The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, September 15, 1910, Image 3

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Centennial of the
“Lady of the Lake"
From the New York World.
This year, 1910, is the centennial of
Bir Walter Scott's third great poem,
“The Lady of the Lake,” which Is still
widely read. Today all Scotland rises
up and calls its author blessed, for tho
canny Scot calculated that during each
season tourists spend at least $1,000,000
in seeing the srots made historical by
the great master of the English lan
guage.
The bard of Abbotsford didn’t lose by
the poem, either; he wouldn't sell his
rights for a mess of pottage, as did John
Milton with his “Paradise Lost," or
Soldsmith for some of his classics.
Scott got $10,000 for the copyright, and
received more in after life.
None of Scott’s former works was
ever looked for with half the anxiety as
was the case with “The Lady of tho
Lake." Tho cantos, as they were sent
to the press, were read to select circles
by James Ballantyne, and popular opin
ion greatly favored them. Everywhere
jt was anticipated that a great poem
would appear, and when it was pub
lished it excited an extraordinary sen
sation. The first edition of 2,050 was
soon sold out, and then followed in
quick succession four editions, so that
in a few months 20,000 copies were
sold. All the criticisms of the poem
were in its favor.
In his Introduction to the 1830 edi
tion Scott tells how the poem came to
be written. The Highlanders, with
their ancient manners, habits and cus
toms, seemed to him to be particular
ly adapted to poetry. He was also fa
miliar with the country, where he was
in the habit of spending tho autumn,
while the custom of James IV—and
more especially James V—of walking
in disguise through Scotland af
forded him a hint of which he made
the most.
Scott took great pains to verify the
accuracy of the local circumstances of
the poem, one day going into Perth
shire to ascertain if King James could
actually have ridden from Loch Ven
nachar to Stirling castle within the
time supposed in the poem, and found
that it was quite practicable. And,
notwithstanding the great success of
the poem, Scott never grew conceited
over it.
“Never was he a partisan of his own
poetry,” Ballantyne relates, reciting an
anecdote. Being one day in Scott’s
library shortly after the poem was
published, he asked Miss Sophia Scott
now she liked It. She replied with per
fect simplicity; “Oh, I have not read
it I Papa says there’s nothing so bad
for young people as reading bad
poetry.”
Seven Million Dollar Joy Ride.
From the Philadelphia Publlo Ledger.
Seven million dollars on a Joy ride
through the streets of Washington Is
a sight to be seen every week day at
the national capital.
And this money stands less chance
of getting hurt through the careless
ness of the driver of the wagon It rides
In or from outside forces than any Joy
rider, animate or Inanimate, In the
country.
For the treasury has a new money
wagon, a brand new vehicle, made of
hard wood, Iron and steel, with heavy
locks and bars, to bring money from
the bureau of engraving and printing
where It Is made, to the vaults of the
treasury, where It Is stored for safe
keeping.
And not only Is the new wagon near
ly bomb proof In Itself, but Just to
make sure that some foolish person
with visions of a Jesse James holdup
scheme, will never succeed In accom
plishing anything of the sort, eight
heavily armed guards ride to and fro
with the J70.000.000.
All this extra precaution Is due to
the change In the system of making
money. Until recently the money was
printed at the bureau of engraving and
printing, but sent to the treasury minus
the seal and the number, so that It
was not real money until handled In
the treasury.
What Worried Him.
From the Boston Globe.
A peculiar instance of connubial af
fection occurred some time ago In Ver
mont. An aged couple, who through
half a century of married life had
wrangled with each other, were In all
probability soon to be separated. The
husband was taken 111 and w-as be
lieved to be near his end. The old
wife came to his bedside and after
carefully examining and taking stock
of his condition exclaimed: "W’y dad
dy, your feet are cold, your hands
are cold and your nose is cold.”
"Wa'al let ’em be cold.”
"W’y, daddy, you're goin’ to die.”
"Wa’al, I guess I know what I’m
■bout."
"Daddy, w'a’t’s to becum of me If
you die 7”
"I dunno, and I don’t care. W’at I
want to know Is, w’at's to becum of
me?”
Found a Way.
From the Argonaut.
"Pedro, I owe about three thousand
francs,” said a Parisian grocer to his
shopman.
"Yes, sir.”
"I have two thousand francs In the
j&te, but the shop is empty; I think It
|s the right moment to fall.”
“That is Just what I think.”
"But I want a plausible pretext for
my creditors. You have plenty of
brains; think the matter over tonight
pnd tomorrow morning.”
The clerk promised to think It care
fully over. On entering the shop next
morning the grocer found the safe
Dpen, the money gone, and In place a
note which ran as follows: “I have
taken the two thousand francs, and am
off to America. It Is the best excuse
you can give to your creditors.”
High Value of Lands in France.
From Dally Consular and Trade Reports.
Intensively cultivated alluvial lands
In southern France are worth $660 to
JS00 an acre, especially In the Valley
of Easse-Durance, where fruit and
vegetable growing Is carried on. This
Is the statement of an agricultural
authority quoted by Consul General A.
Gaulln. of Marseilles. On the hillsides
of Roquevalre, where many apricot
trees are planted among other vege
tation, the value of the land does not
exceed $80 to $240 an acre. This range
of $80 to $800 represents the limit of
variation In the value of lands on which
fruit Is cultivated. Another authority
says that vineyards In southern France
are worth $240 to $400 and flower and
vegetable lands $400 to $800 an acre.
A Successful Quest.
From Harper's Weekly.
“Well, Bill, how did you come out
with the trust company?"
"Fine.”
“They accepted your ofTer, did they?"
“Yep.”
“What kind of a Job did they give
you?”
“Didn’t give me any.”
“Then how did they accept your
proposition?"
' "I offered them the refusal of my
services, and they accepted It—refused
’em right of£ the handle ”
WESTERNERS KNOW HOW.
That Is Why Farm* Are Worth Five
Times as Much as Thoso in East.
From New York Times.
If the Times really wants to know
why It is that western land—in Iowa or
Illinois—sells for $100 to $200 an acre,
while plenty of farms can be bought in
New York for $10 to $20 an acre, let It
pay attention. The secret is about to
be released. And let me say at the
outset that with considerable famil
iarity with both west and east I’d much
prefer to buy eastern to western lands.
One point in favor of the western
farm is that, whereas, a western farm,
properly handled, will raise crops which
pay a good interest on the investment
without fertilizer, a great many acres
of land in the $10 and $20 belt are
merely something to put productive soil
on top of. The French method of car
rying the land away when one moves
wouldn’t go bad in connection with
peveral cheap New York farms.
Another thing, one can take an 80
acre farm in the middle west and plow
every foot of it, while there are very
few cheap farms in this section which
can be cut up into fields large enough
to pay for using large machinery. The
result is that the eastern farmer, if he
Is to make use of the cheap lands, must
’putter.” Now the right sort of put
tering is profitable—fruit, berry and
truck raising will make moderately
i rge fortunes for diligent nnd capable
men—but most men don’t like that sort
of business. The middle westerner is
a whole lot happier with a four-horse
gang plow and a harrow that wouldn't
go between stumps in tho east than ho
would be on a $10-an-acre New York
farm. And he doesn’t strike as many
stones in tho course of a season as the
New York farmer will in a day. Tho
American farmer hasn’t lost his sense
of "bigness” of the country yet, und
until he does lose it he will prefer to
work the large farm rather thap the
small one, even if he gets no moro for
his labor.
Furthermore—and this is not to be
ignored—around that high priced land
in the west will be found a more intel
ligent, better educated body of men,
taking them ‘‘by and large,” than in a
given number of eastern farmers, be
cause the factories and the other city
Joys seem to lure a much larger pro
portion of the ambitious youth of the
east. Tho city is so close to the farm
that the transition is but a step. Of
pourse there are many of the most in
telligent farmers of the country here,
but the farmer with a desire for intel
lectual associations—and some have it
—will find loss of this opportuinty in
the $10 and $20 localities than In the
west. Intelligent farmers, like men in
| other professions, like intelligent com
panionship.
WHY FISHES CHANGE COLOR.
Director Townsend Gives Result of
Some Curious Observations.
From "Chameleons of the Sea,” by Chas.
Haskins Townsend In the Century.
The colors shown on many well
known colored plates of West Indian
fishes published In standard works on
Ichthyology are, we And. not those
of normal conditions; but rather those
of dying, dead, and rapidly fading
fishes. Experiments In the New York
aquarium have shown that such col
ors are merely the vestiges of the
last convulsive color excitements ol
the specimens used. This Is the ex
planation of the rapid changes foi
which the dying dolphin Is celebrat
ed. Even If painted from newly
caught wild fishes, held in a portable
; aquarium, as some of them were, they
i show hiding or alarm colors only
and In every case represent merely one
of several possiblo phases of colora
tion.
In fact, It has been possible to shoxe
by experiments with living fishes lr
the aquarium Just which paintings ant
photographs reproduced in standart
works were made from dead specimen!
and which were not
It Is well known that Northern set
fishes habitually frequenting green 01
yellow seaweed acquire to somo ex
tent the general color tone of theli
habitat, and that trout from darl
water are dark colored, while thosi
Inhabiting waters where there li
Sandy or gravelly bottom are llghl
] colored. Such conditions have long
been appreciated at the aquarium
./here fishes kept In tanks lined with
white tiles habitually wear theli
lighter colors, only an occasiona
Wind fish remaining unchanged. Th<
pale, colorless fishes of the Mam
moth cave gradually become darkei
when exposed to light In the aquarl
am. These fishes, although wltl
Byes that are virtually useless, are stll
ible to distinguish light from dark
ness.
The Books Boys Read.
In an attempt to solve the question ol
what kind of books boys like best, a re
luest was sent to the library assistants
in charge of children's rooms in New
Fork city, asking them to make a Us!
pf the 25 books of Action most populai
among boys of 12 to 15 years old. Th<
Vsts were made after careful consid
eration and without consultation and
represent very fairly the preference ol
fhe boys. The following are the 21
books: "Tom Sawyer,” by Marl
Twain; "Huckleberry Finn,” by Marl
Twain; “Cadet Days,” by Genera
Charles King; “The Adventures of Buf
falo Bill," by Colonel W. F. Cody
| "Robinson Crusoe,” by Daniel Defoe
| “The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes,’
by A. Conan Doyle; “Treasure Island,’
by Stevenson; “Crimson Sweater,” bj
Barbour; "Behind the Dines," by Bar
i hour; "Jack Among the Indians." bj
! Grinnell; "Halfback,” by Barbour
i "Fast Mail,” by Drysdale; "Substi
tute,” by Camp; "Pete, Cow Puncher,’
by Ames; “Ivanhoe,” by Scott; "Cap
tains Courageous,” by Kipling; "Red
skin and Cowboy,” by Henty; "Storj
of a Bad Boy,” by Aldrich; "Rohir
Hood," by Pyle; “Yale Cup,” by Dud
ley; "Oliver Twist,” by Dickens: "Mon
te Cristo,” by Dumas; "Twenty Thou
sand Deagues Under the Sea," bj
Verne; “The Spy,” by Cooper; "Kid
naped,” by Stevenson.
California’s Unexplored Caves.
From the Pathfinder.
In the vicinity of Tulu lake, Cal.
about 40 extinct volcanoes have beer
found, many already being covered
with thick vegetation, and beneath tin
beds of lava given off by them in th<
past numerous interesting caverns hav<
recently been discovered and explored
One Is said to be 200 feet long, 50 feel
wide and 40 feet high. Another has beer
reported discovered which is miles long
it has been named the Mammoth cav<
of California. One recently explored k
said to contain two stories, the temper
ature in the under one being so low
that Icicles two yards long depended
from the celling. Darge caves have va
rious origins. Many have once beer
solid ground, covered with heavy claj
and limestone rock; the lower ground
is washed away by underground wa
ters, a roof and floor being left. Oth
er caves are the result of air or othei
gases getting Into the molten lava
expanding with the heat and blowing
themselves into lava bubbles, leaving
hollows and caverns when the lava
has cooled and hardened, Just as aii
bubble* may be seen to do In moltea
j tar.
ARE YOUR KIDNEY8 WELLT |
The kidney secretions tell if disease
■ lurking in the system. Too fre
I luent or scanty urination, discolored
| arlne, lack of control at night, indi
cate that the kidneys
are disordered.
Doan's Kidney Pills
cure sick kidneys.
J. F. Haynle, 7th
Rt., Forest Grove,
Ore., says: "Doan’s
Kidney Pills saved
my life. I was in bed
for weeks, passed
in terrible condition.
Doan’s Kidney Pills removed my trou
jle and I have not had an attack for
over a year.
Remember the name—Doan's.
For sale by all dealers. 60 cents a
box. Foster-Milburn Co.. Buffalo, N. Y.
BUSY THEN.
in
Vermont Thrift.
Robert Lincoln O’Brien, editor of the
Boston Transcript, Is a great admirer
of the thrift of the Vermonters, but
thinks sometimes they carry it too
far.
O'Brien was up In Vermont last sum
mer and went to dinner with a friend
who had some political aspirations. As
they came In the door he heard the
lady of tho house say to the hired
girl: "1 see Mr. Jones has somebody
with him for dinner. Take theso two
big potatoes down to the cellar and
bring up three small ones.”
A Purist.
"The Chanticleer cocktail Is the new
est drink.”
“Such redundancy! Call It a Chan
tlcleertall.”
Good for Sore Eyes,
for 100 years PETTIT'S EYE SALVE has
positively cured eye diseases everywhere.
Ail druggists or Howard Bros., Buffalo, N.Y.
The only certainty Is principle; as
new as today, and as old as the uni
verse.—Horatio Stebbens.
Mrs. Wlnstow-s Bootlitnsr Syrup.
Forchlldrcn topi-hinw. softens tho kuiun, reduces 1
tiawuutiiou.allay a pain, cures wind colic. ‘H>o a botlitv
There Is a duty of pleasure as well
as a pleasure of duty.—SllaB K. Hock
Ing.
4? "
■■ M ws mb Send postal for
§■ n S* 8" Free I’tu kage
I || Li k of Paxtlne.
Better and more economical
than liquid antiseptics
FOB ALL TOILET VISES.
-,- -
4
tenaBMHaiiB
Gives one a sweet breath; clean, white*
germ-free teeth—antiseptically clean
mouth and throat—purifies tho breath
after smoking—dispels all disagreeable
perspiration and body odors—much ap
preciated by dainty women. A quick
remedy for tore eyes and catarrh.
9 A little Psxdne powder dis
solved in a glass of hot water
makes a delightful antiseptic so
cleansing, germiadal andThesJ
ing power, and absolutely harm
less. Try a Sample. 50c. a
huge box at druggiAs or by mail.
THE PAXTON ToiletOo., Boston, Mass.
V l^j
Makes the skin soft as velvet. Improves att#
complexion. Best shampoo made. Cures mud
skin eruptions.
Mnnjoil’s Hair Invigorator cures 4andru(&
stops hair from falling out, makes hair grom
If you have Dyspepsia, or any liver trouble
use Munyon’s Paw-Paw Pills. They cure Ritt
lousness, Constipation and drive all impurities
from the blood. — MUNYON’S H0ME0PATH1Q
HOME REMEDY CO.. Philadelphia. Pa.
W. L. DOUCLAS1
HVrocE88ED SHOES i
KEN’S *2.00, *2.50, *3.00, *3.50, *4.00, *6.0#
WOMENS *2.60, *8, *3.50, *4
BOYS’ *2.00, *2.50 So *3.00
THE STANDARD
FOR 30 YEARS
They ore absolutely the
most popularand beat shoes
for the price In America. 5!
They are the leadera every
where because they hold jj
their shape, fit better,
look better and wear Ion- I
fer than other makes. r
hey are positively the I_ _ i
most economical shoes for you to buy. W. L.)
Douglas name and the retail price are Btampe41
on the bottom — value guaranteed.
TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE 1 If your Scalar
cannot supply you write lor Mail Order Catalog.*
W. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton. Ko. fv
Salts and Castor
ajl—bad stuff—never cur^,
ll only makes bowels move be*
cause it irritates and sweats themj
like poking finger in your eye. The bea 4
Bowel Medicine is Cascaretd
Every Salts and Castor Oil user should
get a box of CASCARETS and tr»
them juat once. You’ll see. 4
Cneoarete—10c boa—week's treatment / j
All druggists. Blggnst seller Is the »
world—million boxes a month. i
STOCKERS & FEEDER^ ;
Choice quality; reds and roans,
white faces or augus bought on g
orders. Tens of ThouHands to
select from. Satisfaction Guar
anteed. Correspondence Invited. I
Come and see for yourself ;
National Live Stock Com. Co
At either
Kansas City. Mo. St. Joseph, Mo. S. Omaha, ,1
DEFIANCE STARCH
SIOUX CITY PTG. CO., NO. 38-191 eg
WESTERN CANADA S
nl910 crops:
Wheat Yield in Many Districts Will
Be From 25 to 35 Bushels Per Acret
Land sales and homestead entries Increasing. No cessation in numbers going from United 1
Stales. Wonderful opportunities remain for those who intend making Canada their homajl ;
New districts being opened up for settlement. Many farmers will net, this year, $10 to *16 pej j
acre from their wheat crop. All the advantages of old settled countries are there. Good
schools, churches, splendid markets, exoellent railway faculties. See the grain exhibit at th^J
different State and some of the County fairs. , j
Letters similar to the following nre received every day, testifying to satiafactor#,
conditions; other districts are as favorably spoken of: J
TOBY 8BNT FOR THBIR BON. Myorother-ln-law, Mr. Frank J. Zimmer, lives therd
Maidstone, Saaky Canada, Aug. 6th, 1910. Lhrough we decided to looatw (q 1 J
"My parents came here from Cedar ballariowa, M RiebardUenry Eblnger, fl %
four yeare ago, and wore so well pleased with this j
Skcnu'p^X.mSlie^near^'“sSd aTperteril? TAKBS HI8 BROTUBR-IN-LAW'B WORD TORm
aatlsflea to stop bare.” Leonard Douglas. thU clais anl
nriMmq rhttt HR’S RATH FOR TT1S STOCK household goods. 1 got a poor crop here this year
WANTS SH'TrLHU’S HAT H 1TOR UIS BlVUR. and my brother-in-law, Axel Nordstrom In 0amros«|
Btettler, Alberta. July 81st, 1910. wants mo to como there. He formerly Uvod lq
"Well I got np herefrom fcorestdty, Iowa, last Wilton, North Dakota. 1 nm going to buy or taka
Springln good shape with the stock and everything. homestead when I get there, but Ido not want t#.
Now, I have got two boys back In Iowa yet, and I travel two times there, fori take my brother-ln-lawk) i
ain going baok there now soon to get them and an- word about the country, and want to get your Loqr 5
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, w
buck again, and when wo return to Oanoda I will ‘f
call at your office for our certificates.1 WANTS TO RBTURN TO OANADA. \
Your, truly, H. A. Wlk. Vo8,^ JnlT mht urf
____ T,,Q ruMini "I went to Canada nine years ago and took up 4/
WILL MAKH IIIS HOME IN CANADA. quarter section of railroad land and a hotueate*<L
Bralnerd, Minn., Aug. 1st, 1910. but my boys have never taken up any land yet. I
"I am going to Canada a weok from today und still hold the railroad land. 1 had to como back Urn
Intend to make my homo there. My husband has the states on account of my health. Please let m#
been there six weeks and Is well pleased with the know at once If I can got the cheap rates to Ponokfly
country; so he wants me to come as soon as pos- Alberta.” Yours truly. A
Bible. He filed on a claim near Landis, Saak., and Geo. Pas kewits, U f
by his description of It It mnst be a pretty place. Vesta, Mina, w
Send for literature and ask the local Canadian Oorernment Agents for Excursion Iiate%|
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 Building, Omaha, Nebraska
,
The Rayo Lamp is a high grade lamp, sold at a low price.
There are lamps that cost more, but there Is no better lamp made at any
» price. Constructed of solid brass; nickel plated—easily kept clean: ak
ornament to any room In any house. There Is nothing known to the ari
j of lamp-making that, can add to the value of the RAYO Lamp as a light*
giving device. Every dealer everywhere. If not at yours, write fa#
descriptive circular to the nearest agency of the
“_STANDARD OIL COMPANY (Incorporated!__ ji
, A Poor Roof Is a Needless Expense
I You don't need to spend money for painting or patching
> your roof, or to have it regraveled; neither will you have to
A replace it after a heavy wind storm, if you use
Gal-va-nite Roofing
Gal-va-nite is coa'ed on both sides with flaked Mica,
' a mineral that never wears out. This coating protects the
heavy wool felt base and its three coats of mineral asphalt
Gravel or crushed stone in a roofing allows the weather to j
dry the oils out and it soon rots. Mica retains these oils 1 j
and defies the weather i
A one-piece roof is the result if you use Gal-va-nite.
it cements and welds together.
f Let us send you samples and full information. s
UNiON ROOFING & MANUFACTURING CO. |
200 Union Rond St. Paul, Minnesota
I AXLE GRlASl
Keeps the spindle bright and
free from grit. Try a boi.
Sold by dealers everywhere.
STANDARD OIL CO*
1 (Incorporated)
“FADELESS DYES
in any ether dye. One tOe package colors all fibers. They dye In cold water batter then any other dye.
tie (or frog booklet-Hew to Dye, Sleeeh end Mis Colora. MONROE DRUG 00., Qulnoy, Illinois,
YOURS
■» ^
1 Your» for uni- 1
I formity. I
I Your» for great- a
I est leavening 1
power. 1
I Youra for never |
I failing results. I
1 Youra for purity, *
I Youra for economy, a
I Youra for every- 1
I thing that goes to 1
f make up a strictly 1
I high grade, ever- 1
I dependable baking 1
I powder. 1
I That is Calumet. Try 1
f it once and note the im- 1
I provement in your bak- 1
I ing. See how much more 1
I economical over the high- ■
I priced trnst brands, how 1
I much better than the cheap l
I and big-can kinds. 1
I Calumet is highest in quality I
I —moderate in cost.
1 Received Highest Award— I
I World’s Pure Food |
Exposition.
We reduce life to the pettiness of
our dally living; we should exact our
living to the grandeur of life.—Phillips
Brooks.
DR. MARTEL’S FEMALE PILLS.
Seventeen Years 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.
The Enemies.
Apropos of the enmity, now happily
burled, that used to exist between
Minneapolis and St. Paul, Senator
Clapp said at a dinner In the former
city:
“I remember an address on careless
building that I once heard In Minne
apolis.
“ ‘Why,’ said the speaker In the
course of this address, ‘one inhabitant
of St. Paul is killed by accident in the
Streets every 48 hours.’
"A bitter voice from the rear of
the hall interrupted:
“ ‘Well, It ain’t enough,’ It said.”
Shrewd Scheme Stopped Run.
Manyi years ago, in consequence of
a commercial panic, there was a severe
run on a bank in South Wales, and
the small farmers jostled each other
In crowds to draw out their money.
Things were rapidly going from bad
to worse, when the bank manager, In
a fit of desperation, suddenly be
thought him of an expedient. By his
directions a clerk, having heated some
sovereigns in a frying-pan, paid them
over the counter to an anxious appli
cant “Why, they’re quite hot!” said
the latter as he took them up. “Of
course,” was the reply; “what else
could you expect? They are only Just
out of the mold. We are coining them
by hundreds as fast as we can.”
“Coining them!” thought the simple
agriculturists; “then there Is no fear
of the money running short!” With
this their confidence revived, the pan
to abated, and the bank was enabled
to weather the storm.
/-^
Brings
Cheer
to the breakfast table—
Post
Toasties
with cream.
Crisp, golden-brown ;
“crinkly” bits, made
from white corn,
A most appetizing, con- :
venient, pleasurable
j breakfast,
“The Memory Lingers” j
yPostum Cereal Co., Ltd.
Battle Creek, Mick. ,
^ -S I
The Private Citizen—A general has
an easy time after the war is over.
The General—Not for very long,
though. You soon have applications
tor your autograph and invitations to
banquets.
TINY BABY’S PITIFUL CASE
"Our baby when two months old
was suffering with terrible eczema
from head to foot, all over her body.
The baby looked Just like a skinned
rabbit We were unable to put clothes
on her. At first it seemed to be a few
mattered pimples. They would break
the skin and peel off leaving the un
derneath skin red as though it were
scalds. Then a few more pimples
would appear and spread all over the
body, leaving the baby all raw without
skin from head to foot. On top of her
head there appeared a heavy scab a
quarter of an inch thick. It was aw
ful to see so small a baby look as she
did. Imagine! The doctor was afraid
to put his hands to the child. We
tried several doctors’remedies but all
failed.
"Then we decided to try Cuticura.
] By using the Cuticura Ointment we
! softened the scab and it came off. Un
der this, where the real matter was,
by washing with the Cuticura Soap
and applying the Cuticura Ointment,
a new skin soon appeared. We also
gave baby four drops of the Cuticura
Resolvent three times daily. After
three days you could see the baby
gaining a little skin which would peel
off and heal underneath. Now the
baby is four months old. She Is e. fine
picture of a fat little baby and all
is well. We only used one cake of Cuti
cura Soap, two boxes of Cuticura Oint
ment and one bottle of Cuticura Re
solvent. If people would know what
Cuticura is there would be few suffer
ing with eczema. Mrs. Joseph Koss
mann, 7 St. John’s Place, Ridgewood
Heights. N. Y„ Apr. 30 and May 4, ’OA,”
Outlining Treatment.
“I want you to take care of my
practise while I’m away.”
"But, doctor, I have Just graduated.
Have had little experience.”
"You don’t need it with my fashion
able patients. Find out what they
have been eating and stop it. Find
out where they have been summering
and send ’em somewhere else.”
Important to Mothers
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.
’Tls much to wound a foe; ’tls more
to save him and to win a friend.—Eric
Mackay.
RY MURINE EYE REMED V
For Red, Weak, Weary, Watery Eye, and V
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Druggists Sell Marias Eye Remedy, Liquid, 25c, 50c, $1.0(
i Murine Eye Solve, In Aseptic Tubes, 25c, $1.0G
EYE BOOKS AND ADVICE FREE BY MAIL
Murine Eye Remedy Co.,Chicago
Make the Liver
Do its Duty
| Nine time, m ten when the liver i, right the
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CARTER’S LITTLE
LIVER PILLS
gently but firmly com^
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I Cure, Con
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