Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 31, Number 272, 29 October 1906 — Page 5

The Richmond Palladium, Monday, October 29, 1906.

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They Stand Alone. Standing out in bold relief, all alrne, and as a conspicuous example of open, frank and honest dealing with the pick and atiiioted, are Dr. Piarce's Favorite Prescription for weak, over-worked, debilitated, w nervous, "run-down," painracked women, and Dr. Pierce's Golden Mad leal Discovery, the famous remedy for weak atomacn, indigestion, or dyspepsia, torpid liver, or biliousness, all catarrhal affections whether of the stomach, bowels, kidneys, bladder, nasal passages, throat, bronchia, or other mucon passages, also as an effective remedy for all diseases arising from thin, watery or impure blood, as scrofulous and skin affections. Each bottle of the above medicine bears upon its wrapper a badge of han esty In the full list of ingredients con. posing it printed in plain English This frank and open publicity place these medicines in a class all by thevn selves, and is the best guaranty of the! merits. They cannot be classed as paten nor secret medicines for they are neithei being of kiunvn crnnpfjuilio Dr. Pierce feels that he rvo afford tr take the afflicted into b fall'confiUerK' and lay all the ingredients of bis metii cines freely before them because theingredients are such as are endorsed anc most strongly praised by scores of tb most eminent medical writers as cure: for the diseases for which these medi oir.ss are recommended. Therefore, th faiefd do not have to rely alone upox Dr. Pierce's recommendation as to th curative value of his medicines for cer tain easily recognized diseases. A glance at the printed formula or

each bottle will show thrJt no alcohol ami n harmful or hablt-.foriuing drugs enter into Dr. tierce's nvnipnes. tney oeinf wholly compounded fcfgiyceric extract of the roots of nat American foresi plants. These are the cure of most li st and safest fo? ring, chronic dis eases. Dr. R. v. Pi can be consnltet. fbejc, by addressi him at Buffalo. JN. i .. ana an co unications are regarded as sacredly 'onfidential. It is as easy towell as ill and much more comfortable. Constipation li the cause or many rorms oi illness. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets cure constipa tion. I hey are tiny, sugar-coatea granules. One little "Pellet " is a gentle laxa tive, two a mild cathartic All dealers is nwHrtF.es sell tbera, s The new RECORDS For the month f No vember are on satf at RICHMOND Talking Machine Company,; Cor. Main and Eleventh St. 8 t Sweet Cider (just mac (Order a gallon of thiaf Its fine) Rambo and Grlmaf Golden Eating ' Apples, the A est that 4 grow. New Chestnuts (Jra quality.) PHONE 292, HCJLEY BROS. iDr.LS.Chenoweth 4 I ? S JDENTIS 1 00 South 9th S OFFICE 8 a. m. to 5 p. ry day xcept Tui Lady Assistant. : Artistically Hetr olitan I In every detail Is Wcddi USIC Furnished In Rich onv exclusively by Lawrence euker's Tet-rauq Concert Quartet : o Essenoe Pom pA dour 1 X i ne Latest ferruiie rare In Fragrance, DellUous and Very Lasting. CalJ and test it for Yourself. At pleasure to show you M I flnlnlVurt House .... vuiyivjs-pnaftnao, t . . j ..." i t t Merchants' Deliv Headquarters lliff'o Store Phnnn T9f e t PHONE 1717 I'pholstering, Varnishing and Mattrassas Ma& Repaired ROBERT HEftFUrr, Jr. 315 Ooutl STHE PETER JORHSjfl CO. t 2 FOR GASOLIME SfrOVESg AND GAS GuTlDS. iSi 0 POOOOG OO OOOJ

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IN HONOE OF FULTON

MONUMENT TO THE FATHER OF STAM NAVIGATION. The Memorial to Be Ererte on taa Badao tbe Celebration Kext Year la Fnaec aaa at the Janaeatowa Exposltloa. T will be a hundred years on the 11th of next August since the Clermont steamed up the Hudson river from New York to Albany. movement I In progress to honor the builder and Inventor of the Clermont, Robert Pulton, who Is generally regarded as tbe father of steamboat navigation. Whatever the claims of ethers as to application of steam to purpose's of navigation. It was Fulton, at any rate, wbo first demonstrated the practicability of the steamboat for passenger and freight transportation, and after the Clermont had made her memorable voyage and the success of the venture was seen multiplication of steamboats was rapid. Tbe services . of Fulton to science, commerce and civilization were of such vast magnitude that it is thought appropriate to nave ine nation as a whole take part in the memorial which It Is proposed to erect in his honor. This memorial will stand on the banks of the Hudson, overlooking the scene of Fulton's great experiment. The site will be somewhere on the tipper end of Manhattan Island and not far from Grant's tomb, the Cathedral of Bt. John the Divine, Columbia university and other monumental and architectural features which make this part f New York a center of Interest for sightseers. The character of he memorial has not yet been fully decided upon, but a design ' by tbe sculptor Leopold Bracbny Is considered to embody a general idea as to what the monument should be. This provides for a base surrounded , by approaches ornamented by, appropriate sculpture. The shaft supports a heroic figure of Fulton, showing him contemplating' a model of the Clermont. It Is proposed that the remains of Fulton shall be placed in tbe monument, and the consent of the Inventor's grandson, R. Fulton Ludlow of Claverack, N. Y to this plan has been obtained. Fulton's achievements will be celebrated next year" both at the JamesBOBEBT YOXTON AND THB CXSKHOITT. town exposition in Virginia and at the International maritime exhibition in Bordeaux, France. The French have a claim on Fulton, Inasmuch as he made many of his experiments in that country and was encouraged in them by the French government. It was in France that Fulton, away back in the year 1797, experimented with bis boat for submarine navigation in connection with torrWln vrfnn thn anHfinattnir hv mA than n wnhinr thft kiin I . cess In that field achieved in the nast half doxen yearn. It was in France in wa th.t t mAria unm of hi initial essars in the direction of steam naviration. This exhibition will illustrate

the history of maritime development Mr. and Mrs. Louis Gross were surfrom th ariiBt me. prised by a number of their friends

Dm-inar the Jamestown exnosTtlon there la to be at Hampton Roads a great naval and marine exhibition, and In connection with this honors can be paid to Fulton most appropriately. Aug. 11 will be set apart a Fulton day, and a committee headed by Cor nelius Vanderbilt, whoae family has been intimately Identified with the development of steam navigation, Is ar ranging a programme for the occasion. -. Vanderbilt will probably head a marine parade with his yacht North Star. He is president of the Robert Fulton Monument association, and the treasurer, to whom subscriptions for the monument fund may be sent. Is Richard Delafield, president of the National Park bank. New York. Fulton was born in Lancaster coun ty, Ta In 17C5 and died in New Tork In 1813. As Mark Twain puts It: "He made tbe vacant oceans and Idle rivers useful after the unprejudiced had been wondering for a hundred million years what they were for. He found these properties a' liability; he left them an asset. It Is the peculiar honor and privilege of our commercializing aga to estimate this majestic service at Its splendid and rightful value. .The mon ument Is deserved, and It will be built. Mark Twain (Samuel L. Clemens) Is first vice president of the Monument association. With him and Mr. Vanderbilt and Mr. Delafield In the board of officers are such men as Hugh Gordon Miller. R. Fnlton Cutting. Nicholas Murray Butler and Andrew Carnegie. Occasionally one has the fortune to meet women who are Ideal in looks and figure. Ninety-nine times out of a hundred you will find she takes Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea. Tea or Tablets, 35 cents. Can't look well, eat well or feel well with impure blood feeding your body. Keep the blood pure with Burdock Blood Bitters. Eat simply, take exercise, keep clean and you will have long life.

Social and Personal Mention CALENDAR FOR THE COMING WEEK SHOWS THAT THERE WILL BE MANY EVENTS OF MUCH INTERESTGIRLS AT EARLHAM ENTERTAINED SATURDAY NIGHT WITH A DELIGHTFUL HALLOWE'EN PARTY. Society Editor 'Phone 1076. .

THE PAST WEEK. Monday Mrs. Richard Moore enter tained the members of the Dorcas Society at her home on South 14th street. The Criterion Literary Society met with Mrs. Du Vail at her home on North 15th street, Mrs. E. B. Grosvenor was the hos tess for a meeting of the Ticknor Club at her home on National Road West Tuesday Jeanette Leeds gave an "At Home" at her residence on north 8th street In honor of Mrs. Rudolph Leeds. Mrs. Alexander Reid entertained the Spring Grove Sewing Circle at her home north of the city. Mrs. W. F. Hiatt entertained the Aftermath Club at her home on North D street. Mrs. Julia Robbins entertained the members of her Sunday School class at her home on North 10th street, in honor of Mrs. Harriet Paige, of St. Louis. Wednesday The members of the G O. P. club gave a dance in I. O. O. F. hall. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Kolp acted as chaperons and Messrs. White and Wilson furnished the music. Mrs. W. W. Shultz entertained the Wednesday Duplicate Whist Club at her residence on South 11th street at 10 o'clock luncheon. Mr. and Mrs. Horace Iredell were delightfully surprised at their home on North 19th street, the occasion be ing their - seventeenth wedding anni versary. Mrs. Louis Newcomb was the hostess for a meeting of the Martha Washington Club at her home on North F. street. Mr. and Mrs Alonzo Smyser entertained the Larkin Whist Club at their home on North 15th street. The wedding of Miss Elizabeth Mor ris. daughter of Mr .and Mrs. Aaron Morris, and Mr. Frederick Lautz took place at the home of the brides' parents in Milton. Mr. Roy Buffkin, formerly of this city and Miss Lillian Hymes were married at Springfield, Mo. The wedding of Mr. William S. Charles, formerly of this city, and Miss Caroline Gleason took place at New Rochelle, New York. The Domestic Science Club met in ' the Sunday School room of the First Presbyterian church. Mrs. Geo. Ferling entertained the members of the Ivy Club at her home on South 6th street. The History Club Met at the Library. Mrs. George Dugan was the leader for the afternoon. The Ladies' Aid Society of Reid Memorial Hospital met with Mrs. Geo. Eggemeyer. Thursday Mr. and Mrs. William White entertained the members of a card club at their home on the Liberty pike. Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Stover entertained the Merry-Go-Round club at their home on South 8 street. Mr. and Mrs. Fletcher Elliott were pleasantly surprised by a number of their friends at their home on the Middleboro pike. The Misses Lindemuth entertained the Alice Carefy Club at their resi dence on South 13 street Friday Mrs. Laura Schalz entertain ed the members of a whist club at her home on South 13 street. Mrs. Eugene Pries gave a reception at her home on South 18 street in honor of Mrs. Frank Rohen Fortune of Crafton, Pa and Mrs. Everette R Lemon In the evening Mr. and Mrs. Price entertained at cards in fionor of Mr and Mrs. Fortune ana air. uuu jus Everette Lemon The Woman s Missionary outlay oi the First Presbyterian church observ ed Guest Day in the church parlors The decorations were auiuiuu leavco and Richmond roses at their home on South 6th street, tne occasion being tneir niuetn weuumt, anniversary. The Ladies Missionary Society of the Reid Memorial United Presbyter ian church observed Rally Day in the church parlors. ..... l CALENDAR FOR THE WEEK. MondayMrs. John Shroyer will be the hostess for a meetine of the Ticknor Club at her home on South 16th street. Miss Strickland and Mrs. Whit ridge will be the leaders for the af ternoon. Mrs Frank I. Reid will Kive a re ception at her home on South 13th street. The hours are from 2-4 and 4-6 Mrs. C. D. Slifer will be the hostess for a meeting of the Magazine Club at her home on North 10th street. The readers for the afternoon will be Mrs. Chas. Holton and Mrs. Warren Gifford. - Tuesday The Music Study Club will meet at 9 o'clock in the music rooms of the Starr Piano Company. The program will be a study of Massenet, Faure and Chaminade and will be in charge of Miss Magdelena Englebert, Miss Marie Runge, Miss Ruth Peltz, Mrs. Will Earhart and Mrs. Elmer A. Gormon. Mrs. Frank Reid will give a musical at her home on South 13th street. Mrs. Horace Burr of New Castle will give a number of readings and Mr. Geo. McKone, Mr. Frank Braffett and Mrs. Fred Bartel will assist with the music program. Mrs. Galen Lamb will entertain at whist at her home on East Main street Merry Time Whist Club at her home on South Sth street. WednesdayMrs. William Jewett Robie and Miss Bertha Grace Roble will entertain with a whist-luncheon at 1 o'clock at their home on North 13th street- . Mrs. Chas. Flook will be the hos

tess for a meeting of the Cycle Literary Club at her home on South 17th street. Indiana Day will be ob

served. Mrs. Fred Snyder will entertain- a few friends at her home on North D street. The Penny Club will meet with Mr3. Warfel at her home on 10th and South B streets. Miss Lucile Turner will entitain at her home on North 21st street. . The Ladies Auxiliary of the Broth erhood of Railroad Trainmen wil give a dance in I. O. O. F. Hall. Miss Ruby Reid will be the hostess for an evening party at her home on South 4th street. Miss Edna Ferling will entertain nt her home on South 6th street. Miss Marguerite Doan will enter tain at her home on South 12th street Thursday Mrs. William Lane will entertain the Crescent Club at her home on South 10th street. The Dorcas Society of the First M. E. church will meet with Mrs. Ingersoll. Friday The Misses Eleanora and FranciJ Robinson will entertain The Tourists Club at their home on North 11th street, the program will be: Scandi navian Mythology Mrs. Howard A Dill. Current Events Mr. W. J. Hutton, Miss Sophia Marchant. Mrs. Charles Kolp's dancing class will meet at 7 o'clock in I. O. O. F. hall. After nine the nine o'clock dan cers will have the floor. The Home Missionary Society of the First M. E. church will meet with Mrs. D. W. Stevenson at her home on South 15th street. Saturday The plays "A Happy Pair." and "A Box of. Monkeys," will be given by local talent at the Gennett Theatre The girls of Earlham College very delightfully entertained the boys Sat urday evening with a Halloween party. f The guests were led from Earlham Hall by mysterious ghosts and witches ground the builctng and paths (to Llndley Hall where games etc. were indulged in. Later in the dining room of Earl ham Hall a dainty lunch was served. The evening was thoroughly enjoy ed by all present and the' co-eds prov ed themselves 'the most charming entertainers. The card party which was to have been at the Country Club this after noon has been postponed until a week from today. Nov. 5th. It will be an- evening party and the members are requested to be at the club by eight o'clock. Mrs. John Shroyer will entertain the members of the Ticknor Club this afternoon at her home on South 16th street. The Woman's Missionary Society of the First M. E. church which meets the last Wednesday of each month 'has been postponed until Friday of this week. The Magazine Club will meet this afternoon with Mrs. C. D. Slifer nt her home on North 10th street. The readers for the afternoon will beMrs. Charles Holton and Mrs.. Warren Gifford. PERSONAL MENTION. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Fortune who have been the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Price returned to their home in Crafton, Pa., last evening. Mrs. Phoebe Wright of , Toronto, Canada, t and Miss Mary Morton Haines of Philadelphia have returned to their homes. Chas Cooper and Henry Johns of Campbellstown were in the city yes terday. Miss Ida Evans of Kokomo will spend Sunday in the city. Mrs. Henry Scott will leave soon to make her home in Bataria, N. Y. Miss Lida Schumard has returned from a visit at Marion. Fred Carr has returned from a trip to Springfield. Miss Blanche Kerr of Greensfork was the guest of friends In the city yesterday. Mrs. Chas. Kramer and children are visiting in Hamilton. Mrs. Lewis niff and children are the guests of friends in Terre Haute Mrs. Chas. Lugar is visjting at Ea ton. Miss Bertha Jones has returned to her home In Pittsburg after a visit with her brothers, R. Q. Jones and Sharon Jones. Prof. Edgar Stranahan has return ed to his home at Wilmington, O. Mrs. Ralph Polk of Indianapolis is the guests of friends lrf the city. Geo. Smith has returned from a trip to Hamilton. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Roth of New Castle were in the city yesterday. , Miss Ellna Holmes has returned from an extended trip through the South. Mr. and Mrs. Will Commons and Mr. and Mrs. Horace Williams of Anderson spent Sunday with J. D. Rife and family at their home near Boston. Miss Ada Millspaugh of Adram, Mich., spent Sunday with Miss Anna Meek. Mr. and Mrs. Fletcher Elliott. -will leave today for California to make their home. A happy thought. Mrs. Austin's Pancakes for breakfast. Ready in a Jiffy.

THE TREE BORERS. Some Freih Wrinkles la Resrard to Combating; Then. If you examine your trees In the fall do not always look for castings on the ground, as you may not find them, but look for a dark spot of dead bark and you will always find your host, says a contributor in American Agriculturist. Any strongly alkaline wash, if ap plied to the tree and rubbed on with a brush, will prevent any egg from hatching with which it comes in con tact. Nothing is better In this line than a soft soap solution or whale oil soap made with caustic potash. You cannot use it too strong, but I would suggest one gallon of soap to two gal Ions of water. To this may be added one pint of crude carbolic acid to prevent further deposits of egss and also to act as a poison. If the borers are in your trees be careful In cutting them out in the fall or you may completely girdle the tree. It is recommended to kill the borer Inside to take just a few drops of keroBene or coal oil and place in the open Ing from which the sawdust Is dropping, and this by capillary attraction will saturate the sawdust and eventu ally reach and kill the borer. I believe this plan is worth trying and would suggest that it could easily be do-e with an ordinary small sized machine oil can. LAYING LAPPED GLASS. One of (ke Qnickeat Method Is la Cae For Vnskllled Labor, The old and reliable lapped glass roof for greenhouses will probably never go out of fashion, but tbe cost of lay lng it and the tedious method usually employed have induced many to seek a substitute In other styles, such as the "butted" and zinc strip scheme for laying roofs. A method of laying lap ped glass given by the West Virginia experiment station Is described as be ing so simple and so easily learned by even an unskilled laborer that It can not fail to meet a much felt want The method is as follows: If the work Is to be done during cool weather. which Is not desirable, choose a warm room and upon a table about two feet high arrange a board very like the kneading board used by the pastry cook. This board should be wide, smooth and perfectly flat. Warm a quantity of putty, say five or eight pounds, sufficiently to make rt soft and pliable, but not eitcky. With the hand spread the putty over the board in a layer of uniform width and of . a length as great as that of the glass to be used, and Tith a section of three or four inches vitrified sewer pipe as a roiling pin ron th rutty out Into a thin layer about tjree-slxteenths of an Inch thick. Then wirn the glass held as shown in illustration herewith, with the endsfirmly graoped in the hands, the conex sido of the glass away frcm the operator and tbe edge of the glass about one-fourth inch back from XiATTNO IiAFFED GLASS. and parallel with the edge of the putty, press the glass through the putty so as to cut off a narrow strip. Tip the pane toward the operator, then backward and draw it forward. This operation will loosen a strip of putty which will adhere to tbe edge of the glass, as seen in the upper side of glass In illustration. Change sides with the glass and repeat the operation, then with a putty knife cut off the ends of the two lines of putty sufficiently to allow for the desired width of lap. Pass the glass to a man on the roof, holding it meanwhile with the putty on top. The man on the roof turns the pane over and presses it firmly In place, thus squeezing out any super fluous putty, which will pass in both directions out of the rabbet of the sash bar. As soon as the glass is fastened in place tbe operation la complete, save for cleaning off superfluous putty. Hall Gobi For Grapes. A leading vineyardist of Romulus, says the Rochester Herald, has installed six hail guns to protect his vineyards from hailstorms. They are in tbe shape of small mortars with funnel shaped mouths. In which a charge of powder Is placed and fired. The Idea Is that the discharge sets in motion a current of air that disperses the storm. The guns are placed at various points In the vineyards and are fired when black and threatening clouds appear. The grower says they have protected his grapes from Injury, while his neighbors have suffered more or less. fS Stratlfrtaa- Poach Pits. Where but a few seeds of some special Interest or value are to be planted we stratify them over winter in a box of 6and. Care must be taken that the sand is kept moict, so that freezing will open tbe pits. These pits are taken from the sand and planted as early in spring as the soil can be well worked. Kansas Farmer. Affects Plain Clothes Men. New Tork, Oct. 27.A police order almost if not quite as sweeping as that of Wednesday, which flirected the transfer of every captain in the city, with one exception, has been issued by Police Commissioner Bingham. Un der the new order every plain clothes man In the city will don a uniform and In the future the power of captains in assigning an? man to plain clothes duty will be limited. The order threatens to do away with plain clothes men, otherwise known ai "ward men-

WHO SHE WA

SKETCH OF THE LIFE

And a True Story of How the Vegetable Compound Had Its Birth and How the "Panic of ,73 Caused it to be Offered for Public Sale in Druj? Stores.

This remarkable woman, whose maiden name was Estes. was born in Lynn, Mass., February 9th, 1819, coming' from a good old Quaker family. For some years she taught school, and became known as a woman of an alert and investigating1 mind, an earnest seeker after knowledge, and above all, possessed of a wonderfully sympa thetio nature. In 1843 she married Isaac Pinkham, a builder and real estate operator, and their early married life was marked by prosperity and happiness. They had four children, three sons and a daug-hter. In those good old fashioned days It was common for mothers to make their own home medicines from root and herbs, nature's own remediescalling in a physician only in specially urgent cases. By tradition and ex perience many of them gained a won derf ul knowledge of the curative properties of the various roots and herbs. Mrs. Pinkhara took a great interest in the study of roots and herbs, their characteristics and power over disease. Sho maintained th&t just as nature so bountifully provides in the harvestfleldo and orchards vegetable foods of all kinds ; so, if we but take the paina to find them, in the roots and herbs of the field thjre are remedies expressly designed to c-cre the various ills and weaknesses of the body, and it was her pleasure to search these out, and prepare simple and effective medicines for her own family and friends. Chief of these was a rare combination of the choicest medicinal roots and herbs found best adapted for the cure of the ills end weaknesses pecu liar to the female sex, and Ly&i& E. Pinkham's friends and neighbors learned that her compound relieved and cured and it became quite popular bmong them. " All this so far was done freely, with. out money and without price, as a labor Of love. But in 1873 the financial crisis struck Lynn. Its length and severity were too much for the larsre real estate interests of the Pinkham family, as this class of business suffered most from fearful depression, so when the Centen nial year dawned it found their prop erty swept away. Some other source of income had to ba found. At this point Lydia E. Plnkham'a Vegetable Compound was made known to the world. The three sons and the daughter. with their mother, combined forces to EDR. W ED IB 8 NORTH TEN pyZODAKS LA V W. H

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Ross Par fact Ion Tooth Brush Guarantoad 35c.

MM BEL '

Trad , 100 lb. Sack of medium Best of bbl. Salt gi.00. Fancy Sweet Potatoes, A very fair Homd Grown

Pride of Richmonjl and WhjJZLilly Flour $2 per hundred 18 lbs. Granulated, IJfor 20 Ex. C Sugar for $1.00. Sweet Sugar CurWrtams 10c pound. Fancy Bacon by strip of 8x10 lbs 16c. Table Butterine always sweet 18c lb. Creamery Butter, the best 30c lb. C us, the Cash store, and get S. & H. Green Stamps.

HOOD'S MODEL DEPART! IENT STORE

Trading Stamps, with All Purchases. Free Delivery. New Phone 1079;- Old Phone 13R. Store Open Tuesday, Friday and Saturday Evenings. 411413 Main Street.

OF LYDIA E. PINKHAM restore the family fortune. They argued that the medicine which was so good for their woman friends and neighbors was equally good for ths women of the whole world. The Pinkhams had no money, and little credit. Their first laboratory was the kitchen, where roots and herbs were steeped on the stove, gradually filling a gross of bottles. Then came the question of selling it, for always before they had given it away freely. They hired a job printer to run off some pamphlets setting forth the merits of the medi cine, now called Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and these were distributed by ths Pinkham sons in Boston, New York, and Brooklyn. The wonderful curative properties ol the medicine were, to a great extent, self-advertising, for whoever used it recommended it to others, and the demand gradually increased. In 1877, by combined efforts the fam ily had aaved enough money to com mence newspaper advertising' and from that time the growth and success ol the enterprise were assured, until to day Lydia E. Pinkham and her Vegetable Compound have become household words everywhere, and many tons of roots and herbs are used anna ally in its manufacture. Lydia E. Pinkham herself did not live to see the great success of this work. She passed to her reward years ago, but not till she had provided means for continuing her work as effectively as she could have dona it herself. , During her long and eventful expa rlence she was ever methodical in her work and she was alwavs careful to pre serve a record of every case that came to her attention. The case of every sick woman who applied to her for advice and there were thousands received careful study, and the details, including' symptoms, treatment and results were recorded for future reference, and to-day these records, together with hundreds of thousands made since, are available to sick women the world over, and represent a vast collabora tion of information regarding ths treatment of woman's ills, which for authenticity and accuracy can hardly be equaled in any library in tha world. With Lydia E. Pinkham worked her daughter-in-law, the present Mrs. Pinkham. She was carefully instructed in all her hard-won knowledge, and for years she assisted her in her vast correspondence. To her hands naturally fell the direction of the work when its origina tor passed away. I or nearly twentyfive veara she has continued it. and nothing in the work shows wheu tha first Lvdia K. Pinkham drODDed her

pen, and tne present Mrs. I'mkham, y'

it up. With women assistants, some ajr capable as herself, the present i'J. Pinkham continues thi great worts And probably from the office of toother person have so many womeroeen advised how to regain healtjf Sick women, this advice is "Youfor Health" freely given if you orVy write to ask lor it. Such is the histo-Vof Lydia E. Pink ham s Vegetable Compound ; mads from simple ro-H and herbs : the ona great medicirie for women's ailments, and the fitting monument to the nobis woman wse nam it bears. SUPPLIES S DRUG CO. 77 804 Main Otraat ttitsrg? salt 40c 70c bur Potrd tor one day at 60c.

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