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Forest City press. (Forest City, Potter County, D.T. [S.D.]) 1883-19??, February 27, 1919, Image 7

Image and text provided by South Dakota State Historical Society – State Archives

Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn93057084/1919-02-27/ed-1/seq-7/

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SA6E
COMB
TEA 1
FADED GMI HI
If Mixed with Sulphur it Darkens
so Naturally Nobody
can Tell.
Grandmother kept her hair beauti:
fully darkened, glossy and attractive
with a brew of Sage Tea and Sulphur.
Whenever hor luilr took on that dull,
faded or streaked appearance, thlfj
simple mixture was applied with won.
derful effect. By asking at any draft
•tore tor "Wyeth's Sage and Snlphus
Compound," you will get a large bot:
tie of this old-tline recipe, Improve*}
by the addition of other Ingredients, all
ready to use, at very little cost. This
simple mixture can be depended upon
to restore natural color and be&uty to
the hair.
A well-known downtown druggie*
sayB everybody uaes Wyeth's Sage and
Snlphnr Compound now because It
darkens so naturally and evenly that
nobody can tell It has been applied—
It's so easy to use, too. You elmplyj
dampen a comb or soft brush and
draw It through your hair, taking one
strand at a time. By morning thd
gray hair disappears after another
application or two. It la restored to Its
natural color and looks glossy, soft
and beautiful.—Adv.
Experiments have shown that the
average speed of an ordinary snail
at the rate of one mile In 14 days.
stop QjiMeTPMN.
BUB UK AWAY
Instant relief! Limber up! Rub
pain, soreness, stiffness right
out with"St. Jacob's Liniment."
When your back Is sore and lame
or lumbago, sciatica or neuritis has
you stiffened up, don't suffer! Get a
small trial bottle of old, honest "St
Jacobs Liniment" at any drug store,
pour a little in your hand and rub it
right into the pnin or ache, and by the
time you count fifty, the soreness and
lameness is gone.
Don't stay crippled This soothing,
penetrating liniment takes the ache
and pain right out and ends the misery.
It Is magical, yet absolutely harmless
and doesn't burn or discolor the skin.
Nothing else stops lumbago, sciatica
and lame back misery so promptly and
surely. It never disappoints!—Adv.
Unless his wife's relations are rich
and distinguished, the average man is
never interested in them.
HEAD STUFFED FROM
CATARRH OR COLD
Says Cream Applied in Nostril
Opens Air Passages Right Up.
Instant relief—no waiting. Your
clogged nostrils open right up the air
passages of your head clear and you
•can breathe freely. No more hawking,
snuffling, blowing, headache, dryness.
No struggling for breath at night
your cold or catarrh disappears.
Get a small bottle of Ely's Cream
Ralm from your druggist now. App'y
a little of this fragrant, antiseptic,
liealing cream in your nostrils. It pen
etrates through every air passage »f
the head, soothes the inflamed "r
swollen mucous membrane and relief
conies instantly.
It's just fine. Don't stay stufTed-up
with a cold or nasty catarrh.—Adv.
Wise Is the girl who fears a man
more than she does a mouse.
State of Ohio, City of Toledo. Lucas
County—ss.
Frank J. Cheney inalces oath that he Is
senior partner of the firm of F. -I- Cheney
Sk Co., Joins business in tho City of To
ledo, County and State aforesaid, and that
•aid firm will pay the sum of ONE HUN
DRED DOLLARS for any case of Cntarrh
that cannot lie cured by the use of
HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE
FRANK J. CHENEY.
Bworn to before me and subscribed In
my presence, this 6th day of December,
A. D. 1886.
V)1
(Seal) A. W. Oleason. Notary Public.
HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE If' tstc
•n Internally and acts through the Blood
•n the Mncoi" o' Svstem.
Druggists, 75c. Testimonials free.
F. J. Cheney Co., Toledo. Ohio.
Perpetual motion seems to be sue
cess ns perpetual failure.
'jCutlcura Soothes Baby Rashea.
That Itch and burn with hot baths
of Cutlcura Soap followed by gentle
anointings of Cutlcura Ointment.
Nothing better, purer, sweeter, espe
cially If a little of the fragrant Cutl
cura TallUm Is dusted on at the fin
ish. 25c each everywhere.—Adv.
It Is beiter.to have hwrt .of .off*,,
|i|«n a wooden head.
LAND IN DEMAND
Opportunities of Western Canada
Becoming Known.
Fertile Soil on Which Cnn Be Pro
duced Record Crops Offered to Set
tlers at Prices Attractive to
Farm Seekers.
In the *ariy months of 1010 there
vias a demand for farm lands in West
ern Canada, the fcreutest that lias ever
been in the history of the country.
This despite the fact that farm lands
have Increased in price, as the value
of the farm product has increased and
the virility and productive value of
Western Canada farm lands have come
more and more into evidence. Farm
in}: there is no longer an experiment.
Good crops in be grown in all locali
ties, some probably a little more fa
vorable than others, but on the whole
a good —more than good—general av
erage. Land elsewhere on the conti
nent is used for the developing of one
hundred and twenty dollar steers,
thirty-five dollar hogs, two dollar and
twenty cent wheat anil eighly-flvc
cent oats, and Its price is anywhere
from one hundred and fifty to three
hundred dollars an acre. Western
Canada land sells at from twenty to
forty dollars an uere, and the farmer
cultivating it gets one hundred and
twenty-flve dollars for.his steer, thirty:
Ave "dollars for his ho jr. 'two dollars
and twenty cents for his wheat, and
eighty-five cents for his oats. And
can grow corn, too, hut Western Can
ada is saying no more abont it than
North Dakota did fifteen years ago,
when it was an experiment there, and
see what North Dakota is doing to
day. The prediction is that in less
than a decade corn will l»e grown suc
cessfully In all parts of Western Can
ada. It Is, therefore, easy to account
for the increased demand for West
ern Canada lands. The war is ended,
and ihe food that the American and
Canadian farmer sent across to the
soldier, holding up his strength and
maintaining his vitality, won tho war.
No! It was .iust a factor in winning
it, as was the soldier of Italy, of
France, of Belgium, of Great Britain,
of Canada and of the United States.
An important factor, nevertheless.
People generally have begun to real
ize what food means, means to every
body—and it is growsi on the farm.
So people today want fnrnv lands, and
they want those that are gtxfd. Tlie
grent, wide, open stretches of wonder
fully productive soil of Western Can
ada are the chief attraction of the
lnnd seekers of today, and it will be
so tomorrow, and of all days, until
these vacnnr inviting acres are brought
into fruition by the hand of man and
tlie multiplied effort of steam and gas
oline power, :o the influence and op
oration of which these lands present
such a splendid opportunity.
The pulse of today's desire to secure
farm lands may be seen to beat in the
columns of the local newspaper, re
cording sah»s of many tracts of lands,
ranging from 100 to l.'JOO :u-:cs. A
Itegina (Sask.) p:iper says, "In farm
lands there is so brisk a business be
ing done that it might be considered
a boom." Another paper reports the
sale of section of raw pruirie seven
miles east of Itegina for $ori an acre,
and 2U0 acres at .$50 an acre. One
real-estnte firm handled in three
weeks' time over 3,.ri00 acres of farm
lands, the turnover being upward of
$100,000. An improved farm near Ite
gina changed hands at $47 an acre.
"For the first time in the history of
the Moosejaw district farm land has
been sold for $100 an acre.When J. P.
Cameron of Victoria. P». C.. void half
a section, known as the Lett farm, to
John Logan. The farm was bought a
year ago for $85 an acre jjnd is locat
ed three miles from the city. It is
highly improved and has fine build
ings."
An extract from a local paper says:
"The movement of farm lands is open
ing up well this season and there is
every indication that a large area of
prairie property will he turned over
during the months intervening before
seedtime. ,i
"The price received for farm land*
in each instance is considered as good,
particularly for unimproved raw prai
rie. and shows a considerable improve
ment on prices for similar properties
sold during the years of the Mar."—
Advertisement.
Aloft.
"Was our friend Dustin Stax Inter
estad in the uplift?" "Well, he was
pretty strong for overhead charges."
It is entder to
than lost lime.
recover lost money
A VMbmk, Cfemtaft
'-v.
1 Allf RelrcshlM ud •ealls'i
UtiM—Murine for Red
Dtn, Somen, Granula
F*Xmi ftrtiiwgaftdlftHrnmj* care, and he wor.'t part with any
fcf the Em ot Eyeiidr
INDOOR TEMPERATURES.
gathered a lot. of misctlluiieous in
tormntion of interest. this winter
season from reading the January num
ber of the Heatins ami VentilatinR
Magazine. gives tlu- i: uv tem
po!
a lures o!' various rooms in the win
ter reason as follows:
Destrees.
Hath rooms to 7",
Holler shops 50 to ft)
C'hurches
Cooling rooms (bath houses)
Bntrance halls
Factories
Foundries
Gymnasiums
Homes for aRcd
Hospitals
Hot air baths (hath houses)
lecture halls
J^ivinfr rooms
Massape rooms (bath houses)
Machine shops
Offices
Operating rooms
J'aint shops
Vrlsons (day confinement)
Prisons (nijrht confinement)
l*ublic building's
Schools
Shops
Sickrooms
Steam baths (bath houses)
Swimming halls
...'4 to Gil
...50 to
.60 to 04
60 to fir
ts
.70 to
Vestibulea
Warm air baths (bath hou «s)
The proper temperature in most in
stances is determined by the amount
of clothing worn or the character of
the employment of the occupants or
their number. The theory behind a
standard of 60 to 66 for machine shops,
65 for shops, and 60 for gymnasiums
is that t.e occupants, being engaged
in muscular work, cannot get rid of
their superfluous heat if ihe tempera
ture of the air be higher. The supposi
tion is that if the temperature of the
air in churches 1b 65 and lecture halls
is fid to f4 the crowds will make
enough heat to supply the deficiency.
A
is.'he aged aire not good heq.t njajters,
SO is set as the standard "or oid peo
ple's homes.
These are no doubt observations
made of individuals. While an adult
doing moderate wort: would make 500
units of heat, one working harder
would make more than that.
In regulating the temperature of a
room it is necessary to take into con
sideration the number of the occupants,
their activities, their ages within cer
tain limits, and the way they dress.
Another article in this number of the
magazine deals with soot in its rela
tion to heating. Mr. Harrington, engi
neer for the Illinois fuel administra
tion. says the soot is more effective
than asbestos or any other substance
in preventing the transmission of heat
A layer of soot one-thirty-second inch
in thickness will decrease the heat
producing power of a boiler 10 per
cent: one-sixteenth of an inch will re
duce it 20 per cent. Dry salt burned
on a hot lire will get rid of the soot.
SO
r.o
I to 61'
The earn* Journal gives the follow
ing units of heat made by certain
types of .individuals: Child (5 years
old. 240 adult at rest, OSO adult at
work, 500 man 30 years old In an
atmosphere with a temperature of 68
degrees Fahrenheit, 440 man 30 years
old in an atmosphere with a tempera
ture. of :il degrees Fahrenheit. 600
woman 32 years old, 4S0 per in old
age. 360.
Air Raids Costly.
The Manchester Guardian recently
printed the fit si uilcetsor-.i] report of
the Zeppelin raid of September S. 1 HIS.
No eonteinpora: report of any raid
gave the sens'.i of the irreat eity's
titter helplessness and the terrible
force of thi' explosions that the
reader finds in the following extract:
At t'lo end of ixve Lane is Aldenian
b'.'ry, the old Ct-urch of St. Alary the
Virgin, standing in a small open space
at the junction of the two streets. A tall
Week of offices overlooking the church
yard was struck by an explosive bomb,
which exploded on the coping of the .'
and rained down blocks of masonry intj
the stieet. wrecking the premises. Tin:
force of this explosion was such that
every window in Aldermanljury wart
smashed.
A feather warehouse was struck and
so tremendous was the force of Mie ex
plosion that feathers were driven into
the solid wall. At one place the lead was
stripped from a roof and driven into the
:iir. remaining curled into hlic balls over
the texgraph wires and hanging down
ever the street.
lied T.ion street, a little street connect
ing Theobald's road with Red l.ion square,
was badly knocked about. A bomb fell
in the nidde of it and wiped out the
lower parts of tli* most of the house",
including a public houae. which was left
apparently iPi:om|iorted by one pillar.
The Penny Bank at the corner of tlv
htret was destroyed.
Tiie damage done In the raid was esti
mated at £2.000.000 Clio.000.000). chieHy
ly the great fire in the Wood street dis
trict.
Tiie Grief Hog.
There Is no trouble here below for
ordinary mortals: ex-kaiser Bill lm«
cornered woe, and we have naught
but chortles. The kaiser always was
a pig when he was buay reigni.tg:
unless he got the portion b!g. lie sat
around complaining. And now that
he' no longer chief, he's hogged the
stoc!-: of sadness, he's corner.'! at!
there is of grief, and we're condemn:
to gladness. 1 iry to d:g up .some
despair, but there is none to gather:
the kaiser's go it in his lair, he i.'li
the whoie blamed slather. Per'mps
you third: you have a woe, brt it's an
imitation: there iisn't any. that I know,
in all this blooming nation. The ka!«-.r
has it stored away, in boxes, bales and
cases it's all in his old castle gray,
there's none in oilier places. Its really
useless scratching round for any
br&nd o'f sorrow you '(-an not buy it
by the pound, rto gallon can you bor
row. The kaiser has it salted jwti
it's in his safe deposit old Bill the kins
without a crown, old Bill, the gre.v.
what was it. So don't pretend you're
in despair, nnd sprinkle teardrops
many for Bill h*» cornered a!i th«
Brazil says'she will aupport the l"n:teJ
Stfl^es^nd other leading powers nt tlie
p«ie^"^unci1, ptki'tU'tilarly in the 'i'snn'!
tion of the 'requisitioned 0«ruian fhit *. o(
vbkilt she holds 4J
One
I
SiH-crs
fouls.
The Greatest Name in Goody-Land
The Flavor
Lasts!
Crop
Fertile Land
Often
at
ou know «iie
realm ot child
hood dreatns
Is a land of
sweets.
Make some of
those dreams
a dellsbtfuf
reality by
taking home
WRIGLEYS
frequency.
How about
tonfeht?
SEALED TIGHT
KEPT RIGHT
VfflAPKD
IN
Grow Wheat in Western Cmia
Pays for
to
Grain Growing and Stock Raising.^
Tho::ghVZ-is'.ern Csnadaotters lapd atsuch lowfiguree. the high
prices of grain, cat
tie. sheep and hogs will remain.
I Loans for the purchase of stock may be had at low interest
I there are go-V. shipping facilities best of markets free scboofo
church -s spkMid climate low taxation (none on improvements^
For pnrtieuh'mutJ location of UD4S
(or
Atuericiitis th" ^rcittcM
drinkers i.!tf world.
For centnrifM fiOT.D MKDAT ITaarlciii
Oil has l»-e:i a staii'lnrd itouseholil remedy
for kidney, liver, hlaiidcr and stomach
trouble, and all d'se.me-i connectcd with
the urinary or^ana. Tiie kidneys and blad
der are the ui'ist imoort'int otgans of the
body. They are the titters, the purifiers of
your blood, if the poisons which enter
your system '.-trough the blood and stom
ach are not,eptirely thrown- out by 'the
kidneys a&d blad lcr, you are doomed.
Weariness, sleeplessness, nprroutmeflt,
despondency, backache, stomach trouble,
headsche. pain in ioins and loner abdo
men, gall utones, gravel, difficulty when
urinating, cloudy and bloody urine, rheu
matism, sciatica and lumbago, all warn you
to look after your kidneys and bladder.
All these indicate some weakness c-t the
kidneys or other orgaus or that the enemy
mi crows which are always present in your
I n'ltcji have attacked your weak spots.
GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil Capsules are
what you need.
They are not "patent medicine," nor
ft "'new discover^.'
For 300 year* they
'Ah
l*ni
the
'it1
_• -1 1VI .-rT.
-:J?
Weclsrn Can da offara the greatest ariv-antagcE to home seeker*.
Largj profit-, are assured. You can buy on easy* payment-terna*
$15
$30 per Acre—
I land similar to that which through man/ years has averaged from 2ft t« 45
I bushels ot wheat to the acre. Hundreds c.r cases are eu record where inVVifej*
Canada a single crop has paid the cost of land and pmdsctioa. TbtGneia
Iments of the Dnmir.ton and Province* of Manitoba, Saskatchewan and AAcfU mk
I the farmer to prosper, and extend every possible eneourtseBcst awt hoi*
i»l», rn*r3, illtutrat«d literature,
raduuej rz.iwar 1 aiUs. etc., apply to Sunt, ot I mm
igr.it
Job. Ottawa, Cm., or
C. A, Co«k. Driver 197. WtUrtwg, S. D. W. V. Fnaeit, ^f«e 4, B«s
Bldf., Onalu, lil., uJ R. A. G&rrcti. 311 Jtcluoa .TtrMt. St. FuLMhk
Canadian i«ver*iment Agents
water
To keep 'lean 3td healthy take Doctor
Pierce's Pleasum J'ellets. They ret-'ulato
liver, bowels anil tomacli. Adv.
arc lite .vcapons i' hcloloss
SAFE, (jENTLE REMEDY
CLEANSES YOUR KIDNEYS
Peerless Perifoy FmI
and focif zr She
Best for
Adc for pti»aal(nt[itor
Akrea »£a!t»« Canpaajr, Sima
GIOUX CITY PTC. )CO, WO. fiU-WML
have 1-crn a standard ranc*?..
v?,:'c Parvf itupti'Attl !fa**~
lem Oil yoia* fnreanJ/a&u#«d,
are perfectly harmle^. The briUag. ronfb
irig oil ficftlut into Utt wSW tnn) Cttaog
the kidnejs and
thnac]k
the blxdirr, dkiv-
ing out t^e poiMBous gum*. 3i*w Jfe
fresh strength sad hra\h w® rate
continue the trratuwaX Wt*m ca
ly restored to jroar Mpc! tifar,
tuk:n^ a capsule or to* auh tkey
keep you in wdftiot aaii orcsnc.
turn of the disease.
Do not delay- a matte. HMm me
peciaiiy duumm in Uissy mat Nadtbr
.11oub.b- AiTdrufjjiKijt
ltS AMJ
MEDAL. Atatf*
Adr.
M£VAi.
Haarlem Oil Oapsulet. They wiS Tint
MLDAL Haarlewi OH CiHk* mm im
Exited direct trom the Iihe^urisa JUL
land. They are preparei i» setswt faa»
tity o.id convenient tsru, awn enj
and *re poaiiljd^ gsuurtHl ft*
prote'.'t refief. ta thwe
»ges. Ask for the
V*'

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