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About Valentine Democrat. (Valentine, Neb.) 1900-1930 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 7, 1909)
. - - - _ - _ _ _ _ _ - - QUICK RELIEF TAKE Gold MMal Haarlem Oil \ O.A.PSUx..ES " Odorless and Tasteless" STour : painB and aches from KIDNEY , L.TV- } ER. BLADDER OR STOMACH ; TROU- BLE will begin to disappear the first day lyou ( take GOLD MEDAL HAARLEM : OIL " CAPSULES. * - "AJtcr elvlnc ; your Gold Medal Haarlem 011 Capsules ' * thoroncU trial. I find them to be the best kidney and 'tlTcr remedy III are ever bad the Rood fortune take. . - nd they arc truly a blessing to mankind. I heartily recommend them to all sufferers . of weak Iddneye and , liver OB the superlative remedy. " IV. H. WARREN. ICO Bleecker EL New T ork , March 25. 1909. ! Haarlem 011 Capsules 25 and 50 cents per box. Bottles 15c. and 35c. , at all druggists. Scad for Free Full Size 25c Cox of Capsules : ! If vou are suffering from any kind of LIVER , STOMACH or BLADDER trou- flble , fill "out and mall this coupon now to 'Holland ' Medicine : Co. , Scranton. Pa. , and : . 'receive ' a free box oC Capsules for trial. olland redlclne Co. . &mnton. PI1. : J'lcal'0 lenfl me at onco. treo. Cull slzo 25c box Gold Modal 114arlcm on Capszles - 2\lI.me. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Street . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Town. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . State. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . vnirr I"I.\I-\J.Y U - 'r _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ . , . The LCSMOII He Learned. For different people the immortal stories of : the world have different I messages. For instance , Prof. Charles Zueblin , of the Chicago University , said at a recent dinner , which a writer in the St. Louis Globe-Democrat re ports , that in his native town of Pen- dleton some of the mothers used to cut the children's hair. They did it with shears and a bowl. The operation was often painful , and the result was never elegant. In Sunday school a Pendleton teach- er told her pupils the tragic story of Samson and Delilah. Then she turned to a small boy , hopeful that he had extracted some lesson from it. He had , indeed , taken it home. "Joe , " she said , "what do you learn from the Samson story ? " "It don't pay , " piped Joe , feelingly , "to have a woman cut a feller's hair. CAST.OR U A ! 3or Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought ! , Bears the dIr - # ---I _ Signature of i j , SHORT 3CEH TAKE : COURAGE. Chances of Genins Increase Tfltli ' Brevity of : Inches. I , j If you are a man and happen to be short of stature , do not let that trouble you. Your chances of genius - increase with your brevity in inches. At least , this seems to be the conclu- sion pointed at by inquiries recently made into the stature of eminent men In Great Eritain. Take the govern- ment , for instance ; its most distin- , : guished men'range in height about five and a half feet. Xloyd George , the spirited Welshman , who is Chan- cellor of the Exchequer , is five feet ceven. If his inches were equal to his . . \ ( ability he would be a giant. John I \ : - Burns the John Bullish representative ' ' of labor , who has risen from the posi- \ - tion of an engineer earning some $9 V . a week to be president of the Board of Trade , is of the same height. A like number of inches measures John Morley ; : , a man alike eminent as lit- terateur and administrator. When the 'Grand Old Man" was in the flesh hte looked upon Mr. Morley as his right- liand man ; the House of Commons . alls him "Honest" John and India .confesses him an enlightened ruler. Mr. Asquith has an inch more to his .credit , which is providential , perhaps , seeing that he is the especial butt of I the suffragettes. Mr. Chamberlain is .slight and only measures : a fraction -over five and a half feet. Among ac- tors one of the most eminent of Eng- lishmen is John I-jlare , and he Is only five feet four. Barrie. the genial , the .quixotic . the fantastic , is five feet five , . and , as UP 1 is a lover of cricket , a car- toonist cnco drew him peeping over the b'a-p at.a bat to see if the swift fcowler , Richardson , was going to de liver a fast one. Kipling is small- five feet and a half in his height ; Hardy and Hall Caine have an inch the better of him. So it is with the Artists. ! Abbey , 'Alma Tadema and Pointer : are all small ' men. Of the sci tZ.entisLs : ; , Sr ; William : Crookes only reg- isters five : cet seven and of the men " ' of busness ; Carnegie is a veritable mite being : but five feet three. Even the military men. are short ; witness : . Lord Ixoberts with his five feet six I and Viscount Wolseley with but one / inch more. So , if the reader happens to be short , he is short in good com - : pany. , " , IValmI Kexult. . , , Medical : : Professor - What is the re- sult ycunr gentlemen , when a pa tient's temperature goes down as far sis it car. ? Student - Why - er - he - sets cold : f feet. - Cleveland Leader. ; ; -7 - , , . } / : : I , . _ y ( _ * . IIIr/ ; / ' I I. : / - l , . 11h. ; . H. ' . . , ' 5 "Guar" : ; t. , , . . - fj 's . . . : . . . ' _ - - : - - - - - - * Great Crops in Western Canada . . , , , , _ -w- _ _ - Canadian Correspondence : During the early days in the growth of the crop in Western Canada , as well as throughout the ripening and garner- Ing period , there Is yearly growing an increasing interest throughout the Uni- ted States , as to the probable results when harvest is : completed. These mean much to the thousands of Ameri cans who have made their home in some one of the three Provinces that form that vast agriculturafdomain , and Is of considerable interest to the friends they have left behind them. The year 1909 is no disappointment ; it will bring comfort and happiness , wealth and luxury to those who are following agriculture as a pursuit in the country now occupying so much of the attention of the ' world - of this con- tinent in particular. Reports from the grain fields warrant the note of opti- mism that has been so prominent dur ing the past few months. The crops of wheat , oats and barley have been har- to complain of. " He didn't Know though , for the pioneering of his forefathers was discomfort and hard- ship. The opening up and development of western Canada , with its railroad ' utter- lines to carry one to' almost the most part of it , the telegraph line to flash the news to the other outside world , the telephone to talk to one's neighbor , the daily and weekly mail service which brings and carries letters to the friends in distant parts ; the , schools headed by college-bred and highly - certificated teachers ; the churches manned by brilliant divines ; the clubs ; the social and festive life ; what is there about any of this to give to the man who goes there to make his home the credit of being a pioneer Nothing ! He might as well be in any of the old middle west states. A few years ago when this country was not as well known as to-day there long-winded was some justification in - attempts to educate the reader on con- ditions there , to tell him of its geo- graphical relation with the United States , but with about 400,000 Ameri cans now there writing back to their friends , with the mass of literature that has been placftl : in the homes ol farmers in every State of the Union and the thousands of columns descrip- tive of the country that have appeared in newspapers and magazines , it would : : ; , - - . , - , . . 4 . z . , b . , ; - $ - - ; " , r : -4 4t : ' I : - F : 1 :2 : ' : ' - . _ . , , , ; - . - ' ' ' ' _ _ _ A t' ' _ , * , / , _ _ . kk41. . ' ' , , ) . " -r' ; > Of"'J' : . ; r"i , : ? : ' ' ' ' ' . ; ' ' ' . . " ' : r , -i107oQ " ! ( < T. , " . " t . t ' , M"t" . " . . : . ' , , , [ . ; . 'I.(1J"'TM . : 'rti"'J.i " FARM AND HOME OF JOHN SCHNAGER. - - - - - - - - - vested and it is now 'safe to speak : of results. Throughout the entire grain- growing area of 320,000 square miles there has been a uniform production and a high average. Careful estimates place the yield of spring wheat at 30 bushels per acre , winter wheat at over 40 bushels and oats exceed 50 bushels per acre. Barley also has proved an abundant yield. What will attract the reading public more than volumes of figures will be the fact that those who have been induced through the influ- ence of the Government to accept of 160 acres of free grant land , or , by the persuasion of friends to leave their home State of Dakota , Minnesota , Iowa , Illinois , Michigan , Indiana , Ohio , Nebraska or the other States from which people have gone , have done well. Financially , they are in a better position than many of them ever ex pected to be , and in the matter of health , in social conditions , they have lost nothing. The columns of Canadian newspa- pers are filled with accounts of this year's harvest , writers vying with each other in giving the proper coloring to their reports. These make exhilarating reading to the man who has interests in that country. Lethbridge people claim it to be the keystone of Southern Alberta , while Calgary people claim the same for their district. It was in this district that the growing of win- ter wheat in western Canada originat- ed. Its success there led the farmers east and west of it to experiment and . what can now be said of one part may : well be said of the whole. In a few years from now these great plains over whose breadth for years roved hun dreds of thousands of heads of cattle , following the millions of buffalo that once grazed their grasses , will be a solid grain field covering a territory of over 30,000 square miles , and very lit- tle of it but what will yet be worth seem a reflection on the intelligence ol the reading public to repeat it. It i ! : not proposed to do so. Its topographi- cal characteristics are divergent. There is the level prairie with its rich deep loam and underlying subsoil , the high- er and rolling lands with their groves of timber , the wooded lands rich in soil. The wants of all can be supplied ; some want one kind ami' : some another and they can all be suited. The man who wants to put in his steam plow and force the energies of the soil into immediate production can be suited and so can the man who wishes large tracts for the same purposes , and at the same time enjoy the companion- ship of the timber. In many parts it is possible to have a hundred mile square of wheat , without a break. A writer says : "We were driven west and north of Moose Jaw through 20 miles of dead ripe wheat , acres of stooks : and well-worked summer-fallows. One of these fields would yield 40 bushels to the acre , and another man had oats that would yield 90 or 100 bushels to the acre. In this district wheat will average 30 to 35 bushels. The condi- tions were never better and through- out the district the people are assured of a most prosperous year. " In the Melfort district , three hundred miles in another direction , we hear of a far- mer . . whose . yield of oats will run from 85 to " 100 bushels per acre ; then trav eling over another stretch of three hundred miles the Pipestone district in Manitoba is reached and we learn of more 30 and 40 bushels to the acre crops of wheat. So it will be seen that the splendid crops are not confined to one district but are general throughout the entire country. Speaking of his experiences while traveling through the Canadian West Thomas C. Shotwell , financial Editor of the New York American , said that heretofore he had entertained optimis- : : ' , ' ; / " . ! , ; 'J ; ; ( : : " - " _ ' : ' ' . , _ . , , ' , ? ' ; -r . . . , . ; . . . . . _ . L-r . . , _ - , - . , : f ' - , P * - , t ; - ; _ _ L ! ; z . : ; _ . , , . . . , _ ; - ' . - ' - . , ; g -i : : - - . . - . L : ' r\ HL"t'l1 0\1 ) ' . iirfTiiR.X 'AXADA CATTLE. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - t > om $40 to SbO ' per acre. Already the homestead and pre-emption lands are being well filled. In the district of Calgary and in Cen- tral Alberta since the report of a year ; ago was made. the increased acreage in crop has been remarkable. The new- ly-arrived settler has got to work and with the steam-plow and ordinary methods of . farming a large amount of new land is contributing to the wealth- of the country. Railroads have pro- jected and built branches which reach out laterally from the main line , and It is now possible to reach parts rich in agricultural possibilities that were not accessible a year ago. Towns have . come into existence during that time that will soon become cities ; schools and churches have been erected throughout the country districts ; tele- phone lines have been constructed , and an ? ir . of prosperity is everywhere ap parent. There are to be found those' who speak of a "pioneering" life in western Canada , but as one man said , "if this - is pioneering I don't for the life of me see what our forefathers had _ _ . ' L .4 . . . , : . .l' . ' - P/ - . " . _ . . ! _ - - - tk- views regarding : : ; the Canadian rail- roads and lands. but his trip has con- vinced him not only of the soundness . . of his views , but ! it also has established the conviction that Jthe great expan- sion of the next few years will be in Canada's western areas. "I .have never seen such wheat , " said he. It takes an army of men to handle the Western Canada crop , and it * -is estimated that 30,000 peopie have been brought inHhis year to assist in the great undertaking ; there being excur- sions from the outside world nearly every day for the past six weeks. . In this article no attention has been given to the growth of flax which has had great attention paid to it in some districts. It is safe to say that in addi- tion to the 120 million bushels of wheat , the 170 million bushels , of oats and the 30 million bushels of barley , there will . be over two million bushels of flax. The approximate value of all these crops may safely be put at One Hundred and Sixty Million Dollars , as against a total of118 million dollar in 1908. . - - . - - > - , ' - . . , J- . . - . - ' - ' ; . , ' : _ _ : - - - - - - MUNYON'S Eminent Doctors at Your Service Free Not a Penny to Pay for the Fullest Medical Examination. If you are 'in doubt as to the cause cof your disease , mall us a postal re questing a medical examination blank. Our doctors will carefully diagnose your case , and if you can be cured you will be told so ; if you annot be cured you will be told so. You are not obligated to us in any way , for this advice is absolutely free. You are at liberty to take our advice or not , as you see fit. Munyon's , 53d and Jefferson streets , Philadelphia. Pa. Steadfast. - . . . . There had been a cyclone , says a writer in the Cleveland Plain Dealer , and the colonel's house was unroofed , his barn crushed and two miles of his fence blown clean over into the next county. Commenting on the catastro phe two men of the neighborhood en- gaged in the following conversation : "Pretty stiff blow. " "Yep. Ninety-mile-an-hour. Th' colonel says he crawled out of his cy clone cellar after it was all over , an' what do you suppose was the first thing he saw ? " "Give it up. " "He looked across his back lot , and there was his hired man still sitting on the fence ! " NEW VIGOR FOR BAD BACKS. Hovr to Make a Weak : Back Better , Women who suffer with backache , bearing-down pains , dizziness , constant I , . - dull , tired feelings , , . I nuj : . will find hope in the I G . - advice of Mrs. M. 4 / Working , 315 Fulton I 4 , . Ave. , Rochester , Ind. , ! - tt' who said : "I suffered , -y' ' everything with pain I in the back , too fre- ' , Lc ; . quent passages of the kidney secretions , swelling of the ankles and joints and a general feeling of weakness. I used about everything said to be good for I kidney trouble , but Doan's Kidney ; Pills brought me the first real help and three boxes cured me. " I Remember the name-Doan's. Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster- Milburn Co. , Buffalo , N. Y. _ _ Xot Specific Enough. Witness-At the time of the accident my maid was in my boudoir arranging my hair. LawYer-Yes ; and where were you ? Witness-Sir-Boston ! Transcript. $100 Reward , $100. TEe readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there Is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure In all Its stages , and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease , requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally , acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system , thereby destroying the foundation : of the disease , and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting ! nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith In its cura- tive powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. ' Send for : list of testimonials. Address : F. X CHENEY & CO. , Toledo , 0. Sold by all Drug Ists. 75c. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. Promising Youth. "You don't know how proud I am of my younger brother Jerry , " said Mrs. Lapsling. "Before he had been in col lege three years he got his bacchana lian degree. " Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children teething , softens the gums , re duces inflammation , allays pain , cures wind colic. 25c a bottle. . " Congress refused United States Commissioner of Education Brown's request for $3,000 to study a certain phase of child life , but granted 15,000 for a scientific study of clams. Great Home Eye Remedy , for all diseases of the eye , quick relief from using PETTIT'S EYE SALVE. All druggists : : or Howard Bros. , Buffalo , N. Y. Her Sincere Friends. Nan - Has Lil told you yet when she and Jack are to be married ? Fan-Not yet , but I know. They'll be married just as soon as she can get Jack to propose. No matter how long your neck . may be or how sore your throat , Hamlins Wizard Oil will cure it surely and quickly. It drives out all soreness and inflammation. Fair Offer. Mrs. Hank-If you ; won't do no work , yer won't git no dinner , and that's al ] there is to it. . "Tell you what I am willing to do. , I will give you a lesson in correct En- glish. Is it a go-Life. PEKHT VVIS' PAINKILLER has been used In many families for three generations. It Is relied upon for colds neural la. sciatica strains burns or bruises. 25c. 35c. Wc a bottle. The mediaeval custom of ringing all the church bells to avert an impend- ing thunderstorm or untimely fall of snow still exists in the Swiss Canton Wallis. I _ _ _ Dr. Bierce's Pleasant Pellets first put up 40 years ago. They regulate and invigorate , stomach , liver and bowels. Sugar-coated tiny granules. . The Parisienne is always as keen to follow fashions in jewelry as in frocks , and just now she has given her undi- vided affection to the turquoise. BE JtTST ; : TO TOUKSELF and kepwell If possible. Check that cough with the liarmlets and efficient remedy. Allen's Lung Balsam. All dru llsts. 25 : . 5ocand 61.00 bottles. In canning time remember to hold a jar under hot water before filling with the hot syrup. If the jar is set on a folded wet cloth while being filled , it will be less apt to break. An Onion Lover. Dr. W. A. Evans , health commission- er of Chicago , declares pasteurized milk to be an overrated article. "They who expect , " said Dr. Evans recently , "wonderful hygienic effects from pasteurized : milk are bound to be disappointed. " He smiled. "In the way of real , tangible re sults , " Dr. Evans went on , "they will get little more than the Atlantic City excursionist would have got if-but listen to the story. "A Philadelphia gentleman was very bald. Onion juice was recommended him as an infallible hair restorative. Accordingly , every morning he split two onions and rubbed their juicy flesh very thoroughly over his nude white scalp. The odor was strong , but the gentleman , after a time , got used to it. Throughout his Atlantic City vaca tion he saw , no reason to abandon his daily onion tonic. Well , one hot morn- ing on the boardwalk , spying a vacant place beside an excursionist who was lunching out of a paper ; bag , the Philadelphia bald-head seated himself. unbuttoned his waistcoat , removed his hat , and exposed his head to the cool breezes and the sunshine. An over- powering odor of the onion arose. The excursionist beside him , pausing In his repast , frowned and sniffed. The gen- tleman fanned himself calmly. The other , sandwich in hand , kept on snif fing and frowning. Then , after a min ute or two , the .excursionist leaned over and said : " 'Excuse me , boss , but would ye mind if I rubbed this here cheese sand wich on yer head so as to give it a flavor of onions ? I'm awfully fond of onions. ' " CHILD ATE CUTICUBA. . - - Spread "Whole Box of It on Cracker -Not the LeaMt Injury Reunited Thna Proven Pure and Sweet. A New York friend of Cuticuru writes : "My three year old son and heir , after being put to bed on a trip across the Atlant1c , investigated the stateroom and located a box of graham crackers and a box of Cuticura Ointment When a search was made for the box , It was found empty and the kid admitted that he had eaten the contents of the entire box spread on the crackers. It cured him of a bad cold and I don't know what else. " No more conclusive evidence could be offered that every ingredient of Cuticura Ointment is absolutely pure sweet and harmless. If It may be safely eaten by a young child , none but the most beneficial results can be ex pected to attend its application to even the tenderest skin or youngest infant Potter Drug & Chem. Corp. , Sole Props. of Cuticura Remedies. Boston. The " Codex Sinaiticus. The most ancient of the New Testa ment manuscripts is the one known as " Sinaiticus " at the "Codex Si , published the expense of Alexander II. of Rus sia since the Crimean war. This codex covers nearly the whole of the Old and New Testaments and was discov ered in the Convent of St. Gathering on Mount Sinai by the celebrated Tischendorf. It Is generally ascribed to the fourth century.-New York ' American. Careless. He-There was nearly a bad fire at the theater. She-How was that ? He-The villain lit a cigarette and tossed the match into the snow. - St Louis Times. j 1 ' fBER PHYSICIAN ! , ADVISED Taking Lydia E. Pinkfaam'sf Vegetable Compound Columbus , Ohio. - "I have taken Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com4 . u' , - . . pound during ! : c. . . , - ' , . change of life. M : ; " . . ; . ' W , . , , " . ' " . . . . " doctor told me i : - . : - and sine . , ' was good , * . < . " : . : \ ' " : , . /A' : taking it I feel so : . . . . . , . . : : ; $ . much better that I . . , . . ' . . _ " : , . : > , ' , . . . ' . . , . ' - ' , can do all my worl < Jr- " ' { , ' " again. I thin ] . . . r . , : ' . Lydia E. Pinkham' \ ' " : Vegetable Com * . "A. ' . > , . , -i : : , pound a fine remedj : - ' , - . , _ _ . , > , A _ _ for a 11 woman' ) < ' ; trouble ? , and . ' _ ' " , - - - _ ' ' . never forget to te4 my friends what it has done for me. ' ' -Mrs. : E. HANSOX , 304 East Long St. , | Columbus , Ohio. Another Woman Helped. Graniteville , Vt. - "I was passing ; through the Change of Life and suffered : from nervousness and other annoying : symptoms. Lydia E. Pinkham's vege . ; table Compound restored myhealthandi : strength ; , and proved worth mountains of gold to me. For the sake of othef suffering women I am willing jots : should publish my letter. " - MJIS.I : CHARLES BARCLAY , K.F.D. , Granite. ville , Vt. Women who are passing through this critical period or who are suffering from any of those distressing ills pe culiar to their sex should not lose sight of the fact that for thirty years Lydia E. : Pinkham's Vegetable Compound , which is made from roots and herbs * bas been the standard remedy for female ills. In almost every commu. nity you will find women who have ! been restored to health by Lydia E. Pinkham's : Vegetable Compound. : i Viak ten mile . dally ' ail1d you won't need laxatives. But indoor people all need candy Cas carets. They exercise tho I bowels in a gentle , natural way - I not like harsh cathartics. Have ' them always with . you-take on j when you need it. I Vest-pochet box , 10 cents-at drugstores. People now use million boxes monthly. 837 - - - QUICKEST WITH SAFETY P150'S , " CURE ! ; 1\t siss mirai IN \ . @ .UGi\ S , j For the baby often means rest for I both mother and child. Little ones I I like it too-it's so palatable to take. Free from opiates. L' All Druggist , 25 cents. I ciriIi'-r1n saoma wru . cr our . PRIN1'ERS i Une of STATION vi I IUIV I .IUamp1e. The completest ev e "Bsued. ( ; ioux City Newspaper . Union . Siouz Gicr. 10. . . . S. C. H. U. - No. 41-1909. . ' _ _ _ Afraid of Ghosts Many people are afraid of ghosts. Few people are afraid of germs. Yet the ghost is a fancy and the germ is a fact. If the germ could be magnified ( i . , ) to a size equal to its terrors it would appear more , , ' "e 1 terrible than any fire-breathing dragon. Germs . . ' / ' breathe _ _ _ _ can't : : be avoided. They are in the air we , the water we drink. _ _ _ The germ con only prosper when the condition of the system gives it free scope to establish it- self end develop. When there is a deficiency of _ vital force , languor , restlessness , a sallow cheek , - a hollow eye , when the appetite is poor and the \i- \ sleep is broken , it is time to guard against the germ. You can fortify the body against all germs by the use of Dr. Pierce's Gold- en Medical Discovery. It increases the vital power , cleanses the system of clogging impurities , enriches the blood , puts the stom- _ _ _ ach and organs of digestion and nutrition in working condition , so that the germ finds no weak or tainted spot in which to breed. Golden Medical Discovery" contains no alcohol , whisky or , habit-forming drugs. All its ingredients printed on its outside wrapper. It is not a secret nostrum but a medicine OF KNOWN COMPOSITION and with a record of 40 years of cures. Accept no substitute - there is nothing just as good. " Ask your neighbors. . - - Fnr-r rigii av CICTED free . .19 YOD and Every Sister SIJ. ' FREE TO YOU - MY SISTER ferlDg frlm WomaD's AUmeats. I am a woman. I know woman's snfferinjs. _ _ _ , _ 1 /4/4 I have found the cure. - ' . - , I will mail free of any charge , my home treat- A' , ' tnent with full instructions to any sufferer ironx : . , / , ' woman's ailments. I want to tell all women about . I this cure-you , my reader , for yourself , your daughter. ; _ your mother , or your sister. I want to tell you ho ' . i 5 \ to cure yourselves at home without the help of a I ' ' ' doctor. Men : Cannot understand women's sufferings. , . i What we women know from experience , we kzow ( ' , , c better than any doctor. I know thatmy home treat- v'w "j'C ment is a safe and sure cure for Leucorrhoea or k 4- . Whitish Discharges , Ulceration. Dlsplaeement . ' ; Lk' : ' .c or Falling ! of the Womb Profuse , Scanty or Pain- , , ' _ 4 , e ful Periods Uterine or Ovarian Tumors or , . . : < j Sroivths also pains In the head. back and ' 1. ! t ; i 4' bowels , bearing ' down feelings , nervousness , 7 creeping feeling up the spine , melancholy , de . . . ; : : : sire to cry , hot flashes , weariness , kidney antj . bladder troubles , where caused by weaknesses c - , peculiar to our sex. _ . : . 4' I want to send you a complete ten days' treaty , ,7 - , w . ' ' merrt entirely free to pro veto you that you can curs yourself at home , easily , quickly and surely. Re. . member that it will cost you nothing to givethf ! treatment a complete triai ; and if you should wish to continue it will cost you only about 12 cents 3 week , or less than 2 cents a day. It will not interfere with yourworkor occupation. Just send me your name and address tell me how you suffer if you : wish and I will send you the treatment _ _ _ _ _ _ for you case , entirely free , in plain wrapper by return mail. I will also send you , free of cost. m ) book - WOMAN'S OWN MtDICAL ADVISER" with explanatory illustrations showing why womea : suffer , and how they can easily cure themselves at home. Every woman should have it . and lean to think for herself. Then when the doctor says-"You mcst have an operation. " you ran decide for yourself. Thousands of women have cured themselves with my home remedy. It cures all , Old oryeung. To Mothers of Daughters I will explain a simple home treatment which speed ! ! ? : and effectually cures Leucorrhoea. Green Sickness and Painful or Irregular : Menstruation In Yoona Ladies. Plumpness and health always results from its use. Wherever you live , I can refer you to ladies of your own locality "fho know and will gladly tell anj sufferer that this Home Treatment really cures all women's diseases and makes women weU strong , plump and robust. Just semI me your address , and the free ten days' : treatment is yours - . - also the book. Write today , as you may not see this offer again. Address &SRS. M. SUMMERS. Box 1. . . D Notre Dame , nd. , U. S. S. r , PUTNAM FADELESS DYES , - Colir Kite c flds brighter ud fastercelars ban ( any other dye. One 10c packeoe colors all Hfcan. Tker 4ye la cold water bel.'er : than aay oiber dye. Yen caa " y , isy iorcaci wil&eal ripplag apart , Write fer Ira ! bookJU , - . . te 1 870 , Bleacfr u . Hix Colen MOffROE 257 V " G CO. . 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