The Columbus journal. (Columbus, Neb.) 1874-1911, September 26, 1906, Image 3

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    74
A DANGEROUS PRACTICE.'
j
aWroina Off Paint Makes Insurance
Void.
It seems that considerable danger to
.property exists in the practice of
burning off old paint before re-painting.
The question has long been a
.subject of debate in the technical
Journals, end now householders and
the newspapers have begun to discuss
it. Those of us who, with trembling,
have watched the painters blow a
fiery blast from their lamps against
our houses, and hai'e looked sadly at
the .sire of our painting bill because
'of the time wasted on this prelimin
ary work, are interested in the in
vestigation by the Greenfield (Mass.)
Gazette and Courier, which gives con
siderable space to the reasons for the
practice, questions its necessity and
suggests ways to prevent the risk of
burning down one's house in order to
get the old paint off. It says:
"There is a good deal of discussion
among householders as to the desir
ability, in painting houses, of burning
,off the old paint, a practice that has
grown'very common of late in Green
field and elsewhere. Insurance men
are strongly opposed to this method.
It makes void insurance policies for
fires caused in this manner. Several
houses in Greenfield have gotten aflre
as the result of this method, and in
some places houses have burned as a
result
"It is undoubtedly true that when
a house has been painted over and
over again there comes to be an ac
cumulation of paint in bunches. If
new paint is put on top of these ac
cumulations it is almost sure to blis
ter. To burn it off is the quickest
and cheapest and perhaps the surest
method of getting rid of this old
paint'
The Gazette and Courier quotes cer
tain old patrons to the effect that ac
cumulations of paint are unnecessary.
These old-timers lay the blame partly
on the painter who fails to brush his
paint in well, partly on the custom of
Itaintiug in damp weather or not allow
ing sufficient time for drying between
coats, and partly to the use of adulter
ated paints instead of old-fashioned
linseed oil and pure white lead. The
paper says:
."Many of the old householders say
that if care is taken at all these points
it is absolutely unnecessary to have
paint burned off. They advise that
people who have houses painted should
buy their own materials, and to have
them put on by the day, so as to be
sure to. get good lead and oil. Of
course the burning off of paint greatly
'increases the cost of the job."
The trouble householders everywhere
have with paint Is pretty well summed
up by our contemporary, and the
causes are about the same everywhere.
By far the most frequent cause of the
necessity for the dangerous practice
of burning old paint is the use of poor
material. The oil should be pure lin
seed and the white lead should be real
white lead. The latter is more often
tampered with than the oil. Earthy
substances, aud pulverized rock and
quartz, are frequently used ascheap
cners, to the great detriment of the
paint
Painters rarely adulterate white
lead themselves and they very seldom
use ready prepared paints the most
frequent causes of paint trouble. But
they do often buy adulterated white
lead because the property owner in
sists on a low price and the painter
has to economize somewhere. The
suggestion is therefore a good one
that the property owner investigate
the subject a little, find out the name
of some reliable brand of white lead,
"and see that the keg is marked with
"that brand.
The linseed oil is more difficult to
he sure of, as it is usually sold in
hulk when the quantity is small; but
reliable makers of linseed oil can be
learned on inquiry, and, if your dealer
is reliable, you will get what you want
Pure white lead and linseed oil are
so necessary to good paint that the
little trouble necessary to get them
well repays the house owner in dollars
and cents saved.
The Difference.
The actress looked debonair, al-
though the play had been pronounced
a failure on every side.
"It's got to succeed," she explained
"and for that reason I'm not nervous.
Last season I played seven new parts,
on Broadway, but I feel perfectly
tranquil now. That's the advantage
of being a musical show. More than
$40,000 is invested in costumes and
scenery and they're not going to be
thrown away. The piece has simply
got to be made a success. If it had
been a dramatic production we would
have closed oa Saturday night As it
is. I exi)cct to keep the same job all
winter."
Laundry work at home would be
much more satisfactory if the right
Starch were used. In order to get the
desired stiffness, it is usually neces
sary to use so much starch that the
beauty and fineness of the fabric is
hidden behind a paste of varying
thickness, which not only destroys the
appearance, but also affects the wear
ing quality of the goods. This trouble
can be entirely overcome by using De
fiance Starch, as it can be applied
much more thinly because of its great
er strength than other makes.
Serve as lllumjnants.
The fire-flies of Jamaica emit so
brilliant a light that a dozen of them,
enclosed within an Inverted tumbler,
will enable a person to read or write
at night without the least difficulty.
Indeed, it is an expedient to which
many resort These files are in size
as large as a common hive bee, and
perfectly harmless. Their appearance
In Hnusmal numbers acts as a barom
eter to the natives, and is an indica
tion of approaching rain.
Defiance Starch Never sticks to the
iron no blotches no blisters, makes
ironing easy and does not injure the
goods.
A homely riek girl is prettier than
a beautlfal poor one In the eyes of
some men.
Lewis' Single Binder straight 5c cigar is
rood quality all the time. Your dealer or
Lewir Factory, Peoria, TO.
a woauua's tears, the result Is laan-
Will '. wHVTTtf
GROWING POPULARITY OF
BALLOONING WITH SOCIETY
Clubs in England and France
" in New
It is curious how often the old say
ing comes true, that "History repeats
itself;" and this is most forcibly shown
in the return to popularity of balloon
ing. In the eighteenth century we
read a good deal of the delights of
ballooning, both as a sport for men
and women, and it has gone on ever
since up to the last five years, when,
on the formation of an English Aero
club, the sport has been' brought be
fore public notice, and taken up by
society in general. Some years before
the formation of an English Aero club,
France boasted of one composed of
many hundreds of enthusiastic mem
bers, a great number of whom own
private balloons.
Undoubtedly France offers more fa
cilities for ballooning, in that it is not
an island, and so there is more chance
of making long journeys, as in the
British Isles the wind is sure to take
you in a very short space of time to
the sea, while it is not always strong
enough to insure a safe descent on the
other side. In spite of this one draw
back, England is a delightful place
to balloon in for those who are con
tent with a journey of a few hours;
but if a journey running into days is
contemplated, then it is necessary to
go over to France and make a start
from there, preferably from Paris,
where every facility is offered to the
aeronaut
The most astonishing part of bal
looning Is the variety of temperature
one is likely to encounter. It may be
snowing on the earth, and yet, when
the clouds have been passed through,
one finds brilliant sunshine and blue
sky above, while, looking down, the
clouds appear as a great ocean. The
illusion is very remarkable. Again,
when descending in a snow storm, it
Harvesters in English Field
appears to be snowing upwards, owing
to the balloon falling faster than the
anowflakes.
To turn for a moment from the en
joyments of ballooning to its disad
vantages, the most prominent one, to
my mind, is the impossibility to steer
a balloon, and hence one cannot reach
a desired point unless the wind
chooses to oblige you. There is no
doubt that a "conveyance." be it aero
plane or balloon, will soon be invent
ed, when this drawback will be over
come, but not without many experi
ments and possibly loss of life. The
combination of gas and an electric
spark is most dangerous, so we shall
probably see the aeroplane taking the
place of a gas-balloon in the near fu
ture. Regarding the utility of balloons,
this word can hardly be 'applied to
them as articles of use for the general
public, for the reasons before stated.
Nevertheless, in the army they are of
great service. In -the first place, they
have enabled people to get out of be
sieged towns; and secondly, by being
sent up captive, a great area of coun
try can be seen at one time.
To enjoy a balloon trip thoroughly
one must be properly dressed for the
occasion; for women, a short coat and
skirt is the best thing to wear. It is
not while actually in the balloon that
the benefit of this attire is felt but on
descending, when nine times out of
ten there is a walk of several miles to
be done to reach the nearest railway
station, while probably the balloon
and basket have to be packed into the
only available cart
Perhaps the most enjoyable part of
ballooning is what is known as "trail
ing." This consists of letting a rope
Ba - J WM Sm&OS- -5 Bl
HIS USUAL HABIT
A local pastor tells the story, with
one of his brother clergyman as the
subject It appears that when some
men wish to "swear off" from the
use of intoxicating liquor, they feel
surer of themselves ,to take the
pledge with a clergyman as witness.
The pastor in question was awakened
.one night shortly after retiring by
the frantic ringing of his doorbell.
Hastily donning a few garments, he
went to the door and admitted a ra
ther dilapidated specimen of human
ity, quite obviously endeavoring to
recover from the effects of over-indulgence
in the flowing bowl, or its mod
ern equivalent, the bell-shaped glass.
"Wanter take th plesh, pleash," he
carefully articulated.
The clergyman hesitated, but finally
decided that the man was penitent
enough to realize what he was doing,
and started to prepare the docu
ment "How long do you want to take it
for?" he asked. "A year, or two
years, or longer?"
The visitor Jooked at him in some
f
, '"i
Which arc Finding Raereation
Diversion.
about 250 feet king hang over the side
of the balloon basket and trail over
the country beneath, just touching the
ground. To be so near the earth, and
yet just to be able to sail over house
tops and tree-tops,' gives ono the sen
sation the nearest akin to flying, as
when one is soaring in higher alti
tudes one loses all sense of movement
or judgment of distance. The entire
absence of giddiness which seems .al
most incredible to those who have not
tried ballooning is entirely due to this
inability to measure distance. I sup
pose there is hardly ever a time on
this earth when one could say there
was absolute silence; it is either
broken by the whistle of a locomotive
or the bark of a dog. or maybe it is
simply the breeze rustling the leaves
of the trees. In the higher altitudes,
however, the silence is complete In
deed, and is one of the most notice-,
able things on a first balloon trip.
It may not be generally known that
if a balloon is left to itself it will come
down to earth of its own accord after
a certain .time, but it requires, of
course, all the skill of the experienced
aeronaut to effect a safe descent The
art in descending without an undue
"bump," is to let out just the right
quantity of gas and to check the fall
of the balloon at the right moment by
throwing out sufficient quantity of
"ballast" Sometimes it is necessary
to come down very fast should, for
instance, the sea suddenly loom in the
distance but there is nothing more
unpleasant; so when any obstacle is
sighted which necessitates descend
ing, ample time to come down, should
lie allowed, and thus insure a "soft"
descent
Another form of aerial navigation is
the kite. This is being largely used
Helping to Secure Balloon.
for army purposes, being more com
pact than a balloon and requiring no
preparation beforehand. When it is
too windy to send up a captive balloon,
a kite is of especial service, as the
greater the force of the wind the
greater the lifting power of the kite.
On a windy clay at Aldershot one often,
sees a man suspended some five or six
hundred feet from the earth by a
string of kites.
There are two most necessary things
to impress on the novice first that
on no consideration must he or she
alight from the balloon when once in
side without first giving warning to
the rest of the passengers, and then
he must alight without relaxing his
hold on the side of the balloon-basket
Should he omit to do this, the balloon,
relieved of so much weight, would
shoot upwards at a far greater speed
than is either safe or pleasant for the
remaining occupants of the car.
The second point to remember is,
when the balloon is descending for
good, to raise the feet from the bottom
of the basket by means of holding on
to the ropes above with the hands,
and keeping the knees bent until the,
balloon-car has received the first
shock from contact with the earth.
The day may soon come when a
balloon "garage" will be as necessary
a part of one's house as a motor gar
age is at the present time.
VERA F. BUTLER.
Barber's Sign Long in Use.
The barber's sign was a 3triped
pole as far back as 1650, the stripes
around the pole being symbols of the
bandages used in wrapping the arm
or part from which the blood was to
be let
surprise, and then replied, with evi
dent feeling:
"Guess I'd besher take it for life.
UzbTy do."
The clergyman promptly declined
to continue with the ceremonies, but
preserved the story for relation at
the next ministers' meeting. Provi
dence Journal.
Put Blame on Government.
It Is the custom of the Khonds in
the Madras presidency of India to
offer a buffalo in sacrifice hi substi
tution for the human victim. But in
doing so they make long apologies to
the deity, explaining that they them
selves would willingly make the cus
tomary sacrifices, but are prevented by
the British government, on whose
head they pray that any anger at their
neglect of duty may be visited.
Custom of Shaving Is old.
The origin of the custom of shav
ing the face is lost in antiquity. The
Greeks and Romans had public shav
ing places in coanecttoa with their,
?
WORST FORM OP ECZEMA,"
Mack Ipstchss All Over
f acted Farts Naur Clear a
Cared by the Cuticura Ram
' sales. .
"About four years ago I was aHiet.
ed with black splotches all over ay
face aad a few covering my body;
which produced a severe itching Irri
tation, and which caused me a great
deal of annoyance and suffering, to
such an extent that I was forced" to
call in two of the leading physicians
of my town. After a thorough-examination
of the dreaded complaint they
announced it to be skin eczema la its
worst form. They treated me for the
sajne for the -length of one year, but
the treatment did me no good. Fin
ally my husband purchased a set of
the Cuticura- Remedies, and after,
using the contents of the first bottle'
of Cuticura Resolvent in coanectionj
with the Cuticura Soap and Ointment
the breaking out entirely stopped. I
continued the use of 4the Cuticurai
Remedies for six months, and after;
that every splotch was entirely gone
and the affected parts were left as,
clear as ever. The Cuticura Reme
dies 'not only cured me of that dread
ful disease, eczema, but other comphV
cated troubles as well. Lizzie E.'
Sledge, 540 Jones Ave;, Selma, Ala.,
Oct. 28, 1903."
GAME THAT BOBBIE KNEW.
Youngster's Revelations " Were -Interesting
to Caller.. .
A young fellow had called upon a
girl with whose charms he was some
what smitten, and was waiting in the
parlor when her small brother come,
in, weeping bitterly. From either a
sense of politic, precaution or natural
kindness of heart the young man had
been kind to the little fellow on sev
eral occasions, and now took him on
his lap and asked the cause of the
trouble.
"Sis-sister is mean to me," the little
fellow sobbed.
"Ob, I guess she didn't intend to be;
maybe you worried her when she was
busy," the youth said consolingly.
"What was she doing?"
"She was playin', an' wouldn't let
me play, too," Bobby said.
"Playing what? The piano? I
guess she thought you didn't know
how."
"Oh, yes, I know how better'n she
does," Bobby asserted. "She was
playin' Indian, an' wasn't putting half
'nough paint on her face."
Hunters Mauled by Lioness.
A fight between two hunters and an
infuriated lioness is reported from
British East Africa.
Messrs. Lucas and Goldfinch left
Nairobi on a shooting expedition, and
when five miles from the town the
lioness was observed.
While the men stood at the edge of
the thicket the brute pounced on Mr.
Goldfinch and threw him to the
ground. It bit him on the thigh be
fore Mr. Lucas lodged a bullet in its
bkCCK
Maddened by the wound, the ani
xial turned its attention to Mr. Lucas,
whose horse it felled and then pinned
the rider to the ground, inflicting lac
erations on his face and biting his
right arm. He was saved by Mr.
Goldfinch, who, sitting up, rolled the
lioness over with a well-aimed shot.
The beast was about to spring on
its victim again when another dis
charge from the same weapon proved
fatal. The wounded men were taken
back to town, where they received
medical aid.
Practiced What He Preached.
Rev. Denis P. OTIynn. of Xew York
city, used to say that priests ought to
die poor and he practiced vhat he
preached. Aside from a valuable li
brary given to the Paulist fathers he
has left no discoverable estate no
money in bank, no money in the rec
tory. "He died as poor as the proverb
ial church mouse," says his assistant.
Father Corrigan. "What little insur
ance he carried will barely cover the
funeral expenses. He never saved a
penny for himself. After keeping the
house on his meager salary he gave
away an he had."
Unique Election Cry.
A wooden-legged candidate for the
town council of Claston, Eng., urged
his fellow artisans to elect him on the
ground that a wooden leg in the coun
cil would be a pleasant variety among
the wooden heads there now. "Vote
for Peggy!" was his inspiring slogan.
THE WAY OUT.
Change of Food Brought Succ
and
Happiness.
An ambitious but delicate girl, after
failing to go through school on ac
count of nervousness and hysteria,
found in Grape-Nuts the only thing
that seemed to build her up and fur
nish her the peace of health.
"From infancy," she says, "I have
not been strong. Being ambitious to
learn at any cost I finally got to the
High School, but soon had to aban
don my studies on account of nervous
prostration and hysteria.
"My food did not agree with me, I
grew thin and despondent I could
not enjoy the simplest social affair for
J. suffered constantly from nervous
ness in spite of all sorts of medicines.
"This wretched condition continued
until I was twenty-five, when' I be
came interested in the letters of those
who had cases like mine and who
Were being cured by eating Grape
Nuts. "I had little faith, but procured a
box and. after the first dish I expe
rienced a peculiar satisfied feeling
that I had never gained from any or
dinary food. I slept and rested better
that night and in a few days began
to grow stronger.
"I had a new feeling of peace and
restfuless. In a few weeks, to my
great joy, the headaches and nervous
ness left me and life became bright
and hopeful. I resumed my studies
.and later taught ten months with ease
'of course using Grape-Nuts every
jday. It Is now four years since I be
jgan to use Grape-Nuts, I am the mis
jtress of a nappy home and the old
(weakness has never returned. Name
Kivea by Postum Co, Battle Creek,
(Mich. "There's a reason. Read the
little bock, "The Road to WeuvUIe,"
. IH.'.H JH.. L ' !! i
Moaer refaaded for each paekaM ef
PUXAM' FADELESS DYES if aaeatia
factory. Ask yoar draapat.
that tte voice at
coaeeteace Is bat aa ia-voica. i
ij t
! Mrs. Wlaatew'a Sawtala Syrap.
FarekJMnatenhtasr. softens the gam, raaaees fcft
nMcouc. acacotue.
Our idea of a raanly.man is one who
isa't ashamed .to acknowledge his
faults. . . ' -
Lewis' Single Binder cigar richest, moifc
satisfying smoke on the market. Your
dealer or'Lewia Factory, -Peoria, 111.
Jap Converts to Christianity.
' Last year" 5,500 native Christians
were added to the church in Japan.
Defiance Starch Is the latest inven
tion in that line and an improvement
on all other makes; it Is more eco
nomical, does better work, takes less
time. Get it from any grocer.
Swallowed by the Sea.
During 1905 there were wrecked,
burned and foundered at sea 297
steam vessels, of a net aggregate
tonnage of 253,611 and 296 sailing
vessels of 214.C00 tons.
By following the directions, which
are plainly printed on each package of
Defiance Starch, Men's Collars and
Cuffs can be made just as stiff as de
sired, with either gloss or domestic
finish. Try it, 16 oz. for 10c, sold by
all good grocera.
Cultivated by the Scooters.
It is stated that nearly 8,000 school
gardens exist in Austria, not includ
ing the sister kingdom of Hungary.
They are connected with both private
and public schools, and are used for
purposes of practical instruction in
horticulture and tree-growing, and
often contain botanical museums and
Uvea.
Important to Mothers.
carefully vmj bottle of CASTOTOA,
a safe and sure restedr for iafaats aad children,
sad see that it
Bean the
Bignslaro of
at TJat For Over 30 Years.
The Kiad Yea Hare AIwas Bwyt.
Plumage of the Bluebird.
Of the male bluebird Thoreau said:
"He carries the sky on his back." To
this John Burroughs added, "and the
earth on his breast" The bird's back,
wings and tail, chin and throat are a
vivid blue, while his breast and flanks
are a chestnut brown,and his abdomen
a dirty white.- The female is very
much duller in coloring, often having
a reddish tone that extends from the
middle of the Jack over the shoulder.
The Seminole Indians say that the
male bluebird once flew so high that
his back rubbed against the sky,
which imparted to him its own azure
tint Returning to earth, his wife so
admired his new coat that she deter
mined to have a like one for herself
and the next morning flew away to
get it; but the day proving somewhat
cloudy, the color given to har dress
was not so brilliant as was that re
ceived by her mate.
There is no satisfaction
keener tfoabeJng dry
ojuoomiortafiie
wnemoutinthe
hardest storm
YOU ARE SURE
Of THIS YOU
vwtAK
WATTODDAnr
OILED
taxmasoif
DUCK OK YELLOW 'X
I Cn safe everywhere
You Cannot
CURE
all inflamed, ulcerated and catarrhal con
ditions of the mucous membrane such as
aULsalcatarra,uteriaecatarrii caased
ay featlalae ills, sore throat, sore
saoath or iaflaaaea eyes by simply
dosing the stomach.
But you surely can care these stubborn
affections by local treatment with
Paxtine Toilet Antiseptic
which destroys the disease germs,checks
discharges, stops -pain, and heals the
inflammation and soreness.
Paxtine represents the most successful
local' treatment for fenlaiae ills ever
produced. Thousands of women testify
to this fact 50 cents at druggists.
Send for Free Trial Box
CPAZTOMCO.
90,000,000
BUSHELS
HAT'S THE WHEAT
CMP IN WESTEII
CA1AIAJI1IS YEAR
This with nearly ,
000.000 bashels of oats
aad 17.000,680 bashels of barley means a coa
tinaatioB of good tiases for the fanners of West
ern Caaada.
Free fams, trie; crops, low taxes, healthr
climate, good churches and schools, splendid
railway service
The Canadian GoTernmeat offers 160 acres of
land free to every settler willing aad able to
comply with the Homestead Regulations.
Advice aad information may be obtained free
from W. D. Scott Superintendent of Ibubv
. . r..uli nr frnm anthorized
Canadian Gorerameat Ajeent j. S. Crawford.
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A nervous, irritable mother, often on
the verge of hysterics, is unfit to care
for children ; it ruins a child's disposi
tion and reacts upon herself. The
trouble between children and their
mothers too often is due to the fact
thai the mother has some female weak
ness and she is entirely unfit to bear
the strain upon her nerves that govern
ing children involves; it is impossible
for her to do anything calmly.
The ills of women act like a firebrand
upon the nerves, consequently nine
tenths of the nervous prostration, ner
vous despondency, " the blues," sleep
lessness, and nervous irritability of
women arise from some derangement
of the female organism.
Do you experience fits of depression
with restlessness, alternating with
extreme irritability? Are your spirits
easily affected, so that one minute you
laugh, and the next minute you feel
like crying?
Do you feel something like a ball ris
ing in your throat and threatening to
choke you; all the senses perverted,
morbidly sensitive to light and sound ;
pain in the abdominal region, and
between the shoulders; bearing-down
pains; nervous dyspepsia and almost
continually cross and snappy?
If so, yonr nerves are in a shattered
condition, and you are threatened with
nervous prostration.
Proof is monumental that nothinjr in
the world is better for nervous prostra
tion than Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege
table Compound; thousands and thou
sands of women can testify to this fact.
Ask Wn. IHbUb-sVs Aaike-A
W. L. DOUGLAS
3.50&3.00 Shoes
CST IN TMK WORLD
UJiW-slEdgitBj
OMtMBjiaMaatafliprMi
fU 4PauLA a ..
Y. f . TtnnrHt TaV
bins noose is ine most
complete In this country
ycwyir vqiqy
tHOstt J0K WJBBMUDTAT ALL HUCsa.
toaxanL
Wlsnim' a rtillili !!' i
tOtUdrnn'a mo. aajNttoSEoO.
Trr W. Ik DesnrUa Wowas.
CaUMrca'aafcees; for style. St aad wear
they oxcel other malrfit
If I cease! take yoa Into say largo
factories at Brockton, Maas.uafshow
yonlMwcavefailyW.UDoaaasslMies
are sanaaa, yoa weald than aaiatrsfaal
way they bold their shape, fit Better,
wear loafer, aad are of frcater value
than any other make.
yea ure, yaa caa aaaaa w. a.
msanaawaaa amcsisi
avassrl
FrnttCalorEitttttMrnatf: tkew mitt mot i
Write tec Ww-trateal Clalsg at FaB Stylsa.
w. s- iwwsjt w-ffc aa
U. S. NAVY
enlists for foar years yon a -sea of aooa
character aad soon pit-steal eonditioa ac
t wesa the aces of 1? and S aa appreatlea sea
men; opportunities for adraocenent; par
SIC to aft a BOntn. Electricians, ataehlaista.
Blacksmiths, coppersmiths, yeomen (clerks),
earaaaters. shipnuer-, flremen, asasietaaa.
cooks, ate., between 21 and it years, enlisted
la special ratines with saltakle pay: hospital
apprentices 18 to B years. Retirement ea
taree-foartbe pay and aliowaaeea after
years sert lea. Applicants mast saamsxlcaa
attiasas.
first elothina- oatSt free to recruits. Upoa
discharge mstcI allowance I eeats per mile to
place of enlistment. Hones fonr months' pay
aadlnereaseiapaynpoare-enllstmentwithla
foar months or discharge. OStoes at Uaeoia
and Hastings. Hebraska. Also, dming winter.
at IVs Moinw and Slop City. Iowa. Address
MYTKOamTlMSTaiieR.r.tJ
1 11 1 la VY licit I Hifotap I
Catches Me! luffigt 1 1
f aaBBBaaf)aBBaanrBTB ttPatl PaaaaTSPasBk JaSaVaBmBalwSBlm bbbbI aanaaaavllwBBvSaMC1 & bbbbV
OTVmfcff PULL
I w!WmWir POUND
mSmi wMmti premiums, but onclhird
WwMffm WW a0 starch than you get of
mWKMl 1 1 wM- other brands. Try it now. for
WMMMlMi I Wm hot or coId sterchjng t h
IMwltfw V- e9Maanwnot$tcktoieif0n li
B.T2
JfV ify Jw TLaaaVwPraaVi. I
rrfnf 1 ill t3i- JBrjrsWa.A.
c2?k YJb i n aPjrrfvra:
Dsoflaa abacs. His ansae and avtaUstaaaassl
esi taw awnasa, which) ii Mtetta jnaaaaaatahi
arlcaa aaaf aahiclar shoei. Taftw arf
toe. AafcjssjrJsal(rlsrW.I,naarlaartssa
BfSJSSBV
N
and Well.'
Mrs. Chester Curry, Leader of tha
Ladies' Symphony Orchestra, 43 Sara
toga Street, East Boston, Maaa,,
writes:
Dear Mrs. Prnkaam: -
"For eight years I was troubled with a
trenwBervousaees and hysteria, broagat oa
by irregularities. I could neither enjoy life
nor sleep nights: I was very irritable, nerroaa
and despondent. .
"Lydia E. Phtkham's Vegetable Coanxauid
was recommended and proved to be the only
remedy that helped ma I have daily ha
proved iu health until 1 am liow strong and
well, and all nervousness has disappeared."
Mrs. Charles F. Brown, vice-President
of the Mothers' Clnb. 21 Cedar
Terrace, Hot Springs, Ark., writes:
Dear Mrs. Fiakbam:
"I dragged throagh nine years of rnimr
able existence, worn oat with pain and aer
voasnesa, until it seemed as thoagh I saoald
fly. I then noticed a statement of a wniaaa
troubled as I was, aad the wonderful resalta
she derived from Lydia E. Ffokaaa'sVega.
table Compound. I decided to try it. I did at,
and at the end of three months I was a differ
ent woman. My nervousness was all gone, I
was no longer irritable, and my smsbaadfea
in love with me all over again."
Women should remember that Lydia
E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound ia
the medicine that holds the record for)
the greatest number of actnal cures of
female ills, and take no substitute. ;
Free Advice to Womei.
Mrs. Pinkham, daughter-in-law of
Lydia E. Piakham. Lynn, Mass.. invites
all sick women to write to her for',
advice. Mrs. Pinkham'sTastcxperienee j
with female troubles enables her to ad- i
vise yon wisely, and she will charge ;
you nothing for her advice. ,
lS SB,'
The New State,
of Oklahoma '
Bigger than Missouri; as big as Ohio and
Indiana combined, with a soil teeming with
all the crops that any State raises.
OKLAHOMA the new State is destined
to occupy first rank in a few short years.
Here at the present time over a miUioa
people are duplicating the life which is
going on in Illinois and Indiana. Their
houses, their towns and their schools are
newer but in nothing else do their sur
roundings differ from those in our States.
Their cities and towns are growing aad ex
panaing witn the impetus ot a fertile soil,
and a pushing, wide-awake citizenship.
Her settlers, mainly from the older States,
see the virtue of encouraging enterprises of
every kind and the needfulness of gettiag
more and better facilities; of getting more
hands to develop the country.
In brief, conditions to-day are simply
these: OKLAHOMA is in need of nothing
save people. More men are needed in tha
cities and towns; more farmers for the vast
areas of unimproved land not now yielding
crops of which it is capable. There are'
openings of all sorts, for fanners aadl
artisans, for milk and manufacturing!
plants, for small stores of all binds. j
Upportunity
Tbeopportaoetimeisnow whitetbe land lichen.
The eoaatry Is fast settling np. If yon parehase land)
now yon wiU soon see grow op aroaad yon aeoes-l
monlty of prosperous, energetic men who. Ilkeyoar-'
!f5 brighter possibilities of OSX-'
"- mmwm sanaa asjfaatane or t
O-iUFaaaKlTaaWTttearJayal
of each month yoa caa make a trip to OaAAJaOatai
excepUoaally cheap. Baantnptieaeuaontant7
-as-days -ill be sold b, nU lines ia conneetlea wltH
tha at. K. a T. By. at very low rates. ItomCasaaav
to OklabomaCHy the rata la StUB; from StTraaU .
BKS: f rem BuLoais. as St; from Kansas Qty .azau
JaliofsioBHOeralBi bothdttasUW
a 31.. a. aT. Br. If Trmrnrirairt ntiiM
gia yoa tea rates, writs me for panlealao.
W. S.-ST. GEORGE
General Passenger Agent
M., K. & T. R'y
WaiawrightBIdg. St.ioaIs.Mo.
O. A. htcflOTT. at WalaatSC.
city.:
Strong
m
A
II
i
aro. 125 W. mats screcx, irsaais wny.
W. N. U, OMAHA, NO. 3f, IMC.
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