The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, August 03, 1905, Image 7

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    KIDNEY JRDUBLES
Increasing Among Women* But
Sufferers Weed Wot Despair
THE BEST ADVICE IS FREE
Of all the diseases known, with which
the female organism is>afflicted, kidney
disease is the most fatal, and statistics
show that this disease is on the increase
Among women.
^Airj.Emma Sawyer^
Unless early and correct treatment ia
applied the patient seldom survives
when once the disease is fastened upon
her. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound is the most efficient treat
ment for kidney troubles of women,
and is the only medicine especially
prepared for this purpose.
When a woman is troubled wKh pain
or weight in loins, backache, frequent,
painful or scalding urination, swelling
of limbs or feet, swelling under the
eyes, an uneasy, tired feeling in the
region of the kidneys or notices a brick
dust sediment in the urine, she should
lose no time in commencing treatment
with Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound, as it may be the means of
saving her life.
For proof, read what Lydia E. Pink
ham's Vegetable Compound did for Mrs.
Sawyer.
“ I cannot express the terrible suffering I
had to endure. A derangement of the female
organs developed nervous prostration and a
6erious kidney trouble. The doc.vr attended
me for a year, but I kept getting worse, until
I was unable to do anwhing, and I made up
my mind I could not Uve. 1 finally decided
to try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com
pound as a last resort, and I am to-day a well
woman. I cannot praise it too highly, and I
tell every suffering woman about my case."
Mrs. Emma Sawyer, Conyers, Ga.
Mrs. Pinkham gives free advice to
women ; address in confidence, Lynn,
Mass.
Special Offer
The name and address of your
shoe dealer and 15c to cover
cost of mailing, etc., will secure
one of the handsome rolled
gold pins illustrated above.
Enameled in colors and will
wear for years. These pins
were secured by thousands of
World’s Fair visitors.
Only a few hundred left.
Write Quick.
Roberts. Johnson Skand
SHOE CO. ST. L»UIS
MANUFACTURERS OF
“STAR BRAND SHOES”
Very
Low
Round
Trips
South and Southeast, one fare plus
*2.00.
Hot Springs. Ark., daily.$23.00
St. Louis, Mo., daily.$18.50
Chautauqua. N. Y., July 28... 34.00
Detroit. Mich, August 13th
and 14th . 21.50
Pittsburg. Pa., Aug. 17th
and 18th . 25.25
Richmond. Va.. Sept. 8th to
11th inclusive . 33.75
Philadelphia. Pa.. Sept. 14th
to 16th, inclusive. 82 75
Long limits, stopovers and other
features offered in connection with
the above rates.
All Agents can sell you through
tickets and route you Wabash.
All tickets reading over the Wa
bash from Chicago east are op
tional with passenger via Lake or
Rail either or both directions.
Call at Wabash City office. 1601
Farnam St., or write and let me
give you all information, maps, de
scriptive matter, folders, etc.
HARRY E. MOORES.
G. A. P. D. Wabash R R., Omaha,
Neb.
KEEP OIN TME SAEE SIDE
Boy a hand-made Moeller Plano.
We know that only the best materials
obtainable are used in their construc
tion—the twenty year guarantee—then
high quality, our low price.
I nite luxury with economy.
Write today for new catalogue Just
off the press. We have no agent*.
Address the makers,
SCHMOLLER A MUELLER,
Factory, 1407 Harney Street.
E»t. ISM). Omaha. Heh.
m
FOR WOMEN J
troubled with ills peculiar to
their sex. used as a douche is marvelously sue
eessful. Thoroughly cleanses, kills disease germs,
.tops discharges, heals inflammation and local
■oreness, cures leucorrhma and nasal catarrh.
Paxtine is in powder form to be dissolved in pore
enter, and is far mere cleansing, healing, germicmaJ
,.,1 atuv'miral than liquid antiseptics lor all
TOILET AND WOMEN'S SPECIAL USES
For saieat
Tmc A. Paxton Com pant Sootom, is*so.
When Answering Advertisements
1 Kindly Mention This Paper. j
IN A MINING CAMP
~ - A
HARDY LIFE OF A BRAND-NEW
WESTERN TOWN.
“Tenderfoot" Who Would Look for
Luxuries, or Even Comforts, Would
Be Disappointed. — Majesty of a
Storm of Thunder and Rain.
In Harper's Magazine Philip Verrill
Mighels gives a vivid picture of a
western mining camp as he saw it on
the night of his arrival: “It was twi
light when we came in sight of the
brand-new miniEg camp, built in a
natural amphitheater formed by the
square-cut table mountains. It was a
thickly studded constellation of tents,
with straggling domiciles and dugouts
scattered about over a space of ten
square miles. In their whiteness and
squareness the tents resembled count
less dice at rest where the toss of fate
and chance had left them to grasp at
a foothold.
“The darkness closed in as we drove
Into town. Our teamster swung his
animals at once into a large corral,
where hundreds of mules, a dozen
cows, scores of men, great dusty wag
ons. and piles and heaps of baggage,
lumber, cases, rolls of bedding, gaunt
iron boilers and domestic necessities
were mixed in hopeless confusion.
“I paid him my fare and told him T
would willingly pay him more could
he manage to provide me with a 6x1
accommodation in his blankets for the
night. He knew men were walking
the streets for lack of beds in the
town and, being a large-hearted team
ster, he agreed to take me in, provid
ed there was space sufficient under
cover.
“ ‘I sleep ’most anywheres in this
corral.’ he said. 'There’s a tent over
here that we may get in if there ain’t
too many beds there now.’
“In the semi-darkness we stumbled
over to the tent, which he entered.
A second later he let out a horrible
whoop. He had bumped into some
thing alive. It was merely a cow. She
had gone inside in search either for
news from home or hay in the mat
tresses. She came out hurriedly,
bowling the writer aside in her haste.
Then a match was lighted, its waver
ing light revealing nine rough beds in
the tent, all on the ground, in a space
so limited that many were, perforce,
rolled up in order to squeeze into the
space. But I could come here and
bunk in with the teamster if nothing
more inviting could be fi«md. He
seemed to believe there was room.
“A final storm of the day now broke
before I could make my way from
the strewn corral. In Nevada the rar
est disturbance known is a storm of
thunder and rain. But to-night above
the brow of the somber mountains
raged a mighty war of elements, ter
rific and ominous. Out of clouds as
black as felt stabbed three-pronged
lightning strokes', vicious and awful.
A sudden wind hurled dust and rain
and hail together in a tempest on the
town. The street was ablaze with
lights from a score of saloons and
gambling halls. Music arose from
these thronged abodes of carelessness.
It swept in interrupted gushes on the
storm, laughing out its frivolity
against the stern, deep roar of thun
der from the hill. To me it was threat
and portent, fearful and majestic, that
the gods were sounding.”
A Word of Advice.
Biddlecomb was holding his eldest
son in earnest converse.
“My boy,” he said, “I am filled with
anxiety when I think that you will
soon make choice of a wife.”
"I have not done so yet, father,” the
young man replied. “What sort of
wife would you suggest?*’
The older man looked around cau
tiously.
“My son.” he said, "if your father's
advice is worth anything to you, let
me urge you to seek for a woman who
hasn’t the independence, the poeitive
ness, the general characteristics of
your mother.” He was interrupted at
that moment by a light footfall and
realized that his beloved helpmeet had
entered the room. "No, my son,” he
continued, “do not hope to find anoth
er woman like your mother. Such
paragons are rarely, if ever, duplicat
ed.”—cieveland Plain Dealer.
Pensions Dumb City Servants.
Nicholas F. Brady, son of the gov
ernor of Alaska, attended a sale of
condemned fire department horses in
New York city recently. He purchased
the half-dozen animals offered for $600
and sent them to his farm, where they
may browse on meadow grass and
other good things for the rest of their
days. Mr. Brady says that he will
continue to buy the faithful servants
of the public because he believes that
they deserve the gratitude of citizens.
Carnegie Professor of Physics.
Prof. W. E. Gibbs of Fan wood. N. J.,
has been appointed professor of phys
ics in the Carnegie Technical schools
at Pittsburg. He is known through
out the eastern cities for his broad
knowledge of physics, which he has
applied to a great variety of practical
operations.
Offered Liberal Advance.
Fourteen thousand dollars is the
salary of Dr. A. V. V. Raymond by the
First Presbyterian church, the wealth
iest congregation in Buffalo. Dr. Ray
mond has been filling tbe pulpit for
several months without pay, but he
declines to give up the presidency of
Union college at Schenectady, N. Y.,
which pays him $3,500 a year, to ac
cept the pastorate.
Golden Hue in Butter.
Consumers of butter at Springfield,
Mass., who have recently noticed the
unwonted golden hue of the article,
are puzzled over one dealer’s state
ment that an unusual crop of dande
lions in Vermont and western Massa
chusetts is responsible for it, and the
explanation of a less poetic dealer
that it is probably due to a greater use
of coloring matter by the dairymen.
Library Usee Motor Car.
The Chicago public library uses a
twenty-horsepower gasoline wagon to
deliver books from the central depart
ment to the many branches in the city
and suburbs.
NAMES BEST DOCTOR
MR. BAYSSON PUBLISHES RESULTS
OP VALUABLE EXPERIENCE.
A Former Pronounced Dyspeptic He Now
Rejoices in Perfect Freedom from
Miseries of Indigestion.
Thousands of sufferers know that the
reason why they are irritable and de
pressed and nervous and sleepless is be
cause their food does not digest, but how
to get rid of the difficulty is the pnzzLing
question.
Good digestion calls for strong diges
tive organs, and strength comes from a
supply of good rich blood. For this
reason Mr. Baysson took Dr. Williams’
Pink Pills for the cure of indigestion.
“ They have been my best doctor,” he
says. “ I was suffering from dyspepsia.
The pains in my stomach after meals
were almost unbearable. My sleep was
very irregular and my complexion was
sallow. As the result of using eight
boxes of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills, about
the merits of which I learned from
friends in France, I have escaped all
these troubles, and am able again to take
pleasure in eating.”
A very simple story, but if it had not
been for Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills it
might have been a tragic one. When dis
comfort begins with eating, fills up the
intervals between meals with pain, and
prevents sleep at night, there certainly
cannot be much pleasure in living. A
final general breaking down must bt
merely a question of time.
Mr. Joseph Baysson is a native of
Aix-les-Bains, France, but now resides
at No. 2439 Larkin street, San Francisco,
Cal. He is one of a great number who
can testify to the remarkable efficacy of
Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills in the treatment
of obstinate disorders of the stomach.
If you would get rid of nausea, pain or
burning in the stomach, vertigo, ner
vousness, insomnia, or any of the other
miseries of a dyspeptic, get rid of the
weakness of the digestive organs by the
use of Dr. Williams’Pink Pills. They
I are sold by druggists everywhere.
Proper diet is, of course, a great aid in
! forwarding recovery once begun, and a
: little book, “What to Eat and How to
Eat,” may be obtained by any one who
J makes a request for it by writing to the
I Dr. Williams Medical Co., Schenectady,
I N.Y. This valuable diet book contains
an important chapter on the simplest
i taeaas for the cure of constipation.
Hot Lakes in New Zealand.
The hot lakes district of New Zea
land includes seven lakes ranging in
area from thirty-one to three* square
miles, besides many of smaller size.
Important to Mothers.
Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA.
a safe and sure remedy for infanta and children,
and see that it
Bears the
Signature of
la Use For Over 30 Years.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Cause of Headaches.
As is naturally to be expected, the
;ommonest cause of headaches is
tome nervous disturbance or weak
less irritated by some experience
vhich in prime condition of health
vould produce no perceptible effect.
The common causes are therefore of
wo classes, namely, those which jVe
riously exist within the body and
hose which exist outside of it and ex
:ite the inner or latent evils into Re
don.
Quite a Mix-Up.
Ralph Carlisle Hamilton of North
Carolina has confessed that he is a
jirl. She has been posing as a he for
ive years. He admits row he is she.
He had courted another she and she
Ithe other she) was ready to marry
le when he (that is, she) backed out,
ind she (the other she) is enraged at
?he (or rather he) because he (that is,
she) deceived her, the other her—that
s, not him whe is now she.—Judge.
Use for Discarded Tramcars.
Australia has found a new use for
liscarded tramcars. Sydney ladies
lave them painted green and white,
aang them with baskets of flowers,
;rain creepers over the roof and then
atilize them as afternoon tearooms.
London Healthier Than New York.
Although the population of New
Tork is fewer by a good million than
;bat of London, the number of deaths
.ast year in the two cities was prac
tically the same.
CHANGED HUSBAND.
Wife Made Wise Change in Food.
Change of diet is the only way to
really cure stomach and bowel trouble.
A woman says:
"My husband had dyspepsia when
We were married and had suffered
from it for several years. It was al
most impossible to find anything he
could eat without bad results.
“I thought this was largely due to
the use of coffee and persuaded him
to discontinue it. He did so, and be
gan to drink Postum Food Coffee. The
change did him good from the begin
ning, h:s digestion improved; he suf
fered much less from his nervousness,
and when he added Grape-Nuts food
to his diet he was soon entirely cured.
"My friend, Mrs.-, of Vicks
burg (my former home) had become a
nervous wreck also from dyspepsia.
Medicines had no effect, neither did
travel help her. On my last visit home,
some months ago, I persuaded her to
use Grape-Nuts food. She was In de
spair, and consented. She stuck to it
until it restored her health so com
pletely that she is now the most enthu
siastic friend of Grape-Nuts that I ever
knew. She eats it with cream or dry.
Just as it comes from the package—
keeps it in her room and eats it when
ever she feels like it.
“I began eating Grape-Nuts food,
myself, when my baby was two
months old, and I don't know what I
should have done without it. My ap
petite was gone, I was weak and nerv
ous and afforded but very little nour
ishment for the child. The Grape-Nuts
food, of which I soon grew very fond,
speedily set all this right again, and
the baby grew healthful, rosy and
beautiful as a mother could wish. He
is two years old now and eats Grape
Nuts food himself. I wish every tired
young mother knew of the good that
Grape-Nuts would do her.”
Names given by Postum Co., Pattis
I Creek, Mich.
I There’;) a reason.
SONGS IN CITY STREETS.
Glasgow Authorities Prohibit Certain
Mournful Strains.
The London public has generously
decided to dignify the noisier type of
professional mendicant by the title of
'singer,” and still more generously
has decided to put up with their reci
tations and even to pay them moneys
for delivering them. We are glad to
see that this is not the case in Glas
gow. The inhabitants of that city
nave just risen in protest against an
individual who gave out the following
stanza: “The sce*ie was a peaceful
~>xie. The children at play. The larks
above with songs of love, Joined in the
harmony. The foul assassin then ap
peared, And stopped the joyous fun.
And in another moment He his hellish
work was done.”
The lines, we believe, were topical,
and referred to a tragedy that had
taken place in the town. Twenty-one
days’ imprisonment was what the
singer received, and nobody can say
that it was too much. We have quoted
the song in full as an instance of how
the street singer turns naturally to
gloom. A rollicking comic song would
be less painful, but the street mu
sician rarely rollicks. What he likes
!s a slow, mournful ballad, with plenty
of breathing space in between the
lines, so that he can stop and look
around for coppers—in both senses of
the word. A drunken man, singing
with real gusto, is gathered in by the
police before the end of the second
bar. A professional beggar is allowed
to massacre any hymn he pleases,
choosing his own time.—London
Globe.
CARE OF NOSE AND MOUTH.
Prominent Woman Physician Gives
Advice to Mothers.
In the Delineator, Dr. Grace Peck
ham Murray has some remarks on the
care of the nose and mouth that will
be read to their profit by all mothers.
Of proper breathing she says: “If
there are obstructions In either the
mouth or the nose which prevent the
free introduction of air. the blood is
not aerated as it should be, and the
whole bodily nutrition suffers in con
sequence. The trouble occasioned by
such a condition is much greater in
a child than in an adult. If a child
is not growing well, if he is pale and
puny, the nose and mouth and throat
should be examined to discover if
there are anj obstacles to free breath
ing. Between the nose and the throat,
and generally out of sight, are spongy
growths called ‘adenoids.’ They inter
fere more effectually with the free en
trance of air than anything else, and
as they exist unseen they are often
the unsuspected cause of a child's ill
health. If the child breathes with the
mouth open, and not through the nose,
they are likely to be present. If there
are many of these growths they give
rise to catarrhal discharges from the
nose, and they will also Interfere with
hearing. They sometimes occasion
the swelling of the glands of the neck
and cause inflammation which results
in open sores. Children suspected of
having these growths should be taken
to a surgeon to be examined. The
main thing to be borne in mind is that
the only proper way for a child to
breathe is through the nose.”
Expressions Made to Order.
“A remarkable fact in my profes
sion,” said a photographer, “is that
we portrait artists can give to a sit
ter any expression that is desired. A
bland look, a noble look, a serene look
—it is no trouble to us to put any one
of these expressions on the most
wooden face.
“The matter is achieved by the rep
etition of certain words. If you, for
instance, came to me and said you
wished to look distinguished I would
pose you in a distinguished attitude
and then I would get you to say
‘brush’ Just before I snapped the shut
ter. For some inexplicable reason
the pronounciation of the simple word
‘brush’ gives to the mouth an air of
the most striking nobility and distinc
tion.
“If you want to have in a photo
graph a look of serenity you must say
‘bosom.’
“If you want to make your mouth
Iook small say ‘flip.’ If you want to
make it look larger say ‘cabbage.’
“To have an expression of melan
choly it is necessary to say Tier
•chunk.’
“To have an expression of pride or
hauteur it is necessary to say ‘phoe
nix.’ ”—Chicago Chronicle.
Paying for Social Mention.
The expenditure that comes as the
greatest shock to Americans who rent
London houses and expect to break in
to royal society and tap the prince of
Wales playfully with their fans is the
amount of money it takes to get one’s
social activities “noticed” in the
newspapers. To get the announce
ment that “Mrs. Rocks of New York
has taken Lord So-and-So’s Mayfair
residence for the season” into the
chief London daily and weekly jour
nals costs more than $500. The fash
ionable Morning Post alone charges
$25. The newspaper rule on this
point is a hard and fast one and the
only exception to it is royalty. This
rule seems to an outsider a good one.
There’s money in it for the newspaper
and It keeps a lot of cheap peewee so
ciety out of the public eye.
Value of System ’n Work.
It is wonderful to are how many
hours prompt people contrive to make
of a day; it is as though they picked
up the moments which the dawdlers
lost. And if you find yourself where
you have so many things pressing
upon you that you hardly know how
to begin, take hold of the first one
that comes to hand, and you will find
the rest all fall in line and follow
after, like a company of well-drilled
soldiers; and, though work may be
hard to meet when it charges in
squads, it is easily vanquished If you
can bring it into line.—Exchange.
Senator on Investigating Tour.
Ex-Senator Cockrell of Missouri,
now interstate commerce commission
er, and one of his colleagues on the
commission will start for St. Louts
and the southwest in Juiy to make a
study of transportation questions.
This study will be exhaustive and
will deal with important branches of
the rate problem.
Rule fop Soap Making.
If a woman is making soap and a
man stirs it, all will be well and the
soap will be fine, but if a woman
comes the soap will spoil in the mak
ing.—Exchange.
Got Bargain in Fowl.
In dressing a fowl she had pur
chased for 3 shillings Lucie Man
rentz, a Paris cook, found in its in
terior a gold ring set with two superb
diamonds.
Hard Orders to Fill.
Now rules in the French postoffices:
“Sorters are forbidden to read post
cards and are requested to keep back
any on which are insults or bad lan
guage.”
German Domestics Save Money.
In Germany the number of servant
girls who have savings bank accounts
is nearly three times as large as that
of shop girls who have them.
Chesty.
“A man can't keep abreast of the
times,” remarked the observer of
events and things, “by simply throw
ing o.ut his chest.”—Yonkers.
AN OLD MAN’S TRIBUTE.
An Ohio Fruit Raiser, 78 Years Old,
Cured of a Terrible Case after Ten
Years of Suffering.
Sidney Justus, fruit dealer, of Men
81»X*T JUSTUS
tor, Ohio, says:
“I was cured by
Doan’s Kidney
Pills of a severe
case of kidney
trouble, of eight
or ten years’
standing. 1 suf
fered the most
severe backache
and other pains
in the region of
the kidneys.
xnese were especially severe when
stooping to lift anything and often I
could hardly straighten my back. The
aching was bad in the day time, but
just as bad at night, and I was always
lame in the morning. I was bothered
with rheumatic pains and dropsical
sw-elling of the feet. The urinary
passages were painful and the secre
tions were discolored and so free that
often I had to rise at night. I felt
tired all day. Half a box served to re
lieve me, and three boxes effected a
permanent cure.”
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents.
It’s hard to find heaven by looking
iown your nose.
15 YEARS OF TORTURE.
tching and Painful Sores Covered
Head and Body—Cured in Week
By Cuticura.
“For fifteen years my scalp and
'orehead was one mass of scabs, and
ny body was covered with sores.
Words cannot express how I suffered
Tom the itching and pain. I had giv
?n up hope when a friend told me to
;et Cuticura. After bathing with
Cuticura Soap and applying Cuticura
Ointment for three days, my head was
’s clear as ever, and to my surprise
md joy. one cake of soap and one
iox of ointment made a complete cure
a one week. (Signed), H. B. Frank
in, 717 Washington St., Allegheny,
°a.”
No creed may be more bigoted than
me creed.
Every housekeeper should know
hat if they will buy Defiance Cold
iVater Starch for laundry use they
will save not only time, because it
lever sticks to the iron, but because
'ach package contains 16 oz.—one full
oound—while all other Cold Water
Starches are put up in %-pound pack
iges, and the price is the same, 10
ients. Then again because Defiance
starch is free from all injurious chem
:cals. If your grocer tries to sell you
i 12-oz. package it is because he has
i stock on hand which he wishes to
lispose of before he puts in Defiance.
Vie knows that Defiance Starch has
printed on every package in large Jet
ers and figures “16 ozs.” Demand De
fiance and save much time and money
tnd the annoyance of the iron stick
ng. Defiance never sticks.
Piety is more than a nice little line
if patter.
OKLAHOMA OFPORTCNITUM
The completion by the Missouri, Kansas &
Texas Railway of over 351 miles of railroad in
the Oklahoma Territory, opens up a rich agri
cultural country of excellent possibilities, and
rives direct connec ion between St. Louis,
liannibal anil Kansas City with Oklahoma City,
Shawnee, Guthrie, El Reno, Enid and other
Oklahoma points. Along the new lines are
located new and prowing towns, Cleveland.
Jennings. Cushing. Agra. Fallis, Luther and
Maud, situated right in the district of rich
farming lands, offering the best of opportunities
for safe and profitable investments. The field
Is new and the prices of farm iands are low.
Few lines of business are adequately repre
1‘Tited. There are openings of all sorts—for
mill and manufacturing plants, for small stores
>f all kinds, for banks, newspapers and lumber
fards. Mechanic* and professional men, both
»re in demand. TELL US WHAT YOU WANT,
how much you have to invest and we will gladly
nelp you about a good opening.
Copies of our pamphlets. “Business Chances.”
Texas,” “The Coming Country.” “Sights and
•icenes 'n Old Mexico.” etc., are free for the
•sklng by addressing George Morton. General
Passenger and Ticket Agent. Missouri, Kansas
at Texas K‘y.f Box 003, St. Louis, Mo.
A shepherd Is not known by his
shears.
Ask Your Dealer for Allen's Foot-Ease.
A. powder. It rests the feet. Cures Swollen,
■sore. Hot, Callous, Aching, Sweating Feet
tnd Ingrowing Nails. At all Druggists and
■shoe stores, 25 cents. Accept no substitute.
Sampie mailed FREE. Address, Alton a
Dims ted, LeRoy, N. Y.
The fear of tomorrow is the foe of
today.
Smokers find Lewis’ “Single Binder”
straight 5c cigar better quality than most
10c brands. Lewis' Factory, Peoria, IU.
No man ever yet made a track that
someone else did not walk in it
If you don’t ret the biggest and best
its your own _ault. Defiance Starch
is for sale everywhere and there Is
positively nothing to equal It in qual
ity or quantity.
$100 Weekly Easily Made
writing health and accident Insurance experience un
necessary. Write Bankers’Aueiiieut Go..Sea t.
i Thom jrson’t Eye Vatsr
Prove It
By the Oven Fire m
Put the wonderful K C Bak- ^
ing Powder to the test. Get a
can on approval. Your money
will be returned if you don’t
agree that all we claim is true.
You’ll be delighted with the de
licious, wholesome things that
Kf\ BAKING
w POWDER
will bring to life in your oven.
K C Baking Powder is two
thirds cheaper and makes purer,
better, more healthful food than
other powders anywhere near
K C Quality. 25 ounces for
25 cents. Get it to-day!
JAQUES MFG. CO.
Chicago
Send a postal for
“Book of Presents.*’
Let Common Sense Decide
Do you honestly believe, that coffee sold loose (in bulk), exposed
to dust, germs and insects, passing
through many hands (some of
them not over-clean), ‘‘blended,”
you don't know how or by whom,
is fit for your use ? Of course you
don't But
LION COFFEE
Is another story. The green
berries, selected by keen
lodges at the plantation, are
skillfully roasted at our fac
tories, where precautions you
would not dream ol are taken
to secure perfect cleanliness,
flavor, strength and uniformity.
From the time the coffee leaves
the factory no hand touches it till
it is opened in your kitchen.
This has made LION COFFEE the LEADER OF ALL PACKAGE COFFEES.
Millions of American Homes welcome LION COFFEE daily.
There is no stronger proof of merit than continued and increas
ing popularity. “Quality survives all opposition. ’
(Sold only in 1 lb. packages. Lion-bead on every package.)
(Save your Lion-heads for valuable premiums.)
SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE
WOOISON SPICE CO., Toledo, Ohio.
Mull’s GrapeTonic
(FREE)
FOR
Hot Weather Dangers
CONSTIPATION
STOMACH AND BOWEL TROUBLE
No one
with regu
lar bowels
and healthy stomach can contract dis
ease. A person with Constipation and
Stomach Trouble is always the first to
succumb to Sun Stroke, Heat Debility
and Prostration. Cholera, Colic and
Diarrhea are more fatal in Hot Weather
because vitality is lower—they are the
direct result of Constipation. It is a
mistake to suddenly check diarrhea, the
danger is Blood Poison. A physic is also
dangerous as it weakens the patient and
reduces vitality. Treat the cause with
Mull's Grape Tonic. Constipation and
its attending ills are caused by decaying
or dying bowels and intestines—Mull's
Grape Tonic revives and strengthens the
Bowels so that they are enabled to act
naturally and eject the poison from the
system, everybody should take it during
hot weather. It wards off disease,
builds up the system and purifies the
blood. Typhoid Fever and Appendicitis
are unknown in families where Mull’s
Grape Tonic is employed. As a Stomach
Tonic it is unequalled.
SUFFERED ALL HIS LIFE.
The endorsement of E. B. McCurdy of
Troy, Ohio, proves that the severest
forms of Constipation are promptly cured
by Mull’s Grape Tonic—He says:
”1 cave your Tonic a thorough trial. It is the
only remedy that will cure constipation. I do
net believe anyone suffered more therefrom
than I, as 1 bad been afflicted with it all my life.
For days my bowels would not act and then only
by the use of strong cathartics that were fast
ruining my health. My Stomach and Liver were
deranged and I suffered with inward piles, the
pains of which would at times raise me off my
chair. I spent much money with various doc
tors and medicines to no avail.
"Soon after 1 started Mull's Grape Tonic my
bowels began to move regularly—the pain left
me and my general health built up rapidly.
"1 heartily recommand it as an absolute care
to which 1 am a living witness.”
Until Mull’s Grape Touic was put on
the American market there was no core
for Constipation. Let os send you a
bottle free to-day to show you that it
will do all we claim.
Good for Ailing Children and Nursing Mothers.
FREE BOTTLE COUPON
Bend this coupon with your name and address and your druggist's name, for a free bottle of
Mali’s Grope Tonic. Stomach Tonic. Constipation Cure and Blood Purifier, to MULL'S GRAPE
TONIC CO., 148 Third Ats., Book Inland, HI. Give full address and write plainly. The S1.00
bottle oontaine nearly three times the Me. sue. At drug stores. The genuine has a date and
number stamped on the label—take no other from your druggist.
Nothing pleases the eye so much aa
a well made, dainty
Shirt
Waist
Salt
if properly laundered.
To get the best results it
is necessary to use the
best laundry starch.
ID©fiiain)©®
larch
gives that finish to the
clothes that all ladies
desire and should obtain.
It is the delight of the
experienced laundress.
Once tried they w:ll use
no other. It is pure and
is guaranteed not to in
jure the most delicate
fabric. It is sold by the
best grocers at 10c a
package. Each package
contains 16 ounces.
I Other starches, not nearly so good, sell
l at tli! same price per package, but they
I contain only 12 ounces of starch. Con
/ suit your own interests. Ask for
' DEFIANCE STARCH, get it, and wo
know you will never use any other.
OdJance Starch Company, Omaha, Neh.
MOLES ind WARES REMOVED
ANTI-MOUR. No pain, soreness or scar.
GrAKAVTEED Pekmaxext. «1.U0 per bottle by
mall —Miller Manufackorinff Co.. Lincoln. Neb.
W. N. U. Omahiu No. 30—1905.
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