Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, April 2, 1915, Page 3

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FRIDAY, APRIL 2, 1915, ITCHING ECZEMA 1S DRIED RICHT UP WITH SULPHUR Use like cold cream to subdue irritation and clear the skin, Any breaking out or irritation on the face, arms, legs and body when accom- panied by itching, or when the skin is dry and feverish, can be readily over- come by applying a little bold-sulphur, says a noted dermatologist. He informs us that iold-aulphur in- stantly allays the angry itching and irritation and soothes and heals the Eczema right up leaving the skin clear and smooth. Bold-sulphur has occupied a secure position for many years in the treatment of cutaneous disorders be- cause of its parasite-destroying prop- erty. Nothing has ever been found to take its place in treating the irritable and inflammatory skin affections. While not always establishing a ent cure it never fails to subdue the itching irri- tation and drive the Eczema away and it is often years later before any erup- tion again um)eurs. Those troubled should obtain from any druggist an ounce of bold-sulphur, which is applied to the affected parts in the same manner as an ordinary cold cream. It isn’t unpleasant and the prompt relief afforded, particularly in ithing Eczema, proves very welcome. F BACKACHY OR HDNEYS BOTHER Eat less meat and take a giass of Salts to flush out Kidneys— Drink plenty water. Uric acid in meat excites the kidneys, tiiey become overworked; get sluggish, ache, and feel like lumps of lead. The urine becomes cloudy; the bladder is irri- tated, and you may be obliged to seek re- lief two or three times during the night. When the kidneys clog you must help them flush off the body’s urinous waste or you'll be a real sick person shortly. At first you feel a dull misery in the kid- ney region, you suffer from backache, sick headache, .dizziness, - stomach : gets sayr, tongue coated and you feel rheu- matic twinges when the weather is bad. Eat less meat, drink lots of water; also get from any pharmacist four ounces of Jad Salts; take a tablespoonful in & glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will thien act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has been used for generations to clean clogged kidneys and stimulate them to normal activity, also to neutralize the acids in urine, so it no longer is a source of irritation, thus ending bladder weakness. Jad- Salts is inexpensive, cannot in- jure; makes a delightful effervescent lithia-water drink which everyone should take now and then to keep the kidneys clean and active. Druggists here say they sell lots of Jad Salts to folks who believe in overcoming kidney trouble while it is only trouble. SIGE TEA TURNS GRAY HAI DARK I’s Grandmother’s recipe to bring color, lustre and thickness to hair when faded, streaked or gray. That beautiful, even shade of dark, rlossy hair can only be had by brewing - mixture of Sage Tea and Sulphur. ‘our hair is your charm. It makes or wars the face. When it fades, turns :ray, streaked and looks dry, wispy and ‘raggly, just an application or two of \we and Sulphur enhances its appear- nee a hundredfold. Don’t bother to prepace the tonic; you «n get from any drug store a 50 cent ‘wttle of “Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur {air Remedy,” ready to use. This can ulways be depended upon to bring back the mnatural color, thickness and lustre of your hair and remove dandruff, stop acalp itching and falling hair. Everybody uses “Wyeth’s” Sage and Sulphur because it darkens so naturalLy and evenly that nobody can teil it has been applied. You simply dampen =2 sponge or soft brush -with -it and -draw this through the hair, taking one small ctrand at a time; by morning the gray linir has disappeared, and after another application it becomes beautifully dark and appears glosey, lustrous..and abun- iant. « STOPS. HEADACHE PAN, NEURALGi Don’t suffer! Get a dime pack-. of Dr. James’ Headache Powders. You can clear your head and relieve a dull, splitting or. violent throbbing headache in a. moment with .a .Dr. James’ Headache Powder. This old- time headache relief acts almost magi- cally. Send some one to the drug store nnw‘:vr?‘:_iqc sckage and s o ments 8 .you. take a wder will wonder what 'bécame ol;’o the ’he’i?l- ache, neurslgia .4n@ pain. 'Stop asuffer- ing—it's needless. Be sure you get what you ask for, POINTS TO OBSERVE WHEN BUYING A HORSE In buying a horse be sure to choose one of quality, says a writer in the American Cultivator. See that he has good heels, well rounded and tough. wiry feet. See that he has good joints ‘and a proper 'slope to his pastern, not straight up and down, so every time the weight of ‘the horse comes down there is a great jar, and the jar passes up from tendon to tendon, clear to the muscles of the shoulder. but if there is a slope to the pastern there is a spring there. and the jar is broken. and remember that practically two-thirds of the horse’s weight is carried on those front legs, so it is very neces- sary to break that jar, which will certainly be there if there is no.slope to the pastern to make the weight come down easy. We do not want a horse sprung in the knees, because it injures those knees; we want the spring at the pastern. We want a clean, flat leg. covered with fine, silky hair, because the hair on the leg indicates the quality of the bone under that bair, also the quality of the tendon. The horse that has coarse, kinky hair on his leg has a poor quality of bone. Why do we want that sloping pastern on the hind legs? Because there is the propelling power of the horse. If that In selecting a horse see that the animal haw a clean, smooth, well butit hock, because if the horse has & loose, beefy.hock it sprains very easily. If-it.xprains on the inside nature puts on a patch and we.calt 1t'a spavin. If If 1s one of those hock joints that show a hock cur- vature then the patch put on is called a “‘curb.” ‘The fllustration shows a curbed hock. pastern is straight be bhas no leverage. no fulecrum power in that joint. If it is straight behind and you put him to work those tendons shorten up a little, the ankle knuckles over and we call him *‘cock ankled.” Then your horse should be well mus- cled on arm and shoulder and on his thigh, especially well muscled over the ioin, because those muscles are worked hard. Then he must have a short back; he must be comparatively long from the point of the shoulder to the point of the hip. but his back should be short- ened up by a good length of hip and well coupled loin, high wither and some slope to the shoulder. Of course. a run- ning horse and a trotting horse need a very sloping shoulder. A horse to have a good walking gait must have some slope. 8o he can put his feet ahead. Then, again, he needs some height to | his withers, so be can pick up his feet and put them ahead with a clean me- chanieal aetion withont stubbing bis toes, Boats Without Metal Without wails, crews o vodts the Ingenions natives of Andin, o COULEry lying south ot China within the Froepen protecturate, ure able to build strong, light boats, sume of them of lurze size, containing no wetal of nny Kind. savs Popular Mechanics. Theu sampans as the native boats are calied. are made ot five planks joined together without curving or the use of ribs rrom one et to the other. The planss used are pierced at ntervals -of aboul ewznt inches at points directly opposite eacth other. These pertforutions form wor tises in the stipe of double eyelers, through which rattan ropes are passed, tightly binding themw together ‘T'he joints are calked with vegetable tiver, and over these joints .are .aid short lengths of .bourd, lapping over one an other. These act as stiffeners, strongly re-enforcing the boat from end to eud and wakiug it water tgbt. The Drugless Era. We were tatking um&(.develqp_ment in' medica! science when & -prominent ‘doctor made this rather startHug ob- servation: “The number -of prescriptions writ- ten by physicians today is very much smaller than it was eight or.ten yeuars ago. | .beljeve that In about fifteen more years .the writlng of any pre scriptions for medicine will be a very rare occurrence.” “What." 1-mquired. 18 going to tnke the-place or drugs?"- e b s ““Wall,” replied: thin obsgrvant :stu. dent of events as well as of buman ihealth, “the use of serums mad. other meaps of warding off diseane‘will do the wwork, :and ‘what ihéy cspoot do phyriciaps will. - | Mrs, 3. Borden Harriman 1s'writhig a novel based on the Colorado strike. THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER ' e » . ‘§ JUST had to take ‘salts’ everysooften. But, oh -- how I dread- ed it! My stomach felt weak, upset and nervousfor hours after it. That’s why these Webster's " Sodetts: are what I havebeenlookingfor, for years.” ‘We have any number of cus- tomers tell us that about these little “slip-and-go-down” wafers filled with a scientifically meas- ured dose of an ideal combina- tion salt — Sodium Phosphate with a newly discovered chemi- cal which both reinforces and modifies the effect of Sodium Phosphate. Tasteless. Effect- ive. Nodistressing effervescing gas. We recommend Sodetts — in hemgy vest pocket sige packages - 25¢. WE will have a big shipment of Cut Flowers and Potted plants for Easter Sale. You can make the best selection here, secure prompt an courteous atten- tion and pay the lowest price. | CityDrug Store E. N. French & Co. We Solicit Your Earliest Patronage Difficult Trading. The trade between India and Tibet has to be carried through lofty pass- es between 14,000 and 18,000 feet high, most of which are practically impassa- ble during seasons of heavy rain and snow. Sheep and also crosses between yaks and ordinary cattle are used as beasts of burden. The most important route into Tibet from India is from Siliguri. near Darjeeling in northern Bengal, and across the small frontier state of Sikkim.to Gyantse and-Yatung in Tibet, the two leading trade marts authorized by the existing convention. The other chief means of access to Tibet are from Almora, in the north- ern part of the united provinces. and from Simla over the Simla-Tibet road to (Gartok.in western Tibet, which s at about 14,200 feet elevation above the sea. As we can furnish you the finest Cut Flowers, Carnations, Roses, Easter Lilies and all kinds of Assorted Plants. We will have flowers for sale every Satur- day and Sunday. H We offer special bargains on Home Made Gand, snemals fl" Easmf Candies and fancy boxes for Easter. See our windows and come here for your ‘Easter geods for we have the largest and finest assortment we have ever had. Bemidji Candy Kitchen Phone 24 - GUST BROWN, Proprietor ‘Wellésley college e een-yea; e am '"sm;:e“men’sé 'llmutrl.holrv petty KK K KKK KK KKK KK KK completed '@ ‘fund’ to ‘purchase aid |is the official buyer for the Andrew’s | meannesses as.if they were all a nec- * DON'T NEGLECT THAT COUGH * |equip 'a military ambulance for ser-|Inititution for Girls at Willoughby, | essary portion: of ithe day’s: work.— KK KKK KK KKK KKK KK K¥|vice in Frai Use Schiffmann’s ‘Concentrated Ex-{ =~ =~ = — pectorant. 2 ounces ‘make ‘a full pint. Guaranteed to give instant re- lief. If it fails to help you, your money will be returned by Barker's Drug Store. Philadelphia ‘Inquirer. -~ = Marie Correlli, the nqjéllst spends{ Fire rule regulations at Radcliffe collége compel the gird studerts te learn the use of the slide down the rope fire’ escape. fwof It the suftrage a women will be barred from acting as|ed in New. Jersey election clerks and. judges. 1 EASTER GREETINGS We take this opportunity to inform you that we have moved into our new quarters on Third street, with a brand new stock of Up-To-the-Minute WEARING APPAREL FOR MEN. You are assured here of securing the best values obtainable in this line. We invite you especially to come in and look over our new Spring Suits, Hats and Shoes which are unsurpassed anywhere in the Northwest We Specialize in Courteous Treatment and Square Dealing n will not be Jerse 1 Over 5,000 women are employed in | compelled to tell their age. Tead the Ploneér want ads. the ‘candy ‘trade ‘of ‘New ‘York state. Some of the things you will find among our stocks are O’'Donnell shoes for Gentlemen, the niftiest shoes in the country. Hazzard shoes, dressy and comfortable and excellent wearing. ~Original Chippewa drivers and cruisers, hand made and will wear like iron. Prices range from $2.50 to $6.00 Lanpher hats, famous for their style and workmanship. ‘Middleton hats, the latest spring novelties. ~ John B. Stetson hats. Where do you find better? $2.00 to $5 00 Spring union suits that we guarantee to fit a man 65c to $2.60 i The famous Artcraft Suits just received. from New York. Strictly hand tailored. Garments that will hold their shape $10to $17.50 Arrow Brand collars. Come in and see the latest arrivals, all styles 18¢c, two for 28¢c Zenith, Batchelor’s Friend and Everlasting hosi- ery. Either will make a fine home for your: feet ) 18¢c to BOc Neckwear and Novelties of every descl;iptioli. _The dressy kind particular buyers prefer. Cluett and Peabody shirts, enough said. Racine shirts, union ‘made and made right B0c t0 $2.50 25c¢ to 78¢ The House of Quality A\ Akerbergrxjgtlgqorlj Co. : - © 209 Third 8t., New .Lpfiaflon i

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