5>V£*P*,1 J 3,.,< >• 7, P , •>rA..;/^^.-;i ; • .;../..;;i,P%.^g^ ;C J ^ ^ > < • mmmm--mmmmm*mmmmlmm*m .W-i v % ' •' V * % t "* V ." s i.< " 'J * " i >' % -v > i * ' -, V ~ - , , * H .r X - % - , p ' - t . ^ W&3?i My ga to see her I# the Last,* I# »JSr ' 3t» M wHbtn aim to- agnl#e*-;wiien be went He had told the Meads .with whom she lived Quit her death f "-' would probably be sudden, and one *Jk . ',t day be was hurriedly sent for, as She •/- J '* appeared to have become unconscious. ,M v - On his arrival he saw at once that the old lady wan dead, and, taking hold of her right nana, which was HIP* closed, but not rigid, he calmly ex- gp<A tracted from it the fee Which she had provided for him, and as he did so he mvmtored: "Sensibletothe ,' .1 Fje1 •• last" 'H " People Tell Each Other About Good £ " ; Thing*. Twelve years ago few people in the world knew of such a preparation as a Powder for the Feet. To-day after the genuine merits of Allen's Foot-Ease has Been told year after year by grateful per sons, it is indispensable to millions. It is cleanly, wholesome, healing and antiseptic S r.. and gives rest and comfort to tired aching feet. It cures while you walk. Over 90,000 -u- 4 + testimonials. Imitations pay the dealer a larger profit otherwise you would never be offered a substitute for Aitea's Foot- is '.^"'Easp, the original foot powder. Ask far j> v and see that irtttgfei.it. Another Qrand, ' , "*T you realize the danger of ^"•»„' - firewater?" said the man who tries to s'^h"- benefit people. "i go" answered the Indian, 2 ^Ivthoughtfully; "especially the kind the palefarg puts in his automobile." , : . > -* To preven t t ha t t i r ed fee l ing on ironing day--Use Defiance Starch-- ^|V jjs&ves time--saves labor--saves annoy- ^ > 5«ance, will cot stick to the iron. The % v' blg 16 oz. package for 10c, at your • ; . grocer's. ^ __ ' • He that does good shall find good; , £*V^he that does evil shall find evlL-- k' . ' Turkish. • V A FRANK STATKMSMt. " " f <• FttoA m Prominent Fraternal |)» «f Holla, Missouri. Justlee of the Peace A. M. Light, of Rolla, Mo., Major, Uniformed Rank, Knights of Fythiai, fnk J . J n . i i . u . -a u i iu mi( r«auu% Second ^ Regimen^ says: "I am please#* to endorse the use pt Doan's Kidney "Pills, a medicine of great merit. Hav ing had personal ex-' perience with many kidney medicines, I am In a position to know whereof I speak, and am pleased to add my endorsement and to recommend their use." S?old by all dealers. 50 cents Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N, iW-1^ t Lewis' Single Binder straight 5c. prefer them to 10c cigars. .^smokers Many Your SSS;.: • , dea le r o r Lewis ' Fac to ry , Peor i a , 111 . If gray hairs were a sign of wisdom , " .fewer men would have them. t: .. .... <» ITlnilow'i Soothing Syrap. ^ For children teetbtntr, softens the gurae, nJuce* |B> _jtoamutten. atlayt- paia, curea wtn« coUa. : -- * • £ , />» Only a simple man tries to act nn- ? l/^aecessarily strenuous. ^ What He Gave Him. Bacon--A man asked me for monly on the street to-day. Egbert--And did iron give him any thing? "I should say I did! I gave him a look that he won't forget t& a hnrry!" --Yonkers Statesman. With a smooth Iron and Defiance Starch, you can launder your shirt- Waist just as well at home as the steam laundry can; it will have the proper stiffness and finish, there will be less wear and tear of the good#, and it will be a positive pleasure to use a Starch that does not stick to the iftm. • tier for the 8ingle Bliss. Miss Elderleigh--Now that you have a husband, I suppose you haven't a single wish ungratified. Mrs. Wedderly (sighing)--Only one' --and that is a single wish. Big Deposits of Limestone. . On the Tomblgbee river, Alabama,.: Is enough limestone to supply a ce ment plant for 100 years. * ,,'v Does Your Head Aehef If so, get a box of Krause's Headacha Capsules of your Druggist. 25c. Norman Lichty Mfg. Co., Des Moines, la. Men enjoy farming--If they enough money to hire It done. ha*e ~ WOMEN WHO CHARM ^ fH««ltk I« the First Essential Towtrd Mailing a PIH}I Woman Attractive. IhE UDDER.T Varying Types Which Are Desirable . ' in the Dairy Cow. The Illustrations show some of the types of udder that are more.or less desirable in the dairy cow. At A is shown as clearly as possible an ideal udder. The udder need not be over largfc. It should have sufficient capa city, however, to allow the continued growth of numerous cells for the man ufacture of fat and its emulsiflcation with the other constituents of milk. It should be evenly balanced before and behind, and the central suture should be well developed and strongly at tached to the body, It should be cov ered with soft, line hair, be free from fleshiness and closely attached to the body. It should come well forward on the stomach, stand out well behind the thigh,, and be carried well up on n MISS HULDA KUGHLER There is a beauty and attractive ness in health which is far greater than mere regularity of feature. ^ A sickly, irrit •^V^Voman alwayi ion wltl table, and complaining ys carries a cloud of '/depression with her; she is not only :M;-> '^unhappy herself but is a damper to ^ |.all joy and happiness when.with her family and friends. It is the bright, healthy, vivacious woman who always charms and carries . ennshine wherever she goes. If a woman finds that her energies .... ,are flagging and tliat every thing tires 1 , - ;.N"!her; if her feminine system fails to p:};."^perform its allotted duties, there is ^nervousness, sleeplessness, faintness, ' ^backache, headache, bearing-down Lv-?jppains, an^ irregularities, causing •i Constant misery and melancholia, ^ XjMitJ should remember that Lydia 13* *f Pinkham's Vegetable Compound '• luadf from native roots and herbs will , \|^dispel all these troubles. By correct- 1 *"ing* the cause of the trouble it cures f? Ivwhere other treatment may have ;• I failed. W| J Miss Elisabeth Wynn, Ko. 905 p8th Avenue, New York Clty, writes : Mrs. Pinkham:-- 'For months I sufferetl with dreadful neadaehes, pain in the back and severe hemorrhages. I was weak and out of sorts all the time- Lydia E. Piakham s Vegetable ijSKCornpoixnd helped me wheti all other raedi- &feieine had failed'. It seenied to be just what needed and quickly restored my health." Lii---- MISS ELIZABETH WYNI Miss Hold* Kughler, of No, S3, West 15th Street, New York City, writes: Dear Mrs. Pinkham:-- "Formonth* T was flt wttfe an Internal trouble. I suffered terrible agony, was nervous, irritable, and sick all the time. I took different medicines without benefit. Lydia E, Pinkham's Vegetable Compound was recommended and within six months I was completely restore* 1 to health and I want to recommend it to evjjry sui&riug woman." , "Women who are troubled with painful or irregular functions, back ache, bloating (or flatulence), displace ments, inflammation or ulceration, that bearing-down feeling, dizziness, indigestion, or nervous prostration may be restored to perfect health and strength by taking Lydia.£L Pink- ham's Vegetable Compound, Mrs. PtakkaaS tafittiiea te Wo*ea. "Women suffering -from any form of female weakness are invited to ?romptly communicate with Mrs. inkham, at Lynn, Mass. From the symptoms given, the trouble may be located and the quickest and surest way of recovery advised. Out of her vast volume of experience in treating female ills Mrs. Pinkham probably has the very knowledge that will help your case. Her advico ie and always helpfnl. Different Typee of Udders. the posterior portion of the body. It should, of course, have good circum ference and if properly proportioned it will add beauty as well as utility to the cow. At B is shown the udder as it should collapse on itself, like a glove, after the milk has been extracted. A poorly balanced udder is shown at C; it is hung too far forward on the stomach, and the teats are not evenly placed, resulting in a great inconvenience in milking. At D may be seen an udder deficient in the front part; at E an udder that is also lacking in balance, the teats are not evenly placed, and there Is not sufficient development of the anterior region. At F is shown a small udder. There is not enough room here to permit the rapid elabora tion of milk, which is of prime impor tance, as it is a well-known fact that a comparatively smali quantity of milk is In the udder when mflking commences. It is likewise thought by scientists that the ability of a cow to produce milk abundantly is deter mined by the number of cells, and hence the area available for the dis tribution of blood and other fluids through the udder tissues la too re stricted in this instance. A small adder is therefore a poor sign of deep milking powers, though a large udder, owing to the character of tissues that may enter into its formation, is not al ways a sign of a good milker. At Q Is shown an udder much cut up, with very large and poorly placed teats; it Is what may be termed a restricted udder, though Tather elongated. At H appears another form of udder often met with, which, like that shown at G, Is somewhat funnel-shaped in char acter. It has not sufficient rotundity, does not come well forward on, the stomach, and is lacking in deyqlop- ment in the posterior region. CLEAN SALT FOR BUTTER. Careful That It Has Not Absorbed Disagreeable Odors. / free . Jf •4; ,v s.,fV m 'N Le! Ma Send You a Package off Defiance Starch with your next order of groceries and I will guarantee that you will be better satisfied with it than with any starch you have ever used. • I claim that it has no superior . for hot or cold starclnnfr, and I t Wi l l Not Stick to the Iron No Cheap premiums are given with DEFIANCE STAKCH, but YOU QET 05B-THIKD MOWS FOR YOCR MOKKT th&n of Miy other brand. DEFIANCE STARCH costs 10c for a 16-oz. package, and I will refund your money iX it lAfefcs to the iron Truly your* t , HONEST J The Grdce i Will MOT STICK T mw tsr*"t Salt Is often the cause of tainted butter. The salt takes in the smells almost as well as does milk under some conditions. I know of a lot of salt that s%t next to a pile of codfish In a grocery, says a writer in Farm era' Review. The salt was purchased by a farmer who makes a great deal of butter. He was supplying some good customers with his butter and was surprised and chagrined to learn from them that his butter had 'dried fish taste." He did not believe It at first, but on investigation found all of his butter having the same ob jectionable flavor. He concluded that it was the salt that had given the flavor. He purchased a new lot of clean salt, and had no further trfiu- bla ' We are always careful to keep our salt In a place where It will not be affected by smells of kerosene or other like things that are used in Che household. I think that It is easy to protect salt If It is kept covered tight ly and kept In a place where there is fairly good ventilation. But if left uncovered and put in a tight pantry It is very likely to take In smells that do not add anything to the hatter when they reappear in It. ...V Making or h moon cow. firit Fifteen . Months of Calfa Lff* „ Determines Her Future. A wise old dairy fanner once said to Gov. Hoard, "The cow is either made or unmade in the first 15 months of her ute." Questioned far ther he stated that he had come to his conclusion after years of observation end practice. He had noticed this: That where a farmer took the best possible care of his heifer calves, kept them dry and clean, fed them well on good growing food and kept them going in a strong, growthy manner, If they were well bred from good dairy stock, nearly all would make good cowjfi, whereas, if they were ever so well bred, if they were neglected, and badly cared for, it was rarely any of them would make good cows. "We believe firmly in the truth of what this old farmer said," adds Gov. "Hoard. "More good cows are spoiled by neglect, insufficient food, during the first 15 months than from any other cause. "Good blood, dairy heredity and all that Is necessary. It is the founda tion. But if we are going to make good cows out of these heifers we must pay close attention to bow are start them on the road. "For years we have been rearing heifer calves, Some of them we have sold and some of them we have fcspt We are greatly impressed by our ex- periepce with the truth of the old farmer's theory. It is true that We take great pains that the heifer shall be well born. But that la only half the proposition, the first half. "If she is to have good, large capac ity she must be steadily well nour ished from the beginning to the time she is first In calf. This done she has a greatly increased chance of profit to her owner. In buying heifers it Is worth a good deal to know how they have been reared. Of one thing we are certain, and that is that it pays to feed the heifer skim milk dally till she Is 10 to 12 months old, together with a pint to a quart of oats. Such feeding with good care turns out much finer cows than does the treat- meat heifer calves usually receive." ateneaa of Spring Overcome by E» eellent Growing Summer Season. PASTURE GAtE. One Which, Will Give Passage fO .Cows, hut Will Keep Out Hogs* I here show drawing of the plan I have of keeping hogs from going from hog pastures to cow pasture and at the same time allowing the (jattle to go from one pasture -to the other at DAIRY NOTES. eOfub farmer will keep scrab stock. The savage dog has no license on the farm and especially around the dairy. A few good rules consistently fol lowed will accomplish greater re sults than much wisdom and little practice. It ie * mighty poor cow that will not res.pbnd to good care and good food. She should be sold to the butchew forthwith. Milk with dry hands. The man who milks with wet hands is usually very careless as well in the other details of the dairy business. A man who abuses his stock has about aa much chance of reaching that Better Land aa the Golden Bole has of being worked t6 death. ' Will Let the Cows Through. wlfi, writes a correspondent of The Farmer. The opening may be as wide as desired. Two by two-inch plank are nailed to the fence posts about four or six inches from the ground and two extra posts are set out from the fence about a foot The plank Is nailed to the inside of these posts and this plank should be about four feet longer than the one fastened to the fence, so as to go by the opening at each end about two feet. The hogs cannot jump the two planks and small hogs that go between them cannot jump over, as they are lengthwise of the opening. The cattle will readily step over. The same plan may be used for sheep, only three planks may be necessary to retain them, al though I only use two for them also Once more the farmers of Western Canada rest ait ease and grow rich witiie they slumber. Their season of anxiety is over. For a time It looked as though a backward Reason was for once gbing to prevent the westefn country from maintaining its preemi nent position as leader of the grain growing countries of the world. The unusual lateness of the spring coupled with the rapid advance in the price of food-stuffs gave the pessimists some reason for their gloomy forebodings, and among even the optimistic West erners imbued as they usually are with a spirit of buoyancy and hope, there commenced to glimmer a fear that perhaps this year their sanguine expectations were not to be realized. ,On May day when a large proportions of wheat had usuilly been sown there was this year very little seeding done. Finally, however, winter which had tarried so late in the lap of spring in all parts of the Continent vanishejl before the vertical rays of the sun, and the hurry and bustle of spring work commenced on the western pral- By the 20th of May 86% of spring wheat was sown 'and tfie Ital! wheat In the districts devoted to its cultivation was covering the fields with a mantle of green. Wheat sow ing finished on May 30 and by June 10 the coarser grains were also in the ground. The heavy snowfall dur ing the winter left the ground in excel lent shape when once seeding opera tions commenced and from the time weather conditions permitted the com mencement of work until planting was completed, the farmers were a busy class. The area In wheat Is not much larger than last year, hut oats, barley and flax are much in excess of past records, the farmers deeming it wiser on account of the lateness of the season to put In a heavier propor tion of the coarser grains. From the Jumost reliable reports to hand it ap- •pears that the acreage as compared with 1906 will show an Increase of 12% In oats, 19% In barley and 13% in flax. Around Akotoks, High River, Nan- ton, Claresholm and other winter wheat centers, If the present weather conditions continue, the winter wheat will be in head by the middle of July. The backward weather in the early part of May allowed the newly sown grain to get a firm root in the ground, and now with an abundance of moist ure and warm weather the growth Is remarkable. All danger of Injury from droughts la practically over aa the green crop ^covers the ground re taining the moisture required for its growth and preventing the too'rapid evaporation which might otherwise take place. Crops In Western Canada mature In one hundred days of good weather, and as the weather conditions have been ideal since seeding, and A HIGH-CLASS DAIRY. Fine Quality of Milk Supplied to Se lect Trade. A Massachusetts physician owna and operates a dairy farm where over 200 cows are kept the year round. The milk is sold to a high class of buyers in Boston. Four kinds of whole milk are sold, also two kinds of skimmed milk and three qualities of cream. A special grade of milk, testing six per cent., is produced for convalescents and sick folks, who need the richest milk possible. Jerseys and Guernseys supply this high grade of milk. The milk furnished especially for babies contains about four per cent butter fat and is milked from Ayrshire cows. Jerseys, Ayrshires, Guernseys, Devons and Shorthorns are all used in this dairy. Every stable and barn on the place is kept neat and clean, and no foul odors are allowed to permeate them. The morning's milk from this dairy is cooled, bottled and delivered to the many customers in time for their use on the breakfast table. But a couple of cents more per quart is charged for this snilk than for that coming from less sanitary surroundk ings or that of unknown quality.* PROUD IN HER POVERTY. Yeung^Woman'e Brave Answer te In sulting Landlord. Frank P. Sargent, the United States commissioner of immigration, sahl one day in Washington; "There is fine stuff in some of these poor people who come to uor shores. * fecard recently sf 2. young Swerffsh- woman. Brave, witty and honorable, she could bring splendid young Americana into the world. A short time after she arrived among us, her husband got out of work. Naturally, then, the rent fell behind. The land lord called for it one day in her hus band's absence. He listened to the young woman's tale of misfortune, re garding the while her yellow hair, her clear blue eyes, her red mo.uth and white teeth. Suddenly* beading toward her, he said; ^ Give us a kiss!' ^ , "She drew back, and her blue eyes, as cold as iee, dwelt on him disdain fully. i"* 'No,* she said* 'my husband and I may be too poor to pay our rent, but we are not so poor that we can't do our own kissing.'" -•Mia Finger liupflRta. Of. Ceunt Julius Anttrassy monument was recently navel Buda-Pesth. the Neue Press# the following incident: Count Andraa* sy had a habit of smoothing with hie hand his richly oiled hair. One day an important document had pasud ,[ the Austrian council of ministers, In A\ the contents of which Count Andrae* * J sy was interested. Shortly aftei aawfc-^-yi' the Austrian president of the rafnij*' % try said to one of the ministers: ^ "Count Andrassy has read the latest 1 document" "How do you know ?" "I ; * find on it the imprint of Count Ad- 7 drassy's fingers," responded the dent with a laugh. Starch, like everything else, Is be* tog constantly improved, the patent Starches put on the markft 25 yearm ago are very different and inferior to thosfe of the present day. In the lat» est discovery--Defiance Starch--nil in? jurious chemicals are omitted, while- the addition of another ingredient. In vented by us, gives to the Starch » strength and smoothness proached by other brands. S#.; AWFUL EFFECT OF ECZEMA. Covered with Yellow Sorce--Grew Worse--Parents Di*couraged'-£ttr ticura Drove Sores Away. "Our little girl, one year and a hblft old, was taken with eczema or that was what the doctor called it. We took her to three doctors but by this time she was nothing but a yelli greenish sore. One morning we covered a little yellow pimple on on! of her eyes. Doctor No. 3 said that w< had better take her to some eye spe cialist, since It was an ulcer. So we went to Oswego to doctor No. 4, and he said the eyesight was gone. We were nearly discouraged, but I thought we would try the Cuticura Treatment, so I purchased a set of Cuticura Rem edies, which cost me fl, and in three days our daughter, who had been sick about eight months, showed great im provement, and In one week all sores had disappeared. Of course It coiild not restore the eyesight, but if yr* had used Cuticura in time I am confident | that it would have saved the eye. Mrs. Frank Abbott, R. F. D. No. 9, Ful- j ton, Oawego Co., N. Y., Aug. 17, 1906. Every good and great man grow# greater as the sunset of his year# gilds the glory of his lofty soul. Never mind so much where vm-v in*-? u*v At\ ft --Svmrsenn. - Positively cmllf (CARTERS Two Advertising Trutha. A soap millionaire and an actor mailager were talking business. 1 "I," said the actor manager, "have discontinued the use of posters. My announcements appear in the news papers exclusively. I have learned that those who don't read the papers don't go to the theater." "You are wise," said the soap mil lionaire. "And I do like you. Long since I discarded every form of ad vertisement save that of the press, finding that they who didn't read a daily paper had no use for soap." Laundry work at home would be much more satisfactory if the right with 1 Starch were used. In order to get the spring wheat now from 1A to 18 Inches above the ground, a full average crop Is confidently expected. In addition to the cheering pros pects of this year's yield the farmers are to be congratulated on the fact that they atlll have in their possession five million bushels ok wheat from last year's crop which they are now dis posing of at high prices. The splendid yield of 90,000,000 bushels of wheat raised In 1900 In the three provinces of Manitoba, Sas katchewan and Alberta, together with the almost certain assurance, that this year will see a considerable increase, is, as In the past, calling the atten tion of the world of the "Last Best West," and thousands from the United States and the agricultural districts of Europe are each month securing free grant lands or purchasing farms in the land which has proved itself peerless among the grain growing countries of the world. Very Handy. "Among the people who greeted the President upon his arrival at Oyster Bay," says an exchange, "none at tracted so much attention as a woman who carried two children in her arms, and led another by the hand:" It strikes us that a capable woman like that would attract attention anywhere. --Washington Pout. desired stiffness, it is usually neces sary to use so much starch that the beauty and fineness of the fabric la hidden behind a phste of varying thickness, which not only destroys the appearance, but also affects the wear ing quality of the goods. This trou ble can be entirely overcome by using Defiance Starch, as it can be applied much more thinly because of its great er strength than other makes. Foreign-Bom Bohemians. The foreign-born Bohemians In the United States in 1906 are estimated to have numbered 517,300, of which 40,000 ase In New York, 48,000 in Texas and the remainder scattered throughout the west and southwest. One-half are In the large cities. • these Little Pills. They aiso relieve XHm '-5a. IITT1 f trees from Dyspepsia, • •I digestion and Too Hearty I ly If Eating. A perfect 5||| I i edy lor Dliziaess, Na®» W 1 LfcPt sea, Drowsiness, Bai jTaste in the MuutS), Coat ed Tongue, Pain in the 1 ? Side, TORPID LIVER. vA They regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable SMALL PILL SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE. CARTERS Genuine Mutt Bear Fac-Simile Signature mm suiSTimis. A Positive CURS FOR CATARRH Ely's Grin lain is quickly ateorlw*. (Net Relief at Once. 80c. Ely Bros., MiWunvn St.. N. T. m THlDAIBYFLYKILUKIt o}M", ~ ~ f r -j UilUMJISOIIRS. ll90ntA Ate. FITS, St. Vitus Dance and all Narrow Diseases permanently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restore £end for Free 92.00 trial bottle and treatise. Dr. It. 11. Kline, Ld., 931 Arch St.. Philadelphia, Pa. Lowell on,Sincerity. Mo man can produce great thlbfs who is not thoroughly sincere la dea ̂ ing. with himself.--Lowell. Lewis' Single Binder straight 5c cigar made of rich, mellow tobacco. Your deal er or Lewis' Factory, Peoria, 111. Men enjoy dgdng anyth don't have to^tfo for a living. they READERS "i thins advaitisedin its columns should insist upon haviiqf what they ask for, rstusing all substi tutes or imitations. PIT 1 PITLESS SCALES. Fcr 8U ! una Wood frames. «K »a« \\ r:u* us before you boy. iy« you num Pumps and Wind IXMUUS BHOS.. PATENTS WikH S. Cot.au, Pfttfnt A Hop ley, Washington, D. ft i hlw tree, loroitlo*. HtaiiMwtMb PAY 10 COMMISSION where everything is Box 1T7. Ipswich, Boy rich prairi* land frutu uwaMk I.&S 'JKSiSSf nonpsra'i £)i Wafer A. N. K.--A (1907--30) 2UI The Middle Man. A New York report says that ft great butter trust has been formed, backed by a capita] of $30,000,000. The projectors declare that they are going to eliminate the middle man In the selling of butter, and that they propose to get control of practically all the butter made In the country. This butter Is all to be reworked to a singly grade. It will probably prove to be but one mode of the many fruit less attempts to get rid of that very necessary worker, the middleman. Un der the present financial arrange ments for doing business, the middle- man is a necessity. ,,,(j Si i < "v* #r.»'J& k * mi * >*',4?, /' ***• KM IBe Gentle with the. Cowv •Be gentle with the cow, for jrotrWifi feel better About it and the cow cer tainly will. There is a money value about gentleness also, but this should not be the first thing to be considered. The quiet cow is the one that will pro duce the most milk. The cow that la frightened has hur digestive processes interfered with, and these digestive processes are the ones that control the manufacture of milk. A/bad-tem pered hired man should not be loose with the dairy cow*. "A* „ . ^ to ^ turafj ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT. ASIGETAMEFTCPW^NFICLS- INFANTS -'CHILPRFN Promotes DtgpstionOeeii rtess andRestamtainsaeiir upiuM-rtorpiuae norriaaaL Nc ot NARCOTIC The Kind Toa Have Always Bought, and which has been la use for over 30 years, has borne the signature aud has been made under his gonai supervision since itsiiifiutcgr» Allow no one to deceive yon in thls» All Counterfeits, Imitations and «Just-as-good" are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health af TnfantM and Children--B&v îe^ce against EbEperiment» ApCi'led ifcmeii'/ for Ootsflfji tion, Sour 5®BKhJJiw»w« Worms jConvrfskms J^wri* rams andLOSS OF SLEEP. |bc Simile NEW YORK. I j jDos i s - J jC t s r s nnnnl«edwriBt'thcj Copy of Wtoppes. What Is CASTORIA GMtoate te a harmless substitute te Castor Oil* gorie. Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. II ' contains neither Opium# Morphine nor other liarcotto aabstance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Fevcrishncss. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles* cares CJOnstipatkw* Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the ̂ 8tomacli and Bowels, giving healthy and natural de% -j The Children's Panacea--The Mother's Friend. s_ f* , ^ ^5 GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Bean tike Signature of The Kind You Hare Alsa Use For f>ver 30 Years 1w*es*mwB«o2i» •<:/ " -.£• SM'M> L . " 3 ' J » i. A i v!