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PASO IIERAXil) '"Real Estate, Classified and Too-Late-to-Glassify Ads. on Pages 14 and 15. EL Real Estate, Classified and Too-Late-to-Classify Ads. on Pages 14 and 15. What the Curing and Benefiting of Six Thousand Patients With the Loss of Only Six By Osteopathy Teaches JJs. It teaches us that all down through the dim ages' the doctors have striven to get the blood to circulate in the part affected from the exciting of the patients by beating on tin pans by the Aborigines down to the present system of poisoning. And that God was right when He said: "In the Blood Is the Life of All Flesh." And that the freeing of the nerve to the part effected by Osteopathy is the proper way to cure all diseases. Hon H. L. Piner, Ex-Superintendent of the State of Texas School for the Blind at Austin, Texas, Writes the Following Splendid Letter of Encour agement to Mr. Boston, Who Graduated Under Him and Was Blind for Fifteen Years, But Has Been Hestored to Sight Sufficient to See Light, and Will Entirely Recover His Sight Under the Osteopathic Treatment of Dr. Ira W. Collins at the Dr. A. T. StiU Osteopathic Infirmary at El Paso, Coming as It Does From So Able an Author and Thinker as Mr. Piner, It Is Highly Appreciated. DID WE MEDICAL DOCTORS, AFTER YEARS OF PRACTICE, TAKE UP THE STUDY OF OSTEOPATHY', WHY All down through the history of the ages men have striven to get the blood to circulate in the part affected, and whenever they could accomplish this the patient has seemed to get better, lne Excitement caused "by the beating on tin pans by the aborigines (to drive away the evil spirits), did to a certain extent force circulation and the patient felt better. Just'as the medical doctors of today poison their patient or whip up the poor, tired nerve bv means of electricity, leads the patient for a time to think they are better. But all of these systems only irritate the whole nervous system and exhaust it, and are tnereiore a nusuu. Just as the use of all alcohols or stimu lants are a mistake and furnish not one bit of vital force to the system. For the fact remains that if the nerve sras not congested and pressed on at the spine it would never have allowed the blood to become stagnant in the part af fected, and thus caused the disease. Suppose you come in contact with the Bmafipox, the absorbing of the poison from the decaying sweat glands trom the person who had the smallpox, over works the nerves to your sweat glands to throw it off. 'especially if you are filthy, so that the glands cannot throw it out perfectly: then it exhausts the nerves, and the acid condition of the de caying -matter you absorbed, ferments your choked perspiration, and you have the same disease. Sow a medical doctor would poison you to trv to whip that congested, nerve up and this would only weaken the en tire system. While the Osteopath would loosen the nerves to the skin glands and then this acid condition would make the nerve ac ; .na it would have its normal strength and throw this out and you fthfSse of -all these blind peo ple that we have cured, that f J oi the pretended specialists of lexas, When their medical association met here in El Paso, pronounced . Bee -s-hen any one is enuiei -- nerve is so contracted at the spine ". j-i ,1tt. ihe nerves to at nas entire p-.- - Ci. t, to stir T, o-tr So wnen i-ney uj t,: '-nerves hx poisoning and burn- up r xi. j-, ,ti an nothinjr but injure thVeye the more, for the paralyzed nerve will not respond to torture So as they said, these cases were hopeless to them. This is the same way with the nerves to your liver in case of liver trouoies, or i-u ,)"i -- -. on, or to your kidneys in Bright s dis ease; or your limbs in rheumatism. At first when your case is not very bad, they can whip up the nerve with poisons and electricity, and-stimulants, or any other excitement of the nerves, and for a while you seem to be better But re member this excitement is all deadening the nerves the more, at the spine and the next spell will be worse, until the nerve riH tie paralyzed. Just as in the case of these eyes, and then they will pronounce, your case hopeless. It is the same old storv and has filled up all the graveyards with premature deaths, more than all the wars and famines. You see they whip up the nerves to the eyes un til blindness sets in; then you are hope less Thev Trhip up the liver with calomel and whiskey until cancer of liver, then you are hopeless. They whip up the nerves to tne stomacn wim phvsics until cancer sets in and then you are hopeless. They whip up the kidneys with drugs until nerves are paralyzed, then either Brights disease sets in or all the impurities go to the lungs, and tuberculosis sets in. Then they tell you vou are hopeless again. It is the same m all diseases. They begin to dope you for some simple ailment, -which you could have cured by taking a hot or cold bath, or drinking hot water or abstaining from eating so much, or taking more exercise, until thev paralyze the nerve and then some fatal chronic disease sets in, like cancer. Bright's disease, or tuberculosis. Remember that the Rockefeller insti tute for cancers and tuberculosis, says they are caused by irritations and ex hausting of the nerves. And remember that all these fatal diseases are unknown among the Es quimaux, where ho drugs are taken and there is no worU in their language for them, and that they are unknown among the indians, until they become civilizeu and get under the drug habit and fire water from medical poisoners. "Sow the reason we could cure all these eye cases, so many of them pronounced hopeless by them, was that we could free the para lyzed nerve at the spine.vthen the stag nant blood in the eye freed the nerve, and being normal again it forced the blood to circulate in the eye again, and it built the eye up again, for the blood made the eye inv the 'first place. This is the way we do when we cure deafness free the nerve to the ears; when we cure stomachs, free the nerves to the stom ach; when we cure lungs, free the nerves J DR. HI THEY CAX CURE "iOU IF i - ,te. PS bhbbpebsibi imp ii ii i i N.5. sri'ir i- . .. a,v-. vv . -s a,v o.v" v ' a v.'v .; wvv., . : :-,. .'.' '... vi 1111 I III h frl'- mi;iZ'fr&r X MEDICAL IMflll i ll P1 11 1 III lllll pKg:???tS& T3EY MET jaBHBaBflBaBafifaEanMHiQHH fj-A"-jr ,v ...yv ''' -T '.. ? X v.v- 'sif-sis'A'''' & " w.a, mmMrMfflMMMOBraO ' --l: 'Ki-x-tCM . :-" " T - --i - Z A ? , rjz, V- "We are ti P"3SBHBE3BC3HHHE2SJH3ttiSE2BB DR. A. T. STILL OSTEOPATHIC INFIRMARY. DR. IRA W. CORNER MISSOURI AND EL PASO fitted with a loss of only six patients. They can cuie ou also, if you lay aside your projuuice and t1 it, did pay no attention to what medical doctors ay as it is taking all thoir patients. Remember, no do or or remedy ever cured any disease. It is the circulating bbod that ujint do 'hat. In the Blood is the Life of all Flesh. Osteoj-itUjg :hu uiily way to restore perfect circulation of the blood, and perfect health is always the result. i to the lungs. When we cure all these old gunning sores in blood poisons, all Tve did -was free the nerves to the part affected. Same way in asthma. Bright's disease, lung disease. All the diseases of women. They drain the impure blood out when their organs are held up by the freed nerves and plent3r of good blood strengthens the weak parts, and shed the tumors, just as the voung lady from Dakota who was pronounced hope less, shed five tumors; and in catarrh, children put new skin in the nose and shed the adenoids. This is why we have been enabled to help, or cure, if the' I took treatment long enough. Six thous and cures of every kind of disease, and only lost six, while the records show seven thousand in the graveyard to the credit of the professional poisoners in the same length of time. Feel your own spine; the trouble is always there. The Osteopath is the only one who can free the nerve there that goes to the part where you are affected, and forces the blood to circulate there, and cures you. MR. VIRGIL P. BOSTON, El Paso Texas. Denison, Texas, Sept. 15, 1910. Dear Old Boy: I have rarely enjoyed any letter more than yours just now received, and I hasten to answer you. Yours was certainly a refreshing, letter, and so nicely written. Some good friend of yours must have just wanted to do you a favor and me, too. Your report about the present treat ment of your eyes has done me good. If only 'you could be so helped as to be able to see enough to get around, you would simply be all right. I would cer tainly give that doctor a trial, and a good one, and I would certainly stand by him for dping his best on me, whether he entirely cures or not. I have much faith in the osteopathic treatment. It is all nonsense for the medical profession to try to knock them out. There are thousands of cures of wonderful merit ac complished by theiHi One of your fore most citizens was in such a pitiable con dition that he nvould go to sleep looking right at you, and he could not help it, and his condition was eTowinfr worse oay oy aay, ana tne wnoie lenaency J -U 1 -J il. t-1 AJ I tia AJllllL aviiiuiig Ul bUC U1CW11. UUi osteopath begged the privilege of trying his hand on him after a group of doctors had pronounced the case hopeless, and in just a litle while the osteopath found a wrench in his neck and he untwisted it and the man got all right in a little while. There was a shutting off of blood supply from the brain. I know a case right "here in this county where a young man was in a fainting condition all the time, and the doctors doped him month after month and pronounced it -a mys terious condition, but a hopeless one. At lady osteopath was sent for, and she simply took him by the collarbone and gave his arm an upward sling, something snapped and the fellow who was lying unconscious on the floor opened his eyes and got up and saidhe felt all right, and he is himself an osteopathic physician today. United States senator Sloney of T I PR. IRA W. COLLINS, Physician in Chief. YOU WILL LAY ASIDE Y'OLR PREJUDICE AND J J -ST TRY' IT. STS., where six thousand cases of everv Mississippi for years suffered tortures with supposed neuralgia and head pains, and an osteopath fixed iiim all right in two minutes. In this strenuous age we get our muscles like our minds into a drawn state where everything is pulled out of normal relation, and we need the osteopath. By all means go ahead with him. It is a source of much joy to me that1 you still remember the morning lectures which I gave the school. I had a sweet letter from Kendall not long ago in which he refers to them as shaping his life. Almost every pupil writing to me speaks of those lectures. I sincerely trust that the impression T made on the old crowd may remain for good and in spire them all with ideals and the ability to cling to them with clean hands. By till means keep up your violin work. Go after the best that is in it. Put the best that is in you into your playing. Coax out the very sweetest tones. It is worth while. I shall always be glad to hear from you, and to know that you will succeed. I shall not be surprised to hear that you have made j'our mark in the world as a great violinist. It is m you to make one, and 1 believe VOU will do it. Siucerely your friend. 7 H. L. PDsER Why Doctor D. C. Williams, Chicago Eminent Medical O ! Doctor, Took up the Study of Osteopathy. Before I studied medicine I was re porter for the Chicago Times-Herald. After I had practiced medicine for several years we began to hear of the wonderful cures that Dr. A. T. Still Avas making out at Kirksville, Mo. We be lieved it was some kind of hypnotism or faith cures. ' As I had been one of their reporters and was also a practitioner of medicine, I was asked to go over to Kirksville and show up what a fraud this Dr. Still was. I was as honest in it as I ever I Iran in antr nnrlorf oL-iiki rvf -rriT. Mtn T Relieved him to be one of the slickest "' " T uuuv..uiu..S vj-i ill. HiW. J. of frauds. But T received mv first iar the morning I arrived. I was going over to the infirmary and who should I meet but an old patient of mine, a manufacturer of Chicago, who for two years had been an invalid with rheumatism. His limbs all drawn up to his body, and he suffered intense pain most of the time. He could not rest in a bed but slept with his knees on a pil low and body leaning against a chair. As he walked up to me that morning, looking robust and walking without even a limp, my enthusiasm over the thought that I would annihilate this Osteopathy began to wilt and wabble at the knees. I knew he was a hard-headed business man and that no one could work on his credulity. He said he had been there for six months, and after he had been, there for , Cor. Missouri WHICH IS XOW RECOGNIZED BY THE COLLINS, PHYSICIAN IN CHIEF, EL PASO, TEXAS. kind of disease has been cured or here .- I a month he felt so sore and weak that he was utterly discouraged, but others who had been there longer told him it was the same with them after they had taken for a short time thev felt worse, but it was only nature renovating his J system and that he had found this to be true and that a great many "failed to take long enough. But he was now en- tirely cured and was intending to go home soon. He cited me to so many other patients who were suffering with rheumatism, until I began to think it was for rheuniatisnt only. For it surely is a success in that line, for I must have met a hundred cases and it was the same story from them all. When I visited the' institutions I met an bid friend of mine. Mrs. Foraker, wife of Gov. Foraker of Ohio. She had been there for some time with her son, who "suffered with heart trouble. She said he had almcst entirely recovered. But what interested her most in Osteo pathy was i's efficacy in curing all kinds of female troubles. She said that as sne was a friend of Dr. Alice Patterson, the lady physician f.here at the time, she hod watched sev eral hundred eases and their abifity tcf relieve and cure all manner of female diseases was to her the most astonish ing and gratifying of any experience of her life. She pointed out to me anion"' the great stream that is constant j ly going and coming there any I number of ladies, and told me of theer varios f,troules and informed me ff ennm nf thorn Trior, u-orn 1vi-m,.!.4- . . w.. J..... .v... (.u . y. v. UlUUIll, uii a ui eiuiiei a ium nuw were Llie picture Oi health. She ateo pointed out many who had suffered from appendicitis, and that in every instance they ha I been cured and that there had never been a ur"i cal operation for any female troubles nor for appendicitis since she had been there; but that all these various suffer ers had been cured by getting the blood to circulate in the different parts by freeing the nerves at the spine so it would hold up the different organs so they could drain themselves and be sup plied with plenty of circulating blood. I felt my prejudices begin to ebb and flow. I next met some asthmatic patients. Ifovr if there ds any people on earth that make a medical practitioner feel utterly heHpless it is for an asthmatic to call on him for help. Those who had been cured by Osteo pathy, and there were scores of them, claimed their ribs had been held in mal positions because of the rheumatic con ditions of their spines and it did not al low their ribs to rise and fall in respi ration. This seemed reasonable; at least they were cured and that was more than we could do. There was all kinds and stages of kid ney troubles, ranging from Bright's dis ease down to lumbago. They simply frcxl the nerves to the kidneys and anyv or gan generating stagnant blood and forc ed it out of the system, and their re covery was a foregone conclusion. In all kinds of indigestion, liver, stom ach and intestinal troubles it Avas the same way. and El Paso Streets, EL PASO, TEXAS LEGISLATIVE BODIES OF FORTY HERE SIX THOUSAND PATIENTS HAVE BEEN Ana 85 I looked at that seething mass of humanity that was pouring in there from all parts of the earth and getting relief from their various troubles for even the blind and lame and halt were there and realized that the principles of the whole system were founded on their thorough and scientific knowledge of anatomy and physiology. I simply capitulated. For I had no heart to at tack a great blessing to humanity like that, and even if I had I, realized I would be a mere pigmy attempting to i change the great sweeping ocean tide in its onwaia uiarcn io no uuui uestiny. I wrote my experience for ray paper, r went home and fixed up nry business and took a course in Osteopath-, which was the best decision of my life, for it has enabled me to be of more service to humanity in each year than I -could have been in a life time. D. C. WILLIAMS, M. D., PH. D. D. 0. Ex-Chair of Anatomy, Chicago Uni- versitv- THIS IS WHERE WE SET THE VER. TEBRA AND CUR ED LITTLE BLIND JOE KELLEY. READ WHAT HIS PARENTS SAY ABOUT IT. PRO NOUNCED HOPE LESS BY ENTIRE ASSOCIATION WHEN IN EL PASO. ic parents or ntue dosepu K"p11pv. thn blind ho' that Dr. Collins cured bv Osteopath v. Avho Is in the pic- x. -I i ! ture with several other blind people who have been restored to sisrht. 'Joseph had been to sixteen special ists here and in California, and they had left him for five years with his little eyes all ulcered and blind and suffering all the time. 'Until JDr. Ira W. Collins cured him and now he goes to school and reads as well as any child, and does not even use glasses. Mrsl and Mr. J. Kelley." "We live at 1305 Wyoming street." THIS IS WHERE WE LOOSENED THE NERVE IN ovarian ab scess AND CUR ED BAD CASE OF BLOOD POISON ING. READ WHAT MR. AND MRS. MON T G 0 M E R Y SAY ABOUT IT: "Yes, I brought my wife to El Paso, and placed her under Dr. Ira W. Collins at the Still Osteopathic Infirmary. When the other doctors had given her up to die with a large ovarian ab scess, which they said would kill hei with blood poisoning. The abscess left a cavity as large as your double fist. The worst they said they Lad ever seen. Dr. Collins freed the nervc-s to the kidney and the temperature went right down. Then he freed the nerves to the ovaries so they could drain themselves and get blood around them and it has healed up' that great abscess until my wife says she wishes every woman could know what Osteopathy can do for them when suffering with various female troubles. r It has saved my life and I think it is the greatest blessing ever discovered. There are 27 others with female trou bles taking now ouo of 112 patients and they are all doing well. There ds every kind of trouble you can think of being treated here, blood poisoning, liver troubles, appendicitis, fits, eye troubles of every kind, lung troubles, throat, troubles, rheumatism, and all kind5; of asthma, paralysis of even- kind, all kinds of diseases of little babies, spasms and indigestion. .The people they have cured are all over town and they say they only lose onu patient out of a thousand, while the other doctors lose about two hundred patients out of a thousand. Everybody who takes of them seems smiling and"" happy and getting better ann speak a good word for them. They have been here seven years and they have surely done good work. Just think of the blind people they have cured that nobody else could, and it shows that they can cure anything else by getting the blood to circulate." Mr. Elnler Montgomery. "Mrs. S-irah Montgomery. We are now on Upson avenue, but our home is in Clifton, Arizona. There are many people taking treatment from Ari zona, also New Mexico, Old Mexico and Southern Texas. r THIS IS WHERE WE FREED TEE NERVE AND CUR ED THE HOPE LESS BLIND LADY MRS. SMILEY. U7 "I am the lady in the picture whose eyes were restored to sight by Dr. Ira COOEISE COUNTY SCHOOL ENROLMENT Bisbee Leads County; Cattle Shipments Large; Strict Mail Inspection. Bisbee, Ariz., Oct. 22. The school di rectory compiled by superintendent E. H stover, shows that 735S children are taught in the public schools of Cochise county by 180 teachers. Bisbee leads with 2203 children, and 49 school teach ers. Douglas cqmes next with 2146 pupils. Four hign schools established. In this county are located in Bisbee, Douglas, Tombstone and Willcox. The threeyearold daughter of R. H. Martin, of Benson, underwent an opera tion at the Copper Queen hospital for the removal of a five cent piece which she had swallowed. An X-ray examin ation showed that the coin had lodged opposite the collar bone in a vertical position. Two probing were used and after a second attempt the coin ex tracted. Tne child had had the nickel in her throat for 10 days, during which time she had suDsistea oniy on mutt Shipments of cattle from Arizona hnvp heen nlaced for next week. Ac cording to cattlemen 1910 will be a -record year for shipments as it is ex pected they will total no less tnau 25,000 head. Complaint is made by TVm. Heyer, who owns a ranch over the Divide, that he has lost one-third of nis flock of angora goats through the depreda tions of unknown thieves. A shipment of 23 carloads of cattle totaling 700 head will be made by Br Thompson from his ranch on the San Pedro river to H. Street In California. James Smithson had his hand caught in a fodder cutter with the result that it was neatly severed by the revolv ing knives before the machine could be stopped. He was taken to tne uaiumet & Arizona hospital. "While work on the 300-foot level at the Holbrook shaft A. Bertol had a rib broken by a fall of rock. The local stockholders of the Shat-tuck-Arizona company, yesterday, re ceived their dividend of $1 per share. It is estimated that tr- "tal sum re ceived by Bisbee stoc ers of that company amounted lo .000 . On account of the lower freight rates which went into effect on September 1, large shipments of soft pine lumber have been received here. The Cunningham residence on School Hiy has been purchased by Mrs. "W. J Bolton, of this city. The' cigar factory owned by vm. Kinny and Jay C. Raub has started manufacturing cigars for local re tailers. ,. . M t the last meeting of the directors of the Country club five new members, two men and three women were ad itto it was decided to celebrate TTunw'pn with a ball. Arrangements were made for a golf game to be Pyed next Sundav between the Reds and the Blues and to invite a Douglas team to play here. . ' . The April term of the district court was closed by judge Doan. The new term will open Monday next. Postmaster dassidy has announced that all packages forwarded througn the Bisbee postof fice will be -thoroughly examined, as it is known that in sev eral cases first class mail has been sent as second class postage rates. The Order of Eastern Star has issued a large number of invitations to the bail Which will be given tonight. It has been announced that Ocar Goll a member of the territorial fair commission, will be appointed deput v .. .. loci nrar game ana nsn cuunui.. H M. Gallagher, auditor of Thoin-nodre company, surprised the his r,-? aT1 ii hv hrin.srin.er with him; after a v.,-? f oh?mee from Bisbee, his bride. They were recently mam 11 Word has been received that Dr. J. E. Bacon and Miss Olivia Melgreen, for mer residents of this district, were re centlv married in Los Angeles, Cal A medical inspection of the schools of this district will shortly be made and a retrular report concerning the pupils heSth wnl be sent to the school board - ..;nH in i 'niiiiii - Fire drilling exerciser , ,"." in all schools and some oi me ""c" are- being taught ho? to use the fire hose in case of emergency. The local board of trade Is mak ing strenuous efforts to obtain a re duction on express rates. - The headquarters of the Inter-Church federation recently organized in Phoe nix will be established at Douglas, Rev. F. T. Walter of the smelter city having been elected president. The object of the federation is the unity of the Protestants of every denomi nation throughout the territory to car ry on religious work from a uniform viewpoint. In accordance with the city s eco nomical plans, the repair force has been reduced to but five, which Is the smallest gang of men ever employed for the street work. "Work of auditing the city's books for two years previous to 1910 will be completed during the next few days and the books submitted to the city council for examination. A magazine rack has been made by the manual training class and placed in th"e hall of the central school building for the use of the class. Over 50 guests attended the moon light picnic given by the Y. TV. C. A. over the divide. A supper was served in the open and the time was spent In amusements of various kinds. High score were made by members For Bargains in Jewelry SEE OUR WINDOW Unredeemed pledges offered at a fraction of their value FULLA W. Collins. I was totally Wind and now I can sea to do my work and thread my own needles without glasses. I don't see why everybody who has any kind of sickness don't go there and get well, for they are curing every kind! of sickness, pneumonia and typhoid fever. Everything you can (tihink of, just as they didmy eyes when nobody elsa could." -Mrs. J. E. Smiley. We live at 519 S. Stanton. of the Bisbee Rifle club. The targets were placed at various distances be tween 200 and 500 yards. A match 'will take place next Sunday between tne local club and the club of Dickin son, X. D. The "Woman's clpb is making ar rangements for Dr. McCormack of the American Medical association to de liver a lecture here during his trip through Arizona. A large sized Gila monster was cap tured near Hereford and is on exhi bition in a local show window. 2L DIPHTHERIA BREAKS OUT IX THE 3IORMOX COLOXIES. Two Cases at Colonla Dablas Caases a Quarantine; Xovel Eatertaiameat; Family Renaloa Flaaaea. Colonla Dublan, aiex Oct. 22. Diph theria has broken out In Colonla. Dub lan. Two cases have developed, one in the fa'mlly of Benjamine Echols, and: one in the family of Alexander Jame son. The parties .nave been quaran tined and every precaution is being1 taken to keep it from spreading. The Clover girls gave a. unique fare- well party to Clarence Cardon and Othello Bowman. Early in the evening lunch was served, "then the prograta commenced in which several new fea tures were Introduced. One of them was in the shape of a guessing game. The leader propounded a. question, then the "pianist played an answer and tha listener was supposed to write it. H. S. Harris got in from Utah. Ha says conference went off nicely, &nd he met a great many old friends and relatives. His people are arranging: plans for a family reunion. Xotcs from Celoala Jaarez. Mrs. Dora "W. Pratt, stake president of the young women, and several other members of the stake bo&rd, were here on an official visit. Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Brigha!rn. Pierce, a son. Mrs. IiUlu Fillerup Is reported aa having malaria fever. THIS "PHYSICIAN HAD ECZEMA Dr. H. H. Griffith of Dayton. Texas, writes: I cured myself of eczema wiro Imp'erial Remedy and now use it in my practice. '"Imperial Remedy" Is a nice, clean liquid, easily used; just pour a littla on a piece of absorbent cotton and sop on the skin. All the itching, burning or pain is immediately relieved. It penetrates the skin and goes to the seat of the trouble, purifies these parts; kills the germs, drives them, to- the surface and peels them off in the form of scales. The skin is then left pure aud soft- Twenty-five years of continued suc cess proves the merits of this prepara tion. Thousands have been cured throughout Texas and tne South. Do not be annoyed with this malady an other day; go to the nearest drug store and get a bottle of Imperial Remedy. If the druggist cannot supply you send us $1 and we will send you a bottle by prepaid express. Imperial Medicine Co., Houston, Texas. DANDRUFF AMI ITGN1NS SGALP YEILD TO , THIS treatment! Why experiraent trying to drlv the dandruff germ from underneath the rfcln with greasy lotions or fancy hairdrem ing, when the Knoblauch Drug- Store will guarantee ZEMO and ZEMO SOAP yto entirely rid the sctp of the germ life that causes the trouble. ZEMO and ZEMO SOAP can he b-1 tadned in any city or town la America and are recognized the best and msst economical treatment for all affections of the skin or scalp whether oa Infant or grown person. On shampoo "with ZEMO SOAP and application of ZEMO will stop Itching and cleauss the scalp dandruff and scurf. We invite you to try ZEMO and ZSMO lecinG it and Roach Paste rids the house of all yermin in a night. Driyes rats and mice out of the house to die. 2 oz. box 25c; 16 oz. box $1.00. Sold by droexist or sent express prepaid on receipt of price. STEARNS' ELECTRIC PASTE CO., ChlcasM. !e a Manicurist Earn $20 io $4G Per W k Learn at home in a few evenings during your spare time. RARE OP PORTUNITY. Take advantage of our special 30-dav advertising offer to 1000 women. "Write ror book: "LESSONS BY MAIL BEAUTY CULTURE." It will be sent FREE if you write at once. Address IXTERX VTIONAL INSTITUTE OF BEAUTY CULTURE, Suite 35-F. No. 23G Eighth Ave, Neir York City. 1 02 San Antonio St, Stearns' El