The Hays County Times And Farmers' Journal. (San Marcos, Tex.), Ed. 1 Friday, March 10, 1905 Page: 2 of 8
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4
Womans Kidney Troubles
Lydia E. PinKh&m’s Vegetable Compound is Espe-
cially Successful in Curing' This Fatal
Disease.
JTlrs. J. U/. Lanff and /Firs. $■ F'ra/tp
Of all the diseases known, with
which women are afflicted, kidney dis-
ease is the most fatal. In fact, unless
early and correct treatment is applied,
the weary patient seldom survives.
Being fully aware of this, Mrs. Pink-
ham, oarly in her career, gave exhaust-
ive study to the subject, and in pro-
ducing her great remedy for woman’s
ills — Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound—was careful to see that it
contained the correct combination of
herbs which was sure to control that
fatal disease, woman’s kidney troubles.
The Vegetable Compound acts in har-
mony with the laws that govern the
entire female system, and while there
are many so called remedies for kidney
troubles, Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege-
table Compound is the only one espe-
cially prepared for women, and thou-
sands have been cured of serious kidney
derangements by it. Derangements of
the feminine organs quickly affect the
kidney^, and when a woman has such
symptoms as pain or weight in the
loins, backache, bearing down pains,
urine too frequent, scanty or high col-
ored, producing scalding or burning,
or deposits like brick dust in it; un-
usual thirst, swelling of hands and feet,
swelling under the eyes or sharp pains
in the back running down the inside
of her groin, she may be sure her kid-
neys are affected and should lose no
time in combating the disease with
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com-
pound, the woman’s remedy for wo-
man’s ills.
The following letters show how
marvelously successful it is.
Mrs. Samuel Frako, of Prospect
Plains, N. J., writes :
Dear Mrs. Pinkham:—
I cannot thank you enough for what Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has done
forme. When I first wrote to you I had suf-
fered for years with what the doctor called
kidney trouble and congestion of the womb.
My back ached dreadfully all the time, and I
suffered so with that bearing-down feeling I
could hardly walk across the room. I did not
get any better, so decided to stop doctoring
with my physician and take Lydia E. Pink-
ham’s Vegetable Compound and I am thank-
ful to say it has entirely cured me. 1 do all
my own work, have no more backache and
all the bad symptoms have disappeared.
I cannot praise your medicine enough, and
would advise all women suffering with kidney
trouble to try it. ,
Mrs. J. W. Lang, of 626 Third Ave-
nue, New York, writes:
Dear Mrs. Pinkham:—
I have been a great sufferer with kidney
trouble. My back ached ail the time and I
was discouraged. I heard that Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound would enre
kidney disease, and I l>egan to take it; and it
has cured me when everything else had failed.
I have recommended it to lots of people and
they all praise it very highly.
Mrs. Pinkliam's Standing In-
vitation.
Women suffering from kidney
trouble, or any form of female weak-
ness are invited to promptly communi*
cate with Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn,
Mass. Out of the. great volume of ex-
perience which she has to draw from,
it is nfore than likely she has the very
knowledge that will help your case.
Her advice is free and always help-
ful.
IvcSSa E Pinkham’s Ve&etafelc Command; a Wosiaa’s Remedy for Woman’s Ills-
Say Plainly to Your Grocer
That you want LION CO]
M&nT wm “Sot try to sell \Vou any-
thing else. You may not care for our opinion, but
What Abont the United! Judgment of Millions
of housekeepers who have used LION COFFEE
for over a quarter of a century ?
Is there any stronger proof of merit, than the
Confidence of the People
aM ever increasing popularity?
LION COFFEE Is carefully se-
lected at the plantation, skipped
direct to our various factories,
where it is skillfully roasted and
carefully packed in sealed pack-
ages— unlike loose coffee, wMcb
is exposed to germs, dust, In-
sects, etc. LION COFFEE reaches
you as pure and clean as when
it left tlae factory. Sold only
1 lb. packages.
Lion-head on every package.
Save these Lion-heads for valuable premiums.
SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE
WOOLSON SPICE CO., Toledo, Ohio.
32 YEARS SELLING DIRECT
■ We are the largest manufacturers of vehicles and harness in the world sell- ”
—ing to consumers exclusively.
3D Bugg]
rubber ti
We Have Mo Agents
but ship anywhere for ex-
amination and approval,
guaranteeing safe deliv-
ery. You are out noth-
ing if not satisfied as to
style, quality and
price. We make 200
styles of vehicles and
IttPrice’a 65 styles of harness,
rood as sellsC Our large Catalogue la No ,27 r,
FREE. Send for it. $ Ca
Harness Mf£. Co.
527. Canopy Top Surrey. Price complete
$73. As good as sells for $25 more.
Elkhart, Indiani
When a woman goes visiting she
invariably secures a copy of her hos-
tess’ cake recipe—but she never uses dustri
It. home.
Why It Is the Best
!s because made by an entirely differ-
ent process. Defiance Starch is un-
like any other, better and one-third
more for 10 cents.
Don’t think that just because a man
advocates the protection of hime in-
dustries he is industrious when at
ONLY WAY TO GET IT.
Woman Had to Take Lawyer Along
With Her Damages.
Mrs. Stonewall Jackson, widow of
the famous general, lives in Charlotte,
N. C., and the other day a Charlotte
lawyer said of her:
“Mrs. Jackson has great talent in
persiflage and raillery, and she likes
much to air her skill in this direction
at the expense of doctors and lawyers.
She said to me one day:
“A friend of mine—a Virginia wom-
an—sued a railroad company last year
for $50,000 damages, and last week the
case was decided in her favor. ' She
got the money in toto. She got every
cent of it. It is all lying to her credit
in the bank at this moment.’
“Mrs. Jackson paused and smiled.
“ ‘You think it is incredible,’ she
said, ‘that the woman should have
gotten all those thousands. You think
that her lawyer, in sending her a
check for the money would have de-
ducted $30,000 or $35,000 for his share
Well, the woman got all the money.
The lawyer didn’t get a cent. She got
it all. She got it in the only way.’
‘What way was that?’ said I. • ries. Last session it was thought that
‘She married the lawyer,’ said Mfs^rtiTe climax was reached, when a law
Jackson.’
Up and Down With the Bishop.
Bishop Dudley of Kentucky was
much addicted to sport, especially
liking to hunt and fish. Once, when
on a shooting trip, the bishop chanced
to fall in with an old mountaineer,
who, according to Representative Ollie
James, took a great fancy to his new
acquaintance, whom he did not in the
least suspect was a bishop. When’
Bishop Dudley was preparing for his
return home he invited the old man tc
visit Louisville, so that he might hear
him preach.
“Preach?” gasped the old moun
taineer. “What, you preach! Kin you
preach as well as you kin shoot?”
“Much better,” responded the bish-
op, smilingly. “Be sure and come
some Sunday. I’ll see that you get a
good seat in front.”
The old man availed himself of the
invitation thus extended. At the con-
clusion of the service he quickly
sought out his friend, the bishop, and
grasped him by the hand.
“Mr. Bishop,” he cried enthusi-
astically, “I don’t know much about
your creeds and dogmatics, but I i’iz
and sot with you every time!” j
Watching Bees at Work.
Glass hives for the observation of
bees at work have been in use for
many years, and recently ants’ nests
have been on view at the Crystal Pfl-
ace, London; now, a firm in London
has actually put on sale a contrivance
called “The Lubbock Formicariaupt,”
which is really a portable ant’s ntst,
which can be moved anywhere with-
out trouble or inconvenience, jind
which, it is claimed, will last forlun-
ward of six years with ordinary dire.
The species selected is the small
^ ? g t Ffirdiw 3 riYj° imlrf '
A Piece of Robbery.
Mm. Witherspoon of Quanah has in-
duced a bill into the House which
purposes compelling manufacturers of
al| proprietary medicines to print the
formula on all packages of such medi-
cines. The bill has been favorably re-
ported by the committee and has pass-
ed its first reading, and seems to be in
a /fair way to become a state law. The
introduction of the measure was in-
stigated by one of three causes. Mr.
Witherspoon, we understand, says that
lie introduced it by request. It then
h|ad its origin at the hands of black-
mail, and was never intended to pass,
hut was intended to be used to compel
the Advertisers’ Association (another
name for the proprietary medicine,
prepared foods, etc., manufacturers),
to “come across” with a slush fund for
the lobbyists; or it was done at the in-
stigation of some innocent, but sim-
ple person who had hoped to save the
human race from utter annihilation
through “pizen;” or else (whisper it
not in Gath and tell it not in Askalon)
it v/as the work of the fine Italian
hand of the druggists’ and doctors’
strong lobby. For the, past several
Years a trust has been building up
stronger and stronger by legislative
aid among the doctors and apotheca-
r.vas enacted forbidding the purchase
and sale of so simple a drug as pare-
goric, except upon prescription of a
“recognized” doctor. A man caught
up with the old-fashioned belly-ache,
instead of dropping a dime and getting
an ounce of paregoric and a world of
ease, must waltz into a doctor’s office,
cough up a dollar, or more, for a pre-
scription .then hunt up a “pharmacist”
and pay him at least half a simoleon
to fill that “prescription”-—all this
while his belly ached on.
The intent of the bill in this case
appears to be an attempt to drive out
such old-time remedies as Davis’ Pain-
killer and Mexican Mustang Liniment
—medicines in popular use more than
half a century—Chamberlain’s, Buck-
line’s, and a host of other time-tried
and tested household remedies in or-
der that the doctors and druggists may
profit from the sufferings of humanity.
Many of these secret remedies are
regularly prescribed by the best of
physicians, and often under some dis-
guise.
That the people need guardians may
be true, that laws are needed to pro-
tect them from imposition is true, but
that freedom to exercise common dis-
cretion and reasonable economy in the
purchase of simple and harmless medi-
cines should be destroyed and that the
public be compelled to pay at extrava-
gant prices for advice it does not need
or desire, and at the same time he
compelled to use and pay for medi-
cines compounded often by unscrupul-
ous novices or greedy cormerants who
are parties to this combine, is an out-
rage.
The people will not stand for it;
they have had enough tinkering along
this line. They will stand robbing, but
they won’t stand this high handed pro-
cedure.—Riley's Rounder (Dallas),
March 4, 1905.
Many Persons Have Catarrh of Kidneys, 1
Or Catarrh of Bladder and Don’t Know St.
President Newhof and War
Correspondent RichardsWere
Promptly Cured By Pe-ru-na.
Mr. C. B. Newhof, 10 Delamare street,
Albany, N. Y., President Montefiore
Club, writes:
"Since my advanced age / find that
/ have been frequently troubled with
urinary ailments. The bladder seemed
irritated, and my physician said that it
was catarrh caused by a protracted
cold which would be difficult to over»
come on account of my advanced years.
I took Peruna, hardly daring to believe
that I would be helped, but S found to
my relief that I soon began to mend.
The irritation gradually subsided and
the urinary difficulties passed away.
I have enjoyed excellent health now for
the past seven months. 1 enjoy my
meals, sleep soundly, and am as well
as / was twenty years ago. / give* all
praise to Peruna.”—C. B. Newhof.
Suffered From Catarrh of Kidneys,
Threatened With Nervous Collapse,
Cured by Pe-ru-na.
Mr. F. B. Richards, 609 E. Street, N.
W., Washington, D. C., War Corres-
pondent, writes: “Exactly six years ago
I was ordered to Cuba as staff corres-
pondent of the New York Sun. I was in
charge of a Sun Dispatch boat through
the Spanish American war. The effect
of the tropical climate and the nervous
strain showed plainly on my return to
the states. Lassitude, depression to the
verge of melancholia, and incessant
kidney trouble made me practically an
invalid. This undesirable condition
continued,despite the best of treatment.
Finally a brother newspaper man, who
like myself had served in the war, in-
duced me to give a faithful trial to
Peruna. I did so. In a short time the
lassitude left me, my kidneys resumed
a healthy condition, and a complete
cure was effected. I cannot too strong-
ly recommed Peimna to those suffering
with kidney trouble. To-day I am able
to work as hard as at any time in my
life, and the examiner for a leading in-
surance company pronounced me an
“A” risk.” ,
PRES. C. B. NEWHOF,
Suffered From Catarrh of Bladder, g
inclpsed in a frame ten inches squ$Fe,
resembling a picture frame, except
that it must, of course, be laid flat ind
the cover must be kept over it except
when the ants are under observation.
The nest contains ants in their varioius
stages, and some of the other inseats
which are associated with or without
a queen, and accompanied by full di-
rections as to management. This nov-
elty has attracted much attention and
visitors show much interest in the ex-
hibition.
The cultivation of hops in Great
Britain is restricted to some six coun-
ties of England, to total area in hops
outside these counties being only 188
acres, as compared with 47,611 acres
within them.
Important to Mothers.
Examine carefully every bottle of CASTOHIA,
a safe, and sure remedy for infanta and children,
and see that it
Bears the
Signature of
In Use For Over SO Years.
The Kind You Have Always Bought.
Soldiers who lose their heads in bat-
tle have no use for pensions.
“There is plenty of room at the top.”
quoted the Wise Guy. “Every empty
headed fool must realize that,” mur-
mured the Simple Mug.
Lost Faith in America. j
Joe Grim, the Italian fighter with!
the iron jaw, was recently drawn for
jury duty over in Philadelphia. He
had made arrangements tc fight Hugo
Kelly of Chicago, and there was money
in the bout. Joe went to court and
said to the judge:
“Excusa me! Means lotto da mon,
judge!”
“Are you naturalized?” asked the
court.
“Sure! Good American me!” re-
plied the pugilist.
“Nothing doing, then!” remarked
the judge. “If you go West to fight
3’ou’ll go to jail for life when you
come back!”
“Mean shame!” cried Joe. “I needa
da mon. Wife, she needa da mon.
Me, greatest prize fighter in Little
Italy loosa da mon. I go to my man-
ag, Mike da Costell. He is a politish.
He say sure I’ll fix it right. Now he
do nothing. Say he go to jail, too.
I go myself to all the politish. They
givea me da smile. If I go fighta da
Kell I go to pris. If I don’t fighta
da Kell I loosa da mon. America fine
country!” And Joe left the court
room in tears.
In Poor Health Over Four Years.
Pe-ru-na Only Remedyof Rea! Benefit.
Mr. John Nimmo, 215 Lippincott, St.,
Toronto, Can., a prominent merchant of
that city and also a member of the
Masonic order, writes:
“I have been in poor health generally
for over four years. When I caught a
bad cold last winter it settled in the
bladder and kidneys, causing serious
trouble. I took two greatly advertised
kidney remedies without getting the
desired results. Peruna is the only
remedy which was really of any benefit
to me. I have not had a trace of kidney
trouble nor a cold in my system.”
Pe-ru-na Contains No Narcotics.
One reason why Peruna has found
permanent use in so many homes is that
it contains no narcotic of any kind.
Peruna is perfectly harmless. It can ba
used any length of time without acquir-
ing a drug habit. Peruna does not pro-
duce temporary results. It is perman-
ent in its effect.
It has no bad effect upon the system,
and gradually eliminates catarrh by
removing the cause of catarrh. There
are a multitude of homes where Peruna
has been used off and on for twenty
years. Such a thing could not be pos-
sible if Peruna contained any drugs of
a narcotic nature.
sense than men, for
The Wit of Woman.
Women,are the inheritors of the old-
Tht-jThave more
the simple reason that a man has to
be a specialist, and a specialist has
to be a fanatic. The normal man all
over the world is a hunter or a fisher
or a banker or a man of letters or
some silly thing. If so, he has to be
a wise hunter or a wise banker. But
nobody with the smallest knowledge
of professional life would ever expect
him to be a wise man. But his wife
has to be a wise woman. She has to
have an eye on everything.—G. K.
Chesterton in the London Daily News.
©.PISTOL CARTRIDGES.
It’s the shots that hit that count. ”1 Winchester
Rifle and Pistol Cartridges in all calibers hit, that is,
they shoot accurately and strike a good, hard, pene-
trating blow. This is the kind of cartridges you will get,
if you insist on having the time-tried Winchester make.
ALL DEALERS SELL WINCHESTER MAKE OR CARTRIDGES.
yffedjk Women Made Strong,
Women Made
McCANE’S DETECTIVE AGENCY,
Houston, Texas, operates the largest force
GiYe^ema^call61*01*™8 iQ th° South
When a man has one and sounds the
final “t” in valet he seems to think
he isn’t getting his money’s worth.
All Up-to-Date Housekeepers
use Defiance Cold Water Starch, be-
cause it is better, and 4 oz. more of it
for same money.
Statistics prove that nearly two-
thirds of the letters carried by the
world’s postal services are written,
sent to, and read by English-speak*
ing people.
True Greatness.
How sad that all great things are sad—
That greatness knows not to be glad
The boundless, spouseless, fearful sea
Pursues the moon incessantly;
And Caesar childless /lives and dies
The thunder-torn Sequoia tree
In solemn isolation cries
Sad chorus with the homeless wind
Above the clouds, above his kind,
Above his bastioned peak, above
All sign or sound or sense of love.
How mateless, desolate, and dies”
His lorn, long seven thousand year'
My comrades, iovers, dare to be
More truly great than Caesar; he
Who hewed three hundred towns apart
Yet never truly touched one heart
The' tearful, lorn, complaining sea
The very moon looks down upon.
Then changes—as a saber drawn;
The great Soquoia lords as lone ’
As God upon that fabled throne
No. no! True greatness, glory, fame,
Is his who claims nor place nor name
But loves and lives content, complete’
With baby owers at his feet.
Joaquin Miller, in Success.
Development of Butter Industry.
In 1898 the butter hauled over the
Minneapolis & St. Louis railroad, was
400,000 pounds. Last year it was near-
ly 14,000,000, the gain coming wholly
from developments of creameries
along that railroad.
TN those eight words is summed up
| the great work for women which
is accomplished by Doctor Pierce’s
Favorite Prescription. The treatment
and cure of many thousands
of women suffering from
chronic
weak- vA;
nesses
and dis-
tressing ail-
ments at the 1
Invalids’
Hotel and
Surgical In-
stitute, Buffalo,
N. Y., led to the
putting up of
‘ Favorite Pre-
scription ’ ’ for
home use in its
present perfect-
ed form.
The record of
the cures effect-
ed by this rem-
edyJfe without a
parallel. Thou-
sands of testimo-
nials received
from patients
and from physi-
cians who have tested it in the more
aggravated and obstinate cases which
had baffled their skill, prove it to
be the most wonderful remedy ever
devised for the relief and cure of suf-
fering women. It is not recommended
as a “cure-all,” but as a m*>st perfect
specific for woman’s peculiar ailments.
So uniform are the results which follow
the use of this remarkable remedy, that
it can be truly affirmed of “Favorite
Prescription ” that it olteays helps and
almost always cures. |Ninety-eight per
cent, of the women who give this medi-
cine a fair and faithful trial are cured
and remain cured.
. It is a powerful invigorating tonic,
imparting health and strength to the
womb and its appendages. The local,
womanly health is so intimately related
to the general health that when diseases
of the delicate womanly organs are
cured the whole body gains in health
and strength. For weak and sickly
women who are “worn-out,” “run-
down” or debilitated, especially for
women who work in store, office or
school-room, who sit at the type-writer
or sewing machine, or bear heavy house-
hold burdens, Doctor Pierce’s Favorite
Prescription will prove a priceless bene-
fit because of its health-restoring and
strength-giving power.
Dk. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y.;
Dear Str— I wish to state to you that I have
been taking Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescrip-
tion with very flood results. Had been in
poor health for over four years and been
twice in the hospital. About two years ago
my husband brought me a bottle ofPavoritQ
Prescription.” I have been using it since and
think it my duty to say to you and to those
who are sick and need a remedy that the "Fa-
vorite Prescription ” has carried me through
my two last poriods of confinement without
ahy hospital treatment. We are blessed with
two children, boy and girl, and I am suro
your medicine has done me more good than
all the other treatment I have received.
Mrs. K. M. Annis, Hudson. N. H.
A sure and permanent cure for con-
stipation’ is Dr. Pierce’s Pellets. One
“Pellet” is a gentle laxative, two a
mild cathartic.
Don’t allow the dealer to insult your
intelligence by offering his own remedy
to you instead of this well-known prep-
aration of Dr. Pierce. Ten chances to
one he will substitute a cheap compound
having a large percentage of alcohol.
WE RAISE LUCKY HIT RICE
The Best Table Rice Grown
WE SELL IT DIRECT TO THE
CONSUMER in small quantities
and PREPAY THE FREIGHT.
Write Todny for Free Samples and
prices delivered to your station.
J. ED. CABANISS,
Rice Grower,
KATY, TEXAS.
Salzer’s
National Oats
Greatest oat of the century. 1
Yielded in Ohio 187, in Mich.
Jl. in Mo. 255, and in N. Dakota
oh) bus. per acre.
You can beat that record in 1905.
For 10c and this notice
1 mail you free lots of farm seed
triples and our big catalog ten.
gall about this oat wond<
lousanda of other seeds.
JOHN A. SALZER SEED CO.
La Crosse,
Wig.
% mm
in
Largest Pure Sc Bar
Women are more truthful than
men, but occasionally you meet a
woman who says she doesn’t want to
get married.
He who has everything he wants
also has a job lot of things he does
not want.
Dr. Hunter, Specialist.
If you have any ailment, state prin-
cipal symptoms and get a list of ques-
tions, bo;oks, etc. A new system of
scientific specialists treatment for ca-
tarrh, brojnehitis, asthma, consumption,
etc., by Inhalation, which you can use
at your pome. Dr. J. H. Hunter, 310
Main St.,\Houston.
Girls be V the question when they try
to induce men to propose.
Tommy—“Pop?” Tommy’s Pop—
“Well, what is it now?” Tommy—
..When a standing arm gets tired can
it occupy the seat of war?”
Shake in Your Shoes.
Allen s Foot-Ease, a powder, cures pain-
ful, smarting, nervous feet and ingrowing
nails. It’s the greatest comfort discovery
of the age. Makes new shoes easy. A
certain cure for sweating feet. Sold by ali
druggists, 25c. Trial package FREE.
Address A. S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y.
Man wants but little here below
zero.
PATENTS
G. S. & A, B. LACEY, Patent Att’ys, Washlngtgn, D. C,
When Answering Advertisements
Kindly Mention This Paper.
W.N. U. HOUSTON-NO. 10. 1905
PISO 'S: CUR £ FOR
bUHth iVtittit ALL tlkt LAP S.
Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. TTae
iu time. Sold by druggists.
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McNaughton, George A. The Hays County Times And Farmers' Journal. (San Marcos, Tex.), Ed. 1 Friday, March 10, 1905, newspaper, March 10, 1905; San Marcos, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth614597/m1/2/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Texas State University.