The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, February 20, 1903, Image 7

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    That Cry — “ Oh, My Back!n
The little missionary, Doan’s Kidney Pills, “free trial,”
carries ease, rest, comfort. Most people need kidney
help; they who choose Doan’s get It — help that lasts.
Dteerftm.d. Ind.—“When I sent for
the trial box of Doan's Kidney Pills I bad
been afflicted for two months with pam in
my back so bad that I could not get from
the house to the barn. It was called
rheumatism. I could (jet no relief from
the doctors. I began to improve on taking
the sample and got two boxes at our
druggist's, and, although C8 years of age,
I am almost a new man. I was troubled a
good deal with my water — had to get up
four aud five times a night. That trouble
to over with and once more I can rest the
eight through. My backache Is all gone,
mil I thank you ever ao much for the
wonderful medicine, Doan’s Kidney Pills.”
—J-No. H. Huber, President Ridgeville,
Indiana, State Bank.
Bei.dino, Mich., Jan. 14, 1903.—“I re
vived trial box of Doan’s Kidney Pills.
Tln-y did me lots of good. I can not? go
to bed and lie on my right side — the pain
there is all gone, also the stomach distress
md belching of gas is all stuped, with
the use of two boxes.”—Mrs. E. S. Beem,
It F. D. No. 2, Reading, Mich.
Aching backs are eased. IT ip, back, and
loia pains overcome. Swelling of tha
limbs gnd dropsy signs vanish.
They correct urine with brick dust sedi
ment, nigh colored, pain in passing, drib
bling, frequency, bed wetting. Doan’*
Kidney Pills remove calculi nnd gravel.
Relieve heart palpitation, sleeplessness,
headache, nervousness, dizziness.
FREE. CREATED FOR SICK KIDNEY8.
Please send me by mall, without charge,
! trial box boon's Kidney Pills.
Name......—
Post office
(Cut out coupon on dotted lines and mall to
Vo»ter>aiiiburu Co., BuOsdo, N. Y.)
It Is all well enough to
jailor by his clothes.
judge a
The more you pelt a tanner the bet
ter he seems to like it.
Speaking of clothes, a judge says
that lawsuits become attorneys.
Never confide a secret to a woman
with a pedigree. Blood will tell.
BEAUTY AND PURITY
Ancient and Modern Ideas on the Subject.
Time and Disease the Effacing Agents
of Beauty. What Has Science Done
to Restore the Lily and the Rose?
Socrates called beauty a short-lived
tyranny, Plato a privilege of nature,
Theocritus a delightful prejudice,
Theophrastus a slleut cheat, Carneades
a solitary kingdom. flomer a glorious
gift of nature, Ovid a fuvor of the
gods. Aristotle affirmed that benuty
was better than all the letters of recom
mendation in the world, and yet none
of these distinguished authorities has
left us even a hint of how beauty Is to
be perpetuated, or the ravages of age
and disease defied. Time soon blends
the lily and the rose into the pallor of
age, disease dots the fair face with
cutaneous dlsflgurntions and crimsons
the Koman nose with unsightly flushes,
moth, if not rust, corrupts the glory
of eyes, teeth, and lips yet beautiful by
defacing the complexion, and fills the
sensitive soul with agony unspeakable.
If such be the unhappy condition of
one afflicted with slight skin blemishes,
what must be the feelings of those in
whom torturing humors have for
years run riot, covering the skin with
scales and sores aud chargiug tho
blood with poisonous elements to
becomo a part of the system until
death? It is vain to attempt to por
tray such suffering. Death in many
eases might be considered a blessing.
Tho blood and fluids seem to be im
pregnated with a fiery element which,
when discharged through the pores
upon the surface of the body, inflames
and burns until, in his efforts for relief,
tho patient tears the skin with his
nails, and not until the blood flows
does sufllcieut relief come to cause ldin
to desist.
Thus do complexlonal defects merge
into torturing disease, and piqued vau
lts give place to real suffering. A
little wart ou the nose or cheek grows
to the all-devouring lupus, a patch of
tetter on the palm of the hand or on
the limbs suddenly envelops the body
in its fiery embrace, a bruise on the leg
expands into a gnawing ulcer, which
reaches out its fangs to the sufferer’s
heart In every paroxysm of pain, a
small kernel in the neck multiplies Into
a dozen, which eat away the vitality,
great pearl-like scales crow from little
rash-like inflammations In such abun
dance as to pass credulity; and so on
may we depict the sufferings to which
poor human nature is subject, all of
which involve great mental distress
because of personal disfigurations.
II UierU WCIC lJViU airin' i
disease known, eczema alone Would be
n sufficient lnlllctlon on mankind. It
pervades all classes, and descends Im
partially through generations. While
some are constantly enveloped in It,
others have It confined to small
patches in the ears, on the scalp, on
the breast, on the palms of the hands,
on the limbs, etc., but everywhere its
distinctive featuro Is a small watery
blister, which discharges an acrid
fluid, causing heat, inflammation, and
Intense itching. Ring-worm, tetter,
scalled head, dandruff, belong to this
scaly and Itching order of diseases.
Psoriasis, our modern leprosy, with
its mother-of-pearl scale, situated on
a reddened base, which bleeds upon
the removal of the scale, Is to be
dreaded and avoided, as of old. Im
petigo, barber’s Itch, erysipelas, and a
score of minor disorders make up in
part the catalogue of external diseases
of the skin. Thus far we have made
no allusion to those afflictions which
are manifestly impurities of the blood,
viz.: swelling of the glands of the
throat, ulcers on the neck and limbs,
tumors, abscesses, and mercurial
poisons, with loss of hair, because
the whole list can be comprehended In
the one word scrofula.
It 16 in the treatment of torturing,
disfiguring humors and affections of
the skin, scalp, and blood, with loss of
hair, that the Cuticura remedies have
achieved their greatest success. Orig
inal in composition, scientifically com
pounded, absolutely pure, unchangeable
In any climate, al way s ready, and agree
able to the most delicate and sensitive,
they present to young and old the most
successful curative of modern times.
This will be consldo ed strong language
by those acquainted with the character
and obstinacy of blood and skin humors
but it is justified by innumerable suc
cesses where all the remedies and meth
ods in vogue have fa led to cure, and,
In many cases, to relieve, even.
The Cuticura treatment Is at once
agreeable, speedy, economical, and
comprehensive. Rathe the affected
parts freely with hot water and Cuti
cura soap, to cleanse the stir ace of
crusts and scales, and soften the
thickened cuticle. Dry. without hard
rubbing, and apply Cuticura Ointment
i
to allay itching, Irritation, and Inflam
mation, and soothe and heal, and, lastly,
take Cuticura Resolvent, to cool and
cleanse the blood. This treatment af
fords luftiaut relief, permits rest and
sleep In the severest forms of eczema
and other Itching, burning, nnd scaly
humors, and points to a speedy, perma
nent, and economical cure of tortniing,
disfiguring humors, eczemas, rashes,
and Inflammations, from Infancy to
age, when all other remedies and the
best physicians fail. The remedies con
stituting the Cuticura system will repay
an Individual scrutiny of their remark
able properties.
Cnticura Soap contains in a modified
form the medicinal properties of Cuti
cura Ointment, the great skin cure and
purest and sweetest of emollients, com
bined with the most delicate and re
freshing of flower odors. It purifies
and invigorates tho pores of the skim,
and imparts activity to the oil glands
and tubes, thus furnishing an outlet
for unwholesome matter, which If re
tained would cause pimples, black
heads, rashes, oily, mothy 6kln, and
other complexional disfigurations, as
well as scalp affections and irritations,
falling hair, and baby rashes. Its gen
tle and continuous action on theuntural
lubricators of tho skin keeps the latter
transparent, soft, flexible, and healthy.
Hence its constant use, assisted by an
occasional use of Cuticura Ointment,
realizes the fairest complexion, the
softest, whitest hands, and the most
luxuriant, glossy hair within the do
main of tho most advanced scientific
knowledge to supply.
Cnticura Ointment Is the most suc
cessful external curative for torturing,
disfiguring humors of the skin and
scalp, including loss of hair, in proof
of which a single anointing with It,
preceded by a hot bath with Cuticura
Soap, and followed iu the severer cases
by a full dose of Cuticura Resolvent, is
sufficient to affurd Immediate relief In
the most distressing forms of itching,
burning, and scaly humors, permit rest
and sleep, and point to a speedy care
when all other remedies fail. It is espe
cially so In the treatment of infants
and children, cleansing, soothing, and
healing the most distressing of infan
tile humors, and preserving, purifying,
and beautifying the skin, scalp, and
hair.
Cutleura Ointment possesses, at the
same time, the charm of satisfying
the simple wants of the toilet of all
ages, In carlDg for the skin, scalp,
hair, and hands far more effectually,
agreeably, and economically than the
most expensive of toilet emollients,
■while free from every ingredient of a
doubtful or dangerous character. Its
“One Night Treatment of the Hands,”
or “ Single Treatment of the Hair,” or
use after athletics, cycling, golf, ten
nis, riding, sparring, or any sport, each
in connection with the use of Cutleura
Soap, is sufficient evidence of this.
Of all remedies for the purification
of the blood and clrculatiug fluids, noue
approaches in specific medical action
Cuticura Hesolvent. It neutralizes and
resolves away (hence its name) scroib
lous, inherited, and other humors in
the blood, which give rise to swellings
of the glands, pains in tho bones, aud
torturing, disfiguring eruptions of the
skin and scalp, with loss of hair.
Cuticura Hesolvent extends its puri
fying Influence by means of the pores
to the surface of the skin, allaying
irritation, Inflammation, itching, and
burning, and soothing and healing.
Hence its success in the treatment of
distressing humors of the skin, scalp,
aud blood, with loss of hair, which fail
to be permanently cured by external
remedies alone.
The grandest testimonial that can
be offered Cuticura remedies Is their
world-wide sale, due to the personal
recommendations of those who have
used them. It is difficult to realize the
mighty growth of the business done
under this name. From a small begin
ning in the simplest form, against prej
udice and opposition, against monied
hosts, countless rivals, and trade In
difference, Cuticura remedies have be
come the greatest curatives of their
time, and, in fact, of all time, fo? no
where In the history of medicine is
to be found another approaching them
in popularity and sale. In every clime
and with every people they have met
with the same reception. The confines
of the earth are the only limits to their
growth. They have conquered tho
world.
To the test of popular Judgment all
things mundane must finally come.
The civilized world has rendered Its
verdict in favor of Cuticura.
When a Man is Drunk*
The ancient problem, “When fs a
man drunk?" is a question on which
doctors emphatically disagree. In
Scotland, where the authorities have
some experience of the drunken, a
shibboleth foTins the test. The Glas
gow police extract from the suspect
easy and fluent utterance of the
words, "Shoes and socks shock Su
san." la Kdinburgh the authorities
hold to the ancient "Burgess' fish
sauce shop.” In some parts of Eng
land the man must walk a chalked
line, and other tests include the spok*
en words, "Truly rural," "British con
stitution" and the apotheosis of the
thistle-sifting woman who had "six
sieves of sifted thistles and six sives
of unsifted thistles.”
A Scotch Moor.
Raid Sir Henry Maclean, who, as
commander-in-chief of the Moorish
army, is the sultan's right-hand man
in this present rebellion, ranks high
among the famous Scots who have
wooed fortune with their swords.
Since he Tias been Moorish comman
der-in-chief he has conducted many
brilliant campaigns in the Sahara, and
is the only Christian who has openely
crossed the Giania pass and visited
the sacred tomb of Mulai Ali Shereef,
in the Tafllet district. The regular
army under his command numbers
about 20,000 men, with an irregular
militia of 80,000. His salary is said
to be $35,000 a year, which compares
well with Lord Roberts' $22,500, and
better with his own $035 per annum
as a British lieutenant. He lives in
a magnificent palace at Marakesh.
Shortly thereafter they went into ex
I ecutlve session.—Chicago Post.
Automobiles in the Alps.
Should the experiments in progress
in the neighborhood of Rcrne prove
as successful as is anticipated, trav
elers to Switzerland in the summer
of this year will be able to cross the
mountains by automobile instead of
the usual post diligence. The actual
trials will bo made in the spring, and
the result, if successful, will be not
only to allow travelers to make the
different journeys in half the time,
but to open to automobilists the
1 chance of driving over the mountain
1 roads, which are at present closed to
them on account of the horses.
No More “Brass Band" Hunts.
President Roosevelt intends to en
gage in no more bear hunting until he
lays down the cares of office. So he
told a Wyoming delegation headed by
Representative Mondell recently.
They were asking him to participate
in a grizzly hunt next spring, in the
course of his trip through the west
“Your picture is very alluring,"
said the president as the Wyoming
people described to him the prospects
of big game, “but I have found from
| past experience that hunting bear
with a brass band is barren of re
sults.”
The Fly's Swift Flight.
The common house fly is very rapid
In its flight, but its wings make 800
beats a second, and send it through
the air twenty-five feet, under ordi
nary circumstances, in that space of
time. When the insect Is alarmed, it
has been found that it increases its
rate of speed to over 150 feet per sec
ond. If it could continue such rapid
flight for a mile in a straight line it
would cover that distance in exactly
thirty-three seconds.
Women Doctors in Paris.
How many women doctors practice
in Paris? A statistician has gone
into the question. He finds that while
twenty years ago only seven women
had taken their medical degrees there,
in the face, moreover, of violent op
position, the 3,600 physicians now es
tablished in Paris include fifty-seven
j women. The latter all have busy and
remunerative practices.
All in Danger.
“Gentlemen,” said a Judge address
ing the jury in a recent Irish case re
por in Law Noles, “you have heard
the evidence. The indictment says
the prisoner was arrested for stealing
a pig. The offense seems to be be
coming a common one. The time has
come when it must be put a stop Co;
otherwise, gentlemen, none of you will
be safe."
The man who borrows trouble pays
it bark In liberal installments to his
friends.
Whenever we lift another man’s
i burden we gain more strength to car
ry our own.
If a man always pays cash he is en
titled to a lot more credit than he
i ever gets.
DO TOUR CLOTHES LOOK YELLOW?
Then u*e Defiance 8tarch. It will keep
them white—16 oz. for 10 cents.
Flattery is the subterfuge of those
who want to curry favor and do not
know exactly how to go about it.
Plso'e Cure is the beet medicine we ever need
for all affectione of the throat and lungs.—Wa
O. Endslky, Vanburen, ind., Feb. 10, 1000.
! Many people take a melancholy de
light in viewing all life through green
goggles.
INSIST ON GETTING IT.
Some grocers say they don't keep De
fiance Starch. Thle la because they have
a stock on hand of other brands contaln
| Ing only 12 oz. In a package, which they
1 won't be able to sell first, because De
I tlance contains 16 oz. for the same money.
Do you want 16 oz. Instead of 12 oa.
| for same money? Then buy Defiance
| Starch. Requires no cooking.
A Roman collar and a celrlcal cut
! is not always the trademark of a
Christian.
Many School Children Are Sickly.
Mother Gray’s Sweet Powders for Children,
used by Mother Gray,a nurse in Children’s
Home, New York, break up Colds in 24 hours,
cure Feverishness, Headache, Stomach
Troubles, Teething Disorders and Destroy
Worms.Atall druggists', 25c. Sample mailed
free. Address Allen S. Olmsted, LeRoy, N.Y.
Many a man’s mouth pays no atten
tion to his brain’s closing hours.
As a rule of life, ono finds that the
truth lies somewhere between first Im
pressions and final decisions.
SLANG IN THE WEST
SOME PICTURESQUE EXPRES
SIONS IN GENERAL USE.
Many Have a Queer Sound to the Ear
of the Uninitiated, but the Idea I
Conveyed Is Easily Intelligible—
Hobo Phrases.
“How are' you feeling, old man?”
asked a traveler from the East of an
acquaintance in Kansas City the oth
er day.
“Not very well. I’m all shot to
pieces,” was the reply.
The West is both picturesque and
original in slang. “All shot to pieces”
to indicate that one is below par,
physically, smacks of the untrammel
ed West, is full of local color, and in
a few words tells a good deal.
Another new expression to the
touring Easterner was “good Indian.”
Somebody once said that the only
good Indians were the dead Indians;
but a “good Indian” in its newest
use in the West moans a good fellow.
Westerners use the word “line” a
good deal In a slang sense. “A line of
talk,” for instanre. tells Its own story.
Likewise in the West when one per
son gets ahead of another, either by
action or in conversation, he "beats
him to it.” “To pass him up.” mean
ing to give him up or perhaps have
nothing more to do with him, was
heard a long time in the West before
it was heard hereabouts.
Appropriateness and brevity are
combined to a telling degree in a
Western phrase for those whose hab
it it is to patronize the free lunch.
In Missouri these individuals are
known as the "nosebag bunch.”
But slang in its highest develop
ment is not to be found among respec
table citizens, but in the under world.
Now and then the professional hobos
work, and a man who for three
months is thrown in with a party of
them on a ranch in Wyoming not long
ago made a note of what he consider
ed their most effective expressions.
In supplying slang the hobo is prog
ressive. lie is constantly replenish
ing his vocabulary, and some of his
latest achievements along thi3 line
are appended.
“Say, Jack; go out and boost a
gump, will yer?’’
The requst to “Jack”—"Jack" be
ing the general name used by tramps
in address—to "boost a gump” means
to steal a chicken.
When the professional wanderer
would Beek “nature's sweet restorer,
balmly sleep,” he dues not declare his
intentions quite so poetically. On the
contrary, he says: "Hully gee! I
guess I’ll flemish meself down and
take me flopping's.”
“I’lingin’ along the main stem” is
hoboese for begging along the main
line, and when he has been put off a
train by some unfeeling hrakeman, or
“shack,” and is forced to hoof it for
awhile, he “hits the grit.”
Whatever the hobo likes to eat is a
“tomat.” A “tomat” is almost any
thing good to eat, and a stew, ot the
making of which some of the “bos”
are adepts, is a “mulligan."
“Throw out your goose and take
neckin’s” means to look around, to
.reconnoiter. It is analogous to “rub
bering.”
As the hobo rides a good deal on
trains, it is natural that *e should
,try to get a pass. His "pass" is a
stout stick, eo adjusted to the brake
rod that he can sit on it and be whirl
ed across the country as long as not
detected. The hobo argues that his
“pass” is the most desirable of all
free transportation, since it is "good
on any road.”
There aro various sorts of cripples
in the. domain of the hobo. He who
has a lame leg is a "flat wheel,” and
the hobo with a crippled arm becomes
a “bum mit.”
In trampdora "salve” is butter, a
‘ meg” is a cent, “sand” is sugar, and
“dump” is a lodging-house, a “rod” is
a gun, and so on without limit.
“There are different terms for peni
tentiary among crooks,” said an as
sist prosecuting attorney of a West
ern city the other day, ‘‘but the ex
pression I heard most is ‘big house.’
Crooks refer to a pawnshop is a ‘vil
lage’ and a handkerchief as a ‘snarl
ing,’ but what struck mo most forcibly
of their peculiarities of conversation
is the way they express their bravado
when sentenced to the pen. ‘Why, 1
can stand on my head that long,’ Is
the common way of proclaiming their
indifference to the length of their sen
tence.”
Spider Fancies.
An elderly lady who lives in her own
house at Buttes Chaumont, Paris, and
who is the daughter of one of the func
tionaries under the late empire, has
discovered that spiders are peculiarly
appreciative of music. She has made
great pets of them, and the house is
full of spiders of all kinds, on whom
she spends her time and fortune.
Her proteges are lodged in a large,
airy room, where she has provided!
every necessary support for their dif
ferent webs. Her great favorites are
Immense black spiders, which, with
their hairy legs and great bodies, look
very repulsive to others.
When she is inclined to show off
their capabilities for music she sur
rounds herself with a circle of water
to keep off their too delicate attentions
and plays slowly, softly and in a minor
key on the harp. From all corners of
the room the spiders run toward her,
.istening with evident pleasure; but
should she strike up a noisy, gay, in
aarmonious strain they scamper back
to their holes as though disgusted.
A curious fact in connection with
this story is that the lady bears tha
jirthmark of a spider.
Where Birds FI).
Interesting facts as 10 the flight of
birds have resulted from a long series
of observation!), whose general ,rc«
suits have recently been published.
An eagle was observed Ly liergesseil.
of Flrasburg, to fly at a height of
9.000 feet. A ler'.c was detected at
an altitude of 1.000 feet. Aeronauts
have encountered crows as high as
4.200 feet from the earth. These,
however, are exceptional altitudes for
bids to attain. As a rule. 1,300 feet
seems to be the limit. The German
Ornithological society has been con
ducting experiments with pigeons,
and finds that when liberated at a
height of 0,000 feet down to a3 little
as 2,700 feet they drop rapidly to a
much lower region of the atmosphere.
No chromos or cneap premiums, out
a better quality and one-third more of
Defiance Starch for the same price of
other starches.
Love, like genius, is not an integral
part of character; it is a gift, an in
spiration, direct from heaven.
H AIIAMII It.tlLHUSD
—SELL—
MOBILE and rriuro,.
MCW OltLKASS and return. - • • ■ 4 ,n ad j
ilAVAMA CL'IIA, uuu return, - - *S3.SS [
Tlie above »pedal ralm sad many other* with
lou* itiulla and atop-otcr* <>u tale Ecu. 17lh i»
sons tnclu»lts All Information at Wabaah City
union, ldta Fmnain St., ot adarent,
HARItV K. MOORES.
Gan. Agt. Pam Dept. Omaha, Nebr.
A present suitor hath ever the trump
to play against the absent lover.
READ THIS!
lira. Richards ,V VittiCampof 1404 Famnm St..
Omaha, Neb., treat Catarrh ami Guarantee aenre.
The doctor* are old e*t»btt*b*d and reliable phy
nlclatia of Omaha. Write them a atamment of
your case anil valuable Information will be *enl
you free. Eor Catarrh of the no*e, throat and
loner* they will Rend you--one month'* treatment
--Inhaler anil Constitutional Treatment on re
ceipt of ono dollar by postal order, draft or
express money order.
We despise the dealer who Is hoard
ing coal—but we envy hirn.
Perfectly simple and simply perfect
Is dyeing with PUTNAM FADELESS
DYES.
The whistling girl thrown stones at
the crowing hen.
To Cure n ('old In One <lny.
Tnke Lnxtttive Bromo Quinine Tnblein. All
druggists refund money if it fail* to cure. 26a
To win a woman’s love is often a
hot Scotch for a man. The reaction a
fizz thoroughly frappe.
Them is more Catarrh in this tiertlon of the
couutry than all other diseases put together,
and until the last few years was supposed to be
incurable. For a groat, many years doctors pro
nounced It a local disease, uml prescribed local
remedies, and by constantly fulling to cure
with local treatment, pronounced it Incurable.
Science bus-proven catarrh to tie n constitu
tional disease, and therefore requires consti
tutional treatment Hall's Catarrh Cure, man
ufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co.. Toledo Ohio,
Is the only constitutional euro on the market. |
It Is taken Internally in doses from ill drops to
n teaspoonful. It ads directly upon the blood
and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer
one hundred dollars for any ease it falls tocurn.
Send for clrculnrsnnd testimonials. Address
F. J. CHKNKY & CO., Toledo, Ohio.
Sold bv Druggists. T.V.
Hall s Family Fills are the best
Experience hardens soft characters
and softens hard characters.
MORE VXKXIlir.E AND I.ANTINO,
won’t shake out or blow out; by ustr>s
Defiance starch you obtain better results
than possible with any other brand and
one-third more for same money.
Sunshine paints fruits and flowers,
as happiness glorifies a face.
Mrs. Wlnftlowt pmottiinq; Bymp.
For children teething, softens the icums, reduces lu
flazmusiiou.alluyH }i*iu, cure.* wind colic. 23c u bo it la.
A genius should be kept in a glass
case as ainodel for Inventors.
Lewis’ "Single Binder" straight 5c
cigar. The highest, price 5c cigar to thq
dealer and the big nest quality for the
smoker. Always reliable.
Never bother about what other peo
pie say or do, but be careful that you
do not do worse.
Try One Package.
If “Defiance Starcn ' does not please
you. return it to your dealer. If it
does, you get one-third more for the
same money. It will give you satis
faction and will not stick to the Iron.
The man who smiles and smiles Is
liable to see snakes if he docs not quit.
In Winter Use Allen’s Foot-Eaa#.
A powder. Your feet feel uncom
fortable, nervous and often cold and
damp. If you have sweating, sore feet
or tight shoes, try Allen's Foot-Ease.
Sold by all druggists and shoe stores,
25 cents. Sample sent free. Address
Allen S. Olmsted. Lc Roy, N. Y.
Many people fail. Why? Because
they don't try.
If you wish beautiful, clear, white clothes
use Rod Cross Bull Blue. Large '& ox.
package, 5 cents.
Gold and silver may not rhyme, but
they jingle very well together.
How an abscess in the Fallo
pian Tubes of Mrs. Hollinger
was removed without a surgical
operation.
“1 had an abscess in my side in
the fallopian tube (the fallopian
tube is a connection of the ovaries),
t suffered untold misery and was
so weak I could scarcely get around.
The sharp burning pains low down
in my side were terrible. My physi
cian said there was no help for me
unless I would go to the hospital
and be operated on. I thought
before that I would try Lydia E.
Pinkhnm’s Vegetable Compound
which, fortunately, I did, and it has
made mo a stout, healthy woman*
My advice to all women who suffer
with any kind of female trouble is
to commence taking Lydia E.
Pink ham's Vegetable Compound
at once.” —Mns. In a S. Hollinger,
Stilvideo, Ohio.— $5000 forfeit If original of
above letter proving genuineness cannot be produced*
It would seem by this state
ment that women would save
time and much sickness if they
would get Lydia E. Pinkham'S
Vegetable Compound at once,
ana also write to Mrs. Pinkbam
at Lynn. Mass., for special ad
vice. It is free and always helps*
No other person ran give such
helpful advice as Mrs. Plnkham
to women w ho are sick.
"SE'SlTu.S} Thompson's £yi Wattf
nonnev mew discovery! «itm
1 quirk relief mil cnrcaworel
w.oi). Book of teatlmonlal* atn1 10 DAYS' treatment
L'RKX. Dr.H.H.QLEJiW b BOSS.Bo* H,Atlanta,Ob
DAtTI rr P V I »»nt Y°nr ponltry. bat.
lwljl.il It I f’r. ruga. veal, liUla*. eta.
Quirk return, and the blabeel price* ih,t location,
fnelllUe. anil experience ran give. Write for tan*
and prices. HO II Kil l HI KVIB,
KainOlUhcA IH70 Oinnhie. Nek.
AAWMWIftAAilWWWMWWMWMUyb
POTATOES*^
IiUrgi st frowi'rse^Md Polatocsln America.
The"l»uriii Nvw Vorkrr"*1»«SsUer’iKsr» I
Iv VVU«"onwin m >lcl*l of 7-Sw Ini. prr*. l*rloee
dirt < bt’up. Mummothsced b«ok «n J»nni|»lcof
Tt'o«lnlr,H|irlt^ Macaroni IV brat, i>8bu. per <
m.o (Hunt Clover, etc .ujioti receipt of lOo postage. i
JOLIN A. NAUFJtaP.I'DfO. UCroMS, Wll. i
wwvwvwmvmwwvw
EiT I asi mu a so TPTanT. ~
R'r I hereby bepieath iny hldo to the Edes
nwk’Rtihe Tanning Co., to be tanned with the ^
W'\ 1mlr on, sad made Into a r >bo or coat, }
and returned to my boreevod owner, ij
1 hevcj only one hide l am very ijyl
VV particular olwut It, end insist thatir
no jo but the said firm to allowed A.
I to do this work to
[They have tbo Jarg- w
etitund (test equipped
factory «nd are the j
i Dim t capable of
* tanning uty hide
t*> suit me.
Ask yojf
dealer for
Lilf". Holies usd
Cont*.
Write bslay for
custom price li
f.rte* llobe TniimIbc
Co., Puhuqae.lo
Fur Drersers. Fur
L>y«rt, Furriers
_ mj HJI.Ji MJLMJLJUI ■ MMX
creek DApFa^^r
. /&2>ir _»ner TON .
Creatsot, Cheapest Pood
on Earth for Sheep, Swine,
Cattle, etc.
Will t* wi'ri*i (100 to too turraA whit
Salter a oaulej M?t BlKiufrap*.
Billion Dollar Crass
I will positively rcaft® you rich; 13 too*
ef ha/ umI lots of pasture per sere, so
al*o Crmnus, Peanut, SpelU.M scares!
wheat Terr wid, hot soils, 63 bus. per
sere. 2 >th Century Oats, ijO bus. p*T
w re an 1 Teotl? '.e, Yield* 100 tou*
Urccu Fodder |x r nr re.
Forthls Notice oncl 10o._
we mail big entail end Id Farm Bred
Hoveltiee, ii«ly worth $10 to gets start.
p.lflHN A.MLZER SEEP “wSrFfl
P>nrr “TO WOMEN
H it EL EL To prove the healing
■ ■■ “B “■ and cleansing power of
Pa.xtir\e Toilet Antiseptic
we will mail large trial treatment with
book of instructions absolutely free.
This is not a tiny sample, but a large
package, enough to convince any one
that it is the most successful prepara'
tion known to medicine as a cleansing
vaginal douche and for the local treat*
m ent of woman's special ills, curing di»
charges and all inflammation, also to
cleanse the teeth, mouth, and cure ca*
tarrh. Send today; a postal will do.
Sold hydrneifliUoriieii! postpaid by ns. SO
cent# large box. Satisfaction guaranteed.
THE K. PAXTON CO., Bolton, Mall,
a 14 Coluinbui Ave.
Constipation Makes
B&d Blood.
HULL'S GRAPE TONIC CURES CONSTIPATION
Constipation is the rotting and decaying of undigested food
In the alimentary canal. Disease germs aviso from this fester
1TJ£ IIUUHJ, WillCU liUVl UiC-ll *» vuw
Llood. The blood becomes impure and
shortly the entire System gives way to
the unhealthy condition.
You cannot cure a case like this by
\ taking pills or other common cathartics.
I A laxative will not do. A blood medi
cine is ineffective. Mull’s Grape Tonic
is a gentle and mild laxative in addition
to being a blood-making and strength
giving tonic which immediately builds
up the wasted body and makes rich, red
blood that carries its health-giving
strength to every tissue at every heart
Mull’s Grape Tonic is made of pure
crushed fruit juices and is 6old under a
positive guarantee.
Uoctors prescribe it AH druggists sell it at M cents a bottle.
Send ICc to Ujbtnb* Mcdklae Co., Cock, file Jd, IIU to cover po»t**e on larjo umpla bottk.