The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, April 28, 1910, Image 7

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    N BACKACHE!
Suffered Over Nine Months, Nothing
Relieved Me Until I Took PE-R U-NA.
Mrs. Joseph Lacelle, 124 Bronson St.,
Ottawa, East, Ontario, Canada, writes:
“I suffered with backache and head
ache tor over nine months and nothing
relieved me until I took Peruna. This
medicine is by far better than any other
medicine for these troubles. A few bot
ties relieved me of my miserable, half
dead, half-alive condition.”
SAMPLE BOTTLE FREE—To dem
onstrate the value of Peruna in all ca
**-> tarrhal troubles we will send you a sam
ple bottle absolutely free by mail.
The merit and success of Peruna is
so well known to the public that our
readers are advised to send for sample
bottle: Address the Peruna Company.
Columbus, Ohio. Don’t forget to men
tion you read this generous offer in
the.
I fin need of advice write our Medical
Department, stating your case fully.
Our physician in charge will send you
advice free, together with literature con
taining common sense rules for health,
which von cannot afford to be without.
WESTERN CANADA
Senator Dolliver, of Iowa, says:—
3 stream of emigrants from the United 8tates
* > Canada will continue.”
Senator Dolliver recently paid a
visit to Western Canada*
and says; “There is a
land hunger in the hearts
of English sneaking poo
Sle; this will account for
io removal of so many
Iowa fanners to Canada.
Our people are pleased
with its Government and
the excellent adminis
tration of law, and they
are coming to you in
tens of thousands, and
they are still coming.”
Iowa contributed large
ly to the 70,000 Ameri
can farmers who made Canada
their home during 1909.
Field crop returns alone
durlngyear added to the wealth
of thecountry upwards of
$170,000,000.00
Grain growing, mixed farm
ing, cattle raising and dairying
are all profitable. Free Home
steads of 160 acres are to be
had In the very best districts.
169 acre pre-emptions at $6.00
per acre within certain areas.
Schools and churches in every
settlement, climate unexcelled,
soil the richest,wood, water and
building material plentiful.
For particulars as to location, low
settlers' railway rates and descrlp*
f tlve illustrated pamphlet, “Last
Best West,” ana other Informa
tion, write to Bup’t of Immigra
tion, Ottawa, Canada, or to the
following Canadian Gov’t Agents1
EL T. Holmes. 815 Jackson St., St. Paul. Minn.; J. M.
M&cLachlan, Box 118. Watertown. South Dakota, and
W. V. Bennett. Room Bee Building. Omaha, Neb.
(Use address nearest you.)
Please say where you saw this advertisement.
What Is regarded as an excellent
means of comparing the sturdiness of
the American built railroad rolling
Btock with the lighter types of British
construction, took place recently in the
shape of an accident on the London
and Brighton railroad, when a train
ran off the track and crashed into the
Btation. The Pullman car was dam
aged very slightly, while the cars of
English build were completely wrecked.
A brave man is he who has the cour
age to speak out loud in a doctor’s re
ception room.
Chauffeurs, Drivers and Repair
men Earn Big Money
$20 <o$50 per Week
is the usual pay for trained men. Some earn as
much more on the side selling our Auto Sup
plies and Specialties. Do you want a chance?
Writ© us now for outline of our complete Cor
E-spondence Course in Automobile Engineering,
epairing and Driving. Wo can teach you by
mail all about the care, running and repairing ol
automobiles. You can fit yourself at home to
take a position as chauffeur, driver or repair
man. And you can
MAKE MONEY WHILE LEARNING
by putting in your spare time selling our supplies
on liberal commission, building up a perma
nent trade. Write us today^-now—if you want
jNr*'* to learn all about the automobile. To men whe
will become our agents we sell this famous $5C
course for half price—only f£IO down, bal
ance in small monthly payments. Writ© today.
ATLAS AUTO SUPPLY CO.
B37 43rd Street CHICAGO, ILL.
The Army of
Constipation
la Growing Smaller
CARTER’S LITTLE
UVER PILLS w>
responsible)—they no
only give relief—
they permanently
core Constipa
tion. Mil
lions use
them for
Bilious
ness, ladigestioa, Sick Headache, Sallow Skin.
SMALL POL, SMALL DOSE SMALL PRICE
Genuine an* bear Signature
$21,000 ESTABLISHED
HARNESS BUSINESS FOR SALE
Or Trade for Clear Land.
Northwestern Harness & Saddler)
y Company, Sioux City, lows
MIOUX CITY P’T'G CO, 1,344—18, 1911
The Sea of Peace,
I stand above a white-rimmed sea;
Its deeps are mine, its mirrored height;
Mine its low plaint of mystery;
All mine is glee-song of delight.
Mine Its strong soul; its body mine;
I lay me In its kind embrace;
In dreams upon its buoyant brine
It gives me back a cherished face. ,
Mayhap it helps me understand
The language of infinity.
The secret of the shifting sand,
The testimony of the sea.
I am above all circumstance,
I am beyond all power to hurt;
No more I shrink from sorrow’s lance.
So with all strength am I begirt.
I’ve tasted every bitter sup;
Earth’s bulwarks all are proven frail;
Yet sweetened now is life’s low cup.
All hallowed; 'tis my Holy Grail.
Above its wrecks of ships and men
The placid ocean shows no scars;
Above my deeps where storms have been
My tranquil soul reflects the stars.
—Ruth McEnery Stuart, in Century.
There Is mere Catarrh In this section of
the country than all other diseases put to
gether, and until the last few years was
| supposed to be Incurable. For a great many
j years doctors pronounced It a local disease
and prescribed local remedies, and by con
stantly failing to cure with local treatment,
pronounced It incurable. Science has prov
en catarrh to be a constitutional disease
and therefore requires constitutional treat
ment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured
by F. J. Cheney & Co.. Toledo. Ohio. 1« th"
only constitutional cure on the marfcst. It
Is taken Internally In doses from lo drops
to a teaspoonful. It acts directly on the
blood and mucous surfaces of the system.
They offer one hundred dollars for any case
It falls to cure. Send for circulars and tes
timonials.
Address F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O.
Sold by Druggists. 7.r»c.
Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation.
in uiavr. auu ninioa
From the New York Times.
“Chalk this down as a new experience
for me,” said the business man. “The
other day I had a telephone call. The
man at the wire wanted to talk about a
building contract. The first thing he said
was:
“ ‘Is your stenographer there?'
“I said she was.
“ ‘Well,’ said he, ‘will you have her
take down your part of the conversation?
My stenographer is right here, and will
make a note of everything I say.’
“In a kind of huff I asked the man if
he was afraid I would go back on my
word unless it was down in black and
white.
“ ‘Not at all,’ said he, ‘but this is a
custom of mine. Everything I say over
the telephone is taken down by my sten
ographer, and in matters of importance
I like the other fellow to do the same.*
“Of course I had no objection, so, al
though it seemed a needless precaution,
the girl made a note of my disjointed
sentences.’
A reputation for being clever Is
about the hardest thing that can attack
a man and about the time the fact is
j established it is found that his stories
• are repeaters and his witticisims are
of ancient vintage.
Hood’s
Sarsaparilla
By virtue of its unequaled blood
purifying, nerve-strengthening,
stomach-toning, appetite-restoring
: properties, is the one Great Spring
Medicine.
Get it today. In liquid form or choco
lated tablets called Sarsatabs. 100 doses, $1.
It was a hard thing to account for.
The lady didn’t have the dog on a
leash, yet he didn’t run away. Indeed,
he seemed to be very familiar with his
mistress’ skirts, and once in a while,
as he wagged his tall, there would
come a flash of her ankles. The reas
on was plain when you came up even
with her. The nickeled plate on his
collar had a clasp on it, and the clasp
was fastened tightly to the hem of her
skirt. It was simply a new way of
leading a pet dog. This was In Fifth
avenue on last Sunday.
Man and woman left Paradise hand
In hand and now the question arises
whether they shall return that way or
get a soul mate and be content to stay
out.
SORE EYES, weak, Inflamed, red, wat
ery and swollen eyes, use PETTIT’S
EY'E SALVE. All druggists or How
ard Bros., Buffalo, N. Y.
Robert E. Plurlbus Unum Smith Is
an old age pensioner in Australia. In
his application he added the words,
“otherwise known as Rowdy Bob.” In
spite of this uncomplimentary second
title, the local authorities certified his
character as "good," and he had no
difficulty in getting his $2.40 a week
from the state. The oldest Australian
pensioner is a woman of 105.
When you find youself talking too
much, pull the reverse lever clear over
to the other side.
A-ll-C LINIMENT
for man or beast, the best pain stopper.
ALL dealers. Insist on the genuine.
During the winter Just closed the
English Salvation Army expected to
provide 50,000 meals from the waste
of the warships In Chatham dockyards.
For when ships are in port many of
the men are away on leave, but the
food is still supplied, and has hitherto
alone GOO people were fed on what
been counted as waste. On one night
would have otherwise been thrown
away.
How strange It is that a clear con
science more often goes with defeat
than victory.
Constipation causes and seriously aggra
vates many diseases. It Is thoroughly
cured by Ur. Pierce’s Pellets. Tiny sugar
coated granules.
Miss Amanda Ford, deaconess at
the Immigrants’ home in East Boston,
met eighty vessels on their arrival In
port during the last 12 months and
aided nearly 700 persons of whom 314
were women, 306 men and 76 children.
She obtained work for nearly 50 girls,
sent 85 to their friends, gave lodg
ings and meals to some and distrib
uted garments to others.
There Is no use In a man named
Smith having It engraved on his um
brella.
For Red, Itching Eyelids,
Falling Eyelashes and All Eyes
That Need Care Try Murine Eye Salve
Aseptic Tubes—Trial Size—25c.
Ask Your Druggist or Write
Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago.
It Is a mighty observant man who
can realize his own mistakes, and a
wise one who can profit by them.
HATE YOU A COUGH, OR COED?
If so, take at once Alim i Lung Baham and watah
remits. Simple, safe, effective. All dcaltra. Pep
ular prices—___
WESTERN CANADA AS A GRAIN
PRODUCER.
Never Saw Such Fine Wbeat Any
where.
Gust. Anderson, of Maidstone, Sas
katchewan. was formerly of Minnesota,
and has been in Central Canada three
years. On January 16, 1910, he writes:
"Arriving fifteen miles from Maid
stone, 1 bought a couple of steers from
a rancher, as my capital was not large,
and with the two oxen 1 brought with
me, I broke 25 acres which I put in
crop in 1908, and had to clear some
brush. I earned J45.00 by breaking
fifteen acres for a neighbor and dur
ing the summer I put up hay and
hauled timber and put up houses for
othersettlers. Notwithstanding aheavy
frost on August 12th, 1 had 22% bush
els of wheat per acre and 60 bushels
of oats. Oft 35 acres of wheat in 1909,
I got 27 bushels of wheat per acre
and 1,300 bushels of oats ofT 20 acres.
I never saw such fine wheat anywhere.
We have plenty of rain between May
and August and after August seldom
any but dry, warm days. Water can
be had at from 20 to 40 feet, and
plenty of grass for cattle.”
The evidence of Mr. Anderson is giv
en because it is encouraging to the
man of small means who is desirous
of bettering his condition. It shows
what can be done, and there is really
but small limit to the man with push
and energy to become wealthy on Can
adian lands. And the grain that he
raises Is good. A press dispatch says:
The quality of the wheat continues
to be the feature of the deliveries. In
the total of 3,378 cars in the Febru
ary inspections there were 2,847 of
high grade stuff, a percentage of 84.28.
For January the percentage was 82.21,
and for the six months it was 88.6.
This is an unusually high average, and
it demonstrates beyond the shadow of
a doubt that the farmers in this part
of the Dominion still know how to
grow first class wheat. The crop of
1908 was considered good enough, and
its average of contract wheat was only
70 per cent. Good weather through
out the season was an Important fac
tor, of course, in Insuring the high
quality of the grain, and it is not
likely that atmospheric influences of
so favorable a character will be en
countered for a long time to come. The
best that can be expected Is that a fair
average for a term of years will be
maintained.
The Cat "Yumped."
From the Boston Record.
The Nieklingtons, suburban household
ers, brought back from the beach a cat
which the Sweoir.h maid discovered there
and had gradually educated to do some
athletic tricks. Mr. Nlckllngton was en
deavoring to demonstrate to visitors what
had been taught. Making a hoop of his
arms, he Invited the cat to leap through
the opening.
"Jump! Jump! jump!” he bade the fe
line, coaxlngly. Kitty never stirred, but
turned away In indifference.
The maid arrived. Nlckllngton ex
pressed his disappointment. The maid,
Olga, Insisted that it could perform and
would.
"Here,” she commanded to the cat.
“Come, Yump! yump! yump!”
The cat yumped through llthely and
gracefully.
One of the oddest domiciles on earth
Is that erected at Yokohama by Dr.
Van der Heyren, the noted bacteriolo
gist, of Japan. This Is a dust-proof,
air-proof, microbe-proof building of
glass, which stands In the open, un
shaded grounds of the hospital of
Yokohama.
REST AND PEACE
Fall Upon Distracted Households
When Cutloura Enters.
Sleep for skin tortured babies and
rest for tired, fretted mothers Is found
in a hot bath with Cutlcura Soap and
a gentle anointing with Cutlcura Oint
ment. This treatment, In the major
ity of cases, affords immediate relief
in the most distressing forms of Itch
ing, burning, scaly, and crusted hu
mors, eczemas, rashes, Inflammations,
irritations, and chaflngs, of Infancy
and childhood, permits rest and sleep
to both parent and child, and points
to a speedy cure, when other remedies
fall. Worn-out and worried parfints
will find this pure, sweet and econom
ical treatment realizes their highest
expectations, and may be applied to
the youngest Infants as well as chil
dren of all ages. The Cutlcura Rem
edies are sold by druggists every
where. Send to Potter Drug & Ghem.
Corp., sole proprietors, Boston, Mass.,
for their free 32-page Cutlcura Book on
the care and treatment of skin and
scalp of infants, children and adults.
Some Time Hence.
From the Yonkers Statesman.
"Oh, mamma, I’m frightened I" came
from little Tommie, In bed.
"What are you frightened about, my
son?”
"I hear something on the roof.”
“Oh, well, go to sleep, my boy; it’s
only your father taking off his shoes be
fore he comes through the scuttle. He s
Just got home from the club In his air
ship.”
The shipments of Chinese merchan
dise to the United States, as Invoiced
through the American consulate gen
eral at Shanghai, which had dropped
off from $14,734,863 In value In 1907 to
$9,321,646 In 1908, went up to $13,872,
531 last year.
Contentment with a horse and buggy
Is better than an automobile on the in
stallment plan.
ALXSlTSFOOf^EASE
Shake Into Yur Shoes
Allen’s Foot—Base, the antiseptic
pewdw for the feet. It oiroa
painful, swollen, smart lug, nervous feet,
and instantly takes the sttng oat of
corns and bunions. It's the great
est com for (discovery of the
age. Allon’s Foot—Kese make* tight*
fitting or new shoes feel easy. It Is a
certain core forkagrewtng nails, sweat
ing, callous and tired, adringfeek
We have over 80. OOOteeUmoniab T U Y
IT TO-DAY. Sold everywhere, tic
De not accept any substitute.
Sent by mail for 96c. in stamps.
FREE ACKAOB
MOTHER GUAY'S SWEET
**In s skich. P<4WDEttM. the beat medicine for
„ * ?IW. Feverish, sickly Children. Sold by
uaesuen ■ protista everywhere.
^wi^3ESBMeSJkT.
wwvwwvw^vwwwvwwv
♦ ♦
♦ MORE OR LESS HUMOROUS. ♦
♦ ♦
♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦+
Facts for the Census Man.
From Youth's Companion.
Thevceiisus taker rapped at the door
of the little farm house and opened his
long book. A plump girl of IS came to
Ithe door, and blinked at him stupidly.
"How many people live here?" he be
gan.
"Nobody lives here. We are only stay
ing through the hop season.”
"How many of you are there
here ?”
“I’m here. Father's In the woodshed,
and Bill Is—”
"See here, my girl, I want to know
how many Inmates there are in thl3
house. How many people slept here
last night?”
"Nobody slept here, sir. I had the
toothache dreadful, and my little
brother had the stomach ache, and the
new hand that’s helping us got sun
burned so on his back that he has blis
ters the size of eggs, and we all took on
so that nobody slept a wink all night
long."
The Bride's Cake.
From the Kansas City Times.
An Idependence girl, who married and
went away not so very long ago, came
back to visit her relatives last week. The
girl had never known anything about
cooking, so when she volunteered to bake
a cake her sisters were surprised.
"You can’t bake, can you?” one of them
asked.
"Just you wait and see,” replied the
bride. "I've learned a few things about
the culinary art since I was married. I'll
hake the dearest cake you ever saw.”
She labored half an hour mixing the In
gredients and then the sweetened material
was placed In the oven of the gas stove.
"It's going to bake beautifully,” she said.
Five minutes later she looked In the
oven. "Yes," she said, "it will be the love
liest cake I ever baked.”
Fifteen minutes passed and then she
iuunru ii/sum. x uci c naa buiuciuuif,
wrong. The cake batter was not baking,
but was becoming hardened.
“What’s the matter with your cake?"
asked one of the bride's sisters.
“I really don’t know," said the bride, in
a way that showed worry.
“Well, I’ll tell you," said the sister, with
a smile, “you haven’t lighted the gas un«
der your oven.
Hobson's Choice.
From Youth’s Companion.
A story recently told by Thomas ^Hunter,
president of the New York Normal col
lege, seems to indicate that once In a
while a willing wife Is spoiled to make an
unwilling teacher.
A pretty and agreeable young woman
who lived in a country village suddenly
announced that she was going to take up
teaching.
“You! You a school teacher!" exclaimed
the recipient of her confidence. “Why, I’d
rather marry a widower with nine chil
dren!"
“So would I,” the young woman replied,
frankly, “but where is the widower?"
Consolation for the Ice Man.
From Harper’s Weekly.
There Is an evangelist in Boston who is
so devout that, so his friends aver, he
scarcely ever permits himself a secular
thought or his tongue a worldly word.
It appears that this evangelist has a
very bright daughter, aged 5. Not long
since she answered the door bell and found
there the Ice man with a bill.
“Father Is not home,” she said, “but if
you will come In, you poor, perishing soul,
perhaps mamma will pray for you."
The Martyrdom of Statesmanship.
From the Chicago Record-Herald.
"I hear, senator," said the inquisitive
young lady, “that it cost you $20,000 to be
elected."
“Yes, approximately that."
"Well, that will leave you only $10,000
for six years’ work. Isn’t that rather
small for a man of your ability?"
“For a man of my ability it is rather
small, but I expect the sacrifice to be not
wholly In vain. In fact, I have already
been retained as attorney for three large
corporations that would have been injured
by the passage of bills which I intended to
Introduce. 3o you see there are honest
ways in which a man may be compensated
for the annoying expenditures which In
the age of graft and chicanery the high
minded servant of the people must make in
order to help to preserve the foundations
of the republic."
Temptations of a Valet.
From the Philadelphia Bulletin.
“Us valets has our temptations, sir,"
he said. “Only yesterday, when I went to
pay Mr. Henny’s tailor bill, you’d ought
to ha,ve heard what the manager said to
me.
“He says, says he, handing me a flve
dollar note:
“ ‘Why,’ he says, ’this here bill ain’t
harf big enough for a man of Mr. Henn’s
position,” he says. "Look a here, my
man,’ he says ‘the truth Is that you don’t
brush your marster's clothes hard
enough.’
“ ‘No?’ says I.
“ ‘No,’ says he. ‘And now,' he says,
‘I’ll put you up to a wrinkle that’ll put
$G0 a year in your pocket if you use It
right.’
“Then he brought from his office a
stick all roughened on the end.
“ ‘Scrub this hero rough stick,’ he says,
‘over the elbows of your marster’s coats,'
he says, ‘and now and then touch up his
trousers about the knees a bit. It’ll do
wonders, used right. It ought to double
his annuall bill, and if it does there's $o(
a year in it for you.’
“I took the stick," said the valet, “bul
I ain’t never used, it, sir."
Dangerous Railroading.
A newspaper writer, meeting Lord
Brassey at Red Bank, N. J., asked the
distinguished foreigner if he feared to
travel on American railroads.
“Oh, no,Lord Brassey answered.
“Your American railroads kill a good
many people in the year's course; but we
must remember that they carry a good
many people a good many miles. In pro
portion, probably, they do no more dam
age than the railroads of France or of
Scotian^.
“The Scottish railroads used to be very
dangerous indeed. To ride on them was
like traveling through a desolate country
infested with brigands.
“The famous Dr. Norman Macleod was
once about to set off on a long railway
Journey through Scotland. Just as the
train .was pulling out, the clergyman’s
servant put his head in through the win
dow and said:
“ ‘Ha’e ye ta’en an insurance ticket?’
“ ‘I have,’ the doctor answered.
“ ‘Then,’ said the servant, ‘write yer
name on it, and gi’e it to me. They ha’e
an awfu’ bad habit o’ robbin’ the corpses
on this line.’ ”
Causes Some Confusion.
From the Chicago Tribune.
, “Been having trouble in the church
choir, have you, Uncle Ephr’m?’’
“Yes, suh; sort o’ like. Bruddah Cop
ley, wot sings tennah, used to be de
end man in de Jubilee Minstrels. He
gets along all right as a gen’al t’ing,
but w'en he gits excited in de meetin’
and’ goes»to sin gin’ ‘Blow Ye de Trum
pit, Blow/ in ragtime, hit kind o’ puts
he quiah out a little.”
Germany’s African war has already
cost the taxpayers nearly $50,000,000.
Stop
tOcmm,
QmLSoM&k
This Fact — that in addressing Mrs. Pinkham you are con.
fiding your private ills to a woman—a woman whose ex
perience with women’s diseases covers twenty-five years.
The present Mrs. Pinkham, daughter-in-law of Lydia E.
Pinkham, was for years under her direction, and has ever
since her decease continued to advise women.
Many, women suffer in silence and drift along from bad
to worse, knowing well that they ought to have immediate
assistance, but a natural modesty causes them to shrink
from exposing themselves to the questions and probable
examinations of even their family physician. Such ques
tioning and examination is unnecessary. Without cost
you can consult a woman whose knowledge from actual
experience is great.
MRS. PINKHAM’S STANDING INVITATION:
Women sufferingfrom any form of female weakness are in
vited to promptly communicate with Mrs. Pinkham at Lynn,
Mass. All letters are received, opened, read and answered by
women. A woman can freely talk of her private illness
to a woman; thus has been established this confidence
between Mrs. Pinkham and the women of America which
has never been broken. Never has she published a testi
monial or used a letter without the written consent of the
writer, and never has the company allowed these confi
dential letters to get out of their possession, as the hun
dreds of thousands of them in their files will attest.
Out of the vast volume of experience which Mrs. Pink
ham has to draw from, it is more than possible that she
has gained the very knowledge needed in your case.
She asks nothing in return except your good will, and her
advice has helped thousands. Surely any woman, rich or
poor, should be glad to take advantage of this generous
offer of assistance. Address Mrs. Pinkham, care of Lydia
E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass.
COLT DISTEMPER
Among the many extraordinary theo
ries introduced by recent microscopic
studies is that of sex in bread molds.
After years of patient research it is an
nounced that a distinguished scientist
has found that these minute fungi, the
lowest order of plant life, possess the
characteristics of plants of the highest
type, and have the power of reproduc
ing their kind from two distinct and
differing races, in addition to giving
new life from one.
EXPOSURE TO COI.D
and wet is the first step to Pneumonia. Take Perry
Diiris' Painkiller ana the danger is averted. Un
equaled for colds, sore throat, quinsy,26c.36c and50o
Heretofore regaadejd as valueless, a
certain kind of soil, of which there are
large deposits In Denmark, hab been
found to make excellent bricks of light
weight and so tough that nails may be
driven into them without cracking.
English people are trying to define
"sacred music." A London rector
says: "A man writes a waltz, and
calls it 'The Sailor’s Return.’ But re
ligious people will have nothing to do
with It. It Is 'secular music.’ He sets
It to slower tune and labels It Jonah’s
Return from the Belly of the Whale.’
And that is oratorio."
A Scottish clergyman got Into con
versation In a railway carriage with
a workingman, who Informed him that
he had been a coupler on a railway
for several years. “Oh," said the min
ister, "I can beat that. I have been
coupler for over 20 years." "Aye," re
plied the workman, “but I can un
couple and you canna!"
Mr*. WImUw’i coothisw Srarr Mr Obtldr**
icctblnc, kofl*ra ihp irurai, rodnaet lnfl*ram*u on.
tt..tjiprln. purl* wind polio. 8Pc o bottlo.
If a man would cut out the troubl®
that never comes he oould easily bear
what does come without becoming
morbid over It.
Some men not only permit their
notes to mature, but even let them
die of old age.
People who flsh for compliments us
ually confine their operations to shal
low water.
ur home beautiful. H
| The Sahitaiy^Vall Coaling I
i. l comes In all sorts of rich, soft That saves a lot of work, trouble M
K'l shades of color that enable you to and money.
H decorate your walls in the same People do not like kalsomine, ■
m style as the handsome city houses. as all kalsomine is mixed with B
f£ Alabastine is a powder made glue to make it stick. The glue H
B .. rots and the kalsomine comes oft H
from pure native alabaster, you _on clothes and on the M
M mix it with clear cold water and floor. Alabastine adheres to 9
^B apply it with a flat wall brush. the wall of its own cementing B
«B Simple directions printed on qualities. It requires no dirty 9
B every package. Anyone can glue, nor paste, as with kalso- 9
do it. Then when you want mine or wall paper. These B
■ft to redecorate, just put always attract insects and B
yg^ the new coat over the old. disease germs. B
Our Free Offer i-*-i
Send us the coupon (or | I
a postal card) and we will — — — — — —— — — — — — --«•«- -"3
AUWtine Comply .
decoration, and tell you | 482 Grandrille Are., Gnutd Rapids, Midi,
about our offer of free | At no coat to me, plena* aend your J
c?or_j»I>Tn?’ and free | Alabastine book anu tell me about your *
stencils to help you make | free oltera. I
your home cheeif unclean , |
Land beautiful. - w s
Alabastine Co.,• . »
^^^^4t2GruuhriUcAye.| P.O. .. J
Cried Rapids, •
Hick t County....,. J
State. •
m.rn-9 mmrnmmmmmmmmmmm*J