The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, August 25, 1904, Image 7

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    ACHED IN EVERY BONE.
Chicago Society Woman Who Was Si
Sick She Could Not Sleep or Eat,
Cured by Doan’s Kidney Pills.
Marion
Knight, of 83
N. A s h 1 a nc
Are., Chicago,
Orator of the
Wert Side
W e fl nesday
Club, says:
“This wintex
when I start
ed to use
Doan’s Kid.
ney Pills 1
ached in every
bone and had
intease pain:
in the kidneys and pelvic organs. The
urine was thick and cloudy and 1
could barely eat enough to live. 1
felt a change for the better within a
week. The second week I began
eating heartily. I began to improve
generally and before seven weeks hao
passed I was well. I had spent hun
dreds of dollars for medicine that did
not halp me, but 16 worth of Doan's
Kidney Pills restored me to perfect
health.”
A TRIAL FREE—Address Foster
Milfcurn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. For sale
b. all dealers. Price 50c.
Steam Turbine for Pumps.
The steam turbine principle ba>
been adapted to a centrifugal high
pressure pump. The ac.lon is re
versed, however the waier entering
at what would be the exhaust end,
gradually accelerating as it passes
through the several fixe 1 and mova
ble vanes, until It acc dres a high
velocity at what would ordinarily bo
the outlet end.
The Tailor Took Hi» Measure.
"I was getting measured for a suit
of clothes this mawning,” said young
Mr. Sissy to his pretty cousin, “and
just for a Joke, y’know, I awsked
Snipem if it weally took nine tailors
to make a man. He said it would
take more than nine tailors to make
a man of some people. I thought it
was quite clevah.”—Exchange.
Onions for Insomnia.
Onions are recommended as a good
thing for insomnia. A favorite dish
in England is one of the oig sweet
Spanish snions cooked In milk. Cel
try may also be used in the same way,
stewed in milk. It is good for the
nerves, and consequently for sleep
lessness.
Voice From Arkansas.
Cleveland. Ark., August 15 (Spe
cial).—Nearly every newspaper tells
of some wonderful cure of some form
of Kidney Disease by the Great
American Remedy, Dodd’s Kidney
Pills, and this part of Arkansas is
not without its share of evidence that
no case is too deeply rooted foi
L jdd’s Kidney Pills to cure.
Mr. A. E. Carlile, well known and
highly respected here, tells of his
cure after nearly a quarter of a cen
tury’s suffering. Mr. Carlile says:
“I want to let the public know
what I thick of Dodd’s Kidney Pills.
I think they are the best remedy for
sick kidneys ever made.
“I had Kidney Trouble for 23 years
and never found anything that did me
so much good as Dodd's Kidney Pills.
I recommend them to all sufferers.”
There is no uncertain sound about
Mr. Carlilo’s statement. He knows
that Dodd's Kidney Pills rescued him
trom a life of suffering and he want3
the public to know it. Dodd’s Kidney
Pills cure all Kidney ills from Back
ache to Bright’s Disease.
A widow is usually more particular
about the choice of a second husband
than she was about the first.
FREE TO TWENTY-FIVE LADIES.
The Defiance Starch Co. will give
25 ladies a rcund-trp ticket to the St.
Louis exposition to five ladies in
each of the following states: Illinois,
Iowa, Nebraska, Kansas and Missou
ri who will send in the largest number
of trade marks cut from a 10-cent. 16
ounce package of Defiance oold water
laundry starch. This means from your
own home, anywhere in the above
aamed states. These trade marks must
be mailed to and received by the De
fiance Starch Co.. Omaha, Neb., before
September 1st, 1904. October and No
vember will be the best months to
visit the exposition. Remember that
Defiance is the only starch put up 16
oz. (a full pound) to the package.
You get one-third more starch for the
same money than of any other kind,
and Defiance never sticks to the iron.
The tickets to the exposition will be
sent by registered mail September 5th.
Starch for sale by all dealers.
‘When swimming with the current
look out for the falls.”
Loss Than Half to SL Louis and Re
turn via Wabash R. R.
Tickets sold Tuesdays and Thur:«
days in August; rate from Omaha
$8.50. Dally round-trip rate $13.80.
Correspondingly low rates from your
station.
The Wabash is the ONLY line land
ing all passengers at its own station
V
*
[
main entrance World’s Fair grounds,
thus saving time, annoyance and extra
car fare. All World's Fair maps show
Wabash station, main entrance. For
all information address Harry E.
Moores, G. A. P. D. Wab. R. R.,- Oma
ha, Neb.
A safe secret is a confidential let
ter—unwritten.
The Best Results In Starching
can he obtained only by using De
fiance Starch, besides getting 4 oz
more few the same money—no cooking
required.
-- i. ..
By means of a heavy sole we can
give all men a slight raise.
Important to Methers.
carefully every bottle of CASTORIA,
a safe and rare remedy for infants and children,
and aee that it
Rears the
Signature of
Za Use For Over 30 Tears.
He Sind Ton Have Always Bought
When a* bride’s mother weeps it
may bfe Because her daughter didn’t
marry a, man with less beauty and
mortf moniy.
Wild Flowers. '
Scarce known by name, they dot the
ground
With motley colors, starry forms.
In them the sunset skies are found
That follow after storms;
And blurs of crimson, blue and gold.
Their graceful chalices unfold.
While 'mid the dead leaves pile and
pent
Humbly they live and die eontent.
Huge oaks above them lift their heads
And drop the acorn, shed the leaf:
The harvest held far round them sheds
Plenty in many a sheaf.
And they, half fragrant, brighten earth.
| Low in the shadows where there's
dearth
Of pain or pleasure, love or life.
Far from the world’s mad, ceaseless ,
strife.
They speak no message, act no part,
j They have no works to show;
! Deep hidden here they touch no heart,
| And do not ask to know;
j ^ et if one meet the eye of man
j It all unfolds the master plan—
The power that * painted this fair
bloom.
For man can have no futile doom.
—Charles W. Stevenson, in New York
Observer.
Secret of a Water Light.
If you were to announce some even
. mg that you could stick a lighted
! candle into a glass of water until it
was submerged almost up to the
wick, and that the candle would not
yi
i
The Candle in the Glass.
go out, but would burn down to the
‘ very end of its wick instead, wouldn’t
everybody laugh at you?
Get a candle; drive h very small
nail into the bottom end. The candle
should be about three inches long.
Fill a glass with water; light the can
dle and stick it into the glass. The
candle floats and the nail weighs
clown the end, which results in the
candle floating perpendicularly, as
I shown in the illustration.
But what is to prevent it from burn
j ing down to the surface of the water
and going out?
That is the secret of the trick, and
not one person in a hundred would
think of the true cause, which is very
simple and natural.
The candle loses its weight as it
burns; the remaining portion, growing
lighter, keeps rising to the top, pull
; ing the nail up with it; the water
maintains the same distance from the
wick it had in the beginning of the ex
periment, and the candle burns mer
rily away until it reaches the end of
' its wick, w’hen there will still be
! enough tallow left to support the nail
—if it is small enough—and then it
is your turn to laugh.
The City of Silence.
Ancient Greece, hundreds of years
ago, was divided into several inde
pendent states. One of these was
Sparta and the men of Sparta were
wonderfully strong and brave, and so
warlike that all the neighboring cities i
2nd states were much in fear of these
fierce men, who fought for the love of
fighting.
Now, about twenty miles south of
Sparta there was another city, called
Amvclae, which was still free, ak
^hcugh constantly in dread of being
captured by its northern nefghbors.
i There were constant reports that the
Spartans were coming, and the peo
ple were in such an excitement every
time these false reports were spread |
i that at last the leading Amyclaeans !
passed a law forbidding any one to ;
mention Sparta by name on pain of
death.
But at last the Spartans did come,
and, although some of the Amyclae
i ans heard of their approach, they
! were afraid to give warning to their
friends, for fear of the punishment
threatened.
So the Spartans attacked the city,
which was, of course, not in a state
of defense, and it was taken and the
people made captives to their ene
| mies.
That was a time when strict obedi
ence to a lawT caused dire results,
was it not?
—
Tiny Man Whose Pluck Won.
Everybody cannot be big and strong
and handsome, or even smart, but al
most anybody can try to get ahead in
some way, even if he is homely and
freckled and awkward. Once there
was a little bit of a dried-up boy who
lived down southeast somewhere, in
Georgia, I think, and everybody but bis
mother said he never ■would be of any
account. His folks were very poor,
and so if he had not been too sickly
and too little to earn anything out at
work he might never have got a
chance to go to school. But he went
to school and kept getting older,
though his head was about all of him
that got any larger. Finally he fin
ished school and graduated from col
lege and tt« day he was 21 he said to
his mother: “I’m a man now and I
must look after you.” And she said:
“Yes, Alexander, you are a man at
last,” but he only weighed ninety
pounds, after all.
Pretty soon that little dried-up, sick
: ly man said he wanted to go to con
gress, where nearly all the great men
of the country used to go, sooner or
later, in those days. “Why, sonny,”
said one of Alexander’s friends, “how
can you all go to congress? You
ain’t much bigger nor a jackdaw!”
“Why don’t you send Kane Free
man’s big hog if you want size? He
weighs 400 pounds!” Eaid the little
dried-up man.
Then everybody laughed. Then they
stopped to ihink. And ever after that
Alexander kept people laughing or
thinking. He went to congress and
became the greatest man in his state.
He served in congress years and
years, and was governor of Georgia
when he died. His full name was
Alexander H. Stephens, and he was a
wonderful orator.
Don’t give up because you are little
or ugly or dull or weak, because you
never can tell—you never can tell
what will happen when you do your
best.
Novel Fishermen.
The boys who live near a body of
water containing perch, bullheads or
catfish can make large catches by
means of simple devices.
An old jug, well stoppered, makes
an excellent assistant. After empty
ing the jug, and corking it securely,
take it to the place where you want
to fish, and, making a line fas*, bait
your hook and carefully lower the
jug in the water.
A tempting worm on a hook below
a jug is liable to result in a bite, and
then the jug commences to bob about
in an amazing manner. If the fish is
large it may tow the jug around the
water for awhile, but a heavy jug
will soon tire out even a big fish, and
then you can haul in the captive.
If jugs are not obtainable, large
bottles are effective, although they do
not offer the resistance the heavy jug
does, and, unless dark-colored, are
hard to see on the water.
Which Eye Is Stronger?
Here is a little test for your eyes
that °rill soon show you whien cf
then: is tlie stronger. Plae? an object
about two inches in diameter on a
level with your eyes and move lack
from it tbovt ten fee*. Then point
to it and take sight along th° top of
your pointing finder until the object
an 3 the tip of a cur finger are exactly
in a line with the eye from which yon
are sighting. Next open the other eye
and see it the object seems to have
moved from the straight line. It it
has not moved to one side, apparent
ly, the eye with w'hich you first looked
is the stronger, as the addition of
the other's vision does not change the
focus. If the object seems to have
moved it proves that the other eye
is the stronger, the difference b^ing
measured by the distance that the ob
ject appears to have moved.
Try sighting with both eyes open
first. Then lcok with first cr.e eye
and then the other and see how far
out of line each makes the object ap
pear. The one that is farthest out of
line is the weaker eye.
Story of the Wood Told.
A boy was sitting near the stove
watching the fire burn. All at once
he fancied that he heard a voice
speak to him and he thought it was
a piece of wood. The wood said:
“Cnee upon a time I was a seed that
had fallen off a tree. I lay on the
ground for a week. Then some clouds
spread over the sky and it began to
snow. The snow covered me and 1
lay on the ground all winter in the
warm snow. When spring came I be
gan to grow. I grew until I was fif
teen years old. One day a woodcutter
came along and cut me down. He
put me into a wagon and rode down
to the woodyard. I lay in the wood
yard about a month and then your
father came and carried me to your
house.” This was all the piece of
wood said.—Ed. Simonson.
Trick With a Tumbler.
Cut an orange into halves and from
one half remove the pulp, leaving the
peel entire in the form of a hollow
hemisphere or cup. With a renknife
or a toothpick bore two holes in the
bottom of this cup and put it into a
tnmbler, forcing it down about half
way.
The tumbler should be a little
smaller than the orange used, so that
you will have to squeeze the peel
cup a little in order to get it in.
Then it will press firmly against
me glass and stay where you put it
instead of dropping to the bottom.
Tut the cup in right side up, that is,
with the yellow peel below, and pour
red wine into it. The wine will run
through the holes, and you must keep
on pouring until the level of the wine
in the glass just touches the bottom
of the cup. Now fill the rest of the
glass above the orange cup with
water, and await results.
Soon you will see a thin red jet
of wine rising like a fountain through
the w'ater from one of the holes. At
the same time, though you cannot see
it so well, a colorless stream of water
flows downward through the other
hole.
The two liquids do not mix much,
but merely exchange places, so that
in a few minutes the lower part of
the glass, below the cup, will contain
Position of the Orange.
the water, and the upper part will be
filled with water.
This is as it should be, because
water is heavier than wine and nat
urally goes to the bottom. The curi
ous thing is that the wine and water
do not mix, but each selects one hole
for itself. It is like the trick with the
candle burning in a lamp chimney
with a partition at the top, so that
cold fresh air goes down on one side,
while the hot air and smoke escape on
the other.
Oil may be substituted for the wine,
or you may fill the bottom of the
glass with water, and then pour in
milk or some thin-colored cy.'up.
What Sound Is.
If you were asked, “What is
sound?” you would probably answer:
“That is an easy question; a sound is
—a sound.” Let us find a real defini
I tion.
When you walk, what happens?
i People hear the sound of your foot
! steps. Sound follows when you lay
; a book on the table. So, also, when
1 a ball bounce* against the house.
Sound is. th?refore, caused by the
shock when one body comes into con
tact with another.
"All very well,” you reply; “the
| shock is the cause of sound: but that
does not define just what sound is.”
A practical example will best de
scribe it. Strike gently upon the
edge of a wine glass—you hear the
sound, and a very pretty one it is. But
before the sound dies away, put your
finger lightly upon the edge of the
glass, and then you will feel the
sound as well as hear it. The glass
will tremble beneath your finger. If
you press heavily enough to stop this
trembling, the sound will stop also.
Sound is, therefore, vibration—a
j striking against the air of a moving
body.
The Surgeon’s Patient.
It happened that a bulldog saw its
master's broken arm often dressed by
a surgeon. One day the same surgeon
was surprised by a pawing and!
scratching at his door. When the
door was opened he beheld two dogs
—his friend’s bulldog and another.
The latter held up one of its forelegs
to the surgeon, who saw that it was
broken. He set the broken limb in
splints and in due course the bones
reunited and the leg became whole,
On another occasion this very samel
surgeon was summoned to his door
by the persistent yelping of a dog
standing on three legs. The doctor
examined the fourth limb and found
a pin sticking in it, which prevented
the animal from using it without
great pain. The pin was extracted
and the dog went away in ease.
Tom’s Home-Made Engine.
Tom's sunshine engine was a con
trivance of his own, and he was very
proud of it. It consisted of a stiff
writing paper flywheel eight inches
in diameter, a paper flanged wheel,
straw uprights to support the straw
walking beam and the axle, a split
straw driving-rod and piston and a
paper cylinder. The two upright
straw supports of the flanged driving
wheel each measured five inches in
length, and these were fastened to a
discarded glass negative with sealing
wax—absolutely perpendicular, you
may be sure.—St. Nicholas.
FIVE-MINUTE SAILBOAT.
r yiG.fc | Q Fig 3
Pl6.1
Diagram of Boat’s Construction.
Here is a way to make in five min
utes a boat which will ontsail almost
any of the crack fancy boats your lit
tle friends may boast, with their three
masts, topsails, balloon jibs, center
boards and all that. Your homemade
boat will not be exactly beautiful, but
it certainly will be able to sail!
Get a thin piece of board, and
sharpen one end to a point, to repre
sent the bow. Now bore a small hole
a little forward of the center, and
fasten a screweye in the bow, just
at the point, and your deck is com
plete. Easy, isn’t it?
Now for the sail. Get a piece of
heavy paper, and through it thrust the
three slender sticks, in the positions
shown in the diagram. Wedge the
bottom of the upright stick or mast
firmly Into the hole in the deck, and
your boat is almost complete.
Now comes the novel feature of
your boat. Get one of these toy bal
loons which are so often sold by street
venders. You can get a flve-cent one
at any toy store. Fasten a light cord
about four feet long to the balloon,
and tie the other end of the cord to
the screweye in the bow of your boat
and you are ready to launch her.
The balloon will fly at the end of
the cord, high above your boat, which
will skim oVer the water like a swal
low. As soon as the wind changes
the balloon will yank around the bow
of the boat, and she wil head on a
new tack. Then the square sail will
fill and she will be away at a surpris
ing speed.
1
Original Rcugh Riders.
The original Rough Riders ante
dated the pony express by several
years. The Rifle Rangers themselves
were rough riders, and Mayne Reid
was a captain, leading in person many
n gallant charge against the “greas
ers,” Apaches, Commanches and Sioux.
Try One Package.
If “Defiance Starch” does not please
you, return it to your dealer. If it
does you getone-third more for the
saane money. It will give you satis
faction, and will not stick to the iron.
If the play is a frost the audience
soon melts away.
Defiance Starch is put up 16 ounces
in a package, 10 cents. One-third
more starch for the same money.
Lawsuits make the parties bare,
the lawyers fat.—German.
Mm. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup.
For children teething, softens the gums, reduces fcs
lamination, allays pain, euros wind uoLo. a&c sUx.ua.
Sensible Housekeepers
will have Defiance Starch, not alone
because they get one-third more for
the same money, but also because of
superior quality.
If a man is always chaperoned by
his wife he is pretty sure to meander
along in the straight and narrow
path.
When You Buy Starch
buy Defiance and get the best, 16 oz.
for 10 cents. Once used, always used.
A woman has simply got to love
something, even if it is only a man.
Piso’s Cure is the best medicine we ever used
’or all affections of the throat and lungs.—Wm.
3. EsdSlxt, Vanburen, Ind., Feb. 10,1900.
There is never much to talk about
ifter a smooth voyage.
CITe permanently cored. Ifo fits or nerrensnew after
mo Bret day’s use of Dr. Kline’s Great Nerve Restore
|r. Send (or FBK (t.OO trial bettlc and treabret
iw.lt.tt. Kun, Ltd., m Arch Street, Philadelphia, Fa
The greatest merit of some men is
:heir wives.—Poincelot
Do our Clothes Look Yellow?
Then use Defiance Starch, it will
tt-ep them white—16 oz. for 10 cents.
When you feel like telling your
roubles write them down—then burn
he paper.
Beware of Ointments for Catarrh
that Contain Mercury,
i* mercury wgi *ure',y destroy the sent-e of smeU
ind Cbruiiieiely derange the whole system when
“nterin? It throuirh the ridcous sunaces. Such
trtlote* should never lie used except on preserlp
•lons from reputable physicians, as the damage they
»ill do Is ten fold to the (fiod you can possibly de
•1'e from them. Hall’s Catarrh Cure, manufactured
)j F. J. Cheney & Co.. Toledo, O.. contains no mer
•ury. and Is laaen Internally, acting directly upon
.he blood and mucous surfaces of the system. In
tiuylng Mail's Catarrh Cure be sure you get the
feuutne. It Is taken Internally and made In Toledo,
Ohio. by F. J. Cheney & Co. Testimonials free.
Sold by Druggists. Frlce, 75c. per bottle.
Take Hall’s Fantlly Fills for constipation.
Oldest Tree.
The oldest tree in the world is on
the Island of Kos, lying off the coast
■ of Asia Minor. The trunk is thirty
[ feet In circumference. A wall of
| masonry surrounds it and supports
i the two main branches. It is believed
to be more than 2,000 years old.
Cheerfulness and Grumbling.
How many people in real life there
1 are who are a perpetual drain on the
| sympathies of their more cheerful
|friends and neighbors! They like to
i be comforted with strong, uplifting
I words; they appreciate cheerfulness
! —in others. It does not occur to
! them that it is a cultivable quality,
lust as grumbling is.
Corn Birds Will Not Bother.
A well known farmer says he wets
i his seed corn with coal oil before
! planting it, and as a result the birds
| and insects do not bother it before it
comes up. The oil does not injure
the germ and keep it from sprouting.
; This has been proved by experience,
i as he has never had to replant.—Fil
more (Mo.) Lever.
Training of Japanese Wrestlers.
In the place of training to remove
| superfluous flesh, as do the athletes
! of other lands, the wrestlers of Japan
| eat to put it on. Great size and
| weight do not appear to interfere
with their agiiity. Instead it is one
! of the principal means of overcom
| ing an adversary.
JUST ONE DAY
j _
J Free From the Slugger Brought Out
a Fact.
“During the time I was a coffee
, drinker,” says an Iowa woman, “I was
nervous, had spells with my heart,
smothering spells, headache, stom
j ach trouble, liver and kidney trouble.
I did not know for years what made
i me have those’ 'spells. I would fre
! quently sink away as though my last
i hour had come.
“For 27 years I suffered thus and
| used bottles of medicine enough to set
| up a drug store—capsules and pills
and everything I heard of. Spent
lets of money but I was sick nearly
all the time. Sometimes I was so
nervous I could not hold a plate in
my hands! and other times I thought
I would surely die sitting at the table.
"This went on until about two years
ago when one day I did not use any
coffee and I noticed I was not so nerv
ous and told my husband about it.
He had been telling me that it might
be the coffee but I said ‘No, I have
been drinking coffee all my life and
It cannot be.’ But after this I thought
I would try and do without and drink
hot water. I did this for several days,
but got tired of the hot water and
went to drinking oeffee and as soon
as I began coffee again I was nervous
again. This proved that it was the
coffee that caused my troubles.
“We had tried Postum but had not
made it right and did not like it, but
now I decided to give it another trial
so I^sead the directions on the pack
age carefully ai^ made it after these
directions and iWras simply delicious,
so we quit coffee for good and the re
sults are wonderful. Before, I could
not sleep but now I go to bed and
sleep sound, am not a bit nervous
now, hut work hard and can walk
miles. Nervous headaches are gone,
my heart does not bother me any
more like It did and I don’t have any
of the smothering spells and would
yon believe it? I am getting fat. We !
drink Postum now and nothing else
and even my husband’s headaches
have disappeared; we both sleep
sound and healthy now and that's a
blessing.” Name given by Postum
Co., Battle Creet, Mfeh.
Look fpr the book, “The Road to
WellvtUe” In earth pkg.
To be a successful wife, to I
retain the lave and admiration
of her husband should be a
woman's constant study. If
she would be all that she may,
she must guard well against the
signs of ill health. Mrs. Brown
tells her story for the benefit of
all wives and mothers.
“ Dear Mrs. Pinkham : — Lydia E»
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound
will make every mother well, strong,
healthy and happy. I dragged through
nineyearsof miserable existence, worn
out with pain and weariness. I then
noticed a statement of a woman
troubled as I was; and the wonderful
results she had had from your Vege
table Compound, and decided to try
what it would do for me, and used it for
three months. At the end of that
time, I was a different woman, the
neighbors remarked it, and my hus
band fell in love with me all over
again. It seemed like a new existence.
I had been suffering with inflamma
tion and falling of the womb, but your
medicine cured that, and built up my
entire system, till I was indeed like a
new woman. — Sincerely yours, Mrs. j
Chas. F. Browx, 21 Cedar Terrace, Hot
Springs, Ark., Vice President Mothers
Club—$5000 forfeit original of above lottos
proving genuineness cannot be produced.
FOLLOW THE FLAG."
TAKE THE WABASH
SAINT LOUIS
THE ONLY LINE
TO
THE WORLD’S FAIR
MAIN ENTRANCE.
Bagsagr fhrckrd to World'*
Fair ground*.
—
Stopovers allowed. All Agents can
route you via the WABASH. For beau
tiful World’s Fair folder and all infor
mation address
HARRY E. MOORES.
Gen. Agt. Pass. Dept., Omaha. Neb.
■*
m|H|CY Cl Y If II | CD dertroT* all the flies uno
UAlOl rL! MLLtn atronlseolnrorttoe^er?
I»o^ue—in dining-room, sleeping-room *nU places where
eome. tiiean. neat
and will not soi 1 or
Injure anything.
Try them once and
you will never be
without them.If not
kept bv dealer*.eent
prepaid for aor.
II IKOl.ll vis I KS.
1*8 Dekalb Avenue,
t Brooklyn, 5. I.
SMOKERS FIND
LEWIS* SINGLE BINDER
Cigar better Quality than most 10? Cigars
Your jobber or direct from Factory, Peoria, II'
AGENTS WANTED
Portraits
and
Frames.
Frame*, 12a, 15c. 40c and up. Portraits SOc, 50c
and up. Catalogue and Samples Free.
HUSO* PORTRAIT 111., ISM W. IwUmm Si., I bit ago, IU.
W. N. U„ Omaha.
No. 34—1904
“Frcm the cradle to the baby chaf f j
HAVE YOU A BABY? I
If so, you ought to have a
PHOENIX*!
WALKSN6 CHAIR
tPATENTSDl
“AN IDEAL LELF-IN8TRUCT0R.”
/^UR PHjOENIX Waiting Chair
holds the child securely, pre
venting those painful falls and
bumps which are so frequent wlien
baby learns to walk.
“BETTER THAN A NURSE.”
The chair is provided with a re
movable, sanitary cloth seat,which
supports the weight of the child
and prevents bow-legs and spinal
troubles; it also lias a table attach
ment which enables baby to find
amusement in its toys, etc., with
out any attention.
“As indispensabto as a cradlo.”
It is so constructed that it pre
vents soiled clothes, sickness from
drafts and floor germs, and is
recommended by physicians and
endorsed by both mother and baby.
Combines pleasure and utility.
No baby should bo without one.
Gall at your furniture dealer
and ask to see one.
MAJVCTACTCHED OXLT BT
PHOENIX CHAIR CO.
SHEBOYGAN. WIS.
Can only be had of your furniture deal or.
gain)
BAR
RATES
On August 9tb and 23rd and September
13th and 27th. round trip tickets will bo
sold via M H. & T R’y , from St. Louis,
Kansas City. Hannibal, and other Mis
souri anti Kansas points, to Indian Ter
ritory. Oklahoma alid Conti—i. and Ext
ern Texas, at
$15.00
The Southwest is inviting. The crop,
are good; conditions and prospects wera
never more favorable. Indian Territory,
Oklahoma and Texas, are in need of
people and offer plenty of opportunities
for investments of capital and labor.
GO NOW!
Take ad van tags of this exceptional
opportunity.
Ask me about rates and particulars.
I’ll gladly send you something new la
printed matter about the Southwest.
George Morton
Gen. Pass, and TkL AgL
ST. LOUIS. MO.
Medical Department Washington University.
The first two years are devoted mainly t*
practical training in laboratories of Anatomy,
Histology. Embryology. Chemistry. Physiology.
Pathology and Bacteriology, by specialists and
life-workers in these branches. The last tw«
years are given to personal study of disease is
clinical laboratories hospitals anddispensaries.
not merely affiliated, but under the full control
of the Faculty for bed-side instruction. Fo*
particulars and catalogue address the Deac
Locust Street. St. Louis.
FAULTLESS
STARCH
FOR
i
WORK ,
FQR.SHIRTS COLLARS .CUFFS AMD FINE Li MEN]
HOMESTEADS S?vc.T,wo« ,
R«a
Montena. Send 50< tar map and information t«
J. T. KBLLEY. Heal Estate Agency, Bxdiaga, “
R b the purest deanest-starch made.
R b free of injurious chemicals.
R can be used where ordinarily you would be afraid
to use starch of any kind.
That’s Defiance. Your grocer sells it
THE DEFIANCE STARCH CO.f
OMAHA. NEB.
SOLO
BY
DRUGGISTS.
ANTISEPTIC PILE CONES
Sample Fit*. ANTISEPTIC PILE CONE CO., Crete, Nek
CURB
WHILE
YOU
SLEEP.
When Answering Advertisements
Kindly Mention This Papfr.
BEGGS’ BLOOD PURIFIER
CUKES catarrh of the stomach.