The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, November 8, 1900, Page 7

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THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1900. -1 umsxmn ADVERTISEMENTS. GRAND OPERA SEASON ! “AL th GRAU OPBRA CO. TELEPHONE GRANT 33, Moresco's Grand Opera House. | *5po- & \:1‘: F 9299.924 SUTTER ST. h ndan leaving No- take goods iree to Manila. We offer ve delicacies and holi- s to select from. No oxing or draying. SPEGIAL L REDUCTIONS THURSDAY—FRIDAY—SATURDAY. e 40¢ oy al B sale this season. **Sunset,” reg. Sl 83c ot sugges Loutse — Eges Cockta ‘ 12 tti—letters and num- 10¢ Ib 7 Ibs $1.00 Ha:a'an‘. impo Fard uaTes. mpmed H|cn rev 1 Ibs‘l 00 =t head island; large, whole kernels. <armen Brabant 30c tin n 1-1b cans. Reg. c Soc My Tea 60c Iy composed $1.25 5185 35¢ ecch best in the QTUART ROB ON “\HF STO"/P\ TO CO\QUER New Arr vals— Ruben, a Figs, Green Bonbons. Kern, extra AT Begmnmg NEXT WO\DA\ FRANK UANIEI. V!SHY CELESTINS iS A Katural Mineral Water known for centuries and imported ONLY IN BOTTLES. For Disordersd Stomach snd Indigestion foper————sy Its value has been testi. fi=d to by thousands. So-called Vichy in Sy. phons IS NOT VICHY. Get the Genuine. Your physician ~nl s will recommend ft. Sl A VIGNIER, Distributiag Agent § O’QOOQO‘OOO S O0+040+0+0+0+ 4040404040+ 04040404040+ _ 20+ 040 } 20404 0404040404 004040+ 040406054 RUPTURE CURED, | THE DUNHAM FAMILY, JESSIE COUTHOUI, MAGGIE MOORE, NORA BOYES, DOLAN AND LENHARR, PRELLE'S TALKING DOGS HOWARD AND BLAND. JOHNSON or send MAGNETIG ELASTIG TRUSS c0., reet, San Francisco, New York City. Opera -=-- Glasses, Lorgnettes, AN ELEGANT SELECTION flied. Factory Phone, PHENOMENAL o's Favorite ““ H(]bt BABY ARE YOU?" MATINEE SATURDAT! prescriptions on Quick repairing. 10. APHIC ADPAMY s, SCENTIFIC INSTRUMENTS Catat nrue Fa; ClPTh.IANS PrgToGR 642 MarkeT St. e B *TIVOLI* SATTRDAY “TROVATORE.” }{efifi F;R nces of = A Me IRY NIGHT -rms WEBK. lodrama of the Highest Order. LOST PARADISE! MATINEES SATURDAY AND SUNDAY. Next Week—Lots of Fun. Success, “HIS ABSENT BOY” the Last Week of the e et CHUTES a» ZOO| l\l'\fi OF THE OPIUM RlMi EVERY AFTERNOON AND EVENING. EVERYTHING “CARM EN £ “BALLO IN MASCHERA,” "[PNA‘“" and - MIGY\ON » LLAMART M1 A. M. Palmer's and Mgr NEW Eorgs. Dances, Mame l-n-u lnui-y | TO-NIGHT! TO-NIGHT! 5 T wgm";'a.-'{?; .2 ALL STAR AMATEUR SHOW a = AND — PRICES—— - sc and 75 'LADIES' PRIZE FLOUR DUGKIHG GUITEST. -rekpmme for Seats, Park 28. SHERMAY, CLAY & CO’S HALL. Direction 8. H. Friedlander & Co. | TO-DAY e SECOND RECITAL by the Wonderful CHILD PIANIST, LITTLE ENID BRANDT, In an Entirely New Programme, Including Original Compositions and Musical Telegraphy. Prices 1. T5c and S0c. Seats on Sale at Sherman, Clay & Co.’s Music Store, Last Recital Saturday Afternoon, November 10. ,FISCHER’S CONCERT HOUS:—. Admission 10:. Pio Facel, Sylvia Puerari, Cesare Allesan- RACING ! RAC[NG ! INTER MEETING—180L RAC!NG' 1900 CALIFOR\IA JOCKEY CLUB. 17TH, INCLUSIVE. RACETRACK. . Wednesday, Thurs- | Rain or shine. ) NOV, es start 5 3 Barp. boats jeave San !-r-ncuco at 12 m. and | 130, 2, 230 and 3 p. m, connecting ains stopping at the entrance to the > cars on train reserved for no smoking. Buy your Sheil Mound. All trains via nect with San Pablo avenue and Broadway, Oak- Alameda _mole con- at Fourteenth electric cars Th. “fitteen minutes. AT 3:15 P. M. | | .oooooo 04040+ 040404040404 Returning - the track at 4:15 and Antonlo Vargas, Adelbert and Adelaide 46 g T und Immediately atier the last race. | ZNL % UL 0 Clia Morris and Claire Fex BB MILROY, ¥ Reserved Seats, Zc; Matinee gt | LARGEST SHIP AFLOAT IS ONCE MORE READY TO SAIL 0x¢ |Speke Wil Take Away Nearly Five Thousand Tons of| .. Wheat When She Sails for a European Port. | THE BRITISH SHIP SPEKE, THE LARGEST VESSEL OF HER CLASS AFLOAT, IN A GALE OFF THE AUS- | CAPTAIN STOTT SAYS IT WAS ONE OF THE LIVELIEST EXPERIENCES OF HIS SEA- | FARING LIFE. F all the British ships in port the Speke has received the quickest dispatch. Over 45 tons o her in five days and the dores are consequen Jjubilant The Speke is the |ar5:c=' ship™ She is three-masted and square-rigged on the mizzen, so in every sense she is “a ship.” The Di that was here last year was ‘classed as largest ship afloat, but she is ve tons less burden than the Speke. h vessels belong to the firm. The Speke will take away ere 4557 tons of wheat, one of the same i bottom Captain Stott i{s well known in San Francisco. He has been coming here for and his brother is the well-known When last in England he became a benedict and his son and heir was born on Admission day, when the Speke was of the Golden Gate. The lad named John Alfred Speke Stott, mother asserts he is a na- father claims him for an how he is a bouncing T to the ship Speke. ;wke had a terrible time on her within sig has been Of which the poets sing, The clansmen met, with native pride To dance the Highland Fling. One still was fresh in wind and flesh And judged the better man. And he continued dancing Until they begged to know, ‘Whence came the vim, that dweit Io him These rainbow-kiited lads— Began to grow—upon H-0, were skeptical about H-0 because it lacked the bitter flavor characteristic of ordinary oatmeal. In H-O (Hornby's Steam Cooked Oaf the bitter, indigestibie fibre Is entirely removed. Ne stomach is too weak to digest H-0, 1o appetite too capricious to enjoy it. WELLMAN, PECK &C0. SOLE AGENTS 00 | srain were put aboard | afloat. | wheat cargoes ever carried in a | | way here. W r!n two days out from Syd- | | ney, 8. W., a heavy gale was run| s ordered, but be- | order could be executed the miz- | zen topsail was torn into rags. A big sea | came over the stegn and the men at the ieel were knocM®d senseless and the Wheelhouse was wrecked. The ausiliary wheel was used and the ship bore off be- fore the wind until sail was reduced and everything was made snug. As it _was, | the Speke made the trip to San Fran- cisco in sixty-eizht days, one of the runs { of the season, and Captain Stott expects 3 that have sailed a week ahead of kim to C ork EVA AND ABBEY SAFE. | Were Reported Lost, but Have Turned | Up All Right. | The German steamer Eva has arrived at Viadivostok and the British ship Bat-| tle Abbey reached Port Pirie vesterday. The former v t | and refnsuran her, while th 15 per cent The Eva left 1d not be procured on | Abbey was quoted at | Astoria October 7 for Viad- tvostok, with _supplies for the Ru Government. The Battle Abbey was from Puget Sound for Port Pirfe with a cargo of lumber. Both vessels made long runs. —— | Harbor Commissioners Meet. | ‘The excitement over the election did nnt revent the Harbor Commissioners from | olding a meeting yesterday, There was | | little of importance done and while Pres- | ident Kilburn beamed, Commissioners | Herold and Harney did not seem unduly downcast. ‘" E\Pr) dog has his day,” !aid | Mr. Herold, “and next election we will | | sweep the State and California will have | a Democratic Governor.” The board passed some bills and ordered a few | changes, after which the members ad- journed to study the returns. Manauense in Trouble. The steamer Manauense, which arrived | from Oyster Harbor yesterday morning, { was in trouble. She ti up at I-nlxnrn-‘ | street wharf, but the ebb tide and strong wind carried her away. She drifted, stern | on, against the bunkers and damaged | her starboard quarter, carrying away z‘"‘i 1. A tug had to be called in order to | | Fot the sicamer Dack to Hen boreh The | Manauense will sail for Mexican ports on | the 1st prox. | | ——— | | Shipping Intelligence. | ARRIVED. | \vodnudny, \'o\'emh-r 1. | _8tmr Eanta Roea, Alexander, 61% hours ete. Dieg | | United States ‘Coast nmflm\.'Shefl 19 hours from Eureka. Stmr Navarro, Jensén, 11 hours from Bowens | iamoa, Jacobs, 25 hours from Eureka. ce Dollar, osen, 43 hours from San Bktn W H Dimond, Hansen, 27 da: from | | Honoluu. | | Schr Monterey, Beck, 70 hours from Coos Bay. | CLEARED. Wednesday, November 7. Stmr Umatilla, Cousins, Victorla and Puget Sound port: all, Perkins & g g ~ gy R A, Perkins & Co. Stmr Bonita, Nicolson, San Pedro; Goodall, Perkins & Stmr Czarina, Seaman, Seattle; B T Kruse Nor stmr Titanla, Egenes, Nanaimo; John Rosentald's Sons. Bark Chas B Kenney, Anderson, Melbourne; SAILED. J J Moore & Co. Wednesday, November 7. | Stmr ieolson, San Pedro. | Stmr Bureka, Jessen, Eureka. Stmr Umati Cousins, Victoria, ete. | Stmr Matteawan, Croscup, Tacoma. Stmr Alcatraz, Carison, Stmr Despatch, Johnson. Portland, ete. Curacao, Parsons, Guaymas and way Nor stmr Titanla. Egenes. Nanaimo. Bark Chas B Kenny, Anderson, Melbourne. Ship Kenilworth, Taylor, Queenstown. Schr Aloha, Fry, Honolulu. MISCELLANEOUS, LONDON, Noy 6—Br ship Euphrosyne, from | San Francieco June 15, reports going aground Nov 5 during fog in Lune Deep. Damage un- known. TELEGRAPHIC POINT LOBO! 10 p m—Weather thick; wind SW, velocity § miles. DOMESTIC PORTS. E—Arrived Nov 6—Ship Luclle, hence | _SEATTLI for Whateom; | Nov 7—Stmr Aber- Stmr Elihu Thomson, from 508 BAY—Sailed Nov i—Stmr Empire, for San Francisco. SAN DIEGO'Sslled Nov 7—Stmr Homer, for 4 ASTORIA— Sa!lrd Nov 7—Ger ship Nomla, for Queenstown: Ger shin Philadeiphta, for Cap sed In Nov 7, at 9 a m— 1L, from Nome. fled Oct 27—Stmr Leelanaw, E) HONOLULU— for Manila; Br stmr Wyefield, for Manila. hx-\on’r HRAQG——Arrhed Nov 6—Stmr Sequoia, ence Nov. CMPOUA_Salted Nov 3—Schr Lucy, for San Pedro. PORT GAMBLE-Salled Nov 7—Sechr Ad- miral, for Sydney. EASTERN PORT. NEW_YORK—Arrived Nov 6—Stmr Finance, from Colon. FOREIGN PORTS. NANAmo—Arrlved Nov 6—Stmr Ban Mateo, from Port Los Angel cSailed Nov ¢—Br ok Bobert Adamson, for BYD‘\IEY—SIHM Nov 5—Br stmr Warrimoo, HAI(B('RG—Arflved Nov 6—Ger ship Pera, from Port Blakeley. FLEET“ OOD—Arrived ence June 15. Dl J BL!X\—*A!‘HVQG Nov Nov 6—Br ship Eu- 5—Br bark Gladys, prior. to Nov §-Br téle Abby. from Port bark AB‘ o OSTOR Arrived Soe e wtis Eva, uhmomr—s-ued Nov 7-Br stmr Glen- Inc‘:xk forTacoma. N—Sailed Nov 6—Ger stmr Isis, for AL SUEESTER -Arrived Nov 5—Br ship In- YoKOHAlllA—"" pofl Oct 20—Ger ship Otto Gildemelster, gor Oregol e Eailea Oot B-Br ship Drumeraig, for Vancouver. | Liverpool | valuea at ¥ HONGKONG—Arrived Nov 7—Br stmr Coptic, | hence Oct 10. | OCEAN STEAMERS NEW YORK—Satled Nov 7—Stmr Columbia, for Naples; stmr Teutonic, for Liverpool; stmr | Friesland, for Antwerp, via Southampton. AK -Arrived Nov 4-Stmr Alesia, T. San Francisco. ROTTERDAM—Arrived Nov 7—Stmr Staten- am, from New York. YOKOHAMA—Sailed Nov 6—Stmr Energia from Hongkong, for Tacoma. (SHANGHAL Salled Nov i—Stmr Glenlochy. or QUEENSTOWN-—Salled Nov 8—Stmr Ultonta, | trom Liverpool, for Boston. BOSTON—Sailed Nov 7—Stmr Devonian, for stmr New England, for Liverpcol. HON G—Arrived prior to Nov City of Rio Janeiro, from San Franciseo, | Honoluly, Yokohama, Hiogo, anghal SOUTHAMPTO! k. from | NEWS OF THE OCEAN. ‘ =~ and Nagasak! Arrived Nov 7—Stmr New Matters of Interest to Mariners and | Shipping Merchants. 1 The A. J. West loads lumber at Grays Har- hor for Mantia, Io; the Universe, merchan the W. H. Dimond, mer- Pert Gamble for 11 dise to Vladivostck; chandlse to donoiulu, Merchandise for Victoria. The steamer Umatilla sailed yesterday for Victoria with a general cargo, valued at §15,878, anifested as follows: For Victorla, § Paul. Minnesota, $2500; Boston. $2500. wxnulng were the principal shipments: For Victorla—19 cs arms and ammunition, 615 Ibs bread, 1600 Ibs beans, 2600 Ibs butter, § cs clocks, 10 tcns chop feed, 27 cs canned goeds, 2 cs drygoods, 912 Ibs 45 ples dried fruit, 15 | btls flour, 231 bxs fruit. 650 pk&s fruit and nuts, 3 feet lumber, 197 bxs lemons, 31,170 Ibs malt, 6 cs mineral water, 75 tins Ibs 30 pkgs milistul 5 cs metal polish, 3 pkks machinery. atches, 1000 Ibs walnuts, bxs orarges, 3 cs ofl, | spices, 3 bars steel, ), | vegetables. For St. Psul—§00 cs salmon. For I'oston—300 cs salmon. ‘Wheat Shipment. The ship Kenflworth sailed Cueenstown_for order: 99, and ued at $400. Lumber for Australia. | The bark Charles B. klnn-\ cleared yeste lumber. and | . valued Sun, Moon and Tide. and Geodetic Survey— and Heights of High and Low Waters at _Fort Point, . atrance to San Francisco Bay. Published by official au- thority of the Superintendent. NOTE--The high and low waters occur at the city front (Mission-street wharf) about twenty- ‘e minutes later than at Fort Point; the Times © |Time| TIma‘ Jlmel S ( | P 9 | Ft B wi ‘L wi i wi ocsi 4.1] 518 1 “‘ 4.80 o0 241 4.8 7:00| 3:38| 4.6 8:08 4320 4.7 9:30| 5:250 4191 11:00 12| 5.0f 12:21 NOTE—In the above expasition of the tides the sarly morning tides are given in the left and ‘column and the successive tides of the day in the order of occurrence as to time of day, the third time column the third tide and the last or right hand column gives the last tide of the day, except when there are but | three tides. as sometimes occurs. The helghts siven are in addition to the soundings on the TUnited States Coast Survey charts. except when a minus sign (—) precedes _he height, and then the number given is sub’cacted from the | depth given by the charts. The plane of refer- ence is the mean of the lower low waters. Steamer Movements. Steamer. City of Puebh North Fork Potnt Arena. Crescent City Warflel Empire . Coos Bay City Pana Mineola ... Mackinaw rogTes: - Walla “llll. Willamette . Benita Steamer. | Destination. | Salls. Gr. Dollnr\clr-n lebor Nn' l. irm\Pln 2| | 2 pm/Pler 7 4 pm/Pier 13 lamlm 3 B, £} amiBter 1 ty PueblaVictorla er 8 P\’Am -IPoint Arena 2 Bm(Pier 2 v 9 am/Pler 2| . S pm|Pler 13 | Maru. CMnll.hvln Nov. 13. 1 pm|PMSS waur; “|Grays Harbor|Nov. 13, 5 pm/Pler 13 W. Kruger|/Grays Hmm'mv. ", . Columbia ..|Portland......| Nov. 14. 1l am/Pler 2 Queen ...s-.me:o ov. 4, it am|Pier 1 | | In_the other plays |+ trom | | | cutture. | indebtedness to his souree are ‘““Antony | SHAKESPEARE'S USE OF BOOKS. Copyright, 1900, by Seymour Eaton. [ — THIRTY SHAKESPEARE EVENINGS. VIIL British Museum there is a copy of Florio’s translation of Montalgne, with Shakespeare’s autograph in it. If this autograph Is genuine, and there is some | reason to think that it is, it is the only, book that we may definitely associate | with his Iibrary. It is certain from Gon- zalo’s description of an ideal common- | wealth in “The Tempest” that Shake- | speare was acquainted with Montaigne, | and it is probable that he saw Florio's | translation of the essays before it was published. Brandes finds many passages | that suggest Mon- | taigne. There must have been something | in the brilllant Frenchman to attract one who was, like himself, a profoundly hu-| man soul—“a human being, natural, | many sided, full of ability, rich in contra- dictions.” This is evidently one book that Shake- speare read; were there others? And how many more? In 1743 J. Payne Collier pub- lished what he called “‘Shakespeare’s Li- | brary”—a collection of the romances and | novels, etc., that the dramatist used in| writing his plays. This list was found | incomplete by later scholars, and so W C. Hazlitt brought out a new edition of Collfer's work in six volumes, containing all the sources of the plays. It would be well for every student to have access to this very important work, so that he may make at least one or two studies com- paring the respective plays and their sources. This is the material, with which we may work out the way in which Shakespeare used the raw material and evolved his plays. Through these sources we get an idea of his way of working. By far the most useful books were “Holinshed's A Chronicles” and “North's Transiations of Plutarch’s Lives,” the former published In 15i7 and the latter in 1587. Both of them were interesting be- cause they suppled him with studies of the most interesting men the world had known, and also with Incidents that might be worked into plots. From Holin- shed he got the material for about ten pla; and from North all of his Roman plays and “Timon of Athens.” Next to these books he relied mostly on “‘Gesta Romanorum,” collections of Italian | studies of “Hamlet" is that by Mr. John Corbin, developing the point i have just suggesied. ut after all has been said abeut Shakp<pr~' s indebtedness to other men it still remains that his plays are his, -and changes he made are much more remarkable than the parallei- isms. The shaping spirit of imagination took hold of what was crude ore and made it into gold. He \Hallxed Holinshed, spiritualized Plutarch “eternalized every story he made use of. He did for them what Browning did for_the book he not another's. The found on the bookstall in Florence one - live soul and that inert stuft; the life in him abolished the d ath of things. B old's ailoy and ted art istey. how the terial. at § best ways may grow ability a drama one might call dr r instance the tracin m Holinshed to a then to flhzk added the immor- t and Touchstone and added to the whole a lightsomeness thas Lodge never dreamed of; let him sea the ced in “King Lea® m see the difference be- age of Holinshed and the speaches of Lady Macbeth and her hus- band. In the play of “Cori we have no longer piebelan emphasized, but the herofc and tragic figure of Mar: whi tist has changed the Trm of King John" from an Catholics into a play ures move and the ir and not of t. And gest all the kinds of cha look for, let the student peare has changed a bloc traged: uch as many consider the greatest ¢ From such a will telligent _appt plays. One triumph of modern seh ship was the working out of a reasonab| sure chronology of th lays. so that by the aid of Dowden's “Shakespeare: His Mind and Art” and Wendell's “Shakes- | } | ! | | A SCENE FR (From the pain OM “HAMLET." ting by Goldberg.) d —p cels, o o lads and songs, | peare” and th ore recent study of el O S aye wuch. things a% | Bhakespeare by Geors Hrandes. we Lodge's alynde,” Brooke's o8 | realing How Shakespenre, qvelopes tH and Jullet,” ete. He may hav read ' things that make ene of the greatest of “Chapman‘'s Homer" in writing ‘“Troilus l men and the greatest of dramatists. An- and. Cressida,” and he was doubtless | other triumph of medern scholarship was familiar with Chaucer’s “Troilus and Cri- | the finding of Shakespeare's sous and seyde” and the “Knight's Tale. by comparing them with the pl to see ‘how the dramatist worked—what he re- One is struck with the small number of books that Shakespeare read. We wonder how such a man as he was, living in the time of the renaissance, could have read so little classic literature, so little French and Italian literature. The greatest of oete did not know Homer or Virgil or f)flnl& Such limited reading has causea the absurd theory to be advanced that such an ignorant man could not have written the plays we have from his pen. Such a theory need detain us no longer than to say that learning did not pro- duce #Shakespeare’s plays, nor literary He was of all men the least bookish. He had the genius to get hold of ust what he needed in the way of s, and to learn that with the rapidity ul his marvelous genius. But his greaf est teacher was the life of his day. Some one asked Wordsworth's servant one day where the master's study was. The re-| Iy was that his books were in the house, ut his study was out of doors. And so; Shakespeare’s study was In the theater | and the tavern and on the street. | picked up more from conversation and ob | servation than most men do from the reading of a lfetime. Tt s easy to see what was not in his library. for he was as far removed as possible from the scholarly Milton or the bookish Southey. And yet 1 hasten to say that he was in a sense very dependent on his books. There is scarceiy an original plot in his y two or three in which he is not T have already mentioned. He was one! of the greatest borrowers—plagiarists, if you please. What Lowell said of Chaucer | applies with even greater force to Shakes- peare; whenever he saw anvthing directed | to him he took it and never used quota- | tion marks. Though he read but little, he wag master of what he did read, a_crea- tive reader. to use an expression of Emer- son’s. Thére are scenes in his Roman | plays, for instance. that are almost para- | phrases of Plutarch. Many of the inci- | dents that readers of his plays have raved | over may be found in the sources that he | used. Indeed, the first impression of one who makes the study we are suggesting is the | striking similarity between the play anrH its source. One explanation of such simi- larity is that the dramatist of that day considered thar his work was translation merely. adapted to the stage he used. very much as a modern playwright would dramatize “The Scarlet Letter.” Shakespeare seems utterly indiffecent as to any charges of | plagiarism that might be brought: he took what other men had done and used it for his own purposes. Three good plays in which to study his and Cleopatra,” “Romeo and Juliet” and “‘As You, Like It"; for the first reading Plutarch’s “Life of "Mark Antony.” for the second Brooke's “Romeus and Juifet.” ana for the third Ledge's “Rosalynde.” 1 have seen more than one student wlth much of hig hero worship gone after making (he| study of lheue three gl-n and their | sources. The ract is that a poor reader | of “Antony and "~ would get C Bl g B R ] would from the nhy When one hag some idea of the good he things that Shakespeare got fro: otiires it will e itercsting to sce tha bad thi he got. He did not alwa; mnownfe ‘wheat from the ch:fl a‘nd .H result was that he retained many of the crudities of the raw material. "For in- gtance. many of the conceits and, auibbles In =A Yo ke Tt” a osa- Tyne 4 some of llu th ln the old y o( "‘Hnmlot remain mar the uty of the phy as we hn it now. One of the most interesting of the recent jected and what he accepted, what he al- tered and what he added. In some such way we may learn some of the secrets of his art and of his mind EDWIN MIMS. Trinity College. ADVERTISEMENTS. To Mothers of Large Familles, In this workaday world few women are so placed that physical exertion is not constantly demanded of them in their daily life. Mrs. Pinkham malkes a special a to mothers of large families w work is never dome, and man; whom suffer, and suffer for intelligent aid. To women, young or old, rich or poor, Mrs. Pinkham, of Lynn, Masa., extends her invitation of iree adviee. Oh, women ! do not let your lives be sacrificed when a word from Mra Pinkham, at the first approach of of of weakness, may fill your future yemm with healthy joy. “When 1 began to take Lydia E. | Pinkham's Vegetable Compound I was not able to do my housework. I suf- fered terribly at time of M Several doctors told me the; for me. Thanks »‘:‘ ham's ce and medicine T am now well, ean do the work for eight in the family. “1 would Pinkham's Vegetable to all with large fa " —Mgzs. Caraie Beirevinie, Ludington, Mish,

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