The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, September 14, 1905, Image 7

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    Soldier’s Comfort in Death.
After the battle of Sedan, when the
dead were being buried, a trace of
blood led the searchers to a shady
spot, where they found a French ser
geant lying dead, with his hand
tightly clenched in death pressed to
his lips. In his clenched hand was a
scrap of paper, which they forced
from it and read. It was a letter from
his little girl of 5 which, when mor
tally wounded, he had crawled here
to read, and it ran thus: “Dear Fath
er, l miss you so much. I miss you
morning and even when I used to kiss!
you. I try to be good, as you told me,
and kind to mamma. Your loving lit
tle girl, Marguerite.”
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 j
dispose of before he puts in Defiance. I
He knows that Defiance Starch has |
printed on every package in large let- j
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.
“I don’t see how Bilkins can stand
that wife of His. She’s ugly, ill hu
mored, and she’s his fourth at
tempt, anyhow.” “That’s just it.
He’s been married four times, but this
Is the first time he’s struck a real
good cook.”
SENATOR SULLIVAN
Says He Has Found Doan’s Kidney
Pills Invaluable in Treating Sick
Kidneys.
r Hon. Timothy D. Sullivan of New
York, Member of Congress from the
Eighth New York District, and one of
the Democratic leaders of New York
State, strongly recommends Do&a's
Kidney Pills.
Senator Sulli
van writes:
“It is a pleas
ure to endorse a
remedy like
Doan’s Kidney
Pills, having
found them of
greatest value
in eliminating
the distress
caused by sick
**** kidneys, and in
restoring those organs to a condition
of health. My experience with your
valuable remedy was equally as grati
f} ing as that of several of my friends.
Yeurs truly,
(Signed) TIMOTHY D. SULLIVAN.
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
For sale by all druggists. Price, 50
cents per box.
Measuring Rain Drops.
The largest raindrops are about one
fifth of an inch in diameter.- To de
termine the size rain is allowed to fall
into <a thick layer of flour, each drop
forming a pellet of dough, and these
pellets are compared with dough pel
lets obtained from drops of known
size delivered on the flour by artificial
means.
An average man would soon attain
perfection if he followed the advice
he hands out to his neighbors.
Twice as Good
One Third the Cost ^
Every day is bargain day in the
Wave Circle. Come in and get ac
quainted. K C will help you cut
down the living expenses and make
doctor’s bills a thing of the past. Do
you realize that you can get the best
and purest baking powder in the world
Kf\ BAKING
V POWDER
at one-third what you’ve been paying
for anywhere near K C quality. A 23
ounce can costs 23c. Think of the saving!
Can you make money any easier ? Get
it to-day. The grocer returns the
price of can if you are not satisfied.
Jill Grocers
Send port*! for the beautiful
"Book of Prrrent*.’’
_ • FREE. _
JAQUES MFC. CO.
Ch' cago.
W. L. Douglas
*3= & *3= SHOES R*
W. L. Douglas $4.00 Ciit Edge Line
cannot be equalled at any price.
Jo’y 6.1S78.
3»p W.L.DOOOLAS MAKES AMD SELES
^MORE MEM’S 33. BO SHOES THAM
AMY OTHER MAMUFACTURER.
t1 H nnn REWARD to anyone who cm
g I UjUUU disprove this atatoment.
W. L. Douglas $3.50 shoes have by their ev
er (lent style, easy fitting, and superior wearing
qualities, achieved the largest eale of any $3.50
shoe In the world. They are fust as good as
those that coat you $5.00 to $7.00— the only
difference is the price. If I could take you into
my factory at Brockton. Mess., the largest in
the world under one roof making men’s fine
shoes, and show you the care with which every
pair ef Douglas shoes Is made, you would realize
why W. L. Douglas $3.50 shoes are the beat
shoes produced In the world.
If I could show you the difference between the
shoes made In my factory and those of other
makes, you would understand why Douglas
$3.50 shoes cost more to make, why they bold
their shape, fit better, wear longer, and are of
greater intrinsic value than any other $3.90
shoe on the market to-day.
W. L Ooeffas Strong Made Shoom for
Man. 32. BO, 32.00. Boy*' School A
Drama Shoo*, 32.BO, 32, 31.7 B, 31. BO
CAUTION.—Insist upon haviojj W.L.Doug
Isls shoes. Take no substitute. None genuine '
without his name and price stamped on bottom.
WANTED. A shoe dealer in every town where
W. L* Douglas Shoes are not sold. Full line of
Samples sent free for Inspection upon request.
Fast Color Eyelets used; they will not wear brassy.
Write for Illustrated Catalog of Fall Style*
W. L. DOUGLAS, Brocktou, Mas*
X** Very
Ip, L°%nds
South and Southeast, one fare plus
$2.00.
St. Loula, Mo., dally.18.50
Richmond. Va., Sept. 8 th to
11th inclusive . 33.75
Philadelphia. Pa., Sept. 14th
to IStb, inclusive. 32.75
Lome Hmits, stopovers and other
featares offered la connection with
the above rates.
AM Agents can sell you through
tickets and route you Watoasb.
AN tickets reading over the Wa
bash from ChTcago east are op
tional with passenger via Lake or
Rail, either or both directions.
CaN at Wabash City office, 1601
Farnam St., or write and let me
give you all information, maps, de
kscriptive matter, folders, etc.
HARRY E. MOORES.
G. A. P. D. Wabash R. R., Omaha,
Neb.
When answering advertisements
please mention this paper.
W. N. U. Omaha. No. 36—1905.
Beautify Your
Walls and Ceilings!
A Rock Cement
and beautiful
tints. Does not rub or scale. Destroys dis
ease germs and vermin. No washing of
wails after once applied. Any one can
brush it on—mix with cold water. Other
finishes, bearing fanciful names and mixed
with either hot or cold water, do not
have the cementing property of
Alabastine. They are stuck on with glue,
or other animal matter, which rota,
feeding disease germs, rubbing,
scaling and spoiling walls, cloth
ing, etc. Such Finishes must be washed
off every year—expensive, filthy work. Buy
Alabastine only in five pound pack
ages, properly labeled. Tint card,
pretty wall and ceiling design, “ Hints on
Decorating” and our artists’ services lr
making color plans, free.
ALABASTINE CO.,
Grand Rapids, Mkh, or 105 Water St. N. Y
WET WEATHER. WI5D0M!
V THE original
! SLICKER
^ BLACK OR YELLOW
A WILL KEEP YOU DRY
f NOTHING ELSE WILL
TAM NO OUBJTlTVTtt
CATALOGUE* TREE -
SNOWING rvu. LINE Or GARMENTS AND MATS.
A. J. TOWER CO.. BOSTON, MASS., U.S.A.
TONES CANADIAN CO.. LTD.. TORONTO. CANADA.
-WTTxrrra
jU| ■Til
FOR WOMEN j
troubled with Ills peculiar to Xy/fl
their sex, used as a douche la nurclousT? euc
cessftU. Thoroughly cleanses, kills disease germs,
•tops discharges, heals mflammstioa and local
•oreuesa.
Purine Is in powder form to be dissolved in pore
water, and is far more cleansing, healing, germicidal
and economical than liquid antiseptics for all
TOILET AND WOMEN’S SPECIAL USES
For sale at druggists, M cents a hex.
Trial Bax and Book of laatructtons Praa.
TMc R. Paxton Company Boston, Mans.;
INFORMATION 'fiffiKS*
Ir Eleiant New Colleye Baildiag,
66x132 Feet, Fear Stories High
All departments enlarged, two new ones added. Au
ditorium and Gymnasium. Splendid courses In
Business, Short-hand. Typewriting and Telegraphy
Anyone writing for a Catalogue, wiii be sent free
some elegant specimens of Penmanship. Address
R0HRB01GH BROS . Omaha. Neb.
[ Tho»p*§B,i Eft Vattr
Plan to Revive Mesopotamia Delta
■ — ■■■' —— -. _ _
Irrigation Expected to Make One
Time “Granary of the World”
as Productive as It Was in the
Days of Old.
Mesopotamia, the “blessed land,”
the delta of the Tigris and Euphrates
rivers, by many considered to have
been the cradle of the human race,
for centuries one of the richest and
most thickly populated districts on
earth, and now a desert, is to be irri
gated and brought back to its former
state of blessedness. The whole area
includes over 40,000 square miles of
alluvial soil, every square yard of
which is capable of being irrigated
and cultivated. The general scheme
includes the improvement of the Ti
gris and the Euphrates as means of
transportation and, the utilization of
canals for the same purpose. Inter
national politics will figure in the mat
ter. for Germany is building the Bag
dad railway, which would cross some
of the territory involved.
Sir William Willocks, an English
engineer who is interested in the
scheme, says: ‘Babylonia, or lower
Mesopotamia, was a heavily cultivated
and densely populated country for
many thousands of years. Its prosper
ity depended on numerous canals led
from the Euphrates and the Tigris,
between Bagdad and Basra, past Se
leucia, Ctesiphon, Cunaxa, Babylon,
and scores of other well-known places.
The total area of the delta is some
14,000,000 acres, of which 5,000,000
acres must have been cultivated, prac
tically the same area as Egypt.
“We have a detailed description of
the country and its canals in a book
written by an Arab, Ibu Serapion, in
A. D. 900, and translated by Guy le
Strange. The translation is to be
found in the Journal of the Royal Asi
atic Society for 1895. Between A. D.
i 1200 and 1300 the country was over
run by Mongols, and again about 1400
by Tartars, and utterly ruined; while,
to complete the catastrophe, the Ti
gris changed its course north and
south of Bagdad and threw the coun
try into complete confusion.
“I propose,” Sir William adds, “to
bring back a state of affairs which
will make this delta as rich as Egypt
and one of the great cotton producers
of the world. Mesopotamia will be
the Johannesburg of irrigation. The
agricultural wealth of that country
will be one of the facts of the twen
tieth century. At a moderate calcula
tion there is $1,250,000,000 of money
in that land.”
Mutiny Quelled by Brave American
- *-—
Uprising of Turbulent Russian
Soldiers Quickly Ended—Cap
tain the Right Man In the
Right Place
Here is a story of a modern mutiny
which was quelled by the heroic young
American sea captain in the approved
fashion. There arrived at Colombo.
Ceylon, the other day, an American
steamer, the Garonne, from the far
east to Odessa, in Russia. The Gar
onne was carrying a large number of
convalescent Russian soldiers and sail
ors and Russian workmen. Between
Singapore £md Colombo the Russians,
dissatisfied with their treatment, mut
inied and tried to seize the ship. The
mutiny was quelled by Capt. Lowe,
whom the Times of Ceylon describes
as ‘‘a typical American—young, clean
shaven and displaying signs of great
strength, which, as the sequel shows,
he was able to put to excellent use.”
One of the Russian workmen was ring
leader. Early in the trouble he was
put in irons on the bridge.
Capt. Lowe is quoted as saying:
‘‘When passing through the straits of
Malacca I had a good deal of responsi
bility upon my shoulders and could
take but little sleep. In fact, on June i
2 I did not go to my cabin until 12
o’clock noon, when I intended to take
a nap during the afternoon. I lay
down on my settee, but had scarcely
fallen into a doze when the first offi
cer tapped me on the shoulder and I
awoke. ‘Did you give orders for that
man (the ringleader) to be taken out
of irons?’ he asked. ‘Certainly not,’ I
replied. ‘Well, he's out anyway.’
“I jumped up and made my way to
the gangway leading from the bridge
to the deck. Below me I saw a surge
of riotous Russians, among whom was
the scoundrel recently in fetters.
They rushed at me. I whipped out my
revolver, and, after warning them,
pulled the trigger, but it missed fire.
The charge had evidently got damp.
Seeing that this was no use I seized a
rifle and used the butt end as a blud
geon. with which I quickly cleared a
space around me. The ringleader grap
pled with me.
“After a hard struggle I got my man
under. He was dragged up to the
bridge and guarded by three of my
officers, two of whom had Winchester
rifles, the mate being armed with a
couple of revolvers. Little difficulty
was experienced in quelling the dis
turbance after that.”
Testimony to Bravery of “Japonians”
—. w .__
Writing Three Centuries Ago,
Adventurer Tells of the Dis
regard for Life Shown by the
Hardy Little Islanders.
In that interesting book. “Purehas
His Pilgrimes," is recorded the adven
ture which befell John Davis and Sir
Edward Michelbourne. who, little bet
ter than pirates themselves, met in
1605 with a Chinese junk full of pirati
cal “Japonians,” whose own vessel
had been cast away on Borneo. There
were ninety men aboard this junk,
"most of them in foo gallant a habit
for Saylers. and such an equalitie ot
behaviour among them that they seem
ed all fellowes; yet among them there
was one that they called Capitaine,
but gave him little respect.” A num
ber of them having been transferred
to the ship while the junk’s cargo
was being searched, they suddenly sal
lied out of the cabin at a given signal
and while those in the junk killed or
drove overboard the Englishmen in
charge those on the ship tried to
take possession of it. At the first
onset they killed Capt. Davis.
“They pressed so fiercely to come
to us as, we receiving them on our
Pikes, they would gather in our Pikes
with their hands to reach us with
their swords. It was neere half an
hour before we could stone them back
into the Cabbin; in which time we
had killed three or four of their Lead
ers. After they were in the Cabbin
they fought with us at the least foure
houres before we could suppresse
them, often fyring the Cabbin. burn
ing the bedding and much other stufTe
that was there.
"And had we not with two Demy
culverins, from under the halfe-decke,
beaten dowre the bulke head and the
pumpe of the ship, we could not have
suppressed them from burning the
ship. The Ordnance being charged
with Crossebarres. Bullets and Case
shot, and bent close to the bulke
head, so violently marred therewith
boords and splinters that it left but
one of them standing of two and
twentie.
"Their legs, arms and bodies were
so torre. as it was strange to see how
the shot had massacred them. In all
this conflict they never would desire
their lives though they were hope
lesse to escape; such was the desper
ateness of these Japonians.”
Added to Population of BingvilK
Gabe Harkness in a State of Great
Excitement Over the Welcome
Addition to Hie Family—Edi
tor's Congratulations.
Just as we go to press Gabe Hark
ness comes into the Bugle office all out
of breath to announce to us for pub
lication that his wife has presented
him with a 10 lb. child. We therefore
stopped proceedings long enough to
take out a few items which we had
written up merely to help fill space
and hereby insert this birth notice in
their stead. If the child had weighed
less than a ten pounder we would rot
went to this much trouble, but when
somebody goes to the trouble to in
crease the population of our thriving
town by a 10 lb. offspring we are al
ways glad to give the auspicious event
a place in these columns.
We had been expecting this event
to happen in our midst for some time.
Our wife can see Harkresse’s clothes
line in their back yard from our side
window and she has noticed for some
time that there was new baby clothes
hanging out on the line as if they were
expecting something of the kind to
*-—
happen. Gabe was terrible excited.
We asked him which it was a girl or
a boy and Gabe he scratched his head
and said durned if he didn’t forget to
find out being as he was in so much
of a hurry to get it into the paper.
But he said if there was yet time he
would return and find out and in about
10 minutes he came back with his eyes
sticking out until you could of
knocked 'em off with a club and says.
“By thunder it’s twins—two of ’em!”
Again we asked Gabe as to sex of
same and he couldn’t tell. It seems
that when he learned they was two
twins instead of one he was so flab
bergasted that he forgot to ascertain
whether one was a girl and one a boy
or vice versa and as we was late with
the Bugle and couldn’t wait any longer
we went to press without the informa
tion, but will find out by next week
and let you all know.
We congratulate Mr. and Mrs. Hark
ness on this crop of twins which has
come to bless their union and we hope
they will grow up and become useful
men or women—whichever the case
may be.—“Bingville Bugle” items In
the Boston Globe.
Prison Regulations Among the Turks
Law Authorities Show Amazing
Leniency Toward Women Of
fenders—Few Females to Be
Seen in Public Mosques.
Writing in the Forum on the posi
ion of women in Turkey, Mrs. Mary
Mills Patrick states that in prison
regulations the police are usually
more lenient to women than to men,
and there are separate prisons for the
termer. I once knew a woman who
was condemned to prison for a few
weeks for having been involved in a
street quarrel. The police came to
take her to prison. “No,” she said, “I
cannot go now. I have a young baby
that needs my care. It is impossible
for me to be away from home.”
“Very well,” he said. "Let me know
when it is ccn^e^ient for you.” The
woman waited until a short time be
fore one of the public feast days upon
which it is the custom to give free
dom to those who are imprisoned foi
slight offenses. She then put her
house in order and sent word to the
police that she was willing to go tc
prison if she could bring her young
est child with her and satisfactory
arrangements could be made.
Women as well as men among the
Turks are taught to pray. Yet young
women are not expected to attend the
mosques, although as children they
are taught to do so. The hereditary
function of praying together is re
served for the men. But women may
stand and praAin the corners or be
hind screens, in the larger mosques;
and some of the mosques, generally
those with one minaret, are largely
reserved for women. Any woman de
sirous of praying in a mosque is al
ways able to do so; but the women
seen publicly in the mosques are not
young.
Except Getting Salaries Raised.
The successful business man’s mot
j to: Never allow any of your em
ployes to put off till tomorrow what
they can do today.—Somerville Jour
sal.
Ask Your Dealer for Alien's Foot-Ease
A powder. It rest* the feet. Cures Swollen.
Sore, Hot, Callous. Aching. Sweating Feet
and Ingrowing Nails. At all Druggists and
S»hoe stores. 25 cents. Accept no substitute.
Sample mailed FREE. Address, Alien g.
Olmsted, LeRoy, N. Y.
Famous Haddon Hall.
The world-renowned Haddon hall,
the finest baronial hall in England, is
in the vicinity of Bakewell, Derby
shire.
Storekeepers report that the extra
quantity, together with the superior
quality of Defiance Sarch, makes it
next to impossible to sell any other
brand.
A peep into the future would prob
ably be as unsatisfactory to most peo
ple as a backward glance at the past.
Dealers say that as soon as a cus
tomer tries Defiance Starch it is im
possible to sell them any other cold
water starch. It can be used cold or
boiled.
Only an expert shopper can visit
seventeen stores in one afternoon and
escape without spending a cent.
! Lewis’ “ Single Binder ” straight 5c cigar,
j No other brand of cigars is so popular with
j the smoker. He has learned to rely upon
| its uniform high quality. Lewis’ Factory
I Peoria, ILL
Bad luck is reasonably sure to come
to those who trust only to luck.
■pARMS FOR REXT OR PALE OX CROP
* payments. J. MULHALL, Sioux City, la.
You cannot blame the world for be
ing weary of a religion that is dreary.
Don’t you know that Defiance Starch
besides being absolutely superior to
any other, is put up 16 ounces in pack
age and sells at same price as 12
j ounce packages of other kinds?
There Ls no race so easy for the
bookmaker as the human race.
Hundreds of dealers say the extra
quantity and superior quality of De
fiance Starch is fast taking place of
all other brands. Others s^y they can
not sell any other starcV
No man or boy is ever the slightest
good in this world unless he has ambi
tion.—Lord Stanley.
If you don’t get the biggest and best
Its your own fault. Defiance Starch
is for sale everywhere and there is
positively nothing to equal it in qual
ity or quantity.
Once men fought for abstractions,
now they fight for subtractions.
I do not believe Piso's Cure for ConsumpOo*
has an equal for coughs and colds.—Jonar P
Botek, Trinity Springs, Ind., Feb. 15,190Q
Some men try to keep the faith by
keeping the faithful in a pickle.
|
Automobile touring car for sale.
! For particulars address A. L. Purcell,
415 K&rbach block, Omaha, Neb.
It is better to set one man to work
than to make a hundred weep.
THE iDEAL WIFE
Shapes the Destiny of Men—The Influence of a
Healthy Woman Cannot Be Overestimated.
Seven-eighths of the
men in th is world marry
a woman because she is
beautiful in their eyes—
because she has the tfuali
ties which inspire admira
tion, respect and love.
There is a beauty in
health which is more at
tractive to men than mere
regularity of feature.
The influence of women
glorious in the possession
of perfect physical health
upon men and upon the
civilization of the world
could never be measured.
Because of them men have
attained the very heights
of ambition; because of
them even thrones have
been established and de
stroyed.
What a disappointment,
then, to see the fair young
wife’s beauty fading away
before a year passes over
her head ! A sickly, half
dead-and-alive woman,
especially when she is
the mother of a family,
is a damper to all joyous
ness in the home, and a
drag upon her husband.
The cost of a wife's con
stant illness is a serious
drain upon the funds of a
g Airs. Bessie A ins ley
injusciiuiu, iiuu loo oiten au tne doc
toring does no good.
If a woman finds her energies are
flagging, and that everything tires her,
dark shadows appear under her eyes,
her sleep is disturbed by horrible
dreams; if she has backache, head
aches, bearing-down pains, nervous
ness. whites, irregularities, or despon
dency, she should take means to build
her system up at once by a tonic with
specific powers, such as Lydia E. Pink
ham's Vegetable Compound.
This great remedy for women has
done more Jn the way of restoring
health to the women of America than
all other medicines put together. It is
the safeguard of woman's health.
Following we publish, by request, a
letter from a young wife.
Mrs. Bessie Ainsley of 611 South 10th
Street, Tacoma, Wash., writes:
Dear Mrs. Pinkham:—
“ Ever since my child was born I hare suf
fered. as I hope few women ever have, with
inflammation, female weakness, bearing-down
pains, backache and wretched headaches. It
affected my stomach so that I could not en
joy my meals, and half my time was spent
in bed.
“Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound
made me a well woman, and I feel so grate
ful that I am glad to write and tell you of
my marvelous recovery. It brought me
health, new life and vitality.”
What Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound did for Mrs. Ainsley it will
do for every woman who la in poor
health and ailing.
Its benefits begin when its use begin*.
It gives strength and vigor from the
start, and surely makes sick women
well and robust.
Remember Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege
table Compound holds the record for
the greatest number of actual cures of
woman’s ills. This fact is attested to
by the thousands of letters from grate
ful women which are on file in the
Pinkham laboratory. Merit alone can
produce 6uch results.
Women should remember that a cure
for all female diseases actually exist*,
and that cure is Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound. Take no substi
tute.
If you have symptoms yon don't
understand write to Mrs. Pinkham,
Lynn, Mass., for special advice—it i*
free and always helpful.
Lydia E Pin Wham's Vegetable Comnoand Succeeds Where Others KtuL
WINCHESTER
RIFLE AND PISTOL CARTRIDGES If
Winchester Rifle and Pistol Cartridges of all f;
calibers are loaded by machinery which sizes
the shells, supplies the exact quantity of ri
powder, and seats the bullets properly. By I ~
using first-class materials and this up-to-date |i
system of loading, the reputation of Win
chester Cartridges for accuracy, reliability and kj
excellence is maintained. Ask for them. ||
THEY SHOOT WHERE YOU HOLO
*■ "" ■■■■ 1 —... ......... m
Physicians Recommend Castoria
O ASTORIA has met with pronounced favor on the part of physicians, pharma
ceutical societies and medical authorities. It is used by physicians with
results most gratifying. The extended use of Castoria is unquestionably the
result of three facts; first The indisputable evidence that it is harmless;
Second That it not only allays stomach pains and quiets the nerves, but assimi
lates the food; Third—It is an agreeable and perfect substitute for Castor OiL
It is absolutely safe. It does not contain any Opium, Morphine, or other narcotic
and does not stupefy. It is unlike Soothing Syrups, Bateman’s Drops, Godfrey’s
Cordial, etc. This is a good deal for a Medical Journal to say. Our duty, how
ever, is to expose danger and record the means of advancing health. The day
for poisoning innocent children through greed or ignorance ought to end. To
our knowledge, Castoria is a remedy which produces composure and health, by
regulating the system—not by stupefying it—and our readers are entitled to
the information.—HaU’s Journal of Health.
-—i i — - - —
ODDB
JiSkge tabic Preparation for As
similating theFoodandRegula
ting the Stomachs and Bowels of
Promotes Digeshon.Cheerful
ness and Rest.Contains neither
Opntm .Morphine nor Mineral.
Not Narcotic.
A perfect Remedy for Coos Spa
don. Sour Stomach.Diarrhoea.
Worms .Convulsions .Feverish
ness and LOSS OF SLEEP
lac Simile Sif nature of
C&WCZ5Z
NEW YORK.
EXACT COPY OF WBAPPEB. j
Letters from Prominent Physicians Addressed to Charles H. Fletcher.
<*A*iE!£T^bfi2!3g-J!fiEZ W? SIS?" ro“ c“torl*
lt« of Cleveland, Ohio, says: “Tour Castorla stands first In
so filfed the pUwe£irt7 Je*rS °* pracU<* 1 640 “» 1 never have found anything that
it RnDJir^ii?nfTr/mi.rtt^r00kly^' ^ haTe used your Castoria and found
formula is excellent’,y 1 bOQS€hold and prlTate practice for many year*. The
Dr. Wm. l. Bosserman, of Buffalo. X. Y., says: “I am Dleased to sneak a rood
0th,V°br»tZr..r‘uS”VlnIw 11 U"t 1 “ot m>’ "““»'»<* 't t»
^•^SUTSJSn S
KULSS* uait.ilon. lb tbe H.Id, but I .l«a;, «, tb.t m, b.tleuU i“
I ceSin^mkJo^ ro^th?n»°mK ha; N>b” “T8 : “A* the fathOT of thirteen children
*°“ethinK »hont your great medicine, and aside from my own
efficient ‘remedy ^ almo« every^om”’ °f PraCtiCe *°Und Caatoria a ^PQlar “d j
ha, SradeJ-foRr SST& Zf\lTS££?$'
“I* to *■supplemented by the endorsement* ofthen^l pro
fession, but I, for one, most hearuiy endorse it and believe it an excellent remedy.’*
I* Channlng H. Cook, of St. Louis, Mo., says: “I have used your Castorla far
J**?. **** *n “J ow® famll?.a“d have always found it thoroughly efficient
r!yjS1,d*3fn* whlch *■ m great consideration in view of the fact
JJ^aI t? I°f ?.w8 c*“armctar are obnoxious and therefore difficult of ad
acr°be<L*’t,0n‘ ^ * laxative, I consider it the peer of anything that I ever pre
,.JPr- ®- Ward, of Kansas City, Mo., says: “Physicians generally do not dre
scribe proprietary preparations, but in the case of Castoria my experience, like that
9*™°* i°ther Physlrian^a8 tau«ht “* »« “>ak* a“ exceptfoo ^l prwcri^ ™
CMtorla in my practice because I have found it to be a thoroughly reliable Yemed^
for children a complaints. Any physician who has raised a family, as I have. wiU
join me in heartiest recommendation of Castorla.” * * nave, wiu
GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS
The Kind You Have Always Bought
In Use For Over 30 Years.
VWK CCMTAUa COMPANY, TV MUBAAV *T, «ra VMR err*.
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES
^ °1>?|0<: Qocfcoio colon silk, wool and rattan equally well and is guaranteed to cnre perfect reealts,
•ok dealer or we will scad post aud at )Qceoacka«o. Unto tor bee booklet- Wow to Dye, Bloack aad Ha Colon. MOMituit JtMUe CO., UniSmmtiu/MimnSk