Carrollton Chronicle (Carrollton, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 22, Ed. 1 Friday, December 15, 1905 Page: 3 of 8
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THE OLD-MONK-CUKE
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X
A BRIEF SKETCH OF HER LIFE
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RMK.
St Jacobs Oil
THE STORY READS LIKE A ROMANCE
Aches and Pains
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8
...
Bears the
of
In
Use
For Over
I
EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER.
Th.
The Home
Wave Circle
M
loved, where the family enjoy the
4KMf ■?.
■ r
25c. Hit isn’t
»
MUCK.
| M
1
r>
[9 oo Dhops')
1 Xh.lX I X •' ( Hll.DKEX
.Ml
Cto.
has traveled round the world,
and everywhere human
have welcomed it end blest
Il for a ewe.
endfc>r~Boofc<rfPh
JAQUES MP6.CS.
The man who can do all things well
very seldom does anything
I-
■ -
How the Vegetable Compound Had Its Birth and
How the “Panic of *73" Caused it to be Offered
for Public Sale in Drug Stores.
Some men want to make hay even
when It is raining.
Taxing bachelors may not boost the
matrimonial game, but it Is apt to en
courage emigration.
A summer girl has many engage-
ments. but the telephone girl gets the
most rings.
Try me Just once and I am sure to
come again. Defiance Starch.
After reciting “Curfew Shall Not
Ring To-night at school a girl im-
agines she is a bom elocutionist.
When men pool their resources they
sometimes realise that a pool and its
money are soon parted.
There are men who wouldn’t even
pay a compliment without taking a
receipt.
Immense Palm Leaven
The biggest leaves la the world are
those which grow on the Inaj palm,
found on the banks of the Amazon.
The leaves reach a length of as much
as 30 feet to 50 feet, and are from 10
to IS feet In breadth.
If all worn in were as good as they
look men would never dare many
tbess.
Aew^dVA-JMOEIBUBr
4pdir*aJ- .
AdXfdh- 1
foil ft d e 1
Gm. PH. A Pass Agent-
Tyler, Terne
B. fifrfc,
Amt. Gn.r tP.fow.
Tyler, Tenos.
There ism
pines* in All
■ •
J1
The men of pluck rarely have faith
in the goddess called Luck
When Your Grocer Says
he does not have Defiance Starch, you
may be sure he is afraid to keep It un-
til his stock of 12 ox packages are
sold. Defiance Starch Is not only bet-
ter than any other Cold Water Starch,
but contains IS os. to the package and
sells for same money as 12 os. brands.
...JIA E. PINKHAM
ANT
Aperfecl Remedy forConslina
tion. Sour Stomach. Diarrhoea
Worms .Convulsions .Feverish
nes* and Loss OF SLEEP.
HHLIBAYS
SOUTHERN
PACIFIC
■.» BOMB TW new* M MU
ML 21. 22 rat 23
• Return LlnUThlrtr D.r. J, .
Had Some Excuse.
“Is thia man a maniac?" asked Mr.
Fordham, at North London Police
court on Saturday. “I don’t know."
was the reply of an applicant for a
summons, “but I understand ho is
married.”—London Telegraph.
The Kind You Have
Always Bought
UH
EATHER. WISDOM!
THE ORKMAL m
X tOWERa I
'SUCKER
u Slack os yellow
Kill keep mu mn
" WMV ELSE HU
TMEMMWimmO
Cnrunwwn mCC
__ a use w oaamsarra as* ran*.
A.& TOWER Cft.eeesm. usee., *aux
Thirty Years
CASTORIA
VMMWMMIN6MMI MWVMMMU
CASTORIA
ForlnfimtgandChildren.
I . ••
r.JJk
m
1
'J*
.
Instantaneous Action.
“I was almost distracted by a ter-
rible itching which defied all trxit-
ment until I obtained a box of Hunt’s
Cure. The first application afforded
instant and absolute relief. The one
box effected a complete cure.
“It is simply wonderful tn Its in-
stantaneous action."
Geo. Gilliland,
Manitou, O. T.
MO
TO COBB A COLD IN ONE DAT
TO, LAXATIVE BROpo OntslM Tablet*. Drag-
gle** refand waaay If K Mia to care. K. W.
MOVE'S HgaUnreHw each hex. Be.
A woman would rather not be rich
and have people think she was than
to be rich jutd have them think she
wasn’t
Curse Blood, Skin Troubles, Cancer,
Blood Poison. Greatest Blood
: _Purifier Free.
If your blood is Impure, thin, dis-
eased, hot or full of humors, if you
have blood poison, cancer, carbuncles,
eating sores, scrofula, eczema. Itching,
risings and lumps, scabby, pimply
akin, bone pains, catarrh, rheun. itism.
or any blood or skin disease, take Bo-
tanic Blood Balm (B. B. B.) accord-
ing to directions. Soon all sores heal,
aches and pains stop, the blood Is
made pure and rich, leaving the skin
free from every eruption, and giving
the rich glow of perfect health to the
skin. At the same time B. BL B. ins
proves the digestion, cures dyspepsia,
strengthens weak kidneys Just the
medicine for old people, as it gives
them new, vigorous blood. Druggists
81 per large bottle, with directions for
home cure. Sample free and prepaid
by writing Blood Balm Co., Atlanta.
Oa. Describe trouble and special free
medical advice also sent In sealed let-
ter. B. B. B. Is especially advised for
chronic, deep-seated cases of Impure
blood and skin disease, and cures after
all elm fails
Taylor's Cherokee Remedy of Sweet Gum
and Mullan is Nature's greet remedy—Cures
Coughs, Colds, Croup and Consumption,
and all throat sad lung troubles Atdrug-
gtats, Be., Me. and *1.00 per bottle.
Stats or Onto, C>tt or Toisoo, r
Loess CMSTT. (
Fuji J. Canit makes oath that he 1* oralot
nsrtaer ot ths Sna al P. J. Cesssv a Co.. Mac
bwtoca* th the City ef Toledo. Ctmnty aad Sialo
*Ii«*a*M. aad that aaM Ini vtll pay the *am st
OMK HVMUKKII DOLLAR* tar each aod srsry
eaoe at CaTaua that num ha esnd hy Iho aoe W
IUu i LaTasas Csss ______
FKAXK J. CHCXKT
Boron ta before ■« aad oahaothed la ay yra»
Ones lhla«lh day af Daamhar. A. 1>. SK
, A.W. CUiAAOS.
I *5**• I XoTaav Pirsuc.
■ airo Catarrh Cato la lahea tauraally aad ana
Shectly oa lha Mood aad aeeoaa aarfacaa of tha
■Qf ■' head for lenliaiialcli. tree.
r. J. CHXNKY a CO..Tala*>.a
SaH hy an DrassMa. We.
Take Hau's roach, run tbr I ■■■th.tlaa
and pies and other good things every
day. The hakinc b always delicious
aad wholesome becatme
K. C Baking Powder
—die baking' powder <d die wave
circle, b used.
Get KC to-day! 25 ounces far d
that we claim, fl
If there ta one time more than an-
other when we long to do bodily la-
jury ft ta when we hear a little li-
lt’s alright to paddle your owe ea-
aqe, but some men are not satisfied
unless they are paddling some other
feitow*si
—----
PronotesDigKlioitClireTfub
nms and Rt*sl £ofitauis hpi Hmt
Opunn . Morphine norMneraL
NOT NARC OTIC .
Ask Yow Druggist for Alien’s Foot Esse
•‘1 tried ALLEN’S FOOT-EASE recent-
ly and have just bought another supply. It
baa cured say corns, and the hot, burning
and Itching seusation In my feet which was
almost snbearable, aad I would not be with-
out it now.”—Mrs. W. J. Walker, Camden,
N.J." Sold by aft Druggists, 25c.
had oo often made from roots end
herbs for such of her women neigh-
bors sad friends who were sick and
ailing. Its success in those cases had
been wonderful—its fame had spread,
and calls were coming from miles
sround for this efficacious vegetable
compound.
They had no money, and little
credit. Their first laboratory waa the
kitchen, where roots and herbs were
steeped on the stove, gradually filling
a grogs of bottles. Then came the
queatlon of selling IL for always be-
fore they had given it away frte.
They hired a job printer to run off
some pamphlets setting forth the mer-
its of the medicine, now called Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound,
and these pamphlets were distributed
by the Pinkham sons in Boston. New
York and Brooklyn.
The wonderful curative properties of
the medicine were, to a great extent,
self-advertising, for whoever used it
recommended it to others, and the de-
mand gradually inereaaed.
In 1877, by combined efforts, the
family had aaved enough money to
commence newspaper advertising on a
small scale, and from that time the
growth AM success of the enterprise
waa asadT 2, until t»day Lydia E.
Pinkham k^f her Vegetable Compound
have becon. lousebold words every-
where, and i - uaands of pounds of
roots and hern vre used annually in
making this gro remedy for woman’s
ills.
Although Lydia E. Pinkham passed
to her reward some years ago. the per-
petuation of her great work waa
guarded by her foresight
During her long end eventful experi-
ence she was ever methodical in her
work and was careful to preserve a
record of every case that came to her
attention The case of every sick
woman who applied to her tor advice
—and there were thousands—received
careful study, and the details, includ-
ing symptom*, treatment and results,
were recorded for future reference,
and today these records, together with
thousands made since, are available to '
sick women the world over, and repre-
sent a vast collaboration of informa-
tion regarding the treatment of wom-
an’s ills which, for authenticity and
accuracy, can hardly be equaled in any
library in the world.
Another act of foresight on the part
of Lydia E. Pinkham was to see that
some one of her family was trained to
carry on her-work, and with that end
lu view, Jor years before her death,
had as her chief assistant her daugh-
ter-in-law, the present Mrs. Pinkham.
Therefore, under the guidance and
careful training of Lydia E. Pinkham,
and a vast experience of her own,
covering twenty-five years, the present
Mrs. Pinkham ta exceptionally well
equipped to advise sick women, which
she ta always glad to do free of
charge.
The record of Lydia E. Pinkham’*
Vegetable Compound, made of simple
herbs and roots, is a proud and peer-
less one. It ta a record of constant
conquest over the obstinate ills of
women, greater than that of any other
one medicine of its kind in the world,
and will ever stand as a monument to
that noble woman whose name Its
beam
DEFIAICE STARCK
This remarkable woman, whose
maiden name was Estes, was bora in
Lynn, Mass. February fith, 181t, com-
ing from a good old Quaker family.
For many years she taught school, and
during her career as a teacher she be-
came known as a woman of an alert
and investigating mind, an earnest
seeker after knowledge, and above all.
she was possessed with a wonderfully
sympathetic nature.
In 1843 she married Isaac Pinkham,
a builder and real estate operator, and
their early married life was marked by
prosperity and happiness. They had
four children, three sons and a daugh-
ter.
In those good old-fashioned days few
drugs were used in medicines; people
relied upon nature’s remedies, roots
and herbs, which are today recognized
as more potent and efficacious in con-
trolling diseases than any combination
of drugs.
Mrs. Pinkham from her youth took a
deep interest in medicine, in botany—
the study of roots and herbs, their
characteristics, and power over dis-
ease; she believed that as nature
so bountifully provides food for the
body so she also provides medicine for
the ills and weaknesses of- the body,
in the roots and herbs of the field,
and as a wife, mother and sympathetic
friend, she often made use of her
knowledge of roots snd herbs in pre-
paring medicines for her family and
friends.
Knowing of so much suffering among
her sex, after much study and re-
search. Mrs. Pinkham believed that
the diseases of women have a com-
mon cause, and she set ’to work to
_ find a common remedy—not at that
time as a source of profit, but simply
that she might aid the suffering.
How her efforts have been rewarded
the women of the world know-to-day.
In 1873 the financial crisis struck
Lynn. Its length and severity was too
much for the large real estate inter-
ests of the Pinkham family, as this
clam of business suffered most from
this fearful depression, so when the
Centennial year dawned ft found their
property swept away.
At this point the history of Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound com-
mences:
The three sons and daughter, with
their mother, eombined forces to re-
store the family fortune. They re-
solved to give to the world the vege-
table compound th*’ Mrs. Pinkham
To the bourn wife who has not yet
become acquainted with the new things
of everyday use in the market and
who ie reasonably satisfied with the
old. we would suggest that a trial of
Defiance Cold Water Starch be made
at once. Not alone because it ta aulr-
anteed by the manufacturers to be su-
perior to any other brand, but because
each ISo pqpkage contains 1* osa.,
while all the other kinds contain but
12 ozs. It is safe to say that the lady
who once uses Defiance Starch win use
no other. Quality and quantity must
win.
KBW VDHK.
■/hfagetaMeRtparatiofiferAs-
Saved Him.
“It didn’t kin me. but I think ft
would if it had not been for Hunt’s
Cure. I was tired, miserable and well
nigh used up when 1 commenced
using it for an old and severe ctse of
Eczema. One application relieved
snd one box cured me.
“I believe Hunt’s Cure win cure any
form of itching known to mankind.”
Clifton Lawrence.
Helena, O. T.
1 $I4'£iBBBftjXh
r cbbbte wnm aux ea, M
srrs..M*sL.Tfotau r.roa
LEWISSIN6LE BINIER
STRAIGHTS* CIGAR
Tew »BSw er AHer* f»— VM«rr. DA.
A OCASAXTUUn CLUB FOR TILER
iteMe. biiw, sim-sibs. r™«»w«w nn. i>rw
■HM MMfMS «* reruBd naatj tf rAZO
O1XTMKXT MH I. ewe la* teM Oaja at*.
satisfaction and hap- i
>r that Is honest and
true. Few things bring greater eoa-
tentment; faw thtag^givo more pease
That a woman’s tore of love ahmild j
The average girl will allow her
mother to pick out a husband for ner,
but when ft comes to the wedding
gown she generally asserts herself.
SL Louie Southwoelern
Bailwex Coiapanx
OF TCXAH
Now has heavy steel ratio, and ballaet, over
practically tpo enUie ay»ten>, is equipped
with Han speed eualoue, nodern w de
veetibulo dayooa-bes, free redtniDC cbair
cere, parlor cafe cara and punman'a lauwt
Stylo of aieepera. In addition, we lay claim
to Ute fact that oar train crewe areeaoad
to nose ta efBciency aad conrteooa bearine
to the traveling pobUc, In placing these
potnta before you, we do ao with the state-
ment that w will serve yon to the best of
oar ability should we be favored with your
patronage, is that year fotraey while la on.
charge willbeSBoat agreeable one.
The Coll .wing trane are sthsfti’ed to
leave our poiata DAILY la eltbw direcU a:
Mm. 2S2md 2SS tscttarol
Em. 2M sM 2*7 EMtamd
These trains make convenient owsotloeo
at June ion potato for all deetlnatlooa. North,
Laet, West or Month.
Detailed Information regarding year t Ip
Sr
c
c
!
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Risien, John T. Carrollton Chronicle (Carrollton, Tex.), Vol. 2, No. 22, Ed. 1 Friday, December 15, 1905, newspaper, December 15, 1905; Carrollton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1268296/m1/3/?q=%22%22~1&rotate=90: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Carrollton Public Library.