The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, May 18, 1905, Image 7

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    “IT SAVED MY LIFE”
PRAISE FOR A FAMOUS KIDICIKE
Mrs. Willtdsen Tells How She Tried Lydia j
£• Pinkh&m’s Vegetable Compound Just
In Time.
Mrs. T. C. "Willadsen, of Manning,
Iowa, writes to Mrs. Pinkham:
Dear Mrs. Pinkham :—
“ I can truly say that you have saved my
life, ana I cannot express my gratitude to
you in words.
“ Before I wrote to you, telling you bow I
foil. I had doctored for over two years steady
and spent lots of money on medicines besides,
but it all failed to help rue. My monthly pe
riods had ceased and I suffered much pain,
with fainting s{>ells, headache, backache and
bearing-down pains, and I was so weak I
could hardly keep around. As a last resort
I decided to write you and try Lydia E. Pink,
ham’s Vegetable Compound, and I am so
thaiAful that I did, for after following your
instructions, which you sent me free of all
charge, mv monthlv period^ started ; I am
regular and in fwrfect health. Had it not
been for you I would bo in my grave today.
“ I sincerely trust that this letter may lead
every suffering woman in the country to
write you for help as I did."
When women are troubled with Ir
regular or painful menstruation, weak
ness. lencorrhaca. displacement or ul
ceration of the womb, that bearing
down feeling, inflammation of the ova
ries, backache, flatulence, general de
bility, indigestion and nervous prostra
tion, they should remember there is
one tried and true remedy. Lydia E,
Pink ham's Vegetable Compound at once
removes such troubles.
Xo other female medicine in the world
has received such widespread and un
qualified endorsement. Hefuse all sub
stitutes.
Mrs. Plnkham invites all sick women
to write her for advice. She has guided
thousands to health Address, Lynn,
LIAS'S:
A I
Jsje§g0* ^SllMS*
t WATERPROOF 1
iOILED CLOTHING!
I HIGHEST POSSIBLE AWASD ft
I AT THt ST. LOUIS WORLD’S FAIR. |
I Send us the names of dealers in ft
1 your town who do not sell our I
■ goods, and we will send you a 9
ft collection of pictures, in colors, of ft
■ famous towers of the world, srs 0
3 A d- TOWER CO, ESTABLISHED ISSfi’. H !
■ BOSTON NEW YORE CH'CAOO. P|
H TOWEB CANADIAN CO, TORONTO CAN {jj
DR. McQRE W
For 30 year* has made a specialty
of DISK A SFS OF MEN. F.ight
een years In umaha. Hie Home
Treatment h a e permanently
cured thousands at umali cost,
^are time and money by desc-rib- i
lng vour esse, and write for Free
book and terms of treatment. Med- j
trine sent In plain package Box
76#. Office 215 South lath Streoi, 1
ftm»h5 Vebraska.
Provided Handsomely ♦or Pets.
Quite a large sui, was left by £
Rajput princ' some thirty years age
"for the maintenance m comfort” ol
his three favorite elephants and a pel
tiger. A curious provision was thai
special trappings and cloths were tc
be provided for the elephants, while
the tiger was to be regaled with £
specially mentioned diet, and was tc
be provided with a solid gold collai
studded with a large number of pre
cious stones.
With the coming of May, Hudson
River navigation opens, and both the
clay line and the night boats—palaces
ot elegance and models of comfort—
will be once again in active service.
Travel the earth over one will find no
more beautiful wafer trip than this
journey up or down the historic river
that flows majestically through a val
ley of peace, still bearing the foot
steps and scars of battle; still echoing
with the sounds of war.—From “Vest
Pocket Confidences,” in Four-Track
News for May.
Girl Turns Out Lights.
The Strassburg police were puzzled
for some time by the fact that every
night a number of street lights were
turned off. They finally succeeded in
catching the culprit—a young girl
who gave as her excuse for her
strange conduct that it amused her.
For Rent or Sale. Two Ranches of
3.000 Acres Each.
Located in Custer county on South
Loup river; consists of 500 acres good
corn land, 60 alfalfa, 320 meadow and
the balance in pasture; good improve
ments. Inquire of Victor H. Coffman,
Omaha, Neb.
Poor Russian Peasants.
So poor are the Russian peasants,
says Dr. E. J. Dillon, in an article
in the Nineteenth Century, that even
the roach and black beetle can not
find sustenance in their huts.
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.
Once upon a time there was an au
tomobile—which ran slowly and care
fully through the streets of the
city. • * *—Fliegende Blaetter.
CITC rcnnanently enred. No fits or nerrcrameNi &fte»
■ I I V ilr«t day's nse of I)r. Kline’s (Sreai Nerv.- Kestoia
er Send for FBEK •2.00 trial Uitti.. and treutisew
PB. a. il. Ku.nl, Ltd., 931 Arch Street, Philadelphia, Pa
If they are opened to tranquillity
and peace there is no quarter for dis
content.
guaranteed interest semi-annually on all
investments, in tropical plantation half as
large as Rhode Island.40 profitable products
Active managers and asrents wanted. E.
Moore,211 Odd Fellows' Bldg.,St.Louis.Mo
Nowhere are hearts so hungry as in
the land of gingerbread.
You never hear anyone complain
about "Defiance Starch.” There is none
to equal it in quality and quantity; 16
ounces, 10 cents. Try it now and save
your money.
Men who affect virtues have no af
fection for them.
Does your Doctor Know
What’s th* matter with you ? If he does,
the chances are he may help you, but
many times women call on their family
physicians, suffering, a* they Imagine,
one from dyspepsia, another from heart
disease, another from liver or kidney dis
ease, another from nervous exhaustion
or prostration, another with pain here
and there, and In this way they all pre
sent alike to themselves and their easy
going and indifferent, or over-busy doctor,
separate and distinct diseases, for which
lio, assuming them to be such, prescribes
bis pills and potions. In reality they are
ail only tj/mptoriw caused by some womb
disease. The physician, ignorant of the
cause of suffering, encourages this prac
tice until large bills are made. The suf
fering patient gets no better, but proba
bly worse, by reason of the delay, wrong
treatment and consequent complications.
A proper medicine like Dr. Pierce’s Fa
vorite Prescription, directed to the cause
would have entirely removed the disease,
thereby dispelling all those distressing
symptoms, and instituting comfort in
stead of prolonged misery. It has been
well said that “a disease known is half
cured.” In cases almost innumerable,
lifter all other medicines hail failed to
help and doctors had said there was no
cure possible, tlie/iseof Dr. Pierce's Fa
vorite Prescription, supplemented when
necessary by the mistical advice and
counsel of Dr. Pierce, has resulted in a
perfect and permanent cure. The genu
ineness of these cures is attested not only
by the entire discjpitearance of pain, but
by a gain of fltili. a clear complexion
arid a cheerful disposition.
Cures Obstinate Cases.—“Favorite
Prescription ” is a positive cure for the
most complicated and obstinate cases of
leucorrhea, excessive flowing, painful
menstruation, unnatural suppressions
and irregularites, prolapsus or falling vf
the womb, weak back, “female weak
ness,” anteversion, retroversion, bearing
down sensations, chronic congestion, in
flammation and ulceration of the womb,
inflammation, pain and tenderness of the
ovaries, accompanied with “internal
beat.”
Reliable dealers recommend “Favorite
Prescription.” With tricky ones. som<*
thing else that pays them better will
probably be urged tipou you as “just as
good.” Perhaps It is for them, but it
can’t be for you.
Dr. It. V. Pierce. Buffalo. N. Y.:
Dear Str~ I suffered for four years with
falling of womb and general female weak
ness, bad terrible backaches and headaches
and especially distressing times at monthly
periods. Our family physician prescribed
several remedies but although he was an old
and excellent doctor he was unable to relieve
me. I)r. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription was
brought to my attention and spoken of so
highly tlrat I decided to change medicines
and take that. 1 w as indeed pleased to find
that this remedy relieved my pains within
two days, and at the next period. there was
a great change for the better. After ten
weeks’ use of the “Favorite Prescription"
I 1 was not only cured but my general health
was much letter than it had t>een for three
years. I took on flesh, my complexion be
; came smooth and clear, and I now enjoy the
best of health, thanks to Dr. Pierce’s efficient
remedy.
Mrs. A. E. Border,
19& seventu street. Portland. Oregon.
Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription con
tains no alcohol, is entirely vegetable and
was the first exclusively woman’s tonic
on the market—it has sold more largely
in the past third of a century than any
other medicine for women.
All other compounds intended for wom
en only are made with alcohol, or alcohol
is a large component. This alcohol injures
: the nerves. The little red corpuscles of
i the blood are shrunken by alcohol. All
j such compounds, therefore, do harm.
“The People’s Medical Adviser” con
| tains several chapters devoted to the
physiology of women, with directions for
i self-treatment which every woman ought
! to read. A paper-bound copy sent abso
lutely free on receint of 21 one-cent
stamps to pay for mailing only - or cloth
bound, stamps. Address Dr. R. V.
Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y.
Dr. Pierce’s
ter of good
health, and good health is largely a mat
ter of healthy activity of the bowels. Dr.
Pierce's Pleasant Pellets cure constipa
tion. They are safe, sure and speedy,
and once taken do not have to be taken
always. One little “Pellet” is a gentle
laxative, and two a mild
cathartic. They never Ijnl 1
gripe. By all druggists. ■ Cl ICid>
IThe PATRIOT SHOE for Men is made from all leathers,
over stylish yet comfortable lasts, to fit any foot. They are
Goodyear welts, which means flexible soles, with no wax or tacks
tt> irritate the foot. The MAYFLOWER SHOE for Women
is made in welts and hand turns. Is stylish, durable and comfortable.
Ask yoar dealer for them. If be does not handle these shoes,
write ae direct. They will please yon and you will nave from 69
cents to $1.60 per pair in prioes usually charged for shoes of
this character.
PIANOS
Krom Maker u User.*
Cut out Agents* Profit.
SAVE A CLEAN $100
Don’t think of buying a piano with
out first getting our catalog, prices and
terms on the famous “Mueller” pianos
and 20 other makes.
SCLiMOLLER & MUELLER
Plano Sinkers, Omaha. Neb.
.. W.J
There was once a poor woman
whose life had been such a bitter one
that she wanted her memory taken
away. He to whom she had- given the
love of her young heart had not ful
filled the promises of his youth; his
weaknesses had developed into
crimes, so that he was compelled to
flee for his life; and the sons and
daughters she had borne and brought
up had repaid her care and kindness
with neglect and abuse, and at last,
one by one, had wandered far from
her fireside. So the heart of the poor
woman was broken, and she passed, a
sad and desolate soul, down the dark
valley of the shadow of death. She
came at last to the dim river, and
asked the boatman to take her over.
“This is the river of forgetfulness,”
said the boatman. “Will you stop and
drink before you cross?”
The woman's face brightened and
her voice was full of eager longing.
“Yes.” she said, “I will drink; 1 will
forget then that my hopes have fail
ed.”
“You will forget that you ever
hoped,” replied the boatman.
The woman drew back; then she
bent forward once more. “I will for
get that I came to hate him so,” she
said.
“You will forget that you ever loved
him,” came the response.
The words seemed to stir a faraway
memory. There was a long pause.
Then the woman leaned forward to
drink.
“I will forget that my little ones left
my arms. I will forget how I wept for
them in the darkness when they did
not return at night. I will forget that
they lost the right path and wandered
away, never to return to me.”
“Yes,” said the boatman, “you will
forget that you ever pressed them to
your bosom, forget that you ever felt
the tiny fingers wandering caressingly
over your face. You will forget the
visions you saw, the fond hopes you
cherished as you used to rock them
to sleep at night.”
The woman was not stooping by the
river now ; she had raised herself and
was walking toward the boat.
“You may row me across,” she said.
“1 shall not drink of the waters of for
getfulness.”
Have you ever said, dear reader, in
a moment of despair, “there is nothing
in all my past to be thankful for?”
Never say it again. Have you ever
wished that you might drink of the
waters of forgetfulness? Never wish
it again.—A. B. Curtis.
Much Learned Through War
War is abhorrent, but it has at least
jne innocent use, says the Philadel
phia Public Ledger. It is an efficient
educator in geography. War teaches
this branch of education with more in
terest and thoroughness than the
most accomplished professor in his
classroom and, on the other hand, it
is urged by many eminent military
men that an accurate knowledge of
geography is necessary for successful
warfare.
The art of war and geography are
in intimate association. The latter is
called “the handmaid of tactics and
strategy.” So important is the rela
tion of geographical education to war
that the London Times has opened its
columns to the discussion of the sub
ject. One oi its correspondents, in
true British fashion, says that “to
think imperially with any profit we
must think geographically.”
- The technical importance of geo
graphical knowledge in war and the
importance of “thinking imperially”
may not appeal to the American read
er, but there can be no question as to
the educational value of the dis
patches and accompanying explana
tions chronicling the movements of
armies on the war scene and describ
ing more or less minutely regions and
peoples of which the reader has had
very limited and imperfect knowledge.
Recalling conflicts within easy rec
ollection, the South African and the
Spanish-American wars were great
educators. No one who followed
these wars closely, as gazetted by the
newspapers, could have failed to
learn much respecting Africa, Spain,
Cuba, the Philippines and Porto Rico
of which he was previously ignorant.
The pending titanic struggle in Asia
has produced a deluge of valuable in
formation, geographical, political, so
cial, respecting Russia. Japan and
Manchuria, quite apart from the in
tensely dramatic features of the war.
The school books are always years
behind that universal school master,
; the live newspaper. The mass of in
formation and permanently useful in
telligence presented in the voluminous
war correspondence is one of the as
tonishing evidences of modern prog
ress and of the development of the
newspaper’s function as a popular ed
ucator. The daily newspaper, faithful
to its trust, is the world's best text
book in many lines.
Playground of the Wind
As mysterious and uncontrollable, as
treacherous and as entertaining as
the vast ocean, which lies only a few
leagues west of its borders, is the
great sea of sand which forms a large
portion of California's greatest desert,
know n, because of its proximity to the
river of that name, as the Colorado
desert.
This desert is the wind’s favorite
playground. He comes over the moun
tains, from plowing the mighty deep,
and works strange fancies in the pli
able sands. He duplicates the great
billows of the turbulent ocean; he
imitates the rippling waves of the
placid sea; he carves and builds and
plays at artist, sculptor and geometri
cian. When he becomes weary of his
sports he lashes himself to fury and
tosses the sand a mile high in the
air and flings it broadcast over all
the plain, whirling and hurling the
particles till he obscures the sun and
brings a suffocating darkness to the
land.
On the east side of the desert he is
at present busy engultfing a railroad.
Already he has buried many of the
; telegraph poles which stand along the
way and he has invaded the right of
way of the road and the company
is busily fighting to hold possession
until a new line, which is being built
; around the intruding hills, shall be
! completed. Then the rolling billows
| of sand will be allowed to sweep on
undisputed.
In the southwestern portion of the
j same desert is another range of travel
ing hills. These are more wonderful,
however, than the ones which are men
acing the railroad, for upon these hills
the wind has practiced his skill at
carving geometrical figures. These
hills are known as the Crescent hills.
Each is the shape of a true crescent,
the points of which are toward the
east.
A hill which is fifty feet high is
found to be 100 feet thick at the base
and 200 feet from point to point of the
duplicate horns of the crescent. If a
hill is twice that hight its other dimen
sions will be found to have doubled
also. Little and big they keep their
proportions as they move slowly
across the plain.—New York Tribune.
Benefit in Short “Naps”
The majority of people take a meal
of some kind between the hours of 12
and 2 daily, says the London Chron
icle. With a number of persons this
meal assumes the form of a substan
tial dinner, while with others it
amounts to nothing more than a light
luncheon. In either case, however,
the repast requires to be digested, and
this necessitates some modification of
the activities of the brain, since neith
er that organ nor those concerned in
the processes of digestion are capable
of good work when an attempt Is
made to put forth their energies simul
taneously.
A tendency to drowsiness, confusion
of thought and inability to make any
great mental effort are among the re
sults of a diminished cerebral circu
lation. These feelings are, therefore,
experienced by most persons after
a meal, and they are the more pro
nounced in proportion to the gre°ter
amount of digestive energy expended.
! Since brain work of good quality
! cannot be produced while the pro
cesses of digestion are in active opera
tion, it is wise not to attempt it. It
is never prudent to thwart the bene
ficent intentions of nature. Many per
sors struggle against the mental and
physical lethargy that accompanies
the earlier stages of the digestive act,
apparently under the delusion that all
time given to the important business
of building up and repairing by their
tissues is time wasted. So far from
this being the case a well spent post
prandial interval tends to the preser
vation and prolongation of life. If a
tendency to drowsiness is felt sleep
should be allowed to prevail, for the
proverbial “forty winks” is justified
of science. A ten or fifteen minutes’
nap after a meal curiously enough will
enable many a brainworker to arise
refreshed who might have spent an
hour or two in a vain and mentally
confused struggle against the "drowsy
god.”
Proved Value of Courtesy
“I found out the other night that
courtesy pays, even in a poker game,”
said a United States Senator from one
of the Southern states. “I had a par
ty of gentlemen at my house for a so
cial game and 'long toward the shank
of the evenin’ there came a right
smart jackpot.
“I dealt the cards and the man next
to me openin’ it, I squeezed out the
only straight flush I ever held in my
life, from the seven to the jack of
clubs. Of course every man o' the six
that w-ere playin’ trailed along and
when it got ’round to me I just nat
urally raised it the limit, which, by the
■way, was very small.
“Everybody stood the raise and all
hands drew three cards but me and
the bank clerk, a young fellow who
didn’t know much about the game, as
the sequel will show. The opener bet
a white chip, and the bank clerk, who
sat two seats away from him, h’isted
It the limit.
“I saw that he had drawn two cards
and figured it out that he had fours.
In fact, I had no right to count on
anything else, seeing the play he’d
made, and I felt in my bones that I
had him skinned to death.
“Then I did the courteous thing and
says to him, ‘Young man. I’ve got you
licked to a standstill, but bein’ as I’m
the host of the evenin' and bein’ as
I'm slightly ahead of the game, I’m
just goin’ to call you.’
“I’m dam sorry you’re so polite,’
says he. ‘I’ve got the best hand I
ever had in my life,’ and with that he
threw down the king, queen, jack, ten
and nine of diamonds.
“The dam fool,” continued the Sen
ator, “had broke a pair of queens and
held up the king, queen and ten of
diamonds, pullin’ in the nine and jack,
and he had done it before he saw that
I waB standin’ pat, I having the last
draw, showin’, as I said before, that
he didn't know much about the game.
But my courtesy saved my life and I
only lost about a dollar on the hand.”
The Bishop’s Tir'eiy Text.
One of the occasions when Bishop
Brooks preached at Harvard a special
musical service was given. Solomon
-, metter known to the students a#
“Sol,"' again consented to sing for the
great preacher. He sang a solo before
the sermon in fine voice and in a beau
tiful way that touched his hearers.
The impressive silence that followed
was broken by the famous bishop’s
text: “Saul, Saul, why persecutest
thou me?”—Boston Herald.
Why H Was Chosen.
A well known lecturer, who had
been invited to serve as a substitute
in a country place, felt some nervous
ness, knowing he was to fill the place
of a more famous man. This feeling
was not diminished when he heard
himself thus announced by a long
limbed, keen eyed farmer: “This man
is our substitute. 1 don’t know what
he can do. Time was short, and we
had to take what we could git!”
Good Artist vs. Bad Man.
Alfred Gilbert, the artist, told his
Royal Academy audience—according
to the report in the London Pall Mall
Gazette—that the good artist never
was a bad man, and the bad man nev
er was a good artist. And what does
Mr. Gilbert think of the artistic abil
ity of that champion, all-round bad
man, Benvenuto Cellini?
Beans a Japanese Dainty.
Beans, which looked like the or
dinary liver bean of this country,
cooked tender and given a coating of
sugar, were among the sweetmeats
served at a Japanese entertainment
the other day. They are said to be a
common Japanese dainty.
Unique Jail.
The town of Kenneth, Cal., has no
jail building. So it has put an iron
door at the mouth of a mining tunnel,
and the tunnel makes a roomy and se
cure calaboose.
He who shields little sins will soon
be the slave of large ones.
CAPT. GRAHAM’S CURE.
_
Sore* on Face and Back—Tried Many
Doctors Without Success—
Gives Thanks to
Cuticura.
Captain W. S. Graham. 1321 Eoff
St., Wheeling, W. Ya.. writing under
date of June 14, ’04, says: “I am so
grateful I want to thank God that a
friend recommended Cuticura Soap
and Ointment to me. I suffered for a
long time with sores on my face and
back. Some doctors said 1 had blood
poison, and others that 1 had barbers’
itch. None of them did me any good,
but they all took my money. My
friends tell me my skin new looks as
clear as a baby’s, and I tell them all
that Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Oint
ment did it.”
Petrified people, like petrified trees,
take the finish polish.
How’s This ?
We offer One Hundred Dollar* Reward for any
We of Catarrh that canuat be cured by Hall'*
Catarrh Cure.
F. J. CHEXFY * CO.. Toledo. O.
We. the undersigned have known F. J. Cheney
for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly hon
orable In all business transactions and f.nati'clally
able to carry out any obligations made by his firm.
Walbino. Rinnan <fc Marvin,
Wholesale Druggtsta. Toledo. O.
Hell'* Catarrh Core Is taken Internally, acting
*lrect!y upon the blood and mucous surface* of the
! *yBt(em. Testimonials sent free. Price 75 cent* par
bottle Sold bv all Druggist*.
Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation.
Soul possessions are the only as
sets that count in heaven.
I>r. I>»vid Kennedy'* Favorite Remedy Is
Adapted to both sexesanii al1. aces* Cure** Ki»ine\ and
Uver complaint, and purities the blood. 11 uL uru^ffiata.
The richer the life within the sim
pler will be that without.
Mr*. Winslaw's Soothing Nyrtip,
For children teething, softens the gums, reduces tjy
flammation, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c a bottle.
It takes an empty head to rise to
the heights of fashion.
Insist on Getting It.
Some grocers snv they don't keep
Defiance Starch. This is because they
have a stock on hand of other brands
containing only 12 ounces in a pack
age, which they won t be able to sell
first, because Defiance contains 16
ounces for the same money.
Do you want 16 ounces instead of 12
ounces for same money? Then buy De
fiance Starch. Requires no cooking.
Somewhere there’s a sin back of
every sorrow".
More Flexible and Lasting.
won’t shake out or blow out; by using
Defiance Starch you obtain better re
sults than possible with any other
brand and one-third more for same
money.
All power is born of pain.
Alabastine.
Your
Walls
■
' Typhoid Fever, Diphtheria,
■ Small Pox — the germs of
J these deadly diseases multi*
■ ply in the decaying glue pres
i ent in all kalsomines, and the
* decaying paste under wall
■ paper.
I Alabastine is a disinfectant; it
■ destroys disease germs and vermin;
■ is manufactnred from a stone cement
? base, hardens on the walls, and is as
; B enduring as the wall itself. Alabas
a tine is mixed with cold water, and
1 any one can apply it.
■ Ask for sample card of
■ beautiful tints and informa
® tion about decorating. Take
* no cheap substitute.
® Buy only in 5 pound packages
B properly labeled.
| ALABASTINE COMPANY
* Grant Aye., Grand Rapids, Mich.
I ■ ■ ■ ■ §New York Office, 105 Water St.a ■ ■ ■ i
A JUDGE’S WIFE WU
Mrs. Carrie King, Darlington, Mo.,
writes:
“I have suffered for years with
biliousness, and kidney and liver
trouble.
“// I caught a little cold, the pains
were increased and backache and
headache were of frequent occurrence.
“However, Peruna cured me—twelve
bottles made me a healthy woman."’
I Quickly Cured by a Short
Course of Pe-ru-na.
Mrs. minnie e. McAllister,
wife of .fudge McAllister, writes
from 1217 West 33rd street, Minneap
olis, Minn., as follows:
“/ suffered for years with a pain In
the small of my back and right side. It
interfered often with m v domestic and
social duties and I never supposed that
I would be cured, as the doctor's medi»
cine did not seem to help me any.
“Fortunately a member of our Order
arlvisen me to try 1‘eruna and gave it
such high praise that 1 decided to try
it. Although I started in with little
faith. I felt so much better in a week
that I felt encouraged.
“I took it faithfully for seven weeks
and am happy indeed to be able to say
that I am entirely cured.
“Words fail to express my gratitude.
Perfect health once more is the best
thing / could wish for, and thanks to
Peruna, I enjoy that cow ”
Pain in the back, or on the right side.
How often a physician hears this
complaint!
Over and over we hear women say:
‘*1 have a paid in the small of my back.
1 have a pain in my right side, just be
low the ribs.*'
These symptoms indicate pelvic or
abdominal catarrh.
They indicate that the bowels are not
acting properly—that the liver is out
of order—that the pelvic organs are
congested.
Pelvic catarrh—that is the name for it.
Pcruna cures pelvic catarrh, when
all of these symptoms disappear.
The catarrh may be all in the abdom
inal organs, when it would be properly
called abdominal catarrh.
At any rate, it is one of those cases of
internal catarrh which can be reached
only by a course of treatment with
I’eruna.
We have on file thousands ofjtesti
monials similar to the above. It is im
possible here to give our readers more
than one or two specimens of the num
ber of grateful and commendatory let
ters Dr. llartman is constantly receiv
ing in behalf of his famous catarrh
remedy, i’eruna.
|w. L. DOUGLAS
S *3 JO & S3.92 SHOES s.
j; W. ¥-. ¥)oiiglns 93.*»0 shoes are the greatest sellers in the
world lHT;iu#f of their excellent style, easy titling and outie.
rior wearing qual ities. Thev are junl as g<M»d a*those that
cost from ji.'i.OO to ^?.Oo. The o«»ly <1 liter*.*nee is the price.
W. I-. Douglas gM.wO »iu»e« cost more to make, hold their
shape better, wear longer, and are of greater value than any
othrr^t.oOihoe on the market I *-duy. W. L*. llouglas guar
antees their value by m i.uoui : his name a«n»l price on the
bottom of <*arh shoe. Look tor it. Take no substitute. %V. L.
Douglas shoes art* sold through his own retail stores in
the principal cities, tin I by nhoe dealers every where. iN'ainul -
ter where you live, vV.I«. jk»oiigins shoes are within > our reach.
BETTER THAN OTHER MAKES AT AXE PRICE.
“For the last three years I have imm ir. U Douglas ttUHl -.her and found it not
only as goon, but better than any \h >* 'hat I t ier h i t. reganllets of price."
Chas. L, rarrW/, Asst. Cashier Thr Capital National Rank, Indtanap tin. Ind.
Boys wear W. L. Douglas $2.50 and $2.00 shoes because they fit
better, hold their shape, and wear lonsrer than other makes.
W.L.DOUGLAS $4.00 SHOES CAH'SOT BE EQUALLED AT ANY PRICE.
W. B. Douglas u**s Corona Cultsbn in hi.i tS.yi shoes. Coruna
Cult is considered to be the finest patent leather prmiured.
FAST COLOR EYELETS WILL A OT WE A K HR ASM V
L. riosiKlas hap the larce«t *hoe mail order business in the world.
>o trouble to net a lit by mi l. » ■•. ertm. prepavp delivery. If vou desire
further information, trnfe for Illustrated Catalogue of Spring Styles.
W.L.DOUCLAS, BROCKTON, MASSACHUSETTS
BUY VOIR GO-CAI!I AND BABY CARRIAGES
cl i red from
in a uufacturer.
We will sell ;
you retail at
i wholes ile pri
. res. We carry
ft the i*‘st ami \
M finest line west j
|S of Chicago,
r Call or senJ j
C for catalogue. !
| Omaha Reed 6
* R.'t*an Work; !
1512 Howard.
Omaha. Neb. j ,
i -
~ 1
A CLEAR, HEALTHY SKIN
8andhoim's Eczema
and Skin Remedy ]
Purifies, Then Heals
I PoeitlTely cures Eczema, Pimples,
I Eruptions. Insect Kites and ai) dte
| eases of the skin. An absolute cure '
for Dandruff or ttealp d>eat*-s.
Ask Druggist or Barber or send for FREE
BA3CPLE and BOOKLET. Write a-day. (
Dept. 6, 8AJTDH0LM DRUG 00., Dea Heines, la.
TWE1TY BUSHELS UF WHEAT
TO THE ACRE
Is the record on
the Free Home
stead Lands of
Western Canada
for 1304.
Thp 150.000 farmers fr.tn the United States, who
luring the past seven years base gone to Canada
tarticipate In this prosperity.
The United States will son become an Importer of
rbeat. Oet a free homestead or purchase a farm la
Western Canada, add become one of those who wiU
■elp produce It.
Aprly for Information to Superintendent of Irr.ml
Tatloo Ottawa. Canada, or to authorised Canadian
lovemment Agent—W. V. Bennett, SOI New l'or*
.lfe Building. Ouiaha. Nebraska.
Please say where you saw this advertisement.
PIT 4 PITLESS SCALES. For Steel
and Wood Frames, fJS and up. Write
us before you buy. We save you
_ money. Also Pumps and Wind
Mills. BECKMAN BROS., Das Moines. Iowa.
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES
Color more goods brighter and faster colors than any othrr dye. One 10c osckaoe colors silk, wool and cotton eaually well and is aoarsntaad «*> njrfmrt .....h.
tak dealer or tea will send poet paid at 10c a package, ton * tor tree booklet- How to Die. Ble^chTnd «lu Cotor* ^o:vI<;^7>/i7o t^!rt^J,^uS^,.21^
» ____
lEtfflS’SINGLE
BINDER
- J ALWAYS reliable
Tour jobber or ;t troin i-actorj, F#orU, UL
$100 Weekly Easily Made
writing health and accident Insurance experience nn
tmccMary. Write Bankers’ Aoci4eat0o..De# «»mi» T.
W. N. U. Omaha. No. 19—1905.
rs _ ciIItFffHiBE Aa tLSi i aTs." Tg
M Beet CoQKh oyrup. Tanea Good. Dae W
^Pm tail—. HriiQ by dnmrlma._B1
^ X --