The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, November 08, 1917, Image 3

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    Suffered Several
Years. PERUNA
MADE ME WELL
Mrs. Elizabeth Reuther, 1002 11th
St., N. W., Washington, D. C., writes:
"I endorse Peruna as a splendid
medicine for catarrh and stomach
trouble, from which I suffered sev
eral years. I took it tor several
months, found my health was re
stored and have felt splendialy ever
since. I now take it when I con
tract a cold, and it soon rids the sys
tem of any catarrhal tendencies.”
Standby
lor a
Cold.
Those who object to liquid medl- j
clnes can procure Peruna Tablet*.
Raise High Priced Wheat
on Fertile Canadian Soil
Canada extends to you a hearty invita- 1
tion to settle on her FREE Homestead i
lands of 160 acres each or secure some H
of the low priced lands in Manitoba,
Saskatchewan and Alberta. This year wheat i> higher but
Canadian land just at cheap, so the opportunity is more at
tractive than ever. Canada wants you to help feed the world
by tilling some of her fertile soil—land similar to that which
during many years hat averaged 20 to 45 bushels of wheat 3
to the acre. Think of the money you can make with wheat !
around $2 a bushel and land to easy to get. Wonderful
yields also of Oats, Barley and Flax. Mixed farming
in Western Canada is as profitable an industry as
grain growing.
The Government this year is tsking farmers to put in
creased acreage into grain. There ia a great demand for
farm labor to replace the many young men who have'
volunteered for service. The climate ia healthful and
agreeable, railway facilities excellent, good schools and
churches convenient. Write for literature as to reduced
railway rates to Supt. of Immigration, Ottawa. Can., or to
f <*• J- Jnkaetoae. Drawer 197, Watertewn, S. D.|
w-V. Bennett, lees 4, Bee Bsildinf., Osaka. Nek.,
sad R. A. Garrett. 311 iecioea Street, St. Psnl. Mina.
N Ready for Hard Fighting.
“Them Japs,” said a man in a Flat
hush barber shop, to the second-chair
anist. “ain't a-goin’ to let them Ger
mans get too far inter Russia.”
•‘(Join' to fight 'em?” asked the artist.
‘■Sure tiling. First thing ye know
them .laps will be over there.”
“They are hard fighters, them
Japs.” ventured the artist.
“Hard? I should say so,” declared
the man, “and at this very minit the
whole Jap army is marbleized for ac
tion.”
Mrs. \Y. J.' Tisdale, Hoboken, N. J.,
widow, lias seven sons in United States
military service.
It takes an experienced elevator boy
to let a man down easy.
“Wta Will Win
This Battle?
Tour kidneys are the filters of the
body. If they become inactive and fail
to eliminate the waste matter, they are
apt to throw the whole mechanism of
the body out of order, thus toxic poisons
can accumulate in the system and be as
deadly as snake venom.
Besides causing the minor ailments
of rheumatism, sciatica, lumbago and
backache, neglect of the kidneys is apt
to develop into more serious diseases,
such as diabetes or stone in the bladder.
Bid the body of toxic poisons—clean
the bladder and kidneys and cure the
twinges of rheumatism with Anuric and
you win the battle of life.
Anuric was first discovered by Dr.
Tierce and has benefited thousands of
sufferers as well as appeased and elimin
:ted the ravages of the more serious
kidney diseases. Now procurable in vials
'or 00 cents at any good drug store,
or send Dr. V. M. Pierce, Invalids’ Hotel
and Surgical Institute, Buffalo, N. Y.,
10 cents for trial package.
Omaha, Nebr.—‘ ‘ Two or three months
ago I ached all
over and felt so
badly that I could
not sleep at night,
my bladder seemed
weak, gave mo con
siderable trouble;
and 'caused sting
ing sensations. I
read an advertise
ment of Anuric
and' purchased a
bottle. It was only a few days before I
felt wonderfully relieved, anfl all tho
lorencss left me. I am glad to endorse
luch a worthy medicine and always shall
recommend it.”—Mrs. W. C. Zeschman,
1832 N. 17th St.
■J ORIGINAL /flS CHEMICAL*
door Uoset
80,000 SOLD—FIFTH TEAR
Mere Comfortable,
Healthful, Convenient
Eli ruinates the out*house,
open vault and cowpool,
which are brooding places
for cerms. Have a warm,
asAUary, odorless toilet right
2n your house. No going out
in cold weather. A boon to
invalids. Endorsed by State
Boards of Health.
ABSOLUTELY ODORLESS
_ Put It Anvwhrre In The House
rhe pf?raxs are killed by a chemical process Jn
writer In the container. Smpty once a month.
No more trouble to empty than ashes. Closet ab
solutely guaranteed. Ask for catalog and price.
(Are sanitary mfs. co. him eta Detroit, mich.
Ask about tbo Ito-S&n Wasbstand — Hot and
Cold Hunnlng Water Without Plumbing.
. FOR PERSONAL HYGIENE
DtssoivsJ (a vatsf for dou<ihca ilopy
pc’*jc catarrh, ulceration cm? inflara
rnation. Recommended by Lydia E.
rhcAJinirt Med. Co, for tea years.
A liealitijj wonder for nasal catarrh,
•ore throat and soreercs. EconomicoL
H" *•;! ro’dinsr/ »rj gmnidd.l power,
isaplr tree. 5Cr. «U cL-jmhu, or p™ir,ij ty
Ssps-^S i
How Prices Go Up.
An incident which is being told id
the wool trade may, perhaps, shed
some light on the way in which pricee
increase when the fundamental value,
remains virtually unchanged. It maj
also illustrate how something akin t<
camouflage Is utilized by business met
to deceive even themselves into be
Sieving there is a shortage. One deal
er sold a consignment of wool at 61
cents a pound, and it was resold sever
al times, each dealer making 10 cents
a pound profit. In the course of time,
the merchant first referred to heard
that a certain firm had an allotment of
wool for sale and asked the price. 0«
being told that the present owners had
purchased at $1 a pound, and were
willing to sell at $1.25, the inquirer
said, “All right. I’ll take it and send
you a check. Where is the wool ?” The
answer came: “On the third floor oi
your own storage warehouse, where i1
has been ever since you sold it orig
inally."—Christian Science Monitor.
CUTICURA STOPS ITCHING
Instantly in Most Cases—Write for s
Free Sample.
Cuticura is wonderfully effective
The Soap to cleanse and purify, tin
Ointment to soothe and heal all form!
of Itching, burning skin and scalp af
fections. Besides these super-ereamj
emollients if used daily prevent little
skin troubles becoming serious.
Free sample each by mail Xvlth Book
Address postcard, Cuticura, Dept. L
Boston. Sold everywhere.—Adv.
Her Beau Was No Adonis.
A girl with a stunning ligure, big
brown eyes, peach-like complexion and
wavy black hair, lovely enough to be
come tl\e bride ol' a prince, stood
around the Union station recently
watching and waiting, relates the To
peka Globe. Finally her face became
illuminated; a spindly, weak-eyed, un
dersized young man slouched in sight,
homely enough to stop a dock.
The two talked, and every once in a
while the princess-like girl dabbed hei
eyes with a handkerchief. At last a
train puffed in under the station shed
Tlie young man waved an indifferen;
^good-by to the beautiful creature wht
citing to him sobbing until he bourdec
away.
Is lie lier brother, her cousin, or lid
uncle? No, be is her beau. Girls nr«
the funniest things in the world.
$100 Reward, $100
Catarrh Is a local disease greatly infill
enced by constitutional conditions. 1
therefore requires constitutional treat
ment. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE
Is taken internally and acts through tin
Blood on the Mucous Surfaces of the Sys
tem. HALL’S CATARRH MEDICINE
destroys the foundation of the disease,
gives the patient strength by improving
the general health and assists nature in
doing its work. $100.00 for any case of
Catarrh that HALL’S CATARRH
MEDICINE fails to cure.
Druggists 75c. Testimonials free.
F. J. Choney & Co., Toledo, Ohio.
To Burn Stumps.
Compr -sed ail’ is used by u Wash
ington invent nr to f tt burning lluids
into holes of stumps until they are
destroyed more effectively than when
dynamite Is used.
A woman is naturally oft color when
she removes her complexion.
Happy is the home where Red Cro«*
Ball Blue is used. Sure to please. All
grocers. Adv.
When a man is easily bought the j
buyer is usually sold.
Murine is for Tired Eyes. I !
s PflOVISof Red Eyes — Sore Eyes—5
b wMManu Granulw ti Eyelids. Rests — 5
» Refreshes— Restore*. Murion lh a favorite =
6 Treatment for Eyes that Teel dry i.n<\ smart. =
£ Givoyour Byes mac.h of your luviitK cars £
£ as your Teeth aad vritii the same regularity. £
g CAS- m THEM. YOU CANNOT EUY KEY.1 EYFSI 2
S Bold at Drug and Optical Stores or by Mall, s
S Ask Mur.ne Eyt Remedy Co. Chicago, lor Free Buck I
•luiiiiiiiiiuiiiuiuauituiimiuuiiiiiiUiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiaiiB
^444 44^
f SAVE 50 PER CENT OF 4
► AMERICANS. 4
4 4
4 There is one thing Americans 4
4 can never be too thankful for, 4
4 that is, that England and France 4
4 have so advanced the science of 4
4 war since the present one be- 4
4 gan that casualties have been 4
4 reduced more than 60 per cent. 4
4 All these Improved methods of 4
4 "barrage” and "zone fire” are 4
4 now freely and gladly given to 4
4 the American troops. This fact 4
4 alone makes it easy to contrib- 4
4 ute to the Liberty loan. It makes 4
4 it a pleasant duty for Ameri- 4
4 cans to lend their good credit to 4
4 their European allies. The 4
4 French and British will have 4
4 to maintain after the war, as 4
4 they are having to maintain 4
4 now, a vast number of hope- 4
4 lessly disabled soldiers and sail- 4
4 ors who were crippled before 4
4 the new methods of artillery 4
4 war were perfected, when their 4
4 gallant men had to go out into 4 j
4 the open and expose themselves 4
4 to quick firing machine guns 4
4 and shrapnel explosions, even 4
4 while they were cutting barbed 4
4 wire electrically charged. 4
4 4
444444444444444444444444♦4
American Soldiers Courteous.
A French mother whose two sons,
her only children, have given their
lives for France, has written to
Margaret Prescott Montague, the
American writer, praising the cour
tesy of the American troops now in
France. The letter is enough to
make the heart of every American
swell with pride. It was printed in
the Atlantic Monthly, and says:
There have been here, in Paris, many
touching expressions of the gratitude of
our French people toward America. The
first soldiers who arrived here have been
greetedl with extraordinary manifestations
of the most ardent patriotic joy. In re
turn, those fine, handsome men have en
deared themselves to us by traits which
Reveal the nobility of their character.
1 myself have been by a mere chance
the object of one of these manifestations,
and it has moved me so deeply that 1 must
tell you al' about it.
V waa watting at the corner of l’Ave
nue du Trocadero, all alone, standing
on the edge of the sidewalk, w’rapped in
my sombre mourning clothes. It was 5
o’clock in the afternoon. I was not think
ing of the rides organized through Paris
for the American boys, when, all of a sud
den, a motor bus appeared, decorated
with the American and allies’ flags, and
carrying at least 40 of your soldiers.
A poilu, one of our men, was driving, and
next to him sat a noncommissioned Amer
ican officer, who. eeeing me, took aff his
hat and, with a deep gesture, saluted me.
All the soldiers in the bus rose and re- ,
peated the salute.
Behind this car. at least 20 more motors i
followed, the occupants of which, one
after the other, repeated the beautiful
and touching homage to my dead sons
while smiling to me with an air both sac
and resolute. T saluted them also, and
understood w'ell that they wished to «a>
to me. "We have come to fight fpr them
to complete the task they have begun!’
And 1 wished to tell them. “Courage el
merci!”
Was not this a beautiful beginning fof
all those valiant fellows. You can well
be proud of them, for we feel it a glors
to have at our side such soldiers in tliif i
struggle for right and liberty.
Verbal Hash.
From the Milwaukee Journal.
Senator LaFollette has made his long
heralded speech in congress. With all thf
power at his command, he has given hit
Me regarding his disloyal acts and utter
ances. And the most that one can satf 1
concerning his defense Is that it is nu
mlllating to Wisconsin to have a man rep
resenting this state who talks such stuff |
as Mr. LaFollette voiced in congress. If ,
anyone can find anything American in his
speech, he can beat the thousands of loyal
ones who have sought vainly for the |
slightest evidence of genuine patriotism in
Mr. LaFollette’s remarks.
What Mr. LaFollette said in defense of
himself Is mere verbal hash, an exclama
tory concoction made up of the stuff that
has been talked by the propagandists, the
pro-Germans, the pacifists, and all the
others who have been giving aid and com
fort to Germany. There is criticism of the
nation. There is abuse of the admlnistra- j
tion. There is opposition to the war. But i
there is never a word of anything con- |
etructive favoring the United States ,
Never a word is there in denunciation of j
the Belgian outrage, the sinking of tht |
Lusitania, the bad faith of Germany in
keeping her pledged word, or the war by
the kaiser within the United States
against the United States.
If the Journal lia-d 1,000.000 tongues, it
would take them all to tell the outrages i
committed by the German government
against the United States and the harm ,
done America by propagandist newspa- ;
pers. treasonable individuals, and such j
lack loyal citizens as Senator LaFollette.
All their talk about free speech is pretty, |
but disloyally so. When a man is trying J
to burn one's house or murder one’s chil4
dren, men cannot talk about free speech.
There Is nothing to do but act. As for the
Americanism of those who are backing .
Senator LaFollette in his lack loyalty po- ■
sltion, it is nil. And as Senator Robinson, !
Arkansas, said in bis reply to Mr. LaFol- |
lette, Saturday, the man who would not j
fight Germany now, after what Germany I
has done to us, who would take such a j
position as Mr. LaFollette’s. "would not ;
fight if his ow*n daughter were ravished
In his own home.”
Too Big For His Job.
From the Milwaukee Journal.
On the streets of a neighboring city Is !
a young man without a iob. He is steady
In his habits. Ho never enters a saloon.
He does not gamble. He has never been
known to be late at work. And he is one
of the most skilled of the younger men in
his orofession. But the company had to 1
discharge him a week ago, within less
than three months after be had been giv
tn his'first promotion with the company.
That promotion, with an increase ot Jo
a week in salary, ruined him. Ho thought
himself indispensable to the company.
And when a man gets to where he thinks
nls employers cannot get along without
aim. be has taken the first step tbward
discharge.
This young man, after he was promoted,
Decame autocratic. He put ori fine clothes.
He began telling the other fellows how
;o do their work. He criticized them for
:he way they did their work. He got to
where he thought he knew more than the
nen who had built up the business arid
were directing its affairs. Then they had
let him go.
Moral: Young men who expect to make
;heir way . in a trade or a business, must
fuard against getting too exalted an op1n
on of their importance. There is not an
employer anywhere that cannot get along
without any one of his employes. He
night be inconvenienced for a time by
lis loss, but there is always someone
•eady to take the place of the man a little
ligher up. There is a big demand every
where for men with ability, but r.o bust
iesw has any patience with conceited men
vho try to exploit their brains and powers
before their fellows. No young man who
lopes to advance in his chosen profess.on
ran be too careful to refrain from nspurri
ng an air of self-importance. Really big
men, after all, are the most unassuming
l THE POOR BOY’S COUNTRY. +
4 '- 4
4 From the Milwaukee Journal. 4
4 When Henry Fo*d was 17. he 4
4 earned S3 a week. When he was r/J, 4
4 he owned 270 acres of automobile 4
4 manufacturing plant, with 0.000 ma- 4
4 chines operating in a s-.ug’e room 4
4 and e\ery cue of hi** £0.00*) employes 4
4 receiving more each day than he 4
4 had earned in an entire week 36 4
> years before. 4
4 And yet some rev there Is no 4
4 chance fer a pour boy in America. 4
*■ The Fulled Fiat* s i.* the poor man’s v
4 country. If any fellow -1'-»\ .«= !511i \ 4
4 it Is bis . wn fault. For him who 4
4 cat give the w*.»r’.*i v.hat it needs 4
4 and has never had before, even 4
<- though it be only a Ford eutomo- 4
> bile, riches and fame are welting. 4
4 4
>4444444t44444444444444444
"—-- '■ —.- ..— .....— .J——.- ..■ ■■ .. ' ■■ ■ ■
,
, » ’
,1
111
■
She Did Her “Bit."
There are many ways for one to <lo
[Ids bit, but n young woman, riding on
die hurricane deck of a Fifth avenue
bus, discovered a new way, relates the
New York Times. The bus was just
about to go under the elevated struc
ture, which is only a few feet above
the heads of those seated on Its top,
when a young man In khaki jumped
to his feet to join a woman friend In
a seat that had just been vacated. The
conductor sprung forward to grasp the
soldier, but a young woman seated
nearby was quicker. "Sit down,” she
commanded sharply, at the same time
Jerking the arm of Sammy. The khaki
clad young man lost his balance and
the next moment he was seated—in the
young woman's lap. The girl blushed
a bright pink, and the soldier apolo
gized. and everybody smiled. “I don't
care,” said the young woman to her
friend. “I feel that l have done my
bit in saving that soldier's head from
being battered by the low bridge.”
Housekeepers Gan Save
$200,000,000 on Food
In those days when the high cost of liv
ing pinches nearly every home, no waste
should be overlooked. One of the most
flagrant and the most easily prevented, Is
the destruction of food by rats. One rat
will often do a hundred dollars' damage of
food and property In a, single night, and a
careful estimate gives over tiOO.OOO.OOO as
the value of foodstuffs destroyed annually
by these pests. Exterminate them with
Stearns’ Paste and save this enormous
loss of food. A small box of Stearns'
Paste costs only 35 cents and Is usual
ly enough to completely rid the house of
rats and mice: also effective against cock
roaches and waterbugs. Adv.
Sounds True.
Irate Mamma—Goodness me! It's
half nn hour since I sent you to the
shop to get those tilings, and here you
are back again without them.
Little Dick—It was such u long time
before*my turn came to be waited on
that I forgot what it was you wanted.
“Then why didn’t you come home
and find out?”
“I was afraid if I left I’d lose my
turn.”
Deck Does Not Sink.
A British patent has been granted
for a ship so constructed that. In event
of wreck, the hull would sink and the
decks float away with the passengers.
To keep clean and healthy take Dr.
Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets. They regu
late liver, bowels and stomach.—Adv.
It's as unblessed to give its it is to
receive offense.
Same Old Prices.
Tlie voice of an anxious woman
culled the city clerk’s office on the tele
phone the other day, relates the Indi
anapolis News.
“Is tills the marriage parlor?” she
asked. When told there were no mar
riage parlors connected with the of
fice, she said she was anxious to get
some Information nbout the ’’price of
marriage.”
”1 heard some talk about the price
of marriage going up and 1 wanted to
know if they had a standard price dur
ing the war.” she explained.
She gave a sigh of relief when in
formed that the price of marriage
licenses had not been increased, and
that most justices of the pence and
ministers still relied on the generosity
of the bridegroom for their compensa
tion for performing the ceremony.
GREEN’S AUGUST FLOWER
has been a household pannceu all over
the civilized world for more than half
a century for constipation, intestinal
troubles, torpid liver and the generally
depressed feeling that accompanies
such disorders. It is a most valuable
remedy for indigestion or nervous dys- I
pepsin and liver trouble, bringing on
headache, coming of up food, palpita
tion of heart and many other symp
toms. A few doses of August Flower
will Immediately relieve you. It is a
gentle laxative. Ask your druggist.
Sold in all civilized countries.—Adv.
Bald Men, Don't Read This!
Gladys—Who was the old gentleman ,
who took yon to dinner. Violet?
Violet—An old bachelor friend of
papa's. He was delightful.
Gladys—I shouldn't think you would
find a bald-headed old bachelor a very
delightful companion at dinner.
Violet—Oh. but be was—he attract
ed nil the flies.
Important to Mothers
Examine carefully every bottle of
CASTORIA, that famous old remedy
for infants and children, and see that it
In Use for Over 30 years.
Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castoria
Banana Juice Wine.
Two Frenchmen In Cochin, China,
have succeeded in making a palatable
wine from bunauu juice.
Some women break into the gossip
class because tliey are unable to at
tract attention in any other.
“Made in Germany."
A case of sliver and bronze \va'
inedals, mhde In Geriftany, are now at
the British museum, and replicas can
be seen at the Victoria and Albert,
writes a correspondent. One of the
most Important celebrates Zeppelin
raids on London, with a portrait of the
late count on one side and on the
other an imaginative design of a Zepp,
about to alight on Towen bridge, with
tires and explosions In perspective.
There is a profile of the crown prince
on a specially big medal, with the
young Siegfried on the reverse, the
latter killing a dragon with four head*
—the Hon for Belgium, the cock for
France, the bear for Russia and the
unicorn for England.
New Fishhook.
A recently invented fishhook Is se
weighted that should it fall to the bot
tom of a stream the point of the hook
and the halt are held up within reach
of n fish.
For genuine comfort nnd lasting pleas
ure use Red Cross Ball Blue on wash day.
All good grocors. Adv.
Most men who think they nre great
don’t even look the part.
■ j_ ■■ -i
“Blue” and Worried?
“Blue,” worried, half-sick people
should find out the cause of their trou
bles. Often it is merely faulty kidney
action, which allows the blood to get
loaded up with poisons that irritate the ,
nerves. BSckache. headaches, dizziness
and annoying bladder troubles are add
ed proofs that the kidneys need help.
Use Doan’s Kidney Pills. Thousands
thank them for relief from just such
troubles. 1
An Iowa Case
WMr,-FoiirthehAve“ "h*f» **
Cresco, Iowa, says:
."I Buffered from '
rheumatic pains In
my back and lower
limbs. My kidneys
acted too often and
caused me much an
noyance. They didn't
act freely enough
and my limbs and
feet swelled so I [
couldn't get on my
shoes. X got so I
couldn’t get around
I was so dreadfully
weak and miserable.
I had headaches, too.
Doan's Kidney Pills regulated my
kidneys so the swellings went down
and the pains and aches left me.” 1
Get Doan's at Any Store, 60c a Bog
DOAN’S hf“JSV
FOSTER MKBURN CO.. BUFFALO. N.Y.
SIOUX CITY PTG. CO., NO. 45-1917.
I Middle
Worn© iv I
Are Here Told the Best Remedy I
for Their Troubles. ,Mm . g
Freemont, O.—“I was passing through the critical MM * fM//'//// f, K
period of life, being forty-six years of age and had all rT^mSSsjfr ~ * m/fi/m////) '/ HE
the symptoms incident to that change — heat flashes,
nervousness, and was in a general run down condition, yj93>/fAtWb-_—njoMr/ WC- M / H
so it was hard for me to do my work. Lydia E. Pink- j I ii Vs f 'M/ji / H
ham’s Vegetable Compound was recommended to me as \ jico. ' \ m // y
the best remedy for my troubles, which it surely proved ^ ^ f/X/Zfa \\f/ A' A jaV^H
to be. I feel better and stronger in every way since ' •" P//yt&rlk£filC' fTo** ^ . ,■) CMfPl
taking it, and tlie annoying symptoms have disap- '/\T W/MKjfU*fl'l yLr/yj
pcared.”—Mrs. M. Godden, 9-5 Napoleon St., Fremont,
North Haven, Conn.—“Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegeta- Jj
ble Compound restored my health after everything else ^yUbjjUHNHPo//f/*4r*|V7-*'^S. *. - 'ViIHV
had failed when passing through change of life. There "■ f t .ft
is nothing like it to overcome the trying symptoms.” r " j.
—Mrs. Florence Ibei.i.a, Box 197, Nortli Haven, Conn. w ' ,. yiMar
la Sock Cases
LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S l j
VEGETABLE GOMPOUND I 1
%m% ike r@@@r4 for tha qmmi®st g@©d!g
_ _ IYDIA E.PINKHAM MEDICINE CO. LYNN.MASS. Jj