The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, December 21, 1916, Image 7

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    THOUSANDS HAVEKIDNEY
TROUBLE AND DON’T KNOW IT
We*k and unhealthy kidneys r..
much sickness and suffering ,nd *l
through neglect or other causes kid "
trouble is permitted to continue' k d ey
results m*y be expected ’ nous
Your other organs miy need
out your kidneys should have
first because their work i« m . ,,,ention
work is most important.
If you feel that your kidney, ,re the
esuse of your sickness or run down ed
dit.on commence taking Dr KHm?"
Swamp-Root, the great kidney live^nd
.ladder remedy, bec.use if Ss lo b!
.he remedy you need and your kidneys
begin to improve they will he,B ***
sther organs to health e
Prevalency of Kidney Disease.
Moat people do not realize the alann
m« increase and remarkable prevalent
>f kidney disease While kidney di
order* are among the most common dis
tases that prevail, they are almost the
**t Meognized by patients, who usually
oment themselves with doctoring the
rJTects, while the original disease con
stantly undermines the system.
A Trial Will Convince Anyone.
Sv.ann L "land immedlate effect of
, , ™p'Root- the great kidney, liver and
“'HZF&l \ "« realiwd and that
results in tl upbejt for lts remarkable
re. ults in the most distressing cases.
Symptoms of Kidney Trouble.
even-thin^w -f "0t reconimended for
en thing but if you suffer from annoy
ing bladder troubles, frequently passing
water night and day, smarting o/irrita*
tion m passing, brick-dust or sediment
headache, backache, lame Lc“ S
n-ss, poor digestion, sleeplessness nerv
ousness heart disturbance due to W
Kld"?v troubIe-, sklfl eruptions from bad
bood. neuralgia, rheumatism, lumbago
Uck1!?/’ lITltablhty- worn-out feeling,
lack of ambition, may be loss of flesh or
sallow complexion, kidney trouble in its
worst form may be stealing upon you.
Swamp-Root Is Pleasant to Take.
If you are already convinced that
•Swamp-Root is what you need, you can
purchase the regular fifty-cent and on*
dollar sue bottles at all drug stores.
ten to K.toerTO ° BShamtonP,NS 1 Yb°Th °f by enclo«n«
to prove the remarkable merit of this medicine’ VheF^iP'i** >'outbe opportunity
valuable information, containing manv of the t'hoThe>uWl1- 180 fD,d you a b°<* of
from men and women who sav fhey found Swamn Ro^^L8™*.®^ lette”, received
m kidney, liver and bladder troubles Th» j t0 be J“»t the remedy needed
well known that our reader ar™ad?sedTo sem fn/^ *uec,eM of Swamp.Root are so
Kilmer A Co., Binghamton N Y saml>1^ 81ze hoUle Address Dr.
_ * ”• *• " writing be sure and mention this paper.
Like A Boy at SO Bubbling Over
With Vitality—Taking Iron Did It
Doctor says Nuxated Iron is greatest of all strength builder*
Often increases the strength and endurance of delicate,
nervous folks 200 per cent, in two weeks time.
lUKh. A. 1.—jjiot long ago a
Dian came to me who was nearly half
a century old and asked me to give
him a preliminary examination for
life insurance. I was astouished to
find him with the blood pressure of a
boy of 20 and as full of vigor, vim and
vitality as a young man; in fact a
young man he really was notwithstand
ing his age. The secret he said was
taking iron—nuxated irou had filled
him with renewed life. At 30 he was
in bad health; at 46 careworn and
nearly all in. Now at 50 a miracle of
vitality and his face beaming with the
buoyancy of youth. As I have said a
hundred times over, iron is the great
est of all strength builders. If people
would only throw away patent medi
cines and nauseous concoctions and
take simple. nuxated iron. I am con
vinced that the lives of thousands of
persons might be saved, who now die
every year from pneumonia, grippe,
consumption, kidney, liver and heart
trouble, etc. The real and true cause
which started their diseases was noth
ing more nor less than a weakened
condition brought on by lack of iron in
the biood. Iron is absolutely neces
sary to enable your blood to change
food into living tissue. Without it, no
matter how much or what you eat,
your food merely passes through you
without doing you any good. You don’t
get the strength out of it and as'a con
sequence you become weak, pale and
sickly looking just like a plant trying
to grow in a soil deficient in iron. If
you are not strong or well you owe It
to yourself to make the following test:
See how long you can work or how far
you ea» walk without becoming tired.
Next take two five-grain tablets of or
dinary nuxated iron three times per
uaj alter meals for two weeks. Then
test your strength again and see foi
yourself how much you have gained. 1
have seen dozens of nervous, run-down
people who were ailing all the while,
double their strength and endurance
and entirely get rid of all symptoms of
dyspepsia, liver and other troubles in
from ten to fourteen days' time simply
by taking iron in the proper form. And
this after they had in some cases been
doctoring for months without obtaining
any benefit. But don't take the old
forms of reduced iron, iron acetate or
tincture of iron simply to save a few
cents. You must take iron in a form
that can be easily absorbed and as
similated like nuxated iron if you waut
it to do you.any good, otherwise it may
prove worse than useless. Many an
athlete or prize-fighter has won the day
simply because he knew the secret of
great strength and endurance and filled
his blood with iron before he went in
to the affray, while many another has
gone down to inglorious defeat simply
for lack of iron.—E. Sauer, M. D.
NOTE. — Nuxated Iron, recommended
above by Dr. Sauer is not a patent medi
cine nor secret remedy, but one which is
well known to druggists and whose iron
constituents are widely prescribed by emi
nent physicians everywhere. Unlike the
i older itrorganlc iron products, it is easily
| assimilated, does not injure the teeth,
make them black, nor upset the stomach;
on the contrary ft is a most potent rem
I edy in nearly all forms of indigestion, as
well as for nervous, rundown conditions.
The manufacturers have such great con
fidence in Nuxated Iron that they offer to
forfeit JTOO.OO to any charitable institution
if they cannot take any man or woman
under 60 who lacks Iron and increase
their strength 200 per cent, or over in four
weeks' time, provided they have no seri
ous organic trouble. They also offer to
j refund your money if it does not at least
double your strength and endurance in
ten davs' time. It is dispensed by most
druggists. If your druggist or general
store is without a supply, ask them to
get it for you.—Adv.
Pointing a Distinction.
“When you told me you would get
me that office, I considered it a prom
ise."
“No assurance of that kind.” re
plied Senator Sorghum, “can be con
sidered a promise. It is merely a
prophesy.” __
Drawing the Line.
“Why don’t you take up aviation in
stead of motoring?”
“I can’t see the advantage.” replied
Mr. Chuggins. "An accident is bad
enough ns it is. I don't want a vehicle
that’ll put me in the hospital every
time it goes to the repair shop.”
niimi fmiiinTiiiilmiiiiiimiiiiiiTiMiiimiiiliMllllllllHIHIIIIIlHimillllirilllHHFltllllliftjJ
r^^s«s»w«i .^.^i
1 wawsfHSsSsSs® 1
H "~ ..
W**2® Farmers
Ca"«f From Wheat
**r° JSSsb33SI"5N
Old Idea of Gulf Stream, Once Taught
in Schools, Changed by
Later Study
It Is only by speaking loosely that
the skippers of several incoming ships
can say, as reported, that the presence
of many sharks along the coast was
due to a shifting of the Gulf stream.
| What they mean was that the northeast
, drift of warm water is greater than
usual, broader, perhaps, or closer in
shore, or possibly a degree or two high
er in temperature than is customary at
this time in this latitude, says the New
York Sun, \
The Gulf stream as a distinct cur
rent cannot be identified north of the
thirty-second parallel of latitude, which
it crosses between the Bermudas and
the Carolina coast. There it divides
I small streams. 'The westerly winds
blow upon it and break up its surface.
Its warm waters become mixed with
the colder ocean and it becomes an ele
ment of the northeast. At the same
time the warm currents are recogniza
ble as far north as 40 degrees latitude,
a trifle south of New York; beyond 40
degrees north and 60 degrees west
longitude no test of temperature, .salt
ness, color or motion serves to distin
guish them from the rest of the ocean
drift.
Who does not remember having it
Impressed ou him in his schooldays
| that the ministrations of the gulf
stream alone made habitable the Brit
ish Isles? It is not true, as patient
study has shown. The southwest
! winds bring moisture from the ocean
zone it becomes heated and rises to
flow northeast again. The Gulf of
Mexico is like the coil of pipe in a
gas water heater; it supplies intense
heat in a small area and adequately
tempers half the seas.
ascssssaKBsocscessoeasKeMcessss
I„ M J*011 ^ m m I
Feed at regular hours and the fowls
will always be ready and waiting for
their last meal.
Put the windows in the poultry
house low down near the floor, so that
the hens will get the benefit of the
light and sunshine when scratching for
their feed.
The chaff that settles beside the
straw stack at threshing time makes a
splendid winter litter in which to feed
the small grain. Have it about six
inches deep all over the hen-house
floor.
All perches in the poultry-house
should be built on a level. When bunt
one above another, step-fashion, the
hens will fight for the higher perches
with the result that some of them will
become injured or eggs will lie broken
in them.
Grit or lime Is absolutely necessary
for egg production. It is always well
Teaching Tricks to Birds.
A professor of natural history re
futes the statement so frequently iqade
that teaching a bird to draw water
needs apparatus, and that the learning
is cruelty to the bird.
“The following experiences of mine.”
he says, according to London Tit-Bits,
“proves that it is not so by any means.
We bought a young bird last January,
so wild that on our approach it flew
madly round the cage. We hung the
cage low, and by patience, after tlie
bird got used to our proximity, induced
it to take groundsel, first held at
stem's length, then between the fingers,
finally from the lips. We used to let
him out freely, and he would perch on
the loaf next me nt breakfast. His
perch projected through the wires, and
here was his favorite seat when at lib
erty. Then I tried hanging a hit ot
groundsel by a short string to the pro
jecting stick. After inspection he
pulled it up with his beak. On length
ening the string with a fresh bit of his
preferred weed X bad the pleasure and
interest of seeing him pull up the
string with his beak till the flower ltead
was within reach, catching the slack
after each pull with one foot and th^n
transferring it to the other, so that the
coils were quite neat.”
Poet Had Right Idea.
Matthew Arnold, discussing the pop
ularity of his own dog poems, said that
while comparatively few loved poetry,
i nearly everyone loved dogs. And Mat*
j thew Arnold was right.
i to Jbtirope, and this great blanket of
! moist air contains much more latent
i heat than dry air at the same temper
| ature. From the moist air come
I clouds, fogs and rain, which condense
1 heat and water upon the Old World
and prevent the loss of ground heat
by radiation. That is why there is
such a striking difference in temper
atures upon a single line of latitude
cutting the two continents.
While the warm water flows north
east from the Mexican gulf the cold
i water on the north is finding its way
southwesterly, deeper down. When
j the cold current strikes the tropical
FAVORITE OF FILMDOM
Robert Edeson,
Former Star of the Spoken Drama,
Now Shining in the Movie World.
Emergence of Arabia as a Separate!
Nation Is Climax of a Century
of Revolts
The sudden emergence of Arabia as
a separate unit in the great war is a
continuation of a series of revolts
against Turkish control since 1818,
when it was annexed by that nation
for the second time in its uneasy his
tory. From 1882 to 1008 there have
been eight revo!|s. Its happiest days
• were those of the pre-lslamic period,
| during which it was powerful enough
to defeat the Romans in 24 B. C., aud
to resist all other foreign invasion un
til 522 A. D., when it was conquered by
the Abyssinians.
Mecca was compared by Burton to
Bath, but has been likened by other
writers to “Florence without beauty.”
It has had a full share of flood, fire
amt sword, but is said never to have
suffered from any serious epidemic.
This seems the more remarkable be
cause the city lies at the lowest level
of a valley which must be a cesspool,
and the sewage, having no outlet, per
colates into the wells. The immunity,
ascribed by Mohammedans to miracu
lous interposition of providence on be
half of "Mecca the Inviolable,” is due
to the dry climate, the fact thnt most
of the inhabitants have the fine physi
cal vigor needed for a long journey,
and the absence of destitution. The
thousands seen begging are "beggars
at a fair,” reaping the harvest of
wealth brought by pilgriths.—London
Chronicle.
to have a large pile of sand and grntcl
handy, where the fowls can help
themselves.
Milk is a good feed for hens. Give
all the milk they will consume. The
hens will not only lay well, but will
keep in a strong vigorous state of
I health.
You should no more think of keep
| ing a common mixed flock of mongrel
! chickens than you would buy or care
! for chance seedling fruits, wliollj un
known and untried.
While the weather is dry. the poul
trvman should store away several bar
rels of road dust to be used in the
dust boxes during the winter months.
Thoroughbred fowls are the onlj
profitable sort to keep, no matter
what you keep them for.
Why Ammonia Cleans Clothes.
Ammonia, the great spot remover
of the American people, is really a gas
dissolved in water. It belongs to the
alkali family, and on account of its
mineral origin is the foe of all oils
and grease, which explains the easy
way it disposes of sjmts that soap and
water cannot affect. Hath ammonia
is a fine cleanser.
>>%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%»
i ——————— f
: SOME SMILES j
4%%%%%%%%«%%%%«%%%%%%%%^
From Missouri.
1 o u n g Man—
Sir, 1 am unable
to find words to
express the love
I have for your
daughter, and—
Her Father—
Never mind the
word s, young
man; figures will
j 7 uu. jum miuw me
your bank book.
Part of the Game.
“These diplomats are a queer lot.”
"What rankes you think so?”
“They rarely ever permit them
selves to indulge In a plain ‘yes’ or
’no.’ ”
“Don't censure them for that. If
they were not mysterious nobody
would think they were earning their
salary.”
Ireland First Country to Require Sur
names; Here is What Some of
Them Mean
The fact is not generally known
that Ireland was the first country in
modern Europe to enforce the adop
tion of surnames by law. The act
prescribing their general use was
passed more than 100 years before the
Anglo-Norman invasion, whereas sur
names did not come into general use
! in England until the days of Queen
j Elizabeth, nor in Wales till late In the
] seventeenth century.
There are some interesting mean
ings attaching to the most well-known
Irish names, Here are a few, with
the curious changes of spelling that
have come about since the names first
originated:
Murphy came from O’Murphy, Mor
ohey, and Morphew, meaning ••superi
or.”
Kelly came from O'Kelly, Kiely,
Keeley, meaning “for war.”
O'Connors is derived from Connors,
Couerty. meaning “helper.”
Dougherty from O'Doherty, Doherty,
Daughadnv, meaning “destroyer.”
All Irish names at the first stage in
their history had “O’ ” before them, the
first change consisting of dropping
I that “O’.” It will not be necessary,
therefore, to repeat the name with the
“O’ ” before it.
Sullivan was originally Sullifant and
Sullivant, meaning “quick-sighted."
O’Donnell and McDonnell and all
combinations of that name were Don
ald. Dauiel, Dona, meaning “dark
chief.”
Moloney was O’Mullowney, Meloney,
Mullany, meaning “thoughtful.”
McCormack was O'Cormac, McCor
mac, McCormick, meaning “son of the
crown.”
Flynn whs Flann, meaning “red.”
Flannigan was Finnegan, meaning
“Druid.”
Hoyle was Boylan. Boland, Bolan,
Boylin, meaning “benign.”
O'Brian was Bryan, Bryant, Brines,
Bryon, meaning "author.”
Brady was McBrady, meaning “ship
captain.”
Macauley was O'Cawlew, McGawly,
McAuly, McA'.lIvff, Cawley, meaning
“echo,” or literally, “son of the rock.”
1,000,000 in British Navy.
The working forces of the British
navy, afloat and ashore, include more
than 1,000,000 men.
As Others See Us.
She (at the opera)—Don’t you think
Miss Screec-her strains her voice when
she sings?
He—Perhaps: but if she does, she
uses a mighty poor strainer.
More .Than He Could Bear.
"Fur ten years.
glass eater wid a
circus sideshow,”
said the frowsy
applicant for
breakfast.
“How did you
happen to lose
your position?”
"It wuz dis way,
mum. De beard
ed lady got sick
an' de manager
wanted me ter
take her place fur
a week. Bein’ an
artist, me soul
revolted at prac
ticin’ a low decep
tion like dat an’
I quit.”
One Man’s View.
She Why is it that men always like
the things that disagree with them?
'Veil, have an idea it's beenuse
they make good wives.
Meteorites Are Valuable.
Specimens of meteorites command
j such a value that those which fall to
i the earth are generally broken up in
to innumerable parts and scattered in
all directions among tbe private collec
tions. Thus one of the earliest known
meteorites, that was found in En
sisheim, Upper Alsace, in 1492, is rep
resented in GO collections. The result
of this practice is that exorbitant
) prices are asked by dealers for meteor
; jC material in amounts sufficient for
analysis and study. A recent catalogue
of a Philadelphia dealer, says a writer
in a recent issue of Science, advertises
a perfectly commonplace type of me
teoric stone at $5 a gram, the only jws
sible excuse being that there was not
much of it. and in falling it passed
through the roof of a barn.
The Heir.
“Just because a man sits at a ma
hogany desk in a luxurious office,
doesn’t necessarily mean that he is
doing a big business."
“No, but it often indicates that his
father before him did a big business.”
j A Little of Everything
Rockland, Me., yearly produces-1,
000.000 barrels of lime.
It costs Holland about $3,000,000 a
year to maintain its dikes.
Sacramento (Cal.) business men
have formed a Barefoot league for
health and amusement objects. .
The skin of the whale in places has
been found, it is said, to he as much
as two feet in thickness.
Canada’s 1015 crop yield is valued
at $800,000,000, with wheat heading
the list at more than $.'{12,000,000.
Mrs. Mary A. Landon has been chos
en president of the Woodstock-Syca
niore street railway in Illinois.
A peculiar clear, tough and durable
celluloid has been Invented in England
for automobile >*’Adshields.
Believing that mountain-climbing de
velops the ner<^s. as well as the mus
cles. a Philadelphia physical director
has his pupils climb the sides of quar
ries.
With her first proposal, a girl Is
firmly convinced that she will need a
blank book in which to keep a record
of her offers.
Denver, Colo., has, it is believed, the
largest American flag in the world. It
IS 137 feet long and GS feet wide. When
it is necessary to wash the immense
ling it is hung on the side of the muni
cipal auditorium and a fire hose turned
on ii. it takes two hours to wash the
| f>ug.
Henry Anderson, who owns a ranch
in Washoe county, Nevada, has his cat
tle herded by a flying machine. Once
each day his cow aviator flies over the '
range to find the cattle and observe
their condition. Mr. Anderson paid
810,000 for the airplane and already 1
believes it will be worth a dozen cow- !
boys to him in time.
Alaska formerly had enormous ex
ports of gold and salmon. These are !
still important, but to them she has 1
added copper. The valud of that sta
ple in the figures for the last fiscal
year was $26,000,000. The total sales
of articles by Alaska to the United
States amounted to $r»0,000.000 during
the year, or an amount nearly seven
times greater than the United States
paid, for the country.
Novelties of Trade.
The chewing gum habit has at last
“caught on” in England, 20.000,000
packages having been chewed during
September, with the demand growing.
The Chinaman has abandoned san
dals and taken to wearing shoes. Chi
neses purchases of shoes tripled last
year.
Venezuela imported last year over
$1,000,000 worth of American flour.
Despite the hard {iiues the bakers of
Caracas have reduced the price of
bread.
Tuna and bonita are now being
canned in Hawaii by two American
companies. This industry was former
ly controlled by Japanese fishers.
Ten miles of ships used the Panama
canal last July, the average length of
the vessels being 200.92 feet.—W. E.
Aughinbaugh in Leslie’s.
Heredity.
“The football player who did such
fine work is the son of a professional
cook.”
“Then no wonder he took natural
ly to work on the gridiron.”
If some people were to speak their
minds It wouldn’t take them long.
__ _T
-► A RIGID <~
Adherence
TO SIMPLE HEALTH RULES
is really necessary in
order to promote and
maintain health
The digestion must be
kept normal, the liver
active and the
bowels regular
When Help is Needed-TRY
HOSTETTER’S
Stomach Billers
LIKE CLOCK-WORK!
(By N. B. COOK, M. D.)
The machinery of the body needs to
be oiled, kept in good condition, just as
the automobile or bicycle. Why should
the human neglect his own machinery
more than that of his horse or his en
gine? Yet most people do neglect them
selves. Their tongue has a dark brown
color, skin sallow, breath bad, yet they
fail to see that their machinery needs
attention. Everybody should take a
mild laxative at least once a week. A
pleasant way to clear the tongue and
the highly colored water noticed in the
morning is to take a laxative which
will cure the inactive liver and bilious
ness.
A pleasant vegetable pill is made up
of May-apple, leaves of aloe, and jalap,
made into a tiny pellet and coated with
sugar. First put up by Dr. Pierce near
ly 50 years ago. Druggists sell these
vegetable pellets in vials for 25c. ask
for Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets.
If backache, scalding urine or fre
quent urination bother or distress you
or if uric acid in the blood has caused
rheumatism, gout or sciatica, if you
suspect that you have kidney or blad
der trouble, write Dr. Pierce, at In
valids’ Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y„ send a
sample of urine, anA describe symp
toms. A physician nmrchemist will ex
amine it without charge and you will
he under no obligation whatever. Dr.
Pierce’s Anuric tablets cannot fail to
help you, because their action flushes
the kidneys of impurities and puts
strength into them.
Obtain a 50-cent box of Anuric tab
lets today from your druggist here in
town. From personal observation in
large hospital practice, these tablets
will give you speedy relief.—Adv.
DIMK FYF ” FEVER
■ I 1^1 IV Lr I L AND THROAT^ DISEASES
Cures the sick and acts as a preventative for others.
Liquid given on the tongue. Safe for brood mares and
all others. Best kidney remedy. 50 cents a bottle. 15 a
dozen. Sold by all druggists and turf goods houses, or sent,
.express paid, by the manufacturers. Booklet, "Distem
per, Cause and Cure.” free.
SPOHX MEDICAL CO., Chemists, Goshen, Ind„ C. S. A.
_ War and Health.
The effect of war conditions upon
the healtli of the poorer classes is
noted by Dr. L. A. Davies, medical offi
cer of Woolwich, England, in his an
nual report. Improved working con
ditions in that munitions region count
to some degree favorably, but the emo
tional strain of grief and fear more
than overbalances clean floors and
good ventilation. The increased use
of alcohol may be traced to such emo
tion. Accidents have occurred as n
result of the dark streets ordered as
protection from air raids. Poor ven
tilation in cellars, where hiding be
comes necessary, may, Doctor Davies
considers, account for the increase in
respiratory diseases. Fear and shock
have doubtless shortened also the life
of those enfeebled from old age. They
have caused many complications in
childbirth cases.
Important to Mothers
Examine carefully every bottle of
CASTORLA. that famous old remedy
for infants and children, and see that it
Bears the
Signature of ^
In Use for Over 30'Years.
Children Cry for Fletcher’s Caatoria
Forbearance.
“How does the theory of evolution
impress you?”
“Well, I’m not so sure that I approve
of it. I know some men I might sus
pect of having descended from an
ourang-outang. But why should I hu
miliate the ourang-outang?”
A silent man often has a reputation
for knowing about ten times as much
as he really does know.
You can cure
that cold in a,
day. Take—
I
The old family remedy—in tablet
form—safe, sure, easy to take. No
opiates—no unpleasant after effects.
Cures colds in 24 hours—Grip in 3
days. Money back if it fails. Get
the genuine box with Red Top
•ad Mr. Hill's picture on it—25 cents.
At Any Drue Stor.
:_=
It no more necessary
than Smallpox. Army
experience has demons tratei
the almost miraculous effl.
cacy, and harxnlessness,of Antityphoid Vaccination.
Be vaccinated NOW by your physician, you and
your family. It Is mare vital than bouse insurance.
Ask your physician, druggist, or send for i3ave
you had Typhoid?" telling of Typhoid Vaccine,
results from use, and danger from Typhoid Carriers.
Producing Vaccines and Serums under U. S. Lleenta
Tbs Cotter Laberatary. Berkeley. Cal., Chieaga, III.
PARKER’S
HAIR BALSAM
A toilet preparation or merit.
Helps to eradicate dandruff.
... ForRosiorin* Color end
Beauty toCray or Faded Hair.
Preposterous Suggestion.
“John, aren’t you going to get an
overcoat for the winter?”
“Overcoat!” exclaimed Mr. Miifles. ' j
“What do I want with an overcoat?
An Overcoat won’t keep our automobile
from freezing up iu cold weather.”
Two Kinds.
“We had shortcake for breakf ist.”
“So had we. It was so short it
wouldn’t go around.”
A Mother’s Burden
A mother who suffers kiduey trou
ble, finds it hard to keep up her d uly
work. Lameness, backache, sharp
pains when stooping and "blue”, ner
vous or dizzy spells, make home life
dreary. Active kidneys bring back
vigor, health and a pleasure in fam
ily duties. If the kidneys are weak
try a box of Doan’s Kidney Pills.
A Nebraska Case
I “JtKTJ
Plcturt
; TelU a
Mrs. Bert Currier,
IJncoln St., Dex
• ingtQn, Neb., says:
"I suffered for a
long time from
. pains through the
Lsmall of my back.
nThe pain inter
f'fered with my
work, especially
I when I was sweep
ting or dusting. My
ikidneys bothered!
Lme, too. I had
headaches and diz
zy spells. Doan's
Kidney Pills drove
away all these ail
ments and since
then I haven’t been
bothered.’’
Gel Doan's at Any Stare. 60c a Bos
DOAN’S “JKKT
FOSTER-MILBURN CO., BUFFALO, N. Y.
MTTBT CpT f to settle estate, [».
F1UO 1 acres, improved
level, one mile from town. 100 cultivated. 8 timber,2k
pasture, plenty fruit. 14.000 forequitr. 389 acres in
proved. i5U cultivated, balance timber and pastnre
IS2.00 per acre. tteo. Brookcr, Fleml»(riaa. ■,..P,lk <’♦
DITCftiTC Nation E Colenun,
|B ILIl I u Patent Lawyer, Washing ion.
■ ^ ■ ■■■» ■ w d. C. AdFice aDd books free
Rates reasonable. Highest ref erences. Bestservces
Nebraska Directory '
THEMTONllI
Rooms from $1.00 up single, 75 cents up double.
CAFE PRICKS REASONABLE
I DIIPTII9P CURED ill a few days
nUr I UlUa without pain or a sur
gical operation. No pay until cured. Write
OR. WKAV, 3Oft Bos Bldg., Omaha, Neb.
| DEFIANCE STARCH
! is constantly growing in favor because it
Does Not Stick to the Iron
and it will not injure the finest fabric. For
laundry purposes it has no equal. 116 or.
package 10c. 'A more starch for same m oney,
j DEFIANCE STARCH CO.. Omaha, Nebraska
WANTED
1,000 CARLOADS SCRAP IRON
Also Scrap Rubber, Metals, Etc.
Write for prices
Nebraska Iron & Metal Co.
THE KING COLE CO.. OMAHA
FISN.OYSTEK.CUEJK.I’Oill.Tir
WHOLESALE ONLY
Send Christman ordfr*
early to insure receiving
supply when needed.
your PorxTRr to
us. We pay Cash
for live poultry.
COOK BOOK FREE!
Mention this paper.
ELECTRICAL JOBBERS
Flash Lights, Mazda Lamps, Electrical Sup
plies, Lighting Fixtures Gas Lighting Sup
plies, Vacuum cleaners, Electrical washing
Machines, Electric Irons. Send for catalogue.
BURGESS.GR ANDEN CO.
1511 Ho ward St* Omaha, Neb ,
• W. N. U OMAHA, NO 51-1916.