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Flesherton Advance, 21 Mar 1918, p. 7

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-"TO^ ' DISEASE COMES THROUGH THE BLOOD To Cure Common Ailments the Blood Must be Made Rich and Red. Nearly all the common dlseaseoi ihat ^ afflict mankind are caused by bad blood â€" weak, watery blood poisoned by I InipurltJes. Bad blood Is rbe cjiuse of i headaches and bacliacht-s, lumbago ' and rheumatism, debility and lndlg«^s- | tlon, neuralgia, *ciatlca and other ; nerve troubles. It is bad blood that causes disfiguring skia diseases like eczema, and salt rheum ;>'?uplci aii<i eruptions. The severity of the trouble indicates how impure the blood Is, and it goes always from bad to worse un- : less "Steps are promptly t^keu to en- j rich and purify the blood. There is no • use trying a diffftreni medicine for [ each disease, for Uiey all come through the one u-ouble â€" bad blood. To cure ' any of these troubles you must get ' - right down to the root of the trouble â-  in the bipod. That is just what Ilr. Wlllianis Pink Pi!l.= do. They make ' new, rich, red blood. They simply purify and enrich tlie blood, and the ' disease disappears. That is why Dr. Wlilianis Pink Pills have cured thou- sands of cases after other medicines liad failed. Here is proof of the power of Dr. Williams Pink Pills to cure. Mrs. M. Stills, who resides near the town of Napanee. says: "I cannot praise Dr. Williams' Pink Pills too highly. I was very much run down in health, suffered from fre- quent spells of indlge.stion, billlous- ness, and sick headache. I had an al- most constant pain in my head and my housework was a .-ource of dread. In fact I felt so luiserable that life held but little enjoyment. I was advised to try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, which I Aid, and the result was simply mar- vtellous, and can best be summed up by saying that they made me feel like a new woman, and fully restored my health. 1 would advise every woman and girl wljo has poor blood, or is run down in health to give these wonder- ful pills a trial. I am never without them in the house." At tilie first sign that the blood is out of order take Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, and note the speedy Improve- ment they make in the appetite, health and spirits. You can get these pills through any medicine dealer or by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams' Medicine t'o., Brockviile, Out. , -*- OLD QUESTION REVIVED. How Long Would it Take a Stone to Fall to Centre of Earth? , t Studying the velocity of shells and bullets fired in the war led Maurice â-  Sauger, a French geometer, to turn to the old question of the time it would take a stone to fall to the centre of the earth. His conclusion was that it would iake about 20 minutes 34 sec- i ons. I Gassendi, who gave the subject ] much thought in the last century, ; made the time 20 minutes even. Mer- aenne on the other hand contended that 6 hours would be required. j Sauger says that as the stone ap- proached the centre of the earth it would be drawn downward by the core , »f the earth and upward by the shell ivhich it had already penetrated. The rate at which the density of the earth ifaries or increase.s as we penetrate CO greater depths is unknown. San- ger's formula is baaed upon consider- ations of the moment of inertia of ihe earth, as calculated from the pre- ' session of the e(iuinoxes, which agree i vith observations on the density of â-  Ihe earth conducted in mine shafts. j If a shaft were driven right through the earth the stone wouUI appear at :he Antipodes after 88 minutes 30 seconds and then return to its start- ing point, at which it would make its J reappearance at the end of 1 hour 17 iiinutes. It should be illegal to cut down any sugar-piaple tree. Our forefathers knew no other sugar, and we may well ; go back to this best kind now. 1 AN INDUSTKIOUS JOKER. ^^^^ • Reminigcences of the I'elebrated Sir Hiram Maxim. Althounfh a predilection for practical Joking may well be considered as a weakness of character, the weaknesses of great men are often interesting, and there is nothing reprehensible in most of the prank.s that, according" to the Hartford Timen, are attributed to Sir Hiram Maxim by his son, Mr. Hiram Percy Maxim. At one tftne in my boyhood, says the distinguished son of a more distin- guished father, I was very curious about bats. One day my fathei" called to me from the top of the dumb-wait- er «h«tt in .mr house. He said there was a bat in the shaft. I hastened to the top, and ther% sure enough, was some dark object fluttering about in the dim light. I .seized a broom and struck it. It still flut ned. I struck it again and atfain. It seemed invul- nerable. At last I used the handle of the broom on it, but writhout effect. By that time I had ')ecome angry with the thing, and I was determined to kill it. I a.isaulted it with the broom until I v%'as almost exhausted, and my mother put a .stop to the pro- ceedings. Investigation then showed that the "bat" was a black how, sur- reptitiously removed from my mo- ther's best hat by my father and strung upon an iron wire in such a way that a slight vibration made the bow flutter. My father enjoyed the joke hugelyâ€" much more than my mo- ther and I did. • He .spent a whole day working out that scheme. He wa.s the most intense man I ever knew. He left no stone unturn- ed once he decided to do anything. I went home one day and told him that a man in a drug store had offered to give me a white poodle in exchange for a penny with two heads on it. I was too young to know that one head only is allotted to every penny in this world. But father listened very grave- ly and said that he had no doubt that we could produce the two-headed pen- ny without trouble. Then he filed down the "tail" side of two pennies until he had worn away exactly half of each. The next step was to solder the two halves together so skilfully that they made what seemed to be a whole penny with two heads. , The drug- store man was dum founded when I produced itâ€" hut I did not get the white poodle. Our great recreation was g-oing to a bookstore. Father and I would visit a certain store at certain times, buy from one to thirty books and order them sent home. Then he would con- duct me to the middle, of the street and say, "Now let's run home." Imagine a man in a frocli coat, with a silk hat jammed down over his ears*-- tearing at a great rate through the streets of Brooklyn with a small boy at his heels. But that was ahvays the conclusion of our book-buying excursions. Speak Of Them in The Highest Terms Wh> Mr. and Mrs. West Recom- mend Dodd's Kidney PiUa. They Cured Mr. West's Lumbago ;ind Made Mrs. West Fael Like a Ni!w Person. They Are the Best Tonic. St. James, Man.. March IStU â€" I Special)â€" That Dodd's Kidney Pills are living up to their great reputation in tlie West is twice proved by Mr. and Mrs. 0. West, well known iind highly respected residents of lis ; place. Let Mrs. West tell the story j of what the great Canadian kidney I remedy has done for her husband and ; herself. ! "My husband suffer;'(i from attacks of lumbago, " she states, "and tJie doc- ] tor did him no good, but 1 can trath- j fully say that since using Dodd's Kid- 1 ney Pills he is entirely tree from I lumbago. ! "I myself took six boxes of Dodd's i Kidney E^Us and am just like a new ! person. I have gained 10 lbs. since ' using them and my friends compli- ment me on how well I look. I "I have recommended Dc>dd's Kid- ney Pills to some of my lady friends who were complaining of not fe<'ling ' well, and they, like myself, speak , lijghly of them." I Dodd's Kidney Pills cure the kid- ; neys. Cured knimeys make pure blood. j That is why Dodd's Kidney Pills are I thci best tonic. ANY CORN LIFTS OUT, DOESN'T HURT A BIT! No Toollchness! Lift your corns and calluses off with fingers â€" It's like maglcl I â€"O' o o â€" oâ€" oâ€" oâ€" oâ€" o o e e r^*U.e corns, liard come, soft come or juvj kind of a corn, can hturaleswly be lifted right out with the Angers if you apply upon the corn a few drop£ of fi'eezone, says a Cincinnati autliorlty. Por little cost one can get a small bottle of freezone at any di-ug storo, which, will positively rid one's feet of every corn or callus withaut pain. This simple drug dries I'.e Moment it is applied and does mn »• an irri. tate the sun-otrndlng si n v.hile ap- plying it or Hfterwards This an :.:iurn;<-ment will interest many of our readers. If your drug- gist I'lsu't any fret'zine tell him to surely get a small bottle for you from his wholesale drug bouae. What Wom«n Work At. Miss Helen B'raser of London is in New York now helping women to arrange their tasks systematically. At a largely attended meeting she gave facta and figures to show how wonderful was the working power of the British women. We quote a few of her facts and figures. Eight hundred thousand women are in munitions plant.s. ! Two hundred and fifty-eight thou- â-  sand women are on the land. I Eighty-three thousand women are I in Government offices. j Forty thousand women are "some- where in France" at military bases. i Sixty thousand women are volun- jtary hospital worker). A thousand wom.'n art' patrols. This is but a part of it. There are also a great number of home women who give much of their time to war activities. .J Bllaard's Unlment Oorea Daudrnff. Never subject plants in the house or conservatory to strong drafts of air. Before putting a garment with snap fasteners on it through a wring- er snap the fasteners shut. Seeds of pansy, verbena, salvia, pe- tunia, stock, sweet alyssum, minulus, maurandia, sensitive plant, delphi- nium, authirrhinum and dia.ithus may be sown in pots or boxes for summer flowering. E Grannlatsd Eyelids, â- T^ Sore Eyes. E/es Infiamtd by ^'^Smn, Dast&xid Wind quickly relieved b>- Murine T;y it in your Eyes and Ir. Beiiy'i Eyes. S No Smarting, Jnrt Eye Coafort Murfne Eye Remedy ^L7rVf,?,^«^f?//HS Cya Salve, In Tubes ac For //c.ui- af tX* Eve - Fr««» Aik MartBf £ye Bcmedy Co.. Cblcass <i ?\ When buying your Piano insist on having an "OTTO HIG£L" PIANO ACTION WEEKLY NEWSrAX'EU IN WEST- trn Ontario. DolnK a Kood busl- nciis. Death of owner places It on tb« market -V Breat chance for a man with r-ash. Applv Box 82. WHaon l»ubll6ljin« Co.. Limited. Toronto. IITIJ-I-L EQIIPPED NEWSPAPER T T and job printlne plant In EaHtera Ontario. Insurance carried J1.5O0. Will po for. $1,200 on tiuiL-k sale- lio.t 59, Wilson Publishing Co. I-td . Toronto. ui UK, SWOLLEM OUSiOS •n8cnBi.x.AirBOTrs ' The rat caiTies bubonic plague and ; many other diseases fatal to man and has no doubt been responsible for more untimely deaihs among human beings than all wars of history . As the season acf\'ances p!aa^s in the house or under glass require more water. (hat make a horse Wheeze, Roar, luive Thick Wind or Choke-down, can be reduced with ;^BSpRBiNE ^...„ oli'.er Bunches or S^vcllings. Nobiister, ^ I no hair gone, and horse kept at work. Eco- : ; nomical â€" only a fevr drops required at an ap- 1 â-  plication. $2 porbottledelivercd. Boal! 3 M free, ^ j AUSORBINE. JR., the antiseptic Jiniment for : i mankind, reduces Cysts, Wens, Painful, .^ . ., ., -. ' Swollen Veins and Ulcers. f1 and J2 a bottle al BOll-OntO l<fr lIlC KyCS Jealers or delivered. Book "Evidence- free. * "^ ' i W. F. VOUNG, P. D. f., 616 tymafls Bldj., MonlrMl. Cm | ' «t!so[Diu: md AtsortiBb jr.. irn made Ifl CuttOk I Doctors Re« onimeiid Minard's Liniment Co.. Limited. Have ussd MINARD'S LINIMENT for Croup: ftnind nothing equal to It; sure cure. CHAS. E. SHAHP. Hawkshaw, N.B., Sept. 1st, 1905. ! A hardwood wedge in an ax-helve ; will not stay half so long as one made of pine. The softer wood when well driven in grips the hardwood and sticks like a dog to a root. " Ph:'slclan8 and e.ve specialists pre- â- cribs Bon-Opto an a safe homa remedy ! In th« treatment of e.ve troubles and to 1 â- trenKthen eyatilght. Sold under money rsfund (.uaranty by all druaeists. EAGLE MOWA STYU The Cause of Heart TrouMe Faulty disestioa cauies th* Ceneration of gases in the atomacli which inflate and press dowa oa tlie heart and interfere with its regular action, causing faintness acd pain. IS to 30 drops of Malhcr Scitjel's Cnrallve Syrnp after meals sets disestion ri8ht,which allows the heart to beat full ocd regular. 9 DUuard'a Iilnlment for sale everywlure. Writs to<day for our bi^ Free Catalogue showing our full lines of Blcjiics for Men aad Wumcn, Buys and Girls. MOTOR CYCLES MOTOR ATTACHMENTS Tires, Coaster Bralieb, AVhecls, Iimrr Tubes, I.ami)s, Bells, Cyclonietcrr, Saddles, Mquip- luent and Pnrls of Bicyctrs. Vou ciin buy your supplies from us at wholesale prices. T. W. BOYD &. SON, 27 Notra Dame Straot Watt, MoobraaL C.\NCEK. TUMORS. 1,U.MP3. ETC., Internal and external, cured wltlx- out pain bv our horns treatment. Writ* us before too late. Dr. Bellman Medical Co . Limited. Colllngwood. Ont mm HEALS On Face. Badty Disfigureds Used 2 Boxes Ointment and 3 Cakes Soap. "I had .1 bad itchy lot of pimples on tnv {»ce wliicli made it badly dish^re^ They were inflamed and came n- ahead, and 1 could tear my gkin as sewn u i iittie heal came near tliein. 1 could hardly sleep. "VVheii I saw Ciiticura Soap an4 Ointment advertised 1 »eiU for a fre sample which did so much good tliat boti({lit more, and I used two boxes ol Cmicuia OiiHinent and three cakes ol Cuticura Soap when I was healed." (Signed) Miss Bertha NUsson, Stock* boim, Sask. If you ha\e a good cejmplcxion keen it so by using Cuticura Soap daily ana Cuticura mntment occasionally. For Free Sample Each by Mail ad* dress post-caid: "Cuticura, Dept. A, Boston, U. S. A." S<ild everywhere. THE ORIGIN AND DANGER CONSTIPATED CHILDREN Nothing will so Quickly rfiinove childhood con.stipalion as will Baby's Own Tablets. They arc a mild but thorough laxative; are pleasant to take; do not gripe and ne^er fail to regulate the stoinuch and bowels. Coneerniug them Airs. .Vdolphe Noel, Petite I..ame(iite» Que., says:â€" "Baby's Own Tablets are the best remedy for constipation I know of and I would strongly recommend them to ail mothere of little ones." The Tablets are sold by inedieiiie dealej-s or by mail at ^5 cents a bo.x from the Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Brockviile, Ont. Try Maple Sugar. Not many, years ago cane sugar snared to a price of fifteen cents a pound and relief was obtained by the manufacture of maple sug:ar. Your grandmother used it to sweeten her tea and to make her pies and cookies. Try it now, when cane sugar is so scarce and is needed so badly by France and Italy and Oreat Britain. IF YOU SUFFER FROM Catarrh, Catarrhal Deafness, HeaJ Noise-^, Catarrh of the Stomach, (which Is often mistaken for Indl<:estion), Catarrh of the Bowels, .A.^thma, Bronchitis, Loss of Smeli, Phlegm dropping in the back part of the Thioat, or if you have a Coujli -! YOU SHOULD NOT FAIL TC READ EVERY WORD O F THIS ARTICLE What Pijrmiiit, the Wonderful Eii8:lish Foriiuila, Has Done for Others, It Will Do For You Miaard'i liniment Bellevea ITenral^a. Fod Tkt Conserves The recogTiized value of Grapc-Nuts a.s a "saving" food for these serious times, i^ests up6n real merit. Unlike the oa'diimry eei'eal Grape-Nuts re- quires no sujrar. little milk or ci"©am, and re- quires no cooking or other preparation in serving. A trial is well worth while for thtxie who sdnceivly desire to .'s.ive. "I here's a Reason" sold h> (;r<K;ers. Fighting Ba.seiiient Fires^ Fires originating in the basements of business buildings constitute one of the most potent causes of fire loss in Canadian cities. It is difficult to believe that the owners of such build- ing."? are entirely ignorant of or fail to a(>preciate the vali>e of dry sprink- ler systems for basements. The fact that no expense for the installation of special water supplies is involved makes the cost roa.'^onable. .\ dry sprinkler equipment for basements consists of distributing pipes with sprinkler heads as in the ordinary system but with the supply main car- ried to the outside wall of the build- ing where it ends in an ordiy\ary hose connection. When an jinthreak of fire occurs in the basement the nearest sprinkler heads are opened by the heat, the firemen attach their hose to the external supply connection and the water is immediately directed upon the seal of the tire. The com- plete saturation of the contents of the ba.^enient is ihu.s avoided, the fire- men can effectively operate dcf<pite the dense .smoke which is common to all basement fires and the loss t)y both fire and water is largely miniiiii.'.ed. To mpa,sure ear corn in a crib, maUiply the length of the crib by the j wiilth and this by the h<'giht to which I the corn will level off. Th«n nnilti- \ ply the niiniher of cubic feet by four iand cut otT the right hand figure. This trivos ihi' liudiel.'^ iif ><h(lle(l i-oi-n . Miuura'i XiloiuMit Oiix«a Boraa, lt«. CATARRH. A LOATHSOME AND INSIDIOUS DISEASE fulacctl i?* a vei\ ..uHinion nHin.:' fnr a very eoniinoh dts«Hse. so cointnon that most "peopl** do not k-euUzo how fearful, flaiiKerou."! and (ILsBustlnK II Is. .\. I'old ill ihi- tieafl. hawklnK. snltthiK. lilowins oi' the no.so. vhli'sm ilroppiiiK In the ihroiit, bad lineal h. Juiliie.ss i^f mind, bad humour â€" this Is the wiiy It starts. .Villi where doo.s it end." Kioiiuoully in Oatarrli of the Stoiiiuoh. Catarrh of the Uiiwols. Hrom-hltis. and often sllKtit or total dtal'iu'ss results. HOW CATARRH STARTS '"atarrh usually beRins with a ii'lii in I tUe head. 1 The Catarrh germs breathed In through the mouth or nostril.^ have si-ttleil upon tin- Inflamed and dellcatn mucous mom- liraiie that lines the no.oe and thioaf. These fft-rms aru harmless to hoaJthy tis- sues; when they loiise ui>on an Irritated surface It means a mine and more dis- eased condition of the ini'inbnine.^. They thus produce further liillamtnalory irri- tation, and In timo even ulceration. The sufferer from catarrh often (inds hl.-i slMTlit and hearlnR fallliisr. He .suffers from an almost constant dull ache over the eyes and across the forehead. The rtnlnd beeoniea dull when the niombrnnefj j of the nasal cavities are In a dIschaiBing: I conditlou. I It Is the pu."< and decaying matter oo«- i InK from these sores that oau.ses the of- fensive breath 30 common to viotlms of ' catarrh. You may not notice It your- , sttlf. Vou probably do not. But your friends do. thouRh they ain loo careful I of your fenlliijts to tell you eo. I NASAL CATARRH I Thjs 'orm of t'.'atanh is. to say the I least, siikenlng and dlsicustlnff. besides ' hetiiK most common iinii hlKbly dnnRor- â- 'ous. Tlie chanKe.s of weather render th« delliate mucous membranes in tht- nose : niid throat very .suscepUiile to liiflamina- : tioii. and thu.-* Mioi>uiaKe the birth and : ^irowih of catarrhal Reriiis. I The nose and throat are what might ' be called the highway of life. j The thr<>at llself is divided inio two mtitn pa."<.sages, one the "osophaKUs. or : icullet. iroinic to the sioin.Tcli, tiio iSther the respiratory truci, or TiaclieM. ijoIhk in the broiielilal miles and liinKO. ThrouKh the liniKS the, blood pa-ides wTili every huart best, ajul Itier* comes Iti coiitiut with tha air. If the alv breathed In Is pure, and If iio.'«e. throat mid Iuiks are sound, the dark hlooil Is at niie** putltlad and passes out of Ihe lun^s In a briKht. red stream. earolnK life and strenKlh to all ilie hod). If. however. the air breathed In Is biid. or If the no»«. throat or lunfts are •llsen.'.eii In any way, iheii the blood, linslntiil nf bains purlHed by Its passage tlirouKh the lungrs) is. on the eoiitra.ry, atlll further polsoneil au.i KOoa on 1t« way eaviyhiK Un di.seat>c .o all iMU'Ui of tb« DVDteia. Ah! That's the Spot Sloan's Liniment goes right to it. Have you a rheumatic ache or a dull throbbing neuralgic pain? You can find a quick and effective relief in Sloan's Liniment. Thoutaads of homes have this remedy handy for all external pains because time and lime agaitl it ba* provcu the quickest relief. So clean and ee»y to apply, teo. No nU>. bills, no etein. no incoavccuence as is the case with plasters or uintmcnta. H you once use Sloftn sl-inimcot.yea wiU never Uewilo* outit. Generous ai/rd bottl^ at all drugcuts. That nasal catarrh Is a nausea tliiB dis- ease any one knows who hiii" had to sit close to. or talk face to face with a per- son reeking with purulent catarrh. Have you ever had to endure In sickening silence the hawking and gaR^lii^ ^X a catarrh victim, or had to sit close to such a person and experience a disgust- ing appetite-losing-, foul odor, which you could not explain, and did not know what it wa.s? That is cstaiTh. and there are many people who have it and don't know It. CATARRH OF THE STOMACH (Often mistaken for Dyspepsia or In- digestion) Many ease.s of Indifjestlon and dyspep- sia aj-e simply the result of catarrh of the throat and' stomach. At night as \na lie asleep. Uie mucus drops down from the throat and head and Is swal- lowed Into the stomach. In the morn- ing .\Tiu awalte feeling heavy and tired: there is a bad taste In your mouth, yoa are 111 n bad humour: you wonder what alls vou. You have catarrh; catarrh of the stomach, and your whole system Is poisoned and is reeking with the (Hs- ease. Your stoniacTi has become clogired and the delicate membrane Is eoated with a vllo sticky substance. The catarrli mucus refuses to be digested and only â- pa.'^ses out of the stt'inacli with great dllTtciilty. lilttle by ll.ttle. the imic-us with tile catarrh germs which it has car- ried settles permanently on the mucous nieiiit>i*ane which lines the stomach. Real dyspepsia nnd Indlffostlon are caused by » lack of digestive Jukes. But here we have a condition wjiere Iho membrane Is able and ready to do/lts work, but It is prevented by foreign niat- i ter which has dropp,>d down from the head and coated It. How then, can the usual treatment for Indigestion he of use? Since catarrh Is the ca.uso of the trouble. It i.s the catarrh thai must be treated. .If you have catarrh of the 8tnmn.>h we believe that If taken faith- fully for a reasonable length of lime Parmint will brinK you an Hinouiit of relief that will fully i-opipeiisHte you for the cost .Htid Uinc expended. CAUSE OF DEAFNESS \ .'Huse which is responsible for a Mreai Tiiany oases of deafness is ratarrii. Tha whole trouble generally begins in a simple cold in the head. Purlng sip-h a cold almost e\ery person e.xperlences thst feeling of sUifTiness which tells of Inilaininfttlon extending Into the post- nasal space where the openings of the Knsittchlan Tubes are located, and whtt'h If oooompaiiled by catarrhal secretions, oollsofed 111 the post-nasal sp«oe, where U Is rllfflcult to blow It oul of the nose or huwk It up. When such eoiirtliloiis liHve beciime chronic, us In oalarrh. the dang«r Is grave. The niiiiu.a. carrvliig the germ.t. fIropH Into the I'lroat, The gliie-llke iiause«t1iiK mass stb-ks for a (ime to the sides of tlie tiiroiit. The germs are ; oulck to take adxantago of the oppor- | I tunlty. They Invade *he Eustachian I Tubes. Their presence and irritation It censes produce more and more mucus. Gradtmlly this fills up the ear tube so that sounds can only pass through with â-  ' dlfTlculty. The patient finds his hearing slowly going. When the tubes are com- pletely filled total deafness may result. In deafness from nasal catarrh, which affects the middle ear, it often happens that crackMiiR sounds are present which I distress and confuse the pa'.ient. Th.^se : are due to the fact that the mucus whicft : tills the upper part and back of the ! throat is covorlnpr the openliiK of the ' Eustachian Tubes and the burstlns of j bubbles or the nuivenient of mucus ! causes the sounds, which come from the altered resonance of the ear. .\fter a crncklliig report the head may seem clearer and the iieiulng better for a time. Later on In the case there may lio . crackling sounds wl\pn swallowing, which come from the efforts of a stif- fened mnsclo to open the tubes which yield with a .ierk. ; The aliovo e.^planntion of a most com- ; nion eau«e of deafne-ss should make It I'lear iKiw absurd a.nd useless It Is to at- tempt to overcome such i1eafne.ss by ear- drums or de\ ices of a similar sort. Let It be understood, however, that i-'armlnt Is not for our troubles other than those caused by catarrh. If your trouble Is caused by sriu-let (ever or any disease .npart from catarrh, or if caused tiy an Injury. Pjinnint l» not for you. and you shouht consult your own fauv : lly physician regarding your case. i DON'T NEoUicT A COUGH ' If you lia\'e a culd anii it ha-s left you with a rough, no matter how slight-^ you ought not to neglect It. .\ couKh is generally an Indication that there la Inflammation in a danger- ' ous place, and proper tceatinent shtiuld be secured at once, t^elaylng treatmont may mean that the oouuh may settle, develop and stay. liven the slightest cough Indiootes a ianger and sh.nild re- ceive prompt rttt4>ntlon. t'nless your cough has become extretiiely deep seated or has hung onto you for a long time, we believe that you will find a iiulck relief from y our trouble by the use of Painiint. I WHAT IS PARMINT? | I'urrnint is A.n ir^nglisii forniulR put on the maikot in Kngland .about 10 .veurs , ago. It 1m a combliiallon of incredlentn having VBlues In the treatment of oa- larrhiil condltlon.s, broii.-hlal affections, etc . ctimpounded from the best grade of moterlal It Is possible to obtain. I'nr- mhit Is put up 111 "ne-tiiiiioe bottles In concent rated form whith are labeled â- â- Parmlntâ€" -Oouble .'^tretiKtli." These one- ounce bottles riiii be ehtalii. d at a small I cost ami the one-ounce is suffieieni to Intake a full half-pint o;' Parmliu ready 10 lake w lieu nii.ved as *ilreclei) in eatih tmclMCe. Xiii^iii, Sloan's prices not increased 25c 50c $1 NOW RAISES 60 CHIC KENS After Being Relieved of Or> ganic Trouble by Lydia EU Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Oregon, 111. â€" "I took Lydia E. Pink- ham's Vegetable Compound for an or- ganic trouble which pulled me down un- til 1 could not put my foot to tJiQ floor and could scarcely do my work, and as I live on a sn.'all farm and raise six hundred chickens every year it made it very hard for mo. "I 3av7 the Com- pound advertised In our paper, and tried it. It bag restored* my health so I can do aH my work iina I am so grateful that 1 am recommend* ing It to my friends,"â€" Mrs. D. M. Altkrs, R. K. 4, Oregon, III. Onlywomenwhohave suffered thetor- I tares of such troubles and have dragged I alonff from (lay to d83^ c»n realize th« rerief which tfiis famous root and herb I remedy, l.ydiaE. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, brought to Mrs. Alters. â- Wom.-n everywhere in Mr*. Altera' condition should orofit by her Mcorn- mendation, and if there are any com- plications writ* Lydia E. Pinkham'a Medicine Co., Lynn, Masa., for advice. The result of their 40 years experienc* is at your service. 1 mT issi Er 12 -*i«>

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