The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, May 04, 1916, Image 7

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    11
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Fluent.
“Your employer is quite a golf en
thusiast.”
“Is he? Well, that explains it. I
was wondering where he got all those
words he handed me when 1 asked him
for a raise.”
BAD COMPLEXION MADE GOOD
When All Else Fails, by Cuticura Soap
and Ointment. Trial Free.
If you are troubled with pimples,
blackheads, redness, roughness, itching
and burning, which disfigure your com
plexion and skin, Cuticura Soap and
Ointment will do much to help you.
The Soap to cleanse and purify, the
Ointment to soothe and heal.
Free sample each by mail with Book.
Address postcard, Cuticura, Dept. L,
^ Boston. Sold everywhere.—Adv.
Willing to Try.
Bix—Can l trust you?
Fit—Actions speak louder than
words. Try me with ten dollars.”
For a really fine coffee at a mod
erate price, drink Denison’s Seminole
Brand, 3ac the lb., in sealed cans.
Only one merchant in each town
sells Seminole. If your grocer isn’t
the one, write the Denison Coffee Co.,
Chicago, for a souvenir and the name
of your Seminole dealer.
Buy the 3 lb. Canister Can for $1.00.
—Adv.
You can't always judge a man's
worth by the size of bis pay envelope.
I ITS, Frif.FPSY, FALT.ING SICKNKSS
Stopped <Jaicklv. Fltty years of uninterrupted
success of J>r. Kline's Epilepsy Medicine insures
lusting resnlTs. La roe Trial bottle Free. OK.
KJL1N12 COMPANY, Ktxl ik*uk, N. J.-Adv.
w Women who wear tight shoes al
* ways have narrow soles.
Answer the Alarm!
I A bad back makes a day’s work twice
as hard. Backache usually comes from
weak kidneys, and if headaches, dizzi
ness or urinary disorders are added,
don’t wait—get help before dropsy,
gravel or Bright’s disease set in. Doan’s
Kidney Pills have brought new life and
new strength to thousands of working
men and women. Used and recommend
ed the world over.
Ah Iowa Case
“Every Picture Enoch Lewis, 1431
Tel:. U Story Locust St., Dos
oines, Iowa, says:
“Hard work weak
ened my kidneys and
my back ached so
badly I couldn’t get
around. The kidney
secretions scalded in
passage ami were
filled with sediment.
Doan's Kidney Pills
corrected these ail
ments and made my
kidneys stronger in
every way.”
Get Doan’s at Any Store, SOc a Box
DOAN’S kpTJLe»t
FOSTER-M1LBURN CO.. BUFFALO. N. Y.
< .“
FOR PERSONAL
f Dissolved In water for
pelvic catarrh, ulceration and inflam
mation. Recommended by Lydia E.
I Pinkham Med. Co, for ten years.
A healing wonder for nasal catarrh,
sore throat and sore eyes. Economical.
Has rx Ira ordinary clearning and germicidal power.
Sample Free* 50c. all druggists, or postpaid by
^riaibjrhePaxtonTonel^TOpany^oston^Mas^^^
t GALLSTONES
/ uVold o pc rations Positive remedy- **«.»■* r-a
(N’o Oil)— Results sore. Write forour r« W H
Viy Book of Truth and Facts To-J>uy. * AXA-si*
' uallstocc Homed} Jo.Jkpt.t-69,219S.DcarbornSt..Chicago
6IOU¥ CITY F’TG. CO., NO. 19-1916
- - - ...
If
American Priceless Heritage
In Danger of Private Graft !
Franklin K. Lane. Secretary of Interior.
We Americans have a priceless nomage
10 guard—a heritage of which our need
aas never been more apparent than it is
it this hour. For it is now, when wo are
oust anxiously concerned with the means
sf strengthening our national defense that
we should give heed to the foundations on
which all our power rests, for the present
and for the farthest future.
For a century we had regarded our na
tional resources almost purely as th<* as
sets of a people at peace, as we regarded
our people themselves, even to tit* chil
dren. But, with no change whatever in
our national devotion to the pursuits of
]>eace, we have been the reluctant, har
rowed spectators of a vast tragedy abroad
and have had borne in upon up the vf.Ud
lesson of the modern war. We have seen
—we are still seeing—a gigantic demon
stration of the fact that, when any peo
ple contemplate the possibilities of armed
conflict, they must contemplate not alone
the utilization of their navies on the fypas
and their armies on the land, but ev*ry
last vestige of strength that can be sum
moned from their concrete wealth, tjieir
genius for industry, their field products,
their minerals, their sources of physical
energy, down to the waters that flow to
the sea.
All this we are beholding in the tiagic
enactment of the vast drama: all thU we
have, Indeed, come to understand. But
have we, as yet, realized it? Have we
had forced upon us, after a year and a
half of appalling demonstration, the inti
mate conviction that whenever our first
lines of defense—the navy and the army—
shall be engaged with a foreign foe, we
must bo prepared as well with all of our
real and ultimate safeguards, the sources
of power which alone can keep the n in
being?
The land which we possess is furnished
with every essential for the development
of a great people, furnished as is no coun
try owned by others. I have reviewed, in
my recent annual report, the results of
investigations set afoot months ago for
the ascertaining of our position as to nat
ural resources. Of the world's petroleum
output we produce 65 per cent; of the cop
per, 60 per cent; of the coal and Iron. 40
per cent; of the lead and zinc, 32 per cent.
There is practically nothing lacking, in
the products of our mines and forests for
the construction and equipment of every
requirement throughout the range of our
Industrial activities. For our soil and its
replenishment with the necessary fertil
izers we have an ample supply of phos
phorus. The potash for which we have
been dependent on Germany has been
iouiki in aeposns in ^nuiornia ana oias
fall* to bo available from other sources.
Our water power contains possibilities for
the extraction of nitrogen from the air
that put us on a par with Europe’s pio
neer countries pi hydro-electricity; in the
fall of our waters alone we have 60,000,000
horsepower awaiting the harness. All of
the foods of the temperate zone and many
of tho luxuries of the semi-tropics are ours
for the growing.
In our people we have qualities admir
ably adapted to the utilization of our re
sources, qualities of originality which dur
ing the half century just past have pro
duced lucre 66 per cent of the Inventions
which the world has recognized as revo
lutionary of its industrial and social life.
And tlie work of men like Rittman dis
covering new processes for tho produc
tion of gasoline from crude petroleum and
for supplying benzol and toluol, proves
that in the important field of chemistry
Americans are fitted to meet any rivalry.
These are not boastings. They are
statements of the simple facts, mere ref
erences to the unparalleled resources of a
people whose genius'manifests itself in a
passion for discovery and a craving for
high achievement. Were this people ever
parted from the resources that now exist
for giatifylng its innate vocation to great
ness in every field, we should need no
foreign conqueror to imbue us with the
wretchedness suffered by a fettered giant.
Tho time Is hero when, wholly apart
from consideration of prejjaiedness
against dangers from abroad, we must
protect our vast natural resources as an
essential preliminary to their beneficent
use for aud by our people. The power
to give that protection lies with congress.
At least two bills call urgently for pas
sage. One is the bill governing the use
of public lands for the development of
hydro-electric power. The other is the
general development bill, which provides
the desirable method of utilizing our na
tional resources of oil, gas, coal, phos
phate and potash, with danger neither of
monopoly nor of nonuse.
Although as a nation we have given
1 away our riches with a lavish hand, we
still possess of our patrimony enough to
suffice for our future, however distant
and however great. Let us enact into
law these two supremely important meas
ures, and whatever we own of national
resources will remain forever in tho serv
ice of the people.
Democracy here today is challenged by
its fundamental necessities for the asser
tion of its basic, permanent rights. What
answer shall this democracy of ours give?
THE DECEITFUL PRINCESS.
ivwFyugiu, A3.it>, uy tuu ju;v iuiu i>Kws
paper Syndicate.)
Once there was a prince who wanted
a wife that could sing, and, also, she
must have raven black liair to suit him.
He went through the country, and at
last came to the house where the man
had two daughters. One had black
hair and her name was Nella, and
the other had golden hair and her
name was Lina.
Nella could sing like a lark, but her
sister’s voice was harsh and grating.
When Lina heard the prince was
coming that way she went to an old
witch who lived in the forest and told
her she must make her hair as black
as the raven, and for this she would
give her a bag of gold.
One night when everyone was in
bed Lina stole out of the house and
wont to the witch, who made her
drink a cupful of herbs, and then she
poured over her golden locks some
thing that stained them black as the
raven.
‘That w ill never come off unless I
will it.” said the old witch, reaching
out for the bag of gold.
Lina had tied the bag with strong
twine in many knots, and she was a
long way from the cave when at last
the old witcli who opened the bag had
found that Lina had deceived her.
The bag was filled with stones.
The next day when the prince called
at her father’s house, Una told Nella
that she ought to be singing when the
prince arrived.
Lina wore a covering over her hair,
so that her sister did not know about
the colored hair, and when Lina told
her she was sure to be chosen for the
wife of the prince Nella believed her
and did as she told her.
When the prince came to the door.
Lina hurried out of the room and told
Nella to stop singing and wait until
he called her.
"Were you singing when I came to
the door? asked the prince.
Then Lina uncovered her hair and
let it down. “I was singing, your
highness, until I heard that you were
at our door,” answered the deceitful
Lina.
"You shall be my bride,” said
the prince.
"If your highness would have me
for a bride you must take me away
at once, as my father has sworn that
you should wed my sister, who has
golden hair und cannot sing a note,
and he will not let me go, I am sure.”
So the prince took Lina away at once
to lus castle, but it was a long dis
tance, anti before they had reached
there the old witch had learned the
secret and came to Nella and told her
to prepare for a journey.
“We will outwit your deceitful sister.
She thinks she can marry the prince
before we can reach there and then he
cannot send her away when he finds
out she cannot sing."
The witch had two horses at the
door and they flew over the ground,
carrying Nella and the witch to the
door of the prince’s palace just as the
wedding was beginning.
“Here is your bride," said the witch,
leading Nella by the hand up to the
astonished prince. “This girl has de
ceived you as she did me. She can
not sing and her hair is golden. Look
and see.”
The witch pointed her long bony
finger at Lina as she spoke and then
muttered something which no one
could understand.
When the prince turned he beheld, a
■—-- ■ I — ■ III —■
golden haired girl beside him and ho
looked at Nella, who was standing be
hind the witch.
“You must be the sister I should
have taken for my bride,” he said,
holding out his hand. "And can you
sing also?” he asked.
For answ;er, Nella sang and when
the prince heard her voice he led her
to the place where her sister had
stood a minute before and the cere
mony was performed which made
Nella his wife.
The prince and Nella were so sorry
for JLitia that the prince told her to
stay at the palace and he would And
her a husband who wanted a golden
haired wife.
IN PLACE OF FURS.
(Copyright, 1910, by the McClure news
paper Syndicate.)
This year when fur has been worn
more extensively than ever before by
way of trimming in every conceivable
way there has also been a revival of
scarf anti muff sets that are not of any
sort of pelt, hut that are warm and ex
ceedingly attractive.
One of the most attractive of the new
scarfs for cold weather is made of
blanket cloth lined with a contrasting
silk and buttonholed around the edge
in heavy worsted to match the cloth.
V/ith this scarf is a sailor shaped hut
lined with silk and buttonholed around
the edge of the rim and at the top of
the crown with the worsted. One of
these in a pretty shade of fawn lined
with blue is especially attractive. Any
clever woman could make one of these
skating sets with the aid of a paper
pattern. An embroidered design on flte
side of the hat and on the ends of the
scarf of some contrasting worsted
would add considerably to the effect.
For the woman who knits there are
nil sorts of possibilities in the way of
knitted mufflers and caps, as well as
muffs. The fad for skating has brought
Why the Difference?
From Collier's.
What we fully can’t understand—
though doubtless Bernstorff and hts
American press agents could explain It
to us—is why so many pro-Germans ob
ject to the plans of the American legion,
the American Defense society, etc. These
persons protest against our "German
iz.ng" America by enlarging our navy and
bringing the army up to something near
the peace strength of Switzerland or
Turkey.
The same people who roll their eyes
heavenward when It Is suggested that
America maintain an army of 200,000 men,
and deplore the mere suggestion as rank
militarism, explain passionately that it Is
the errny that has made German the mod
ern Eden, that the German army is a dem
ocratic Influence, that Germany Is the one
country in the world with a well-devel
oped social spirit tthanks to the army),
t
Heavy woolen mittens back into fash
ion and a knitted set of this sort would
be very attractive for the woman who
is fond of outdoor sports or winter
walking.
Various sorts of worsted can be used,
: in combinations that are most effec
tive. All white for wear in the coun
try. where they don't get easily soiled,
are very attractive. And white banded
with deep rose, bright blue, green or
orange is very pretty. The mufflers
have bands at the ends, the caps have
a striped border all around. There are
caps, too, with a long point to tie like
a muffler around the neck.
There are charming cap and muffler
sets, originally for skating, but quite
wearable for walking and other out
door purposes. These are made of silk
and cloth variously combined. The
caps fold quite flat when off the head,
but when on they take the form of a
tcque They are softly lined with silk,
and quite unstiffened. The scarfs go
once about the neck and one end is
then thrown over the shoulder. One is
made of golden yellow broadcloth and
black plush, bands of the broadcloth
being used for trimming.
and a lot of other points that are extreme
ly Interesting. Therefore, It puzzles us,
this pronounced opposition of German
apologists to the suggestion that we, too,
try to develop Teuton virtues.
What Happened to the Tire.
From the Australia Motor World.
“What do you mean by coming in here
with that tire ail cut to ribbons?'' shout
ed the irate owner of the tiu-horse racing
car.
“I ran It over a milk bottle, sir,” said
tlie trembling chauffeur.
“A milk bottle, eh? It seems to me you
could see a thing as big as that.”
"The boy had it under hie coat, sir."
For peeling oranges there has been
invented a curved piece of bone with
a nick at one end to cut the skin.
NICARAGUANS TO NAME
THEIR OWN PRESIDENT
Managua, Nicaragua, (by mall) —
The people of Nicaragua are to be
given the right to express their will
for the selection of a president. That
will be a remarkable state of affairs
for Nicaragua where, for 20 years, dic
tatorship and revolution have inter
dicted and made such a condition im
possible. As thff secretary of state ex
pressed it in an official letter when lie
dismissed the Nicaraguan minister
from the United States in 1909: “It is
equally notorious that under the
regime of president Zelaya, republican
institutions have ceased to exist In
Nicaragua except in name, that public
opinion and the press have been
strangled and that prisons have been
the price of every demonstration ol
patriotism."
President Diaz has Just issued an
announcement through the press, and
says he will make it official by a proc
lamation in the Official Gazette, that
“It lias been the basis of my program
of government to restore in Nicaragua
all the republican practices." To
that end, ho continues, the most im
portant is the succession of one term
presidents in tho executive power, se
lected by popular will.
As tho presidential election In
Nicaragua occurs October 1. next, and
as polities are warming and the parties
are gathering themseleves together,
this announcement is most significant.
The present generation (except the
older people who were active before
1898), know nothing of a popular dis
cussion of candidates for the presi
dency, of a free registration of voters,
or of any expression of the popular
will. Such things were not permitted
under President Zelaya from 1893 to
1910.
The provisional government, which
gained force that year adopted a new
constitution for a republican form of
government, providing tliat the presi
dential term should be four years and
an incumbent could not succeed him
self, thus restoring the practice in
Nicaragua for tho quarter century pre
ceding Zelaya. The first election was
in December, 1912, but it came so soon
after the revolution of 1912 engaged in
by General Mena and the Zelaya
liberals, that the partisans of the lat
ter party made no effort at the polls
and the conservatives won without op
position. tho acting President, Adolfo
Diaz, being elected for a full term,
Tho president now declares that the
one-term provision will be carried out.
which means that he will retire, and
states further that the free expression
of the popular will in the primaries or
meetings will be guaranteed by the
government “with the same care that
I have taken that the other guarantees
which the constitution gjves to the
citizens shall be respected."
He says that there is further guar
anteed the free exercise of propaganda
and the right of free speeoh in meet
ings provided that it be done with de
corum and in lawful manner. He calls
attention to his instructions to the Jefe
Politicos (governors) of the depart
ments last month that all citizens who
desired to register will be given fur
ther opportunity on two days in May.
The liberals, which is the party in
opposition, are already taking ad
vantage of the president's declarations
that free discussion will be permitted,
by organizing clubs and calling meet
ings. The conservatives are doing the
same. So there is good prospect of a
six months’ lively campaign. Some
of the liberals seem a litle stunned by
the announcement that free speech will
be permitted, so unusual is it. When it
is remembered that most of the present
high officials of the government, who
nre conservatives, spent more or less
time in prison or in exile for Indulging
in free speech in the regime of Zelaya
the significance of President Diaz’s an
nouncement can bo appreciated. It
marks a new epoch for Nicaragua.
SUBSTITUTE FOR SALVARSAhl.
American has developed two substi
tutes for saivarsan. A group of Phila
delphia scientists have brought out
one, which they call arsenobenzol. The
proceeds from the manufacture and
sale of this drug go toward the main
tenance of an experimental labora
tory and clinic. No one makes any
money out of the product.
It may not be generally known that
the prevailing customs in Germany
permit the patenting of drugs. In this
country It Is the custom for the medi
cal profession lo give the methods of
manufacture, formulas, etc., to the
cause of humanity. In accordance with
the German custom, Dr. Ehrlich pat
ented saivarsan In every land, includ
ing the United States. When the Euro
pean war stopped the Importation of
saivarsan and neo-salvarsan, Dr.
Schamberg, of Philadelphia, and his
associates began a series of experi
ments, searching to flnda chemical
having the merits of saivarsan, but
sufficiently unlike It not to infringe on
the Ehrlich patents.
The outbreak of the war found a
large stock of saivarsan in this coun
try. The manufacturer’s agents han
dled the situation with the best of faith
and with great skill. They declined to
advance the price. They exerted them
selves to see that unscrupulous parties
should not corner the supply. They
made the supply last as long as possi
ble. About the time it was exhausted
arsenobenzol came on the market.
Under the Canadian . atent law pat
ented articles must he manufactured in
Canada within two years else the pat
ent is forfeited to the government.
There Is a provision of the law permit
ting an extension of the two year per
mit in cases where the patentee shows
the justice of his claim. Acting under
the Canadian law diarsenol has been
put on the market.
Dr. Ormsh'y says of the American
preparation, arsenobenzol: “Arseno
benzol, together with mercury, offers
as good a method of treatment of
syphilis as any heretofore used. In Its
uniform and nontoxic action arseno
benzol commends Itself as a remedial
agent of great value in the treatment
of syphilis and Its successful prepara
tion marks an achievement In Ameri
can chemotherapy.”
The effort to control syphilis as a
public health measure was getting un
der headway when the European war
broke out. It had been established that
when a dose of saivarsan was given
upon the very first sign of the disease
appearing, a cure was effected within
a few days. By working for prompt
diagnosis and prompt treatment cases
could he made permanently noncon
taglous.
Even when treatment was delayed,
Injection of saivarsan caused all signs
of the disease to disappear at once. A
highly contagious disease became non
contagious for the time being. Repeat
ed often enough and combined with
mercury, the disease could be perma
nently cured. Following out these pol
icies, the ravages of the disease were
being lessened. The greatest headway
was being made with soldiers and sail
ors. but among civil populations there
was some gain. Just at this point the
supply of saivarsan was exhausted.
Now we have arsenobenzol at our ser
vice.
How to Talk to the Wounded.
From the London Punch.
’’What the boches can’t stand, you
know, ma’am, Is cold steel."
"Yes, I suppose It gets very cold this
time of year."
ill PROBLEM LB
(FROM THE PEORIA JOURNAL.)
The Nebraska State Journal calls at
tention to the fact that Uncle Sam's
opening of a 4,000-acre tract in the
North Platto irrigation district for set
tlement practically winds up the “free
land distribution” of the nation. It
adds:
“Free or cheap land has been
tho American safety valve. A
population straining for self-bet
terment has had its own remedy—
to go west and grow up with tho
country. With the government
reduced to advertising an opening
of forty-three farms, the safety
valve may be considered forever
closed. The expansive energy for
merly exerted outward, must here
after work itself out intensively,
increasing land speculation, with
rapidly rising prices of land and
proportionately increasing dissat
isfaction among tho landless would
seem inevitable. The tone of our
politics and tho intensity of our
social problem's cannot but be vi
tally changed under tho strain of
dealing internally with a social
pressure which hitherto has had
the wilderness to vent itself upon.
“ 'Land hunger' will soon become a
reality in this rapidly growing country
and the constant pressure of popula
tion, increasingly higher than the ratio
of production, Is bound to bring us
face to face with economic problems
that we have heretofore considered re
mote. The far-sighted statesman and
publicist must devote his thought
earnestly to the consideration of these
questions If we are to escape the ex
tremes which curse the older nations
of the world.”
such as their friends have in the Unit
ed States.
The worth of the crops grown is
Western Canada is of higher value
than those of the States named, so why
should the land not be worth fully as
much. Any Canadian Government
Agent will be glad to give you infor
mation as to homestead lands or where
you can buy.—Advertisement.
Too many dollars in a man's pocket
have been known to crowd all the
sense from under his hat.
AFTER SIX YEARS
OF SUFFERING
Woman Made Well by Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound.
Columbus, Ohio.—“I had almost given
Up. I had been sick for six years with
female troubles and
nervousness. I had
a pain in my right
side and could not
eat nnything with
out hurting my
stomach. I could
not drink cold water
at all nor eat any
kind of raw fruit,
nor fresh meat nor
chicken. From 178
pounds I went to
318 and would get so weak at times that
I fell over. I began to take Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, and
ten day9 later I could eat and it did not
hurt my stomach. I have taken the
medicine ever since and I feci like a
new woman. I now weigh 127 pounds
so you can see what it has done for me
already. My husband says ho knows
your medicine has saved my life.”—
Mrs. J. S. Barlow, 1624 South 4th St.,
Columbus, Ohio.
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com
pound contains just the virtues of roots
and herbs needed to restore health and
strength to the weakened organs of the
body. That is why Mrs. Barlow, a
chronic invalid,recovered so completely.
It pays for women suffering from any
female ailments to insist upon having
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com
pound.
In tho above will be found one of
the reasons that the Canadian Govern
ment 1b offering 160 acres of land free
to the actual settler. There is no
dearth of homesteads of this size, and
the land is of the highest quality, be
ing such as produces yields of from 30
to 60 bushe.ls of wheat per acre, while
oats run from fifty to over hundred
bushels per acre. It is not only a mat
ter of free grants, but in Western Can
ada are also to be had other lands at
prices ranging from $12 to $30 per
acre, the difference in price being
largely a matter of location and dis
tance from railway. If one takes into
consideration the scarcity of free
grant landB in the United States it is
not difficult to understand why there
has been most material advances in
the price of farm lands.
A few years ago, land that now sells
for two hundred dollars an acre in
Iowa, could have been bought for sev
enty-five dollars an acre or less. The
increased price is warranted by the
increased value of the product raised
on these farms. Tho lands that today
can be had in Western Canada at the
low prices quoted will in a less time
than that taken for the Iowa lands to
increase, have a proportionate in
crease. In Nebraska tho lands that
sold for sixteen to twenty dollars per
acre seven years ago, find a market at
one hundred and seventy-five dollars
an acre, for the same reason given for
the increase in Iowa lands. Values
In these two States, as well as in oth
ers that might be mentioned, show
that Western Canada lands aro going
at a song at their present prices. In
many cases in Western Canada today,
there are American settlers who real
ize this, and are placing a value of
sixty and seventy dollars an acre on
their improved farms, but would sell
only because they can purchase un
improved land at such a low price that
in another few years they would have
equally as good farms as they left or
I ~
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
pel a lazy liver to
do its
Cur
(tipation, In
digestion,
Sick
Headache,
and Distress After Eating.
SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE.
Genuine must bear Signature
LOSSES SURELY PREVENTED*
by Cutter’s Blackleg Pills. Low
priced. treah, reliable: preferred by
Western stockmen, because they
protect where other vaccines fall.
Writ© for booklet and testimonials.
10-doae pkge. Blackleg Pills $1.00
00-dose pkge. Blackleg Pilfe 4.00
Use any injector, but Cutter's best.
The superiority of Cutter products is due to over IS
years of specializing In vaccines and serume only.
Inalst on Cutter’s. If unobtainable, order direct.
Ths Cutter Laboratory, Berkeley, Cal., or Chicago, li/«
1^,1 1 DEVELOPING
JVOOaKS and PRINTING
Send for Catalogue and Finishing Price Lint.
ZIMMERMAN BROTHERS. 608 Pierce St, Sioux City, la.
STATE, County and City Distributing Man
ager* Tor Auto Tiro Power Pump; retails
$3.50; no investment; liberal commission;
exclusive territory; write quick. AUTO AP—
PMAXrK COMPANY. Indianapolis. Ind.
.Net Contents 15 Fluid Drachms
I _ ALCOHOL-3 PER GENT
A Vegetable Prepantlionfbr As
jiH similatiriglhc Food and Regain*
, J*"r i|()g the Stomachs and Dowels of
.; ■-rr-^-^r-j
-;.... ---!Tr=
Projnoles Digestion,Clieerful
it c ness'nnd Rest.Contains neither
J,'! Opium,Morphine nor Mineral.
Not Narcotic.
jr» Ktdpi of (Md Dr. SAMVtL P/TCfftff
•b \
fl 1mm ! ! * |
1 &
A perfect Remedy for Consflpa
tion. SoiTr StomachDiarrhoea,
'll a Worms*Feverishness and
ioss of Sleep.
«e)oO PacSiinile^igiialurf Of
—-"-nA
J gy The^Centaur Company;
NEW YORK*
\b.
Bxact Copy of Wrapper
GASTORIA
For Infants and Children.
Mothers Know That
Genuine Castoria
Thirty Years
GASTORIA
THE eSNTAUft OOMMNV, NEW TOUR ©ITW