The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, May 25, 1911, Image 3

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    . ThatTired Feeling
|L jp M’that is caused by impure, impoverished
L jB blood or low. run-down condition of the
wSfi . system, is burdensome and discouraging.
|f Do not put up with it, but take Hood's
Earsaparills, which removes it as nothing
else does.
"I had that tired feeling, bad no ap
petite and no ambition to do anything. A
friend advised me to take Hood’s Sarsa
parilla. I did so, and soon that tired
feeling was gone, I had a good appetite
and felt well. I believe Hood’s saved me
from a long illness.” Mrs. B. Johnson,
Westfield, N. J.
Get Hood's Sarsaparilla today. In liquid
form or In tablets called Sarsatabs.
Make the Liver
Do its Duty
Nine times in ten when the liver is
right the stomach and bowels are right.
CARTER’S LITTLE
LIVER PILLS
gentlybutfirmly com^
pel a lazy liver to^
do its duty.
Cures Con
stipation, In
digestion,
Headache,4
end Distress After Eating.
SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE
Genuine must bear Signature
Thompson’s Eyo Wator
The man who has been married
fifty years Is willing to let his wife
do the boasting about It.
ASK FOR ALLEN'S FOOT-EASE
the Antiseptic powder to shake Into your shoes. Re
lieves Corns, Bunlops, Ingrowing Nalls, Swollen and
Sweating feet. Blisters and Callons spots. Sold
everywhere, 26e. Don't accept any tubal itute. Sam
Sle FREE. Address Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N.X
_
Wanted an Officer.
The sheriff was snoozing away in
his seat In the coach, when he heard
■ some one call out: “Is there an officer
In the coach from New Castle?”
“Yes,” replied the sheriff very em
phatically.
“Loan me your corkscrew, please,
sir,” calmly continued the drummer.
f' Who She Was.
“Well,” laughed Squiggles, “some
tnen never know when they are
snubbed! That lady you just spoke
to was about as distant as they make
'em in her greeting.” ,
"Well, why shouldn’t she be?” re
i torted Jabbers. “She’s a distant rela
jr tive of mine.”
“By marriage?”
“No—by divorce. She got rid of me
*t Sioux Falls back in 1898.”—Har
per’s Weekly.
NATURAL EVIDENCE.
Adelaide—Why, Cornelia, your hair
k la all mussed up.
\ • Cornelia—Yes, dear; you—you see,
« George stole up and snatched a dozen
'kisses before I could scream.
Adelaide—But why don’t you step
In front of the mirror and rearrange
your hair?
Cornelia—Gracious! Why, I wouldn’t
do it for the world. Why, none of the
girls would believe he kissed me.
One Cook
May make a cake “fit for
i the Queen,” while another
only succeeds in making a
“pretty good cake” from the
I same materials.
It’s a matter of skill I
People appreciate, who
have once tasted.
Post
Toasties
A delicious food made of \
White Com—flaked and
toasted to a delicate, crisp
brown—to the “Queen’s
taste.”
Post Toasties are served
direct from the package with
cream or milk, and sugar if
desired—
A breakfast favorite!
^ “The Memory Lingers”
Postu m Cereal Company, Ltd.
W Battle Creek, Mich.
) ^^
I
Anthem.
Blends sacrificial red, white, honor's hue,
Today, the stripes and bars.
And somber Is the field of loyal blue,
Purpled with battle scars,
And darkened draped in amber memories
true
Of deeds no shadow mars;
Through all, undimmed, effulgence ever
new,
Shine glorious destined stars'.
Her flag great freedom bears in noblest
Of mingled joy and grief.
While loveliest blooms the Ivy, oltve,
palm,
Fresh gathered May day sheaf.
With blessings deep she strews and chants
her psalm
Of gratitude’s belief
O'er myriad graves mid tenderest green’s
embalm
To virtues this, the chief!
The muffled drums, low plaint of cy
presses,
And nation's proud acclaim.
Tell, in celestial blending syntheses,
The history of fame;
The theme of love's sublimest harmonies,
Undying, yet the same,
Heirs to that than which none greater is
Of patriotic flame!
—Selected.
: In Two Chapters i;
1 A Decoration By———-- ' >
; Day Story. NANDA L. CROCKER J >
In the next room lay the roses and
lilies with the sweet-scented heliotrope
he loved so well; then there were the
daisies, the pansies and sweet alyssunt,
as finishing flowers.
Over there on the wall, where the'
streaming sunset light burnished the
hilt, hung his sword, with which he cut
his way through in that deadly charge
at the awful battle of Shiloh.
Yes, there It was, where Abner was
wounded, and he. so handsome and
strong when he marched blithely away
to the sound of the merry martial music,
came home a cripple.
But she would always remember how
proudly he looked up to the stars and
stripes and touched the shining shoul
der straps when, with sorrowful ex
clamation, she took hold of his empty
sleeve. And somehow she caught the
patriotic fire, and was prouder of her
one-armed soldier husband than she
had ever been of the able-bodied Ab
ner. He had lived to celebrate several
Decoration days, and how much he
xiade of them.
Since he had gone to rest in an
honored grave she had always tried
to do the same for his sake. Today she
had a double incentive for being pa
triotic.
Mrs. Neville counted her life as in
two chapters, and felt that the whole
story pulsed to the sound of life and
drum.
We have touched on the first chap
ter, which reached its blaze of triumph
April 7, 1862.
But after the setting light had beau
tified the sword of slxty-two. It fell in
golden halo on a boyish, yet manly,
face beyond.
And the blending folds of the Ameri
can and Cuban colors Just above the
picture marked the second chapter
which today was in the hands of time
tnd circumstances, and was coming
out in story form as fast as they could
"set it up."
She was thinking of this so deeply
that she had entirely forgotten the girl
at her side.
The silver hair and care-lined brew
of the one, and the sweet, dimpled face
of the other told that a life-time lay
between them, notwithstanding tbeir
nearness to each other .
They could hear the training on the
green, altheugh neither cared to hear
Just then. Their eyes met. "Tomor
row is his birthday, too, and he has
never been away from home on his
birthday before.”
"But we can think of him, Letty, and
of course, he will remember us, of all
lays, tomorrow.”
"War is something dreadful, Isn’t It,
grandma?" the girl whispered across
;he grand-maternal knee, in a fright
ened way.
"Dreadful things come eut of war,
•tnd grand things, too, Letty. It brings
out the bravery and nobility of man
kind, and unfolds the love of country,
but the greatest heartbreaks of earth
are the heartbreaks of strike. Have you
oeen to the office this evening, child?”
“Yes, but there was nothing.”
"Well, we will hear tomorrow, may
be. You must be ready early, Letty, to
carry the flowers. I cannot do it this
year, of all years. I am net brave
enough; the martial music will hurt
ne so, child; It always does on Decora
tion day. But I am loyal to the dear old
lag, and true to your grandfather’s
memory, and to your brother’s loyalty.
I would not have you think I am dis
loyal, Letty.”
"I understand, grandma.” And the
girl went softly out on the porch to
cry by herself, with no one to see but
the sleepy wrens clinging to the old
trumpet creeper along the eaves.
”1 don’t see,” she began, "I don’t see
what Ted wanted to go away from
grandma for. She has kept us and
loved us ever since mamma died years
igo. And what If he should not get
well? There’ll be Just us two in Vine
••ottage, O, dear!”
But inside the door sat grandma,
knowing why. Of course, Letty was a
child; she didn't know. Over 3d years
igo Abner had marched away in the
prime of his life and manhood’s
ltrerxgth, and she was left with the chil
dren at the knee, to be loyal "by the
stuff,” and she knew why; and she
knew how, too.
The clear, martial music sounded on
the church square, and the people were
gathering fro mevery direction. A per
fect sea of flags surging in from a giv
en point announced the coming of the
schools, and the different "orders.”
The -lovely wreath had been made,
watered with her tears and sanctified
by a prayer for her grandson In south
ern camp.
And Letty had gone with it.
trying hard all the while to be pa
triotic enough to keep back her teurs.
Grandma Neville stood looking proud- !
ly, yet wistfully, the way she went.
And the boy? Yes. Theodore had !
marched away down the square street
to the same national air that Abner,
his grandfather, did. Would "history
repeat itself?” Would Ted come home
with honors, even though It cost a sac
rifice?
A great fear choked her. She put out
her thin hands deprecatingly to some
unseen presence, and went out into the i
sweet May weather. She went and I
stood where she might see the crowds 1
go by. A white dove from the cote •
came and perched on her shoulder,
while a songster In the old trumpet vine 1
taroled forth a melody triumphant !
and pure as “heaven.
"That means peace and victory!” she ;
exclaimed, with joyful reverence; "the 1
good Lord will keep Theodore.’ ’
There they come, the battle-scarred j
veterans. There were not so many of j
the Shields post as on last Decoration I
day and their steps weren't quite so j
steady as a year ago, but they had not ;
Torgotten to keep step, had they?
Next came the provisional guards,
Ted's schoolfellows; and Ted was tl
today.
Abner was 31 when he "cut his way
through” and won hi* honors and his
sword.
But the rest were getting Into line
now. The stars and stripes floated tri
umphantly ahead and the same merry
martial music rang clear on the notes
of "Yankee Doodle” as they came.
There were the merry lassies In white,
carrying armfuls of flowers and keep
ing time with springing steps to fife
and rum. In between the guards and
their sweethearts came the juvenile
band: boys in knee pants with curls of
childhood still on their brows.
They were preparing for harder
marches than this one, maybe; and
their music seemed the sweetest of all,
while the folds of the old flag floated
over them.
She turned and went in the hsuse,
trying to hum “My Country ’Tls of
Thee," but gave it up at the end of the
second bat. Abner would have sung it
vigorously, but some way she wasn't
quite like Abner—the mother-heart
was in the way.
The sunshine flooded the dining
room. It must be nearly noon now, and
Letty would be tired and hungry.
There are many hard battles fought
and won without bayonet or bloodshed,
and "though women must weep" they
come oft victorious in scores of hard
fought battles when the world notes
nothing.
And the carol of the songster and tho
caress of the dove’s white wing were
a talisman.
Letty, coming in a half hour later,
dusty and weary, was cheered to so*
Grandma Neville smiling.
“Oh, you’ve had news from Ted; good
pew??”
Tl’he question same in glad anticlpa^
tlon.
“No, child, I've had no news; but I
had an omen, and it means g*od tid
ings.” Letty listened to the lnoident of
of the birds and the song with ques
tioning heart.
Did such things mean anything, and
did grandma know?
She hoped there was no mistake in
any of it.
"You put the flowers on yo«r grand
father’s grave and watered them well,
Letty?”
"Yes; and Mrs. Jensen said that In
ratio as the flewers were fragrant the
memories were sweet and patriotism
true. I wonder how Mrs. Jensen knows,
grandma? She ha* no soldier dead.”
Grandma answered evasively, and
Letty whs left in doubt still.
“Letty,” said grandma, presently, "I
shall lay the table for four today. Ab
ner's plate opposite mine, as in years
agone, and Ted’s and yours on either
hand, as hitherto. It will be one of the i
memories Mrs. Jensen spoke of.”
At evening Vine cottage at the end
of the white street received a letter
from Tampa. “Going on to Cuba to in
terview the Spaniards,’ ’he wrote.
"Farther and farther away,” grand
ma said, and her lips quivered a little
as she laid down her glasses. But she
went over to the table, and, gathering
up the flowers left over .made a pretty,
fragrant wreath and pinned it to the
American and Cuban colors, just above
the bright, boyish face on the wall.
"It is because I am proud of him,” she
said.
A month and two days went by,
circling over the white street in Somer
set with all the conflicting news of the
Spanish-Amerlcan war.
Then came the battle of San Juan.
The wires flashed the news into Som
erset the morning after the fight.
Theodore’s regiment was in that en
gagement. Grandma Neville went out
on the long, low porch and sat where
the trumpet vine shadowed her silvered
head from the July heat, but she did
not cry, as Letty did. Serenely quiet
she sat looking down the white street,
down which Theodore had marched in
April.
“That song In the vines meant a pro- j
motion for the boy, and maybe this
battle is the time for winning it; who
knows?” And the dear old lady bridled
her silvered head proudly.
Later came advices through the
press; the newsboys cried it all down
the white street that Theodore Neville
had been promoted to the rank of a
lieutenant for his daring and bravery;
“and he didn't get a scratch,” shouted
the newsboys, triumphantly.
And Letty went out among the doves
and wondered which one made itself
so famous on Decoration day.
Meaning of Decoration Day.
Of all your yearly feasts, Decoration
day is perhaps the most distinctly na
tional. The adorning of the soldiers'
graves is but the outward manifesta
tion of a feeling which la all the strong
er In that our national history is so
brief a one. The men wha fell at
Chlckamauga or Bull Run need not
share their honors with the well nigh
mythical heroes of a thousand years
ago. They, themselves, have written,
the sages of our own race, in their life
blood, and they will be passed on to
generations yet unborn. Monuments
have been raised in their honor, but
the story of their deeds, as told from
son to sire, will outlast the crumbling
stones. Little did these heroes dream
of all this, as they marched out to do
and die. They had no vision of honors
to be heaped upon them by a grateful
people. With the simplicity Inherited
from their pioneer fathers, they
marched out to meet the foe, all un
conscious of the heroism which Is the
dearest heritage of their descendant*.
So Reassuring.
Tit Bits: Mr. Manley—“Well, darling,
I’ve had my life Insured for £l,tM."
Mrs. M.—"How very sensible of you!
Now I shan't have to keep telling you
to be so careful every place you go to."
w ...—’
Willie the Wag—Ah.’ madam, permit
Cue to work the garden «t little ere you
ihower your gifts upon me!
Mrs. Up-to-Date— O! these are not for
you. sir; they are for dog. Go a&d
work the dog!
HIS PROPERTY.
........ w„. mam r i
■- T
Old Man—Here, get out of that
puddle at once!
Kid—Nit! You go an' find a mud
puddle of your own!
CURED ITCHING AND BURNING
“I was taken with the itch in April,
1904, and used most everything. I
had a friend pay me a visit from
Cumfceriflpd. q$4 she advised rpe to
use Cuticura Remedies which t did.
The cure was certainly quick, and f
use them to this day. I had it terri
bly under my knees. I only used one
box of pills, but two boxes of Cuti
cura Ointment, and I use the Cuti
cura Soap all the time. I hope this
will benefit others, as it has me, after
Dr. - and others could do noth
ing for me.” (Signed) Miss Lu John
son, 1623 Ninth St., N. W., Wash
ington, D, C., April 3, 1910.
In a later letter Miss Johnson adds:
“The trouble began with an eruption
under my knees, and extended up
wards toward my waist, until I was
not able to sit down. It kept a con
stant itching and burning all the time,
night and day. I went to my doctor,
but he could do me no good after I
do not know how many medicines he
gave me, and then told me I would
be compelled to go to a skin special
ist, which I positively refused to do. I
cried all the time. Finally I made
up my mind to try Cuticura Rem
edies, and tried Cuticura Pills, Oint
ment and Soap, and was entirely
cured of the itching three days after
t started UBlng them. The healing
took about eight days. I consider
Cuticura Remedies marvelous, and
would recommend them everywhere.”
Cuticura Remedies are sold through
out the world. Send to Potter Drug
t Chem. Corp., Boston, for free book
on skin afflictions.
To Pray for the Rich.
Two women prominent in St. Louis
have started a movement to induce
*00,000 of their sex In the south to
pray every day for the rich. They ex
plain they hope by organizing system
ttlcally groups of women who will pray
often and well for the more affluent,
wealthy persons will be led to contrib
ate to a fund for the evangelization
of the world. Belle H. Bennett, presl
lent of the woman’s missionary coun
cil of the Methodist Episcopal church
louth and Mrs. R. W. McDonnell are
(he originators of the plan.
Frightful.
“They say she looked daggers at
41m?”
"Worse than that She looked long
hatpins.”
Try Marin* Bye Remedy for Ked,
Watery Byes and Granulated Lids. No
Imartlng—Just Bye Comfort. Murine
Bye SalVe In Aseptic Tubes New Size
me. Murine Liquid 26c-60c.
Their Time.
Foolis’ Fred—Do you like lobsters?
Pert Polly—Yes, both human and
.Tustacean, in their Balad days.
Do your feet feel tired, schv. and sore
it night? Rub them with a little Ham
ins Wizard Oil. They’ll be glad in the
horning and so will you.
Many a fellow who falls into a for
tune goes right through It.
Garfield Tea cures constipation, keeps
the blood pure and tones up the system.
Don’t let your money burn a hole
n some other fellow’s pocket.
Backache
Is only ant of many symptoms which some women en
dure through weakness or displacement of the womanly
organs. Mrs. Lizzie White of Memphis, Tenu., wrote
Dr. R. V. Pierce, as follows :
“ At time* I was hardly able to be on my feet.
I believe I had every pain and aehe a woman
oould have. Had a very bad case. Internal
organa were very much diseased and my back
waa very weak. I suffered a great deal with
nervous headaches, in fact, I suffered all over.
This was my condition when I wrote to you for
advice. After taking your 'Favorite Prescrip
tion* for about three months can say that my
health was never better."
Dr. Pierce s Favorite Prescription
I» ■ positive cure for weakness and disease of the feminine organism. It allays
inflammation, heals ulceration and soothes pain. Tones and builds up the nerves.
Do not permit a dishonest dealer to substitute for this medicine which has •
record of 40 years of cures. “ No, thank you, I want what I ask for.”
Or- Pierce's Pleasant Pellets Induce mild natural bowel movement once a day.
PLEDGE POLICIES FOR LOAN*
Imprudent Act That Really Means
Man la Borrowing From Hit
Widow.
Many men, pressed for money, go
to the life insurance company, de
posit their policy as security and bor
row as much as the company is will
ing to lend. That the practice is com
mon is proved by the fact that most
companies have loaned from a fourth
to a third of the aggregate face value
of their policies In this way. ‘‘Very
few of these loans,” says the annual
report of the Connecticut Mutual—and
this company’s experience Is typical—
‘‘are ever repaid to the company. The
moneys . . . are swallowed up
In business enterprises, in specula
tions . . . 'and the total result
means embarrassment and distress in
a great many cases and poverty In
the place of competence, when the
claims mature, and there is nothing
left above the loans but a mere mar
gin in cash on the policies for the
protection of families or estates."
Men who borrow on their policies are
taking away protection from their
families. It ought not to be done.—
Collier’s.
Politician and Preacher.
A politician in a western state, long
suspected of crookedness and noted
for his shifty ways, was finally In
dicted and tried. The jury was out a
long time, but eventually acquitted
him. After the verdict was In and
the politician was leaving the court
room, a minister who had been in
part responsible for the Indictment
and trial approached the politician
and said; "Well, my friend, you have
escaped; but you had a close shave.
I trust this will be a warning to you
to lead a better life and deal more
fairly with your fellow men.”
“That may be,” the politician re
plied. “That may be; but I ain’t
pledged to any one."—Saturday Even
ing Post.
“When a Wife te Cruel.”
The husband rushed Into the room
where his wife was sitting.
"My dear," said he, excitedly.
“Guess what! Intelligence has Just
reached me—”
The wife gave a jump at this point,
rushed to her husband, and, klsBlng
him fervently, Interrupted with:
"Well, thank heaven, Harry!”
He Qot It.
“Won’t you give roe an order?”
pleaded the too-perslstent traveling
salesman.
“Certainly. Get out!”
The herb laxative, Garfield Tea. prompt
ly overcomes constipation, biliousnesa,
aick-headache and insures better health.
A man can get along without doing
much if he has sense enough to know
what not to do.
Mr*. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children
teething, softens the gums, reduces liiflsmm*
tlon, Allays pain, cures wind colic, 85c a bottle.
The chief secret of comfort lies In
not allowing trifles to vex us.—Sharp.
Mads Father Bestir Himself.
When Dorothy Meldrum was a lit
tle younger—she is but ten now—her
father asked her on her return from
Sunday school what the lesson of the
day had been.
"Dandruff in the lion's den.” was
her answer.
Ever since Rev. Andrew B. Mel
drum, D. D.,.has personally applied
himself to the religious instruction of
his little daughter.—Exchange.
The Way of It.
Knicker—How does marriage affect
accomplishments?
Bocker—A girl drops her music and
a man takes up his smoking.
SHE
SUFFERED
FIYEYEARS
Finally Cured by Lydia E. Pink*
ham’s Vegetable Compound.
Erie, Pa.—"I suffered for five years
from female troubles and at last was
almost helpless. I
went to three doc
tors and they did
mo no good, so my
sister advised me to
try Lydia E. Pink
ham’s Vegetable
Compound, and
when I had taken
only two bottles I
could see a big
change, so I took
six bottles and I am
now strong and well
again. I don’t know how to express
my thanks for the good it has done me
and I hope all suffering women will
Sve Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
ompound a trial. It was worth its
weight in gold.”—Mrs. J. P. Ehdlxch,
E. f.D. No. 7, Erie, Pa.
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com
pound, made from native roots and
herbs, contains no narcotic or harm
ful drugs, and to-day bolds the record
for the largest number of actual cures
of female diseases we know of, and
thousands of voluntary testimonials
are on file In the Pinkham laboratory
at Lynn, Mass., from women who have
been cured from almost every form of
female complaints, such as inflamma
tion, ulceration, displacements, fibroid
tumors, irregularities, periodic pains,
backache, indigestion and nervous
prostration. Every suffering woman
owes it to herself to give Lydia E. Pinki
ham’s Vegetable Compound a trial
If you want special advice write
Mrs.Pinlf ham,Lynn, Mass., for it.
It is free and always helpful.
IncLier row
wits
___jsqre evea
IF YOU HAVE A SICKLY
YOUNGSTER TRY THIS FREE
The family with young children that Is
without sickness In the house now and
then Is rare, and so It Is important that
the head of the house should know what
to do in the little emergencies that arise.
A child with a serious ailment needs a
doctor, it la true, but In the majority of
Instances, as any doctor knows, the child
suffers from some Intestinal trouble,
usually constipation.
There is ne sense In giving It a pill or
a remedy containing an opiate, nor is
flushing of the bowels to be always rec
ommended. Rather give it a small dose
of a mild, gentle laxative tonic like Dr.
Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin, which, by clean
ing out the bowels and strengthening the
little stomach muscles, will immediately
correct the trouble.
This is not alone our opinion but that
of Mrs. N. H. Mead of Freeport, Kans.,
whose granddaughter hag been taking It
successfully and of Mrs. J. R, Whiting
of Dena, Wls„ who gives it to her children
and takes it herself. It Is sold In fifty
cent and one dollar bottles at every
drug store, but If you want to test It in
your family before you buy It send your
address to Dr. Caldwell and he will for
ward a supply free of charge.
For the free sample address Dr. W. B.
Caldwell, 201 Caldwell building, Monti
cello, I1L
People who gay just what they think
are more numerous than popular.
If constipation is present, the liver
sluggish, take Garfield Tea: it is mild in
action and never loses Us potency.
Many a girl has too many strings
to her beau.
Splendid Crops
In Saskatchewan (Wastam Canada)
800 Bushels from 20 aoree
wheat waa tha threaher’a
return from a Lloyd
mlnater farm In the
aeason of 1910. Many
fields in that aa well aa
other districts yield
ed from 23 to 33 bu
shels of wheat to the
acre. Other grains in
proportion.
LAR8E PROFITS
■re thus derived
from the FREE
ROM ESTEAD LANDS
of Western Ceneda.
This excellent shoeing causes
prices to advance. Land
HonTesteads^YTeo acres are
McfirUati Sr
tlouA at 93,00 per acre with -
In certain areas. Schools and
churches in every settle
mentp climate unexcelled,
soil the richest; wood, water
**«i ldlug material
plentiful. 80
For particulars as to location,
low settlers’ railway rates and
descriptive illustrated pamphlet.
“Last Best West,” and other in
formation, write to Sup’tof lrnmi
6ration, Ottawa, Canada, or to
anadiun Government Agent,
f. T IMnn. 315 Jattom St., St Pwl, Ulna.
J M. Kjcltthljn, DrmtrMI.fitnMa. S D.
W. V. Bcsactt. R'»m 4, Bcc Building. Oiwtii. rich.
DISTEMPER
* *•** 44 4'4» & Catarrhal Fever
Sure cure and positive preventive, no matter how horse* at any stage are Infected
or exposed.” Liquid,given on the tongue; acts on the Blood and Glands expels the
Kuu^UVer“*;ro,w *“®.bo<iJ • Cures Distemper In Dogs end Sheep and Cholera In
roultry Largest selling livestock remedy. Cures I a Grippe among human beings
and isaflne Kidney remedy. Me and II a bottle; 15 uadllO a doten. Cut this out.
Keeplt Show to your druggist, who will get it foryou. Free Booklet “Distemper
Causes and Cures." 8pedal Agents wanted. *
SPOHN MEDICAL CO., 60SHEN, IND., U. S. A.
in Washington Comity, Kansas, must be sold to
close an estate. Fine opportunity for practical
farmer with equipment and $4,000or $5,000cash.
All undercMiltlvation. Alfalfa land. Corn,wheat,
oats, cane, growing this season, meadow and
pasture, orchard, never failing spring, two
houses, etc. Will sell entire or in *4 section
tracts. Detail information on request. Add.
1.. P. ALLEN, Greenfield, 111.
SIOUX CITY PTG. CO., NO. 21-191lT
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES
W®! and faater co!°n tk*p aiJV °*«r dye One 10c package colors ail fibers. They dye in cold water better than any other dye You can
aye any garment without ripping apart. Write for free booklet—How to Dye, Bleach and Mix Colors. MONROE DRUG COMPANY, Quincy, III.