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About The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 19, 1905)
KIDNEY TROUBLE DUE TO CATARRH. The Curative Power of PE-RU-NA in Kidney Disease the Talk of the Continent. Nicholas J. Hertz. Member of Ancient Order of Workmen, Capitol Lodge, No. 140, Pearl Street Hotel, Albany, N. Y., writes: “A few months ago I contracted a heavy cold which settled in my kidneys, and each time 1 was exposed to inclem ent weather the trouble was aggravated until finally I was unable to work. “After trying many of the adver tised remedies for kidney trouble, I finally took Peruna. “In a week the intense pains in my back were much relieved and in four weeks I was able to take up my work again. “I still continued to use Peruna for another month and at the end of that time I was perfectly well. “I now take a dose or two when I have been exposed and find that it is splendid to keep me well.” Hundreds of Cures. Dr. Hartman is constantly in receipt of testimonials from people who have been cured of chronic and complicated kidney disease by Peruna. For free medical advice, address Dr. Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, Ohio. W. L. Douglas •3= & *3= SHOES B W. L. Douglas $4.00 Cii. Edge Line cannot be equalled at any price. ^vao>jeLAS SHOES * Established Jo !y 6.1*78. ^ W. L.DOUGLAS MAKES AND SELLS ^ MORE MEM’S S3. BO SHOES THAM AMY OTHER MANUFACTURER. $10,000 REWARD to anyone who can disprove this statement. W. L. Douglas $3.50 shoe* have by their ex cellent style, easy fitting, and superior wearing qualities, achieved the largest sale of any $3.50 shoe In the world. They are fust as good as those that cost you $5.00 to $7.00 — the only difference is the price. If 1 could take you into my factory at Brockton, Mass., the largest in the world under one roof making men's fine shoes, and show vou the care with which every pair of Douglas shoes is made, you would realize why W. L_ Douglas $3.50 shoes are the best shoes produced in the world. If I could show you the difference between the Shoes made In niy factory and those of other makes, you would understand why Douglas $3.50 shoe* cost more to make, why they hold their shape, fit better, wear longer, and are of greater intrinsic value than any other $3.50 shoe on the market to-day. kwgfas String Made mots for S2.BO.S2.Oa. Boym’ School A 1.60, S2, SI. 7B.SI.BO CAUTION.—Insist upon having W.L.Doug las 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. Pull line of Samples sent free for inspection upon request. Fast Color Eyelet* used; they mill not wear brassy. Write for lllnstrated Catalog of Fall Styles W. L DOUGLAS. Brocktou, MIXED FARMING WHEAT RAISING RANCHING three great pursuits have Spain shown wonderful results on the FREE HOMESTEAD LANDS OF WESTERN CANADA. Magnificent climate—fanners plowing in their shirt sleeves in the middle of November. “All are bound to be more than pleased with the final results of the past season's harvest.’'— Extract. Coal. wood, water, hay in abundance—schools, churches, markets convenient. This is the era of tl.00 wheat. Apply for information to Superintendent of Immigration, Ottawa. Canada, or to authorized Canadian Government Agent—W. V. Bennett. SOI New York Life Building. Omaha, Nebraska. (Mention this paper.) )AXTine Antiseptic FOR WOMEN . tnmhled with Ills peculiar to their kz. need u a douche it marvelously suc cessful. Thoroughly cleanse*, kills disease terms, ■tope discharges, Mala laflagunatiaa and local Pax tine b in powder form to be disxolved in pore water, and is far more deatesing, healing, eemucioai yui economical than liquid antiseptics for all TOILET AND WOMEN’S SPECIAL USES For ale at druggists, GO cents a box. Trial Bax and Bank of Instruction* Free, •tea R. Paxton Co a rear Boston. Home Visitors Excursioa November 30th To many points in Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Kentucky, Western Pennsylvan ia. New York and West Virginia, at GREATI.Y REDUCED RATES. The WABASH has solid road-bed, rock ballast, ana new equipment. Re clining chair cars (SEATS FREE.) For rates, maps and all information coll at Wabash City Office, 1601 Far nam St- or address HARRY K. MOORES, O. A. F. D.. Wab. R. R.t Omaha, Nob. The Boy Reared by Hand. An old farmer in Nemaha county re marks that a home-grown, hand spanked, bare-footed and hard-fisted country boy makes a much better fighter in the battles of life than does the pampered, high-collared, creased trousered youth of our towns and cities whose clothes have always been dusted with a whisk broom instead of a shingle.—Kansas City Journal. Collision Logic. It has been suggested that the ex cellent showing made by steel cars in collision is due to the fact that the wooden cars in the train with them acted as cushions and lessened the force of shock. Preserving Fish Scales. The discovery of the method of pre serving fish scales has led to a con siderable export trade from Russia. The scales are used for the making of artificial pearls and similar ar ticles. Monkeys Help in Tea Packing. Chinese monkeys for years past have assisted the natives in tea pack ing. Their labor is cheap, for they are more than contented with payment in the shape of sundry luscious mor sels. Collie Follows Automobile. A collie that had pursued its mas ter’s automobile eighty miles, un known to the driver, was found, ex hausted, the other day, near Rain bow, a Cheshire (England) village. Peanut Like the Potato. The peanut is a root plant, that is, the buds, after blossoming, bend down enter the earth, and become the nuts. The nuts, therefore, are dug out of the earth like potatoes. Forests ir. Finland. Findland has a larger percentage of wooded area, in comparison to its total surface, than any other European country. It leads with 51.s per cent. Dairies in South Africa. The growth of agricultural co-op erative societies in South Africa opens good opportunities for selling ma chines used in the dairy industry. pARMS FOR RENT OR SALE ON CROP -P payments. J. MCLHALL, Sioux City, la. How soon a man who called his girl saucy, calls his wife sassy! When You Buy Starch buy Defiance and get the best, 16 oz. for 10 cents. Once used, always used. With some men swearing off is a continuous performance. Do Your Clothes Look Yellow? Then use Defiance Starch, it will keep them white—16 oz. for 10 cents. The average man is to be seen everywhere—except in a mirror. WOMEN’S NEGLECT SUFFERINGTHESUREPENALTY Health Thus Lost Is Restored by Lydia E. Pink.ham'a Vegetable Compound. How many women do you know who are perfectly well and strong? We hear every day the same story over and over again. “ I do not feel well; I am so tired all the time ! ” More than likely you speak the same words yourself, and no doubt you feel far from well. The cause maybe easily traced to some derangement of the fe male organs which manifests itself in depression of spirits, reluctance to go anywhere or do anything, backache, bearing-down pains, flatulency, nerv ousness, sleeplessness, leucorrhoea. These symptoms are but warnings that there is danger ahead, and unless heeded a life of suffering or a serious -operation is the inevitable result. The never-failing remedy for all these symptoms is Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg etable Compound. Miss Kate McDonald, of Woodbridge, N J., writes: Dear Mrs Pinkham: “ I think that a woman naturally dislikes to make her troubles known to the public, but restored health has meant so much to me that I cannot help from telling mine for the sake of other gunerii g women. “ For a long time I suffered untold agony with a uterine trouble and irregularities, which made me a physical wreck, and no one thought I would recover, but Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound has entirely cured me. and made me well and strong, and I feel it roy dutv to tell other suffering women What a splendid medicine it is.” If you are ill, don’t hesitate to get a bottle of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta ble Compound at once, and write to Mrs Pinkham, Lynn. Mass., for special advice -it is free and always helpful. CURES CONSTIPATION Relief that comes from the use of pills or other cathartics is better than suffering from the results of constipation, but relief and euro combined may be had at the same price and more promptly, for Lane’s Family Medicine is a cure for constipation, and the headache, backache, sideache and general debility that come from constipation stop when the bowels do their proper work. Sold by all dealers at 25 c. and 50c. LEWIS’SINGLE J±S1£binder STRAIGHT 5*1 ANNUAL tmr 9 ** ** 9_ _ _ four jobber, or direct from factory, Peoria, III ♦CIGAR SCALES FOR FARMERS. Buy the cheep •ft and beat. Bend for fiteen Bente (to., Atop, U CONGRESSMAN GOULDEN Finds Quick Relief from Bladder Troi*> bles Through Doan's Kidney Pills. Hon. Joseph A. Goulden, Member of Congress representing the 18th Dis trict of New York, also trustee of the Soldiers’ Home at Bath, N. Y., writes: Gentlemen: As many of my friends have used Doan’s Kidney Pills and have been cured of kidney and bladder troubles, I feel it my duty to recom mend the medicine from personal experience i show Doan’s Kidney Pills will cure inflam* mation of the bladder, having expert* enced relief the second day of using the medicine. (Signed) J. A. GOULDEN. Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milbum Co.. Buffalo, N. Y. You may go off by yourself and de clare you are as good as anybody, but the lie will do you no good. BIG PUBLISHER SUED. Chicago, Oct. 10.—The Peruna Drug Manufacturing Company, manufactur ers of a widely known proprietary med icine, has brought suit in the Superior Court of the City of Chicago against the Curtis Publishing Company of Phil adelphia, alleging that it has been damaged to the extent of $250,000 by a recent article in the Ladies’ Home Journal. The suit is based on a statement re cently made in that journal that • testimonial as to the merit of the rem edy manufactured by the plaintiff, al leged to have been given by Congress man George H. White of South Caro lina, was fraudulent, denial from Mr. White that he ever gave such a testi monial also being printed. The Peruna company declares that Congressman White did give the testi monial in good faith, and that it has two original letters from Mr. White. It declares that Mr. White was led to repudiate the testimonial through a misunderstanding. This is the second large damage suit that has been filed against the Curtis Publishing company since it inaugur ated its attacks on “Patent Medicines." Fifty-two languages and dialects are spoken along the banks of the Danube. Advancing the Farmers’ Interests. Traveling agents and salesmen are now sent from the home offices of the Chicago packers into all South Ameri can and Asiatic countries. They are going into every land, no matter what language may be spoken or what money be used. They will exchange their goods for cowries or elephant tusks—anything to sell the product and get something in return converti ble into money. It may seem odd to some folks, but traveling men, carry ing cases with samples of American meat products, can be seen in the desert of Sahara, the sands of Zanzi bar or in Brazil, “where the nuts come from.” Great is the enterprise of the Yankee merchant. The greater the market, the greater the price and sta bility of the price of the product and all that goes to make it in its various stages. The old man is never eradicated by becoming an old woman. Mr*. Winslow's Soothing Symp. For children teething, softens the gums, reduces flimmstlon, allays ptln, cures wind colic. 2ScsbolUe» Tis Hard to Reform. . A crook, who had married and tried to settle down and lead an honest life, was riding in a street car when he felt a Blight tug at his stud. Without turn ing his head he looked down and saw a busy hand trying to work it out of his shirt front. He at once worked his right hand behind his back and took the other fellow’s watch. When he had it securely in his pocket he turned around and said: ‘‘Say, Bill, I was in the same line myself not long ago.”—New York Sun. Cabby’s Windfall. A London cabman found a dead cat on one of the seats of his vehicle. He was about to throw the corpse into the gutter when a constable stopped him. "You can’t leave that in the street,” said the officer. “But if I can’t,” said the cabman, “what can I do with it?” "Take it,” said the constable, “to Scotland Yard, and if it is not claimed within three months it becomes your property.” The Ideal Woman. The ideal woman, if she ever could exist, would be a bore, a prig, a hope less dowdy, and would undoubtedly be at loggerheads with all her friends and relations.—World. Liberal Offer. An advertisement in a German newspaper contains this tempting off er. “Anybody who can prove that my tapioca is damaging to health will at once receive three packets gratis.” “GOLD GOLD.” “Good," He Says, “But Comfort Bet ter." “Food that fits is better than a gold mine,” says a grateful man. “Before I commenced to use Grape Nuts food no man on earth ever had a worse infliction from catarrh of the stomach than I had for years. “I could eat nothing but the very lightest food and even that gave me great distress. “I went through the catalogue of prepared foods but found them all (except Grape-Nuts) more or less in digestible, generating gas in the stom ach (which in turn produced head ache and various other pains and aches) and otherwise unavailable for my use. “Grape-Nuts food I have found easily digested and assimilated, and it has renewed my health and vigor and made me a well man again. The catarrh of the stomach has disap peared entirely with all its attendant ills, thanks to Grape-Nuts, which now is my almost sole food. I want no other.” Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Ten day’s trial tells the story. There’s a reason. t HAS TASK TO TAX STATESMAN. Baron Frankenthurm the Center of Political Storm in Austria. Baron Gautsch Von Frankenthurm, against whom the social democrats' made a violent demonstration in the lower house at Vienna, has been Aus trian premier since November, 1897, when he succeeded Count Badeni. In preceding cabinets he had been min •ster of worship and minister of edu cation. Baron Gautsch was bom in 1851, and was but twenty-three years old when he entered the ministry of justice. Id 1881 he was appointed director of the Theresian Academy, and made an enviable record. In ail respects he is said to be a thoroughly eelf-made man. The service for whicn he is best appreciated in Austria is the reform he effected in the methods of instruction. FORESAW THE RISE OF JAPAN. Wonderful Fulfilment of Prophecy Made Forty Years Ago. The Frankfurter Zeitung quotes a prophecy made over forty years ago that will be read with special interest in the light of recent events. The prophet was Wilhelm Raobes, the novelist. In his novel, “The For est People,” published in Frankfort in 1863, one of the characters delivers an oration over the grave of a traveler in the Pacific. The prophecy follows: “Believe me, gentlemen, this is a good spot in which to lie at rest and listen to the sound of the approaching footsteps. Hear you not that awe striking tread? Hark! They come, singly at first, then in pairs, in twen ties, in their thousands, in millions! Who and what are they whose giant tread is thus hastening hither? They are those who will yet unfold on this spot the flag of the future. A future when those who live shall see another England, an England of the Pacific ocean, arise in glory and might. To day we call this land Japan, a land be fore which we stand as before a dark, unsolvable riddle. “■When this time comes, potent new nations, owning and navigating ships of gigantic make, will traffic and inter mingle between the coasts of Asia and America, as now they do between Hull and Hamburg, between Dover and Calais. In that age to come the power of commerce and enlightenment will gradually but surely destroy the an cient might of the sword and of tyran ny, and the England of the Pacific, as the England of the North Sea in the past, will be the principal agent of the new civilization.” BLAMES HIGH ARMY OFFICERS. New York Surgeon Criticises Ameri can Methods in Late War. Dr. Louis L. Seaman of New York, in speaking before the convention of military surgeons at Detroit on the fight made by the Japanese army on disease, strongly criticised Ame-ican sanitary work during the war with Spain. He declared conditions were misrepresented and that hundreds died of disease unnecessarily. N< gleet and even ignorance characterized the acts of high army officers in caring for their men, he insisted. On the other hand, the Japanese used the most modern methods and preserved the lives of their soldiers for legiti mate work of the war. No Excuse for Another Epidemic. New Orleans’ fight against yellow fever shows beyond a doubt that an other epidemic ought never to occur. During the ten weeks of the straggle there has been but 335 deaths from the disease, which is a remarkably low record, compared with the epidem ic of 1878, when, during the same sea son of the year, the deaths numbered 2,176 in a much smaller population. The immense reduction in mortality this year has unquestionably been due to the advance of medical science in the handling of yellow fever, and here after, with the city always on the alert and protected against the stegomyia mosquito, the epidemic of 1905 should be known as the last of the plague.— Springfield, Mass., Republican. Daughter of Motley Visits America. Lady Harcourt, who has arrived in New York from Europe after an ab sence of many years, is the daughter of the American diplomat and histo rian, John Lathrop Motley, and the widow of the late Sir William Vernon Harcourt. one of the most eminent leaden and statesmen of the liberal party. WORLD’S LINES OF RAILROADS. America Has More Than Half of the Entire Mileage. Consul General Guenther of Frank fort supplies the following remarkable railroad statistics: According to the most recent Ger man statistics, the length of the rail roads of the world on Dec. 31, 1904, was 537.105 miles, of which 270,386 miles were in America, 187,776 in Eu rope, 46,592 miles in Asia, 15,649 miles in Africa and 16,702 miles in Austra lasia. Of the mileage of European railroads Germany stands first (34, 016), followed in their order by Rus sia (33.286), France (28.266), Austria Hungary (24,261), the United King dom (22,502), Italy (10,025), Spain (8,656), Sweden and Norway (7,730). The average cost of construction of the European railroads per mile is estimated at $107,577, while for the remainder of the world the estimate is only $59,680. The total value of the railroads of the world, according to these statistics, is $43,000,000,000, of which the European roads figure for $22,000,000,000. The estimate for roll ing stock is as follows, in numbers: Locomotives, 150,000; passenger coaches, 225,000, and freight cars, 3, 000,000. FRANK BEARD DIES SUDDENLY. Well-Known Illustrator and Originator of “Chalk Talk.” Frank Beard, known all over the United States as the originator of the “chalk talk,” and for more than twen ty years connected with the Ram's Horn, chiefly as illustrator, died sud denly, Sept. 28 at Chicago. Death came as the result of cerebral hemorr hage. Mr. Beard came of a well known fam ily. His father and uncle were James ard William H. Beard, the painters, and the name of his brother, Dan Beard, writer, lecturer and inventor, has been familiar to the boys of sev eral generations. Frank Beard was born in Cincin nati. O., Feb. 6, 1842. Before he was twelve years old he had begun his artistic work and was sending sketches to Yankee Notions, one of the first of American illustrated pa pers. Although only eighteen years old when the civil war broke out, he was commissioned by Frank Leslie’s and Harper’s Weeklies to accompany the army of the Potomac. After the war he began lecturing, and it was at this time that he origi nated the “chalk talks”—a popular lecture with an accompaniment of rapid illustrating. For three years ne occupied the chair of esthetics and painting in Syracuse university, and at that time became editor of Judge, which position he held during the Blaine campaign. About this time Mr. Beard began to feel that the power wielded by a car toonist should be exerted in ether directions than those of social and political reform. He therefore turned aside from his humorous and political work and became interested in Sun day schools and the Chautauqua move ment, in connection with which much of his best known work has been done. About twenty years ago he began illustrating for the Ram's Horn, a religious weekly published in Chicago. In 1890 he became one of the editors of the paper and for the last fifteen years had been devoting his entire time to this work. King Edward Growing Peevish. Indications are not wanting that his most gracious majesty King Ed ward of Great Britain and Ireland grows old and peevish. The latest in cident in proof of this deplorable ten dency comes from Cowes, where the king has a royal residence, Osborne house. Some repairs were to be made in the naval cadets’ school near by and his majesty asked to be shown the plans. The architect sent with the drawing had a wart upon one side of his nose. This disfigurement caus ed his majesty great annoyance and he has demanded that the architect be removed from charge of the repairs. Everybody in London is laughing at the incident. Some of the comic pa pers have gone so far as to express regret at the delicate state of the king’s health. Polyglot Pupils in Gotham. Eighteen languages were spoken in New York before the war of the revo lution and that number has now risen to sixty-six or sixty-seven. There is a school in the Syrian district of the city in which, it is reported, twenty nine languages and dialects are used. The greatest problem to be solved in New York, not only as a municipality, but as the gateway to the United States, is the naturalizing of this host of children—not by the forms of law, but in spirit, temper, habit and speech. Much is being done for men and wom en in these congested quarters; more probably than the atmosphere In which they live than by all other agen cies combined, but the most searching, effective and fruitful work is being done with the children.— Harper’s Magazine. Woman Deserving of Honors. Among those who received the hon orary degree of LL. D. at Trinity col lege, Dublin, last month was Mrs. Mar garet Byers, the head of Victoria col lege, Belfast, who recently celebrated her jubilee of fifty years of an active professional life. 9 oo Drops WffnWX4n.->... i»ui:...;;.u..-in I WtHj tftmt'nOitiMUi ’ , ■; ■ ■ AVege table Preparationfor As similating the Food andRegula ling the Stomachs andBowels of lNFANIS/( H1LDKLN Promotes Digestion.Cheerful ness and Rest.Contains neither Opium .Morphine nor Mineral. >’OTliAHCOTIC. tfOUnrSiMUtLPtTCBSR An»Aii Stwd' jUx.Smttm. * &JUUSJ* jkmMr M * *Sfd Ctmifud-tajm Wiiii^i’iii fhrmi Aperfec! Remedy forConslipa Fion, Sour Stomach.Diarrhoea Worms .Convulsions .Feverish ness and Loss OF SLEEP. Far Simile Signature or NEW YORK. Alb moiiliis olds' 35 Dosfs - 35 Crisis EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. GASTORIA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Thirty Years GASTORIA Thi octmun MaMinr. new iom errr. Compare Pillsbury's Vitos with other cereals and you will instantly recognize PILLSBURY PURITY in the rich, white color ot’ pMsmm k which is actually the "Meat oi the Wheat.' It is the white heart of the wheat kernel, sterilized. Nothing added; nothing taken away. ' Try this Common Sense Breakfast Food and you will never change It Is HEALTHFUL.—SUBSTANTIAL—ECONOMICAL A 2-POUND PACKAGE MAKES 12 POUNDS COOKED -See the Economj PRICE 15 CENTS, ROC IT MOUNTAIN TERRITORY, 20 CENTS. —4si four Grocer To-Day ■—... PILLSBURY-WASHBURN FLOUR. MILL CO.. Ltd, Minneapolis. Mina. PRICE. 25 Cts. CURE THE6RIP, IN ONE DAY mmw. pito wo equal for h^ne ANTI-GRIPINE IS GUARANTEED TO CURE GRIP, BAD COLD, HEADACHE AHD NEURALGIA. I won’t .ell Aatl-Orlptne to a dealer who won’t Gasrmatea IL Call for your MO* EY BACK IF IT DON’T CUKE. F. IF. JHemer, JE. X>.» MuulMturer.RjtriiitaieM, Mm, HAVE YOU COWS? If you have cream to separate a good Cream Separator is the most profitable in vestment you can possibly make. Delay means daily waste or time, labor and product DE LAVAL CREAM SEPARATORS save $10.- per cow per year every year of use over all gravity setting systems and $5.- per cow over all imitating separators. They received the Grand Prize or Highest Award : at St. Louis. Baying trashy cash-in-advance sepa rators is penny wise, dollar foolish. Suoft machines quickly lose their cost instead of saving it, If you haven’t the ready cash DE LAVAL machines may be bought on such liberal terms that they actually pay for themselves. Send today for new catalogue and name of nearest local agent. The De Laval Separator Co. ■■rtalpta A Canal Sts. i 74 Cortlandt Strati CHICAGO I NEW YORK I Don’t Get Wet! TOWER’S SLICKERS will keep you dry as nothing else will, because they are the product of the best materials and seventy years’ experi ence in manufacturing. A. J. TOWER CO. Boston, U.&A. TOWPt CAMASHAM OO.. Ltd. t Look for this brand on harness, collars, saddles, horse blankets, lap robes, etc. Made by flarpham Bros. Co„ Lincoln, Neb. •rep os a card and will nail yon a souvenir. PIT * PITLESS SCALES. For Stm and Wood Frames, $25 and np. Write us before you buy. We save you money. Also Pumps and Wind BiCKMAI BROS. On Yon Have No Right to Suffer From Constipation,Bowel and Stomach Trouble Q. "What is the beginning of sickness? A. Constipation. Q. What is Constipation? A. Failure of the bowels to carry off tho waste matter which lies in the alimentary canal where it decays and poisons the entire system. Eventually the results are death under tha name of some other disease. Note the deaths from typhoid fever and appendicitis, stomach and bowel trouble at the present time. Q. What causes Constipation? A. Neglect to respond to the call of nature promptly. Lack of exercise. Excessive brain work. Jttental emotion and improper diet. Q. What are the results of neglected Consti pation? A. Constipation causes more suffering than any other disease. It causes rheumatism, colds, fevers, stomach, bowel, kidney, lung and heart troubles, etc. It is the one disease that starts all others. Indigestion, dyspepsia, diarrhea, loss of sleep and strength are Its symptoms—plies, appendicitis and fistula, are caused by Constipa tion. Its consequences are known to all phy sicians, but few sufferers realize their condition until it is too late. Women become confirmed invalids as a result of Constipation. Q. Do physicians recognize this? A. Yes. The first question Tour doctor aaka you is "are you constipated?" That is the secret. Q. Can.lt be'cured ? A. Ye*, with proper treatment. The common error is to resort to physics, such as pills, salts, mineral water, castor oil. injections, etc . every one of which is injurious. They weaken and increase the malady. You know this by your own experience. si- w dai men should be done to cure it ? A. Get a bottle of Mull's Grape Tonic stonca Mull’s Grape Tonic will positively cure Consti pation And Stomach Trouble in the shortest spAce of time. No other remedy hAS before been known to cure Constipation positively And per manently. Q. What is Moll's Grape Tonic ? A. It is a Compound with 40 per cent of ths Juice of Concord urapes. It exerts a pecuiiAr strengthening, henling influence upon the intes tines. so thst they cad do their work unaided. The process is graduAl but sure. It is not a physic, but it cures Constipstion. Dysentery, Stomach And Bowel Trouble. Having a rich, fruity grape flAvor, it is pleasant to take. As a tonic it is unequalled, insuring the system against disease. It strengthens and builds up waste tissue. Q. Where can Mull's Grape Tonic be bad ? A. Your druggist sells it. The dollar bottls contains nearly three times the 50-cent size. Osod for Ailing Children and Karting Mothers. A free bottle to all who have never used it because we know it will cure you. 124 FREE BOTTLE. 10145 Send thls'coupon with vour name and ad dress and your druggist’s name, for a free bottle of Mull’s Grape Tonic for Stomaob and Bowels, to MinX’S CRAPE TONIC CO-, 148 Third Avenue, Rock Island. Illinois Git* Full Addrest and Writt Plaint*. The 0.00 bottle contains nearly three times the 50c size. At drug stores. The genuine has a date and number stamped the label—take no other from your druggist. w m it No. 41- 1905.