The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, March 16, 1905, Image 7

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    Many Persons Have Catarrh of Kidneys.
Or Catarrh of Bladder and Don’t Know It.
j: President Newhof and War
;j CorrespondentRichardsWere
!; Promptly Cured By Pe-ru-na.
Mr. C. J. Newhof, 10 Delamare street,
Albany, N. Y., President Montefiore
Club, writes:
* ‘Since my advanced age / find that
J have been frequently troubled with
urinary ailments. The bladder seemed
irritated, and my physician said tha' It
was catarrh caused by a protracted
y '' cola which would be difficult to over
come on account of my advanced years.
I took Peruna, hardly daring to believe
that I would be helped, but I found to
my relit f that I soon began to mend.
The irritation gradually subsided and 1
the urinary difficulties passed away, j
J have enjoyed excellent health now for
the past seven jnonths. I enjoy my \
meals, sleep soundly, and am as well
as I was twenty years ago. I give all!
praise to Peruna.”—C. B. Newhof.
Suffered From Catarrh of Kidneys,
Threatened With Nervous Collapse,
Cured by Pe-ru-na.
Mr. F. F». Richards, 609 E. Street. N.
TV., Washington. T). C., War Corres
Fondent. writes: “Exactly six years ago
was ordered to Cuba as staff corres
pondent of the New York Sun. I was in
charge of a Sun Dispatch boat through
the Spanish American war. The effect
of the tropical climate and the nervous
strain showed plainly on my return to
the states. Lassitude, depression to the
verge of melancholia, and incessant
kidney trouble made me practically an
invalid. This undesirable condition
continued.despite the best of treatment.
Finally a brother newspaper man, who
like myself had served in the war. in
duced me to give a faithful trial to
Peruna. I did so. In a short time the
lassitude left me. ray kidneys resumed |
a healthy condition, and a complete !
cure was effected. 1 cannot too strong- j
ly reeommed Peruna to those suffering
with kidney trouble. To-day I am able
to work as hard as at any time in my
life, and the examiner for a leading in
surance company pronounced me an
“A” risk.”
In Poor Heallh Over Four Years.
Pe-ru-naOnly Remedyof Real Benefit.
Mr. John Nimmo. 215 Lippincott, St..
Toronto. Can., a prominent merchant of
that city and also a member of the
Masonic order, writes:
‘T have been in poor health generally
for over four years. Wl*en I caught a
bad cold last winter it settled in the
bladder and kidneys, causing serious
trouble. I took two greatly advertised
kidney remedies without getting the
I PRES. C. B. NEWHOF, \\
> Suffered From Catarrh of Bladder. " «!
desired results. Peruna is the only
remedy v, nich was really of any benefit
to me. I have not had a trace of kidney
trouble nor a cold in my system.”
Pe-ru-na Contains No Narcotics.
One reason why Peruna has «fonnd
permanent use in so many homes is that ;
it contains no narcotic of any kind.
Peruna is perfectly harmless. It can be j
used any length of time without acquir
ing a drug habit. Peruna does not pro
duce temporary results. It' is perman
ent in its effect.
It has no bad effect upon the system,
and gradually eliminates catarrh by
removing the cause of catarrh. There
are a multitude of homes where Peruna
has been used off and on for twenty
years. Such a thing could not be pos
sible if Peruna contained any drugs of
a narcotic nature.
Say Plainly to Your Grocer
That you want LION COFFEE always, and he,
being a square man, will not try to soli you any
t 5, thing else. You may not care for our opinion, but
Wliai About (he United Judgment of Millions
| of housekeepers who have used LION COFFEE
for over a quarter of a century?
Is there any stronger proof of merit, than tha
Confidence cf Uic People
and ever increasing popularity?
LION COFFEE is carefully se
lected at the plantation, shipped
direct to our various factories,
where It is skillfully roasted and
carefully packed in sealed pack
ages- unlike loose coffee, which
is exposed to germs, dust, in
sects, etc. LION COFFEE re aches
you as pure and clean as when
it left the factory. Sold only in
1 lb. packages.
L Lion-head on every package.
Save these Lion-heads for valuable premiums l‘
SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE |
WOOLSON SPICE CO., Toledo, Ohio. f
___ |
m iisrcHBSTm
RIFLE ®> PISTOL CARTRIDGES.
^ “ It’s the shots that hit that count. ” Winchester
H Rifle and Pistol Cartridges in all calibers hit, that is,
they shoot accurately and strike a good, hard, pene
trating blow. This is the kind of cartridges you will get,
if you insist on having the time-tried Winchester make.
all dealers sell winchester make of cartridges.
BOTICE!
to announce that we bought the entire wholesale and retail
le Dewey & Stone Furniture Co., Omaha, who are the larg
ve furniture dealers in the west.
aken the stock over to our present location and inaugurate
ale to close out at once all of their goods. Tremendous re
a furniture of every description.
ard «S? Wilhelm Carpet Co. f
32 YEAR'S 'SEELING DIRECT
■ We are the largest manufacturers of vehicles and harness in the world sell-1
ing to consumers exclusively.
| We Have No Agents
f but ship anywhere for ex
amination and approval,
. guaranteeing safe deliv
\ ery. You are out noth
_1 ing if not satisfied as to
Z} style, quality and
Jfi price. We make
y rtf trfi'n» and
{ I [■
BEGGS’BLOOD PURIFIER
CURES catarrh'of the stomach.
When Answering Advertisements
Kindly Mention This Paper.
Early ore frosty October morning
vhen the little Nimrod was sitting in
i crevice of the mountain’s side bask
ng in the sun he espied way down in
he valley three grizzlies, says a writ
er in the Metropolitan. Front the for
r.er trailing he had done he knew
hem to be a great male and two fe
males as his mates:
As the boy watched them he say
hat they went off in different diree
ions, one ascending the face of the
opposite mountain, while the other
wo worked their way around either
side of its base before commencing
the ascent. As he watched them he
rut iced that while the bear that was
climbing up the mountain’s face took
things leisurely the other two were
going much faster and that they were
heading up toward the back of the
mountain.
The lad, wondering what the bears
were about, began to scan the moun
tain and discovered a band of big
horn sheep feeding on the mountain's
front very near the top. Standing
Wolf felt sure that something of in
terost was about to happen, so he
watched the bears and the sheep at
tentively. After awhile, when the
lower bear, the only one now in view,
had climbed to a point which revealed
him to the sheep, they became rest
less and began to ascend rapidly.
Whenever the bear was seen to quick
en his pace the big-horns would at
once quicken theirs.
Up. up, up the rugged precipice they
scurried and ever faster followed the
bear. After an exhausting ascent of
the steepest cliff on the mountain's
side the hand gained the top and for
a second rested. Then, as two great
! forms rushed out among them, confu
sion seized the herd and they dashed
away in all directions, many leaping
panic-stricken over the precipice.
A moment later, after having killed
the couple they, had seized, two griz
zly bears that had ascended the back
of the mountain waddled forward to
the edge of the cliff and stared down
at their accomplice feasting upon a
sheep that had been mangled upon
the crags below.
Billi ards an Of cl Game
The game of billiards may lay claim
to great antiquity, for in “Anthony and
Cleopatra'’ Shakespeare makes Cleo
patra say: “Let us to billiards;” and
so. unless we accuse the great poet of
error in chronology, we have traced
the game l ack to a period before the
Christian era. In early times a simi
lar game was played on the grass or i
tift-f with stones, and later with halls
of lignum vitae and other substances.
How to apply the right “twist" or
"English” to the cue ball is one of the
P'ost interesting and important ele
ments in the art of good playing, fa
early times only two balls were used,
and each player sought simply to
pocket the ball of bis opponent. The
red ball was introduced as a nov* ity
to keep the game from dying out. As
time lias gone on the game has had a
varied development in different coun
tries. In Spain they play with tfiree
bails and five wooden pins are set tip
in the middle of the table. In Russia
they play with five balls, two white 1
and a red, blue and yellow one.
The English game is played quite
differently from the American and
French games. It is a combination of
the American games of both pool and
billiards, being played on a table hav
ing pockets, as in an ordinary pool
tabfe. and the points a- scored in both
of the American games being counted.
Tiie French and Americ m games are
played with three balls upon a table
without pockets and only "canons” or
“caroms” art counted. In America the
game of billiards has undergone a
rapid development on account of the
great skill acquired by American play
ers. Early in the last century the
game was commonly played with four
hails upon a pool tabic, more or less
like tht pre.-ent English game, for
noth pocketing the balls and making
caroms were counted, but in time this
style of playing proved so simple that
a table was adopted without any pock
ets in it—and caroms only were count
ed.—Outing.
Necktie Very Off Color
Jean Burnett, Assemblyman, from
Ontario and chairman of the cities
committee of that body, is known as
the best dressed man at Albany. He
came to New York on Saturday, re
turning to the capital yesterday. His
visit was for the purpose of buying
neckties, and he took back with him
enough of these—all black ones—to
stock a haberdashery.
Tuesday night last he attended a
fashionable reception at the Gover
nor's mansion. The music was mellow,
dreamy, heart singing, divine. The
men looked superb in their evening
dress—the women with their diamonds
and rosebuds flashing from throat and
hair, were c-mraeingly beautiful. Bin
where was Burnett?
The minutes sped along, a cab ap
peared and Burnett got cut. The
usher at fhe door shied at him. the
guests tittered, the governor looked
solemn. Presently the governor took
Burnett aside—escorted him to his
room.
"Sav. Jean." he said, ‘ you are a
mighty handsome fellow and you are
generally up to snuff when it comes to
conforming to the proprieties of social
occasions, but what do you mean by
wearing that red necktie with your
evening suit? Better borrow one of
mine.”
Burnett walked to the glass, poked
his nose near it and surveyed himself
and then paled until his face was
cruelly white.
“Honest, governor, is: this tie red?”
He was assured that it was.
"Then 1 am gone color Mind. 1
imagined it was a black one. Sure I
did." apologetically. Then while he
was adjusting one of the governor's
his sense of humor returned to him.
“Say. governor.” ho added, “will color
blindness prevent me from distinguish
ing bills, do you think?’—New York
American.
Rum 0melette for Him
This is the true story of how a Mis- j
sissippi editor kept his New Year’s
lesolution net to drink vinous, malt,
distilled or other variety of intoxicat
ing beverages. On or about Jan. 3 he i
came to town with a small hand
satchel and the good resolution not to
drink aforesaid.
In a short time he found himself at
a table in a restaurant with a party of
congenial spirits. The congenial spir- j
its were partaking of spirits equally j
congenial. Only the Mississippi editor
was adhering to a glass of cold, re
pellant, unsympathetic ice water.
"Have something to drink," suggest
ed one of the party.
"No; I've sworn off: don't intend to
drink any more," was the virtuous
reply.
"Too bad! Too bad!" was the sym
pathetic rejoinder.
The conversation became more live
ly. spirits grew high. The Mississippi
editor keenly felt his aloofness. He
began to understand how the mummy
at the ancient Egyptian feasts used te
feel.
“Have something more, old man!'
suggested one of the party to him a?
the glasses were being replenished
forgetting he had declined before.
To the despairing and thirsty soul ol
the molder of public opinion came a
fla.-h of positive inspiration.
“By heaven:" he exclaimed excited
ly, under the influence of a great idea
"I swore I would not drink it any
more, hut I never said a word about
eating it. Waiter, bring me a rum
omelette and see you pour plenty ol
rum over it:”
At the sixth rum omelette, which the
Mississippi editor ate with a spoon tc
lose none of the sauce, he grew visibly
elate.
Which shows that love will find a
way.—New Orleans Times-Democrat.
Saved by Tobacco Juice
In Cyrus Townsend Brady’s “Indian
Fights and Fighters’’ is a tale of two
scouts, Trudeau and Stillwell, who car
ried to Gen. Carpenter through an In
dian infested country the news that
Maj. Forsyth was being besieged in
the sands of Beecher's Island by a
thousand warriors. Here is one inci
dent cf their journey: “During this day
a lar^e party of scouting Indians halt
ed wi&in 100 feet of the wallow where
the scouts were hiding. Simultaneous
ly with their arrival a wandering rat
tlesnake made his appearance in front
of the two scouts, who were hugging
the earth and expecting every minute
to be discovered.
“In his way the rattlesnake was as
deadly as the Indians. The scouts
could have killed him easily had it not
been for the proximity of the Chey
ennes. To make the slightest move
ment would call attention to their hid
ing place. Indeed, the sinister rattle
of the venomous snake before he
struck would probably attract the no
tice of the alert Indians. Between the
savage reptile and the savage men the
scouts were in a frightful predica
ment. which young Stillwell, a lad ot
amazing resources, instantly and ef
fectuallv solved.
“He was chewing tobacco at the
time, and as the snake drew near him
and made ready to strike, Stillwell
completely routed him by spitting to
bacco juice in his mouth and eyes and
all over his head. The rattlesnake
Red; he could not stand such a dose.
The Indians presently moved on. hav
ing noticed nothing, and so ended per
haps the most terrible half-hour the
two men had ever experienced.”
In Love’s Great Hereafter
Love, when all these years are silent,
vanished quite and laid to rest.
When you and I are sleeping, folded
breahless breast to breast.
When no morrow is before us.
And the long grass tosses o’er us.
And our giave remains forgotten, or by
alien footsteps pressed—
Still that love of ours will linger, that
great love enrich the earth.
Sunshine in the heavenly azure, breezes
blowing joyous mirth:
Fragrance fanning off from flowers.
Melody of summer showers,
Sparkle of the spicy wood tires round the
happy autumn hearth.
That’s our love. But you and I, dear—
shall we linger with it yet.
Mingled in one dewdrop, tangled in one
sunbeam's golden net—
On the violet's purple bosom,
I the sheen, but you the blossom.
Stream on sunset winds and bo the haze
with which some hill is wet?
Or. beloved—if ascending—when we have
endowed the world
With the best bloom of our being, whither
will our way be whirled.
Through what vast and starrv spaces,
Tow aid what awful holy places.
With a white light on our faces, spirit
over spirit furled?
Only this our yearning answers—Where
soever that way detile,
Not a film shall part us through the
, aeons of that mighty while.
In the fair eternal w< at her,
Even as phantoms.stlll together.
Floating, floating, one forever, in the
light of God's great smile!
—Harriet Prescott Spofford.
Words Wnich France Likes,
Tho number of English words ab
| sorbed into the French language dur
i ing recent years without any employ
ment of italic type or quotation
marks, is considerable. In a rapid
skimming of one number of a Paris
daily paper, an editor came across
the words “interview,” "meeting.”
“dockers,” “steeplechase.” "handi
cap.” “editorial,” "wagon,” "clown,”
and “tramway.”
Shake in Vonr Shoes.
Allen s Foot-Ease, a powder, cures pcin
I ful, smarting, nervous feet and ingrowing
nails. It’s the greatest comfort discovery
j of the age. Makes new shoes easy. A
; certain cure for sweating feet. Sold by ali
| druggists, 25c. Trial package FREE.
Address A. S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y.
Worth Remembering.
Tt made the air shine after the
sound had died away, and yet it was
just the remark of a young man who
: walked past me one day arm-in-arm
' with a companion: "Depend upon it.
Tom, St. Edmund of Canterbury was
| right when he said to somebody.
‘Work as though you would live for
ever; live as though you would die
today.’ ”—Exchange.
Lewis’ “Single Binder" straight .V cicar.
No ntlior brand of cigars is so popular with
the smoker. lie has learned to rely upon
its uniform high quality. Lewis' Factory,
' Peoria. 111.
Where a Lady Tells Her Age.
When ladies go to buy a dress in
Japan they tell the shopkeeper their
age. and whether they are married,
because there are special designs for
the single and double relations of life,
as well as for ages. The consequence
of this custom is that you can te’.l the
age of every lady you meet, and
know whether she is married, precise
ly as though she were labeled.
; --
Why It Is the Sent
is because made by an entirely differ
ent process. Defiance Starch is unlike
any other, better ami one-third more
j for 10 cents.
Promptly Fixing the Blame.
Miss Three Year-Old was obliged to
j remain indoors because of a severe
; cold. Looking out of the window, she
j saw her favorite boy playmate with
i another little girl. They were having
: a fine time in the snow. Turning to
1 her mother, the eooped-up exclaimed:
I “I never did like that girl.”
All Up-to-Date Housekeepers
use Defiance Cold Water Starch, be
cause it is better, and 4 ounces more of
it for same money.
Dealing with Burning Oil.
To extinguish burning oil do not
throw water on the flames, for it will
only spread them by causing the oil
: to float. The right plan is to throw
! on flour, earth or sand.-Any of these
I things will soak up the oil—generally
; paraffin from an overturned lamp—
and quickly extinguish the fire.
-
—
“T>r. Kennedy's Favorite Kennedy Is
• n-plieni f‘-r I p ttvffp * ' if. - ste-r pi./ r vPam of
tuiltsrii.g." b. J’* pr.Ti. Aluu.y, A. V World famous. If.
To Truly Live.
T.ife is what we are alive to. It is
not length, but breadth. To be alive
only to appetite, pleasure, pride, mon
ey-making, and not to goodness and
kindness, purity and love history,
i poetry and music, flowers, stars. God
: and eternal hopes, is to be all but
dead.—Maltbie D. Babcock.
Mr*. Winslow's SooUtintr Syrnp.
For children teething, softens the gorep. reduces to
flammaiioii.al.ayspiila, cures wfndcoilu. hitsb-Aue.
——
Iceland seems to be hardly as des
titute of trees as some suppose, an
old idea being that it possesses only
a single tree. An investigation shows
that the island really contains woods
having various trees of considerable
size, and that the elimate is not un
favorable to tree growth.
Fiso's Cure cannot be too highly spoken of as
a cough cure.—J. W. O'Hhies. 322 Third Ave.
N-,Minneapolis. Minn., Jan. 6, lhOO.
j Marion Pierson of Shasta county,
California, drove fifty-six miles from
his ranch to town to buy a coffin for
his father. The old man was not dead
when he started, but he expected to
find him dead on his return.
Prince Mirsky. Russia’s reform
i statesman, attributes much of his sue
cess in public life to his brilliant wife
Woman s Kidnev 'Troubles
C'
Lydia E. PinKham’s Vegetable Compound is Espe
cially Successful in Curing This Fatal
Disease.
0hi SKrs- ^ M/- Lgtjj and /Kirs. *y. Frake
Of all the diseases- known, with 1
which women are afflicted, kidney dis
ease is the most fatal. In fact, unless
early and correct treatment is applied,
the weary patient seldom survives.
Iking fully aware of this. Mrs. l’ir.k
ham early in her career, gave exhaust
ive study to the subject, and in pro
ducing her great remedy for woman's
j ills—Lydia K. Pinkham's Vegetable.
Compound—was careful to see that it
contained the correct combination of
herbs which was sure to control that'
fatal disease, woman's kidney troubles. 1
1 The Vegetable Compound acts in har
mony with the laws that govern the
entire female system, and while there J
, are many so called remedies for kidney ;
troubles. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege
| table Compound is the only one espe
cially prepared for women, and thou
sands have been cure 1 of serious kidney
derangements by it. Derangements of
; the feminine organs quickly affect the
kidneys, and when a woman has such
symptoms ;is pain or weight in the
i loins, backache, bearing down pains,
urine too frequent scanty or limb col
ored, producing scalding or burning,
or deposits like brick dust in it: un
usual thirst, swelling of hands and feet,
swelling under the eyes or sharp pains
in the back runhing down the inside
of her groin, she may be sure her kid
neys are affected and should lose no
j time in combating the disease with
I Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com
pound. the woman s remedy for wo
| man s ills.
The following letters show how
marvelously successful it is.
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound
. . .
Mrs. Samuel Frake, of prospect
Plains. N. .1., writes:
Dear Mrs. Pinkham:—
I cannot thank you enough for what T.rdir*
E. Pinkriaiii's V* getable < L - . •!»*»
forme. When 1 first wrote to you I ha 1 of
fered for years with what the doctor !e<|
kidney trouble and congestion of the womb.
Mv hack ached dreadfully all the tune and f
su V-ed so with that bearing-down feeling I
could hardly w alk across the room, i did not
g t any letter, so decided to ston doctoring
with mv phv-ician and take Lydia E. l ink
ham’s Vegetable CVinuKiund and i am tiiank
fnl to say i: has entirely cured me I do all
my own work, have no more backache ami
ail the bad symptoms have disappeared
I cannot, praise vour t ledicine enough, and
would a n is*- all women suffering w it!* kidney
troub*e to try it
Mrs. *T V*'. Lang. of G26 Third Ave
nue. New York, writes:
Dear Mrs. pinkham:—
1 have 1# -u a great sufferer with kidney
trouble. My back ached all toe tine and I
was discouraged. I heard that Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound woul 1 uro
kidney iti-- as*-*, and I began to t:*k- it; a.si it
1 .-as caretl me when every thing else had i"-iil*-d
1 have recommended it to lots of peoj-.e and
they all praise it very f.tghly.
Mrs. I’iukliam’s Standing In
vitation.
Women suffering from kidney
trouble, or any form of female weak
ness are invited to promptly communi
cate with Mrs Pinkham. at Lynn.
Mass. Out of the great volume of ex
perience which she has to draw from,
it is more than likely she has the very
knowledge that will help your case.
Her advice is free and always help
ful.
; a Woman's Remedy for Woman's Ills*
i There are Many Imitations of K
i I Baker’s Cocoa I
| Baker’s Chocolate !
Don t be misled by them ! |
Our trade-mark is on every f.
package of genuine goods.
Under the decisions of several
\ United States Courts, no
other chocolate or cocoa than
Walter Baker cif Co.’s is en- I
^titled to be sold as “ Baker’s
Look fo* ibis Trade-Mark Cocoa” or “Baker's Chocolate”
Our handsomely illustrated recipe book
sent free.
Walter Baker & Co. Ltd. I
Established I7c0 Dorchester, Massachusetts
45 Highest Awards in Europe and America
WOMAN NEEDS !
For the relief and cure of the many del
icate, intricate and obstinate ailment*
peculiar to her sex, a remedy carefully
devised and adapted to her delicate
organization by an experienced and
skilled physician. Such a remedy is
Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription.
The treatment of many thousands of
those chronic weaknesses and distress
ing ailments peculiar to females, at the
Invalids’ Hotel and Surgical Institute,
Buffalo, N. Y., has afforded a vast ex
perience in nicely adapting and thor
oughly testing remedies for the cure of
woman’s peculiar maladies.
Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription is
the outgrowth, or result, of this great
and valuable experience. Thousands
of testimonials received from patients
and from physicians who have tested it
in the more aggravated and obstinate
cases which had baffled their skill,
prove it to be a superior remedy for the
relief and cure of suffering women.- It
is not recommended as a “cure-all,”
but as a most perfect specific for wom
an's peculiar ailments.
As a powerful invigorating tonic, it
imparts strength to the whole system
and to the womb and its appendages in
particular. For over-worked, “worn
out,” debilitated teachers, milliners,
dressmakers, seamstresses, “shop
girls,” house-keepers, nursing moth
ers, and feeble women generally, “F’a
vorite Prescription” is the greatest
earthly boon, being unequaled as an
appetizing cordial and restorative tonic.
As a soothing and strengthening
nervine, “ Favorite Prescription ” is
onequaled and is invaluable in allaying
and subduing nervous excitability, irri
tability, nervous exhaustion, nervous
prostration, neuralgia, hysteria, spasms,
chorea, or St. Vitus’s dance, and other
distressing, nervous symptoms com
monly attendant upon functional and
organic disease of the womb. It in
duces refreshing sleep and relieves
mental anxiety and despondency.
| A prospective mother cannot begin
too early to look after her own health
and physical condition. This is sure
to be reflected in the baby. Any weak*
; ness or nervous depression, or lack of
vigor on the mother’s part should be
j overcome early during the expectant
time by the use of I)r. Tierce’s Favorite
Prescription, which promotes the per
fect health and strength of the organ
ism specially concerned in motherhood.
It makes the coming of baby abso
lutely safe and comparatively free from
pain; renders the mother strong and
j cheerful, and transmits healthy consti
tutional vigor to the child.
DR R. V. Pierce. Buffalo. X. Y. :
Dear Sir^-ik>mc eight years ago. after the
birth of our first baby. 1 was left in a weak,
run-down condition and it seemed my nerves
were badly unstrung. Did not suffer much
pain, but believe 1 suffered everything that
anyone could suffer with nervousness. Life
wa»; a misery to me. I doctored with a good
physician several years but obtained no re
lief. Then 1 took almost all kinds of patent
i medicines and almost all the old ‘‘trash”
1 that came around. I got no relief, but grew
I worse all the time. Finally chanced to get
bold of one of your pamphlets and thought I
i would write to you. 1 was in fear that you
would write that there could be no cure, but,
j great was my joy, when l received your
answer that I could he cured. I took one bot
tle of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription, two
of "Golden Medical Discovery” and four vials
of Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. 1 am never
without these little “Pellets"In the house.
I ant also cured of those terrible headaches.
T would advise all sufferers to go to Doctor
( Pierce of Buffalo. X. Y., for relief. I don't
’ think they will be disappointed. I do not
! know how to thank you enough for all the
good your medicine has done for me.
xMrs. T. E. U ceo El..
636 Windsor Avenue. Elmira. X. Y.
All women should read Dr. Pierce’s
thousand-page illustrated book, ‘‘The
i People’s Common Sense Medical Ad
! viser.” It contains more clear and
1 comprehensive advice on medical sub
j jects than any other book ever pub
j lished. A paper-bound copy sent free
* for twenty-one one-cent stamps to pay
j the cost of mailing only. Or doth
j bound for thirty-one stamps.
KPEMP5TEP IMPROVED
k^STEEL WIND MILL
^ JOfSTER
nG.Colj
f ROLLER RIM GEARS
^THEYSTOP THE
illWISE AND LESSEN THE WEAR
LATEST. STRONGEST. BEST.
FACTORY. BEATRICE. NEB
BRANCH HOUSES:
Kansas City, Mo., Omaha. Neb., Sioux Falls. S 3.
See nearest dealer or write for circular.
"
* National Oats
Greatest oat of the centner.
Yielded In Ohio l»7. in Mich,
t il, in Mo. 251. and in N. Dakota
310 bu--. per acre.
You can beat that record in IMS.
For 10c and
we mail you free lots of farm seed
samples and our but catalog, t* U
log all about this oat wonder and
thousands of other seeds.
JOHN A. SALZER SEED CO.
INCUBATORS.
The OLD TRUSTY lu
subatora are made by
Johnson, the Incubator
Man. who made 90.000he
Fore Inventing hia OLD
rRUSTY.
A pay-for-ltse’.f hatch
?r. Forty days' free trial
mil a five year'* icueran
lee. For bix free cata
"0>>e. »m poultry lllu»
:rati>ins, adorers.
M. M. JOHNSON CO.,
Box O. T., Clay Center. Neb.
W. N. U. Omaha. No. 10—1905.
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES
an* ,as!er»c,rt5r*tha? anv ?!h-'r ^yev 0ne ,0c oackaoe colors silk, wool and cotton aoually well and is guaranteed to give perfect results.
Ask dealer or we will send post paid at tOc a package. Wri.e for free booklet—How to Dye. Bleach and Mix Colors. MOAJa**c lmCu co., C’nionviUe, Mitamtri