Rensselaer Semi-Weekly Republican, Volume 38, Number 21, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 3 November 1905 — Page 7
PARALYSISJJURED Caso Seemed Hopeless but Yielded to Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. Mr. Kenney has actually escaped from the paralytic’s fate to which he seemed a short time ago hopelessly doomed. The surprising report has been fully verified and some important details secured in a personal interview with the recent sufferer. “The doctor,” said Mr. Kenney, “told me that if I wanted to live any length of time I would have to give up work altogether, aud he told my friends that the paralysis which had begun would in time involve my whole body.” “Just how were you afflicted at this time ?” Mr. Kenney was asked. “ Well, I had first hot, and then cold and clammy feelings, aud at times my body felt as if needles were being stuck into it. These sensations were followed by terrible pain s, and again I would have no feeling at all, but a numbness would come over me, and I would not be able to move. The most agonizing torttires came from headaches and a pain in the spine. “ Night after night I could not get my natural sleep and my system was wrecked by the strain of torturing pains and the effect of the opiates I was forced to take to induce sleep. As I look back on the terrible suffering I endured during this period I often wonder how I retained my reason through it all. * “ But relief came quickly when I was induced to try Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People. The very first box seemed to help me, and seven boxes made me entirely well. There can be no doubt about the thoroughness of my cure, for I have worked steadily ever since and that is nearly four years.” Mr. Kenney is at present employed by the Merrimac Hat Company and resides at 101 Aubin street, Amesbury, Mass. The remedy which he used with such satisfactory results, is sold by all druggists, or direct by the Dr. Williams Medicine Company, Schenectady, N Y.
W. L. Douglas *3=&’3= SHOESmen W. L. Douglas $4.00 Gilt Edge Line cannot be equalled at any price. -IVOOUGIxj SHOES /X ALL K; if / f Hk \\ I PRICES W \ \ M a S K-j w* wi i MJ Mgi/ _ ™ E 'i: i ) JaSIRIB July 8,1878. W.L.DfJUGLAS MAKES AMD SELLS MORE MEN’S $3.50 SHOES TH AM ANY OTHER MANUFACTURER. 1 fl nnn REWARD to anyone who can M>IU)UUU disprove this statement. W. L. Douglas $3.50 shoes have by their excellent style, easy fitting, and superior wearing qualities, achieved the largest sale of any $3.50 shoe in the world. They are just as good as those that cost you $5.00 to $7.00 the only difference Is the price. If 1 could take you into my factory at Brockton, Mass., the largest in the world under one roof making men’s fine shoes, and show you the care with which every pair of Dougins shoes is made, you would realize why W. L. Don"las $3.50 shoes are the best shoes produced in the world. If I could show you the difference between the shoes made in my factory and those of other makes, you would understand why Douglas $3.50 shoes cost more to make, why they hold their shape, fit better, wear longer, and are of greater intrinsic value than any other $3.50 shoe on the market to-day. W. L. Doutilat Strong Made Shoes for Man. $2.50, $2.00. Boys’ School & Dress Shoes,s2.so, $2, $1.7 5,51.50 CAUTION.— Insist upon having W.L.Douglas shoes. Take no substitute. None genuine without ms name and price stamped on bottom. WANTED. A shoo dealer in every town where W. L. Douglas Shoes are not sold. Full line of samples sent free for inspection upon request. • fast Color Eyelets used; they will not wear brassy. Write for Illustrated Catalog of Fall Style* W. L. DOUGLAS. Brockton, Mass.
MEMIOFCfIffI gives Absolutely free Jo Every Settler ® nc » un()re< ' an( * Sixty Acres of Land In WESTERN CANADA Land adjoining: this can be purchased from rail way and land companies at from J 6 to $lO per acre On This Land This Year Has Been Produced Upwards of Twenty-five Bushels of Wheat to the Acre It is also the best of grazing land, and for mixed farming it has no superior on the continent. Splendid climate, low taxes, railways convenient, schools and churches close at hand. Fot “Twentieth Century Canada" and low railway rates Apply for Information to Superintendent of Tmmisra* tion. Ottawa. Canada, orto 0. J. Broughton, Boom 430, Quincy Build!ng, Chicano, Ill.sE.T. Holmes. 815 Jackeon St., St. Paul, Minn.: M. V. Mclunea, « Avenue Theater Block, Detroit, Mich, iT. O. Currie, Boom 12, B. Callahan Block. Milwaukee. Wte.iW.ll. Bogers, Ird Floor,Traction-Terminal Building, Indianapolis, Ind., Authorized Government Agente. Plena* euy where you enw this advertleerynt. SICK HEADACHE —ii —i Positively cured by AADTrOO these Little Pills. LAilllrO They also relievo tresgfroH!D^pepsia,lnC I digestion and Too Hearty • n Eating. A perfect rema edy for Dizziness. Nausea. -S Drowsiness, Bod Taste * In the Mouth, Coated Tongue, Pain In the Side. I TORPID LIVER. TW regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. SMAIL PILL SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE Genuine Must Bear Kittle Fac-Simile Signature IVER _✓ PILLS. dLJREFUSE SUBSTITUTES. job and._ K s,- OC Newspaper K 1 Of th. lateot and beet dwrtgn. eold upon soar Ural and at reaaonable prioea. For further particulars addrana CHICAGO NEWSPAPEB ONION, ST, St. »1, SS SeuU Jeffaraan St.. Cklease, TIL in time. Ei— BHT
WASHINGTON GOSSIP
President Roosevelt is mapping out a lot of work to occupy the attention of Congress when it next assembles. Questions that are of great moment to the business world and the public in general are to be placed squarely before the legislators for action. The President’s attitude on the railway rate question has not been modified since he first directed attention! to the manifest evil that has grown up under the insidious system of rebates. Mr. Roosevelt strikes the keynote when he says the highways must be kept open to all on equal terms. The abuses of the private car line and the private terminal track and private side switch system must be stopped, the President says. There is little doubt that the majority of the people echo his sentiments in this regard. If the President has his way, power to revise and regulate rates will be invested in the Interstate Commerce Commission. Another measure of great importance that will be recommended by the President is a bill to prevent bribery and other forms of corruption in Federal elections. State courts have showed in a lamentable number of instances that they are not beyond the baneful influence of ward leaders, and attempts to punish violators of the sanctity of the ballot box have ignominiously failed. The absolute purification of politics probably will ever remain an iridescent dream, but there is little doubt that a Federal statute, asking the trial of offenders against the ballot out of the control of State courts, would be a long step forward in a commendable effort to free the ballot box of fraud. Federal control of insurance is another question that will be discussed in the President’s message. The disclosures that are being made in the investigation in New York have aroused a storm of indignant protest from policy holders who demand that their interests shall be protected and safeguarded by Federal control.
The new Anglo-Japanese treaty differs from the earlier treaty in several important particulars. It runs for a period of ten years; it embodies a recognition on the part of Great Britain of the paramount political, military and economic interests of Japan in Korea, and on the part of Japan of the right of Great Britain to take such measures as she may find necessary for safeguarding her Indian possessions; it applies the principle of “the open door” for the commerce of all nations to Korea; and, most important of all, it pledges each power to come to the assistance of the other in war, not merely when its ally is attacked by two powers, as in the earlier treaty, but when it is involved in any war in defense of its territorial rights or special interests “in the regions of eastern Asia and India.”
The folly of maintaining custom houses to serve the interests of politicians is clearly outlined by James R. Reynolds, second assistant of the United States treasury, who says that of the 157 custom ports in our country 111 do not pay expenses. Crisfield, Md., received $22.70 in customs last year and $2,700 was paid out for salaries. Beaufort, N. C., took in $1.55 in revenues and the salaries paid to gather this tiny sum were about sl,500. All told, these 111 offices, where the receipts fall behind the expenses, cost the government nearly $300,000 every year.
Surgeon General R. M. O’Reilly of the army has submitted an exhaustive annual report on health conditions to Secretary Taft. The report says that the enlisted strength of the army, as shown upon the monthly sick report, was 58,740, and on the returns of the military secretary 60,139, and calculations are made up on the latter figures. There were 79,586 “admissions to the sick report” during the year, <O6 deaths from all causes and 1,377 discharges for disability. The figures, Dr. O’Reilly says, show a steady and progressive improvement in the health of the army. • When the Civil Wgr closed the Union army had an enrollment of a little more than a million. In June of this year the report of the Commissioner of Pensions showed more than six hundred and eighty thousand survivors on the pension rolls. There are probably many veterans who do not appear on the pension rolls, so that the number of survivors is remarkably large. Certainly the sentimental cartoon which the newspapers print each Memorial day of the “thin blue line” and decimated ranks does not represent the facts.
Because of the loss of submarine boats in Europe, the Secretary of the Navy has ordered that no American submarine be allowed to go down unless accompanied by a convoy equipped with hoisting apparatus for use in case of accident. • Every mother whose son goes aboard a submarine vessel will be glad that this order has been issued. And when the President went down in the 'lunger at Oyster Bay in August, the nation rejoiced that the convoy was nt hand.
YOU HAVE NO RIGHT
To Suffer from Constipation, Bowel and Stomach Trouble. <J- What Is the beginning of sickness A. Constipation. Q. What is Constipation? A. Failure of the bowels to carry off the waste matter which lies in the alimentary canal where it decays and poisons the entire system. Eventually the results* are death under the name of some other disease. Note the deaths from typhoid -fever and appendicitis, stomach and bowel trouble, at the present time. Q. What causes Constipation? A. Neglect to respond to the call of Nature promptly. Lack of exercise. Excessive brain work. Mental emotion and improper diet. Q. What are the results of neglected. Constipation? A. Constipation causes more suffering than any other disease. It causes rheumatism, colds, fevers, stomach, bowel, kidney, lung and heart troubles, etc. It is the one disease that starts all others. Indigestion, dyspepsia, diarrhea, loss of sleep and strength are Its symptoms—piles, appendicitis, and fistula, are caused by Constipation. Its consequences are known to all physicians, but. few sufferers realize their condition Until it is too late. Women become confirmed invalids as a result of Constipation. Q. Do physicians recognize this? A. Yes. The first question your doctor asks you is “Are you Constipated?’’ That is the secret. Q. Can it be cured? A. Yes, with proper treatment. The common error is to resort to physics, such as pills, salts, mineral water, castor oil, Injections, etc., every one of which is injurious. They weaken and Increase the malady. You know this by your o\vn experience. Q. What then should be done to cure it? A. Get a bottle of Mull's Grape Tonic at once. , Mull’s Grape Tonic will positively cure Constipation and stomach trouble in the shortest space of time. No other remedy has before been known to cure Constipation positively and permanently. Q. What is Mull’s Grape Tonic? A. It is a compound with 40 per cent of the juice of Coucord Grapes. It exerts a peculiar strengthening, healing influence upon the Intestines, so that they can do their work unaided. The process Is gradual, but sure. It Is not a physic. It Is unlike anything else you have ever used, but it cures Constipation, Dysentery, Stomach and Ifcwel trouble. Having a rich, fruity grape flavor, it is pleasant to take. As a tonic it is unequalled, insuring the system agajnst disease. . It strengthens and builds up waste tissue. Q. Where can Mull’s Grape Tonic be had? A. Your druggist sells it. The dollar bottle contains nearly three times the 50cent size. f , Good for ailing children and nursing mothers. A free bottle to all who have never used it, because we know it will cure you.
124 FREE BOTTLE ”405 Send this coupon with your name and address and druggist’s name, for a free bottle of Mull’s Grape Tonic for Stomach and Bowels,to MULL'S GlttPE TONIC CO., SI Third Avenue, Rock Island, Illinois Give Full Address and Write Plainly The si.oo bottle contains nearly three times the Soc size. At drug stores.
The genuine has a date and number stamped oft the label—take no other from your druggist.
Never Touched Him.
The old man paused at tlie parlor door on his way upstairs. “Don’t forget, young man,” he said, “that the lights in this house are all out at 10 o'clock.” “Thanks,” rejoined the young man, who was helping the fair maid to hold the sofa down, “but—er—couldn’t you make aft exception to-night and put ’em out an hour earlier?”—Chicago News.
SUFFERING UNTOLD.
A Kansas City Woman’s Terrible Experience with Kidney Sickness. Mrs. Mary Cogin, 20th St. and Cleveland Ave., Kansas City, Mo., says:
Pills, an.fi the remedy cured me so that I have been well ever since, and have had a fine baby, the first In five that' was not prematurely born.” Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
Power to Ocean Waves.
At the international engineering congress held in St. Louis, some unusual figures were given on the subject of the height and power of ocean waves, particularly as regards their effect upon harbor works, says the Scientific American. In the course of a paper dealing with the new Dover harbor, it was stated that since these works have been in progress, no wave of a greater height than fifteen feet has been recorded —a fact which will be very surprising to those who have experienced the miseries of the DoverCalais passage. The fact is the more remarkable because at the entrance to the Tyne waves from thirty-five to forty feet high have been measured and the last-named height has also been observed at Peterhead. In dwelling upon the necessity for what are known as spending beaches and wave traps, for dissipating and controlling wave action, It was stated that the depth to which the later extends Is now known to be much greater than once commonly supposed. Proof of this Is shown by the fact that lobster pots placed In from 120 to 180 feet of water have been found to be filled with sand and shingle after a heavy gale; moreover, sand had been found deposited after a heavy gale in the grtilery of the Bishop Rock lighthouse, the latter being 120 feet above the . water and the depth of the water at that point 150 feet. That the water, even at considerable depths, must be moving during a gale with great momentum is shown by the fact that at the Peterhead breakwater blocks weighing forty-one tons and located over thirty-six feet below spring tide, low water, were displaced during a storm, while a section of the breakwater weighing 8,300 tons was moved bodily for a few Inches without the brickwork being dislocated.
The belief of Sir James CrichtonBrowne that brainworkers achieve their best work in later middle age >s easily confirmed by glancing at the careers of a few of the grand old men who are still with us, many of whom are as busy as in their younger days, says the London Chronicle. Lord Roberts at 73 is still worth £5,000 a year to the nation as one of our imperial defenders; Lord Kelvin at 81 may startle us with fdrther generalizations on .’thp mysteries of science, Sir William Huggins at the same age still explores interstellar spaces, while the activity of the octogenarian Duke of Rutland and Lord Wemyss is as effective as ever in preserving the privileges of our old nobility.
Hinton, Ky., Oct. *o.—(Special.)— lt has long been claimed that Diabetes is incurable, but Mr. E. J. Thompson, teacher in the Hinton pchool, has' pleasing evidence to the contrary. Mr. Thompson had Diabetes. He took Dodd’s Kidney Pills and is cured. In a statement he makes regarding his cure Mr. Thompson says: “J was troubled with my kidneys for more than two years and was treated by two of the best doctors in this part of the State. They claimed I had Diabetes and there was little to be done for me. Then I started to use Dodd’s Kidney Pills and what, they did for me was wonfierfyl. Jit is certainly owing to- Dodd’s Kidney Pills that I am now enjoying good health.” Many doctors still maintain that Diabetes is incurable. But Diabetes is a kidney disease and the kidney disease that Dodd’s Kidney Pills will not cure has yet to be discovered.
It is a matter of common observation that at the passing of the great men of each generation there is a pessimistic feeling prevalent that “there were giants in those days.” But the feeling has never had any warrant in the actual deficiencies of the oncoming generations. Orators have come and gone and statesmen have come and gone, and sometimes their immediate successes have not been discernible. But in time the men have emerged wno have taken their places and who have improved upon the patterns they left. —Des Moines Register.
State of Ohio, City of Toledo, Lucas County, ss.: Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he Is senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney & Co., doing business in the City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of Hall’s Catarrh Cure. - . FRANK 3. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence, this 6th day of December, A. D. 1886. A. W. GLEASON, (Seal.) Notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. Sold by all Druggists, 75c. Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation.
James Rankin Young, ex-Congress-man, is responsible for this story about three drowning men. They were out in a rowboat which was run down by an excursion steamer on the Delaware River. The accident occurred close to the shore, and the captain of the steamer immediately had a lifeboat lowered. While the crew were pulling toward the struggling men, an excited individual on the dock yelled out: “Save the red-headed man! Whatever you do, save the red-headed man!” All three men, however, were saved; and when they had been safely landed on the dock, the captain turned to the excited individual and said: “Why did you want to save the red-headed man in preference to the others?” “Because,” was the frank reply, “he owes me a dollar and a half.”
"For years I was run down, weak, lame and sore. The kidney secretions were too frequent. Then dropsy puffed up my ankles until they were a sight to behold. Doctors gave me up, but I began using Doan’s Kidney
Kloseman—Well, of all things! The idea of his accusing me of making a lie out of the whole cloth Pepprey—Yes, the idea! Kloseman —Ridiculous, isn’t It? Pepprey—Oh, very. Evidently he doesn’t know how economical you are. —Philadelphia
Tom (at the reception)—That young widow is acting rather kittenish to-night. Jack—No wonder. She spent the summer in the CatskillSpiountains.—Chicago News.
People Will Drink Coffee When It ‘•Does Buch Things.” “I began to use Postum because the old kind of coffee bad so poisoned my whole system that I was on the point of breaking down, and the doctor warned me that I must quit it, My chief ailment was nervousness and heart trouble. Any unexpected noise would cause me the most painful palpitation, make me faint and weak. “I had beard of Postum and began to drink it when I left off the old coffee. It began to me just as soon as the old effects of the other kind of coffee passed away. It did not' stimulate me for a while, and then leave me weak and nervous as coffee used to do. Instead of that It built up my strength and supplied a constant vigor to my system which I can always rely on. It enables me to do the biggest kind of a day’s work without getting tired. All the heart trouble, etc., has passed away. “I give it freely to all my children, from the youngest to the oldest and it keeps them all healthy and hearty.” Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Micb. There’s a reason. Read the little book, “The Road to Wellville,” In pkgs.
Age and Brain Work.
A Teacher’s Testimony.
Great Men.
Econymy in Life-Saving.
Groundless Accusations.
Explanation.
FUNNY
WILD WITH ECZEMA
And Other Itching, Burning, Scaly Eruptions, with Loss of Hair—Speed* ily Cured by Cuticnra. Bathe the affected parts with hot water and Cuticura Soap, to cleanse the surface of crusts and scales and soften the thickened cuticle; dry, without hard rubbing, and apply Cuticura Ointment frealy, to allay itching, irritation and inflammation, and soothe and heal; and, lastly, take Cuticura Resolvent Pills to -cool and cleanse the blood. A single set, costing bpt sl, is often suflicient to cure the most torturing, disfiguring skin, scalp and blood humors, with loss of hair, when air else fails.
Success and Failure.
Most of yoti, I dare say, have heard of George Ade. Here is a little story of him. At a recent banquet he was asked to speak on success. “I suppose that failure is more familiar than success to all of us,” he said. “We work away. Four things fall. The -fifth thing succeeds. The hardest workers have the most failures, but then they have the most successes, too. One of my early failures was a melodrama that I traveled all the way from Chicago to New York to sell to a manager. This was in my youth, ifvhen I had confidence in myself. The manager returned my melodrama. lie said he didn’t care for it. “I pointed out the merits in it which he had overlooked. I proved that he would make a great mistake if he should not accept this work. But he shook his head. ‘“Can’t you’tase it at all?’ I asked despairingly. “ ‘Well,’ said he, ‘I might grind it up and use it for a snowstorm.’ ’’— Bertrand in Boston Globe.
Staple as Sugar and Coffee.
The magazine editors who are using much of their space in attacks on “patent” medicines, seem to overlook the fact that a large proportion of the population of this country—nearly 53 per cent, to be exact —live in rural districts, remote from physicians and drug stores, and that it is necessary for them to keep ready-prepared family medicines on hand for immediate use in case of an emergency. On this account, if on no other, the well-known family remedies will continue to be as staple as sugar and coffee.
Open to Argument. Still, it is often impossible to tell whether the life insurance director or the life insurance policy holder is the greater dummy.—Atlanta Journal. The well-earned reputation and increasing popularity of the Lewis’ “Single Binder,” straight 5c cigar, is due to the maintained high quality and appreciation of the smoker. Lewis’ Factory, Peoria, Illinois. Bashfulness may sometimes exclude pleasure, but seldom opens any avenue to sorrow or remorse.—Johnson. I cannot praise Piso’s Cure enough for the wonders it has worked in curing me. —R. H. Seidel, 2206 Olive street, St. Louis, Mo., April 15, 1901. When some men pretend to act foolish their neighbors are unable to detect the difference. M. Gllea, Everett, Po., Suffered yean with kidney and crave! trouble. Cured by Dr. David Kennedy a Favorite Bemedy. Bondout, N. Y. 11.00, If you are wise to-day you can afford to risk being otherwise to-morrow. Mm Winslows Soothing Btrup for Children teething; softens the gums, reduces inflammation, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25 cents a bottle. Around the World •‘I have used your Fish Brand Slickers for years In the Hawaiian Islands end found them the only article that suited. I an now In this country (Africa) and think a great deal of your coats.” (hams oh application) men EST AWARD WORLD’S FAIR, 1904. The world-wide renutatlon of Tower’s Waterproof Oiled Clothing assures the buyer of the positive worth of all garments bearing /Ten anstfU this Sign of the Fish. A. J. TOWER CO., Boston, U. S. A. TOWER CANADIAN CO., LIMITED, 353 Toronto, Canada.
Winchester B|srh| REPEATING shotguns No matter how big the bird, no matter how heavy ite plumage or swift ita ■ \ flight, you can bring it to bag with a long, atrong, straight elm sting I \i \UI Winchester Repeating Shotgun. Reeulta are what count. They always I w give the beat results in field, fowl or trap shooting, and are sold wttkaa reach of everybody's pocketbook. FR££.- Sand name and addrtit on-jf portal card for oar largo Übutratod tafofogae. WWWiJBHRfr*;] , WINCBESTEI ItPEATING AIMS CO.. NEV HAVEN. CUI ■ BEST FOR THE BOWELS ANIHIRIPINF GRIP. BAD cold, headache aid neuraloia. nilll mill lIII_ I won't sell Aag-Owlylae to a dealer who won't Pearaa«et Ba UHmmfiWtluMf U Call for yoar MOMtT SACK IV IT DOKSHYT CTHBB. L X w. Warner, ALE*., Manufacturer, AprimoltoM.
THE CHANGE OF LIFE.
INTELLIGENTWOMEN PREPME Dangers and Pain of This Critical Pwte< Avoided by the Use of Lydia M PtaJfc* barn's Vegetable Compound.
If her system is in a deranged ©audition, or she is predisposed to Apoplexy or congestion of any organ, it is at thia time likely to become activerand, with, a host of nervous irritations, make life a burden. ‘ At this time, also, cancers and tnmre are more liable to begin their deetree* tive work. Such warning symptoms M a sense of suffocation, hot flashes, dis* zkiess, headache, dread of impending evil, sounds in the ears, timidity, palpitation of the heart, sparks before the eyes, irregularities, constipation* variable appetite, weakness and inquietude are promptly heedpd by intelligent women who are approaching th® period of life when woman’s great change may be expected. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound is the world's greatest remedy for women at this trying period, and' may be relied upon to overcomeall distressing symptoms and carry them safely through to a healthy and happy old age. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound invigorates and strengthens the female organism, and builds up th® weakened nervous system as no other medicine can.
Mrs A. E. G. Hyland, of Chester* town, Md., in a letter to Mrs, Pinkham, says: Dear Mrs. Pinkham: — “I had been suffering with falling of the womb for years and was passing through the change of life. My womb was badly swollen. I had a good deal of soreness, dizzy opeUa, headaches, and was very nervous. I wrote you for advice and commenced treatment with Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Ownpound as you directed, and I am happy tossy that all those distressing symptoms left me, and I have passed safely through the chang® of life a well woman.” . For special advice regarding thia important period women are invited to write to Mrs. Pinkham for advic®. It Tr.-p and nlwprs hplnfnl.
j i Tablets and powders advertised . ( x as cures for sick-headache are gen- ( x erally harmful and they do not cure . K but only deaden the pain by puffiaf 1 F the nerves to sleep for a short time < Eugh the use of morphine or I * tine. < * me’s Family 1■ Medicine ' tonic-laxative, cures sick-head- < :, not merely stops it for an < ror two. It removes the cause I 1 eadache and keeps it away. ( I I by all dealers at 25c. and 50c. F FOR WOMEN jBjSI troubled with ills peculiar to their sex, used as a douche is marvelously ssecessfnl. Thoroughly cleanses, kills disease Etnna. stops discharges, heals inflammation and local soreness. Paxtine is in powder form to be dissolved la purs water, and is far more cleansing, healing, germicidal and economical than liquid antiseptics for all TOILET AND WOMEN’S SPECIAL USES For sale at druggists, 50 cents a box. Trial Box and Book of instructions Free. Thc R. Paxton Company Boston, Mis*. IPEUTC ten WEEKLY Beilins Curio., BraafHaa AUEN I W SUU Beetle,. Bar. ipwtiaU, effcwi before; no competition; exclusive territory. Sample 2&c; bringa 11.25. Ah tram Alfg. Co., 157 E. Kt., New Yarb THIS BEATS HEW JERSEY railroads or any other Industrial pursuit; laws, blaaka frea. Philip M. Eawrenee t former Aset. Sec. State, HarmsUß ".'“'wJl’onipson’sEyeWatßi Bend 10 eta. AAIIADETE Tr ’ At * foll T •* for copy of UURUIIC I C Cement Products. ,Cte> Crete Publishing Co., 54 Home Haak, Detroit, Minh A A AAO EC in North wort Texas; ca II UU A Vll fed line for wheat and stock rGaia*. torch. EKNEMT O’BANNON, -»-«rrt«l4, La C. N. U. ————— No . WHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS PLEASB SAY ’’ yoa saw the advtrtlssocai la this paper.
| How noianjr we men realise that , the most arittoU period in a w®* man’s existene® lis the chang* of life, and th at th® I anxiety felt by I women as this ' time draws neoir is not without reason ?
