The Columbus journal. (Columbus, Neb.) 1874-1911, February 27, 1901, Image 4
' fjaffwaWBt-rBSjsMWyMsiB HBBWW'W khehis bct-;? ffyT,, qfg'fCBHg-y.,; v, t W r" 1 - . - . r- te It tSfar ; i-j ? i. -. p'. SB y; THANKFUL TOMrs. PINKHAM Letters Proving Positively that there is No Medicine for Woman's Ills Equal to Lydia E. Pinkham's ' Vegetable Compound. H flnlEBv bIIkV bbbbbbb bbbbbbi f& awUr LH MR5. ANNIE (ALL LCTTEBK ABE rCBUnHXD BT SPECIAL PERJUSM05.) "I cannot say enough in regard to Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. . It has done mc more good than all the doctors. I have been troubled with female weakness in its worst form for about ten years. I had leucorrhoea and was so weak that I could not do my housework. I also had falling of the womb and inflammation of the womb and ovaries, " and at menstrual periods I suffered terribly. At times my back would ache . Tery hard. I could not lift anything or do any heavy work ; was not able to stand on my feet long at a time. My husband spent hundreds of dollars for doctors but they did me no good. My husband's sister wrote what the Vege-,- table Compound had done for her, and wanted me to try it, but I did not then think it would do r e any good. After a time, I concluded to try it, and I can truly say it docs all that is claimed for it. Ten bottles of the Vegetable Com and seven packages of Sanative Wash have made a new woman of me, I have had no womb trouble since taking the fifth bottle. I weigh more than I have in years; can do all my own housework, sleep well, have a good appetite, and now feel that life is worth living. I owe all to Lydia E. Pinkham's Teg " etable Compound. 1 feci that it has saved my life and would not be with . " oat it for anything. I am always glad to recommend it to all my sex, for I know if they will follow Mrs. Pinkham's directions, they will be cured." Gratefully yours, Mns. A.nnie Tuosirsox, South Hot Springs, Ark. CHANGE OF LIFE. I was taken sick five years ago with The Grippe,' and 'had a relapse and was given up by the doctor and my . friends. Change of Life began to work on me. I .flowed very badly - until a year ago, then my stomach . and lungs got so bad, I suffered terribly ; the blood went up in my lungs and stomach, and I vomited it up. I could not eat bcareely anything. I cannot tell what I suffered with my head. My hus band got me a bottle of Lydia El Pinlc- ham?s Vegetable Compound, and before I had taken half of it I began to im prove.and to-day I am another woman. : Mrs. Pinkham's medicine has saved my life. I cannot praise it enough." M. A. Dexsox, Millport, N.Y. H5000 REWARD. We have deposited wiiicii mil ue pal J to any person vno can ana mat tne above testimonial letters are not genuine, or aero published before obtaining the writer's special per- mission. W. L. DOUGLAS $3 & $3.50 SHOES ufX The real worth of W. I- DongiM S3.00 and HSJM hoes compared with other makes is $4.00 to S5.00. Oar S4.00 Gilt Edge Line cannot be equalled at any price. We make and sell more :;.0:i and tfXSO shorn than any other two man ufacturers to tho United State. XHi: KCAWS more W. L. Donslu as and S3JM shoes are coJ4 . thuanyothermakeiahccautcT'It i:v AKKTHE BKST. Tour dealer knoaidkrtptlirin; vc sivi one dealer rxclunrc tale In each Mb. Take no Mtlntitut! lnnist nn having W. I Doujriae ihnt-iwit.'i tianieand price tiamped on bjttnm. If your dealer will not art them fr jron, end direct ti factory. cncltinR price and JSc extra lor carriacr. Plate kind of Irathcr. tirr. ud width. I lim or cap toe. Iter hoe will reeh you anywlicre. I'.'ntc or catalogue rhorime en? Spring ttvltt. We mat) Ftaat Color W. .. Bowrfiia Mhoe Cih, RyclcU la aM ear abec. ISrocktoa, Mas. I FREE f WINCHESTER ( n . 2 SHOTGUNS Our 1 60 page g and illustrated cata-f FACTORY LOADED SHOTGUN SHELLS loiniC inn iog Lomutnat.on tt flu fnn Ml t4t-i1trt11 WINCHESTER REPEATING ARMS d. iSo WiNaitsrrK Ave., New 1!acn, Corsst. nDADCVNEW DISCOVERY: sires ayaV rjuiclcrelierandcurCKTroTvt eaaeg. Book of testimonials an'i m inTv treatment raat. E.B.M.tWt.VSSONSli.'tK. aiUtttia. For To;i Trice ship 1 nr ti A M K AXB t O V . T K V To HtaJiiiartfr i. W. Irkea A t'ompaHy. Batter, Ecpf. Veal. Hides nud Knr-. lViiatoes. Oulous In Carioail Lot-. Oaaaha. Nebraska. MMim eat asioked ia a few hours with KMUSERS' LIQUID EXTRACT OF SMOKE. Had from hickory wood, litres fine flaror. Cleanest, cheapest : free from insects. Send for areolar, e. Jtaui bek jikvu, KUtsa. ra. OKLAHOMA Offers Free Heaes to 50.000 people on3,0Q0.- IVJ seres of lands. soon to open to settlement. Opportunity of a lifetime. THE KIOWA CHIEF, devoted to infor mation about these lands, will contain procla mation fixing date of opening. One ear (1.00: Cxnos.. 60 cents; S cents per copv. H0R6AN'S MANUAL, (Complete Settler's Uiade) with sec tional map, 81.00. MANUAL. MA? and CHIEF. 6 mos. tl.30. For sale by Book and News Dealers. ( BrCK T. ttORGAN. Perry, 0. T. - WINTER TOURIST KATES. SPECIAL Tours "to Tlorida," Key West, . Cuba. Bermuda, Old Mexico. ' and the Mediterranean and Orient. HALF Bates for the round trip to many points south on sale first and third Tuesday each month. BATES To --Hot Springs. Ark., the fa- sojm prater resort of America. ' oh sale every -day in the year. mw -as aala to all the srlatsr t th soatk. trood returning uatU JasMtM; JM. 'Wee rates, descriptive mat- aW;swSMsMl aad an otaer tnroramaaesi. all at C. A . R. B. City Ticlcet OSsw. MS Faraata at. (Paxton Hotel HARRY E. MOORES, -J - . T. A. OllliR, Nw. f . . j aWvS Hf A,Vi WILL BAKE TCtJ RIOV H WjifJAf? ThlaisadarinstateiBent,tatSaI. U HMJlMZMr'sseeds bear tt oat evrrytUaa Q flO Comblnaton Oem. IM39I Oreatestcomc'nearUi.WiIiposlUTdyn NBA WTobrttonlxe corn growlay. rkwk STflaiR JMillton Dollar Ora. j&fjE LIMF' TV X flmlial aurrerottbeaRe, BH UngflS tstoasof hayperaero. First ISMJ fgwgh crepslx weeks after tawmmtfw QjPGSvCX Catalocae tells. CVr-BrlC S91 HcSTAMK TMsB BntS aiakKoncE ad arrBMaM Mla4K aad caiakis, 10 GraU JaVJ MaaJ X SaaBiiawJacladuuraLoa,a!a9 BaaaaBaaaaBvtiBaal ti aMu0ttabuOata,IBfin jit ktrJ4 iwa.) Ript. UafawMsa5Hl rjsar!ma4iar)ftaoal.tc.WorthtMLttLLISaw, Q THOMPSON PROFUSE PERIODS. taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound about 3 months ago, and cannot express the won derf ul good it has done mc. Men struations were so proiuse us vo leave il!iiV me very weak for V3L.Q.H0Q6i some time alter. Was also troubled with leucorrhoea, tired feeling, bearing down sensation, pain across the back and thighs. I felt as though there was a heavy weight in my stomach all the time. I have taken two bottles of the medi cine, and now have better health than. I have had for four years." Mrs. Lizzie Dickson Hodge, Avalon, Ohio. with the National City Bank of Lynn. $5000, LYDIA E. riNKUAM MEDICINE CC uir. w. Factory loaded shotgun shells, "NEW RIVAL,' LEADER,Mand "REPEATER." A trial will prove their superiority. ia the tela or Mi flrtn.. Ask your grocer .for DEFIANCE STARCH, the onl;. 1C or. package for 10 cents. All other 10-cent starch con tains only 12 oz. Satisfaction guaran teed or money refunded. Great motives cause great efforts and great efforts "result in great hap piness. I Co not believe Piso's Cure for Consumption has an equal for couch s and colds. John F Botkr, Trinity Springs. Ind., Feb. 15, 1900. Unless the whole mind is given to a. task it cannot be accomplished well. Lame back makes a young man feel old. Wizard Oil makes an old man feel young. See your druggist. In the game of life many a trick is taken with the trump of fame. $148 will buy new Upright piano on easy payments. Write for catalogues. Schmollcr & Mueller, 1313 Farnam street. Omaha. ivSsSS J. El! SH BR H.L1A M. WflJLOttr Wnx Keep You Dry G9TOflCa Hoje WotL Take No Susmurc . Faxc Catalogue, Smowhsb Full Lae or Cmmckts and Mats. A.J.TOWErlCo. BasTOM. Mass. IN 3 OR 4 YEARS MiggEKUEICElSSBRED It you take up your homes in Western Can ada, the land of plenty. Illustrated pamphlets, giving experiences of (aimers who here be ecaae wealthy ia grow ing wheat, reports of dele? ate, etc. and fun nuormuoa as to reduce railway rates caa be aad on- application to the Strpertntetd-nt of fiBaattxatioa. Departmeat or Xnterror. ouavs. OgadajtoW V. Bennett. SOI X V. Ufa mmmmsm BBaaaaaHBaaaataV' ?! affayjddfi' L Hiil I fill fji NH DeUchts af West aTMat. There's glory galore in buttons aad braid, In weapons as bright as dawn; There's bursting pride in a grand pa rade When the lasses are on the lawn, When the lasses are on the lawn, ' my boys, Our glittering selves to scan; But supremest joy of West Point Joys Is licking a fourth-class man, Is pounding a fourth-class man,. No pleasure so rife In academy life As thrashing a fourth-class man! There's pleasure in playing the bully and boss Whenever you're not found out. In stuffing a guy with tabasco sauce And roasting his "innards" out, And roasting his "innards" out, my boys. As stinging tabasco can, t But the sport, like "eagling," quickly cloys In hazing a fourth-class man, In feasing the fourth-class man; Adversity scars That infant of Mars, The Ill-fated fourth-class man. He hasn't got even a Chinaman's chance To put up a decent scrap; Once the big, trained bruiser makes . him dance His blood is on copious tap. His blood is on copious tap, my boys. And such Is our noble 2an. To take his physic and make no noise Is the lot of the fourth-class man. Unfortunate fourth-class man; We see him keel o'er In a pool of his gore. And we laugh at the fourth-class man. P. G. S. in Chicago Journal. Who Woa the Bevalatlea? What class of people It was who fought and won the war of the revo lution in 1776 is constantly obscured by the glamour which time and pa triotism has thrown over the events of that stirring time, but Barrett Wen dell, professor of English in Harvard university, has done something to clear up the point in his newly pub lished "History of American Litera ture." He makes it perfectly plain that It was not the ruling class nor the commercial class of colonial days which set it in motion and carried the day, but rather the plain, homely, com mon folk, who, In order to free them selves from the yoke of Britain, fought and bled and went cold and hungry, themselves and their children, to leave the priceless heritage of freedom be hind them. To gain some adequate conception of what Boston was under the king, it will be needful to go to some British colonial town of the same size today. The closeness of the com parison is shown by an anecdote which MV. Wendell relates, to the effect that a man of position and rank in one of the British colonies was recently in the room of the Boston Museum of Fine Arts, which is devoted to the portraits of Boston merchants and similar worthies, painted by Copley in the years just preceding 177S. The Briton had been puzzled by the United States, but when he looked about at these men and women of the older American day his face lighted with comprehension and he said, laughingly: "Why, that's just the kind of people we are." Now, the notable thing about America is ' that the revolution practically extermi nated that class in the country. Mr. Wendell's testimony to this effect is unimpeachable. "The revolution," he says, "destroyed the fortunes and the social leadership of this class. To find such people again in America, we must probably wait until after the civil war." New Brunswick, Nova Scotia and Ontario are populated largely to day with the descendants of these ex iles, who as united empire loyalists were driven out of the territories of the United States for their adherenca J to King George. They were, most part, the "best people" for the of that day, the gentry in both city and coun try, the women who entertained and the men who provided the means for such luxury as the world could then afford, the components of polite soci ety, those from whom aristocratic de scent could be taken with proper pride. Who, then, did win the revolution? Here Mr. Wendell is again explicit. He says, "The people who had been so profoundly stirred by this great awak ening were the same who, in 1776, de clared themselves independent of the mother country." This "great awak ening" was the Whitefield revival, run ning the whole length of the country, from Georgia to New England, through the years between 1738 and 1745. "The great awakening testifies to one lasting fact a far-reaching spontaneity and enthusiasm among the humble classes of America," he says again. This is one point which is always to be kept in mind "the humble classes" of America, not the educated classes, nor the best people, nor the commercial nor financial interests made this coun try free and gave it self-government The honor of being descended from revolutionary stock in the United States is the honor of tracing one's an cestry among these same "humble classes, a fact which tends to rational ize all American pride of birth. Chi cago News. Gen. Graaly as War Daviess. Scientific forecasts for a century must be regarded as merely vague sug gestions, especially in an age of such tremendous advances as have charac terized the nineteenth century. War in the twentieth century must to a greater extent than ever before make tributary the sciences of commerce and industry. The evolution of offensive military methods must invariably be in the direction of improved mechan ism which will be automatically oper ated. Improved means of observation, communication and transportation will surely follow, as indispensable to ef ficiency. The most notable advances will be: L Rapid-ire machine guns of considerably extended power and range and so constructed that the fire can be controlled and regulated automati cally with the greatest precision. 1. Devices wherewith high explosives caa be safely throws long distances, but so accurately delivered as to effectually i" i A shatter and destroy all objects adjacent to the point of its delivery. 3. Exten sive improvements in mechanical trac tion, suited to its efficient use in a rough country and capable of concen trating rapidly men and material. 4. Adaptations and improvements in elec trical devices which shall make sur prises impossible and largely increase the facilities for the collection and dif fusion of military intelligence. 5. The development of aerial navigation, which from its expense, difficulty and danger will first be utilized for war purposes rather than as a means of transportation. Such navigable meats will serve for observation and for the effective delivery of high explosives. The evolution of aerial navigation will proceed on three lines viz.: Balloons, flying machines and a combination of the two. The dirigible balloons in their constructive system will tend eventu ally to the use of very light metal, whereby sufficient strength of the en velope will be gained so as to safely permit great speed of travel and ability to withstand great gas pressure. The flying machine will be improved so that the carrying of dead weights say, perhaps half a ton can be done with ease and to moderate distances. This possibly will be the first system of acknowledged practicability. The combined method that of separate balloons, with attached chambers of which the Zeppelin airship is a type will be so developed that it can carry large weights for long distances, al though the landing of such an air-ship must necessarily be a problem of such difficulty and danger as to confine its use to war purposes. A. W. Greely in Chicago Record. Army Recruits la Plenty. Members of the staff of Gen. Elwell S. Otis scoff at the statements that the government will meet, with diffi culty in recruiting the army with the additional 35,000 men required under the reorganization bill, says the Chi cago News. Col. W. P. Hall, adjutant general of the department, said: "There are about 90 recruiting stations in the United States. From those sta tions our officers are enlisting on an average of 2,000 men a month. There has been no difficulty at any time in securing recruits. In fact, the trouble has been the other way, as many good men are turned away, the recruiting officer selecting the best from those calling on him. All that will be needed to secure the 35,000 men will be to increase the number of recruit ing stations. Then it must be consid ered that of the 24 volunteer regiments to be mustered out soon, thousands of the discharged veterans will re-enlist Some may not do it immediately, but after a few weeks' visit at home, they will take up the gun again. I suppose some inducement will be off ered those volunteers in the Philip pines to remain in the service. The inducement will probably be the travel pay which they are entitled to from the islands to this country. There are hundreds of country boys, making their board and $12 a month, who will be glad to take up service in the army, where they secure board, clothing, medical attendance, and at least 13 a month, and are not forced to work one-half as hard as they are on the farm. It is that class of men that are the. most desirable. The government wants none but the best men and it will not experience the least difficulty in securing them." Capt. L. P. Hunt, in charge of the recruiting office at 82 Madison street, has secured the con sent of the government to open a re cruiting office at Streator. liacola ea Gen. Baker. "When I was in Springfield, Abra ham Lincoln and Gen. Baker, who was killed at Leesburg, Va., during the civil war, made the race for the Whig nomi nation for congress," said a personal friend of Lincoln's recently. "Both were Whigs, and both were keen for the nomination. Both had a strong personal following and if both ran the Democrat would win in the district. So a primary election was necessary to settle the contest. Baken won. Both men were at Springfield when the news came. Lincoln was depressed. The crowd, to cheer him up, called on him for a speech. Getting up, he said: 'Gentlemen, I'd like to comply with 3'our request. Dut i can t make a speecn aow- I expected to receive the noml- 1 nation, but I failed. .If I had won I know Baker would have got up here and so charmed you with his eloquence as to make you believe you had done him a favor by nominating me. But I can't do it.' " Admires His Thirst. Three soldiers wearing the blue and yellow of the United States cavalry did a good turn the other day to a thinly clad, shivering "sandwich" man who was standing in front of Trinity church. The soldiers were making a hilarious way to South Ferry. Every block or so they stopped and took ob servations through their big black bot tle. The sandwich man's, teeth chat tered and he looked at the bottle greed ily. One of the soldiers noticed the mute appeal. "Have a drink, old party?" he said, passing the- bottle over. The sandwich man grabbed it in two purple hands and berore the cavalryman could stop him he had drank at least half a pint of cheap whisky. Then he wiped his lips on hi3 coat sleeve and returned the botte. The cavalryman's eyes bulged with wonder. "If I had a thirst like that," he said, "I'd never do another day's work." New York Mail and Express. Coamaalttss AU Old Soldiers. The senate military committee is made up of old soldiers. Senators Bate and Pettus fought in the Mexican war and in the confederate army also. Bate was a major general and Pettus a brigadier general. Cockrell was a brigadier general and Harris of Kan sas an adjutant general with Wilcox's brigade. On the Republican side Sen ator Hawley, chairman of the commit tee, was a brevet major general. Proc tor a colonel, Shoup a lieutenant and captain of scouts, Sewell a major gen eral, Warren a private and noncom missioner officer and. Burrows a major. Stat Departsseat of Ulster. Confederate Veteran associations of .Alabama are advocating the establish ment of a state department of aistvy, to preserve historical documents affect ing the state both in peace and in war. Other birds fight on the co-operative plan, but the eagle fights all bis battles alone. Watsriac Is the hygienic management of the horse it has been found that the beat results' from feeding follow where the animal u only allowed to drink prior to a meaL This u a subject that so far as we are aware has aot been -af-ficlently considered as regard, the management of hogs. The stomach of the pig is somewhat similar to that of the horse, so that It requires com paratively small amounts of food at frequent Intervals. Its capacity is but from one and one-half to two gallons and, like that of the horse, digestion of grain goes on therein rather than in the intestines, which in the pig are about 72 feet long, counting large and small Intestines together. It stands to reason that when the stomach con tains that amount of food which it can properly care for as regards digestion, it also contains the average supply of gastric juice necessary for the perfect digestion of the food so far as it is carried out in the stomach. If at this time of repletion, when digestion is going on, the hog Is allowed to drink all It cares to of water, we must con clude that loss Is entailed by this act. The water taken Into the stomach does not all stay there, even when the stom ach is empty. A large portion of it passes into the large intestines, so that water taken just after a hearty meal must of necessity wash part of the un digested food into the intestines, and here it cannot possibly be as fully di gested as it would have been In the stomach proper. We conclude, there fore, that there is a loss from feeding corn meal and at the same time allow ing the hogs to drink all the water they care to take. If this idea is cor rect, then the proper way to feed would be to give the hogs all the water they want before feeding and keep the water away from them after and hin der them from drinking water until the meal is digested. It Is a fact that hogs require much less water when fattening upon corn meal than they do when living upon other meals, such as rye or barley meal. If they require one part of water when eating corn meal they require one and three-quarters parts of water when eating barley meal. Although this Is the case, there Is no evidence to show that the water Is required during the meal, but every reason to show that It should be given before the meal so that It will not wash out the contents of the stomach and remove undlgesed food to the bowels. It would also seem likely that undue dilution of the gastric juices by water taken during a meal would tend to reduce the power they have in the digestion of food, and this would be an added argument against allowing hogs drinking water while feeding upon corn meal or other dry rations. When it Is remembered that the fattening period is a short one the shorter the better the feeder should do all in his power to have th hogs assimilate the largest possi ble proportion of the food nutrients of the meals consumed. The greatest gain from amount of food consumed Is made during the first four or five weeks of the fattening period and the greater the gain made during this period the better, for the reason that after that period additional gain can only be made by the feeding of a larger amount of food per hundred pounds of gain and the amount of food con sumed for each pound of gain increases fast the longer the pigs are fed. Our argument is, then, that during the first period of feeding upon corn meal more than at any other time, the hogs should not be allowed to drink water after or during the feeding time, as it will tend to waste food, lessen the amount of food nutrients assimilated, and so lessen the amount of gain made per hundred pounds of food consumed. It should be understood that this would apply equally to other foods than corn when fattening pigs. We hope that readers of the Farmers' Re view will put this idea into practice and if possible test the truth of the theory by applying it to two lota of hogs and weighing them at the end of given periods of feeding. Fertilisers for Orals. In the experiments of the Central Station at Wooster, Ohio, where wheat has been grown in rotation with corn, oats, clover and timothy, the average increase per acre from plain acid phos phate, applied at the rate of 160 pounds per acre to wheat and 80 pounds per acre to corn and oats, or a total of 320 pounds during the five years of a ro tation, has been 4.6 bushels of wheat, 3.6 bushels of corn, 7.2 bushels of oats and 500 pounds of hay, while from the same quantity of acid phosphate, car ried partly in acid phosphate and partly In tankage, but re-enforced by the nitrogen carried in the tankage and by a small addition of muriate of potash, the average increase has been 7.2 bushels of wheat, 8 bushels of corn, 8 bushels of oats and 1600 pounds of hay. The cost of the acid phosphate used on an acre in five years has been about $2.40, while that of the mixture of acid phosphate, tankage and muriate of potash, has been about $3.75; but the average Increase from this mixture has been so much greater than that from acid phosphate alone as to give a to tal net profit, over the cost of the fer tilizer, of about $12 per acre in five years for the mixed fertilizer against about $6 for the acid phosphate used alone. v?alaals from Sewer Farm. Superintendent Reynolds of the city sewer farm says that the crop of wal nuts on the city property will amount to about three carloads, and that there will be not more than seven or eight sacks of "seconds'" In all three. This is by far the largest crop the farm has ever produced and it also leads for quality. Mr. Reynolds sorted over 115 trays of the nuts and only found a tray and a half of second quality in the whole lot The nuts have been sold to the Ontario Packing Company for 8 cents a pound for firsts, 6 cents for seconds. Pasadena Star. The royal "baron" of beef furnished for the queen's table Christmas was a remarkably fine joint taken from a three-year-old bullock bred by her majesty. Tne joint weighed 100 pounds and was roasted before the kitchen lire at Windsor before it was sent to the Isle of Wight Before being served it was marked with the queen's mono gram. Wash the burners of your lamps, ir you will (and they should be washed often), but do not boil the wicks; get new ones. They are Inexpensive and much more safe and wholesome than the shrunken ones you get by putting them in boiling water. Briggs I hear you have been oper ating In Wall street Griggs A great mistake. I've been operated upon. Harper's Bazar. Vegetables and fruits are to be used IiBimk Binau7 i utst season OI lUt year in which they naturally mature. I The aradeat aoclety bello tries to make her waist as little as possible. FITST ! sfrCsrwi. ffoettortaarrosssMsafls east ssr'a saw ot Br. KUat's Qifat Xenre Kcetorar. Bme for FBUCK . trial bottl and traarba, laavLH.aUUdsaiarchSt.FaUaJteK.r Don't dress to show. The thinnest soap bubbles wear the grandest col ors. Try Orala-Ot Try Grata-OI Ask your Grocer to-day to show yoa a vtwkagw of GRAIN-O. the new food drink that takes the place of coffee. The children may drink it without injury as well as the adult. AU who try it, like it GRAIN-O has that rich seal brown of Mocha or Java, bnt It is made from pore grain?, and the most delicate stomach receives it without dis tress. V the price of coffee. 15cand8Scta perpsnksge. Sold by all grocers. The fashionable boarding house ta ble should show less gilding and more carving. The stomach has to work hard, grinding the food we crowd into it. Make its work easy by che wins Beeman's Pepsin Gum. Ambition is the road that leads to fame, but you can't travel over it on a pass. TO CUKE A COLO IN ONE DAT. Take Laxative Bbomo Qcimse Tablets. An drutTRists refund the money it it fails to core. . W. Grove's signature is on the box 25c The average baby has no earthly use for anything he can't put in his mouth. Ask your grocer for DEFIANCE STARCH, the only 16 oz. package for 10 cents. All other 10-cent starch con tains only 12 oz. Satisfaction guaran teed or money refunded. Pride Is the fog that surrounds in significance. Carter's lak has the largest sale of any Ink in the world, be cause it is the best ic!t that can be made. A school teacher says he whips his pupils to make them smart. PUTNAM FADELESS DYES are fast to sunlight, washing and rubbing. The history of mankind is an im mense volume of errors. Neglect yoor hair and you lose it. IUkkeb's Ham BaUAM renews the growth and color. Huiosscosxs. the best care for coras. lScts. Who knows the secret of applica tion will acquire the means of suc cess. . Catssrh Caaaot Be Cared with LOCAL. APPLICATIONS, as they cannot reach the seat of the disease. Catarrh Is a blood or constitutional disease, and in order to cure it you must take Internal remedies. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts directly on tho blood and mucous surfaces. Hall's Catarrh Cure is not a quack medicine. It was prescribed by one of the best physicians in this country for years, and is a regular pre scription. It is composed of the best tonics known, combined with the best blood puriners. acting directly on the mucous surfaces. The perfect combination of the two ingredients is what produces such wonderful results in curing Catarrh. Send for testimonials, free. P. J. CHENEY & CO.. Props., Toledo, a Sold by druggists, price 75c. Ball's Family Pills arc the best Some men are bigamists, but one wife is more than the average man can manage. Sufferers from siek headaches are not users of Garfield Tea, for this HERB TEA is a positive cure for sick headaches, constipation and liver dis orders. The front parlor is the most popu lar of all court rooms. Ghosts may talk, but few people understand the dead languages. Ask your grocer for DEFIANCE STARCH, the only 16 or. package for 10 cents. All other 10-cent starch con tains only 12 oz. Satisfaction guaran teed or monev refunded. An Irish nolitician savs that half the lies told about him are not true. You can't get bread from a stone, but you can get money from a gold brick. We call our readers' attention to the advertisement of the Northwest ern Hide & Fur Co.. Minneapolis, Minn. This is an old reliable firm with a national reputation for origin ating and compiling information valu able to trappers and farmers on wild animals and their skins; they publish the best trapper's book ever printed. You can buy of them or ship them furs, hides, etc.. in perfect confidence. Mention our paper when writine them. The Diamond Match company re ports net earnings of $2,014,838 during 1900, a little more than 14 per cent on that company's 515,000,000 capital stock. 30 FEET OF BOWELS m v - issii aNcSBaa.. aaaaa ttS!H1WSjf:. iSarxjawiy JB a3Bn MvkUW TalE AZ.WaBKBr'lTaBBVY OAsTAX. t aoiihariiKmaat-plpowhteli con.ya thai food from ttaa threat totbotSomacIi; S. Cardiac end of fttoeiach: 3. Pyloric and of toaaaeh: . Duodenum: 8. Oall bladdar; ,. Small Intes ttnea; T.Cwonm: a. Tarmlform appendix: . ascendlna colon: aa Traasrarso colon; 11. DaaceiuUca' colon: 12. Biamold flaa ora; O. Rectos: IL Anca. The duodenum la oonttnnooa with toe mail IntasUnea. The email lnteaOne emptlaa Into tbm large) fatastiiie or colon at tho caKura. The arrowa ladleaM the direction which the contenu of the bowels raattakala aaeleg tarooch tke alimentary canal. nftcttiieto 10c. fcjCe HJCe ALL DRUGGISTS. (Ins. Alii! Is J"1 . traaMea. araesrfteltls, Wl I'IIKIb Bei i BmslbremtlieWelStoewrfjael UUliC " Hi? f0" UmM towels, real V Villa MOBtai. hrai Jaclae. lsjreawioat. plasties, flsas after emtos ' UxmMeVasJlew eeaBpIexfesi aaaaaa eaaszaaecnBBW aawaa wet aia aiaBaweaai aaataBva: BBBAwat B. WhesiVeBjwBieiwrclaalataatSi larlr y re CetOas; sick. CoBaitlBaitl kllle a re) people Ueaut all uer eUseases toe;etl.er. It Is a BBmrter fer the cfereaJe ailaaeate aa leas; years " that cease aflcrararda. wa aUs yoa, start laktes; OASCAKBTS ta-aay. far yaa will aever set well aa ae well all the Uaaeuui yajr ywfjbweto rlsht. Take ear aarrlce. start waaaa vaowuiBaa aeeaeaaje aieeaejcareorBBeauf WOMEN OF THE KNM AS TKM SliOl AtAMST CATAAtO, CCtrtltwUt, NK AM CATAMAL MSIASES. mmmmmi, 9sssssHeHkS9 rBssswiiSf - eKaataaaaJPsaafaaaaaaaMS W -, JPWTTW .RSbtcIbsssssEIsbsssSs. tBSSsRStslllE MM. BELVA A. LOCKWOOD, LATE CANDIDATE FOR THE PRESIDENCY Mrs. Belva Lockwood, the eminent barrister, ot Washington. D. C. is the only woman who has ever been a candidate for the Presidency of the United States. She is the best known woman In America. As the pioneer of her sex in the legal profession, she has gathered fame and fortune. In a letter to The Peruna Medicine Company, she says: " have asesf Permmm both tor myself aad my mother, Mrs. Hmammk J. Ac' -met, aswlm her 88th year, aad I nod it aa iavalusblc remedy forcoJd, catarrk. hay fever aad kiadred diseases; also a good tonic for feeble aad Bid people, fey those rma dowa, and with nerves unstrung. "Belva A. Lockwood. T- a BaaaaaaaaaaaaaSsBaaaaaT W HtT fi H n- Mrs. T. Peltou. Mrs. T. Pelton. 562 St. Anthony ave nue. St. Paul, Minn., writes: "Peruna has done wonders for me. It has cured my headache and palpita tion of the heart; has built up my whole system. I cheerfully recom mend Peruna to all sufferers afflicted with catarrh. My mother 13 never without Peruna. When one is tired and generally out of sorts, if Peruna Is taken it immediately removes that tired feeling." Peruna cures catajrh by removing the cause, inflamed mucous mem branes. Dr. Hartman, the compounder of Pe runa, once said, in a lecture to women: "A great number of women consult me every year. I often have occasion to say to these patients, 'I fear you have catarrh, madam.' They will gen erally reply, 'Oh, no, I never had ca tarrh. My nose is perfectly clear,, and IVBm . paT'V. aaBBBaBm. I ItwQJBaawwwwwwwwWkslawwwwwl I RSIWsIxVVwNBbbbbbbbB I H TrMNWylCTWBI" I n I TaB .-; mms n I ..Fffi? II iHr vebxci.es,..I are packed away in your insides and most be kept t, in order and doing business. "'' It's a longr way, with many turns and pitfalls to catch the refuse and clop; the channel if not most carefully cleaned out every day. When this tone; canal Is blockaded, look out for trouMe furred tongue, bad breath, bdehing of gases, yeltow spots, pimples and boils, headaches, spitting up of nod after eating an all-around disgusting nuisance. Violent calomel purges or griping salts are dan gerous to use for cleaning oat the Bowels. They force out the obstruction By causing -'violent spasms of the Bowels, But they leave the intestines ttfeak and even less able to keep up regular movements than Before, and make a larger dose necessary next time. Then you have the pill habit, which kills more people than the morphine and whiskey habits combined. The only safe, gentle but certain bowel cleansers are swee fragrant CASCARETS, because they don't force out the foecal matter with violence, but act as a tonic on the whole 30 feet of bowel wall, strengthen the muscles and restore healthy, natural action. Buy and try them I (Look out for imitations and substitutes or you can't get results. Cascarets are never sold in bulk. Look for the trade-mark, the long-tailed "Con the box.) You will find that in an entirely natural way your bowels will be promptly and permanently tower aas of MaiIa ff FAN and CTDAM. h.r TONIC GUARANTEED ctae tat that t BWetrtC - . M wmMnawaaaris m5mZ2PiSPm . .... .M .i a mi 5 & afleraataat ' aaapaw mmx wawaajsw Ban Bass at U. xa. Taae atatwle aw., Baeawa win attaheelate aw elWLIM BESSST CO., HXWUlS UNITED STATES .Bs9t!7 .swBmmmss-f sfUBaaaaBBBaaPr .V IW-tfi 5a mv breath is not bad. I am not troubled with coughing or spitting, or any o t h er disagree a b 1 e symptoms or catarrh.' But. my dear madam, you may have catarrh all the same. Catarrh is not always located in the head. You may have catarrh of the lungs, or stomach, or liv er, or kidneys, and especially you may have catarrh of the pelvic organs." Mrs. Julia C. Brows, or Pecatonica, Ills., -says: "I hare used Peruna in my home for the past four years and am thoroughly convinced that it is a reliable family rem edy." Julia a Brows. The doctor went on to say: "I have been preaching this doctrine for the last forty years, but there are a vast multitude of women who have never heard it yet. Catarrh may at tack any organ of the body. Women are especially liable to catarrh of the pelvic organs. There are one hundred cases of catarrh of tne pelvic organs to one of catarrh of the head. Most peo ple think, because they have not ca tarrh of the head, they have not ca tarrh at all. This is a great mistake, and is the cause of many cases of sick ness and death." If you do not derive prompt and satisfactory results lrom the use of Peruna, write at once to Dr. Hartman. giving a full statement of your case and he will be pleased to give you his valuable advice gratis. Address Dr. Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus. Ohio. Anyone Anywhere Our vehicles and harness are shipped to say point :n 'he United States on approval, aad for comparison with any other goods. We are willing to take chances on pleasing yoa. Are you willing to save money without tak ing any chances? OurSetttHtckeryVcMcfee are right in style, in quality and ia price. Write for our new catalogue and prices oa seventy-six (78) different styles ia vehicles snd large assortment of liarneas. Buy direct from us, and save all dealers comsaissioas and profits. We are manufacturers of the famous SpUt Hickory Vehicles. Oslo Carriage Masni actsrisf Csssfsay 5tatIcaE. COLUMBUS. OtMO. NEVER SOLD IN BULK. TOCtJKXtFlTe: ver ata whU. Thla I viai. tHflaatld w - '" - alately g ay. wel eMseSsV teaear aaaaet aaatter Tlra-lrssilew weaa v '' - I VABcam. """bBPSSSSB bMBbBBBBb. bbV WeteBBB7Z2 """'SBaWaW BbBWSxB bBBBbBbBBSB BSV J". aaTlgsie7awZ - - xeiawaaaiE.779 s&Esxs: VKnmMBBWBBBBBBBBBBL bCbbBsKSbbBBBbbb . JF . a t - " Ik1 ' I i -i R " h r, x : ?j" " . 'jJSs?,.: '-vT- J. a ' s-5t -v ;rr. 1-Ji-.1 , rst- - ,J' . . - - V3, rmmmx gggggfe .4 iZ---