McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 1 Jun 1905, p. 3

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^ ^r- • . ; . . . '*-• • WORTH KNOWING. The average consumer of baking powder does not know that a reaction occurs in the process of baking. Food prepared with a cream of tartar bak­ ing powder does not contain any cream of tartar. A loaf of bread made from a quart o? fJour icaveaeu with cream of tartar baking powder contains forty-five grains more of Rochelle Salts than is contained in one Seidlitz powder. Some eminent Boston physi­ cians testified against the healthfill­ ness of Rochelle Salts. Therefere, why should the consumer pay forty five or fifty cents per pound for the cream of tartar or Trust bak­ ing powders when the best baking powder in the world can be haade to retail at twenty-five cents per pound (the price asked for Calumet Baking Powder) and leave a fair manufactur­ er's profit? The manufacturers of Calumet Bak­ ing Powder have for years made a standing offer of One Thousand Dol­ lars for any substance injurious to health found in food prepared from it. Bread made from Calumet Baking Powder is entirely free from Rochelle Salts, alum, lime or ammonia. HI8 MONEY SPOKE FOR HIM Genlug is not preaching, but a Phelps. essential to good live man is.--A. HEAL SSTA.TR, Artttsian water for Irrigation, In Southwest Tfiii. t« of recent discovery; tbli added to !ie fine climate and fertile soil and ehort, mild wlntere, will make It the leading truck crowing section of me Union.»ure. Tfceee lands are cheap now, but advancing. If you •want a home, cheap and on good terms, or a safe In­ vestment, write at once to WORD & MOOSE. SEAL ESTATE, SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS. FOR SALE --One of (he best grain and stock farms tsi Manitoba, has two sets of good buildltfgs, barn, room for 40 horses, 5 gralnarlei and other out build- lags; never-falling supply of good water; one mile north of St. Jean can be bought on easy terms. Small cast payment or nearly all cash If desired. For further particular® call on or addrece Fred A. Woraley, St. Jean Baptiste, Manitoba,Can. For Sale by the Owners Besots. Best of soil, crops, water, neighbors, markets, schools and churches. Taxes low. County In beat financial condition of any county In the State. We ha?e lived here 33 years and have yet to see a crop fatlure. Liberal prices and terms--email cash pay­ ments--balance time. Low rate of Interest. Write us for full Information. Stone ft Stone, Benson, JCian. Fifty Thousand Arres be8t fruit and farming f Illf (IIUUMHU ntres landg ln Georgia, In vicinity Albany, G»-, lands level and productive. Prices «6 to tao per acre. Terms easy. Write for par­ ticulars to L. E. Welch, Albany, Georgia. ALBANY, GA., the best little city In South, values and population will double ln few years. City, subur­ ban, fruit and farm lands sold on easy terms. Write Jor particulars to L. E. Welch, Albany, Ga. The T/»"Cumulative Preferred Stock of the H. P. Wheatley Shoe Company (Incor­ porated under the laws of Massachusetts) presents a rare opportunity to secure a safe Investment ln the business of manufacturing boots and shoes. Dividend Is payable ln semi-annual Install­ ments and earnings are more than three times ln excess of dividend liability. Capit­ alization Is but <40,000 and only 420,000 of the stock Is preferred. I recommend this Investment as entirely cafe and Invite correspondence with view to business relations. As this advertisement will not appear again early action la neces­ sary to secure any portion of this Issue. For full details address ROBEIT G. RUXT0N, Buker aid Inker. 32 Broadway. . NEW YORK* « * ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ » ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ Aphasia-Stricken Person. Had £roof He Was Somebody. "Aphasia is a curious thing, and is no respecter of persons," said Dr. William J. Morton, in commenting on the number of absentminded persons suffering from the strain and stress of modern life. "Frequently it has a tragic ending, but a case in which the comic was strongly blended came to my attention a few days ago," he continued. "The victim, in this instance, was subsequently identified as an up-State merchant who had come to New York and had completely forgotten his name and address. I saw him a few min­ utes after he arrived, by a round­ about way, at a private sanitarium. He was cheerful, even humorous, in fact, that when asked his name he searched through his pockets and pro­ duced an expansive roll of bills, but nothing to identify himself. " 'Doctor,' he at length said, 'I've completely forgotten my name and where I live, but, by jimminy, I must be somebody somewhere to be carry­ ing as much money as this around.' --New York Times. "> THE WRONG WAY TO WALK Inelegant and Slovenly Gait Noticed All Too 1 in Record time. , Piney Flats., Teiin., May 29th.-- (Special)--Cured in two days of Rhen- matism that had made his life a tor­ ture for two years, D. S. Hilton of this place naturally wants every other sufferer from rheumatism 1 know what cured him. It was Dodd Kidney Pills. t "Dodd's Kidney Pills are the grand est pill on earth" says Mr. Hilton "I would not take any sum of money for what they did for me. For two years I had what the doctors called rheumatism. I could hardly walk around the house. It seemed to in my back and hip and legs. I tried everything but nothing helped me till 1 got Dodd's Kidney Pills." "Two days after I took the first dose all pain left me and it has never come back since. I can't praise Dodd' Kidney Pills too much." Rheumatism is caused by uric acid in the blood. Healthy kidneys take all the Uric Acid out of the blood Dodds' Kidney Pills make healthy kidneys. Merely on a Shopping Tour. First duke--Well, do you think Miss Van Bullion intends to buy you? Second duke--My dear boy, I don't know. Some days I think she does At other times I fear she is merely shopping. Many Children Are Sickly. Mother Gray's Sweet Powders for Children, used by Mother Gray, a nurse in Children' Home, New York, Cure Feverisbness, Head ache, Stomach Troubles, Teething Dis orders,Break up Colds and Destroy Worms At all Druggists' ,25c. Sam pie mailed FREE. Address Allen S. Olmsted, Le Hoy, N. Y, New York has revived Now for the bicycle. •Trilby." "I Went Home to Die from Gravel Troobl*. Doctors failed. Dr. David Kennedy's Favorite Kerned* cured me." Mrs. C. W. Brown, Petersburg, N. Y. Never judge a woman'B appearance by her looks. Do You Fed Chilly, Then Feverish and Ache all Over? Fnl Worn-wit, Blue and Tired ? Have Yon a Fresh Cold, With Frequent Haoking CNgli? Sensation of SorenMt it tha Chest or Back? Don't let your cold run into chronic bronchitis or pneumonia. The very best tonic alterative and body-builder at this time is Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Dis­ covery. Made without alcohol or dan­ gerous drugs, and it contains that raro combination of roots and herbs that will allay a cough (irons it out, as it were), restores the circulation, assists the appe­ tite and digestion, and consequently re­ stores tone to the entire system. That is the reason people look happy once more after taking it--they feel like living, be­ cause their liver is active, the blood In their arteries is full of that life-giving quality--rich, red blood. The blood in turn feeds the nerves. Nervousness and neuralgia are only the Indication that the nerves are not fed on invigorating blood. This "Medical Dis­ covery" of Dr. Pierce is nature's own restorer. It tones up the organism and stimulates its functions, furnishing to the body one of its necessary constituent principles of which it is in need. This preparation is of pleasant taste, agrees perfectly with rebellious and sen­ sitive stomachs, and is extremely effec­ tive in restorin, which throws off a cold. One very good reason why it restores the health of run­ down, pale and emaciated people is be­ cause it first throws out the poisons from the liver and kidneys. It then begins its reconstructive work in building up flesh and making good, rich, red blood. "I have been a sufferer from indigestion for some thirty years, at times." writes Mr. 8. W. Mullenax, of Cirolevllle, W. Va., "and have used medicine from several of our best physicians, which (rave me only a little tem­ porary relief. They said I could never be cured. Last winter I was stricken with the worst spell that I ever had. I suffered with such severe pains ln the pit of my stomach that I could neitiier work nor sleep, and mr weight went down from one hundred ana ninety-five pounds to one hundred and sixty pounds ln atx)ut two months" time. I then concluded that T would try Doctor Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. By the time the first bottle was cone, 1 felt some relief from my severe suffering so continued until I had used four bottles of 'Golden Medical Dis­ covery.' I am truly thankful for the great benefit which I have received from your medicine, and can cordially recommend It to others." It Stands Alone t&rstz gredients, re- in- but tive in restoring tone and vigor to tne entire system. It cures gastric troubles of the stomach and at the same time the blood-vessels are given a stimulation also as the only medicine for stomach, liver and blood disorders, which abso­ lutely CONTAIN NO ALCOHOL. It Stands Alone terative medi- cine, the makers of which take their patients fully into their confidence and tell them exactly what they are taking. This Dr. Pierce can afford to do, because his "GOLDEN MEDICAL DISCOVERY" Is made of such ingredients and after a working formula that has hundreds of thousands of cures to its credit, placing its merits above criticism. It Stands Alone s&sstts. all chronic dis­ eases because the earth supplies the in­ gredients, which are as follows: Golden Seal (Hydrastis Canadensis). Queen's root (Stillingia SylvaUca). Stone root (ColUnsnnla Canadensis). Cherrybark (Prunus Vlryiniana). Bloodroot (Sanguinaria Canadensis). Mandrake (Podophyllum Pcltatum). Constipation although a little ill. be- fets big ones if neglected. Dr. Pierce's 'leasant Pellets cures constipation. » 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 tbe United Judgment of Millions , of housekeepers who have used LION COFFEE jfor over a quarter of a century ? Is there any stronger proof of merit, than the Confidence of the People •nd ever Increasing popularity? fJON COFFEE Is carefully se­ lected at the plantation, shipped direct to our various factories* Ivhere It is skillfully roasted and earefully packed in sealed pack- Ages--unlike loose coffee, which Is exposed to germs, dust. In­ sects, etc. LION COFFEE reaches you as pure and «l«aa as when ft left the factory. Sold oaly In 1 lb. packages. Lion-head on e*ery package. * ' t "Stare these Lion-heads for valuable premium*. SOLA BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE VOOLSON SPICE CO., Toledo, OUo. Walking--one of the most popular and beneficial exercises--is well dis­ cussed in Good Housekeeping: Very stout or slouchy people allow the abdomen to "lead." Brain work­ ers, worriers, all nervous and physi­ cally uncultivated people, let their heads, lead; the head is further ad­ vanced than any other part of the per­ son. Dyspeptics whose thoughts ere centered on their stomachs, often un­ consciously lead with the waist line just over the offending organ. Oc­ casionally a weak-willed person per­ mits the knees to lead. When a thin, bad walker moves rapidly, there often seems to be a race between nose and knees, and you watch tp see which will arrive at the goal' first. When A young woman's skirt and a young man's trousers show a bulging shape over the knees, their owners .are leading sedentary lives or have pever learned to walk correctly. This part of the lower limbs should be kept straight, and the ball of the foot, not the heelf should touch the ground first. When the head Is bent for long hours over sewing machine or ledger or onion bed, it is not an easy matter to pull it back to its proper position and make it stay there, and it seems so mUch more easy and comfortable to let the chest sink than to hold it up to its right place; but the demands of health and beauty are identical in the matter of a head held easily, not egotistically, back, and a chest kept in the highest and most advanced position. It is a striking lact that this atti­ tude of head and cnest is expressive, not only of health and grace, but of the finer mental qualities. The em­ barrassed boy drops his head; If he would hold his head up, his nervous­ ness would disappear. The shy girl thinks that every one in the room is looking at her, and her chest sinks; but if she would hold it up--assume the attitude of courage, though she have It not--she wouldn't care wheth­ er they looked or not. The self-con­ scious person who knows he Is stiff and awkward, and who knowB that his stiffness and awkwardness are the direct results of his self-conscious­ ness, should Imagine that a strong string is attached to the upper part of his chest and held by an invisible hand above him. All he has to do is to let his body depend from that string and keep his head well back of it, and his mind and body will alike become easy and free. The most graceful walker I ever knew told me that she habitually walked by the aid of tilB invisible cord. required of it, it would seem that the brush best adapted to use in the hu­ man mouth should have a short, nar­ row head, with short, rather stiff bris­ tles, trimjned straight longitudinally and convex latitudinally, that each line of bristles may come successively into use as the brush is rotated. Tooth Brushes. Dr. S. H. Arnold gives some interest­ ing facts and good advice in regardf to that daily friend, the tooth brush: Nearly all brushes are made from bristles taken from the wild hogs of Russia or China. The handles are common beef bones. They are made mostly in Japan, France, England and Germany, and by one firm in the United States. Probably English brushes are the best made and worst shaped. The French are next in qual­ ity, but far ahead in form. Germany and Japan are generally imitators. Some of the most expensive English and French, and all American brushes, are made In factories under more or less sanitary conditions, but the cheap­ er grades, Including all German and Japanese brushes, are made in the huts of the peasants, where cattle, dogs, swine, fowls and humans are herded ln common. The bristles and bene are given out by the dealer and taken into the country, where they are assorted by the aged and young chil­ dren and diseased persons, the strong­ er members of the family working at more remunerative employment. These cheap brushes are often in the most unsanitary and wretched sur­ roundings imaginable, and it is a sig­ nificant faet that after being made they are seldom sterilized before using. The English brushes are generally very much too large to be efficient. The French are better shaped, but are apt to be too long of head, making much waste to the brush, and are too long of bristle. A wide brush Is not advisable be­ cause it limits the movement possibly longitudinally to the tooth. Long bris­ tles are not the best, because they bend whep the brush is thrust back between cheek and teeth, and stay bent till the brush is withdrawn, thus missing the interproximal spaces so much in need of cleaning. Soft bris­ tles become softer when wet, and utterly fail to enter the spaces at all. If the surface of the bristles is con­ caved longitudinally to fit the labial curve of the teeth, then when the brush is reversed and used on the lin­ gual surfaces, only the ends of the brush engage the teeth; hence, more teeth are missed than cleaned, and the user Is deceived into thinking he has cleaned his teeth because he has,, brushed them. Studying the brush over and what is She Was Not Beautiful. At the Whistler exhibition in Lon­ don,said a tourist, "I had a chate with Joseph Pennell, the well known artist. Pennell had spent his boyhood in Germantown with me, and so we talked of our old Germantown friends. We talked of a boy who had become an artist and married a rich woman. Pennell said this chap was not altpgether happy. He said be would teli me a story about him that would reveal subtly, in a Henry James man­ ner, the cause of his unhappiness. A stranger visited the man's studio one day, and paused, full of wonder, before a life-size, full-length picture of a woman ln a white Greek dress. •Is this," said the stranger, ln a tone of amazement, 'your ideal.' "'No,' the artist answered; 'it's my wife.'" Breathing for Strength. Instead of the above heading might be written, "Breathing for life." For that is really what we do. And since this fact is so easily demon­ strated, it is strange, that we have not more quickly and fully discovered that in this vital process lies the secret remedy for a thousand ills, if not "the fable fountain of immortal youth." Men have lived weeks with­ out eating; days without drinking, and nights without sleeping; but how long can we live without breathing? Twenty ounces of food and a few pints of water will supply the body one day; but, upon a low estimate, it requires thirty thousand pints of air in the same length of time. The delicate machine which this volume of air enters is said to contain over 700,000,000 air cells, or little workshops. Into the walls of these there flows, like the sewerage of a great city, the foul, venous blood of the body. In these remarkable work­ shops it is quickly transformed into a rushing red torrent filled with life- giviog oxygen from the air. What a wonderful invention! What a miracu­ lous process! : And yet you are trust­ ed with operating one of these instru­ ments. Would you note Its magical effect under proper conditions? Then stand erect. Open the doors and windows; or, if you are sick in bed, have them opened. Lift your chest and chin, and breathe the invigorating air of hea­ ven, till the muscles of your abdomen fairly bound with joy. Now, isn't that a tonic. Then take It many times a day. You can repeat the dose often. Even as I write the fresh air tickles my finger tips; for when we breathe deeply, it goes to all parts of the body. To "The Suffer In' Neat." There was a little woman In a very sorry plight; For, strange to tell, this woman Disliked to dwell with light. She closed her blinds up tightly. Then craped the windows o'er, 'For fear the blessed sunshine Would spoil her walls and floor. This dainty little woman Grew very pale and thin. Just like the weak potato sprouts . In cellars deep and dim. Ah, silly little woman! . You have faded out of sight. Because you would not let In The sweetness of God's light'. --Farm and Fireside. Consumption Can Be Conquered. The universal Interest in the Anti- Tuberculosis movement is shown ln every convention held to consider this work. The discussions are practical, not theoretical. The audiences are popular, not merely professional. The whole people are intereted. In a session just closed at Atlanta, Georgia, many important and interest­ ing phases of^he prevention and cure of consumption were considered. Dr, C. P. Ambler gave a concise review of the duty of the physician in charge to the patient and family. His paper was enthusiastically received and adopted as the sense of the League on this subject. His points were as follows: First Tuberculosis is not the fatal disease commonly believed. Second--While communicable it can be made practically harmless by the proper course on the part of the patient Third--The chief cause of the high mortality is late diagnosis. Fourth--Late diagnosis is caused by indifference of the patient to early symptoms and carelessness on the part of the physician consulted. Fifth--By thorough, systematic in struction of the patient better results can be accomplished than by medica­ tion. Sixth--Instruction of patient, fam­ ily and friends, and close observance on their part of the rules laid down will practically rob the disease of its method and means of extending. Behind the Scenes. Clara--Have you heard about Grace Dresser? She has received quite a large legacy. , , Maude--Yes. fier mother was a ballet dancer. Evils of Piano Playing A French scientist of note maintains that a large number of the nervous disorders from which girls suffer are to be attributed to playing the piano. He shows by statistics that of one thousand girls who study this instru­ ment before the age of twelve, no less than six hundred suffer from nervous disorders, while of those who do not begin till later there are only two hundred per one thousand, and only one hundred per one thousand among those who have never worked at it. The violin, he says, is equally inju­ rious. As a remedy he suggests that children should not be permitted to study either instrument before the age of sixteen, at least, and in the ca?e of those possessing delicate constitu­ tions, not till a later age.'1' Fly In the Ointment. "I made an extra ten to-day," said Mr. Nippy to his wife. "Let's go to a Hungarian restaurant to-morrow night for dinner." "You'd better let me have it to take to Mrs. Jinkson's missionary sale," replied Mrs. Nippy. "I haven't more than a dollar to spend there, other­ wise, and Mrs. Jinkson has sent me a special invitation." "That's the way it goes," said Mr. Nippy, bitterly. "The minute we get a little ahead, along come our dear" friends with their hands out. Con­ found this thing of giving to the heathen when we need the money our­ selves."--Newark News. Spoke From Experience. "If I had a wife," said the very young man, "I certainly wouldn't want her to be at some woman's club dis­ cussing public affairs till midnight." "Neither would you want her to discuss private affairs at home after midnight," rejoined the man with the absent hair, "but it's pickles to fudge she would do it just the same."--Chi­ cago News. . Quit* Proper. "Look here!" complained Mrs. Good art, "I gave you that quarter because you said you wanted to buy food." "Yes, ma'am," replied the polite hoho. "Well, you went right off an& bought whisky with it" , "Well, ma'am, several scientists hate declared that alcohol is food." Mother's Devotion To her children is one of the mbst beautiful things in life. When they are sick, the wise mother, who has taken the pains to study their best interests, promptly gives them Dr. Caldwell's (laxative) Syrup Pepsin. It quickly relieves pain and fever, and can never do anything but good. Try it ' ........ Might Be Alt Right: "Do you believe in transmigration of souls?" inquired the man with meta­ physical tendencies. "Why," answered Mrs. Cumrox, doubtfully, "not as a rule, although I have no doubt it would be all right under some circumstances." Inftiit on Getting It. 8ome grocers nay they don't keep Defiance Starch. This is because they have a stock on hand of other brands containing only 12 oi in a package, which they won't be able to sell first, because Defiance contains IS OS. tot the same money. > Do you want 16 os. instead of 13 OR. for same money? Then buy Defiance Starch, Requires no cooking. 6.Backache, "The Blues' Both. Symptoms of Organic Derangement Women--Thousands of Sufferers Find Relief. We Do Not Understand This Jest. "Papa, do you think kings and queens are happy In their home life." asked Jlmmle. "Well," replied his father, slowly, "I presume they are if they have a full house." . tn a Pinch, Use ALLEN'S FOOT-EASE. A powder. It cures painful, smarting, nerv. ous feet and ingrowing nails. It's the greatest comfort discovery of the age. Makes new shoes easy. A certain cure for sweating feet. Sold by all druggists, 25c. Trial package FREE. Address A. S» Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. Quite Natural. "I think I'm in love. They say it makes a fellow so idiotic." "Don't know that I notice anything onusual about you." m Mrs. J.G Hoi Emma Cotrely m e s Why It Is the Best ti because made by an entirely differ* ent process. Deftance Starch is un­ like any other, better and one-third more for 10 cents. On the square, don't you often won­ der what the waiter thinks of you for tipping him too much in order to re­ tain his respect? Lewis' "Single Binder" straight .V cigar. Made by hand of ripe, thoroughly cured tobacco, which insures a rich, satisi fying smoke. You pay 10c for cigars not so good. Lewis' Factory, Peoria, 111. When a girl has a corn that causes her to limp she always apologizes by saying she must have twisted her ankle. Defiance Starch ahonld be in every household, none so pood, besides 4 os. more for 10 cents than any other brand of cold water atareh. Ibsen does not like children. But the children undoubtedly began it I do not believe Piso's Cure for Consumption has an equal for coughs and colds.--JOB* F. BOY EH, Trini ty Springs. Ind., Feb. 15,1800. How often do we hear women say: "It Seems as though my back would break,* ' or "Don't speak to me, I am all out of sorts?" These eigni ficant remarks prove that thesystem requires attention. Backache and " the blues" are direct symptoms of an inward trouble which will sooner or later declare itself. It may be caused by diseased kidneys or some uterine derangement. Nature requires assistance and at. once, and Lydia E, Pinkham's Vegetable Coin- pound instantly asserts its curative powers in all those peculiar ailments of women. It has been the standby of intelligent American women for twenty years, and the ablest specialists agree that it is the most universally success­ ful remedy for woman's ills known to medicine. The following letters from Mrs. Holmes and Mrs. Cotrely are among the many thousands which Mrs. l'ink- ham has received this year from those whom she has relieved. Surelv such testimony is convincing. Mrs. J.G. Holmes, of Larimore, North Dakota, writes: Dear Mrs. Pinkham:-- " I have suffered everything with backache and womb trouble--I let the trouble run on until my system was in such a condition that I was unable to be about, and then it was I commenced to use Lvdia E. Pinkham's Vege­ table Compound. I? I had only known how much suffering I would have saved, I should have taken it months sooner--for a few weeks1 treatment made me well and strong. My backaches and beat laches are all gone and I suffer no pain at my menstrual periods, whereas befoi-e I took Lvdia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound 1 suffered intense pain." Mrs. Emma Cotrely, 109 East 12th Street, New York City, writes: Ask Mrs. Pinkhaa's Advice--A W Dear Mrs. Pmkbani:-- " I f«eiEJiy duty to teli ail stiffe of the relief f have found in I ydia 15. Psnia*! ham's Vegetable Compound. When I ccnW menced taking the Compound I «nffere4f everytbing with backaches, head&chm, men^j. strual ar.d ovarian trouble®. I am compietw^I ly cured and enjoy tbe beet of health, and £ ' owe it ail to you." When women are troubled with irregt: ular, suppressed or painfnl menstrua^ tion, weakness, leucorrhoea, displace* ment or ulceration of the womb, thai* bearing down feeling, inflammation of the ovaries, backache, bloating (of- flatulence), general debility, indigesM tion and nervous prostration, or are b©» set with such symptoms as dizziness^ faintness. lassitude, excitability, irrita* ! bility. nervousness, sleeplessness, mel- ' ancholy, "all gone "and " want to-bef „ left-alone" feelings, blues and hopeless^ J J ness, they should remember there ison^lr?^ -i$ tried and true remedy, Lydia E. l'ink» ham's Vegetable Compound at once re* moves such troubles. No other medicine In the world ha4 • 1 received such widespread aud unquai*' ; fled endorsement. No other medicine SlS has such a record of cures of femal^ troubles. Refuse to buy any substitute*. "fi FREE ADVICE TO WOMEN, > Remember, every woman is cordially invited to write to Mrs. Pinkham if « there i? anything about her symptom* she does not understand. Mrs. Pink* ham's address is Lynn. Mass., he# ~- advice is free and cheerfully given every ailiqg woman who asks for it»i I-; Her advice and medicine have restore^ to health more than one hundred lhou« sand women. Best Understands A WOMB'S M* Do You Want to Become a Physician? Wouldn't you do it if you eould work your way through oneot the best medical colleges m i ' with larpe' hospital in connection whose diplomas are fully recognized by the Stater Do jou knoip * that nearly a*) students are doing this at the Dearborn Medical College and that our alteadan<%rr will be doubled next term • Send lor catalogue and information. Dearborn Medical College. ChteawK 4^ A tableful of welcome makes scarce one dainty dish.--Shakespeare. The man who pays for a book on the art of making money gets the in­ formation--but the other fellow gets the money. All Up-to-Date Housekeepers use Defiance Cold Water Starch, be­ cause It is better, and 4 os. more of it for same money. Work hard, play hard, but let it be. fair play and honest work. Mrs. Wlaalow'a Boothia* Hjrap, For children teething, soften* the gurai, redueM |» C*BHUktiun,allaj*p*ln,enrwwtadouliu. Hctbotia Sweets are the uses of prosperity. MILLIONS Nevatf/a OM FleMs LATEST NEWS RELIABLE PAPERS COPIES Send u« 2c (tamp forsampt* coplei best papei* and other literature. Onsuit its freely for re it- tiMe Information. Addre*« aU huKtnew coin- in unkaitone to our San Francisco office. Nevafe Miam ASM , SN KAKL BM|., Saa Fraadac* Thompson's Eye Hate# W. N. U., CHICAGO, No. 22, 1905. When Answering Advertiseniente Kindly Mention Thia Paper. 'ii . •: Save the Babies. INFANT MORTALITY is something frightful. We can hardly realize that of all the children born in civilized countries, twentytwo per cent, or nearly one-quarter, die before they reach one year j thirtyseven per cent., or more than one-third, before they are five, and one-half before they are fifteen J We do not hesitate to say that a timely use of Castoria would save a jority of these precious lives. Neither do we hesitate to say that many of these infantile deaths are occasioned by the use of narcotic preparations. Drops, tinctures and soothing syrups sold for children's complaints contain more or less opium, or morphine. They are, in considerable quantities, deadly poisons. In any quantity they stupefy, retard circulation and lead to congestions, sickness, death. Castoria operates exactly the reverse, but you must see that it bears the signature of Chas. H. Fletcher. Castoria causes the blood to circulate properly, opens tip pores of the skin and allays fever. Letters from Prominent Physicians, addressed to Chas. H. Fletcher. Dr. A. F. Peeler, of St. Louie, Mo., says : "I have prescribed your Castoria M many eases and have always found it an efficient and speedy remedy." Dr. E. Down, of Philadelphia, l'a.. says: "I have prescribed vour Castoria ia my practice fur many years with great satisfaction to myself and benefit to BUT patients." Dr. J. E. Waggoner, of Chicago, III,, says: "I can most heartily recommeatf your Castoria tu me public as a remedy for children's complaints. I have tried It and found it of great value." I)r. Kdwanl I'arris-h. of Hrooklyn, X. Y.. says: "J have used your Castoria IS my own household with good results, aad have advised several patients to use tt tot its mild laxative eflect and freedom from Jiarm." Dr. J. R. Elliott, of New York City, says: "Having during the past six veani prescribed your Castoria for infantile stomach disorders. 1 most heartily com'mead Us use. The formula contains nothing deleterious to the most delicate of children." Dr. C. G. Sprague, of Omaha, Neb., says: "Your Castoria is an Ideal medtciaa r for children, and 1 frequently prescribe it. While I do not advpeate the indj»> criminate use of proprietary medicines, yet Castoria is an exception for conditiona which arise in the tare of children." # Dr. J. A. Tarker, of Kansas City, Mo., says: "Your Castoria holds the esteea of the medical profession in a manner held by no other,,proprietary preparation. It is a sure and n liable medicine for Infants and children. In fact, it is the universal household remedy for infantile ailments.' Dr. H. F Merrill, of Augusta. Me., says: "Castoria is one of the very finest and most remarkable remedies for infants and children. In my opinion your Castoria has saved thousands from an early grave. I can furnish hundreds of testimonial# from this locality as to Its efficiency and merits." Dr. Norman M. Geer, of Cleveland. Ohio, says: "During the last twelve yeaia I have frequently recommended your Castoria as one of the best preparations of tha kind," being safe ln the hands of parents and very effective in relieving chlldrenli - disorders, while the ease with which such a pleasant preparation can be administered is a great advantage." Dr. F. H. Kyle, of St. Paul. Minn., says: "It affords me pleasure to add BV name to the long list of those who have used and now endorse your Castoria. Tifc- fact of the ingredients being known through the printing of the formula on tfca wrapper 1b one good and sufficient reason for the recommendation oC any physlciaa* 1 know of its good Qualities and recommend It cheerfully." GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears the Signature of t-SS Vegetable Preparation for As similating the Food andRcg ula ting the 5fomachs and Bowels of INFANTS /CHILDREN Promotes Digesdon.Cheerful ness and RestContains neither Opium,Morphine nor Mineral. NOT NAB C OTIC. afOMDrSAMUEL PtTCBBl J^iunpicm SmJ~ jflx.Sennm * IhJulUSJk- JAW M »I JiaaerrMMt - ihCar*tn**XUm* fUmSttd - danfuJ Soicr • Jjfi)toryrtn Flavin Aperfeci Remedy for Constipa­ tion. Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea Worms .Convulsions Teverish- ness and Loss OF SLSBR Yac Simile Signature o| "NEW YORK. AI (» moitlhs old EXACT COPT OF VBU7C*. The Kind You Have Always Bought In Uae Foi'Over 30 Yeara. TNt cl HTiUR CSBHINV, TT MuWUY ST, NtW VOIft CITV. *

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