Newspaper Page Text
& I TtOGTORS MISTAKES Are said often to be buried six feet under ground. But many times women call on their family physicians, suffering, as they imagine, one from dyspepsia, another from heart disease, another from liver or kid j|5r lie disease, another from nervous pros tration, another with pain here and there, ^"Stnd in this way they present alike to themselves and their easy-going or over busy doctor, separate diseases, for which he, assuming them to be such, prescribes his pills and potions. In reality, they are $11 only tsymj)Ujms caused by some uterine i- disease. The/pTvKgician, fgnorant of the cause of suffenngV^eps upm§^reatment until large bills are made. .TCieSuffering patient gets no betterSjjMre^isxQjKtbe •wrong treatment, but probably worse?_^. proper mPriicina likf T)r VXprctfa. Fq,Yoril°_ Prescription, directed to the cause would nave entirely"remoyedthe disease, there by aispeuing all those distressing symp toms, and instituting comfort instead of prolonged misery. It has been well said, that "a disease known is half cured." Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is a scientific medicine, carefully devised by an experienced and skillful physician, and adapted to woman's delicate system. It is made of native American medicinal roots and is perfectly harmless in its effects in any concilium oT'tne t'emace system. As a powerful invigorating tonic "Fa vorite Prescription imparts strength to the whole system and to the organs dis tinctly feminine in particular. lor over worked, "worn-out," run-down." debili tated teachers, milliners, dressmakers, seamstresses, "shop-girls," house-keepers, nuraingmothers, and feeble women gen erally, Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is the greatest earthly boon, being un equaled as an appetizing cordial and re* storative tonic. As a soothing and strengthening nerv ine "Favorite Prescription" is unequaled and is invaluable in allaying and sub duing nervous excitability, irritability, nervous exhaustion, nervous prostration, neuralgia, hysteria, spasms, St. Vitus's dance, and other distressing, nervous symptoms commonly attendant upon functional and organic disease of the uterus. It induces refreshing sleep and relieves mental anxiety and despondency. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets invigorate the stomach, liver and bowels. One to three a dose. Easy to take as candy. MAGAZIN E READERS SUNSET MAGAZINE beautifully illustrated,good stone* and arbcMM about Califonus and vl all the Far Wert. V** CAMERA CRAFT devoted «acK month to the ar tiinc reproduction of the best $ 1 0 0 work of amateur and professional photographers. a 4 ROAD 0 7 A THOUSAND WONDERS a book of 75 pages, containing t20 colored photographs of S TET picturesque spots in California and Oregon. _________ Total $3.25 All for $1.50 Address all orders to SUBSET MAGAZINE Flood Building San Francisco DR. ADDISON JONES the regular and reliable Chicago specialist will be at The Dakota House, New TJlm, Minn., Wednesday, Dec. nt Hours: 9 a. m. to 5 p. m. O dav onlv and return each 2 8 days Cures permanently the cases he un dertake and sends the incuiable home without taking a tee from them. This is he continues his visits eai after year, while other doctors have -made a few visits and stopped Di Tones is an eminently successful spec ialis all chronic diseases proven by he many cures effected in chiom cases which a oaffled the skill ot all oth phvs'CJans Hi hospital experience sind extensive practice have made him &o proficient th.it he, can name and lo ^jt«- disease in a minutes Catarrh, Catairhal Deafness Diseases of the Ear, Nose Throat and of the L,unp:s (and Consumption the earlier a are to be curea when Dr. Jones methods are applied. Graimlnteil Eyelids and Cataract pei manentl cured by his Absorption Treatment Glasses fitted and Guaranteed. Cross E straightened without pain Astonishing cures are readilv made in cas«s of Chrome Rheumatism, Pa 1a vsis. Kpilepsy and Skin Cunoer. Treats all curable Diseases of the Heart, Blood Skin, Jilver, Stomach, id Bladder and ot the Nervous System, and Female organs never-failing remedy for Bi Neck PILfciS, FISTULAE and RUPTUR E guaranteed cured without detention from nusiness Special attention gi^en to all Surgical cases. NERVOUS DEBILITY. Are you uervous and despondent *Js^-weak and debilitated tired mornings &' 110 ambition—lifeless, memory poor ea fatigued, excitable and irritable, eyes sunken red and blurred pimples on face restless, haggard looking a back deposit in urine distrust ful, want of confidence lack of energy and strength, sleepless? DISEASES OF MEN AND PRIVATE "DISEASES A SPECIALTY. Blood Poison, Syphilis, Stricture, Oleet, Spermatorrhea, Varicocele, dioeele, and the effects of early Vice or Kxcess. producing Debility, Nervous t'jf- /less-. Defective Memory, etc., which mind and body, positively cured. W O N E E S f* Perfected in old cases which have t)eew neglected or unskillfully treated. No experiments or failures. No incur able cases taken. onsultation Free and Confidential) *dIresa DR 4.DDISON-JONES. kf 3801 Lak Ave., Chicago. Reference, Dr«xel State Bank. m. W 4 &£&&&&$& Now people no longer ask who's Hughes, but throughout the United States they are asking what's Hughes —what kind of a man Is this person at Albany, this new and novel figure iv public life, for It is a ra^t that Hughes is a new element in chics, like radium in physics A Unique Governor. Charles E Hughes has been govern or of Ne-w York for almost a year— quite long enough to allow his measure to be taken Yet it is a difficult mat ter to classify the man at Albany. Aft er looking at this human specimen from all sides and in all lights the con elusion is reached that he does not be long in any classification hitherto ae cepted, but te ,\ whole new class bj himself. As a public administratoi Governor Hughes is unique People are asking, "What about this man Hughes''' Avitb thoughts on presi dential possibilities, but it is declared by close friends of the go\emor him self and indeed by intimate observers who oppose him political!? that the subject of this curiosity is not think ing at all about what may happen to him or who Hughes may be next year or ten years hence Hughes, they say. is simply attending to his job as go\ ernor of New York. It may be said that Mr. Hughes' in terpretation of the duties of a state executive is the one thing that differ entiates him from the general run of governors the country over. How he interprets his duties Is best explained by citing incidents in his official career f-7& & 5W—,— _} Chairman Ste\ens of the New York legislature's gas trust investigating committee in March, 1905, when State Senator Alfred R. Page, one of the members, suggested Attorney Charles Evans Hughes for chief counsel or Inquisitor. Just at present Mr Hughes is gov ernor of New York, but he was an unknown lawyer when that question was asked Mr Page knew that Mr Hughes was a good lawyer. A consid erable group of men In New York city, where he practiced, also knew this fact. But there are many other good lawyers New York, so that is not very much of a distinction. However Page insisted to Stevens that Hughes was the very best lawyer available for the work in hand—to corkscrew confessions of amazing manipulations out of Consolidated Gas officials, to poke the probe down into the rotten core of lighting contracts and illumi nate the opaque interior and to dls cover that New York people were pay ing a dollar for gas that cost 28 cents Hughes was hired and did the work. &j CharlesEvansHughes New York's Energetic Governor, Who Is In the Presidential Limelight, Has No Use For Political Bosses. By R.OBER.TUS LOVE. HO'S Hughes Such A\as the query ol CHARLES EVANS HUGHES. Before Mr. Hughes Avent to Albany the working desk of the governor was in a small room adjoining the fine large chamber which is known as the executive office. Former governors pre ferred the small room so that they could keep away from the crowd which frequently fills the large room also, it must be said, some of them preferred the little office so that they could talk in private with politicians. Governor Hughes used the little room for a few days. Then he marched out into the big room and took his seat at the es-j panshe flat desk which had been merely ornamental, and he works there every day. Shortly after this move a certain in dividual entered the big chamber ami put his face close to the governor's, saying softly. "I want to see you alone, governor." "I am alone," replied the governor to his everyday voice. "But this is a private matter, gov ernor, and"— "Is it official business?" "Yes, but"— "Good day," said Governor Hughes. That politician thus made the star tling discovery that New York has a governor to whom no official business is private. It used to be mighty hard for a hum ble citizen to get access to the little room and the governor's ear. Now anybody not palpably a crank or a lunatic can enter the big room and state his case to the governor, who listens as attentively to a cab driver as he listens to the president of a railroad. Some months ago a man just released from state prison called upon Governor Hughes in the big room, announcing himself as an ex convict The governor listened atten tively while the man complained of certain abuses in the prison and of fered suggestions as to remedies. Gov ernor Hughes took copious notes dur ing the conversation and promised to take the matter under advisement. Sample of His Investigation. Two former officials at the capitol will not forget the evening when the lights went out The governor and his secretaries were working late. They lost valuable time hunting for candles. This led Governor Hughes to investigate the lighting system, bring about improvements which will obviate any future resort to candles, dismiss two important officials and cen sure a third. Hughes, you know, got his office because he was an investi gator. These are small incidents, but they have a large bearing upon the charac ter of the man Hughes. One of the bigger affairs of his administration was his flght to oust Otto Kelsey, the •tate insurance commissioner. A* *rybody knows, after Law.rer Httgbeit •I'-^Htfinl 1 ti had Investigated gas he was called to investigate life insurance. After his searching questions had compelled in surance presidents and managers to disgorge the facts which proved their gross mismanagement of the people's funds Mr. Hughes prepared the official report of the legislative investigating committee to which he had acted as chief counseli^*When he became gov ernor he knew life insurance down to the nub. He became convinced that the commissioner of insurance was not taking advantage of the findings con tamed in that report to protect policy holders He proposed to have anew I commissioner, but he gave Mr. Kelsey an opportunity to show cause why he should not be removed. I Won a Moral Victory. GOA ernor Hughes notified Commis sioner Kelsey to appear before him the big room for immediate examina tion. There was no precedent for such a thing, of course But, then, Gov ernor Hughes cares little for prece dents. He cares more for common sense, for business methods applied on the jump to the case immediately in hand. After a few hours of what law yers call "Q and A," otherwise cross examination, Mr. Kelsey felt like the bosom of a boiled shirt after being worn on a hot August day. He was wilted The party machine in the state 'senate sustained Mr. Kelsey and pre vented his removal, but the governor won the moral victory. Also the governor a little later by attending strictly to his business as chief executive according to his own interpretation took the starch out of the party machine. A correspondent wrote from Albany: "He has smashed his party organi zation so that there is little left of it as a machine. To be sure, many of the working parts are intact, but they are not assembled." Neither Boss Nor Machine. And it is not at all likely that they will be assembled so long as Charles E. Hughes stays in Albany. There is no Republican party machine In New York state at present writing. Up to a year or two ago the machine was as active as an automobile with a full tank out to break the record. Now it lies by the wayside like an auto that has butted against a steel telegraph pole. Governor Hughes is the steel pole. There is no Republican boss in New York state. Boss Piatt is no more. Boss Odell is no more. State Chairman Woodruff, who might be boss with some other man than Hughes in the gubernatorial chair, is not a boss at all. For the first time in many years New York state Republic ans have neither boss nor machine. Why not? Because the man at the big flat desk in the large open cham ber at Albany steadfastly refuses to attend to anybody's business but his own. He is the governor and attends to the governor's business. His inter pretation of the governor's business does not include partisanship of any sort, does not include fixing up the fences so that the party may win out next year, does not include shystering and chicanery, trickstering and traf ficking in patronage—none of those things at all. Apparently he is not concerned, officially at any rate, as to whether New York city goes Republic an or Cattaraugus county carries the whole ticket with increased majorities. He does not care, officially speaking, whether the Empire State is Repub lican or Populist next year. That is none of his business. His business is to be governor of New York and do the work directly connected with that office until his term shall end. Governor Hughes puts no ear to the ground to hearken the rumbling of popular issues. Last winter state leg islatures east, west and south were passing laws reducing the railroad pas senger rate to 2 cents a mile. The people clamored for such laws The governors signed them. There seemed to be a general demand for an arbi trary regulation of passenger rates, and it was the most popular move ment of recent times. New York's legislative assembly passed a two cent law. Go\ ernor Hughes vetoed it. "The People's Governor." At fiist the people were shocked. The utte« ly unexpected had happened. Indignation soon gave way to curiosi ty. Hughes had become known as "the people's governor," and he t»r tainly was not the corporation's gov ernor. He must have plausible rea sons for vetoing the bill When the people read the governor's reasons, submitted with his veto message, showing the two sides of the ques tion, many of them applauded. Rev. David Hughes, retired Bap tist minister and father of the gov ernor, sajs Charley was always a good boy, "but neither a prig nor a Puritan." Nobody denies that the ma ture Charley is making a good gov ernor. But he is a new sort of gov ernor because he is not playing poli tics. This extraordinary abstention from the game that is supposed to be a prerogative of the New York governor ship, with vague outlines of the White House looming up in the immediate future, perplexes the politicians. They don't know where they are at. They are afraid to say where they stand as to the future of Charles E. Hughes. The people, however, are in no such perplexity. Everywhere throughout New York state you may hear people "mentioning" Hughes for the presi dential nomination. And this recent utterance of President Schurman of Cornell in a public address delivered from the platform where Abraham Lincoln made his first speech in the east, the old Cooper Union in New York city, expresses the situation: "If the people want Governor Hughes for higher service, it is best for them to take the initiative and extend the call. He would not accept an invita tion from the bosses." f^J^-i^§MA Kmli WSk How She Rests. In Germantown there dwells a fam ily of ancient lineage which for years every summer has employed a colored woman named Liza as a cook while the family was at the shore. Sons and daughters have married and migrated, reared children and added to the branches of an already luxuriant fam ily tree. On one occasion a number of these signified a desire to assemble again under the old roof The old lady who now is- the head of the family, seeing that special help was necessary, sent for Liza to come and help cook the dinner Liza's answer was brief and dignified. "De winter am my vaca tion." she said, "an* den I doan* cook for nobody. In de winter I rests, an* all I does is washin* an' ironin'."— Philadelphia Record A Curt Reply. A story is told of Professor Masson when editor of Macmillan's Magazine. It refers to the days when Kingsley and Newman were engaged in their famous pamphlet war. Conscious of the excellence of an article on the sub ject of the controversy which he had written in the magazine, Masson ven tured to bring it under the notice of Newman, but he was not prepared for the reply he received, although he aft erward spoke of it with philosophic humor. Newman's laconic message was in words such as these: "1 have not heard of your magazine, and your name conveys no impression to my mind."—Westminster Gazette. Heartfelt. Lord Carrington when governor of New South Wales made his first pub lic appearance at the major's dinner at Sydney. Having committed a few words to paper, he delivered them reply to the toast of his health and then sat down, feeling very much sat isfied with himself Opposite to him there sat an M. P. who had suffered long from the abundant eloquence of the new governor's predecessor When Lord Carrington sat down the man filled his glass to the brim and said. "Thank the Lord, he can't speak!" Just a Spill. "Beg pardon, sir," said the awkward waiter, "but was that last meal on you?" "Not all of it, garcon," replied the guest as he meekly rubbed his much spattered trousers "only the soup."— Pittsburg Press. Lots of It. "Initiative is the great thing that we all need and that most of us lack." "Well, my husband has lots of it," replied Mrs. Gottawadde "He's initi ated in something nearly every night." —Chicago Record-Herald Sensitive. "Willie is so sensitive "Really?" "Exceedingly so. When papa kicked him down the steps the last time he didn't call again for three weeks Cincinnati Enquirer. While the world lasts fashion will lead it by the nose.—Cowper The Man With Tact. I Casual Caller (to one next him)—I was introduced to that squint eyed, I red haired woman over there as Mrs. I Somebody or other. Don't you think1 the man was an idiot that married her? Next One (meekly)—I can't just say. I'm the man.—Baltimore American. I BURDICK CASH REGISTERS. Our Candies are Pure Nothing but the Purest of the Pure enters into the manufacture of our Cream ChewingTaffies The Home Here's Good Advice.^ O. S. Woolevt-r. «ui»- «tf theb+*«t know., ni"n limits ,,f /L„ N Y., --.V-' "if MUI me ever troubled Ai au piv Arm-a t^lve. It curtd f#$\ in- of them for jromi 20 Yt-u» (. .r nit*»«i t«»i sun*. I\OIIHK, luiriiN or itr sions. 25\ at O. Olsen'a iirug StOlf. Whenever youfeei that your stomach has gone a little wrong, or when you feel that it is not in good order as is evidenced by mean headaches, ner vousness, bad breath, and belching, take something at limes, and especial ly after your meals until relief is af foi ded There is nothing better offered the public today for stomach troubles, dyspepsia, indigestion, etc than Ko dol. This is a scientific preparation of natural digestants combined with vegetable acids and it contains the same juices found in every healthy stomach. Kodol is guaranteed to gi\ relief. It is pleasant to take it will make you feel fine by digesting what ou eat. Sold by Eugene A. Pfefferle. We have a hne line of cabinets for Edison and Victor records,also piano beuches, scarfs and stools so beautify our piano with a fine bench or scarf and also your Edison and Victor ma chines with a fine cabinet to keep vour records. Sold at New UJm Music Store. A. Danielson. Badly Mixed Up. Abraham Brown, nl Wuit.-i ton, N Y"., liat.iv«M\ lemarkable «xperieice he SH?S- "Doctors got l»id uuxeo up over int-, one nu\ heait disease, two called it kidn trouble, the fourth, bio poi son, and the fifth stomach and hvei trou ll«-, bur none of them helped me so mv wile advised ttyiuij Electric Bitters, Inch ire restoring me to perfect health. On bottle did me more good than all the rive doctors prescribed." Guaran teed lot blood poison, weakness and all stomach, liver and kidnev complaints, by 0 M, Olseu druggist, 50c. There is something about Kennedy's Laxative Cough Syrup that, makes" it different from others, as it causes a free yet gentle action of the bowels through which the cold is forced out of the system. At the same time it heals irritation and allays inflammation ot the throat and lungs, It is pleasant to take. Children like it. Contains no opiates nor narcotics. Sold bv Eugene A. Pfefferle. 43 Years Experience in Furs Of value, with style, fit, quality and proper workmanship. Fur and fur-lined Garments for la dies and gentlemen at the right prices Fur as Christma Gifts Make your selection now from a complete stock and have them laid aside until later. Mink Sets from $50.00 up. Lynx Sets from $40.00 to $60.00. Fox Sets from $20.00 up. Persian Lamb Sets from $35 up. Persian Paw Sets for $13.50. And many other Sets at right prices. Chas. A, Altetit, 384 Wabasha St., St. Paul, Minn. Call at the Brown County Bank and roeu re one of these Burdick Cash Registers If you wish to save a certain amount each week, the register shows at all times how near you are to the goal. The register cashes value of smallest coin. The Home Bakery W EISNER, Proprietor. W EIBNER, Proprietor., Bakerv^^•B &A idlvMOk ^,1^-irl