The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, January 30, 1908, Image 7

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    irony of Life.
“It is sad to realize,” said a ■woman,
“that those who love us most usually
please us least, while those who please
us most don’t love us at all.”
Uses of Adversity.
The gem cannot be polished with
out friction, nor man perfected with
out adversity.—Bishop Hall.
If.
Many a man who loves his neighbor
as himself would be in serious trouble
if his wife knew it.
Uncle Allen.
“Speaking of the price of success,”
mused Uncle Alien Sparks, “I’ve no
ticed that ‘getting ahead’ means, as
a general thing, getting a bald head.”
YOUR EYES
Don't trust your
_ evps to traveling
mi' *■ optlrians ur puciv
peddlars. We are the oldest manufactur
ing opticians in the state—grind our own
lenses—make our own frames. Consulta
tion free. Glasses fitted. $1.00 up. Hate
son Optical Co.. ICxelusive Opticians, Jl.'i
So. 16th St. Omaha. Factory on prem
ises. Wholesale and Retail.
The different Indian tribes in Mex
ico do not mingle much and seldom
intermarry.
Mingle a little gaiety wilh your
grave pursuits.—Horace.
When a man doesn't care a wrap,
he generally gets the sack.
Omaha Directory
NEBRASKA IOWA Si
Do a General Grain Business
Terminal elevator at Omaha. We
solicit consignments; we buy grain:
we sell corn to feeders; we sell seed
oats; we sell choice milling wheat.
/ Write, wire or phone us.
CARD CASE FREE
Mail me 35c for 3
dozen Cards with
your name Fancy
Written thereon
andgret this Aluminum Card Case FREE.
J. WILLIAMS. 873 Brandeis Blk.. Omaha. Neb.
FOR SALE
FOR SALE
1760 acres, solid body of
land, improved, central
$23.00 per acre.
?12 acres, well improved,
onlv three miles from
South Omaha; $:•<>.00 per acre.
FOR SALE
Bargain. Pric*
per year.
Address JOHN
Corner lot two houses on
business street. < »maha.
$6,500.00. Rental $000.00
L. McCAGUE. Omaha.
6%to 10% Interest On Your Money
That i* what vnu can pet by buYlnK
OMAHA REAL ESTATE
We hav^e niany good^ $|.Q00 tO $50,000
That we will be p>ett?ed to show you acy time, nothing
safer. l»etter or more substantia!.
HASTINGS and HEYOEN
1704 Farnam St. Omaha. Nebr.
IF YOU
. have never used
I the
CHAMPION
SCREW CALK
with a Black
Diamond Steel
V-«*ntCP iiii iiJr w luroupn. jou never
used the best C;ilk on the market. At»k your
blacksmith to show it to you.
HA “SQUARE DEAL” ON
9DES AND FUR§
■Want ‘20.000 Muskrat** and l.ono mink at once. No. 1
Large I tats W-SS*-. Kits 7t\ No. 1 Mink. I.arge §5.75.
"Write for price list on hide- and fore which is now
readv. Tag*and full Information cheerfully furnished.
D. B. MCDONALD HIDE & FUR CO
Office and Warehouse. 5i3 So. 13th Street
Reference- Omaha National Bank OMAHA
< ornuiercial Agencies Nebr.
I)rs. Hailey & Mach. The |
— -- 3d tio*;r. Pax
. Block, cor. ltith I
id Furnam 1
s.. Omaha. Nm. Best equipped
J>ental office in the Middle West. Latest appliances.
High grade Dentistry. Reasonable prices.
DENTISTS
Do You Drink Coffee
Why put the cheap, rank, bitter flavored coffee *n
your stomach when pure GE R M AN- AM ER iCAH
COFFEE rosts no more; insist on having it. Your
grocer sells it or can get It.
MATTHEWS
Tllk OKIklML 1'tlM.KSS
DENTIST
2S veara inOmaha. Neb.. Room 4. Bushman Block. K. E.
comer lGth and Douglas Si.**. Good act teeti . N.ofl; gold
crowns. N-oO: bridge t**etb. *4. ■*): Amalgam III lingo. 50c.;
silver fillings* 75c: gold fillings*. •! and up. M'lKk <-l AK
A.MEEU 10 IKAks. Bring tnisadvertisement w ith yoa
$5 Per Day
AND EXPENSES
made by our agent® bo
. _ liclting for us. Male and
Female. Chicago Picture and Frame Co.,
Manufacturers and Wholesalers of Pictures. Frames,
Portraits. Art Novelties and Glass, 606 south 13th
St., Omaha. Write this week.
Largest stock in the West
Montello Granite a speci
alty. All lettering done by
pneumatic tool*;. First-class work and lowest
prices. Correspondence solicited. Give us a call
J F. BLOOM & COMPANY, 1815-1817 FARNAM ST.. OMAHA.'
YOU CAN
HAVE A
cents in st:
ors wanted
VIOLIN FREE °^cDHf0RGE
imps for particulars. Solicit
eve* vwhere. TWENTIETH CENTURY
CORRESPOKDEKCE MUSIC CO.. 1611 Farcarr. St.. Omaha.
SHIP grain DIRECT
Farmers can save t*> t*>8u»0a rar by shipping their ow n
grain to us for sale. A. L. Davis. Gordon. Neb., saved
tl» on one ear of barlev. Write t"day f«»r --Shipper*'
Guide with full directions. Address F armers’ Grain
Co. 781 1-2 Brandies Bldg., Omaha, Men.
ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES A„„a."rg,u.
RAILWAY. STEAM AMD GENERAL
SUPPLIES
JOSEPH R. LEHMER, 1218 Farnam, Omaha
, DON’T Youa "TBS
By having them experimented on bv trav
eling fakers. Come to us for Free Exami
nation. H. J. PENFOLD & CO.. Loading
Scientific Opticians. 2 408 Farnam, Omaha,
"”When¥ OMAHA Stop at the
Iler Grand Hotel
Good Rooms SI.OO Per Day
Meals at Reasonable Prices
■Iiv Alin RDAIW Nebraska hit »»o grain co.
HA I Hnu UiiniM 707-93randies'Bldg.
Omalia. E. A. Nordstrom, Manaper. ’Phone
or wire u*. Members Omaha Grain Exchange.
Carload Consignments Our Specialty.
OIL MEAI Cotton Seed Tan
kage and Alfalfa Feeds
J. H. CONRAD, 724T26 Omaha ciniln Exchange.
Established ISM. Ton and nr l.*ds. Consignmenti
Itralu solicited. Member t Imabs (trail. Eicbamt*.
IF IT'S A
JOHN DEERE
IT’S RIGHT
NEWS NOTES OF INTEREST FROM
VARIOUS SECTIONS.
ULI. SUBJECTS TOUCHED UPON
Religious, Social, Agricultural, Polit
ical and Other Matters Given
Due Consideration.
A Taft organization has been formed
at Peru.
Hastings is discussing the 6 o’clock
closing movement.
Stock sheds, valued at several hun
dred dollars, were burned at Geneva.
Rev. Mr. Buechner has tendered his
resignation as pastor of the St. Paul
Lutheran church at Blue Hill and asks
to be released from his duties in about
three months.
The annual Johnson county farmers’
institute will be held in Tecumseh on
February 11. 12. 13 and 14. Six state
speakers will be in attendance and
there will be a corn show.
The smallpox condition at the state
industrial school at Kearney is much
improved, and it is thought that in a
short time the Quarantine will be
raised. There were three cases of
genuine smallpox.
Joseph M. Shively, deputy land com
missioner. has announced his candi
dacy for land commissioner, to suc
ceed his chief, H. M. Eaton. Mr.
Shively hails from Dodge county, the
home of Mr. Eaton.
Inc diner attached to Burlington
train No. 3 took fire between Dorches
ter and Friend. The burning car was
pulled to Friend, where the fire was
extinguished, though the car and can
tents arc a total loss.
August Swartund. a wealthy farmer
living near Holdrege. tried to kill him
self with a razor. He made two deep
gashes from ear to ear. when the razor
broke. He was found unconscious,
but will probably recover.
A 14-year-old son of Peter Obbody.
a Bohemian farmer residing eleven
miles south of Friend, lost one of his
legs while driving the horsepower of a
corn shelier. Physicians amputated
the limb just below the knee.
Attorney Charles W. Seymour, one
of the best known and, perhaps, the
eldest attorney in this state, at this
writing is lying dangerously ill at his
home in Nebraska City, and no hopes
are entertained for his recovery
Governor Sheldon has received $9,300
from the government as the semi-an
nual appropriation for the support of
homes for soldiers and sailors in Ne
braska. being at the rate of $100 a
year for each member of the homes.
Orland Pierce, by his attorney, John
C. Watson, has filed a suit in the dis
trict court of Otoe county against the
Morton-Gregson Packing company, ask
ing for $15,000 damages for injuries
received while working for said com
pany.
Senator Norris Brown, emphasizing
“the importance of the financial legis
lation now before congress," has writ
ten to the secretaries of the commer
cial clubs, including that of Lincoln,
for a statement by the secretary as to
the wishes of the members of the club.
Valeria W. Coad. wife of Mark M.
Coad of Omaha, filed a suit tor divorce
in the district court at Lincoln. Ac
cording to information received in Lin
coln. Coad is a ranch owner and erst
while business partner of W. F. Cody,
known as “Buffalo Bill." Mrs. Ccad's
petition is brief. She alleges non
support.
The state auditor has returned the
$15,000 school bonds of the Sidney dis
trict, properly registered. The bonds
are in denominations of $5,000 and
run from one to twenty years, drawing
5 per cent, interest optional after five
years, issued for the purpose of build
ing an addition to the high school
building in Sidney.
The railway commission issued two
orders, one permitting the Union Pa
cific to put in a lower rate on feed
corn to St. Paul, Amherst, Riverdale,
Odessa and Buda and intermediate,
and to permit the Union Pacific to put
in a lower corn rate to Genoa, Kent
and Merchison and intermediate
points.
Succumbing to an attack of nervous
trouble, Jerry Hennen, a Fremont
drayman, who came into possession of
a fortune eighteen months ago by a
legacy, died last week. Mr. Hennen,
who was in moderate circumstances,
was bequeathed a valuable farm, iron
and coal land worth $25,000 by a dis
tant relative, who died in West Vir
ginia.
State Food Commissioner Johnson
announces that the requirements of the
law in regard to the handling of milk
nr. J cream will henceforth be enforced.
In regard to testing cream, he says:
‘ The Babock test must be employed,
using a weighed sample of eighteen
grams, weighed on a delicate balance
and tested in a nine-inch bottle, gradu
ated to at least 5 per cent of the fat
column and read between the tempera
ture of 130 and 140 degrees Fahren
heit.
Three fine milch cows belonging to
J. A. Zimmerman, who resides north
west of Beatrice, were drowned in the
Blue river. The animals disappeared,
and after a search of two days their
bodies were found' in the stream.
Exeter was visited by another fire.
It was the West Side livery bam. The
conteni j of the barn were owned by
Attorney Delaney and consisted of
(' ven lie.’.d of horses, several car
ria?1 s, a lot of hay and feed, harness,
blankets, rotes and other things, all
of which are a total loss, as there was
no insurance.
Moravian Barley and Speltz,
two front cereals, makes growing and fat
tening hogs and cattle possible in Dak.,
Mont.. Ida.. Colo., yes. everywhere, and
add to above Salzer’s Billion Dollar Grass,
the 12 ton Hay wonder Teosinte. which
produces SMons of green fodder per acre.
Emperor William Oat prodigy, etc., and
other rare farm seeds that they offer.
JUST CUT THIS OUT AND RETURN IT
with 10c in stamps for packing, etc., to the
John A. Salzer Seed Co.. La Crosse. Wis.,
and get their big catalog and lots of farm
seed samples. K. & W.
In the Language.
“Some one has said that a kiss is
the language of love,” remarked the
| young man in the parlor scene.
“Well,” rejoined the fair maid on
i the far end of the sofa, “why don't you
. get busy and say something?"
The Reason for Marrying.
“They say that he married her for
her money.”
“And what did he do when she lost
her wealth?"
“He lost his reason."—Harvard
Lampoon.
important to Klothe.-c.
Examine carefully every bottle ol
CASTOR1A a safe and sure remedy for
infants and children, and see that it
Bears the
Signature of
In tTse For Over .‘50 Years.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
It is vain to be always looking to
wards the future, and never acting to
ward it.—Boyes.
Bon t worry about your complexion—
take Garfield Tea, the Herb laxative and
blood-puriber! An improvement will be
seen in a week.
You can't make good ginger ale if
anything ails the ginger.
| -
Had Dene His Best.
Uncle Hosea did not feel able to
contribute more than 75 cents to the
missionary cause, and was not particu
larly enthusiastic about giving even
that.
‘ You ought to give as the Lord has
prospered you,” said Deacon Iron- ;
side.
“I don't think the Lord'll ever .ac
cuse me of bein’ ungrateful,” an
swered Uncle Hosea. "Six of my '
boys is preachers."
Those Delicious Lemon Pies.
The kind that “make your mouth wa- j
ter" are easily made with no fussing: and !
at least possible expense if you use [
“OUR-PIE” Preparation. Don’t hesitate. I
Try it and tell your friends. At grocers, i
10 cents. Three kinds: Lemon, Choco- !
late and Custard.
It is not necessary for all men to be i
great in action. The greatest and sub
limest power is often simple patience.
—Goethe.
Many Old People Suffer from
Bronchial Affections particularly at
this time of year. Brown's Bronchial i
Troches give immediate relief.
However things may seem, no evil
thing is success, and no good thing
failure.—Samuel Longfellow.
ONLY ONE “BROMO OlIININE"
That is laxative brumuoltmxk. Look for
the signature of K. W. GKO\Ti. Used the World i
over to Cure a Cold in One Day. 2jc.
The more judgment a man has. the i
slower and the more careful will he be
to condemn.—Maurer.
Mr*, ^'inflow's Soothing Syrup.
For children teething. softenB the gurus, reduce* In
flammation, allay* pain, cares wind colic. 25c a bottle.
It's a sweeping assertion to say that j
a new broom sweeps clean.
“OUCH, OH SVsY BACK”
NEURALGIA, STITCHES, LAMENESS. CRAMP
TWINGES. TWITCHES FROM WET OR DAMP
ALL BRUISES. SPRAINS, A WRENCH OR TWIST
THIS SOVEREIGN REMEDY THEY CAN T RESIST
Price 25c and 50c
WZAZZrJ shoes at all
PRICES, FOR every ^CJfSssiB5^
""^MEMBER OFTHE FAMILY,
MEN, BOYS, WOMEN, MISSES AND CHILDREN.
= IV.L. Douglas makes and sails more «?£'*
men 's $2.SO, $3.00and *8.60shoes
than any other manufacturer In the
* mould, because they hold their
shafts, fit better, wear longer, ana
= are of greater value than any ether mr-'O
shoos in the world tit-day.
n. L. uougtas $4 2nc tint tuge &noss uannci ce t^ucusc m nny nice
arl'Al’TIOW. W. L. Donclas name anil price Is Btamped oa botton. Take!¥o Sub.titiitp.
Sold by tbe best shoe dealers everywhere. Shoes ma-lrd from fartorr to any pan or the world, Illu>
tr&ted Catalog free to any address. W. L>. UULliLAsi, Brockton, Isluas.
DEFUIGE Gold WaterStarch
makes laundry work a pleasure. 18 oz. pkg. 10c.
W. N. U., OMAHA, NO. 5, 1908.
u&uSunus electrotypes'
In grreat variety for sale at tbe lowest prices by
A. N. k II JAM it, NEH'SP.tl’Ut ( 0., "t W, AiianisSe, tbicteo
i
From the Railway World, January j>, igcS.
Mr. Herbert Knox Smith, whose zeal in the
cause of economic rt form has been in no wise
abated by the panic which he and his kind did
so much to bring on, is out with an answer to
President Moffett, of the Standard Oil Com
pany of Indiana. The publication of this an
swer, it is officially given out, was delayed sev
eral weeks, "for business reasons," because it
was not deemed advisable to further excite
the public mind, which was profoundly dis
turbed by the crisis. Now that the storm
clouds have rolled by. however, the Commis
sioner rushes again into the fray.
Our readers remember that the chief points
in the defence of the Standard Oil Company, as
presented by President Moffett, were (1) that
the date of six cents on oil from Whiting to
East St. Louis has been issued to the Standard
Oil Company as the lawful rate by employes
of the Alton, (2) that the 18-cent rate on file
with the Interstate Commerce Commission was
a class and not a commodity rate, never being
intended to apply to oil, (3) that oil was
shipped in large quantities between Whiting
and East St. Louis over the Chicago & East
ern Illinois at 6% cents per hundred pounds,
which has been filed with the Interstate Com
merce Commission as the lawful rate, and (4)
that the lS-cent rate on oil was entirely out of
proportion to lawful rates on other commodi
ties between these points of a similar char
acter. and of greater value, such, for example,
as linseed oil, the lawful rate on which was
eight cents. President Moffett also stated that
thousands of tons of freight had been sent by
other shippers between these points under
substantially the same conditions as governed
the shipments of the Standard Oil Company.
This defence of the Standard Oil Company
was widely quoted and has undoubtedly exert
ed a powerful influence upon the public mind.
Naturally the Administration, which has
staked the success of its campaign against
the "trusts" upon the result of its attack upon
this company, endeavors to offset this influ
ence, and hence the new deliverance of Com
missioner Smith.
We need hardly to point out that his rebut
tal argument is extremely weak, although as
strong, no doubt, as the circumstances would
warrant. He answers the points made by Presi
dent Moffett substantially as follows: (1) The
Standard Oil Company had a traffic department,
and should have known that the six-cent rate
had not been filed, (2) no answer, (3) the Chi
cago & Eastern Illinois rate was a secret rate
because it read, not from Whiting, but from
Dolton, which is described as "a village of
about 1,500 population just outside of Chicago.
Its only claim to note is that it has been for
many years the point of origin for this and
similar secret rates.” The Commissioner ad
mits in describing this rate that there was a
note attached stating that the rate could also
be used from Whiting.
The press has quite generally hailed this
statement of the Commissioner of Corpora
tions as a conclusive refutation of what is evi
dently recognized as the strongest rebuttal
argument advanced by the Standard.
In fact, it is as weak and inconclusive as the
remainder of his argument. The lines of the
Chicago & Eastern Illinois do not run into
Chicago. They terminate at Dolton, from which
point entrance is made over the Belt Line.
Whiting, where the oil freight originates, is not
on the lines of the Chicago Eastern Illinois,
which receives its Whiting freight from the
Belt Line at Dolton. The former practice, now
discontinued, in filing tariffs was to make
them read from a point on the line of the fil
ing road, and It was also general to state on
the same sheet, that the tariff would apply to
other points, e. g., Whiting. The Chicago &
Eastern Illinois followed this practice in filing
its rate from Dolton, and making a note on
the sheet that is applied to Whiting. This w as
in 1895 when this method of filing tariffs was
in common use.
Now let us see in what way the intending
shipper of oil could be misled and deceived by
the fact that the Chicago & Eastern Illinois
had not filed a rate reading from Whiting.
Commissioner Smith contends that ‘'conceal
ment is the only motive for such a circuitous
arrangement,” i. e., that this method of filing
the rate was intended to mislead intending
competitors of the Standard Oil Company.
Suppose such a prospective oil refiner had ap
plied to the Interstate Commerce Commission
for the rate from Chicago to East St. Louis
over the Chicago & Eastern Illinois, he would
have been informed that the only rate filed
with the commission by this company was 6*4
cents from Dolton, and be would have been
further informed, if indeed he did not know
this already, that this rate applied throughout
Chicago territory. So that whether he wished
to locate his plant at Whiting, or anywhere
else about Chicago, under an arrangement of
long standing, and which applies to all the in
dustrial towns in the neighborhood of Chica
go, he could have his freight delivered over
the Belt Line to the Chicago & Eastern Illi
nois at Dolton and transported to East St.
Louis at a rate of 614 cents. Where then is
the concealment which the Commissioner of
Corporations makes so much of? Any rate—
from Dolton on the Eastern Illinois or Chap
pell on the Alton, or Harvey on the Illinois
Central, or Blue Island on the Rock Island,
applies throughout Chicago territory to ship
ments from any other point in the district.
So far from the Eastern Illinois filing its rate
from Dolton in order to deceive the shipper,
it is the Commissioner of Corporations who
either betrays his gross ignorance of transpor
tation customs in Chicago territory or relies
on the public ignorance of these customs to
deceive the public too apt to accept unques
tioningly every statement made by a Govern
ment official as necessarily true, although, as
in the present instance, a careful examination
shows these statements to be false.
The final point made by President Moffett
that other commodities of a character similar
to oil were carried at much lower rates than
18 cents, the Commissioner of Corporations
discusses only with the remark that “the
‘reasonableness’ of this rate is not in question.
The question is whether this rate constituted
a discrimination as against other shippers of
oil," and he also makes much of the failure of
President Moffett to produce before the grand
jury evidence of the alleged illegal acts of
which the Standard Oil official said tlaat other
large shippers in the territory had been guilty.
Considering the tact that these shippers in
cluded the packers and elevator men of Chi
cago the action of the grand jury in calling
upon President Moffett to furnish evidence of
their wrong-doing may be interpreted as a de
mand for an elaboration of the obvious; but
the fact that a rate-book containing these
freight fates for other shippers was offered in
evidence during the trial and ruled out by
Judge Landis, was kept out of sight. Presi
dent Moffett would not. of course, accept the
invitation of the grand jury although he might
have been pardoned if he had referred them
to various official investigations by the inter
state Commerce Commission and other de
partments of the Government.
We come back, therefore, to the conclusion
of the whole matter, which is that the Stand
ard Oil Company of Indiana was fined an
amount equal to seven or eight times the val
ue of its entire property, because its traffic
department did not verify the statement of
the Alton rate clerk, that the six-ccnt commod
ity rate on oil had been properly filed with the
Interstate Commerce Commission. There is no
evidence, and none was introduced at the trial,
that any shipper of oil from Chicago territory
had been interfered with by the 18-cent rate
nor that the failure of the Alton to file its six
cent rate had resulted in any discrimination
against any independent shipper,—we must
take this on the word of the Commissioner
of Corporations and of Judge Landis. Neither
is it denied even by Mr. Smith that the "inde
pendent” shipper of oil, whom he pictures as
being driven out of business by this discrim
ination of the Alton, could have shipped all
the oil he desired to ship from Whiting via
Dolton over the lines of the Chicago &. East
ern Illinois to East St. Louis. In short,'Presi
dent Moffett's defence is still good, and we
predict will be so declared by the higher court.
The Standard Oil Company has been charged
with ail manner of crimes and misdemeanors.
Beginning with the famous Rice of Marietta,
passing down to that apostle of popular liber
ties. Henry Demarest Lloyd, with his Wealth
Against the Commonwealth, descending by
easy stages to Miss Tarbell's ogensive person
alities, we finally reach the nether depths of
unfair and baseless misrepresentation in the
report of the Commissioner of Corporations.
The Standard has been charged with every
form of commercial piracy and with most of
the crimes on the corporation calendar. After
long years of strenuous attack, under the
leadership of the President of the United
States, the corporation is at last dragged to
the bar of justice to answer for its misdoings.
The whole strength of the Government is di
rected against it, and at last, we are told, the
Standard Oil Company is to pay the penalty of
its crimes, and it is finally convicted of hav
ing failed to verify the statement of a rate
clerk and is forthwith fined a prodigious sum,
measured by the car. Under the old criminal
law, the theft of property worth more than a
shilling was punishable by death. Under the
interpretation of the Interstate Commerce law
hv Theodore . Reosevelt and Judge Kenesaw
Landis, a technical error of a traffic official is
made the excuse for the confiscation of a vast
amount of property^
By the way. are you acquainted with
any man wTho flatters his wife!
We Sell Guns and Traps Cheap
Buy fursand hides, or tan them for robes
& nigs. X. VY. Hide & Fur Co., Minneapolis.
Talk is cheap—unless a lawyer is
handing it out.
It’s easy for the average man to
make a bad break.
PILES CURED IN 6 TO 14 DATS.
I*A£0 OINTMENT is guaranteed to cure any case
or Itching. Blind. Bleeding or Protruding Piles in
6 to U days or money refunded. 50c.
By doing duty we learn to do it.—
E. B. Pusey.
<>IQ
For
DISTEMPER
Pink Eye, Epizootic
Shipping Fever
& Catarrhal Fever
5“rL'H”t,nd Wltlvi- preventive. no mutter bow horses ad am- ace am infested or
erptsed Liquid, c'von on the tonctie: nets on the Blood and elands expels tlia
E'™7,!Sus£rrm”.,r"o u*®.b<x,r- Cures lnstemper In Outre ami Sheep amt i biTm ia
1?% “K7*sellinc live stork remedy. Cures la tTrtppe amonc human belaca
and It. a fine Kidney remedy. He and tl a bottle. (Sand til) a dozen. Cut this oat. K?S
Lten±atty“te,o“'Fr™ *»**<>«• -wJswfciis
SPOHN MEDICAL CO..
Chemists and
Bacteriologists
GOSHEN, IND., U. S. A.
Not
For
Men
B 20
When you need a medicine for women’s ills, we urge you earnestly to take Car
dui. Cardui is a woman’s medicine. It is not for men, but only for such women as
suffer from the ills peculiar to women. Therefore, you should take
Wine of
if sick, because it has helped others who suffered as you do. Mrs. Bettie Arp, of
Menlo, Ga., writes: “1 was troubled with female complaint for twelve months. The
doctors treated me, but did me little good, so I took Cardui, and it saved my life
WRITE FOR FREE BOOK
2finiKi2ri!v,te®*'p?^Bookf<?T ^omen’ elvim symptoms, causes, home treatment and
valuable hints on diet, exsTOsea, etc. Bent free on request in plsin wrapper, by mail
prepaid. Ladies Advisory Dept, The Chattanooca Medicine Co. Chattanooca, Venn.