The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, October 01, 1914, Image 8

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    me cmpagm
of none
CHE Homan Campagna has
a quality which is unique,
w-hich differentiates it en
tirely from any other
scenery of plain or mouu
Vy /jSvl ta*n uP°n our world’s sur
face. It stirs the imagina
jF BjTp f'PP; it either uplifts or
depresses us according
to our mood, and very
much too, I think,
according to our
race and inherited
instincts and tradi
tions. It has some
thing of the mystery
of the sea, even
where it is bounded
by that surging line
of Sabine moun
tains; above all, it
has the immense,
the eternal tradition
of that world-city o!
past empire and
present faith, which
reaches us so in
tensely when, look
ing from the high
ground of Tivoli or
the Alban Hills, we
vjuiuo »
of, St- \peter's, a RFimSlC Of I
misty mass in the && CArtPAGrOL
far distance, brood- fi£RDJiA£Air
Inp- no i*_ ;!
,• c me city wmcn
feet 8Carcely distinguishable at its
"The Campagna of Rome," said
iregorovius, ••is nothing else than
the land of Latium, which is separa
ted from Tusceny by the Tiber
From the time of Constantine the
Great the name of Latium has fallen
into disuse, and that of Campania ,
has been used in Us place; and In
the middle ages tafs name indicated j
a great part of the so-called Ducatus .
Romanus.” Since the middle ages
the district has been divided into two |
parts, the Campagna, which com
prises the inland district, and the Mari
tima, which extends along the sea
coast as far as Terracina. Nature
herself has divided it by mountain and
plain into distinct compartments. It
is divided into three plains. First,
the Campagna around the city, watered
by the Tiber and the Anio, and
hemmed in by the Alban and the Sa
bine mountains, the bills about Ron
ciglione, and the sea-coast; secondly,
the great plain in which the Pontine
Marshes are situated, bounded on the
one side by the Alban and Volscian
Hills and on the other by the sea; :
and. lastly, the valley of the Sacco, ,
which runs down between the Vols- i
cian and the Equian and Herman
bills.
A glance at any good map, euch,
for instance, as even the one given
by Baedeker in his “Central! Italy j
and Rome” (page 380), will help ns
to follow out the geographical divi- j
sions given as above by the great .
historian. We shall see there Brae- j
ciano with its lake on the northwest,
Subiaeo to the far east, on the west
the sea line, and in the 'ery cen
ter Rome herself, with the Tiber
winding down to her from the Um
brian uplands. And the sirine identi
fication of the Campagna vith the old
Latium, the Latina Tellus ("Latin
Land”)! extending along the front of ;
| the Mediterranean for 120 miles, as j
i with a superficial area of 1.245 square
f. miles, has been followed by Signor
Cervesaro in his work on “The Roman
Campagna," though he uses the Argo
and the Palude (the cultivable land
and the marshes) as expressing two
essential and very important divisions
■ of this vast area.
"The general color of the Cam
pagna," says this writer, “is a tawny
red, paler where it undulates over
the terraces of the slopes, greener in
the flats where it expands into broad
meadows, and the whole wide plain
from one horizon to another is bathed
in a glorious sea of light. It is that
wonderful, mysterious light, the 'color
of the air of Rome’ of which foreign
writers speak; overhead, depths of
sapphire bine which towards the
horizon melt into a limpid opalescent
haze, where every color, every vapor
is etherealized and transmuted by the
dreamy transparency of this fairy
light. Under it the silent plain, starred
by asphodels, to the Greek emb.Jins
of HadeB, and flooded by pearly re
flections, seems an Elysian field,
where time is naught, and where every
reality becomes only the fleeting as
pect of an ever-vanishing illusion. . . .
The sapphire light that enfolds It,
cunobleB it indescribably, seeming
to widen the horizon, and to open
up mysterious, unfathomable distances
behind Its transparent veil. Dreams
take shape and grow in this air."
Chateaubriand, too. had written of
this Campagna "From its barren soil
rises the shadow of the great city.
It Is more than difficult, it
is impossible to describe what one
axsr£Zowzrr<$ jxr ZHsrztQMan cniwxzzat
fee!8 when Rome bursts on one's
sight in the midst of her lost domin
ions; she seems to rise from a tomb
in which she had been laid to rest.
• . . A host of memories press in.
overwhelming and thrilling the soul
at the sight of this Rome which twice
assumed the dominion of the world.”
And, not to dwell too insistently on
this side of our subject—this mystery
of space and light, blended with the
past sense of a tremendous destiny,
"which destroys the weak, incites the
hero to greatness, and is fateful to
all”—who has expressed in any lan
guage more tersely or more intimate
ly the emotion it inspires than our
Robert Browning, in hiB “Two tn the
Campagna?"
The champaign with its endless fleece
O', feathery grasses everywhere!
Silence and passion, joy and peace.
An everlasting wash of air,—
Rome's ghost since her decrease
Such life here, through such lengths
of hours.
Such miracles performed in play.
Such primal naked forms of flowers.
Such letting Nature have her way
While heaven looks from its towers!
It was natural that these qualities, j
pictorial as well as artistic, of the
Roman Campagna should proTe an j
irresistible attraction to the painters
of landscapes; and, in fact, without
going back so far as the days of
Claude of Poussin, within our own
age and in my own experience Poing
destre and Arthur Strutt, both of whom
I knew in my student days at the
British Academy of Rome; Henry
Coleman, who, only a few months be
fore his recent and lamented death,
had described to me within the walls
of the same academy his own experi
ences of the romance of life among
the herdsmen of the Campagna; Ono
rato Carlandi, who happily is still
among us in Rome, a genial figure tn
her art life and one of the famous
"Twenty-five of the Campagna" to
whose excursions In that magic dis
trict I have been invited; Nardi, who
is well known in this country, and
Pazzini, who deserves to be better
known; and, lastly, that master of
every branch of his art, Aristide Sar
torio, whose kindness has placed at
my disposal a superb set of reproduc
tions from his own studio of the
Campagna to illustrate this article—
all these have been under this spell,
have been gripped by this wide deso
lation with an intensity which no
beauty of foliage, or sea, or snow
peaked mountain can seem to equal.
The population of the Campagna is
largely nomadic, though there is a
permanent settled race, not very nu
merous, using a language which is
a mixture of Romanesque dialect and
Abruzzese—the word “buttero” (cat
tle-driver), for instance being a cor
ruption of “bourn ductor.” The no
madic people who come down to the
field work dlfTer very much among
themselves according to their “proven
ance,” but are largely recruited from
the Abruzzi. Among them the Aquila
men (Aquilani) are prized as good
hedgers, the Rieti men, for sowing:
the huntsmen and olive-pruners come
down from Umbria and Sabina: and
\BLtr73lG$S JIT WCSZK Jf
|.2ar
these different no
mads, who are gtner
icaily known as
“guitte.” keep very
much to their own
clan and locality. th6
men of the Marches
never mixing with
those of Aquila, Dor
even of one village
with another. They
live in miserable
huts, or caverns, or
sleep in the open.
They are victims of
the tavern landlord,
or storekeeper, as
from him alone they
can get the necessi
ties of their poor life,
and were exposed,
until recently, at any
rate, to the ravages
of the malaria fever.
When the work of
the laud is over and
harvested these no
mads take their de
parture, and the Cam
pagna returns to its
wonted solitude. Hut omy a pari m
this vast tract around the farm
steads is under cultivation at all.
Beyond this lie the vast tracts grazed
over by oxen, horses, and buffaloes,
and by the sheep, who, in the winter
are driven down to graze on the plaiD
and, as the summer advances, are
slowly driven up from the scorching
heat into the hills.
In conclusion, let me give a few
■words to my illustrations. Signor Sar
torlo has spent much of his time dur
ing the last years in the Campagna.
studying most intimately its scenery
and the life X have described. The re
sults of his work have found expres
sion in a series of brilliant pictures,
a number of which have now been
exhibited in the Venice International
exhibition; and I think it is not too
much to say that the undoubted suc
cess these exhibited pictures have
achieved is due not only to their un
deniable artistic merit, but also to
the fact that they constitute a very
precious record of the conditions of
a life which may before long have
passed away.
SELWYN IJRir-’TON.
HE CATCHES BIRDS AT SEA
Barber on Ocean Liner Uses Whis
tling Brown Linnet Most Success
fully as a Decoy.
The barber of the Atlantic liner
Minnetonka finds a new and profita
ble pastime in catching wandering
birds during the vessel’s voyage across
the ocean—his profit arising from the
selling of the birds on his arrival in
port. All sorts of birds come on board,
he says, and he finds a ready sale for
many of the rarer specimens.
His chief assistant in capturing the
birds is a whistling brown linnet,
which lures the wanderers aboard
from its cage in an open port. The
vagrant flyers alight on hearing its
whistle, and presently flutter inside.
Then the port is closed, and the
strange birds are soon made prisoners.
“I have caught hundreds of them,
and 1 supply the London zoo regular
ly," said the bird catcher. “On a re
cent homeward voyage the linnet lured
a snowbird. It was the first one the
zoo bad been able to secure in 16
years What the birds require when
they first alight on a ship is not food,
but water, and it must be boiled.
“Gulls follow a ship all the way
across the Atlantic. American gulls
are regular convoys as far as the Eng
lish channel, where they desert ub,
and follow a westward bounder home
again. The English gulls follow a
liner over and back in tbe same way.
The gulls like emigrant ships best, be
cause the more passengers there are
the greater the quantity of scraps
thrown overboard.”
A Mind Reader.
“What makes you sure your con
gressman is not speaking his mind
frankly and freely?”
“The weather,” replied Farmer
Corntossel. “If he spoke frankly and
freely he wouldn’t offer any remarks
except motions to adjourn."
PARTING SHOT WAS HOT ONE
Traveler Didn't Get His Suitcase in
Time, but He Had a Little
Satisfaction.
Here is a story that was told at a
recent dinner by Dr. Ailerton S. Cush
man, director of the Institute of In
dustrial Research, Washington, when
reference was made to sacrifice jolts;
Some time ago an esteemed ciU
sen went to the package room of a big
railroad for a suitcase he had checked
a few hours before, and being in some
thing of a hurry, he tried to beam up
on the grip juggler that he stacked
up against.
• book here, old pal,” he earnestly
entreated, ‘‘my train leaves in just
three minutes. Can't you get that
suitcase of mine?”
‘ You are not the only man on
earth," was the grouchy rejoinder of
the grip juggler. ‘‘You will get your
suitcase when your turn comes.”
Whereat the'traveler subsided. He
saw what he had collided with and
prepared to pay the penalty of his
rashness. One long exasperating min
ute the grip juggler loafed: Then an
other! Finally the suitcase was pro
duced.
•Thanh you!” freezingly remarked
the traveler as he faded away “]f
you ever lose your job here, come to
roe. I need a roan to chase snails."
So He Keeps at Work.
When a man does not want to take
a vacation it is a sign that he fears
that he will not be missed at the shop.
Cheerful News.
The eminent physicians had been
called in consultation. They had re
tired to another room to discuss the
patient’s condition. In the closet of
that room a small boy had been con
cealed by the patient's directions to
listen to what the consultation de
cided, and to tell the patient, who de
sired genuine information.
"Well, Jimmie,” said the patient
when the boy came to report, “what
did they say?”
“1 couldn't tell yon that,” said the
boy. “I listened as hard as I could,
but they used such big words I could’t
remember much of It. All I could
catch was when one doctor said:
“Well, we ll find that out at the au
topsy.”
Hi* One Rival.
"One or the other of us,” muttered
the young man who awaited his be
loved in the front parlor, “is going to
be turned down tonight!" And he
glanced ferociously at the solitary par
lor lamp glowing near the piano.
Revenge.
It is possible to heap "coals of fire”
upon the head of one who has offended
us, and do It with such vicious intent
that there is no merit in the treat-1
ment so far as we are concerned The
kindness that springs from a generous
and forgiving spirit is one thing and
the seeming kindness which is secret
ly intended To humiliate the foe and
to place ourselves on a pedestal is
quite another matter. Revenge is the
same spirit whether it hurls benefits
or brickbats—Selected.
Republic Full of Wrecks of His
» toric Cities.
Mitla, “The Place of Death,” Is Near
Town of Oaxaca, on Southern
Railroad—Occupies Center of
an Arid Plain or Valley.
City of Mexico.—The ruins of an
cient cities, remnants of dead civiliza
tions, have a fascination for most peo
ple. Be they scientists of great re
nown or mere mortala of more com
mon clay, somehow something stirs
within them at the touch of antique
things. The average tourist seeking
surcease from the daily grind, whether
of the college lecture room or of the
constant chase of the elusive dollar in
trade and traffic, who finds himself in
some strange city and learns that not
far off are the weather-beaten walls of
an ancient temple, shrine or place
whose history is a mystery and whose
builders are unknown, hies himself at
1 once to that place. He touches the
crumbling stones, traces the grotesque
I figures and queer designs, and mar
vels that such things could have been
so many years before he came on
earth, perhaps even before the very'
civilization of which he is a poastful
part came into existence.
Mexico is full of such ruins as these.
In Yucatan alone there are some sev
enty cr more. Approach to some of
these is too arduous to most tourists,
| but on llie southernmost shore of the
republic lies the state of Oaxaca,
whose capital is easily accessible.
| “Oaxaca City is reached from Puebla
by the Mexican Southern,” according
to a statement in the latest pamphlet
on Mexico, issued by the Pun-Ameri
can Union of Washington. “The dis
tance is 228 miles and the trip takes
12 hours. It is 288 miles from Mexico
City and the saute distance from Vera
Cruz. Its population is 40,000. It was
the parly home of both Porfirio Diaz,
rormer president, and Benito Juarez,
the patriot and national hero. Its age
makes it very attractive, but it is quite
modern in many ways, possessing
tramcars, electric lights, telephones
and other factors of comfort. Another
feature connected with Oaxaca is the
fact that from the city the excursion
is made, about twenty-five miles to the
southeast, to the ruins of Mitla, some
of the best preserved prehistoric re
mains of all Mexico.”
Mitla is a contraction or corruption
of the word Mictlan, meaning “The
place of Death.” The modern village
and the ancient ruins occupy the cen
ter of an arid plain or valley, surround
ed on all sides by equally arid hills,
on the highest summit of which are
the well-preserved remains of a great
fortress, whose walls are of a rough
construction and without ornament of
any kind. Nearly in the center of the
plain five great groups of buildings
stand out completely exposed. Many
of them are now nearly shapeless
mounds and masses of ruins. Two
great groups, however, are in compara
Ancient Mexico—The Pyramid of ths
Sun at Teotihuacan (City of the
Gods.)
tively perfect preservation, a third is
incorporated with an old church, and a
fourth, the great sacrificial mound, is
surmounted by the ruine of a very an
cient church. The principal buildings
are of sftne masonry. A condensed
description of one will give an idea
of the others.
The Hall of Pillars, the northern
most building of the north group, is a
great room 125 feet long and 28 feet
wide, interior measurements. The
height of the walls is about 12 feet, the
thickness varying from 8 feet 2 inches
on the sides to 4 feet 6 inches for the
front wall. The entrances are three
doorways nearly 8 feet wide, each com
posed of three members, two enor
mous monolithic door jambs about 7
feet high, 6 feet wide, and 2 feet thick.
The most striking feature of the room
is a row of six monolithic columns
running lengthwise of the room, each
column standing 11 feet 1 inch above
the floor, which is covered with ce
ment. Their circumference is each 9
feet 6 inches. They are slightly
tapered at the top, which Is perfectly
flat. The interior walls are perfectly,
plain, while the exterior are covered
with a rich decoration of panels of
mosaic work, surrounded by large
squared and sometimes incfaed sculp
tured stones.
BABY YEARNED FOR RAINDROP
Little Tot's Effort to Grasp Elusive
Moisture Plunged Her From
Window.
Baltimore, Md.—While catching
rain dr ps from a second-story windod
of her home at Catonsville during g
storm Cora Sauter, two and one-hal)
years old, daughter of Patrolman Wil
Ham H. Sauter, of Catonsville, fell
from the window, but was not ser£
ously injured.
At the time of the accident the
child was playing with her two broth
ers, Carl and Norman, and when rhe
rain began to fall she leaped out of
the window to catch the drops. She
lost her balance and fell £o a cellar
door. The force of the fall broke the
door, but the child was only slightly
bruised. Dr. Marshall B. West wag
called to attend her.
All for America.
l4tst year the t'nited States import
ed knit goods to the amount of $5,671,
863 and this year will have to get
along without the imported goods. It
is now the fashion for women'to ’ sac
rifice” themselves for their countries
and what better sacrifice could Ameri
can women make than cheerfully to
wear American-made clothes- during
the next few years? Let every one
declare for American goods.
The Size of It.
"Was your husband on his hj"h
horse last night?”
"No; just an ordinary bat.”’
Be happy. 1’se Red Cm-*. Ball Blue;
much better than liquid blue. Delights
the laundress. All greetrs. Adv.
The Korean postal savings bank sys
tem has 420,000 depositors.
Minnesota's population is now 2,250.
000.
Out of Pan.
The small boy's sister came in from
play on the first day of her visit and
asked for a drink.
"There’s the water pail,” said her
grandmother.
"But what 6hall I use to drink
with ?"
“Use this,” said the old lady, hand
ing the child a tin dipper.
"Honest?’’ cried the little girl. "Do
you want me to drink out of this pan?”
—New York News.
Poorer Girls Grade High.
Records of the University of Wiscon
sin show thai (he average grade for
young women working their wav
through college is higher than that of
girls of the leisure class and whose
expenses are paid for them.
Not in Sight.
Madge—I never see you sitting in a
hammock with a young man.
Marjorie—I Fhould say not. My
hammock is out of sight.—Puck.
A MINISTER’S WIFE
Always
Speaks
a Good
Word
For
tana.
A
Splendid
Woman
Mrs. O. F. McITsrgue. 147 W. 3th
St., Jacksonville, Florida, writes: “I
had catarrh and throat trouble.
Three bottles of Peruna cured nie.
As a minister's wife I come in con
tact with all classes of people, and
shall always speak a good word for
! Peruna. I have given trial bottles
to a few frtends. Wishing you abun
dant success. I remain, yours truly."
I Physicians Recommend Castoria
ASTOEIA has met with pronounced favor on the part of physicians, pharma
^ centical societies and medical authorities. It is used by physicians with
results most gratifying. The extended use of Castoria is unquestionably the
result of three facts: First—The indisputable evidence that it is harmless:
Second—That it not only allays stomach pains and quiets the nerves, hut assimi
[ lates the food: Third— It is an agreeable and perfect substitute for Castor OIL
It is absolutely safe. It does not contain any Opium, Morphine, or other narcotic
and does not stupefy. It is unlike Soothing Syrups, Bateman’s Drops, Godfrey’s
Cordial, etc. This is a good deal for a Medical Journal to say. Our duty, how
ever, is to expose danger and record the means of advancing health. The day
for poisoning innocent children through greed or ignorance ought to end. To
our knowledge, Castoria is a remedy which produces composure and health, ly
regulating the system—not by stupefying it—and our readers are entitled to
the information.—Hall's Journal of Health.
Letters from Prominent Physicians
addressed to Chas. H. Fletcher.
Dr. B. Halstead Scott, of Chicago, Ills., says: “I have prescribed your
Castoria often for infants during my practice, and find it very satisfactory.”
Dr. William Belmont, of Cleveland, Ohio, says: “Your Castoria stands
first in its class. In my thirty years of practice I can say I never have
found anything that so filled the place.”
Dr. J. H. Taft, of Brooklyn, N. Y., says: "I have used your Castoria and
found It an excellent remedy In my household and private practice for
many years. The formula is excellent.”
Dr. R. J. Hamlen, of Detroit, Mich., says: “I prescribe your Castoria
extensively, as I have never found anything to equal It for children’s
troubles. I am aware that there are Imitations in the field, but I always
see that my patients get Fletcher’s.”
Dr.Wm. J McCrann, of Omaha, Neb., says: “As the father of thirteen
children I certainly know something about your great medicine, and aside
from my own family experience I have in my years of practice found Cas
toria a popular and efficient remedy in almost every home.”
Dr. J. R. Clausen, of Philadelphia, Pa., says: "The name that your Cas
toria has made for itself in the tens of thousands of homes blessed by the
presence of children, scarcely needs to he supplemented by the endorse
ment of the medical profession, but I, for one, most heartily endorse it and
believe it an excellent remedy.”
Dr. R. M. Ward, of Kansas City, Mo., says: “Physicians generally fto not
prescribe proprietary preparations, but in the case of Castoria my experi
ence, like that of many other physicians, has taught me to make an ex
ception. I prescribe your Castoria in my practice because I have found It
to be a thoroughly reliable remedy for children’s complaints. Any physi
cian who has raised a family, as I "hare, will join me in heartiest recom
mendation of Castoria.”
GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS
Bears the Signature of_
. i *
» /
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Exact Copy of Wrapper. In Use For Over 30 Years.
^_ THl CKHTAUW COMPANY. NEW YOSK CITY.
UNDISTURBED BY THE CLAMOR
8udden and Deafening Noiae Had No
Effect on Occupant of New
York Park.
He was lost in dreamy contempla
tion of the bUBj- thoroughfare with it6
hurrying throng, unmindful of the
grime and stains that marked and
marred his old-fashioned garments,
when suddenly there resounded upon
the air an ear-splitting roar, a terrific
clangor, a stifled shriek from some
frightened women, a babel of voices
and a rush of scurrying feet
He stood transfixed, rooted to the
spot, without power to move a muscle,
an expression of unconscious agony
upon his noble face. Breathlessly be
wailed, unmindful of the curious
glances bestowed upon him. and the
little newsboys crouching at his feet,
his gaze fixed rigidly upon the spot
from whence had arisen that cry of
terror. The crowd parted, a heavy
truck. moved lumberingly aside and a
Broadway surface car went on its way.
Still he did not move, nor did the
stern expression upon his bronzed
features relax.
For he alone of all that crowd had
nerves sufficiently- hardened to with J
stand the terrifying clamor and con
fusion. He vyas the statue of Nathan
Hale—New York World.
—
His Clams All Right.
Lady—Once, last summer, l saw
some boys "treading for clams,” as
they called It. They were very dirty
looking boys: they were barefooted— i
feet unwashed, most likely—and they !
were walking through the mud at low
tide. When they felt a clam at their
feat, they pulled it cut with their
tecs. It Jas-i made me sick. 1 hope
your clams are not caught that way.
Waiter—Of course not, ma am. The
man wot furnishes clams to this res
taurant fishes for ’em with a silver
spoon.
Appendicitis Insurance Higher.
The Lloyds of London have recent
ly issued a form of insurance against
appendicitis. The claims have become
so numerous that they have found it
ueceusary to double their premiums.
Switzerland is a heavy importer of
American apples.
Shoes for Soldiers.
A study of the orders given by Na
poleon indicate the care he exercised
to have a sufficient supply of shoes
I provided. On one occasion he wrote:
j “You know that shoes are always
needed in war,” and at another time
he said to Baron Lejeune: “Shoes
help on marches, and marches win
battles." To Sir John Burgoyne’s
question addressed to Wellington:
"What was the first requirement of a
6oldier?“ "A good pair of shoes,” he
replied. ' And the second require
ment?” "A good pair of shoes for a
change.'' "And the third?” "A pair
of soles for repairs.”—Scientific Amer
ican.
Tommie's Guess.
“What is the meaning of the word
purchase, Tommie?”
“I don't know, ma'am."
"Oh, yes, you do. Suppose your fa
ther gave your mother enough money
to buy a new dress, what would your
mother do?”
“Have a fit, 1 guess!”
YOI'R OWN DKIGG1ST WILL Tit LI. YOC
Try Marine Eyo Remedy for Red, Weak. Watery
Eyes and Granulated Eyelids: No martin*
lust Rye Comfort. Write for Book of the Ere
by mail Free. Murine Eye Remedy Co.. Chicago.
The Kind.
"What flowers would you use for
this patriotic design?”
“Why not try flags?”
Ten smiles for a nickel. Always buy Red
Cross Ball Blue: have beautiful clear white
clothes. Adv.
Glasgow now forbids the opening of
saloons earlier than 10 a. m.
More than forty-six hundred Ger
mans settled last year in Canada.
Of the 176 aeropiaens owned by the
British war department. 136 are of na
tive make.
Keep Down Uric Add
Uric acid Isa poison formed inside our bodies
la digesting certain foods, especially meat,
and by the burning tap of nerve and muscle
cells ds ring exertion. I
Uric acid la harmless as long as the kidneys
t Iter It promptly from the blood, bnt people
»'ho overdo and overeat, make urio acid so fast
that It overloads the blood, weakens tbe kld
reys, and attacks tbe nerves, causing rben
naatie pains. It forms gravel, hardens the
arteries and brlngson dropsy or Bright’s disease.
_ By restoring tbe kidneys to normal activity
Doan's Kidney Pills help to overcome excess
mrlo held
A Nebraska Case
1 m /rfn
Mrs W. M Klin
ger, 126 E. Lincoln
SL, Blair. Neb.,
•ays: **1 had rheu
matic pains In my
right arm and I
suffered from a
constant, bearing
down ache in the
•mall of my back
and hlpa. My heart
often palpitated. I
tried several reme
dies, but nothing
gave me relief un
til I used Doan's
Kidney Pills. They
removed the pain
in my back and
improved m y
health wonderful
ly. Whenever I
results have be*«n satisfactory.'*
Cat Doaa't at Aar Stara. SOc a Boa
DOAN'S VffiV
FOSTER-MILBURN CO.. BUFFALO. EL Y.
FRESH PECANS
“THE NUT SUPREME”
Only the largest and best varieties.
By insured percel foet }“ gjjg
Return if nst satisfied.
Southwestern Bee C*» DepL G, San Antonio,Tea.
N. 1^, OMAHA, NO. 39-1914.
Get the Molting Over Quickly
«o£?tt?fedbmS,t " -itn
Get it over—Feed a good Ml ration and be sure to include
prgtts, p—**—•*-■ ■ ■
If* a
FNATT FOOD CO, PHI LA., CHICAGO. TORONTO,