Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 25 Aug 1904, p. 3

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• - - ,r~ - THE FRAME'S THE THING. picture But of Secondary iMmHtffte# In (tome Eyes. Mortimer Menpes. the author vi the entertaining biography o£ Whistler that recently appeared, was talking , about the frame's Importance to a pic­ ture. "This importance," he said, "no oas but a frame maker can 'exaggerate, and even he cannot exaggerate it very much, There was a good deal of truth in the remark thart my frame maker made to me at one of our last exhibitions. • "He had done, me the honor to come to see my picture, and, as he stood before it, I said: " 'Well, HoroiC ..what do you think of it?' " 'Think of it?' he cried, enthusias­ tically, 'why, stay it's perfect--perfect. Mr. Blank,' he .went on, 'has got one Just like it.' : "'What?' I said, puzzled. 'Blank has 4fc.picture like this? " 'Oh,' said Horne, 'I wasn't talking about the picture. I was talking about the frame. Trust me, sir; the frame Is the important thing. It's the frfanes that sell 'em, every time.' ** - The Bronze Turkey. This variety originated from a crosB between the tame aspd the wild turkey. Its rich plumage and size come from Shouting Their Praises. / Priarpoint, Miss., August 22 (Spe- d*l).--Cured of Bladder and Kidney Trouble after 26 years of suffering, Rev. H. H. Hat,ch, of this place, is telling the public the good news and shouting the praises of the remedy that cured him--Dodd's Kidney Pills. Rev. Mr. Hatch says: -- "*'I have been suffering from Blad­ der and Kidney Trouble for* 26 years end I have tried everything that peo­ ple said would do', me good. But nothing did me any gooi except Difed's Kidney Pills. **I haven't felt a pain since I^pok Dodd's Kidney Pills. They' gave me health and I feel like a new man al­ together. Dodd's Kidney Pills are the best I ever had." All Urinary and Bladder Troubles are caused by diseased Kidneys. The natural way to cure them is to cure the kidneys. Dodd's Kidney Pills ijever fail to cure diseased kidneys in any stage or place. They, always cure Backache and they are the only remedy tjiatever cured Brigbt's Dis­ ease. * \ , • Scared the Englishmen. Two "Colorado beetles" recently caused palpitation of the heart in certain agricultural and scientific cir­ cles In England, for a number of wor­ thy gentlemen saw ruined crops and national calamity staring the country In the face until the matter was ex­ plained to thenu A well-dressed wom­ an called at the Hereford free library end handed an assistant a small, round wooden box, saying that it contained "two Colorado, potato bugs," which migfct be of use to the museum, knowing the ravages these insects made among potato crops, the libra­ rian informed the chief constable, who in turn informed the board of agricul­ ture. Two government inspectors hur­ ried from London and, with the royal police, made diligent inquiries for the mysterious woman who had left the beetles. Finally the mystery was solved. A young man called at the free library and said that the beetles were left by a Mrs. Knotter of Rhode Island. Mrs. Knotter had brought five specimens oY the beetle from America as curiosities. Three of them died and the remaining two were taken by her to the free library. Poor Policy." "A liberal policy pays best," said Mayor Stoy of Atlantic City. "The government and the towns-people of this resort are liberal, and tnat is why --or partly why--Atlantic City has so pell succeeded. "We had a grocer here once who ^as not liberal. He did not get on. He soon had to shut up shop. His ir.ethods did not suit a place like this. "Here is an example of that gro- r's way of doing business. 4'A millionaire cottager called on bim one morning, and said, half amused and half angry: "'You have charged me on this bill, •Ir, with things I never got. What do you mean by such items as one handful of raisins, three lumps of eheese, one pocketful of almonds, two pieces of candy, and three mouth fair of sugar?' " 'I mean, sir,' said the grocer, 'that they who bring their boys with them when they do their marketing, must pay for all they get.'" A8 EASY - Needs Only a Little Thinking. The food of childhood often decides whether one is to grow up well nour­ ished and healthy or weak and sick­ ly from improper food. -'"It's just as easy to be one as the Oilier provided we get a proper start '• A wise physician like the Denver Doctor who knew about food, can ac­ complish wonders provided the pa­ tient is willing to help and will eat qoly proper food. Speaking of this case the Mother slid her little four year old boy was Buffering from a peculiar derangement of the stomach, liver and kidneys and his feet became so swollen he couldn't take a step. "We called a Doctor who said at once we must be very careful as to his diet as improper food was the<only cause of his sickness. Sugar especially, he forbid. ~-"So the Dr. made up a diet and the Srincipal food he prescribed was rape-Nuts and the boy, who was very jfond of sweet things took the Grape Nuts readily without adding any -ftugar. (Dr. explained that the sweet Hhfr Grape-Nuts is not at all like cane or beet sugar but is the natural sweet the grains.) "We saw big improvement inside a tew days and now Grape-Nuts are al- fcost his only food and he is once " more a healthy, happy, rosy-cheeked youngster with every prospect to grow up Into a strong healthy man." Name glvep by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. - The sweet of Grape-Nuts is the Na- , tnre-sweet known' as Post Sugar, not digested in the liver like ordinary Sugar, but pre-digested. Feed the youngsters a handful of^ Grape-Nuts* When Nature demands * sweet and prompts them tb call for sugar. There's a reason. Get the little bool£"Th» Road to ^Jfellville" in each pkg- Tonng Bronzy Turkey (male), its wild progenitor. To keep up these Qualities crosses are continually made. In this way the mammoth size has been gained. Some think that the bronze turkey has been developed too • much in size, as too often the in- n v. Adult Bronze Turkey (male), crease of size has been in the shank and thigh and not in the -edible por­ tions. Floors of Poultry Houses. The floor of the poultry house is a matter of considerable importance for a good many reasons. The health and safety of the fowls are directly af­ fected. Some poultrymen prefer earth floors, some board floors, and some floors of cement. The latter are very uncommon, but are being put in by some poultrymen that are raising poul­ try on a large scale. The main con­ troversy is betWeen the advocates of wooden and of earth floors. i Some years ago 'the Farmers' Re­ view , sent cut inquiries to a large number of poultry raisers asking what kind of a floor they preferred. The answers were overwhelmingly in favor or board floors, and it is evident that board floors are far more common than the other kind. In the main they are the safest kind of floors to construct and have hitherto cost less than would a cement floor. There are numerous things to be said in favor of board floors. They are suitable for any kind of location, be it dry or damp. They can be built of any thickness, single or double or hollow with tarred paper between to keep out the cold. They may be placed near the ground or put far away from it. They may .be even raised so high that there wijp be room for scratching sheds under them or for big boxes into which the manure can be scraped at cleaning time. They dry Out readily if wet, and in fact, have few objec- tional features. They may, however, if hollow, become the breeding places of rats and mice, and this is one of the great objections to them. Lice and mites find a hiding place in the cracks between the boards. If kept too wet the boards swell and some­ times bulge up. In case of flre they make good food for the conflagration. They rot in the course of time and from the beginning oft that process it is imnnssihle to koep them clean. If allowed to absorb drbppings they be­ come thoroughly scented, and this odor can -never be taken from them. These objections are, however, quite theoretical, as the careful poultry raiser can readily prevent most of them. First, if the floor is kept cov­ ered with sand, dust or other absorb­ ent material, the lice will not be like­ ly to get into the cracks, as lice do not like dust. If often cleaned out the house should not become so. filthy as to lead to the rotting of the boards. The dirt floor has proved very ob­ jectionable in some cases, especially where natural soil was used as a floor. In the case of chicks such a floor has net infrequently proved a source of supply of gape worms, and such chicks have been killed by gapes, when other chicks kept on board floors, but in the same poultry bouse, have not been affected. Where the dirt floor is used the natural dirt should not be allowed to come to the top, but It should be Overlaid with something else, perhaps coal ashes or cinders or even sand. The dirt floor is always hard to clean, except where much straw is used. The cement floor will doubtless be more extensively used in the future than it has been in the past, as we are evidently entering cn a cement age. It is clean, durable, rat proof, lice proof, easily cleaned, non-perme­ able by.droppings apd odorless. All poultry houses should be built thoroughly rat and mice proof.- The rats destroy the chicKens and steal the eggs and the mice injure the feed and often riddle the bags that contain it Then, too, there is no knowing how many diseases are brought in by mice. There is no reason why they should be tolerated in the "poultry house. A few more hens on every ^'farm would enormously increase the aggre­ gate Income of American farms. The cause of pear blight has now been discovered and the method by which it is carried from one tree to another. This makes it possible to And a preventive, for the blight spore has its limitations and its seasons of TORTURING PAIN. Hair This Man's Sufferings Would Have Kilted Many a Person, But (poan'a Cured Him. - A. C. Sprague, ftock dealer, of ^Normal, 111., writes: 'Tor t w o w f a o i e rears I was do­ ing nothing but buying rnedi- :ines to cure nay kidneys. /I do not think that any jnan ever suffered as i did and lived. The pain in my back was so bad that I could not sleep at night. I could not ride a horse, and sometimes was unable even to ride in a car. My condition was Critical when I sent for Doan's Kidney Pills. I used three boxes find they cured me. Now I can go anywhere and do as much as anybody. 1 sleep well and feel no discomfort at all." A TRIAL FREE--Address Foster- Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. For sale by,all dealers. Price 50c. r " Stylish Women Not Modest.' / Accord in g to a leading dressmaker of Boston the once sensational "peek- a-boo waist" must give place in trans­ parency to a lace novelty which is now much favored by stylish women in eastern cities. Says this modiste: "Really, some of the work I am oblig­ ed to turn out makes me feel like a promoter of immorality. People in my line of business are not easily shocked but, upon my word, at times my sense of modesty has nearly compelled me to offer patrons the shelter of an op­ era cape. My attempts at toning down their ideals have met with ridicule or haughty protest, and some of them have even left my establishment in anger because of my protests," NORTHWEST KANSASI Phillips County is located between the Solomon and Republican, two of the beet rivers in the State. Its network of hills, smooth open prairies, wide meadow valleys, numerous springs, timbered cross streams and rivers combined together make it a surprisingly beautiful country and natur­ ally promote and precipitate seasonable local rains' protecting it from drouth. It has a deep loam soil and it is one of the best ranch and surest crop sections west of the Missouri river for orchards, corn, alfalfa, hoffs, cattle and horses. Three railroads through county. It will pay you to investigate my $10 to $30 bargains in de­ sirable ranches and farms. J. F. MORSE, Phillipsburg, Kan. Sterilized Milk. As many as 5Q0 families 4re now supplied with sterilised milk by the Liverpool (Eng.) corporation, the weekly consumption being 1,200 gal­ lons. So well has the undertaking succeeded that the health committee now proposes to develop it by start­ ing a municipal dairy farm and keep­ ing its own cows. The municipal sup­ ply of sterilized milk has also been adopted at St. Helens and Battersea. Would Seek North Pole. The French savant, M. Benard, is convinced that Nansen took the only route by which the north pole can pos­ sibly be reached. He favors an ex­ pedition with two ships connected by wireless telegraphy. The time is esti­ mated at three years, and it is hoped that the prince of. Monaco, who is greatly interested, will contribute the necessary $300,000. ' Important to Mother*. Sxamine carefully every bottle of CA8TORU, a eafo and sure remedy for infaate and children, and see that It Bean the Signature of &l Das For Oyer SO Yean. The Kind Yoa Hare Alwaya Bought. Hamilton's Grandson. A grandson of Alexander Hamilton lives in Elk Neck, Md., keeping a country store and acting as postmas­ ter. He is seventy-four years old and always speaks of the first secretary of the treasury as "grandpa." He was appointed postmaster at Elk Neck by President Lincoln and has held the office ever since. ARE YOU GOING TO ST. LO'JIS? The Hamilton Hotel Is located but a few blocks from World's Fair. It is fireproof and moderate in charges. Good rooms with bath, $2.00 per day and' up. European' plan. Breakfast 50c. Write for Booklet. Address F Wilfiamson, manager. Railway Building in Japan. According to a Japanese trade jour­ nal, little progress was made in rail­ way extensions in that country during 1903, as only 211 miles of new track were opened by both government and private companies. For Voyr Perfect Comfort At St. Louis Exposition, which Is very severe upon the feet, remember to take along a box or two of ALLEN'S tOOT- EASE, a powder for Hot. Tired. Aching, Swollen, Sweating1 Feet. 80.O00 testi­ monials of cures. Sold by all DruptfistS, Dfre. JXXfci T ACCEPT A SUBSXTXUX12. - 7^--- . • . J j In Close Quarters. - There is a four-room tenenfient in Manchester, Conn., which is occupied by a family of Poles and several boarders, in all fifty-six persons. A paper complains that "single men get all the jobs there are." At any rate, they-don't get the job of taking down the st^ve or wheeling the baby carriage. ^velfipinent. Hundreds of dealers say the extra quantity and superior quality of De­ fiance Starch is fast taking, place of all other brands. Others say they can­ not sell any other starch. Of the 32,019 lights used' In the public illumination of Berlin last March no fewer than 30,881 were gas, &nd only 735 were electric. On the 10th of July the railway to the most fashionable resort in Switzerland--St. Morits, in the Enga- dire--was completed. Dealers^ say that as soon as a cus­ tomer tries Defiance Starch it is im­ possible to sell them any other cold water starch. It can be used cold or boiled. : Even New York City hesitates to adopt the double-creased trousers. iwm meiguci U5CL. Corn Planting* in Argentina. Aside from lack of cultivation, the principal- mistake of the Argentine corn grower is his unwillingness to give his plants room enough to,grow and get(, air and sunshine to mature and ripen, says Frank W. Bicknell In a report to the United States Depart­ ment of Agriculture. As previously stated, most?1 of the corn is planted with a machine attached to the plow, and the rows are generally about 20 inches apart--simply drilled in, re­ sembling very much a field of fodder corn in this country. A few of the farmers are learning better, and per­ haps 100 American corn planters have been sold in Argentina. But no check rowers were seen, and there is1 so little cultivating corn two ways that it is still spoken of as a curious thing --this "North American checkerboard plan" of planting corn-r-and scarcely a farmer in the country follows that plan. The Basques, the most indus­ trious and successful class of Span­ iards, go in for better methods. The Catalans, from the Province of Cata­ lonia, Spain, are also engaged in corn growing in the Province of Buenos Ayres. In some sections, notably to the southwest of the city of Bueno'S Ayres, where some of the best corn farming is done, it is noticeable that the better the farming, the more ex­ perienced and successful the farmers, the wider apart the ro$s are, and occasionally a field is cultivated both ways. The rows in the better culti­ vated sections are from 24 to 30 inches apart, and the plants in the rows about 20 to 24 inches apart. Corn is hardly ever planted farther apart thah this, and the greater part, in fact nine- tenths, is in rows 20 to 22 inches a)art, and the plants no farther apart In the rows and generally much closer together. The Argentine DeparHbent of Agri­ culture has tried to teach the farmers the benefits of plantipg farther apart, but they are hard to convince. Men .have been sent around in various sec­ tions saying to farmers: "(Jive us a hectare of land and we will plant it and cultivate it the way we think it should be done; we will bear all the expense and you may have all the crop." These experiments have al­ ways resulted in producing twice as much, ojr more than twice as much, as the farmer raised alongside in the old way, because the corn was given plenty of room and was well culti­ vated. But the ignorant farmers have not always been conartjieed. When asked how they were going to plant next year, some of them said they intended to go on as before.. When asked why, and if they had not seen the good results of the improved methods, they have replied: "Oh, that was Just luck; you couldn't do it again." Until recently corn was sim­ ply sown broaidcast, by hand, covered in some primitive fashion, and nothing more done with it until it was gath­ ered in the fall. Even now much of this is' being done in some parts, though not in the districts where corn grows best. &»*- *' . a The Peanut a* a Field Crop. The peanut is assuming every year more and more importance as a field crop. Its natural home seems to be in the southern part of the temperate zone, but it grows far north when properly cultivated. It is successfully cultivated as far north as the Great Lakes. We are not sure that this will not yet become one of the successful field crops of the sandy regions of the middle west. We have been treated to so many surprises as to the adapta­ bility of plants to large areas of coun­ try that little in this line now-sur- prisea'us. If the peaftut can be grown in large quantities on our very sandy land, it will prove to be a great boon to our agriculturists. Belonging to the leguminosae it has roots that car­ ry nodules in which live the bacteria that gather nitrogen from the air. The edible portion of the nut is there= fore very rich In nitrogen. An analy­ sis of the edible portion shows it to contain, in per cents, water, 9.2; pro­ tein, 25.8; fat, 38.6; carbohydrate, 24.4, apd ash, 2. The protein content is therefore remarkably high, and makes the nut very good food when it is ground to increase its digestibil­ ity. It is an improver of the. soil, as are all the legumes. There is no dan­ ger of growing too many peanuts, as the surplus can always be used as food for swine. One ' man declares that the peanut can be grown in ev­ ery state in the Union and even in Southern Canada, and asserts that it is now being grown as far north as the lower peninsula of Michigan. If for any reason a crop of peanuts should fail to ripen, it woijld add.nitfb^ gen to the soil by being plowed un- ief.' £__ •• : Docility of Pure-Bred Hogs, It is a great point in favor of pure­ bred hoga that they are more docile than the others and less liable to run about. The fencing of them is a com­ paratively easy matter where the fencing of the "others was a herculean task. This point should be of itself sufficient reason for the farmer to pay a little more money and get pure breds when he has the choice of buy­ ing them or of purchasing Others of the mongrel sort with roving and rest* less proclivities. It is not a pleasant thing to have hogs always breaking out of the yards and pastures and hav­ ing to hiint them up in the highway or the neighbors! vegetable garden.* Then the common "sorts are hard to drive and it is no easy matter to return them to their pens and yards once they have broken out. The quieter- animals are more valuable for food, as their muscles are tenderer. More­ over the quiet ones make better use of their food and will make more pounds of gain per hundred pound of feed than the others. The breeders of pure bred swine are constantly select­ ing, though unconsciously, in the di­ rection of greater docility and tract- ability. The interests of the breeders of pure bred swine and of the farmers lie along the same line. W. S. Swarwj has been appointed as- •istant dairy and food commissioner .... Qi .;;,g . . ' -.. .. rj* ̂ NO ESCAPE FROM FATE. Man of CverrWueh Prudence the Play« thing of Disaster. "These railway disasters my cour- age o'ermasters." said he; "I w/on't ride on the train;" and starring to travel, o'er concrete and gravel, fell and bFoke a iarge hole in his brain, /"These steamboat explosions fill me with commotions; I will walk if it takes m^»a week." So he walked all vacation, out nervous prostration^ cOm-^ pletely broke down his physique. "1 wouldn't ride in a phaeton, not if it should weigh a ton; if you ride be­ hind horses you're dead." Then a cy­ clone cam® whirling; his house start­ ed twirling and thundering down on his head. "I won't ride a bicycle, break bones like an icicle, and go to those hospi­ tal cribs." Then a bicycle-rider, a wheelman named Snyder, rdde against him and broke in his ribs. " Then the surgeon inspected his backbone deflected, and found that his head had been split; but young Mr. Snyder, the bicyele-ridefr-fwhy, heh wasn't lrijured a bit. ;'In no church congregation' I'll take up my station--a church may burn down in a minute." But that night a dire unquenchable fire burned down his own house and him in it.--Lon­ don Tit-Bits. . Universal Language. Never do six months pass by with* out some attempt being made to do away with the disadvantages of the diversity of tongues; but so far sue: cess has not attended any one of them. Struggle as they may, the in­ ventors of universal languages cannot get away from Latin, and the present attempt, that by Prof. Peano of Turin resolves itself into Latin without in­ flections. The professor proposes to do away with cases, numbers, gen­ ders and person, and also with tenses and voices, using the ablative in the case of substantives, and the infini­ tive minus -re or -ri for the verbs. In fact, his system is the evolution of the Italian tongue carried to its logical conclusion. Nearly everyone learns T,atin more or less, and it is difficult to see why the simple Latin of the Middle Ages, without any straining after Ciceronian elegancies, ^should not suffice for all our international needs, during the few years which must pass before all the world speaks English.--London Globe. * * 8trikea in Massachusetts. According'to a bulletin just issued by the Massachusetts bureau of sta­ tistics of Labor, covering the year ended Sept. 30, 1903, * the number of strikes during that period was 217, or fifty-nine fewer than the year be fore. One hundred and thirty-three strikes involved 28,709 workmen, who lost an aggregate of 1,316,859 days. Many Children Are Sickly, Mother Gray's Sweet Powders for Children,'* used by Mother Gray, a nurse in Children's Home, New York, euro Summer Complaint;, Feverishness,Headache.Stomach Troubles, Teething Disorders and Destroy Wonus. At all Druggists', 25c. Sample mailed FREE. Address Allen S. Olmsted, Le lioy, N. Y. The Philadelphia mint is to turn out $100,000,000 in cents and nickels from September to December--thus providing an ample supply of coins to put in the contribution box and to pay car fares with. The National Casket Co. make the Best and Most Elegant Caskets in the World. If you are furnished their goods, you may rest assured you->&et what you pay for. * King Edward having become a pa­ tron of the Automobile Club of Great Britain and Ireland, that club is now authorized to prefix "Royal" to its rame. Don't you know that Defiance Starch besides being absolutely superior to ffnv other, is put up 16 ounces in pack­ age and sells at same price as 12- ounce packages of other kinds 7 Germany is probably the most densely wooded country in EyVope. ore forest. More than one-quarter of the entire ar^F of the empire is covered a with Chaplain Henry A. Brown has been appointed chaplain at Ft. McHenry. This is the first time in twenty years the fort has had a chaplain. Storekeepers report that the extra quantity, together with the superior quality of Defiance Starch makes it next to impossible to sell any other brand. 1 We learn with regret that John L. Sullivan has been eating too many codfish balls again. .. E^O YOU COUCH D O t a k e L - i i r n - ' c BALSAM It Cures Colds. Coughs. Sore Throat. C'rcup, In­ fluenza, Whooping Couirti, Bronchitis ana Asthma. A certain cure for Consumption innrsi stages, and a sure relief in advanced stages, use at once. You will see the excellent effect after taking the first dose. Sold by dealers every­ where. Large oottles 25 cents and 50 vents. THE ALASKA CENTRAL R'Y. Fabulously rich territory. Cheap and easy to bfeld. Sarest and most profitable Investment ot modern TOWS. Beliable information also Government report# on farming in Alaska, mailed free to anybody applying to AD0LPH 6YDAL, Crookston, Minn, Reference: AlMka Central Kjr.Co., SeatUe,Wash. Uied bjr Good Boosekeepenu EZ TUQUID)' STOVE POLISH UQUID)r DOLZiT LAST Md by Good Paalary : W*sne£Mds Wioale-Stick urNDR* BLPB. . VTea't »pni7 break, freeie nor «po» clothM. Co* Iteeat* ancieqnaUMcenta worih ot ao; othar Malae. V .. : S - i A ' * J Mrs. Rosa Adams, niece of the late General Roger Hanson, C. S. A., wants every woman to know of the wonders accomplished by* Lydia R Pinkham's Vegetable Compound* " DRAB MKS. PINKHAM : --I cannot tell you with pen and ink what good liydia E. Pinkhani's Vegetable Compound did for me, suffering from the ills peculiar to the sex, extreme lassitude and that all gone feeling. X would rise from my bed in the morning feeling more tired than when I went to bed. but before I had used two bottles of JLydia E. Pinkliaiu's Vegpe* table Con .pound, I began to feel the buoyancy of my younger days return­ ing, became regular, could do more v. ork and not feel tired than 1 had ever been able to do before, so I continued to use it until I was restored to perfect health. It is indeed a boon to sick women and I heartily recommend it Tours very truly, Maa. Rosa. ADAMS, 819 12th St., Louisville,*Ky.n . ^ Any women who are troubled witk ir* regular or painful menstruation, weak­ ness, lcticorrhoea, displacement or ulcer­ ation of the womb, that bearing^dowA feeling, inflammation of the ovaries, back* ache, general debility, and nervous proa* tration, should know there is one tried and true remedy, Lydia E. Pinkham'S Vegetable Compound. No other medicine for women has received such wide-spread and unqualified indorsement. No other medicinc has such a record of female cures* " DEAR MRS. PINKIIAM : -- I am wry pleased to recommend Lydia E. Pinkliam's Veg®. table Compound for womb and ovarian diffi<mk ties frcm whit h I have been a sufferer for yeara It was the only medicine which was at all beneficial, and within a week after I started to use it, ther* was a great change in my feelings and looks. I used it for a little over three months, and at the end of that time I suffered no pain at the menstrual period, nor was I troubled with those distressing pains which compelled me to go to bed, and I hav® not had a headache since. This is nearly a year ago. 1 always keep a bottle cn hand, and take a ftw doses every week, for 1 find that it 'tones up the system and keeps ma feeling strong, and I never have that tired, out feeling any more. "I certainly think that every woman ought to try this grand medicine, tor it would prove its worth. Yours very truly, Misa ELSIE DASroBXH, TOFT Da Soto St., Memphis, Tenn." ,> FREE MEDICAIi ADVICE TO WOMEN. 4 . Don't hesitate to write to Mrs. Pinkham. She will understaad Jrour case perfectly, and will treat you with kindness. Her advice s free, and ihe address is Lynn, Mass. No woman ever regretted having written her, and she has helped thousands. FORFEIT U we ran not forthwith prodne« tho original letter* asd BlgBataratst aboTo twtlm-nlall whieh will prove their absolute j $5000 i genuineness. l*di* K. Pinkham M«d< C*., L|U, MiA $44 To the 33 Pacific Coast Every day, September 15 to (October 15, from Chicago. Via The California Express and Omaha; The Pioneer Limited through ^ St Paul and Minneapolis; or The South­ west Limited and Kansas City if you select the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Only $33.00, Chicago to San Francisco,, Los Angeles, Santa Barbara, Portland* Tacoma, Seattle" and many other Pacific Coast points. Only $30.50, Chicago t© Spokane; "$30.00, Chicago to Helena and Butte, Ogden and Salt Lake * City. T<> * For Free Books and Folders kindly Fill Out This Coupon and anil to-day to F.H. MlLtER, SU. Pat. «gt., Railway Eiohiap, CBRIM Name City. States fhrobable Destination. W.N. tl. Aids the organs of the body to per- form their func­ tions in a natural and healthful way $I,200T0 $3,000 A YEAR la balnv made by graduate* of ti>» Western Ve««iinar7 Oel!ae« practicing and t n government poattiona. Catalog I r a a . D r . 1 . H . W A T f U a , U W M . t i l i M . . • » » -- l a WORLD'S FAIR ST. LOUIS, MO. BILLON AVENUE HOUSE Rote Si per day for bed and brMritfaet Only t'irt1 .* Mtn'ki from Fair Or>juis4» KntraBM. Fvi'ryuiuiw: new. StrMoe tfce brat. Coot aid 8ij;ht;y. Seud fur elrcalare. Gratiot & Wild«n.6111 W. Park *»., St Unit, Hi. ; Thompson1* Eye Water W. N. U, CHICAGO, NO. 35, 1904, When Atifwering Aaveriieementt Kindly Mtntioir This

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