Grand Rapids Herald-Review Newspaper, December 1, 1906, Page 12

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

linen tne = ra - health began to’ im, _ regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. A TIME OF PAIN AND PERIL Miss Emma Cole Says that Lydia EH. |" Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has Saved Her Life and Made Her Well. How many lives of beautiful young girls have been sacrificed ths just as they dy ning into womanhood! How ‘regularities. or displacements have been developed at this important period, resulting in years of suffering! A mother should come to her child’s aid at this critical time and remember that Lydia E, Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound will prepare the system for the coming change and start this try- ing period in a young girl's life ‘without pain or irregularities. Miss EmmaCole of Tullahoma, Tenn., writes: Dear Mrs. Pinkham; “TT want to fell you thatI amen bet- ter health tlian [ have for years, and Iowe itall Prd Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- pound When fou rears: at age I suffered al- most constant ey and'for t{vo or’ tht Soe I had soreness and pain yi my ‘and eadaches and was dizzy and bait doctors all failed to help me. g “Lydia E. Pant ay egetable Com and a ae tai Tea iy rapidly, an it saved my ae sincerely hope my: ape ence will be’a tootiter girls who a: ing from gir ‘abing Reigns sod. Ppt i your Compound will do as much for them.” If you know of any young girl who is sick and needs motherly advice ask her to write Mrs, Pinkham, Lynn, Mass..' and she will receive free advice which “ aeill put her on the right road toa], u ght toad to a strong, healthy and happy womanh ‘Mrs. Pinkham is“daughter-in-law of Lydia E. Pinkharh‘and for twent}-five years has been advising sick women ‘free of charge. He who does not get his’ education from everything gets it from’ nothing. Learn the Barber Trade. Write for free illustrated catalog explain- ing all. Moler Barber College, Mingeapolis, fim The man who can keep his, religion “to himself peel any fo keep. MAKES BEAUTY Among the ladies novother medi- cjne has ever had so strong a fol- lowing, becaiise, excepting pure air and exercise, it is the source of more beautiful ‘complexions than any other agency, as Lane’s Family . Medicine the tonic-laxative. It puts pure blood in the veins, and no woman can be homely when the rich, red bjood of health courses in her veins. Sold by all dealers at 25c, and soc, SICK HEADAGHE Positively cured by these Little Pills. ‘They also relieve Dis- tress from Dyspepsia, In- digestion and Too Hearty Eating. A perfect rem- edy for Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsiness, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Coated Tongue, Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER. They SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE, Genuine Must Bear Fac-Simile Signature REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. w. L: DOUGLAS $3.50 &*3.00 Shoes BEST IN THE WORLD * W.L.Douglas $4 Gilt Edge ling cannotbeequalledatany price / £ HT Douglas, Wome jdren’s shoes; for style, ‘excel other makes. take you into my large Mass.,and show | Spread Rapidly Over Body—Limbs jbis face, spreading quite ; rapidly until’ * and Arms vag to Be J jandaged—| Marvelous Cure by Cuticura. “My son, who’ is now twenty-tw@| years of age, when he was four months old began to have eczema on! he was nearly ‘covered. We ‘Had all: the doctors ground us, and some from’ larger places, but no one helped him a’ particle, The eczeme was something terrible, anid the doctors said it was) the worst case they ever saw. Ati times his whole body and face were covered, all but his feet. I had to bandage his limbs and arms; his} : scalp was just dreadful. A friend: |" teased me to try Cuticura, and I be! gan to use all three of the Cuticural Remedies. He was better in two months, and in six months he was well. Mrs. R. L. Risley, Piermont N. H., Oct. 24, 1905.” Natural Inference. “Papa, God reads the same paper that we do, doesn’t he?’ “What makes you think ‘gee little one?” “We learned it in Sunday school. “The Times are in his hands.’” - PATENTS. » ‘ List of Patents Issued Last Week to Northwestern Inventors. Reported by Lothrop & Johnson: patent ‘lawyers, 911 Pioneer- Press’ building, St. Paul, Minn.: John Ey Argue, Red Lake Falls, Minn., dental tool; William M. Deming, Cartliage, S D., slip-clevis; William D. Freytag, | Stillwater, Minn., ironing board; Jas. 44 Gerber, Minneapolis, Minn., flexible. spout; Frank J. Hipp, New Brighton«. Minn., fish-hook; Peter O. Holmgren, ; pound | Hetfmandaip n., apimal poke; Herman Strehlow, Casselton, hook. —_— Mapyi ia man, ‘has the tired feeling b cause of his “strenuous efforts to avoid‘ work, TRAPPERS’ SUPPLIES ARE $0L at low prices by the Old Reliable N. Hide &arCo., Pol Rt a Minn, There is no virtue. in the Sunday; 4 that makes children say, “I wish it was Monday.” URKEYS WANTED, also Veal and hickens.' C." J. Ertz, 30-32-34 EB. 3rd St. (Oldest ‘iouse in St. Paul.) "It’s easy to pul Tid on, bu it comes. to keeping it on— well, that’s niother story. , . Send for Qur Free Harness Booklet. It you are about to buy a harness, don’t et t Tite us to-day, or oak your dealer © shéw you, our line ‘ SCHEFFER'& Hossum co., Paul, Minn, The strain of the market should be the Lie of good morality. SHIP YOUR HIDES AND FURS to the Old Reliable N. W. Hide & Fur Co., Minneapolis, Minn. Established 1890. You cannot elevate “society at the price of the individual. (EREAM. . You ean get 284 or fnore. Ship to-day. CRESCENT CREAMERY CO.,’ST. PAUL. —— There is nothing holier eat every- day ‘helpfulness. ‘ : HIGH PRICES FOR HIDES, FURS AND Pelts. Writefor tags and Price List. John, or silver paper, Mack & Co:, 15 N. 2d st.. Minneapolis, Long Took No Chances. Commander Alexander Sharp, Jr., now of the cruiser Chattanooga, was naval aid to Theodore Roosevelt, assis- tant secretary of the navy at the out- break of the Spanish war, and he ap- plied for the command of a vessel. He was then only a lieutenant and was not entitled to a large vessel. John D. Long, secretary of the navy, de- cided to assign him to command the Josephine. “ “Mr. Secretary,” said Sharp, “my wife’s name is Josephine, and I wish you would change the name of the yacht I’m to command.” “And what does’ Mrs.’ Sharp say?” asked Mr. Long. “She said,” answered Sharp, “that if you kept the name it would be the only Josephine I ever commanded.” “Ah,” said the secretary of the navy, “I shall change the vessel’s name to Vixen.” And the Vixen she became. id, PILLS Liyy <a Coane S Tease eaten N. D., fish: Fy .| yond the average pocketbook. Squares iE the glass with letters of silver or | fires to use this old centerpiece base. ‘he, mirror:,.may lie upon a bed of |—~ its red ber-|. Entertainments Sri dovions ~ for Social Functions By EDITH A. BROWN Society Editor of the Ghicago Record-Herald. }j Suitable Celebration for the Fifteenth Wedding Anniversary — Invita- tions of Gilt Letters on Glass—Mir- ror and Mistletoe Centerpiece for Table—White Soup, Salad, Meat and Dessert—A Cotillion Ending with a Wedding Figure with Tiny Bridal. Bouquets, Rings and. Mar- riage Licenses for Favors. The crystal wedding anniversar; comes the fifteenth year of wedded life, ‘and: if celebrated, durjng the winter ‘month of December, it makes an enter- tainment particularly attractive in de- tail. “Decembér is the winter month hich, in point of entertainment ad- Nantages, corresponds to June for the summer, The énow’ iq prettiest dur- ing this month, {he holidays are bring, ing their festivities, the young folk! are returning or preparing to, Tejurn home corti midwinter vacation, ‘and everything seems particularly joyous. S -Th¢ coming’ of the. crystal wedding anniversary: fds most married gauples in’ the, prime ‘of life; that period’ be- tween, ‘youth and. middle’ age which Stands for the substantials and the celebration for this reason is ‘one of .the happiest of the list. After a! fashion, where decoration Is » -eonsidered, the cere anniversary entertainment is not ‘unlike the china entertainment for alone neither crysi readily .to decorative ideas. - Crystal has the advantage fof many things, “just as good? meee may. be used in Imitation.” “ . The very prettiest “invitations ‘can be purchased by special order at a glass4 {nanufacturing. concern.. :.These could be squares of fine glass in which the Invitations have been spun, but in point of ‘cost these cards will be be- pilt cut oupand ‘pasted upon them can be made to;answey. , To follow closely the idea of crystal will make. too cold a decoration for the winter season, and throughout the parlors holly and the Christmas greens may be used with good effect. For the flining-room’:and the table nothing fan be more appropriate than the taistletoe with its erystal-like berries. (or the centerpiece juse a low, flat mound of the mistle-toe, and this may test upon a mirror if the hostess de- smilax or holly with ties to add a dash of warmth and brightness to the table. [dea of the invitations—spun by special brder or made by the ‘aid of the gilt Glass candlesticks thould be chosen to hold the’ white tandles, and if the holly is used in the table decoration use red shades for the candles. Long strings of glass beads or the prisms which once adorned chandeliers may be draped to the four corners after the fashion of ribbons if the hostess desires and the effect of too much is not produced thereby. For the menu everything should be in white, or as nearly so as possible, and, of course, everything must be served in glass dishes from the soup, jwhich may come in glass bowls (this an be done if heavy bowls are se- cured and care is taken when the hot soup is poured into them) to the éof- fee, which may be served in glasses after the fashion of some of the for- eign countries. The oysters on the fhalf-shell, served on cracked ice, will make the prettiest kind of an opening ‘course, and this may be followed by a white soup. Halibut or a planked iwhite fish—the latter brought in on ‘a mirror instead of the usual board— may be served next, and roast turkey, celery and potatoes may follow. On ‘the table have a glass dish of pickled cauliflower instead of the regulation olives, or sour dish and for the sweet a glass dish of candied pine-apple. The salad of white asparagus will be of the right weight after the fish and roast, and then may come the ice and assorted cakes. Blanched almonds will serve nicely with the coffee, and it is not a new idea to serve reck candy instead of leaf sugar for the sweeten- ing of the coffee at crystal wedding af- fairs. The result is declared by many to be quite as appetizing although an equal number might not find it so. Finally, let a great plate of candied white grapes or the grapes frosted with sugar be borne to the table on a large glass dish and the hostess will clip bunches off for the guests, Following the dinner there should be a short program of regular dances and the evening may close with a short cotillion. One set may be a wedding figure under wedding bells suspended from the ceiling and tiny bridal beu- quets, bouttonieres, wedding veils an: rings, duplicate marriage licenses an: | the like may be given en Seale? The crystal wedding “May pole” dance, with seinen glass beads coming frem under one mense glass Dall. (Copyright, by Joseph B, Bowles.) #|Conn., is the wife of the village ma- tal nor china lend themselves, very'|" The place cards should follow the|‘ Mrs. Cota, Confined to Bed and in | Constant Pain, Cured by Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills. Rheumatism can be inherited and that fact proves it to be a disease of the blood. It is necessary, therefore, to treat. it | through the blood if a permanent cure | is expected. External applications may give temporary relief from pain but as long as the poisonous acid is in the blood the pain will return, perhaps in a new place, but it will surely return. Dr. Wil- liams’ Pink Pills cure rheumatism be- cause they go directly to the seat of the disorder, purifying and enriching the blood. Mrs. Henry Cota, of West Cheshire, chinist. ‘Several years ago,” she says, “I was laid up with rheumatism in my feet, ankles and knees. I was in con- stant pain and sometimes the affected parts would swell so badly that I could not get about at all to attend to my household duties. There was one period of three weeks during which I was con- | fined to the bed. My sufferings were awful and the doctor’s medicine did not help me. ‘‘One day a neighbor told me about Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills and I decided to try them. After I had taken them a short time I was decidedly better and a few more boxes cured me. What is better’, the cure was permanent.” Remember Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills do not act on the bowels. They make new blood and restore shattered nerves. They tone up the stomach and restore impaired digestion, bring healthful, refreshing sleep, give strength to the weakand make miserable, complaining people strong, hungry and energetic. They are sold by all drnggists, or will be sent postpaid, on recaift of price, 50 cents per box, six boxes $2.50, by the Dr. Williams Medi- cine Co., Schenectady, . Lee Autobiography of a Family Man. “I was born in New York and went to Boston to be born. again. For the first twenty- ‘one years of my life I was known as the son of my mother, for the next thirty as the husband of my wife; and for the ldst ten years as the father of’ my daughter. I claim, there- fore to be a family man. ‘ The Original Porous Plaster. It’s Allcock’s, first introduced to the people ‘sixty years ago, and to-day un- doubtedly has the largest sale of any external remedy—millions being sold annually all over the world. There have been imitations, to be, sure, but never has there been one to even com- }pare with /Allcock’s—the world’s standard external remedy. For a weak back, cold on the chest | or any local pain, the result of taking | cold or over-strain, nothing we know | of compares with this famous plaster. There/ seems to be ‘a good argument for every religion, and for no religion; in fact, there is a good argument for everything, except drinking, whisky. Nobody attempts to defend that habit. FURS, HIDES, PELTS. Write for prices and ship to McMillan Fur & Wool Co., Minneapolis, Minn. ,A.man saves his religion and his ‘best suit of clothes for Sunday. ‘ it is so easy to digest. the Family Package, he will get it for you. ‘The Quaker Oats @mpany waker Best Cornmeal is the new, delicious Quaker product” the best. corn- ‘meal you've ever had. Try a 3 pound, sealed pack- age for 10c. Quaker Oats For Little Folks» . :’ One of the reasons why Quaker Oats is used " universally, is because it is a food that. makes both , children and grownups sturdy and healthy, because Quaker Oats in the large sized Family Package at 25c—the same price as common rolled oats—contains either a plate, vegetable dish or cup and saucer of beautifully decorated, semi- porcelain china. If your grocer does not have , complete ‘ protection and long service. a, | other good are combined in TOWERS FISH RAND ILED Ag Tower, co. Bostow vem WER CANADIAN CO LTO. at 50 cts. a dozen pay. Why not get them in fall and winter when prices are highest by using SHERIOA ES Gores the scientifically prepared poultry tonic? Finstint the market and in use forty years hens lay. Helps poultry to get feu" benele of all Kinds. of food, mal chicks grow rapidly and keeps them healthy. One pack, 25¢.; five, $1: two-lb. can, $1.20; six, $5.00. Express paid. At all dealers. I, 8. JOHNSON & CO., Boston, Mass. Over 200,000. American farmers who have set- tled: in Canada during the past few years testi- fy to the fact that Cana- da is,. beyond question, | the greatest fatming land in thé world. _ OVER NINETY MILLION BUSHELS ' of wheat from the haryest of 1906 means good money to the farmers of Western Canada when the world has to be fed, Cattle Raising, Dairy- ing aud Mixed Farming are also profitable call, | ings. Coal, wood and water in abundance; | churches and schools convenient; markets easy; | of access. Taxes low. | “Ror advice and information address the Super- any authorized Canadian Government Agent. E, T. HOLMES, 325 Jackson Street, St. Paul, Minnesota. SCALES | Ask for Free C | Fairbanks, Morse & Co At GOOD SALARY. pai WANTED feotiy, addiess GATEWA SALESMEN NUBSWRY OO. Le Sars. lowe. ‘When Answering Mauctiaaneat Kindly Mention This Paper. If more than ordinary skill in playing brings the honors of the game to the winning player, so exceptional merit in a remedy ensures the commendation of the well informed, and as a rea- sonable amount of outdoor life and recreation is conducive to the health and strength, so does a perfect laxative tend to one’s improvement in cases of constipation, biliousness, headaches, etc. It is all important, however,-in selecting a laxative, to choose one of known quality and excellence, like the ever pleasant Syrup of Figs, manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Go.,a laxative which sweetens and cleanses the system effectually, when a laxative is needed, without any unpleasant after effects, as it acts naturally and gently on the internal organs, simply assisting nature when nature needs assistance, without griping, irritating or debilitating the internal organs in any way, as it contains nothing of an objectionable or injurious nature. As the plants which are combined with the figs in the manufacture of Syrup of Figs are known to physicians to act most beneficially upon the system, the remedy has met with their general approval as a family laxative, a fact well worth considering in making purchases. It is because of the fact tht SYRUP OF FIGS is a remedy of known quality and excellence, and approved by physicians that has led to its use by so many millions of well informed people, who would not use any remedy of uncertain quality or inferior reputation. Every family should have a bottle of the genuine on hand at all times, to use when a/ laxative remedy is required. Please to remember that the genuine Syrup of Figs is for sale in bottles of one size only, by all reputable druggists, and that full name of the company— California Fig Syrup Co., is plainly printed on the front of every package, NA price, 50c per bottle. ESTABLISHED 187. WOODWARD @ CO. DEFECTIVE PAGE M recreract Thompson's Eye Water When Answering Advertisements — Kindly Mention This Paper. ag RS ee N WN U —NO. 48— 1906, sues av eee

Other pages from this issue: