Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 8 Feb 1917, p. 7

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that may Pa.--"For twehre rears i^fleitfa terrible crampL I would have to staj: ^4 tribute to the great war president's labors for the restoration of national unity from Col Henry ^Patterson, last of the "old school" editors, distinguished publicist and Confederate veteran ̂ ̂ <> v k. - in bed several days, every month , 1 tried all kinds of remedies and was treated by doctors, but my trouble con­ tinued nntil <me day I read about Lydia E. Pink ham's Vege­ table Compound and what It had done for others. I tried it and now I am never troubled with cramps and feel like a different woman. I cannot praise Lydia E. Pinkham'a Vegetable Com- * too hijrhly and I am recommend- to my friends who suffer afc I did.' * George R. Naylor, Box 72, •> Iftarys^ille, Pa^ i Yoeng women who are troubled with painful or irregwla? periods, backache, neadache, draggirig-down sensations, fainting spells or indigestion should take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Thousands have been re­ stored to health' by this root and herb Write for free and helpful advice to Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. (cor* fiaential), Lynn, Mass. Only womeo open and read such letters. ftH CANCER • r •« *n d Tnmora an cc--folly tmUt j (removed) without knUtorpaio. All work (MmitMi Come, or write for free Smmmtorlmm book , Dr. WILLIAMS SANATORIUM HO DriwwMf At„ Wa--aufc.Mlsa. TYPHOID «T. aadbaralaaoua Be vaccinated NOW nr family. It U mora rttaj than boo** loatifsace Ask mt pfayridan. dragglat, or «end for Jtare "•had Typhoid?* telling of TypboU Vscctae, * " •trfkoH CUtlen. is bo mora _ then Smallpox, inaf axpcriaoca baademoBftnto* tha almoat mlracolooa rflL - #ey, aadbarmlaaotea*, of Antityphoid Vaodoatloa. ^Ba«MdaatadllOW by m phyatdaa, yoa and family. It U mora rttaj than boa** Inwirsaee, i uaa, sad da&gar fraaa PreSKlsss Yiintaw **£ SaraaM ntfar U. «. UMaas Cattar lalaralwi. BartuMr. M., CMms*. IIL Hubby's Reception. yoa git up for your husband?" <$*< No; I am an early riser and am •f always up in time to greet him."--De­ troit Free Press. CARE FOR YOUR SKIN Amd Keep It Clear by Daily Uaa of Cuticura--Trial Free. A hot bath with Cuticura Soap fol­ lowed by a gentle anointing with Cuti­ cura Ointment clears the skin or scalp In most cases of eczemas, rashes and itching of children and adults. Make Cuticura your every-day toilet prepara­ tions and prevent such troubles. i Free sample each by mail with Book. Address postcard, Cuticura, Dept. L, Boston. . Sold everywhere.--Adv. «l Don't Know." There is always hope for the girl who is not afraid to say, "J don't know," provided, of course, that she wants to know. If this avowal of Ig­ norance is also an expression of indif­ ference, she Is no better off than the girl who tries to look intelligent when a subject is being discussed of which she is entirely ignorant. *No one will atteppt to enlighten the girl who pre­ tends to know it all. The wisest way to find out about the mysteries which puzzle you is to be ready ta say, "I don't know."--Girl's Companion. . Would that the spirit of the illus­ trious dead whom we lament today, could speak from the grave in tones ' which reach each and every heart: •My countrymen! Know one anoth­ er and you will love one another.' ,,«-- Lamar on the death of Sumner. ) HE LINES of thought 'and feeling which led to the reclamation of the birth­ place of Abraham Lin­ coln , and the peaceful scenes and unity of pur­ pose that attend its trans­ fer from the ownership of an association to the possession of the govern­ ment of the United States cuiurast strangely with the passions wliich illumined the period in which his lot was cast, toward the close breaking into a volcano of blood arid flame, his tragic death unhappily riot the end; for we now know that, while he was entertaining the most benevo­ lent intentions toward the beaten party in the strife, his taking off gave at once the signal and the pretext for letting loose upon the vanquished a swarm of e%il spirits working ills even worse than those of war itself. For at least ten years before the secession of the Southern states the two sectional extremes in and out of congress talked like madmen, the rav­ ing ranging from the abolition orator's melodramatic "My curse be upon the Constitution of these United States" to the rodomontade of the Southern sena­ tor who would not be pacified until he; could "call the muster roll of lilts slaves beneath Bunker Hill monument." As the sectional pressure tightened In national politics before the advent of actual hostilities those conservative men who tried to avert the oncoming clash of arms were driven to the wall. Neither extreme wouid listen to mod­ erate counsels. The Interposition of the border states proved of doubtful restraint and was of short duration. During the war and after it was over these patriotic men fared no better than the firebrands, the mass and body of the Southern people confounded with the original secessionists. Even now the distinction that once existed is blurred, if not lost. Yet a great majority of the Southern people were devoted to the Union and at least a* strong minority were opposed to slav- ery. No oae understood this better than Abraham Lincolri. He was himself of Southern birth. He and all his tribe were Southerners. Although he left Kentucky when a child, he was an old child; he never was very young; nor did he go very far, growing to man­ hood in a Kentucky colony, for what lis Illinois, what Chicago, but a Ken­ tucky colony^ swollen somewhat out of proportion ? He was in no sense what we used to call "a poor white." Awkward, ungainly but aspiring, the spirit of a hero within that rugged ' , rests upon two imperfect and appar­ ently conflicting narratives--the oiricial and formal report of the Confederate commissioners andxthe subsequent oral and personal statement of Mr. Steph­ ens. The disagreement, however, "is easily explained, having, with Its at­ tendant controversy, arisen because what Mr. Stephens said was assumed to be an attack upon Mr. Duvis. It was never so intended by Mr. Stephens, the aim being solely to throw light upon the character and purposes of Mr. Lincoln. It should be borne In mind in this connection that Mr. Stephens and Mr. Lincoln were personal friends--old Whig colleagues in congress--Lincoln a warm admirer of Stephens, whom he wanted to ask to become a member of his cabiuet when fie was elected president. In the little cabin, of the river steamer where the conference was being held the two had drawn apart from the rest. "Stephens," said Lincoln, as Mr. Stephens related the conversation to many of his friends, "you know I am a fair man and I know you to be one. Both of us understand the situation. Let me write 'Union' at the top of this page and you may write below it whatever else you please. I am surq you will write nothing which I cannot agree to." Mr. Stephens re­ plied that the commissioners were lim­ ited to treating upon the basis of dthe recognition of the Independence of the Confederacy. "Then, Stephens," said Lincoln, "my hands are clean of every drop of blood t spilled from this time onward." i In the general rather desultory and. in the end, wholly abortive, talk be- casement; a fine, far-reaching imagina- tween the three Confederate commls- tion behind those heavy brows; the doners and Mr. Lincoln and Mr. Se- a preh­ eard And Books of No Avail. Billy's teacher had written ieui in mnltfplication on the board asked: "What table -do you use' for tblsr "The .multiplication table," said Billy. "What do you use for this?" In­ quired the teacher. "You oae your head." responded BUIy. Agaiaat Women's High Shoes. sere Is a great cry in England against the high shoes of fashion, be­ cause of the leather they consume, un­ necessarily. One manufacturer an ••ounces publicly that although he is not in sympathy with the style he must make them because women insist upon having them. Barroom generosity deep. is only skin K'%'. A Pleasant Healthful Habit A daily ration of Grape-Nnts and cream is a splendid food for those who want vigor and energy. is a concentrated health-food made from choice whole wheat and malted barley. It retains the vital min­ eral elements of the grain so essential to thorough nourishment of body and" brain, but lacking in many other cereal foods. Every table should have its daily ration of Grape*JNuU. » "There's * Reason" JVc chang* to price, qualtty or six.* af courage of a lion beneath those patient, kindly aspects; and, long before he was of legal age, a leader among men. His first love was a Rutledge; his wife was a Todd. Lincoln the Poet. We know that he was a poet, fof have we not that immortal prose-poem ! recited at Gettysburg? We know that ! he was a statesman, for has not time vindicated his conclusions? But the | South did not for a long time know. j except as a kind of hearsay, that he j was a friend--the one friend who had the .power and the will to save it alike j from its enemies and itself. The direst ! blow that could have fallen upon a hapless and prostrate people -was de­ livered by the assassin's* bullet that struck him down. Much of a misleading kind has been written touching what did and did not happen at the Hampton Koads con­ ferences Nothing happened there which changed the Irreconcilable at­ titude of the combatants. Their agent*, Indeed, argued from opposite prem­ ises--the restoration of the Union the «ine qua non of the one side, the rec­ ognition of the Confederacy the ultima­ tum of the other. Neither, indeed, possessed the pow­ er to come to terms. Mr. Davis had no right to dissolve the Confederacy snd disband its armies, Mr. Lincoln none to commit his government to any definite treaty. It is a fact, however, that the federal president was pre­ pared with a plan then and there to end the war, which, could it have been adopted, would have saved two months' bloody fighting and spared the South the humiliation of the final Collapse and surrender. • Though this has been denied, it ad­ mits of no dispute. The historic issue ward, Mr. Lincoln recurring to slavery and the Emancipation Proclamation, declared that he would be willing to be taxed to pay the Southern people a fair valuation for 1heir slaves. It is a matter of fact that he had already prepared a joint resolution to be rec­ ommended to the two houses of con­ gress appropriating $400,000,000 to this purpose, and a proclamation to be issued by himself as president when this had been adopted. On his return to Washington he laid these two papers before the cabinet. Inevitably tJiere was opposition. "Why, gentlemen," he said, "how long is the war going to last? It is not going to end in one hundred days, is it? It is costing us $4,000,000 a day. There you have-the $400,000,000, not counting the intervening loss of lives and prop­ erty. But. you are all against me, and I will say no more about it." Both papers still stand in his own handwriting. The South'* True Friend. The death of Lincoln removed from the head of affairs the best, if not the only, friend the Southern people had at court. There came in his stead an told line southern Democrat--a verit­ able "poor white"--breathing destruc­ tion to the ruling classes at the South, .vet a constitutionalist of the school of Jefferson and as hostile to the negro equality theories of the radical Repub­ licans as the most ultra Copperhead of the North. Secession had failed; must it carry with it the failure also of institutional freedom? Liberating the black man, must it enslave the white? The plan to Impeach Andrew Johnson was little other than a scheme to Mex- Icanize the government. It came peril­ ously near succeeding. The Grand Army of the Republic COtfi JS&RY held one of its annual encampments upon Southern soil, to be welcomed at least as universally and hcspltnbl r as ever it had been welcomed on North­ ern soil. And the Confederate veterans are to advance in what force remains to them upon Washington, with no other thought than that it is their capi tal, the mecca of the true American the holy of holies of the freeheart's hope and home. A Confederate sol­ dier, appointed by a Republican presi dent. Is chief justice of the United States. Two Confederate generals who honorably wore the bluexhave died on the retired list and payroll of the Army of the United States. Verily the war of states and sections is over. The dream of Abraham Lincoln has been fulfilled. The mystic chords of memory, stretching to every living heart and hearthstone, have swellaN at last the chorus of the Union, touched not only by the angels of our better nature, but bound by the blood- ties of kindled origins, principles and affections. It did, indeed, seem n long time coming. As far hack as I860, speaking primnrily for the soldiers of the Cou federacy, I had proposed that the three war amendmentR to the Constitution be accepted and ratified as the treaty of peace between the North and the South. There followed a pretty wran­ gle. vMany--and especially those who had not been actually In the war--were unable to see or unwilling to admit that the head of the South was In the lion's mouth, and that, unless and until it eould l>e extracted, nothing was very much worth while. Sectionalism flourished apace On either sids? of party lines. The Confed erate brigadiers made a kind of common cause with the valiants of the bloody shirt, both out, as it were, for gate money. Thus the politicians played comedy while the people suffered trag edy. Although the Greely campaign in the long run perhups shortened the distance acroSS'the sectional chasjji, it did not show any .immediate fruitage, and it remained for an apparently un­ important personal event to make the first serious impression upon the solid wall of misunderstanding and prejudice which divided the two warring parts of the half-restored Union. Tills was the death of Charles Sumner and the eulogy of Lucius Lamar. It was an epoch-making speech. The North recognized its fidelity and its truth, and warmed to it; Thencefor­ ward the South could see its way ahead. Instead of sprinkling salt on raw places, it begatl to be the fashion to pour oil; instead of twisting the lion's tall to pat his mane. letter came Grady with his wondrous appeal--re­ sistless--for who could stand out against the cogent reasoning and sim­ ple pathos of that big-brained, great­ hearted, that immortal boy, pleading in the name of a new generation for a united country 1--Louisville Courier- Journal. Lincoln's Family. | tlcally tall, stooping figure before her I voice--the Ineffable sadness--the sad- - There were four children--Tloberf be that of the president of the United j ness and woe pf a great nation. And Todd, born August 1. 1843; Edward States? She stopped, as from the j the sorrow in those eyes, the sorrow of Baker, born March 10. 1840. and dying i shock he gave her. The leap, yellow |a heavy cross borne meekly--how in infancy ,* William Wallace, born IV- j face, with the niaskiike lines a!! "P ^ heavy none will fver know. The pain and down, the unkempt hair, the beard , of a crown of thorns worn for a world --why, he was a hundred times more that djd -not understand."--The Crisis ridiculous than his caricatures. Ho might have stood for many of the poor white-trash farmers she had seen in Kentucky--save for the long black coat. "But the little rebel is soon made to cember 21, 1850, and who died during his father's first year in the presi­ dency, and Thomas, born April 4. 1853, and who died when he was nineteen fawra old. Hla Personal Appearance. As Virginia Carvel enters Mr. Lin­ coln's presence: "Could this fanta*- forget all that In the sadness of that INTERESTING ITEMS Cleveland tn May b«<l 1,000,000 street car riders daily. ___ _ _ Columbus, O., now pays city street laborers $2.50 a day. China yearly Imports $4,000,000 worth of various kinds of leather. Electrical apparatus taking current from a light socket has been invented to force the growth of Indoor plants. Havana in April, May and June shipped to the United Sstatta SWVPS crates of pineappiea. Chicago has 6,085 lawyers, a gain of 228 In a year. Thunderstorms are rarer in San Francisco than in any other part of the United States* Pennsylvania will plant black cherry trees In the state reserves to provide food for birds. • The first iighthousf on this conti­ nent was built in 1715, at the entrance to Boston harbpr. A rack that can be hung on a radi­ ator to enable a peraon to wgpq £la feet has been invented. His Trouble. "For years I understand Fixit has been pursuing an upright course of life." - "Perhaps he haa, but he has never overtaken It." The nerves of the skyscraper are the telephone wires, of course. And inas­ much as progress In evolution is meas­ ured by complex nervous development. It fs natural that New York's down­ town, where business, the highest form of social biology, has attained its full­ est development, should be an enor­ mous spider's web of telephone wires. The per eppita consumption of tele­ phone wire in New Yprk is six "times »s much as in London, Simeon Straw- sky writes in Harper's. That rep­ resents the relative nervous in­ tensity of business In New York and in London. " Some such excess of wiring I sus­ pect in the skyscrapers of downtown. There are hundreds and thousands of rooms, and In every room one or more men with their mouths and ears to tha telephone. It is all cellular parti­ tions and wire ganglions reaching out to Chicago, perhaps, or San Francisco; wires to the stock exchange around the corner, wires to the assistant In the adjoining room, wires to tSie heart of the dictaphone into which business is being dictated and from which busi­ ness will travel to the ears of the stenographer who will transfer tt to paper. Our ghostly tourist will con­ clude that modern business is a mat­ ter of conversation. Downtown, Inside of Its ' tens of thousands of skyscraper cells. Is thus terribly busy--about what? So far as the eye can see, about nothing In par­ ticular. A man with a telephone at his elbow, a fiat-topped desk with a metal basket holding a dozen letters, perhaps, a photograph of the man's wife in a silver frame at one end of the desk, and that is alK But if the cell is a large one, sometimes reaching the dimensions of an entire floor in a skyscraper block, the desks, tele­ phones, metal baskets and phonographs are indefinitely multiplied. The sub­ stantialities of business are not there --the steel, wheat, cotton, bullion, the beams, casks, boxes and bales which you recall being hauled toward quaint little wharves on toy trucks driven by men In jumpers and shovel hats in the pictures in your school geography la­ beled commerce. By externals there is no way of telling whether the man at the desk Is engaged in selling stocks and bonds, or woolen remnants, or railway accessories or trusts and mergers, or theater tickets. There Is lackiqg the concrete symbolism of the old counting room--the heavy ledgers, whose bulk suggested the raw mate­ rials of traffic, the clerks on their high stools, the bustle of orders given and taken. The heavy ledgers have been replaced by filing cabinets, whose pur­ pose seems as much decorative as use­ ful. Your business office might as well be the catalogue room of a col­ lege library. Two Age* Raced Together. Two little dots in the distance sud­ denly woke up, and two Cossuek out­ posts who had probably been waiting for us for hours, for we were half a day late, flung themselves on their horses and galloped toward us, Arthur Ruhl writes in Collier's. The chauffeur of the first machine motioned with his gantlet, with tbe same bored gesture he would have used In a city street, and the Cossacks, bringing down their knouts and fling­ ing their horses about with what should have been u magnificent ges­ ture. fled down tlie road. The only thing that dimmed its mag­ nificence, for they rode beautifully, was the Invention of tbe motorcar and the1-cruel and cynical ease with which these soulless contraptions of steel and gas only purred a bit heavier and were always at their heels, llorses and riders doubled up every now and then and leaped like greyhounds, rifles bumping on the men's shoulders, and the motors purred and snorted lazily after--two ages and two civili»ation« v?»-re racing there down the soggy wad. « ^ He Waa a Frugal Man. Mr. Lincoln, though not parsimoni­ ous, was a frugal man. He' told me that when he came to Washington he was worth about $15,000. When he died his administrator. Judge Davis, said that he left about $75,000, being one of the few presidents who went out of the office as wed off as when they went in.--Chicago Tribune. Worth More Than Bombs. The average woman resident of London has become accustomed to the cry of "Zepp raider." and as the time passes show a decreasing fear of Prus­ sian bombs. Many women continue about their business as if nothing was happening. As an illustration of the lj>ndon women's fearlessness, a saleswoman in a millinery shop described recently what happened in her showroom dur­ ing the Zeppelin raid in the latter part of November. A woman customer was selecting a bonnet when the explosion of a bomb shattered windows in the vicinity and s^nt every one scurrying to shelter. The saleswoman In the shop started to run into the street.' "Come back here." cried the custo mer. "I'm not going to have my time wasted because you fear the explosion of a Prussian bomb. What ix the use of becoming excited over a little thing that?" Boy Scouts Lead the Blind. Henceforth the blind men of Spo­ kane, Wash., several of whom are earning their livelihood as newsboys or street vendors, will not be com pelled to take chances with being struck by an automobile or street car. To end the perils which beset these sightless men at dangerous street crossings, several Boy Scouts have volunteered their services as pilots for the blind. These scouts have assumed a sort- of guardianship over the btind and will guide them each morning to their places of employment, and see that they reach home safely each night.--Spokane News Bureau. Talent and Genius- Tal«ot is that which is in a.maa'i powers -Genius is that i> whose pow er a man la.--Lowell. '•** Hopes for tha Futura. Tbe latest dance step is entitled "the toddle," which indicates that the terpsichorean originators have turned from ihe zoo to the nesery for Ideas. This sort of revives the-waning hope that in time danHng may be restored to some of the aspects of a human and grown-lip pastime..--Providence Journal. Defined. * Wfcloittavy ta the art of oeing dlsa* greeable la $ polite manner." Xranscript. LIVER, BOWELS For sick headache, bad breath, Sour Stomach and h- " oonstipation. - Get a 10-cent box now: * No odds how bad your liver, stomach or bowels; how much your head1 aches, how miserable and uncomfort­ able you are from constipation, indiges­ tion, biliousness and sluggish bowels --you always get the desired results with Cascarets. Don't let your stomach, liver and bowels make you miserable. Take Cascarets to-night; put an end to the headache, biliousness, dizziness, nerv­ ousness, sick, sour, gassy stomach, backache %nd all other distress; cleanse your inside organs of fell the bile, gases and constipated matter which is producing the misery. (A 10-cent box means health, happi­ ness and a clear head for months. No more days of gloom and distress if you will take a Cascaret now and then. All stores sell Cascarets. Don't forget the children--their little in- sides need a cleansing, too. Adv. Housekeeping for Indian Girls. On the caiupus of the Carlisle Indian school is a bungalow, known as the model home cottage, which plays an Important part in the education of In­ dian girls. Four girls are sent to the eottage every month with a matron. They do all the work connected with running the house, which is -construct­ ed in such a manner that It virtually duplicates cbndltions to be found in any home on an Indian reservation. ACTRESS TELL8 8ECRET. A well known actress gives the follow­ ing recipe for gray hair: To half pint of water add 1 ox. Bay Rum, a small box of Bar bo Compound, and M ox. of glycerine. Any druggist can put this up or you can mix it at home at very little cost. Fall directions for making and use coma in each box of Barbo, Compound.* It will gradually darken streaked, faded gray hair, and make it soft and glossy. It Will not color the scalp. Is not sticky or. creasy, and does not rub off. Adv. Natural Question. Mazie--I have only one wish-- •Daisy--Oh. Mazie! Who is hef-- Browning's Magazine. Boss of the House. : ' Agent--Is the boss of the house in? Proud Father--Yes; he's asleep up­ stairs in his cradle. Purity Is the essence of ^heavenly wisdom; It >ls the pure in heart alone who arrive at this wisdom.--Ruther­ ford. How a w.oinan does envy a man. when he goes strutting up the street on a rainy day and his skirts don't draggle. Nerves All On Edge? Jnst as nerve wear is a cause of kid­ ney weakness, so is kidney trouble a cause of aervonsness. Anyone who haa backache, nervousness, "blues," head­ aches, dizzy spells, urinary ills and a tired, worn feeling, would do well to try Doen's Kidney Pills. This safe, relia­ ble remedy is recommended by thou­ sands who have bad relief from just such troubles. , An Illinois Cue Ifrs. J. J. McGov- ern, 1730 S. First 8t., Springfield, 111.. says: "I used to be troubled a lot with my kidneys. My back kept me in misery and pained terribly at times. My back was so weak that I could Just about drag myself around. I f r e q u e n t l y h a d h e a d a c h e s , m y sight blurred ana the kidney secretions passed too often. It took only a few box*s of Doan's Kidney puis to cure all these trou­bles," toDeta'mA«>Shw,B0e«8«B D O A N ' S v . " " * POSTER-MD-BURN CO- BUFFALO.N.Y. STEARNS* ELECTRIC PIS U. S. Government Buys It •OLD EVERYWHERE--25c and $L0» FLORIDA TRUCK FARMS AT DUPONT FLORIDA q on Florida East Coast Railway in St. .lobtt and Volusia Conn tie*. Freight Express Sf to 48 hours to New York markets. Coa^ tinaoas cropping season --poiatoes, eeleff and lettuce. WRITE FOR BOOKLET. *"• DUPONT LAND COMPANY Dqmt, Florida tad Scrmnton, Penneyhreeia FLORIDA FARM FACTS Manatee County; refuted to have the be<4 soil and best climatic conditions la Florida! 8A5 gn»wiag days; electrie light auil ic§ plant; near railroad ^tracts from five acres ap, on eesy terms. WaiTs Fok Booauni J. HENRY STROHMEYER Sarasota, Fla. Baltimore. M<|t HAIR SAuAM A WMpNHMInttiMrii _ FarR-->Mi»sCnfcir wl •s--m nQmy «rFad«J HafcJ Ha. aid D» --tUU. Virginia Farms and Home# JTKHB CATALOGOB O* SPLBNDID SUBOA1N&' flU B. CHAVFIN * CO. BWiwnsd.fl fiownawt Positions, par to iLflt Writs tornluibl*booklet, BoaatoC 4hent Poattkins"by former t7. S Cml 8wrlo» Ibm. Tissmw anlbsaams mimml, kmni PATENTS wo«!?! _ Lawyor, W*»hini 1*. 0, iiflee and books .. Ratos reMOB&ble. HighMtrafefanees. BeatseMe Farlila Plantations and floe Timber land* I CI IIIC gururlalBgiT low prices. Many urliand £ ' ~ Booth; write I a Loan Co., mber land* alS ay adTaaiaMi Katei»(,3fla^ ••atua--<4@ k. KeaMtMia--Hew 'law Jmt towns,business opBortanitiM. 3«iiar information. Address t\ 8. iflfltlCH All RITC*""*' R»u* Mire. *<>«* •UVUII vimm* I>i»outdoors, locandii W. N. U; CHICAGO, NO. f-1917. 100 Years Old "The Jcidrteys play a most important part in causing premature old age and death--the more injurious the poisons passing thru the kidneys the sooner comes decay"--so says a distinguished physician, who further advises all people who are past thirty to preserve the vitality of the kidneys and free the blood from poisonous elements, such as uric acid-- drink plenty of water--sweat sense daily and take Anuric before meals. This Anuric is put up in tablet form, and can be obtained at almost any drug Btore. For that backache, lumbago, rheimatism, "rusty" joints, swollen feet or bands, due to uric acid in the blood, Anuric quickly dissolves the uric acid as hot water does sugar Discovered by Dr. Pierce of Buffalo, N. Y. Prevent premature old age by simply sipping a cup cf hot water every morning before breakfast, taking a httle Anuric before meals, and live to De a nundrcd. The reflections op a „ WOMAN--are not pleasant^ if she is delicate, rttn-down, ' ~ over worked. She feels which are played out" Her nd tier Rood spirits ham taken night. It worriea her husband as well as _ herself. •V This Is tha thna; ,\vs to build up her * Vp> strength and cure thosa weaknesses £» or ailments the seat of hsr trouble. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prascriph tion regulates and promotes all the proper functions of womanhood, enriches ihs blood, dispels aches and pains, melan* choly ana nervousness, brings refresh­ ing sleep, and restores health and strength. It cures those disorders and derangements incident to womanhood. A well-known agent which can b*-: procured at all drug stores is "Pleasant Pellets." mado up of the Mar-apple, thai dried juice of the leaves of aloe* and tha root of jalap. First put out by Dr. Piere* nearly^Dfty years ago.. --Adv. The Quinino Thai DOBS Mot Causo Nervousnosn Ringing in Hand Because of Its Tonic and Laxative effect, LAXATIVE QUININE can be taken by anyone without causing nervousness ̂ or ringing in the head. It removes the cause of Colds, Grip and ̂ Headache. Used whenever Quinine is needed. ,v$|j --to# remember therm fm Only One "Bromo Quinine Thmi im tbe OHglnmt • Laxative Bromo Quinino Tbim Signature mm IWry Box j Raise High Priced Wheat oh Fertile Canadian Soil Canada extends to you a hearty Invita­ tion to settle on her FREE Homestead lands of 160 acres each or secure some of the low priced lands in Manitoba, Saskatchewan wad Alberta, This year whe*( i> higher but Canadian tand juai aa chaap, so the opportunity is more at­ tractive than ever. Canada wants you to help feed the world by tilling some of her fertile soil--land similar to that which during many years has avaragad 20 to 45 bu»h«l» of wheat to the acre. Think of the many you can make with wheat around $2 a bushel and land so easy to get. Wonderful yields also of Oat«,B*rl«y and Fla*. Mta#d fii win . in Western Canada ia as profitable an iadailij aa grain growing. ^ The Government this year is asking farmers to put in­ creased acreage teto grain Military serrso? « ik>* coot- pulaorr ia Canada but tberr is a great demand for faro labor to replace the man v vounrfnwn who have v 4un- & mi con*eo«it. Write far Jitcrstare as to reduced r* meateSipt. of Unmigrkion. Ottawa, €•&* otVt C. JL StWbloa. ft*** 41*. tlX W A4aa Mrwt. Ouc«*o, B).i M. V. M*c1whmTm ATMIIW. Mhniu Canadian Government Agents

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