Rensselaer Journal, Volume 10, Number 46, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 25 April 1901 — Page 7
A Romarhable Record.
The mother of Got. Bekham of Kentucky has a remarkable record. She has the unprecedented distinction of having been the mother of a governor, the daughter of a governor, the sister of a governor and the cousin of a governor.
Do Your Feet Ache and Bara?
Bhake into your shoes, Allen’s FootEase, a powder for the feet. It makes tight or New Shoes feel Easy. Cures Corns, Bunions, Swollen, * Hot and Sweating Feet. At all Druggists and Shoe Stores, 25c. Sample sent FREE. Address Allen S. Olmsted, Leßoy, N.Y.
Corn Indigenous to Peru.
The earliest specimens of Indian corn grew, it is believed by botanists, on the plateau of Peru, where this plant has been found growing in a condition which indicates that it is indigenous to the soil.
Should Be In Every Household.
A jar of RUBEFACIENT should be kept In •very bouse. It Is the most wonderful specific in all cases of Internal Inflammation and will speedily nip In the bud any case of Pneumonia, Diphtheria, La Grippe, etc. Write to the Rubefacient Co., Newton Upper Falls, Mass., for free booklet.
Austro-Hungarlan Census Figures.
The Austro-Hungarian censtis just completed shows the total population to be 47,000,000, an increase since 1890 of 9 per cent. The population of BudaPesth has increased 45 per cent.
Coughing Leads to Consumption.
Kemp’s Balsam will stop the cough at once. Go to your druggist today and get a sample bottle free. Sold in 26 and 50 cent .bottles. Go at once; delays are dangerous. Every now and then a man’s mind is stretched by a new idea ot sensation, and never shrinks back to its former dimensions. Simplicity, strength and purity combined in Garfield Tea, the herb medicine that cures constipation and liver troubles. The French are not supposed to be yet the Touring Club of France has;'80,000 members.
Makes Washing Easy.
Maple City Self Washing Soap saves time, saves work and saves your clothes. Just try It once. The bore who is looking for nobody in particular should look in the mirror.
•••••••••••••••••••••••••a • • : Sudden and Severe : • • 0 attacks of • • i Neuralgia i i ; 41% i • but however 9 " •>' / Ml bad the case • i JImI) St. ' • : /XT Jacobs : IMm oh _ j • 'vfi' ' penetrates • • Wll I promptly * • \l> ; i and deeply, • • A 1 p. I L soothes and • • Mill ' Jf.l strengthens * • J iVW i/a/A the nerves • • \ * alK * brings • • a sure cure. \ • « fLUnmtwtMt GO hand in hand G & J Detachable Pouble Tube Tirei 4re hlgh-(! r »de and w-ll made. They are light, easy riding and easily repaired no tools required. When a puncUirc occurs just remove the outer cover, patch the inner tube, and away you go. The best is always the cheapest —it pays to buy G& J Tires first and avoid the necessity of a change. Catalogue for the asking. G & J TIRE COMPANY, Indianapolis, Ind. SOZODONT Tooth Powder 25c
If Your Stomach makes life miserable, Its your own fault. Dr. Greene, the discoverer of Dr. Greene’s Nervura, will tell you why this is so, and Just exactly how to cure the whole trouble. This information and advice will cost you nothing. Write to Dr. Greene, 35 West 14th St., New York City. liiiifW I f* A- A F U O B F We will frive the above award to an v person -who r~~~77rT~; 7 —— .'will correctly arrange the above letters to spell the A) • T v h „ ree Important American Cities. What are they? Each line represents < fnll person to secure at least a portion, if. not the A) amount. For should there be more than one set of correct answers, the money < no" or A n ? tance ’ should five persons send in correct answers, #) rm : *7o^ ld *t n I>®r s . ons 'send in correct ans ers, each will receive [• THIS CONTEST IS FREE. As soon as yon l,a ■ wha" o"”ap^e UrnWh K reC i nam ° 8 ’ ? i en< Vi hem , A Postal card wnll do, and you will hear _< byj-eturnmail. Ihose who have tried other con tests and failed to secure •nytnlnif, try this one. All can secure an award if they wish to try, without any ex- j\ pense whatever. a] NOME SUPPLY CO., Dept.W, DETROIT,
SEEN AT NIAGARA.
View of the Great Exposition Tower at a Distance or Twenty Miles. The first view passengers coming from the west over the Michigan Central get of the wonderful electric tower of the Pan-American exposition grounds is at Falls View station, on the Canadian side at Niagara Falls. Looking up and across the river from this station, the electric tower is seen with the naked eye. The distance is about twenty miles. This early glimpse of the greatest of the exposition structures is doubly expressive of the fact that the exposition and Niagara have joined hands and forces to entertain as the public has neve? entertained before. Standing on the platform of a Michigan Central train at Falls View and looking first down at the falls and gorge, and then far away at the distant electric tower, it is hard to conceive that electric power generated by water power of the falls give life to the lamps on the very apex of the tower. But such is the fact
How's This!
We offer One Hundred Dollars reward lor any ease ol Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years and believe him perfectly honorable In all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by their firm. West & Truax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O.; Walding, Kinnan & Marvin, Wholesale Druggists. Toledo, Ohio. Hall s Catarrh Cure Is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price 75c per bottle. Sold by all druggista Hall’s Family Pills are the best.
Distribution of Light.
When one considers the general plan for the proposed illumination of the grounds of the Pan-American exposition, it is easily seen that the secret of the great success that is to be attained in the illumination is to be found in the evenness of the distribution of light and decorative effect, by dividing the individual lights into as many units as -possible and still keeping the' points of light proportionate in size to the objects to be decorated with light.
Are You Interested In the Northwest?
Cut out this advertisement, mention paper in which it appeared,enclose with 10c in silver to address given and Home and Garden, illustrated, monthly, will be sent you free for one year. Regular price, 50c. Address Home and Garden, Newspaper Row, St. Paul, Minn.
New York Has 7,400 Police.
These are*7,4oo members of the New York police force. The number of arrests made by the New York police last year was 138,875, or an average of between eighteen and twenty for each policeman.
Are You Using Allen’s Foot-Ease?
It is the only cure for Swollen, Smarting, Burning, Sweating Feet, •orns and Bunions. Ask for Allen’s Foot-Ease, a powder to be shaken into the shoes. At all Druggists and Shoe Stores, 25c. Sample sent FREE. Address, Allen S. Olmsted, Leßoy, N. Y.
Leads World in Fruit-Growing.
The United States leads all other nations in the matter of fruit growing. Strawberries were valued at $80,000,000 last year and grapes at $100,000,000.
Lane's Family Medicine.
Moves the bowels each day. In order to be healthy this is necessary. Acts gently on the liver and kidneys. Cures .sick headache. Price 25 and 50c. The young people’s church societies in Little Rock, Ark., have formed a permanent anti-crime league, to carry on “a fight against the evil one and his imps.” . Golden and diamond weddings were celebrated by 614 couples in Prussia last year, and the state contributed medals to each husband and wife.. Take Garfield Tea for constipation; it has this to recommend it: it is made from health-giving herbs and it surely cures. The United States imported $7,500,000 more silver from Mexico in 1900 than in 1899.
When You Buy Soap
insist on getting Maple City Self Washing Soap. Tour grocer has it or will get it. The finished performance of an actor is^ often a great relief to the audience.
FOR VILLAGE IMPROVEMENT.
Both Is Home Grounds and Public Ground*. “In discussing the method of management for our Village Improvement (Society,” says Eben E. Rexford, in the “New” Lippincott, “we decided to have everything about It as simple as possible, for some of us recognized the fact that success in undertakings of this nature is largely dependent on simplicity and directness. In order to avoid friction and ‘running expenses,' it is wise to have but little machinery in a society of this kind, and that of the simplest character consistent with effectiveness. We dispensed with a formal apd elaborate * constitution’ and ‘code of by-laws,’ for we did not think either was needed. We sitpply drew up a paper setting forth the object of the society and the few rules we thought necessary to formulate for Its operation, and when we had subscribed our names to It we were full-fledged, active members. “In this paper It was stated that (membership was conditional on an agreement on our part to devote at least one day’s work, spring and fall, jto the Improvement of the home (grounds, and to give one day’s work, spring and fall, to the improvement of public grounds and vacant places belonging to non-residents if called on to do so. “Each member pledged himself to the payment of one dollar semi-annu-ally, the money thus secured to constitute a general fund to be drawn on in meeting the expenses attendant on the Improvement of public places. We had but three officers, a President, Secretary, and Treasurer. It was understood that the President was to have supervision of all work on public places, with the power of appointing such committees as might be deemed necessary whenever they were needed. “At first we had not proposed to take women into membership, but It was suggested that they had as much right in the society as men had, and would, no doubt, take as much Interest in It,—and quite likely a good deal more. Accordingly It was unanimously voted to admit them.”
America’s Superiority in “Expectation."
The expectation of life at a given age, to use the actuarial phrase, differs considerably, as might be expected, in different countries, and Englishmen may be surprised to learn that they are not the longest living among the white race. At the age of twenty an Englishman in average health may ; expect to live forty-two years, and any life office will grant him a policy based on that probability. The American’s expectation is for a slightly longer period. On the other hand, a German lad of twenty can count upon little more than thirty-nine years and a half. It would seem, therefore, that the restlessness attributed to the American temperament does not necessarily conduce to the shortening of life, nor the composure German to its prolongation. Possibly the better feeding and clothing of Americans in the lowers-classes of the population are the principal cause of their greater longevity. Their position is, at any rate, maintained in later as well as in earlier years. The American who has reached sixty may look to complete fourteen years more, while the Britisher’s expectation Is only about thirteen years and ten months, and the German’s as nearly as possibly twelve months less. Both at twenty and sixty the Frenchman’s prosIpect is a little better than the German’s and a little worse than the Englishman’s.—London Globe.
What is News?
The late Charles A, Dana was once asked: "What is news?” The reply: [“Anything the people will read,” was •characteristic of the man. What the venerable editor of the [New York Sun said years ago is quite as true to-day as then. The definition was not meant to be ,taken literally, but for all that, a column might have been written on the subject and little more of value added. ! As a matter of fact this is the general rule that governs the newspaper [world to-day. It is, of course, true jthat all newspapers do not print all that might come under this head, but It is true nevertheless that every item of any possible interest to anybody is sure to get into type somewhere. The newspaper to-day gets up news In the way its readers demand It. If they are more interested in the latest sensational murder than in a Wall street panic, the panic must give way Jn order that the blood-curdling details may be played up to the limit.— Fourth Estate.
A Mailbox Sleuth.
A new electric letterbox on exhibition last week in Washington, if adopted by the Government, would make life anything but pleasant and comfortable for the careless or unlucky carrier. The electric letterbox registers at the main postoffice each time a collection is made, so that it is impossible for a carrier in making his rounds ,to skip a single box without being instantly detected. Worse yet, if one letter is left in the box the electric attachment promptly records that fact at the main office, and the carrier is liable to thirty days’ suspension for undue haste and negligence.
How Dreams Are Manufactured.
M. Bergson, professor at the College de France, now calmly asserts that ae has »discovered the stuff dreams are made of. The circulation of the blood in the retina and the pressure of the eyelid on the optic nerve, he claims, cause a color sensation. The colors assume phantom shapes, which stir the memory. Despite the claims or musicians, says Professor Bergson, there is nothing new in sleeping vagaries. Paris Correspondence New York Herald.
CHINESE SHOW FIGHT.
Mass Troops in Fore* In Sphere of Allies. A clash between the Chinese troops which are massing in great strength in the province of Shan-Si, near the frontier of the province of Chee-Lee, and the Franco-German expedition is imminent. Well-informed natives prophesy serious trouble. It is impossible to ascertain whether the court is playing a double game or Its authority is insufficient to prevent the Chinese generals acting in a manner likely to provoke hostilities. The fact that for many months there has been nothing in the shape of a de facto government favors the latter hypothesis. Everything will depend upon the FrancoGerman expedition inflicting a severe defeat upon the Chinese who havetransgressed the agreement by entering into the sphere of the allies. If these offenders are thoroughly punished it is likely to produce a good effect.
Shirt Waists for Carriers.
The following order, drafted by Superintendeent Machen of the free delivery service, with a view to relieving letter carriers throughout the country of wearing heavy uniform coats and vests during the summer, has been signed by Postmaster General Smith: “During the heated term postmasters may permit letter carriers to wear a neat shirt waist or loose-fitting blouse, Instead of coat and vest, the same to be made of light gray chambray gingham, light gray cheviot, or other light gray washable material; to be worn with turn-down collar, dark tie, and a neat belt; all to be uniform at each office.”
Half a Town Wiped Out,
Augusta, a little town in Columbiana county, near Minerva, 0., has been almost wiped out by fire. The Eagle hotel, the Pottorf drug store and several dwellings and other buildings were entirely consumed, with most of their contents. The town is without fire protection and Minerva and Hanoverton were appealed to for aid. The loss amounts to several thousand dollars, with very little insurance.
Can Find No Gold in Iowa.
In the annual report of the lowa geological survey, Prof. Samuel Calvin, state geologist, declares hopelessly absurd the idea that oil, gas or gold in paying quantities can ever be found in lowa. Prof. Calvin shows that the strata in lowa makes the existence of large amounts of these products impossible. He advises the public to waste no capital in a useless search for products that do not exist.
Rebels Are Active in Cebu.
A thousand troops in Cebu island are unable to accomplish the surrender or capture of the 200 insurgent riflemen who are still out. Col. MeClernand says the terms the insurgents offered are impossible. Of the fifty towns, a dozen of the larger have been organized under military order. The others are believed to have insurgent governments.
Mora Than Fifty Years in Prison.
The death at Richmond, Ind., of Jesse Way, the noted counterfeiter, removes one of the greatest criminals of the country and one well known to the officers of the states of Missouri, Ohio, Indiana, Michigan and Wisconsin, in each of which he served prison sentences. More than fifty years o£ his eighty years were spent behind prison bars.
Kensit Creates a Stir.
The scene in Bow church, London, at the consecration of Ingram as bishop of London resembled a political meeting. John Kensit entered an expected protest against the appointment. His remarks caused an extraordinary uproar, and he was greeted with cheers, hisses and shouts of “Order!” “Shame!” “No Popery!” etc.
Two Students Are Expelled.
Two Albion, Mich., college students, a co-ed and her “steady company,” according to the announcement made at chapel by Acting President Samuel Dickie, have been requested to pack their books and depart for home, to remain away permanently as a result of repeated violations of the college social regulations.
Keane Given Sacred Vestment.
St. Raphael’s cathedral at Dubuque, lowa, was filled with an assemblage of distinguished prelates and members of the clergy of the Roman Catholic church Wednesday when Archbishop John J. Keane, the new metropolitan of Dubuque, was invested with the pallium in mark of his high ecclesiastical office.
Lackawanna Switchmen Strike.
Two hundred switchmen in the Lackawanna yards at Scranton, Taylor and Clark’s Summit, Pa., have struck against the discharge of two men by Yardmaster Newell, who wanted to replace them, it Is said, by men brought from Hoboken. There is a complete tie-up of freight and coal traffic at Scranton.
Largest of All Towboats.
The lowa Iron works of Dubuque has been awarded the contract to build the largest towboat in the world for the Monongahela Coal Company, Pittsburg. The boat will be able to tow fifty steel barges. It will cost $250,000.
Snow Slide Hits Locomotives.
On the Colorado and Northwestern road two engines, which had been attached to a passenger train coming from Ward to Boulder, Colo., were struck by a snowslide and hurled into the chasm below.
Bacteria and School Kooks.
Philadelphia introduced free textbooks when it established the public school system In 1818, and has furnished free books for eighty-three years without ‘suffering from bacteria, bankruptcy, or any other of the promised calamities that are supposed to wait upon this “dangerous experiment.” New York city has furnished all school books free for sixty-eight years; Bristol, R. I„ sixty-three years; Paterson, N. J., fifty-one years; Elizabeth, fortyfive years; Newark, forty-three years; Brighton and Hoboken, thirty-three from twenty to thirty years; the entire state of Massachusetts for seventeen years, and many of its cities for a much longer time. In the west Detroit has furnished school books free for nine years, employs a clerk to look after the books, Includes repairs, storage, fumigation, rebinding and clerk hire in its average annual cost of 65 cents per pupil. Saginaw, with seventeen years’ experience, finds its cost, including high school, to be 57 cents. Berlin, Wis., has furnished free textbooks for twenty-three years; Eau Claire, twenty years; La Crosse, eighteen years; Omaha, Neb., fifteen years; Duluth, Minn., thirteen years.—Chicago Journal.
HUSBAND AND WIFE.
A Veteran of the Civil War Tells an Interesting Story. EFFINGHAM, 111., April 22. (Special). —Uriah S. Andrick is now 67 years of age. Mr. Andrick served through the whole of the CiyU-War. He was wounded, three times by ball, and twice by bayonet. ' When he entered the service of his country in 1861, he was hale and hearty, and weighed 198 pounds. Since the close of the War however, Mr. Andrick has had very bad health. For fifteen years, he never lay down in bed for over an hour at a time. He had aoute Kidney Trouble, which grew Into Bright’s Disease. His heart also, troubled him very much. On Oct. 18th, 1900, he was weighed, and weighed only 102 pounds, being but a shadow of his former self. He commenced using Dodd’s Kidney Pills on the 26th of last December, and on Feb. 20th was again weighed, and weighed 146 pounds. He says: “I have spent hundreds of dollars and received no benefit, until on the 26th of December last, I purchased one box of Dodd’s Kidney Pills. I am cured, and I am free from any pain. My heart’s action is completely restored. I have not the slightest trace of the Bright’s Disease, and I can sleep well all night. I was considered a hopeless case by everybody, but today I am a well man, thanks to Dodd’a Kidney Pills. “For the last sixteen years my wife has been in misery with bearing down pains, pains in the lower part of the abdomen and other serious ailments. When she saw what Dodd’s Kidney Pills were doing for me she commenced to use them. She now feels like another woman, her pains have all disappeared and her general health is better than it has been for years. “She is so taken up with Dodd’s Kidney Pills and what they have done for us that she has gone to Mr. Cornwallis Drug Store and bought them for some of her friends for fear that if they went themselves they might make a mistake and get something else.” There is something very convincing in the honest simple story of this old veteran and his wife. Dodd’s Kidney Pills are the only Remedy that ever cured Bright’s Disease, Diabetes or Dropsy. They never fail. Cultivate forbearance till your" heart yields a fine crop of it. Pray for a short memory as to all unkindness.— Spurgeon.
Can’t Sleep? _ ™ I™*™ have that of oppression like a weight on your chest'or a load of cobblestones in your stomach, keeping you awake nights with a horrible sensatioß of anxiety, or tossing restlessly in terrible dreams tbat ma £ e the d PI?P- ati ° n b / eak °, ut all ° Ver you ? Thats insomnia, or sleeplessness, and some unfortunates suffer with it night after night, until their reason is in danger and they are on the edge of going mad The cause of this fearful ailment is in the stomach and bowels, and a Cascaret taken at night will soon bring relief and give the sufferer sweet, refreshing sleep. Always insist on getting CASCARETS! ® Ju air t’ thim hobo-mobo troocks!—kuck. w ** ‘— ly „ “I h»ye been ailnc CASCARETS th» jp for Insomnia, with whichlhare been afflicted MWOF Hn * 1 • *°r over twenty years, and I can say that cove JBUm * as ' Ciwcarets have Riven me more relief than any “S. IssßxzW KSdFF RR remed y I hare ever tried. I shall cer- , MUBmB wm[ , ulnl 7 recommend them to my friends as be- suer HMKm H -*Bly, lng all they are represented.” BDe . V can Thos. Ouxiu, Elgin. 111. ' he The Coldest. the ■ ‘ )W sre« *v bi’ M BEST FOR BOWELS AND LIVER.
wsrtss&rsspi Retting sick. Constipation kills more people than nil otker It Is n starter for tke chronic ailment. uSdlingyenr® of InrSSSS sfterwsrds. BTo nsnttor wknt nils yon, stnrt tnklnr conse you will never set well ssd bo will nil the time untU Vin jLi“ d f T ’ f “, r rlßht. Take oar ndvlce; stnrt with CAMAMTI todiy. Jolm m guarantee to care or money refunded. 1 ,°| r •* absolnto
It is not generally known, but it is a fact all the same, that London id better off for trees than any other city in Europe.
If You Have Rneumatism
Send no money, but write Dr. Sheop, Kaclne, Wt»., box 143, for six bottles of Dr. Shoop's Rheumatic Cure, express paid. If cared pay *5.50; If not It Is frae. But he who knows, and knows that he knows, is a wise man; follow him. If everyone knew how good a remedy was Hamlin’s Wizard Oil its sales would double in a day. The first street lighting in this country was done in New York in 1697. Piso's Cure cannot be too highly spoken of as a cough cure.—J. W. O'Brien, 322 Third At&, N., Minneapolis, Minn.. Jan. 6. 1900. Lie not, neither to thyself, nor man, nor God. It is for cowards to lie. Borne articles must be described. White’s Yucatan needs no description; it’s the real thing. Blow the coals of . anger and the sparks will fly in your own face % SICK HEADACHE AND CONSTIPATION go together. DR. CRANE’S QUAKER TONIC TABLETS kill both. 50c a box. If a woman is lost in thought her dressmaker can re-cover her.
If Your Clothes ook Yellow
wash them with Maple City Self Washing Soap. It will make them white again. The first thing a shoemaker uses in his business is his last. Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Symp. For children teething, softens the gums, reduces Inflammation, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c a bottle. An umbrella does a lot of good but it has to be put up to it. Carter’s Ink. Good ink is a necessity for good writing. Carter’s is the best. Costs no more than poor ink. The fool-killer sometimes assumes the form of a cigarette.
Coe’s Cough Balsam
Ib the oldest and best. It will break up a cold quicker than anything else. It Is always reliable. Try it. In 1790 New York had a colored population of 25,978. PUTNAM FADELESS DYES produce the fastest and brightest colors of any known dye stuff. Johnny—lt’s funnny how ignorant women are about such things, ain’t it, pa?
Sterlet of Siberian Rivers.
The sterlet, caught in Siberian rivers, competes with the pompano, from the Gulf of Mexico, as the most delicious fish in the world.
Ran Salia’s First Hotel.
Mrs. Mary E. Bradley is dead at Salina. In 1867 Mrs. Bradley ran Salina's only hotel, a log cabin with a dirt roof. It was this hotel which Bayard Taylor, traveling across the cintinent in that year, humorously described in one of his letters. —Kansas City Journal.
Spring Cleaning Made Easy.
Much of the terror of Spring Cleaning may be avoided by good management. Settled weather should be selected for the work, and every thing necessary provided before hand. Ivory Soap will be found best for washing paints, floors and windows; it is harmless and very effective in making the house clean and fresh. ... _ _ ELIZA R PARKER.
An Old Wampum Belt.
At Essex, Conn., the other day a wampum belt owned by a descendant of Herman Garret, who was appointed governor over the Pequots in 1655, was sold for $320. The relic is composed of a String of shells formed into a belt two and one-half inches wide and thirty-three inches long.
SOZODOHT tor the TEETH 25c Thompson'* Eye Water
"Now Dont dot the Blues."
When a cheerful, brave and light-hearted woman is suddenly plunged into that perfection of misery, the blues, it is a sad picture. It is usually this way: She has been feeling out of sorts for some time, experiencing severe headache and backache; sleeps very and is exceedingly* nervous. Sometimes she is nearly overcome by faintness, dizziness, and palpitation of the heart; then that bearing-down feeling is dreadfully wearing. Her husband says, ‘‘Now, don’t get the blues ! You will be all right after you have taken the doctor’s medicine.” But she does not get - all right. She grows worse day by day, until all at once she realises that a distressing female complaint is established. Her doctor has made a mistake. She loses faith ; hope vanishes : then comes the morbid, melancholy everlasting blues. She should have been told just what the trouble was, but probably she withheld some information from the doctor, who, therefore, is unable to accurately locate her particular illness. Mrs. Pinkham has relieved thousands of women from lust this kind of trouble, and now retains their grateful letters in her library as proof of the great assistance she has rendered them. This same assistance awaits every sick woman m the land. • ' Mrs. Winifred Allender’s Letter. “ Dear Mrs - Pctkham:—l feel it my duty to write and tell you of the benefit I have received from your wonderful remedies. Before taking Lydia E. Plnkham’s Vegetable Compound, 1 was a misery to mvr self and every one around me. I suffered terrible P a * n in m y hack, head, and right side, was very t'rv rSI nervous, would cry for hours. Menses would appeals* \ j sometimes in two weeks, then again not for three j or four months. I was so tired and weak, could not nA *'ss* / sleep nights, sharp pains would dart through my - 1 heart that would almost cause me to fall. vr “ My mother coaxed me to try Lydia E. Pinkham’s UjflakSgffijßßßßCT Vegetable Compound. I had no"faith in it, but to please her 1 did so - The first bottle helped me so much that I continued its nse. lam now well and |MRS.WimfRID ALLENDCR | weigh more than I ever did in my life.”—MßS - - WINIFRED ALLENDER, Farmington, 11L Q CI AM IPH Owiny to the fsct that some skeptical As fill 11 ntWAnU f| 111! 11 •“rf’-’-i,' b N.doJf fit wesa ’i-X' writer's special permission.—Lydia E. Pinkham M. uicise Co.
HAVE YOU MONEY TO INVEST? A limited amount of funds wanted for stock In an exceedingly meritorious and profitable MINING enterprise. Will prove a very profitable Investment for amal! as well as large capitalists. You can invest from »50 to $5,000. A specially favorable proposition made for the first available funds. For terms and full Information address K. G. RI’XTON 134 Van Buren Street Chlcaßo. Illinois.
CAlSKris^jMld* , N^?it^S!sfr.lC , i?iiF em K!L *** tk ® *”* *•* of CAtsimilar 1. thTwVrtdT' ThU T.'ubS.^l^?*.? NafittfiAWiESSSSefflS
w. N. U, CHICAGO. NO. 17, 1901. Whea Answering Advertisements Kindly Mention This Paper.
