The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, October 23, 1913, Image 7

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    MRS. MANGES
ESCAPES
OPERATION
How She Was Saved From
Surgeon’s Knife by Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Vegeta
ble Compound.
Mosadore Ohio. - ‘ ‘The first two years
I was married I suffered so much from
iem&ie troubles and
bearing down paina
that I could not
stand on my feet
long enough todo my
work. The doctor
said I would have to
undergo an opera*
tion, but my husband
wanted me to try
Lydia E. Pinkham’s
I'inf' | v egeiaDie ujm
1--J pound first. I took
three bottles and it made me well and
strong and I avoided a dreadful opera
tion. I now have two fine healthy chil
dren, and I cannot say too much about
what Lydia E. Pinkham’s V ege table Com
pound has done for me.” — Mrs. T w,
Manges, R. F. D. 10, Mogadore, Ohio.
Why will women take chances with
an operation or drag out a sickly, half
hearted existence, missing three-fourths
of the joy of living, when they can find
health in Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound ?
For thirty years it has been the stand
ard remedy for female ills, and has re
stored the health of thousands of women
who have been troubled with such ail
ments as displacements, inflammation,
ulceration, tumors, irregularities, etc.
If yon want special advice write to
Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. (confi
dential) Lynn, Mass. Tonr letter will
be opened, read and answered by a
woman and held in strict confidence*
Make the Liver
Do its Duty
Nine times in ten when the liver is
right the stomach and bowels are right
CARTER’S LITTLE
LIVER PILLS
gentlybutfirmly com
pel a lazy liver toi'“
do its duty.
Cures Con-„
stipation, In-^
digestion.
Sick
nenaacfie, — rv
and Distress After Eating.
SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE.
Genuine must bear Signature
We Will Pay You $120.00
to distribute religious literature in rour community.
W days' work. Experience not required. Man or wo
man. Opportunity for promotion. Spare time may be
Used, lnteraaliaaai Bible Pun, 1014 Irek St., Philadelphia
Airman’s Dream.
M. Esnault, Pelterie, one of the
best-known French aviation experts,
is of opinion that the day will come
when communication between the
earth and the moon and stars will be
possible in aeroplanes.
Providing that radium is one day
found in large quantities and that
some way of harnessing its energies
is discovered by scientists, he calcu
lates that an aeroplane weighing a
ton apropos of an administrative mu
800 miles which separate the earth
the moon in three hours and five
minutes.
About 800 pounds oi radium would
be necessary to provide the fuel for
the journey. At the current price
about $10,000,000,000 worth would be
required.
Trips to certain of the stars he
considers equally practicable.
The Objection.
Patience—I hear that Montreal po
lice authorities are in favor of the pro
posal to add several police women to
the force.
Patrice—The trouble is that none of
'em want to be plain-clothes women, 1
suppose.
Sure Proof.
“How can a girl be sure that a
young man loves her?"
“Oh, there are reliable signs. Now,
my beau stands for my father’s stale
stories and even for an occasional
touch.”
The less a man knows about women
the more wisdom he has.
-^
Breakfast
1 Sunshine
Post
Toasties
and Cream
I
There’s a delicious smack
in these crisp, appetizing bits
of toasted com that brings
brightness and good cheer to
many and many a breakfast
table.
Toasties are untouched by
hand in making; and come in
tightly sealed packages—clean
and sweet—ready to eat with
cream and sugar.
Wholesome
Nourishing
Easy to Serve
Sold by grocers everywhere.
<>0<><><x><><><>00<x><>0<><>
HER FH EUNICE
By EVA TAYLOR.
“George, ’ said Leslie, ' you have
heard me speak about my friend
Eunice Vane? I have ju9t had a let
ter from her; she is coming to pay
me a visit for a couple of days, with
her two children, while her Wsband is
away in New York. 1 haven’t Been
her for nearly six years. You know
we were at college together.”
"Then I guess I'll have to spruce up
tomorrow night.” answered Leslie's
fiance, as he rose to take his leave
of her. He kissed her and put on his
hat. As he went down the steps Les
lie looked after him with a vague dis
satisfaction which she could not quite
analyze.
“Lucky Eunice!” she soliloquized, a
little bitterly. “Here we are, both
verging on thirty, and both engaged
in the same month. And you have
a rich husband and two babies, while
I—” She shrugged her shoulders and
went back into the parlor.
George and Leslie had been engaged
for nearly six years. She was a
school teacher and George a lawyer
in the same town. But Leslie earned
more than George and he would not
marry her—nor did she desire it—
until he was earning enough to sup
port her at home. They had meant
to be married many years before, but
first George's firm had failed and he
had had to set up for himself, this in
volving the expenditure of all the lit
tle hoard that had been accumulated
so carefully. Then had come a pe
riod of sickness, when all Leslie's sav
ings had gone on hospital and phy
sicians' fees. Finally, just when they
had begun to put something aside for
furniture, a nation-wide panic had
cut down George's earnings to the
bare minimum of subsistence, and he
was only just beginning to earn a liv
ing wage again.
“Happy Eunice!” sighed Leslie.
And then she began to understand
why she was miserable that evening.
It was not altogether envy of her
friend. The fact was—she felt that
George and she were drifting apart.
There was no longer the sense of ro
mance, of rapture, in their meetings.
I-1
I__I
"Why?" Asked Leslie.
And George was growing careless. He
never asked her permission before
pulling out that old pipe of his in the
parlor. And he had said that he
would have to "spruce up" for Eunice
—had said it brazenly, as though ad
mitting that it was not necessary to
take such a measure for her!
Leslie spent a miserable night. In
the morning Eunice arrived with the
children.
Leslie was astonished at Eunice's
appearance. She had always thought
of her as the young, immature, rather
sedate young girl with whom she had
roomed at college. Instead of which
she saw before her a matronly young
woman, calm, self-posses6ed, with two
children, a boy and a girl, who made
I Leslie's heart ache as she kissed
them.
They found a certain sense of em
barrassment in their meeting. They
were conscious that everything had
changed since their college days; their
interests had become divergent; they
had grown apart in many ways. And
Leslie was painfully conscious that it
was she who had stood still, not
Eunice. It was not until after
George's visit that evening that
Eunice seemed to thaw.
"So that is George," she said. Then
she took Leslie by the hand. “My
dear, ’ how long have you been en
gaged?" she asked.
“Five years,” said Leslie, rather
frigidly.
“Leslie, do yon know that you could
have been married for five years and
; had that much more happiness?’’ ask
j ed Eunice.
Leslie began to explain the cir
! cunistances, the long series of misfor
| tunes. There was a touch of envy in
her tone which was not lost upon her
friend.
“My dear," she answered, "I know
that you have made a great mistake—
I should say the great mistake.”
“Why?” &Bked Leslie. “Do you be
lieve in marrying before one is in a
position to do so? If George had had
your husband's advantages—”
"When Philip and I got married,”
answered Eunice, “he had just $50 in
the world. And we spent that on our
honeymoon. We had no furniture, he
had no prospects except those of a
poorly paid clerk. The first three
years were a continuous struggle. A
month before Arthur was born we did
not know where the doctor's expenses
would come from. And we have been
very happy all through it Philip al
ways says that if he hadn't had me he
would never have reached the position
be holds today.
“If we had waited, as you have wait
ed—where would we be now? Dear
Leslie, do you think marriage is a
thing that should come after one has
made one’s way in the world? Philip
■ays that it is part of life, not the re
ward of life."
Leslie hardly slept that night And
on the next day. after Eunice had
gone, she waa too ill to go to school. |
She knew now that tt was not llke
.V
ly that George and she would ever
marry. She had Been her face in the
mirror; ahe had changed even more
than Eunice, but instead of taking on
the matronly aspect of a happily mar
ried woman she had become a queru
lous-looking old maid instead. Some
day George would awaken to the un
derstanding of what they had missed
in life; he would marry some young
girl, and she—well, it would be like
those horrible breach-of-promise cases
that she had read in the newspapers.
She must let George go. She knew
that he did not love her. She had be>
come merely a part of the routine of
his life.
A ring at the bell—George’s ring!
He never called at four in the after
noon. Something must have occurred
to make him leave his office at that
hour. She fastened ber hair and
slipped down tbe stairs.
George followed her into the parlor
and sat down heavily. His face was
unshaven, his tie sagged from his col
lar; he looked thoroughly dejected.
■•Leslie,” he said, “I have come to
offer you your freedom. I can never
marry you."
She looked at him; a new-born pity
rose In her heart. How men had to
struggle! She had not thought before
that George, too, might be as wretched
at. she.
"The bank has failed," he continued,
in a monotonous voice. "Every penny
is gone. I am at the bottom of the
ladder again. It 'kill mean three years
longer. Leslie, I can't hold you. Les
lie! Why, what are you laughing
about?"
She laughed, and the tears in her
eyes were those of happiness. She
went across to George's chair and
perched herself upon the arm of it,
just as she used to do in the first days
of their engagement.
“My dear,” she said, "how would
you like to marry me without the
house -and the furniture and the new
trunks and the outfit and the trous
seau? Do you want me, dear, or do
you want these?”
He leaped up and caught her hands
incredulously.
"Do you mean that, Leslie?” he
cried. "Why, I have never dared to
make that suggestion. Do you—will
you? Today?"
"Tomorrow," answered Leslie, smil
ing, and then a flood of happy tears
blinded her eyes.
(Copyright, 1913. by W. G. Chapman.)
VICTORY WON BY DIPLOMACY
When Mr. Thurlow Knew How to
Soften the Heart of Hi» Charm
er's Mother.
Mrs. Darnton," said William Thur
low, "there is a matter which I would
like to discuss with you, If I may at
this time.”
Mrs. Darnton looked over her glass
es and frowned. She was the secre
tary of the Society for the Preven
tion of Manly Independence, and she
had a well defined idea of the nature
of the proposition that Mr. Thurlow
Wished to discuss.
"Well, go on,” she said in her most
impressive manner, what is it?"
“I love your daughter and I have
reasons to believe that she returns
my affection.”
"Have you dared to make love to
her without first gaining my permis
sion?”
“No, dear lady. I have never call
ed her sweetheart or darling, or any
thing like that. I have merely gained
the impression, owing, perhaps, to
the pleasure she seemed to have in
my company, that she might learn to
care for me if I gained authority from
S’ou to try to win her love.”
Mrs. Darnton's features hardened,
and she coldly asked:
“What recommendation have you to
offer for yourself? If you love my
daughter now, how am I to be con
vinced that your love will not be as
evanescent—kindly mark the word—as
evanescent as is the love almost every
other man has for his wife at the be
ginning?”
"I am sure my love will not be evan
escent. I shall love Geraldine always,
I know. I shall never cease to worship
her for her beauty. I have noticed that
she takes after her mother. If I may
say so, and that is a guarantee that
her beauty will not fade as the ye-,rs
go by. If I might, with permission,
try to win—”
Geraldine came downstairs and in
terrupted them then, but the jury
returned a verdict In Mr. Thurlow’s
favor.
Almost the Same Thing.
A little girl, visiting her auntie, was
compelled to sleep in a room colder
than that to which she was accus
tomed at home. Every night, before
retiring, she took a hot bath, and
auntie noticed that from the bathroom
she made swift and straight flight to
bed. “Don’t you say your prayers at
night, dear?” asked the lady, in tones
of gentle reproof. “Oh, yes, auntie
dear, I say them In the bathroom, it’s
warmer. I say them just the last
thing before I come to bed.”
“But,” said auntie, who had noticed
the child's habit of lying flat in the
water for a few moments before
emerging from the bath, "you don’t
kneel down to say them, do you?”
“No,” was the unexpected answer,
“but I turn over on my front.”
Owed Life to Dream.
Melton Prior, the famous war art
ist, always averred that he owed his
life on one occasion to warning
dreams. When going out to the Zulu
war he twice dreamed that be was
shot and then buried. On arriving at
Durban he received a letter from his
mother telling of a dream identical
with his own, and begging him not to
go to the front. He obeyed her in
junction, and engaged another artist
to go in bis place. The unfortunate
substitute was almost the first man
killed in the fighting. One wonders
why a warning dream was not grant
ed him also.
4,
Believed Fish Had a Language.
In the old Roman days the murae
nas, or sea eels, were supposed to be
possessed of a "language”—“low and
sweet,” it is denominated by one an
cient writer, “and with an Intonation
so fascinating that few could resist its
Influence.” The Emperor Augustus, it
was contended, was the only ssoitgl
who could understand this ‘language-”
USING COMMON SENSE IN THE HOG LOT
Berkshire Gelts.
In breeding swine we must consider
the type of hog the nearest market
demands.
Never sacrifice a good body in or
der to shorten the snout or decrease
the size of the ears.
Buy a boar of some reliable breeder
who has been working for years to get
the correct type of a pig and who is
prepered to furnish the type you de
sire.
With well bred hogs your feed and
care will produce the best results.
It is mistaken idea that breeding an
imals to do well must be fed only
enough to keep them alive.
At mating time both sire and dam
should be in the pink of condition to
produce the best results.
Feed a pig all he can eat without
squealing. This can be done only by
watching him eat and knowing just
how much he needs.
An old school teacher once said to
her class on physology, "the internal
organs of a hog are the nearest like
those of a human being and any dumb
animal,” unless it be a man.
Swine are natives of a tropical cli
mate and should have warm and dry
quarters.
In this era of cheap woven wire
; fences there is absolutely no excuse
: for a nasty ill-smelling hog yard near
; the house where disease is bred, and
the best fertilizers of the farm dissi
pated loto air.
Is it any wonder that pigs lose their
thriftness and constitution and be
come weak in the back with crooked
legs when they are confined in an
8 by 10 pen that is cleaned but once a
year, and then when the owner has
I time. Stop and figure the losses that
' result from pigs that do not do well
and are restless when all they need
to make them comfortable and con
I tented is the run of a nice clean pas
ture where they can leave their drop
J pings to the benefit of the soil.
USEFUL HINTS ON
FEEDING THE HOGS
—
Animals Should Be Separated
According to Size—Some La
bor-Saving Schemes.
As a general thing, on the average
farm too much time is used in feed
ing and caring for hogs. Unnecessar
ily slow and tedious methods are em
ployed, whereas shorter cuts in feed
I ing than those practiced at present
j would produce equally good results
either by the use of horse labor, by
the rearrangement of the feeding
yards and troughs, by the more care
ful use of pasture and crops that may
be harvested by the hogs, and thus
reduce the number of hours required
to care for the animals and at the
same time save labor, says the Iowa
Homestead.
Where one is feeding many hogs it
frequently is a labor saver to use a
horse in transporting swill, water and
feed directly from the tank and bin to
the pens, yards or field in which the
animals are kept. Wide alley hogs
houses make possible using the one
horse truck, not alone for hauling feed
in, but for hauling out the manure
and thereby keeping the surroundings
clean and sanitary.
There are few who have taken the
; trouble to separate the shoats accord
! ing to size so that they could be fed
more easily and satisfactorily. Many
prefer to feed hogs of all sizes to
gether, either continuing the feeding
until all are full or else wasting time
j chasing the larger ones away until
the smaller ones are fed. Feeding all
j the animals will hold is a wasteful
method, while beating up the big ones
while the smaller ones eat is not
conducive to gains in either the old
or young. It is always well in feed
ing hogs to sort according to size and
limit the number to twenty or thirty
in a feeding place.
FARM WATER TANK
IS BIG NECESSITY
Force Pump Is Great Help and
Engine or Windmill Will Fur
nish Needed Power.
Water is used more often than any
thing else in the home, therefore it
should be of the best quality and
handy.
The old open well was a death trap
for everything that crawls, walks or
flies, and these, decaying, caused dis
ease and a big doctor’s bill. So, writes
B. C. Lane of Michigan in the Epito
mist, have a good driven well and get
the supply from below the surface
water. Put on a force pump, and if
you are using any quantity of water
attach a gasoline engine or a windmill
to do your pumping.
Lay pipe to your house (be sure to
get it below the frost line) and con
nect the pipe with a tank. The pneu
matic tank in the basement is the best,
but an open tank with a loose cover in
an upper room is all right. The size of
a tank will depend on the quantity of
water you use. Have it large enough
to hold at least a day's supply. Or,
if you can’t afford anything better,
and it is for house use only, put in a
good barrel on a stand' in one comer
of the kitchen. If you put in a tank
run a pipe from it to any place need
ed, and be sure to have a sink with
waste pipe.
If you have only hand power for
pumping, you will find it takes but lit
tle more exertion to pump water into
the tank, and it will save carrying—
no small chore.
One Cruel Method.
The old way of carrying fowls by
their legs or wings is not practiced by
the present day poultrymen. It is a
cruel practice. Holding the fowl firmly
by the lege and allowing the body to
rest on the arm is .a much better
method.
Don’t Winter Loafers.
Put the old hens by themselves and
feed liberally with com to fatten
them for market Do not winter any
loafers, but it may be well to keep a
few for hatching purposes.
BEST LOCATION OF
THE POULTRY FARM
Do Not Set Hens Late in Fall Un
less Buildings Are Well Suit
ed for Broods.
Hens should not be set late in the
summer or fall unless there are build
ings well suited for housing the young
broods. Chickens will not thrive if
shut up on a barn floor. They are
far better to be cooped up out of
doors upon dry ground. They must
have sunshine, air, exercise and a full
supply of green food, in addition to
their regular grain rations and plenty
of clean fresh water given twice a
day. It requires close attention to all
the little points in the feeding and
management of poultry to make the
business profitable. It is not an easy
business. Probably a large propor
tion of sudden deaths amongst young
chickens are due to overfeeding
(cramming), badly ventilated coops
and yards infested with germs. Give
free grass range. Poultry cannot be
kept healthy when kept closely con
fined In small yards.
Chickens require feeding three
times a day and only a small quantity
at each meal should be the rule. A
very successful poultryman says:
“One-quarter of a pint of corn Is
ample grain for a hen for one day
without any other food, and one tea
spoonful of corn mush or coarse meal
per day is sufficient for a young
chicken.”
In locating a poultry business, se
lect gravelly or sandy land that
drains naturally. A hillside sloping
to the south, protected by a grove
of trees on the north and west, with
a stream of running water at the
bottom of the slope should be chosen.
Heavy limestone and red clay land,
unless well drained, is not suitable for
poultry. Such land, even with the
best of management, is liable to be
cold and wet in the eaFly spring and
during most of the winter months.
PACKING HONEY IN
PRINTED CARTONS
Neat Little Receptacles Are of
Great Convenience to Dealer
and Consumer.
The best grades of comb honey
should be put on the market in neatly
printed cartons. They are a great
convenience for the dealer, they serve
to keep honey free from dust, and
also prevent marring the delicate
comb when handling from the grocery
to the consumer’s kitchen.
Cartons are so inexpensive and s<
useful that it is surprising that more
of the best comb honey is not put on
the market in them.
Of course, those using carton*
should be very careful to see that only
the most perfect sections of honey are
put into them. A honey purchaser
will seldom buy cartoned honey the
second time if she has been once de
ceived—by getting, for instance, a
partly filled comb in a carton; or. per
haps. a dirty-looking comb.
Cartons Bhould be used more exten
sively than they are now, as they also
furnish an added opportunity to send
printed honey Information with each
comb of honey sold.
Read-Dust Per Chicks.
Begin this month to gather road-dust
in barrels for the hens to bathe in
daring winter. In the summer they
dig in the field and sun themselves,
half buried in the dust.
_•
Pigs Must Have Grain.
Neither rape nor clover alone will
do for growing fattening hogs. They
must have some grain twice a day
for best results.
Shelter for Sheep.
Do not think because a sheep has
a heavy coat of wool it will be able
to endure cold rains and sleep with
out a warm shelter.
Sheep Are Immune.
Sheep are practically ipunm^ to
tuberculosis.
New Broome.
Representative Dillon said in Yank
ton apropos to an administrative mu
nicipal change, of which he did not ap
prove! 'They declare that a new
broom sweeps clean, but some of these
new brooms that seem to sweep clean
are In reality only throwing dust in
our eyes.’’
RED, ROUGH HANDS MADE
SOFT AND WHITE
For red, rough, chapped and bleed
ing hands, dry, fissured, Itching, burn
ing palms, and painful finger-ends,
with shapeless nails, a one-night Cuti
cura treatment works wonders. Di
rections: Soak the hands, on retir
ing, in hot water and Cuticura Soap.
Dry, anoint with Cuticura Ointment,
and wear soft bandages or old, loose
gloves during the night These pure,
sweet and gentle emollients preserve
the hands, prevent redness, roughness
and chapping, and Impart in a single
night that velvety softness and white
ness so much desired by women. For
those whose occupations tend to in
jure the bands, Cuticura Soap and Cu
ticura Ointment are wonderful.
Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold
; throughout the world. Sample of each
| free.with 32-p. Skin Book. Address post
! card “Cuticura, Dept. L, Boston."—Adv.
_
How happy the average married
I man would be if he were only half as
J well satisfied with his wife as he is
j himself!
I Bronchial troubles weaken the system.
: Pneumonia sometimes follows. Dean’s Men
tholated Cough Drops prevent trouble.
Philadelphia police have been in
structed to enforce rigidly the law
governing the speed of trolley cars.
j Don’t buy water for bluing. Liquid blue
is almost all water. Buv Red Cross Ball
! Blue, the blue that's all blue. Adv.
Vancouver, B. C., is to have a new
| $350,000 opera house.
i -_ !
Sprains, Braises
Stiff Mascles
* :
fcre quickly relieved by Sloan’g
Liniment. Lay it on—no rub
bing. Try it.
Ankl. Sprain and Di.loc.trd Hip.
“ I sprained my ankle and dislocated
my hip by falling out of a third story
wm.ow. Went on crutches for four \
months. Then I started to use your
Liniment, according to directions I
must say it is helping me wonderfully.
We will never be without Sloan's Lini
ment anymore."—Chat. Joknton., Laeemt
Station, KY.
SLOANS
LINIMENT
Kills Pain
Splendid for Sprains.
i “I fell and sprained my arm a week
ago and was in terrible pain. I could
not use my hand or arm until I applied
your Liniment. I shall never be with
out a bottle of Sloan’s Liniment."—**™.
B. B. Springer, EUeaheth, S'. J. s,
Fin. for Stiffness. |
“Sloan’s Liniment has done more
good than anything I have ever tried
for stiff joints. I got my hand hurt so
badly that I had to stop work right in
the busiest time of the year. I thought
at first that I would have to have my
hand taken off. but I got a bottle off
Sloan’s Liniment and cured my hand."
—IT.Lion Whteitr, Morrit, Ala.
I At all Dealers. 25c_
| 60c. and $1.00
I Send for Sloan's
■ free, instructive J
■ book on horses, C
■ cattle, hogs and \>
■ poultry. Address
I Dr.EARLS.SLOAN,lac.
| BOSTON, MASS.
HIM MU I !■■■
ALCOHOL-3 PER CERT
{* I A\«getable Preparation for As -
Ifcis similating the Food and Regula
te 1 hng the Sfomachs and Bowels of
j:si • -
- '■?>l
-.-.-.. :- :
oj'3 Promotes Dige s lion,Cheerful
?! nessandRest Contains neither
Opium .Morphine nor Mineral
!tj Not Narcotic
^ Prupr of O/d DrSAMVUfrmat
j;
fi AMrttoSa/b -
2* Anuo S.U ■
g •
%*d -
1 {I ClarS/fdSuf*
J.C WiitkrfrTtm fhnrwr
K\l -
ijpC Aperfect Remedy forConstipa
tion, Sour Stomach.Diarrhoea,
*{o Worms .Convulsions.Feverish
ness and LOSS OF SLEEP
M —-:
KO iFac Simile Signature of
Ijj GbtfflSSZ.
65^ The Centaur Company.
& NEW VORK.
I_
X.(£iarameed under the Foodaii
Exact Copy of Wrapper.
CASTORIA
Tor Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have
Always Bought
i
■
Thirty Years
MSTCBIA
OtWTAUB OOMMMY, NIM VONK OITV. * 1
WATCHES MR
Rifles Shoot Well, Work Well and Wear Well
The rough, hard usage that hunting rifles often receive
requires them to be constructed on sound mechanical
principles and of the best materials. All Winchester
rifles are so made. Nothing is left undone that will make
them shoot well, work well, look well and wear well.
Winchester Guns and Ammunition—The Red VV Brand—are made for all kinds of Hunting
Winchester repeating arms Co.. - - new haven, conn. |
W. L. DOUGLAS
fe *3.00 *3.50 *4.00
*4-50 and $R.oo
SHOES !
FOR MEN AND WOMEN/
8**tBoy 8*0*3 In th* World I
82.00, $2.60 and $3.00 I
BEOAH BtrBZHES8 XV 187* \
OH f 179 CAPITAL. HOW THE 1
LAMEST MAKEB OF S3 SO * "
H.OO BBOES XH THE WOELD
A»k inr dealer to show in
W.L.DOsrla*$3.40, $4.00aad
ahoea. Just u rood la atile, fit aad
•ear aa other makes rostiag $4.00 to $7.00 —the
oali dlffereare Is the prlre. Shoes la all
therm, stiles sad shapes to salt emery body. /
*1 r»* ®f"*4 TU,t w-L Doaflas largo factories /
at Broektea, Bam., aad see for yourself how f.
_ carefalli V. I„ Doaclas shoes an made. >«• L
waua un anderatand why they are warraated to
•t hatter, leek better, held their ahaae and wear leaser
thaa may other wake for the prlrT *
If W. L- Dooglaa aboeeare not for ante in yoor Tietntty.
order direct from the factory. Shoes for ctm »
her of the family, at all prteee, by PaSel PoSKZST A
free. Write fir 1 llutrsted Cmudo*. It will
jj »how yon how to order by mail, and why you tin
"ne la w»re money on your footwear. Le»i
the'bottom. W. la. ItonclM, HI Syerft Knii. Breslt—, »-Tr V
Foley Kidney Pills Relieve
promptly the suffering due to weak, in
active kidneys and painful bladder action
They offer a powerful help to nature
in building up the true excreting kid
ney tissue, in restoring normal action
and in regulating bladder irregularities.
Try them.
REETOALL SUFFERERS,
SOKT* BUN DOWN'or'OOTIHt RLOB^
SSSKr^yx *fc?**» BLADDER. NERVOU* DISEASE*
THERAPION
At^t£»j£"L0V/S?W?Cal,ment- ®*R*t mm€* c«bc
No followup-circular*. Da 1.FCLEIQ
Msd.Co. haverstoce Ed. Hampstead. London, hug*
nnv VAiTED to,,ark °p e|«i» <■> T<na
BOY ine&aa&sSS
~~ ~ ~ — - — -a.
w. N. U, OMAHA, NO. 4X-191X