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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 14 Sep 1905, p. 7

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1 1 zxt: ^yy r-^'"-V* ;t SfcT 1SS1 J* LIEUT. F. S. DAVIDSON. SSf:¥:W:::: a®^33ssss IKE ENTIRE SYSTEM. P. S. Davidson, Ex-Lieut. U. S. ! Army, Washington, D. C., care U. S, Pension Office, writes: "To my mind there is no remedy i for catarrh comparable to Peruna. it not only strikes at the root of the malady, but it tones and strengthens the system in a truly wonderful way. That has been its history in my case. I cheerfully and unhesi­ tatingly recommend it to those afflicted as I have been."--F. S. Davidson. If you dp not derive prompt and satis factory results from the use of Peruna write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving1 a full statement of your case, and he will be pleased to give yon his valuable ad vice gratis. Address Dr. S. B. Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Colum- 1ms, Ohio. Poor Lo Becoming Civilized. ' The Indian is assuredly acquiring . Virilization. Forty years ago the Sioux were the scourge of the north­ west* The other day the greater part of the tribe assembled /to honor Mis­ sionary Bishop - Hare on the occasion of his retirement. And that terrible old Apache, Geronimo, is a communi­ cant in the Reformed church.--Phil* ielphla Ledger. Important to Moth ore.' i carefully every bottle of CASTflBti, ftiafe and ran remedy tot inftote sad chlldraa, and aee that it Bears the Signature of ti Uao For Over SO Yearn ttc Kind Yoa Have Ahrqra fioufht. Mrs. Flower's Gift to City. Mrs. Roswell P. Flower, widow of Gov. Flower, has recently given a handsome granite and marble drink­ ing fountain to the city of Watcrtown, N. Y. It is to be erected in the public •qfcare at a cost of $15,000 Plans Great Evangelistic Hall. Rev. G. W. McPherson, one of the best known evangelists of New York city, plans the building of a great evangelistic hall seating 3,000 persons and having in connection with it a IWlfning school for evangelists. NOISES 4N HER HEAD Reagan was a Nervous Wrocto But Dr. Williams' Pink Pills Brought Sound Health. " Before 1 began to take Dr.Williams' Pink Pills," said Mrs. Mary Reagan, of No. 86 Kilburn street, Fall River, Mass., recently, " I was in aud out of bed all the time, hut now I stay up all day and do all my own work. " I was badly run down from over­ work. One day noises began in my head and almost made me crazy. My head felt as if a tight band had been put around it, and the pressure and the sonnds made me so uneasy that I often had to walk the floor all night. " My stomach was in bad shape, and I had smothering sensations. At such times my body seemed bloodless, my bauds were like chalk and my face turned yellow. The doctor said I had dyspepsia iu the worst form. Then my nerves gave way and I was completely prostrated. 1 frequently suffered from •mothering sensations. " The first box of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills that I used quieted my nerves SO that I could get a good night's deep, which was a new experience for me. Before I began to use them I was m nervous wreck and trembled at the •lightest sound. 1 was so weak that I had to sit down and rest every few steps when I went up stairs. Now I can run up a whole flight at once. The smother- ling sensations have gone and the noises in my head have stopped entirely. My Appearance has greatly improved, for friends who were alarmed ou my ac­ count before, now say: ' How well jrou are looking !' My husband spent over a hundred dollars on treatment for me that was worthless, but a few boxes of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills brought me sound health." Sold by all druggists, or sent, post­ paid, on receipt of price, 60 cents pet box, six boxes for $2 f»0 by the Dr. Wil­ liams Mediciue Go., Schenectady, N. T. Reward a good servant well, and .rather get quit of a bad one than dis­ quiet thyself with him.--Sir Thomas Browne. The World's Standard DE LAVAL CREAM SEPARATORS OOOlOOO Id Use. Ten Times All Others Combined. taw SIO.- per tar iw) Inr «f Vh mm til tmtty hUn IptM* mi It.- pit few MtaBaf Siparatar*. TIE IE LUAL SEPARATOR M. Omm* * l>Mid»l»>i Ma. | N CMMM limli I HCW VOW* ^ cause of Pear Blight. For ten years I have grown pears tor market and have watched and stud­ ied the tTees almost daily during that time, and 1 cannot agree with experi­ ment station men and others as to the cause of pear blight. I cannot believe that pear blight is caused by bacteria or that a microbe has any­ thing to do with it An experiment station professor writing tn "Country Life in America" recently went so far as to say that the pear blight microbe i is in the nectar of the pear blossoms and is carried by bees from flower to flower. I think it Is hardly possible jj for the nectar to be anything but pure when the blossoms open. I think pear i blight is caused by conditions of soil and climate. On certain soils and elevations even in Illinois, pear trees are free from blight Frank Aikia. Illinois.: • J : V:' The cause of pear blight is now very well known. There is no ques­ tion at all of its being a germ disease. The microscope has revealed its char­ acter and it has been isolated and ex­ amined. The spore of the fungus that causes pear blight is both heavy and- sticky and cannot be blown by the- wind from one place to another. It used to be supposed that it could be blown from one tree to another and that this would account for the sud­ den appearance of pear blight after a windy and wet period. The germ of pear blight lives over winter in the live wood adjoining dead wood that has been killed by blight. Insects, especially bees, sip the sap from wounds in infected trees and later visit the tips of trees where small leaves are being formed or blossoms are opening. The spores of the pear blight stick to the limbs of the insects just as pollen sticks to them. When the insects suck the nectar in the flowers, the spores are rubbed off and fall into the flower. From those spores, minute plants of a thread-like character develop. These plants grow through the sap wood and through the leaves and use up the life fluid that should go to feed the leaves. The leaves then wilt and turn color, and we say the tree has been blighted There is much yet to be learned about pear blight, but the foundation has been well" worked out.--Farmers* Re­ view. JUDGE TO HEAR PACKERS' CASE. Prominent Business Men Will Plead Before Illinois Jurist. Judge J. Otis Humphrey of Spring1- field, 111., before whom the officials and employes of large packing firms under indictment upon the charge of conspiracy in violation of the federal anii^isist land: Interstate commerce laws were cited to appear to enter their pleas; has been a prominent fig­ ure in the packing industries investi­ gation from the time the last federal grand jury began its work until it completed. His charge to the last fed­ eral grand jury, which conducted the Inquiry and which voted the indict­ ments against the packing officials, is claimed to have given an impetus to A WOMAN'S SUFFERINGS. the Inquiry that had much to do with securing the indictments. It was Judge Humphrey who heard the tes­ timony in connection with placing witnesses needed by the prosecution under bonds, and it was he who fixed His amount Fruit Exhibit at Fairs. Societies having the control of the fruit exhibit at fairs should see to it that, so far as possible, every variety of fruit grown in the state shall be represented at each exhibition. Man­ agers of agricultural societies should remember that these exhibitions are for the purpose of instruction and for the stimulation of fruit growing. They /re not mere gambling devices by which a few men can make as much money as possible out of the premi­ ums. Many of our exhibits are defi­ cient in the number of varieties dls played. Certain orchardists are in­ vited in, and these generally make a display of the fruit they grow them­ selves. Some of the varieties that are thriving best in the state are not ^Showp at all. The managers of the exhibit could, by a very little work, bring in all the different varieties of fruit being grown in the locality rep' resented by the fair. This should be done even if the management has to buy a few plates of good fruit, of va­ rieties that would not otherwise be represented. The matter of instruc­ tion should be made much of, and ev­ ery variety should be fully designated by lettered or printed labels that are large enough to be read by all. Very frequently the labels on the fruits are very badly written on slips of paper and are placed where they are weighed down by the fruit. This may be satisfactory to the judges, but would hardly do much in Instructing the public. Orchard Cover Crop. At this season bf the year a cover crop may be put into the orchard^that has been cultivated, especially if this orchard is in the north. Experiments made with cover crops show that they very materially reduce the distance that the frost enters the ground. In some cases the common vetch has been planted in the orchard in mid­ summer, and has made a good growth during the fal|, covering the orchard with a carpet of green. This plant freezes during the winter, but the carpet it makes reduces the power of the frost to pentraie the ground. In one test in Wisconsin, where the frost went twenty Inches without this cover, it went only twelve inches with it. It is too late now to plant alfalfa or clover, but cow peas may yet be sown, as may also winter rye. These will both make a good cover crop by the time frost comes, and will serve the purpose intended. Where orchards have been in sod all the spring and summer, they should not be disturbed in the fall, but the sod should be left as a cover for the roots of the trees during the winter. Sulphur and Cattle Ticks, lai regions where the cattle are sub­ ject to attacks of fever due to the presence of ticks, the opinion has gained ground among the cattlemen that if the cattle are fed large quanti­ ties of sulphur, this will prevent them from being attacked by the ticks, and if any ticks are on them, they will fall off. In South Africa a thorough test is being made of this theory. Young steers and colts were given sulphur in their food during a period of 40 days, receiving one and a half ounces of sulphur daily. At the end of this time the dose was increased to three ounces dally, and this was con­ tinued during the infestation. The steers were then infected with the ticks. These ticks reached maturity in the usual time and it was evident that the - prolonged sulphur treatment did not produce the slightest effect upon the ticks. He so-called pedigreeing of plants Is a misnomer, when such plants are not produced from seed. Selection is one thing, but it is not pedigreeing. A plant cannot he it« QWJtt Claims Office-Holding Reeortf. E. W. Sweeley, a justice of th« peace in Loyalsock, Lycoming county, Pa., claims the record for offce-holding in that state. Altogether he has held various township and county offices whose terms aggregate 109 years dur­ ing his life of sixty-eight years, and he is still adding to his record. Mr. Sweeley is a democrat and that he is popular is shown by his record as fol­ lows: Justice of the peace, thirty-five years; assessor, twenty-six years; supervisor, eight years; school direct­ or, fifteen years; overseer of the poor, six years; township auditor, #twelve years; county auditor, four years; jury commissioner, three years. CHINAMAN MARKED FOR DEATH. on Secret Society Has Set Price Head of Rich Celestial. Tom Lee, mayor of New York's Chinatown, Is marked for death. As leader of the On Leong Tong society a price of $3,000 has ben set upon his head by a rival organization, the Hip Sing Tong society. Lee is guarded by a band of armed men day and Weak, Irregular, Racked witi Pains- Made Well and 36 Pounds Heavier. Mrs. E. W. Wright of 1:2 Main St., Haverhill, Mass., says: "In 1898 I was suffering so with sharp pains in the small of the back and had such fre­ quent dizzy spells t h a ' t I c o u l d s c a r c e l y g e t about the house. The urinary pas­ sages were also quite irregular. Monthly periods Were so distress­ i n g 1 d r e a d e d tr approach. This was my condi­ tion for four years. Doan's Kidney Pills helped me Vight away when I began with them, and three boxes cured me permanently." .f'oster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. For sale by *11( dealers. - Price, B0 cents per box. Vj;;; Missed Her Fish Dinners. ' #1 was in the parlor of a littlei Ger­ man inn that American overheard two of her ^ifil'women discussing their itine^SflPPith grfiat vivacity. "There are nfrlxee places, all on the coast of Italy," said one. "They are highly recommended in the guide­ books for beauty of scenery and so on, but they must be a good deal alike. What do you say to skipping one of them?" "Well, let's wait and see hofv we like the first one," said her friend, who was registered as coming from a Massachusetts town. "Being right on the sea,, I should think we'd stand some chance of getting a good fish dinner, and that's something we have not had since we left home!" Every housekeeper should know that if they will buy Defiance Cold Water Starch for laundry use they will save not only time, because it never sticks to the Iron, but because each package contains 16 oz.--one full pound--while all other Cold Water Starches are put up in %-pound pack­ ages. and the price is the same, 10 cents. Then again because Defiance Starch Is free from all injurious chem­ icals. If your grocer tries to sell you a 12-oz. package it is because he has a stock on hand which he wishes to dispose of before he puts in Defiance. He knows that Defiance Starch has printed on every package in large let­ ters and figures "16 ozs." Demand De­ fiance and save much time and money and the annoyance of the iron stick- iitg. Defiance never sticks. . New Line to Los Angefft. Commencing Sept. 15, daily tourist car service will be Inaugurated be­ tween Chicago. Los Angeles and other points in Southern California, via the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Rail- wav. There tvil! bo through scrvics over the U. P. and the new San Pedro scenic line. Trains will leave Union Station, Chicago, 5:15 p. m. every day. Route via Omaha, Ogden, Salt Lake City and San Bernardino to Los An­ geles. Write F. A. Miller, G. P. A., Chicago, for full particulars.<i" Tom Lee. night He is & millionaire and has great power in Mongolian affairs in America. Joseph Choate Taking a Rest, Although Joseph Choate, the formei ambassador to England, has been home only seven months he has had occasion to refuse flattering offers for legal services which would have net­ ted him many thousands of dollars^ He declined to mix in the Philadelphia affair a few months ago and recently he wrote a positive letter saying that he could not possibly he persuaded to go into the Equitable business. Choate is in demand from many quarters, but he has steadfastly refused to entertain proposals. His excuse is "pressure of personal business." For a man worth less than a million this seems strange to many New Yorkers. For Broadening the Shoulders. A good exercise for broadening th« shoulders requires the person to place in his hands straight before him against a door or wall, which he must face. Straighten out the arms and let the palms of both hands be spread out upon the surface of the door. Then slowly press the chest forward toward the door. This will cause the J arms to bend at the elbows, but at the same time will throw back the shoul­ ders. Rowing will broaden the shoul­ ders very perceptibly. Exercises with dumb-bells are also good. CHICAGO, September 11, 1905:-- With the conclusion of peace nego­ tiations at Portsmouth and the early ratification of a treaty between Rus­ sia and Japan, the Chicago & North Western is understood to have order­ ed rushed to completion a large order for new equipment for the Overland Limited, their crack every-day-in-the- year train between Chicago and San Francisco. This in expectation of a large volume of traffic to and from the Pacific Coast, due to the immedi­ ate commercial expansion that is an­ ticipated. The Gate to the Orient. The America^ people are beginning to discover that the Golden Gate is the front door to the orient. While the nations officially are contending for political settlement in Asia, the flood of travel has started through San Francisco bay in pursuit of com­ mercial opportunity in every region beyond the Pacific slope. Time was, not long ago, when the point to move from was on the other side of the con­ tinent. But that is changed now. The momentum is westward and the activ­ ity radiates from the metropolis of California. The people who think of going to the orient realize that when they pass the Golden Gate they enter at once into an extensive area of un- exploited possibilities. -- Arthur I. Street in Sunset Magazine for September. We have never had a clear idea of what "sang froid" means, but we im­ agine it is the way a woman acts when she meets some one who knew her before she dyed her hair and who has not seen her since. PAINFUL PERIODS AMERICAN WOMEN FIND RELIEF The Case of Miss Irene Crosby Is One of Thousands of Cures Made by Lydis 2. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. How many women realize that men* struation is the balance wheel of a woman's life, and while no woman is entirely free from periodical suffering, it is not the plan ot nature that women should suffer so severely. Crosb We grow broader, not by seeing er­ ror, but by seeing more and more of truth.--James Freeman Clarke. D O Y O U COUCH d o n t d e l a y B A L S A M It Cures Colds, Coughs, Sore Throat, Croup, Influenza, Whooping Cough, Bronchitis and Asthma. A certain cure for Consumption in first (stages, ant! a sure relief in advanced stages. T'se »t once. You will see the excellent effect after taking the ttrst dose. Sqld by dealers every­ where. Large bottles 26 cents and 50 oeata. Thousands of American women, how­ ever, have found relief from all monthly suffering by taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, as it is the most thorough female regulator known to -taedical science. It cures the condition •Which causes so much discomfort and robs menstruation of its terrors. Miss Irene Crosby, of 313 Charlton Street East Savannah, Ga., writes: " Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound fa» a true friend to woman. It has been of great benetit to me, curing me of irregular and painful menstruation when everything else bad failed, and 1 gladly recommwSl it to other suffering women.1' Women who are troubled with pain- ful or irregular menstruation, back­ ache, bloating (or flatulence), leucor- rhoea, failing, inflammation or ulcera­ tion of the uterus, ovarian troubles, that "bearing-down" feeling, dizzi­ ness, faintness, indigestion, nervous {prostration or the blues, should take mmediate action to ward off the seri­ ous consequences, and be restored to perfect health and strength by taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- Eound, and then write to Mrs. Pink-am, Lynn, Mass., for further free ad­ vice. Thousands have been cored by so doing. SMOKERS FIND LEWIS* SINGLE BINDER Ciftar better Quality than most tOf Ciftars votir Jobber or direct fr«in F«<-fory, Peoria. Ill WE GUARANTtfc ih.i our SU1E-DYSPEFSIA-CURE WILL positively CURE »ny cut of DYSPEPSIA f u directed or MONEY RfFt'HDf®. Relieves Stomach Troubles. Sempie box. 10c.. Boxes con- Umng one Month's Treetment. Price fl.OO postage pud. Address ROSS t, WALKER 107 Dearborn Si . Chicago^ III GLOBE AGENTS WANTED ltapld manufacture wliti high ca'tbo* wire make GLOBE FENCE a fabt seller. GLOBE FENCE CO.. UMw BMg., mnsON. •ICUKUX JIE'AL EST A TIC. rno MllPlf est p ® »crf« Rood farm, adap- rWil yilltm table eltber to grain or dairying. All In cultivation. Onlr 2 miles from rket; 8-room brick bouse, brick barn 36x60, one frame house and frame bam StixEK), and other iirat- claaa onthousee. Wltl sell cheap, (with mock and tool*, ele., If desired.) ternie arramred. M. BXIBKHABK, Route No. 1. Silverwood, Xicfc. Cone to Sooth Arkansas; ton and frtitta In abundance; climate mild; location healthy. We can »ell Improved land at low prices. Term* liberal. Following Is an average small farm; 280 acres.80 In cultivation, new 5-rooni house, another i-room house, with outhouses. Price •1.500. Larger or smaller places at corresponding prlcefl. Tor full Information address Holmes t Green, £1 Dorado. Ark. FOR SALE --Tine hotel In Nebraska, doing good business, »6S.<X)0; 24.000 acres timber and coal land In Eastern Kentucky, 29 feet of coal, t22.50 per acre; 78,000acres of timber land In Xorth Carolina. *9 per acre; 100sections of cbplce gr&zlntf laud In Nebranka from42.50 10 W per acre; fine farm In Oregon, pear Salem. acres, some timber. »50 per acre. Addreva SCOTT EDQINGTON, Washington, D. C. SALT RIVER VALLEY LAND FOR SALE-- The most productive land In the United States can be bought now at from |2S to r.iK> per acre, under the Brest Touto Reservoir. The cheap land Is bound to double in price before the reservoir Is completed, which will be Inside of two years. Fine climate, no cyclones or sun-strokes. Terms arranged to suit Durcbaser. For further Information address J. L. IRVIN, - PHOENIX, ARIZONA. A Sleep Inducer. A. writer in a medical Journal ao£> Bests a new way of juggling with in­ somnia. His sleep inducer is a of words, bo associated in sonnd or meaning that each suggests the next subsequent--for instance: Ice, slip­ pery; smooth, rough; ruffianj tramp, etc. When sleep is coy, recite the list mentally. This is said to be a sure cure. It keeps the mind from ram­ bling from subject to subject, as tlis mind tends to do in sleeplessness*-- Chicago ; • ALABAMA FARMS FOR SALE--540 acres, 400 tillable, watered, level, fertile, at Belle Mlna, Ala­ bama, on Southern Kallwav. *1* miles east of Decatur In Tennessee Valley.PHcc *20 per acre. Also Improv ed eoo-acre farm fuur'mlleK east of Klkmont on Louis­ ville it Nashville at bargain. Other smaller places. Liberal terms arranged. For full free Information address Erie Pettus, Attorney-at-Law, Athens, Aia. FOR A FARM jrf SO acres, 160 acres, 320 acres or larger, with geod soil, plenty of water, with gas for fuel and light,and land underlaid with gas and oil, and where you can touv for low prices and on easy terms. Write LONG BROTHERS, FREDONIA, KANSAS. WE SELL TIDEWATER VIRGINIA FARMS because peopie who have gone to the West and else* where are re;urnlng to their ancestral homes, having learned that, taken all la all, the be« place In North America for human development Is Tidewater, Vir­ ginia. Times have changed, aud Virginia changes with the times. Opportunities that could not exist under former regime exist now. Write forcatalogue and Information. UUKPHY * MAYO, Hague, Va. HOMESTEADS AND TIMBER CLAIMS- W» can locate good homestead laad In Minnesota and •pod pralrte land tn North Dakota, also timber claims In Washington and Oregon that contains 8,000.000 to >,000.000 feet of timber per claim. We have for Me good farming laad MirOilalb at M to 110 per sere, and htMtfM fuai It WsiUwKaM Orswm A RAIN oa to unfinished stack will spoil eaouzh hay to pay for a good stack cover, Savo tno hay by having tho covor when you need It. Send tor cir­ cular and prices of all canvas roods. W. L. DOUGLAS SHOES wii W. L. Douglas S4.00 Cllt Edge Line cannot be equalled at any price. ^5^ July®, 18W. AMY OTHER MUUUiFAOTWaOL t i n n n n R E W A R O t o t n y o n e w t i o c i n 91 UfUUU disprove thl« statement. W. L. Douglas $3.50 shoes have by their ex­ cellent style, easy fitting, and superior wearing qualities, achieved the largest sale of any $3.50 shoe In the world. They are just as good as those that cost yon $5.00 to $7.00--the only difference Is the price. If I could take you into my factory at Brockton, Mass., the largest In the world under one roof making men's fine shoes, and show you the care with which every pair of Douglas shoes is made, you would realize why W. L. Dou^ias 3,j. SO shoes are the best shoes produced ln the world. If I could show you the difference between tbe shoes In my factory and those of other would understand why Douglas cost more to make, why they hold kes, you woul $3.50 shoes cost t . . . their shape, fit better, wear longer, and are of greater Intrinsic value than any other $3.50 shoe on the market to-day. W. L. Dmum/mm Strong Mmdm Moss fmr -- i7 tSZBO, 99.00. Says' Sohoofi ~ 0M.BO. 02791.70, Jl. BO -Insist upon having W.L.Doug- iu wiun. 110 substitute. None genuine without his name and price stamped on bottom. WANTED. A shoe dealer tn ©very town where W. L. Douglas Shoes are not sold. Full line of samples sent free for inspection upon request Fait CMer £**/*£• <issrf; they will'oat mar bratty. Wlita for Illustrated Catalog of Ml Btjla, A KALAMAZOO DIRECT TO YOU. Dont buy a range or stove of nny kind vntll yon get our <*ntalogue mod embank bond aadplveyou a sao IMtV# «Pr*0¥.*L TEST. J I " " * • " r " y i > U i a e t i y u s represented, return It at our expense. Remember, we are actual manufacturers-- . _ __ _ »ot mall order dealers--and (rive yon tbe lowest factory pn.ua. wa Pay TM Freight. « e doubtless ean refer you to satisfied customers in *•** P»»«attoday far C»t«;ogM<« m«, 3SO, It describes oat stoves andrangas, and our money -earing, dlrect-from-the-factory plan. KALAMAZOO STOVE COMPANY* MAMUFACT" 111 m>S»wmliias»n«lw«4ili>n>nni 5R8, IUUmZOv, HKWaiM. OTM niutonm ABOUNDING LIFE The Healthful Life; the Hattle CreeK.Idea A NEW BOOKLET ABSOLUTELY FREE B Y THE. TIME this Publication reaches its readers die first sheets of a new booklet on Healthful Liv­ ing will be off the press. This book­ let cost thousands of dollars to prepare. The facts it sets forth are the result of thirty years of "experiment, analysis, re­ search. The ideas of the leading dieteti- cians of the world are summarized in it. It would be hard to compute its value in dollars and cents, but it will be mailed without charge to any reader who asks fcr it. We hope to send a copy into every home, in Amerita. It ought to be read by every man who desires to have physical strength; to do his full share in the world's work. Every woman who wishes to perform her whole duty to herself and family, should toot only read it, but carefully, thoughtfully study it. There is nothing pedantic in tho booklet-- no exploitation of fads or fancies--just plain straightforward talk and practical truths. It tells of a rational life you can live in your own home, -whereby yoa can sec ore abounding, abiding health. It tells the ItshMNI r'M, cause of sickness and weakness. the part that diet plays in making or mar* : ring careers. Every word yoa can understand. Aad bock Of every word is authority. For this book- ; let is a condensed summary of the wonder- ' ful achievements in restoring and preserv­ ing health during thirty years, of dietetio study at Battle Creek. And, remember, this booklet is not to ea> ploit the Battle Creek Sanitarium. The message is a message for the home--for everyday life. You can follow its teachings without interference with business or booM : duties. There is absolutely no charge--no obllga*" tions on your part if you ask for the book­ let--now, or in the future. So write today --now. Only those who act will know the value of this opportunity. If we could eon* • vey a clear conception of its purpose yoa would need no urging. Let the booklet speak for itself. Mention this publication ^ and send your request either by letter OS postal card addressed to the BATTLE CREEK SANITARIUM CO.. Ltd., Department A70, Battle Creek, lfidl , -'t • t te - * - 13 Constipation Life the Honest When you ask your druggist for Mull's Grape Tonic, a cure for Constipation, Stomach and Bowel Trouble, and he tries to sell you something else which he claims is just as good, that is substitution or dishonesty. It is an insult to your Intelligence. He*does it for profit, and not because he cares about your health. No honest druggist wilt do it. " Stop a moment and reflect before you permit him to mislead you. He is willing to endanger your life and health f"r the sake of a few pennies. Is he a safe man to trade with? Deal with the Honest drug­ gist who will promptly supply you with what you know you want, and that which you call for. y Until Mull's Grape Tonic was put on the American market there 'was no cure for Constipation and Stomach trouble. Your Doctor will tell you as much. He knows that a physic won't cure Constipation. Some remedies may act as laxatives and physics, but you and I know from experience that physics are dangerous, that they weaken, that they not only fail to cure but make us worse until finally they lose effect entirely, which means paralysis of the Bowels and death by Typhoid Fever, Appendicitis, Stomach, Heart, and Lung Trouble, Rheumatism, Dropsy, Kidney and Bright's Disease, etc. • There are honorable druggists in most every locality, men who will promptly supply you with Mull's Grape Tonic and not try to sell you something else; but should there be no such druggist there, we wiil send you the Tonic direct from this factory without additional expense to you. If you have Constipation and want to try Mull's Grape Tonic and have never used It, we will send you, or any of your friends who suffer with this affliction, a free bottle. Send us name and address at once, while we are giving the first bottle free; we want to prove to you, at our expense, the truth of the claims we make for this valuable remedy. Use the tbupon below at once while we are giving the remedy away. Free to all who have never used it. FREE GRAPE TONIC COUPON 113 Bead tliis eoapaa with your name aad address and year druggist's name, for a free bottle ef Mull's Grape Tenie, Stomach Tonic, Constipation Cure and Blood Punier, to HULL'S OEiFE ION10 00., 148 Third Ave., Bock island, 111. Dive full addrees aad write plaiaiy. The $1.00 battle contains nearly three tin.es the 50c. sise. At drug stores. The geauiae has a date aad number stamped on the l&bel--take no other from yuor druggist. '-I, t The Mast Convenient Way to go to C A L I F O R N I A is to step into s through tourist sleeper at St. LiOuIm and not be compelled to leave the oar until California is reached. This convenience you have if you travel Tia the M. K. A T. Ry. It will be a pleasure to send you a booklet about the service. An Exceptional Rate is oCtered to California from Sept. 15th to Oct. 31st- $30.00 hvm St. LmmU; $28.00 town Kansas City. If you're thinking of going West or Southwest while tbe rates are low, write me. GEORGE MORTON, 6. P. AT. A. M. K. a T. Rr. St Louis. Ms. THE LAST CALL I hare offered the stock ot Diamond Vale Coal aad Iron utnes l.t.i. through the eolumnaof thispahlt- mtloii lihl' U HK I THOROUGHLY BKLIEVS IN ; IT. Kesilers of this paper have aeen my aaMX men La of various enterprises foe the pas* Ave yaara ' and 1 am pleased t o say that NO ON K who hae en Invested one dollar iu any enterprise I have rece mended has lost any thing by «k>in»c *>. My own clients, aud readers >.-ejierai;y. are by i earnestly remiested to lnrestlfrate [his offeriM. The I'Oiupttuy owns 33 coat locations, each oue mm I at IHamomi Vale, B. C., art) capitalized for , but 93.000 000 ami arc subject to tbe rigid provision* . of the British Couipanlea Act, being incorporated undf r Bv C. lawu. If you desire a perfectly sound inv*»stai«mt tbmM 1 by the very imture or tfte oa*e carrie?; tlit* evrtalatjr of lartre profits piea*« communicate with me or company dtrtvc. This announcement will no* Ap­ pear asra'u and It behooves yoa to not tjuickiy la this matter, if you act at all, a* subecrtpUou books { will hux>!l it? C'los*?*!. . , A h&odfome prospectus containing half ton# view# of the property and valuable data to any iuvmrittr interested Iu the coal ttekl pomiiUittte* of Brttlafc Columbia wtll be seat you oarequt**. Aililrm ROBfiKT & Krxmt Raakvr, S£ Mhj. !«*» » j ItiiMwJ Val« €*alaa4 IrwlbM ^ Stock 1* offered at par * «1 per share ^ Hornttfc cesutav be made If preferred through The Ko Bank oK'auada. at Vancouver. B. C. deposit ot * !inn*ure stock better held pending your : ga ti pet. Tbe drposit wiil t* refunded if. _ of that lnmilfttioo you do not feel perfectly cattyfied. FOR WOMEN troubled with ill* peculiar to then sex, used m A douche is cessful. Thoroughly cleanse*, kills disease rerms. «topa discharges, neaia inflammation and local #0r6B6S3a Paxtine is in powder form to be dissolved iti pore areter, and is far more cleansing, healing, jgernuadal and economical tiuu liquid antiseptics tor all JOILET AND WOMEN'S SPECIAL US8S For sale 50 cents a box. Trial Box aad Bank ot loatroctloa* Prm rn. PUTON COMPANY »O«TON. MAW. PIT A PfTUESS SCALES. For Steel and Wood Frames. $25 and up. Write us before you buy Wt save you money. Also Pamft and Wind Bible Readers and Students of Advanced Thought If you desire much infonaatios wi«u reading, procure at once Patterson's books. .. Write for free descriptive circular. Dr.C.EPattwMa.SMBridaaSL.finndBaMa.MMk W. N. U., CHICAGO, No. 37, 1906. When Answering Adv«rti*em*nt« Kindly Mention This Paper. P I S O S C U R E F O R $ J P M.V V* .

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