OCR Text |
Show jd E. PINKHAM CVDIA I it stand in Ha old, old place, But .1 with a atrange, chill air; 1 the amlle on a tcmlcr fac 'Neat a ciown of silvery hair. And I turn from the silence there. For VN BRIEF SKETCH OF HER LIFE 1 , Am I in a dream? Ah, me' Some day. perchance. ahull waks And that name sweet vlelon aee. And the hands of a dear one take. When the cloud oervelllng shall break. Annt G. Murray la Boaton Herald. ISSUEs) T" if iii hi 7iT uiiuTnii a ti For Infants and Children. iiTTTWfr X the Vegetable Compound Had Its Birth and How the Panic of 73 Caused it to be Offered low The Kind You Have MitOftjA tifTiii e Ill o till III , ti lm min for Public Sale in Drug Stores. Always Bought f1', Vegetable Preparationfor Assimilating the Food nndRcdula ling the Stomachs and Dowels of Bears the H N FAlSfTSCB flDK ENfl STORY IBB READS rld are J palm, Amazon. much from 10 This remarkable woman, whose alden name was Estes, was horn In ,ynn, Mass., February 9th, 1819, coming from a good old Quaker family, or many years she taught school, and uring her career as a teacher she e known as a woman of an alert nd Investigating mind, an earnest he dev-ieker after knowledge, and above all, devil be was possessed with a wonderfully ould he ympathetlc nature. r gams In 1843 she married Isaac Pinkham, builder and real estate operator, and elr early married life was marked by happiness. They had Jhildren, rosperlty-Tinur children, three sons and a daugb-r- . y, nurse rk, cure In those good days few tomach, late the rugs were used in medicines; people lied upon natures remedies, roots 1,000 tov nd herbs, which are recognized Sample g 9 more potent and efficacious in oy.N.Y, diseases than any combination drugs. Mrs. Pinkham from her youth took a men la ep interest in medicine, in botany e study of roots and herbs, their laracteristics, and power over dls-isshe believed that as nature 9 bountifully provides food for the jdy so she also provides medicine for e of :e ills and weaknesses of the body, the roots and herbs of the field, free id as a wife, mother and sympathetic lend, she often made use of her ; nowledge of roots and herbs in medicines for her family and idoat lends. Knowing of so much suffering among er sex, after much study and Mrs. Pinkham believed that hough he diseases of women have a com-ao- n IB for cause, and she set to work to d pro nd a common remedy not at that me as a source of profit, but simply hat she might aid the suffering. How her efforts have been rewarded fallible ie women of the world know xnciij, In 1873 the financial crisis struck ynn. Its length and severity was too such for the large real estate Inter its of the Pinkham family, as this e Con. Vass of business suffered most from The 'his fearful depression, so when the ting a Centennial year dawned it found their Ion of roperty swept away. At this point the history of Lydia E. inkham's Vegetable Compound come to-da- y it pre-arin- g to-da- mences: IE I The three sons and daughter, with e combined forces to the family fortune. They resolved to give to the world the vegetable compound that Mrs. Pinkham heir mother, re-ior- LIKE A ROMANCE had so often made from roots and herbs for such of her women neighbors and friends who were sick and ailing. Its success in those cases bad been wonderful its fame had spread, and calls were coming from miles around for this efficacious vegetable compound. They had no money, and little credit. Their first laboratory was the kitchen, where roots and herbs were steeped on the stove, gradually filling a gross of bottles. Then came the question of selling It, for always before they had given it away free. They hired a job printer to run off some pamphlets setting forth the men Its of the medicine, now called Lydia E. Plnkbam'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, for whoever used It recommended it to others, and the demand gradually Increased. In 1877, by combined efforts, the family had saved enough money to commence newspaper advertising on a small scale, and from that time the growth and success of the enterprise was assured, until Lydia E. Pinkham and her Vegetable Compound have become household words everywhere, and thousands of pounds of roots and herbs are used annually in making this great remedy for womans ills. Although Lydia E. Pinkham passed to her reward some years ago, the per petuation of her great work was guarded by her foresight During her long and eventful experience 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 for advice and there were thousands received careful study, and the details. Including symptoms, treatment and results, were recorded for future reference, and y these records, together with thousands made since, are available to sick women the world over, and represent a vast collaboration of Information regarding the treatment of womans 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 In view, for years before her death, bad as her chief assistant her daughter-in-law, the present Mrs. Pinkham. Therefore, under the gutdance and careful training of Lydia E. Pinkham, and a vast experience of her own, covering twenty-fivyears, the present Mrs. Pinkham Is exceptionally well equipped to advise sick women, which she is always glad to do free of charge. The record of Lydia E. Plnkbam's Vegetable Compound, made of simple herbs and roots. Is a proud and peerless one. It Is 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 bears. to-da- y to-da- e The Gift of Gifts For Christmas or Any Other Time Is 1 a Diamond. Vnless you have a technical knowledge of diamonds your chief concern should be in selecting the house from which to purchase The unquestioned reputation of BOYD PAFMKaltLkejJEstabltshedJBM, with absolute guarantee, will decide the question for you. Draw from the largest stock of Dmmonds. Watches and Silver in the Intermountain Region. e ird 170 Main Street. Salt Lake RICE. j jrm a jSLiu 7Q0 H CURE 23 Cts. Jaw J ja THE CRIP IN ONE DAY panic A if IS GUARANTEED TO CURE 1 GRIP, BAD COLD, HEADACHE AND NEURALGIA. wh" SSooaontao I wool ..II AotUOrlplao I" K. MONBV HACK. IP IT M VT II J.. IF. IHrmtr, U. V., Maautaelurcr.NpHNPI.IU, Jfo. l. ;not Narcotic. by Dally 8tory Pub. Co.) Just off the street, in a narrow alley for soon he was going to put into exethat reeked with the scent of garbage, cution the thing he had come there rested a large dry goods box, and in to do. But presently the course of the box crouched the figure of a man the intruder swerved a little and trying to shield himself from the fall- led toward the edge of the wharf seving rain. The faint lights of the street eral feet away from the man. The glimmered In front of him, but none footsteps were far too light for those of the rays penetrated to his place of of a man they were evidently being refuge. The man had been sitting made by a "Woman or a child. But (Copyright, 1906, as keep it up? Silence again for a moment, then: "Whats to gain anyhow by keeping up the fight? Nothing. Whos to care if I drop it? No one. Therell be an end to everything. AH will be blank, no feeling either good or bad, no more misery, no cold or hunger, nothing, abIts pleasant to solutely nothing think that there will be nothing to feel. Maybe there's a soul. If so, It will go darting here and there through space like the pollen sheath of a grass stalks In a varying breeze. He fell Into silence once more and listened to the patter of the rain on the top of his box while his thoughts ran over and over the same line of reasoning. He caught the "Yes, Ill do It. himself up to box the of pull edge from his crouching position. "It will be a very easy thing to do, much easier than to hold on another twenty-fou- r hours. Yet there's something that tugs at my determination somehow. But It is off I declare It to be off now. ' He crept out of the box and turned In the direction of the North river. The rain beat upon his head, but he cemed to care no longer for that lie had thrust his hands into his pockets and his shoulders had drooped forward ss if he carried a weight on his back. He walked slowly, sometimes stopping still, for an instant, as though be still argued with himself. It was more than half a mile to the North river at the point which he sought.'lm abandoned portion of a There were no rotting old wharf. near-blights, and the place was murky and dismal. The surroundings suited the mood of the man and enHe concouraged his determination. tinued on across the planking which was curled and hollowed and twisted from the contending forces of the dampness from below and the sunshine of the day from above. Occasionally a weak board gave way Just a little beneath his feet, and Involuntarily he sprang forward to a ounder part of the flooring. Reaching the edge he leaned against a piece of piling which extended above the wharf, and looked down toward the waters. He could not see the line where they played against the timbers of the wharf, but he knew that It was Just four feet down at this point. No sound came to his ears above the lapping of the waves against the timbers for some time, for the rain bad almost ceased, though no start were visible overhead1. "No, there's nothing to It, and Ill not keep It up; though I shall Just atand here a little while longer, Just y while I am feeling no particular in. disposition. either mentally or physic-lly- In - I IrrfcmaAkgidf ttinft.frlH -- Vmfods Use Remedy forConslipa-non- , Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea Worms .Convulsions .Feverishness and Loss OF SLEEP. A period Facsimile Signature For Over of Thirty Years NEW YORK. mr' ' EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. 9 io) A Ini J TMS MNTMIft HtNHVi NM TOM ITV. LEYSONS Laid a hand upon the woman Who is Loysons ? Tho largest on Intsr. mountain country. Everything first doss, with ample susrsntooo to proteot tho purohosor, Ws will ma.ll free out two Illustrated Cwtsi-logue- o ( one of Watches, "A and tho other of Diamonds and Jewelry. to ony oddroso. B) Phono M for tho correct time. arm. "God have mercy on my aoult It 1 am doing that which I should not, but It seems that I have endured all that I can endure. There Is no use to try If only longer. It is hopeless. there will be nothing beyond this, absolutely nothing just an eternal blank and void. The voice broke off qulverlngly, and the man, still clinging to the post leaned outward toward the woman. His free, outstretched hand might almost have touched her. Thoughts of his own situation had for the present vanished. "But why hesitate longer, the voice continued soon, only to prolong the misery? I wish I were braver and yet I am brave enough for this thing. There Is no one to miss me, there Is hardly one that would know my dead face. But It la strange that I hurried so to get here, and am now no longer In haste to do what I came for. But I shall not wait another moment. God forgive me! She crouched a little to make a spring. But the man had crept away from the post and he now laid a hand upon the womans arm. She turned quickly but made no outcry. Who are you that you lay your hand upon me? she asked In a low but steady tone. I am one who came here for the sr.me purpose which brought you. "Then why do you restrain me? "Because something has suddenly taken a grip upon my heart that had not existed before. I have been at your talk. You have drunk at the thick and murky fountain you could be something to me, and I b lleve I could he something to you. 1 have just learned that sympathy It the half of bread In this world. Let us go back together and take up the struggle again already 1 feel new life In my soul. We should belong to each other. You have saved my life and I shall save yours. In a single Instant love has been born In my heart And you will love me I shall make you. The woman did not answer. But he allowed hla arms to steal about her and to lead her away from the trlnk of the river. They crossed the wharf back toward the city. Stop ping at the inner edge of tho planking he drew her to him closely and kissed her lips timidly; and a mom- entary trembling as of virgin confu- sion passed through her body. Then hand In hand they walked back to-ward the pavements and the lights and the sound of the city; every-thing seemed beautiful and fair, and In their hearts waa a wonderful hope. Real Beginning of Education. When a young man begins to know how much less he knows than he thinks he knows then he knows something that is really worth knowing. BL Joseph, Mo., Gazette. Her Darling. A piioo Jawslry Houso In tho BALT LAKE CITY. On an Electrical Parade, I dont know much 'bout prophesl cation, said uncle Eben, but I kin say dar is three mighty reliable sign o min a horse race, a circus an a camp meetln. Washington Star. More Converts Every Year Every day in every year that comes, more housewives are giving up their exhorbitant ti priced Baking Powders and turning to K C, the honest and reliable, which has stood so well the test of years. They are find ing out that BAKING POWDER costs list-enln- g 1 He walked alowly. ttoua-SMTaptrcH- Sent' Awin Ax Smut AurM As- there for some time in silence and mo- why should a woman or a child com tionless. At last he muttered: here at this hour? The footsteps "Theres nothing to it, why keep it halted at the edge of the planking, up? and silence again reigned for a few Then he relapsed into silence again moments. Then a sob broke from the for another half hour. At the end of form that had stopped there, and a this time he muttered again: woman's voice murmured: No; theres nothing to it and why Send for Reasonable Prices. Signature of Promotes DigeslionChccrfuF nessandRest.Contains neither Opium, Morphine nor Mineral one-thir- the price of d powder anywhere near K C quality, and makes better, purer, more healthful baking. 25 ounces for 25c. Scad potlil for u Book of frowsts.' JAQUES MFC. CO. Chicago 111. .WE. TREAT and CURE ! CATARRH sod all owsbls gissstss of tbs Sts, Mr, osss.tbroot. longs, stem-tIi.tr. bswsls. kldn-r- s, btsSSsr and II sbrsoio nsrvsiwsng privsts Sim. ms I boib stats, sod d ims ms ol sbiidrso. Hums Trsstmsnt taros. Writs for frsa sjnipinm list If oo e.o-scall, t ou.uitalloa troo. ' , ot ' I p. . w. ssosas. s. a. f. taonss. Special Offer In Private Diseases So ara suffsrlnt fnns Prl.sto IHMsMs-ohslIftar-Saa- s tansaS Cafnrtnnaiot of bois taio ta Hb.rM .nS lagmiaala ra. Sf lMauJiHikS ataoMof an-- l rob Uwnposjit aultnrar tor (nnfi ,u Iro.tm.Dl. I'HS. ( h.ri.i.M oo in us as aO Hill fc.H IU Mil aK TuU ru fAV tubw USB Irul.LAU CHIU, r. tun wink th KM vit Wri 1UBT CAt Ct'ltB AND T0 rCR PRIVSTR DlSKSSrS IN BOTH HlloHKo' . tint to I'HOVM Iboir Mill. In ibis tiaaa of SBXBS tbof traataaS ona Sullar. Or tlinaaubn pra'.r Sura turStam. balort lbs pailsnt la ruoulraS la r lira. ms ar otuntit'r lot .lim.nit t. t oar lbs fus lb tman THIS HtiNSST ,rar,.a. S bio. v tbs tfua-- k an At f MCTKli Saai. a fakir ana pi. An oP i HAI.IM, Wl I It rill ruanaas. II4 au star ba.r of a ksklr lafuaSiss s aoiaaita all Ct.S la atnbanta for ami-l- f -no cannot loss tiiani-It out. rtoat If four par lata ai.m.r loataur-l aaii.nt ,oh foa a.nnf W K AH Nr.ivRH Of MKN' ara Hlnlanih. of .n rallsd .linn, ins rs.ull of aa lays at M I.A Nit-lHborM now UK. A I. THKA1 MRS C for tuck saws. I NT A HI- lal.mtM I'H -r Oomrt boa audsr iba old and amiMa piss af AHI.V I t MRS M n,ar hum. lb, auraMamin. ! UAMIOhiii Ws aura for val, Wsakn,. lima as for lam Uu.NuHMMiilt A, H Ill l.tN, VAHI IN M.R and Slnitnol trauSiat, la mon.r. i baa oaf ,In.illutma Is Iba aaal. srs-- r sum I. ooiinituntial as aarar uta a asms w Sswaf Bismisailaa and Ad.im MUCH br mall oral thaolSca. soars! OfrlcH Itol UHi HHMtf HI Braaliigt I la St sunitartasJ holidays IDS 14 It bsr toniosuis-Sa.aalaa- CUUKU-UNLK- sUmt-nta- a .? gowned young woman, after leaving her carriage at tho aril He continued to gaze toward the entrance to a leading shop In West tho atreet other Twenty-thirday,; water of the river. A half hour passed. Then a sound came to the man's gave a parting glance toward her seat ear that waa not from the river. Foot-atep- mate, a atjllshly frorked pug, says a DBS. SHORES & SHORES. Enert Socialists. 249 hesitating footstep, writer In the New York Press. The light, sounded from behind him, coming in pug eyed Its nilstrcr wistfully, and vehla direction aerosa tho flooring of ihe milady retraced her atepa to her W. N. U., Balt Lako-N- o. anld. and hicle sympathetically: arm the about his wharf. Throwing Woman In Finland's University, with-ou- t lonesome Come, dearie, youre post he half turned to listen more Twenty five per cent of the students your mother. I'll take you along. PtSQtSY Intently. Finlands university are women; at cum i mit all use came on dlrecty Promptly the footman saluted, and but The footstep u NmI luuirb hyrup, half of these pan the examionly to In I'm by toward him It seemed and he started transferred the dog companion Those that do are mostly In nations. tr move away 4 to escape deteetle L "mothers arms. the medical dorrtment. fashionably as. k- Im.-man- l V I l.f !. anvil-atloM- a, ir.rA.VA ro. THi MOUTH, THROAT, amp lOwaL,.... uowioh Nsldsn-Judso- s , n . IICUPB (AILw poa Awe Anrwtrlng Advertisement This Paper. Meffllcu-- ore eye 1 Sail Lak City, Utah. Drug Co., Gineral Agents. Kindly Mention DHUAA-tala tv ALLaioaae.. aisisxi with ue (Thompson's Eya Water 60,1903. TsraMaimaragr |