The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, April 26, 1906, Image 7

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    I I
“PE-RU-NA WORKED
SIMPLY MARVELOUS.”
Suffered Severely
With Headaches—
Unable to Work.
Miss Lflev V. McGivney, 452 3rd Ave.,
Brooklyn, ft. V., writes:
“For many months I suffered se
verely from headaches and pains in
the side and back, sometimes being
unable to attend to my dally work.
“I am better, now, thanks to Peru
ma, and am a* active as ever and have
mo more headaches.
“The way Peruna worked in my
ease was simply marvelous."
We have in our files many grateful
letters from women who have suffered
with the symptoms named above. Lack
•f space prevents our giving more than
•ue testimonial here.
It is impossible to even approximate
the great amount of suffering which I’e
ruua has relieved, or the number of
women who have been restored to health
»n i strength by its faithful use.
[’oUREniMEMACHn
Tablets and powders advertised a
as cures for aick-headache are gen- K
erally harmful and they do not cure J
but only deaden the pain by patting J
the acrves to sleep for a short time #
^ through the ose of morphine or £
{I cocaine. #
i Lane's Family |
$ Medicine $
Jthe tonic-laxative, earta sick-head- f:
ache, not merely stops it for an V
# hour or two. It removes the cause 0
0 of headache and keeps it away.
0 Sold by all dealers at asc. and 50c. #
W. L. Douglas
*3= & *3 = S H O ES
W. L. Douglas f 4.00 Cilt Edge Line
cannot be equalled at any price.
I
j&vrs
ESTASushed' =
july 8 isr»
IiCAPITAL *2.300,000
W. L. DOUCLAS MAKES S SELLS MORt
MEN’S S3.SO SHOES THAN ANY OTHER
MANUFACTURER IN THE WORLD.
C1 0 finn REWARD to aoyooo who can
$ I UjUUU disprove this statement.
If I could uke you into mv three large factories
at Brockton, Mass., and show you the infinite
care with which every r*lrof shoes is made, you
would realirc why W. L. Douglas $3.50 shoes
cost more to make, why they hold their shape,
tit better, wear longer, and are of greater
intrinsic value than any other $3.50 shoe,
W. L. O angina Strong Mad a Shona for
Man S3.BO. S3.00. Bov a’ School S
Dress Shoea, S3. SO. S3. S1.7 S. SI. SO
CAUTION. —Insiit upon having W.L.Doug- i
la* shoes. Take no substitute. None genuine
Without hi* name and price stamped on bottom.
Fast Color Eueleta need ; they u>it! not wear brassy.
Write for Illustrated Catalog.
W. L. DOUGLAS. Brockton. Mass.
Wrinkles
I come surely to weak women,®
who have to frown and en-H
dure the torture due to them
diseases peculiar to their sex®
Not only wrinkles, but hol-fik
low, lack-lustre eyes, sallow®
complexion, gray hair, all of B
.which tell of premature old®
age- The prevention of this,®
lies in your own hands.®
Cure the disease that causes®
your suffering, and strength-®
en your weakened consti-K
tution, with W
| WOMAN’S RELIEF |
I ol which Mrs. Mary Irvin, of Pam- H
B plin City, Va., writes: “I think it B
■ is the best on earth for all suffering B
B women. My doctor did me no B
B good. I suffered untold misery B
B from head to foot, but the first dose B
B of Cardui gave me relief, and when B
B I had taken on* bottle, I felt like a B
B new woman." The above seems B
B to prove that Cardui will relieve B
B your pain, strengthen your consti- B
B tution and renew your youth. Try it. B
PIEBALD CANNIBAL RACE.
Savages Whose Skins Are Brown
with Fink Patches Found
by Explorer.
Piebald savages! are among the inter
ests,, and things of which Mr.
A. E. Pratt writes, says the London
Mirror.
Papua is a land of which, as yet, no
explorers, not eten Mr. Pratt and his
son, who accompanied him in his ex
peditions in the virgin mountains and
forests of the land, know very much.
"Fifty years ago schoolboys, looking
at their map of Africa, blessed the dark
continent for an easy place to learn,"
says Mr. Pratt in his opening pages. “A
few names fringed the coast; inland
nearly all was comprehended under the
cheerful word 'unexplored.'
"Such in great measure is the case
with New Guinea to-day. Its 300,000
square miles of territory, held by Great
Britain Germany and the Netherlands,
are destined in the course of the next
half century to enrich the worlds of com
merce and of science to a degree that
may to some extent be forecast by what
is already known of very restricted
areas."
It is a difficult country to explore, and
that for several reasons. The moun
tains are numerous and steep, much of
the soil is broken in a fashion peculiar
ly irritating to pedestrians, and the na
tives, without whose assistance prac
tically nothing can be accomplished, are
difficult to deal with.
You are entirely in the hands of the
natives, without whom you cannot stir
a foot. All your impedimenta, your
food, stores, scientific implements and
“trade" (material for barter, the equiva
lent of ready money) must go on the
barks of your cannibal friends, a people
without organization, who are hard to
collect and hard to persuade to follow
you.
The different tribes which populate
the island differ widely in language and
character, hut all appear to be more or
less warlike. The men are well-knit,
strongly-built fellows, capable of im
mense endurance, and—at odd moments
—of much hard work.
Among them are a number of curious
people whom Mr. Pratt is inclined to
take as a hitherto unknown human fam
ily. although as will be seen from the
following passage, he is not yet quite
certain of this:
"An interesting feature of Hula was
the presence there of a piebald people,”
he says. "For the most part their bodies
were brown, but they were marked with
pinkish patches unevenly distributed.
This marking might he due to a disease,
contracted from a too constant fish diet;
but if it were a disease I could not dis
cover that it gave any discomfort.
"Against this theory must be set this
fact, that I observed one man in whom
the light markings predominated. In
fact, he was quite fresh colored, like an
European, and had light hair.’’
COMMERCIAL TRAVELERS.
In Austria They Must Pay Taxes and
Are Classed as Regular
Tradesmen.
Commercial travelers in Austria
have to pay taxes and are therefore
considered regular tradesmen, even if
they have no open business places or
sample rooms. As a rule, good agents,
especially if they have business houses
of their own, refuse to represent firms
who are not well known uniess they
can get contributions and warehouse
expenses. They will not run any risss
toi firms winch are unknown in Aus
tria, and. as there are many firms who
will pay liberal salaries if they can get
their services. American firms End it
difficult to obtain them.
Many Austrian manufacturing firms
have branch houses at the capitals, es
pecially at Vienna, but some English
manufacturings firms, especially in the
agricultural line, have warehouses and
even factories throughout Austria, and
when a traveler, for instance, leaves
the railway station at Prague, the
capital of Bohemia, he will soon no
tice the signboards of well-known
English manufacturing firms who do
a large trade in .Austria and have their
warehouses even in provincial towns.
Travelers in Austria are mostly
hard working and respectable men.
very temperate in tfceir habits and ex
tremely diligent Near y ail of them
travel third class on the railways and
wiih the exception, pprhaps, of those
in the wine and spirit lines, they are
seldom addicted to drinking. A trav
eler who drinks loses the respect of
his fellow travelers.
PASSENGER’S CLEVER RUSE
Helped a Lady in Distress and Got
Himself Nicely Out of the
Situation.
As a train was approaching Shef
field a man seated in one of the com
partments noticed a lady looking trou
bled. and asked her what was the mat
ter. ■
“I’ve lost my ticket, and they will
charge me with fraud,” said the lady.
"Oh, never mind. I’ll work a little
dodge with the guard,” and he got his
own ticket out of his pocket and tore
the corner off and gave the ticket to
the lady.
"When the train arrived at Shef
field the guard collected all the tick
ets but one.
“Where s your ticket, sir?” he asked
of the gentleman.
*‘I gave it to you.”
“No you didn’t,” replied the guard.
“I shall have to call the station mas
ter.”
When the station master arrived h®
said:
“Where is your ticket, young man?”
“I gave it to the guard. See if he
has a ticket with a corner torn off,”
replied the sharp man.
On searching, of course the guard
found it.
“Now,” said the young man, “see If
this fits it,” as he gate him the corner
of the ticket.
A look of surprise: came over the
guard's face, and he crept out of- the
carriage dumfounded.
A Bargs.in.
Mrs. Knicker—I thought you were
going abroad
Mrs. Bocker—So I was, but my doc
tor offered me such a lovely bargain
in appendicitis—only $1,000.—Harper’c
Bazar
THE CHOICE OF PAINT.
Fifty year* ago a well-painted house
was a rare eight; to-day an unpainted
houa* le rarer. If people knew the
real value of paint a house In need
of paint would be “scarcer than hen’s
teeth." There was some excuse for
our forefathers. Many of them lived
in houses hardly worth preserving;
they knew nothing about paint, ex
cept that it was pretty; and to get a
house painted was a serious and cost
ly Job. The difference between their
case and ours is that when they want
ed paint It had to be made for them;
whereas when we need paint we can
go to the nearest good store and buy
it, in any color or quality ready foi
use. We know, or ought to know by
this time, that to let a house stand
unpainted is most costly, while a good
coat of paint, applied in season. Is the
best of investments. If we put off the
brief visit of the painter we shall in
due time have the carpenter cominj
to pay us a iong visit at our expense
Lumber is constantly getting scarcer,
dearer and poorer, while prepared
paints are getting plentier, better and
less expensive. It is a short-sighted
plan to let the valuable lumber o? our
houses go to pieces for the want of
pelnt.
For the man that needs paint ther»
are two forms from which to choose;
one is the old form, still favored by
certain unprogresslve painters who
have not yet caught up with the times
—lead and oil; the other is the ready
for-use paint found in every up-to-date
store. The first must be mixed with
oil, driers, turpentine and colors be
fore It is reedy for use; the other
need only be stirred up In the can
and It Is ready to go on. To buy
ic«a »na on, colors, clc., ana mix
them into a paint by hand ia. in this
twentieth century, about the same
aa refusing to ride in a trolley car
boeause one's grandfather had to walk
&r rids on horseback when ho wanted
to go anywhere. Prepared paints have
been on tbs market less than fifty
years, but they have proved on ths
whole so inexpensive, so convenient
and so good that the consumption to
day Is something over sixty million
gallons a year and still growing. Un
less they had been in the main satis
factory, it stands to reason then
would hive been no such steady
growth in their use.
Mixed paints are necessarily cheap
er than paint of the hand-mixed kind,
boeause they are made in a large way
by machinery from materials bought
in large quantities by the manufac
turer. They are necessarily bettet
than paints mixed by hand, because
they are more finely ground and more
thoroughly mixed, and because there
is less chance of the raw materials in
them being adulterated. No painter,
however careful he may be, can ever
bo sure that the materials he buys are
not adulterated, but the large paint
manufacturer does know in every
ease, because everything he buys goes
through the chemist's hands before
he accepts it.
Of course thege are poor paints cn
the market (which are generally
cheap paints). So there is poor flour,
poor cloth, poor eoap; but because ol
that do we go back to the hand mill,
the hand-loom and the soap-kettle of
the backwoods No. we use our com
mon sense fn choosing goods. We find
out the reputation of the different
brands of flour, cloth and soap; we
take account of the standing of the
dealer that handles them, we ask
our neighbors. So with paint; if the
manufacturer ha3 a good reputation,
if the dealer is responsible, if our
neighbors have had satisfaction with
it, that ought to be pretty good evl
dence that the paint is ail right.
“Many men of many kinds”—
Many paints of many kinds;
but while prepared paints may differ
considerably in composition, the bet
ter grades of them all agree pretty
closely In results. “All roads lead to
Rome.” and the paint manufacturers,
starting by different paths, have all
the same object—to make the best
paint possible to sell for the least
money, and so capture and keep the
trade.
There is scarcely any other article
of general use on the market to-day
that can be bought with anything like
the assurance of getting your money’s
worth as the established brands of pre
pared paint. The paint you buy to
day may not be like a certain patent
medicine, “the same as you have al
ways bought,” but if not. it will be
because the manufacturer has 'found
a way of giving you a better article
for your money, and so making more
sure of your next order.
_ P. G.
POINTED PARAGRAPHS.
If you can't speak the truth keep a
stiff under jaw.
But the day worker acquires more
coin than the day dreamer.
“I will now proceed in the following
manner,” said the detective.
A good joke on a friend wouldn’t be
worth a smile if on yourself.
Often “the coming man” has a lit
tle bill he would like to collect.
It takes a man with a cork leg to
laugh at the man who wears a wig.
If a man owes you money he is al
ways ready to laugh at your alleged
jokes.
Intuition comes easier than seri
ous contemplation; that is why wom
en prefer it.
A man would forget the most of his
troubles if be didn't take a vacation
once in a while.
If a man returns a borrowed um
brella it s a sure indication that he
has a conscience.
Book learning is about all a man
needs in the world—providing he
spends his time in jail.
Beware of the man who looks at
you with an air of vacant inquiry
when you are trying to tell a funny
story.
A woman may not be able to drive
a horse or a nail, but when it comes
to driving a bargain she manages to
get there.—Chicago News.
Garden City in the East.
Bangkok, the capital of Siam, is
one of the most interesting cities. It
is called the “Garden City in the
East"
To sweep dirt out of the door after
sundown. \ou are sweeping out
•ome of the family. I
PLANTING-TIME SOON.
Plant Sweet Peas Early and Do Not
Neglect the Old-Fashioned
Flowers.
Don’t forget that the peas, flowering
or garden, must go into the ground early.
The trenches for the peas should be pre
pared at the earliest possible moment, as
soon as the condition of the weather and
soil will permit—the earlier the better,
in order that the vines may make a good
root-growth whiie the ground is cool
and moist.
Don’t neglect to plant plenty cf the
dear old "grandmother’s garden” flow
ers; and remember the fragrant ones as
well as those for show only. Plant some
scented foliage plants. The old lemon
verbena is one of the best. Some of our
most popular flowering plants of to-day
are the old kinds our mothers loved.
These plants "seldom die and never re
sign” their office of beauty-bearing.
Lettuce is easily started in boxes in
the house, or, if there is a furnace in the
cellar, with a window in the apartment
through which the son may reach the
box part of the day, the boxes may be
set there, and when the ground gets in
condition to work the lettu'-e should be
ready to transplant. All hardy vege
tables, such as beets, radishes, turnips,
peppers, etc., can be started in the house
with much saving of tipie.
The common ruffled parsley, used so
freely as a garnish for many dishes and
as flavoring for others, is easily raised.
Seeds should be sown early in boxes in
the house, or in the hot bed. or. later, in
the open ground. The seeds germinate
readily. When fully grown, cold and
freezing weather does not harm the
parsley, and it can he had green all win
ter if given a little protection. A sprig of
it suits well to put in bonnets, or in the
vase. It is useful, ornamental and easily
grown. Do plant a few seeds of it.
For either the flower or vegetable gar
den. prepare the ground, get good seeds,
nlant generously to allow for many mis
haps, give good cultivation, and vou will
And yourself well repaid for money, care
or exertion. Don’t neglect the garden.
| —The Commoner.
ONIONS FOR PNEUMONIA.
New England Physician Won Renown
by Simple Remedies and Found
This One Most Successful.
Owing to the prevalence of pneu
monia and the great mortality which
attends its ravages during the winter
and spring, several boards of health
in northern New Jersey have been tak
ing measures to protect the citizens of
their towns from the disease. The
health board o* Washington, N. J.. has
published a remedy which is said to
be a sure cure for pneumonia, and
other health hoards are looking into
the matter with a view of having the
same thing published for the good of
the general public. This is the pub
lication as. it has appeared in the pa
pers of Washington:
“Take six to ten onions, according
to size, and chop fine, put in a large
spider over a hot fire, then add the
same quantity of rye meal and vine
• gar enough to form a thick paste. In
the meanwhile stir it thoroughly, let
ting it simmer five or ten minutes.
Then put in a cotton bag large enough
to cover the lungs and apply to chest
as hot as patient can bear. In about
ten minutes apply another, and thus
continue by reheating the poultices,
and in a few hours the patient will be
out of danger. This simple remedy
has never failed to cure this too-oftsn
fatal malady. Usually three or four
applications will he sufficient, but con
tinue always until the perspiration
starts freely from the chest. This rem
edy was formulated mar,v age
by one of the best physic'--?; vCT
England has ever known, w - never
lost a patient by the disease ?-> ! won
his renown by simple remedi
THE VALUE OF ORANCES.
They Are MoEt Attractive for Table
Decorations—Various Ways
to Serve Them.
Oranges are charming for decoration
of the table, as well as for food. When
placed upon the table whole, a few
green leaves should be placed around
them; the leaves need not, necessarily,
be orange leaves, but other pretty, green
leaves may be used, If the orange leaves
are not to be had. When to be eaten at
the table, there are several ways of han
dlingthem. Cuttingthem across and eat
ing with a spoon has the drawback that
the juice flies about disagreeably. By
cutting a little circle around the core in
the center this unpleasant feature may
be counteracted. Another way is to cut
them in eighths with the skin on, and
sip the juice from these little portions.
One method of preparing them for the
table Is as follows: Cut with a sharp
knife a narrow girdle around the cir
cumference of the orange, half way from
the stem to the blossom end; remove all
the rind exceot the narrow girdle; just
over one of the divisions of the fruit cut
the rind band through with a knife.
Then carefully separate the natural
divisions of the orange, leaving each at
tached at its back to the strip of rind. It
is very convenient and comfortable to
eat oranges prepared in this way, as
there is no trouble with the juice or peel
ing.—The Commoner.
TO EAT WITH FINGERS.
Celery, which may properly be placed
on the tablecloth beside the plate.
Lettuce, which should be dipped in
the dressing or in a little salt.
Asparagus, whether hot or cold, when
served whole, as it should be.
Strawberries, when served with the
stems on, as they usually are in the most
elegant homes.
Bread, toast, tarts and all small
cakes.
Fruits of all kinds, except melons and
preserves, which are eaten with a spoon.
Cheese, which is almost invariably
eaten with the fingers by the most par
ticular people.—Chicago Daily News.
Leather Chairs.
To clean and polish the leather
coverings of chairs, etc., mix together
equal parts of vinegar and linseed
oil. Apply very sparingly with a
piece of flannel and polish with a soft
cloth. The same treatment is excel
lent for French polished furniture,
but it must be remembered that the
vinegar and oil mixture is to be ap
applied sparingly, and that “elb&w
'grease” Is to be used generously.
SAYINGS OF SAGES.
Beter to do nothing than to do all.
—Pliny.
Nothing is so foolish as the laugh
of a fool.—Martial.
The living voice is that which sways
the soul.—Pliny the Younger.
There is precious instruction to be
got by finding we are wrong.—Car
lyle.
I had rather men should ask why
my statue is not set up than what it
is—Cato.
Work is not a man’s punishment; it
is his reward and his strength.—
George Sand.
We are more sensible of what is
done against custom than against na
ture.—Plutarch.
Dut for some trouble and sorrow we
should never know half the good there
is about us.—Dickens.
The best educat'on in the world is
that got by struggling to make a liv
ing.—Wendell Pnillips.
In a Pinch, Use ALLEN’S FOOT-EASE.
A powder. It cures p’. infill. smart
ing. nervous feet and ingrowing nails.
It's the greatest comfort discovery of
the age. Makes new shoes easy. A
certain cure for sweating feet. Sold
by all druggists, 25c. Trial package,
FREE. Address A. S. Olmsted, Le
Roy, N. Y.
Artificial Eyes.
As early as 500 B. C. artificial eyes
were made by the priests of Rome and
Egypt, who practised as physicians
and Burgeons.
Mr*. Wimloir'a Roothlng Rynp.
For children teething, softens the gurus, reduces SB*
fiammatloa. allays pain, caret wind colic. 25c a bottle.
It's easier for a man to marry a
woman for her beauty than it is to
live with her tor the same reason.
When a laxative is needed, nothing esc
he more effective than Garheld Tea, whic.
ie made of herb*. It cure* sick headache
constipation and disease* of liver, kidneys
stomach and bowel*; it purifie* the blood
clean*** the *y*tem and elear* th* com
plexion.
To sneeze while eating is a sign of
death. If a man sneezes a woman
will die and vice versa.
PIT# permanently rurrd. Fe fits or nerrouraem after
■ II# first day s nee of Dr. KHne'sUreat Nerve Hestor
er. Rend tor FREE 83.00 trial bottle and treatise.
DR- H- H. KLINE. Ltd . *31 Arch Street. Philadelphia, Pa.
To start anywhere and turn back.
If you turn back make a cross mark;
this changes the luck.
Lewis’ Single Binder straight 5c cigar
made of rich, mellow tobacco. Your
dealer or Lewis’ Factory, Peoria, 111.
Men live in the suburbs so as to be
able to lie about how much more
healthful it is.
RUNNING SORES ON LIMBS.
Little Girl'* Obstinate Case of Eczema
—Mother Saya: “Cutieura Reme
dlea a Household Standby.”
“Last year, after having my little
girl treated by a very prominent
phvaictan, for an obstinate case of
eczema, I resorted to the Cutieura
Remedies, and was so well pleased
with the almost instantaneous relief
afforded that we discarded the physi
clan's prescription and relied entirely
on the Cutieura Soap. Cutieura Oint
ment, and Cutieura Pill*. When we
commenced with the Cutieura Reme
dies her feet and limbs were cover
ed with running sores. In about six
weeks we had her completely well,
and there has been no recurrence of
the trouble. We find that the Cutl
cura Remedies are a valuable house
hold standby, living as we do, twelve
miles from a doctor, and where It
costs from twenty to twenty-five dol
lars to come up on the mountain.
Mrs. Lizzie Vincent Thomas, Fair
mount, Walden's Ridge, Tenn., Oct.
13. 1905.”
After you fall out with people you
may call their apartment a flat.
—
To make any gain some outlay is
necessary.—Pla utus.
1
To sweeten, Dispels colds and
To refresh, I headaches when
To cleanse the \ bilious or con
system, $ stipated;
\ Effectually l For men, women
^ and Gentlyj \ and children;
There is only \ Acts best* on
one Genuine u) the kidneys
Syrup of Figs; V and liver,
to get its bene- ] stomach and
ficial effects bowels;
Always buy the genuine — Manufactured by the
IlipsRNIA JIGOTIP^
Ijptaiisvine, Ky. San Francisco. Cal. HwYork.KX. 1
W'* The genuine Syrup of Figs is for sale by all first-class I
1 druggists. The full name of the company—California a
\ Fig Syrup Co. — is always printed on the front I
of every package. Price Fifty Cents per bottle. \
WORKING WOMEN
Their Hard Struggle Made Easier—Interesting State
ments by a Young Lady in Boston
and One in Nashville, Tenn.
ff—7** _r
[WliiiFi-ankieOwrZj XyMssPearl Acker*!
All women work; some in their I
homes, some in church, and some in
the whirl of society. And in stores,
mills and 6hops tens of thousands are
on the never-ceasing treadmill, earning
their daily’ bread.
All are subject to the same physical
laws; all suffer alike from the same
physical disturbance, and the nature of
their duties, in many cases, quickly
drifts them into the horrors of all
kinds of female complaints, tumors,
ulceration, falling and displace
ments or perhaps irregularity or
suppression, causing backache, ner
vousness, irritability and lassitude.
They especially require an invigorat
ing, sustaining medicine which will
strengthen the female organism and
enable them to bear easily the fatigues
of the day. to sleep well at night, and
to rise refreshed and cheerful.
How distressing to see a woman
struggling to earn a livelihood or per
form her household duties when her
back and head are aching, she is so
tired she can hardly drag about or
stand up, and every movement causes
pain, the origin of which is due to
some derangement of the female or
ganism.
Miss F. Orser. of 14 Warren ton Street
Boston, tells women how to avoid such
suffering; she writes:
Dear Mrs. Pinkham:—
“ I suffered misery for several T*ars with
female irregularities. My back ached; I had
bearing-down pains, and frequent headaches;
[ con’d not Bleep and could hardly dm?
lround. I consulted two physicians without
relief, and as a last resort, I tried Lyiliu K.
Pinkham s Vegetal >le Compound, and to my
surprise, every ache and paiu left me. X
gained ten pound* and am in perfect health
Miss Pearl Ackers, of 327North Sum
mer btreet, Nashville, Tcnn., writes:
Dear Mrs. Pinkham:—
“ I suffered with painful periods, severe
backache, bearing-down pains, pains across
I he abdomen; was very nervous and irrita
ble, and my trouble grew worse every mouth.
“My physician failed to help nio and I
Seeided to try Lydia E. Finkham’s Vegetable
Compound. I soon fouud it was doing me
good. Alltnyp-uns and aches disappeared,
uul X no longer Xear my monthly periods.”
Lydia E, 1 inkham’s Vegetable Com
pound is the unfailing cure for all these
troubles. It strengthens the proper
muscles, and displacement with all its
horrors will no more crush you.
Backache, dizziness, fainting, bear
ing-down pains, disordered stomach,
moodiness, dislikeof friends and society
—all symptoms of the one cause—will
be quickly dispelled, and it will make
you strong and well.
You can tell the story of your suf
ferings to a woman, and receive help
ful advice free of cost. Address Mrs.
Pinkham, Lynn, Mass. The present
Mrs. Pinkham is the daughter-in-law
of Lydia E. l’inkham and for twenty
five years she has, under her direction
and since her decease, been advising
sick women free of charge.
Lydia E Piukham's Vegetable Compound Succeeds Where Others Fall.
New Way to Prepare Tea.
To obtain tea very aromatic, and
only in a small degree astringent, in
fuse it for half an hour in a very
small quantity of cold water, and
then add boiling water. The cold
water saturates the whole texture of
the leaves.
Cruelty to a Monkey.
For using a sick monkey to beg
with an organ grinder has been fined
$40 in London.
In proportion as nations get more
corrupt more disgrace will attach to
poverty, and more respect to wealth.
There is no satisfaction keener
than being dry and comfortable
when out in the hardest storm.
v^.YOOARF SOM OF THIS
JP YOU WEA2
/(OWER'g
<%SllVf0
"WATERPROOF
S011E9 CLOTSifflG
* »1ACK OR YELLOW
40 OHJMI EVERYMlEGEi
, A.*IUW«ra.WmOH.MM5.U5*.
’ .tout ROtHAUm CO.UxitH.TO>OHTQ.(AH t
$16 AN ACRE
in Western
Canada is the
amount many
farmers will
realize from
their wheat
cropthisyear.
25 Bushels to the Acre Will be the
Average Yield of Wheat.
i The land that this was grown on cost many of
the farmers absolutely cothiag. while those
who wished to add to the 160 acres the Govern
ment grants, can buy land adjoining at from $6
to f 10 an acre.
Climate splendid,school convenient, railways
close at hand, taxes low.
Send for pamphlet "20th Century Canada**
and full particulars regarding rate, etc., to
Superintendent of Immigration, Ottawa,
Canada, or to the following authorized
Canadian Government Agentr-W. V. Bennett,
B>)1 New York Life Building, Omaha, Nebraska,
(Mention this paper.)
PATENTS for PROFIT
roust fully protect an invention. Booklet and
Desk Calendar FREE. Highest reference*.
Communications confidential. Kmabltahed 186L
Mason, Fenwick fit La.wr.nte, Washington, D. 0.
j tv. N. li„ Omnfta. No. 17—1IMKL