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MOUNT VERNON HAWK-E YE.
BY DISEASE.
W 0' n
. .hose Fame Will Not
1“; 111 History.
es fol
‘t 22’ ed and Unprejndlced
view 0 the Conditions Ex-
1 dem the Various Tent
igels ta! Station“.
Lintles
the 011
:about 9 Made (Pa.) Leticia]
l Err over. Spanish bullets
film; 912‘ force; but, the
of ' of this war have
so =‘ Abe'I‘Ed. The enormous
“many is still in the service,
1 “3' have been flir-
09,000 men are still in
312?“: ting fUrther orders. in
most ' 8‘55 camps fevers pre-
8 exc that the spread of dis~
l fppg hecked, but the germs
Fer th’deeply to prevent the
be we " “other young sufferer.
1332“ I was at the home of
,2,“ “Span E, First District
hree c men‘s, who had died
btetfen y ‘5 Was the first fatali~
"last. Surf. and his corporal
-s are ' 501111;; man had hard—
d ye: “ghoul the Cuban cam—
h;;; (f back in the trium-
L' that n, Of his regiment,
forei y m the ranks. The
bras attacked with the
e larg 5 n fever-
lnt of “mar reports are re‘
9“ “e “y regiments. What
11 hesl dld not accomplish
rtly b .as and is still doing
:marti mnghemes. While over
defian (:58 “'110 waited in vain
was e. ty ‘0 advance to Cuba
is it h “d glory on the battle
flag?“ sPeeler of. typhoid
at bar' d
:susta » however, that condi-
lrg'or ,. 5' lfnproving, for the
*Ship p lllrrmg are mainly the
have 1dEmic that raged dur-
the (“1:115 At Montauk the
38,38 P Olds are being fed
:alnst_ and we cream, and as
.ekcommend this diet the
3 IN em up. There is one
, “am at. Camp Wikoff
r and making a practice of
Flel “alescent typhoids.
rlth ' fifld hospitals are still
A mldier may be re-
nn.,
ial to gag,
“:d 3%, 9%
I0 bu
l tha .
reshe
cksa , .
.1 do: “fl ‘
ingly/
of 58
The W ,5
fieldSv. ‘3’"
ning. V .11-
st til
9 Sa
‘ sno
stand.
for a
OK i
:tle J.
era
It]: 0;
1y, ,1 quarters..\
., e
yea . m and 1mm be-
wbil. “ 1’11 his military duties.
)1. of y .‘ Ecomes more serious,
eet, ,; hd elther to the regi-
day ‘ tidlvision hospital, or
them I 1:fbehind in one of the
:1 dr “e thy an army on the
hen, i pimregimentalfiivision
two A ; “ Safe merely an ag-
roun erwnh cots for the pa-
' ’e in)“ not even con-
. r1102“! Such hospitals
ed “I Dunn Loring,
. ch,
’cks Camp Mead, Wash-
' andm at many
119'. 83mg,“ the hospitals
te’ntsles were spread
lfll‘Y “t and more .pa.
’3- 22' 1,. there ~ practical—
ih th‘ ' ForI‘Hr'vounded sol-
. 0
)erg ' 3:315 are Often quite
r. T, n 5’ Well be doubted
lithe -~ "ing with typhoid,
the l . yseutery should be
Tran .Was told by an eye
ition . I ‘ght in a rainstorm
i noflhtfents were blown
‘d lems lay for almost
With 3° the storm and
ind f tram.
E8339 2:: division tent hos-
r .
“mm, 3' of the public
er of \ i
. J. '1" LL
ml 5“. I
. tri 3..
0 Bu , 1
1 the v. .
111
g qll. Wiggly directed. The
Den 8, i “’38. absence of
fthe _eg“ Orance and al-
a bu Inbjgence of attendants
'6 11:5»; £03 0! the most 56»
“a, “a “lit there have
00 I . f ‘heggefiltion, and yet
in, gen bso'called “yellow
i" 00 ’- May no means base-
!) r1811]: hospital is
l) hl's but when the
out the thousands
. “Enslderable cou-
ieg Thnp‘ “lug. Many
' $3M. I"We been pre—
5 all? methods at
cove 3' whn laplles were fre~
tell at other times
3.115% «girlie patients
e mi gape. wfi‘je Typgoid
kntio . {It teaches, -ras mo e111)
n are: inning
Willi”; and o? lmiilessquam
t i “eat “alleged cura-
£011,118“ meanwhile
111p A,“ a striking i1.
Q‘luf hat. ager’ Van Where I
ct. lat. era? table
pk 19- e m: “ nIber of ther-
ilion h
Ospltnl had
been for months almost entirely or 31-
together without these invaluable in-
struments. At this hospital almost all
the patients were typhoids. Think of
treating that disease, which perhaps
more than any other demands a con-
stant gauging of the temperature of
the blood, without the aid of a ther-
morncter!
When 1 was at this same camp, one of
the surgeons admitted to me that hos-
pital privates had been mustered into
the service from all kinds of trade on
satisfactorily passing a physical ex-
amination. These men were then sup-
posed to attend to the wants of the
sick. The surgeon also admitted that
cut of the six men that came undcr
his immediate command five were so
ignorant that they had to be taught
how to read a thermometer.
For that matter the surgeons in
charge are frequently none too com-
petent. It is. claimed that veterinary
surgeons have been assigned to take
charge of hundreds of typhoid pa-
tients, and jUSt now a great outcry has
arisen over the appointment of a head
physician at one of the large camps, a
man whose card as a veterinary sur-
geon some one is said to have discov-
ered. In fact, a brief conversation with
many of the physicians now at the hos-
pitals will convince anyone of their
limited qualifications, although, on
the other hand, some of the best men
in the profession have accepted minor
positions and are hard at work in de-
tached branch hospitals.
A source ol‘. criticism at the present
time is the fact that by the movement
of troops from camp to camp it was
found necessary to leave many who
became too sick to move at branch
hospitals hastily constructed along
the road. There are such tents scat-
tered all through the country from
Tampa to New York. While the pa—
tients at regimental hospitals were
generally able to move with their
regiments some of those at the division
hospitals had to remain behind. Thus
at Camp Alger, where 10,000 troops
went. away to various places, 29 pa-
tients, in charge of a few surgeons and
attendants, had to be left way out in
the woods between Falls Church and
\Vcdderliurn. Va. At Bristoe and
other places a few sick men remained
behind in a desolate country.
It has been suggested that all these
hospitals be consolidated at the gen-
'eral hespitals, such as those at Fort.
,.z
I‘l“/,//l
v.4! ._
so
ENE IN A TENT HOSPITAL STATION.
Thomas.
THE AESTHETIC SIDE.
To Beuutlfy ()ur Highways Is Not a
Flu], us Trch Are (irent l'ru-
recto rs of Roads.
While con>idcring~ the purely utili-
turian aspect of good highways, it. is
well not to forget that there arc other
considerations worthy of attention,
and that hard roads when unsliudcd
and barren, and city streets when uu—
adorned. arc lill‘lx’lllg‘lll ihoac simple
yet beautiful features which make
travel over llicm more agreeable and
add an unmistakable charm to move—
ment in the open air.
For the most part, all tllouglli re—
garding roadmaking in the recent re-
vival in this country, has thus far
turned to grades, drainage and road
beds. and almost no attention has been
paid to roadside adornment. This fea-
ture, however, is not without its utility
as well as aesthetic value, for country
roads lined by shade trees and hedges,
and so partially protected from the
summer sun, are, in a measure. kept
from drying out too fast and from
breaking up in time of drought. The
traveler is made more comfortable and
his animals suffer less from heat. In
the many districts in which watering
PRIZE BAD ROAD.
(Located Not Very Far from Baltimore,
Maryland.)
is impracticable or impossible the ben-
efits are particularly marked.
But tllc beauty that maybe added to
any road or street at the cost of little
trouble and expense is a direct source
of refining influences to all that por-
tion of the public which uses them.
The great. variety of trees, shrubs,
bushes, hedges and flowers that are
possible along the roadside are a com—
fort to the traveler and a delightto his
eye.
In towns, and in the residence por-
tion: of ditieaeven better results can
be obtained, as imbue case in a west-
ern city where a gentleman who owned
land on both sides of the streetv‘me—
moved the fences" saySPark and Ceme-
tery, “and planted in their places quan—
tities of barberry bushes, Japan
that ll be Myer. F0“ MGPhEr-‘Dn Mill 301%
~qu§incc,"’bncktllorns, prickly ash and“
While a regimental or di- sweet briars; The
pa rkwuys retain
vision hospital rmay reccinonly name- gxiiihesmetivawmusmnd there’has
patients of its own organization; mm b‘e’en additional planting. Elms.
lin-
which the surgeons are selected.‘gen- dens, maples, oaks and other trees
“‘31 hospitals are for the use 01 any have been used, and also
red-branched
troops in the United States service.
The general hospitals are excellent.
Fort Myer has now about 35 patients,
many of whom on returning to their from another city, after having
regimental mess have told me that.
they wished themselves back to the
flesh pots of Egypt. The general hos-
pitals are regularly established in-
stitutions pertaining to the regular
army. and that is the secret of their
superiority, for, though the volunteer
officers have meant. well, it has been
a problem almost beyond human pow-
er to properly systematize the enor-
mous volunteer organizations in any
of its branches in so short a period.
At the Fort Myer bespital every room
has been utilized for the patients, and
even the riding school was converted
into a ward. the largest hospital ward
ever used in this country. c
Much has already been done by
way of transporting the patients to
the general hospitals. A special hos-
pital train of ten tourist sleepers has
been commissioned as a transport.
and is running constantly from camp
to camp. The patients in the isolated
hospital tents are being taken away
just as soon as they are strong enough
to endure the trip. On a rccentTues-
day 181 regulars were received at
Fort Myer. The next day the sanie
train took a large number to Fort Mc-
Pherson. Many of the stateshave been
and are still making strenuous efforts
to carry their own sick away from the
division quarters to private hospitals.
Train after train of Pullman sleepers
has taken Missourians, New Yorkers,
Philadelphians, Ohioans, Yankees and
others from hospitals at Loring, Chick-
amauga and elsewhere to their home
states. Thanks to the charitable Phil-
adelphians their medico-chirurglcal
hospital alone has quartered almost
two hundred soldiers.
In speaking of private charity, one
must not forget the good Samaritans
of the gentler sex. What woman has
done to alleviate the sufiering of thou-
sands und thousands of soldiers no his-
tory can ever record; but those who
have snflered and have seen the su!‘
fering know of their great and noble
work. The funds that bought the
ice cream and champagne at. Montauk
were secured by and through the el—
forts of women; the transportation of
patients to better quarters was large-
ly the work of women‘s organizations.
When it was learned that the soldiers
were sent from camp to camp with
half—sick men among them, crowded
into day coaches and fed at half ra-
tions and 21 cents coffee mom-y for
24 hours, kind-hearted women met the
trains at every station with refresh-
ments for the hungry and pillows and
cushions for the sick. This method of
comforting soldiers on transports has
been organized into a regular prac-
tice at every station from Fernandina,
Fla., to New York city. .A great work
has been accomplished also by Sister:
of Charity and other trained nurses
who volunteered their services at the
division and branch hospitals. Sol-
dier rest homes have been provided
by the Legion of Loyal Women 'and
other organizations, where soldiers on
sick furloughs and others are re-
freshed. comforted and entertained.
dog-woods, syringns and viburnums.
The groups planted are as irregular as
the native growth. Recently a man
rid-
den through this street, was surprised
to find it was a public thoroughfare,
his impression having been that it was
a gentleman’s‘privaie drive.”
In some sections of the country this
sort. of thing is being undertaken to
the great advantage of the towns. An~
tiquated and useless fences, which
only disfigure the landscape, are being
removed, and residences dot here and
there among the shrubbcry and flow-
ers and lawns what appear to be great
and beautiful parks.
With the adoption of this plan would
naturally come the removal of the
great and hideous advertising signs
which disfigure so many streets, boul—
evards and public places and are a
monstrous eye sore on any landscape.
The result of such a change from the
purely commonplace and prosaic to
the beautiful and ornamental would
be far reaching, and highly beneficial
to the tastes and thoughts of all
classes, and particularly to the young.
—-L. A. “1 Bulletin.
Ronbs OVER HILLS.
They Are a Great This on Time,
Strength and “’cm- and Ten:-
of Horse and Drh'er-
The tax we have to pay because the
original cattle tracks and paths led-
abruptly up and down over hills seems
to be as immovable as the hills them-
St‘d'YCS which cause it. immense sums
would be eventually saved if many
hill roads were relocated. in learning
how to improve our highways and to
construct new ones, it. is well to learn
where lines should run. in order to in-
sure economy in grades and reduce the
tax on time, strength. wear and tear
and maintenance caule by hills.
Writing- on this subject in the Port-
land industrial Journal, Mr. 8.1).Gray
tells of roads over hills which “must
not be gone around because our fath-
ers traveled them and We may as well
be footsorc as they.” He cites a case
“in which boih town and- couuty (tom-
minioncrs refused to not. This road
was two miles in length with eight
rugged hills. four of them unsafe to
ride up or down. All those hills could
have been avoided and a level road
made for less than $1,000 that would
pay for itself in ten yours. The old
hills still remain. What we nccd‘is 8“
understanding not how to build our
roads but to say where our roads can
and should be built."
Gulls on HIP‘KOI'," Tree!)
The hickory galls are made by some
of the gall lice described by Drs, Fitch,
Walsh and Shimer and others. There
is no connection, whatevcr, between
these and caterpillars. There is, as yet,
no practical measure known that will
“factually prevent the attacks of these
gall lice upon the leaves of the hickory.
Beyond disfiguring leaves by theirllp-
penance, they do no special harm. The
caterpillars can be easily destroyed by
the timely use by arsenic-a1 poison|.—-—
F. M. Webster, Ohio Exp. Sta.
SUIT THE CONSUMER.
A Lesson 'I‘lmt Many nutter-Maker-
“111 Have to Learn Before They
Can Make Money.
(hie thing should always be borne in
mind by the person in making butter to
sell. The butter is for somebody else
to eat, and it is for yourinterestvto suit.
them. whether it just suits your taste or
not. llabit has a great deal to do with
our likes and dislikes. You may have i
been accustomed to sweet cream but.
tcr; if so, you probably like that best.
01‘, you may have got used to eating
butter made from very ripe cream. and
the butter not washed to expel the but-
termilk, causing; it to have a very de-
cided flavor and taste, and so you look
upon fine. delicate-flavored butter as
insipid. Or, you may like little or no
salting or high sailing; light color or
high colon But all this is of little con-
sequecc. It is no matter whatnyou like. !
You want to make it to suit yourcus—
tomer, and you want your cllstomers-
to be those who are able and willing to
pay a good prion for what suits them.
If the customer wants sweet—cream
butter, make it; if unsalted,makc it so; i
if he desires it high salted, salt it
high, and so on. Always make it the
same for the Customers. They are get-
ting tastes formed which you can make
it profitable to gratify. It is not the
province of the maker of dairy butter
to try and educate the tastes of the
people who buy butler, but rather to
cater to their tastes when he finds out
what. they are. if one is making but- ,
ter to put on the general market, he i
wants to make what the market. de-
mands and Will my the best price for.
The best way to learn the market de.
mand is to have the butter inspected
by an expert judge who is a dealer and
knows what takes best in the market.
Ask him to criticise it and if” you just
what. he thinks of it; and do not get
angry at what he tells you. but try and
profit by what he says. The object of.
this article is to help farmers to make
such butter as the best-paying custom-
ers in the general market demand.—
Ilrairic Farmer.
l
l
l
l
A CHEAP ATOMIZER.
Especially Adapted and Convenient
for House Plants and the
Flower Gardel-
This is made by soldering in a pint
tin cup the device shownin the lower
part of the illustration. 'TO the half-
moon shaped piece of tin is attached
the long rectangular tube. The short.
round tube at right angles to this
reaches almost but. not quite to the
SIMPLE SPRAYING DEVICE.
bottom of the cup. The top of thin
short tube is on a level with the bot-
tom of the long one. By partially
filling the cup with any kind of an in-
secticide and blowing into the long
tube]; fine spray can be created. The
little device is not patented and any
tinsmith can make one. With kero-
sene a small herd of cattle can be
sprayed for lice or to keep off flies in
a very short time. For house plant:
it is expecially adapted and con-
venient. rure kerosene must be used
very sparingly on either plants or
animals—vOrange Judd Farmer.
THE cow “751531:
If She Hun Been “’ell Lured For She
Should Then Be at Her
Very lieu. ‘
Many dairymen and othch who milk
cows for profit believe that when a
cow reaches the age of seven or eight
her useful years are over, and. that she
should be replaced by one younger,
says a writer in the New York Trib-l
one. But, other things being equal,
this is a mistake. A cow that has
been well cared 101‘. With generous ru-
tions and proper attention given to
her comfort, through all seasons of
the year, is better and will make a
more profitable return at eight, year.
old than at an earlier age; in other
wordt. she is in her prime, and she
will continue in this condition several
years, and will not be considered an
old cow until 14 or 15 years have
passed. Lows with first calves—at two
or thl‘l‘e years——are generally un-
profitable in their milk yield, and
a really good cow between seven and.
eight years old' will pay a. better reve-
nue than two that are performing
their first year's duties in the dairy
herd, and she. will probably consume
but a little more food than one. of the
younger ones. This fact is worthy
of the consideration of those who are
dairyng for profit. ‘
Cl'hlle Ind 11nd Roldl.
The extent and number of bloody
feuds in the mountainous districts of
some states is attributed to theinac-
cessibility of the people, their ig-
norance, enforced idleness and c0nsc~
quent crime. In many districts the
roads are so bad that a four-hone
team can pull but a ton during the
summer aul lull, while another sea-
sons what little transportation there
is takes place by puck mules. Schools
could not be attended if they existed.
the people are out _of touch with their '
kind, and have nothing better to do
than to make and drink "moonshine"
whisky and nurse their feuds. Perma-
nent roads would revolutionize these
cmnmuurities, make industry possible
and profitable. cause the establish—
ment of schools and repress criminal!
tendencies—«Good Roads.
For a small lawn there is no prettier '
or more suitable tree than magnolia
acuminala. It is without disease and
insect pests do not attack it.
ivory large fruit grower should but
a cold storage plant.
Whewt $2 a. Bushel.
Some farmers are holding their wheat be-
cause the think the price will go to $2 a
bushel. 'hc price, however, may go down
instead of up, and thus great losses wnll fol-
low delay in selling. In all matters delays
are dangerous, particularly so in Sickness.
At. the first sign of blhpusness, dyspepsia, in-
digestion or cousti scion cure yourself 'Wlth
liostettcr‘s Stomac Bitters. Don t wait for
your condition to improve itself, {or ii; 15 apt
to get worse still.
_. .... W‘WW...
A Necessary Crime.
Celebrated Lawyer—vNow tell me, ham
estly, did you rob that bank? ~
Client (in disgust)—0f course i did. Do
yer s’pose I'd be able to retain yer if I didn’t?
~—-Harlem Life.
-mw.“ .
Beware of Ointment: for Catnrrh
That Contain Mercury,
as mercury will surely destroy the sense of
smell and completely dcrange the whole sys
tem when entering it through the mucous
surfaces. Such articles should never be
used except on prescriptions trom re utable
physicians, as the damage they wxl do is
often ten fold to the pond you can possxbly
derive from them. 1 all’s Cutarrh (lure,
manufactured by l“. J. Chencyd 60., Toledo,
0., contains no mercury, and Is taken inter-
nally, actin directly upon the blood and
mucous sur aces of the system. In buying
Hall’s Catarrh Cure be sure you get the gen-
uinc. It is taken internally, and made in
Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Cheney & (,‘o. 'lcstl-
monials free. ' '
Sold by Drugglsis, price 75¢ per bottle.
Hall’s Family Pills are the best.
__..
The Value of Experience.
“\Vith what a gracefully sweeping motion
. she handles a. fun.” “Yes: she used to keep
the flies of? the table in her father's Omaha
lunchroom.”—~Cleveland Plain Dealer.
w. ,
From Baby in the Risk Chau-
to grandma inthe rocker Grain-O is good for
the whole family. It is the long-desired sub-
stitute for coflec. Never upsets the nerves
or injures the digestion. Made from pure
grains it is a. foo in itself. Has the taste
and ap earance of the best coffee at a; the
price. t is a genuine and scientific article
and is come to stay. It makes for health
and strength. Ask your grocer for Grain-O.
#W
The Real Factl.
“Manv a man,” said the Cumminsville
sage, “thinks he has sometbin to say, Wllgn,
really, he’only has a Job of ta mg to do. —-
Cincinnati Enquirer.
4,.-.
Land: Family Medicine.
Moves the bowels each day. In order to be
healthy this is necessar v. Acts gentlv on
the liver and kidneys. urea sick headache.
Price ‘25 and 50c.
...._..~.-
Advice ' Quickly Taken.
Physician—«You are living too high.
I’atientw'l‘hat’s so: I’ve got. to get a
cheaper doctor.-——N. Y. Vim.
_*.m. .-
Coughing Lead; to Consumption.
Kem 's Balsam will stop the Cough at
once. .0 to your druggist today and get a
sample bottle free. Large bottles ‘25 and 50
cents. G0 at once ; delays are dangerous.
——-—~———r
Enou h for a Row.~“Pa, what are the
dogs 0 war?” “Well, vour mother’s fine
Boodle and that mongrel pup next door-3"—
etroil; Free Press.
After ph sicians had iven me up, I was
saved by iso’s Curc.—— ulph Erieg, Wil~
liamsport, Pa., Nov. 22, 1893.
.4-
Leadin a. woman to the altar is usually
a man’s ast act of leadership.-Chicago
Daily News.
H.
To Cure a Cold in One Day
Take Laxative Bromo Quininc Tablets" All
druggists refund money if it fails to cure. 250.
4......“
The approval of your conscience is an ex-
cellent thing, but it is not. sufficient to get;
you a raise of salary.~—1’uck.
My
Biscuit making as practiced by some wom-
an is hard Work.--Chicago Daily News.
Damp weather brin s Rheumatism St
J acob's Oil brings the promptly.
,I , V .
he means: a man is the midi: he
V lower hiareoord;——Chicago Daily N cm.
,
Stricken with'Sciatica? St. Jacobs Oil will
rike it out and cure.
So many people become silly in trying to L
be funnyr—Atc ison Globe.
“Mu.-
Why suffer so with Neuralgia? St. Jacobs
Oil Will drive it all away.
Hang a sword over a man’s head and he is
more likely to cut the thread than move
from undersaktchison Globe.
Still‘ as a poker—«sore as a boil! St. Ja-. 1
cubs Oil wil relax, soothe, cure.
Beauty is like a cooking stovenno ood if
the fuel gives outs—Chicago Daily Negws. :r
Mw~o .'
mixed pain has bruise and sprain. St.
Jacobs Oil cures the twain.
Women’s shoes are naturally tight when
they crafting—Chicago Daily News.
M
Ever thus—heirs to aches and pains.
Jacobs 011’: the doctor.
8t.
Do u get up with a
headachg? ‘
18» there I bad taste in
your mouth?
Then you have a or
appetite and a weak d ges-
tlon. You are frequently
dizzy, nlwa s feel dull and
drowsy. on have cold
You get
but little benefit from our
food. You have no amt: ion
to work and the sh: pains
of ammo dart trough
“1'
yowmit i; the cause of all
this trouble?
Oonstlpnted bowoli.
hands and feet.
i will give you prompt mile}
and cemin cure.
Run Your aloud hu-
1! you have neglected your
case a long time, you had
better take '
Ana’s “will:
alsb- It will remove all
impurities that have been
accumulating in your blood
and will greatly strengthen
your nerves.
We no. Mor-
Thero my be something i. at
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{ INFO-BAG fillfifiii’i'i“lili2c’o’xi‘&it“
MRS. PINKHAM TALKS ABOUT OVARITIS.
Letter from Mrs. Carrie 1“. Tremper that all Suffering Women Should
Read.
Ovaritis or inflammation of the ovaries may result from sudden stopping of
the monthly flow, from inflammation of the
womb, and many other causes. The
slightest: indication of trouble with the
ovaries should claim your instant
attention. It. will not cure itself, and
a. hospital operation with all its ter-
rors may easily result from neglect.
The fullest. counsel on this sub-
ject can be secured withoutoost by
writing to Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn.
Mass, and asking for her advice.
Your letter will be confidential
and seen by women only.
Muellmm F. Tnnurns, Lake, Ind.,
whose letter we print, is only one of
many that have been cured of ovarian
troubles by Lydia. E. Pinkham’s Vege»
table Compound.
DEAR Mus. PrmnAm—I m
sufiering from congestion of the
ovaries, m‘isplaccment of the womb.
irregular, scanty, and painful
menstruation, also kidney trouble.
I had let. it. go on until I could not
sit up, and could not. straighten my left.
leg. My physician gave me relief, but
g, failed to cure me. Reading the testi-
monials of difi‘ercnt women, telling what
Lydia. E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound had
done for them, I decided to give it. a. trial. I
had almost. given up hopes, as I had suffered
untold agony. The first. dose helped me. And now, after using eight
bottles of
Vegetable Compound, one bottle of Blood Purifier. one box of Liver Pills,
I am proud to say I am as well as I ever was. I might have saved a. large
doctor’s bill and much suffering, had I tried yonr precious medicine in
the
beginning of my sickness. All in the village know I was not expected to
live.
when I had the first. and second attacks. In fact, I had no hope until I
began
taking your Vegetable Compound. It. has saved my life.”
Million Women [lave Been Benefltod by Mrs. Pinknam’s Advice and Medicine
'Ax knows this to beafact. There
ishno olcl oi“ Bafirtetls;1 my-
; w alter-en t ,as
Battle Ax sells five times more than
any 0313 brand in the world.
All who chew it never cha e.
emember the name,
when you buy again.
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“GOOD WIVES GROW FAIR IN
THE LIGHT OF THEIR WORKS,”
ESPEGlALLY IF THEY USE
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CAN DY
CA'VHAR'flc ’3' ‘ an". by
Buckingham’sllp.
Price so cent: at all dragging or
R. 1’. 1mm 00., Kuhn, R. H.
Em inecula is
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money. send 10¢ (or "Gold Tigefinigggbroé
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busy. 11mm Bauer eln. 0: 1814. Denver. Colorado.
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REA DEBS OF THIS PAPER
DESIRING' TO BUY ANYTHING
ADVERTISE!) IN ITS COLUMNS
SHOULD INSIST UPON
'WHA’I‘ THEY ASK NR. BEFUSIHG
ALL SUBSTITUTES OR I! ITATIONS.
A. N. Kn~A ‘73};
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