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Flesherton Advance, 22 Apr 1897, p. 7

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THE FARM. THE FARMER'S HOME. The detaeUs of the dairy, of the flouka bod bexds, are of vital imiportance to the husbaiuiniaD, but success alongi these Jines is an empty achievement, if, the details of the home axe oeglect- ed. The farmer's work is necessarily of an irksome character. Cnderneath the storface, when, the farmer's life la aiCDipped of it.s romance ivnd pueticai Bveetness sUnJBp by poets and day dreamers who nevex milked a cow la fly time otf stood at the "tall end" of a. tfareshia? maohiine a day in their life, we fin.d a sense of responsibility, a feeling of submission to the daily grind that grows wearisome as the years roll on. There are days when the fie^ids look larger than ever, and times when it seems aa thqugb the work in hand coUld newer be accomp- lished. Th'e farmer's life is not all aimshina or poeltxy of motion. It has its dis- cauo-agements and diaappoiutments aa well as all oilher vocations. Buitt there shoiold be in the life of every farmer one refugeâ€" one plac« of sunshine and che«r, where the work and worry of tha day can be cast aside, wherei the cheer- flul glow of love and joy shall dispel the gathering gloom, and new hope aad streingih given for the morrow's labor and remewed courage to meet: the trials and disappointments of the day. Several years of out life have beea speot as "the hired man," during which we have eatered. in that capacity, all sorts and kinds o( farmers' homes. We are sairy to say too many of thenk ought, from their envirooments, to be the happiest places on earthâ€" aur- rouuded by all bounties and beauties of nature â€" are cold, and bleak, and bare within. Not laL-king in the interior fornishLngs. aa in many cases the ap- poiuLmunis of the household were fine, approaching the elegance affected by cur city U-othera; not lacking in books, music, and works of art ; but in them we fua'od a deatrth of the hearty hoar- pitality, the sense of good cheer, and the presence and mingling of congen- ial spirits. Thsre was ever preseat a sense of oppression and reserve. The grind, the hurry, the weariness ^ the Tabor of the field was reflected tik the atmoapbere of the home, and the stern features of the ancestors, frownlog in their antiquated framea on the walls, seemed to cast a spell uC despondency and gloom about tha bearibstone. No wxmder the boys leave the> farm as soon as they are able. The lights, the la,ughter, the jest, the mus- ic and glamoar of the town are to them new and delightful experiences, whil« the houle is l/at the memory of the •ulemn. careworn face of father, and the longing, pleading eyes of mother. The farmer's home should be the hap- riest. jolhest place on earth. Here re bestowed the richest of Uod's bless- iogs â€" rouust health, purest food, water, tir, and sunshine. Why should it not be the type uf Edenf Fathers, leave the cows in the stable, the pigs in the pea, the plow in the birrow, the har- vest in the fields ; throw off your cares with yoi:r frock atul boots, and give up yourself, soul and body, to the pleas- ures of the fireside. Open the par- low, build a fire in the grate, and ask the neighbors in ; pop some corn, bring up samie apples, see to it that every- body around you is having a good time, and you will be surprised to see hovr weJll yoU have enjoyed yourself. Yoti will onic« mare find }[ourself in love with yotur wife, the children, the aeighbars. lutd the farm. It wiil take aches and (xains out oC yoivr back, amodih the wrinkles front mother's Ibrow, and bring joy and yladneas to the children. Every cowt in the barn will slop chewing her cud to look yua a morning greeting, and he way will seem lighter and brighter, "he art of home-makiug is as essential an the art of milik-making. You will be a long time dead. Make the most of life as you go. supply their cows with sufficient wa- ter in the stable is that the same lot of cows will give from ten to even ad much as twenty per cent more milk, on the same food. And no one who keeps cows for profU can ignore sucb a result. It will require considerable work to attend properly to all details in a we'.l managed dairy. Btxt no one canl afford to at^iect them if they expect to attain success. Weil, a great many people do not want to do what is right l^ecause it will require a little extra care. But you will never find any way to real success except the "noxrow way." The beat way is always the narrow way, rttgardleas of what; yaa are trying to follow up. Because it is narrow iUwill niever be crowdedâ€" not because of lack ot room, al the gate to get in. )tut .be- cause of Uu^k of heart ami' courage and continuity of effort and merit. COLD AJfD ROUP. We believe from experimental know- ledge as welt as a cdurse of reason- ing, founded upon some knowledge of medicioe and pathoiogy, that there ia a difference between cold and roup. Cdd with fowls comes from no venti- lation aaxd over-crowding. The place may be too waj-m, or the fowls are sit- ting in » draught of cold wind. The symptoms are drowi^iness and chirping or sneezing. The treatment â€" First, remove the cause, if overcrowded, separate. If too warm, give good venitilation. If there are cracks and crevices where draughts of cold air strike the fowls close them. Second, five drops of aconite and ten drops of hlux vomica tinctures in ona pint of waiter, and let the fowls run to it and da'ink instead of wiater. The roup is a blood disease and ma^ be diagnosed by sneezing, sweeling of tha head, eyes swelled shut, and by catching fowls and separating bills, the tomrue and mucous membrances will be found covered with a white, stickvi coat. Xreatmeatâ€" For external application tAke on«-balf teaspoonfui of turpen- tine, one-half teaapoonfiul of coal oil. one-half teaspoonfol of lard ; put ii^ tin cup ; put on stove and heat, stir- ring all the time until well mixed ; seb off. liiihar use whi.le warm or stii* until cool to keep the Ingredients well mixed. Then app.y three times per day by nubbing all the parts affected^ For iaternaj treatment take ona tablespool^Jl of isulptiite of soda to a, half teauupful of water, put sods iq watar slowly stirring all the time, id will not all dissolve, after stirring » few minuCies add ten drops of fluid ex- tract of aconite and give a teaspoonfuli every two hours; coatlnue until tha white sticky coating ia removed. The aconute wUI control the fever and inflammation, the sulphite of sodal will correct the blood lesion. In othet< words, the white, sticky, mucous coat- ing is a deimaud of the system for an ailkali and an antiseptic. The sj,Iphite of soda me»ts both oC these conditions. If this treatment is followed aearly* every cuae will recover. Recollect that when roup is developed th'<> fotvls aff«otsd sboluld be kept by themselves. A SHORT COT TO RELIEF PBOM THE ITCHING AKD BDRNINO OF ECZEMA. What is Eczema, anyway? Let him who has been afflicted answer. It is an Itching and burning oi the skin almost beyond endurance. It is thousands of little vesicles filled with an irritant fluid, which burst and Sow over the raw sur&ce of the denuded skin, causing more tftTture than all other skin diseases combined. It comes on almost any p^rt of the body and is no respecter of age, as old people IS well as tender infants are the subjects of its attack. ^ What about the cure ? Physiciana seem prone to regard it as almost beyond their reach. What about Kootenay Cure ? Why, it's the very remedy wherever there is any deterioration of the blood. In the case of Mr. G. W. Dawson, Fulton P. C, Ont., stated under oath, it simply worked marvels.* He had Eczema for five years, was treated by many physiciana in Canada and the United Sutea, but got so bad at last with the frightiut itching and burning that he thought he wouHl go insane. Six bottles of Rycknuui's Koote- nay Cure cured him. Mr. William Marcham, an Engineer, rn'mg at z^ Catherine Street North, Ham- ilton, makes a sworn statement that he suffered intensely with Eczema which covered his whole body. He was in the City Hospital for six weeks and was dis- charged at the end of that time as incur- able. Four bottles of Kootenay entirely cured his Eczema. Other proofs of the remarkable efficacy of Ryckman's Kootenay Cure may be had by addressing the Ryckman Medicine Co., Hamilton, Ont. Hundreds of people testify unJtr oath. The New Ingredient used in Kootenay Cure will revolutionize medical science. One battle lasts over a month. FOB TWENTY-SEVEN TEARS. DUNN'S BAKING POWDER THECOOK'S BEST FRIEND Larocst salc in Canada. ^ PROPER CARE OF THE YOUNG PIG. The first day after the pigs are far- rowed the sow should not have any food but she should be wa4:ered. The sao- ood day she may have a light feed ot ground oats oc hnun mixed with dish- water. Keep the bed dry and clean, and gradxially inorease the amount ol food, being careful to not overfeed or to give her aoy aouir slop. By tha time the pigs are two weeks old the sow! should be full feed. The pigs need pleaty of sunlight, and should never be shut iolto a dark pen. As soon aa they are old eoough to learn to eat. make a libtle shallow trough and put into it some freshly-drawn milk. Then rouse the pigs from their bed and when ones they have tasted the milk they willsooa learn to drink it. Feed theu a few; times at the bed, then they will follow yoa to where you feed the sow. The sleeping shouse should be situated some diatanoe trom where the sow ia Bed so as to oomipal the pigs to take: exercise. It is absolutely essential that they hiive it. If the weather is cold and they are inclined to stay in lhe( nest too m.<ach they should be compell- ed to move about. Have a small {ten near the sow's feeding place into which she cannot go. tut which wUI admiU the pigs. Give them at first fresh, warm milk, then mix shorts in it and aalMtitute itkim milk for <h« whole milk. ' Feed all the shorts and milk warm stable. One of the best devices I ^^^^ *,[" «=»â- ; "P "^i^**^' *"*^ ""Y,*"' ^^""^ more than that. Always have it sweet, ibd food should be changed occasion- ally. GrxXand oats with the hulls re.< moved mixed with miilk, and ground wheat with hominy meal is good. The pigs sboald have plenty of pure water at all times, and should have access to dry wood ashes and salt, mixed in the proportion ot three-fourths ashes to one-fourth salt in a shallow trough. They should also have soone green rye, grass or clover. IWhen eight weeks old the pigs will have learned to eat so that the sow- may be taken away and they will not mls.s her. REMARJtABLE NEW COIFFURE. The Duchess d'Angouleme ooiffurs which attained so tremendous a vogue i in the early part of the century, when the lovely Duchess was exiled to Eog- . land, ia underolng a revival, and sel- dom have end-of-the-century women ' encountered a fashion that was mora I dlffioult to revive. It is probably the most complicated method of halr- , dressing th»t prevails to-day, but per- haps for that reason it is likely to be ' the most popular. I To accomplish ilt bujtch the hair up . straight from the ixipe of the neck, firmly tie It on this top ot the head and then arrange it to Imitate bows. I There miuA be a parting from ear to ear. but it must not be far back from . the forehead. All the hair behind this I division shotUd be brushed back and tied together with the back hair. The I frout hair has a central parting. There I is aa arrangement of short curls I brought into a bunoh at each side by means of a side comb, or there may I be a group of coques to right and left I of the parting. Theae coquea were or- i iginally called "oomb curls," because ' they were not allowed to fall but were I stiffly arranged and bel din place by small combs or bairpion. ABUNDANT WATKR FOR COWS. As a ituile very few dairymen water the cows twice a day. and a very small niumber have water In the barns and w-ater for the cows in the stables. Here and there one has his stables provid- ed so tha|t the cows can drink when they like ; not only is this necessao-y when the wea;the<r is very stormy and cold, as it often is In the northern abates, tlut even on moderate days a oow will bo mkich better, will driok more, aitd give more milk from the same food it allowed to drink in a made for watering rows In the stable, says L. O. Fotlow, consists of an "V" shaped trough running the whole length of the stable, immediately ever the center of the manger, and about three and a halt fee>t from the floor of the manger. It thus does not in- convenience either cow or attendant, and the water can easily be led from a tank or piumped directly into the trough. Id is necessary that the cow, in ad- dition to the water needed tor rumin- ation and digestion, must have enough to put eighty-seven per rent in the milk she gives. <A cow weighing l.OOU pounds iu fu'il milk should nave alwut twelre gallons of water each day, and if tiveilve gallons be taken at one time it wiill, iu very cold wsather. give the oow a terrible chill, so it » ill some- times take hours l>efor» the cow feels comfortable, so that the secretion ot milk can commence again. Besides, lb makes the fodd in her stomach so liquid it camnot be raised for rumination. Ot course, nature soon takes out the sur- pl'ua, butt the process continues and the contents became too dry and 'solid, so â- he is haikdioapped lx>th ways, when w«>re th» vKater at hand she would take a little Just when needed for best re- «u1ts. CThe univwoft. testimony ot all who HAND-m-HAND. Health and Happiness go Hand-in- Uand â€" With Stomach and Nerves all out of Sorts, Health and Happiness are Unkaoiwn. Frank A. Gadbois, Oornwall, Ont.: "I was for several years a great suf- ferer from indigestion, dyspepsia and nervousness. I took many remedies without any relief. I saw South Am- erican Nervine advertised. I procur- ed a bottle, aud I can truthfully say it is the best medicine I ever used, aqd I strongly reoosnmand it to any- one suffering as I did. A few doses wonderfully helped me. and tw« bot- tles hav<e made a new mam ot me." it cures by diieot aotion on the nerve centres.* Sold by \V. E. Richardson. Piles Cured in S t» 6 Nightsâ€" Itching. Burning Skin Diseases Relieved in One Dojr. Dr. Agnew'g Ointment will cure all ^ cases of itching piles in from three ' to six nights. One application brings I oomfurt. For blind and bleeding piles ' It is peerless. Also cures tetter, salt I rheum, eczema, barber's itch and all eruptions of the 3kin. Relieves in a day. 35 cents. Sold by W. E. Ricbardaun. FORCE OF HABIT. I guess that new man must be an actor, sold the star boarder to the landlady. Why so? Because 'he threw up his arms aod dodged when you passed the eggs. A HBALE© HBRALD. Thinks Rheumatism is Born of the L,ow- er Regions, but Proclaims South Am- erican Rnetimatic Cure a Heaven- sent Healer. Henry Humphreys, East London, sends his unsolicited testimony : "1 was seized with painful rheumatism in my left foot. 1 could not rest with it day or night, the pain was so iu- I tense. I tried many remedies, but j they had no more effect on me than ; water on a duck's back. I was per- suaded to try Stmth American Rheu- matic Cure. X followed the directiens closely and in a very short time this wonderful remedy effected a com- plete cure, and there has not been the slightest hint of a return of the div ease. It is a sure remedy and I de- light to herald the goodness all over the land." Sold by W. E. Richardson. THE LADY'S AGR. The Prince of Wales about five years ago met a dharmiog lady >veU known iu London society a.t Hombuirg. "You are young enoughs" he said In the course of conversation, "for me to be able to 08^ your age." "Twenjty-flve," was the ready reply. This stMiuner his Royal Higbiii£<« met the lady again. "What." he a«dted again, with a huju- orouB smile, "is your age, I wunder t" '"Twenty-five," again said tSie lady. "But you said that the last time I met you," rem«r*ed the Primce, with a smile. "Well, sir," laughed the lady "amd would you bavv m« contradict my- tNiUtt" THEWHITEiJDBLIIEFLA& THE GREEK FLAG IS BATTLE STAIN- ED AND BLOODY. Chertshed WUh a Matiea'A MveltoB-rinl VImac !• tke Breese SMiTeBly.Slx lean 'Ageâ€" ABBlver«ary •( tke renml tte- â- Moe t« Um Saltaa mm* tke •ntkreak •r tke â- cvelaUeB. April 1, ia one of rejoicing through- ouit Greece. On that date, 1881, Ger- man<», Archbisiiop of Facrss, first un- Curlad the standard which is now the national flag of Greece on the ram- parts ot the Monastery of Megaspellon. near that city, writes a correspondent, Megaspe4ioa is almost impregnable. Mutiny of the cells ot the monks are herwn out of the soiid rock. Itils acces- sible only by one gorge in the moun- tain, and this narrow peas has been, and can be again, defended against an army of TVirks by a regiment of Greeks, Tha stripes in the Greek flag are blue and white, the hliue suggestive of the azure sky and w^ter which environ Hiellas. the white typical of the glis- teinxng marMes of which her shrines axe built, and ot the pure and stain- leas lilies which blossom la the fields 1^ Cbe fertile Morea. I recently saw la the audience chamber of the palace at Athens this historic flag, nowr battle stained and bloody, which Germanos tiaunjted at Megaspellon 76 years ago. This flag is no>v borne by the regi- meint of the Crown Prince Constantin oa the Thessalian frontier, it may seem strange to us that an Archbishop should lead a revolt. THE FACTS IN THE CAST, FuJly justify GermajMM in his aotion. The Suiiotes, whose country can be seen Cram the moUutain near Patras, had been fighting the Turks 13 years, win- ning victory after victory over vastly suiperlor numbers. The secret society of the Hetaria was then ia its infancy, but encouraged Iby the brilliant ex- ploits of Marcos Bozzaris, the comman- dor of the StUiotes, Ipselaati, a petty Greek leader of the Morea, uindertook to arouse the members of the league and make the revolution general. All Pa»lM heojnl of it and ordered that the primates of the Greek Church and Bishops of the Morea should be sent to Xrlpolitza and held as hostages until the Hetaria should disband and lay down arms. Archbishop Germanos was then near Megaspeliun. He de- signed the national standard, had one made, flung it to the breeze and called on every Greek In "the name of God aod libarty" to take up arms and de- fend it against the Moslem crescent! Tha response to bis call was instan- taneous. Megaspellon was altac'ced by a large army of Turks. For several days they tried in vain to pass the narrow gorge. Finally despairing ot this, they climbed the mountain behind the monastery and rolled huge bowl- ders down the inaccessible precipice which overhangs the monastery, hop- ing to crush the root Ln. > One tremen- dous rock got hailf way down. The Monks, seeing it coming, and bearing the roar as it tumbled down, hastened to their chapel (o pray, for they thoaght the craft ot the eae<uy would prevail if THIS METHOD OF WARFARE Was kept uy. lAs they prayed the noise ceased, and looking up they saw that the mighty mass of rock had stop- pe«l half way do\vn the precipice. It is there to-day, oind can be seen by aoy tojrist. What bohds it there is a mystery. It has no visible means ot oupport. Theouiy prol>al>le solution is tha*. the moantain i.-> mageuetir, and that magnetic forces slopped this en- giue of destructioiu in its course. Me- gaai>e>lion, thus apparently preserved by a miracle, is the riche.st monaslury is Greece, and strangers are entertained frt^e ot cost by the hospitable monks. Ai>ril 17 Art'hbishoii Germanos, in command of bis pourly armed rabble, captured Patras, driving the Turks out ot th>« city which they Uunoed a^ svun as they realized they were defeated. By the lat of May, 18:21, the spark thus lighted had spread, and the torch of w:ir blazed from Macedonia to Crete, The Sul'tan waa infuriated. His gifted young Greek inlerpreter. Oemetrios Morousoa, and 10 of tn<« must illustrious lirt»ek faiuilies in ConhUiiitinople were instantly murdered. Ou Ejuster Sun- day, as .\rL'bbi«bop tJregorios, the Urand Patriarch of Conntantiiiople and the raiiiing I'rimate of the Greek Church, came ojt of chutch. after the celebra- tion of the Easier .services, he was seiz- ed by the Sultan's euiissarifs. l)utL;her- e>d. ami his dead lH>dy hung up on the walls of th« palace two whole days, to l>e sioffed at aod spit on by every good M'assuJImna. The IxKiy was fin- ally DRAGGED BY THE HEELS To the Buspurta.s and thrown in. Ure- gorios w:is at this time 90 years old, and was S!r**t'y respected for his blame- less life aiul consistent piety. Not satisfied with this aiilr.i.ge the Sultan, unrestrained by his "Holy Allies" of Europe, hanged nine lireek Bishops, hundreds of i)Tiests, a.Dd the streets of CoiuitAntinopIo ran with the blood ot Greek Christians. The Turks of Asia Minor toUowwl the example of the Saltan, and thouisands ot G-i-eek fam- ilies were massacred. These are only a fe*w of the llirkish atrocities which marked that era. They served to in- orease the army of Germanos. and Ucl- tenes everywhere determined to win the fight or die in the attempt. In l»f7 the battle ot Navarino ended the >var. Knd Greece was desolated, but freed forever from the Turki.sh yoke, excepting Orete. which by ,tu acciden- tal delay caused by the coofusion that followed the battle was left out in the final arrangeoneata ot the Powers. January 19, 1872. Greece declared her choice in favor ot a republican form of government. Capo d'Istria was elected Presideoit at THE YOUNG REPUBLIC Spiridion (Tricoupia was appointed Secretary of .State. Petros Mavromicha- lis Secretary ot War. Andreas Xauui^ Secretary of the Interior, Conduriotiia Secretary of 1 he Treasury., But Eu- rope wouild not countenanctt a rei^bliu, and Otho of Bavaria was the first of th« modern Kings of Greece. He was de- posed bv the Greek Parllamenit and suo- ceeded t>y the preseat popular and abia King George, whose olaeat son. Con- stantin. was born in Athens, and \m proliably a member of the H<etaria. The ulaud of Orete has nav«r ao- oepted the suzerainty ot Turkey. G«o- graphirally she l^ilongs to Greece. Hav Spbaikioles have n«iver been defeatedC For oeaturies after a tanporary ra- pulse they have retreated to theis citadel of mountains, to return again and again to battJe for their land ana liberty. They will never yield. Th« last ooe will die before he bends his oeck to the yoke of the despised Turk. A FAEMER'S Wl TKLLS A STOBT OF YBARS OF PAOI AND SOFFEBING. ••cton Vtterly Failed (• â- â€¢!* ler oa* M«r»kt»! was I'estlBHally Kcterted M â€"Became 8« Weak »ke Cuald tearcelr irerfornt Her â- viurkeld n«tte«. From: the Beaver Napanee. Mr. and Mrt. Rolit. Stone have beeni residents of tlie township of Erne«- townn, about ten miles east ofN^anee, toraperiod of alxtut three years, ami in that time have gained the esteeiB of all their neighbors. Vat six years previous to thii3 time they had lived in irlea'wuod Springs, Colorado, and IV was during the It re«ldence there that Mr<». Stone was attacked with an ill- ness that made her lite miserable foe years. To a reporter who receutly in- terviewed her the told the follo\ving .story: "During the early part of omf residence in Colorado, my illness firsb came on. At the outset every two or thrve weeks I wotdd be attacked with A pain in my stomach. Latee on it greatly increased In severltjrj ojd at timeis was so bad that I would scream aJoud with the pain. A doctos waA coiled in, but the only benefit Z ever received frotu his treatment through the injectilon of morpfaui* Into mty arm. as a result ot which tlM pain would gradually pass away. Tib* , medicine which was given me. how- ' ever hsd out the slightest effect, aii4 t^ doctors appeared to be greatly per- plexed, and tbereafter continually re- sorted to injections of morpbine when- ever tine attacks came on. These at- tacks oi>ntinu«>d at intervals until our return to Canada, whjsa they increased in frequency and intensenesa. The re- .sult was that I grew very weak, and my wboJe system appeared to be giv- ing out. My oom-plexion turned ai yellowish hue. and I bad little oit no appetite. Latterly. I would be at- tacked with fainting spells, preceded by atl.soks of dizziness. I became ut>- terly unable to stand fatigue, and ouuld with the greatest difficulty per- form my household duties. A doolor was called in who treated me fdr soma time without benefitting toe an^ Then he gave me what I now know to be Ur. Williams' Pink Pills, and after I had used two boxes I felt somewhat better. I then purchased the pills mjr- aelf and continued the treatment. I found that the oain was gmdually 4»- creosimg. 1 could get rest and sleep a:t night, which had hitherto been almnwt impossible. I continued using Dr. WU- li.ams' Pink Pills for several mouth*, and the result is that they have ef- fected a complete cure, and lam iKmr \ (ipojoying the beet ot health. I caa a*- j sure you it is a gneat- relief to be freia from thi? trouble that mode my lifo miserable tor so many years and I \ have to thank Dr. Williams' Pink Pilla (for succeeding when doctors had failed. , Dr. Williams' Pink Pills act directly I upon the blood .id<1 nerves, building) ' them anvw ajid thus driving disease I from the system. There is no trouble I due to eitlupr nf these causes which ' Pink Pills will not cur<e. an<l in hun- <Ireds of coses they have restored pat- ! 'euts to heiilth after all other reme- dies h;id tailed. Ask for Dr. Williams" Pink Pills and take nothing else. Tha ; gejiuine are always enoliwed in hoxoa th« wr.ipper arounil which bears the full trade mark, " Ur. Williams' Pink Pills t(»r Pale People." Miy be hiid from all dealers or .sent post paid on receipt of 5i) cents a box or box«s (or ta.iiO by iidiUvs,s' nw tliie Dr. Williams' Medicine Co.. Brookville. Ont. MARRY1N<; ON «10 A WEEK. "Young Higginside married, you say. on 910 a week ? That took nerve, any- how. What was he working at f" "Nothing. It was the girl that waa earning the 910." WOMAN, WHY? You have Sallow Skin. Pimples, P'rup- tions, Discolorations. Why Resort to Cosmetics and Powders to Hide the Effects ? Dr. Agnew's Liver Pills regulate tha System and restore to the cheek tha Uejilthlul Rosy Bloom and peaoh Blush of Youth. 10c. a vial. Disorders like these arise from slu^ gish liver. From one or two pills & dose, wilt clarify and purify the com- plexion in short order. Dr. Agn<>w 's Pills at all druggists. See that you get what you ask for. lOo. for 40 doses. Sold by W. E. RtchM<l30»

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