Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 4 Mar 1909, p. 7

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V s • - ' ?! K ?v - - « * H ' ' ' . . 'v- m ; ; ' ' ; V •iiiifVM v'.f, ili ^asoace^aaa^ttcaaaai| DIET AND H E A L T H By DR. J. T. ALLEN 8»sthHst C * Ak.ulfi<yr of "Rating _/cr a ^Purpose." "The JVe&* Gospel of Health." • Etc. •Vfrfk iCopy right, by Joaepii £. Bowi««.J j "THE DIET CURE" " ••'* \\. (Continued.) cannot go to church op- the opera, especially in the winter, when less air and light are admitted, with­ out admitting into your air passages, enough germs of consumption or of pneumonia or other germ disease, to send you to this grave, if the vitality of the blood is so low as to allow these disease germs to multiply so far as to develop the disease ill virulent form. M&ny of us have had consumption BO far started, without knowing it. that post-mortem examination of our lungs would show that small colonies of the tuberculosis germ had started their work of destroying *the lung tis- Bue but had been overcome by * the natural defensive powers of the sys­ tem. And this applies to nearly every other disease. How often we read of death from the scratch of a pin or a nail, because the blood was in bad condition, the defenses weakened! "I understand," says some one, "how Impure blood, due to improper eating, may cause rheumatism, or boils, be­ cause rheumatism is supposed to be due to uric acid in the blood caused by wron? eating, and boils are under­ stood to be an abnormal way of elim­ inating waste matter through the skin, |»ut I cannot see that food has any­ thing to do with 'catching cold,' for example." « 4 Both rbettlhaftsfh and "boils" have t last been included, by some, in the germ diseases, but I shall show that germs are only (he secondary cause of dieeasa, the prime cause being waste Blatter in the blood, the sources of which waste are improper food or too much of the right food, and destructive thought, (fear, worry,, hate, etc.) which generates virulent poisons in the blood as fatal as the bite of a snake, and defective elimination. Some modern medical philosophers hold that tho vitality is in the nerves, that, therefore, the secret of health lies in keeping the nervous system in order, and that, consequently, cure depends upon toning the nervous sys­ tem, which they aim to do by soothing drugs, by mental influence, by elec­ tricity, by change of scene or by rest, or all of these. It is true that all the physical func­ tions are controlled by the mind, with tho nerves as conductors of sensation . carrying impressions from every part of thfi body to the spinal < olumn and the train, and carrying messages from the itfain and spinal column to every cell in the body, with the sympathetic nerve system directly controlling the vital processes--digestion, pulsation, etc.. subject to suggestion from the object »ve mind, which is constantly going on while we are awake--every thought, every, mental picture influenc­ ing the body, sometimes so powerfully, as in fright, as to cause death; but the nerves are as powerless to act, of themselves, as are the wires from a battery to produce a current. They must be charged from the dynamo, the trainband that requires a galvanic bat­ tery, toith the blood as its liquid; and the quality of the current must de­ pend, largely, upon the quality, of the liquid, the blood. Unless the neces­ sary elements are supplied to the blood and the waste removed death must, in time, ^nsue. Poisoned blood will no more support life than will worn out liquid supply life to * bat­ tery. ' It is important, indeed, to treat the nervous system, and profound knowl­ edge of physiology and of psychology are necessary to do this wisely, but the material vital supply must come from the food. Proper feeding is the prime condition of a sound nervous system. Let a child be ill nourished, pre-natal, or post-natal, and you have a weak, "nervous" child, but feed a child well (avoid­ ing the almost universal error, too much food) and it is vigorous in every way. Even insanity and epilepsy are blood diseases, special cases of nerv­ ous mal-nutrition. "Cold" is a form of congestion, as, indeed, every disease in, in a sens*), congestion; resulting, primarily, from bad feeding, including defective elim­ ination. Diligent searchers after disease germs have at length discovered a germ to go with pneumonia, the grip and. as was to be expected, with eachv kind of "cold," a great variety. Now germs play a very Important part in < I the causation of disease, a part as im- • I' portent, at least, as the common house fly plays in the causation of filth. It Ib worthy of note, thai the typhus fever germ has almost disappeared, because the degree of filth necessary to entertain that festive bug has been - relegated to a semi barbarous age. The blood is circulated through ; every tissue by fie vital impulse of . ' the nervous system, which controls ; the expansion and contraction of tue * h°art and the arteries, as it controls every other vital function. If *he tem­ perature of the body be suddenly low­ ered, contraction of the minute blood vessels, at the surface of the body re- cults, driving the blood .inward and away from the extremities. Now if the circulation Is free "knd easy through all the tisanes, if the system is not clogged by the waste from imperfectly digested food, and if the nervous energy is high, and not abnormally sensitive, the balance of the circulation and nerve supply are easily restored, but if the* circulation Is sluggish and vitality low, a more or less permanent congestion results; We i |iave a slight or a severe "cold," show- "tng chiefly in the head, the lungs, the .Ihi oat or congesting the kidneys and ' " ' l w.1: precipitating rheumatism, If tlie sy» tern Is predisposed to rheumatism by Improper food and sluggish circulation or, if the vitality is very low, as in the aged or the Inebriate, pneumonia may result, oven without any record of a distinct chill, or, if there is an hereditary predisposition to consump­ tion, that dread disease may gain a foothold. The blood thus leaving the surface of the body, the pores of the skin are more or less closed and the work of the skin, which i£ to throw off a large part of the wastV.fidf the body, is im­ posed upon the lungs <u»d the kidneys. The functioning of the nervous system is also unbalanced, which contributes to the same result. The action of the interior skin, that is, the mucous lin­ ing of the air cavities, and of the ali­ mentary tract, is disturbed, on account of sympathy with the outer akin; it is congested. The lining of the interior of the body is but a continuation of the outer skin. It is for these 1 easons that there is an extraordinary dis» charge of mucus, often general, when one is suffering from cold, and, with the extraordinary congestion, closing the pores of the skin, to a large ex­ tent, and the Increased waste of tissue, due to fever, the urine contains more waste. The purpose of the fever Is to "burn up the waste matter in the system; it is a natural curative process, and to "cure"' the fever except py doing the same thing Jhat nature is doing by the fever and thus render the fever unnecessary--to stop or lower the fever by. quelling it with anti-febrile drugs is always to combat the cure, and is sometimes extremely danger­ ous, as in pneumonia in a vigorous, full-blooded man. Blood-letting, a therapeutic agent now relegated to a barbarous age, though often "indi­ cated," is far more scientific than that --but lack of space forbids an interest­ ing explanation here. To stop a cough by drugging is equally irrational, as a rule. Hie cough is a curative measure. If the vitality is low, the blood In bad condition, and the general system much congested by waste from the food, fhronic catarrh may be estab­ lished, or one of the lung diseases, as above Indicated. Repeated slight cold taking tends in certain conditions of the nutritive system to make catarrh chronic; hence we find it very general in our changeable climate. The cure Tor catarrh is manifestly not in killing the germ by spraying the membrane but in removing the prime cause. If the fire bell were to sound on a cold night In a hotel where every guest knew that a quick run down a long, cold hall, would bring him to a safe place--not warm, but safe--'few or none would "take cold" by making the run and back immediately, bare­ foot and protected only by a night robe, (even though they might en­ counter millions of influenza and pneu­ monia germs on the way), but let a dozen of the same people discover on awakening quietly, that they must walk through that same long hall, barefoot, and protected only by a night robe and many of them will contract cold, one tonsilitls, another influenza and perhaps one (a senile Inebriate) even pneumonia. Almost every reader must have seen the proof of this, so I shall pass at once to the conclusion: Don't fear that every draft will give you cold; set your mind against taking cold, but don't choose to Bit in a draft. Keep moving when you are exposed to an unusual degree of cold; tense mind and muscles, walk fast. The atmos­ phere in ill-ventilated rooms is poi soned and the system is far more like­ ly to be overpowered then by even a slight draft than it would be in cold but pure air In th«» open. No poison, no "cold," no pneumonia, even at 20 below zero, with the ears and fingers freezing. Grip, or common influenza is "catching" in a poisoned, "close" atmosphere, and where it finds lodging in a body laden with poisonous matter from unexcreted waste of superfluous food, it may become firmly established and lead to serious consequences. The germs of influenza, consumption, or pneumonia are always at hand, like vermin, ready to .perform their office. Those who hold to the theory that the germ is the prime cause of cold, say that a draft or wet feet er a drenching cold rain, may be ignored, if we can only avoid the germs, but it is a physiological fact that extreme heat and cold affect every living or­ ganism, even when conditions are otherwise normal. I formerly suffered much from tonsilitis, but not since I understood and applied the theory of osteopathy, that disease is due to In­ terference with free circulation of the nerve energy and the cure, "take off the pressure,"--that is, relieve the con­ gestion--a theory that finds useful ap­ plication often, even though it is only part of the truth. Osteopathic treat­ ment is especially indicated in pneu­ monia even where there are no "bones to set" and aside from massage, which is also beneficial, but it is no more wise to treat pneumonia by osteopathy alone than to treat it by drugs alone or by "science" alone. An old physician says that he has noticed^ for many years, that pneu­ monia sets in more frequently at the beginning of the week, than at the end. This is undoubtedly because peo­ ple aB a rule eat more heavily on Sun­ day,. so that the vitality is more ab­ sorbed in eliminating waste matter, leaving less to resist the attacks of disease and also because, in winter and spring, people are more indoors on Sunday. * • Some authorities name among the predisposing causes of pneumonia, un­ der-feeding. Manifestly the prime cause is defective nutrition, with ex­ posure as the existing cause and the germ as the incidental*or secondary cause. Improper feeding, most fre­ quently eating too much or eating the wrong food, is usually the prime fac­ tor in the mal-nutrition predisposing to pneumonia or "cold." The statistics show also that pneumonia, which is second in death-dealing power only to consumption, becomes gradually more frequent toward the close of winter and spring when people eat most heavy food* and least fruit and are most indoors and subject to sudden changes of temperature, (March, April and May, when the weather is most changeable, showing the largest har­ vest of death), and that the fewest deaths occur in July and August when the weather Is least changeable, when most fruit and least meat are eaten and people are most in the open air. Because I have not space enough to give the natural treatment for pneu­ monia. and because it is advisable al­ ways to have a physician, in serious cases, whose instructions should be followed implicitly, I shall give only the treatment which will apply to any form of cold, and to the Initial stage of pneumonia. This treatment Is clearly indicated proper understanding of the true V^uses of cold or congestive chill, in­ cluding pneumonia, and by a proper understanding of the effects of such chiil and the means by which nature can be assisted in restoring the nor­ mal condition--that is, the condition In which all the powers of nutrition are performing their respective func­ tions naturally, the condition of health. The essential primary factor in the causation of common cold, consump­ tion and pneumonia, is defective feed­ ing and it must follow that the natural diet, simple but nourishing, is the most important means of prevention. I know a man who can break the ice in the river In winter, and take a plunge bath and be none the worse the nes-. day. If the average healthy man were to fall off a city bridge and break through the ice, the danger would be not pneumonia but the result of the mental and physical shock. If l»e were quickly landed without physical Injury, and immediately run to an adjacent hotel and have a brisk rubbing with a Turkish towel, and then dress at once, and feel that he was none the worse, the effect would probably be the same as in the case of the man who voluntarily can take a river bath in January, but in no case is this ad­ visable. It indicates, however, like the example of the hotel guests, an im­ portant means of prevention, which everybody should follow in varying de­ gree according to age and strength, in winter. It also indicates the serious mistake of preparing for a cold, grip, or pneumonia, by hugging the stove continually or remaining closely in an ill-ventilated, dark, steam-heated, car­ peted room. The temperature of the sleeping room should not be above 50. It is best to breathe out-door air, whether one is in average health or suffering from pneumonia. This can be done in any room by the use of the window tent. The farmer's boy who 50 years ago saw the stars shining through the-roof when he awoke in the morning after a severe storm in February, with a blanket of snow around him, was not addicted to catching cold as much as we who think we must hear the steam hissing before we venture to expose our hands or feet. On awakening in a temperature of 30, we can at least be sure that al­ though the nose and earB may feel cold, there is no danger of catching cold. The Indian, asked why he did not catch cold like the white man, said, "Me all face." If we can extend this Immunity to the arms, then to the legs and then to the entire body, and maintain it, we shall have a permanent defense against the exciting cause of "colds" including pneumonia. Rub the arms, alternately extended, uncovered, vigorously, for five min­ utes, then neck and chest. When a glow has been induced in the upper part of the body, jump from bed and begin to rub the legs, vigorously, alter­ nately, with the hands, till a glow has been secured, all the time breathing deep and fast. Next begin to rub briskly the trunk in every part that can be reached, going to the extremi­ ties when a tendency is felt to chill, thus keeping the circulation equal­ ized. Follow ten minutes of this exercise with movements exercis­ ing every muscle in the body, flushing the small arteries in every tissue. Then begin with a wet towel, rubbing vigorously the extremi­ ties and then the trunk, finally removing the robe and ending with a dry Turk­ ish towel rub. This may take 30 min­ utes, but it will be the most profitable investment of the day. It may require weeks' or months' gradual approach in a mild temperature before this full program can be carried out in a freez­ ing temperature but the effort will be repaid many times. With a walk of five miles daily, this will supply ideal physical exercise and be an insurance against disease, if the proper food is eaten and the mental conditions are right. But if these preventive measures ar/e neglected, the nutrition is bad and a severe chill takes place, threatening perhaps pneumonia: Fresh air first, the colder it is the quicker it will burn off the waste, relieve congestion and give life to the blood by furnishing oxygen. Empty the alimentary canal as quickly and completely as possible, by emetic, (if a meal has been eaten within two hours) enema and rhubarb; stop eating till you are sure that nor­ mal conditions have returned, resum­ ing with acid fruit, fresh if possible, after one or two days or longer In serious cases. Sit with the leet in hot water up to the knees for half an hour, adding hot water as the bath cools. When the stomach settles, drink as much lemonade (no sugar) as possible. While sitting with the feet in bath or reclining have a cold pack about the head and neck. Have thorough mas­ sage and osteopathic treatment and a vapor bath and, in ordinary cases, no cold or pneumonia will develop. Don't yield to the Inclination to eat ravenously; the appetite is not natural. There is a rapid burning up of waste matter, but that should go on without interruption, whereas a heavy meal will Interfere with the cure. "Feed a cold and you'll starve a fever" (later), the popular maxim should read. Fever Is a beneficial process; it is nature's house cleaning.. To stop It by depressing the action of the heart is always wrong, often fatal. The high temperature, as in pneu­ monia is prolonged by the poisonous matter generated In the blood by the pneurao coccus pneumoniae, the spe­ cific germ of lung fever, degenerated blood being rapidly poured in upon the heart, but to refrain from adding fresh poison by eating when the stomach cannot digest and. to keep the ali­ mentary canal clean and clear and to furnish plenty pure air at the lowest temperature to burn off the waste in the blood and vivify it with oxygen-- this is simple but effective, always. •THE MARRYING SQUIRE." Justice George e. Law Has Broken All Records. George E. Law, Justice of the Peace, 18% Frankly pt„ Brazil, Ind., is known far and wide as the "Marrying Squire," from the fact that he has mar­ ried more couples than any other offi- cial in Indiana. Judge Law wrote a letter In 1906, recommend­ ing Doan's Kidney Pills, which he said had made a bad | back well, enabled him to sleep bet­ ter nights and feel more fit for work. The treatment also cleared up the urine. On January 5, 1909, Judge Law confirmed his previous testimony. "I have recommended this remedy to many people since I first used it," said he. Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box* Foater-Mllburn Co., Buffalo, N. X.^ ON FAITH. Fat Man--Did you polish 'em up nice? Boy--Yep, look for yerseif. Pat Man--I'll take your word for it. HAD AWFUL WEEPING ECZEMA. Faee and Meek Were Raw--Terrible Itching, Inflammation and Soreness --All Treatments Failed. Cutlcura Proved a Great 8uecees. "Eczema began over the top of my ear. It cracked and then began to spread. I had three different doctors and tried several things, but they did me no good. At last one side of my face and my deck were raw. The water ran out of it so that I had to wear \ medicated cotton, and it was so inflamed and sore that I had to put a piece of cloth over my pillow to keep the water from it, and it would stain the cloth a sort of yellow. The ec­ zema itched so that it seemed as though I could tear my face all to pieces. Then I began to use the Cutlcura Soap and Ointment, and it was not more than three months before it was all healed up. Miss Ann Pearsons, North- field, Vt, Dec. 19, 1907." FMMr Dng A Cbem. Corp., Sol* ProH-t They Meant Business, A Chicago stage manager-was tell­ ing of amusing incidents of blunders and errors caused by stage fright. In a romantic play, recently revived, one of the minor characters, a dairy maid, comes forward at the end of a recital of a love romance, and comments as follows: "Hope filled their youths and whet­ ted their love; they plighted their troth!" But at one of the performances the girl who played the dairy maid was ab­ sent without notice. At the last mo­ ment the manager gave the lines to a •shepherdess, who had never had lines to speak before, and who was ex­ cessively nervous when her cue came. This is what the astonished audience heard: "Hope filled their trough and blighted their love; they whetted their tooth!" Meant the Other Way. Rear Admiral Sperry, commander* In-chief of the fleet returned from its triumphant sail around the world, sometimes has serious spells of absent mindedness. Several years ago he was talking with a group of fellow officers at the Naval War college at Newport, when one of them remarked that he had been ordered for duty cm the Asiatic station. "Are you going to take your wife with you?" Admiral Sperry inquired. "No," the officer replied. "I think you are making a serious mistake," the admiral continued in positive terms. "I was out there in 1876 when an epidemic of cholera broke out, and hundreds of people died."--Sunday Magazine. NEW IDEA Helped Wis. Couple. It doesn't pay to stick too closely to old notions of things. New ideas often lead to better health, success and hap­ piness. A Wis. couple examined an idea new to them and stepped up several rounds on the health ladder. The husband writes: "Several years ago we suffered from coffee drinking, were sleepless, nervous, sallow, weak and Irritable. My wife and I both loved coffee and thought it was a bracer." (delusion.) "Finally, after years of suffering, we read of Postum and the harmfulness of coffee, and believing that to grow we should give some attention to new ideas, we decided to test Postum. "When we made it-right we liked It and were relieved, of ills caused by coffee. Our friends noticed the change --fresher skin, steadier nerves, better temper, etc. "These changes were not sudden, but relief increased as we continued to drink and enjoy Postum, and we lost the desire for coffee. "Many of our friends did not like Postum at first, because they did not make it right. But when they boiled Postum according to directions on pkg., until it was dark and rich, they liked it better than coffee and were benefited by the change." "There's a Reason." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read "The Road to Well- ville" in pkgs. Ever read the akOTC letterT A »ew one appears from ttac to tin They are genuine, tiw» and fall mi hnua interest. f3&O0 PERSONALLY CONDUCTED EXCURSIONS. Colonists' one-way tickets Chicago to the Pacific coast, via the Chicago, Union Pacific and Northwestern Line, are on sale daily during March aaA April at Jthe rate of $33.00. Corre­ spondingly Iot* rates from all points. Double berth in tourist sleeping car only $7.00, through without change to San Francisco, Los Angeles and Port­ land. No extra charge on our person­ ally conducted tours. Write for itin­ erary and full particulars to S. A. Hutchison, Manager Tourist Depart* ment, 212 Clark Street, Chicago, I1L " Added a Saving Clause. A food old deacon in Connecticut was very pious and very fond of clams. When once upon a time he at­ tended a Rhode Island clam-bake he overtaxed his capacity and was sore ly distressed. But his faith in prayer was unabated. Leaving the party and going down on his knees behind a tree, he was heard to supplicate: "Forgive me, O Lord, this great aln of gluttony. Restore my health, and I will, never eat any more clams." Then after a judicious pauses ~Very few, if any. Amen." How's This? W« eMr Op* Hundred Dollars Reiwifi' tor MM M of Catarrh that cannot ba cored by O&tarrh Cure. A Jewelry Store F. S. CHENEY * CO.. Toledo, O. - We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Ohensy bf tho lut IS years, and brMeve him perfectly hoo- •rtble In all business trens&rtlons and •Mb to carry out any obligations made by his firm. WAUHHO. KINNA.NT A MAHVIN, Wholesale OruiMtets, Toledo, Ol Hall'sCatarrb Cure to taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of tlM system. Testimonials sent free. Price 7S cents ptt bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Take Hall's Family Pills ,for constipation* In a dafe Place. "We have a man in this prison wtyl never tried to escape," declared* the head keeper. "What's he in for?" inquired the visitor. "Bigamy," replied the head keeper. --Bohemian. \ Important to Mothers. 1 _ Examine carefully every bottle Of CAsTORIA a safe and sure remedy for infants and children, and see that it Bears the Signature In Use For Over SO Years. The Kind Tou Have Always BoutftL ia cuiiuroui auu pco a* Deserves Censure. A Boston woman is charged with throwing a pie in her husband's face. That's a fine way to waste pie! If It's Your Eye Use PettIVs £ye Salve, for inflammation, stys, itching lids, ey# aches, defects of vision and sensitivity to strong lights, All druggists or Howard Bros., ttukulo, N. Y. Many a fellow who tells * girl lie would lay down his life for her ia afraid to take a chance by breaking the news to her father. Try the Natural laxative, Garfield Tea! It overcomes constipation and regulates liver and kidneys. (Samples sent upon reQOMt. Garfield Tea Co., Brooklyn, N. Y. A woman wouldn't mind being poor so much if all her acquaintances were Just a little poorer. For relieving Coughs, Asthma and Bron­ chitis "Brown's Bronchial Trochee" ate effective. 25 cents a box. Bamplea free, John I. Brown A Son, Boston, Mass., Tell a married man he doesn't look It and he will be terribly flattered. Mrs. WUslow'l Soothing 8ynM, For children teething, Softens the gutas, reduces tfr fiammatlon, allays pain, cures wind ooUu. SSeaboUflt. Silence isn't always golden. Some­ times it is an admission of guilt. ' y - If Tear Feet Ache or Bam get k S9e package of Allen's Foot-Kase. It gives quick Nllel. Two million packages sold rtfSTly. Our powers owe much of their •»* ergy to our hopes.--Johnson. Guar®* There's Danger Ahead if you're been neglecting a cold. Don'texperiment with your health. Get a remedy that you know will cure--that remedy is DR.D.JAYNE'S EXPECTORANT It's safe. In the severest cases of coughs, colds, bronchitis, croup, in­ flammation of chest and lungs it is the most effective remedy known. It does its work quickly, removes the cause of the disease Sold everywhere in three tUe bottles, $1.00, 50c, 25c. SICK HEADACHE Positively cured by these Little Pills., They also relieve Dis­ tress from Dyspepsia, In­ digestion and Too Hearty Hating. A perfect rem­ edy for Dizziness, Nau­ sea, Drowsiness, Bad Xaste in the Mouth, Coatr ed Tongue, Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER. TUey regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE .SMALL PRICE. CARTERS IVER PILLS CARTERS •I'ttle | IVER J PILLS. Genuine Must Bear Fac-Simile Signature REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. Business & Finance 00PJ free* BunisNa A FUmw, lift Mmw >•» f\,: . .. • r*x-,*v • -.'i V'i'VV^»«yirvv^'? . * "a.? ss-i Vv rJ. ? fr-'i ' - V l ? . 4 . i ' * "ri v>\ tsiiu. A. N. Kv--A (1909--10) 2272. * /. ». ... . " 'J For a competent jeweler is "on the ground" to properly adjust the watch to yonr own individual seeds. And that's the only right waytis buy a watch--never by mail. For no matter how good the watch --or how well known the maker--it can't keep accurate time tuttess per­ sonally adjusted. A South Bend Watch F<fmomUSmtldhmKmmP*rfoet7it^o A Somtk BmA--acknowledged by authorities to be the peer of all in every grade--would fail as a perfect time-keeper unless it was adjusted for the one who is to carry It. A South Bend Watch is never sold by mall--only by the best jewelers. Ask your jeweler to show you one. And write us for our free book showing how and why a South Bend Watch keeps accurate time in any temperature. • * J X Watch South Read. lad. * V41 fi J An aching back is instantly relieved by aa ..i. ^ application of Sloan's Liniment I |r t This liniment takes the place of massage and ^ t is better than sticky plasters. It penetrates-- j'/ without rubbing--through the skin and muscti- J iar tissue right to the bone, quickens the blood, relieves congestion, and gives permanent i well as temporary relief. « ^ ' r - V 1 vf < Liniment' A has no equal as a remedy for Rheumatism, Neuralgia, or any pain or stiffness In the muscles or joints. FlS«e 25®^ 50&, and $t.OQ« _ * Dr. Earl S. Sloan, Boston, Mass,, U» & A. Sloan's book op how, cattle, atttiep mM Dmitry »en> t»--. . . ..V* p ? t *"^5 v? <s~: :iS SA L 2 E R * r GREAT BEARDLESS B A R L E Y . « SILVER KING BARLEY Wlsoonsln lstamedasths bast hau­ler stftt* la tUa Union. Certain it >s that It produoea the heaviest Yielding barters on earth. Or SO VARIETIES tsewu !>y the Wisconsin Agricul­tural Htatlon.Salser'e Silver King •ariey heads the list as the bl ((e«t ylelderl That's a record we are proud oft But It's what •eeda do ererjwhera. BEARBLESSI BARLEY T h o b a r l e y o f your dreams; no J boards; aaey to! harvest, yielding I In NewTork state I 1X1 bushels perl acrew I I EsperorVHBaa OAT Oils* ne w Em perorWU- Uanioat ! .• the great. I esto»ti'*ttiee»atanr. | Alnuttcancreatasttui Emperor h I mtalf. Yog will want It. It's • marvel. Bl« trial psniaie. S» SALZER'S BILLION DOLLAR BRASS ARB TEOSIRTE _ Billion Dollar Orass covered Itself with floryioltM. It's hay crop to the united states aione is esiimaitxi ai *iw^>yv.wu.S5. It wiii tie much more for 1909. Everybody Is talklnc about It. Everybody will sow ltfor IMS. as it eoets but »oc to »0c perai're. Is rend? with Its first eroi» within »tx weeks after Medlng and seldom yields less* tlm:t # to It tom> per acre of magnificent bay. TEOS1NXK, well, the oataiuf tell® of this 100 ton green food freak. PURE CLOVER AND TIMOTHY SEED Salser'K swtti < 'ontury atrai us of clox-w mud timothy seed stand all aloae In their absolute purity. Of <;ourue they cost more than uijr other seedsmen^ bat they are free from weeds. That 'a worth the difference. W* INN* by *11 aeed Ntots IB MM«twr Mllers hold* Bushela! jBflT* BIG~DATALOCTFREC Kft Or fortdSln stampa we mall free of all coeta samples otBUrer Klnx Bar­ley. yielding 173 ba. peraere: Macaroni Wheat, yield!nc «4 bu. per acre; Billion PollarQrass; Speitx, the cereal and hay food prodigy, together with timothy. Clover, «ra«w, etc., easily worth |IM« oi mnj mmiA mamvr to get a start therewith And if you Bead 1«@ wt, add to above a paofea** of fmrm Seed Kovsltr never sew by you before. JOHN A. S AL2ER SEED egg*™ J |S -. '.^1 $ #9^ FOR PINK EYE DiSTLMPEX CATARRHAL FEVE1 AND ALL NOSE AND THROAT IHSEA3RR Cures the sick and acts as a preventive for others. Liquid given oa the tongue. Safe for brood mares ami all others. Best kidney remedy; 89 «. vnts and fl.Ot) a bottle; $5.00 aud 110,00 the dozen. BoUt by all drngyis** aud horse goods houses, or sent express paid, by the tu&uatectupara. QfOHN MEDICAL CO* Chemist* GOSHEN, HUMANA ntnlHSWizARD OIL G R E A T F O R PA I N jKNOWN SINCE 1836 AS RELIABLE -- .-r.|'C TRADE MARK J •y£co» black U * CAPSULES SUPERIOR REMEDYr^URIWARYDISCHARGESuc DRUGGISTS OR BY HAIL ON RECEIPTOF 50C H PLANTEN& SON. 93 HEMRY ST BROOKLYN N Y DR. McINTOSH celebrated NATURAL UTERINE SUPPORTER Immediate rvhof. 8.>Ul t>> »U suiylcal ment dualersiirid W-udinp druiijfit-ts in I lilted Stutcs ft CAUADA. Catalog A pna- lis; SENT on »»pMcation. THIS HASTINGS A MolNTUSU TRUSS CO.. •12 Walnut St.. Philadelphia. 1'a.. manufacturers of trusses and solx nmtrrs of Ui«t gouuiuu staiuood "MCINTOSH ' bupportc- CALIFORNIA Reliable Information Qbtainabb From members ol California State Re» alty Federation, comprising local realty organizations and individual real estate agents in_ all sections of California. Membership is a virtual guarantee of reliability and in case of com­ plaints by purchasers members az* required to submit to thorough in* •estimation and are subject to sever® penalties for unfair dealing. For liat ol members apply to Executive Secre­ tary, 534 Security Bid#., Los Angeles. . r •. ' * WISCONSIN SEEDS They ueirer fail. Let us send y..u our catalog. It is trr«< aud tells low al! about vegetable. Imrw and Held seeds, thai rben harvest time comes. fegeti a««|r Uisappuial ! PARKER'S HAIR BAL8AH Ommi uil Hm iaftfc ftum IJIM ttawiu* wueiiuanrBiuuicaiuirs, f -- M M a Wisconsin Seed SrowcrV Mh. Lb C fosse. Wtg. f Ifctftf I If WltWT '-i. • , ':$;i >' , r l , 1 " " V I . ' ' rj * •> >'* V f* 11 ~ * ^4 * Ma

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