Grand Rapids Herald-Review Newspaper, May 11, 1907, Page 14

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MISS ADELAIDE NICHOLS that period of its terrors. Women Miss Adelaide Nichols of 324 upon Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetabl quickly alleviated. I feel greatly regular functions should take immediate action to ward off the serious consequences and be restored to health and strength by taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound writes:—Dear Mrs, Pinkham:"‘If women who suffer would only rely which has been brought to me by your inestimable remedy.” Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound cures Female Complaints such as Falling and Displacements, and Organic Diseases. Headache, General Debility, Indigestion, and invigorates the whole feminine system. For the derangements of the Kidneys of either sex Lydia Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound is excellent. Mrs, Pinkham’s Standing Invitation to Women ‘Women suffering from any form of female weakness are invited to write Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass.From the symptoms given, the trouble may be located and the quickest and surest way of recovery advised. PERIODS OF PAIN While no woman is entirely free from periodic suffering, it does not seem to be the plan of nature that women should suffer so severely. Ir- regularities and pain are positive evidence that something is wrong which should be set right or it will lead “to serious derangement of the feminine organism, Thousands of women, have found relief from all periodic suf- fering by taking Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound, which is made from native roots and herbs, as it is the most thorough female regulator known to medical science. It cures the condition which causes so much discomfort and robs who are troubled with painful or ir- West 22nd Street, New York City, le Compound their troubles would be indebted for the relief and health Expensive. “Jinks owns his home, doesn’t he?” “Yes; but I guess it’s moragaged for all it’s worth.” “What makes you think that?” “He’s had his auto for about a month now.” NORTH DAKOTA FARM LANDS, Also improved farms in Minnesota and Iowa. We have some desirable wholesale tracts in western N. D. & Montana. Legiti- mate exchanges considered. Live agents wanted. MABON LAND CO. St.Paul, Minn Usually a woman of an uncertain age remains at a certain age for a long time. VEAL 7c, 7 1-2c, LIVE CHIX 1c, 134-2c. Also ship me your Butter, Eggs, Fish, kite. Ref. 2nd Nat. Bank. H. A. Ertz, St. Paul. Men do not hold women dear who cheapen themselves. SICK HEADACHE Positively cured these Little Sid tress from Dyspepsia, In- regulate the Bowels, Purely Vegetable. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE, ~ Genuine Must Bear Fac-Simile Signature flew tae REFUSE SUBSTITUTES, HOUSE PAINTS that defer repainting for the longest possible period, best preserve the woodwork of your house and maintain their orig- inal appearance for the greatest length of time, are the most economical paints to buy. You can be sure of these qualities only by insisting upon MASURY’S HOUSE PAINTS Manufactured for sixty-five years by the house of JOHN W. MASURY & SON ““NO. 1 HARD” WHEAT (Sixty-three Pounds to the Bushel). Are situ- ated in the Canadian West where Home- steads of 160 acres can be obtained free by every settler willing and able to comply with the Homestead Regulations. During the present year a large portion of New Wheat Growing Territory HAS BEEN MADE ACCESSIBLE TO MAR- KETS BY THE RAILWAY CONSTRUCTION that has been pushed forward so vigorously by the three great railway companies. For literature and particulars address SUPER- INTENDENT OF IMMIGRATION, Ottawa, Canada, or the following authorized Canadian Government Agent : E. T. HOLMES, 325 Jackson Street, St. Paul, Minnesota. Mention this paper. is the mother's nightly dread for her little ones. It may cause spasmodic coutraction of the throat muscles, and strangle a child unless prompt relief in gotten. The relaxing power of our JoHNS tinier has saved ‘more lives than any other remedy in cases of croup, when used ‘a8 directed in the wrapper of each bottle. Our method is free to mothers. 25 cents. three times as much 50 cents. 1.8. JOHNSON & CO., Boston, Mass. ITTLE = {aigestion and Too Hearty ; | If a married man ‘ould only draw the salary his wife thinks he earns! It’s a pity we can’t keep our good resolutions by placing them in cold storage. Music even has charms for the savage who is pounding the piano. FAMILY’S SKIN TROUBLES, Eczema, Heat Rash, and Scalp Affec- tions Afflict Different Members, But Cuticura Cures Them. “My wife had eczema for five or six years. It was on her face and would come and go. We thought we woulda give the Cuticura Remedies atrial. We did so and she has never had a sign of eczema for four years. I myself used Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment some time ago for falling hair. I now have a very heavy head of hair. We used Cuticura Remedies for our baby, who was nearly bald when young. She has very nice hair now. She is very fleshy, and we had so much trouble with heat that we would bathe her with Cuticura Soap and then apply Cuticura Ointment, it would dry the heat up so much quicker than any- | thing else. Mr. H. B. Springmire, 323 | So. Capitol Street, Iowa City, Ia, July 16, 1905, and Sept. 16, 1906.” About the time a man gets used to himself the undertaker gets busy with him. $100 Reward, $100. * The 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 {ts stages, and that ts Catarrb. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now Known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being @ constitutional disease, requires @ constitu: Uonal treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure fs taken in- wrnally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by butiding up the constitution and assist- ing nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith fn its curative powers that they offer One ‘Hundred Dollars for any case that it falls to cure. Send for list of testimonials, Address F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, 0. all Druggists, 75c. Bold by . ‘all's Family Pills for constipation. Take Some people pose as peacemakers to further their chances of butting into the affairs of others. WE PAY TOP PRICES FOR CREAM. Cash every day. Write for prices and tags MILLER & HOLMES, St. Paul, Minn. A popular photographer is one who can make a woman feel satisved with her face. Garfield Tea, Nature’s Remedy, brings relief from many ailments; it overcomes constipation, regulates the liver and kid- neys, purifies the blood and clears the complexion, It is made of Herbs, and is absolutely Pure. As the years roll by many old prov- erbs take to the tall timber. Help the Horse No article is more useful the spindles be! up” —it will help the horse, and bring the load home quicker. wears well—better than Other grease. Coats the asic with a hard, smooth surface of “Ask the deatcr for 2. ie deal Mica Axle Grease. esota State News of the 4 Week Briefly Told A number of cases of smallpox are reported from Freeport. Four men were buried in a cave-in at the Shenango mine, and were not | extricated until \twelve hours later. ‘Ywenty-five carloads of fat stock were shipped to Chicago markets by farmers of the immediate vicinity of Triumph. William Lewis, an engineer for the Omaha railway, was run down and killed in the Payne avenue yards of the company at St. Paul. Ole H. Erickson, a farmer of Ma- jelia, shot himself in the temple. No veal cause is known, although he had been despondent of late. At a special meeting of the Glen- wood board of education Superintend- ent O. K. Omlie was re-elected. This is his first year in Glenwood. August Wyland was arrested at Fer- gus Falls on a charge of netting fish. e pleaded guilty in the justice court here, and was sent to jail for thirty lays. The five-year-old daughter of Frank -. Walders, living »* North Creek, near Winona, was burned to death (vhile alone in the house. Her clothes caught fire from a stove. Miss Mary Grotte, twenty-three years old, was drowned in a slough near Fergus Falls. She broke through the ice while crossing the slough in pursuit of some cattle. Nearly half of the village of Vergas, a little town located on the Soo rail- road, in Otter Tail county, was wiped out by a fire which started in a sa- loon. The total loss is about $30,000. allie’ Campbell and H. C. Span- ton are in jail at Madison awaiting a hearing on charges of arson in con- nection with the burning of the Inter- state Grain company’s elevator at Bel- lingham, Mrs. Max Berger died at Duluth of burns. She suffered great agony for twenty hours. Mrs, Berger used some kerosene to start a fire in the kitchen, and accidentally set fire to her clothing. Company K, First regiment of Still- water, passed a creditable annual in- spection. Col. William Gerlach, United States army, the inspecting officer, complimented the company. Sixty- nine men were in the ranks. A fire involving a loss of about $25,- 900 ocurred on the harbor at Duluth, when warehouses A and B of the Sing- er dock were destroyed, together with toirty-six cars of hay, four box cars and 2,000 gallons of lubricating oil. surs. Henning Anderson of Waseca, who had given birth to a child twenty- four hours before, was informed of the accidental killing of a near relation. The shock to her in her weakened condition was so great that she was unable to rally from it. A fire started in a slough near Rus- kin, Rice county, was carried by a stiff breeze to a farm owned by Will- iam McMahon, where the flames ig- |nited and burned a large amount of hay and a number of stacks ef grain and threatened the farm buildings with destruction. oe jig ce Citizens of Winona, after a banquet one night last week, presented to James A. Tawney, chairman of the appropriations committee of the na- tional house of representatives, a solid silver loving cup, lined with gold. The cup bears the inscription: “To our Jim—From His Winona Friends” Insurance Commissioner T. D. O’Brien stated last week that he will resign hi sposition, but he wil Istay in office two or three more days until the work in connection with the re- j cent legislation is in shape. Then he wul retire to practice law. J. A. Har- tigan, the actuary of the department. it is generally understood, will suc- ceed Mr. O’Brien as insurance com- missioner. In the debating contest between the Heron Lake and Slayton high schools, held at Slayton, Slayton took first honors. The question was: “Re- solved, That Cuba should be annexed to the United States.” The Heron Lake debaters’ were Erwin Freemire. John Benson and Arthur Miller, and they argued for the negative. Theaf- firmative was upheld by Mae Belle Cornish, Ethel Banbour and May Leed of Slayton. Andrew Scheiber, who manages the big Elwell farm in Blaine, near Anoka, was killed while out hunting. He went out on Golden lake and pulled a shotgun toward him oyer the seat of the boat. The gun was discharged, the shot tearing a hole through his heart. Armed with an axe, a lone bandit held at bay the Very Rev. Father J. D.-Fowler and Rev. M, J. Ripple at the house of the Dominican Fathers, adjoining the Holy Rosary church in Minneapolis, while he robbed the church of $180 of its collection money. An unknown man was instantly kill- ed by a Milwaukee traig at Fourteenth anvenue south and Sixth street, Minneapolis. Adolph Knupple, living three miles south of Morton, cut his throat with a,razor in a fit of despondency. He cannot recover. While walking on the railroad track at Lake City John Hogan, about sev- enty years old, was run down by the work train and instantly killed. Harry Cain, a young farmer living about ten miles up the Mississippi river from Brainerd, was badly injured by being kicked in the head by one of his horses. Hon. A. L. Cole, who has been se- riously ill in Chicago during the win- ter, is the guest of his brother, Dr. A. B. Cole at Fergus Falls. Mr. Cole is steadily improving, and is now able to be about. Mrs. William Montgomery of East Grand Forks had a narrow escape from death by mistaking a bottle con- taining acid for brandy. Three doc- tors worked over her for several hours before she was pronounced out of danger. The German Catholic congregation of Melrose will build a $13,000 rectory. The work of excavating will be start- ed next Monday, and will be done by the members of the congregation, who will also furnish the stone for the basement, James Mattimore, fifteen years old, was seriously injured; John O’Hall- oran, ten years old, was badly bruised; a horse driven by the boys was killec outright and the buggy smashed into splinters in a collision with a street car in St. Paul. Dr. William Huntington Leonard. the oldest practicing physician in Minneapolis, is dead. Dr. Leonar? bad practiced medicine in Minneapoli. for fifty-two years. His last illness lasted over a year. He was eighty- five years old. Willie, the three-year-old son of Frank Smith, fell down the cold air draught of the furnace at his father’s residence at La Crescent. It was necessary to tear down the chimney to rescue him. He, was not injured, but badly frightened. Jobn M. Garvin, a conductor for the Omaha road, was found dead in St. Paul, with a bullet wound in his head. The police investigated the case and decided that Garvin had killed him- self. He had complained of illness shortly before he was found dead. The spring term of the United States court, which will convene on May 7, promises to be one of the long- est in recent years. There are eleven cases on the civil calendar. There are also eight chancery cases, -and the outlook is that there will be a large criminal calendar. Thirty insane men and thirty-two insane women, all patients of the milder type, were sent from Fergus Falls to Anoka last week. These pa- tients are considered incurable, and hospital treatment, in the strict sense of the word, can have no effect on them. The Anoka asylum is intend- ed for patients of this class. Ten million feet of logs are jammed in the Red Lake river above Crooks- ton and are causing the river drivers much trouble. The jam is from six to eight feet high and fills the river for more than a quarter of a mile. The jam was caused by a sudden rise in the river in consequence of an ice gorge forming at St. Hilaire. Gov. Johnson has appointed as mem- bers of the capitol grounds commis- sion R. T. O’Connor, J. W. Lusk and F. O’Mera, all of St. Paul. This com- mission, under the law creating it, will proceed with the acquirement, either by purchase or condemnation, of ground sufficient to give the capi- tol a proper setting. In the case of The State vs. William Chilson, charged with soliciting a bribe, the defendant was bound over to await the action of the grand jury in the sum of $1,000. The specific charge against/ Chilson is that while he was president of the village coun- cil at Funkeley he asked a bribe from M. H. Fisher if the latter was allowed a liquor license at Funkeley. J. R. Moore, who has been in cus- tody at Bemidji since last December on charges of grand larceny in the second degree, pleaded guilty before Judge Spooner and paid fines of $500 for each offense. The court ex- plained that leniency was shown the prisoner because it was unanimously requested by the persons whom Moore was alleged to have victimized in financial deals. An epidemic of diphtheria is report- ed at New York Mills, and the village schools have been closed for two weeks. Aynold Sparby, aged eleven years, was shot and instantly killed by Albert Singer, aged sixteen years, near Crookston. The boys were playing with an old shotgun. They did not know that it was loaded, and Singer, pointing the gun at the head of Spar- by, pulled the trigger. The charge plew off the top of Sparby’s head. Singer is almost crazed with grief. Danger in Being Too Good. Jimmy—W’at ails yer? Yer don’t go | in fur no fun at all nowadays. Tommy—No; I’m bein’ good. I’m goin’ to have a birthday soon an’ I want ter get a present—— | Jimmy—Better be keerful an’ not be too good or mebbe they won’t give yer nothin’ but a Bible. It Cures While You Walk. Allen’s Foot-Ease is a certain cure for | hot, sweating, callous, and swollen, aching | feet. Sold by all Druggists. Price 25¢. Don’t | accept any substitute. Trial ey FREE. | aires ‘Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. | You must not judge the world by the fact that you can see little good out of red eyes. FOR PRICES ON POULTRY Either Live or Dressed. Write. R. E. COBB, St. Paul, Minn. It’s hard to steer a straight course whé. you keep your conscience in| your pants pocket. SHIP YOUR CREAM to Crescent Creamery Co,, St. Paul, Minn. Write to-day for tags and prices. A woman derives more satisfaction from the things she suspects than from the things she is sure of. HIDES, FURS, WOOL, PELTS, ETC. To get full value, ship to the old reliable N. W. Hide & Fur Co., Minneapolis, Minn. | cht ius se. 2 kag | It’s as easy to get the reputation of 4 being a “good fel¥,w” as it is hard to | get rid of it when age brings wisdom. | TEXAS GULF COAST LANDS No blizzards, no heat prostrations, grow- ing crops all year. Live agents wanted. THEODORE F. KOCH, ST. PAUL, MINN This is said to be the land of the free, yet the owner of real estate has to pay taxes on it. All Cloth Hats, Children’s Dresses, etc., | made to look like new with PUTNAM FADELESS DYES. | Among other things frequently missed as we journey through life is the last car. Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup. For children teething, softens the gums, reduces in- | fammation allays pain, cures wind colic. ' ea bottle. Some people want an elastic cur- rency and some others want a brand | that is a little more adhesive. | Kill the Flies Now | before they multiply. A DAISY FLY KILLER kills thousands. Lasts the sea- son. Ask your dealer, or send 20c to H. ! Somers, 149 De Kalb Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. | | If all men were to get what they | deserve it would be necessary to build | a lot more jails. | Instead of experimenting with drugs and strong cathartics—which are clearly harm- | ful—take Nature’s mild laxative, Garfield | Téa! It is made wholly of Herbs. For constipation, liver and kidney derange- ments, sick-headache, biliousness and in- digestion. Many a man is unable to meet his | expenses because he is headed the | wrong way. : } | When a butcher moves he pulls up | steaks. The Small Buyer of Paint who takes care that the Dutch Boy trade mark, shown below, appears on every keg of white lead he buys, is perfectly pro- tected; as perfectly as if he were a railroad official buying hundreds of tons, and with a corps of chemists at his back to see that no adulterant is palmed off on him. Pure White Lead and Pure Linseed Oil are absolutely nec- essary to good painting. SEND FOR BOOK “A Talk on Paint,” gives valnable infor- mation on the paint subject. Sent free ‘Upon request. NATIONAL LEAD COMPANY tn whichever of the follow- ing cities 18 nearest you : New York, Boston, Buffalo, Cleveland. Oincinnati, Chicago, St. Louis, Phila- Pitte- All tead packed in 19@7 bears this mark delphia (Jobn T. Lewis & Bros. Co.), burgh (National Lead & Oil Oo.) Libby’s Vienna Sausage unequalled for their delicious taste. They are put up in most convenient form for ready serv- ing, requiring only a few min- utes preparation. They have a fine flavor and freshness which will please every one. An, Appetizing Dish.—Drop a tin of Libby’s Vienna Sausage in boiling water until heated (about 15 minutes) and serve as taken from the tin ona smal} plate garnished with lettuce | Ask your grocer for Libi inalst upon getting "he Libby, McNeill & Libby, Chicage SEES Watson E. Coleman, Patent Attor- PA ney, Washington, D.O. Advice freé, Termslow. Highest ret. When Answering Advertisements Kindly Mention This Paper. ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT. j ANegetable PreparationforAs. Similating the FoodandRegula- ting the Stomachs and Bowels of -| Opium Morphine nor Mineral. NoT NARCOTIC. Aperfect Remned for Constipa- tion, Sour Stomach Diario Worms Convulsions feverish CASTORIA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of In Use For Over Thirty Years == CASTORIA ‘THE CENTAUR COMPANY, NEW YORE Ory. to style, quality and price. ANING, 34 YEARS SELLING DIRECT < gm Our vehicles and harness have been sold direct from our fact: to user for a third of a century. We ship for examination ead oper guarantee safe delivery. You are out nothing if not We are the Largest Manufacturers in the World selling to the consumer exclusively. We make 200 styles of Vehicles, 65styles of harness. Send for lar; Elkhart, Indiana roval and as Ky ge, free catalogue. XL RY ‘Tires. ~ i ElkhartCarriage & Harness Mig.Co- ssi acre, wooed oe | Pris oxsples, $73.00, | A long sermon has a short life. N WN U —NO‘19— 1907 ESTABLISHED Ww. WOODWARD @, CO. Minneapolis GRAIN COMMISSION. Du'uth

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