The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, April 19, 1906, Image 7

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    STOP, WOMAN!
AND CONSIDER
THE ALL
IMPORTANT FACT
That in address
trig Mrs. Pink
bara you are con
fiding your private
ills to a woman
a woman whose experi
ence with women’s dis
eases covers a great
many years. I
Mrs. Pinkham is the '
daughter- in - law
Lydia E. Pinkhan
g and lor many years
y under her direction,
- • Ind since her de
cease.she has been
advising sick wo
men free of charge.
Many women v '
suffer in silence and drift along from
bad to worse, knowing full well that
they ought to have immediate assist
ance, but a natural modesty impels
them to shrink from exposing them
selves to the questions and probable
examinations of even their family
physician. It is unnecessary. Without
money or price you can consult a wo
man whose knowledge from actual ex
perience is great.
Mrs. Plnkham’s Standing Invitation.
Women suffering from any form of
female weakness are invited to promptly
communicate with Mrs. Pinkham, at
Lynn, Mass. All letters are received,
opened, read and answered bv women ’
only. A woman can freely talk of her
private illness to a woman; thus has
been established the eternal confidence
between Mrs. Pinkham and the women
of America which has never been
broken. Out of the vast volume of
experience which she has to draw from,
it is more than possible that she has
gained the very knowledge that will
help your case. She asks nothing in
return except your good-will, and her
advice has relieved thousands. Surely
any woman, rich or poor, is very foolish
if she does not take advantage of this
generous offer of assistance.
If you are ill, don't hesitate to get a
bottle of Lydia E. Pinkham’sVegetable
Compound at once, and write Mrs. Pink
ham. Lynn. Mass., for special advice.
When a medicine has been successful
tn restoring to health so many women,
you cannot well say, without trying it,
“ I do not believe it will help me.”
W. L. Douglas
*3= & $3= SHOES men
W. L. Douglas $4.00 Cllt Edge Line
cannot be equalled at any price.
6S
W. L. DOUGLAS MAKES A SELLS MORE
MEN’S $3.60 SHOES THAN ANY OTHER
MANUFACTURER IN THE WORLD.
(1 (1 REWARD to anyone who can
O I U)UUU disprove this statement.
If I could take you into my three large factories
It Brockton, Mass., and show you the infinite
rare with which every pair of shoes is made, you
would realize why W. L. Douglas £3.50 shoes
rost 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. Douglas Strong Msdo Shoos for
Men, $2.60, $2.00. Beys’ School A
Dross Shoos, $2.60, $2.$1.7 6, $1.60
CAUTION. —Insist upon having W.L.Poug
/ns shoos. Take no substitute. None genuine
without his name and price stamped on bottom.
Fast Color Eyelets used ; they will not wear brassy.
Write for Illustrated Catalog.
W. L. DOUGLAS, Drockton, Mass.
That Delightful Aid to Health
•Paxttne
I Toilet Antiseptic
Whitens the teeth — purifies
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
LARGB TRIAL PACKAGE FREB
The R. Paxton Co., Boston, Mass.
»♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦•»♦♦♦♦♦♦
♦ ORDER YOUR TYPE ♦
AND PRINTERS’SUPPLIES ♦
4 From the 4
4 Sioux City Printing Company, 4
4 Western agents for the Amer- 4
4 lean Type Founders company. 4
4 Foundry rates guaranteed. Also 4
4 agents for the Tubbs Manufac- 4
4 turing company and Jaenecke 4
4 Printing Ink company. 4
♦4444444444444444-444444444
44444 4444++4+4-444444444444
4 Western Canada Land Co., 4
+ Head office, 38 Ninth St., Brandon, 4
4 Manitoba. Wheat and Ranch lands ♦
4 improved and prairie, wholesale and 4
4 retail in all parts of Manitoba. Al- 4
4 berta, Saskatchewan and fruit 4
4 lands in British Columbia; home- 4
4 steads located, selections made, cor- 4
respondence solicited. 4
44444444444444444444444444
Western Canada Land Co., head office,
38 Ninth street, Brandon, Manitoba.
Wheat and ranch lands improved and |
prairie, wholesale and retail in all parts of j
Manitoba, Alberta, Saskatchewan and ;
fruit lands in British Columbia; home- \
steads located, selections made, corres- 1
pondence solicited.
incubators and Brooders, built from i
our pattern^ and plans for J3.00. Cata- I
logut* free. Auto. Hen Incubator Co., Box I
308. Omaha, Nebraska.
rir^mpson’sEyeWatsr
FOR THE HOUSEKEEPER.
Ink stains will come out with the salts of
lemon. Rub the salts over the spot after
wetting It slightly with water. Repeat the
process every few minutes, rubbing well
and rinsing in cold water until the marks
have disappeared. Some ink stains are
very obstinate and do not yield as readily
as others.
To bring out the brilliancy of cut glass,
ammonia should bo put in the water in
which it is rinsed.
The dirtiest fryingpan wil become clean
soaked five minutes in ammonia and water.
To take care of silk dresses properly they
should never be brushed, but rubbed with
a soft piece of merino.
An expert trained nurse suggests a slight
stimulant every day for people advanced
in life—60 or 70 years old—and al^o fof
frail persons not so old. She recommends
a tablespoonful of brandy or wine in a
glass of milk, beaten up with an egg and
flavored with nutmeg and sugar.
To clean sponges w'hen very foul wash
them In diluted tartaric acid, rinsing them
afterwards in water; it will make them
very soft and w'hite.
Ammonia is excellent for cleansing hair
brushes. Use about two tablespoonfuls
of ammonia and enough water to cover the
bristles, but not the back. Shake it thor
oughly while it is in the water to loosen
the dirt. Dry it well before using.
Discolored saucepans of enamel can oft
en be made to look like new by boiling a
little chloride of lime in the water with
which they are filled.
It is a fad to have sofa pillows combine
as many shades of one color as possible
without introducing a foreign tone. Var
ious shades of red w’hich hramonize well
are excellent for a couch.
Women who do their own washing,
should when finished, rub their hands with
dry salt. This brings out the soap and
makes the hands more agreeable.
If you have a pot of ferns be sure to give
them plenty of water. A fern that has be
come thoroughly dry once* or twice is
practically ruined; at least it will never
have the same old strength again.
A good polish for a stove is made of one
tablespoonful of powdered alum mixed
with the stove polish. The brilliancy that
this mixture will give to the stove will last,
for a long time.
Some housekeepers put a peeled onion
inside a fowl that is to be kept for any
length of time. This absorbs germs that
would otherwise infect the meat. Sliced
onions or a bag of charcoal placed near
meat of any kind has the same effect.
Sunshine is a powerful treatment for dis
ease. If you aspire to health and happi
ness, you must allow' sunshine to come
into your house.
When making starch for light fabrics,
add one teaspoonful of borax, which not
only keeps the things cleaner, but puts a
nice gloss on them.
Old potatoes are greatly improved by
being soaked in cold water over night, or
at least several hours after peeling. The
water should be changed once or twice.
Whenever vegetables put up in tin cans
are opened and only partly used do not al
low the remainder to stand in the tins, but
turn out into an earthen bowl and put
in a cool place.
EXTRAVAGANCE OF AMERICANS.
In a speech before the St. Paul, Minn.,
Commercial club James J. Hill said: “The
nation at large Is prosperous. We are
cutting a wide swath; there is no doubt of
that. If we get down, however, to a closer
examination, we will readily see that the
nation is living profligately. We are sell
ing out our natural resources—exploiting
them as fast as we can, without building
up industries and trade relations to take
their place when exhausted. Where are
the immigrants rushing to our shores to
end up? Not on the land. We have no
more to offer them. They must crowrd into
the cities.”
Mr. James J. Hill is a competent author
ity to speak upon this subject.
Every article which nature has bestowed
upon this country with such lavish lands
is being wasted. Especially is this true
with reference to the forests, which are
being reduced at a rate w’hich will leave
America, or at least the United States,
bankrupt on timber in two decades, while
neither congress nor any state legislature
are taking any adequate steps to pre
vent it.
The immigration should be checked
speedily. It is true we have no public
lands left which are available for settle
ment, while the cities are growing beyond
the ability of the country to support them.
25 Bushels of Wheat
fo the Acre
means a productive
capacity In dollars of
Over $16 Per Acre
This on land, which has cost the farmei
nothing but the price of tilling it, tells its
own story. The Canadian Government givei
Absolutely Free to Every Settler
160 Acres of Such Land
Landa adjoining can be purchased at from 16 te
lio per acre fiom railroad and other corporationa.
Already 175,000 FARMERS from the United Statei
have made their homes in Canada. For pamphlet
" Twentieth Cealary Canada" and all information
Apply for information to 8nr»arint«nd>nt of Immigr*
tiou, Ottawa. Canada, or to £. T. Holman, 816 Jackson
8t., tit. Paul, Minn.; J. M. MacLtichlun, Box 116 Wntar
town. South Dakota, and W. V. Bannett, 6t)l New York
Li fe Building, Omaha, Neb , Autborixad Govarniuaal l
Agent*.
Please say where yon aaw tide advertisement,
SICK headache!
r—-5—Positively cured by
PADTrOO these Little Pills.
LMrV I Ll\d They also relieve Dio
■—m trees from Dyspepsia. In
I LC digestion and Too Hearty j
F B Eating. A perfect rem- '
I SaH edy for Dtizlness, Nausea, !
Eg LS Drowsiness. Bod Taste
J|§j| * tn the Mouth. Coated
{sSjfeaKfcjgW Tongue, Pain In the Bids, ■
—-i TORPID LIVER. They
regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable.
SMALL PILL SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE.
t
Germany’s Largest Steamship.
From Harper's Weekly.
Germany follows close behind Great
Britain In the construction of trans
atlantic liners, and recently there was
launched at Stettin the largest steam
ship ever built in Germany. It is the
Kaiserin Augusta Victoria for the
Hamburg-American line, and rnj^e
sents the largest developments in that
type of vessel designed for large pas
senger and cargo capacity than for
high speed. Thus in dimensions the
new German liner is inferior to the new
twenty-five knot Ounarder now under
construction, but her tonnage (25,500)
and her displacement (35,500 tons) are
somewhat greater.
Inasmuch us the twin screw engines
are designed for a sea speed of but IT
knots, it has been found necessary to
provide for 17,500 horse power, which
is far less than is required for the high
speed liners. The Kaiserin Augusta
Victoria is 699 feet in length, 77 feet
beam, and 87 feet deep from boat deck
to keel, there being eight decks through
which pass automatic hoists and ele
vators. The dining saloons will be ar
ranged on the restaurant plan, and
meals served a la carte, so that the
passage tickets will be sold. If desired,
independent of the food. There will
also be facilties for exercise and recre
ation, which should be appreciated by
ocean travelers. The new steamer will
really be a large town, having a pop
ulation of 1,849, of which 530 will com
prise the crew, while there will be 532
first class passengers, 301 second, 218
third, and 268 in the steerage.
A PRECARIOUS CONDITION.
Many Women Softer Dally Miseries
and Don’t Know the Henson.
Women who are languid, suffer back
ache and dizzy spells, should read care
fully, the experience of Mrs. Laura Sul
livan, Bluff and
Third Sts., Mar
quette Mich., who
says: *T had back
ache and hearing
down pain, and at
times my limbs
would swell to
twice natural size.
1 could hardly get
up or down stairs,
and often could not get my shoes on.
Beginning to use Doan’s Kidney Pills
I got relief before I had used half n
box, but continued taking them until
cured. The bloating subsided and X
was well again.”
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box;
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
A Bad Error.
It was a typographical error that threat
ened to bring streaks of gray into the
locks of the editor of a newly started
weekly which purported to chronicle the
doing of the smart set of a western city.
In reality, however, It sold out the edi
tion and filled the readers with a desire
to see what would develop In the succeed
ing numbers. The subject of the para
graph was a pink luncheon given by a well
known matron. When the edition was
given to the public it was found that the
opening lines of general eulogy were fol
lowed by the bald statement, "The lunch
eon was punk.”
Trying Out of Debutantes.
From the New York Free Press.
It Is remarked that several clevei
Philadelphia matrons have adopted a
wily scheme in regard to their daugh
ters' entrance into society which proves
the town isn't so slow’ after all. In
stead of having an elaborate tea for
their hopefuls or some similar affair,
the buds in question sort of drift out
with no formal presentation whatever.
If they don't happen to "make good”
in this preliminary campaign they may
try their luck all over again, for their
families then go to the fore, giving
them the biggest coming-out party
their purses can afford. Two fascinat
ing Philadelphia damsels of Cedar
street who have been “out" for the last
two years—one of them having been
reported as being several times en
gaged—will make their formal entrance
into society in a burst of splendor this
fall. There are few signs of the coy
debutante about them, and society is
laughing up its sleeve at the new idea.
Peaches at 60 Cents Each.
From the New York Sun.
Peaches that sell for sixty cents eacl
are now to be had at some of the best
fruiterers’ In the city. They come from
South Africa and are grown In the Druk
ensburg mountains, where lots of the
fighting occurred during the Boer war.
They are handsome in appearance and
according to experts are of a very line
o.uallty. The manager of one of these
stores said that they could sell all they
got without any trouble. The peaches are
shipped to London from South Africa.
Each peach Is carefully packed so as not
to be. bruised in transit. It takes nbout
four weeks to get them here from the
orchards where they are raised. This dis
trict Is said to be one of the best for fruit
growing In the world. "If we could only
say that these were English hothouse
grown we could get a dollar apiece for
them and then would not have sufficient
to supply the demand," was another state
menl of the dealer.
A WOMAN DOCTOR
Wn, Quick to Sec that Coffee PoUoi
Was Uolnar the Mlsehlef.
A lady tells of a bad case of coffee
poisoning and tells it In a way so sim
ple nnd straightforward that literary
skill could not Improve It.
“I had neuralgic headaches for 12
years.” she says, "and have suffered
untold agony. When I first began to
have them 1 welgued 140 pounds, but
they brought me down to 110. 1 went
to many doctors nnd they gave me only
temporary relief. So I suffered on, till
one day In 1904. a woman doctor told
me to drink Postum Food Coffee. She
said 1 looked like 1 was coffee poison
ed.
"So I began to drink Postum ant
I gained 15 ]K)unds 111 the first few
weeks and am still gaining, but not so
fast as at first. My headaches began
to leave me after I had used Postum
about two weeks—long enough I expect
to get the coffee poison out of my sys
tem.
“Now that a few months have passed
since 1 began to use Postum Food Cof
fee, I can gladly say that I never know
what a neuralgic headache is like any
more, and it was nothing hut Postum
that cured me. Before I used Postum
1 never went out alone; I would get
bewildered nnd would not know which
way to turn. Now 1 go alone nail my
head Is clear as a bell. My brain and
nerves are stronger than they have been
for years." Name given by Postum Co.,
Battle Creek, Mich.
There's a reason. Read the little
book. “Tbe Rond to WcIlvUle,” In pkga.
FACTS IN NATURE.
Not Only Do Wo Got Inspiration From
Nature, Ent Health no Well.
For pcoplo who aro run-down and nerv
ous, who suffer from Indigestion or dys
pepsia, headache, biliousness, or torpid
liver, coated tongue with bitter taste in
the morning anti poor appetite, it be
comes necessary to turn to some tonic or
strengthener which will assist Nature
and help them to get on their feet and
fmt the body into its proper condition. It
s becoming more and more apparent that
Nature’s most valuable health-giving
agents aro to be found in forest plants
and roots.
Nearly forty years ago, Dr. R.V. Pierce,
now consulting physician to the Invalids’
Hotel and Surgical Institute, at Buffalo,
N. Y„ discovered that by scientifically
extracting and combining certain medici
nal principles from native roots, taken
from our American forests, he could pro
duce a medicine which was marvelously
efficient in curing cases of blood disorder
and liver and stomach trouble as well as
many other chronic, or lingering ail
ments. This concentrated extract of
Nature’s vitality ho named "Golden Med
ical Discovery.” It purifies tho blood by
putting the stomach and liver Into
healthy condition, thereby helping tho
digestion and assimilation of food which
feeds tho blood. Thereby it cures weak
stomach, indigestion, torpid liver, or bil
iousness, and Kindred derangements.
It you have coated tongue, with bitter
or bad taste in the morning, frequent
headaches, feel weak, easily tired, stitches
or pain In side, back gives out easily ami
aches, belching of gas, constipation, or
Irregular bowels, feel flashes o; heat al
ternating with chilly sensations or kin
dred symptoms, they point to derange
ment of your stomach, liver and kidneys,
which too "Golden Medical Discovery”
will correct more speedily and perma
nently than any other known agent. Con
tains no alcohol or habit-forming drugs.
All Its ingredients primed in plain Eng
lish on wrapper.
Tho solo motive for substitution is to
permit tho dealer to make a little more
profit. He gains; you lose. Accept no sub
stitute for "Golden Medical Discovery.”
Constipation causes and aggravates
many serious diseases. It is thoroughly
curod by Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets.
One a laxative; two or three aro cathartic.
nssmssssn
5 Tablets and powders advertised k
i as cures for sick-headache are gen- K
x erally harmful and they do not cure ?
X but only deaden the pain by potting f
0 the nerves to sleep for a short time #
# through the use of morphine or #
p cocaine. #
| Lane’s Family I
1 Medicine $
X the tonic-laxative, cures sick-head- x
F ache, not merely stops it for an 0
0 hour or two. It removes the cause #
0 of headache and keeps it away. #
0 Sold by all dealers at 25c. and 50c. P
She Knew Her Business.
He had been sweet on her for some time
and one evening he dropped In on his way
home from the office.
‘‘I hope you will excuse me for calling
In my business suit," he said, "but-”
“Oh, that's all right,” interrupted the
fair maid, "that Is, If you mean business."
And the next day a downtown jeweler
separated him from a month's salary In
exchange for the ring.
SKIN ERUPTIONS 35 YEARS.
Sufferad Severely with Eczema All
Over Body—A Thousand Thanks
to Cuticura Remedies.
“For over thirty-five years I was a
severe sufferer from eczema. The
eruption was not confined to any one
place. It was all over my body, limbs,
and even on my head. I am sixty years
old and an old soldier, and have been
examined by the Government Board
over fifteen times, and they said there
was no cure for me. I have taken all
kinds of medicine and have spent large
sums of money for doctors, without
avail. A short time ago I decided to
try the Cuticura Remedies, and nfter
using two cakes of Cuticura Soap, two
boxes of Cuticura Ointment, and two
bottles of Cuticura Resolvent, two
treatments In all, I am now well and
completely cured. A thousand thanks
to Cuticura. I cannot speak too high
ly of the Cuticura Remedies. John T.
Roach, Richmondale, Ross Co., Ohio,
July 17, 1005.”
Luxuries of Girlhood.
An interesting picture of a young girl's
life in the palaces of the very rich is
offered by Emily Harrington in her article,
“Housekeeping on Half-a-Million a Year,1'
in the April Everybody’s. She says:
“The luxuries to which these children,
particularly the young girls, are early
accustomed, are, it seems to an outsider,
of dubious advantage. The fourteen-year
old daughter of such a home remarked one
day, T was looking for a brooch that I
missed and found nine that I had forgotten
all about.’ Every one of these brooches
was studded with gems. This girl’s pri
vate suite of rooms was as luxurious as
those already described, although the ap
pointments were appropriate to her age.
Her sitting room was furnished in white
enamel, covered with roses and morning
glories. Her fireplace fonder and fire-dogs
were of silver, as well as the fire-irons and
the stand. When she chose to take a meal
in her own apartment she indulged her
languor on a brocaded couch, propped up
with embroidered pillows, and as her
youthful appetite was unimpaired, a ser
vant wus detailed to take each course to
her as It was served in the dining room.
And yet she Is still only a schoolgirl, with
no part in her mother’s ceaseless round of
entertainment; her days still innocent of
the delightful complexities, personal and
social, that are ready to enmesh her as
soon as, four years later, she becomes a
debutante.’’
Spring Hats.
The first shapes that are exhibited arc
always rather extreme, and this season
there is no exception to the rule, but the
fiat-crowned hat turned up far enough at
the side to allow' of quite a thick and long
ostrich feather being worn beneath its
brim, and with a wreath of roses around
the crown, does not seem so appalling as it
would were it not placed at just the right
angle. The material of the hat. black
crln, makes it light enough to support the
weight of the wreath of greenish roses
arid the grten and white ostrich feather
better than if a heavy straw were used.
Rough straw will be used for the hats to
be worn with the tailor-made street
gowns, and there is an Infinite variety of
pattern. Colored straws and black will
both be fashionable, while all sorts of col
ors will be combined. In n dark bh e fancy
straw is a most charming thrte-corned
turban, with a full gathered crown of pa It*
mauve taffeta. At the back are three long
ostrich tips so plac'd as to fall over th**
crown. Just exactly the right shades of
mauve and blue are combin'd, and the
hut Is delightfully tmart..
Mr. Aesop as Revised.
From the New York Evening Sun.
Once upon a time a grasshopper and an
ant met on Broadway. They had known
each other in the same town out west.
It was summer. The grasshopper was
going to roof gardens and Coney Island
and everywhere, wearing a picture hat and
a shirt Waist that was peekaboo till you
couldn’t rest.
The ant had on a bonnet that had come
to her through the will of her grand
mother some years before. She was serious
as an honorary pallbearer and busy as a j
boss canvasinan. She carried her lunch
in a paper bag and was walking to save
car fare
"Fly high, little canary, you’re bound to
light some day," said the ant to the grass
hopper. "Winter's coming and yhen I
have? my snug little hall bedroom with its
cheery gas stove and my steady Job at
the broker’s office, where will you be?"
"Never you mind," replied the grass
hopper. "An nee in the hand Is worth
two In the deck," and she climbed Into a
hansom cab with a wine agent.
Thus they parted. So winter came. Just
as the ant had expected. One bitter day,
when the ant was beating the vitals out
of her typewriter, the door opened and in
walked the poor grasshopper, trembling
with the cold.
"You might as w-ell be gone,” said the i
ant. They always talk that was in fables. |
"You remember what 1 told you last |
August, but you wouldn’t listen. I cannot !
help you, foolish one. It takes every cent !
of the $6.50 a week I earn to keep the j
gas stove burning."
"Peace, be still, thou sad-eyed steno
graphic ant!" said the grasshopper. "What
care I for your six-fifty per? 1 draw
seventy-live a week ns chief show girl
with the swellest troupe in town, and I’ve ;
got a drag with the manager that makes j
the prima donna sob aloud. I Just !
dropped In to pick up your boss. He’s 1
going to take me up to the St. Reckless ,
for lunch. That subdued, clicking sound (
without Is simply the chauffeur cranking
up my little forty horse power bubble j
wagon." . I
The moral: WThat’s the use?
To Clean a Carpet on the Floor.
Sweep the carpet thoroughly, then
sprinkle with corn meal or coarse salt
end sweep again. Dissolve n bar of Ivory
Soap in three gallons of water, and with |
a sponge or soft broom, go over the car- !
pet. Rinse in the same way with clear,
warm water Htid let the air pass through
the room until the floor is dry.
ELEANOR It. PARKER.
A Question Unsettled.
From the New York Weekly.
Farmer’s Wife—“What does the weather
Indications In the paper say?’’
Daughter—“Clear and warm.”
“What does the almanac say?”
“Wind and storm."
“Well, It do beat all how these scientists
disagree.’*
For Rent—Several grain ttnd stock
farms. John Mulhall. 306 Pierce street.
Telephone 692, Sioux City, la.
No Wonder.
“Did you hear of the man who got mar
ried and never spoke a wi.rd to hia wife
for fifteen years?’*
“No; why?"
“He didn't like to Interrupt her.’*
State of Ohio, City of Toledo. Lucas Coun
ty, 68.:
Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he Is
senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney
& Co., doing business In the City of To
ledo, Comity and State aforesaid, and that
said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUN
DRED DOLLARS for each and every case
of Catarrh that cannot be cured by the use
of Hall’s Catarrh Cure.
FRANK J. CHENEY.
Sworn to before me and subscribed In my
presence, this Gth dav of December. A. D
1886. A. W. U LEA SON,
(Seal.) Notary Public.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure la taken internally,
and acts directly on the blood and mucous
surfaces of the system. Send for testimo
nials, free. b\ J. CHENEY & CO.,
Toledo, O.
Sold by all Druggists. 73c.
Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation.
A Good Chance.
From the New York Weekly.
Tobacco-Chewing Husband—after as
cending the stairs—“I am all out of
breath."
Wife—"Then kiss me, please.’*
You Can Get Allen’* Foot*Ease FREE.
1 Write to-dav to Allen S. Olmsted, I>e Roy.
N. V., for a FREE sample of Allen's Foot
Rase, a powder to shake Into your shoes.
It cures tired, sweating, hot. swollen, ach
ing feet. It makes new or tight shoes easv.
A certain cure for Corns and Itunlor.s. All
Druggists and Shoe Stores sell It. 2ftc.
1 ■ --
Would Get It. Anyway.
The sick man had called his lawyer. “I
wish to explain again to you," said he,
weakly, "about willing my property."
The attorney held up his hand reassur
ingly. "There, there!" said he, “leave that
all to me."
The sick man sighed resignedly. "I sup
pose I might as well," said he, turning
upon his pillow, “you’ll get It anyway.**
....,... iimumP
FOR NERVOUS PEOPLE
A Michigan Mother Pravvcved to He*
Family by Dr WililMts*
Pink Pills.
When the blood is impervc-fsbed the
nerves starve and neural glace eroie thin#
more serious swiftly follows. Natrons
people are generally pal# pmpfe. By
supplying through the blood data* vital
elements that the nerves need. Dr.Wil
liams’ Pink Pills for Pale Wwflla have
performed those remarkable* cones that
make it impossible for any nervosa suf
ferer to negloct them.
A recent case is that of Mrs. Peter
Morrisset te, of No. 315 Eleventh street,
Alpena, Mich., who writes ss follows:
“ My tronbie started with childbirth.
After one of my children was bona I had
a kind of paralysis. I was very weak
and my mouth was a little croaked. I
was always tired and was n nervous
that I could not bear to hear s dag bark
or a bell ring—even the litth* Wed in its
cage would annoy me. My heart flat
tered a great deal and I had dissy spells.
I was not able to be left alone.
• • My doctor gave me diffemot kinds of
medicine, changing 11 «>*«*■* times.
When it was evil .out that hsenald not
help me he said he did not understand
my case. This was three years ago and
I was very much discouraged.when my
brother, who had taken Dr. Williams’
Pink Pills, recommended them toms. I
tried them and noticed a change for the
better when I was taking ths second box.
Dr. "Williams’ Pink Pills cored ms and I
have been well ever since. I now do all
my own housework, sewing sad wash
ing for seven of us. ”
Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills haws also
cured diseases caused by iropawi or im
poverished blood such a* rheumatism,
aurmnia and after-effects of tbsgrip.
All druggists sell Dr. Williams’ Pink
Pills or the remedy will be mailed, post
paid, on receipt of price, 60 cents per
box, six boxes for $2.60, by tbs Dr. Wil
liams Medicine Co., Schenectady, N. Y.
'v» No doubt you’ll non! * ••
TOWER’S
FISH BRAN0
SUIT or SUCKER
Make no mistake — it%f&r &2n*!
that’s guaranteed tokunpvamdcf
and comfortable In lt» Wdnt
storm. Made in Black or Ye^
low. Sold by ailrefofata irfrikw
A. J. TOWER CO.* /
BOSTON. U.BJL. W%
*0W» OaiTADIAJIC«L.SaA _ M
Toronto, Oul jNk
A Positive
CURE
Ely’s Cream Balm
l> quickly abaorbtd.
Girts R.ll.l at Ones.
It cleanses, soothes
heals and protects
the diseased mem
| brane. It cures Ca
1 tarrh and drives
1 away a Cold in the
Head quickly. Ito
storee the Senses
Taste and Smell,
giete or by mail; Trial Size
lily Brothers, G6
MOTHER CRATS
SWEET POWDERS
FOR CHILDREN,
A.mf "oLJ. STEO. La I
Kant Slip Skirt Fastener—Sin belts,
pins, hooka, claws. No eewtne. Will not
Injure delicate fabrics. Send list VA resi
dent married ladles’ names receive fasten
er fite. A (tents wanted, l>arv» grant*.
Shelton & Co., Denver. Colo.
A Pint Free—Fine .toilet water deliv
ered all applicants for bit pwMskle
manufacturing business. Capital provided.
Men or women. Only one to county, so bo
prompt. W. F. Ott, 43# Eleventh Ave.,
New York City.
SIOUX CITY P’T’G CO, 1,134, 1904
■€£
« IOC.
M 25c.
? myFQ., 4UjS||i ly? v&r