The Alliance herald. (Alliance, Box Butte County, Neb.) 1902-1922, April 01, 1904, Image 6

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    . -1, JT-JIU'' 1
Fal' 'V, Xk
lBwfBw' A f v.. H
IB rf A .. i
hmhbw r-ov-rx s, h
Miss Acrnes Miller, of Chican-o. Rnpnks
to young women about dangers of the
Menstrual Period how to avoid pain and
suffering and remove the cause by using
Lydia E, Pinkham's Vegetable Compound-
"To Yotwo Womk.v: I suffered for six years with dysmenor
rhea (painful poriods), so much ro (hat I dreaded every month, as I
'Ktifuv It mount threo or four days of intenso pain. The doctor said
Urn was duo to nn mllamed condition of the uterine appendages caused
urt .,.. -i..t ..i.. i'.
VI5 glrL ly raized
Zr n n,' . . B.'"'""S wnuiu ix) sparou mem. ujianlc Hod
for Lytlla IJ. Pinlchuni'M Vrgetublo Compound, that was tho onlv
llUMliulun wliicli linltwl mi. nntr
any. V
,.t. il r L:i' i i i .' """ ""-" uuh.i imi-i jl suirieu 10
t.uco it, 1 noticed a marked improvement m my general health, and at
.1 i T I i ' IT """ J ..wxi. mj liuui jiuu Ullillllisilt.-U COIlHlOCr-
rti)ly. I kept up tho treatment, and was cured a month later. I am like
atiolhor noraim since. I am m perfect health, my eyes arc brighter, I havo
added 12 pounds to my weight, my color is good, and I feel light and
happy." Miss Aajoa JMiLLsn, 25 Fbtoinao Ave., Chicago, 111.
Tho monthly sickness reflects tho condition of a woman's
health. Anything uiuisunl nt that tlmo should have prompt
and proper attention. Fifty thousand letters from women prove
that Lydia fi. Pinkliam'M Verrotnblo Compound regulates men
struation and makes thoso poriods painless.
RI3AI WHAT MISS MNDBEOK SAYS:
(ffigJBBSMBK
IxB Hi
severe bearing
i invited to
wRwjrr?rnfj7OT f.
1 1 a mm a.
'minims
- ----- -- , ....... ..) .. ,ut.Ma a .luiiivpri Jrt
jjymi, .luasa., ncr auvico is ireo and cheerfully given to every nil
Insr woman who asks for it. Her advice has restored to health
moro than one hundred thousand women. Why don't you try
It, my stele sisters?
iflflfi r?&&lM
J 3
RJIII " ' " - . ifu
Idla
MANAGER WANTED
Tniitwor thjr UJy or ceutlaoun to mintre bmi.
nek in Una County nnd adjolnlne territory for well
nn.l f voi bly Lnown lmu- a ot iolld niundal lanl-
p tld each MonJy by cUw k diroct from headquar
ter. i?ho pioney adanred; position perma
nent. .tperlneonoteMntJal. Addret
T. J. COOPER, Monoaer.
Como Slock, CIUOAQO.CLU
50,000 AMERICANS
WERE WELCOMED TO
:OMED TO
Western
Canada!
DURINQ LAUT YEAR. j
Tber are ettled and settling on the Grain and
G'a-itiii Landcuid are ptospnum and satisfied.
u Wilfred Lautler lecciul) aaid Anewtar
bat utrn onliie boruon. and it is toward it that
cvny immigrant who leavos ihi- land of hisancc
t'H-j (u come un.i seek a homn for Uimsolf now
tjiuk his Kite" Canada. Theie is
Room for Millions.
1'ltKK UuiuMtradk Rlrru una;. Srhoola,
thurrliM, .(alltrayit, alurkvta. Clliuute,
onwjttilnc to be dealrwd.
I'or a. descriptive Atlas and other l-Iocmation,
pypljf toSuifiimv'ndciit Imaiirrallon. Ottawa. Can-a-la.
or authoiiicU Canadian Coenime.t Aarnt
W V lleimett. ft)l Hew VoiU Life Uuildins.
OuiiIm. Neb.
W. "N." 0V Ornaha. . ' ''No. 141904
i
lBKyWMHBB FOR V fffnfiaiV
wPmiS la II 1 IhW t. TwlriitB ilniiMr
wma. ff,J,l,.'f.l2Mr C igrQ IHIBHyBHBW
9
how dangevous it; is to take cold at
ithin tlireo weeks after 1 started to
"Drati Mits. PiNicnAjt: I.ydla E. Plnlc
jiam's Vegetable Compound has greatly bene
fitted mo I will tell you how I suffered. My
trouble wtyj painful menstruation. I felt as each
month Wilt hv fllllfc T ivno imfilmr -...w T .,wl
- dowi pains in nrybackand abdo-
im.li.
"A friend advised me to try Mrs. Pinkham's
medicine. I did so and am now fren from nil
....... v...u. . ..... r.w ...in uiu jivnr iji-u iriiin iiu
pain during my periods." .Tus3tu C. Lixddkck,
1-201 Oth Street, Kockford, 111.
FREE AITVTOE TO WOSTEN. v
IlCIUCmhcr. OVOrV ivminm in rnp.llnllr
write to Mrs. Pinlclinm if ii.i-
is anything about her symptoms she does
nilfc lltllllM-Xtllllfl. "ATI-el 1t.lrl.r..... . .1.1 .,.. i
to""".
JC TinkluMu aioiUclno Co., Lynn, Matt.
uut nuiviutu KvIIUlllVllCSK
Lawn Pence
Iron or wire, many ntyles,
forrratiU'iii-e.rliiircli.Mcliool.
cemotery, fouliry and lio
fence, (arm cat"'. Send for
i-uialogue.
Clwmpioa Iroi ard Wire Works.
lLJUumiiiiuii m
JUa OMAHA. KIMI.
WESTERN SUPPLY
JODCEBB OF
CO.
PUMPS, WIKDMILLS and
PLUMBING MATERIAL
BELTIMQ ond THRESHEn SUPPLIES.
PACKING and ELEVATOR REPAIRS.
820-822 H Street LINCOLN. NEBRASKA
w. l douglas
sS'3 5HOES
UNIOr
MADI
. Ji. lJotizins
shoes have l)j- their
oxi-olleiit utylo,
eiisy-liitlus, ami
superior carlnj
riunlltlos, nelilovrd
tho litrRi-bt will) ot
any shoes lu the
world.
Tlmy are lust as good
as tliost) that cost you
M to $3 tho oiily
difforeuco b thoijrice.
aa:a tmrywtnii.
xxDk for iiamo ap-l
prlro on bottom.
n.mi.. .. .
rr;,1"?w"S".""T"r" coMHiruto
i "" Hl?t Talent I.Htlieryet irMliicd.
fait Crtor U,M, . Khoea bi mall.Sr.ext?.
Writ for CU 0. T.t.PousU! BrocktSu, BtS:
i
ft- ' MM.
pi
Immortality
If n man rile. Blmll he Ue agnln? Job.
Every natural, well poised person
holds life to bo tho dearest of nil
troaautoB. When a philosopher Hk'e
Schopenhauer argues against the good
of life we set him down as a pcsbI
inUt. Only the morbid perHon, thb
mlEanthrope, tho unhealthy mind
lightly values life. Wrote John
Htunrt Mill: "Tho bouI yearns for
life." And said Dr. Samuel Johnson:
'No wlso man will ho contented to die
If ho thinks ho Is to fall Into annihila
tion." Hut with this passion for Hfo
how fearful becomes tho shadow of
death which palls the race of men!
Just when the powers are ripest tho
thinker, tho genius, tho empire build
er must drop his plans and retire
from tho-stage of lire. Shall we won
der, then, that from or old, wise men
should have asked Job's great ques
tion, "If a man die, shall ho live
again?" And that great pagan think
ers sought by natural proofs to con
struct n doctrine of Immortality? Tho
strongest or those, perhaps, was the
historical one that drawn from uni
versal belief. Tho Egyptians, In th&
labled bird the phoenix, rising "from
Us own ashes; tile Homeric poems,
with Acheron and the realm of
shades; tho Hindu doctrine of me
tempsychosis, the transmigration or
souls, and tho hymns or Hie Itlg-Veda,
tho next oldest book to tho Blblo hi
tho world, all teach an existence ho
yond tho grave. And are not such
universal boilers reflections or eternal
truths? And do they not point to ob
jective realities, just ns the eye
prophesies things to be seen and the
bird's wing points to n medium fitted
for flight? Hence wrote Victor Hugo:
"My thirst for the Infinite proves that
ray being is Infinite. Winter is on
"THE DESCENT FROM
my silver head, but eternal spring is
in my lieart."
Tho philosophical argument, based
upon the indestructibility of any itlm
pie entity, lias also beon resorted to.
On this ground Plato held that "tho
soul was imperthliable and immortal."
And Knnt. the intellectual giant ot
modern times, deduced tho same re
sult from the voice of conscience,
which be called the "Practical Rea
son." The ethical argument, drawn
from the incompleteness and inequal
ity and injustice of this stage of be
ing, has also beon adduced.
And even science Is not without its
proof. For Professor Talt, In his
"Treatise on the Unseen Universe,"
shows that the modem discovery ol
tho conservation of force that no
particle of force amid all changes Is
over lost, Indicates the indissoluble
naturo of the feoul. So tho indestruc
tibility of matter and the mystery of
sleep, "twin sister of death," bring
further corroborative proofs.
Such are tho reasonings by which
men in all ages havo sought to frame
a theory of immortality with which
to break the lance of tho rlm tyrant
death. Addison has thus strongly aud
beautifully voiced this sentiment:
It nuixt be mi; l'luto, thou rcasoiiMt
will;
Else whonre this ptunHini; hope, this fond
d os 1 re.
This loiiKlnsr nrtor Immortality?
Or wheuue tlil.-f Micrgt drimd and Inward
horror
Of falling Into nuusht? Why shrinks the
soul
b'aclt on herxelf and Martins at destruc
tion? Tli the divinity that stirs within ub:
'TIh Iknimmi itself that points out an
hereafter
Ami Intimate eternity to tnnn.
Yet what are theories, speculations
and philosophies when confronted
with tho romorscloss loglo of facts?
So, with all tholr argumouts, a tono
of inconsolable lament and subdued
despair characterizes the writings or
the ancients. "Happier never to havo
been born," sings Sophocles, "than so
soon to pass through' the hapless
gates of Hades." And IlaecUol's
" y a. BKBBSBPF&flF' Vlv- ylBffyCg3HP!yyyjWBiiPLHBBP
"Sleep of tho Soul," Huxley's ''Enrf
loss Sleep" and Hume's "Loapjnto
tho Dark" show tho somo doubt nn;
scepticism among modern secular phi
Iosophers.
And this, then, is the uniqueness
and tho glory of the Enster message
It meets fact with fact. It proclaims
with a trumpet that rends tho uni
versal nir: "Christ has risen! The
Son of God has burst tho bars of the
grave! Tho king of terrors la dis
crowned! Jesus hath abolished death
and brought life and immortnllty to
light!" This all men feel to bo the
most blessed and significant fact or
history. It Is tho cornerstone or
Christianity. Well may Kenan admit
that this Easter message has revo
lutionized tho world. Naturally ana
rightfully, thinking mon everywhere
rose up and questioned its credibility.
But Christ would havo risen In vain
had not the resurrection been satis
factorily attested. And so tho Church
formulated the evidence, and littlo by
little the world came to accept the
Easter miracle as an indisputable his
torical fact. And then tho nightmare
of nges lifted. The Sun or Immortal
lty rose to tho zenith. A great In
spiration uplifted humanity, -The
floodgates of history were revorsed.
Religion was transfused with hopo
and gladness. Literature took on sun
nlcr moods. Art bloomed with love.
Her rorms. Cemeteries lost their hor
ror nnd became peaceful couches
where the loved pilgrims slept the
"sleep beautiful," to be wnkc-.ed by
the Joyful trump of endless lire. The
race had undergone a new creation.
Tho resurrection or Jesus is thus a
demonstration or Immortnllty. And
of our personnl Immortality. For, as
Ho was made man for us, so we trl
THE CROSS." RUBENS.
umph over death in Him, our repre
sentative. And so is It a demonstra
tion of our personal resurrection. Im
mortality and Hesnrrectiun were
ever such twin truths heralded as
these? And not without n divine :n
spirntion has the blessed Kastertlde
bceu fixed by the Church at the sea
son when the earth shakes off her
winter's sleep; when the birds come
back and the flowers begin to bloom;
when ovory seed that falls Into the
ground and dies, and rises again with
a new body, Is a witness to us of the
resurrection of Christ, anil a witness
to us of tho resurrection of Christ,
and a witness to us that some day lifo
shall conquer death, light conquei
darkness nntl Joy conquer grief In that
realm of immortal being where "there
shall be no moro death, neither sor
row, nor crying, neither shall there be
any more pain; for the former things
are passed away" (Rev. xxl., 4).
Fortified, thon. with this assuring
Easter faith, lot us, when our sum
mons comes to quit these mortal
shores, mako response with the tran
quil mind of lho Christian poet Ten
nyton :
Sunset and evonlnp star!
And ono rlenr cull for me.
And may tliero Ix- no moaning of the bar
When f put out to soa;
For though from out our bourne of
time nnd ptnee
The flood may bear mo far.
I hope to seo my Pilot faro to face
t When I havo erosKod tho bar.
An Easter Novelty.
A novelty In ceramics for tho com
ing Easter is a small porcelain tllo
with an appropriate verse of a poem
or a quotation from Scripture, done In
fancy lettering and bordered -with
flowers, A boautlful tllo of this kind.
Just designed by a local artist, shows
tho first verso ot an Easter hymn dono
in gilt lettering, nnd riBing' up be
tween tho lettors slender green stems
which enrry it the top, as a kind of
lKirder. full blown Iris flowers.
Brooklyn Eagle.
HAPPY WOMEN.
Wouldn't
n n y woman
bo happy,
After years
HiitfXr
Days o I
m t r v
III 1 9 t. I jr,
nlflilc nf iin.
rest,
Thc dl s
tress of url-
nary
blcs,
She
trou-
finds
rollef and cure?
No renson why any reader
Should suffer in tho face of evi
dence liko this:
Mrs. Almlra A. Jackson, of East
Front St., Traorso City, Mich., says:
"For' twenty years 1 never know what '
It was to havo good health. Every !
physician consulted said I hud liver i
trouble, but their medicines did mo no
good. .lust before 1 began using
Dean's Kidney Pills 1 was almost par
alyzed. I could hardly stand on my
feet because of tho numbness .and
lack of circulation. Had n knife been
thrust Into my kidneys the pain could
not have been more Intense. My sleep
was disturbed by visions of distorted
figures, the Itidney secretions were
annoylngly Irregular and I was tor
tured with thirst and always bloated.
I used seven boxes of Doan's Kidney
Pills. Tho bloating subsided until I
weighed ono hundred pounds less,
could sleep like a child and was re
lieved ot the pain and the irregular
ity of the kidney action. My circula
tion Is good and I feel belter In every
way."
A FREE TRIAL ot this great kid
ney medicine which cured Mrs. Jack
son will be mailed on application to
any part of tho United States. Ad
dress Foster-MUburn Co.. IlnffaJo. N,
Y. For sale by all druggists, yrico
DO cents per box.
Senator Hoar's Long Service.
An anniversary of somo interest to
Massachusetts came on Friday last;
Senator Hoar that day completed
thlrty-flvo vcars of continuous service
In congress. In this respect his rec
ord surpasses that of any other .Massa
chusetts statesman. Hotft John
Qulncy Adams and Daniel Webster
were In public llt, ninny years, but
their terms of service in executive
office broke the continuity of their
life In Washington, especially the leg
islative phase.
FREE TREATMENT
to ovory Sufferer of Stomach. Hoaft
and Nervous Dlsoaso.
The KlmO Chemical C'oinpiuii. Ml flood
Itlock. ties Molars. Intra. liatj illM'ovcred a
new ititil "underfill .Medicine uliloli liieyeall
"Klino Ciieiarlno" which iries humid I. Mr
relli f nnd iMjiinaneiitly cute-, every case or
Moniiieli. Heart nrNervc DlieaM-s thai him1
tried It. Tliei hiiM niadu anntiKi'iiinis to
Kle :iay .miXKl IVi-cent Wc of Kltmi I'ac
tnrlno in the United Mate-, to people ufllictcd
wllh any (IKeiisc or weuUiiess of the Heart.
Stomach or Nerves. They tvant every IhhIv id
try it at their expense. Send no tnonej or
sunups -Just wtlii' jioiir name and address
plain and say what paper .ou .saw HiK In anil
Ket a lw of this wonderful Medicine five,
t.ct wtll ami tell your friends, thafs all wo
want. lite toilaj.
The Smallest Coin.
The smallest coin In lho world hav
ing a genuine circulation Is probably
tho Maltese "gain," a tiny fragment
of branze about as big around as the
top of a Mate' pencil, and worth only
one twentieth of a penny.
10,000 TlanU for lCo.
This Is a remarkable offer tho John
A. Salter Seed Co., La Ctosse, Wis.,
nmkfs. They will send you their big
plant and seed catalog, together with
enough seed to grow
1,000 line, solid Cabbages.
-.000 delicious Carrots.
2,000 blanching, nutty Celery.
2,000 rich, buttery Lettuce.
1,000 splendid Onions.
1,000 rare; luscious Radishes.
1,000 gloriously brilliant Flowers.
This great offer is made in order to
Induce you to try their warranted seeds
for when you once plant them you
will grow no others, nnd
JlLI, rOB Uf.llic POSTAGE,
providing you will return this notice,
and if you will send them 20e In post
age, they will add to the above a pack
age, of the famous Herliner Cauliflower.
(W. J. U.)
Historic Bit of Crape.
A day or two before tho funeral of
Senator Hanna Postmaster Emerson,
or Cleveland received by mall from
C. J. Johnso, of Greenville, Texas, a
small piece of crape which bad beon
worn on boveral notable, occaslont.
It Is a part of tho first that came out
in tho army or the Potomac, and was
worn at the funerals of Lincoln,
Grant, Gailield, Logan and pevcra1!
minor celebrities. Tho knot ia thc
crape has never been untied. Post
master Emersori wore it at the Hanna
funeral and then sent it back to Its
owner In Texas
free to Twenty-five Ladies.
The Defiance Starch Co, will give
25 ladles a round trip ticket to tho
St. Louis Exposition, to five ladles
In each of the following states: Illi
nois, Iowa, NobraBku, Kansas and
Missouri who will send In the largest
number of trade marks cut from a ton
cent. ICounce package of Defiance
cold water laundry starch. This
means from your own home, any
where In tho above named states.
Those tra.de markB must be mailed to
and received by the Defiance Starch
Co., Omaha, Nebr., beforo September
1st, 1901. October and November
will bo the best months to visit tho
Exposition. Remember that Deflanco
is tho only starch put up 10 oz. (a
full pound) to the package. You get
one-third more starch for the same
money than of any other kind, and
Deflanco never sticks to the Iron
Tho tickets to the Exposition will bo
sent by registered mall September
6th. Starch tor sale by all dealora.
If wo are to Judge people by what
thoy say, somo mon must live on bay
aud thistles.
Mako tho best of tho trouhlos you
have and don't hunt more.
sSp
,1 OPINION OF THE EDITOR OF THfi
"NEBRASKA FARMER,"
i H(J ExpressCc His Approval of Amer-
, can Em,oratIon t0 Canada.
I Durlt'B thc Intcr mont,ls th0 llcatl-
ot U,G fnni,'y consults with tho other
I members as to tho prospects for tho
.,...,. !, ninst
' lullire, unit UHUUiii-aa uuu n me ""
Interesting topics discussed is that ot
moving to some district where it is
possible to more easily sccuro what
lc necessary for a comfortablo exist
ence, whero it ts an easy matter to
become possessed of suificlent farm
laud to assure a competence for tho
future. This, not only Interests tho
head of the family, but every indi
vidual member of it.
Having beforo mo thc knowledgo
whero he can sccuro a homo with tho
expenditure of hut littlo money, It is
well for him to obtain all informa
tion possible regarding tho product
iveness of tho land In the country
that he may select. For several yeara
past a largo number of Americana
i havo removed to Western Canada,
j and ns nearly as It can be ascer-
talncd almost all of these havo ex
pressed themselves satisfied with tho
conditions that exist there. During
thc nast summer a number of thc ed-
I itors of farm papers throughout tho
! United States made a personal visit
on a tour of inspection and the re
j ports of these gentlemen prove Inter
esting reading. Mr. H. E. Heath, ed
itor ot the "Nebraska Farmer," a
paper enjoying a wide circulation as
well as thc confidence ot its sub
scribers, after giving somo idea ot
the extent of this wonderful country
says:
"Western Canada is the last un
occupied and unimproved good agri
cultural land In America avallablo
to-day."
Ha then discusses Its possibilities'
for raising live stock and the advan
tages it possesses for dairying, farm-in.-;
and wheat growing, and says,
"What has been said about tho coun
try as to the ability of tho soil, tho
yield of wonderful crops ot wheat,
is qiuTe Justified."
To quote further from Mr. Heath,
ho snys, referring to climate:
"These people (skeptical -ones) do
not know or realize that altltudo
moro than latitude makes climates;
that large bodies of water, both fresh
and salt, that never freeze over, ex
ert a wonderful influence on climate.
Another Influence on climate, moro
potent than those named above,
which applies more to the Alborta
district, Is the warm Chinook breezo
from the Pacific ocean, which Is COO
or 700 mbes nearer than Colorado or
Wyoming, besides thc Rocky Moun-
tain range is not nearly so high nor
half so far from the ocean as it ia
down in tho States.
"In further considering tho cllmato
of the Canadlnn prairies, we should
not lose sight of tho fact of the In
fluence of the rains; the total aver
age rainfall for the season is but 13.35
Inches for the territories, and 17.31
inches fn Manitoba, and that lho
amounts falling between April 1st and
October 1st are respectively 9 3!
Inches nnd 12.87 inches or about three
fourths ot tho entire rainfall. From
the middle of June to thc middlu of
July thcro aro over two hours moro
daylight In every twenty-four hours
than thcro is In Nebraska. Tho main
reason why Western Canada wheat
grows to such perfection Is tho effect
of solnr light, or longer period of sun
shine It gets each day. This Is what
makes seeds or grain moro perfect,
grown in this country than elsewhere.
This extraordinary rapid growth ot
vegetation under tho Influence of this
long continued sunshine exceeds any
thing known In lower latitudes.
"Wo do not wish it understood that
wheat alone is tho main product ot
this country; it leads In that, yet It is
destined to become famous for its cat
tle, horses and sheep and for Its dairy
products. Wo saw more and larger
bands of cattle and sheep grazing in
Asslnibola nnd Alberta than we ever
saw on tho western plains of tho
United States. One band of cattle
numbering 5,000 head wero graziug on
tho rich grass, and sheep without num
ber." The government of the Dominion ot
Canada Is still tiring the.samo ener
getic efforts which havo beon used for
tho past 5 or C years to settle up theso
western prairies, and on application
to any Agent of the Canadian Govern
ment the settler will be able to sccuro
a certificate ontitling him to a low
rate which will give him tho oppor
tunlty of visiting any portion of Can
ada's grain producing domain.
Am I In favor of expansion? Every
thing that grows expands. Seo how
tho State Farmers' Mutual Insuranco
Company of South Omaha has grown.
Jan. 1. 189(1 wo had 50,210.00
" " 1S9" wo had 438,850.00
" " 189S we had...... 2,09(5,105.00
" " 1899 we had 4.221,375.00
" " 1900 wo had 7.538,973.00
" " 1901 we had 10,180,483.00
" " 1902 wo had 13,54.1,307.00
" " 1903 wo had 1C,413,8C9.00
" " 1904 wo had 18,410.388.32
Don't you think you would like to
belong to a llvp Company like this'
Write chp Secretary. B. Jt. Stoufferl
South Omaha. Nebr.
Naturo doesn't use self-made beau
ties for patterns.
riso's Cure Is tho beat memclno we erer usod
f or all tnections of tho thioat and lungs. Wit
O. Iosusr, Vanbrrea. Ind., Feb. 10. 190A
It Is easier to onduro lailuro than
to bear success.
Don't you know - that Defiance
Starch, besides being absolutely supe
rlor to any other, Is put up 10 ounces
In packages and soils at same prlco
a8 12-ounco packages ot other kinds?
, To-day Is never bcttr by tomor
row's .burdens.