McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 27 Dec 1906, p. 7

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.:?4 jv< STORING WATER t tp~~' , Vr v V ^ j c*% - Kw*'1"" : v ,|4 ^ ' s &• fi $•>•*• s _ III "•« Reservoir Can Bt Cheaply Built at the Spring. Am easy wagr t» mke a reservoir jfttbe spring, is to throw up a bank* perhaps laying a wall first, founding it below the sarfaoe. I have seen many reservoirs excavated at great expense, sometimes in the solid rock, ait the useless expenditure of money. By going down hill a few feet It would have !>een simple and inexpensive. Should the soil fee such that water percolates. fhroogb it, face the soil wfth loam on top awi puddle It well. H this leaks face it with clay and pvd- ffl# the clay, «s showa ia cut. These •' ?y / 041m for Spring Reservoir. fams tfte r« made of stoee 35- ik sf, . * ' • K." r,:j rates apply to afi WSd earth. Pipes entering the reservoir should •utter at the bottom and the soil be Weil paddled around them to prevent the water working through beside the pipe. Each pipe must have a strainer over its supply end and have airholes in its entire length. A good strainer can be made from * piece of large lead pipe punched Ml of holes, as shown, says Farm and Home. One end may be flattened or turned over and the other drawn on <Bwer the end of the water pipe. Let aofeody suppose that simple, inexpen­ sive arrangements are faulty because primitive. If constructed correctly •ad in line with natural laws they are not only all Tight, but are preferable to fancy, complicated devices that getf ,«out of order easily or In a year or two require a master mechanic to put them into working condition, again. Suggestion That the Laboref the For­ mer Be Utilized in This Way. la nearly all sections of the- country the necessity of better roads is fully appreciated, yet the problem of secur­ ing them Is continuing a difficult one. Farmers are too buBy In most sections most of the year to devote all the time necessary to make the roads what they should be, though there is much im­ provement since the use of the split- log drag and similar devices has be­ come more common. Figures recently issued oa the re­ sults of convict labor In American prisons carry with them a suggestion of what might be accomplished for the betterment of roads if some of the labor performed by convicts should be devoted in that direction, says Chi­ cago Sun. It is shown that convicts in America produced $34,276,205 worth of manufactured goods last year. Boots and shoes came first, with a value of $8,527,599, with clothing next at $2,- 644,511. There were 8,341 convicts em­ ployed at farming, producing $2,983,- 875 worth of farm products, while 3,- 507 worked on roads and highways, giving value of $1,657,170. Missouri led, her 1,973 convicts earning a value of $2,451,939. The average cost of keeping a convict one year is given as follows: Food, $51.68; clothing, $18.02; guarding, $56.30. Manufacturers who have Invested money In plants naturally have Btrong objections to the competition they are compelled to meet from prison-made goods. There is no question that they seriously Interfere with regular trade in many lines. One case is reported where in a prison the yearly make per convict is 1,579 pairs of shoes, or 45 pairs more than the average dally out­ put in free labor factories. Should MoTe of the convict labor he employed In the work of Improving our public roads the general public would be benefited rather than a few labor contractors who secure big serv­ ice from state convicts. In that way they would compete'less with free la­ bor than in any other line. The slogan, "Good roads made by bad men," has been taken up and should be given more general attention in every state. T PREVENTION ON ROADS. i-'*- KB, •1 I • ' y~. I Application of Tar Being Tried in the Vicinity of Troy, N. V. A modification of the common meth- f l of using tar on a pnbllc highway r the purpose of laying dust is re­ ported from the vicinity of Troy, New York state. The experiment is being tried by State Engineer Van Alstyne, In a village of considerable •Ice. The first step is to sprinkle hot' tar oa the road, and then to fill up low spots with screenings. When the surface has been well packed by teams, a second application is made. The job Is not considered complete, though, until there has been a third coating. Before being UBed, the tar is boiled to drive off any water It may contain. This road is much need by automo­ biles, whose owners found the dust as unpleasant as did the local resi­ dents, and consequently two classes of people are watching the expert ments carefully. The extraordinary Increase everywhere in the number of horseless carriages of late has made the suppression of dust as im­ portant to their drivers as to resi­ dents along the roads frequented by them. Formerly the man in an auto­ mobile did not appreciate what a nuisance this dust was, but now that many cars are running over each good road there Is no longer any tendency to deny that these vehicles are responsible for a somewhat se­ rious action on the surface of the; highway, and that 6teps should be jr taken to prevent it. *lt is not wear fa the usual sense of the term, but rather suction, and as Its effect can be checked by the same nieans that are used to lay dust, the Importance of these experiments can be readily appreciated. BUILDING FARM ROLLER. „ CHICKEN WAS ALL RIGHT. How One Worgan Was Cured of anOld * Prejudice. •*]' liver eat fried food;* ifttf* my guest, raising her hand in protesta­ tion when I said in pleasantry: "I have fried a chicken to-day in your honor." "But if you eat my fried chicken and have faith in my assertion that it will not harm you, you will be glad that you tried it," I replied, and went on helping her to the second Joint and a piece of the breast, and added a generous supply of cream gravy for the baked Jersey sweet which was offered on another small plate. It was a moment when friend­ ship of long years seemed about to be strained, and I would not have placed my guest In the position of taking Hob- son's choice had I not known and felt that she was in a half starved condi­ tion through fear that different sorts of food might harm her. '-She had been seriously ill nearly two years be­ fore and could not quite shake off the effect so far as a lingering fear that she could not do this or that without evil result. ThlB fear was principally In regard to food and her menu was pitifully limited. The chicken In question was young and tender and had been plunged into deep smoking hot fat until the outside was seared, then the kettle was set back, where the cooking would go on more slowly and reach the bone. In reality it was more delicate than most broiled chiclcin, for almost no fat had been absorbed and there were no hard, burned or dried portions. While we were deep In conversation about some pleasant matters my friend tasted and picked until only the bones remained on her plate. Then after a light dessert we went out for a walk in the fresh air, and minor In­ teresting sights along the way pre­ vented dwelling on the anticipated troubles and they did not become real. My friend afterward alluded to It as "a successful treatment." But she add­ ed: "I wouldn't risk any other cook's fried chicken." HOWPVCT, she had learned that the digestive organs and nerves bear quite close relation, and given well cooked food, fresh air, and ^absence of fear will help digestion to unaccustomed or forgotten tasks.-- Chicago Inter Ocean. Convenient Machine With Which te Crush Clods on Plowed Ground. - S. have a roller which I have used for some time, and find it very satis­ factory, writes a correspondent of Prairie Farmer. The form of roller I made is original, and is perfectly well bearing for a man 150 pounds weight The end beams are three feet nine inches long. The board in front Is 14 inches wide, six feet six inches long. FOR THE 8MALL HOUSE. General View of Roller. The rear beam is six feet long, the front beam being mortised Into the two end beams. The tongue and braces are placed under the board In front so top of frame will be all lined. The general method of placing is shown in our second Illustration. The entire frame is spiked together with 60 penny spikes, except where two bolts are used in the tongue. The rear corners are strengthened with old 6trips of iron fixings from front wagon hounds. This material can be .bought at most any junk shop or blacksmith's iron head. The rock roller must not be more than 20 Inches in diameter. Tour space in frame Is only 24 Inches wide MM AGRICULTURAL POINTS. !Jf§rhe farm Is what a fellow makes It Faith is the father of prpflt In farm- Ittg. The frost strikes deep in wqll- dralned soli. .Advice to those about to term-- Keep your tools bright, your fences tight and your heart light. Stone harvest lasts from November to March. During the rest of the year other things interfere with it. It is poor management to go with­ out things that "are needed. In order to hoard up money. Human necessi­ ties come first. The depth of the water table in the •oil will regulate to a considerable degree the moisture of the soil. The water table should not be nearer to the surface than 30 inches and may be ten feet belo# the surfaee in very fine soils. Gutters In Stables. Many of the old-fashioned stables hare no gutters, the floor behind the standing platforms of the cow being a dead level. The liquids flow over all and this is constantly wet during the time the cows are tied up» It is al­ ways advisable to construct gutters behind the cows, thus keeping the level part dry and clean at all times. This gutter will catch the liquids and will carry them to one end of the •table where they can be made to run into some kind of a receptacle or some absorbent that will preserve them for fertilizing purposes. The gutters greatly facilitate the cleaning oi*t oi the stables. . . . V ' ; Why Poor Crean#v The Iowa d.U ry ̂ commissioner says that one of the causesrbf thin and poor cream Is the so-called water "separat­ or." It is liable to be 24 hours older hand-separated cream, for one than 1 tftteg. t Apples Good for Cows. . ft has been found from feeding tests that apples are worth ate much as roots or silage, ton for ton, in feeding the milk cows. This is a pointer to those whose windfalls are going to waste. Advantages In Ueing Same 8tyle of Wall Paper. For the average small house, such as one finds in rows in every suburban i town, according to Suburban Life, it is a very good plan to run the same wall paper through the entire first floor, Including the hall. This makes the house seem larger, and, if desired, variety my be given by different ways o£ treating detail, different colored woodwork in different rooms, and dif­ ferent colored curtains in each room. For instance, if the walls are covered with a soft green throughout, we may have white paint on the parlor, dark green in the dining-room, natural wood finish In the hall; at the north win­ dows, thin yellow silk or silkollne cur­ tains; at the south ecru net, white muslin, or silk with a blue and green figure. A house needs to be both large and spacious, with big, high-studded rooms, to look even passably well with the usu­ al kaleidoscopic method of doing each room in a different color without regard to the others. It would be much more harmonious to choose some keynote or tone, as gray, brown, or green, and lead from one room to an­ other with variations, but with con­ stant regard to the harmonious effect in passing through. With any of these colors as a ground tone, one can do much, or^even the three well chosen would go well together; and blue may be carefully introduced--"carefully" meaning that with gray we need a fcold blue, and with brown or green we should use a green-blue. Yellow here eowata with the browns. ^f >tr ,\l {*, -kid. , ^ * rt> Diagram of Roller.- . and six feet long. A roller of this size will give two large horses all they care to handle on freshly plowed grouiMj, and will mash practically every lump that it passes over. An old mowing machine sent is used for seat on this roller. THE TINKERING WOMAN. -t J # 1 ... , *»... Get Mgr. a Kit of Tools and Teach Her How te Use Them» See to it, good farmer friend, that your wife or handy daughter has a kit of tools for her own use. By a "kit," I mean the very much- needed articles of your workshop that she has to use and borrow triim you (perhaps forgetting to replace them). For instance: Hammer, gimlet, hand­ saw (always kept in good trim), a box of mixed nails and screws, screw­ driver, and, strange as it may sound, a miter-box and a double glue pot. You will be surprised to find how much of your very valuable time will thus be saved; and you may also be astonished at the amount of good work in carpentering accomplished by the good ladies of your household. A discarded miter-box and a few feet of molding, left by a busy work­ man as a donation to the good wife, resulted in a very durable and hand­ some picture frame that gave great pride to the home manufacturer. The girl of to-day is beginning to look to cabinet-making and otkdr branches of Industry that heretofore were looked upon as the sole domain of her more favored brother. Well, encourage the girls In the use of neces­ sary tools on a farm, writes Kendall Perry, In Farm Journal. Then perhaps we men folks shall have a few less hingelese, knobless doors to look after on a rainy day. Or perhaps we might get the girls to repair a broken fencs if the cattle got out when wt wed away thrashing. * > Pounded Cheese. This is a reliable recipe winch may be made up in quantities and packed down in small stone jars, covered, and set away in a cool place. Place In a mortar with three ounces of butter about a pound of good dry cheese and pound it to a paste. Into this mix a half tablespoonful of black pep- iper and a teaspoonful each of mustard ;(made mustard), ground spice and Scurry powder; add, also, a wineglass- ful of sherry, and the cheese is ready for use. It is tasty if served on slices of bread and sprinkled Qverwith a little paprika - Cream Cheese and This combination Is one of the most palatable there is when it is a question of mixing cheese and fruit. It is much used for luncheons, as cream cheese is a sort of non-commital variety and the average woman is fond of it. Take one package of fresh cream cheese and beat in enough rich cream to make it soft and somewhat foamy. Pile it into a pyramid heap in the cen­ ter of a plate and surround it with stewed gooseberries. The gooseber- rfies should be cooked until they are quite done and plentifully sweetened.' This is to be served on toasted salt* water biscuits. Plant for "Dark" Room* . ^ . Is there any plant which will fiooiv ish In a more or less dark room? The aspidistra is the only plant that we know which thrives almost as well in the dark as in the light. Of course, this does not mean abso­ lute dark, but away from the win­ dow. This plant, also, stands a good deal of neglect in other respects, not needing much fertilizer and it Is al­ most free from insects. WORD IS MODERN ENGLISH. "Chap** To-Day Has Not Meaning Old ^Writers Gave to Its, * 5' name of the new play it tlfe Criterion, "Prince Chap," would have been quite unintelligible to an English­ man of Shakespeare*B time. Not until the end of the sixteenth century did' "chapman," a trader or peddler, get contracted into "chap" even in vulgar speech, and even then for a long time it did not advance beyond the mean­ ing of buyer or customer. In this sense Steele speaks of "hunt­ ing after chaps," and Wilkes writes that "perhaps Mrs. Mead would buy, but she would be a hard chap." "Chap** seems to have reached its ultimate stage as a casual equivalent of "man" through the intermediate sense of a man with whom one has dealings, not of business, but of good fellowship. The case of "customer" is very sim­ ilar. Shakespeare used it to mean a boon companion but "'a queer cus­ tomer" now means little more than "a queer man." There is a trace of the old companionship idea, however, when a young woman speaks of "my chap," and in "Prince Chap" itself,--- London Chronicle. s DISFIGURING 8KIN HUMOR. Pt$5uS|WFAbi A«k *wr * .^washing DYES are tie hastens to repentance who hasti­ ly judges.--Publlua Syrus. Lewis' Single Binder straight 5c. Many smokers prefer them to 10c cigars. Your dealer or Lewis' Factory, Peoria, UL A one-sided affair is all right If It happens to be a bright side. Garfield Tea, the Herb laxative, is and potent; take it for constipation and to regulate a sluggish liver. Any man who tries to dodge his taxes has no business to hanker for fame. CTMED isr E TO 14 DAYS. PAXO OINTMSNTJs guaranteed to cure any • _ nil 8 to 14 daj s or inonttj reluaded. of Ilctiinir, Blind, Bleediug or ifST* ding Pilfta ia Impossible to Get Employment* as Face and Body Were Covered With Sores--Cured by Cutlcura. "Since the year 1884 I have been troubled with a very bad case of ec­ zema which I have spent hundreds of dollars trying to cure, and I went to the hospital, but they failed to cure me, and it was getting worse all the time. Five weeks ago my wife bought a box of Cutlcura Ointment and one cake of Cutlcura Soap, and f am pleased to say that I am now com­ pletely cured and well. It was Im­ possible for me to get employment, as my fae«, head and body were cov­ ered with'jjt. The eczema first ap­ peared on the top of my head, and it had worked all the way around down tho back of my neck and around to my throat, down my body and around the hips. It itched so I would be obliged to scratch it, and the flesh was raw.' I am now all well, and I will be pleased to recommend the Cuticura Remedies to all persons Who wish a speedy and permanent cure of skin diseases." Thomas M. Rossiter, 290 Prospect Street, East Orange, w. J., Mar. 3Q* 1905. - Claim Nearly Cbst Lift. Fred McNulty, of this city, had a terrible experience while holding down a claim which he has several miles east of here. He went to the claim Just before the big blizzard of last week. The weather previously had been mild, and McNulty had no store of fuel In the shack. The storm was so fierce that he could not make his way home, so he went to bed In order to keep from freezing to death. For three days the storm raged, and Mc­ Nulty lay covered tip to his ears, with­ out a bite to eat and only a small quantity of water. When at last the storm subsided he made hiB way to a neighbor's, a mile distant, freezing his face and ears while en route. When he finally reached Minot he was com­ pelled to take to his bed as a result of his experience.--Minot Correspond­ ence Duluth Herald. The 8unny South* Now when all outdoor farm work has ceased in the north, the term "sunny south" and all that it means, appeals with full force to the northern farmer as he realizes that with him It is a case of remaining indoors for the next several months consuming everything that has been produced during the growing season. In the "sunny south" something can be raised every month In the year, and practically every day can be spent out doors. No blizzards. No sunstrokes. Cattle-raising Is very profitable. Large profits are made with lfttle labor In growing fruits, vegetable!, etc., for northern markets. Strawberries and cantaloupes are great revenue getters. Water unsurpassed. Work plentiful. Lands cheap and productive. For re­ liable information, address G. A. Park, General Immigration and Industrial Agent, Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company, Louisville, Ky. Girl Has Business 8enee. " Mary Mauske, thi rteen-yearold daughter of a Wheeler (S. P.) farmer, hauls a load of wheat daily to mar­ ket and sees to Its disposal. Lewis' Single Binder straight 6c cigar made of ricn, mellow tobacco. Your flbaler or Lewis' Factory, Peoria, 111. Men who pose as judges of human, lature get a good many hard bnmps. TOOVKIAOOU IM OKI DAT V. Take LAXATIVE UliOMO Quinine Tablets. Dflf lints retiiqd moiie* II It falis tu cure. B. w &KOVE S siKUluure is on each box. 26c, He who envies the happiness qfoUl ers will never be happy. Mrs. WlDilow'i Soothing sjrrnp, fer children teething, softens the gums, reduces !** temmmon allays psln. cures wind coiio. ttca bottte Lots of women get married beforf ihey can afford to. 'J;- •• ' The skeleton of a megatherium has been dug np by excavators In the Ave­ nue Bosquet, Paris. FITS, St. Vitus Dance and all NetWMW- Dieeases permanently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. Send for Free $2.00 trial bottle and treatise. Dr. R. H. Kline, Ld., 931 Arch St., Philadelphia, ^ Luxury for Young ArietQOrat, ^ The duke of Bedford has presented Lord Tavistock, his eldest son, with a silver-mounted motor car JEgr While at Oxford university; How's This? - 5 V| offer One Hundred Sonars Rewwrtl for any saae ot Catarrh tbat cannot be oared by Hall't Catarrfa Cure. V. J. CHENEY ft CO., Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 Tears, and believe him perfectly hon­ orable In all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by his firm. WAIDINO. KINXAK & MARTIN, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O. Hall'* Catarrh Cure is taken Internally, acting directly npon the blood and mncoue surf&coa of the •yetem. Testimonials Bent free. 1'itoe «& bottle. 8old by all Druggist*. ^ I ;5 Take Hall's Family Pilla for coiutt»ation. • '. ^ Money In Papular Songs. According to a celebrated compos­ er, the popular song, though sneered at by the superior, is in reality the ambition of most composers. Thou­ sands ot% them, he says, "would give their ears to write M tune that reached the barrel-organs." And when it has been on the organs some little time a good many other people would wish to dispose of their ears. Signature Return In Age to Childhood, Attention has recently been to the curious fact that the shells of certain animals, such as cephalopods, brae hi pods and some bivalves, are commonly marked by retrogressive changes as age advances. "The old mail returns to second childhood in mind and body," states a well-known scientist at Washington, "and the shell of the cephalopod has, In old age, however distinct and highly orna­ mental the adult, very close resem­ blance to its own young." ' AVfetfetatfe PrepattHiflttforAs andBetfda Promotes DigestiooCheerful- ness andRest.Contains neither Opium.Morptune nor Mineral, NOT HARCOTIC. " For Infimti and Children. v The Kind Yoo Havflf Always Bough A perfect Remedy for Constipa­ tion, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea . Worms .Convulsions .Fevenstv- ness and Loss OF SLSBP. facsimile Signature of -MNEW "YORK. M \ l (t m i) n I h i) 1 tJ. U S E S - EXACT conr OF WRAPPER. hirty Tears? . _ _ - j; SICK HEADACHE CARTERS •Pmu LP ••• regulate tbe Bowels. SMALL PILL SHALL DOSE Positively eared by these Little Pills. They also reBere Dis­ tress tram Dyspepsia, In­ digestion fund Too Hearty Eating. A perfect rem­ edy for Dizziness, Nausea. Drowsiness, Bad Taste in the Houtb, Coated Tongue, Pain In the Side, TORPID LIVKR. They Purely Vegetable. SMALL PRICE. CARTERS IVER Genime Must Bear Fac-Simile Signature REFUSE tUMTITUTEi. an READERS SiSt.'SriS: mmmmm* thing advertised in its columns should insist upon having what they ask for, refusing ai! substi­ tutes or imitation*. A flOQD DOCTOR Of CMcer, Ipllfpiy, Paralysis, Cataitk and Neurasthenia, without Uon, sworn proofs and consultation FRJCB. 0. BULLAKO, M. D., Box 488, MADISON. & JRATJEXT ATTORNEYS. PATENTS Dalwa t. Catena, Patent Attoat ney, Wsahington. D. 0. Adnis free. Terms low. Highastiafc PATENTS Teres RrismMr. Brrrlci PfNBti Ittfarttatloa rlws. W. Ik ftOACkMr, Paeift* WM*, fefe I'Trs WHAT JOYThey Bring TO EVERY HOME f ••;' as with Joyous hearts and smiling faces they romp and play--when in health--and how conducive to health the games in which they indulge, the outdoor life they enjoy, the cleanly, regular habits they should be taught to form and the wholesome diet ©f which they should partake. How tenderly their health should be preserved, not by constant medication, but by careful avoidance of every medicine of an injuri­ ous or objectionable nature, and if at any time a remedial agent is required, to assist nature, only those of known excellence should be used; remedies which are pure and wholesome and truly beneficial in effect, like the pleasant laxative remedy, Syrup of Figs, manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. Syrup of Figs has come into general favor in many millions of well informed families, whose estimate of its quality and excellence is based upon personal knowledge and use. Syrup of Figs has also met with the approval of physicians generally, because they know it is'wholesome, simple and gentle in its action. We inform all reputa­ ble physicians as to the medicinal principles of Syrup of Figs, obtained, by an original method, from certain plants known to them to act most beneficially and presented in an agreeable syrup in which the wholesome Californian blue figs are used to promote the pleasant taste; therefore it is not a secret remedy and hence we are free to refer to all well informed physicians, who do not approve of patent ' nnedicines and never favor indiscriminate self-medication. Please to remember and teach your children also that the genuine Syrup of Figs always has the full name of the Company--California Fig Syrup Co.--plainly printed on the front of every package and that it is for sale in bottles of one size only. If any dealer offers any other than the regular Fifty cent size, or having printed thereon the name of any other company, do not accept it. If you fail to get the genuine you will not get its beneficial effects. Every family should always have a bottle on hand, as it is equally benefit *9*- Pare^. whenever a laxative remedy is required, % F , wm/i «* 4d , ' .i« . I • •• Dado Is Economical. Nothing Is more economical In wall decoration than a dado, says an au­ thority on house decoration. As the tourer Dart of the walls become soiled more quicKiy upper, a room can often be freshened Bimpljr by re­ newing the dado, without touching \.he upper walls. Another advantage of the dado is that It gives a room a comfortable and furnished appear* ance without the addition of a lot of furniture. This is particularly true of a hall or Btairway where there ls *< JM rf woo tn»t ne.*. Dortt. Suffer &1! fright long from toothache neuralgia, or rheumatism. •SloeoNJS L/iivinrveivt Jkilb the p*un -- quiets thm Iterves &nd induces sleep At eJI dealers. Price 25c 50c &H00 •Db Earl S.SIowv, Bosior\»Ma.ss.U.&A«. jjgy. • P .; *, Jx' .."hi: •. "*{. ~ " . . ' A i - . . . - NO MORE MUSTARD PLASTERS TO BLISTER. TUB SCIENTIFIC AND MODERN EXTERNAL COU NTER-IRRiTANT. CAPISICUM V A S E L I N E EXTRACT OP THE CAYENNE PEPPER PLANT ^ A QUICK, SURE. SAFE AND ALWAYS READY CURE FOR PAIN.--FWCB 15c.--IN COLLAPSIBLE TUBES-AT ALL DRUGGKTS AND DEALERS. OR BY MAIL ON RECEIPT OF 15c. IN POSTAGE STAMPS. DON'T WAIT T I L L T H E P A I N C O M E S -- K E E P A T U B E H A N D Y . A substitute for and superior to mustard or any other plaster, and will not# blister the most delicate skin. The pain-allaying and curative qualities of the article are wonderful. It will stop the toothache at once, and relieve Headache and Sciatica. We recommend it as the best and safest external counter-irritant known, also as an external remedy for pains In the cheat and stomach and all Rheumatic, Neuralgic and Gouty complaints, A trial will prove what wex;laim for it, and it w«!l be found to be invaluable la tba household and for children. Once used no family will be without It. Many people say "it Is the best of all your preparations." Accept no preparation of vaseline unless the same carries our label, as otherwise it is not genuine. SEND YOUR ADDRESS AND WE WILL MAIL OUR VASE* LlllZ PAMPHLET ^PHICK.^ILL INTEREST YOU. .CHESEBROUGH MFG. CQt1 : ^ 17 STATE STREET. NEW YORK CITY . t - IEFUICE STUGI--1 otter narehM "MPIANCt OOQCM tt package only 12 onnrM --» prie* aad !• MIMMIOft QUALITY. Zt oflHetM vltb I SAFE EVEOTO OOO • *!^^S A. N. K.--A (1901--62) &r; . . ^ ^ ' < .i v "i . '

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