f - - ,- -V H i RED CLOUD, NEBRASKA, CHIEF i if $ n $ x s 4 s. Wm HOT WATER MU DP TOUJ Says glass of hot water with phosphate beforo breakfast waihca out poisons. If you wnko up with n bad tasto. bail breath ntiel tongue la coated; If your head Is dull or aching; If what you cat soura and forms gao end acid In stom ach, or you aro bilious, constipated, nervous, sallow nnJ can't got fooling Juut right, begin drinking phosphatcd hot water. Drink beforo breakfast, a glass of real hot water with a tea spoonful of Hmcstjiio phosphates In It. This will flush tho poisons and toxins from stomach, liver, kidneys and bow ols and clransc, sweeten and purify tho cntiro alimentary tract Do your Inoldo bathing Immediately upon aris ing In tho morning to wash out of tho system all tho provlous day'a poison ous wasto, gases and sour bllo before putting more? food Into tho stomach. To feel llko young folkB feel; like you felt beforo your blood, norves and muscles bocamo loaded with body Im purities, got from your druggist or storekeeper a quarter pound of lime etono phosphato which is inexpensive and almost tasteless, except for a Bourlsh tlngo which is not unpleasant Just as soap and hot water act on tho skin, cleansing, Bweetcnlng and freshening, bo hot water and lime Btono phosphato act on tho stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels. Men and women who aro usually constipated, bilious, headachy or havo any stomach disorder should begin this Insldo bath ing boforo breakfast They aro a3 ourcd thoy will become real cranks on tho subject shortly. Adv. Used to Shell3 and Their Contents. A stranger became one of n group of listeners to a veteran of many bat tlos, nays Postmaster General Uurlo son. Tho veteran had about concluded a vividly colored narrative of a furious battle, in which ho had taken part. "Just think of It," exclaimed ono of tho party, turning to tho btranger. "How would you llko to stand with shells bursting all around you?" "I havo been there," responded the newcomer. "What? Have you, too, been a sol dier?" "No," answered tho stranger, "1 am an actor." Philadelphia Ledger. "GASGRRETS" ACT do sick headache, biliousness, bad taste or constipation by morning. Get a lOcont box. kio you keeping your vowels, liver nel stomach clean, pure and fresh with Cascarcts, or merely forcing a passageway every few days with Salts, Cathartic Pills, Castor Oil or Purgatlvo Wators7 Stop having a bowel w&eh-day. Let Cascarcts thoroughly clcanso and rcg ulato tho stomach, remove tho eoui and fermontlng food and foul gases, tako tho excess bllo ftom tho ltvei and carry out of tho system all the constipated vrusto mutter and poisons in tho bowels. A Cascarct tonight, will make you feel great by morning. They work whllo you Bleep never grlpo, sicken or causa any Inconvenience, nnd cost only 10 cents a boj from your store. Millions of men and women tako a Cascnret now and then and nover havo Hcadacho Biliousness, Coated Tongue, Indigestion, Sour Stomach or Constipation Adv. Er.lrcme Pacifism. "Soldiers In Europo nro fighting with gas Lomba and liquid fire." "What nrc wo coming to?" "I don't know, but bo long as thero aro places in tho world whero a man may hide himself, I know I'm not com ing to Miat." RED, ROUGH, SORE HANDS May Do Soothed nnd Healed by Use of Cutlcura. Trial Free. Nothing bo coothlng nnd healing for red, rough and Irritated hands as Cutl cura Soap and Cutlcura Ointment. Sonk hands on retiring In hot Cutlcura soapsuds. Dry, and gently anoint hands with Cutlcura Ointment. A ono-night treatment works wonders. Freo Bampio each by mall with Book. Address postcard, Cutlcura, Dcpt. L, Boston. Bold ovorywhero. Adv. The Earlier Opportunity. "Do you think our friend's peace plans can end tho war?" "I'm nfrald not Anybody smart enough to end tho war would havo been Bmart enough to prevent It" Piles OellevcH hy Flrnt Appllrnllon Aixlciirifl Inl.l') UUUS u I'AZl) olNrMl.IsT the oiilviirwil r'iui'ily lor nil forma uj I'llcs UrufUliU rotund uiunoj If lU-illo. UXs. This Is tho glad season of tho year when tho plumber gota squaro with tho Ice man. To keep clean and healthy take Dr. Pierce's Pleasant I'clWts. They rcgulatt liver, bowels and stomach. Adv. When a man begins to talk about purifying politics, he wanta an office. LIVER ROWELS ABRAHAM LINCOLN vW iB For he, to whom we had applied Our shopman's test of age and worth, Was elemental when he died, As lie was ancient at his birth n m OF THE PEOPLE Many Reasons Why He Has Just ly Been Given the Title of Typical American. Firm Believer Always In the Concep tion of Democracy Which Is the Foundation of Our Nation Hit Many High Qualities Worthy of Emulation. TO savo Abraham Lincoln from deathly apotheosis of tho steel engraving has boen a laudable effort of recent years. Of courso It will not provent tho proceBB of leg end making which works upon tho earthly reality of every great man, ond In duo tlmo leaves aim a desiccated abstraction existing for tho heavy boredom of childhood. Even Lincoln, with his vital, homely outlines, his Intimate, endearing faults, nnd strong flavor of his day, must come to this turn. But tho process may bo retard ed and ought to bo as long as wo can contrivo. Ono hundred and soven years ago Lincoln was born. Flfty-ono years ago ho was shot by John Wilkes Boath, and on tho noxt day ho died, tho first "martyred president." A great wavo of passionate sorrow, gratitudo and af fection swept tho North. Tho process of apotheosis began. Today it may bo observed In tho sanctified generalities of Lincoln orations, editorials, poems and articles. Moved by Flattery. Tho central Idea of tho overwhelm ing mnjorlty of these tributes la Lin coln, tho man of tho peoplo, tho typi cal Amorlcan. Year after year on Fobruary 12 and frequently through out the year wo hear this confident aummary and without examining It. Is this mental Inertia or aro wo uncon sciously moved by tho flattery Implicit In this Idea? An editorial In tho Now Republic suggests the latter. Tho roal purposo of Lincoln-day speakers Is not bo much to euloglzo Lincoln, this jour nnl declares, as to flattor tho audience. "If Mr, Lincoln wos bo entirely a man of tho peoplo, the peoplo must bo very llko to Lincoln." New View of Great President. Tho reproach has moro of justice than wo llko to think. The orator Is tho courtlor of domocracy flattering tho sovereign citizen as grossly as ever an emporor was flattered. Tho flattery of Indirect pralss Is unusually NO S. ffvb rUw)" VwsfWsA . tTpV " ( J 1 M - v mlplH Fill ggJr The saddest among kings oi earth. Bowed with n galling crown, this man Met rancor with a cryptic? mirth, Laconic and Olympian. E. A. Roilnton. delicate- and Insidious, and it Is well for us to examine It coolly. Tho Now Republic puts it shnrpiy away. "In point of fuct Mr. Lincoln was super ficially a man of tho peoplo, and funda mentally a unique, distinguished and wholly exceptional individual. In cer tain salient respects ho was tho least typical of Americans. Americans, par ticularly thoso of Lincoln's own gener ation and neighborhood, were- essen tially active, aggressive and objcctlvo men, whoso lives woro given ovor to practical external affairs, who sub ordinated everything else to tho do mands of practical achievement, and whoso individuality consisted in llvjng ordinary lives in nn extraordinarily energetic manner. Thoy wcro super llclal, dlscurslvo, easy-going, quarrel somo, and wholly Incapablo of prepar ing in advance for any task or respon sibility. In nil theso respects Lincoln differed from his fellow countrymen, and upon these differences his cml nenco dopendB. Ho was not particu larly ambitious, aggresslvo or practi cal. In Bplto of hi3 lively social feel ings, ho lived a contemplatlvo llfo, In which tho Intellectual Intorest ob tained full expression nnd which at tained a high degree of Internal con centration. Ho fought hard and well, but ho nover quarreled. During his formative years ho quietly but unos tcntntiouslypropared himself for great enterprises. He trained his mind bo cause ho enjoyed hard Intellectual ex ertion. HIb stylo shaped Itself under tho lnflucnco of tho Ulblo and Shako spoaro. Thus at a period and In a country favorablo to tho cheap per formanco and tho easy victory, Mr Lincoln tempered his reason and his spirit for a great performance and a costly victory. Was thero anything typically American about that?" Ideas Worth Consideration. This is refreshing variation from tho "canned cloquenco" of tho Lincoln day utteranco, and It will repay con sldcrntion and emphasis, sinco wo nro LINCOLN Out of the shadows we nee him rlso Face that Is haunting- and sorrowful eyes Scarred by his burden and bowed 'noath Its weight: Slave to a mission nnd shackled by rato. Poor was the soil where his schooling no- ean; Rusned the boyhood that molded the inuh. Prono with his bcok by the nickering blaze, What saw ho there In the hearth's ruddy blazo? Slowly he rose while the Fates nave no sign, Fitting himself for that labor divine, i Deep In the shadows we see hlrn again Savior nnd martyr and brother oMmen! W, It. Rose In Cleveland Plain Dealer. very llko our forbears as to just tho defects tho Now Republic hero pun gently outlines. If wo thought moro of Lincoln's extraordinary disinterest edness, of his horolr. patlenco, of his dcoply brooding spirit, and less of thobo qualities with which wo estab lish all too readily a rough roacm bianco to our dally selves, wo might get a wholo.omo nnd much-needed re action from our rattling, selt-sntisflod and shallow llfo without losing our sense of his reality as a human being having human weaknesses. Especially keen Is tho thrust delivered at our tendency to "the cheap performance and tho easy victory" and Us contrast with Lincoln's tempting renson and spirit "for a great performance and a costly victory." No great victory wnB over pup chased cheaply. It has always been paid for In long and costly, though often unconscious preparation. Our nationnl optimism, our Impatience and superficiality obscure that truth. As Typical American. But, after all, In tho legend wo art making of Lincoln as typical Amorl can thero Is an Instinct and a truth that aro not superficial. All legend making Is a profound process of na tional self-realization, nn Intuitlvo in carnation of national ideals, and In tho caso of Lincoln It Is based upon tho slncero, tho religious democracy of this great man. Tho high distinction of mind, no shown, for example, In tho proso of tho Gettysburg oration, tho moral nobility, tho lntrospectlvo aloof ness which wcio an essential part of him, only acccntuato for us tho warm nearness of his naturo to tho common man and tho common llfo. Lincoln himself held to tho mystical concep tion of democracy which Whitman ex pressed in his poetry and which Is tho dream In tho heart of Americanism. Tho essential brotherhood of man was nn lntlmato nnd glowing reality to Lincoln, not a lofty abstraction, and though wo betray It nnd misread It wo tniiBt cling to it If wo aro to savo tho uutloual soul. Idealizing ourselves through Lincoln Is more than solf-flnttory. It Is a cruds but not ignoble effort to express tho deepest and most porvnslvo element ol American Idealism. Lincoln's Place In History. Abraham Lincoln was ono of tho on prcmoly great men of hla day. Ho grows bigger aud bigger nil tho tlmo, and a thousand years from now his fnma will bo lmmonsoly vaster than it 1b at tho preesnt tlmo. No man In all tho tido of tlmo ovor filled n moro dlfllcult or trying plnco than ho hold for four years, and tho verdict of his tory Is that ho racnsureid squnroly up to his tromendaus rcBpcmslbllltlcs. It is doubtful It any other man In the country emild have saved tho day. WOULD YOUR SKIN STAND THIS TEST? Tho bright lights of nn evening gathering show up mercilessly tho do fcetH of n imor complexion. But tho re'gulnr uho of Iltisliiol Soap makes It ns easy to havo n mifuriilf beautiful akin ns to cover tip a poor ono with cosmetle-H. It lessens the tendency to pimples, redness nnd roughness, and In a very nliort tltun tliei complex Ion usually becomes clear, fresh nnd velvety In stivcro or stubborn ciirps, Ro"dnol Soap should lionliloil hyn llltln Resluol Ointment. All drtigglslu. Adv. UoGton'a Nocturnal Habits. A wild plgeMiu Unit 'has a haunt Homuwhe'ip ne'ar Uuj old Ilewlein City club hait formed n habit of coming down inti, tho Htreot Into nt night for his supper. Huwinl nights lately ns I have como through lle-neem Btroet I liavu een tho bird having its midnight meal. It strikes mo us (something unusual for plgeieins to do so. Shouldn't self-respecting pigeons bo nt roost at Btich an hour? Boston Post. In n Different Light. "Tho boys nro throwing Btonos at n poor peeldlor." "Outrageous." "That's what 1 think." "WheiHo boyu uro thoy?' 1 UUIO. "Oh, well, boyn will bo boya. tho children play." Lot Decision Deferred. "How nro you going to llko your now neighborB?" "Can't tell. 1 happened to bo out when thi'lr furnltiiro wno moved In." Judgo. RECIPE FOR GRAY HAIR. To half pint of wutor mid 1 on. Hay Ruin, a mull Ikii of llnrlxt Compound, and M m. of glycerine. Apply to tho lialr twice n week until ll bocmiicM tho elnMreuI Mmelu. Anyelrug glftl can put UiIh up or you e-an mix It nt liomo at very little, cottt It will griidunlly darken otreulied, fueled gray hair, and ro-move-s dandruff. It Is oxe-ullonl for falling liairand will nmlio Imruli ImlrFofr, mnl Rlossy. It will not color llio wjilp, Is mil stlckr or groasy, and docs not rub oil. Adv. If n man does nothing ho mnkos a mistake, and If ho nllempto to do things his mistakes aro many. PREPAREDNESS! To Fortify Hie System Against drip when Crip Is provalrnk LAXATIVE 11KOMO QUININIt should be lakeu. s llila combination ol Quinine wilh other Inireillenta. destroys terms, sett as a Tonlo and I.aiailve and thus keeps the system in condition to withstand Colds, Grip and Influent. There ii only ona -1IKOMO QUININH." B. W. GKOVli'S sir nature oo box. sjo. Let'B be kind to tho beggars. Wo may want to borrow money of them somo day. Ket Contents 15 Fluid Drachms. fnTjjjTTjTB ZZEtt TTTfr"1 ALCOHOL- 3 J'P.R ORNT. AVetjclalilcIVcpamllonlbrAs siniilalinp;ilieFi)odindRciiu liii'4llic StoirttcliiAiul llowcis of IVoniolcs Digest ion.CI iccrfi il ncssnndRcst.Coiilfliasncillicr aiitm,Morpliint! norMiiusBl, ot Narcotic. ufaoraupesirtvupimegl JymMm&ud' AocteUf Salt Antt inta flrtartauiltScJk ClarifM Sujaf ninltryntn Hen IIHW I Harerf Tfperlccl Remedy (urCtHtsiTpaT (ion. Sour Sloui;icli.l)uirrlioca. Womis. Icvcrislmcss jiiuL LOSSOl'SLlil'JV OTuc-Shnllc Sltlimlua'of ... . Tub ckntauii Ccimi'anV 4V12W YORIC. t0 I5w W ?! Baact Copy of Wrapper . a(jpa''nnTnn-tjariainatanaTonsiaftn'in rilkinniTM kiiT'Tiiii''i;iTiiii';L;,';:!v;aEcrs!fi: BBtaSl atfaaVBtsflak laBaarkT iV IflCTll Oil I ssHiJI Ll Cl I A 1(3)1 THIS Is Ihd best newspaper ofTer mads In Nebraska, because the Journal Is the best paper and Is now the cheapest. The Journal I the Nebraska paper with a reputation, giving you all the news truthfully and accurately, Inelualnc a full market report, sta'e news end special Washington correspordence ol Interest to tlebraskans. If you tend CJ5C GL we will Include the big Sunday Journal with Its colored Comic Supplement, PJaJvl Story and Picture Magaxlna and Dig News Features. A letter today will start the paper, THE NEBRASKA STATE JOURNAL. LINCOLN, NEBR.. HEAT FLASHES, DIZZY, NERVOUS Mrs. Wynn Tells How Lydia E. PinkhanVo Vegetable Compound Helped Her During Change of Life. Richmond, Vn. - "After taktnft Bcvcn bottles of I.yella K. Pinkhnm's Vte;otnblo Com pound I fuel lileo a new woman. I nl wayn had n he'ndneho eliiriiii; the Chungti of Li found v.'aanl&o troubled with other bael fcchng.1 com mon ut that timo dizzy spells, nervous feelings nnd heat flushes. Now I am in bettor health than I over wn3 and rccomme'nd your remedies to all my friends. "Mrs. Lkna Wynn, 2S12 E. O Street, Richmond, Va. Whllo Chnnrjo of Life is a most crit ical period of a woman'B existence, tho annoying symptoms which nccompnny it may bo controlled, nnd normal health restored by tho timely uso of Lydia E. Flnlriiam's Vcjctablo Compound. Such wnrnlnu symptoms nro a scnas of sutTocaUon, hot flashes, headaches, backnehes, dread of impending evil, timidity, pounds In tho cars, rmlpitntiori of thti heart, Bpnrks beforo tho eyes, irregularities, constipation, vnrinblo ap petite, weakness and inquietude, and dizziness. For these) nbnormal conditions do not fall to take Lyeliu L'. I'inkhum'u Vejj toblo Compound. Make the Liver Do its Duty Nine times in ten when the liver Is right the stomach and bowels nrc right CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER' PILLS gentlybutfirmlycomr pel a lazy liver tOi tlo its duty. Cures Con-. stipntion, In digestion, Sick Headache,' and Distress After Eating. SMALL PILL, SMALL UOSli. SMALL rRICE. Genuine must bear Signature BLACK LOSSES SURELY PREVENTED lr Cutlrr's Olacklrs Pills. Low I'llrnl. frrtti, reliable: prtftrrtil tif ic nUm Kvkui'U. txcaiiM tht W mm m srottct Mhira stlitr vacelnis tall. aLa Wrlla for Umklrl and ltlmonlila. .r.l m lO-dou pVl. illacklfS PUIS 11.00 JLJIJLA to.a'ts akgt. uiacktts Pills 4 00 t) any Injrctnr. hut Cutltr'a Lit. Tht tuiwrlority of CuUrr pmilucls Is ilue to oier IS yean cf p.-rlallrlns In aclnn and sarumt aaly. Insist on Cutltr's. Jf urn I talnallo. onler dlrtct. Tta Cutttr Lalisratwy, Ocrkclsy, Cal sr Chleau, lib GASTORIA For Infants and Children. Mothers Know That Genuine Castoria Always Bears the Signature of For Over Thirty Years CASTORIA the etarrauH oommny, ncw vosh errv. l!liifiil!! I' lr "In v Wr ,sHaT7a H!!p aBBaCinADTFDC. MtMZm sjflTTLE .aaBRaBsBBBBBVr' sallUliU JRMI1 HVribkS M rtJ Use stu0ptVaii Distemper CURES THE SICK Ami prevents others hnvlnir the dlsrnse no matter how expnut-d. r.l) rents and ft it hot lie, .'i und 910 n doaeat bo it Ira. All good drugKlatH nnd turf t'ouds houses. SIM) I IN .ItnOICAI, CO., Cliemlata read Uurlt-rlnlnRlatN, Gtialicn, Ind., 17. 8, A. ,11 M T 41 R lAVa hfl-JfUlU-JI,, ttsH?K-fS4(ia M W il---. . fti