The Wageworker. (Lincoln, Neb.) 1904-????, March 08, 1907, Image 2

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    PREACHER AND THE POET.
Writer Speculate on Shakespeare at
a Churchgoer.
Probably . Shakespeare did his own
thinking on questions of religion, said
little, and conformed strictly tothe ex
isting order. Still we question if he
was a good churchgoer. The town aDd
church of Stratford had a decided bent
toward Presbyterlanlsm, and there Is
reason to think that he did not get
on well with it in this respect. Him
self the wisest of preachers; he does
not seem to have been fond of preach
ing. That which sounds most like ft
and very wise it is comes from
Polonlus, whom he calls "a prating old
Tool." We fear that when he walked
to church with his wife he went no
farther than the porch, but strolled
along the Avon, where he was found
by Susanna and Judith on "a grassy
bank" in close converse with "daisies
pied and violets blue," and "herb-o'-grace"
as became Sunday. And in
winter he was not sorry "wien cough
ing drowned the parson's saw." The
preacher and the poet have never got
on well together, and will not until
they are identically the same person,
as Cardinal Newman says; and they
must not divide and antagonize what
Sod have joined together. Theodore
r. Mungcr in the February Atlantic.
CHILDREN TORTURED.
Girl Had Running Sores from Eczema
Boy Tortured by Poison Oak
Both Cured by Cuticura.
"Last year, after having my little
girl treated by a very prominent phy
sician for an obstinate case of ec
zema, I resorted to the Cuticura Rem
edies, and was so well pleased with
the almost Instantaneous relief afford
ed that wo discarded the physician's
prescription and relied entirely on
the Cuticura Soap, Cuticura Oint
ment, and Cuticura Pills. When we
commenced with the Cuticura Reme
dies her feet and limbs were covered
with running sores. In about six
weeks we had her completely well,
and there has been no recurrence of
the trouble.
"In July of this year a little boy
in our family poisoned his hands and
arms with poison oak, and In twenty
four hours his hands and arms were
a mass of torturing sores. We used
only the Cuticura Remedies, washing
his hands and arms with the Cuticura
Soap, and anointing them with the
Cuticura Ointment, and then gave
him the Cuticura Resolvent. In
about three weeks his hands and
arms healed up. So we have lots of
cause for feeling grateful for the Cu
ticura Remedies. We find that the
Cuticura Remedies are a valuable
household standby, living as we do
twelve miles from a doctor. Mrs. Liz
zie Vincent Thomas, Fairmont, Wal
den's Ridge, Tenn., Oct 13, 1905."
At a Disadvantage.
"The court fortune teller la going to
resign," said one Russian official.
"Yes," answered the other; "he Is
at a disadvantage. If he predicts bad
news, he comes into royal disfavor,
and if he predicts good news, it
doesn't come true." Washington Star.
The foundation of pride Is the wish
to respect one's self, whatever others
may think; the mainspring of vanity
is the craving for the admiration of
others, no matter at what cost to one's
self-respect. F. Marion Crawford.
SICK HEADACHE
Positively cured br
Al DTCD O these L"tle pi"s
ilMlVI Ll0 1 TUe7 9330 relieve Dis-
i tress irom Dyspepsia, in-
k jlTTLE digestion and Too Ilearty
I I W rn Eating. A perfect rem-
Mil mm rV edy for Dizziness, Kansea.
I I PILLS drowsiness. Bad Tasto
il p3 In tho Mouth, Coated
C .. Tongue, Pain In the side.
1 "" ITORPID LIVER. They
regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable.
SMALL PILL SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE.
CARTERS
Genuine Must Bear
Fac-Simile Signature
REFUSE SUBSTITUTES.
IITTLE
IVER
PILLS.
THE CANADIAN WEST
iS THE BEST WEST
The testimony of tbou
!inl. durum the past
yrurislrmt tho Caniidlun
Went i. the best West.
Yeur by yeur the agri
oullural returns nave In
oreased In Tulutne and la
value, and mill the Cana
dian Government offers
MIO oom FKEB lo
every buna fide settler.
Some of the Advantages
The phenomenal Increase tn railway mileage
main lines and branehen bun put almuatevery por
tion of tbe country within easy reacb of churches,
achooli. markets, cheap fuel aud every modern
Convenience.
The N I N KTT MILLION RUHI1 KL W H BAT CROf
of this year meauH A). UK). Utti iu the farmers of
Western Canada, apart from tbe result of otbec
grains and oatile.
Kor arivlne and Information SKTdrms the 8UPER
INTKNDKNT OK IM MK. KATION, Ottawa, Canada,
or any amhoriKed Government Ageni.
W. V. BENNETT, 801 New York Life BmMiot,
Oaaha. Nebraska.
Eastern Washington
Farm Lands
Offer the best advantages for a home or
investment. Climate unsurpassed. No
destructive wind or hail storms. No
pests. Crops sure. We offer the best
raw and improved lands at low prices
and easy terms, near good towns and
markets. Railroad fare refunded to pur
chasers. Low excursion rates. Write at
once for illustrated pamphlet and map.
THE BIO BEND LAND COMPANY,
i Washington Street, Spokane, Washington.
HIE WAQEWORKER
By W. M. MAUPIN
LINCOLN,
NEBRASKA
Kilts vs. Trousers.
A Scot has written for the London
Journals an argument in favor ol
wearing kilts, especially in. cold ,
weather. A fashionable physician of
London supports his argument, and
the Tailor and Cutter admits that
the streets would be made more pic
turesque, furthermore the kilt would
put an end to "baggy -kneed trousers."
A pair of trousers that bag at the
knees is Indeed a loathsome object.
The question of wearing kilts is
not one of leg exposure to the cold
of winter, nor is it one of compara
tive durability and economy in ma
terial. It is chiefly a question of
legs, remarks' Boston Herald. The
Psalmist said of the Lord: "He
taketh not pleasure In the legs
of a man." Nevertheless, civilized
man, a vain thing, vainer than the
average woman, is conscious of his
legs. They must be sculptured if the
kilt is to be donned. Thackeray's
marquis of Flarintosh appeared at
Parisian court balls in his uniform of
the Scotch archers or in his native
Glenlivat tartan, and he thought there
was no handsomer young nobleman;
but look at Doyle's picture of him,
and lo, he was a sight. We may all
be deceived in this respect. The
most bow-legged may fondly imagine
that his left at least is a poem. There
are eminent statesmen, judges, phil
anthropists who, kilted, would appear
as inconsiderable beings, , things of
naught, yet they may rise superior
to baggy trousers or even to those
worn at half-mast.
Aged African Explorer.
While many of the great 'explorer
of Africa among them Barth, Speek,
Livingstone, Burton, Rohlfs, Nachtl
gal, Stanley have passed away, one
of the pioneers, George Schweinfurth,
celebrated his seventieth birthday a
few weeks ago in perfect health, and
as eager for work as ever. When
he first visited Africa, in 1863, even
the Nile regions were largely terra in
cognita. He explored the Delta, the
deserts, the region between the Nile
and the Red sea; he leaded Arabic,
and soon became so acclimated that
Africa seemed his real home a para
dise compared to Europe, with its
"wretched, insufferable civilization."
Thus it was that he felt himself drawn
deeper and deeper, into the Dark con
tinent. His "Heart of Africa" appear
ed in 1874, and was promptly trans
lated into all the European languages.
His later works attracted less atten
tion, as they were addressed chiefly
to savants. In recent years he has
devoted much time to the preparation
of charts of the Eastern desert of
Egypt. Many of his papers have ap
peared in the periodical of the Berlin
Geographical society and the Zeit
schift fur Ethnologie. Although his
specialty has ',een botany, he has made
many important contributions to an
thropology, among the more recent
ones being an attempt to throw a
light on Egyptian antiquity and or
igins by the aid of the botanical con
tents of old tombs.
Tier liners .are congratulating them
selves on the gradual disappearance
of their second-class cabs and the
multiplication of auto-cabs. The latest
count showed that of the cabs of all
kinds, 7,713 altogether, 503 were au
tomobiles. All of these are in such
great demand that their receipts often
rise to $ 15 a day, and never fall below
five dollars. They are allowed to
charge seven cents more than ordi
nary cabs. The number of auto-om
nibuses was 947, as against 3,343
street cars. These ominbuses make
almost as good time as the auto-cabs.
Accidents rarely happen, largely ow
ing to the abundant supply of police
men. At the Potsdamer Platz alone
there arc 14 of them, and they have
very little to do, their mere presence
making the drivers and chauffeurs
careful to observe the ordinances.
A Chicago woman says that it is
"inhuman cruelty" to tax bachelors,
because bachelors cannot help being
bachelors. She holds that many men
try in vain to win a wife and give up
in despair. This leads the Baltimore Sun
to say the Chicago women have
almost as peculiar views, it seems, as
the Chicago men.
Somebody wants to know whether
there is any difference in the weight
of water when in liquid form and
when that same quantity is turned to
ice. Offhand we should say not, but
there's a big difference in the price.
The waiting maids in Ottawa, Can.,
belong to the Servant Girls' union, and
refuse to serve dinner after six
o'clock. They expect the aid of the
cook-ladies and the dish-washing dam
sels, who will undoubtedly encourage
them with a sympathetic strike.
The glove-cutters in France earn big
wages, some of them getting as much
as $75 a week. So difficult is the art
of cutting kid gloves that most of
the principal cutters are known to
the trade by name and fame.
A Big Bargain for 12 Cents Postpaid.
The vear of 1906 was one of Drodieal
Slenty on our seed farms. Never before
id vegetable and farm seeds return such
enormous yields.'
Now we wish to gain 200,000 new cus
tomers this year and hencS- offer for 12c
postpaid
pkg. uarden City Ueet IUC
" Earliest Ripe Cabbage 10c
" ' Earliest Emerald Cucumber 15c
" La Crosse Market Lettuce 15c
" 13 Dav Radish 10c
" Blue Blood Tomato 15c
" Juicv Tumio 10c
1000 kernels gloriously beautiful flow
er seeds - - ioc
Total $1.00
AH for 12c postpaid in order to intro-
rlnpp our warranted seeds, and if vou
will send 16c we will add one package of
Berliner Earliest Cauliflower, together
with our mammoth Dlant. nursery stock.
vegetable and farm seed and. tool catalog.
This catalog is mailed tree to an in
tending purchasers. Write to-day.
John A. Salzer Seed Co., Box W, La
Crosse. Wis.
How to Sleep in a Blanket.
There are a great many very com
petent treatises telling you how to
build your fire, pitch your tent and all
the rest of it. I have never seen des
cribed the woodman's method of using
a blanket, however. Lie flat on your
back. Spread the blanket over you.
Now raise your legs. rigid from the
hips, the blanket, of course, draping
over them. In two swift motions tuck
first one edge under your legs from
right to left, then the second edge un
der from left to right, and over the
first edge. Lower your legs, wrap
up your shoulders and go to sleep. If
you roll over one edge will unwind
but the other will tighten. Stewart
Edward White in Outing. '
Crisis Averted.
The two men met, stopped and
glared at each other.
Then one of them spoke.
"Rivers," he said, "you are wrong!
It's a lie! I haven't the grip!"
"Brooks," impulsively exclaimed the
other, "it's an infamous falsehood! It's
a base slander! I don't know of any
cure for the grip, and I wouldn't tell
you of it if 1 did!"
Then they solemnly shook hands
and passed on.
Inducement to Undertakers.
The following advertisement ap
peared in a paper of a small town in
Colorado:
."For Sale An old established, well
paying undertaker's establishment.
The city is in a very unhealthy loca
tion, where the mortality is very
great. There is only one doctor in the
whole town. The deaths from fever
alone pay the expenses, and the rest
Is clear profit. There is no competi
tion." Judge.
Keep Your Face tt the Sunlight.
I know an old man who has had a
good deal of trouble and many lossea
and misfortunes, but he started out in
life with a firm determination to ex
tract just as much real enjoyment
from it, as he wenf along, as possible
not in dissipation, but in wholesome
recreation and fun. He has always
tried to see the humorous side and the
duty of happiness. O. S. Warden In
Success Magazine.
RIGHT SORT OF CORN BREAD.
Found Only in Tennessee, According
to Nashville American.
The best cornmeal in the world Is
made in Tennessee though the out
put is limi'pd and not much of it
reaches the market where urbanites
dwell The steam buhrstone has
driven the water mill almost into
desuetude, only to be in turn crowded
out by the modern roller mill. The
ancient .water mill still lingers in re
mote sections and "mountain fast
nesses where clear waters flow
through pebbly channels in sylvan
shades. More than one of these ideal
mills may be found on Fighting creek
in Sevier county, under the shadows
of the Big Smoky, and near unto
Sugarlaad region, where the untaxed
juice of the corn flows from modest
aud retiring stills. There are many
such mills in the Unaka region, and
in various sections of middle Tennes
sae, where the withering blight of
modern civilization, with its canned
foods and packing house meats, has
not yet penetrated, and where one
nay
Listen to the water mill
Through the Uveloni? day,
"While the clicking of its wheel
Wears the weary hours away.
But they don't bring the meal to
town. The town-raised person's taste
is too vitiated to appreciate it, says
the Nashville American. WThen he
eats corn bread at all with his oleo
margarine or canned soup, he wants
the roller mill product, which sug
gested he idea of sawdust breakfast
food to a Battle Creek Yankee. The
right sort of corn bread is made lrom
meal ground on a slow-running water
mill from sorn that has been well
dried, the little end of the ear shelled
oft for the chickens or pigs, the rot
ten grain; carefully eliminated, and
the corn run through a fan mill. Be
fore being made into bread the meal
is sifted through a wire sieve or sift
er, the meshes of which are not too
fine. Then if good bread Is not pro
duced it is the fault of the cook. The
use of sugar in making any form of
corn bread should be made a felony.
There is as much difference between
bread from properly ground meal and
the common meal of commerce as
there is between a Smithfield ham and
a packing house ham.
Cement for Brftken Glass.
Plaster of paris, mixed into a paste
with white of egg, makes a strong
cement for mending broken glass or
cbina; and another excellent cement
is made as follows: Into a small bot
tle press as much isinglass as will
fill it, then pour in by degrees un
sweetened gin, which will gradually
dissolve the Isinglass if the bottle is
kept in a warm place. j
WHAT WESTERN CANADA DOES.
Satisfactory Yields of Wheat and
Good Prices.
Dundurn, Sask., Sept. 30, 1906.
Mr. W. H. Rogers, Canadian Govern
ment Agent,
Indianapolis, Ind.
My Dear Sir:
When you were at our place In July
I promised to write, you what Ay
north quarter made per acre. You
will remember it was all sown to wheat.
Well, I finished threshing yesterday
and received from, it an average of
43, bushels per acre testing 64
pounds per stroked bushel. The wheat
is the best sample I have ever raised
so uniform and even in size. You
may know it was a good sample when
I tell you that I have already sold 2,000
bushels of it for seed to my neighbors.
This year has been my best effort in
farming during my life. My wheat
totaled 9,280 bushels and my oats
nearly 5,000.
If you remember I pointed out to
you a half section lying just west of
our house and joining my upper quar
ter on the south, which I said I should
have in order to make one of the best
farms in western Canada. I am very
glad to be able to tell you that I now
own that half section. My ambition
now is to be able to market 20,000
bushels of wheat next year. If some
of those good, honest Hoosiers could
have been with me during, the last two
weeks and could have seen the golden
grain rushing down the spout into my
wagon and then could have seen it in
great piles in my granaries, I feel sure
they would have been forced to
acknowledge there is no better farm
ing country in the world than this. I
may just say that I have done all my
farming with eight head of horses and
one hired man except during harvest
and threshing.' This year I proved to
my neighbor that the Hoosiers, when
once "woke up," can raise grain equal
to the best Minnesota farmers. His
best yield was 42 bushels per acre,
so you see "old Indiana" is holding the
ribbon this year.
Yours very truly,
N. E. BAUMINK.
80ME WIVES ARE DIFFERENT.
Quiet Cynicism, or Good Honest Row
Which Is the Better?
"Most men," said the man of experi
ence, "think it must be awfully nice
to have a wife who takes things as
coolly as Dave Potter's wife takes
them; but others, more discriminat
ing, prefer a good honest row to. her
style of quiet cynicism. The way she
behaved the other day when she
found a letter in Dave's pocket from
a girl is an example of her method.
" T don't see,' wrote this girl, -'how
on earth I can ever live without you.'
"Dave's wife read that gush, and a
lot more just like it, without ever turn
ing a hair.
" 'Well,' she said, quietly, 'that girl
is a fool. If she knew you as well as
I do she would be wondering how on
earth she could ever live with you.'
"And that, in the opinion of the dis
criminating few, cuts , a whole lot
deeper than a common, everyday rum
pus." PREPARE THIS YOURSELF.
Tells How to Make the Best Blood
Tonic at Home.
For those who have any form of
blood disorders; who want new, rich
blood and plenty of it, try this: - -
Fluid Extract Dandelion, one-half
ounce; Compound Kargon, one ounce;
Compound Syrup Sarsaparilla, three
ounces.
Shake well in a bottle and take in
teaspoonful doses after each meal and
at bedtime. Any good pharmacy can
supply the ingredients at small cost.
This is the prescription which, when
made up, is called "The Vegetable
Treatment;" by others, the "Cyclone
Blood Purifier." It acts gently and
certainly does wonders for some peo
ple who are sickly, weak and out of
sorts, and Is known to relieve serious,
long-standing cases of rheumatism
and chronic backache quickly.
Make some up and try it.
Long Sermons.
Mark Twain tells- this story, the
moral of which you may supply your
self: "I went to church one time and
was so impressed by what the preach
er told me about the poor heathen
that I was ready to give up a hundred
dollars of my own money and even go
out and borrow more to send to the
heathen. But the minister preached
too long, and my enthusiasm began to
drop about $25 a drop till there was
nothing left for the poor heathen, and
by the time he was through and the
collection was taken up I stole ten
cents off the plate." Southwestern'n
book.
Laundry wortr. at home would bS
much more satisfactory If the right
Starch were used. In order to get the
desired stiffness, ft is usually neces
sary to use so much starch that the
beauty and fineness of the fabric Is
hidden behind a paste of varying
thickness, which not only destroys thfl
appearance, but also affects the wear
ing quality of the goods. This trouble"
can be entirely overcome by using De
fiance Starch, as it can be applied
much more thinly because of its great
er strength than other makes.
According to statistics nine-tenths
of the men who commit suicide are
married. Comment is unnecessary.
ONLY ONE "BKOMO GII1XIJIE"
That is LAXATIVE BKOMO jnlnlne. Similarly
iiuiucu reucuivsMJUivumvb utnxivtr. xue ur&i- una
original Cold Tablet ifi a WlilTifi PACK At; K with
black and red lettering, and bears the signature of
B.W.UHOVB. 25c
A toast May the best you wish for
be the worst you get.
Senators Much Alike.
Senator Simmons, of North Carolina,
and Senator Taliaferro, of Florida, look'
enough alike to be twin brothers.
They are about' the same size and
build; each has a heavy crop of hair,
which is kept closely trimmed, and
their short,- stubby mustaches are
much alike. Both have dark eyes
and there is probably not two pounds
difference in their respective weights.
If .it were not for the fact that tho
Florida senator has a few more gray
hairs in his head than his North Caro
lina colleague it would be almost im
possible for the senate employes to
tell them apart.
State of Omo.'CtTr of Toledo, (
Lucas Coirrr. f
Fraks J. Cheney maKes oath that he Is senior
partner of the firm of F. J. Cuenkt & Co., doing
business in the City of Toledo. County and State
aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of
ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS- for each and every
case of Catarrh that cannot be. cured by the use of
Hall's Catabbh Cure.
FRANK J. CHENET.
Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence
this Cell day of December, A. D.. 1886.
. - , A. W. GLEASON,
J SEAL J : . NOTAB.Y PUBLIC
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally and acts
directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the
system. Send for testimonials, free.
F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, 0.
Sold by all Druggists, ?5c.
Take Hall'sFamlly Fills for constipation. '
Hardly Likely.
Andrew Carnegie tells a story to
Illustrate that a Celt is always a Celt
In Scotland as well as in Ireland. In
a sermon preached in a small church
in Glasgow the pastor, after inveigh
ing against slothfulness, said, by way
of climax, "Do you think that Adam
and Eve went about the garden of
Eden with their hands in their pock
ets?" - - -
In a Pinch, Use ALLEN'S FOOT-EASE.
A nowder. It cures nainful. smart
ing, nervous feet and ingrowing nails.
It's the greatest comfort discovery of
the age. Makes -new shoes easy. A
certain cure for sweating feet. Sold
by all Druggists, 25c. Accept no sub
stitute. Trial package, FREE. Ad
dress A. S. Olmsted. Le Roy. N. Y.
Wages in Germany Advanced.
Wages In the machine factories of
Germany advanced last year 10 to 15
per cent.
TIRED AND SICK
YET MUST WORK
"Man may work from sun to sun
but woman's work is never done,"
In order to keep the home neat
and pretty, the children well dressed
and tidy, women overdo and often -suffer
in silence, drifting along from
bad to worse, knowing well that
they oug ht to have help to overcome
the pains and aches which, daily
make life a burden.
It is to these women that Lydia
E. Pinkham' Vegetable Compound,'
made from native roots and herbs.
comes as alilessing. When the spir
its are depressed, the head and back
aches, there are dragging-down pains, nervousness, sleeplessness, and I
reluctance to go anywhere, these are only symptoms which unless
heeded, are soon followed by the worst forms of Female Complaints. -: D
juyum c. riiiKiiaui s vegeiaoie compounu
keeps the feminine organism in a strong and healthy condition. It cures
Inflammation, Ulceration, displacements, and organic troubles. In
preparing for child-birth and to carry women safely through the Change
of Life it is most efficient. "
Mrs. Aug-ustu3 L.yon, of East Earl, Pa., writes: Dear Mrs. Pink
ham: "For a long time I suffered from female troubles and had all kinds
of aches and pains in the lower part of back and sides, I could not
sleep and had no appetite. Since taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound and following; the advice which you gave me I feel like a
new woman and I cannot praise your medicine too highly."
Mrs. Pinkham's Invitation to Women
Women suffering from any form of female weakness are invited to
write Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass. Out of her vast volume of ex
perience she probably has the very knowledge that will help your
case. Her advice is free and always helpful. ' -
CORED
As-
.mf
'1
Address
i -.r- a
NO MORE MUSTARD PLASTERS TO BLISTER.
THE SCIENTIFIC AND MODERN EXTERNAL COUNTER-IRRITANT.
CAPISICUM
VASELINE
EXTRACT OF THE CAYENNE PEPPER PLANT
A OUICK. SURE. SAFE AND ALWAYS READY CURE FOR PAIN. PRICE
I Sc. IN COLLAPSIBLE TUBES AT ALL DRUGGISTS AND DEALERS. OR
BY MAIL ON RECEIPT OF 15c. IN POSTAGE STAMPS. DON'T WAIT
TILL THE PAIN COMES KEEP A TUBE HANDY.
A substitute for and superior to mustard or any other plaster, and will not
blister the most delicate skin. The pain-allaying and curative qualities of
the article are wonderful. It will stop the toothache at once, and- relieve
Headache and Sciatica. We recommend it as the best and safest external
counter-irritant known, also as an external remedy for pains in the chest
and stomach and all Rheumatic, Neuralgic and Gouty complaints, A trial
will prove what we claim for it, and it will be found to be invaluable in the.
household and for children. Onoe used no family will be without it. Many
people say "it is the best of all your preparations." Accept no preparation
of vaseline unless the same carries our label, as otherwise it is not genuine.
SEND YOUR ADDRESS AND WE WILL MAIL OUR VASE
LINE PAMPHLET WHICH WILL INTEREST YOU.
CHESEBROUGH MFG. CO.
17 STATE STREET, NEW YORK CITY
WEAK, PALE, THIN
Dr. Williams Pink Pills Restored Mr.
Robbina To Health and Also Cured
Her Daughter of Anaemia.
Mrs. Jocie Robbing, of 1121 Clar
SJ., Decatur, 111., says: "I was weak,
thin and troubled with neadacues. My
appetite failed so that I did not rel
ish my food. I was unable to do my
work because my limbs pained me
so and my feet were swollen. I got
numb and dizzy, my tongue seemed at
times to be paralyzed so that I
couldn't speak distinctly. My extrem
ities, when in this numb state, felt as
if some one was sticking needles into
me all over their surface. Through
my shoulders at times I had such pain
that I couldn't sleep. Many -times I
awoke with a smothering sensation.
"When the physician's remedies
failed to benefit me I began to look
for something that would. My sister,
Mrs. McDaniel, of Decatur, recom
mended Dr. Williams' Pink Pills to
me and I at once purchased some. I
was greatly encouraged when I saw
how they acted on my nervous condi
tion and continued using them until
cured. I am now able to attend to my
duties and have not consulted a phys
ician since.
"I also gave them to my daughter
who had always' been weak and who
at this time seemed to lack vitality.
Her cheeks were colorless and she
was thin and spiritless. . She had an
aemia and we feared consumption, be
cause every time she went out doors
if it was at all cold or damp she
would take cold and cough. But Dr.
Williams' Pink Pills brought color
back to her cheeks and strength to
her body."
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are sold by
all druggists, or sent postpaid, on re
ceipt of price, 50 cents per box, six
boxes for $2.50, by the Dr. Williams
Medicine Co., Schenectady, N. T.
f!HFA P T IWfl? Unexcelled forgeneral farm-
VUMM Willi J intr, stock, dairying, fruits, truck,
etc. ; convenient to the very best markets and transpor
tation facilities. Writenearestofficeforllstsand pub
lications. M. V. Richards, Land and Industrial Afrent.
Southern Ry. and Mobile & Ohio B. R Washington. D. a
C. S. Chase, West. Agt.,621 Chemical Bldg., St. Louis, Ho.
For' aexibllity, 'smooth finish, stiff
ness and durability, Defiance Starch
has no eaual 10c for 16 or.
MRS. AUG. LYON
f - f J
i ne urcuianon or muisrea
m mm - - ' l
ana me nucie onu vfaiqj
lubricated by using
f!rl f-i jvll r)sJkfii
vs-a j .wis. -mw vflws
'5loan'sTreatiseO'nTeHorseSerttFree
Dr. Earl S.SIoan.Bostpn.Mass. I