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

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    A Valuable Agent.
The glycerine employed in Dr. Pierce’s
medicines greatly enhances the medi
cinal properties which it extracts and
ho ds in solution much better than alco
hol would. It also possesses medicinal
properties of its own, being a valuable
demulcent, nutritive, antiseptic and anti
ferment. It adds greatly to the efticacv
of the Black Cherry bark. Golden Seal
root. Stone root and Queen’s root, con
tained in "Golden Medical Discovery" in
subduing chronic, or lingering coughs,
bronchial, throat and lung affections,
for all of which these agents are recom
mended by standard medical authorities.
In all cases where there is a wasting
awav of flesh, loss of appetite, with
weak stomach, as in the early stages of
consumption, there can be no "doubt that
glycerine acts as a valuable nutritive and
aids the Golden Seal root. Stone root,
Queen's root and Black Cherrybark in
promoting digestion and building up the
flesh and strength, controlling the cough
and bringing about a healthy condition
of the whole system. Of course, it must
not be expected to work miracles. It will
not cure consumption except in its earlier
stages. It will cure very severe, obstin
ate. chronic coughs, bronchial and laryn
geal troubles, aid chronic sore throat
with hoarseness. In acute coughs it is
not so effective. It is in the lingering
coughs, or those of long standing, even
when accompanied by bleeding from
lungs, that it has performed its most
marvelous cures. Send for and read the
little bwik of extracts, treating of the
properties and uses of the several med
icinal roots that enter into Dr. Pierce's
Golden Medical Discovery and learn why
this medicine has such a wide range of
application in the cure of diseases. It is
sent free. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce
Buffalo. N. Y. The "Discoverv” con
tains no alcohol or harmful, habit-form
ing drug. Ingredients all printed on each
bottle wrapper in plain English.
Sick people, especially those suffering
from diseases of long standing, are invited
to consult Dr. Pierce bv letter, free. All
correspondence is held as strictly private
and sacredly confidential. Address Dr.
R. V. Pierce. Buffalo. N. Y.
Dr. Pierce's Medical Adviser is sent free
on receipt of stamps to pay expense of
mailing only. Send 21 one-cent stamps
for paper-covered, or 31 stamps for cloth
bound copy.
T
| THE BEST COUGH CURE j
No cough is too trifling or too
! serious to be treated by the right
! method, and the right method is
j the use of the best cough cure,
which is
Kemp’s Balsam
This famous preparation cures
coughs, colds, bronchitis, grip and
| consumption in its first stages.
Irritation of the throat and bron
i chial tubes is immediately removed 1
by the use of Kemp's Balsam.
i Sold by all dealers at 25c. and 50c. j
'
Heat Your Building With
BOVEE’S
Ventilating Furnace
And save 40 per cent
on cost and fuel
Thousands in use. Guar
anteed. Send for free cata
logue. Manufactured and
sold by the
ui iiiuvi u i ui i'au
Works, Waterloo, Iowa.
nCpaAMPr CTARPII easiest to work with and
ULrlHHUb O mnun Btarches Clottiei nicest.
Let Us Do Our Duty.
Let us do our duty in our shop or
our kitchen, the market, the street,
the office, the school, the home, just
as faithfully as if we stood in the
front rank of some great battle, and
we knew that victory for mankind de
pended on our bravery, strength and
skill. When we do that, the humblest
of us will be serving in that great
army which achieves the welfare of
the world.—Theodore Parker.
Postage Stamp Lore.
More than 17,000,000 postage stamps
are used in this country every day in
, the year, according to a postofflce of
ficial. This is about one stamp a day
for every five persons, and means $18,
! t'00 a year in the cost of gum alone.
! The daily consumption of stamps has
increased by 2,000,000 during the last
five years, or in other words, 730,000,
i0000 more stamps are used each year
than five years ago.
Tigress Hides Her Cubs.
A tigress in a Paris menagerie has
three cubs, but no one has seen them
yet. Should anybody intrude, the
| tigress would eat them at once. She
and they will have to be severely
let alone, until she considers them
large enough to appear.
A Language Lesson.
Hans Hansen called to see how his
friend Ole Olsen was making out with
his fine new job—street sweeping,
Says Olsen: “Vail. I tank I like the
shob all right.” At which angrily re
torted Hansen: “Shob? Doan say
'shob'; say ‘yob'.”
Salt to Relieve Pain.
We all know, more or less, the
agony of toothache and other pains,
and how comforting a bag of salt is.
often giving immediate relief, while
a weak solution, used as gargle, is
good for sore throats, not forgetting
| it is also beneficial as a dentifrice.
To the housewife who has not yet
1 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
earh 10c package contains 1G ozs.,
while all the other kinds contain but
12 ozs. It is safe to say that the lady
who once uses Defiance Starch will use
no other. Quality and quantity must
win.
Favorite Trees of Birds. '
Birds of different kinds have their
favorite trees. Blackbirds, rooks and
jays frequent oak trees; the ash shel
ters wood pigeons and thrushes, the
hawthorn all kinds of finches, whilst
the woodpecker's favorite is the
beech.
When Your Grocer Says
he does not have De“ance Starch, you
may be sure he is afraid to keep it
until his stock of 12 oz. packages are
sold. Defiance Starch is not only bet
ter than any other Cold Water Starch,
but contains 16 oz. to the package and
sells for same money as 12 oz. brands.
More Converts
Every Year
/jt, OUNCES
Every day in every year
that comes, more housewives
are giving up their exhorbitant
priced Baking Powders and
turning to K C, the honest and
reliable, which has stood so well
the test of years. They are find
ing out that
W5
KG
Chicago t
yO«n ^an5A=
BAKIfJG
POWDER
costs one-third the price of
powder anywhere near K C
quality, and makes better, purer, more
healthful baking. 25 ounces for 25c.
Send postal for** Book of Presents.”
JAQUES MFG. CO.
Chicago, 111.
It is wrong for you to suffer from Constipation,
Bowel and Stomach Trouble when there is a positive,
natural and harmless cure—Mull’s Grape Tonic.
Have yon noticed the large number of Typhoid Fever cases lately? Typhoid
Fever, Malarial Fever, Appendicitis, Impure Blood, Pimples, Sick Headache,
Skin Disease, Piles. Female Troubles, Stomach Troubles, Heart Troubles, etc.,
are the result of Constipation.
There is a remedy now to be had that cures these troubles absolutely.
A full sized bottle is furnished \ ou liee to prove it.
Remember we give only one Ixntle to each family. If your druggist fails to
supply you with Mull’s Grape Tonic send us this coupon together with name and
address of the druggist and we will mail you a boitle.
Try all the druggists before you write us as the bottle he is authorized to give
you for this coupon is three times as large as the one we are allowed to send by mail.
The following coupon will not be honored unless it is cut out of the paper in
one piece ircludingthe Patient's coupon, Retail Druggist's coupon and Wholesale
or Jobber's coupon, they must not be separated.
CUT OUT THIS COUPON. SIGN AND TAKE IT TO YOUR DRUGGIST WHO IS
1S7-121S5 AUTHORIZED TO GIVE YOU A FREE 35c. BOTTLE FOR IT.
I hereby certify that I have never taken Mull’s Graoe Tonic, that I will apply for only one
free bottle, that 1 will not sell or give it »wav and that 1 will take it myself for Constipation.
Bowel and Stomach Trouble as toon as I obtain it.
Patient sign your name here very plainly.
Write your full addrtr-s here very plainly.
NONE BUT THE RETAIL DRUGGIST MUST SIGN THIS:
TO THE RETAIL DRUGGIST: This coupon void unless yon sirn your name and
address on the line below. Send tnis full coupon to the jobber of whom vou purchased this
remedy, and he will give you 35 cents in c**h or trade for each coupon, properly signed,
which you send him All jobbers have th** 35c. 50c and $1.00 sizes. The $1.00 bottle contains
nearly b times the 35c size and 3 times the 50c size.
Retail Druggist, sign your name here.
Your address here.
NO ONE BUT THE WHOLESALE DRUGGIST MUST SIGN THIS:
TO THE JOBBER: You will please accept this coupon if the same is properly signed,
and give to the letailer buying the reinedv from you 35 cents in cash or trade for same. This
coupon void unle-s you sign *our firm name and add-ess. Forward all coupons to us and we
will remit you 35 cents for each coupon properly signed by the consumer, retailer and yourself.
Jobber, sign your name here.
Address here.
Cat oat the above three coupons in one piece. Do not separate.
WHE/4 GEJV. CVS TEH. SWEHVED
Word was given; the bugle blew;
“Boots and saddles!” it signaled shrill.
Up and mount! and each horseman flew
Astride his steed with a right good-will.
Hoofs were pawing and necks were
arched;
Forth from the camp the troopers
marched.
In the plains they rode where dread
Lurked with doom in the pampas-grass;
Many a serpent raised its head,
Rattling “death” from the tangled
mass.
Many an Indian skulked unseen.
Spying from them cruel-keen.
Not for these would the brave ranks
swerve;
Straight in the line of march they rode.
He who would soldier must needs pre
serve
Heart that harbors no craven bode.
Into the praiiie pressed the band.
General Custer in command.
Noon's sun dowm from the zenith beat.
Scorching the earth wdth ruthless rays;
Over the ground the quivering heat
Rose and danced in a blinding maze.
Never a brook or tree was there
Serving to cool the fevered air.
Every sound to heartward went;
Click of hoof or the ring of steel,
Sudden clank of accoutrement.
Never a soldier failed to feel!
While one step from the beaten
course
Roused to alertness man and horse.
Gallant Custer rode ahead.
Guide and chief of a brave command!
Arrow-straight his good charger sped,
Never swerving to either hand.
Till—a touch! and the faithful steed
Veered aside in his headlong lead.
What had happened to force their chief
Out of his pathway? What dread foe?
He a coward? ’Twas past belief!
Still, his way must troopeis go.
If the General made detour.
They must follow him, that is sure.
.So each rider, as up he drew
To the place where his chief had
veered.
Slackened his pace and detour made too.
Whilst below in the grass he peered.
Wondering what he there should see.
That might baffle the cavalry.
There deep-hid in the prairie-grass
Lay the nest of a meadow-lark.
Birdlings wee, in a fluffy mass.
Hid ’neath her wings so warm and
dark.
Right in the line of march they stood;
Little mother and tiny brood.
That was all; but e'en rough heart heed
Gentle acts, and these softlier beat
For their General’s simi le deed.
Done for love in its dim retreat.
That was all; but in Custer s wake
Rode meek men—for a mother bird s
sake.
—Julie M. Lippman, in Boston Pilot.
VI/fED Of4 SCATTERED ••C'RVM’BS"
In front of a drinking place in Ful
ton street stood a brewer's dray and
the portly, prosperous looking horses
attached to it were at their midday
meal. Haughtily they tossed their
heads, scattering the oats from their
well filled nosebags as if to empha
size their opulence. Other horses
standing in the street and engaged
with scantily filled nosebags from
which they struggled to extract the
last particle of grain, kept one eye
upon the haughty pair with a look
which seemed to conceal envy under
an expression which said as plainly
as words: "What vulgar ostentation!”
Nearby stood a scrawny old white
horse attached to a ramshackle cart.
His expression was one of profound
humility. His ribs showred through
his hide and his Roman nose was un
adorned by any bag of grain. All his
expression seemed to say was: “What
a blessing it is to be able to watch
the rich enjoying themselves!” His
humility under the trying circum
stances reminded one of those starv
ing Parisians who, before the French
revolution, used to accept with grati
tude the privilege of crowding the
galleries of the royal dining room to
watch the king and his family at din
ner.
When the brewery horses had fin
ished their luncheon their rubicund
driver appeared, took off their nose
bags and mounting his seat drove
away. With a celerity surprising in
such a bag of bones, the humble old
horse moved up to the place vacated
by the prosperous team and began to
■eat the oats left scattered on the
pavement. Lazarus did not eat more
greedily the crumbs which fell from
the rich man’s table than did that old,
white horse devour the grain which
fell from the nosebags of the brewery
team. He cleaned the pavement as if
it had been gone over with a fine
toothed comb and then, with a sigh
of repletion which seemed to say:
“Fate cannot harm me—I have
dined,” he settled back into his medi
tations.—New York Press.
THIJVK. C'RA'DS CAVSED 'QX/AKJE
Very curious were some of the ex
planations given by Chinamen of the
recent earthquakes which have been
felt at Hongkong, Canton and Macao.
The Hongkong Daily Press tells about
them: “The famous dragon whose
privilege it h'as been to give an oc
casional shock to the earth’s crust is
not held responsible for the recent
scare in Macao and elsewhere. Some
Chinese attribute the last shocks to
the water-dragon of Canton, whose
anger has been raised by the reclama
tion works. Coolies are dumping daily
boatloads of sand and stone on the
poor dragon’s back, and the beast nat
urally feels hurt.
“It appears, however, that the real
causes of the earthquakes were the
Macao crabs! Here is the story:
Close by the hot springs in the neigh
borhood of Macao stands a small vil
lage wherein lives an old woman who
has the misfortune to be the mother
of an unworthy young man whose sole
occupation is fishing. A few days
previous to the first earthquake shock
experienced in Macao the young man
returned home with a couple of crabs
and a few small fish.
“Nothing extraordinary was noticed
at first, but when the crabs had been
boiled one of them presented a pe
culiar appearance, as on the red back
ground of its shell stood in gold relief
a design in white which resembled a
Chinese character. Neighbors were
called and the wise man of the village
soon explained that it was the king
of the crabs that had found its way
into the old woman's kettle.
“Thereupon the vilage prophet pre
dicted that some great calamity would
visit the unfortunate village. Mean
while the crabs of Macao and the
neighborhood, having learned the fate
of their king, assembled in great num
bers, filling up every available hole,
and started to shake the earth. Thus
was their displeasure at the death of
the king crab clearly shown!”
COCKTAIL AT TH'REE FOUKS
“I was standing in the baTroom in
a resort at Three Forks,” said a trav
eling man, “waiting for the proprie
tor to arrive, in the hope of placing a
small order. While I was waiting,
two cowboys, wrapped in tur coats,
their own dignity and a reputation as
the top riders of the country which
stretches away toward the head ot
Willow Creek, came into the saloon
and, marching up to the bar, demand
ed a cocktail.
“The bartender looked nonplussed
for a moment, but he was not to be
shut out, for he grabbed the biggest
glass he could find behind the bar and
immediately got busy. If there was
anything there he missed putting into
that glass, from the salt and pepper
sauce used to flavor the beer, to the
snipping from the ends of the cigars
which he found in the cigar cutter, I
could not see it, and when he had
finally finished he had two big beer
glasses full of the mixture.
The boys both tasted the beverage,
and it did not taste good. Each had
unlimbered a big gun and, playfully
toying with the weapons, they suggest
ed that the bartender drink his own
mixture. It required some persuasion,
but finally, to avoid trouble, he swal
i lowed the contents of both glasses.
‘Now, make your will, you would-be
poisoner,’ shouted the punchers and
solemnly they put their guns back
where they belonged, treated the
house to the cigars and fadded away
into the distance, their horses hitting
only the high spots as they disappear
ed up the valley.
“And I tell you, the impromptu bar
tender had good occasion to make his
will. For three of four hours he was
the sickest man I ever saw, and it
took the services of a doctor, who
worked over him for an hour or two, to
bring him back to life again.”—Ana
conda Standard.
‘B'REAKIflG COLTS TO HALTE'R
From the very day of his advent
into the world a thoroughbred colt is
man-handled, says the Metropolitan
Magazine. At first he will be inclined
out of sheer desert instinct to slip
around on the other side of his mother
when the man draws too near, but he
gets over that and quickly. The man
coaxes and pets him into a quiet and
teaches him to trust the two-'.egged
animal. Once that trust is obtained
it is never abused. Thoroughbreds,
until they get into races, are never
whipped, are never even spoken to
harshly. Theirs is a life of gentle
handling and soft words.
Except that he is made used to the
hands of mankind, nothing is done for
him save to watch the health of his
dam and keep him out of mischief
until he is ready to wean. Then a
light halter without a strap is put on
him. By this time he has grown so
accustomed to being handled that any
thing a man may do to him seems
right and proper. So he doesn't mind
so much when the first restraining
sign is made to him. He Is given the
halter free at the beginning that he
may learn the feel of it on his head.
There is no leading of him about and
worrying him into unnatural heat. He
is worry enough in this separation
from the mother. He is given a home
with fellows of his age and like family
distresses, and there he learns self
denial, and is in fine humor for the
handlers when he is to be halter brok
en. He hardly knows when this event
occurs to him. He is led away from
the paddocks down into the open
fields and allowed to graze with the
crowd, while a boy gently restrains
him with the halter strap if he ven
tures too far. So easily and natural
ly is It all done that before he realizes
it the halter control over him is com
plete.
HOJIG'R 'RESE'RVE'D FOTt
••MVSHEW
There is a popular belief in the ex
treme northwest that the north pole
will be discovered by a musher, and
not by any scientific polar expedition.
This belief is based on the conviction
that a gold stampede will eventually
be started toward north latitude 90
degrees, and that inushers will rush in
where arctic explorers have feared to
tread. So completely unknown to
fame is this newcomer in the race for
pole that to the majority of people
the name suggests nothing but cereal
; oreakfast food.
Gilbert Parker, the novelist, who
finds bis most congenial theme in
French-Canadian life, has made • his
readers familiar with "Marcbe-l’-en!”
the cry with which drivers of dog
teams urge forward their panting ani
mals. French-Canadian trappers were
among the earliest white men in the
tar northwest, and American prospect
crs on the Yukon soon learned to goad
their dogs on with the same cry, with
out, however, understanding the
French, which, in their mouths, was
rapidly corrupted to “Mushon!” to this
day an Alaska dog driver's equivalent
for “Gee up!”
Dog drivers generally run with the
team and therefore from “Mush-on”
has come the noun musher, used all
over Alaska and the Yukon territory
to designate a trailsman. The musher
is generally prospector, stampeder and
trailsman all rolled into one, and Alas
ka trails are such uncertain quantities
that he has frequently to make his own
precedents over newly frozen sea and
trackless snow. The musher achieves
most of his stampeding to new gold
fields during the arctic winter, for then
the ribid sea becomes a highway and
mighty rivers need no bridging.—Sun
set Magazine.
Floating Islands.
History tells us that islands made
from reeds, which were not only
moved about by the wind but by oars,
were the means of the escape of
many Roman citizens during the Mith
ridatic wars. Indian legends are full
af interesting stories of the marvel
ous escapes of Yugutives on "came
otes,” which were floating islands
composed of green rafts of canes or
brushwood.
Needs of California Juries.
The jury that recently tried State
Senator Emmons for bribery, at Sac
ramento, Cal., sat twenty-six days.
During that time it consumed thirty
six SI meals a day, 150 quarts of
claret, 200 bottles of bee”, sixteen
quarts of white wine and thirty-six
quart bottles of whisky. All this at
the restaurant, besides over two dozen
bottles of whisky sent to the jury
room.
Mine Under the Ocean.
The Levant mine, situated near the
Land’s End, England, goes down ver
tically for 2.100 feet, and is w’orked
laterally under Jie bed of the Atlan
tic, considerably over a mile from the
foot of the duffs. The mine gives em
ployment to 515 men and 175 boys,
and practically runs the village of St.
lust.
What Sairey Said.
Mrs. Gamp was not a philosopher,
but her remark that “we live in a
wale,” embodies the concentrated es
sence of all philosojhers. We can im
prove the conditions under which we
live, but we cannot, take what
thought we may, change our “wale”
into a Garden of Eden.—The Practi
tioner.
Free Manners.
Manners appear to get freer with
every generation. Modesty, which is
the crown of maidenhood, never ap
pears to characterize sweet seventeen.
What one generation thinks dreadful
ly fast, if not shattering to the repu
tation, is the common practice of the
next.—Lady Helen Forbes, in Black
and White.
Mother Gray’s Sweet Powders for Children.
Successfully used by Mother Gray, nurse
in the Children's Home in New York, cure
Constipation, Feverishness. Bad Stomach,
Teething Disorders, move and regulate the
Bowels and Destroy Worms.Over 30,000 tes
timonials. At all Druggists, '35c. Sample
FREE. Address A. S. Olmsted, LeRoy.N.Y.
Danner in Overwork.
Whatever tends to diminish disease
is conducive to longevity, but in our
endeavor to promote it we must have
regard to mental as well as to bodily
hygiene. A great deal of premature
| decline in force and energy is due to
’ overuse of the brain and nervous sys
! tern.
Try' me Just once and I am sure to
come again. Defiance Ptareh.
Would Reform Japanese Writing.
Japan has a new periodical, Tegami
Zasshi, the aim of which is to teach
the writing of sensible letters. The
editor warns his readers, among other
things, against the habit of introduc
ing sentimental phrases into business
letters.
TO COIF A cot.n IN ONE DAY
Take LAXATIVE BHOMO Quinine Tablets. Drug
gist" refund money If tt falls to rare. E. W.
O DOVE'S signature Is on eacti boa. ISc.
English Book Club.
The books of a club at Leicester, t
England, ostensibly established for
‘mental and moral improvements, mu
tual helpfulness and rational crea
tion,” showed, in court that about 14
cents a week was spent by the club
Dn literature and about $35 a week on
drink.
LYDIA E. P1NKHAM
A BRIEF SKETCH OF HER LIFE
How the Vegetable Compound Had Its Birth and
How the “Panic of ’73” Caused it to be Offered
for Public Sale in Drug Stores.
THE STORY READS LIKE A ROMANCE
This remarkable woman, whose
maiden name was Estes, was born in
Lynn, Mass., February 9th. 1819. com
ing from a good old Quaker family.
For many years she taught school, and
during her career as a teacher she be’
came known as a woman of an alert
and investigating mind, an earnest
seeker after knowledge, and above all,
she was possessed with a wonderfully
sympathetic nature.
In 1843 she married Isaac Pinkham,
a builder and real estate operator, and
their early married life was marked by
prosperity and happiness. They had
four children, three sons and a daugh
ter.
In those good old-fashioned days few
drugs were used in medicines: people
relied upon nature's remedies, roots
and herbs, which are to-day recognized
as more potent and efficacious in con
trolling diseases than any combination
of drugs.
Mrs. nnsnam irom ner youtn iook a
deep interest in medicine, in botany—
the study of roots and herbs, their
characteristics, and power over dis
ease; she believed that as nature
so bountifully provides food for the
body so she also provides medicine for
the ijls and weaknesses of the body,
in the roots and herbs of the field,
and as a wife, mother and sympathetic
friend, she often made use of her
knowledge of roots and herbs in pre
paring medicines for her family and
friends.
Knowing of so much suffering among
her sex. after much study and re
search, Mrs. Pinkham believed that
the diseases of women have a com
mon cause, and she set to work to
find a common remedy—not at that
time as a source of profit, but simplj
that she might aid the suffering.
How her efforts have been rewarded
the women of the world know to-day.
In 1873 the financial crisis struck
Lynn. Its length and severity was too
much for the large real estate inter
ests of the Pinkham family, as this
class of business suffered most from
this fearful depression, so when the
Centennial year dawned it found their
property swept away.
At this point the history of Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound com
mences:
The three sons and daughter, with
their mother, combined forces to re
store the family fortune. They re
solved to give to the world the veee
table compound that Mrs Pinkham
A\egetable Prcparatioafor As
similating the Food andficgula
ting the Stomachs nndBowcIs of
Promotes Digeslion.CheerFul
ness and Rest .Contains neither
Opium,Morphine nor Mineral
hOTliAHCOTIC.
Jlx.Xmtut ♦
RmMUSJ*
JkmeSmd *
A perfect Remedy forConstipa
Ron, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea
Worms .Convulsions .Feverish
ness and Loss OF SLEEP.
Facsimile Signature of
ItN FAN I’S /'CHFLDKliN
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have
Always Bought
Bears the
Signature
of
Use
For Over
Thirty Years
CASTORIA
PRICE, j=\ 25 Ct«.
^roajttTHEW^
M IN ONE DAY f
HW
Tlte HO £Oi)*L FDffrt
—
ANTI-GRIPIME
IS GUARANTIED TO CORE
GRIP, BAD COLD, HEADACHE AHD NEURALGIA.
I won’t Mil A«tl-firlpt*« to a donler who won’t GMrsntM
It. 'JtU tor your MOKET HACK IF IT DOIT CUKE.
I’m W.Dicmer,M. t>.,iianulaaluiiiT.Springfield, Mo. j
Eft w*»«r
When Answering Advertisements
Please Mention This Paper.
DEFIANCE STARCH iS^SS
W. N. U. Omaha.
No. 50—1905.
Y' PISO'S CURE -FOR .
uynca wtttMt ALL tL5t »AlLb. * , J
* Cough 8jrrop Taate* Good. Uk M
_in time. 8olc by drujrsrists. ul
CONSUMPTION ^
* i
had so often made from roots and
herbs for such of her women neigh
bors and friends who were sick and
ailing. Its success in those cases had
been wonderful—its fame had spread,
and calls were coming from miles
around for this efficacious vegetable
compound.
They had no money, and little
credit. Their first laboratory was the
kitchen, where roots and herbs w'ere
steeped on the stove, gradually filling
a gross of bottles. Then came the
question of selling it, for always be
fore they had given it away free.
They hired a job printer to run oft
some pamphlets setting forth the mer
its of the medicine, now cal'.ed Lydia
E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound,
and these pamphlets were distributed
by the Pinkham sons in Boston, New
York and Brooklyn.
The wonderful curative properties of
the medicine were, to a great extent,
self-advertising, for whoever used it
recommended it to others, and the de
mand gradually increased.
In 1877, by combined efforts, the
family had saved enough money to
commence newspaper advertising on a
small scale, and from that time the
growth and success of the enterprise
was assured, until to-day Lydia E.
Pinkham and her Vegetable Compound
have become household words every
where. and thousands of pounds of
roots and herbs are used annually in
making this great remedv for woman's
ills
Although Lydia E. Pinkham passed
to her reward some years ago, the per
petuation of tier great work was
guarded by her foresight.
During her long and eventful experi
ence she was ever methodical in her
work and was careful to preserve a
record of every case that came to her
attention. The case of every sick
woman who applied to her for advice
—and there were thousands—received
careful study, and the details, includ
ing symptoms, treatment and results,
were recorded for future reference,
and to-day these records, together with
thousands made since, are available to
sick women the world over, and repre
sent a vast collaboration of informa
tion regarding the treatment of wom
an's ills which, for authenticity and
accuracy, ran hardly be equaled in any
library in the world.
Another act of foresight on the part
of Lydia E. Pinkham was to see that
some one of her family was trained to
carry on her work, and with that end
in view, for years before her death,
had as her chief assistant her daugh
ter-in-law the present Mrs. Pinkham.
Therefore, under the guidance and
careful training of Lydia E. Pinkham,
and a vast experience of her own,
covering twenty-five years, the present
Mrs Pinkham is exceptionally well
equipped to advise sick women, which
she is always glad to do free of
charge.
The record of Lydia E. Pinkham'*
Vegetable Compound, made of simple
herbs and roots, is a proud and peer
less one. It is a record of constant
conquest over the obstinate ills of
women, greater than that of any other
one medicine of its kind in the wwld,
and will ever stand as a monument to
that noble woman wbose name its
bears.
For Health
and Recreation
come to Texas! Get away from
the cold, damp, wintery weather
here and find health and pleasure
in the Winter Play-grounds of
Texas. The rest, the perfect
sunshiny winter weather and the
exhilerating air will benefit you.
Tourist tickets are now on sale
daily to the following points:
Dallas, Ft. Worth. Houston,
Beaumont, Galveston. San
Antonio. Rockport, Corpus
Christi. Brownsville and FI
Paso, Texas, with a final limit
of June 1st, 1906. Ask your near
est railroad agent for rates.
Come to Texan! The exceptionally
low rate#-the excellent train *er\ Ice
' la the M., K. & T. lt'y. make It a
journey of but small coat and not ot
tiresome lentth.
I’ve a helpful little pamphlet,
“Winter Trips." which 1 know will
aid you In planning a trip, i’ll gladly tend It on re*
quest. Address
W. S. ST. GEORGE
General Passenger and Ticket Agent
Box 01 la ST. LOI IS. MO.
$16 AN ACRE
29 Bushels to the Acre Will be the
Average Yield of Wheat.
The land that this was grown on cost many of
the farmers absolutely nothing, while thoso
who wished to add to the ISO acres the Govern
ment rrants, can buy land adjoining at from t)
to $10 an acre.
Climate splendid, school convenient, railways
slose at hand, taxes low.
Send for pamphlet *‘$0th Centnry Canada'*
and full particulars regarding rate, etc., U>
Superintendent of Immigration, Ottawa,
nada, or to the fc< - ««*w—i—«
3a.iadian Government Ag
hil New York Life Butldii
(Mention this
in Western
Canada is the
amount many
farmers will
realize from
their wheat
crop this year.