The Columbus journal. (Columbus, Neb.) 1874-1911, April 11, 1900, Image 4

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Spring j
Annually Says Take J
Hood'
SarmapaHUa
!
i
!
3
!
In toe sprint thoae Pisaplet, Bolls,
Kraptions and Genera! Bad Feelings
ladlcate that there are cobwebs in
taw system. It needs a thorough
trashing, and the best brash la
Hood's Sarsaparllla. which sweeps
all humors before it. This great
HWdldne eradicates Scrofula, sub
dues Salt Rheum, neutralizes the
acidity which causes Rheumatism
in short, purifies the blood and
thoroughly renovates the whole
physical system.
"We hare used Hood's Sarsapa
rllla and it has given the best of
satisfaction, especially as a spring
aaedlclne. It builds up the general
system and gives new life." Dwiqht
C. Park, Whtteland, Indiana.
t
Toa have beard of Swanson'a 5
DROPS Rheumatic Cure, still you are
suffering; from Rheumatism and other
diseases that this remedy so surely
cures. Many of your friends have ad
vised you to use it, and yet you hesi
tate before giving it a trial. Why de
lay' any longer, and why waste any
more money and time? Tou will cer-
. tainly find what you have sought in
vain for, and we are confident it will
do for you what it has done for others
similarly afflicted. If all knew what
thousands know of the efficacy of 5
Drops as a curative as well as pre
ventive of any ache or pain known to
the human body, there would not be a
family in all America without a bottle
of Swanson's 5 DROPS Rheumatic
'Cure. You can try it for the small
amount of 23c, on receipt of same
will send you a sample bottle; or, send
us a Dollar and we will send you a
large bottle prepaid by express, con
taining 300 doses, 5 DROPS is the
name and dose. Free from opiates in
any form. Absolutely harmless, a
child can use it as well as an adult.
For further particulars write Swanson
Rheumatic Cure Co., ICO Lake St,
Chicago.
He far-Cfcaawa
feT Waller Baker Co. Ltd.. Dorcaeater,
suauearrc. steatioa tau paper.
If you have not tried Magnetic Starch
try it now. You will then use no other.
There are 32,000 small farms in Por
to Rico devoted to fruits and miscel
laneous crops.
To aesleet the hair It to loae youth and comeliness.
are H with Fimi't lUta IlaLaax.
Hisdkbcokxi, ta beat cure for coma. lScti.
House-hunting is not recokencd by
the average man as a pleasure.
Use Magnetic Starch it has no equal.
Try Magnetic Starch It will last
longer than any other.
My doctor said I would die, but Piso's
Cur for Coasamptioa cored me. Amos
Kaiawr, Cherry Valley, III., Nor. 23. '85.
;... ....... ...........
I iryurain-ui
Try Grain-O!
a packageof GRAIN-O, the new food
drink that takes the place ot coffee.
j The children may drink it without
injury as well as the adult. Ail who
try it, like it. GRAIN-O has that
rick seal brown of Mocha or Java,
but it k made from pnre grains, and
the moat delicate stomach receives it
without distress. the prioe of coffee.
15 cents end 25 cents per package.
Sold by all grocers.
Tastes Hke Coffee
Looks Wee Coffee
lassatbatTovgrocergiTCsyoaQRAIaH)
Accept no taitatioa. 4
:
:
:
MM
EXCMSMM MTES
lto Western Canada and
lDartlrula,r& uk tn hnw tn
Iseeura 100 acres or the
Ibest wheat-growing
J land on the continent
Iran be nraml on ann'l.
tuition InSiml nf Tmnii.
l(?ratlon,Ottawa. Cnncda,
Inr trtii iinAaArclrvw. Cm.
i.. r: ,:: ."""".'-.
Kimnj cvuuuam cxi-uraion win leave sl 1 am.
Minn., on tie first and third Tuesday in esea
month, and specially low rates on all line of
railway arc quoted for excursions leaving St.
Paul on March 3S and April 4 for Manitoba.
Assinlbola. Saskatchewan and Alberta. M. V.
Bennett, 801 New York Life Bldg.. Omaha. JCeb.
XgSSaj$s
TlFniruireTeD S
wincm
p flBP' J- a
Send your name and address on aj
postal, and we will send you our 156- J
page illustrated catalogue free.
WKKSTaATMMarcCO.
174 WtacKesssr Arcavs, Haw Haven, Cmm.
5SS
$20 WEEK SURE
W m
30 week
ith ric to introduce our Poultrr remedr In
'country. EXCELSIOR MFQ. CO.
Dapt.
. "W. Parsons, Kas.
win
Stadeata at
taelrhaaaeata taefaadaiutatalinlaclpleaof tae
taw. and awe branches aa eoastlrete a finished
vnvncMHia. r rtr nrmiira anoroaa
EIW. IACM. 323 HHi St..rfii, .
AITieitKS! - whifVr.cb:
5rS?S.A lUKE PREVENTIVE or
"" laoiEa. Koormotu ylelJer, and taa
grtat&t root fatteaer for nogt. tbeep. colu and
cauie known. Write for elrcnlar tell!az all aboat
thtx. Tht will not rneirmln.
W. r. MANLCV, Richmond, Intf.
HDAD6V NEW WnCWHUHi dm
jaTdVSJ""S I quick rellefaBdcatM wont
jmk or uatuaoalaia aad M mys tremtneat
aa. b. a. cam ans. an a. aa. c
Vav rat Aeb aad BaraT
Siiake Into your shoes Allen's Foot-Ea-t,
a powder for the feet It makes
tight or New Shoes feel Easy. Cures
Coras, Bunions, Swollen, Hot and
Sweating Feet. At all Druggists and
Shoe Stores, 25c. Sample "sent FREE.
Address Alien S. Olmsted. LeBoy. N. T.
The April Century is rich in pictorial
.illactration. its special art features in
cluding a frontispiece engraved by
Cole, a foil-page plate of H. O. Tan
ner's painting. "The Annunciation";
' Castaigne's Paris pictures and . Du
Mond's decorative treatment of "The
Groves jf Pan." a poem by Clarence
Urtay. From the "Talks with Napo
leon," la thi number, it appears that
the Emperor was so folly resolved to
make bit Lome in America, in the
event of defeat at Waterloo, .that he
aid bills drawn upon this country for
whatever stuns he chose to take.
W.fGUOMAIiA. Ne. M 9
BaBaaaBwEKfl
WUlfe
UH9!.A9Gi
i-oaflilal
THE TEEMING WEST.
Waattca CaaaSa Prairie Laada Bala
riltod with KxeeUaat Setllera.
The salient fact that presents itself
in taking a blrdseye view or the Ca
nadian West, is that of intense activi
ty la every department Whether the
glance be turned- upon the district
east of Winnipeg, the Red River Val
ley routh or north, the Dauphin and
If. M. W. district, the Southwestern.
or v nether it take in the great central
division along the main line of the C.
P. ft., stretching" away out to the
Ro Jdes aad from there bending north
an south to Prince Alberta and Ed
narntoB, McLeod and Lethbridge
wl ether the examination be made in
anr of these directions the same ac
t! ity, growth and hopefulness are ob
servable. 1'be Canadian West is not only a
gtod place to locate permanently,
bjit it is also a good place to invite
oie's relatives and friends to come to.
Tils is the spirit that seems to ani
nate the West at the present time,
a id its effects-are to be seen on every
bind. To enumerate the towns where
handsome and substantial blocks and
isldences have gone up this year
vould be simply to give a list of the
towns and villages along the railway
.'ines. And this movement has net
teen confined to these centers of popu
ation, but in many cases it has been
jvershadowed by the improvement in
farm buildings.
So far as one can see, this is no pass
ing phase, no repetition of any tem
porary boom following a period of
good crops and fair prices. It is a
movement more spontaneous, more
general, more marked than anything
that has gone before, and seems to in
dicate that the great West, !Ike Sam
son, bursting the encompassing bands,
has awakened to a period of activity
and development that will surpass
anything we have known in the past
and which will only be paralleled by
the opening out of some of the most
fertile of the western states of the
union.
Look at some of the figures. Over a
thousand schools In Manitoba, and the
number going up by leaps and bounds;
something like 500 schools in the terri
tories. Winnipeg as representing the
gateway of the West, the third city
In the Dominion in regard to bank
clearings, postal business and proba
bly In regard to customs, the customs
return at Winnipeg running about 30
to 40 per cent greater monta by month
than in the fiscal year ol 1897-8, the
largest previous year for actual busi
ness entries, when over $900,000 was
paid through the Winnipeg office for
duty; the C. P. R. and Canada
Northwest land sales together running
over $1,500,000 for the year. These
and a thousand more signs show how
the West has leaped into new life.
This is an inspiring and cheering
spectacle, but it brings with it great
responsibilities. The business men
realize this, the banks realize it and
have spread their agencies through
every bustling little town clear out to
the coast; the churches realize it, and
one denomination alone has opened an
average of about thirty new stations
in each of the past two years, and will
increase this in the year now entered
upon; the government departments
realize it and there is talk of redis
tribution and additional members. The
educational branches realize it, and
new schools are springing up every
where. Over 12,000 settlers came in
from the United States alone last year,
and these, with the people who came
in from the East prove the most rig
orous westerners. They lose no timo
in developing their farms, in filling
their grazing lands with stock, and in
every district 16 to be found evidences
of thrift and prosperity.
A Farmer Krlen-.l.
During the great drought year J. .1.
H. Gregory, of Marble Head, Mass.,
sent unasked, to Nebraska and the
Dakotas, tons of seeds for free dis
tribution. It made scores of new
friends for the popular seed house.
This year Mr. Gregory wants to reach
every one of these farmers and asks
for present addresses. He will be
glad to send his 1900 Catalogues to
both old and new friends. Send on
jour name to him. Those who re
member the farmer in periods of de
pression should be remembered by the
farmer in the days of prosperity.
Mrs. Wlaslorjra Boothia- Syrup.
For chtldrea teething, aoftena the guma, reduce ln
fcftmnaattoc, allaji pala. cure wind colic c a bottle.
Happy
W
omen
who hmvm mmmm rmitrnvmaJoi
malmital mmmmtruatkm my
lyaWm . Ptokhmm'sVi
mtmmUy wHtimm grateful
ImttmrmtoMrs.Pimkhmm.
Lya E. rVUtasi's Vegetable
thmmu U alwmys
f JsWfcWaT
whm suf
Nmrly mU U His of
mformmgmmmmt of tho
m niaaaaiaafafaa SaWaaa
BBaaWar Ormmmm&wnm fttWa
olmm mmkos wommm
hmmlthy; of this Ihorm fa
Domfi oxmorlmomtm if
yommmffor got this momJ
SBbMbT gOm mHrOm rtHK
's from mmyfoom
Is Lynm, Mrnss
&$
tsh JTitbifr
POMMEL
laaBaa
SaMteCbat..
EeeM both rider sad caAD mtJ
faetivdrvta hmrgmst rJmm I
Sabstfttrtuwffl disappoint Ask for I
'I wan mm i
kbeat-Khraew. If not for sale la I
ywor jowb. wrat for catatarat
A.j.TOWHLBoaaoa.Masa.
fer shmmU k
immrn kmmwlmdgmm
FABM AND GARDEN.
MATTERS OP INTEREST TO
AGRICULTURISTS.
jaaaa Ca-to-DaU Htata Abaat Cal
tlvattea. or lk Sell aad Yields
Tharoatt Ilorticaltare, Vlttcaltmre aad
Florlcaltare.
VarUUaa ar Strawhorrlev
From Farmers' Review: It seems
to me now, after twenty years of ex
perience, that there is nothing more
Important to the strawberry grower
than choice of variety. In the raising
of grain, or vegetables or fruit of any
kind, much depends on the proper se
lection of varieties, but in strawberry
culture almost everything depends on
it With a pretty general knowledge
of the well tested varieties now grown,
gained both by observation and read
ing. I do not hesitate to say emphatic
ally that for this latitude and for a
number of degrees north and south of
the latitude of Chicago, the one great
berry, worth more than all the others
together, is the Warfleld.
Speaking of strawberry culture in
the past I think it is true that there
have been just three great berries,
each of which had Its day "and gave
way to the next, and these are the Wil
son, the Crescent, and the Warfleld.
Growers who raised the Wilson in Its
day and who at the proper time sub
stituted the Crescent, and then after
the Warfleld was well introduced
planted it and gave up the Crescent,
have done the best for themselves and
for their customers that could be done.
I think most practical growers will
agree with me when I 6peak of the
expense and disappointment which
have attended our efforts to secure the
best varieties. What a time indeed we
have had with the highly praised new
comers, the BIdwells, Manchesters,
Jewels, Lady Rusks, Cbas. Downeys,
Big Bobs. Ht Vernons, Bubacbs, Jes
sies, Parker Earles. and a host of
others whose names I will not men
tion, all introduced with a great flour
ish and often having some good quali
ties but as practical, business berries,
utterly worthless. It seems strange to
me that so many writers and even ex
periment stations speak of some good
point in very many of these varieties,
without adding that in the summing
up they have no value at all.
I know that some growers will pro
test against my judgment of some of
these berries, but I believe the best
conclusions of practical men are in line
with my own. Some would probably
defend the Bubach and Haverland,
which are of good size and productive,
but I never ate one of the first without
regretting It, and the second I would
net permit my pickers to gather, so
wretchedly soft and tasteless It is.
Parker Earle Is solid and productive,
but of bad color and unreliable. Beder
Wood Is productive and has been high
ly praised, but I have always felt guilty
for picking it at all, so soft and In
sipid and colorless It Is and I am glad
to see in our latest station reports that
it is not recommended as it was.
Doubtless some of the new berries
will prove to have value, and some,
like the Marshall, are certain to be of
use for fancy market, but I repeat in
conclusion that for the climate I have
mentioned, for real value both to pro
ducer and consumer, there is no well
tested berry which is worthy of com
parison with Warfleld. In my view
the most important problem for prac
tical growers now is to find the best
and most reliable fertilizer for the
Warfleld.
8. W. GIBSON.
The Valae of Weed.
Weeds have a value. The writer
once heard Professor Bailey say that
the weed is the friend of the farmer,
and no man should want to get rid of
a farm because it is weedy. He him
self had purchased a good farm at a
low price, because it had ail run to
weeds and the former owner believed
that they were so numerous as to
greatly reduce the value of the land.
But these same weeds had been keep
ing the fertility of the soil from leach
ing out, and had kept the ground in a
condition where it would not bake,
but would readily yield to the plow.
He simply turned all the weeds under
and got back the fertility they bad
taken from the ground. Then he
planted to other crops and had a re
gained farm.
Were it not for weeds, say after a
clover crop, the nitrogen in the soil in
readiness for plant use would disap
pear. As it is, the weeds take it up
and hold it for subsequent crops. The
cultivation that is necessary to keep
down weeds Is not time and effort lost
The benefit to the crop cultivated is
more than enough to pay for the out
lay. The additional effect of conserva
tion of moisture is not to be forgot
ten. Weeds are also valuable for the work
they do in keeping the land In the
hands of the many. Were there no
weeds the cultivation of the land could
be undertaken on an immense scale by
men of wealth and a monopoly in land
would be possible. If such a monopoly
were attempted at this time, the coat
of keeping the land clean would make
it Impossible to keep it under control.
Abbobs; the Wladow Plants.
From the Farmers' Review: At
this season of the year most
plants In the window will begin to
make strong, vigorous growth, if
properly fed. As soon as they begin
to grow, but not before, give them lib
eral applications of some good fer
tilizer. Many persons whose plants
are not growing -satisfactorily think
to "give them a start" by feeding
them rich food. This is all wrong.
The plants are not in condition to
make use of such food until they be
gin to grow. It Injures them if given
when they cannot assimilate it There
fore, wait and keep close watch of
them, and when signs of growth are
seen, begin to feed them. Give weak
applications at first increasing the
supply as the growth of the plant in
creases. The proper time to train plants Is
when they are growing. If a branch
shows a tendency to outgrow other
branches, thus making the plant un
symmetrlcal, nip off the end of it at
once. Keep it from making more
growth until the other branches have
had a chance to catch up with it thus
giving the plant proper balance on all
sides. Most persons neglect their
plants in this respect beause, they
say, "It seems such a pity to Interfere
with them, when they are growing so
well." Growth Is not all we aim at
We want well-shaped, symmetrical
plants, and such plants we can not
have unless we give them proper train
ing. Very few plants can be trusted
to train themselves. Whatever train
ing they get should be given while
they are in the early stages of de
velopment The old saying that it is
bard work to teach an old "dog new
tricks applies here. When a plant has
been allowed to grow to suit itself
until it has reached Its prime, it is too
late to do very much for it Take It
in hand, then, while growing, aad
make it understand that it most corns
to your terms. Plants are tractable
things. They will do as you tell them
to if they see you. "mean baa wees.'
, KBEN B. RBXFORO.
Water llakataelh
This Is called also American water
hemlock, wild hemlock, spotted hem
lock, Bpotted parsley, snakeweed,
beaver poison, musquash root, musk
rat weed, cowbane, spotted cowbane,
children's bane, death of man.
It is a smooth erect perennial, 3 to
8 feet high, with a rigid hollow stem,
numerous branches, finely-dissected
leaves, white flowers, and a cluster of
spindle-shaped roots, which vary in
length from 1 to 3 inches, and are
very characteristic of the plant It
grows commonly in swamps and damp
soils throughout the Atlantic states
westward to Louisiana, Iowa and Min
nesota; much less commonly north
westward through Nebraska to the
Rocky Mountains and in New Mexico.
This is one of the most poisonous
native plants in the United States, be
ing rapidly fatal to both man and ani
mals. The roots are especially dan
gerous, because the taste, being aro
matic and to some people suggestive
of horseradish, parsnips, artichokes or
sweet cicely, is apt to lead children to
eat them when they are found forced
out of the soil by washing, freezing
or other causes in the early spring.
Cattle sometimes eat the tubers, and
in marshes they are poisoned by drink-
JB. IS. Water tankek (OCeafa awmfaao, i
iiaaai or aattamaaaed root aad lawar saaa,taa
haras, Savera, aad fratt oaa-aalf aataxal aawi aba
frail sad ansa seeUea of sasa, aakrgad taass.
ing water contaminated by the juice
of roots that have been crushed by be
ing trampled upon. No estimate can
be made of the amount of damage done
to live stock, but it is very consider
able. The human victims average sev
eral per annum.
The prominent symptoms of the
poisoning are colicky pains, vomiting,
staggering, unconsciousness, and
frightful convulsions ending In death.
Fertility la Potatoes,
Bulletin 57 of the Maine Experiment
Station giving some figures of the
chemical contents of a potato crop
says: Assuming these figures to fairly
represent potatoes as grown in Maine,
a crop of 200 bushels, weighing six
tons, would remove thirty-seven
pounds of nitrogen, sixteen pounds of
phosphoric acid and fifty-eight pounds
of potash. If the amounts and pro
portions of fertilizing elements re
moved by a crop could be taken as a
guide in preparing a field for that crop,
the problem of supplying the proper
amount and kind of plant food to the
soil would be much simplified. To
manure a field for a crop of potatoes,
nitrogen, phosphoric acid and potash
would have to be added in about the
proportions given above and in suf
ficient quantity to supply the vines
and tubers the land was expected to
yield. A formula made up on this
basis would be very materially differ
ent from any mixed fertilizer on the
market and would contain the fertiliz
ing elements in about the following
proportions: Nitrogen, 5 parts; phos
phoric acid, 2 parts; and potash, 8
parts.
No Dark Stable.
I want my stable above ground; no
cellar for me, as I do not believe cows
relish being confined in a dungeon any
more than a man does, said C. D. Hess
in a paper read by him at the recent
convention of dairymen at Columbus.
Give them all the sunlight possible. I
never saw a stable with too many win
dows to suit me. If you are building
by all means look well to your water
supply, ir possible to do so, build
where you can have the advantage of
running water in your stables. If you
cannot do this be sure you get a sup
ply of well water at all times in the
year at a reasonable der'.b. After you
have fitted up your str.ble with mod
ern devices for watering those cows,
go one step further ar.d arrange to heat
that water up to a temperature of 70
degrees. You say this means a great
deal of trouble and expense, but if
there is a man in this room who has
ever tried warming the water for his
milk cows that did not think himself
fully repaid there is something wrong
with the man or else he has the wrong
kind of cows.
The state of Michigan has begun pro
secutions, in Jackson county, that
state, against Armour ft Company of
Chicago for the selling of process but
ter without labeling it as such. The
fact that the Chicago packer named Is
engaged in the manufacture of process
butter is not perhaps, generally
known. It was supposed that the Chi
cago packers made butterine as a side
issue, mainly as a means of disposing
of their by-products to the best ad
vantage. The making over of rancid
butter, however, is something of a de
parture for the meat packers, and it
will probably not be long before we
find the same factors at work In other
lines of dairy effort It seems likely
that the firms that make and sell pro
cess butter in Michigan will be com
pelled to sell It under the name of
"process" butter. Not till recently has
the dairy and food department of that
state been able "to distinguish process
butter from fresh butter, but now a
way to distinguish them has been dis
covered. The dairy and food commis
sion of Michigan has set a good ex
ample to the neighboring states In the
vigor with which It Is following up
violators of the state laws.
At the Missouri Experiment Station
Prof. Schweitzer measured the leaf
surface of a vigorous corn plant of av
erage development The total surface
of the 12 leaves and sheaths was found
to be 3.4S0 square inches, or about 24
square feet
Heredity in breeding relates to trans
mission. It Is doubtless governed by
fixed laws, but many of these are as
yet imperSrftir understood.
tSS) steward fjiso
The readers erthis paper trill be pleaded td
tsara that, there is at least one dreaded disease
that srleaoe has been attic to cure in. all its
stage, and that is Catarra. ilalf Catarrh
Care Is the only positive cure now known to the
BMxUcalfrateralty. Catarrh being. tt constitu
tional disease-, requires a constitutional treatr
ment Hall's Catarrh Curei taken Internally;
scilhg directly upbhthc blooit and mucous sur?
faces of the. system, thereby, destroying. -the
foundation of .tho dlseasend gl Vinjr the patient
MrenfetB by building up the constitution and
assisting nature in doing its work. The pro
prietors have so much faith in its curative
powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars for
any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of
Testimonials. . .
Address P. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, a
Sold by druggists 73c.
Hall's Family Pills are the best
The Krupp works are to be extended
at a cost of not far from $1,000,000.
FITS Permanently OBirrt. ffonriornrrrontnesiaftct
Crt dajr's u-e of It. Kline" Ctrat Serve Ketoreh
Scud for FREE S3.00 trial bottle and tmuts.
Da. B. U. Kuxe, Ltd., Ml Arch at, lhlladelpnia,Fak
Ara Toa tfelac Atlea'a iToOt-EMet
It is the only cure for Swollen
Smarting. Burning, Sweating Feet
Corns and Bunions. Ask for Allen's
Foot-Ease, a powder to be shaken into
the shoes. At all Druggists and Shoe
Stores, 25c Sample sent FREE. Ad
dress Allen S. Olmsted, LeRoy, N. Y;
OMAHA & ST. LOUIS RAILROAD.
WABASH RAILROAD.
48 miles shortest to St. Louis.
28 miles shortest to Quincy.
"THE ST. LOUIS CANNON BALL."
Last to leave; first to arrive.
Leave Omaha 5:05 P. M.
Arrive St. Louis 7:00 P. M.
Trains leave Union Station daily for
St. Louis, Quincy, Kansas City and all
points East or South.
Home Seekers Excursion on sale first
and third Tuesday of each month.
Steamship tickets to all parts of the
world. For full information, call at
O. it St. L. ticket Office, 1415 Farnam
St. (Paxton Hotel block), or write,
Harry E. Moores, G. P. & T A, Omaha.
Neb.
The Atlantic Monthly for April has
a rich table of contents, part of which
is as follows: An Acadian Easter,
Maud-Evelyn, The Consular Service of
the United States, Autobiography of
W. J. Still IV., The Cherries of Ueno.
The Perplexities of a College Presi
dent, The Forests of the Yosemitc
Park, England, A Comic Chesterfield.
Birds of Passage, Penny Wise.
EDUCATE YOUR BOWELS.
Thousands of Premature Deaths
Caused by Neglect.
Every Persia Caa Protest Life and Eajoy
Health aad Kapplaess Who Will LIstea
to the Yoke of Progress.
If you want to open a door, you don't
smash It with a crowbar, but ope:i it with
a key.
It's easier and less destructive.
When you are costive, or bilious, or con
stipated, don't take an old-time dose of
physic, throw your bowels into spasms
and turn your liver Inside out, as Ions as
everything: can be set right, In a nice,
gentle, quiet, positive, natural way by
Cascarets, the ideal laxative.
We have all found out that persuasion
Is stronger than violence.
Instead of trying to force your disor
dered organs to do their duty. Educate
Your Bowels and make them act natu
rally by using Cascarets, Candy Cathartic,
so pleasant to the taste, so mild, so effec
tive. They are guaranteed to cure any
case of constipation or money refunded.
Buy and try Cascarets to-day. Jt's what
they do. not what we say they'll do.
that proves their merit. All drugcist?.
10p. 25P. 50c. or bV mall fur nrtna Za,..l
fnr tinnklpt and free Knm:il A1.li-.. I
Sterling Itemed v Co., Chicago; Montreal',
Can.: or New York. , rt .
This Is the CASCARET th.
let. Every tablet of the only
genuine Cascarets bears the
magic letters "C c c." Look
at the tablet befoie you buy,
&tt
kr-f
and beware of frauds, Imita-
tions and substitutes.
" ' came the chaplain took a good supply
The editors of Ainslee's Magazine ; of reading matter from his cabin, and
(New York) offer in the April number was on nand witll it as tne i,reakfast,
lour readable articles on matters near j table was cleared off and the officers ,
to the heart of the American people, i were getting ready to plav cards as
In "The Islands of the Pacific," by i sualt stepping to the head of the'
Arthur I. Street, we have a kaleido- table, he said, good naturedly: 'Gen-t-topic
view of that remote world into tlemen, tracts are trumps today, and
hich expansion has led us. "Net Re
suits in Alaska," by Warren Cheney,
is a sane summary of chances and con
ditions in the gold fields, with the con
clusion that, gold-mining is a cold
blooded business proposition. 1 ne in-
cian Congress," by Wade Mountfortt,
is a pathetic picture of the last days
of a dying regime. "Our Congressiona'
President" by George Leland Hunter,
is an article worth much considera-
tion.
I r-''--'
Old as the Dills
are the paius and aches of
RBEUMATISU
NEURALGIA
SCIATICA
!
Sure as tases is the cure of
them by
St Jacobs Oil
aTJC-Za a-J
aNvaatss tasKffc
.B '
A STATE STREET SCENE
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Hill WM, Ihhh
awPJMHFj IIS!
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Bwl 9 X
Q"pp Laxative Bromo-Quinine which is advertised on the large banner over
State Street, Chicago, as represented above, is the only exclusive cold prescription
sold by every druggist in the United States, Canada and in England. This is the sig
nature (cQjdt of the inventor and plainly appears on every box of the genuine
article. It is sold for 25c a box, and all druggists refund the money if it fails tocurc.
PERUNA PROTECTS OUR HOMES.
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raaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaMaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaasmataaaaaaaaBaaa
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The Roberts Family, of Falls City, Neb., Are Healthy and Happy A Rare Sight in These Days. They
Say "We Think Peruna Is The Greatest Medicine On Earth."
No man Is better known in the State
of Nebraska than Mr. Carl T. Hoberts.
contractor and mason. A typical Am
ericanactive, shrewd and full of busi
ness sagacity. He is not only a pro
vider for his family, but a protector.
In a recent letter to Dr. Hartman he
writes among other things, as follows:
"Our boy, James, had the membra
nous croup and repeated attacks of
lung fever. Our boy, Charlie, was also
subject to attacks of pneumonia and
pleurisy. Our third boy, John, was
subject to fever and ague (malarial)
and liver trouble. Your remedy, pe
runa, cured my boys entirely, and
now I have three of the healthiest
boys in the State of Nebraska, which
I attribute to your medicine. My wife
had a stomach trouble which Peruna
also cured. Altogether for my whole
family we have used nineteen bottles
of Peruna, and have thus saved $500
in doctors' bills. I am a contractor
and mason by trade, and am known all
over Nebraska. I hare bad a stomach
trouble, which has been greatly re
lieved by your remedy, Peruna, for
which I am still taking it We think
For starching fine linen use Magnetic
Starch.
No berries or small fruits are grown
in the Philippines.
Your clothes will not crack if you
use Magnetic Starch.
' A Game With Tracts add Trump.
I An army officer tells this story: "One
- .....,.. -..., ' i
OI m cnapiam menus was on an army
' transport, going South with officers
and men from various regiments. The "
' i..s . r ... .u n..
U-IS i.iue uan. in me :um
I ftom morning to night. When Sunday
it's my deal! 'All right, chaplain.
the officers responded, 'give us a hand.
The books and prayers were given out.
No cards were played that day. The
chaplain had his opportunity unhind-
' ered, because he showed tact
in his
way of presenting his case."
Mrs. Eldridge of Colorado in telling
j the New York women bow women vote
in ber state, says that Governor Waite,
! of "bloody bridles" fame, gave them '
suffrage and their first efforts were di- '
' rected to displacing him. Mrs. Eld
ridge thinks that if all women wanted
suffrage they would get it, but she does
not believe that as yet it would be
'expedient in New York.
An Effrctlte Busniau Method.
The Russian government has a man
1 ner peculiarly its own in the meeting
1 of emergencies. At present it is deal- J
, ing witn the overproduction of medical ,
' practitioners. The minister of educa
I tion has simply issued a decree re
i stricting to a fixed number the admis
tsion of first year students by the sev
eral medical faculties throughout the
empire. The University of Moscow is
limited to 230. Kief to 200. Charkow to
173, Dorpat to 150, Tomsk to 120, and
i Kasan and Warsaw to 100. Thus the
total number of medical freshmen in
I the domains of the czar cannot exceed
, 1,095. This number does not. however,
include the students of the St. Pcters-
f burg Medico-Military academy, which
. is allowed 250 first year students.
In 1830 there were 71,000 tons of
.steel made in the whole world. In
llfcOS the United States alone made 9,
075,000. We are not sent into the world to do
anything into which we cannov put our
hearts.
Magnetic Starch Is tha very best
laundry starch : i the world.
ON A STORMY DAY.
it is the greatest medicine on earth."
C. T. Roberts, Falls City, Nebraska.
Hon. William Youngblood. Auditor
for the Interior, writes from Washing
ton. D. C to Dr.
m Hartman. Colura-
una, vn io, as ioi
lows: "I've often
beard of your
great medicine
and have persuad
ed my wife, who
has been much of
a sufferer from ca
tarrh, to try Peru
runa, and after
using one bottle
she has wonder
fully improved. It
has proved all you
have claimed for
it. and I take'
Hon. William
- Younsblood.
pleasure in recom
mending it to anyone who'is afflicted
with catarrh." Peruna has become, in
a multitude of households, absolutely
indispensable.
Mr. T. G. Walker, Carneiro, Kansas,
writes: "It is with pleasure that I re
ROOFING;
: The lieot Rfil Rni
Koofinc for le. it
I fti.ft.icaDsantln&ttti
! inclnif nd. Substitute for plnittrr. Ssmplr free.
THE FAT MANIUA CBFIWO C3 , CAMBi". W. J.
WANTED
Tro airframes oral; renerai
hoalicrs. Ibf.r nfiluwi or
tcir. nho ni.-uk- a IIO.MK-
ei r.Aiif iiii.M, on levithaii
SOLDIERS'
im) scro. on or to for
Jun! r. 1ST.;, no waiter
wln-llier Kl.S'Al. I'KUOF
was niarfo or not lwlilbuf
l.tml Warrnnia.
tMri-i3 ' unirjda
W K. .MO.SKM.
lux in.V. DonTar.
HOMESTEADS
Colorado-
IjABASTINK is the original
and only durable wall coating,
entirely different from all ...tl-somIne.-.
JJraily for use ir.
white or fourteen beautiful
tints by adding cold water.
AD1ES naturally prefer ALA
BAST1XK for .walls and ceil
ings, because It is pure, clan.
durable. Put tip In dry pow
dered form. In five-pound pack
ages, with full directions.
LL. kalsomlnes are cheap, tem
porary oreparations made from (
whiting, chalks, clays, etc..
and stuck on walls with e
caylntr animal glue. AL.ABAS- ,
TINK Is not a kalsomlne. '
EWARE of the dealer who
rays he can sell you the "samo
thing" a3 AL.ABAST1XE or
"something just as good." ir
Is either not posted cr Is try-
Ing to deceive you.
ND IN OFFERING something '
he has baugnt cheno and tries
to sell on ALABASTINE'S de
mands, he may not realize thrt
damage you will suffer by a
kalsoir.ino on your walla.
ENSTBLB dealers will net buy
a lawsuit. Dealers risk one by
eelllr.t; and consumers bv using
Infringement. Alabastine Co.
own right to mak wall coat
ing to mix with cold water.
II K INTEP.IOR WALLS of i
every church and school should I
be coated only with pur. dur-
able ALADASTINK. It safe
guards health. Hundreds of
tons used yearly for this work.
N BITING AI.ABASTINK.
customers should avoid get
tins' cheap kalsomlnes under
different names. Insi-it on
having our goods in packages
and properly labeled.
UISANCE of wall panor Is ob
viated bv ALAHASTINE. It
can be used on plastered wa'.ls.
wood ceilings, brlk or can
vas. A child can brush It on.
It does not rub or scale ofr.
STAnLTSTT""!T3 In favor. Shun i
all imitations- Ak paint ceai
er cr druggist for tint card.
Write us for Interesting book
let, free. ALABASTINE CO.,
Grand Hanids, Mich.
DO YOU
SPECULATE?
J.
Brijfessga
s
port that I am better than I have been
for many years. I believe Peruna Is
without a doubt the best medicine that
ever was" used in a family. It has
cured my nervousness, with which I
had been afflicted for a great number
of years."
It is a fact of ever-increasing aston
ishment that so many otherwise sen
sible and provident people will, for
the neglect of so simple a precaution
as to have a bottle of Peruna at hand,
bring upon themselves the needless
suffering and foolish expense that a
practitioner of medicine is forced to
witness every day.
As soon as the value of Peruna ia
fully appreciated by every household,
both as a preventive and cure of thesa
affections, tens of thousands of lives
will be saved, and hundreds of thou
sands of chronic, lingering cases of
disease prevented. Peruna is the
household safeguard.
A complete work on chronic catarrh
sent free to any address by The Peru
na Medicine Company, Columbus,
Ohio.
Tfce Wiaftr
K tfte A$e
NoleirMfNCteUaf
It Stiffens the Goods
It Whitens the Goods
It polishes the Goods
It makes alt garments fresh and crisp
when first bought uer.
Try a Sample Packazd
You'll like It If you try it.
You'll buv it if you try it.
You'll ube It If you try It.
Try If.
Sold by all Grocra,
Miiiiiiiiniiiiimii
FOR 14 CENTS!
Wo wish to gain thu year S&inro '
Ecrctutomer. and hencooaVr I
lPk Kari't EnurralJCnenmbrIto i
I r. uitv lianiitn Ht. iivt i
! LAi;ro3e Market LKOO.15c
Diraworrry ateiom,
ItUerKadMt.
Kirly Ripe Cabbage,
K&rlv Itinnpr Oriifin.
S " Brilliant Flower Secda,
VTarth ai.eo, Tr 14 eeata.
Above 10 Pkea. worth $1.00. w wilt I
tain joa iree, wireiner witti oar
arca-.aiaini- leinn
inn j
all about
SAtna $ muiicm wui pit am ,
upon receipt of thia nstire
14C. i
a'.ainp. We intita jnnrtrada. aad
knowwhenyoa oner try Hmlzer'a
reela you will aerrrdo without. I
est earlmtTomato Giant on earth. .
IONS A. SaLZza BSCB CO.. i raotwc. win.
w rnzraon naizrr-a imm-nr.
I
W. L. DOUGLAS
S3 &3.5Q SHOES Jjn i og
worth S4 to S6 compared ,
wun outer manes.
IadorBcd br over
l.ooe,oo wearers, i
Te genuine haveW. L
PougUs' name and price I
stamped on bottom. Take (
no substitute claimed to be
a3 (rood. Your dealer
should keep thm if .
not, we wili send a pair'
on receipt of price and !:.
extra for carriase. State kind of leather.
iUe, and width, plain or cap toe. Cat. free.
caarram " - uuuauu anut tu, orocJttoo, Mass.
DR. SETH ARNOLD'S
has stood the test of M years
and is still the ltet Cough
Jtemedy Sold. Cures when
other remedies fall. T'lstes
good: children like It. Sold
by all drudsts :S rents.
COUGH
KILLER
una m ytnciuw CBjaVP
om NC JOT
momm
13
aT yW wBwBwBn
ft lwtltUHfl
'.T3UKIwBwBYbw I
KUKBwM 1 '
inSawli
S Hi-am 4.
ZuSmSRv
TTiaTl
Jit X
art a
3 VI
n1
ioc vafe
rasT
If 'prriiTati'VNvrfuUy. We can make toii tn ttiemtnthii.orplntrr.i
i n your mony than any bank will piy cmi n a vc ar will hnv I.Mrt
Iii-Iic' of nlieat rrn ami iiur.-ln tlieam2 c-nt". S-nrt furuur Irjv't
on speculation. IT IS KKI-X. Alt ppifll (nraMe on detn-inl.
K. COMSTOCK ft CO.,
Room 23, "Traders' Bldg., Chicago.
7.
li
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t
"
iV
i
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