The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, March 11, 1909, Image 6

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

    DURING THE SHOPPING. |
-===-,1
Maude—Men arc getting so deceit
ful, you can't trust your best friend.
Percy—And what’s worse, you can't
get your best friend to trust you.
$100 Reward, 5100.
Tbo Traders of tpaper will be pleased to learn
that there is at least one dreaded disease tnat science
has been able to cure m all its staves, and that is
Catarrn. Ha.i’s Catarrh Cure Is the only positive
cure uovr i.tio.vn to tats medical fraternity. Catarrh
bcinz a roosittuUu.ui diseusc. requires a const it u*
tlona.' treat:’!.*..!. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken in
ter tallv actu : direct.y upon tiie biood and mucous
surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the
t-wndation of tba di \ and elvlnp the patient
stren-rtn by bulHlnsr u > the constitution and assist
uur nature In < ci <r its v.-ork. The proprietors have
so much faith n itJ curative powers that they offoi
One Hundrel Foliar.! fr any case that tt Liii» to
cure, send for rist of testimonials
Address F..!. ( Hl .VEV i CO.. Toledo, O
ISold bv all l»ru,!'TlsJ9. TV.
Take AIxTa Family Fills for constipation.
I he Difference.
Jcsiah (to newly wadded neighbor)
—I wish you leng. happy lives; and
l see no reason since you have had
experience why you and Mariah can
not pull together as steady and hap
py and successfully as a team of
horses.
Obadiar—N'o doubt we could if there
was only c-ne tongue between us.—
Judge.
Asthmatics, Read This.
If ycu are aiiiicted with Asthma write
me at once and learn of something for
which you viP be grateful the_ rest of
your life. -T. (I. Mritride. Stella. Nebr.
A lazy man makes as much fuss
when he has a little job of work on
hand as r.a old hen dser who is try
ing to raise one chid..
ONI.Y OYE “BROMO
That is !.AXATl\ « BUOV.O QtUMNK. hook foi
(b*» signature of K. \V. UKiiViC. I -it J the World
i»er to Cure a Cold in 'Uae hay. Site.
A man who needs advice is apt to
get the kind he doesn’t want.
Lewis’ Single Hinder straight 5c. Many
smokers prefer them to 10c cigars. Your
dealer fir Lewis’ Factory, Peoria, 111.
Things past may be repented but
not recalled.—Livy.
PHYSICIAN
ADVISED
Taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound
Columbus, Ohio. — “I have taken
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com
pound during
change of life. My
doctor told me it
was good, and since
taking it I feel so
much better that I
can do all my work
again. I think
Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Com
pound a fine remedy
for all woman’s
troubles, and I
3never forget to tell
my mends what it has done tor me.
—Mrs. E. Hanson, 304 East Long St.,
Columbus. Ohio.
Another Woman Helped.
Graniteville, Vt. — “I was passing
through the Cliangeof Lifeand suffered
from nervousness and other annoying
symptoms. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege
table Compound restored myhealthand
strength, and proved worth mountains
of gold to me. For the sake of other
suffering women I am willing you
should publish my letter.’’— Mrs.
Charles Barclay, It.F.D., Granite
ville, Vt.
Women who are passing through this
critical period or who are suffering
from any of those distressing ills pe
culiar to their sex should not lose sight
of the fact that for thirty years Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound,
which is made from roots and herbs,
has been the standard remedy for
female ills. In almost every commu
nity you will find women who have
been restored to health by Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound.
.. .. ^
Bad Breath.
A well-known physician, who
undoubtedly knows, declares that
bad breath has broken off more i
matches than bad temper.
There are ardent
lovers who must
sometimes wish
their sweethearts
\ presented sweeter j
1 mouths to be kissed.
Good teeth cannot
prevent bad breath
when the stomach is
disordered.
The best cure for
bad breath is a
cleansinfr out of the
body by use of
Lane’s Family
Medicine
(called also Lane's Tea)
jj the tonic laxative.
This is a herb medicine, sold in
25c. and 50c. packages by drug
gists. It saves doctor bills.
It cures headache, backache, in
digestion, constipation and skin
diseases. 25c. at druggists.
^ 1 ”■■■ -#
Omaha Directory
REVERERUBBERBELTIN6
^T^cr.or LEWIS SUPPLY CO., OMAHA
M. Spiesberger & Son Co.
Wholesale Millinery
The Best In the West OMAHAv NEB*
RUBBER GOOBS
«... „,„n *t ent prices. Send tor free catalogue.
STyERS-OILLON DRUG CO.. OMAHA. NEBB
i r——————---- *—**—*—■■—
With the World's
Great Humorists
Selections from the Writings of the Best Kjnobun
MaKcrs of Mirth„
II
■! —in ini ■■ iw~i——i—tth —ra———HFrn—nnii —■ ■■■ini—■—■ n
Strange Origin of Proverbs
By Stanley Waterloo.
There is nothing more curious or.
In some instances, more astounding, to
the student than the revelations made
in a study of the origin of proverbs.
Very long before the eastern sage,
Abcu Ben There, had written the an
cient oriental tale which, translat
ed, is called “Her Majesty, the Queen.”
had declared that “It is unlucky to
sleep thirteen in a bed” and thus
started the nefarious unlucky thirteen
legend, proverbs, with their accom
panying superstitions, began, and con
cerning them there is, perhaps, noth
ing more interesting than the story of
the first proverb ever born. This it is:
Some hundred and fifty thousand
years ago, long before the flood, one of
the wariest and generally capable of
the cave men of his time chanced also
to be, and excessively so, the hairiest
of his tribe, of which all were hairy.
The cave men usually acquired their
names from some personal peculiarity
and thus it came that, so dense was
the growth upon the body of this par
ticular individual, it suggested to his
fellow beings of the period the close,
mossy growth about the bases of the
great conifers, the trees amid which
they lived and hunted. Thus it came
that he was known as Moss.
So vigorous of body and acute of
mind was Moss—considering the peri
o i%-ihat even when aged 70 he had
slight difficulty in winning for his
sixth wife the belle of the tribe, the
charming Little Ear. His first wife
had died a natural death; his second
wife, wandering too casually into the
forest, had appeased the appetite of a
monstrous tiger of the kind known to
scientists to-day as Sabre Tooth; the
third, who could not swim very well.
bet was always trying it, was gobbled
up, or rather down, by some sort of
river monster; the fourth had disap
peared mysteriously, and the fifth, be
cause of her lack of all botanical infor
mation, had eaten too rapturously and
fully of the enticing berries of a plant
known in these modern times as night
shade.
Yet, somehow, old Moss could not
“Old Mess Came Swinging Rapidly
Along the Path.”
have been considered an unlucky hus
band, else he would have been unlike
ly to have won Little Ear (possibly
her father. Big Club, may have had
something to do with it) whom he
took to his cave ihe next day after the
episode of the berries, even though
A Hard Luck Tale
„ By Norman H. Crowell.
“Talking about tough luck, and so
so on,” remarked the thin man as he
jabbed his lower limbs through the
pickets of the hotel veranda and
>awned widely, “reminds me of a fun
ny run of circumstances that connect
ed with me a while back. I was called
down to a southern Minnesota lake by
the sickness of an aunt, and while
(here got wind of the local sports
making preparations for the opening
of the bass season.
“Next morning was an ideal day and
I was there—bright and early. As 1
was shoving ofT in my skiff I observed
a tall, rawboned fellow' protrude from
a bunch of bushes a hundred steps up
the beach and take a squint at me.
“i very naturally concluded that this
was a warden, and I had no doubt that
“Not a Bay Nor a Cove Was in Sight."
under the influence of that magnifier
of his I looked about twice the size
of a horse and twice as natural. But
I pulled out into the lake and looked
around in search of a bay or a cove
that might shelter me from that mer
ciless telescope. Not a bay nor a cove
was in sight.
‘‘Well, I tossed in my hook and was
just looking around into the business
end of that telescope when—whish!
something grabbed It and struck out
toward deep water in a thrilling man
ner. I tended to business for the next
few minutes and I had my work cut
out too, for the fellow on my hook
was a thoroughbred.
‘‘As I was getting my breath back
I caught the reflection of that infernal
telescope and the cold sweat began to
ooze out of my scalp and percolate
towards my collar. I realized at once
that the fellow had me focused right
down to a gnat’s feathers and—well,
; I hate to te)> what I did but might as
well confess. It was cowardly, per
haps. but I couldn't get away from
that telescope, you see. I adjusted my
pocket scale and weighed my fish. He
was a dandy—just an even five
pounds. Then I picked the old fel
low up by the tail, held him ostenta
tiously aloft and heaved him back in
to his native element. Then—I cussed
a little under my breath and looked
as pleased as possible—for the tele
scope was still dead-centered on me
all the time.
“I was getting rather lonesome
when, as I was passing the identical
spot where I landed my big bass, I
got another strike. It was a glorious
scrap, gents, and for a minute I
thought my tackle was a goner but in
about ten minutes 1 wearied the boy
and pulled him in. 1 weighed him—
five pounds and half an ounce.
“Well, back he went and I put on
my third frog. All quiet for 20 min
utes and then I rowed back that way
again. Kerswish! Away shot my line
and I made a mental resolve to anchor
right there for the rest of the sea
son.
“But I noticed one strange thing
about those bass—the larger they got
the less gamey they were. I landed
An Experience
By Thomas L. Masecn.
“It has come."
“What has come?" asked Mrs. Gan
son, wonderingly, for she had been
looking at Easter hats all the morning
and was in a dazed condition.
“Why, the piece of furnfture I or
dered. It is a wonderful idea. It
comes in pieces, all separate, with di
rections how to put it together. Don't
you remember the day I wrote for it?
Ah, now I shall have a merry time. I
have wanted to take an afternoon off
at a job like this for a long while."
“Isn't this great!” he exclaimed, as
he got all the parts together. “Here
are the printed directions. Let's see.
Begin with number one, and—”
“What is it?” asked Mrs. Ganson.
“It's a chair, you ninny. Just what
I have been longing to loll away the
evening in for so long—a great easy,
comfortable chair. That must be the
bottom piece. See how thick it is."
“I don't believe it is a chair at all,”
said Mrs. Ganson. "It looks to me
like a table. They must have sent you
the wrong thing."
"Nothing of the sort. Just wait un
til I begin to build it up, and then
you will see ”
Mrs. Ganson, disappearing in the
house, was, however, so filled with cu
riosity that she came'back in a few
“How are you getting on?"
Ganson rose up slowly—for his
moments.
back was almost broken—and waved
a burnished slat in the air.
“Do you know," he whispered
hoarsely, “what I would do with the
mouse-colored idiot that sent me this
thing—the fiend who has spent his
awful ingenuity in trying to invent
some torture for the human mind tc
lose itself on? Oh, maybe I wouldn’t
beat him to a jelly! For heaven's
sake, woman, get that hammer."
Mrs. Ganson went after it. But as
hers was the usual household, no ham
mer, of course, was in sight. She
looked in drawer and on shelf. Finally
after a long search, she discovered it.
and trembling with anxiety, sped forth
to find her husband.
A bright blaze met her eye.
Ganson was poking up the flames
“It’s all right,” he shouted, with a
cunning smile which only comes to
those in the last stages. "It may be a
chair or it may be a table—it’s ah
one to me. I’m having some fun out
of it. My only regret is that the
villain who sent it to me isn’t sitting
on top.”
(Copyright, 1909, by W. a. Chapman.)
; start it out upon a course that God
only can forecast through eternity.
|
It would be easy to show that in a.
day a life may be blighted, but it may
be as profitable to remember that in
one day a life may be redeemed. In
one day Matthew the publican left,
“the seat cf customs” and became a
disciple. In one day Saul of Tarsus,
ceased to be a persecutor and was
called to be an apostle. If one day
in God's house is better than another,
it is the first day, the day in which
the wanderer first realizes that he
has entered within the circle, and that,
he is conscious of God's love. It is
worth a thousand years of aimless
life.
While God does not neglect the lit
tle things, even the greatest are not
too great for him. If one day is with
him as a thousand years, a thousand
years are as one day. He does not
grow weary or impatient. He knows
how precious time is, but he inhabits
eternity. With untiring; patience he
waits. It is because he changes not
that we are not consumed.
Blessed Memories.
They of blessed memory help us; for
they make it easy for U3 to believe in
goodness and God and eternal life and
heaven. They are even our last strand
in the evidence for personal immor
tality; for we cannot believe that all
that power of loving and all that
wealth of grace and all that beauty of
character have ceased. He lives a
poor attenuated life who has never
thrilled to the mystic union, who does
not know that there are two societies
alone on earth—“The noble living and
the noble dead." And sometimes even
we see that they are not two but one
great society, the one irrefragable
bond of souls, the one communion of
the saints. The memory of the just
is blessed, a blessing to us more than
we can put into words, not only in
stimulating us to emulation, not only
exciting us and guiding us to all good,
but also establishing us in faith in
good and faith that we too have the
same real vocation to which we are
called to walk worthy.—Prof. Hugh
Eiack.
THE MEASURE OF TIME.
Day Spent with God Worth a Thou
sand Years of Aimless Life.
“One day is with the Lord as a
thousand years, and a thousand years
as one day.” It is not because he does
not care for time, but because he
knows that millenniums are made up
of days, and that days expand in their
results as time flows on. They mingle
with millenniums.
We throw a day away and think
nothing about it. It .is only a day, and
we are rich in time. God's days have
no end, but he treasures and uses each
day as if it were a thousand years.
What would happen to us if he left
as alone for one day?
He treasures each of cur days. One
lay spent well by even the poorest of
is is much with him. It is much
with him, for he only knows how much
:t really means for us. He knows
'.hat, after all, there is not so much
difference with us between one day
ind a thousand years. One day's work
may leave its mark upon a life—may 1
I
the more or less blushing bride was
already half promised to Roarer, a
young man prominent among the cave
people, and as vigqrous as he was vi
cious. Things seethed, of course.
There was a path sometimes taken
by old Moss when he started on a
hunting trip which led beside a slight
but exceedingly stiff slope, almost a
fall, at the crest of which lay a huge
rock. Behind this boulder one day
crouched Roarer.
Old Moss came swinging rapidly along
the path, tlintheaded spear In hand
and exhibiting, supposedly, in his face
some of the rapture of the excessively
ancient honeymoon. Just as the ap
proaching and unsuspecting hunter
reached what Roarer deemed the right
spot, the watcher bent and braced and
heaved with his broad shoulder and
down like leaping death thundered the
boulder.
And Roarer, in his murderous ex
citement, had strained and heaved too
lustily and far! As the rock went he
lost his footing and pitched after it,
rolling down the pathway of its very
wake. Even in mid air old Moss per
ceived him beneath jind, as he land
ed himself, there was swift and un
necessarily persistent spearing. Roar
er was of the memories, and that
night the wolves would eat him—
simple strenuous times!
Then it was that the fine old man be
came enthusiastic and excited. He
leaped up and down and
yelped aloud till the sound reached
from along the pathway.
“Hi-vali! Hi-yah! A rolling stone
gathers no Moss!”
Very curious and interesting and
educational, certainly, are the facts
derived from a study of the origin ol
the old proverbs.
(Copyright. 1WD, by W. G. Chapman.)
——— ---■
I
the last fellow in about 40 seconds of
easy work. I threw in my twenty-first
frog hoping to get hold of a smaller
and more sporty fish. But in a moment
something took hold and hung on just
like a sack of wet sand. I reeled In
and made a few unkind remarks
thinking I had hooked a mud turtle.
"The sport was too tame for me
and I stopped to think a bit. I was
weary of dragging in huge bass with
no more life in them than in a water
logged pair of pants. There was
something wrong. I recalled a famil
iar look about the last bass—it star
tled me. I could have sworn I had
seen that face before. A horrible sus
picion crept over me, gents, and in
feverish haste I threwT in my hook to
fathom the mystery. In about two
seconds he had fastened on and I
snaked him in.
“Well, It was the same bass—I
counted 22 perforations where my
hook had caught him. He was full
of frogs, and to save time I took my
remaining two and crammed them
down his throat. Then I tossed him
overboard and rowed for shore. And
would you believe me, gents, that
bass swam alongside all the way,
sometimes so close I could reach out
and pat him. And the man with the
telescope wasn't a warden after all—
wasn't that tough?"
(Copyright, 1909, by W. G. Chapman.)
Mfefln
Three
Dresses and a
Coat for Girls.
————«.. .ml(
rHE costume on the left is a useful dress for girl from 10 to 12 years. It is
made up in navy blue serge, and has a yoke and plastron cut in one. and
taken to the end of skirt, and edged with a silk strap; silk-coveted buttons
are taken down the center of yoke and plastron, as far as the waist; six small
tucks are made where the material joins the yoke. The sleeve is a plain
bishop set to a cuff, which is trimmed with a silk strap. A leather waist
band draws the dress in at the waist. Materials required: C yards serge 46
inches wide, 9 buttons, 1*4 yard silk.
The coat is suitable for a girl from 10 to 12 years. Dark red coatng
is used; it fastens down the front under a wide box-plait which is trimmed
with black cord and buttons; the collar and cuffs are trimmed in the same
way. Hat of red felt, trimmed with plaid silk ribbon. Materials required;
4 yards coating 48 inches wide, 1 dozen yards braid, 1 dozen buttons, 6 yards
lining.
At the bottom is shown a smart dress for girl from 10 to 12 years, Saxe
bluc cashmere is chosen, piece lace is used for the yoke and collar: the bodice
fastens at the left side of front, a strap of velvet edges the yoke, also dowm
the fastening; two tucks are made on each shoulder. The sleeve is a plain
leg of mutton, trimmed at the wrist by a strap of velvet and some buttons.
The skirt has a box-plait each side of front, with smaller plaits turning from
it; a tuck is made at the foot all the way round, with the exception of the
center front. Materials required: 7 yards cashmere 46 inches wide, 14 but
tons. yard velvet.
Striped tweed is the material chosen for the costume on the right. The
skirt is trimmed up the center of front and round the foot by braid, also braid
covered buttons; the bodice is also trimmed with braid and buttons; piece
lace is used for the little yoke, and one tuck is made on each side of back and
front. Materials required: 6 yards tweed 46 inches wide, 14 buttons, S yards
braid *4 yard lace.
WALKING COSTUME
Cedar-green Venetian cloth would
look well in this style. The high
walsted skirt is plaited all the way
round, the plaits turning towards the
front; in the center of back the plaits
are much closer. The smartly-cut coat
is tight-fitting and has a little waist
coat of Chene silk fastening over to
one side in a point. The fronts are
slightly cut away and are trimmed
with buttons and cords.
Hat of cedar-green stretched silk
trimmed with brown silk and quills.
Materials required: 8 yards 48
Inches wide, % yard Chene silk, 1
dozen buttons, 1% yard cord, 4 yards
coat lining.
Flowered -Mousseline.
One of the new materials that Paris
Is sending over for evening gowns is a
rather heavy mousseline covered with
velvet flowers. These are in the
same color as the background, but in
a deeper or a lighter shade of it.
Golden lilies, pink peach blossoms,
the violet iris and the huge hydrangea
are used in design. The first new
gowns of this fabric show it as a
drapery from shoulder to knees and
over arms, with a foundation of silver
gauze or colored messaline or supple
panne velvet.
Pads for Dining Table.
After all, there is really no better
protection to a dining table than the
asbestos pads. They come in all
sizes, and once bought do not need
renewing. Round or square shape,
measuring 48 to 54 inches, a pad will
cost $5; 55 to 60 inches, $5.50, and 61
to 66 inches, $6. Leaves 12 inches
wide or less can bev had for $1, and
leaves over this number of inches will
cost $1.25. A table so covered will be
prepared to receive hot dishes upon
any spot over its entire surface.
ORNAMENTS FOR GRAY HAIR.
Black and White Are Two Colors That
Should Be Avoided.
I
The silver-haired woman makes a
mistake in wearing black in her hair
under the Impression that it will
bring out the color. The contrast is
too startling, and black deadens the
luster. White darkens the silver tones
and is apt to give the hair a greenish
hue.
The most becoming tone that can be
used is silver, though there are certain
shades of turquoise blue that are love
ly with it.
For daytime or informal wear bows
or fillets of silver gauze are charming,
while for evening a big silver flower
or wreaths and garlands in silver
oak leaves, or narrow silver bands will
give the silver-haired woman a touch
of distinction that no other coloring
can.
Side combs for gray hair are most \
effective w’ith silver tops. Gold
combs rarely look well, though occa
sionally those studded with turquoise
are becoming. Rhinestones or dia
monds go particularly well with sil
very hair but are more becoming
when set in silver or platinum than in
gold.
3hirred Hats.
Reboux is showing shirred hats of
black velvet, medium-sized and worn
well down over the head, trimmed with
two long plumes. The turbans now
are tiny and trimmed with one gold or
silver ornament. At this famous shop
is also a blue beaver with one small
bluebird on the side. At Suzanne Tal
bot’s the same shirred hats are shown,
and French hair (which most likely is
identical with the American article)
is arranged to harmonize with the
shape of every hat. For the turbans
worn actually over the eyes, the hair
is parted in the middle and arranged
low at the back.
For Marking Sheets.
An easy method of marking sheets
is to get name or initial tape, which
can be purchased by the bolt, and sew
the name on one of the hems at the
left corner.
This is an inexpensive way of mark
ing articles to be sent to the laun
dry.
The red or blue letters do not fade
and undoubtedly the embroidered let
ters are more presentable than the ink
laundry marks.
Evening Footwear.
The latest fad for evening footwear
is slippers of gold or silver with flesh
colored silk stockings. Slippers to
match the color of the gown are still
much worn with self-tone silk stock
ings elaborately embroidered, some be
ing even studded with tiny pearls or
jet beads.
Chiffon Is Deceptive.
There is probably no more effective
agent for producing the effect of a
soft, clear skin than a sheer white
chiffon (or maline) veil worn beneath
the usual face veil; women wha are
conscious of a few wrinkles are taking
note of this fact.
SiWjifvgs
El\x\Yt$ Senna
Cleanses the System
EffeetuaYYy;
Dispels colds and Headaches
duclo Ccnsll\>atvo\\;
Acts naluvatXy, uctslvuV^ as
al.axa\\ve.
Best Jot ften^Venxen. andCtnld
tcxv—Jfbnn^ and 0\d.
To del It's bonejlclaX easels,
5 always buy tbs Genuine,
manufactured by tke
CALIFORNIA
Fig Syrup Co.
SOLD BY ALL LEADING DRUGGISTS
one size only, regular price SO1 per bottle.
ARTFUL BEGGAR.
Miss Charity—If I were to give you
a quarter, what would you say?
Wandering Jim—I should tell every
gent that you were the prettiest lady
in ah this town.
Different Destinations.
"Mollie,” he said, “I believe that if
yrv; were in heaven you would ask the
angels if your hat v an on straight.”
"Yes,” was the reply. "Just about
the time you'd be asking Satan to put
a little more brimstone in the 'Hot
Scotch!”*
“A Little Cold is a
Dangerous Thing”
ar.d often leads to hasty disease and
death when neglected. There are
many ways to treat a cold, but there is
only one right way—use the right
remedy.
DR.D. JAYNE’S
EXPECTORANT
is the surest and safest remedy known,
fcr Coughs, Croup, Bronchitis,
Whooping Cough, Asthma, Pleurisy.
It cures when other remedies fail.
Do something for your cold in time,
you know what delay means, you
know the remedy, too—Dr. D. Jayne’s
Expectorant.
Bottles in three sizes, $ 1, 50c, 25c
Western Canada
MORE BIG CROPS IN 1908
Another 60,000 set
tlers from the United
States. New dis
tricts opened for set
tlement. 320 acres
ofland to each set
tier,—160 free
homestead and 160 at $3.00 per acre.
“A vast rich country and a contented pros
perous people.’’—Extr.tot .front coTrtstonaenct
of ‘I Mational E./ttor. -.ohose visit to lies torn
CanaJa, in August, I00S, was an institution.
Many have paid the entire cost of their
forms and had a balance of from $10.00 to
$20.00 per acre as a result of one crop.
Spring wheat, winter wheat, oats, barley,
flax and peas are the principal crops, while
the wild grasses bring to perfection the
best cattle that have ever been sold on
the Chicago market.
Splendid climate, schools and churches
In all localities. Railways touch most of
the settled districts, and prices for produce
are always good. Lands may also be pur
shased from railway and land companies.
For pamphlets, maps and information re
garding low railway rules, apply to Superin
tendent oflmmigration, Ottawa, Canada or
the authorized Canadian Government Agent:
W. V. BENNETT.
801 New Tork Life Building, Omaha. Nebraska.
SICK HEADACHE
A A n-rrrVn Pos*‘l vely cured by
CARTERS these Lm,e fil,s
|—|_ They also relieve Dis
I ■ |TTLE tressfromDyspopsia.il.
IlfFn digestionandTou Hearty
„ I VLK KatlnS- A perfect rem
PH I C e,ly for Di«iness, Nau
■ I hLO, sea, Drowsiness, Bad
Taste in the Mouth, Coat
ft Tougue, Pain in the
--IStde, TOKI-ID LIVER.
They regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable
SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE.
Genuine Must Bear
Fac*Simi!e Signature
REFUSE SUBSTITUTES.