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About Montana Sunlight (Whitehall, Mont.) 1902-1911 | View This Issue
Montana Sunlight (Whitehall, Mont.), 19 Aug. 1910, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053178/1910-08-19/ed-1/seq-3/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
4 tr t )IER LIFE. TO din E. PInkham's table Compound hleago, Ill.—\I was troubled with and inflammation, and the don. tors said I could not get well unless I had an operation. I knew I could nob stand the strain of one, so I wrote to you sometime ago about my health and you told me what to do. After taking Lydia E. Pinklutm's Vegeta- ble Compound and Blood Purifier lam ya well woman.\—Mrs. WILLLtm 5, 988 W. 21st St., Chicago, Ill. E. Pinkham's Vegetable Coin - made from native roots and contains uo narcotics or harm. rugs, and to -day holds the record the largest number of actual cures male diseased of any similar medi- in the country, and thousands of tary testimonials are on file in Pinkham laboratory at Lynn, fronkwonesn who have beim from almost every form of Is complaints, inflammation, ni- tion,dlsplacements, fibroid tumors, gularities, periodic pains,backache, gestion and nervous prostration. ry such suffering woman owes it to 'if to give Lydia E Pinkham'il table Compound a trial you would like special advice ut your case write a conildeir• letter to Mrs. loinkham, at , Mass. Her advice is free, always helpful. wes wt .2 1 Tbespees's Eye Water PLE STATEMENT OF FACT Johnson Unable to See Where in Any Way He Had \Put His Foot in It.\ is common to deplore the lack of or in a person. Yet the very t of it may save a certain amount mbarrassment, as was the case a certain LICC1111011- with President :mon. \He was one day,\ says ter in Harper's Magazine, \visit. my mother, and a friend. Mrs. x, a widow, came in. She had wn Mr. Johnson some years be , • when he was a member of the slature, but they had not met since After mutual reeognition. Mr. nson said, 'How is Mr. Knox? I e not seen him lately.' 'He has been dead six years,' said . Knox. 'I thought I hadn't seen him on S treet,' said Mr. Johnson. When Mrs. Knox left, my mother laughing, 'That was a funny mis- e of yours about Mr. Knox.' 'What mistake did I make?' said n eon. 'I said I hadn't seen him on street. and I hadn't.'\ One Side Enough. enator William Alden Smith tells an Irish justice of the peace out Michigan. In a trial the evidence all in and the plantiff's attorney made a long and very eloquent ment, when the lawyer acting for defense arose What are you doing\ asked the tice. as the lawyer began. Going to present our side of the dot want to bear both sides ar- . It has tindency to confute the rt.\—Washingtonian. A New Version. wyers have a peculiar system of viaticum such words as trustees. utors being cut down to trees, re, and admors. This practise led an amusing slip on the part of a tenor who, somewhat late in life, ndoned his profession and entered church. A few Sundays after his !nation he startled his congrega- while reading the lesson by deli,- ng one of the passages as follows: see men as trustees walking.\ The Summer Girl. • How'd you like to be engaged to a Iona ire r• I was engaged to one all last sum - r, and he seldom spent a dime. I t to be engaged to a young man o is down here for two weeks with t $300 in his roll.\ e lamb that plays around a mint tempts fate. Convenient For Any Meal Post Toasties Are always ready to setve right from the box with the addition of cream or milk. Especially pleasing with berries or fresh fruit., Delicious, wholesome, economical food which , saves a lot of cooking in hot weather. \The Memory Lingers\ m•11•11 POSIT!. tit ENKA I. CO , Ltd. Batt le creel, nigh. [Odd News From Big Cities Stories of Strange Happenings in the Metropolitan Towns zerfer,tgeezelyzerezeue , Uncle Sam Asks All to Swat the Fly MEW YORK.—The whole United III States government, with its vast treasury of wealth, he brainy states- men and Insurgents. its army and navy, its immense horde of high- brows, against the poor little house fly! That's the line-up in a bitter , war of extermination scheduled to set the nation by the ears and enlist the cour- ageous support of every man, woman and child in this broad land. The final knell of the house fly has been sounded and the battle has just be- gun. \Catch 'em and kill 'em; show no quarter\—that is the war cry of the army of extermination that is to put forth every effort to rid the land of Moses DomeedeRe -fhli-Ennta-melae by which the house fly should be ad- dressed by strangers. Until the scientists got busy with their investigations the house fly was considered merely as a pestiferous in- sect, designed by the Creator of all things merely to take its bath In the sweet cream and maple sirup, annoy the late morning sleeper, skate about with abandon on the polished surface of shiny baldheads and practise the Morse telegraph code on the cleanest' of windows. Long suffering housewives since time began wee, the only really active enemies of the seemingly insignificant little fly, and they alone and unaided applied the imprecations and dish cloths vigorously against the nuisance. But after the scientists got onto the job the fight against the insect began to assume proportions of magnitude. That little insect which the average citizen was wont to regard merely as a domegtic pest is now branded as the most dangerous creature op earth. The house fly has been publiclf Indicted as -esevineee , ot • • the—letzswerrtiee, the greatest disease propagator and the carrier .11 more menacing and malig nant germs than all other creatures put together. This little, but potent, messenger p, death wanders from the sick room, from the filth of the 'garbage pail, from the heaps of refuse of all kinds Into the peaceful, happq homes of our land, walks upon the butter, the meat, the fruit, the sugar, takes a bath in the milk, leaving everywhere the germs of disease that have gathered upon its furry feet and body. In experiments conducted by tht New York health authorities the scien- tists found on the body of a single lit- tle fly 1,222,570 different bacteria, enough to kill a few thousand human beings. In another experiment a fly was caught in a sterilized net and dropped into a bottle of sterilized .wa- ter. The bottle was shaken and -the germs washed off the insect's body, as would be the case if the fly dropped into a glass of milk for the baby. The vftevionstv mate water was then exam- ined and it was discovered that the fly's bath contained no less than 5,000 ; - 000 disease germs. About half the deaths from typhoid in New York, according to the health authorities, are attributed directly to the distribution of -germs by house flies. And worse than that, the figures show that of 7,000 deaths of cooing babies in that city from infantile dis- eases, more than 6,000 were traced to infection carried by house flies. According to a noted scientist the extermination of the pest is compara- tively easy. All that is necessary, he says, is a systematic effort on the part of the public. If all the people will practise the utmost cleanliness, it is declared, the house fly will be extinct in this country within a few years, for the house fly cannot exist 'Without filth. \Cleanliness then, is the watchword for the American public to put an end to an insect that is not only a terrible nuisance, but a terrible Instrument of death to thousands of our population 'Tear. 'Gators and Insects 'MEW ORLEANS —More than ‘000, - II 000 acres of marsh land lying with- in 50 miles of New Orleans are to be drained, reclaimed and transformed from a wilderness Into gardens, homes, Lamiets and towns. The work of re- claiming some 60,000 acres within the corporate limits of New Orleans is now well under way, while contracts have been let for the reclamation of fully 100,000 acres additional in ad - Wining parishes. This mean' that within two years the alligator will no longer end abort. ginal harborage in the Carnival city, that the breeding grounds of countless billions of mosquitoes will be turned into highly productive farms on which mosquitoes cannot breed, that hun- dreds of miles of paved roadways will lead from New Orleans north, east ane west, and that for the first time in III history New Orleans will posess sub- urbs- To the westward the same character of work is being done, and prepare - Hunt New Home Bons are now being made to reclaim an additional half million acres through the construction of • wide levee along the western shore of Lake Pontchartrain and the southern shore of Lake Maurepas. On the crown of this levee a paved roadway 76 miles in length will connect New Orleans and Baton Rouge and ultimately will be the southern terminus of a Chicago - New Orleans highway. The nearest town or settlement ot any to -sequence Is now 60 miles dis- tant from New Orleans. Within fifty tulles of every large city in the coun- try a million or more people reside, and many industries develop buainess and wealth for the urban population. This is the end New Orleans Is working to' and will have reached, in large part, anyway, by the time the Panama canal is opened to the ships of the world. Meanwhile modern sewerage &no drainage within the city proper have practically and wholly solved the city's sanitary problems, and the discovery of a simple method of filtering the waters of the Mississippi river has given the city • pure water service ex- celled by none in the world. These sys- tems are in operation and are nearly complete. They have cost the city about $25,000,000. No Corsets are Worn at West Point W ASHIENOTON.—\I have often heard a question as to whether West Pointers wore corsets. It is absurd in a way, because should any effeminate youngster resort to such a thing it would be impossible to keep the affair a secret, and once known his school life would become a burden to him on account of the endless amount of criti- cism he would receive from his fel- lows, lie would be made the laugh- ing -stock of the school and would soon find himself the possessor of any num- ber of effeminate nicknames that would grate upon his ears in any but a pleasant manner. \It is true,\ continued the old sol- dier, who was no other than Col. IC B. Collins, a retired army officer, in a discussion of West Pointers, \that many West Pointers acquire a figure of perfection of symmetry and a car- riage the acme of manly gtace, but these are due net to any ingenious Ap- pliances, but to the , systematic drills and exercises that make,the cadet, to a certain extent, an athlete. At the outset these young fellows are put through what are, called the. 'setting up' exercises, their object being to straighten the body and develop the chest. One might suppose that it would require a great amount of such exer- cise 'to make any marked showing, but three long hours of such exercise deity will soon produce beneficial re stilts in the most stooped forms. \The cadet uniform is also a great help in this direction. The dress coat Is tight, very tight. The shoulders are heavily padded in order to give them a square effect. The chest la made thick, so that there will be no danger of wrinkling. All this for the sake of looks; comfort has no place in the make-up of a West Pointer; it is die cipline and looks.\ Dentists Believe They Have a Kick C H1CAGO.—\Well I don't know wha under the shining forceps I am go- ing to do, anyway,\ and a dentist in the Masonic temple sighed a perfect mammoth of a sigh. \The matter! Hair. just plain hair. No—not plain, either. Nob, for in- stance. A lady came up to my office the other day and wanted her teeth fixed, and finally I took hold of the top of her head with one hand, while I worked with the other. Then I turned away to get an instrument, and my sleeve button ceught in her hair and the whole back 01 it, about fifteen fat, shiny curls, came along with me. She simply froze me up, and she didn't come back to pay her bill, either Say, this new tangled hair style is putting me to the bad. \The worst feature of the whole thing is that the heads, or rather the hair, won't fit into the headrests. I have tried all manner of schemes, and oven had a new headrest built along lines that I was sure Would flt, but the heads simply won't fit into any- thing. \If We do succeed in getting the MASS -laid- out and tucked away care- fully where it won't bother us, we get something like this: \'Oh mercy, doctor, you are muss Mg my hair all up. And I am going to a party this afternoon, too.' 'But the most usual thing is: 'Oh, doctor, there it a hairpin sacking in my bead. Wait a minute. 0, dear, it. coming down. Doctor, do stop a min- ute while I fasten up my braid.' \I do teli t aou what, the dentists ought to gefilogether and boycott the present style of hairdress, or else in slat that all extra hair be taken off before any dental work well be done That would settle it. all riebt.\ THEIR IDEAS. I 0 • v First Woman• —A smart woman yak fool a man all his life. Second Woman—And a smart man can only fool a woman until she find, it out. LEG A MASS OF HUMOR \About seven years ago a small abrasion appeared , on my right leg Just above my ankle. It irritated me so that I began to scratch it, and it began to spread until my leg from my ankle to the knee was one solid scale like a scab. The irritation was always worse at night and would not allow me to sleep, or my wife either, and it was completely undermining our health. I lost fifty pounds in weight and was almost out of my mind with pain and chagrin as no matter where the irritation came, at work, on the street or in the presence of company. I would have to scratch it until I had the blood running down into my shoe. Ing during those seven years. The pain, mortification, loss of sleep, both to myself and wife is simply inde- scribable on paper and one has to ex- perience it to know what it is, \I tried all kinds of doctors and rem- edies but I might as wtBlhave thrown my money down a sewer. They would dry up 'for a little while and fill me with hope only to break out again just as bad if not worse. I had given up hope of ever being cured when I waa Induced by my wife to give the Cuti- cure Remedies a trial. After taking the Cuticura Remedies for a little while I began to see a change, and after taking a dozen bottles of Cud - curs Resolvent in conjunction with the Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointe ment. the trouble had entirely disap- peared and my leg was as fine es the day I .was hors. Now after a lapse of six months with no signs of a recur- rence I feel perfectly safe in extend- ing te you my heartfelt thanks for the good the Cuticura Remedies have done for me. I shall always recommend them to my friends. W. H. .White, 312 E. Cabot St., Philadelphia, Pa., Feb. 4 and Apr. 13. 1909.\ TUBERCULOSIS IN THE PRISON Per Cent. of Sufferers Is Enormous and There Seems but One Remedy. From several investigations that have been made by the National As- sociation for the Study and. Preven lion of Tuberculosis, it is estimated that on an average about fifteen per cent, of the prison population of the country is afflicted with tuberculosis. On this basis, out of the 80,000 prison- ers housed in the penal institution' of the United States at any Wet time, not less than 12,000 'are infected with this disease. If the Philippine islands and other insular possessions were taken into consideration' the number would be much larger. Some of the prisons of Pennsylvania. Kan- sas and Ohio show such shocking con- ditions with reference to tuberculosis that many wardens admit that these places of detention are death traps. Similar conditions could be found in almost every state, and in the 'mine. ity of cases the only sure remedy is the destruction of the old buildings and the erection of new ones. And They Wondered. Judge Nicholas Longworth, who used to sit on Ohio's supreme bench, looked unnaturally grave, and a neighbor, in recognition of his facial depression, named a pet owl \Judge Longworth.\ It was the very next day that an excited maid broke up his wife's garden party. \Oh. madam,\ said she. \Madam! Judge Longworth has laid an egg\ Opinions Aired. \Were the commencement exer- cises interesting?\ \Very. The time was divided be- tween advice from public men on the selection of a carper and suggestions from graduates on bow to run the government.\ The secret of life is not to do what one likes, but to try to like that which nne_has to do; and one does like it— in time—D. M. Cralk. Constipation Vanishes Forever Prompt Relief—Permanent Cars CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS vier tea. Pwely vget- eblv—be surely bet gently ea the Inn. Stop Mow &ma dieter— cure iodi. motion-- improve the complericei — brOten She eyes. 3.111 Pille Smell Dew, Sinall Price, Genuine omilien Signature Fargo Directory RUBBER STAMPS e s P_Zia j o g : gil ta_sgat i14 _s. WARGO STAMP WORKS, rasa: RitHides,WooliPelts To BOLLES & ROGERS FARGO, N. D. KODAKS isnom.a.?‘` 7.M aa +. 11 1.: FAIN MUG CO. l'aree. 1AY RULE CANADA )uke of Connaught Likely to Be Governor General. Popular Brother of the Late King Edward Is Reported to Be Slated for Head of the Dominion Government. Ottawa, Can.—If the present pro gram is adhered to the next rev ernor general of Canada will 'be the Duke of Connaught, brother of the late King Edward. Such waa the de sire of the deceased monarch, and the probabilities are that the new Kin* will not oppose the program. Can ada appreciates the distinguished how or Of haying at thePhead of her gov- ernment as the representative of the mother country so eminent a member of the royal family. Never before has one of the royal family occupied such • position, though Queen Victoria's daughter, • sister of the duke, was for years a resident of ,the Dominion when her husband, the Marquis ol Lorne, now the Duke of Argyle, was governor general. At he same time the Canadians appreciate that society affairs at Rideau Hall, or Government House as it is sometimes called, the official residence of his excellency at Ottawa, will be upon a much grander scale than in the past, and that it will cost • prettir Penny 'for those who tty, —dateureperrmere this ever, wi become the social center. The D ke of Connaught is the 0017 on-vivin son of Queen Victoria and is 10 years old. Her majesty had nine children, of whom the eldest was Princess Victoria, mother of Emperor William; she died in 1901. The sec and child was the late King Edward The Princess Alice Maud Mary. moth er of the present Czarina of Russia, died in 1878. Alfred, Duke of Edin burg, died in 1900. Leopold, Duke ol Albany, died in 1884. Beside the Duke Of Connaught there survive Helena, Princess Christian of Schleswig-Hol. stein; Louise, Duchess of Argyle. and Beatrice, now Princess Henry of Rat Moberg. The DukS of Connaught married Prime's Louise of Prussia in 1379 and has three children. His eldest daughter is Margaret, wife of Rua tavus Adolphus of Sweden. His son is Prince Arthur Patrick, and his young er laughter le the beautiful and de cidedly Independent Princess Victoria Patritta. SirsorMosApeif—Wiwomriliew-wfweri suck evidence of harms a will of be: own as has the Princess Patricia Over and over again has a husband been selected for her by those wise it statecraft. but she has bundled these suitors off with slight ceremony and has repeatedly declared that she will have a.husband of her own choosing or tibiae at all. Slife is the most pope tar princess in England and was favorite of her uncle, King Edward ' , Her name, which is a compliment tc Ireland, alone makes her popular with the people of that part of the empire. The British government has a pur- pose in sending to Canada a prince of the royal blood. It is believed a gov- ernor general so close to the throne would tend to forward the empire movement and bring the Dominion in closer sympathy to the mother coun- try. The governor general as a mat- ter of fact has very little to do with the government of Canada. He has the power of veto but never exercises that right. Did he do so there would be as great a commotion as would oc- cur if the King in England should set himself actively in opposition to the elected government. But nevertheless he has q tremendous influence, though it is operative only through social and diplomatic channels. His salary is $50,000 a year with an executive rest. dence. Those geNernors, general who have been most popular and Influential have been those who have really come to love the Dolmnion and its people for themselves and have developed a deep interest in their welfare. Wheth- er the duke and his family can forget the life in England to which he has been accustomed remains to be seen, Caterpillars Ravage Trees. Washington.—Shade trees of Wash Berton, famed for their number and beauty, are undergoing an attack from a horde of caterpillars. The trees are being stripped of their foliage rapidly So numerous are the pests, that they have baffled the caretakers' efforts tc cope with them. Properly owner, have joined in the attempt to repel the invaders, but it seems that there Is little chance to prevail against them. Some fear for the lives of the trees in expressed. 4 \ a ltiTea_ Jim—Ortiet is terribly absent mind- Jack—I should say so! I've known rim to telephone to his office and ask f he was in. Try This, This Summer. The very next timeyou're hot, tired Sr thirsty, step up to a soda fountain and get a glass of Coca-Col It will :opt you off, relieve your lightly and mental fatigue and quench your -thirst lelightfully. At soda fountains or :arbonated in bottles -6c everywhere. Delicious, refreshing and wholesome. Bend to the Coca-Cola Co, Atlanta, h., for their free booklet \The Truth Cgpipagt. 4 .24111245100erhaemtitelle. Cola Is and why It is so delicious, re- freshing and thirst -quenching. And tend 2c stamp for the Coca-Cola Base- ball Record Book for 1910—costains the famous poem \Casey At The fiat,\ records, schedules for both leagues and other vajuable baseball informs. Lion complied by authorities. let ties Chaim Here is a glimpse of the horrors of a western desert, taken front the Gold- field (Ntiv 4 ) News: \Another desert victim is 'reported. and Archie Camp- bell. manager of the Last Chanoe mining property near Death valley, earne to Goldfl Id terday to en- deavor to eats a ty of the unfortunate. \Mr. Campbell encountered the un- known man on the desert in a fright- ful condition. He was in the last stages of desert exhaustion, devoid of clothing, sunburned, blistered and crazed, with his tongue swollen enor- mously. a pitiable object, and unable to sneak. \He was tenderly conveyed to temp and everything possible cone for him, but kind aid came too late, for an hour after he had absorbed the first cup of water he expired.\ Keeping it Dry. An old woman of a wealthy New prsey family was going visiting. The coachman, who had not been in this country long, had just been equipped with a new unifortu and a new silk hat. Before they had gone far It be gan to sprinkle, and the old woman told tM , coachman to fasten down the aide curtains of the wagonette. • He drove up to a hitching post be side the road and, dismounting, hung his new hat op the post, and begun to fasten the curtains. The old woman noticed his bare head and asked him where his hat a as. \01 toot it off nie head, mum. so as .artstsidstliorgaxwon. - . .risveattp replied. Doll House Library. A search for a child's short story. \The Griffin and the Minor Canon.\ in a volume all by itself revealed to a persistent city shopper the thought and modey that are expended on the furnishing of dolls' houses. Book stores had not the story in n single volume, but in a department store one young woman interviewed had re. cently been transferred from the toy department and was able to contribute a helpful hint. ' \I think,\ she said, \you can find it in one of the dolls' houses down- stairs.\ Curiosity had by that time become a sauce to literature. so the shopper hurried downstairs to inspect the doll 4teriMphtilwesentatteMmeali- - 45Weviii41 10- houses contained libraries consisting of a score of diminutive books and each book contained •a child's story complete. One of them was \The Griffin and the Minor Canon.\ Quotation Marks. aer speech In elevate cski c sald of a cor Senator Beveridge, in en after-din- rupt politician: M ti rder! \The MIMI excuse 1111 MI absurd us the excuse that a (serials: minister of- fered on being convicted- of plaglar ism. \'Brethren said this minister, 'It is true that I occasionally borrow fie my sermons, but I always ocknowl edge the fact in the pulpit by raising two fingers at the beginning and two at the end of the borrowed matter, thus indicating that it Is quoted ' ' Good intentions are always hot stuff; that 111 ,why they are used for paving material in IL certain locality. FREE Send postal for Free Package of Peatitie. Metter and more economical than liquid antiseptics FOR ALL TOIL= MEL Gives one • sweet breath; clean, white, germ.free teeth—antiseptically clean mouth and throat —purifies the breath after smoking—dispels all disagreeable perspiration and body odors—much ap- preciated by dainty women. A quick remedy for sore eyes and catarrh. A little Paatine powder di.- mleed in a plan of hot walls JPICNI , ` dalailalec.-aactist ea. ponentag eau cleansing. germicidal si l = l ag power, and absolutely hens. less. Try a Sample. 50c.• large boa at druggists or by and. I' TISIL PAXTON TOILET Co , .0111 , 0. MAINS • Advice. \Dbetor cried little Single, 'over his telephone, \my wife has lost her voice. What the dickens shall do\ Qnservatory itsilteacions int 1,10 were you retnember the fact \%hen Tian ring day conies around, and act accordingly.\ Whereupon the doctor chuckled as he charged Single two dollars .for professional services.—Harper's Week- ly. C ABC A REV' Mc • box for a wreak** treatment. •11 druggists. Murat seller la tee world. Waists beam • month. - ,Northwestern 04 Instructors 600 Students \Why said the doctor, gravely, \If One gets it by highway mesi—Tame of thousands by Bad Bowels—No dif- ference. Constipation and dotal Myer make the whole system sick — Every. body knows It—CASCARETS regulate— ears Bowel and Liver troubles by simply doing nature's work until you get well— Millions us* CASCARETS. Life Sever? so inoluded Her. \Why did she get angry at the stranger in town?\ \Site asked him if he had seen her daughter and he answered that he had seen all the sights of the place.\ Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORLA, a safe and sure remedy for Infants and children, and see that It Bears the Signature of In Use For Over 30 'Yearn. The Kind You Have Always Bought. A fondness man's leisure is simply 'he time he doesn't know what to do with. Mrs. ifitassenrs Illoottilag syrup. rorrei id mil tee, hing. @often@ the gum., reaemotts,. gammon 4o0.• Ila entisiatting guilt. Bo a baths Better a nagless wife than a horse - less carrlagc _ AN ni malt Art and Drusstis Art, otatt11 re ent• %m y... al . i...rneas in , Art. Piano, nam- ing. Inns teissasee WIN km O. A. &VW. ass. st......0.0.. Mine DAISY FLY KILLER =:7,1=st Vi.1, tits . h ▪ orroso • roars tal orrooloole hoop. irol. AU eeeee Nor of mewl Aroma tem Of p Of, WM IBM .011 or WOn rl. 3 I al U•r000rl holli to. Of oil dorm r mom rerAl BAWL, 1111E111111 Int nada aim. ilentniant INN TN. • You can shave first time you try with r 01111 1° KNOWN TIM WOMD OVER OLD SORES CURED motin• ••cures 'brook. rem no rceernfiskrins tilesora,warloossi 'leers.' n - o on t Uleers,11/1•rrnrtal tilrers.Whit•5w•11- Ing,SI ilh Leg,rever Soros, se.aliema. eminespa• J P •1.1.114.Dept.ASSt PSSIEDSes PATENTS:A=1=2FM _ . W. N. U , FARGO, NO, 34-1910, We Give Away Absolutely Free of Cost The People's Common Sense Medical Adviser, in Plain English, or Medicine Simplified, by R. V. Pierce, M. D., Chief Consulting Physician to the Invalids' Dotal and Sur- gical Institute at Buffiflo, a book of 1008 large pages and over 700 illustrations, in strong paper covers, to any one sending 21 one -cent stamps to cover cost of mailing ealx or, in Preach Cloth binding for 31 stamps. Over 6811,000 copies of this complete Family Doctor Book were sold in cloth binding at regular price of $1.50. Afterwards, one end a half million copies were given sway as above. A new, up-to-date revised edition is now ready for mailing. Better send NOW before all are gone. Address Won'''. Dts- ransway MEDIC.AL ASSOCIATION, it.V. Pierce, M. D., President, Buffalo, N. Y. DR. PIERCE'S FAVORITE PRESCRIPTION THE ONE REMEDY for woman's peculiar ailments good enough that its makers are not afraid to print on its outside wrapper Its every ingredient. No Secrets—No Deception. THE ONE REMEDY for women which contains no alcohol and no habit-forming drugs. Made from native medicinal forest roes of well established curative value. The Rayo Lamp is a high grade lamp, sold at a low price. There are lamp, that cost more, but there Is softener lamp made at say price. Onnarurted et mild braes; Mattel ratad--eneilY Iterd clean. an tirnament to •ny romp In an• boom. There • nothing Smoot. to the e , rants of lawn -making that can add to the o the R•TO Isms ass lig giving device Nv•ry dealer everywhere If not at yours, inns descriptive Me - Marto the nearest agency of the CONTINENTAL OIL. COMPANY ameresestedi