McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 1 Nov 1906, p. 6

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

SIMPLE LIBRARY TABLE. Can Be Built by the Handy ,¥ Man .or Boy. Tie cut shows & plan tor uniting library shelves and a table top in one article of furniture. A simple, sauare, box-like structure is made for the foundation, with shelves about the four sides. The top, which may be either a perfect circle, or an oval, is fastened directly to the shelves. The f&p is composed of two ISyers of thin boards, one being laid at Tight angles to the other, and firmly fas­ tened together by screws passing up through the lower layer into the up­ per, but not long enough to go through the latter. If desired, the edges of the lower layer can be bev­ eled backward and the top can pro­ ject jm inch over the lower layer of boards. This will give a lighter ap­ pearing top than the one shown in the cut. Pour round balls of wood, suggests Orange Judd Ffrmer, can serve Combined Bookcase and Table. feet, being held in place by screws' passing down through the lowest shelf. The upper boards of the top should be well' fitted at the joints and firmly glued. The lower Ityer of the top is put on first and firmly screwed to the shelves. The Building of a House Foundation <x PtAW< I To build a house foundation, first •icavate to the desired depth of cel- flar, and around the edge dig a trench inches wide and six inches deep. Then build forms for wall about 12 Inches thick as shown in Figs. 2 and 8. Pig. 1 represents the side view of an ordinary form. Two-inch by four- inch braces are plated against tfee two by four inch studs. In Fig. 2 is seen an ordinary low wall in course of construction and shows the way the footing is placed, lii some cases the bank may be made to do duty for half the form as shown in Fig. 3. AN AIR VIS$. W Old Air Brake Cylinder 'PgUM a New Sphere of' Usefulness. A' • •An old air brake cylinder, which ft|d for years given good service to S. P. railroad, lay rusting on a scfap pile amid other discarded ap- mt The Air Vise. pliances, when, one day, C. C. Perry, of Houston, Tex., assistant foreman of the shop, conceived the idea of an air vise. He accordingly made the device shown in the sketch. An old vise, A, in which the screw had become nearly worn out, was con­ nected to the air brake cylinder, B, In such a way that the air ente'ring (the cylinder brought the jaws of the •tse together. When the air was re­ leased the spring in the cylinder •would open the jaws again. The air in this arrangement, says Popular Science, is controlled by a HUMANITY AND MACHINERY. Latter Is Called the Cornerstone of Modern Society. Machinery is the cornerstone of modern society, the very foundation on which law, science, ethics, the arts, even the state itself, rests. It is so new that we do not yet know its poetry. We do not yet understand. Only two generations have lived be­ side the highway of steam; only one has seen the 'Bessemer conver|er transform the blacksmith Into a master builder of ships and towers. The sewing machine, the far speaker^ the typewriter are common things of to-day, accepted as a matter of daily convenience, and yet a^p they teach­ ers of the people. Machines that come close to our lives and homes, says the Reader Magazine, insensibly teach truth, precision, the adjustment of universal laws to human needs, re­ spect for that wise American idea that labor saved is labor released for higher and nobler toil. The machine is the head master of the high school of the race. £ Illinois State News Recent Happenings of Interest in the Various Cities and Towns. NOT ENTITLED TO PROPERTY. Circuit Court Decides Against Edward1 Kinnear--Will Appeal. Decatur.--Edward Kinnear, suing for his share of the estate of his aunt, the late Mrs. Ann Beman, had an odd experience In- the circuit court when he was declared not entitled to the share which had passed to his . niece and nephew. Mrs. Beman was an eccentric char­ acter who maintained her old home place of ,40 acres until it wan ^sur­ rounded by th^icity's growth. When she died she left no direct heirs and the property had grown to enormous value. Kinnear had disappeared years ago, serving in the army and navy. In set­ tling the estate he was declared legai- lf* dead, having been absent seven yeaVs. Then a Decatur lawyer wrote to him, but he did not establish his claim within the year required by law. " When the case was finally decided the court ruled that although Kinnear was declared legally dead, he was alive, yet he was not entitled to his sh£|re of the property. The case will be appealed. LAY CHUIlpH CORNER 8TONE. Methodists of Assumption Will Push Edifice to Completion.' Assumption. -- Tuesday afternoon, October 23, was an occasion long to be remembered in Assumption, and especially so by the Methodists. The occasion was the laying of the cor­ ner stone of the New Methodist church which is being rapidly pushed to com­ pletion. The address was made by Rev. J. W. Van Cleve, of Decatur, fol- FIGHT FEDERAL CROP REPORTS. Society of Equity Condemns Govern­ ment Bulletins. East St. Louis.--The Society of Eqtflty condemned the crop bulletins issued by the agricultural department and recommended that congress order them discontinued. It was voted to es­ tablish a press bureau at Indianapo­ lis whose work will be to get out a crop, bulletin and furnish data to the press. The fruit and produce grow­ ers' branch of the society elected the following officers: president, C. O. Drayton, Greenville, 111.; secretary and. treasurer, Thomas Emmerton, Bloomer, Wis. ;< Directors, J. B. Whit­ ing, Interlaken, N. Y.; T. L. Morrell, Cedar, Minn.; A. K. Finout, Barryton, Mich. . BANKER SENT TO PRISON, Howard 8. Barker, of Frankfort* III., Given Concurrent Sentences. Joliet.--Howard S. Barker, presi­ dent of a bank at Frankfort, 111., which failed recently, pleaded guilty to two indictments for embezzlement and was given concurrent sentences of 1 to 15 years. Barker will begin his term at once. There was a loss of town and schgpl funds In the bank crash. Ill on Sleeper; Asks $50,000. Chicago.--Illness contracted while' riding in a sleeping car is the basis of a suit for $50,000 begun in the supe­ rior court by Daniel F. Criily, South park commissioner, against the St. Louis & San Francisco and the South­ ern railway companies and the Pull­ man Palace Car company. Mr. Criily SPEAKER CANNON'8 BOYHOOD HOME GONE. Bloomington.--The most interesting landmark in Douglas county has been torn down; This was the boyhood home of Speaker Joseph Cannon. The ^ld house was known far and near. It was always pointed out to visitors as the residence for so many years of the SUBMARINE DIVER8 GROUND. UNDER- congressman. .Speaker Cannon sold, torn down the property 25 years ago to Thomas Gassman and he has demolished the structure to make way for a modern home. The house was out of date and no. longer an ornament, but the fact that it was rich in historical associa­ tions led to general regret that it was Unique Service Which Was Required by a Cathedral in England. lowed by the laying of the corner stone by Rev. B. F. Shipp, presiding elder of the Decatur district An unusual use of divers was re­ cently made in saving Winchester . - . cathedral, England. During repairs three-way cock, C, which is operated j to the foundations a large water main hy the foot levers, D. A vise arranged in this way is not suitable for small work, as there is danger of injuring the hands, but for heavy work, which lias to be changed frequently, it is * SEMt labor saver. AEOLIAN HARP. to Make an Instrument That Will Play in the Wind. An Aeolian harp should be made to fit into a window so that the sash may be adjusted to cause a strong breeze across the strings of the in- m- Aeolian Harp. •trument Make the box of thin dry 1#ne, the top piece or sounding board of extra clear Btuff, about three-six- teentha of an inch thick. Sides and bottom can be one-quarter of an Inch; length two inches shorter than the width of your window; width ten Inches-, depth two and one-half inches. The ends should be of hard wood, and thick enough at one. end to hold the eyes or studs for fastening the wires •Or catgut strings. At the other end the wood Bhould be thick enough to feold a set of violin keys, if you use eatgut; or iron piano pins, it you ittse wire, which should be steel. *Jwo bridges of hard wood are glued diagonally across each end, for the Strings to rest on. If steel wire is $sed, a round wire Bhould be inserted %n each bridge, so that the sound­ ing wires will not cut the wood. The • tuning should be harmonic, or, say, thirds, fifths, and octaves. Make about four holes in the Bound board, one inch in diameter under the string*. > Girl to Get Bible in Three Years. " Pana.--A queer agreement was filed in the county court between John H. Schempf and Frank A. Beyers, of Pana, in- the disposition of a child. Schempf, guardian of Bertha McDan- iels, aged 13, binds her over to Bey­ ers to keep until she is 16 years old, when Beyers is to give Bertha a new Bible, two suits of wearing apparel suitable to her station, and $20 in money. Diver Working Under Church. burst, filling the excavation and crypt. For some days it was feared the noble Play 8oldiers; Boy Killed. structure would collapse, but divers Litchfield.--While playing soldiers were sent down, the rush of waters stopped, and the building saved. Look to America for Cotton. The cotton spinners of Lancashire, England, raised a commission of ex­ perts to visit all the cotton-growing lands of the world and investigate the industry. Their report has been made, and it is to the effect that the United States must continue the source of the main supply. Egypt Is proving as much of a disappointment as India as a cotton country, and it is generally agreed that our southern states will lead in this important In­ dustry for many years to come. America Generous to 8clence. Prof. Ray Lankester, in his opening Address before the British association, pointed out what has been many times remarked, that in no country is Bo much aid given by laymen to sci­ entific investigation as in America. , fThe habit of giving telescopes, labor­ atories and research'"funds has be­ come common among rich men, and We rather take their gifts for granted. Tt has been humorously said that the ill of a Massachusetts man which does not provide a gift for a hospital, an art museum, a university or an in­ stitute for the investigation of human ^pedigrees is in poor form, and reflects on the social standing of the testator's IM*. (family. Cheaper Liquid Air. A Dane named Knudsen is credited with discovering means of producing liquid air at the cost of no more than one-sixth the usual price, and it is claimed that bis process, which Is me­ chanical rather than chemical, will ultimately put liquid air on the mar­ ket at not more than about two cents a gallon. The same invention makes it possible to sell oxygen at a cent a cubic foot, which promises to bring it Into rather wide Industrial use. Senator Hopkins Laid Up. Aurora.--United States Senator A. J. Hopkins has been forced to abandon his plan to make campaign speeches this fall. The senator is buffering from a throat affection and ha3 been under tke care of a specialist for weeks. He planned to make 30 or 40 speeches in southern and northern Illi­ nois but has been kept from carrying out his intentions by his physician. «_--» Chicago Water Works Worn Out. Chicago.--The city council finance committee has run against a serious si/uation. It developed that the city water works system is practically worn out, and must be largely rebuilt at once. A rough estimate of the cost was $10,000,000. in the yard Charles Cq?fey, aged eight son of Mr. and Mrs. (Sjrffey, of Irving, shot and instantly killed his twin brother, Robert. The deed was com­ mitted with a large target rifle, the bullet taking effect In the left temple. alleges he was neglected by the at­ tendants to such an extent that he suffered an attack df cold, rheumatism and was ill, sore and lame. Capital Made $200,000,000 Springfield.--The Chicago & North­ western Railway company, by Marvin Hughitt, president, vfiled for record a certificate of the increase of the cap­ ital stock to $200,000,000 authorized at a meeting of stockholders £nd bond­ holders October 18. Students on a Strike. Rock Island.--Students of Augus- tana college went on strike as a pro­ test against the action of the directors in turning down a petition of the stu­ dents for permission to continue inter­ collegiate brsket ball. Carter Harrison Better. Chicago.--Ex-Mayor Carter H. Har­ rison, who was Injured while hunting moose in Ontario and who has been confined to his room since his return to Chicago, was reported on the way to a speedy recovery. Iron Ties. Iron ties are extensively useA/Oll the German railroads. They look suc­ cessful. The roadbed ii certainly excellent. They are hollow and the edges set well ^atb the soil and bal­ last. • Private Banker Bankrupt. Freeport.--Lyman Booth, a private banker at Ashton, 111., filed a petition in bankruptcy "In the United States court here. His liabilities are more than $12,000 and his assets $11,000. He has $100 in cash on hand. / . . "Three I" Players Drafted. 1 Bloomington.--Information received by President Holland . states that Wright, late of Bloomington, has been drafted by Oakland, Cal., Ronan by Baltimore and Ford by Atlanta, both playing with Cedar Rapids this sea­ son. DEATHS IN THE STATE. Pana.--Daniel Donohue, aged 70 years, is dead. > Havana.--Daniel McMann, aged 50 years, is dead. Pana.--Mrs. A. L. Klarr, aged 71 years, is dead. Decatur.--Mrs. Isabell Hayes, aged 72 years, is dead. Litchfield.--Anthony Street died at St. Francis hospital, aged 65 years. Pana.--Mrs. Henrietta Travis, moth­ er of Deloss Travis, clerk of the city court, is dead. N Litchfield.--Mrs. A. Emrick, former­ ly of this city but later of Dayton, O., died at her home in that city, aged 40 years. Hillsboro.--Christian AngejBteln died •it the home of his son, C. W. Ange- stexu, five miles south of this city, aged 81 years. Elgin Police Ch4«f Fined. Elgin.--After deliberating six hours over testimony in the trial of James Younger, chief of police, the police commissioners decided to Que him ten days' pay for violations of the rules of the department. Beit things to Do When Caught III Burning Building. Chief Crocker, of the New York fire brigade, offers the following ad­ vice as to conduct In case of an out­ break of fire: "Keep cool; no matter how hot everything around you gets, retain a cool, calm equilibrium, and you'll come out all right. "Send in the alarm Immediately; do not take it for granted that some one else has rung up the fire de­ partment. "Fight the fire yourself before the firemen arrive. Very few fires, if dis­ covered at the outset are beyond tho control of the people on the premises, if only ijuick, intelligent action is taken. ^Fight the flames with pails of wat£r; smother them with rugs and blankets; beat them out with wet brooms. "Block the Bpread of fire. If the burning room or rooms can be shut off from the rest of the building, it will take considerable time for the fire to spread. Shut all doors, tran­ soms and windows opening on shafts, and, if possible, those to the exterior. By closing up the burning rooms you prevent draughts, and cut off a new supply of oxygen. The fire, after ex­ hausting the oxygen, will only smoul­ der. "Never ascend to the upper stories of a burning building. The upper are always the most dangerous. The smoke, superheated air and poisonous fumes which it is death to inhale, col­ lect first In the top of the house. Fire, spreading through a building, burns straight ta the rbof, usually by way of the haft and stairways, q.nd then, widening its course, eats back €o the stories below. The lower floors are the safest in time of fire. "Never try to climb up the stairs to the roof, and never open the scuttle. A hole through the roof to the open air would serve as a chimney, and magnify the conflagration almost in­ credibly. "Keep out of the halls. The safe way to await the arrival of the fire­ men Is in a room as low down in the building as you can get without risk of smoke-laden halls. Shut all doors and transoms in room in which you stay, and open the windows wide to keep the air cool and pure. If smoke breaks in, lean out of the windows. Be careful not to get excited, Und not to breathe in the hot, Bmoking at­ mosphere. * , Make your< way from the building if the fire is dangerous, and you can escape without braving too great heat, A wet towel held over the " mouth and nostrils will enable you to live in an otherwise deadly atmosphere. But unless the fire spreads into the room you are occupying it Is best to wait for outside help." Taylorville Grants Franchise. Taylorville.-- Mayor J. W. Lee signed the interurban franchise ordi­ nance giving the Springfield & South western railway the ttse of the streets along the route which the company planned. To Organize New Ball League. Quincy.--A meeting will be held here November 1 for the purpose of organizing a baseball league com' prising the cities of Quincy, Burling­ ton, Clinton, Davenport, Jacksonville 'Hannibal and possibly Freeport and Keokuk. , ' * Falls Prom Apfrte Tree. Carllnville.--B. F. Waggoner, of this city, fell from an apple tree, dis­ locating his shoulder and received oth­ er bruises. He is well advanced In years and his recovery will be slow. Accused of AbductKtg Sterling.--James Drake, of Moline, 111., was arrested here charged with abduction of Mabel Barnett, a mulat- tress, 14 years old. The girl is miss­ ing. 0AY8 OF MALE DANDIES. Feminine Display Outdone by Duke of Buckingham. * Until the last century, in variety and magnificence, the human male followed the rule of the lower animals that the male shall predominate in brilliance. No woman has ever ruled through pure modishness; there has never been a feminine counter­ part of Beau Brummel. All varieties of exquisite are male, whether dandy, macaroni or beau--and not because lhey are exceptions to a general rule of sobriety, but'because of a superior originality and more forcible and dis­ tinguished expression. In the point of extravagance there never has been (until the |ast cen­ tury) any difference between . male and female costume. The duke of Buckingham took 27 suits of clothes to Paris in 1625, one of white uncut velvet set all over with diamonds, worth £14,000. He also wore a dia­ monded feather and diamond buttons and earrings. A curious fashion for men prevailed in 1612 x>t orfiarfientlng the ear with strings otMack velvet ribbon, also of placing a rose behind the ear. HAPPENINGS OF INTEREST FROI^ \ \ ALL OVER THE 8TATE. v Nason and the Air Brakes. ft was in the time of the old Bos ton & Providence railroad that air brakes were first introduced, but even then railroading was so little under­ stood that few men realized their im­ portance. Supt. Nason of the Boston & Provldencc was one of these, al­ though he had the reputation of being an eminently "practical" man. One day an agent of an air brake company was explaining to him the working of the main reservoir, but Nason could not seem to ge it through his head. "You say you pump air into it?" he inquired. "Yes," was the reply. "Well, ain't it full of air, anyhow; and how are you going to fill it any fuller? Think you can make a pail hold twice as much water by pouring more in? When a thing's full, it's full^ I know what I'm talking about.". Too Much Condeneed. R. Lincoln Lippitt at' a meeting of the American Automobile club was talking of a certain valuable but rare work oh automobiling. 'After trying to buy the book," said Mr. liippitt, "at every book seller's I could think of, I was told that I might perhaps get it at a certain library. They had it, sure enough, at this li­ brary, but it was. out. I tried again and it was out; again, and it was still out. "'When will 1 be able to get this book?' I said to the clerk at last In some Impatience. "I'm sure I don't know,' the clerk answered, airily. 'But we've got it, all right. It's In the catalogue.' " 'Yes,'said I, 'I know it Is, but In so condensed a form that I cant read if" • FIND PREHISTORIC RELIC3 Discovery of ° the Greatest Value*?' ! • Archaeologists Made Near Mom Sterling in Brown County. Quincy.--One of the richest and most wonderful prehistoric finds has just been made on what is known as ope of the Illinois river hills, mid­ way between Cooperstowp and the river, and .eight miles from Mount Sterling, Brown county. A curious res­ ident of the locality recently dug into an ancient mound on the farm of Mrs. M. ^rabtree and already the results of the exploration would make arch­ aeologists wonder. Thus far several skeletons eight feet long and several pieces of re* markable pottery, beads and curios implements have been taken out. The bones crumble Almost as soon as they are taken into the open air. They are so numerous that it is be­ lieved a prehistoric burying ground has been opened, greater In extent and more perfectly preserved than any hitherto discovered. Under the bones of each of the an­ cient dead were found pieces of pot- tery, beneath fragments of skull. Great vases were discovered, the largest of which would hold two gal­ lons. Under one skeleton was a cu­ rious bowl, in the center of which basin was the well-fashioned figure of a king seated upon a log, and it is thought that these bones may be those of a leader of the race that once ruled, this portion of the con­ tinent. Strangest of all the articles found with the bones were implements that are apparently shaped of bamboo, some cjf them evidently shaped for purposes of weaving. Countless beads of a strange material almost white, and possibly made from the best of potters' clay, were also unearthed. The soil of the mound has never before been disturbed and to this fact is attributed the marvelous pres­ ervation of the things unearthed. The mound is one of a series along the Illinois river hills which a noted archaeologist said would one day furnish a solution of the mystery of the mound builders. Farmers 8et Minimum Scale. ^ East St. Louis.--The following minimum price scale was adopted at the session of the American Society of Equity: Wheat, $1; corn, 45 cents until Jan. 1, 50 cents Jan. 1 to April 1, 55 cents April 1 until the next meeting of the society; oats, 40 cents; cotton, 12 cents, based at New York; hogs, $6.50; cattle, $6; hay, $14. With the excep­ tion of cotton all prices are based on delivery at Chicago. Officers elected were: President, J. H. Everitt, Indianapolis; vice presi­ dent, J. B. Whiting, Interlaken, N. Y.; secretary, M. Wes Tubbs, Indianapo­ lis. Bandits Escape With Booty. Odin.--The Bank of Odin was'dyiuu mited and looted by a gang of safe robberB at an early hpur October 26. The report of the explosion attracted a crowd of citizens to the scene, and a running fight ensued In which more than 30 shots were fired. The bandits escaped with all their booty. None of the citizens who engaged in the battle was hurt. It1 is not known whether any of the robbers was wounded. ^Baby Scalded to Death. Chicago. -- Edward Penaka, two years old, 237 Twenty-fifth place, died at his home as the result of being scalded. The child was left alone in the kitchen of the house by his moth­ er, and while walking past a table he seized the tablecloth, and in pulling it overturned a kettle of boiling water. The hot water fell on the child's face and body and he was fatally injured. Fireman and Engineer Will Die. Danville.--Big Four passenger train No. 3 side-swiped a freight train at Beckwith, three wiles east of Dan­ ville, fatally injuring Engineer S. C. Briggs and Fireman Edward Roberts, Indianapolis, and slightly injuring Conductor William Haymaker, of In­ dianapolis. All the injured 'were on the passen­ ger train. " Hanged Himself In Jail. Girard.--The body of James Cul- lom, a coal miner, was found hanging in the city calaboose. He was placed in the calaboose upon complaint of several citizens who thought he was crazy. At the inquest it developed that he came from Arkansas and that he was On his way to some town in Indiana. 8purned Suitor a Suicide. Belleville.--Frederick C. Keim, a prominent farmer of New Athens, committed suicide because Emma Kaiser refused to marry him. He shot himself in the heart. RHEUMATISM ;| AND ST JACOBS OIL The Proved Remedy ] For Over 50 Yea***. Price SSe end 30c X ' I, i v , v V > "Heat Veil" for Firemen. One of the gravest perils which fire fighters are constantly facing is the fierce heat. After successful trials, a newly Invented "heat veil" has been introduced into practice at Cologne, Germany, where 200 men have been supplied with the appliance. The yeil is made after the principle of a safety lamp, with double windows, it is composed of fibers of cane, which possess the peculiarfproperty of retaining water for a considerable length of time. The veil/ Is made damp before being fastened to the fireman's ordinary brass helmet. 8mothers in Grain Elevator. Aurora.--George Longenbucker, 1# years old, was buried in 50 feet of chaff and wheat screenings at the Burlington elevatdri and was smoth­ ered. The screenings had been stored for some time, and a crust had formed over the top of a chute. When Long­ enbucker stepped upon this crust it gave way. Falls from Car; Is Killed. Belleville.--Harry Trost, aged 25, a glass blower, fell from a street ear and was instantly killed. Acquittal in Short Order. Springfield.--After a deliberation of 15 minutes, the jury that heard the evidence against James McTee, Frank Cummlngs and James Jarrett, re­ turned a verdict of not guilty in the circuit court. The defendants were charged with. assaulting Ben Roesch, a saloon keeper of New Berlin. Stock Brings Good Prices. • Tallula.--Charles C. Judy's 300 mules and some 30 horses which were bold here netted the owner about 937»* 000. John Stuart Mill. James Mill, his father, was a hard man, a clever man, and a crank--a hedonist capable of making himself thoroughly disagreeable about the greatest happiness of the greatest number; a theorist who regarded his clever son as a suitable object for ed­ ucational experiments. . ^ He would not send him to school because schools were the fortresses of "prejudice," and taught the wrong things in the wrong way. He pro­ vided him with no playmates, and al­ lowed him no holidays, lest "the habit of work should be broken."--Francis Grlbble, in Fortnightly Review. Women Have Pet 8nakes. A great many snakes are imported into England. There Is a brisk de­ mand for snake pets among rich ladies. It's a funny kind of pet, per­ haps, but they seem to like them, and get quite fond of them. 1 suppose it's because ladles nowadays like the unusual. Of course, these pet snakes are all nonpoisonous.--London Mora* ing Leader. ^ Prospective ̂ employer--"Why did you leave your last place?" Irate Cook--"Humph! Why did yer last cook lave here?" NERVOUS COLLAPSE Otnklng Spells, Headaches Rheumatism all Yield to Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. Mrs. Lizzie Williams, of No. 410 Ce­ dar street, Quincy, 111., says: "Ever since I had nervous prostration, about thirteen years ago, I have had periodical spells of complete exhaustion. The doc* tor said n»y nerves were shattered. Any excitement or unusual activity would throw me into a state of lifelessness. At the begin ii iTtg my strength would come back in a moderate time after eacb attack, but the period of weakness kept lengthening until at last I would lie helpless as many as three hours at a stretch. I hud dizzy feelings, palpita­ tion of the heart, misery after eating, hot flashes, nervous headaches, rheu­ matic pains in the back and hips. The doctor did me so little good that I gave up his treatment, and really feared that my case was incurable " When I began taking Dr. Williams' Pink Pills my appetite grew keen, my food no longer distressed me, luy nerves were quitted to a degree that I had not experienced for years and my strength returned. The fainting spells left me entirely after I had used the third box of the pills, and my friends say that I am looking better than I have done for the past fifteen years." Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are recom­ mended for diseases that come from im. poverished blood snch as anaemia, rheu­ matism, debility and disorders of the nerves such as neuralgia, nervous pros­ tration and partial paralysis. They have cured the most stubborn indigestion. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills agree with tho most delicate stomach, quiet all ner­ vousness, stir lip every organ to do its proper work and give strength that lasts. Sold by all druggists, or sent postpaid, on receipt of price, 50 cents per box, six boxes for $2.50, by the Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Schenectady, K". Y. E BEST COUGH CURE Cough syrups are all cheap enough, but if you should get a gallon of cough syrup that does not cure for the price of a small bottle of Kemp's Balsam the best cough cure, you would \ have made a bad bargain--for <>n® \ small bottle of Kemp's fealsam may • stop the worst cough and save a ' life, whereas the cough "cure" that ! does not cure is worse than useless. \ Sold by all dealers at 25c. and 50c. HOLD UP! and con&idg£ .POMMEL ' SltCKEU tlKC ALL fOW£^ WATERPROOF CLOTHING. Ismadf of the best rmlfri&Kinbtak wallow ifydurantolAnd uM |p rtiiblf tains wrrywhtre « 417 3T1CK70THE ' 3ICN OF THE FISH /rtmmmMMI TOWER Canadian cooirm ajtowkr co. ^ TORONTO, CAH. MSTWUttiUAiA* A Positive CURE Elf's Cream Balm U quickly absorbed. Gives Raiiet at Once. It cleanses, soothes heals and protects the diseased mem­ brane. It cures Ca­ tarrh and drives away a Cold in •>"> rsr Head quickly. Re- f IlVE stores the Senses of slf* • Taste and Smell. Full size 50 cts., at Drug, 'iists or by mail; Trial Size 10 cts. by mail Ely Brothers, 56 Warren Street. New Xoxk, fa) ,¥ A'A * • i l f . J * * * ! ^ ...m&IS. Ok

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy