The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, January 19, 1905, Image 7

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    MEDICAL EXAMINER
Of the United States Treasury Recommends
Pe-ru-na.
Another Prominent Physician Uses
•nd Endorses Pe-ru-na.
DR. LLEWELLYN JORDAN, Medi
cal Examiner of the U. S. Treas
ury Department, graduate of Co
lumbia College, and who served three
years at West Point, has the follow
ing to say of Peruna:
••Allow me to express my grmth
k tade to you for the benefit derived
from your wonderful remedy.
One short month has brought
forth a vast change and / now
consider myself a well man after
months of suffering. Fellow suf
ferers, Peruna will cure you.**
A constantly increasing number of
physicians prescribe Peruna in their
practice. It has prtiven its merits so
thoroughly that even the doctors have
overcome their prejudice against so
called patent medicines and recom
mend it to their patients.
Peruna occupies a unique position
in medical science. It is the only in
ternal systemic catarrh remedy
known to the medical profession to
day. Catarrh, as everyone will admit,
is the cause of one-half the diseases
which afflict mankind: Catarrh and
catarrhal diseases afflict one-half of
the people of United States.
u Robert R. Roberts, M. D., Wash-"
i ington, D. C.. writes: < >
\\ ••Through my own experience
as welt ms that of many of my,,
friends and acquaintances who '
\ hare been cured or relieved of cm- |
tarrh by the use of Hartman’s ,
Peruna, 1 can confidently recam- ♦
| mend It to those suffering from such \
'< disorders, and have no hesitation In,,
prescribing It to my patients.”—
Robert R. Roberts.
Catarrh is a systemic disease cur
able only by systemic treatment. A
remedy that cures catarrh must aim
directly at the depressed nerve cen
ters. This is what Peruna does.
Peruna immediately invigorates the
nerve-centers which give vitality to
the mucous membranes. Then catarrh
Every housekeeper should know
that if they will buy Defiance Cold
Water Starch for laundry use they
will save not only time, because it
never sticks to the iron, but because
each package contains 16 oz.—one full
pound—while all other Cold Water
Starches are put up in %-pound pack
ages, and the price is the same, 10
cents. Then again because Defiance
Starch is free from all injurious chem
icals. If your grocer tries to sell you
a 12-oz. package it Is because he has
a stock on hand which he wishes to
dispose of before he puts in Defiance.
He knows that Defiance Starch has
printed on every package in large let
ters and figures “16 ozs.” Demand De
fiance and save much time and money
and the annoyance of the iron stick
ing. Defiance never sticks.
Your conscience must be a light to
you, but it cannot be law to others.
IMPERIAL HERNIA CURE.
Dr. O. S. Wood cures Rupture by
a new process, in a few weeks, with
out loss of time or inconvenience.
Rectal diseases cured without the
knife. Send for circular. O. S. Wood,
M. D., 521 N. Y. Life Bldg., Omaha.
You never lose any of your sorrow
by shedding sour looks. .
SPECIAL NOTICE.
UNDOMA Hair Tonic will lend to
yonr hair that soft flufTy appearance
appreciated by people of good taste
and refinement
Ask Your Barber.
Send us your name for free treat
ment
THE UNDOMA COMPANY, Omaha.
Married men daily make sacrifices
of which no mention ever is made.
When Your Grocer Says
he does not have Defiance Starch, you
may be sure he is afraid to keep it un
til his stock of 12 ox. packages are
sold. Defiance Starch Is not only bet
ter than any other Cold Water Starch,
but contains 16 oz. to the package and
sells for same money as 12 oz. brands.
It doesn't take any grit to grumble.
I
I
I
j
I
MIXES FARMING
WHEAT RAISIHO
RAHCNIlfi
Three exeat pursuits hare again shown wonderful
neulta on the Free Homestead Lands of Western
Canada this year.
Magnificent climate—farmers plowing In their shirt
tlT—— in the middle of November.
“ All are bound to be more than pleated with the
gnal results©! the past season’s harvests. —Extract.
Coal wood, water, bay in abundance. Schools,
Churches, market* convenient.
Add't for lnformatlondo Superintendent of Immi
gration, Ottawa. Canada, or to authorized Canadian
Government A Kent—W. \ . Bennett, 801 New fork
Life Building. Omnba, Nebraska.
Please say wfere yon saw this advertisement.
K
MEXICAN
Mustang Liniment
cure* Cuts, Burns, Bruises.
INCUBATORS.
The OU) nun z in
enbetort ere mede by
Johneoo, (be Incnbetor
Men. who mede so.ueu be
fore Inventing hie OLD
TBvrrr. _ .
A ney-foT-ttaelf hatch
er. Mr d*y»’ trial
end e tre jeer** |W»
tee. For hi* ftee eate
loene. ZOO poeltry Ulee
tiettooa. eddrcaa.
M. M. JOHNSON OO- ■ ^
• Sax Ob Th Slat Cantor. Sato
T Or. Llewellyn Jordan, T
* Medical Examiner United 8tatea i
T Treasury. T
disappears. Then catarrh is per
manently cured.
If you do not derive prompt and
satisfactory results from the use of
Peruna, write at once to Dr. Hart
mann, giving a full statement of your
case, and he will be pleased to give
you his valuable advice gratis.
Address Dr. Hartman, President of
The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus,
Ohio.
Malicious Personal Questions.
Don't ask personal questions that
carry the sting of humiliation, remem
bering always that any satisfaction de
rived from saying mean things is ob
tained at the price of feelings that
should be regarded always as sacred.
A GREAT INSTITUTION.
It is unusual that a single institution in a
city of 8,000 people will overshadow in im
portance every other interest, but such is
the case witn the American School of
Osteopathy, and A T. Stdl Infirmary at
Kirksville, Mo.
A stranger in Kirksville is immediately
impressed with the idea that the town is
sustained by this iustitution, in fact,
Kirksville has been made what it is to-day
by Dr. Still and his famous School anti
Infirmary. It is the largest patronized un
endowed institution of its kind in the
United States.
Dr. Still s school enrolls over TOO students
yearly and each studmt is required to at
tend four terms of five months each before
completing the courseof study. There are
over 2,000 graduttes and they are prac
ticing in every state and territory of the
Union. About two-thirds of the states
have passed special laws legalizing the
science.
This school teaches every branch taught
in medical colleges except "drugs'’ and
osteopathy is substituted for that. So
thorough is the teaching in anatomy that
over one hundred human bodies are dis
sected yearly by the students.
At the Infirmary, patients from every
part of the country and with almost every
form of disease are constantly under treat
ment. For the past fifteen'years almost
every train coming to Kirksville has
brought some new sufferer hoping to find re
lief by the science of Osteopathy. By the
tbonsands who have left the institution
benefited by the treatment, the science has
been heralded to the world as a safe and
rational method of cure. Several years ago
a free clinic was established in connection
with the practice department of the school
and this is still in operation. Hnndreds of
the worthy poor, who are unable to pay for
treatment, are treated every afternoon by
the senior students free of charge.
If your friends believe you to be
poor, they will conspire to keep you
poor. If they think you rich, they will
all try to make you richer.
Beware of Ointments for Catarrh
that Contain Mercury,
a* mercury win surely destroy the tense of em*n
and completely derange the whole system when
entering It through the mucous surfaces. Such
articles sbonld never be used eicept on prescrip
tions from reputable physicians, aa the damage they
will do Is ten fold to the good yon can possibly de
rive from them. Haifa Catarrh Cure, manufactured
by F. J. Cheney A Co., Toledo, O.. contains no mer
cury. and is taken Internally, acting directly upon
the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. In
buying Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure you get the
genuine. It la taken Internally and made In Toledo,
Ohio, by F J. Cheney A Co. Testimonials fra*.
Sold by Druggists. Price. 75c. per bottle.
Take Hall's Family Pill* for constipation.
He who stops to help a tottering
brother over the rough places arrives
quicker than he who rushes headlong
down the lane of life.
Many Children /.re Sickly.
Mother Gray's Sweet Powders for Children,
used by Mother Gray, a nurse in Children’s
Home, New York, cure Feverishness, Head
ache, Stomach Troubles. Teething Dis
orders, Break up Colds and Destroy Worms.
At all Druggists’ ,83c. Sample mailed FREE.
Address Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y.
It’s no use bragging of your an
cestors unless they would feel like re
turning the compliment.
Important to Mothers.
g«wnlM carefully every bottle of CASTORIA,
s safe and rare remedy for infants and children,
sad see that it
Bears the
Signature of
In Use For Over 30 Year*.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Save your scowls for your enemies.
Be cheerful when surrounded by the
home circle.
TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablet*. AU drug
gists refund the na >ney If It falls to cure. E. W
Grove * signature Is on each box. 35c.
He who gives cheerfully of genuine
charity finds an ever-flowing fountain
from which to draw.
I am sure Piso's Cure for Consumption saved
my life three years ago.—Mas. Thos. Robbxss,
Maple Street, Norwich, N. Y., Feb. 17,1900i
One realizes the importance of
money when he tries to buy love.
“Dr. David K«oa*dy« Favorite Raaaady
He who dwells on his troubles al
ways dwells in them.
»•
!
no friends.
| He Understood Mules y
On a street corner in the northwest
ern section of the city last Saturday
forenoon quite a large crowd had
collected. It had formed a ring, or,
rather, a square, about some object
In the center, two sides having con
gregated on each side of the curb,
while the others made a rather thin
line on the other side of the square.
The on-lookers to whatever was going
on did not seem in t^e least excited,
but there was every indication of
much interest in the situation.
“Drunken women fighting,” said one
of two young women who were pass
ing near by. “It’s most disgraceful,
and those people placidly looking on.
If they were men they’d stop it,” she
said to her companion. “It’s degrad
ing.”
An old gentleman in the same lo
cality was explaining to another one
that a man had been stricken with
an epileptic fit. “Poor fellow,” he
said; “and no one knows what to do
for him.”
It was evident that the gathering
was an inactive one, and the reporter
whose duty it is to investigate every
thing hastened to the scene and
found out that a stout, well-propor
tioned mule had slipped on the pave
ment and was apparently well satis
fied with his recumbent situation. The
fact was that he resented every well
meant attempt to hoist him from his
contact with mother earth, while his
disgusted driver, a colored boy about
20 years old, was actually sobbing
with anger and vexation of spirit. All
sorts of suggestions were hurled at
him, but nobody seemed to want to
help him in his distress. There waa
danger in it. The mule was wild
eyed and vicious, and used both fore
legs as a battery to keep folks away
from him, until at last the driver sat
down on the shafts of the cart, which
had been drawn away from the ani
mal, and indulged in long, bitter
thought.
Just then an old colored man, wear
ing an old-fashioned blue army over
coat and a red worsted comforter
about his neck, stepped into the open
space, walked bravely up to the now
quiet quadruped and took hold of both
of his ears, t He seemed to whisper
to the beast, but whatever he did act
ed like magic. The mule got upon
his feet, permitted himself to be
hitched again to his cart, and the
crowd went away.
“You seem to know how to deal
with mules,” said the reporter to the
old fellow. “ 'Deed I does, suh,” was
the reply. I knows all about mules
and they does me. ’Fore Gawd, boss,
I wasn't brought up in old Missouri
for nothing. Y"ass‘r, muels and me is
kinfolks, sho’s you bo n. En I think
dat job’s wuff ten cents. Don’t you,
boss?”
The crowd had melted away, and
as there was no one else by to re
spond to this palpable hint the report
er did so. And thus the chapter end
ed.—Washington Star.
Thorough Work of Japs
One of the most unique and inter
esting features of the Japanese plan
of campaign is the importance of the
tasks assigned to the doctors. Maj.
Louis Livingstone Seamon of the Unit
ed States army says in his recently
published book: “The medical officer
is omnipresent. You will find him in
countless places where in an Ameri
can or British army he has no place.
He is as much at the front as in the
rear. He is with the screen of the
scouts with his microscope and chemi
cals, testing and labeling wells so that
the army to follow shall drink no con
taminated water. When the scouts
reach a town he immediately insti
tutes a thorough examination of its
sanitary condition and if contagion or
infection is found he quarantines and
places a guard around the dangerous
district. Notices are posted so that
the approaching column is warned
and no soldiers are billeted where
danger exists. Microscopic blood tests
are made in all fever cases and bac
teriological experts, fully equipped,
form part of the staff of every di
visional headquarters.
“The medical officer also accompa
nies foraging parties and, with the
commissariat officers, samples the va
rious foods, fruits and vegetables sold
by the natives along the line of march,
long before the arrival of the army. If
the food is tainted or the fruit is over
ripe or the water requires boiling,
notice is posted to that effect, and
such is the respect and discipline of
every soldier, from the commanding
officer to the file in the ranks, that
obedience to its orders is absolute.
The medical officer is also found, in
camp lecturing the man on sanitation
and the hundred and one details of
personal hygiene—how to cook and
to eat and when not to drink or to
bathe—even to the paring and cleans
ing of the finger nails to prevent dan
ger from bacteria.
•‘Long before the outbreak of hos
tilities he was with the advance
agents of the army, testing provisions
that were being collected for the
troops that were to follow. As a con
sequence of these precautions he is
not found treating thousands of cases
of intestinal diseases and other con
tagion and fevers that follow improper
subsistence and neglected sanitation
—diseases that have brought many
campaigns to disastrous termina
tions.”
Oddities of South Africa
“Though the days of the long treks
over trackless wastes of South Africa
are past, life in this country still has
little diversities peculiar to itself,”
writes a correspondent. “For in
stance, a farmer named Long was re
cently troubled by a leopard that had
been destroying his cattle. The na
tives surrounded it one day in the
long grass and sent for the white man
to kill it. "While searching for the
brute in the tangle of vegetation Mr.
Long came across him sooner than
he expected and the leopard got the
jump on him. There was a fierce
struggle and the white man was a good
deal torn up. One of his negroes got
in a lucky shot and killed the leopard
Just before the latter got at the man’s
throat.
“Odd things happen in the mines,
too, once in a while. A miner named
Wonacott recently passed through a
most exciting experience at Dutoit
span. He had charged four boreholes
with dynamite in the usual way and
then endeavored to signal to the en
gine-driver, but failed to establish |
communication. He concluded, how
ever, that everything was all right,
and he lit the charges, expecting to
be hauled up in the bucket. His sec
ond signal not being answered, he be
gan to climb the rope in a hurry to
get away from the dynamite. He was
too slow and the concussion of the
discharge knocked him off. He fell
into the bucket, where he remained
until all the charges had exploded. He
was only slightly hurt.
“And there was a curious incident
near Harding recently. A native was
riding along a pathway at sunrise,
when be saw the head and arms of a
man sticking out of the ground, the
arms waving wildly in signal of dis
tress. The fellow was imprisoned in
an ant-bear hole and wah half dead.
When he was resuscitated he told how
he had been coming back on foot from
Johannesburg with some friends when
he was taken ill. His friends thought
he was going to die and stuck him in
the ant-bear hole and deserted him.
When he recovered he prosecuted his
friends and they went to prison.”
Loss in World’s Sheep
Australia is the foremost pastoral
country in the world. In normal sea
sons it grows one-third as much wool
as all the rest of the world taken to
gether; and it is practically the sole
producer of the fine merino quality.
And now that the long drought has
reduced by half the flocks of ten or
twelve years ago, Australians an
about to experiment cotton grow
ing, so that thay may clothe south
ern China to-morrow as to-day they
clotLe northern Europe and America.
During the seven years’ drought
which broke up last year the sheep
died by milftons for the want of food
and water—yet the pastoralists hesi
tate about building irrigation works
until they try first to make the gov
ernment build them instead. And
this is trifling with the greatest na
tional industry. Of the grand total of
not less than 500,000,000 sheep in the
world, Australasia owned ten years
ago practically 125,000,000. As these
were nearly all merinos this country
has a practical monopoly in the pro
duction of the finer qualities of wool.
For two or three years past you have
been wearing the fashionable coarse
weaves of suitings and dress fabrics;
but perhaps you have not asked your
selves why they were fashionable. The
explanation is found, not in the fickle
fancy of Parisian dandies and dress
makers, but in the terrible reality of
the great Australian drought. That
drought, by lessening the supply of
merino wool, would have multiplied
the price of all fine fabrics had the
“fashion” remained steadfast. But in
self-protection the woollen mills
promptly switched the fashion to
rougher cloths. It will be some years
yet before the sheep stations here
are fully restocked and the supply of
merino wools restored. At present
there are in Aust-ilia proper only a
little over 50,000,000 sheep, in com
parison with over 100.000,000 a decade
ago.—Booklovers’ Magazine.
When the Worm Turned
Hers was the modern mania for “beauti
fying” things;
She went In strong
For the Chinese gong.
And statues without wings;
Her walls were hung with draperies of
curious design,
And her pictures rare.
Arranged with care.
On no particular line;
And all bsr friends who saw the place,
Declared that It was “Fine!”
Her husband was a business man, on
“just plain comfort” bent;
He furnished the “mun,”
And let her run
The place, without dissent;
Great stacks of “beaten brass” she
bought, and sticks of scented punk;
In his secret soul
Each brasen bowl
He classified as “Junk.”
Although be never told her ro.
He didn’t have the spunk!
And then the "Sanitation” erase pos
sessed her for a while;
She routed germs
In medical terms
That only made him smile;
She "sterilised” the whole darn place
And everything they ata.
ftafe "rales” oh -ved
That steak was served
On an anti-microbe plate!
And still he never said a word.
But let her navigate.
She took down all the draperies and
painted all the walls,
Until the rooms
Resembled tombs
And whitewashed stable stalls;
Then she declared that hygiene prescribed
the proper “rest’;
She bought "twin” beds
And turned their heads
Exactly ••nor'-nor’west.”
And still her lord and master •
Hadn't courage to protest.
But then at last she hit upon a bigger.
brighter fad;
She was elate.
So up-to-date
The new idea she had.
She moved the beds out on the porch.
to sleep in open air;
The scheme was bold—
Twas bitter cold—
She thought he would not care;
But Gee! When be came hone ttai
hare heard him swear!
—Anna Marble.
Testing the Richness of Milk.
Dairymen abroad have been exp«r}
menting for the purpose of determin
ing which yield of milk, the morning
or evening, is the richer of the two.
The decision was in favor of the even
ing milk being the richer, both for but
ter and cheese making qualities. The
milk of cows fed on ground feed in
winter was richer than that produced
by the same cows from grass in the
summer.
Happiness in Poetry.
There are so many holy and tender
emotions flying about in our inward
world, which, l:*e angels, can never
assume the body of an outward act;
so many rich and lovely flowers spring
np which bear no seed, that it is a
happiness poetry was invented, which
receives into its limbers all these in
corporeal spirits, and the perfume of
all these flowers.—Jean Paul Richter.
Modern Surgical Methods.
The use of the needle and thread
in closing wounds has come to be a
fine art. In former days the surgeons
were mere bunglers, and most wounds
left hideous scars. But at the present
day the manner in which arteries are
ligatured, tendons spliced, intestines
sutured and wounds closed is the
foundation of success, no skilled use
•f the scalpel taking its place.
The Simple Life in Gotham.
After all, the simple life is wide
spread here. We do nothing but labor
to get a few dollars to pay the office
holders. Political bosses do all our
thinking for us, so we have no cares
along that line, but simply work and
sleep until it’s time to go to the poor
house. Surely nothing could be sim
pler.—New York Telegram.
Magnesite in California.
Magnesite, which is used in the
making of fire brick and other fire
proof building materials, has been
discovered in large quantities in San
ta Clara and Stanislaus counties, Cal
ifornia. They are the only known de
posits in the United States. Hither
to America has imported magnesite
from Greece and Syria.
Character Told by the Chin.
The chin is one of the most sub
stantial parts of the face when it is
normal, and by physiognomists Is said
to register unerringly certain charac
teristics, to tell on one for weal or
woe.” Others say that this is not so,
for one may smile and yet be a villain,
and the smile Is what makes the fa
cial characteristic.
New Material for Ships’ Decks.
A substance called petrolignite Is
being adopted as a material for the
decks of ships. It is prepared from
sawdust, mixed with certain minerals,
and formed into slabs, under high hy
draulic pressure. Its valuable prop
erties are that it is non inflammable,
and is not slippery when wet.
And Chain the Mat.
A Brooklyn minister of a prag
matical turn of mind has his front
doormat chained to his house, and
to inculcate the right spirit in the
passerby has had the motto “Trust in
God” worked in scarlet letters of large
seize in the middle of the mat.
Russian Bristles Best.
A first essential of a good hairbrush
is that the bristles should really be
bristles, not imitations, and that they
should be of a good kind. Russian
bristles are the best; they are ob
tained from the back of the wild boar
ALL DONE OUT.
Veteran Joshua Heder, of 706 Sooth
Walnut street, Urbana, III., says: “In
the fall of 1899, after taking Doan’s
Kidney Pills I told
the readers of this
paper that they had
relieved me of kid
ney trouble, dis
posed of a lame
back with pain
across my loins and
beneath the shoul
der blades. During
the interval which
has elapsed I have
had occasion to re- A
sort to Doan’s Kid- \
ney Pills when I
noticed warnings |
or an arrack, un each and every oc
casion the results obtained were Just
as satisfactory as when the pills were
first brought to my notice. I just as
emphatically endorse the preparation
to-day as I did over two years ago.”
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.,
proprietors. For sale by all druggists,
price 50 cents per box.
Women like to read about how to
preserve their youth and beauty, even
if they don’t follow the rules laid
down.—Philadelphia Bulletin.
Many who formerly smoked 10c cigars,
now smoke Lewis' •'Single Binder” straight
5c cigar. The best combination of the best
tobaccos. Lewis’ Factory, Peoria, 111.
A woman keeps away from the eye
glass period as long as possible.
Last year the Sure Hatch Incubator
Co. of Clay Centre. Neb., shipped 600
incubators to Germany and several
thousand to Australia, South Africa
and South America.
The angry man always lashes him
self.
St.
Jacobs Stiffness
tf ^ 1 From cold, hard labor or exercise,
II relaxes the stiffness and the sore
ness disappears.
The Old Monk Core Price, 25c. and 50c
(Mrs. L. C. Glover, Vice Pres. Milwaukee,!
Wis., Business Woman’s Association, is
another one of the million women who
have been restored to health by using
Lydia EL Pinkham's Vegetable Compound*
“ Dear Mrs. Pinkham : I was married for several years and no children
blessed my home. The doctor said I had a complication of female trouble*
| and I eculd not have any children unless I could be cured. He tried to cure
me, but after experimenting for several months, my husband became dis
gusted, and one night when we noticed a testimonial of a woman who had
been cured of similar trouble through the use of Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound, he went out and bought a bottle for me. 1 used
your medicine for three and one half months, improving steadily in health,
and in twenty-two months a child came. I cannot fully express the joy and
thankfnlness that is in my heart. Our home is a different place now. as w*
have something to live for, and all the credit is due to Lydia E. Pinkham’sl
Vegetable Compound. Yours very sincerely, Mrs. L. €. Glover, 614 Grove
St., Milwaukee, Wis.'’ Vice President, Milwaukee Business Woman's Ass’n.
Women should not fail to profit by the experience of these two'
I women; just as surely as they were cured of the troubles enume
rated in their letters, just so certainly will Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound cure others who suffer from womi troubles,
inflammation of the ovaries, kidney troubles, nervous excitability,»
and nervous prostration; remember that it is Lydia E. Pink
ham’s Vegetable Compound that is curing women, and don't allow
any druggist to sell you anything else in its place.
*
r An Indiana Lady Tells of a Wonderful Cure: —
" Dear Mrs. Pinxbam : It is a pleasure
for me to write and tell what yoar wonderful
medicine has done for me. I was sick for
three years with change of life, and my
physician thought a cancerous condition of
the womb. During these three years 1
suffered untold agony.
‘•I cannot find words in which to ex
press my bad feelings. I did not expect to
ever see another well day. I read some of the
testimonials recomending you- medicine and
decided to write to you and give your treat
ment a trial.
“ Before I had taken half a bottle of
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com
pound, I began to sleep. I have taken now
aix bottles and am so well I can do all kinds
of work.”—Mrs. Lizzie Hiheue, Salem, Ind.
_ t
If there is anything in your case about which you would like
special advice, write freely to Mrs. Pink bam. She can surely help,
you, for no person in America can speak from a wider experience
in treating female ills. Address is Lynn, Mass.; her advice is free
and always helpful.
15000
To the housewife who has not yet
become acquainted with the new thing*
of everyday use in the market and
who is reasonably satisfied with the
old. we would suggest that a trial of
Defiance Cold Water Starch be mad*
at once. Not alone because it is guar
anteed by the manufacturers to be su
perior to any other brand, but because
each 10c package contains 16 ozs.,
while all the other kinds contain but
12 ozs. It Is safe to say that the lady
who once uses Defiance Starch will use
no other. Quality and quantity must
win.
Looking at sin leads to loving it.
Try me just once and I am sure to
come again. Defiance Starch.
It Cures Colds, Coughs. Sore Throat. Croup,
Influenza, Whooping Cough, Bronchitis and
Asthma. A certain cure for Consumption in first
stages, and a sure relief in advanoedstages. Use
at once. You will see the excellent effect after
taking the first dose. Sold by dealers every*
where. Large bottles 25 cents and 50 cents.
^SPINAL CURVATURE Can b« Cored
ALSO OTMgN DCFONMITICS.
[Write or cmll at office for free informs'
[tion. Highest testimonials from prom*
[incut statesmen, and physicians. Con
lult your Family Doctor. No braces or
ppliances used. Treated successfully
;y t£»il- Six years’ experience.
« *»»«■«"»*fy titletOrth—tffittot
Uffihpi l*t iNc o«>o«»tio. ctnrti sae.eee.oa.
INTO at ARLINGTON BLK., OMAHA. NCffi.
BJ2“.Vi’^iThomp«on’» Eft *atM
$10.00
FOB ALL
TbM't til tt wi’t
•M tonttMol
n> * ** -j| I.
ntaton ..pliti,
M town it foot
railroad iMho, »U
fr.it ht elui. pi»
PM. Ho gO« «
in rmdy to iptn.
SURE HATCH INU1BATUKS
Broth* war id'* rteBdarl ImMm Thro* wall* Coil.oe
aia rtdwot-d kabastu* IM tnronahmit Coppae hot water
basting (yetem 1«S*qaar*tnehas Wam(t*rfac*k> water
Water. Only thirty cantsworth of oil ranairad tm a hatch.
Att machine* aoid an M Kay a’ Ppm Trial, (fated te
aeary opportunity to b* ror* yoa ar* right. twiy machine
earriaa a ft roar* (turaste*. Ion taka aa rtak With th*
•FSB HATCM-th* machine that baa ateod •*!*** of
lint. Sand for fW« booktatMO It yon Ira* aari of ftiteW
app> Rltar address Indianapolis. if was*. Ctay I'awter.
•FSB BATCH INCtTBATOB COMPANY
| Clay fealar. ilek. ladtaaapait*. InA.
y THE LADY
WHO IRONS
knows how important I b
to um a good starch. Defunct
Starch b the best starch
made. H doesn't stick to
the iron. It gives a beauti
ful soft glossy stiffness to the
clothes. It will not blister
~' I
or crack the goods. It sells
for less, goes farther, does
more. , Ask the lady who
irons. 4 Defiance Starch at all
grocers. 16 oz. for K) cents.
Itt KFU1KE STJUKH CO,
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES
taler were goods brighter and taster colors than any other dye. One 10c nacheoe colors silk, aeol and cotton egealty veil and is guaranteed to gf*e perfect reeelfa.
tek ios lor orJwanU send post paid at 10c a package. Write lor free booklet Wen to Dye. Bleach and Mai Coloss. MoiiM"* OMVu CO., iliFI
When Answering Advertisements
Kindly Mention This Paper.
BEGGS' CHERRY COUGH
SYRUP cures coughs and colds.
HIDES TANNED SftsSS
Mitten* sad Rag*. Best work la lull guaranteed.
Cadar Rapids Roba * Tannary,
Cadar Mapida, Iowa.
| W. N. U« Omaha. No. 2—1S0&