The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, October 11, 1906, Image 7

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    NO REST NIGHT OR DAY.
With Irritating Skin Humor—Hair
Began to Fall Out—Wonderful Re
sult from Cuticura Remedies.
“About the latter part of July my
whole body began to Itch. I did not
take much notice of it at first, but it
began to get worse all the time and
then I began to get uneasy and tried
all kinds of baths and other remedies
that were recommended for skin hum
ors; hut I became worse all the time.
My hair began to fall out and my
scalp itched all the time. Especially
at night, just as soon as I would get
in bed and get warm, my whole body
would begin to itch and my finger
nails would kfep it irritated, and it
was not long before I could not rest
night or day. A friend asked me
to try the Cuticura Remedies, and I
did, and the first application helped
me wonderfully. For about four
weeks I would take a hot bath every
night and then apply the Cuticura
Ointment to my whole body; and I
kept getting better, and by the time
I used four boxes of Cuticura I was
entirely cured, and my hair stopped
falling out. D. E. Blankenship, 319
M. Bel. St., Indianapolis, Ind., Oct. 27,
1905 ”
Not What He Was Used To.
Ever since John D. Rockefeller be
came an honorary member of the
American Press Humorists’ associa
tion stories more or less apocryphal
have been afloat regarding him. It is
beginning to be suspected that some
of them have been invented by his
fellow humorists. One of the latest
refers to an occasion last summer
when he entertained a lot of slum
children at his stock farm near Cleve
land. Mr. Rockefeller gave each of
them, among other things, some milk
to drink, part of it at least being the
product of a $2,000 prize cow. "How
do you like it?” he asked when they
had finished. “Gee, it's fine!” re
sponded one little feliow, who added
after a thoughtful pause: “I wisht
our milkman kep’ a cow!”
Rich Crown Has Disappeared.
A richly jeweled crown, which cost
i! 20.000, has disappeared from the
church at Mont St. Michael, Rouen.
Cne version is that it has been stolen,
another that it has been hidden by
the priests to save it from confiscation
by the government.
There is an altar society in Brook
lyn composed of eight policemen. The
members contribute a certain amount
every month which pays for lights and
flowers on an altar of perpetual adora
tion.
Walnut a Staple Food.
In some parts of France walnuts
form a regular article of diet. The
peasants eat them with bread that
has oftentimes been rubbed with gar
lic. The hygienic effects are consid
ered good, replacing meat to a large
extent These nuts are also used
to make oil. It is much cheaper and
similar in taste to that pressed from
olives, and is employed to adulterate
the latter. The prisoners in certain
prisons are engaged in cracking wal
nuts and picking out the kernels,
which are pressed into oil.
Starch, like everything else, is be
ing constantly jmproved, the patent
Starches put on the market 25 years
ago are very different and inferior tc
those of the present dav. In the lat
est discovery—Defiance Starch—all in
jurious chemicals are omitted, while
the addition of another ingredient, in
vented by ns, gives to the Starch a
strength and smoothness never ap
proached by other brands.
New York's Great Ocean Trade.
New York is the second great sea
port of the world. In 1903 over $9,
000,000 tons of imports and 8,700,00(
tons of exports were cleared througi
New York harbor. London is the
greatest seaport, exceeding New Yorl
in imports, though not by exports
Antwerp and Hamburg are third anc
fourth, respectively.
By following the directions, which
are plainly printed on each package ol
Defiance Starch, Men’s Collars and
Cnffs can be made just as stiff as de
sired, with either gloss or domestic
finish. Try it. Id oz. for 10c, sold by
all gcod grocers.
Report Seeing Pure White Rook.
Ha., makers at work on a farm at
Little Burstead, Essex. England, have
recently seen a pure white rook among
a number of black ones.
Defiance Starch Is the latest inven
tion in that line and an improvement
on all other makes; it is mo^c cco
! nomical, does better worn, ta’ses less
! time. Get it from any grocer.
If a man would know himself thor
! ougbly he hasn't much time to waste
In trying to find out things about bis
neighbor.
Defiance Starch—Never sticks to the
! iron—no blotches—no blisters, make;
! ironing easy and does not injure the
I goods.
Onions smd whisky rorin a com
I bination calculated to put slroost any
happy home out of commission.
WHO SHE WAS
SKETCH OF THE LIFE OF LYDIA E. PINKHAM
And a True Story of How the Vegetable Compound
Had Its Birth and How the “Panic of *73” Caused
it to be Offered for Public Sale in Drug Stores.
This remarkable woman, whose
maiden name was Estes, was born in
Lynn, Mass., February 9th, 1S19, com
ing from a good old Quaker family.
For some years she taught school, and
became known as a woman of an alert
and investigating1 mind, an earnest
seeker after knowledge, and above
all, possessed of a wonderfully sympa
thetic nature.
In 1843 she married Isaac Pinkham.
a builder and real estate operator, and
their early mayied life was marked by
prosperity and happiness. They had
four children, three sons and a
daughter.
In those good old fashioned days it
was common for mothers to make
their own home medicines from roots
and herbs, nature’s own remedies—
calling in a physician only in specially
urgent cases. By tradition and ex
perience many of them gained a won
derful knowledge of the curative prop
erties of the various roots and herbs.
Mrs. Pinkham took a great interest
in the 9tudy of roots and herbs, their
characteristics and power over disease.
She maintained that just as nature so
bountifully provides in the harvest
fields and orchards vegetable foods of
all kinds; so, if we but take the pains
to find them, in the roots and herbs
of the field there are remedies ex
pressly designed to cure the various
ills and weaknesses of the body, and
it was her pleasure to search these out,
and prepare simple and effective medi
cines for her own family and friends.
Chief of these was a rare combina
tion of the choicest medicinal roots
sad herbs found best adapted for the
cure of the ills and' weaknesses pecu
liar to the female sex, and Lydia E. Pink
ham's friends and neighbors learned
that her compound relieved and cured
and it became quite popular among
them.
All this so far was done freely, with
out money and without price, aa a
labor of lore.
But in -1873 the financial crisis struck
Lynn. Its length and severity were too
much for the large real estate interests
of the Pinkham family, as this class
of business suffered most from
fearful depression, so when the Centen
nial year dawned it found their prop
erty swept away. Some other source
of income had to be found.
At this point Lydia E. Piakham’s
Vegetable Compound was made known
to the world.
The three sons and the daughter,
jwtth their mother, combined forces to
restore the family fortune. They
argued that t'ns medicine which was
so pood for their woman friends and
neighbors was equally good for the
women of the whole world.
The Pinkhams had no money, and
little credit-. Their first laboratory
was the kitchen, where roots and
herbs were steeped on the stove,
gradually filling a gross of bottles.
Then came the question of selling
it, for always before they had given
it away freely. They hired a job
printer to run off some pamphlets
setting forth the merits of the medi
cine, now called Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound, and these were
distributed by the Pinkbain 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, aad the de
mand gradually increased.
In 1877, by combined efforts the fam
ily had saved enough money to com
mence newspaper advertising and from
that time the growth and success of
the enterprise were assured, until to
day Lydia E. Pinkhain and her Vege
table Compound have become house
hold words everywhere, and many
tons of roots and herbs are used annu
ally in its manufacture.
Lydia E. Pinkhain herse'f did not
live to*see the great success of this
work. She passed to her reward years
ago, but not till she had provided
means for continuing her work as
effectively as she could have done it
herself.
During her long and eventful expe
rience she was ever methodical in her
work and she was always careful to pre
serve 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
hundreds of thousands made since, are
available to sick women the world
over, and represent a vast collabora
tion of information regarding the
treatment of woman’s ills, which for
authenticity and accuracy can hardly
be equaled in any library in the
world.
With Lydia E. Pinkham worked her
daughter-in-law, the present Mrs.
| Pinkham. She was carefully instructed
in all her hard-won knowledge, and
for years she assisted her in her vast
correspondence.
To her hands naturally fell the
direction of the work when its origina
tor passed away. For nearly twenty
fire years she "has continued it, and
nothing in the work shows when the
first Lydia E. Pinkham dropped her
pen, and the present Mrs. Pinkham,
now the mother of a large family, took
it up. With women assistants, some a*
capable as herself, the present Mrs.
Pinkham continues this great work,and
probably from the office of no other
person hare so many women been ad
vised bow to regain health. Kick wo
men, this advice is “Yours for Health”
freely given if yon only write to ask
for it.
Such is the history of Lydia E. Pink
ham’s Vegetable Compound; "«*»
from simple roots and herbs; the (me
great medicine far women's ailments,
and the fitting monument to Um
woman whose name it bean.
Friendship vs. Woman’s Love
By WILLIAM FORSTER BROWN.
Capt. Amos Stubbs, puffing like an
overworked tugboat, drew bis pudgy
form out of the water and climbed
laboriously across the jagged ridges of
Whale back ledge.
“Darn it!’* he wheezed wrathfully,
as he reached the top—a small, cir
cumscribed area of dry rock—“Guess
I might ez well make up my mind to
stay here all night I wouldn’t hev
Widder Tompkins find out I’d been
fool enough to git ketched in the Horse
Race an’ capsized for a carload o’ lob
sters.”
The captain’s eyes, roving dully over
the rocky knobs and hollows that sur
rounded him, restod at length on a
bright object among the pile of stones.
It was a small silver ilask.
“It’s more’n half full o’ snthin,’’ he
decided, "licker, likely’s not.”
He unscrewed the cap and applied
the mouth of the flask to his nose—
“’Tis licker!” he grunted.
“I hsin’t tetched any licker, but
once, since I shaped a course arter the
widder,” he argued mentally, ’’an’
that’s more’n three years ago. But she
won’t know no more about it,” tilting
the flask determinedly, “than she will
about my bein’ here on Whaleback,
'•apsizeu an’ stove. There! Blamed if
that didn’t go right to the spot!”
A comforting warmth arose and dis
tributed itself over the captain’s ana
tomy, and even his damp feet began to
glow cheerfully.
“It’s all-fired lucky Cap’n Higgins’s
over to Bass river, ’cause he'd manage
to find out where I'd been if it took
him a month o’ Sundays, an' he’d like
nuthin' better—him an' me not bein’
ez good friends ez we useter—than to
tell everybody in Fairport—’specially
the widder—that I'd got capsized in
the Horse Race.”
All ac once Capt. Stubbs dropped bis
wet sleeve and listened eagerly.
“Wonder what ’tis?” he Queried
aloud; “sounds like one of them oil
boats over to the P int; hope to good
ness it is one of ’em, 'causa then I'll
git took off.”
He peered r ver the lump of rock and
the next instant dropped stiffly to his
knees.
“Of all the cussed luck!” he growled
savagely, “seem’s ez if there wan’t
goin’ to be no let-up to It. I’d gin’ a
hundred dollars ruther'n had Lemuel
Higgins ketch me marooned on this
"'Taint Your Fault She Ain’t Mis’
Lemuel Higgins This Minit,
Neither.”
blamed old ledge, an’ here he comes,
lickety-split—though where he’s corn
in’ from gits me.”
The captain promptly spreadeagled
his wet body flat on the rock, face
down, and waited anxiously.
That moment a quavering hail arose
from below’: “Cap’n Stubbs?”
The captain held his breath.
’’Higgins hez seen the dory,” he ac
knowledged regretfully, “but mebbe he
ain’t seen me!”
“Cap’n Stubbs?” The hail arose
again, penetrating and insistent.
“What be you layin’ up there for?
Why don’t you say suthin’—be you
hurt?”
Reluctantly Capt. Stubbs crawled to
his l'eet and stared down calmly at his
interrogator.
“I was jest restin',” Capt. Amos an
E we red sarcastically. “What do you
E’pose t was doin'—diggin’ clams?”
The man in the dory guffawed
hoarsely.
“You’d better come down an’ git
aboard,” he went on, as Capt. Amos
glowered at him. “but you'll hev’ to
swim. I dassent come in no nigher;
it’s full of rocks in there, an’ I might
hit niv perpeller on some of ’em.”
The castaway planted his feet wide
apart and thrust out his chin, shoving
his bands deep into his wet pockets.
"Be you cornin’ or ain't you?” Htg
gine demanded impatiently. ‘I want
to git in ’fore dark, an’ I ain’t got no
time to fool away ’round here, argy’
ing.”
“I ain't heard nobody ask you to,”
retorted Capt. Amos, ungraciously.
•T’ve al’lus taken care of myself so fur
an’ I reckon I kin keep on a-doin’ of It
without any extry help. If I wuz
you—”
“Then I'll jest give you a chance to
git yourself to Fairport, you pigheaded
old cuts!” yelled Capt. Higgins, with a
snort of exasperation. “If I didn’t
know you’d signed the pledge I sh’d
think you’d been drinkin’—or was out
of your head; I’in goin’ home.”
“Hold on a minit!” shouted Amos,
scrambling down the slope of the
ledge, “Don’t be so tetchy. I didn’t
say 1 didn’t want to t>e took oil at all,
did 1? I only said I wan’t pertic’ler
’bout it if I had to do any more swina
min'. Mebbe I won’t hev’ ter.”
And Capt. Amos—with a deep-water
sailor's unerring spring, landed square
ly on the boat’s half-deck.
The red of the sunset faded into
pearl—and darkening gray. From the
lighthouse on Fort Point a golden fin
ger shot seaward and the frosted edge
of the full moon crept gradually into
the cloudless sky. An inexplicable
spell, conjured perhaps by the half
mysterious peace brooding under the
wings of the coming night, flooded
Capt. Amos' soul, awakening old and
poient memories..
“Lem?” he said diffidently—uncon
sciously using the familiar diminutive
that had not passed his lips for years
—"j’yor. notice how terribly pretty the
sky looks over there to the west’ard?
1 ain’t seen it lo&k like that for years,
an’ it sorter reminds me of the time
we was young fellers—with old man
Bragg in the Dreadnaught—in ’63.”
"Yes,” assented Capt Lemuel,
thoughtfully, “an’ sneakin’ ’bout the
Dreadnaught, do you remember how
we uster hook a share of the grog
bein’ too young to hev’ any, regular.
Blamed if I don’t wish I had that ol’
tin pannikin o’ mine here now, with
some in it.”
Capt. Amos heart gave a sudden
throb of anticipation.
"Say?” he remarked deprecatingly,
“ ’course I ain't a-savin' there is any
thing o’ that sort aboard this dory; but
s’posin’ there wuz? Would you prom
ise—on the Bible if we had one—not
to say anything to—to—Fairport, ’bout
my bein’ capsized—if I gin' you
some ?”
Capt. Higgins stopped his oar and
reaching forth, grasped his dory
mate's shoulder, whirling him around
unceremoniously.
“Do you mean to say you’ve got
some licker, Amos Stubbs?” he de
manded sternly.
Capt. Stubbs explained and produced
the flask.
Capt. Higgins elevated 1. for a long
minute and returned it with a deep
sigh of satisfaction.
“It's curious how set some women
is agin' a little licker,” he commented,
with glistening eyes; ’ all foolishness,
too.”
“So ’tis—so ’tis,” concurred Capt.
Amos, raising the flask in turn. “I al’
lus said so; ’specially if their fust hus
bauds couldn’t stand much; women is
all-flred queer, anyhow.”
“They certainly be,” acknowledged
the tall captain, eyeing the flask hope
fully, “an’ that's one reason I’ve been
so everlastia' s’prised at seein’ you a
chasm’ one of ’em at your time of life,
throwin’ over ol' friends an' actin’
stubborn an’ cont’ray—'s if you was a
young feller o' 20.”
Me r.-enasm or em: retorted capt.
Amos indignantly. “What hey’ you
been c'rin’ yourself. I'd like to know?
Ain't you been a-goin' up tO the wid
der’s every Thursday night for the
last three years? An' tra in’- to pizen
her mind agin’ me? 'Tain’t your fault
she ain’t Mis’ Lemuel Higgins this
oimt, nuther—why don’t you say
suthin?”
Cart- Higgins moistened his lips.
‘If ’twan't for things bein' as they
be,” he ventured hesitatingly, “I dunno
but I’d be tempted to make a sorter
proposition to you, Ain Stubbs; but I
s’pose it wouldn't be no use—you bein’
so set on marryin’ Mis’ Tompkins.”
“I don't see's I'm any more set on
marrvin’ of her than you be,” Capt.
Amos retorted, with asperity. “What
kind of a proposition was you thinkin’
o’ makin'?”
“Weli,” returned Lemuel, moving his
oar aimlessly, “I was goin' to say that
if things was the same between us as
they '.'as once—I mean if there wan’t
no winder—I’d ask you if you didn't
want, to come in with me on my new
lobster contract? There'd be good
monsv for both of us in it, an' I've
got to hev’ somebody.”
Capt. Amos rubbed his chin, staring
ahead at the wide and scintillating
fairway the moon had flung down
clear to the dory's bow.
"Look here, Lem!” he blurted husk
ily ore: his shoulder “mebbe I'm a
fool; but somehow, talkin’ over old
times same's we've been doin', has
kinder made me feel diff’rent from the
way I’ve been a-feelin’. It seems to me
I ain’t so all-fired set on the widder as
I thought I was. I’m gettin’ along in
years an’ I’m a good deal more set in
my ways than you be—you hev’ing
been married once—so—so—so—” des
perately—“I’ll come to the weddin’. I
ain’t savin’ this on account o’ the offer
you made me, nuther—though I'd be
more'n glad to take up with it an’ do
the cookin',” he concluded resolutely.
“Do you mean to say that you’ll give
up the widder to me?” faltered Capt.
Lem i:i a curiously shaky voice.
“That’s jest what I mean!” replied
Capt Amos, steadily. ’T’ve made up
my mind that there’s some things that
is more precious to an ol’ feller like
me than the love o' any woman; or
times an’ ol' friends—an'—an’—”
“Then we won't neither on ns hev*
her,” cried Capt. Lemuel triumphantly.
“S'pose we jes' give her the mitten, so
to speak, an’ sheer off? We can begin
lobsierin' the fust of the week.”
“Suits me to a T,“ broke in Capt.
Amos, delightedly.
He held out the flask joyfully.
“Let s finish the licker an’ run 'er in
a-kiun’,” he suggested.
(Copyright. 19(16. by Joseph B. Bowles.)
STRONG IN BROTHERLY LOVE
“Little Father’s” Affection Was Proof
Against Weariness.
A story in the New York Press says
that a West side woman for several
weeks had noticed a little boy push
ing a rather old and shabby carriage
holding a plump baby. Obviously
they came from the cheap flats around
the corner and chose her block be
cause it was cool and shady, being
blessed with a few trees. The “lit
tle father” wasn’t very rosy or ro
bust, but he lifted the big baby in
and out of the carriage and played
with it on the sidewalk without the
slightest show of fatigue or annoy
ance at occasional whimpers or the
wearing heat.
As she came in one day the woman
spoke to him. He had paused near
i her stoop and she saw in his face that
■ pathetic old look that gives tragedy’s
stamp to the children of the poor.
“Don’t you ever get tired taking
care of that heavy baby and lifting
her around T she asked with more
good will than tact.
His pale face flashed, and reproach
was mingled with surprise in his voice
as he answered: “Oh, no, ma'am:
this is my little sister.”
There was a time when the obese
woman was the light of other days.
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES produce
the brightest and fastest colors with less
work and no muss.
Somehow it doesn't sound just righl
when a spinster asks for a match.
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup.
For children. teething. soften? the iiums, reuucev in
nimnmUon allays pain, cares wind co*h\ SScat ottle.
About two-thirds of a man's friends
are enemies in disguise. ^
Hurt. Bruise or Sprain
St. Jacobs Oil relieves from pain.
When a bachelor wants to make a
married man angry, all he has to do
is whistle the wedding march.
Smokers appreciate the quality value of
Lewis’ Single Binder cigar. Your dealer
or Lewis’ Factory, Peoria, 111.
The Alliance Israelite university has
placed five Bialystok orphans in the j
Ahlem agricultural school, and has
as a first installment applied the sum
of 16,000 marks for their maintenance
and education.
$100 Reward, $100.
Tbe reader* of this paper will be pleased to learn
that there t*at lea*t one dreaded disease that science
has been able to cure In all Us stages, and that is
Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Care is the only positive
care now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh
being a constitutional disease, requires a constitu
tional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken in
ternally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous
surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the
foundation of the disease, and giving the patient
strength by building up tbe constitution and assist
ing nature In doing Its work. The proprietors have
so much faith In its curative powers that they ofTer
One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to
cure. Send for list of testimonials.
Address F. J. CHEN’EV & CO., Toledo. O.
Sold by ail Druggists. 75c.
Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation.
Remarkable Double Wedding.
A remarkable uouble wedding has
been celebrated in a Viennese church
A manufacturer named Muller mar
ried a widow, while at the same time
bfe son married the widow’s daughter
Thus the father becomes the father
in-law of his own son, and the moth
er also the mother-in-law of be*
daughter.
Cheap Excursions South.
On the 1st and 3rd Tuesday of each
month the Big Four Ry. will sell ex
cursion tickets to most all points in
Virginia, South Carolina, Tennessee,
Alabama and Georgia at rate of one
fare plus $2.00 with return limit 30
days. Liberal stopover privileges.
Write I. P. Spining, General Northern
Agent, Big Four Route, 238 Clark St.,
Chicago, for further information.
New Use for Gramopnone.
Drilling native Malay levies by word
of command emitted from a gramo
phone is the latest instance of modern
ingenuity. Even the Zulu can now
hear his own native songs and war
dances from records made by a Lon
don company, who have sold more
than 20 machines to swarthy warrior
chiefs in South Africa. Folk-songs of
the Pygmies were recently procured,
and a machine has been dispatched to
Lapland for the purpose, if possible, of
procuring Eskimo folk-songs.
Laundry work at home would be
much more satisfactory if the right
Starch were used. In order to get the
desired stiffness, it is usually neces
sary to use so much starch that the
beauty and fineness of the fabric is
hidden behind a paste of varying
thickness, which not only destroys the
appearance, but also affects the wear
ing quality of the goods. This trouble
can be entirely overcome by using De
fiance Starch, as it can be applied
much more thinly because of its great
er strength than other makes.
Uruguay's Financial Condition.
Uruguay reduced her national debt
by $1,570,450 during 1905. The total
debt on January 1, 1908, was $121,455,
747, of which about 80 per cent, was
external. Uruguay is a prosperous
country, and in her prosperity is a
good customer of the United States.
Exports of merchandise from this
country to Uruguay for the nine
months ending March 31, 1906,
amounted to $2,172,276, against $1,200,
542 in the same period of the pre
vious year.
TIRED BACKS.
The kidneys have a great work to
do in keeping the blood pure. When
they get out of or
der it causes back
ache, headaches,
dizziness, languor
and distressing urin
ary troubles. Keep
the kidneys ■well
and all these suf
ferings will be
saved you. Mrs.
S. A. Moore, pro
prietor of a res
taurant at watervllle. Mo., says:
“Before using Doan’s Kidney Pills I
suffered everything from kidney trou
bles for a year and a half. I had pain
in the back and head, and almost con
tinous in the loins and felt weary
all the time. A few doses of Doan's
Kidney Pills brought great relief, and
I kept on taking them until tn a short
time I was cured. I think Doan’s Kid
ney Pills are wonderful.”
For sale by all dealers. 50 cents a
box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo,
N. Y._
PENNIES FOR A COLLEGE.
One Hundred Thousand Workers Each
Give a Penny to Ruskin College.
The British trade unions had not in
their origin any direct concern with
education, says the Fortnightly Re
view. But it is a fact of no ordinary
significance that some of the leading
unions should be taking very great
interest in the higher education of the
workman.
For the last three years some 100,*
000 workingmen, members of the
Amalgamated Society of Engineers,
have made three levies of one penny
each to help on the work of Ruskin
college at Oxford. This levy pro
duces over £300 a year, and by means
of it six engineers are maintained for
a year’s course of study at the col
lege.
8maller but substantial sums have
been contributed to the same institu
tion by the London Society of Com
positors, by the Lanarkshire Miners’
County Union, by the Amalgamated
.Association of Bearners, Twisters and
Drawers, by the Derbyshire miners
and the Durham miners, while a large
'number of other societies appear
sumac the donors and subscribers.
'■■■
^Vegetable Preparationfor As -
simulating the Food andBeguIa
ling thof itainachs and Bowels of
Promotes Digeslion.Cheerful
ness and Rest.Contains neither
Opium.Morphine nor Mineral.
Not Harcotic .
Bi (c.rtonaksSoia +
hirm. Seed- -
Ctari.'ied .fiuar
"Wkteyrwt. Flavor. t
A perfect Remedy forConstipa
Ron, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea
j Worms .Convulsions, Feverish
ness and LOSS OF SLEEP.
Facsimile Signature of
NEW YORK.
EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER
Infants/Children
Altj months old
mu
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have
Always Bought
Bears the
Signature
of
In
Use
For Over
Thirty Years
■HJ
NO MORE MUSTARD PLASTERS TO BLISTER.
THE SCIENTIFIC AND MODERN EXTERNAL COUNTER-IRRITANT.
CAPISiCUM
VASELINE
EXTRACT OF THE CAYENNE PEPPER PLANT
A QUICK. SURE. SAFE AND ALWAYS READY CURE FOR PA1N.-PR1CF
15c.—IN COLLAPSIBLE TUBES-AT ALL DRUGGISTS AND DEALERS. Oh
BY MAIL ON RECEIPT OF I Sc. IN POSTAGE STAMPS. DON'T WAIT
TILL THE PAIN COMES-KEEP A TUBE HANDY.
A substitute for and superior to mustard or any other plaster, and will r.ct
blister the most de.icate skin. The pain-ailaving and curative qualities of
the articie axe wonderful. It wiil stop the toothache at once, ar.d relieve
Headache and Sciatica. We recommend it as the best and safest external
counter-irritant known, also as an external remedy for pairs in the chest
and stomach and ail Rheumatic. Neuraigic and Gouty complaints. A trial
will prove what we claim for it, and it will be found to be invaluable in the
household and for children. Once used no family will be. without it. Many
people say "it is the best of all your preparations.” Accept no preparation
of vaseline unless the same carries our label, as otherwise it is not genuine.
SEND YOUR ADDRESS AND WE WILL MAIL OUK VASE
LINE PAMPHLET WHICH V7ILL INTEREST YOU.
CHESEBROUGH MFG. CO.
17 STATE STREET. NEW YORK CITY
Dainty, Grisji, Dressy
Summer
Skirts
are a deliglit to the refined woman every
where. In order to get this result see
that the material is good, that it is cut in
the latest fashion and use
Defiance
Starch
in the laundry. A11 three things aretm
portant, but the last is absolutely neces
sary- No matter how fine the material
or how daintily made, bad starch and
poor laundry work will spoil the effect
and ruin the clothes. DEFIANCE
STARCH is pure, will not rot the clothes
nor cause them to crack. It sells at roc
a sixteen ounce package everywhere.
Other starches, much inferior, sell at 10c
for twelve ounce package. Insist on
getting DEFIANCE STARCH and lie
sure of results.
Defiance Starch
Company,
Omaha, Nebraska.
I nanteiiite jq
DUST
DIRT
SLOP
SPILL
SMOKE
SMELL
MUSS OR
SPATTER
He Knows1
the kind of 7
Watt
Oiled i
that stands
hardest service
DoYouKhowf
)/
*tSniH3i&
Mad* for all kind*
of wet work or sport .
SOU) EVERYWHERE
Don't take ear chances but secure expert lent ad
Yice on all questions of lav or equit7 a.i1 inquiries
answered bj* *r"“pt — —w --
»°»wemd bjr expert counselors, each department
question SI-00. or a»equestfons
fordoO. Bemit with your Inquiry bypostoBceor
SSr?6 nl?>*T-or*®r--or ®™ft on Chicago, en
closing self addressed stamped enreiope for reply.
» Bear and forceful statement of the law bear
mailed you by return mall.
klDASSOTIATIOS. Suite
>1A Dept. K, Ml let Salle Street, CHICAGO, ILL.
$25,000.00 52? agents. FionB
yw,«w.wv work among ycmr friends.
frequent sales, large 00mmissions. and" bin prises
for all. Address Dept. 18X, II B-MthHu, N.YCUj!
W. N. U, OMAHA, NO. 41, 1906.
••t^a.'l.-i'^vcC.- .a ■'Stf.H?; -AT -I'.iJ\C'L ' i ' •
You Cannot
CUR
all inflamed, ulcerated and catarrhal con
ditions of the mucous membrane such as
nasal catarrh,uterine catarrh caused
by feminine ills, sore throat, sore
mouth or inflamed eyes by simply
dosing the stomach. * ,
But you surely can cure these stubborn
'•Sections by local treatment with
Paxtine Toilet Antiseptic
which destroys the disease germs,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
TOE S. PAXTON CO
You Ought to Know
you heard about our wonderful Rice Lands,
that bring more revenue than any other lands in
Do you_
of corn. oats
Do you km
section on coins to make the^price of land Jump ;
Writ* os and let os aend
w. w. >vhi * mm