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About The Columbus journal. (Columbus, Neb.) 1874-1911 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 6, 1907)
if . r "Sw. rru - ' -M i. v .. $ -, -tti V. ' I 1 . & I m illftj lOE THE WHITE HAGUE SYSTEMATIC WARFARE WAGED TO WIPE OUT CONSUMPTION. Warnine That Intemperance In the Liability to Contract Dii Nagtected Csfse a Pralifle Source. Orgaalsed effort is bow betes mate throughout toe United Stated to fight consumption. A warning is gives against Intemperate habits, which in crease the liability to consumption, while spitting: is public places Is de precated, as the disease is frequently contracted from dried sputum. Colds should not be neglected, as they leave the lungs in a peculiarly receptive condition for the tuburca lar germ. The following' simple for mula will break up a cold in twenty four hours. A leading authority on lung trouble says that when pre pared from pure ingredients, it will cure any cough that is curable. " Take half ounce Virgin Oil of Pine (Pure); two ounces glycerine and half pint good whisky. Shake well and use in teaspoonful doses every four hours. The ingredients can be secured from any good prescription druggist at small cost, and to avoid subsltation should be purchased separately and mixed in your own home. Virgin Oil of Pine (Pure) is put up in half-ounce vials for dispensing. Each vial is securely scaled in a round wooden case, with engraved wrapper, with the name Virgin Oil of Pine (Pure), prepared only by Leach Chemical Co., Cincinnati, O. plainly printed thereon. There are many rank imitations of Virgin Oil of Pine (Pure), which are put out under various names, such as Concentrated Oil of Pine, Pine Balsam, etc Never accept these as a substitute for the Pure Virgin Oil of Pine, as they will invariably produce nausea and never effect the desired result. Economy as the Boy Saw It. Paul Morton, In a recent address on insurance, said of a certain proposed economy: "That would not be an economy, but an extravagance, in the long run. It reminds me of the boy and the jam. "'My son,' said this boy's mother, isn't it rather an extravagance to eat butter with that superb jam? "'No, ma'am, it's an economy,' the boy answered. "The same piece of bread does for both." Tbere Is more Catarrh ia thin section of the country tbau alt olber diseases put together, sod until the last lew year to supposed to be Incurable. Fur a great many years doctors proBGunced It a local disease and prescribed local remedies, and by constantly falling to cure with lucal treatment, pronounced It incurable. Eclenca baa proven Catarrb to be a consUtutlonal dis ease, and therefore require coaitttutlonal treatment. Hall's Catarrh Care, manufactured by F.J. Cheney & Co.. Toledo, Ohio, Is th&only Constitutional cure on the market. It la takes Internally in dosea from 10 drops to a teacpoonful. It acts directly on the blood ana mucous surfaces 01 the system. TBey offer one nunorea aoiiar xor any case it xaua to cure. lor circulars and testimonials. Address: F. J. CHENEY CO., TeJedc, OktSw Sold by Drantota. 75c Take Hairs Family Ptila Mr constipation. POTENT LIQUOR IS SAKE. Lafcaalo Hearn's Testimony as to Strength of Japanese Wine. There is no liquor in the world upon which a man becomes so quickly in toxicated as Japanese sake (rice wine), and yet none of which the ef fects last so short a time. The in toxication is pleasant as the effect of opium or hasheesh. It is soft, pleas ant, luminous exhilaration, everything becoming brighter, happier, lighter; then you get very sleepy. At Japanese dinners it is the rule to become slightly exhilarated, but not to drink enough to talk thickly or walk crooked. The ability to drink at ban quets requires practice long practice. There are banquets of many kinds, and the man who is invited to one at which extensive drinking may be ex pected is careful to start in upon am empty or almost empty stomach. By not eating one can drink a good deal. The cups are very small and of many curious shapes. One may be expected to empty 50. A quart of sake is a good deal; two quarts require iron nerves to stand. But among the Japanese there are wonderful drinkers. At a military officer's banquet a captain offered me a tumbler holding a good pint of sake. I almost fainted at the sight of it, for it was only the first. But a friend said to me: "Only drink a little and pass it back," which I did. Stronger heads emptied cup after cup like water. Letters of Lafcadto Keara. . MAY BE COFFEE That Causes all the Trouble. "When the house is afire, it's like a body when disease begins to show, it's no time to talk but time to act delay is dangerous remove the cause of the trouble at once. "For a number of years, says a Kansas lady, "I felt sure that coffee , was hurting me, and yet, I was so fond of it, I could not give it up. I paltered with my appetite and of course yield ed to the temptation to drink more. At last I got so bad that I made up my mind I must either quit the use of cof fee or die. "Everything I ate distressed me, and I suffered severely almost all the time with palpitation of the heart I fre quently ajgke up in the night with the feeling tBmt I was almost gone, my heart seemed so smothered and weak in its action that I feared it wouki stop "beating. My 'breath grew short and the least exertion set me to panting. I slept but little and suffered from rheu matism. 'Two years ago I stopped using the old kind of coffee and began to use Postum Food Coffee, and from the very first I began to improve. It worked a miracle! Now I can eat any thing and digest it without trouble. I sleep like a baby, and my heart beats full, strong and easily. My breathing has become steady and normal, and my rheumatism has left me. I feel like another person, and it Is all due to quitting coffee and msing Postum Food Coffee, for I haven't msed any medicine and none would have done any good as IobsT as I kept drugging with coffee. Name gfvea by Postum Co, Battle Creek, Mich. There's ft Reason. Read the little book, "The Road to Welirflle," in nkga, AB a. , gpii IIISmS SfcfVIsS I aV Baaf " I iT.il MAE I BjJJJMMViMAMVIlJVJUlMAWlXJlMK, r Gqaqz Dum BoyiiAK NNE STACEY sat with Aner oacK to me ugui ui her existence and the otioniioiipr nut ttin re spective luminaries re mained equally indiffer ent, the one obscured by his evening paper and the other by a pink-tissue shade. So she lifted her pretty foot to the glow of the fire the only glow that seemed in evidence anywhere and engaged in her long practised game of making the best of things. But the play went dully this night, although the coals arranged the usual pictures for her to gaze into and the castle-building materials were all at hand. Now and then she glanced at a big bowl of violets which stood on the table near her. and in her expression 9was a curious blending of indignation and triumph. There was silence in the room, except for a slow-pulsed clock, which struck the quarter-hours reluctantly, and the occasional rustling of the turning pages of tho newspaper. She felt strangely lonely. The girls had gone out. wearing their violets pinned in the fur and laces at their bonnie throats. The fragrance of the flowers at her side swept up with the memory of the lines which had come as a valentine to little Jeanne: This thins I know, my dear. My love for you, my dear, Will last for aye! "But it doesn't, Jeanne, child" she whispered sadly. "It does not last any longer than the dew lasts on the roses. But it is so sweet to be de ceived!" She sighed. And again her eyes fell on the violets. "Who in the world could have sent them to me?" she murmured. "And the verses! Impertinent, of course. But rather dear. The writing looks a little familiar, too; but I can't place It" She drew a little note from the dainty little rose-colored bag which swung from the ribbons at her waist, and scanned it by the firelight A half-pleased smile crept up to her eyes, as she read: These tender flowers are sent to you by one To whom you are the starlight and the sun. Their fragrance bears a message fond and true From out a heart that beats alone for you. "How dreadful!" murmured Anne Stacey, but with commendable for bearance. "I must show it to Dick!" She rose determinedly, just as there1 was a sound of a sliding paper and a snore. She' turned back and sat down, and the little foot on the fender tap ped impatiently. "Asleep again," she said, "and it is only half-past eight! Another tire some evening ahead of me. Oh, dear. I don't see why I ever married him! A man so absorbed in business has no right to marry. He is so tired and dull when he comes home that he never talks. I believe I am getting so I dis like Dick, aayueay. I just won't try to tell him about the flowers and note. He doesn't take the trouble to tell me anything. I wish I knew who sent it that's what IjWish!" Her cheeks were flushed now, and she looked re sentfully at the form in the big leather MEW A&rSBBBBBBBBSsJnT chair. "I won't tell him a word," she repeated then called sharply: "Dick!" Stacey started up, dazedly. "Eh? Tes. All right! What is it mam ma?" It's St Valentine's eve!" 'The deuce it is! I thought it was morning What's up?" 'Nothing. The same old nothing." There was a pause, after which an other gasp and snore was followed by an apologetic: "Did you speak, mamma?" "I only said it was St Valentine's eve." "Oh, yes, so you didl" (Yawn.) "Who was the old duffer anyway? Been reading about him for the club?" (Yawn.) Mrs. Stacey ignored the question so coldly that Stacey dimly realized that something ought to be said or done. This, he began Insinuatingly, this isn't an anniversary of any kind, Is iif We were not married or any thing on Valentine's day, were we?" if I had to ask such a question as lfrjkL -Qh. wA&v awthegrlsefyesteryoa; Thelitis who used te cost us dear When we went valentnn$? To whom we sang and meant it fez Oh sugars sweet and so areyou" To whom we sent with great tide ' Two hearts aff intertwnm? If these should meet the eyes orone loved in the yesteryear Whose tresses dintedin the sun Whose blue eyes cost us dear. Wed Me to say and mean it fob. 'Oh sugars street and so wereyout But time haicut our tore in thte v Dear maid df yesteryear that I'd keep still about it!" an nounced Mrs. Stacey. Her husband retired behind his paper. This was no time to discuss racial peculiarities of language. "The girls have each received love ly big bunches of violets." "Bully for the girls! Who sent em?" "We don't know. Jeanne's came with a valentine poetry, yon know.". "Well, of course," said Stacey, "that is harder to bear. Know who wrote 1t?" Mrs. Stacey shook her head. "No. But it .is beautiful. She will always remember it" "Will, eh? Can't get it out of her head, 1 suppose. Something like that 'Blue - trip business." slip-for-an-eight-cent-fare y Mrs. Stacey gave wifely inattention to his joke. Her mind seemed fixed on other subjects. Finally: "A wo man always remembers such things. And sometimes they make dangerous food for hungry hearts." The man behind the paper became conscious of a meaning in his wife's tone. He looked over the top of the sheet, to see that her gaze was fixed upon a bowl of violets on the stand before the fire. She went on: "You never sent me a valentine, Dick. But some one else has. I wasn't going to tell you when you were asleep " "Well, I'm glad you didn't then. But what about it now?" There isn't anything more about it At least I only -know that I received a valentine and a bunch of flowers, and I don't know who sent them. I wish I did, because I am tired of be ing left alone and neglected and so there!" "Why, mamma! Why" "You needn't 'Why me!" The pitcher of patience indeed had been broken at the fountain. Mrs. Stacey was royally angry and in tears. "What do you men think women want in this life? Do you think we are satisfied with food and fire and clothes? I tell you we want love nd attention as much as we do when we were young girls! And if husbands are .too busy or too indifferent to give these things, some other men will!" She stopped, with shamed sobbing. Stacey had risen and now stood be side her chair. "What did he say, Anne?" he questioned quietly. But she shook her head miserably. "What did he say?" He reached down and took her slender hand in his broad palm. His little ring glim mered upon it in the firelight "I can't tell you. You never would understand or appreciate such ten derness. You you never have time "What did he say, dear?". "Oh, Dick. If only you had made love to me if you ever ever had ' "Tell me what he said. You can't? Then let me tell you." He knelt down beside her and her wondering eyes saw tears upon his bearded cheeks. But he reached over and took the bowl of violets in his hand as he said: These tender flowers are sent to you by one To whom you are the starlight and the; sun. "Dick! You? You?"v She threw her arms around his neck. Her cheek was upon his cheek, her eyes seeking his eyes, as he continued: Their fragrance bears a message fond and true From out a heart which beats alone for you. Then there was silence in the little room where a man knelt with his wife in his arms and the quick-pulsed clock called blithely the quarter-hours as they ran away with the eve of St Val. entine. SELDOM THINKS. Ethylene Cholly sent me a lovely valentine and a note- saying his thoughts are all of me Ernest That signifies nothing; ha doesn't think oftener than once a month. sBr F at arsssT W j dhm!&!'Qmt$,m 2SSJSJ5S5?S2i Heart failure ana casa failure of tea go together. rixca ccbd m m ts i mti. PaXO OUmUKIT la (MisMM Urar say caM ofMeMT. StUMB. mead) FnKrasHBcFUtoiB to lummrm ww ia And by not getting married soi auuuge to live haimilr ever after. Tea Prices .ffw Hides, Furs, Pelts. Write for cireakr and catakfue No. t, N. W. Hide ft Far Co., MituKapolis.-. Observe' what direction year thoagats sad feelings most readily take wheayou are alone, and yon win thea form a tolerably correct oilaloa ef jDTsalf BengeL Beta eswMly eray battle ef CASTOStA,, kfeaaanjraNawytetafataaMcUUrea, I ace that K ' Bean the Sjeasttareer. it IS Vet Bar Over 3 Tears. Sat Baal laa Bar Alwcs The' Infinite. From every point of view and from everything that the human mind, touches we are in touch everywhere with the infinite, and the infinite is Just as absolute a fact as the most finite thing touched by the mind or the physical being of maa. ' r , With a smooth iron and Deflaace Starch, yon can launder your shirt waist just as well at home as the steam laundry can; it will have the proper stiffness and finish, there will he less wear and tear of the goods, and it will be a positive pleasure to ase a Starch that does not stick to the iron, Playing at Occultism. There Is a 'danger to-day of psychi cal research degenerating into a fash ionable society amusement without practical alms, and there are promi nent members of the 'Society for Psychical Research who do less than little to discourage this tendency. Occult Review. Oats Heads 2 Foot Long. The John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse, Wis., are bringing out a neu oats this year with heads 2 foot long! That's a wonder! Their catalog tells! Spetz the greatest cereal hay food America ever saw! Catalog tells! FREE Onr mammoth 148-page Seed and Tool Catalog is mailed free to all intending buyer?, or send 6c in 'stamps and receive free samples of new Two Foot Long Oat6 and other cereals and big catalog free. John A. Salzer Seed Co., Box W, La Crosse, Wis. Two heads are better than one especially at kissing MOTHERHOOD The first requisite of a good mother is good health, and the ex perience of maternity should not be approached without careful physical preparation, as a woman who is in good physical condition transmits to her children the blessings of a good constitution. Preparation for healthy mater nity is accomplished by Lydia E. Pinkhams Vegetable Compound, which is made from native roots and herbs, more successfully than by any other medicine because it gives tone and strength to the entire feminine organism, curing displacements, ul ceration and inflammation, and the CLxjirz!2zfrr result is less suffering and more children healthy at birth. For more than thirty years ' Lydia E. Pinkham'sVegetable Compound has been the standby of American mothers in preparing for childbirth. Note whatMrs. JamesChester.of 427 W. 35th St., New York says in this letter: Dear Mrs. Pinkham:-"I wish every expectant mother knew about Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. A neighbor who had learned of its great value at this trying period ef a woman's life urged me to try it and I did so, and I cannot say enough in regard to the good it did me. I recovered quickly and am in the best of health now." Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is certainly a successful remedy for the peculiar weaknesses and ailments of women. It has cured almost every, form of Female Complaints, Dragging Sensa tions, Weak Back, Falling and Displacements, Inflammation, Ulcera tions and Organic Diseases of Women and is invaluable in preparing for Childbirth and during the Change of Life. Mrs. Pinkham's Standing Invitation to Women Women suffering from any form of female weakness are invited to write Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass. Her advice is free. For Reconstructing Kingston. Kingston, Jamaica The reconstruc tion committee appointed,, by Arch bishop Nuttall to carry out proposals for rebuilding the city met and passed a resolution to ask the imperial gov ernment to advance a loan of 15,000, 000 at a low rate of interest. BsaBBBIBiB eHBjfBl CriMttC vlaMVH thepackat Xter atarclna only 12 oaaces se price jam -"aFIAMCS" SB auKBioa ouautv. Heart je-7 ' Home S4 iCe.,1 . Lewis' Single Binder straight 5c. Many ok. Mfarttm to 10ccigara. Year dealer or Lewis Factory, Pcona, ID. Men never fully appreciate the blessings of poverty until after they break iato the millionaire class. Defiance Starch Is the latest inven tion ia that line aad an improvement oa all other makes; it Is more eco nomical, does better work, takes less Gat it frost any grocer. Be tloas. it ia your rela- It pays to he honest MRS. JAMES CHESTER I Waaes Advanced. Columbus, O. An advance in wages, averaging about 4 per cent, is granted firemen, .trainmen, yardmen and switchmen of the Toledo & Ohio Cen tral railway as the result of a confer-i ence of railway officials and represent atives of the employes. aaracyas.uaf IBwBBBBnra C.fS WsbBbT W. N. U., OMAHA, NO. C, 1907. V-s "U. ot was aaan jaw b. aad a val tfvWeaea." Tat JC gpkBKlgBTmBaCgBBBf, tafsffSB?l9gaH lBBaaaaasSaasesaansM Bsssssssssssssssssassi mm . m OERSOKNOVVLpG L JJr conspetaive age aad whea of staple rWacttf ft places as fcxlaasss ESpiHI W poaNMorn Tl Wei Iarfons of tW World. zZ&9i (Mm A vaatrundcl penonal kaowfcdge is reaiy riirwl.il to aSe adaevuacat el tVc SHKnSJj4 I W AKsxmletoof Fons fuSSsWl ' W edge of PlroducU ate al of tfeatnoat valae and in qaearions of afeaadheaMi 7wQBkmQ M when a true and wlmlesoiae weedy u desired ft should be KSwsjbcied that Syiap A. msssw I ethical product which has bkI wi& tte afamtal cf ife 'ggfrTi JHsSbIB H gives enifeftal sabjtacSDB because ft at a Kaneoy of JMn liSrBmStBt Knowti QuaJity, Known FarrMcurft mad Known CmapcmmtfflnllWSmttBlM m Parts aad hat won the vshnble palroaaae of waanwi of she Wei Isfaaaed of they!1 llf'fBmWBK .O wedd, whokaowof ihdrowapecaoaal inwidedaeaadtroai sKlaal aie fnilftnaWanr .1 jlf fBWBl u This valuable lcsJsVrly hss been loag sad tavorahly kaown yJtmmwSm9Bt wide accepbaxeaathcnanteneeaeBt fcfcsswy kxalne. As it pare ummfSmmWw9mmKSi v(i axalvcpnBCsples,cfctamedfr ml kaown to phjaiiMai 1 Vspf LUmnmWW . Jk andthe Wei Wormed of the world to he the bat we have AV 'JfflJL cagjl adopted the more elaborate name of Srvnp of Fibs aad JW ' iS&fB?- JpSfllty bat doubtless ft wl always be caled f oe by the dwrter 9L . WMmmmfSm JgSgf of Syrup of Figs aad to set its beaeadal 911 I V 1 I JsEbbbT SbtIbW OmmCJmFmSm fill Ik W aWKlggwBsnV Co. printed on the front of every package. Ml W V V 1 1 M JflmMBLl whcthoyoacalfor-SyrapclFaji f 1 lS I v A SS '"BBBBBBBBBsBBaw11 5B3f BBBnaTftsBYftBw aaSBBBBBBBBBBBT?iBBBBBBBBBBBfaBr J& bbbwbBBS BBBBBBBBBBBBaMB" XCfnna -JtBnBBBS- - . , """SsnaatssssssssssssssBn PfgsnnnnnsasnnBnBaasis1,BB I SAN FRANCISCO. CAU I gLQUISyLL.E.Ky. LONDowfeLAtjD. NEW YORK.N.Yj ana ' "nsKwai isar-" x iCSSSSZSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSBSSSSSBB ff HURT, BRUISE OR SPRAIN ST. JACOBS OIL THE Ot NO MORE MUSTARD PLASTERS TO BLISTER. THE SCIENTIFIC AND MODERN EXTERNAL COUNTER-IRRITAHT. CAPISICUM VASELINE EXTRACT OF THE CAYENNE PEPPER PLANT A 0UICK. SURE. SAFE AND ALWAYS READY CURE FOR FMN.-PBJCS I5C-4N COLLAPSIBLE TUBES-AT ALL DRUGGISTS AND DEALERS. OR BY MAIL ON RECEIPT OF 15c. IN POSTAGE STAMPS. BONT WATT TILL THE FAIN COMES-KEEP A TUB! HANBY. A sttbsttrate for and superior to mustard or. any other plaster, aad will net blister the most delicate skin. Tea pain-allaying and curative qaeMias ef the article are wonderful. It will stop the toothache at once, and lesave Headache and Sciatica. We recommend Has the best and safest, externa! counter-irritant known, also as an external remedy for patas bribe chest' and stomach and all Rheumatic. Neuralgic and Gouty complaints, A trial will prove what we claim for it, and it will be found to be invaluable ia the household and f or chi ldren. Once used no family will be without H. Maay people say "it is the best of all your preparations.' Accept no pvepaiaaea ef vaseline unless the same carries our label, as otherwise it Isnotgenelae. SEND YOUR ADDRESS AND WE WILL MAIL OUR VASE LINE PAMPHLET WHICH WILL INTEREST YOU. CHESEBROUGH MFC CO. 17 STATE STREET. NEW YORK CITY The marvelous growth and the consequent magnitude of the UNDERWOOD TYPEWRITER COMPANY'S organization in this, the tenth year of its existence, excites ad miration and inspires confi dence the world over. UNDERWOOD TYPEWRITER CO. 2617 Farnam Street, Omaha, Neb. Unexcelled forgeneral farm- inf. utoek. dslrrinr. (raits, track. te. : convenient to the ery Mt market ana transpor tation facilitieo. Write nearest oHee for Iif tsandpub Ueations. M. V. Wehard.Lan ad Industrial Ajreat, Southern St. aad MoblleAOhlolt. R-Washlngton. D.C. C. 8. Caa.'Wsst. agings Chemical BMg., St. LoaJs.Mo. A.ia BAI.K ea CKflU rsiSM.li T. aOLSAU.- SIOUX CITY. MWA. A Little Child carries with it the possibilities of great happiness, Into the heart of a childless home. Women who wish for children, should understand that sterility Is not so much of a disease, as a symptom of female weakness, and, that In 90 cases out of 100, when the female weak ness has been cured by the loopd-far vUt of the stork comes. Dr. J. J. Uviasston. of FreaaaaB. faL. writes: "I prescribed Cardu. to a bdy paUeot. who had preYiously had three or foar mishaps. She took 6 bottles and was soon made the happy mother of a wag. ffu boy.wliotoataaYlnaiiddjtogwefl. I thixric that Wine of Cardul Utha sola catoa rf her beina to be tills dald.' Whatever may bo the form of your Jemala trouble or weakness, try CrfuL ItUarefabjewoiadyfocaMtfaa rjfiniii towomaa AT ALL DBUG6ISTS IN $L00 BOTTLB i THE CANADUN WEST iS THE BEST WEST Smi if tte AfaiHgis Tks KmommmL. luu. I -" aaala Itaaa an Mmsieswa-taa pat aJssoaavrary 1 Uoa ot taacoaatrr witkhs aasf nstak off karcl saavw.-M -fiatm mtmmmm svaae bnmbb WWW BBPal WBTvaimrGV TkeniNBTT XIUJON BTOIlBLWBaUTCBOSi of this year ascaas SaSa.ta u the tmramnm Westers aaia. apart from taaraaatMaTalfeaa mlM aiMl aalth. .-v. mi n. mn i.iuiHMnF' UVffOTS SBV 1NTKNDKNT OT IMMjUBATIOM. Ottawa. Va .jlaU. jTfm . - - W. V. KsMETT. fH flew Tart Life WeWft SSBBBjBBBBBBJBJBBfriTk tertiajeay r tkaa rfBBBJBBTBSBBBBQ laajMte aanac tarn pas SssswCStsH . aaaaUH iDaCa j iJgQyQ0i.siaS2 ; J ?l M . 'l l " f C . " '-.-1! . ,iA VfaW .&?'&&&$$)& JvajtoldMa&tWilltoate Xi2SkjSSr:2.i2iZ. -?fe V-is &-c$iixTK.tS., . kw F'T.'r-fcB-' 1st -.-3-K5.d Vtyj-r f t - j, -iWiiS.-. iS 'Z ' . .. i J&; . .i.iOi' . i-Aii. - . x---.,- T. -.-j-.