Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, June 25, 1910, Page 15

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Restful Sleep comes to peevish, wakeful children when bathed with ‘warm water and It lessens irritation —quiets the nerves. Best for skin diseases — invaluable in the nursery. Sold by all druggists. "H's Hair and Whisker De, black or brows, S0c. — The New Queen and Gos: According fo a writer in a contem- orary, Queen Mary has a great d ike to ggssip and all kinds of bac biting and scandal, and intends to use her influence to dfive away this habi from society. 1 feel readers will sympathiz her efforts, as a recent ca how much unhappines by repeating ldle gos ith her in hes shown be caused slander. But this betraying of one’s sister's af- | ventured ex-Governor | fairs in the market place is not en- | tirely a feminine aspect of human na- Exceeding the speed laws” came ture, and men, though perhaps not g Sl b o Bl guite so prone to it as n, are also hour. We timed you all” | @dept at the hateful business. It is| ' “Impossible!” exclaimed the car Dot to be supposed, however, that|owners in unison Queen Mary Iter human nature, R ha AMNEA here. this but we can all wish success in her campaign. The Wretchedness of Constipation Caa quickly be overcome by CARTER’S LITTLE LIVER PILLS. Sem. a2 Indigestion. They do their duy. Small PAl_Small Dose. ‘Semall Prica. CGENUINE must bear signature: How do your iGlasses Fit? 't you like an eye gla > fit as nicely over the nose le bridge ng glasses must first At Then the size and shape of be conformable to the a great deal of time se important factors our own grinding we are In position to make edch Pair of glasses In proper proportion, thus improving the looks as well as the sight Why not give us a trial? R. C. BOSWORTH, Optometrist and Prescription Optician, m 5, Shannon Bidg. 3N Why Not Do It Now? ky oof of That will yours cause ¥ou no end of tréuble it not attended to at once. The same holds true of the gutters and leaders on your house And RIGHT NOW is the time o have it done. tell you the cost. The price ably surprise you. AndrewTWhnley, 12 Ferry Street. Telephone 209 apr2s All Varielies Best Teas 25¢ . Best Coffee 20¢c . Norwich? Branch, Fi over Scmers Bros. Putnam Branch, ground floor Putnam Inn Building. Willimantic Branch, over City Drug Store. United Tea Importers Co. nklin Sq. Get off at Omaha Sisth Assue! Conventon July 18,19 and 20 Associated Ad Clubs Moct with Amarica’s bumaess creators WRITE OMAHA AD CLUB FOR PROGRAM sure that all my COLONEL JARVIS PINCHED. Fake Policemen Have Fun with B lin Colonel. Thirty members of the “Farmers’ ‘plub,” a branch of the Union League of New Haven, including Major W. H. Lyon and W. F. Parke of this city, were held up near Derby Saturday by two fake policemen while speeding over a nice patch of “real good” state road, en route to the farm home of At- torney Robert J. Woodruff. The farm of Farmer Bob Woodruff was to be the first stop. and Colonel Jarvis as president of the club was leading the way with ex-Governor Woodruff in the proverbial “large touring car,” when the arrest took place. The first. intimation of impending trouble came with a sound of crashing | brushwood, such as is made by a hip- pepotamus’ at play in a woodbin. Ten carloads_of farmers pricked up their | ears ana * there was ~a grinding of | brakes as two huskies in the telltale | blue uniform of the constabulary gal- loped across the road, accompanied by a large gate. Planting it directly the path of the cars the limbs of motioned for a halt and issued 1 statement to the effect that blamed bunch” were under arrest There was a brief perfod of impres- silence as_the members of the zue Farmers' club adjusted t n " exclaimed Colonel Jar- re composure. assured the constabu- a | well, | mornin'’ an’ we've got to put a stop to this sort of thing,” insisted the con- stabulary Do vou know who we are?’ ven- tured a deep voice from car No. 3. o; came the laconic reply. us up the road.” forms were noticed looming off the horizon this moment. They e coming from the direction of Prosecutor Woodruff’s farm. Could it be a rescuing party? Quite s Who should it be but - Prosecutor Woodruff and his brother, Frank C. Woodruff. What? Can they be laugh- | ing? Yes, sir! having the chuckle of | a lifetime. - sigh’ _of and we don't give a whoop,” “You just fol- relief swept over the Farmers' club as they realized that the entire affair was a joke. Introduc-.| tions to the two “constables” as farm hands on the Woodruff farms then followed and the party continued onm | uninterrupted.—Meriden Record. TALES FROM OVER SEAS. Charms as_cures for sickness were common in England a céntury ago. Lady Wake who was born in 1800, tells of a grewsome cure adopted for the removal of some birthmarks which disfigured her face. Her mother was persuaded that “a dead man’s hand laid upon my cheek and hands would effectually remove the marks,” she writes. “As a man could not be killed | for the occasion it was necessary to wiat until some one died. An old man at last did die in ome of the nearest cottages and I was taken there in my sleep. 1 remember, afterward, being constantly stopped by the widow, who always examined my cheek in order to ascertain the state of her husband’s body, as the marks, she told my nur would certainly fade away as he turn- ed-into dust. Whatever the cause of the cure, the marks in time disap- | peare “Hints conveyed by dreams are oc- casionally worth hearing,” says the London Chronicle. “The late Lord | Dufferin, when in Paris, dreamed that he was in a hearse on the way to the cemetery. A few days later. as he was | about to enter the elevator Of a cer- tain hotel, he was startled to find that | the attendant was a double of the | driver of the hearse in his dream. He thereupon promptly left the ele- vator and walked upstairs. The car scended without him, but as it neared fop something in the mechanism gave way and the passengers met their death. Had they also, one wonders, been forewarned in a dream?’ Sultan, Prince Bismarck's favorite boar-hound, attacked a passing rail- road train and was cut to pieces, Bis- marck's grief over the dog's agonies was such that his son Herbert tried | to lead him away, but the prince | would not go. Vo, I cannot leave | him like this.” Then, when the dog’s sufferings were over, Bismarck wiped his eyes and murmuted: “Our Teuton forefathers showed benevolence in | their religion. They believed they | would find in the hunting grounds their paradise all the dogs that been their faithful comrades here be- low. I wish I could believe that” To the Last for Annexation. In the remarks of the American press upon Goldwin Smith's Telation to the that 1s to cause of continental union say, the union of the United States and Canada, we note here and there h-weakened the impression that his fa toward the last in consequence of the development of the imp that naturally followed the participation of the colonies in the Boer war. The decline of Canadlan interest in the question of annexation to the United States, or rather equal union with the | United States, never changed Gold Smith's view of the manifest destir of the two branches of the Ei speaking people on this continent following is an extract from'an in un- published letter written as lately as March of last year: 1 came to Canada believing, as al- most all our public men in Eng including even Disraeli, did, that in pendence was the ultimate destiny de- the colonies. I was disillusios in the case of Canada when I saw how totally deficient in compactness her territory was and how strong, com- parcd_with the general population, was French element. Compared 'with your population (in the United & ale.\l“ | | the French element would be trifiing and would be soon absorbed. ly as the ultimate union of Scotl: England was dictated by 5 rely dictated by batu | ultimate’ reunion of the English- | speaking race on this continent. It | ! become more pressing in case of | a_formidable development on the sid apan and perhaps China. It will reatly to the advantage of my own which will thenceforth have s continent instead of a precari- | ous outpost a natural and very pow- | ertut ally. ! Here are presented, briefly and forc bly, both Goldwin Smith's expectations | as a_philosophical observer of events | and his personal hope as a patriotic | Engtish ew York Sun. | = An Admoni on. on't let the Big Stick talk make | you unnecessarily quarrelsome,—Atch- ison Globe. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA The Conservation of Nature's Resources applies as well to our physical state | @3 to material things. C. J. Budlon | Washingon, R. L, realized his cond | tion and touk wirning before it was oo late. He says: “T suffered severe- Iy from kidney trouble, the disease be ing hereditary in our family. I have taken four bottles of Foley's Kidney NE STONINGTON. High School Graduating Exercis Not Till Wednesday, June 20—Shipping Company’s Annual Meeting—Fish- hawks Again at the Beacon. The graduation exercises borough high school will take place Wednesday evening, June 2§, in the opera house. Shipping Company’s Meeting. The annual meeting of the Atlantic Shipping _company of Stonington was held in the town court room here on Wednesday; 1,167 shares of the stock of the company were represented. There was a large attendance. The following directors were chosen for the ensuing year: Prentiss Howard, E. P. of the Wells, D. B. Spalding, E. E. Babb, H: E. Delano, J. F. Davis, C. A. Davis, H. E. Gayiord, Dwight C. Stone, C. N. The directors chose the fol- President, D. B. Spald- ing; vice president, E. Babl retary, H. C. Delario: treasurer, ¢ Davis. A dividend of 1 1-2 per o was declared, payable July ist. business of the company was over and the reports of the office were presented. Capt. C. A sasurer of the company, made a most factory report. The schooners are ven e hooner Clara from New n Belfast. ¢ r Fiore Wayland. lowing officar The gone riled ow York May 26 1., Joading for e FHoward June 5 for ric; schoon- er Jenjamin F York June jrunswick to_load for New York: schooner Hope Shei wood, sailed from Proyidence Ju for Newport News to load for S: nah and to bring lumber to New York: schooner Fannie Prescott, arrived at Cardenas, Cuba, June 10th with lumber he New ready to leave a, where she will York. Fishhawks Return This Year. a pair of large fishhawks vy specles have made their from Tampa, Cardenas for P load lumber for For year of the ‘osp: nest on the beacon at Rodman’s Folly between Stonington and tch Hill. The passenge board the Stonington boat that runs from here t ch H s within a of this. The ntion. be- This species eagle ing birds ing nearl resembles the baldheaded plumage, being black white only smaller With the e: tion of las ese birds nested there for the past te and why they should have season is a mystery, again this season, com usual. The oldsbirds seen from the point fish in their claws. are here r than are frequently rying very large The spread of the wings is more than four feet when fiying. Thursday afternoon schoorer Ada Shull came in_ wit z0 of Seed oysters to be plar bay. Dr. and Mrs. Henry Rising of Hart- ford are guests of James H. Cleveland and family John B. B the borough school, and Mrs. C. S. Ryon Mrs. Emil Schmitz and daughter are visiting_in Providence. Mrs. Reuben Herr ‘and fn town Friday from L Her mother accompanied New York Paper by Miss Wheeler. The Connecticut ch Daughters n, a former teacher in the guest of Mr. arrived M from son metown, m of Founders and Pa t at the Mohican hotel Wednes t which time Miss Grace D. Wheeler of the | Road “aistrict_read a paper entitled Capt. George Denison. Frank Brver, Jr. has entered the employ of Samuel Chesebro, Mrs. George H. Rhodes and daughter Helen of Providence are guests of Mr. and Mrs_ William H. Fairbrother. WS LEITERS FROM didatdad 5, 1910 !s § \ authorized to permit of prompt pletion of irrigation projects alrdea; Mysterious “B” on Indiana Oats. The appearance of a legible B on thd : 3 v | R aeton of the Meyér scheme of | 0at blades in Indiana ks alarmed tha b 5 naval feorganization mude possible by | superstitious. The _crop, thanks to and rehabilitation on modern lines of {'hue the yPtograph causes unessl< - - - - | the navy general fund. Inbas. Mo o oldest inhabitants 18 5 Progressive naval programme, wy- [aignifles calumity. Of many buleful Eastern Poin thorizing the comstruction o reports We auoto the followlng froms and ahiengen :J.,“:.fi?f"..’:‘.".‘m"‘é ) Two 27,000-tan_ battlesbipg. Muncie the Army and Navy club, The Taft administration has secured | court, granting fhe commission com- [ SIX torvedo hoat Cestiovere “Among the many farmers in De Miss Annie Atwood has returned | from congress at this first regular ses- | plete authority over classifications and | 5OW ,""f’"“ Ry o 2 ware county who have noticed the J trom Virginia, sion practically everything It has ask- | regulations, and bringing telograpn | TWo colllers ¢ the lahthouse | (€7, B on_oate leaves in Ray Lam Mrs. James M. Crocker has returned | ed. Not only have the promises of | and telephone companies under the |, Reorsanization = of thoe & T&REHOU Gaston. He has been show to the borough ' after spending two | the republican party platform been |scope of the Interstate commerce act. | POArd along lines of mode s ves of oats with the strs ;eel:r wltlh g;r n!;ce, u; Sarah F.|redemeed, but important legislation | The creation of a special committec "éifi-fid‘l:fi"’f A GE pilpen e+ | MY on*Anem. azly all ghe low mer, cepshedd . p < > s on of a b es, 5 smie 1 rée 8o marked. Ol Eomer. 3t Speapeiess Bay L. I |not defnitely promised by the party |to investigase the extent to which |, G R Mliliulie dangers 1o mine | lents sa (hat 1t 18 an i1 smen; 1 from Adelphi eollege Thursday, June employes on | 10 1860, ust before the outbreik 16, and received the degree of bachelor rriers required 10 Turnish | the ‘eivii war a similar - of arts. ot meciflents to the oacs’ Shil: Heth the 1etier srohd Mrs. Rogers of Norwich and Mrs. {nterstate commerce commission. Bloodshed that fol Curtiss of Meriden made an auto trip Law requiring use of safety appli There mre ¢ o . Al to Maple Lawn this week. ances on rallroads made broader and | this wign among t olating 10 Mr. and_ Mrs. Alex Lincoln arrived more. comple the roturn from Kb ch way be in town Friday from New York and Adulteration randing of In- | divmiesed as unwor ne will be the guests of Mr. and Mrs. sccticides and fungicides prohibited on hmoniss et wiekar RN 2 Charles Noyes. They made the trip the behest of farmers and orchard- | fyance. in March, 1 Bl by_auto. ists. tesraph at all, t belng Miss Lucy Billings has returned from “White slave” traffic penalized by | ((\ smaoth tc « The atary her school at Chester to spend the a system of heavy fimes for interstate | ot the I the Indlann oat staes summer with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. commerce therein | presents no problem te There in Billings. Drastic regulations designed o pre- | i sueh letter 1t O g P Engagement Announced. e maists. of ' Tchave) pisonbeR.] st i aiciey® LA A A Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Palmer an- whose conduct After conviction War- |agse. Indiana his m at flelds, In nounce the = engagement of their rants elemency, authorized. foct jt i Ve When Bs daughter, Adella, M, to Staniey Clark Publicity for campaign contributions | luve been reported ¢ where, Johnson of Providence, a former West- made compulsory DUk eod P - ol & erly boy, now teller for the Rhode Isl- SBystem of licensing customs brokers | the valleys v . and 't and Hospital Trust company in Provi- provided White. and everybody i% Kueseing wha Miss Muller has arrived from e o bt el et Ta | i it il . Pratt’s fnstitute, Brooklyn, for the Unitc ! States otherwise than by sea. | gynouncec " or summer. I igration of allens’ furthey pre R onea sy Bavariane: tasi e Miss Dolbaun has returned from tected by Increased restrictions and : t ‘Willimantie. oosarcn b T O ST NOANK . up to date | ocion.” : : Y Gold coin fixed as the medium of Liberty Coundil Elects Officers—Spicer paying' the public debt of o it Why Railroad Men Wear Out Family Gives Iron Fence to Ceme- it gl S R IRRER TSI IR il tery—Visitors from San Jose. Hawali @ cd in Important partic- | vo The semi-annual meeting of Liberty e Sommilsston iof Mina Arti créatad vy | mork.—F council, D. of A.. was held Thursday enact evening. The following officers were wde for ralsimg the bat eleocted = o A Will Do His ¢ ch Councilor, Mrs. Carrie Fltch: asso- i y ¢ clate councilor, Mrs. Mary Durfee: vice Extensivé iy nd harvor bul| his count 1 associate councilor, Mrs. Harriet Ches- |.arafted in accordance with the policy | to tel) t 1 " ice councilor, Mrs. ordinati cse improvemen that Y. Telegy Suicer: recording _secretary, svision made fc erous o Miss Bertha Thompson: assistant sary public buildir the comple = === cording secretary, Mrs. Minnie T. V S ot hoee alreat o lette; financial secretary, Mrs. Ida I “Thirty thousand d appropriat X Palmer; treasurer, Miss Mary Luc the department of ugri- | Flomme Treatment for conductor, Mrs. Bertha Latham; war- culture to conduct tests looking to ¢ S o, Mra Nelite Wiloax: Inside’ senti- B sty ot e ubetitie o e Tuberculosis Willlam Palmer: outside senti- in the manufacture pulp paper 3 a7 i P Mrs, Bdward Ashby: junior past A st e e g b Papers 1. | Less Expense Involved Tha cotncilor, Mrs. Anna Smith: assistant B bvides 10 erHabla. the wadibeiont and Less Effective Methods past councilor. Mise Effie Lamb; trus- atrvey to carry on the work of gaugs | i ; 3 2 tee. Mrs. Carrie Carrington; represen- Ing streams u promotion of | eoues Ria bs tative to national council, Miss Efe the congervation ter power site e . Lamb: representative to financial ben- sand A ¢ Emma Sistare. Aepartment stico for | This 4 v ne witl be installed Wed- tior Violators of the | Has been conque erculosis evening, July 6. 2 | ti-trust lnw Panatoria had fafiea and promoun Qife of - Bpicer: Family. has been accomplished. The record is | rallroad stocks are waterca and re- | thousand dollars pro- | Cases incurable 3 B without parallel. port on the feasibility of fedmral si- | vided for the use of the joint commis Fhinik wh me pe The ‘new iron fence that is to be | Among the important measures en- | pervision of all rallroad sccuriics | slon charged with the duty of settling | fees: no san u os; no tra erected at the cemetery has arrived at | acted at this session are these | "The creation of a n of postal | questions relating to boundar gxpengen; no xpensl nilk the local station. The fence, which Railroad rate bill, elinching the | anks, thus ning for gmajl | between the United States and Can ;,“, lo right in ¢ Y was given to the Cemetery association | Roosevelt policy of federal control of s the se ty of the United | ada their dear ones encou 3 throush the kindness of the Spicer | raflway rates, and in addition thereio treasury and guaranteelng 2| Glacler National park in Montana | them that tender home care which x family, will be erected in a few days | compelling rallroads to secure the | per cent. interest on their deposi created cannot b gz and will_greatly improve the appear- | proval of the Interstate co el ting of sepurate Wood | Bix Trée forests of California pro- |, Bauatoriin ta | bull ance of Elm street. commission before advancing rates, | i¢ and Ne Mexico in ac- |tected by additional ..u.\v wards, et O R atortioat . |authorizing the interstate commerc the oft repeated pl | “Numerous measures designed t - Rojiitons Suxve, I ovmnonts. commission to institute proceedings n national platforms | tect and promote the interests of th : The street has been widened so that | without waiting for the complaint M TAas ot ] Ioatany. g there is no danger of a team and a |a shipper. creating a special commerce | and drawals alveady made Modern legislation for the District it XS v irolley car coming together at the o A . 1 | o Columbi ding authorizatior : Rollsione curve. The street at this K ey el 2B R LR all| af a system les for juvenile o place could be further improved by the A T 3 nders i street rAifwdy company removing the | here, this was his first visit In forty- | Co riorogal sodnoramele mmi ted large pile of dirt and rocks between years. by _authorization of ag 1 en- tion of nical metho n e hlley track and ‘the “street ot | . The meeting of the Eleventh school | tries on the surface, w PR b s s i ve y the curv aistrict will be held in the Main street | deposits Is reserved tc SOVarD: | s Talan. aq vavisad. &a ta: tray Al mans "All Abotit the Vill school Monday evening. ment Pl A0 i it sure ; out the Village. Fishing schooner Elinora Hill was | Preservation of nat ats’ by | from the speaker to a majority of the | mradun, . A apt. Jobn Christiansen, who lately | hauled out at the north ways Friday | permitting states a ories t0 | hoase L : ¢ purchased the sloon Bo Peep, has soid | for painting, when she 1s launched she | select other lands In lict of those cc Provision made for the compengation | the same ¥ i am g his motor bodt <Ciara to Bernard H. | Wjll make a trip after swordfish. | tained in the reserves. of Justice Moody should he be com B e e - Dodge ‘of ‘Block Island. Mr: Dodge | 'Fish and Game Commissioner .| 1Tywo hundred and fifty thousand dol- | pelied to retire by ill health. M g ~ will use the Clara in lobster fishing | Hart Geer .of Hadlyme.was at the |lars appropriated to enable the tariff | = Section 860 of the revised statute > around the 1sisnd. batchery Friday. board to ascertain the difference in the [an Immunity statute, which was n ood Charles Lamb of San Jose, Cal, who | The woodwork of the store building | cost of production, at home and abroad criminals, Tepealed, in nc- | Throat and 1 . has been the guest of his sister, Mrs, | for F. I Rathbun on Potter's wharf | of articies included in the tariff sched- ith the earnest recommen- | in Norwich by Lee & ¢ I. W. Beebe, on Elm street for the | was gommenced Friday. | ules. such information to afford the the attorney gene ther Dru 1 past three months, leaves today (Sat- | C.'S. Bartow of Fishers island was [ basis for an accurate adjustment —_ — — Y ‘ “ urday) for his home on the Pacific | in the village Friday in his launch | the rates of duty rector Durand reported on the | ! Sook! Although Mr. Lamb was born | Viking. Twenty-million-dollar bond 1ssue | progress made by the census bureau. | Phika, ¥ Sanfora N. Billings, Jerome S. An- derson and Orson C. Rozers were at { coast Why Physicians Recommend Castoria It is used by physicians ASTORIA has met with pronounced favor on the part of physicians, pharmaceutical societies and medical authorities. with results most gratifying. perfect substitute for Castor Oil unlike Soothing Syrups, Bateman’s Drops, Godfrey’s Cordial, etc. expose danger and record the means of advancing health. The day for poisoning innocent children through greed or ignorance ought to end. It is absolutely safe. The extended use of Castoria is unquestionably the result of three facts: It does not contain any Opium, Morphine, or other narcotic and does not stupefy. This is a good deal for a Medical Journal to say. First—The indisputable evidence that it is harmless: Second—That it not only allays stomach pains and quiets the nerves, but assimilates the food: Z7ird—It is an agreeable and It is Our duty, however, is to To our knowledge, Castoria is a remedy which produces composure and health, by regulating the system—not by stupefying it—and our readers are entitled to the information.—Hall's Journal of Healtk. i -y AVegetable Preparation for As- similating theFood and Regula- ting the Stomachs and Bowels of Promotes Digestion Cheerful- ness and Best.Contains neither Oputm, Morphine nor Minesal. Nor NARCOTIC. Peccpe of Ol Ir SAMUELPITURER Aperfect Remedy for Consti |iol:’s[s<)ur Stom)a'cn : namr_#; ‘Worms Convuisions, Feverish- ness and LOSS OF SLEER PacSimile Signatuse of mronths old 73])05! Sy }"(FI,\IN EXACT COPY OF WRABFES. Remedy and now _consider myself thoroughly cured. This should be a warning to all not te neglect taking Kidney Remedy until it i8 too e~ & Osgoud Co. The Kind You Have Always Bought and which has been in use for over 30 years, has borne the signa- ture of Chas. H. Fletcher, and has been made under his personal supervision Aliow no one to deceive you in this. tations and * Just-as-good” since its infancy. All Counterfeits, Imi- are but Experiments that triffle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children—E xperience against Experiment. GENUINE CASTORIA Bears the Signature of Dr. W. L. Leister, of Rogers, Ark., says : *“ As a practicing phy- sician I use Castoria and like it very much.” Dr. W. T. Seeley, of Amity, . Y., says : “T have used your toria for several sears practice and Lave found it a safe and veliable remedy.” Or. Raymond M. Evarts, of Santa Ynez, Cal., says : ** After using your Castoria for children for years it annoys me greatly to have an ignorant druggist substitute some- thing else, especially to the pa- tient’s disadvantage, as in this case. I enciose herewith the wrapper of the imitation.” Dr. R. M. Ward, of Kansas City, Mo., says : * Physicians generally do not prescribe proprietary prepa- rations, but in the case of Uastoria my experience, like that of many other physicians, has taught me to make an exception. I prescribe your Castoria in my practice be- cause I have found it to be a thor- oughly reliable remedy for chil- dren’s complaints. Any physician who has raised a family, as I have, will join me in heartiest recom- mendation of Castoria.” my Dr. W. F. Wallace, of Bradford, : T use your Castoria in my prastice, and in my family.” Dr. Wi, I. McCann or Omaha, Neb., says : ** A& the father of thir- teen children I certainly know something about your great medi- cine and aside from my own family experience, I have, in my years of practice, found Castoria a popular and eflicient remedy in almost every home.” Dr. Howard James, of New York, City, says : 1t in with great pleas- ure that I desire to testify to the medicinal virtue of your Castoria. 1 have used it with marked bénefit in the case of yay own daughte, and have obtained excellent resul s from its administration to otly r children in my practice.” Dr. J. R. Clausen, of Philadel- phia, Pa., says : *The name that your Castoria has made for itselt in the tens of thousands of homes blessed by the presence of children, scarcely needs to be supplemented by the endorsement of the medical profession, but I, for one, most heartily endorse it and believe it cllent remedy.” an ex Letters from Prominent Physicians Addressed to Chas. H. Fletcher. Dr. B. Halstead Scott, of Chica- go, 111, says : “I have prescribed your Castoria often for infants during my practice and find it very satisfactory.” Dr. William Belmont, of Cleve- land, Ohio, says : * Your Castoria stands first in its class. In my thirty years of practice I can say I never have found anything that so filled the place.” Dr. R. J. Hamlen, of Detroit, Mich., says : 1 prescribe your Cas- torin extensively as I have never found anything to equal it for chil- dren’s troubles, I am aware that there are imitations in the field, but 1 always see that my patients get Fletcher's.” Dr. Channing H. Cook, of Saint Louis, Mo., says: “I have used your Castoria for seyeral years past in my own family and have always found it thoroughly efficient and never objected to by children, which is a great consideration in view of the fact that most medi- cines of this character are obnox- ious and therefore difficult of ad- ministration. As a laxative I consider it the peer of anything shat I ever prescribed.” ) ) Dr. L. 0. Morgan, of So. Amboy, .J. says: “I prescribe your Casto- % rin every day for children who are ¢ suffering from constipation, with ) betder effect than I receive from § any other combination of drug $ Dr. H. J. Taft, of Brooklyn, N. ) Y., says: ““I have used your Cast 3 a and found it an excellent % remedy in my household and priv- § ate practice for many years, The J formula is excellent,” )] Dr. Wm, L. Bosserman, of T ¢ falo, N. Y., says: m pleased to 4 speak a good word for your Casto- ) ria. I think so highly of it that T § not only recommend it to others, but have used it in my own family $ Dr. F. H. Kyle, of St. Paul, ) Minn., says : It affords me plea- § sure to add my name to the long % list of those who bave used and now endorse your Castoria. The ) fact of the ingredients being known through the printing of the formula on the wrapper is one good and suficlent reason for the reoom. mendation of any physician know of ita good qualities and re commend it cheerfully.” I A A AN e ] ASK YOUR PHYSICIAN

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