The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, March 28, 1907, Image 3

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    AT THE
TELEPHONE
"Hello, central!"
"Hello!” Click, click, click, click!
Central, if you please, give me the
Hotel Jamb.”
"What number?” Click, click, click.
“I don't know the number.” Click
click.
"All right, I'll get Information for
you.”
Buzz, buzz, buzz, buzz. Central on
the track of Information. Wild voice
on cross wire:
“What number is this? What?
What?” Click!
Buzz, buzz, buzz, buzz! Information
gone to the tall timbers. Central in
hotfoot pursuit. Phonograph.
“Central! I want the Hotel Jamb
Have you forgotten?”
"No! No! It's all right. Hold the
wire. Get Information for you. In a
minute!"
"Buzz, buzz. buzz, buzz! The hoofs
of Central's horse in pursuit of In
iormation. Information hiding behind
a tall tree. Central almost upon her,
but not quite. Deep bass voice sing
ing.
Cilck, click, click, click. Wild un
known voice:
"Central! That number! I want
that number!” Click, click, click. Pho
nograph.
"Central! Will you give me the Ho
tel Jamb?”
"All right. I'm getting Information
for you!”
Rat a tat tat. Rat a tat tat! In
formation's horse's hoofs at the door.
Click, click, click, click! Informa
tion's high heels as she leaps from
the back of her high horse.
Buzz, buzz, buzz, buzz! Triumph
ant voice of Central:
"Here she is!” Click, click, buzz,
buzz.
Information in a voice tired from
her long wanderings:
"Well, what is it?”
"The Hotel Jamb.”
"Do you know the number?" Voice
very tired.
"If I knew the number. Information.
I wouldn't have asked for you. I
would have looked it up myself.”
Information's voice still more tired.
"What street is it on?"
"Steenth street.”
"What avenues is it between?”
"Between Fifth and Sixth avenues.”
"On the north side of the street or
the south?"
"On the north side of the street.”
"And you don't know the num
ber?"
"Information! If I knew the number
1 wouldn't—”
Information quickly:
“Very well. I’ll try to find it for you,
but it's a pity you didn't know the
number.”
“Buzz, buzz, buzz, buzz. Click,
click, click. Singing of a canary bird.
Buzzzzz, buzz, buzz, buzz! Sharp
voice:
Don t you tell me! Click!
Click, click, click, click. Phono
graph.
“Central! The Hotel Jamb!”
Central, hurriedly: “All rigfct! I've
found Information. She's looking it
up for you.”
Buzz, buzz, buzz, buzz! Strange
cross-wire voice:
"Central! That number!”
Central: “All right. They're busy.
They're busy, I say. Shall I call
you?”
Strange voice, pitifully: “I've been
waiting an hour!”
Central: “I say they're busy. Shall I
call you?”
"Central! The Hotel Jamb!”
Central: “All right. Information is
looking up for you. Here she is now.
Here's Information!”
Click, click, click! Information’s
feet approaching. Buzz, buzz!
Information: “Was it the Hote'
Jamb you wanted?”
"The Hotel Jamb.”
“On Steentb street?”
“Yes. On Steenth street.”
"Between Fifth and Sixth avenues?”
"Between Fifth and Sixth avenues.”
Click, click, click! Fire alarm! Beh
ringing! Phonograph!
Information: “I have found the Ho
tel Jamb. The telephone number is
546789321 Morningside. Shall I con
nect you?”
“Good heavens! Information, if I
hadn't wanted you to . . . what would
have ijeen the . .
Click, click, click, click! Phono
graph . . . Click!
Voice: “Well, this is the Hotel
Jamb.”
Woman’s Chief Need.
One reason why the average woman
wears out and grows old and plain is
that, through a mistaken idea of duty
she lays out for herself at the begin
ning of married life a scheme of duty
of which every hour is filled with
work, says a correspondent This she
follows religiously for years, feeling
that she has done her duty. She, how
ever, soon becomes merely a machine.
Can any woman keep brightness, orig
inality of thought, or even good looks,
with such a life? And. without those
things, how can she keep her husband
and children full of loving admiration?
Constant association with others ol
her own age, with her children and
their friends, and an occasional period
of recreation is what the average wo
man requires to make her attractive.
Shell Startled English Village.
The little Sussex fishing village of
Selsey, famous for its lobsters, and
lying on the south coast a few miles
from Chichester, had a startling ex
perience recently. A shell from a war
ship in the channel whistled over the
houses and falling in a meadow just
beyond the limits of the village with
a loud explosion startled all the inhab
itants. The projectile came to the
ground within 100 yards of the Fisher
mens Joy inn. Mr. H. A. Smith,
brother of the innkeeper, was thrown
down by the concussion. The shell in
exploding plowed the earth to a depth
of five or six feet over a space of nine
or ten yards, and became embedded in
the soil.
Opportunities.
A good many of the opportunities
that seem to be golden are merely
gold-plated.
OVBR *1,000 A YEAR AND‘'LIVING.”
That Is the Story of a Michigan Farm
er Who Lives in Western Canada.
Olds, Alberta, Dec. 10, 1906.
Mr. M. V. Mclnnes, Detroit, Michij^n:
Dear Sir and Friend—It will be four
years next May since I came to Olds,
and have lived here ever since.
Since I came here wheat has run
from 25 to 45 bu. per acre, oats from
65 to 115, that I know of. I raised
that last year, 115 bu. to the acre of
the finest oats I ever saw, and oats
that I sowed 31st day of May this
year went 721,*. to the acre and weigh
ed 41 lbs. to the bushel. My barley
went 40 bu. last year and 50 this year,
and was not sown until the latter part
of May. I had 3 acres of potatoes this
year and sold 700 bushels and put 275
bu. in the cellar, and no bugs to pick, j
We have a fine Government Cream- j
ery at Olds. Our cows made $41 per
head and 1. didn't feed any grain; j
only prairie hay. so you see we are do- :
ing well. We have the patent for
our homestead now and am very
thankful that we came to Alberta. '
We have made a little over $1,000
each year besides making our living. |
l would not #co back to Michigan to j
live for anything. If I had my choice j
af a ticket to Olds or a 40-acre farm I
in Michigan I would take the ticket j
and in two years I could buy any of !
j them 40-acre farms. This is the coun
| try for a poor man. as well as a man
j with money.
I will close, thanking you for our
: prosperity. I remain yours truly,
(Signed) OTTO YETTING.
Olds, Alberta. Canada. Box 159. |
Information as to how to secure j
j tow rates to the free grant lands of
Western Canada can be secured of j
| any Canadian Government agents.
Hard to Believe.
“I saw the rabbit coming through !
; the air, and the next moment it ap
! peared under my coat," said a man I
who was charged in an English police
j court with stealing a rabbit from a j
i shop. Furthermore, he swore that 1
• that day he had taken only two
classes of beer.
DURING THIS MONTH.
Excellent Advice Which Our Readers
Will Benefit By.
Now is the time to get the rheu
[ matic poisons and foul acids from the
blood and system, states au eminent I
authority, who says that Rheumatism
and Kidney trouble are caused by the j
blood, which often becomes sour from ,
excessive acids, and also tells what to
do to make it pure and healthy.
Get from any good prescription phar
macy one-half ounce Fluid Extract
Dandelion, one ounce Compound Kar
eon, three ounces Compound Syrup
Sarsaparilla. Mix by shaking in a
bottle and take a teaspoonful aftei
meals and at bedtime.
Just try this simple blood cleaner j
and tonic at the first sign of Rheu
matism. or if your back aches or you
feel that the Kidneys are not acting
right. Any one can easily prepare !
' this mixture at home.
______ |
BUTTON THEIR OWN WAISTS.
New York Women Have Surmounted
Great Obstacle.
Marvelous as it may seem, New
York women have lately discovered a !
way of fastening their waists up the
back without calling for assistance.
Thought not lacking in generosity, they
became so tired of the outstretched
palm of the chambermaids that they
now feel that it is time to guard their
pockets. The Gotham woman discov- !
ered that if she put her blouse on j
hind side before, with the sleeves :
hanging free, it could be fastened |
from top to bottom, with the excep- j
tion of the hooks at the neck, and
then turned around and the arms
slipped into the sleeves without un- 1
duly straining the fastenings. So sim- |
pie! So strange that no one had
thought of it before. Or is it possible 1
other women have used the pan and j
meanly kept it to themseltes? Will
the waist that buttons in the back
now have a new lease of life?
The Small Pharisee.
A clergyman's daughter, before be
?ng put to bed. uttered this somewhat
remarkable prayer: "And, dear Lord, i
this afternoon I saw out on the cold j
sidewalk a poor little girl, and she
had no shoes or stockings on. and—
and"— (followed by a silence, as
though the little mind were wrestling
with the problem), she concluded:
"but it’s none of our business, is it,
God?”
—
GOOD NATURED AGAIN.
—
Good Humor Returns with Change to !
Proper Food.
“For many years I was a constant
sufferer from indigestion ani nervous- \
ness amounting almost to prostration," '
writes a Montana man.
“My blood was impoverished, the
vision was blurred and weak, with j
moving spots before my eyes. This i
was a steady daily condition. I grew
Ill-tempered, and eventually got so
nervous I could not keep my books
posted, nor handle accounts satisfac
torily. I can’t describe my sufferings.
“Nothing I ate agreed wi.h me, till
one day I happened to notice Grape
Nuts in a grocery store and bought
% package, out of curiosity to know
what it wan.
“I liked the food from the very first,
eating it with cream, and now I buy
it by the case and use it daily. I
soon found that Grape-Nuts food was
supplying brain and nerve force as
nothing in the drug line ever had done
or could do.
“It wasn't long before I was re
stored to health, comfort and happi
ness. Through the use of Grape-Nuts
food my digestion had been restored,
my nerves are steady once more, my
eyesight is good again, my mental fac
ulties are clear and acute, t.nd I have
become so good-natured that my
friends are truly astonished at the
change. I feel younger snd better
than I have for 20 years. No amount
of money would induce me to surren
der what I have gained through the
use of Grape-Nuts food.” Name given
by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich.
“There’s a reason.” Read the little
book, “The road to WelPrillo,” inpkgs.
OPEN THE WINDOWS
FRESH AIR ESSENTIAL TO PRE
VENT CONSUMPTION.
—
Dangerous to Neglect Even an Ordin
ary Cough or Cold—Simple Rem
edy Is Effective.
“Good food, fresh air and rest; keep
your windows open winter and sum
mer.”
So we are told by the great scient
ists who are certainly doing wonders
. j reducing the death rate from Tuber
culosis. They also warn us not to neg- >
lect a cold or cough, and it is most im- I
portant that this advice be followed.
While the cough or cold may not bring
consumption, it is better to be on the
safe sice and take no chances.
Here is a simple remedy that will
break up a cold in twenty-four hours,
and cure any cough that is curable:
Glycerine, two ounces; Virgin Oil of
Pine (Pure), one-half ounce; good
Whisky, a half pint Shake well and
use in teaspoonful doses every four 1
hours. The ingredients can be secured
from any good prescription druggist at
small cost, but must be pure to effect
the desired results. For this reason it
is always best to purchase the ingredi
ents separately and prepare the mix
ture at home.
Virgin Oil of Pine (Pure) should be
purchased only in the original half
ounce vials put up for druggists to
dispense. Each vial is enclosed in a
round wooden case, with engraved
wrapper, with the name—Virgin Oil of
Pine (Pure); guaranteed under the
Food and Drug Act, June 30. 1906.
Prepared only by Leach Chemical Co.,
Cincinnati. O.—plainly printed there
on. Imitations and oils sold in bulk i
pay dealers larger profits, but they are i
dangerous to health and should never I
be used.
FOUND HE COULD MAKE TIME.
One Call for Physician That Met with
Quick Response.
Life is such a constant rush to a
well-known physician that to secure a
little recreation he has recourse to
ruses. A visitor called one night, and
began a speech to the servant:
"I want the doctor to come over as
quickly as he can.”
“He can't do it!” the servant an- '
swered. “He left orders that he was t
so busy that unless it was absolutely i
a matter of life and death he couldn’t
go out at all this evening.”
“But," said the caller, “it isn’t ill
ness at all.”
“What then?”
“We want him to come over and
take a hand in a game of whist.”
“Oh, that’s different.”
The servant disappeared, and reap- |
peared a moment later.
“The doctor says he'll be over in ten
miutes, sir,” he announced.
FIFTEEN YEARS OF ECZEMA. 1
_
Terrible Itching Prevented Sleep—
Hands. Arms and Legs Affected j
—Cuticura Cured in 6 Days.
“I had eczema nearly fifteen years.
The affected parts were my hands,
arms and legs. They were the worst
in the winter time, and were always
itchy, and I could not keep from
scratching them. I had to keep both
hands bandaged all the time, and at
night I would have to scratch though
the bandages as the itching was so
severe, and at times I would have to
tear everything off my hands to
scratch the skin. 1 could not rest or
sleep. I had several physicians treat
me but they could not give me a
permanent cure nor even could they
stop the itching. After using the
Cuticura Soap, one box of Cuticura
Ointment and two bottles of Cuticura
Resolvent for about six days the
rtching had ceased, and now the sores
have disappeared, and I never felt
better in my life than I do now.
Edward Worell, Band 30th U. S. In
fantry, Fort Crook, Nebraska.”
Coincident Inventions.
Almost at the same time two dif
ferent inventors in different places
have announced their success with
electrical devices for seeing at a dis
tance. They are J. B. Fowler and Wil
liam H. Thompson. In Fowler's device
four wires are required to accom
plish the combined effect of distant
vision and hearing. Details of the
operation are withheld, however, on
the plea of getting out a patent. Each
inventor uses the name “Televue.”
TWO YEARSJN BED
Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills Cured Stub
born Rheumatism When Other
Treatment Gave No Relief.
Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills have been '
curing the most stubborn cases of
rheumatism for nearly a generation
and thousands of grateful patients
have given testimony that cannot be
ignored.
Mr. Robert Odbert, a machinist, liv
ing at 201 Cameron Street, Detroit,
Mich., had a very distressing experi
ence with rheumatism for about two
years. He makes the following state
ment: "About the year 1887 1 felt the
effects of rheumatism which gradually
grew worse until I was compelled to
give up work for a time. The years
of '97 and ’98 I was confined to my bed
most of the time. I was under doctors’
treatment but found no relief. My
legs were swollen from the hips down
ward and red blotches appeared all
over them. Frequently they pained
me so that I had to bind them tightly
with strips of linen. This sometimes
relieved the pain hut at other times
failed to do so. At times I had to
crawl to my work, using two crutches.
During these spells I suffered greatly
from pain around my heart which I at
tributed to the rheumatism.
“At last my mother wrote me and
asked me to try Dr. Williams’ Pink
Pills. I did s and in a short time I
found myself getting better and have
had no trouble since. I may here add
that I consider myself perfectly cured.
I have not had the least sign of the
disease since and feel better now than
I ever did. For these reasons I
recommend Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills
to any one affected the same as I was.”
Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills are sold by
all druggists, or sent by mail, postpaid
on receipt of price. 50 cents per box,
six boxes for $2.50, by the Dr. Wil
iams Medicine Co., Schenectady, N. Y.
MAN OF DELICATE NERVES.
Rosenthal, the Pianist, Made Much
Trouble in Hotel.
Rosenthal, the pianist, is one ol
those entitled to have his crankiness
termed "the eccentricities of genius,”
says the San Francisco Chronicle.
When he inspected his rooms at the
Majestic upon his arrival very late the
other night, he went softly to the ad
joining doors, and placing his ears
close to the cracks, exclaimed In
broken English, "Zgodd, no sounds
pass thees.” After nodding his ap
proval of the grand piano and the fur
niture he frowned at the tan-colored
window shades. “Must be green.” He
was assured that a change would be
made especially for him the next day.
At five o’clock in the morning Ros
enthal, clad only in his pajamas, came
scurrying excitedly down stairs and
into the office, where the drowsy
night clerk was nodding at the desk.
“Ze street cars! Noise! Must
stopped! Nervous me! I cannot
sleep.”
The clerk hurriedly sent, for Mana
ger Gustav Mann, and Mann spent
two hours telling Rosenthal funny
stories in German trying to divert his
mind while the clerk was upstairs
squaring the mangement for waking
a guest on the Gough street side and
ordering him to move at once to the
Sutter street side as a gas pipe had
burst under the floor and had to be re
paired!
People appreciate the delicate taste and
natural action of Gartieid Tea, the mild
herb laxative, llest ior liver, kidneys and
bowels. Guaranteed under the Pure Food
and Drugs Law.
What we have been makes us what
we are.—George Eliot.
Smokers appreciate the quality value of
Lewis' Single Kinder c-igar. Your dealer
or Lewis’ Factory, Peoria, 111.
Reticence has been responsible for
many a lamentable failure.
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup.
For children teething, softens the guns, reduces li>
LammKt.oii. allays pain, cares wind colic. 25c a bottle.
K.’s about all some people can do to
keep from being done.
PE-RU-NA A MEDICAL COMPOUND
In any medical compound aa much depends upon the manner in which it Is
compounded as upon the ingredients used.
First, there must be a due proportion of the ingredients. Each drug in the ,
pharmacopeia has its special action. To combine any drug with other drugs
that have slightly different action, the combination must be made with strict
; reference to the use for which the compound is intended. The drugs may be
well selected as to their efficacy, but the compound ENTIRELY SPOILED BY
THE PROPORTION in which they are combined.
It takes years and years of experience to discover this proportion. There
is no law of chemistry, of pharmacy, by which the exact balance of proportion
can be determined. EXPERIENCE IS THE ONLY GUIDE.
In compounding a catarrh remedy Dr. Hartman has had many years’ ex
perience. In the use of the various ingredients which compose the catarrh
remedy, Peruna, he has learned, little by little, how to harmonize the action of
each ingredient, how to combine them into a stable compound, how to arrange
them into such nice proportions as to blend the taste, the operation and the
chemical peculiarities of each several ingredient in order to produce a pharma
ceutical product beyond the criticism of doctors, pharmacists or chemists.
WE REPEAT, THAT AS MUCH DEPENDS ON THE WAY IN WHICH ;
THE DRUGS ARE COMBINED AS DEPENDS UPON THE DRUGS THEM
SELVES.
The compound must present a stability which is not affected by changes ot
temperature, not affected by exposure to the air, not affected by age. It must '
be so combined that it will remain just the same whether used in the logging or
mining camps of the northwest or the coffee plantations of the tropics.
A complete list of the ingredients of Peruna would not enable any druggist [
or physician to reproduce Peruna. It is the skUl and sagacity by which these
ingredients are brought together that give Peruna much of its peculiar claims as
an efficacious catarrh remedy.
However much virtue each ingredient of Peruna may possess, the value of
the compound depends largely upon the manner and proportion in which they
are combined. The right ingredients, put together rightly, is the only way a
medical compound can be made of real value.
|U. S. NAVY
eniists for four years young men of good
character and Bonnd physical condition be
tween the ages of 17 and 25 as apprentice sea
men; opportunities for advancement: pay
$16 to $70 a month. Electricians, machinists,
blacksmiths, coppersmiths, yeomen iclerks',
carpenters, shipctters. firemen, musicians,
cooks, etc .between 21 and bb years, enlisted
in special rating!" with suitable pay: hospital
appren: ees 16 to 28 years. Retirement on
tnree-fourths pay and allowances after oU
years service. Applicants must be American
citizens. i
First clothing outfit free to recruits. Upon
discharge travel allowance 4 cents per miie to
place or enlistment. Bonos four months pay
and increase in pay upon re-enlistment within
four months of discharge. Offices at I.ioco.n
and Hastings. Nebraska. Also, curing winter,
at I>cs Mo n**« and 8ioox Citv. Iow%. Address
NAVY RECRUITING STATION.P.0.Bid*..OMAHA
DEFIANCE Cold Water Starch
■lakes laundri work a pleasure. 19 or. pk*. 10c.
MRS. A. M. HAGERMANN
ALL WOMEN
SUFFER
from the same physical disturbances,
and the nature of their duties, in
many cases, quickly drift them into
the horrors of all kinds of female
complaints, organic troubles, ulcera
tion, falling and displacements, or
perhaps irregularity or suppression !
causing backache, nervousness, ir
ritability, and sleeplessness.
\\ omen everywhere should re
member that the medicine that holds
the record for the largest number of
actual cures of female ills is
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound
made from simple native roots and herbs. For more than thirty years
it has been helping women to be strong, regulating the functions per
fectly and overcoming pain. It has also proved itself invaluable in pre
paring for child birth and the Change of Life.
Mrs. A. M. Fageriuann, of Bay Shore, L. I., writes:—Dear Mrs.
Pinkham:—“I suffered from a displacement, excessive and painful
functions so that I had to lie down or sit still most of the time.
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has made me a well woman so
that I am able to attend to my duties. I wish every suffering woman
would try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and see what relief
it will give them.”
Mrs. Pinkham’s Standing Invitation to Women
Women suffering from any form of female illness are invited to write
Mrs. Pinkham. at Lvnn, Mass, for advice She is the Mrs. Pinkham who
has been advising sick women free of charge for more than twenty
years, and before that she assisted her mother-in-law Lydia E. Pink
ham in advising. Therefore ahe is especially well qualified to guide
sick women back to health.
I
Canadian Government
Free Farms
Over 200.000 American
farmers who have set
tled in Canada during
the past few years testi
fy to the fact that Cana
da is, beyond question,
the greatest farming laud iu the world.
OVER NINETY
MILLION BUSHELS!
of wheat from the harvest of 1906 means good
money to the farmers of Western Canada when
the world has to be fed. Cattle Raising, Dairy
ing and Mixed Farming are also profitable call
ings. Coal, wood and water in abundance; !
churches and schools convenient; markets easy
of access. Taxes low.
For ad vice and information address the Super
intendent of Immigration, Ottawa. Canada! or
anv authorized Canadian Government Agent.
W. V. BENNETT, SOI New York Life BuiMmf,
Osaka, Nebraska.
INVENTIONS NEEDED
toatop wreck* and nave labor on farm*. M A SO\
FEY WICK Al I-A WHENCE* Box
C. Wash last sa. U. C. 1*4. 1§€1. Booklet fre*. Be*i rvterviaec*.
nrriAurr ctarpii to work with mt
ULrmniiC omriun Marches ciotnea n'cet;,
W. N. U., OMAHA, NO. 13, 1907.
Of Skin Tortured
Disfigured Babies
SHOULD
KNOW €
THAT 4
Warm baths With
And gentle anointings with
Cuticura,the great Skm Cure,
afford instant relief, permit
rest and sleep, and point to a
speedy cure of torturing, dis
figuring eczemas, rashes,
ftchings, and irritations of
infants and children when all
else fails. Guaranteed abso
lutely pure, and may be used
from the hour of birth.
Sold throughout wo.Id. Depot*: London. 27
Charterhouse Sq.; Pa'to. 6 Hue de la Pa lx; Austra
lia. R. Town* A Oo., 8y Iner; India, E. K. PaulJCfcl
cutta; China. Hong Kong Drug Co.: Japan. Martiya.
Ltd.. Tokto: Russia. Ferretn (App-ka). Moscow;
South Africa. Lennon, L d.. Cape Town. etc.: L .S.A.,
Potter Drug A Cneoi. Corp .sole Pro os.. Boston,
aarPostrtrte. Cuticum Book on Care of the skin.
MONEYMAKING
PROPOSITION
NEBRASKA and IOWA MERCHANTS—We
have decided to appoint a dealer in every Ne*
braskaand Iowa town ; liberal proposition eA
bracing three improved EdI«on phonographs te
first applicant. NEBRASKA CYCLE CO.,
Factory Jobbers. OMAHA, NEBRASKA.
DO YOU SMOKE A PIPE?_—^
WHAT KIND OF TOBACCO DO YOU SMOKE?
IF YOU HAVE NOT TRIED QBOID G™#T-rD
i You have never gotten that solid comfort which a good
“pipe smoke ” should give a man.
QBOID Will WOT BITE THE TONGUE
IT IS THE ORIGINAL OF THIS STYLE TOBACCO
It has an elegant Aroma which no other pipe tobacco possesses, and
its smooth, delightful flavor and free smoking qualities are the results
of years of careful study and experimenting.
SPECIAL OFFER
Tobacco is now
yDV/lU on almost
everywhere, and hundreds of thous
ands of boxes were consumed
last year, and it ia our pur
pose to place QBOIO in reach I
of every pipe smoker in this
country, and to that end we
make the following offer:
If vour dealer does not
handle QBOID Tobacco, we
will send you any size box,
postage paid, upon receipt ot regnwr price—via: prices, if ox. tin
box, 10c.; 3§ oz. tin box, 20c.; 8 oz. tin box, 45c. and 16 oz. fancy tin
box, 90c. Money refunded to any dissatisfied purchaser.
Cut out this advertisement and send irith money order or stamps.
Write your name and address plainly, and address to
LARUS & BRO. CO., Manufacturer*, Richmond, Va.
W. L. DOUGLAS
$3.00 AND $3.50 SHOES Tm^WOKJ) |
». L DOUGLAS $4.00 GILT EDGE SHOES CANNOT BE EQUALLED AT ANT PRICE.
SHOES FOR EVERYBODY AT AU. PRIDES:
Men'. Shoe., S5 to SUM). Bnjl’ Shoes, *3 to SI.ah. Women’.
Shoe., 04 to •l.SO. MiueA* £ Children’. Shoes, K.SS to Sl.OO. .
W. L. Douglas shoes are recognized by expert judges of footwear’
to be the best in style, fit and wear produced in this country. Each
part of the shoe and every detail of the making 5s looked after A
and watched over by skilled shoemakers, without regard to^f
time or cost. If I could take you into my large factories at^Hg
Brockton, Mass., and show you how carefully W. L. Douglas V
811 oes are inane, you wmuu men umiersiaDU wi.y iney noia tneir snape, nt Better,
wear longer, and are of greater value than any other makes.
W. I.Dooala* name and price i* ntampod on the boltoir, which protecta tlic wearer asainat blab
priees and interior too**. Tab*.»• miMUtate. Sold by the beu. shoe dealer* erarjwbare
Fagt Coltr £gtleti uted elctanrelg. Catalog matted free. W. 1.. UOIltlLan, ftrocktau.Haos.
QALL-STONE CURE. “Craemer’sCalculus Cura”
" , w • ■ Is a Certain Remedy FOR GALL STONKS,
Stones ill the Kidney*. Stones .n the Urinary Bladder or Gravel. Biliousness. Sallow Complexion.
Jaundice and ail Stomach Tmuli.es resulting from Biliousness. Write Tor etroalar.
WM. CSAIHES, 4*00 h'ertk Grand Arenac. ST. LOUIS, U
I For Girls & Women
Ton Need Cardui
At every age, after entering womanhood, girls and women need
the strengthening, building, pain-relieving assistance of Wine of Cardui.
It will carry you over the rough places, ease your hard days and
increase the comfort and pleasure of living.
What its millions of users think of it, is well expressed in these
words of Mrs. Rosa Lee Cole, of Smithten, Mo., who writes: “I suf
fered from female troubles for 7 years. I had pain, low down in my
stomach, my feet hurt so 1 could not stand, and 1 was so weak and
nervous 1 could hardly do anything. 1 was just sick all the time. At
last I wrote you for advice and you recommended Wine of Cardui,
which 1 took according to your directions. I have now talon
5 bottles of Wine of Cardui, and am feeling better than in the past 7
years. My feet and stomach do not hurt, my female troubles have
gone, I am getting stouter and stronger, can do all my housework, work
in the garden and tend to 260 little chickens.”
Wine oif Cardui acts directly upon the sick or disordered womanly
organs or functions. It is a natural, scientific, female tonic. It con
tains no dangerous minerals, or other deleterious ingredients, but is
purely vegetable, perfectly harmless and beneficial to young and old.
Every reliable druggist sells it,in $1 bottles. Try it
f * V;
Wine of Cardui