The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, June 10, 1909, Image 8

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

    PITY FOR THE TOILER.
1
“I hear, Limpy, dat de price of livin’
has increased.”
"Yep. Gee, it must be tough to
have to work for wot a feller eats.”
The Selfish Invalid.
Senator Dixon, discussing a certain
tariff proposition, said:
“It is selfishness, pure selfishness.
It reminds me of George Cartwright
of Missoula.
"George Cartwright took sick and
spent a week abed. He carried on
dreadfully with his groans and com
plaints. His wife said to him one
night:
“ ‘Well, George, I'd rather have the
whole family sick than you!’
“ ‘Huh, so would I,’ George an
swered.”
Laundry work at home would be
much more satisfactory if the right
Starch wer'e 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
’hickness, 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.
Well, What If He Didn't?
For many years Dr. Francis L. Pat
ton, ex-president of Princeton univer
sity, wore side whiskers. Whenever
he suggested shaving them there was
a division of opinion in the family.
One morning he came into his wife's
room, razor in hand, with his right
cheek shaved smooth.
"How do you like it, my dear?” he
asked. “If you think it looks well, I
will shave the other side, too.”—
Everybody's Magazine
Smoother Then.
The second-year debutante, as she
massaged her left cheek with a rotary
movement, said:
"Of course I love him, though he’s
rather rough, I confess.”
"Before I threwr him over,” said the
third-year debutante, looking up from
tne face-steaming machine, "he shaved
every day.”
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. It great strength as a stiffen
er makes half the usual quantity of
Starch necessary, with the result of
perfect finish, equal to that when the
goods were new.
Mar-vel-lous!
At a baseball game in Chicago the
gatekeeper hurried to Comiskey, leader
of the White Sox, and said:
“Umpire Hurst is here with two
friends. Shall I pass ’em in?”
“An umpire with two friends!”
gasped Comiskey. “Sure!”—Every
body’s Magazine.
Division of Musical Labor.
Knicker—Is yours a musical fam
ily?
Bocker—The cook sings about her
work, and my daughter works about
her sing.
Success.
“Why did you marry?”
“For sympathy.”
“Did you get what you were after?”
“Yes—from my friends.”
Nebraska Directory
TAFT'S DENTAL ROOMS
1517 Douglas St., OMAHA, NEB.
Reliable Dentistry at Moderate Prices.
Velie Wrought Iron Vehicles
Will Not Wear Out. Insist on having them—
ask your local dealer or
JOHN DEERE PLOW COMPANY. Omaha—Sioux Falls
PLEATING
All Kind*
Dyeing and Cleaning
Kuching, Buttons, etc. Send for free price
list and samples. IDEAL PLEATING CO.
202 Douglass Blk., Omaha, Neb.
REBUILT TRACTION
ENGINES
at bargain prices. Write
for list. LINIGER IMPLE
MENT CO., Omaha, Neb.
TYPEWRITERS SS&„
\ to l-j Mfr n price. Ca?h or time pay
ment*. Renter!, rent applies. We ship
*i*ny where f«»r free examination. No dtv
-poair Write for big buy&ia libt and offer
B.F.S«aa«*a t o..427 Woodman Bid*..Omaha.
AUTOMOBILE TIRES
ami Tubes. Large stock. \\ ant your business.
Write for prices. PIONEER IMPLEMENT CO.,
Tire Department, Council Bluffs, Iowa.
The Roof with the Lap
A U Nail Heads Protected
CAREY’S ROOFING
Hail and Fire Resisting
Ask your dealer or
SUNDERLAND ROOFING & SUPPLY CO.
Omaha. : : : : : Nebraska.
DON’T
Wear Other Overalls
When You Can Buy
OAK BRAND
overalls"
JUST AS CHEAP
SOLD BY LEADING DEALERS EVERYWHERE
Made with the Greatest Care
Made of Best Materials
Made in Omaha by
Byrne & Hammer Dry Goods Co,
Of all va
rieties per
manent ly
cured in a
few days without a surgical operation
or detention from business. No pay
will be accepted until the patient is
completely Liatisffed. Write or call on
FRANTZ H. WRAY, M. D.
Room 306 Bee Bldg., Omaha, Neb.
For an Instant They Were Swaying Back and Forth.
SYNOPSIS.
“Mad” Dan Maitland, on reaching his
New York bachelor club, met an attrac
ive young woman at the door. Janitor
3’Hagan assured him no one had been
within that day. Dan discovered a wom
an’s finger prints in dust on his desk,
along with a letter from his attorney.
Maitland dined with Bannerman. his at
torney. Dan set out for Greenfields, to
get his family jewels. During his walk
:o the country s*at. he met the young
woman in gray, whom he had seen leav
ing his bachelors' club. Her auto had
broken down. He fixed it. By a ruse she
‘lost" him. Maitland, on reaching home,
surprised lady in gray, cracking the safe
.ontaining his gems. She, apparently,
took him for a well-known crook, Daniel
Anisty. Half-hypnotized, Maitland opened
iis safe, took therefrom the jewels, and
gave them to her, first forming a part
nership in crime.
CHAPTER IV.—Continued.
The interior of the safe was re
vealed in a shape little different from
that of the ordinary household strong
box. There were several account
books, ledgers and the like, together
with some packages of docketed bills,
in the pigeon holes. The cash box,
itself a safe within a safe, showed a
blank face broken by a small combi
nation dial. Behind this, in a se
emed compartment, the Maitland heir
looms languished, half forgotten of
their heedless owner.
The cash box combination offered
less difficulty than had the outer dial.
Maitland had it open in a twinkling.
Then, brazenly lifting out the inner
framework bodily, he thrust a fum
bling hand into the aperture thus dis
closed and pressed the spring, re
leasing the panel at the back. It dis
appeared as though by witchcraft,
and the splash of light from the bull's
eye discovered a canvas bag squatting
humbly in the secret compartment; a
fat little canvas bag, considerably soiled
from much handling, such as is used
by banks for coin, a sturdy, matter-of
fact, every-day sort of canvas bag,
with nothing about it of hauteur, no
air of self-importance or ostentation,
to betray the fact that it was the re
ceptacle of a small fortune.
At Maitland's ear, incredulous:
"How did you guess?" she breathed.
He took thought and breath, both
briefly, and prevaricated shamelessly:
“Bribed the head clerk of the safe
manufacturer who built this.”
Rising, he passed over to the center
table, the girl following. "Steady with
the light,” he whispered; and loosed
the string around the mouth of the
bag, pouring its contents, a glistening,
priceless, flaming, iridiscent treasure
horde, upon the table.
"Oh!" said a. small voice at his side.
And again and again: “Oh, Oh! Oh!”
Maitland himself was moved by the
wonder of it. The jewels seemed to
till the room with a flashing, amazing,
coruscant glamour, rainbow-like. His
breath came hot and fast as he gazed
upon the trove; a queen’s ramsom, a
fortune incalculable even to its owner.
As for the girl, he thought that the
wonder of it must have struck her
dumb. Not, a sound came from the
spot where she stood.
Then, abruptly, the sun went out;
at least, such was the effect; the light
of the hand lamp vanished utterly,
leaving a partly-colored blur swim
ming against the impenetrable black
ness, before his eyes.
His lips opened; but a small hand
fell firmly upon his own, and a tiny,
tremulous whisper shrilled in his ear.
"Hush—ah, hush!”
"What—?”
“Steady ... . some one coming.
. . . the jewels.”
He heard the dull musical clash of
them as her hands swept them back
into the bag, and a cold, sickening fear
rendered him almost faint with the
sense of trust misplaced, illusion re
solved into brutal realities. His fingers
closed convulsively about her wrists;
but she held passive.
“Ah, but I might have expected
that!” came her reproachful whisper.
' Take them, then, my—my partner
that was.” Her tone cut like a knife,
tind the touch of the canvas bag, as
'he forced it into his hands, was hate
ful to him.
“Forgive me—” he began.
"But listen!”
For a space he obeyed, the silence
at first seeming tremendous; then,
faint but distinct, he heard the tinkle
and slide of the brazen rings support
ing the smoking room portiere.
His hand sought the girl's; she had
not moved, and the cool, firm pressure
of her fingers steadied him. He
thought quickly.
“Quick!” he told her in the least of
whispers. “Leave by the window you
opened and wait for me by the motor
err.”
“No!”
There was no time to remonstrate
with her. Already he had slipped away,
shaping a course for the entrance to
the passage. But the dominant thought
in his mind was that at all costs the
girl must be spared the exposure. She
was to be saved, whatever the hazard.
Afterwards—
The tapestry rustled, but he tvas
yet too far distant to spring. He
crept on with the crouching, vicious
attitude, mental and physical, of a
panther stalking its prey.
Like a thunderclap from a clear sky
the glare of the light broke out from
the ceiling. Maitland paused, trans
fixed, on tiptoe, eyes incredulous, brain
striving to grapple with the astounding
discovery that had come to him.
The third factor stood in the door
way, slender and tall, in evening dress
—as was Maitland—a light, full over
coat hanging open from his shoulders;
one hand holding back the curtain, the
other arrested on the light switch. His
lips dropped open and his eyes, too,
were protruding with amazement. Fea
ture for feature he was the counter
part of the man before him; in a word,
here was the real Anisty.
The wonder of it all saved the day
for Maitland; Anisty's astonishment
was sincere and the more complete
in that, unlike Maitland, he had been
unprepared to find any one in the
library.
For a mere second his gaze left
Maitland and traveled on to the girl,
then to the rifled safe—taking in the
whole significance of the scene. When
he spoke, it was as if dazed.
"By God!” he cried—or, rather, the
syllables seemed to jump from his
lips like bullets from a gun.
The wmrds shattered the tableau. On
their echo Maitland sprang and fas
tened his fingers around the other’s
throat. Carried off his feet by the
sheer ferocity of the assault, Anisty
gave ground a little. For an instant
they were swaying back and forth,
with advantage to neither. Then the
burglar’s collar slipped and somehow
tore from its stud, giving Maitland’s
hands freer play. His grasp tightened
about the man’s gullet; he shook him
mercilessly. Anisty staggered, gasped,
reeled, struck Maitland once or twice
upon the chest—feeble, weightless el
bow jabs that went for nothing, then
concentrated his energies in a vain
attempt to wrench the hands from his
throat. Reeling, tearing at Maitland’s
wrists, face empurpling, eyes staring
in agony, he stumbled. Mercilessly
Maitland forced him to his kr. -3s and
bullied him across the floor toward the
nearest lounge—with creme!’..ated de
sign; finally succeeding in throwing
him flat; and knelt upon his chest, re
taining his grip but refraining from
throttling him.
As it was, all strength and thought
of resistance had been choked out of
Anisty. He lay at length, gasping
painfully.
Maitland glanced over his shoulders
and saw the girl moving forward, ap
parently making for the switch.
"No!" he cried, peremptorily. "Don’t
turn off the light—please!”
“But—” she doubted.
"Let me have those curtain cords, if
you please,” he requested, shortly.
She followed his gaze to the win
dows, interpreted his wishes, and was
very quick to carry them out. In a
trice she was offering him half a
dozen of the heavy, twisted silk cords
that had been used to loop back the
curtains.
Soft yet strong, they were excellent
ly well adapted to Maitland’s needs.
Unceremoniously he swung his captive
over on his side, bringing his neck and
ankles in juxtaposition to the legs of
that substantial piece of furniture, the
lounge.
His hands, the first to be secured, and
Lightly, behind his back, Anisty lay
helpless, glaring vindictively the while
gradually he recovered consciousness
and strength. Maitland cared little
for his evil glances; he w-as busy. The
burglar's ankles were next bound to
gether and to the lounge leg; and, an
instant later, a brace of half-hitches
about the man’s neck and the nearest
support entirely eliminated him as a
possible factor in subsequent events.
"Those loops around your throat,”
Maitland warned him curtly, "are
loose enough now, but if you struggle
they'll tighten and strangle you. Un- I
derstand?”
Anisty nodded, making an inco
herent sound with his swollen tongue.
At which Mail land frowned, smit ten
thoughtful with a nev,T consideration.
"You mustn’t talk, you know,” he
mused half aloud; and, whipping forth
a handkerchief, gagged Mr. Anisty.
After which, breathing hard and in a
maze of perplexity, he got to his feet.
Already his hearing, quickened by the
emergency, had apprised him of the
situation's imminent hazards. It
needed not the girl's hurried whisper,
“The servants!" to warn him of their
danger. Front the rear wing of the
mansion the sounds of hurrying feet
were distinctly audible, as, presently,
were the heavy, excited voices of men
and the more shrill and frightened
cries of women.
neeuiess oi ner oispieasure. Jiau
land seized the girl by the arm and
urged her over to the open window.
“Don’t hang back!" he told her ner
vously. "You must get out of this be
fore they sec you. Do as I tell you,
please, and we'll save ourselves yet!
If we both make a run for it, we're
lost. Don't you understand?"
“Xo. Why?" she demanded, reluc
tant, spirited, obstinate—and lovely in
his eyes.
“If he wrere anybody else,” Maitland
indicated, with a jerk of his head to
ward the burglar. “But didn't you
see? He must be Maitland—and he’s
my double. I'll stay, brazen it cut,
then, as soon as possible, make my es
cape and join you by the gate. Your
motor's there—wait! Be ready for
me”
But she had grasped his intention
ard was suddenly become pliant to his
will. “You’re wonderful!” she told
him with a little low laugh; and was
gone, silently as a spirit.
The curtains fell behind her in long,
straight folds; Maitland stilled their
swaying with a touch, and stepped
back into the room. For a moment he
caught the eye of the fellow on the
floor; it was upturned to his, sardonic
ally intelligent. But the lord of the
manor had little time to debate con
sequences.
Abruptly the door was flung wide
and a short stout man, clutching up
his trousers with a frantic hand, burst
into the library, brandishing over
head a rampant revolver.
“’Ands hup!” he cried, leveling at
Maitland. And then, with a fallen
countenance: “G-r-r-reat ’eavins, sir!
You, Mister Maitland, sir!”
“Ah, Higgins," his employer greeted
the butler blandly.
Higgins pulled up, thunderstruck,
panting and perspiring with agitation.
His fat cheeks quivered like the wat
tles of a gobbler, and his eyes bulged
as, by degrees, he became alive to the
situation.
Maitland began to explain, forestall
ing the embarrassments of cross-exam
ination.
“By the merest accident, Higgins, I
was passing in my car with a party of
Mends. Just for a joke I thought I'd
steal up to the house and see how you
were behaving yourselves. By chance
—again—I happened to see this light
through the library windows.” And
Maitland, putting an incautious hand
upon the bull’s-eye on the desk, with
drew it instantly, with an exclamation
of annoyance and four scorched fin
gers.
“He's been at the safe,” he added
quickly, diverting attention from him
self. “I was just in time.”
“My wor-r-rd!” said Higgins, with
emotion. Then quickly: "Did ’e get
anythin’, do you think, sir?”
Maitland shook his head, scowling
over the butler's burly shoulders at the
rapidly augmenting concourse of serv
ants in the hallway—lackeys, grooms,
maids, cooks, and what-not; a back-1
ground of pale, scared faces to the
tableau in the library. “This won’t
do,” considered Maitland. “Get back,
all of you!” he ordered, sternly, indi
cating the group with a dominant and
inflexible forefinger. “Those who are
wanted will be sent for. Now go!
Higgins, you may stay.”
"Yes, sir. Yes, sir. But wot an
’orrld ’appenin’, sir, if you'll permit
me—”
“I won’t. Be quiet and listen. This
man is Anisty—Handsome Dan Anisty,
the notorious jewel thief, wanted badly
by the police of a dozen cities. You
understand? . . . I'm going now
to motor to the village and get the
constables; I may,” he invented, des
perately, “be delayed—may have to get
a detective from Brooklyn. If this
scoundrel stirs, don't touch him. Let
him alone—he can’t escape if you do.
Above all things, don't you dare to re
move that gag!”
“Most cert’inly, sir. I shall bear in
mind wot you says—”
“You’d best,” grimly. “Now I'm off.
No; I don’t want any attendance—I
know my way. And—don’t—touch—
that man—till I return.”
“Very good, sir.”
Maitland stepped over to the safe,
glanced within, cursorily, replaced a
bundle of pacers which he did not re
call disturbing, closed the door and
twirled the combination.
“Nothing gone.” he announced. An
inarticulate gurgle from the prostrate
man drew a black scowl from Mait
land. Recovering, "Gccd morning,” he
said politely to the butler, and striding
out of the house by the front door,
was careful to slam that behind him,
ere darting into the shadows.
The moon was down, the sky a cold,
opaque gray, overcast with a light
drift of cloud. The park seemed very
dark, very dreary; a searching breeze
was sweeping inland from the sound,
soughing sadly in the tree tops; a
chill humidity permeated the air, pre
cursor of rain. The young man shiv
ered, both with chill and reaction from
the tension of the emergency just past.
He was aware of an instantaneous
loss of heart, a subsidence of the
elation which had upheld him through
out the adventure; and to escape this,
to forget or overcome it, took imme
diately to his heels, scampering madly
for the road, oppressed with fear lest
he should find the girl gone—with the
jewels.
That she should prove untrue, faith
less, lacking even that honor which
proverbially obtains in the society of
ctiminals—a consideration of such a
possibility was intolerable, as much
so as the suspense of ignorance. He
could not, would not, believe her
capable of ingratitude so rank; and
fought fiercely, unreasoningly, against
the conviction that she would have fol
lowed her thievish instincts and
made off with the booty. ... A
judgment meet and right upon him
for his madness!
Heart in mouth, he reached the
gates, passing through without dis
covering her, and was struck dumb
and witless with relief when she
stepped quietly from the shadows of
a low branching tree, offering him a
guiding hand.
"Come,” she said, quietly. "This
way.”
Without being exactly conscious of
what he was about he caught the
hand in both his own. “Then,” he ex
ulted almost passionately—"then you
didn't—”
His voice choked in his throat. Her
face, momentarily upturned to his,
gleamed pale and weary in the dreary
light; the face of a tired child,
troubled, saddened; yet with eyes in
expressibly sweet. She turned away,
tugging at her hand.
(TO BE CONTINUED.)
The Dog.
The dog is man’s most faithful
friend. A man may lie, but a dog
won’t; a man may get drunk, a man
may slander his neighbor, a man may
embezzle and defraud, a man may
borrow money, a man may steal
money, a man may go into politics,
a man may knife his best friend, a
man may run people down with an au
tomobile, a man may gamble himself
to ruin, a man may waste his sub
stance in riotous living, a man may
go to heaven—but a dog won't. Can
these things be truthfully spoken of
other friends man has about him?
There is a strong affinity between man
and the dog; it must be the affinity of
contrast. Yet any man will resent be
ing called a dog. Possibly the dog
would resent being called a man if he
understood—I do not know. I only
know that the maxim works but one
way; and if we would say: “Man is
the dog's most faithful friend,” there
would be many a cavil, saying that it
was mighty rough on the dog.—Suc
cess Magazine.
And Then He Wasn’t Pleased
Wifcy’s Economy That Drew No Praise
from Husband.
There was a pensive look in Mrs.
Compton's charming eyes, but she
smiled across the table at her husband
when he asked’her if she felt too tired
to go with him to a concert. “I sup
pose you have been busy packing all
day,” he said, thoughtfully.
"Oh, yes, I’ve been busy,” she said,
with a little sigh, “but I feel satisfied,
for everything is packed now, except
the last things, that can’t go in the
trunks till to-morrow, and besides that
I have done something I’m sure will
please you, Henry. It will show you
that I'm really learning to be thrifty
and economical like you.”
"I should like to hear what you've
done," said Mr. Compton, with as seri
ous an air as his wife’s.
“I knew that the battery in my little
electric lantern would not begin to last
till ous vacation was over,” said Mrs.
Compton, “and yet it didn't really need i
to be recharged yet. So rather than
have that spark wasted. I went into
the library at desk, with all the cur
tains drawn and the shades down, and
just sat there in the dark—or it would
have been dark except for the lantern,
1 mean—and pressed one finger after
another on the lantern button,
changing fingers as they got numb, till
at last the spark gave out. So now I
can have it recharged to-morrow with
a clear conscience.”—Youth’s Compan
ion.
What’s in a Word7
Two men were discussing the trou
ble in India, and each had a deal to
say about his notion of Hindu charac
ter.
’’They’re such a bellicose set of
people,” said one.
"Indeed!” exclaimed the other, In
surprise. “I was always under the im
pression that they were very spare
men.”—Harper’s Weekly.
People Talk Acotr: Things.
Fourteen years ago few people knew of
such a preparation as a Powder for the
Fee*.. To-day after the genuine merits of
Allen's Foot-Ease have been told year after
year by grateful persons, it is indispens
able to millions. It is cleanly, whole
some, healing and antiseptic and gives
rest and comfort to tired aching feet.
It cures while you walk. Over 30,000
testimonials. Imitations pay the dealer
a larger profit otherwise you would never
be offered a substitute for Allen’s Foot
Ease, the original foot powder. Ask for
Allen’s Foot-Ease, and see that you get it.
Not Hard to Please.
"Woman may be uncertain and coy,”
remarked the boarding house philoso
pher, ‘‘but she isn’t hard to please.
That's where the poet is wrong.”
“What new light have you had on
that subject, Mr. McGinnis?” asked the
landlady.
“She'll put up with almost any kind
of stick for a husband and wear any
old thing on her head for a hat.”
Important to Mothers.
Examine carefully every bottle of
CASTOK1A a safe and sure remedy for
Infants and children, and see that it
Hears the
Signature of<
Id Use For Over 1JO Years.
The Kind You Have Always Bought.
Courage.
“He’s a man of great courage."
“Unusual courage?”
“Yes, unusual courage. He Isn’t
afraid to keep his seat in a street ear,
even if a woman he knows is standing
right in front of him.”
Red. Weak. Weary, Watery Ejei
Relieved by Murine Eye Remedy. Com
pounded by Experienced Physicians. Mu
rine Doesn't Smart: Soothes Eye Pain.
Write Murine Eye Remedy Co.. Chicago,
for illustrated Eye Rook. At Druggists.
Ruling Passion.
“He’s half crazy about music.”
“Sure is. Even calls his price list
a scale of prices.”
Over fifty years of public confidence
and popularity. That is the record of
Hamlins Wizard Oil, the world’s stand
ard remedy for aches ami pains. There’s
a reason and only one—MERIT.
Uncle Josh Says:
’Tain’t all cigarette smoke la Turk
ish circles, b’ jinks, is it?
For Any Disease or Injury to
the eye. use PETTIT'S EYE SALVE, ab
solutely harmless, acts quickly. 25c. All .
druggists or Howard Bros., Buffalo, N. Y. '
Marriage is not a lottery; it's a
raffle. One man gets the prize while
the other gets the shake.
There are imitations, don't be fooled
There is no substitute! Tell the dealer you
want Lewis’ Single Binder cigar.
She is a wise young wife who tries
her first cake (la tramp.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrnp.
For children teething, 6oftenb the gums, reduces In
fiainm&tion.tllayt: pa*?, exes wind colic. li5ca bottle
Somemarriages medn war and some
mean an armed truce.
There’s Danger
Ahead
if you’ve been neglecting a cold.
Don’ texperiment with your health.
Get a remedy that you will
cure—that remedy is
DR. D. JAYNE’S
EXPECTORANT
It’s safe. In the severest cases of
coughs, colds, bronchitis, croup, in
flammation of chest and lungs it is the
most effective remedy known. It does
its work quickly, removes the cause of
the disease
Sold everywhere in three size
bottles, $1.00, 50c, 25c.
Constipation—
Nearly Every One Gets It
The bowels show first sign
of things going wrong. A
Cascaret taken every night
as needed keeps the bowels
working naturally without
grip, gripe and that upset
sick feeling. 9"
Ten cent box, week’s treatment.
All drop stores. Biggest seller in
tlie world—million boxes a month.
Always Ready Always Sharp
NO STROPPING NO HONING
i PARKER'S
HAIR BALSAM
Cleanses and bcarrifies the h.ilr.
Promotes a luxuriant growth.
Never Paila to Iteatore Gray
Hair to lta Youthful Color.
Cures scalp diseases ft hair iailir*.
^^^Oc^aad^LOOat^TugMts^^
MOTHERS
WHO HAVE
DAUGHTERS
Find! Help in Lydia IB. Pink*
ham’s Vegetable Compound
Winchester, Ind. — “Four doctors
told me that they could never make
me regular, uuu
that I would event
ually have dropsy.
1 would bloat, and
suffer frombearing
down pains,cramps
and chills, and I
could not sleep
nights. My mother
wrote to Mrs. Pink
ham for advice,and
I began to take
LydiaE.Pinkham’s
Vegetable Com
pound. After taking one and one
lialf bottles of the Compound, I am all
right again, and I recommend it to
every suffering woman.” — MiiS. May
Deal, Winchester, Ind.
Hundreds of such letters from girls
and mothers expressing their gratitude
for what Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege
table Compound has accomplished for
them have been received by The Lydia
E. PinkhamMedicino Company, Lynn,
Mass.
Girls who are troubled with painful
or irregular periods, backache, head
ache, dragging-down sensations, faint
ing spoils or indigestion, should take
immediate action to ward off the seri
ous consequences and be restored to
health by Lyclia E. Pinkham’s Vege
table Compound. Thousands have been
restored to health by its use.
If you would like special advice
about your case write a confiden
tial letter to Mrs. Pinkkam, at
Lynn. Mass. Her advice is free,
and always helpful
SICK HEADACHE
Positively cured by
these Little Pills.
The.v also relieve Dis
tress from Dyspepsia, In
digestion aud Too Hearty
Eatinpr. A perfect rem
edy for D'zziness, Nau
sea, Drowsiness, Bad
Taste in t he Month, Coat
ed Tongue, Pain In the
Side, TORPID LIVER.
They regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable.
SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE.
Genuine Must Bear
Fac-Similc Signature
REFUSE SUBSTITUTES.
45 to 50 Bu of Wheat Per Acre
have been grown on farm lands in
WESTERN CANADA
Much les5 would be
satisfactory. The gen
eral average is above
twenty bushels.
“Allare !oud in their
praises of the great
crops and that won
derful country.”- hi
tmjct from ccrresronJi nee Falional LSitorial
Association cf August,
It is now possible to secure a homestead cf 160
acres free and another 160 acres at $3.C0 per acre.
Hundreds have paid the cost of their farms (if
purchased) and then had a balance of from $10.00
to $ 12.00 per acre from or.e crop. \L heat, barley,
oats,flax—all do well. Mixed farming is a great
success and dairying is highly profitable. Excel
lent climate, splendid schools and churches, rail
ways bring most every district within easy reach
of market. Railway and land companies have
lands for sale at low prices and on easy terms.
“Last Best West” pamphlets and maps sent
free. For these and information a9 to How
to secure lowest railway rates, apply to
Superintendent of Immigration, Ottawa,
Canada, or the authorized Canadian Govern
ment Agent:
W. V. BENNETT,
801 New York Life Building, Omaha. Nebraska*
CARTERS
SPittie
ljlVER
| PILLS.
TOILET ANTISEPTIC
-NOTHINC LIKE IT FOR
TUP TppV|J Paxtine excels any dentifrice
■ " ■■ I n in cleansing, whitening and
removing tartar from the teeth, beside? destroying
all germs of decay and disease which ordinary
tooth preparations cannot do.
Tlir MAI ITU Pe’ttine used as a mouth
* ■*" IwlwW I n wash disinfects the mouth
and throat, purifies the breath, and kills the germs
which collect in the mouth, causing sore throat,
bad teeth, bad breath, grippe, and much sickness.
TUP PYFC wf,en inflamed, tired, ache
! int bl kw and bum, may be instantly
relieved and strengthened by Paxtine.
ATAB PU destroy the germs
j ■ F4linn that cause catarrh, heal the in
flammation and stop the dischergc.
, remedy for uterine catarrh.
Paxtine is a harmless yet powerful
gennicide,disinfei5tant and deodorizer.
Used in bathing it destroys odors and
leaves the body antiseptically clean.
TOR sate AT DRUG STORES,50c
OR POSTPAID BV MAIL.
URGE SAMPLE FREE! _
THE PAXTON TOILET CO.. BOSTON. MASS,
is a sure
DAISY FLY KILLER
1
I placed anywhere
I attract* ami kills
all Has. Neat,
< iHan.arnutuenial,
eonve!-,leul.c‘jeap.
l-aiiull aratuu. ('ati
ll 't spill or tip
over, will not noil
orinjureanytlmnr.
iJ’iaran^ee*} effec
tive. of alt dealers,
or sent pn’paaifor
Harold Somers,
151) Or kalb Armor,
Brook If b. New York.
"wSwSAS S Thompson’s £ys Water
W. N. U., OMAHA, NO. 24-1909.
In ■ pinch,
use Allen's
Twit-Ease."
ALLEN’S FOOTEASE
_Shake Into Your Shoes
Allen s Foot*Ease, a powder for the feet. It relieves painful, swol
len. smarting, nervous feet, and instantly takes the sting out of corus
and bunions. It’s the greatest comfort discovery of the age.
Allen's Foot=Ease makes tight-fitting or new shoes feel easy. It is a
certain relief for ingrowing nails, perspiring, callous and hot, tired,
v aching feet. It is always in demand for use in Patent Leather Shoes
^ad for Breaking in New Shces. We have over 30,000 testimonials.
TR\ IT TODAY. Sold by all Druggists, 25c. Do not accept
any Substitute. Sent by mail for 25c. in stamps.
TRIAL PACKAGE sent by mail. Address
ALLEN S. OLMSTED, LE ROY, N, Y.