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About The Columbus journal. (Columbus, Neb.) 1874-1911 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 25, 1905)
&e- ZSGttmesettita if J 0 f 1' MES. EMMA FLEISSIEE Suffered Over Ttvo Years health Wm In a Precarious Condition Caused By Pelvic Catarrh. HEALTH AND STRENGTH RESTORED BY PE-RU-NA. Mrs. Tlrnma Flyi.sMior, 1412 Fixth A v, Seattle, Wah., Worthy Treasurer Sons of TeiiiiKTiiiiee, writes: suffered over (wo years with i regular and painful periods. My health was in a very precarious condition ana J was anxious to fin J something to re store my health and strength. "I was very jrl:il to try IVrima ami delighted to lind that it v:is doing me good. 1 continued to u.e it a little ovei three mouths and found 1113' troubles removed. " consider it a splendid medicine and shall never be without it, taking a dose occasionally when I feel run-down and tired." Our liles contain, thousands of testi monials which Dr. Hartman has re ceived from grateful, happy women who have been restored to health by his remedy. 1'eruna, Beautify Your Walls and Ceilings! A Rock Cement in whit and beautiful tints. Docs not rub or scale. Destroys disease- gcrais and vermin. No washing of Vails after onco applied. Any one can brush it on mix with cold water. Other finishes, leariii fanciful names and mixed with cither Iiot or cold water, do not liavc Hiq cement In C property of Alabastine. They are stuck on with glue, or other animal matter, which rots, feeding disease KerniM, rubbing:, healing and spoiling walls, cloth ing, etc Such Finishes must bo washed off every year expensive, filthy work. Buy Alabastiiiconly in five pound pack aes, iroKrly labeled. Tint card, pretty whM and ceiling design, " Hints on Decorating" and our artists' services in making color plans. Free. ALABASHNE CO., 0raa4 Rspids, Mich., or 105 Water St, N. Y- The World's Standard DE LAVAL CREAM SEPARATORS 600.000 In Use Ten Times All Others Combined. Sara $10.- atr Caw trtrj fair of Um to an fkaritj Stttiai iTttaaa ea SB.- str Cm mlttting lu a tar Ciu&vm. THE IE LAVAL SEPAIATN CI. Canal a Randolph bu . 74 CorUanat Sltwb CHICAGO I NEW YOftK JRmnva AJiiSiWit aft - AAVIfB 2 ' "' Tco 4mfJ$ MAttUOT SSl ITATERPROOf 0I1H aOTfflllG? rsUCttllS.FOMHfLSUCKKAJwKATy FOLLOWING OUR SUCCC53E4 AT PHILADELPHIA CHICAGO AND OTHER EXPOSITIONS Wfc WON THE: i HIGHEST POSSIBLE AWARD . kAI THE 5T.LOU15 WUKLVd JAW AJTOWHtCO :Ht -kjittw meats! fX -NtWYORK J iST0WcMklnli; GRAND' atIZl T30"T.t Every housekeeper should know that if they will buy Defiance Cold Water Starch for laundry use they will save not only time, because it never sticks to the iron, but because each package .contains 16 oz. one full pound while all other Cold Water Starches arc put up in vi-pound pack ages, and the price is the same. 10 cents. Then again because Defiance Starch is free from all injurious chem icals. If your grocer tries to sell you a 1--OZ- package it is because he has a stock on hand which he wishes to dispose of before he puts in Defiance. He knows that Defiance Starch has printed on every package in large let ters and figures "1G ozs." Demand De fiance and save much time and money and the annoyance of the iron stick : iog. Defiance never sticks. "I , Livery for Housemaids. Housemaids in livery are the latest innovation in "smart" London houses. One fashionable woman has attired her maids in neat skirts, tight-fitting bodices with natty double-breasted waistcoats of yellow and black, tiny trass buttons on either side. . This Language of Ours. J "yes," said the slang specialist, with lereat earnestness, "that bum baseball 'team by crooked playing, has won six ajaJSlit games." Baltimore Americas. 11111 Mill 111 nun gj fj AbBBkwSe EDWARD F. SWINNEY LONG A POWER IN FINANCIAL WORLD FtiiMiWa Edward F. Swinney, retiring presi dent of the American Hankers Associ ation, has been at the head of the First National Bank of Kansas City since ! 1S90, and for three years prior to that date held the position of cashier. He was born near Lynchburg, Pa., in 1857, and received his education in the pub lic schools. In 1875 he came to Mis Sioux Feared Massacre Gray dawn was breaking at the Pine Ridge agency when an Indian runner broke headlong into the village of the surrendered Sioux. He stopped at the tepees of the principal warriors long enough to shout a message, and then leaving the camp where its end rested against an abrupt hill, he made his way with a plainsman's stealth to the group of agency buildings, circling which had extending beyond crowning ridge after ridge were the white Sib ley tents of the soldiers. Breakfast was forgotten in the troubled camp of the Sioux. The chiefs and the greater braves rushed to quick council, and the lesser war riors, the squaws and the children stood waiting with dogged patience in the village streets. The council was over. An old chief shouted a word of command that was caught up and passed quickly to the farthest outlying tepee. An army might have learned a lesson from that which followed the short, sharp order. Mounted men shot out from the vil lage, and as fast as fleet-footed ponies, pressed to their utmost, could accom plish the distances every outlying ridge was topped with the figure of rider and horse, silhouetted against the morning sky. Every sentinel warrior ha'd his eyes on the camps of the white soldiery. Suddenly from the east of the agency, where lay the Sixth Cavalry, there came a trumpet call that swelled and ended in one ringing note that sang iu and out the valleys. The motionless figure of one of the hill-top sentinels was moved to instant life. A signal ran from ridge to ridge, anally to be passed downward into the camp of the waiting Sioux who sprang into action at its coming. The pony herds of the Sioux were grazing on the hills to the west, unrestrained of their freedom by lariat or herds man. In number they nearly equaled the people of the village, a few ponies for emergency use only having been kept within the camp. Upon these jumped a score of warriors, who broke out of the shelter of the tepees for the hills where the herds were forag ing on the snow-covered bunch grass. It seemed but a passing moment be fore every pony in that great grazing herd was headed for the village. The animals were as obidient to the word of command as is a brave to the word of his chief. During the gathering of the herds the women of the camp had slung their papooses to their backs, had col lected the camp utensils and were standing ready to strike the tepees, while the braves, blanketed, and with rifles in their hands, had thrown them selves between the village and the camps of the soldiers of Gen. Miles. The Sioux who had surrendered less than a week before were preparing to stampede from the agency and to Senator Clark's Troublesome Pipe. This story is tcld about ex-Senator J. S. Clark "of Calais. Me.: One day, while awaiting his turn in a barber shop in Calais, he was talking with a friend, and was so deeply interested in the conversation that he allowed his pipe to go out several times. Each time he would ask Melvin Noble, a local practical joker, for a match. About the time he wanted the fifth match Noble said: "I don't begrudge you the matches, Jed, but I think it would be cheaper for you to put a grate in your pipe and burn coal." Great Singers "Found." Some of the world's greatest singers have been discovered accidentally. Once upon a time Wachtel. the great est tenor of his day in Germany, was cracking his whip and hailing fares In a musical rondo. Mme. Scalchi, the greatest of contraltos, is said to have called her wares in the street before she was found for the opera stage. Campanini, the king of tenors, was a blacksmith, hut was heard singing like an angel and was enabled to desert the forge for the footlights. souri and was made eashier of a bank in Fayette. A few years later he be came cashier of a bank in Colorado City, Texas. Mr. Swinney is treasurer of the Kansas City board of education, and a director in the Fidelity Trust company and the Missouri Savings as sociation. He is also noted as an ex pert wing shot. make necessary the repeating of a campaign that had lasted for months. The Indian runner had brought word that Great Chief Miles had ordered his soldiers to arms in the early morning, and that the surrendered Sioux were' to be massacred to the last man, wom an and child. The medicine men had told the In dians that this was to be their fate, and the runner's word found ready be lief. Gen. Miles had planned a review of the forces in the field as a last act of the campaign, and it was the order for the gathering and the marching that had been taken as an order of massa cre by the fearful, suspicious Sioux. Trumpet and bugle calls of "boots and saddles" and "assembly" burden ed the air. The troopers and "dough boys" had fallen in, 5,000 strong. The column started west with flags and guidons fluttering. The head of the command, the greatest that had been gathered together since the days of the civil war, reached the bluff above the Sioux village. A shout would have started the stampede of the sav ages; a shot would have been the sig nal for a volley from the warriors lying between the white column and the village. What a review was that on the snow-covered South Dakota plains that January morning fifteen years ago! Gen. Miles on his great black horse watched the 5,000 soldiers pass, soldiers that had stood the burden of battle and the hardships of a winter's campaign, and had checked one of the greatest Indian uprisings of history. The First Infantry led by Col. Shaf fer, who afterward was in command in front of Santiago, was there that day. Guy V. Henry, now lying in peaceful Arlington cemetery, rode at the head of his black troopers, the "buffalo soldiers" of the Sioux. Capt. Allen W. Capron was there with the battery that afterward opened the bat tle at Santiago. The Seventh cavalry was there, two of its troops, B and K, having barely enough men left in the ranks to form a platoon. These two troops had borne the brunt of the fighting at Wounded Knee, when ninety men of the Seventh fell killed or wounded before the bul lets of the Sioux. When the two troops with their attenuated ranks rode by the reviewing general remov ed his cap, an honor otherwise paid only to the colors of his country. The column filed past, broke into regiments, then into troops and com-, panics, and the word of dismissal was given. The Indian sentinels on the ridges signaled to the camp in the val ley. In another minute there was a stampede, but it was only that of the thousands of Sioux ponies turned loose and eager to get back to their breakfast of bunch grass on the' prairies. Chicago Post. , AaAAaaaVMWI Tennyson's Honeymoon. Tennyson waited for his bride ten years. When the wedding day came the dresses arrived too late. The cake arrived late also. But that did not spoil either the wedding or the honeymoon. The couple first went to Lynton, enjoying, as became a poet and poet's wife, long rambles through the woods and over the heather, in spite of the weeping Devonshire cli mate. Thence they passed to the English lakes. Tennyson spoke of the country round and about as the Garden of Eden. Philadelphia Press. Had Forgotten Her Contract. The latest story about Sarah Bern hardt illustrates her disinclination to bother about details. A big publish ing house made arrangements to pub lish her memoirs and the tragedienne promised to deliver them ready in a year. When the time came the pub liscr sent a man for the manuscript. "Memoirs?" said Mme. Bernhardt, when the messenger had stated his errand. "Mon Dieu, I had forgotten all about them." She haj not pre pared a line. ALCOHOL IN MOST MEDICINES. Indispensable Requisite in Compound ing of Some Prescriptions. It is of course true that some pro prietary medicines contain alcohol and nearly all liquid medicines prescribed by physicians contain it. No honest man will defend the sale of intoxi cants under the guise of medicine; but every honest man should protest against a system of wholesale denun ciation born of malice, or ignorance of pharmaceutical principles, and fos tered by selfish interests. It is as sumed that alcohol is the cause of in temperance; but there is a great dif ference between alcohol and whisky. If a substitute for alcohol could be found for use in the manufacture of medicines, its discoverer would render a great service to the profession of pharmacy and the science of med cine, for alcohol is a very expensive ingredient and a cheaper substitute would be gladly accepted. Unfortun ately the word 'alcohol in the minds of many people is associated exclu sively with bar-rooms, drunkenness and all forms of degradation and vice. This is due to a lack of knowledge by the general public of the fact that alcohol is an indispensable requisite in drugs, tinctures and fluid extracts. All fluid extracts and tinctures on the druggists' shelves contain from 20 to 00 per cent of alcohol; and of all liquid medicines prescribed by phy sicians more than 75 per cent contain it in large proportions. Alcohol is required to preserve or ganic substances from deterioration and from freezing, and it is also re quired to dissolve substances not solu ble in water, while it contributes to their preservation when dissolved. Diluted alcohol is largely employed in fluid extracts; and whenever a greater strength of alcohol is required as a solvent (for extracting medicinal prin ciples) the medicine is of such a char acter as to preclude a large dosage; and for this reason preparations, even if containing 50 per cent or more ot alcohol, are practically less intoxicat ing than beer. In such cases the character of the medicinal constituents is such as to absolutely forbid the taking of the medicine in any way except in very small doses and at stated intervals only. To assume that any great number of proprietary med icines are used as beverages is the veriest absurdity. Exchange. Famous Bow Bells. There are no church bells in Eng land more famed than Bow Bells. Thev set limits to the boundaries of Cockneydom. Americans regard all Londoners as cockneys. But onl those born within hearing of Bow Bells can claim the distinction which is supposed to confer on its possessor peculiar privileges of speech, partic ularly where aspinatcs are concerned Western life Irdemnity Go. The Policy Holders' Committee at Xo. .. Jackson Blvd.. Chlcucn. will plte complete Information loiiI the expenditure of Oiuou of company fund at commission to Mr. ISopenfeld for the purchase of Life Insurance Company of Pennsylvania hua!nef made on or about February 2th. 16. and the ex penditure of tSMijmo on September aith. IW. to pur chase 8.tioa share of stock In the Security Life and Annuity Company. r 'alue 10 per share.) Mr Moulton. Mr. K senfe'd and Mr. Moore, the Execu me Committee, are now cited by Jude KohNaat tc show cause why they should not be punished fot contempt in maklnir the lat tranacJlon. Mnk Inquiry once. IIEUVEV I. HICKS, Chairman Enough for a Bath. Should an American, an English man, a Frenchman, an Austrian, i i German, an Italian and a Russian si down to a table together and ordei drinks in a quantity that would show the relative consumption of these bev erages by their respective peoples 'some would get enough for a bath while others would obtain only a few mouthfuls. Beware of Ointments for Catarrh that Contain Mercury, as mercury will surely destroy the sern-e of smell and completely derance the whole system when entering It throueh the mucous surfaces. Such artlC.es should never 1 u-cd except on prescrip tions from reputable physicians, as the damage they will d U ten fold to the Rood yon can rxsibly de Tit e from them. Hall'tf Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F.J. Cheney Co., Toledo. O.. contains no nier curr. and Is taken internally, acting directly upon the" blood and mucous surfaces of the system. In biiTlmc Hall's Catarrh Cure ha sure you pet the genuine. It Is taken lnteruallv and made In Toledo, Ohio, bv F J. Cheney Co. Teriiinonlais free. Sold bv Iruirclts. 1 rice. ."u-. per bottle. Take Aall'a Family I'llU for constipation. Do Amusements Amuse? Happiness is always unconsciou: (watch children and puppies at plaj and you will be convinced of the fact) but amusements, as a rule, rendei their participants even more irritabk and self-conscious. Lady Violet Gre ville in the Graphic. Important to Mothers. Exnaine carefully every bottle of CASTOrttA. a safe and sure remedy for infanta and children. and see that it Bears the Signature of 6Lzffflj3fa la Use For Over SO Years. The Kind You Have Always Bought. Mosquitoes and Flies. One of the facts established within a few years is that mosquitoes are the deadliest of all creatures. A writer in the Lancet adduces evidence whicb indicates that flies, too, cause thou sands of deaths, especially of infants every summer, by contaminating fooc with diarrheal germs. Odd Rents in Britain. The English delight in odd rents but the oddest is a tenancy at Brook house, in Yorkshire, where the renta" is one snowball in June and a rec rose in December. The rose is easilj arranged and the snowball is now made of shaved ice. It doesn't take the average man long to tell all he really knows, but he never gets through telling whal he thinks he knows. Chicago News. When a man presents a woman with an engagement ring it is equivalent to a declaration of war. Enjoy life today. The joys of yes terday are past and those due tomor row may fail to arrive. Biting the nails is called "onchyo page" in France and is regarded as s symptom of degeneracy. Withholding affection is one of tht Btost wasteful economies in life. Logic The argumentative man But, my dear fellow, I tetl you it's impossible for the moon to be inhabited. When t is full it is all right, but when it wanes down to a little crescent, where :he deuce would all the people go to? Salt Water is Tonic. One of the best features of a sea bath, says the "Family Doctor," is the salt water inadvertently swallowed by bathers, which is a wonderful tonic for the liver, stomach and kidneys. STRENGTHEN THE STOMACH Dr. Williams' Pink Pills Really Cur Indigestion Instead of Merely Relieving Symptoms. There are plenty of remedies by which you can relieve for the time heartburn, pain and gas on the stomach and can smother nervous sensations and induce artificial sleep. You can humor your stomach by giving it predigested fixd. But when you take your next meal all your trouble begins afresh. There is only one sensible thing to do. Strengthen the sfbmach ami do away with the necessity for drugs and arti ficial foods. The be.st remedy ever found for this purpose is the one that was iiud by E. E. Strong, of Capluville, Shelby county, Teiin. " For years," he states, " I snffered greatly from indigestion. I tried many different, remedies and some of them would relieve me for a time, but the trouble alwavs came back. About six mouths ago 1 hud an unusually severe attack, and while I tried everything I had ever heard of, I found that none of the ordinary remedies would reach the difficulty this time. " Oue'dav I read in a Memphis paper how Dr. Williams Pink Pills had cured a Michigan woman, n sufferer from chronic dyspepsia of a most stubborn type. I then tried the same remedy ami it proved jnst as successful in my case. I took only three boxes, and was cured. I have not had the slightest symptoms of indigestion since." The tonic treatment has a sound prin ciple as its baMs. and abundant success in .actual use. Multitndesof cases that hail defied all other remedies have been cured bv Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. Tho pilis actually make new blood and strikeat the root of all diseases caused by bad blood. Thev contain no harmful stimulants or opiates. Everv dvspeptio should read, What to Eat ami How to Eat." Write th Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Schenec tady, N.Y., for a free copy. Eighty Per Ceut. If by a single stroke all marriage ties now in existence were struck off or declared illegal, eight-tenths of all couples would be remarried within forty-eight hours, and seven-tenths could not be kept asunder with bayo nets. Eighty per cent of all marriages are a success from a biologic point of view. Dr. Woods Hutchinson in Contemporary Review. Doctors in a Race. An attraction of the last North Georgia fair was a "doctors race." The physicians who took part in the contest had their horses stabled and were themselves undressed and in bed when the call for them was made. When the bell rang they had to dress and hitch their horses and drive one mile to a certain place. Life-Saving Pigs. A coasting steamer was wrecked near Sydney. The captain tied life lines to some pigs which formed part of the cargo. These on being thrown overboard, quickly -swam ashore, tak ing the lines with them. Communi cation being thus established, every person on board was rescued. awa nermanently enred. Ko fits or nervousness after MIS SSTdavsuie of Ir. KlInesGreat Nert e Kestor ir Send for FKtCfc -J.OO trial bottle and treatise. DK.fcfcau!I.NE?i:tdT.01Arcn Street. 1'hlIadelphU.l. Nye Regretted Sense of Humor. It is related that Bill Nye often spoke, late in his life, of his gift of rare humor as a curse. His fun palled upon him while his readers were still roaring. He saw himself as a buffoon, a clown, amusing the rabble and the idea was not sweet to him. You never hear any one complain about "Defiance Starch." There is none to equal it in quality and quantity. 16 ounces. 10 cents. Try it now and save your money. Few men amount to much until they have fallen in love a few times and have been thrown down. CURES INDIGESTION When what you eat makes yon nncomfortable it is doing you very little good beyond barely keeping yon alive. Digestive tablets are worse than useless, for they will in time deprive the stomach of all power to digest food. The stomach must be toned up strengthened, The herb tonic-laxative, Lane's Family Medicine will do the work quickly and pleas antly. Sold by all dealers at 25c. and 50c. NEBRASKA LAND $5 to $20 ai Acre $." to $15 for unimproved, and f12 50 to JM for Improved. We have a larjre list of the fiuvt land there Is. It l located In the Southwest en part of Nebraska, where yon -an raise coru. alfalfa, all kinds of mall rra'n. winter wheat and all kind-, of fruit. The best kind of water and the healthiest all-year-around climate you can II eln. The s3il is a deep, dark loam, no Baud, mostly :11 level, close to towns, schools and r.iilroads. Why eo t r ther out when you can buy pood land in Ne braska that Is clone to a pco 1 market, for less money than other places. Special low rates to look over tho land. Write us for ex cursion rales and free map of Nebraska. HantinRfi tt Heyden. WfJ'.-i Farnam St.. Omaha, or Oxford, Nebraska. PATENTS1PR0FIT MUST FULLY PROTECT AN INVENTION. MASON, FEKMCI ft UWIENCE. Fateit Lawyers, Washington, D. C, Established 1861. Send for our 43rd Anniversary free Booklet, ehow lne Illustrations of Mechanical Movement. Refer ence. Bradftreet and tbouaands of at!fied cllenu. CommunlcaUoBj confidential. Write us to-daj. Ciitey Islati Souvenir Ptst Cards. Six beautiful colored scene- for 25c. Coney Island Postal Card Co., Coney Island, N. Y. DEFIMCE Cold Water Starch makes laundry work a pleasure. 16 oz. pkg. 10c. Alcohol is Brain Poison. In their annual report, an exhaus tive document, the British lunacy com missioners say, as a result of their researches into the relation of drink and insanity: "It cannot be denied that alcohol is a brain poison." One Man Pays for Canal. Toulouse, France, 1ms a canal which was built entirely at the expense of one man. Its name is the Canal du Midi; it was built in 1666-1681. and cost M. Paul Riquet 6SO,000,COO francs. Characteristics of Koreans. The people of Korea are timid and peaceful, the men tall, with high fore heads, straight noses, and a graceful, indolent carriage, the women short, squat, and as ugly as their lords are handsome. Hope for Them and Him. A man has made great progress when he has learned that some of the people who don't agree with all his opinions may. after all, be partly right. Somcrville Journal. After 30. While she is under thirty a woman may get comfort out of the thought that she is younger than she looks. After that her only hope is to look younger than she is. The Better Part of Valor. The courage of one's convictions is an excellent thing, but it should never be allowed to become unyoked from the discretion of one's reason. Puck. Born an American Citizen. A son born to American parents while traveling in a foreign country is an American citizen, and as such is eligible to the presidency. Isn't He a Nice Man, Ladies. After all, a pretty baby doesn't need a prize. A pretty baby is a prize. And all babies are pretty. North Adams Transcript. The penalty in Germany for adulter ating food is six months in prison and a fine of 1,500 marks. One pound of washed wool produces on an average a yard of cloth 36 in. wide. More Flexible and Lasting, won't shake out or blow out; by using Defiance Starch you obtain better re sults than possible with any other brand, and one-third more for same money. Many a man who owns an automo bile ought to be pushing a wheelbar row. Defiance Starch is guaranteed biggest and best or money refunded. 16 ounces, 10 cents. Try it now. A good ostrich is worth $300. THIS AD IS WORTH Scents. Cot it out: take It to your srocen he wfll irfve SUCK rKDiK, We wi'i give one tree to every in America to convince her it is tiie oest ana most convenient form of WASH BLUE Wont freeze, break, spill nor spot clothes. Once used always used. Wlecls PRICE, 25Cts. CURE THE GWPi IN ONE DAY I AMPiNE iS &sa pwiMaa!E rirtBtsTQiiiity fiMJrllMaC.mm SlwSMI&C!6AR always reliable Vour jouuer or dlrcit truiu Ki-ctory, i'eorls, IU. TWEITY-FIVE BUSHELS OF WHE1T TO THE ACRE Means a pro ductive ca pacity in dol lars of over $16 per acre. This on land which has cost the farmer noth ing but the price of tilling it, tells its own story. The jnadian Government pives absolutely free to every settler 160 acres of such land. Lands adjoining can be purchased at from J6 to 10 per acre from railroad and other corpor ations. Already 175,000 farmers from the United States have made their homes in Canada. For pamphlet "Twentieth Century Canada" and all information apply to Supt. of Immigra tion, Ottawa. Canada, or to following authorized Canadian Government Agent IV. V. IJennett, 801 New York Life Building, Omaha, Nebraska. (Mention this paper.) FOR WOMEN timliM with ins oecnliar te their sex. nsed as a douche it marvelonslv suc cessful. Thoroughly cleanses, kills disease terns, stops discharges, heals inflammation and local soreness. Paxtine is in powder form to be dissolved m pure water, and is far more cleansing, healing, eermiculal and economical than liquid antiseptics for all TOsLET AND WOMEN'S SPECIAL USES For sale at dru agists, 00 cents a box. Trial Box and Book cf lastnictioM Free. Kmc R. Paxton Compant Boston. Mass. "Fallow tie Fist" HoiDf visitors Excursion Novtiier 37th To many points in Illinois, Indiana. Ohio. Kentucky. Western Pennsylvan ia. New York and West Virginia, at GREATLY REDUCED RATES. The WABASH has solid road-bed. roc-k ballast, ana new equipment. Re clining cSair cars (SEATS FREE.) For rate, maps and all information call at Wabash City Office. 1601 Far nam St. or address HARRY E. MOORES, G. A. P. D.. Wab. R. R.. Omaha. Neb. SCALES FOR FARMERS. Buy the cheap en and be:. Send fur prlcra. Chicago Seals Cow Chicago, IU. g Jd iYW - OW" laTBBVKaBB. i vt - i5; : k, v-Zfb -S-U5 VO .- ..!.. U&BB it - rio'a Ur2 r "ljail-r5" m IMM JvMk Eggs Fried on Pavement. In July, says a writer in the Cana dian Journal of Medicine and Surgery the Washington shopkeepers, to at tract trade, fry eggs by breaking the shell and allowing the conttats to fall upon the heated pavement of Penn sylvania avenre. Our best friends' are those who re mind us of the smart things we have said. A widow can make a man believe in her by pretending to believe in him. . Ht UiiANBt Or LIFE IsTELLIGENTWOMEN PREPARE Dangers and Pain of This Critical Period Avoided by the Uee of Lydia S. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound. How many wo men realize that the .most critical period in a wo man s existence is the change of life, and that the anxiety felt by women as this time draws near is not withojft reason ? If her system is in a deranged condi tion, or slie is predisposed to apoplexy or congestion of any organ, it is at this time likely to become active and. with a host of nervous irritations, make Ufa a burden. At this time, also caneersand tnmors are more liable to begin their destruc tive work. Such warning symptoms as a sense of suffocation, hot flashes, diz ziness, headache, dread of impending evil, sounds iu the ears, timidity, pal pitation of the heart, sparks before the eyes, irregularities, constipation, variable appetite, weakness and inqui etude are promptly heeded by intelli gent women who are approaching the period of life when woman's great change mav be expected. Lydia E." Piukham's Vegetable Com pound is the world's greatest remedy for women at this trying period, and may be relied upon to overcomftall dis tressing symptoms and carry them safely through to a healthy and happy old age. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound invigorates and strengthens the female organism, and builds up the weakened nervous system as no other medicine can. Mrs A. E. G Hyland. of Chester town, Md., in a letter to ilrs. Pick- ham, says : Dear Mrs. Pinkham : "I bad been suffering with falling of tbs womb for years and was passing through the change of life. My womb was btully swollen. 1 had a good deal of soreness, dizzy siiells, headaches, and was very nervous. I wroto you for advice and commenced treatment with Lydia E. Pinkhain's Vegetable Com pound as you directed, and I am happy to say that all those distressing symptoms left me, and I have passed safely through the change of life a well woman." For special advice regarding this im portant period women are invited to write to Mrs Pinkham for advice. It is free and always helpful. . yon a 5c Wlcslfl woman OttIO GROCER: will mleem thin ak through Tour inltlu-r. or rM-t-fnr itn faro vaJaeof Sc it ra- Sceind by "job In payment for a Se Wiad Stick, or in half payment tor lOoatick. LAUNDRY BLUE CO., CHICAGO. AfpiAEGhylanilTl jBJkN m9mMmWmWFW aK m.Lk JmJnffCi'l W wAMmmmmWmw 52w i I I I ill aw e l 3. i i eg a..M n m - mmmmmzmM Srssr;"";. v.riMjjMfr- (Carltat. y nQlogJ-dggfcJBr&iSjwsswlft is round, never flat. The bine is inside, never outside. t Beware of imitation. AHTI-GRIPIHE IS GUARANTEED TO CURE GRIP, IAD COLMEADAHE MD K'JRALIIA. I won't sell Aatbrlilae to a laler who won'tOnaraato IU Call forvuurMOXEir BACK. IF IT llO.VT COBB, W. L. Douglas 3 J? & 3-:2? SHOES'. W. L. Douglas S4.00 Ci. Edge Unm cannot be equalled at any price. . ' moRE mem'm Ma.mm shoes imam AMY OTHER MAMVFACTVKEK. tin nnfl RHMHu to Myem Mho cm OlUjUUU disprove tMs statement W. L. Douglas $3.M shoes have by their ex cellent style, easy fitting, and snrerinr wearing qualities, achieved the largest r aie of any S3 Jim snoe in the world. They are Jest as good as those that coat you $5.0O to $7.00 the only difference is the price. If I could take you tat my factory at Brockton, Mass., the larpest ha tne world under one roof making men's fie a shoes, and show ou the care with which every pair of Douglas shoes H made, you would realize why W. L. Douglas $3.50 shoes are the heat shoes produceJ in the world. If i could show you the difference between the shoes made hi my factory and those of other makes, you would understand why Douglas $3.50 shoes cost more to make, why they haM their shape, fit better, wear longer, and are ot greater intrinsic value than any other SJ.9S snoe on tne maricec 10-aay. W. L. Ommmam mmmmm 1 aWawa.S2.64f.S2.car Bmvm' . Orwmm Whmam.S2.5Q, S2, St.7S,t- CAUTION. Insist upon luivine W.J,. Dong las shoes. Take no suttitiit. Nook grnuin without tm name an. I price Mamped ou bottom. WANTEIK A fh'e dealer in er:ry town where W. L. IKmirl.is Pin- are iot mM. Full line of lamplcs sent free for in-peotiiii ujion teqnest. Fast Color Eyelets used; they will not vcar brass f. , Writ for llliirtrat! Catalog of Fall Stylo W. I DOUGLAS- BrocktOLi. 1 Heat Your Building With BOVEE'S VenttatJnFunuw And save 40 percent on cosi and fuel. Thousand, in use.i G antectl. Send for free lo'ue. Manufactured sold by the levee Crisicr at Works, Wateries, W. N. U. Omaha. No. 431 i '"kLr 2 pi KJiii ( R-f ) TpxC&SSJ II Jnlye.lt. Ml w.L.omueiAM mmmebamo amm "aaelO1 anmVsTt' -B Best Cooah Syrup. Tastes Good. -Vse PS In ttae. otd by draaaista. gnu y i