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Show THE MORNING ths minds THE EXAMINER Is clmr. Is kis piss to Mis Is he nuking tbs bst possible Jury nss ssMinnsl pride. Hs reford ts what Is taw this side st tbs Miasta-fopl.sad whst might be law os ths Pnetilc. n is s trick. though. of s proa armor somewhat lower than tbs of fcigk Meals Jmw t " u FAILURES. Ths fsilsrw to tbs Isited States tbs tret quarter of 1807 sre itgfctiy Im ja somber sad Is total tbss tbs record ,er tbs of saws quarter Is tbs Iwt sores years Is only on sartor is ths teat twenty yean hswe ths total of liabilities boss teas sad that was la 111. Is the Erst quarter of U84 they wore double sad la IMS almost doubls nifty yean ago ths failures la tbs Ifelhst States totaled man tkaa they da later. Kith tbs ssoeptioa of four yam. 1ITM1, they were larger tbaa for test year, although ths business for ror t rt tbs eouacry has expanded ths children, and. flour- ishing in the earth, an object lesson In a tree plantation of use or beauty or both combined. "The tree that Is significant In the life of the nation is, of coutss, the forest tree. Isolated tree. along the roadside, la the city streets, or In the school yard, please the eye and cool the air wtth their refreshing shade. But the forest of trees, where wood la growing to supply material for homes, for fuel, for a hundred industries; where the ferest Utter Is storing the waters for streams to quench men's thirsty to Irrigate their lands, to drive their mills, to fill their rivers deep tot the vest traffic of inland in a word, the forest as producer and rustodlan of the necessaries of life and happiness, is ths true message of Arbor Day. "Forestry Is based os this Idea of tho forest, and all its teachings aim to put thla Men into aotnal practice. As a science, forestry secure the ex-- , act knowledge of forest life which makes it possible to cooperate wtth nature la bringing the forvet to its ety fullest usefulness as a source of wood, as a protection to the soil, or as a natural reservoir. As an art, forestry applies this knowledge for the good of mankind. Thus Arbor Day Is the time for Imparting, especially to children, such of the clearest and simplest of forest laws as their minds are ready to receive. It ts, of course, impossible to go profoundly into tho subject, and quite as unnecessary. But, however modest the work undertaken on A rbor Day, it Is by no moans difficult te make that work tell In tho right direction by bringing home Its connection with tho larger and simpler truths of forestry. Ths planting of a few trees, without reference to tho commercial utility and protective value of forests. Is but, a small part of ths work of the day. "That tho elemente of forestry are highly suited to Interest the mind sad appeal to the affections of tho child Is now well established and Is Jus principally to ths fact that ths forest la an active and performing thing, and the home of wild life. The child mind, from very Infancy, has tho inquiring spirit 'of an investigator. But tho dirset appeal to the childs attention and fancy, as to those of few children among races, the barbarians. Is mads not by the abstract or the inanimate. nor by causes and laws, but by the concrete and external forme of nature. The crystal or the weather, tho rocks or ths stars., have Jheir strongest attraction for a later time; but for the years between tho ages of I or 7 and II or 14 tho age for naturo study It Is ths beasts, ths insects, and the birds, ths flowers with their beauties, sad assuredly tho deep forest la Its strength and mystery, tho dwelling place of these creatures and the place otiosen for adventure by youth, that keep the epell to charm and hold the child discoverer. hint child haa not seen a muddy fraehet? Yet thla sight, so common la tho spring, la full of suggestion for a forest lesson. The stream la discolored by ths earth which it has gathered from the sotr. This carries us back to tho stream's source, ta the forest springs. Again, It shows us with whst fores the water has rushed over the exposed ground where there was no forest to shield and bind tt. In Just this way the Mississippi tears down and flings into its bed, each summer, more soil than will ho dredged with years of bostly labor to mnka tho Panama Csual. An experiment with fine and coarse Mils stirred quickly In a tumbler of water and then allowed to settle explain how the stream continues muddy while It runs swiftly, and how It clears again aa It slackens on more level stretches, dropping the soil to the bottom. On any steep, plowed hillside, or on any railroad or trolley embankment, exposed toll may bo seen washing witty the rain. "The flowers and seeds of trees are Interesting subjects of Investigation. The bursting of the blossoms on elm catkins and red maple, the taasel-llk- e of cottonwood, willow, and alder am among the earliest signs of spring. Some of the meet fascinating facts of botany are easily studied In tree flowers. Black locust, basswoods, and yellow poplar, for instance, carry per feet flowers that pollen I ze their own pistils; chestnut, beech, pines, and spruces, on the other hand, have their atamlnate and pistillate flowers distinct, though on the same tree, while such species as the cottonwood, the willows, alders and ashes, the per-- ' JEROME'S TRICK. BUfilNKfifi of many Md. JUST A THOUGHT. Ths erushtag etset of a thought is shows la the case of aa Indiana brought before a lunacy eommls-sio- a to he eaamlasd as to his sanity sad ths tragic sadlng of a woman la Iowa who was reported la a paper aa baring died. Ths mam was sane Munmh to understand ths horrible fats that awaited him if ha wen adjudged Insane end, appalled at the thought of being sent to n madhouse, bio heart ceased to beet, his mind left him nod every function of body and mind wan paralysed. Ho fell as though struck a blow by a dab, and yet the only was a blow that reached, him r "thought." The woman read In the newspaper aa account of her death. She lastaatly reeled sad ths death stroke was upon her. Ths thought come to her that perhaps her sense of things was wrong, that aha was la a tranco and to all tho world virtually dead, and ths struck her dead la fact ,. thought Ths power of ths mind over the body Is beyond understanding. One fates notion, finding lodgment in the brain, snaps ths Ilfs strings and the sou la released. Thera la a lossoa la the foregoing (hat should fee learned. Ths brain that nan work havoc, can build up aa wail ua tsar down. Rightly directed, (ha Bktad Is a wonderful restorer of health; allowud to run riot. It can wrack tho whole human structure. Ths woman whs thought n calamity had bafnlteu her, stuffed out tho spark of ife wtth that one thought; tho man, hold on saspiaioa of bolng Insane, forood ths one anno thought that came ts him to tsar down ths pillars of ths stand's temple sad was buried In tho ndna, Thera Is nothing so uplifting as a thought that allows a ray of sunshine to penetrate ths Innermost recesses of ths soul; there Is nothing so depressing as a shadow cast into ths Ilfs of any one. ARfiOR DAY. Day next Monday Is absorbing our thoughts la local affairs and we all are making some preparation to observe ths day la a manner fitting ths oocasloa. Why? Beoauss them Is ns holiday attended by mors practical snggeetioBS of how to Improve ths home and beautify the city. Km the government Is taking pert hi helping to make Arbor Day a day of education and good deeds, sad for ths first time la the history of ths Agricultural department, a circular on Arbor Day has been Issued, setting forth the obeat of tree planting. Gifford Ptnehot says tbs lesson of ths Arbor Day Is ths use and value of ths tree la the life of the nation: "It should therefore be ths aim of ths teacher so ts observe the day as to convey this lesson clearly and Impressively. The diversion of setting eut a few trees, the excrete as with which ths school hours era enlivened, In exciting ths though si internet end celling forth the enthusiasm of ths scholars, may well he regarded as a means to ths desired sad rather than as the end Itself. Ths sentiments sad emotions aroustJ oa Arbor Day pass only too quickly; the important thing Is that permanent results hs left testing Impressions la A rior est-lgatio- a; half-dnse- n EXAMINER, slmmoa, and the boxelder, bear only the atamlaate or only the pistillate flowers on a single tree. The Ingenious and often Intricate devices of na- are ture to secure well worth Inquiring Into. "Many of the early flowering trees mature their seeds before the school year ends The adaptations by which forest trees secure the distribution of their seeds are diverse. Some seeds, such as the nut and hickories and chestnuts, are distributed by squirrels, foxes, hears, sad coyotes, sad -- by birds, others by ths wind, and yet others by floods or running waters. Hedge-row- s of locust trees commonly spring np whore tho seed, after falling oa the frosen snow, are driven bj the winter gusto to lodgo among tho brush and roots along the fences. Rows of Juniper and cherry are Just as often grown from seeds dropped by birds. Willows sre mainly found along streams sad oocy ground, not because they always prefer so wet a soil, but because the fresh, fine mud beside the water gives the seed-bemoat fevorable to the germination of the seed. "A whole world of undiscovered yet most rewarding truth can be opened through this gateway. And the story of flower and seed conveys very vividly the Insistent purpose of nature to renew the forest and carry It, undepleted, from one generation to another.' n 9 'DANGER OF A STRIKE. New York Droning Post: The declaration of tho Congress of Preach Independent Socialists against tho employment of tho general strike as a political weapon is symptomatic of a difference of opinion which exists within Socialist ranks In all European countries. The theory of the general strike Is of very recent growth; It rose to sudden prominence about four years ago, triumphed' signally In Russia, when tho manifesto of October SO, IMS, was directly won by ths great national three Gaya strike, and la Austria, where tho Imminence of a general cessation of labor wrested tho grant of universal suffrage from the government, but has sines declined as suddenly as it rose. la Germany, Babel fought the movement for a general strike at a time when the majority of German workmen. It Is said, were eager to join Issue with the government under the spell of enthusiasm engendered by affairs la Russia. Brbel saw that the general strike was a dangerous weapon to play with. Successful a It might bo la a cause that enlisted the sympathy of aa overwhelming majority, a tho case was la Russia and Austria, tho situation was different la Germany, with a Arm Imperial hand at the holm. There a general strike was sura to load to dvtl war, and tho Socialist leader hesitated. BLOCKING THE ROADS. Editor Stamford: I would like to rail the attention of the offlelals of the operating department of tho O. 8. I to aa abuso that Is getting too frequent to to pleasant. 1 rvfer to (ho blocking of tho highway's by the railroad company. Oa 8atnrday, March 3, tiie highway, leading west past the old Wasatch driving park, was Mocked by cars from S:40 to 1:30 p. ra. Besides the mall carrier, Eugene Bingham, there were eight others who were held by tho cars oa tho sugar factory track. Oa April 8th. at the same place, the highway was blocked for one full hour by cars. It la simply oussednesa on the part of the switching crews. They kick a string of oars down the track sad leave them to block the highway or not, as It happens, it Is not more than a three-minut- e Job to eut a train of cars. But they cannot wasto that time on a lot of hayseeds I have heard this expression used. It ta a pity then Is not some tew in Utah to remedy this matter, but it appears there Is not or the railroad officials would he a Uttte more careful of the right of the public who use the highways. Our spineless legislators are to blame for the existing condition of things, and (hero will be no remedy until the legislators of the slate work more for the benefit of the public. (Signed) E. W. Clayton. "Doan's Ointment cured me of that had annoyed me a long time. The cure was permanent." Hon. 8. W. Matthews, Commissioner Labor Statistics, Augusta, Me. HARRY THAW'S FATE REflTS IN HANDS OF THE JURY. (Continued From Page Three) after she had seen Stanford White, the ogre who had plied her with wine and seduced her, he had completely undermined her great love for Thaw the love which led to her renunciation of the man. poor little Evelyn,' poor indeed, the woman whose great love was undermined in twenty-fou- r hours by stories of perversion-undermiby the man who had ravished her. of all men on earth. "Men Of this Jury, there Is in this cmc every element of ths simple, vulgar. every rlay tenderloin homicide. If the defendant were any person hut the rich Harry Thaw, of Plttsbnrg. If he wore the son of a padrone In Elisabeth street; If Stanford White were not a leading architect, but a Chinaman In Mott street- If this girt were a chorus girl in a Bowwy theater, how long would the bralu storm, or the paranoia theory be listened to There were two ordinary men In thla esse, and between them wn a tigress urging them on. With Thaw nhe waa seduced hy White: with White she wa the victim of Thaw's perversion. Why. men. there are the same old element here that have made criminal history ever since the world ned A WINTER AND SUUER ' FOOD For bet weather, oaten daily in ha natural state with cream sad sugar. In cold weather pat in a stew-pacover with boiling hot milk, let it boil two minotes; stir to prevent lumping; serve hot with cream and sugar, no breakfast food can oompare with n, WHEAT FLAKE CELERY - began. It coatnlas all the elemente foead in the body, Intetl!-geatcombined to make a diet conducive to health sad long life. Prepared under the personal superstates of Dr. Price, whose name as a manufacturer of pare food prod nets te national. MntHUeoa- -- Easy of IMgeettoo ood Ready te Eat Fatntohlo CsbenOM, M hshst ins ftrsfreoMcgar sate b Mann. ly "la them anything in all this ev). donee tn 1kjw that when Thaw shot and killed White he did not know the nature and quality of hla act, or that the art was wrong. Mr. Jerome reviewed the letter Thaw wrote from PnrU and PIttbug to Aitorney Longfellow and which wrre introduced to show the effect of Evelyn's story upon he young man's mind. He declared tli,.t tho letters OGDEN, UTAIL THURSDAY, showed all through them the writer's appreciation of IfeM rights and wrongs. "Ttey me nothlrg more." he continued. than the rrwtie sad vulgar productions of riel Illiterate, who always had hla own way In life until he was locked up ts Ju eky prison." laaw's sanity. Referring again District Attorney Jerome said he knew enough to write to h attorney to see th girl through the custom house when she landed. The will and codicil next were taken ap and discussed. Tie will showed "a cowardly fear of daruh, declared the prosecutor, hut nothing more. "So you see, geaUemea, tt was eay for such a oowardly aaaa as this to withhold his demands Americana for three years and kill the victim who could not seo Mm approach." Mr. Jerome again picked up the will sad held It aloft. "What la the dotation in that will? Did he not laav h money to the right people Warns Is the delusloa la hla reference to the Twenty-fourtstreet horns Has not the girl described i? Where Is ths delusion there? Dont let us assume she wai tolling the trath once and in the next breath say the same thing show tint Thaw had deh lusion. "Now. turn to tie mother' testimony. when ho went home the girl had thrown Mm over again, perhaps for the very reason! mentioned in the affidavit. There is notMng to show there was any other reason. He loved her all right, loved her tn hla own brute way. There k the scene la the church where the music moved Mm nd he shed tears. Where Is tho delusloa there He was nervous sad worried oa ths day of his marriage. Why. Evelyn was net twenty one and he was afraid her mother would not give her consent. Did Thaw show a delusloa? Didn't tt rather show a tense of tha requirements of the law? What one of the many people who must have known him dsring Me life had been called here to show that he was ever irrational? "No one. , "Did his mother say he was aver to rational? No. 8ha simply said ho was nervous and depressed sad after we hear of what happened before he left New York, I don't wonder. "Now for the Drat witness. Dr. 1 see Mr. Dolmas does not Wiley. place him among his experts He seems to treat those experts as so much Junk. If ho puts seven In one cake against six In the other, he seems to think tho seven won. I had the delusion that quality counted for something and that It was not merely a matter of quantity." Taking up tho testimony of tha defenses medical witnesses one by one Mr. Jerome passed lightly over that given by Dr. Wiley of Pittsburg sad practically Ignored It altogether. Of Dr. Btngaman, the Thaw family physician, he spoke la the highest respect. "This physician who frankly tolls yon that ha Is a general practitioner, Mr. Jerome continued, "who Is not aa export, testified that Thaw aa a child had all tha ailments Incidental to childhood. He tells yon that ha wph called la to attend Thaw la the latter part of 1804 and found him depressed and nervous. That Is only natural. Any man who haa had tho Interviews Thaw had with the girl he loved, saw her go to hls hated rival, and make the affidavit she did, would also be depressed and dejected. "The doctor saw Thaw la prison and saw that Thaw had stuffed aoms paper la the cell door to keep out the draft So aa not to catch cold. Perfectly Batumi, Is It not? Thaw told Dr. Blngaman that hls counsel desired to put him In a mad house and that a conspiracy was. oa foot to commit him to so asylum so as to prevent the life of White being made public la a court room. For that reason he changed Ms counsel. Rational, indeed. If Thsw wanted to take the chance of fighting out hls case before a Jury. "Now, as to Dr. Deemar. He merely toeilfled that Thaw was nervous and that la all. Doctors Evans and Wagner same next. "Evans told you that Thaw suffered from exaggerated ego. That la merely Dr. Blnganother name for vanity. aman, when naked about It said Thaw alwayt had a great opinion of himself. Brans told you Thaw had a brainstorm; a better term would he paranoia of a millionaire. No one ever heard of a brain storm before and Brans may bare wasted to make of It a classic phrase. Well, he has at least .succeeded la making It knows tha. world over. For two days, you will recall, we tried to find a definition for a brain storm hut could find none. "We were told that Thaw, was like a rudderless ship, whteh had lost its balance wheel, cast off from Its moorings sad ths nearest we get to a was a mental fulminatkm, a psychic explosion. "When Dr. Wagner took the stand h said Dr. Evans' explanation of Thaw's stats of mind when he killed White was a Rood one. When I asked blm If he knew of a similar case recorded In medical literature, eut of the many cases he said ha knew of, he cited this one. Mr. Jerome then read the case of a women which hae several times been referred to ta the course of tho trial. After reading the ease Mr. Jerome remarked: T think one can truly say with Dr. Himch that there was as much similarity in this case and thmt of Harry Thaw aa there was between smallpox and a broken leg. After Evans and Wagner came Mrs. Caine. She merely testified that Thaw glared every time he saw White. Nothing unnatural is that. This 1 practically all the evidence, with the exception of that of the expert. which the defense has submitted in support of the plea of Insanity." Mr. Jerome referred to the girlish costume Evelyn had worn throughout the trial, saying that the was dressed s a girl of sixteen. What such a costume had to do with the lssaes involved he oould not say. Young Mrs. Thsw smiled. "How does Thaw come Into the life of this young woman? We first llnJ him wrapping 158 notes shout the stems of American beauty roses and throwing them over the footlights We find him attending her at a chorus girls' dinner. We Hod him offering a weak mother a competence to help him win the daughter. He wss paying s honorable court to her says Mr. Are men who are paying honor able court to women In the habit :sf wrapping $M bllla around the roses they send them? Ho sends her to a hospital and then furnished money to take here abroad. And In Paris he asks her to marry him? Whan the said no. he asked, Ts tt because of Btanfard Whiter Did this pome to him as a shork? Had he heard gossip In the tenderloin which led him to suspect her relations wtth White? I snld It in no sneering way, that if the -- defl-nltl- Del-ms- APRIL 11, 1&07. story of her supreme renunciation was true, there m nothing lik It in the history or literature. She had nothing before her but a life cf hard work. Hera was a man the loved, her was a haven of rest sad because she luved him so well, she cast it all aside. Here was a poor, innocent child whom he would take to hla arms, cherish and protect her against the Infamy of While. And what did thla Sir Gala-hado hut take this 'angel child and flaunt her through nearly every capital of Europe as his mistress. U Stanford White is to he painted black for what he did to Evelyn Kesblt, then them to no enter black enough to paint thla Sir Galahad that took thla angel child and despoiled her! "Dementia Americana that Is whst they call tt. Fine specimen of the high or unwritten tew." Mr. Jerome then directed Ms to tho Hummel affidavit. "1 dost think Hummel Is aa upright man," he said. "I waa after Mas for years and finally got Mss- - He will 80 to Jail If I can put him there and he will stay there it I can keep Mm there. Anything that comas from Ms hands can Justly be viewed with hut In thla affidavit there also figures two reputable tier he, Bnydeck-- r and Jacobson. Snydecker testified that he witnessed the writing at the signature by Evelyn Nesblt. He asked her If she had read the aflldavit and if .what was eontainsd therein was true. She answered yea sad then signed It The defease had every opportunity to eall Jacobean to refute this, hut they did not Jo so." Mr. Jerome picked up the photo graphic copy of tha signature sad teat pngs of the affidavit and pointed out to the Jury how It would be Impossible to pieoe together Evelyns signature wtth that of ths affidavit. The date of the affidavit waa there, as waa the name of Snydecker. The affidavit Itself, the district attorney continued, eras a complete to lnary of Evelyn's Journey through Europe which she herself had told Tum-ma- l. d a sue-piclo- The district attorney scouted the suggestion that Hummel concocted the charges set forth in the affidavit, contending that the eenaecloas between tha affidavit and part of tha girl's testimony were so clear as to remove all doubt as to the document's authentici- ty. "You heard ths story of tho Christmas ova when this Sir Galahad again rescued the maiden from the brute. You hare heard how they remained In Rector's nntll 4 o'clock la (ha moraine and then went to Thaw's apartments. Again he had made up with her, again ha had told her that he would put Ms atalwart arm about her and they would go through Ufa side by aide. Bo Sir Galahad Urad with her as hls mistress la Paris, going to the Dead Rat and tho Ctafo de Paris, and doing cake walks at 3 o'clock la the morning. Thla ts ths Sir Galahad who, almost within ths sound of hls wifes votes, asked James Clynch Smith If he waa vary much married and if he did not want to meet a buxom brunette he was going to Europe and would he glad to put him neat' This, gentlemen, was the SL George who was going out Into tha world and rescuing American maidenhood. Tho district attorney then rehearsed and dwelt on the fact that they expressed (he opinion that Thaw knew the naturo of hls act and knew that It was wrong. Every one of these experts admitted that at tha time of the MUlng Thsw had a knowledge of what ha was doing. but said It was an. Insane knowledge. They could not tell the difference between sane and inaane knowledge. There Is not la any of the acts of that night one thing that shows a look of appreciation of what ha was doing. You remember the conversaWas there tion with Mr. Smlther? anything irratlonsl there? And after the killing did he say that he was the agent of Almighty God who had been directed to make way with this raw Idler of American womanhood? No, he said, 'He ruined my wife.' There was nothing said about Providence until after hls consultation wtth a friend. Dr. Evans. In the words, 'He ruined my wife,' he expressed a jnotlro for hie crime. But there was notMng Irrational there. And there was nothing Irrational about anything hs did that night. When he got to the station house be gave a fictitious name. That was not the Insane man the agent of Providence, the one man chosen of God to avenge a woman's shame. "Mr. De'.mss said he would not appeal to such a shadowy thing ns the unwritten tew. But he reded by en appeal to 'dementia Americans.' which he said afflicted the whole nation. "He might better have adhered to his original purpose, because if this man was Insane you might acquit him. "But when this defendant Is presented to you aa the supposed aroag- (Contlned oa Page Seven.) Woman's Watchword Is Modesty, Whatever threatens woman's delicate sense of modesty, frightens ta. For this reason many a woman permits disease of the delicate woman! ' organs to become aggravated because she cannot bring herself to sulm to the ordeal of unpleasant questionings, offensive examinations sad obnoxious local treatments, which most physicians Doubtless thousands cf the women who have taken sdvanttgeof' Picrae'a offer at free consultation by letter have been led to do so by tto .pe thus offered from a treatment repugnant to modesty. Any sick woman may write to Dr. R. ed and ia invaluable ia aliasine wbduing nervous txcitebilhv; ky, nervous exhsustwn. eonfldeaoc bring treated notedly confidential, bring ncaa to plain aarelopac with as adveitiriac or etonr printing upon teem. Booh ooasnltotioa com yea nothing bother yoa taka treatment from Dr. Pterec or act. Dr. Piorecs Favorite Prescription has been long baited as a "God sand to women." It makes weak women strong and sick women wad. It enables women suffering from "female weokneas," prolapsus atari, retroversion, unlever-- . smb, and ether diealsoeiaesiM of the organs distinctly laminins, te core themaalros right m the privacy af their homes. Pelvis catarrhal drains, painful or irregular periods, bschaehsl frequent headaches, weak Barren, drmgging-aow- a pain or distress to tee lower abdominal, or pelvic, region, gnawing sensation ia stomach, dissineaa, or iaiat sprite, and kindred conditions and symptoms are cared by Dr. Pierres Favorite Prescription. It is not a secret or patent medicine, against the nss of which most people of fartrilitanoa aatarally object,n but ia, in fact, tho "Favorite Pieaorip-tioof a regularly sduoated and experienced physician in the treatment of woman's pceuKar ailments and who is not afraid to publish all its ingredients, as ho doss, on ka attesting tho esmstnasa of the same under oath. borie-wrappe- r, it drop, bains curaure tore gljfcrnc extract vl prin ciples found ta ear most valuable satire, medtelnal roots, w attested by many of tba most eminent medical writers and teacher of all the several schools of practice. Dr. Pierre's Favorite Prescription is a acientifis medicine, earefaUy devised by sa experienced and skillful phyatoima, and adapted frsaisnsdriicata system. It ia made of satire American medicinal roots and is perfectly harmless ta Its fleets ms any comb ties of (As festal sisteggg parr-- S over-worke- house-keeper- s, irireehkelL. induces and nliaros menial anxietymS pendency. Yoa eant afford to soon a -noatram as a substitute i..r this nor. Xxmuy or mow x ciwirosmos The Blood is Tho life, Science has never gone above simple suwmeut ofbeyond ft. Bat tt has Utominetod that smteSSi and given tt a awaamg eW with tec taerearing brraqih oTkuJ edge. When the Mood te" bad scteL purs it is not alone ths body vfeh suffers through disease. The brun k ateo clouded, tec mind nnd judgeum are effected, and aiany an evU detdw impure thought may be directly iro3 to tea impurity of the blood, foul impure btood can be made rare by ass of Dr. Pwres's Golden Mediral tea eevary. It enriches and purifies Ife blood thereby caring, pimples, biocchsT eruptions and other rutenoons totter, or him manifasutiens of Lpm sris-riwui- and blood. 9 9 9 9 9 " tnelssins Ihy. to . Yos tlfcl m ctn't I" . ups te Dr. M t Bgprd te seerol sev mH. it i life Hit " yolrtfji pfedieif Pitctntn; Jl I PtteM.W.F.IBhlttlT, list sf MltpiflS having la pli English oa In r, tea as aorrast under oath. 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A a powerful Invigorating teals "Fa-orit- o Prescription" ua parts strength to the whole system ana to tho organa distinctly feminine ta particular. The "wam-eu- t, run derm," debilitated teacher, milliners, dress"shop-girls,1- 1 makers, ecsmatreesss, Burring mothers, and feeble women graarallr, Dr. Pieree's Favorite Preeosietiea b the earthly boon, being umaqnated aa appetising cordial and restorative tonic. As a soatiiag and steengthsaing n vine" Favorite Prescription" Is armqnsL LS!! |