Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 4, 1909)
vSAVED FROM AN OPERATION By Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Louisville, Ky.—“Lydia E. Pink ham’s Vegetable Compound has cer tainly done me a world of good and I cannot praise it enough. I suffered fromirregularities, dizziness, nervous ness, and a severe female trouble. LydiaE.Pinkham’s Vegetable Corn restored rfect kept me the operating is* ' this (AM’L Ky. Another Operation Avoided. Adrian, Ga. — “I suffered untold misery from female troubles, and my doctor said an operation was my only chance, and I dreaded it almost as much as death. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound completely cured me without an operation.”—Lena V. Henry, R. E. D. 3. Thirty years of unparalleled sue cess confirms the power of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound to cure female diseases. The great vol ume of unsolicited testimony constant ly pouring in proves conclusively that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com Lstres'sing feminine ills from which •o many women suffer. « ^Wtl^^f_BeautjM»^J2jMForever. DR. T. Felix Qouraud's Oriental Cream or Magloal Beautlfler. lemoves Tan. Pimp Is*, reckles. Moth Patches, ’““u and Skin Diseases, and every blemish l on beauty, and de fies detection. It has stood the test of 60 years, and Is bo harmless we taste It to be sure it Is properly made. Accept no counter feit of similar came. Dr. L. A. Savre eald to a lady of the haut ton (a patient): “ As you ladles will use them. _ I recommend 'Gournnd’s Crenm’ as the least harmful of all the •kin preparations.” For sale by all druggists and Fancy Goods Dealers In the United States, Canada and Europe. FERD.T. HOPKiNS. Prop.. 37 Great Jones Street Mew York Don’t Cough!—Use CURE m ttsT mwutt tor (§\igrs«»%r5 Will instantly relieve your aching throat. There is nothing like it lor Asthma, Bronohitis and lung troubles. Contains no opiates. Very pleasant to take. All Druggists, 25 ccctc. * The Natural Laxative acts on the bowels just as some foods act. CascaretM thus aid the bowels just as Nature would. Harsh cathartics act like pepper in the nostrils. Soon the bowels grow so calloused that one must multiply the dose. eis Vest-pocket box, 10 cents—at drag’-fitcres. Bach tablet of the genuine is marked CCC. Paper-Hangers & Painters You oau greatly lncrenie your business with no ex* fra investment by selling Alfred Peats’ Prise Wallpaper. We want one good worker in each vicinity, ana to the first worthy applicant will send FREE, by prepaid express, five large sample books showing a $250,000.00 Wallpaper Stock for customers to select from. We offer liberal profits to our representatives. Answer Quickly that you may wet the agency in your vicinity for 1910. Alfred Peata Co.. 144-14# Wabash A*'©., Chicago. HA1IPO pie recent extension of the N. C.'O, IllfivlLvJ R*R* brings thousands of acres of fine ™rT"-r government land along this line on the market. Splendid soil, climate, water, timber and range; alfalfa, wheat, stock.fruit, grain and vegetables. Good railroad facilities and markets. Crops sure with out Irrigation. COME NOW and get a bomefor nothing, , Instead of paying high prices olsewhere. If you have used your homestead right, you can take 320 acres under the Desert Land Act, Some stock ranches and deeded land for gale by owners. Fine opening for live land man. Address H. C. DOUQG. LAND COM., ■evada, California, Oregon Ry., RENO, NEVADA 8I0UX CITY P’T’G CO., 1,319—45, 1909 The man who works himself to death and the man who dies of poverty su perinduced by sitting on a dry goods box, represent the two extremes. As usual it is the middle man who is the winner. Some people would drown with a life preserver at hand. They are the kind that suffer from Rheumatism and Neural gia when they can get Hamlins Wizard Oil. the best of all pain remedies. FOR SALE—Virginia farms, river fronts, fish, oysters and game. Delightful ell mate. Good schools. Address Owens & Bagby, West Point, Virginia. AGENTS—Fine new portraits 46. Pillow tops 30c. Stereoscope views lc; 16x21 sheet pictures 2c. Fidelity Portrait Com pany, 36 So. Paulina st., Chicago. NEW INVENTION for pool halls. Agents make $10 per day. State and county rights for sale. Write Immediately; this don’t appear again. Star Pool Co., Per ry, la.__ __ ”A WILFUL MAID,” spicy book, bettei than Sappho, 250,000 sold in two weeks, J5c coin. Fond Du Lac, Wis. Box 267. AGENTS make big money selling our high grade household specialties. Send for particulars. Brand Agency Co., Times Square Station, New York. “Those Who Go Down to the Sea !■ Ship*” When the young leaves on the willow* are green and the wind Is fresh from the south. It is then I feel again your kisses warm on my mouth! But the stormy day You sailed away Brought sorrow to my door, And It seemed to me that the hand of hope can be lifted never more! When I hear the ocean murmur, and the wind Is hoarse with pain. When this long, lone stretch of land is gray with mist and rain, Then I look and long For your boat and song To bring sweet peace to me. As I wait with heart as restless as the restless waves of the sea! Ah! those who go down to the sea In ships, to the cruel, treacherous sea! They take all the sunshine with them who bide the waves' decree1 The star that you steer by Is never seen by the eye That shone when you looked at me With love's own fond reflection! (Oh, the desolate days to be!) Oh! for a dream of the golden past, to drop this ceaseless pain, To wander again with you by the hedge rows down the lane, To feel again the spring, With the birds upon the wing: The Bea as blue as your eye. And never a sign or cloud-rack above In the cloudless sky! It seems I am wedded to my grief! But the lonely curlew’s call, The seaweed and the dulse that with th* surges rise and fall, Tell of the passing day, And a boat to sail away Beyond this sad sea wall, To a far-off haven secure with a blu* sky over all! —Alonzo Rica. 1 i t; 7— HEARD 'EM EVERY NIGHT. Book Agent—Lady, I’d Uka to sell yon this hook of fairy tales. Mrs. Wise—Not to me. I’ve been mar ried. 15 years and fairy tales are a chest nut to me. Deafness Cannot be Cured br local applications, as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that Is by constitutional remedies. Deafness Is caused by an Inflamed condition of the mu cous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube Is Inflamed you have a rumbling sound or Imperfect hearing, and when it is entirely closed. Deafness Is the result, ana uuless the Inflammation can be taken out and this tube restored to Its normal condi tion, hearing will be destroyed forever; nine cases out of ten are caused by Ca tarrh, which is nothing but an inflamed con dition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. Bold by Druggists, 75c. Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation. The Vacation of Griggs. From Harper’s Weekly. Griggs had been In the office all Bum mer. Pie had seen his fellows leave fof i their lawful two weeks, and had heard, 1 with some exactness, the cheerful words I used to greet them when they came back. When, therefore, the day came to greet Griggs, this is what was written and hung by him as a sign upon his desk: Yes, I’ve been away on my vacation. Yes, I had a good time. Yes, the weather was fine. Yes, I’m glad to get back. Yes, the first day is always the hardest. Our sympathy Is with Griggs. Fine Recipe lor Colds. Any druggYst can supply these In gredients, or he will get them from his wholesale house. ‘‘Mix half pint of good whiskey; two ounces of glycerine; half ounce of Concentrated pine compound. Shake the bottle well each time and use in doses of a teaspoonful to a tablespoon ful four times a day.” This prescrip tion is said to work wonders. The Concentrated pine is a special pine product and comes only in half ounce bottles, each enclosed in an aii tight case, but be sure it is labeled “Concentrated” in order to get tha genuine article. And Just as Good as Ever. From the Philadelphia Ledger. An old physician of the last generation was noted for his brusque manner and ' old-fashioned methods. One time a lady j called him In to treat her baby, who waa slightly ailing. The doctor prescribed cas tor oil. “But, doctor,” protested the young mother, "castor oil Is such an old-fash loned remedy.” "Madame," replied the doctor, “babies are old-fashioned." A member of the dentists’ congress recently held In Berlin writes: "Our plans as to St. Petersburg for the gath ering In 1914 failed. Not because there was any objection to the city, but be cause some of the men who might be delegates would either not be admitted or if allowed to enter the city would be uncomfortable while there. Russia Is queer about according rights of resi dence to former citizens and to people of certain religious views, and having this In mind London was agreed upon as the next meeting place.” Xn. Wlailaw'i SooTHiire Snrr for Children teething, eoftens the game, reducer lndemutetl on, slleyepaln, cure* wind eolto. Shoe bottle. A political trickster Is a member of the opposition faction who usually has his own way. Prejudice is incited against some really good books because their bind ings do not match the finish of the book case. CASTOR IA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the SIX . T~* Signature of New News of - Yesterday 4444+44444♦ ♦♦♦♦♦+♦ 4444444+ -4 4 4 This daily series of anecdotes 4 4 and incidents that throw new, 4 ♦ interesting and frequently dra- 4 4 matlc light on famous events 4 4 and personalities of the past 4 4 have been collected by Mr. Ed- 4 4 wards ("Holland”) during near- 4 4 ly 40 years of more or less inti- 4 4 mate acquaintance with many 4 4 of the country’s leaders since 4 4 the civil war. Each anecdote or 4 4 incident is fresh from Mr. Ed- 4 4 ward’s note book—hitherto un- 4 4 published "New News of Yes- 4 4 terday” garnered from the men 4 4 who made the news—the his- 4 4 tory—or from equally authorita- 4 4 tivo sources. As important con- 4 4 tributions of the "human inter- 4 4 est” sort to American history. 4 4 these articles have a distinctive 4 4 value all their own. 4 4 4 44444444444444444444444444 The Ten-Year-Long Dream That Made Ingersoll Famous. Any standard American encyclopedia or biographical dictionary will tell you that Colonel "Bob" Ingersoll was one of America’s most famous orators. Certain it is that in many respects ingersoll stands out as the greatest orator America has yet produced. Emotionally, this is so, and as a Shakespearean orator, so called, it is generally conceded that none iias squalled him. He, too, possessed the rare gift of putting that elusive some thing into his periods that make them send thi-1113 along one’s backbone when they are dead, as they did when their creator delivered them with all the power of his magnificent eloquence and personality. Few. very few, of the world’s famous orations so arouse the blood wh“n they are scanned on the printed page. As everybody familiar with Inger roll’s career knows, he gained national Came through Ills* "Plumed Knight” speech. The day before he delivered It he was unknown; the day after his name was on the lips of the country. But not until now has it been told how ingersoll came to conceive his master piece, bow he built it up sentence by sentence through a period of years, and :hen, to please his brother, clinched his hold on fame by writing it down in a tew minutes. One Memorial day, two or three years after he had begun the practice of law in New York city, Colonel In gersoll stood on a corner watching the veterans of the civil war as they marched past the reviewing stand. There were tears in his eyes as he looked upon the old soldiers, and turn 'ng to me he repeated the opening sen tence of his justly celebrated Memorial Jay address, which you can see en graven in bronze in the National ceme tery at Arlington: "The past rises be fore me like a dream." He saw, almost as vividly as he had seen in the days Df the war itself, the soldiers on theii march, rallying to the attack, charging, falling, dying for their country. As he walked away in my company after the procession had passed I ask *d him if it were true that he wrote his famous "Plumed Knight” speech at gbout midnight one night, as had been incidentally 'reported. Seizing my arm and moving slowly through Madison Square, Colonel In gersoll said: “That story is partly correct. But the real truth is that I was 10 years writing that speech. I had been a great admirer of James G. Blaine from the time he was first a member of congress. I thought he was a typical American and would make a great president. I pictured to myself Blaine in political action. He often fasci aated me when I saw him sitting in the chair of the speaker of the House of Representatives. Every now and then a thought would come to me in which I expressed to myself my ideas and my ideal of Blaine. "I went to the republican national convention of 1876, at Cincinnati, in the company of my brother. We shared a ?arIor and had two bedrooms at the otel. My brother knew that I had Been asked to place Blaine in nomi nation. He became very nervous be cause I did not sit down and write out my speech. He was continually prod ding me to do this, but I put him off. But I was really writing that speech all the time, mentally. I composed part of it on the railway train on the way to Cincinnati. All the ideas that nad come to me from time to time re specting Blaine I mentally gathered and sifted, and decided upon the ex pression of my thought. “On the evening of the day before the nominating speeches were to be tnade my brother said to me: ‘Bob, you nave got to write that speech before you go to bed.’ “‘All right,’ I said, ‘I’ll write it this evening.’ So, a little before midnight i took my pen and ink and tw® or three 6heets of paper and wrote out the speech. I was simply copying whal was in my mind, what I had been years writing. You know, that is the way Webster prepared his famous reply to Hayne. After I had done that I went to bed and was soon sound asleep. I simply did it to please my brother, and that is the way what they call the ‘Plumed Knight’ speech was put down Dn paper at midnight In 10 minutes." (Copyright, 1909, by E. J. Edwards.) A Mystery to Von Moltke. From the Cleveland Leader. Two brothers were once at Count von Moltke’s house at an evening party; both were captains of the general staff. The general came up to a group of gentlemen, Dne of whom was one of the brothers. After joining in the conversation, he asked the latter, “Just tell me who Is that tall officer, near the fire place on the other Bide—I forget his name,’’ “That’s my brother, your excellency.” was the answer. A smile stealing over the general’s face luggested the idea that he had not obtained the information he wished. Some time after the general went to another group Df people, and there joined the officer whose name he had inquired. Suddenly the others saw him turning away, with the same smile on his face. Afterwurd, when they inquired from the young officer what the general had asked him, he replied "He asked me who that officer was over there.” "And what did you say?" "1 said that he was my brother." The general gave up inquiring the name of the two brothers for that evening. It is a bad sign when the barking of your dog which disturbs your neighbor has less effect on you than the crowing of your neighbor's rooster before day light In the morning. When ordinary milk—very ordinary milk—sells for eight cents a quart, what would be a fair price for the milk of human kindness. That rib from Adam’s side from which Eve was constructed is claimed to have been the "original bone of con tention." The self made man Is subject to re vision after marriage. The magazine gun was not invented (or the purnose of exterminating po®‘ Youth. Don't you recall when apples grew, Oh. twice as big as now? When fish, however, they were few. Were monster ones somehow? When Galne’s milldam made a roar As though the water hurled "Were gathered In a mighty store From all the wide, wide world? Don’t you remember when the trees. The oak trees and the beech. Were lost in clouds on days like those And eyes could hardly reach Their waving tops? When noonday skies Were, oh. such deeper blue? When Jack’s great beanstalk In our eyes Just grew and grew and grew? And there were bells, so more than fine. Of blue and white and red. Upon the morning glorv vine That climbed up on the shed, To be a wonder and delight, So fresh and full of dew. To bud and open In a night— I see them now—don’t you? Don’t you remember when the caves Were thick and full of gloom, 'Where captive maidens, once, like slaves Were chained In some damp room? When twllght rustling In the brush Was some fierce beast? A cow It was. but cows at dusk are -Mush! I think I hear one now'. Come; take a little trip with me, Forget the things that fret. For you may close your eyes and see Some things that I forget. Why I’ve seen Bluebeard’s hidden room And Cinderella’s shoe! ' And I have seen where violets bloom— So blue! So blue! So blue! —J. W. Foley, In New York Times. ---- I i——n—i ROOM FOR DOUBT. Johnny—De Duke Is outside and wants to see you alone. Mary—Are you sure he didn’t say he wanted papa to make him a loan? RASH ALL OVER BODY. Avrfnl, Crusted, Weeping Enema on Little Sufferer—A Score ol Treat ments Prove Dismal Failures— Cure Achieved by Cutieura. “My little boy had an awful rash all over his body and the doctor said it was eczema. It was terrible and used to water awfully. Any place the water went It would form another sore and It would become crusted. A score or more physicians failed utterly and dis mally in their efforts to remove the trouble. Then I was told to use the Cutieura Remedies. I got a cake of Cutieura Soap, a box of Cutieura Oint ment and a bottle of Cutieura Resolv ent, and before we had used half the Resolvent I could see a change in him. In about two mouths he was entirely well. George L. Lambert. 139 West Centre St., Mahanoy City. Pa., Sept. 20 and Nov. 4, 1907.” Potter Drug & Chem. Corp., Sol* Props, of Cutieura Remedies, Boston. A Hitch. I hitched ray wagon to a star. Also my limousine; My friends, who knew the stellar life, Said I was pretty green. I promptly scorned their good advice And starward long did look. I hitched my wagon to a star. Also iny pocketbook. Alas! the star was not affixed, But led a planet race; I found my wagon and my lint' Could not kepe up the pace. And when my pocketbook was flat I got the sweet "ha, Ha!" She found another one who wished To hitch behind a star. —Joe Cone, In Boston Herald. TTP.T.'DTTCO TTTT-PTT UTTTTTT1W A TTfiTVT The Experience of Many Who Do Not Know the Klilneys Are Wetlt. Jacob C. Bahr, 18 Broadway, Leba non, Ohio, says: "For three months I was helpless in bed with muscular rheumatism and had to be fed. My feet swelled, my legs were rigid, black spots flitted before my eyes and I was sore all over. Doctors didn’t help me and I couldn’t raise hand or foot. To please my wife I began using Doan's Kidney Pills, and In two weeks I was Improving. Then by leaps and bounds I got better until well and back at work. After such mortal agony this seemed wonderful.” Remember the name—Doan’s. Sold by all dealers. 60 cents a box. Foster Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. rzz—mm NATURALLY. The Philosopher—I believe that every nan has his secret sorrow. The Joker—Tee; even the man who Is outwardly happy h&s a skeleton In hlf midst. PEUUY DAVIS' PAINKILLER fcaa bo aubatltute. No other remedy la bo effeotlre for ffeeumatiam. lumbago, atlffneea. neuralgia er cold of aa| aert Fut up la »c. Kk» end Mo Lottie* A Clean Man Outside cleanliness is less than half the battle. A mnnmay scrub himself a dozen timet a day, and still be unclean. Good health means cleanliness not only outside, but inside. It means • clean atomach, clean bowels, clean blood, a clean liver, and new, clean, healthy tissues. The man who is clean in this way will look it and act it. He will work with energy and think dean, clear, healthy thoughts. He will never be troubled with liver, lung, stomach or blood disorder*. Dyspepsia and indigestion originate in unclean stom achs. Blood diseases are (ound where there ia unclean blood. Consumption and bronchitis mean unclean lungs. c Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery prevents thee* disease*. It make* a man’s inside* clean ■nd healthy. It clean* the digestive organa, make* par*, dean blood, and clean, healthy flesh. It restores tone to the nervous system, and cure* nervous exhaustion and prostration. It contains no alcohol or habit-forming drugs. Constipation is the most unclean uncleanlioess. Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pel lets euro it. They never gripe. Easy to take as oandy. LADY SHOES^^k foi f?" ^ere are n0 ot^ier shoes at popular prices / V that in any way compare with these classy, Vl \ 7 fashionable, good-fitting shoes. They are made IB \\ZyV °n lasts that insure the utmost comfort, yet II \ \ ' give your feet that trim and stylish look. II ml shoes combine style and wearing qualities to a degree that ■ / easily makes them the most popular, dressy and serviceable ml ladies’ fine shoes obtainable, at a cost no greater than ordin SI ary shoes. Your dealer will supply you; if not, write to us. 1 To te sun you get the LEADING LADY, ■ 1 look for the Mayer Trade Mark on the soles. ■I FREE — If you will .end us the name of a dealer who doe* Bl not handle Leading Lady Shoes, we will send you free, post m\ paid, u beautiful picture of Martha Washington, site IS x 20. We also make Honorbilt Shoes for men, Martha Wash ington Comfort Shoes, Yerma Cushion Shoes, Special Merit School Shoes and Work Shoes. Raising! emperature depends upon the heater—how constructed—whether it gets all the fuel-energy or only some of it. If the heater is a PERFECTION Oil Heater (Equipped with Smokelesa Device)] the raising of the temperature is certain. Turn the wick as high or low as / it will go—there’s no danger, no Jj smoke, no smell—just an emphatic raising of temperature. The Automatic Smokeless Device is a permanent check upon carelessness, making the heater safe in the hands of a child. Bums nine hours with one filling, heats all parts of a room quickly. Oil indicator tells amount of oil in the all-brass font. Damper top. Cool handle. Aluminum window frame. Cleaned in a minute. Finished' in Nickel or Japan. Various styles and finishes. Every Dealer Everywhere. If Not at Youra, Write for Descriptive Circular to the Nearest Agency ol the STANDARD OIL COMPANY (Incorporated) j- _ , . _____ _..1_-_i I NEEDLESSLY ALARMED BRIGHT’S DISEASE OF THE KIDNEYS, concerning which so much hasbeeavrittta.lt s very rare disease. In not one esse out ol twenty of so-called ‘Kidney Disease does the troahlt really lie with the kidneys. It Is practicidly ail BLADDER TROUBLE. SOLD HED1L HURLED OIL C1PSULES Is the most efficient snd reliable BLADDER MEDICINE known to the'medlcal world. Thousand* ol people throughout the countrywill testify to the quick and sure relief obtained from Its use. ft baa been In constant use throughout the civilized world for over 200 years and la probably better know* than any other remedy discovered by man. BXjADDBII thoublu Is often a painful and annoying ailment. Frequently most distressing symtoms result from a slightly sffected bltdder. Tsken regularly Gold Medal Haarlem Oil Capsule, will remora all traces of such trouble in a few days. It Is not strange that this valuable preparation should enloy sank an extended use and enormous sale. _ , Gold Medal Haarlem OH Is put up In two forms. In CAPSULES and BOTTLES. Capsule. 25c. and 50c. per box. Bottles 15c. and 35c., at all Druggists. Be sure von obtain the Gold Medal Tilly brand. HOLLAND MEDICINE COMPANY, SCRANTON, PA. COLT DISTEMPER Can bo handled very easily. The sick are cured. Mid all oftinbl the tongue, or In feed. Acts on the blood and expeli germ cMl, all forms or distemper. Best remedy ever known for mares lafoaL , Ono bottle guaranteed to cure one case. &0o an''II a bottioi Nua | HO dosen of druggists and harness dealers, or sent express bald V I manufacturers. Cut uhovrs how to poultice throats. Oar am I Booklet gives everything. Local agents wanted. Largest Mllag _ _____ ^ hone remedy la existence—^twelve years. > I — SPOHN MEDICAL CO.. cv»btaaa4Bse<ari.iH<au. Ooafian, Ind, U. R. A. ^FURSHHIIDES for spot cash. 10 to 60% more money for yon to ship Raw Furs and Hides to ns than to sell ut home. rite for Price List, Market Report, Snipping Tags, and aboat oar HUNTERS'&TRAPPERS’GUlDE.fo^. 450 paso**. leather bonnd. Best thine on the subject ever written. Illustrating all Fur Animals. All about Trappers' Secrete, Decoys, Traps, Game Laws. How and where to trap, and to beoom* a sae> eessful trappur. It's a regular Encyclopedia. Price. $2. To our customers. • 1.25. Hides tanned lata beautiful Robes. Our Magnetic Bait and Decoy attracts animals to traps, 11.00 per bottle, Ship you* Hides and Furs to us and got highest prices. And crack Urea, Dept* 112 Mlnneapttllsjft&ugb Researches In Germany show that a given quantity of red hot coke will ab sorb four times the amount of water that will'be absorbed by the same coke If cold. ■ _ _ _ The Darwinian theory Is so fully ac cepted by some that they profess to be lieve man has started on the return trip. _ _ When' a father buys the bridegroom and gives away the bride It Is not easy to see how It is a profitable transac tion. It Is Just as safe to invite a man to a wine feast as to a beer lunch. If you know he is on the water wagon and will not fall off. One sure way to get a woman ready to attend the evening performance U t* ask her to go to the maiinee. Search the mortgage records for evli dence of your neighbor’s sudden proa<i perity. The habit of smoking is easily broken when a cold sore on the lip give# Uta Impression of a coming cancer. J