The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, August 04, 1910, Image 7

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    WANTS HER
LETTER
PUBLISHED
For Benefit of Women who
Suffer from Female Ills
' Minneapolis, Minn.—“I Was a great
Bufferer from female troubles which
caused a weakness
and broken dowh
condition of the
system. I read so
, 1 muchofwhat'Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Veg
etable Compound
had done for other
suffering women I
felt sure it would
help me, and I must
say it did help me
wonderfully. My
1 pains all left me, 1
frew stronger, and within thr€e months
was a perfectly well woman.
“I want this letter made public to
show the benefit Women may derive
from Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound.”—Mrs. John G. Mob® an,
2115 Second St., North, Minneapolis,
Mina.
Thousands of unsolicited and genu
lne testimonials like the above prove
the eflSciency of Lydia E. Pinkhana’a
Vegetable Compound, which is made
exclusively'from roots and herbs.
Women who suffer from those dis
tressing ills peculiar to their sex should
not lose sight of these facts or doubl
the ability of Lydia E. Pinkham’a
Vegetable Compound to restore theii
health.
Ifyou want special advice write
to Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass,
She will treatyourletterasstrictly
confidential. For 20 years she
has been helping sick women in
this way, free of charge. Don’t
hesitate—write at once, -
Tips you get are almost as worth
less as those you give.
Dr. Pierce’s Pellets, small, sugar
coated, easy to take as candy, regulate
pnd invigorate stomach, liver and bow
els and cure constipation.
Quanity Not Quality.
Teacher—Willie, have you whis
pered today without permission?
Willie—Yes, wunst.
Teacher—Johnnie, should Willie
.have said “wunst?”
Johnnie (triumphantly)—No, ma’am,
he should have said twist.
AN INSURANCE EXCEPTION.
“Now,” said the chronic quoter, "a
man is known by the company he
keeps.”
“Say, I’m an insurance policy hold
er! Please don’t class me with the
company I keep.”
Judges’ Wigs.
The wig is only worn by English
barristers to give them a stern judi
cial appearance, and no one can say
that it fails In this respect. The cus
tom was originated by a French
judge in the seventeenth century
when, happening to don a marquis’
wig one day he found it gave him
such a stern and dignified appearance
that he decided to get one for himself
and wear it at all times in court.
This he did, and the result was so
satisfactory from a legal point of
view, that not only judges, but bar
risters, also, took up the custom
throughout Europe.
Hungry
Little
Folks
{ find delightful satisfaction in
a bowl of toothsome
Post
Toasties
When the children want
lunch, this wholesome nour
ishing food is always ready to
serve right from the package
without cooking, and saves
many steps for mother.
Let the youngters have
Post Toasties—superb sum
! mer food.
“The Memory Lingers'*
Postum Cereal Co., Limited.
Battle Creek, Mich.
HI/
A BUNCH OF GOOD STORIES.
Japk’s Bear Story.
From the St, Paul Dispatch.
Senator Boles Penrose, at a dinner at
the Philadelphia stub, said of a move
ment that he opposed:
"It promises incredible things. In fact,
it makes me think of Jack Travers ef Pike
county.
"Jack is an old man now. He remem
bers tie time when bears were as plenti
ful on the barren mountain as rattlers still
are. Once, when I was flsMng at Port
land lake, I asked him If he ever had any
remarkable adventures with bears.
“ 'Well, no, senator,’ said the old man,
as be filled his pipe with cut plug: ‘1 can’t
say as I ever had mueh to do with the
bears hereabouts. Wunst, In my sparkin’
days, me and a bear got together—‘twan’t
nothin’, though.
* ‘It all oome about over old Sukey, our
sow. She had a bad habit of stayin’ out
late at night. Then I’d have to go to the
woods and fetch hetj home ta the milkin’.
" ‘Weil, one dark night when I wanted
ta ga sparkin’, Sukey was late ag’ln, and
It certainly rlz my dander. I started out
after her, casein’ a blue streak, and In
about an hour I heerd her saorln’ and
puffin’ In the thicket.
"I’d missed my girl by that time, and I
was riled clear through. I out a sapplln’
and wont for old Sukey. It was teo dark
to see, but I knew her snuffle, and I
grabbed her by the ear and began to lay
on with my stick just about proper.
" ’The old cow 'showed fight. She
wrestled me around considerable. But I
was mad—mad all over—and I half pushefi
and half drug and half carried her to the
t)arn, and there I tied her up tight and
fast, and I milked her In the dark. After
wards I went to bed.
“ ‘I certainly did have to laugh, though,
when I came down the next morning. (Josh
durned If I hadn’t fetched and milked a
big she bear.’ "
Hat Off There!
“Mark Twain,” says a New York mag
aciBe editor, “liked to tell, as an Illustra
tion of persistence and push, a story about
a Sheepshead Bay race.
.tie said that at the end of an Important
race a young man shouted so savagely
‘Hats off! Hats off these!’ that every one
In hearing distance obeyed him and stood
bareheaded.
“A moment later the young man
hastened toward an elderly gentleman,
shouting as he ran:
" 'You oan put on your hats again,
now! It's all right!’
“Seme one asked him later on why he
had made ail the people take their hats
off.
“ ‘Why,’ he replied. ‘I’d bet fifty with a
bald headed man, and I had to find him,
hadn’t IT*’
A.
Not Any That Night.
The young roan who had taken the de
butante In to dinner was talking art. "Are
you fond of etchings?” he asked.
"As a general thing, yes,” she answered,
looking into his eyes with an engaging
frankness that threatened havoo to his
heart; "but,” she added, hastily, as he
started to say something pretty, "not any
tonight, thank you; It Is rather late. A
small piece of Jelly will be sufflclent.
Cheering Up 'Thuse.
James Whitcomb Riley was going up the
steps of the state house In Indianapolis
one day when he mSt his friend, Warren
G. Sayre. The two had been close friends
for years.
"Good morning, Mr. Riley, said Mr.
Sayre in greeting.
“Why, hello, Warren!” Mr. Riley re
replied. "How are you?"
"Never felt better in my life. You're
looking well.”
I don’t know,” said the poet; "I some
times feel the weight of years, for you
know I’m getting old.”
"Nonsense! nonsense!" Mr. Sayre re
marked with emphasis. “You don’t look
old. In fact, you don’t look a bit older
now than when I first saw you.”
"Perhaps that Is true, but I feel age
coming on. I was Just thinking, as I
came up these steps, about old Methusa
leh. I Imagined I could hear him driving
along the road in his big wagon. He met
an old friend who was sitting on a rail
fence at the side of the road. 'Why,
hello, Thuse!’ Bays the friend. ’How are
you?’
“ ‘Oh, pretty fair for an old man,’ said
the patriarch. ‘But I’m getting along In
years.’
“ 'Oh, bosh, ’Thuse! you don’t look old.
How old are you, Thuse, anyway?’
•’ 'I'm nine hundred and sixty-nine,’ he
answered.
“ 'Well, well, I never would er thought
It! said the friend. ‘Why, ’Thuse, you
don’t look a day over nine hundred and
sixty-eight!’ ”
One Woman Has Her Rights.
Mrs. Kelly and Mrs. Rafferty were ex
changing ideas across the shabby fence
which separated their respective domains.
The conversation turned on the subject of
woman suffrage. “Are ye taking much
stock in this attempt that a lot Iv th’
wimmln are making to get th’ vote f’r us,
Mrs. Rafferty?”
“I ain’t bothering me head about It," de
clared Mrs. Rafferty. ‘Tm satisfied to
let Dinny and th bys do all th’ voting for
me family. But I do think that a lady
shud get a man’s pay.”
“Well,” replied Mrs. Kelly, “all I kin
say Is, Mrs. Rafferty, that I get one man’s
pay, or know the reason why, Ivery Satur
day night.”
Irish Only Dare Tell This One.
Thomas A. Daly, of Philadelphia, the
clover delineator of Italian dialect stories
and poems, although a thorough son of
Erin from tip to tip, put this one over on
one of his fellow countrymen at a recent
banquet of book publishers at the Hotel
"In a hew Jersey city thq Irish, had Of
ganiaed a branch of the Holy Nafiid so
ciety, whose object Is to discourage the
use of profanity and the name of the
Deity In vain. On their patron saint day
they were marching through th® 'Streetq
In the business section of th® city five or
six hundred strong.
" -What'B all this?’ Inquired an awed
spectator of an Irish street sweeper who
had lifted his hat on the comer as the
procession was passing.
’’ ’Them? Why, that's the Catholic Holy
Name society—a dandy folne bunch of
Irishmen—as good as ever walked the cob
blestones.’
’’ 'Gee! I didn't think there was that
many Irishmen In this section of the state.
How did they get here?’
•• 'Ah, go along wld ye, ye heathen!
Didn’t know they were that many here?
Why, this is only the bunch that don’t
swear. You ought to see the other big
mob that do.’ ”
Police Intelligence.
A gentleman one day asked a Dondon
shoeblack who was cleaning his boots if
he ever read the newspapers. The boy
promptly replied. ’’Oh, yes, sir, I reads the
paper."
"What do you read, my lad?" asked
the gentleman.
"Oh,” retorted the boy, “I reads the
House of Commons news, sir.”
A policeman standing near, who had
heard the conversation, strolled up to the
lad when the gentleman had left and said,
‘‘Do you ever read the police Intelligence?”
"Gam. They ain’t got none I" curtly re
■ponded the youth.
Tea Testers Not Tasters
Boston, Mass.—Do you know tea
when you smell It? You do? Mo. you
don’t. Not unless you aro the one Bos
tonian of 10,000. fn other words, there
are some BO men In the city who can
distinguish teaB by the odors, and
these are Boston’s BO tea testers.
Scarcely a taste of tea do they ttvke,
however, and the old term "tea taster,"
Indicative of the older method, Is fast
being ousted by the ftewer title, “tea
expert.” It Is by the sense of smell
alon'e nowadays that the subtle differ
ence between tea that Is fine and tea
that la superfine Is determined.
The olfactory nerves of th'ese 50 or
so experts have been sandpapered—
metaphorically, of course. By their
wonderfully delicate sense of odors
they are able to tell to a fraction of
a penay how much a given brand of
ten Is worth, and they can tell to a
fraction of a penny how much more
or less the tea is worth than another
grown on the same plantation and
Identical, as far as the layman can see
or smell with the first.
Before a round table with revolving
top the tea expert seats himself. In
front of him are packers of tea and a
row of white china cups, the latter all
of a size. Behind them Is a pair of
scales, very small and sensitive to the
leailt touch. Near at hand flames a
gas heater, with a steaming kettle
perched on It.
Stfch are the tea expert’s tools. Here
are his methods. With carrful hand
and calculating eye he measures Into
the scales Just enough tea to turn the
balance—the weight is equal to a sil
ver half dime. He slides It Into the
little white cup and weighs out another
palmful from a second package. Per
haps he dips Into a third. His Idea Is
to compare the unknown tea with one
tea or several the value of which Is
already established.
When the water bolls—and It must
boll hard, not near boll—he fills the
cups, and for two minutes watchee the
leaves unfold and stain the water yel
low. At Just the proper moment he
dips Into the cup with his little silver
spoon, catches a pinch of the grounds,
drains the liqjild off and raises the hot,
fragrant leaves, not to his lips, but to
his nostrils. He sniffs them a second,
drops them back, tries the next cup
and the next, compares them both with
the first—and the test is over.
In those few moments he has been
I 1
HE FELT STRANGE.
“How did you sleep last night?" asked
the proprietor of the Bummer hotel.
"Not a wink!" groaned the guest. "I
was too surprised and shocked. I found
the bed comfortable and I missed my old
friends the mosquitoes!"
Lines Written in Early Spring.
I heard a thousand blended notes.
While In a grove I sat reclined.
In that sweet mood when pleasant
thoughts
Bring sad thoughts to the mind.
To her fair works did Nature link
The human soul that through me ran;
And much It grieved my heart to think
What man has made a man.
Through primrose tufts, In that green
bower,
The periwinkle trailed Its wreaths;
And 'tis my faith that very flower
Enjoys the air it breaths.
The birds around me hopped and played,
Their thoughts I can not measure—
But the least motion which they made,
It seemed a thrill of pleasure.
The building twigs spread out their fan,
To catch the breesy air;
And I must think, do all I can.
That there was pleasure there.
If this belief from heaven be sent.
If such be Nature's holy plan.
Have I not reason to lament
What man has made of man?
1798. —Wordsworth.
Better Part of Valor.
From the Boston Traveler.
Bishop William H. McVlckar, of the
Episcopal diocese of Rhode Island, has
hundreds of Boston friends who will be
Interested In a story they are telling
down In Providence about him. The
bishop Is as big physically as he Is
taentally. On a certain occasion some
years ago he preached a sermon on
the need for missionary work in the
back towns of his state, and especially
pientloned the town of Foster, which
certainly deserved as much as he said
about It.
There are a good many fighters in
Foster, and the worst of the lot an
nounced to all who cared to hear tliat
when he came to Providence he would
ODD AND CURIOUS FACTS
Although agriculture Is the main oc
cupation of Haytl, neither plows nor
epades are used. For 100 years or more
the ground has been tilled by scratch
ing the surface soil with a knife.
There are over 170,000,000 of acres
under wheat cultivation In the world.
About (130,000,000 was received In
premiums by British Are Insurance of
fices In 1909.
Between the years 1879 and 1908 in
clusive, 8,028 new streets and squares
were formed In London.
There are 144,000 boys and 34,000
girls of school age regularly employed
|n England for money.
Thera are now 1,600 societies and
groups for the propagation of Esper
anto situated In all parts of the world.
Members of both houses of represen
tatives In Japan are paid about (1,000
tor each session, with traveling expen
ds.
Although the population of western
Australia Is not 300,000, the govern
ment spends about (260,000 a year In
connection with Its hospitals.
The record attendance at a foot
ball match In the United Kingdom Is
121,542, at the England vs. Scotland
contest of 1908, at Hampden park,
Glasgow.
Switzerland has one postofflee for
every 862 Inhabitants; Germany for
1,696; England, 1,873; Belgium, 5,119;
Austria, 2,965; France, 3,008; Spain,
4,148, and Turkey, 18,316.
Wild dacks are estimated to fly 90
miles an houF; swallows fly rather
faster, and the swift tiles above 200
miles an hour.
Sunday and fixed holidays excepted.
It is estimated that $100,000 worth of
fish Is dally dragged out of the sea by
British fishermen.
Frederick Moore, ex-coxswaln of ths
Scotland lifeboat, who has Just died,
helped to save 150 lives and hud many
narrow escapes from death.
Coffee made of burnt turnips, milk
colored with coal tar and pepper which
Is ground olive stones are three of the
exhibits at a faked food exhibition in
London.
Gelf balls coated in luminous paint
have Just been tried by two members
of the Old Trafford club, Manchester!
In a moonless and cloudy night the ex
periment was made. The balls sbond
bright In the darkness and wore eaoiiy
found. They oan, It Is said, be used la
dry or wet weather, and each ball, ac
cording to the inventor, Is good for
several hours’ play.
An Italian engineer. Signor GabeUtni,
has Invented a process for the building
of ships In artificial stone, and a vessel
of this type Is working with so mgU
success on ths Main at Frankfort that
several more are In course of construc
tion In Italy and Germany. The great
advantage of the system Is that ships
built of reinforced conorete are free
from barnacles. As compared with
ordinary ships, the weight of a vessel
Is less by a fourth.
able to rank the new unknown tea with
absolute accuracy. But he has dona In
a few moments what It requlrad years
to learn. And not only was constant
application necessary, but also a
naturally keen sense of smell and ar»
analytical mint!. Tho work Is c«aet
Ing; it demands astonishing precision;
and persistence. Those are some of tha
reasons why only 50 tea expert's are to
be found In Boston. Within a few
months there will be 51.
All the experts now la the city are
^working for private firms. Soon Bos
ton is to hnve an official expert who
will work for tho government. That is
because Boston Is such an Inveterate
tea drlhker. In tho last two years tho
Importation of tea Into tills port has
doubled. Boston now receives at Its
wharves 4,000.000 pounds annually—1
not a huge amount when compare^
with New York's 45.000,000, but yet
quite a respectable shipment.
The corps of experts In Boston af
present are grading teas for thetr
particular business houses. The United
States expert will test all the toon
brought In here to determine whether
any Is too poor for admittance. When,
Boston obtains her own expert she wttl
be added to the list of American cities
which are regulrtr ports of entry for
tea. Therb are as yet only five ports
In the eountry where tea In large
quantities mdy bo brought In. The
right Is granted to New York—by far
the greatest Importer In tho United,
States—Chicago, Tacoma, San Fran
cisco and St. Paul. So Boston looms
up Ul'etty well, especially considering
tho treatment she gavo this herb at the
memorable tea party.
Theso ports were decided upon by;
tho United States board of tea experts
and It 1b the same board which now
grants an expert to Boston. All tea
things are In the hands of this com
mission. They decide Just how low'
grade a tea can be and still enter tha
eountry, and that Is not very Inferior,
either. They allow tea to he handled
by only a few large ports for the rea
son that It Is easier to control six ex
perts than 600. Before the pure food
law—even away back In 1897—tha
United States board of tea experts,
comprising seven members, was es
tablished. Tea Is thus the only article
of human consumption which has In
the United States a special law to pro
tect the consumer.
make It his business to chastise the
bishop. He didn’t happen to visit the
city until a month or so ago. On his
return he Joined the crowd about the
stove In the village postoffice.
“Well, HI," said one of the gray
beards, “Did ye lick this here Parson
Vickery when ye was down to Provi
dence?”
Hi spat deliberately before he re-'
plied. “Lick him!” he said. “Say, he’s
8 foot tall and 4 feet broad. Lick him?'
I ’saw’ him.”
Nick Will Appreciate This.
Norman E. Mack's National Monthly,
Some months ago, In one of the
many beautiful park spaces In Wash
ington, a statue was erected to thOi
memory of the poet Longfellow. In
late afternoon, while the unveiling!
ceremonies were in progress, two
washerwomen of the colored persua
sion passed along the street, rolllngi
their baby carriages containing the
“wash” of their patrons. As they,
drew near the large crowd of specta
tors, the admirers of the poet's work,
took off their hats and bowed thelrl
heads for a moment, during some part
of the proceedings.
“Hey, whut’s dis?” asked one of the
colored wash ladies.
“Why, dey's a-unveilin’ a statute to
Cunnel Longfellow,” replied her com
panion, with an air of familiarity with
public events.
“Huh, I reckon I'se lgn'ant, but who
Is Cunnel Longfellow?” asked the
first.
“Why, don’t you ’member?” said the
wise one. "Cunnel Longfellow Is de
man whut married Cunnel Rusefelt's
daughter.”
"O, yes,” said the other, “an’ is dat
why dere glbln him a statue?"
Persistent scratching of one’s head Is
not necessarily an Indication of deep
though*.
GAVH HIM AWAY.
Mistress of the House—Brldgetta, |
tnr husband ever attempts to kiss yofll.
Just box bis ears.
Brldgetta—Shure, mum, he's felt t)C|
sting of mg hand more than once, mum
RESTORED TO HEALTH.
Aftsr Suffering With Kidney Disor
der* fer Many Year*.
Mss. John S. Way, 209 S. 8th 8L,
Independence, Kans., says: "For a
number of years I was a victim of
disordered kidneys. My back ached
sage of the kidriSy se
constantly, the pas
cretions was Irregu
lar and my feet and
ankles were badly
swollen. Spots often
appeared before my
eyes and I became
very nervous. After
remedies without re
lief I was completely cured by Doan’s
Kidney Fills. This trems remarkable
when you consider my advanced age.”
Remember the name—Doan’s.
For sale by all dealers. 60 cents a
bez. Foster-MUBum Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
THEY ARE ONE AND A HALF.
' ■ .v
Denham—The paper says that in
Norway married people can travel for
a fare and a half.
Mrs. Benham—Married people aren’t
one, even In Norway, are they?
SCRATCHED SO SHE COULD
NOT SLEEP
"I writ® to tell you how thankful I
am for the wonderful Cutlcura Rem
edies. My little niece had eczema for
fire years and when her mother died
I took care of the child. It was all
over her face and body, also on her
head. She scratched so that she could
not sleep nights. I used Cutlcura
Soap to wash her with and then ap
plied Cutlcura Ointment. I did not
use quite half the Cutlcura Soap and
Ointment, together with Cutlcura Re
solvent, when you could see a change
and they cured her nicely. Now she
Is eleven years old and has never boen j
bothered with eczema since. My
friends think It Is just great the way i
the baby was cured by Cutlcura. I
tend you a picture taken when she was
about 18 months old.
"She was taken with the eczema
when two years old. She was covered
with big sores and her mother had all
the best doctors and tried all kinds of
•alves and medicines without effect [
until we used Cutlcura Remedies. Mrs.
H. Klernan, 663 Quincy St., Brooklyn,
N. Y., Sept. 27, 1909.”
The supply of talk always exceeds
the demand. ‘
Mr*. Winslow’s Soothing: Syrup.
For chi Id run teething, softens the gums, reduces In.
flammaUon.allajr s ouln. cures wind colic. 25c a bottle.
Many a budding genius has devel
oped Into a blooming Idiot.
Make the Liver
Do its Duty
k the fiver b right do
Bgbc
after Eating.
Steal PH, Small Doeo. M Fttee
Genuine mastbeu Signature
P n P P Send postal for
§■ M m Pi Free Package
I II k k *f Paxtlne.
Better asdnore economical
than llqald antiseptics
FOB AIX TOUT USES.
Gives one a sweet breath; clean, whits,
germ-free teeth—antiseptically dean
mouth usd throat—purifies the breath
after ameidng—dispels all disagreeable
perspiration and body odors—much ap
preciated by dainty women. A quick
remedy for sore eyes find catarrh.
A little Paxtme powder db
selved ia a glass of hot water
makes a delightful antiseptic so
lution, possessing extraordinary
cleansing, germicidal and heal
ing power, and absolutely harm
less. Try a Sample. 50c. a
targe boa at druggists or by mail.
THE PAXTON ToiletOO., Bo€TON, Mass.
Millions Say So
When millions of people use for
years a medicine it proves its merit.
People who know CASCARETS1
value buy over a million boxes a
month. It’s the biggest seller be
cause it Is the best bowel and liver
medicine ever made. No matter
what you’re using, just try CAS
CARETS once—you’ll See. uy
CASCARETS 10c. a box for a week’s
treatment, all druggists. Biggest seller
la tbs world. Million boxes a month.
DAISY FLY KILLER Ir'l.U* UMS
Nfat.clran, t-ruann’ft
■ CsSaH^a '»>^v.i >• i.t.cr.ap.
HpWrT \ ^ A11 Hnioa,
Mb itt of iii>-iai.cannot
gpptjl *pi U or u p t>Ttr, will
By *1 not not I or injure any
KFm H|IIII! ("'isisiiMrrti ef»
X ■'Juj u*\E* ’gfelSKtl 'relive. Of*)) dealers
CE-ul » <JTor “«'utVI‘;pJia fo.-iOe*
HAROLD f03ERB
■fiMlkafiso i•«Kuii. A»e.
*1?^* 8Sliiif Brooklyn, New Y*4
STOCKERS & FEEDERS
Choice quality; reds and roans,
white faces or angus bought on
orders. Tens of Thousands to
select from. Satisfaction Guar
anteed. Correspondence Invited.
Come and see for yourself.
National Live Stock Com. Co.
At either
Kansas City, Mo., St. Joseph, Mo., S. Omaha, Neb*
“fiSSSSSSSi Thompson’s Eys Watsr
THE LAST OF THE WORLD’S WHEAT
LANDS, good soil, plenty of rainfall, big yields,
land cheap Stoner's Land Agency, Lewi blown,Mont.
A|TCIITO WntseaR.Coleman,Wasl»
rA I ► K I \ Ingion.D.C. Books free. High*
1 n ■ ■■ ■■ ■ w# eat references. Best results.
SIOUX CITY PTG. CO., NO. 32-191(1
Despair and Despondency
No one but ■ woman can tell the story of the suffering, the
despair, and the despondency endured by women who carry
a daily burden of ill-health and pain because of disorders and
derangements of the delicate and important organs that are
distinctly feasinine. The tortures so bravely endured com.
pletely upset the nerves if long continued.
Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription is a positive cure for
weakness and disease of the feminine organism.
IT MAKES WEAK WOnEN STRONG,
SICK WOMEN WELL. ,
It allays inflammation, heals ulceration and soothes pain.
It tones and builds up the nerves. It fits for wifehood
and motherhood. Honest medicine dealers sell it, and
have nothing to urge upon you as ***just as good.”
It is nen-secret, non-alcoholio and has a record of forty years of cures.
Asa You* Nbicjhboks. They probably know of some of its many cures.
If you want a book that tells all about woman’s diseases, and how to euro
them at home, send 21 one-cent stamps to Dr. Pierce to pay cost of mailing
enly, and he will send you a fret copy of his great thousand-page illustrated
Common Sense Medical Adviser—aevised, up-to date edition, in paper covers,
la handsome cloth-binding, 31 stamps. Address Dr. R.V. Pierce, Buffalo, N.Y.
SAVES YOU MONEY
Use Gal-Va-Nite and save all the money you are spending (or repairs. i
patching, painting and flxing.up your roofs. }
Gal-Va-Nite n n outollle coating of flaked mica that keeps the oils Inside M
end defies tke*weather. It Is pliable and easy to handle. One man can lay It
with a sharp knife and a hammer.
It comes In rolls of 10ft square feet, with nails, cement, and full direc
tions for laying. When laid It is a one-piece roof that will Inst as long as the
building. Samples sent with Free Book which tells ell about roofs. j
UNION ROOFING & MANUFACTURING CO.
200 UNION ROAD ST. PAUL, MINNESOTA
EM
The Rayo Lamp ia a high grade lamp, told at a low price.
There are lamps that soet mure, but there Is no better lamy> mad© at any
price. Constructed of solid brass; nickel plated—easily Kept clean: auk
ornament to any room In any house. There Is nothing known to tbe art
of lamp-making that can add to the value cf tbe RAYO lamp as a llght
glrlng device. Every dealer cveiywhero. If not at yunrf, write fof
descriptive circular to tbe nearest ugency of the
__ STANDARD OIL COMPANY (lacorparc^C