The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, November 30, 1916, Image 3

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I'
THE HIGHEST QUALITY
J6 /&g? Boo!'. Fret
SKINNER MFG. CO.. OMAHA. USA
IARGES7 MAttRCKi UCT3BY BS tJ-lOliCA
What Ghe Said.
Little Ernest—I know Unit lady over
there, nmmmn. She often speaks to
me.
Mother—Yes, darling, and what does
she say to you?
Little Ernest — She — she says:
“Don’t you dare to throw stones at my
dog again, you little wretch!’’
Of Course, He Believed It.
“Do you believe that awful story
they’re telling, fierce?”
“Yes. what is it?”—Everybody’s.
PUT BUSINESS LESSON FIRST
Youngster Had Excellent Defense
When Hauled Before the Parental
Tribunal for Fighting.
“My son—”
“Yes. poll—”
“Do you remember what your
Sunday school teacher told you about
lighting?”
“Yes, sir.”
“Then why did you strike that Horn
mnndhaw boy with your list?”
“He struck me first.”
“But what about your Sunday school
lesson ?”
"I thought about your lesson first.”
“What lesson?”
“Your business lesson.”
“I am afraid I do not know what
you mean.”
“You told me always to do every
thing in a strictly business way.”
“Yes—”
“Well, when he delivered a wallop
on my nose I just had to give him a
receipt.”—Youngstown Telegram.
Sudden Cold.
Look out—it’s
dangerous.
CASCARABqUSNINE
-
The old family remedy —in tablet
form—safe, sure, easy to take. No
opiates—no unpleasant after-effects.
Cures colds in 24 hours—Grip in 3
days. Money back if it fails. Get
the genuine box with Red Top and
Mr. Iiill’s picture on it—25 cents.
At Any Drug Store
■ __ I
Your Liver
Is Clogged Up
That’s Why You’re Tired— ut of Sorts j
—Have No Appetite.
CARTER’S LITTLE
LIVER PILLS
will put you right
in a few days.
They do
their dutyv
Cure Con
stipation,
Biliousness, Indigestion and Sick Headache
SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE.
Genuine must bear Signature
HrirVLOSSES surely prevented
DLALI\Kt^sblackiegp,us
am mam fresh, reliable; I
■ IP preferred by
VA, Kgfj ftt? V western stock* ' ,
HI A ■ men, because they
Jagg gfeKa VSffg protect whoro other
vacc|nM fft||.
gf Write for booklet and testimonials.
10-dosnpkg.Blackleg Pills, $1.00
50-dose pfcg. Blackleg Pills, $4.00
Use any Injector, but Cutter's simplest and strongest.
The superiority of Cutter products is due to over IS
years of specializing In VACCINES AND SERUMS
ONLY. INSIST ON CUTTER’S. II unobtainable,
order direct. . _ , . _ . ...
_»i cutter UtinteiT. l«iti1»T. Ctl„ er CMem, IH y
. PARKER’S
KfEjnWfl HAIR BALSAM c
^ toilet preparation of merit.
UfchGK&P MBBj Helps to eradicate dandruff.
O&JkM&k ~PH For Restoring: Color and
t—Doauty to Gray or Faded Hair.
^ SOc. and <1.00 at Drugr lets. *
OllPTilSC CURED in a few days
riWr 8 ISSlt without pain or a sur
gical operation. Ho pay until cured. Write
Ok, tVKAK, 308 Bee Bldg., OmaUa, Neb.
THE PROFESSOR'S STATEMENT.
Prof. Aug. F. W. Schmitz, Thomas,
Okla., writes: “I was troubled with
Backache for about twenty-five years.
When told I had Bright’s Disease in
its last stages, I
tried Dodd’s Kid
ney Pills. After
using two boxes I
was somewhat re
lieved and I stop
ped the treatment.
In the spring of
the next year I
had another at
Prof. Schmitz. tack. I went for
Dodd’s Kidney Pills and they relieved
me again. I used three boxes. That
is now three years ago and my Back
ache has not returned in Us severity,
and by using another two boxes a lit
tle later on, the pain left altogether
and I have had no trouble since. You
may use my statement. I recommend
Dodd’s Kidney Pills when and wher
ever I can.” Dodd’s Kidney Pills, 50c.
per box at your dealer or Dodd’s Medi
cine Co., Buffalo, N. Y.—Adv.
Two Ways of “Cleaning Up.”
Some years ago a young man from
a small eouittry town, on visiting Cin
cinnati, walked Into one of the down
town barber shojis to have his hair
cut.
After the barber had clipped for
some time on the young man’s head, he
asked him if he hadn’t better have his
hai rcleaned up. The young man, after
glancing itt the hair on the floor and
thinking the barber was trying to put
one over on him, said he “guessed not."
After asking the same question sev
eral times to no avail the barber gave
it up. The young man paid his hill
and went from tlie shop, laughing to
himself, thinking he wasn’t so green
after all.
Afterward it dawned on him that
the barber wanted only to give him a
shampoo.
To keep clean and healthy take Dr.
Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets. They regulate
liver, bowels and stomach.—Adv.
The world makes way for the man
who knows where he is going. \
It doesn’t pay to own the tilings you
owe for.
WINCHESTER
if “Leader” and “Repea ter” B
3 Shot Shells B
For the high flyers, or the low flyers, “Leader” and e|
-a “Repeater’’ shells have the reach, spread andpenetra- B
Ej| tion. Their great sale is due to these qualities, which', EH
iji insure a full bag. Made in many gauges and loads.'
M BE SURE TO ASK FOR THE W BRAND ||
Canada’s Liberal Offer of
Wheat Land to Settlers
to every fanner or fanner's son
■ ~ who is anxious to establish for
himself a happy home and
prosperity. Canada’s hearty
invitation this year is more attractive j
than ever. Wheat is much higher but
her fertile farm land just as cheap, and
in the provinces of Manitoba, Saskat
chewan and Alberta
130 Acre Homesteads Ait Actually Free to Settlers
and Other Land Sold at from $15 to $20 per Acre
The great demand for Canadian Wheat will !
keep up the price. Where a farmer can get
near $2 for wheat and raise 20 to 45 bushels to
the acre he is bound to make money — that’s j
what you can expect in Western Canada. Won- \
derful yields also of Oats, Barley and Flax.
Mixed Farming in Western Canada is fully as
profitable an industry as grain raising.
The excellent grasses, full of nutrition, are the only
food required either for beef or dairy purposes.
Good schools, churches, markets convenient, climate
excellent. Military service is not compulsory in
Canada but there is an unusual demand for farm
labor to replace the many young men who have
volunteered for the war. Write for literature and
particulars as to reduced railway rates to Supuof
Immigration, Ottawa, Can., or to
M. J. Jeknstoae, Drawer 197, Watertowa, 8. D.;
W. V. Bennett, Room 4, Bee Building;., Omakt, Rek.,
and R. A. Garrett, 311 Jackson Street, St. Paal, Miaa.
t’anadian Government Agents
SHOULDER TO SHOULDER WOMEN AND
MEN WORK IN BRITISH INDUSTRIES
^ ■ -^ ^ *
Two types of boilermakers—the old and the new.
As a rule boilermakers are not considered ladylike, but this plucky
woman has thrown tradition to the winds and entered on a career in a
boiler factory in Glasgow. Clad in working togs deserted by a huskier
boilermaker when the call to the colors sent him to the front, she is shown
in this picture working a hydraulic riveter, assisted by a man.
I ~
X DEMON-DOCTOR GIVES X
•f MOST UNIQUE TREATMENT ♦
♦ ♦
Herald Ashton, In Answers, London.
You would never think, to look at
the place, that there was anything
devilish about it.
It was a small, gabled, stone built
house with a square bow window, dis
creetly curtained, fronting the main
street in an unromantic little totvn in
Derbyshire. There was a diminutive
walled garden in front. On the wall
an amiable looking black cat was sun
ning himself.
If he was the devil, I had encoun
tered him at a "ery un-Satanic mo
ment of his existence, for he blinked
lazily at me with his yellow eyes as I
entered, purred softly, and went to
sleep again.
The place was called:
BETH-RAPA,
The Home for Divine Life,
Rest, and Teaching,
Where you can have quiet waiting
upon God,.
I knocked at the door. It was opened
by a huge, stout old man, whose face,
nestling in a comfortable fold of double
chins, reminded me very much of Mr.
Spurgeon. He gazed at me with mild
blue eyes, stretched out a smooth,
plump hand, and drew me inside.
“Enter, dear friend," he said, “and
have no fear! Your case shall be dealt
with immediately.”
“Are you the—the gentleman who
casts out devils?” I hazarded, hardly
believing that this extremely mild
mannered old person could be the in
dividual I had traveled so far to see.
“I am he,” was the reply.
And together we entered the sur
gery, or whatever you may choose to
call it.
There was nothing frightening about
It. It was a typical suburban “best
room,” brightly furnished, laden with
knickknacks, photographs on the walls,
antimacassars on the chairs, and an
Illuminated text over the mantelpiece.
A slight aroma of sulphur in the air
completed the ensemble.
“Pray be seated," said the plump old
gentleman.
I obeyed, and he came and knelt
down before me, his plump knee crack
ing slightly as he subsided. He again
took me by the hand, and searched my
face with his calm blue eyes.
“Have you brought your demon with
you?” he asked, in a matter of fact
manner. It really might have been my
umbrella he was inquiring about.
“Er—um—I don’t think I have," I re
plied. feeling a trifle uncomfortable,
but yet moved with an irresistible de
sire to laugh.
But the pastor, as he is called, was
so serious and so solemn that I re
strained my temptation to merriment.
“I suppose you imagine, dear friend,”
he went on, “that you don't possess
such a thing as a devil?”
“I wasn’t particularly aware of it,” I
Bald.
“But you do, friend—you do! You
have your devil, even as I, at certain
times and in certain circumstances,
have mine. Indeed, all of us have our—
shall I eay—pet demons? There is the
demon of avarice, of hate, of lust, of
despair, of desperation, of drink, of dis
quietude, of chicanery, of—of -. Oh,
dear friend, flocks and flocks of ’em—
as multitudinous as the sands on the
seashore, as devastating as locust
swarms, as. as-”
He waved his fat, white hand des
pairingly. Then he changed his prayer
ful attitude to the other knee—which
also cracked ominously—and fixed me
again with his pair of cerulean search
lights.
For some seconds we both crouched
and glared at each other like a couple
of mongrels before opening hostilities.
Then the pastor sighed very profoundly,
shook his leonine mane, and made a
noise like a kettle ardently on the boil.
Presently he became suddenly excit
ed, muttering and murmuring strange
words, one of which was undoubtedly
"Abracadabra,” and another which
sounded remarkably like “Sausages”—
though I can’t swear to it.
The Demon of Curiosity.
"I can classify your demon, sir,” he
said. "It’s a plump, unmistakable devil,
gnd the name of him is-"
He paused.
"Tell me the worst,” I urged. "I can
bear it! Your expert evidence of identi
fication will be more satisfying than
frightening."
“His name, sir,” the pastor declared,
”ia Curiosity. But he’s not quite ripe for
extraction yet. If you can call again—
Tuesdays and Fridays are my at home
days—I’ll do my best to get a grip on
the gentleman and yank him out.
"My fee?” The demon dentist smiled
a very pleasant smile. “Why, sir, noth
ing. except it be the lucre of your good
will, your grqjitude, and a trifle, if you
can spare it, for the poor. I charge
nothing for cases like yours. 1 only
charge for patients who, possessed of a
particularly vjrulent demon—a deep
seated devil—have to come and stay in
my hospital for a spell, and even then
the bill covers little more than board
and lodging."
“How do you do it?" I asked.
“Ah!” replied the old man. "My
method is secret. But I can tell you this
—I scent demgns from afar. Some are
sent to me; some come of their own ac
cord. All are welcome! Hapless suf
ferers, sick and wrackled under the tor
mentlngs and the soul twistings of their
personal devils, must come and stay at
the home for a certain period.
Fees Are Graduated.
“They pay according to the state of
their worldly affairs. For instance, I
charge a collier 10 shillings to 15 shill
ings a week, and a dustman even less.
My smallest fee was 3 shillings and 6
pence, which 1 charged a poor woman
for casting out her demon-—at cost
price, so to speak. My prescription—
up to a certain point—is quite simple:
Fresh air, fresh food, clear cold water,
and—prayer. That, for a start, makes
the demon begin to feel uncomfortable
and anxious for a change of residence.
“While 1 feed up the patient, I fast
myself, to prepare for the final tussle.
Then the spirit descends suddenly upon
me, and I go for the grim gentleman
with both hands. I know that IPs
either him or me! Once or twice It’s
very nearly been him, but, thanks be, I
come out on top in the end, and Mr.
Devil has hopped out, screaming!”
As a guarantee of his good faith, the
pastor introduced me to his latest
"cure,” a little boy named Willie, whose
demon of epilepsy had been cast out
with great success only a few days
previous. Willie was quiet happy and
composed.
Then my entertaining host produced
his "casebook” of outcastlngs, in which
I read some very interesting entries.
Here are two extracts:
"Pastor G-, of Leeds. Possessed
when a youth of a most fearful demon.
Came as paying guest to Beth-Rapha,
where I wrestled with the spirit, and,
after a terrific struggle, conquered. The
demon, turbulent and terrible, eventu
ally came hissing out of Pastor G-'a
mouth like a fierce serpent. The room
and everything shook; even the chairs
and the ornaments danced about. So
did I.
"Miss C-. Amost successful lady
novelist, but possessed by an atrocious
ly malicious demon, who inspired all
her stories. The tales were moral and
pretty, but the inspiration was bad, and
whoever read them would take in some
of the atributes of the wicked demon
who inspired them. My wrestling with
this evil spirit was so severe that tho
patient fell into a dead faint, lasting
one and three quarters hours. She re
covered, but she has never been able to
write stories since, her literary powers
having completely vanished."
When we finally said goodbye on the
hospitable doorstep of Beth-Rapha, 1
thanked and congratulated the pastor,
for I could not fail to recognize in him
a man of the very best intentions—
generous, considerate and kind to the
poor. How far the demons may have
been a figment of his Imagination 1
cannot say.
But he meant well, and I envied his
pluck. A man who can extract a full
grown, furious demon out of a coal
heaver for an inclusive fee of 7 and 6
is more than a credit to his country.
The war office ought to give him a
commission and turn him on the kaiset
and the crown prince with full powers
to act!
Why the Chinese Woman's Feot Are
Bound.
Jean Price in World Outlook.
And then we came to China, land of
that greatest torture to womankind
foot binding. I’ve had so many people
say to me, “That isn't done any more,
is it?” Bishop Lewis* says that if you
will travel 100 miles in any part of
the empire, you will get the idea that
there are no unbound feet.
A famous scholar told the bishop his
theory of foot binding. For centuries
China’s men have said: “Woman's
place is the home and child bearing
her business.” Perhaps we have China
to thank for originating that remark.
So the men conceived this brilliant idea
of breaking women’s feet—a sort of
padlock on the door of the home. It is
a padlock Indeed. No pleasure in mov
ing—why not sit? And sit these wom
en do, while the pigs wallow in and
out of the door and the children die
like flies of neglect and disease.
•[Bishop Lewis returned from China
last spring, and after spending most of
tho summer and fall in Sioux City, his
former home, sailed for the orient No
vember 3 to resume his missionary
work. He is a former president of
Mornlngside college.]
Paper covers to protect automobiles
la storage have been invented.
neither Opium. Morpnuic,
Mineral. NotNahcotic|
J^rfMOeSAXLUPrnBeR ,
J^ph»s*l
MxStimo
ikMAA
MixSM*
Warm Sard
a,mf<'dS**r
... . — /
Exact Copy of Wrapper.
'mean TRICK hard to beat
According to Fat Plumber, He Wit
nessed Action That Would Seem
to Be the Limit.
“I have spotted another ‘meanest
man.’ ”
It was the fat plumber who spoke.
“Who is it lliis time?" the thin car
penter asked.
“Unison.”
“What's Unison been 'doing?”
“He took me to dinner with him in
a swell hotel the other evening.”
"Do you coll that mean?”
“No, hut listen.”
"I am listening.”
“When we had finished he took n
| small piece of tinfoil that hud cov
ered a little square of cheese—”
“Vh Dull—”
"Placed It on n silver dollar to get
a perfect impression—”
“Yes—”
“And then left the Impression on
his plate so the waiter would think
he was getting a line til)."—Youngs
town Telegram.
—
! RED, ROUGH, PIMPLY SKIN
Quickly Cleared by Cuticura Soap and
Ointment. Trial Free.
Y'ou may rely on these fragrant,
super-creamy emollients to care for
your skin, scalp, hair and hands. Noth
ing better to clear the skin of pimples,
blotches, redness and roughness, the
scalp of dandruff: and itching and the
hands of chapping and coreness.
Free sample each by mail with Book.
Address postcard, Cuticu ;a. Dept. L, i
Boston. Sold everywhere.—-Adv.
Pretty Often, Too.
During a Bible lesson a Let cher was J
trying to explain the parabie of the i
tares.
“Ciiii anyone .i ll me any person who ;
is like the evil one who sowed the
tares?"
A hand instantly shot up from the
foot of the class.
"Well, David, what person do you i
say?"
"Please, mn’ajn, my mother.”
“Why?" ask'ii 1 the toucher In nston- !
isliment.
“Been ise," answered ho, eying '
Ids patched trousers, "she sews tears.”
Same Principle.
Willis—What system do these mill- I
tary airplanes work on?
(llllis -One person runs the machine
and the other ts just an observer, hut
both of them fight.
Willis—I set' just like being mar- !
lied.
The letters 1',. P. N. S. on silver
plated teapots menu “electro-plate or
nlekel-sllver.”
Life (s the growth from little tilings
to great.
Bodily Housekeeping
(By V. M. riEBCE, M. LX)
The subject of drinking wnter with
meals lias been misunderstood.
In recent years investigation by
means of X-rays, the observations of
•scientists such as Cannon, (irutzuor,
Pavlov, Fowler, Hawk, prove that tin
abundance of water taken during di
gestion is necessary in good bodily
housekeeping.
If your kidneys are sick, or you suf
fer with lumbago or rheumatism at
times, pain in the back or back of the
neck, take a little Anuric before meals.
Tills can be found at any good drug
store. Therefore my advice to young
or old is, always drink plenty of pure
water. And for long life, occasionally
take tablets of Anuric three or four
times a day.
Anuric acts much more quickly th in
litliin. Many find tlmt it dissolves
uric acid as water does sugar.
1
CASTM
For Infants and Children.
Mothers Know That
Genuine Castoria
Thirty Years
TMI OKNTAUR COMPANY, HCW YORK CITY.
msEs^sscEemtiimREesiimi
Useless Visitor.
“Say, young felled,” said Bronco Bob,
“linve you got n gun on you?”
“No, sir,” replied tlie man with the
brand-new cowboy uniform. “I was
told that it was better to be unarmed,
so as to avoid any impression that I
was seeking a quarrel.”
“Well, that’s a big disappointment.
I needed a brand new gun an’ thought
you'd be bringin’ along at least a pair
of ’em. Don’t you let anything like
this occur again.”—Washington Star.
The largest meteorite stone actually
known to have fallen to earth weighed
G40 pounds.
Prosperity is often the forerunner
of calamity.
Getting Old Too Fast?
Late in life the body shows signs of
wear and often the kidneys weaken
first. The back is lame, bent and achy,
and the kidney action distressing. This
makes people feel older than they are.
Don’t wait for dropsy, gravel, harden
ing of the arteries or Bright’s disease.
Use a mild kidney stimulant. Try
Doan’s Kidney Pills. Thousands of el
derly folks recommend them.
A South Dakota Cate
Mrs. Henry I-Iofert,
Salem, S. Dak., says:
"For a year 1 was tor
tured by backache.
The trouble made me
so weak that 1 could
hardly turn In bod and
awful pains shot Into
my head. The kidney
secretions were unnat
ural and I knew my
kidneys were disor
dered. Three boxes of
Doan’s Kidney Pills
lived me up In good
shape after everything
else failed. I am now
able to work all right
and seldom have any
sign of kidney trouble."
Get Doan’s at Any Store, 50c a Box
DOAN’S V.IIV
FOSTER-M1LBURN CO., BUFFALO, N. Y.
|
'No Sir’’ You c«b*1 palm off rotatitutr* ob me. I*** I
beet] trains Auguat Flower for atoraaeh troubles, biiiouume |
itnd nervous indigestion since I was a boy, and I always *5
. insist upon having it because I know what it will da’* |
Green’s
August Flower
is tlie one remedy always to be relied
upon for indigestion, constipation, and
that dizzy feeling. 5! jears test has
proved it, the best in many thousands
of households. Try it and learn by that
means how easy It is to keep well.
25c. and 75c. sizes at all Druggists and
Dealers. Always keep a bottle handy
SIOUX CITY PTG. CO., NO. 49-1916.
ADVICE TO MOTHERS
New Ulm, Miun.—“Over twenty
years ago I started to take ‘Favorite
Prescription.’ It
kept me in splen
did condi tiou dur
ing tlie expect
ant period, and I
had a compara
tively easy time
and was In un
usual health af
terwards ; also
during middle life
and it eeijainly
helped me. I
do not suffer with
hot flashes or dizziness ai all or any
oilier ailment which 1 have known oth
er women to have at this time of life.
1 am glad to recommend Dr. Pierce’s
Favorite Prescription.”—MBS. GKK
YUl'DR BUSHARD, Gli N. State
Street.
Buy it now in liquid or tablets.—
Aflv. i