Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The Columbus journal. (Columbus, Neb.) 1874-1911 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 14, 1908)
-. .f. . r; -i .c J- '--.r.- '--''i- K--ff.-j.-."- "i; -v -v -'.' ."- " "--;"'-i' J- " ' jjb,5l- " t' -y -w w j- ! :- DRAGS YOU OOWN. Backache and Kidney Trouble 81ewiy Wear One Out. Mrs. R. Crouse, Fayette St, Man chester, la, says: - "For two years my back -was weak and rheumatic. 'Pains ran through my back, hips and limbs. I could hardly get about and lost much sleep. The action of the kidneys was much disordered. I began using Doan's Kidney Pills and the result was remarkable. The kidney action became normal, the backache ceased, and my health is now mi usually good." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Hilburn Co., Buffalo. N. Y. Expressions of a Cynic Walter Pater, an old man at 50, bald as a coot and grotesquely plain, re garded every woman much as did Dean Swift, who wrote: "A very little wit !s valued in a woman, as we are pleased with few words spoken intel ligibly by a parrot" "You don't ap prove of marriage?" a friend once ob served lo Pater. "No." he replied, "nor would anybody else if he gave the matter proper consideration. Men and women are always pulling dif ferent ways. Women won't pull our way. They are so perverse." Imaginary Holidays. I know a man who cannot afford to travel, and yet has a delightful way of deceiving himself. He learns about the cost of traveling, the proper cloth ing to he worn, gets a time table, and arranges excursions for himself to various places, and then reads about Jbem in books of travel. To the man with .imagination it is a captivating occupation. Hearth and Home. The extraordinary popularity of fine white goods this summer makes the choice of Starch a matter of great im portance. Defiance Starch, being free from all injurions chemicals, is the only one which is safe to use on fine fabrics. Its great strength as a stiffen er makes half the usual quantity of Starch necessary, with the result of perfect finish, equal to that when the goods were new. An Inopportune Query. "For whom do you intend to vote at the next election?" "I dunno," answered Farmer Cora tossel. "I've got too much work of my own just at present to mix into this rivalry for holding gover'ment lobs." Washington Star. How's This? Wc offrr 0.c Hundred Dollars Reward for any caie of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Ball's Catarrh Cure F. J. CHEXCV 4 CO- Toledo. O. TV-, the unilrrelsned. have known F. J. Chonry for the list IS years, and believe him perfectly hon orable In all ImMncH transactions and financially able to carry out any obliratlons made by his firm. Yauing. Kinnax & Makvlv. Wholesale Urucrlsta, Toledo. O. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally, artinc directly upon the Mood and mucous surfaces of the system. Testimonials pent free. Price 7 cents per bottle. Sold by all Dnrccists. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. The World a Blank. We feel sorry for the woman who has no confidence in either her hus band or her dressmaker. Asthmatics, Read This. If you arc nfllictetl with Asthma write me at once and learn of t-oniething for which vou will lc grateful the res-t of your life. J. G. McDridc, Stella, Nebr. Sometimes Peppery. Spicy conversation should be handled gingerly. Instant Relief for All Eyes, that arc irritated from dust. heat, sun or wind. PiriTlT'S EYE SALVE. 25cv All druggists or Howard Bros., Buffalo, X. Y. It's a pity some people can't marry for brains instead of money. Lewis' Single Binder costs more than other fc cigars Smokers know why. Your dealer or Lewis" Factory, Peoria, 111. An occasional failure doesn't dis courage a Lustier. A SUDDEN GOLD. Xlsa Helen SaaerMer, of 8153Xala St St. Joseph. SXicn writes an interesting letter a the subject of catchlnr cold, which cannot fail to be of raise to all women vba catch cold easily. SUDDEN GOLDS. It Should be Taken According to Directions on the Bottle, at the First Appearance of the Cold. St. Joseph, Mich., Sept., 1001. Last winter I caught a sadden cold which developed into ma unpleasant catarrh of the head and throat, depriving me of my appetite and usual good spirits. A friend who had been cured by Peruna advised me to try it and I Bent for a bottle at once, and I am glad to say that in three days the phlegm had loosened, and I felt better, my appetite returned and within nine days I was in my usual good health. Miss Ilelen Sauerbier. Peruna is an old and well tried remedy for colds. Uo woman should be with out it. rLssssW 9r PERtil MED HI irriBfc m mzcazr SYNOPSIS. Giles Dudley arrived In San Francisco to Join his friend and distant relative Henry Wilton, whom he was to assist in an Important and mysterious task, ana who accompanied Dudley on the ferry boat trip into the city. The re markable resemblance of the two men is noted and commented on by passen gers on the ferry. They see a man witn snake eyes, which sends a thrill through Dudley. Wilton postpones an explanation of the strange errand Dudley is to per form, but occurrences cause htm to know it is one of no ordinary meaning. Dudley is summoned to the morgue and there finds the dead body of his friend. Henry Wilton. And thus Wilton dies without ever explaining to Dudley tbe puzzling work he was to perform In San Francisco. In order to discover the se cret mission l:ls friend had entrusted to him. Dudley continues his disguise and permits himself to be known as Henry Wilton. He learns that there is a boy whom he is charged with secretins and protecting. Dudley, mistaken for Wil ton, is employed by Knapp to assist In a stock brokerage deal. Giles Dudley finds himself closeted in a room with Mother Borton who makes a confidant of him. He can learn nothing about the mvstcrious bov further than that it is Tim Terrill and Dai by Meeker who are after him. Dudley visits the home of Knapp and is stricken by the beauty or Luella. his daughter. Slumming tour through Chinatown Is planned. The trip to Chinatown. Giles Dudley learns that the party is being shadowed by Terrill. Luella and Dudley are cut off from the rest of the party and imprison ed In a hallway "behind an Iron-bound door. Three Chinese rulllans approach the imprisoned couple. A battle ensues. One Is knocked down. Giles begins firing. Inn Terrill Is seen in the mob. A newly form ed mob is checked by shots from Giles revolver. Policeman Corson breaks down the door with an ax and the couple Is rescued. Luella thanks Giles Dudley for saving her life. Knapp appears at the office with no traces of the previous night's debauch. Following his Instruc tions Dudley has a notable day in the Stock Exchange, selling Crown Diamond and buying Omega, the object bei ng to crush Decker. Knapp's hated mal. Dud ley discovers that he loves I-yc-lla Knapp. Mother Borton tells Giles Dudley t that "they've discovered where 'the boy is. The mysterious unknown woman employ er of Dudley meets him by appointment with "the boy" who Is turned over to Dfdlev with his guards and they drive with film to the ferry boat to tfi' a ja in out of the city. Dudley and bis faithful guards convey "the boy" by train to the village of Llvermore. as per the written instructions. The party Is followed, boon after the party is .quartered In the hotU a special train arrives in Llvermore The "gang" including Darby Meeker and Tim Terrill. lay siege to the hotel and en deavor to capture "he boy." who comes forward to see the tight. Tricked again." cries Tim Terrill. when he sees the voungster's face. "It's the wrong boy." CHAPTER XXIV. On the Road. The wrong boy! For a moment 1 could not under stand nor believe; and when the mean ing of the words came to me 1 groped in mental darkness. But there was no time for speculation. Kalf in a daze I heard a roar of curses, orders, a crash of glass as the lamp was extinguished, and over all came the prolonged growl of a wolf-voice, hoarse and shaken with anger. There was a vision of a wolf-head rising above the outline of faces a few yards away, dark, dis torted, fierce, with eyes that blazed threats, and in an instant 1 found my self in the center of a struggling, shouting, swearing mass of savage men, fighting with naught but the in stinct of blind rage. 1 doubt not that 1 was as crazy as the rest. But in my madness there was one idea strong in my mind. It was to reach the cveil face and snake-eyes of Tom Terrill, and stamp the life out of him. With desperate rage I shouldered and fought till his white face with its venomous hatred was next to mine, till the fingers of my left hand gripped his throat, and my right hand tried to beat out his brains with a six shooter. "Damn you!" he gasped, striking fiercely at me. "I've been waiting for you!" I thightened my grip and spoke no word. He writhed and turned, striv ing to free himself. 1 had knocked his revolver from his hand, and he tried in vain to reach it. A trace of fear stole into the venomous anger of the one eye that was unobscured. as he strove without success to guard him self from my blows. But he gave a sudden thrust, and with a sinuous writhe he was free, while 1 was car ried back by the rush of men with the vague impression that something was amiss with me. Then a great light flamed tip before me in which the struggling mob, the close hall and room, and the universe itself melted away, and I was alone. The next impression that came to me was that of a voice from an im measurable distance. "He's coming to," is said; and then beside it I heard a strange wailing cry. "What is it?" I asked, trying to sit up. My voice seemed to come from miles away and to belong to some other man. "That's it. you're all right," said the voice encouragingly, and about the half of Niagara fell on my face. Then the mists before my eyes cleared away, and I found that I was on the floor of the inner bedroom and Wainwright had emptied a water jug over me. The light of a small kero sene lamp gave a gloomy illumination to the place. Lockhart and Fitzhugh leaned against the door, and Wilson bent with Wainwright over me. The boy was sitting on the bed, crying shrilly over the melancholy situation. "What is it?" 1 asked, gathering my scattered wits. "What has happened?" "We've been licked." said Wain wright regretfully. "The rest of the boys got took, but we got in here. Fitz and me seen the nasty knock you got, and dragged you back, and when we got you here the parlor was full of the hounds, and Porter and Abrams and Brown was missing. We found you was cut, and we've tried to fix you up." I looked at my bandged arm, and put one more count in the indictment against Terrill. He had tried to stab me over the heart at the time he ha I wrenched free, but he had morely slashed my arm. It was ret a severe wound, but it g? me pain. "Only a scratch," said Wainwright. I envied the .philosophic calm with which he regardc . "It'll ..heal," 1 returned shortly. fit x 'z'"' r - ,n n n -. jfcfw-w-wpwKXVVWWX-rJ" U"liiiiiimi,i,i,i,i J mm,m,mm mm ffiHB &Q395J2EBJ3ZL CQHRUW MWMWMMWWMWMW "Where is the other gang? Are they gone?" "No; there's half a dozen of 'em out in the parlor, I reckon." "You'd better tell him," said Fitz hugh, shifting an unpleasant task. "Well," said Wainwright, "we heard orders given to shoot the first man that comes out before morning, but before all to kill you if you sticks your nose outside before sun-up." The amiable intentions of the vic tors set me to thinking. If it was im portant to keep here till morning, it must be important to me to get out There was no duty to keep here, for I need fear no attack on the boy who was with us. I looked at my watch, and found it was near 1 o'clock. "Tie those blankets together," I or dered, as soon as I was able to get my feet. The men obeyed me in silence, while Wainwright vainly tried to quiet the child. I was satisfied to have him cry, for the more noise he made the less our movements would be heard. I had a plan that I thought might be carried out. While the others were at work, I cautiously raised the window and peered through the shutters. The rain was falling briskly, and the wind still blew a gale. I thought I dis- ITjGffZENZD Tfr GJ2Z u42VD SJQKZ: JVO PVOJ3D tinguished the dark figure of a man on guard within a few feet of the building, and my heart sank. "How many are in the parlor, Wil son?" I asked. Wilson applied his eye to the key hole. "Can't see anybody but that one- eyed fellow, Broderick, but there might be more." A flash of memory came to me, and I felt in my pocket for Mother Bor ton's mysterious scrawl. "Give that to a one-eyed man," she had said. It was a forlorn hope, but worth the trying. "Hand this to Broderick," I said, "as soon as you can do it without any one's seeing you." Wilson did not like the task, but he took the envolope and silently brought the door ajar. His first in vestigations were evidently reassur ing, for he soon had half his body out side. "He's got it," he said on reappear ing. A little later there was a gentle tap at the door, and the head of the one eyed man was thrust in. "It's as much as my life's worth," he whispered. "What do you want me to do?" "How many men are in the street below here?" "There's one. but more are in call." "Well, I want him got out of the way." "That's easy," said Broderick, with a diabolical wink of his one eye. "I'll have him change places with me." "Good! How many men are here?" "You don't need to know that. There's enough to bury you." "Have Meeker and Terrill gone?" "Tom? He's in the next room here, and can count it a mercy of the saints if he gits out in a week. Meeker's gone with the old man. Well, I can't stay a-gabbin' any longer, or I'll be caught, and then the divil himself couldn't save me." I shuddered at the thought of the "old man," and the shadow of Dodd ridge Knapp weighed on my spirits. "Are you ready for an excursion, Fitzhugh?" I whispered. He nooded assent. "Well, we'll be out of here in a minute or two. Take tiiat overcoat. I've gt one. Now tie that blanket to t:.e bedpost. No, it won't be long enough. You'll have to -hold it for us, boys." I heard the change of guards below, and, giving directions to Wainwright, with funds to settle our account with the house, I blew out the lamp, quietly swung open the shutter and leaned over the sill. "Hold onto the blanket, boys. Fol low, Fitz," I whispered, and climbed out The strain on' my injured arm as I swung off gave me .a burning pain, but I got to the ground in safety, and the improvised rope was drawn up. "Where now?" whispered Fitzhugh. "To the stable." As we slipped along to the corner a man stepped out before us. "Don't shoot." he said; "it's me Broderick. Tell Mother Borton I wouldn't have done it for anybody but her." "I'm obliged to you just the same," I said. "And here's a bit of drink money. Now, where are my men?" "Don't know. In the lockup, I "reck on." "How's that?" "Why, you see, Meeker tells the fellows here he has a warrant for you that you're the gang of burglars that's wanted for the Parrott murder. And he had to show the constable and the landlord and some others the war rant, too." "How many were hurt?" "Six or seven. Two of your fallows looked pretty bad when they were carried out." We turned down a by-street, but as soon as the guard had disappeared we retraced our steps and hastened to the Thatcher stables. The rain was' whipped into our faces as we bent against the wind, and the whish and roar of the gale among the trees and the rattle of loose boards and tins, as they were tossed and shaken behind the houses, gave a mel ancholy accompaniment to our hasty march. We nearly missed the stable in the darkness, and it was several minutes before we roused Thatcher to a state in which he could put together the two ideas that we wanted to get in, and that it was his place to get up and let us in. "Horses to-night?" he gasped, throw- ' ing up his hands. "Holy Moses! I couldn't think of letting the worst plug of the lot out in this storm." "Well, I want your best." "You'll have to do it, Dick," said Fitzhugh with a few words of expla nation. "He'll make it all right for you." "Where are you going?" asked Thatcher. "Oakland." He threw up his hands once more. "Great Scott! you can't do it. The horses can't travel 50 miles at night and in this weather. You'd best wait for the morning train. The express will be through here before 5." "I hesitated a moment, but the chances of being stopped were too great. "I must go," I said decidedly. "I can't wait here." "I have it," said Thatcher. "By hard riding you can get to Niles in time to catch the freight as it goes up from San Jose. It will get down in time for the first boat, if that's what you want." "Good! How far is it?" "We call it 18 miles it's over that by the road. There's only one nasty bit. That's in the canyon." "I think we shall need the pleasure of your company," I said. "It's a bad job, but if you must, you must," he groaned. And he soon had three horses under the saddle. I eyed the beasts with some dis favor. They were evidently half-mustang, and I thought undersized for such a journey. But I was to learn before the night was out the virtues of strength and endurance that lie in tbe blood of the Indian horse. "Hist! What's that?" said Fitz hugh, extinguishing the. light. The voices of the stcrm and the un easy champing of the horses were the only sounds that rewarded a minute's listening. "We must chance it," said I, after looking cautiously into the darkness and finding no signs of a foe. And in a moment more we were galloping down the street, the hoof beats scarcely sounding in the soft ened earth of the roadway. Not a word was spoken after the start as we turned through the side streets to avoid the approaches to the hotel. Thatcher suddenly turned to the west, and in another minute we were on the open highway, with the steady beat of the horses' hoofs splashing a wild rhythm on the muddy road. With the town once behind us, I felt my spirits rise with every stroke of the horse's hoofs beneath me. The rain and the wind were friends rather than foes. Yet my arm pained me sharply, and I was forced to carry the reins hi the whip hand. Here the road was broader, and we rode three abreast, silent, watchful, each busy with his own thought, and all alert for the signs of chase behind. "There!" said Thatcher, suddenly pulling his horse up to a walk. "We're five miles out, and they've got a big piece to make up if they're on our track. We'll breathe the horses a bit" The beasts were panting a little, but chafed at the bits as we walked them and tossed their heads uneasily to the pelting of the storm. "Hark!" I cried. "Did you hear that?" I-was almost certain that the sound of a faint halloo came from be hind us. I was not alone in the thought. "The dern fools!" said Fitzhugh. "They want a long chase, I guess, to go through the country yelling like a pack of wild Injuns." "I reckon 'twas an owl;" said Thatch er; "but we might as well be moving. We needn't take no chances while we've got a good set of heels under us. Get up. boys." (TO BE CONTINUED.) MADE WHILE YOU WAIT. Autograph Fiend an Easy Mark for the Unscrupulous. W. E. Collett, secretary of the Col orado Prison association, was talking in Denver about 50 autograph letters from widows that he recently received wherein each widow offered gladly to marry one of Mr. Collett's proteges, a reformed convict in search of a wife. "I shall keep most of those widows' autographs," said Mr. Collett "They are very interesting. A collection of autographs of such a character would be worth having, wouldn't it? Differ ent from the usual dull collections of mere signatures, eh?" He smiled and went on: "An autograph fiend who collects mere signatures is rather a fool, and he is very easily taken in. Whenever I think of him, I think of a littlo story about him. "According to this story, an auto graph fiend walked into an old curi osity shop and said: "'You advertise that you have au tographs of Washington, and Shake speare for sale. If your terms are reasonable, I should like to purchase specimens of each of those auto graphs. "The proprietor bowed politely. Then he went to the back of the shop and said to a man who was painting a large canvas on an easel: " 'Put away that Rembrandt for the present, Jim, and write me out an au tograph of Washington and one of Shakespeare. Gentleman waiting out side.' " GOOD THING TO LEAVE ALONE. Physicians Advice to Those Who Are Fond of Mushrooms. It may be possible that when all the boys are dead they will quit eating toadstools and dying in spasms there from. The edible and poisonous varie ties of these fungi are too close to gether in general and species for the average youngster to differentiate them. It continues, after many years, to be the same old story: Eat it; if it kills you it is a toadstool; if it agrees with you it is a mushroom. Some years ago the department of agricul ture at Washington issued an elab orate and beautiful set of illustrations of mushrooms and "near" mushrooms, labeling one set "edible" and the other "poisonous." The story leaked out that the printers got the labels mixed, and that the transposition was not discovered until the work had been sent broadcast. The officials did some tall hustling in an effort to call in the issue. A well-known physician said to me the other day: "Owing to the very great difficulty in ordinary life of detecting the true from the false, my mushroom advice has usually been 'let both kinds alone.'" New York Press. Parish Registers. I was once being shown round a vil lage church in the Eastern Counties, and was solemnly informed by the somewhat garrulous parish clerk that the registers went back to the time of William the Conqueror, says J. F. Wil liams in The Treasury. Lest the same startling opinion may be held by oth ers, let me hasten to say that parish registers were unknown in England before the end of Henry VIH's reign, and happy is that parish which still possesses its records even from that date. For our earlier registers have certainly had a very checkered career, and when we read the story of the treatment which has been meted out to them during the three or four cen turies of their existence, we can only wonder that they exist in such num bers as they do. Paganini's Violin. . The famous violin of Paganini, which was preserved in a glass case, has been found to be rotting, and it is certain that the wood will not last many years longer. This dis covery has caused agitation as to the means of preserving the precious instrument It has been decided that to keep it a few years longer it shall be taken out once a year and played on for an hour by the best pupil of the conservatoire. Only once since the death of the greatest violinist who ever lived has the violin, which is a superb Stradivarius, been touched, and that was some years ago, by the Spanish violinist, Pablo del Sarasate, to whom the city during a triumphal tour through Italy wished to offer a signal honor. Reducing Ocean Record. The first steamer that ever crossed the Atlantic took twenty-four days to make the trip, and the early boats of tbe Cunard line, organized in 1840. made the transatlantic trip In four teen days, or in about" the same time as the best of the clippers of the Black Ball and other lines. In 1860 the sailing ship Dreadnought made the passage in nine days and seven teen hours, and it was a long time be fore a steamer beat that record. It is nearly two decades since the five-day ship came upon tbe scene, and ever since then the record has been lower ed by hours rather than by days. ? AMMJjil liii!ii;iii;:iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiini"'"''"i""i"'i"ll ALCOHOL-3 PER CENT AWgttable Preparation for As similating feFoodandKegub fag the S kMaachs and Bowels of Promotes DtgestioaCheerful nessand Rest Contains neither OpiumMorphine nor Mineral Not Narc otic Rctipr cfOldDrSAMVEimtMER ftmpln'n Sid JtxSimm -MnMkSltt-Awt St J HirmSetd -Wfmktyrrtm fhvtr. A perfect Remedy forConslipa lion . Sour Stomach.Diarrhoea, Worms .Convulsions .Fevcrish ncss and LOSS OF SLEEP Facsimile Signature of The Centaur Company, NEW YORK. Ul'iiMaAsf fltMsfAM 4frA Eanrhtawd kwuui qmtvu miuvi wis vwiu Exact Copy of Wrapper. OPPONENT EASY TO BEAT. Slight Accident Put Edmonia's Rival Out of the Running. Mrs. S. was in a Richmond hos pital, and she was lonely, so welcomed the advent of a very black and very languid maid, who came in one morn ing to wipe up the floor. Some one new to talk to, so no time was lost. "I have not seen you working here before. Aren't you a new girl?" Edmonia willingly let the cloth slip back into the bucket, and sat fiat upon the floor before answering. "Yas'm, I's new. I's jest washin op do floor; but I don't work, I's ed jikated." "And where were you educated?" was the next question. "In a seminary." Then., with a burst of confidence: "There was me an' an other girl workin In a house. She was cook and I was chambermaid, and we had great times about who would git de prize, but I beat." Then, after a pause, "She was easy to beat, 'cause she got smothered to death with gas de night before de 'zaminations come off." Harper's Magazine. Why He Went Back to His Old Tricks "You ingrate!" exclaimed the irato Judge, addressing the culprit; "this gentleman took a fatherly interest in you after you had promised to stop stealing, and he gave you a job in hi3 store, did he not?" "Yes, sir!" "And when he left you alone in the place one day you repaid his gratitude by sneaking behind the desk and rifling the cash drawer, didn't you?" "Yes, sir." "Now, why did you do this?" "I got remorse of conscience, Judge!" Advice from a Wise Man. After getting the best of a man in one deal steer clear of him, for he will begin to sit up and take notice. Exchange. AVE SELL GVJSS AXD TRAPS CHEAP & buy Furs &, Hides: Write for catalog 105 N. W. Hide & Fur Co., Minneapolis, Minn. Occasionally a listener hears good of himself after talking into a phono eraph. You always get full value in Lewis' Single Binder straight 5c cigar. Your dealer or Lewis' Factory, Peoria, HI. A woman says that all men may be equal, but none are superior. Mrs. IClnalow'B Soothing Sjrop. For children teething, softens tbe suras, reduce to flammstion, allays pain, cores wind colic SScabottl A successful man isn't necessarily a contented man. K i.riiiii'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiu.mliimJ Let He Send Yoi a Package of Defiance Starch with your next order, of groceries and I will guarantee Y that BavL Kmj (CTrWC . Ha." tcWLw srv, Hsmu Forlnfluiti and Children, The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of In Use For Over Thirty Years CASTORIA iw cnrrMMt mmm. mm mm errr. Hard Work. Patience That Miss Fussenfeather holds her head quite high since her father got an automobile. Patrice Yes; she's trying to keep her nose above range of the smell of the gasoline. FARMS FOR RENT or sale on croppay ments. J. MULUALL, Sioux. City, la. The wise man who has a good opin ion of himself keeps it to himself. Feet Arhe ITno Allen's Foot-Fas OTrra),U00tei.UmoDia!s. Uofust'iuiltatluns. Kendfo tree trial package. A. S. Olmsted. Lo ltoy. M. T. The lore of money Is the easieat of all roots to cultivate. SICK HEADACHE Positively cured by these Little Pills. They also relieve Di tress from Dyspepsia, In digestion antlToo Hearty Eating. A perfect rem edy for Dizziness, Nau sea, Drowsiness, Bad Taste in the Month, Coat ed Tongue, Pain in th Side, TORPID LIVER. They regulate the Bowels. Purely VeeetabI. .MALL PILL. SHALL DOSE. SHALL PRICE. Genuine Must Bear Fac-Sinile Signature , REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. PAAkr'6 hair balsam rinamn and bcantifita th n VmrtuXtm a brnniaiit STOWth. Never Pail to Bettor Gray tXMir to iia xoawrai vuiar. Con ra!p ditnw hair talliaa gOcandjUMat ObbMi uccsTTiioiipsMvs EycWaftr UTanft foL? Cood pay. Write Red Croat IVailC 41 JOO: Cneml&ts Specialty Co.. Chicago. W. N. U., OMAHA, NO. 42, 1906. you will be better satisfied pk m fc f 1 41 ft CARTER'S rmr Tiver H PILLS. CARTERS VrrriE TlVER pals. 'with it than with any starch you have ever used. W. I claim that it has no superior (for hot or cold starching, and It Will Not Stick to the Iron No cheap premiums are given with DEFIANCE STARCH, but TOU GET ONE-THIRD MORB tor tour monet than of any other brand. DEFIANCE STARCH costs 10c for a 16-oz. package, and I will refund your money if It ticks to the iron. Truly yours, Hohest Jonrr, TteGroccryaaa . e Z - .SlK