Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 11 Jan 1923, p. 3

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vmm Hci t* PLAI9DBAIIIB, term- MeHEKBT, IMJ» ' '"• "v v ..s till®#,, CsA&tr S J ?/t| Mr#. Viola French, f ^Danville, 111 --"I think Dr. Pierce** Ckdden Medical Discovery Is tfie best Medicine I have ever used or heard of. .1 learned of It through a friend when I was In a weak and highly nervous condition. I had lost Interest ill almost everything--Just dragged on in a listless sort of way. A few doses of the 'Discovery' gave me a brigtfter *tew of life and I began to gain Strength. No one but those who have Bled this helpful medicine are in a S'Sirlon to speak fullv of Its merit."-- rs. Viola Erench. 108 S. Hazel St What Oolden Medical Discovery has done for thousands it will do for you. Get it today from your nearest draggist, tablets or liquid. Write for free medical advice to Dr. Pierce's, Buffalo, '••lir f V- COUGH Aetfthtoklfetl cigarettes 15 ./orc 10 <jjv' ^ "Tanlae la my stand-ty, and 1 wouldn't think of being wlthout it. It. has set me on my feet more than once when I had such bad spells ol stomach trouble. I thought I couldn't get well." This emphatic statement was made recently by W. C. Wallace, 320 N. Normandy Place, Los Angeles, Calif. "An add stomach and indigestion caused me Indescribable suffering fqt more than four years," he said. "Awful pains would strike me soon after eaf» ing, and I would be almost doubled up in agony. Often I had to take to my bed, and I would lose much weight with every spell. I was told I had ulcers, enlarged stomach and ether all* merits, but a!l my efforts to get relief failed. I kept gettlag worse, and figured I would have to get something to help me or 1 couldn't keep going much longer. "I read' 5n the papers where Tanlac was helping others with stomach troubles, so I began taking It. It never failed to straighten me out, and I gained back my lost weight,^ too. 1 am more grateful than I can* say for .the good this medicine has done me, and I do not hesitate to fire it mj fullest recommendation." Tanlac Is sold by all good druggists. Over 35 million bottles sold.--Advertisement. ' Don't spesk your mind unless you have a mind to say something. , 'C- v . DYED HER DRAPERIES, i j ; SKIRT AND A SWEATCt *" _ > WITH "DIAMOND DYES" Etch package of "Diamond Dye»" contains directions.M simple that any woman can dye or tint faaed, shabby 'skirts, dresses, waists, coats, sweaters, stockings, hangings, draperies, everything like new. Buy "Diamond Dyes"--no othei kind--theft perfect home dyeing is guaranteed, even if you have never dyed before. Tell your druggist whether the material you wiah to dye is wool or silk, or whethei it is linen, cotton, or*mixed goods. Diamond Dyes never streak, spot, fade, oi ran, go (ujr to use.--Advertisement. Wealth is sure to bring disappointments-- after you lose It. etCoBtaottlS|jbmd liny I In *i»f wa<tTir,n"*fa* a? CASTORIA For Infants and Children. Mothers Know That Genuine Castoria Bears ft Signature Copy of Wrappsa. CASTORIA VMC esimMMI WNiMMIV. NBW WMK errv. Quit* Out of Data. jV -IS this the flrst tlme you have ever loved f "They 4ea't ask Uiat question S* Comes Natural, Alice--Doesn't Gladys act lous? Virginia--It isn't actlaffl rfdSc** ••••••••••••ManaukaM Tauohitaby to tpfke Cigars, So Wife SUes Even babies are being taught to smoke, according to the evidence Introduced by Mrs. Rose K u perm an of New York city, who is suing her husband, Adolph, for a separation. Mrs. Kuperman charges that her husband taught their baby to smoke cigars, made love to his stenographer, and posed in tights with beautiful maidens. BCL&rANS , _ Hot water Sum Relief . ELL-ANS s 23# ANO 73* PACKAGES EVERYWHERE HUNTER BRAVES BEAR IN HIS DEN Wounded Animal, Maddened With Pain, Charges Man Who Hat Close Call for His Life. Malone. N. I.--If you had tracked a big bear to .his den among mountain rocks and Bruin laughed at you and refused to come out and be killed, what would you do? Leave him to himself and look for him another day? Or would you crawl in after him as Old Put crawled In on one memorable occasion and bearded i"§ Mothers Rest After Cuticura Sm» ZSc. Otatosat ZS aa4 50c,Talcw2Se. *UY 0P NOAH'S Asleep at the Switch When He Had i Opportunity to Benefit tha $ Human Kaos. feoneheads have been fwjned^tM?^ the dawn of light. The idea that any particular age sees them running wild is a mistake. The first famous bonehead that history records was pulled by no less a personage than old Noah. Noah simply couldn't see things right; he had no vision and, therefore, missed the "Golden Chance." HA Imd 40 long nights in which to get up and put the two mosquitoes In the world out of businegs. He could have done it with one smash of his fly swatted. But Noah snored away af the switch and in time the 0ove appeared with the ollfe branch and the next day the people walked off the ark onto land--and the mosquitoes went with them. There are many other famous boneheads that might be here recorded, but none of them equals old Noah's as s work of art, so the committee appointed for the purpose has decided unanimously to place his name In the hall of famet--Bert Walker In the Topeka Capital. Uses ••Cutter's" Scrums and Vaccines he is doing hi* best to comerve your interest*. 25 years oooprntrjtion on -,niat int IF YOUR VETERINARIAN rjh. The Cutter Laboratory tk*t XnHcu ' Berkeley (U. & License) California W. N. u7CHICAGO, NO. 2-1923. ' . Fired Two Shots.- ' ' ( wvMMm* his (air? That Is jest what A M. Johnson, a Chateaugay hunter, did the other day, and he got his bear. Johnson, with Ed Cooke, Jerry Mahoney and other Chateaguay mm, was stalking deer In the woods near Chateaugay lake. Coming upon tracks of a bear they abandoned their deer hunt to follow him. After a long trail they arrived at a naturally formed den in 9 rocky ledge. As the bear's tracks had ended there, they knew thqt the beast bad taken refuge In the caVe. How to get at the animal was the question. He showed no willingness to come out and letthe hunters shoot him, nor did he promise to be a cordial host But Johnson was unwilling to leave without at least % sight of his game. So, holding his rifle in position for instant use, the hunter entered the den. He had not penetrated far before he caught sight of the animal. Recognition probably was mutual In the dim light of the cave, and Johnson took no chances of a warm welcome from den's owner. He fired two shots In quick succession. One of them broke the bear's Jaw. Maddened with pain and rage the beast made a rush for the hunter, who backed out of the den as quickly as possible with the bear close upon him. As the animal appeared in the open the other hunters fired upon It, and a fusillade of bullets goon put la out of power to fight. The weighed 800 pounds. SAY "BAYER"" when you buys Unless you see the "Bayer Cross" on tablets, you are not getting the genuine Bayer product prescribed by physicians over 23 years and proved safe by millions for Odds Toothache Neuritis Neuralgtaf Headachf ? -V>* < Rheumatism ^: Lumbago Pain, Pain Accept only "Bayer" package which contains proper diiectioat. Handy "Bayer" boxoTof 12 tablets--Also bottles of 24 and 100--Druggirts. la Ik* Mai* wt at IHiw MiaiiSWw of llouxotiuaiUM--i' oi 8aU«UiaS( FINDS WIFE, 72, IS UNTRUE Husban^ Sees Love Note to Another Man After Being Ma mod Forty-Eight Years. Los Angeles.--After forty-eight fears Of married life, A. W. McCready, tol<* the court that he had discovered his wife, seventy-two years old, to be untrue. McCready displayed a 24-page letter which he declared his wife wrote to another man. "I saw her kiss his letters. I was peeking through the curtains at the Jlme," declared McCready. Child Drowns in Bucket of Water. Lingle, Wyo.--Pitching head first ffrorn a baby carriage into a bucket of water, the infant son of Mr. and Mrs. George Jacobson, was drowned during the absence of his mother, who had Stepped but of the house for a few minutes. Ask Him st End of Month, "Brother Williams, If the summona were to come for ydU to go to heaven tonight, would you ba ready and wlllln'f* "Looky heah, Mr. Tom," was the reply, "ain't you 'ware rie fact dat I done paid a month's bouse rent In advance?" It is said that worry kills nolw pee- %>le than work--probably because more people worry than work. Fashion. Beautiful silken nighties la g window' attracted the attention of the Woman. And then she noticed across the tt>p of one of these nighties some cats embroidered with much cleverness. Playful cats they were, but even In their embroidered faces they looked "catlike." as, of course, they should have done. Did some * cynical male fashion creator decide on this touch or mas this a creation for some flapper who could exclaim : "They're certainly tha oafs* pajamas."-- New York Sun. ; 2 or 3 Cans os Baking Powder Are Not Worth the Price ot On* : Vj If they'are the "big can and*; cheap" kind because they>»v««- * may mean baking failures. CALUMET The Economy BAKING POWDER ' 1 Don't let a BJGCAlf: or a very low pried mislead you. ^ Experimenting with an uncertain brand is expensive -- because it Wastes t i m e a n d money. • ja. w BEST BY TEST The sales of Calumet are over 150% greate^ than that of any othef; baking powder. THE WORLD'S GREATEST BAKING jPOWDJStt Stop tha Pain. The hurt of a burn or a cut stops when Cole's Carbolisalve is applied. It heals ulckly without acars. 30^_ajid iOc by all druggists, Co., Rockford, 111.--Advertisement. or send 30c to The J. W. Cole Proximity Avoided. "Have you forgiven that old political enemy of yours?" "Yes," replied Senator Sorphnm. "But I'm not going to let him know It for fear he will cultivate friendly relations and get close enough to make another reach for my scalp." Better a down thorns on the bush than one ii% the finger. % Blue Favorite Color. Blue Is the favorite color of both men and women, according to Dr. Thaddeus L. Bolton, professor of psychology at Temple university, who has made a research study of colors. Blue and yellow and black and yellow are the most popular combinations of both sexes, with violet as favorite from the time of the Immemorial as the royal <*»lor. Doctor Bolton says. When a man makes an ostentatious display of his weulth he advertises himself ss an easy mark. Life Is a one-sidel light for the man who Is his own worst enemy. GREEN MOUNTAIN ASTHMA COMPOUND qnlckly reHevea tlw lliiiws Ing paroxysm. Used tor 55 years and r--II of iMf experience in •tdraggtaU. throat and lung dlaaaaM tgr Dr. J. H. Gnild. FBHSTaiAL ! BOX, Treattaeoa Asthma, l«S causes, treatment, etc-* aaaS upon raqurt. Kt. in hJl J. H. GUILD CO., KUFKST.TC. i Hair Thin? tk« roots and slops kalr ftlUaf M-- spot* rapidly. Try It! At all gaoi «r dlract frtHS nsSK-EUB. ~ Goto $41,000 for Loos of Chicago.--Forty-one thousand dollars damage for the loss of Ills band In -a railroad accident has been award* ed to Clinton F. Anderson, father ot 11 children. Anderson was a brake- Scolded, Girl, 14, THeo to Klil Self. St. Joseph, m.--Severely reprimanded by her parents, Esther Bols, fourteen years old, attempted to kill herself with her father's revolyer. She Is suffering from a bullet woond la bar breast and may not recover. Gallantry Fatal to Man. . Cleveland.--As he stooped to pick «p a slipper dropped by a woman who was crossing the street, Henry Walterson. aeventy-four years old. wealthy contractor, was struck by a ira track an# almost Instantly killed. * ^fpr. -jr.-; W " " V f 1 1 ' l i H j 1 ! v, •'*-r-iir* ri-tniffj-sr' T Wlsf.^.. . , ^9 i-'"* • ~-*jr - "rt-v •• THE WORLD'S OREATEST NEWSPAPER...'f y,A "n.,- ™ •' }Y '•. h t ,.^L: r/: A BIC REDUCTION IN SUBSCRIPTION RATES For the cBenefit of Readers Receiving| - i The Tribune By SMail iw J w >. p,» \ f , ^ i f . 1 HE CHICAGO TRIBUNE, realizing that its phenomenal;, success is due in a large measure tdM* the fact that for seventy-five years i|;v has numbered among its readers & large proportion of the residents of farms and small cities ifrho receive The Tribune by mail, announces for their benefit a big reduction in subscript , }< tion rates effective January 15th, 1923, ; -The reduction rangesfram^ioYt. 1 Mow former rates 1 In 1917, as a war measure, Congress passed a bH| . ' providing for four annual raises in Postal Rates fof( v', newspaper subscriptions. As The Tribune had, fofj ?> many years before, sold its paper to out-of-towit^ 3 readers at less than cost, it felt compelled to add a port tioo of these postage increases to its subscription rates. For the past three years The (Chicago Tribune has been leading the fight to obtain a reduction iip therefore, without waiting further far to act, The Tribune announces a reduction in subscription rates ranging from ft to ft. This cut in rates will cost The Tribi/ne approximately $200,000.00each year, but The Tribune will pay the bUlin the interest of its many country readers. New subscriptions to The Chicago Daft| starting on and after January accepted at the following rates: THE CHICAGO DAILY TRIBUNE [By Mall, Six Days a Week) TImm BstM AwiyOahrto SabwriptioaihiStatMoi IHtikbAH^ltn. mi lltmMlfc (Citi--. TjJW-- --4 lad lwo» !• iliiii.] OUItmf 1 Month $1.00... 3 Month* 2.50 12 Month«.M..M.H...*..i 7.5d.t .. 2.50 5.00 seeond-class postage rates so that it could reduce t<j J»re-war prices its subscription rates to residents iarms and small cities. The Chicago Daily T ribune today enjoys (|ie largest circulation in its history and the largest morning circu- < lation in America--averaging over530,000copies daily. It will readily be seen, therefore, that the reduction M not made primarily to secure more circulation. If you wish to. receive The Chicago Daily Tribune --with its many wonderful features--regularly, take advantage of these new, low rates now. Mail subscription coupon below. Note that $2.50 will now bring A. £e presents,,. Ra.esl, coS«S 1T,e Tnhun^' " from $3.20 to $6.79 a year for Postage alone to sent| { :v the paper to each subscriber in the States of lllinois» ;^A _ ,. ' > : wV Indiana, Iowa, Michigan and Wisconsin. In many For the benefit of its country readers The Tribune instances this is more than The Tribune's entire w subscription price--without considering the cost oF* the product ' Although every one of the other ten taxes estab* Kslted by the war revenue act of 1917 has beett reduced, Congress has not seen &i as yet to reduc* the tax on second-class postage; . will continue its fight for fairer postage rates. Many of our farmer friends have stated that it required from 10 to 12 bushels of corn to pay for f year's subscription to The Chicago Daily Tribune. The Tribune is anxious to remedy that fact TO TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THIS OFFER TEAR OUT COUPON and MAIL AT ONCE! / If y«a prefer to do ee, yon mmy turn Mibtcriptioa / aaasoe below omtoroar poatmuter, pabliahdi or newadealer who will forward it to u«. ' ***&• /SUBSCRIPTION coupon The Tribune Company, Chicago, Illinois, - • I wait to take advaatafe el jmur reAieed aobMriptioa nrtae. ffealmud fieii $.... for whio)i »«od TVt Qum|o DaSp Tribune [by Mall, Six Days a Week} aa follow*: lit® ^ Q 3 MONTHS {$1.25} • 12 MONTHSiSSji^ Oicck the $Mfcecr<»tia« «uamaa4 Street Addreaa or R. P.D.

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