Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, September 11, 1911, Page 6

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NORWICH BULLETIN, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1911 Boarding. House Robbed {fi in Cash Belonging to Joe Jenzins, a Boarder, Stolen —Clark Defeated in Golf Semi-Finals—Judge Her- bert W. Rathbun Entertains at Old Homestead. William Clark of Westerly, who eompeted for the Rhode Istand golf to get out of the house, although am- ple time was taken to distribute the hip, was defeated in the | personal effects equally —about the semi-finals by C. H. Gardner, 2 up and |rooms. So far as can be learned, 1 to #o, and thus eliminated from the |nothing was taken by Joe Jenzins' #nal match for the championship. it |cash. Jjoe and his fellow boarder dis- was a afp and tuck contest all the |covered the loss as soon as they en- tered their the circumstances rooms and they reported at once to Mr. way v-\rwfi Clark proving a foe- man that t Gardmer right on his merve. Gardner took the first hole | Leonard, who lost na time in report- ©en a §-7 score. Clark losing on the |ing the case to Deputy Chief Brown. They halved the second in|The premises were given official in- green. fives. The third went to Gardner, 4-5, Dut Clark came back at his opponent vestizatiton. The thief. in the opinion of Chief Brown, is somewhat familiar on the fourth, taking the cup 5 to|With the genmeral layout of the Gilk- § and cutting Gardner's lead to 1.[inson boarding house. Ther halved the fifth In sixes and =g Local Laconics. Mrs, Charles H. Schwaner and three sons were visitors Clark squared the match on the sixth, - excelient putting. r on the seventh immediately ryesumed the lead of one, making the ® Tole 4-5 and increasing the lead by | MM and A L wi the eighth hole 4-5. Un- [{SW Tandon st <aunte Clark cut the lead of two e ng the ninth hole | Mr. and Mrs. James R. May and made the match 1 up at the end of the first half. The tenth was halved by fives, and Clark squared the match again in the | eleventh, Gardner playing his oppon- | Aloho ent’s ball by mistake from mid-course, and Tosing the hole. Clark at this | point struck a winning zait and took | The twelfth hole, 4-5, but failed to hold of New London, visited Dr. John E 1\1»1\ in Westerly Sunday. rank W. Coy has sold the cottage at Watch Hill, recently owned ® Howe of Pittsburgh, to corge A. Driggs of Waterbury. ressman_George F. O'Shaugl will_be in Westerly this (Mon- g'm':.?inr'n'-vfim ne; even the match ) evening at a meeting ul'ht)(:m\e The players hilved in the four- Rk e s N el teenth and fifteenth in fives each and 4 f Et8ner, winning the sixteenth and rueman Newberry, former assist- Seventeenth holes, took the match 2 up | Dt sccretary of the navy, will appear and 1 to go. The cards: in the ond_district court Monday, 2 to meet any charge that may be Gardner—8, 5 brought against him in connection . 5 {with the death of a child at Narr: Clark— gansett Pier, who was struck by an tomobile driven by Mr. Newberry. loses hole *Approximate—Gardner By playing opponent’s ball. In the final for the state champion- #hip, C. H. Gardner and H. W. Da- yenport were the competitors winning by 5 up and 4 to play perfect appro. " BALTIC | L. A, Girouard Pays $132 When Saloon is Raided by State Police—Meeting of St. Jean Society—Taftville Couple Secure License. with hing and clever putting Teatures of the game. Westerly Sund mornin he state e | Sunday morning the state police of the ser: raided the saloon of I. A. Girouard, Providence securing two whole barrels and two of liquor Seven n five ot H. H. and about ,a n were found hing. Be- justice barrels n bottles. the pla fore Lawyer court Sunday fine §30 on each of two count: a total of §132, which he Smoker Follows Business. monthly ing half Pettis_in afternoon Girouard w with fon, Noose Neck, Arcadia, jey, Ashaway, Westerly, Providence. One hour will be allowed | Pler, Wickford, East Greenwich and | for dinmer, then the cvclists will ride | over the same route again in reverse | dfrection. This will be a hard sched- | tile to make on time at controls and | is meeded to split up the tie existing | ®etweon several members. . of St held in the vening. Louis atain presiding. Routine business transacted. The secretary’s and me wa alar e Morbert W. Rathbun enter- | (reasurer’s report was read and ined & party of friends at Wehippit- | ccpted, after which a smoker was en- gituok, the ancestral home in Quiam- [Jjoved and refreshments were served. bavg, Saturday, where the judge, his | During the evening the St. Jean band, pasents and sisters, spend the summer | Prof. Orville LaRoche leader, gave smomths. The judge traces his ances- | excellent concert. siting members $t¥ from three of the four founders of | from Norwich and Taftvilla were pre Ihe fown of Stonington and the old |ent: The successful affair was due to farmhouse containg many re the following committee A. Gar- @ocuments in proof of its antiquity. | reau, chairman, Arthur P. Cote, George The farm is large and the location 1 Lacroix and Alex Dupont, Jr. This an ldeal beauty sport. Dinner was |society has an active membership of served in the open alr and it was of | one hundred the kind that President Taft and King ikt Interests: Qesrze might have ved together | . ana Mrs. Ephraim Dem And declsre 't to the best ever.| i 'son was chri ed Alphou There were fried chicken and roast|yi: ang M Adolph Deinuth were the duck, prepared by the mother of the | 1= AN JEaEe N e e thpan | William Depot has moved his family erved Oy the - un. | from Plainfield to Baltic & s suests were Ju Jobn Mr. and Mrs. Antoine Desautels and S Tud 1 1. Will . o Otye: X 11- | famiiy have returned to their e in jams, “”,'" - 3 alter l_ Dixen and i New Bedford after two weeks' visit l;’ur‘l ‘f'fl\\\' Clarence e of | with Mr. Desautel: mother, Mrs. A. gRterty. mer, | pDesautels, of Ma Hagiai & Hull, Mequire and | "IN Dutont ot s having a_car- 4;, Hadlai #Hull ;\! \“-—u r vndo'( Judge ge shed built on the land he re- Robert Allen of . Holyoke, Attorney | contly bought from Charles F. Cha Warren Burrows of Groton, and Dr. |ron in the rear of the Sprague hous jes O. Mn Vi Sher- | Bt Ghmgion. Tetiere of mo- Licafiss: to Tattvills-Couple, =t _were recelved from Judge John A marriage license was issued r § Thaver ana Mayor Charles F.|contly to Henry Appleby and 31 Thayer of Norwich, Judge Collins of | Rose A. Olney. both of Taftville. New Jersey, Judze Ralph Wheeler of August N’ar‘lalv!y Vital statistics show seven deaths New London and others. and Mrs. Gregoire days in~Provi- nelda ¥ spent a few t week. In the double house at 174 Main | stroet, Westerly, one-half is occupied a8 a boarding house and conducted by week of her guest other, 1 den and Joe Jenzins. who iz employed at the Reuter greenhouse, evening between seven #'clock, someone made entry, ably through an open cellar window, | End of Half Holidays. fhence up stairs to the other floors of | The half holiday is over for the the house, making exit by way of the rks and they have resumed work Saek door. % vith new ambition. The room of Jenzins and that of the prank Hull is having an office other boarder, not Leonard, Were vVis- | nuili on the east side of the Hull & §ted by the intruder, and their trunks ns store forced open, but the only valuable iss Agnes Brennan has returned to taken was $i0 of Jenzin's hard-earned tic to resume teaching. cash. The wearing apparel in the Albert Jarvis and family have moved bureau drawers and trunks in these ain homest to High two rooms were strewn about the floor: Joc's silver watch was also on hial school will reopen this the floor, to give impression that it was dropped by the thief in his hurry nin REBUKE FOR MR. SHERMAN. [Son of Vice President in Court Tells| of Faulty Motor Light. | W York | erman of U Prosiden CASTORIA Fer Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Zon Tt Thomas M. son of Vice | W eprimande Side court yvesterday by | el, after testifying tha ight on his automobile did net i minate fully the rear number of th he reprimand Mr. Sher | L i | ‘ . Girl Holds Sneezing Record he t' h n "esterl Chicago, Sept. 10.—Miss Nellie De Onzo. 17 vears old, Is under the care msesnesessesessessesessesssssessossnssassesss | Of DIIVEICians in a hospital result of 4 ninety minute spoll of sneezing. | Her experience, which is said to be the | INDUSTRIAL TRUST COMPANY | i:nx ‘IR vcira i T (0.0 1o e 5 Beanch l . was due to snuff w a young man in a spirit of fun scattered noarb. hile she was singing. She was relfev- | Capital . Thres Milllon Dollars | ", "2 or Heing taken to a hospital Surplas Three Million Dollars | where it was said there would be no | Over Fifty Thousand Accounts. | permanent ill effects. Liberal, courteous and efficlent 1a its | = meanagement. | Without including Hantax, a thriv- |ing industrial town of 105,000 inhabi |tants, te the north. the consuliar d |trict ‘of Huddersfield, Fngland. has a population of nearly 250,000, of which about 75,000 belong to what is known as the heavy woolen district, six or seven miles o the northe: Established 1901. Marsla L. Wells, O. D., Optometrist. Defeetiv n corrected by the prop- R A Block. Westerly, R. L $1,000. Reward | A Reward of $1,000 (3500 voted by the Town Council of Westerly and $560 te be given by Joseph Newall & Co.), is hersby offerad for the detention, apprehension and cenviction of the persons, or any of them, who committed the crime of robbery upon the person of David MoG. Newall on the highway near the village of Bradford in the town of Wasterly, R. I, on the 2d day of September, 1911. | Cemmunicate with J. R. Wilcox, Sheriff, Kingston, R. I., | E. Brown, Deputy Chief of Polics, Westerly, R. I. ‘Waesterly, R. I, September 8, 1911. or Thomas Miss Tillie Gilkinson. assisted by her Irenee But2au and Abby Cote were sister, Margaret Giikinson. Among (in Hartford attending the races the | the occupents are three male board- | week. ers, Charles F. Leonard, George Bor- | Mrs. M rd of Putnam was MYSTIC Death of Thomas P. Wilcox—Birthday of District Nurse Celebrated—Sunday in the Churche: Thomas Pendieton - Wileox died at his home in Quiambaug after a long and painful illness, He was born in the town of Stonington April 5, 1844, the son.of Thomas W. and Lavinia Fish Wilcox, had always resided in this section, and followed the water as a fisherman. He leaves a daughter, Miss Lavinia Wilco: five sons, George I Wilcox of My Thomas Ir., Henry M., Frank G. Wilcox of Quiam- baug and William C. Wilcox of Provi- | dence. Birthday Celebrated. Miss Margaret Peacock, nurse for the Mystic District Nu association. cel ebrated her birthday Sunday and r ceived many of her friends at the home of Mrs, Mary Benjamin, where she re- sides. Miss Peacock received a post- card shower, nearly every home that she has visitad during the past eight months being represented. A dinner party was given in her honor. Sunday Services. t MOTHERS DoNotNeglect In the promotion of permanent skin | and hair health, and in the preven- troubles, Cuticura Soap and Cuti- cura Ointment are unrivaled. Sold everywhere. _Sample of each free, With 32-D, ook, Address “Cuticura,” Dept, 14N, Bostol. PLUMBING AND GASFITTING. JOHNSON AND BENSON,- 20 Cenral Avenue. SLATE ROOFING Matal Cornices and Skylights, Gutters’ and Conductors, and ail kihds’of Job- bing promptly attended to., d Tel. 719. YOUNG Sanitary Plumbing A peep Into an up to date bathroom is only less refreshing than the bath itself. During the summer you wili the more 100k to the bath for bodily comfort. I will show you samples and plans of the porcelain and other tubs and give you estimates for the work of puiting them in in the best manner from a sanitary standpoint—and. guar- antee the entire Joi 1. E. TOMPKINS, 67 West Main Street Babys Skm | on and treatment of minor skin Services at the Union Baptist church comducted Sunday morning by L. Peacock of Westarly. The | . Rev.Welcome E. Bates, preach ed at Fastern Point. Ak the Congre- al church at 4 o'clock -the ser- | were in charge of the Salvation | a large number being present. | ¢ and services were sland sound. Miss Stella Melli Providence for a weel Dr. A. M. Purdy, Arthur Brown and S. Kenzie were Sunday v ant View. Mr. and_Mrs. Charles Allyn of Mia- mus ‘and Miss Lillian Gallup of Led- yard spent Saturday with Mystic friends Miss Sadie Donahue spent the past week at Pleasant Vie visiting in William Stimitz, S. Brown Mac- itors at Pleas- The speakers were Col. Adam Clifford | Worry over ill-health does your |, d Staff Capt, Walter Mabee of New | health 1o good, and merely causes “2Tnished promptly. St This whas Salvation Army day | Wrinkles, that make you look older | ™ ~ 0 25 Faerry Street | _than you are. held in every town. The collections| If you are sick, don’t worry, but go n taken went for the good work the | about it to make yoursel? well To do . I'. Ul members are doi this we repeat the words of thousands & . William and = Walte .| of other former sufferers from wom- Harold Cook and y | onts e, “tmitar v vours. when we | 1in and Sheet Metal Worker e i e FE, Agent for Richardson and Boynton you will admit if you try it. Directions for its use are printed ia six languages with every bottle. Price FRANCO-GE] DON'T WORRY It Makes Wrinkles The Vaughn Foundry Co. [RON CASTINGS Furnaces. 35 West Main Street, Norwich, Conn. Take VIBURN-0 It 1s a wonderful female remedy, as T. F. BURNS, Heating and Plumbing, | 92 Franklin Street 25 at drugsi MAN CHEMICAL CO. 106 Wes: 120th Street, New York Mr. and Mrs. S, E. Beebe and N Helen Beebe have returned to West- | i | | DENTIST GIDEON WELLES' HOUSE SOLD. St. Peter’s Catholic Church, Hartford, Buys Valuable Old Property. An historic bit of private property was acuired by a church corporation 1ast week, when the real estate at No. 11 Charter Oak place, Hartford, passed | from the hands of Mrs. Mary P. Morris | Te field, N. I, after a month's stay Dost thou love Iife, then town. do not squander time, for Mr. and Mrs. Charles McLaughiin | DRe Ee J. JONES time is the stuff life is Have returned from a week's stav in 7 = . made of—Franklin, Providenc: Suite 46, Shannon Building G Mrs. M Severn of Bridgeport is ) h e the guest of Mrs. Lydia Douglas, e T‘:‘: ";;:::‘ Shetuciset street en- | p, 55t squander time chopping o Mbert B. Saunders of Chester spent | (& o st Temt e i e 2 smelly, greasy ofl can getting reads Sponge Cake to do your conking. Get a Gas Range any time without a single and cook irritating, irksome, ire producing. pro- fanity provoking preliminary proceed- ure. A match and the firs is ready. Indisputably the world's best cooking stove. A hot weather necessity and a at CARDWELL’S 1-952, 3—9S Market Street | death, las tspring. No.' 11 Charter Oald place acquired | ond administration—th | tion finished by— Joh untimely death of th he bought the property and lived there | until his death, nine years later. The | house is a pretentious one and was built by Woodbridge White in 18t As | far as is known. it was. the original| building of the proper s not far from Governor Georze Wyllys' es- | tate, upon which was hidden the fam- | | ous charter.— ord Times entitded to the informatio mvthflll’nplrmfurm- simiating theFood and Re; u|a- ting the Stomachs and Bovwe! INFANTS “CHILDREN © Promotes Digestion. ness and Rest.Contains neither %mn, lorphine nor Mineral. NAmcOTIC. Aperfect Remedy for Consti tion, Sour Stomuh Dxarrmpz: Worms Convulsions Feverish- ness and LOSS OF SLEEP. Tas"umile Signature of NEW YORK. B167m 0 U Rk 35 Dosis~35CF the Y. M. C. A 1359 with results most gratifying. - The extended use of Castoria : | it is harmless: Second—That it not only allays stomach paias and quiets the nerves, but assimilates the food: Third—It is an agreeable and It does not conmtain any Opium, Morphine, or other narcotic and does not stupefy. Our duty, however, is to paefeet substitute for Castor Oil unMke Soothing Syrups, Bateman’s Drops, Godfrey’s Cordial, etc. This is a good deal for a Medical Journal to say. The day for poiscning innocent children through greed or ignorance ought to end. Teo our knowledge, Castoria is a remedy which produces composure and health, by regulating the system—not by stupefying it—and our readers are expese danger and record the means of advancing health. t0 ‘Ountle pafors (Ghvacht porsoration. ; blessing every day in the year. Saves| proof of what your medicines have ?‘gal;rr‘m b;;r;\‘fl\“z h\t} l‘r‘x’:r Kflw ¥ work, saves time, saves dollars. Call | done forime can get it from any drug- B e s o Ahs satert. of and sea the latest models. Prices gstfgrtbywnulnxtome You can ol e ftnd nd The Gesanily o1 s 10| from $10 up. Iy temtiiaoninl oy par O X | cation. it is assumed that the figure Office’sMcGrory Building. was high. Mrs, Morris is the widow of | troure—1-2.30, 7-8 p. m Rotary Gas Water Tank Heaters | Mrs. CHRISTINA REED, 105 Mound St., John E. Morris, who wa. sy of | . s $10, connecting at cost. Peoria, Ill. = the Travelers Insurance company for a | Telephone 86! auglbd Cook ith gas and forget th iz~ i number of years and director and as- | S et ne %] Another Operation Avoided. sociatey secretary .at the time of his | zling, scorching, sweltering weather. New Orleans, La.—“For years I suf- GEO. E. PITCHER fame principally as the residence of | Gas & Electrical ¥ the doctor said an operation was neces- | Ve » secretary of 1vi i A 2o Thb Al O S Civil Engineer, ST 'Bep_ o | 2T T gave Lydia k. Pinkbarm's Veg. Ol i the paval wortior wishes to announce to his patro.. and [ 327 Main Street, Alice Building. | etable Compound a trial first, and 1861-to 1869, and when_ he 3 the public that he has moved to 65 was saved from an operation,”’—Mrs. his_duties at the end of Lincoln's sec- | Broadway. Chapman building, opposite LiLy PEYROUT, 1111 Kerlerec St., New | JOSEPH BRADFORD, Book Binder. slank Books Mado and Ruled to Ords: 103 BRUADWAY. Telephone 263 HOWTUCK AFE ANITARY ATISEYING remedy PRING WATER OPERATION By Lydia E. Pinkham'’s ‘Vegetable Compound | | Peoria, IIl.—*I wish to let everyone | know what Lydia E. Pinkham’s teme- flammation,and yoursanative lieved me. equal as a cathartic. Any one wishing fered from severe female troubles. | Finally I was confined to my bed and | Vegetable Compound is a remarkable | Holds Three Hods ular size coal hod. ble made. “This raises it from'bottom of range. Allows [its easy removal without a: The section side of it acoommodates a reg- The Grates are thie best and most dura- They can be removed and replaced without disturbing any other parts of fire box." HUB ranges are fitted with all ‘the conm- veniences that teally help—there are no unnecessary bothersome ‘‘features.’’ ing ashes onto floor. SCHWARTZ BROS,, 9-11 Water Street, Norwich, Conn., Agents. WANUPACTURED AND WARRARTED BYBWITR AND'ARTHONY 8., BOETON, MABS: dies have done for | me. _For two years | 1 suffered. The doc- tors said I had tu- mors, and the only remedy was the sur- geon’s knife. My mother bought me Lydia B. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- pound, and today I am a healthy wo- man. For months I suffered from in- e Washre- | Your Liver Pnllr have no Orleans, La. | The great volume of unsolicited tes- | timony constantly pouring in proves | eonclusively that Lydia E. Pinkham's Do Need Printing P 35-6 The BULLETIN Co. 64-66 Franklin Street You Sole Agents for KEMICORIS AND Grapholastic Paint Sold on six years’' guarantee. solutely waterproof and preserves them indefinitely. warped shingles, Kemicoris cements them to each other, rendering the roof water- Acid and Fire Proof. Impervious to wi Used on roofs, whether metal, wood or prepared roofings, _makes them ab- When- applied to old Grapholastic Paint Equally serviceable on Stesl Bridges, Tanks, Piles, Iron Fences, Bridges, | Gutters, Smokestacks, etc. THE HOUSEHOLD, Bulletin Building 74 Franklin Street for those distressing feniinine illsfrom whirh =0 many women suffer. THER THERE s no advertising mcdlum in stern ern Connecticut eawal te The Bul- | in for business results, | Tel. 34 Norwich, Conn. E etin for F Is no aavertising medium ‘n Connecticut equal to The Bul- business results. dium better than thr ore the publi eolumns of The Bulle you want ‘to put your busi- | WHEN you want to put your busi- | ness ‘befora the public. there is no me- dium better than through the advertis- ling columns of The Bulletin. It is absolutely safe. n.—Hall's Journal of Healtk. A A The Kind You Have Always Bought and which 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 Anity, . Y., say8: “Thave nsed sour Cas- toria for sevoral sears iz my practice and bave found it a safe and eliable reredy.” 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. 1 enclose heruwith the wrapper of the imitation.” Dr. R. M. Ward, of Kansas City, Mo., says ; “Physicians generally do 1ok prescribe propristary prepa- rations, butin the case of Castoria ry 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 foultd it to be a thor- _oughly reliable remedy for chil- dren’s complaints. Any physician 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 since ifs infancy. Aliow no one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imi- tations and “ Just-as-good” are but Experiments that trife with and endanger the health of Infants and Childrem —E xperience against Experiment. ‘who has raised a family, as I have, will join me in heartiest recom- mendation of Castoria.” i CGENUINE CASTORIA Bears the Signature of Dr. W. F. Wallace, of Bradford, N. He, says: “ T use your Castoria in my prastice. and in my family.” Or. Wm. L McCann or Omaha, Neb., says : ‘* As the father of thiz- 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 efficient remedy in almost every home.” Dr. Howard James, of New York, City, says: It is with great pleas- ure that T desire to testify to the medicinal virtue of your Castoria. 1 have ased it with mafked benefit in the case of my own daughter’, and have obtained excellent resul 5 from its administration to oth r children in my practice.” Dr. J. R. Clausen, of Philadel- phia, Pa., says : “The name that your Castoria has made for itself 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 an excellent remedy.” ASTORIA has met with pronounced favor on the part of physicians, pharmaceutical societies and medical authonties. unquestionably the resuit of- three facts: First Letters from Prominent Physicians Addressed to Chas. H. Fletcher. Dr. B. Halstead Scott, of Chica- g0, TIL, says ; “I have prescribed your Castoria often for infants during my - practice and find it very eatisfactory.” Pr. William Belmont, 4t Cleve- Iand, Ohio, says : ““ You Castoria stands first 'n fts ciass In my thirty years of practice I van say I never have found anything that so filled the place.” Dr. R. J. Hamién, of Detroit, Mich:, says : I prescribe your Cas- toria extensively as I have never found anything to equal it for chil- dren’s troubles. { am aware that there are imitationsin the field, but 1 always see that my patients get Fletcher's.” Dr. Channing H. Cook, of Saift. Louis, Mo., seys: “I have used your Castora for several years past inmy 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.”_ Why Physicians Recommend Castoria It is used by physicians -The indisputable evidence that 1t is Dr. L. O. Morgan, of So. Amboy, N. J. says: ““I prescribe your Casto~ ria every day for children who are suffering from constipation, with bether effect than I receive from any other combination of druga.” Dr. H. J. Taft, of Brooklyn, N. Y., says: “I have used your Casto- ria and fouvnd it an excellent remedy in my housekold and priv- ate practice for many years. The formula is excellent.” Dr. Wm, L. Bosserman, of Buf- falo, N. Y,, says: ‘I am pleased to _ speak & good word for your Casto- ria. I think so highly of it that I not only recommend it to others, but have used it in my own family.” Dr. F. H. Kyls, of St Peul, Minn., says : “It affords me plea- sure to add my name to’ the long list of those who Bave used and _now endorse yotf Castoria. The faot of the ingredients being known through the printing of the formula on the wrapper is one good and sufficient reason for the recom- mendation df any.physician. I know of its good qualitfes and re- commend it cheerfally.” ’ ASK YOUR A,

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