The North Platte semi-weekly tribune. (North Platte, Neb.) 1895-1922, July 16, 1912, Image 2

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    THE SEMUWEEKLY TRIBUNE
IRA. L. BARB. Publlshor.
TERMS, J1.25 IN ADVANCE.
AiORTH PLATTE,
NEBRASKA
SYNDICATING KINDLINESS.
Congress has declined to Incorpo
rate the hundred million dollar Rocke
feller philanthropic trust, and porliane
It Is just as well; not bo much because
tho trust might In tho dim future
somehow monaco tho liberties of the
people, as becauao tho rofusal is In
directly a blow at tho tendency of the
tlmo to syndicate and organlzo all
altruistic endeavor. Individualism It
what wo should encourago In this
field, says tho Columbia (S. C.) State
Tho syndication method excels, per
haps, In "efficiency," If ono appralsci
philanthropy by tho rate and degree
In which It translates good will on
tho ono hand Into rellof and uplift oc
tho other. But wo have norcr under
stood thnt tho good of tho recipient
waB tho wholo of a gift's blessings
Well-doing at second hand Is not com
parablo with well-doing that rcqulroi
Individual thought, anxiety and nclf
denial. One's senso of humanity and
his powers of compassion atrophy un
dcr tho syndication system, but when
ono performs himself tho maximum o!
kindly nets, philanthropic vlrtuo Ii
constantly being elicited, cxerclsci!
and matured. It Is good to seo a ten
dency checked which In Its logical ex
tension would causa pcoplo to rcpos
n smug content In tho doing of gool
on tho Instnllraont plan, as they mlyhf
pay for a ploco of furniture.
Philosophy Is. ns somebody hat
snld, merely a more than usually do
tcrmincd effort to think clearly. Hu
man naturo seems to liavo Tieen en
(lowed with a restless curiosity about
the great problems of existence. Most
of VI do moro or less desultory think
lng about them, and to thnt extent
nre philosophers. The ancient Orecki
.were tho first to consider tho prob
Jems serlouB and they brought to beai
jon thorn tho keenest sort of lntolll
Ecncc. Slnco their tlmo other kece
'hinds in all agoo havo boon concerned
with them. When wo get a nqw Idea
for instnncc, wo often feel as If w
had known It all tho tlmo, only It
had never coino to tho surface befon
in our minds and been recognized bo
fore. Docs this moan that somehow
nil fragments of It como to conscious
' loss? Wo dcscrlbo a cortnln tablo ni
smooth. Hut looked at through c
jnicroscopo It scemB rough. A stll'
moro powerful glnss might rndlcall
chango Its appearance Which Is th
real tablo? What Is behind tho tints'
thnt our senses glvo us? Wo wondei
whoro wo como from and what th
real meaning of llfo Is. Thoso and
elmilar problems como up at times 1:
tho minds of most persons, whethoi
students of philosophy or not, suyi
tho Knnsns City Star. A consldora
tlon of such questions certainly tcndi
to widen tho horizon, and to glvo
possible background to existence
Tho Now York Tolophono Compauj
has given twenty of ltn offlco met
outside work as solicitors, and hat
Buppllcd tho vacancies created In tholi
former positions by engaging women,
who will bo known as cashiers. Thcli
business is to hnndlo tho largo sumi
In nickels, dimes and quarters which,
reach tho ofllcos of tho company frorr
pay Btntlons in different parts of the
city. It Is stated by officials of the
company that they hnvo found womoc
moro rollnblo and less inclined tc
yield to tomptntton than nion In nan
dllng cash. And yet there nre men
who assort that women havo no sens;
of business honor.
A New York judgo has decided that
tho car company must sottlo if a
sleeping passenger's trousers nre stol
en froui his borth nt a station through
a window. Tho company ought to be
required, also, to carry nn extra pnii
of trousers for tho relief of tho pa&
Bonger In caso of such an embarras
sing occurrence.
Denver boaBts that In Kb public
schools girls over twelvo years ol
ago aro taught cooking, sowing, lnun
dry work, tho care of children, rcspoct
for husbands, the wlso management
of Incomes and soma art by which
they can earn a living. But Donvot
omits to mention how many aro grad
uated each year.
Tho management of ono of Now
York's largest vaudeville houses hus
decided to bnr molher-ln-lnw jokes
and to prohibit "humor" which la
basod upon a man's ability to bo un
truo to his wlfo without permitting
her to know it. This Is tho kind
of nn uplift that may really uplift.
Tho sultan of Morocco has decided
thnt since Franco has taken every
thing olso ho might ns well move over
to Paris and let Franco keep him, too.
That roport of King Qcorgolnvont
log a coal-saving cook stovo was
sprung just at tho moment whon It
would malto him most popular.
One Chicago woman has had hor
husband arrested b'ecnuso he did not
kiss her, Almost any husband should
feel proud of the compliment.
WORK OF PRAIRIE ANT
Interesting Description of Indus
trious Insect.
Cannot Tolerate Presence of Vegeta
tion Near Their Mounds and Work
ers Cut It Away by Use of
Woll-Adapted Mandibles.
ny anonais a. dean.)
In crossing tho prairies of a largo
part of tho western states, tho travel
er's attention Is frequently drawn to
tho gravel-covered mounds that skirt
tho railways and wagon roadB. Locat
ed In tho center of cleared circular
areas, they stand out prominently,
breaking tho grassy surface. Thcso
mounds dot tho slopes of ravines, tho
banks of streams, und nookB and Hats
between cliffs and rldgqs.
They occur along traveled roads and
sldowalkn , In corrals, and In door
yards. They nro present In fields of
wheat and nlfalfa, In splto of tho plow
ing nnd disking. They possessed tho
pralrlo beforo tho farmer came, and
they remain In splto of his operations.
Tho ant whoso Industry has made
thoso mounds, with their clean-swept
dooryards, clings tenaciously to the
houso which It has built, and, so often
as tho roof la destroyed, laboriously
rebuilds It.
Tho nests are of various sizes and
heights, ranging from nlno to twenty
four inches. Tho clearing surrounding
tho mound is level, absolutely devoid
of vegetation, and usually has tho
mound exactly In tho center. Tho size
of tho clenrlng ranges from nlno to
twenty feet and In ono Instnnco ex
tended for forty-flvo feet.
Tho ants cannot tolerato tho pres
ence of vegetation near their mounds
and tho workers clear it away by uso
of their well-adapted mandibles. They
doubtlesB find that vegetation Is an
obstacle to their going and coming;
that it affords concealment to their
onomloB; retains moisture nfter a rain,
Uiub favoring the growth of injurious
fungi; that Its roots penctrato the
chambers of their nests nnd, decaying,
form passageways for the entranco of
water.
In irany of tho mounds tho ants
go and como through ono opening; in
others they havo two or threo Biich
passngoways, nnd In ono exception
ally largo mound tho occupants had
eight openings.
Thn Intnrlnr nt Mm mntitnl In hnnov.
4t 1ft A jl 4t t t 1 nltntrttinHrt n ft . 1 nri 1 1 j-ft ftf AR 7
uuiuuuu wiui uiiiiiiiuui a tiiiu ijuiiunua.
Tho chambors vary from one to threo
Inches In diameter and from one-half
to ono inch in height. Tho connect
ing galleries hnvo a uniform dlnmcter
of nbout three-eights of an Inch. Sealed
and unsealed stororooniB filled with
seeds occur throughout tho nest. Lar
vae, pupae, and young ants occupy
many of tho chamberB.
Seeds of various kinds nro carried
by tho workers into tho nest Tho
hulls nro torn off, cnrrled out and
dumped nt ono sldo of tho clearing,
nnd tho plump, sound seeds stored
away In tho storerooms.
Tho mound-building pralrlo nnt
shows threo distinct classes of Individ-
Tho two upper Insects are workers;
left lower Is a fertile female or
queen and right lower Is a male.
uals tho queens (fertile females),
males and workers (sterile females).
Queens and males form a compara
tively small portion of tho colony,
whllo tho workers In a nest havo been
known to number 10,000.
Although these antu aro largor than
most Bpccles and have two of tho
most formidable wenpons known
among Insects large, pointed mandi
bles and most clllciont stings they
nro not qunrrolsomo, nnd fight only In
solf-dofonBO. So peaceably Inclined
nro they that other species of nnts aro
allowed to como Into their clearings
nnd throw up tholr tiny crescent
shaped mounds of earth, and cvon to
nttack and chuso such thoughtless
"mound builders" ns happen to pass
too near thorn. Indeed, thoy carry
this pcacotul disposition t& a point
whoro thoy permit tho common tor
mlto and some species of nnts to llvo
With thom in tho chambors of tholr
nests and to partako of their stored
food.
Thcso ants havo como to bo consid
ered Injurious Insects, not through In
creases in numbers, but rather through
tholr close contact with man resulting
from his conversion of tho prairlos
Into cultivated fields.
The ant colonies aro too scattering
to materially decrease tho yield of any
crop; they nro chiefly troublesome as
nn obstnelo to harvesting.
To attempt to mow through or over
them would choke tho machinery and
ruin tho cutting edgo of tho slrkle.
Should n driver hnvo such trouble In
pasting over n mound It would bo most
unwlso for him to stop and try to ad
just hU machinery, for such a disturb
ance would bring tho ants forth In
angry Bwarms, each individual eagor
to do her utmost to repel tho Invader.
Every one that succeeded In getting
man or beast would selzo clothing,
hair or skin between her mandibles,
ourvo hor abdomen downward nnd do
liver a thrust qulta as painful In re
sult as tho sting of bumblebee or
yellow-jacket.
i . . . . .
NEEDED SUPPLY OF MOISTURE
Never Does Season Pass But That
8hort Droughty Period Is Experi
enced Value of Stirring.
(Hy C. P. HUM Mlniieoota nporlment
(station )
The season for cultivation of the
soil, to remedy tho mechnnlcal condi
tion, to control tho molsturo supply
and to kill weeds, is now on. It would
scorn nB though little would need to
he said about cultivation for tho con
trol of tho molBturo supply In the soil,
but there Is nocr a season pasnes, but
that a short droughty period Is experi
enced, experiments at University
fnrm show conclusively tho value of
ntlrrlng the surfaco soil during dry
times.
Strange as It may seem, tho stirring
of the soil is nlso n good thing when
tho soil Is too moist. In tho former
cbbo, cultivation breaks the cnpllarlty
and provents. the escape of tho mols
turo through evaporation. In tho latter
case, it opens up tho soil that Is
stirred, and permits a freer circulation
of tho air, and in this way dries out
tho surface area, thus controlling, to
a ccrtnln extent, tho molsturo supply.
Cultivation for conserving molsturo
should bo relatively shallow; the
depth being moro or legs in accord
ance with the severity of the drought.
A deeper "dust blanket" should bo
maintained during a severe drought
than during tho short and . mild
droughty periods. In tho "dry-land
farming" sections, thnt Is, in regions
of fifteen Inches or less rainfall, dust
mulch of three to four inches is ad
vised. Under the average Minnesota
conditions, a one-inch dust mulch
will generally suffice.
During the earlier period of growth,
plants need much better soll-culturo
than during tho latter periods of
growth, for tho roots aro not numer
ous and do not draw from a very
Inrgo area. For this reason, it Is very
Important thnt the conditions bo as
near perfect ns possible, that the
plants may develop normally nnd rap
idly In their earlier periods of
growth.
Frequent cultivations, as well as tho
proper kind of cultivations aro very
importunt. In droughty periods a cul
tivation of tho cornfield or potato
field should bo mndo nt least onco a
week. Tho tillage question is not a
difficult ono to answer, If duo consid
eration is given to tho scientific prin
ciples underlying tho conditions,
which make it necessary to do ono
thing or tho other. A study of tho soli,
tho amount of moisture, tho amount
of rainfall and tho kind of crop, will
generally Indicate tho .method to bo
followed.
FOUNDATION OF DRY FARMING
In Deep Soil Farmer Has Immense
Reservoir Where Precipitation
May Be Stored.
Plants cannot grow without mols
turo nnd upon Its conservation tho
theory and practlco of dry farming
must rest In normnl years tho rain
and snow fnll upon tho plowed slice,
which is meroly a temporary resorvolr,
and Blnk rapidly out of tho reach of
tho wind and sun, and other agencies
of ovnporntlon. Succeeding precipita
tion follows tho same courso, each
tlmo moistening tho mlnuto soil parti
cles to grcnter depths, until at length
tho soil is wet ns far down as six or
eight feet, or oven more. This fnct
is very significant, for It means that
in a deep soil tho dry-farmer has an
lmmcnso reservoir, whoro by proper
mothods of cultivation tho precipita
tion of normal and wot years may bo
carefully stored away for futuro uso In
tlmo of drought Tho damming up of
tho high waters in the tops of tho
mountains during tho spring time, and
tho holding them back for tho uso of
tho Inhabitants of a distant city dur
ing tho rainless summer Is certainly
no moro realistic.
DAIRY NOTES.
Tho cowb' salt box should never bo
empty, sunimor or winter.
Each season a grass lot should be
hold In reserve for tho dairy cows.
Moro milk per aero as well as per
cow Is tho successful cow farmer's
slogan.
Aftor all has been snld and done,
thcro is no butter like good farm
mado butter.
How did you build and arrange that
milk houso you 'think is tho best in
tho township?
When a cow Iibb been dry for some
tlmo bo gentlo with her when sho
freshens ugaln.
Plantings of sweet com are now In
order to help piece out short pas
tures in August
In keeping cowb never be without
clover. It 1b ono of tho foods essontlal
to good dairying.
Tho greatest nld In tho prevention
of Bcourlug and enro of all dairy prod
ucts is temperature.
A herd of good dairy cows is the
best insurance against hnrd times or
a slump In prosperity.
Tho Btrong cow Is tho ono that will
rniso a calf every year and produce
a largo quantity of milk.
,lf tho cream in tho churn fonms up
and runs over, tho churn Is too full
or tho cream Is Improperly ripened.
Turn separator with a steady and
uniform speed, nnd flush down with
skim milk or water at end of separa
tion. It has been found that tho milking
qualities of a cow depend almost as
much on hor sire's mother ns on her
own mother.
Keop your calves in clenn, soparato
pons for about four wcoks, and then
If tho weather permits, turn thom out
with tho herd, and they will not suck
tho COWB.
T3sh oiftTlWM and
Budding Bandit is
aiJS;
A
NEW YORK. "Nlrped in tho Bud, or
Nothing Doing for Dickey Boy," is
the next novel to which will bo drawn
tho attention of Richard Boy, a would
bo bandit. Dicklo Boy, who is flvo
feot three and fifteen yeara old, armed
himself with two big guns, a slung
shot, seventeen dlmo novels, a Bible
nnd a map of Arizona nnd started for
the wild nnd woolly west to shoot
down Indians and shoot up Baloons.
He did not even get a good start, for
he was grabbed by just an ordinary
copper and "trun into the cooler." Ho
did not even havo tho satisfaction of
being stuck up by a cowboy sheriff
nnd getting a run for his money and a
squnro show.
Tho budding frontiersman started
tho ball rolling the other afternoon by
running amuck In his homo at 59'West
Ninety-third street. Ho did not shoot
out any lights, but ho scared the llfo
out of his mother and two younger
brothers and Bisters. Tho terror of
the West sldo declared he'd shoot 'em
nil up, nnd they got into closets and
under beds while ho strutted In in
truly western splendor, rattling with
artillery as ho walked. "Terrjblo Tim
vh rrt
- ,mi. nroi c- lu
rr v, rvj&'b.. nur
Qo$3r ill.
AWSAMAAVWWMMVWMWIOA'WIiAAMOrfVWVSAS
Militant Cow Fiats
CHICAGO. A spotted cow which
answered with enthusiasm to tho
name of "Violet" came into East Chi
cago tho other evening, approached
the outer fringe fo the political battle
field, and went mad.
At midnight Policeman John Lazar
was walking his penceful beat In the
neighborhood of Chicago and Ken
nedy avenues when he met Violet and
was seized with a sense of pastoral
poetry and moonlight.
"I will tnke her to tho pound and
lmaglno myself onco moro in the old
lane that leads from the pasturo to
my father's barn," Lazar told himself
and smiled with pleasure at tho pros
pect. Ho approached Violet sympathetic
ally and with a delicate motion of his
arms sought to waft her in the direc
tion sho should go.
Violet refused to be wafted. Sho
was In playful mood and showed a
desiro to place both her front feet
nt once on tho policeman's shoulders.
He retreated warily. Ho got inside
a pntrol box and from its security
argued with the bovine.
Violet hurled herself against tho
policeman's shelter
Ho drew his club and shook it stern
ly in her face. Sho recognized no au
thority, i
Texas Will Fight
SAN ANTONIO, Tex. There Is a
man In Texas who has found out a
now way to flght the moBquIto. His
name Is Dr. Charles R. Campbell. He
is ofllcinl bacteriologist of tho city of
San Antonio.
His Idea is to employ bats as mos
quito fighters. Tho neighborhood of
San Antonio is especially plagued by
mosquitoes malaria Is moro or less
rife In that vicinity and for a long
time past the Inhabitants of the mu
nicipality and Its suburbs havo eager
ly sought to find a solution of the
problem. Much benefit has been ob
tained by keeping minnows in cisterns
and pondB these email fishes being
jjreody dovourers of mobqulto larvae
but such measures havo not altogeth
er met requirements.
WWVSVVAAAAAAAAAA
Crate of Stolen Chickens on Kis Bed
PHILADELPHIA. When Nathaniel
Jones, colored, of Naudaln street,
near Tenth, discovered a number of
llvo chickens on his bed ho wub bo In
dignant that tho publicity ho gave to
tho matter resulted in the arrest of
Edward Watklns, also colored, of
Lombard street, near Fifteenth, who,
It 1b charged, stole tho poultry from a
store at Eleventh and Rodman streets
for a chicken dinner which ho intend
ed to glvo to two of his friends, Rich
nrd Green and Albert Emerson of
Lombnrd street, near Tenth. Tho
threo men wero brought before Mag
istrate EUenbrown nt the Central po
llco station. After a hcnrlng Green
nnd Emerson were discharged, but
Watklns was held in $C0O ball for
court.
At tho hearing, Jones snld that
when ho roturned from a theater ho
was astonished to find crate of llvo
chickens on his bed. Upon Investiga
tion, he said, he learned that tho
poultry had been brought thoro by
Watklns. About the same tlmo B.
Wagner, a poultry dealer, reported to
dmcrCWXK
Nipped in the Bud
of Tonopah," or tho "Twining Twins
of Tucson" had nothing on him.
Policeman Filed was on fixed post
when a man camo along and told him
nbout tho minlnturo arsenal. It did
not scare tho policeman a bit. He
sauntered over to tho hallway and
boro down on the embryonic western
terror. Without pulling n gun on him
and telling him to throw up his handB
ho grabbed him by tho scruff of tho
neck, gave him an old-fashioned clout
and said:
"Sonny, whafebave you got in youi
pockets?"
With an awful scowl tho boy bandit
faced his captor. Tho ofllcer took him
upstairs where tho family was found
In a condition of terror. Fried then
took the pocket edition of Jesso James
to the West sldo police station.
The two guns wore fully loaded. The
slungskot was ono of tho toughest
looking weapons tho police hnd ever
seen. It was made up of nails and
blls of steel and covered with leather,
with a leathern thong nttached to it
for tho wrist. 'Hio dlmo novels wero
wonders of literary art. They ran
all the way from "Diamond Dick's
Last Dlvo" to "Whanged Into tho Wil
lies" and "Scarlet Sam's Sacrifice."
Tho youthful desperado was held by
Magistrate Cornell in the West Bido
police court without bail under the
Sullivan law. His mother was in
court, but did not make any charges.
It wasn't necessary tho court as
sured her. Little Dicklo Boy will be
mado an example of.
Policemen to Rosat
Tho policeman tried for two hours
to pacify tho cow. It was a vain at
tempt. He telephoned for help.
Chief of Police Leo McCormaclc of
East Chicago got out of bed and head
ed a relief squad. Armed to tho teeth
tho bluecoats descended upon tho in
trenchments of tho cow. They were
repulsed, and Violet went away.
At noon tho next day Violet strolled
down the Pennsylvania tracks near
Baring avenue. Policeman Esantrager
said ho could conquer any cow.
Ho was rolled over in the street threo
times before ho escaped. Tho driver
of a garbago wagon who said ho would
tell his name if ho defeated tho cow
went forth to battle. He, too, was de
feated. Violet began to demolish freight
trains on the tracks, when Policeman
Harry Nanglo stole upon her from
behind with a rifle.
There will bo no inquest
Mosquito With Bat
Bats, as Is well known, nro insect
eaters, and aro particularly fond of
mosquitoes. In tho twilight, when
thoy rove abroad, thoy devour im
mense numbers of tho pestiferous in
sects, the manner being to dash back
and forth thiough a swarm and gob
ble tho victims up by tho wholesale.
In view of which fact It occurred
to Dr. Campbell that it might be a
good idea to establish in and nbout
San Antonio a number of "bat roosts,"
as ho calls them that is to say, ntruc
tures bo contrived as to invite bats
for sleeping purposes. He has already
set up two of them, and proposes to
orect others, thoso nlready in opera
tion having proved highly successful.
There aro no windows, but opportu
nity of entrance is afforded to the bats
by a series of horizontal openings so
arranged as to resemble the slnts of
an ordinary window shutter. The
wholo building la thirty feet high,
the upper twenty feet being the in
closed portion, and tho slatted ar
rangement runs up each of the two
sides for a distanco of sixteen feet.
fpilR
J ivf- i an'
LC fc.ni!
SAKES
tho Nineteenth district police that bo
had been robbed of a crato of chick
ens When tho police hoard of Jones'
Indignation at finding a crato of chick
ens on his bed they put two and two
together and started an Investigation,
which ended In tho arrest of Watklns
and his two friends. Green and Em
erson Bhowed that they had known
nothing of tho theft of tho poultry,
and woro theroforo released.
After holding Watklns In ball, Mag
istrate EUenbrown ' asked Wagner to
recall the line, "Lead t not Into
temptation" In the Lord's Prayer.
"Don't you know better," ho asked,
"that to tempt these colored peoplo
by putting chickens out In front of
your Btore?"
rA-z. ijSiiL
yQ&WTS&fittM
K&iSr&-?r$mm
Hardly tho Sunday School Brand.
The young hopeful had secreted
some bright buttons In his pocket,
which camo from tho motor car Bhow.
When Sunday school was well under
fvay, ho took ono out and pinned It on
hlB coat, feeling it an ornament. Un
fortunately, when tho minister came
round to speak to the dear children,
his near sighted eyes wero caught by
the color.
"Well, Richard, I seo you aro wear
ing some motto, my lad. What does
it say?"
"You read it, sir," replied Richard,
hanging his head.
"But I cannot seo. I haven't my
glasses, eon. Read it so wo can all
hear you."
Richard blushed. "It says, sir, 'Ain't
it to the poor?' " 'Metropolitan
Magazine.
Noted Author.
"Seo that man over thoro with tho
black moustache?" said Tompy.
"Yes," said tho visitor.
"Well," said Tompy, "he is tho au
thor of ono of tho most popular seri
als In n hundred years."
"Really?" said the visitor. "Why,
ho doesn't look llko a literary man."
"No," said Tompy. "He isn't Ho's
the inventor of popped grits, the best
selling cereal on the market." Har
per's Weekly.
With the Lid Off.
"Mother," asked Bob, with a hope
ful eye on the peppermint jar, "hava
I been n good boy this afternoon?"
"M-m-yes," answered mother, dubl
ously, recalling a certain littlo rift
within tho lute. Tho four-yenr-old dip
lomat looked anxious.
"Please," he begged, "say a wide
open yes!" Harper's Bazar.
Standard of Sanity.
Shakespeare was asked if Hamlet
was sane.
"As Bane as the Fourth of July," ha
replied.
Some men find it cheaper to stay
married than to pny alimony.
Red Cros Ball Dluo -will wash doublo at
many clothes as any other blue. Don't put
our money Into any other.
The woman pugilist kuows Just how
o assert her "rights."
Your working power depenctB upon yotn
health. Garfield Teu helps- toward keeping it
He who hesitates la lost especially
tvhen he is found out.
m ye
How Mrs. Bethune was Re.
stored to Health by Lydia
E. Pinkham's Vegeta
ble Compound.
Sikeston, Mo. "For seven years 1
juffered everything. I was in bed for
four or five days at a
time every month,
and so weak I could
hardly walk. I had
cramps, backache
and headache, and
was so nervous and
weak that I dreaded
to seo anyone or
have anyone move in
tho room. The doc
tors gave mo medi
cino to caso me at
those times, and said that I ought to
have an operation. I would not listen to
that, and when a fiicnd of my husband's
told him about Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg
etable Compound and what it had dono
for hia wife, I was willing to take it
Now I look the picture of health and feel
like it, too. I can do all my own house
work, work in tho garden and entertain
company and enjoy them, nnd can walk
as far as any ordinary woman, any day
in tho week. I wish I could talk to every
Buffering woman and girl, and tell them
what Lydia E. Pinkham'a Vegetable
Compound has dono for me." Mrs.
Dema Bethune, Sikeston, Mo.
Remember, tho remedy which did this
tvas Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound.
It haa helped thousands of women who
have been troubled with displacements,
inflammation, ulceration, tumors, irreg
ularities, periodic pains, backache, that
bearing down feeling, indigestion, and
nervous prostration, after all other means
have failed. Why don't you try it?
The Army of
Constipation
If Growing Smaller Everv D.
CARTER'S LITTLE
LIVER PILLS are
responsible they
not oniygive relief
tney perma
nently cure Con-.
itipahon. Mily
lions use.
them for
Bilionineii.
r . t r
indigestion, Sick Headache, Sallow Skin.
SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE.
Genuine must bear Signature
DAISY FLY KILLER g ;?!-.?; ft
fll. prat, elean or
namental, con ranlent.
cfaeap. Ltiti ll
l.aioo. Hade at
metal, can't tplll or tip
onri will not aotl of
Injurs anything-.
Ouarantetd cffectWa.
Sold by danlaraor
0 .cut tir.natd for tl.
IAB0LB S0JIIS1, UO DtXalb At , Brooklyn, X. T.
ISEBY
Y' ,-lLi-L' '
2
iHmPArvrrrfc
Hi Wil ' Lt
Mnmr ivbK
JWVIll PILLS.
tiff J&" " ' I
yTz
W. N. U., OMAHA, NO. 28-1912.