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About Heppner gazette. (Heppner, Morrow County, Or.) 1892-1912 | View Entire Issue (April 27, 1911)
I have fbp prent- st BfiUir out: nowly patrnt oil article: carried in pocket. Send ti'C in stamps for sample to l'orket l)ior Lock Co., fciO Mi-hawk Bldt:., Portland, Oregon. MOHAIR WOOL and HIDES. Write TVxinv for Prices THE H. F. NORTON CO. S13anJ315 Front St. FOR TLASD, ORE. KODAKS AND KODAK SUPPLIES Writ for catjiloe-neji und lifpraturw. Developing fcnd printing. Mail orders (riven prompt attention I ortiand t-hoto Supply Co. 149 Third Street PORTLAND. ORE. MOHAIR St;tnp;iSsand THEO EEKNHE M CO. 247 Ash St.. Portland. Or. FARMS, ACREAGE CITY REAL ESTATE AND HOMES 530 Railway Exchange Building, Portland, Or, BELMONT AUTO SCHOOL WW. in t (he ( Aaron! iastroctwu a aTrtiaf V pmc iral work Hut rat, be Biodured. ibf Ian work, tna press and nnnag. Ymb eoatpretl audit shop and school room. Tuiiioi Ik $35 cash: $40 paynwats $10 per week. EtLWONT AUTO SCHOOL ft REALTY COMPANY. East 23d and Morrison, Portland, Or. 75T INSIST UPON WESTERN KT Kerosene MANTLES I JL KI.FIN CO.. Inc.. Distributer 28 Front Street Portland. O BOYNTON FURNACES Most economical and effective for houaa and school heating. J. C BAYER FURNACE CO. Tront and Mar ket Sts. Portland, Or. SEND FOR CATALOGUE. KILL YOUR MOLES, GOPHERS AND OTHER RODENTS Whitney's Rodent Torch will do the work. Fully tested at Lewis and Clark Fair and O. A. C. Address M. T. WHITNEY. Chitwood, Or. COFFEEC TEA SPICES BAKING POWDER EXTRACTS JUST RIGHT CLOSSrTAriFVFBI1 The comidence felt by farmers nd gardeners in Ferry s Seeds to-day would have been impossible to feel i any seeds two score of years ago. We have made a science of seed growing. always do exactly what you ' expect of them. For sale everywhere. FEKHY'S ISU SEED l &NKCU Free on request D. M. FERRY & CODetrolt. Hltoh. Knew His cosiness. "What you want to do is to have that mudhole In the road fixed," said the visitor. "That goes to show," re plied Farmer Corntossel, "how little jou reformers understand local con ditions. I've purty nigh paid off a mortgage with the money I made Laulin' automobiles out o' that mud i.ole." CI-"""-" Hard to Lie Up to. An example of greatness thrust upon one is an eleven-year-old boy living in Hamilton avenue, Yonkers. His name is George Washington. Ha was born on Christmas day and christened on Easter. The lad elcgs Jn the choir of St, Andrew's Me morial cb"f"H. Fciii.e ...t.t-ay. First Cat "How sweetly you sing! I oever heard anything so entrancing! What wag that last song?" Second Cat (sentimentally) "'If I had nine thousand lives to live, I'd live them all for you.' " Woman's Home Compan ion. Not a drop of Alcohol Doctors frnTib; very little, if any, alcohol these days. They prefer strong tonics and altera tives. This is all in keeping with modern medical science. It explains why Ayer's Sar saparilla is now made entirely free from alcohol. Ask your doctor. Follow his advice. A V puo.iih oaf formula from our mdioiuea Wo urtt you to COSBU t y our iers Unless there is daily action of the bow els, poisonous products are absorbed, causing headache, biliousness, nausea, dyspepsia. X'e wish you would ask your doctor about correcting your constipation by taking laxative doses of Ayer's Pills. aMid by tha J. C. Ayr Co., Lswoll, Mill. - AGENTS and SOLICITORS H FARM ORCHARD Aotes and Instructions from Agricultural Colleges and Experiment Stations of Oregon and Washington, Specially Suitable to Pacific Coast Conditions CARE OF DAIRY CALVES. Professor F. L. Kent, of the depart merit 'of dairying at the Oregon Agri cultural college, sets lortn in a care fully prepared paper the best method of caring for dairy calves. He has prepared a very complete set of direc tions which should be used in guiding the dairymnan in caring for his calves to the best advantage. One of the weak points of dairying is the usually unsatisfactory condition of the growing dairy calf. The pot bellied, unthrifty calf so often met upon dairy farms is really a travesty upon the industry There is no ex cuse for this. If proper methods are employed, excellent calves can be grown upon skim milk. Care, how ever, must be exercised from the time of birth; even before birth careful preparation should be made for this event. Every dairy barn should be supplied with one or more roomy, well-lighted, well-ventilated box stalls. Shortly before the cow is expected to freshen she should be placed in a box stall that has previously been thor oughly cleaned. If this stall has been much used as a hospital stall it should not only be thoroughly cleaned but dis infected as well. For this purpose a two per cent solution of Creolin, or one part of corrosive sublimate to .two thousand parts of water may be used. Use clean straw for bedding. Permit the calf to remain with its dam for about twelve house, after which take the cow to her regular stall and allow the calf to remain in the box stall for a few days if the stall be not needed for other purposes. It is considered not a good practice to allow the calf to remain with its dam longer than twelve or twenty-four hours. By leaving a calf with a heavy milking cow for alonger period than this it is liable to cause a serious shrinkage in milk production. About six hours af ter taking the cow away, milk her out clean and give the calf not to exceed three pounds of this freshly drawn milk. t It is a good plan whenever practic able to milk the cow three times a day for a few days and give the calf about three pounds of the freshly drawn milk at each milking. For the first week the calf should be fed three times daily and the whole milk should be continued until the calf is three weeks old; after this substitute from one-half pint to one pint of skim milk for the whole milk. In about a week or ten days the calf should be getting all skim milk. The change should be made very gradually. Even at this age unless the calf is very large and thrifty it should not be fed more than 10 or 12 pounds of milk daily. The skim milk should be fed at blood tem perature and sweet. Milk directly from the 5 separator while it is yet warm is the best to feed. Feed also from perfectly clean vessels. Un clean milk pails are the skim-milk calf's greatest foe. As the calf grows and develops the milk ration may be gradually increas ed until from 12 to even 20 pounds per day may be fed. The latter quantity, however, is the maximum. In fact the calf should be watched closely and upon the very first appearance of scours or a tendency to bloating the quantity of milk should be immediate ly reduced. Keep the calf in a clean pen that is frequently cleaned out and bedded with bright straw. A calf stanchion should be constructed so that each calf in the pen can be fastened in a sepa rate stanchion while being fed. Con struct it with a trough in front which may be utilized in feeding grain. When the calf is from two to four weeks old it will manifest a desire to take some solid food. Nothing i.s bet ter at first than equal parts of bran and whole oats. Feed a very little of this immediately after giving the milk and while the calf is still con fined in the stanchion. After a little when the calf eats the grain readily the bran may be omitted and whole oats given. This is one of the very best grain rations for calves for sev eral reasons . First, oats are rich in fat, which takes the place largely of the butter fat in whole milk; the chewing of the oat3 assists in the de velopment of the masseter muscles; the hull of the oat stimulates the de velopments of the rumen and in a me chanical way assists in the digestion of the casein. A rack should be provided in the pen so that hay may be fed. The best cured, brightest hay should be selec ted. A mixture of clover and mead- owgrasses is probably the best calf hay, but vetch and oats, or alfalfa, are also good. It is an excellent plan to supply a little kale, roots or silage. Succulent food in some form is very essential for the health and thrift of a, growing calf. The method outlined is j for the winter management of the! calf. A spring calf should be fed in 1 the same manner, but allowed to have the free range of a nicely sodded pas ture. Shade and also an abundance of clean water should also be provided, The essential requirements for the , Foolishly Expunged. I remember a passage In Gold smith's "Viiar of Wakefield," which he was afterwards fool enough to ex punge: "I do no' love a man who Is zealous for nothing." Parnuel John soa. Lofty Structure. Next to the Washington monumnt the new Pilgrims' monument on Cape Cod, Massachusetts, which Is 272 feet high. Is the loftiest structure of solid masonry on this continent. growing of a good, healthy, thrifty skim-milk calf are a clean pen or lot; milk fed sweet, warm and from clean vessels, regularly fed in not too large quantities; whole oats as a supple mental grain food with well cured hay and some succulent feed with winter rations. By the observance of these simple rules a skim-milk calf will be a delight to behold and the scrawney, impoverished little creatures which are so much in evidence at times will no longer mar the landscape of the modern farm. PRESERVING POSTS AND POLES By Prof. G. W. Peavy. Department of Foresti-y, Oregon Agricultural College. In the greater part of Oregon there is still such an abundant supply of timber that little thought has been given to economy in its use. The ex haustion of the timber resources of the East, together with the rapid increase in population in the Northwest, are rapidy producing conditions which will materially increase the value of all classes of wood. With the decreasing supply and increasing demand the price of the commodity must, of ne cessity, advance. Consumers of wood will naturally be forced to make use of poorer grades of material or else resort to means of prolonging the life of the stuff employed. In line with the idea of increasing the usefulness of timber by prolong ing the period of its utility, the Ore gon Agricultural college, through its department of forestry, his installed a plant for the preservative treatment of fence posts and other farm timbers which are used in contact with the ground. The equipment consists of two galvanized iron tanks, one cylin drical in form, 3 feet in diameter and 3 J feet high, and the other rectangu lar in form, 3 feet wide, 3 feet high and 8 feet long. The smaller tank is provided with a series of steam coils of inch pipe in the bottom. This is the hot bath tank. The other is the cold bath tank. The preservative used is commercial creosote. All timbers treated are peeled and thoroughly seasoned before the pre servative is applied. Fence posts, for example, are placed in the hot bath tank, with the temperature of the creosote raised to 215 degrees Fahren heit and allowed to remain about five hours. The fluid is kept to a level which reaches just above the point where the post sets even with the sur face of the ground. At the comple tion of the hot bath the posts are placed in the cooling tank for two or three hours. In this treatment the average fence post should absorb about two quarts of the preservative. To make the reason for the applica tion of the preservative clear, it should be understood that decay is due to the action of low forms of plant life known as bacteria and fungi. Fa miliar examples of fungi are the toad stools, which grow on damp, rotten logs, and the punks or brackets which are seen on the trunks of trees in the woods. These ouside forms, however, are not the cause of the decay. They are the fruiting bodies- which bear immense numbers of spores dust-like particles corresponding to the seeds of higher plants. Ihese spores find lodgment in dead portions of a tree or in down timber, and when moisture conditions are right begin to grow. The growth of the fungus in the inter ior of the wood consists of long, thin, film-like white threads, which, by re peated branchings, eventually pene trate the entire structure of the wood. So much of the wood fiber is eaten away or changed in composition that its strength is diminished. The. tex ture becomes brittle and disconnected, and the wood is commonly spoken of as rotten. The simplest way of prolonging the life of timber which is exposed to the attacks of fungi is through reducing the amount of moisture in the wood. It is common knowledge that green fence posts decay quickly. This is due to the fact that moisture condi tions favor the action of the fungi. Hence, as a matter of economy, posts and poles should never be placed in the ground unless they are thoroughly seasoned. However, since seasoned wood gradually absorbs moisture from the soil, some means of preventing fungus action on moist wood is desir able. That is the office performed bv the liquid used in timber treating. It poisons the food supply of the bacteria and fungi which produce decay. hxperts in the forest service esti mate the average life of all fence posts used in the United States to he about eight years. With proper pre servative treatment this life may be increased by fourteen years, giving a total service of twenty-two years for the treated posts. In other words, a treated post will last nearly three times as long as an untreated one. Setting a well-treated post saves the cost of setting three untreated ones as well as the price of two posts. This involves a business proposition which should be considered by the hopgrow- ers and ranchers of the state. She'd Been In Europs. Tm sfraid the ship might run In to an Iceberg. "That danger, auntie. Is v?ry remote." "Weil, give the cap tain a doilar, anyhow, and then he'il be extra careful." The Reason. Daughter Thpre ain't anybody corns In for dinner today, ma. Landlady ftTlmly) No; this Is the day that they all promised positively to pay. Puck. FASHIONS OF THE MOMENT. ITMPTUOUS! sumptuous! sumptuous! What I tell you three times must be true, and this is the word which best expresses the new silks dedicated to cor onation year, writes our special London correspond ent. Elghteen-carat gold, the most artistic of de signs, and the finest of fiber go to the making of the multi-colored silken brocades which we shall delight to honor, and which will, no doubt, with equal fervor, delight to honor us in the coming season, which has almost come. Simple designs in gold, some what oriental in effect, are interwoven upon foundations as soft and pliable as gauze, yet thick and solid enough for the making of frocks unlined. In contrast to this there is a very much entangled and very elaborate pattern with flowers entwined on waving lines of g6!d, and there are further conven tional and floral devices in gold and silver on dark or light foundations. The special attraction of most of the new silks is their double width, and for the contrivance of the straight, narrow frock it beseems us to "ac knowledge this gratefully. Crepe de chine Is again an established favorite, either plain or printed, or interwoven with gold, and gold plays its part on gauze, and on grenadine, and on charmeuse. Altogether, when " you come to investigate a selection of the silka of the hour you will cordially Indorse my verdict that sumptuous Is the one and only possible description What we shall do wilh these silk remains to be teen, but, of course, they are primarily dedicated to tne service of the court train or tc the evening dress of our greatest demand for we are to foot It merrily In 1911 On the whole it will he an economical purchase, the gown of geed silk, since it may be relied upon to outwear the gown of muslin or chiffon by at least a dozen times. A tunic and bodice of one of the brocades opening at one "lde of the front to show an under skirt of lace, and made with a short- waisted bodice with a little lace about the decolletage, with sleeves and bod ice cut in kimono fashion will repre sent the most patronized style, further elaborate possibilities being supplied by flat or round gold cords and tas sels. This reminds me of a strange coif fure which was my neighbor at the theater the other night. This was a flatly rolled turban of hair with a thick gold cord resting about an inch above the eyebrows and terminating in two tassels above the left ear! The effect was deflnite'y curious and al most as definitely Turkish. Fashion is hot with the Oriental plrlt. All the best theater cloaks are of Oriental embroidery, bordered with fur for the present, and liable to be denuded of It at any moment, while much favor Is still shown to pine-pat terned cotton as a foundation for day blouses veiled with ninon. Far newer than this latter, however, are the pat terened nlnons which are Inspired by the work of the Roumanians and the Russians; and for our hats and wraps we seem to have sought and found in splratton in the great, little Corslcati, for the upturned brim, the cockade, and the shrouding mantle with its military decorations all savor of Napo leon. Very pretty these new coats are, too and when diverging from the straight path they permit themselves gold, and black, and red braid, and gold buttons, and a lining of crimson. There Is a deal of crimson In the market, indeed red, white and blue are conspicuously loved, separately and together, and' what could be bet ter or more suitable for the moment? An excellent dark red dress that I have seen designed for spring wear fashioned with a short bolero and narrow kklrt piped on to It well above the usual waist line, a round, turn down collar of Roumanian embroidery, very tight long 6leeves cut In one with the bolero, which has a vest of white muslin with a soft plaited frill at one side and a rollarband outlined with black satin ruckled with gold In the center. A dark red Tegal hat trimmed with a black cockade with a group of blue beads In the center fin ishes this most admirably, and to be worn wi h It has been purchased a long ct of Mack lined with red, with epaulettes of black braid and small gold buttons. Talking of long coats remind me of capital specimen In raven blue sa'in wuicn 1 rnt'i ypsieruay. iins was c;u in one with Its sleeves, the siefves being rather wide at their base, while the trimming down the cent, r of the front was formed by f.fpares of Ori ental embroidery In different (hades of blue, and on ( v ry f-fji;e w as a Mr.d of braid, and turned 'own at t' e reck was a ma!l collar of white Llth lace, and the linirg win of bright blue, a color which was BPain repeated on the brim of the turban toque of black crinoline which crowned all these charms. Turlan torjues bearing clrollne crowns and straw brims held with feathers or flowers or bended orna ments are to have much rogue, and pretty '-hey are too. and comfortable 0 at that, while to the short woman they grant height, since they are very nar row, and the tall on that accouEt must not adopt them as millinery for the matinee. From the south, whence the new modes come, I hear of toques of roses and lilac with hovering buttei'fles, and of bright cerise toques gay with pur pie birds, and there are also rumors of simple tailor-made tweed frocks made in checks, and crowned with narrow pyramids of flowers. Again I have news of nlnon scarve hemmed with flowers. These last 1 feel I could cheerfully dispense with, finding the -soft satin scarf of black lined and fringed with a color, su premely becoming and engendering as much warmth as desirable when the fur boa need no longer be a circum stance of our necessity. The Batin scarves are not so long as those of last year, and there seems to be notion prevailing that one should be supplied to match every satin or mus lin frock. The tweed coats and skirts are best without such addenda, but piam-racea cloths may well be so treated, but it would seem that silks are to have it all their own way, and for everyday occasions the short dress made of soft satin will enjoy consid erable patronage; and floral musilns and crepe de chines, and foulards will only stand In the background un til May Is an established fact. After all there will be so many oc casions to wear go many frocks that the thrifty will doubtless hide their heads in the country, sing hey for the simple life and enwrap themselves In printed cambric and take earnestly to sport, or gardening, or even needle work. Apropos of needlework, the Industri ous may find much excuse for their labors in the popularity of bead trim mings which are to be bought ready- made at prohibitive prices under the best circumstances, and may yet be accomplished in a manner that will lead to triumph, by the skilled ama teur with a nice eye for co'or. There are several bead shops in town nowa days where every variety of bead and bugle definitely French and indefinite ly Oriental may be discovered, and amongst my recent investigations has been a length of black and green bro cade with the design carefulfy fol lowed out In dull gold bugles and some red and blue Oriental beads with a result that was surprisingly effective and bore no hint of home manufacture. Of course it is easy enough to contrive the many-beaded devices which decorate the latest mil llnery, and the beaded tassel may be calculated to bestow an air of ele gance on quite inexpensive straws. The illustrations shows a little even ing frock In silver-gray voile on trans parent silver turquoise embroidery, touched up with turquoise jewels. Early Betrothal. Under the headline "Infant He trothals" the American Hebrew telle of two patients Of the Jewish Mater nlty hospital, in New York, friends of ong standing, who "happened to in crease the population of the world In that building by a boy pnd a girl on the same day. They had often ex pressed the determination to, make a match between their offspring ancMhe occasion seemed so propitious that little Leonard Harnett and tiny R chel Marcus were betrothed to fach other In the presence of the staff be fore cither of them was a day old. I'nfnrtunatrly, love laughs at such bonds and the very fact of their being tkd together in this unceremonious way may turn tnem against each other. Fortunately, at present thf betrothal Is merely a pious wish and has no legal validity either In Jewish or American law. Salvage. Hotel Proprietor Was ther any thing of value in the trunk of that fel low who Jumped his bill? Clerk I should say so. It was full , of our linen and silverw are. Judjte, Jim lllp 4 " EsrnTfiES Suit in One Klcssr! Xmr profit for nn hoar or two m ihi tprwnutif of our eri Uilrln huiis da for peciftl ni.tlo-fcj iMwur tint for you UiaJiandfoinfit, tli mot iljrli.h nd lh tiioit durbl tvvr mad. Jutl show two or tbr of yuurfrltndilhe ami) lot of our flu. wooiiuiuuits, fftKnivro or iirefr tclMiudyiu itftva Mined wciu't. Vuu cn'if-U to orders. Our AO bttftutiful iiimplM ereitts t(initiou whcrctoi hnwn. NoDnvrww tuck mutton)! tlx pricit tinfura. Ynu Ulit uorivk. Kvcrvthlnt- if hiniNKlon kpiiruraJ tuhiwituiH hour' imnlaslion, Cnntumen trf (ooda on and mutt bo aiiflod will) tyl, fit and quality bora payinr. Wo Pay Cxpraaa on Cvaryihlnuf Yw) can nndnritll tverybody, Gnf ch'thai for your frianrfi at leaf coil niak whuletalar'ai j'ller'f and ro ut i asaier jjroiii. iu nmsni ui wel lost, clnaiiRHt and nioeat bunlnoM In Amertcal A HI Hualneaa that more UiAD di.ublsi your aarnlnRl. Wi van! yU torapf4MHtuinow I) jo 'l wait an til aometNUy alt taka tblianal builMta. No aiwlrn4 Mry. W furnish you our portfolio wiUi J tiiiii of tli a latest fcbriotmii oolong uHiUiyrm. uuyuuwant tnniwtii inan ordar lull and thlireturkblYTMoo? making huilnnaa thai will imis y.u rich? A hUI or latter mallml to uaaxoBuaslrMrna ami! olotliaaaada b bualuaaa. (S PARAGON TAILORING COMP'Y. Dept. 34, Chicago, III, TO MAKE DEVONSHIRE CREAM Let Milk Stand Until a Good Head of Cream Rises, Cook to Boiling Point A reader who was Interested In a Recipe for making Devonshire cream has kindly written as follows, regard ing method of procedure: "I used to work in a dairy at home where De vonshire cream was one of our spe cialties. The way we made ours waa to let the milk stand till a good head of cream rose on It. Then we lifted the tin, containing it onto a copper boiler of water, hot, but not boiling, and let it simmer until done. In this way, the cream is made sweeter, though good results can be obtained either way. One advantage In water scalding is that you cannot burn the cream as you might with stove scald ing. Care must be taken not to have the milk tin too full or it will lnk. The water must be of sufficient quan tity to float the milk tin. Q.ur copper was generally built In a house, but In my opinion where a stove Is used a large deep pan rilled with water would answer the same purpose." Mott vs wVl find Mrs. windows Soothing 7ruo tiie brat remedy to use tui liieir ciiliUitia iurlug the teething period. Forgivenl We can even take a charitable view of the time taken dally by the typ& writer girl for the arrangement of her hair. Her fingers are congested by the work of writing, and tired by contact with the hard keys of her machine; and the different feeling of her hair, and the little p'ays and movements of her fingers In adjusting It, are a dia- inct stimulation and relief. Paul W. Goldsbury, In riMn. Cures While You Walk. "'' ' Allnn's Foot-l-'..se in a pertain euro for hot. sn out itif;, ml his, mill swollen, lu-hlnt? feet. Sold by all DruugNt.s. Price J."e. Don't aeeent uny substitute. Trial ptu-kuco Fit EE. Aildrtnis VUeuS. Olmsteil, Le Uoy, N Y. Not to uu (nought Cf. "My dear," he feebly said, after they had permitted her to go to him after the operation, "I shall not re cover. They think I will, but they are mistaken. I feel it. I am go ing to die." "No, no, John!" she cried. "Don't say that! You mustn't die! I haven't a thing that Is Ct t wear to f Pain and Swelling seMom indicate in- erniil oran c trutililo. Thev lire tixuiillv lie re-ult of loi iil cold or intlMtnin.-ition which can be quickly removed by 11am lins Wizard Oil. Greaiai I .. , .y in Life. Neither rich furniture, nor abund ance of gold, nor a descent from an illustrious family, nor gieatness of au thority, nor eloquence and all the charms of speaking, can produce so great a serenity of life as a mind tree from gujlt, ktfpt untainted, not only from actions, Ditt purposes, tiat are wickc " i Constipation causes many serious dis eases, it is thoroughly cured by Doc tor Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. One a laxative, three for cathartic. 1 i.e i.iUobiLe iione. The "Real Moabite Stone" is a blaclt basaltic block, unearthed at Dlban in 1868, by Rev. F. A. Klelv, 3.8 feet by 1.2 feet In dimensions, which contains 34 liles In the Phoenician language. These chronicle the result of Mesha King of Moan, from Ahab King of Is rael. At least two replicas of this valuable stone have been made, but the original Is still In the Louvre io Paris. TRY MURINE EYE REMEDY for Red, Weak. Weary, Watery Kyea and Granulated Eyelids. Murine Doesn't Smart Soothes Kye Pain. Druggists Sell Murine Eye Remedy, Liquid. 2.rc, 50c, $1.00. Murine Kye Salve in Aseptic Tubes, 2nc. $1.00. Eye Books and Eye Advice Free by Mail. Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago, Mixed Metaphors. The famous commingling of meta phors beginning, "I smeil a rat; I shall nip him In the bud," has been surpassed. According to Punch a Yorkshire paper writes: "We hope Mr. Atkinson will keep his word and with the ability he has always shown tear to shreds and tatters the sub terranean methods of the clique which at present rides thp h'sh horse." n I have been using Cascareta for In. omnia, with which I have been afflicted for twenty years, and I can sa that Cm. carets have iriven me more relief than n. other remedy I have ever tried. I shall certainly recommend them to my friendj aa being all that they are represented." Thos. Gillard, Elgin, IU. PVwnt PlatbK. Potent. Tun Good. Do Good Nevr wk-n WmVeii or Gnp. We. 2c Kte. Niwr mid In bulk. rv nn. in MM (tsmpd CCU buarmntwl M nn or roof oionar back. til Wtt. 1 fW