Loup city Northwestern J. W. BURLEIGH, Publisher. LOUP CITY, - - NEBRASKA. Hasten Slowly. It is not well to be too eager to ac quire wealth, especially when it en tails long hours of work and constant anxiety. The other day a rich mer chant of Illinois, traveling in England, wrote home to his son, who is carrying on the business: "I am a middle aged man,” he said, ‘ and I am just learning that it is wisest to hasten slowly.” In the anxiety to grow rich, he had made too much haste, and had suffered seriously in health and in the reasonable enjoyjnent of life. Ke had worked all day and all night when occasion appeared to demand it; he 'had taken no count of days of rest, or any other time. It was work and scheme, scheme and work, all the time. He had at last awakened in his old age to the fact that he has made a great mistake. No one depre ,cates work, steady and persevering; for the young man that is, in many 'instances, essential to any kind of success; but to make oneself a slave 'to the anxiety to become rich is an other matter. That is just what many a husband and father is now doing. It is the wife's duty, says New York Weekly, to check this; she should take care that he does not become so consumed by the notion that he must constantly improve his condition by unceasing labor, day after day, and thus let his life slip away and his health go with it. The anxiety to get wealth does not always end in con stant work; it often entails a growing carelessness for the difference be tween right and wrong and the wel fare of others. Very frequently a woman forces her husband along this dangerous path instead of keeping him in check. She sees money coming in, and she spends it, not troubling about how he works to get it or in which way he obtains the coveted wealth. A collateral descendant of William Shakespeare has d. 1 in London in the person of George Shakespeare Hart. He was an engineer and was 64 years old. A pedigree in posses sion of the family shows his descent from the Poet's family. Shakespeare's sister, Joan, married William Hart, a hatter, of Stratford-on-Avon, and it was from him that George Shakespeare Hart descended. A vast increase in the importations of briarwood pipes is noted, which is complimentary to the taste of old smokers. There may be solace in a good cigar, but there's likewise com fort and joy in a sweet pipe, declares the Boston Herald. It is much affected nowadays out of doors and on the busy street, but that is a violation of good taste. The den is the place for the pipe. The extraordinary resuscitating lower of light recently reecived a curi ous illustration in the silver mines at Laurium, Greece. A mine had been ibandoned 2,000 years, when some poppy seed was found beneath the slag. The slag being removed, in a short time the entire space was cov ered with the most gorgeous show of poppies. Speaking of talking machines, In dia is a great country for this instru ment, and thousands of them are in use. The native who can command :he price wants a talking machine, and the records he delights in are those which reproduce the native songs. The American machine takes the lead, and there is room for more. A full-fledged liar dwells in Wilming ton, Del. He solemnly declares that he placed a brooding hen on a “set ting” of cold-storage eggs. The result was that she hatched 17 chickens which had fur instead of feathers, and be attributes this phenomenal result to the fact that nature adapts all animals to their environment. A peculiarity of the eyeball of the mole is that it can be projected for ward several times its own diameter beyond the orbit and retracted in like manner. Dr. Lindsay Johnson notes that this is necessary for vision, as the animal’s dense fur so covers the eye that the making of an opening is the only way to see. The Siamese government, which floated a loan of $5,000,000 in 1905, is .reported to have placed another bond issue of $15,000,000 at four and one 'half per cent., which was taken up by London, Paris and Berlin bankers on January 31. A large part of the new issue is for railways. Now comes forward an expert on the eternal domestic problem to say the mistress 1b more to blame for ex isting conditions than the servant. As if such a question could have any side but that of the party who has the only chances of rushing into print about it. Prof. Starr of Chicago is said to be an expert authority on the costumes ■of the ladies of the Congo. Which tends to prove that rubbering and star-gazing are sometimes the same thing. Some excellent business men fail tc make good statesmen. On the other hand, some of the world’s greatest statesmen have been exceedingly poor business men. Utah has given permission to dental students to practice on the convicts in the penitentiary. Here is encour agement for the opponents of capital punishment. « The tempests and storms of life can never intimidate or conquer the spirit ef a brave man ©princess! ROBERT] DE BROGLIE American, Singing on London Mu sic Hall Stage,*' ^Husband, ** Descendant of * Marshal of France, Flags I an Accompaniment £ Boston.—Titled persons are not a rarity on the stage these days of the ascendency of money power, but some thing of a sensation has been caused in London and in several of the larger cities of the United States by the ap pearance of a prince of illustrious lineage with his wife in vaudeville. They are the Prince and Princess Robert de Broglie, the husband being the cousin of the sixtli Duke of Brog lie, head of one of the most distin guished families in France, and the princess having been Miss Estelle Alexander, daughter of a wealthy New Mexican planter and divorced wife of a millionaire merchant of Ger man extraction, Sidney V. Veit by name. Family quarrels and the triumph of their attachment make a romantic story of the lives of the young couple. The continent has princes and nobles in such profusion, many of them bogus, that continental titles have lost much of their significance to English men and Americans, but Prince Rob ert de Broglie is the younger son of a really historic French family. Among file old ducal houses of France, the name of De Broglie possesses a spe cial interest to Americans, for one of its most distinguished members, Prince Victor de Broglie, served through the war of independence in this country as one ol the principal lieutenants of General "he Marquis de Lafayette. Of Illustrious Aocestry. This prince was afterward guillo tined by Robespierre in 1794, but his son married a daughter of the cele brated Mme. de Stael, and it is their great-great-grandson who is now daughter of Mme. de Stael. and his son was chief of MacMahon's cabinet and grandfather of Prince Robert. Led by Woman’s Beauty. How comes it that a scion of this august family of dukes and marshals and statesmen earns his living con ducting an orchestra in a music hall while his American princess performs behind the footlights? The cause was Miss Estelle Alex ander. now the Princess Robert de Broglie, a famous beauty. An old Chinese proverb says: "Trouble does not come from heaven, but is brought about by some woman.’’ A beautiful American girl, the daughter of Lyman Alexander, an American landowner, who held large tracts in southern California, Miss Estelle Alexander was the wife of a merchant and importer, of Prussian antecedents, named Veit, when she met the Prince Robert de Broglie in Paris in 1904. That meeting was in the studio of an artist in Paris, and ‘ the prince’s mother and sister were present at the meeting. She was young and possessed of an encum brance in the shape of an unsympa thetic husband; the prince was youth ful, ardent, a great admirer of beauti ful women. Day after day the prince's valet carried flowers and notes from his master to Mrs. Veit. She knew him then only as M. de Broglie. She left her husband's house in Paris finally. That made Herr Veit’s divorce a very simple matter, an easily achieved formality. And it was from that moment that the couple’s troubles began. Disinherited by Father. Prince Amedee de Broglie, the fa wielding the baton in conducting the orchestras for his wife’s songs in their vaudeville entertainments. Other batons than that of a leader of an orchestra have been wielded by Prince Robert’s ancestors, for a De Broglie was a marshal of France un der the Grand Monarque and another under Louis XVI. Another Duke de Broglie was the philosopher and acad emician who, as head of the cabinet of Louis Philjppe, was riding by his sov ereign when Fieschi opened fire on them with his infernal machine. This was the De Broglie who married the ther of the youthful Robert, was a stern parent, with all the inherited prejudices of his class. As almost Roman power over the affairs of his children is given a father by the French laws, the elder prince’s ob jections counted for much more than would have been the case had he been an American. In defiance of his ex pressed command, the couple were married in Milan. The parent imme diately took action in the French courts to have the marriage annulled on the ground that it had been con tracted without the consent of the CHURCH FEDERATION NEEDS MUCH MONEY Christian Organizations of New York City Ask Endowment Fund of $1,000, 000 to Carry on Good Work Planned —Little Doubt That the Sum Will Be Raised—Gospel Meetings with Music a Large Part of the Plan. The federation of churches and Christian organizations in New York city is asking for an endowment of $1,000,000 to carry on its various de partments of progressiva work, un hampered by the necessity of con stantly soliciting funds for its own support. In 11 months of 1906 the officers and employes of the federation visited 110,000 families, or nearly one-fifth of the entire population of Greater New York. Of Jewish families, 63 per cent had no religious affiliation. Protestant 28 and Catholic five per cent. Over 700 cburchleBS families were recovered to regularity of worship. Over 300 churches are In the fed eration membership. A new department, church and la bor, has been added, under the lead ership of Rev. Charles Stelzle, who was born on the East side of New York, and worked as a poor boy in a factory. He is now at the head of the church and labor department of the Presbyterian board of home mis sions, and as both laboring man and minister has the respect and confi dence of the working and church-going classes, and has thus been able in many cases to remove the serious mis understandings. He proposes 500 Gospel meetings in at least 200 city shops, with addresses from leading clergy and laymen, lim ited to ten minutes each and devoted to practical questions. Music will be a prominent feature. The federation scheme has the backing of hundreds of churches and many pastors and workers, and the Grant family, through Gen. Grant, has already pledged 930,000 as a Matthew Grant fellowship fund, in memory of the founder of the family In America, a freeman of the Massachusetts col ony, who moved into Connecticut and established the town of Windsor. It is proposed to apportion the total endowment in subdivisions of work, aa, for instance, to 15 post-graduate fel lowships of $20,000 each (or $300,000 in all), the incumbents coming from all parts of the country, and on an investment of funds at four per cent, receiving $800 each. Another $300, 000 will provide for the five chief offi cers and their assistants and inciden tals, while the remaining $400,000, yielding $16,000 a year, will maintain 11 assistant workers, headquarters and such departments as children’s work in summer, church and labor, etc., leaving the annual gifts to be used in aiding churches in the help of the poor, abolishing vicious resorts and creating a general uplift. Clever Scheme. Eva—But he is a literary chap and very brilliant What do you do when you misspell words in your letters to him?” Katharine—Oh, I just make stars over those words I am doubtful of and let them go as kisses.—Chicago Daily News. _, t parents. This action failed of its pup pose, Prince Robert having mean while traveled with his wife to Amer ica and having been married again ao cording to American law by a justice of the peace in Chicago. He had th( marriage notice sent to the Frenck consul there and received acknowl edgment of its record, in order U comply with the French law as tc civil registration of marriages. However, one recourse yet remained to the indignant Prince Amedee. H« could cut off the son’s allowance anc disinherit him. This he at once pro ceeded.to do. Although New York society had j opened its arms to the two brothers j of Prince Robert on the occasion of j their visit to America, when the same 1 people found the youthful couple in dollarless despair their reception was j of a different sort. A prince whose i seat consists of a bed-sitting room on j the top floor of a cheap lodging house; does not get the treatment of a prince who comes surrounded with the glamor of the appurtenances of his rank. So it came about that Prince Robert found New York capitalists cold to the propositions he unfolded concerning his inventions of a freight carrying automobile with a vapor motor. Reduced to Penury. Things went from bad to worse with the Prince and Princess Robert de Broglie. Meaner and yet meaner lodgings they secured, until finally they were living penniless, in a gar ret, with their baby daughter, the Princess Jessemonde. It was then that an entertprising theatrical mana ger discovered them and made an of fer to star the princess in vaudeville, with hev husband conducting the or chestra as a sort of side-show attrac tion. Immediately the press took up their cause and painted the sufferings en dured by the romantic pair for their love's sake. A thousand newspapers carried the story of their misfortunes to millions of American hemes. Head lines made celebrites of this couple, and the evil day of poverty and of pinching had passed for Prince and Princess Robert de Broglie. Prepared by the newspapers for their appearance, the public extended a kindly welcome to the pair in vaude ville, and even staid, cold-hearted Lon don has since opened its pursestrings to see them perform. Divorce Runs in Family. The princess had early experience of the operations of the divorce courts, for her mother was separated and divorced from her father, the planter, and married Edward Clay, a stepson of Senator Jones, as her sec ond husband. And it is by no means the prince's first venture on the sea of matrimony. About five years ago he fell desperately in love with the for mer wife of Count Fleury, daughter of Baron .Deslandes, who, after her di vorce from her husband, son of the famous ambassador to St. Petersburg, shone as the leader of a famous co terie of wits and fashionables gath ered nightly in her Paris solon. She then assumed her mother’s name, that of the Baroness Deslandes. She was 30 years old and he was 21, but that did not prevent a blind at tachment. In spite of the strenuous opposition of his powerful family, Prince Robert married her clandes tinely in London. Immediately the Prince Amedee started action to annul the marriage, claiming that there was virtually no marriage, since it was without the consent of the parents, without publication, and had not been entered upon the French civil regis ters. He won his case, and the mar riage was declared invalid. For quite two years Prince Robert was incon solable; and then he met the beautiful Miss Alexander in Paris, and all was sunshine again for him. Prince an American Citizen. Owing to the difficulties with his family, the" prince was driven in No vember of last year to renounce his allegiance to the republic of France and to take out citizenship papers in the United States. The estate of the De Broglies, which surrounds the famous Chateau de Chaumont, is con sidered one of the most magnificent in France. His father, Prince Amedee, married a daughter of the sugar king, Henry Say. whose immense fortune was subsequently lost through wild and fraudulent speculation. The princess is an accomplished, as well as an exceptionally beautiful woman. During her education in Europe, she studied with Capoul of the Paris opera and with Fugere of the Opera Comique. In describing her own appearance recently, the Princess Robert de Broglie gave the following details; “Tall and slender, five feet ten; magnificent figure; wonderful long hair of dark, reddish-chestnut color, falling to knees; eyes of midnight darkness, changing to emerald hues and shades of deep sea-green, and at times are of a rich, dark brown; mouth and nose Grecian, and lips full and red.” Paradoxical Wit. “Bibbles has a lot of dry humor.” “Yes, especially when he’s been drinking.”—Baltimore American. WHAT WESTERN CANADA DOES. ■ Satisfactory Yields of Wheat and Good Prices. Dundurn, Sask., Sept. 30, 1906. Mr. W. H. Rogers, Canadian Govern ment Agent, Indianapolis, Ind. My Dear Sir: When you were at our place in July I promised to write you what my north quarter made per acre. You will remember it was all sown to wheat. Well, I finished threshing yesterday and received from it an average of 43% bushels per acre—testing 64% pounds per stroked bushel. The wheat is the best sample I have ever raised —so uniform and even in size. You may know it was a good sample when I tell you that I have already sold 2,000 bushels of it for seed to my neighbors. This year has been my best effort in farming during my life. My wheat totaled 9,280 bushels and my oats nearly 5,000. If you remember I pointed out to you a half section lying Just west of our house and joining my upper quar ter on the south, which I said I should have in order to make one of the best farms in western Canada. I am very glad to be able to tell you that I now own that half section. My ambition now is to be able to market 20,000 bushels of wheat next year. If some of those good, honest Hoosiers could have been with me during the last two weeks and could have seen the golden grain rushing down the spout into my wagon and then could have seen it in great piles in my granaries, I feel sure they would have been forced to acknowledge there is no better farm ing country in the world than this. I may just say that I have done all my farming with eight head of horses and one hired man except during harvest and threshing. This year I proved to my neighbor that the Hoosiers, when once “woke up,” can raise grain equal to the best Minnesota farmers. His best yield was 42% bushels per acre, so you see “old Indiana” is holding the ribbon this year. Yours very truly, N. E. BAUMINK. How to Sleep In a Blanket. There are a great many very com petent treatises telling you how to build your fire, pitch your tent and all the rest of it. I have never seen des cribed the woodman’s method of using a blanket, however. Lie flat on your back. Spread the blanket over you. Now raise your legs rigid from the hips, the blanket, of course, draping over them. In two swift motions tuck first one edge under your legs from right to left, then the second edge un der from left to right, and over the first edge. Lower your legs, wrap up your shoulders and go to sleep. If you roll over one edge will unwind but the other will tighten.—Stewart Edward. White in Outing. Proof of Merit. The proof of the merits of a plaster is the cures It effects, and the volun tary testimonials of those who have used Allcock's Plasters during the past sixty years is unimpeachable evidence of their superiority and should convince the most skeptical. Self-praise is no recommendation, but certificates from those who have used them are. Allcock’s are the original and gen uine porous plasters and have never been equaled by those who have sought to trade upon their reputation by making plasters with holes in them. Avoid substitutes as you would counterfeit money. South Carolina Game Cocke to Mexico. Mr. S. M. Pickens is now shipping 12 game cocks to Mexico, for which he receives eight dollars each, says the Anderson Intelligencer. He has also an order for 100 at five dollars each, and 50 at eight dollars each, aggregat ing $996. Mr. Pickens has a large number of fine chickens at different walks in the county, and is getting to gether the 150 for the $996 order. The breeds raised by Mr. Pickens are the Ginn grays and the Warhorse. They are excellent pit cocks and se lected and bred to stand steel. 6heer white goods, In fact, any fine wash goods when new, owe much of their attractiveness to the way they are laundered, this being done in a manner to enhance their textile beau ty. Home laundering would be equal ly satisfactory if proper attention was given to starching, the first essential being good Starch, which has sufficient strength to stiffen, without thickening the goods. Try Defiance Starch and yon will be pleasantly surprised at the Improved appearance of your work. How Pineapple Should Be Taken. The reputation of the pineapple has suffered because it has been eaten in too large quantities at a time and the fibrous part has been swallowed with the juice. To obtain the full digestive value of the juice one quadrant of a slice half an inch thick is ample at one meal. It must not be cooked and should be just ripe. The preserved fruit has practically no digestive pos sibility. Author Fond of the Country. Arthur Stringer, the author, is an enthusiastic farmer, and has a fine fruit farm at Cedar Springs, Ont., whore he spends his summers. You have massed- the best if Garfield Tea, Nature's laxative, has been over looked; take it to regulate the liver and to overcome constipation. Building Up Manila. Manila is issuing building permits at the rate of from 10 to 25 a day, large and small. S IF YOU WANT WHAT YOU WANT WHEN J I ALWAYS KEEP A BOTTLE OF j ST. JACOBS OIL § IN THE HOUSE AND YOU WILL HAVE A X X QUICK. SAFE AND SURE REMEDY FOR PAIN { 1 WHERE YOU CAN GET AT IT WHEN NEEDED. | V PRICE 23c AND 30c \ — TWICE-TOLD TE8TIMONY. A Woman Who Has Suffered Tells How to Find Relief. The thousands of women who suffer backache, languor, urinary disorders ana oiner Kinney ins, I will find comfort in ' the words of Mrs. Jane Farrell, of 606 Ocean Ave., Jersey City, N. J., who says: “I reiterate all I .. have said before in '■ praise of Doan’s Kid ney Pills. I had ' been having heavy backaches, 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 secre tions highly colored. To-day, how ever, 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 box. Foster-Milburn Co.. Buffalo, N. Y. The Mugger’s Attendants. While clambering up I noticed what looked like the hulk of a ship, about 400 yards away, says a writer in the London Field. It turned out to be a monster crocodile; it must, without exaggeration, have been 27 or 28 feet long, and in its close vicinity were five or six small muggers, looking like a bodyguard. I was afterward told by an old Cawnpore resident that they actually act as such, and give warn ing of any approaching danger to their overlord. ... A Big Bargain for 12 Cents Postpaid. The year of 1906 was one of prodigal plenty on our seed farms. Never before did vegetable and farm seeds return such enormous yields. Now we wish to gain 200,000 new cus tomers this year ana hence offer for 12c postpaid 1 pkg. Garden City Beet. 10c 1 “ Earliest Ripe Cabbage. 10c 1 “ Earliest Emerald Cucumber_ 15e 1 “ I.a Crosse Market Lettuce. 15c 1 “ 13 Dav Radish. 10c 1 “ Blue Blood Tomato. 15c 1 “ Juicy Turnip . 10c 1000 kernels gloriously beautiful flow er seeds . 15c Total .*1.00 All for 12c postpaid in order to intro duce our warranted seeds, and if you will send 16c we will add one package of Berliner Earliest Cauliflower, together with our mammoth plant, nursery stock, vegetable and farm seed and tool catalog, j This catalog is mailed free to all in- j tending purchasers. Write to day. John A. Salzer feed Co., Box W, La Crosse, Wis. — Soft people occasionally use hard words. Lewis’ Single Binder straight 5c cigar. Made of extra quality tobacco. Your dealer or Lewis’ Factory, Peoria, 111. Prefer diligence before Idleness, un less you esteem rust before brightness. —Plato.__ ONLTONii! ‘•BKOMO QDINIKB" That is I.AXATIVB BltOMO Oulnme S mllsrlr named remedies sometimes deceive. The Cm and original Cold Tablet is a WHITE PACK AGE with black and red lettering, and bears the signature of E.W. GROVE. 25c. Wages in Germany Advanced. Wages In the machine factories of Germany advanced last year 10 to 15 per cent SICK HEADACHE I— . ■ a—i Positively cured by AJk DTrD O these Little Pills. G/\|\ | Ll\0 They also relieve Dts tress from Dyspepsia, In HP ITTLE digestion and Too Beauty ' M ll/rD Eating. A perfect rem it! I V LH edy for Dizziness, Nausea. i?!j§ PILLS Drowsiness, Bad Taste I b» * in the Mouth. Coated Tongue, Pain In the Side. _I TORPID LIVER. They regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. SMALL PILL SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE. THE CANADIAN WEST IS THE BEST WEST MThe testimony of thou sands during ths past ▼ear is that the Canadtaa West is the best West. Tear by year the agri cultural returns haye In creased In yolume and la value, and sail! theCana d an Government offers 160 acres PBBK to every bona fide settler. Some of the Advantages The phenomenal increase in railway mi sage main lines and branches—has put almostevery por tion of the country within easy reach of cnirches, schools, markets, cheap fuel and erery modern convenience. The NINETY MILLION BUSHEL \THEAT CROP of this year means IW).OUU.UX) to the farmer* of Western Canada, apart from the resuite of other grains and cattle. For adTice and information address the SUPER INTENDENT OF IMMIGRATION, Ottawa, Canada, or any authorised Government Agent. W. V. BENNETT, 801 Ntw York Lift Balding, Omaha. Nebraska. READERS thing advertised in its columns should insist upon having what they ask for, refusing all substi tutes or imitations. TIRED AND SICK YET MUST WORK “Man may work from sun to sun j but woman's work is never done,’' In order to keep the home neat and pretty, the children well dnessed and tidy, women overdo and often suffer in silence, drifting along from bad to worse, knowing well that | they ought to have help to overcome the pains and aches which daily I I make life a burden. It is to these women that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, made from native roots and herbs, uo a> . M utu vuc opi - . . _ — All A I V/ A Kl , its are depressed, the head and back MRS. AuU1. L T U in aches, there are dragging-down pains, nervousness, sleeplessness, anc reluctance to go anywhere, these are only symptoms which unless, heeded, are soon followed by the worst forms of Female Complaints. ' \ Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound keeps the feminine organism in a strong and healthy condition. It cures Inflammation, Ulceration, displacements, and organic troubles. In preparing for child-birth and to carry women safely through the Change of Life it is most efficient. Mrs. Augustus Lyon, of East Earl. Pa., writes:— Dear Mrs. Pink- I ham:—“Foralong time I suffered from female troubles and had all kinds of aches and pains in the lower part of back and sides, I could not sleep and had no appetite. Since taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and following the advice which you gave me I feel like a new woman and I cannot praise your medicine too highly.” Mrs. Pinkham’s Invitation to Women Women suffering from any form of female weakness are invited to i write Mrs Pinkham. at Lynn, Mass. Out of her vast volume of ex " perience she probably has the very knowledge that will help your case. Her advice is free and always helpful. j ■■■!!■■■■■■ fill mil.I .. »■■■■ ———I W. L.DOUGLAS $3.00 AND $3.50 SHOES TH if WnBT.Ti I W. L. DOUGLAS $4.00 GILT EDGE SHOES CANNOT BE EQUALLED AT ANY PRICE. SHOES FOR EVERYBODY AT ALL PRICES: Men’s Shoe9, 95 to 91.50. Boys’ Shoes, 9.1 to 91.35. Women’s Shoes, 94 to 91.50. Misses’ & Children’s Shoes, 93.35 to 91.00. , W. L Douglas shoes are recognized by expert judges of footwear' to be tho best in style, fit and wear produced in this country. Each part of the shoe and every detail of tho making Is looked after A and watched over by skilled shoemakers, without regard time or cost. If I could take you into my large factories at lirocsion, mass., ami snow .you now careiuuy tv. j^ougias \xtBftW\wBkw JXWr'/Am shoes are made, y«u would then rndcrstand why they hold their shape, fit better, wear longer, and are of greater value than any other makes. \V. I.. IViUirhw name and price *s ataipped on the bottom, which protects the weaivr apainst high p-l<**a iuhI inferior shoe*. I'ukr Kn Mitmtitatr. Ntfld by the best shoe dealers every where. Fast (Jotor Eyelets used exclusively. Catalog mailed free. W. L. llOtOLAS, BruekloM,Mosk ------ 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 PAIN.—PRICE IEc.—IN COLLAPSIBLE TUBES—AT ALL DRUGGISTS AND DEALERS. OR BY MAIL ON RECEIPT OF ISc. 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 not blister the most delicate skin. The pain-allaying and curative qualities of the article are wonderful. It will stop the toothache at once, and relieve Headache and Sciatica. V/e recommend it as the best and safest external counter-irritant known, also as an external remedy for pains in the chest and stomach and all Rheumatic, Neuralgic and Gouty complaints, A trial will prove what we claim for it, and it will be found to bo 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 OUR VASE LINE PAMPHLET WHICH WILL INTEREST YOU. CHESEBROUGH MFC. CO. 17 STATE STREET. NEW YORK CITY LIVE STOCK AND MISCELLANEOUS Electrotypes IN GREAT VARIETY FOR SALE AT THE LOWEST PRICES BY A.N.KELLOGC NEWSPAPER CO. 73 V Adame Street. CUCASO