Grand Rapids Herald-Review Newspaper, December 29, 1900, Page 3

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Thoughts for New Year. “Happy New Year! I wish you a Happy New Year!” ‘The words go ringing through the house, upstairs and down, like some glorious chime. And as I wish to be in the general re- joicing, I, too, wish everyone a Happy Realm friends, ould we not rejoice and be her? The old yi but may not the akes and erasures, » boitom of the > and of the new s a time for tu The old ye oint- DY the new ation, mence over age hat it isa well as happy ; yet these sel e good reso- ns are often the very roc upon ic many bright hopes are ship- ed. De not “swear off” on too many quits at once, It is dangerous, and I tell you why. t flush of a new beginning run high and we feel equal ing. I doubt whether there ; many noble thoughts in mind on day in the as upon New kes are to be remem- 5 are to be left in the back- 1d bad habits cast to the There is no thought of not s a new beginning? lutions are made by the yard, he first days of the new year are noble purposes. We itions k, human na- t in the middle n With a thump. The h we thought could be Ww > remedied, loom up before us Fault tubbornly re- fuse in the kground, and to us like burrs, Is it any ing, weak and disheart- de that there is not much Our new page is 1ere is a big blot on the And so we slip back 1 of the re weary and discouraged than id not believe in making new lutions unless due allowance 1 Ited state of mind in is left cannot be good ail bind like fetters of t is impossible to throw 1 off at will. 1t takes time is full of re undaunt- me faith in undertakings is however, and close plic 1 honest purpose ig ‘the other h e indeed—as some ue ects of our own it not be well then 0 old Latin quotation, quia posse videntur” (You thi you can), for coming year? »py Wishes, let us true by trying ld a little for may come in con- Whiri of Revelry. ulentine, writing of y in the White House” Home Companion, eribes the public receptions: ‘ 1 e published in the p ning the levee at House, and the e erent off ce will be receiy- r cne o'clock ple are admit- hich the d tate levee at the white house e begi alling that ues throughout the afternoonand ¢ nto th ght in official and pri- official social season 2w Year's day in It is the grand rallying hborly proclivities of entire district. Many and last visit of nd only see cer- ls on this one day of they grow older these seem to come closer and Lists are published in papers of the houses where i, with the names ) will assist in receiv- ting lady often attracts ers than the hostess, and vly arrived families are on the look- out for popular women for their New Years da eception. There is no to interrupt the grand round of for luncheon or dinner; the car- red for the day, and, dressed y best, the caller must see 1 » old friends and make as many new ones time will permit. Every- where open house is kept in the lavish thern fashion, Tables are loaded th viands hot and cold, supplement- ed with r southern egg-nogg, or a bowl filled from the housekeeper’s win- ter supply of Fish house punch, mixed from a well guarded formula that is an irloom in Philadelphia families. The rl of revelry is intense, but this g is h 2 comes for Washingtonians once a year, and it is celebrated wite true southern warmth and = en- A Habit of His. to swear off drinking old man? I suppose so, I generally do. GOVERNOR Uses Pe-ru-na For Colds in His Family and Grip. CAPITOL BUILDING, SALEM, OREGON. A Letter from the Executive Office of Oregon. The Governor of Oregon is an ar- | tarrh out of its victims. Pe-ru-na not dent admirer of Pe-ru-na. He keeps|only cures catarrh, but prevents. it continually in the house. In a re-| Every household should be supplied cent letter to Dr. Hartman he says: with this great remedy for coughs, State or Oregon, colds and so forth. Executive Department, It will be noticed that the Governor Salem, May 9, 1898. says he has not had occasion to use The Pe-ru-na Medicine Co., Columbus, | Pe-ru-na for other ailments. The rea- Ohio: ; Sen for this is, most other ailments Dear Sirs:—I have had occasion to | begin with a cold. Using Pe-ru-na to use your Pe-ru-na medicine in my| promptly cure colds, he protects his family for colds, and it proved to be | family against other ailments. This an excellent remedy. I have not had | is exactly what every other family in occasion to use it for other ailments. |the United States should do. Keep Yours very truly, W. M. Lord. Pe-ru-na in the house. Use it for Any man who wishes perfect health | coughs, colds, la grippe, and other must be entirely free from catarrh. | climatic affections of winter, and there Catarrh is well-nigh universal; almost | will be no other ailments in the house, omnipresent. Pe-ru-na is the only ab- | Such families shéuld provide them- solute safeguard known. A cold is} selves with a copy of Dr. Hartman’s the beginning of catarrh. To prevent | free book, entitled “Winter Catarrh.” colds, to cure colds, is to cheat ca-| Address Dr. Hartman, Columbus, 0. The young, developing individual is | peware of Ointments for Catarrh That always advised to partake bountifully Contain Mercury, ce tood. As mercury will surely destroy the sense of Ta smell and completely derange the whole system TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY. when entering it through the mucous surfaces. Take Laxative Bromo QUININ BLETS. All | Such articles should never be used except on prescriptions from reputable physicians, as the ‘ove’s signature is on the box. 25c. damage they will do is tenfold to the good you can pt ‘ive from them. Hall's Catarrh bly Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., One hundred and fifty fin is | Toledo, O., contains no mercury, and is taken fa putts Rd we bed cr Se internally, acting directly upon the blood and country manufacture school text | mucous surfaces of the system. In buying books. Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure you get thegenuine. It is taken internally, and made in Toledo, Ohio, refund the mon Cautious Griggs. Briggs—You seem to think a good deal of Spooner, but I notice you are the only one of his acquaintances who by F. J. Cheney &Co. Tes:imonialstree. Sold by Druggists. price 7c per bottle. ‘Hall's Family Pills are the best. THE PURE GRAIN COFFEE aie 3 . does not lend him money. Grain-O is not a sale gy a Griggs—No. The fact is, I don’t want coffee. sues tonic and its effects to lose his friendship. I’m afraid if I are petmancnr. @ lend himt ntoney he won't b A successful substitute for coffee, a8 pus he ee pbs A a “peed because it has the coffee flavor that - sf everybody likes. Lots of coffee substitutes in the market, but only one food drink— Grain-O. All grocers ; 15¢, and 25c. Very Doubtful. “The sultan is going to have a war- ship built in one of our big shipyards.” “Say, I wonder if he'll send over one of the girls from the harem to christen it?”—Cleveland Plain Dealer, Don’t wait until it begins to sprinkle before starting to lay up money for a OF OREGON rainy day. ijto any reader of this paper, Sharing the Fun. “TI suj~ose I came home late last night?” he said to his wife. “You did!” she answered, shortly. “Pull?” “®ery.” . “They say I am very amusing when Iam that way?” “Very amusing. You were so delight- fully entertaining, in fact, that I could not bear to think of depriving the ser- vants of such a pleasing and elevating impersonation, and so I called them all up to enjoy your merry antics. How they laughed!” “The deuce they did!”—Cleveland Plain Dealer. PAT ts Issned Last Week to estern Inventors. Bateman, Larimore, N. D., label holder; Alfred Boren, St. Paul, Minn., combined folding chair and couch; John Cook, Grafton, N. D., grain drier; Lucius A. Doble, Huron, S. D., washing machine; Even H. Evenson, New Richland, Minn.,wrench'; Hans G. Hansen, Howard Lake, Minn., bag tie; Roland W. Knapp, Minneapo- lis, Minn., water tube boiler; Bert. T. McChesney, Brewster,. Minn., hame clip. Lothrop & Johnson, patent attorneys, 911 & 912 Pioneer Press Bldg.. St. Paul, Minn. An Examination Required. Agent—Wish to get an accident poli- cy—yes, sir. Live in New York? Applicant—Yes. Agent—How far can you jump, and What distance can you cover in two hops, three skips and a leap? “Eh? What do you want to know that for?” “You expect to cross Broadway oc- ecasionally, don’t you?—New “York Weekly. Dyeing is as simple as washing when you use PUTNAM FADELESS DYES. Man of Prominence, “Who is that haughty looking col- legian who just entered the grounds? Is he the captain of the eleven?” “Captain of the eleven! I guess not. The captain isn’t in it with that lad. That’s Bigsby, the chief rooter.”— Cleveland Plain Dealer. What Shall We Have for Dessert? This question arises in the family every day. Let us answer it today. Try Jell-O, a delicious and healthful dessert. Prepared in two minutes. No boiling! no baking! add boiling water and set to cool. Flavors:—Lemon, Orange, Raspberry and Strawberry. At your grocers. 10 cts. Olympian Amenities, The Goddess Athena—I sprang full- panoplied from the head of Zeus, The Gcddess Hera—Full-panoplied. child, every stitch you had on could be put in one small trunk!—De- troit Journal. Mrs, Winsiow’s soothing Syrup. For children teetiing, softens the gums, reduces fr Gammation, alias puin.cures wind colic. 25¢a bottle. A woman who sells newspapers at one end of the Brooklyn bridge, has made a $45,000 investment in tenant property. Learning How. “Doesn't it make trouble to have your daughter go to cooking school “No; she wants to ccok at home.”— Chicago Tribune. Baseball players; Golf players; all play- ers chew White's ‘Yucatan Whilst playing. A Life Saver. “My wife asserts that she saves my life at least once every year.” “How’s that?” “She won't let me go hunting.”—Chi- cago Record. Love, to a woman, is a thrill; to a man, a throb, Faded hair recovers its youthful color and soft- ness by the use of PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM. LUNDERCORN, the best cure for corns. ets, Altered to Suit. “This is the horseless age,” said Kil- duff. ‘ “It is,"replied Poindexter; “and that good old adage should be revised to read: ‘Money makes the auto go.’”— Carter's Ink has a good deep color and it does Hot strain the eyes. Carter's doesn’t fade. Intervals in an Exciting Race. “Ma, when I get big I’m goin’ way off to be a pirate.” “Are you, Bobby?” “Yes; but don’t you get scared; I'll come home at night to sleep.”—Chica- go Record, ABSOLUTE SECURITY. Genuine Carter’s | Little Liver Pills. Must Bear Signaturo cf Very small end as easy Straight and strong is the statue when the twits and are cured and Jacobs SPIE SSPSAVSISIIBDAS VIPS ‘The real worth of W. L. Douglas $3.00 and 3.50 shoes compared with other makes is 84.00 to 95.00. Our$4GiltEd, cannot be equalled at any price. Over 1,000,- 000 satisfied wearers. W. L. Dougiag $3.50 sees will positively outweee Weare the la: and $3.50 shoes and sel! more $3 and $3.50 shoes than any other two manvfacturors in the U. & to take as sugar. FOR READACHES FOR DIZZINESS. FOR BILIGUSHESS. FOR TORPIG LIVER. FOR CONSTIPATICN. FOR SALLOW SKIN. FOR THE COMPLEXION GENUINE ust nave MATURES urely Vegetabl a CURE SICK HEADACHE, WITHOUT F- Send — descriptions and get free opinion. » stab, 184. ILLO B. STEVENS & CC 2 > Est iv. 2, 817 —1th Street, WASBINGTON, D.C. ag offices: Chicago, Cleveland and Detroit, SON more W.L. Dour many other make ig becau BE ler we give one dealer exclusive sale in ke no substitute! Insist on h 4 las shoes with name and price stemped on bet iL. Deuglas Shoe DROPS Book of testimontals FREE. DR. H. H, GREEN'S SONS, Box E, Atlanta, Gas “N WNU OVERY, gives lief and cures worst 10 DAYS? treatmenz No money in advances = ies < e0s!; positive guarantee. TN com] ten mont 2 or ernst OSE ening canted ce ect| Minneapolis. Woodward & Co., Grain Commimission. duluth. ORDERS FOR FUTURE DELIVERY EXECUTED IN ALL MARKETS. dout SEARS, RGEBUCK & CO., Chicago. ESTABLISHED 1879. KIDNEY DISEASE. fight with disease. Tho trouble, of which the kidney affection was the fatal outcome, first appeared about Sopt. 20. ° * * « * * * * Does your back ache? The trouble had, however, st upon a vital organ, and on Noy. 11 examin: fj of the urine proved the presence of inflammation of the kidneys. Lenkester as to the presence of these serious to somo of Senator Davis’ busi: his opinion that the case was hopeles: ° . . . . * . * associates firm hold on your system. To those, however, who were familiar with the symptoms of acute kidney troubles the bulletins held ominous information, the rapid respiration, fluctuating pulse, delirium and approaching —St. Paul Dispateh. a B will stand no trifling because no disease is so deceptive and none more fatal. Statistics show that more people die from U. S. SENATOR DAVIS DIES FROM | Kidney Diseases than any other disease, Senator Dayis made a prolonged and gallant is This What Ails You? Do you have scanty flow of urine? Do you have frequent severe headaches? Do you urinate too frequently either day or night. Trouble Stealthily Encroached. Have you sand, gravel, brick dust or white mucous in your urine? hily eneroached | Have you dark or bloody locking urine which scalds when voiding? Have you dark circles around the eyes, puffiness under the eyes, or bloated appearance of the face in the morning? any publie statment, homado known privatcly | AND HERE 1S WHER Kidney Disease does not make itself felt until it has secured a Both acute nephritis and diabetes made their - . appearance, and Dr. Murphy, of Chicago, was summoned. Ho agreod with Doctors Stone and YOUR DANGER LIES: Morrow’s Kid=-ne-oids R coma tolling the story of death's nearness. are made for Kidney Diseases and that they cure Kidney Diseases can be attested by a “cloud of living witnesses,” three of which give voluntary testimony below: the smail of my back, which would be nttended piicilees. by a sharp, stining pain when lifting cr stooping over. On account of s the pain in my back I A could not sleop and get f proper rest, and would feel dulland tired when f arising in the morning cae papi bers instead of fresh and ing your medicine tothe Vigorous. When Mor- row's Kid-ne-oids were first advertised i did not have much falth in their curative qualiti but after seeing the Mr. J. C. Schoch, of DuBois, Pa., convinced | DuBolse,Pa.and is always glad to.say a. good word beyond the shadow of a doubt that Morrow’s | for that peerless kidney remedy—Kid-ne-olds. Yours truly, Mrs. Gold Campman, Kid-ne-olds cure kidney troubles promptly and] Mrs. Gold Campman 48 River St., Sharon, Pa., to stay cured. graphically describes her condition before and ¥or about a year I had a dull, heavy pain in | after she used Morrow's Kid-no-oids, hoping by | years with kidney troubles, “I suffered several years with kidney trouble some other woman to| and did considerable doctoring, even going to|are true. They are Deen the hospital for atime, iti Dut !t secmed that my | P roof pos ire of @isease was incurable. | the great merit of My suffering was ter- rible, especially with | MOFFOW’S my ng Isaw Mor- Ki d Tow’s Kid-ne-vids ad- vertised Rud recat “Ne- mended so highly b: symptoms wero simi-} Each name lar to my own that I i decided to try them, | 224 address is I began to improve in | correctly two or three days after | gj: . commenced to take | VCs if Jou so doing she will help get rid of the debilita- ting backaches so com- mou to the female sex. Sharon, Pa., Noy. 8, 3900. John Morrow & public in the hope that it may benefit others as ithas mo, Three years ago in March I was at- tacked with a severe fe- “ ft : recommended torelieve | Mrs. Gold Campman. AS ink font Mr. J.O.8choch. _ symptoms like my own, | tlon. About one year ago, after my kidneys be- ——3 Some at Vosburg’s drug store, and | came affected, the pain In my back was so bad | Mrs. D. 8. Sterner. them, and took them according to directions. In a few | could not sit up or lie down. Ww ‘ days the pain in my back stopped. The Kid-ne- | Kid-ne-oids highly frail yee olds have done away with that dull, tired feeling }a box and took them according to directions, and I am enjoying better health than I have for | which resulted in a eure. I have taken in ali years.” Mr. Sehoch, lives at 117 Olive Ave.,| three boxes and consider the medicine so good for kidney troubles that I will take no other.” All the Graphie interview given our reporter by Mrs.| TeStimonials D. S. Sterner, of Altoona, Pa., who suffered for | and letters published to improve until the pain in my back has all dis- | enclose a appeared. I have felt like a new person since taking Kid-ne-oids and am only too glad to be postagestamp able to recommend such a valuable medicine.” | to pay for Mrs. Sterner resides at 16157th Ave., Altoona,Pa. by John Morrow &Co, continued | Write them the answer. JGHN MORROW & Coa., CHEMISTS, MORROW’S KID-NE-OIDS Morrow’s Kid-ne-oids are made only by are for sale by all druggists or by mail prepaid on receipt of 50 cents. *

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