Valentine Democrat. (Valentine, Neb.) 1900-1930, November 01, 1906, Image 6

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    A Laay Liver
May bo only a tired liver , or a starved
liver. It would bo a stupid as well aa
'fiavago thing to beat a weary or starved
iinan because ho lagged In his work. So
in treating the lagging , torpid liver it is
& great mistake to lash it wilh strong
cjrastic drugs. A torpid liver is but an
'
'indication of an Ill-nourished , enfeebled
Ixxly whoso organs are 'weary1 with dyer
toork. Start with the stomacli.and' allied
Organs of digestion and nutrition. Piit
them In working order and see how
quickly your liver will become active.
Dr. Picrco's Golden Medical Discovery
has made many marvelous cures of "fiver
trouble" by its wonderful control of the
organs of digestion and nutrition. It re
stores the normal activity of thp.stomach ,
Increases the secretions of the blood-mak
ing glands , cleanses the system from poi
sonous accumulations , and so relieves the
liver of the burdens imposed upon it by
the defection of other organs.
If you have bitterer bad taste-in the morn-
fnir. poor or/variable / appetite , coaled tonpue ,
foul breath , constipated or irregular bowels ,
feel -weal' : , caslls tired , aqspOndent , fr&auent
headaches , pain Ar distress "small of back. "
gnawing or distressed. Q n stomach ,
perhaps nauseaNdfotf o r "rislnes" In
throat after eating , and kinowl symptoms
of v/cak stomach and torpid llvij no niedl-
clne will ralleve you morejrorcfitly or cure
" ' '
lyJjiTnTPohtor' Plgrc p
Discovery. Perhaps only
a part of the above symptoms will be present
at one time and yet point to torpid liver or
biliousness and weak stomach. Avoid all
liot bread and biscuits , griddle cakes and
other indicestiblo food and take the "Golden
Medical Discovery" regularly and stick to its
use until j-oa are vigorous and strong.
The "Discovery" is non-secret.'npn-alco-
hollc. is a elyccric extract of native medici
nal roots with a full list of its ingredients
printed on each bottle-wrapper and attested
under oath. Its ingredients are endorsed
and extolled by the most eminent medical
writers of the asre and are recommended to
cure tbo diseases for which it is advised.
Don't accept a substitute of unknown
composition for this non-secret MEDICINE
OF KNOWN COMPOSITION.
You CANNOT
all inflamed , ulcerated and catarrhal con
ditions of the mucous membrane such as
nasal catarrh , uterine catarrh caused
by feminine ills , sore throat , sore
snouih or inflamed eyes by simply
dosing the stomach.
But you surely can cure these stubborn
affections by local treatment with
Paxtine Toilet Antiseptjc
which destroys the disease germs.checks
discharges , stops pain , and heals the
inflammation and soreness.
Paxtine represents the most successful
local treatment for
feminine Ills ever
produced. Thousands of women testify
to this fact. 50 cents at druggists.
Send for Free Trial Box
THE R. PAXTOK CO. , Boston , Mass.
A Positive
CURE FOR
B
Ely's Gream Balm
is quickly absorbed.
Gives Reief ! al Once.
It cleanses , soothes ,
lieals and protects
the diseased membrane. It cures Catarrh
and drives away a Cold in the Head quickly.
Hestores the Senses of Taste and SmelL
Full size 50 cts. at Druggists or by mail ;
Trial size 10 cts. by mail.
Ely Brothers , 56 Warren Street , New York.
\ Her Answer.
' "Dearest , " I said , and whispered low ,
' "Tell ine a thing I long to know ,
.Tell mo , thou prophetess of 'bliss ,
Tell me which cheek of thine to kiss ? "
She sighed and shook her head ( tha
witch ! ) ,
"It makes no difference which is which.
The choice , kind sir , is up to you aq
JSTou must decide between the two. " aw
The Reader. w
b
* Clarcncc FltzJin.ntca'n'n Retorti
"No , I have no dinner for you , " said siV
the housekeeper sternly , "and don't you a
< conie here after dinner again. "
"Bcs pnrdon , lady , " replied tha tramp , si B
" 'but I didn't s'posb you'd have dinner sit
over dis early in dc day. Y' ain't very t
stylish , are yer ? " Philadelphia Press. o
f
NERVOUS 'si ' ;
COLLAPSE 1
1o
Sinking Spells , Headaches and h
Rheumatism all Yield to. Dr. ha
Williams' Pink Pills. i hn
.Mrs. Lizzie "Williams , of No. 416 Ce n
dar street , Qaiucy , 111. , says : "Ever n
since I had nervous prostration , about cif
thirteen I have had f
years ago , periodical
spells of complete exhaustion. The doc dP
tor said my nerves were shattered. Any P
excitement or unusual activity would
throw me into a state of lifelessness. ItCL
Ab the beginning my strength would CLEl
coine back in a moderate time after each El
attack , bnt the period of weakness kept 1a
lengthening until nfc lasfe I would lie a
helpless as many as three hours at a n
stretch. I had dizzy feelings , palpita- nt
tiou of the henrfc , misery after eating , li
liofc flashes , nervous headaches , rheu liei lit :
matic paiiis iu the back and hips. The ei
doctor did me so little good that I gave re
np his treatment , and really feared that reei
my case was incurable eifi
" ' ' Whe.n.I began taking Dr. Williams' fi
Pink Pills my appetite grew keen ,
my food no longer distressed me , my
nerves were quieted to a degree that I
iad not experienced for years and my
.strength returned. The fainting , spells
left me entirely after I haft used the w
third bo.x of the pills , and my friends m
.f-ay that I am looking better thaii I have
< louo for the past fifteen years. " El
Dr. "Willianls' Pink Pills are recommended ElPI
PI
mended for diseases that come from im
poverished Wood stich as anemia'rheu PIre
matism , debility and disorders of the reb
nerves such as neuralgia , iiervotis pros b :
tration and partial paralysis. They have es
cared the most stubborn indigestion. CL :
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills agree with the
most delicate stomach , qmet all nervousness -
-vousness , st-ir up every organ to do its ai
proper work and give stren'gtli that lasts. dc
Sold by all druggists , or sent postpaid ,
on receipt of price , 50 cents per bqx , six to
boxes for § 2.50 , . J the Dr. William * Inw
Jdediciue Co. , Scheuectady , IN" . Y. ' w
Opinions of Great Papers on Important Subjects ,
AVERAGE VOCABULABIES.
P 300 old spellings are to be tabooed in the
President's .first order , how many will the
second order Include and how much of the
language will there be left in its received
former old-fashioned people to console
themselves with ? An uneducated man's vo
cabulary contains altogether , according to
the authorities , only some 300 or 400 words. Italian
operas require not over 800 words , and the system of
Egyptian hieroglyphics has but 800 symbols. Well edu
cated persons of fair intelligence use , it is said , not over
3,000 or 4,000 words. The Bible of 1G11 commonly
known as the King James or the Authorized Version
without the Apocryphal portion , has under 0,000 words.
Poets , dealing much under abstractions , employ a larger
vocabulary. Milton found 8,000 words necessary for
the composition of his poems ; Pope , 11,000 , and Shalc-
epeare , 15,000. These ure large figures , compared -with
the prosy talk of the "average man , " who gets along com
fortably with 500 words.
Everybody knows or understands a great many words
which he never uses. "Dictionary words" include a long
list never heard in speech -and rarely seen in print. The
number of words , including scientific and art terms ,
which are not obsolete , that are used by good authors ,
may reach 100,000. Dictionary makers score a point on
their rivals by Introducing in large numbers rarely used
technical terms derived from Latin or Greek. Slang ,
colloquialisms , hybrids , special coinages and semi-natural
ized words may be used to pad the list Indefinitely. Early
editions of Webster had but 70,000 words , but Worcester's
has 116,000 , Webster's Unabridged , 118,000 , and Web
ster's International Dictionary 140,000 , while the Ency
clopedic Dictionary contains 180,000 words , or , if com
pounds be included , 250,000. The Century Dictionary , in
cluding therewith the Cyclopedia of Names and Atlas ,
defines 450,000 words and names. It should be added.
however , that of this large total 170,000 are to be cred
ited tt > the Atlas , and a number , sixiilarly large , to the
Cyclopedia of Names. Baltimore Sun.
THE FAMILY PEW.
OME of the most vivid of the emotions which
thronged upon the summer pilgrim to the
old home were those which awaited him In
the family pew of the old meeting house.
As he took his seat there , and heard the
familiar note of the organ and the clear ,
thin voices of the choir , the years melted
away , the faces changed , the new carpet faded into the
well-remeinbered colors of fifty -years ago and he was
In truth a child again.
His thought went back to the time when he was al
lowed to sit on the footstool as a concession to his short ,
restless legs. lie tasted again the luscious raisin which
found Its way from grandmother's pocket to his mouth ,
and sniffed the pungent southernwood of the Sunday
nosegay in a neighbor's silk-initted hand.
It was in that pew that he first realized to the full
the dignity of trousers. It was there that he was proudly
conscious of the approving glances of his friends on his
first college vacation. He recalled in a flash the intoler
able length of the sermon on that Thanksgiving day !
The pew has sad memories as well as sweet ones. Most
poignant of them is that of his mother's funeral and
the awful Sundaj- after it , when no one could bear to
take her empty place and the emptiness of it seemed un
endurable. Close upon that time followed the Sunday
when he made solemn profession there of the- faith she
had loved so well.
Then came the days of the great war , when the meet-
LUXURY OF OCEAN TRAVEL.
CVitli Their Splendid Equipment tlie
Great Liners Arc Floutiiisr Palaces.
There was a time , and not so long
igo , when crossing the ocean seemed
juitc an undertaking , and the person
ivho had ventured twice or thrice was
jrave in the eyes of his associates. But ,
significant of tlie wandering spirit de-
reloped in America within the last dec
ide , a few days ago the writer was
speaking with a man , not a profes
sional traveler , who had made eighty
trips across ; and to the moneyed man
) r woman of this century a record of
from ; ten to twenty trips across is note
o extraordinary as to cause comment.
The eight or ten days formerly spent
m : the waves between here and Europe
iaye been reduced to a trifle over six ,
md during these six days the vessel islet
lot only in constant communication
tvith land , but every , morning a paper
containing brief accounts of the news
features ( of the world is printed and
listributed free of charge among the
Dassengers.
Because of their bulk and weight the
arge liners are comparatively steady ,
md few storms of the summer are of
sufficient strength to roll or toss them.
Che broad decks are like small streets ,
md ; the dining rooms and saloons are
nore like those of a metropolitan hotel
than ) a ship. In place of the stuffy
ittle cabins of old-time ships , the up-
o-date liners are equipped with rooms
n suite , with baths , full-length nilr-
ors and wardrobes , and even the sinall-
sr cabins are provided with nil the
'urnlshlngs of n well-appointed bou-
loir. Leslie's Weekly.
An Infant Prodigy.
Hercules was only six months old
vhen he uttered the first words under
cost unusual circumstances.
He happened to be looking over the
Ide of his cradle when he saw ap-
iroaching two huge reptiles.
"Great snakes ! " he exclaimed , as ,
eachlng out , he took one in each clmb-
y fist and strangled the life out of
ach twenty-footer. Baltimore
an.
Here is a question that came up
mong some .people who . .were talking
own town to-day : Which is worse
have some one around who Is will-
ag but dumb , or some one wlio I * un-
rllllng , but wise ?
K
ing house blazed with flags and thrilled witli the music
of bugle and drum. The blessing'of the volunteers , the
prayers for their safety , and the snd , sad series of sol
diers' funerals all these came up to the man's memory
in the old pew.
Suddenly out of this dreamland he Is called by the
stir of the congregation and IB conscious that he has
missed the good pastor's sermon. But perhaps God Him
self has preached to him out of life's grim struggle in
the vision of some of his own deep experiences and the
discovery that they are still potent to arouse the will
and confirm the faith with their rich and tender mem
ories. Youth's Companion.
MILS-A-HI2mTE RAILROADING.
LL the signs point to an eventual electrifi
cation of the transportation business of the
country , at least except in the case of very
long hauls through thinly populated re
gions. Will this transformation bring with
it the practical impossibility of inlle-a-ruin-
ute travel ? There seems considerable justi
fication for an affirmative answer. It has been amply
demonstrated that the electric locomotive is capable of at
taining and maintaining far higher speeds than this.
On the Zossen experimental road in Germany speeds of
over 125 miles per hour were reached.
The chief difficulty in the way of operating a com
mercial line at such enormous velocities aside from the
question of cost has to do with the safety of passengers.
The rails and cars can be built strongly enough to stand
the wear and tear , motors competent to push them at this
speed are available , and methods of transmitting current
to the motors from an overhead conductor have been per
fected. In fact , the realization of a ten-hour train be
tween New York and Chicago seems to require only the
deviseuient of a protective block system which would
render practically impossible the terrible fatalities liable
to result from collisions and derailments at these speeds.
* * * If the rolling stock could be made accident
proof , and the road bed sufficiently straight and solid to
do away with the danger of derailment , there seems noth
ing in the way of a mile-a-inlnute line , but its" cost. How
much heavier this would be than in the cape of a fifty-
mile per hour service is a question on which the early
construction of such a line seems to depend. New York
Globe.
HIPPLE'S HYPOCRISY ,
damage effected by the late Mr. Hippie is
not confined to his depositors. The ex
I posure of a hypocrite always endangers the
faith In human nature of the grudging and
the weak. Mr. Hippie was able to deceive
his creditors by parading his religion , by
practicing with convincing ostentation the
qualities that usually indicate character and prin
ciple. But this proves nothing except Mr. Hip
pie's - success at simulation a success which is
not unique , but which , on the other hand , it would be
contemptible to consider universal.
Speculations as to our neighbors' , our rivals' and our
enemies' sincerity will always be one of the interesting
occupations of mankind. Yet it 5s a courageous man
who makes rigid rules , who is prepared to condemn or
affirm on general principles. Mr. Hippie refrained from
the Sunday newspaper he now proves a hypocrite , but
that makes the Sunday newspaper neither better nor
worse. Unfortunate indeed would it be to weaken one's
capacity for belief In one's kind because a knave had a
measure of success. Chicago Post.
CZAR NICHOLAS IN AN AUTOMOBILE.
S F--V-rjit- : :
3s > ; fcM if > \-jf-.w v > t
MMA MM a * * MMn' VMHH MaM WW * MMB"IWB aMlWMMMMV > BB H1-- - - " - -
THE PZAR LEAVING THE RACE COURSE AT KRASNOYE SELO.
The Czar has rarely been presented to English readers as a motorist A
correspondent of London Sphere , however , has snapshotted him at the miltary
horse races at Krasnoye Selo , which is sixteen miles southwest of S . Peters
burg , whereas Tsarskoye Selo is fifteen miles south of the capital. This
particular view shows the Czar motoring down the race course after the races.
Fitting.
On the evening of the first Sunday
after their removal from their "house
in the suburbs , which was the only
home the children had ever known , to
the top floor of a seventh-story apart
ment house , the family gathered
around the piano for the usual hour
of song , each member in turn , ac
cording to time-honored custom , re
questing n bynm of his choice. When
10-year-old Marjory's turn came she
said : "I think the most appropriate
hymn is :
" Tm nearer my heavenly home to-day
Than ever I've been before. '
"I think of it every time I come up
in the elevator. " Now York Press.
One of the jokes of this season Is
to decorate a house with golden rod
for a party , and find out when the ,
guests have arrived that half of them ,
have hay fever.
THE INSURANCE INVESTIGATION.
5'vro JTewnpnper Kcportcra A.TC Sc-
rUVcvHuible for the Great UpZioval.
.There would have beec nn investiga
tion of the insurance companies tail
It not teen for the recent disclosures
Jnade by ; David Ferguson , a reporter
kor the Kew York World , who be $ rm
Jby prodding the officers of the Equit'a-
Jjie about James fiazen Hyde's Cam-
b'on dmner and other evidences of ruin
ous waste. At the outset , Ferguson
| ivas laughed at by the men he ap
proached. Hyde and. Alexander , the
two heads of the Equitable , denied
everything denied that there was any
factional uprising in the Equitable , or
fee slightest unfriendliness between
.Sir. Hyde and Mr. Alexander. But
1&e reporter kept on prodding and dig-
"gtag patiently until he gained the con-
jBjifence of some one on the inside
Vh&Se name will probably never be"
known. From that time on Fergujon
had the situation In his own hands ,
what followed is thoroughly
Jknown to the American public to-day ,
having resulted in the" greatest upheaval -
heaval ever known in the history of
"American finance. Compelled , by the
jfcrsistent revelations Ferguson wag
'making , to underta62 ! an investigation ,
Francis lien'dricks , superintendent of
insurance for the State of "New York ,
jBled away a lengthy document con
taining the testimony he had taken ;
'and ' It remained for Louis Seibold , rfnJ J
"other World reporter , to procure a
copy of this secret report , which mada [
the longest "story" ever "run" in a
newspaper about a single Incident
:112,000 words. It is still a matter of
keenest speculation among the newspaper -
paper men of New York how Seibold
obtained possession of a copy of a
"State document , and it will be , prob
ably , a mystery forever. Reporters of
Sefbojd's type never betray confidence. "
W"ere the secrets of Messrs. Ferguson
and Seibold known concerning the
'great insurance exposure , they would ,
Undoubtedly , make good reading , but
these men made pledges of confidence
the public good , and it goes with-
' 6ut saying that those pledges will die
them. Success Magazine.
A Bad Case.
"Whtfe arrangements did the school
trustees make with that new teach-
"er ? "
"He is to get $50 a month to find
himself. "
"Good heavens ; he's so absent-mind-
sd that If he had to find himself hs
will go to a home foi- lost children.- *
Baltimore American.
In sitting , place one foot slightly hi
advance of thq other , ns a Frenchwoman
always doe. TJiefe will then he no effort
tieefffed to rise properly it is done w'ith-
o'ut strain on any one set of muscles ,
ail3 is natural , easy and graceful.
The London Tablet says Pius X. hai '
resolved that no priest's revenue fron
ecclesiastical sources shall exceed $1,20C
a year.
\
*
W
ca
SI
Dvcrsco.coo American farmers who have settled
n Canada during the past few years testify tojthe
fact thai CanaSn is , beyond question , the greatest
arming1 land ill the world.
Nineiy Million iushels fay
of wheat from the harvest of 1906 , means good y (
money to the farmers of Western Canada when ire
he world has to be fed. Cattle raising , Dairying , v/
tfixcd farming- arc also probable calfinjrs. Coal , vth
wood , water in abundance ; churches and schools
convenient ; markets easv of access. Taxes low. thi
For advice and information address the ' i
superintendent of Immigration , Ottawa , Canada , Do
r the authorized Canadian Government - - trenr , on
V. B. Scot't , Superintendent of Immigration ,
) ltawa , Canada , or E. T. Holmes. 315 Jackson onft
Et. , St. Paul , Minn , and J. M. MacLachlan , Box srid
Ii6 , Watertown , StJ. Dakota Authorized Government fti
. i
ment Agents. i
Pltoso say where you saw this advertisement. ! f.
S ? EDY CUBE OF MISS
Bne Is Made Well by I/ydia E.
ham's Vegetable Compound , end ,
Writes Gratefully to Mrs. Pinkhszn.
For the wonderful help that she has
found Miss Cora Geode , 25o B. Chicago
A nue , Chicago , fll. , believes it her ,
dnTy to Tvrfte the following : letter for
mblication , in order that Other womeu
afflicted in the same way may DO
jl/liss Cera
benefited as she was. Miss Geode is
president of the Bryn Mawr Lawn
Tennis Club of Ghicago. She writes ;
Dear Mrs. Pinkham :
"I tried many different remedies to
build up my system , which had become run
doyen from loss of proper rest and unreason
able , hours , bnt nothing seemed to help me.
Mother J is a great advocate of Lydia E. Pink-
ham's Vegetable Compound for female trou
bles , having used it herself some years ago
with great success. So I began to take it ,
and in less than a month I was able to boouts ; ,
of bed and out of doors , and in three months
I was entirely well. Heally I have never felfr
eo strong and well as I fiavo since. " j
No other medicine Las such a record
of cures of female troubles as has Lydia
E. Finkhain's Vegetable Compound.
Women who are troubled with pain
ful or irregular period's , backache ,
bloating ( or flatulence ) , displacement
Of organs , inflammation or ulceration ,
can be restored to perfect health
and strength by taking Lydia B ,
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. J
Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women'
to write her for advice. She has guided
thousands to health. Her experience ;
is very great , and she gives the benefit"
of it to all who stand in need of wisV
counsel. . . She is the daughter-in-law of
Lydia E. Pinkham and for twenty-five'
years has been advising sick women4
free of charge. Address , Lynn , Mass.-
CLOTHING.
Tfjffddeofthe-btt
reli
5TIC1CTOTHE
SIGH OFTHE FISH
W. L. DOUGLAS
3.50 & * 3.O Shoes
BEST IN THE WORLD
,
Fa. Shoe Beaten :
W. L. Douglas' Job-
bin ? H m5o la tbo moat
complete fn this caaatty
Sftidfar
SHOES FOE EVERYBODY AT ALL PEICE3.
lisa's Shoes. $5 to $1.BO. Boya' Shoes' $3
ta 31.25. "Women's ShC83 , 4.GO to Sl.BO.
KlMss' & CUUdran'a Sboea , $2.25 to fl.OO.
Cry AV. T. . . Douglas "Women's , Misses and
Children's shoes ; for style , fit andivear
they excel other makes.
II I could take you into my large
'actories at Brockton , Mass.and shov/
you how carefully W.L. Douglas shoes
made , you would then understand
ivhy they hold their shape , fit better ,
ivear longer , and are of greater value \
than any other make.
Wherever you live , you can obtain W. L.
Douglas shoes. His name and price is stamped
the bottom-which protects you against high
prices and Inferior shoes. Take no substt *
lute. Ask youf dealer for W. L. Douglas shoe *
insist upon having them.
fast Color Eyelets used ; they will not wear brassy ,
Write for illustrated Catalog of Fall Style * .
W. L. DOUGLAS , Dept. 14 , Brockton ,
rheumatism
V
if