The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, November 17, 1904, Image 6

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    n i
Mrs. Weisslitz, president of the Ger-fl
man Womans’ Club of Buffalo, N. Y., after
doctoring for two years, was finally cured
of her kidney trouble by the use of
Lydia E* Pinkbam's Vegetable Compound*
Of *11 the diseases known with which the female organism is afflicted,
kidney disease is the most fatal. In fact, unless prompt and correct treatment
Is applied, tho weary patient seldom survives.
Being fully aware of this, Mrs. Pinkham, early in her career, gave careful
study to the subject, and in producing her great remedy for woman’s ills —
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound —made sure that it con
tained the correct combination of herbs which was certain to control that
dreaded disease, woman’s kidney troubles. The Vegetable Compound acts
in harmony with the laws that govern the entire female system, and while
there are many so called remedies for kidney troubles, Lydia E. Pink
ham’s Vegetable Compound is the only one especially pr re ared
for women.
Read What Mrs. Weisslitz Says.
“Dear Mrs, Pinkham:—For two years my life was simply a bur
den, I suffered so with female troubles, and pains across my back and
loins. The doctor told mo that I had kidney troubles and prescribed
for me. For three months I took his medicines, but grow steadily
worse. My husband then advised me to try Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound, and brought home a bottle. It is the greatest
blessing ever brought to our home. Within three months I was a
changed woman. My pain had disappeared, my complexion became
clear, my eyes bright, and my entire system in good shape.”—Mrs. Paula
Weisslitz, 176 Seneca St., Buffalo, N. Y.
Proof that lidney Trouble can b« Cured by Lydia G. Finliham’s Testable Compound.
“Dear Mrs. Pinkham:—I feel very thankful to you for the good
your medicine has done me. I had doctored for years and was steadily
growing worse. I had trouble with my kidneys, and two doctors told
me I had Bright’s disease; also had falling of tho womb, and could not
walk a block at a time. My back and head ached all the time, and I was
so nervous I could not sleep; had hysteria and fainting spells, was tired
all the time, had such a pain in my left side that I could hardly stand
at times without putting my foot on something.
“I doctored with several good doctors, but they did not help me any.
I took, In alL twelve bottles of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com
pound, five boxes of Liver Pills, and used three packages of Sanative
Wash, and feel like a new woman, can eat and sleep well, do all my own
work, and can walk two miles without feeling over tired. The doctors
tell mo-that my kidneys are all right now. I am so happy to be well,
and I feel that I owe it all to your medicine.”—Mrs. Ofal Stbono,
Dalton, Mass.
Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women to write her for advice.
She has guided thousands to health. Address Lynn, Mass.
FORFEIT If w». e.nnot forthwith ftrodae* tho ortgU.l letter* and *1(n*tar**al
ahov* tMtlmoulnlt, whlok will pror* th*ir abaolut* g*nnia«n*u.
Lfdl* K. PUkhui Madluin* Co. Ljnn, Hu*
Why Chang*?
Chicago Record-Herald: "Do you
think ..women ought to have the right
to propose?”
"No. Women generally manage to
get the fdlWs they want as It Is. bo
why not let the men go on Innocently
thinking they're the ones who ore to
blame?'*
Tosminninm
ntnonttinmiiiiuu
- WAMM.
*fnvtsfi
MR
MDUcawnr
•JtsgffiSKaHretaitsJiB!
CORN CRII
S ee*, 400 to 1000 bu. Chea
and bandy. Gan bn act u
fa tea reiuutea. We ait
manufacture Steel Grai
Bin*, Wire Field as
Lawn Fence, etc.
Tke Deaniai Peace Wart
CEDAR RAMOS, tDWA
MEXICAN
Mustang Liniment
is a positive cure for Piles.
_V___
CCCI I file M t Nlt'-IVBMrbedy Mod dim# for i! lu.tr al
rCCLIlUl took tot, “Uv-B Music Cures, ** Wonderful, »r
*leei. mv»)u*tle VU rechurd Co., Ml* Case Are., bl Louie.
BECCS’ CHERRY COUCH SYRU
cure* coughs and colds.
i ' ^
'
TO KEEP OFF MOSQUITOES.
Pyrethrum Powder Burned on Livo
Coal Is Effective.
Popular Science Monthly: Anyone
who Is til with malaria or yellow fever
should be carefully protected from
mosquitoes, for, should a person be bit
ten by an anopheles, the mlarlal
mosquito, or stegoinlya fasclata, the
yellow fever mosquito, at this time,
there would be great danger that tha
Insects might fly away and bit* some
one else and thus spread the disease.
Screens for both doors and windows
form the best protection against, mos
quitoes at all times; but It often hap
pens that the Insects get Into our
houses, even though they are thorough
ly screened, generally through some
door or win 'ow that has been left open
by mistake, or they may gain an en
trance by coming down an unused
chlipney If the flue Is allowed to re
main open i urlng the summer time.
A house op a room may be cleared
of mosquitoes by burning pyrethrum
powder and allowing the smoko, which
Is not at all offensive to most people, to
thoroughly fill the room that Is under
. treatment. This smoke kills or so
stupefies the insects that they will not
I bite.
Pyrethrum powder is a preparation
of the plant pyrethrum roseum, and Is
0 sometimes sold as Persian insect pow
0 der or Dalmatton powder; It can be
? bought at any drug store for about 35
J cents a pound. It Is a very fine, light
powder, and an ounce of It will go a
long way making a large volume ol
* smoke.
A pyrethrum smudge or smoke may
. be started by covering a live coal, taker
from the kitchen stove, with the pow
der, first placing the coal upon a small
shovel, so that It may be moved about
conveniently without danger of setting
anything on Are. The pyrethrum wll
quickly begin to smolder and give ofl
a dense smoke. All that Is now nec
essary to add from time to time i
pinch of the powder as occasion re
quires, merely keeping the smolderlni
ashes covered so that the smoke wll
_ continue.
*1
*- Equal Term*.
Detroit Free Press: Mrs. Breezy
~ Isn’t my dressmaker lovely? I’ve Jus
P received her bill and she has thrown h
my bathing suit.
Her Husband—O, well, that's nothing
Philadelphia Public Ledger: Hlcks
II do try to be polite, but I seem to b
forever forgetting my manners.
Wicks—What's the matter now?
Hicks—I Just gave a woman my sea
I In the street car and forgot to than!
* her for taking It.
FOOLS AND SOOTHSAYERS.
Fortune-Teller* Who Swindle the Very
Poor Should be Punished.
London Spectator: When fortune
teller* swindle the poor and Ignorant
' we would make them suffer smartly for
rlt. Certainly the Ingenuity of a profes
sional fortune-teller Is In Itself edu
cative. The craft with which she
'throws out veiled hints, the subtlety
with which site pounces upon any lucky
shot and the diplomacy which she uses
to extort confessions are often magnifi
cent.
Observe the rapt, far-away look with
which she asks you abruptly: “Who
1* Ethel?" There Is a possibility that
you know some one of that name, in
! which case the odds are that you will
! afford her sons* clew for Intelligent
i anticipations. If. however, you lndig
1 nantly deny any such acquaintance
she can always fall back upon the very
safe statement that the npme will be
familiar to you later on.
Such procedure reminds us of the
famous dodge of Disraeli, who. when
ever he met a man whom he did not
know, but Vlt he ought to know. In
quired suavely, "How is the old com
plaint?”
Playing this little comedy one day in
Pall Mall he was met with the discon
certing reply, "Complaint! I never
had an ache or a pain in my life,”
whereupon he put his head on one
side and said with a sympatheic sigh.
“Ah, I meant the wife.” The secret
of the success of most charlatans is
that, if they go on making a sufficient
number of shots, come of them are
bound eventually to hit the mark.
We remember the case of a clairvoy
ant who told a fair client that two
good spirits Were watching over her
and that their names were Juliet and
Jane. The visitor declared that there
were no such persons. But when she
came home and told her mother of the
episode she was reminded to her
amazement, that those were Indeed the
names of two sisters who had died In
Infancy.
Fortune-telling, we should say, Is a
harmless pastime so long as it is not
taken seriously. But what about edu
cated and most respectable folk who
take It very seriously? We are accus
tomed to pity Dr. Johnson because he
could not pass a lampost without
touching It, but what shall we say
of people who forego Important enter
prises on days which they Imagine to be
unlucky, who deliberately make them
selves the sport of chance or resign
their reason to designing adventures.
We would not lly in the face of anci
ent beliefs, the origin of which may
have been forgotten, nor do we forget
that the founders of Thirteen clubs
have often perished miserably. But the
person who really cares about omens,
unlucky days, upsetting salt and all
the rest should know that he Is a fool, !
•m i
Of Course.
Assistant Cashier—Why do you still
keep those notes of Cheatem's? You've
had 'em five years.
Cashier—I know, but they are as good
ns ever they were.
ffTn.7 " ,lin1 ' 1 _ 1 11 i
The Idea.
She—My, but Mr. Flaxyman Is
stingy.
He—I should say so. Why, he
wouldn't laugh at a joke unless it was
at somebody else's expense.
Porto Rico—which pays for neither
army or navy—is the most lightly 1
taxed country on earth. It has no debt.
Chestnuts Cure for Liquor Habit.
Philadelphia Record: “There should
be less drunkenness nt this season of
the year than at any other time,” said
a specialist in nervous disorders who
has a private sanitarium for the treat- :
ment of wealthy dipsomaniacs. "It is
not generally known—in fact, I claim
the honor of the discovery—that roust
ed chestnuts are a good antidote for
liquor. The average man who drinks
under high nervous pressure, not for
the sake of sociability, but because the
alcohol stimulates him to a greater ef
fort. is the one whose nervous system
is most quickly undermined. He may
never get drunk, but there is a con
stant demand for over-stimulation that
works damage In the end. No sooner
does the effect of one drink wear off
than there Is a craving for another.
Now, if that man would eat a few
roasted chestnuts Instead of taking an
other drink when the feeling comes on
him. he would rind that the substance
■ of tho nuts, having quickly absorbed
the liquor already In the system, had
] appreciably decreased his longing for
1 more alcoholic stimulant. It Isn't a
theory. I know it to be true."
Drowning It.
. Chicago News: Rodrlck—“Did you
t ever hear Grafton eat soup?”
i Van Albert—"Never! Does he make
a noise?"
Rodrlck—“I should say so. The man
in the lunch room has to start the
i phonograph every time Grafton be
j gins.” _ _
The fastest train in Europe Is run be
1 tween Leeds. England, and Edinburgh.
‘ Scotland. The distance is 2S0 miles and
1 is covered tn 4 hours 19 minutes—an
; average of nearly a mile a minute.
Home Made Farm Cart.
While most farmers have a wheelbar
row In which to trundle odds and ends
a hand cart would be better and cost
less. New material need not be used
If one has a lot of odds and ends In
lumber; even boxes may be utilized
to make such a cart as described,
while the box of the cart may be made
any desired shape It should be deep
nnd somewhat flaring at ends and
sides. Low wheels should be used If
possible, but If the wheels one has
are not quite low enough, this may
be remedied by having the blacksmith
bend the axle so that the body of the
box may be as low as dcsjrpd. ,As a
Fiite TTts best”to Tifive this hand cart
made of strong lumber even though
It be a bit old, for many times consid
erable weight will have to be carried
in it. The illustration shows a cart
made after the manner suggested and
from the cut one can readily work out
the details although the shape may
be changed if wished.
Help From Farmers’ Institutes.
As evidence that farmers are becom
ing better informed on their work,
many men who had earned consider
able money as institute workers have
been obliged to drop the work because,
as one of them frankly said, "the farm
ers know more than we do.” It is not
charged that speakers at farmers' in
stitutes are not well informed, for they
are, as a rule. The time was. however,
when a man with a glib tongue and a
superficial knowledge of farming or
kindred industries could readily take
up institute work; but of late years,
as farmers became more familiar with
the technical part of farming, the insti
tue speaker must needs be nob only a
good talker, but know what ho is
talking about and keep ahead of the
farmer in knowledge. These farmers’
institutes are productive of immense
benefit and there should be one in ev
ery farming district. The writer has
done institute work for many years and
knows that his best success has come,
not from his prepared speech or paper,
but from the discussion which resulted
from the asking of questions by think
ing farmers. Here is a point for the
farmer wrho seeks for knowledge. Ask
the institute worker questions. Most
of these speakers are sincere and hon
est and If they cannot answer your
question they will say so frankly and
seek to obtain the Information for you j
from some fellow wmrker or from some
farmer in the room. You in turn may
be able to give from your experience
Just the help some fellow farmer neers.
Learn not only to listen, but to talk
and in this way help yourself and I
others.
Shall We Silo Frosted Corn?
TJie early frosts this year caught
many farmers asleep and much corn
was frosted. Numerous questions as
to the advisability of using this frosted
corn in the silo come to this depart
ment and there seems to be but one
answer: In the light of the experi
ence of many farmers, the frosted corn
can be made to give Its fullest value
only when placed in the silo. Remem
ber that some of its food value Is lost
and that making silage of It will not
bring It back, but It will prevent any
further deterioration. The longer the
corn remains In the field after being
frosted, the more water will need to be
put in the silo with it. How much
water must be used is hard to say and
we can only try to furnish what we
think has been lost by the plant In be
ing frosted. The water should be
thrown over the corn as evenly as pos
sible while it is being cut preparatory
to placing in the silo. If there is no
silo then one must make the best of
what he 1 as and be prepared to lose
much of the feeding value of the corn
and fry another year to get it cut be
fore the frost catches it.
Possibilities in Poultry Raising,
One of the troubles with the men who
fail in poultry raising results from
their desire to raise fancy stock. They
argue that they see no reason why they
should sell eggs from poultry hatched
from egsrs they paid from 30 to 50 cents
each, In the open market at from 26 to
40 cents a dozen. "If Smith sells me
eggs for $5 for 13, why cannot I sell
Jones eggs from my fowls at the same
price? They forget that Smith has
spent the best part of his life in learn
ing to breed fowls of high degree. If
one is going into the breeding of fancy
poultry with an idea of show room
exhibits, they should be prepared to
have a good bank account to stand
the drain until they turn the corner.
The demand of the public is not for
eggs from high bred fowls at from
$2 to $5 a sitting, but for fresh laid
eggs from well and properly fed fowls
at from 26 cents to 40 cents a dozen,
according to the season and the qual
ity of the eggs. Just figure out the re
turns on the investment and see if you
can find anything else which will meet
them. Supposing you buy ten laying
pullets at $2 each a total cost of $20.
You feed these pullets a year at a cost
of $20 or more. If they lay as well as
they should for the price paid for them,
each of them will give you 12 dozens
of eggs in the year or 120 dozens from
the ten birds. Now supposing you use
240 of these eggs in the year and from
them hatch 140 pullets, selling the re
mainder 1,400 eggs at two cents each.
You now have 140 pullets to feed for ,
six months, largely on the range, at a
cost of 30 cents each or $42. Your
cash Investment is therefore $82 and at
the end of a year you have the original
twenty pullets, now eighteen months
old and worth at leant all you paid for
them, but we will say worth only $16.
Your 140 pullets raised, are worth what
you paid for their mothers, or $2 each,
S2S0; and you have sold $28 worth of
eggs. A total expenditure of $82 and
a total valuation of $308. Isn’t this a
good Interest on the money Invested?
Properly Feeding Heifers.
While it is generally understood that
the intelligent farmer will give his
pregnant cows the best of care, the fact
remains that few farmers give the helf
I era who are about to calve for the first
time, the care they should have. They
forget that the coming ordeal is a new
one for the animal and that she will
need all the strength possible to get
through in good shape, particularly if
quite young. Care must be taken, of
course, that the heifer is not over fed
and her food should be in considerable
variety and always of the kind that
will give her strength rather than fat.
A good ration to start the heifer on
now, is equal parts of ground oats, corn
meal and wheat middlings, giving her
six quarts a day. Then let her have
plenty of clean roughage, some roots
and lots of clean, fresh water with the
chill taken off. Try her on this ration
for a time and watch results, increas
ing or decreasing the grain ration, as
seems advisable. Bear in mind that
not only must the heifer bear the calf,
but she must be put in good shape to
make her a valuable milker for a num
ber of years. If the heifer was worth
raising to the breeding period, she is
worth taking care of. Not only should
her food be along the lines suggested,
but she should have a comfortable sta
ble, a clean bed and a chance to exer
cise out doors in some place where
she will be protected from the storm.'
Try the plan and see how satisfactory
the results will be.
Pumpkins for Cows.
In feeding pumpkins to cows the
seeds should not be given as they are
injurious to cows giving milk. As a
matter of fact there is very little food
value in pumpkin, their chief use being
to vary the ration and to act pleasantly
on the digestive organs. This is the
main value of most root crops and any
thing in the nature of green fruit or
vegetables given to animals, but the
value is sufficiently great in this respect
to warrant feeding them. In feeding
pumpkins the vegetable should not be
cut in pieces too small, or the animal
is likely to choke on them. Let the
pieces be larere enough so that they will
nave to be bitten at least once before
being swallowed. All food of this na
ture should be given either at noon or
just after the grain food, else the ani
mal is apt to eat so greedily of it that
she will not eat the requisite amount
of grain.
Making a Cabbage Pit.
When on has a large crop of cab
bages that are being held for later
market or for feeding, they should be
stored in some place where they will
keep in the best possible condition. A
place prepared in fhe open ground is
undoubtedly better than one entirely
under cover and a good way to make
such a place is after the following
method: A rather dry place should be
selected and one where there will be no
possible danger from surface water. If
the location is on a slight rise of
ground, an excavation may be made to
a depth of a foot or more and with
stout boards a box two feet high and
six feet wide of the desired length,
should be built, ' The corner posts
should be driven firmly in the ground.
A box ventilator, which any farmer
can make, should be set in the center
of this pit. Have an opening In one
end, the roof on a slant with the lower
ends of the board, projecting as far as
posible so that the water from the roof
will not flow back into the pit. Place
the cabbages In the pit in neat layers,
bank up around with soil and straw,
adding more as the weather gets cold
er, but being careful not to get the pit
too warm so as to cause decay of the
cabbages. Such a pit, if well made,
will keep the cabbages for months.
Strawberries on Sod Land.
Several correspondents writing about
the growing of small fruits, say that
they have nice sod land which they
propose plowing under in the spring
and setting to strawberry plants. Don’t
do it, for no end of trouble will be had
with the white grub so numerous in
sod land. If the sod land one has seems
suited to strawberries, it should be
plowed and used for a hoed crop for
two years. Put in corn the first year,
follow with potatoes and the third sea
son the ground will be in ideal shape
for strawberries, particularly, if it has
been well fertilized for the corn and po
tatoes. If the soil is sandy loam, it is
possible by thoroughly breaking it up
and cultivating the corn thoroughly, it
may be used for strawberries the fol- ]
lowing season.
We wish it were possible to induce
farmers to go more into the growing
of strawberries: not extensively, if con
ditions do not seem to warrant it, but
at least sufficient to have a full home
supply to be used fresh and for canning
later in the season. A small bed will
furnish this and enough besides to
trade with your neighbor for some deli
cacy he has. Plant two or three of the
well tested varieties and enjoy this lus
cious fruit, which is so easily grown.
A Piano Eox Poultry House.
It is quite often possible to find in
large towns dealers in pianos who have
upright piano boxes which they will
sell for a small sum. Two such boxes, i
properly Joined will make a first class
small poultry house. An excellent way
to construct such a house is to remove
the backs, these are generally screwed
on as the instrument goes in this way,
: . 1 \/
then place the openings close together
and join well. The material In the
backs may be used to make a slant
roof, filling in the endn at the peaks
with the smaller waste boards. Cover
the cracks on the roof with laths or,
better, cover the entire roof with build
ing paper. Cut windows where desired,
line Inside with building paper or old
newspapers and one has a neat, cosy
and Inexpensive poultry house In which
fowls will thrive even in very cold
weather. The illustration shows a plan
of the piano box clearly.
That We May Escape.
O! wad some pow’r (we sing with Burns) *
The giftie gie us B
To always see our creditors \
Before they see us.
A* Honest Opinion*
Mineral, Idaho, Nov. 14.—(Special.)
‘—That a sure cure has been discovered
for those sciatic pains that make so
many lives miserable, is the firm opin
ion of Mr. I). S. Colson, a well-known
resident of this place, and he does not
hesitate to say that cure is Dodd’s Kid
ney Pills. The reason Mr. Colson Is so
firm in his opinion is that he had those
terrible pains and is cured. Speaking
of the matter, he says:
"I am only too happy to say Dodd’s
Kidney Pills have clone me lots of
good. I had awful pains In my hip so
I could hardly walk. Dodd's Kidney
Pills stopped it entirely. 1 think they
are a grand medicine.”
All Sciatic and Rheumatic pains are
caused by Uric Acid In the blood.
Dodd's Kidney Pills make healthy kid
neys and healthy kidneys strain all the
Uric Acid out of the blood. With the
cause removed there can be no Rheu
matism or Sciatica.
His Little Joke.
"If I'd known what I know now
about that preacher,” said the cannibal
chief, “ instead of eating him I would
have put him at the head of my cab
inet. He was fitted for it.”
"Why so, your majesty?” inquired
the visiting monarch.
“Because,” replied the chief smack
ing his lips, "he was a prime minister."
flow'* Thl.l
We offer One Hundred Dollar. Reward ior
any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by
Hall’s Catarrh (Jure.
F. J. CHENEY & CO.. Props., Tolede. O
We the undersigned have known F. J..Cheney
for the last 15 years, and belleva him perfectly
honorable in ail business transactions and flnnn
daily able to carry out any obligation made by
their firm.
West ATkuax. Wholesale Druggists,Toledo, O.
Wai.iuno. Kinnan Si Marvin, Wholesal*
Druggists. Toledo. O.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally, acting
directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of
the system. Price 75c. per bottle. Sold by all
Druggists. Testimonial* free.
Uall’e Family Pills are the best.
Where Women Are Ruled.
Chicago Evening Post: "Are there
clubs for women in this town?” asked
the suffragist from the east.
"Certainly not," replied the. gallant
westener. "We handle women with
out clubs.”
A Bit of the History of American Steel
Making.
From the Iron and Steel Nujnber of the
Scientific American: Upon a certain sum
i mer's day in the year 1756, there might
have been witnessed the advance of a
: small detachment of British and colonial
! troops, not much over a thousand strong,
j through the dense forests that lined the
banks of the Monongahela river a few
| miles above the point where It merges
| with the Allegheny. The objective point
I of the expedition was a small fort at the
j confluence of these rivers, which formed
j one of the most Important links In that
chain of military posts and trading sta
tions, which the restless and far seeing
energy of the French colonial govern
ment had strung out between the mouths
of the St. Lawrence and the Mississippi,
by way of the great lakes, the Ohio, and
the Mississippi valley. In the van of this
little army, bearing himself with a con
fidence born of much successful warfare
in other lands under less difficult condi
tions, and heedless of the warnings of
his young colonial aide de camp George
Washington, who had command of the
rear guard, was General Braddock. Ad
vancing in a close formation, which wae
better suited to fhe open spaces of con
tinental battle grounds than to the all '*
but impenetrable forests of the American
frontier, the devoted band marched right
Into an ambush of the French regulars
and their Indian allies, and was quickly
cut to pieces. Braddock was killed, and
Colonel Washington, his military coat
pierced more than once by the bullets of
the French sharpshooters, barely suc
ceeded in carrying the shattered rem
nants of the force back over the Alle
ghenies Into colonial territory. The po
litical and military considerations that
prompted that disastrous expedition wers
worthy of a better fate: and, Indeed, sub
sequent history has proved that In en
deavoring to capture Fort Du Quesne and
break the bounds which the French wers
endeavoring to set to the westward de
velopment of the British colonies, our
forefathers had taken a Just view of the
situation. Today the objective point of
the expedition forms the site of Pittsburg,
one of the greatest centers of Industrial
activity in the world; while hidden among
the back streets of the city, and rescued
from destruction and preserved through
the care and munificence of a local his
torical society, may still be found Fort
du Quesne, or rather its Immediate suc
cessor, Fort Pitt. A few miles up the
river, at the town -f Braddock and on
the identical spot where the battle oc
curred, Is to be found one of the great
est steel works in the world; while for
many a mne along those very banks of
Monongahela where Braddock laboriously
cut his way through the woods, la to be
found the most wendeful aggregation of
coking ovens, blast furnaces, and rolling
mille in the world. Although Just now we
are concerned merely with the history of
the development of these Industries, we
may be pardoned a reference to the fact
that in St. Louis, 500 miles to the west
ward of the Braddock battlefield, the
great republic which has sprung from
that strip of colonies that fringed the At
lantic seaboard In 1755, la Just now pre
paring to celebrate the 100th anniversary
of its acquisition from France of the vast
territories from which that country
sought to bar the early colonials out.
0 A Marvel of Relief S
St. Jacobs Oil f
a Safa and sara for a
1 Lumbago |
O Si
| Sciatica |
5 It is the specific virtue of penetration in,this 0)
ft remedy that carries it right to the paiav»pot 0{
D and effects a prompt care 0'
L!™™ '“Thompson's EyeWatar
I