The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, April 11, 1907, Image 7

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    fTsosmu
li PiSHi^ The Kind You Have
B&iiMflHHl Always Bought
i . alcohol 3 per cent. ; # **
IwS'S1 A\^getable PreparationforAs- -r* .
!|£3b: slrailatingtheFbocfamlReguta UeaiS tiie
pp-g ting tlie Stomachs andBowsof
|gi Signature
ilHI i; Promotes Digestion.Chrerfiil- «£
ill! ness and fest-Contalnsncilter '■'*
gps> Opium .Morphine norMiueriL
hR|| Not Narcotic.
KH|!| £m/xofo!dDt£wmrnmi |
B|s0! Pimpkin Strd
Hnsi! ' jttx.Sanr* 1 I
jkMuuk- I ; an
****■' \ ■**
BSl .5 flFPSSenafrSkb* |
^ sg*> I I Use
, v bBI'. Aperfecl Remedy forfonsfipa- I
ifcM, tion. Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea _
listu Worms .Convulsions .Feverish- L#%K ||UQK
ness andLoss OF SltEEP-: TUI Uful
Hiki Facsimile Signature of f | i , II
.Rl Thirtv Years
is iuuiw
CASTORIA
Exact Copy of W.apper. the ccntaun eoMMNt, ntw ycirr cm.
Phew! Salts
and Castor Oil!
Why take sickening salts or repulsive
castor oil? “Goes through you like a
dose of salts” means violence, grips, gripes, gases,
soreness, irritation, and leaves your stomach and bowels
>veak and burnt out. Might just as well take concen
trated lye. Then there’s castor oil, disgusting, nauseat
ing truck that your stomach refuses unless you disguise
[the taste. Fool your own stomach, eh? Don’t ever
'believe that anything offensive to your taste or smell is
' (going to do you real good. Nature makes certain
'things repulsive, so you will not take them. Force
[yourself to nauseous doses, and you ruin your digestion,
(weaken your bowels, destroy your health.
'On the other hand see what a delightful,
(palatable, perfect modern laxative, liver
regulator and bowel tonic you find in
Bpst for the Bowels. All
&B‘oYdSin:°&l£C’ -The
genuine tablet stamped
CCC. Guaranteed to cure or your money back.
Sample and booklet free. Address 540
r*r'o.. C.hicst'o or New York.
. ■ -■.- ■ .■ ■—
PULLING OUT THE WARP.
Have you ever been annoyed by want
of a very fine thread? Well, hero Is
on idea. It amounts to very little as
an economy, but as a convenience Its
proportion is great. The very nicest
fine thread you can have for sewing
is the warp of flue lawn. But It must
be the warp and not the cross thread.
The next time you tear oft a selvedge.
Instead of feeling annoyed at the long
threads which come loose, wind them
on a spool for future use. They will
be very handy. Tou will find them
quite strong and much nicer to work
with for very fine sewing than Is a
manufactured thread of the same thick
ness. In making fine ties by hand, for
instance, If the hems are sewed with
this warp, not a single stitch will be
visible, and the sewing will last as
long as if made with manufactured
cotton.
In making colored dresses, this same
plan is a good one to follow In regard
to any specially dainty little piece of
sewing, ns one is sure of a "good
match." Also, it Is well to have on
hand such threads to use for darning,
should necessity occur. Here you not
only have the color, but the fiber and
the exact thickness.
THREAD ON THE MACHINE.
When using a full spool of silk on
the machine, the threads will fly off In
loops, tighten on the spindle below the
spool and break. To prevent this, take
a tine wire hairpin, place the points in
the top center of the spool, bend it over
and down until the loop is half way
down the side of the spool; draw the
thread through the loop. It will then
run smoothly and not break.
Plan for Good Health! Take Garfield
Tea now; it regulates the liver and kid
neys, overcomes constipation, purifies the
blood and eradicates disease. It is made
wholly of Herbs.
A Fix Indeed.
W. Bourko Cockran, at a St. Patrick’s
day dinner, told a newspaper story.
"An Irishman,” he said, “was talking
about the ease of Baring-Gould, whoso
obituary, you will remember, was recently
printed by mistake, Mr. Gould Btill being
happily with us.
’’ ’So/ said the Irishman, 'thoy’ve print
ed the funeral notice av a man that ain't
dead yet, hov they? Faith, an’ It's a nice
fix he’d be In now If he was won o' thim
people that belaves iverything they see In
the papers.’ ”
SAVE US FROM OUR FRIENDS.
Mary, I have sold the farm for
$50,000, and we will now move to the
city and enjoy the balance of our life
In comfort.
Five Years Later.
It Is all over, Mary, I must pay
John Brown’s bond, which will take
every dollar I own and you and I will
have to go to the poor house.
MORAL.
Do not sign a friend’s bond, and
when you require a bond, buy It.
Write for particulars or see our agent
at the County Seat.
WE ISSUE SURETY BONUS.
The Title Guaranty & Surety Com
pany, Home Office, Scranton, Pa., Cap
ital and Surplus over $1,000,000.
Ill Advised.
’’That speech was Ill-advised,” said Sen
ator Cullom, referring to a colleague’s too
outspoken address.
"It reminds me of a speech that a widow
made to her new husband on the honey
moon.
" ‘Oh,’ she sighed, throwing herself In
the man’s arms, how happy poor dear
James would be if he could only know by
what an agreeable gentleman he has been
replaced.’ ’’
S One of the Important Duties of Physicians and S
r the Well-Informed of the World J
is to learn as to the relative standing and reliability of the leading manufactur- A
Ilk ers of medicinal agents, as the most eminent physicians are the most careful as to ^k
1\ the uniform quality and perfect purity of remedies prescribed by them, and it is well mm
known to physicians and the Well-Informed generally that the California Fig Syrup
BBS8 Co., by reason of its correct methods and perfect equipment and the ethical character of
BjKgff its product has attained to the high standing in scientific and commercial circles which H^ft
Esjf is accorded to successful and reliable houses only, and, therefore, that the name of the IjH
afiap Company has become a guarantee of the excellence of its remedy.
ffl TRUTH AND QUALITY V
appeal to the Well-Informed in every walk of life and are essential to permanent sue- 1%
t 1 cess and creditable standing, therefore we wish to call the attention of all who would I 1
I I eiijoy good health, with its blessings, to the fact that it involves the question of right 1 I
1 I living with all the term implies. With proper knowledge of what is best each hour ftm
W of recreation, of enjoyment, of contemplation and of effort may be made to contribute Jj
ft to that end and the use of medicines dispensed with generally to great advantage, but
■ ft as in many instances a simple, wholesome remedy may be invaluable if taken at the m I
rftft proper time, the California Fig Syrup Co. feels that it is alike important to present I ft
Jo* truthfully the subject and to supply the one perfect laxative remedy which has won I
the appoval of physicians and the world-wide acceptance of the Well-Informed because j
the excellence of the combination, known to all, and the original method of manufac
y^j iure, which is known to the California Fig Syrup Co. only.
This valuable remedy has been long and favorably known under the name of—
Syrup of Figs—and has attained to world-wide acceptance as the most excellent of IvT
I I family laxatives, and as its pure laxative principles, obtained from Senna, are well ftj* /
W known to physicians and the Well-Informed of the world to be the best of natural
W laxatives, we have adopted the more elaborate name of—Syrup of Figs and Elixir of W
Jft Senna—as more fully descriptive of the remedy, but doubtless it will always be Jft
■ ft called for by the shorter name of Syrup of Figs—and to get its beneficial effects always f 1
I ft note, when purchasing, the full name of the Company — California Fig Syrup Co.— I ft
ft I plainly printed on the front of every package, whether you simply call for — Syrup of I f
Figs—or by the full name—Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna—as—Syrup of Figs and ^X
fift Elixir of Senna — is the one laxative remedy manufactured by the California Fig Syrup
HI Co. and the same heretofore known by the name —Syrup of Figs —which has given ^^ft
fifty satisfaction to millions. The genuine is for sale by all leading druggists throughout
WK the United States in original packages of one size only, the regular price of which SB
VJ| is fifty cents per bottle.
> Wm Every bottle is sold under the general guarantee of the Company, filed with the
Secretary of Agriculture, at Washington, D. C., that the remedy is r.ot adulterated or
am misbranded within the meaning of the Food and Drugs Act, June 30th, 1906. ftl
h CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. r\
I San Francisco, Cal. a ]
mil Louisville, Ky U S. A. New York, N. Y. IjX
'Si?. London, England.
/
ONE WOMAN’S OEVOTiON
From the Kansas City Star.
Shep kept a hoarding house and I
lived there. I went recently to look at
It again, but no trace of It was left.
The progress of the city had engulfed
It and a great modern apartment house
stood there.
As 1 remember It was an ugly red
brick house of three floors with, steep
wooden steps leading up from the
street to the second floor. As If to
make the house look more cold and
repellant the owner had painted the
window frames black, and a heavy cor
nice overhung the whole.
But Ihcro was cheerfulness within
the house. We were a lot of young
people, mostly, and there was a decided
air of respectability and comfort about
the sitting room upon the second floor,
, and the bedrooms upstairs. The dining
room was upon tho basement floor. t
Mrs. North, the landlady, went up
;and down tho stairways many, many
times a day, and how sho managed to
hold up under all the work she did
was a source of constant wonderment
to me. She had no servunt. except a
negro girl In the kitchen. All of the
other work she did herself. If ever
thero was a slave sho was one. Wlmt
made it harder for her was that sho
was very stout.
But sho never grumbled. Neither did
she smile. She was kind always, and
courteous, but her face wore at all
times a look of sadness and of pa
tience as If she had known much sor
row.
Her boarders were all young men.
We loved and respected her. Wo knew
she had seen better days. Her voice
and manner showed that, and we pitied
her and did what we could to lighten
her burden.
i Wo wondered why she did not have
another servant or two to do the heavy
work for her. The profit from tho
house would have permitted It and left
her a fair Income besides. But we
never questioned her about It. Each
of us, quite Independent of nngther,
had formed tho opinion that there was
some great tragedy, perhaps, that had
saddened her, and that we ought not
to pry Into It.
Onco every month, regularly, through
the three years I lived there, she went
away In tho evening and returned the
next afternoon. Those were the only
times sho ever left the house except
when sho went to market. She took
always with her upon those over-night
trips a large "telescope" valise packed
full of bread and cakes of her own
making. We always knew, several
dayB beforehand, when she was going
upon one of these trips, by the pro
longed odor of cake-baking that filled
the house. Wo wondered much about
these mysterious trips. We knew that
she went out of town because one ot
the boarders had seen her getting upon
a train at the union depot, dragging
her heavy valise up the steps after her.
Once each month, and never oftener,
a letter came to her. It always came
upon tho same day of the month. She
knew when to expect It, she waited
and watched for It and never once
failed to meet the postman at the bot
tom step of the street stairway to tako
the letter from his hand. Tho arrival
of tho letter always meant a crying
spell for her. She carried It straight
to her room, shut tho door and came
out a little later with eyes red and
swollen from weeping, and her face
more sad than ever.
No one of us ever saw tho postmark
upon the letters, or knew where they
camo from. We would like to have
known, but we respected her too much
to try and find out.
At last her health began to fall. We
noticed the beginning of the breakdown
and we talked gravely together about
It. Her effort to keep up was pitiful,
but one morning she was too sick to
leave her bed. And then we took charge.
We sent for a doctor who told us that
she would never get up again. We
hired two girls to do the work and
we tried to cheer her by telling her
that all was going along smoothly and
that not one of her boarders would
leave her.
viib uay me uuciur iuiu ner mat Bite
could not live more than a week.
"Oh, doctor, can't I live two weeks,
don’t you think?” she pleaded. The
doctor shook his head.
“Oh, I must, I must. Doctor, try and
keep me alive two weeks by all means,”
she said.
The week went by and she was yet
alive, but falling rapidly.
"If I can only live three more days,”
she said beseechingly, to the doctor. He
asked her why, but she refused then to
tell.
That night the doctor told her she
was dying, that she could not live until
morning, and advised her that If she
had any instructions to give as to her
property then was the time to do it.
She replied, weakly:
"This is Tuesday. My husband will
be here Thursday. Do not bury me un
til he comes.”
An hour later she was dead.
Thursday afternoon a man at the
door, a man with gray hair and bent
shoulders, asked:
“Does Mrs. North live here? I am
her husband.”
"She did,” was the answer.
“What! Has she moved?”
"No; come In and I'll explain.”
He was told of her death. I have seen
much sorrow and grief in my time, but
never such heartbroken grief as he
went through. He fell across her coffin,
with both arms clasped around It, and
his tears fell like rain upon the dead
face, stamped yet with the look of
patience and long suffering. His grief
exhausted him so that a physician had
to be called to quiet him with medi
cines.
After w-e returned to the boarding
house from the burial In the cemetery
we missed him. He did not come that
night. The next morning his dead body
was found beside the newly made grave
of his wife. His head rested upon the
sod above her breast as If It had been
a pillow. Some time during the long,
dark night that he lay there alone In
the cemetery he had ended Ills life. He
was burled next day in a grave beside
her.
Then the public administrator took
charge of her property and, in reading
her letters—she had saved every one of
them—he discovered the secret of her
life. Ten years before her husband had
been sentenced to the penitentiary. She .
had gone with him to the door of the ■
prison and then came to Kansas City !
to work and wait for his release. Ten
long years she waited, patiently, de
votedly. The prison rules permitted
her to see him only once a month, and
each month for ten years she had gone
to Jeffexson City to spend one comfort
ing hour with him. The prison rules
allowed him to write her only one let
ter a month. Those letters, sacredly
preserved by her, told the story of the
ten-year vigil kept by both of them.
Those letters told of their plans for the
future, when he should be free again.
She had saved $800; It was In the bank,
and with It he was to open a little gro
cery store near her boarding house.
She had already leased the room for It.
The administrator sold the boarding
house furniture and the money, added i
to the $800 In the bank, paid the doc- |
tor, the funeral expenses and bought 1
a large, rough, granite monument,
which was placed at the heads of the ,
two graves. You can see it any day In ,
Elmwood cemetery. It bears this in- i
scrlption: t
“Sacred to the memory of one wom
an’s devotion.” A. B. M. |
Women Avoid
Operations
When a woman suffering from
female trouble is told that au oper
ation is necessary, it, of course,
frightens her.
The very thought of the hospital,
the operating table and the knife
strikes terror to her heart.
It is quite true that these troub
les may reach a stage where on ope
ration is the only resource, but a
great many women have been cured
by Lydia E. Pinkham'a Vegetable
Compound after an operation has
been decided upon as the only cure.
The strongest and most grateful
! statements possible to make come from women who by taking
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound
made from native roots and herbs, have escaped serious operations, as
evidenced by Miss Rose Moore’s case, of 307 W. 26th St., N.Y. She writes:
Dear Mrs. Pinkham:-“Lvdia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has
cured me of the very worst form of female trouble and I wish to express
to you my deepest gratitude. 1 suffered Intensely for two years so that
I was unable to attend to my duties and was a burden to my family. 1
doctored and doctored with only temporary relief and constantly objecting
to an operation which I was advised to undergo. I decided to try Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound; it cured me of tho terrible trouble
and I am Dow in better health than I have been for many years.”
This and other such eases should encourage every woman to try Ly
j dia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound before she submits to an operation.
Mrs. Pinkham’s Standing Invitation to Women
Women suffering from any form of female weakness are invited to
promptly communicate with Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass. From the
symptoms given, tho trouble may be located and tho quickest and surest
way of recovery ad vised.
W. L. DOUGLAS
$3.00 AND $3.50 SHOES TR^^PORIJ)
w. L. DOUGLAS $4.00 GILT EDGE SHOES CANNOT BE EQUALLED AT ANV PRICE.
SHOES FOR EVERYBODY AT ALL PRICES:
Mmi'a Shoe., SO to *1.110. Boy.’ Shoe*. S3 to SI .35. Women'.
Shoe., AM, to si.no. Mine.’ A Children1. Shoe., S'.’.'in to SI.on.
W. L Douglas shoes are recognized by export judges of footwear’
to bo the best in style, fit and wear produced in this country. Kadi
part of the shoo and every detail of the making Is looked uftor
and watched over by skilled shoemakers, without regard to
time or cost. If I could take yon into my large factories all
Brockton, Mass., and show you how carefully \V. L. Dough's 1
shoos are made, you would then nnderstanil why they hold their shape, fit better,
wear longer, and ate of greater value than anv other makes.
W. r,. Ihmoltis name and price ll stamped on the bottom, which protects the wesrer strslnst hloh
prices and Inferior shoe*. T»»k#* Nn Kulistttiate. Sold lij fhe best «hoe dealers evorywhkm
Fast Color Eyelets vied exclusively. Catalog mailed free. W. I.. 1*0 V *i I. A **. Hrorh t on. !H ««•>
ANOTHER WESTERN CANADA
RECORD.
The W»7 In Which a Swan River
Farmer Became Wealthy.
Swan River, Manitoba,
Nov. 21, 1806.
Two weeks ago we gave an account
of the prosperity of a farmer In West
ern Canada, and this week we repro
duce another.
“I have been asked regarding this
year's work on my form, and I here
with willingly submit the following
statement:
Three years ago I purchased an Im
proved farm of 186 acres on Section 0,
Township 36, Range 27, west of the
First Meridian, two (2) miles from the
town of Swan River.
I plowed and cropped 122% acres of
land during this year (1D06), 80 acres
of wheat, 30 acres In oata and 12%
In barley.
The cost of putting In and taking off
this crop this season Is as follows:
Cash paid for blue stono.$ 1.50
Cash paid for binder twine.... 39.00
Cash paid for hired help. 125.00
Cash paid for threshing. 175.00
$340.50
Receipts for the year as follows:
Bushels.
SO acres of wheat (yielded 30
bushels per acre), total.2,400
30 acres of oats (yielded 46 bush
els per acre), total.1,200
And (one stack of oats In sheaf) 200
12% acres barley (48 bushels per
acre) . 600
Crop potatoes . 800
15 tons of hay.
SOLD.
1,168 bushels wheat at G2c....$ 724.10
1,232 bushels wheat lu granary
at 62c . 763.84
300 bushels barley at 35c... 105.00
300 bushels barley In gran
ary at 35c . 105.00
1,200 bushels oats In granary
at 25e . 300.00
100 bushels potatoes at 30c.. 30.00
200 bushels potatoes In root
house at 30c . 60.00
1 stack of oats in sheaf for
feed . 50.00
15 tons of hay at $3. 45.00
Garden roots and vegetables.. 30.00
$2,213.00
Cost of above, besides my own
labor . 840.50
$1,872.50
I have In all 125 acres ready for cron
next year, Including 10 acres cleared
and broken this season.
TOTAL ASSETS.
186 acres laud with house, sta
ble and outbuildings, etc... .$6,000.00
Implements . 600.00
4 head of horses and harness. 800.00
15 head of cattle.. 375.00
20 pigs . 200.00
Receipts of this season's crop 1,872.00
$8,747.50
Liabilities are . 1,000.00
Total assets .$7,747.50
I have made the above amount by
farming In Manitoba. I think It has
paid. This is my standing to-day. I
am a single man, a Canadian, and 20 j
years of age. For particulars how to
secure low rates to the free homesteads
of Western Canada, apply to any Cana
dian government agent.
A Truth Put Neatly.
Miss Ellen Terry, at a reception in Now
fork talked about the innumerable women
vho ask her to help them get on the
tage.
"The fact Is," she said, "every woman
ind"t' 30 believes she is an actress.
"And every actress." she added, "be- '
leves she Is under 30."
In the last six years In the courts,
of eeventy-three wars or military end
naval expeditions In Asia and Afrtc*.
Great Britain has had 8,67S men killed
and 23,733 wounded.
8L.EEP BROKEN BY ITCHING.
Ecicnta Covered Whole Body foe e
Year—No Relief Until Cetleere
Remedies Prove • Snceeee.
"For a year I have bad what they
call eczema. I had an itching all over
my body, and when I would retire for
the night It would keep me awako
half the night, and the more I wouM
scratch, the more It would Itch. I tried
all kinds of remedies, but could get ■»
relief.
“I used one cake of Cuticura Soon
one box of Cuticura, and two vial* at
Cuticura Resolvent Pills, which coot
me a dollar and twenty-five cents Id
all, and am very glad I tried them, for
I was completely cured. Walter W.
Pagluscb, 207 N. Robey street, Chicago^
111., Oct 8 and 16, 1000."
A bit of practice in the hand* Ik
worth two theories In the bush.
A P4“Ltlve CATABB
Ely’s Cream Balm
Is quickly absorbed.
Gives Relief at One*.
It cleanses, soothes
heals and proteots
the diseased mem
brane. It cures Ca
tarrh and drives
sway a Cold in the
Head quickly. Re
stores the Renees of
Taste and Smell. Full size 50 eta., at Dnu i
gists or by mail; Trial Size 10 cts. by mull.
£!v Brothers, 56 Warren Street Haw Xarl.'
■Mfc To convince my I
■ ml ■ woman that rwx- (
■■ Gw Hm Bm tine Antixeptle will
n grift H” Improve her livable
- a H bla nn<1 do all we claim
■ ■■^■^■forlt. We will
send her absolutely tree a largo trial
box of Pastlne with book of instruc
tions and genuine testimonials. Send
your name and address on a postal card.
PAXTINEH
fectlons, such as nasal catarrh, petvle
catarrh and Inflammation caused by femi
nine Ills; sore eyes, sore throat and
mouth, by direct local treatment. Its cur
ative power over these troubles Is extra
ordinary and gives Immediate relief.
Thousands of women are using and rae
ommending It every day. 60 cents at
druggists or by mall. Remember, however,
IT COSTS YOU NOTHING TO TRY IT.
IH* It. PAXTON CO., Boston, “
MOTHER CRAY’S
SWEET POWDERS*
FOR CHILDREN,
A 0®rUi» Oar® for Fererf •fcMMt
Constipation. He a dacha*
i stomach Trouble*, TeethT**
u ^ f liorderi, mnd Deitr*9
Mother Gray. Worm*. ThtyBrealc ap CalA
Nur»ein Child- in hour®. At nil DrufinU,
r®n’« Horn®, Sampt® dialled FRKR Addrm.
K*wYorkCiir. A. £ OLMSTED. U RoyTiI
Farms
That
Grow
No. 1 Hard Wheat
(63 Pounds to the Bushel)
Are situated in the Canadian Wes: whera
Homesteads of 160 acres can be obtained
free by every settler willing and able to
comply with the Homestead Regulations.
During the present year a large portion of
New Wheat Growing Territory'
has been made accessible to markets by
the railway construction that has been
pushed forward so vigorously by the three
great railway companies.
For literature and particulars address
Superintendent of Immigrat.on, Ottawa, Canada
or ti e authorized C ‘nariii;- <i ivrrnment e *■».••
W. D. Scott, Superintendent of ImmicrarKW*
Ottawa, Canada, or L. T. Holmes, 315 Jacks©)®
St..St. Raul, Minn.; .). M. MacLacBox 11c
Watertown. South Duke! >. nd \\ . V. Bciineil.
801 New York Life Lni.tini;', Omaha, l\cb.«
Authorized Government A.-e t
Llwa.iobay where you nan th .- udvei-tipctuent.
SIOUX CITY P’l Ci CO., 1,136—