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About The commoner. (Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-1923 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 25, 1901)
s, The Commoner. 12 I Will Cure. You of Rheumatism No pay until You know it After 2,000 experiments, I have learned how to cure Rheumatism. Not to .turn bony joints Into flesh again; that is impossible. But I can cure the disease always, at any state, and for ever. I ask for no money Simply write me a postal and I will send you an order on your nearest druggist for six bottles of Dr. Snoop's Rheumatic Cure, for every druggigt keeps it. Use it for a month, and if it does what I claim pay your druggist $5.50 for it. If it doesn't I will pay him myself. I have no samples. Any medicine that can affect Rheumatism with but a few doses must be drugged to the verge of danger. I use no such drugs. It is folly to take them. You must get the disease out of the blood. My remedy does that, even in the most difficult, obstinate cases. No matter how impossible this seems to you, I know it and I take the risk. I have cured tens of thousands of cases in this way, and my records show that 39 out of 40 who get those six bottles pay, and pay gladly. I have learned that people in general are honest with a physician who cures them. That is all I ask. If I fail I don't expect a penny from you. Simply write mo a postal card or letter. Let me send you an order for the medicine. Take it for a month, for it won't harm you atiyway. If it cures, pay $5,50. I leave that entirely to you. I will mall you a book that tells how I do it. Address Dr. Shoop, Box 515, Racine, Wis, Mild cases, not chronic, are often cured by one or two bottles. At all druggists. The South African War. The South African war has entered in its third year, and it has been in no ways changed by Lord Kitchener's last proclamation. - The British are sur prised how the Boers' supply of am munition holds out. They can hardly get it -from outside their 'country and the general belief is that it represents captures from tho British columns, which' are not reported. Convoys are frequently rushed for no other purpose than,, getting ammunition, and then they may obtain supplies from Cape Colony, which they have recently pen- Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain Piils. A quick, safe, and sure rolief for sick or nor voin Headache Backache, Stomach Pains, Neuralgia, Nervousness, Irritability, Sleepless, noss, Rheumatism, Sciatica. Contain no opium or morphine, and leave no bad after-oltocta. 25 uoses 25c, At' druggists. Be Your Own Boss! MANY MAKE $,000.00 A Yl;ATt. You havo the pumo chance. Start a Mail Ordor jjumuuaa sv uumo, wo um you how. jnoney com ing in daily. Enormous profits. Everything furnished. Write at one for our "Starter" and Eroo particulars. K.Kruetgor Co.,155 Washington St.Chicago.IU Treatment for Hog Cholera. The success made in treating Hog Cholera Is becoming more evident ' each day. Dr. J. H. Snoddy of Alton, 111., spends the most of his time in treating fine herds -which are dis eased. He goes Into the pons where hogs are dying fast and stops the dis ease in a few days. Hq will send full particulars of his remedy, a report of the recent Ohio test, pictures and in dorsements of 25 prominent breede'rs and his new book, revised, "Treatise on Hogs," free to anyone sending him meir name ana address. etrated farther than at any time since the waif commenced. Tho effect on British finances is most disheartening. Consols, which before the war sold for 114, are now quoted at 92. As an Index to the costliness of modern war it Jls noted that the increase in Eng land's public debt, since this little South African war began, has been nearly one-fourth as great as its total increase during the period of the great Napoleonic wars, from 1802 to, 1816. Pittsburg Post. Bo More 5p'eclfic. Almost every day some republican of more or less prominence rushes into print with thd statement that he is in favor of continuing the policy inaug urated by the late President McKinloy. The trouble with these declarations is that they are entirely too general. If these believers in the policy of Mc Klnley would bo more specific and tell us something definite that they are in favor of doing, it would bo more satis factory and enlightening. A mere state ment of approval amounts to nothing. We have reached a point at which something must be done. Washington Times. God Keep Thy Life. Thy little feet know not the way to go, And thorns may wound them in a World of strife; I can but pray because I love you so: "God keep thy life." For, looking backward on the vanished years, I see, my stumbling feet where earth " was rife With dangers; and I pray, while fall my tears, "God keep thy life." For I have known the bitterness of loss, And oft have fallen in the o'er whelming strife, Thou, too, must suffer thou must bear thy cross: ' ,, "God keep thy life." Frank L. Stanton In Atlanta Constitution. Why Hull Hesitates. It is altogether probable that Con gressman's Hull's views as to the un desirabillty of foreign merchants op erating in the Philippines are colored by his own interests as president of the Philippine Development and Lum ber Company, but whether they are or not' he seems to have called atten to a state of affairs which, if not as represented, should not be permitted to continue longer than it will take congress to provide a remedy. If the present status of the laws permits for eigners to do business in the islands while Americans are barred out, the law cannot be changed too quickly. Philadelphia Public Ledger, Gleanings of Fact. E is, the most common letter. In Bolivia 12 peaks of tho Cordil leras de la Paz rise to over 20,000 feet. A watermelon on o-hibition recent ly at Camden, Ark., velghed 7G lbsv From the German colony of Ebbnez er, near Savannah, In the year 1749, over 1,000 pounds of silk were ex ported, Ecuador has a record in volcanoes three active, five dormant, twelve ex tinct. Eleven of those peaks have never been climbed. Pens of hardened gutta percha have been repeatedly tried in this country and England, but 'have not met with success. PUBLISHED BY THE ABBET PRESS. English Pharisees and - By French Crocodiles, - max o'rell A piquant indictment of the British aristocracy and ruling classes, together with a suggestive showing up of certain circles in France. The most Interesting and powerful Book of the Season. Published by Tho Abbey Press, 114 Fifth Avenue, New York. Price $1.50, In Cloth $12.00, Prepaid. Send a copy of this advertisement with your ordor to THE ABBEY PRESS Publishers, 114 5th Av., New York. PUBLISHED BY THE ABBEY PRESS. Webster Mr. I MR. WEBSTER DAVIS' BOOK. This work is the outcome of a visit to the Transvaal, mado by Mr. i ebster Davis while ho was Assistant Secretary of the Interior, under; r. McKinley's first administration, and as a result of which he broke his : tho opposition. Tho. author ve-S: homently arraigns the British gov- S ernment for the Transvaal war. 52 Whether tho reader agrees with 5; the author or not. he will bo inter- s ested in his nrflKPninfinn nf fhv Boor side of the case. Milton said that truth could not suffer so long as j she was left freo to combat error. The illustrations were all taken on the i snot, either hv Mr. Davis or hv cnrrift of liia frionfia nnrJ fhnv noKfotnlvi form a unique collection of South African pictures.' ' Cloth, large octavo j (6x9), 400 pages altogether, printed on coated paper, beautifully illustrated-: -ry w w.buvj luil-jiugu UUU-lUUOO U bllUU 111 V Oljf UUUUU,' JLWU UU11ULS, UUf. PlflflTA KIFAYnifi kfinn fl mr?r rr 4-ri.ci nnimttfinnmnn nti4T . ! 4 &' rf"" juuv u i-wjy ui ujliio uuruiuaomouu uiuu juui utuoi iaj THE ABBEY PRESS, p-b,WMsSw1JS5h A" WWWWMWWMWMWWWW John Bulls Crime or Assaults on Republics VALUABLE BOOKS. Money, Trusts and Imperialism, the latest book by W. H. Hajivet, author of Coin's JTi-. nanoial School, the most entertaining and instructive book by this author, containing a world of information. It should be in every family library, and read and studied .c by young and old alike. 184 pages, paper bound, 25 cents. In Cloth, $1.00. Other Books by the Same Author. Coin's Financial School, 160 pages, in cloth only $1. OO A. Tale of Two Nations, 302 pages, in cloth only; $1.00 Coin's Financial School, and Coin's Financial School Up-to-Date, The latter an answer to tho critics of Coin's Financial School, both bound in one volume. In cloth only . . . $2.00 The Great Debate, between Roswoll G. Hoar and Mr. Har vey, 535 pages, in cloth only . . .$2.00 'Sent "by mail postpaid on receipt of the price in checks, bank drafts, P. O. or ex press orders, or in postage stamps. Address COIN PUBMING CO., JSJ. Mention Tho Cooimonor wbon sdndfng for any of the books advertlsod Rbovo. P ji ' vr.