Plymouth Tribune, Volume 4, Number 26, Plymouth, Marshall County, 30 March 1905 — Page 7

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ii iiui' ivr f i 11 1 1 11 iiiiii i u i I rr i i ii m H l . 1 Mr. David L. Javcox. Chaplain $ Clarinda, I. O. G. T., tnd Chaplain G. A. It., SG5 Broadway, Oakland, Cal., writes: "lam an old war vetemn. I contracted severe bladder and kidney trouble. I spent hundreds of dollars and consulted i host of doctors, but neither did me any good. "Peruna .has proven the best medicine I ever used. My pains are gone and I believe myself to be cured. I feel well and would not be without a bottle in time of need for ten times its cost." Hundreds of war veterans have kidney and bladder trouble. Impure dnnntng water, sleeping on the ground, and all manner of expo sores to wet and cold weather produced catarrh of the kidneys and bladder. S

D. L. JAYCOX. HALF OUR ILLS ARE CATARRH. gf VP Thousands of People Have Kidney Trouble c, )r I life and Don't Know It Is Catarrh. ä if jf f llp

The Secret o! (Scofl Cofiee Even the best housekeepers cannot make a good cup of coffee -without good material. Dirty, adulterated and queerly bleuded coffee such as unscrupulous dealers shovel oyer their counters won't do. But take the pure, clean, natural flavored LION COFFEE, the leader o! all package colfees the coffee that for ever a quarter of a century has been daily welcomed in millions of homes and you "will make a drink fit for a king in this way :

HOW TO MAKE GOOD COFFEE. Use LION COFFEE, beeanse to jret best results yon must nie the best coffee. Grind yonr LION COFFEE rather fine. Use a tablespoonful to each cup, and one extra for the pot." First mix it with a little cold water, enonch to make a thick paste, and add whlta of an egg (if egg is to be used as a settler), then follow one of the following roles : 1st. WITH BOILING WATER. Add boiling wafer, and It It boll THREE MINUTES ONLY. Add a little cold water and set aside live

minutes to settle. Serve promptly. 24, WITH COLD WATIR. Add bring St to a boll. Then at . miaute It's ready to serve. side, add (Don't boll It too long.

1 Don't let It stand mora than ten minutes before servlnar.

DONTS luorvt use water mat nas Deen oouea Deiore. TWO WAYS TO SETTLE COFFEE. 1ft, W! Eggt. Use part of the white of an egg, mixing It with the ground LION COFFEE before boltfn?. 2d. With CsU Water Instead of e&p. After boCinj add a dash of cold water, and Be? aside for eight or ten minute, than serve through a strainer.

Insist on getting a package ol genuine LION COFFEE, Erepare It according to this recipe and you will only use ION COFFEE In future. (Bold only in 1 lb. sealed packages.) (Lion-head on every package.) (Save these Lion-heads for valuable premiums.) SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE WOOLSON SPICE CO., Toledo, Ohio.

Low Rates to the Pacific Coast WABASH R. R.

CDEGINNING SMarch 1st and continuing on sale daily untü SWay 15th the WABASH R R w& sell single trip tickets at Greatly Reduced 'Rates to points in (Arizona., &evda, California, Oregon, Montana, Utah, Washington and 'British Colombia. r:s Write nearest Wabash cAgent or address C. J. CRJiNE, General Passenger Agent, St. Louis, Mo.

Sale Ten Million

THE FACILT3 FAVORITE BECICIXZ

CANDY CATHARTIC

13c 25c 50c

BEST FOR THE BOWELS

Let us do your Printing using Linen for your office stationery. You can get the paper and envelopes to match. It U thm rmal thing. Takm no other. 10,000 PfcafofcrlO: V, Kor gurdens and farms are planted to Balatra Berus man any (aar i America- Thara 1 raaaon for this. Wa Awn r.vmr ä 000 acre, for the uro auction of oar wsmiiMMai la order to lnduea you to try taam, make y oa ina louowus ri For lO ilatstm Pcztpztt IftOO Early, ! aaa LaSS Ca ( iOOO Ftaa i.lrj T.rmipa, V ta Biaaaalag Calary. V too Rh laitfUttaaa, loo Splai4 Oalaaa, JOOO Kara Immtimm. RaAJhaa, I Abot savea packs' eootala saS. i etant soad to (tow 10 000 plan'-, la J Biaalna; tabela ar fcrllll l.wrn and lota asU lotto i ':baioa - ragatables, toath r wl. J oar rreal rataJogr , tall In all about riowars, & email Fruita, ate.. aJl fop l4o tn tampa auasl aia oaucat iAg u-pca eaiaios auova, ao CTID l(J gyp. taiCro.

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GEVERE KIDNEY AND BLADDER TROUBLE

They hare d o o t red with every c o nceivabla drus, hare c o n s u lted all schools of medicine. It was not until Peruna came into use, however, that these old soldiers ' i found a remedy that would actually enre thrm More cases of catarrh of kidneys and bladder have been cured by Peruna than alt other medicines com bined. Address Dr. S. B. Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium. Columbus, Ohio, and he will be pleased to give you the beneßt of his medical advice gratis. All correspondence held Btrictly confidential. cold water to the paste and little cold water and In live Boxes a Year. TO THE FREE GRÜNT LANDS Of Western GnnnDn Darias tha moaths of March aot April, than rill b ZLxoursJons on tha various lina of railway to the Cna4ian Waat. Enadrads of thooaanda of tha boat ! Wheat and Orasing lands on tha Cootlaaat fraa to the apttlar. Adjoin Lnc lands may ba porchaaed from railway ! and land com paaiaa at raanonabla orieaa. aa 0 roata.eto, . Apply for information to Superintendent of ImsalsTS I t'on, Ottawa. Canada, or to W. H. Jtogara, Sd Floor. Trsction-Xarminal Building, Indianapolis. Ind., and H. M. Williama, Koons 20. Law Boildin. ToUdo, Ohio, Anthorlsad OoTornmant Aaanta. flaaae say whare you saw this sdrertlsomeat. RUBBER STAMPS. AI! kind of Rubber Stamps Mad tt Order. SelMoklaf Dterswmethraz new. Ink and Inklof; Pads. Send for Catalozn to Lock Bos 219. Port VVaja. Ind. Pi'r llfTT V Pr-r and shabby when 70a can U,n 1 lay C8 TCr male from 50 to fcft) Tr month, (iood, clean, honorable business. Plan explaining fall only f2.00. Japaneso Puzzle and 'atalo?ue only 10c. The Perry Brown Ca, West feomerrilie. llass. C n m Pslr llcksl PUtss Scissors, 8 papers needles and uuu handsome catalogue postpaid 20c, Great Eastern Ca, 232 Martens, Brooklyn. N. Y. T 1 ail ti . ( fta Eirl Cöoia fcrrup. laste ÖooO. I t V titi". Eo!l tfrr 3

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ComparatiTely few imported tardines are sold in this country nowadays, yet not one consumer in a thousand knows the difference between the imitation and the genuine, so nearly does the fish sold for a sardine resemble the real ßardine in appearance and taste. Nine-tenths of the "sardines" come from Maine. In Eastport alone there are over two dozen places where the mock sardiaa is prepared and boxed. The New York Sun gives an account of the industry. The business was begun Ions ago by a couple of sharp and far-seeing New Yorkers, who began to pack small herhlng In little wooden kegs and place them on the market under the name of "Russian herring." The venture wai most successful, but-the men got the Idea there was more money still In modeling the herring after the French sardine. A similar experiment had been tried not long before, but it had turned out to be a failure. It had been easy to pack the Maine herring in olive oil and to encase It In boxes which Imitated the French production, but the taste of the herring remained unmistakable, and the scheme failed.- The New Yorkers, however, after a few trials, hit on a mixture or blend of spices and oils for a packing sauce, which made a "sardine" of a herring and caused ,to spring up a gigantic industry. "Sar dines" are made not only from common herring, but from young sea trout The way the fish are handled at the factory Is a sight worth going to Maine to see. When they have been piled in heaps on long tables the cleaning be-, gins. The rapidity of the work Is wonderful. A 7-year-old girl can behead and clean seventy-five herrings every minute for ten minutes without & miss or a halt New York is the great wholesale center for these Yankee "sardines." One Maine factory alone and there are others doing as large a trade has made and sold as many as two million boxes of "sardines" in a year. "What the Dentist Says. Toledo, Ohio, March 27th. (Special.) Ilarry T. Lewis, the well known dentist of 607 Sumit street this city, is telling of his remarkable cure of Kidney Disease by using Dodd's Kidney Pills. "I was flat on my back and must say I had almost given up all hope of ever getting any help," says Dr. Lewis. "My kidneys had troubled me for years. The pains in my back were severe and I had to get up several times at night I tried different medicines but kept on getting worse tili I was laid up. "Then a friend advised me to try Dodd's Kidney Pills and in about two weeks I started to improve. Now I am glad to admit I am cured and I cannot praise Dodd's Kidney Pills too highly." If you take Dodd's Kidney Pills when your kidneys first shew signs of being out of order you will never have Bright's Disease, Diabetes, Dropsy, Gravel or Rheumatism. A 480-ACRE FARM YIELDS 25 PER CENT PROFIT IN A YEAR. What a Mercer County (Ohio) Farmer Kecelred from One Year's Crop. Extracts from an interesting letter from P. II. Rynhard, of Starbuck, Manitoba, Canada, gives an excellent idea of the prosperity of those who have gone from the United States to Canada. He says: "I bought August 1903, 4S0 acres of land, paying $12,000 for it We threshed 2,973 bushels of wheat and between 1,200 and 1.G00 bushels of oats and barley from 200 acres. But part of the wheat went down before filling end was not harvested except for hay. The crop was worth at threshing time $3,000. Besides 120 acres laying idle except a timothy meadow which is not Included in this estimate. Counting the value of the product and the increase of value of land w;Jl pay me more than 25 per cent on the investment Two brothers ifi the sime neighborhood bought 1G0 acres each six years ago. They have not done a single thing to this land except to fence it and break and cultivate about onehalf of it Harvested last year 23 bushels wheat per acre. This year 27 bushels pr acre. They can get any day $25 per acre. These are only a few of many hundreds of such chances. It looks like boasting, but truth is Justifiable and the world ought to know It especially the home-seeker. I know of quite a few farmers thai have made fortunes la from 10 to 20 years, retired with from $20,000 to $100,000. .Writing concerning another district In the Canadian West S. L. Short says: "Dear Sir I have to inform you that I have Just returned from th Carrot river country in Saskatchewan, where I located land of the very finest black vegetable loam, which I am proud of, and will move in the spring. Farmers are still plowing there. A mild climate and beautiful country to behold. Cattle are fat and running outside. Wood and water good. Saw oats "weighing 42 pounds to bushel. Potatoes large and well ripened; also wheat that brought there 82 cents. The country exceeded my expectations. Saw oats in stook, thicker on the ground than appears in many of the illustrations sent out in descriptive pamphlets. I have been in many Western States, but the soil excels any I ever saw." The Canadian Government Agents at different points report that the Inquiries for literature and railroad rates, etc., to Western Caxada are the greatest in the history of their work. Japan la not devoting h r whole attention to war. An electrical plant has been shipped from England for Tokio, to work sixty miles of electric street railway, with sixty cars, in that city. A GUARANTEED CUBE FOB FIXES. Itching-. Blind. Bleedln or Protrudlnr Piles. Your drusrsrist win refund money il PAZO OINT. iXENT fails to euro yon in fi to 14 days. Ida . He Is a wls9 man who wastes no energy on pursuits for which he Is not fitted. Gladstone. For ftomethln? good, try Mrs. Austin's famous Pancake Floor, ready In a Jiffy. Your grocer has It on hand. ; aWaw-waaaaaaBaaBBBaBBaaBBaaBaaaBBBBBBaaaBaBaaawaaBBBaaasM, B The first atp to knowledge a to know: that we are ixnorant Cecil

IIOOSIEE HAPPENINGS

NEWS OF THE WEEK CONCISELY CONDENSED. What Onr Nelßhbors Are Doine Matters of General and Local Interest Marriages and Deaths Accidents and Crimes Personal Pointers Abont Indianians. Brief State Items. A. Liebert-of Geneva, an old oil pumper, was Killed dv tne explosion oi an enine. Thieves plundered the Jewish Temple at South Bend, of fifteen robes valued at $100 each and other articles. William Barlow, 26 j ears old, was fatally hurt while cutting timber on the Broderick farm near Anderson. A limb of the tree fell on hina, crashin: his skull. Benton Lafuze, 29, son of Ezra Lafuze, a wealthy farmer living near Liberty, killed himself with a revolver shot through the heart. It is said that he had been disap pointed in love. While Wesley Sags of Angola, was en route homeward from Arkansas, his pock ets were picked of $1,600, of which $1,850 was in certificates of deposits, on which he has stopped payment. A tank in the plant of the Lippencott Glass Company at Alexandria, burst letting out a llood of molten glass. Slight damage was done, but 800 chimney men will be out of work for several weeks. The shock incident to the conviction of his son for assault and battery with intent to murder was probably the immediate cause of the death of Joseph L. Modlin, aged 62, of Richmond. He died of heart disease. Fire destroyed the farm home of F. N. Brooks, near Newcastle, not even household goods being saved. Neighbors rallied on call of telephone and saved surrounding buildings. Loss $1,000, with no insurance. The northbound midnight mail pouch from Bedford was found in the north part of the city cut to pieces and a part of the contents gone. The sack is said to have contained a large number of drafts, one cal'.g for $40,000. Dr. Horace Wardner, a well-known phy sician, is dead at Laporte, from blood poisoning, due, it is said, to running a sliver under his thumb nail fourteen years ago. During the Civil War he was Assistant Medical Director under Gen. Grant. Great alarm is reported at Monroe, Adams County, because of threats of incendlries to burn the town, conveyed by anonymous letters. Eight fires have occurred in two days. The buildings burned include three residences and a blacksmith shop. While Prof. Fritz W. Dapprich, instruc tor of German, Purdue University, at Lafayette, was testing a cranky eanoe on the Wabash river, he was overturned by the swift current and narrowly escaped drowning. He reached the shore with dif ficulty. A strong box supposed to contain $350 cash and $6,000 in notes, alleged to have been stolen from the lato John Huber of Mt. Vernon, by his son John, and his nephew, Edward Oeth, was recovered in a bank at Evansville, where the two men had deposited it. Replevin proceedings were necessary. John W. Davidson, 56, of Washington, committed suicide in a horrible man ner. He had been ill for five weeks and decided to hasten death by tying a hand kerchief about his neck and then placing a cane in the noose he turned the cane over and over, tightening the handkerchief and choking himself. Merle Casey, a negro girl, 10 years old, fell down the elevator shaft of the Glass block at Marion, from the third floor to the basement, alighting on her head on the concrete floor. The skull was not fractured and no bones were broken. She was able to stand and talk a few minutes after the accident. The Southern Indiana is undertaking quite an engineering feat fifteen miles northwest of Clinton. . A bridge will be built over Jenkins ford, 118 feet above the water, and 1,680 feet long. It is to be double-tracked. 200 men have begun work on the bridge, which is to be com pleted in three moDths. While oiling machinery in the B. L. Pease sash and door factory at Jefferson ville, Harry Watson, 18 years old, be came entang'e I in a belt and his body was hurled over the shafting and against the ceiling at the rate of 240 revolutions a min ute. Almost every bone in his body was broken. He died two hours later. John Bowers of Evansville, water-works ditcn dieser, may lose nis lire, owing to a dream he had while on the road to recovery. He thought a friend had struck him, and his pains were so vivid, while his struggle in his sleep so active, that he ag gravated his injuries, and physicians now say that death may result from this pecu liar psychological condition. The entire residence portion of the village of Alvi was imperiled by the burning of the barns of J. . Useler and Cora Straughn. The village is without fire protection save a bucket brigade, and the hard work of this brigade alone saved the place The barns which were valued at $1,000 each. were insured. It is believed that they were set on fire by a tramp who took offense at the treatment he received from some of the villagers. At the risk of her own 'ife Mrs. Michael Loewenstein of 3Iuncie, wife of a local clothier, stopped a runaway horse that was dragging Dilvert Smith, a boy of 13, over rough ground at a rapid rate, and rescued the boy, who had become entangled in the lines and seemed on the point of being killed. Mrs. Loewenstein then carried the injured lad into her own home nearby and restored him to consciousness. The boy's injuries are not serious. , Elmer nuddleston, the 12-year-old son of Charles Huddleston of Brookvifle, was drowned. He was crossing a plank ut the old salt-mill with a basket on his arm, when the basket caught on the lever that throws the gate and he was thrown into the stream. The boy slippei into the whirl pool and was soon out of sight. The father of the boy was notified at once of tta accident, and, rushing to where his boy fel h jumped into the water and was with diffl culty saved from drowning. The body of the boy was found a quarter of a mile from where it fell, after being in the water thiee hours. Thomas B. Leach and son, south of Mis awaka, felled a huge tree and found in the hollow trunk five raccoons, two old ones and three cubs. The old fellows weigh ower seventeen pounds each, and are the largest ever seen there. That species of animal has become almost extinct in this country. As Peter Cruse und a companion named Fleming, were crossing the Indianapolis and Northwestern interurban tracks In a buggy, a northbound car struck the buggy, hurlinc both men out. Cruse was struck by the car and so badly injured that he wir die. Fleming was only slightly scratched. Cruse Is 45 years ld and lives a few miles south of Z ions ville.

r" r " Culinary Madness. Baked beans have always been a mystery to those not born in the happy

regions where they are a weekly oc currence. One English housekeeper, who tried to provide them for her American guests, triumphantly served them hard and partially raw. Another burned them to a crisp in a quick oven. Only the true New Englander knows the spell by which they are conjured forth, after long baking, brown and mealy. Lippineott's Magazine reports this conversation as having taken place between two Southerners, one of whom had recently returned from a trip through the Northern States. Said he to his friend: "You know those little white round beans?" "Yes. The kind we feed to our horses?" "The very same. Well, do you know, 6ir, that in Boston the enlightened cit izens take those little white round beans, boil them for three or four hours, mix them with molasses and I know not what other ingredients, bake them, and then what do you suppose they do with the beans?" "They " "They eat them, sir!" interrupted the first Southerner, impressively. "Bless me, sir, they eat 'em!" Effects of Prosperity. In the six years of the country's greatest prosperity, from 1897 to 1903, average prices of breadstuffs advanced 65 per cent, meats 23.1 per cent dairy and garden products 50.1 per cent and clothing 24.1. 'All these were products of the farmer and stockman who routed more than any other class of the community by these advances. The miner benefited 42.1 per cent by that advance in the average price of metals. The only decrease in the average prices of commodities In that pe riod was In railway freights, which decreased from .70S per ton-mile in 1S97 to .763 in 1903, a los3 of 4.4 per cent The report of the Interstate Commerce Commission shows that the average increase In the pay of railroad employes in that period was a trifle above 8.5 per cent Greatest Things Are the Simplest. The trouble with us is that we look too high and too far away for our chances. We forget that the greatest things are the simplest In hunting for roses, we trample the daisies under our feet We are blind to the chances and blessings near us because we are looking so far away for them. Everything depends upon the power of the mind to see opportunities. It is the eye that can see the chance, the pluck and determination to Lay hold of it and wring from it every possibility that we Lack, rather than the chance "to make good." Success Magazine. No Quarter. The evils which always follow after indigestion, biliousness or constipation will give no quarter. Better fight them to a finish with Dr. Caldwell's (laxative) Syrup Pepsin, It is a weapon against these dangerous diseases, which will give you quick relief and permanent cure. Sold by all druggists at 50c and $1.00. Money back if it fails. Served Ilim Right. "You idiot!" exclaimed Ike the Ital ian, "you stuck the lather brush in my mouth." "A wise man," calmly rejoined John, the jay barber, "would have kept his mouth shut and let me do all the talk ing."

What is Castoria. (OAST0EIA is a harmless sabstitnte for Castor OlL, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups, It is pleasant. It contains neither Opinm, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. The children's Panacea The Mother's Friend. The Kind Ton Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over 30 years, has borne the signature of Ohas. E Fletcher, mi has been made under his personal supervision since its infancy. Allow no one to deceive you in tins. All Counterfeits, Imitations and " J ust-as-good n are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children Experience against Experiment.

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n.iM1,fiTn.i,;i,tliii,,.-,,i...v,,-v.vfrfi JiVegc tabic Prcparationfor As - slmilaling CcTooddndRcguiating tte StoEariis and Bcreels of Promotes DcsBortXijerfulntss andPaCilor.t2i.ts nrir Not Naix c o tic . aaisffs f.!J AperfnzfRsdy for CöRStbaticx Sosr S tor2hj)irrtdzx VTcrcs jCorrvulsioas Jever ishnccs end Loss O? CLZZP. TacSlnuJe SrJnsSsrs ,ef NEW "YOI2K. 0( EXACT COPY CT VRAKPEB.

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This Statement Has Been Unjustly Made, Because Modest Women Evade Questions Asked By Male Physicians.

An eminent physician Bays that "Women are not truthful; they will lie to their physician." This statement Bhould be qualified; women do tell the truth, but not the whole truth, to a male physician, but this is only in regard to those painful and troublesome disorders peculiar to their sex. There can be no more terrible ordeal to a delicate, sensitive, refine 1 woman than to be obliged to answer certain questions when those questions are asked, even by her family physician. This is especially the case with unmarried women. Is it any wonder, then, that women continue to suffer and that doctors fail to cure female diseases when they cannot get the proper information to work on ? This is the reason why thousands and thousands of women are now corresponding with Mrs. Pinkham, To her they can and do give every symptom, bo that she really knows more about the true condition of her patients, through her correspondence with them than the physician who personally questions them. If yon suffer from any form of trouble peculiar to women, write at once to Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass., and she will advise you free of charge. The fact that this great boon, which is extended freely to women by Mrs. Pinkham, is appreciated, the thousands of letters received by her prove. Many such grateful letters as the fol lowing are constantly pouring in.

Ask I2rs. Pinkham's Advice A Woman Best Understands A Wcnan's His.

SOUTHERN CONDITIONS AND POSSIBILITIES. In no part of the United States has there been such wonderful Commercial, Industrial and Agricultural developmenc as along the lines of the Illinois Central and the Yazoo & Mississippi Valley Railroads in the States of Tennessee, Mississippi and Louisiana, within the past ten years. Cities and towns bare doubled their population. Splendid business blocks have been erected. Farm lands have more than doubled In value. Hundreds of industries hare been established and as a result there Is an unprecedented demand for DAY LABORERS, SKILLED WORKMEN AND ESPECIALLY FARM TENANTS. Parties with small capital, seeking an opportunity to purchase a farm home; farmers who would prefer to rent for a couple of fears before purchasing, and day laborers la fields or factories should address a postal card to Mr. J. F. Merry, As6t. General Passenger Agent, Dubuque, Iowa, who will promptly mall printed matter concerning the territory above described, and give specific replies to all inquiries.

Letters from Prominent Physicians addressed to Chas. H. Fletcher. .... FGr.alfi Blattaer. of Buffalo, N. Y- says: Tour Castoria Is rood fot children sad I frequently preset Cm it, always obtaining the desired results." Dr. Gustave A. Elaenraebei; of SL PauL MLml, says: "I lurrs used your Castoria repeatedly in mV practice with good results, and cn reessnaend it as aa excellent, mild and harmless remedy for children."

Dr. B. J. Dennis, of St Louis, lfo, says: "I have vsed &n4 prescribed 70s? oria In my sanltarlasa and eartsaate ocactlce for a naxmber yeas aad Ami it C

iJaMoria in my sanitarian and eaxtsada ysmct

im au uccireut remeoy i or can ur en. Dr. B. A. Buchanan, of Philadelphia. Pa,say: X have used yoar Castoria ta the ease of say own tony and find It plfnt to take, ad hare whtaJmed ncerfUnt results from Its ose" Dr. J. E. Simpson, of Chi cam, UL, says : "I have used your Castoria La esses of ceile In children and hart found it ttts best nte&cliis of its kind on the mar tea,-

Dr. R. E. Eskfidetm. of Omaha. standard family remedy. It Is ths best

known and X recommend it. Dr. L. IL Robinson, of Kansas City, Mo., says : Tour Castoria certainly has merit. Is sot Its act, its eon tinned tse by soothers throurh aH these years, sad ths many attempts t imitate it. sufJcteat recommendation I What caa a physician addt Leave It to tbft motbsca." Dr. Albert J. Westm, of Cleveland, O- says : "I hare need yoar Castoria ta ssy practice for the past shtcen years wich ths utmost success." Dr. Edwin F. Pardee, of New York City, says: "For savers! years I hsas recommended roar Castoria and shall always eeatlnne to do so, as it las invariably produced beneficial results." r Dr. N. B. Sixer, of Brooklyn, N. T-. says : "I object to äst are csJUd .paten medicines, where maker alone knows hat inrredients are pes ta taam, but I knots ths formula of your Castoria sad advise Us ase." GENUINE CASTORIA AL7AY0;

Bears tho

The Kind You Have iluays Bought In Uco For Cvci D Yccro. XKX CENTAUR COMPANY, TT trsaST ST, MOTtC3m.

TRÜTHF

Mrs.EUa Lee, Frankford, Ind.,write Dear Mrs. Pinkham: " I want to thank you for what your medicine has done for me. " Three years ago I had Inflammation of ths ovaries and ulcers on my womb. I was under1 the doctor's care for about three months, and the only time I was not in pain was when undar the influence of morphine. The doctor finally said I never would be better, and would be an invalid the res: of my life. I had given up In despair, but one evening I camo across one of your advertisements and decided to write you for advice. I did so and commenced to take Lydia E. Pinkham 's Vege table Compound. Ibegan to improve at once, and to-day I am a well woman, and I know it is all due to your advice and medicine. Mrs. J. H. Farmer of 2809 Elliott Avenue, St. Louis, Mo., writes: Dear Mrs. Pinkham: " I cannot thank you enough for what your advice and medicines have done for me.. They have done me more good than all ths doctors I ever had. " For the last eight years I have suffered with female troubles; was very weak; had nervous prostration, and could not do mv work; but I am happy to say Lydia E. Pink-' ham's Vegetable Compound has made s different woman of me. I am in TrfeeW health and have gained in weight from 9d pounds to 123 pounds." No other medicine in the world has! received such widespread and unquali-1 fied endorsement No other medicine has such a record for actual cures of1 female ills as has Lydia E. Pinkham' 1 Vegetable Compound. Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women to write her for advice. She has guided thousands to health. Address, juynn, aiass. vnun nufii PintiiTllDC luun uiin oiuiiHiunc cushion Rubber Stamp for signing Letters, Vouchers, etc. at the low price of tl-25. Send for particulars. Lock Box 219. Fort Wayne, Indiana WORTH A THOUSAND TIMES ITS COST. THIS 1 NO OKDINAKT OFFER Sand 10 eanUUday, beforayou folgst it; we will mail you, postpaid, tbs hudaoraett and mot valuable booklet ever puhliakiad. Its paces shin like diamond, and it may light yoar path rtetice. T cannot afford to bo without one; aaonay refunded if not aar. fectiy satisfactory. Standard Trading Co., 19 W. list, Ksw York F. V. N. TJ. - - - No. 131905 When writing to Advertisers please say yo saw the Advertisement la this ppr. Do you want a Self Inking Dating Staat for 13 cents? Address. Lock Box 219, Pert Wayne. Indiana. says: "I find yonr Castoria to be for Infants aaa cnucrsa I dato ever Signature of