The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, August 01, 1907, Image 7

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    Is Pe-ni-na Useful
for Catarrh?
Should a list of the ingredients of Pe
nmabo submitted to any medical ex
pert, of whatever school or nationality,
he would be obliged to admit without
reserve that each one of them was of un
doubted value in chronic catarrhal dis
eases, and had stood the test of many
years’ experience in the treatment of
such diseases. THEEE CAS BE HO
DISPUTE ABOUT THIS WHAT
EVER. Peruna is composed of the most
efficacious and universally used herbal
remedies for catarrh. Every ingredient
of Peruna has a reputation of its own
In the cure of some phase of catarrh.
Peruna brings to the home the COX- !
BITTED KNOWLEDGE OF SEVERAL
SCHOOLS OF MEDICINE in the treat
ment of catarrhal diseases; brings to
the home the scientific skill and knowl
edge o f the modern pharmacist; and last
but not least, brings to the home the vast
and varied experience of Dr. Hartman,
in the use of catarrh remedies, and in the
treatment of catarrhal diseases.
The fact is, chronic catarrh is a dis
ease which is very prevalent. Kany
thousand people know they have
chronic catarrh. They have visited
doctors over and over again, and been
told that their case is one of chronic
catarrh. It may be of the nose, throat,
lungs, stomach or some other internal
organ. There is no doubt as to the na
ture of the disease. The only trouble
is the remedy. This doctor has tried to
cure them. That doctor has tried to
prescribe for them.
4 BUT THEY ALL FAILED TO
BRING ANY RELIEF/
Dr. Hartman’s idea is that a catarrh
remedy can be made on a large scale,
as he is making it; that it can be made
honestly, of the purest drugs and of
the strictest uniformity. His idea is
r that this remedy can be supplied direct
ly to the people, and no more be charged
for it than is necessary for the
handling of it
No other household remedy so uni
versally advertised carries upon the
label the principal active constituents,
showing that Peruna invites the fall
inspection of the critics.
Poor Paint is Expensive
If one is rich enough to repaint his
buildings every year for the pleasure
of having a change of color scheme,
the quality of '-he paint used may cut
little figure. But if it is desirable to
cut the painting bills down to the least
amount possible per year, it is of the
utmost importance that the paint be
made of Pure White Lead and the
best of Linseed Oil. There are imita
tions in the form of alleged White
Lead, and there are substitutes in the
form of ready-prepared paints.
We guarantee our White Lead to be
absolutely pure, and the Dutch Boy
on the side of every keg is your safe
guara. uuoil ior
him.
i SEND FOR
BOOK
' "A Talk on Paint.”
gives valuable infor
mation oa the paint
subject. Sent free
upon request.
NATIONAL LEAD COMPANY
in whichever of the follow
ing cities is nearest you:
ISewYork. Boston. Buffalo. Cleveland.
Cincinnati, Chicago. St. Louis. Philadel
phia John T. Lewis ± Bros. Co..; Pittsburgh
(National Lead & Oil Co.)
lelp the Horse
No article is more useful
about the stable than Mica
Axle Grease. Put a little on ,
the spindles before you 1 'book
Up”—it will help the horse, and
bring the load home quicker.
MICA AXLE
CREASE
tifars vitll—better than any
other grease. Coats the axle
with a hard, smooth surface of
i powdered mica which reduces
| friction. Ask the dealer for
Mica Axle Grease.
ST ANSARS (Hi C3MFUIY
Good W ork
and lots of it, to
day and every day,
when you use the
Remington
1619 Farnam St., Omaha.
SORE SHOULDERS
I would like very much to personally meet every
reader of this paper who owns any horses that have
•ore shoulders and tell him about Security Gall
galve This is impossible so 1 am going to tell you
through the paper. _ .
Yon sud I Doth know tnat horses working with
more shoulders are in pain, aud that they can’t do
.. much work without running down as when they
' nre free from pain. 1 also know perfectly well that
4 cL-nrity Gall Salve will cure these shoulders, but
von do not know it. If you did y*u would buy a box
veur dealer at once and cure them up, for you
have no doubt often wished that you knew cf some
have no douot oncnwisucu ma* Ji>u aircw oi&oiuc*
♦Mna vou could rely on. You can rely absolutely on
---do its woitc every time
thing you could re:y on. z w
gnr-nHty Gall Salve, It will c— - --
S i? you Prefer to try it first I will mail you a
SLipfe free. »*«« *1U go to you
on flrtt mnll.
gsf
audSL.00 sixes. Use them for your needs;
action.
satisfaction.
WIDENING THE EIELD
MAKING GREATER OPPORTUNITY
FOR SONS OF FARMERS.
BUILDING UP THE HOME TOWN
Some Causes for Complaint Which
Can Be Obliterated by the
United Efforts of the
People.
How often do we hear it said that
the young man has not the opportun
ity that the young man of a score of
years ago had. How great is the com
plaint of trusts and combinations
which control industries to the detri
ment of the smaller ones in business,
and how often is reference made to
business concentration in the large
cities at the cost of the smaller
towns.
Innovations in business methods
have been many. It may be said that
this is an era of economical methods;
that evolution is going on continually
broadening the field fGr individual
effort and making possible the opera
tion of mammoth enterprises. There
can be no doubt as to the detrimental
effects upon small towns of this busi
ness concentration in the larger cities.
Pessimists deplore the lack of oppor
tunity for the young men of to-day.
At the same time the large corpora
tions put forth the cry that there is a
scarcity of the right kind of material
for important places of trust. How
ever this may be, there is one thing
evident, and that is, small towns being
kept from advancing narrows the
field for the young men who would
otherwise enjoy an opportunity to en
gage in business.
Traveling to the large city for em
ployment, the youth, perhaps, seeks a
clerkship at moderate wages. There
are thousands of others that he must
compete with in the race for success.
His field is narrowed. It is not often
that he has fair competition, and fa
voritism he finds is one of the obstruc
tions in his way. One of the cures
for this condition is to devise means
of enlarging the scope and importance
of %he so-called country towns.
There, is no economical reason why
the large city should have the busi
ness that rightfully belongs to the
small town. There is no saving in
buying goods at a. distant point even
though a small percentage may be
saved directly. Whenever a resident
of a community sends his money to
J some other community for the neces
| sities that he requires, he robs his
j own home town of a certain amount
of business. Employment is given to
the people of the large city instead of
: the people of the local community.
It has been estimated that more
i than 50 per cent, of the trade goes
j from some communities to larger
cities. If this trade were given to the
home town, it would immediately dou
ble its business importance and give a
corresponding increase in employment
for the people. This means that the
population of the town would in
j creased and the opportunity for en
gaging in business would be greater.
, Xot only this, but it is an established
j principle that values of farm lands to
a great extent are dependent upon the
; activity of the town near which the
farms may be located. Thus it is
plain that if the sons of farmers
would have greater opportunities open
to them for engaging in business, it
can be increased by closely adhering
to the home trade and home protec
tion principle, which widens the local
field for individual effort in a business
way.
HELPS FOR TOWN BUILDERS.
Strangers to a town form their
opinions as to its people by the ap
pearance of the business places and
the residences. In a town where the
buildings are dingy and dirty, and the
show windows of the stores are care
lessly arranged, it is evidence that
there is a lack of enterprise. It pays
the business men of a town to be care
ful as to the exterior appearances of
their places of business.
* * *
Small towns usually contain but iew
expensive residences. It matters little
how inexpensively built residences are
if the buildings are kept well painted
and the yards neat and clean. This
is evidence of the good taste of the
people. * * *
In many towns in country districts
there are hitching posts placed here
and there before the stores. It is gen
erally the case that where the hitch
ing post is found, unless the street is
well paved, there is a mud hole.
Every town that is incorporated
should have regulations as to the
placing of hitching posts indiscrimin
ately in the streets. There should be
set aside some side street that is con
venient to the business portion the
town, where the farmers and others
can hitch their teams instead of in
front of the stores.
* * *
Good sidewalks give the strangers
to a town a favorable impression of
the place, and also they are an advan
tage in many ways and may prove a
matter of economy through the pre
vention of accidents that might give
cause for damage against the town
corporation.
* * *
Nearly every small town has its
public park. It is often noticed that
these parks are little cared for. They
are public pastures and serve no good
purpose as places where the people
of the town can meet evenings for
social intercourse. People of towns
should take pride in keeping the pub
lic parks in good condition. They can
be made beauty spots with but little
effort and expense.
One of the swindles that is non’ be
ing operated throughout the country
is being worked by a number of stock
food agents. They visit a locslity,
represent to some responsible firm
er how much money can be made
through becoming an agent for the
stock food. No money is required in
advance, but they ask that an agree
ment be signed to take a certain
amount of the food. This agreeiaent
later turns np as a note, and the firm
pr navK *n Hmcg -1—
OPPRESSION IN FOREIGN LANDS.
Laborer* Reduced to 81avery Through
Systems of Land Holding.
Americans should be thankful for
the liberty that their form of govern
ment allows. It is only necessary to
study into conditions as they obtain
in many of the European countries, to
learn how enslaved are the common
classes of the people' of those coun
tries. The holding of vast estates by
the nobility has reduced the peasant
classes to a condition of serfdom.
In these countries it is also notice
able that the artisans, and the work
ers in the mills, receive wages that
are barely sufficient to buy them food
and clothing. In many of the conti
nental countries of Europe the farm
laborer receives as compensation from
$1 to $1.50 a week. In Silesa, where
there are large cotton factories, expert
weavers receive from $2.28 to $3 per
week, and women employed at like
work e^rn less than $2 per week.
Even in Old England, where labor is
paid the best of any European coun
try, in the cotton factories the scale
for labor runs from $4.86 to $10.20 a
week. Where wages are so low it is
impossible for the people to save
money, and it is necessary that they
live upon the plainest and cheapest
food in order to make ends meet
In comparison with these countries
how grand are the opportunities for
the laborer in the United States! In
America there are homes for all who
would build them. In no part of the
earth is there such reward for indi
vidual effort. It is said by some that
there is a tendency even in this free
country toward oligarchy. That the
tendency towards the concentration of
financial power and business in the
densely populated districts is a men
ace that is too lightly estimated. The
preventive remedy for this evil lies in
the hands of the masses. There is
great need or the people in general
studying more deeply into economic
subjects. The simple principles upon
which business rests appear to be lit
tle understood by the average citizens.
The remedy for the prevention of the
building up of one section of the
United States at tto cost of another
section is readily at hand, and each
and every citizen can do his part in
administering this remedy.
For many years great insurance
companies have maintained their
headquarters in large eastern cities.
Millions upon millions of dollars annu
ally were contributed to them by the
people in all parts of the United
States. The vast funds built up for
the protection of policyholders had to
seek profitable investment. The great
captains of finance evolved means for
the employment of this capital. A
dozen small industries independently
conducted would be combined into one
company, capitalized far up in the
millions and the money contributed
to the funds maintained by the insur
ance companies utilized in carrying
out the plans of the great combina
tions. Thus it can be seen how
trusts have been built up and the
money of the people used for this pur
pose, and too often to oppress the
very classes that contributed the
funds which made it possible for
bringing into existence these combina
tions.
It can be understood how essential
it is that industries of this kind be es
tablished in the different states, and
how the money contributed by the
people of a state to a company in
some other state works directly
against the contributors. What holds
good in the insurance business applies
equally to other industries. By keep
ing the earnings of a people in the
community where these earnings are
produced, is to the best interests of
the people. If it is necessary that they
be sent from the community, as far
as possible keep the earnings within
the limits of the state, for what assists
a state to greatness makes lighter the
burden of taxation upon all the people
within it and materially helps every
community within the state.
i ne student can plainly understand
how the concentration of business and
of money can be prevented by a sim
ple rule which involves the patronage
of local institutions and the retaining
in each community as far as possible
all the wealth produced within that
community. If th'is principle be close
ly adhered to it will be impossible for
any acquirement of such vast power
as will oppress the American people
as the common classes of many of the
European countries are oppressed.
Need a Good Bank.
A good bank is a valuable asset for
the small town. During these days
of prosperity people of almost every
community have a surplus amount of
money to deposit in the bank, or to
invest in a way that will bring a
| fair margin of interest. Lately a sys
tem has grown up of doing a banking
business by mail. Alleged savings
banks and investment companies in
large cities advertise widely offering
six to seven per cent, interest on de
posits. Many who have little knowl
edge of financial affairs make depos
its in .these banks. The Lincoln bank
at Oak Park. 111., was one of these in
stitutions that made great offers to
the pqople of agricultural districts in
order to secure deposits. More than
$1,000,000 were deposited by farmers
and others in this concern. Within a
| year it was declared unsound by the
United States authorities, the pro
moter of it placed under arrest and
charged with fraud. The poor de
luded depositors are not likely to re
ceive five per cent, of their deposits.
Remember that when you send your
money from your local community it
ceases to be any factor in developing
'home resources or in adding to the
wealth of the place. It is better al
ways to patronize home banks than
banks far away.
Every man is an important factor
in the community where he resides.
His influence is either good or bad.
His value as a citizen is gauged ac
cording to his works. The honest la
borer, however humble, is a valuable
acquisition to society, and so is every
other producer.
Loyalty to your local community is
A WOMAN’S SUFFERINGS.
A Dreadful Operation Seemed to Be
the Only Outcome.
Mrs. Clyde Pixley, Bridge St., Beld
ing. Mich., writes: “I had inflamma
tion of the blad
der and the trou
ble had gone so
far in five years
that my physicians
said nothing but
an operation would
cure me. Awful
bearing down
pains, backaches
and headaches tor
tured me, there
were spells of dizziness and faintness, |
the kidney secretions were like blood i
and passed with intense pain. I had |
lost 30 pounds when I began using
Doan's Kidney Pills, and was dread
fully nervous. In one week I felt bet
ter and to-day I am a well woman and
have been for a long time.”
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box.
Foster-Milbum Co.. Buffalo, N. Y.
HAD MISSED GOOD THING.
Patrick’s Joy Dimmed by Thought of
Wasted Opportunities.
Patrick, recently arrived and un
used to the ways of this country, was
accosted one day by a member of the
sporting fraternity, who offered to im
I part to him, for a modest considera- !
tion. a marvelous way to make money
Without toiling for it. All one needed,
he said, was a small amount to bet
on a certain horse that couldn't pos
sibly lose. ‘‘And yez say Oi can get
that money without working for it?”
asked the bewildered Irishman, when
the other was through explaining.
“Sure thing. All the work you got to
do is to count the mazuma.” “Ill thry
it,” said Pat. So they hied them to a
racecourse, where the sporty-looking <
gentleman placed Pat's money at odds
j of five to one. And the horse won!
Pat's joy was unbounded when he was
handed a large roll of yellow-backed
bills. Calling his new-found friend to
one side, he asked in a voice that
trembled with excitement: “Oi say,
how long has this thing been goin’
on?”
Dr. McCosh’s Impression.
1 “Ah, I have an impression!” ex
claimed Dr. McCosh, the president of
Princeton college, to the mental-phi
losophy class. “Now, young gentle
men," continued the doctor, as he
touched his head with his forefinger,
“can you tell me what an impression
; is?'
No answer.
“What; no one knows? No one can
tell me what an impression is?” ex
claimed the doctor, looking up and
down the class.
“I know,” said Mr. Arthur. “An
impression is a dent in a soft place.”
“Young gentleman," said the doctor,
removing his hand from his forehead
and growing red in the face, “you are
i excused for the day.—Judge.
Blackest of All.
The millionaire from Pittsburg was
observed to be loitering outside of the
pearly gates.
"Why don’t you hurry up and
knock?” queried a shade.
“I’m waiting for that other chap to
get ahead of me,” whispered the Pitts
burg millionaire.
| “And who is he?”
“Why, a grafter from San Francisco.
By the side of him I will seem as in
nocent as a lamb.”
—
Go Out to Welcome Bells.
Curious scenes occurred at the vil
lage of St. Keverne, Cornwall, on the
arrival of a new peal of bells for the
parish church. A large procession of
villagers, headed by the local band,
marched out to meet the bells, which
were drawn by horses on four wagons.
Men. women, and children carried
flags and wreaths and wild flowers
were laid on the bells.—London
Graphic.
auuiiimiiiiiiiimiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimimimmuiiui
Have Trouble
with Your Food?
Try
Grape-Nuts
Perfectly Cooked,
Keady to Serve,
Delicious and Healthful
“The ordinary breakfast cereal
cooked a few minutes in a half-hearted
way will in time weaken the stomach
of anything short of an ox.
“Any preparation of wheat or oats
put into water that is below the boil
ing point and cooked as mush is usu
ally served, remains a pasty, indi
gestible mass. The cells are tough
and unopened. In addition, the stom
ach of a person sensitively constituted
refuses to do anything with the pasty
mass. It is sent into the second stom
ach, the Duodenum, where in conse
quence of the long time of the first
process of digestion, is fermented and
soured. As an eminent medical man
pertinently states, the stomachs of half
the people going about the streets are
about in the condition of an old vin
egar barrel.
“Intestinal dyspepsia is the direct
consequence of such feeding.”
Knowledge of these facts and a wide
experience in the preparation and use
of cereals brought out the product
known as Grape-Nuts, manufactured
with special reference to having the
nitrogenous and starchy parts of the
grains, of which the food is composed,
perfectly and scientifically cooked at
the factory, ready for immediate use
and therefore not subject to the ma
nipulations of any cook, good or bad.
The starch of the grains, changed to
grape-sugar, can be seen glistening on
the little granules, and gives forth a
delicate sweetish taste, very palatable.
Children and adnlts obtain fine re
sults from the use of Grape-Nuts food.
It is so perfectly adapted to the wants
of the human body and so easily di
gested that many cases are on record
of nursing babes being fed very suc
cessfully on it. "There's a Reason.”
Made at the pure food factories of
the Postmii Co.. Battle Creek Mlrf,.
FIVE FALL INTO GRAVE.
Remarkable Incident That Disturbed
Solemnity of Funeral.
Instead of the accustomed quiet
which prevails at the burial of the
dead, great excitement and fear at- i
tended the burial the other day of
Michael Sereno, a prominent merchant
of Westport, when by the collapsing
of a grave the coffin and several per
sons attending the services were
hurled into a small pit.
The final prayer had been said by
the preacher, and the assistant to the
undertaker stepped to the foot of the
coffin to arrange the rope for letting
the coffin into the grave. At that mo
ment one of the pallbearers acci
dentally kicked out the crosspiece
that supported the coffin. The coffin
quickly descended into the grave, the
body going feet first. The assistant
hastened its descent by tumbling on
it. Several persons rushed to the
edge of the grave, causing the soil to
yield, and in a few seconds five per
sons were lying in the pit half covered
with dirt.
They were pulled out, the coffin was
dug out and laid flat, and after the
grave had been redug the burial was
completed.—X. Y. Press.
TWO SISTERS HAD ECZEMA.
Cuticura Cured Scalp Troubles of
Two Illinois Girls—Another Sis
ter Took Cuticura Pills.
“I must give much praise to all the
Cuticura Remedies. I used but one
cake of Cuticura Soap and one box of
Cuticura Ointment, as that was all that
was required to cure my disease. I
was very much troubled v.-ith eczema
of the head, and a friend of mine told
me to use the Cuticura Remedies,
which I did, and am glad to say that
they cured my eczema entirely. My
sister was also cured of eczema of the
head by using the Cuticura Remedies.
Another sister has used Cuticura Re
solvent and Pills and thinks they are
a splendid tonic. Miss Edith Hammer,
R. F. D. Xo. P Morrison HI.. Oct. 3, ’06.”
WAITIKu FOR THE FUN.
Youngster Had Reason to Expect
“Something Would Happen.”
An old gentleman, rather portly and
clad in a somewhat youthful suit of
light gray flannel, sat on a bench in
the park enjoying the day, relates the
Woman's Home Companion.
“What’s the matter, sonny?” he
asked a small urchin who lay on the
grass just across the walk and stared
intently. “Why don't you go and
play?”
'“Don't wanter,” the hoy replied.
“But it is not natural,” the old gen
tleman insisted, "for a boy to be so
quiet. Why don't you run about?”
“Oh, I'm just waitin’,” the little fel
low answered. “I'm just awaitin' till
you get up. A man painted that
bench about fifteen minutes ago.”
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 trou
ble can be entirely overcome by using
Defiance Starch, as it can be applied
much more thinly because of its great
er strength than other makes.
Good fcr Fishermen’s “Bait.”
The remarkable heat-insulating ef
fect of a vacuum is strikingly brought
out in the claims made for a new
sportsman's bottle. The vessel has
double walls, being really one bottle
within another, with a sealed-up in
tervening space from which the air
has been withdrawn. It is asserted
that liquid^ in this bottle can be kept
hot 48 hours in the coldest weather,
and that inced beverages will retain
their delicious coolness for weeks in
the hottest summer.
Minds of Lower Animals.
Evidence of a mind in all animals,
even the lowest, is found by F. W.
Headley. The amoeba exercises the
power of choice when it eats, and the
tree-like colony of one-celled infuso
rians, called zoothamnium, after a
time ceases to be agitated by jars re
peated at intervals, showing that it
must remember that a jar is harm
less.
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 fine
fabrics. Its great strength as a stiffener
makes half the usual quantity of Starch
necessary, with the result of perfect
finish, equal to that when the goods
were new.
New Australian Industry.
A new industry has been started in
Australian in connection with rabbits.
Nearly half a gallon of lubricating oil
has been obtained by a rabbiter at
Gilgandra, New South Wales, from
73 pounds of skins, without lessening
the commercial value of the latter.
Shake Into Your Shoes
Allen’s Foot-Ease. It curerpainful,swollen,
smarting, sweating feet. Makes new shoes
easy. Sold by all Druggists and Shoe Stores.
Don’t accept any substitute. Sample FREE.
Address A. S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y.
It is not easy to be a widow; for
she must resume all the modesty of
maidenhood without being able even
to pretend ignorance.—Mme. de Gi
rardin. _
No Headache in the Morning.
Krause's Headache Capsules for over-in
dulgence in food or drink. Druggists, 25c.
Norman Liehty Mfg. Co., Des Moines, la.
Nature is so earnest when she
makes a woman.-O. W. Holmes.
Lewis’ Single Binder — the famous
straight 5c cigar, always best quality.
Your dealer or Lewis’ Factory, Peoria, HI.
Wherever women are honored, the
gods are satisfied.—Hindu Proverb.
Mrs. Window’s Soothing Sjnp.
for children teething, softens the guns, reduces tn
flsmmsann.nlmypnm.careswtodoaUc. Bcnbouln.
_Sbakespeam has no hemftai.Jiii.Jma
*
Sheer white goods, in tact, any nn»
wash goods when new, owe much of j
their attractiveness to the way they
are laundered, this being done in a
manner to enhance their textile beau- j
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
you will be pleasantly surprised at the
improved appearance of your work.
Diversified Existence.
An old brick laboratory in Middle- 1
town, Conn., which was torn dowTn
Saturday, has been put to many uses
since its erection, in 1825. Originally
it was a gunhous#\ but it has since
been used as a hospital, an eating
house, a carpenter shop, an icehouse,
and an electrical laboratory.
Newspaper 5CG Years Old.
The oldest newspaper in the world,
the King Pao. or News of the Capital,
of Pekin, will celebrate its five hun
dredth anniversary this year.
Smokers appreciate the quality value of
Lewis' SinpV Hinder cigar. Your dealer
or Lewis’ Factory, Peoria, 111.
A short absence quickens love; a
long absence kills it.—Mirabeau.
With a smooth iron and Defiance
Starch, you can launder your shirt
waist just as well at home as the
steam laundry can; it will have the
proper stiffness and finish, there will
be less wear and tear of the goods,
and it will be a positive pleasure to
use a Starch that does not stick to the
iron._
A Calculation.
"I calculate,” says Edison, “that we
know one seven-billionth of one per
cent, about anything.”
YV. N. U., OMAHA. NO. 31, 1907.
MMftBB
'-2320 Guaranu eil untie
Infants .-Thiidren
ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT.
AVegelaWe Preparafion for As
similating the FoodawIRcgda
ting (in* Siomaciis ariBowelsaf
Promotes DigeslionJCheerful
ness and Rest.Contains neittw
Opium.Morphiae nor Mineral.
Not Narcotic.
of Old DcStMUfflWER
Aperfect Remedy forConstipa
tion. Sour Stomaeh.Diarrtra
Worms .ConvulsionsJevcrish
ness and Loss OF Seeep.
FatSiir.Se Si^naiare cf
NEW YORK.
Tor Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have
Always Bought
Bears the
Signature
of
In
Use
Far Over
Thirty Years
Exact Copy cf Wrapper.
THE CENTAUR CCKTANT. NEW *©!•* CfTY.
Nothing pleases the eye so much
as a well made, dainty
Shirt
Waist
Suit
if properly laundered.
To get the best results
it is necessary tp use
the best laundry
starch.
Defiance
Starch
gives that finish to the
clothes that all ladies
desire and should ob
tain. It is the delight
of the experienced
laundress. Once tried
they will use noother. It is pure and
is guaranteed not to injure the most
delicate fabric. It is sold by the
best grocers at toe a package. Each
package contains 16 ounces. Other
starches, not nearlv so eood. sell at
the same price per package, but they contain only 12 ounces of starch.
Consult your own interests. Ask for DEFIANCE STARCH, get it, and we
know you will never use any other.
Defiance Starch Company, Omaha, Neb.
SICK HEADACHE
(CARTERS
Tithe
IVER
PILLS.
.Positively cured by
these Little Pills.
They also relieve Dis
tress from Dyspepsia. in
digestion and Too Hearty
Eating. A perfect rem
edy for Dizziness, Nan
sea, Drowsiness, Bad
Tastein the Month, Coat
ed Tongue, Bain in the
--Side, TORPID LIVER.
They regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable.
SHALL PHI. SMALL DOSE. SHALL FRIGE.
CARTERS
TITLE
IVER
POLS.
Genuine Must Bear
Fac-Simile Signature
" , , tor it. We will
sena her absolutely free a largo trial
box of i'aiti.ie with book of mstruo
tions and genuine testinionir.ir Send
your name and address on a postal card.
Mt A mF^pl.Xgil RSI cleanses
EUs £1 W IS il “US ST tenia
wr DM S [I K'Gl inucous
g% ffi {§ §ft| -W.m a m -
, .. ~ ■ brine af
fections, such as nasal catarrh, peWc
catarrh and inflammation caused byfeini.
mne ills; sore eyes, sore .throat and
mouth, by direct focal treatment Its cur*
atiyd power over these troubles Is extra*
ordinary and gives immediate relief.
Thousands of women are using and reo
ommending it every day. fie cunts at
druggists orby maiL B.<inember,howeYer,
IJ COSTS TOO KOTBiCNC TOISm!