The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, May 25, 1916, Image 3

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    YOUNG WOMEN
MAY AVOID PAIN
Need Only Trust to Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Com
pound, says Mrs. Kurtzweg.
Buffalo, N.Y.—“ My daughter, whose
picture is herewith, was much troubled
with pains in her
back and sides every
. month and they
would sometimes be
so bad that it would
seem like acute in
flammation of some
organ. She read
your advertisement
in the newspapers
and tried Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vege
table Compound.
She praises it highly as she has been
relieved of all these pains by its use.
All mothers should know of this remedy,
and all young girls who suffer should
try it ’’—Mrs. Matilda Kurtzweg, 529
High St., Buffalo, N. Y.
Young women who are troubled with
painful or irregular periods, backache,
headache, dragging-down sensations,
fainting spells or indigestion, should
take Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound. Thousands have been re
stored to health by this root and herb
remedy.
If you know of any young wo
man who is sick and needs help
ful advice, ask her to write to the
Lydia E.Pinkham Medieine Co.,
Lynn, Mass. Only women will
receive her letter, and it will he
held in strictest confidence.
Tumors and Lupus successfully
treated without knife or pain. All
1 work guaranteed. Come, or
write for free Illustrated Book
. Dr. WILLIAMS SANATORIUM
2900 University At., Minneapolis, Minn.
SIOUX CITY PTG. CO., NO, 22-1916,
Two Dollars, Please.
"What would you recommend for
somnambulism, doctor?"
"Well, you might try insomnia."
ALLEN’S FOOT-EASE FOR THE
TROOPS
Many war zone hospitals have ordered
Allen’s Foot-Ease, the antiseptic powder,
for use among the troops. Shaken into
the shoes and used in the foot-bath,
Allen's Foot-Ease gives rest and romfort
and makes walking a delight. Sold every
where, 25c. Try it today. Adv.
Proof Wanted.
Father sat. in his study one after
noon writing out a speech, when his
son called shrilly from the garden:
"Dad! Look out of the window!”
"What a nuisance children are at
times!” grumbled the parent as he
put down his pen and advanced to
the window. With a half-smile ha
raised the sash and stuck forth liia
head. “Well, Harry, what is it?” he
asked.
The boy. from a group of young
sters, called out, “Dad, Tommy Per
kins didn't believe that you had no
hair on the top of your head.”—Ham
per's Magazine.
Sorry She Spoke.
Two girl friends met in the street
and stopped to shake hands.
"So glad to see you. Grace," said the
tailor-made Alice. “Was just on my
way to ask you, as my oldest friend,
to be one of my bridesmaids.”
"Bridesmaids! How lovely! 1 did
not know you were engaged,” replied
Grace.
“It’s sudden—very sudden; but he's
awfully in love, and is just too lovely
to live. Will you act?”
“Act? Of course, I’ll be charmed:
But," moving forward and speaking in
an undertone, "do come around thd
corner and tell me all about it. Hern
comes that idiotic, irrepressible don
key, Jim Berton. He’s grinning a:i
though he meant to stop, and I don't
care to be seen talking to him.”
"Jim Berton! He’s the man I'm
going to marry!”
I ———'
“He who has health
has hope,
And he who has hope
has everything.”
(Arabian Proverb)
Sound health is largely
a matter of proper food—
which must include certain
mineral elements best de
rived from the field grains,
but lacking in many foods.
Grape-Nuts
made of whole wheat and
malted barley, supplies all
the rich nourishment of
| the grains, including their
vital mineral salts—phos
j phate of potash, etc., most
necessary for building and
energizing the mental and
physical forces.
“There’s a Reason”
Sold by Grocers everywhere.
___________________
The Heroes of TS.
We are fortunate that we behold this
day. The heavens bend benignly over
us; the earth blossoms with renewed
life: and our hearts beat joyfully to
gether with one emotion of filial grati
tude and patriotic exultation. Citizens
of a great, free and prosperous coun
try, we come hither to honor the men,
our fathers, who, upon this spot and
upon this day, a hundred years ago,
struck the first blow in the contest
which made that country independent.
Here, beneath the hills they trod, by
the peaceful river on whose shores they
dwell, amidst the fields that they sowed
and reaped, proudly recalling their
virtue and their valor, we come to tell
their story, to try ourselves by their
lofty standard to know if we are their
worthy children: and, standing rever
ently where they stood and fought and
died, to swear before God and each
other, in the words of him upon whom
in Our day the spirit of the revolution
ary fathers visibly descended, that
government of the people, by the
people, for the people, shall not perish
from the earth.
This ancient town, with its neigh
bors who share its glory, has never
failed to fitly commemorate this great
day of its history. Fifty years ago,
while some soldiers of the Concord
fight were yet living; 25 years ago,
while still a few venerable survivors
lingered—with prayer and eloquence
nnd song, you renewed the pious vow.
But the last living link with the revo
lution lias long been broken. Great
events and a mightier struggle have
absorbed our own generation. Yet. we
who stand here today have a sympathy
with the men at the old North Bridge,
which those who preceded ns here at
earlier celebrations could not know.
iin mem war was a name ana a tra
dition. So swift and vast had been
the change, and the development of
the country, that the revolutionary
clash of arms was already vague and
unreal, and Concord and Lexington
seemed to them almost as remote and
historic as Arbela and Sempach. When
they assembled to celebrate this day.
they saw a little group of tottering
forms, eyes, from which the light was
fading, arms nerveless and withered,
thin white hairs that lluttered in the
wind; they saw a few venerable relics
of a vanished age, whose pride was
that, before living memory, they had
been minute men of American inde
pendence. But with us how changed!
War is no longer a tradition, half ro
mantic and obscure. It has ravaged
how many of our homes! It has wrung
how many of the hearts before me!
North and south, we know the pang.
Our common liberty is consecrated bv
a common sorrow. We do not count
around us a few feeble veterans of the
contest; but we are girt with a cloud
of witnesses. We are surrounded every
where by multitudes in the vigor of
their prime. Behold them here today,
sharing in these pious and peaceful
rites, the honored citizens, legislators,
magistrates—yes, the chief magistrate
of the republic—whose glory it is that
they were minute men of American
liberty and union. These men of to
day interpret to us with resistless elo
quence the men and the times we com
memorate. Now, if never before wo
understand the revolution. Now’ we
know the secret of those old hearts and
homes.
No royal governor, indeed, sits in
yon stately capital; no hostile fleet for
many a year has vexed the waters of
our coasts; nor is any army but our
own ever likely to tread our soil. Not
such are our enemies today. They do
not come proudly stepping to the drum
heat, with bayonets flashing in the
morning sun. But wherever party
spirit .shall strain the ancient guaran
tees of freedom; or bigotry and ignor
ance shall lay their fatal hands upon
education, or the arrogance of caste
shall strike at equal rights, or corrup
tion shall poison the very springs of
national life, there, minute men of
liberty, are your Lexington Green and
C oncord Bridge; and as you love your
country and your kind, and would have
your children rise up and call you
blessed, spare not the enemy! Over
the hills, out of the earth, down from
the clouds, pour in resistless might.
Fire from every rock and tree, from
door and window, from hearthstone
and chamber; hang upon his flank and
rear from morn to sunset, and so,
through a land blazing with holy in
dignation, hurl the hordes of ignor
ance and corruption and injustice hack,
back, in utter defeat and ruin.
George William Curtis.
• «■ •
Lev® of Country.
In these days of rapid national
growth, when the citizen of today is
supplanted by the youth and franchised
emigrant tomorrow; when 1,0011,000 vo
ters cast their ballots witli no higher
motive than compliance with a custom
or the dictates of party henchmen;
when one-fourth of our henchmen;
have no stronger ties of residence than
avarice, whose strength varies with the
financial iluctuations of the business
world; when year by year our shores
receive the restless spirits of other
lands who acknowledge no higher au
thority than their own caprice; when
so many of our youth are growing into
manhood ignorant of everything save
the means of licensed indulgences and
trivolity our liberty affords; when, as
partakers of the grandest political in- 1
heritance ever transmitted from one
generation to another, we are ail about
to forget tlie fearful responsibilities
thrust upon us in our acceptance of the
blessings of liberty we enjoy, it is time
to halt.
J--CI us gainer uie fragments that
nothing he lost.
To tell the next ages what liberty cost.” 1
Let us teach the coming citizen that. !
next to tiie love of uod—implanted at ‘
the mother’s knee and cultivated by
daily acts of piely and benevolence—
is the love of country, its flag, the mar
tyrs who fell in Its defense, and last,
but greatest of ail, an abiding faith
in its institutions and an undying de
votion to its peace, happiness and per
petuity. Let the examples of patriots,
in deeds of heroism and self sacrifice,
lie our theme cf meditation and discus
sion. Let our literature gleam with the
noble efforts, the grand achievements
of those who gave their all that we,
their dependents, might taste the
sweets of freedom undisturbed.
Let us realize that this grandest ner
itage of earth’s martyrs came to us,
not alone through the business tact
and prudent foresight of our sires, but
by years of toil and suffering, of cold
and hunger, of want and privation, and
by the generous sacriflc'e of precious
blood; and that, though it be vouch
safed to us through blessings of a no
ble ancestry, its possession implies no
permanence to an unworthy race.
It is ours, not alone to enjoy, but to
foster and protect: ours to guard from
schism, vice and crime; ours to purify,
exalt, ennoble; ours to prepare a dwell
ing place for the purest, fairest, best
of eartti's humanity.
I. It. Brown.
History of Our Flag.
The history of our glorious old flag
is of exceeding interest, and brines
1 ack to us a throng of sacred and
thrilling associations. The banner of
St. Andrew was blue, charged with a
white altier or cross, in tile form of 1
the letter X. and was used in Scotland i
as early as the 11th century. The ban- I
I
' ner of St. George was white, charged
with the red cross, and was used in
England as early as the first part of
the 14th century. By a royal procla
mation, dated April 12, 1700, these two
crosses were Joined together upon the
same banner, forming the ancient na
tional flag of England.
It was not until Ireland, In 1801. was
made a part of Great Britain, that the
present national flag of England, so
well known as the Union Jack was
completed. But it was the ancient flag
of England that constituted the basis
of our American banner. Various other
flags had Indeed been raised at other
times by our colonial ancestors. But
they were not particularly associated
with, or at least, were not incorporated
into and made a part of the destined
"Stars und Stripes."
It was after Washington had taken
command of the first army of the rev
olution. at Cambridge, that he unfold
ed before them the new flag of 13
stripes of alternate red and white, hav
ing upon one of its corners the red and
white crosses of St. George and St.
Andrew, on a Held of blue. And this
was the standard which was borne
j into the city of Boston when it was
! evacuated by the British troops and
was entered by the American army.
Uniting, as it did. the flags of Eng
land and America, it showed that the
j colonists were not yet prepared to
sever the tie that bound them to the
mother country. By that union of
flags, they claimed to be a vital and
substantial part of the empire of Great
Britain, and demanded the rights and
privileges which such a relation im
plied. Yet it was by these 1.3 stripes
that they made known the union also
of the 1.3 colonies, the stripes of white
declaring the purity and innocence of
their cause, and the stripes of red giv
ing forth defiance to cruelty and oppo
sition.
on the 14th day of June, 1777, It was
resolved by congress, "That the flag of
the 13 United States be 13 stripes, al
ternate red and white, and the union
be 13 white stars in the blue field."
This resolution was made public Sep
tember 3, 1777. and the flag that was
first made and used in pursuance of it
was that which led the Americans to
victory at Saratoga. Here the 13 stars
were arranged In a circle, as we some
times see them now. in order better to
exnress the union of the states.
In 1794, there having been two more
new states added to the union, it was
voted that the alternate stripes, as well
as the circling stars, be 15 in number,
and the flag, as thus altered and en
larged, was the one which was borne
through all the contests of the war of
1812. But it was thought that the flag
would at length become too large if a
new stripe should be added with every
freshly admitted state. It was there
fore enacted, in 1818, that a perma
nent return should be made to the or
iginal number of 13 stripes, and the
number of stars should henceforth cor
respond to the growing number of
states.
Thus the flag would symbolize the
union as it might be at any given pe
riod of its history, and also as it was
at the very hour of its birth. It was
at the same time suggested that these
stars, instead of being arranged in a
circle, should be formed into a single
star—a suggestion which we occasion
ally see adopted. In fine, no particular
order seems now to be observed with
respect to the arrangement of the con
stellation. It is enough if only the
whole number be there upon that azure
field—the blue to be emblematical of
perseverance, vigilance and justice,
each star to signify the glory of the
state it may represent, and the whole
to be eloquent forever of a union that
must be ‘one and inseparable.”
What precious associations cluster
around our flag! Not alone have our
fathers set up this banner in the name
of God over the well won battlefields
of the revolution, and over the cities
and towns which they rescued from
despotic rule; but think where also
their descendants have carried it, and
raised it in conquest or protection!
Through W'hat clouds of dust and
smoke has it passed—what storms of
shot and shell—what scenes of fire and
blood! Net only at Saratoga, at Mon
mouth and at Yorktown, but at Lun
dy's Lane and New Orleans, at Buena
Vista and Chapultepec. It is the same
glorous old flag which, inscribed with
the dying werds of Lawrence, "Don't
give up the ship," w-as hoisted on Lake
Erie by Commodore Perry just on the
eve of his great naval victory—the
same old flag which our great chief
tain bore in triumph to the proud city
of the Aztecs, and planted upon the
heights of her national palace. Brave
bands raised it above the eternal re
gions of ice in the Arctic seas and have
set it up on the summits of the lofty
mountains of the distant west.
Where has it not gone, the pride of
its friends and the terror of its foes?
What countries and what seas has it
not visited? Where has not the Amer
ican citizen been able to stand beneath
its guardian folds and defy the world?
With what joy and exultation seamen
and tourists have gazed upon its star.s
and stripes, read in it the history of
their nation's glory, received from it
the full sense of security, and drawn
frum it the inspirations of patriotism!
By it, how many have sworn fealty to
their country!
What bursts of magnificent elo
quence it has called forth from Web
ster and from Everett! What lyric
strains of poetry from Drake and
Holmes! How many heroes its folds
have covered in death! How many
have lived for it, and how many have
died for it! How many, living and
dying, have said, in their enthusiastic
devotion to its honor, like that young
wounded sufferer in the streets of Bal
timore, "Oh, the flag? the Stars and
Stripes!" and, wherever that flag has
gone it has been the herald of a better
day—it has been the pledge of freedom
of justice, of order, of civilization, and
of Christianity. Tyrants only have
hated it. and the enemies of mankind
alone have trampled it to the earth
All who sigh for the triumph of truth
and righteousness love and salute it.
_Bev. A. P. Putnam.
Our Centennial Celebration.
Extract of a speech delivered by the
Hon. Orestes Cleveland, at the closing
of the preliminary session of the Cen
tennial commission.
Fellow Commissioners: When we
were welcomed in Independence hall,
and again In visiting old Carpenters’
hall, I was impressed with the grand
and glorious memories clustering
round about Philadelphia, all pointing
with solemn significance to the occa
sion we are preparing to celebrate.
May we all have light and strength to
appreciate that occasion as it ap
proaches. No such family gathering
has ever been known in the world’s
history, and wre shall have passed away
and been forgotten when the next one
recurs. May we be permitted to rise
up to the grandeur and importance of
the work before us, so that the results
and lessons of our labor may bless and
last until our descendants shall cele
brate in a similar manner the next
centennial.
The vast and varied and marvelous
results of Inventive industry from all
the world shall gather here; and it is
fitting—-for here, upon this continent,
in this new country, under the foster
ing care of the wise and beneficent
provisions of our patent laws, the in
ventive genius of the" age finds her
most congenial home. From the in
ternational exhibition of 1876 the ed
ucation of skilled labor, in tills coun
try, at least, Is to take a new depart
ure, and we hope the effect will be felt
also, in some measure, by every civ
ilized nation.
Here will be spread out before us the
manufactures of Great Britain, the
source of all her power. From F'rance
will come articles of taste and utility,
exquisite in design and perfect in exe
cution. From Russia, iron and leather
no nation has yet learned to produce.
From Berlin and Munich, artistic pro
ductions in iron and bronze. From
Switzerland, her nnequaled wood carv
ings and delicate watch work. From
Bohemia shall come the perfection of
glass blowing, and musical Instru
ments from the Black Forest.
From the people of poor old Spain,
t° whose daring and public spirit near
ly four centuries back we owe the pos
sibilities of this hour, shall come the
evidence of aforetime greatness, now
unhappily faded away for the want of
education amongst the mass of her
people. From Nineveh and Pompeii
the evidences of a buried past. The
progress of the applied arts will he
shown from all Europe. From China,
her curious workmanship, the result
of accumulated ingenuity reaching
back beyond the time when history be
gan. Matchless woodwork from Japan,
and from far India her treasures rar^
and wonderful. Turkey and Persia
shall bring their gorgeous fabrics to
diversify and stimulate our taste. The
queen of the east, passing the Suez
canal, shall cross the great deep and
bow her turbaned head to this young
giant of the west, and he shall point
her people to the source of his vast
powers—the education of all her
people.
i m wui iiuieu orators iaia nerore
us the other night such evidence as
he could gather of the lost arts of the
ancients, and he demands to know
what we have to Compensate us for the
i loss. I claim that we have produced
I some things, even in this new country,
worthy of that orator’s notice. In
| stead of tearing open the bosom of
mother earth with the root of a tree,
that he may feed upon the bounties of
nature, as the ancients did, the green
covering rolls away with the perfec
tion and grace of art itself from the
polished moulding board of the Pitts
burgh steel plow. Machinery casts
abroad the seed and a reaping machine
gathers the harvest. Whitney’s cotton
gin prepares the liber; Eyall’s positive
motion boom takes the place of the
old wheel, and a sewing machine lits
the fabric for the use of man. What
had the ancients, I demand to know,
that could compensate them for the
want of these American inventions? I
do not speak of the American tele
graph or steam power, that we have
done more than all other nations put
together in reaching its possibilities.
The Magi of the east never dreamed,
in the wildest frenzy of their beautiful
imaginations, of the wonders of these!
Next year it will become the duty
of the general government to make the
international exhibition known to oth
er countries, to the end that all civil
ized people may meet with us in 1876
in friendly competition in the progress
of the arts of peace. Be it our duty
now to arouse our own people to a
sense of its great value. I know that
we go out with our hearts full—let our
minds be determined and our hands
ready for the labor.
The Yankees In Battle.
For courage and dash there is no
parallel in history to this action of the
Spanish admiral. He came, as he knew,
to absolute destruction. There was one
single hope. That was that the Span
ish ship Cristobal Colon would steam
faster than the American ship Brook
lyn. Tile spectacle of two torpedo
boat destroyers, paper shells at best,
deliberately steaming out in broad day
light in the face of the fire of battle
ships, can only be described in one
way. it was Spanish, and it was ord
ered by the Spanish General Blanco.
The same may be said of the entire
movement.
In contrast to the Spanisli fashion
was the cool, deliberate Yankee work.
The American squadron was without
sentiment apparently. The ships went
at their Spanish opponents and liter
ally tore them to pieces. Admiral Cer
vera was taken aboard the Iowa from
the Gloucester, which had rescued him,
and he was received wih a full admir
al’s guard. The crew of the Iowa
crowded aft over the turrets, half naked
and black with powder, as Cervera
stepped over the side bareheaded. The
crew cheered vociferously. The admir
al submitted to the fortunes of war
with a grace that proclaimed him a
thoroughbred.
The officers of the Spanish ship Viz
caya said they simply could not hold
their crews at the guns on account of
the rapid fire poured upon them. The
decks were flooded with water from
the fire hose, and the blood from the
wounded made this a dark red. Frag
ments of bodies floated in this along
the gun deck. Every instant the crack
of exploding shells told of new havoc.
The torpedo boat Ericsson was sent by
the flagship to the help of the Iowa in
the rescue of the Viscaya's crew. Her
men saw a terrible sight. The flames,
leaping out from the huge shot holes in
the Viscaya’s sides, licked up the decks,
sizzling the flesh of the wounded who
were lying there shrieking for help.
Between the frequent explosions there
came awful cries and groans from the
men pinned below. This carnage was
chiefly due to the rapidity of the Amer
ican fire.
qaiiu i ere-uuy:-i aiWK
From two six-pounders 400 shells
were fired in 50 minutes. Up in the
tops the marines banged away with
one-pounders, too excited to step back
to duck as the shells whistled over
tern. One gunner of a secondary bat
tery under a 12-inch gun was blinded
by smoke and saltpetre from the tur
ret, and his crew were driven off, but
sticking a wet handkerchief over his
face, with holes cut for Ills eyes, he
stuck to his gun.
Finally, as the six-pounders were so
close to the eight-inch turret as to
make it impossible to stay there with
safety, the men were ordered away be
fore the big gun was fired, but they re
fused to leave. When the three-inch
gun was fired, the concussion blew
two men of the smaller gun’s crew 10
feet from their guns and threw them to
the deck as deaf as posts. Back they
went again, however, and w'ere again
blown away from their stations. Such
bravery and such dogged determina
tion under the heavy fire were of fre
quent occurrence on all the ships en
gaged.
Astronomers are already beginning
to make plans for observing the total
eclipse of the sun which will occur
June 8, 11(18. The path of totality ex
tends diagonally across the whole
United States, as the shadow, after
crossing the North Pacific ocean, will
enter the country in the neighborhood
of Chebalis, Wash.; pass over Baker
City. Ore.; Hailey and Montpelier, Id.;
Rock Springs, Wyo.; Steamboat
Springs, Central City, Golden and Den
ver, Colo; Dakin and Ashland, Kan.;
linid, Okla.; Jackson, Miss., and Or
lando, Fla. Along the easterly part of
the route the sun will be too near set
ting for the best observations.
Shehi, kaswa and kvass are the three
staple dishes of the Russian peasant,
yet death by choking is not inordinate
ly frequent. In fact, these raucous
libels are attached to such simple
things as porridge, stewed cabbage and
a wild, homebrewed refreshment?
Understood.
“Strike three,’’ said the umpire.
“Batter up!”
"Whaddye mean, out?” protested the
batter. "Yuh big stiff, that last one
was a mile outside.”
"You’re fined ten dollars," said the
umpire. “Do you understand that?"
"Sure, I get you now. Money talks.”
DON’T LOSE YOUR HAIR
Prevent It by Using Cuticura Soap and
Ointment. Trial Free.
If your scalp is irritated, itching and
burning and your hair dry and falling
out in handfuls try the following treat
ment: touch spots of dandruff and
Itching with Cuticura Ointment and
follow with hot shampoo of Cuticura
Soap. Absolutely nothing better.
Free sample each by mail with Book.
Address postcard, Cuticura, Dept. L,
Boston. Sold everywhere.—Adv.
A preferred creditor is one who iB
willing to wait until you get ready to
settle.
The heiress makes a poor invest
ment when she purchases a title.
Rest Those Worn Nerves
Don't give up. When you feel
all unstrung, when family cares
seem too hard to bear, and back
ache, dizzy headaches and irregu
lar kidney action mystify you, re
member that such troubles often
come from weak kidneys and it
may be that you only need Doan’s
Kidney Pills to make you well.
Don’t delay. Profit by other peo
ple’s experiences.
A South Dakota Case
Mrs. M. Cook.
8 1 s s e t o n. 8. D.,
says: "Several
years ago, 1 had a
steady, dull, ache In
the small of my,
back. This wasf
soon followed by
terrible dizzy spells.
If I tried to walk,
I had one of these ■
spells and stag
g e r e d. My head!
ached a great deaL
and the kidney se-s
cretlons were lrreg-Z
ular In passage.'
I used Doan’s Kidney Pills and they
completely cured me.”
Gat Doan’s at Any Store, SOc n Bax
DOAN’S v/av
FOSTER-MILB URN CO.. BUFFALO. N. Y.
ALCOHOL-3.PF.R CF.NT,
AVege table Pro pa m lion for As
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V *r , ling the Stomachs and Bowels of
'AOJ d—ra-.rnr.TT-,--xrrr-r.-a-t-t
gig -
Jj* Promotes Digestion,Cheerful*
Jr« ness and Rest.Contains neither
Opium,Morphine nor Mineral.
Not Narcotic.
«£* r Ktdpitf Old Dr.SANVCl pntHOt .
Si
!?l
See
iS<J
'caf Ape fleet Remedy ForCousfljJa*
;?>i9 .tton. Sour Stomach Diarrhoea.
Sr* Worms.1 Feverishness and.
loss of Sleep.
IvjoO Fac-Simile',Signature'OT
eQu< ---4
J <0 The Centaur ComhmsT,
iJod: NEW YORK.
V- _ J
Exact Copy of Wrapper
CASTORIA
For Infants and Children.
Mothers Know That
Genuine Castoria
Always
Bears the
m
For Over
Thirty Years
CASTORIA
TWK cintadh company, new yopk cmr. I
No Optimist.
"Why did you leave your last
place?”
"The husband of the lady I worked
Cor made love to me, ma'am.”
“Well, If you go to work for me I’ll
see that nothing of that sort happens
here.”
“Yessum, I hope so, but you never
can tell.”
F R ECKLE S
Now If the Time to Get Rid of These
Ugly Spots.
There’s no longer the slightest need of
feeling ashamed of your freckles, as the
prescription othlne—double strength—Is
guaranteed to remove these homely spots.
Simply get an ounce of othlne—double
Strength—from your druggist, and apply a
little of it night and morning and you
should soon see that even the worst freckles
have begun to disappear, while the lighter
ones have vanished entirely. It is seldom
that more than one ounce is needed to com
pletely clear the skin and gain a beautiful
clear complexion.
Be sure to ask for the double strength
othlne, as this is sold under guarantee of
money back if It fails to remove freckles.—
Adv.
That’s What.
"What is an ultimatum, pa?”
"It's when your mother says she
wants a new hat.”
FITS, EPir.FPST, FAIXING SICKNESS
stopped Gulcklv. Fifty years of uninterrupted j
tuccess of J)r. Kline's Kpilepsy Medicine insures i
lasting results. Large TRIAL BOTTLE Fkkk I>R. I
KUNE COMPANY, Red Rank, N. J.-Adv.
A horrible example is often better
than none at all.
Your Liver
Is Clogged Up
That’* Why Y of Sort*
—Have No Appetite.
CARTER’S
LIVER
will put you right
in a few days.
Th<
their
stipation,
Biliousness, Indigestion and Sick Headache!
SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE.
Genuine must bear Signature
Farmers Atfention!
Did you know that you could buy Hail In
surance buy inall! and save the middle men's
profits or about one-fourth the cost of your
Insurance. Write telling us how much you
farm, what county you are in, and how rnuoh
insurance you want to carry and let us llgure
with you.
F. L. McCLURE SIOUX v-n *, LA.
DAISY FLY KILLER g;sf STSffi S
flias. Neat, clean, or*
namentei, convenient,
cheap. LastB all
season* Made of
inetal. can’t spill or tip
over; will not soil or
1njure anything.
Guaranteed effective*
All dealers ortseat
express paid for tl.Mu
SOMERS, ISO Da Kalb Ava„ Brooklyn, H. T.
t The Wheat Yieid:Vi^u
Tells the Story
Western Canada’s Rapid Progress I
avy crops in Western Canada have caused !Sm??cL 0
ords to be made in the handling of grains B^ir zR g m B/a/B I
sads. For, while the movement of these J5k# &> jfkl MR
heavy shipments has been wonderfully rapid, the Wf ,
resources of the different roads, despite enlarged ® /* frv'Zdtfd • I K
equipments and increased facilities, have been ^^waajiaLaj—I. M
strained as never before, and previous records mmm' "’'"’““““““‘TP j
have thus been broken in all directions. p§ ■
The largest Canadian wheat shipments through New York ever known ■
are reported for the period up to October 15th, upwards of four and a B
quarter million bushels being exported in less than six weeks. I
and this was but the overflow of shipments to Montreal, through which R
point shipments were much larger than to New York. ig
Yields as high as 60 bushels cf wheat per acre are reported from all F
parts of the country; while yields of 45 bushels per acre are common. f?
Thousands of American farmers have taken part in this wonderful pro* I
. duction. Land prices are still low and free homestead lands are easily secured M
in good localities, convenient to churches, schools, markets, railways, etc. m j
Therm la na war tax on land and no conscription. Jf
Write for illustrated pamphlet, reduced railroad rates and o»her
_ information to Superintendent Immigration. Ottawa,
J. M. MacLacUaa. Drawer HT.W.ter- [£
t.wi, S. D.: W.V. ftoisttl, Rom 4, Bre dyrVMr
Bids.. Osaka, Not,.. e>4 R. A. Garrett. __
u 111 JacJuoa Street. it. Baal. Hina. ‘J
ft. Canadian Government Agents "y HMR