The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, August 25, 1910, Image 3

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    ‘ 1 A — ’ ...
I want any person who suffers with bil
iousness, constipation, indigestion or any
liver or blood ailment, to try my Paw-Paw
Liver Pills. I guarantee they will purify the
blood and put the liver and stomach into a
healthful condition and will positively cure
biliousness and constipation, or I will refund
your money. — Munyon’s Homeopathic Home
Remedy Co., 63rd and Jefferson Sts.. Phlla., Pa.
Try murine eye remedy
For Red, Weak, Weary, Watery Eye* aed I
GRANULATED EYELIDS I
Marine Doesn’t Smart-Soothes Eye Pain
DroKife M Mariae Ere lia.tr, Uqald, 25c, 50c, $1.00
Murine Ere Salve, in Aseptic Tube., 25c, $1.00
EYE BOOKS AND ADVICE FREE BY MAIL
Murine Eye Remedy Co ..Chicago
Your Liver
is Clogged up
That's Why You’re Tired—Ont el
Sort.—Hava No Aypet&e.^
CARTER’S U
LIVER PILLS
-wiB put you right
*-*’ faafewdayfc
They do
their doty.
Cum
Coutip*.
lion, BtL
kuineea, hdigeotioa, aad Skk Headache.
SMALL PILL SMALL DOSE, SMALL PSICS
Genuine omibear Signature
HEARD IN A GROCERY STORY.
"I Just had a fall on your sidewalk.”
"I am very sorry, my dear sir.”
"Well, I wish you would sell your
sugar straight and put your sand on
f the sidewalk.”
Excellent Definition.
“Bjornstjerne Bjornson, in his hotel
fronting the Tuileries gardens, re
ceived a few friends up to the last in
Paris,” said the continental agent of a
tyjiewriter firm.
“I had the honor to be among those
friends and I never wearied of the
great Norseman’s wit and wisdom.
“The last thing he said to me, in
cautioning me not to give an import
ant provencal agency to an easy-going
man of the world, was this:
“ 'Beware the easy-going man. An
easy-going man, you know, is one who
makes the path of life very rough and
difficult for somebody else.' ”
Answering for Him.
Physician—And would you like to
be a doctor. Jack?
Mother (while Jack is still hesitat
ing)—No. no! The dear boy couldn’t
kill a fly.—Punch.
The entire nature of man is the
garden which is given him to culti
vate.—W. E. Gladstone.
-—
Cut Out
Breakfast
Cooking
Easy to start the day
cool and comfortable if
- Post
Toasties
are in the pantry ready
to serve right from the
package. No cooking
required; just add some
cream and a little sugar.
Especially pleasing
these summer mornings
with berries or fresh
fruit.
One can feel cool in
hot weather on proper
food.
"The Memory Lingers”
POST DM CEREAL CO., Ltd.
Battle Creek. Mich.
f V J
"Wonder if this one will fall in love
with you’”
"Harry, don’t be so horrid!”
"But you know very well they all do.
I am sure I don’t know why”—with
brotherly candor.
"I know, and it’s very disagreeable!”
Bald Daisy.
"You don’t seem to think so at the
time.”
"The dlsagreeability comes when—
When they propose,” said Daisy rue
fully. She Jumped up from her seat
suddenly. "I know what I Khali do
this time. 1 shall snub him unmerci
fully; show him unmistakably that I—
1 am-”
"Not Indulging In curates." put in
Harry, and dodged the sofa cushion
thrown at him skilfully.
The scene was the morning room at
Avondale vicarage, and the speakers
were the only clilldren of the Bev.
Archibald Kemp, who adored them
both, and as his parishioners—some of
them—averred, spoiled them. Daisy
Kemp—everyone called her that,
though her real name was Margaret,
after her long-dead mother—was 21, her
brother 19. She was a curly-haired,
round and rosy-faced kitten, with a
dimpled chin, and, as may have been
gathered, a horror of being made love
to by curates! Her brother Harry was
replica of Ills father—open-browed, tall,
broad-shouldered and honest-eyed, a
typic.ai country English lad.
Perfectly true It was that all her
father’s curates fell In love with Daisy.
She sincerely wished they would not.
But they all did. some at first sight,
some gradually—but they all did! Then
they proposed to her. were friendly but
firmly refused, und went away In
search of pastures new and forgetful
ness. It was, as Daisy said, and she
meant It, too, very disagreeable.
“What Is Mr. Bentham like?” was
Daisy’s question at lunch that day.
Harry gave a grin; the vicar looked at
his daughter Innocently.
"Wait and see, my child,” was all he
said.
‘‘When Is he coming?"
"I told Mr. Smithers to have his
rooms ready tonight.”
That night they met
“My daughter, Mr. Bentham,” said
the vicar, absently. "Yes. as you were
saying, there Is much always to be
thought of and to do.”
"Yes, Indeed ” replied Mr. Bentham,
In what struck Daisy as a peculiarly
unpleasant voice,
"Dad,” she remarked, when indoors
later, “he is absolutely ugly.”
“Oh, no. dear. Plain, perhaps, but j
not bo bad as that.”
broken out in this part of Avondale,
and Is claiming Its victims, old and
young, every day. That child you are
now holding In your arms is now sick
ening for It. Now—now can you un
derstand why I warned you, through
Harry, not to come to the Sinclairs?"
Daisy gave a brief, tender glance at
the child In her arms.
"1 should have come even If I had
known," she said; "even you—even you
could not have prevented me.”
“I knew when I came Into Vale cot
tage; Mrs. Sinclair told me at once. I
am nursing Dolly while she Is lying
down for half an hour. I am not
afraid. Are you?"
The scorn in Daisy's voice went
through Richard tientam's heart.
"I was thinking of—of you,” he said.
Daisy’s silence was more expressive
than words. But, hearing voices, Mrs.
Sinclair, with profuse apologies and
much tearful gesture, came upon the
scene.
"Give her to me now. Miss Kemp.”
she said. “I told you Mr. Bentham said
I was not to let you nurse her or come
near her."
The few simple words were as a
lightning flash to Dolly's brain.
Ten days later there was a little
white form in the cottage, a baby voice
hushed forever, and a footfall silenced
In this world. For Dolly Sinclair—lit
tle four-year-old Dolly—was dead.
And then—ah, yes. and then—Daisy
Kemp learned how unselfish, how
brave, how strong Richard Bentham
had been. It had only been a brief
epidemic, which had carried away to
the eternal rest some little ones who
had scarcely learned the meaning of
life, and some others who had learned
almost all the world could teach them
—but It had been a bitter month for
Avondale, a time of grief and mourn
ing. work, prayer and sorrow, and
Richard Bentham, beaten at last, lay In
his room at Mrs. Smlther's tiny cot
tage. fighting for life.
"No wonder," said the vicar sadly.
"No wonder,” echoed all Avondale,
he had absolutely slaved during that
brief time of trouble. Now he lay,
weak as a child, careless of living or
dying, at the mercy of the very fiend
he had been strenuously fighting
against for the sake of others.
Over and over again those words of
Connie Sinclair came to Daisy’S mind.
“I told you, Mr. Bentham said you were
not to nurse her or come near her.”
He had thought of her and safety then.
Why?
Finally the fever passed, but the
heart, sadly weakened by the tong
I "I don’t like him.”
One muggy, unseasonable day In late
] August Daisy met her brother on the
I tennis lawn. He was swinging his
! racquet carelessly, but the expression
on his face was not quite careless.
Daisy knew that he had, with the vicar,
been talking to Mr. Bentham.
"I have a message for you,” Harry
said curtly, as though he did not much
enjoy the delivery of the said message.
Daisy smiled. Then she noticed her
brother’s serious face and the smile
died away.
"Wnat Is It?” she exclaimed with
some anxiety. For Harry was as a
rule so bright and merry that a pre
monition of ill seemed to strike her
at once.
"Oh, It's all right! But Bentham told
me to tell you not to go up to the Sin
clairs again until he lets you know."
"He lets me know!” said Daisy, with
a scathing emphasis.
“Yes,” said Harry, and he turned
a»- ay.
’What right-” began Daisy, but
hrother was out of reach and hearing.
Hear heart beat furiously. Indeed,
what right had Richard Bentham to
send her such a peremptory message?
The Sinclairs were her friends—the
little four-year-old baby Dolly Sinclair
was her especial pet, and Mr. Bentham
had forbidden her to see them! What
did it mean?
"I will go," she said to herselfj, "and
I will go this very afternoon."
That same afternoon Richard Bent
ham found her. sitting in the little
parlor of the Sinclairs' cottage, with
Dolly Sinclair asleep In her arms. i
"Hush. She's asleep,” said Daisy In
a more tender tone than she had ever
addressed to him.
"You!” he said. "You!"
"Why not?” said Daisy, defiantly.
"Did Harry give you my message?"
"Yes. and what right have you to
Bay what I shall do or shall nut do?”
"Can you not guess—or must I tell
you? Fever, malignant fever, has
strain, was at almost at Us last ebb.
"Daisy!"
It was her father’s voice, broken with
unmistakable tears.
“I want you to be brave, my dear
girl, and come and say goodby to—
to—”
The vicar broke down here.
“Good-by?" whispered Daisy; “Is—
Is he-?”
"Yes. lie Is dying."
Without a word Daisy Kemp went
with her father hand in hand to Rich
ard Bentham's bedside. She steeled
herself for the ordeal, and with agony
in her heart, knelt down beside the dy
ing man whom she now knew she loved
indeed.
His tired eyes turned to her drawn
face; his thin hand clasped hers.
"Daisy 1” he murmured; “I wanted
to see you before—forgive-"
She put her quivering lips to his
hand in reply.
“Daisy—I love you—I have—always
loved—you—from—the—first."
“Dear-”
“Tell me—you—care—If-"
Daisy's eyes were blurred with team,
her whole form shook with pain. She
rose slightly and put her warm lips
upon those of Richard Bentham. and
kissed them tenderly.
No one but herself heard the words
that he murmured:
“You have—brought—me back—to
life—beloved."
And she had.
Population of Big Nations.
Latest statistics give the populations
of some principal countries as follows:
Russia in Europe, 129,000.000; Russia in
Asia, Including western Turkestan, 23,
000,000: Japan, 44.000.000, Korea, 12,500,
000; China. 426,000,000; India, 294,000,000;
France, 39,000,000; Germany. 57,000,000;
Italy, 38,000,000; Great Britain and Ire
land. 43,000,000; Austria-Hungary, 45.
000,000; Spain, 18,000.000; Turkey 18,
000,000.
NATURE'S SIGN1A1LS.
The first Indication of kidney dis
order is often backache. Then comes
pain in the hips and sides, lameness,
soreness and urinary troubles. These
are the warnings—
nature’s signals for
help. Doan's Kidney
Pills should be used
at the first sign.
Mrs. W. R. Cody,
402 15th St., Lewis
ton, Idaho, says: "I
had a bad case of
dropsy and bloated 40
lbs. in weight. My
ankles swelled and I
had to wear shoes
two sizes larger than
usual. I was nerv
ous, restless and much run down.
After using Doan’s Kidney Pills I
came down to natural weight and my
kidneys became normal.”
Remember the name—Doan's. For
sale by all dealers. 50 cents a box.
Foater-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
MEAN.
aei-nea e>vceTL
WUUe—We were playing insurance
company at school today and the boys
treated me mean.
Mama—How?
Willie—I was the president of the
company, and before I could resign
they fired me,
KEEP BABY’S SKIN CLEAR
Few parents realize how many es
timable lives have been embittered
ind social and business success pre
vented by serious skin affections
which so often result from the neglect
»f minor eruptions In Infancy and
childhood. With but a little care and
the use of the proper emollients, baby’s
skin and hair may be preserved, puri
fied and beautified, minor eruptions
prevented from becoming chronic and
torturing, disfiguring rashes, ltchlngs,
Irritations and chaflngs dispelled.
To this end, nothing is so pure, so
sweet, so speedily effective as the con
stant use of Cutlcura Soap, assisted,
when necessary, by Cutlcura Ointment.
Send to Potter Drug & Chem. Corp.,
sole proprietors, Boston, for their free
S2-page Cutlcura Book, telling all about
the care and treatment of the skin.
A Fake Camera.
‘‘Yonder Is a beach camera fiend,”
said the first bathing girl. "They are
disgusting, I think.
"This one Is particularly disgusting,”
declared the second bathing girl.
"After I had posed all morning for his
benefit, he ate his lunch from that
box.”
Might Do It.
"Do you know anything that will
kill potato bugs?" asked the young
man with the yellow fingers.
“Yes,” said the old lady with the
gingham apron, crustily, “get ’em to
smoke cigarettes!"—Yonkers States
man.
Important to Wlotnora
Examine carefully every bottle of
CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for
Infants and children, and see that It
S
In Use For Over 30 Years.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Domestic Amenities.
“Hubby, I gave your light pants to
a poor tramp."
“And what am I going to wear this
summer? Kilts?"
Dr. Pierce’s Pellets, small, sugar
coated, easy to take as candy, regulate
and invigorate stomach, liver and bow
els. Do not gripe.
Lots of us never put off till tomor
row what we can have done for us
today.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup.
Forchlldren teething, softens the gums, reduces In- :
UauiiuaLion.&llays Dam. cures wind colic. !&cu bottle.
The crop that never fails year aftel j
year Is trouble.
Gal-va-silte1 Moofin^
Makes a Weather-Proof Roof for Many Years
; We make Gal-va-nite from heavy wool felt, which is thoroughly saturated with mineral
asphalt and subjected to tremendous pressure. It is then plated with flaked Mica, a mineral
product that never wears out, and which keeps all the essential oils in and the weather out.
Gal-va-nite will outlast the building it covers, and it requires no attention or repairs. It
is pliable and easy to handle. One man can put it on. It makes a one piece roof that is
proof against all kinds of weather and will save you money by cutting out repair expense.
Write for our Free Book and samples, now.
Union Roofing & Manufacturing Co., 200 Union Road, St. Paul, Minn.
Sign of Recovery.
"If when the devil Is sick a monk
he will be," said Rose Stahl sagely,
“then the devil gets well in double
quick time. Witness that young ‘dlvil
with the ladles,’ my kid cousin. Last
winter he was 111, so 111 he didn’t have
any sense of humor left nor any sense
either. I was staying at the same ho
tel, and when I went In to look after
him he virtuously remarked that his
room was no place for a 'Chorus Lady’
and promptly shooed me out. (A few
years ago 1 spanked that kid.) Then
he got scared and sent for a doctor
and the doctor sent for a trained
nurse. For several days I got bulle
tins of his progress from the cham
bermaid. The fourth morning she set
my mind completely at rest.
" 'Sure, ma'am,' sold Maggie, 'an' I
think he do be gettln' along very well.
The nurse was sittln’ on his lap this
mornln'l’ ”
Mrs. Wlggln's Idea of London.
During the recent visit of Mrs. Wig
gin, the American author, In London,
an Interviewer called on her. With
pencil poised, the Interviewer asked:
"And what do you think of London,
Mrs. Wlggin?"
"You remind me," answered the au
thor cheerfully, "of the young lady
who Bat beside Dr. Gibbon at dinner.
She turned to him after the soup.
“ ‘Do, dear Dr. Gibbon,' she said, ‘tell
me about the decline and fall of the
Roman empire.’ ”
DR. MARTEL’S FEMALE PILLS.
Seventeen Year* the Standard.
Prescribed and recommended for
Women’s Ailments. A scientifically pre
pared remedy of proven worth. The
result from their use Is quick and per
manent. For sale at all Drug Stores.
A Sage's Summer.
Solomon sighed.
“Think of the number of plants I
have to remember to water while they
are all away for the summer," he cried.
Herewith he doubted his title to
wisdom.
jj' a Hot Suiv—
(Wtfl Dusty Roads B
By the time you reach ^^^B
[ \ /&8L. town and light you’ll ba^^^B
V- - Q hot and tired and your throat^^B
I /JO dry with dust and dirt. Hunt up a ^^k
jm soda fountain and treat yourself to ^B
A Glass or » ltot tie of ^B
T (hs$& 1
in Jult „ cooling u the bottom step In the BS
IB tprlng house. You’ll find It rellera ll
m tlgue too. and washes swag all the dust ■
■ snd thirst as nothing else will. It touches H
I the spot. ■
■ Dsllciem • letreahing ■ Wholesome H
5c Everywhere ■
■ Our Free Booklet
H **Tha Truth About Coca-Cola” tell# ^B
V all about Coca-Cola—what It Is and ^B
H why It Is so delicious, wholesome ^B
B snd beneficial. It glrea analyses ^B
BB made by scientists and chemists from J^B
^Bk coast to coast, pror Ing Its purity and mm
wholesomeness. Your name and ad
B^k dress on a postal will bring you ^^B
(bl» interesting booklet. ^^B
BPk. The Coca-Cola Co.. ^^B When
Atlanta .Ga. ercr yoe
Psee an arn>w
think
Coca-Cola
DYSPEPSIA
“Having taken your wonderful ‘Casca
rets’ for three months and being entirely
cured of stomach catarrh and dyspepsia,
I think a word of praise Is due to
‘Cascarets’ for their wonderful composi
tion. 1 have taken numerons other so
called remedies but without avail, and I
find that Cascarets relieve more in a day
than all the others I have taken would ia
a year.” James McGune,
108 Mercer St., Jersey City, N. J.
Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good.
Do Good. Never Sicken. Weaken or Gripe.
10c. 25c, 50c. Never Bold In bulk. The gen
uine tablet stamped C C C. Guaranteed to
cure or your money back. 919
STOCKERS & FEEDERS
Choice quality; reds and roan*,
white faces or angus bought, on
orders. Tens of Thousands to
select from. Satisfaction Guar
anteed. Correspondence Invited.
Come and see for yourself.
National Live Stock Com. Co.
At either
Kansas City. Me.. St. Joseph. Ma« S. Omaha. Nek.
Patriotism.
The stotr.seh is a larger (actor in "life, liberty and the pur
suit of happiness” than most people are aware. Patriotism
can withstand hunger but not dyspepsia. The confirmed dys
peptic "is fit for treason, stratagems and spoils.” The man
who goes to the front for his country with a weak stomach
will be a weak soldier and a fault finder.
A sound stomach makes for good citizensnip as well as foe
health and happiness.
j Diseases of the stomach and other organa of digestion and
nutrition are promptly and permanently cured by the use of
Dr. PIERCE'S GOLDEN MEDICAL DISCOVERY.
It builds up the body with sound flesh end
solid muscle.
) The dealer who offers a substitute tor the "Discovery” is
only seeking to make the little more profit realized on the
sale of less meritorious preparations.
Dr. Pierce’s Common Sense Medical Adviser is sent fret
on receipt of stamps to pay expense of mailing only. Send
21 one-ccnt stamps for the paper covered book, or 31 stamps
. for the cloth bound. Address World’s Dispensary Medical
^^Association, R. V. Pierce, M. D., President, Buffalo, N. Y.
WESTERN CANADA S
1910 CROPS
Wheat Yield in Many Districts Will
Be From 25 to 35 Bushels Per Acre
Laud sales and homestead entries increasing. No cessation in numbers going from United
States. Wonderful opportunities remain for those who Intend making Canada their home.
New districts being opened up for settlement. Many farmers will net, this year, $10 to $16 per
acre from their wheat crop. All the advantages of old settled countries are there. Good
schools, churches, splendid markets, excellent railway facilities. See the grain exhibit at the
different State and some of the County fairs.
Letters similar to the following are received every day, testifying to satisfactory
conditions; other districts are as favorably spoken of;
THBY HUNT FOR THUIR SON. My orother-tn-law, Mr. Frank J. Zimmer, lives there
Malden., Hut. Canada. An*. Mb. 1*15. *^'t"** ‘‘""W" "• daoidad to local* la
“My parents came here from Cedar Falls, Iowa, Lanaaa. yonrs ra y,
four years ago, and were so well pleased with this Mr#- “chard Henry Wringer.
’ud tmV.fe£r TAKBS H“ BROTHBR-IN-LAW* WORD FOR IT.
satis fled to stop here." Leonard Douglas. TayloYs Falls, Minn., Ang. 7, 1916.
“I shall go to Camrose this Fall with my cattle and
WANTS BBTTI.BB'B RAT* FOR HIS STOCK my°b™fbSMn-lat° x'xIlSJ&m” Cam^
8 tattler, Alberta. July 81st, 1910. wants me to come there. He formerly lived Id
“Well I got up here from Forest Olty, Iowa, last Wilton, North Dakota. I am going to bay or take
Spring In good shape with the stock and everything. homestead when I get there, but I do not want to
Now, I have got two boys back In Iowa yot, and I travel two times there, fori take my brotber-ln-law’g
am going back there now soon to get them And an- word about the country, and want to get your low
other car up here this fall. What I would like to rate." Yours truly
know Is, if there is any chance to get a cheap rate Peter A. Nelson,
back ugaln, and when we return to Canada I will
call at your office for our cerliBratoi." WANTS TO KHTCRN TO CANADA.
sours truly, H. A. Wtx. w .„ _ , . . ^
Vesta, Minn., July 24th, 1910
mi * * M.KRim nr»MH in (’ana ha “I w®nt to Canada nine years ago and took up a
WILL MAKB HIS HOMH IN CANADA. quarter section of railroad land and a homestead
Bralnerd, Minn., Ang. 1st, 1910, but my boys have never taken up any land yet, I
"1 am going to Canada a week from Today and still hold the railroad land. I had to come baok to
Intend to make my home there. My husband has the states on account of my health. Please let ma
been there six weeks and Is well pleased with the know at once if I can get the cheap rates to Ponoka,
country; so he wants me to come as soon as pos- Alberta." Yours truly,
slblo. He filed on a claim near Landis, Sask., and Geo. Paskewit*,
by bis description of it It must be a pretty place. Vesta, Minn.
semi for literature and ask the local Canadian Government Agents for Excursion Kates,
best districts in which to locate, and when to go.
E. T. HOLMES, 315 Jackson Street, St. Paul, Minnesota
J. M. MAC LACHLAN, Box 116, Watertown, South Dakota
W. V. BENNETT, 801 New York Life Buildino, Omaha, Nebraska
AXLE GREASE
Keeps the spindle bright and
free from grit. Try a box.
Sold by dealers everywhere.
STANDARD OIL CO.
(Incorporated)