wurtzel especially for poultry. These beets are stored so that they can be reached and placed before the birds continuously. A big beet or cabbage head hung up in the hen's house by a stout cord of rope just high enough for the hens to peck at will furnish both food and exercise on a winter s day. Tur- nips, carrots, onions, or clover hay furnish a delightful change in food for poultry during winter. The clov- er hay should be cut up fine in a cutting box mixed with a little com meal or bran moistened. If your birds are pulling out their feathers or eating their eggs or doing other strange stunts feed them green food for a week or two and see the change for the better. —Green's Fruit Grower. DOES FARM POULTRY PAY. During January and February the city prices of eggs ranged from 45 to 60 cents a dozen. Throughout most of the winter they were sell ing at 40 cents or higher. These prices almost prohibited the general use of eggs as an article of food, and caused many consumers to jump at the conclusion that there was easy money in egg production. Careful Ip fry »«v the Ohio Agri- cultural Experiment Station among a number of farmers would seem to indicate that not to exceed 5 per cent of the hens were laying at all during these months of high prices, and that had the producer received for his product the price paid by the consumer, he would still, in many cases, have been a loser. Certain farms reporting to the Station show an egg cost of from 7 to 13 cents each for the month of January. Of course the fellow who had things fixed so that his hens did lay reap- ed a golden harvest. BREEDS AND LAYING CAPACITY. Laying capacity varies greatly among individual hens. This has been discovered by the use of trap nests Experiment station records show that hens vary from 250 eggs per year to no eggs. Frequently a good-looking hen. in good health, will rot pay for the food she eats, while another hen of the same breed and >vith the same care, will lay eggs worth three or four times the cost of the food. The smaller breeds, such as Leg- horns, are usually the most profit- able for egg production. The Leg- horns should lay as many eggs as the Plymouth Rocks and breeds of that kind, on one-fourth less food. But the question of profit does not hinge on egg-yield alone. Large re- turns will be secured from the sales of the Plymouth Rocks for market, which will about balance the differ- ence in the cost of feeding.—Weekly Witness. CLEAN WINDOWS. Dirty windows In the poultry house prevent the fowls from getting the full benefit of the sun’s rays and make the house cheerless and un- comfortable. It is a good plan to place the dust-bath where the sun can shine directly into It during some part of the day. Clean the windows and let a little sunshine in. —Farmers’ Home Journal. WHERE IS THE MARKET. Any man making an investment Ir. any manufacturing or producing busi- ness first asks himself the most im- portant question—What market will I have for my products? Can any one tell us of a business that could have greater demand for its products than an egg farm? Then it only stands to reason that It Is a safe investment. —Farmers’ Home Journal. NOTES. It, must not be forgotten that food flavors the flesh as well as the egg. Our American breeds fatten very readily, making them ideal market poultry. Those who become discouraged by mistakes are not very progressive. Instead of being stumbling blocks, mistakes are object lessons that arouse one to a sense of closer ob- servation and point out facts. How- ever, the man who makes the same mistake twice is not a very observ- ing person. The older the egg the less is that sweet rich flavor noticeable. It is more important to know the work of the individual hen than the average of the flock. There is no foundation for the as- sertion that the “sweet, rich flavor” of the egg belongs to the breed. That condition can only be brought, about by the quality of the food. If hens trusted to luck, they would lay very few eggs. Hens never go at it in that haphazard way. See that you do your part as well as they do theirs. The farmer’s wife often speaks about being lucky or unlucky with regard to getting winter eggs from her hens. The fact is that it is a matter of management rather than luck. When you get eggs and your neighbor does not, it is not luck that makes the difference. All authorities are predicting a shortage in the poultry crop of the coming season. This will mean high- er prices, both for eggs and dressed poultry. Hatch all the chicks you can possibly attend to. and keep as many pullets as possible. Your re- turns will more than compensate you. Saving the Peach Crop. The Department of Agriculture wants to save all of the peach crop and has therefore issued a bulletin showing how this may be done in a large measure wherever peaches are grown. It says that the losses peach growers endure from the “peach brown rot” is $5,000,000 annually. The department is at work trying to discover a completely satisfactory remedy, but apparently has not reached any satisfactory conclusion, but it has of the peach scab or black spot which causes a great deal of damage. A cheap and simple remedy hat been found for this disease in self- boiled lime-sulphur wash, which can be applied during the growing sea- son with little danger of injuring the fruit or the foliage. It Is declared to be very effective. By mixing ar- senate of lead with the fungicide the curculic can be destroyed at the same time. The department has prepared a pamphlet describing the prepara- tion and use of the remedy.—Wash- ington Special to the Boston Adver- tiser. I PACKAGE DAILF6 FREE ON REQUEST OF MUNYON’S PAW-PAW PILLS The beet Stomach and Elver Pills known and a positive and apeedy cure for Con- stipation. Indigestion. Jaundice. Biliousness. Sour Stomach, Head- ache, and all ailments arising from a disor- dered stomach or slug- gish liver. They con- tain In concentrated form all the virtues and values of Mun- yon’s Paw-Paw Tonic and are made from the Juice of the Paw-Paw fruit. I unhesitatingly recommend these pills as being the best laxative and cathartic ever compounded. Send us a postal ot letter requesting a free package ot Munyon's Celebrated Paw-Paw Laxa- tive Pills, and we will mull same free of charge. MUNYON'S HOMOEO- PATHIC HOME REMEDY CO.. 53d and Jefferson Sts.. Philadelphia. Pa. John and the Frnochlse, A woman suffrage lecturer in Eng- land recently brought down the house with the folowing argument: "I have no vote, but my groom has. I have a great resjiect for that man in the sta- bles. but I am sure if 1 were to go to him and say, 'John, will you exercise the franchise?’ he would reply, ’Please, mum, which horse be that?’ ” Aligning llllnnelf. •'Brother Hardesty, you've heard of what they cat! the higher criticism, haven’t you?" "Yes, 1 know all about that." Well, do you take any stock inl ItT” "Not a bit, Brother Irons; I'm ortho- dox. I'm no insurgent.”—Chicago Trib- une. WOMENS ILLS. Many women who suffer with back ache, bearing-down pain, hMd*< b and nervousness do not know thai these ailments are usually due to trouble with the kidneys. Doan'.- Kidney Pills re ' , move the uuise. Mrs M. Me Fad *' would have died had it not been for “¦ D o a n’s Kidm \ suffered from ' rible backaches. I gradually grew worse until 1 had to take to my bed, where I lay uncon scious. I began using Doan's Kidney Pills after the doctors had failed to help me and was completely cured.” Remember the name—-Doan's. For sale by all dealers. 50 cents a box Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Consult with him that Is wise and of sound judgment, and seek to be in- structed by one better than thyself, rather than to follow thine own inven- tions. —Thomas a Korn pis. M I niikrogHuauhrne, A hard name to pronounce, called lo- cally "Mlnnlcog.” This is a picturesque summer resort on one of the largest Islands of the Georgian Bay, only 3Vj hours run liy the Grand Trunk Railway System from the City of Toronto. Can- ada. and beautifully situated among the 30.000 islands of that territory. Splen- did hotel accommodation, good fishing, tine boating and no hay fever. Bass, trout, pickerel and pike abound. For illustrated descriptive matter and all information, write to W. 8. Cookson, tn? Merchants Loan & Trust Building, Chicago. A girl blushes the first time a young man kisses her because it embarrasses her to think that he might not havs done it Divtlonnrlea t'p to Date* “Talk about keeping up with th* times," eaid the professor, "th* makers of dictionaries have to be n* to the very minute. I don’t believe * day passes without some new word being introduced into our language. For most of them the originators of slang delightfully original aren't they? and the men of sclenc* are responsible. I waa running ovar the other day a list of new words as- sembled for the latest dictionary, and I declare I was amazed at the number that were, in truth, new to me. Did you know, for example, that the po mato is the name given to the crds* between the tomato and the that a grasshopper destroyer Is called a hopperdozer. and that the scientific term for hookworm is unclnariastoF Speaking of slang. I notice that plac* has been found in the dictionary for rubberneck, stunt, tank up and fan—- of course," the professor added some- what hurriedly. "I mean a baseball fan. And there are hundreds and hundreds more.” When young a girl wonders if she will ever meet a man she would mar- ry; after she gets older, she wonder* If she will ever meet one she wouldn’t marry. rALLENSFObf-EASE Shake Into Y—r , Alton’s Foot- Rm*. the antfeeptiel i |»oodrr lor I lie Iret. It our**f i z painful, swollen, smarting, norroeA feet- i /f * /i\ and instant Ij taka* tb* atiuff oat «* i coms and bun inna. Il’sthe ffrrat* C'Jr/J/ rat cvinlorl dinrerery lhe P ALa. ' «<«*• Alton’* Foot—K***m*M**tiyhh- \ tii'n>K or how ateoao feel ***y. Ul*a CJML' certain ctir4 for ingrowtag nails, aesei- »»»«. callous and tired. anhin<r feet. g 'V.IL . Ue have over » .(MK'tMttmoeiAh. TKY ITTO-IXY.Sold Areryw bare. »• r Wfcrt l>o not nrrepl aay *abatHata. 1 1 Sant by mail for 2ftc. in stamp*. l;v3F FREE mn iint tatAVs Rwniy "In a stock \t 111. K>. lh" • < —w I Fewlsb, ”CO» Children, Soto be alien • |>r„r)rl,, n.,.rrwhi,re. I FoolEste Tr.ill'.rk.f.HtKK.Address. The Army of Constipation Is Growing Smaller Every Psjk CARTER’S LITTLE LIVER PILLS an oofy^giro relief—- they permanently 'jWjltiaß curs t'«a.ii»-Zpgaßr tUTTUBI ties. Mil-'JEgSgr IIVOV I lion. use Wx[ ¦ PIUJK. I them for VW— AMAH i Bdiees- Maa, larligMt—, Sick U.Usdto, MbwSfe SHALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SHALL MKX Genuine a— bsu Signature W. L. DOUGLAS $5, $4, $3.50, $3 & 82.50 C* !lZ"YE* S*w«' 4T2.00 Shues O ilU CaOn W. L. Dougin* RhocH ure worn X *\ by more men than l wja any other make, BECAUSE: XV. t.Douglas SB.OO I ** Ej an<i riX--. in at.vie, (It- mid u»*:tr, other initkeM coating • dttaMkteA 1 to ftH.OO. XV. IJh.uulaM *3.50. V '* “jFj hik! ahoea are the lowe«t «/f price, (|iiitlitv roiiahl- ered. in t h<« \% <*rl«l. ® 1 /IF'&xS Fast Cvlor Eyelet*. i&MI Thr genuine have W. IMirtaHMMadpte* ttamped on f lie iMitfoiii, Tukr W«• hnb*aM«a*a« A*l> \ nrir rleialer for W.K iMHiglaaatMßea. Iflh**r Are not for Mkle in your town wrile/or Mali t>t<ar o*B- -Hiving fulldirections how to wrier toNB ordered direct from factory <lclivrrrdto tkaWß*Mr ¦¦ chai get prepaid. W. L. DOL’til.AH, HmcDMA, Mawi. Don’t give babies physic. When baby needs a laxative, let mother take a candy CaacareC. These innocent, vegetable tablets act through the mother** mQk. A million mothers now know tkar nothing can take their place. a* Vest-pocket box. 10 cent .—at dragwtaraw People now use • million boxM moatMv. For Any Itlseene or Injure •« the eye, use PETTIT’S EYE HALVE, absolutely harmless, acts quickly. All druggists or Howard Bros, Buffalo, N. Y. Am It Seemed to Iler. "Mrs. Wilfong, how many lodges does your husband belong to?” "He’s a member of four lodges and two councils.” "What is the difference between a lodge and a council?” "¦Well, w hen he goes to a lodge meet- ing he generally stays later.” S. C. N. U. - No. 30.-1910. Not Sisters Hi yk I [ J '-'VUI Now and again you see two women pass- ing down the street who look like sisters. You are astonished to learn that they are mother and daughter, and you realize that a woman at forty or forty-five ought to be at her finest and fairest. Why isn’t it so? The general health of woman is so in- timately associated with the local health of the essentially feminine organs that there can be no red cheeks and round form where there is female weakness. Women who have suffered from this trouble have found prompt relief and cure in the use of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. It gives vigor and vitaKty to As organs of womanhood. It clears the complexion, brightens gh» eyes end reddens the cheeks. No alcohol, or habit-forming drugs it contained in “Favorite PreseriptaM.**' Any sick woman may consult Dr. Pierce by letter, free. Every tetter to held as sacredly confidential, and answered in a plain envelope. Address! World's Dispensary Medical Association, Dr. R.V. Pierce, Pres.. BsdM*, N.Y. 175 PIANO PURCHASING BOND Given for a Solution to this ONLY ONE SOLUTION ALLOWED FROM THE SAME FAMILY Rend In your solution at •nee. also tend with yo«v*o- Intion the names of two or more famillea In year vicinity who have no piano*. lam of* ferln* this Purchatlng Bond to apply only a* part payment on the purchase f the Purcell Plano, in order to secure the names and addresses of famI- Ilea who have no pianos, so I can get them Interested Inmy method of Factory • to ¦ Home Bellingof the high grade Pur- cell piano. 1 will aend you the bond, free trial order blank, cate* lojrue and fullparticulars. Bead fn year ablution, on thia or a a eparale sheet of paper, at once to L L MKfIL,fatecy-ta-lban ® ® R Ah£> 2 _IT H E.'tiSlk j Hifcl,Mtt, llW—t»ni Af«. OKMIBMT

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