The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, April 06, 1905, Image 7

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    ITS MEBIT IS PROVED
RECORD OF A GREET MEDICINE
▲ Prominent Cincinnati Woman Telle
How Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable
Compound Completely Cured Her.
The great good Lydia E. Pinkliam's
Vegetable: Compound is doing among
the women of America is attracting
the attention of many of our leading
scientists, and thinking people gener
ally.
i
I
|
The following letter is only one of
many thousands which are on tile in
the Pinkhum office, and go to prove
beyond question that Lydia ]£. Pink
ham's Vegetable Compound must be a
remedy of great merit, otherwise it 1
could not produce such marvelous re- '
suits among sick and ailing women. j
Dear Mrs. Pinkham:—
' ‘ About nine months ago I was a great suf
ferer with womb trouble, whic| caused me
aevere pain extreme nervousness and fre
quent headaches, from which the doctor j
failed to relieve me. I tried Lydia K. Pink- j
ham’s Vegetable Compound, and within a
short time fe.lt better, and after taking five |
liottlesof it I was entirely cured. 1 therefore
heartily recommend your Compound as a :
splendid uterine tonic." It makes the monthly ;
periods regular and without pain ; and what :
a blessing it is to find such a remedy after so I
many doctors fail to help you. I am pleased I
to recommend it to all suffering women.”— 1
Mi-s. Sara Wilson, 31 Kastod Street, Cincin- j
uuti, Ohio.
If you have suppressed or painful !
menstruation, weakness of the stoin- |
ach. indigestion, bleating, leucorrhcea, |
flooding, nervous prostration, dizzi- j
ness, faintness, “ don’t-care ” and!
“ want-to-be-left alone ” feeling, ex
citability, backache or the blues, these j
are sure indications of female weak- j
ness, some derangement of the uterus
or ovarian trouble. In such cases there
is one tried and true remedy—Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound.
SICK HEADACHE
Positively cored by
these Little Pills. |
They also relieve DIs- :
tress from Dyspepsia. In
digestion and Too Hearty
Eating. A perfect rem
edy for Dizziness, Nausea, i
Drowsiness, Bad Taste
In the Mouth, Coated
Tongue, Pain In the Side.
TORPID LIVER. They
regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable.
SMALL PILL SMALL DOSE. SHALL PRICE.
Genuine Must Bear
Fan-Simile Signature I
REFUSE SUBSTITUTES.
Worth a Thonennd T'mPi lt« C'oat
THIS IS NO ORDINARY OFFF.R—Send 10 cent*,
today, before you forgot It. We will mall you. post- J
paid, the handsomest and most valuable booklet ever
published. Its pages shine like diamonds, i n l It may
light yonr path to riches. You cannot ahwrd to be
without one. Money refunded If not perfec satU
footory. {Standard Trading Co.,80 W.2iatSt.,N.Y.City
For Sale—320 acres, fine, level wheat,
flax, stock and coal land; North Dakota;
ItveR.R. town 2 miles, $8 acre: easy terms,
balance 6 pet. Edward Rowe, Indiana,, Pa.
PLEASE MENTION THIS PAPER.
SIOUX CITY P’T'G CO., 1,080—14, 1905
BEGGS* BLOOD PURIFIER
CURES catarrh ol the stomach. |
Remorse.
"I never felt so bad. suli.” said the
southern major, "as when 1 threw that
young man through the window for
coming into my house Intoxicated.”
"Repented your rash set, eh?” said
the friend.
”1 should say so. suh. Why. he had
no sooner struck the pavement than X
heard the crash of a full flask. The
Idea of wasting all that good liquor,
suh.”
Who Owns the Railroads.
H. T. Newcomb, of the District of
Columbia bar, has compiled statistics
showing that 5.174,718 depositors in
savings banks of six Kasiern States
are directly interested in the Joint
ownership of $442,354,080 of steam
railroad securities, that insurance com
panies doing business in Massachu
setts hold $845,889,088 of steam rail
road stocks and bonds, and 74 eduen- I
tional institutions depend on $47,408,
327 invested in similar securities for a
portion of their Income. Other fidu
ciary institutions own enough railroad
securities to bring such holdings up to
more than a billion and a half dollars,
about one-sixth of the entire capital
invested in railroad property. These
investments represent the savings of
the masses, there being twenty million
holders qf life insurance policies in the
country, as many more of fire insur
ance policies, and an even greater
number of depositors in banking and
trust institutions, where investments
ure largely in railroad securities.
The Ties of Home.
Judge: I-'irst Boy—I see Patsy has
broken all home tics.
Second Boy—Wot do yer mean?
First Boy—His mudder tied him up ter
de bed post, so he couldn’t go swimmin’,
but dare he is!
How's Till ST
Wo offer One Hundred Dollars Reward tor any
rase of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall’s
Catarrh Cure. •
F. J. CHENEY & CO.. Toledo. O.
We the undersigned have known F. J. Cheney
for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly
honorable In all business transactions and finan
cially able to carry out any obligations made by
their firm.
West Si Truax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O.
Waldlng. Kinnan & Marvin, Wholesale
Druggists. Toledo. 0.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally, acting
directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of
the system. l’rlce "5c. per bottle. Sold by all
Druggists.
Hall's Family Pills are the best.
Lord Avebury, the London banker,
was the first person In England to have
his photograph taken. He was a little
boy. Daguerre himself took the picture
while explaining his invention to Ave
bury’s father.
Mother Gray'* Sweet Powder* Tor
Children.
Successfully used by Mother Gray, nurse In
ihe Children's Home In New York, cure Con
stipation. Feverishness, Bad Stomach, Teeth
ing Disorders, move and regulate the Bowels
and-Destroy Worms. Over HO.OOO testimonials.
At all Druggists. 25c. Sample FREE. Ad
dress A. S. Olmsted. LeRoy, N. Y.
The most costly mitre In the United
States, which represents $10,000 worth
of jewels and precious stones, is worn
by Bishop Horstman, of the Cleveland
diocese of the Roman Catholic church.
Salzer’* Rome Ballder Corn.
So named because 50 acres produced *0
heavily, that its proceeds built a lovely
home. See Salzer’s catalog. Yielded in
Ind. 157 bu., Ohio 160 bu., Tenn. 198 bu.,
and in Mich. £20 bu. per acre. You can
beat ibis record in 1905.
WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THESE YIELDS?
120 bu. Beardless Barley per acre.
310 bu. Salzer's New National Oats per A.
80 bu. Salzer Speltz and Macaroni Wheat.
1.000 bu. Pedigree Potatoes per acre.
14 tons of rich Billion Dollar Grass Hay.
60.000 lbs. Victoria Rape for sheep—per A.
160.000 lbs. Teosinte, the fodder wonder.
54.000 lbs. Salzer * Superior Fodder Corn
—rich, juicy fodder, per A.
Now such yields you can have in 1905,
if you will plant my seeds.
JUST SEND THIS NOTICE AND IOC
in stamps to John A. Salzer Seed Co., La
Crosse, Wis., and receive their great cata
log and lots of farmseed samples. [C. N. U.]
Working Shoes
Meet the special requirements of the Farmer,
Miner, Lumberman and other working men
who need strong, well made shoes.
Made from the best upper leather obtainable for the purpose and
heavy tough soles. Will not grow hard or crack with ordinary care.
) Ask for Mayer shoes and look for the trade-mark on the sole.
For a Sunday or dress shoe wear the “Honorbilt” for men.
F. MAYER BOOT SHOE CO.
MILWAUKEE, WIS.
■ ■ __ _!_ I I. I —— ■■■
280 acre farm for sale or exchange; 800
acres unimproved land $6 to $10 per acre;
Brood fo’1. roads, schools, markets ;must pell
Address P. H. Maine, Stevens Point. Wis.
Xihceclates
The finest and most delicious made
If jonr dealer does not sell them
we will send you express prepaid
1 lb bss50c. 2 lb b«x $1
PALMER G CO., fcwi Mr l«. j
-MAKERS Or FUSE CAMDT^—' I
GAVE HIS LIFE IN
HELPING OTHERS
Priest Contracts Leprosy ana
Dies of It in Hawaiian
Islands.
DID MISSIONARY LABOR
\Va< Scion of a Wealthy Belgian F«m
ily, and Deliberately Sacrificed
Hi* Life in Effort to Be of
U«e to Sufferers.
New York special: In a letter re
ceived In the city came the announce
ment that Brother Seraplon Van Koop,
member of a wealthy Helglap family,
who two years ago went to the Ha
waiian islands to take up the work be
gun by Father Damien In the leper
colony of Molokai, has himself fallen a
victim to the disease.
The letter came from the voting mis
sionary himself to the Hev. Father
John J. Dunn, head of the local bureau
for the propagation of the faith, the
Roman Catholic Missionary bureau. It
was originally sent to a close friend In
Belgium. Its text was as follows:
I have at Inst summoned sufficient
courage to write you a few words. For
the last six months I have lived through
days of such anxiety and melancholy
that I had not tiie courage to talk with
you. You will pardon me for not re
plying more promptly to your well
wishes for a happy New' Year. I felt
it necessary at last to break the si
lence and let you know of my condition.
You will kindly break the news to my
brothers and sisters, because I cannot
tell them myself.
Elbow Numb.
"A little while after your last letter
came 1 discovered that I had no feel
ing in my elbow. 1 remarked the fact
to the Rev. Father Maxinie, who com
manded me to go to our physician. Aft
er he had examined tne he declared the
want of feeling appeared to him to be
a symptom of leprosy, but to make sure
he took from my elbow some pieces of
flesh for microscopic examination.
After a few days he came to see me
and Informed me that very probably It
would prove to be a case of leprosy.
He did not care to decide definitely,
however, as all cases of the kind are
left to doctors in Honolulu, to whom
he suggested that I should go. Our
very reverend provincial had been stop
ping with us for a fortnight, and on his
return to Honolulu 1 accompanied him.
When we arrived there I was examined
by Doctor Herbert, who also took a
piece of flesh from my elbow, causing
me quite a little pain. The operation,
however brought no result.
"Two days later there was a similar
operation with similar uncertainty. The
following day I was examined by an
other doctor in the hospital, who
brought In consultation a member of the
board of health. This lime a small por
tion of skin was taken from a red
patch which had appeared on my cheek,
as well as a piece from my forehead.
In both of these cultures they found mi
crobes of leprosy. There is no doubt of
it. I am a leper. These experiments
were made on the 11th of the month.
That very night I left Honolulu to re
turn to Molokai, where I will be com
pelled to remain for the rest of my
days.
To Live in Hut.
“Vnu ni!J v ho cnro thio loot teln
was not exactly a very pleasant one.
Just as soon as 1 arrived at the Laz
aratto house my first care was to turn
over all my affairs of the .house to Fath
er Maxime, with whom 1 had lived up
to that time. I then took up my resi
dence in a little hut, where I must*live
alone. It is certainly a very great trial
for me, but I am sure that God will
not forsake me."
The letter concludes with a request
for prayers. Brother Serapion Van
Koop is 28 years old. In all likelihood
he will never live to see his thirty
first birthday.
Until the day of his death, ns he set
forth, he will live alone in a little hut
of the leper colony. He can have no
companions except those similarly af
flicted, and as there are natives or
Chinese, there will be nothing of com
panionship for him. Books he will have
and letters from home, but he may nev
er answer those letters except through
a third person. Occasionally he will see
a fellow human being, some courageous
missionary, who will come to take his
place, but the danger of infection is
so great that they will only speak at a
distance. Helplessness and lethargy
that accompany the disease will come
upon him after the end of the first
year. He will then be able only to
crawl about the hut. Death will be a
welcome relief to him.
THE STRAIN OF WORK.
Best of Bucks Give Out Under the Bur
den of Daily Toll.
Lieutenant George G. Warren, of No.
3 Chemical, Washington, D. C„ says:
"It’s an honest fact thut Doan's Kid
ney Pills did me
a freut lot of
good, and if it
were not true I
would not recom
mend them. It
wus the strain of
lifting that
brought on kid
ney trouble and
weakened my
but since using Doan's Kidney
Pills I have lifted 600 pounds and felt
no bad effects. I have not felt the
trouble come back since, although I
had suffered for Uve or six years, and
other remedies had not helped me at
all.”
For sale by all dealers. Price 50
cents. Foster-Mllburn Co., Buffalo,
n. y. __
The Next Best Thing.
"Can you gimme a bite, ma'am'.''’ said
the ragged hobo “I'm hungry enuff ter
eat a hoss.”
"I regret to say,' replied the kind
lady, "that we are just out of horses;
but I’ll call the dog.”
"Dppepilk tormented me for yeart. Pr. David
Kennedy'* Favorite Itemedr cured me." Mre. C. S.
Dougherty, Millville, N. J. Uaed brer 90 yeans. P1.U0.
Houston Post: "1 wish Willie Sap
hed would hurry up his proposal.”
"But you aren't going to accept him!"
“I know it. I want him to propose
so I can get rid of him."
I caa r atom mend PIso's Cura for Coa-!
sumption for Asthma. It haa given me
freat relief.—W. L. Wood, Farmeriburg,
nd.. Sept. 8, 1901.
The British admiralty has decided
that gray is the best all around coloi
for torpedo craft, and a change la tc >
be made from black. i
HOW TWO BEAUTIFUL WOMEN ESCAPED
PELVIC CATARRH OT AID OF PE-RO-NA.
Female Weakness Is Usually Pelvic Catarrh. Pe-ru-na
Cures Catarrh Wherever Located.
\ Mr*. Lizzie Keddintr. 3134 B Clifton PI a of, St.
Y\ I.ouis, Mo., writes:
J “I found after trying many different medicine*
to restore me to health, that Peruna was the only
thing which could be depended upon. I began
i taking it when I was in a decline, induced by
I female weakness and overwrought nerves.
“I began to feel stronger during the first week
I took Peruna and my health improved daily un
til now I am in perfect health and enjoy life as
I never did before.”—Lizzie Bedding,
Mr*. Mable Bradford, 13 Church direct,
Burlington, Vt., Secretary Whittier Oratoria
Society, write*:
“Peruna ii certainly a wonderful medi
cine for the ills of women. I have heard
it spoken of in the highest praise by many,
and certainly my experience is well worthy
of a good word.
“I began to have severe pains across my
back about a year ago, brought on by a
cold, and each subsequent month brought
me pain and distress.
"Yonr remedy was prescribed, and the
way it acted upon my system was almost
too good to be true. I certainly have re
gained my. health and strength, and I no
lunger auner periodical pains ana extreme \s ^ —- —
lassitude.”—Mable Bradford. .. ,
diseases, including pelvic ca- j
I - ■ ■ ii . mi , ■ tarrh 11 lifolntwv utmlv
In Peruna these women find a prompt
and permaneut cure.
Thousands of testimonials to this ef
fect arc received by Dr. Hartman every
year. The good that Peruna has ac
complished in this class of cases ca»
scarcely be over-estimated.
If you do uot derive prompt and
satisfactory results from the use of
Peruna, write at once to I)r. Hnrl
mnn. giving a full statement of your
case, and he will he pleased to give
you his valuable advice gratis.
Address Dr. Hartman, President
of The Hartman Sanitarium, Colum
bus. Ohio. All correspondence held
strictly confidential.
Thousands of Women Cured Every Year by
Correspondence—This Is What Dr. Hart
■ran Proposes to Do For You
Without Charge.
Women who suffer should rend the
evidences presented here. We have
thousands of letters from grateful
friends who tell the same story.
Half the ills that are peculiarly
woman's own are of a catarrhal
character. Female weukness was not
understood for many years.
Dr. Hartman deserves the eredit of
having determined its real character.
He has made catarrh and catarrhal
-
J ?rur,a cures catarrh, whether of the
pelvic organs or nny other organ of the
human body.
Pe-ru-.ia, a Natural Beautlfier.
Peruna produces* dean, mucous mem
branes, the basis of facial symmetry
snd u perfect complexion.
The women have not been slow to dis
cover that a course of Peruna will do
more toward restoring youthful beauty
than all the devices known to science.
Many n girl has regained her faded
beauty, many n matron has lengthened
the days of her comely appearance by
usiDg Peruna.
SCREAMED AT NIGHT.
Bnby Scratched Until Face Was Raw
and Bleeding — Eczema Cnred by
Cuticnra.
"For over two years my little baby
girl suffered with a raw. Itching und
painful eczema on her head and face,
the pain causing her to scream day
and night, and ray wife could get no
rest. We tried several doctors, but
without success. Unless we kept hor
hands tied she would scratch until her
face was like raw beef. One cake of
Cutleura Soap and two boxes of Cutl
cura Ointment completely cured her,
healing her face without mark or blem
ish. (Signed) W. J. Morgan, Orchard
Town, New Lambton, New South
Wales, Australia.”
No Wormwood.
Cleveland Leader: "The life.of an In
surance agent,” sighed Premyums, "is
full of wormwood and gull.”
"I hadn’t noticed the wormwood,”
growled the victim.
A GUARANTEED CURE FOR PILES.
Itching, BliDd, Bleeding or Protruding Piles.
Yourdrugglst will refund money If PAZO OINT
MK.vr rails to cure you In 6 to 14 days. toe.
Hoped Not.
Philadelphia Ledger: “Oh, John:"
she exclaimed ns she observed him get
ting into his overcoat, "I hope you're
not going to be out again tonight.”
"I hope not,” he replied absent
mindedly, "but it’s quite likely. The
cards have been running very badly
for me lately.”
Contracting in Japan.
San Francisco Chronicle: If a per
son desires to employ a Japanese, or a
thousand of them, he does not make
contracts with the individual men. but
with a Japanese contractor. This is
no new thing in California, for our
people were long accustomed to make
such contracts with Chinese bosses.
There is a difference, however: When
the contract was made with the Chi
nese boss the employer knew that the
work would be done precisely as speei
lled In the contract, which is usually
In writing. When we make a similar
contract with a Japanese boss we do
not know whether the work will be
done or not. If the men can do better
elsewhere It must be expected that the
contract will be repudiated and a strike
occur, so timed as to make acceptance
of the revised terms unavoidable ex
cept at great loss.
Mrs. Window ■ soothing btbdy Tor cauldron
toothing; ooftono the gums, reduces lodamoiauun r1
iOMPoln. cures wind onlio. 25 cent’a bottle
The first standard gauge electric rail
road in Germany is to be built between
Hamburg arid Ohlsdorf. Later on this
load is to be extended to Lubeck.
f Truths that Strike Home
H Tour grocer is honest and—if he cares to do bo—can tell
■ you that he knows very little about the bulk coffee ho
■ sells you. How ran he know, where it originally came from,
p how it was blended—or With What
t I —or when roasted? If you buy your
coffee loose by the pound, how can
| you expect purity and uniform quality ?
LION COFFEE, the LEADER OF |
ALL PACKAGE COFFEES, Is ol
necessity unllorm in quality,
strength and llavor. For OVER A
QUARTER OF A CENTURY. LION COFFEE
has heen the standard cotlce In
millions ol homes.
LION COFr EE t» carefully pacl;cd ■
at our factories, and until opened In H
your home, has no chance of being odul- I
terated, or of coming In contact with dust, R
dirt, germs, or unclean hands. |4|
In each package of LION COFFEE you get OflC full fi
Sound of Pure Coffee. Insist upon getting the genuine. I;
ion head on every package.) «
(Save the Lion-heads for valuable premiums.) If
SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE I
WOOLSON SPICE CO., Toledo, Ohio. M
W,CHESTER
‘NEW RIVAL" BLACK POWDER SHELLS.
It’s the thoroughly modern and scientific system of load
ing and the use of only the best materials which make
Winchester Factory Loaded “New Rival” Shells give bet
ter pattern, penetration and more uniform results gener
ally than any other shells. The special paper and the Win
chester patent corrugated head used In making “New
Rival” shells give them strength to withstand reloading.
BE SURE TO GET WINCHESTER MAKE OF SHELLS.
St. Jacobs Oil
promptest, surest Rhe:jatism and Neuralgia f
.