McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 19 Jul 1906, p. 3

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

THE SUBMARINE BELL. Device by Which Vessels at Sea Are Able to Avoid Shoals and Col- /' lisions with Other Ships. V The submarine bell has been per­ fected until now its use will enable the navigator to locate tbe position of their ships, and also that of shoals, buoys, lighthouses and lightships, and In foggy weather avoid collision with other vessels. As simplified by late improvements, the system now comprises two very simple parts, these being a signaling apparatus, consisting of a submerged bell of a design adapted to produce sounds in the water, and the receiving apparatus on a ship, which picks up the sound of the bell and enables the pilot to determine its direction. The sound receiving apparatus as applied to vessels consists of a pair of sensitive electric transmitters placed on. the inside • of the ship, against the outer plating or planking, below the water line, one transmitter being on the por£ side and the other on the starboard. Both transmitters are <;or.nected by wires to a single, tel­ ephone receiver box in the pilot house. A switch at this point en­ ables the pilot to listen to the sound as received either on the port or the starboard side of the ship, and by a simple manipulation, which a novice can learn in five minutes, the bearing of the signal bell can be accurately lo­ cated. Tests between the receivers on the tug and the bell on the lightship were made. The position of the tug was frequently changed and when the lightship was on the starboard bow or beam it was noted ..that the bell LIGHTSHIP WITH SUBMARINE BELL AND A TRANSMITTER CASE IN HOLD OF VESSEL. could be' heard distinctly* from the starooard receiver, and more faintly on the port side, the opposite condi­ tions obtained when the tug brought the lightship on her port hand. There­ in lies one of the chief values of the device, as because of this readily de­ tected difference in sound a fog bound vessel nearing a lightship or light­ house can readily find position. The captain of the Cunarder Lucania pickej up the Nantucket lightship at a distance of seven and a half miles with the bell. 'Electricity of Light What is light? This has been the query not only of the scientists, but of the philosophers of every age. Modern research brings us one step nearer the solution of the problem by showing this cause to be closely con­ nected with one of the fundamental questions of recent years, "What is electricity?" 1 An answer to the first of these questions is ventured by the modern electronic theory of the constitution of matter. On this view all sub­ stances contain within their atoms a number of exceedingly small aggrega­ tions, each carrying a negative charge. Suppose, explains Dr. Bergen Davis, of Columbia university, in the New York Times, the circle in Fig. .1 to represent an atom, the dots within to represent these small charged cen­ ters, the electrons, and the shaded DR. DAVIS' APPARATUS. portion sufficient positive electricity to make the atom electrically neutral. Any given number being present, these electrons will occupy certain definite positions^ with regard to one another, within the atom. If, now, some outside force displaces one of these electrons from its position of equilibrium, the force within the atom tending to pull it back to its original place will cause it to vibrate, and this vibrating charge will be the origin of ether disturbances. The oscillations succeed one another with extreme rapidity, and so we have an electro-magnetic disturbance of short wave length which affects our senses with tbe sensation of light. 'Knowing, then, that light is due to electrical oscillations, the question naturally arose as to whether or not it would be possible to convert sun­ light directly into electricity. To this interesting and valuable subject of in­ vestigation Bartoli, an Italian physi­ cist, gave some attention. In 1881 he performed an experiment with this as the object and cl&kned success. He arranged a conducting film of sil­ ver so thaf it could be moved with very great velocity, the ends of the film being connected with a galvan­ ometer. The film was then set in mo­ tion while a bright ray of sunlight fell upon it. Bartoli claims that when light was thus allowed to fall on the moving film a small deflection was observed, thus indicating the presence of a cur­ rent of electricity. * He also states that when the film was at rest there was no deflection; also, upon reversing the direction of the motion of the film, the deflection of the galvanomet- ter was reversed. Believing that" the confirmation of such a direct conversion of the electro­ magnetic waves of light into elec­ tricity was of fundamental importance, Dr. Davis constructed a more sensi­ tive apparatus than that of Bartoli, de­ signed upon a somewhat different plan. The. method employed was to place a thin film of silver on a glass plate or disk (A in Pigs. II., III.), which was so thin as to be translucent. The ends of this film wgre connected by wires (w w) running through a hol­ low steel axle (B) to a very sensitive galvanometer. The disk carrying the film was then set in motion, making approximately 200 revolutions a second, and sunlight concentrated upon the film by means of a powerful lens (X). In the first experiments performed some slight deflections of the galvan­ ometer were noticed, but in later trials when greater care was taken to avoid all extraneous causes of disturbance, no deflection could be obtained on the galvanometer, no matter whether the film was revolving Fapidly or was en­ tirely at rest. It is my opinion, however, says Dr. Davis, in view of my experiments with the more sensitive instruments now at the disposal of physicists, and in view of Bartoli's single experiment in 1881, that tbe effect he observed was in all probability due to outside electrical disturbances. That light may be converted into electricity is no doubt a possibility, but theory seems to indicate that if any effect Is obtained it is probably too small to be measured by any instrument now known to science. • A Novel New Welding Process There are three general methods of making welded rail joints. In one method, cast iron is poured around the joint, the molten iron being ob­ tained from a portable cupola. In an­ other method the rails are fused to­ gether by a high amperage alternating current, generated in a transformer. When thermit was discovered another ^>roc<>ss of welding was developed, the ends of the rails being fused together by the heat of the thermit. In a new system of rail welding, de­ veloped in Germany, and described in the Street Railway Journal, the heat is derived from a flaming arc, which allocs the use of a dirwt current. The positive wire is attached to the carbon, and the negative wire is at- tached to rail. The carbon is guided by a holder, which is moved by hand, and the arc produced is fed with steel, which melts and runs into a mold surrounding the Joint. At the same time the ends of the rails become fused and unite, thus forming a per­ fect joint. The current is taken from a trolley wire, and is reduced from 550 volts to 60 volts by the apparatus shown in the sketch. The large wagon contains a motor dynamo, and the other con­ tains an auxiliary storage battery, which is connected in parallel with the generator. In using the apparatus the wagons are placed at the side of the tracks to be welded, and a wire hooked on the trolley wire. Mrs. Liscom Found Her Com­ panions to Be Mere Gossips The summer at a seaside resort had Only served to confirm Mm. Liscom's opinion of certain follies of the day. "This sitting around on piazzas is a terrible waste of time," she said to one of her neighbors when the season waa over and she was once more sur­ rounded by the comforts of her own home. "You get in the habit of it before you realize it, because, of course, your room is never so pleasant to sit in. But, my dear, the piazza is a perfect hotbed of gossip! It was when I sud­ denly realized that that I made up my mind to stay in my room more, even if it was hot and looked out on the bathhouses and the stable." "Yoil mean really scandal, or Just harmless talk?" idly inquired the neighbor, whose mind was bent ,on se­ curing a new sleeve pattern, but who saw the time was not ripe. "One leads to the other, as I've al­ ways contended." and Mrs. Liscom as­ sumed her loftiest air. "The first week or two, when I was a newcomer, the other women were rather careful; they only spoke of such things as the table, and the way the children of some of tj»e cottagers were alloWed to run wild, and what a condition the so- ciety of the town was in, and how quarrelsome the two Swansley families were, and the way in which th^'Rand girls carried on--things, of course, nobody could help speaking of. "I was quite deceived until one day, my dear, they suddenly turned on me and asked me bow long Muriel had been engaged, and if Mr.' Glidden wasn't considerably older than she. "It wasn't so much what they said as tho way they looked that showed me in a flash that they were regular gossips and expected me to be the same. So I just turned off their ques­ tions and left the piazza--and I never sat there again except when Mr. Lis­ com was with Compan­ ion. LlVi SELF FEEDER FOR HOGS. Directions for the Building of Two Convenient Devices for the Peri. This self-feeder should be placed on floored space and can be made any length desired. A general plan is shown in our first Illustration, says Prairie Parmer. In building it, nail 2x4's to the floor with edges up to make the HOPPER TROUGH HOG SELF-FEEDER FOR SHELLED CORN. trough. Set the end pieces of the hopper inside of the ends of the trough at center, leaving a space four inches wide for feed , to pass through between the sides of the hopper. This space should run the full length of the trough. The sides of the hopper should be about one inch above the ANOTHER STYLE OF SELF-FEEDER. bottom, so that feed can pass be­ neath. The feed can be shut off at any time by nailing a strip over this opening. This feeder keeps the grain clean and a supply before the hogs at all times. The grain cannot be wasted when the hopper is properly regu­ lated. This self-feeder can be built out of doors without any trouble, pro­ viding a roof is placed over it. The second plan is shown in our second illustration. There is no par­ ticular scale. It is only necessary to slant the sides of the feeder and trough so that a hog can get his head in and not his feet. GRUB IN HEAD OF SHEEP. The Treatment for This Trouble Should Begin by Using the "Ounce of Prevention." Treatment for grub in the hfead is practically valueless, declares Orange Judd Farmer. Not so,- however, with reference to prevention. Grub in the head is caused by a fly which in hot, late summer weather lays eggs in the nostrils of the sheep. These hatch in a few days and crawl up into the re­ gion adjacent to the brain. There they live and their presence leads frequent­ ly to inflammation, which often re­ sults in death. If sheep are furnished with a cool and darkened shed where they can lie during hot summer days, they are not likely to be injured by the fly. THE LIVE STOCK. No blemished horse should be as a breeder!" v Good horses cannot be produced from inferior parents. • Horse breeding should receive more attention by the general farmer. Pig pork is juicer, tenderer, healtUt^, costs less and sells better than hog pork. Cleanliness is as necessary for the health and well being of hogs as for other animals. Oats fed to hogs will produce bone and muscle and will prevent sows from getting too fat. In the purchase of any kind of animal, quality is generally worth more than is paid for it. The growing pig should be raised upon something else beside corn till ready to begin to fatten. Gradually increase the rations of tbe pigs a few days before weaning if they are to be kept growing. Large and fine muttons bring good prices, sufficiently good to pay well for the grain to make them fat, large and as fine as possible. SKIMMINGS. some they It pays to feed the cows] ground feed daily even when are on good pasture. One batch of bad cream will spoil many other batches of good cream if it is mixed with them. Success in the dairy business de­ pends on scientific knowledge of dairy­ ing- Just as a sponge absorbs water just so milk absorbs odors of all kinds, only in a much larger degree. The worse the odor the better the milk seems to like it. It is impossible to raise good dairy material in some localities, on account of the absence of good bulls. To Grow Wool. To grow wool without fault or law in its fiber it is. necessary that the sheep be kept in uniformly good thrifty condition every day in the year, and not at any time exposed to extremes of heat or cold. The sheep must not be underfed or overfed at any time, so as to fever the system or allow it to be­ come debilitated, as either condition is Stkely to weaken the frber or make It brittle. ' STOMACH WORMS IN SHEEP Ailment Which Is Best Treated by a Change of Pasturage--Other Remedies. The bane of the sheep grovtar in the humid sections is what is called the twisted stomach worm, the Strongulus Contortus, a small, fine, thread-like worm found twisted to­ gether in the stomach of the sheep, red when filled with blood, white when dead and empty. So far as we know it is to be found in, all flocks in the humid and perhaps in the semi-arid sections of the United States. It seldom does any appreciable in­ jury to the older sheep, nor to vigor­ ous early lambs. It is frequently fatal to lambs out of condition, and espe­ cially to lambs that come as late as the first of June. It is taken into the system from pasture infected from the droppings of older sheep or iambs that are infested. Hence the one important thing in fighting this, disease is change of pas­ ture. If sheep are kept for a number of years on a blue grass pasture, and especially, if they are watered from sloughs in the pasture, they are al­ most certain to have a severe attack of stomach worms. There are just two preventives. One is not to allow sheep on the same pasture more than two years in succession. The other is to have your lambs come as early as they can be cared for, and then feed them some grain and keep them grow­ ing vigorously from start to finish. If they can be sold fat in June at the prices usually current, sell them. Five dollars is just as good pay for a lamb in June as it is for a lamb in December and January which has eaten a great deal more feed and in­ curred greater risk. If weaned they should be put on a fresh pasture. Old pastures sooner or later become sheep sick. As to remedies, Prof. R. A. Craig, veterinarian of Purdue experiment station, upon the authority of Dr. Law, .recommends the following: "Arsenious acid, one dram; sulphate of iron, five drams; powdered nux vomica, two drams;' powdered areca, two ounces; common salt, four ounces. This mixture is sufficient for 30 sheep and can be fed with ground feed once or twice a week. In case the symp­ toms are already manifested, it should be fed once a day for two or three weeks. In giving this remedy in this feed the necessary precautions should be taken or each animal may not get the proper dose." To which he also adds: "Turpentine is largely used in the treatment of stomach worms. It Is administered as an emulsion with milk (one part turpentine to 16 parts of milk). The emulsion should be well shaken before drenching the ani­ mal. The dose is two ounces for a lamb and four ounces for an adult, and^o be effective should be repeated daily for two or three days." We used this turpentine treatment some years ago in our own flock; and while it will kill the worms, we have always thought that it left the sheep in an enfeebled condition; whether due to the treatment or the result of the disease "we were not able to de­ termine. In handling sheep an ounce of pre­ vention is worth a good many pounds of cure, and the one maxim "change of pasture is good for shee^" is worth about all the medicines that were ever poured down the sheep's throat., says Wallace's Farmer. We remember once looking through an old copy of one of the earliest of the agricultural papers AVegelable Prcparatioafor As­ similating (hcFoodandRegula- UngiheSlomacitsaitd Bowels of I N F A N T S / C H I L D R E N Promotes Digestion.Cheerful- ness andRest.Conlains neither Opium.Morphine nor Mineral. NOT NARCOTIC. Mve orfltautsmsLimma! i\mfpkm Smt" Apafec! Remedy forConsHpa- iion. Sour Stomach. Diarrhoea Worms Convulsions Jfcverish- iiess and LOSS OF SLEEP. fhc Simile Signature of „ G&Mff&cXiK NEW YORK. The Kind, Yon Have Always Bought, and wfcicli ben In use for over 30 years, has borne -the signature of and has been made tinder his per­ gonal superv ision since its infancy. Allow no one to deceive yon in this» All Counterfeits, Imitations and " Jnst-as-good" are bnt Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health oC ? ; Infants and Children--Experience against ExperimeeW What Is CASTORIA Qfestoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, PaWN..- jjoric, Drops and Soothing SyrupS® It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other ISarcotle substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind Golic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. The C'Mldrett'a Panacea--The Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORS A ALWAYS the Signature ' " *- ? ^ pHBBlSBB in EXACT COPY: OF WRAPPER. Tbe Kind Ton Hare Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years fuw CENTAUR OOHMNV, TT MUMMY aTMET, NKW VON* err*. FY THE WAY. Even a stingy person is always will­ ing to give advice. No one is so prosperous that he can afford to malign other people. A desire to get even has often been the keynote of a man's success. Value of property is entirely a mat­ ter of whether somebody wants it "There are smaller dividends in the practice of hate than in any other oc­ cupation. It is hard to persuade a community that you are any better than your neighbors. A man does not really get old un­ til he begins to feel secret pride in hia infirmities. Every person imagines that his Is a special case among the ills that af­ fect mankind in general.--Uncle Dick, in Madison Journal. UTTERLY WORN OUT. Vitality Sapped by Years of Suffering with. Kidney Trouble. Capt. J. W. Hogun, former postmas­ ter of Indianola, now living at Austin, Texas, writes: "I was afflicted for years with pains across the loins and in the hips and shoulders. I had headache also and neuralgia. My right eye, from pain, was of little use to me for years. The It went into the subject of j constant flow or urine kept my system diseases of sheep very thoroughly, dealing with almost every disease we ever heard of and some we never heard of. The remedies described were purely vegetable, decoctions from various herbs .such as were used by our wise grandmothers in treating the ailments of their children and grand­ children; but we noticed that at the end of each prescription there was this sage advice: Change the pas­ ture. DROP FLOOR HOG HOUSE. Arrangement Which Does Away . Largely with the Objection­ able Slanting Floor. Some men will object to th*6 hog house with a slanting floor to aid in good drainage. Those who do will perhaps find in the accompanying il­ lustration a plan which will answer VIEW f H E 1IOL depleted, causing nervous chills and night sweats. After trying seven dif­ ferent climates and using all kinds of medicines, I had the good fortune to hear of Doan's Kidney Pills. This remedy has cured me. I am as well to­ day as I was twenty years ago, and my eyesight is perfect." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. British Colonial Order. The order of St. Michael and St. George, the chapel of which was dedi­ cated in St. Paul's cathedral, l/inrton, the other day, is the order conferred-on British colonists, distinguished or oth­ erwise. The lowest rank in the order carries the letters C. M. G. after the owner's name. Flippant Londoners translate this "Colonial Made Gentle­ men." ' As soon as the literary young woman has her first poem published, the laurel wreath begins to pinch. Hard work offers small odds, but is generally a sure winner. Genius is a 100-to-l shot. SECTIONAL, their, purpose more satisfactorily, says Prairie Farmer. The figure^rep­ resents a double hog house with a double roof. P is the passage down the center, while g g are the gutters on either side. FL is a feeding plat­ form a little lower than B, which is the bed and yet higher than the pas­ sage. The feeding trough is placed in FL, next to tbe passage partition. By this plan, all liquid manure or the water which may be used from time to time in washing down the ce­ ment floors runs to the front, where it strikes the gutter and thus finds an outlet to the outside of the hog house. Shape of Eggs. The shape of eggs has nothing te do with the life germ unless the egg is deformed. The shape of the egg conforms with the shape of the duct, hence we have .leng eggs, short eggs and round eggs. The air cells and germ is in the broad end and if this part is smooth and even and if the germ is fertilized that is all that is Tjectssary so far as shape goes. Sheep Help the Land Sheep are almost esssntial in main­ taining the fertility and cleanliness of the land.- It is claimed that sheep re­ turns to the soil more of the fertilizing matter of Its food than any other ani­ mal and in a majority of cases this fact alone is no unimportant consid­ eration in deciding the class of animal* BAD COMPLEXIONS Depraved Blood Causea Pimplea and Boils--Dr. Williams' Pink Pilla Make New Blood and Cure Follows. " I abused my stomachj my blood got ont of order and then inv face broke out with pimples and boils," says T. E. Rob­ ertson, of 197 Addison street, Washing­ ton, Pa. "This was over two years ago. My stomach was iu bad shape. After eating 1 would have to rest awhile or I would suffer the most severe pains in my stomach. On arising I would often be so dizzy that I conld hardly stand up. The slightest exertion would start my back aching so that 1 often had to sit down and rest awhile. At times I ex­ perienced a pain around the heart which alarmed me but which I suppose came from my stomach trouble. "1 began to break out On the faoe with pimples and later with boils -which con­ fined me to the house a week or more at a time. One day 1 saw Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People advertised in a rimphlet which was left at the door a^d thought I would give them a trial, x took several boxes of the pills beftire all the pimples and boils left me, but 1 am now glad to say that my blood is good. I do not have any eruptions and I no longer have the head and stomach troubles I have desoribed. I am very grateful for what Dr. W illiams'Piii k Pills taive done for me and I have recom­ mended them and always will advise those who are suffering from bad blood or stomach trouble to try them." ^ If vou want good health you must- have good blood. Bad blood is the root of most common diseases like antenna, rheuma­ tism, sciatica, neuralgia, St.Vitus dance, nervousness, indigestion, debility, par­ tial paralvsis and locomotor ataxia. Dr. Williams' Piuk Pills are sokl by all druggistsor sent, postpaid, on receipt of price, 50c. per box, six boxes for $2.60, This •For FREE ALLEN'S FOOT-EASE WIT* A Certain Cure lor Tired, Hot, Aching Feet *^"^0Addrew^ i e n DO NOT ACCEPT A SUBSTITUTE. on ereij bos. S. Olmsted, Le lioj, N. Y. Sunday School . Teacher--What be­ came of the swine that had evil spirits cast into them? Small Johnny--They were made into deviled ham. Lewis' Single Binder -- the famous straight 5c cigar, always best quality. Your dealer or Lewis' Factory, Peoria. 111. Even an electric button won't accom­ plish much unless it Is pushed. Mrs. Wtnstow'a Soothing Syrup. For children teethlnn, softens the ptuma, reduce* In­ flammation, allay* pain, cures wlud colic. 25cs tRitUa. He never says anything who never has anything to unsay. SICK HEADACHE Positively cured by these Little Pills* Tliey also relieve tress from Dyspepsia, la* digestion and Too Hearty Ealing. A perfect renfc* edy tor Dizziness. Nausea Drowsiness, Bad Taste 111 tha Month. Coated Tongue. Pain in the side, TORPID LIVER. Tbtip regulate tbe Bowels. Purely Vegetable. SHALL PILL SMALL DOSE, SHALL PRICE. CARTERS PILLS. CARTERS ITTLE IVER PILLS. Genuine Must Bear Fac-Sitnilo Signature REFUSE SUBSTITUTES* KDMJCATIONAI* The Greatest Boarding College In the Werld University of * Notre Dame NOTRE DAME, INDIANA JfV guarantee two feints: Our studtnt* study and our students beha-ct thtnntlvts 18 Boildiag* 75 Professor* 800 Students Courses in Ancient and Modern Kntf-llsh. History, and Economies. ClK'niistrv, Itiolotrv, I'lm-macy, ( tvjl. Electrical, «ml Mechanic-ill Knjri- ne*t1ner. Architecture, Shorthand,Book-keep­ing, Ty pe-wi iting. SPECIAL DEPARTMENT FOB BOTS UNDER TH1UTEEN TERNS: Board. Tnilion. and Laundry. MM. Send ten cents to the Registrar lor Catalogue $20 . AND LESS From St, Louis and Kansas City to all points Southwest via M. JC. & T. R'y. August 7th, 21 st. Tickets good 30 days returning with stopovers in both directions, To Dallas, Ft. Worth, Waco, Houston, Galveston, San An­ tonio, Corpus Christi. Browns­ ville, Laredo, and intermediate points . $20 To El Paso and intermediate points . . $26.50 To Kansas, Indian Territory, Okla­ homa, and Northern Texas points, one (are plus $2.00, but no rate higher than . $20 Correspondingly low rates from all points : From Chicago. $25.00; St. Paul. $27.50; Omaha and Council Blufis, $22.5* Write for fall particulars \V. S. ST. GEORGE General Passenger Agent, M. K. & T. R'y Wainwright Building St. Louis, 11a e.w.aiwru. «oidK., ... '1 " SOUTHWEST' % ANNUAL PERSONALLY" CONDUCTED NIAGARA FALLS EXCURSION VIA to stock up with lo maintain the fcrtr. J by the Dr. Wifliama^Medicine Company, Ity of the soil. » • Schenectady, N.Y. Lake Erie & Western R. R. THE PIONEER NIAUM'FALLS EXCURSION LINE •N CONNECTION WITH THE Lake Shore & Michigan Southern Rjr. Thursday, August 2,1906 Ticket* good returning on C. A B. line Steamer, Buffalo to Cleveland, if desired. SIDE TRIPS TO TORONTO, THOUSAND ISLANDS, Ete. ALSO CHEAP RATES TO Sandusky and Put-in-Bay YHPR SPMMKR OI'TIXH K»K THB ' "nliST Uf Al'til ST AND COAIJS Wi lli L"S For pamphlet containing (tMrtl inforaMtiae U to rate, time. etc.. call oa any ticket if«at at the above route, or addreaa S. D. McLEISH, General »'assen«er A*ent, INDIANAPOLIS, I NO. Union Pacific Bulletin JULY 1906. To Oregon, Washington, Idaho, Montana and return, low ratea in effect daily to September 15, to many O. S. L. and O. R. & N. points. To California, Portland and Puget So 11 ud: Low excursion ratea daily to September 15, applying variable routes, limit October 31. To Cal it'ornia and Return: One fare for the round-trip. Tickets on sale September 3 to 14. To Colorado and Return: Daily < to September 30, slightly over one fare for round trip. Still lower rates July 10 to 16 and September 19 to 22, inclu- aive. To Ogdett and Salt Lake Cltyt Very low round-trip rates dai"#.;|(^ September 30. • Inquire of '\ W.G. NEIMYER, G. A., 120 Jackson Boulevard Chicago, III. : TUCniKV PI V VII I CD <J<*«roy» all the niM and IntUAIoT iLI MLLCIl is comfort to ever, hozu^. One fOe. box la*t« the ertttre season. Harmlegk * You C ANNOT CURE all inflamed, ulcerated and catarrhal eon* ditions of the mucous membrane such as nasal catarrh, uterine catarrh caused by feminine ills, sore throat, sore mouth or inflamed eyes by simply dosing the stomach. But you surelv can cure these stubborn affections by local treatment with Paxtine Toilet Antiseptic which destroyithe disease g^rms,checks discharges, stops pain, and heals the inflammation and soreness. Paxtine represents the most successful loral treatment for feminine Ills ever produced. Thousands of women testify to this tact. 50 cents at druggists. Send for Free Trial Bo* His R. PAXTON CO. neat anil will not eon or inju rts a n r t h i n # . T r y tliem once ana vou will n*ver b* without thfus. It not kept t»v deal-era. eeat prepaid for Uarafcl §iam. 14»U*KaJfc fcliil*. PIT ft PfTLESS SCALES. ForStMl ami Wood l-Tames. £3 and wp. U'ritc && money. Also Pumps aud Wind •ECKttAM BROS DM WINTER Wheat*. MkaakeU peracr*. Catalogue and lampiea rHSK, lilitrll><t».ltt>J.lrfiia< Wh. MEAl, KHTATK. tm itmtf 1 THE NEW STATE. Gnia. Ktocfc*a« MMMUMAA Krutt Fttrim tbat will double < Q vata* tn a short tinw Ad tire sa W SMITH. Ofete. A. *. X.-* (1«06--M7 a*3*> " - _ H 1 &y 'i

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy