Heppner gazette. (Heppner, Morrow County, Or.) 1892-1912, May 21, 1908, Image 7

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    iU selection, proportion and combination
of Ingredients.
in tbe process by which their remedial
values are uatruuieu unu preservea,
In effectiveness, usefulness and economy,
Curing the widest range of diseases,
Doing the most food for the money,
Haying the most medicinal merit,
And the greutest record of cures,-
Hood's Sarsaparilla
In usual liquid form or In chocolated
tablets known as Sarsatabs. 100 doses $1.
Something to Amuse Baby
A funny hook in colors Milled "Jingle Pook"
ent FKEE to any mother Rending name and ad
droHs of her baby and tops from two pound car
tonH of "20 Mule Team" I'ackatce Borax, with 4c
in stumps. Address I'ucilic Coast Borax Co., Oak
land, Cat
WANTED
INFORMATION
REGARDING
Farm or Business
inr Rnle. Not particular tilxut location.
Winn to hear from OWNER only who will
Red direct to buyer. Give price, descrip
tion and state when possession can be
hud. Address,
L DARBVSHIRE, Boi 228. Rodietler, N. Y.
The Victorian Knellnh.
The England which ioke the lan
guage which was already dying in the
elghteen-sixties was before all things
a world of the country. The sights and
sounds of nature played a far greater
part In the lives of the mass of the
people than they do to-day. This is re
flected, for Instance, In the way In
which birds and animals were spoken
of and the names given them. I have
myself once or twice heard old people
in the country speak of the hen as
"Dame Tartlet." One Is familiar with
the phrase from books, of course? It Is
Chaucer's "Pertolette" but once or
twice as a child I actually heard It. I
suppose It would be Impossible to beat
It anywhere now. London Outlook.
$100 Reward, $100.
The readen of this t aper will bo pleased t
learn tuat therein at least one dreaded disease
that science has been able to cure in all ill
stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh
Cure is the only positive cure now known to tin
medical fraternity. Catarrh be a constitu
tional disease, requires a constitutional treat
ment Hall's Catarrh Cine is taken internally,
acting directly uihh theblood and muenuH sur
faces of the system, thereby destroying the foun
dation of the disease, and giving te patent
strength by building up the constitu'ion and
assisting nature in doing its work. The pro
prietors have so much faith in itscurativepow
ers hat they offer OueHuiidred Do'larsforanj
case that it fails to cure. Send for list ol
testimonials.
Address F. J. CHENEY A CO., Toledo, O.
Bold by all druggists, 7re.
Take Hall's F aiui.y fills for constipation.
Tlioxe Hear Friends.
Nan This is Jack's latest
. .
picture,
Don't you think he looks better in profit
than in a front view?
Fan Much better, dear,
bow his bald spot.
It doesn't
In Ills Element,
Greasy Grimes You look as if you'd
managed to git in de swim somehow.
Tuffold Knutt Yep ; I'm a Fust Ward
floater now. Chicaco Tribune.
The '
General Demand
of the Well-informed of the World has
always been for a simple, pleasant
and efficient liquid laxative remedy of
known value; a laxative which physi-;he
clans could sanction for family use
because its component parts are
known to them to be wholesome and
truly beneficial ia effect, acceptable
to the system and gentle, yet prompt,
n action.
In supplying that demand with Its
excellent combination of Syrup of
Figs and Elixir of Senna, the Call- j ed ,n xVm, at the expense of so
fornia Fig Syrup Co. proceeds along ! ciety.
ethical lines and relies on the merits i He cannot make a speech, but he Is
of the laxative for Its remarkable j nn eloquent splutterer; and although
euccess. his manner to ministers Is wittily def-
That is one of many reasons why , ereutial, he has been known to ruin a
Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna is ' preacher's meeting and make the vlc
glven the preference by the Well-jtln19 of hIs b"rnin& incoherence look
Informed. To get its beneficial effects ke row- of paper dolls blown before
always buy the genuine manufac
tured by the California Fig Syrup Co..
only, and for sale by all leading
druggists. Price fifty cents per bottle.
Doesn't Fenae Illui.
"That now preacher you have is
pretty wide-awake young man, isn't he?" j
"Yep. Keeps right on preachin' when
everybody else is asleep." Cleveland j
Leader,
To succeed these days you
must have plenty of grit, cour
age, strength. How is it with
the children ? Are they thin,
pale, delicate ? Do not forget
Ayer's Sarsaparilla. You
know it makes the blood pure
and rich, and builds up the
general health in every way.
The children cannot possibly have rood
health unlen the bowels are In proper condi
tion. A sliiKKtsli Her Rl'es a coated tongue,
bad breath, constipated bowels. Correct all
these bT givlne; small Isiattve dose of Ayera
fills. All Yegetable, sugar-coated.
A
Made by 3. C. A yer Co., LoweU, llasa.
Also manuiaciurara or
HAIR V100R.
Afit'E CIKE.
CHEKRY PECTORAL
vers
For the
I Children
2l OlQ FflVOritCS
jV
0&
$ ' J
t$4J$$&
Tbe Crucifixion.
When I survey the wondrous Cross
On which the Prince of Glory dy'd, -
My richest gain I count but loss
And pour contempt on all my pride.
Forbid it, Lord, that I should boast
Save in the Death of Christ my God ;
All the vain things which charm me most
I sacrifice them to I lis Blood.
See, from Ilia Head, His Hands, I Lin
Feet,
Sorrow and love flow mingled down !
Did e'er such love nad sorrow meet,
Or thorns compose so rich a crown?
Ilis dying crimson, like a robe
Spreads o'er His Hody on the Tree;
Then am I dead to all the globe
And all the globt; is dead to me.
Worn the whole realm of nature mine,
That were a present far too small ;
Love so amazing, so divine
Demands my soul, my life, my all.
Kncaurageiiient,
It may not be our lot to wield
The sickle in the ripened field ;
Nor ours to hear, on summer eves,
The reaper's song among the sheaves.
Yet ours the grateful service whence
Comes, day by day, the recompense;
The hope, the trust, the purpose stayed
The fountain and the noonday shade.
&nd were this life the utmost span,
The only end and aim of man,
Better the toil of fields like these
Than waking dream and doubtful ease.
But life, though falling like our grain,
Like that revives and springs again;
And, early called, how blest are they
Who wait. In heaven, their harvest day,'
John G. Whittier.
HE IS A GOOD SAMARITAN.
Look After the I ndeserTlns; Poor
Say. No One Else V11I.
There Is a rich man In a Southern
city who makes the undeserving poor
his peculiar care, says the Independ
ent. His methods In dealing with what he
regards them as scientific from the
heavenly point of view. He Insists
upon a full catalogue of the victim's
transgressions.
He claims that this Is done on the
theory that a physician first adminis
ters an emetic in case of poisoning.
Then if the patient Is an utterly lost
A,i i i, f i
, , . . ... . i ' srora goatf Do coyotes annov themt '
takes her home with him, where she,8 6 ' f t v
js quartered in tbe guest chamber and
treated by the family as the welcome
guest whose presence there is in no j Angora goats. To secure them, a fence
way remarkable. ghould be of a kind that will not per-
For our scientist claims that it Is mit the animals to climb, and from
the loss of the sacred home conscious-1 four to five feet high. It should be so
ness In such women which casts them j constructed that a goat cannot jump
so far down, and his purpose Is to re-1 Y" .' .an? Preferably should be made
, , , , . 1 of wire instead of boards. A wire fence
store the same by his own fireside, , mado of WQven wir(J and about fifty.four
which is particularly attractive, In j jncb.0s high should nold them. Kemem
that he has a wife and many young . ber, that if the animals can get any
children. Nothing Is said to the for-' sort of vantage from which to jump,
lorn one to remind her of her shame; 'they will go over the fence. The goats
she is simply left to get well, as the are Prett7 Sood on the defensive, hence
And It Is astonishing how many of
them do get well. Ills boast Is that
hasj married his girls happily all
over the country, for he Is an enthusi
astic believer in wedlock. Upon a re
cent visit to a distant city he remark
ed to the editor:
"I married one of my girls off In
this town ; couple doing well ; moving
In the best society. Good as the rest,
too, now. But It's a secret ; If society
knew It would abolish her." He wink-
the breath of a living disciple.
An Anchor to Windward.
' The solemn-faced man who drove the
stage between Willowby nnd Green
field never lost an opportunity to dis
play his knowledge to a new pass
enger, nor had he ever been known '
to suppress his opinion on any subject, horses." I. M. IT.
m matter what It might be. "They j "guch a comparison is impossible,
tell me you're tbe man that wrote thejgince the feeds yon mention do not fill
story that s running In one o' the big ; the same need. The food value of car
magazines. I forget which 'tis," he j rots is very low, but the effect they
said one day to a cheery passenger who I have in toning up the system, and keep
had been endeavoring to ask a few I !n ' " running order is very
questions himself.
"I believe I am," admitted the gen
tleman. "I've never turned my hand to writ
ing," said the stage-driver, flicking his
horses in meditative mood. "No, sir,
I've been too much took up with other
things, but I read everything, most. I
was having n little talk with Bill
Sears alMuit you yesterday. We'd both
been reading your last book before
this new one. Now, do you rely en
tirely on what you write for a liv
ing?" "Not entirely," said the author, wit
due humility.
"That's what I thought when I fin
ished the book." and he stage-driver
looked kindly at the man of letters.
"I'm real glad for ye that you've other
means," he Bald, benevolently. "Got
'em well Invested. I expect, top. I told
Bill Sears that was most likely the
case."
1 "I hope." says a man of 20. "tht
th Intra will be better to-morrow." "I
hope," he says when he Is past
"that they won't be any worse."
RAISING OF WHEAT.
Advantages of Correct Method of
Growing and Marketing.
By 8. C. Armstrong. Washington Stats Collars,
Pullman. j
We must first find out what the ex
isting demand le going to be, and then,
if possible, meet that demand; lor if
j t l , I. - : i -f .u ;
r uo mw i"" l"
aemana, some one eise win, ana we
will be forced to a lower level than we
should be. Congequtntly, In the pro
duction of wheat, we have to study the
lt.A. . ,.,. ,1 !,
somebody else who Is growing wheat,
not out neighbor, necesFarily, but our
neighbor's section of the country. A
man will go where he can get the beat
wheat, if he wants to hnv. and ir we
i -- - ,
have not the best, we w ill lose the trade.
We of the wheat producing districts
of Wai-hinuton are fortunate in having
tbe best country for the production of
wheat on earth, and we should use the
utmost diligence to see that we employ
only the best methods. If we do thie,
we can place Washington at the head of
the wheat producing regions of the
globe, and the brand of the "Evtrgrepn
State" on a barrel or Rack of flour will
be known as a mark cf perfection the
world over.
We, the public, should commence to
raise the grade standard. The slate
train commissioner is at present forcing
the purchaser to accept No. 2 as No. 1;
we cannot expect to getas much for No.
1 wheat that tests 68 pounds as our
neighbors can for wheat that teste bet
ter. Because this state of affairs exists,
we are sending out, each year, .wheat
less Bought for than wheat grown in
many other countries.
We should insist that every grain
grower in tbe stats uss inch oare in the
produotionh of his wheat that the re
sulting higher standard will increase
the demand for oar wheat. If we im
prove the quality of our product, the
etate grain commissioner will be forced
1.. t-An.A . ,1,M
in this way see that our standard is
above the standard of every other wheat
producing state. By doing this, we
would cause our wheat to be quoted at
fancy prices. We should make our
product so good that we would be will
ing to have our name and address print
ed on it, so that as it goes out into the
markets of the world, people the world
over will know that we are proud of our
product.
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS.
Valuable Information to Pacific North
west Irqjirtrs
By J. L. Ashlock, Washing-ton Experiment Sta-
tion, Pullman.
Eyan "Has mankind ever been able
to devise a fence that will stop an An-
"There are no domesticated animals
that are as iant to keen nenned nil as
headway in attacking them."
Glenwood, Idaho "Is 'quack gras'
a dangerous pest! How may I kill
morning-gloriest " 1 C. B.
" 'Couch grass' is another name for
this pest, and it is certainly dangerous
when it once has escaped into a garden.
In the Eastern States it is reported
quite often, but I have not been in
formed that it is in the Northwest in
any great abundance. The morning
glory is even more dangerous than
quack grass. Fall plowing and cover
ing with straw or manure are fairly
good means of destroying it, but it is
nearly impossible to kill it by fall plow
ing." Wolf Creek, Mont 'yiow much al
falfa seed should be sown per acret
Which is better, fall or spring seed
ing! " W. C.
"If moisture conditions are all right,
fall seeding will do in some regions.
Spring seeding should be done bo as
to avoid damage by frost when the seed
is germinating. Twelve to fifteen
pounds per acre is about right for broad-
, cast seeding, but if a drill or seeder is
used, ten or twelve will do."
Grass Valley, Or "Please tell me
concerning the comparative value of
wheat, hav. and carrots as a feed for
important. A horse could eat a peck of
carrots per day to a very good advan
tage, but you should not attampt to
substitute them for hay. The same is
true in making a comparison of wheat
and raw carrots for hog feed, although
up to the amount that a hog will eat,
the carrots will replace a certain por
tion of the wheat. I can safely sav
that where carrots will yield twenty
tons per acre, you will find it highly
profitable to feed them to hogs to the
fuH capacity of their appetities, provid- j
ing you feed soma grain in connection
with the corroti; but you will be un
able to keep stock hogs on carrots alone,
as they contain too mmll a percentage
of bone-and muscle making material."
Getting Acqnalnted.
"My dad kin lick your dad," said th
dirty faced boy.
"I don't know whether he kin or not."
said the new boy on the other side of the
back yard fence, "but I'll bet my ma kin
outtnlk yonr'n." Thicaeo Tribune.
Missouri marketed lUT.lOo.UOS dozens
of eggs last year, for which was received
mor than w- W100- Added to this
"' ,he items of live and rl poultry
and feather, making the comfortable sum
1 of nesrly f 4f.rtOMN0 for poultry pro-
Hurts for the last vear. 1
i t
I
tbe Gentle Itcliufr.
"Immeasurable are the rebuffs thai
he helpers of the poor, the seekers af
ter charity for their suffering brothers
undergo," said a New York charily or
ganization olll.'lal. "A friend of mine,
a Methodist minister In a small west
ern town, told me the other day of his
last rebuff, a not unkind one. Enter
ing the office of the local weekly, the
, minister said to the editor
'"I am soliciting aid for a gentleman
of refinement and Intelligence who Is In
dire need of a little ready money, but
who Is far too proud a man to make
his sufferings known.'
sufferings known.'
Why,' exclaimed the editor, push
ing up his eyeshade, 'I'm the only chap
In the village who answers that de-
i scrlption
Whut's this gentleman's
uujjic
"'I regret,' said the minister, 'that I
am not at liln-rty to disclose It.'
" 'Why, it must be me, said the edi
tor. 'It Is me. It's me, sure. Heaven
proper you, parson, in your good
work.' '
What MaLf the Heart lJeatt
Prof. Jacques Loeb, the celebrated
biologist, in bis book, "Dynamics of
Living Matter," has shown that a strip
cut from the ventricle of the heart put
In a solution of chloride of sodium will
continue to beat for a number of days,
until putrefaction sets in. He says this
can be done with an ordinary muscle
after It has been extirpated from the
body. This would tend to prove that
the heart Is a, chemical machine and
that it Is all due to chemical action.
The muscular contraction is probably
due to the substitution of sodium for
calcium salts In the cells of the mus
cles. The difficulty of this theory is that it
does not explain tbe control of the
muscles. It Is plain that the problem
of control Is not solved by the chemical
theory.
I Mothers will, find Mrs. WinsWs Soothing
tjrapuewiinimwt wubmiiiuihuuth
Diacoverina; Writers.
The rejection of a manuscript often
left a pang, but the acceptable manu
script, especially from an unknown
hand, brought a glow of joy which
richly compensated me for all I suf
fered from the others. To feel the
touch never felt before, to be Che first
to find the planet unlmaglned In the
illimitable heaven of art, to be in at
the dawn of a new talent, with the
light that seems to mantle the written
page, who would not be an editor for
such a privilege? I do not know hoiw
It is with other editors who are also
authors, but I can truly say for my
self that nothing of my own which I
thought fresh and true ever gave me
more pleasure than that I got from the
like qualities In the work of some
young writer revealing his power.
W. D. Howells In Atlantic.
CITP St. Vitus' Panee and all Nervons DUanes
II I 0 Permanently cured by Dr. Kline's l.rt-at
.Nerve Restorer. Send for rltrx fZtrlal bottle and
treatise, ur. it. ii.ii.iine, ixL, 2i Aicn tu, riiiiu.,i'a.
The Master's Title.
Prof. Key when head master of a
large London school was one of tbe
most genial gentlemen that ever filled
that position. He was fond of encour
aging fun in his boys and was not un
willing to recount occasionally during
class time when anything prompted it
the manners and customs of countries
he had visited. On one occasion he was
elling his class about Spain and said :
"Do you know, boys, that when a
man attains to eminence there he Is not
called 'sir,' but is given the title of
'don?' "
One of the boys here called out:
"Then, I suppose, sir, they would
call you Don Key?"
The gravity of the class was com
pletely upset for the remainder of the
afternoon. Strand Magazine.
Considerate.
In a country church one Sabbath,
ns the congregation were rising for the
first hymn, an old lady entered the
church at the same time. She held up
ber band, exclaiming: "Keep your
s-ents. Iosh, ye needna arise, though I
v ' " 1 nrtnn Express.
MADE FOR SERVICE
IN THE ROUGHEST WEATHER
AND GUARANTEED ABSOLUTELY
WATERPROOF
POMMFT.
A M.X a AW
, STTfKFD
n r a
I 1113 UUUC IIIUI l
ond the word
Tower on the
buttons distin
auish this hiah
grade slicker from
Ihe just as good
to feO&TO U & A
Brands
MOTEL MOORE
im
OriiX" ALL THE YE Alt
Clatsop Beach Seaside, Oregon
The
Pirertly on tbe beach overlooking
the ocean. Hot salt baths and
Plirr UflllCC Rarf balking. Kerrea
ULIrr nUUdC tloa pier for fUhlnf.
fir Son parlors. Electric lighta. Ilre
ur place and steam beat. Fine walks
nDtPflW" ana drlTC. (ira foods a spee
URlUUrt ,T. Rate, f J.50 and $.1.00
per day. " special rates by tbe week.
4
DAN. J. MOORE, Proprietor
P N U
No. 21-08
'HEN writing; to advertisers pleaa
mention this paper.
PUTNAM
Mr'A
v, ir isw-b.
color more rowls briehter suid faster colors than any other dye. One lOc package colors silk, wool and cc
and ts ruaranteed to give perfect ults. Ask dealer, or we will send post paid at 10c a packape. Writ
bowtodye,bieachuidn:a coUra, MONROE DRUG COMPANY, Qu
What is Pemn&?
Is it a Catarrh Remedy, or a Tonic,
or is it Both?
Some people call Peruna a great tonic Others refer to Percna as a great
catarrh remedy.
Which of these people are right? Is it more proper to call Peruna a ca
tarrh remedy than to call it a tonic?
0or reply is, that Peruna is both a tonic and a catarrh remedy. Indeed,
there can be no effectual catarrh remedy that is not also a tonic.
In order to thoroughly relieve any case of catarrh, a remedy mnst not only
have a specific action on the mucous membranes affected by the catarrh, bat it
mast have a general tonic action on the nervous system.
Catarrh, even in persona rho are otherwise stron?, h a weakened condi
tion of some mucous membrane. There must be something to strengthen the
circulation, to give tone to the arteries, and to raise the vital forces.
Perhaps no vegetable remedy in the world ha3 attracted eo much attention
from medical writers as KYERASTIS CANADENSIS. The wonderful efficacy
of this herb has been recognized many years, anil is growing in its hold
upon the medical profession. Vhen joined wilh C'UBI.23 and COPAIBA a
trio of medical agent3 is formed m Peruna which constitutes a specific rem
edy for catarrh that in the present state cf medical progress cannot be im
proved upon. This action, reinforced by such renowned tonics as C0LLIN
S0NIA CANADENSIS, C0HYDALI3 FORMOSA and CEDE0N SEED, ought
to make this compound an ideal remedy for catarrh in all its stages and locations
in the body.
)From a theoretical standpoint, therefore, Feruna i3 beyend criticism. The
use ,of Peruna, confirms this opinion. Numberless testimonials from every
quarter of the earth furnish ample evidence that this judgment i3 not over
enthusiastic. When practical experience confirms a well-grounded theory the
result is a truth that cannot be shaken.
Manufactured by Peruna Drug Manufacturing Co., Columbus, Ohio
Would Ask Xo Merer.
Mrs. Vick-Senn What do you suppose
yeu would do if you were to meet the
fool killer?
Her Husband I'd tell him I was the
man he was looking for, all right. I have
just given orders to have that new addi
tion to the house torn down and built
again exactly as you want it.
o'
3
PvHEUMATISM
is most painful.
What's good?
Gives instant relief.
Removes the twinges.
USE IT, THEN YOU'LL KNOW
25c ALL DRUGGISTS 50c.
1
mm
Calling; Ills Attention.
Mr. Lingfi-Iong I bad a queer adven
ture this afternoon
Miss de Muir (with a swift glance at
the clock) Y'ou mean yesterday after
noon, I presume.
ICaV
No old sore exists merely because the flesh is diseased at that partic
ular spot; if this were true simple cleanliness and local applications would
heal them. Whenever a sore or ulcer refuses to heal readily, the blood is at
fault ; this vital fluid is filled with impurities and poisons which are being1
constantly discharged into the place, feeding it with noxious matter and
irritating and inflaming the nerves and tissues so the sore cannot heal.
These impurities in the blood may be the remains of some constitutional
trouble, the effect of a debilitating spell of sickness, leaving disease germs
in the svstein, or the absorption by the blood of the fermented refuse matter
which the bodily channels of waste have failed to remove. Again the cause
may be hereditary, the diseased blood of ancestry being handed down to
posterity ; but whatever the cause, the fact that the sore will not heal shows
the necessity for the very best constitutional treatment. There is nothing
that causes more worry and anxiety than an old sore which resists treatment.
Every symptom suggests pollution
and disease the discharge, the red,
angry looking flesh, the pain and in
flammation, and the discoloration of
surrounding parts, all show that deep
down in the blood there are morbid
and dangerous forces at work, con
stantly creating poisons which may
in the end lead to Cancer. Local
applications are valuable ot.1v for
their cleansing and antiseptic effects;
they do not reach- the blood, where
the real cause is located, and can
therefore have no real curative worth.
S. S. S. heals old sores by going down
to the fountain-head of the trouble
and driving out the poison-producing
p;erius and morbid matters which are
keeping the ulcer open. It removes every particle of impurity from the cir
culation and makes this life-stream pure, fresh and health-sustaining. Then
as new. rich blood is carried to the place the healing begins, all discharg-e
ceases, the inflammation leaves, new tissue and healthy flesh are formed,
and soon the sore or ulcer is well. S. S. S. is the greatest of all blood puri
fiers and finest of tonics, just what is needed in the treatment, and in addi
tion to curing the sore will build up and strengthen every part of the system.
Special book on Sores and Ulcers and anv medical advice desired furnished
free to all who write. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, GA,
ILL
EVERY
MEMBER OF THE FAMILY.
MEN, BOYS, WOMEN. MISSES AND CHILDREN.
W. L. Douglas make and soils mora Sft
man's SH.60, $3.00 and S3.S3shoaa
than any thor manufacturer In tha
UKO rprld. bacauaa ifiey hold thalr
ah a pa, fit hatter, woar lonocr. and
lSF " or praatem vmlua than any
47 shoes In tha world to-da v.
W.L. Ooug'as $4 and $5 Gil Edge Shoes Cannot Ba
"' t'TION'. W. I. Drs-llis name aid prife u stamped on bottom. Takf Snh.tltute.
8.M by the be shoe rtralfrs eierywbere. SUma ma.lcl Irom f-iorT to anr pan of the wori-l. ULus.
trated Cm Ion free uuj address. W. 1 UOl'ULAS UrucUtuo, Maaa.
FADELESS DYES
Taking o Chnnces.
"Oh, the borrow of it!" sobbed the
fair maid. "I.nst night I refused Mr.
Blank and this morning his body was
found In the river."
"Poor fellow !" murmured her gin
friend. "I supiwse he was afraid you
might change your mind."
-
Shop Talk Barred.
Friend (at wedding) Where are yon
going to spend yoar houeyruoon. dear?
Blushing Bride 'b ! You mustn't let
my husband htar you ask that question.
Lon't you know he's a beekeeper?
WW
0 1
HEALS
OLD SOSES
I waDt to recommend S. S. S. to any who are
in need of a blood puriSer.'and especially as a
remedy for sores and obstinate ulcers. In 1877
I had my leg badly cut on the sharp e dje of a
barrel, and having on a blue woolen stocking
tbe place was badly poisoned from the dye. A
great sore formed and for years no one knows
what I suffered with the place. I tried, it
seemed to me, everything I had ever heard of,
but I got no relief and ! thought I would have
to go through life v.'ith an angry, discharging
sore on my leg. At last I began the use of
S. S. S., and it was but a short time until I saw
that the place was improving. I continued it
until it removed all the poison from my blood
and made a complete and permanent cure of
the sore. JSO. ELLIS.
250 Navy Street, Brooklyn, N. Y.
other.
Equalled At Any Price
cotton equally well
e tor . tes iccius)t
Qulncy, LUnoia.
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Hzelunct!.