The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, July 31, 1919, Image 11

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Baby's Clothes
will be white as the driven snow
when laundered if you use
Red Cross Ball Blue
It never streaks or spots the
clothes, nor does it injure the
most delicate fabric.
All good grocers sell it; 5 cents
a package.
/
BMilMMW
FOR PERSONAL HYGIENE
Dissolved in water for douches stop*
j>rl vie efiterih, ulceration and inflam*
n-ttica. Recommended by Lydia E.
FirJ-.hsm hied. Co.vfor ten years.
A h Selins' wonder for nasal catarrh,
sore throat and sore eyes. Economical.
Hw extraordinary cicauring and germicidal power.
Free. 30c. oil druggists, or postpaid by
\HW4rt^rhePaxtnaTon»<CompLny^B«tMjMii^^^
ft ft ICY Cl V ffll I CD placed anywhere
U/UOl rLi MLLCn ATTRACTS AND KILLS
" ALL FIIES. Kent,
clean .ornamental .con
venient, cheap. Last*
all 6cascn. Mai’e of
metal, can’t spill or
tip over; will not Boil
or injure anything.
, Guaranteed effective.
Sold by dealer*, or
5 by EXPRESS,
prepaid, $1.25.
HAROLD COMERS, io» Do KaiL Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.
^B.A.THOMAS’
StocK Remedy
For Horses, Cattle and Sheep
OLD KENTUCKY MFC. CO., Enc., Paducah, Ky.
—an^r'war
ATm
Use Cuticura Soap
To Clear Your Skin
All druggicU: Soap 25, Ointment 26 A 60. Taloum26.
Sample each free of “Caticnra, D«pt Z, Boston."
~raarmM*m-ar^ar Ajrjrar
4,000 ACRES, schools, railroad, telephone,
fenced, abundance water; 1,400 a. meadow,
open to forest reserve; A-l for stock, dairy,
*heep ranch: In the temperate Bitter Root
Valley Geo. F. Brooks, own.. Missoula. Mont.
SIOUX CITY, PTG. CO„ NO. 31-1919.
Unfinished Business.
“Do you believe that fighting is at
bn en<1?” asked Mr. Dolun.
“Yes,” replied Sir. Uafferty. “We’re
feeing to live peaceable hereafter.”
“Well, I dort*t want to spoil any
pleasant sociability. But there was two
or three little meetings I'd like to
lmve had before they changed the
rules.”
Poetry and Prose.
“Across the Alps lies Italy” may be
b good graduating motto, but n high
school class in Kansas ehose this:
“Beyond us lies the saw buck and the
v ushtub.”—Boston Transcript.
WBftitt Bests, Beiresbes, Soothe*,
IS— r? Heals—Keep your Eyes
| Strong and Healthy.*- If
they Tire, Smart Itch, or
Burn, if Sore, Irritated,
__1 Inflamei or Granulated,
use Murine often. Safe for Infant or Adult
At ali Druggists. Write for.tree Eye Boole
Mailt EreSsaicdy Cmcyaay, Chktso.C, 5, L
4444444f44*44444>*4*f
♦ ♦
4 CURED BROKEN NECK. 4
4 4
4 From Popular Mechanics. 4
4 How an American army filer, 4
4 whose neck was broken by a fall* 4
4 recovered and reerterc' the service, 4
4 was briefly told in Popular Me- 4
4 chanies ‘ast March. Now that a 4
.4 permanent cure has been effected, 4
4 the apparatus that accomplished 4
4 so extraordinary a result is dis- 4
4 closed. Devised for the occasion by 4
4 the array surgeon In charge of tlni 4
4 case, it took the form of e rigid 4
4 support for the patient's head, with 4
4 adjustments whit!) kept the neck 4
4 sufficiently stretched to separate 4
4 the Injured vertebrae. A feqle 4
4 leather pad for chin and neck was 4
4 made froth a plaster cast. A metal 4
4 yoke fitted to the shoulders was in- 4
4 closed in leather bads held »igidly 4
4 in place by a firm body harness. To 4
4 the metal yoke were soldered up- 4
4 right rods of metal, extending well 4
4- up toward the lop of the bead, and 4
I 4 the neck pad was’ strapped to the 4
1 4 tips of these rods. Wing nuts at 4
I 4 this point were screwed upto great- 4
4 er tension each day, until the pa- 4
•4 tient’s head assumed its normal 4
4- attitude. 4
4 ♦
♦ 444 44444 4 4 44444 44-44
YOUNG AND FRESH
VEGETABLES
Feed the children a lot of fresh vege
tables ind frtrits. They need it and like
It. A lot of experimental work has been
done on vegetables during the last two
years. Much of it has been done in an
effort to find out whether dried vege
tables can take the place of fresh ones.
One discovery hue been that vegetables
vary greatly as they' mature. Fresh,
young, tender vegetables are far better
for us than older, tougher ones. In fact,
fresh, young, tender vegetables, after
having been dehydrated. Haw audio anti
scurvy substance thjtn old, tough' un
dehydrated oneg* Therefore it is not ad
visable to dehydrate old, tough, matured
vegetables. Select the young, tender
ones.
Guinea pigs could be cured of scurvy
by feeding them dehydrated carrots, pro
vided the roots dehydrated were yi ung
and tender. It was likewise found that
prolonged heating extracted the anti
scurvy principle from carrots. If young
carrots are boiled for 20 minutes and
then permitted to finish cooking by allow
ing them to stand in the hot water they
retained the anti-scurvy principle. If
they were boiled longer ^hey lost it.
Nothing is better for young children
than tomato juice. It r.ot only prevents
scurvy, but it has anti-neuritis proper
ties. When pigeons are fed too long and
monotonously on a diet that is wrong in
certain ways they get neuritis and
eventually become paralyzed. Human
beings have neuritie pains and even a
disease similar to that referred to in
pigeons and known as beriberi. It has
been found that plenty of tomato juice
is a remedy for these neuritie difficulties
as well.
But the tomatoes must be fresh, tender,
and not at all spoiled. In cooking the
heat must not be tco long applied. If
fresh, young tomatoes are used and the
heating Is properly done the pulp can be
canned and even after a year or more
it is a cure for mild scurvy and an ar.ti*
neuritie as well as a preventative for
the disease conditions referred to.
Falk, McGuire and Blount say that to
get prime products in canning and de
hydrating vegetables the goods must be
young and tender; they must not be
over ripe, and they must be cooked at a
high temperature for a short time.
Another suggestion that seems to of
fer much is that we make use of yeast as
a staple article of diet. It is especially
promising as a food for persons between
10 and 20 years of age. Yeast is a plant.
It grows rapidly and is inexpensive to
produce. It has not the limitations of
wheat which can only be grown on rich
soil or of beef which is expensive to pro
duce. However, it remains for the cooks
to learn to make palatable dishes of it
and for the growers to put it on a com
mercial basis.
Yosemite Park.
Fr6m the Book of National Parks,
Scribners’ Sons Publishers.
In the impressive surroundings of the
Yosemite National Park in California, F.
E. Matt bee, of the United States geolog
ical survey, will this month announce in
a series of three lectures a new and final
solution of the long debated problem of
the origin of the Yosemite valley in Cali
fornia.
The fact, as advanced by Matthes, is
that the Yosemite valley was cut from the
solid granite nearly to its present depth
by the Merced river, long before the be
ginning of the glacial period; before the
glaciers arrived the river cut valley was
already 2,400 feet deep opposite El Capitan,
and 3,000 feet deep opposite Eagle Peak.
The valley was then V-shaped, and the
present waterfalls were cascades; those
which are now the Yosemite falls were
1,800 feet deep and those of Sentinel creek
2,000 feet deep.
It was not the dawdling modern Merced
river that cut this chasm, but a torrent
which, day and night for several million
years, swept with terrific force down a
sharply tilted bed, sand papering its path
with the friction of the masses of sand
and granite fragments borne down from
the high Sierra. That the river could con
tinue in this process for millions of years
without cutting down to a level, choking
up with the sand and gravel it carried,
and eventually slowing up, was due to the
frequent tilting and shifting of the Sierra
throughout its geological history. For the
present Sierra Nevada is not the first
mountain chain upon Its site.
Can Money Buy It?
From the Springfield Republican.
The project to make New York city the
world's medical capital, an honor here
tofore divided between Berlin and Vienna,
has a reasonable basis. America is already
wrell to the fore in surgery and has made
notable contributions to tne science of
bacteriology. Whatever cash may be
necessary can doubtless be raised with
out much difficutly.
Mexico’s “William Weeks."
From the New York Sun.
For some years past Mexico has been
extensively engaged in the agreeable pas
time of making money. More than $2,000,
000,000 worth of engraved certificates have
been issued since the revolutionary trou
bles set in. The notes arc given the
curious name “blllemblque-s,” which Is
only a Mexican effort to pronounce the
American name “William Weeks.”
This William Weeks was once a pay
master who used to give orders to the
peons tor small sums tq carry them along
until nest they aligned themselves before
the cashier’s window. The local merchants
would accept the notes with the signature
of the accommodating paymaster as good
currency, and they were named “Bill
embiques." By a simple transition the
term came to applied to the revolutionary
paper money.
Hurley Back to Farm. ^
It irn’t every man who selects hfis birth-»
day as a fitting occasion to derrick him
rtelf one of the biggest jobs in the
CQUfttnrlnut Edward N. Hurley, chairman
of*h^Uoitcd States shipping board, has
arrange G for such a double celebration on
July 31. < >n that day he will be 55 years
old and out of a government job, but he
will still have a few Mg busim-t-y oiuer
prf&eA that i.w jvn t and Jrr fu*n fc
Wheaton. »i!.
r" * w»
We Can Build League of Nations j
From Stars and Stripes, Newspaper of tha A. E. F.
The flag on Ehrenbreilstein may weather a few more summers, but this
summer is the last that the A. E. K., as most of us know it, will sweat through.
Wo’ve finished. And we have the satisfaction of knowing that we did a good
}ob and we're glad to quit.
But can we carry the lessen home?
Print can’t do It.
Photographs can't do it.
Man.\ will come to Belleau Wood, people who have read all about the Great
War. Already worn paths scar that onoe pathless hell. Those people will see
the twisted trees. But they won't see the sprawling forms beneath them. They
will see the bullet bitten rocks. But they can never visualize the trembling
.horror of lying in those crevices while the German guns spat their death
through the grass. Here and there they may pick up an empty shell. But
tlie fingerless hand protruding from the rotting khakt blouse has been gra
ciously burled beneath a -neat white cross.
The horror has been hallowed. The misery has become picturesque, the
murder- turned to romance.
And those little villages in the, valleys! Their strange sad windows look
out across fresh meadow's now like staring blinded eyes. They are so still, so
deathly still—not a single wisp of friendly smoke, no human color, only a
garish patch perhaps, where some unremembering bush flaunts its green
brancli across the gray.
This cannot touch the tourist. The home folk can never feel it beside
their friendly hearths. Nobody under God's great, tranquil skies can tell of
the rottenness of war but the men who suffered through it.
Upon (hem rests a solemn duty. They must go home and choke the coward,
jingo who macks himself behind his false and blatant patriotism, and the
merchant politician, not content with stuffing his home coffers tilt they burst—
but anxious to barter the b'ood of his country’s young manhood for new places
in the sun!
The Prussian guardsman died hard, fighting for such a place. The men in
frock coats who make the laws never had to stand up against him. They never
took a machine gun nest or saw a barrage roll down, stop and then uncurtain a
wall of .shrieking steel. We know what the Prussian guardsman means—his
code, iiis cold courage and the blind patriotism that sent him forward, granting
none the right to live but those who wore his uniform.
We know, but we cannot give that knowledge to others. But upon it we
can act. We can help build a League of Nations with such sinews of war and
such conscience for peace that no one will dare oppose it.
If we don’t, tiro blood will be on our own foolish heads, which, by the grace
of God, chance, or sethe Prussian guardsman’s poor aim, are still on our foolish
shoulders.
j The Finical Taste. J
Frcrr the Portland Oregonlon.
The war department recently rejected some t>8 bids for purchase
of 43,000,000 pounds of canned and cured meat which it had on hand
when the armistice was signed. These bids in a majority of eases
were for less than half of the sums the government had paid for the
goods. .VIany of them were made by the same packers who had sold
the goods to the government.
There is, perhaps, an element of profiteering in these later trans
actions. Evidently the war department is going to get more money
for its supplies if it can. It will not, however, in ordinary expectation,
get out all that it put into them. They were bought in a war market ;
when they are sold their own v.« ight will serve to bring down the scale
in some E'gree. Thor© is a ecvtr.in allowance to he legitimately made
between market* then and now.
But (here is another and an even more influential factor. One
element in fixing the price of these goods for civilian use is that they
are packed in army packages. The army pac kages are durable enough,
but, as the New York Commercial, speaking with authority from*the
trade viewpoint, observes, they “have a generally unfinished appear
ance, are unattractive to the eye, and the public would expect to get
them at a considerably reduced price.’’
So the public pays for its finical taste in such matters as these.
Grown accustomed to buying its food put up attractively, it will have
it no other way. Tin* eye, no less than the palate and the digestion,
figures in the purchase of necessities for the table.
Bomb Logic.
From the Dearborn Independent.
Bomb logic is the argument of t man
without a case. It is the snap of the dog
who resents society’s insistence on a
standard of manners even for dogs: it Is
;he climatic blow of the ignorant out
argued by hi? times and baffled by the
moving forces of the world with which he
Is out of step; it Is the curse of exaspera
tion when the world declines to recog
nize the pot hobby; it is the earnest desire
savagely and selfish.y conceived, to
“make 'em suffer,' ’to "hurt ’em," to "give
em pain."
A poor and insufficient premise for
assassinatio n yet bombing has a strong
sompeiling appeal to the inarticulate, sub
merged fragment, struggling to voice
things which are only half formed, at
best, in their own lopsided brains. They
mouth fearful things, frothing at the
mouth, running along at top speed like ,
t mill race, and pouring over a Niagara
)f incoherence; the world looks with !
raised eyebrows, and, with a patient |
ihrug of the shoulder, passes on; the
humiliated zealot, speechless but blazing
with bitter, sullen anger, takes the one1
;tep which, to him, carries the most im
pressive punishment. "Hurt ’em." That’s
lis creed. He can understand that; but
not much else.
lie never realizes he Is stupid; yet he is.
It never occurs to him that there are a
dozen far more effective ways of making
society sorry far its indifference than by
bombing a half dozen public officials
whom nine-tenths of society have never
teen and never expect to see. He sets
ils bomb, and, barring misadventures to
iis own person by premature explosion,
mgs himself, the silly fool, and grins a
oothy grin of glee at his "triumph." He’s
urt someone; he’s made a wound.
Pity the unfortunate bomb logician; he’s
11 dressed up with unwanted ideas, and
o place to go.
LICE.
Some of our good people are alarmed
est the returning soldiers scatter gray
lacks'all over the country. They say
he boys who are now coming back have
•sen more closely in touch with the na
Jves and the danger of bringing beck
hfectlons is greater In consequence,
imong the men who are now getting back
.re many who have been in Russia, some
n Siberia, and a few who have been in
he Balkans. There countries are over
ain by a variety of terrible diseases. In
wrtain sections of the Balkans half the
■opulation have died from typhus within
Ive years, and typhus is spread by lice.
The fear is not justified. Every mili
ary command returning t<» this country
ias a delousing and bathing officer and
’very soldier Is held until he has been
Jirough the baths and delousing sto
lons as often as the delousing officers
:hir:k necessary In order that he and his
ilothing shall be safe.
On the other band a considerable por
lon of ;he civilian potmlstlon Is lousy.
\To man in safe from lice « „d not because
>f the soldiers We need the same rtur.d
irds for civilians that the soldiers have,
t have known of 10 per cent of the clill
lrcn in a public school having been found
frifected with lice. Furthermore, there
Is more typhus in Mexico than there Is
In Russia, and there Is a little mild ty
phus prevalent in the United States all
■ie time. So important Is this subject
|r.at Dr. McCullough of the Ontario health j
department has a pamphlet of Instruction j
for civilians.
For head lie- they recommend washing !
tiie hair with kerosene followed by soap1
And water. !
For lice in (he eyebrows—pick them off I
arid apply an ointment of veilow oxide i
of mercury.
For lice on the body—Ordinary shine !
with hot water ai.d qp and .omtilng )
wiVn a fine tooth comb are cnougjh, pro
vided one remembers that body lice live
and breed in the clothes and only go Into
Ok- body to feed. Attention, therefore,
?ho«hi be concentrator! on iho clothing.
When the clothes arc only moderately in
bsfrd. ironing the* pram* with a hot iron,
brushing of the outside c/othlng and boil
ing of the underwear will generally suf
lice. Lice lit stored clothing will live
about 10 days. A louse will starve to
death in about two weeks. Kggtt do not
’'■atoll at a temperature lower tlian 72
degrees. They require from one to two
weeks to batch, according to the temper
ature and humidity. A temperature of
110 to 1P0 degrees will i.ill both lice and
aits. Immersion In water at 131 degrees
for 10 minutes will i 11] both lice and nits.
Among Insecticides of value against
lice from which choice may be made are:
Carbolic solution. 2ly per cent in water,
pomade or olive oil.
Corrosive sublimate in vinegar, 1 to 30.
Kerosene" alone or mixed with equal
parts of olJve oil.
Crude naphthalene and soft soap, 9 t<*
1.
Creso! soap, kerosene soap.
Crosol-kerosenc soap.
—-■ ^ ■ —- ..... .
Why Bolshevists Kill.
From Leslie’s Weekly.
—4—
MuJ. George W. Simmons, special com
missioner of the American Red Cross, who
returned from Sibora, says those who op
pose bolshevism by word or deed are shot.
Some victims were killed because they
lived In brick houses; others because they
owned their shops or stores; one because
he had formerly been a policeman; others
because they were teachers. Many priests
have been killed and the churches turned
Into theaters.
Hinting at Somebody.
From the Humboldt Chronicle.
Some of the matrons of this community
went to se,' "The Good For Nothing Hus
band" last week. Certain other married
ladles didn’t have to go.
Not So Bad.
From London Tit-Bits.
The nervy young officer sat down at a
table in the vegetarian restaurant.
“Crushed nut, sir?" asked the waitress,
handing him the menu or the day.
"No, no; shell shock," he replied.
Babes of Various Lands.
From the Buffalo Times.
We think it Is proper and natural for
baby to be taken for an outing in his
pr. tly white coach or gocart, but many a
mother coming from a far off country
would stare at the baby going thus for an
airing as though It were an outlandish
light. Bo you wonder what children in
other lands do that would seem queer to
ua?
The Lapp baby’s cradle la Ills mother's’
shoe It is large and covered w(th animal
skin, and the inside is lined with mo«s.
When his nintlicV goes to a party she
bangs the shoe on a tree outside the house
until she conies out to take It home.
The little babye in Guinea has no cradle.
iB« mother buries him in rand up to his
waist, and there lie stays, while she
works, safe from harm and out of mis
chief’s way.
The baby in India takes bts airing in u
bosket, suspended from hts mother’s head
or I,tIn some parts of.the country the
baby ha. his face ’Vovered with a veil
so t«U he looks much like his mother.
* In China the baby 1- taken out tied to
the haul; of his older Sister
The Arab baby is tb<t in a Uut w-j
•.trap! i onto a samel . back. t-b.- some
tin. s y t- seasick when lie Is ,ulit,
’ impel, l. >v«i , airltm
I GREEN’S AUGUST FLOWER '
! In the good old summer time when
1 fruits of nil kinds tire getting ripe
and tempting, when cucumbers, rad
I lshcs and vegetables fresb from the
! gnrden are too good to resist, when the
festive picnic prevails and everybody
( overeats and your stomach goes hack
on you, then la the time for “August
Flower,” the sovereign remedy for
tired, overworked und disordered stom
achs, a panacea for indlgcsllon. fer
: mentation of food, sour stomach, sick
headache and constipation. It gently
stimulates the liver, clonuses the In
testines and alimentary canal, making
life worth living. Sold everywhere. Adv.
An Even Bet.
Gerald—I am going to kiss you.
Gernldino--ru bet you don’t.
Gerald—What will you hot?
Geraldine-—A kiss.
Important to Mother*
Examine carefully every bottle of
CASTOKIA, that famous old remedy
for Infants and children, and see that it
Bears the
Signature of j
In Use for Over 30 Years.
Children Ciy for Fletcher’s Castoria
Efficient Refrigerator.
Refrigeration cars for transporting
meat with which an English railroad
is experimenting are said to maintain
us even n temperature as elaborate re
frigeration plants on steamships.
To Have * Clear Sweet Skin.
Touch pimples, redness, roughness
or Itching, if uny, with Cutlcura Oint
ment, then bathe with C'utlcuru Soap
and hot water. Rinse, dry gently and
dust on a little Cutlcura Talcum to
leave a fascinating fragrance on skin.
Everywhere 25c each.—Adv.
Queen a Photograper.
Queen Helena of Italy is a clever
amateur photographer, her favorite
subject being her children at (heir out
door plu.v.
"BAYER CROSS" ON
GENUINE ASPIRIN
"Bayer Tablets of Aspirin' to be
genuine must be marked with the
safety "Bayer Cross.” Always buy an
unbroken Bayer package which con
tains proper directions to safely re
lieve Headache, Toothache, Earache,
Neuralgia, Colds and pain. Handy tin
boxes of 12 tablets cost but a few
cents at drug stores—larger packages
also. Aspirin Is the trade mark *f
Bayer Manufacture of Monoacetlo
add ester of Sallcyllcacld.—Adv.
Phenomenal Feat.
“The dentist who operated on young
Brassy is possessed of miraculous pow
ers.”
“What makes you say that?”
“He did what I never thought It pos
(slble for anybody to do. He killed
Brassy's nerve."
HOW
RHEUMATISM
BEGINS
The excruciating agonies of rheuma
tism are usualiy the result of failure of
the kidneys to expel poisons from the
system. If the irritation of these uric
acid crystals is allowed to continue, in
curable bladder or kidney disease may
result. Attend to it at once. Don’t
resort to temporary relief. The sick
kidneys must be restored to health by
the use of some sterling' remedy which
will prevent a return of the disease.
Get some GOLD MEDAL Haarlem
Oil Capsules immediately. They have
brought back the joys of life to count
less thousands of sufferers from rheu
matism, lame back, lumbago, soiatlca,
gall stones, gravel and other affections
of the kidneys, liver, stomach, bladder
and allied organs.
They will attack the poisons at once,
clear out the kidneys and urinary tract
and the soothing healing oils and herbs
will restore the inflamed tissues and
organs to normal health. *
All others are imitations. Ask for
GOLD MEDAL and be sure the name
GOLD MEDAL is on the box. Three
Sixes, at all good druggists,—Adv.
Lots of people who rob Peter to pay
I'aul manage to stand Paul off.
HUSBAND
SAVES WIFE
From Suffering fay Getting
Her Lydia E. Pinkhara’s
Vegetable Compound.
- Pittsburgh, Pa.—“ For many months
I was not abfe to do my work owing to
ft weakness wmcn
caused backache
and headaches. A
friend called m J
attention to one of
yoor ner (paper
advertisements and
immediately my
husband bought
three bottles of
IordiaE. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Com
pound for me.
After taking two
WVM4VD A Ad V AIIIO
and my troubles caused by that weak
ness are a tiling of the past. All women
who suffer as I did should try Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.”—
Mrs. Jas. Rohrbkbg, 629 Knapp St.,
N. S., Pittsburgh, Pa.
Women who suffer from any form of
weakness, as indicated by displacements,
inflammation, ulceration, irregularities,
backache, headaches, nervousness or
"the blues,” should accept Mrs. Robr
berg’s suggestion and give Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound a
thorough trial.
For over forty year* it has been
correcting such ailments. If you have
mvsterioua complications write for
ndvice to Lydia K. Pinkhsm Medicine
Co., Lynn, Mass.
THE “BLUES”
Caused by
Acid-Stomach
Mill lone of people who worry, ere despou*
dent, have spell* of m«oUl depression, feel
blue and are often melancholy, believe that
these conditions are dot to outside Influence*
over which they have little or no control.
Nearly always, however, they can be traced
to an internal source—nald stomach. Nor la
it to be wondered at. Acid-stomach, begin
ning with such well defined symptoms a* In
digestion, belching, heartburn, bioat. etc.,
will, If not checked. In time affect to some
degree or other all the vital organa. The
nervous system becomes doraeged. Digestion
suffers. The blood la Impoverished. Health
and strength are undermined. The victim sf
acid-stomach, although he may not know
the cause of his ailment*, feels his hope,
courage, ambition and energy slipping. And
truly life is dark—not worth tnnch to the
man or woman who has add-stomach!
Get rid of It! Don’t let acid-stomach hold
you back, wreck yoar health, make your
daya miserable, make yon * victim of the
“blues” and gloomy thoughts! There la a
marvelous modern remedy called BATON1C
that brlnga, ohi such quick relief from your
stomach miseries—set* rear stomach to rights
—makes it strong, cool, sweet and comfort
able Helps you get back jrour strength, vigor,
vitality enthusiasm and good cheer. So
many thousands upon thousands of sufferer*
nave used *HATONIC with such marvelously
helpful results that we are sure you will
feel the same way If yea will lust give it *
ttial. Get a big SO cent box of HATONIC—
the good tasting tablets that you eat like a
bit of candy—from your druggist today. He
will return your money If results are not
even more than you expect.
FATONIC
hi Crob tQor acto-stomac^
Of Two Great Evils.
Wife—Richard, I wish you would
take care of the baity for i*n hour or
two. I nut going to move n tooth
pulled.
Husband—See here, dearie, you
mind the baby am! I’ll go and get
u couple of teeth Killed.—Cartoons
Magazine.
A Leading Question.
"Oh, Meestalre Soapklng,” ex
claimed Count <le Itustup. “I love your
daughtalre! Bet would give ins ze
supreme plalsure to marry wls her!"
"A'right, count, but now listen t’
me: Are you able t’ be supported in
th’ manner In which my daughters are
accustomed t’ supporting their hus
bands?”
/famous French Discovery!
■""replaces nerVe wastage! H
H Increases strenfitfi energy. ■
1 ateii;yij,Uy1f«0A M
\Blst Wg KNOWN For/
For Sal© or Exchange—l.OTt a. black rtvor
bottom soil; beat unirap.; a©U or trade tor
highly imp. F. K. Ashby, Charleston, Mo.
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