McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 14 Jan 1904, p. 6

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m Wl i/innrv" Muiiti j. TROUBLE AND DON'T KNOW IT ^ M ** 5 -j I U ZZ&m UtfYE!W*.tm;W.r.lSilE«6CO. k:: To Prove what Swamp-Root, the Great Kidney Remedy* ; Will Do for YOU. Every Reader of this paper May ^ .Have a Sample Bottle Sent Free by Mail. Weak and unhealthy kidneys are responsible for more ffekne8s and suffering1 than any other disease, therefore, when through neglect or other causes, kidney trouble is permitted to Continue, fatal results are sure to follow. Your other organs may need attention--but your kidneys most* ' t»ecause they do most and need attention first. If you are sick or "feel badly," bejjin taking Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, the great kidney, liver and bladder remedy, because fui soon as your kidneys begin to get better they will help all tho Other organs to health. A trial will convince anyone. The miid and immediate effect of Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, the great kidney ; and bladder remedy, is soon realized. It Stands the highest for its wonderful cures of the most distressing cases. Swamp- Root wiU set your whole system right, •Ad the best proof of this is a triaL M Bast Mew You City. .JMib Safe* Oct. 15th, 1902. "I had t'een suffftrine severely from kidney tfMible. All symptoms were on hand; toy former " Mrangth and power had left tne; 1 con Id hardly . 4ru myself along. Even my mental capacity was fiving out, and often 1 wished to die. It was then saw an advertisement of yours in a New York t>aper. but would not have paid any attention to It. tad it not promised a sworn guarantee with every ' Ixrttleof your medicine, asserting that your Swamp- foot is purely vegetable, and does not contain any annfu! drncs. I am seventy years and four months eld, and with a cood conscience I can recommend jp-Root to ail sufterers from kidney troubles, members of my family have been using 'Root for four different kidney diseases, rtfll the same cood results." WMk r thanks to yon. I remain. Very truly yours. ROBERT BBRNER. Yon may have a sample bottle of this jJEamous kidney remedy, Swamp-Root, Cent free by mail, postpaid, by which you Bay test its virtues for such disorders as dney, bladder and uric acid diseases, fxx>r digestion, being obliged to pass your water frequently night and day smarting or irritation in passing, bricks dust or sediment in the urine, headache^ backache, lame back, dizziness, sleepless** ness, nervousness, heart disturbance due to bad kidney trouble, skin eruptions from bad blood, neuralgia, rheumatism, diabetes, bloating, irritability, wornout feeling, lack Of ambition, loss of flesh, sallow com* plexion, or Bright's disease. If your water, when allowed to remain undisturbed in a glass or bottle for twenty-four hoars, forms a sediment or settling or has a cloudy appearance, it is evidence that your kidneys and bladder need immediate.aUention. Swamp-Root is thfe great discovery of Dr. Kilmer, the eminent kidney and blad" der specialist. Hospitals use it with won* derful success in both slight and sever# cases. Doctors recommend it to their patients and use it in theij? own families* because they recognize in Swamp-Root the greatest and most successful remedy. Swamp-Root is pleasant to take and it for sale at drug stores the world over is bottles of two sizes and two prices--fifty cents and one dollar. JRemember tht name. Swamp- Root, Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, and the address, Bing* hamton, N. V., on every bottle. !t EDITORIAL NOTICE.--If you fcve the slightest symptoms of kidney or }>!adder trouble, or if there is a trace of it a your family history, send at once to Dr. {ulmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., who will r Madly send you by mail, immediately, with- tout cost to you, a sample bottle of Swamp- . Root and a book containing many of the thousands upon thousands of testimonial Esrs received from men and women cured, writing, be sure to say that you read generous ofier in this paper. COUPON. Please write" or fill in this coupon with jtv name and add i ess and Dr. Kilmer & Co. will send you a Free Sample Bottle of Swamp-Root tlM Great Kidney Remedy. Name. St. and No..., City or Towa. Stat* Popular Washington Belle. Washington's younger set does not claim a more popular young woman than Miss Francis Fuller, the daugh­ ter of Ohief Justice Melville Fuller. Moreover, the great jurist's daughter vis' one of the handsomest girls in her set. Miss Frances is unusual looking. She has what her friends terra a "fascinating air of mystery.;; At a glance she might be compared .to Mme. Calve in the singer's youth. Miss Fuller has dazzling eyes that always are half shut. She is dark in ccfloeing and her thick black hair is in a large pompadour. She gdfes tn Cor Mcarre effects. THE WISCONSIN CENTRAL RY. Reaches the principal points in Wis­ consin, offering Pullman Sleepers, Free Reclining Chair Cars, modern coaches and dining and cafe service between Chicago, Milwaukee, Mani­ towoc and St. Paul, Minneapolis, Ash­ land and Duluth. Connections are made with diverging lines at all ter­ minal points. Meals served a la carte. For tickets, sleeping car reservations and further information apply to agent# of this company or write Jas. C. fond, Gen'l Pass. Agt., Milwaukee, Wis. 7* / Insist on Getting It i Borne grocers »>ay they don't keep Do- fiance Btarch. This is because they havo a •lock on hand of other brands containing ooly 12 cz. in £ packu^s, iiicii thoy won't Mable to sell first, because Defiance con­ tains 16 on. for the fiame money. Do you want 16 oz. instead' of VI or. for •ame money t Then boy Defiance Btarch. Requires no cooking. The New York Central Lines have ^decided to put on fast and luxurious service for the World's Fair and trains of the most approved pattern are now being built for this purpose. Tin? train will be called THE LOUISI­ ANA PURCHASE LIMITED. Young Man's Rapid Rise. Five years ago William D. Myers of Joplin, Mo., known among his friends at "Billy," got a job as stenographer in the offices of the Mexican Central Railway at Mexico City. He was then 17 years old. By close application he learned Spanish as well as a great deal about the railway business and was rapidly promoted. When the Goulds got control of the Mexican Central he was retained in their em­ ploy, and now, at the age of 22 years, he has been made superintendent of freight and transportation of a large division, with headquarters at Mon­ terey. Tho Wonderfol Cream Separator. Does Its work tn thirty minutes and leaves lees than 1 per cent butter fat. The pride Is ridiculously low, accord­ ing to size, $2.75 to $6.00 each, and when you have one you would not part therewith for fifty times its cost. JU8T BEND THIS NOTICE. with 5c stamps for postage to the John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse, Wis., and get their big catalogue, fully de­ scribing this remarkable Cream Sepa­ rator, and hundreds of other tools and farm Boedbu used by the farmer. (W. N. U.) Tibet Monasteries. Monasteries of the lamas in Tibet are always perched on the top or steep sides of a hill. They are built in stages connected by abrupt passages and stairs guarded by Tibetan mastiffs. These dogs are almost as high as a donkey and are so fierce that it goes hard with a stranger who attempts to enter without an attendant lama. A Lilian Bell's latest work, "A Book of Girls," is a collection of fascinating stories told in this author's character­ istically charming style, full of huinor- ofis events and as varied as they are Interesting. Many who formerly smoked 10c powsmoke Lewis' "Single Binder" straight fcccigar, The bent, combination of the best •OIMCOOS. L«wis' Ffictory. Peoria, III. Panama ranks fifth In population •ad seventh in area among the states of Hie Colombian republic. OBJECT LESSONS IN BUTLER'S , EPIDEMIC OF TYPHOID FEVER Typhoid fever within the last year lias taught the people of the United States several lessons that have come more closely home to the laity than ever before had been taught It by that distinctly Infectious, disease. For years the phrase, "Boil the water," had been recognized j&lmost to the ex­ tent of its adoption by the vaudeville stage, when at Ithaca, N. Y., affecting Cornell university; at Palo Alto, Cal., affecting Leland Stanford university; and last at Butler, Pa., where 1,000 persons fell ill of the disease out of a population of only 16,000, typhoid fever stalked back and forth as a specter in all its unknown hideous- ness, teaching its lesson of sanitation and cleanliness. The one great truth that has come pf these epidemics and these investi­ gations of their causes is the em­ phatic statement that every victim of typhoid fever, whether of the lightest or of the most virulent type, may be as much a menace to his fellow man as if he suffered from measles or scar­ let fever. As indicating his status in a community where insanitary condi­ tions may exist, Dr. Geo. A. Soper, consulting engineer and sanitary ex­ pert, investigating Butler conditions for the Engineering News, writes of the brook entering the creek 15.) feet above the Intake pipes of the'pumping statton: "Inasmuch as it is practically a sewer, its contents must be consid­ ered to contain all the terrible poten­ tialities of sewage. A case of walk­ ing, or unrecognized typhoid, or the rlsit of a convalescent whose bladder was Infected with the typhoid bacil­ lus, might reasonably have infected the brook sufficiently to have pro­ duced the epidemic." The history of the Butler epidemic is the story of the possibilities of the typhoid bacillus in connection with carelessness and bad sanitation. It has shed new light upon the command ^0? within the borough limits. From Aug; 27 to Nov. 1 this polluted creek was the source ot Butler's water supply. A system of filtering had been fol­ lowed by the company, but on Oct. 20 these filters were shut down for alter­ ations and change, and it was between Oct. 30 and Oct. 31 that the seeds of the typhoia epidemic were sown, in Connoquenessing creek. On Nor. 1 the filters again were put into opera­ tion and after the middle of the month the water from the new Thorn Run reservoir was available. Connoquenessing creek ciktenda about ten miles above Butler, dimin­ ishing above the old reservoir to a thread. From either bank, all the way down, the creek is fed by swift brooks that drain an area of thirty-one square miles. The character of the country is hilly and the drainage is rapid. There are camps of miners upon some of these brooks; on others are shanty houses for laborers; and on all side3 are farmhouses, with drainage front barnyards and . pigpens, and open vaults. Boydstown's drainage, from its twenty houses, always has come into the creek below the reservoir which supplied Butler. Thorn Rua, running into • Connoquenessing creek two miles above Butler, had been one of the sources of contamination of the creek and after the completion of the new reservoir a typical case of ty­ phoid fever developed on the banks of the run. In'a farmhouse situated on a pre­ cipitous bank of the run the first case developed on July 17, and four cases followed the first, with the wastes from the sickrooms thrown into the yards on the banks of the run, with­ out the commonest precaution to dis­ infect these deposits. Aocording to Dr. Soper there were 1,270 cases of typhoid fever in Butler up to the middle of December, most of a mild type. Compared with some of the other experiences of cities in the la^ twenty-five years the fifty- nior h « f903 wtm Sigrtf Map of Butler, Pa., and Vicinity, 8howfng Sources of Water Supply. A recent publication by Houghton, Mifflin & Co. (Boston), "The Log of a Cowboy," by Andy Adams, are actual experiences "on the hurricane deck of a Texas horse"--a life which now ex­ ists only in the memory of veterans of the Western trail. It will be found intensely entertaining to all those interested in the old trail days. Mexican Theater Fees. In attending a Mexican theater the admission is charged one act at a time'; thus the rates are according to the number of acts in the play. When You Buy 8tareh Defiance and get the beat, 16 oc. for 10 Onoo nood, always used. Good roads advocates want New York state to spend $6,000,000 on highways. Ploo*a Cure (mot M too tastily spoken of at tOMfti euro.--J. W. O'Bbixn, 828 Third Am, IK* Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. 6.1800. Santo Domingo's weekly revolution arrived on scheduled time. For Mother's Eyes. In another coTumn of this paper will be found an announcement of the Phoenix. Chair Co., Sheboygan, Wis., setting forth the merits of the "Phoenix Walking Chair" for babies. Every mother should read it. In London, at the Billingsgate mar­ ket, 12,009 to 14,000 tons of fish are handled every month. Do Your Clothes Look Yellow? Then nso Defiance Btarch. It will to* them white--16 os. for 10 cents. That far-eastern war cloud is begin­ ning again to take on a funnel shape. T° ^ure a Cold in One day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All druggists refund money if it fails to cure. 26a "Woman's sphere?" ft ts thia roimd ball, the earth. "Boil the water." It is something with a bearing upon the conditions of a thousand cities and towns all over the world. Butler lies Just forty-nine miles north of Pittsburg and on the banks of the Connoquenessing creek, a stream that in ordinary stages is about 100 feet wide. In 1900 the Unit­ ed States census gave the city a pop­ ulation of 10,853, while since that time the building of a great car works and other conditions connecting with a "boom" growth, added at least 6,000 more people to the community. This growth was 6bown plainly in the re­ ports of the water company for three comparative periods in November. 1901, 1902 and 1903. The water used in one week in the first year was 10,- 000,000 gallons; in the second year it was 12,000,000 gallons, while in the corresponding week in 1903 it was 19,000,000 gallons. The source of the water for years had been behind a dam across the creek at Boydstown, seven miles above the city of Butler. In 1897 one- half of this dam had washed out and had to be repaired, and when the growth of the city made an added supply imperative work was begun on a new subsidiary dam across Thorn Run. This dam was almost completed when on Aug. 27, 1903, the other half of the original dam gave way, leaving the water company to take its supply from the Connoquenessing creek, well Pastor's Kindly Act. Rev. J. J Kuendig, pastor of St. John's German Lutheran church of Reading, Pa., has insisted upon a reduction of $200 in his salary, the money to be added to the salary of his assistant. Rev. Philip J. Kirchner, who will now receive $1,000. Rev. Mr. Kuendig is the oldest pastor in point of Bervice in Reading. six deaths In Butler to the middle of December have not been of the worst* Caterham, in England, with a popu­ lation of 5,800, in 1879 had 352 cases of the disease, with 21 deaths; Ply­ mouth, Pa., with a population of 8,000, had 1,104 cases 'in 1885, with 114 deaths, and Ithaca, N. Y., with 13,000 population and 1,300 cases, lost 78 of the stricken ones. "The number of deaths at Butler, as compared with the number of cases, appears small and will likely remain so," writes Dr. Soper in con­ clusion. "In the only other epidemic of typhoid with which Butler should be compared--Ithaca--the proportion of deaths to cases was far smaller than the text books would lead one to expect. It is probable that the pro­ portion of detfths at Butler will in­ crease, for a large number of the cases have not yet passed through their critical stages, yet a low death rate should be anticipated. "There will undoubtedly be more eases due to the epidemic than will b& known. The disease has already been scattered wide from Butler and local transmission will continue." The lesson of lessons from the ar­ ticle is that a community cannot af­ ford to have a questionable water supply under any circumstanees, and that it must recognize the ^erious menace that one case of typhoid fever may be to a whole careless commun­ ity. ~ CuriouA Christmas Gathering. Among the most "curious of Christ­ mas gatherings this year was one held at the home of Rev. Dr. A. E. Ballard of Ocean Grove, N. J. On that day the doctor celebrated the eighty-second an­ niversary of his birth. The same day was the birthday of his daughter and of his two sisters. One of the latter was married on Christmas day. Pope Leo's Presents In Museum. Mrs. Joseph Drexel of Philadelphia, who is noted as an indefatigable col­ lector of fans, has received from Rome the two papal fans which were given to her by Pope Leo XIII. The inter­ esting relics of the Vatican will be deposited |n the museum ot the Uni­ versity of Pennsylvania. 8tatue of Virginia's War Governor. A marble statue of the late Got. Francis H. Pierpont, the war gov­ ernor of West Virginia, has been placed In Statuary hall in the capitol. It will be unveiled as soon as a date Is set by congress for the ceremonies at the request of delegation from that state. Great Lawyer and Statesman. The late Italian premier. Zanardel- II, it should be noted, was a great lawyer, and as a writer on legal sub­ jects he achieved a European reputa­ tion. He was the author of the mod­ ern penal code of Italy, which is re­ garded as well-nigh a perfect work of its kind. Edueator* Work in Gymnasium.- President Nicholas Murray Butler of Columbia university has joined a special gymnasium class for officers of instruction, and three times a week attends the class. The pupils meet in a private room back of the office of Dr. J^eylan, 41r»etor at tht gymnasium. CARLISLE INDIAN FOOTBALL STAR GOES WEST WITH FAIR BRIDE 1»0'0 >* i cfslNEcS PHILLrlPd § \ EJrnmy B, Northwestern University students were surprised by the announcement that James Phillips, the Carlisle In­ dian guard on the football team, had ONLY A QUESTION OF TIME. How Patience Will Enable One to Car- ry Water in a Sieve. John Diedrich Spreckels. the son of Claus Spreckles, is the proprietor of a San Francisco newspaper. To an edi­ tor one day Mr. Spreckels was talk­ ing about persistence and In the course of his remarks he said: "My father is a great believer in persis­ tence--in patience. Once when I was a boy I abandoned in despair some childish task thaPl had undertaken and my father reproved me for it. Per­ sistence will do anything,' he said. 'Therels nothing you can't accomplish with patience.' And then he smiled slightly and added: 'You could even carry water in a sieve if you would have the patience to wait long enough.' How long would I have to wait? I said. 'Till it froze,' my father an­ swered." MIGHT HAVE BEEN WOR^fe. Congressman Hepburn's Consolation for Piece of Bad Luck. Congressman Hepburn of Iowa Is nearly always unlucky in drawing a seat; but of late years he has been able to retain his old* seat, the member drawing it # always exchanging with him. When he first entered the house he drew about the worst seat in the lot. As he sat down there he was grumbling over his bad luck, when he looked across the hall and saw the disconsolate face of the man whom he had beaten for the nomination and whom he succeeded in congress. Then he thought: "I'll bet that fellow would be satisfied with even this seat." and at once ceased to feel bad about his luck. 6een married during the Christmas holidays to Miss Earney E. Wilber, a Carlisle Indian girl, and had left for Seattle, Wash., with his bride. He will practice law in Seattle. Phillips^ marriage, which took place without the "knowledge oi his Evans- ton friends, occurred last week. Phil­ lips and Miss Wilber became ac­ quainted while both were students at Carlisle, where the football man studied previous^o his registration as a law student at Northwestern last fall. . . Mrs. Phillips is a member of the Menominee tribe of Indians and has lived at Keshena, Wis. She was gradu ated last February from the Carlisle school. MANY NOW 8TUDY CHINESE. Columbia University 8tudents Becom­ ing Greatly Interested. Prof. Frederick Hirth, who holds the Dean Lung chair of Chinese at Colum­ bia university, says that interest In the study of China's language and litera­ ture throughout the United States is rapidly on the increase. Although this is only the second year of the Chinese school at Columbia, the number of stu­ dents registered has become so great as to tax the present8 facilities. There is a great demand for lectures on Chinese subjects in New York and elsewhere. The Columbia library has secured a copy of the cyclopedia T'u- Shue-Tsi-Ch' Ong, consisting of more than 500 native volumes, as a gift from the Chinese government and has had these bound in European style. It is, outside of certain serials, the most voluminous print ever published in the world. Its translation into English would, Prof. Hirth calculates, furnish no fewer than 109 volumes of the size of Appleton's encyclopedia. Well Known Bostonian Dead. William Durant, treasurer of the Boston Transcript Company and for seventy years a faithful employe and guiding spirit of that corporation, died last week in his eighty-eighth year. Mr. Durant was born in Boston, studied law for a short time and in February, 1834. became a clerk in the Transcript office. Eight years later he was business manager, which posi­ tion he held until 1879, when he also undertook the dutj of treasurer. In 1886, at his own request, he was re­ lieved of the presidency, but until his death was treasurer and director. A Friendly Sign. 'Tiook Pleasant." That was the sign in large letters that adorned the kitchen wall of a bright little house­ keeper. When the nervous worry lest, the steak get too brown while she was mashing the potatoes threatened to crease her forehead she looked up at the friendly sign--and smiled. One can really work from the outside as well as the inside in getting the kinks straightened out of fretted nerves. Smooth the face, and before you know it the worries will follow suit and smooth out, too --; Will Be Kept at Hie Desk. The retirement from active senrtee on his own application pf Pay Direct­ or Theodore 9. Thompson, in charge of the navy pay office at Boston, is announced. Capt. Thompson will re­ main on duty at Boston. His pro­ fessional ability is of such a higher order, navy department officials say, that Secretary Moody has taken ad­ vantage of the law which gives Mm power to give active work to officers on the retired list. Cuba's Richest Woman. Senora Rosa Ahreu. the richest woman in Cuba, is a handsome, intelli­ gent, aristocratic looking widow worth $2,000,000, and with no Incum­ brance. She lives In the Cerro, a fashionable suburb of Havana, was born in Cuba, as was her late hus­ band. and all her interests and sym­ pathies are entirely non-Spanish. La senora is very democratic in manner and takes great interest in a society originated by American women to aid the poor. Her plantation, one of the largest in Cuba, consists of 150,000 acres of magnificent coffee land. Refused Customary Holiday. Postmaster General Payne upset a long-established custom by refusing to give the 2,000 employes in his de­ partment a half-holiday the day be­ fore Christmas. He had Intended to do so, but after consultation with some department chiefs he found that such a course would cause serious delay in the volume of work, so he decided to keep everybody at work as usual. Mr. Payne's action is In line with President Cleveland's contention that it was a deliberate violation of law for heads of departments to .give clerks such a half-holiday. Know Not Their Value. Thackeray has siaid that if women knew their power they could marry any man they wanted. This is just where th§ trouble lies; they do not know their power, nofr understand wherein their charms lie. Of course there are exceptions to this rule; tnere are many who understand only too well and wield their scepters-- or their swords--with-too dexterous a hand. But there are those who un­ dervalue themselves, are too retiring, and let the happiness which is meant for them slip from their hands. Has Plaster Cast of Whala. Curator Lucas of the National mu­ seum who went to Newfoundland a couple of months ago to obtain a plas­ ter cast of a whale, has succeeded in his task. The cast is said to be the largest in the world, and when com­ pleted will be shipped to the museum. It is seventy-nine feet long. Ex-Senate Quits Business. Ex-United Stated Senator Murphy on New Year's day retired from busi­ ness, selling all his Interests in his brewing company at Troy, N. Y. He ha3 had a half interest in the business for fifty years. Chartran's Painting for White House. Chartran's painting of the signing of the peace protocal between the United States and Spain has been formally ac­ cepted by the president from H. C. Frick of Pittsburg, who had it painted at a cost of $20,000. The picture will eventually be displayed in the east room. The central figures of the work are President McKinley, Secretary Day. Assistant Secretaries Hill. Adee and Cridler, Ambassador Carabon, rep­ resenting Spain, and Secretary Thie- baut of the French embassy. Government Stow in Settling. Two days' after the death of Ste phen W. Fitts of Allerton, Mass.. his executor received a check for $3.03 from the United States treasury in payment of a claim against the gov­ ernment that had been filed forty-two years ago. The claim was for unpaid services in the army. In Memory of Famous Scholar. A number of scholars have organ- Ited to honor the memory of the his­ torian Lecky. To this end they formed ,a committee "to promote a public memorial In Ireland." ^in- Valuable Feathers. The most valuable feathers ara those of the mlrasol. a bird of Argen­ tina. They art worth abovt £210 a poued. Pension Well Earned., Lewis P. Abbott, for thirty years a member of the Boston fire department, a part ot that time holding the office of district chief, retired on a pension of $1,000 yearly on New Year's day. He has missed but four fires in his district during'bis term of service. Childish Criminals. In the Hungarian town of UJpe«t three girls, aged from 11 to 15, hav* been convicted of opening the grave* of several children and breaking; coffins In search of jewels. r • '• "4- The Beet Results In 8tarcttfrt§ •' : •aaibe obtained only by using Defiana* fJtareh, bwidw getting 4 oz. more for sazna money--AO cooking required. A Clyde Fitch has Just brought out »ew play. Clyde isn't doing mm this season. He has only written dramas since Thanksgiving. Economy is the road to wealtjh. ^ JPUTNAM FADELESS DYE la tit* |oad to economy. The American sewing '\ W, »aking advances In Japan far aheai * Of all others. 4 Plans Return to the Stage. It is said that the widow of the late Max O'Rell will return to the stage. She was once well known in comio opera as Beatrice Eresham. She Is now preparing in Paris for her reap­ pearance. Shoes for Viennese. A big American shoe store is opened ta Vienna. Many women are denied the* happiness of children through derangement of the generative organs. Mrs. Beyer advises women to use Lydia E. Pink* ham's Vegetable Compound. " D*AB MRS. Potkham :--I suffered with stomach complaint for years. I got so bad that I could not carry my children but five months, then would have a miscarriage. The last time X became prernant, my husband pot ma to take Liydia E. Pinkliam's Vego« table Compound. After taking tbe first bottle I was relieved of the sicli>. ness of stomach, and began to feel bet» ter in every way. I continued its uaa and was enabled to carry my baby t® maturity. I now have a nice baby girl, ana can work better than I ever could before. I am like a new woman.*. -- Mks. Frank Beyer, 22 S. Second Sfc* Meriden, Conn. -- $5000 forfait If original abov* letter proving genuineness cannot be produoei FREE MEDICAL, ADVICE TO "WOMAN. Don't hesitate to write to Mrs. Pinkham. She will understand your case perfectly, and will treat you with kindness. Her advicft is free, and the address is 1*3 Mass0 No woman ever rejfre> having1 written lier, and UM helped thousands. , D O Y O U COUCH D O N rr DEL LAY keMPS BALSAM Tt1E^ It Cure» Colds, Couehs. Sore Throat, Croup, Inflt. enzA, Whooping Cough, Bronchitis and Asthma* A certain cure for Consumption In first stagey nnd ft gnre relief in advanced stages. Use at ones, feet after taking the Drst dose. Sold by dea'ers everywhere, Laifl Vou will aee the excellent effect after ' l>otties 25 cents and 60 cent* " From the cradle to the baby chair." RAVE Y00 A BABY? If so, you ought to have s PHOENIX WALKIIB CH/UB (FATUTD) " BCTTKR THAN A HUMS." OUR PHOENIX Walking Chair enables the baby to learn to walk, without injury or excessive exercise. It is impossible for the child to fall and 'injure itself, and it enables it to walk without assist­ ance, thus gaining confidence in itself at once. It is well made, and is provided with a sanitary cloth removable seat; it also has a table attachment which enables the baby to enjoy itself with its toys with­ out further attention. This chair is so constructed that it prevents colds and diseases from (drafts or floor perms. It will prevent enough soiled clothes to pay for itself. It is at­ tractively made and is an ornament to any home, and baby will get more strength, comfort and enjoyment oat of it than anything else you can got. "Aa indispensable a* a cradJ*." KAWTJrAOTCBKD ONLY BT P H O E N I X C H A I R C O , SHEBOYGAN, WIS. Can only ba had ol your furniture dealer. Wisdom Soap (Granulated) "Soap that sells to clean. . Must clean to selL" Wisdom does the same work at one-haJ| the cost of any bar soap. ̂ All Grocers • fell: f*

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