Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 24 Feb 1916, p. 3

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'•-(X ",xJft̂ ' '^ *9 *••• .-<' :-,^:t<' Cv:\^v/ -.Iy>v»".-/-,••'- y-H -v» V;«'|,:..<-|_^| • : • > : ; ^ •*• : •• - ' ' * - »,> ^ *rA ****"$*<< *<tw« *•/ • THE McHEXBY PLAINPEALER, McHENRY, ILL. KEEP YOUNG As well be y&uns at 70 as old at 60. Many elderly people suffer lame, bent, aching backs, and distress­ ing urinary disorders, when a little help for the kidneys would fix it all up. Don't wait for gravel, or Bright's disease. Use Doan s Kid­ ney Pills. They have helped thousands, young and old, and are recommended by thousands. An Illinois Case Mr». L S , E u - banks, 6922 Dorches­ ter St., Chicago, 111., s a y s : " I w a s I n about as bad shape as one could be with kidney complaint. I had a constant pain in the small of my back that broke my rest. Often after do- I n g a little house- Work, I had to sit -- - . * Was nervous and irritable, and DJaaaer trouble caused me intense suf- ®'x boxes of Doan's Kidney Hills cured me after other medicines had failed, and I have been in good health since." GttlWitlAvSlan.lOttBo D O A N ' S FOSTER-MILEURN CO., BUFFALO. N. Y. Picturt Ttllt a Story" Grippy Weather This--Better Get a Box of CASCARAgQUININE her / }etf At nay Drug1 Stor* The old standard remedy--In tablet form--No unpleasant after effects--No opiates - Cures colds in 24 houra -- La Grippe in 3 days -- Money back if it fails- Insist on genuine--Box with red top--Mr. Hill's picture OQ it . H. Hill Company, Detroit Children Who Are Sickly <U When your child cries at night, to?ses restlessly in its sleep, is constipated, fev­ erish or has symptoms of worms, you feel worried. Mothers who value their own comfort and tlie welfare of their children, should never l>e without a box of Mother Cray's Sweet Powders for Children lor use throughout the sea> •on. They tend to Break HP Colds, relieve Feverish* ness, Constipation, Teeth­ ing Disorders, move and regulata the Bowels and destroy Worm?. These powders are pleasant to take and easy for parents to give. They cleanse the stomach, act on tha Liver and five healthful 6leep by regulating the child's any substitute, system. i'sfd by mothers for 28 ymrs. Sold by all drujrfrists, 25 cts. Sample mailed FKIJB. Address, Mother Gray Co.. Le Roy, N. Y. * Be sure you ask for and obtain Mother Gray's Sweet Powders for Childreft. Trade Mark. Don't accept s-d BLACK LOSSES SURELY PREVENTED by Cutter's Blackleg PIIU. Low- priced. fresh, reliable: preferred bf Western stockmen, because they W V"^ protect where other vaoolrtet fall. • m Write for booklet and testimonials. • m I0*do«> pkQe. Blackleg Pills $1.00 C0*dose pkge. Blackleg Pills 4.00 Use any injector, but Cutter's best. ^Tbe superiority of Cutter products is due to over 15 fears of specializing in vaccines and serums only. Insist Cutter's. If unobtainable, order direct. The Cutter Laboratory, Berkeley, Cal.« «r ClilMa* III* Constipation Vanishes Forever Prompt Relief--Permanent Cure CARTER S LITTLE LIVER PILLS never faiL Purely vegeta­ ble -- act surely but gently on the liver. Stop after dinner dis­ tress--cure indigestion,' improve the complexion, brighten the eyes. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICK. Genuine must bear Signature CARTER* 1ITTLE IVER PiLLS. Safe Kidney and Liver Remedy is a medicine of great value in the treatment of various diseases of the kidneys, as has been demonstrated, during the past 40 years. This safe and de pendable remedy ts sold in two sizes, 50c and $1.00, at your druggist, or direct postpaid on receipt of price. SunpU WBI if requested. Warner's Sale RemHiea Co. •ocbesltr. It. Y. DAIRY H For "Backward" Cows If you have such a cow buy a package of Kow- Kure from your feed dealer or druggist and use according to directions. You'll be surprised at the difference it makes in her general health and milk yield Kow-Kure is especially recommended as a preventive and cure for Abortion, Barrenness. Milk Fe r. Scouring, Lost Appetite, Bunches and othft common ailments. Writs for frta Traatlss, "Tha Hoaia Cow DectofV"9 DAIRY ASSOCIATION CO. lyndonvlllc, Vt. Balesuim »V anted--We require tho si rv u-i-jj of a ffrbU'iafsSalesman, well acquuinu-d In Ibis territory, to bell our New Paint Printed Hheet Steel signs for outdoor advertising Splendid opportunity for hustler. Write (tivinij experience and reference. Howard Si(rn Company, 8&U Putlerson.C'inclnnatl, Q. 40-ACRE FARM, 18 ACRES CLEARED fenced; house, fruit trees, etc. ll.VU): 1600 caah. Bargains In farm and fruit lands. Correspondence Erlled. JAMBS U. PAYNK, Jacksonville, Florida SPOKICIDE SHUT treat. Sent direct on trial where wh hav^ no a^enk •ee booklet. Local agents wanted. Established Hporicids (>hsiulcal Co.» Atlanta 2i* x* PATENTS WnmoB E. Coleman, W«al» lnntoci. U.C. WookHfree. Ulgb- mt relerencea. Best : --•-- -- DARING IDEA SENT - HERE FROM PARIS Quaintly Designed Redingote That Bids Fair to Achieve Popularity--Saber Umbrella Adopted by the "Smart Set"--Latest Word About the Coming Spring Hats--Way to Hang Skirt; Beer has recently shown, me some lovely models which were specially created for the Riviera season, writes the Paris correspondent of the Boston Globe. The redingote of smoke-gray velvet which I have sketched was one of these. It was a Quaint garment. Three- Quarter length and very ' full at the hem, with a broad band of chinchilla A Redingote Model of Smoke-Gray Velvet and Chinchilla, by Beer. bordering it. The coat was finished off with triple capes, in coachman style, and there was a high collar shaped like the open petalB of a big lily. The coat was fastened right down the front with large buttons made of semitransparent gray horn and the lin­ ing was lemon-yellow brocaded satin. This style is likely to be popular all through the spring. The Parisieiyies seem delighted with the curious little shoulder cap^s which were introduced a month or two ago by Redfern. We find these capes on coats of all kinds; also cn afternon dresses of an elaborate order. Beer is making a specialty of coats which are very full at the hem and bordered all round with fur; he makes these garments of velvet, veloyrs de laine, duvetyn, cam­ el-hair cloth, brocaded satin and many other stuffs. The fur border nearly always meas­ ures from eight to ten inches and on some of the newest modeis--for in­ stance that shown in my sketch--there is no fur on any other part of the coat. Beer still continues to make skirts and coats ver^ wide at the hem, but I notice he Js not now so keen about the "bustle" outline, for which we feel devoutly thankful. The Beer dresses--especially those intended for afternoon wear--are still very "fussy," but the draperies at the side and back seem rather to indicate a revival, of panniers than of bustles. Paquin has been making some plc: turesque wrap-coats which give a short-waisted impression. These gar­ ments are exceedingly picturesque and graceful and the skirt of the coat is set into a semitight top which is fashioned like a bolero. On tall, slight women these coats are charming; they are, as a rule, quite long and the out­ line is so picturesque that the coat forms a sort of dress. Very soft and supple materials are used for these coats, and they are in­ variably finished off with a high collar and wide cufTs made of some hand­ some fur. One or two large buttons are added and special attention is paid to the linings. Petticoats. Frocks must flare at the hi? line and at the bottom. For this there is a new petticoat in organdie or stiff taffeta, which has narrow, stiff ruf­ fles at the hem and hips. This is to be worn under the soft, unstiffened frock of thin material. Another odd petticoat is made of panels of fine embroidery, laced together with col­ ored ribbons over insets of lace. A taffeta top of another colored petti­ coat has an embroidered net flounce to which are applied medallions of the .taffeta with a fancy buttonhole stitch. Embroidery Is Not to Lose,All of Its Color The art of embroidery is much old­ er than that of lacemaking and de­ spite the fact that modern machinery 'has in many instances supplanted the hand-wrought examples of the em­ broiderer's art, nothing has been found to actually take the place of the simulated designs of flowers and geometrical effects that are copies of patterns tffeed for years and years by the "needle painter" of the peasantry of Europe. Every season there is provided JUBt the right kind of embroidery to ac­ company the new washable fabrics put on the market. The looms of the great Rodier are constantly experi­ menting to produce exquisite cotton, linen or cotton-and-linen mixtures whichVfering as big a price in Amer­ ica as do silks or satins. These ma­ terials are usually matched up in em­ broideries whose basic ground is of the weave of the dress which they trim. Color forms a considerable part of the new embroideries. Usually such color is in pastel shades, although there are examples where black is used on a white or cream ground. In some quarters it is asserted that many of the embroideries thus wrought are really those that have been carried over from J&st year, when dyes were more plentiful than they are ncftv. However this may be, it looks as if there would be enough of the color decoration to at least start the sea­ son, in so far as southern patrons are concerned; and after that there is always a revamping of styles to suit the exigencies of practical wear, and it may be that the all-white ef­ fects will then be in greatest demand. For the Writing Table or for Other Purposes In the illustration we show calendar combined with a decorated little box. It can be made with any strong card­ board box. The box is smoothly covered with cream-colored silk, the material being turned over at the edges and fastened on inside and underneath with a strong adhesive. On the silk covering the lid a wreath composed of holly leaves and berries is embroidered, and in the center of the wreath a small "tear-off" calendar is fastened on with tiny paper fasteners run into the cor­ ners of the calendar and the lid, and bent flat inside. A printed calendar for this purpose may be procured at almost any stationer's at this time of year, at a very small cost. The lid is edged with scarlet silk cord, carried into loops,' turned in­ ward at the corners, and ribbon Btrings of a color to match are sewn on in the front of the box to secure it when closed. The interior of the box is' loosely lined with soft white silk. * * A little article of thiB kind is both useful and ornamental upon the writ­ ing table, and in it odds and ends can be placed, or if made with a box of suitable %ize it could be used for hold ing handkerchiefs. Women of Fashion Have Adopted the Butterfly -?2 A %T T> o men and woroqn to sell onr >. ^ 4 k O A specialties, make $3 00 to 96.no a. dar, biff profits, Kauii'le 10c cataloe fre& lurllou bpoclalty Co., LuokTllle, Ktutuckj ' t 'a?.?*- • The bluebird as a fashionable fetish Is no longer "in it"--to borrow from school-boy slang--for the butterfly has fluttered into favor and now enthralls feminine fancy. Butterflies of colored enamel poise on almost bare shoul­ ders, alight on bodices, trem the coiffure, spread themsel ette-fashion, across the back even clasp fashionable hand other words, butterflies are on brooches, l&cepins, hair co: pins, barrettes, bracelets and Theater handbags of velvet brocaded silk have butterfly enameled to match the bag enameled clasps bring the the bag up to twenty odd d •o. Pearl, glass beads and cor laces are the most popular. also popular lor hatpins and and also as an ornament combs.. Hair combs are in a great va­ riety of shapes and materials, among which are the mandarin combs, made of imitation tortoise shell, the upper part of the comb being deco­ rated with Oriental designs, such as dragons, peacocks, etc. Combs in the shape of butterflies are very effective when inlaid with rh^nestones or with colored beads, especially in blue and in ruby. ALU "GO HOME" SOME TIME To Every Inmate of Prison the Period of Freedom Arrives, Either in Life or Death. Some day--if we live, and there doesn't -seem to be much chance of dying around here--we ate going out and going home, says a writer in the New Era, Federal penitentiary, Leav­ enworth. Even the man who happens to die here is going home, for that matter. It may seem slow, but the time comes, eventually for the last "get-up" In prison for every man here. Then it's hike! It's over to the tailor shop for new clothes from head to foot--and then out and away. No bird will be freer than you and I, but we'll not fly high any more. One will start in one direc­ tion and one in another. What's the difference? Any road leads to free­ dom and the main chance. We shall have the right to work and to carry our wages our pockets again or put the money in the bank. We shall drink freedom from every water cup, and breathe in liberty from the air itself. We can get off a dis­ tance and yell out loud without fear of a calldown. We can sit and talk it all over at the dinner table with friends and rel­ atives. No more hands out for pota­ toes. Some of these days we will tuck a napkin under our chin again and make merry over our pudding. We "shall go to bed at night with lights out and know the balm of darkness to the eyes and enjoy the rest it gives the optic nerve. The day will roll 'round for us to say good-by and go, with heads up-- not down. No more will we feel the weight of bondage or know the pinch of confine­ ment. Everything we do, it will be our pleasure to do, and not our task. We will cast off fetters, not put them on. f We shalf despise and feel a horror for anything that curtails our liberties. Habits that make slaves of men will be cast aside, for while serving a prison sentence we are freed of habits that bind UB more than any privilege withdrawn here. We will not be slaves to strong drink. We will go out free from its awful bondage. Its curse is removed far from us. We shall not be'tempted to profane our lives with evil deeds so long re­ moved from their commitment. We will go out more free from shackles than we have been in years, for bad habits are the hardest shackles to strike from us. Made Bachelor Pay for Wife. A delicate question was recently de­ cided by an alderman of Wilkes-Barre, Pa., when he was called upon to ad­ judicate as to how much it is worth to find a wife for a bachelor, who is anx­ ious to step from bachelorhood into the bliss of married life. Opportunity to determine this question came when a woman brought suit against^a man to recover $100 which she alleged was promised her for finding a wife for de­ fendant after he had failed in his hunt f6r a life partner. She claimed that he had expressed great disgust with his condition of bachelorhood and en­ gaged her to hunt him a wife. She lo­ cated a woman, introduced her to him and their marriage resulted. Follow­ ing the marriage the husband refused to pay the $100 he had promised. The alderman, who is a bachelor, ruled that it was well worth $100 to find a wife for a bachelor, and he gave Judgment for the full amount of the claim. State Control In England. A remarkable scheme of state con­ trol has been inaugurated at a cen­ ter in the north of England where 20,- 000 men are expected to be at work shortly on munitions. To provide for them the government has acquired all 6hops in the district, and will either allow the late proprietors to sell goods under license only or will in most cases run them under direct control. The government will thus be butchers, bakers, grocers and milkmen to the inhabitants. The main object is to regulate prices and prevent extortion. The liquor control board has already bought all the public houses--about thirty in number--and has thus a monopoly in the district. In some tho sale of Intoxicants will continue under close restrictions; in others it has been suspended, and some have been turned into lodging houses for work­ men. New "8klrt" Veil. The new "skirt" veil, to be worn with small turbans, is coquettish in­ deed. It is gathered around the edge of the hat, falling Just to the chin in front, and no lower at the back. Around its edge is a fine wire,* or hoop, which makes it stand out like a new dancing skirt. These veils are of fine hexagon mesh with delicate bor­ der designs at the edge Saved by a Coin Toss. How the • in of a coin saved the life of one Gordon Highlander but meant the death of a comrade is ro­ tated by the survivor, who received over forty wounds in the battle of Loos, but has Just been discharged from hospital. "Shortly before the bat­ tle," he said, "two of us were detached from our battalion to make up the number in charge of a heavy trench mortar. We had only been there a day* however, when one of the regular men In charge of the trench mortar returned to duty and one of us, there­ fore, had to return to ou<* regiment. We tossed for it, and 1 had to return. "A few hours later I learned that my comrade had been killed by •hell." Increased Use of Quinine. That the use of quinine is rising in popularity is amply borne out in a statement laid before the legislative council of India, recently. This state­ ment shows that in 1913 the sales of this medicine were Just over forty-flve and a quarter million grains, whereas in 1914 the sales had increased to close on seventy-two and a half million grains and for the first eleven months of last year the sales exceed seventy- three and fhree-quarter million grains Educational 8Urvey. Henry Turner Bailey of Newton, Mass., author and lecturer on art and educational topics and editor of Something^o-Do and the School Arts Magazine, n^s been selected by the United States bWeatl of education to assist Commissioner Philander P. Claxton in making a survey of the pubflc school system of San Francisco: This survey promises to be most sig­ nificant- It Is the first to be made IN PRIiflTJVI: RUSSIA ~ • a. fc REGION WHICH ClVtt.12ATiON NA& MOT REACHED. Inhabited by Nomadic Race, Who Llve as Their Forefathers Lived Through- out the Centuries--Have Many Peculiar Customs. Interest is still kept up in Great Britain in other things besides the war. The other day, tor instance, a Mr. F. A. Holiday, a traveler, gave an address before the Society of Arts in London on the Uralak, a province in Asian mid-Russia, northeast of Caspian sea. Valuable oil fields exist here, and also deposits of sulphur and other minerals useful in peace and war. Mr. Holiday said that the land was very flat, and there was almost an absence of trees, which caused the fuel problem to be somewhat acute. The advent of western civilization fur­ nished the inhabitants with a certain amount of firewood in the shape of tel­ egraph poles and stakes used to mark out claims. The CossacKs, nad, nowever, taught them to respect the former, though not in. some cases the latter. The original inhabitants were the Kirghiz, an essentially nomadic race, who lived in dome-shaped tents made of a light wooden frame covered with camel skins. The tents had. no furniture, but sometimes beautiful oriental rugs or carpets were placed on the floor, a space being left on which a fire was made. When the Kirghiz used the tele­ graph poles as firewood, they did not take the whole pole away, but each man chipped off a piece until at last the whole pole gave way. A prince was a man with 100 or 200 sheep, and a "prince in winter generally lived in a house built of bricks made out of the sand and baked in the sun. , The houses were sunk in the ground for warmth ltr the winter. They had window frames and doors, but the firewood questionWpua so acute that when the people went on trek in the summer they took the window frames and doors out and packed them on the backs of camels for fear the people who did not trek would steal them. , The Ural river was a great source of wealth to the Cossacks, for it was well stocked with fish. At one time a barge crossed the rfver, but the Cossacks would not allow it to cross after dark, as they said that the fish wanted to sleep as well as anybody else. The outbreak of war put a great cneck on the developments of the Uraisk and of other oil fields. • great deal of prospecting and pre­ liminary work was necessarily stopped, and companies which were already well established met with fresh diffi­ culties. In some places "gas holes," around which there was often a deposit of sulphur, were met with. Some of these spots were venerated by the Kirghiz, who prayed round them and then erected little sticks, to which they tied little pieces of cloth, as was the manner of simple peoples. On one occasion.his driver stopped and prayed by one of these "gas holfeB," and threw a few kopeks on the ground, which, he said, were for tho religious authorities when they came along. Asked if there was not danger of someone stealing them, the driver replied that if he prayed for relief from sickness and trouble, and then someone stole the money, the thief would get the trouble and sick­ ness, so there was no danger. To Improve Cattle in Bengal. T^e decadence of cattle in the prov- incft of Bengal forms the subject of an interesting monograph recently published by the director of agricul­ ture for the province. The cause of their decadence he attributes partly to climatic conditions, partly to the lack of grazing grounds, and largely to the heedless breeding policy of the Bengal cattle owner. His chief rec­ ommendations are the provision of good bulls and the establishment of superior milk-yielding cows, draft bullocks and bulls. The report is il­ lustrated by a most interesting collec­ tion of photographs descriptive of the various species of cattle ranging from the Himalayas to the Bay of Bengal-- from the record bull bison, measuring 18 hands 2V& inches at the Bhoulder and 19 hands 3 inches at the hump, down to the huiible lineaments of the Malda calf which at sixteen months measured only 36 inches in height be­ hind the hump. This Pfcture and That. "The populations of the Boer, or far­ mer republic of South Africa, and of Mississippi have not been unlike, ex­ cept in language," says Senator John Sharp Williams of Mississippi. "Both lead plain lives; both alike have their strength constantly re­ newed, as was that of Antaeus of old, by daily contact with their mother- earth. "Both shoot well, ride well, live an outdoor life and, as a rule, speak can­ didly without diplomatic frills. Both have their negro race problem and an overruling race pride molding, color­ ing, motiving or modifying nearly everything--politics, religion and so­ cial life. Both have combined grim humor with cool courage." His Revenge a Run on Bank. When a foreigner presented a check at a bank at Scranton, Pa . that had the semblance of a forgery he was refused payment. In retaliation he spread the story among the foreigners that the bank was out of money. When they inves­ tigated and found the doors closed for the half holiday they grew angry, and when the doors opened in the eve­ ning hundreds were clamoring for their money. Until long after midnight the offi­ cers were kept4 busy paying out funds, and it was not until nearly $100,000 had been paid out that the dem&ad was stemmed. M'Woman9& ». How to Fed Well During Middle life Told by Three Women Who Learned from Experience. The Change of Life is a most critical period of woman s existence, and ncglect of health at this time invites ̂ ̂ disease and pain. Women everywhere should remember % that there is no other remedy known to medicine that will - r^ so successfully carry women through this trying period as " >lf' Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, made from *18 native roots and herbs. Read these letters:-- ^ J-J PtuliadelphijL Pa.--"I started the Change of TJ-fr five years ago. I always had a headache and back- v%£- ache with bearing down pains and I would have heat flashes very bad at tunes with dizzy spells and 2 nervous feelings. After taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound I feel like a new person and am in better health and no more troubled with the aches and pains I had before I took your won­ derful remedy. I recommend it to my friends fori cannot praise it enough."--Sirs. MARGARET GRASS- MAN, 759 N. Ringgold St, Philadelphia, Pa. Beverly, Mass.--MI took Lydia R Pinkhanris v egeiaoie compound, for nervousness and dyspepsia, when I was going through the Change of Life. I found it very helpful and I nave always spoken of it to other women who suffer as I did and have had them try it and they also have received good results from it.w--Mrs. GEORGE A. DUKBAB, 17 Koundy St., B^erly, Mass. Erie, Pa. --WI was in poor health when the Change of Life started with me and I took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, or I think I should not have got over it as easy as I did. Even now if I do not feel good I take the Compound and it restores me in a short time. I will praise your remedies to every woman for it may help them as it has me."--Mrs. £L KISSUNO, 931 East 24th St., Erie, Pa. Tfo other medicine has been so successful in relieving womanfti £ suffering as has Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound* ̂ Women may receive free and lielpf ul advice by writing the Lydia ik E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass. Such letters are recelfti »ad answered by women only and held in strict confidences t DISTEMPER CATARRHAL FEVEB AND ALL NOSE AND THROAT DISEXSET ^OH/V PINK EYE Cures the sick and acts as a preventative for othertL Liquid given on the tongue. Safe for brood mares an$ all others. Best kidney remedy. 60 cents a bottle. 9o a dozen. Sold by all druggists and turf gtiods houses, or sent express paid, by the manufacturers. Booklet, "Dtstem- per. Cause and Cure," free. SPOHN MEDICAL CON Chemists, GMkct, lad., IT. S. A* Italy Comparatively Small. The area of Italy is 110,000 square miles, while the area of California is 158,000 square miles. DON'T LOSE'ANOTHER HAIR Treat Your 8calp With Cutieura and Prevent Hair Falling. Trial Free. For dandruff, itching, burning scalp, the cause of dry, thin and falling hair, Cutieura Soap and Ointment are most effective. Touch spots of dandruff and Uching with Cutieura Ointment. Then shampoo with Cutieura Soap and hot water. No treatment more successful. Free sample each by mail with Book. Address postcard, Cutieura. Dept. L, Boston. Sold everywhere.--Adv. Since the first life insurance com- pauy started in Japan in 1881,'* the business has doubled every ten years. Widowers, like tumble-down houses, should be re-paired. But Cool Million., "He talks a tot about being heir flQ a million." "Hot air!" Vw Marti* after ICipeears Cutting Winds and Duet. It Reetecea Refreshes and Promotes Eye Health. Good for art Kyes that Need CarftL Murine Eye Remedy Co.. Chicago Scad* £ye Book on request. The Reason. "Why do they call a b&sebCB sphere?" "Well, isn't it the whirled?** «' M PIIM Relieved by first Application And cured in 6 to U dajs aj PAZO OINTMKNT t|g universal romedr for all furms ot Piles UruEtpj reload none; If it faitk He. ' Heard at the Club. / "Hello, old chap; killing time?*" "No, dear' boy; just waiting foisit- 4%V to die a natural death." ^ Fortunes await the inventor of fe'i i lifeboat that will float on a sea trouble. *»- AILING WOMEN NEED THIS FAMOUS DOCTOR'S PRESCRIPTION Thousands of women who are now blessed with robust health cannot un> derstand why thousands of other wom­ en continue to worry and suffer from ailments peculiar to women when they can obtain for a trifling sum Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription which will surely and quickly banish all pain, distress and misery and restore the womanly functions to health. This prescription of Dr. Pierce's ex­ tracted from roots and herbs is a tem­ perance remedy. To get rid of irregularities, or ca­ tarrhal condition, to avoid pain at cer­ tain timesr to overcome irritability and weakness, waste no time, but get Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription in liquid or tablet form this very day. "ANURICr NEWEST IN CHEMISTRY, This is a recent discovery of Doctor Pierce, head of the Invalids' Hotel Buffalo, N. Y. Experiments for sev­ eral years proved that there Is no other eliminator of uric acid compae rable. For those easily recognized symptoms of inflammation--as back­ ache, scalding urine and frequent urK; nation, as well as sediment in tho, urine, or if uric acid in the blood has caused rheumatism. "Anuric" acta quickly. In rheumatism of the joints in gravel and gout, invariably tha pains and stiffness which so frequently and persistently accompany the ease rapidly disappear. \ Sen J Dr. Piprce 10c for large trial package. Full treatment 50c. A% druggists. Natural Revenge. "So your town went Jry?" "Yes, sir, and if you'll believe me. the very next week we had a flood. Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for infants and children, and see that it Bears the Signature of In Use for Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria Differentiation. "Have you a good cook?" "Oh, the cook's good enough, but the cooking is atrocious." . PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM A toil«c pr*p*r*tiun of merit to cr.uiicmX* dandruff. For Restoring Color and Beauty to Gray or Faded H&ir. eV-c. arti .'/0 at DfttCTtfU Four Dollars a Month buys a paper that contain* the best elements of aiS Insurance Policy, Bond and Savings Bank. Ycxf are guaranteed four peT cent on your money, cai| borrow $500 on each contract, at five per cent* with ten years to repay. Provides tor a home. anil., constitutes insurance before and after deaths" Send for our booklet. "Co-operative Home Finance., tawr". FMP1BE REALTY & MOSTGAG#' COMPANY. NASHVILLE. TE.NNLSSEE* 1)1 last for ywure. SatlsXaot oil or moaey twok. Be. C&sburoo, UU Citestoat. dt. Loaif W. N. U., CHICAGO, NO. 9-1916. Write Us a Postal Card Today Just say:- "Piease send me free full information how I can ob­ tain a complete set of Oneida Community f-\ir Plate Silver­ ware f r ee bv saving the trade mark signatures f r o m packages o f SKINNER'S sis pKJ„.»ms We will answer by return rrfail and. in addition, will send you a beautiful 36 page book of recipes. Skinner's products are the highest quality and help you cut down wonderfully on meat bil ls SKINNER M AN IF ACT L RIN G CO. The Largest Macaroni Factory in America Omaha I >' 4 'itl

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