Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 10 May 1917, p. 7

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-* c v - • "V T V' - 'V Z S ' ** %Jrt'- ' ,1*; *>-y '- * i,: yr%, '•n *-~yie-w ;'k s'. THE Me If KNRY PLAINDEALER, McHENRY, ILL. :?m *m. fei'i niJUjjiil nn«> MjiffiMU *&-y:%3aalQm w * W. L. DOUGLAS W. L DouglM lahoe dealers, in the World. THE SHOE THAT HOLOS »T8 SHAPE" $3 S3.BO 94 S4.50 M 96 *7 & 98 «XS%SHb. Say® Money by Wearing W 1 r»«.--»». - 111 ® • shoes. For stale by over OOOO The Best Known Shoes ix W. L. Douglas name and die retail price n (tamped on the bo* torn of M. shoes at the factocy. The value is guaranteed and the weaier protected against high prices for inferior shoes. IT* retail prices are die same evoywhete. They cost no more in San Frpcuco than they do Is Nnr YodL Thsy a» always wacthtfae price paid for them. T!» quality of W. L. DbogM pradoct is gfarraseed by mere * than 40 years experience in making fine shoes. The smart styles ate the leaders in the Fashion Centres of America. They ate made in a well-equipped factory at Brockton, Mass., by the highest paid, skilled shoemakers, under the direction and, supervision of experienced men. all working with an honest deteniiinatioB to make the best shoes few the price that money can buy. • . Ask your shoe dealer for W. I. DonglM shoes. If lisean- not inprtr tm with the kind you want, take m other mskfc write for Interesting booklet explaining how to Mt ihoMof the hi(hNt standard of quality for the pries, by retor-a mail, pottsg* free. LOOK FOR W. L. Dowlas the retell 'price a the bottom. < SStt HpmrU St., Brockton. Mass. SUBSTITUTES Boys* Shoes I i Alt j0 Best in ttM Warid $3.00 $2.50 & $2.00 Fx-esldent W.I» Doaglas Shoe €o., Canadian Farmers Profit From Wheat The war's devastation of European crops has caused an unusual demand for grain from the American Conti­ nent. The people of the world must be fed and wheat near $2 a bushel offers great profits to the farmer. Canada's invitation is therefore especially attractive. ' She wants settlers to make money and happy, prosperous homesfor thfcmselves by helping her raise immense wheat crops. Yaacaa get a BsMcstead of 180 acres FREE and other lands at remarkably low prices. During many yean Canadian wheat fields have averaged 20 bushels to the acre many yields as high as 45 bushels to the acre. Wonderful crops also of Oats, Barley and Rax. Mixed farsriii as profitable an industry as grain rais­ ing The excellent grasses full of nutrition are the only food required for beef or dairy purposes. Good schools. churches, markets convenient, climate excellent. There is an extra demand for farm labor to replace the H 9m railway rates to Sept. of Immigration, Ottawa, Canada, or C. J. Broushtw, Room 412, 112 W. Adams Street. Chicago, 111.; M. V. Machines. 176 Jslfenoo Avenue, Detroit, Mich. Canadian Government Agents a •» m Government Issues v Warning Against Fly Poisons Following Is an extract from "The Transmission of Disease by Flies," Supplement No. 29 to the Publio Health Reports, April, 1910. "Of other fly poisons mentioned, mention should be made, merely for" a purpose of condemnation, of those composed of arseuie. Fat$! cases of poisoning of children through the use of such compounds are far too frequent, and owing to the resem­ blance of arsenical poisoning to cummer diarrhea and cholera In­ fantum, It is believed that the cases reported do not, by any means, com­ prise the total. Arsenical fly-de­ stroying devices must be rated aa extremely dangerous, and should never be used, even if other meas­ ures are not at hand." 106 fly poisoning eases have been re­ ported by the press within the last three years. As stated above this um­ ber is but a fraction of the real number. Protect your children by using the vie, efficient, non-poisonous fly catcher Fought With Hessians. An ancestor of Coun^ yon Bernstorfif, the dismissed German ambassudor, fought against Aiherlca id our war for freedom. The facials ^brought out by a passage In the "Souvenirs du Che­ valier de Cussy." Among the acquain­ tances made •by the- chevalier in 1820, when he joined the staff of the French embassy in Berlin, was the court chamberlain, Count von Bernstorfif, grandfather of the former amba§^- dor. "Countess Bernstorff," wrote ̂ De Cussy, "bears a »singular forename, 'America":* This was bestowed on her because she was born in that country during the war of independence. Her father was in command of ode Of the regiments "hired out to the English by the elector of Hesse." ? ANY CORN LIFTS OUT, -DOESN'T HURT A BIT! AMGLEF No foolishness! Lift your oorns and calluses off with fingers--^ It's like magic! Sore corns, hard corns, soft corns or any kind of a corn, can harmlessly be lifted right out with the fingers if you apply upon the corn a few drops of freezone, says a Cincinnati authority. For little cost one can get a small bottle of freezone at any drug store, which will positively rid one's feet Of every com or callus without pain. This simple drug dries the moment it is applied and does not even irri­ tate the surrounding skin while ap- | plyjng it or afterwards, ' j This announcement will Interest I many of our readers. If your druggist hasn't any freezone tell him to surely get a small bottle for you from Ma wholesale drug house,--adv. The 0. & W. Than Company GRAND RAPIDS MICHIGAN The Children's Poet. In the St. Nicholas Magazine Hilde- garde Hawthorne gives a sympathetic sketch of the life of Robert Louis Stevenson, whose "Child's Garden of Verses" is perhaps the most popular book of poetry ever written. His pas­ sionate attachment to children is ex­ pressed best by Andrew Lang, whom Miss Hawthorne quotes : ^ ° "There was a very pleasant trait in Stevenson's1 character which,per­ haps, does not display itself In most of his writings--his great affection .for children. ... In an early letter he writes: 'Kids Is what is the mat­ ter with me. . . . Children are too good to be true.' He had a natural Infatuation, so to say, for children as children . . . little boys and girls s were his delight, and he was theirs." It 8ounds Ridiculous. Joseph H. Choate said, at a lunch­ eon in New York: « "When the Germans talk about pro­ tecting little nations, freeing the seas and championing international law, It sounds so ridiculous that It reminds me of the tramp. . "'Lady,' said a tramp to a farmer's wife, 'could you oblige me with the loan of a cake of soap?' » "The farmer's wife threw up her hands. " 'Soap!' ffhe said. Do you mean to tell me you desire soap?* "Y„as'm,' said the tramp. *Me part­ ner's got the hiccups aad\l want tp Stare him.'" ! The king of Wuerttemberg draws a tt profit of at least $50,000 a year >m the hotels he runs in the Black forest. Oramriafed Eyelids, Eve* inflamed by expo­ sure to Swb- (Just and Wind •uickiy relieved by Murine CyeReiaetfy. No Smarting^ -- just Eye Comfort. At Druggists or by mail 50c per Bottle. Murine Eye Salve in Tubes 25c. For Baok #1 the tjl R£E auk Marias Eye ieaedy Co.* Chicane -/ > >* • Ir Tit for Tat. . There was an uproar in the nursery and papa rushed upstairs to inquire into the cause. "Now, then, children, what's alK-thifc noise? .< Stop it at once!" / ' "Boo-hoo!" sobbed Eva. "Billy kicked me !* . "Billy kicked 'you? Billj^ how dare you kick your little sister? J'ou cow­ ard, to kick a girl J Don't you know it's only donkeys that kick ? if I hear of this again I'll give you tft for tat, and kick you!" * # BOSGHEE'S Panacea 9 the Home the World Over. ' -Why <will you allow a coW 4p ad­ vance in your system and thus encour­ age more serious maladies, such as pneumonia or lung trouble, when by the timely use of a few doses of Boschee's German Syrup you can get relief. This medicine has stood the test of fifty years. It induces a good night's sleep with easy expectoration In the morning. For sale by druggists In all parts of the civilized world ti 25 and 75 cent bottles--Adv. Preserve the Wild Flowerm. An earnest appeal has been made for the preservation of one of the most beautiful of wild flowers,»the colum­ bine, particularly along tourist routes. This appeal will find sympathetic sup­ port everywhere throughout the states In which the columbine is a natural annual, but it should be broadened to include all wild flowering plants that are needlessly, and o^jten wantonly pulled up by the roots. The conser­ vation of wild flowers is a patriotic duty.---Cfaristian Science Monitor. . • . • ••• V_ ^ Selfish. . • ^ V* . Jack--Can she keep a secret? , Maud--Yes, the disagreeable thiOf GINGHAM REVIVED AFTER MANY YEARS Striped Cottons Adopted by Women Who Set Fashions , In America. BOON TO HOME DRESSMAKER With tneyperillve *«ertala Mad# Available Any Woman Can Have Varied Wardrobe for Sum- mir Months. New" Tork.--It has been decades since gingham was worn. There were times when every woman abused the material by trimming it with satin and lace, and turning it into a frock of ceremony. It was considered appropri­ ate for the afternoon hours. It ranked with satin, voile, hankerchief linen. Today gingham has been revived by the smart women who launch the spring styles at Palm Beach. Young women found In it an agreeable change from the Ubiquitous Jersey cloth and serge. Someone in Paris had brought striped muslins Into high fashion, and those in this, country who rgmerabered the gayety of ging­ hams in the old days, and realized that here, in this country, were to be found all sorts of alluring cottons, took It into their clever heads to/re­ instate them. Palm Beach really set the seal of approval on the so-called humble fabric and It is probable that we shall see much of It as the season advances. Why not? In every way gingham carries out the modern demand' in clothes. Its coloring is happily chosen. Its stripes and checks, its plaid de­ signs "are accepted in all other fabrics. The lessening of the output of novelty fabrics, the ability of the mills to turn out admirable cotton weaves, the mark fashion has put upon simple mate­ rials as evidences of good taste In a time of national stress, the comfort of cotton in hot wtather, are fashion facts that build a strong foundation 'for gingham. The Incoming of Cottons. On this foundation also rests the otaim that other fabrics of the common garden variety are making for service this summer. The Southern mills have always produced "quantities of inex­ pensive materials in alluring colors, materials that are woven to stand the heat and sun and which have served the Southern women for generations. These have their showing in the towns of other districts, hut they are not as commonly accepted or as well-known as they should be. These fabrics are not always treated In an inexpensive way by those -who buy their clothes at expensive places. fHH vsSAWA'SS/'V/sVS/-'* Is'-////; w0m ,, /*•>> Y///.CA ySfVfys.ft.j The aatin is deftly draped from shoulder to anklea with a pointed train. There is silver tace down one aide only, and one arm Is draped with a band of rhinestones. It is a mistake to suppose that the price of a gown Is lowered by the price of the fabric used. If one has it made by a high-class dressmaker. One must pay the same for the cutting and fit­ ting of a gingham as of a satin or chif­ fon. Striped tnusftns sell for the same price in the great shops and dressmak­ ing houses as silk net, French jersey cloth and silk. As the dressmakers ex­ plain it, the salary paid to the various "artists" who give their time to the making of a garment necessitates ask­ ing a big price for it, despite the orig­ inal outlay for the building ingredi­ ents. - When each of the principal workers' In a high-class place gets $5,000 a year it Is not possible to sell Mme, X a ging­ ham gown at a price which Is com­ mensurate with the price per yard of the cloth. Choose whatever fabric you will. Is the comment of the head of the establishment, the price remains about the same. There is reason and order in this. It is in selling cotton frocks at the price of at tin ones that many dressmakers are able to even up the losses on frightfully expensive French models from which almost noth­ ing has been realized. Season of Home Dressmaking. But, after all, only the minority buy their clothe# at the palaces of Industry. Thousands of ready-tt&wear depart­ ments throughout the country cater to the desires of the majority easily and W//S/SSA S'Ss*." % ; ;w//w-v. ysss/.'*, V/i>y,-y/A<'4y/SoyA •tm* W r •W.y, s/f WW##'-' MMM The frock is of black lace, with a tulle apron heavily trimmed with jet. It drops in straight line down the back to the floor, weighted with jet. sufficiently well to stand the test of g«K»d fashion, and the test of thae, be it added, wheu <, fashions change as rapidly as they do in this epoch. Also, the summer Is the season of quantities of home dressmaking. Favor­ ing winds, long days of light, less street activities, contribute to the desire of the large majority of women to accom­ plish much sewing, to add a dozen gar­ ments to the few their dress allowance permits them to buy in the shops. A woman can do with few clothes In cold weather. We all have a touch of the Eskimo in our ability to con­ tinue in the same garments while the ground freezes ijnd so do we. But warm weather brings n riotous desire to have clothes heaped upon the closet shelves, separate garments, blouses, frocks, skirts, at any price, so they be fresh, clean and plentiful. In a season of satin, chiffon and Jersey It was not possible for any but the rich to be freshly and variously ar­ rayed from May until October, but with the Incoming of cottons, striped, plaid, plain, of white muslin trimmed with colored cotton, of white cotton net trimmed with ribbon, of cotton voile touched with embroidery, there is hope for everyone. No wonder the sewing machines are helng oiled and cleaned and patterns are being sought and the shops searched for good-looking ginghams and Turkey red and candy-striped muslins and black and white hundker- lawns and bandanna handkerchiefs bought to prepare for a veritable orgy of sewing. Copying French Designs. The best way to go nt the making of aU these Inexpensive frocks Is to copy, as far as taste and opportunity allow, the gowns of high degree. There are marked differences be­ tween gowns for the formal and the informal hours, and the knowledge and application of these differences actual ly mark the line between a woman who Is well dressed and one who Is not. Consistency is a jewel In dressing as well as In character, despite the fact that most people believe with Mr. Em­ erson that consistency Is the vice of small minds. There are several Inter­ pretations, however, of the word, and as it is used to express a certain high­ ly developed and trained sense of the suitability and relation of clothes and the woman. It has no qualities of vice in it. no. not even the minor and pleas­ ant qualities of It. To trim igingham with lace and rib­ bon, to fashion It as though dealing with satin. Is to be inconsistent.- To wear gingham to an afterhoon tea or dunce. Is to he Inconsistent. But to build a gingham frock after the man­ ner of a satin or French jersey frock is acceptable. The silhouette remains the some whether for afternoon, eve­ ning or morning; whether on the ten­ nis court, the country club porch, the ballroom or the breakfast table of one's own home. (Copyright. 1917, by the MeCture Newtpa • per Syndicate.) Wash Frocks For Children #- Not in Many Years Have Colored Fab­ rics Been Used So Much for Child Under Five or Six. Mot in many years have there been so many coldred wash dresses for even wee children. A few years ago it was thought that pure white was the only color suitable for the child under five or six. But now, in spite of the dye problems that might lead one to avoid colored goods because of their scarcity and high pric^, we And even toddlers dressed In colored gingham, percales and chambray, piques, cordeiins and linens, either in color or in white. The children's dresses this year and the children's coats, also, show^i tend­ ency to ape growo-up people's clothes In having very elaborate pockets, many of these standing well off from the child's figure, following the style of grown-up people's pockets. ^rtien a frock or coat is chosen for play purposes, however, pockets of this sort are not to be recommended. At Mmmemm best a child's pocket is a temptation as a most inviting receptacle for stones, pebbles and various sorts of vegeta tion. When the pocket is large and open-mouthed, this temptafion is one that no normal child can resist. If there are pockets they ought not to be very wide at the top, and when they are used merely for decoration it Is a good idea, If possible, to stitch them clos?. The Perennial Tailored Suit.. We often hear, early in the season, the announcement that tailoreds suits will not be greatly used, or later we are t6id that tailored suits* have not been worn as much as dresses and coats; hut never was there a time when tailored suits did 'not play ^ most important part in the wardro»«e of the fashionable American woman. It would be a strong-minded designer, indeed who could refuse the American woman-anything so deur to her heart, av the tailored suit.--VanHy Fair. HER RICH REWARD Town's Most Gifted Cook Wins EavyofOlher W«Ben,r..,f . . There Is No Material Compensation fiir Long Hours She Spends With Rolling Pin and Oven. There 1s In every smalt town some woman whose cooking is absolute wiz­ ardry itself. Her home never lacks for Sunday "company." She is always In demand at church or lodge suppers, too. Mrs. George Sparks was that sort of woman. While she could cook with an artist's skill most any dish known to the small-town housewife, pumpkin pie was her especial forte. Whenever the Ladies' Aid society advertised a supper and carefully stated that Mrs. George Sparks woi»'d contribute some of her Justly famed pumpkin pies, an overflow attendance was certain. What a strug­ gle always followed the bringing forth- of those g< lden^rown pumpkin pies! The very sight of them was enough to make any man in the town wet his lips with anticipatory delight. The crusts were always short to just the right degree of perfect joy and the filling was like ambrosia the gods hadt care­ lessly left at the disposal of an unde­ serving mankind. Mrs. Sparks never had the' experi­ ence of other members of the Ladies' Aid society, who often had some of their viands left for the home folk to consume. 'Her pies were all slicked up In a remarkably brief time after they made their appearance. Pies like Mrs. George Sparks' were never made to be eaten with a fork--they were made for a large, liberal, thick piece to be grasped gently in the palm o| the left hand and thereby to be conveyed to the eagerly waiting mouth. 4 , N'one of the men, except the mayor and the minister ever was able to curb his impatient appetite sufficiently to permit him to ply a fork at such times. The utter and manifest delight with which every man In town fell upon those golden pies brought many a bale­ ful glance from other and less favored members of the Ladies' Aid .society. But there was no man In town who wasn't willing to have a troublous ses­ sion at home for the sake of a second piece of one of those pies. And there was probably not another man in town who didn't at times envy George Sparks and didn't resent that worthy man'is self-satisfied and contented de­ meanor. And. Mrs. George Sparks, what did she get In return for those hours she spent with the rolling pin, the dough pan and the cooking stove oven? She never got a cent for all the hundreds of perfect pies with which she supplied the hungry townsmen. But then- wasn't a woman in town who wouldn't have undergone an equal amount of la­ bor and self-denial gladly to have re­ ceived Mrs. George Sparks' reward-- that of knowing she could do some­ thing better than any other woman in town and knowing that they, too, were aware of the fact. Elephants Halt Train. Whan a circus traiu on the South­ ern Pacific came to an involuntary stop near Galveston not long ago, in­ vestigation by the engineer revealed the cause, it is reported, in a carload of elephants right behind the water, tank of the engine tender. Being athlrst and dusty, the intelligent ani­ mals had reached with their trunks through the end window of the car into the tank, and every drop of water had gone to assuage elephantine thirst and spray vast acres of dusty hide. The elephant trainer was called from the caboose to a consultation and solved the problem of moving the stalled train by uploading the four of­ fending elephantst who "were then hitched in tandem in front of the 1 aco­ rn otlve and compelled to pull it for a distance of three miles along the track to the nearest water supply, where the tender was replenished.-- Popular Mechanics Magazine. The Whole Thing. „ "Certain writers keep deriding our Ignorance of Russia," said Professor Pate. "I have Interviewed a number of my fellow citizens, and I find that almost without exception they believe themselves thoroughly posted, in the school readers of their youth -they learned that the chief business of Rus­ sian gentlemen has long been standing up la wildly careering sledges, each drawn by three horses abreast, and pouring the whip to the steeds with one hand, while flinging small children to ravening wolves nvitli the other. Beyond that, according to the average American, nothing much ever hap­ pened in Russia until the country went bone-dry and dethroned the czar. If we do not know It all, we think we do, which Is fully as satisfactory to the most of us."--Kansas City Star. Best He Had Found. It could hardly have been caused by old age--the man had been haldhead- ed, very baidheaded, for years. There had been a time when some of in­ numerable preparations calculated to prevent the falling out of hair had been tried, but his hair had ceased to fall only when not even a fringe re­ mained. . •. • But the man was contented. He wore a wig--not a small, tlght-flttlng one but a large, bushy one. But one day on the street, as the wind caught away the man's hat, his wig was snatched, too. Bareheaded, indeed, the owner made a futile grab, then waited while a small boy gave chase. "Sonny," said the man, as he grate­ fully rewarded the boy, "you're the quickest thalr restorer I have evef found." Noted Exception. "My husband is such a knocker. Ha has his hammer out on all occasions." "So has mine, except when I want h>»n to put down the carpets." He Knew. She--Take care, Alfred! That isn*t the remedy for seasickness. Don't you see the bottle is marked poison? . He--That's the one I want. Is Your Back Stiff, Lame and Achy? Do Weak Kidneys Keep You Sick, • Tired and All Worn Out? IF YOU have a constant, dull ache, or sharp pains .whenever you bend or twist your back, and the kidney secretions seem disordered, too, don't waste time plastering or rubbing the bad back. It's likely that the cause is kidney weakness, and delay in treating the kidneya may invite uric acid poisoning, gravel, dropsy or fatal Bright's disease. , Get Doan's Kidney Pilh, a special remedy lor weak kidneys, used around the world and publicly recommended by 50,000 people in the U. S. A. * Personal Reports of Real Cam ^ i •;r| ̂ • » * . %\<j " *-* 4$ • '>1 DOAN'S CURED HIM. S. W. Shoemaker, 1206 Walnut St., Cairo, 111., says: "I had a weak back all my life and suffered from burning pains in the small of my back. At times when I stooped over to lift anything and then tried to straighten up, terrible pains would dart through my back. My head ached and I had dizzy spells with spots before my eyes. My appetite was poor and my weight decreased. I didn't have any control over the kidney secretions either. The first box of Doan's Kidney Fills helped me and continued use removed all the trouble." NOW STRONG AND WELL. Mrs. H. T. Sharp. 817 W. Tenth St.. Des Moines, Iowa, says: "I suffered terribly from kidney com­ plaint and words couldn't express what I went through. My back felt as though it were being pulled apart and I couldn't get on my feet with­ out help. I didn't have a moment's rest day or night and. Inflammation of the bladder nearly killed me. I had no appetite, didn't sleep well and looked like a shadow. After doctors and everything else failed, I begun using Doan's Kidney Pills. Today I am strong and well and I give Doan's Kidney Pills the cred­ it." KIDNEY PILLS 50c • Box it AU Stores, Futef-Milbura Buffs*®, If. Y., Mfg. Chealfts DOAN'S I "Wormy," that's what's the matter of 'em. Stomack and intestinal worms. Nearly as bad as distemper. -Coat you too much to feed 'em. Look bad---axe bad. Don t physic 'em to death. Spohn's Compound will remove the worms. Improve the appetite, and tone 'em up all rottM and don't "physic." Acts on glands and blood. Full I directions with each bottle, and sold by all druggists. ] SPOHX MEDICAL GO., Chemists, Gashes. lad.. 17. 8. A.I TRICK WAS COSTLY TO HIM Conjurer Who "Found" Coins on Street Car Floor Forced by Con­ ductor to Turn Over Money. A conjurer performing at a local theater ^ot. on a street car with two members of his company, and after a while, moved by some sudden Impulse, he pretended to find sundry quarters, stooping here and there, and producing them from under the seats, on the floor, anywhere, to the amazement of the passengers, says the Toronto Mall. His two friends laughed heartily at the Joke. Not so, however, the conduc­ tor, who came forward and sternly de­ manded the twelve 2,"»-cent pieces he had "picked up," In order that he might hand them over in accordance with the regulations governing lost property found in the cars. In vain did the "finder" protest that it was only a conjuring trick. The conductor obviously did not believe him. And In the end, in order to avoid a compulsory visit to the police station, he had to give up the coins. One Nurse to Ten Patients. One nurse to every 200 soldiers ttf the requirement In modern conflict, ae the war In Europe has ^demonstrated# The proportion of sick and wounded ttt the entire army is about 5 per cent# That is, if we throw 1,000,000 soldier* against an enemy, at least 50,000 oil them will be in the hospitals conttni- ually. In a war hospital the averse* proportion of patients to nurses is tea to one.--Red Cross Magazine^. %-• « f : •£ kt*; r Cut Them Out. t , • V ^ firv si Remove from your vocabularff * , v/"? J' "don't like" Gazette. or "can't eat"--Emporlag Occasionally a woman makes a fooM of a man, but more often she makttl him make a fool of himself. Important to Mothara _ Examine carefully every bottle et CASTORIA, that famous, old remedy for infants and children, and see that it Bears the Signature In Use for Over 30 Tears. Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria [g auu nmurtu, auu iuui it Caged Insects. Pussy's constant loss of flesh, de­ spite her-good food, worried Jackie. "She Is thin this summer because she eats flies," his mother said. Jadk regarded his scrawny cat with a new interest. ** "She eats bees, too, mother,* he said. "I can hear 'em humming." Pie crusts are bound, crimped and trimmed at the same time with a new kitchen utensil. To teach rifle shooting a Japanese has invented a crossbow with rifle stock, trigger and sights. COCKROACHES! are easily killed by using j ' Stearns' Electric Pasts Full directions in IS languages j Sold everywhere--25c and $1.00 | U.S-Government Buys It Ken and Women ! Women as well as men are made misSR* able In" kuiney and bladder irouble. Dl* Kilmer's Swamp-Root, the great kidnap medicine, is highly recommended by thoa sands. Swamp-Root stands the highest for tha retfson that so many people say it hat proved to be Just the remedy needed te thousands of even the most distressing cases. At druggists in 50c and $1.00 sizes. T««a may receive a sample sise bottle eH Swamp-Root by Parcel Post, also a pit' phlet telling you about It. Address Or. Kilmer & Co.. Binghamton, N. Y„ aaA enclose ten cents, also mention this pap*. of a! I kinds boocbt and sol*. It jrua have &•; u> :>el! or wuAtfli jmrrhasf *ny_ write^ fC LUMBER Uculars. Ci.ElissA Bro., J^b Depw.Buffalo, W. N. U., CHICAGO, NO. 19-1917^ CARTERS 1TTLC PSLL& Tour Liver Is the Best Beauty Doctor A dull, yellow, lifeless akin, or pimples aaA eruptions, are twin brothers to constipation. Bile, nature's own laxative, is getting into your blood instead of passing out ot your system aa it should. This is the treatment, ta suc­ cessful use for 50 years -- on* pttt daily (more only when necessity ̂rm-Sauii Dose -Small Price Garter's Little liver Pills For Constipation Genuine bears signature futs_Y<>a itisl OVer Nig!) Pallid, Pale, Putty-Faced People Need Gariars iron Kb 'ii.yli,-

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