The Columbus journal. (Columbus, Neb.) 1874-1911, May 10, 1905, Image 7
IKES minn'ie McAllister. Carrie Kinir. Ifariinirton. Mo. Yirr-- 'I have suiTerd for wars wit'i ii!'ou-iie-v. and Ki.Im-v and l:er tr.ile. cauj-ht a little cold, the pins , t incrczied end backache and licadache wjre of frequent occurrence. Hov..-icr IVni'.a cured m twelve lojt ,-s made me a health v woman. !Qm 1 I ( I J 1 T JT-Vf A &&& ,, rAfflaBSSi I; V3 These Shoes were Awarded iVfJ Crond Prix- Gt St. Louis WoriJ's Fau fl Th IMTKIOT SHOE for I C over M-It-h rt juilorlit.Io t,o. lr. -ir wolts. w ica n?aa PcxiMa sr.ir.Mitb ro u or tacl.s t ir-tato tro r .. Tne XAWZ.OYiI.lt MIOK 'it W a. a isisa -i3cin' 1 vianl turn. Is styl'-n. li-ratlf a1 r n rori' lo. AiU J urdei4 -1 r ,aem. If he docs nt han !li t . so - c. writ ut dcl Tjit will pjf.iir yau a-id a .n w.il t - -j Si cbh to il 5j ;kt pair ia iric-3 uaaaiiy cbarsod Tor , f th.a c t irai :er. MW81i;' ""U 11- - 1 a-ut I t .n t -ni.il u in ; oum , l cciit your money. i i- in " nmj,..iin -t i j. 1 1 r .-. none ii... t .ind -I i.mlil . lli I . " 1 i ry u now Hid sa- J Men who affect feet ion for them. virtues have no af- ..n e rt.r h is smrnK'Cd l)is iinl lie-t or iiiiinex r-f imled 10 - 10 lent-. Try it now fU!l PLEASANT T-E. ."' :-: .3 I FEE'. A-.D I.'t' COMPEj- 17 u'K-j.ir pt it nrt k-ii j on t' tt m: id Kiir-jt r 1 is i -i t laiit t- 1 ,s . Iticaiinl.aui . IVn"' or n: s !nnl r vziilf a t LANES FAMILY MEDICINE A ' d-ai.viiorhT ird2. rt f i c Buy it In v l.itito. I iiniilr ."rlii-ir- in.,T , (,. Ii.mrk inch iln. Ii -r t. i, . -vthi-i ts..-ir A i.lr-i I- W Xr . ! 1 . . V. mil mmiihms. Tiiis is what the Crenni S par.itor has proved to be. Twenty yeais of experi ence Uon the part of hundreds of thou-ands of iL-ei-s in e iy coun try of the worid bear witness to the fact. 2o one disputes it. There neer wa a letter time to make thisall-important farm investment than the ireent. I3utter is u.i- precedentedly high in price. It is mo-t desirable that none be left go to waste, and that the quality be such as to command top prices." If you have cteam to separate yo;i cannot atTord to delay this investment a tingle day. If wi haen"t the rcady cah the machine w ill earn its cost while you are paying for it. The De Laval Separator Co. Randolph . Canal Sts. i 74 Co te tdt S'rett CHICAGO I NEW YOfi.S. Alabastine ...... Your I Walls Typhoid Fever, Diphtheria, Small Pox the germs of these deadly discuses multi ply in the decaying glue pres ent in all kalsomines, and the decaying paste under wall paper. Alabastine is a disinfectant: it destroys disease germs and vermin: is manufactured from a stone cement base, hardens on the walls, and is as enduring as the wall itself. Alabas tine is mixed with cold water, and any one can apply it. Ask for sample card of beautiful tints and informa tion about decorating. Take no cheap substitute. Buy enly ia pound raca&ces rroperlj labeled. ALABASTINE COMPANY Graut Ave.. Grand Karids. Mich. a iN'ew YcrL OSce. 105 Water St. a a a a a a a a '&& WATERPROOF OILED CLOTHING DECEIVED THfc HIGHEST POSSIBLE AWARD AT Tltt ST. LOWS WORLDS PAW. Send us the n&mss of dealers in your town who do rot .sell our goods, and we will aend youa collection of Dicl.ures.in coior.oi faious towers of the woria. s A. J-TOWER CO. ESTABLISHED I0S&.: -bottom. aaavToao. caaw. , ymm okaiuji co. tui , luauwo a; WW mm Hjsm, B-7 ''T AD f.,V , . . I jJHrVi Mf fllANIV- ?RAND5 BSSK IMP SIEE Quickly Cured by a Short Course Gf Pe-ru-na. mix vie e. McAllister, wto J ' J -ii-.iiiiiv . writes l 1 . U.. Ulirt.K . :"-i:n 1-"T m-t rd street. Minneap- a !'nn . a ffiliovi. suffered tor ears with a pain In the small of my back and right side, it interfered often with mv domestic amd social duties and 1 never supposed that I would be cured, as the doctor's medi cine did r.ot seem to help me any. --Fortunatf'T, a m-mtfr of our Order mlvw-n mv to'fy I'truaa and jravo it suthlii'li prai-ft'it I di-oidi-d to try it. Altiimi:li I -t.irT-l in iwth little f-iith. I flt mj much U'.KTinavffk that I felt 'nco-.imrfd. I ','lUh It 1.111I11UI1J. ! -... and am hajjy indeed to be able to ;i that 1 am ei.Tirelv cured "Words fail w express my gratitude, trfect health once more is the best Perfect thing I could wish for, end thanks to Peruna. I enjoy that oou- " Pain in tlu baik. or on the rijrht side. Ho'-v ofU-n a phMcian hears this complaint! ( vor and over we hear women say: I have a paid in the small of my back. I liav-a pain in my rijjlit side, just be low the ribs." Tih-m. vmptom indicate pelvic or tbdomhial catanh. Ti.v indicate that the bowels are not aet-n- prop-rly-that the lm-r is out i of ord. that the pelvic organs are 1 com.-. -ted. IV lvu'i r.arrh tint i the name for it. Peruna cures pehic catarrh, when ail of these symptoms disappear. '1 lie c.tarrh may Wall m the abdom tn tl irjr'iii-.. when it would be properly c:n!il :il.i(min.-i catarrh. ...,- ,-..i.. ;t w ,...f i:..i. ..n.. -f internal catarrh which tan be reached ' ' ' ''' :l course ot treatment with ... , , ,, , , . .. Ve Irive on file thou,-aiiI- of tcti- ino'ii.-'l-. -".milar to tiie above. It i- im- p . -il.K- In re to rivc our reader more fian om- .-t'o pviimeii, of the nnra- l.iT.i rr t"ful and commendatorv lct- T --. lr. ll.ir'mai is con-t.intly leceiv inur iii IkIi. ill" of his famous catarrh remed v. Peruna. 5S Uti . j&m s. Mea is iaJ- from all le.vher. list's, to lit iar I ot. Tj-t .-iro Unique Jai'. The town ot" Kenneth. Cal.. has no I-:- l...n.i: - j. I z ' miiiuiiii; an u lias put an iruu door at the mouth of a mining tunnel. and ill- tunnel makes a roomy and se cure calaboose. CITC rpTT''nP''UJ' ccrp-1. 7Tnflt-ioricrTcr3-mfrrtf El I w r.r-tda'iu-M-r.f lr. K"!lm'" (li-at Nfnt-KrIor- er. Send f r Fit HZ tf .Oil ln.il bottlt- ind trrau-o. i Dii. It- li. Klin e. Ltd.. 31 Sreii btrvtt, 1'MUdelptu, t ' The shortest road to riches lies ' through contempt of riches. Seneca J of yorr posossions, but in the small ness of your wants. IJrotherton. i cuarantecd intorc-t semi-annually on all investments, in tropical plantation "half as lar-.-ea-KhodIsla:id.40prolitable products. Active managers and asrents wanted. E. Moore, -Jll Odd Fellows" Bldg.,St.Louis.Mo. Nowhere are hearts so hungry as in the land of gineerbread. IMPERIAL HERNIA CURE. Dr. 0 S. Wood cures Rupture by a new process, in a few weeks, with out loss of time or inconvenience. Rectal di-eaes cured without the knife. Send for circular. O. S. Wood. M. D., 521 X. Y. Life Bldg., Omaha. Beans a Japanese Dainty. Poins winch looked like the or dmary lhr boan of this country, cooked tendr-r and givm a coating of sugar, were among the sweetmeats t.-ered at a Japanese entertainment the other day. Tiny are said to be a common Japanese dainty. Girl Turns Out Lights. The Strassburg police were puzzled i for some time by the fact that every night a number of street lights were turned off They finally succeeded in catching the culprit a young girl, who gave as her excuse for her strange conduct that it amused her. There is only one more exasperating thing on earth than a balky hcrse. and that's the, man who refuses to be con vinced when you have presented plain proof that black is white. On the borders between China and Rus-ia. in Aii. is a cood-ized town known as Mirinatrhin. which inhab it ! ecluhely by men. An old law forb.ds women to live there. With the coming of May, Hudson liner iiaint:o!i opens, and both the caj Iiik and the night boats palaces o: elesance and n.oiu-ls of conjlort will be once a earn m active service. Traiel the earth over one will find no irore beautfiul water trip than this ournej up or down the historic river that tiows majestically through a val ley of peace, still bearing the foot steps and scars of battle: still echoing with the sounds of war. From "Vest Pocket Confidences," in Four-Track Xews for M?v. Poor Russian Peasants. So poor are the Russian peasants, says Dr. E. J. Dillon, in an article in the Nineteenth Century, that even the roach and black beetle can not find sustenance ia their huts. For Rent or Sale. Two Ranches of ' 3.000 Acres Each. Located in Custer county on South Loup river: consists of 500 acres good 'orn land. 30 alfalfa. 320 meadow and the balance in pasture: good improve- ments. Inquire of Victor Omaha. Neb. H. Coffman, Once upon a time there was an au tomob.le which ran slowly and care fully through the streets of the city. Fliecende Blaetter. The practical man is he who turns l'fe to the best account for himself: rhe good man, he who teaches others how to do so. Lord Lytton. When you go into mixed company the air you should carry with you here is that of fearing no one and wishing to offend no one. If they are opened to tranquillity and peace there is no quarter for dis content. Somewhere there's every sorrow. a sin back of ll-aa- RISK LIVES TO GIVE AMUSEMENT Daring Exploits of "Freaks" Who Court Death in Thrilling Feats That Make Spectators Gasp. Tfae daring, reckless flirting with death for the purpose of amusing the public, which has gone to such ex treme lengths during the past three or four years, will this coming season reach a limit almost inconceivable to the average mind. The -thrillers" which will thrill tho nnMl. j - - H '1L ""ring tne suanner nave been perfected by those "human freaks" th nng, the past wnter, and some of tnem have already been "put on" in T rh The are real "tnri,lers-" in tne past few years ingenious, wild, incredible schemes havp nrocco.i on runout a break, so that there has hardly been a year when the freak of out- tt?a-uii as good enough to be the freak of the next. Th circus people themselves won Vr where the nerve of the freaks is cuing to stop. They really thought, or rriit-r. feare'. that it had reached the limit when Fitzgerald, the one-legged man, rode dovn an almost vertical flight of Tair from the top of Mad- is) n Squart Grrden to the arena on a i,,,..,. pt ,f thv unn.ioro.i .i.. y f d TO fo",Iow u , . . , ... ,1M-J' , they had their pains for nothing. Be- THE VOISBUE k re the season was ended, a dozen plan? were on foot to beat the act. Fitzgerald himself beat it by going down the same terrible declivity in tht net season on an automobile. His bicycle Lad been improved on by two men who tiew the staircase on a single wheel one standing on the other's shoulders and firing off a pis tol as they sped. Along came another man who rode in an enormous cage made of slats set widely apart. Gradually, as his veloc ity increased, his wheel climbed the side of the apparatus till he rode at right ang!es to the slats. Before long, three men were riding arcund in the cage. Then others found that the act would look mere thrilling if the cage were lifted high in the air and had no bot'oni to it. so that any accident wruld certainly hurl the performers outward and downward like a cannon ball. Then came the loop-the-loop freak, and the public said that this surely was the limit. So thought the circus people themselves. They figured that there might be some modification of the thing, but that the limit of daring mortal injury and death for wages had probably been reached at last. Yet within two years the loopthe loop ride was lost before the loop-the-gap ride, and in the same arena an- 'The Death Dip" in an automobile other rider was thundering nightly down an incline o sheer that no man could climb it. dishinsr up another and leajnntr from the end of it over more than twentj five feet of space to the up-tilted end of itill another. These things looked pretty hard to beat, and tl ey were. But they have been hcateu again. In Europe tc-day a woman is mak ing y. har the program calls "A Flight to the Moon.'" Hich up in the top of the building is a painted canvas moon. Opposite it is the up-tilted end of one of these loop-the-loop contrivances. The woman flies along on her wheel, darts eft" the very end of the dizzy road and goes spinning clean across the arena, high over head, till she strikes the moon, which opens and takes in her aEd her wheel. Scarcely had the people of Europe had time to gasp at this before a Pa rasian woman came out with some thing that was indeed worthy of being called "the biggest thing yet." So bic was it that the American cir cus promptly went "down into its Remarkable Menagerie. Paula Edwardes recently received the following letter, which is evidently the work ot some polite lunatic: "Dear Miss Edwardes: Knowing you to be interested in anything novel in theatrical entertainment, I should like to make an appointment to show jou my collection cf trained germs. They have the well known flea circus skinned to death. The star of the com pany is a typhoid fever bacillus, named Mike, who can stand on all sev en of his hands and whistle 'Home. Sweet Home' through his teeth. I have also two young measles microbes who do a sister act and a family of diphtheria bacilli, the youngest of which can tuck his limbs under his neck and sit en both ears at once. The performance can be given on a stage two inches square. Kindly let me know when and where ou will see me." Minneapolis Times. Telephoning to a Phonograph. The disadvantages inevitable in telephoning have been partially over come by an intstrument of foreign joake thocch the general serire- 1 BV 1 tjf iiorEjaiiL,, apKvmi" W clothes" for ?5,000 a week for her and brought her oer as its star attraction for the season of 1905. This new thrilling freak is a pretty woman. Mauricia de Tiers is her name. She seats herself in an automobile high in the air on the top of a skele- 3 a.-v ( ton structure as tall as a five-story building. Defore her the runway j points almost straight down till it reaches a point about midway from ' the ground. There it turns inward j underneath itself, like a vast hook, I it ii-? ,, -,f ctrM,i f ; It looks as if, once started from its j giddy resting place, the heavv automo- bile must surely flash down the in- cline and drop wildly off into space the moment it reaches the dip where the roadway disappears. The machine, with the little whit clad figure in it, rips downward with a roar. It dins down like lightning, still clinging to the roadway, but upside down, shoots off into the air with its occupant head down, and the next mo ment strikes the up-tilted segment of a wooden roadway more than thirty feet away with a crash. Stil! upside down it darts down the under side of this. till, completing the circle, the j thing is right side up again and goes careering along the incline, to the ground. I Auto bolide, they call it. The ride . lasts four seconds. It is to be done twice a day in this country. That makes eight seconds a day or forty . eight a week, which makes her -alary I 55.000 for less than a minute's "work" a week. But how many persons would take the ride one single time for the whole week's salary or for the whole sea son's earnings? The bicycle Loop-theGap has been out freaked and out-thrilled, too. The circus crowds of the season will see two inclines facing each other and each ending in the familiar loop with the break or gap in it. The gap has been vastly extended so that there are more than 30 feet of open space now for the riders to leap. A rider starts at each summit. The two wheels cash down, apparently bound helplessly toward each other. One. arriving at the end of his loop. which inclines backward over itseii. is hurled violently upside down and catapults in a direction reverse to his course. At tne same instant tne other rider shoots into space from the tippedup end of his runway, and the two whiz by each other in mid-air. m -.;rV, --'1&5SJ: as performed by Mile. De Tiers. Bang Bang: They hit the upward pointing end of the second loop at the same moment. But they do not anni hilate each other as one expects those hurtling bodies to do; one strikes the , loop underneath and the other above. , The one who has been upside down whirls around below, and even as his wheel richts, he is hurled off again, once more reversing his course, to leap through the air a second time and bounce with a shock onto a plat form whence he rides off onto the , ground. The other in the meantime has reached the end of his runwav i and is also shot off and upward to a platform at the opposite side. What next? The circus people can't imagine. But the chances are that i somewhere somebody is trying to beat these two feats already with some thin? even more wildly spectacular and deadly. Telephone Vibrations. The membrane of a telephone, whose vibrations are what physicians call "forced" that is, they are main- ability of the device has not been i demonstrated by usage in this coun try, according to the World's Work. It may be described as an ordinary tele phone with a phonographic attach ment. While Mr. Jones is in his office the attachment is not in use, but on going out he connects it with the tele phone. When someone calls for Mr. Jones over the telephone, the phono graphic attachment responds some thing after this fashion: "Mr. Jones is not in. This is a phonographic re ceiver speaking. Kindly give me your message and I will give it to him on his return." On coming in Mr. Jones sees from a signal that a message is waiting him. He takes the receiver and the phonograph delivers the mes sages (perhaps there are many) that have been confided to it. University Faculty Colony. A Stanford university .faculty col ony is to be started at Carmel-by-the Sea, southern California. Among those who build summer homes there are President Jordan. Professors Gilbert, Stillman, Fish, Pierce, Merino, Elmore and Canncn and Mrs. w a Kimball. tained by the speaking voice, and the disk is not left to itself to vibrate freely takes only about a thousandth of a second to get into full swing. This has been ascertained by Dr. R. Kempf-Hartmann. a recent German in vestigator. who studied the motion of the membrane by reflecting a spot of light from a mirror, attached to it. so that the light would leave its record on a moving photographic film. From such records he obtained a set of curves for owels, diphthongs, and consonants, and also for other sounds. The membrane takes only two swings j to attain its full that the curve is movement, and after steady. WHY RACES WERE DELAYED. i Incident Showed Folly of Present Automobile Driving. I A. F. MacDonald, who recently made at Ormond. with a SO H. P. car. five miles in a little over three minutes, is ' a prudent, no less than a skilled chauf- I fer. MacDonald has no patience with j reckless motoring. He believes that, with ordinary care and caution, acci dents might be altogether eliminated. He said the other day: "It is a shame that horrible fatali ties so often occur in automobiling. It is a shame that, at motor races, it is possible to hear what I heard not long since. "An important race was to be run. but at the hour of starting there was some delay. The people became ini- j patient over this delay. A man in a I brown ponyskin coat accosted one of the officials, and I heard him say: " 'The race was scheduled for 2, and here it is almost C. What is the trouble? Why all this waiting?' "The official answered politely: " The ambulance surgeons, sir, have not yet arrived.' " Great Pagoda at Rangoon. Rangoon, the principal city of Bur-1 ma, grew up around the sacred spot , on which is Luiit the great Shoay Da gon pagoda, one of its principal won ders. "Rising to a height of 360 feet, its size is greatly enhanced by the fact , tnat it slan(Is on an eminence that is , itself Ut feel abme the level of the cilv savs a writer. .It is covered with pure gold from bae to summit; and once in every generation this gold is completely renewed by public sub scription. Yet throughout the inter val the process of regilding goes on perpetually. Pious people who seek in this way to express their venera tion and to add to their store of spir itual merit climb up daily with lntle fluttering packets of gold leaf, which they fasten on some friction of it great surface. There is no more pic turesque sight offered by it than that of a group of these silken worshipers outlined against its gold, in the act of contributing their small quota to its splendor. The pagoda itself has no in terior. It is a solid stupa of brick raised over a relic chamber." Making Bed in the Woods. If your bed is made on the ground put a log at the head and a smaller one at the fcot and cover the inter vening space with a thick layer of flat spruce boughs neatly laid, with all the unnecessary sticks thrown out. chop down some young balsams and ' strip them of all their twigs, collect i a great stack of these twigs in front ! of ycr shack and. selecting all those , of about twelve inches in length, be i gin at the foot of the bed and work i up, stickinc the butt ends of the bal sam twisrs into the spruce boughs. . Plr.ce them as close together as i os ! sible with their tops slightly inclined to the foot of the couch. After all the balsam is planted scatter the fine tips cf some hemlock boughs over the bal i sarn and spread your blanket over all Any bag or pillow case filled with hemlock and balsam tips make good sweet-scentel pillows. Arnold lett Parker in Recreation. Bart Suit Rolls. Suit rolls, which are something like enlarged music rolls, come as a new . wrinkle to athletes, especially base , ball, lawn tennis and golfing men, thi season. Reallv thev are intended tc i ," .i. t i.. keep out wrinkles in the clothing. Be sides outin a place for a pair of shoes, an : suit and shirt mav be laid flat in the roll and the strapped into a neat bundle. They come of canvas or I leather, with handles like those on a shawl strap. Shakespearean Subterfuge. Mrs. Maybrick. who has returned to America after fifteen years of impris onment in England, tells an amusing anecdote of her life there. In the Eng lish prison the convicts are not al lowed to use profane language, and down feelinsr, inflammation of the ova the restriction becomes extremely ries. backache, flatulence, general de irksorae for many of them. One of the tlity. indigestion and nervous prostra keepers, says Mrs. Maybrick. was once , tion' !hfJ" sno"d remember there is passing a cell when he overheard the I ?,"e,tred.ad true remt-dy. Lvdia E, convict within talking loudly to him self. The keeper stopped to listen. "Out, damn spot:" he heard, repeat ed over and over with intense empha sis. "Here, you: " called the keeper. "No swearmc stop that"' The man drew himself up and re-' plied, with dignity, "Do you mean to tell me," he inquired, "that one can't I even quote Shakpspeare in this place?' Harper's Weekly. Children Keep City Clean. The children of San Rafael, Cal., have been formed into a junior section of the local improvement club. Their duty Till be to preserve the street trees and to keep paper off the streets. The Bishop's Timely Text. One of the occasions when Bishop Brooks preached at Harvard a special musical service was given. Solomon . better known to the students as "Sol," agpin consented to sing for the great preacher. He sang a solo before the sermon in fine voice and in a beau tiful way that touched his hearers. The impressive silence that followed was broken by the famous bishop's text: "Saul, Saul, why persecutest ' thou me?" Boston Herald. Insist on Getting It. Some urocers say they don't keep Defiance Starch. This is because they have a stock on h.tmi of other brands containinc only U ounces in a. pack ape, which they won't be ab'e to sell first, because Defiance contains 16 ounces for the same money. Do you want 16 ounces instead of 12 ounces for same money? Then buy De fiance Starch. Kenuires no cooking. Ww H Was Chosen. A well known lecturer, who had been invited to serve as a substitute in a country place, felt some nervous ness, knowing he was to fill the place of a more famous man. This feeling was not diminished when he heard himself thus announced by a long limbed, keen eyed farmer: "This man is our substitute. I don't know what he can do. Time was short, and we had to take what we could git!" Cannot Reduce a Rate. It is stated in Washington, that ' ander the Townsend rate bill, if a rate is fixed by the Commission it cpnnot be lowered by a railroad. Should an emergency arise calling for a decreased rate, the railroads or , shippers would have to appeal again to the Commission, there being r.o latitude allowed, whatever the cir- ' cumstances. Hitherto a maximum rate has been the rule, but no such concession is made under the pro posed legislation. i He who shields little sins will soon be the slave of large ones. ' CAPT. GRAHAM'S CURE. Sores on Face and Back Tried Many Doctors Without Success Gives Thanks to Cuticura. Captain W. S. Graham. 1321 Eoff St. Wheeling. W. Va.. writing under date of June 14. '04. says: "I am so grateful I want to thank God that a friend recommended Cuticura Soap and Ointment to me. I buttered for a long time with sores on my face and back. Some decters said I had blood poison, and others that I had barbers' ifch. Xone of them did me any good, but they all took my money. My friends tell me my skin now looks as clear as a baby's, and I tell them all that Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Oint ment did it." Petrified people, like petrified trees, ( take the finish polish. How's This? I W offar One Hundred Poliar Reward for ny ease ot Catarrh that caaaol be cured by Uall'a Catarrb Cure. F. J. CHEVET 4 CO.. Toledo. O. We. the undersigned. fcae known F. J. Cheney fortbelt 15 rr. and believe him perfectly !mn orable In all bu-lne-a tran-kHlon and financially ab: tu carry o Jt any oblljil n made by hi- Qnu. Waldim. Kismn A Mabtin, W buler ale I)rasli. Tuledo. O. Hall's Catarrh Cure 1 tura Internally, acting directly u:i tlie bi-! and mucou- nirfucesot tb ejMetu. 1 et!:uon!aW cut f rre. l'rlca 75 ctUU Pr bottle Sold bv all I)rut:i.tM. Take Uall" Family I'llU !ur consllp-ttloo. Soul possessions are the only as- i sets that count in heaven. Dr. Dalil KiiiimIt Fittorltc nrmpil? Ia IJer coiuilnlnt. and i t.rinVsth-luu'd tl HUru.-ljt. i The richer the life within the sim pler will be that without. ' Mr, fvinaiow'a ootlilntr rrnp. Forrhlldrrn teethinir, softens the puns, reduces ! ZUmmatlua, allays pain, cures wlad cullc 20c a bottle. It takes an empty head to rise to the heights of fashion. More Flexible and Lasting, won't shake out or blow out. by using Deran' Stare h you obtain better re sult than possible wub any other brand and one-third more for same m. ney. All power is born of pain. "IT SAVEDMY LIFE" PRAISE FOR A FAMOUS MEDICINE Mrs. Willadsen Tells How She Tried Lydia , E. PinkhaaVa Vegetable Conpouid Just ia Title. i Mrs. T. C. Willadsen, of Manning, Iowa, writes to Mrs. iMikham: Dear Mrs. Pinkham : I can trulv sav that vou have saved mr life, and I cannot exprtss. nn gratitude to you in words. 'Before I vrrote to you. telh'np you how I felt, I had doctored for over two vears steady n.nV?monv on medicines b.idps, but it all faild to h-lp me. Mv nionthlv r- riods had cwi.1 and I suffered much iT with fainting sHK headache, backache and bearing - .lo - .vn pains. ami I vjiq est trir r . J..,!) ItArll. t-fvv. nKn.- -1 A . idMtowWLTS&TEME ham's Testable Compound, and I am so thankful that I did. for after following vour instructions, wnira you vnt me free of 'l cnanr. my monttuv period staru-d ; I am regular ani m penec: nmn. Hail it not been for you I would le in mv grave to-dav " I siwvMy trust that this lVttr mav lead every suffering woman in the country to write you for help as I did." When women are troubled with Ir rejrnlar or painful menstruation, weak ness, leucorrhcea. displacement or ul ceration of the wnmh tho v-: "iwwms egeia Die compound at once removes such troubles. No other female medicine in the world Has received such widespread and un qualified endorsement. Refuse all sub- ' Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women I to write her for advice. She has iruided Joasand3 to health. Address, Ly; Ua&s. rna, PUTNAM 2n!nr Krr nnv1 hrlnMc.-... ... . mm ittttt or e ail! send post paid at 10c a package. Wri (jiAlrxTCWilfadsen fi SSJ BIDDER Tkoes Your What's tho matter with yon ? If he docs, the chances are ho may help you, but nianv times women call on their family physicians, sufToritig, as they imagine, one from dyspepsia, another from heart disease, another from liver or kidney dis ease, another from nervous exhaustion or prostration, another with pain here and there, and in this way they all pre sent alike to themselves and their easy going and indifferent, or oer-busy doctor, separate and distinct diseases, for which he, assuming them to bo such, prescribes his pills and potion-. In reality they are ail only smnptoins caused by some womb disease. The physician, ignorant of the cause of suffering, encourages this prac tice until large bills are made. The suf fering patient gets no bettor, but prolui bly worse, by reason of the delay, wrong treatment and consequent coin plications. A proper medicine like Dr. Pierce's Fa vorite Proscription, directed to the cause would have entirely removed tho disease, thereby dispelling all those distressing fevmptoms. and instituting comfort in stead of prolonged misery. It has boon well said that "a disease known is half cured." In eases almost innumerable, after all other medicines hud failed to help and doctors had said there was no curt possible, tho use of Dr. Pierce's Fa vorite Prescription, supplemented when necessary by the medical advice and counsel of Dr. Pierce, has resulted in a perfect and permanent cure. The genu ineness of these cure- K attested not only by the entire di-amn-anuice of pain, but by a gain of Ilesli. a clear complexion and a cheerful diixv-ition. Cuke! Oh-.tix.vtk Casks." Favorite tiritir and irrosularites. nrI.insiis or falling of Prescription "is a jMsime cure for tlielhly free on reeei t.t . of - ;" most complicated and oWmate cases of rfamzs to P '""'VKisi yVi" loucorrhea. eveessne flowing:, painful a- ?i st mps. Addrt Dr. U. . ii..ti.trttntinii. tmn.itnr:il .mirn-i-.iiiiis i lerctf. iH.ilalO, -. i. the womb, weak hack, "female weak- r. rlCiU; h-rgely a mat nes," antevorMon. retroorsinn. bearing-1 . V'r , 001 down sensations, chronu conception, in-! health, and good health w largely a mat llammation and ulcerati- n of the womb. ' tor of health actiin of the U.weis. Dr. inflammation, pain ami tend -rias of the ' Pierce's Pleasant Pellet, cure coiistipa- ovaries. accompanied with "internal llflMT Koiiable dealers recommend "Favorite' Prescription." ith tricuv om-s. some- thine else that pas them letter will probably bo urged ii.uii jou as "just as The Secret of Gcsd oi!ee Even tho best housekeepers cannot nrnfco a good cup of coffee without good inuterinL Dirty, adulterated and queerly blended cofteo such as unscrupulous dealers shovel over their counters won't do. But take the puro, clean, natural lluvorcd LION COFFEE, the leader ! an package colfcesr- tho coffee that for over n quarter of a century has been daily welcomed in millions of homes and you will make a drink tit for a kinsr in this wav: HOW TO MAKE GOOD COFFEE. Use LION COFFEE, b?in-e to qet le-t rctilw tou mnt ne the K-t coffee. Grind voor I.IOX I OFFEE rather fine. 1 e tallenioiiifuI t each cup, and one estra for tSe iot." F r-t mix it uith a little col.l water, enoimh t make a thick pastr. nwl add white of an ecg (if egi: is to be tued a a tcttler), then follow one of the following rulrt : lml. WITH BOILING WATER. Add bolltofl water, and let It boll THREE MINUTES ONLY. Add a little cold water ami ct aside Mve miautes to settle. Serve promptly. 2d. WITH COLD WA1EU. Add your eold water to the paste and bring tt to a boll. Then set aside, add a little cold water, aud In Uve rfautes lfs ready to nerve. 3 (Don't boil it too longr. . , -Don't lot it stand more than ton minutes before serving. DOVTS (.Don't use water that has boon boiled before. TWO WAYS TO SETTLE COFFEE. lit. WMh Eggs, fee part of the -white of an eg?, mixing it with the pound LlOX COFFEE tefore boiiini:. ,,...,, j id. WUh Cold Wr'tr instead of esgs. After boiling add a dasa of cold water, and iot aside for eight or tea mmutrti, then serve through a itraiuer. Insist on getting a package of geaalac LION COFFEE. prepare it according to this recipe ami yoa will only ase LION COFFEE in future. (S11 only in 1 lb. sealed packages.) (Lion-hend on every package.) (Save thtse Lion-heuds for valualile premmms.) SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE WOOLSON SPICE CO., Toledo, Ohio. W. L. DOUGLAS UNION MADE. S3J2&S3.22 SHOES W. I.. Iluiiela '!.. lO lir iirf th nr-:tli-.t wllir In tlie W4rll lMr.iukir th-ir oxrt-llrnt IIb,'ub (Mlius inI ur. rinr runni rrit:llit.-. 'I'lit-v arc Juat i ii'mhI u tliwsc thut rml fru n S.VOO IdSl.OO. Thr only tliOrmirf is thf prlrr. W. I. !titsl.i M.0 ahio cttat miirr f e urur, hall ChAr Bh.iM-Im-IIit. wr.ir loiiT. anil ur" nfgrr.iHT .ilur limn any olhrrV-t.-'af h- n Ihrmnrkrl l-Iay. W. I.. Itnnglas Buitr. Hnlrft th-ir .ilutB ty t.tiniIii 111 ituino nti prtrt u ch hwllnia nfrurh luif. l.Mk lur II. i'lLruowlnlilulf. W.l loucl.ta -. aliun :irr aul:I diniujti lii uwn rrluil t;rrm In thpprinrip l )('. :! I ry tntl-.l-r h-rr. ui. ter Mrtitrri' iu lit r, UT.Im luulu alitxra urr tt Kliia our rravclt. LETTER TIU:: OTHER JflKES T AW PRICK. "for thf iLt I'trrr vntr I h irr te-rn W.Uh'tigJ it SX.V) Knr awl j'mn-1 it not only as 9 't.'tit'- r hit mv t'k. "A i' I -r rtt rj mlUn of prtcr." Cms. L.tirrri..lur. ' u'i.rr The I ipi'nt i' U t tni. Inli.m.ip-.hs. tnl. Boys wear VI. L. Doadas $2.50 and S2.03 shoes becaase they fit better, hold their shape, aad wear lontr taaa other makes. W.LD0UGLA3 $4.00 SHOES CAMNOT 3E EQUALLED ATAHY PRICE. It. 1i'i'J (' n 1 ' t'l'tlri ir Am S3 V 1.. ''ran Cult Ii 'itudrr il t,j 'h Ttrt'it pl'tnt trl' it pri'ttil. FsTi.zt 1: vi:i.rr ivi 1.1. xot wi:a k iitt.r W. I- IViacH-. ln tht l.iri:t lirx" mill onler tMiii- in th worll. No irr.uMf t lM a St 4 tiu . 2S . riri ntixv (Mivrry. lfoji1-sr-timber information. trri' f r l fin' I Cur tim f Spnna .ttu' W.L.DOUCLAS, BROCKTON, MASSACHUSETTS Baaaaabt ' t-JJ " MSi RrpiAioiiff SSiT Have you mone- that is idle, or whir h should be invested ? Do you want a loan against our farm ? Write for circulars of the oldest 1 nd strongest Savings Bank in Nebraska. Gin SAVINGS B&HK, 2CI S. 16th Si., QFMSIl. BIY TIILR G0-CWI AND BABY CABBIAOES dl'i'i' 'r n n a 1 t r r 23 I . ' til ' . 1- tr -V. i- -.irn "-t urn vt . .- wn! itlE i -t--w ApS ' -till!? VVVjl V-v '.JUT. .. Cnata t'ti & B-ittJa Horki IiI2 Howan! O-naha. . UK A CLEAR. HEALTHY SKlNP biziioI s Eczema and Znn Beaedy Purifies, Then Heals I y '-' Eczema. V plcj. Kr " i -t Illte ai Ki . . ' n. Aa alto'cte cutt for r"1 - r Scala U a- Ask Dra-vist t r tend 1 TRZE SAMPLE aaa EOl -1 Write nnlj DepL 6. SAKDHr T ?.CG CO, Des ilaiaes. pit A P1TLESS SCALES. 1- ' a- v lfr- - ?aaJui ' ' , t bav We u - o It:id i -i --- ECM-' Z-'-'Z., Cts Ksisss, l:5. -un Vvaaaan1 V a... L vO VK dm FADELESS DYES . .-?' eclo's si . wool a-t r.ction equ?!l; !! zni is Guaranteed to cw 3ffrc, ruiT h to Dje. 3!each and SI: Colors. JiO.Miif.jUtuco.. Ut.iontate. MiUu x for frer tot $100 Weekly Easily Made a-rttlasSei ' aecr'ary.n : 'a-uraace.experleace na- eBi;t?-' AcciSea:Co..Oealtauea.Ia. Doctor Know good. Perhaps It Is for them, bat tft can't bo for you. Dr. R. V. Pirate. Buffalo. X. Y.: Dear Sir I suffered for four year wltb fallliur of womb and general female weak ness, had terrible backaches and headaches and exieclally distressing times at monthly periods. Our family ptijslcian prescribed several remedies but although he wis an old and excellent doctor he wa unatilo to relieve me. Dr. Pierre's Favorite Inscription was brought to my attention and spoken of so highly that 1 decided to change medicines and take that. 1 was Indeed pleased to timl that tlil remedy relieved my pains within two days, and at tho next period, there wm a groat change for the IiotU-r. After ten weeks' use of tho Favorite Prescription ' I was not only cured bat my general health was much better than It had Urn for thrert years. 1 took on flesh, my complexion be came smooth and clear, ami I now enjoy tha best of health, thanks to Dr. l'itrco's etUcient remedy. Mrs. A. E. Hoht.neh. 1 Seventh Street. PortlandOregon, Dr. Pierce's Favorite lYocription con tains no alcohol, is entirely vegetable and was the first exclusively woman's tonic on the market it has sold more largely in tho past third of a century than any other medicine for women. All other compounds intended for wom en onlv are made with alcohol, or alcohol Is a large component, Thisalcohol injures the nerves. The little nl corpuscles of the blood an' shrunken by alcohol. All such compounds, therefore, do harm. "Tho People's Medical Advisor" con tains several chapters devoted to tha phvsiologv of women, with directions for sou-treatment which every woman ought to read. A paper-nouna copv sent .mso- l"v rT?,s. ..,- .?- tuKl tomans turn, nicy are s:ilo. sine uin s-w. I u ml taken do not h.e to lo taken always. One little "Pellet' is a gentle laxative, and two a mild cathartic, lhey never lJpl IrvfC Thev never gripe. hy all druggists. m viivui '.Ci, 'Tr ar FCR MEN. PIANOS From Mukrr 10 l'r. Cut out Aitriit- I'railf. SAVE A ClEAIN 9100 Don't think of li'iin!t n piano with out tirst K"ttlrisr our j,i t It-r prices and UTmt on the famous ""utller" pianos and 20 othor rnakt" ADDKESS SCHUOLLER&MLELLER I'lami Makera. Omnhu, rb. ESET o ;. . TWEITY BUSHELS OF WHEAT TO THE ACRE ? Is the record on the Free Home stead Lands of WesternCanada for IS04. pz&r wZtit'Zr; W?ir- lb "- tt rart'i-'pf't T rn':-l '- tfce I'nlul Statei.-rtc d .'- nave gone to Canada s."- ty k. n l.ero-n aa Importer cf --:-a! iurc(iae a farm ta -- c'l.: Oeia v j t ania inl V'oae nt it tbose vaa nil! te p pruiace It. App'yfTfn' a n '.' Sap'ln'-Er!ent of In.ml- Ea: n & ,i 4 r! u-tn.r!zed Canai'ao vTimeit ." V. lSmaclt, ; JCew Vuik M'- Hui (I'a? e-'.4-.k.. I'lease say a L i ' tU alTerttieseni. DR. M CORE VV F "- '? hauTind-a "pi-cis.; II-EASEorlFN. KlKht- .r. MrhOmuhi H II. m Trrtniriit ha p-raur-r.'lf - ''.ouTruli, it maU ;. l jti- ca-. r.d wr!: fo- I"rr iiniltrT- r meat M-l- nnf;fn i. t.j rj paci-K Bo ""X OtT.c' ' cuth Uth Stfat. Vhen Answering Advertisement' Kindly Ment'on This Paper ftriMr. MaT'af unxrat iri LUKth WHlKi- All f ISP :aI!. st Cctuh syrup. To.-: Goxl. in time. ?oIa by druggists. 1 pyil I -&& I aCaaaakaLL viaK " aVaaaaaaaaaaaaaaai r" T7n.'j -lViiT ;m4B K-Lizj 2H? ?-, .& IJ- - Vfcfct-J? A -r?M-tfaaai m VZJ 3l a & f J7 aaEaClato aai ii LSee rfWiLT UT OJ. r trnm v - -JZ JT'". --- M.iM f racunr. Feorto. Hi. W. N. U. Orr.ana. No. 191905. S raised embank- r- .. .." ''N