Evening Republican, Volume 14, Number 2, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 3 January 1910 — Page 2 Advertisements Column 2 [ADVERTISEMENT]
MORE PINKHAM CORES
Added to the Long List due to This Famous Remedy. Camden. N.J.— “It is with -Uleasur®. that I add my testimonial to your already long lißt hoping that it may induce others to avail themselves or this valuable mediV cine.LydiaE.Pinkham’s ve getabl ©. Compound. I suffeted from terrible. jPw headaches, pain in m Y hack and right. Bide, was tired and Itlip* * 'iffill nervous, and soweak Icould hardly '-'Vstand. Lydia E.. -- Pinkham’s Vegeta- - hie Compound re- , .j&f g tored me to health and made me feel like a new person, and it shall always have my praise. —Mrs. W. P. Valentine, 902 Lincoln. Avenue, Camden, N. J. Gardiner, Me. ferer from a female disease. The doctor said I would have to go to the hospital for an operation, but Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound completely cured me in three months.’*— Mrs. S. A. Williams, B» F. D.FTo. 14,. Box 39, Gardiner Me.
Because your case is a difficult one, doctors having done you no good, do not continue to suffer without giving Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound a trial It surely has cured, many cases of female ills, such as inflammation, ulceration, displacements, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic; pains, backache, that bearing-down feeling, indigestion, dizziness, and nerrvous prostration. It costs but a trifle to try it, and the result is worth millions to many suffering women. SPOHR’S VIOLIN POUND. ■ *i -m New Yorker Believe. He Hna Solved a Mystery of a C'cntnry. Louis Blumenberg of New York tells me he has found the famous Spohr violin in London, a London correspondent of the New York Herald says. The story of this renowned fiddle and Its loss is one of the romances of music. , . Louis Spohr, the greatest artist of bis day, was traveling through Germany in 1804, with a friend, Herr Eck. Spohr had his trunk, containing all his personal effects, with his beloved violin, carefully lashed to the back of the coach on the way to Gottingen. There were numerous highway robbers* in those districts in those days, and a. certain variety of “luggage lifter”* bearing some resemblance to the modern gentleman who operates so successfully at times on English and continental railways. When Spohr reached Gottingen he* found his trunk gone, and from that, day to this there has been no trace* of the famous violin. But good records have been kept of Its peculiar design and markings, and when it came* before Mr. Blumenberg’s eye he identified it. When full proof of the Instrument’s-, identity, which Mr. Blumenberg Is nowseeking in Germany, is secured. It. will be worth at least $15,000 to $20,000.
Left a Name Behind Him. Daniel—Hello, Jim! Who be yew a-digging that ’ole for? Jim—Old Lawyer Skinner—’e diedf yesterday. * t ' Daniel—Oh, what complaint? Jim—Not a word o’ complaint. Fam- . Ily rather pleased than otherwise.— Ally Sloper’s. Two Different Effects. "If you only knew how nervous I waswhen I proposed to you!” “And if you only knew how nervousI was until you proposed to me!”— Meggendorfer Blaetter. THE DOCTOR’S WIFE
Agrees with Hint About Food. A trained nurse says: “In the practice of my profession 1 have found sotnany points in favor of Grape-Nuts, food that I unhesitatingly recommend It to all my patients. “It Is delicate find pleasing to tha. palate (an essential in food for theslck) and can be adapted to all ages, being softened with milk or cream for babies or the aged when deficiency of teeth renders mastication Impossible. For fever patients or those on liquid diet I find ’Grape-Nuts and albumen water very nourishing and refreshing.’ "This recipe Is my own Idea and la made as follows: Soak a teaspoonful of Grape Nuts In a glass of water for an hour, strain and serve with the beaten white of an egg and a spoonful* of fruit Juice for flavouring. This affords a great deal of nourishment that even the weakest stomachs can assimilate without any distress. "My husband is a physician and he uses Grape-Nuts himself and ordera It many times for his patients. "Personally I regard a dish of Grapenuts with freah or stewed fruit oa the Ideal breakfast for anyone—well or sick." In any cmee of stomach trouble, nerv* ous prostration or brain fag—a 10day trial of Grape-Nuts will work wonders toward nourishing and rebuilding, sod In this way ending the trouble. “There’s a Reason.” and trial proves. Look Id pkgs. for the famous little book. “The Road to Wellrille." Ever read the above letter? A new one appear* from time to time. They ere genuine, true, and full of human interest.
