Dakota County herald. (Dakota City, Neb.) 1891-1965, October 19, 1906, Image 7

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    1
RUN DOWN FROM GRIP
Or. Williams' Pink Pill Have Cured
I me Form of Debility In
Hundreds of Cases.
Tonr yrnrn aro," says Mr. F. Mor
rison, i.f No. 1012 Carson street, South
Hide, Pittsburg, Pn., " I took a cold
whili turned iuto the grip. This trouble
left me all mu down. I wait thin, had
baoknclie nmcli of I be time, had no ap
petite, my stomach was out of order and
I felt nervous and uiistrniig.
"While I had the grip I had a doctor,
bnt I really Buffered more from the con
dition in which the influenza left me
than I did from the disease itself. I felt
generally wretched and miserable and
the least exposure to cold would make
rne worse. I couldn't seem to get any
better until I began to take Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills. 1 Yery quickly noticed a
beueflt after I begun taking them and
they restored me to good health and
t.rpnirr.h Ilr Willin,.. il.,lr Hill.
rt- - - ' ' . iua . inn n I u
a Wonderfully good medicine. Thanks
to them I am now in fine health and
have had noretnru of my former trouble.
I recommend the pills to everyone who
in ailing and take every opportunity to
let people know bow good they are."
Dr. Williams Pink Pills cured Mrs.
Morrison becmise they actually make
good, red blood. When the blood is red
and healthy there can be no debility.
The relation between the blood and
nervous system is such that the pills
have a very decided action upon the
nerves and they have enred man v severe
nervous disorders, such ns partial pa
ralysis, locomotor ataxia and St. Vitus'
dauce, that have not yielded to ordinary
j treatment. Their double action, on the
v blood and on the nerves, makes thorn an
ideal tonio.
All druggists sell Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills, or they will be sent bv mail post
mid, on receipt of price, 60 cents per
box, six boxes for fS.fiO, bv the Dr. Wil
liams Medicine Co., Schenectady, N.Y.
A Bariraln Conntrr Hncouilrr,
One of the shops in town has been
i Belling fur goods at a reduction since
9. Christmas, says the Washington Post,
liver so many people responded to the
all of the advertisement. One of those
persons was a tall, commanding look
ing woman, with a determined ring in
foer voice. ' She paused beside a table
, fal of muffs and neck pieces, and be
gan to discuss them with the sales
woman. She looked at this muff and
then at that, and at length her eyes
fell on a mink muff lying at a little
distance from the others. She picked
K tip and looked at it disapprovingly.
"You don't mean to tell me you ex
pect anybody to pay good money for
thin,? like that, do you?" she de
snanded. There was a faint exclamation from
a woman whose back bad leen turned
f at that moment. She snatched the
tnnff from the hands of the command
fag looking woman. There was not
a word spoken, but for the space of ten
aoconds I fully expected the two to
ke their corners, and I was prepared
o put my money on the woman who
owned the mull.
Anything- Out a Joke.
"These alleged Jokes about the sum
mer girl who gets engaged Just for
fun," remarked the sad-eyed paosenger
as he let a comic weekly fall to the
Boor of the car, "make me real weary."
"What's the answer?" queried the
hardware drummer.
"I met that kind of a girl last suni
saer," explained the sad-eyed party,
"and thinking the Joke compilers knew
their business, I got engaged to her."
"Well?" said the h. d., us the other
paused to light his pipe.
"Hut Instead of acting according to
the dope sheet," continued ue" of tne
ad optics, "she Jumped the hurdle and
married me about the time the leaves
began to turn."
In tbe Dlnlnsr Car.
English Tourist Waiter, this steak
is deucedly tough, y'kuow.
Walter Got teh be, sub, In ordeh
ten pass de guv-mont 'spectlon ! Vo'
probably am unaware, sah, dat since
tie Packln'town 'sposures tendehness la
beef am consldebed a sign ob physi
cal weakness! Puck.
wiikrf: tiik iiidks go.
Shoe Men Use Then IT p In a Way That
is ApiMilMng.
, slayer Factory, of Milwaukee, Uses,
i 415,612 Annually.
Steers, Cows, Calves, . (ioata. Horses,
Sheep and Kangaroos, Contribute
to Ono of tlio (ircatwt In
dustries on Karth.
In the mad whirl of business, people
rarely pause long enough to consider
the little things of life and how close
ly they are lrlentltie.1 with the greater
ones how Inseparable, In fact, they
are, from and how essential to them.
Take, for instance, the shoe business
did ever anyone ponder long enough
to realize the wealth of actual energy
and animal life expended In the prod
uction of footwear for the human
race.
As an example, take the Mayer Root
and Shoe company, a Milwaukee con
cern that It in three hundred working
days has consumed no less than 415,
612 hides of all kinds during the past
twelve months.
Here, then, we have the hides of
60,298 steers, 31,163 cows, 65,
.704 calves, 196,846. goats, 67,
699 sheep, 2,523 horses and
distributed by the great Mayer factory
with In the period of a ypar. Stand
these animals in a straight line and
they would cover a distance of 351
miles, nearly one-sixtieth of thh
earth's circumference. To bring this
live stock to Its final point of destina
tion, required no b-ss than 3.000 26
foot oars, which strung tugi-ther would
I cover over 15 miles of railroad track.
' It takes the bides of nearly 1.500 anl-
main dally to supply the demands of
this monster shoe enterprise and were
all of them cprend out at one time.
It would require an area of 5.000,000
squnre.foet to accommodate them.
Nearly 1,000 skilled artisans are
employed by the Mayer company the
year round making the Ilnnorbilt shoe
for men. Western lately for women,
and the celebrated Martha Washing,
ton comfort shoes; also school shoes
.ihnt wear like iron, and work shoes
lor nil classes and purposes. The to
tal capacity of the Mayer factory Is
6,000 pairs of nhoes a day. The equip
ment of this factory Is as thoroughly
modern and up-to-date as money and
A experience can make It. Another de
cidedly favorable feature Is that of lo
cation, which Is in the greatest leather
market in the world, thus enabling the
company to secure first-choice on
products consumed. The uniformly
excellent quality of oil shoes turned
iout by the Mayer factory is largely at
tributed to this fact.
MONEY AND LOVE.
By
it
KRE Is a set of
put everybody upon
H ft
do they go to tho root of matrimonial
I difficulties. A correspondent asks :
"1. Is money as
ment in making a
"2. Is all money
than all love and no money?
"A married woman says yes to the
second question, says that the finan
cial end is necessary to be successful,
that a woman must respect her hus-
' band to love him, and that she can
not respect him when he is not get
ting along financially.
"3. Is money so Important as to be
balf of the marriage, and is love only half, or nearly all
of It?"
That Is plain enough for the humblest comprehension.
The questions are emphatically practical ones, and it will
not do to answer them supposedly by panegyrics In favor
of love. Those are easy to write and pleasant to read,
but, as the saying Is, "they butter no parsnips."
In fact, the best answers come from the human wis
dom bound up in proverbs. These are so firmly founded
In experience that they pass current .t their face value.
They are self-evldently true, and they have little regard
for the mere sentimentalist.
"When poverty conies In at the dor, love files out of
the window." This at lenst Implies that love knows no
harder test thnn the falling from a higher temporal estate
to a lower. Other wise snylngs will adjust themselves
to the same end. Quite as significant Is the1 uniform
attiude of the great world toward a moneyless match. It
is uniformly held to be unfortunate, and Its end Is gen
erally believed to be unbapplness.
Any study of the folk-lore of women will show further
that woman In all ages and climes have had an eye single
to what we most unpoetleally term "the main chance." I
think both love and money are essential to the best re
sults, and that money can do without love quite as well,
In most cases, as love without money.
SEIZE EVERY OPPORTUNITY.
By Rev.
The word opportunity means before a port,
and life's opportunities are so many portals
leading out into wider regions beyond. Op
portunity is as essential as ability to any
man's success, for unless he is given an oppor
tunity to make use of his ability It Is nil in
vain. But opportunities are always showing
themselves, while men with ability are not
always ready to avail themselves of tbe oppor
tunities that open before them.
Then men who complain they have had no opportunities
are always those who have not been prepared for them
when they came. It takes a wide-awake man to recog
nize the face of opportunity. Almost everyone knows his
back. It may be a bitter thing to think of the chances
we never had and of the more favorable circumstances of
others, but It will be a deejwr sorrow to think of things
we might have done but did not do. The Judges of Drey
fus had a wonderful opportunity ; they are the byword of
the nations been use they failed to Improve It. '
Stensland had his opportunity and he who might have
been trusted and loved as everywhere execrated as one
who blunted his sense of right and Justice and proved
recreant to his trust. On the other hand the man eager
WHAT THE NEIGHBORS 8AY.
She isn't very pretty and
She doesn't talk so very well,
So I can hardly understand
Flow she could ever be a belle.
Se has no money, which I know
Some mercenary men prefer.
He isn't mercenary, -bo -
I wonder what he sees in her.
He's homely and he's awkward, toot
At any sport an awful muff.
He's not one of those fellows who
Can even make a decent bluff;
No business gumption, and I hear,
j His salary is pretty slim.
It certainly seems rather queer,
I wonder what she sees in him.
lie sees she's beautiful and wise,
She sees him handsome, brave and
strong
She's fascinating in his eyes,
She thinks that he does nothing wrong,
Well, if that most deluded pair
Are quite contented I suppose
jit's something that we ought to bear
But that's the way it always goes.
-Chicago News.
......
TTTTTTTTTTTTTtTTTTV
RAILWAY station filled with
a crowd of people, some laugh
ing, some crying, tome pretend-
ing some not.
Victoria station at 11 o'clock, and
the boat train for Dover.
"Good-bye, Jim, take care of your
self!" The tall girl gathered her worn
cloak closer around her the lady who
held the door handle of the next com
partment a first-class, wus robed In
sables, rich and rare. "I wish I were
going, too!"
I "So do I, old lady." A handsome
xnan bent forward on tho seat of the
third-class carriage, and his hand
closed over her slim ungloved fingers
with a teuder pressure.
ILie blue eyes looked most suspicious
ly, moist but what of that? It is not
puveryone who can afford to be callous!
It seems aucU a long time three
years, Jim!" the girl said again, and
there was a break In her voice. "And
life such a chance, u mere "
"A mere chance yes," the man
echoed, but we must Just trust to chance,
Monica; It's the only thing to be done,
dear. Keep up a good heart because
I shall be coming back In three years'
time. Think of that, little one. Three
years, perhaps to-day, this very day,
you may be standing at this very sta
tion, waiting for my train to come In;
and I shall dash out I shall be hun
gering for the sight of you, darling,
and you will throw your urms around
my neck "
"Jim!" the tears so bravely withheld
'up till now overilowed at last, and fell
pou to tho neat but worn clonk.
The lady In furs turned at the sound
of tbe pain-filled tones, and her own
ivolce grew a little husky as the train
teamed off.
i "Good-by, Monica, my darling!"
J A moment later, Monica Ward was
taudlng on an empty platform, with an
empty, achlug heart
I'M
T
i vTwo Meetings
4
William Wesley.
questions that should
inquiry, to deeply
Important ns senti
happy marriage?
and no love better
THE HUSBAND'S
Earl B. Hubbell.
"AWAY WITH
A hand touced her shoulder.
"Can I take you anywhere?" a pleas
ant sympathetic voice said. It was the
lady In furs. "I always think the first
few moments are the worst after
ward "
"Afterwards," repented Monica in
dull tones.
"Oh ! afterwards one gets accustomed
to it," returned the other lightly, "and
one wonders why one felt so much.
Come, will you let me Just drop you
anywhere?"
It seemed all one to Monica Ward
what she did," and where she went She
nodded, and tried to smile.
"Thank you," she said, "It Is very
good of you to trouble yourself about
a stranger "
"After all we are sisters," the other
said a little dryly. "Come!"
And for the next half hour Monulca
bowled along in the lady's rubber-tired
carriage, behind a pair of prancing
chestnut horses.
She did not remember till she stood
once more in the little room, which
looked so deserted now that Jim had
gone, that she had never found out the
name of her friend in need I
And the days slipped Into weeks, and
the weeks into months, and all the
while Jlni Ward, in a distant country,
wns trying to court the fortune which
had failed to smile on him In England.
"It's due now, miss, quite due, and I
don't think it's more than a few min
utes late!"
Monica Ward, tall and slim, with the
pretty color coming and going In her
WITH AN EMPTY, ACIIINQ HEART.
soft cheeks, stood onee more on the
platform awaiting the train.
Suddenly there was n noise a puff
ing, panting sound, and tbe train wus
In!
Monica's heart bent fast, and she was
so excited that she could hardly see
anything In front of her. Jim was com
ing home home
Was this Jim? this man coming to
ward her with Jim's face, and yet not
his face with a rolling guit uud un
steady pye?
She (ihuddered ; her col r forsook
her cheeks, her eyes looked frightened
her feet shook so that she cculd
hardly stand.
After nil, ns the other woman had
wild, one gets accustomed to It. ItetttT
far better If he had stayed awuy
than to return to her like this!
Involuntarily she took a btep back
to make the most of life sees his opportunities and Im
proves thein. Opportunity demands promptness. As the
days pass by let us quickly take advantage of the hourly
opportunities to do something for others and to master
tho dally task, knowing that for opportunities well used
there will come yet broader ones, which will bring us
richer rewards and help us better to perform our duty to
God and man.
VACATION.
By Cynthia drey.
A beast of burden 1 es, your husband 1
And that's Just what he Is, too. May be It's
your fault and may be It Isn't Cut he Is one,
anyway, and he Is becoming old, uninteresting,
and plodding Just like any other donkey. And
the neighbors are all talking about it You're
going off on a vacation and will leave him
plodding along at the store, the office, or wher
ever it Is that he holds forth.
It Is the business of every wife to Insist upon her hus
band's getting a vacation. He can't afford the time?
May be he can't and also afford tbe money to buy you an
outfit and seud you off somewhere. You have to go for
jour health? I won't dispute that. Wives need a change?
That's all right. They do. But nlno times out of ten
they don't need It half so badly ns do the husbands.
1'lnn an outing for your husband, if It Is the last thing
you do. If he thinks be can't afford It, prove to him that
he can. Go without something to make his vacation pos
sible. Prove to hliu that a vacation Is cheaper than a
funeral, and that you would be miserable spending his
life Insurance, Work up your scheme. Get him nway
from work for a while. Come back with him and make
his home as comfortable as you can.
OUR DUTY IS PLAIN.
By Nathan Straus.
We have stood nghnst at the conception of
hor r and Integrity of those we were wont to
tool, upon as leaders In the financial and busi
ness world, but If we rest with expressing our
astonishment and detestation of the prac
tices that have been revealed to us and com
placently forget the evils we have learned of,
then nn opportunity has been lost the like of
which will not again present Itself In this
generation.
If the unworthy accumulation of vast sums of money
be looked upon with toleration, and even bring respect
and admiration to the possessors, what brand of honesty
shall we teach to our children? We cannot see how the
hand of destiny guides us, but If the recent events, with
their dishonor and disgrace, result In a higher grade of
morality and a more enlightened citizenship, they shall
not have been without their compensation.
RITUAL AND CREED."
By Prot. Gerald B. Smith.
It is easy for us to take up some historical
Interpretation or theory and put It above
our religion. It is so easy, In fact, that we
have hundreds of sects In our one religion.
Each sect represents some slight difference of
theory.
These differences have grown so great that
nowadays it Is a comparatively easy thing
for one to be a good member of any particular
creed, while it still and always will be difficult to be a
true Christian. I say away with rituals and creeds and
let us have a true Christian religion.
ward; the advancing man noticed It
and her.
"My pretty dear!" he cried thickly
and Monica was Just recoiling In horror
when a man laid bis nrm on hers.
"Monica!" he cried, "surely yon
haven't forgotten me?"
And then, somehow or another, she
found herself in his arms sobbing and
laughing In one breath out of sheer joy
and relief.
"Thnt other mnn !" she cried a little
Incoherently, "he wns so like you that
I thought It was you, Jim "
"Monica!" returned her husband re
proachfully, "and that fellow wss
drunk 1 Never mind, darling," slipping
her hand through his arm, "come home
somebody has come to claim him
somebody some poor devil of a soma"
body !"
Monica looked half fearfully across
the almost deserted plntfonn. Not very
far away stood the mnn whom she has
mistaken for Jim, standing surrounded
by porters, and a small group of gapers
a footman was urging, Imploring. By
his side, bravely facing them all, stood
some one whom she recollected as In
a dream.
"Afterwards, one gets accustomed to
it!'"
The words cleared Monica's brain,
they echoed In her ears the bright
panting engine throbbed to the same
refrain.
Ah! she remembered. It was her
friend of that black day three years
ago. whom she had not seen since.
What chance what Irony of fato had
brought them together again?
"Jim," she said suddenly. "That man
over there he won't move they can't
do anything with him. Can't you, won't
you, go over and see If you can get
him away from those gaping crowds?
That's bis wife she was kind to me
the day you left Ah! Jim, If it hud
been you!"
Jim Ward needed no second bidding.
With a few steady strides he reached
the little group. Tbe lady In furs was
pleading, scolding, threatening, but all
to no purpose.
What she could not accomplish Jlin'i
strong voice and steady authoritative
manner did. In n few minutes he had
escorted the traveler to the waiting
carriage, uud left hliu there.
Monica stood Just Inside the, door
and he linked her arm In his once more
as they walked to the cab.
"How could I have thought It was
you, J I in V she kii lil in a softly happy
voice. "I'm so gbid and yet that
miserable day I envied her!"
They were In the cab, and he tno'j
her in his arms and kWscd her.
"Hut you don't, now," she answered
hi ones -f deep content. "I almost
think It wns worth letting you go
to have you back again. Jim!"
And for tho moment lie thought so
tool-l'hll.idelpliln Telegraph.
Nliiall fur ll Ar,
"Tills is tlie third year I've worn
tills bathing suit," she salil.
"It's rather small lor lis age, don't
you think'" the young man asked.
She blushed faintly, but, being beau
tlfnl, she was not displeased.
"If I were a innn," nearly every
wouiuu says, "I would smoke."
Pnpr's Ineorae ta ttla;.
It It lniKvsible to fix the exact In
come of the I'ope. because the sonreet
by which his settled Income l. largely
augmented are subject to great fluctua
tion. Such Is the annual subsidy culled
"Peter's pence," nnd the thank offer
ings which he receives every year from
all parts of the world. It Is thought
probable by authorities who have the
best minus of Judging that, taklngfone
year with another, the average annual
Income of the Pope cannot Tall short of
$3,000,000.
Where the Moarr tinea.
Batehcllrr That's a good cigar
you're smoking.
Pjpley Yes, that' a fine 10-cetiter
you gnve me.
Hatcheller I gave you? I guej
rot.
Popley Oh, yes, I'm sure It was
your money pnid for It. The only
money I found In our baby's bank this
morning was the dime you put In yes.
terday. Catholic Standard and Times,
Porcine Nature.
There are more than 10,000 establish
ments In the country for raising enrly
vtgetnble plants under glass. Within
a radius of fifteen miles of Boston
there are nearly 2,000,000 square feet
of glnss used In forcing vegetables.
Near Providence, K. I., ere fully ten
acres of glass for the same purjiose.
The suburbs of New York. Chicago nnd
other big cities use nearly n.000,000
square feet of glnss for strictly vege
table nnd enrly fruit culture, nnd the
glass alone used In thus forcing nature
's worth millions. Islle's Weekly.
A TERRIBLE EXPERIENCE.
Hv Veteran Was Saved the' An.
pntallon o( a l.lmb.
B. Frank Doremus, veteran, of Roose
velt Ave,, Iudlanapolls, Ind., says: "I
had been showing symptoms of kidney
trouble from tbe time
I wns mustered out
of tbe army, but in all
my life 1 never suf
fered as In 1807.
Headaches, dlr.rlness
and sleeplessness first
and then dropsy. I
was weak and help
less, having run down
from ISO to 123
pounds. I was having
terrible pain In tba
kidneys and the secre
tions passed almost Involuntarily. My
left leg swelled until It was S4 Inches
around, and tbe doctor tapped It night
and morning until I could no longer
stand It and then be advised amputa
tion. I refused, and began using Doan's
Kidney Pills. The swelling subsided
gradually, the urine became natural and
all my pains and aches disappeared. I
have been well now for nine years since
using Doan's Kidney Pills.
For sale by all dealers. 80 cents a
box. Foster-Mllburn Co.. Buffalo. N. X.
What' the Dill Good For.
On the car tbe other morning I hap
pened to hnng by the strap next to
Blmmelstcln's. Between begging par
dons of nnd granting pardons to my
near neighbors, I managed to rend a
few paragraphs in my newspaper. One
of them told of a remarkable find by
a Nippur expedition of the University
of Pennsylvania. It was nothing less
than a well preserved and thoroughly
authenticated tnilor's bill nearly C0O0
years old.
Since Blmmelsteln himself is en
gaged In the clothing business, I
thought he would be Interested in this
ancient relic, so I told hi in about It,
but the story seemed to make no Im
pression on him.
"Hang It man," said I, "don't you
understand? It's a tailor's bill almost
6,000 years old."
"Veil," he answered, "vot Iss It good
for? Dey can't gollect It" Brooklyn
Eagle.
SKIN ERUPTIONS 35 YEARS.
Buffered Severely with Eczema All
Over Body A Thousand Thanks
to Cutlcura Beinedles.
"For over thirty-five yeurs 1 was a
severe sufferer from eczema. The
eruption was not confined to any one
place. It was all over my body, limbs,
and even on my head. I am sixty years
old and an old soldier, aud have been
examined by tbe Government Board
over fifteen times, and they said there
was no cure for me. I have tukeu all
kinds of medicine aud have spent large
sums of money for doctors, without
avail. A short time ago I decided to
try the Cutlcura Beinedles, and after
using two cakes of Cutlcura Soap, two
boxes of Cutlcura Ointment, and two
bottles of Cutlcura Resolvent, two
treatments In all, I am now well and
completely cured. A thousand thanks
to Cutlcura. I cannot speak too high
ly of the Cutlcura Remedies. John T.
Roach, Rlchmoudals, Ross Co., Ohio,
July 17. 1005."
Kemlulue War.
Mayme But why did you encourage
young Greene If you Intended to reject
hliu?
Edyth Why, I bad to encourage him
in order to enable mo to curry out my
Intentions.
How's This?
We offer One Hnndrod Dollars H. wird for
any case of Caturrli than cauuot be curt-J
by Hall's Catarrh Cure.
F. J. CHKNKV A CO., Toledo, O.
niiiiaralitiied, have known K. J.
Cbmejr for tba laat 1(1 yaara, and hHlcva
nlm parfrotly bonorabl lu all bualura
tranaactlona and nnabHally able to carry
out any obllaatlona made by bla firm
WAMllNO. KINNAN k MAKVIN,
,. Wb0'"'' DruKlH. Toledo, O
Hall Catarrh Cur la takrn Internally.
actliiK directly upuii tbe blood and murom
anrracra of the ayairni. TeitlmotiUI. ,r
free, price TSe per bottla. Hold tiy ull
Lrujtglta.'
Taka Hall's Family PUIa for conallputlon.
The Ouly W a.
Miss Klderlelgh I win surprised to
see young Muggins kiss you. 1 wouldn't
thing of letting a man kiss me.
Miss Pluinplelgh Nor I. It's so
much more sutUfuctory to let him do it
unthinkingly.
trm. WlnilaWi Iwmiin Svatrv for fdlMraa
Miking) aoflau Lf tui, Itliw tufluiia4uit,
iwla, mum miMd taut. X- Ml a IwUU.
Too Had.
"I swear to you 1 cunnot live with
out my wife."
"You love her so?"
"Well, not exactly that You nee. she
has the money."
PUTNAM FADELESS" DYES
.kr' kTlr se faster colort tkw aay etkrr r. Oae lOe aariwt toleri til fieri TVyM wools aster setter tksa asy stker . Tea tea aa.
est esraest altaeal r!ie ayarU ftrtl for trst keekaH- kW 1 Oys, Sleeul tad Ma Csle. H6j?JtOJL 5 VG cH. Vn!Z2i4i
iTbe
era art
DUILT
That's what tba namt meant.
all means wear BtatrWII"
INSIST. Sold everywhere.
trite to ut.
We also make the
"Martha wasklngten' comfort ah oca and a full line
of men's, women's and children's shoes. Our trade
mark la stamped on every
F. Mayer Boot
Milwaukee),
Q Z D Atosrm
i mj is
i. :j IB
A
PERFECTION Oil Heater
. (Equipped wltH
ia aa ornament to the home. It b made in two finishes nickel
and (span. Brats od fount beautifully embossed. Holds
4 quarts of oil and burns 9 hours. Every heater warranted.
Do not be satisfied with anything but a PERFECTION Oil Heater.
If you cannot get Heater or information from your tUaUr write
to nearest agency for descriptive circular.
Thcigay&Larnp Ei'
all-round household use. Gives a clear, steady light. Fitted
with latest improved burner. Made of brass throughout and
nickel plated. Every lamp warranted. Suitable for library,
dining room or parlor. Ii not at your dealer's write to nearest
agency. 8TANDARD OIL COMPANY
r
Sale Ten Million Boxes a Year.
TUB FAMILY'S FAVORITB BBIOIHI
m
CANDY CATHARTIC
WMZKl vYJ -
BEST FOR THE BOWELS
t'ratemt IMend 'of Infurnaatloa.
The learned traveler had delivered hie
great lecture on tbe manners and customs
of old Japan.
"And now," he said, In conclusion, "I
shall be pi 'sued to anxwer questions per
taining to any peculiarities of thle Inter
esting people upon which I may not have
touched In my discourse." ,
"I'rofeiisor," eagerly asked a yonng mar
ried woman in the audience, "what do
the Japanese do to plum juice to make itf
Jell?"
Not Liked.
"IIow do you like your, new next
door nelghlwr?"
"Don't like him at all. He's a con
temptible fellow. Insteud of owning a !
lawn mower that I could borrow he
has his grass cut by contract" OJeve
laud rialn Dealer.
Some Mia take.
"That's l'rof. Ooodsole," said Mra.
I Jam. "He's a noted anti-vivleectloniHt."
"I've heard of him," observed Mrs. Bud-dyn-Klymcr,
"but I always thought he
was a CongregationaliMt."
ABSOLUTE
SECURITY.
Genuine
Carter's
Little Liver Pills.
Must Bear Signature of
5e Tac-Slmlle Wrapper Balew.
Tery eaaall aad aa
to take as sagaa.
FOR HEADACHE.
FOR DI17INESS.
FOR BILIOUSRESS.
FOR TORPID LIVER.
FOR CONSTIPATION.
FOR SALLOW SKIN.
FOR THE COMPLEXION
IMm I flW'lwr www ham fnATum.
"MmtrtMiimmn wis
CURE SICK HEADACHE.
8. O. X. I'. ... Xo. 42 lOueT
'CARTERS
KITTLE
IVER
PILLS.
SHOES FOR HEN
highest degree of style, fit and workman
p art embodied in these splendid shoes
atne that eqoal bem is appearance
4 wearing quallly at. tbe srice. They are
ON HONOR
That's what a trial will provt. By
bees.' Demand them of your dealer
II you cannot get them
"West ere Lady," and the.
sole.
& Shoe Co.,
Wis.
Vv S inert
r pe a cow
room ia the
house if you own
a PERFECTION Oil
Heater. This is aa oil
heater that gives satisfaction
wherever ened. Produces intense
heat without smoke of small because it if
quipped with smokeless devices no trouble,
no dinger. Easily carried around from room
to room. You cannot him the wick too high
or too low. A easy and simple to care for
as a lamp. The
Smokeless Device.)
lakes the home
thU Is the safest
best lamp for
MO WML
When you buy
WET
WEATHER
CLOTHINO.
you wejt
corrtDlete
protection
tnd long
service.
These and marry
other good point
are combined In
TOWER'S
PISH BRAND
OILED CLOTHINO
You cant afford
to buy any other .
17. L. DOUGLAS
3.50&3.00 Shoeo
VIST IN THI WORLD
W.LDoug1uS4 GUI Edge line.
sannotDt equalled at an; prloe i
nahft (Malm i
W. L bouflaa' Job.
bint Horn If tut tuoM
eouiploja In this ooiiDtry
Stmt for Colalot
IHOBS F0& EVERYBODY AT ill tMiH
Jf.u'a Bhooa. SB to ei.BO. Pora' annaa. aa
toSl.BS. Woni.u's eiioM. S4.00 to S1.B0.
Misaaa' a Ohlldrau's Shu.. to jl.OO.
Try W. U I)oalaa Wuuiea'a, Ml. Ma a4
Calldrea'a abooai for atyla, nt and wear
thay aieal othar makes.
If I could take you Into my Lars
factories at Brockton, Mass. .and ahow,
you how carefully W. L. Douglaa shoe
are made, you would then understand
why they hold their shape, fit better,
wear longer, and are of greater value
than any other make.
Wnerevar yoa live, you can obtain W. L.
Doualaa snoas. HI nam and prtca la atampoai
ea the bottom, which protects yuaagalnai aigai
prlcaa and Interior shoo. Tak no mumtlim
tut. Ask your dealer lor W, l Douglas shoes)
and Inslat upon baying thtm.
fmBt Oolor tutttta ud: than m
t hay will hot awar 6nuap
'ataloK of Fall Styles. I
Writ for Illustrated Catalog ol Fall Styles. I
c W. U IKHJULAS, Uept. 14, brock ten, Maaaj
AGENTS WANTED tlZ
AiitoiButMa Htioe Hint Hararai Mpirkner
tiuim. Ikma away with m-edle. and brutlfi
In repairing liara.st ami utiotw. Sample PhB
LA M l ON A iKJMIMAM, Alfra., ilitrUa.
tvu, W le.
PRINTERS
Whoa id m ff tor our 90m
lil Of aasVaVYIaTXekj m- Zl
w--i atan.. use wmpieieJeil TM '
Irauvd. Sioux City Nwppr Union.1
mm
1-1 J I
tf?"aV
f m arx'v