Valentine Democrat. (Valentine, Neb.) 1900-1930, January 08, 1903, Image 2

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    I
THE VALENTINE DEMOCRA
I. Ji HICK , I'ub I-linr.
VALENTINE ,
The nalt trust dissolved , probably .1
cause there was too much water m
Alfred Austin has written a poem e
titled "Good Night. " If we could on
believe he means It !
Up to date. Emperor William h
killed 47,443 "piecesof game , * or
of which were not haltered at the tin-
When the Soiith American rcpubli
pcowl at Uncle Sam they are luakii
faces at the only real friend theyn \
It is reported that King Leopold
polng to get married again. The liar
of t-he lucky music hall artist is n
glrcn.
According to Uncle Russell Sag
"grout fortunes are misfortunes. " It
wonderful how some people cling
misfortune.
Schwab says he can't understai
why people insist on gossiping abo
him. This is a strong Indication <
mental derangement.
A New York lady who sued for ? 2 :
000 for breach of promise has bet
awarded damages in the sum of s
cents. That ought to take the concc
out of the fellow.
tJen. Harrison's name appears !
"Ben" Harrison on the new $5 bi
Still , even at that it isn't likely that
very large percentage of the popnl
tion will get too familiar with it.
Remember the date Nov. 5 , 1902
the day the first message was transmi
te.l by wireless telegraphy across tJ
Atlantic ocean. You can't have tc
many things to tell your graudchildre
about
Arrangements have been made 1
turn over to the creditors of the Com
and Countess de Castellane all bv
$200,000 a year of .their income. Ho1
can the poor things ever hope to pu
through on such a niggardly allowauc
as that ?
It has been decided that a change c
shape which enables an instrument t
perform new functions is inveutioi
Among leading inventors of the da
must therefore be reckoned the me
Who by changes in formation enable
football eleven to perform new fuu <
The Crown Prince of Slam took pain
j avoid women during his stay in Ch
' < cago. His royal highness will , in a <
cordance with Siamese customs , b
compelled to have anywhere from 5
to 500 wives , and he probably is desii
mis of putting off his trouble until th
last minute.
Education makes a man that is th
only true education. And it isn't ol
tained by shooting a boy through th
grammar school , where he learns t
spell and is taught to make the elemer
tary calculations of commerce. If edt
cators yield to this grotesque notion , a
some of them seem to be doing , the ,
will prove themselves sorry guardian
of the people's welfare.
One of the political parties in th
Philippines has petitioned the Pliilii :
pine commission to furnish free trans
portation to the United States for Kill
piiio teachers who desire to fit then ]
selves here to teach at home. Eve ;
If the Filipinos did not study man ,
books while here , a visit would do then
n great deal If good , and their pupil
when they returned would be benefitei
by their enlarged outlook.
Commissioner Woodbury of the Nev
York street-cleaning department latel ;
exposed some gelatine plates for hal
an hour in the best residential parts o
the city , and in the crowded tenemen
regions. Those exposed to the air ii
the clean portions of the city capture !
ten or a dozen colonies of bacteria
those in the East Side from seventy
five to a hundred thousand. Rather !
neat way to preach the gospel of cleai
streets 1
The Rev. Dr. Huutington , rector o
Grace Church , has offered the use o
the schoolrooms in the parish missioi
house to the department of educatioi
of New York City as a measure of re
lief for the overcrowded public schools
"The church receives very valuable
privileges , and enjoys important exemp
tions at the hands of the civic author !
ties , " said Dr. Huntington , "and i
therefore seems only fair that whei
need arises , as in the present Instance
there should be at least an offer of reel
procity. "
It Is a curious fact that not on <
among the many philanthropists ben
upon providing reading matter for th <
public has ever thought of establishing
a hospital library or of giving attentioi
to the selection of stimulating book ;
for convalescents. Of course , book ;
are written for well people , and every
body knows that It takes a healthy
organism to digest some of them , bu
there are many tonic tales that migh
aid recovery and which ought to lint
their way to hospital book shelves
At present the volumes that are fount
upon these shelves form but a nonde
script collection made up of the cast
aways from family libraries , the Incur
ably dull , or hopelessly insane storief
that have outlived popular favor. Ol
course. In hospitals with each bool
must go a reader ; and it is not ever.\
patient who can command enough of t
nurse's leisure to permit of literarj
pursuits. And again , It may be s i
that patients provide their own bo <
or have friends who bring in liten
tidbits just as they supply more t
terial delicacies. But these sour
are not always to be depended up
and some one ought to arise who c
put up literary prescriptions and w
can discover the novels that may
calculated to aid in bringing back 1
Hush of health.
It Is declared that in the month
October alone more than 40,000 ei
grants passed through Chicago for pa
beyond the Mississippi and Misso
Rivers , and that this volume has be
sustained for some time and has shcr
no signs of decrease. Most of the sei
ers are of the better class of foreigne
but many of them are Eastern far
ers , who have sold out their small ho
ings in the old States for the larger or
that the price will secure in new lam
Without doubt most of those who sc
Western homes at this time will f
well. The West is capable of sustain !
and profiting by a vastly greater popu
tion than it now holds. If the we
ward movement is drawing to some (
tent on the big cities so much the b
ter , for the centers of population a
becoming dangerously crowded.
In little Denmark it has been discc
ered that poverty is not a crime ; a :
that aged poverty is a misfortune tli
at once puts a moral and legal duty
the shoulders of the State. It is n
askeJ why a human being , white-ha
ed and tottering , past the age of endc
vor , has failed to gain a competence , b
what can be done to make the lot
the old folks comfortable. The old-a
home in Copenhagen is a great mode
building , standing in the center of
beautiful garden. It has nothing
common with the average poorhous
It is a place to live in , not simply t
housing of misery. All the rooms a
bright , well warmed and ventilate
prettily furnished , and the food is pi
pared by a chef who takes delight
coaxing the appetites of the Inmat
with dainty dishes. Tliloik of coaxii
( he appetite of paupers ! One wondei
after an inspection of some A in eric :
poorhotises , and they are all near
alike , if the people of Denmark are Ic
ing their senses. One thinks of tl
places where old and young are her
ed together idiots , imbeciles and o
mon and women who are worn out ai
not wanted where the food is at tl
mercy of men who desire to attain
record for cheapness of maintenanc
where the inmates are made to fe
that they are paupers during evei
waking moment. It is a crime. De
mark takes care of the old folks , ar
the State must pay the bill. It do
pay it without grumbling , for a hif
sense of duty has been implanted
the breasts of the Danes.
An evil excrescence is growing upc
3ur public school system which canni
be removed too speedily or complete !
It is the Greek letter fraternity ev
Ihe evil does not lie in the Greek lette
Iliat is merely an accident. Any othi
symbol would serve as .well whic
should produce the same impression <
jstentatious mystery and exclusivenes
Ihe evil lies in the effects of these o
; anizations upon the spirit , the habi
ind the relations of the pupils , an
these effects are almost wholly bai
l"he Greek letter society may not be a
inmixed evil in a college or uuiversit ;
Possibly it may in some cases be a
agent of good. It may , for instanc
jring together to their mutual advai
: age students of similar tastes wl
lave already made choice of sSmilf
pursuits. In the public high school th
ort of society is wholly out of plae
The public schools are essentially den
) cratic. If they should cease to be
: hey would fail to accomplish one of tl
nost important ends of their creatioi
fhe secret "frat" is not democratic ;
s essentially aristocratic and a breedt
) f class and caste spirit. Whenevc
: hese societies are introduced into
ligh school distinctions of caste appe.i
it once. The members of this and thr
'frat" are selected not because of si
> erior scholarship or merit as shown b
heir school work and deportment , bv
> ecause they are socially acceptable t
his or that "set. " The result is li
riguing , clannishness and supercilioui
less on the one side and resentment o
he other not only in the first year , bv
it each succeeding advance. All thi
las the effect not only to found lifelon
mmities and to beget and strengthe
he caste distinctions and feuds whic
jromise no good to the republic , bv
hey interefere seriously with th
iroper work of the schools. Intrigue
ind the social diversions , amountin
ften to dissipations , take the place c
chool work , and scholarship decline ;
vhile mental habits which are far froi
londucive to good citizenship ar
brined.
The Cruelty of Mnn.
The divorce lawyer looked up.
"You desire a reparation ? " he ask !
o open the conversation.
The pretty woman readjusted he
reil nervously. "Yes , " she said , "o :
; he grounds of extreme cruelty. "
"Will you detail the incidents t
ne ? " asked the lawyer.
"Yes , " replied the fair one , sobbing
y. "Three times recently I have crie
! or five minutes at a time , and bo < .
100 ! he he hasn't even asked w-w
vhat I was crying about ! " CIncinnal
Commercial Tribune
Signs.
Towne I think my barber's in lovt
Browne Doesn't eat onions an
nore , eh ?
Towne Yes , and he's so absen ;
ninded. He pinned the newspapf
iround my neck this morning and gav
ne a towel to read. Philadelphi
? ress.
iI
& FAVORITES
The Land o' the Leal.
I'm wearin' awa' , Jean ,
Like snaw wreaths in thaw , . Jean ,
I'm weariu' a\va'
To thn land o' the leal.
There's nac sorrow there , Jean.
There's neither cauld nor care , Jean ,
The day is aye fair
In the land o' the leal.
Our bonnic bairn's there. Jean.
She was baitli giido and fair , .If an ;
And , O , we grudged her sair
To the land o' the leal.
But sorrow's si l * wears past. Jean.
And joy's a-coming fast , Joan.
The joy that's aye to last
In the land o * the leal.
* * * * * * *
O. hand ye leal and true. Jean.
Your day it's wearin' through. Jean ,
And I'll welcome you
To tlio land o' .the leal.
Now fareytwepl. . my ain Jean.
This warld's cares are vain. Jean ,
We'll inet't , and we'll he fain ,
In the land o' the leal.
Lady Nairne.
Aboil Ben Adhem and thc-Anprel.
Abou Bon Adhem ( may his tribe ir
crease ! )
Awoke one night from a deep dream n
peace ,
And saw. within the moonlight of hi
room ,
Making it rich , and like a lily in bloon
An angel writing in a book of gold-
Exceeding peace had made Lien Adhct
bold ,
And to the presence in the room he s. m
"What writest thouV" The vision raiso
its head.
And with a look made all of sweet act-on ;
Answered. "The names of those who lov
the Lord. "
VAnd is mine one ? " said Ahou. "Xaj
not so , "
Replied tho angel. Abou spoke more lo\\
But cheerily still , and said. "I pray thec
tben ,
\Yritc me as one who loves his fellow
men. "
The angel wrote and vanish'd. The nex
night
It came again with a great wakenin ;
light.
And sho-w'd the nameswhom love of C'ot
had bless'd.
And lo ! Bou Ad hem's name led all tin
rest !
Leigh Hunt.
It is a notable fact that most of th <
subjects of King Edward VII. an
Hindoos.
It has been observed tl-.at a man's
liair turns gray five years sooner thai
i woman's.
Copper money in France is to b <
gradually replaced this year by alu
uinnm bronze pennies of a pale yellow
olor.
There are 2,055 counties in the Unit
H ! States. Texas has the largest num
jer , 240 , and Delaware the smallos ;
lumber , three.
According to official central inarkei
5tatistics recently issued , eight him
Ired tons of snails were sold in Paris
luring the year 1'JOl.
As a rule , dwarfs live much lougei
.haii giants. The latter usually have
veak constitutions , their blood circu
ation is sluggish and Fhey have brittle
) ones.
The Gulf stream flows at the rate ol
ibout two and a half miles an hour.
< Mve miles is exceeded in some places ,
ind the rate varies much with coudi-
ions of weather and tide.
M. Haniard , the French sculptor , has
ust completed in Paris the model of a
tatue of Marshal Rochambeau to be
resented to the city of Washington as
. companion statue of Lafayette. It
vill be ready to send to the United
states in April.
Cows are scarce in Labrador , be-
ause it is difficult to keep them in the
xtremely cold weather. The natives
rocure their milk for the winter and
hen kill their cows. The milk is kept
a barrels , where it freezes and never
urns sour throughout the entire sea-
on. When one wishes to use any milk
e has simply to go to > the barrel and
ut out a slice.
Last winter , during a spell of freez-
ig weather , at a quarry in Aberdeen ,
cotlaud , a large stone weighing six
ms had been drilled for blasting ,
rhen the thought struck the foreman
lat the severe frost might be utilized.
Tater was poured into each of Ihe
oles , and it was fonnd after a couple
f days that the block of granite had
roken into pieces.
He Waited.
"What were you doing at the time of
our arrest ? " asked the magistrate of
le prisoner.
"I was waiting. "
"Waiting for whom ? "
"Just waiting. "
"What were you waiting for ? "
"To get my money. "
"Who from ? "
"The man I was waiting for. "
"What did be owe it to you for ? "
"For waiting. "
" ' what . Ex-
"I don't know you mean. -
lain yourself. "
"I thought you knew I was a waiter
i a restaurant. "
"Oh ! " gasped the magistrate. Mont-
sal Herald.
When a man and his wife have de
led themselves that their daughter
ay enjoy an extended visit In some
her town , 4he often rewards them by
jendlng her first evening after ihe
turns relating bow she bated to come
ici.
Civilized by the
Uganda Railway.
The importance of a highway is i
necessarily proportionate to its leng
Although the Uganda railway , whi
now connects the "Pearl of Africa , "
Lake Victoria Xyauxa is called , w
the Indian Ocean , is only five humli
and seventy-two miles long , its cxi
once has been the means of suppress !
the slave trade throughout British lia
Africa. Twenty-seven years ago it to
Stanley eight months to travel from s
to lake ; two years ago six months wi
rcqured for the same journey. To-d
it lakes two : ud a half days.
Commeiiting on the great chan
wrought in the twem.v-seve-i ye ;
since hs ! own first Uganda exploi
tions , Stanley tells in the Indep-Mido
how he climbed the highest peak of
littlk island in the Xyanza and reflect
upon the future : "I seemed to s
steamers trailing their dark smoke ov
the gray waters of the bay , loaded wi
passengers * * * and the natives
the east coast making blood broth *
hood with the natives of the west coa ,
I seemed to hear church-bells ringing
a great distance , and I hoped ai
prayed that some day that vision tnig
be realized. In those days Mtesa
Ug.iida impaled his victims and clu
bed his women to death upon the sligl
ust provocation and all along t
shores barbarous people were sighii
and thirsting for blood. To-day t !
converts of Uganda are carrying t !
gospel to the distant lands of the we ?
three hundred and twenty church
have been established , with nine
thousand Christian people ; there a
five hundred children in the Men ;
school. "
I f , as Sir Henry asserts , the lake i
? ion has advanced so marvelously du
ing the slow period when the laden po
tors carried the leads of the missionai
ind the sugar-chest of the trader up
Uganda , what will be its rate of pro
'ess now that Uganda is brought wit
n two and a half days of the sea ? 'I
; he undaunted services of explorer
.he fidelity of missionaries and the s
? acity of English administrators tl
jrcat Uganda railwaj adds an alino :
ncalculable force in the regeneratic
) f East Africa.
And how came that part of Africa 1
> e explored , and who were the first e :
) lorers to accomplish important an
H'rmanent results ? They were Chri
ian missionaries. First came the gm
Livingstone. Stanley himself mat
lis first trip into the interior of Afrir
md began his career as an explorer i
he effort to find Livingstone. The stor
if the great Scotchman's zeal , his di
'otion to the cause of Christ and hi
leath in the wilderness of the Dar
Continent made one of the most eh
luent missionary sermons ever preacl
d. Youth's Companion.
MONEY MADE IN OX HORNS.
IVarle Has Reached Larire Proportion
front a Small Ueiriniiinsr.
A familiar sight in the business quai
er of this city is the Russian hor
icddler. The man himself is pictui
isque , having the strong features
lark skin , long beard and ill-fittin
iothes which mark the Slovakvhil
iis wares are always noticeable fo
heir oddity. Sometimes it is the ha
ack. consisting of two ox horns be. : ai
ifully polished and fitted together a
he butts upon a small wooden boari
eady for hanging in a hallway. A
uother time it is a small thrce-lcgge *
tool , of which each leg is a grea
orn. Again it is a gun rackvher
lie hooks are horns , yellow , white
ray , brown and black. If you desin
: he will supply you with easy chairs
rm chairs and rockers , of which tin
ntire frames are made of horns. O
iinilar construction are easels , inusii
sicks , picture frames , wall trophic :
nd baby cribs.
The industry was started about fif
jen years ago by some poor Russiai
ews near the kosher slaughter-house
lefore that time the horns were sole
-ith the hoofs to the gluemakers am
utton manufacturers. They brough
ut a few cents a pound and the ghu
uyers had no trouble in getting al
ic raw material they needed.
The manufacturers first prepared th <
orns by boiling and using alkalies
.fterward they found they could se
lire better results by treatment witl
3ld alkaline solutions followed by an
septics. After the horns have beer
leaned they are scraped and polishec
ntil they gleam like burnished metal
few are varnished , but the practice
i not recommended by the trade.
'ew York Evening Post
TEACHERS ARE UNDERPAID.
ervices of the Chef Valued Above
Those of the Educator.
The race is not yet so far advanced ir
ie scale of civilization that men are
illing to pay as highly for services
lat minister to intellectual and spir-
ual culture as for those that relate
i physical and economic "well being ,
liere is an imperative urgency about
, e demand for the latter which causes
em to be liberally rewarded. We
ilue the services of the physician and
e lawyer more highly than those of
ie teacher and the clergyman. The
: pert chef is proverbially better paid
an the greatest college president ; the
iccessful jockey gets more than thn
iremost preacher. In fact , the great
w of supply and demand is a gro-
sque failure as a salary regulator ,
iserts the Boston Transcript. The
achers and preachers ought to start
movement for its repeal.
An effective remedy for the evil of low
ty in the teaching profession is not
ady at hand. Trade unionism for
achers hardly seems
Nothing , indeed , can be expected
work a complete reform here exc
the slow evolution In human nati
whicM will create a proper appreclat
of the services rendered by this ck
But something could be done by rais
the standard of requirements for tea
ing If more thorough preparation w
demanded this would keep out the tr
sients , dilettantes and incompete
who are now the bane of the calll
The oversupply of mediocre tal
would be cut off and the average r
would certainly be increased.
EFFECTS OF TOBACCO.
Data Gathered by Yale's Doctor
liysical Cr.ltnrtf.
The effects of tobacco on mind s
body are of perennial interest to
interested in the health of otlie
Among recent adverse criticisms
the use of tobacco that of Seaver , <
rector of physical culture at Yale Ui
verity , is evidently based upon cai
ful observation. lie finds by a tal
lation of records of the measuremet
of all the students taken in the Yi
gymnasium during nine years that t
smokers average tifteen months old
than non-smokers , and that their si
in every respect , except weight , w
! inferior. The height of the non-smo
ers was 7 millimeters greater ; the
lung capacity SO cc. greater , and UK
weight was only 1.4 kilograms lej
though over a year younger. The o
served rate of growth at this a ;
would lead us to expect that the smo
ers would surpass the non-smokers I
2 millimeters in height and 100 cc.
lung capacity.
To estimate the effect of tc-bac *
when they reach full maturity on bo ;
from 1(3 to 25 , a comparison was ma (
of the men of one class , which w
divided into three groups , the first n <
using tobacco , the second using it re
ularly , and the third using it irreg
larly. During undergraduate life , e
sentially 3.5 years , the first grov
grows in weight 10.4 per cent moi
than the second and G.6 per cent inoi
than the third ; in height the fir :
group grows 24 per cent more tha
the second and 11 per cent more tha
the third ; in girth of chest the fin
group grows 20.7 per cent more tha
the second and 22 per cent more tha
the third ; in capacity of lungs tli
first group gains 77 per cent more tha
the second and 49.5 per cent more tha
the third. Seaver refers to the obse
vations made by Dr. Hitchcock , (
Amherst College , in a similar seric
of measurements of young men , n
doubt suggesting to Seaver the poss
blc value of such studies.
It is impossible to determine the ei
feet of tobacco on mental processe ;
but as giving some indication Seave
mentions that only 5 per cent of th
highest scholarship men at Yale use
tobacco , and whenever it is desired t
secure the highest possible physics
and mental working ability , for exair
pie. in athletic sports , tobacco is on
of the first things forbidden. If th
whole period of physical growth is di
vided into periods of seven or eigh
years , HIP third period is devoted t
rounding out. At this time the inos
strenuous mental application is begin
and opportunities for recreations an
curtailed ; at this period also the to
bacco habit is usually begun , if at all
As a large part of the functional ac
tivity during this rounding-out perioi
pertains to growth , Seaver believe :
that it is logical to remove the moto :
depressant influences in order tha
there may be the greatest possible in
crease in size and improved activity
This position has been taken by tin
directors of governmental schools no'
nnly in this country , but in Europe
Many private schools have been fol
lovrlng their example during the pasi
ten years , and Seaver suggests thai
3ther institutions would do well tc
ilso take this step. American Medi
: ine.
MILLIONS FROM COTTONSEED.
SVhat Was Once Deemed a Nuisance Is
Now a Source of Profit.
One of the romances of the census i :
.he story of the cottonseed oil anc
he millions of dollars it yields annual
y , where a few years ago the seed was
L nuisance , outlawed by the States ol
he cotton belt. In the Mississipp
aws of 1857 was one imposing a fine
> f $20 for every day that cottonseee
vas left around a ginhouse to menace
> ublic health.
In 1S70 a process for extracting oil
rom cotton seed had been discovered
md a product worth $14,000 was
ealized. What was deemed a nui
ance in JS57 continued to prove valu
ible , through invention , until in the
ensus year of 1900 it gave a return to
he mill operators of over $42,411.000
Cottonseed oil is used on the table ,
ivaling that of the olive and threat
ening to drive the latter from the mar-
: et. The oil also enters into soap and
mtter making , says the New York
Commercial , and is burned in miners'
amps. The hulls are used in making
laper , fuel and fertilizer , while enor
nous quantities of the seed itself find
. market as food for cattle.
English Fakirs in India.
In British India there have been dur-
ng the last thirty or forty years quite
L number of Englishmen who , yield-
ug to some monomania , have adopted
lie role of fakir and have ended theii
lays as hermits , subjecting themselves-
o all those dreadful forms of ascet-
cism and of penance practiced by the
ndian dervishes.
When a plugged dime is passed on i
, 'oman , she agrees with her conscience
hat it would be a sin to attempt tc
ass it. but puts it in her purse know
ig that some day it will be pushed
long when she is not thinking aboa !
rer gets you anything to address
-cr as brother.
A Lurking Dancer.
There is a li
danger in the aching-
back. The aches and-
pains of the back .tell *
of kidneys overwork
ed. Go to the kid
neys' assistance when
backache pains warn
you.
you.A kidney warning
should be promptly
heeded , for dangerous ,
diabetes. Orient's dfs-
ease , dropsy are < niy
a step away.
Read how the dan
ger can be averted.
CASE NO. 15,741.
llev. Jacob P. Van-
Doren , of 57 Sixth street. Foii'l dn Lac.
Wis. , Presbyterian clergym.m. says : "A-
had k d-
man or woman who nas never
ney couipHint or any of the little % \ &
consecinent upon irritated or inactive
kidneys knows very little about what
prolonged suffering is. I had attacks
which kept me in the house for days at
a time , unable to do anything , and i&
express what I suffered can hardly be-
adequately done in ordinary Anglo-
K.ixon. As time passed , completions
5ci in , the p.ii.ieulars of which I will ,
be pleased to give in a personal fr.tor-
view to any ono who requires informa
tion. I used plenty of reme-iies. and.
ever on the outlook for something that
might check or benefit my condition , I
began taking Doan's Kidney Tills. Pliis-
I can conscientiously say , Doau's Kid
ney Pills caused a general improve
ment in inv health. J'hev "bron fit
great relirr ! ny lessening t'e pain and
correcting the action of thj kidney SP-
crcMons. "
\ FREE TRIAL of this great kidney
medicine which cured the liev. .facoh-
Van Doren will be maile"3 on applica
tion to any part of the United States.
Address Foster-Milbrrn Co. , Buffalo.
N. Y. For ale by all druggists , price
50 cents per box.
An Irish auctioneer , in Willoughby
street , Brooklyn , said of a set of
mourniny jp.vvelry which he was try
ing to dispose of that it was "jnst
the sort of article he would purchase
for his wife if she were a uidow. "
Scented cioth , designed f jr ladi > sr
dresses , is the latest novelty from
Paris. The fabric retains ifcs
grance so long as there is a fragment
of the material left ; you may tear ,
drench with rain or fling asirie the
psrfume gown , but its particular fra-
urance wilfcling tc it still.
The woman with brilliant prospects
often casts a shadow thereon by a
want of mental equipoise.
Put Up in Collapsible Tubes.
A Substitute for and Superior to Mustard or any
atbur plaster , and will uot blister the most dellcatt
akin. The pain alloying and curative qualities Of'
this ariicie are womferf ul. It will stop the tooth
ache at once , and relieve headache and sciatic * .
We recommend it as the best and safest extern * !
sounter-irritant known , also as an external reme
dy for pains in the chest and stomnch and. tJi
rheumatic , neuralgic and couty complaints
A trial will prove what we claim for it , and 11
tvill be focnd to be invaluable in the houfehold.
Many people say "It is the best of all your prepa
rations , "
Price 15 cents , at all druggists , or other dealers. ,
or by sending this amount to'us in postage stampi ,
we will senit you a tube by mail.
No article should be accepted by the public un
less the same carries our label , aa otherwise It i *
lot genuine.
CHESEBROUGH MANUFACTURING CO.
17 State St. , New York City.
Are you entirely satisfied with ,
the goods you buy and with tho
prices that you pay ?
Over 2.000.000 people are trading with
us and getting their goods at wholesale
prices.
Our l.OOO-pape catalogue will be sent
on receipt of 15 cents. It tells the story.
CHICAGO
The house that tells the truth.
ESTERN
CANADA.
The Vn t Area * of tb'n nnmark-
nblo Agricultural Country are
attracting more attention than
ouy other district in the world.
"THE OKAJfART OF THE WC'BLD. "
"THE JJLXU OF SUNSHINE. "
he NATURAL rEEPINQ CROT iDS for STOCS
Area nnd-r Crop In 190S 1.987.3SO Acre * .
Yield In 190SJ HTa2S,7541Jushes.
Abundance o Water ; Fuel , Plentiful. Cheap Boilif-
UJlulerifilGood _ Grass for f astores and llar.aferul
> I. a sufficient rainfall , and B cliniatetsiving aa
i-sured and adequate geoMm of growth , jforaeofad
ndsof 160 Acre * Fre clo-e to Churches , Sen t'.j.
c ; Hallways tap all sealed districts. '
Send for Atlas and other liter-lure to Pnperln-
nilcnt or Immi.ration , Ottawa , CunaJa. or
. W.V. Bennett. 801 Xevr York Life Bids. , Omaha ,
eb. . Agent lor the Government of Canada.Who will
ipply you with certificate giving you reduced
ites. etc.
MADE
, U. Douglas makes and sells rnor -
ien'3 S3.5O and S3.OO shoes than any other
vo manufacturers Sn the world , which-
roves their superiority ;
ley are worn by more
eople In all stations of
fe than any other make.
Because W. L. Douglas
the Iaree3tmanuf turer
3 can buy cheaper *
reduce his shoes at a >
iwer cost than other con- ,
jrns , which enables him
> sell shoes for 53.50 and
3.00 equal in every
ay to those sold else-
here for S4 and
. ,
mcuyuwmm
id S3 shoes are worn by thousandsof inenwho
ave been paying 84 and SS.notbelievine they
) uld get a first-class shoe for S3.50 or $3.00.
Ho has convinced them that the style , fit ,
nd wear of his S3.50 and S3.00 shoes is jnat
; pood. Placed side by side it is impossible
any difference. A trial will convince.
f ot ice Increase f ISM Sales3 2OJJ s ai
' *
lu IIa lnelWKSalM : .S. 'o24a4O.'oO
A gain of 'S3,8tto,4.10.70 in Four Years.
. . -4 < i4iMOW CILT EDGE LINE.
-
*
Worth S6.OO Compared with Other Makes.
The best Imported an I American leathers. Heul't
ttent Col' Enamel. Bvc Calf , Calf. Vicl Kid. Coroi *
ilt , ind National Kangaroo. Fast Color Eaglets.
lUllUll name tuui price stamped on bottom.
. N. U. NO. 753-2 , YORK NER