The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, May 20, 1909, Image 3

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    When a remedy has lived for over thirty years, steadily
growing in popularity and influence, and thousands upon
thousands of women declare they owe their very lives to it,
is it not reasonable to believe that it is an article of great
merit ?
We challenge the world to show any other one remedy
for a special class of disease which has attained such an
enormous demand and maintained it for so many years as
has Lydia E. Pinkham’* Vegetable Compound, the famous
woman’s remedy for woman's ills. Unless it is a very good
medicine and the claims made for it are honest, such a record
would have been impossible—fraud or misrepresentations
would long ago have been detected and the business gone
into oblivion. Read this unsolicited letter:—
Melbourne, Iowa: — “I suffered for many years with female
troubles, Inflammation, and bearing-down pains, so that 1 was
unable to do my work.
“ Lydia E.Pinkhain’s Vegetable Compound was recommended,
and I am so thankful for the great good it has done me. 1 feel
that I am a living advertisement for ,this medicine as I have
influenced so many of iny friends to use it, so thankful am I
that it restored me to health.”—>lrs. Clara Watermann, It. D. 1,
Melbourne, Iowa.
When a woman like Mrs. Watermann is generous enough
to write such a letter as the above for publication, she
should at least be given credit for a sincere desire to help
other suffering women. For we assure you there is no
other reason why she should court such publicity.
We say it in all sincerity and friendship—try this medicine.
For 30 years Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound has been the standard remedy for
female ills. No sick woman does justice to
herself who will not tr.v this famous medicine.
Made exclusively from roots and herbs, and
has thousands or cures to its credit.
Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women
to write her for advice. She has
guided thousands to health free of charge.
Address Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass.
1 TVB _as 9 Is here—Distemper among the
V nantino horses m*y be near also—
* ■ *”*M*“*,f5 mares are Coaling—Distemper
may take some of them—corn planting may be late if your horses
have Distemper.
SPOHN’S DISTEMPER CURE
is your trne safeguard—a cure as well as preventive—50c and 11.00
bottle—$5.00 aud $10.0G dozen, delivered. Large i6 more than twice the
smaller size. Don't put it off. Get it. Druggists—or send to manufacturers.
— Spohn Medical Co.. Chemists and Bscterioloiists. Goshen. Ind.. L .S.A.
The Part Contains the Whole.
Strive not to say the whole; the poet in
w his art
^ Must intimate the whole, and say the
smallest part.
Trie young moon’s silver arc her perfect ,
circle tells.
The limitless within art’s bounded outline
dwells.
Bf every noble work the silent part is best:
f all expression, that which cannot be
exprest.
jfiach act contains the life, each work of
art the world,
And all the planet laws are in each dew
drop pearled.
—William Wetmore Story.
The Chinese soya bean has been
found to contain from 16 to 16 per cent
of oil suitable for soap making.
PROOF in the
Morningl
We tell you about how good you’ll
feel after taking a CASCAKET—
that millions of people—buy, use
and recommend them—But that's
talk—you buy a box now—take as
directed to-night and get the proof
in the morning—After you know
CASCARETS you’ll never be
without them. 9lJ
CASCARET9 IOC a box for a week's
treatment, all druggists. Biggest seller
in the world. Million boxes a month,
610UX cTtY P’T’G CO., 1,295—21. 1909
WESTERN CANADA
More
Big Crops
In 1908
Another 60,000 Settlers Irom the United States
NEW DISTRICTS
OPENED FOR SETTLEMENT
320 Acres el land fo EACH SETUEB -160 Ere*
■stseslead and 160 al $3.00 Per Acre.
vast, rich aountry and a contented,
prosperous people. " Extract from correspond
ence of a National Editor, whose visit to Western
Canada in August, 1908, was an inspiration.
Many have paid the entire o«st of their farms
and had a balance of from $10.00 to $20.00 per acre
as a result of < ne crop.
Spring Wheat, Winter Wheat, Oats. Barley,
Flax and Peas are the principal crops, while the
wild grasses bring to perfection the best Cattle
that have ever been sold on the Chicago market.
Splendid Climate, Schools and Churches in all
localities, rail ways touch most of the settled dis
tricts, and prices for produce are always good.
Lands, rnay also be purchased from Railway and
Land Companies. For pamphlets, maps and in
formation regarding low railroad rates apply to
W. D. Scott, Superintendent of Immigration,
Ottawa. Canada, or E. T. Holmes, 315 Jacxson
St..St. Paul, Minn.; J. M. MacLacnlan, Box 116
Watertown, South Dakota, and W. V. Bennett,
ftoi New York Life Building, Omaha, Net?.,
Authorized Government Agents
. tar wh«r« you saw iku udwrtiBsaient.
The Way in Temperance Towns.
From the Kansas City Star.
This is one of the pet stories of W. R.
Smith, general attorney for the Santa
Fe. One must almost be a Kansan to
get the real chuckle out of It. A man
dropped Into a Kansas drug store and
asked for a bottle of beer.
“All right.“ said the druggist, reaching
for the “slgn-up” book. “What reason
shall I give?”
“I’m not sick.” said the purchaser.
“Well, If you don't want It for medic
inal purposes, do you want it for me
chanical uses?” asked the druggist.
“Sure, sure—for mechanical,” was the
reply.
“Well, specify,” went on the druggist.
“H’m, h’m,” muttered the buyer,
scratching his head. “H-m—Oh, yes—
that’s right—I want it to grease a buggy
with.”
New Minister Makes a Hit.
From Everybody’s.
The new minister in a Georgia church
was delivering his first sermon. The darky
janitor was a critical listener from a back
corner of the church. The minister’s ser
mon was eloquent and his prayers seemed
to cover the whole category of human
wants.
After the services one of the deacons
asked the old darky what he thought of
the new minister. “Don’t you think he
offers up a good prayer, Joe? ’
"Ah trios’ suhtanly does, boss. Why, that
man axed de good Lord fo’ things dat de
odder preacher didn't even know he had!”
SKIN TROUBLES CURED.
Two Little Girl* Had Eczema Very
Radiy—In One Ca*e Child’* Hair
Came Out and I.eft Bare Patches
—Cutieura Met with Suceezz.
“I have two little girls who have
been troubled very badly with eczema.
One of them bad it on her lower limbs.
I did everything that X could hear of
for her. but it did not give in until
warm weather, when It seemingly sub
sided. The next winter when it be
came cold the eczema started again
and also in her head where it would
take the hair out and leave bare
patches. At the same time her arms
were sore the whole length of them. I
took her to a physician, but the child
grew worse ail the time. Her sister's
arms were also affected. I began using
tbe Cutieura Remedies, and by the
time tbe second lot was used their skin
was soft and smooth. Mrs. Charles
Baker, Albion, Me., Sept. 21, 1908.”
Potter Drug & Chern. Corps., Sole
Props, of Cutieura Remedies. Boston.
tine of the friends of Lord Greenville
was noted for his baldness and avarice.
He was speaking one day about a mu
tual friend who was going to be mar
ried. "I would like to give him, my
lord, said the hairless and stingy one,
'something rare, but not expensive.”
"Present him a lock of your hair,”
Greenville- whispered sweetly."
Fell from Scaffold and Injured TTIa |
Back. 1
Thirty years ago James C. Lee, of
1100 9th street, S. E., Washington,
D. C., fel! from a scaffold and seriously
Injured his back, lu telling about it he
says: "My suffering was terrible; from
the small of my back all around my
stomach was just as if I had been beat
en with a club. I tried all kinds of
plasters—belladonna, capclne and por
ous—without getting relief, and bought
so-called electric belts but none of them
did me any good.
One day, while working near my
daughter's house, my back pained me
so badly that I had to quit. I went into
the house and lay down for ease. My
daughter had a bottle of Sloan's Lini
ment in the house and she rubbed my
back well with it and gave me some
to take home. I used six and a half
bottles of Sloan's 25c. Liniment and
can do as much work now as any man
in the shop, although I am sixty-seven
years old. 1 would not be without
Sloan’s Liniment for any consideration
aud recommend it to anyone suffering
pain."
Taken Unaware*.
Sir William Grantham has naturally had
many entertaining experiences during hlB
long public career, and some of the most,
amusing occurred when he was engaged
as a political speaker In the days beforo
he took his place on the bench, and when
he was plain .Mr. Grantham. On one oc
casion, while he was delivering an ad
dress a man got up in the audience and
shouted out excitedly: "It's a He.”
"Thanks." said the future judge. “It's
a lie," shouted the excited one again.
“You're a gentleman," said Mr. Grantham
sarcastically. "It's a He,” burst out his
opponent again, carried away by Ills
wrath; but the general laughter which
arose at Ills answer recalled him to him
self again and he sat down, discomfited.
Mrs. Win slaw's HOTUH Brave for Children
teething, toflens the gams, redaoes laflsmmstl os.
si ley t pain, earns wind eollo. 36c s battle.
Small Scale Love.
From the Seattle Post-Intelligencer.
Dr. Pierce Underhill, whose book on
divorce and marriage is to appear next
month In Indianapolis, delivered a lec
ture recently in a fashionable Indian
apolis church.
"Extravagance,” he began, “is one of
the big causes of divorce. My cousin,
a bank teller, married a pretty girl and
took her home to a nice little flat. But
she frowned and bit her lip.
“'Oh, Jack.’ she said, 'I can't live in
a tiny flat like this!’
■' ‘You don't love me when you Bay
that, darling,’ said my cousin.
“ 'Oh, yer, I do,' said she, 'but not on
such a small scale.' ”
An Unfortunate Resemblance.
Prom the Cleveland Plain Dealer.
The visitor looked around.
‘‘Who Is he?” he asked.
"That's Jim Pettigrew. He ain’t don
a stroke o' work for 16 years. Just sets
aroun' an' tells stories."
“What's the matter with him?"
"Nothin’. Only some fool feller back
In '93 told him he looked like Lincoln."
The Suffragette Cocktail.
Minneapolis Letter to the Pittsburg Press.
The sufTragette cocktail is the newest
American drink.
Some other kinds of cocktails make
a man want to go home and beat his
wife. The new drink has exactly the
opposite tendency. Two or three of
the new drinks make a man go home
and relinquish his position as head of
the household to his wife and accord
her all the privileges he now enjoys as
a citizen.
That's true, for it has already been
tried. A Hennepin avenue bartender
Invented the new drink. Here's his
recipe;
Sloe gin, French vermouth and Ital
ian vermouth In equal parts to make
a gill; mix in a cocktail glass, add a
dash of orange bitters, twist in two
strips of lemon peel and servo.
One makes a man willing to listen to
the suffragettes’ argument.
Two convinces him that it has some
merit.
Three make him a missionary, will
ing to spread the gospel abroad, and
four make him go home and wash the
dishes.
In a Pinch, Use Allen’s Fool-Ease.
A powder to shake into your shoes. It rests
the feet. Cures Corns, Bunions, Swollen,
Sore, Hot, Callous, Aching, Sweating feet
and ingrowing Nalls. Allen's Foot-Ease
makes new or tight shoes easy. Sold by all
Druggists und Shoe Stores, 25c. Sample
mailed FREE. Address Allen S. Olmsted,
Le Roy, N. T.
How a Lawyer Lost a Fee.
From the Dallas News.
According to old timers, the late Colonel
Bob Taylor, of Bonham, once met a wom
an In the road as he was riding on horse
back to hold court In Delta county, he
being then district judge. The woman
had a jug of water and the judge was
thirsty.
Being a man with a cheery word for
everyone, the colonel stopped her.
"My dear madam," he said, smiling,
"if you will give me a drink of cool water
from yonder jug, when you want a divorce
from your husband I will see that it
costs you nothing."
“Are you a lawyer?” inquired the
woman, handing him the jug.
The colonel explained who he was. and
waving a farewell departed, leaving the
woman gazing after him.
Tne very next morning the woman
showed up In the court room and asked
for him. She explained that she wanted
a divorce. She had been separated from
lier husband for a long while and the j
colonel had put an idea into her head.
The colonel was game, however. He ■
procured a lawyer at his own expense !
and in due course of law' the woman was
given a divorce, and Colonel Taylor would
tell the joke on himself often.
Longing.
Come to me in my dreams, and then
By day 1 shall he W'ell again!
For then the night will more than pay
The hopeless longing of the day.
Come, as thou cam'st a thousand times,
A messenger from radiant climes,
And smile on thy new world, and be
As kind to others as to ine!
Or, as thou never can'st In sooth,
Come now, and let me dream it truth;
And part my hair, and aiss my brow.
And say, "My love! why sufferest thou?"
Come to me in my dreams, and then
By day I shall be well again!
For then the night will more than pay
The hopeless longing of the day.
—Matthew Arnold.
Try Murine Eye Remedy
For Red. Weak. Weary. Watery Eyes.
Compounded hy Experienced Physicians.
Conforms to the Pure Food and Drugs Ijiw. j
Murine Doesn't Smart. Soothes Eve Pain. |
Try Murine for Your Eyes. You Will Like It '■
Evolution.
From Marcus Aurelius.
Observe constantly that all tilings
take place by change, and accustom
thyself to consider that the nature of j
the universe loves nothing so much as
to change the things which are, and
to make new things like them.
ENGIN ERING FEATS 1
ON THE PLANET MARS
Speculation as to the Difficul
ties Martians Have Had
to Overcome.
Gamll 1’. Servls In New York American,
A reviewer In the London Times of
Professor Percival Lowell's book on
"Mars as the Abode of Life" makes a
S regnant suggestion. Why. he asks,
as not Professor Lowell dealt with the
temperature difficulty on Mars as he
has with that of the scarcity of water')
And then he goes on to add that If the
Martian engineers have constructed the
gigantic system of Irrigation of which
our telescopes gave us a hint, they;
must surely have been capable of solv
ing the no less Important problem of
(Storing up solar heat on that chilly,
unblanketed planet.
While Mars gets only half as much
solar heat as we do, its cloudless con
dition Is favorable to employment of
heat engines depending on the utiliza
tion of the sun's rays In Its equato
rial regions the sun Is never hidden by
clouds, and all day long solar engines
might run without Interruption. If the
canal-like lines are. as Professor Low
ell thinks, Irrigated bands. It Is equally
probable that they also Indicate the
lines along which energy Is conveyed
[to the neighborhood of the poles, where
fhe annually melting snows are as
sumed to furnish practically all the
water that Is available to keep the
planet alive.
This water would not flow’ toward
the middle latitudes of Itself. The,
pupposed engineers must have con
trived machinery to pump It and set It
running to the places where It can be
used. The energy needed to drive the
pumps would have to be almost un
limited in amount. Fuel like coal could
not supply It, but a vast system of
solar engines might suffice to do the
work.
The pumps would have to be arrayed
iln long series, conducting the water, by
successive steps over distances as great
as from San Francisco to New York.
iThe known flatness of the surface of
(the planet Is favorable to this. The
hecessity of a continuous succession of
pumping machinery offers an explana
tion of the narrowness of the "Irrigated
bands,’’ and also explains why they ex
tend to the very poles. A glanoe at a
chart of Mars shows the suggestive
May In which the lines run, radiating
from the centers, and covering the en
tire planet with tlielr network of sup
posed machinery.
Truly, our terrestrial engineers are
pitifully childlike In comparison tvlth
the suppositious giants of Mars.
Unconscious Effort.
In pictures of athletic competitions,
chiefly hurdle races and high Jumps, an
occasional spectator Is seen caught by
the camera In a queeer posture, says
the New York Sun.
If It Is a picture of an athlete leap
ing, 10 chances to one the spectator
has Involuntarily raised his right leg.
twisting his body In automatic expres
sion of a desire to help the Jumper.
VtTth hurdle race photographs this of
ten may be noticed, too, and In the
case of sprinters not a few men stancj
•with faces twisted up and holding the 1
breath In correct Imitation of the ath
lete.
So, too, with football views. In one
of a big game recently there was g
photograph of a man on the side line
watching a tackle, who was crouching
down In almost exact Imitation of a
waiting defense man who was shown
at the moment making ready for hlq
leap at the runner.
Men who follow’ athletics know how
involuntary this Is. One athletic train
er has appeared in hundreds of pic
tures as watching some one of his
rharges high Jumping, with his legs
swung out Just as If he were making
the leap himself. There Is a sort of
relief for the feeling of trying to help
the Jumper in swinging the leg up so,
and almost any person is likely to do
It.
It may be noticed at prize lights that
some men go through the entire battle
punch for punch, crossing and counter
ing an Imaginary opponent as they
watch the struggle before them. Men
drive and ride horses In races from the
stand, making the effort In the stretch
along with the Jockey of their fancy.
This Is one of the well-known features
among the race crowd where there are
many "grand stand riders." In wrest
ling matches almost any one will try,
purely by Instinct, to help the athlete
who Is down and who Is bridging des
perately.
And yet there is rarely enough tele
pathic suggestion in the air surcharged
w ith desire to bring about a result dif
ferent from what naturally might be
expected at the moment when the
greatest wish for something else Is
born. That is to say, the high Jumper
doesn't necessarily clear the bar, nor
the sprinter squeezes out the Inch or
so that he needs, nor the Jockey whip
up his mount in for the head that
means victory.
Important Legacy.
From Life.
Bull Terrier—Dad's dead, eh? Leave
you anything?
Fat Pug—Yes, I Inherited his pants.
HELPING HIM OUT.
JlSKi
"Tour milliner’s bill has cost me this
year as much as the salary of my two
bookkeepers. That Is more than I can
afford.”
“Well, discharge one of them."
The United States annually produces
more oats than any other country In j
the world—754,000,000 out of 3,582,000,- I
000 bushels.
From the Columbus Dispatch.
Jaik Gant*, colored, janitor of the
offices of the attorney general and
state pharmacy and medical boards,
who is past KO. born In slavery, and
who has never attended school In his
life, la to be educated. Assistant At
torney General William H. Miller, who
secured him the place he holds, six
months ago, and who has taken a deep
Man of 60 Years Learns to Write,
interest in him, has arranged for hltn
to receive Instruction In one of the Y.
M. C. A. classes. It is a part of the
work of the Janitor to bring and dis
tribute the mall and when Jack took
the job and was told what was expect
ed of him. he was filled with despair.
"’Deed. Mr. Bill, you know I don't
know miffin' 'bout dat readln' and 'ritin'
and I can t do dat work.”
Mr. Miller took him in hand, taught
him the rudiments of these things and
Jack has progressed so far that he can
not only read the addresses of the let
ters and distribute them properly, but
also write his own name, an accom
plishment over which he Is very proud,
j He signs his pay voucher and In
speaking about his ability to perform
that task he remarked: "That was de
greates' thing on history.” Jack was
reared by the Todhunter family In
Fayette county.
Funny Preachers Win Fiflhf.
From the Milwaukee Sentinel.
Advantages enjoyed by foreign mis
sionaries having ability to entertain,
were touched upon by Henry White,
late missionary to Laos, before the
Women's Presbyterian board of mis
sions of the Northwest.
"These natives are Just as hungry
for fun as Americans.” said Mr. White.
"If the missionary can play a horn or
a violin, or sing, and, yes, even give
a clog dance, he will get the atten
tion of these people and later be able
to reach their hearts with the gospel.
"The missionary who Is full of hu
mor and Jokes has the greater chance
for success.
"You may question as to what we
are achieving. When 1 tell you that
because of our work in Iatos hundreds
have denounced Idolatry .and taken
Christ, cost what It will, are we not
'making good'.”
Protection afforded to the seal and
the salmon has for the time being made
a serious deficiency lq the value of the
fish product of Canada.
NOTHING IN SIGHT.
I.lfe Had Loit All Interest.
Mrs. J. I*. Pemberton. 854 S.
Lafayette St., Marshall, Mo., says:
“Doctors told me I had
Bright's disease, and 1
believed It. I was get
ting weaker and weak
er until 1 finally took
to bed. The kidney se
cretions were scanty
and seemed filled wltb
dead tissue. I got thin
and emaciated and then
began to bloat all over.
It oppressed my heart and 1 was In
such a condition that I did not take
an interest In anything. As a last ef
fort I began using Doan’s Kidney
Pills. The kidneys responded quickly,
began carrying off the poisons, and
when I had used twelve boxes the
trouble was ail gone. I now enjoy
better health than ever before."
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box.
Foster-Milburn Co.. Buffalo, N. Y.
Pope's Translation of the Iliad.
, From the New York Times.
There are a number of interesting
libraries of R. N. Oakman, Jr., of
Brooklyn and Dr. E. C. Williams, of
Chicago, which will be sold at Merwin
Clayton’s on May 11, 12 and 13. One
of them is a first edition of Alexander
Pope's translation of Homer's Iliad.
Pasted on the front leaf is the fol
lowing printed slip: “Received of
George England, esq., two guineas, be
ing the first payment to the subscrip
tion for the Translation of Homer's Il
iad: to be delivered in quires to the
bearer hereof in the manner specify’d
in the proposals. (Signed) A. Pope.”
The name of George England and the
signature, “A. Pope” are both In
Pope's autograph.
There Is ulso a copy of a first edi
tion of George Bancroft's Poems, writ
ten in 1823 when he was 23 years of
age, and rare, owing to his own efforts
to suppress It. It is said that most of
the copies were burned at the home
of Prescott.
The Willow Pattern Plate.
Two little eagles Hying high.
Elttle vessel Nailing by,
Chinese temple, there it stands.
Seems to cover all the land.
Weeping willow bending o'er
Little bridge, with three or four
Orange trees with oranges on.
Palisading all along.
Two little birds flying high,
Chinese vessels sailing by;
Weeping willow hanging o'er
Three men walking, if not four.
Chinese castle, there it stands;
As if It were the Lord of lands;
Apple tree with apples on,
Fence below to end my song.
—Unidentified.
The Right Kind of Waiter.
From the Tatler.
"What on earth made you give that
chap such a big tip?"
"Well, look at the coat lie's given me.”
I Kidney
Ailment
I want every person who suffers with
any form of Kidney ailment, no matter
how many remedies they have tried,
matter how many doctors they hare con
sulted. no matter how serious the case, t*
give Munyon'a Kidney Remedy a trial.
You will be astonished to see bow quickly
It relieves all pains In the back loin*
and groins caused by the kidney*. Yo»
will be surprised to see how quickly
It reduces the swelling In the feet *n«
legs, also pufflneas under the eyes, after
taking a few doses of this remedy. Too
will be delighted to eee the color return
ing to your cheeks and feel the thrill of
vigor and good cheer. If yonr Urine 1*
thick or milky. If It la pale and foamy. If
It contains sediments or brlckdust, If It 1*
hlrhly colored or baa an offenalra smell,
11^ou urinate frequently, yon shoold per
sist In taking this remedy until all symp
toms disappear. We believe this remedy
has cured more eerlous kidney ailment*
than all the Kidney medicines that have
been compounded. Professor Munyon be
lieves that the terrible death rate from
Bright's Disease and Diabetes la unneo
essary and will be greatly reduced by this
remedy.
Go at once to your druggist and parches*
a bottle of Munyon'a Kidney remedy. It
It falls to give satisfaction I will refund
yonr money.—Munyon.
For sale by all drugglsta. Pries 2Se.
SOUTH DAKOTA—180 acres, Brooking*
county farm, all cultivated, buildings: *4P
per tq:re. Terms, write Owner, Ales Pow
ell, Claar Lake, S. D.
BEST GRADE typewriter carbon paper, f
sheets 8V*xll. any color, sent postpaid
for 10c sliver. Address D. R. McCrady, Sw
Liberty st., Franklin, Pa.. Dept. A.
A.AA.AA.AAAAAA A A A A A A A. A A A A. A. A. A. -A
♦ ANIMAL STORIES. £
♦ ♦
Subdued Her Lord.
From the New York Herald.
New thought In various forms
arouses in echo in the Bronx Zoolog
ic*! Gardens, and visitors yesterday
had an opportunity to witness practical
demonstrations of the doctrine of wo
man suffrage and the '‘Osier" theory
among Its Inmates.
Duke is a magnificent gray timber
wolf and until yesterday was an auto
cratic one. His mate was Susan, and
a more peaceful, meek and self-effacing
wife no one could desire. Duke was
distinctly the head of his own house
hold and ran things to suit himself.
When he wanted amusement he nagged
Susan and when he was Irritated he
snapped at her In quite the usual and
natural way. Sometimes he bit her,
and his teeth are sharp. He was In a.
particularly evil temper on Saturday.
It Is not known whether 8usaa
slipped away to a suffragette meeting
In the evening or whether she found
a yellow button bearing the legend
"Votes for Women." which started a,
revolutionary train of thought. But
yesterday she came to an understand
ing with Duke that had unpleasant
consequences for him. He started to
worry her and she came out for heri
rights, caught him by the scruff of the
neck, banged him up and down, ripped
his coat in 15 places and had him
by the neck with a strangle hold when
the keepers separated her from her
first convert—for there was no doubt
that Duke was converted. When h*
leaves the hospital. If ever, he will
trot right up with the beef bone and
take what he gets when -Susan la
through with It.
The prairie dogs afforded the next
Illustration of the advance of Idea*
among the animals. There has long
been a mystery, to keepers as well a*
to visitors, concerning the fate of the
aged prairie dogs. Members of the
colony have suddenly disappeared. Yes
terday a number of persons gathered
about the prairie dog burrows saw one
of the patriarchs crawl slowly out
Into the sun. He was unnoticed for a
time, but presently three young, actlvq
prairie dogs surrounded him and began
to kick dust at him. Ho made no re
sistance, but crawled back into his hole.
Tnen they scraped dirt In after him.
When one of the keepers was sum
moned and dug Into the burrow h«
found that the aged victim had been
suffocated.
Care That Cold To-Day.
Nearly all druggists and dealers now~
have in stock Lane's Pleasant Tablets
(laxative) for Colds and Grip, and they
will break up a cold quicker than any oth
er remedy. A trial will convince you, aa
it has thousands of others. Avoid suffer
ing and save doctors’ bills by ordering to
day. 26 cents a box. Sample free. Ad
dress Orator P. Woodward, Le Roy, N. Y.
On January 1 Canada was shelter
ing 38,253 Orientals, Including 17,239
Chinese, 15484 Japanese, and 5,171 In
dians. Canada has made British sub
jects of 7,442 Orientals.
Cato at SO began the study of Greek.
I rnrr electrical I
I P IlCC TREATMENTS I
^ For a limited time only Dr. Hathaway C8, Co., the old reliable ®
specialists, will give free electrical treatments by means of their wonderful Sk
■ High Frequency Electrical Apparatus to all cases placed with them. This 'sk
’■$4 wonderful electrical current is little short of marvelous in its manifestations ,®|
anu cuccis upon disease. x ou nave
never had anything like it. Let us
demonstrate it to you. The finest
electrical equipment in the north
west. The most pleasant and
effective method of relief and cure
used in the treatment of such j
chronic and special diseases as | ■
Rheumatism Stricture |
Catarrh Kidney
Neuralgia Vital Losses
Varicocele Hydrocele
Indigeunon Bladder
Weakness Nervous Debility
Blood Poison Rectal Diseases
Women's Diseases Prostatic Troubles
Come at once and get our opinion !
of your case and the benefit of this
grandest of all modern curative
methods. Our specialty includes
I all cnronic ana apeciai uiseases or Mg
25 years’ experience, 20 years both Men and Women. Everything W
In Sioux City, firmly establish strictly confidential. If you cannot S|
our reliability. call, write us about your case. S
Dr. Hathaway Sl Co. siouf city, mwi p