The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, January 10, 1907, Image 7

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

    AN IMPORTANT CASE
Patient Cured of Ataxia Gives the
Entire Credit to Dr. Williams’
Pink Pills.
Mrs. S. C. Wellock, of 114 Cleveland
Avenue, Everett, Mass., the wife of
an employe in the government workB
at Chelsea, says:
“I had been troubled with nervous
ness for ten years and the disease
kept growing on me. Then I learned
that I was suffering from locomotor
ataxia. I had terrible tremblings in
my right leg which would get rigid
and when this happened in the street
I uad to stand still until it passed
away to keep from falling. My right
arm felt as if a thousand needles were
pricking it. The sheet touching my
knee in bed would nearly cause me
to scream out with pain and both
knees were so weak I could hardly
stand.
“I had to use a cane and be helped
about by my son. Then the pain be
gan to settle in the calves of my legs
and the muscles became numb and
quivered constantly. The cords un
der my knees seemed to be drawn up
tight and the terrible shooting pains
in my legs would nearly drive me in
sane. My toes became numb and at
times would prickle as if needles were
being thrust into them. My eyes be
came dull and black spots floated be
fore them. My heart was very weak.
“My attention was called to Dr.
Williams’ Pink Pills and I bought sev
eral boxes right away and soon felt
relief. I was so pleased that I kept
•n taking them until they cured me
entirely, and I have had no symptoms
•f the trouble for over a year.”
Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills are sold by
all druggists or sent, postpaid, on re
ceipt of price. 50 cents per box. six
boxes $2.50, by the Dr. Williams Med
icine Company. Schenectady. N. Y.
A booklet, entitled “Nervous Dis
orders,” sent free on request.
HE WANTED LIVE NEW*.
Correspondent Had No Time to Watt*
with Vice President.
Vice President Fairbanks stopped
a newspaper man the other day, and
good-naturedly asked explanation of
an incident which happened years
ago. On that occasion Mr. Fairbanks
and the correspondent were chatting
pleasantly, when suddenly the latter
moved away to meet Senator Chand
ler of Maine. The vice president said:
‘‘I have always had great curiosity to
know why you deserted me that day.”
The newspaper man hesitated for a
moment, and then replied: ‘To tell
you the truth, Mr. Vice President, you
are a mighty dry source of news. You
may have a nose for news, but I
doubt it; at any rate, you never give
up any. Now, when a newspaper man
is gunning for big, live news he hasn't
got time to stop and exchange small
talk with a man, even if he be a sen
ator, who would not know the price of
aews if he saw it.” Mr. Fairbanks
smiled. "I thank you for your frank
mess,” he said. I see I shall have to
cultivate a nose for news."
ALMOST A SOLID SORE.
Skin Disease from Birth—Fortune
Spent on Her Without Benefit—
Cured Her with Cuticura.
*‘I have a cousin in Rockingham Co.
who once had a skin disease from her
birth until she was six years of age.
Her father had spent a fortune on
her to get her cured and none of the
treatments did her any good. Old
Dr. G- suggested that he try the
Cuticura Remedies which he did.
When he commenced to use it the
child was almost a solid scab. He
had used it about two months and
the child was well. I was there when
they commenced to use your Cuti
cura Remedies. I stayed that week
and then returned home and stayed
two weeks and then went back and
stayed with them two weeks longer,
and when I went home I could hardly
believe she was the same child. Her
skin was as soft as a baby's with
out a scar on it. I have not seen her
in seventeen years, but I have heard
from her and the last time I heard from
her she was welL Mrs. W. P. Ingle, Bur
lington, N. C., June 16, 1905.”
Made Much on Small Capital.
Twenty-five years ago W. S. Wctham
left the town of La Grange, Ga., with
toe munificent sum of one dollar in
his pocket and landed in New lork
with nothing to his credit but his
slothes and his character. The quality
•f the former does not matter and the
quality of the latter has shown itself.
He is to-day president of 75 banks, ail
but four of which are situated in his
native state. In return for Georgia’s
small advance of 100 cents he has
pretty well cornered her banking in
terests and has in keeping a goodly
amount of her funds. The four banks
sf which he is president outside of the
state of Georgia are situated in Flor
ida. _
, Millionaire la Generous.
p Congressman John E. Andrus, who
represents the Yonkers. N. Y., district,
for several years has taken delight in
playing the role of Santa Claus to the
pages,and telephone and telegraph
boys of the house. This year, as usual,
his gifts to the youngsters consisted
of two and five-dollar bills. Col. An
drus is worth $20,000,000, made out of
the manufacture of pepsin.
Artificial Flowers.
There are 430 manufactories of arti
ficial towers, leaves, plants and fruits
in the district of Dresden. The iargest
manufactories employ from 250 to
1,000 persons, and the total number of
persons engaged in the. trada is esti
mated at 10,000, the larger proportion
being women and girls, who earn from
ts. to 12s. a week by their work.
BOXES ARE WORTH SAVING.
Many Usee to Which Old Pasteboard*
Can Be Put.
The provident woman keeps her
pasteboard boxes, if she can find a
shelf where they can be stored for fu
;ure use.
So many merchants deliver goods in
poxes now, in place of the easily torn
wrapping paper, that almost any size
s always on hand. If broken, keep
'.he best pieces; their use will be
worth while noting. When baking
,'ookies, clean sheets of pasteboard
'rom such boxes are better to cool
:he thin hot cakes; when frying pota
toes, try putting a round piece of
pasteboard in the bottom of a pie plate
n the mouth of the oven to absorb
any remaining grease as the potatoes
ire skimmed out and placed on the
plate.
Cover some of the small boxes with
dainty tinted or flowered paper, form
ing a hinge on one side, and keep to
fill with some of your home-made can
dies or cakes for an invalid friend.
Cover others in sets of four for your
dressing table; they have the merit of
costing almost nothing and of being
easy to make. Send pictures of any
sort placed between two sheets of
pasteboard to prevent bending. Save
the boxes.
CONCEALING ONION IN SALAD.
Indispensable Flavoring Should Never
Be Too Pronounced.
Onion is indispensable to a good
salad, but its presence should never be
suspected. The best way to conceal
it is to rub the sides of the dish with
a section of an onion, and not to put
any onion in the salad at all.
Another way is to use half a tea
spoonful of onion juice in the salad
dressing. This is for the French dress
ing, of oil and vinegar, salt and pepper.
The juice is obtained by grating the
onion. It is weli to set aside a small
grater for this purpose, as the onion
will cling to it. Grate the juice into a
saucer and use no more than a half
teaspoonful to a small salad.
Chives, chopped very fine and sprin
kled in the salad, are an excellent sub
stitute for onions.
USES FOR COLD FISH.
Appetizing Dish That May Be Pre
pared from Left-Over Materials.
The Sauce.—Boil a pint of milk in a
double Vpttlp Tirno in a song of
parsley. Let boil ten or fifteen min
utes, so that the milk will be well
flavored. Blend a tablespoonful of
flour with a tablespoonful of but
ter. Add these to the milk.
Remove the milk from the stove
and stir into it the well-beaten
yolks of two eggs. Salt and pepper
to taste. The sauce should be of the
thickness of cream.
v The Fish.—Take two forks and
break the fish apart. Spread a layer
of fish in a baking or pudding dish
and strain the sauce over it. On top
sprinkle bread crumbs that have been
rolled in melted butter. Put in hot
oven for 15 or £0 minutes.
These directions must be very care
fully followed.
How to Make Madras Curry.
Made from any scraps of veal or any
cold meat.
One large onion, one large apple,
one dessertspoonful of prepared cocoa
nut, one dessertspoonful of chutney,
one dessertspoonful of brown sugar,
one dessertspoonful of curry powder,
one dessertspoonful of curry paste, one
table6poonful of vinegar, one pinch of
salt, the juice of half a lemon, three
quarters of a pint of new milk.
Fry the onion and apple in a little
dripping until brown, then put It into
a saucepan, add cocoanut, chutney,
curry paste, curry powder, sugar, salt
and stir together, then add lemon juice
and vinegar, lastly the milk.
Let it simmer for one and a half
hours, stirring often; about half an
hour before serving add the cold meat,
cut Into little blocks, and serve with
boiled rice.
How to Remove Paint Spots.
Paint may be removed from cloth
ing by the application of equal parts
of ammonia and turpentine well
shaken together. Apply carefully to
the actual paint spot and let it pene
trate for five or ten minutes; repeat
two or three times and the paint will
come off in flakes. In wash fabrics
this treatment is very succesful, even
if the paint has been dried on for a
long period.
Old Sheets.
Worn sheets which can no longer be
turned and darned will be found useful
as a means of covering ironing-boards,
old blankets also doing duty it this
connection as padding. Lorg strips
of old linen sheets may be set aside
as bandages, tightly rolled up fas
tened with a safety pin, and enclosed
in blue dust-excluding paper until
they may be required.
Brushes and Combs.
Soap and soda soften the bristles of
a brush and turn an ivory back yel
low; a tablespoonful of ammonia in a
quart of warm water is sufficiently
cleansing. Combs should not be washed
if it can be avoided, as water is apt to
split the teeth. They can be kept
clean with a small brush which is
sold for the purpose, and rubbed with
a cloth or towel.
Useful and Economical.
A clothes hanger may be economi
cally made by using a barrel hoop.
Cut from a hoop a piece of the desired
length, and, after inserting a screw
eve in the middle of the hanger, tie a
string in it for a loop to hang it up by.
Such a hanger is easy to make, and
answers the purpose very well.
Pretty and Inexpensive Curtains.
Pretty and inexpensive curtains may
be made from Indian linen. Use a
tumbler for a pattern in scalloping
the edges, marking around its edges
with a pencil. Buttonhole the scal
lops and work a few rows of folks
dots inside the buttonholing.
Shank Bones of Mutton.
The shank bones of button, so little
valued in general, if well soaked, add
to the richness of gravies and soups
1 for sick room broths.
No muss or failures made with PUT
NAM FADELESS DYES; bright, beauti
ful colors a certainty.
Nothing hurts a conceited man like
being ignored.
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrnp.
Fbr children t«*ethini?. tofrens the gums, reuucet in.
Snmmation nlitjt pain, cure* wind coiic. the a bottle.
Some men can't even do their duty
without making a fuss about it.
Lewis’ Single Binder Cigar ha? a riels
taste. Your dealer or Lewis' Factory,
Peoria. 111.
When members of a family quarrel
a lot of truth leaks out.
TO crSE A rOL.lt IN OAK BAT
Take LAXATIVE liilOMO Quinine Tablets. T>rnf
gis s rerund monfr if ic faiis to cure. E. W
OilUVE i signature is on each box. 5c.
A woman would rather do things to
worry a rival than to afford herself
pleasure.
Top Prices for Hides, rurs, Pelts.
Write for circular No o N. W. Hide &
Fur Co., Minneapolis, Minnesota.
Acquiesce in the present without re
pining. remember the past with thank
fulness, and meet the future hopefully
and cheerfully, without fear or suspi
cion.—Diogenes.
Defiance Starch is the latest inven
tion in that line and an improvement
on all other makes; it is more eco
nomical, does better wont, takes less
time. Get it from any grocer.
Much Traveled Sailor.
Henry Stevens, chief wine steward
of a Cunard liner is now on his thou
sandth trip across the Atlantic. This
record, so far as is knovrn, has never
been surpassed by any other employe
of the steamship lines. Stevens is 63
years old and has been in continuous
service of the Cunard company for 42
] years and six months. Taking 3.000
| miles for the trip from Liverpool to
! New York as a basis for computation,
Stevens has traveled 3.000.000 miles,
! or a distance of 12,000 times around
the earth. Had he been traveling
| through space he would have made
i mix round trips to the moon.
_
Safe, Sure and Speedy.
No external remedy ever yet de
vised has so fully and unquestionably
met these three prime conditions as
| successfully as Allcock's Plasters.
I They are safe because they contain
| no deleterious drugs and are manu
j factured upon scientific principles of
: medicine. They are sure because
nothing goes into them except ingre
dients which are exactly adapted to
the purposes for which a plaster is re
quired. They are speedy in their ac
tion because their medicinal qualities
go right to their work of relieving
pain and restoring the natural and
healthy performance of the functions
| of muscles, nerves and skin.
Allcock's Plasters are the original
j and genuine porous plasters and like
most meritorious articles have been
extensively imitated, theSefore always
make sure and get the genuine.
MANY SOURCES OF SALT.
That from Natural Springs Is Genee
ally Most Nearly Pure.
The purity of salt depends upon the
source from which it is obtained and
the sanitary conditions under which
it is prepared for the market. The
supply of common salt, the most in
i dispensable of all the seasoning sub
j stances both as a relishing condiment
i and a well-nigh universal food pre
: servative. is exhaustless, yet even so
I there is salt and salt, says the Pic
torial Review.
Formerly salt was obtained by evap
orating ocean water, a process that
left many impurities in the residuum,
to say nothing of its exposure to all
kinds of dirt in its shipment from sea
ports. The Turk's island or rock salt,
which is still largely used in pork
packing and in the manufacture of ice
creams, comes to the United States
in holds of vessels continually sub
jected to dirt and foul odors. Upon
its arrival it is again handled, then
packed in coarse burlap bags, permit
ting dust to sift into the salt. In this
condition it reaches the consumer.
Latterly, however, the product of
salt springs has largely taken the lead
in this country not only for table salt
but for meat packing. -The annual
production from this source id the
United States reaches more than 40,
000.000 bushels, the state of New York
in the vicinity of Syracuse furnishing
a large proportion of this important
supply.
NEVER TIRES
Of the Food That Restored Her to
Health.
“My food was killing me and I didn’t
: know the cause,” writes a Colo, young
' lady. “For two years I was thin and
| sickly, suffering from indigestion and
i inflammatory rheumatism.
“I had tried different kinds of diet,
plain living, and many of the remedies
recommended, but got no better.
“Finally, about five weeks ago,
mother suggested that I try Grape
Nuts, and I began at once, eating it
with a little cream or milk. A change
for the better began at once.
“To-day I am well and am gaining
weight and strength all the time. I’ve
gained 10 lbs. in the last five weeks
and do not suffer any more from indi
gestion and the rheumatism is all
gone.
“I know it is to Grape-Nuts alone
that I owe my restored health. I still
eat the food twice a day and never tire
of it.” Name given by Postum Co.,
Battle Creek, Mich.
The flavor of Grape-Nuts is peculiar
to Itself. It Is neutral, not too sweet
and has an agreeable, healthful qual
ity that never grows tiresome.
One of the sources of rheumatism
is from overloading the system with
acid material, the result of imperfect
digestion and assimilation.
As soon as improper food is aban
doned and Grape-Nuts is taken regu
larly, digestion is made strong, the or
gans do their work of building up good
red blood cells and of carrying away
the excess of disease-making material
from the By stem.
The result is a certain and steady
return to normal health and mental
activity. “There’s a reason.” Read
the little book “The Road to WelK
1 till#” in pk*a.
BLOATED WITH DROPSY.
The Heart Was Badly Affected When
the Patient Began Using
Doan’s Kidney Pills.
Mrs. Elizabeth Maxwell, of 415 West
Fourth street, Olympia, Wash., says:
'For over three
years I suffered
with a dropsical
condition with
out being aware
that it wa3 due
to kidney trou-'
ble. The early j
stages were
principally back
ache and bear
ing down pain,
but I went along
without worrying much until dropsy
set in. My feet and ankles swelled
up, my hands puffed and became so
tense I could hardly close them. I had
great difficulty in breathing, and my
heart would flutter with the least ex
ertion. I could not walk far without
stopping again and again to rest. Since
using four boxes of Doan's Kidney
Pills the bleating has gone down and
the feelings cf distress have disap
peared.”
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box.
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
ANIMALS THAT SHED TEARS.
Travelers’ Observations Have Proved
That Weeping Is Common.
Travelers through the Syrian desert
have seen horses weep from thirst, a
mule has been seen to cry from the
pain of an injured foot and camels,
it is said, shed tears in streams, say*
a writer in Harper's Weekly. A cow
sold by its mistress who had tended
young soko ape used to cry from vexa- i
tion if Livingston didn't nurse it im
his arms when it asked him to.
Wounded apes have died crying, and
apes have wept over their young slain
by hunters. A chimpanzee trained to
carry water jugs broke one and fell j
a-crving. which proved sorrow, though
it wouldn’t mend the jug. Rats, dis
covering their young drowned, have
been moved to tears. A giraffe which
a huntsman's rifle had injured began
to cry when approached. Sea liona
often weep over the ioas of their
young. Gordon Cummings observed
tears trickling down the face of a dy
ing elephant. And even an orang
outang when deprived of its mango
was so vexed that it took to weeping.
There is little doubt, therefore, that
animals do cry from grief or weep
from pain or annoyance.
Whine from Henry James.
Henry James, pursuing his theme.
“The Speech of American Women,"
speaks of a group of Boston young
women, "all articulating as from sore
mouths, all mumbling and whining
and vocally limping and shuffling as it
were together." He compares, also to
its great disadvantage, a school where j
parents pay so much not to have their
boys taught to speak as gentlemen,
with one "beyond the sea. in which
the proviso that the schoolmaster
shall speak as a gentleman is so ab»o- ■
luteiy vital."
Laundry work at home would he
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
bpautv and fineness of the fabric i3
bidden behind a paste of varying
thickness, which not only destroys the
appearance, but also affects the wear
ing quality of the goads. This trouble
can be entirely overcome by using De
fiance Starch. ?s it caD be applied
much more thinly because of its great
er strength than other makes.
Tallest American Soldier.
The distinction of being the tallest
man in the United States army be
longs to Ernest D. Peck, a first lieu
tenant in the engineer corps. He is
six feet four and a half inches in
height. Lieutenant Peck is a native
of Wisconsin and was graduated from
the Oshkosh high school. Lieutenant
Peck is now on duty at Yellowstone
Park. Wyoming, and has supervised
the building of a military road known
as Peek's Pike. He is called Pike’s
Peak by his comrades in the service.
Stats or Ohio. Citt or Toledo, l
Lucas CorTr. ( BB’
Frajtb J. Chexey makes oath that he le sen’o
partner of the firm of F. J. Coexet & Co., doing
Dullness In the City of Toledo. County and Stare
aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of
ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every
case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of
Hall’3 Catarrh Cras.
FRANK J. CHENEY.
Sworn to before rae and subscribed In my presence,
this tiib day of Dccembsr. A. D.. 1586.
s —. A. W. GLEASON,
) *gAJ \ XOTAIT PrBLIC.
Hall’a Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally and acts
directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of tha
tyatem. Send for testimonials, free.
F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O.
Sold by all Drujrrlsta. 75c.
Take Hail’s Family Pills for constipation.
New York Philanthropist.
Dr. Adelaide Wallerstein, rich,
young and handsome, has turned part
of her elegant New York home into a
physician's office. Here she devotes
about six hours a day to practicing
medicine, all the income so derived
going to her charity work on the east
side of the city. Mrs. Wallerstein is
accomplished and socially prominent,
but has given up most of her society
pleasures for her professional and
charitable work.
Kinsmen of Immortal George.
Many kindred of George Washing
ton dwell on and about the original
Washington plantation in Westmore
i land county, Virginia. The present oc
cupant of the plantation is named
: George Washington.
We daily influence each other for
; good or evil. Let us not be the occa
sion of misleading others by our sil
ence when we ought to speak.—J. H.
Newman.
f- \
| STIFFNESS, STITCHES, LAMENESS, CRAMP, I
| TWISTS AND TWITCHES. ALL DEOAMP WHEN i
i « . YOU APPLY 1
ST.
JACOBS
OLD CAPT. CACK’S QUESTION.
Somewhat Pointed, But It Denoted
Quick Intelligence.
Pierce Jay. the commissioner of
banks of Massachusetts, at the Ameri
can Bankers’ association’s convention j
in St. Louis, advocated a better ac- j
counting system.
“But above all,” said Mr. Jay. in
a discussion of his idea, “we want
intelligence, if embezzlement is to be
thoroughly put down. Systems are
good, but intelligence is better, and
in cashiers and tellers and book
keepers and note clerks we want the
same keen, quick intelligence that
characterized old Capt. Hiram Cack,
of Gloucester.
“Cack lay very III. One day he got
down-hearted, feeling that his case
was hopeless.
“ ‘I fear, doctor.’ he said, ‘there isn’t
much hope for me.'
“ ‘Oh. yes, there is,’ the doctor an
swered. ‘Three years ago I was in
your condition precisely, and look at
me now.’
“Cack. intelligent and alert, said
quickly:
“'What doctor did you have?’”
Stili Working for Humanity.
Tennie ClaCin, as she was called be
fore she married an English lord and
went to England to live in the '70s, is
back again in New" York. Her agita
tion now is to promote happier mar
riages by lectures and informal enter
tainments in churches.
Give Defiance Starch a fair trial—
try it for both hot and cold starching,
and if you don’t think you do better
work, in less time and at smaller cost,
return it and your grocer will give
you back your money.
If you will be true to the best of
yourself, living up to your nature,
standing boldly by the truth of your
word and satisfied therewith, then you
will bo a happy man.—Marcus Aura
lius.
Take Garfield Tea, the Natural Laxa
tive. for constipation, indigestion, liver
and kidney derangements, and colds. It is
made of Herbs. Guaranteed under the
Pure Food Law.
Wo frequently fall into errror and :
folly, not because the true principles
of action are not known, but because ;
for the time they aro aot remembered, j
Defiance Starch—Sixteen ounces for
ten cents, all other brands contain
only 12 ounces for same money.
Many a man who prays for rain
would doubtless steal his neighbor's
umbrella if his prayera were answered.
Furs, Hides. Pelts.
Write for prices and ship to McMillan
Fur & Wool Co., Minneapolis, Minn.
Nothing pleasea a homely womaa so
much as to have a man compliment
her figure.
PILES CrBEB IX • T* 14 BATS.
PAZi) OINTM BNT is guaranteed to cur® any can®
of Itching. Blind, Bieediug or Protrading PUts id
6 to 14 cLiys or money refund®*. Pic.
And it’s a sure thing that one can’t
be sure of anything in this world.
Smokers have to call for Lewis’ Single
Binder cigar to get it. Your dealer or
Lewis' Factory, Peoria. HI.
■With too many people charity ia
more of a fad than a virtue.
What /If 'Pe°»rt£~na ?
Is it a Catarrh Remedy, or a Tonic,
or is /Y Both?
Some people call Peruna a great tonic. Others refer to Peruna as a great catarrh
remedy
Which of these people are right ? Is it more proper to call Peruna a catarrh rem
edy than to call it a tonic ?
Our reply is, that Peruna is both a tonic and a catarrh remedy. Indeed, there can
be no edectual catarrh remedy that is not al30 a tonic.
In order to thoroughly relieve any case of catarrh, a remedy must not only have a
specific action on the mucous membranes afiected by the catarrh, but it must have a
general tonic action on the nervous system.
Catarrh, even in persons who are otherwise strong, is a weakened condition of soma
mucous membrane. There must be something to strengthen the circulation, to give
tone to the arteries, and to raise the vital forces.
Perhaps no vegetable remedy in the world has attracted so much attention from
medical writers as HYDRASTIS CANADENSIS. The wonderful efficacy of this herb
has been recognized many years, and is growing in its hold upon the medical profession.
When joined with CUBEBS and COPAIBA a trio of medical agents is formed in
Peruna which constitutes a specific remedy for catarrh that in the present state of medi
cal progress cannot be improved upon. This action, reinforced by such renowned tonics
as COLLINSONIA CANADENSIS. CORYDALIS FORMOSA and CEDRON SEED,
ought to make this compound an ideal remedy for catarrh in all its stages and locations
in the body.
From a theoretical standpoint, therefore, Peruna is beyond criticism. The use of
Peruna. confirms this opinion. Numberless testimonials from every quarter of the earth
furnish ample evidence that this judgment is not over enthusiastic. When practical ex
perience confirms a well-grounded theory the result is a truth that cannot be shaken.
CURED 1
The Circulation Stimulated
and the Muscles and Joints
lubricated by using
i SSoaurcs
Lirumeixt
Price 25c 50c£r$!.00
Sold by adl Defiers
$ "SloansTreatise On The Horse"Sent Frt
Jn Address Dr. Earl S.Sloan.Boston^Mas
Knows Whom He Can Trust. I
Police Commissioner Bingham has |
learned one important fact that will be
of aid to him in his official career. J
When he desires to get the exact facts
about some large question that is to
the front in New York city he calls
in the newspaper reporters located at
police headquarters and has a heart
to-heart talk. As one of them says:
"He gets it straight, and so straight
that not all the men of the force can
fool him on that one point”
- 1
That an article may be good as well
as cheap, and give entire satisfaction,
is proven by the extraordinary sale of
DeSance Starch, each package con
taining one-third more Starch than
can be had of any ether brand for the
same money.
No sooner does the average man dis
cover that he has made a mistake
than he gets busy and maufactures an
explanation.
f
CASTOf
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have
Always Bought
Bears the
Signature
of
, - • i"
I Hop
Aperfecl Remedy forConsfipa H U O U
Ron, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea H
Worms .Convulsions .Feverish- §gj A,,. M
ness and L099 OF Sleep, Sgj l-nr liyPr
Facsimile Signature of I®
Thirty Years
UKTanmvnrK*. J
SICK HEADACHE
-=—1 Positively cured by
Al nyrno these Little PUls.
Wrvl\I SL8%W 71107ali0reUeTB
tress trcm Dyspepsia. In
digestion and Too Eeartff
Eating. A perfect rem
edy for Dizziness, Nausea.
Drowsiness, Bad Tas$s
In the llornth. Coated
Tongue, Pain In the Side,
1- .iTOPT-m LTVER. They
regulate the Bctrols. Purely Vegetable.
SMALL PILL SMALL DOSE. SHALL PRICE.
Genuine Must Bear
Fac-Simile Signature
DEFUSE SUBSTITUTES.
THE CANADIAN WEST
IS THE BEST WEST
HThe testimony of thou
sands dcme the past
je;ir is that the Canadian
West .s the besi West,
Year by year the agr -
cultural returns have in
creased in volume and la
value, and still the Cana
dian Government offers
160 acre® FREE 10
every ooaa fide settler.
Some of the Advantages
The phenomena! Increase in railwav mileage
main lines and branches— has put almost every por
tion of the country within easy reach of enurcneajt
schools, markets, cheap fuel and every modern
convenience.
Tae NINETY MILLION BUSHEL WHEAT CROP
of this year means AiU.OJD.ttJU to the farmers or
Western Canada, apart from the results of other
grains and cattle.
For advice and information address the SUPER
INTENDENT OF 1 MMliiRATION. Ottawa. Canada,,
or any author sed Government Agcnr.
W. V. BENNETT, 801 New York Life BeiMmi,
Omaha. Nebraska.
FOBS AND HIDES
IRE VERY RIERIR PRICE
Why not get full value by- shipping
them yourself instead of selling to
your local dealer at 1-3 to 3-3 of
what they are worth? SEND FOR
TAOS AND PRICE LIST Small
sr.ioments are welcome and receive
full attention.
JACOB HOLZ.
IOOO Worth 16th Bt., - OMAHA NEB.
FARMS FOR RENT ££&
>• MILHALL. UOVA (ITV, IOWA,
"•SK2I Thompson’s Eye Water
W. N. U., OMAHA, NO. 2, 1907.
The extraordinary popularity of fine
white goods this summer makes the
choice of Starch a matter of great im
portance. Defiance Starch, being free
from all injurious chemicals, is the
only one which is safe to use on flae
fabrics. Its great strength as a stiff
ener makes half the usual quantity of
Starch necessary, with the result of
perfect finish, equal to that when the
goods were new.
Will llllli'llj III I Ml II HI jj—
NO MORE MUSTARD PLASTERS TO BLISTER.
j THE SCIENTIFIC AND MODERN EXTERNAL COUNTER-IRRITANT.
CAPISICUM
VASELINE
EXTRACT OF THE CAYENNE PEPPER PLANT
AND ALWAYS READY CURE FOR PMN.-PRTCE
C£iiL^.,2Ili'JvTH?ES~AT ALL DRUGGISTS AND DEALERS. OR
BY MAIL ON RECEIPT OF 15c 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 net
blister the most delicate skin. Ths pain-allaying and curative qualities of
) *ke article are wonderful. It will stop the toothache at once, and relieve
Headache and Sciatica. Ws recommend it as the best and safest external
counter-irritant known, also as an external remedy for pains in the chest
and stomach and ail Rheumatic. Neuralgic and Goutv complaints. A trial
will prove what we claim for it. and it will be found to be invaluable ia the
household and for children. Once used no family will be without it. Many
people »y “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 OUR VASE
LINE PAMPHLET WHICH WILL INTEREST YOU.
CHESEBROUGH MFC. CO.
17 STATE STREET. NEW YORK CITY
I - I