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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 16 Nov 1905, p. 3

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m STIFF AND SORE from head to foot? Can't work today, but tomorrow you i as the Qld-Monk-Cur# '<V TRUE MARX. St Jacobs Oil will soften and heal the muscles while you sleep. It Conquers Pain Pric«t> 85c. and 50e> W. L. DOUGLAS *3= & SHOES™ >W. In. Douglas 14.00 Gilt Edge Line ,KV " cannot be equalled at any price. AMY. W.L. DOUGLAS MAKES more mars sa.io si OTHER MAMUFAOTUn $10,000 AMD SELLS xoZSSSF™" W. L. Douglas $3.50 shoe* have by tbolr » eellent style, easy fitting, and •nperior wearing qualities, achieved the largest sale of any $3.80 a hoe in the world. They are lust as mod as those that cost yon $5.00 to $7.00--the only difference Is the price. If I could talc* you Into any factory at Brockton, Mass., the largest In the world under one roof Baking men's fine shoes, and show yon the car* with which every pair of Douglas shoes Is made, you would realize why W. L. Dou?las $3.50 shoes are the best shoes produced In the world. If I could show you the difference between the shoes made In my factory and those of other makes, you would understand why Douglas $3.50 shoes cost more to make, why they hold their shape, fit better, wear longer, and an of greater intrinsic value than any other $3.50 •hoe on the market to-day. ' MitftlftMtfw Bnym' SohualA ,02,01.70,01.50 CAUTION .--Insist upon having W.L.Doug­ las shoes. Take no substitute. None genuine without his name and price stamped on bottom. WA>:TKI>. A shoe dealer in every tovm «rhere "W. L. Douglas Shoes are not sold. Full line of Samples sent free for inspection upon request. fast Color £yelet* used; they will not wear braug, • ' Writs for Illustrated Catalog of Fall Stylefc W. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mass. m $I6 AN ACRE I n W e s t e r n Canada is the amount many f a r m e r s w i l l r e a l i z e f r o m t h e i r w h e a t crop this yeara 25 Bushels to the Acre Will be the Average Yield of Wheat. The land that this was grown on cost many at jibe farmers absolutely nothing, while those ho wished iu add to tliu 100 tores the Govern­ ment grants, can buy land adjoining at from IS to $10 an acre. Climate splendid, school convenient, railways close at band, taxes low. Send for pamphlet "80th Century Canada" and full particulars regarding rate, eto., to Superintendent of Immigration, Ottawa, Canada, or to the following authorized Canadian Government Agent--C. J. Broughton, Boom 430 Quincy Bldg., Chicago, 111.; W, H. Rogers, third floor, Traction Terminal Bldg., Indianapolis, Ind.; or T. O. Currie, Boom 18, B, Callahan Block, Milwaukee, Wis. (Mention this paper.) DEAN'S KING CACTUS OIL HEALS WITHOUT A SCAR Bent prepaid for *1 If your druggist eaanot supply you. OLNEY * MoDAID, Clinton, Iowa. FOR WOMEN troubled with ills peculiar to . _ their sex. nsed as a douche is marvelously suc­ cessful. Thoroughly cleanses, kills disease eerm», stops discharges, heals inflammation ana local torenetf. paxtine Is in powder form to be dissolved in port water, and is far more cleansing, healing, germirvial and economical than liquid antiseptics for alt TOILET AND WOMEN'S SPECIAL USES * For sale at druggists, 50 cents a box. 9 Trial Box and Book of Instructions Pre*. «Ut M. PaXTON COM PANT SOSTON, HKAL EST ATK. PUP eai r 160 acres bottom land. Improvements ; W Wis S1.201K never .ivprlliiirit io mile* f rocs "^Watongu, county seat of Blaine County, Oklahoma, With two railroads and 1,800 Inhabitants. Price (4,000. Liberal terms arranged. Write for description. H. E. FEE, - WATONOA, OKLAHOMA. FOR 8ALE CHEAP--80 or 40-acre farm, all till­ able, 40 fenced, % cultivated, 800 bearing trees and vines; horses, cows, hojrs, poultry, implements and all; 13 miles west of Mobile, school H mile, railroad station 14 utiles. Libera l terms. RASMUS, Route I, Box 23, Crichton, Alabama. Ctilppewa County. Minn., Farm for Sale-- 830 acres flue land,8 miles fromMurdock and95 miles from Minneapolis; 260 now ready for sowing,balance nay land and fine pasture; good dwelling and out­ buildings; all improvements first class. Through sickness I will sacrifice for *11.200 on easy terms. WM. J. RUDDY, (Owner), Murdoch, Minn. • FOR SALE--To close tip an estate. The best dairy business in British Colombia, the best climate In the world; 87 head of cattle, all implements, horses, wagons, etc., etc., *4,i>00 profit yearly; also splendid splendid ranch, 2.0H0 acres, cattle, horses, sbeep, Machinery, tine house,etc., etc.; also the finest tim­ ber limits!n the world; al8o a fine creamery business. Piper A Co., Vancouver, British Columbia. OREGON LARDS Bend for prices on farms, some partly improved, good bargains. Foothill l ru-h ianj for goats, excellent twll SB per acre, cut-over laud for dalrvlng, poultry, ?;T""""ilrutt, fine place for colony, soil deep rich loam, some ;• : bottom land SA io *8 per acre Bold on easy terms. for loam* on requMt. £. A. CLEM, Portland, vrcfon. Beference, rorviaud hoard of j rwla. CIBU CAB CAI C la Norton County. Kansas. (MINI rWll MLC gai acres. So acres broken, - % . BOO mors breakable. r>-room frame bouse, barn, ' sranary, 2 miles fence. 7 acres of timber, 2 good wells, L jwlndml.l, creek crosses p at e, pood settlement. Prlee jftMMjMd. H.W. Loomis. (twit.-,) iogan, Kuneaa. Storing Home-Grown Celery. For a number of years we have been enjoying home-grown celery. Most farmers that I know do not think they can raise celery, but they leave It to the specialists who make goodly sums every year out of their neighbors and others, and all the while those neigh­ bors might Just as well be growing their own. The celery should be now about ready to go into the cellar. This is our plan for caring for It: We take a long box, say fourteen inches wide and about the same in depth and raise it an Inch or two above the bottom of the cellar by putting two or three pieces of flat stone under it Then we coyer the bottom of the box with a layer of earth about two inches thick. We now lift the celery plants from their ridges in the garden with a crowbar, taking pains to drive the bar well down under the roots of the plant and keeping as much of the soil cm the bottom as we can. As the plants one after another are thus taken up, they are set into a large basket to be carried down cellar. They are now ready for packing. Beginning at one end of the narrow box, we stand the plants on end, close together, so that there shall be as little space between the stalks as possible. When a dozen plants have been pack- ed this way we fill in close up to the roots with earth from the garden, and proceed with another dozen, and so on until the box is as full as it will hold. Then a blanket of old bran sacks Is thrown over the whole to shut out the light and help to blanch any stalks that have not already been whitened. Stored in this way we have kept cel­ ery until February and had it come out as crisp and nice as when it was put in. When the box is empty, carry out the earth and all stray bits of stalks that may remain to prevent bad ajnells in the cellar.--& I* Vincent in Fanners'Review. Fall Work In the Orchard. In our part of the country some ol the leading orchardlsts long since adopted the practice of cleaning up their orchards in the fall of the year. Last fall was the first time I ever gave much attention to the matter, but the apparent results pleased me so much that I shall continue the practice in­ definitely. The leaves that fall and dry under the trees are the means of carrying through the winter some of our tree pests in the form of fungous diseases. I therefore rake them Into piles and put them in the barnyard, where they are trampled under the feet of the stock and soon rendered impotent to blow about and carry spores. Leaves would make good bed­ ding, but they are so loose when they are piled up that it requires a good deal of work to get them together and a good deal of space In which to con­ tain them when they are gathered. I thus dispose of them In the most sat­ isfactory way. The leaves that are the farthest from the barnyard I col­ lect and burn with all the other rub bish that can be found lying about. Among this rubbish is the mass of weeds that has matured and died in the fence corners. I think this is the means, if left, of conveying the dis­ ease to other parts of the orchard. Every protected place harbors disease and insects. Another piece of fall work that we have found it necessary to do in our locality is to protect the young trees against mice and rabbits. Before the ground freezes I put on a lath shield around each of the apple trees that has soft smooth bark. This keeps the mice from them as well as the rab­ bits. I am not afraid of the rodents injuring the trees above a foot from the ground unless the snow comes very deep.--Peter Smith, Illinois, In Fanners' Review. Danger In Wttiter Mulches. While a njulch on the orchard is generally good, it is sometimes de­ structive. There is, sometimes, an overdoing of the matter. A mulch that is spread six inches deep, or even a foot deep, may be of great value, as it will prevent the frost from striking as deep as It otherwise would. But If the mulch is put on, as it frequently is, after the frost has entered the ground, and if around some trees the mulch is carelessly left, say two feet deep, the tendency will be to hold the frost in the ground too long In the spring. The result will be the killing of the tree, as the warm air will start the sap into motion in the upper part of the tree, while the roots are still frozen. Such a condition inevitably causes a loss of trees. It Is better to lay only a thin mulch in -the fall, as it is not likely to be taken off in the spring, if, however, a mulch is spread very deeply around any tree and left there throughout the winter, it should be taken off very early in the spring to allow the frost to disap­ pear. Short Trunks on Fruit Trees. The old-style fruit tree had a long trunk, sometimes seven or eight feet long, and a high head and long branches. The modern fruit tree is the reverse of this. Many of the best orchards are filled with trees with short trunks. The dwarf pears have branches going from the trunk of the tree not more than a foot from the ground, and this is true on some kinds of cherries and peaches. Many of the standard apple trees have trunks only 2% feet in length. The advantage of this is, that the trunks do not crack, as in the case of the high-headed trees, while in pruning md spraying It has been found an Immense advantage. Spraying especially requires a low- headed tree, both for the saving of time in doing the work and for pre­ venting the waste of material. These short trunks are. also a very great ad­ vantage when the fruit on the tree must be thinned. A further advantage is found in the saving of time at the fruit harvest. AS. ... The farmer's cow is the animal that is producing the most of the world's butter. The special dairy cow Is great in her locality, but she is not found in many localities. • • - T . . > - J.';.' Gray Wild Geese. ' Gray-wild geese are now quite ex­ tensively raised in about all parts of the United States. They are consid­ ered among the most practical of all the goose breeds for farm use. The flesh of these geese is fine in texture and has a rich flavor. This makes it most acceptable for table purposes. The geese are good layers compared with most other geese. One thing that strongly favors this breed is that the birds are hardy. This is doubtless due to the fact that they have not been under the conditions of domestication long enough to have become non-re- sistent to disease. Their old wild habits enabled them to live under the severest of conditions. Those that have them say they are very easy to rear. ' v. , The gray wild goose has a small head and small frill, sharp at the point rhe neck is long, slender and snaky In appearance. The back is narrow but long, and is arched upward from neck to tail. The breast is full and deep and the body long and slender. The wings are long, large and powerful. The head of the goose Is black and a white stripe nearly covers the side of the face. The breast is gray, and the under part of the body is white. The wings are dark gray. The tail feath­ ers are glossy black and the thighs are gray. The shanks, toes and webs are black. The eyes are black. The standard weight of the full- grown gander is 16 pounds; that of the adult goose 14 pounds; young gander, 12 pounds; young goose, 10 pounds. New breeds of turkeys are not as frequent as new breeds of common fowls, yet there is more need of new breeds of turkeys than of any other kind of farm fowl. Unknown Poultry Diseases. I used to think that all poultry diseases were known to our scientists and that all one had to do was to go to a center of information, as to a medical college, a veterinary college, a doctor or a veterinarian, to be in­ stantly told what a certain disease might be. But after having tried a few times to find out things I did not know, I am convinced that there are among our poultry at least numerous diseases that no one knows about--so far as being able to name and accurately de­ scribe is concerned. I recently saw a paragraph in a paper to the effect that the poultry of England is so bad­ ly affected with tuberculosis that a commission has been appointed to in­ vestigate. Now, It may be that tuber­ culosis does exist largely in the fowls of England, but It In more likely that it exists to a limited degree and that many of the unknown diseases are counted tuberculosis, Just as Is the case with hog cholera. I frequently hear of mysterious diseases existing in the flocks of my neighbors. A few years ago they used to say that cholera had broken out in their flock. That was the easiest way to explain something that was not easily accounted for. Generally the causes lying at the foundation of the trouble were bad feeding and exposure. In the future we shall know more about poultry diseases, but it will be after the men with the microscopes have made a study of all poultry dis­ eased and have located and named the germs that cause the contagious and infectious ones. Some of the unknown diseases are simply troubles arising from the In­ terference with the respiration of the fowls or with the perspiration. The latter is certainly the cause of many evils. If we will build our poultry houses on dry situations and keep them dry and clean, with no drafts permitted in the sleeping places of the fowls, we will have less trouble with unknown diseases.--Sylvanus Banks, Champaign Co., 111., in Farmer*' Re­ view. Eggs Good or Bad. Mrs. J. S. Martin, a South Carolina reader of the Farmers' Review, writes to ask how to tell good from bad eggs. There Is but one method that need be used and that is candling. This Is practiced in all the great egg-buying establishments of the country. The candling is done by placing the egg between the eye and a bright light Candles were first used to give the light for this work, hence the name. Now electric lights are used and the work Is done with great rapidity. Light must be allowed to reach the eye only through the egg. This leaves the whole inside of the egg clear to the vision. If the egg is transparent it is good. If a cloud has begun to ap­ pear in one part of it, it is not bad but stale. The larger and thicker^, the cloud the farther is the egg from being fresh. A common lamp can be used for candling. It can be placed in a box from which a stream of light is permitted to emerge just the size of an egg or a little smaller. The eggs can be placed over this hole one at a time and Inspected. Of course, the rest of the room should be dark at the time, or the eyes of the one looking at the egg should be protected from all light on the sides. The better the eye is protected from such light the better able will it be to tell what is the condition of the inside of the egg. A little practice in this matter will give a good deal of skill.---Farmers' Review. Strawberry plants should w* )» covered till the ground Is CroseaJi^fi ' is- -' - ? Crippled and Made III by Awful kid­ ney Disorders. John Fernaays, fruit raiser, Web­ ster, N. T-, says: "I used to lift rail­ road ties easily but wrenched my back and began to suffer with backache a n d k i d n e y trouble. 1 neg­ lected tt until o n e d a y a t w i n ge felled me like a log and made me crawl on hands and knees. I was so crippled for a time that I couldn't walk with­ out sticks, had headaches and dizzy Bpells and the kidney secretions were muddy and full of brick-dust sediment Doan's Kidney Pills made the pain disappear and corrected the urinary trouble. I have felt better ever since." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. ^, . Western Awakening. In the last twenty years there has been an awakening to the opportunity which lies in the arid west for the homemaker, and a remarkable trans­ formation has taken place in many parts of this region. Thousands of miles of canals, representing a vast expenditure of money and labor, carry water upon more than eight million acres, which once a worthless desert now produce each year crops worth a hundred million dollars.--E. T. Per­ kins in "Sunset Magazine" for Novem­ ber. The November number of "The Gar­ den Magazine" (Doubleday, Page & Company, New York), Is especially interesting to those who are growing plants In their houses during winter. In "Propagating Plants at Home" Mr. James T. Scott gives explicit directions by which any one may save the flowering and decorative plants, instead of leaving them outdoors to be killed by frost A series of elabo­ rate illustrations shows' just how to make cuttings of geraniums to have nice plants for next season, instead of carrying over the old ones that have done duty all this year. A Great Monarch. Wealthier than any brother sover­ eign; master of legions, which num­ ber over a million; lord of more than one-sixth of the surface of the globe, with subjects of many colors and races, amounting to* over one-hundred- and twenty million souls, the Czar of all the Russias will not be invincible until he adopts Pillsbury's Vitos as his regular breakfast diet Mr. W. S. Harwood, who wrote the recently published articles on Luther Burbank In "The Century," has writ­ ten for the same magazine the story of how California's crops are saved-- largely by the work of the United States Department of Agriculture. Mr. Harwood will narrate how science has succeeded in exterminating insect pests that had well nigh ruined the chief crops of California. There Is more Catarrh in this section of tbe conn try than all other disease* put together, and an til the last few yeara was supposed to be incurable. For a great many yeara doctor* pronounced it a local disease and prescribed local remedies, and by constantly falling to cure with local tretuiiKMit, pronounced !t Incnrshle. Science has proven Catarrh to be acuiistltutional dis­ ease and therefore requires constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Ctire, manufactured by F. J Cheney A Co., Toledo, Ohio, Is the only constitutional cure on the market. It Is taken internally In doses from 10 drops to a teacpoonful. It acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars for any case It falls to cure. Bead tor circulars and testimonials. . Address; F. 3 CHICXEY A CO., Toledo, Ohio. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. Paul Eider and Company, San Fran­ cisco, announce for publication in, November "The Critique of Social­ ism," by Edward F. Adams, first de­ livered as an after dinner address be­ fore the Ruskin club of Oakland. It is stated to be an arraignment of Socialism in style somewhat droll, but with a serious purpose. Insist on Getting It. Some grocers say they dont keep Defiance Starch. This Is because the> have a stock on hand of other brands containing only 12 ox In a package, which they won't be able to sell first, because Defiance contains If ox. for the same money. Do you want 16 oz. Instead of 12 os. for same money? Then buy Defiance Starch. Requires no cooking. Longest Lived British Title. The Earl of Aberdeen belongs to perhaps the longest lived family in the British peerage. The title, which was granted in 1C82, was in the pos­ session of the fourth bearer only in 1860. _________ Important to Mothers. Smntae carefully every bottle of CASTORL&* a Mfe and euro remedy for infants and children, aad see that tt IS UM For Over SO Years. Tlua Kind You Have Always Bought Bean the Signature of The November "Arena" is, as usual, bold and outspoken on the political, social and economic problems that are stirring the thought of the nation, though it also carries a number of other contributions that will appeal to the general reader. 'Ask Your Dealer for Aden's Foot-Ess* A powder. It rests the feet. Cures Swollen, Sore, Hot, Callous, Aching. Sweating Feet and Ingrowing Nails, At all Drug-prists and Shoe stores, 25 cents. Accept no substitute. Sample mailed FREE. Address, Allen S. Olmsted, LeRoy, N. Y. "A Halt in the Desert," the Initial story In the November "Sports Afield," is a tale of the humanities-- one that will profoundly stir the finer chords of your nature. - i r Defiance Starch should be in every household, none so good, besides 4 oz. more for 10 cents than any other brand of cold water starch. To read "The World's Work" Is to watch modern civilization and the sig­ nificant happenings in every branch of human endeavor. The good Samaritan doesnt do It as an Investment. The campaign undertaken by inter­ ested publications to undermine the faith of the people in proprietary medicines has drawn forth the follow­ ing from a high medical authority: "It must never be forgotten that the interest of the manufacturer Is to put out a remedy which Is not only meri­ torious but sate. With a small army of enemies constantly on the alert, ready to seize upon and magnify every unfavorable circumstance, how few are the cases of accident or injury from the use of proprietary medicines! Complaints "in regard to the use of such remedies are exceedingly rare and utterly insignificant, In compari­ son with the amount sold and the mil­ lions of people who avail themselves of these remedies." Every housekeeper jQould know that If they *111 buy Defiance Coli 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 irom all injurious chem­ icals. If your grocer tries to sell yon 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 sttcli* ing. Defiance never sticks. Theodore Roosevelt's article in the November "Scrlbner's" describes **A Wolf Hunt in Oklahoma"--The ac­ count of his hunting trip made last April. It deals with an entirely dif­ ferent sort of hunting from that told of in "A Colorado Bear Hunt," which appeared in the October number, for this time, Instead of being in the mountains, it is on the broad plains. The Isthmian Canal. Now that the Canal Treaty has been ratified, we may expect to see work resumed in a short time, and the great canal-ships, carrying huge loads of Pillsbury's Vitos to all parts of the world. By the way, have you ever eaten Vitos? You'll like it bet­ ter than any other cereal food. The November Magazine Number of "The Outlook" contains many illus­ trated articles in addition to the usual historical treatment of the events of the week and editorial comment on political, economic and literary mat­ ters. Here is Relief for Women. • Mother Gray, a nurse in New York, dis­ covered a pleasant herb remedy for women's ills, called AUSTRALIAN-LEAF. It is the only certain monthly regulator. Cures female weaknesses, Baekacho, Kidney and Urinary troubles. At all Druggists or by mail 50 cts. Sample mailed FREE. Address, The Mother Gray Co., Lelioy, N. Y. No American can read the Autobiog­ raphy of Carl Schurz (beginning in November "McClure's") without be­ coming a good American and a better man. Why It Is the Best Is becatase made by an entirely differ­ ent process. Defiance Starch is un­ like any other, better and one-third more for 10 cents. •'Pittsburg cigarette fiend got safe­ ly away with $100,000. And yet they say cigarettes weaken the mind. THE BEST COUGH CUBE Many a lonesome and expensive trip to Florida, California or the Adirondacks has been saved by the use of Kemp's Balsam the best cough cure. If this great remedy will not cure the cough, no medicine will, and then all hope rests in a change of climate--but 1 try Kemp's Balsam first. Sold by all dealers at 85c. and 50c. Draw Your Own Comparisons! TEXAS is the only State in the Union with room enough for a population great enough to consume its total pro­ duction of food, fabrics and building material. Big enough? Yes I Now here is the comparison. Suppose you are an Iowa farmer. Ac­ cording to Government reports the average value of crops in Texas is $2.00 per acre more than in Iowa; and the average returns on Texas farms are twelve per cent greater. The average acreage of Texas farms is 357 acres as compared with 157 acres in Iowa. With products yielding better returns with a minimum amount of labor, mild winters and plenty of room does it not seem to you that Texas promises much? The possibilities were neves brighter than now for men seeking to better their condition. In five years' time these possibilities will be gone. You should make the change now while the prices of fanning lands are reasonable and investment opportunities are not overdone. Why not locate in a progres­ sive locality and grow up with the country? It will certainly pay you to investigate conditions ̂ whether you im­ migrate to Texas or not. I can give you many valuable point­ ers about locations where prospects are brightest. Write me--tell me what you want, how much you have to invest. I will give you information atui gladly assist you in getting in touch with the opportunity. > Write to-duy for a FREE copy of my book "Texas." Addreaa S. G. LANGSTON, General Immigration Atfent. Rsom 625 Wainwright Bids., ST. LOUIS, MO. FROM- 6M00D TO WGMAHH008 Bcthers Should Watch the Development of Their Daughters- Interesting Experiences of Kisses Carman and Mills. 9 MATtliM possesses which is of vital interest to her young daughter. Too often this is never imparted or is withheld until serious harm has result­ ed to the growing girl through her ignorance of nature's mysterious and wonderful laws and penalties. Girls' over-sensitiveness and modesty often puzzle their mothers and baffle physicians, as they so often withhold their confidence from their mothers and conceal the symptoms which ought j to be told to their physician at this critical period. When a girl's thoughts become slug­ gish, with headache, dizziness or a dis­ position to sleep, pains in back or lower limbs, eyes dim, desire for solitude; when she is a mystery to herself and friends, her mother should come to her »id, and remember that Lydia E. Pink- ham's Vegetable Compound will at this time prepare the system for the coming change, and start the menstrual period in a young girl's life without pain or irregularities. Hundreds of letters from young girls and from mothers, expressing their m gratitude for what Lydia, E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has accomplished for them, have been received by the Lydia E. Pinkham lledieine Co., at Lynn, Mass. Miss Mills has written the two fol­ lowing letters to Mrs. Pinkham, which will be read with interest: Dear Mrs. Pinkham:-- (First Letter.) "I am but fifteen years of age, am depressed, have dizzy spells, chills, headache and back- Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Makes Sick Women WeU ache, and as I have heard that you can tin helpful advice to girls in my condition, lam writing you."--Myrtle Mills, Oquawka, HI. Dear Mrs. Pinkham:-- (Second Letter.) " It is vrith the feeling of ut most gratitude that I srrite to you to tell you what yocar valuable medicine has done for me. When I •wrote you in regard to my condition I had consulted several doctors, but they failed to understand my case and I did not receive any benefit from their treatment. £ followed your advice, and took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and atn now healthy ana well, and all the distressing symptoms which I bad at that time have disappeared.^-- Myrtle Mills, Oquawka, HL Miss Matilda Borinaa writes Mx>» Pinkham as follows : "1 Dear Mrs. Pinkham:-- Before taking Lydia B. Pinkham's Vege- - table Compound my monthlies were irrego- V lur and painful, and I always had such -:M dreadful headaches. " But since taking the Compound aav head- , aches have entirely left me, my monthlies are regular, and I am getting strong and well. I ^ am telling al! my srirl friends what Lydia E. ^ Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has done for me."--Matilda Borinan, Faruiingtou, Iowa. If you know of any young girl who • is sick and needs motherly advice, ask / ̂ her to address Mrs. Pinkham at Lynn, . 1 Mass., and tell her every detail of her- " symptoms, and to keep nothing back. ,/M She will receive advice absolutely free, ' from a source that has no rival in the experience of woman's ills, and it will, if r< -;'3 followed, pnt her on the right road to a ' j J strong, healthy and happy womanhood. , '>j Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-" : pound holds the record for the greatest 1 number of cures of female ills of any ' 1 medicine that the world has ever<,<r| known. Why don t you try it ? ..v;$ '3, A KALAMAZOO DIRECT TO YOU. Don't buy a range or Move of any kind until yon Ret oar catalogue and li»»l Factory pries*. We positively save yuu trom tS.tO to JtO.OO on erery parcbaae; because, by ft Ulnar you direct from our factory. we<-ut out *'! jobbw,' niMdlt- men's ami dealers' profits. We truarant«M> <nmUty under a *20.- 000 bank bond and pive yon a seo DA> S APPROVAL TEST. If you do not And jnur purchase exactly represented, return It at our eipeiiFO. Kememtn-r, we are uetifal manufacturers - not mall order dealers--aud elva you the lowest factory prtCM. W« Pay TtW FrtliM. >"« doubtlpss ;an refer y-n to «ati*tied customers in your own town. Band Peatal t«4ay f*r Ctlnl«gu« Na. 330. It describee our Mom and ranges, and our money saving, dlrect-trom-the laciory plan. KALAMAZOO STOVE COMPANY, MANUFACTURERS. KALAMAZOO, MRHMM. All BtorM tnd rmafM Bra ®<]»ippcii .lib pttoat eves themofactcr, wfeieh nake« rvaatlac May. OTIH THffWIIIUrfflW 5!pC»Si8<| i % "They Say It Cures Where All Others Fail --JUDGE & DOLPH DRUG CO. present indications, it won't be very long before MuH*$ Crape Tonic Is ther only remedy sold for constipation and stomach trouble. It is the only one now in our store that is selling to amount to anything. Our customers are actually enthusiastic about ft. "They say that it cures constipation and stomach trouble where all others fail. That it builds up and strength* ens the digestive organs and the whole genera! system. In fact, we hear more good words about this rcuurlubte remedy than anything that we cany in stock. "Those who have used Mull's Grape Tonic not only tell us that it is a certain cure for stomach trouble and constipation, but they tell others. We have new customers calling for it constantly who have been sent to the store by those who have been cured." JUDGE & DOLPH DRUG CO.. 515 Olive St, St Loui*. Me. Thtm rmllmblm draff firm l» fn cfoa* Hm cumiommrm mnd th*» above wartlm mufttolmnt to •warrant a trial &f this There la nothing BO good for youiig and old as MULL'S"GRAMI TONIC. It bnilds up and pots tbe atomacb, th* bowela, the whole dlgesttre system In perfect condition to do Its natural work. It la Indeed nature's own true tonic, niado from tbe products of natup*** It does not shock or weaken the delicate organs aad own storehouse tbua make a bad matter worse and pleasant to take, It Is healing, soothing, atrenztbeainc MULL S GRAPE TONIC CURES Constipation and Stomach Trouble and all the diseases which they cause. Your own physician will toll yon that nearly every case of plies, biliousness, typhoid fever, sick headache, blood and skia diseaaes, appendicitis, nervous affections and every kind of female trouble are directly caused by iml agression biiu constipation* Hy th** •ase -- MULL'3 "GRAPH TONIO cures these dangerous complieatkM* 38 cents, 60 cents and $1.00 sire bottles, at all drug-gists. The tt.W size contains about 6 times as much as the S5 cent size arid about 3 time* as much as the 60 cent size. It pays to buy the largest siia. CDCC Upon reccipt of your address, yonr druwrist's name and 10c. to pay rnU postage we will mail you a sample free. If you have never used MuU'sGraoe Tonic, and will also send you a certificate good for J1U0 to wart tbe purchase of more Tonic from your druggist. MULL'S GRAPE TONIC CO.. 14ft TMrd Rock Island. DL , , ••• nacE, •JtSZ 25 Cts. CURE THE GRIP ^.JNONE DAY WRIPINE ANTI-6RIPINE IS GUARANTEED TO CURE GRIP, BAD COLD, HEADACHE AND HEUULSUL jr. H . Uiemer, 3S. It., Maaafaotm'r,Sj»rtoffll«M, Mm. Thompson's Eye water DEFIANCE Cold Water Starch ~ ] makes laundry work a pleasure. M oz. pktr. Wo. FARMS For Sa,e payments Hill III V j. MtTT.TTAi.r^ &ioox City, Iowa. DEFIANCE STMCH-- ^EFl"»He«»°W «UPSHIO«mOU»UITi. W. N. U.( CHICAGO, No. 46, 1905. When Answering Advertisements Kindly Mention This Paper. PUTNAM FADELESS DYES » -- - -- .... -- i. - tkr.-. -.r: ^ Color more aw msusoeizsisa <=<>.. uzz&iZ l PILB=CURED WITHOUT USING THIE_ KNIFB VOU PAY Rupture, and Diseases of the ISectam. lavestl- eaie by writing for our illustrated trrntins a.uaa ti Including letters fTom prominent people cured. UfllMM | 11Vrlf M.8.S.MEItDERS(M,IStUSailaA*».,CJttCM0 In III* I d"1 t - ' : . ' «L. .3, .A.,. .j ..' V... • ' .. ,Lr' .w.x,r 'li. a ...

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