Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 27 Jul 1905, p. 3

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rr W '•ft' 13 YEARS OF TORTURE. '%>i»rt»tng and p-»»«fi.»l Sores Covered :•••'•! Head arid Body--Cured In Week ( IV I By Cuticura* 'i: a*sl* 1 j:| "For fifteen years my scalp and •forehead was one mass of scabs, and my body was covered with sores. Ijwords cannot express how I suffered jlfrom the itching and pain. I had giv­ en up hope when a friend told me to get Cuticura. After bathing with ^Cuticura Soap and applying Curti- ' cura Ointment for three days, my •head was as clear as ever, and to my fjsurprise and joy, one cake of soap and ' one box of ointment made a complete 'tcure in one week, (signed) H. B. ^ Franklin, 717 Washington St., Alle­ gheny, Pa." New and Delicious Cocktail. ' Commander Lucian Young of the gunboat Bennington, stationed at Honolulo, has delighted all thirsty men in the islands by inventing a new cocktail. It consists of a mix­ ture of poi, milk and brandy, a com­ bination which good judges declare to be of such revivifying powers as should immortalize the discoverer. Iiswia* '..Always reliable. , ijnot so good. "Single Binder." The richest .quality cigar on the market at straight 6a You pay 10c for cigars, Lewis' Factory, Peoriav HL ; The fears of one class of men. are <" ?*ot the measure of the rights of an­ other.--Bancroft. M •'si- KIDNEY ̂ TROUBLES Increasing Among Womea, Bit Sufferers Need Not Despair THE BEST ADVICE IS FREE Of all the diseases known, with which the female organism is afflicted, kidney disease is the most fatal, and statistics show that this disease is on the increase among women. JMrjJZmma Unless early and correct treatment is applied the patient seldom survives when once the disease is fastened upon her. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is the most efficient treat­ ment for kidney troubles of women, and is the only medicine especially prepared for this purpose. When a woman is troubled with pain or weight in loins, backache, frequent, painful or scalding urination, swelling of limbs or feet, swelling under the eyes, an uneasy, tired feejing in the region of the kidneys or notices a brick- dust sediment in the urine, she should lose no time in commencing treatment with Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, as It may be the means of saving her life. For proof, read what Lydia E. Pink­ ham's Vegetable Compound did for Mrs. Sawyer. • "I cannot express the terrible suffering I had to endure. A derangement of the female organs developed nervous prostration and a serious kidney trouble. The doctor attended me for a year, but I kept getting worse, until I was unable to do anything, and I made up my mind I could not five. I finally decided to try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com­ pound as a last resort, and I am to-day a well woman. I cannot praise it too highly, and 1 tell every suffering woman about my case." Mrs. y.inrna Sawyer, Conyers, Ga. Mrs. Pinkham gives free advice to women ; in confidence, Lynn, Mass. W\ -r • (Assisted by Cuticura Ointment, the great Skin Cure, for preserving, purifying, and beautify ing the skin, for cleansing the scalp of crusts, scales, and dandruff, and th^ stop­ ping of falling hair, for softening, whitening, and soothing red, rough, I and sore hands, for baby rashes, « itchings, and chafings, in the form ,of baths for annoying irritations and inflammations, or undue per­ spiration, in the form of washes for ulcerative weaknesses, and for many sanative, antiseptic, purposes l which readily suggest themselves, as well as for all the purposes of the toilet, .bath, and nursery. ' 8e!S the world. Poila Drug* OitatOiflfc Boston. aVMallad line, "A Book for Womea." tins VICK ILL till it Coagh Syrup/Tastes Good. Us Si tlmt. Sold br taatoti. » ...k .St. 2. £-«. j / FREE LAND FOR SETTLERS Western Canada To-Day the Country of Oppor­ tunity for Millions He would have been called a dream­ er of the most imaginative class who, thirty-five years ago, when the North­ west country became a possession of Canada, prophesied the present pros­ perity in the lapse of so short a period of time. Three transcontinental rail­ ways have been financed through on the aqaple assurance there is business in the west to warrant their construc­ tion, and resources to liquidate the consequent indebtedness. Manitoba In the eastern portion of the country was created a province a year after the purchase from the Hud­ son Bay Company in 1870. In 1882, the western country was tapped by the extended main line of the C. P. R. That year also territorial government was established, the remaining out­ lying country being converted into four territories--Alberta, Assiniboia, Saskatchewan and Athabasca--with a central government for all at Regina. The few thousand people of those days have grown into the half million of to-day. Let us now note some of the evi- ,*h: ing on to its confines to bring It to the front as a field for most extensive and profitable settlement. The whole country embraces an area of over 385,000,000 acres and de­ ducting water and broken land there is plenty of wheat growing territory to produce twenty times over the requirements of Great Britain. As wheat can be grown at $7.50 per acre with wages to the men doing their own work besides, and as year in and year out the yield and price are twenty bushels at 60 cents, the profits are $4.50 per acre. As live stock doubles every three years and grows like wheat while the farmer is sleeping, we expect that this will always be one of the leading feat­ ures of the agricultural industry. Ai the Pacific coast or warm winds melt the snow in Alberta almost as rapidly as it fails, the herds or live stock live Out on the open prairie the entire year through and are in good condi­ tion every spring. The native grasses are highly nutritions and retain their qualities the whole winter through, $• K ,•»:• * Reaping Record Crop at BattlefanL dences of advancement. The first; making winter feed as inexpensive as bushel of wheat, was shipped in 1882, \ summer pasturage. in fact the first shipment from Mani­ toba, merely as a sample, was made in 1877. In 1904 there were under all crops, excepting hay, 1,575,000 acres in the western provinces, producing 17,250,350 bushels of wheat, 18,250,640 bushels of oats, and 2,350,420 bushels of barley, realizing a total of about $18,500,000 for the farmers. In Manitoba there were grown in 1904 41,600,000 bushels of wheat and other farm products in proportion. The firsC^fnile of railway was built in the country in 1880, and to-day there are over 6,000 miles of road in opera­ tion, and further extensions are going ahead as fast as men and money can build them. There are two trunk lines in the country, the C. P. R. and the Canadian Northern, with the Grand Trunk commencing its trans­ continental line. In addition to these trunk lines, all systems are extending branches to all sections where there are settlements to patronize them. The grain elevator development is another assurance of the wonderful expansion of the country, the one- fourth of the whole area, or about 95,- 000,000 acres of the country traversed by railways being now fairly supplied by elevators. In all there are 1.015 of them in the country with a combin­ ed capacity of 27,683,000 bushels and erected at a cost of over $55,000,000. In addition to these, elevators atv*he head of the lakes have storage capac­ ity of 18,200,000. Fourteen years ago the entire storage capacity of the elevators was 7,628,000 bushels, to-day it is 41,600,000 and increasing yearly from five to ten million bushels. What the settlement of the country will be in the next ten years may well be imagined from the fact that last year the immigration was over 133,OOu souls. There are those who believe the grain-producing area of the country mast be limited, blft results tell a As $2,835,516 worth of live stock was marketed in that country in six months of last year an idea may be formed of the proportions it may be led to attain when the country be­ comes fully settled up. Dairying is the third leading busi­ ness of the Northwest farmer, and may, like the others be developed while the farmer is sleeping. It is found that on account of the cost of farm help, and to avert the expense of erecting suitable buildings for the purpose, the co-operative system is decidedly the best. Under it the en­ tire management is in the hands of the government under expert opera­ tives, though control of sales, etc., rests with the patrons. The farmers simply deliver their milk or cream, usually the latter, at the dairies, .re­ ceive monthly advances, and bal­ ances of proceeds of sales at the close of the year. The schools are free and non-denon^ nationals-national. There is no tax for attendance, the government defrays the greater part of the cost of sup­ port of a highly certificated staff of teachers. There are schools in all country districts where there are a dozen pupils to attend them and the tax is rarely more than $4 a year on every quarter section. As each prov­ ince--Alberta and Saskatchewan--un­ der the new provincial autonomy will receive at the start from the Federal government $1,100,000 a year, there will be but very inconsiderable taxa­ tion for any and all provincial pur poses. Fuel is the bugbear of many of the prairie countries. In Western Canada, however, there are but few-districts without an ample supply of timber and as coal of the best quality is everywhere present no farmer being more than 200 miles distant from a mine, and the price never more than $4.50 per ton to faint athls door, it Is *V ...a** , : ; A . . Threshing No. 1 Hard Wheat (ft Western. different story. In the northern Peace River country, 900 miles north of the International boundary, wheat is grown every year 62 to 65 lbs. to the bushel, from 20 to 30 bushels to the acre, and matures in 107 days from sowing. The length of day and there­ fore the greater amount of summer heat in the 24 hours fully compensate for the disadvantages of latitude. As there are already thrifty settlements, with their grist mills, large fields of grain, numerous herds of live stock in that north country, it only requires the extension of the railways now push- The August illustrated number of "The Outlook" Is termed the "educa­ tional" number and contains a fine address on "Republican Education" by President Eliot of Harvard; an in­ teresting series of full page portraits of new college presidents; a personal appreciation of President Harper and President Angell by President Finley, and a readable personal article about the Shakespearean scholar and editor, William J. Rolfe, by Thomas Went- worth Higginson. Several illustrated and unlllustrated articles on topics other than educational, a story and the usual weekly survey of men, books and affairs complete the number. Jack London, socialist and fictkmist, is not fictional when he 'writes of the "War of the Classes" (The Mae- millan company). He appears to be quite aware that it is not possible to Idealize, successfully, for any length of time, two groups of men, who, en­ gaged in a desperate struggle in which there is little of disinterestedness, find the struggle so unprecedented in sev­ eral particulars that they must make the sorc?,«fMfcK, jp ttoey fight - . readily spen the fuel problem is al­ ready solved. As shown above the railways are everywhere tapping new districts where free land is offered all re­ gardless of religion or nationality. Even in some of the older parts there is yet plenty of free land, Manitoba having 1,500,000 acres of it. The land is there for the asking, and the next ten years will see a large area of it everywhere dotted with im­ proved farms, grain elevators and a rich, prosperous and pre-eminently contented population. Every housekeeper should know that if they will buy Defiance Cold Water Starch for laundry use they will save not only time, because it never sticks to the iron, but because each package contains 16 oz.--one full pound--while all other Cold Water Starches are put up in %-pound pack­ ages, and the price is the same, 10 cents. Then again because Defiance Starch is free frpm all'injurious chem­ icals. If your grocer tries tQ sell you a 12-oz. package it is because he has a stock on hand which he wishes to dispose of before he puts in Defiance. He knows that Defiance Starch has printed on every package in large let­ ters and figures "16 ozs." Demand De­ fiance and save much time and money and the annoyance of the Iron stick­ ing. Defiance never sticks. The August "Arena" will be an is­ sue of exceptional interest and invalu­ able to friends of democratic institu­ tions. Among its strong and thought- compelling features we mention the following: The Parcels Post of Eu­ rope, The Economic Struggle In Colo­ rado, Jno. D. Rockefeller: A Study in Character, Motive and Influence antf A Vast Educational Scheme. Eels and Lampreys. Among the wry best things that Ireland sends to help towards the feeding of the five million inhabitants In London Is the fereatly appreciated silver eel. An old London dish is an eel pie, and the thought of it carries one back to the English history story of how. King Henry I. died because he ate too many lampreys. For some reason, perhaps for fear of a similar temptation, the lamprey eel seems to have vanished from the market, and the memory of it is only occasionally revived by a newspaper paragraph stating that Gloucester has sent a River Severn lamprey pie to the King. The lamprey is a river eel* It makes its breeding beds of gravel in the cen­ ter of the stream; but the silver eel breeds in the sea, and goes up to the big lakes to grow and feed. It is when this silvery-coated creature is running in shoals down Irish rivers during the dark nights of October and November to the sea that it is caught and preserved in perforated wooden tanks in order to be sent in continu­ ous supply to the English market. The rivers where these fish thrive are those which flow from great lakes; and Ireland is rich in great lakes and rapid rivers, which rush like torrents to the sea. being navigable in parts only for salmon, trout, and ,eels. v > Especially for Women. Champion, Mich., July 24th.-- (Spe-" eial)--A case of especial interest to women is that of Mrs. A. Wellett, wife of a well known photographer here. It is best given in her own words. "I could not sleep, my feet were cold and my limbs cramped," Mrs. Wellett states, "I had an awful hard pain across my kidneys. I had to get up three or four times in the night. I was very nervous and fearfully de­ spondent. "I had been troubled in this way for five years when I commenced to use Dodd's Kidney Pills, and what they caused to come from my kidneys will hardly stand description. "By the time I had finished one box of Dodd's Kidney Pills I was cured. Now I can sleep well, my limbs do not cramp, I do not get up in the night and I feel better than I have in years. I owe my health to Dodd's Kidney Pills." Women's ills are caused by Dis­ eased Kidneys; that's why podd's Kidney Pills always cure them. •spi# AN OLD MAN'S TRIBUTE. An Ohio Fruit Raiser, 78 Years Old, Cured of a Terrible Case after Ten Years of Suffering. A Simple Fountain. Take a good-sized barrel and cat it in two, one part being one third of the whole, the other two thirds. Use the smaller part for the basin and the larger for the reservoir. Sink the ba­ sin almost flush into the ground and bring a lead pipe from underneath coming up into the center. Take a large thimble or the top of watering can and see that the small holes are well pierced through. Solder on to the tube. Raise the other piece of the barrel four feet above the level of the basip, either banking or blocking it up with rock work. Insert the other end of the tube three inches from the bot­ tom and cover the end over with fine gauze to prevent the fountain getting stopped up. Rock work and growing plants should be lead up to the foun­ tain trying to make it as inconspicu­ ous as possible. A few fish will sur­ vive in this basin, and near the wa­ ter's edge fuchsias, ivies, lilies, etc*, if planted, will greatly add to the at­ tractiveness of this fountain, which Is within the constructive powers of the average boy. In Toy's Predicament. Ju Toy, in the expressive language of the streets, 'is "up against it." De­ spite his name he is an American-born citizen, as he has proved. Unfortu nately, however, he traveled in China and on his return was excluded by the immigration official on the ground of being a Chinaman. Writs of habeas corpus and other appeals to the courts have availe4 him nothing. He went to China, and therefore he is a China man. Shades of the fourteenth amendment! Is it possible that a col­ ored gentleman bora in America who chanced to travel in Africa becomes thereby an African? By that'process of logic, no man's citizenship is safe. If we but venture from home "We may become a Russian, Frenchman, Turk or Prussian." Beforetimes it has been averred that the Constitution does not follow the flag, and now Ju Toy proves that cit­ izenship does not follow the individ­ ual.--San Antonio Express. CHANGED HU8BANO. Wife Made Wise Change in Fo«d. Change of diet is the only way to really cure stomach and bowel trouble. A woman says: "My husband had dyspepsia when we were married and had suffered from it for several years. It was al­ most impossible to find anything he could eat without bad results. "I thought this was largely due to the use of coffee and persuaded him to discontinue it. He did ?o, and be­ gan to drink Postum Food Coffee. The change did him good from tie" begin­ ning, his digestion improved; he suf­ fered much less from his nervousness, and when he added Grape-Nuts food to his diet he was soon entirely cured. "My friend, Mrs. , of Vicks- burg (my former home) had become a nervous wreck also from dyspepsia. Medicines had no effect, neither did travel help her. On my last visit home, some months ago, I persuaded her to use Grape-Nuts food. She was in de­ spair, and consented. She stuck to it until it restored her health so com­ pletely that she is now the most enthu­ siastic friend of Grape-Nuts that l ever knew. She eats it with cream or dry, just as it comes from the package-- keeps it in .her room and eats it when­ ever she feels like it. "I began eating Grape-Nuts food, myself, when my baby was two months old, and I don't know what I should have done without it. My ap­ petite was gone, I was weak and nerv­ ous and afforded but very little nour­ ishment for the child. The Grape-Nuts food, of which I soon grew very fond, speedily set all this right again, and the baby grew healthful, rosy and beautiful as a mother could wish. He Is two years old now and eats Grape- Nuts food himself. I wish every tired young mother knew of the good that Grape-Nuts would do her." Names given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. • There's a reasoo. . ,|f^: Sidney Justus, fruit dealer, of Men­ tor, Ohio, says: % was cured by Span's Kidney Pills of a severe case of kidney .trouble, of eight or ten years' standing. I suf­ fered the most severe backache and other pains ^ ' ' » in the region of a i m r z T ^ i w T u s t h e k i d n e y s . These were especially severe when stooping to lift anything and often I could hardly straighten my back. The aching was bad in the day time, but just as bad at night, and I was always lame in the morning. I was bothered with rheumatic pains and dropsical swelling of the feet. The urinary passages ^ere painful and the secre­ tions were discolored and so free that often I had to rise at night. : I felt tired all day. Half a box served to re­ lieve me, and three boxes effected a permanent cure."- Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Far Sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. MMAZ BtlTAT*. FOR 8At.£--360 acres richest wild land, gon i marsh (3U.U00 acres) Allegan, Michigan. Ideal game reserve. Enormously prudm-ilve, <800 bu. outon* S«r acre, where drained.) Drainage <4 per acre. Win oubie and treble value. Inexti:iu8tal>ie peat. Price ®15 per sore. CARL KLEIKSTokCK, Kalamazoo. FOR SALE --Excellent farm of 1B0 acre*, all imder plow, 4 miles norihwest of I'iatnvtew, Minn. Fine japple orchard,new wind mill and ifood w ell and water. TBlsrbarn with hay shed. Rood S-room hou*e. Small canh payment, balance on lime. OttoH. Becker. £ly, II. D. FOR SALE--229 acres In the heart of North Caro­ lina's (Treat, truefe farrainj? belt: 8,» io "0 acres groodae- parapiis. 3 celery land. Any of It will produce almost anything. 80 acre* fine timber, enough If properly handied to pay for place, rest open. miles t> depot. 16 hours from New Yort. Prtceebeap. A ureat lmr- raln. Easy terms. Crops BO with place If taken soun. IN J. UENKINS, - Bowtlens, N. C. KiKCae I B- DAVIDSON & CO.. WMW*® LSBUa of Glrard, Kansas, offers the finest list of farms for HOMES or INVEST­ MENT on the market. Parties looking for a loca- t-Iou fOf > iiome or investment should state their wants. TO RENTERS--You can buy a furm easier than pay hl^h rent, as we can sell you a farm with snisil cash payment down and balance on easy terms. CHEAP FARM--274 acres Jand under fence; 24u In cultlvatloa; flue house*, 20 acres young orchard, . good hon pasture. t6JS00 cash or easy payments. One i mile from dapou S. KcQlaaaon, Park, Bowie Co .Tsx. ! > Did Her a Good Turn. 'What, you here again?" said the Dakota Judge. \ v "Yes, your honor," Said the blonde lady, with a smile; "I want a divorce." "But I gave you a divorce only a few months ago." "Yes, judge, you did, and I want another. You know one good. tUJr^ de­ serves another." "' % Lands Arkansas Valley of Eastern Colorado San Joaquin Valley in California. Pecos and Rio Grande Valleys, New Mexico. Salt River Valley of Arizona. . tfty • &V-. •; All readied fay ^ FOR WOMEN troubled with ills peculiar to their scZf usc« as a douche is cessioi. thoroughly cie«Ln«es, kills disease eenns. r.ops discharges, heals inflammation and local •oreuess. Paxtine U in powder form to be dissolved in pore water, »r<d is (ar more cleansing, healing, {germicidal and economical than liquid antiseptics for all 1XHLFT AND WOMEN'S SPECIAL USES For sale ai druggists, CO cents a box. Trial Box arad Book of Instructions Pree. TMC It. PAXTOi* SOHCANi Boaro*. Mas*. Write tor inlorautiM (tout the "S»i ul Tiling" in Firming nay man his ova if atnicted with! Thompson's £ye Water FM. Nichobon. Gen. CHIMIIMI Agent. A. T. V S. F. Rr~ 9S7 Railway Exchange. Chicago, •ore eyes, UM I When Answering Advertisements Kindly Mention This Paper. W. N. U., CHICAGO, No. 30, 1906. COME TO MlSSOUrt^" ^ The best State, lowest taxes, largest per capita school fund, best neighbors. Churches in every neighborhood, good schools near every home, GOOD SOIL CHEAP, mild climate. Write us, d^ scribing' what you want. We have it at prices that will please you. Harris- Guthrie Abstract Co., Fulton* Call* away Co., Mo. 1 At the Game. He--I see by the paper that the spectators showered coin on a west­ ern ball player. - \ She--What fort » ' <" • He--Why he greaf catfcl*. She--H'm! I'll bet he didn't get as much money as Mabel did when she made her great catch.--Detroit Tribune. Here is Relief for Women. Mother Gray, a nurse in New York, discovered a pleasant herb remedy for women's ills, called AUSTRALIAN- LEAP. Cures female weaknesses. Hack- ache, Kidney, Bladder and Urinary troubles. At all Druggists or by mail 50c. Sample mailed FREE. Address, The Mother (>rav Co . LeRov, N- Y, Fast Days in Russia. "Fasts," says Percival Gibbon In the World's Work, "are frequent and long in Russia, and it is on record that the mortality rate throughout the country shows a large increase to­ ward the end of each of these terns of abstinence." Important t® Ntothw*. Ctamine carefully every bottle of CASTORU, a safe ami erne remedy for Infanta aad children, and sec that It I of Bears the Sign store h UM For Over 30 Years. 23» Kind Too Have Always Bought Poker. The tiouble with poker is that a man never knows when to begin and when to quit.--Detroit Tribune. Dealers say that as soon as a cus­ tomer tries Defiance Starch it Is lm- rippssible to sell them any other cold ...pf " starch. It can be used cold or boiled. ' That last international automobile race %as quite a success, making al*- lowance for the fact that there were hardly any accidents. If you don't get the biRgrest ana Dest it's your own fault. Defiance Starch la for sale everywhere and there is positively nothing to equal it in qual­ ity or quantity. Make yourself an honest man and then you may be sure that there is one rascal less in the world.--Carlyle. Smokers find Lewis' "Single Binder', straight 5c cigar better quality than most 10c brands. Lewis1 Factory. Peoria. 111. Let Common Sense Decide Do you honestly believe, that coffee sold loose (in bulk), exposed to dust, genus and insects, passing through many bands (some of them not over-clean), '•blended,'* you don't know how or by whom, IB-fit for yoflr use! Of couise you don't. But LION COFFEE Is another story. The preen berries, selected by keen fudges at the plantation, are skillfully roasted at our fac­ tories, where precautions you would not dream of are taken to secure perfect cleanliness, flavor,strength and uniformity. From the time the coffee leases the factory no hand touches it till it is opened in your kitchen* TfcUhssMdt LION COFFEE B»e IEAMK « *11 PACKAGE COCTB& Millions of American Homes welcome LION COFFEE daily. There is no stronger proof of merit than continued and increas­ ing popularity. "Quality survives all opposition. (Sold only in 1 lb. packages. Lion-head on every (Save your Lion-heads for valuable premiums,) , SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE "WOOIfiON SriCE CO., Toledo, Ohio. 7 "ii-.-sifjS y ' 4 j t.».. • 'y?j. f' ifN •< v* « '•-JH J * * i Mull's GrapeTonic (FREE) FOR Hot Weather Dangers CONSTIPATION STOMACH AND BOWEL TROUBLE Take care of your enemies, and your friends will take care of them­ selves. Pi BO'S Cure ts the best medicine *EN«RUMD for all affections of the throat and lungs.--Ws O. EnnsuiT, Vanburen. Ind., Feb. 10.1900. The cup of happiness usually springs a leak, before it begins to run over. FREE--52 pa»re copyright book. "Advice to Victims Great White rtairue (Tuberculosis.)" Drs. Van Hummed. fiU Hth St., Denver, Colo. Even the sweet girl graduate is bound to ferment sooner or later. -Dr. David Kennedy"* Favorite Remedy eared my wife of a terrible disease. With pleasure I tastUf to its marvelouit etiieacy." J. Sweet, Albany, N. Y. Fuzzless peaches are more plentiful than fussless women. Mrs. Wlnalow's Soothing Sjmp. For children teething, aofteua the gums, reduces n t -- -- i » " « f * i M e a b o t t l a b Only a truthful nuich he lies. man realizes how VfANTrn AS%nt In yourlocaltty to sell our «to«lc. nnnibV hafe, permanent, profitable. M ill Bell on Bight. Apply promptly, irlvlnic references, to STOCKS. Box B, BAYONNE, NEW JERSEY. 1 No one with regu­ lar bowels and tiealthy stomach can contract dis­ ease. A person with Constipation and Stomach Trouble is always the first to succumb to Sun Stroke, Heat Debiiiiy and Prostration. Cholera, Colic and Diarrhea are more fatal in Hoi Weather because vitality is lower--they are the direct result of Constipation. It is a mistake to suddenly check diarrhea, the danger is Blood Poison. A physic is also dangerous as it weakens the patient and reduces vitality. Treat the cause with Mull's Grape Tonic. Constipation and its attending ills are caused by decaying or dying bowels and intestines--Mull's Grape Tonic revives and strengthens the Bowels so that they are enabled to act naturally and eject the poison from the system, everybody should take it during hot weather. It wards off disease, builds up the system and purifies the blood. Typhoid Fever and Appendicitis are unknown in families where Moll's Grape Tonic is employed. As a Stoaoach Tonic it is unequalled. SUFFERED ALU HIS LIPS. The endorsement of E. B. McCnrdyof Troy, Ohio,, proves that Ihe severest forms of Constipation are promptly cosed by Mull's Grape Tonic--He says: "I gave your Tonic a thorough trial. It itthl only reiueily that will cure constipation. I do not believe an>one su tiered more therefcon than I, as I had been attiicied with it all in? life. For dais my bowels would not act and thenoaly by the use of strong caihaitiis that were fast ruining my health. My Stomach and Liver were detailed anil I suffered with inward pile*, the pains of which would at times raise me oS my cbair. I spent much money with various doc­ tors and medicines to no avail. "Soon alter 1 started Mull's Grape Tonic my bowels bQgan to move regularly--the pain laft me and my general health built up rapidly. t "I heartily recommend it as an absolute cm to which 1 am a living witness." Until Mull's Grape Tonic was pot on the American market there was no core for Constipation. Let us send you a bottle free to-day to show you that it will do all we claim. Geod far Ailing CMMrca and Nmiag Mil in. F R E E B O T T L E C O U P O N S«nd this coupon with your name and address and your drug(ji«t'» name, for a free bottle HuU's Grape Tonic, Stomach Tonic, Constipation Cure and Blood Purifier, to BULl. 8 OUn TON 10 CO , 148 Third Ave., Rock Inland, 111. Give full address aad writs plainly. Ths tLN fctttie contain# nearly three time* the 60c. *ize. At dru? «tore»« Xht ye»aiae kai % fete ftw number ttamped on the label--take no other from your druggist. .i.'ii Ln "ell* " .*VV: A i .it 4 Lewis and Clark Exposition A Great Combination for THIS SUMMER'S VACATION THE Canadian Rockies the grandest scenery in the world-- unapproachable in magnificence and majesty and The Lewis and Clark Centen­ nial Exposition at Portland, Oregon. This will be the popular trip this summer. IfcNMjMfcSanto* Between St. Paul imt the Pactte Coast Send for handsome booklet ..•Challenge of the Mountaina." I# CANADIAN PACIFIC RY. JL C Shaw. Genl. Agt. Passenger Deparbnant, SB S. Clark Street. Chicago. New open for the suiiiifrfer. Interesting because it demonstrates the projfress made by that wonderful country--the Pacific North­ west. It is interesting, too, because it affords a chance to see, cheaply and satisfactorilyt the many places of interest in our Western States. Go via Rock Island System and stop oS »n Colo­ rado--visit Salt Lake City--Yellowstone National Park-- California--see the most for your money. . 'Excursion rates in effect daily until September 30» Full detail^ v JOHN SEBASTIAN, ~ - /J Passenger Traffic Manag«|^f CHICAGO. ^ - -5 > , -v! 5•' S3 "f * .. J - :n i isSttJi " S ' ^ i - 1 » * - ' * i ? * - , - ' , » > < k « •

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