The Stayton mail. (Stayton, Marion County, Or.) 1895-current, April 06, 1916, Image 5

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H A W TH O R N E A U TO SCHOOL
Thr only Atitnm.d.ll«» SrlKh.l fin th» l*a-
•M mi
main tal til ri«
a (« imi Tractor
I M - . I a ln i llo li ('«lU rp llla r, C. I,. Ileal
Trark layer anil Wheel l i adora. both III tho
arluail and oporatliitf held.
44k llaaihorn e Ave..
Portland. Ora.
It's a Good
IN V E S T M EN T
See Your Dealer
Every Caae o f Pile»
f‘an and ahouU) l*e Kollevefl, «van though
Halvna. Mii|i|>nalti«rlr« and IHIatora have failed.
It will coat you nothing to learn of a roliablo
met hoil. Addreaa
TH E C O G L LY
24AW Washington Si.,
M ETH O D ,
Portland, Oregon
Monamobile Oils
and Greases Double Tread, Puncture Proof Tires
and
FEDERAL TIRES AND TUBES
Prae Tira Hervida.
• 7ufe H ö r SK n r s k r wer. -
MOTOR CAM S U P P L Y CO.. Ino.
3J B r o a d w a y N o .
PorCland. O ra
AGENT W A N T E D
Ruaim-aa iieo-aaity — «v e ry Mer­
chant huya On aight.
Httf profits.
Fxcluaiv« t.-rriUirv. Free Rampici.
Sella from #."> to $100.
W rite iiuick
for territory.
•ory. Sayi-ni. 687 Hallway
Exchange, Portland, O r«.
ORI LON VUUANliWC CO. *50 »«dw«tea St. Pehd. O n
WHEN YOU ARE THINKING
of .bippin. CREAM. EGGS, POULTRY,
DRE3SKD MEATS ...a HIDU,
D on't f o r it t l THE HAZELWOOD CO.. Portland
Tko o.bl pi*. •, ri.bl pri«*. ri.lo
PROMPT RETURNS
HIDES, PELTS, CASCARA BARK
U. S. Government Say.:
‘SAVE YOU R R A G S’
Sbtp four R.p. Rubber. llrtM. Lappar,
etc., to
M. BARDE & SONS,
for junk.
Made from your old <>nee I.aat lung
•or Itran N* w lire. WK AUK) HUY
*11.1» TlltKH. We pay ae high ae 10c
per lb fur *urh aa we can uae In Double
Tr« ad work, and the htirheat market
Hhlp your T*rea at once or write ue.
Portland, Oregon
QUICK RETURNS
Estimating a Foe.
"T h at man arena«« you o f being the
greuteal «ra fte r on earth.”
"Y ea ." replied Senator Sorghum,
''lull ||" dot nn I llieatl ll
If lie be
III.veil I ... .
. . it ' ■ ifter Ml
earth he'd be right with me In every
campaign, trying to get next and make
biuiaclf useful." Waahltigtoti Star.
Day* at Home.
" I wlull a doormat," announced Mrs.
I)e Style.
"H ere la a very nice pattern." aald
the aaleaman. "w ith the word ‘ W e l­
com e- woven Into tin* fiber."
"1 aee. 1 auppoae that will do If
yon ran add the worda 'Tueadaya and
Fridays.’ “ • l^iulavlUe Courier Journal.
Not a Youthful Saying.
Wv want all you bav<*.
•hit'Ptn« la**
Writ* for prtroo and
trtr m . r. n o m io n t o .
S i North fron t St., Portland. Ora.
Speed.
The Stranger— Why are you driving
the rar ao fuat?
The American— T o get to the ferry.
Later, at tho ferry:
The Am erican— W e have 20 uilnutea
to apare.
The Stranger— I knew It. In tbla
country you will rure tho car, burn up
guaollne, Imperil llvea, run the chance
of being arreated ami kill a chicken
to gain 20 uilnutea for whlch^you have
no uae wheu you get them.— Life.
Delayed.
"H en ry.” aald hla w ife reproachful­
ly. “ do you know that It waa 3 o ’clock
when you came home thla morning?"
"Y ou ore mlataken, my dear.” he
replied. "It waa Juat half paat 1. I
looked at the clock on the church
tower ua I panned the corner.”
"F a r be It from me to doubt your
word. Henry," anawered hla wife, "but
If that Is the case It must have taken
you an hour and a half to open the
front door.”
l
NORTHWEST MARKET REPORTS;
GENERAL CROP CONDITIONS
Portara! Wheat— iilueatem, 98c per
bushel; fo rty fold, 91c; club, 90c; red
F ife, 88c; red Russian, 88c.
Hay Eastern Oregon timothy, $21
bit 22 per ton; valley timothy, $16; al­
falfa. $20.
M illfeed — .Spot prices. Bran, $28
per ton; shorts, $26.60; rolled barley,
$81.606(32.60.
Corn - Whole, $37 (ter ton; cracked,
$38.
Vegetables— Artichokes, 66f(¿80c per
dozen* tomatoes, $3.76 per crate; cab­
bage, $ 1 . 26 ( 0 , 2.26 |x-r hundred; garlic,
10c per pound; peppers, 17J ftt 20c;
eggplant, 23Jc; horseradish, 8Jc; cau­
liflower, $1.506(1.60 per crate; let­
tuce, $2.260(3.26; cucumbers, $1.2566
1.60; spinach, 90c6($l per box; aspar­
agus, Kft/.llc per pound; rhubarb, $1.26
(it2 per box; peas,, 9(i/, 10c per pound.
Potatoes - - Oregon $1.506/ 1.60 per
sack; Yakim a $1.70(1(1.80; new Flor­
ida, 10(i(l2c per pound.
Onions — Oregon,
buying prices,
$1.60 f. o. b. shipping points.
Green Fru its—AppleB, $ If«, 1^60 per
box; cranberries, $11 per barrel.
F ggs — Jobbing
prices, Oregon
ranch, candled, 21c {ter dozen; un­
candled, 20(«20 jc.
Poultry — Hens, 16|c per pound;
springs, 16(/(l(ljc; stags, 12c; broil­
ers, 20(i/,25c; turkeys, live, 186(20c;
turkeys, dressed, choice, 24 6( 25c;
ducks, 13(<(16c; geese, 10c.
Butter — Prices from wholesaler to
retailer; Portland
city
creamery,
prints, 60-pound case lots, strandard
grades, 34c per pound; lower grades,
31c; Oregon country creamery prints,
60-pound case lots, standard makes, 31
(t(33c; lower grades, 306f.30$c; packed
in cubea, 2c leas. Prices paid by job ­
bers to producers; Cubes, extras, 29
(i(30c; firsts, 276/. 27 Je; dairy butter,
14(((18|c; butterfat. No. 1, 33c; No.
2, SOe.
V eal— Fancy, 11c per pound.
Pork— Fancy, 116(11 Jc per pound.
Hops— 1916 crop, 106(13c per pound;
1916 contracts, lli6/,12c.
W ool— Eastern Oregon, 206(30c per
pound; valley, 276(28c; mohair, Ore­
gon, 306;31c.
Cascara bark— Old and new, 4c per
pound.
Cattle — Steers, choice grain and
pulp, $8.506(8.75; choice hay, $8.1564
8.50; good, $7.76 ((( 8.15; medium,
$7.506(7.75; cows, choice, $6.756(7.50;
good, $6.506(6.75; medium, $6.25(((
6.50; heifers, $56(7.75; bull«, $2.76<{(
6; stags, $3<j(5.25.
Hogs — Prim e light, $9 20 <$ 9.35;
good to prime, $8.256(9; rough heavy,
$8(u.R.26; pigs and skips, $8(0.8.25.
Sheep— Yearlings. $86(8.75; weth­
ers, $7.256(8.25; ewes, $6.256(7.25;
lambs, $9.506(10.50.
K o v e r a lls
K eep Kids Kleen
T h a mnte orarti «I haalthful rUyttm t
Bark nchca? Stomach sen­
sitive? A little cough? No
strength?
Tire easily?
A ll
after ciTects of this dread mal­
ady. Y s. they are catarrhal.
Grip b a catarrhal disease.
You can never be well as long
as catarrh remains in your sys­
tem, weakening your whole
body with stagnant blood and
unhealthy secretions.
You Need
PERUN A
It's the one tonic for the after
effects of grip, because it is a
catarrhal treatment of proved
excellence. Take it to clear
away nil the effects o f grip, to
tone the digestion,clear up the
Inflammed membranes, régulât« the
bowels, and sot you ot\ the highway
to complete recovery.
Perhaps one of- more o f your
friends have found it valuable.
Thou-sands of people In every state
have, and hnve told us of it. Many
thousands more have been helped
at critical times by this reliable
family medicine.
F r i f i t d i l l . io U k l«t h r a for roor i n v h I m n ,
Tho Poruno Company,
Colomb«., Ohio
C
G cc
W o
Ruereaaful Horn«
B«te«dl«a •
Hla «ticr#*«afnl herb­
al n‘rn«iic« cure all
kind« of ailment« of
men and women with­
out op «ration. unnd
from tha wonderful
Chin«*** hart*, root*,
bud* and vr^rtablna. which ar* unknown to
th« marlical Rfiancn of Ihia country.
Writa for blank and circular«. 4anJ «tamp.
CONSULT A l l< >N FKKH Addreaa
The C Gee Wo Chinese Medicine Co.
162Vk Flmt St.. Portland. Or*
Mention Papctr.
P. N. U.
No. IS, 1010
W H K N writing lo nSvcrtlMra.
TT lion this p o p » . _____
I
Perhaps.
“ Some people say that our ancestors
were monkeys."
"W e ll,” replied Miss Cayenne, "m ay­
be some o f our ancestors would say
the same of ua."— Washington Star.
Very Much So.
"U ncle James did a paradoxical
thing this morning."
"W h at was It?"
"H o wanted some things from town
In a hurry, so he sent the footman on
horseback."— Boston American.
ELDERLY WOMEN
SAFEGUARDED
Tel! Other* How They W ere
Carried Safely Through
Change of Life.
Durand, W is.— " I am the mother o f
fourteen children and I owe my life to
Lydia E. Finkham's
V e g e t a b l e Com­
pound. When 1 waa
45 a n d h a d t h e
C h a n g e o f Life,
a f r i e n d recom­
mended it and it
gave me such relief
from my bad feel­
ings that 1 t o o k
several bottles.
I
am now well and
healthy and recom­
mend your Compound to other ladies. ’ *
— M rs. M a r y R i d c w a y , Durand, Wis.
A 31 uxsuclj use11s W o m a n W r it e s :
Blackstone, Maas. — “ M y troubles
were from my age, and I fe lt awfully
sick for three years. I had hot flashes
often and frequently suffered from
pains.
I took Lydia E. Finkham’s
VegrtableCompound and now am w ell.”
—Mrs. F i e r r e C o u r n o y e r , B o x 239,
Blackstone, Mass.
Such warning symptoms as sense o f
suffocation,hot flashes,headaches,back­
aches, dread o f impending evil, timidity,
sounds in the ears,, palpitation o f the
heart, sparks before the eyes, irregu­
larities, constipation, variable appetite,
weak ness and dizziness, should be heeded
by middle-aged women. Lydia E. Pink-
ham’s Vegetable Compound has carried
many women safely through this crisis.
Mme.
Catherine
Brsahkovskaya.
ssvanty-ons years eld, known an th«
"grandmother of tho Rueelan revolu­
tion," has bean exiled to Bulune, loot
outpost on tho Icy frontier of the
North Polo region.
prices were readjusted in line with
existin g values, posted offers being 2
to 6 cents higher than that o f the pre­
ceding week.
fM ft of HP* M «Ja MI OM PMC« writ»
drop hack. L-aalir
o* or « J
tUmlf wnàmi ‘ .>,t|h*lMtvUwk
to mop circulation Mari« mi M u *
demon, nmd Mu« «od white twekory
mnpmUx art dt« r«ar r«Mnd Aku
kJhêm w « f M , fate-cob« aatenai m
U r k U u «. end* Uuc. Uo u dark r«d
lor Muni t e w«*r. all mf*
In n a e d w*h fate • color adate«.
_
M a d « » l ><*<h net k wUhrll/O’W
dmvm «ad W * aack aad k » «
■aavai
'
7 5 c t h e su it
• vow
tupptr TO«,
W « w Jl tend »h*?a. ' haf
ytnmad
on receipt of pri«e. 75c each.
— A O R IC U L T U R A l.
V r F R E E “^
and save money because they go further
than others. Th ey are made especially
to suit IVestern farm conditions.
Giant Farm Powders— the product
o f the oldest manufacturer o f high ex­
plosives in the United States— are the
only genuine “ $i*»nt powders” for agri­
cultural use.
They are made in two
brands— Giant Stumping Powder, ideal
for blasting in wet ground; and Eureka
Stumping Powder, the money-saving, low-
freezing explosive for blasting stumps in
dry soil.
Dam an at ! aSabooa Lo-A toe
Moda by
S . T m H o w a 4 . L iU
Levi Strauss A Co., San Francisco
I..H X OSASOfdl/E •/ Iks PM E
Hugs Sums Spent for Chewing Gum.
Washington, D. C.—The chewing-
gum habit has coat the American peo­
ple for chicle alone nearly $35,000,000
In the last ten years, or almost five
times as much as we paid Russia for
Alaska, according to figures furnished
by the Bureau of Foreign and Domes­
tic Commerce, o f the Department of
Commerce. Norm ally our annual Im­
ports o f chicle amount to 7,000,000
pounds, for which we pay about $2,-
500.000 in the countries of origin, and
to which must be added customs du­
ties In our own ports of about $750,000.
Imports o f chicle gum during the
fiscal year 1916 were as follows: From
Mexico, 2,197,000 pounds; from Can­
ada. 2,181,000 pounds; from British
Honduras, 1,139.000 pounds;
from
Venezuela. 952,000 pounds; from the
Central American republics. 26,000
pounds; from all other countries, 5,000
pounds.
Chicle Is not produced In
Canada, but large quantities from oth­
er British possessions are handled
through the Dominion. • In 1913 the
total tmporta of the gum amounted to
13.759.000 pounda, and that Is the rec­
ord Importation for any one year. In
1915 the total was 6,500,000 pounds.
Chicle is the dried m ilky Juice of
the sapodilla tree, which is one of a
large lam lly o f tropical trees known
as bully-trees. Some o f the gum is
used as a substitute for gutta percha,
but the bulk o f It la used in the manu­
facture of chewing gum.
Always Busy, Too.
Hokus— He has a steady Job fo r the
rest of his life.
I’okus— Gee! W hat is he?
Hokus— A professional reform er.—
Ask your dealer for Giant Powders and blast­
ing supplies, i f he does not have them we shall
sec that you are supplied.
TH E G IAN T POWDER COMPANY, Con.
** E v e r y th in g fo r B la s tin g **
Horn« Offica : S A N FRANCISCO
Branch Offices:
Seattle, Spokane, Portland, Salt Lak«
C ity, Dcover
if
p
if
"Ì -k '
l
■ i sP'lLil
3» ’Litó
FREE BOOKS
We issue five valuable books.
They tell how to remove stumps
and boulders, blast ditches,
break up the subsoil, and have
earlier-bearing, thriftier or­
chards by blasting holes for
trees. U'rit/ for the book that
you prefer.
m
■riX ^ -¡¡r ,,
.
l* no more necessary
than Smal l pox. Army
TYPHOID
Ju d g e
experien ce has demonstrated
the airaoct miraculous e f f i ­
and harmlessness, o f Antityphoid Vaccination.
Be vaccinated N O W by your physician, you and
pour fa m ily. It is more vital than house insurance.
Ask your p hysician, druggist, or send fo r “ H a ve
F©u had Typhoid?’ * te llin g o f T y p h o i d Vaccine,
results from use, and danger from T yp h oid Carriers.
Metal Grain Bins
cacy,
FHC CUTTPt LA HOP A TOBY, MCfftflfY, CAL.
M o n c i m «AcciMts a srauas u a o it u. «. aov. u c e a ti
Made Him Nervous.
H ow
to stop dandruff
and loss o f hair
with Resinol
H ere is a simple, inexpensive
treatment that will generally stop
dandruff and scalp itching, and keep
the hair thick, live and lustrous:
At night, .presd the hair apart and mb a little
Ktninol Ointment into th* »calp gently, with
the tip ot the linger. Repeat this until the
whole scalp ha. been treated. Neat morning,
champ.-’ thoroughly with Reeinot Soapandhot
water Work the creamy Rcinol lather well
into the scalp. Rinse with gradually cooler
sealer, the last srater being cold. All druggatg
Mil Resinol Soap and Ointment.
A crowd o f dirty-faced urchins were
playing dangerously near the edge of
a Providence pier. Suddenly an old
■alt, who had been a fidgety onlooker
from the cabin o f his boat, emerged
from his favorite post and proceeded
to soundly thrash one o f the lads in
question.
Some passer-by, surprised by his
actions, stopped to question the old
tar thereon.
“ W al, I'll tell yar.” said the old fel-1
low as he regretfully ceased his hold
on the lad's collar. "'T a in ’t as I care
a hang whether they fall in or whether
they don't, but it's the danged uncer-
tainty about it that I can't stand.”—
Judge.
A
-fi-
R A T PROOF
R A IN P R O O F
RUST PRO O F
W R IT E FOR PRICES
Agents Wanted
Coast Culvert & Flum e Co.
Politics.
" I always like to meet a fellow who
P O R T L A N D . [K enton] O R E G O N
came from a farm,” remarked Con­
gressman Flubdub.
"Y e s ? ”
“ Yes. You can advise him to go
Can't Miss 'Em
back to it if he isn't a success, and
“ I've Invented something in an au­
congratulate him on leaving It if he
tomobile horn. It's got all the others
is.” — Louisville Courier-Journal.
backed o ff the boards.”
Not Baby's Color.
“ Can it beat those squawkers that
H s t . H ealth ?, Strong, B .n n t lfo l I j M
” 1 was rather surprised when the
Oculists and Physicians used Muriuc KJ t make a man jump almost out of hia
doctor told me not to give baby any Remedy
many years before It waa offered as s boots ?’’
blue milk.”
Domestic Eye Medicine. Murine Is 8UU Com­
“ Can it? Say, this horn o f mine
"W h y ? "
pounded by Our Physiclsns and guaranteed
scares ’em so they can’t get out of
“ O f course, baby is a brunette, and by them as a Reliable R elief for Eyes that Nerd
your way.”
blue is not her color. But I didn't sup­ Care. Try it in your Eyes sod In Baby a Eves —
pose that musty old doctors knew No Smarting — J u .l Eye Comfort. Buy Murine
of your Druggist — accept no Substitute, and If
Bad Advice.
about such things."— Louisville Cour­ interested writs for Book o f the Ere Free.
ier-Journal.
She— Did you let papa win from you
I l l B IN E E V E R E M E D Y CO., CH1CAUO
at poker, as I told you?
Or Buy Swordfish.
He— Yes, and he said that a dub who
Hard Tlmea.
played such a poor game should never
"H enford is a pacifist, isn’t he?”
A gentleman in New Orleans adver­
"Kahid!
Why. he wouldn't let his tised for a man to do chores around marry his daughter— never.— Boston
w ife have cartridge paper on their din­ the house and the advertisement was Transcript.
ing room w all."— Boston Transcript.
answered by a colored man.
Such is Life.
"A re you m arried?" asked the pros-
Its Status.
“ When we were first married I al­
spectlve employer.
“ Did Bibbs give his w ife her new
“ Yes, suh, I ’se married." replied the lowed my wife twenty dollars a week
I
car voluntarily?”
applicant, "but mah w ife is out of a for household expenses.”
" I rather think it was a case o f auto Job. Dat's why I'se got to s h if foh
"Y es, and now?”
suggestion."— Baltimore American.
“ She allows me a dollar and a half
m yself.”
I a week for lunches and carfare."
Prospect of Danger.
First Tommy (in the trenches'):
W o t ’cher lookin' so blue abaht. B ill?"
Second Tom m y: "Jest got a letter!
from the Missus, ter say 'er sister is |
puttin' up w iv ’er and 'as got the meas- !
les. It ain't 'arf a go, if ain’t w iv me
gotn* ’onle on leave tomorrer, and a
dangerous trouble like that in the
’ouse.” — London Opinion.
Fora
Galled
Horse
Spring Plow ing Is Delayed.
Baker, Or. — W h ile farm ers are
thankful that the return o f w inter this
week has checked the possibilities of
floods injuring the fields, it has set
K t t p t H im W orking
back spring plowing.
Farmers had
just started to break ground, with the
hopes o f an extra long season, when
the snow and cold stopped work. W ith
the prospect o f a long season and an
unusual amount e f water fo r irrigation,
A LI N l M B N T
much new land is to be broken and
bumper crops o f all kinds are expected
in the Snake R iver country, where the F o r G a l l s , W i r e
C u t«,
L am en ess,
season is already w ell advanced.
H A N F O R D ’S
Balsam of Myrrh
S tr a in s , B u n c h e s ,
Bulk Grain Handling Discussed.
Dayton, Wash. — A t the tri-county
m eeting o f the Farm ers’ Union o f the
counties o f W alla Walla, Columbia and
Garfield, the subject o f handling the
grain this year was discussed. The
price o f sacks is prcatically prohibi­
tive, so it is quite probable that many
grain tanks w ill be erected prepara­
tory to handling the crop in bulk.
I he explosives that get stumps out cleanest and cheapest
are those that have a heaving ana lifting effect, shattering the
stumps just enough to break them up. Then you can handle
them easily.
“ The farmer,” says an Experiment Station, “ should use
an explosive that stands all ordinary shocks o f handling and
does not easily freeze. He does not need the expensive nitro­
glycerine explosives.” Thousands use
r rnwm* evte mveotml lor ct*kir«* I to
Mamma Don’t you know that King
Solomon aald. "Spare the rod and
Too Smart.
apoll the child?"
W illie— Pa. do you know every­
Little Leo- Yea; hut he never anld
thing?
It until after he got ao old hla mother
I’a Yea. my aon. Why do you ask?
couldn't lick him.— Chicago
Dally
W illie— Why. I wanted to find out
N cw a.
why It la that the heavy end o f a
mutch In the "lig h t" end.
Appropriate Site.
Fast Seeks Wheat.
I’ a — Y ou go and take a walk, young
“ I ue« where they have been figh t­ man; you are getting too emarL
P ortlan d - - The recent advances in
ing near the site of the Uardcu of
the Eastern cash wheat markets have
Apparently Reconciled.
Kden."
resulted
in putting more life into the
“ W ell, why npt? Isn’t that where
" I notice one trend o f thought."
All the trouble started?"— Holtlmorc
wheat trade here than it has had for
"W h at is that?”
American.
’’.Most people have given up trying i several weeks. Prices in the North­
to figure the wherefore of the high ; west are now once more on a parity
Very Often.
cost of living, and are hustling for the I with Chicago, and a fa ir amount o f
price."— Louisville Courier-Journal.
business
is being done in wheat, ¡
"X la an unknown quantity, lan't It,
mamma?”
mainly the r*d varieties, fo r shipment
He Reckoned.
“ It la to your father when I auk him
to the Eastern states.
“ When did your boy Josh pass his | A t the Merchants’ Exchange, t h e 1
to give me one."— llaltlm ore American
examinations?”
*
feeding was more cheerful and bid |
“ I dunno, exactly." replied Farmer
Corntassel, "but I reckon It must have
been when nobody waa lookin'.”—*
M M L BRESHKOVSKAYA
Washington Star.
GripStill O
Hanging On '
S a v e M o n ey on Y o u r
S tu m p B la stin g —
T h ru sh ,
O ld
S ores,
N a il W o u n d s , F o o t R o t,
F is t u la , B le e d in g , E t c ., E t c .
Made Since 1846.
Pries 25c, 50c and $1.00
All Dealers
O R W R IT E
G. C. Hanford Mfg. Co
S Y R A C U S E , N . Y.
Too True.
The bride Is a pleasing young w o­
man, w ell known In Beardstown's
younger social set, and enjoys the ac­
quaintance o f every one who knows
her.— Beardstown Ullnoian Star.
a Cure* While You Walk.
•
Allen’* Poot-Eue is * certain cur« for hot,
(wretlng, cellui,am t swollen, aching feet. Sold
by e ll Druggists. Price Ac. Don't accept any
inbetltute. Trial r » « t » c e
FREE. Addrew
Allen 8. Olmsted. L eR o y. S. Y.
.
That Tired Feeling.
H e— But doesn't my devotion arouse
in you some feeling fo r me?
She— Oh, yes; the sort o f feeling
:>ne takes a tonic for In the spring.—
Boston Transcript.
Literal.
"Some, I am sorry to say, fall by the
wayside.”
'W ell, aren't they hitting the tra il?"
—Baltimore American.
When
Appetite
Rebels
■
■
2
at mealtime, you can rest
assured there is weakness
somewhere in the diges­
t i ve s y s t e m that calls
for immediate attention.
This suggests a trial of
MOSTETTER’S
Stomach Bitters
It helps Nature bring back the
appet i t e and aids digestion