Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 18 Sep 1924, p. 3

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$ •* ^ p. ^ • •' « •. y ^wr^iT-1^f?#y ~thit*-f ;^fvF*v f ,?v £ £9 'iwwanS'-let: * -• •'• 'l ' *,f J ^3 _Ia^|i,- ~» ^4^ .t v*: ~ :.' «**>*••; E'^*^*-* ,f ^1=?^ YOUR DAUGHTER'S HEALTH Mothers of Ailing Daughte»^.ttention SliLHow Two Mothers Helped Thwr L ^s-2~7 them Lydia E. Pii eget&ble Compound ; by Giving Ljrdia EL Pinkham1® Iwj mow* possesses information of vttal importance to her young daughter, and the responsibility for f„; the girl's future is largely in her r hands. When a school girl's thoughts become sluggish, when she suiters the consequences of wet feet, pain, headaches, fainting spells, loss of sleep and appetite ana is irregular, her , mother should have a care for her physical condition and rive her Lydia K. Pinkham'a Vegetable Compound, which has proved a reliable aid to nature for just such conditions In so many cases. First Bottle Helpw! Her Richmond, Indiana, -- " I am sending this letter to tell you how much • „ / good Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable •"> , Compound did my daughter. She was troubled with nervousness so that she was reetfess at night, and then she could not sleep and she was afraid of everything. She could not work as she was not strong enough, and .. she bad to quit school at 14 because she was ill so much. The doctor said she had anervous breakdown and her system was all run down. She had pains in her right ride and through her back, and the medicine she took did her no good at alL I saw Lydia E. Pinkham'a advertisement in our paper, telling all that the Vegetable Compound had done for other women, so I said, 'We will try it out and see A Heavy Weight "Is he fat?" "Is he fat? He has ceased to have a waistline. It's a cirrumfeivTw " -- From Life. NOW YOU CAN QUICKLY END KIDNEY TROUBLES A six ounce bottle of Dr. Carey's Marshroot Prescription 777 lor 75 cents. tf you have backache or puffed eyelids, swollen ankles or clammy hands, It's probably poison settled In your kidneys and the sooner you get rid of it, the further away from the grave you'll be. , Roots and herbs arfe best for this purpose as Dr. Carey, for 40 years a practicing physician, well knew. " If your kidneys are making your life miserable the best medicine Is none too pood. Cut out this notice, take It to any pood druKpist and see that you get Dr. Ctorey's Marshroot Prescription 777. It comes In both liquid and tablet form and the price is only 75 cents. If your local druggist hasn't It he can get It from the Carey Medical Laboratories at Elmira, N. Y. Not 'lm Weary Willie (reading old paper)-- •Nother feller drowned in 'Is bath. »Erb. Gloomy Gus--Thank 'evven, I alnt foo]'ardy.--London Opinion. Sure Relief FOR INDIGESTION 72__ 6 Bell-ans J1 Hot water Sure Relief ELL-ANS 254 AND 754 PACKAGES EVERYWHERE FOR OVER 200 YEARS haarlem oil has been a worldwide remedy for kidney, liver and bladder disorders, rheumatism, lumbago and uric acid conditions. BttkNRS INDWISTKW HAARLEM OIL GDSS99S correct internal troubles, stiroulateVital organs. Three sizes. All druggists. Insist on the original genuine GOLD MEOAU Sensational Chicago MURDER! LEOPOLD AND LOEB CASE Direct From Court ROOM to Yo« The Greatest Detective Story em. An actual happening. Read and learn. Doa't let your sons follow thefateof these bora. This cane cost Cook County and the oa* feose over (160,000. Ton can have C, 4 A A P«- copy, cash it for only with order Order Today-tJM MRECTWAY PRESS, CHICAGO, ILL. -- »- 1 1 Send your nttnf, wf will mall TOJ si* l® "WMUI. free,a 10cbottle LIYRM VINKK. fVonderful for dusting. pollKhinK pi&no*. furniture and woodwork, UgrioVtMiK Co. BUOAIO N. T. The nhnble sixpence does the work of the slow shilling.--Old English Proverb. ' Lots of verse writers actually tinsfine that they can write poetry. what it does.' Shshsdnot tskenths first bottle before it began to help her, and we will always say that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is the best medicine she ever took."--Mrs. E. DARBY, 911 N. lfith Street, Richmond, Indiana. An Ohio Mother Reports Columbus, Ohio.-- "When my daughter became 14 years of age she was ailing very much. The doctor gave her medicine, but she was very weak, and he always had to write excuses for her as she could not attend the 'gym " classes, and I often had to keen her home from school. I had taken Lydia E. Pinkham'a Vegetable Compound for my nerves and rundown condition, so I gave her three doses daily, and also Lydia E. Pink* ham's Blood Medicine. Our friends are surprised to see how fine and tail she is petting and how well she is. I - will gladly answer letters and give you a fine recommendation for othermothers." -- Mrs. MARIE MJELKE, 814 Ebner Street, Columbus, Ohiow Over 100,000 women have so far replied to our question, "Have you received benefit from taking Lydia EL Pink ham's Vegetable Compound?" 98 per cent, ofthese replies answer "Yes." That means that 98 outof every 100 women who have taken this medicine have been helped by tt> For sale by druggists everywhere, No Privacy The** Daya A flapper and her best boy wers seated alone together on the sofa, listening in for the tirst time with the latter's new wireless set. Nor did th* fuciKthat both of them were wearing their headphones prevent them from snatching un occasional |tiss. Just as they were In the middle of one par ticularly long drawn-out embrace came the title of the next song: "Tal^p Those Lips Away." "Oh George." gusped the girl, as she drew back, blushing. "Oh, George, they can see us!" Feminine Wit William Lyon PlioJps was discussing a well-known woman novelist. "She has no sense of humor," he said, "but she has something that makes up for It--like the man. y<>u know, who had admitted that his left leg was shorter, but added that lii* right leg made up for It. being longer." "A critic said to this woman novelist one day: " 'Most women have no sfcnse of humor.' "•Well, what of ItT' said she. Host men have no sense at all.'" --u- Dsa't ckackl* if jtm fmi mr a tdtrtihh WIMB U dnrtiiri pradact ia aU for. Mayka ym CVSUMT will TMT MM hack. Bmm Umlf6rd.Jr. ' Gets Rid of Rata A Detroit merchant has perfected s device which has cleared his store of rats in a very short time, he says. He has a box on the floor, with a door swinging from its upper edge. The door is smeared with cheese, and as the rat pushes on It. It opens and ad mits him to a small compartment with a hole into a huge tank of water, where he drowns. The trap Is very effective, and has to be emptied every day. Cuticura for Pimply Faeea. To remove pimples and blackheads smear them with Cuticura Ointment. Wash off in five minutes with Cuticura Soap and hot water. Once clear keep your skin clear by using them for daily toilet purposes. Don't fall to include Cuticura Talcum. Advertisement. Farm Children The |f«rm population of the nation although less than 30 per cent of the total, is carrying more, than 85 pet cent of the child population, says a United States bulletin. The farm is charged with the duty of educating this excess of youth and turning it over to the cities at the producing age. Trnvel often broadens a mqn's mind --also his stomach, if he can afford to stop at first-class hotels. Wisdom Is the health of the said.-- Victor Hugo. Better Than Pills -- For L i v e r I l l s KR Ton i«jht _ Tomorrow Alright Less than 2 per ceiu of the total land area of the arid and seinl-arid parts of the United States M MW irrigated. In literature there are no many things necessary for you to read that are unmitigatedly stupid.. ChOdren Cry for "Castoria" A Harmless Substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups -- No Narcotics! been In usei for <o ver 30 years to relieve babies and children of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic and Diarrhea; allaying Feverishness arising therefrom, and, by regulating the Stomach sad Bowels, aids thfe assimilation of Food; giving natural sleep without opiates. The genuine bears signature of MONOTONY OF RUM ROW LIFE LED TO MURDER Ytagedy Revealed Through Complaint of Mother <of Victim. >: Attahtlc City, N. J.--The cordon of Silence which surrounds Rum row, outside the 12-tnlle limit off Atlantic City, was punctured recently by the tale of murder committed months ago on one of the veteran vessels'of the boose trade. Two governments, the British and American, Joined hands in the case. ' It is a tale of fierce hatred induced by the monotonous life of the sailors, who pass weeks riding at anchor in waters safe from revenue cutters. And tf it had not been for the mother of the murdered man, who waited in vain In Ireland for the money he sent her '•ch month, the account never would isve reached the ears of the author!- Jes. November 26 the body of Robert Pike, a twenty-four-year old sailor, was sewed In a sack and slid off s board into the Atlantic. Kllltd in a Brawl. " > ' ; ' Pike, according to Robert Q. Clarke, Department of Justice agent from Philadelphia, was shot and instantly killed in a brawl oo the British steamer Genevieve. .*•> From his talks wifS sailors now aboard the Genevieve, Clarke Is sure that the brawl was the outcome of the galling life the men lead, a life of os- Fate Wtu Agamtt His "Making Good" Kingman, Ariz-- Antone W. Wroblewskie, Detroit war veteran,- who was released frvia the California state prison after a skull operation to relieve lilm from criminal tendencies resulting from shell shock, was buried here with full military honors. He was on his way home to his fiancee when he died from "delayed effects" of the operation. After his conviction for robbery, as a "dangerous criminal," he was adjudged Insane, but the judge was convinced of his recovery after the operation and helped obtain his release. j| "VET" OF MANY WARS STILL CARRYING ON Steeplejack at 6T, After Life of Adventure, i Syracuse, N. Y.--"I've got to carry on!" • : So sal0 Frank Clark of Arizona, when his brother, Melvin Clark, fell. off a high belfry in Detroit, Mich., and was killed. And Frank has been carrying on ever since. At sixty-seven he is a human fly and steeplejack. All his life Frank has climbed. He Is one of the survivors of the battleship Maine, blown up in Havana harbor ; served as a drummer boy during the Civil war, and has brought up s family of 19 children. ^ "Yes, 19 of them," said Frank, exhibiting for the benefit of the wondering newlywed from New Orleans hia youngest son, Mike. "Two girls and 17 boys. And each of the boys has done one or more 'itches in the army, and Mike's gonna do 'is, or he ain't no son o' mine." "How old are you, Mr. Clark?" asked the youthful husband, meekly. Frank wouldn't tell so Mike chirped 'he information. Exposed, Mr. Clark admitted he was "sixfy-seven and maybe more." "Served In the Civil war as a drummer boy. fought during the Indian uprising, In China during the Boxer uprising. and put in three years with the First division In France during the World war." Clark recited, proudly.) "T got my upward start ea the battleship Marblehead." Only Otis Passenger Put Out Prom the Genevieve. tracism from all the glittering jpys of port and all the quieter joys of home. According to tales that filtered through from Rum row all efforts to escape ennui were futile. One night s fight started and Pike was the victim. Chalmers the Slayer. 9 A short time later a lifeboat bearing only one passenger put out from the Genevieve. That passenger, so Clarke relates, was Louis "Frenchy" Chalmers, erstwhile able seaman of the vessel and thirty-four years old. The crew of the Genevieve heard no more of Chalmers. A short time ago Atlantic City police, who have been working with Clarke, had a telegram from New Orleans detectives. The telegram said Chalmers had been captured there as he was about to board a vessel for France. He will be held for the British authorities. The crime is one for the British to deal with, as It was committed on high seas under the flag of England. ' The United States Department of Justice became Involved wben the British ambassador at Washington, at the request of Pike's mother in Dublin, started an investigation. The mother knew the name of ber son's vessel and through It he was traced. Pike was a British subject. His home port Is listed as Kingston, Jamaica,' Smuggle Narcotics With Aid of Radio Philadelphia.--With the discovery that prisoners in the Eastern state penitentiary were using radio as an aid to smuggle In narcotics, there also has been revealed considerable Ingenuity In the constructions of miniature sets to evade the subsequent drastic edict forbidding radio instruments. prison officials said. The ruling became necessary when a visitor repairing a convict's instrument in a cell, received a radio message In code detailing a scheme to bring narcotics Into the penitentiary in a rubber ball thrown over the walls. Investigation showed that the message was sent from a small portable set near the prison. The sets constructed by the convicts to evade the ruling have beeu found to vary from tiny ones to fit the palm of the hand, to more pretentious sets concealed In out-of-the-way places. In general, bed springs haver been used for aerial connections, with water pipes or steam pipes for "grounds." One set, seized since the ofder banning them, was contained in a Bible. The convict had hollowed out the center of the volume, leaving only the edges of the pages intact, and In the hollow portion had built a highly efficient set. Boyt Pull Tombstone Ovtor on Companion Jamaica, N. Y.--A boyish prank came to a sudden, tragic ending when a heavy gravestone which five schoolboys were trying to uproot In St. Monica's cemetery toppled and fell on Chester Obutelewoz, fourteen, of 47 Church street, Jamaica, and pinned him to the earth. The boy's companions ran screaming from the cemetery, which is at Prospect and Beaver streets, and called Patrolman Patrick O'Hannon of the Jamaica station. With the assistance of several passersby the patrolman succeeded in lifting the 200-pound monument from the boy, who was taken to Mary the Immaculate hospital, where he died half an hour later of a fractured skul). According to the incoherent story told to the policeman by the boy's playmates, among whom were two brothers of the Injured lad, they had tired of baseball and swimming and had entered the cemetery seeking new amusement. A long rope was procured by one of the lads and fastened around a large monument. Exerting their full strength the^boys tugged at the stone. Suddenly It fell, pinning Chester beneath it. Beheaded by Blaet A patch of steel a foot square blew off an air tank in a factory and beheaded William Selirorer. 2 School street. Perth Amboy, who was on top of the tank looking for a leak and had just l^J In 100 cubic feet of air. CreoMoting Ties A aew. creosoting plant of the .Southern Pacific Railway company at Wilmington. Cal., has facilities for perforating and treating 3,000 railroad ties mmg ^4 hours. Mak^CExperiments on . Disasters in Mines .Million, England.--Closer co-operation between the safety in mines research board of Great Britain and the United States bureau of mines, will be hastened by the results of work at tiie experimental station at Eskmeals, Cumberland, said Dr. Foster Bain, director of the United States mines bureau, after a recent visit to the Cumberland station. A remarkable demonstration of a coal dust explosion was witnessed. Coal dust was strewn along the floor and on shelves inside the explosion gallery for 850 feet. The gallery is cylindrical, 750 feet long, 7 feet 8 inches In diameter and constructed of half-inch iron. Pit pro^s were placed Inside to make conditions approximate those in mines when explosions occur. A cannon was placed under the gallery at the center and fired Into the dust zone. A great explosion followed, the flames traveling along Inside of the gallery and into the open air at a speed of 1,000 feet a second. The pit props were sent flying in all direction, while a great volume of smoke and dust rose several hundred feet Amateur Dentistry Fatal Cincinnati.--Sam Allen, waiter on the steamer Cincinnati, Ohio river boat, had a toothache. He tied a string to the painful molar, fastened the other end to the ship's anchor and cast it into the river. With it went the tooth and part of Sam's jaw. He thought the wound superficial and went to bed. During the night be bled to death. Clawed by Squirrel Newark, N. J.--While wallflng through a park a flying squirrel leaped from a tree, landing In Daniel Mo- Tassney's face, into which it dug its claws. Several deep scratches afe Me- Tassney's evidence that he succeeded In halting the flight of the squirrel. Would Conscript Girlm Girls should be conscripted and1 taught the domestic arts, and thus relieve the house-help shortage, declares Had Little Fear of Bocts Hugging Powers Among the large collection of jungl# creatures brought to New York by the Beebe expedition from British Guiana was what is described as the most iridescent tropical snake ever seen In this latitude. r The snake, which will find a home ia the Zoological museum, is over seven feet long, and was captured by the ladies of the expedition, Miss Ruth Rose, the historian; Miss Isabel Cooper, the artist, and Mrs. John Teevan. Miss Rose, in describing the capture, said that the male members of the party, including Sergte Chetyrkin, archeologist, and Mr. T^evan. were away in the depths of the jungle while the young women were In a subcamp with a group of native women and children. The welkin was suddenly split with feminine screams, and the white ladies boldly ran to the scene of the hullabakxC Native women of British Guiana do not know a poisonous snake front the harmless kind. <*nd they had never seen a scintillating rainbow* boa before. That was what they were screaming about. Under the leadership of Miss Rose the ladles closed in on the sneke, whose dazzling beauty, Miss Rose intimated, seemed intended as a protective coloration to blind Its foes. The standard way to capture a big snake Is to grab it by tlife back of the neck, and If you are an ordinary lady to call for male help. Ornithological ladles never think of calling for help. Exactly which one grabbed the back of the boa's neck first none of the grabbers could tell. But all got firm grips somewhere on the marvelous snake's squirming length and held on. In an Instant there was a great shew of mllltnery mixed with prismatic boa hues resembling a May pole celebration gone mad. Of course, the ladles said later, they did not fear to be hugged by the boa, or any beau, because he was hardly strong enough to crush one's bones, and they were determined to capture him alive Just to show the men that they were not the whole jungle shooting match. Finally, to the Joy of the startled native women, the boa surrendered and consented to be colled up In a box.--Montreal Family Herald. Famous Throne Room to Be Reconstructed The throne room in the palace of Meneptah, believed to have been the pharaoh of the Exodus, in which Moses warned the ruler of the plagues that would befall Egypt, will soon be reconstructed within the University of Pennsylvania museum. The work will be carried on under the direction of Dr. Clarence S. Fisher In the new Egyptian wing of the museum. Because the throne room, or chamber, had been ruined when the royal palace was burned soon after Hie. death of the pharaoh, and was afterward Inundated by the Nile at Memphis, Its reconstruction will be unusually difficult. Gorgeously colored omnmentntlon that harmonized with the formality of the designs surrounded Moses when he held his conferences with Meneptah, according to Doctor Fisher. When Moses appeared before the ruler he stood upon a slope that rose 20 Inches at Its greatest height at the far end of the room, where the dais stood supporting the chair of state. "The dais was of limestone," said Doctor Fisher, "and the decoration on It was cut In low relief and colored like the floor." Drake** Set of Bowl* One pf the features of the great historical pageant of Devon, produced at Torquay recently, was the use,' In one scene, of the Identical set of,, bowls with which Drake was pla.vtng when llie armada came in sight. These bowls are among the treasures of Tjr-, quay museum, says London Tlt-Blts. There are people, however, who doubt their authenticity, or, rather, the truth of the famous anecdote ot Drake and his celebrated game on Plymouth Hoe. There is no contemporary account of the Incident, which was described for the first time In Britain In an Eighteenth-century book. It Is mentioned. however, in a Spanish political pamphlet published In 1624. Sauce for Her Nancy, aged seven, is lunching with ber mother in a restaurant. Mother (helping herself to sauce)-- You won't like this, dear, it's parsley sauce. Nancy--Oh! let me have some, mummy. I know I should like It. Mother--Why, you haven't tasted It. Nancy--No. but I've read about It in the Bible. Mother (surprised)--Where? Nancy--I've been reading about the man who was sick of the parsley and I want to try it.--Brisbane Mail, times. -- WHOLE FAMILY TANLACAS 5-f ' "Tanlac has been our constant as anybody could wish. friend for years, and my wife and myself and eight children ace all enjoying wonderful health, largely due to this medicine," Is the remarkable statement of Harry H. Pistole, 810 Archer St., Waco, Texas. "In my own case Tanlac has done what seemed to be impossible. When I began taking it my stomach was in such a bad fix that I had to live on a milk and egg diet and I was slmost a skeleton. I had been flat on my hack in bed and under treatment for 18 months and felt that my time was about up. "After my case had been given op as hopeless and I thought I was beyond redemption a relative put me on to Tanlac, and the result Is, I gained 20 pounds, and enjoy as good health Telephone for the Deaf Use of the cheekbone as a conductor to the auditory nerve, coupled with the amplification o' speech, has produced a telephone for the deaf. Persons who have not heard for years are said to be able to receive long-distanc messages through this apparatus. which is being tested by the department of telephones of the Saskatchewan government.--Popular Science Monthly. "My wife was all broke* down t| health. But now she weighs 155 pounds, and is strong and well and; I am giving Tanlac credit for It. W# . give Tanlac to the children to tone" them up and make them grow, and nobody ever had a healthier set of chll- • dren than we have. "Tanlac is certainly the greatest: , medicine on earth for anyone whose life is wrecked by bad health. W«. sure do have a great deal to pralsei Tanlac for at my house." Tanlac is for sale by all good druggists. Accept no substitute. Over 411 million bottles sold. i : -H Tanlac Vegetable Pills lv constipation ; made and recommended by th« manufacturers of Tanlac. More Suitable "What has become of the fine old names of Prudence and Patience?" "They wouldn't be appropriate these days," replied the old grouch. "If I had a couple of daughters I'd christen them Extravagance "T"> terla. --Boston Transcript. . • Rich Phosphate Depotft* Much Interest has been aroused In Austrian agricultural circles by the discovery that many of the hundreds of caverns found In the Austrian alps contain valuable deposits of bat guano and other phosphates of animal origin. If one isn't sure what life Is for, one Is likely to be confused In working toward the Ideal. Canada?* Gold Production Louis D. Hun toon, former professor of mining and metallurgy at Yale university, predicts that within a few years Canada will surpass the United States In g.»ld production. He points out that since 1015 Canada's output has increase*- rapidly, whiie In the United States it has undergone s steady decline. Canada's gold production in 1923 was valued at S25.LtM.000, and he expresses the opinion that this year It will rise to $90,000,000. The Cowboy* of Ana The Buriats, a peculiar tribe of Mongolians, dwelling near Baikal lake, on the northern border of the Gobi desert are known as the "cowboys of Asia." Like the traditional American cow hoy they are expert riders and spend most of their time on horseback. The Burlat horse has great powers of endniv ance and always there is great attachment between master and animal. Ingenious Squirrel At Epping. N. H.. a squirrel wag seen playing in a sugar maple tree near the schoolhouse, and a closer inspection revealed the fact that be hart gnawed the under side of a limb and, hanging on his four feet. wai» sucking the.sap that oozed qut. He repeated this' performance , several WOMEN HEED SWAMP-ROOT Thousands of women have kidney and bladder trouble and never nuspect It. Women's complaints often prove to be (.othing else but kidney trouble, or the rwult of kidney or bladder disease. If the kidneys are not in a healthy condition they may cause the other org Ana to become diseased. Pain in the back, headache, low of ambition^ nervousness are oftentimes symptoms of kidney trouble. Don't delay starting treatment. Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, a physician's prescription, obtained at any drug store, may be just the remedy needed to overcome such conditions. Get a medium or large size bottle immediatelv from any drug store. However, if you wish first to test this great preparation, send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binchamton, N. Y., for a sample bottle. When writing, be sure and mention this paper.--Advertisement. Paper Money Has Peril* Infectious diseases may be spread by paper jnoney more frequently thau by any other article in everyday use. It has been found that coined money Is innocuous owing to the self-disinfecting action of the metal Itself, and because Its smooth surface prevents the development of germs. The dirtiest piece of copper Is, from the standpoint of the bacteriologist, better than newly Issued paper money, say:* London Tit-Bits. On post-war hank notes which had been in circulation for some time up to 143,000 bacteria were found. On prewar notes the highest found was 3,000. The post-war note is, of course, handled much more frequentty than were notes of the prewar period. The right way to skin beauty , I? VERY skin wUI nape*# to correct treatment, bat BDfi't overlook that word cor- •ect--it means the difference between success and failure.i In addition to being una saw Hissed for general toilet uw Resinol Soap, aided by R •••>•! Qntment improve* poor conplexions. Blotches, roughness, clogged pores, redness, and ens the more serious itching, amarting skin disorders gradually disappear when the Rasinal < treatment is used. Ask your druggist today for Resinol Soap and Ointment awl use them aa directed. Within • week you will begin to notice a difference in your aluu. » RESINOL It takes u good cook to do ft bacfc* wheat cake up brown. Wise the man who can correct a mistake before he makes it. We arouse In others the attitude we hold toward them. Hairs Catarrh Medicine rid your system of flftarrh or Deslosss caused by Catarrh. Sold by drmggmt* fm Mtr 40 F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, Obi* Unlet*, perelf vtnftiUi, CkiMrtn'i Rfftktsr, liwli «a nwy hM CamslcMl asa-urctbc, •-- MRS. W1NS0W3 SYRUP n* Uub' u4 CtiUna'* ffinfalM Children irrow healthy and fr from colic. di*rrh.H«, flatulency, | constipation ami other trouble tf (riven it at teething time. Safe, pleasant--always bring* remarkable and sratifytac raauita. At All Druggigt* i PAXTINE IS FOR WOMEN iho have f V t u i n i n e ills t h a t need local tr#*tli^ nt 1'ou^hes of Pax: in* Antiseptic degerms, heals inflammation, ulceration and stop* the discharge The Lydia EL Pinkham Hedicfne Co. recom* mended Paxtlne for years in their advertising. A pure white powder to be dissolved In water AM neede-l--one box makes gallons of stronj; antiseptic solntion that gives poei tive satisfaction--S(»c at druesiists or postjpaid by mail. THK COMFORT POWDER COMPANY. BOSTON. MAS3ACHL'SJ£CIS. Be sure of good bread; use Yeast Foam Every girl should learn how to make good bread; it should be the starting point in her home cookery training* Send for free booklet "The Art of Baking Breads Northwestern Yeast Go. 1730 North Ashland AvSk Jtot IS

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