Freeland tribune. (Freeland, Pa.) 1888-1921, April 25, 1902, Image 3

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    ADAPTABILITY OF CHIFFON.
It is a Favorite Fabric of tlie Fashion
able Woman.
Without chiffon a woman, setting
foot into the fashionable world of 35)02,
would be in despair.
There is no one fabric so much in ev
idence, no one material so much need
ed in the schemes of dress, no one stuff
half as becoming,
k Without chiffon the robes of 1002
would be robbed of their gauziness,
and the general effect of the lightness
would be gone.
Chiffon is seen both winter and sum
mer, and has been called the connect
ing link between these two extremes
of senson. On Fourth of July a woman
veils herself in it and makes her stock
of it; in mid-winter her gown is
trimmed with it and her bodice is fash
ioned entirely of it. Her fur coat is
decorated with it, and her linings par
take of its puffings, while her under
skirts rejoice in its sliirrlngs.
Chiffon means more to-day to the
woman of fashion than it ever did be
fore, and the prophets say that it will
continue to increase In meaning and
in fashionable growth.
The new uses to which It is put are
too many to he mentioned and too va
ried to allow of description. As a veil
ing It now comes In dotted form, the
dots of different colors on the opposite
sides. If this very French form of
veiling cannot he purchased ready
made a woman dots it herself, using a
fine needle and much patience.
A Queen Louise stock is another ar
ticle of chiffon which she wears. This
is a long veil coming from the back of
the winter hat, often from the back of
a fur hat, falling right out from under
a much tailed animal, and this she
twists around her neck many times un
til it form a stock. The two ends are
QOW allowed to hang down tlie front in
stole fashion, and, of course, these
ends are embroidered.
But this is not all the ways of chif
fon. As a bodice stuff it Is so much
seen that to attempt to tell of new
ways of treatment opens lip a field in
exhaustive. But there is a chiffon bod
ice that may be new. It is made upon
a foundation, for chiffon is too sheer
to go alone, and it is shirred every
inch, to make inch wide puffs. These
are attached to the under part or lin
ing until a waist is formed—an entire
shirt waist, all little soft chiffon puffs.
—New York Herald.
Woman's Plnce In Golf.
f When women in America first began
[ to play golf they were allowed at many
x \ of the big clubs to use the links only
at certain hours 011 certain days when
it was thought that their presence
would not incommode the Lords of
Creation.
The first courses laid out In America
were very short, and consequently
easy. That of the Morris County Club,
uno of the finest in the country then,
as now, had in those days but seven
holes, and not one of them waft over a
drive and iron shot in length. The
women were erefore able to roach
them with a drive and brassey, and so
were as well off as tlie men, and their
scores soon began to compare very fa
vorably with those of their masculine
competitors. This was also true of
other courses and clubs, and the wom
en naturally asked for the privilege of
playing at any and all hours, urging
as an excuse their ability to make low
scores.
After much hesitation and head shak
ing 011 the part of those men who,
► never having had sisters, had no idea
of the physical capabilities of a girl,
permission was granted.
Tlie women took their hardly won
permission with joy, and proceeded
to demonstrate that they could play
good golf by taking on tlielr detractors
for a round and soundly beating them.
From that day women have had an un
disputed place on the links, and for the
past three or four years it has been es
teemed an honor for even the amateur
champion to be asked to play in a
mixed foursome by any one of a dozen
of our leading women players.—Golf.
Unusual Feminine Vocations.
In different parts of the earth wom
en who earn their daily bread have
ehoseu strange means of doing so.
/.Their example may inspire others, if
not to ndopt like professions, (o act
upon the principle which guided them
to choose the one thing they could do
" was near at linnd.
For instance, in the State of Geor
gia n woman not only personally de
livers mail over a forty-mile route,
riding over the scantily settled region
of Montgomery County thrice weekly
during tlie entire year, but manages
a large farm as well, doing much of
the manual labor, such as plowing,
harrowing, eowiug and harvesting,
and supports by her energy and cour
age a family of four.
In the neighborhood of Savannah
there resides a widow who for the
last two years made more than a com
fortable income as a government con
tractor, bidding for the removal of
■wrecks, anchoring of buoys, building
of jetties and dredging.
Not one in a thousand riding over
the New London Northern Itnilwny
are aware that the company employs
the only woman train dispatcher in
the world. Her hours, from 7 o'clock
,Jn the morniug to !) In the evening.
,*nire most responsible, her duties a con
tinual nervous and mental strain.
Recently the directors of the road
complimented her upon her efficient
service. She was also substantially
awarded.
China's Woman Doctor.
Dwelling quietly iu Sail Francisco
is the "newest" Chinese woman in
the world—a woman whose distin
guished career and splendid American
education makes her "advanced" even
among Caucasian women of brains.
Dr. Yami Kim is a graduate of the
Women's Medical College of the New
York Infirmary. She came to Ameri
ca when only sixteen years of age
from her birthplace, Ning To, near
Shangliai-
Tlie Chinese girl was first regis
tered as a student at a private board
ing school in New York, and after a
term there and a vacation trip to
Honolulu she returned and settled
down to her medical course.
Her greatest work as a physician
was done in Amoy, China, where she
was sent by the Dutch Beform Board.
The hospital to which she was assigned
was in sueli an unsanitary condition
that Dr. Kim resolved to have a hos
pital of her own. She built up as
paying a practice as she could among
the better classes of Amoy, and with
the money earned proceeded to turn
her own dwelling house into a hos
pital.
"I ran that hospital on scientific
lines," she declares. "I established
baths and hygenic wards with beds
and appliances as nearly modern as
could be niauaged under the eirciun
stauces, but I could not stand the cli
mate, so was obliged to resign my
post; but I left it with money in the
treasury."
The Ambitious Hatpin.
A plain hatpin is uncommon nowa
days, although the jeweled ones cost a
pretty penny. Those formed with
thick gold twisted tops, with a dia
mond or pearl in the centre, are al
ways in good taste, and not likely to
clash with any of the hat trimmings,
or a crystal ball, covered with a trellis
work of jewels, is a favorite design.
Many a pretty hatpin may be made
out of those old earrings which most
people are burdened with and regard
only as a superfluity; small cameos
set In gold, onyx, or cornelians only
require a strong pin attached to them
to turn them into useful as well as or
namental hatpins. A set of silver or
antique buttons is another gift which
is fashionable this year, the more
unique and old the specimen the better.
Feminine Occupations In the Orient.
There are many openings in the
Orient for a veutursome woman who is
not afraid to euter upon untrodden
paths in search of a now occupation.
In Turkey, Cyprus, Syria and Crimea
all sorts of knick-knacks, such as pock
et knives, scissors, housewives, toys
and hundreds of small household arti
cles, have been introduced as the re
sult of European influence, and the de
mand for these trifles is so greatly in
excess of the supply that a fine field
awaits the woman who takes up the
work of going to the houses of native
women with such wares. The women
of the Orient do not like to attempt
shopping in the stores, hence the neces
sity for a visiting trader.
Flowers For the Ifalr.
The shell combs that have been worn
are vanishing, and even for full-dress
wear aigrettes and bows are seen less
than half wreaths of flowers or a single
delicate or richly glowing rose.
NEWEST
M* \i FASHIONS
Small boys have their initials oi
monograms embroidered on their caps.
A simple yet popular adornment for
the licck is a broad straight band of
velvet.
A pale blue matelasse dressing jack
et. Is trimmed with a flowered pompa
dour silk and lace with black velvet
ribbons.
Many buttons were on a stylish lit
tle gown of navy cloth, edging the
short bolero trimmed with cut work
applied over lettuce-green satin.
In the handsome silk skirts which
nre selling now at a reduction, some
iu light colors have narrow ruffles
edged with uarrow fancy ribbons.
The newest lace pattern stockings
do not have open work nt the foot or
ankle, lint instead the lace effect tends
from the top of the stocking to the shoe
top.
The latest chiffon veils nre finished
around three edges with a hemstitched
border one Inch wide. These come in
ninny colors and have chenille dots to
match the veil.
For fancy vests to be worn with any
costume, flowered cliiffon, arranged
over satin or silk, is the popular ma
terial. "White chiffon for tlds purpose
is sprinkled with pink rosebuds or for
get-me-nots of silk.
An exquisite house gown of while
crepe de chine Is trimmed with gar
lands of violets embroidered on white
mousseiine de sole. Another of the
same material, in black, is trimmed
with black and gold embroidery.
Odd blues and browns are to be seen
in the new foulards, queer light shades
of brown, aud many of the pretty aud
also light shades of blue, although
there are some of the deeper shades of
the latter color, as deep as the Yale
blue.
Tucks have lost none of their popu
larity and are used in a variety of ar
tistic ways for slilrt waist adornment.
A stylish effect Is produced in a waist
composed of daintily hemstitched solid
tucking, running up and down, with
the sleeves and narrow cuff made of
, crosswise tucks to correspond.
ODD RECORDS MADE IN 'Ol
ALL SORTS OF UNPRECEDENTED
FEATS ACHIEVED.
riiity llungc From Speedy Divorces and
Great Font* of Travel to Unexampled
Financial Transaction* and Varied
Forinw of Prosperity.
The first yonr of the twentieth cen
tury, A. I).. 1901, saw many new rec
ords established in odd lines of human
activity, while it left a pathway strewn
with old records broken.
To begin at the beginning, on New
Year's Day there wore thirty deaths
from violent causes in various parts of
Kentucky. This record sot a new
high slaughter mark. The matrimo
nial mart usually lias big things to
show in n year. All nuptial speed rec
ords were smashed on Sunday, August
10, at St. Joseph, Mich., Chicago's
Gretna Green, when twenty-seven
couples from Chicago were deftly
spliced in one hour and three-quarters,
each couple thus having less than live
minutes to go through the mill.
The minister who in 1901 claimed the
record with reference to the grand to
tal of marriages and funerals, con
nected with n long minister's life, is
the Bev. J. M. Ilaughey, of Mason City,
tile namesake ol' Senator Billy, but not
his home—a little town thirty miles
south of Pckiu, 111. During his career
as a preacher, a period of some forty
years, lie lias married 1357 couples and
conducted 1500 funerals.
Turning to the divorce side of matri
mony—a side peculiarly rich in speed
records—one naturally would look to
Chicago, Oklahoma or the Dakotus for
winners. The Chicago speedy-divorce
calendar for the year found its stellar
performance In the ease of Mrs. G.
Krueger. It took this lady a trifle less
than ten minutes to convince Judge
Dunne tlint she ought to lie cut loose
from her husband, Henry William
Krueger, a saloonkeeper of the Windy
City.
At 9.39 a. m„ August 28, she filed
her bill in the Circuit Court charging
that Henry, whom she had wedded in
•the preceding April, was a cruel
spouse. At 9.40 a. in. the decree had
been signed by tlie Judge, awarding
freedom to the bride and taxing the re
creant Henry SISOO nlimony. The
highest speed achievement in former
cases in any part of the United States
was twenty minutes for the legal sep
aration of a San Francisco couple, in
1900.
Referring to feats in travel, It cer
tainly was a great year for the auto
mobile. Even in these days of chronic
record-breaking such n performance as
that of Henri Fournier. the French
chauffeur, who drove a heavy French
racing machine a mile in 514-5 sec
onds on the Coney Island Boulevard,
in November, was most noteworthy.
The long-distance records for horse
less vehicles was broken by Arthur J.
Eddy, of Chicago, a former President
of the Automobile CTub of that city.
In sixty days, from August 1 to Sep
tember 30, he covered 2900 miles, trav
eling through Michigan, Indiana, Ohio,
Pennsylvania, New York, New Jersey,
Massachusetts and part of Canada. He
averaged about 100 mile 3 a day and
at times maintained a speed of forty
miles an hour.
Wonders incident to travel were pro
claimed in other classes; for example,
the unchallenged record of Charles
Bellamy, a Burlington Railroad fire
mull, who in eleven years of faithful
service traveled 000.840 miles and shov
eled 32,501 tons of coal on the way.
He never lost a trip or received a
scratch through accident. Railroad
men say that it is a case of physical
endurance never equaled.
An engine of the Great Northern
Railway, lu England, which was built
in 1870, completed iu August nu aggre
gate of 4,000,000 miles, breaking the
English record in this respect.
ane speediest long-distance delivery
of mail ever accomplished in the world
was that of the consignment which
left Sydney, Australia, October 15, for
London, England, by the American
route. A distance of 15,205 miles was
covered In thirty-one days, a saving
of four days over the Suez Canal route.
Around the world In sixty days thir
teen hours and thirty minutes is the
new globe-girdling record, which was
completed last July by Charles C.
Fitzmorris, a Chicago high school boy.
This heat the host previous fast cir
cuit of the world by several days.
The champion gormand of the year
was Elmer rt'eifor, an Areola (111.)
youth with an elastic stomach—a chap
that Carlyle probably would have
called a patent digester—who one hun
gry day In February devoured twen
ty-four fat ham sandwiches in exactly
forty-flight minutes, thereby winning
a wager, with side hots of $75 aud es
tablishing a record which undoubtedly
was a world beater.
Harry 8. Black, of Chicago and New
York, recently made Iho largest con
science contribution to Uncle Sam
known in the history of the Govern
ment. He sent to the proper officials
$18.0119.(10, representing the duty oil
jewels Imported by Ids wife, which
had escaped the vigilance of the in
spectors.
It was a fruitful years in unprece
dented financial, commercial aud In
dustrial transactions. The largest
shipment of gold which ever left New
York In n slngledaywas sent to Europe
November 19 on the steamship Kaiser
Wilhelm der Grosse. Tlie sum was
$7,082,583.19. No other ship in the
world's history lias ever been so richly
lnden. Another record is noted in the
statement that at the opening of busi
ness on July 31 the United States
Treasury hnd in its possession the
largest fund of gold held by any nation
In the world and the greatest over
Dwned by this Government, the amount
being $504,354,270.
.Wall Street had a record-breaking
[ day on January 7, when for the first
time In the history of the New Yorlc
Stock Exchange more than 2,000.000
shares were traded la on its floor dur
ing the five hours of business.
The showing of national banks in the
country at largo was far lu excess of
anything of the kind ever before re
ported; the Comptroller's statement in
Washington in June accounted for a
total of 4004 banks with total resources
Of $5,630,704,307.
The largest single order ever given
for watches was received by an Ameri
can manufacturer from a London firm,
the former agreeing to deliver to his
customer 2,000,000 timepieces within
twelve months.
A. L. Scliaetfer, of Edgar County,
111., harvested the largest crop of pop
corn ever gathered in the world. From
his 102 acres he had ISOO bushels, a
yield of a little over .seventeen bushels
to the acre. It cost him sl7 an acre
to raise, sort, shell and pay ground
rent.
The winter wheat yield of Kansas
for 1001 was 90,045,514 bushels, val
ued at $00,479,540, and breaking the
preceding year's record by 13,450,070
bushels. These two were the largest
wheat crops ever grown by any State.
The first year of the new century
was an all-around record breaker for
the farmers of the United States. The
entire year's surplus of the products
of field and farm sold abroad amount
ed to no less thnn $500,000,000.
Charles 11. Schwab, President of the
United States Steel Corporation, Is
authority for the statement that steel
has supplanted cotton In industrial
kingship; that it exceeded the cotton
industry iu 1000 by more thau SIOO,-
000,000 and for 1001 will exceed It by
more than $250,000,000.
Imagine, if you can, a live stock train
sixteen and seven-eighth miles long
numbering 2397 ears and containing
34,785 head of cattle. 38,450 hogs and
22,234 sheep, and you will have some
idea of the record-breaking day for re
ceipts at the Union Stock Yards, Chi
cago. on Wednesday, July 24, 1001. It
was the biggest day ever known in the
history of this big live stock mart.
The drought iu the Middle and West
ern States caused this unprecedented
rush of stock to the market. The to
tal value of the day's receipts was
over $500,000. The cattle alone con
solidated in one mammoth animal
would have made a steer seven times
as high as the Masouie Temple, or in
a single file drove would have reached
from Chicago to Milwaukee.
This herd weighed about 30,000,000
pouDds on tile lioof, and furnished beef
enters with about 20,000,000 pounds of
meat. The value of cattle shipments
for that entire week was estimated at
over $4,000,000. The world's sheep rec
ord was smashed at these yards on
Monday, August 5, when 32,153 head
were received.
Taking a broader survey, all previous
records were broken in the live stock
markets of the West during the first
nine months of 1001.
To conclude with a few records more
strictly in the odd class: Two prize
winning hogs were produced. Down
in Vladosta, Ga., a hog was killed
whose gross weight was 1200 pounds;
his net weight, was 955. Each ham
weighed 102 pounds. Tills fat monster
produced 510 pounds of lard, or nearly
a tierce and a half —enough to last a
small family about four years. Besides
the lard there was nearly a wagon load
of sausage from this one pig, to say
nothing of the bigdislipausfull of hogs
head c-heese, liver pudding and othef
products.
The second giant pig was a Chester
white boar, weighing 1258 pounds,
measuring three feet nine inches
across the back and eight feet six
inches from the tip of the nose to the
end of the tail. It was brought to the
Chicago Stock Yards February 20 by
S. A. Stephens, of Dayton, 111.
Among other curious things London
had a record-breaking fog on October
25, the streets being rendered impassa
ble during all that evening by the
densest and blackest fog known for
years.
Park Policeman A. J. Stiles, of Chi
cago, says he Is the champion stopper
of runaways, having during the year
increased his total to 135.
Finally, the entire postal revenue of
the United States In 1901 reached high
water mark, being in round numbers
slll,ooo,ooo.—New York Sun.
Birds a Necessity to Man*
Man could not live in a birdloss
world. A French naturalist asserts
that if all the birds iu the world were
to die suddenly, human life on this
planet would Weeome extinct in nine
years. In spite of nil the sprays and
poisons which could be manufactured
to kill off destructive slugs and insects,
they would so multiply that in that
length of time tlicy would have eaten
up all the orchards and crops in ex
istence and man would bo starved to
death. All that man does iu the <vay
of "preserving to our use the kindly
fruits of the earth" Is as nothing com
pared with what is accomplished by
the vast army of birds which prey
upon insect life aud thus keep it down
to a point which permits of the growth
of sufficient food to support human life.
Take away the birds and in nine years
not a innu, woman or child would he
alive—all dead of starvation.
Inauguration of Railway Systems.
Tlie first railway systems in the
world were Inaugurated iu the follow
ing years, says the Mechanical Engl-1
ncer: England, September 27, 1825;
Austria, September 30, 182S; France,
October 2, 1828; America, December 20,
1829; Belgium, May 3, 1835; Germany,
December 7, 1835; Russia, April 4,
1838; Italy, September 4, 1830.
Africa's RlggoHt Town.
Cairo Is much the biggest town In
Africa, with 490,000 people, of whom
25,000 are Europeans.
"Don'tl" For Young Housekeepers.
Don't put butter iu your refrigerator
with the wrappings on.
Don't use butter for frying purposes.
It decomposes aud is unwholesome.
Don't keep custards in the cellar
in an open vessel. They are liable to
become poisonous.
Don't pour boiling water over china
packed in a pan. It will contract by
tho sudden contraction and expansion
Dou't moisten your food with the
idea of saving your teeth. It spoils
tlie teeth aud you will soon lose them.
Dou't use steel kuives for cutting
fish, oysters, sweetbreads or brains.
The steel blackens and gives an un
pleasant flavor.
Don't scrub your refrigerator with
warm water. When necessary sponge
it out quickly with two ounces of for
maldehyde in two quarts of cold water.
Dou't put table cloths and napkins
that are fruit-stained Into hot soap
suds; it sets or fixes the stains. Re
move the stains first with dilute oxalic
acid, washing quickly iu clear water.
—Mrs. S. T. Rorer, in the Ladies' Home
Journal.
The Cure of Palms.
About all our palms require is that
all dust be kept off the foliage. This
is of the utmost importance, us palms
positively refuse to do well otherwise.
See that they have moisture supplied
to the roots as needed, which iu spring
and summer should he about every
day. In fall aud winter they require
oitly moderate watering. They can
be grown from seed, but It is slow
work, aud It is better to get those
already started. The scale insect is
their worst enemy. A wash of dilute
alcohol will kill it, but must be washed
off well afterward. A wash of weak
lye soap is the best preventive, hut,
like the alcohol, must be riused off well
at once. Go all over the plant and
leave no spot untouched with the soap.
Palms should have a soil composed
of good garden soil, leaf mold, rotted
cow manure and sand, one-half of
garden soil, and the other half equal
parts of the rest. The roots grow
downward, consequently they require
a deep pot. Put iu pots just largo
enough to supply their wants, mako
tho soil light and firm, arrange for
good drainage, and place the crown
so it will he just above the soil.—Mrs.
W. M. Kuoer, iu Good Housekeep
ing.
\MeiisKH®we>F
wcir^r
Grilled Sweet Potatoes-Boil or steam
four or five medium-sized potatoes aud
use them while hot, for the texture of
the potatoes when freshly cooked is
quite unlike that of those which have
become cold and then are reheated.
Pure them, cut them in shapely slices
lengthwise, nud about one-third Inch
thick. Dip them lu melted butter aud
sugar, lay them ou a greased broiler
and cook until brown. Be careful not
to let them burn. Being already hot,
they only need the quick frowning,
and tho sugar aud butter will burn eas
ily If not watched. Put two round
tablespoons of butter, one of sugar, one
of hot water aud one-fourth teaspoon
of salt in a saucepan over hot water,
and it will melt while you are paring
the potatoes.
Almond Cake—Beat to a cream
one cup of sugar, oue-half cup
of butter; add beaten whites of
two eggs aud one yolk, one cup
of sweet milk; then mix two tea
spoonfuls of baking powder into four
cups of well sifted Hour. Bake imme
diately after It has been stirred. Fill
ing: Chop line one cup of seeded
raisins and one cup of blanched al
monds. Cook one cup of granulated
sugar with one-half cup of water un
til it strings, then add the whites of
three eggs, well beaten, and stir uutil
a cream, aud when cool add chopped
almonds and raisins, using for flavor
ing a few droiis of hitter almond and
oil of rose. This can be used as a
solid ealte by addiug the filling to tho
cake and bake iu one tin together.
Chicken Souffle in Pepper Cases-
Chop very fine one cupful of chicken
meat previously cooked; mix with it
two tablespoonfuls of flour, one table
spoonful of chopped parsley, one-half
tablespoonful of chopped onion and one
cupful of hot milk. Put ou the stove;
let it come to a boil, and add the well
beaten yolks of three eggs; remove
from the fire. Fold in the whites of
tho eggs beaten to a stiff froth. Pour
into the prepared peppers; clot with
bits of butter, anil bake uutil brown
and Huffy. The large bell peppers are
the best for cooking; always select
those that have not lieguu to ehunge
color. Cut a slice from the stem end,
extract the seeds, throw them in cleat
cold water; let them lie for an Lour;
then drain them and they are ready
for use.
California is the most diversified
agricultural State iu the Union.
Rothschild's Auto Hothouse.
An automobile hothouse is one dt
the latest novelties in Paris. Baron.
Edraond de Rothschild has just had
one constructed 'at a lost of 15,000
francs, for the purpose of carrying
hothouse plants from his country es
tate to his house in Paris. The jour
ney there and hack used to take two
days, and necessitated the lodging of
three men overnight in Paris. It is
now performed in the same day and
will, doubtless, be a considerable econ
omy.
STATE OP UHIO, CITY OF TOLEDO, 7
PRANK J. CHENEY, "make oath that lie ig the
senior partner of the llrm of I'. J. CHENEY A
Co., doing business in the City of Toledo,
County and State aforesaid, and that said
firm will pay'tho sum of ONE HUNDRED DOL
LARS for eaoh and overy case of CATAHRII that
oaniiot be cured by the use of Hall'*
CATARRH CCKE. FRANK J. CHENEY.
Sworn to before me and subscribed iD my
i *, presence, this Gthday of December,
j SEAL, yA. D., 1880. A. W. GLEABON,
' >— ' Notary Public.
Hull's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and
aota directly on the blood and mucous sur
faces of the system. Hend for testimonials,
free. F. J. CHENEY A Co., Toledo, O.
Sold bv Druggists,7sc.
Hall's family rills are the best.
There is nothing so uncertain as a sure
thing.
Garfield Tea, the herb medicine, cures con*
Btipation, sick headache and liver disorders.
The only solution to the servant girl
problem is not to have any.
Many Koliool Children Are Sickly.
Mother Gray's Rweet Powders for Children,
tised by Mother Gray, a nurse in Children's
Homo, New York, break up Colds in 24hours,
euro Feverishness, Headache, Stomach
Troubles, Teething Disorders and Destroy
Worms. At all druggists', 25e. Sample mailed
FBEE. Address AJleu 8. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y.
The man isn't necessarily a crank who
believes that one good turn deserves an
other.
MISS BONNIE DELANO
A Chicago Society Lady, in a
Letter to Mrs. Pinkliam says:
"DEAR MRS. Pinkiiam : —Of all the
grateful daughters to whom you have
g{veii health and life, none are more
glad than 1.
44 My home and my life was happy
MISS BONN IB DELANO,
until Illness came upon mc three years
ago. I first noticed it by being irreg
ular and having very painful and
scanty menstruation; gradually my
general health failed ; 1 could not en-
Joy my meals ; I became languid and
nervous, with griping pains frequently
in the groins.
44 1 advised with our family phys
ician who prescribed without any im
provement. One day he said.—'Try
jLydia Pinkliam's Remedies.' I
did, thank God; the next month I was
better, and it gradually built mo up
until in four months I was cured. This
is nearly a year ago and I have not
had a pain or ache since." — Bonnih
DELANO, 3348 Indiana Ave., Chicago,
111.— $5000 forfeit If above testimonial le not
genuine.
Trustworthy proof is abundant that
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound saves thousands of
young women from dangers resulting
from organic irregularity, suppression
or retention of the menses, ovarian or
womb troubles. Refuse substitutes.
Capsicum Vaseline
Put up in Collapsible Tubes.
A' Substitute) for and Superior to Mustard or any
othor plaster, and will not blister the moot delicate
akin. The pain alluring and curative qualities of
this article are wonderful. It will stop the toothache
at once, and relieve headache and sciatica.
We recommend it as the best and safest external
counter-irritant known, also as an external remedy
for pains in the chest and stomach and all rheumatic,
neuralgic and Kouty complaints.
A trial will prove win t we claim for it, and it will
be found to be invaluable in the household. Many
peoplo say "It Ls the best of all your preparation*. w
Price, 15 cents, at all dnnrffiatp, or other dealers,
or by sending this amount to us in pustule stomps
we will send you a tube by mail.
No article should be accepted by the public unlet*
the some carries oar label, us otherwise it is not
genuine.
CHEESEBROUGH MANUFACTURING CO.,
17 State Sti'eet, New York City-
Rrf/nu?\ lOHN A - SALZ ER SEED CO.. y
DRO PSYSSKJ;
eu. Book of testimonial* and 1 O dn yx' tr. ntme.it
free. Dr. U. H. ÜBEJitt'gfiOMß, Box b. Atlanta, Ou.
Gold llrriul at HUIIAIO Exposition.
McILHEiNNY'S TABASCO
r. N. u. o, 'O2.
g^aw'ihviaiiutatAgill^B
g Twits WHtm ALL ELSE FAILS. ~ " JjT
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