The Columbus journal. (Columbus, Neb.) 1874-1911, May 29, 1901, Image 4

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ft GIFTED AND BEAUTIFUL GIRL
Threatened With Nervous Prostration,
PROMPTLY SAVED BY PE-RU-NA.
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MISS ROsFcULLEN, OFBUTTE, MONT.
Miss Rose Cullen, President Young Woman's Club, of Butte, Mont,
writes from 921 Galena street, as follows:
"Peruna has many Mends In Butte I cannot say too much In
praise of it While finishing school I became very nervous and
exhausted from over-study. I was weak and sick, and could neither
eat, sleep nor enjoy life. A couple of bottles of Peruna put new life
in me. I find that having It in the house and taking a dose off and
'on keeps me In fine health.
"A large number of my friends place Peruna at the head of all
medicines." Miss Rose Cullen.
How Penuuft Quickly Cskm Backache,
the Base of Womankind.
MRS. G. W. HEARD, Hempstead,
Texas, writes:
"We have moved recently, and I
must have lifted something that was
too heavy for me In straightening
things up, for I had such a backache
and could hardly stand on my feet at
all. Beside, I was so tired all the
time. My face was spotted and I was
very thin. I took one bottle of Pe
runa and was soon real well. When
I feel tired and all run down I take
Peruna and feel all right before I fin
ish one bottle. I know it is a won
derful medicine, and both myself and
husband praise Peruna.
"There has been a great deal of
sickness through this part of the coun
try, but, thanks to Peruna. which we
use freely, our own family has escaped
With almost no sickness at all.
"Could you but see our baby Ruby,
(to whom we gave Peruna for bowel
trouble), you would see from her ro
bust looks that you need no better ad
vertisement in this little town. She
.is so fat and rosy, is nearly five years
old now, and is a great believer in Pe
runa.' Mrs. G. W. Heard.
Given Up to Die All Doctor Falled-It
Proved to be Catarrh of Stomach
and Was Cared by Peruna.
W. A. Mitchell, dealer in general
merchandise, of Martin, Ga., writes:
"I wrote you some time ago con
cerning my wife's case. She had tried
cil of the best doctors, and we got to
C b n AK IsP formcaaeot
backache. Betvotunesi, sleepless
ness, weakness, lues of vitality. In
cipient kidney .bladder and urinary
disorder that can not be enred by
tho great kidney, liver and blood medicine SOc
At all Druggist. Write for free sample. Address
KIO-ME-OIDS. St. Louis. Mo.
SEND US YOUR NAME AND ADDRESS
and upon receipt of tame I wllfaend you a
proposition whereby joii will be Ulerally
paid for a few mfnutesof your time; co can
vassing, aa 1 hate nothing to sell. It cutti
yiu absolutely nothing. Write to-day.
W. C KLEINE.
3103 Fine Street, St. Louis, Mo.
MEN TO SELL CIGARS.
Liberal proposition: If von are out
of eoployment and mant a pron table steady situa
tion and will devote your time to our business
write us. HAVANA CIGAR COMPANY.
UcSota Bulidlac, St. Loots, Mo.
It afflicted with
ore ere, use
TirMMSM's Eye Watt?
IN 3 OR 4 YEARS
HHKreiBEICE ASSURED
If you take un votir
home in Western Can
ada.the land of plenty.
uiuM.rau.-u DamDniets.
Kirlng experiences of
runners who have be
i come weslthv in cms:.
ine wheat, resorts of
information as to reduced railway rates can be
had oa application to tho Superintendent of
Immigration. Department or Interior. Ottawa,
J"??! orJ v- Bennett, 801 New York
Life Bids., Omaha. Neb.
oeifvau. nj. und run
A Moat la California.
Here is an estimate of the cost of a
trip to, and a month's stay in, Califor
nia at the time of the Epworth League
meeting in San Francisco, in .July:
Round-trip ticket $43.00
. Berth In tourist sleeper (both
ways) 10.00
Meals en route S.00
, Four weeks' board and lodging in
San Francisco ao.ft)
Sundries Excursions, street cars,
laundry, etc. 15.0J
. . $105.00
The figures are. based on beginning
the trip at Omaha, but they are ap
proximately correct from other Bur
lington Route Stations west of the
Missouri river.
If you wish to return by way of
Portland, Seattle, Tacoma, Helena, or
Butte and Billings, it will cost 9 addi
tional. Beautifully illustrated folder, giving
full information about San Francisco
and the best way to reach it, will be
sailed on request
J. FRANCIS,
General Passenger Agent,
Omaha, Neb.
Ask your, grocer for DEFIANCE
STARCH, the only 16 oz. package for
10 ceats. All other 10-cent starch con
tains oaly 12 oz. Satisfaction guaran
teed or aoney refunded.
Mvate Wellies; Card.
Frrrmte Mailing Card with colored
Views of faery om the Chicago, Mil
.waajr.ee St Paul Railway sent on
receipt of tea (10) cents In stamps.
Address F. A. Miller. General Passen
jatr Ageat, Chicago. m.
Muftiseaests
This rsfcc
Kisely
W.N.U. OMAHA
mr fftfUsa t Itoafswat of Or. O.VH
B Vkrlps Brown's Great Remedy for fl
y Fta.Eptlepiy and all KetroasDlsusrs. Address
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where we thought all they did was
against her. She weighed about 190
pounds when she was in good health.
When she commenced with our family
physician in April, 1898, she weighed
about 130, but kept going down all the
time. She went to Atlanta, Ga., and
took treatment, but it did her no good.
Then she went to Harmony Grove, Ga.,
and took treatment from the best phy
sician there for three months. She
kept going down under his treatment.
although he was considered the best
physician in the county. She went
down from 130 pounds to 63, and we
saw she could not live long. She was
a skeleton. We consulted an old phy
sician who told her to use Peruna. Sho
gradually improved and got stronger.
She has gained 38 pounds since she
has taken Peruna, and Is gaining ev
ery day, and docs her own housework.
"She was well known when she was
so low, and now everybody wants to
know what cured her. She had indiges
tion and catarrh of the stomach. It is
as good for children as for grown peo
ple. We haven't had to have a doctor
for one of our children since 1898."
W. A. Mitchell.
If you do not derive prompt and sat
isfactory results from the use of Peru
na, write at once to Dr. Hartman, giv
ing a full statement of your case and
he will be pleased to give you his val
uable advice gratis.
Address Dr. Hartman, President of
The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, O.
If there is one thing that the aver
age American is proud of it is the
American girl. "The National Maga
zine," true to its intensified interest
in affairs American, is publishing a
series of portraits on covers, showing
the distinctive type of American girls.
These portraits have a winsome at
tractiveness on the news stands,
where the "National" stanJs out clear
and distinctive in its clear-cut and
aggressive field. The magazine for
May lias the usual crisp way of com
prehending the current topics touch
ing all phases of human interest. 91
Bedford street, Boston, Mass.
Probably the most difficult ascent is
getting up a subscription.
HOT FOR OKI.ATI03IA!
Kew land soon to open. Be ready! Morgan's Manual.
mheupp.einrntcnnuininffproclnmatlon.inapsboirlnr
allotment. CVranty seats, etc.. . Supplement A Map.
Kc agents Wanted. DICKT.aoRGAS.rerry.ax.
A flat in the ninth story of an apart
ment' house is a place intended for high
livers.
South CaStota Farms
Is the title of an illustrated booklet
just Issued by the Chicago, Milwaukee
& St. Paul Railway, descriptive of the
country between Aberdeen and tho
Missouri River, a section heretofore
unprovided with railway facilities, but
which is now reached by a new line of
the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul
Railway. Everyone contemplating a
change of location will be interested
In the information contained in it, and
a copy may be had by sending a two
cent stamp to F. A. Miller, General
Passenger Agent, Chicago, 111.
The wisdom of today is not infre
quently the result of yesterday's mis
fortune. 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.
When a soldier becomes insane there
is something wrong at headquarters.
What Io the Children Drlakr
Don't give them tea or coffee. Have yoa
tried tee new food drink called GKAIN-Ot
It is delicious and nourishing, and takes tee
place of coffee. The more Grain-O you give
the children the more health yoa distribute
through their systems. Grain-O is made of
pure grains, and when properly prepared
tastes like the choice grades of coffee, but
corts about as much. AU grooers sell it.
16caad25&
Iots of men know how to cure hams,
but are unable to pro-cure them.
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Tied Up
When the mascler. feel drawn aad
tied up aad the flesh tender, that
tension is
ft
a
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and
Stiffoess
frost cold or over exercise. It
lasts bat a short taste after
St Jacobs Oil
is applied. The care
is prompt and sure.
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FAEM AND GARDEN.
MATTERS OP INTEREST TO
AGRICULTURISTS.
fesae tjp-to-Pat Hints Abont Celt!
tSea of tbe Eoll aad Yields Thereof
Horticulture, lltlcaltar and Clerical.
11
The Sand Plana.
In a book written by Professor
Waugh, en plum culture, he prints a
tetter received by him from D. M.
Adams, of Sumner county, Kansas, on
the sand plum. We believe it will be
interesting to our readers and "so re
produce it here:
"This plum grows wild in this coun
try along the Arkansas river. The
best patch of wild ones I have seen
was on the bank of the Arkansas 'at
the mouth of Slate Creek, a few miles
above Gueda Springs. There was
about forty acres in the patch that had
been left in its natural state. The
ground looked like a barren sand
bank. There was no grass or weeds
or ether shrubbery, except a few wild
grape vines. It was a hot day in
August. The sand was so hot that the
boys could not walk over it in their
bare feet The bushes grew down to
high water mark in the river. Most of
the hills were about ten feet above
the level of the river. The person that
owned the land sold the fruit and let
us pick it They watched and had it
picked clean as they went It was
about the middle of August They had
been picking for a month and thought
there would be plums there for- an
other month. The bushes were from
three to six feet high. The plums were
brown, the size of a May cherry, the
size of a Damson plum. Some were
a bright scarlet, the color of a cherry;
others were a bright yellow or amber
color. Where they had not been pick-
i tho htishpfl were bending to the
ground with their load of fruit The
fruit was so thick as almost to hide
the leaves. It was the grandest sight
in the fruit line that I ever saw. They
looked like a large flower garden at a
short distance. .We cultivate them in
our yards and gardens. All you have
to do is to set out a few bushes. Soon
they will spread until they make a
thicket that one cannot walk through.
When they are in bloom they look like
a bank of snow. They begin to ripen
at about the same time as wheat, and
continue to ripen for six weeks to two
months. They do not all ripen en the
same bush at once. There will be
ripe ones and others perfectly green
on the same limb at the same time.
They are one of the best fruits for
cooking that grow. We have a patch
of four or five square rods. It gives us
all we want while they are going, and
then we have a supply for canning.
Here is one ot the most valuable
fruits. Some of the small-sized plums
have a bitter taste, still are very juicy
and acid. I do not know how they
will succeed further north. Since I
have been here I have sent several lots
of seeds and roots to different parties
in different states, but have never re
ceived reports from any of them. I
sent a lot of seed to a nurseryman in
Indiana. He advertised them in his
catalogue as Kansas dwarf plums."
Is the Rubin a Friend or Foe?
An Illinois professor, who has made
a study of birds and bird-life, says:
Gardeners have long looked on the
robin with suspicion; Its abundance,
its size, its boldness in entering our
gardens and orchards, render him quite
a factor for the weal or woe of the
fruit grower; so it has received an un
usual share of attention from Inves
tigators. Even when the snows of
winter linger late the robins come at
their appointed time and content them
selves with last year's sumach or wild
grapes. Once the lawns are clear they
descend to them and subsist chiefly
on fly larvae, of hese 175 have been
counted in a single stomach. As the
season advances the diet is more var
ied, larvae of many kinds, beetles,
grasshoppers and other ground In
sects receiving attention. During
March twenty per cent of their food
is cutworms; In April beetles are often
in the majority; but up to the end of
May, ninety-five per cent of their food
is Insects. Then comes a change.
During June I use figures compiled
for our own state fifty-five per cent
is fruit, In July this figure rises to
6eventy-nine per cent, in August it Is
fifty-six but more than half of this Is
wild cherries. For the balance of the
year fruit predominates, wild grapes
being most favored but forty-one dif
ferent kinds of wild berries have been
found In the stomachs. For the whole
year sixty-five per cent of the food Is
Insects, twenty-five domestic and ten
per cent wild fruit Of the Insects we
find that forty-three per cent are In
jurious and thirty-six per cent bene
ficial species, while twenty-one per
cent are neutral. The question be
comes very complicated for we would
not only have to know the value of
the fruit, but the damage done by the
Injurious species, including those that
would have been destroyed by the ben
eficial species, and other details, all
reduced to dollars and cents. It is evi
dent we cannot enter on this sub
ject here, but It has been worked out
thoroughly and carefully elsewhere,
and in concluding an exhaustive paper
on the subject Professor Forbes says:
T, for my part do not believe that the
horticulturist can sell his small fruits
anywhere in the ordinary markets of
the world at so high a price as to the
robin, provided he uses diligence that
the little huckster does not overreach
him In the bargain."
An Appeal to Breeders.
The committee representing Poland
Chinas, composed of R. D. Burnham,
H. M. Kirkpatrick and Frank D. Winn,
makes an appeal to the Poland-China
breeders throughout the United States
for help in making the Kansas City
show the great success it promises to
be with the support of the liberal
spirited breeders of the United States.
The condition of the Poland-China
breed in this show is most unfortunate
In having no association or Record
Company behind it When the Kansas
City Stock Yards Company offered
$500 to each breed on condition that
this amount be duplicated by each
breed, the Berkshire and Duroc Jersey
Record Associations made the guaran
tee, while the $500 of the Poland
Chinas had to be guaranteed imme
diately by the three members of the
committee. The committee wishes it
to be distinctly understood that an
the work they are doing in condition
with this show is entirely gratis and
that in addition to this the current
expenses which have to be met are
being taken-care of personally and
will-have to be until after the show
and besides this, each of the three
members have made a liberal sub
scription, to the special prize fund.
It would not be fair to even think
that the breeders of the country who
will derive as much good from and
who should be as much Interested in
this show as the committeemen, will
refuse to aid this great undertaking.
The $2,500 to be raised for the state
fair list Is abont all provided for and
a good portion of the 12,500 for spe
cials to be raised by the breeders has
already been pledged, but there is yet
considerable to be raised which can
be done easily by a little help from
each. vIt is not expected that breeders
living at a distance will give a large
amount, but they can afford to give
something and the committee wants it
understood that anything, offered will
be gratefully accepted. If you do not
feel able to give 25, give $10 and If
not $10 then give $1. There are thou
sands of Pcland-China breeders, and
even $1 from each would more than
raise the money, although there are
few breeders who could not afford to
give at least $5. The subscription
blanks are now being sent out and it
is to be hoped that no breeder will re
turn same without something filled in.
The Record Companies have prac
tically refused to take an interest in
the show, the state fairs have cut the
premium list down on hog3 until no
exhibitor can win enough money to
pay expenses and it is due to the three
members of the committee who are
working untiringly to make this show
a grand success and when the sub
scription blanks are sent around that
a donation of seme kind be made. This
is a breeders' show and nobody but
the breeders will be benefited and each
should see that he does his part There
is a friendly rivalry between the two
breeds as to who will make the best
show and have the most attractive
premium list Will the representatives
of the great breed of Poland-Chinas
stand still and see their favorite out
done? Consider this when filling out
your subscription blank, is the earn
est request of the management
The Sweat Potato.
The sweet potato is coming to te
recognized as one of the most im
portant products of our soil. The in
terest in it as an article of food for
botu man and beast is steadily In
creasing. Not many years ago north
ern people had sweet potatoes on their
tables only during the short fall sea
son, lasting from the time when sweet
potatoes were mature enough to dig,
to perhaps the end of November. Now,
on account of the more scientific ways
of handling, transplanting and storing
them they are on our tables during a
large portion of the winter. Canning
them has also become a practice. New
ways of keeping and utilizing them are
being tried. They are being dried and
some are being ground up into sweet
potato flour.
It is said that the sweet potato
thrives only in a warm climate, but
what that means depends on the un
derstanding of the word warm. It may
be said that the sweet potato thrives
only where the temperature during its
time of growth does not fall below 45
degrees. On this point a government
bulletin says: "On soils suited to the
sweet potato it may be grown wherever
the large dent varieties of maize reach
maturity, but when grown near its
northern limit or at high altitudes it
generally lacks sweetness and flavor.
This loss of quality must be attrib
uted to the cool nights, which are like
ly to prevail in high latitudes, and at
considerable elevations in lower lati
tudes during the latter part of the
growing season, a condition that does
not admit of the growing of sweet po
tatoes in a large way." Then follows
tbe suggestion that in high latitudes
farmers may grow sweet potatoes by
starting them in pots and afterward
transplanting them into the open
ground after the danger of frosts is
past For profitable general field cul
ture the sweet potato requires at least
four months of warm weather, free,
not only from frost, but also from cold
winds and from the cool nights that
prevail In summer at the north and at
high altitudes everywhere. Sweet po
tatoes do not suffer as quickly as Irish
potatoes from drouth, but are injured
by excessive rainfall and overlrriga-
tion.
In a suitable climate and with good
cultivation the sweet potato will thrive
on any well-drained soil. Nevertheless,
it should not be planted on heavy or
peaty soils unless intended for stock
feeding. It Is not always practicable to
harvest the crop when the ground is
dry, and such soils, unless they are
very dry, adhere to the tubers and so
detract from their value. Moreover,
the quality of sweet potatoes grown on
these soils is always relatively low.
The best soil for the sweet potato is
a light, well-drained, but not leachy
sandy loam that will not adhere to the
potatoes. If the best quality is desired,
soils which have an excess of organic
matter should be avoided.
Hortlealtnral Items.
According to a man who is said to
be the biggest dealer in palms in New
York, aoove 6,000,000 of them were dis
tributed throughout the country for
church use on the Sunday previous to
Easter day.
From Dalmatia has come a peren
nial cabbage, which forms the princi
pal food of hundreds of families In
Dalmatia. It grows to a height of five
feet and bears tender leaves through
out the winter. These are picked sing
ly or the whole head is cut and the
stems sprout again. It stands in the
fields for three or four years.
A table, published in the annual re
port of the department of agriculture,
is enlightening as to the amount of
money the people of the United States
spent in purchasing favorite flowers
at retail in 1899 roses, $6,000,000; car
nations, $4,000,000; violets, $750,000;
chrysanthemums, $500,000; miscel
laneous, Including lilies, $1,250,000.
These vast sums found their way Into
the pockets of nearly 100,000 producers
and retailers.
Cleveland has a home gardening as
sociation which encourages children to
cultivate flowers at home. Last spring
the association distributed to children
50,000 penny packages of flower seeds,
accompanied with printed, instructions
how to prepare the soil, plant and
water. The teachers supplemented
these instructions by talks. In the
fall exhibitions were held in many
schools, which revealed the fact that
about 75 per cent of the efforts of the
children were successful.
Foot-aad-Moath Disease la UrajEaay.
Consul Swalm of Montevideo says
it Is officially reported that the foot-and-mouth
cattle disease has disap
peared in all of the departments, of the
Republic and that the herds are in the
very finest condition. In several of the
departments the losses from this dis
ease were very heavy, but generally
the percentage of deaths fell below 3
per cent Save only thoroughbred or
breeding stock, adds Mr. Swalm, the
herds of Uruguay never know the com
forts of a shelter, but as snow or frost
or sleet is very rare the exposure sel
dom results seriously. He continues-
The tick is more feared than anything
else, and where both the tick and the
foot-and-mouth disease are prevalent'
the skinning knife is the only remedy'
applied. i
The stock of California raisins is so'
large that growers talk of building a
distillery to absorb tbe yearly surplus
hereafter.
The Spartan Japs.
The Japanese are a Spartan race.
"Many things besides their resistance
to cold prove it. The most of them
live in simplicity. They can go a long
time without food. The coolies per
form marvelous feats of strength and
endurance; they draw a "jlnrikiaha"
all day or carry travelers over the
steepest mountains. Every summer a
colony of foreigners go to Mount Hel
Eizan, near Kioto. Their camp is sev
eral miles up the steep mountain side,
but early each morning the Japanese
bring up the mail, fresh vegetables
and milk, and women often carry
trunks to the, summit "on their heads.
A Schobrec Manuscript Found.
An interesting original manuscript
work by Franz Schubert was discov
ered recently in Vienna among the
property of a rich and eccentric man
named Wyssiak, an official of the court
of justice, who died recently. It is the
long-sought-for composition in D flat
for two' violins, viola and violincello.
This work is dated in March, 1844, and
was recognized as genuine some years
ago by Schubert's step-brother. Today
the same verdict is given by several
specialists well acquainted with Schu
bert's music. The discovery has
caused a great sensation in Viennese
musical circles.
LWln? Pictures for the Illiad.
The cinematograph for the blind is
a machine which passes under the fin
gers of the blind in a series of relief
representing the same object in differ
ent positions the branch of a tree, a
bird, or any other object. The blind
person has the illusion of moving
scenes just as photographs passing
over a luminous screen lend the illu
sion to those with sight.
An "31. DV Open Letter.
Benton, 111., May 20 R. H. Dunaway,
M. D., of this place, in an open letter,
makes the following startling state
ment: "I had Diabetes with all its worst
symptoms. I applied every remedy
known to the profession, as well as
every prescription suggested in our
books. In spite of all, I was dying,
and I knew it
"As a last resort, and with scarce
ly any faith whatever, I commenced
taking Dodd's Kidney Pills. In one
week I saw a great improvement. After
I had taken five boxes, I was sound
and well. This i3 ten months ago,
and I have not taken any medicine of
any kind since, and am convinced that
my cure is a permanent one.
"As a practicing physician with
years of experience, I most positively
assert that Dodd's Kidney Pills arc the
best medicine in the world today, for
Diabetes or any other Kidney Disease.
Since using them myself, I have used
them in many cases in my practice,
and 'they have never failed.
"I am making this statement as a
professional man, after having made a
most thorough test of Dodd's Kidney
Pills, and because I feel it my duty to
the public and to my professional
brethren. The truth can never hurt
anyone, and what I have said is the
absolute truth."
R. H. DUNAWAY, M. D.
It is no wonder that the public are
enthusiastic over this new medicine,
when our leading physicians them
selves, are being won over to its use.
Tolstoi's Copj Well Revised.
Beofer Tolstoi's manuscript goes to
the printers a third copy has been
made, to include corrections and
changes. The count spent five years
getting the material for "War and
Peace. His wife and daughters are
his copyists.
Ask your grocer for DEFIANCE
STARCH, the only 16 oz. package for
10 cents. All other 10-cent starca con
tains only 12 oz. Satisfaction guaran
teed or money refunded.
A dollar in the hand is worth two in
a will.
Pain Wizard Oil. Use the last on
the first and you have neither one nor
the other.
You can not always improve an un
cultured man by cultivating him as an
acquaintance.
Only a brief summary of Mr. Cleve
land's two recent lectures on the
Venezuela affair was given to the
public the lectures having been espe
cially copyrighted for appearance in
the June and July numbers of the
Century Magazine. Few except spe
cial students are aware of the long
history cf the connection of the
United States with the subject. Among
the interesting points brought out in
the lectures, and not reported, may be
mentioned Mr. Cleveland's scathing
remarks on the relations of the senate
to treaties formulated by the execu
tive branch of the government. Th--;
lectures constitute Mr. Cleveland's
most important contribution to his
tory. "Where am I?" thought the trans
planted fruit tree. "I have lost my
bearings."
Bad Breath
Undigested, decaying food remnants, in the mouth and stomach, giving off pestiferous gases, are the cause
of that awful breath, so repulsive as to cause a halt in friendship, affection, love, any form of intimacy.
Nobody can stand its overpowering stench, and it is a cause of terrible misery to those afflicted and their dear
ones. There is only one way to cure it disinfect the digestive canal with CASCARETS! Clean it out, keep it
clean, let CASCARETS stimulate the lining of mouth and stomach, and put it in shape to work naturally and
properly. Nothing but CASCARETS will bring about the desired result BE SURE YOU GET THEM!
THIS IS
jg
THE TABLET
IVAXAXTJ
stercr sjat wall
raaviewf
CaeaeijaWaefcSs'sTiM . I. eases aJTeeafrlrisfoijsS.
f sajws.
ZEZJOK
S0Z0D0NT fort. Teeth m 25
WHAT WE HEAR FROM
ASSINIBOIA. WESTERN CANADA.
"Dos-t Thlak ef Cosslas wat
To the Editor: The above Is the em
phatic manner In which a friend In
Yorkton writes to a friend near 3t
Paul, Minnesota, aad It is pretty near
ly right, too, with the advantages
that Western Canada offers to those
seeking homes. The AsslBlboia dis
trict is one of the best The writer
from whose letter we quote goes on to
say:
"John, if you miss this chance you
are foolish, for you can get out cheap
er when there' are so many coming,
and I would not tell you to come if I
thought you could not do well, and
if you don't come in the spring you
will have to go away back, for you
do not want to think that there is no
one living out here but us. I saw
nicer buildings out hero than I ever
saw before, and if the country was no
good what would they want them for?
John, if you sold everything you have
and came out here you would be worth
more than ever you were before, and
if you can bring your team. You can
get anything you want on tick, and
when they do that with strangers they
are not afraid they can't make enough
to pay for it. I saw as nice wheat as
I ever saw in my life, and if they could
not grow grain what- would the flour
mill be for, and it cost $20,000."
Now this was what Mr. Thomas
Fitzpatrlck, of Yorkton, Assiniboia,
Western Canada, wrote to a friend.
There -will be opened up this sum
mer new districts in Saskatchewan
and Assiniboia at low prices, particu
lars of which can be had of any agent
of the government of the Dominion of
Canada, whose advertisement appears
elsewhere in the columns of your
paper. Yours truly, An Old Reader.
True fishers of souls have little use
for bread and butter bait.
$148 will buy new Upright piano on
easy payments. Write for catalogues.
Schmoller & Mueller. 1313 Farnam
street, Omaha.
Your worth depends on what you are
and not what you have.
Sirs. Wlaslow's Soothlnr Syrae.
Vorchlldrea teething, softens the Rums, reduces Ir
Caminatioa. allays pain, cures wind colic aic a bottle.
A man may have a keen mind with
out a cutting tongue.
Are Ton Vales; Allea's Foot EaaeT
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. T.
Holland's Carrie Nation.
Holland has her Carrie Nation in the
person of Mrs. Waszklewicz Schief
gaarde, who makes perpetual but ut
terly vain war on the Dutch rum dam
on. She has announced her intention
to visit England, where she means to
start a crusade. o
City Fands Kept in a Chimney.
The city of South Norwalk, Conn.,
keeps a part of its record in a chimney.
This unique "safe" is found at the mu
nicipal electric lighting plant The
space usually utilized as a soot pit in
the base of the 500 foot brick smoke
stack has been utilized for keeping the
records and books of the plants.
Toasting -
Blue '
Flame
Heat is not diffused through
out the house there is no
smell, soot, or danger, and the
expense of operating is nomi
nal. Made in many sizes;
sold wherever stoves are sold.
If your dealer does not have
it write to nearest agency of
STANDARD OH
COMPANY
ens. Detroit
aseve
and ae a smile aed effective lazaUTe teey are
sissaly woeesrfuL My daegater aad I woe
totaerea wtttt sick etamare aad oar areata
was very bad. After taklssj tew dates ef
rsawersts we kave iayceved woaderr&U.
Tky ere a great kelp la tee tamOj."
WBMWLMlA NCEX
1 RlWaenasH St. OeclnaeM. Qjje.
"Well. I's
BEST FOR BOWELS AND LIVER.
eTClTaUtanates.lis.ilis, ! IMS. lsa m 1 1 1.
wessSjMsv wga seagf teniae J"JT-?tllTf '"r
JT?l'aM, "
Our desire to do the right thing very
seldom prevents us from doing the
easiest one.
. Piso'aCnre i the best ssedlcine we ever used
for all affections of the thro.it aad Ian. W
a E.XMLST, VacbarcB, lad.. Fee. 10, 19W.
If a man could do just as he pleas
ed he would be the most unpopular
individual on earth.
The May Atlantic will open with the
first installment of "Audrey," Miss
Mary Johnston's new romance. Like
"Prisoners of Hope" and "To Have and
to Hold," it is a Virginian story, but it
is laid In the eighteenth instead of
the seventeenth century. The life of
colonial Virginia has been growing
more rich and picturesque, if less
strenuous In martial enterprise. We
are introduced to the stately mansions
that still adorn the banks of the
James river, and to the lively capital
of Williamsburg. Typical figures in
this complex and many-charactered
story are the witty Colonel Byrd (2d)
of Westover and his daughter Evelyn,
the famous beauty.
The
man.
'bad tboy" often makes the best
Dyspepsia is the nane or the human system.
Protect yourself airainitt its ravages by the use
of lSecman's Pepsin Gum.
People who ask "time" for their
debts don't care to spend it in jail.
Do Tear Feet Ache east Beret
Shake into your shoes, Allen's Foot
r.. ..n.i,.- - .v t i.
tight or New Shoes feel Easy. Cures
imbc, s yurun iui mc iccu at uiaacs
Corns, Bunions, Swollen, Hot and
Sweating Feet At all Druggists and
Shoe Stores, 25c. Sample sent FREE.
Address Allen S. Olmsted, LeRoy. N.Y.
It doesn't take an artist to draw a
perfectly natural long breath.
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.
Many a man has married a piece of
real estate, with a woman in the title
deed.
Ball's Catarrh Care
Is takea internally. Price. 73a
A family tree is one kind that isn't
admired for having a shady reputation.
WINCHESTER
"NEW RIVAL" FACTORY LOADED SHOTGUN SHELLS
Oiitshoot all other black powder shells, because they are made
better and loaded by exact machinery with the standard brands of
r order, shot and waddintr. Tnr them and vats will he ennrinrtxf.
, , B. ., ,
vaw w - Dcorrrjpf c . ncjr cdc . tree a . tubii
V -w a w
W.L.DOUGLAS
afwr w?
tQ A tQ .HI
rmSTCOLftXlW W" w,w
.aavsts wana w .
OUt IJae
ass awy
i class
Khat
rstTl
of the foot, sad the construction of the shoe. It
knowIeilKe that hare made W. I- Dona-las shoes the
Take urn asslMtlttate. Insist on haYin? W. 1-
T use
hb. sj w y VTwarm.
aWsaV e V CLr sTS- VW en
WW ' "ftnnfir- "
eefcA . . ,mfTUlMi5r ' Jl "V
m- -- -W2. r
and price stamped on bottom. Your dealer snould'keep mem. it ne uoes not,
e&d for catalog kitIbjc foil Instructions how to order by mail.
W. 1 jvOUOjLAM, Mrucktaa. Mas.
baking - ironing
anything that can be done with a wood cr coal fire is done
better, cheaper and quicker on a '
WICKLESS
Oil Stove
Etf
fc-iii:.!
Free Pi. -a.
keea saata
lad to kao"
eTAaTUaBTal.Tw CUMXt rt rear, stew erne flees eea ee
OAktSrra wm HkLirsw H I. veral satufae Wa7s Messawes?eaas7
Bjs.fjssiSe eare er sssesy rftiae.e. eW assy ssaw. taalksksSi
CMsst sssaar.aet artel, aa aiar irilas'-T?? gsgwT -"-TYm's,l
lv ssssswaw V eWessr evaiaBevawwas aawaTwwjaWa'aawaae flaaawaw HeT sopbv esssrws aeeeees eeeeeeee'i
We can often create a very favorable
impression by not saying what we
think.
WHY lS. HHKHJU3
b Able to Help Sick Womea
Wheat Doctors Fail.
Bow gladly would men fly to wo
man's aid did they but understand a
woman's feelings, trials, sensibilities,
and peculiar organic disturbances.
Those things arc known only to
womea, and the aid a man would give
is not at his command.
To treat a case properly it is neces
sary to know all about it, and full
information, many times, cannot bo
given by a woman to her family phy
! .t..
aician.
Has. G. H. Cuappeu.
She cannot bring herself to
' teU everything, and the physician is
at a constant disadvantage. This is
why, for the past twenty-five years,
thousands of women have been con
fiding' their troubles to Mrs. Pinkham,
and whose advice has brought happi
ness and health to countless women in
the United States.
Mrs. Chappell, of Grant Tark, 111.,
whose portrait we publish, advises all
suffering women to seek Mrs. Pink
ham's advice and use Lydia E. Pink
ham's Vegetable Compound, as they
cured her of inflammat ion'of the ovaries
and womb ; she. therefore, speaks from
knowledge, and her experience ought
to give others confidence. Mrs. Pink
ham's address is Lynn, Mass., and her
advice is absolutely free.
Tor Top Prices Ship Toor
fiAII ASI rUl'LTBT
To Headquarters
3. W. Ickess dt Company.
Better. Est. Veal. Uldcs and Furs. Potato,
Onloas la Carload Lots.
sake. aebraaka.
w n. m l. r w i in
SHflR Mf"??
wiiww m-uc.
a, .avstasjiaa ka
essaaet e eaeallcsl
psrsev.
It I not alone tne nest
leather that makes a first
shoe it is tbe brains.
ham ntannnl the ties
lasts a perfect model
is mechanical skill an.l
heat in the world for men.
Honshu shoes with name
iia
IliiHIl' J. il vm,. ?T
.i i nil ',;,"" ' .
Hi
mm
m
m
.'nilf :i ' N
10c.
25c. 50c
NEVER SOLD IN BULK.
DRUGGISTS
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