PlftJ T i l -1 A ras m fT ir zzm tmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm WHAR DEW mwummwitiiiiiiHMiwuiwwwcwiWPmiPWinimi Tii8 Lincoln Eye and Ear infirmary - v2BBE diseases and in- I juries of the 5 EYE EAR NOSE and THROAT s Including 5 1 BLINDNESS DEAfKESS and ATAITL I Contagious and incurable cases not admit- Ar t - toA Pntiniewin1 ni1 cri find trftjxl s Letters of inquiry promptly answered 5 Write for announcement 5 I DRS GARTEN COOK 5 I Oculists and Aurists in attendance LincolnTJefa iiiinmiwmfuii wwwicty twii Muimu imw ill tthea Answering Advertisements rlsntioa This fjpec liineUy HmSmwia I CUM IN Being the Soliloquy of a Farmer on the Free Raw Sugar Question Thars a mighly lot cr talkin about farmers n thar rights N the wonderful prosperity thct beet growin invites Thars a heap er foolish crowin n the beats begin ter shout n holler fer the Tariff ter keep free raw sugar out But I notis thet the bect producin farms arc very few An the farmers through the country aint got much ef it ter dew The hull land aint a raisin beets n aint goin ter begin Beet growins right fer sum I guess but whar dew cum in The farmer gits four dollars now fer every ton o beets A hansom price I must allow but hldin sum deceits Beet sugar manyfactercrs admit ee they hev found Thet granylated costs cm sumthin like tew cents a pound in lact thet leaves a profit on which they d greatly thrive And if it kin be sold fer three why should we pay Jem FIVE t 11 seems ter me cs Met s a game thets mighty like a skin But if thars any benefit waal whar dew cum in When Uncle Sams in want o cash were glad ter help him out N well stand all the taxes thet are needed never doubt But when his pocket books well lined an nary cent he lacks Et seems ter me his dutys ter repeal thct sugar tax Them fellers wot is interested sez its to protect The bect producin farmer thet the duty they collect But I guess thet cxplanaton cs a little bit too thin The sugar maker hes all right but whar dew we cum in Take off raw sugar duty an the price will quickly fall To everybodys benefit fer sugars used by all The poor will bless the Government thct placed it in thar reach n millions of our citizens free sugar now beseech The dealer 11 be delighted less expenditure fer him More demand n bigger profits which at present arc but slim - An the farmer 11 be as well paid as he ever yet hes ben But hell buy his- sugar cheaper thets whar he an Ill cum in Now whars the sense er reason of the sugar tax to day When our treasurys a bulgin an we hev no debts ter pay The duty on raw sugars Fifty million every year An the peoples got ter pay it thets a fact thets very clear Fifty million Great Jerusha 1 Ter protect beet magnates too Why should they tax ALL the people just ter help a scattered FEW And the FEW Beet sugar MAKERS Dont it really seem a sin Thus ter help an fill thar coffers Whar dew you an I cum in The farmer growin beets hes got a contract price fer years Free raw sugar wouldnt hurt him an of it he hes no fears But mebbe like myself hes also growing fruit so nice Ter preserve it at a profit he needs sugar at a price The repealing of the duty surely cuts the price in two Thetll make a mighty difference neighbor both ter me an you -Let the sugar manyfactrer make such profits as he kin him it may seem right enufF but whar dew I cum in An I aint a goin ter swallcr all the argyments they shout Thct the farmers need protection an must bar raw sugar out Common sense is plainly showin that the people in the land Want raw sugar free in future an its freedom will demand Tis a tax no longer needed hateful to the public view Taxing millions of our people to enrich a favored few They cant blind me any longer with the foolish yarns they -spin While theyre busy makin money whar dew you and I come in Im a goin ter keep on hustlin talkin plcadin7 with tny irends no sense in lettin others gain thar selfish privet ends Im a goin ter write tcr morrer to my Congressman 7nd say Thet he oughter do his best ter kill that tax without delayl Feller farmers do your utmost whether yon grow beets or not Tojepeal the tax on sugar you can but improve your lot Cheaper sugar helps your pocket greater blessingsvou can win When weve three cent granylated thats vhar jou an Income in 1 t Better so about than fall into the ditch 333SJ j STCPrmniTcnren NoTftsornerTousness after 5 i I J O first dayi use of Dr Klines Great Xerre SuCCeSStUllV 8 Send for FkEIJ SSOO trfalbottle and treatise OK 11 TTKTTYEIt1 CTArchStreet Philadelphia Pa A man doesnt mind being a fool as long as ha doesnt know it There Is tio -trick in dyeing You can fio it iustis well as anv one if vou use PUTNAM FADELESS DYES Boiling the goods for half an hour is all there ooiaDy aruggistSj iuajpaeicage 5ew men have enough self-confidence to enable ihem to ignore their own mistakes A good companion makes good com pany rrE ttJr fhf Versatile Jflctalur The late John G Nieolay was a man of many and varied accom plishments Beginning his career as a clerk in a country store he became successively a printer editor pub lisher and proprietor of a newspaper a private secretary a diplomat and an author Besides he was an accom plished linquist a connoisseur of mu sic and art and something of a poet As to his part in the preparation ol the biography of Lincoln which was jointly the work of Mr NIcolay and John Hay the latter is credited with the graceful explanation that he did half and Mr NIcolay the other halL Hero of Memphis Dead Father Aloysius Wiever a Francis can priest who died In the Santa Barbara mission in southern Califor nia on the morning made memorable by the death of President McKinley was the man who in 1878 earned the title of the hero of Memphis He was a native of Vreden Germany hav ing been born sixty three years ago He came to this country when 20 years old In 1870 he removed to St Louis and in 1873 when the plague of yellow fever broke out in Memphis he voluntarily went to the stricken city and remained through the plague rendering assistance alike to -white and black CANADAS CAPITAL AROUSED 3fever Was Thcro Such Excitement niyslolans Association Trying to Explain Ottawa Canada Nov 25h This city is stirred up as never before Some seven years ago the local papers published an account of n man named George U -Kent of 408 Gilmour street who was dying of Brlghts Disease and who at the -very last moment after several of our best physicians had de clared -he couldnt live twelve hours was saved by Dodds Kidney Pills People who know how low Mr Kent was refused to believe that he was cured permanently and the other day in order to clinch the matter the pa pers published the whole case over again -and backed up their story by sworn statements made by Mr Kent in which he declares most positively that in 1S94 he was given up by the doctors and that Dodds Kidney Pills and nothing else saved him and fur ther that since the day that Dodds Kidney Pills sent him back to work seven years ago he has not lost a single minute from his work He is a printer in the American Bank Note Printing Company Mr Kent is kept quite busy during his spare hours answering inquiries personally and by letter but he is so grateful that he counts the time well spent Indeed he and his wife have shown their gratitude to Dodds Kid ney Pills in a very striking way by having their little girl born in 1S96 christened by the name of Dodds Altogether it is the most sensational case that has ever occurred in the his tory of medicine in Canada and the perfect substantiation of every detaiF leaves no room to doubt either the completeness or the permanency of the cure The local physicians have made the case of Kent and Dodds Kidney Pills the subject of discussion at several of the private meetings of their associa tion iHclen GonldR Vasar Gift Miss Helen Miller Gould has given to Vassar college two scholarships ol 10000 each for the benefit of grad uates of the Tarrytown high school and of the Washington Irving high school at lrvington N Y ApmArm jaj i gaxa stj jffiot wvrsv7aaLx vjko i - jaxattv g ii s tfjgpFC1 and Acts wjps PLEASANTLY amd rfNTLY H5BlTUALC0ii5Tlp OyeOT1 Permanently FOR SALE BV ALU DSUOQISTS nun With man- millions of families Syrup of Figs has become the ideal home laxative The combination is a simple and wholesome one and the method of manufacture by the California Fig Syrup Company ensures that perfect purity and uniformity of product which have commended it to the favorable consideration of the most eminent physicians and to the intelligent appreciation of all Tjrho are well informed in reference to medicinal agents Syrup of Figs has truly a laxative effect and acts gently with out in any way disturbing the natural functions and with perfect freedom from any unpleasant after effects In the process of manufacturing figs are used as theyare pleasant to the taste but the medicinally laxative principles of the combination are obtaintd from plants known to act most bene ficially on the system Tojjeijts beneficial effects Djy xrQ 3erJirernrUTScCtured by Lxhiovm Fl5w4fl Louisville Ky SAn Francisco CeJ New YorKfiY PRICE 50 PER BOTTLE mjitJ2m jjMnmmmmmim Uhe First 15 hanks ginning It but here for NCIDBNTALLY re marked the man with a basket on his arm as ho came Into the presence of the editor I night men tion the fact ihat if you want the fine it and fat test turkey for your Thanksgiving dinner my store is the place to get that is not what I am I came in to brine you an item of interest You may not know notwithstanding an editor knows more than anybody else on earth that the first proclamation of Thanksgiving Day that is to be found in printed form Is the one issued by Francis Bernard Captain General and Governor-in-Chief In and over his Majestys province of the Massachusetts Bay in New Eng land and Vice Admiral of the same In 17b7 The editor admitted that it had not occurred to him previously Tm glad Im giving you something new continued the turkey man and now let me read it to you so you may compare it with the modern style It is headed A Proclamation for a Public Thanksgiving As tne Business of the year is now drawing toward a conclusion we are reminded according to the laudable usage of the Providence to join to gether in a grateful acknowledgment of the manifold mercies of the Divine Providence conferred upon Us In the passing Year Wherefore I have thought fit to appoint and I do with tne advice of his Majestys Council J 1 v INCIDENTALLY SAID THE MAN Tssue to assure us the Continuation of the Blessings which we derive from that Illustrious House that He hath oecn pleased to prosper the whole Brit ish Empire by the Preservation of Peace the Encrease of Trade and the opening of new Sources of National Wealth and now particularly that He 3f this Province with healthy and kind ly Seasons and to bless the Labour of hheir Hands with a Sufilciency of the Produce of the Earth and of the Sea And I do exhort all Ministers of the Gospel with their several Congre gations within this Province that they issemble on the said Day in a Solemn manner to return their most humble thanks to Almighty God for these and ill other of Her Mercies into us and to beseech Him itanding our unworthiness to continue His gracious Providence over us And command and enjoin all Magistrates md Civil Officers to see that the said Day be observed as a Day set apart or religious worship and that no ser rile Labour be performed thereon Given at the Council Chamber in Boston the Fourth Day of November L767 in the Eightn Year of the Reign f our Sovereign Lord George the rhird hy the Grace of God of Great Britain France and Ireland King De fender of the Faith c Fra Bernard By His Excellencys Command A Oliver Secry God Save the King Remember what I told you about he place for Thanksgiving turkeys aid the turkrey man laying the paper in the desk and walking out New fork Sun Z 7 r AWsjflMZPA ss yz Happiness has less use for comfort ban indolence has Satire is the salt of wit rubbed on sore spot Lov and a silver dollar are tested by ue rlg point Thursday the Third Day of De cember next to be a day of public Thanksgiving that we may thereupon with one Heart and Voice return our most Humble Thanks to Almighty God for the gracious Dispensations of His Providence since the last religious An niversary of this kind and especially for that He has been pleased to pre serve and maintain our most gracious Sovereign King George in Health and Wealth in Peace and Honor and to extend the Blessings of his Govern ment to the remotest part of his Do minions that He hath been pleased to Dless and preserve our gracious Queen Charlotte their Royal Highnesses the Prince of Wales the Princess Dowager IttMiM an unbroken family circle gathers Then it is tnat the day can have its full significance of thanksgiving and praise It is hard indeed to accept the decrees of Providence when they remove from us those to whom our hearts are close ly united Try as we may profess as we will up from the depths of our nath been pleased to favor the people f souls comes the cry for the beloved wno nave been taken from us But when we come one and all an unbrok en band and take our places at the ta me nlled with the good things of life then in the fullness of our hearts we can give thanks not only for the plenty which has been showered upon us but for the presence of those without wnom our lives would be incomplete and full of sorrow It is meet that before we enjoy the delights of a table laden with the deli- cacies and dainties with which the sea son has furnished us that we should render our tribute of praise and thankfulness to the great Provider who giveth at the proper time the harvest of field orchard meadow forest and stream It is but common justice that we would do this even to a friend who has bestowed favors upon us How much more then to the great Creator who erives not oniv tha simnlpst hi Lire is the spirit of God Himself When God made man He brothed into his nostrils His own breath and with it a fragment of his own spiritual and immortal being 533SSGXii f What Do alEO the greatest gifts of our lives I For the gift of life What is iife CR m mm WWmMLmmm fli Wl ITi 1 P the many feast days celebrated throughout the world Thanksgiving Day the day set apart by proclamation to give thanks to the Giver of all good for the mercies and blessings of the year is nearest and dearest to the hearts of the American people Especially is this so in historic old New England where family ties associations and memories together with the day-by-day life of the hardy sons and daugh ters of this prosperous and picturesque region are tempered and molded even to this day by the traditions of their Puritan ancestry writes Rev John Hall Nearly three centuries ago a little band of brave adventurous pioneers celebrated the first appointed day of Thanksgiving Governor Bradford at Plymouth Mass in the autumn fol lowing the landing of the Pilgrims set apart a day to be devoted to thanks giving prayer praise ana incidentally to various and sundry demonstrations of good will good fellowship and a general good time for young and old It was a day of boynty Ci openhanded ness a day when the lah string was not only altogether out but the door was wide open It is said of certain venerable Puritans that after the feast was over after the hangers on and the few poor of the neighborhood had been fed that they gathered into baskets the scraps and bits that remained and went out through the highways and byways looking for hungry dogs and cats that they also might be filled on this blessed day Failing in this they placed the food on some rock or tree trunk that the birds and wild beasts might eat thereof There are many holidays around which pleasant memo ries cluster but among them all Thanksgiving Day presents to our view the most kaleidoscopic pictures This day for family reunion this milestone J on tne patnway of human life this day from which many households date their pleasures and their griefs the red letter days in the calendar of the aged and infirm hoped for waited for prayed for because it brought once more the smiling faces of loved ones because it furnished one more delight before the venerable and snow crowned heads were laid away in their last long home There is one most delightful of Wales and all the Roval familv and ieaiure ot tnis aitogetner happy dv the freauent increase of thff Ttnvil sion Blessed be the roof under which erclsed the priceless privileges ol thoughtlessness and snapping now and then as girls and other than girls have always done but think it cannot be denied that the girl of a generation ago had a conscience on tho subject of debts ot gratitude such as few have had since her day T have said that I am afraid that with many of us today It Is a lost art I am sure that it is not given that prominence which It once had and that it Is not cultivated with the en thusiasm with which it once was Girls are taught what etiquette says about it but etiquette deals only from the lips outward and the result Is that even our language tells the story of the decadence of thanksgiving A traveler from Mars might hear our Thanks a million times and never suspect that it was meant as an ack nowledgment of a favor I am suro that up to say a dozen years ago in those parts of our country where gal lantry has held out longest one could not give up a seat in a car without being sure of a full return In an ac knowledgment that meant to ac knowledge something and that to day the average man is utterly upset and undone when his ears catch the old sweet sound Of course this dees not justify or account for the current lack of gal lantry among men but I am not en gaged in the hopeless task of restoring men to the old paths but in the hope ful one of pointing out a neglected talent which the most charming of girls may cultivate with good results I am not grumbling I do not mean to say that the girl of the period is one whit behind the girl of the past I do not believe in the decadence of women I believe that the girl of today is equal to the girl her mother used to be but I do not believe that it is enough to say of our girls that they are equal to the girls of the past any more than it is enough to say of a flower that has had the best attention of the host florists for a generation that It is a3 beautiful today as it was thirty years ago If we have done wisely the girl of today ought to have not only some thing which her mother lacked but she ought to have all her mothers graces as well But it is a serious question whether in pressing her de velopment we have not cultivated some qualities at the expense of ethers just as in pressing the devel opment of a certain flower we have increased its size and beauty at the expense of its fragrance tSmSil WMlyk U VC Sm 4gStfA57iraraS S JmW fSSsJS mvJgr a Saga Indy reach dah hire vo back han me date ah almanac Wy Hand t morrera ThansgK r Got to sit out an make hay Don ker what de preachah say VVe mus eat Thanksssvin day Uz sho uz yous a ibbiii You krow svhah Hah5 Hudson HfesS Ders a turkey dahdat gibs ile a heap o trouble Some day Hudson sine to miss Dat owdashus fcvrl o his ls sine Gber dah an twit At gobblabs nake phusb tfocbtfe Goin pas dah t othah day Turkey strutted up an sayi A sobble gobble sobbler 3Iuch uz ef mont remahk Don jou with at it wrc daftfcT Aint I temtnr S 1 fctJik Er eise deyH be a squabsV Take an wrin ys nake rigfit fe y Light on oa hk a J brk The girl who has cultivated the U- f J XT Z TL spirit of thankfulness does not gush vhen J ty over at the gift of a daisv and snap fow had a to r N rm fclMi KV ten ysu an indignant Thanks at the man who has lost a day from the effce to rJ to uti nipt gratify her little whim writes Edward JL fff Ksh Pell in the Womans Iioce Com- Ta3te keer CTry j3ne panion Of course those mothers i Oct to do n k ap Uaf of ows had their whims and l ne t3 - saws no j err o Eajis turkoy bbalC