The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, July 16, 1903, Image 7

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    SUFFERING WOMEN.
!; Tired, Nervous, Aching,
; Trembling, Sleepless, Blood
| less—Pe-ru-na Renovates,
Regulates, Restores Many
' Prominent Women Endorse
; Pe-ru-na.
' “ The great majority of ner
vous women are so because they
are suffering from some form of female
disease.
Mrs. Emma Mitchell, 520 Louisiana
Street, Indianapolis, Ind., writes:
“I’eruna has certainly been a blessing
In disguise to me, for when I first began
taking it for troubles peculiar to the sex
and a generally worn out system, I had
little faith.
“For the past five years 1 have
rarely beer: without pain, but Pe
ru n a has changed all this, and in
a very short time. 1 think 1 had
only taken two bottles before I
began to recuperate very quickly,
and seven bottles made me well.
/ do not have headache or back
ache any more, and have some in
terest In life. I give all credit
where it is due, and that Is to Pe
runa.—Emma Mitchell.
By far the greatest number of female
troubles are caused directly by catarrh.
They are catarrh of the organ which is
affected. These women despair of re
covery. Female trouble is so common, so
prevalent, that they accept it as almost in
evitable. The greatest obstacle in the way
of recovery is that they do not understand
that it is catarrh which is thesourceof their
illness. In female complaint, ninety-nine
cases out of one hundred are nothing but
catarrh. Peruna cures catarrh wherever
located.
Chronic invalids who have languished for
years on sick beds with some form of female
disease begin to improve at once after be
ginning Dr. Hartman’s treatment.
Among the many prominent women who
recommend Peruna are:—Belva Lockwood,
of Washington, D. C.; Mrs. Col. Hamilton,
of Columbus, Ohio; Mrs. F. E. Warren, wife
of U. S. Senator Warren, of Wyoming.
If you do not derive prompt and satisfac
tory results from the use of Peruna, write
at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a full state
ment of your case, and he will be pleased
to give you his valuable advice grafts.
Address Dr. Hartman, President of The
Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, Ohio.
t—-^
cartridges and shot shells
are made in the largest and
best equipped ammunition
factory in the world.
AMMUNITION
of U- M. G. make is now
accepted by shooters as
“the worlds standard" for
it shoots well in any gun.
Tour dealer sells it.
The Union Metallic
Cartridge Co.
| Bridgeport, - - Conn. |
WE DEMAND
B YOUR ATTENTION. V
■ |f anyone offered you a good y
| dollar (or an imperfect one l
5 would you take it? n
■ If anyone offered you one good E
yg dollar for 75 cents of bad money H
B would you take it? R
I We offer you 10 ounces of the f
6 very best sitrch made for 10c. i
A No other brand is so good, yet A
A all others cost 10c. for 12 ounces. SB
flaji Ours is a business proposition. H
|i DEFIANCE STARCH b the best |l
H We guarantee H satisfactory. V
| Ask your grocer I
A. The DEFIANCE STARCH CO., A
«|jjk Omaha. Neb.' JB
pt -
TfiomDso;! a £ys W«iM
When Answernig Advertisements
Kindly Mention This Paper.
W. N. U., Omaha. No. 29—1903
What doth it profit a man to have
brains if he lacketh the ability to use
them?
I do not believe Piso’s Cure for Consumption
oas an equal for coughs and colds.—John F
Boxeu. Trinity Springs, Ind., Feb. IS, 190(1
Look at a picture in the best pos
sible light, and be as courteous to your
fellow man as you are to a picture.
Every time a man tries to get some
thing for nothing he acquires a little
more experience.
Do Your Feet Ache and Burn?
Shake into your shoes, Allen’s Foot
Ease, a powder for the feet. It makes
tight or New Shoes feel Easy. Cures
Swollen, Hot, Sweating Feet, Corns
and Bunions. At all Druggists and
Shoe Stores. 25c. Sample sent FREE.
Address Allen S. Olmsted, LeRoy, N. Y.
Will Entertain a King.
Thomas F. Walsh, who expects to
| receive a visit next fall from King
! Leopold, of Belgium, and to entertain
the royal personage at his splendid
home on Massachusetts avenue, in
Washington, is a millionaire who made
his wealth out of Colorado mines. He
was born in Ireland in 1851 and came
to America at the age of 18. He went
to Colorado soon afterward, took up
mining and by industry and good luck
accumulated a vast fortune.
Mrs. Winslows nootTilngr Syrup.
For children teething, softens the gums, reduces in*
fly munition, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c a bottia
It’s only a matter of time till the
undertaker lets you in on the ground
floor.
This country can struggle along
without kings and queens as long as
it has a few political bosses.
When Your Grocer Says
he does not have Defiance Htarch, yon may
be sure he is afraid to keep it until his
stock of 12 oz. packages are sold. Defiance
Starch is not only better than any other
Cold Water Ktnrch, hut contains 1(5 oz. to
the package and Bells for same money aa 12
oz. brands.
Professors of physical culture lack
the nerve needed to recommend the
wood-saw and wash-hoard.
Any act by which a man makes one
enemy is in the end a losing game.
Many who formerly smoked 10c cigars,
now smoke Lewis’ “Single Binder’’ straight
5e cigar, The best combination of the best
| tobaccos. Lewis’ Factory, Peoria, 111.
A tvoman who gushes over a man
i when he is tired and hungry is due
I for a term in a padded cell.
RED CROSS BALL, BLUB
Should he in every home. Ask your grocer
for it. Large 2 oz. package only 5 cents.
The average man cant realize hotv
easy it is to pass the contribution plate
and forget to chip in until he tries it.
1 Those Who Have Tried It
will use no other. Defiance Cold Water
Starch has no equal in Quantity or Qual
ity—1(5 oz. for 10 cents. Other brands con
lulu onlv 12 oz.
The wise missionary secureth an ap
[ pointnient among the vegetarian typo
of heathen.
To Cure a Cold in one day.
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All
druggists refund money if it fails to cure. 25c.
Morning prayer sets a picket for
the day.
1 SIGHTS SEEN BY TRAVELER |
j ALONG THE MODERN NILE j
Traveling by the ordinary methods
you may go from Alexandria to Khar
tum in about six days, says the Lon
don Standard. Easily and smoothly you
wing through the fertile cotton fields
of the delta and Its populous cities and
villages, prosperous but dirty, and at
Cairo you settle down into a most com
fortable sleeping car for the night jour
ney to Luxor. Early next morning you
are in the cane fields of upper Egypt,
with the river close on one side and
the desert on the other.
At Luxor you must change to the
narrow gauge for Assouan, and there
is time to refresh yourself w'ith bath
and breakfast and to look across at
the plain of Thebes and the valley, of
the tomb of the kings, or to ride a
donkey out to Karnak. From Luxor to
Assouan it is hot and dusty enough,
and you are glad to rest there for the
night. Next day you embark at Shel
lal, above the dam, for Wady Haifa, a
leisurely voyage of three days. It is
a most beautiful reach of the river;
the hills come down to the water in
bold, rugged outlines, showing to per
fection in the pure, dry desert air. The
effect of the dam is clearly seen as far
as Korosko. First of all, at Shellal
the boat is moored amid a grove of
palm trees, the temples of Nubian vil
lages look quaint enough as they stand
on the edge of the desert, forlornly
mourning their strip of cultivated land,
most of which the greedy reservoir
has swallowed.
The boundary between Egypt and
the Sudan, settled by the convention of
1899, runs along the twenty-second par
allel: not far beyond this is the fron
tier town of Haifa. There is no mis
taking the signs of British rule. The
whole place Is rigidly clean, an ex
traordinary contrast to the filth of the
Egyptian villages. The streets are well
laid out and scrupulously swept, and
slmdy avenues of trees are springing
up. Haifa is the railway terminus of
the Sudan. It is twenty-eight hours to
Khartum. Nothing can be more com
fortable than the well-appointed sleep
ing-car train, which runs twice a week.
Starting at eight in the evening, you
strike right across the Baynda desert,
most desolate and forlorn of countries.
The stations have no names, but arc
known merely by their numbers. In
the morning you come to Abu llaraed
— back to the Nile once more. Here
was the scene of one of the stillest
lights in the Sudan campaign, when
Gen. Hunter made his dash from Kor
ki, and here are the graves of the
white officers of the Tenth Sudanese
battalion, round which the black sol
diers who died with them keep ghost
ly watch and ward forever, and so re
deem the credit of the regiment, which
came back from the battle without its
leader.
From here onward the journey is full
of Interest. Berber is springing up
again from its ruins; it even boasts
two stations. Then comes the At
bara, with its famous bridges and
then Matiner, where there is this year
a camp of exercise for the Egyptian
army. The camp had a most business
like appearance. Just as we arrived a
train came steaming in with a bat
talion of infantry, all in full marching
order; it was exactly like a regiment
detraining at the front in real war.
Shendy is the Crewe of the Sudan,
and, an hour or two later, we ran into
the terminus at Halfaya.
I; RICH FINDS MADE IN
{ OLD TOMBS IN EGYPT j
Some important archaeological dis
coveries made recently at Beni Hasan,
a site in Egypt famous for its painted
tombs and early architectural features,
are detailed by Prof, John Garstang,
of University college, Liverpool.
A vast necropolis has been un
earthed, remarkable for the preserva
tion of the furniture in its tombs and
for the wealth of material which these
supplied in illustrating the burial cus
toms of the Middle Empire. Four bun
dled and ninety-two tombs hewn in the
rock have been opened and examined.
More than 100 of them had never been
previously entered since their doors
were closed at the time of Interment
4,000 years before.
In the tomb of one Nefer-y, a chief
physician, the huge painted coffin was
surrounded by a numoer of wooden
models of objects and scenes familiar
from the wail paintings of the larger
tombs.
Upon the coffin rested a great row
ing boat, the twenty oarsmen standing
and swing back in time to the beat of
two figures seated on a raised platform
in the center. Beyond this was the
model of a granary with six compart
ments in rows of three on either side
of the courtyard between them. Men
were standing knee deep in real grain
filling baskets, while a scribe seated
on the roof, pen in hand, kept count.
A well-executed group found by the
excavators in another tomb repre
sented the making of beer from fer
mentation of break by a similar proc
ess to that employed by the natives
to-day. Beside the coffin was a sailing
boat, the numerous sailors assuming
the attitude necessary for hoisting the
large square sail, of which the yards
and rigging were preserved. Two men,
in characteristic pose], were using
poles vigorously over the sides.
In another tomb were found models
of a number of warships. In the bow
of one, by the side of the lookout,
stood a negro sailor, bow and arrow in
hand. In the tomb of Antef, a courtier,
the boats had double steering enrs. In
one boat were seated two men under
a canopy, playing a game of chess.
The opening of each tomb was re
corded by photography, as the excava
tion proceeded step by step, 450 neg
atives being taken in all.
; LIFE AND LOVE BOTH
: CHEAP IN THE CAUCASUS :
In the northern Caucasus nearly half
the death rate of the inhabitants Is
caused by vendetta, and at least three
fourths of the vendetta cases are the
result of a curious marriage custom
which is now' decimating the popula
tion. The native of those parts who
wishes to take unto himself a wife
cannot arrange the matter in the sim
ple offhand manner in vogue in west
ern Europe by “popping the question.”
He must go home, sell his belong
ings, and buy her fairly and squarely
of her parents, the price ranging from
$175 to $1,000. This is a costly custom
i:i many ways, for it is not every young
man who can afford to invest such a
large sum in a w'ife, however accom
plished. What generally happens in
such cases is that the indigent candi
date for the order of Benedick induces
a few stalwart comrades to seize the
maiden and carry her off.
What too often follows then may be
gathered from a case in point which
has just taken place in Sosslambek.
Bokayeff Is the bridegroom’s name,
and Neshkho that of the girl of sweet
sixteen who had the misfortune to find
favor in his eyes. His pockets being
empty he persuaded three comrades to
kidnap the maid, whom he then took
off to another village as his wife.
But her father, on discovering her
whereabouts, had her sent back by the
police, and then demanded $150 for
loss of her services, as we should say.
Bokayeff, to whom the demand was
made, would not or could not pay. The
girl’s father thereupon claimed that
sum from the bridegroom’s com
panions, who are equally liable. They
admitted the justice of his claim and
called up Bokayeff to hand over the
sum to them. On his refusal they shot
him dead, that being the custom of the
country, although daggers are also al
lowed to take the place of bullets.
| DEACON HAD NO USE i
I FOR THE TURKISH BATH j
The two young men had induced the
deacon to take his first Turkish bath.
They had got him properly attired, or,
rather, ui\attired, and had conducted
him into the hot room.
The deacon didn't enjoy it, but he
was game. He rolled around nervous
ly on his cot, and every time he moved
he seemed to strike a hotter spot. But
he stood it like a man until the per
spiration made rivulets innumerable in
running off him. Then he lifted him
self up on his elbow and said plaint
tlvely:
“Let's get out of this.”
But the young men only laughed and
told him to keep quiet; that it was just
getting comfortable.
When he finally absolutely refused
to stand it any longer they led him
Into the steam room and sat down to
gossip and enjoy his discomfiture, as
he felt himself slowly boiling away.
♦»««»«»■«»»«»«»»»»»>
And the deacon seemed inclined to
lose his temper. It was aggravating
to be so extremely uncomfortable
when they apparently were enjoying
themselves, and would offer him no
means of escape that would, to say the
least, be dignified.
But there was an end of it; he got
out; and as he looked “more in sorrow
than in anger” from one to the other
of them, one asked:
“Well, ^eacon, what do you think of
it?”
The deacon replied solemnly, and
with all due dignity, but rather point
I edly:
'It's a good thing, young man; It’s
a remarkably convenient thing for
some people who need to suitably pre
pare themselves for the'hereafter, b it
for my part I am glad to get on earth
again."
| NERVE WORN KIDNEYS.
T>o mi's Kidney Fill*
make freedom from kid
ney trout?’9 possible*
Vhey carry a kind of
medication to the kid
neys that brings a bright,
ray of hope to desperate
rases.
i Aching backs are past'd.
I dip, back, and loin pains
| overcome. Swelling of the
| I mbs and dropsy signs
! vanish.
Lock Haven, Pa.—Mrs.
I L. W. Auimumen writes:
I * A fen• weeks ago I sent for
a trial box of Doan s Kidney
Pills for myself, and they did
all they an' said to do. My
husband was kicked last fall
-—
_- _—_
by a horse and badly hurt —
his hip was fractured —and
after he recovered ho was in
such misery that he could
hardly walk, and to stoop
caused him such distress that
he thought he would have to
quit work — also, it affected
his bladder, and he wan un
able to make his water with
out so much distress. I in
sisted on his getting a bor
; of your pills and trying them,
i so I went to Mason's Drug
Store and got a box. Tile
| first box helped him so much
j that I got the second and also
] the third, and now he is en
! tlrely well."—Mrs. L. W.
J Ammcme.v, Lock Ilaveu, Pa.
Take-Down Repeating Shotguns
Don’t spend from $50 to $200 for a gun, when for so
much less money you can buy a Winchester Take
Down Repeating Shotgun, which will outshoot and
outlast the highest-priced double-barreled gun,
besides being as safe, reliable and handy. Your :
dealer can show you one. They are sold everywhere.
FREE t Our 160-Page Illustrated Catalogue•
WINCHESTER REPEATI NG ARMS CO. NEW HAVEN, CONN. i
— nil—II ■ I ■■■■ ■ rj
ybursjbra Clear Head*
_ „ BROMO SELTIER,
lUV' OED JS VERYtVJfERE ——^
Owls acquire their reputation for
wisdom by saying one thing and stick
ing to it.
AIX CP-TO-IJATE HOUSEKEEPERS
Use Hod Crons Boll Blue. It makes clothes
clean and sweet us when new. All grocers.
Some women’s Idea of being stren
uous is to belong to seventeen differ
ent. societies for the suppression of
things.
Why It Is the Best
is because made tiy an entirely different
process. Defiance Starch is unlike any
other, better and one-third more for 10
cents.
The love of some Women is like the
ague; it begins with a chill and ends
in a fever.
The fool shows his folly and knows
it not. but the wise guy knows his
folly and shows it not.
Haiti Catarrh Cure
Is taken internally. Price, 75c.
Two court injunctions are equiva
lent to a pair of suspenders.
To many pecple mistake a polite
acknowledgement for an encore.
llINlMt OH tkltlue It.
Some grocers say they don't keep De
Mance Starch because they have a stock
hi hand of 12 oz. brands, which they
know cannot lie sold to a customer who
lias once used the 10 oz. pkg. Defiance
Starch for the sumo money.
It Converted the Moonshiner.
The fate of those Arkansas farmer
boya who poisoned themselves with
“whisky” made from wood alcohol
made such an impression on John H.
Brumley, moonshiner, that he loaded
his still Into a wagon, drove to Hot
• Springs and Surrendered it and him
self to the United States commission
er. His whisky had always been pure
stuff, he’said, but he wanted to get out
of the business.
Russell Sage's Brick.
Russell Sage boarded a Sixth avenue
elevated train at Rector street one day
last week. He carried under one arm
a sample brick wraped in a news
paper. It was one that the builder of
the Emma Willard seminary had
taken to the financier's office. Re
pairs to Mr. Sage’s hall are to be made
and Mr. Sage wanted to see the brick
that Is to be used. It was worth per
haps 2 cents. At Twenty-eighth street
a sporty looking youth, who evidently
knew the great man, reached down,
seized the brick, dashed to the door,
was down stairs and away before Mr.
Sage, much annoyed, could get to
the door and breathlessly explain to
the guard what had happened. “I felt
sorry for him,” said the latter, when
he told of the experience. "He looked
real sad at losing that bric.t, but I'd
have given a dollar to have seen the
face of the other fellow when he cut
the string. ’
A Good Story.
Frederika, la., July 13th.—Mr. A. S.
Grover of this place tells an interest
ing story showing how sick people
may regain their health if they will
only be guided by the experience of
others. He says:
"I had a very bad ease of Kidney
Trouble, which affected my urinary
organs so that I had to get up every
hour of the night. 1 could not retain
my urine and my feet and limbs began
to bloat up. My weight was quickly
running down.
“After I had tried many things in
vain, I began to use Dodd's Kidney
Pills, a medicine which had cured
some other very bad cases.
"This remedy has done wonders for
me. I have gained eight pounds in j
two months. The bloat has all gone
from my feet and legs, and I don’t
have to get up at night. I took in all j
about ten boxes before I was all
sound.”
Those who suffer as did Mr. Gro
ver can make no mistake in taking
Dodd’s Kidney Pills, for they are a
sure, safe and permanent cure for all
Kidney urinary disorders
Money makes the mare go. but its !
peasuasive powers are often wasted !
on the automobile.
The tighter a man becomes the
looser his tongue gets.
Seek a generous man if you would
find a truly grateful one.
Mora Flexible and Lasting,
won't shake out or blow out; by using
Defiance Starch you obtain better results
than possible with any other brand and
one-tblrd more for same money.
Occasionally a woman thinks her
figure is one of nature's miscalcula
tions.
When two women talk the subject
of their conversation is conspicuously
absent.
HAIR GROWTH
Promoted by Shampoos
of Cuticura Soap
And Dressings cf Cuticura the
Great Skin Cure
Purest, Sweetest, Most Effective Remedies
for Skin, Scalp and Hair.
This treatment at once stops falling
hair, removes crusts, scales and dan
druff, destroys hair parasites, soothes
Irritated, Itching surfaces, stimulates
the hair follicles, loosens the scalp skin,
supplies the roots with energy and
nourishment, and makes the hair grow
upon u sweet, wholesome, healthy scalp
when ail else falls.
Millions of women now rely on Catl
eura Soap assisted by Cuticura Oint
ment, the great skin dure, for preserving,
purifying and beautifying the skin, for
cleansing the scalp of crusts, scales and
dandruff, and the stopping of falling
hair, for softening, whitening and
soothing red, rough and sore hands, for
baby rashes, ltchings and chaflngs, for
annoying irritations, or too free or
offensive perspiration, for ulcerative
weaknesses, and many sanative, anti
septic purposes which readily suggest
themselves, as well as for all the pur
poses of the toilet and nursery.
Cuticura remedies are the standard
skin cures and humour remedies of the
world. Bathe the affected parts with hot
water and Cuticura Soap, to cleanse the
surface of crusts and scales and soften
the thickened cuticle. Dry, without
hard rubbing, and apply Cuticura Oint
ment freely, to allay Itching, irritation
and inflammation, and soothe and heal,
and, lastly, In the severei forms, take
Cuticura Resolvent, to cool aud cleanse
the blooj. A single set is ofteu suffi
cient to euro the most torturing, dis
figuring skin, scalp and blood humours,
from pimples to scrofula, from Infancy
to age, when all else fails.
8old throughout the world. Cuticura Resolvent. Me fln
forrn of Chocolate Coated Pills. 25c. per vial of 80).OInt«.
ment. Me., Hmb. 2-Tc. Depot*: London. 27 Charterhouse
80. : Paris. 6 Rue de la Pmx ; To*ton. 137 Columbus A VC*.
Potter Drug it Chain. Oorp . Sole ^rops.
Wf* Send lor *• flow to Cur* Every Humour."
FREE TO WOMEN!
To prove the healing ami
Cleansing power of Paxtine
Toilet Antiseptic we will
mail a large trial package
with book of instructions
absolutely free. This is not
a tiny sample, but a large
package, enough to con
vince anyone of Its value.
Women all over the country
are praising Paxtine for what
it has done in local treat
1 merit of female Ills, curing
all inflammation and discharges, wonderful as a
cleansing vaginal douche, for sore throat, nasal
catarrh, as a mouth wash and to remove tartar
and whiten the teeth, Send today; a postal card
wiU do.
bold by druggists or sunt postpaid by us, 50
large box. .Satisfaction guaranteed.
THE It. PAXTON CO., Boston, Mass.
21 I Columbus At"*
The /T”* Cor. 19th and
”e—pflpv ft lire Leavenworth Stf.
f* B Vt,ey VXU C OMAHA. NEB.
The only positive cure for Drunkenness,
Drog-ITslng and the Tobacco Habit. Cor
respondence strictly confidential.
VVM. It. BL'ItJCS. Manager,
CHAMPiON TRUSS ?8
A-K Your I*hyslciau’» AdviwS. it 1)0KLET FREE.
Thiladelphia Truss Cc,, 610 Locust St., Phil*., Pa,