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About The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965 | View Entire Issue (March 22, 1906)
HOSPITALS CROWDED MAJORITY OF PATiEMTS WOMEN Mrs. Plnkham's Advice Saves Many From this Sad and Costly Experience. It is a sad but certain fact that j every year brings an in crease in the mi mber of ope ra tions performed upon women in our hospitals. More than three fourths of the patients lying < on those snow white beds are women and girls who are awaiting or recovering from opera tions made necessary by neglect, ii Every one of these patients had plenty of warning in that bearing down feeding, pain at the left or right of the abdomen, nervous exhaustion, pain in the small of the back, pelvic catarrh, dizziness, flatulency, displacements or Irregularities. All of these symptoms are indications of an unhealthy con dition of the female organs, and if not 'heeded the trouble may make headway ‘until the penalty has to be paid by a dangerous operation, and a lifetime of ’impaired usefulness at best, while in many cases the results are fatal. Miss Luella Adams, of Seattle, Wash., writes: Dear Mrs. Pinkham “About two years ago I was a great suf ferer from a severe female trouble, pains and headaches. The doctor prescribed for me and finally told me that I had a tumor and must undergo an operation if I wanted to get well. I felt that this was my death warrant, but I spent hundreds of dollars for medical help, but the tumor kept growing. Fortunately I corresponded with an aunt in the New England States, and she advised me to take Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, as it was said to cure tumors. I did so and immediately began to improve in health,and I was entirely cured, the tumor disappearing entirely, with out an operation. I wish every suffering woman would try this great preparation.” Just as surely as Miss Adams was cured of the troubles enumerated in (her letter, just so surely will Lydia E. (Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound euro other women who suffer from fe male troubles, inflammation, kidney troubles, nervous excitability or ner vous prostration. * Mrs. Pinkham invites all young women who are ill to write her for free advice. She is daughter-in-law of ,Lydia E. Pinkham and for twenty-five years Ijas been advising sick women Jree of charge. Address, Lynn, Mass. When you buy WET WEATHER CLOTHING you want complete protection and long service. These and many other good points are combined In TOWER’S FISH BRAND OILED CLOTHING \bu cant afford to buy any other turn** '«!»*»»» AJ TOWCS CO DO»T?n USA TOWCA CANADIAN CO k.T» — ,vJg.»9"r0- V™ NU. MOTHER GRAY’S SWEET POWDERS FOR CHILDREN, A Certain Oare for Feverish ness, Constipation, Headache, Stomach Troubles, Teething Disorders, and Destroy Mother Gray, Worms. They Break up Col da Burse in Child- »n 34 hours. At all Druaeisfs, 26ot* rsn’s Home. Sample mailed FREE Address, Bev York City. A. S. OLMSTED. Le Roy. N Y, W.L. Douglas *3 = & *3 = S H O ES Gu W. L. Douglas $4.00 Gilt Edge Lino cannot be equalled atany price. ESTABijjheD' JULY^e. ,8f»v Capital *2,500,0 _ESA SELLS MORE MEM’S$3. BO SHOES THAN AMY OTHER MANUFACTURER IN THE WORLD. > (in nnn REWARD to anyone who can it I UjUUU disprove this statemeht. Ill could take you into my three large factories •t Brockton, Mass., and show you the Infinite care with which every palrof shoes Ismade, you would realize why W. L. Douglas $3.50 shoes cost more to make, why they hold their shape, lit better, wear longer, and are of greater intrinsic value than any other $3.50 shoe. W. L. Douglmm Strong Mmdo Shomm for Mon. $2.BO, 93.00. Soys' School A Dromm Shooa, 93. BO, 98. 91.7 B, 91.BO CAUTION.—Insist upon having W.L.Doug tss slxoe». Take no substitute. None genuine Without his name and price stamped on bottom. fast Color Eyelets used ; they wiU net wear brassy. Write for-Illustrated Catalog. \V. L DOUGLAS, Brockton* Umi. That Delightful Aid to Health IDaxtme I Toilet Antiseptic Whitens the teeth — purifieg mouth and breath — cures nasal catarrh, sore throat, sore eyes, and by direct application cures all inflamed, ulcerated and catarrhal conditions caused by feminine ills. Paxtine possesses extraordinary cleansing, healing and germi cidal qualities unlike anything else. At all druggists. 50 cents LARGE TRIAL PACKAGE FREE The R. Paxton Co., Boston, Hass. ^Thompson’s Eyewater An Apt Pupil. From the New York Weekly. Doctor—"The trouble with you Is that you don’t take enough exercise. Take more." Blinks—"Thanks. How much do I owe you?" Doctijr—"Two dollars. Here Is your change. Much obliged. Helgho! I don't feel very well myself.” Blinks—"You take too much exercise, doctor. Take less. Two dollars, please." Worth Knowing —that Allccck's are the original and only genuine porous plasters; all other so-called porous plasters are Imitations. Forcing Public Opinion. From "The Railroads on Trial" In Mc Clure’s. Having sent out an article to an editor, his paper Is closely watched by the read ers, and when It appears the number In the card-catalogue is checked ih red. A glance at a card, therefore, will Instantly reveal how much and what sort of railroad ar ticles every papers in the country is pub lishing, how railroad Information Is run ning high In one community and low In another—whether a paper Is "good" or "bad" from the standpoint of the rail roads. This card-catalogue Is well named In the office “The Barometer." It Is oertalnly as good an Indicator of the atmosphere of railroad opinion in the country as could possibly be devised. It gives the observer, Indeed, and impression of hopeless perfec tion. What chance have feeble, unor ganized outsiders to make and register public opinion In the face of such a ma chine? Does It get results? Indeed It does. One of the members of the firm told me with pride of the record In Nebraska. In the week ended June 5, last, the newspapers of that state published exactly 212 columns of matter unfavorable to the railroads, and only two columns favorable. Eleven weeks later, after a careful campaign, a week’s record showed that the papers of Nebraska had published 202 columns favor able to the railroads and four unfavorable. A pretty good barometric condition! But the work Is by no means confined to the offices. If an editor Is found to be radically antl-rallroad, as frequently hap pens In the west, an agent goes about among shipping and oomercial organiza tions of the town and stirs up public opin ion against the editor. Now. shippers and business men generally are peculiarly subject to railroad influence or discrimina tion. A very little thing will put them wrong with the railroad. Consequently, when the railroad asks a favor that costs nothing—like the signing of a petition, or the writing of a letter—why, they are In clined to yield and avoid trouble. More over, It Is of familiar knowledge that the politicians In many towns are pro-rallroad. Usually one or more of the prominent law yers are retained by the railroads, and there Is always the local railroad staff to be counfed upon. All these forces are so cunningly mar shaled that the recalcitrant editor Is "smoked out” by his own people. Discouraging the Suitor. The late Daniel Lamont was cele brated for his tact. As private secre tary to President Cleveland and as sec retary of war he was able to refuse more people their dearest wishes with less resulting rancor than any man In the administration. “I learned the lesson early in life,” explained Mr. Lamont. “There was a very poor young man in our town who fell head over heels in love with a farmer’s daughter. He was deadly seri ous about it, and as poor as poor could be. The girl knew something of toll and was wears' of It, but she was fond of the man; her moods left him alter nately elated and depressed. " ‘I am afraid there Is no chance for me,’ he confided to a friend one day. ■In a delicate way she has been dis couraging my attentions to her.' " How Is she doing It?’ “ ‘Oh, very delicately. She told me yesterday that she was a twin, her mother was a twin, and her grand mother was a twin.’ ” All Her Fault. Mr. Wombat—"Loogy yuh, Claud! Dar’s a heap o’ ’scussion gwlne on about de fact dat yo’ hugged Miss Lullabelle Smoot bo hahd at de dance de udder night dat yo’ done broke two of her r!bs. De gan’al opinion am dat dar wasn’t no discrimin atin’ circumstances, and-” Mr. Coopah—“De doose dar wasn’t! Not castln’ any deflections on de lady, dess lemmo ax yo’, as man to man, what kind uh ribs was dem to take to a social func tion, uh?" SICK HEADACHE —1 . »—| Positively cured by A ADIT DC these Little Pills, ynlll Ll\0 They also relieve Die* _ tress from Dyspepsia. In- 1 HHI ITT LE digestion and Too Hearty m IW P n Eating. A perfect rem §j« 1 v H.jrk edy for Dizziness. Nausea. R PILLS. Drowsiness. Bad Taste ~ Jl 10 1,18 Month. Coated j Tongue. Pain In the Side. -- J TORPID LIVER. They ' regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. SMALL PILL SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE. PADTCB'cI Genuine Must Bear j Sfilivf? Fac-SimilB Signature IsffjLJitEFUSEsubstitutes. * p^itive CATARRH i Ely’s Cream Balm i« quickly absorbed. Gives Relief at Once. : It cleanses, soothes! heals and protects | the diseased mem brane. It cures Ca- l tarrh and drives! away a Cold in the L—r > - r sn-r Head quickly. Be-||AV tn/|TR stores ths Senses of VW I tfcl Lll Taste and Smell. Full size 60 cts., at Drug gists or by mail; Trial Size 10 cts. by mail. Ely Brothera,68 Warren Street, New Yori OREGON, WASHINGTON farms for sale. State about wbat you want. Scot tleh-American Farm Lands Co., 4M ©re gonian Bldg., Portland Ore. ^ The Careful Millionaire. Lieutenant Bevan of the Drake described at a dinner In New York an English mil lionaire. "This man,” he said, "never earned a penny In his life. Ho never lacked a penny. Yet he Is as careful of every shill ing as though it was his last. "I once dined with him, and. as It wns raining when I came to go, 1 hesitated a little while before the umbrella rack In the hall. " ‘I hate.' I said, 'to start out in this rain.' "Then I laid my hand on an umbrella. " ‘I don't like, either.' I went on, 'to borrow your umbrella.’ The millionaire siezed up my handsome malaeca walking stick. " 'Oh, take It,’ he said, heartily. 'Take It, my dear follow, and I’ll keep this stick as security.' " COULD NOT KEEP UP. Broken Down, Like Many Another Woman, with Exhausting Kidney Troubles. Mrs. A. Taylor, of Wharton, N. J., says: “I had kidney trouble In Its most painful and severe form, and the torture I went through now seems to have been almost unbearable. I had backache, pains in the side and loins, dizzy spells and hot, feverish head aches. There were bearing down pains, and the kidney secretions passed too frequent ly, and witli a burning sensation. They showed sediment. I became discour aged, weak, languid and depressed, so sick and weak that I could not keep up. As doctors did not cure me, I de cided to try Doan's Kidney Pills, and with such success that my troubles were all gone after using eight boxes, and my strength, ambition and general health Is fine.” Sold by all dealers. 60 cents a box. Foster-Mllburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Wonders Never Cease. Proprietor Patent Medicine—In a hos pital—"My poor friend, I hear you met with a terlble accident on the railroad, near Smith's Crossing.” Patient—"Yes; I was thrown fifty feet, and given up for dead." “So I heard; and, when you regained consciousness, you were gazing on the big rock which contains an advertisement of my stomach bitters." "Yes, sir.” "Well, you have been snatched from the Jaws of death, and I have called for a testimonial.” DR. R. V. PIERCE GETS VERDICT, Jury Vindicate* “FttTortte Prescrip tion'’ from Attack of Ladle** Home Journal. The trial of the first libel suit grow ing out of the attacks on “patent” medicines has resulted In a verdict for the plaintiff. The first case to come to trial was that of the Dr. Pierce com pany against the Ladies’ Home Journal, and the Jury found the Ladies’ Home Journal guilty of libel and fixed $16,000 as the damages It should pay. A mo tion was immediately made by the Dr. Tierce company to have this verdict set aside and the case retried, the grounds being that the verdict was insufficient. This motion is yet to be argued. The article on which the suit was based was printed in the Ladies’ Home Journal, and was to the effect that the Pierce medicines contained alcohol, digitalis and opium. It was shown that they contain none of these drugs, and Mr. Bok admitted, on the stand, that after the article was printed he hnd caused analysis to be made by three chemists and none could find a trace of the drugs mentioned. Occupations for Women. Juliet Wilbor Tompkins In Success Maga zlne. Nearly 5,000,000 women go to work every day In the United States—go to paid work, whether the returns be $2 a week or $10,000 a year. Sixty years ago Harriet Mar tlneau, while visiting America, declared that she found here but seven occupations for women: teaching, needlework, taking boarders, typesetting, employment In cot ton mills, bookbinding, and domestice ser vice. Now there are scarcely seven occu pations closed to them; they are pouring out Into the world of activities, and the 5,000,000 will be six, at thS next counting. Whether or not you or they like the change is wholy unimportant. As someone has suggested, the early eohlppus may have resented changing Into a horse and his neighbors may have greeted his devel opment In the matter of hoofs and legs with acidly critical comment; but. when once started horseward, nothing could stop him; he had to adjust himself to the outer conditions that demanded one concentrat ed toe In the place of five. In the same way woman Is being swept along In a great, vague, irresistible wave of economic change, when she turns her face down town In the early morning. She will pass an alarmist uttering his dismal note on every corner; his warning Is prophetic of lost charm, lost power, and lost position. One declares that presently man will cease altogether to support wom en. If this thing goes on Increasing, and then how about home and mother? The answer to that—not new. but worth re peating—is that man never has supported woman. To support means to provide with the necessaries of life. Who was doing the larger share of this, the man who raised and sheared the sheep, or the man who carded and spun and wove the wool, and cut and sewed the clothes?—the man who shot the bird, or the woman who plucked and cooked it?—the man who pro vided the yarn, or the woman who knit the stockings? It Is a fairly even matter, this "support,” In the days when most of the human needs were worked out un der each Individual roof. In humbler homes, where the necessities are bought Instead of made and yet there Is but one source of money, we often get a picture of a shriveling, careworn father staggering under a weight of strumming, embroidering, spending daughters that make us rejoice in that swelling 6,000,000 at their gainful occupations. How can they do It, these kindly, careless girls; and what will become of them when they have worked their victim to death? Surely some change In a system that allows such uneven burdens need not make us fear a lessening of woman's Intrinsic value; she will have gained In every sense when she becomes ashamed to rest her healthy young weight on overworked shoulders. That by going to work, she competes with man and reduces his earnings Is a prob lem for professional economists to strug gle with; though It has been suggested that, as a producer, she always has com peted with man and reduced his earnings, whether she wove her own clothes or earned them with a typewriter. As early as 600 B. C. artificial eyes were made by the priests of Rome and. Egypt, who practised as physlclua and sm*e<»Mrw_ HAD HEART PAIHS ' A Critical Case of Rheumatism Cure* ! By Dr.Williams’ Pink Pills. Whilo Mr. W. S. Gcisel, of No. 125 j East Coates street, Moberly, Mo., was steadily working at bis trade in a foun dry at that place, he became the victim of an attack of rheumatism, and his ex perience is that of thousands who are compelled to work in similar surround ings. Ho describes his situation as fol lows : “ I had been at work for a long time In a foundry where I was exposed to dampness. First my feet begau to hurt and to swell, then my knees and my shoulder joints began to be affected in the same way. Finally I could not walk without great difficulty and suffering and had to stop work altogether. My appetite was feeble and I grew very pale and weak. I began to have pains about my heart and it fluttered a great deal. I became greatly alarmed about my con dition. My mother knew about the vir tues of Dr.Williams’ Pink Pills, as they had given her back her health when she was nearly wasting to death, and when she found that they wore good for rheu matism too, she began to givo them to me about a month aftor I was attacked. That was in the early part of March, 1903, and by June they had driven away the pains and swelling and lmd restored my appetite and color. Then I felt strong enough to take tip a line of out door work and now, in October, I re gard myself as entirely well and I am about to go into a foundry again nt St. ■Louis." Dr. Williams' Pink Pills also enre other diseases springing from im pure blood or disordered nerves, such as Bciatica, locomotor ataxia, partial paralysis and all forms of weakness in male or female. They may be had at all druggists or directly from tho Dr. Williams Medicine Company, Schenec tady, N. Y. Compensation. From the Washington Star. "Potatoes In Greenland are no larger than marbles,” remarked the person who makes Irrelevant remarks. "Well," answered the man who refusei to ho surprised, "there's compensation In al things. I have no doubt that. In sum mer, the Greenland lee-man leaves much larger lumps than we get." Yon Cau Get Allen’s Foot-Ease FHl!l » Write to-Say to Allen 8. Olmsted, Le Hoy, N. X., for a FREE sample of Allen's Foot Ease, a powder to shake Into your shoes. It cures tired, sweating, hot, swollen, ach ing feet. It makes new or tight shoes easy. A certain cure for Corns and Bunions. All Druggists and Shoe stores sell It. 25c. LINCOLN’S CARELESSNESS. His Hat His Favorite Receptacle for Letters and Papers. From the Century. When Lincoln was postmaster of New Salem he used to tuck the letters Inside his hat and deliver them whenever he happened to meet the persons to whom they were addressed. As this Is a fair example of his business system It may readily be Imagined that the office of Stuart & Lincoln was not a model es tablishment, where there was a place for everything, and everything in its place. And It was not. Indeed, ns1 a managing clerk the junior partner would have been a hopeless failure, and ap an attorney, in the technical sense of the term, he would never have dis tinguished himself. He disliked every thing connected with the drudgery of legal routine, hated drawing the declar ations and pleas, despised the artificial ities and refinements which were even then beginning to creep Into the plead ings, and disregarded forms whenever it was possible to do so. There was nothing mechanical, pre cise or methodical about the man, and In all those housewifely virtues which characterized the careful, orderly, ex act solicitor he was utterly deficient. He never knew where his papers were, and apparently the only attempt he ever made to better the disorder was to write on one of his bundles of papers which littered his desk, "When you can’t find It anywhere else, look in this.” But that was long after the firm of Stuart & Lincoln has dissolved, and even then we find him explaining to a correspondent that he had placed his letter Inside an old hat and had thus neglected answering It, which shows he had not wholly outgrown the habit of his postoffice days. Indeed, his hat continued to be his favorite receptacle for papers as long as he lived, and he never acquired any sense of order. Enthusiasm is contagious In any cause. GRAND TO LIVE. And the hast Laugh Is Always the Best. "Six months ago I would have laugh ed at the idea that there could be any thing better for a table beverage than coffee,” writes an Ohio woman—"now I laugh to know there Is.” “Since childhood 1 drank coffee as freely as any other member of the family. The result was a puny, sickly girl, and as I grew into womanhood l did not gain in health, but was affliet ed with heart trouble, a weak and dis ordered stomach, wrecked nerves and a general breaking down, till last winter at the age of 38 I seemed to be on the verge of consumption. My friends greeted me with ‘How bad you look. What a terrible color'.’ and this was not very comforting. The doctors and patent medicines did me absolutely no good. 1 was thor oughly discouraged. "Then I gave up coffee and com menced Postum Food Conee. At first I didn’t like it, but after a few trials and following the directions exactly, it was grand. It was refreshing and satisfying. In a couple of weeks I no ticed a great change. I became strong er, my brain grew clearer, I was not troubled with forgetfulness as in coffee times, my power of endurance was more than doubled. The heart trouble and indigestion disappeared and my nerves became steady and strong. “I began to take an Interest in tilings about me. Housework and home-mak ing became a pleasure. My friends have marveled at the change and when they Inquire what brought It about, I answer ’Postum Food Coffee, and noth ing else In the world.’ ” Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. There’s a reason. Head the little book, “xh» .u~4 to w«imufc;Jsj>s#» , v. Studying for the Stags. Sarnh Bernhardt In Success Magazine. I wrote, some time hack, that there is no end to the work of studying for the stage, and It Is so. There Is much to learn, and many, many books must be read. The student should read llrst. of course, the dramatists of his own language, then those of other countries. Always he should read with understanding and with the object of learning something. Superficial reading of anything that Is not in Itself superficial Is a waste of time. A dramatic student must study as she reads, must learn the history of every country In order to bo able to portray historical characters with accur acy, and must be conversant with the groat literature of all lands In order fully to understand the thoughts and feelings of those she Impersonates. The wider the knowledge of the woman, the greater the abttlty of the actress. If one has an aptitude for one of the arts or sciences, by all means she should study that art or science. To learn as much as possible of everything should bo the chief aim of a dramatic scholar, for all arts, all professions, all trades, and all conditions of life have their bearing on the I art of acting. There Is no limit to the number and variety of the subjects that may be studied with advantage, and one never reaches a point where constant study ceases to be a necessity. Purposely, I have avoided until now mentioning one thing that Is extremely Important. It Is not a thing that can be studied; It Is not even something that can be denied. In the dramatic profession, however, It counts, possibly, more than In any other occupation. I have refrained from mentioning It until the last because 1 desire to Impress It on my readers. I will put It In this way; The microbe of succesa Is personal mag netism. State of Ohio, City of Toledo. Lucas Coun ty. s*.: Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he la senior partner of the Arm of F. J. Cheney & Co., doing business In the City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that said Arm will nay the turn of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every caae of Ca tarrh that cannot be cured by the uae of Hall’s Catarrh Cure. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed In my Sreaeuce, thla tlth day of December, A. D. BBS. A. W. GLEASON, (Seal.) Notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally, and acta directly on the blood and rnucona surfaces of the system. Send for tpstlmo nlala free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. Sold by all Druggist*. 73c. Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation. Chance to Get Even. From the Chicago News. The F'ricnd—“I can’t understand your method of dealing out Justice. The Judge—"You can’t eh?" The F'rlend—“No. For Instance, why did you give that woman ten years at hard la bor yesterday for assaulting a neighbor?” The Judge—"Because she once gave my wife cooking lessons. That’s the answer." NO REST NIGHT OR DAY. With Irritating Skin Humor—Hair Began to Pall Out—Wonderful Re sult from Cuticura Remedies. “About tbe latter part of July my whole body began to Itch. I did not take much notice of It at first, but It began to get worse all the time, and . then 1 began to get uneasy and tried all kinds of baths and other remedies that were recommended for skin hu mors; but I became worse all the time. My hair began to fall out and my scalp itched all the time. Especially at night. Just as soon as 1 would get In bed and get warm, my whole body would begin to itch, and my finger nails would keep It Irritated, and It was not long before X could not rest night or day. A friend asked me to try the Cuticura Kemedles, and 1 did, and the first application helped rne wonderfully. For about four weeks I would take a hot bath every night and then npply the Cuticura Ointment to my whole body; and 1 kept getting bet ter. and by the time I used four boxes of Cuticura I was entirely cured, ami my hair stopped falling out. D. K. Blankenship, 319 X. Del. St., ludianap olis, Ind. Oct. 27, 1905.” A village of the bronze age has b“en found near Domodossola, Italy. It had apparently been burned. Beautiful vases, bracelets and lance heads have been discovered. For Rent—Several grahi and stock farms. John Mulhall, 306% Pierce street. Telephone 592. Sioux City, la. About 3,500,000 people are on the sea, either as passengers or seamen, every day of the year. A Trite Saying. It Is a trite saying that no man tv stronger than his stomach. Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery strengthens tho stomach—puts it in shape to malts pure, rich blood—helps the liver and Kidneys to expel the poisons from the body and thus cures both liver and kid ney troubles. If you take this natural blood purifier and tonic, you will assist your system In manufacturing each day a pint of rich, red blood, that is invigo rating to the brain and nerves. The weak, nervous, run-down, debilitated condition which so many people suffer from, is usually the effect of poisons in the blood; It is often indicated by pimples or boils appearing on the SKln, tne face becomes tmn and the feelings "blue.1* Dr. Pierce’s "Discovery” cures all blood humors as well as being a tonic that makes one vigorous, strong and forceful. It Is the only medicine put up for sale through druggists for like purposes that contains neither alcohol nor harmful habit-forming drugs, and the only one, every Ingredient of which has the profes sional endorsement of the leading medical writers of this country. Some of these endorsements are published In a little book of extracts from standard medical works and will be sent to any addresa free, on receipt of request therefor by letter or postal card, addressed to Dr. K, V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y.. It tells just what Dr. Pierce’s medicines are made of, The "Words of Praise ” for the several Ingredients of which Dr. Pierce’s medi cines are composed, by leaders In all the several schools of medical practice, and recommending them for the cure of the diseases for which the "Golden Medical; Discovery" Is advised, should have far. more weight with the sick and afflicted 1 than any amount of the so-called "tcstl-j monlals ” so conspicuously flaunted before the public by those who are afraid to let1 the Ingredients of which their medicine* are composed bo known. Bear In mind that tho "Golden Medical Discovery ” ha* tub badge of HONESTY on every bottle wrapper, in a full list of Its Ingredients, i Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets cure con*1 stipatlon, Invigorate the liver and regtw late stomach and bowels. Dr. Pierce’s great thousand-page IHuev trated Common Sense Medical Advise* will be sent free, paper-bound, for 21 one cent stamps, or cloth-bound for 31 stamps. Address Dr. Pierce as above. CUBES CONSTIPATION Relief that comes from the use of pills or other cathartics is better than suffering from the results of constipation, but relief and cure combined may be had at the same price and more promptly, for Lane’s Family Medicine is e cure for constipation, and the headache, backache, sideache and general debility that come from constipation stop when the bowels do their proper work. Sold by all dealers at 350. and 50c. 25Bushels ofWheat to the Acre means a productive capacity In dollars ol> Over $16 Per Acre This on land, which has cost the farmer nothing but the price of tilling It, tells its own story. The Canadian Government give* Absolutely Free to Every Settler 160 Acres of Such Land Lands adjoining can be purchased at from $6 If fio per acre from railr oad and other corporation** Alteady 175.000 FARMERS from the United Staled have made their homes in Canada. For oamphtoi "Twentieth Century Canada" and all information Apply for inform-tion to Superintend ntof Imi« are* lion, Ottawa, Canada, or to E. T. Dolmen, 816 iut-kMie St., St. Paul, Minn.; J. M. MacLnchlan, Box 110 V* uteii Iowa, South Dakota, und W, V. Bennett, Util Ne* Yori Life Building, Omaha, Neb , Authorized Governluen# Agents. Please say where you aaw thia advertisement. BARGAINS IN L\Mt*SZJLnS& Dakota, Nebrnka, Kansss and Texas. Improved and uuim proved. Wilts for prices end lists: give stats. *n«. .-cunt* where you wish to locate. Thomas J. Pugh, Omaha, Nefc GEORGIA colonj’ now forming. fln» lands; homes nearly free. Big returns a* investment. S. S. Colonj. Brazil, N. D. AGENTS—Write for my lCdslwelsa Songster—words and music complete free to all. Handle my reliable goods— easy money—I trust you; established 1SSS— same standard. Don't delay. Robert Uliimer. 1266 Blncoln Ave., Chicago, 111. SIOUX CITY P’T’G CO., 1,136—12, 1906 = ra ^ ; ftONOMUirY SKoes for MeS. A These elegant, stylish and up-to-date ■hoes are made of the finest leather. They are built over "foot form" ■ i lasts that insure a perfect fit and are guaranteed to wear heller than most shoes sold at higher prices. ^R Every piece cf material used is honest. ■Hft rf 'J. he workmanship is perfect; style correct. | They ere built on honor. & 1 Let your neat pair of »hoe» be "RosMtlll.'* Toor \vJjSIl S-i ahoe dealer will supply you. If he refuses write to us. wXtk / See that the name "lls»»rblll" and Waver trademark VN# f appear on the sole. It Is a guaranies gf .utility. / We make the "Western Lady" and lha"Waitn Waahlncton wjft f. MAYER BOOT A SHOE CO.. ijB MILWAUKEE, WIS 1