McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 21 Nov 1912, p. 7

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ij? » f i f ^ . r ; ? ^; .:m-,..- :w., ** ̂ IrT, ' J. /v ,'* ".V: V'SV i f f m ? re " , £: - K'EH?:-5* &W- Mtl«« '• "' rVJM*" •v^. .v JX^pj,^.-. -.-. -- • -.-.v • «• >^v-_>. ^» f A V**\Wk%.A *> V X >-»i^W It? JUST- WHAT THEY EXPECTED ROYALTY WELCOMES THE AMERICAN SETTLER HIS ROYAL HIQHNE8S, THt£ DUKE OF CONNAUGHT, WELCOMES AMERICAN8 TO CANADA. It was a happy speech, that on that GIRLS MAY AVOID PERIODIC PAINS The Experience of Two Girl* Here Related For The Benefit of Others. Com mitt e« Made No Mistake When They Looked for Almost Inevit­ able Comment. A. committee of investigating scien­ tists approached a lady. "Madam," Bald Professor Pre wins, the spokesman, offering her a magnifl-1 cent chrysanthemum of rare and love-1 beautiful October day, the Duke of ly hue. "Madam, permit me to pre- j Conn&ught, Governor-General of Can- sent this flower to you as a token of ' &da, made at Macleod, Alberta. It our high regard." |*as*an opportune, speech, heartful She clasped the splendid blossom in and resonant with good fellowship. her lily white hand. j j And, as it was specially intended for Breathlessly the committee waited j American ears, the audience, com­ ber reply. prised largely of so many American "How beautiful it is?" she answered, settlers in Canada, the time and p^ice "What an exquisite shade of purple! : could not have been better chosen. I should love to have a dress of that [ color." j come tendered to him at the pretty i to get relief. Dr. Prewins nodded knowingly to | city of Macleod, with the foothills of j "After giving her only tvw> bottle* of the committee, as if to say, »"I told the Rockies as a setting^ and the 'Lydia EL Pinkham's VegAaWe Com- you so." great wheat fields between, and in J pound she is now enjoying the best at The committee winked (o the pro- fact all around the place as the fore- ! health. I cannot praise your Compound fessor and whispered. "You win." ground, that His Highness, true to the too highly. I want every good mother -- ' best interests of the country and to to read what your medicine has done foe those of the Americans who choose my child."--Mrs. RICHAKD N. DUNHAM* to make Canada their home, said in 311 Exchange St, Rochester, N.Y. part: i Stoutsville, Ohio. --"I suffered from "I am well aware that among those ' headaches, backache aad was very irreg- Rochester, N. Y.--" I have a daugfv ter 18 years old who has always been very healthy until recently when sh« complained of dizziness and cramps every month, so bad that I would have to keep It was In reply to an address of wel- i ber home from school and put her to bed ?#! JUDGE CURED, HEART TROUBLE. I took about 6 boxes of Dodds Kid­ ney Pills for Heart Trouble from which I had suffered for 5 years. I had dizzy spells, my eyes puffed, HANKSGIVING day as It Is now celebrated is a composite of the ancient Harvest festival, whose origins go back to the dim pre-hlstoric " begin­ nings of civilization, and of the solemn Puritan religious ceremony of thanksgiving. The Joy­ ous celebration of the gathering of the year's harvest, a day or week of feast­ ing, song, dance and revel, is found in all ages and among all peoples. Thanksgiving days are also common to all religions, past aud present, but- they were not regular or periodical events-r-occurring generally after some victory of war. "The Puritans and the Pilgrims brought with them from England both the Harvest festi­ val and the Thanksgiving days, the latter being observed whenever the deeply religious mind of the Puritan iaw in their prosperity or good for­ tune the direct intervention of Provi­ dence. The Puritan also stripped the ancient Harvest festival of much of its rude license that had grown up around the celebration in England, and grad­ ually through the two centuries fol­ lowing the setlement of New England, there grew up the practice of combin­ ing the two events and making the Thankgiving annual. The religious element has%een greatly subordinated as the years passed* until at the pres­ ent time it is to a majority of Ameri­ cans only an incident that by many is observed only in the breach.^ To the stern old Puritan of almost three centuries ago, the Thanksgiving day of 1912 would seem little less than sacrilege so far as the thinksgiving feature of it is concerned, llut he would understand and appreciate the day's feasting and revel as a part of .(he celebration of the Harvest festl- ral. The difference is apparent in the records of the early settlement of \merica. The first thanksgiving serv­ ice held in North America was ob­ served with religious ceremonies con­ ducted by an English minister in the year 1578 on the shores of Newfound­ land. This clergyman, accompanied the expedition under Probisher, who settled the first English colony in America. The records of this signlfi cant day have been preserved in the quaint rules and regulations of the ex­ pedition as follows: "In primus: To banish swearing, dice and card playing, and filthy com­ munication, and to serve God twice a day with the ordinary service of the Church of England. On Monday morn­ ing, May 27, 1578, aboard the Ayde, we received all, the communication by the minister of Gravesend, prepared as good Christians toward God, and resolute men for all fortunes; . . . and Maister Wolfall made unto us a goodlye sermon, exhorting ail espe­ cially to be thankful to God for His strange and marvelous deliverance in those dangerous places." The second record of a thanksgiving service in America is that of the Pop- ham colony which settled at Sagada­ hoc on the Maine coast in 1607. It consisted of prayer and sermon as in the first instance. These were thanks­ giving days pure and simple, and after the settlement of Plymouth many oth­ ers of a similarly solemn religious na­ ture occurred. The first Harvest festival held In America was upon December 13, 1621. It has been called, wrongly, the first autumnal thanksgiving held In Amer­ ica, but it was in reality the observ­ ance of the Harvest festival, with which the settlers had been acquaint­ ed in England. It was not a day set apart for religious worship and it is not likely that any religious service was held; on the contrary, it was the beginning of a whole week of festiv­ ity In celebration of the successful garnering of their first harvest in SURELY EASY TO UNDERSTAND Remarkably Lucid Explanation *f Murder Which Judge Is Said to Have Vrtade to Jury. The average juryman is not very well versed in the fine distinctions of the law. On those he n<<eds instruc­ tion from the judge. It must have been a "very obtuse Juryaian, how­ ever, to whom the case was not per­ fectly clear after listening to the fol­ lowing explanation by a judfe: their new home. Qalntly does "Mourt's Relation" chronicle the event: "Our harvest being gotten in, our Governour sent foure men on fowling, that so we might after a more speciall manner rejoyce together, after we had gathered the fruit of our labours: they foure in one day killed as much fowle, as with a little helpe beside, served the Company almost a weeke, at which time amongst other Recrea­ tions, we exercised our Armes, many of the Indians coming amongst us, and amongst the rest their greatest King Massasoyt, with some nlnetie men, whom for three dayes we enter­ tained and feasted, aud they went out and killed Deere, which they brought to the plantation and bestowed upon the Captaine, and others. And al­ though it be not alwayes so plentiful, as it was at this time with us, yet by the goodnesse of God, we aire so farre from want, that we often wifch you partakers of our plentle." While the bill of fare of this first American celebration of the Harvest festival has not been preserved the feast was no doubt a royal one even if some of the food and the methods of preparation would seem strange and outlandish to present day Amer­ icans. The provisions must have been bountiful for there were about 140 persons including the 90 of Mas- sasoit'8 company who were enter­ tained for three days, and all had their share of supplies. From other sources we know that the foods of the sea were abundant and that the Pilgrims had made the acquaintance of the oyster. Ducks they had in plenty of the choicest species and also geese. Game, from grouse to veni­ son, was brought in from the forest in abundance, and there was a "great store" of wild turkeys. Barley loaf and cakes of corn meal were highly prized by the colonists and played their part in the feast For vege­ tables the Pilgrims had much the same as they had in England, Gov. Bradford's list naming beans, pease, parsnips, carrots, turnips, onions, melons, cucumbers, radishes, "skir- ets," beets, coleworts, and. cabbages, in addition to wheat, rye, barley and oats. Besides these they had the lndigeous squash and pumpkin, and it may be taken for granted that a care­ ful Pilgrim housewife had preserved during the summer by drying a quan­ tity of strawberries, gooseberries and "raspls." Take it altogether, the food basis of the first Harvest Thanksgiv­ ing day celebration in America was much the same as today. But if the good housewife of today was obliged to prepare the thanksgiv­ ing feast with the utensils and Incon­ veniences of the kitchen of three cen- tures ago 6he probably would throw up her hands In hopeless despair. The kitchen with its great glowing fire­ place was the housewife's domain and the general living room of the entire family. The Walls and the floor were bare and the furniture meager and comfortless, while the kitchen furnish­ ings were odd and styange. It was in this great cavernous chimney that the Pilgrim wife cooked her thanksgiving dinner. Placed high up in the yawn­ ing chimney was the heavy backbar, or lug-hole, of green wood, afterwards displaced by the great iron crane. It was beyond reach of the flames, and from it hung a motley collection of books of various lengths and weights. They had many different names, such as pot-hooks, pot-hangles, pot-claws, pot-cleps, trammels, crooks, hakes, gallow-balke. Words that would puz­ zle a housewife of today to define. From these were suspended the pots and kettles in which the food was cooked. 4t both sides of the flre- THANKSGIVING By AMELIA E. BARR. "Have you cut the wheat in the blowing fields. The barley, the oats, arid the rye, The golden corn and the pearly rice? For the winter days are nigh." "We have reaped them all from shore to Bhore, And the grain is safe on the threshing floor." "Have you gathered the berries from the vine, And the fruit from the orchard trees? The dew and the scent from the roses and thyme. In the hive of the honey bees?" "The peach and the plum and the apple are ours, And the honeycomb from the scented flowers " "The wealth of the snowy cotton field And the gift of the Bugar cane. The sjftvory herb and the nourishing root There has nothing been given in vain." "We have gathered the harvest from shore to shore, And the measure is full and brimming o er." Then lift up the head with a song! And lift up the hand with a gift! To the ancient Giver of all The spirit in gratitude lift! For the Joy and the promise of spring, For the hay and the clover sweet. The barley, the rye, and the oats, The rice and the corn and the wheat. The cotton and sugar and fruit. The flowers and the fine honeycomb, The country, so fair and so free, The blessings and glory of home. "Gentlemen." he stated, with ad­ mirable lucidity, "murder is where a man is murderously killed. The killer in such a case is a murderer. Now, murder by po'son is just as much murder as murder with a gun, pistol, or knife. It is the simple act of murdering that constitutes murder In the eye of the law. Don't let the Jdea of murder and manslaughter con­ found you. Murder la one thing; manslaughter is quite another. Con­ sequently, If there has been a murder, and it is not manslaughter, then it must be murder. Don't let this point escape you. "Self-murder has nothing to do with this case. Xceordlng to BlackstOne and other legal writers, one man can­ not commit felo-de-se upon another; and this is my opinion. "Gentlemen, murder is murder. The murder of brother is called fratricade; the murder of a father is called parri­ cide, but that don't enter into this case. As I have said before, murder is emphatically murder. "You will consider your verdict. place were large ovens in which bak­ ing and roasting were done. There were no tin utensils in those old days and brass kettles were worth $15 a piece. The utensils wero mostly of iron, woofd, pewter or lat-, tern ware. Glassware was practically unknown and bottles were made of leather. Wood played a great part' in kitchen and tableware. Wooden trenchers from which two ate were used on the table for a century after the settlement at Plymouth. Wood was also used for pans and bread troughs and a host of other things displaced by tin in the modern kitch­ en. Of wood were made butter pad­ dles, salt cellars, noggins, keelers, rundlets, and many kinds of drinking bowls which were known under the names of mazers, whiskins, piggins, tankards and kannes, words many of which have disappeared from use. The dining table of these old day* was the old Anglo-Saxon board placed on trestles, and the tablecloth was known as the "board cloth." Thus we have the origin of the time-worn*^ phrase: "Gather around the feative board." And the furnishings of the "board" were simple, inventories of that period mentioning only cups, chafing dishes, chargers, threnchers, salt cellars, knives and spoons. The table fork was an innovation not yet in general use; the Angers of the eater were used to thrust the food into the mouth. The spoons were of wood and pewter mostly. Silver spoons were rare. There was no chinaware on the tables of the early thanksgiving feasts; for no china- ware came over on the Mayflower. That and the lack of glassware and silver would make a thanksgiving table of the seventeenth century look impossible to a housewife of today- Complete the picture by Imagining large trenchers, square blocks of wood hollowed out by hand, placed around the "board" from each of which t vo people dig their food out with thuir fingers, and you have an idea of the manner in which our ancestors cele­ brated Thanksgiving three centuries ago. But If the kitchen and table furni­ ture would appear strange to a house­ wife of today some of the dishes served would appear even stranger. How many housekeepers of today can cook "suppawn" and "samp" from corn meal? Or bake manchet, slm- melB, cracknels. jannackB, cocket bread, cheat loaves, or "wasel" bread? The colonists did not take kindly at first to the pumpkin, which in the pie form has become a distinctive fea­ ture of the modern thanksgiving feast. They called them "pomlons" then, and this is awe-inspiring recipe lroai which the colonial housewife made "pompion" pie: "Take a half pound of Pumpion and slice it, a handful of Tyme, a lit­ tle Rosemary, Parsley and sweet Mar­ joram slipped oil the stalks, then the cinnamon, nutmeg and pepper, and six cloves, and beat them. Then mix them and beat them together and put in as much sugar as you see fit; then fry them like a froiz. After it Is fried let it stand until It be cold. Take sliced apples, thinne rounde ways, and lay a row of the frolze and a layer of apples with currents betwixt the layer while your pie is fitted, and put in a good deal of sueet butter before you close it. When the pie is baked take six yolks of eggs, some white wine or Vergis and make a caudle of this, but not too thick. Cut up the lid and put it in. Stir them well together whilst the eggs and the pompions be not perceived and serve it up." Thus saith the old cook book, and the modern housewife who faithful ly follows this recipe can have at least a unique concoction, fearfully and wonderfully made, to grace her Thanksgiving table. gentlemen, and make up your minds according to the law and the evidence, not forgetting the explanation I hav<. given you." my breathwas short and I had chills and back­ ache. I took the pill^,about a year ago and have had no return of the able to do lots of .liHjjgip Miller. manual labor, am well and hearty and weigh about 200 pounds. I feel very grateful that 1 found Dodds Kidney Pills and you may publish this letter if you wish. I am serving my third term as Probate Judge of Gray Co. Yours truly, PHILIP MILLER, Cimarron, Kan. Correspond with Judge Miller about this wonderful remedy. Dodds Kidney Pills, 60c. per box at your dealer or Dodds Medicine Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Write for Household Hints, also music of National Anthem (English and German words) and re- cip6fc for dainty dishes. All 3 sent free. Adv. AN ARTISTIC DEVOTEE. whom I am now addressing, there are a very great proportion who were not born under the British flag. Most of these will have realized by now that residence under that flag implies no disabilities. All we ask is that the laws of Canada should be obeyed. "With this provisidni every one is free to come ahd go, to marry, to live palpitations. Am to die as seems best to^lm, and now 63 years old, | »8 Pleases Providence. "We bring no pressure to bear on anyone to adopt the Canadian nation­ ality, for we do not value citizenship which ris obtained under compulsion. "Our American cousins are welcome from over the border. Thrice we wel­ come our Canadian and British broth- ersiwho return to the Union Jack, aft­ er living under the Stars and Stripes. "JJistory is repeating itself. For mahy years hundreds of young Brit­ ishers tiave sought fortune in the western States. Time haB brought about a change, and the tide has set in the other direction, bringing across the frontier numbers of our neighbors to whom we are glad to return hos­ pitalities. "One of the chief dispensers of such hospitality in proportion to Its popu­ lation has, as we have said, changed Its character from an Important cat­ tle town to a thriving wheat producing area. "What it has lost from the pictur- esque^point of view, it has gained in the material side, and I wish, in con- elusion, to express the hope that the prosperity which has evinced Itself here for the past ten years, may con­ tinue unabated in the future." There is no reason why at a hun­ dred places on this educative. Instruct­ ive and interesting trip of His Royal Highness he might not have express­ ed himself In the same terms, and on each occasion, addressed laVge gather­ ings of Americans who are now set­ tled on the prairies of Western Cana­ da.--Advertisement. Dunn--How pale uuu eiirwwurn Mrs. Brown looks! Ounn--Yes, she has on her Lenten complexion. RASH SPREAD TO ARMS 759 Roach Ave., Indianapolis, Ind.-- "At first I noticed small eruptions on my face. The trouble began as a rash. It looked like red pimples. In a few days they spread to my arms and back. They Itched and burned so badly that 1 scratched them and of course the re­ sult was blood and matter. The erup­ tions festered, broke, opened and dried up, leaving the skin dry and scaly. I spent many sleepless nights, my back, arms and face burning and itching; sleep was purely and simply out of the question. The trouble also caused disfigurement. My clothing irritated the breaking out. "By this time I had used eeveral well-known remedies without success. The trouble continued. Then I began to use the sample of Cuticura Soap and Ointment. Within seven or eight days I noticed gratifying results. I purchased a full-sized cake of Cuti­ cura Soap and a box of Cuticura Oint­ ment and in about eighteen or twenty days my cure was complete." (Signed) Miss Katherine McCallister, Apr. 12, 1912. Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world. Sample of each free with 32-p. Skin Book. Address TIRED BLOOD post-card "Cuticura, DepL L, Boston.' | Adv. I His Mistake. ^ After the services were over, ohe of the congregation turned to his wife and said: "On my way to church I picked up a button and put it in my changc I'ocket, where I had a quarter." **Gracious, my dear!" anticipated his wife, very much horrified. "And you dropped it Into the collection bas­ ket by mistake?" "No, confound It!" replied her hus­ band, "I put in the quarter."--Judge. ular. A friend ad­ v i sed me t o t ake Lydia E. Pinkbaro'a Vegetable Com­ pound, and before I had taken the whole o f t w o bo t t l e s found relief. I am' only sixteen yean old, but I have bet> ter health than fa* two or three years, cannot express my thanks for what Lydia E. Pinkham'* Vegetable Compound has done for ma. I had taken other medicines bat did not find relief."--Miss CORA B. FoSNAUGH, Stoutsville, Ohio, R.F.D., No. 1. Hundreds of such letters from moth* ers expressing their gratitude for what Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com­ pound has accomplished for their daugb* ters have been received by the Lydia SE* pinkham Medicine Company, Lynn, Mas*, mmii\ Pays Cash far Furs We Want Tew HBSiwi OsBars* Wordi e# ¥<• Mjj >t"i < •! ro--a I fin jFnssflteo Furs is ^eree." We If?*/!' biggest l~Ti 1 Fa* t'ig'itf-s- prfoc*, better grading aafl i3 fsnted uv. o.si: !urgf regular Bales, Competition .. _ nwvnoMs fc'vretnm ®»|| Fcndten Hrrw. A Co. f r» St. SLeoia, Tfee bis, American. CanadInn »sid Eaiopeaa bnjren *«« re; •That's whv we can pay yon sartre ssaaey few i-'cmr ti Soil rfiTOCt w i tli os. Koagratstosplik yoerproi Big Money In f rapping tSM lynz.whttoweaKl.etc.. awvnjoa! We wont Ten BSiMfcn BOHHTU* worth of Jnat »neh titm We «tn( jroar fwra-anything {com on.#skin op. _ Use Funsten Animal Salt Guaranteed to inierrese or tnonoy back. e&ii* Onttiu&aiuiKte' ltJ99 rtOc! oar profit cm onocfm. IV-ok Oram! Prizo, WorM't'- Faiir, b} thi-< II, 8, Government,. %%T& siitikd a slilfermti bMfc for each. kind of State kind w&Qt<nL furiitehodat faetor> nJao m\t outfits at bsgi&aviag to trappsrtL |T{|£'r Bond for Trapper®* catalog asid Jbs&wi lii ones m«o Fur Market K* jwirie., ~ " . All tree. Writ© today. fihlppingTaga, etc. 445 Fi Cost- / Tl>e Original Price' of a A Tender Point. "What got you into trouble with Vhis policeman?" demanded the New Vork judge. "Just trying to ask him a civil ques­ tion, your honor," said the Tlaitor, "nothing more." "What was that question?" "I Just asked him when the next official murder would be dragged off." Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets flrtt put vp 40 years ago. They reg-ulate and lnvlgnrate stomach, liver and bowels. 8ugar-ooat«d tiny granules. Adv. lf/ People will encourage your tads as long as you are willing to squander your money on them. YOU CAN CURB CATARRH Br wine Cola's CarbolUalva. It hi a effective remedy. All druggists. 25 and 50c. Adv. If a man and wife are one it la be­ cause they are tied for first place. Similarly Minded. The village tailor only received oc­ casional orders from the vicar for such articles as hats, collars, or hand- , kerchiefs. "You see," remarked the j tion, Shortness of Breath, Poor Circu- vlcar ope day, having called with his latlon, Irregular Beats, Cold Hands WEAKENS THE HEART (Copyright 1912 by the Tonitivee Co ) Heart Weakness is caused by Tired Blood-which lacks the necessary pow­ er and energy to produce proper mus­ cular heart action, causing Palpita- Glvlng Compliments. Don't be afraid to give compli­ ments. Overdelicacy in this respect is a social handicap and a cause of much needless lack of popularity. Learn the art of compliment giving, but be sure, too, that there is at !eas/ a grain of truth in every compllmest you pay. usual order, "when I want a suit I go to London. They make them there." Calling again a few days later, the vicar remarked that he had not seen the tailor at church lately. "No," replied the tailor; "when I want to hear a good sermon I go to London; they preach them there." and Feet, Fainting, Dizzy Spells, etc. spaAiilTiifffi These symptoms TONITiVES °.' Hwirt Weak ^•fiBEDBUJOO ST & "T* heart is not receiving sufficient nour­ ishment. We can secure the best re­ sults, meeting the demand for tonitized blood, by a treatment of Tonitivee, taken regularly until the symptoms described have entirely disappeared. triflinf ove spread cost lilUllttl Prom the Best Store* Everywhere Waterman Qfc 173 B'way- N. Y. "The Pen That^Everybody Use»" GANIOA'S QFFERINI TO THE SETTLER WM Equivocal. "Thrifty habits are your friends." "Yes, 1 suppose a man nowadays is 75c. per box of dealers or by maiL known by the bank accounts he | The Tonitivee Co., Buffalo, N. Y. _ keeps." "* - HAIR BALSAM mid bej-utiftai the vmSt ia loxuri&iii growth* Wever jftaiis to Bofttore Ottc Half to ii& Youthful Color* htvfiitji luitr fsitlui&r. FOLEY KIDNEY PIULS Arc Rlcheat in Curative Qualities FOR BACKACHE, RHEUMATISM, KIDNEYS ANO BLADDER $400 From One Acre in Mississippi In 1911, Mr. James A. Cox of Centerville. Mississippi, had one acre of unfertil­ ized ground. He planted sugar cane and that acre produced just 662 gallons of molasses. Ht put it up in ten pound tm» and sold it, deriving a net profit of $400. Hov Much Did You Make Per Acre? Go South where there are no long cold winters or crop failures. Land in Mississippi and Loumana is very cheap and can be bought on very advantageous term*. Write for beautifully illustrated booklets lo J. C. CLAIR, immigration Commissioner, Room M60G Central Station, Illinois Central R. R., Chicago, 111. THE AMERICAN RUSH 10 WESTERN CANADA IS INCREASING Free Homesteads In the new Districts ot Manitoba, Saskatcbv- wtku and Albert* ttn>r« are Hioustniils of Five left, wblvS to tiis- suiia making em ry in 8 years nine will worSB troiu fJli u>f!5por aer«. These i»n<ls a r» wi>il adapted to grain growiug aod calli* raising. KXm.UKX* UUH1I FiClUTlKS In many eases railways Cnoadu harp bwu buili In ail VHDce of setsk-iiieui. uiul In < abort time tl»>re will not bo at settler * bo eecd be than ten or iirtlT* mile% (ruai a Woe of railway. Railway Bataa regulated by Government OOB>- misslon. Social Conditions The Ann'rioan SoulortsatUoaie in Western Oinudu- is not a •(ranger ID a strange land, har- lng nearly a million of l"-is own people already settled there. If yon desire to know why the con­ dition ot the Canadian Settler is wnte and lor i«ratur«. raws, etc., to a. I. NttaMf. 1T® JcftersM *».. tetrosl Canadian iioTennn*i»t yf ;u1divv» Suiwrluleii^nl of 1mmIteration, OttHwn, FNIEE TO ALL SUFFERERS I II luu n<el "out of b->rta"--"run ^ - . ,»> blues "suffer troiu kidnef.bladder.nervous ' chronic weakness.1*, uioerii.*kiaorupuou£.|.'.5sM.&€.. ! wrUefor niy FKKK book. It 1. In most | medical book ever written It ;e.ls ailjtboIUI I dlsea.M-s and tbe remnrfcab!e«r»«effectedb» tb« French Remedy -THEHAI H..N No. 1. * o.S I and joa ran decide for yoo nselt it It 1*1 tie n-\a«Ay fur 1 y,..ir ailment. l»n t send a c.cu. U ai ao»oltK-- if 1KKK .No follow up circulars Dr.LeClc.* MrJ. 1 Co.. Ibu rti.Kk Ktl., H.»u:p*toJMt, *«*. INVESTING FOR PROFIT FREE Fnr «lx M onih*. It u aorthllOiivry toiny »•» htt«n<lin*f to Jnv«»t anr mouef^io»t«ver»[i>al! (DTWteii mun«>T unpromat.> or who oah or tuoflfc per montb but who hadn't til* Art sit !»*«*t'OJf for profit I t (teiuottatrmie# tb« resit e+rmux Off rnouev th* knowledtf* rtn»n."ens fci.ot' tbe rnASM>». It rt-vaa;* tlif enorniw# po'tit* b*r.kt}im makf an<'. ihow« how to mskc t:.e-»aiorroCts.lt tiow »tup*:idous fortune *r* hymatte:L •l 300 trrows to est t o tntnHluct * 11» meuaw. I'll e«ni1 It 9 i months tNrtluCelr H. L BAKKK. Ptb K.49e. W W.Jackma BM-. Citktt a.1* '4 $63 TO $200 A Mouth. l M>ru n tie" k<r.-'«oakw». Week*. \\ e j.iK-. V,,- '.hre« huutlrej before 'Ttfiajp INDIANA SCHOOL OF TRACTIONEERUtt* 10^ PINE LAKE AVE.. LA PORTE. I MO. ^ ^ JW" 11 1 igmaarasffig arcs W. N. U., CHICAGO, NO. 47-181*. PUTNAM FADELESS DYES MOW good» brighter «ad far.er colon iban MfrOtWr dye OIIE K>C i y t i a y f i w w M t r i p p h u i p w t . W J o g f r u Colo

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