Evening Republican, Volume 14, Number 152, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 27 June 1910 — Page 2 Advertisements Column 1 [ADVERTISEMENT]

MOTHERS WHO HAVE DAUGHTERS Find Help in Lydia E Pink* ham’s Vegetable Compound Hudson, Ohio.—“lf mothers realized the good your remedies would do delicate girls I believe there would bfr weak and ait- • • 1:1 iug women. Irregular and painful TB. periods and such 18 „—.— fßt troubles would b* lijßjf ♦ W : , relieved at once in IfeD +* flj|| many cases. Lydia jgjiia --y- f is! E. Pinkham’s VegeA :. *• table Compound i» fine for ailing girl* and run-dowu wo■TC * men - Their delicate wZfeWmm Mlorgans need a tonio the Compound. fives new ambition and life from th* rst dose.”—Mrs. George Strickler, Hudson, Ohio, R. No. 5, Box 32. Hundreds of such letters front, mothers expressing their gratitud* for what Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has accomplished for them have been received by the LydiaE. Pinkham Medicine Company, Lynn, Mass. Young Girls, Heed This. Girls who are troubled with painful or irregular periods, backache, headache, dragging-down sensations, fainting spells or indigestion, should takaimmediate action to ward off the serious consequences and be restored tohealth by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Thousands have beenrestored to health by its use. If you would like special adviceabout your case write a confidential letter to Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass. Her advice is free*, and always helpful. Seeing? Her Home. Hegan—l think Miss De Blank livery rude! Jones —What causes you to think that? I never thought her so. Hegan—l met. her out for a walk, this afternoon and asked if I might sea her home. She said yes, I could see it from the top of the high school building, and that It wasn’t necessary to go any farther.—United Presbyterian.

CASTOR IA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the /9r .VtfW Signature of LfLajt/X CostliVr Than Yachting;. 'More money is wasted every year by women buying needless things under the excitement of the bargain, hunt than is spent in all the gambling houses and racetracks put together, says Mary Heaton Vorse in Success. When you say that I have no statistics to prove this, I answer that I have common sense ana nave spent much time in city shops. I know, too, what I am capable of, and I am but a> half-hearted hunter. I know what my friends do. It isn’t for nothing that I have seen earnest* young student* of economics succumb to this hunting: instinct and fare forth to buy 98-cent undergarments. It is not only in the stores frequented by poor or uneducated women that I have seen the more brutal instincts of the human race come to the surface. I have seen a charming elderly woman in a high class storo snatch a dress length of gray voile from the hands of another elderly woman, and the reason I happened to see these sights was because I myself was at the sale looking at garments I didn’t want and didn’t nded, and buying them. The bargaifl chase, the shoppinggame passion &r sport, life-work or recreation —for it may be any one of these, according to the temperament of the woman—has American women well in its grip. Hardly one of us escapes some one of the psychological deviations from the normal which I have mentioned. Between two evils It’s better for a woman to marry a man who chews tobacco rather than one who Is alwaya chewing the rag.

A Happy Day • ' • Follows a breakfast that is pleasing and healthful. Post Toasties Are pleasing! and healthful, and bring! smiles of satisfa<s- - to the whole family. “The Memory Lingers** Popular Pkg. 10c Family slzs, 15c. Postum Cereal Co., Ltd. Battle Creek, Mich.