The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, May 11, 1916, Image 9
AFTER SIX YEARS OF SUFFERING Woman Made Well by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Colnmbus,Ohio.—“I had almost given Bp. I had been sick for six years with -| iemaie troubles and | nervousness. I had | a pain in my right • side and could not eat anything with out hurting my stomach. 1 could not drink cold water i at all nor eat any ; kind of raw fruit, nor fresh meat nor i chicken. From 173 pounds I went to jis ana would gat so weak at times that I fell over. I began to take Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, and ten dayB later I could eat and it did not hurt my stomach. I have taken the medicine ever since and I feel like a new woman. I now weigh 127 pounds eo you can see what it has done for me already. My husband says he knows your medicine has saved my life.”— Mrs. J. S. Barlow, 1624 South 4th St., Columbus, Ohio. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com pound contains just the virtues of roots and herbs needed to restore health and / strength to the weakened organs of the V body. That is why Mrs. Barlow, a chronic invalid,recovered so completely. It pays for women suffering from any female ailments to insist upon having Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com f pound. PI l CV LOSSES surely prevented br Cutter', Biaekte, Pill,. Low *4wJUk priced, fresh, reliable: preferred hj Western stockmen, because they V protect where other vaccine* fail. ^ £4 M Write for booklet and testimonials. S - W 10-dose pkoc. Blaeklef Pill* $1.00 50-dose pkge. Biackle* Pill* 4.90 Vs* a7jy iajector. but Cutter's best, i-.e superiority of (.utter products is due- to ever 15 Tears of spccializl'i* In vaccine* and scrum* only, »J n,'lL#a Cutter**. If unobtainable. order direct. The Cutter Laboratory. Berkeley. Cal., or Chioaso. III. Nebraska Directory TKEPJXTONiS Booms from § 1X10 up sicgle, 75 cents up double CAFE PRICES REASONABLE TRI-CITY BARP.FR COLLEGE LEARN BARBER TRADE fo where they make Barber*. Electric massaee. Hydraulic chairs. Lott rate tuition. Wages paid. «Tlh- striven. Caliorwr.rp for free catalog at.d infor mation. !1J4 DogkIm si. Osu.b&, «r 1082 h hi . Lincoln N«b. : Townsend’s for Sporting Goods * -* Wholesale and Retail vjuns, niElilUDHIO", oporiBloecS Supplies, Athlefic Goods. TOWNSEND GUN CO.. 1314 TARN AM STREET. OMAHA. NEB DOCTORS DEK rSSTS . 3rd Floe °axto - Block jj »Sth A Farna.p Sis. ,0mahL Bert equip*- 1 Deniai Office Ui Orcrjia. Reasonable p; i ea. Sp» ui disc -jut to al; *» ole lirir.p eotslae ci uin-ha ^ Good Serum Will Save Your Hogs ==F>om Psp P. ?. Gov. Licensed Semin. Phone, wire, write or call on OMAHA Sl.Kl.M COMPANY, 26th A O Sts. S. Omaha, Neb., Phone South 2868 i I 3 AsJk your i.itntlvmun or write os K for free sample. A SSUNDERL'XI) BROS CO., OMAHA J RHEUMATISM Pc-cessfa 1.7 treated with 8emm. It is the only p<'- t.ve Treatici nt known which w/.l eradicate tti»' tisstjM :i >rn-yinc K’crms rr«-ci the system. A snotv-sTn! treatment guaranteed. Gull or wme for futi particulars. Dr W ’.V, Jowser. 314 Bee Bldg., Omaha. Nebr Joseph Bliss & Sop Go, Live Stock Commission Satisfactory sales. Prompt returns. SOUTH OMAHA. ESTABLISHED 133*. •?if WOOD BROS. GET MORE MONEY FOR YOUR ' CATTLE. SHEEP AND HOGS pc: iad; z eoaaissiON fltLIHDLE MERCHANTS OMAHA - CHICAGO — SIOUX ClTY Electrical Engineers and Electric Starter Specialists ALL MAKES STRAHLE & ANDERSON, Inc. 2057 Faraam $L Omaha, Neb. Byers Bros. & Co. SATISFACTORY SERVICE * LIVE STOCK COMMISSION FIRM SOUTH OMAHA ^2^®tteMTrj^^erTi^Wit|^our^Hex^usuiess^ REDUCE TIRE EXPENSE Duplex tire* ar* good for WOO to 5005 mile*' merries. Coe: U to 15 Ser.ij us two tor a* man* a* you hcrei old. discarded tlrea. or write and ai how Be ajre one tire ha* a b«a1. the other • fatr tr?a3. DUPLEX TIRE COMPANY. •iT.lf. Famar.i street. Quia ha. Neb. Hail Insurance Wc save ycu $5 OO cn every thousand dollar* of hail insurance placed with us compared with the rates charged by eastern companies. Losses paid in cash as soon as adjusted. Drop us a postal card today and get the name of our nearest agent and full information. NATIONAL BAH INSURANCE COMPANY, Lincoln. Neb. It. Is sometimes easier to borrow money than to pay it back. Willing to Try. Bis—Can I trust you? Bix—Actions speak louder than words. Try me with $10. For a really fine coffee at a mod erate price, drink Denison's Seminole Brand, 35c the lb., in sealed cans. Only one merchant in each, town sells Seminole. If your groce- isn’t the one, write the Denison Coffee Co., Chicago, for a souvenir and the name of your Seminole dealer. Buy the 3 lb. Canister Can for $1.00 —Adv. Strenuous. “What do you mean by referring to Wiggins as an athlete? The only game he can play is pinochle, and you'd hardly call that an athletic sport.” "It is the way Wiggins plays it. You ought to see him pound the table when he trumps the other fellow's ace.” BAD COMPLEXION MADE GOOD When All Else Fails, by Cuticura Soap and Ointment. Trial Free. If you are troubled with pimples, blackheads, redness, roughness. Itching and burning, which disfigure your com I Plexion and skin, Cuticura Soap and Ointment will do much to help you. The Soap to cleanse and purify the Ointment to soothe and heal. Free sample each by mail with Book. Address postcard, Cuticura, Dept. L, Boston. Sold everywhere.—Adv. It's a short street that has no turn for the organgrinder. You Eveiywhere They Know FOR 35 years Alabastine has been the choice of house I wives who take particular pride in the decoration of their homes. For 35 years Alabastine has been sold everywhere by paint, hardware, drug, and general i stores. It is known by dealers and users alike as the “tint beau tiful” for walls and ceilings. Alabastine is a dry powder that i mixes perfectly in cold water. You can apply it yourself or your local | painter will do the work reasonably. | Be sure that you get Alabastine i brought or. the job in properly labeled packages. Free Color Plans The be^t decorators pdvise the use of stencils to produce contrasts.£ j wall and ceiling borders- Ordi narily, stencils cost from 50 cents to , S3 00 each; but it you will write for the free “Alabastine Packet,” con taining hand colored proofs of 12 of the very latest stencil effects, we will tell you how you can have your choice of these and 500 others at practically no expense. Write todav for this absolutely free decorating service. Alabastine Co. 2SS Granville Rd Gr&ad Rapids, Mick. TT ?i ts<»n E.Coleman.Wash ington. ;>.C. Books free. 11.►ti es t references. Best rebUita. Nebraska Directory VIOLINS 'Complete with case, bow and extra string at ikv 8k, 815. (25 and cp SOLD ON EAST PAYMENTS A. HOSPE CO. 1516 ’IodjIhs St.,()maha,Neb MID WEST ELECTRIC CO. 1207 Harney, Omaha. Neb.; 709 Cherry St., Des Moines, bra Distributors tor the Middle West. General Electric Company. Everything Electrical. Mietz <St Weiss Fuel Oil Engines. Bail Steam Engines. American Telephones SEND US YOUR INQUIRIESL FREE NEW PRICE LIST OF MONUMENTS REVOLUTION IN MONUMENT BUSINESS SEND FOR IT TODAY TO Trank Svoboda, 1213-31 S. 13th St., Omaha Hotel Castle 632 So. 16 St., Omaha, Neb. New, Absolutely fireproof Rooms with private bath - - $ 1.50 Rooms with private toilet - • 1.00 Fred A. Castle, Proprietor DIRECT —Save all Agents' | Commission and Losses Send for tags and our special offer for new customers. ’ WATERLOO CREAMERY CO. ■ OMAHA, NEB. INFLUENZA aswaa. -- ™ w Fever, Epizootio And all diseases of the horse affecting his throat speedily cured; colts and horses in same stable kept from having them by using Spohn's Distemper Compound, 3 to 6 doses often cure; one bottle guaranteed to cure one case. Safe for brood mares, baby colts, stallions, all ages and con ditions. Most skillful scientific compound. 50c and $1 per bottle; $5 and $10 a dozen. Any druggist or deliv / — ered by manufacturers. SPOU3i MEDICAL CO., Goshen, Ind. i _ ___ PARKER’S HAIR BALSAM A toilet preparation of merit, Helps to eradicate dandruff. For Restoring Color and Beauty to Gray or Faded Hair. •0c, and SLOP at Druggists. GALLSTONES Avoid operations. Positive remedy— r^vv (So Oil ^-Results sure. Write for our f Kf f big Book of Truth and Facts To-Day. * frtllkw EaajyCaJtytC’WjUSJiifkreSuQiciii Pigs in Rape at the Missouri AgricuKurai Experiment Station. 'By I». A. WEAVER. Missouri College of Agriculture.) Forage crops furnish the best pos sible way of cheapening the cost of pork production, if we can trust the experience of the Missouri agricultural experiment station aud of numerous hog feeders. High-priced grain must be used to a certain extent, but cheap er crops may be substituted for a part of it. The Missouri station experi ments show that the five pounds of grain required to produce a pound of pork in dry lots may be reduced to three pounds if the hogs are running on alfalfa, rape, clover, sorghum or blue grass. The average return per j bushel of corn fed was 66 cents a bushel in case of dry-lot feeding, as compared with $1.10 when the hogs fed were running on pasture Economy of work and a better effect on the fertility of the soil are also secured by hogging down, so the 40 per cent saving in grain feed does not tell the whole story. Hogs on pas ture nearly always crop the manure where it will do some good, but this j is rarely the case if dry-lot feeding is practiced. The grain feed keeps the ! animal in better health and free range gives him a chance to keep himself more nearly free from lice and worms. Among the forage crops tested for pork production, alfalfa stands at the very top because (1) its long growing season enables it to furnish both early and late pasture. (2) it is drought re sistant and does very well in the dri est seasons and the driest parts of the growing season in Missouri, (3) its high protein content makes it espe cially good for balancing the corn in the ration. Clover ranks next to alfalfa and fits into corn-belt rotations much tet ter. It is similar in composition, but does not furnish pasture as early or keep as many hogs per acre. Dwarf Essex rape is the best of the j crops that must be sown each year. It may be sown alone or broadcast at the rate of six pounds par acre after which a bushel cf oats per acre can be drilled in. Sorghum is also to be ! recommended and blue grass is ex cellent. especially for early and late , pasture, but it in likely to take a rest during a hot. dry summer. At such times the green, succulent sor ghum will be very acceptable. INCREASE IN VIGOR MADE BY CROSSING After First Generation There Is Decrease in Yielding Power of Hybrid Strains. It has been the common belief of feeders that a first cross between two pure breeds produces an animal that makes more rapid gains and matures earlier than would an animal of either of the pure breeds that entered into the cross. The blue-gray steer (Short horn-Galloway cress) has been famous as a feeder for many years. Like wise farmers that are raising hogs for the butcher's block usually prefer Berkshire-Poland-China, Duroc-Tam worth, or Duroc-Bcrkshire first crosses to pure bred stock of any of these breeds. There is an increase of vigor in the first generation cross. It has also been known for many years that first generation crosses among plants that have been bred pure for some time will give an in crease of yield over their parent stock. Later experiments have brought out a point that the earlier experiment ers failed to fully appreciate—that the increase in vigor from crossing is only temporary. After the first generation there is a decrease in the yielding power of hybrid Etrains. Un fortunately most breeders after they bave made a cross with good results, will try to perpetuate a hybrid varie ty.—Bulletin 202, Virginia Experiment Station. USE OF FULL-BLOOD SIRES ON THE RANGE Striking Argument in Favor of Registered Bulls Reported From State of Utah. A communication from Washington, D. C., gives a striking illustration cf the value of the use of full-blood sires >n the range. Ttfro Utah ranchmen shipped their steers to the same market on the same day. Both grazed their stock an the national forest range under grazing permits, controlling the same infcunt of range per head, and paid the same grazing fee. There was this iifference: One had used registered bulls, the other had net. The owner of the steers by registered bulls ac ‘.uallv received $10 per head more for bis steers on the market than the oth rr one received for the steers sired by the nonrpgistered balls. There is more sound argument in favor cf the use of registered bulls in ‘.his one fact than could be written nto a volume. Treatment of Peppers. The same treatment in the seedbed and after transplanting in the frame or greenhouse practically is required of peppers as tomatoes. Higher tem peratures are necessary to get the best results. Peppers thrive in any 1 kind of loose, fertile soil and the ! lendencv to become spindly is not so marked as in the case of tomatoes. ---—— Heat in the Hotbed. Fresh horse manure, containing a liberal amount of straw or other litter is the best material to furnish heat in j the hotbed, if manure is saved from the heme stable it should be collected and preserved under cover. It requires about one two-horse load for every two sash. Grain Bin Is Cheap. A grain bin that will last at least ten years can be had for ten cents a bushel, or one cent per bushel per year storage expense. That's cheap! HORSE REALLY HAS VERY LITTLE SENSE Not Nearly So Intelligent as He !s Often Pictured—‘•Jibbler” Not Stupid. j ir.y GEORGE H. GROVER. Colorado Agricultural College, Fort Coiling, Colo.) Those who have had the least to do i with horses ascribe to them an intel ligence which they really do not pos sess. A horse knows about as much when it is born as it ever does. The majority of horses have very little will power, they can be rendered docile and tractable, they will work at high pressure until exhausted, never apparently learning the obvious lesson that it is the “willing horse” which suffers and that the more they work the more they will get to do. The so-called stupidity of the ass and the provoking obstinacy of the muie are not indications of a lack «f intelligence. On the contrary they manifest a determination of purpose which if they could combine against man would secure for them complete ; freedom from civilization. A horse that “jibs” is one that has | learned to disobey; he has learned his own strength and the comparative t powerlessness of his master and he 1 has learned this through an exercise j of reason. The “jibbler” is an intel ligent and not a stupid horse. GIVE YOUNG COLTS VERY BEST OF CARE . Dry Bed and Protection From Cold Winds and Rain Is of Utmost Importance. (By PROF. DONALD J. KAYS, Ohio State University.) With the demand for good draft horses advancing, the young colts should receive the best of care to in sure rapid and complete development. Many may be ruined by heavy feeding in the stalls where they cannot take exercise. The ideal shelter for colts is a tightly built shed open to the south w here the animals may go in or out at their own pleasure and where they may have the run of a lot for exercise. A dry bed and a protection from cold w-inds and rain is all that is needed. Clover and alfalfa make good rough age for colts with a grain ration of two parts cats and one bran added. There is little danger of overfeed ing a colt if room for proper exercise is given. Growth can be made more cheaply during the first year than at I any other time and feed should not be i spared. Keeping Bees Quiet. To keep a newly-settled swarm of ' bees quiet and make them enter the hive well, sprinkle them lightly with ! water before beginning to work with j them. __ Preserving Fence Posts. Dipping the butts of fence posts | for a length of 30 inches in hot coal j tar will prove a great saving in j fence-post expense. -— Avoid Low-Priced Seed. Don t purchase the lowest-priced ! seed. In nine cases out of ten the ; highest-priced seed is by far the cheap- i est. The seed doesn’t cost much, af ter all, in proportion to the labor put on plants, once they start. A full crop is important, and possible only with good seed. Worth of Planning. A day in the fields is worth more than a day hauling grain, but an hour of planning may be worth more than both. SANDWICHES OF MANY KINDS Some of Them in the Nature of De parture From the Weli-Known Fillings Generally 'Jsed. Olive Sandwiches.—Thin slices of bread evenly buttered, cut hexagon shape. Between each two slices place a layer of neufchatel cheese mixed to a paste with equal quantities of cream and salad dressing and covered thickly with chopped olives. Fig Sandwiches. — Thin slices of i bread cut in fancy shapes and but tered, with fig filling between each two. The fig filling should be prepared as follows: One-half pound finely chopped figs, one-third cupful sugar, one-half cupful of boiling water, add two tablespoonfuls of lemon juice. Mix these ingredients and cook in a double boiler until thick enough to spread. Chicken Salad Sandwiches. — Be tween two thin, oblong slices of bread, buttered, place a layer of chicken sal ad on a lettuce leaf. In making chick en salad for sandwiches chop the chicken and celery much finer than for ordinary purposes. Ham Sandwiches.—Chop ham very fine and season with mustard, make into a paste with melted butter, spread between two thin slices of bread, thin ly buttered. German Sandwiches. — Mix equal parts of cream cheese and chopped walnut meats with French dressing. Spread between thin slices of bread. Russian Sandwiches.—Stir grated cheese into mayonnaise and spread be tween thin crackers. SOUR BEEF WITH DUMPLINGS _ Recipe Which Will No Doubt Find ; Favor With Anyone Who Is Mcved to Try It. Put three to four pounds of beef (the round is best! in a bowl and pour over it sufficient vinegar to cover. Set aside for 24 hours, turning and basting frequently. Brown two large onions, chopped fne, in two table spoonfuls butter. Place meat in roast ing pan, pour over it the brown onions and the vinegar in which it was soaked; add a few cloves, a blade of mace and a bit of allspice. Bay leaves and lemon peel may be added if de sired. When browned and thoroughly cooked the liquor should be strained and thickened either with flour or grated ginger snaps. Potato Dumplings. — Cream a j piece of butter the size of an egg. add j yolks of two eggs, half cupful stale bread crumbs and a cupful cf cold boiled potatoes; put through the ricer; season with salt and nutmeg, and, last ly, add the beaten whites of the eggs. Make into small dumplings and drop into the boiling iiquor in which meat was cooked, and boii, ciosclv covered, for ten minutes. Noodled Karri. Make the noodles by beating one egg with a saltspoon of salt till very light. Add as much flour as it will re quire to make a stiff dough. Roll thin, cut in narrow strips, shake them out, then break or cut in pieces when dry1. Put two cupfuls of (hem in stewpan, cover with boiling water and boil ten minutes. Chop enough boiled ham to make a large cupful. Butter an earth en dish, drain noodles and alternate layer of ham and noodles, with ham for the last layer; beat two eggs, add one cupful of cream or rich milk and pour over top. Cover with layer of crumbs and dots of butter. Bake a delicate brown and serve in dish in which it was baked. Potato Caramel Cake. Cream together two cupfuls granu lated sugar, two-thirds cupful of butter and yolks four eggs; add one cupful hot mashed potato and one-half cupful of miik. one teaspoonful each clove, cinnamon and nutmeg, one cupful grated chocolate, two teaspoonfuls baking powder in two cupfuls flour, and last stir in lightly the whites of eggs and one cupful broken or chipped English walnuts. About Lemons. Here are some of the things the ever-usefu! lemon can do; Remove stains from the hands. Relieve fever if used to sponge the patient's lips. One part lemon juice and one part glycerin is the proper proportion. A dash of lemon juice in a glass of ; water is an excellent mouth and tooth j wash. It removes tartar and sweet- ! ens the breath. Chicken a la Boston. One cup cold cooked chicken cut to strips, three cold boiled potatoes, cut in half-inch slices, one truffle cut in strips, three tablespoonfuls butter, three tablespoonfuls flour, one and one-half cupfuls scalded miik. salt and pepper. Make a sauce of butter, flour and milk. Add chicken, potatoes and truffle, and as soon as heated add sea soning. Kct Fricassee. Cut into small pieces the remains of a roast, either beef, lamb or veal, put into a frying pan, dredge thickly with flour. Season with salt and pep per. cover with cold water and cook gently. Serve very hot with mashed potatoes. At this time cf the year potatoes are much nicer mashed or i scalloped than boiled. They go farther also. Pork Chops With Eggs. First put a couple of slices of bread in oven to toast, then fry meat, drop eggs in gravy and scrable them, add ing piece of butter. Now dip your toast in hot. salted water and pour eggs over it. I think sausage a nice change, also tripe fried in butter. Beat an egg, add salt and tablespoon of flour. Dip your tripe in this and fry in pork fat.—Boston Globe. Scotch Shortbread. Rub four ounces of butter into six ounces of flour and add two ounces powder sugar. Knead the mixture un till it becomes a stiff paste. (When it is hard to knead add one egg but that is not necessary’-) Mold it on a board with your hand. Roll out and cut in fancy shapes. Prick with a fork and bake in moderate oven 15 minutps lUII PROBLEM AHEAD (FROM THE PEORIA JOURNAL.) The Nebraska State Journal calls at tention to the fact that Uncle Sam’s opening of a 4,000-acre tract in the North Platte irrigation district for set tlement practically winds up the "free land distribution" of the nation. It adds: '“Free or cheap land has been the American safety valve. A population straining for self-bet terment has had its own remedy— to go west and grow up witn the country. With the government reduced to advertising an opening of forty-three farms, the safety valve may be considered forever closed. The expansive energy for merly exerted outward, must here after work itself out intensively. Increasing land speculation, with rapidly rising prices of land and proportionately increasing dissat isfaction among the landless would seem inevitable. The tone of our politics and the intensity of our social problems cannot but be vi tally changed under the strain of dealing internally with a social pleasure wuicn muierio nas uau the wilderness to vent itself upon. " ’Land hunger' will soon become a reality in this rapidly growing country and the constant pressure of popula-' tion. increasingly higher than the ratio of production, is bound to bring us face to face with economic problems that we have heretofore considered re mote. The far-sighted statesman and publicist must devote his thought earnestly to the consideration of these questions if we are to escape the ex tremes which curse the older nations of the world.” In the above will be found one ol the reasons that the Canadian Govern ment is offering ICO acres of land free to the actual settler. There is no dearth of homesteads of this size, and the land is of the highest quality, be ing such as produces yields of from 20 to 60 bushels of wheat per acre, while oats run from fifty to over hundred bushels per acre. It is not only a mat ter of free grants, but in Western Can ada are also to be had other lands at prices ranging from $12 to $20 per acre, the difference in price being largely a matter of location and dis tance from railway. If one takes into consideration the scarcity of free grant lands in the United States it is not difficult to understand why there has been most material advances in the price of farm lands. A few years ago, land that now sells for two hundred dollars an acre in Iowa, could have been bought for sev enty-five dollars an acre or less. The increased price is warranted by the increased value of the product raised on these farms. The lands that today can be had in Western Canada at the low prices quoted will in a less time than that taken for the Iowa lands to increase, have a proportionate in-! crease. In Nebraska the lands that sold for sixteen to twenty dollars per acre seven years ago, find a market at one hundred and seventy-live dollars an acre, for the same reason given for the increase in Iowa lands. Values in these two States, as well as in oth ers that might be mentioned, show that Western Canada lands are going at a song at their present prices. In many cases in Western Canada today, there are American settlers who real-1 ize this, and are placing a value of sixty and seventy dollars an acre on their improved farms, but would sell j only because they can purchase un improved land at such a low price that in another few years they would have equally as good farms as they left or ‘ such as their friends have in the Unit ed States. The worth of the crops grown in \t estern Canada is of higher value than those of the States named, so why should the land not be worth fully as much. Any Canadian Government Agent will be glad to give you infor mation uf to homestead lands or where you can buy.—Advertisement. --- No man ever has as much sense as the female he is engaged to thinks ; he has. _ Most of the world's heroes dwell be- j tween the covers of novels. --;-— Dependable Assistance Being prepared against a spell of Stomach, Liver or Bowel weakness is an excellent idea. This brings to mind the dependable as sistance to be deriv ed from a fair trial of HOSTETTER’S Stomach Bitters A family remedy for 63 year3 This IS Awful. “Are you Hungary?” “Yes, Siam." “Well, come along: I’ll Fiji.” Kill the Flies Now and Prevent disease. .n. DAISY FLY KILLER will do it. Kills thousands. Las Is all season. A11 dealer* or six sent express paid for $1 H. SOM ERR. 150 Do Kalb Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Adv. It's an easy matter to give advice, but it is difficult to get people to havo | faith enough to use it. Answer the Alarm! A bad back makes a day’s work twice as hard. Backache usually comes from weak kidneys, and if headaches, dizzi ness or urinary disorders are added, don t wait—get help before dropsy, gravel or Bright's disease set in. Doan’s Kidney Pills have brought new life and new strength to thousands of working men and women, t sed and recommend ed the world Over. An iewa Cate (“Every Picture Till* a Story" C. D. Hayes. 122 N. Second St., Albia, Iowa, says: ‘ My life was a burden with kidney complaint ami I suffered from sharp pains, along with a dull ache. I got little benefit from any thing I took until I used Doan's Kidney Pills. Five boxes rid me of the trouble and I haven't suf fered much since." Get Doc r»*s at Any Store, 50c a Eax DOAN'S KPTAV FOSTB1-MILBURN CO, BUFFALO. N. T. pelvic catarrh, ulceration and iwflaiw ■nation. Recommended by Lydia E. Pinkham Med. Co, for ten A healing wonder for nasal sore throat and sore Make the Liver Do its Duty Nine times in ten when the liver is right the stomach and bowels are right tAIUHK a LliiLL OVER PILLS gently but firmly comvS pel a lazy liver to r» ito i ? ♦-* t #4 Cures Con stipation, In- A digestion, Sick Headache, ana uistre&s After Lating SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE* Genuine must bear Signature W. N. L'., OMAHA, NO. 19-1916. Promules Diuestion.Chec [ful ness wad Rest .Contains neither Opium,Morphine nor .Mineral Not Narcotic. Adpe afQUDr.S.WU FITCfflJl Pumpkin Seed - AIx Serna * \ PocJuii* Soils « Artis* Seed • Peppermint V Cion tied Sugar 1 Wutlrrnrvcn hiawr . / A perfect Remedy for Constipa tion. Soar Stomach.Diarrhoea, Wornjs. Feverishness and. Loss of Sleep. Exact Ccr'y of Wrapper rgrjjifants and Children. Mothers Know That Genuine Gastoria Thirty Years GASTORIA ™* cnrua company. ara TOOK emr.