Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 13 Jul 1905, p. 3

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' •: '-"V- "• -- • • ;>V fm BABY'S TERRIBLE BORE Body Raw With Humor--Caused Urn told Agony--Doctor Did No Good --Cutlcura Cured at Once. *My child was a very delicate baby. A terrible sore and humor broke out on his body, looking like raw flesh, and causing the child untold agony. My physician prescribed various rem­ edies, none of which helped at all. I became discouraged and took the mat­ ter into my own hands, and tried Cuti- cura Soap and Cuticura Ointment with almost immediate success. Be­ fore the second week had passed the soreness was gone, not leaving a trace of anything. Mrs. Jeannette H. Block, 281 Rosedale St., Rochester, N. Y." Puzzle. Landlady--Will you have tome chicken, Mr. Smith? Mr. Smith--If you please, Mrs. Fatt- leigh. Landlady--Will you have come chicken, Mr. Jones? Mr. Jones--Certainly, HI have Chicken. t Which one is behind In hist board Wonderful Courage Is displayed by many a poor invalid, crushed under the weight of chronic troubles, like constipation, biliousness, neuralgia, headache, stomach trouble, etc. But such suffering, though brave, is quite unnecessary, for Dr. Cald­ well's (laxative) Sytup Pepsin will surely cure all these diseases, drive away all the unpleasant symptoms, and restore every invalid to health. Try it. Sold by all druggists at 50c and $1.00. Money back if it fails. , A Feminine Retort." "Here Is a sensible writer in the London World who says: 'Most menr like women in quite plain, simple, clothes.'" "Bah! That's the utterance of some parsimonious husband with a dowdy wife." Here is Relief for Women. Mother Gray, a nurse in New York, -discovered a pleasant herb remedy for women's ills, called AUSTRALIAN- LEAF. Cures female weaknesses, Back­ ache, Kidney, Bladder and Urinary troubles. At all Drupg-ists or by mail 50c. Sample mailed FREE. Address, The Mother Grav Co . LeRov. N. Y. Knew Too Much. Mr. Lodger--Why do you always lock your door when you go out? Mr. Boarder--How do you know I al­ ways do? Why It Is the jBest is because made by an entirely differ, ent process. Defiance Starch is un­ like any other, better and one-third more for 10 cents. "When the Hawaiian planters begin fighting Claus Spreckels in California there will be plenty of cane raised. Many who formerly smoked 10c cigar*, nowsmoke Lewis' "Single Binder" straight 6c cigar. The best combination of the best tobaccos. Lewis' Factory, Peoria, 111. Many a natural born fool wouldn't be suspected if he only had sense enough *0 keep his mouth shut. Up-to-Date Housekeepers use Defiance Cold Water Starch, be-* cause it is better, and 4 oz. more of it (or same money. Character is a thing that you never can put back in the place from which you have taken it. Dr. David Kennedy's Favorite Remedy, the Great Kidney and Liver Cure. World Famous. Write Dr. Kennedy's Sous, Kondout, N. Y., for free sample bottle. At the age of forty the average man has his conscience chloroformed. Mrs. Winaiow'a Soothing Syrnp, Tor children teething, softens the gums, reduces tB> flamnmuoii, allays pain, cures wind collo. 25c a botUa. Off Cannibals and politicians live other people. Four Facts For Sick Women To Consider Lydia B. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Has an Unequalled Recotd of Cure at Mrs. IPinkQam's Advice Is Confiden­ tial, Free, and always Helpful FIBST.--That almost every operation In our hospitals performed upon women becomes necessary through neglect of sueh symptoms as backache, irregular and pain nil menstruation, leucorrhoea, displacements of the uterus, pain in the side, burning sensation in the stom­ ach, bearing-down pains, nervousness dizziness and sleeplessness. 8 K cox p.--The medicine that holds the record for the largest number of absolute cures of female ills is Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. It regulates, strengthens and cures diseases of the female organism as nothing else can. , For thirty years it has been helping women to be strong, curing backache, nervousness, kidney troubles, all uter­ ine and ovarian inflammation, weak­ ness and displacements, regulating Menstruation perfectly and overcom­ ing its pains. It has also proved itself invaluable in preparing for childbirth and the change of life. THIRD.--The great volume of unso­ licited and grateful testimonials on file at the Pinkham Laboratory at Lynn, Mass., many of which are from time to time published by permission, give ab­ solute evidence of the valae of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and Mrs. Pinkham's advice. FOURTH--Every ailing woman lathe United States is asked to accept the following invitation. It is free, will bring yon health and may save your life. Mrs. Pinkham's Standing Invitation to Women.--Women suffering from any form of female weakness are invited to Eromptly communicate with Mrs. Pink-am, at Lynn, Mass. All letters are received, opened, re«l and answered by women only. From symptoms given, your trouble may be located and the quickest and surest way of recovery advised. Out of the vast volume of ex­ perience in treating female ills Mrs. Pinkham probably has the very knowl­ edge that will help your case. Surely, any woman, rich or poor, is very foolish if she does not take advantage of this generous offer of ri ^ v^u n l rvy'i ? Pc i-~xV*V- j'?: mm HOUSES FOR CONSTANT ACHING. SAILORS. KMC nnrK Map of Sweden and Norway, Showing Location of Recently Declared "War Forts." (Dotted circles mark Stockholm, Karl- skrona, Gothenburg and Farosund ports, which by order of the Swed­ ish government are birred to for­ eign warships.) *, STRENGTH OF TWO NATIONS. Sweden. Army, peace footing'. .,*i.. 39,000 War footing . 500,000 Field guns ..........,. . . . 240 Small battleships and mod­ ern coast defense vessels... 13 Monitors and gunboats .... 25 Navy, total vessels 38 Tonnage of vessels ........ 64,432 Bight-inch guns 29 Officers and men ...» 8,000 Area, square'miles 172,876 Population 5,200,000 Norway. Army, peace footing ........ 30,000 War footing 80,000 Field guns . 40 Small battleships and mod­ ern coast defense vessels.. Monitors and gunboats ..... 11 Navy, total vessels'....' 16 Tonage of vessels 29,453 Eight-inch guns 10 Officers and men 4,000 Area, square miles .........,124,129 Population ...2,250,000 THE GATE OF EUROPE. City of Buda Pesth Has Right to this Appellation. Buda Pesth, the Hungarian capital Is one of the handsomest cities in the world. Its wide streets, bordered by magnificent buildings, its parks, pal­ aces, theaters, and last, but not least, its luxurious cafes #hich have no equal, can not fail to impress the visi­ tor with its wealth and beauty. The city is built on volcanic ground and the internal fires are still smold­ ering. A visit to the St. Lucas hot sulphur baths across the Danube at Buda might lead the visitor to think that the infernal regions are not far off, and indeed a humorous preacher could make good use of this when Moralizing on the gay and luxuriant life of the Pesth half of the consoli­ dated town. Another curiosity of the spot is the natural aperient waters re­ nowned throughout the world, of which Apenta is the leading one. The Apenta accumulates in wells dug for the purpose, and absorbs from the soil the salts that make it a Valuable pur­ gative. To one returning from the east by the Oriental Express, Buda Pesth ap­ pears like the gate ©f Europe, as it really is, for this was the last outpost Of the Turks in their march westward. LANGTRY AFTER EASY MONEY. English Actress Will Make Vaudeville TOur of America. The fact that Mrs. Langtry is com­ ing to act in the New York vaudeville theaters does not necessarily show that she needs th3 money. It is true that she built in London several years ago a theater which has been a source of almost continuous loss, but she is not poor. She has a mania for increas­ ing her cash bank account and is in the habit of turning her property Into cash whenever she feels that her bal­ ance needs it To have her deposit go below a certain sum seems to her the approach of grim poverty. Last spring she sold some of her jewels be­ cause her bank account had fallen below what she believed it should be, It is the prospect of a comparatively large sum in a very short time with no risk about plays that has led her to decide to come back here in vaude ville. Must Give Wife Pay Envelope. William Tieman, a tailor of Dayton, Ohio, was up before Justice Carlin, charged with being drunk and abusing his family. His honor imposed the unique penalty: "You are sentenced to turn over your pay envelope to your nife every Saturday night for three months and the following Monday present me with a receipt for same signed by his wife. Either that or pay $19.60 fine and costs and go to tie workhouse for ninety days." The prisoner did not hesitate a moment in deciding to give his wife the en­ velope. Prominent Mexican Veteran. Gen. Leonardo Marquez was among the most interesting figures in the city of Mexico last week. Wednesday was the thirty-eighth anniversary of the triumphant entry of Gen. Porfirio DIas and the republican army into the City of Mexico--a month after the fall of Queretaro and two days after the exe­ cution of the ill-fated Archduke Maxi­ milian. Gen. Marquez, who commend­ ed the Maximilian garrison of the city, is still living there, having returned years ago from the exile to which he fled--with death at his heels--in 1867. Morgan to Donate Library. Plerpont Morgan has purchased and will present en bloc to the Wads worth Athenaeum the library of the late Dr. Henry Barnard of Hartford, Conn. The library consists of about 10,000 vol­ umes, Including 4,500 school books. Some of the works are quite valuable, notably an edition (either the first or second) of "Don Quixote," published at Madrid in 1605; but the school books, ancient and musty, new and prim, constitute the most interesting feature of the entire collection. Summer Sown Alfalfa Seed. In the usual instructions relative to the sowing of alfalfa seed, spring is generally set down as the best time for that work. This makes it a little awkward when the alfalfa is to follow a crop of winter wheat or is to be put on ground that is turned under after the hay crop is taken off. Some have thought that it would be a great thing if alfalfa seed could be sown in the summer after the crop of winter wheat had been harvested, as the loss of the land for one year would be saved. Under uie common method a piece Of wheat land has to be plowed up in the summer and fall and allowed to lie idle for the larger part of a year before being even seeded. Then it is not till the next year that a crop of. alfalfa hay can be obtained. It was with this thought in his mind that Professor Olin, while at the Iowa Station, tried seeding alfalfa in the summer. The seeding was made Au­ gust 22, 1903, on land that had borne a wheat crop that year. The first cut­ ting was made on the 13th of June, 1904, and Professor Olin brought to the Farmer's Review office a sample of the alfalfa obtained. It was 22 Inches in length, and that cutting had yielded two tons of dried hay per acre. It would be a good thing for some of our farmers to take the hint and try seeding a piece of wheat land this year. If the weather conditions are right the alfalfa should cover the ground enough by fall to protect it from the cold of winter. In this part pf the country, where the winter wheat crop is so important, it will be a very good arrangement If we can ro­ tate alfalfa with it or at least foTlow wheat with alfalfa. Whether alfalfa can be made part of the rotation or not will depend on how long the alfal­ fa crop is to be kept on the land.-- Farmers' Review. The Chick Pea. This is known also as Gram and Idaho pea. It did not, however, origi­ nate in Idaho, but in the East, proba­ bly Asia Minor. It was the first legu­ minous crop to be cultivated and was well-known to the ancient Greeks and Romans. It is rather strange that this once best known legume should now be so little known in this country. It is, however, largely cultivated in Asia, and in India 5,000,000 acres of land are devoted to its culture. There this QnmiCicerarietOtmi pea Is a staple article of horse feed The yield of peas there is put at about 10 bushels per acre, though as high as 25 bushels are grown under ex­ ceptional circumstances. It has been grown experimentally by the United States Department of Agriculture and by several stations of the Rocky Mountain states. Whether it is more valuable than other legumes in any lo' cation is not yet apparent. Alfalfa and Innoculation. We sowed alfalfa a year ago in May on well prepared sandy loam, worked down to a fine tilth, it being in a good state of fertility, sowing about twenty pounds of seed to the acre. We inoculated it from an old field of alfalfa, where a few plants remained, sowing the dirt by hand immediately before putting in the seed. In this process we failed to make the \lirt meet, and when the alfalfa got started we could readily see where the soil was inoculated and where not, by the color and size of the alfalfa. However, we got a good stand and it wintered all right. This spring the non-inoculated strip offered the same as it did last summer, and. we cov­ ered it with good stable manure, tak­ ing dirt from a well inoculated spot and covering each load before scatter­ ing. In this process the dirt became well mixed with the manure and hence was evenly distributed over the soil. From that time on the weakly strip began to take on new life, nodules appearing on the roots, and when cut, which was on June 13, could see but a mere trace of them, it being practically all inoculated and making about three tons of fine hay frora two acres of ground, first cutting. C. M. Teegarfen. Kosciusko Co., Ind. England Spends $140,000 That Ad­ miral May Live on Shore. The expenditure of $140,000 for a residence for the commander in chief at Chatham is a scandalous job. The plea that the Admiral in command at Chatham is unable to discharge his. social functions without a house cost­ ing $140,000 is palpably absurd. No other country in the world provides its admirals with houses. The mari­ time prefect of Brest is not a case1 in point, as he has administrative duties. The commander-in-chief in China is quite as important an official as the commander-in-chief at Chatham, and his social functions are of greater im­ portance to the nation. But the com- mander-in-<$ief in China has no house, and it will be an evil day for the British navy when the British senior officer in the far east is allow­ ed to live on shore. The admirals' houses at Tricoma- lee, Simons bay, and other places are pleasant residences, but they militate against efficiency by favoring officers with a long purse. • There is an item on the admiralty estimates for $52,500 for a new official residence at Jamaica. The house of commons Surely cannot have forgot­ ten that Jamaica is one of the four stations named in the late first lord's memorandum as about to be redtitfW, so there will be no fleet, no officers, but a house for a shore-giving admi- rall--Vanity Fair. Arriving at a Verdict. Kushequa, Pa., July 10.-- (Special)-- In this section of Pennsylvania there is a growing belief that for such Kid­ ney Diseases as Rheumatism and Lame Back there is only one sure cure and that is Dodd's Kidney Pills. This belief grows from such cases as that of Mrs. M. L. Davison of this place. She tells the story herself as follows: "I have suffered from Rheumatism for thirty years and find that Dodd's Kidney Pills have done me more good than any medicine I have ever taken. I was also bothered with Lame Back and I can only say that my back hasn't bothered me since I took Dodd's Kid­ ney Pills." Considering that Mrs. Davison only took two boxes of Dodd's Kidney Pills, the resuit would be considered wonder­ ful if it were not that others are re­ porting similar Results daily. Kushe- qua is fast arriving at a verdict that "Dodd's Kidney Pills are the one sure cure for Rheumatism." Two Blades of Grass. One of the oldest sentences, In the world is "He who makes two blades of grass grow where one grew before is a public benefactor." This^ saying will be found In uncountable thousands of addresses- on agricultural topics. Let us not imagine that it is one that has been coined of late years, for It is known to be at least two thousand years old. The great agricultural writers of the times of early Rome used it and even the agricultural writ­ ers of Carthage. For all that we know, its origin may have been further back still in the misty twilight of the unre­ corded past. It has survived because it tells a great truth. The man that increases the food supply of the world benefits the world. The changing of the raw products of the soil into high-priced meat is a inr»B<ar*»pt industry. Future of the College Athlete. The college athlete" is now "in our midst." What Is he fit for, now that we have him? The college athlete, when he goes out and looks for some­ thing to do, is no longer living in the same world that ne lived in for four years* at college. He is no more a hero. No team manager looks after his entertainment and pays his bills. His name does not get into the papers. The men with the gray side whiskers that he asks for employment have never heard of him or his team. It is no wonder that the college athlete finds the temptation strong upon him to go into professional sports in one way or another. There his accom­ plishments are of some account. But if he is a good athlete he has learned at least one thing that will stand him in good stead, and that is to take with good grace a pretty thorough defeat an dtry again.--New York Mail. Avoid the Cheap and "Big Can" Bak­ ing Powders. The cheap baking powders have but one recommendation: they certainly give the purchaser plenty of powder fpr, his money. These powders are so carelessly made from inferior ma­ terials that they will not make light, wholesome food. Further, these cheap baking powders have a very small per­ centage of leavening gas; therefore it takes from two to three times as much of such powder to raise the cake or biscuit as it does of Calumet Baking Powder. Therefore, in the long run, the actual cost to the consumer of such powders is more than Calumet would be. Cheap baking powders leave the bread sometimes bleached and acid, sometimes yellow ahd alka­ line, and always unpalatable. They are never of uniform strength and quality. Why not buy a perfectly wholesome baking powder like Calumet, that is at the same time moderate in price and oue which can be relied upon? Calu­ met is always the same, keeps indef­ initely and gives the cook the least trouble. As Things Used to> Be. Mr. Holyoke, a British writer, re­ members a time when "only four men in Birmingham had the courage to wear beards," and only military offi­ cers were allowed to wear a mustache. In the good old days, ene pump in a yard had to serve wor'afng class fami­ lies. Insist on Getting It. Borne grocers say they don't keep .Defiance Starch. This is because the> have a stock on hand of other brands containing only 12 oz in a package, which they won't be able to sell first, because Defiance contains 19 ox. for the same money. Do you want 16 oz. instead of 12 OS. for same money? Then buy Defiance Starch. Requires no cooking. Suffers 8evere Punishment. "He's sorry that he quarreled wttf his wife." "She has gone home to her mother, I suppose." 'No; she's had her mother come home to her." Ask Your Dealer for Aden's Foot-Ease. A powder. It rests the feet. Cures Swol­ len,Sore, Hot,Callous, Aching, Sweating Feet and Ingrowing Nails. At ail Drug­ gists and Shoe stores, 25 cents. Accept no substitute. Sample mailed FREE, •ddresp, A S. Olmsted, LeRoy, H. ¥> Knocking. Pittsburg Citizen--Isn't this smoke perfectly terrible? Pittsburg Visitor--Oh, I don't know. It hides the streets. Defiance Starch should be in every household, none so grod, besides 4 oz. more for 10 cents than any other brand of cold water starch. ' The American peace society wants permanent headquarters, and is plan­ ning a $100,000 dove-cote, #0 to speak. k Back aches all the time. Spoils yonr appetite, wearies the body, worries the mind. Kidneys cause it all and Doan's "Kidney Pills relieve and cure it. H. B. McCar- ver, of 201 Cherry S t . , P o r t l a n d , Ore.* Inspector of freight for the Trans-Continental Co., says: "I used Doan's > Kidney Pills j for back ache and other symptoms of kid­ ney trouble which had annoyed me for months. I think a cold was responsible for the whole trouble. It seemed to settle in my. kidneys. Doan's Kidney/ Pills rooted it Out. It is several months since I used them, and up to date there has been no recurrence of the trouble." D°an's Kidney Pills for sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents per box. Fos- ter-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. - Some Special Bargains, 40 a. fruit farm, choice l.uuo trees. *2,400; 4u a. •'truck farm," close tn. cheap at tl.fioO; 8d a. (f>od timber land.no improvements. «soo; S;i a. choice land, fair Improvements, 5 a Improved suburban, a snap at (1,0110: 16 a. Improved, suburban, very low at (l.SOo. Titles perfect, te-tas easy. Complete description* furnished. Address J. B. Harris, Nevada, Mo. FOR SALE--My farm of IBO acres on !oa? time and easy payments. Buildings on it that < oat over (C.'XW: pood orchard and fruit of all kinds. One of the flne>t stock farms in the country. GEORGE WILKIN, - Cedar Falls. Iowa. I Have Fine Farms for Sale jy;t*e M * Iowa, Kansas aad Colorado lands. All In rich co'nntry close to county teat. I also have mills and lm-lne»s properties for sale on easy terms. G W. THU RO, Harrisonville, Mo., or Caledonia, Ohio. LANDS FOR SALE IN LOUISIANA. Improved laud# from 48 to *12 per acre: unimproved from $5 to (8 per acre. Mild climate, productive soil, convenient markets, pure and abundant water, health unsurpassed, churches and schools abound, the latter free 8 or 9 months in the year. Farmer* especially would do well and would be warmly welcomed. For Information address Walker h Tatum, Gibalaad, La. Some men ask for a job as though they wer6 afraid fli^y might get It, HOMES FOR EVERYBODY--f*T ££ grazing land, any size tract, 1 acie to 1.too acres In the (treat i :»iou»e coun ry. A!! kinds of city and town property. No cyclones, lightning, hail, dronth. ot s .nstroke; no crop failures .*> ai res (500. lu acrei *7^0. mi acre* adjolalng town (6(1 per acre. 24o acres, One Improvements. 145 j er sere. lateral terms ar- rangad. Wtlie for particulars. WAGNER A CAMPBELL, - Roealia. Washington TkompsOR's Eye Water W. N. U.r CHICAGO, No. 28, 1905. AVfcgetable PrcparationforAs- ula- sof 1N l A N1 b / (. H111 > K K N When Answering Advertisements Kindly Mention This Paper* CASTORIA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Promotes Digcslion.CheerFuI- ness and Rest.Contains neither Opium,Morphine nor Mineral, KOI^AHCOTIC. af0MBWP <W* MyC.JYMM* * RmktUt ja4t-- • * Apeifecl Remedy forfonsBpa- Tion, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea Worms .Convulsions .Feverish- ness and Loss OF SLEEP. Vac Simile Signature of G&tffZSEZ: NEW YORK. \ I b u i o n l l i s 1 1 1 ( 1 D o s i S - J j C I N I S fcXACT copy or wrabbcr. „ •MM*, new TM orrr. Say Plainly to Your Grocer That you want LION COFFEE always, and he, being a square man, will not try to sell you any­ thing else. You may not care for our opinion, but What About the United Judgment of Millions of housekeepers who have .used LION COFFEE for over a quarter of a century ? : Is there any stronger proof of merit, than the Confidence of the People and ever increasing popularity? LION COFFEE Is carefully se­ lected at the plantation, shipped direct to our various factories* where it is skillfully roasted and carefully packed In sealed pack­ ages- unlike loose coffee, which is exposed to germs, dust, in­ sects. etc. LION COFFEEreaches yon as pore and clean jus when it left the factory. Sold only In 1 lb. packages. Lion-bead on every package. Save these Lion-heads for valuable premiums. SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE WOOLSON SPICE CO., Totedo, Ohio. This Is What urnaciv o ZMWAVCr AUSNOEQVAL. Catches Me! FULL POUND PIo premiums, but oncikrrd mote starch than you get of other brands. Try it now, for hot or cold starching it has no equal and will not stick to the iron* In Use For Over Thirty Years CASTORIA Complete External ami Internal Treatment i ONEDOLLAR Consisting of^warm baths ̂ with \ | to cleanse the sfcia of crusts and scales, and -. soften the thickened ctrti-' cle; CUTICURA Oint­ ment to instantly allay itching, irritation, ana inflammation and soothe and heal; and CUTI­ CURA. Pills to cool and cleanse the blood# x A Single Set, costing but One Doflaf£ Is often sufficient to cure the most tortuf- ing, disfiguring skin, scalp, and blood humors, eczemas, rashes, itchings, and" irritations, with loss of hair, from infancy to age, when all else fails. Sold throughout the world. Cutl<mr» So*p,!5e_. OfflU^ totnt, Rnolvctit, .Wc. (in form ol Chocol»te CoataA Pilli. &V-. per vial of 61 >. : London. S7 Cbirter- houte Sj. s l*aris, 5 Rue dt 1» P*ix; Boston, 137Co1iub! Ave. Fotter Drug ft Chem. Corp.,Sol« l*rop«. j a ar Send for " llow to Cure Toituring, DisfigarlBe * Biimen from Infancy lo Ag*." " w ForHotWeather A FREE BOTTLE OP Mull's Grape Tonic TO ANYONE WHO WILL WRITE FOR IT NOV Have You Constipation. Stomack Trouble, Indigestion, Dy«pepsi% Blood Poleon.Skin Dieeases.Sore% Sudden Bowel Trouble, Diarrheal Cholera, Etc.? No one whose bow- IHB are healthy and ac­ tive contracts these complaints. Invari­ ably they are the result of Constipation which means decayed, poisoned and dying bowels or Intestines. Check diarrhea and you are liable to fatal Mood poison--a physic makes you worse. There is only one right i ourso and that is to treat the cause. Re­ vive and strengtMfe the bowels and into* tines. We will prove to you that Mull's Grape Tonio euros Constipation and all these terrible Bowel troubles because tfc cleanses the Blood an# « ; . makes the intestine# practically new. B feeds the starved coap i dition and brings theia back to life--nothing else will. For htfft weather ills it has ne , equal. . : ::6 WRITE FOR THIS FREE BOTTLE TQOif > ood for ailing children and nursing mothers, i FREE COUPON Send this coupon with your name aoA Mi- dress and your druggist's name, for a free bottle of Mull'sOirsipo Tonic,StomachTtonio and Constipation Cure. To Mull's Grape Tonic Co., 148 Third A vs., Rock Island, IB. Girt Full Addret* and Writ* Plaimlf The# 1.00bottle contains nearly three times, the SOc size. At drug stores. i The genuine has a date and number OU the label--take no other from ICVJ- A Great Combination for THIS SUMMER'S VACATION THE Canadian Rockiet the grandest scenery in the world-- - unapproachable in magnificenea and majesty and The Lewis and Clark Canum niat Exposition at Portland* Oregon. This will be the popular trip this summer. Thiwuh Senrics Between St Paul an* Uw toils Send for handsome booklet "Challenge of the Mountains.* CANADIAN PACIFIC RY. A. C, Shaw. Genl. Agt. Passenger Depsrtmea^ >CjS; ?"<2 S. Clark Str»'«>t Chicago. Vl-uj j .The Opportunity of Today The opportunity for the man with little met It better today ID the prairie ttate* of the Soutk- weit than ever before In the history of the biitou. To be nure, (tieie !• r>ot the van op«a choice of land for the homesteads that exlited la the '70s. The lands thea taken up under Govera- meat l»w» are now prosperous farm* and ranches. There is need of more hands to ilereki# the country. In the Southweei-- ladiaa Terri­ tory. Oklahoma and Texas- are va*t areas of un­ improved! land not yet yielding the eruj-s of vbM It !» capable. Practically the same thin* Is true of the towns. Few tlnei of bui*!nes« are adeaaateiy represented. There are openloe* ' f •11 »orts for WIDE-AWAKE MJSN. ARK VOU ONE? If you are IntereMeU, «eU us what you waat, how much TOU have to Invest, and we wlU(F!adly furnish the Information. Write for a copv of our paper, 'The Com In* Country." lt'i tre*. Address. CE0KGENMT0M.fi. t. «T. L BOX 911. . ST. LOUIS, M*. f TOIIET ANTISEPTIC FOR WOMEN tTMhled with ills peculiar to their «ex. ased as a Aoacfes it cessfal. Thoroughly ctauuea, kills disease •tope discharge*, heals laiLumnatioa a» Piitinc is io powder lorra to be dissolved ia pa •alar, and is t*r more eleaiuing, heanaf, MM IBdMOttWQ] ih-ua TOILET AND WQMBPT* SPECIAL UB>. roe sale m 2S«cttaiiisl%«B* a. Puree CesNaf

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