V Is it not true ? Women suffer, feel the very life crushed out of them, grow old before their time. Each morning wake up determined to do so much before the day ends, and yet— Before the morning is very old the dreadful BACKACHE attacks them, the brave spirit sinks back in affright: no matter how hard they struggle, the “clutch” is upon them and they fall upon the couch crying: “ Why should I suffer so i What can I do The answer is ready, your cry has been heard, end a woman is able to restore you to health and happiness. Backache is only a symptom of more fatal trouble heed its warning in time. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound will stop your tortui-e and restore your courage. Your pains come from unnatural menstruation or some derangement of the womb. Let those who are suffering read Mrs. Mor ton’s letter and be guided by her experience. AN OPEN LETTER TO WOMEN. ^ •’ Dear Mrs. Pinkham I have been no delighted with Lydia E. Pinkliam’s Vegetable Compound * I thought I would write and thank you. My system was entirely run down. I suffered with terrible back ^ ache in the small of my back and could hardly stand \ upright; was more tired in the morning than on retiring at night. I had no appetite. Since taking your Com pound I have gained fifteen pounds, and am gaining every week. My appetite has improved, have no back ache, and I look better than I ever looked before. “ I shall recommend it to all my friends, as it cer tainly is a wonderful medicine.”—Mrs. E. F. Morton, 826 York St., Cincinnati, O. f When a medicine has been successful in restoring to health more than a million women, you cannot well say, without trying it, “I do not believe it will help me.” If you are 111, don’t hesitate to get a bottle of Lydia E. Pinkliam’s Vegetable Compound at once, and write Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass., for special advice—it is free. SS I" 1MI ft m n Owing to the fact that some skeptical fi fera |h JffjQ jKS K 11 P^P1' have *rora time to timc questioned ■ lb WV Vi Bill the genuineness of the testimonial letters , . . . , , we are constantly publishing, we have deposited with the National City Bank, of Lynn, Mass., f5,000, |j which will be paid to any person who can show that the above testimonial is not genuine, ov was pulished before obtaining the | writer 1 special permission.—Lydia £. Pinkham Mbdicinb Co. x _ . W.L.DOUCLAS $3. & $3.50 SHOES made. Beal worth of W. L. BoueIm »:* and Nhoea ia 94 to 9a. My 94 Gilt Edge Line canout be equulled tat any price. It is not alone the heat leather that makes a first class shoe it Is the brains, i that have planned the best style, lasts a perfect model of ttie foot, and tbe construction of the shoe. It is mechanical skill and knowledge that have made W. L. Douglas shoes the best in the world for men. Take no aubatltute. Insist on having W. L. Douglas shoes with name A and price stamped on bottom. Your dealer should keep them, if he does not, A *end for catalog giving full instructions bow to order by mail. ^B W. JL. 1>0U GLA9, Brockton, Man. W IN 3 OR 4 YEARS An actor's ripe experience doesn’t AN INDEPENDENCE ASSURED rBJ-?nt his g€tting green from jeal J If you take up your home in Western Can- Private Mailing Cord. / ada.the land of plenty. _ . . „ v Illustrated pamphlets, Private Mailing Card with colored I furaersewhor hav-e8be- vlews of scenery on the Chicago. Mil come wealthy in grow- waukee & St. Paul Railway sent on I de!efrates,tetcC.anrclSfun rece,Pt of tpn <10> cents stamps, information as to reduced railway rates can be Address F. A. Miller, General Passen had on application to the Superintendent of ffOT. tii Immigration, Department of Interior. Ottawa, v.nicago, m. Canada, or to W V. Bennett, bOI New York -- Life Bldg., Omaha, Neb. The inventor of tailor-made gar -—-——-ments furnished us with proof that figures will lie. Bnit d»r » uje of In-.:Kline» Great Vr v.i Restorer. ®*"d„,0’ *gKK •*•2® ‘Ha! »K)ttl» and ti-.ni.e Kb. U. H. Kline-., Ltd.. *31 Arch St.. I tuU-.leli ui-i. fa. No man can stand on top because _ he is put there. the great kidney, liver and blood medicine. SOc At all Druggist,. Write for free sample. Andre., . - .. 1 _ KID-NE-OIDS, St. Louis, Mo. . , _ _____Nature s Priceless Remedy Rheumatism, Neural When Answering Advertisements Kindly : ° PPfCWM/C S ^"s-^ore^ndaMPaim Hrmton This Caper. j HERBAL SjeCialT^l,^ -■ — _ iriie doe, nofwdt tft send W. N. U_OMAHA No. 20-1901 „P^TMENT UrouiiV^w, wfu,0ery’or y •* Cures Through the Pores send VouaTrtai n8e, --_--j Aditif.mm Dr. O.P. Brown, 08 B'way, Newburgh, N-Y. |-L --- — M For Top Price* Ship Your r I OABi: AND rOULTRY To Headquarter* <4. W. Ickfii «& Coiupaiv, * L, BkHer, Egg*. Veal, Hides and Fur*. Potato** ' ■ Onion* In Carload Lot*. ,_p Omai**, BrbrMka. ARE ROLLING IN WEALTH. On|t Indiana Ar® t!»® Wealihlrat Peo yle on the Earth. At the office of the commissioner of Indian affairs a few days ago contracts were let to cattlemen for the renting of the pasture lands of the Osage In dians in Oklahoma. These Indians have 800,000 acres of pasture lands, of which 600,000 acres were rented. This will add to the annua! income of the tribe about $120,000, says the Washing ton Post. “And already.“ said Captain A. C, Tonner. assistant commissioner of Indian affairs, yesterday, “the Osage Indians are the richest people In the world. Several years ago the lands of the Osages in Kansas were sold, the sale realizing $8,000,000. This money was placed In the treasury of the United States, and from it the Osage Indians derive an annual in come of $400,000. In addition to this they own 1,570,195 acres of land, which is fairly worth $6 an acre, making the value of their land holdings $7,850,875. There are 1,972 Indians in the tribe, counting men, women and children. They all share alike in the tribal wealth, and when a child is born it becomes a Joint property owner with all the other Indians in the tribe. The profits from the $8,000,000 held in the treasury, the recent rental of pasture lands, and other sources of revenue, give the Osages an annual Income of approximately $600,000, a per capita income of $304,25 for each man, woman and child. When a family consists of man and wife and eight children, as often happens, the family receives each year in cash $3,040, and on their lands they raise all their foodstuffs and con siderable grain for the market. The realty holdings of the tribe have a per capita valuation of $3,987, or, for a family of ten, $39,870. There is no other race of people In the world, it Is declared, that can make such a show ing. The Osage Indians have not fail ed to profit by this wealth. The sons and daughters of families are sent east to colleges and boarding schools to be educated, many of them receiving pro fessional training. There are a few families, of course, which still live with almost the simplicity that mark ed the lives of their savage ancestors, but the desire for education and cul ture is rapidly spreading, and when the Osages become citizens a few years hence they will be fully equipped for thedutlesand responsibilities of citizen ship. The homes of some of the most progressive Osages compare favorably with the dwellings of white people of equal wealth. Their houses are richly furnished with carpets and modern furniture, and in many homes there are pianos upon which the boarding school training of the daughters has taught them to perform. Horses and carriages are not infrequent, and though the automobile has not yet made its appearance, it is not an im possibility of the future. NEW PLATE FOR CAMERAS. Invention That Will Prove a Boon to Amateur Photographer*. The difficulties involved in the man ipulation of a long celluloid film have prevented the extensive use of cinema tographic apparatus by amateur pho tographers. To avoid this objection Leo Kamm hus Invented a camera— the kammatograph—in which acircular glass plate takes the place of the cellu loid film. The plate can be made to rotate rapidly by means of a multiply ing gear, and at the same time it trav els laterally. A small lens forms an image upon the plate, und when the plate is put In motion these images are multiplied into a series of pictures arranged in a spiral. The plate is, of course, developed precisely In the same way as an ordinary negative, and a positive is then taken from it. To display the series of pictures it is only necessary to place the positive in the camera and to arrange the camera so that the beam from a lantern close to It can pass through the lens. The plate is then rotated as before, and the suc cession of the pictures projected upon the screen reproduces the original movements. About 600 pictures can be photographed during the motion of a single plate at a rate of about twelve 3r fourteen a second. The camera is very compact, and both as regards price and adaptability is within the reach of any photographer who wishes to secure pictures of rapidly changing scenes and moving objects. The small size of the pictures will not permit of projection upon a large screen, hut the views can be'shown large enough for srdlnary purposes.—Chicago Chron icle. Short of Water. Utah proposes to avert pending ca lamity to her agricultural section by supplying the Great Salt Lake basin with needed water. Irrigation has cut off the supply and the lake itself is in imminent danger of drying up. The usual supply of water is being with held and evaporation is rapidly lower ing the level of the lake. Centuries ago the shores of the great inland salt sea were high on the mountains, where the line of the ancient brook is visible today, and the lake, which has sunk to Its present dimensions, promises to disappear far more rapidly than in the ages past. Traveling Flrlt Cabin. General Francis Vinton Greene al ways travels first cabin. He is a mil lionaire, and can afford to. Mrs. 3reene, who was a Miss Chevalier, lived in Washington before her mar riage, and whenever she and the gen eral revisit the capita! they have a -oyal time. Their recent inauguration launt lasted ten days, during which period they occupied the home of Archibald Hopkins in Dupont Circle, paying a rental of $700. Wouldn’t you like to rent a few Washington houses it $25,000 a year.—New York Press. You’ll find watered silk in the dry goods department and dry champagne among the wet goods. A Month's Tost Free. If you have Itheuniatlam. write Or. Sheep. Pacino, Wit.. Box 148. for six bottles nf bis hheunistlv Cure, express paid. Send no money, l'ay *5.50 if cured. Where they pay attention to the lit tle things—in the orphan Asylum. California Rates Open to Kveryone. The low rates to San Francisco which the Burlington Route has made for the Epworth league meeting In that city in July are open to everyone. They are the lowest ever known. From Omaha, for example, the round trip rate to San Francisco will be only $45. Return limit, August 31. Through cars will be run and stop-overs allowed, going and returning. It is not too early to make your plans for the trip. To obtain full In formation about it write to J. Francis, General Passenger Agent, Burlington Route. Omaha, Neb. A man can be too confiding in others, but never too confident in him self. The well posted druggist advises you to use Wizard Oil for pain, for be knows what it has done. Astronomy has nothing to do with the way one theatrical star eclipses another. Try Oralu-O! Try Graiil-Ot Ask your Grocer to-day to show you a package of GRAIN-O. the new food drink that takes the place of colToo. The children may drink it without injury ns well us the adult. All who try it, like it GRA1N O has that rich seal brown of Mocha or Java, but it is made from pure grains, aud the most delicate stomach receives it without dis tress. the price of coffee. 15c and SB eta. per package. Bold by all grocers. Many an old toper who has never been in Cork has seen a great many drawings of it. ftouth Dnkotn Farina I* the title of an illustrated booklet just issued by the Chicago. Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway, descriptive of the country between Aberdeen and the Missouri River, a section heretofore unprovided with railway facilities, blit which is now reached by a new line of the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway. Everyono contemplating a change of location will be interested in the information contained in It, and a copy may be had by sending a two cent stamp to F. A. Miller, General Passenger Agent, Chicago, 111. After effect—the kind word that makes a dog’s tail wag. Ask your grocer for DEFIANCE STARCH, the only 16 oz. package for 10 cents. All other 10-cent staren con tains only 12 oz. Satisfaction guaran teed or money refunded. Most appropriate name for a dentist —Phil Pullman. Mr«. Winslow’s Soothing: Syrnp. For children teething, softens the gems, reduces Iff ttainmatlon, allays pain.cures wind colic. 23c a bottle. Youth has a perseverance all its own, but the trouble is it never knows when to stop. Plso’s Curb for Consumption is an infallible medicine for coughs and colds.—N. VV. .Samlcl., Ocean Grove, N. J., Feb. 17. 1U00. There are no elevators in the house of success. Drugs have their use. but don't store them In your stomach. Beemun's Pepsin Gum aids the natural forces to perform their functions. There’s no egg so large that it can not he beaten. Big Camera* Barred at Buffalo. “Camera fiends” who are Intending to take everything in sight at the Pan American exposition will do well to re member that the, regulations restrict ing the use of cameras on the grounds o" the Pan-American exposition, under the concessions granted to a private party, provide that no camera exceed ing four or five inches shall be al lowed within the gates. Stereoscopic oameros and tripods will not be ad mitted under and circumstances. The fee for the admission of cameras four by five inches or under will be 50 cents for a day or $1.60 for a week. A man can be too confiding »- - _,^sr GASTORIA Tor Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Thirty Years CASTORIA TMC CCNTAUW COMWNV. NEW VOW* CITY. POOR LITTLE JOHNNY! AND HIS “TUMMY”! Small boys, and many times large ones, and occasionally girls, too, big and little, suffer terribly from convulsive pains or “cramps” in the bowels and stomach— pain so violent that it “doubles up” the ones attacked, and makes it impossible for them to stand up. Some people call It colic, but most Honest, plain-spoken people call it “belly-ache” and very properly, for the seat of the trouble is in the 4 bowels, and caused by the violent efforts of the ’ bowels to rid themselves of something which doesn’t belong there. The small boy usually ■ gets it from over-eating or from eating forbidden ; fruit, and suffers mostly in the summer time. It’s spring now, and “in times of peace, prepare for war.” Let the boys and girls and the big • folks, too, for that matter, clean out the clogged channels filled with winter bile and putrid undi gested food, strengthen the 30-feet of bowel j canal, liven up the liver, and “summer belly- i aches” will have no terrors, because thev won’t happen. The way to make the body ache-poof is to use CASCARETS, gentle, sweet, fragrant I CASCARETS, the oerfect system cleaners and bowel strengtheners. For fear that anybody in the [ family should ever be attacked by belly-ache, keep a box of CASCARETS in the house always, and 1 remember that all pains and troubles in your insides are | AIIAr bowel troubles* appendicitis, bll lBllUla lousuess, bad breath, bad blood, wind 11|| IIr on th« stomach, bloated bowels, foul Willi mouth, headache. Indigestion, pimples, pains after eating, liver trouble, sallow complexion and dizxlness. when jroar bowels don't move regu larly yon are getting slclc. Constipation kills more people than all other dlseuses together. It Is a starter for tho chronic ailments and long years of snflferlng that come afterwards. No matter what alls you, start taking CASCARETS to-day, for you will never get w»ll and be well all tho time until you put your bowels right. Take our advice; start with CA&CARISTS to-day, under an absolute guar antee to euro or money refunded. w nil inAMTCCn ESStiwraanc uUAKAN I LLli ■Imllur medicine in the world. This is absolute proof of great merit, and oar best testimonial. Wo have faith and will sell CASCARKTH absolutely guaranteed to cure or money refandod. 60 buy today, two ff.Oo boxes, give them a fair, nonest trial, us per simple directions, and If you are not sutlsflcd, after using one »•<■. box, return the noowdsOs box and tho empty box to us by mall, or the druggist from whom you purchased It, and get your wont r back for both boxes. Take our udv1oe--no matter wfcaC ails you—start to day. Health will quickly follow and you will bless the day you first started the p*««rCA8CARKTN. Book free by malL Address: STEM 1.NO REMEDY CO., 1SEW YOUA or UilCAlO.