Valentine Democrat. (Valentine, Neb.) 1900-1930, July 24, 1902, Image 7

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    UNWER8ITY OF NOTRE'DAME" .
Notre Dame , Indiana.
. We call the attention of our readers
k > the advertisement of Notre Dauie
University , one of the great educatiou-
il Institutions of the West , which ap
pears iu another coluinu of this paper.
Those of our readers who may have
tension to look up a college for their
tons during the coming year would do
well to correspond with the President ,
who will seud them a catalogue free
B-f charge , as well as all particulars re
garding terms , courses of studies , etc.
There Is a thorough preparatory
Ichool iu connection with the Univer
sity , in which students of all grades
will have every opportunity of prepar
ing themselves for higher studies. The
Commercial Course intended for young
mea preparing for business may be
finished in one or two years according
to the ability of the student. St. Ed
ward's Hall , for boys under thirteen , is
au unique department of the institu
tion. The higher courses are thorough
ia every respect , and students will liud
every opportunity of perfecting them
selves in any Hue of work they may
choose to select. Thoroughness in class-
work , exactness in the care of students ,
ad devotlou to the best Interests of
all , are the distinguishing characteris
tics of Notre Dame University.
Fifty-eight years of active work in
tlie cause of education have made this
institution famous nil over the country.
REEL , w , , o. .
Yicc Chancellor Reetl Sustains Charles
II. Fletcher in His Suit.
Vice Chancellor Heed , sitting in rhe
gourt of Chancery at Trenton , N. J. .
fc-au just rendered a decision of vital
importance in the case of The Centaur
Company against a pirty calling them
selves the C. W. Link Drug Company.
It seems for the past year or more
Mr. Charles H. Fletcher , president of
The Centaur Company , the manufac
turers of Castoria , has been fighting ,
tfirough the courts , counterfeiters and
imitators of their goods.
All of the fnke goods are put up in
a juauner to lead the purchaser to think
tfcey are getting the same Ca < toria they
'have always bought , and rhe Chancel
lor dwells at length on this point , show
ing how easy It would be to inform the
public of the difference between the i
'
packages If it were not their object to
mislead the consumer. He says in
part : "Every one of the packages put
in evidence by the defendant show a
persistent adoption of the size of the
bottle and the label of the complain
ant. All these manufacturers knew ,
just ; fts yje defendant knew , that if the
TSmody was put up in round bottles or
ki bottles distinctively larger or small- [
i or If the bottles were so differently
' wrapped , as to at once arrest the at
tention of the casual purchaser , the sale
of the remedy in such packages would
at once become substantially reduced. " '
Citing numerous esses in line with this '
.opinion . , he gave Mr. Charles H. '
Fletcher the iujunctiou asked for and
'the C. W. Link Drug Company must '
eek aew fields. Philadelphia Inquirer. '
'
A splendid marble bassorilleve has
been discovered in Pompaii In a little |
garden of a house on the Eastside , says
& Naples letter In the Paris Messenger.
. In Berlin a student who wrote for
the newspapers has been lined heavily
for publishing the substance of a pro
fessor's lectures in his articles without
permission.
So many lovers have committed sui
cide together of late in Italy that the
kuthorities now indict the survivor of
iny such tragedy for murder.
'
'
|
'
DOUGLAS
Established 1876. For more than a
quarter of a century the reputation of
"W. L. Douglas shoes for style , com
fort , and wear has excelled all other
makes. A trial will convince you. '
W. L. DOUGLAS $4 SHOES
CANNOT BE EXCELLED.
m ( . M i no ooftl looz . * IM. $9 oiiif \ \ \ '
lit e nonth * . )1 > 1 V'V'- I IU 6 luo.tUj , _ .04 V.VI/U /
Best imported and American Ivaii.crs. Hey I :
patent Calf. Enamel. Box Calf , Calf , Viet Kid , Corona '
Soft , Nat. Kangaroo. Fast Color Eyelet1 * uceil.
Pttiftlnn f T110 genuine have'W" . L. DOUGLAS' I
ItfBUicuii i name and price stampod on bottom.
Stint * by mail , 25c. extra. Illus. Catalog J ret.
W. L. DOUGLAS , BROCKTON. MASS.
The University of. Notre Dame ,
NOTRE DAME , INDIANA.
PULL COURSES la Clistlcs , Letters , Bco-
Bmics mad History , Journalism , Art , Science ,
Pharmacy , Law , CMI , Mechanical sad Elec
trical Befloeertar , Architecture.
Thorough Prepmraiory aad Commercial
Room * Prt * to ill students who have com
pleted the studies required tor dmlsalon into the
Junior or Senior Year of any of the CoJleglaW
Oonnos.
Room * to RcmL Moderate charge to * tudents
r r seventeen preparing for Collegiate Couraca.
A limited number of candidates for the Ecclc-
liattoal it t * will be receired at special rates. ,
5 SL B4wff * MM ] I , for Boy under IX year * , ii
VQlflM is the conpfoieness of its equipment.
i The S9th Year will open Stpictaber 9 , 192.
tlorutf Fno. Address
KEY. A. MQRK1SSEY , C. S. C , PretUeaL
HA M LI NS WIZARD OIL
DRUGGISTS SEL'DY
GOOD I
Short Storie $ ft f
Stonewall Jackson's dying words
/vere / : "Pass the infantry rapidly to
!
the front. " "Tell A. P. Hill to prepare
[ or action. " "We will pass over the
'river ' and rest under the shade of the
trees on the opposite side. " He was
jJelirious , and , like Napoleon's , iii.s
jaiiud , as it feebly fulfilled its last of
fices , was with his military pas' ' .
Having once lost a case in New York ,
"
'Counselor" Nolau sadly remarked :
'My poor client is little likely to gat
justice done here until the judgment
iay. " "Well , counselor , " said the
eourt , "if I have ail opportunity , I'll
plead for the poor woiua.ii myself on
lhat day. " "Your honor , " replied No-
lan , "will have troubles of your own
upon that day. "
When a colleague at one time doubt-
fcd whether the constituents of William
II. Moody , our new Secretary of the
Navy , would indorse a measure he was
supporting , he replied : "I was not sent
here to shake and shiver like a dry leaf
In a November gale whenever a pro
test came from home , but to exercise
uiy intelligence and to vote for meas
ures according to how , in my best judg
ment , they would benefit or injure the
people. "
During the recent street cur strike in
§ r. Louis , Prof. Hyatt , the weather ob
server , was about to get on a car , when
i member of the strike committee step
ped up to him aud asked if he intended
tiding on the car. The professor re
plied that such was his intention. The
striker sought to persuade him not to
fide , but he started to get on the car.
' Well , if you ride on that car we will
ivithdraw our patronage from you , "
> nid the striker. "I don't care wheth
er you patronize me or not. I'm iu tUe
weather business , " replied Prof. Hyatt ,
'and lie entered the car.
The ignorance which foreigners have
to combat in their efforts to open 'ip
trade with China is well illustrated by
an Incident which occurred not long
Hgo. Sir James Mackay is the Euglisii
commissioner to negotiate trade trea-
ties in China. He wrote to oue of the
viceroys , earnestly pleading that the
trade barriers iu that province be re
moved. He received a reply from the
viceroy saying that he could not ihiuk
of removing these barriers for the roa-
'sou that if he did the water would all
'run out of his province. The viceroy's
'idea of the barriers was that they
'were physical dams along the water
'courses over which the trade was car-
tied.
When Attorney E. W. MeCiraw left
I witness on the stand the other day ,
a lid whispered somethiug in the ear of
several attorneys in Judge Murasky's
i-oui't , the spectators thought some
thing of great moment was to happen.
SVheu he approached the judge , Muras-
ky leaned over toward McJraw with
look of expectancy on his face , and
then shook his head even more vigor
ously thau hud rhe other * . McUraw
looked almost inconsolable , and turned
U > resume his examination of the wii"-
ties.s. The court kindly relieved the
'spectators aud attorneys in tlie court
room by saying to the lawyer : "No , Mr.
McUraw , The court does not chew. "
UNWRITTEN LAWS.
The "Next" of the Uurhemud ( .Jiviiur
a Smoker a lAtzht.
"Next , " the time-honored barber
shop word , is the audible evidence of
administration of one oi ! those unwrit
ten laws which are enforced more
strictly thau many engrossed statutes.
"Next" Is part of the fair-play code ,
and probably was inscribed in invisible
liuk on imperceptible parchmeut by the
patrons of the first man who scraped
'chins for hire.
It is "first come , first served"crystal
led. The barber who permits any man
'to break the law of "next. " is punished
on the spot , as au accessory after the
fact , and the criminal who slides into a
chair before his lawful turn is looKed
upon as a worthy candidate for peni
tentiary honors.
A man may stop ahead of the oue be
fore him in the Hue leading to tin * box
'office of : i theater aud every person in
line will ft'el a personal grievance
'against him. but uo oue holds the tick
et seller responsible for this infraction
'of the "first come , first served" rule.
A hurried depositor may reach over
the shoulders of those who lined up be
fore him in front of the receiving tull-
ler's window , but uo oue feels that the
mau behind the plate glass screen is a
BUbject for a grand jury investigation.
But iu a barber shop , "next" means
next. It is the basic principle ou which 1
the constitution and by-laws of the
tonsorlal profession are founded. Any
barber who will permit the wrong mau
to get into the right place after he 1ms
called out "Next" loses the respect of
his customers then aud there.
He is a brave man who refuses to
comply with the request , "Will you
give me a light ? " The one with a
lighted cigar.aud the one with a cigar
he wants to smoke may be so .strange r
to each other thai they never drcaaicd
of each other's existence. This gener
ally is the case , but HIM ) ; times out of
1,000 the smoker promptly hands over
his lighted cigar , the other mau lights ,
his , the cigar is returned with thanks
s
and the unwritten law , ' 'Never refuse
u request for a light , " which has come
rj
flown through many generations of
smokers , has been duly aud promptly
obeyed.
If a man 011 the back platform of a
street car aeki his fellow-passenger
whom he never saw before. "What i
r vr name ? " tk * ckaices are thai he . !
will have a cold , stony glare turned csj ,
him and will be told it is none of his
buciue. s. If , however , he bites off the
end of a cigar and asks for the light j
the other man will give it to him as a !
matter of course. He does not know
why he should take his good cigar out
of his mouth and risk its being mined
by contamination from a cheap weed.
He simply does it because he has done
.
it ever since he learned to smoke. It
J1
la one of the unwritten laws. Milwau
kee Sentinel.
STRONG PULSE BEATS.
Casea in Which They Are Perceptible
to the Eye.
"It is not such an uncommon thing , "
said a physician , " to find a person
whose pulse beats can be plainly seen ,
and yet I suppose there are but few out
side of the profession who realize the.
facts In most persons the beat of the
pulse cannot be perceived , but the mere
fact that the beating la perceptible does
not mean that the pulse is other than
normal. I have come across a number
of cases where the throbbing of the
wrist could be plainly seen , and yet the
persons rarely gave evidence of abnor
mality in temperature. They were rare
ly feverish , and were in good physical
condition generally. Pulses of this kind ,
from this view , which Is based upon ac
tual observation of cases , do not indi
cate anything more than an abnormal
physical condition in the formation of
the wrist veins.
"I have met with one case which was
possibly a little extraordinary , in that
it was. plainer and much more distinct
than any I had ever seen before. .It
could almost be heard. The artery
would rise to a point almost as large as
the ball of the little finger of a child ,
and would change from the white of
the skin to a blood purple with each
beat of the pulse. I found it easy to
count the pulse beats without touching
the patient's wrist. 1 could see plainly
enough to keep the record , and. in or
der not to err in my calculation , I test-
ed it in several ways and found it was
correct aud that there was no mistake
in my counting with the naked % , ye. "
New Orleans Times-Democrat.
Hanging Gardens of Shevnizi.
In various parts of the world may be
found ( hanging gardens. There are
many on mouutain-sides in China , wa
ter ( being raised in buckets to irrigate
them. A beautiful region of verdure
exists and the desert lands of Arabia
One of the inland towns is Sheraizl.
perched on the brow of a lofty cliff
which falls to the valley beneath. The
town is built on so steep a declivity tliat
the houses appear to overhang oue au
other , the only communication being by
means of steps leading from one to an
other row of buildings. Just below
the town is a copious spring of pure
water that meets the requirements of
the inhabitants and supplies the chan
nels that fertilize the lumping gardens. .
These extensive gardens , spread along
the precipitous valley walls , are the
most beautiful feature of SSheraizi. The
whole face of the mountain-side to a
depth of over 1.000 feet is cut into a
series of ledges or terraces. Owing to
the sharp angle of the slope , the ledges
are not over 10 to 12 feet in width
The inhabitants would be glad of great
er depth of soil , and the garden spots
have been enriched by a large amount
of fertile earth brought to them. The
steep mountain-side is almost barren
excei > ; 1'or the beautiful strips of green
wheiv vineyards , orchards , and wheat-
tields are bt-aring. The labor bestowed
on the terraces would have been futile
without an abundant supply of water ,
and in this respect nature lias been
prodigal , the strips of cultivated land
being easily and continuously irrigated
by the mountain stream which is it'6
from one ledge to another and is kept
from overflowing bv Hi tie embank
ments along the margin.
Takinjj Him Literally.
A Methodist preacher was traveling
in oue of the back settlements , and
stopped at a cabin where the old lady
received him very kindly. After set
ting provisions before him she began
to > question him.
"Stranger , where mought you be .
' "
om' :
"Mada'iu. I reside in Shelby County.
Kentucky. "
0
Wall , stranger , no offense , but what
mought you be doin' up here ? "
"Madam , I am searching for the lost
sheep of the tribe of Israel. "
"John , John. " shouted the old lady ,
"come right here this minnit ! Hero's
a stranger all the way from Shelby
a.
County , Kentucky , a-huuting stock ,
aud I'll just bet my life that the tan-
sjled-hairt-d black ram that's been in
e
our lot all last week is one of bi > "
tl
The Premier's Stroke.
Ii
Mr. Balfour once inveigled Lord Sal-
isbury ! into indulging iu golf. The .
Prime Minister was on a visit to hi *
distinguished nephew at Whittingham
when he consented to handle the golf
ing clubs. lie rather characteristical
aimed a terrific blow at the bali.
struck too low. and. looking around for
the result , risked rhe caddio : "What ,
have ' 1 hit ? "
t
The irreverent caddie looked critical
ly at the lump of turf that had been
e
removed. "Scotland , my lord ! " he an
swered gruffly. (
( !
From Different Standpoints.
rucksWell. . Johnny , how are you
gettiug on at school ? Johnny
( aged 7)-- )
Oh , first-rate ! I'm not doing so well as °
some of the other boys , though. I can '
stand on my head , but 1 have to put ,
mj feet against the wall. 1 Avaut to [ °
do It without being near the wall at
all.
'
Every husband is a sort of Mout Is
Peleu , and though he shows gyuiptoma ,
of growing dangerous , hs * family re . '
fuses to take waruins.
fvention
Whether Hertzian waves reach us
from the suu is a question that the as-
tronouiers are about to investigate ,
Reasons are found for believing that
the : suu must emit such waves , aud
Mr. Charles Nordtnaun shows that the
emissions must be particularly intense
during violent eruptions and at periods
of maximum sun-spots. This view is
made to explain the form of the solar
QC
corona and the spectra of comets.
The possibility of poisoning from ar
senic in the soil lias been studied by
Messrs. A. aud A. P. Augell. British
chemists. The arsenic impurity of a
superphosphate of lime was increased
to one-half of one per cent , about sev
enteen times the usual proportion , and
this manure was applied to various
crops iu two lots , part at time of sowing
and part when the plants were well
above ground. It was found that sorni
arsenic was drawu up mechanically
Into the young leaves of rhubarb aud
iiU
iib grasses and Into the greeu pods of
beans , but no trace reached the fruit or
seed of any plant.
H. W. Olds , speaking before the Bio-
logical Society of Washington about his
gl
studies of the songs of birds , said re-
cently that the wood-thrush , the Caro
lina wren , the chickadee and the che-
wink use the intervals of the modern
musical scale. The sougs of birds are
often rhythmical , and may be divided
into regular measures properly accent
ed. Mr. Olds added that "several of
the formal rules of humau music may
be found governing the music of the
birds. " He gave an example of a song
by a wood-pewee In which the rules ol
construction governing many of our
ballads were followed.
Scientific study of the storm of dust
that swept over southern aud central
Europe from March 9 to March 12 ,
1901 , shows that it was one of the most
remarkable phenomena of the kind ever
observed. It began in northern Africa ,
on the borders of the Sahara , crossed
the Mediterranean Sea , swept over the
chain of the Alps and extended as far
as Denmark , thus traversing 25 degrees
of latitude. The dust was saud from
the desert , aud the particles that fell
became finer and finer as the storm
progressed northward. The advance
was at the rate of more than forty-
three miles an hour , a high atmos-
pheric current carrying the dust along
the course of a barometric depression
moving toward the Baltic Sea. In Aus
tria-Hungary and farther uorth the
dust was accompanied everywhere by
rain , snow or sleet.
Wendell Phillips would have found
an interesting item for his "Lost Arts"
.lecture , which he frequently remolded
as new facts came to him , in the story
of the Wardwell Y-wound cop. A cop
is a cylinder of wound thread or yarn ,
an the V-wind is superior In compact
ness aud uniformity of tension. The
method was invented by S. J. Ward-
well Iu 1S91. His patents becoming the
subject of a lawsuit , it was disvov-
ered that the National Museum in
Washington and the Natural History
Museum in New York had cops of cord ,
made years ago by Fiji Islanders , pre
cisely similar iu appearance to the
Wardwell cops. So the pateuts were
declared invalid. But since the mu
seum authorities refuse to have rheir
cops unwouud , it is impossible to prove
tliat the same wind extends through all
the layers , aud for this reasou the pat
ent office has reissued a patent to Mr.
Wardwell for his method.
CHILDREN'S EYESIGHT.
Considerations "Worth Attentiou br
Those in Charge of Schools.
Civili/.jitioii has its drawbacks. An
expert : oculist connected with a London
hospital was asked the other day what
was the cause and cure for the large
amount of defective eyesight among
young people. Ilis answer is : "The
cause , in my humble opinion , is the
present condition of the education laws.
.No sooner are the children of the low-
er classes pushed away from rlu > ir
mothers' breasts than the school board
officer'swoops ' down upon them and car
.
ries them off to the badly lighted and
worse ventilated schoolroom , where for
about five hours per diem they strain
ir eyes in the endeavor to read small
print and learn a smattering of French ,
painting and the 'ologies. embroidery
and the grammar of music.
Even the kindergarten has been so
prostituted that the children are sweat-
ed < to turn out artistic nmts of intri
cate desigu to the ruin of their eyes and
the delight of their teachers. In early
life the tunics of the eye are to aer -
tain extent yielding , while the muscu
lar movements associated in the act of
accommodating for near vision hav j
not yet become purely automatic.
Hence unnecessary strain often takes
place , and the shape of the eye becomes
garduaily altered. acompanied. of
course , by defective vision. Teach t-hil-
dren their letters , if necessaryvhih *
they } are young by means of large capi
tals , placed at some distance from the
eye , not nearer than four or five feet ;
teach them Avhat you like by means of
Conversation , pictures and natural ob
jects ; but I would not allow a child in
whom I was interested to undergo reg
ular schooling until at least 7 or S years
of , age. Under this plan , it is true , we
should . lose our infant prodigies , but
then they never would be missed. " In
our days of overpressure these be
words of wisdom.
It is not the fact , TT are told , that
'short-elghtedness ie on the increase ; it
'
of twin : detected and rcmdi d. .Long
sight a&d its frequently a e rapa&jing
'squint account. It ia said , far 80 per
It is
practically stationary t.fter four or five
years of age. Short sight , on the uuer
hand , unless corrected by suitable
glasses , aud sometimes even then
tends to increase up to 13 or 10. "Many
board schools , having first ruined th i
sight of the children , instruct their
' teachers t to test the sight at frequent
'
intervals i by means of the test types ,
!
and i notify the parents of those h . ing
J i defective sight to take them to an oph
thalmic t hospital. This , of course , is the
i 1 least i they can do. " Considering how
! ; much ] good eyesight is worth , 'tis woe-
j j ful \ waste to sacrifice it even to produce
infant prodigies. London Telegraph.
THE IDEAL BOY.
American and Kuiclish Standard * of
Juvenile Perfection.
Brains , cultivation , physical strength
and endurance , truthfulness , courage ,
chivalry , kindliness , social leadershli > -
these are the qualities in a youth that
Mr. Rhodes wanted to get in his Ox
ford ' candidates , whether he really ex
pected to get them or nor. The boy
that should possess them all would be
a paragon. Mr. Rhodes , of course , only
proposed that these tests should b *
kept in mind in selecting the student * .
He did not expect perfection. Proba
bly he put in the social leadership test
to shut out the prigs and milksops , for
prigs ] and milksops are never popular ,
decides the New York Mail und Ex
press. '
The self-examination that is iroins ;
on is good for the boys. Rhodes him-
self organized the scheme according to
the idea standard of manliness iu the
English schools. It does not differ
greatly from the American standard ,
but it does differ a little. We are apt
to mix into our ideal of youth a littk-
more of mere nicoiiess than the English
do. Much as we admire a successful
football player , our ideal boy has It1-- .
beef in him that the entirely admirable
Euglish youth.
Not to put too fiue a point upon the
matter , there has beeu a trifle too much
of the influence of mature feminine
opinion in this matter. Uur social judi :
meuts are generally left to'the womeu :
and though this fact has an excellent j
effect on social morals , which are bet- J
ter here thau they are iu England , in ,
may be feared that our ideal boy-is a lit
tle too much the mother's darling.
Not so many American boys may
want to go to Oxford to finish their
euucation as Cecil Rhodes hoped would
.
be the case. But at any rate , the pub
.
lication and discussion of his tests of
youug manhood are going to have a
large Influence. They will set Tim
boys , and doubtless in many cases also
their mothers , sisters aud especially
their aunts , to thinking. There will bJ
a powerful searching out of qualities
as the result. We are inclined to think
.
that the louger those tests are studied
the t more profound will appear the
knowledge 1 of human nature that
prompted them.
WEATHER AND MORALS.
Prof. Dexter Has Some Experiments
Showing Effect of Wind and Storm.
Wind and storm have a great and di
rect influence upon morals , says Prof.
Dexter of the University of illiuois.
in the Popular Science Monthly. Ud
lias carefully tabulated a long series
of experiments , and finds that w&tn
the wind does blow harder than foui ?
miles au hour , children stay "TOIII "
school iu three times as great num
bers , more policemen are off duty ,
more errors are made by bank clerks ,
aud more people die. He discovers also-
thai women aud children are more ? m-
ceptible to storm aud calm than men ,
aud rhat fewer serious crimes a v ci m- '
mitted during calm days , and he inter- j
prets his statistics iu this way : "I > ui-
iug calms. " he says , "those life ; > hi"
nomeua which are due to depleted vi
tality are excessive , aud ihose wh.cli
are due to excessive vitality are defi
cient in number. " Iu explanation of
this state of affairs are two general hy
potheses. The first is based upon thu
general facts bearing upon ventilation , '
: md the second upou those of atmos
pheric electricity. The first would only
be j appliable to the conditions of large
cities , while the second would be valid
for any spot ou the earth's surface ,
1
If the normal proportions of oxygen
are to be maintained in the iuimedlatu j
vicinity of great combustion of oxyfc J
ueii. fresh air must by some means ho
,
brought in to take the place of that thfl
normal mixture of which has beeu dis
tributed. We are quite familiar with
These facts in their bearing upou the !
1
ventilation of buildings , but there is no
difference except that of magnitude be- j I
twecn a building in which the air is.
being robbed of its oxygenv through MJ J
combustion and a city in which thu ,
same process is going ou. ' ' Harper' : * 'j
Weekly.
Thrust an < l Parry.
The friends of a popular traveler tell
a story at his expense that is worth j
repeating. We are not sure , however , I #
but it is at the expense of the othei ! ' *
person concerned in the narrative.
He attended a large party one even
ing , and after rhe supper was over wan ' 1
'
promenading with one of the guests , -
a young lady , to whom he had jus !
beeu introduced. In the course of the ,
conversation the subject of
callings came up. and she said :
"By the way. Mr. , may I ask you 1
what your occupation is ? "
'Certainly. " he answered , "I am a
commercial traveler. "
"How very interesting ! Do you
kuow. Mr. . that iu the part of the -
country where 1 reside commercial
travelers are not received in good so
ciety ? "
Quick as a flash he rejoined :
"They are not here , either , madam. "
After all , u man's business is the im *
'
thing , ami people trill nvt for-
Msa if ke aegrleeti it , '
'
MRS J ' , J , EJ'DONNELL1 '
'Was ' Sick Eight Te.ira with
l Female Trouble and Finally
f j Cured by Lyclia E. Pink-ham's
Vegetable Compound.
" DKA.K MRS. PIXKHAU : I
never ia rny life given a tcstirm iml
before , but you have done so much for
me that I fuel called upon to givr you
this unsolicited acknowledgement of ,
MRS. JENNIE E. O'DOXXXLL ,
President of Ouiland Woman * ! Rldlnj Clmfc.
the wonderful curative ralue of JLrdlA.
E. Pin ( chain's Y 'table Com- '
pound. 1 For eight _ a I had female
1t
1c trouble , falling- the womb and other
complications. During * that time I waft
more or less of an invalid and not much
good for anythinguntil one day I
found a book in my hull telling of1
the cures you could perform. I became
interested 5 : I bouyht a bottle of LrVdla
K. ] Pinkham's Vegetable Com-i
pound and was helped : 1 continued it * j
use < uidin seven months was cured , and !
since that time I have had perfect *
health. Thanks , dear Mrs. Pinkhaxa *
again , for the health T uovr enjoy. " '
MRS. JENNIE O'Do > "NKi.u 278 Eas.t 31 i
SGiicijo. . ] \ \ . ssooo forfeit if tjw *
testtmor.ful If not genuine. '
Women .snlTcringfrom any
form of female ill.s cin be cured
by Jjydia K. 1'iukliam's Vegeta
ble C'ompound. That's sure. "
Mrs. Pinkiiain ad vises sick wo- !
'
men free. Address , Lyrxa , Ma&t.
to Eat
from Mbliv's famous kiicheiii , 4 }
wher puritr prerails.U ra att i4eJ IB < >
LIBBY'S
Natural Flavor ; |
Food Products i ii i
< i
V. S. .
are Gotcnimcat Inspected. < i
Keep w tht * Louie fur eiocrgeucLei tor
sup pen , fur s udvritlie for autun *
whan vuu want * < iiaethjni ; K - J > * ud wmuk
it quick Niruply turu u key and itie can
i oprn A u ippfti'/iu iuuub u r * JT ia
au instant.
LIBBY , McHEILL t LI8BT , CfllCiGl j
Write for our free ) xok'le' . "How t Mafc *
( Jood Tbiugs tu tt. "
imr A M Y B n H * " fof * * > Cait d But
W AIM T t U N rrU > I b < xi.l. ( * I8toaf
and t > - > jra ago 15 to 17. Wrico for Information. N r4
' '
CATHARTIC
l
Genuine jUmped C , C. C Never sold In bdfc
Beware of the dealer who tries to xll
"something just u stood. "
Kullvrar
Most of the railway stations in Ku .
sia are about two miles from the town *
\vbicti they respectively serve. Thi
is a precaution against tire , as man }
of the Russian dwellings are thatche
with straw.
Cal > Calls.
There are now being constructed \
front of New York theatres automatic
cab calls , numbers in electric light ?
Doing shown. A similar device hat
been designed to show the names ol
stations on railroad trains.
J-J < pnurtive L > u Collars.
Dog colUrs are made of all sorts ol
semiprecious stjnes in effective de-
signs. One fashionable style is ol
many rows of coral beads , with a large
clasp of brilliants. A fantastic collar
is of imitation pearls , with a large
vampire buckle in front , the wings be
ing of odd blue enamel and the eye
blazing red stones
lirnve Iioj .
Three Victoria crosses , ten distin-
guished service medak , two promo-
'tlons to commissioned rank and four
jnentions in despatches have fallen to
the lot of reform-school lads in South
Africa.
Africa.CASTORIA
CASTORIA
For Infantr and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bough !
Bears the
Signature of
PfSO'S
. CUBES WHfcBE ALL ELSE FAILS.
[ Be t Cough Sjrup. Tantes Good.
ia time. Sold
CONSUMPTION
1. V. N. U. NO. 799so YOHK NEB j