RED CLOUD, NEBRASKA, CHIEF Aspirin Say "Bayer" and Insist! if it Lincoln's 1 After Every Meal r WRIGLEYS Top off each meal Willi a bit of sweet In the form of WRIGLEY'S. It satisfies the sweet tooth and aids digestion. hsV .1 5! :? 'SWsj Pleasure antl benefit combined. jss -mTA , Kk . - . r-nV-i Uuloss you see the nnme "Ilaycr" on package or on tablets you arc not get ting the genuine Payer product pre scribed by physiciuns over twenty-two years and proved safe by millions for Cojds Headache Toothache Lumbago Kurache lUicunmtlsm Neuralgia I'uln, I'uln Accept "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin' only. Each unbroken package contains proper directions. Handy boxes of twelve tablets cost few cents. Drug gists also soil bottles of 2-1 and 100. Asperln Is tha trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoacctlcacldcster of Snliryiicnclil. Advertisement. Mr r fffnlll I ftr.. i - r Tew live who do not remember with great exactness every compliment they over received. HELP FOR GIRLS WHO WORK Mrs. Lodic Tells How Lydia E. Pinkham'8 Vegetable Compound Helped Her Tyrono, Pa. "A friend told my hus band how Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta- oio impouna naa neipea nis wue, bo m7 husband bought mo a bottlo becauso I waa bo run-down, had a nervous weak nes3, no Btrength in my body and pains in my left side bo bad that I could hardly do my worK. Before L-waa mar ried I used to work tn 4t.n ft.tww nnrl T ..mbIII tliU lUbWkjr UllU M. had pains Just tho samo then as I havo had since I havo dono my housework. I would not be without a bottle in the bouse now. It has stopped tho pains all right and I have found out that it is a wonderful body builder, as it has made me well and strong. It is going to be tho 'old reliable' with me hereafter, and I am nlwaya willing to tell other women how it has helped mo. You can use this letter as you wish as I can hon estly Bay that my words are true." Mrs. M. Lodic, R.F.D. No. 4, Box 40, Tyrone, Pa. Letters liko th!s bring out tho merit of Lydia E. Pinkhnm'a Vegetable Com pound. They tell of tho relief from such pains and ailments nf tor taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Chronic Constipation Relieved Without the Use of Laxatives Nujol Is a lubricant not incdlulno or lajuulvo -ao cannot gripe. When you are constipated, not enough or Naturo'8 lu bricating liquid Is produced In tho bowel to keep tho food wasto soft uud moving. Doctors pro- fieri im ujoi bocmiso It acta llko this natu ral lubricant and thus re places It. Try it today. ni..jv.T A LUBRICANT-NOT A LAXATIVE There are scores of reasons why "Vaseline" Petroleum Jelly should b accounted a household mainstay. A few of them are burns, nores, blisters, euta. It comes In bottles-atall drug gists and general stores. CIIE5EBROUGH MAKUFACTUalNO Ca lute Strftt Nw Ycifc , Vaseline ReUS.PntOff PETROLEUM JELLY Uiuut tlu tinluu fvrio tnd tfitttinm COUGH Try PISO'S Astonlshtnglr quick relief. A rrup different from all other plaasant no up set stomach no opiate. 3 5c and 60c Yerywberc i y BW -w !? i '.- Uft- vs xi j ZIS ss&x&eBgt am siHri. i.ifi 'v"j WiT tWvWtt , . 4"-i,V'Ui, & zsm &,-.'Tr-r-T i w iSissaAsfesn-WB - . ....': , a i . ii .serrs- . $&$&&&&. w - - :jr"-v r -,jr-',7r.c..s--cn .i--..- 'HWaiSH KSItti Xnii. .. - vwt" . ... "A . .:r""l fg . .-. ""l, " "! -.. X JVJJ , ' T . w, i: . , ii'lMig in ll m i i "Wl lliii JJi iBi "ijieSIMJJ '". JIBM7'9ATK'XAlfafaFSHRamIJ'' (BfMj k'"' . ST i . k; a . . iJ.MtiJ s OuAi ULjn on -x " , ...M K?s? .ck--... -sattffiNiafc-' . rssw'f aiacnsA-rzrr pmm?i w4CT y4tfC ij'rrfiL J'ia,-T'JA "'" Vp4 A 1J i.nc(ervooc(irlTCii;rKocr l Dy JOHN DICKINSON SHERMAN INCOLN'S nieniorlal In Wjishlngton Is ill. nlilltllH llllllllil .III fniillj 111. Aim. 11. I .1 can people's annual tribute on Kehru- B niv vi tn Alirnliiiiii Lincoln. Tills me morial Is worthy the man and tlie day, so far as human hands can express the thoughts of human minds and hearts. In n few generations It will jloutblesi have it worthy rival, which In time may surpass It tho Lincoln highway, a national road across the continent lined with memorial trees, beautiful with roadside planting, busy with the trallle nnd travel of the nation which lie saved. Today the Lincoln meinorlul In Washington stands supreme among memorials to Abraham Lincoln perhaps among memorials to any man or woman In all the world. "A thing of beauty Is a Joy forever," and this Is a thing of beauty. To look fr3m the Washington monument down the long Mall and see tho simple, massive white marble (reek temple, Its stately Doric columns reflected In the waters of the quiet lagoon, Is n sight to stir the appreciative to ecstasy. Whut a trinity tho Capitol, Washington's monument, the Lincoln mon ument v 1th Arlington near by ! Lincoln's memorial In Washington stnnds todny n completed and perfected nntlonul shrine for u people's homage on Febnmry VI. It was ollkially dedicated last year on Memorial day. This year It will be rededlcatcd on Lincoln's blrthdayln the hearts of the American people. In briefest words, here Is how the Lincoln me morial wns created and what It Is: February 1, 1011, congress authorized tho expen diture of $L000,000 for a national memorial to (.'oiiitucinornie the llfo and character of Abraham Lincoln. In 10151 plans were approved. Work was begun February 12, 1014. The cornerstone wiib laid February 11 1015. Henry llacon of New York designed a simple and massive Greek temple of white Colorado mnrble, erected on n granite rect angulnr hnse. The memorial consists of it central memorial hall, containing a colossal seated statue of Lincoln by Daniel Chester French, and two smaller rooms containing memorials of Lincoln's Second Inaugural Address and bis Gettysburg Ad dress. There Is u colonnade of thirty-six Doric columns, symbolic of the United States In 18(5.". Above these are forty-eight festoons In high re lief representing tho forty-eight states. Tho memorial has cost almost exactly $3,000,000 to date. The total height of the structure above grade Is 122 feet. Each column Is 44 feet high and 7 feet 5 Inches In diameter at the base. The coloiftmdo Is 1S8 feet long. The statue of Lincoln Is 21 foot high and weighs 21 tons; Its height, with pedestal and base, Is 5U) feet. The visitor enters the memorial to gaze from a dlstnnco of seventy feet at this glirantlc Lincoln, represented as tho great wnr President. Over his hend Is Inscribed : In This Temple, As in the Hearts of the People For Whom He Saved the Union, The Memory of Abraham Lincoln Ig Enshrined Forever. As to the spirit of Lincoln's IJIrthday in Ameri ca In 10251, no truer words can bo said than were spoken by President Harding when ho received, In behalf of the American people, the Lincoln me morial from tho Lincoln memorial commission ap pointed by congress In 1011, with William Howard Taft for chairman. President Harding said, among oilier things: "Jt 1 a supreme satisfaction ofllclnlly to accept on behalf of the government this superb monu ment to the savior of tho republic. No ofllcinl duty could be more welcome, no ofllelal function more pleasing. This memorial edifice Is n nolilo tribute, gratefully bestowed, and In Its offering Is the reverent heart of America; In Its dedication Is the consciousness of reverence and gratitude beautifully expressed. "Somehow my emotions Incline me to speak simply as a reverent and grateful American, r.athcr than one In ofllelal responsibility. I am thus inclined because the true measure of Lin coln Is In his place today In tho heart of American citizenship, though half a century has passed since his colosMfl service and his martyrdom. In every moment of peril, tn every hour of discouragement, whenever the clouds gather, there Is the Imago of Lincoln to rivet our hopes, and to renew our faith, Whenexer there Is n glow of triumph over nation al achievement, there comes tho reminder that but for Lincoln's heroic nnd unnlterablo faith In the Union, these triumphs could not hnve been. "Hero was tho great purpose, hero tho towering hope, hero tho supremo faith, lie treasured the Inheritance bunded down by the founding fathers, St 74 rSnT.Tf m$&m jisjJ-"-- Tr Mrji- ! IftfcrHtxxf ma tms : e RJ3-U ml h ftnAr M ti- 'A'wM' r-y' v. fc3kl Wl'l '(f i'U n 'f-V'jrxt" jj'i"i "! ff m nan TI rf I. 11. WiWWJ'J mi-: ill r 2L, w "AMI && tho ark of tho covenant wrought through their heroic sacrlllces nnd hulldcd through their inspired genius. The Union must he preserved. It was the central thought, the unalterable purpose, the un yielding Intent, tho foundation of faith. It was worth every sacrifice, Justified every cost, steeled tho heart to sanction every crimsoned tide of blood. " "lie knew, of course, beforo tho assassin robbed him of fuller realization, that the end was bring ing him out all right. Ho knew when swords were shenthed and guns laid down, that the Union he saved wns riveted anew and made forever Indis soluble. He knew that In the great crucible of fire nnd blood tjio dross had been burned from tho misdirected patriotism of seceding states ami the pure gold restored to shining stars In dear Old Glory iiHdln. He knew in; had freed it race of bondmen nnd had given to the world the costly proof of tho perpetuity of tho American Union, lint I cannot restrain the wish that he might some how know of tho monuments to his memory throughout tho world, and that we are dedicating today, on behalf of n grateful nation, this match less memorial, whose forty-eight columns, repre senting forty-eight stntes In the concord of union, testify thnt tho 'end brought him out all right.' Washington inspired belief In the republic In Its heroic beginning. Lincoln proved Its quality In tho heroic preservation. The old world had wondered about the new-world experiment, and wns quite ready to proclaim Its futility when the Civil war was threatening, hut-Lincoln left tho Union un challenged for all succeeding time. Not only wns our nation given n new birth of freedom, hut de-x mocraey was given a new tanctlon by that hand of divinity itself which has written the rights of hu mankind nnd pointed the wny tn their enjoyment. "Fifty-seven yonrs ago the people gnvo from their ranks, sprung from their own fiber, this plain man, holding their common Ideals. They gave lilin first to service of tluj nation In tho hour of perils, then to their Pantheon of fame. With them and by them ho Is enshrined nnd exalted forever. - "Today American gratitude, love and apprecia tion give to Abraham Lincoln this lone white tem ple, a Pantheon for him alone." Herewith is reproduced n new photograph of Lincoln cathedral in faraway England. Why what is tho connection between Abraham Lincoln and a cathedral across seas thijt was built long before tho Pilgrims landed on Plymouth Hock? For one thing, this "blood Is thicker than wa ter" and "hniHld across tho sea" business Is not all buncombe. There's considerable In It, after all. 'nglanil gnvo us the Llncolns, when all Is said and liono. Knglnnd gnve us the Lincoln blood. Amor len innde it run richer. Doubtless It was Provi dence, rather tlmn Knglnnd or America, that raised up Abraham Lincoln. For another thing, It Is a safe guess that Abra ham Lincoln had his beginnings beneath tho shadow of Lincoln cathedral. "Lincoln" Is n place name. Tho Llncolns of England and America took "tliolr namo from Lincoln, the capital of Lincoln shire, which is an old, old city Llndum Colonla of Roman times. And tho name fs old, too. Why, Hugh Lincoln Is tho subject of the "Prioress' eTalo" In Chnucer's "Canterbury Tales." Thcro wero Llncolns early In our American his tory. Abraham Lincoln Is descended from Samuel Lincoln, who came to Massachusetts from Eng land In 1037. And the Llncolns were a sturdy fam ily. There was MnJ. Gen. llenjamln Lincoln (175J5J 1810), who received Lord Cornwallls' sword In surrender at Yorktown. Enoch Lincoln (1788 1820) as governor of Maine, 1827-0. Levi Lin coln (1740-1820) was United States nttorney gen eral 1801-n. Another Levi Lincoln (1782-1808) was governor of Massachusetts 1825-511 and member of congress 18515-41. Abraham Lincoln's Immediate ancestors chose to go pioneering. New England was too settled for them. They were of the typo of American pio neer who moved on as soon as ho saw n neighbor's smoke or heard his dog bark. In the depths of the wilderness, ever working westwnrd, they becnino what the world calls poor and obscure. It should be remembered, however, that poverty and ob scurity are one thing In the city nnd entirely a different thing In tho wilderness. A pioneer with a rllle and a.v, u roof over his head and it crop In the ground Is neither poor nor obscure. Lincoln cathedral Is one of the finest In Eng land. It was In process of erection from 1075 to 1501. It Is of early English architecture and Is 521 by 82 feet, with n matchless' central tower 271 feet high. The cathedral's famous bell, "Great Tom of Lincoln,;' weighs about Vi tons. The north gate of Llndum Colonln still stands and Is the only Itoman gate In Itrltaln still In use. Not far pway Is lloston, the mother ot our Iloston, What Lincoln nnd Lincoln's birthday mean to the English-speaking nations of earth cannot be better said than was Mild by Ellhil Hoot at the presentation of the Salut-Gaudens statue of Lin . coin, the gift of America to the IJrltlsh people. Ho said, among other things: "Put aside superficial difference, accidental and unimportant, and Abraham Lincoln nppears, In the simple greatness .of his life, his character, and his j-orylce to mankind, a representative of the deep and underlying qualities of his race tho qualities that gmtf emergencies reveal, unchangingly thu same In every continent; tho qualities to which Hrltaln owed her life In the terrible years of tho last decade; the qualities that have made both llrltnln and America great. Ho was of English blood, and ho has brought enduring honor to tho name. Every child of English sires should learn tho story and think with pride, 'Of such tuff as this are we English made.' "Ho was Imbued with tho conceptions of Justice mid liberty that the people of Itrltaln had been working out hi struggle and sacrifice slnco before Magna Charlie the conceptions for which Chatham and Hurke and Franklin nnd Washington stood to gether, a century and a half ago, when tho battlo for Hritibh liberty was fought and won for Itrltaln as well as for America on the other sldu of the Atlantic. These conceptions of Justlco nnd liberty havo been the frtrmatlve power that has brought all America, from the Atlantic to tho Pacific, to order Its life according to tho course of the common law, to assert Its popular sovereignty through rep 1'c.teniutlvc government TJrltnln's great gift to tho political science of the world nnd to establish tho relation of Individual citizenship (n the state, on tho basis of Inalienable rights which governments nro established to secure. It Is tho Identity of these fundamental conceptions In both countries which makes it Impossible that In any great world emergency Itrltaln and America can a on oppos ing sjdes. These conceptions of Justlco and liberty uro tho breath of life for both." Sire idb v I Wtsp. 05O I pen y3i2fWfM ' sffffifffH :Rf2lS VIRGINIA i fH I I aE ;, AM IRICANTOIACCO rcLJlJK Music Tabooed in Kurdistan. Though nearly all primitive peoples are fond of music, the Kurd Is an ex ception. In Kurdistan music of any kind Is banned. There music Is looked on us Immoral. Ited Cross Itall IMuc should he used In every home. It makes clothes whlto ns snow and never Injures tho fabric. All good grocers. Advertisement. Ketlcenco grows In some direc tions. Epitaphs ore brief In our day or absent altogether. Mrs. Eliza Teeter P9IHfflfHifKvfffffffW LMLRHHisBHRS HAVE YOU A COUGH? What Tliis Woman Says is of Vital Interest to You Goshen, Ind. "I Invl coughed night r.nd day for n wliolo year and had loat so much flesh I begnn to look liko a walking skeleton. Two of my sisters had died from tuberculosis nnd I felt certain that my time had come. Finally, a friend rc rommended Dr. Pierco'a Golden Medical Discovery to my husband, uud it mado mo feel now strength and vitality right from the start and in a year's timo I was just as strong and hardy iw over. I liavo never suffered with n deep, hack ing cough since (that was about 20 ycara ago) and havo always felt very grateful to Dr. Pierce." Mrs. Eliza Teeter, 413 Middlebury St. Whenever you feci tho need of good confidential medical advice, address Dr. 1'icrco, president Invalids' Hotel, Buffalo N. Y., and answer will bo returned with-' out charge of any kind. SLOW DEATH Aches, pains, nervousness, diffi culty in urinating, often mean serious disorders. The world'sf standard remedy for kidney, liver, bladder and uric acid troubles LATHROP'S L" etiU HAARLEM OIL Em bring quick relief and often ward oaf deadly diseases. Known as the national remedy of Holland for more than 200 years. All druggists, in three sires. Look for tha nama Cold M.dl on every box and acc.pt no Imitation IURESC0LDSh24H0URIi BaQHEiKlMSn TURE5 UGRIPPEM3DrV 'otniori; vw.hiljlco. michkiah.1 Cuticura Soap Is Ideal for The Complexion Soap 25, Oiatawa 25 sad 50c, Takw 25c