Image provided by: Santiam Historical Society; Stayton, OR
About The Stayton mail. (Stayton, Marion County, Or.) 1895-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 21, 1915)
A POSITION FOR YO U K la r« I M 7 l ffftÈ D Our irratluaU»« mm always In ii«inan<J Jh»f9 l* » _ n***»*l _^l fur yuu lust po«lUon a* ■'->»! mm you ran pi «par- fur It. IIOLMKA Trainiti* m«an* MON POSITION FOWKit Th«rr ar< i m i m u u 'A U i¿m r< ¡/ u < ./ L M u Klvht thoiiHiiil i a ■ i. M i-, i i *M(ity.»avan «atlnAml at ilwnU hmvm ihr*nitfh IJOl.MFH (furimi tha past twenty-«Iftht year» M < ir iiir « Hj « > t them are now < iut ' r <* a«ful hualri ««* mon with trwlapan<l«mt inounw*. Our xrailuat •• start at *a arios ramfinir from $40 tu $100 a munth. WriU fur cstaU>«us. «tart NOW Holmes Business College ’" Thu School that geli you a good p< tU on. " ••U S E T H E R IV E R ” Dalles-Columbia Line Atala of Waahlnftun. fur Tha Dallas dally ax. j Furnia? II p rti. I «rav« Dallas dally ax MoiitJay IX M Htaamars J N. Teal. Inland Kmpira iim I ( Twin Citi**« fur Upper Columbia and Hnaka rivar l pointa. Taylor Ut. (tuck lai Main (IIS WittuMtl« as4 lelaak« Rn« I«-iaf Ce. Pulissi U TYPHOID no m o r« n a c H M r r than hm allpo a. Himt eaaa.laate be« d-awaeuetei tha alm .nl m lia ca toa l affi- C a ff, ai.d harailaaanaaa...f A n 'n y p tw ld Vacclaalloa. • a v a c ila a t a d N O W b y y .w r a h y a U la a . y m i . « * y o u r fa m ily . It la m ora vita l th a n hou aa In a u raa e a . Aita y o u r p h y a li lan. .truyytat, o r a m t fo r H ava ytai h a d T y p h o i u r ' t a illa « o f T y p h o i d V ac. Ina, raaulla f% u n uaa, alvi .U n « a t f r o » T y p h o id C artla ra. INC Ilium LAbOSAIMV. BTMrtrv. CAL a oa a a t.a a m i i v n a aaawaa v a s a a a. a. a av iic a a a o II Needed Explanation. A Kanaua c'lllun relates tliut recent- ly while on n trip About the environ* of Sun I Heco uii.l Coronado beach In a alcht aueluc motor car. the driver liolnted out vartuu* land holdlnc*. building*. Ilútela, etc., aa the property o f J. 1). Hpreckela Jr., the anear mac uate. Even the road over which they bowled wua privately owned by Hpreckela. Aa the car, following the wlndlnc road, drew near the bay. a little girl naked “ Mama, who owna the buy?” Mama mulled and said, "W hy. tlearle. Uod owna the bay." •'W ell." mu i-1 the |.muled child, "how did he c t it awuy from Mr. Hpreck- ela?" Constipation cause* and seriously ag gravate* many diavaMca. It la thor oughly cured by I»r. Pierce’• Pelleta. Tm y KUgar-coated granule*. W>iku|i«« > i Imh IViUH 0» CONSUMPTION TAKES 350 PEOPLE DAILY Ovrr 3V) people euccutnb to con sumption every day In the United State«. Science prove* that the germs only thrive wbrn the ayalem I* weakened from cold* or aicknraa, overwork, confining duUra or when general wrakneaa e m u . The brat physicians point out that j during changing aeaaona the blood ahould be made rich and pure and active by tik- j lug Scott '« KmuUion after mrali. The rod liver oil In Scott a liinulaion warma the j body by enriching the blond ; it peculiarly atrengthen* the lunga and throat, while it upbuilds tbe rraiative force* of the body to avoid colda and prevent consumption. If yon work indoors, tire easily, feel languid or nervous. Scolt'a Hinulsion it the most strrngtbrnioglood-tnedicinc known. It la totally lree Irom alcohol or any stupefying drug. Avoid substitutes, IV C! hull a ( u n i ntuom&cld N. I.. A Patented. “ What I want to a ««," «aid Diogenes, "la an honest man." “ And when you see him. what w ill you do?" •'I’ll »Im ply go my way. A thorough ly honest man generally ha* poaltlve opinion* o f his own, and, therefore, la liable unt to be very good coinpauy. — Washington Star. How to H e a l c-— 150,000 ITAtlANS l 10 fIGHT BALKANS Government Maintains Strictest Secrecy As To Objective. ROUMANIA KEEPS STRICT NEUTRALITY German Submarines Are Sheltered in Bulgarian Port— Great Brit ain Gives Bulgaria Notice. Paris— Italy will send 160,000 men to the Balkans, according to inform a tion received by the Excelsior from what the paper says Is a reliable source. The government maintains the strict est secrecy aa to where the troops w ill be landed, says the E xcelsior’s inform ant, but Italian intervention w ill take place at a point where it w ill have a decisive effect, on the whole Balkan campaign. Bucharest, via Paris— The cabinet, after again going over tbe war situa tion, made a pronouncement in favor o f the maintenance o f neutrality by Rou mania. A ll necessary m ilitary precautions have been taken on each of Koutnania’s frontiers. The presence o f two German sub marines at Varna, B ulgaria’s chief seaport on the Black sea, has been confirmed. London—Great Britain has declared war on Bulgaria. The BHtish foreign Explanation. office announces that in view o f the A Baltimore doctor suggests tbla fact that Bulgaria has announced she "W illie, did you tie that tin can to simple, but reliable and Inexpensive, is at war with Serbia and is an ally tile dog's t I "Yea. a ir,' replied the email boy home treatment for people suffering o f the central powers, Hia M ajesty’» "I'm trying to do a kind act every with eczema, ring government haa informed the Bulgar day. That dog chaaea every rabbit he worm, rashes and ian government that a state o f war similar Itrhlng, burn sees. I tied the ran to him no that exists between Great Britain and Bul It will make u nolae and warn the rab ing aklu troubles garia. A t a n y reliable bit." Washington Hlar. druggist's get a Jar of realnol ointment Elevating. “ Safety first” lessee life loss. " I aaked the box* for a rulae to and a cake o f rea lnol soap Theae are not at all ex day." aa Id the elevator boy. Chicago. 111.— Tbe Union Pacific With the realnol soap and "W h at did he aay?" aaked hi* pensive. railroad system w ill be given an ab warm water bathe the affected parts solutely clean bill ou “ Passengers thoroughly, until they are free from "d oin g u p !" K ille d " during the fiscal year ending crusts and the skin Is softened. l*ry June 30, 1915, In the report o f the In very gently, spread on a thin layer of Patent O ffice Documents. terstate Commerce commission. And Hie realnol ointment, and cover with the number o f passengers injured, for If all tl'.e documenta atured In the a light bandage—If necessary to pro the same period, w ill show almost patent office at Waalilngton could be tect the clothing. This should be done negligible in the commission's rep ort placed end to end they would form a twice a day. Usually the distressing T w o years ago the Union Pacific atrip that would reach around the Itching and burning atop with the first system adopted a motto o f "S afety earth three times. treatment, and the sktn soon becomes First.” E very employe, regardless of clear and healthy again. Sample free. his position, was enlisted in the work Disguised. o f making the Union Pacific not only Customer- I'm going to a masked Sometimes. as safe as any other system in the bull, and 1 want something that will j "M y face la my fortune." com pletely disguise me. t'ostum er— | "Yea. but an Investment of that kind country, but absolutely safe for the Certainly, air. I will give you some ( sometimes has very tmd features about traveling public as well as fo r the em ployes. thing nice.— P e l« Mele. It."— Baltimore American. The clean bill which the Interstate Commerce commission's report will Satisfactory Correspondence. show Is the result o f that ‘'safety” "You r husband sends you very few campaign. letters?" N ot one passenger was killed on the "That's all right. He sends me his entire Union Pacific system, from end pay envelope every week."— Lout* to end. main line and branch lines, ville Courier-Journal. during the last fiscal year. In that period 8,951,364 passengers entrusted An Achievement. themselves on the thousands of miles I.umber, S h i n g l e s , “ Are you sure you thoroughly under o f branch roads o f Union Pacific, and stand that question you attempted to upon the main line trains from Omaha luith, M o u l d i n g . decide?" to Portland, Seattle and Spokane, Doors, Windows and "N o .” replied Senator Sorghum; from Kansas City to Denver and Chey other Building Ma "but I fancy I expressed m yself to enne, and not pne single passenger terial from terms sufficiently obscured to prevent lost his life, although, together, these anybody else from taking enough In 8.951.364 passengers traveled nearly terest to call me down.” — Washington one billion miles during that year. Not Star. only does this apply to those passen gers actually on board the trains, but It Includes those who w ere preparing to go aboard, or who w ere leaving the Portland, Oregon. trains o f the company. Regardless of whether the blame lay with the rail Send us a list o f what you require road. or was due to the grossest, most for your buildings ami we will name flagrant carelessness on the part of you prices delivered at your station the passenger, the fact remains that and (iuaranlee to savr you Money. during the fiscal year ending June 30, 1915, not one single Union Pacific passenger was killed. But Union Pacific's “ S afety F irst" campaign is not benefiting passengers alone. Employes are reaping hand some returns on the efforts they are - r«*oftl» from »11 part» of | making to prevent accidents to each I Oregon at»<l Waihinir j t«»n constantly visit our other. ___________________ loffie« fur dental treat- Imeni Our «kill laac- Germans Execute Women. I know led irrsl. and our Louisville, Ky.— “ I think if moresuf- Ipromptne*» In flnlnh- London— The foreign office has been Imtr work in on« day foring women would take Lydia E. I when rmjuirtd I r appro- I'inkham's V e g e ta notified by the American embassy that IciatMl l»y out-of-town ■ patrona ble Compound they Miss Edith Cavell, lately the head o f Dr W in *. U * faine would enjoy better a large training school in Brussels, ¡tooth «Xpert. Thrr« la AI.W AYS ONK IIKSr health. 1 suffered who was arrested August 6 by the I In every calling, and from a female trou German authorities in Brussels, was I Dr. Wla« luya claim to Ithi« diatlnrtton in Or«- ble, and the doctors executed October 13 a fter sentence of ¡iron. Ytift npa«M decided I h a d a death had been passed on her. What w« can't guar It is ani«« we don't do. tumorous g r o w t h understood that the charge against LOW PRICBS FOR IHGH-GRADR WORK. and would have to Miss Cgvell was that she harbored Oood Red Ruhher IMatra. each .............. $5.00 be operated upon, fu g itiv e British and French soldiers The lleat Red Rubber Platea, each ........... 7.50 22-Kaiat (wild or Porcelain Crown............ 5.00 but I refused as I do and Belgians o f m ilitary age and had not believe in opera assisted them to escape from Belgium WISE DENTAL CO. tions. t Lad fainting spells, bloated, in order to join their colors. RKI.IAHt.K PAINLRM Mi NTI.STS. and could hardly stand the pain in my phonea Main 2029. A 202». 122' j Third Street. Failing Hldg . Portland. Oregon left side. My husband insisted that I Gsrman Shipping Hard Hit. 8. K. Cor. Third and Washington. try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable London — British submarines have Compound, and l am ao thankful I did, now cleared|the Baltic sea and the for I am now a well woman. I sleep G ulf o f Bothnia entirely o f German better, do all my housework and tako merchant ships, says a dispatch to long walks. I never fail to praise Lydia the Star from Copenhagen. Every Blrmaful llom. & Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound for German ship which was south-bound HrmallM my good health.’ ’ —Mrs. J. M. R esch , from Sweden when the submarines Hi. .urr.ii.ful herb 1900 W est Broadway, Louisville, Ky. started their campaign has either been al rrmi.llrs rur. all Since we guarantee that all testimo sunk or run aground, it adds. O f 60 kind, of «ilm.nl. of men anil woman with nials which we publish are genuine, is it German ore carriers, 37 are virtually out ofirr.tlon. u«*d not fa ir to suppose that i f Lydia E. interned in Swedish ports, the corre from the wonderful Chine.« herb. roof«, Pinkham's Vsgetable Compound has the spondent declares. hull« «nil veet-t.blea, whlrh «re unknown to virtue to help these women it will help the mediral m-ionre of thla rountrr. Write for blank and rlrrular«. Send «lamp sny other woman who is suffering in a Big Loan Is Com pleted. CONSULTATION FREE. Addre«« like manner? N ew York — The contract covering The C. Gee Wo Chinese Medicine Cn. I f you are ill do not drag along until the flotation o f the «600,000,000 Anglo- l<J2ty Flm t St.. Portland. Oc«. an operation is necessary, but at once Mon lion Paper. French credit loan haa been signed. take Lydia E. Pinkham’s V egetable I-ord Reading, chairman o f the Anglo- Compound. French commission, signed the docu W rite to Lydia E. Plnkhnm ment on behalf o f Great B ritain; Oc No. 43, ItlS F. N. U. Med icineCoM(confidontial) Lynn, tave Hom berg and Ernest M allett, the Masa. Y our letter w ll be opened, French commission, signed fo r France, rend nnd answered by a woman and J. P. Morgan signed on behalf o f W H K N writing to advertía««*, p l o d lion this p a p e r . ________________ and bold In strict confidence. the American syndicate o f bankers. S k in -D is e a s e s Maud [rügÿForest toYou, Sam Connell Lumber Co. WOMAN REFUSES JPERATION DENTAL HEADQUARTERS POR OUT-OP-TOWN PEOPLE C. Gee Wo Telit How She Was Saved by Taking Lydia E. Pink- ham’« Vegetable Compound. NORTHWEST MARKET REPORTS; GENERAL CROP CONDITIONS Portland.— W heat — Bluestem 96c. forty fold 95 Vic, club 93 Vic, red fife 90 Vic, red Russian 89c. Oata— No. 1 W hite Feed «24.00. Barley— No. 1 Feed. «26; brewing, $27. M lllfeed— Spot prices: Bran. $26 per ton; shorts, «26; rolled barley, (2 8 0 29 Corn— Whole, (37.60 per ton; crack ed, $38.60 per ton. H ay— Eastern Oregon timothy. (16 O l f ; valley timothy, $12013; alfalfa. «12.60 0 13.50; cheat. «9 0 1 0 ; oaU and vetch, «11012- Vegetablea — Artichokes. 7&c per dozen; tomatoes, 25O30c per box; cabbage, lc per pound; green corn, 10 016c per dozen; garlic, l&c per pound, peppers, 405c; eggplant, 4 0 6 c; sprouts, 8O10c; horseradish, 12Vic; cauliflower, 7 6 cO H 25. Green Fruits— Cantaloupes, 86cOI2 par crate; peaches, 40O66c per box; watermelons, l O l V i c per pound; ap ples, 75cO$l 75 per box; pears, « 1 0 1.25; grapes, 86cO (160 per crate; cas- abas, lV ic per pound; cranberries, $9.50010 per barrel. Potatoes—Oregon. 75085c; Yakima, $1 per sack; sweets, $2.4002 50 per hundred. Onions— Oregon, $1.25 01.35 sack. Eggs— Oregon ranch, buying prices; No. 1, 36c; No. 2, 27c; No. 3, 20c per dozen. Jobbing prices; No. 1, 38c. Poultry— Hens, 11013Vic; springs, 13015c; turkeys, nominal; ducks, white, 13015c; colored, lO O U c ; geese, 8O10c. Butter— City creamery cubes, ex tras, selling at 31 Vic; firsts, 29c; print and cartons, extra. Prices paid to pro ducers; Country creamery, 22029c, according to quality; butterfat premi um quality, 33c; No. 1 average quality 31c; No. 2 29c. V eal— Fancy, 10c per pound. Pork— Block, 7ViO$c per pound. Hops— 1915 crop, 9O10c per pound. Hides— Salted hides, 15c; salted kip 15c; salted calf, 18c; green hides, 13Vic; green ktp, 15c; green calf, 18c; dry hides, 25c; dry calf. 27c. W ool— Eastern Oregon. 18 0 28c; valley, 27028c; fall lambs' wool, 210 25c. Mohair— Oregon, 27 0 30c per pound. Cascara Bark— Old and new, 3ViO 4c per pound. Pelts— Dry long-wooled pelts, 16Vic; dry short-wooled pelts, llV ic ; dry. shearlings, 15026c each; dry goat, long hair. 13c each; dry goat shear lings, 10O20c each; salted long-wool ed pelts. September, 76cO(l-25 each. Cattle— Choice steers, $6.6003-85; Choice steers, $6.5006-25. good steers, $606-25; medium steers, $5.2506.75; choice cows, $5 0 5.25; good cows, $4.5004-76; medium cows, $3.750 4.25; heifers. $3.5005.76; bulls, $30 4.50; stags. $4.6005.25. H ogs—Light, $6.40©6.60; heavy, $5.4006.60. Sheep— W ethers. $4.76 0 6 ; ewes, $406-60; lambs, $5.6007. Purity Guaranteed under all State and National Pure Food L a w s . Y o u can p a y a higher price, but you cannot get a baking powder that will raise nicer, lighter biscuits, cakes and pastry, or that is any more healtniul. Your money hack if K C fails to please you. T ry a can at our risk. Woman Triumph In Kansas. Ccyfdn’t Forget It. Out In Kansas where they strive to ' please, the women ought to have small cause for complaint it It Is possible to deprive the sex o f that Inalienable right. Here are some o f the things a wo man of the Sunflower state may legal ly do: Can take back her maiden name af ter her husband 1« dead, without any legal process or legislative act. Can keep her own name when she Is married. Can persuade her husband to take her name and gi ve up his fam ily name if she does not like it. Can keep her maiden name and her husband can keep his. Can retain her maiden name for bus iness transactions and use her hus band's uatne for social affairs. If wi fe does not like either her own or husband's fam ily name they can change to a name that does suit. A woman can wear men's ciothtng without any restriction except that she must not pose as a man. She can vote at every election. She can hold any office in the state and run for congress As Kansas probably puts it, a wo man there can do almost anything a man can. That's so. Tbe men's cloth ing provision even permits her to scratch a match as some men do. Only thing she seems debarred from is "pos ing as a man," which is impossible, of course, for most of them, at lea st "Saturday night some miscreant lug ged o ff a whole cord of my wood, and somehow I can't forget It,” declared Silas "H a v e you tried to forget it?” In quired his friend. "Yes. Sunday morning I went to church, hoping I could get It o ff my mind, and before F had been there five minutes tbe choir started in Binging ‘The Lost Chord’ so I got out."—Judge. T o B re « f in N e w • • Leader' ’ and * • Repeater” and Judges' Wigs. make a killing com bina tion for field,fowl or trap shooting. N o smokeless pow der shells enjoy such a reputation for uniform ity of loading and strong s h o o t in g q u a l i t i e s as “ L eader" and “Repeater" b r a n d s do, an d no s h o t g u n made s h o o t s h a r d e r o r better than th e Winchester. A B a d Sto m a ch Is a Foe to B e F e a re d HOSTETTER’S The governm ent's monthly crop re port estimates a low er condition, as compared with the 10-year average, fo r potatoes in the Pacific coast. For the entire United States, the in dicated yield fo r 1915, based upon above averages fo r October, is 368.- 161.000 bushels, compared with the September 1 estim ate o f 405.909.000, the final estim ate on 1914 crop o f 405,- 921.000 and the five-year average of 357.000,000 bushels. Statistics as to potato crop condi tions in the western states follow : Cond'n Cond'n 10-Yr. Oct. t. Sept. 1. Aver. 85 Oregon ___ _______ 82 91 84 87 W a s h in g t o n ........... 82 87 88 California ............ «5 88 8» Idaho ____________ 84 99 93 91 Nevada ................ »1 87 75 70 Utah ............ 86 90 96 Montana ....... *0 88 »1 Colorado _____ _______ W y o m in g .............. 97 S4 85 For tne United S tate« as a whole, the condition on October 1 was 74.2, on September 1, 82.7 and the 10-year average, 76.4. Plenty of Grape# on Street. Grapes o f all kinds w ere abundant during the past week, and sold w ell at steady prices. Am ong the receipts w ere good pack Tokays from Grants Pass, which brought $1 per crate. A few small shipments o f Southern Oregon cantaloupes are arriving, stan dards selling at $2 and flats at 85 cents. Onion prices have been advanced 10 cents on the street and w ill go higher. There is a lim ited shipping trade In potatoes at steady prices. Several cars o f new-crop California walnuts arrived In sacks and cartons. Shotgun Shells S S « ««. Alwtyi «ti«ke In Allea'« Koo(-«:««•, a powder. It ru re.b o t, « w e » tln f, achilie, «Mollen (eeL Cure« corri., luerowiug asti« «n d tmnioum. A l «Il druggiiita «nd «line «(ere., '¿ve. Pont Eccepì *ny »iibailtute. Saniple meileU F u t i . Addre«* Allea S.olm «ted, Le ftoy N. Y. The w ig is only worn by English barristers to give them a stern, judi cial appearance, and no one can say that It fails in this respect The cus tom was originated by a French judge in the seventeenth century when, hap pening to dou a marquis' w ig one day, Wheat Farmers Holding Firmly. he found it gave him such a stern and dignified appearance that he decided Portland— The Merchants Exchange to get one for himself and wear it at was closed Tuesday on account o f the all times in court. This he did, and holiday. The country wheat markets the result was so satisfactory from a w ere also quiet. legal point o f view that not only the Grain farm ers in the interior are judges, but barristers also, took up holding their wheat firm ly in antici the custom throughout Europe.— Lon pation o f higher prices. They have don Graphic. followed this policy for the first two months o f the season and are w ell sat isfied with the results. As most of them are independent they are not likely to upset values by a general selling movement. As an indication of the way supplies are being held back in the country it Is cited that on the lines o f the Spokane £ Inland rail way there are now 1,366,676 bags of wheat, against 940,000 bags at this time last year. Broomhall In his w eekly Internation al review says: Nearly all illness has its "T h e general position o f the market origin in a weak Stomach is about unchanged with the under tone strong and an advancing tenden and dogged bowels. Your cy. food remains undigested “ The evidence is becoming increas ingly plain that the w orld’s supply of and you are deprived of wheat w ill be abundant for the season, its h e a lth s u s t a i n i n g and the abnormally large receipts in both the United States and W innipeg properties. Weakness and o f spring wheat Indicate that the per a general rundown condi iod of scarcity is about ending and re cent large purchases, in a quiet way, tion soon overtake you. Indicate that a good share o f these Be wise in time and pro supplies w ill eventually reach the Uni ted Kingdom. vide proper aid, which “ The urgent demand, which is be suggests a fair trial of coming pronounced, from M editerran ean countries, and the extraordinary strength in freights, may prevent any Immediate decline. Potato Crop Condition Lower. W inchester Stomach Bitters His Mild Request. Repeating Shotguns T H E Y ARK MADE FOR EACH O TH ER The Tibetan penal code is curious. Murder is punished with a fine vary ing according to the importance of the slain, theft by a fine o f seven to one hundred times the value of the article stolen. Here, again, the fine depend« on the social importance o f the person from whom the theft has been commit ted. The harborer of a thief is looked upon as a worse criminal than the thief himself. Ordeals by fire and by boiling water are still used as proofs o f innocence or guilt, exactly as was the custom in Europe in the middle ages. And if the lamas never inflict death they are adepts at torture. Knew the Business. The leading druggist in a certain suburb wanted an apprentice. One applicant for the situation had been employed in a fish store, but he seem ed a likely lad. "Y o u r handwriting's good enough." said the druggist. "Can you do men tal arithm etic?" "Y es, sir,” replied the lad. " W — what would 34 pounds o f sal mon at 8 cents a pound be?” "Bad, s ir !” was the prompt an swer. An Old Accomplishment. "T h a t w ife of mine is a great one for fads; her latest is firing china,” said the young married man. "T h at was one o f the first ones my wife had,” the older man said. "M y dear." he began mildly. "W e ll,” she snapped. Literary. “ I don't mind your borrowing my “ Oh. I simply adore Meredith and Panama hat. But when you return It please remove the veil and the hat Browning and Henry James." said the pins. I don't care to wear such equip gushing young person. “ So do I,” said little Binks. “ They ment downtown agaiu."— Louisville are perfectly delightful. It's like send Courier-Journal. ing your mind to a gymnasium. Er— Exercise is the chief source o f im do you read them in the origin al?"— provement in all our faculties.— Blair. N ew York Times. 1 P IM P LE S V BOILS ■ CARBUNCLES ■ V ■ ACHES CHILLS P A IN S ■ 1 ■ A re “ Danger Signals’ ’— the human system ’s method o f givin g warn ing that the blood has become impoverished and circulation poor. In this condition the human body is almost powerless to resist the more serious illness. Don’ t delay. Y ou need DR. PIER CE’S Golden Medical Discovery It gets to work immediately at the test of yoar trouble— th e S tom ach . It lends a helping hand. Help« to digest the food. Tones op the stomach. Boon brings back normal conditions. Food is properly assimilated and turned into rich, red blood. Every organ is strengthened and every tissue re-vitalised. Made from roots taken from our grant nmerican forests. Try this remedy now. Sold by Medicine Dealers in liquid or tablet form—or send 60s tv Dr. Pierce's Invalida Hotel. Buffalo, N. Y., for trial box. T e a r a e have the rampiate free Dr. Pierce S ic far wr, STL£