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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 18, 1900)
THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SFXDAV, 2fOVEMHTST? IS, 1000. 17 EXTENSION OF LIBRARIES Beasom Whj the State Should Promot Them in Small Oornmunltres. EDUCATIONAL VALUE OF GOOD BOOKS Frojiosed i.mrr fur n Mate Commission to Push llir Work Along; I'rnc lloiil Mum Plnns fur , Trsvellni: Mltrnrle. The Nebraska legislature of l&Ol will be Asked to consider 11 bill which has (or Its object tho furtherance and spread ot tlio library movement In Nebraska. It Is pro posed to creato n library commission, to provide for a system of traveling libraries and to multo tui appropriation sufllelcnt to carry tbo law Into offect. Tho Nebraska Federation of Woman's Clubs, tho Nebraska Library association and other toclctles aro enlisted In tho cause, committees have been appointed and they hope to rccolvo tho nc tlve co-operation ot every friend of educa tional progress In the state. Tho benefits to bo derived from tho operation nf such a law aro so obvious as to need only to bo sot forth briefly In order to command tho upport of tho citizens of tho state. It 'is no untrodden path Into which the stato Is asked to venture. Seventeen states have already established library commis sions and thirty-three Btatcs nro enjoying the' advantages ot some form of traveling libraries. Tho states having library com missions aro oh follows: Colorado, Con necticut, Georgia, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Now Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, I'ennsylvnnla, Vermont and Wiscon sin. It Is high tlmo Nebraska Joined so goodly u company. Theso commissions nro composed of peo ple nho servo In nearly all cases without salary and whojo solo efforts aro to ralso tho Intellectual and moral standards of their rospectlvo commonwealths. It Is tho buBlnots of u library commission to foster thn growth nnd establishment of freo pub Ho libraries, to assist In raising tho stand ard of library management and to co-oper-ato with all tho educational forces of tho date In tho spread of Intelligence by tho use of books. Method of Promotion. Thero Is no need of arguing us to tho de sirability of establishing freo public libra ries. Hathcr, It lias como to bo considered a reproach to a town of any slzo If It has rot a public library. A man having a cholco us to whoro his family shall live will, If ho Is wlso, prefer a town that has a public library to ono that has not It Is otio of tho duties of n library commission to on rourago tlio establishment of free publlo libraries. Thero aro many ways of doing this. Many towns tiro without public libra ries merely bocnuso pcoplo nro too busy to find out what nro tho legal steps required by tho stato laws and how to go to work to creato sentiment In favor of establishing a publlo library and securo funds to support It when established. Tho library rommlsslon will publish and clrculato tbo library laws of tho state, will study out nnd disseminata ways of creating publlo Intorest nnd secur ing funds, will send its members or officers, If so desired by n community, to aid In ad vocating tho establishing of a. publlo li brary and will at nil times bo on tho alert to fostor tho growth of tho library move ment. Thero Is much that tho commission can do to assist libraries already Htarted and thoso whose establishment has nlready been decided on. Whenever requested, tho library commission shall bo prepared to glvo advlso as to tho best methods of se lecting, buying, cataloguing and circulating books; also as to general library manage ment, rules und regulations, choice of librarian nnd everything pertaining to the most npproved developments ot library science It shall Bend Its members, It re quested, to study tho needs ot a given library, Instruct tho librarian In methods and aid In every possible way In giving tho community Iraprnvod library service, library buildings, etc. In this way small libraries with limited funds and untraluod librarians may bo spared expcnslvo mistakes, as well as being made Increasingly effective. It Is ono of tho duties of a library com mission to publish und clrculato library In formation, lists of books nnd other matter that would bo helpful particularly to tho mall libraries which, In Ncbrasku, means all the libraries e.icept thoso In Lincoln and Omaha. Whon demand for Buch a school comes, It Is tho duty of such a commission to hold a brief school of Instruction in library methods In order that librarians whoso salaries will not permit of attendance, at any of tho distant library schools, may learn better mot hods of library management. It Is also tho duty of a library commis sion to study tho needs of the stnto In tho way of library legislation nnd to report tho results of such study to tho governor from tlmo to time. Traveling: I.lbmrlm. flo far tho work of the commission rcachos enly tho cities nud towns, but thero Is much that thn llbrury commission can do for the rural districts by means of a system of traveling libraries. These collections of books are purchased by tho commission from money appropriated by the stato for thot purpose -ind recolved from philanthropic sources. Under rules prescribed by the commission, theso traveling libraries nro fcent out wherever In tho stato thero Is a demand for them, nnd are kept from three, to six mouths. This makes It poaslblo for ii Isolntod rural district In the thinly settled part of tho stato to enjoy tho use of the world's best books. Kvcn In progres sive Nebraska thero aro communities whoro a good book Is never seen, where the pcoplo have no way of finding out which books are good nnd which are not, whero the ndvent of nny kind of a book Is a godsend, I'lcturc for a moment tho benefit such a community would derive from n wisely selected travel ing library, and no thinking citizen of Ne braska could hcsltato In declaring that $2,000 n year spent on traveling libraries would be money well spent and would yield returns nil out of proportion to the amount expended, Traveling libraries will bo tho means of keeping nllvo tho small libraries, whero only a few books can bo added each year. Interest soon dies out when pcoplo have read all of tho contents of n library that thoy care to, unless a fresh supply of books can be had now and then. More than this, traveling libraries will help to creato a thirst for good books that nothing but the establishment of public libraries will quench. A traveling library Is au elo quent missionary. As a result of tbo work ot tho commission, with Its strong right arm ot traveling libraries, Nebraska will hnvo moro and better managed public libraries, school libraries and prlvato libraries, moro endowed libraries and better library buildings and equipments. I'riiL'tli'iil l.'inmiilm. As a concrete Illustration, suppose that the superintendent ot schools ut I) , a town of 2,000 Inhabitants, attends ,tho State Teachers' association meeting at Lin coln, hears an address from the library commission, secures a printed circular con tnlnlng tho library laws of Nebraska and somo hints on starting a library and goes homo to consult with tho pcoplo he Is suro will bo Interested. Shortly afterward these pcoplo send for somo representative of tho commission to como to 11 , and they hold a public meeting, which results In the establishment of a public library. This library Is helped along by tho presence of truvellng libraries until somebody, who would never have thought of It If thero had been no publlo library In D , en dows the book fund or gives money to oroct library building. Tho library board of 1J appeals to tho library commission for suggestions as to plans for buildings, and tho result gives 11 a marked fid- vantugo over towns having no public libra ries, which, In turn, stimulates theso other towns until they vlo with II In provid ing educational facilities for their citizens. In tho rural districts tho mere presence of tho traveling libraries will bo nn argu mont for moro books In tho schools nnd tho home. When people llvo hundreds of miles from a book store thoy cannot bo expected to buy books or to know what books to buy. Many a family that has abundant means to buy good books Is without them because they do not Know what to buy or where to buy them. Tho trnvellng library will open n new world to such people nnd will transform many a home. The library commission will pub lish nnd send out with tho traveling libraries und In other ways lists of books sultablo for prlvato purchaso In rural com munities. Tho county newspapor and tho Herd book will ccaso to bo the only printed matter In many a home. Much of the world's best literature par ticularly that In periodical form Is stowed away In the gnrretn of Nebraska or has been set nsldo by libraries that have re ceived It by donation because It duplicates things already In tho libraries. Ily means of tho library commission this llteraturo will bo encouraged to leave Its hiding places, exchanges will bo effected nnd tho magazines placed whero they will do tho most good, Tho library commission will co-operato with the stato superintendent, tho teachers of Nebraska, tho conductors of farmers' Institutes, tho study clubs and other edu catloiiul societies In advancing tho educa tional standards of tho stato. Its members and officers will habitually attend educa tional meotings, study educational methods nnd possibilities, to tho end that' thero shall bo tho closest co-operation between tho libraries and the schools. Time for Action. Much moro might be Bald as to the pos sibilities of tho work of a library com mission, but Is not this enough to con vince the most ohdurato that Nebraska must no longer delay In this work? With scarcely a scoro of freo public libraries in tho state, can anyouo doubt the wisdom of taking steps to encourago tho establish ment of moro libraries nnd tho strengthen ing of thoso already established? With wldo stretches of unsettled territory to which It Is desired to. Invito tho best class of settlers, who would have the temerity to say that Nebraska docs not need travel ing libraries? A reading people nro n con tented pcoplo. Let us soften the solitude of tho dwellers of tho sandhill country lest they Book moro nllurjng fields; let us glvo tho children of Ncbrnskn tho opportunity to continue their education on through life; let us put Into the hands of the chil dren ot tho forclgn-born pioneers those settlors whom, for their Industry, courage and sturdy manhood and womanhood, wo wclcomo to tho hardships of pioneer llfo tho books that will enable, them to over como tho disadvantage of their parentfl' untamlllnrlty with our language, literature and hlBtory; let us put within reach of tho farmers tho latest and best books re lating to their profession, tho profession on which tho material prosperity of tho stato depends, and In bo doing thereby make glad the wasto places until, from Richardson to Sioux, and from KlmbH.ll to Dixon, thero In not a wasto place, In any sense of tho word, In fair Nebraska. Tho friends of this movement will havo to meet severnl objections. It will not tako long to llnd tho man who opposes tho creation of any moro commissions. He Is easily disponed ot. Thero may bo good and bad commissions, but thoy aro not alt bad, nnd oven tho bod ones nro generally neces enry evils. In tho evolution of a stato there has to bo a division of labor, henco commissions. The citizen whoso patriotism MEN CURED Without Drugs or Electricity by Our Vacuum Organ Developer f Our Vacuum Oman Davfltmi TBrjthine- l.o fails nud horn is iload. It re stores mail, weak orBin, lost power, fnillm? nisnhood, drnlns, errors of youth, etc. Strlo turs and Virlcocols permanently cured In 1 to weeks, ' No Drug to ruin the stomach. No Electrlo Its to 11 ter anil burn. Our Vacuum De veloper is o local treatment applied directly to tbo weak m.d disordered parts. It sires jtrnogth nnd development wherever applied. Old men with lost or fit I log manhood, or the jotwtf ami mlddlo aed w lm tire renpiutc tho re nulls of youthful error, eicessororer work nro quickly restored to hr-ulth and strength. Our niiirTeloin appliance has nstonUhrvl Hie entire ?t5 e"V"'rMU '""''In plmlclons in the I'nlted State lire now reconimemllnKnur appli ance in the severest case where etery other known deuce has fulled. You will see and feel Its lienefit from the flrt urforltU applied directly nt Ibo rent of the tucrder. It makes no difference how tetere ths No Cure No Ray 75,000 in usee:: takes tho turn ot antagonism to commis sions simply has to submit to the inevita ble, and would do well to expend his en ergies In finding out just what commissions the state really needs. .No Politic, In It. The only othor serious objection, aside from the financial one, will come from thoso who fear that tho commission will be com posed ot political partisans, who will use their positions to spread their own particu lar doctrines. This sort of opposition has doveloped to some extent In tbo lost two legislatures, when the matter was being considered. Nothing could bo further from tho intentions ot tho supporters of this movement. Nothing could bo so fatal to tho purposes of a library commission as to havo tho faintest tinge ot partisanship In its membership. It Is proposed to draft Into tho service as ex-ofllclo members the stato superintendent, state librarian, chancellor and librarian of tho university, with pos sibly ono or two other members. Their services are to be entirely unrcmuncrated, tho actual work being dono under their di rection by an officer of their own selecting, who shall recelvo such compensation as they direct. Tho chancellor nnd stato superin tendent aro nlready entrusted with the chief educational functions ot tho stato and the two librarians prcsldo ovor the two largest libraries In tho stnlc which ought to be sufficient answer to this objection. Tho economical objector must also be reckoned with. Iowa appropriates annually $4,000, tho Minnesota commission has $5,000 a year and tho coming leglslaturo is to be askod to ralso It to $10,000 a year, Wiscon sin has $7,600 a year for the commission nlone, without any traveling libraries, nnd many of tho other states having library com missions spend considerable sums on the work. A traveling library of fifty volumes, carefully selected, prepared and pneked In a strong shipping caae costs, on an average, not less than $76. An annual $2,000 would supply only twenty-six libraries to meet tho demand that, beyond a question, could not adequately bo met with 100 such libraries. Tho work of tho commission as outlined would requlro at least another $2,000 a yoar to mako It effective Iowa hns already found tho $2,000 devoted to that purpose en tirely Inadequate. Nebraska could not hope to put this work on n firm basis for less than Iowa can do It, but tho friends of this movemont would undertake to mako nn an nual $1,000 yield results In excess of nny othor annual $4,000 spent by tho state for educational purposes. Anyone who wishes to co-oporate with thoso who inaugurated this movement could not do so moro effectively than to call the attention of his neighbors to It, and ono nnd all to urgo it upon their representatives In the legislature. MUS. BELLE M. BTOUTRNnOTtOTJOH. I'HATTIli OP TIIK YOUNGSTERS. Little Miss Uppcrten Mamma, doesn't tho blblo say we should love our neigh bors? Mamma Tes, dear. Little Miss U. Does that Include thoso on tho back stroet as well as those on the nvcuuo? Tommy (aged 4) Mamma, may I go out and play in tho street now? Mamma What! You want to go out and piny with that big hole In your Jacket? Tommy No, mamma; I only want to piny with tho Ilttlo boy next door. Johnny had been watching the crowded street corner from his father's downtown office window for nearly an hour. "Goo!" ho exclaimed. "There's a feller that's goln' to git run over! No, ho ain't, neither," he added, in a tone of deep dls gust. "Ho got out o' tho way!" Small Hoy Mamma, please give me an other lump of Mlear for mv nnfr. t dropped tho other one. Mamma Well, hero's another. But whers did you drop the first ono? Small Hoy In my coffoe. Little Johnny Peonln can't - uiMiint after they die, can they? Mr. Blowboy No, I guess not, Johnny. Little Johnny Then you can't never morry my big sister, can you? Mr. Slowbov Whv. I erv,nf v.. you think I can't, Johnny? Llttlo Johnny 'Cause I heard her tell m the other day that you was a dead one. A child Just In her t companylng her father to a ttreet car In the suburbs, suddenly saw a grass snake slldo into n itnotnoie in tho sidewalk. "Say, papa." exclaimed the startled youngster, "did you seo tho snake?" Tho man, bent upon work, declared that ho had. Then the little girl made this staggering Inquiry: "Why Is It. nana, that nnnV-M a.... themselves out crawling on their atom- acns uio way thoy do?" Tho father caught tho first car, but he foro he did so ho told his child to shoot the samo question nt her'mothor. NOT ONE FAILURE NOT ONE RETURNED case or how long standing, it Is as suro to yield to our treatment as tho miu is to rise. The blood is tho life, the fertilizer of the hn. mail body. Our Instrument forces the blood Into circulation where moat needed, (jiving strength nnd development to weak and lifeless parts. The ncuum Urtrnn Developer was first Introduced In the standing armiei of Kuropo few years ago by the French kpeclalist. Da liousset, nnd its remnrknblo success ia these countries led tho Locul Appliance Co. to fecure the exciuitn control if its tale on the Western Continent: nnd slnco its Introduction Into this country its remarkable cures have astounded tlio entire medical profession. It lias restored thousand of rates pronounced lucurablo by physicians. It cum ipilcMy, harmlessly, and without detention from busbies.. Remember there is no exposure, no C.O.D. or any other rschemeinourdealicgwith the public. Write for free particular sent pealed in plain envelop. LutiULsrriiasuc tiomrsni. I 474 Charles ulltllng, Dsnvsr, Celsrad. I A Puns Vt'sretnhle Compound. No mercurial or other mineral poisons In Cascarcts Candy Cathartic, only vegetable Buoeiancos, iato medical discoveries. AH druggists, 10c, 25c, LOc. OUT OF Till: OimiXAIlY. A eclohrated l.ngllsh physician says that he has found that warts may bo cured bv revuecinat on. He revacclnntcd a girl of IS oiiiBij-iuur wnrm on ono niuid nnd soven weeks nfter tho operation the wnrts tad nil disappeared. Many other remedies .tan lccii uit;u in VII 111. It Is tho lnw In Mnlnn Hint h. ,,,t.. on bears must be paid when the animal's nuau in miunii, wiiuo in ftfw Hampshire the money is forthcoming upon exhibltim of thn ears. Soma enterprising sportsmen who live near the boundary collect double ;iuni miujiHB mo nosei in .tiaino nnd tho ears In Now Hampshire. Christmas trees nro already being out down in Washington county. Mnlne, nnd the sea.ion's output from that Bectlon will amount to 400 carloads, with 360 bunches to a cur. Each hunch consists of from two to six trees. Tho trees nro sent to New York and Huston, where they will retail for U.UUUI iru iimea 113 mncu us iney nro worth on board tho cars in Maine. Quito, tho capital of Ecuador, cannot be niipruucuea oy ran or oy wagon road. In two years It is exneeted that n. v.nv vri Hvndlcato will have completed a railroad to uiui poini. uorses anu muies ana thou sands of men nnd women aro engaged In bearing burdens to Quito nnd other towns. It takes sixteen Indians about thirty days tp convey 11 piano to Ecuador's capital from tho nearest point. Tlio last congress appropriated $3,000 to cii-ui wiu inocis ni aioux uity anil the secre tary of the treasury lot a contract for a time piece costing but $l,3Si). Jt Is to have 110 Strlkllll- nttnr)imnt nrwl nn III dial und Is not nt all satisfactory. It seems now the citizens will follow the example of 1. uunrpu, .no., wnero ine same Kind of u deal mm attempted, A protest sent to Washington unused the "village" clock to be ordered taken to Wllmtngtun, N. C, for wtTvuw itiiii iui un-io-uaio ana Rtiimtit nt.i at Ht. Joseph. Tho total cost of the Pan-American ex tiosltlon to be held In HnfTnln nvt v..,- 1. ostlmuted at Slo.X,(X. and John N. Scatch". erd. who Is chulrinun of thn pvnih.. ,.,,. mltteo, says that tho resources now lu'slcht amount to nboat Jii,fiO0,0. Progress on the worn 01 i-iuisirui'iiun in proceeding rapidly nearly 5,OH) workmen now being employed Tho "midwnv" ut the exposition will cost $3,000,000. Tlio exposition eroumlH will . half 11 tulle wldo nnd n mlln nml n mm on ions, nnd will comprlso 350 acres, it will open May 1, 1M1, 1 I'ntll n few days airo Hrown eonniv in. dlana, had neither railway, telegraph nor ii'lt-iiiiuiin uti:iiiiii;t unwiiera W1II11U Its borders, It Is still minus the two drst men- iiuni'ii iiccesMiiirH oi mooern life, nut u telenhone lint) has Invaded Xuslivllln ins from Columbus, In an adjoining county. .v v uiiik i wi ui uiuiiuiui'iitirr huh recently finished a iipw state cirrlairn fnr thn .,... eminent of Ecuador nt a cost of $10,000. It ' modeled after tho carriages of the pope Hnd tho khedlve, but larks the follil cold ornaments of the former and the gems of 1111 iui,rt , Never In the memory of the oldest In- I? ft bLVsUsinCfsjiBjBKjwsjsaaH Si ia HI that is cesirissg women, ma 0 P. Pi m Mr3. Walmon toll off suffering wo men how mho warn cured and advises them to follow hor example Here is her first lottor to Rflrs. Pinkham s (PUBLISHED by permission.) " March 15, 1891. "To MRS. PINKHAM, Lynn, Mass.: "Dear Madam: I am sufferinc from inflnmrrmtirtn of tho ovaries and womb, and havo been for eirrhtmi months. I havo a continual pain and soreness in my back and sido. I am only freo from pain when lying down or sitting in an easy chair, When I stand I Buffer with severe pain in my sido and back. I beliovo my troubles were caused by over-work and lifting some years ago. "Lifo is a drag to me, and I sometimes feel like giving up evor being a well woman ; havo become careless nnd unconcerned about everything. I am in bed now. I have had several doctors, but they did me but little trood. "Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has been recommended to me bv a friend, and I havn marlo nn m v mi'nrl to give it fair trial. " I write this letter with the hope of hearing from you in regard to my case "Mrs. S. J. Watson, Hampton, Va. Mrs. Pinkham's advico was promptly received by Mrs Watson and a few months later she writes as follows s e (PUBLISUKD BT PEKMIS8ION.) "November 27, 1899. "Dear Mrs. Pinkham: I feel it my duty to acknowledge io you me oeneiic mat L.yaia iU. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound has dono for me. "I had been suffering with female troubles for some time, could walk but a short distance, had terrible bearing- aown pains in Jower part of my bowels, backache, and pain in ovary. I used your medicine for four months and was so much better that I could walk three times the distance that I could before. "Iam to-day in better health than I have been for more than two years, and I know it is all duo to Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound. "I recommend your advice and medicine to all women who Buffer." Mrs. S. J. Watson, Hampton, Va. Mrs. Watson's letters prove thai Mrs. Pink ham's frss amfvioo Is always forthcoming on roquast and that It Is a sura guldo to health. Thoso letters are hut a dram In ihm ovldenoe proving that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound CURES the Ills of women. No other medicine in tho world has rrivH ancK widespread and unqualified endorsement. No othor medicine has such a record of curea of female troubles or such hosts of grateful friends. Do not mo persuaded that any other medlclno Is just sis good. Any dealer who suggests something else has no Interest In your case. He Is seeking a larger profit. Follow tho record of this medicine and remember that these thousands of cures of women whose letters aro constantly printed in this paper wore not brought auout oy "sometning else," but by in I' U S2SEE Lydia C Pinkham's Vegetable Compound RCfl A D 1 OwlBj5tothefctthatouiekeptlclpeplehavefroratliuetotluiequea Cm Vh r li htf the Rruuliicnets of the testimbuUl letters we re couiUully publlabl: imvc u?piuru won inn roiiioiiHi -ny uan&, l,ynn bum., wnu pnld to any perron who will nhuw that the above tcttlraouUlmtre (. genuine or were published lainiDK the writer's special permission, I.YDIA It, PINKHAM MKDICINK CO , I.yuii, M be obtain! habitant of the anthracite region of Penn sylvania has thero been so serious n droiiKth ns that wbleh now nrevnllH nml which aft'ecls nil Industries. Tho inhabitants of Slinmokln and the Shenandoah valley, including Clirardvlllo, are allowed water only throo hours u day, The collieries oporated by tlio Philadelphia & Iti'ndln? Coal and Iron eompanv nnd tlio I.ohigh Valley Coal comnanv will bo comnelli'il to shut down nil operations unices ruin shall fall within the next week, uh tho purified sulphur water now belnir used by them for the Kuuer.uion of Hteam is destructive oC boilers, At Muhnnnv I''ano und ns fur ns Tamaqua the Philudelph'a ft lleiidliiir Kali- nay comnany is compendia in naji water for locomotives nnd thn holsdnir nlnnn euglno at M liunoy Plane from tho Sus quehannu river, a distance of forty-one miles, to Mnlianoy Plane, and flfty-eluht miles to Tamaqua. f'ltoUui FREE r's Kn.it' ,,tu We will Rlvo nb Fiuuieiy n) Gold l.over' HanKlo MhtiH to readers of this iiapur to ndvertWo our lioveltle.4. linn'! Mom! nn. money, Just your nnnio and nddross plnlu'v written, and send stamp for pojtnfie Write toduy ns this advortUcment will not no. pear again. All requests must rciich us bv Saturday, Nov 21, nnd Itlngs will bo mailed that day oltcs Jewelry Co., 105 Western Ave., Covington, Ky. wicox MSI PILLS K'ri year thf:i'ytareiindre!hWi?eiti!i1e Iterululur !r 1 iruir ir. It ell- ttwu.li jd.;. A rurtlsti.cr by mil. Fi'r.li'i .'mie, lnrW urn's f. riant. ll'llniri .rMi.iiienrn, ,M, i.tn rh!li..r. Sold by Ueaton-McGInn Drug Co., a no Sherman & JlcConncll Drug Co. WHEN IN DOUBT, TRY They hiteitood the into! ytrt. ana u.va cured tuomaadi ol caiei of Nervous Ducairi, tuck) at Debility, Dhuineti.Sleepltie sets and Varicocele. AtroDar.lc. Tkey clear th brain, nrelbt the circulation, make. Uettia . ... .... ... T- perlect, anrl impait a helllby If tlEOr to the whole being. All drains and lotiei ire checked ftrmtmtxlty. Unlets patleits .1 ,f ir . , ' 11 WHUI"unu'" wurriesinewiBioinjanuy, uooiumpiiontr jeain. Mailed sealed. Pnce ti per toij 6 boxes, with Iron-cl.d legal t-uarantrr to nife or refund the) mriurv.ft.o. r d I rlrer. boot. Arlrlmi. pru Mcmoiui- ro i i-h n Bold by Kuhn G Co,. 15th and Douglas, and J. A. Fuller & Co., 14th nnd Doug Is. STRONG AGAIN ! f l SaS asT v ,mmammaa9W' (-Kawf r M i" , . a, T , . tickle and cures tho cold, bold by druggists, Cook'i Duchess Tablet ear sucoMif ully used monthlr by orer 10.000 ladles. Price, SI, Ily mail, Jl.on. baud 4 cents for strapl and particulate The Cook Co.. t'M Woodward stc. Detroit. Midi. SoU in Omaha br Ku lm L Co., 13 ft Douglas,