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About The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965 | View Entire Issue (June 26, 1924)
Not Well Since I ! Three Years Old i I Catarrh of i the Ear I Neighbor \ i Recom mended PE-RU-NA mmrwmm The experience of Mrs. T. C Dacus, 1621 Booker St., Little Rock, 1 Ark., was not an unusual one. It ' was in fact a repetition of what has happened in thousands upon thousands of instances. She had a ' running condition of the ear from 1 the time she was three years old. _ In spite of treatment it per sisted and became very offensive. One day a neighbor recommended Pe-ru-na and La-cu-pia which had relieved his wife of the same trouble. Mrs. Dacus used three bottle of each of these quick acting reme dies and reports that the discharge and offensive odor are both gone. Her disease was one of the very many forms taken by Catarrh and is known as chronic Otitis. Wherever the catrirrhal condition is located Pe-ru-na reaches it. May be purchased any place in tablet or liquid form. DAISY FLY KILLEBftjggrfiggggg ^arnnnna all flies. PABoBigoSB»U>PriXAmrSIriari.'>I. T. Land Area in Japan Japan proper has a land area of 147,655 square miles, or about one jlwenty-fourth of that of the United fitates, while Its population Is about 66,000,000, or one-half of that of the {United States. Poverty may be a blessing In dls kulse to young people, but not to. bid ones. Sure Relief FOR INDIGESTION Bell-ans Hot water Sure Relief ELL-ANS | 25$ AND 75j PACKAGES EVERYWHERE — ■ — - | | ie runty ot tuticura 1Maken It Unexcelled For AllToiiet Purposes r ~ —. n | In These Days ! ."What do you think of a boy who (can make a girl blush?” , “I think lie’s a wonder."—The Yel low Jacket. 1 Electricity, though not a bad word, (is often shocking. i About the hardest thing for a man jto do Is to kiss a girl unexpectedly, £_L_ ' . — --- — • . ■ - Ladies Can Wear Shoes One size smaller and walk in comfort by using Allen's Foot-Ease, the antiseptic, healing powder for the feet. Shaken into the shoes Allen's Foot Ease makes tight or new shoes feel easy; gives instant relief to Corns, Bunions and Calluses; prevents Blisters and Sore Spots and gives rest to tired, aching, swollen feet. At night if your feet are tired and sore from excessive walking or dancing, jsprinkle some Allen’s Foot-Ease in the foot-bath, and get rest and comfort. ; Sold everywhere. For Free sample 'and a Foot-Ease Walking Doll, address [Allen’s Foot-Ease, Le Roy, N. Y. FOR OVER 200 YEARS haarlem oil has been a world wide remedy for kidney, liver and bladder disorders, rheumatism, lumbago and uric acid conditions. correct internal troubles, stimulate vital organs. Three sizes. All druggists. Insist on the original genuine Gold Medal. i [HOTEL MARTIN In the Heart of SIOUX CITY Absolutely fireproof - Rate* 11.71 to 18 SO BIG CAFETERIA - HOME COOKING m4 AM^edy Andy I iy tSoRimy Traill* Raggedy Ann and Raggedy Andy ' Would have liked to spend more time with the three rag puppy dogs and Berty Bear and hla nice mama and Daddy Bear, but the Magical wooden hobby horse wanted to go In search of adventures. "I have never had Any real adven tures,” he told the Raggedya, "Be cause the conjurer made me only a little while before I met you and when I chased after you, through the deep, deep woods that was the only time I was ever out of the conjurer’s shed!" So the Raggedya told the Rag pup py dogs and the nice kindly Bears goodbye and, with the two Magic books under their arms, they got up on the back of the Magical wooden hobby horse and sped away down the path through the deep, deep woods. “I guess the three men w'ill never take the nice Rag puppy dogs’ phon ograph away from them again!" Rag gedy Andy said as the horse stopped at a waffle bush and he and Raggedy Ann dismounted to eat some w-affles. "I guess not!” Raggedy Ann laugh ed, “I wished with the two maglo books that the three men would for get all about the puppy dogs’ .phono graph and would never return to the puppy dogs’ house. So, of course the wish will come true.." “Of course it will, Raggedy Ann!” Raggedy Andy laughed, “These two Magic books tell how to make everything magical In the world I guess!” imggcuy a.IIiiy iaia in© two magical books, ths large red one and the small green one down upon the grass while he helped Raggedy Ann and the hob by horss to waffles. You see, Rag gedy Andy did not wish to hold the magical books, while he ate, for the butter on the waffles would soil the nice books. At the side of the waffle bush there was a little pool of some thing which looked like clear water, but when Raggedy Ann tasted it, she found that it was eyrup. 80 she took a little stick and dipped the waffles into ths syrup pool so that Raggedy Andy and the hobby horse could have some too. And it was while they were eat ing the lovely waffles dipped In ths syrup pool that an old woman who had been peeping out of the bushes, tiptoed out and picked up the two magical books. Then, while the Raggedys and the hobby horse were busy eating she tiptoed back Into the bushes and then ran as hard as she could. It was a long time before the Rag gedys discovered that the two Mag ical books were gone, for as every one knows, waffles dipped in syrup are very good and anyone can eat a great many; especially magical waffles which grow wild in the deep, deep woods. "Oh, dear I Where are the Magi cal books, Raggedy Andy?" Raggedy Ann asked. "Why!" Raggedy Andy cried In surprise, “I put them right here and now they are gone!" "Look!” the hobby horse cried as he pointed to the ground, “There are prints in the grass where someone has tiptoed out of the bushes and tip toed back!” So the Raggedys hopped upon the hobby horse’s back and he followed the foot prints until he came to the queer little house of Minga, the Witch. "Aha!” Minga cried out of the win dow, "It will do you no good to snoop The wooden hobby horse wept saw-dust tears. around my house, for I have every door locked tight, and you will nev er get the Magical books again! You may Just as well run on home!” This made the wooden bobby horse feel so sad he wept saw-dust tears. “It was very mean of Minga, the Witch, to take your two nice Magi cal books!” the wooden hobby horse said as he wiped the saw dust from his wooden eyes. “Now I ’spect you will never get them back again!” he added. "You bet they won’t!” Minga the Witch howled out of her window. ”1 guess I know fine Magical books when I see them and I shall keep thorn for my very own!” “But you are taking things which do not belong to you and that is very very wrong!" Raggedy Ann said, “Give us our two Magic books and we will forgive you, Minga, the Witch!” “Aha! If I would give you the two magic books, then 1 wouldn't have them myself!” the mean creature howled, "And I guess two magic books like these can't be found every day!" Of course Raggedy Ann and Rag gedy Andy knew this was true, for the Magic hooks were really the only ones the Raggedys had ever seen and maybe they were the only ones In the deep, deep woods, “We must find some way to get the two Magic books away from Minga the Witch before she reads any magic out of them!” Raggedy Andy said “If you wl’l giv«i Raggedy Ann the two Magic hooka, she will give you r penny!" the wooden nooby horse said to Minga- the Witch. *'Ha! Show me the penny!” Minga howled, ".lust show It to me!" "Dear me! I haven't any pennies!" Raggedy Ann told the nice hobby horse. The magical hobby horse scratched his wooden head against a tree so that he might think better. “If you had the two Magic books, you could wish for a lot of pennies and give one to the Witch, couldn't you?” he asked. "Of course she could, silly!” the Witch laughed, "and that Is just why I want the Magic books myself! I shall wish for a lot more pennies to buy lolly pops with; and If I give Raggedy Ann the books, then I wouldn't have all the nice wishes fof my very own!” "My goodness! I wouldn’t be that selfish for anything!” the Hobby horse said. “Anyway, I shall keep the two Magic books!” ths TVttch howled as she slammed the window shut. "I’ll bet she Is going to make a lot of wishes right now!" Raggedy jLndy said, "and If she once finds out Just how nice and magical the books are, we shall never, never, never get them away from her!” "I shall run real hard and ‘Blump’ my wooden head agntnst the Witch’s door!" the Hobby horse “Hal Show Mo tho Penny!” Mingo Howled. said. "Maybe I can break the door) then we can all rush in and take the magic books away from her!” So the Hobby horse took a long run and "BLiUMPED” his wooden head against the Witch’s door. My it made a loud bang, but the dooi did not break. So the Hobby horse took a longe: run and “BLUMPED” the witch’s door twice as hard. "Oh, dear! Oh, dear!” Ragged > Ann cried, “The Hobby horse haa broken off his head!” Mlnga, the Witch, opened the window again and laughed real loud. "Now you see!” she cried, "You'd better take your old wooden Hobby horse and run home before I Split him up for kindling!” So Raggedy Andy picked up the broken Hobby horse ind carried him down the path into the deep, deep woods. "It dpesn’t hurt even a smidgin!” the Hobby horse’s head said, "If wa can find some nails you can fix my head on again.” With Thanks. From Le Journal Amusant, Paris. laboring mightily, a little lad was pushing a handcart loaded with broken stone, and ten times too big for him. A kindly passer-by put his shoulder to the wheel and helped him. When they arrived at the top of the hill, he said to the boy, In front of the crowd of Idlers that had collated: "I call It an outrage to give a kid like you a job like that! Why didn’t you tell your employer It was too heavy for you?” ”1 did.” "Ami what did the big bully say?” “Well, he said, ‘Go ahead with It— you're sure to find some fool loafer o» the way to give you a hand.' ” Unfair Advantage. From the Santa Barbara News. O’Murphy—“Ol Jyst had me ancls try thraced back t’ an Olrlsh King.'' O’Connoll— “Shure, an’ that was alsy. Th' poor feller’s dead and couldn’t de fend himself.” The Boss Agreed From the Boston Transcript. "Don’t you think, sir,” said the tim id clerk, “that I have been here long enough to deserve an Increase?” “i do,” replied his employer. “I cer tainly do—why don’t you?” The Good 8port. From the London Humorist. Hospital Nurse—You wish to see the young man Injured In the motor acci dent. You are the lady he was with.' Gwendoline—Yes, l though it tvould be only fair to give him the kiss he was trying for. Real Lady. From the Chicago News. In the privacy of his home, the vil lage butcher was telling his wife of the arrival of a new' resident. “She came in today,” he said with enthusi asm, ‘‘and 1 can tell you she’s a real lady, brought up select and exclusive. She don't know one cut o’ meat from another, nor veal from mutton.” Deplorable. From the Chicago News. The minister of a certain church called upon a woman, a member of his congregation, and, finding no one at home, slipped a card through the let ter box after scribbling upon It ths words: “Sorry to find you out.” When the vyoman returned home Mary, maid, met her at the door and pre sented the dard with a wdil^pereil, “Here, mum, I took charge of this. It would never do for the master to know the minister’s found you out.” SUltmanlte brick, a new type of fire brick for lining steel furnaces, has been developed at the University of Wash ington by students of the College of Mines and the United States Bureau of Mine?. According to the Inventors, the brick should greatly reduce the cost of steel manufacture. It Is said that it will eliminate changes of linings that add 12 to $3 to the cost of every ton of steel produced. With the new type of brick these changes will be much leea frequent. ( Big Sardinian Dam The dam on the Tirso river In Sar dinia, officially opened April 2ft, cre ates an artificial lake with a capac ity of 450,000,000 cubic meters of water, which will give ‘an estimated annual output of 50,000,000 kilowatt hours of electric power and irrigate 75,00 acres of laud. The cheap power created by this dam will per mit local electrolytic treatment of line ore s, which have been export ■at hitherto, and will fuvor the develop ment of other Industries in the region. This is the first of several similar Projects In Sardinia to increase the grieultural developments of the (land. Couldn’t Find the Boxee “Will you please tell me where tin boxes are?’’ was the question pro pounded the pastor's secretary of the First liaptist church, Vermont and Meridian streets, ns she stepppd out of her office the other day. It was a bewildered colored man who asked. Evidently he had been wandering about the church for some time. On being asked wlmt boxes he want ed, the colored man said: "Why, Indy, ain’t dls j*e.re de pos' orticeV”—Indi anapolis News. Watch Cutlcura Improve Your 8kin. On rising and retiring gently smear the face with Cutlcura Ointment. Wash off Ointment in live minutes with Cutlcura Soap and hot water. It Is wonderful what Cutlcura will do for poor complexions, dandruff, itching and red, rough hands.—Advertisement. Financial, Not Moral Mrs. Denham—Do you object to my smoking? Denham—Not if you buy your own cigars. Derivation of “Fortnight” “The word “fortnight” is merely an old contraction of "fourteen nights." If a man cuind rend his own biog raphy It would surprise him more than any one else. O_ Tn doing something for others you do not lose their respect by luuklng'H pay. When doctors disagree they can al ways unite in attributing it to heart failure. Thoughts are but dreams till their effects be tried. Every mun is great Just because he is a man. When a dentist is buried he Alls Ids Inst cavity. I DEMAND Over 100,000 people have testified that TANLAC has relieved them of: Stomach Trouble, Rheumatism, Malnutrition, Sleeplessness, Nervousness, Loss of Appetite, Loss of Weight, Indigestion, Torpid Liver or Constipation. Ask Anyone Who Has Taken TANLAC” * Accept No Substitute~'Over 40 Million Bottles Sold • For Sale By All Good Druggists Literature and Hittory Teacher—What can you say of “Pit grim's Progress?’’ Pupil—When he had progressed as far as Plymouth, he found a rock in the way and he landed or If. One giant redwood tree, recently felled near Portland. Ore., yielded suf ficient lumber to hulld 50 ordinary live-room bungalows. Ana sometimes alimony seems to he the capital prize In tin- marriage lottery. The man In love loses Ids self pos session In trying to get possession of another. If a man talks unusually load It Isn't necessary to clear a space for him to uct In. Music In Its highest form seems a pensive memory. Heredity "Irow many are four nnd five?— hands iif ’’’ A forest of hands perforated the air. “Ah, you—little girl In the front seat.” “Fo’oer and fTiv,’’ answered the young daughter of a former telephone operator, “are nl-yun.”—Bell Telei phone News. Work Without Worrying Men worry most when they or (help interests are involved, and least when the other fellow Is concerned. This is natural. Yet In neither case does worry accomplish very much. Much better a dear head nnd bodily strength to do what has to he done.—Grit. Not Some, Anyway Toting Man—Don’t you think that mind controls matter?" Critic—Not some rending matter. Children Cry for “Castoria” ( Especially Prepared for Infants and Children of All Ages Mother! Fletcher’s Castorla has been in use for over 80 years as a pleasant, harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Teething Drops and Soothing Syrups. Contains no narcotics. Proven directions are on each package. Physicians everywhere recommend it. The kind you have always bought bears signature of -=r~~~ ' ' ' "=-—-=~ Helpful Advice to f\ Overworked Wonen JwW*?''-:: .1^.' * « m Iiiiii hi. « n. . • MRS. C. E. CHAPMAN IBBO CLM ST.. NBW ALBANY. IND. 1") AY in and day out, week in and week out! tho tired, over-worked housewife and mother toils on, sweeping, dusting, cook ing, cleaning and mending. Ia it any wonder that after a time a weakness, sudh/iaa Mrs. Chapman had, develops and tho wife and mother pays a toll an physical weakness and pain for her efforts of lovo, tiho natural result of overwork t Women who find themselves afflicted with weakness, pain, head aches, backache, nervousness, irritability and melancholia will bo interested in Mrs. Chapman’s letter, and should realize that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, is especially adapted to overcome such conditions. Mrs. Chapman's Letter Reads as Follows: NEW ALBANY. IND.—"I took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound for a weakness which many women have from over work, and from which I suffered for quite a while. I wasn’t fit to do my w'ork and my sister advised me to take this medicine. After the flret few days the pains were not eo severe as they had been and after taking a few bottles I am not bothered any more. I am doing my housework every day and highly recommend the Vegetable Compound to any woman eufTerlng from female trouble. Only yesterday a friend called me on the 'phone and knowing what it did for me wanted to know what to ask l2£Aa4,.th0o?ruS'>i?re' a! 8h* to »lv® u a trial.”—MRS. C. B. CHAPMAN, 1820 Elm Street. New Albany, Indiana. Another Case of Nervous Breakdown MEMPHIS, TENN.—“Two years ago I was completely run-down and my nerves were a wreck. I could not sweep a room without resting. I could not do any of my work except a little at a time and ths doctor's medicine did not help me. One day some one threw a little book on to my porch and in It I read several testimonials of women who had been like myself. I went right out and got me a bottle of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and before I had taken the whole of that bottle I knew It warn helping me. I took six bottles and then In about three months I took two more. Now I am In perfect health. I do rll my own work and could do more. I can truly ssy that 1 know Lydia E. Pipit ham's Vegetable Compound gave me my health."—MBS. O. J. HINCKLEY. 415 H B. Georgia St., Memphis, Tsnn. Thousands of Women owe their health to Lydia E. Pinkham’s rentable Compound LYOlA C.PINKHAH HCDICINB CO. LYNN* fifA98»