Evening Republican, Volume 16, Number 230, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 25 September 1912 — Page 3
THESE SIX LETTERS From New England Women Prove that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Does Restore the Health of Ailing Women. Boston, Mass —“I was passing' through the Change of Life and suffered from hemorrhages (sometimes lasting for weeks), and oonld get nothing to cheek them. I began taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound (tablet form) on Tuesday, ana the following Saturday morning the hem* orrhages stopped. I hare taken them regularly ever since and am steadily gaining. v'. v certainly think that every one who is troubled as I was should give jour Compound Tablets a faithful trial, and they will find relief.”—Mm. Geobsb Jubt, 803 Fifth Street, South Boston, Mass. Letter from Mrs. Julia King, Phoenix, R.L Phoenix, B.L—“I worked steady in the mill from the time I was 12 year* old until I had been married a year, and I think that caused my bad feelings. I had soreness in my aide near my left hip that went around to my back, and sometimes I would have to lie in bed for two or three days.- I was not able to do my housework. M Lydia R Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has helped me wonderfully in every way. Von may use my letter for the good of others. lam onlytoo Jlad to do anything within my power to recommend your medicine.’*—Mrs. dlu Eure, Box 282, Phoenix. 8.1. Letter from Mrs. Etta Donovan,Willi mantle, Conn. Willimantie, Conn.—” For five years I suffered untold agony from female troubles causing backache, irregularities, dizziness, and nervous prostration. It was impossible for me to walk up stairs without stopping on the way. I was all run down in every way; “ I tried three doctors and each told me something different. I received no benefit from any of them but seemed to suffer more. The last doctor said it was no use for me to take anything as nothing would restore me to health again. So I began taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound to see what it would do, and by taking seven bottles of the Compound and other treatment yon advised, I am restored to my natural health.**—Mrs. Etta Donovan, 782 Main Street, Willimantie, Conn. Letter from Mrs. Winfield Dana, Augusta, Me. Augusta, Me.—“ Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has cured th* backache, headache, and the bad pain I bad in my right side, and 1 am perfectly well.”—Mrs. Wibhxld Dana, B.P.D. No. 2, Augusta, Me. Letter from Mrs. J. A Thompson, Newport, V 4. Newport, Vt.—“ I thank you for the great benefit Lydia B. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has done me. I took eto’ht bottles and it did wonders for me, as I was a nervous wreck when I began taking it. I shall always Steak a good word for it to my friends. "—Mrs. Johk A. Thompson, Box 8, ewport Center, Vermont. Letter from Miss Grace Dodds, Bethlehetn, N.H. Bethlehem, N.H. —“ By working very hard, sweeping carpets, washing. Ironing, lifting heavy baskets of clothes, etc., I got all run down. I was sick in bed every month. “ This last Spring my mother got Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound for me, and already I feel like another girt. 1 lam regular and dp not have the pains that I did, and do not have to go to bed. 1 will tell all my friends what the Compound is doing for me.”—Miss Gbagde B. Dodds, Box 133, Bethlehem, N.H. For 80 years Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has been the standard remedy for fe- In nr male ills. No one sick with woman's ailments ((// g does justice to herself who will not try this fa- i/ bWwtf mous medicine, made from roots and herbs, it 11 yl 1 has restored so many suffering wdmen to health. II j/ II to LYDIA E. PINKHAM MEDICINE CO. fA n) (CONFIDENTIAL) LYNN, MASS., for advice. -Your letter will be opened; read and answered (?) Ks? 'ZdKPZtA Ha by a woman and held in strict confidence*
West No Place for Consumption.
Physicians in all of the eastern states will be asked by the National Association for the Stndy and Prevention pf Tuberculosis to stop sending consumptives in the last stages of tuberculosis and without sufficient funds to the southwestern part of the United States in search of health. While it is impossible to tell accu.-. rately how many consumptives there are at present living in the states of Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona, southern California, and western Texas, it is probable that no less than ten-per cent of the 6,000,000 people in this territory have tuberculosis themselves, or have come to the west be* cause some member of their family have had it. Every year, the health authorities estimate, not less than 10,000 consumptives, hopelessly diseased, come "west to die. For these eases, the climate of this section of the country can do nothing, and they are compelled to die in strange surVoundings and thousands of miles from home and friends. The National Association points out further that from 60 to 60 per cent of these advanced cases are too poor to provide the proper necessaries of life, and they are either starved to death, or compelled to accept the meager charity which this part of the country affords.
The Love in Fiction and Life.
▲ periodical devoted to the drama pleads for plays based on some emotion other than love. The difficulty in producing such plays is that every play must have a hero, and in making a hero the playwright, as well as his audience, almost inevitably adopts the view expressed 2,000 years ago by a scribbler of the dead walls of Pom- • peii: “He who has never loved a woman is not a gentleman.”
A Booklet for Investors.
The Harris Trust and Savinas Bank, Harris Trust Building. Chicago, baa issued a booklet entitled “Why Bonds Are Safe Investments,” Intended for the use of persons planning to invest in bonds for the first time. Its aim ia to explain in simple terms the purposes and uses of various classes of bonds, and to indicate, tbs value of bonds as safe investments for Individuals as wen as institutions. Copies may be had free on application.
Golfer's Grand Army Score.
A golfer playing his first game of the season reported downtown the next day that he had madC a Grand Army score —be went out in 61 and came back in 66. —Chicago Evening Post
Soda to Brighten China.
Bodh will brighten china that has been burned or darkened by long use. If you, would win life’s battle you must be a hard bitter and a poor quitter. It’s well enough to hope, but don’t loaf on*the Job while doing it
, : PPH for backache, RHEUMATISM KIDNEYS AND BLADDER ' ■LAj
HAPPY THOUGHT.
Fortune Teller—Yes, you will be very wealthy. With my inward eye I can. see heaps of money all around you/" Mr. Verywise—Well, suppose you take your fee out of it with your inward fingers.
California Woman's Good Shot
While walking through the woods near Cohasset, Mrs. W. H. Pillsbury of Chico shot a large brown bear that measured six feet from tip to tip. Mr. and Mrs. Pillsbury were walk* ing from their summer home near Cohasset to the “Promontory,” a high point from which an excellent view of the whole valley can be had. Mrs. Pillsbury had a 30-30 carbine. Suddenly she saw a large bear coming down the hill about forty yards away. “It's a bear, shall I shoot it?" she shouted to her husbands Pillsbury answered in the affirmative and his wife asked, “Where shall I shoot him?” “In the head,” came the answer. With deliberate aim the woman fired, bitting the animal square in the right eye, killing him instantly, and the weight of the carcass was estimated at 300 pounds.—-Chico Cor. San Francisco Chronicle. The czar of Russia has 103 vast palaces, employing a staff of 32,000 servants, with an annual payroll of Hr 000,000. . The palmist can read your future off-hand. CUkBS ITCHING SKIN DISBASBB. Cote’a CarboHaalve stops itching sad ustas tbs skin smooth. AH dmgtfsto. K sad 60c. Nothing keeps a man so busy ss the attempt to idle away his time. Xes. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Ohfldrss teething, softens the gams, redaees inflammation. allays pain, ewes wind aollo, He s bottle. . r— —; ; A baseball player may be sluggish without being a slugger.
PROPER USE OF CASSEROLE
Should Always First Be Tempered— Sudden Changes of Temperature to Be Avoided. Before using a casserole for the first time, It is well to temper It;'this is best done by covering It with cold water, then letting the water come to the boiling point, remove from the fire, and let the casserole remain in the water until it is cold. -Under no circumstances let tlje casserole be put on the stove without \> a ter or fat In it, says the Indianapolis News. If this is done the diah will crack. :-’w Avoid sudden changes of temperature with the casserole; that H, do not take it bom the hot stove or oven and place it f n cold water or in a wet sink; this W.ll'prove disastrous to the dish. Casserole cooking requires only moderate heat; if something is being cooked in the casserole at the same time that intense heat is required for something else, take the precaution of setting the casserole in a pan of water. If the cover of the casserolb does not set very closely, thus allowing steam to escape too freely, it is well to spread a strip of cloth wet with a flour and Water paste and preßS it over the joining of cover and casserole before setting the dish Jo the oven. When ready to serve, the strip is readily pulled off. In cooking anything in a casserole, it 1s well to allow twice the time for cooking that would be required were the stew or Vegetables or fruit cooked in the ordinary way.
TAKE UP ENGLISH DELICACY
Orange Marmalade Has Become Pop_ular Dish in America —How It Bhou!d Be Served. America has become addicted to the orange-marmalade habit. That which is bought, much of it shipped from over seas, is never quite so good as that which can be made at home. For every dozen thin-skinned oranges al-. low. three lemons, all the fruit, being washed and sliced as thin as Then cover it with water in the proportion of one and a half quarts of water to every quart of fruit, and allow It to stand over night. Next morning the mixture is cooked slowly for two hours, sometimes a little more. Sugar equal in amount to the cooked fruit is added and the cooking is resumed until the mixture Jellies from a spoon, which wIU be in from a half to a full hour. There should be no guesswork in adding the sugar. Measure the cooked fruit carefully to get at the amount of sugar to be used.
Chicken Baked with Salt Pork.
Clean the required number of young ohlckens. Cut them down through the backbone, open, and flatten breast with a cleaver. In a large covered roasting pan lay several slices of salt pork. Place the chickens on these, skin side up. Dredge with flour and lay several slices of very thin salt pork on top. Add two cups of boiling water and bake slowly two hours, basting frequently and dredging very lightly with flour after each basting. More broth may be added if necessary. There should be at least eight bastings. Place buttered toast on a platter, arrange chicken on it, garnish with parsley. Thicken gravy with flour, add one teaspoonful of butter and one cupful of ricti cream, salt and pepper to taste, and pour over chicken. .
Curry of Beef.
Cut up the meat in small pieces, add two very finely chopped peeled onions, one teaspoon of curry powder, one peeled and chopped apple, one-half teaspoon of sugar, a little lemon juice. Add one teaspoon of flour, one-half of a tumblerful of boiling milk and a banana and tomato if liked. Mix together. Place in the paper bag and 'then on broiler at once. Allow T 5 minutes in a hot oven. Rice to be boiled and served separately if desired.
Plum Salad.
For a plum salad pare and pit small plums and AH the cavity In each with chopped nuts, Bays the New Haven Journal-Courier. Arrange on serving dish in circles of sliced bananas and top each plum and each of the banana slices with a bit of whipped egg dressing. Serve immediately a garnish of crisp cress.
Maplewood ple.
Pare and grate some sweet, mellow apples, about A dozen;' to a pint of the grated pulp put a pint of milk, two egfcs, two tablespoonfula of melted butter, the grated peel of a lemon and half a wineglaSs of brandy; sweeten to your taste; to be baked in a deep plate, with only a lower crust
Chicken Fritters.
Cut pieces as large as possible from a cold, cooked chicken or turkey, season to taste, dip In fritter batter and fry a golden brown; serve with sauce tar tare. The chicken may be dipped in eggs and crumbs instead of batter.
Ginger Snaps.
The secret of good ginger snaps is to use boiling water when mixing, then cover the dqngh and let It stand for several hours before baking.—Home Department National Magazine.
Cottage Cheese Salad.
Add rich cream to the desired quantity of tottage cheese; place a spoonful On a lettuce leaf, and sprinkle over the top some finely cat onions.
ELECTRIC LIGHT IN DENMARK
Every Town In That Country of Over 6,000 Population Has Public Service. According to recent Information about the progress of electric light and power Industries in Denmark, it appears that all the towns of 6,000 Inhabitants and over are now provided with public electric service, says the Scientific American. As to towns having between 6,000 ants, there are only three In which electric mains are not installed, so that it will be seen that Denmark is one of the most progressive countries in this respect The largest sized electric stations are to be found at Copenhagen and at present there are three large plants in operation giving a total of 27,000 horse power. Current is supplied for the city mains, as well as for the tramway lines. As regards the Dafilßh stations in small towns, in general each town has its own plant, and there is but one example of an intercommunal system. This Is. at Skovshoved, near Copenhagen, and the central station extends its power lines over all the suburban regions, also supplying the tramways of Hellerup and Klampenburg. In most of the town electric stations the Diesel heavy oil engine is used.
ERUPTION LIKE PIMPLES
Wathena, Kan. —“My child’s scalp trouble became bo bad that I was ashamed to have anyone see him. His head had a solid scab on it. He also bad a terrible breaking out on his face which was gradually growing worse. The eruption was like pimples which developed Into sores when he scratched, which he did almost constantly Baby would almost scratch himself raw. ‘1 had used several different kinds of salve, none of them helping in the least bit, when I saw the Cutieura advertisement in the paper and it made me think of the good results my sister had when she used It for her children. I had only used Cutieura Soap and Ointment about two weeks before 1 noticed that the sores were almost entirely gone, and it must have been a month .or six weeks he was troubled before I began the treatment. He would get easy when I would put the Cutieura Ointment on him. Cutieura Soap and Ointment completely cured him and he has a clear complexion now.” (Signed) Mrs. W. H. Hughes, Dec. 31, 1911. Cutieura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world. Sample of each free, with 32-p. Skin Book. Address post-card “Cutieura, Dept. L, Boston."
Ancient Idea of Dancing.
Dancing was originally a means of expressing religious feeling.
Don’t Poison Baby. FORTY YEARS AGO almost every mother thought her most have PAREGORIC or laudanum to make it sleep. These drags will produce sleep, mid A PEW PROPS TOO MANY will produce the SLEEP PROM WHICH THERE IS NO WAKING. Many are the children who have been killed or whose health has been ruined for life by paregoric, laudanum and morphine, each of which is a narcotic product of opium* Druggists are prohibited from raffing either of the narcotics named to children at all, or to anybody without la-sassing them poison.” The definition of u narcotic” is; " A medicine which relieves pain and produces sleep, but which in poisonous doses produces stupor, coma, convulsions and death.” The taste and smell of mefliobion nmitainfag opium ara fli«grrigp.fl > and sold under the names of u Drops,” * Cordials,” u Soothing Syrups,” etc. You should not permit any medicine to be given to your children without you or your physioian know of what it is composed. OASTORIA DGES NOT CONTAIN NARCOTICS, if it hears the signature of Chas. H. • Fletcher.
jKJHffIIJ jJ j ill | -J nif&Mil • BtfiJlgflg P||Tl i flmfll- ""alcohol 3 PER cent!' Mifl Preparation fcrAsHgiga Hni Promotes Digestionffeeftt ■Mfj ness and RestContalns natter ®lt Opuni-MOTjAine norMtottaL p NOT Narcotic. j||u I s|xt«l Apefeet Remedy for Comfrs r -t 1 Hon, Sour Stoma*,Dtarri**a K 3s*» sSm ■»», n._ i_* r-_,l Eu worms t onvuisxjus.rewnse 1 ness and Loss or SHEF. Wm KEWYWxk. Exact Copy of Wrapper.
A VARIATION.
“Your husband frequently misses his dinner.” “Yea. Whenever there is a ball game in town he devotes himself to finding fault with the umpire instead of with the cook."
Adulation Pleased Rousseau.
Roußspau, whose bicentenary celebration occasioned & riot in Paris the other day, created a sensation when he visited England in 1766, “Rousseau and his Armenian dress,” wrote Lord Charlemont, “were followed by crowds when he first arrived in London. and as long as this species of admiration lasted he was contented and happy. Garrich not only gave a supper in his honor, but played two characters specially to please him Rousseau was highly gratified, but Mrs. Garrick declared that she had never spent a more unpleasant evening in her life, the philosopher being so anxious to display himself, and hanging over the front of the box so much, that she was obliged to hold him by the skirts of his coat to prevent him from falling over into the pit.” Instead of liquid antiseptics, tablets and peroxide, for toilet and medicinal uses, many people prefer *’ Paxtiqe, which Is cheaper and better. At druggists, 25c a box or sent postpaid on receipt of price by The Paxton Toilet Co., Boston. Mass.
Korean Arable Land.
It is estimated that the present area of arable land In Korea might be increased 20 to 30 per cent., but not more.
Cuba Market for Canada Stone.
Cuba imports most of its stone from Canada..
YOU CAN CURB CATARRH
By usinr Cola’s Carbolisalve. It U a moat effective remedy. All druggists. 25 and 60c. Some people boast in order to keep others from-doing so.
Letters from Prominent Physicians addressed to Chas. H. Fletcher. Dr. J. W. Dinsdale, of Chicago, EL, says: “I use your Castorla and advise Its use In all families where there are children.” Dr. Alexander E. Mlntle, of Cleveland, Ohio, says: *1 have frequently prescribed your Castorla and have found it a reliable p 1 ion edy for children.” Dr. Agnes V. Swetland, of Omaha, Nebr., says: "Your Oetoris is the best remedy in the world far children end the only cos I use sad recommend." ' - Dr. J. A. McClellan, of N. Y, says: *1 have frequently prescribed your Castorla for children and always got good results. Ia fact I nas Castorla for my own children. 1 * Dr. J. W. Allen, of St. Louis, Ho, says: "I heartily endorse your Ca» torts. I have frequency prescribed It in my medical gad. hart always found it to do all that is claimed far it” Dr. CL H. Glldden, of S».'Paul, Minn., says: “My experience as a pruv titloner with your Castorla has been highly satisfactory, and l om&km. 4 an excellent remedy for the young." Dr. H. D. Benner, of Philadelphia, Pa., says: “I have need year Castorla as a purgative in the ease# of children for years past with the mod lumpy effect, and fully endorse it as a safe remedy.” Dr. J. A. Boar man, of KaaaaeClt|r, Ho* says: “Your fltaftsla is a spleo* Old remedy for Children, known the world over. I use it In my practice and have no hesitancy in recommending it toe the at end children.” Dr. J. J. Mackey, of Brooklyn, N. Y* says: *1 your Castorin an excellent preparation for children, being composed of reliable end pleasant to the taste. ▲ good remedy foe all inahirtismnw at the digestive organs.” GENUINE CASTOR I A ALWAYS Be Kind Too fore Always Sought in Use For Over 30 Years.
WHAT WILL CURE MV BACH? Common sense will do more to cure backache than anything else. Twill tell yon whether the kidneys are sore, swollen and aching. It will tell yon in that case that them is no nse trying to cure it with a plaster. If the passages sure scant or too frequent, proof that there is kidney trouble is complete. Then common sense will tell you to nse Doan's Kidney Pills, the best recommended special kidney remedy. Ass Ohio Cm* Harris. J«f- /TS feraon. Ohio, CJf •ay a: "For roff«red“”om b«•an taklna DoanV Kidney Fills. Tboy CDMd me completely.” Get Doss's at say Dreg Store, 50c. a Box Doan’s “isar
Constipation Vanishes Forever Prompt Relief — Permanent Curs CARTER'S LITTLE Aa LIVER PILLS never fail. Purely vegeta- gbp ble act surely snTCrtr but gently on jSßmsSnm xr."lr!r the liver. V|tTL| Stop after JfjßMßr IjVER dinner dis- j PILLS, tress—cure . mN— — indigestion, 1 improve the complexioivfcrighten the eyes, SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PMOL Gamine must bear Signatu re
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