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Miss Hapgood tells how she was cured
of Fallopian and Ovarian Inflammation—
and escaped an awful operation by using
i ‘ ! ble Co
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound.
“Dear Mrs. Pinknam: —1 suffered for four years with what the
doctors called Salpingitis (inflammation »f the fallopian tubes) and ova
ritis, which are most distressing and painful ailments, affecting all the
surrounding parts, undermaiuing the constitution, and sapping the life
fornog If sou liad Seen me a year ago, before I began taking Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Com;lmund! and had noticed the sunken eyes,
sallow complexion, and general emaciated condition, and compared that
person with me as I am today, robust, hearty and well, you would not
wonder that I feel thankful to {ou and your wonderful medicine,
which restored me to new life and health in five months, and saved me
from an awful operation.” — Miss Irenxe Harcoop, 1022 Sandwich St.,
Windsor, Ont.
Ovaritis or inflammation of the ovaries or fallopian tubes which adjoin the
ovaries may result from sudden stopping of the monthly flow, from inflamma
tion of the womb, and many other eauses. The slightest indication of trouble
with the ovaries, indicated by dull throbbing pain in the side, accompanied
by heat and shooting pains, should claim your instant attention. It will not
cure itself, and a hospital operation, with all its terrors, may easily result from
neglect.
“DeAr Mrs. PiNkpAM:—X can truly say that you have saved
my life, and I cannot express my gratitude to you in words.
“ Before I wrote to you telling how I felt, I had doctored for oser
two years steady and spent lots of money in medicine besides, but it ag
failed to do me any good. My menses did not appear in that time, &n
R, I suffered much fiam. I 'would daily have
e r;':,?fffi,ffgf}g\?;. fainting spells, headache, backache and
(ffit B 2 Whs bhearing down pain, and was so weak that
‘\\i‘:\‘ B »~{~%§f 15 ~" . C q p g € o ca 18
AR €aaom it was hard for me to do my work.
A 5 T “I used your medicine and treatmeat
7}s‘ 0y "g; S as directed, and after taking three bottles
e - . v of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com-
R % pound, menses a}_‘»peared, my womb trou-
B\ EAE el | bles left me, and I have been regular ever
R AR, 40 gince. I used fourteen bottles of
e o‘;i?a‘% e~ Lydia E. Pinkham’s- Vegetable
e __./ P Comgound and Blood Purifier
Y& // wr together, and am now restored to
“ 4 - = perfect health. Had it not been fox
e you, I would have been in my grave.
“I will always recommend your wonderful remedies, and hope that
these few lines may lead others who suffer as I did to try your
remedies.? —Mgzs. T. C. WirLrapsen, R. R. No. 1, Manning, lowa.
Such unquestionable testimony proves the power of Lydia E. Pink
ham’s Vegetable Compound over diseases of women.
Women should remember that they are privileged to consult
Mrs. Pinkham at Lynn, Mass., about their illness, entirely fres.
FREE
REGQULAR
S5COc.
SIZE
Give the name of this paper when
writing to advertisers—(At27-04)
1 - PISO'S CURE FOR .
) GURES WHER AL’% ELSE FAILS. 3}
Best Cough Byrup. Tastes Good. Use -
'e) in time. Sold by druggists, ® R
WL CONSUMPTION »
'"2 Use Guaranteed to Cure
0 ° .
vears. All Stomach and Resulting Disorders.
(Acts on Boweaels.)
TYNERS DySPEPSIA RREMEDY.
~ Write us your Case. Box 138, Dept. C, ATLANTA, GA.
R CURED
s N Gives
™ Quick
’ 5 Relief,
e, Removes all swelling in Bto 20
v days; effects a permanent cure
d in 30to 6o days. Trialtreatment
i ™\ givenfree. Nothingcan be fairer
e 2N I _ Write Dr., H. H. Green’s Sons,
LT T VYR specialists, Box B Atlanta, Ga.
Dangers of White Lead.
The French Government is at pres
ent considering the question of the
use of white lead and other lead mix
‘tures for painting houses. A commit
tee of the Chamber of Deputies has
Lheen appointed to investigate the mat
ter, and Mr. Breton, one of the ex
perts, has been authorized to publish
the results of his investigation in
pamphlet form. He condemns the ad
dition of white lead to paints and all
colors containing it, declaring them
to be poisonous in a large degree, both
for the workmen and for the inhabi
tants of a house painted with lead
colors.—Report of Consul Genera)
Guenther from Frankfort.
WHAT SHE SAID.
“George, dear,” she said, with a
blush, “do you know that Mr. Simp
son asked me last night to be his
wife?”
“Well, I like his impudence. The
idea of proposing to an engaged young
lady! What did you say to him?”
“I told him that I was very sorry
indeed, but he was too late.”—Tit-Bits.
FITS permanently cured. No fitsornervous
‘ness after first day’s use of Dr. Kline’s Great
Nerveßestorer,s2trial bottle and treatise free
Dr.R.H. KLiNg, Ltd., 931 Arch St., Phila., Pa
In the plague districts of South Africa
the Govermment pays. six cents for every
dead rat. -
e s e
Ladies Can Wear Shoes
One size smaller after using Allen’s Foot-
Ease, a powder. It makes tight or new shoes
easy. gures swollen, hot, sweating, aching
feet, ingrowing nails, corns and Bunions. At
all dmggists and shoe stores, 25¢c. Don't ac
cept any substitute. Trial package FrEE by
mail. Address, Allen 8, Olmsted, Leßoy, N.Y.
The Australian cypress pine :s stated to
be proof ag2insi il Insects.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children
teething, soften the gums, reducesinflamma
tion, allays pain,cures wind eolie, 25¢c.abottle
A training school in courtship is a Sal
vation Army institution.
I do not believe Piso’s Cure for Consump
tion has anequal for coughs and colds.--JoaEN
F.BoYERr, Trinity Springs, Ind., Feb. 15, 1900,
Salted whale meat is a Japanese delicacy.
® Narrow Streets in Japan.
Most of the Japanese cities are very
old and their streets are too narrow for
street railways. To rebuild the streets
for the use of the street railways is
not an easy matter
STATE OF Ogm, Ciry oF ToLEDO, |
Ludas Couxry. {8
Fraxk J. CeExky make oath that he is
senjor partner ot the firm of F. J. CHENEY &
Co., doing business in the City of Toledo,
County and State aforesaid, and that said
firm will pay the sum of ONE BEUNDRED DOL
LARS for each and every case of CATARRH
that cannot be cured by the use of HaLL’S
CATARRH CURE. FraNk J. CHENEY.
Sworn to before me and subseribed in my
. ~~=, presence, this 6th day of Decem
iSEAL. }ber,A.D.,ISSB. A.W.GLEASON, -
g o Notary Public.
H_all. s Catarrh Cureis taken internally, and
acts directly on the blood and mucous sur
faces of the system. Send for testimonials,
frq'e. F. J. Cuexey & Co., Toledo, O,
'bold by all Druggists, 75e.
Take Ha?l’s Family Pills for constipation.
American Shoes in Denmark. ;
. The American-made shoe is popular
in Denmark. Two of the foremost
shoe stores in Copenhagen wuse the
American shoe for-a “leader” in their
splendid show window exhibits.
s
- Well Worth Seeing.
One of the most interesting exhibits
among the many of all kinds at the Louis
jana Purchase Exposition in St. Louis is
that of the Winchester Repeating Arms
Company, of New Haven, Conn., manu
facturers of repeating rifles and shotguns
and all kinds of ammunition. The exhibit
was in readiness and was opened on the
first day of the fair, a fact that clearly
illustrates the enterprise and up-to-date
methods of the company behind it. It is
the aim of the Winchester Repeating
Arms Company to show at their exhibit
the high (se\'elopm.eut which they have
I‘eache(’f in the making of guns and ammau
nition, and one needs only to see the ex
hibit to realize how near to perfection
that development has come. There ~can
be seen the new automatic repeating rifle,
all kinds of shotguns, the modern smoke
less powder shotgun shells and rifle car
tridges; in fact everything that can interest
the devotees of hunting and trap and tar
get shooting. Don’t fail to see.the exhibit
at the Manufacturers and Fish and Game
Buildings. It’s well worth your while.
Mrs. Dearinger, of Taylorsville, 111, is
eightyv-seven, and has 271 descendants.
BRAIN REST. :
Medical Disquisition orn the Curative
Properties of Prolorged Sleeps.
As long ago as 1883 Dr. J. Leonard.
Corning of New York brought forward
this plan of managing functional nerv
ous disorders in a monograph entitled
“Brain Rest, a Disquisition on the
Curative Properties of Prolonged
Sleep,” and in a subsequent edition,
published in 1885, the whole matter
of practical management was elaborat
ed to the last detail, says the Medical
Record. Dr. Corning observes that
“as applied to the brain, rest implies
something totally different from that
which is described by the term when
used in connection with the muscle,
joint or spinal cord. This radical dif
ference is chiefly owing to the fact
that the brain being an organ, of the
intellectual processes, rest in so far
as it concerns that organ, means noth
ing less than a cessation of mentali
zation, with all thereby implied. It is
impossible by a mere flat of the will
to cause cessation of thought; the
very idea "embodias a /contradic.tion,‘
for the will as physiologically under
stood is itself a product of very com
plicated intellection, and cannot, there
fore, be regarded as a thing sui gen
eris—a something witiout the pale
of other psychical processes.” Only
during sleep is the ideal repose of
the cerebral faculties realized. But
while a physiological amount of sleep
is sufficient to achieve this in health,
the period of unconscious repose must
be greatly augmented when by over
taxation or inordinate mental strain
the nerve cell has become devitalized,
and is no longer able to hoard up a
sufficient store of energy during the
usual period of unconsciousness. It
‘ is in such cases that prolonged sleep,
a sleep continued for 10, 15, or even
20 hours at a time, achieves the most
striking results.
“As a rule,” observes Dr. Corning,
“l am in the habit of secluding the
subject in a darkened room, eventual
ly for from 10 to 15 hours at a time,
laccording to the amount of sleep it
is desired should be had during the
[ 24 hours. I do not, however, attempt
- great things in the way of sleep at
first; but, on the contrary, the dura
tion of the period of unconsciousness
is progressively increased by the
~utilization or habit, hydrotherapy, ap
propriate food, and, in urgent cases,
' modejrate medication.” In extreme
cases the period of sleep is prolonged
to as much as 20 heurs at a time, the
patient being awakened and given
small quantities of nourishment and
then allowed to sleep again. He
warns, moreover, against the evils ac
cruing from attempis to keep in bed
nervous, irritable persons while in a
conscious condition. Such individuals
should be told to lie down only on
the appearance of drowsiness, which
in intragtable cascs, may be brought
on by the moderate use of sedatives,
during the latter part of the day, and
exceptionally by the exhibition of hyp
notics before retiring. Recumbency,
then, is purely incidental, the prolong
ed unconsciousness is all. In thus
strenuously insisting on the radical
difference between cerebral and or
dinary corporeal rest, Dr. Corning has
rendered a substantiai -and practical
service,
The Age of Hurry,
There is no baekwater to which this
impetuous tide of hurry that not pene
trated, and if we try to find one where
we may lie in a punt on pink cushions
under a tree we are certain to be made
restiess by the long, single hoot of a
fussy steam launch, or the short, dou
ble one of a tearing motor car, and
iustead of lying still we jump up and
cry: “Oh, wait, for me and take me!
I'm in a fearful hurry tb get there
a.nxl' do it with you!” And when we
are taken:in and have recovered our
breath, avd are well on our W/
theve to du it, we remember to ask
where we are bound for, and what
‘we are going to do!—Londcu Oute
look.
Authorities on crimipology sav that
& majority of criminals use opium.