The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, May 24, 1906, Image 7

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    HE WENT ON CRUTCHES |
Ail Medicines Failed Until Dr. Wil
liams’ Pink Pills Cured His
Rheumatism.
“Some years ago.” says Mr. W. H.
Clark, a printer, living at 612 Bnckanan
street, Topeka, Runs., “I had a bad at
tack of rheumatism and could not seem
to get over it. All sorts of medicines
failed to do me any good and my trouble
kept getting worse. My feet were so
swollen that I could not wear shoes and
I had to go on crutches. The pain was
terrible.
“ One day I was setting the type of an
grticle for the paper telling what Dr.
Williams’ Pink Pills had done for a mar
afflicted as I was and I was so impressed
with it that I determined to give the
medicine a trial. For a year my rheu
matism had been growing worse, bnt
after taking Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills I
began to improve. The pain and swell
ing all disappeared and I can truthfully
say that I haven’t felt better in the past
twenty years than I do right now. I
could name, off hand, a lmlf-dozen peo
ple who have used Dr. Williams’ Pink
Pills at my suggestion and who have re
ceived good results from them.”
Dr. W illiams’ Pink Pills are guaran
teed to be safe and harmless to the most
delicate constitution. They contain no
morphine, opiate, narcotic, nor any
thing to cause a drug habit. They do n ot
act ou the bowels but they actually make
new blood and strengthen the nerves.
Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills cure rheuma
tism because they make rich, red blood
and no man or woman can have healthy
blood and rheumatism at the same time.
They have also cured many cases of
autemia, neuralgia, sciatica, partial pa
ralysis, locomotor ataxia and other dis
eases that have not yielded to ordinary
treatment.
All druggists sell Dr. Williams’ Pink
Pills or they will he sent by mail, post
paid, on receipt of price, 50 cents per
box, six boxes for $2.50, by the Dr. Wil
liams Medicine Co., Schenectady, Is. Y.
If a political candidate wants his
campaign to be a hummer, he shouldn't
start out with a hammer.
Important to Mothers.
Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA,
a safe and pure remedy for infanta and children,
and see that it
Bear- tbe
Signature of
In Use For Over 30 Years.
The Kind You Have Always Bought.
He Wasn’t Certain.
At Fortress Monroe, Va.. one day
about a year ago, a man, accompanied
by two ladies, approached a soldier
who. w'ith a gun on his shoulder, was
pacing to and fro near the entrance.
Tbe warrior’s appearance indicated
that he was new to the service.
“Can you tell us.” asked one of the
visitors, addressing the recruit, “where
Jeff Davis was imprisoned here?"
“Yonder’s the ga-a-ar-d house.” he
replied, jerking a thumb over his
shoulder, "but I dunno whether
thg’y’ve still got him shut up or not.”
—Chicago Record-Herald.
Deduction by Analogy.
“Mamma. I’se got a stomach ache,”
said Nelly Bly, six years old.
"That’s because you’ve been with
out lunch. It’s because your stomach
is empty. You would feel better if
you had something in it.”
That afternoon tbe pastor called,
and in tbe course of conversation, re
marked .nat he had been suffering all
day with a very severe headache.
“That's because it is empty.” said
Nellie. "You'd feel much better if
you had something in it.”—American
Spectator.
Followed Instructions.
A lady going from home for the day.
says a writer in the New York World,
locked everything up carefully, and
for the grocer’s benefit left a card on
the back door.
"All out. Don’t leave anything,” It
roaa.
On her return she found her homo
ransacked and all her choicest pos
sessions gone. To the card on the
door was added: "Thanks. We haven t
left much.”
Second in Command.
Stranger (sarcastically)—Are you
the boss here?
Office Boy—No; there’s another of
flee boy above me.—N. Y. Press.
An Alibi.
“Do you believe that riches bring
trouble?”
“They never brought me any.”—
Houston Post.
BREAD DYSPEPSIA.
The Digesting Element Left Out.
Bread dyspepsia is common. It af
fects the bowels because white bread is
nearly all starch, and starch is digested
in the intestines, not in the stomach
proper.
t7p under the shell of the wheat berry
nature has provided a curious deposit
which is turned into diastase when it is
subjected to the saliva and to the pan
creatic juices in the human intestines.
This diastase is absolutely necessary
to digest starch and turn it into grape
sugar, which is the next form: but that
part of the wheat berry makes dark
flour, and the modem miller cannot
readily sell dark flour, so nature’s val
uable digester is thrown out and the
auman system must handle the starch
as best it can, without the help that na -
ture intended.
Small wonder that appendicitis, peri
tonitis, constipation and all sorts of
trouble exist when we go so contrary
to nature’s law. The food experts that
perfected Grape-Nuts Food, knowing
these facts, made use in their experi
ments of the entire wheat and barley,
including all the parts, and subjected
them to moisture and long continued
warmth, which allows time and the
proper conditions for developing the
diastase, outside of the human body.
In this way the starchy part is trans
formed into grape-sugar in a perfect
ly natural manner, without the use of
chemicals or any outside ingredients.
The little sparkling crystals of grape
sugar can be seen on the pieces of
Grape-Nuts. This food therefore is
naturally pre-digested and its use in
place of bread will quickly correct the
troubles that have been brought about
by the too free use of starch in the
food, and that is very common in the
'human race to-day.
The eeffct of eating Grape-Nuts ten
days or two weeks and the discontin
uance of ordinary white bread is very
marked. The user will gain rapidly In
strength and physical "WTitni
health.
"There’s a reason.”
ro THE AMATEUR NURSE.
Some Excellent Bits of Advice That
Well Might Be Followed by Pro
fessionals os Well.
Never trouble a patient with ques
tions about food; the effort of making
a decision is a strain upon an invalid.
The aim should be to provide some
small surprise at meal times, if possi
ble, to stimulate the appetite.
It is always unwise to allow a pa
tient to get into the habit of inquiring
what the clinical thermometer regis
ters each time it is used. A rise in
temperature may make a nervous pet
son very uneasy and thereby increase
the fever considerably.
If possible, choose a room facing
south or southwest for a sick person,
provided it is quiet and away from
street noises. A northern aspect
should be avoided. Do not allow the
bed to face the light, as this is tiring
to both brain and eyes
The bed should not be too broad.
Three feet six inches is wide enough,
as it is then an easy matter to lift
and turn the patient from either side.
The floor of the sick room should
be wiped over every day with a clotn
wrung out in water and some good
disinfectant.
A nurse should take special pains
to be scrupulously clean and neat in
her dress. Trifling details which may
pass unnoticed in ordinary life loom
large on the patient's limited horizon
Remember, too, that unending tact
and patience must be exercised with
a sick person, for weariness and ir
ritability are the accompaniments of
illness, especially in the early stages
of convalescence.
« nen laiKiug u> a pautui a uumc
should always stand or sit where the
former has not to strain the eyes in
order to see clearly, few things being
more irritating than to have to lie in
a twisted position with the head at an
uncomfortable angle, so as to follow
what is said.
In cases of long illness, the nurse
should spare herself as much as pos
sible, husbanding her strength not
only for the time when her powers
of endurance may be tried to the ut
most, but for the period of con
valescence, when, perhaps, her untir
ing service is most in demand by the
invalid.
Rest is very important to the ama
teur nurse, and four hours unbroken
sleep are worth much more to her
than a whole night of disturbed
anxious slumber. It is much better to
divide the night into watches if there
Is more than one member of the fam
ily available, than to try to be more
or less on the qui vive the whole night
through.
Nothing is more annoying to a sick
person than to be discussed in her
presence by one or more of her ama
teur nurses, and questions as to when
the medicine was given, how much
stimulant was last administered, and
so on. should be settled out of earshot
of the invalid.—Brooklyn Eagle.
SOCIAL POWER OF WOMEN.
In Every Community There Are
Lonely People Who Need the
Help of Social Intercourse.
I wonder whether women are mak
ing the most of social opportunities.
The elevating of social life is one of
the greatest problems in our land to
day and this ennobling work is pre
eminently that of the average woman
in every community who loves her fel
lowmen and women enough to try to
serve them in humble service in that
little corner of the great world into
which her lot has been cast.
Could women not do something in
the time that they now take for whist
playing, which with many women has
become a debauch, crowding out all
noble inspirations and belittling life,
usurping public spirit and civic duty,
might they not more wisely spend that
time in providing entertainment for
the people of moderate means who
live in your community?
Could they not arrange to get the
people together in some unused church
or perhaps in their own parlors and by
friendly intercourse, led on by some
invited speaker, develop a better citi
zenship in their community?
Social life is in the hands of wom
en and the higher the social position
and the larger the wealth the greater
the need that something should be
done to broaden culture and bring
•unshine to the lives of those who
have so little to amuse them.—Chicago
Inter Ocean.
MUSHROOM PROVENCALE.
A Very Delicate Way of Serving This
Delicious and Nutritious
Vegetable.
Take about two pounds of large
fresh mushrooms, pare the stalks and
wash them in acidulated water, so as
to keep them as white as possible,
drain on a cloth, cut the heads in sev
eral pieces, and drop the stalks, beat
a gill of sweet oil in a frying pan, add
the sliced heads, fry a light brown,
then add a tablespoonful and a half
of chopped shallots, two bruised
cloves or garlic (if liked) and the
ehoped stalks; fry again until the
moisture has evaporated; drain almost
all or the oil off. moisten with two
large spoonfuls of tomato sauce and a
I little melted beef extract; season with
salt, white pepper and a dash of cay
enne; boil two minutes; mix well by
tossing the mushrooms; finish with
lemon juice and chopped parsley.
Pour into a vegetable dish, surround
with heart-shaped croutons fried In
oil and serve hot.—Elizabeth Pyewell.
Pique Coats.
I think the pique coats with wide
shoulder capes are the most attractive
for a little child. The capes are scal
loped and worked in the buttonhole
stitch, and the smell turnover collars
are finished in the same manner.
Large polka dots, embroidered aoove
the scallops in the solid satin <-utch,
have a charming effect. The prettiest
hat to wear with this coat is one of
pique, scalloped around brim and
crown, and having the crowrn Buttoned
to the brim. You can work a little
wreath in the solid or eyelet em
broidery on the brim, or put a row ol
polka dots to match the coat
Buttons Fashionable.
Elaborate buttons are much used on
coats and dresses.
THE POINT OF THE PROVERB
An old proverb advises the shoe
maker to stick to his last. It means
that a man always succeeds best at
the business he knows. To the farmer
it means, stick to your plow; to the
blacksmith, stick to your forge; to
the painter, stick to your brush.
When we make experiments out of our
line they are likely to prove expen
sive failures.
It is amusing, however, to remark
how every one of us secretly thinks
he could do some other fellow’s work
better than the other fellow himself.
The painter imagines he can make
paint better than the paint manufac
turer; the farmer thinks he can do
a job of painting better, or at least
cheaper than the painter, and so on.
A farm hand in one of Octave
Thanet’s stories tells the 'Walking
Delegate of the Painters’ Union, “Any
body can slather paint;” and the old
line painter tells the paint salesman,
“None of your ready made mixtures
for me; I reckon I ought to know
how to mix paint.”
The farm hand is wrong and the
painter is wrong: “Shoemaker, stick
to your last.” The “fancy farmer”
can farm, of course, but it is an ex
pensive amusement. If it strikes him
as pleasant to grow strawberries at
fifty cents apiece, or to produce eggs
that cost him five dollars a dozen, it
is a form of amusement, to be sure,
if he can afford it, but it’s not farm
ing. If the farmer likes to slosh
around with a paint brush and can af
ford the time and the expense of hav
ing a practical painter do the job
right pretty soon afterward, it’s a
harmless form of amusement. If the
painter’s customers can afford to
stand for paint that comes off in half
the time it should, they have a perfect
right to indulge his harmless vanity
about his skill in paint making. But
in none of these cases does the shoe
maker stick to his last.
mere is jusc one class oi men in
the world that knows how to make
paint properly and have the facilities
for doing it right; and that is the
paint manufacturers—the makers of
the standard brands of ready-prepared
paints. The painter mixes paints;
the paint manufacturer grinds them
together. In a good ready-prepared
paint every particle of one kind of
pigment is forced to join hands with
a particle of another kind and every
bit of solid matter is forced, as it
were, to open its mouth and drink in
its share of linseed oil. That is the
only way good paint can be made, and
if the painter knew how to do it he
has nothing at hand to do it with. A
paint pot and a paddle are a poor
substitute for power-mixers, buhr-mills
and roller-mills.
The man who owns a building and
neglects to paint it as often as it
needs paint is only a degree more
short-sighted than the one who tries
to do his own painting or allows the
painter to mix his paint for him.
P. G.
CLOTHES AND CONDUCT.
Addison could no! write his best un
fess he was well dressed.
Every man and every womin feels
the influence of clothes and appearance
upon conduct.
Indeed, in a millennium of free
clothes of the latest fashion we shall
ail be archangels.
You have heard cf the lonely man in
the Australian oush who always put
on evening dress lor dinner, so that
he might remember he was a gentle
man.
Put. a naughty girl into her bes:
Sunday clothes, and she will behave
quite nice'y. Put a blackguard into
khaki aws he will be a hero. Put
an omnibus conductor into uniform
and he will live up to bis clothes.
So Homelike.
Some one said to Brother Williams:
"They have a balloon fad now, and
you can go up and cool off in the
clouds.”
‘“Yes. suh,” he replied. “Ed dar’s
so much thunder en lightnin’ up dar,
I reckon lots er ’urn will feel lak' dey
wuz right at home—'specially de mar
ried folks!”'—Atlanta Constitution.
W. L. Douclas
*3=& ’3= SHOES K.
W. L. Douglas *4.00 Cllt Edge Line
cannot be equalled at any price.
£5TAB
JUUr 6. |«T®
Capital •2.504m
$10,000
IflteuM take you Into mythro. large fceterk.
■t Brock ton, Mis., and straw you the infinite
esre with which every pair of shoes is made you
weald realize why W. I_ Douglas $3.90 shoes
*• make, why they hold their shape,
Ht better, wear longer, and are of greater
tetrinslc value than any other $3.90 shoe.
Mm* *S8S*839!
CAUTIONa—lSfit nfK>xfhartnV Vi®:
l«» shoes. Take no substitute. None genuine
without his name and pnoe stamped on bottom.
'tRas/fisa',sar'
W. L. DOCOLUBrtttaaa,llM,
ON OUT-DOOR LIVING.
Eloquent Plea for Porch Life—Mak
ing the Porch Attractive with
Vines and Flowers.
Porch life is a habit, and if you
have not already acquired it, begin at
once.
People do not begin to realize the
importance of outside life, nor how
comparatively easy a matter it is for
the entire family to spend many hours
of the day outside the walls of the
house. If porch life were more sys
tematically adhered to, there would be
less necessity for that “month in the
country with the children,” which
closes up so many pretty homes and
leaves a desolated house for fa;her to
return to at night. Three months of
porch life is none too much for a fam
ily that spends the other nine months
in a furnace-heated house where up
holstered furniture and rugs and hang
ings abound, and where, in spite of
constan. care, the air is filled with
bacteria-laden dust.
Begin to plan in the spring. If the
porch hitherto has been bare Oi vines,
plant some of the quick-growing varie
ties that will bring the desired results
this season, and later put in the roots
of perennials. Clematis, woodbine,
trumpet flower, ivies, and honey
suckles are all favorite perennials,
while the mottled Japanese hop vine,
the scarlet and pink flowering bean,
and even the old-fashioned, humb’e
morning glory are rapid growers, and
in the course of a few weeks give the
coveted privacy and shade. One of the
charms of these latter varieties is
watching their remarkably speedy
growth. One family, about whose
east porch had been p'anted a quan
tity of the scarlet creeping beans, took
the pains to ascertain the growth dur
mg iz nours or one oi these vines. A
string was tied to the tip of an ambi
tious plant at seven o’clock one eve
ning; at seven the following morning
it had registered a growth of six and
three-quarter inches. These beans are
veritable magnets to the humming
birds, which hover about them all
through the summer, their beautiful
little bright-hued bodies a continual
source of joy to the observing.
The boxes of flowers should be of the
hardy varieties—the brilliant gerani
ums, salvia, many-colored petunias,
combined with vines or plants of tbe
climbing variety, such as nasturtiums
and sweet alyssum, and with fringing
ferns. If you are planning to have a
general color scheme for your porch—
and this is an easy matter and most
pleasing in its results—be careful that
the flowers do not form a jarrinv note
to the general tone.—Good Health.
SENSIBLE SUGGESTIONS.
Charcoal is said to strengthen and
whiten the teeth, remove the tartar
prevent toothache, and give the gums
and lips an attractive character. About
as much as can be placed on the point
of a knife should be vubbed gently
into the interstices of the teeth on
going to bed, to be rinsed out thor
oughly in the morning.
To improve your hands, use only
soft soap for washing and a good toiiet
soap. Before drying rub on a tew
drops of pure glycerine, work into thf
skin thoroughly, and then dry care
fully. Keep the pulp of a lemon or
your washstand and with it rub youi
hands once or twice a day after wash
ing.
Never wash the face just before go
ing out of doors, or directly alter
coming in, if the skin is inclined tc
be sensitive.
Another thing to remember is that
the face and hands must be thorough
ly dried with the towel before veu til
ing out. Neglect of this will u- . u.e
to make the skin tender, and p maps
unsightly.
The value of rain water. The purest
water met with under ordinary cir
cumstances is rain water, which is cer
tainly a great luxury to those in
tow’ns for washing. If it were fully
apreciated how valuable rain water
really is, the dwellers in our large
towns would see that it was not al
ways lost. It is free from the hard
ness which characterizes spring water,
feels soft to the hands, forms a beau
tiful lather, and agrees well with the
skin.
Do not wash the wooden bread plate
in hot water, and it will not turn
black. Wash with soap and warm wa
ter and rinse in clear cold water.
Use a silver knife to peel apples, and
the hands will not be blackened as
when a steel knife is used. The acid
of the fruit (acetic acid) acts on tha
iron in the latter case, but does not
affect the silver.
If you are choked and cannot get re
lief, get down on all fours and cough
until you remove the obstruction. The
plan of holding a child upside down
and shaking him is the best plan
known for relieving a choking baby.
—Chicago Tribune.
Shadow Embroidery.
Stamp your design on the wrong
side of the material and work the
flowers, leaves and large figures in a
close fagotting or cat stitch on the
wrong side. The small stitch, which
will show on the right side, makes an
outline and the center of the leaf or
flower i3 prettily filled in with the
faggoting stitch, which shows through
the sheer material. The stems should
be done in outline stitch. It is veiy
easy work and quickly done. You can
take a few lessons at any of the large
department stores if you go to the art
needlework department.
Quick Way to Hake Buns.
When you are making bread, after
adding enough flour to the mixing to
make a thick batter, dip out two cupE
into a large bowl or pail and add one
fourth cup shortening, either butter or
lard, three-fourths cup sugar, one-half
cup currants and one heaping teaspoon
cinnamon. Let it set over night and
in the morning stir in enough flour
to mold. Avoid getting too stiff. Let
rise again and then form into buns.
After rising in the tins brush over
with a little sugar dissolved in milk
and bake one-half hour.
An Old Silk Coat
It is very hard to remove the shine
from the back of a silk coat Better
UBe a fancy braid to outline the seams.
That would make the wear come on
the braid, and keep the Bilk from
crowing wane at least
A LAND OF OPPORTUNITIES.
Inducements Held Out by Western
Canada Are Powerful.
A recent number of the Winnipeg
(Manitoba) Free Press contains an
excellent article on the prospects in
Western Canada, a portion of which
we are pleased to reproduce.
The agents of the Canadian Gov
ernment, located at different centres
in the States, will be pleased to give
any further information as to rates,
and how to reach these lands.
“Just now there is a keener inter
est than ever before on the part of
the outside world, in regard to the
claims of the Canadian West as a field
of settlement. At no previous time
has there been such a rush of immi
gration, and the amount of informa
tion distributed broadcast is unprece
dentedly great.
“In the majority of the States of
the Union and in Great Britain the
opportunities for home-making and
achieving of even a modest compe
tence are at the best limited. More
over, according to the social and in
dustrial conditions prevalent in those
communities, the future holds out no
promise of better things. It is not
strange, then, that energetic young
men should turn their eyes to Can
ada’s great wheat belt, wrhere every
man can pursue fortune without the
hindrance of any discouraging handi
cap.
The inducements held out by West
ern Canada are powerful and made
manifest by the great movememt now
in progress. That the prospects are
considerably more than reasonably
certain is borne out by thre history of
the country and its residents. The
promise of gain is powerful, but when
added to it there is the prospect of a
corresponding social and civil eleva
tion. it should prove irresistible to
young men of a particularly desirable
class for any new country.
“The Canadian West is alive with
opportunities for the young man who
aims at becoming more than a mere
atom in the civil and national fabric.
Some of the eager young fellows who
arrive on the prairies daily are des
tined to become more than merely
prosperous farmers. In the near fu
ture great municipal and provincial
development will be in tire hancfs of
the people. The stepping stone to
both financial prosperity and civil
prominence is, and will be, the farm.
For every professional opening there
are hundreds of agricultural openings.
The Canadian prairies are teeming
with opportunities for the honest and
industrious of all classes, but they
are specially inviting to the ambitious
young man who seeks a field for the
energy and ability which he feels in
herent within him. The familiar cry
of “Back to the soil!” is more than
a vain soundng phrase when applied
to Western Canada.”
Locating the Blame.
"My dear,” said the trusting wife,
"I don’t think your rules of economy
are any good.”
“You don’t?” asked the fond hus
band.
“No,” she replied, bending anew
over tire column of figures in her
beautifully bound expense book.
“You told me the way to save money
was not to buy things—that thus w«
would save the amount the goods
would have cost us. So I have been
careful to set down the exact price
of everything I have wanted to buy
but felt I could not afford. I find, in
adding it up, it amounts to $535, but
I only have $4.37 in cash on hand.
There must be something wrong with
your theory.—Stray Stories.
The Beginning.
Knicker—Primitive men plowed the
earth with a sharpened stick.
Bocker—You don't mean to say golf
dated back that far?—N. Y. Sun.
Deafness Cannot Be Cured
by local applications, as they cannot reach the dla
eased portion of the ear. There It* only one way ta
cure deafness, and that Is by constitutional remedies.
Deafness is caused by an Inflamed condition of the
mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this
tube is Inflamed you have a rumbling sound or 1m*
Perfect hearing, and when It Is eutlrely clt*»ed. Deaf
ness Is the result.and unless the Inflammation can be
taken out and this tube restored to Its normal condi
tion. hearing will be destroyed forever; nine cases
out of ten are caused by Catarrh, which Is nothing
but an Inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces.
We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case ol
Deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured
by Hall’s Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free.
F. J. CHENEY <k CO., Toledo, a
Bold by Druggists. 75c.
Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation.
The man who flirts with trouble is
apt to get it where Uncle Bill got the
carbuncle.
Garfield Tea purifies the blood, regulates
the digestive organs, brings good health
The sun that shines in the face
rises in the heart
Are You Tired, Nervous
and Sleepless?
Nervousness and sleepl jssness are us
B&lly due to the fact that the nerves are
not fed on properly nourishing blood:
they are starved nerves. Dr. Pierces
Golden Medical Discovery makes pure,
rich blood, and thereby the nerves are
properly nourished and all the organs of
the body are run as smoothly as machin
ery which runs m oil. In this wav you
feel clean, strong and strenuous—you are
toned up and invigorated, and j'ou are
good for a whole lot of physical or mental
work. Best of all, the strength and in
crease in vitality and health are lasting.
The trouble with most tonics and med
cines which have a large, booming sale
for a short time, is that they are largely
composed of alcohol holding the drugs in
solution. This alcohol shrinks up the red
blood corpuscles, and in the long run
greatly injures the system. One may feel
exhilarated and better for the time being,
yet in the end weakened and with vitality
decreased. Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical
Discovery contains no alcohol. Every
bottle of it bears upon its wrapper The
Badge of Honesty, in a full list of all its
several ingredients. For the druggist to
offer you something he claims is “just as
good” is to insult your intelligence.
Eveiy ingredient entering into the
world-famed “Golden Medical Discovery”
has the unanimous approval and endorse
ment of the leading medical authorities
of all the several schools of practice. No
other medicine sold through druggists for
like purposes has any such endorsement.
The "Golden Medical Discovery” not
only produces all the good effects to be
obtained from the use of Golden Seal
root, in all stomach, liver and bowel
troubles, as in dyspepsia, biliiousness, con
stipation, ulceration of stomach and
bowels and kindred ailments, but the
Golden Seal root used in its compound
ing is greatly enhanced in its curative ac
tion by other ingredients Bueh as Stone
root. Black Cherry bark. Blood root, Man
drake root and chemically pure triple
Pefined glycerine.
“The Common Sense Medical Adviser.”
te sent free in paper covers on receipt of
*1 one-oent stamps to pay the cost of mail
ing only. For 31 stamps the cloth-bound
volume will be sent. Address Dr. U. V
Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y.
t*1- Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets cure con
stipation, Hlifmsnnsn and headache.
William Glynne Charles Gladstone,
grandson of the great commoner and
heir to the Hawarden estate, has been
elected secretary of the Oxford Union
society, a position which his illus
trious grandfather occupied 76 years
ago.' Young Mr. Gladstone comes of
age in two or three months, and will
then enter into possession of the
Hawarden estate, which has been
managed during his minority by hU
uncles, Herbert and Henry Gladstone.
His One Hope.
"You'll find, my boy,” said the wise
old man, "that this world is full of
quicksands.”
“Yes," replied the bright youth, “as
I expect to go into the sugar refining
business I hope I'll find it reasonably
full of get-rich-quick sauds.”—Phila
delphia Ledger.
What Has Reason to Eo with It?
Joe—But, my dear fellow, is your
income enough to justify your mar
rying?
Fred—I’m afraid not.
"Then what reason have you for
taking so serious a step?”
"I have no reason. I'm in love.”—
Stray Stories.
Write Garfield Tea Co., Brooklyn, \. Y.,
for sample of Garfield Tea. Mild laxative.
Light-weight men always think they
are heavy-weight thinkers.
CORDIAL INVITATION
ADDRESSEDTOWORKING GIRLS
Miss Barrows Tells How Mrs. Pink
hums Advice Heips W orking Girls.
v Girls who work
i a r e particularly
l\ susceptible to fe
I'male disorders,
"/ especially those
f/ who are obliged
4\to stand on their
Sj feet from morn
dling until night in
'/ stores or facto
(mnAbbyFBorrowM Day in and day
V>- .- ■ —nnt the girl toils,
and she is often the bread-winner of
the family. Whether she is sick or
well, whether it rains or shines, she
must get to her place of employment,
perform the duties exacted of her—
smile and be agreeable.
Among this class the symptoms of
female diseases are early manifest by
weak and aching backs, pain in the
lower limbs and lower part of the
stomach. In consequence of frequent
wetting of the feet, periods become
painful and irregular, and frequently
there are faint and dizzy spells, with
loss of appetite, until life is a burden.
All these symptoms point to a de
rangement of the female organism
which can be easily and promptly
cured by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta
ble Compound.
Miss Abby F. Barrows. Nelsonville.
Athens Co.. Ohio, tells what this great
medicine did for her. She writes :
Dear Mrs. Pinkham :—
‘•I feel it my duty to tell you the good
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound
and Blood Purifier have done for me. Before
I took them I was very nervous, had dull
headaches, pains in back, and periods were
irregular. I had been to several doctors, and
they did me no good.
‘•Your medicine has made me well and
! strong. I can do most any kind of work
without complaint, and my periods are all
right.
“I em in better health than I ever was,
and 1 know it is all due to your remedies. 1
recommend your advice and medicine to all
who suffer.”
It is to such girls that Mrs. Pink
ham holds out a helping hand and ex
tends a cordial invitation to correspond
with her. She is daughter-in-law of
Lydia E. Pinkham and for twenty-five
years has been advising sick women
free of charge. Her long record of
success in treating woman's ills makes
her letters of advice of untold value to
every ailing working girl. Address,
Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass.
i””H0TYOURHEABT*"
•
< ► If you think you have heart dis
J [ ease you are only one of a countless
< > number that are deceived by indi
' “ gestion into believing the heart is
J [ affected.
:: Lane’s Family
Medicine
i» the tonic-laxative, will get your
J ► stomach back into good condition,
,, and then the chances are ten to one
< > that you will have no more symp
II toms of heart disease.
J> Sold by all dealers at 25c. and 50c.
IMAKE EVERYDAY!
£ UJUIN1
~ , no matter how
■ ;■ bad the weather
rtu You cannot
7s afford to be
ij. without a
w TOWER’S
\ WATERPROOF
Hi OILED SUIT
M OR SLICKER
/I Wh»n you buy
/ \l I00K for the
1\ SIGN OF THE FJSH
A J TOw?* CO BOSTON USA
UWgft CAjU~>AN CO ITO TQWXTQCAN
You Cannot
CURE
all inflamed, ulcerated and catarrhal con
ditions of the mucous rjembrane such as
nasal catarrh, uterine catarrh caused
by feminine ills, sore throat, sore
mouth or inflamed eyes by simply
dosing tiie stomach.
But yon surely can cure these stubborn
affections by local treatment with
Paxtine Toilet Antiseptic
which destroys the disease ge.Wns,checks
discharges, stops pain, and heals the
inflammation and soreness.
Paxtine represents the most successful
local treatment for feminine ills ever
produced. Thousands of women testify
to this fact. 50 cents at druggists.
Send for Free Trial Box
THE K. PAXTON CO. Boston. —,
ALLEN’S FOOT-EAS
A Certain Cars for Tlrod, Hot, Aching Fi
DO NOT ACC* P" \ SUBSTITUT
TWICE-TOLD TESTIMONY.
A. Woman Who Has Suffered Tells
How to Find Relief.
The thousands of women who suffer
backache, languor, urinary disorders
and other kidney
ills, will find com
fort in the words
of Mrs. Jane Far
rell, of 606 Ocean
Ave., Jersey City,
N. J., who says:
“X reiterate a 1 I
have said before in
praise of Doan’s
Kidney Pills. I had
been having heavy backache and
my general health was affected when
I began using them. My feet were
swollen, my eyes puffed, and dizzy
spells were frequent. Kidney action
was irregular and the secretions high
ly colored. To-day, however, I am a
well woman, and I am confident that
Doan's Kidney Pills have made me
so, and are keeping me well.”
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a bos.
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo. N. Y.
It is human nature to wonder how
so many incompetent people succeed
where we can't.—Judge.
Cramps
I cause women some of ©
their most excruciating- fl
ly painful hours. Mrs. B
Lula Berry, of Farming- fl
ton, Ark., writes: “I fl
suffered with terrible fl
cramps every month, fl
and would sometimes fl
lose consciousness for 4 fl
to 9 hours. On a friend’s K
advice I took fl
? CARDUI
I WOMAN’S RELIEF |
fl and as a result am now F
fl relieved of all my pains, fl
I and am doing all my fl
fl housework.” No mat- fl
U ter what symptoms your I
fl female trouble may fl
B cause, the most reliable, fl
fl scientific remedy for fl
fl them, is Cardui. Try it fl
j§ At all Druggists Cil
$20.
AND LESS
From St. Louis and Kansas
City to all points Southwest
via M. K. T. R’y. June
15th and 19th. Tickets
good 50 days returning
with stopovers in both
directions.
To Dallas, Ft. Worth. Waco.
Houston, Galveston. San
Antonio, Corpus Christi,
Brownsville, Laredo
and intermediate eon
points.JPfiU
To Elpaso and intermediate
points. $26.50
To Kansas. Indian
Territory, Oklahoma and
northern Texas points, one
fare plus $2.00, but eon
no rate higher than •P&U
Correspondingly low rates from all points:
From Chicago, 525 ; from St. Paul, 5/7 501
from Omaha and Council bluffs, 522.50
Write for full particular*.
W. S. ST GEORGE
General Passenger and Ticket Agent
ST. LOUIS. MO.
c; A McNCTT.
B*ossorii House. Kansas City, Mo.
I—■■ ■ - ■■■
Save the Pennies
You Can Buy the Big Ten
Cake Package of
On Time
Yeast
for 5 cents, warranted by the On
Time Yeast Company to give satis
faction or money refunded.
Two packages of “On Time” will
cost you 10 cents and are equal in
weight to three packages of any
other brand for which you will pay
15 cents.
The extra nickel is worth as much to you *
as to the manufacturer of the seven cake I
package. Use On Time Yeast and get 1
Ten Cakes tor S cents instead of seven.
Ask YourGrocerfor On Time Yeast |
PIT St PITLESS SCALES. For Steel
and Wood Frames. $25 and np. Write
us before you buy. We save you
money. Also Pumps and Wind
Mills. BECKMAN BROS.. Des Moines, lows.
PATENTS for PROFIT
must fully protect an Invention. Booklet and
Ifesk Calendar FREE. Highest references.
Communications ronfliientlal. Established 1881.
Mason. Fee wick 4 Lawrence* Washington, D. C.
DEFIABCE STARCH
W. N. TJ., OMAHA, NO. 21, 1906.
I I
«L
K.