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About The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 9, 1905)
You Have He 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 newels to carry off the waste matcei which ft.es in the alimentary canal where it decays and poisons the entire system. Eventually the results are d*ath under thj name of some other disease Note the death i from typhoid fever and appendicitis, s to mao i and bowel trouble at the present time. Q. What causes Constipation? A. Neglect to respond to the call of natui* promptly. Lack of exercise. Excessive braia work. Aiemtal emotion and improper diet. Q. What are the results of neglected Conrtl pation? A. Constipation causes more suffering than any other disease. It causes rheumatism. coWs. fevers, stomach, bowel, kidney, lung and heart troubles, etc. It is the one disease that stars* all others. Indigestion, dyspepsia, diarrhea, lois of sleep and strength are its symptoms—piles, 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 j invalids as a result of Constipation. xjyj rccu».'u uc uaa.F A. Yes. The first question your doctor asks you is “are you const:paced?” That is the secret. Q. Can.lt be'cured ? A. Yes. 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. Yon know this by your j own experience. Q. What then should be done to cure it ? A. Get a bottle of Mull's Grape Tonic at once. Mull's Grape Tonic will positively cure Consti pation and Stomach Trouble in the shortest space of time. No other remedy ias before been known to cure Constipation positively and per manently. Q. What is Mull’s Grape Tonic ? A. It is a Compound with 40 per cent of the Juice of Conoord orapes. It exert* a peculiar strengthening, healing influence upon the intes tines. so that they can do their work unaided. The process is gradual but sure. It is not a physic, but it cures Constipation. 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 had ? A. Your druggist sells it. The dollar bottle contains nearly three times the 50-cent size. Good for Ailing Children and Horsing Mothers. A free bottle to all who hsve never used 1ft because we know it will cure you. 124 FREE BOTTLE. 11405 Send this coupon with Tour name and ad dress and your druggists name, for a free bottle of Mull's Grape Tonic for Stomach and Bowels, to MTIX'S GRAPK TONIC CO. 148 Third Are. ae, Rock bland. Illinois Gite P'uB Address and Writs Plainly. The SI.00 bottle contains nearly three times the 50c site. At drug stores. The genuine has a date and number stamped os the label—take no otber from your druggist. The Gaunt TOWER'S POMMEL SUCKER » HAS MEN ADVERTISED T AND SOLD FOB A ^ QUAETEB OF A CENIM LIKE ALL i22221w»tmof ) CIOTHING. It is made of the best late rials, m black or/dow. fully guaranteed, and sold bjr reliable dealers crCTwhere. tower Canadian ecu—w. TOC ONTO. CAM. STICK TO THE SIGN OF THE FISH i.'UfKK.ffi: W. L. Douglas *3= & *3= SHOES mu H. L. Douglas $4.00 Cilt Edge Line cannot be equalled at any price. *.L-DOU6u^ SHOES & W.L. DOUGLAS MAKES AMD SELLS MORE MEN'S $3.60 SHOES THAN AMY OTHER MANUFACTURER. t1 n nnn *WARD to inyone who CM 9 I U,UUU disprove this statement. W. L. Doug la* $3.50 shoes 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 Just as good as those that cost you $5.00 to $7.00—the only difference is the price. If I could take you into my factory at Brockton, Mass., the largest In the world under one roof making men’s fire shoes, and show vou the care with which every pair of Douglas shoes is made, vou would realize why W. L. Douglas $3.50 shoes are the best shoes produced In the world. If 1 could show you the difference between the shoes made in my factory and those of other makes, yon would understand why Douglas $3.50 shoes 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. W. L Oonffas Strong Mado Shomm for Mon. $2.50. $2.00. Boyn’ School S Dromm Shoo*, $2.60, $2, $1.7 6, $1.60 CAUTION.—Insist upon having W.L.Pong tas shoes. Take no substitute. Kone 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. Writ# for Illustrated Catalog of Fall Stvlea. W. L- DOUGLAS, Brockton, LAW URGED BY SELF-SEEKERS. Real Animus of Movement Against Remedies Deservedly Popular. An adroit but plausible scheme try which it is hoped to prejudice the sale of Proprietary medicines is the propo si l n to prohibit the sale of any rem edy which “contains poison” unless each package or bottle is expressly la beled “Poiscn." Such bills rre also well designed to impose upon men who have no familiarity with the subject matter. The pretense of protecting the public health put forth in support of Fuch bills is generally the merest subterfuge; and whenever you hear a demand for a law of this kind it originates with those who have a direct pecuniary interest to serve by destroying the sale of proprietary rem edies. Some of the best and most widely used remedies in the world contain some one ingredient which, if -taken in sufficient quantities, might be poi sonous. and yet the preparation as a whole is not poisonous at all. Opium, for instance, is used in small quanti ties in many of the best cures for coughs, colic, diarrhea, etc., in tooth ache drops and in almost all liniments. To require such medicines to be false ly labeled “poison” would be merely a cunning device to alarm the public and thus bring about the destruction of the sale of those remedies, and in directly to compel people to procure the medicine they want by the more expensive method of consulting a phy sician and getting his prescription. In other words, it is an effort to prevent them from getting cheaply the reme dies which they and their fathers be fore them have used for many years.— Medical exchange. HEALTHY CHILDREN. Without good health life is not worth living. Sickly, peevish chil dren are a source of endless trouble and anxiety to their parents, yet the children’s condition is frequently due to their parents' ignorance or thought lessness, or both. To make children healthy and to keep them in that condition it is nec essary to feed them proper food and to see that they get plenty of exer cise and fresh air. Meat is very bad for children. It should be avoided and food rich in phosphates, such as Pillsbury’s Vitos, should be given in its place. . This food is truly the “meat of the wheat.” It is made by the world’s greatest millers and it is free from artificial coloring or adulteration. It is not especially a child's food. Your whole family will enjoy this common sense cereal. It makes a wholesome, substantial breakfast or an appetiz ing dessert and can be prepared in one hundred different ways. Every good grocer will supply you with Pillsbury’s Vitos. Large pack age—enough to make twelve pounds of strength-building food. 15c, Rocky Mountain Territory, 20c. Ask your grocer about it to-day. Cactus Blossoms. The cactus is coming into fashion in England and Germany. A German writer maintains that cactus blossoms excel all others in variety and in beau ty of form and color. 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 dispose of before he puts in Defiance. He knows that Defiance Starch has printed on every package in large let 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. Business in Lhassa. Lhassa, the Forbidden City of Thib et, has ten thousand people, two-thirds of whom are women, who conduct all the business of the city. To the housewife who has not yet become acquainted with the new things of everyday use in the market, and who is reasonably satisfied with the old. we would suggest that a trial of Defiance Cold water Starch be made at once. Not alone because it is guar anteed by the manufacturers to be su perior to any other brand, but because each 10c package contains 16 ozs., while all the other kinds contain but 12 ozs. It Is safe to sav that the lady who once uses Defiance Sarch will use no other. Quality and quantity must win. _ Our worst enemies are the friends who have failed to find us profitable. Mrs. WlnaJow's Soothing Syrup. for children teething, softens the gums, reduces tp fimmmntlon, allays pain, cures windcollu ZScaboolA Diamonds have been found in me teorites. THE COMFORTER A congested vein pressing on a nerve accounts for the swelling, throbbing ache of Neuralgia St. Jacobs Oil frees the circulation, allays the pressure and soothes away the pain. Pricw. 95c. and 50c. PRICE. 25 Cts. /Vo cure the sap i pH IN ONE CAY f AMPINEI ANTI-GRIPINE IS GUARANTEED TO CURE GRIP, BAD COLD, HEADACHE AHD HEURALGIA. 1 won't nil AitkOrtflM to • dealer who wont finrutw It. Call for your MONET BACK IV IT DOST CUKE. J'.IF. - -- * ‘ - N ' U MPTICN DEFIIICE STUM ► Coney bland Souveair Post Cards. Btx beaut'fu; colored scene* for 35c. Coney Island Postal Card Co>« Coney Island, H. V. I FOR I IRS. Buy the cheap SCALES p- *"d -b*?t- -6aa2”j'1^ Cknn leik Os.. CWmq. 111. ’t Eft Vats Protecting Fowls from Lice. Fowls are hard to protect from lice largely on account of the number cf fowls that must be kept by any one man who expects to make much money out of them. If a thousand-pound steer or horse has lice the treatment of that animal for the parasites is not a great task; but it is far different if a thousand pounds of chickens have to be treated. That might mean, as many as 200 fowls to be washed, dipped, or otherwise handled and cared for. There are several ways of killing lice, but the most thorough way is to wash the fowl with soap and water. A poultry exhibitor said to the writer, “If the man that has lousy hens will wash them as the showman does his birds he will have no trouble with lice, provided he does not again permit them to come into contact with other birds that are lousy.” His method of washing was to make a strong lather of soap and water and scrub the birds thoroughly. The lather was worked into the feathers and under all of them and was again and again washed off. This kind of treatment gets rid of the lice and leaves the birds absolutely clean. The next best thing is perhaps grease put under the wings, under the tail feathers, and on top of the head. Sooner or later the lice on the bird will take refuge in the places mentioned and will become covered with grease, which will in turn cause the stoppage j of the breathing pores of the insects j and hence strangulation. This is the j current opinion, but whether all the lice do thus commit suicide is a ques tion that is hard to settle. Certain it is that the application of grease does greatly reduce the number of lice in festing the fowls. Fattening Fowls. It is time to begin thinking of fat tening fowls for the fall mar ket and for the Thanksgiving table. When we are getting them ready for market we give them a thorough cleaning, to get rid of all vermin, and then confine where they will have plenty of fresh air, but very little exercise. We pay special atten tion to see that they are kept free from vermin now, for they have not a fair chance to look out for them selves when confined. Pure air in great abundance is very essential, but exercise will work off the flesh you are trying to lay on them. Com is one of our best fattening foods, with some oats and buckwheat. A variety in the food tempts their appetite and gives better results. During the last ten days we feed nothing but soft foods and these we feed in great quantities. In confining the fowls for fattening, we separate the cocks and hens, and in case any individual fowl is inclined to be “scrappy” and persists in bothering his neighbors and worry ing himself about them, we put him in a coop by himself. Anything which tends to worry the fowls or to work off flesh must be watched for and avoided.—Cora H. Porter, Grant Co., Ind., in Farmers’ Review. Cost of Raising Fowls. The cost of raising fowls is hard to estimate, because the farmer feeds his fowls with material that would be wasted if he did not give it to the poultry. Where men live in the vil lages and keep poultry, they roughly estimate that it costs one dollar per head to raise a chick and bring it to the laying period. This is about the cost estimated to keep a fowl a year. In making the estimate of one dollar per fowl, one might say that the esti mate is too large, but it must be re membered that when the chickens are growing there are invariably losses, and these must be averaged up as part of the cost of raising the ones that survive. It is not a hard matter to make a fowl, after she has begun laying, produce a dollar's worth of eggs a year, or even half a dollar more than that. We doubt if the cost of raising a fowl on the farm is more than a half dollar, and our farm fowls, if rightly handled, should in a year pay for themselves, and pay an extra dol lar in the way of profit. We are cer tain that on many farms they do this, but the owner does not appreciate this because he keeps no account either of receipts or expenditures. More care in the raising of poultry will reduce the cost per head.—Warren Wilson, Union Co., O. The Marketing of Chickens. The marketing of chickens requires that all the best methods should be observed, if profit is to be expected from the consignments. It is surpris ing how much weight people put upon the appearance that goes with any food product. Some commission men, too, make it a point to deduct from the price if the package is not up-to-date in appearances, declaring that they are unable to sell at a certain figure on account of poor appearance of the chickens or the package in which they were sent forward. Sometimes this is based on actual facts. It is often the case that the men that report that they have not been able to make sales at going prices have really repacked the chickens and sold them at the market price for the best goods, but they do not care to give the result of their work to the original consigner. Perhaps they are not to be blamed. Certain it is that the man or woman that goes into the production of poul try with the expectation of making money out of it will have to accept conditions as they are and try to con form to the requirements of the mar ket. Meat Cracklings for Fowls. The butchers take the fattest parts of animals, especially hogs, and boil them to get the fat out of them. After the fat is taken out the remainder goes under the name of cracklings. How much value these have as a poultry feed it is hard to telL It is doubtful, however, if they are worth paying a very high price for, as fat seems to be their principal component. The permanent pasture may be made one of the most profitable pieces of land ob the farm. mmm Nomenclature of Apples. Many a man tries to make himself I familiar with the apples that are ' grown in this country. The skilled horticulturist feels a pride in recogniz ing the different varieties of apples at j sight, aEd this is pardonable, for It is 1 one of the things the public supposes him to know. It is always a humilia tion to him to be unable to tell the name of an apple that is brought to him or to misname it. But those that have made a careful investigation of the matter have come to the conclu sion that no matter how much a man may study apples, it is practically im possible for him to know all the varie ties so well that he can tell each one at sight and not make a mistake. There are over 2,OPO varieties in gen eral cultivation at the present time. It would be a difficult task to learn the names of these and their descrip tions. But what is worse, these apples have among them over 14,000 names, as W. H. Ragan of the United States Depart ment of Agriculture assured the writer. Mr. Ragan is the author of a large bulletin that has recently been issued by the government on this matter. Mr. Ragan is the government expert on pomological nomenclature, and we doubt if any man in the country has put as many years of work on this sub ject as has he. Yet we doubt very much if even Mr. Ragan would be able to recognize some of the old varieties that appear at our fairs and winter horticultural meetings. If an apple always held its form and color It would be different, but the forms and colors change in accordance with varying con ditions. une or tne Dest Known growers oi i apples in Illinois was showing the writer through his orchard when he came to a Wealthy tree that bore ex ceptionally large apples. The fruit looked much more like the Wolf River than like the Wealthy, yet there was no doubt about them being Wealthies. Mr. Soverhill said that for some time after the tree came into bearing he held to the belief that the tree was the Wolf River. This illustrates the way in which fruits change under varying conditions. Mr. Soverhill also related a litfle incident tint occurred several years ago. There was a dis pute among some fruit judges at a fair as to certain plates that were sup posed to be Wealthies. They were in fact Wealthies, but the best judges did not believe some of them to be so. Mr. Soverhill picked apples from three parts of the same Wealthy tree and brought them to the judges. Some had grown in open sunshine, some in the shade and others varied in size. He asked the experts to name the ap ples. and they promptly gave them three different names. He surprised them by telling them that the apples were all taken from the same tree and that it was a Wealthy. The man that tries to learn all about apples is engaged in a laudible under taking, but he has taken upon himself a task without end, especially so as new varieties are being continually brought out by nurserymen as well as by enthusiasts that are ambitious to make a record as originators of popu lar fruits. Fortunes Lost by Forest Fires. Mr. J. H. Bissell of the Michigan Academy of Sciences has been making a close study of forestry in Michigan. What he says about forest fires should set every man to thinking. The lumber product of Michigan is of immense value. Mr. Bissell claims that the val ue of pine and hardwood lumber that has already been cut in that state amounts to $2,649,175,000. In addi tion to this, since lumbering in the state began, forest fires have de stroyed pine and hardwood to the value of $859,000,000. This is a sum about equal to our national debt. It is a loss sustained in a single state of the union. Is it any wonder, there fore, that students of public econom ics are asking our legislators every where to pass laws that will prevent forest fires? Plum Seedlings. Frederic Cranefield of Wisconsin says that 90 per cent of the seedlings of any variety of plums will fruit earlier than the parent. The best varieties produce the best seedlings, but show a great dif ference in the uniformity of their seedlings, or in their varietal dif ferences. Thus the seedlings from the Quaker difTer but little from their parent, while the seedlings from the Wild Goose show a multitude of types. Get Ready to Graft. At this time of year the farmer should select the trees that he wishes to propagate on his trees of less useful variety. The grafting will not be done until spring, but now the wood that is to be used for the grafting should be marked, that it may be cut and laid away after the leaves have fallen. Why do we allow our trees to produce inferior fruits when we can so readily con trol the matter by grafting? Pruning and Size of Fruit. An Australian orchardist laat year pruned seven varieties of apple trees with the idea of affecting the fruit. The aver age diameter of the seven varieties of apples from the unpruned trees was 1.5 inches, while from pinned trees in the same vicinity the average diam eter was 3 inches. Skim Milk and Water. In the feeding of skim milk to fowls, it should be remembered that it is a food rather than a drink. It should not be al lowed to take the place of water. While it Is composed largely of water, yet its combination as a food makes the system crave pure water to satisfy the thirst. A Russian has recently died who was known as the King." He had shepherds working for him all over Rnsr.ia. He also had large mas u factories for the working up of wool. He is said to have had 70,000 men working for him. Siberian Reindeer Farms. In Siberia reindeer farming is a growing industry. Owners of young deer brand the animals on the ear. In capturing the creatures a long las soo with a thick knot on one end and a noose on the other is used. The j weapon is composed of sealskin straps braided together, and some of the young women on the reindeer farms are as expert as the men. Hare is Relief for Women. Mother Gray a nurse in New York, dis covered a pleasant herb remedv for women 's ills, called AUSTRALIAN' LEAF. It is the only certain monthly regulator. Cures female weaknesses, Backache, Kidney and Urinary troubles. At ail Druvtrists or by mail 50 cts. Sample mailed FREE. Address, The Mother Gray Co., LeRoy, N\ Y. “Yump!” A Swede, intending to leave the country, started for the steamer, ac companied by a friend. As they reached the dock the boat was leav ing. The friend excitedly Exclaimed, ‘'Yump, Yon. yump! I dank you can mok it in a couple of yumps!’’ When Your Grocer Says he does not have De^ance Starch, you may be sure he is afraid to keep it j until his stock of 12 oz. packages are j sold. Defiance Starch is not only bet ter than any other Cold Water Starch. 1 but contains 16 oz. to the package anu ' sells for same money as 12 oz. brands. Highest of World's Trees. Highest of all trees in the world is a specimen of the eucalyptus colossea in the Dandenong mountains near Melbourne. Australia. It has a hight, of 494 feet, exceeding by 25 feet the ; highest of the big trees in California. Piso's Cure is the best medicine we ever used for all a .lection- of the throat and lungs—Wjl O. EsnahWT. Vanburen. Ind.. Feb. 10.1900. Beer and Heart Disease. Some German writers think there is a connection between the fact that the consumption of beer in Germany has trebled in twenty years and the fact that there are now almost four times as many heart disease “rejects" at the recruiting offices of the army and navy as in 1891. Struggles of Life. In the realm of conscience and char-1 acter man must work out his own sal- i vation through ceaseless struggling. ; toiling long. hard, and patiently. And i just in proportion as he goes toward excellence does the work become diffi cult.—Newell Dwight Hillis. ECZEMA FOR TWO YEARS. Little Girl's Awful Suffering With Ter rible Skin Humor—Sleepless Nights for Mothei—Speedy Cure by Cuticura. “My little girl had been suffering for two years from eczema, and dur ing that time I could not get a night s sleep, as her ailment was very severe. I had tried sc many remedies, deriv ing no benefit. I had given up all hope. But as a last resort I was persuaded to try Cuticura, and one box of the Ointment and two bottles of the Re solvent together with the Soap, ef fected a permanent cure.—Mrs. L B. Jones, Addington, Ind. T." Selling Out. A legitimate, bona fide advertise ment: "A young couple has to ride I out in the country for some purpose. | and has seven rooms, with best furni ture, with piano, to be sold cheap be- i fore eight days around.” Omaha, Nebr., Oct. 26.—It la re ported from Casper, Wyo., that sales of town lots for the new town of Sh-' shone, located at the edge of the Wind River Reservation on the new line of The Chicago & North-Western ; Railway across the state from Cas per, have been unprecedented. Bidding for town lots runs high and a large number have been disposed of within a short time. Buyers evident- , ly figure on the growth of the city here when the Indian Reservation is thrown open to settlement next June. Give a woman a chance to show oft and she will make good. OPERATIONS AVOIDED Two Grateful Letters from Women Who Avoided Serious Operations.—Many Women Suffering from Like Conditions Will Be Interested. XpflAcrjret A1erA/e^T When a physician tells a woman, snf- j fering from ovarian or womb trouble. : that an operation is necessary it, of course, frightens her. The very thought of the operating table and the knife strikes terror to her heart. As one woman expressed it. when told by her physician that she must undergo an operation she felt that her death knell had sounded. Our hospitals are full of women who are there for ovarian or womb operations! It is quite true that these troubles may reach a stage where an operation is the only resource, but such eases are much rarer than is generally supposed, because a great many women have been cured by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound after the doctors had said an operation must be per formed. In fact, up to the point where the knife must be used to secure instant relief, this medicine is certain to help The strongest and most grateful statements possible to make come from women who. by taking Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound, have escaped serious operations. Margrite Ryan. Treasurer of St. An drew's Society. Hotel English, Indian apolis, Ind., writes of her cur e as fallows: Dear Mrs. Pinkham:— “ I cannot find words to express my thanks for the good Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound did ine. The doctor said I could not get well unless I had an operation for ovarian and female troubles. I knew I could not stand the strain of an operation and made up my mind I would be an invalid for life. Hearing how Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound had saved other women from serious operations I deckled to trv it. and in less than fonr months I was entirely cured; and words fail to express my thankfulness.'’ Miss Margret Merkley of 275 3d Street, Milwaukee, VVis., writes: Dear Mrs. Pinkham:— “Loss of strength, extreme- nervousness, severe shooting p uns through the pelvio organs, cramps, bearing- down pains, and extreme irritation com(>eiled me to seek l.iiical advice. The doctor, after making an examination, said that I bad ovarian trou ble and ub-eration, and advised an opeiation as mv only hot*-. To this I strongly objected —and I decided as a last resort to try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. " To my surprise the ulceration healed, all the bad symptoms disappeared, and I am one* more strong, vigorous and well: and 1 can not express my thanks for what it has dona for me.” Ovarian and womb troubles ar« steadily on the increase among women —and before submitting to an opera tion every woman should try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and write Mrs. Flukham at Lynn, Mass, for advice. For thirty years Lydia E Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has been curing the worst forms of female complaints, all ovarian troubles, inflammation, nl I ceration. falling and displacement of ! the womb, leucorrhcea. irregularities, indigestion and nervous prostration. Any woman wrho could read the many grateful letters on file in Mrs Pink ham's office would be convinced of tha efficiency of her advice and Lydia E. ! Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. *» nrs. Plnkham's Advice—A woman Best Understands a woman's Ilia. you know i the secret oF^ the Wave | ilk Circle ? ® Wonderful! CTSLpon’t delay another y Send Ww ~mj| for K clT right a- V { way. It’s %|fe purer and more efficient E than any Bak- 1 ing Powder that costs three times k as much. 25 oz. for 25c. w L. A ll grocers Send postal for "'Book of Presents " Jaques Mfg.Co. Chicago PATENTSIPROFIT MUST FULLY PROTECT AN INVENTION. NASON, FENWICK * LAWRENCE, Patent Lawyers, Washington, D. C.« Established 1861. Send for onr 43rd Anniversary free Booklet. ■*bow ln* Illustrations of Mechanical'Movement*. Reter encea. Bradstreet and thousands of satisfied clients. Coann uni cations confidential. Write us to-day. The Government of Canada Give* absolutely FREE to every settler one hun dred and sixty acres of land in Western Canada. Land adjoining this can be purchased ^Vegetable Preparationfor As - similating toe Food andRegula ting (he Stomachs and Bowels of Promotes Digestion.Cheerful ness and Rest.Contains neither Opium.Morphine nor Mineral. Not Narc otic . Aperfed Remedy ForConsBpa Tion, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea Worms .Convulsions .Feverish ness and Loss of Sleep. Infan is /( hildkfn -V l b mouths old DoSIS-KCli GASTOBIA For Infants and Children. EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. In Use For Over Thirty Years GASTORIA The Kind You Have Always Bought from railway and land companies at from $6 to $10 per acre. On this land this year has been produced i upwards of twenty-five bushels of wheat to the acre. It is also the best of .crazing land and for i mixed farming it has no superior on the 1 comment. Splendid climate, low taxes, railways ; convenient, schools and churches close at hand. Write for “Twentieth Century Canada” and low railw ay rates to Superintendent of Immigration, Ottawa. Canada; or to authorized Canadian Government Aeent— W. V. Bennett. 8ol New York Life Build ing, Omaha, Nebraska. (Mention this paper.! IDA IiAn' XTINE v TOIIEI Antiseptic FOR WOMEN troubled with ills peculiar to weir sex, used as a aoucne is marvelous] y suc cessful. Thoroughly cleanses, kills disease terms, stops discharges, heals lailamaru-.tion and local soreness. Paxtine is in powder form to be dissolved in pore water, and is far more cleansing, healing, eenniadal and economical than liquid antiseptics for all TOILET AND WOMEN’S SPECIAL USES For sale at druggists, SO cents a box. Trial Box and Book of Instructions Free. Thc R. Paxton Company Boston. Hii,; I "Ftitow the Flaa" Home Visitors fj(ursion November ayth To many points in Illinois, Indiana. Ohio; Kentucky. Western Pennsylvan ia, New Vork and West Virginia, at greatly reduced rates. The WABASH has solid r*atl-bed rock ballast, anc, new equipment. Re clining er.air cars <SEATS FREE.) For rates, maps and all information call at Wabash City Office, 1601 Far nam St. or address W. N. U. Omaha. No. 44—1905. PUTNAM FADELESS tlaitmother*tt- *te Me package calon all ibera. The* lire ia cold water b mib>MMa«lhr«riwaaa(wL Write Mr he* aeoalet—Hew 9- Uje, Bleach and Mu Colon. MOMWOS0KWC DYES ttaa an* other Ore. Yea can <*e ■> IMobriM, HfMlMOt