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About Dakota County herald. (Dakota City, Neb.) 1891-1965 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 22, 1911)
..:,.iWLV !:?' .uau- ftjt". --JiS. 1m tr,,F,, I r", i G" Btrflhiililj. V f ,- . j y liH. I n I f (J, f ni-,L aaawcawc It: i - San.. SOME AND INWNHON PUTS BORDER ON PHOTO Printing Frams Which Makes Por trait Look Like Engraving Any Amateur May Acquire Effect Much of tha Ingenuity of the photo graphic artist is dlreoted to tbo end of getting away from photography Under ordinary circumstances, the camera makes such a sharp and die- "aail'nisso, rczreduciss e"ry Hn and blemish with such unerring ac curacy that tho result Is regarded as ofenslvo and in violation to the tra ditions of art So the worker with tie camera resorts to various means of relieving tho picture of this accu sation, endeavoring to make the pic- A Border on Photograph. ture appear as some of the many forma followed by artist such as en graving, the tone of the engraving make the photograph resemble an en Srarlag, the tone of tb nngravtna ink Is Imitated by modification of the developer and the desired effeot Is further holghtoncd by printing the picture in tho centor cl a large sheet with a border tint surrounding the picture and a margin of white paper. This art was known for a few work era who improvised and devised the means for securing this offect, but there has been recently invented a printing frame by which this is ac complished in a very simple manner. Thus any amateur may now obtain the effect which has boon formerly tho occlusive property of a tew pro fessionals. :PKASES-0r-Af.EAR7HQUAKE tolsmoflrsBh at Messlnl Indicates Pos- tMllty ef Warning Olvan Be -i for Big 8hoofc.Ardy.ed- la the subterranean chamber of the UesslBl observatory a selsmograuh made a most laterestlng record of the grat 'rthquake, which indicates the possibility of warning being given by suok instruments several minutes be forertbVdlsastrouH shock arrives. The great movement, according to this rec ord, began with a very Plight shock, which was repeated. For ten seconds It increased in violence, and for an other ten seconds decreased. Ten min utes next passed without disturbance. Then came a second shock of great Intensity, accompanied with a loud subterranean rumbling, and this was the shook that caused tbo calamity. One cannot help thinking how many thousands of liven might have boon made safo in thoso precious ten min utes It tho first warning had been com municated to the public CABINET TO SHOW PICTURES AutSntatlftxWM''?'!'"!' -Eiiposas 8ua. cesslvely Pictorial Exhibits and Attracts Attention. Among the principal obJoctB which an invention, by Mark O. Phillips of Corvallts, Ore., bas In view are: To provide an automatic mechanism to expose successively pictorial exhibits lo attract attention and to please pass ers by; and to provldo a flashlight mechanism for periodically illuminat ing the said exhibits, says tho Scien tific American. The illustration showB a vertical longitudinal section of a ma- Picture Display Cabinet, chine wjtlc,b in operation gives an at tractive. Mid continuously Interrupted display of pictorial designs, Inters persed with (entertaining advertising matter. Astrenomer Measures Moon. A distinguished astronomer, onco took the trouble to measure la sev eral tainting! the slxe of the moon, and to deduce from It the height of the mountains shown In the same pic ture. He found that tho average height of the hills was about 43 miles, while one giant peak raised its head sore than 100 miles above sea level. Turner, who was one of the greatest masters of landscape composition and oc4ring, frequently exaggerates the heights of his hills with the intention of opnferrlBg upon them a majesty whlafai otherwise they' would not pos- j...T.t....rT..,...Wrv.r.M.lnrBa 'p ,ir- II I W Iflllj.,, jjllliu J I I fix R IMiioiv 11 8 Wt" itth 'Iff ! r BLIND MAN IS MADE TO SEE Extraordinary Operation by Which Sight Was Restored to Miner Whose Eyes Were Shattered. Tho following description of a won derful operation which restored the sight of a miner named D. Cab), who was totally blind for over a year as tho result of a mlno explosion, bas beon given by ono of the surgeons of tho Royal Ophthalmic hospital In London, England: "Whon tho patient first camo to the hospital tbo right eyo was totally de stroyed, whilo tho loft ono was in tensely Inflamed, and tho cornea, or projecting front part, was dotted with fragments of quartz blown Into it at the time of tbo explosion. The cap sulo of tbo lens bad beon torn by other Jagged particles of rock and lii wlidtj lias hod feces sbisrb-d Only tho capsule remained to sepa rate the luid in tho ball of tho eye from the Iris, or colored screon which surrounds tbo pupil. "Tho first treatment consisted of picking out tbo quartz particlos, some of which wero embeddod even in the muscles which rotate the ye. Then the Irritation wan reduced by lotions. The greater part of the cornea traa opaque, on account of old scar tissue, the result of tho early Inflammation, but a fairly transparent part was se lected, and a portion of the Iris, or screen behind this, was then out away, so as to let tho light fall on tho sen sitive retina, or lining of the back part of tho eye. "As the man's natural lens within the eye hod already been destroyed, ho now has to wear a glass lens be fore the eye to mnko tho ontoring rays of light focus correctly on bis retina. His range of vision is llmltod, but be can read tho finest type easily, and instead of ending his days In an insti tute for tho blind, bo should bo able to earn his own living at some em ployment which does not mako too great a demand on the eyesight." HANDY ON TALKING MACHINE Attachment Holds Needles and Saves Trouble of Changing on Every Record That Is Played. Ono of tho little steel needles used on a talking machine Is worn out on each record and a new noodle has to bo Inserted each tlmo. A Pennsyl vania man has Invented an auto matic magazine needle holder which saves all this trouble by holding about a dozen needles and turning a new one down for each record. The holder is a disk with grooves In for the Insertion of the needles and a plate to bold them In ploco. A thumb- Talking Machine Help. screw otarnps tho plate on and re moves It, and also turns tho disk around to placo a new needle In position each Ume. The same maga zlno will hold wooden noodles, too, for, though the wooden onoB lost longer than tho steel, they also must be changed about every third record. This little contrivance not only saves the operator of tho phonograph tlmo and troublo, but adds to his own eu joyment of the music thereby. NOTES or SCIENCE -AJ-JO INVENTION Owners ot falso teeth can't blow the bugle successfully. More than 67,000 motor vehicles have been registered In London. A coin in the slot machlno for cleaning straw hats is a novelty. Tho newest bathroom fixture has a ....- K..tn . tlnntnl nti.nn.Mi SUIHIIUIU UUU1U w ,. iiiuuav A bydraullo clutch for gasoline driven automobiles Is an English nov elty. , The average man's brain lc five ounces heavier than that of tho avor ago woman. Tepid wator will taste 6a cold as Ico If you will first dissolve r pepper mint drop In your mouth. A fountain marking brush, somewhat resembling a huge fountain pen, has been patented by a Michigan man. Airships aro to bo built of the new motal, known as Liege metal, which Is 40 per cont lighter than aluminum. To keop n diner's flngors clean there has been invented a silver clip to hold and squeeze a bIIco of lemon. Trimmings from now flax and hemp are tho Btock from which Is made the finest grades of "rice" cigarette pa per. Naturalists say that at certain sea sons afiy lays 4,600,000 eggs each day. Microscopic In size they may be, to bs sure, A French savant has declared that be is satisfied that smoking, however moderate, has a serious effect on the hearing. An Imploment has been invented for slicing a boiled egg evenly a more dtfaoult task than generally Is supposed. Calomol mlxod with masUo is a rem edy tor toothache found In Ebors Pay. rus, written B. O., 1CS0, and found at Luxor In 1873. Juggllnghas been recommended as a desirable form of mental and phys ical exorclso for persons ot sedontary habits and those afillctod with nervous troublos. A patent bas been granted two Massachusetts men for a simple ma chine to even the bottoms of damaged tenpins, which are held in a frame while rotable knives grind thorn true. NEW NEWS of YESTERDAY First of Submarine Cables Colonel Colt's Invention That Ante dated That of Samuel Morse, but Was Dropped for Manu facture of Revolvers. Not long ago I told the story of fcorr General Zachary Taylor uncon sciously made tho revolver popular after Its inventor. Samuel Colt, bad failed to Induce the army and tho pub lic to look kindly upon tho new weapon Colonel Colt always gave Old Rough and Heady" full credit for making tho revolver a commercial success, and to his Intimate friends he sometimes declared that It was General Taylor, also, who perhaps kept him from being known to fame as tho inventor of tho transatlantic cable. One of the friends to whom ho thus expressed himself was Mar shall Jowcll, who was a fellow towns man of Colt's, in Grant's cabinet as postmaster-general, before that minis ter to RusBla and twice governor of Connecticut, and, Hko Colt, for many years one of the leading manufactur ers of Connecticut. 'When the country was going wild over the laying of tho first Atlantic cable," said Governor Jewell, "and over the exchnngo of messages be tween Queen Victoria and President Buchanan, Colt told mo that a num bor of years earlier at about the, time when ProfeBor Morse was per fecting his telegraph system he con ceived the Idea that it would be pos sible to lay a telegraph line upon the bed of a river or along tho coast that would be successful, and he further more was of the opinion that there was 'nothing in science which stood in the way of laying a telegraph line upon tbo ocean bed from continent to continent. "Now Sam Colt was a man who, whon an Idea occurred to him involv ing Invention and experiment, never let It lapso unless ho had tested It and found It wanting. So ho had a good many talks with Professor Morso In the lattor's littlo laboratory on the top floor oi a building racing Wash ington Square, in New York, and ho learned from Morso that the great ob stacle that stood In the way of a submarine telograph lino was 'inabil ity to secure an insulating medium. "That statement was sufficient to set San) Colt at work experimenting to see whether or not ho could find some Inexpensive material which would serve as an Insulator to a telegraph wlra under water. He made a good many experiments. Rubber waB out of the question; it was too costly. But it occurred to him that cotton yarn was cheap and that If he soaked the yarn in beeswax, which is a non Fate and a Noted Irish Actor lohn Brougham's Reminiscences of the Way Fame and Fortune Missed Him and Fell " to Others. "What queor pranks destiny plays us I" said John Brougham ono autumn evoulng In 1877. Wo wero sitting In the New York study of the Irish nctor and playwright whose name was wide ly known in England and America in connection with matters theatrical from 1840 until his death in 18C0. "I was thinking.' Mr. Brougham continued, "how queerly the ft have allotted their gifts so far as I am concerned. There Is the case ot 'Lon don Assurance,' for Instance, which bas been a favorite with English and American playgoers ever since Its first production in Covent Garden In 1841 by Dion Bouclcault In tho writ ing of that comedy I colaborated with Dion Bouclcault, yt aimoBt all of the money which came from its production went to Don, and the play, made his reputation ob a playwright, while John Brougham remained Insig nificant all the time that It was being compared favorably with Sheridan's 'Tho Rivals.' "Ah, yes, thero is such u thing as luck In the world of tho drama as well as In the world of business, and a later experience, and an oven more striking one than this with 'London Assurance.' will serve to Illustrate the polnL "Not long after my return to tho United States after the closo ot tho Civil war I was reading over for the fourth or llfth tlmo Charles Dickens' 'Old Curloilty Shop' a great fnvorlte of mlno when tho Idea suddenly oc curred to roe that If Just the right act ress could be found It would bo possl- "The World's Mine Oystor." Professor Deland bad beon favored with the acquaintance ot most ot the members ot his son's class, and when the Ume of graduation from tho high school approached, William and a delegation from tho class askud the professor's advice aB to a suitable do Blgn tor the medallion. "We want something to be mounted on a pin," said one ot the boys, "and wo thought a design that bad a boy's figure and a globe would be about right, to show that tho whole world 1b before us, you know." "Ot course the boy's flguro would be the Important thing," said William, hastily. "Wo thought porhaps the globe mtght be at tho boy's feet. How does the Idea strike you, father?" "It is not wholly unfamiliar to me," said the professor. "But why have the globe at the boy's feet, WllllaraT Why not have it lying In tho palm of of bis hand T" Youth's Companion. The Comeback, "Wo aro turning a lot of )ouur aw jors out " 'Don't worry They'll got bncK ut i hy tuLIni; us In ' By E. J. EDWARDS conductor, and put It around a wlro, protecting the whole with aBpbaltum, and then carried the wire thus insul ated through a lead pipe, ho would overcome the difficulty. "This scheme of insulation worked perfectly in the laboratory; and Colt procuring a wiro long enough to stretch from Firo Island to what is now Coney Island, N. Y., insulated It with his mixture encased' the whole in a lead plpo and sunk it beneath the waves. This was the first submarine telegraph cable laid; so far as trans mission of eloctric signals was con cerned It was successful, and Colt, after tho Morse telegraph had been proved a commercial success a year or two later, determined to develop the submarine cable commercially, first by laying short ocean cables, and then a transatlantic one. "But, 'curiously enough,' as Sam Colt used to put It to me, just when ho was all but ovor tho preliminary work, General Zachary Taylor, then fighting the Mexicans, sent in to him an order for a thousand revolvers which Colt had ceased to make a num ber of years before because no one would buy the weapon and ColL seeing a splendid business chance in Taylor's order, at once set to work to fill it, tho result being that a large demand soon grew up for the revol ver. The meeting of this demand oc cupied all of Colonel Colt's time and energy, and as he saw a fortune rap idly growing out of the manufacture and sale of the weapon, he thought Chance Meeting of Enemies How Isaiah Rhynders, Rabid Pro-Slavery Advocate, and William Lloyd Garrison, Leader of Abolition ists, Became Acquainted. The present generation has forgot ten Isaiah Rhynders. Yet in the ante bellum days his name was a familiar one. It symbolized northern pro-slavery sentiment Its bearer was regard ed by the abolitionists as a sort of ogre, a man dominated by ferocity of political senUment He was, indeed, one of the. most rabid of all the pro slavery Democrats of the north, and as United States marshal for the southern district of New York, to which office he was appointed first by President Pierce, be bont his ener gies to running down fugitive slaves and returning them to their masters. I met Marshal Rhynders in 1875. To my surprise, I saw a man of slender build, a man of mast gentle demeanor. ble to write nplay based on the novel In which tho characters of Little Nell and tho Marchioness could be taken by the aanie person. I realized that it would requlre.a great deal ot dramatic ability, a wonderful versatility, for any ono to play Little Nell In one act and tho Marchioness in another; but I kept tho ldoa in mind, and later was told that a young girl who had not been In Now York many years from California, where she had appeared on the stage as a more child, would Just fit the dual role both In phyBlquo and dramatic ability. It war pro posed that I write a play for this youns sir!, in whlctl h would appear alternately aB Little I,vn and the Marchioness, certain terms were men tioned to me, and I accepted the proposition and went to work. "Well, In due tlmo I fixed up the piny, and when It was produced in 1867 It mado one of the greatest suc cesses of the American stage It made the fame of Charlotte Crabtree, better known as Lotto. It waB the basis ot tho fortune she now possesses an she deserves every penny of It. denr girl But again John Brougham was obscure; nor had he more than n paltry return of money for his work. Would you have known, it I had not told you Just now, that it was I who dramatized Little Nell and tho Marchioness?" The Irish actor-playwright smiled philosophically. "Ah, me." he said, "I am not com plaining. It Is all fate", and I presume this will bo my fate until the end." Threo years later, a' tho ago of 70, Brougham died, leaving the manu script of a play upon which he had based great hopes, but which, by rea son ot his death, was never produced (Copyright, 1911, by E. J Edwards. All Rights Reserved.) The Last Hope When Lemuel Gregg died, a cousin from a distant town appeared, saying ho hud come to settlo trio estate and tako the residue, as Lemuel's only kinsman. He bad a jaunty air at first, but at the end ot a weok he had ac quired n watchful and anxious oxpros slon. When he stopped Into tho of fice or Lawyer Mears, on Saturday afternoon, he seemed to be extremely nervous. "Well, how are you coming outT" asked tho lawyer. "I suppose it's all clear sailing, isn't it?" "Clear sailing!" echoed tho executor. "Do you suppose I'd be hero with a too to pay It 'twas clear sailing? I'm desporato, I tell you I "Thero Isn't a thing left ot Cousin Lom's ostate excepting a two-dollar bill and three pewter plates. I want to know If thero's any way that I can oblige thq town to accopt thoso platos for the tax bill that sprung up 1 on mo after I thought I'd got every E less and loss of tho submarine cable, finally dropping from his mind all his old plans In connection with it "Perhaps, had ho held to those plans, they might have boon success ful. Sam Colt to the day of his death always held that tlioy would havo been successful; and ho Hko wise al ways believed that Cyrus W. Field got his first idea of submarine telegraphy from tho little cable that was laid by Colt in Now York harbor back in 1813." (Copyright. 1911, by E. J. Edwards. All night Reservad.) Story of a S50 Bill. A most chinning Philadelphia wom an came to New York for the day and her husband handed her a fifty-dollar bill for tips and small change, relates the New York Telegraph. At tho station in Philadelphia she left the Pullman to buy a periodical, leaving her bag carelessly on the seat. There was another woman oc cupying the adjacent chair. Upon her return the Philadelphia woman opened her bag and found no fifty-dollar bllL She made no accusation, but when the other woman fell asleep she quiet ly openod her bag and abstracted the bill. In New York they bowed amicably and parted. When the Philadelphlan returned home her husband asked ber if she bad enjoyed the trip. "Yes, but I spent all the money," she replied. "All the money," said tho husband. "Why, I was worrying over the fact that you left your fifty-dollar bill on your dressing table." with a bright and kindly oxprosslon in bis eye, and a smile that told ot his fondness for humor. Could this be the man who had been painted as a demon in human form not so very many years before? As we sat talking remlnlscently of the days when Rhynders was in the thick of events political, the door of the room of the postmaster ot New York opened and there entered a gen tleman whose manner and features be tokened the scholar, the man of culti vation and refinement His height must have been something more than six feet His dress was that of a man who knows how to dress well but not conspicuously. I saw at onco that the postmaster was in some embarrassment. He look ed furUvely at Marshal Rhynders, then,agaln at the newcomer, and then, evidently mustering bis courage, he said: "I am very glad of this opportunity to bring into acquaintance two men who have been known for many years to each other by name, but who, I pre sume, havo never met personally. Marshal Rhynders, I tako great pleas ure In introducing you to my personal friend, William Lloyd Garrison." Mr. GnrriBon, the great leader ot the Abolitionists, the first in all the north to agitato against slavery, and to teach opposition to the fugitive slave law, and Marshal Rhynders, typi fying in bis career and symbolizing In his name the moro rabid pro-slavery party ot the decade before the Civil war, stood facing one another tor an instant. Mr. Garrison was penotrating the ex-United States marshal with bis glanco, while Rhynders, on the other hand, was studying the personality ot the great anti-slavery leader. In a moment, however, they scorned to realize fully that tho issues which had given them fame were of the past. Each extended his hand, they took seats sido by side and a moment or two lator the postmaster and I went out of the room unobserved, for thoso two men were engaged in Intlmato conversation. Perhaps halt an hour later William Lloyd Garrison camo from the post master's room through the anteroom whoro ho met us. His faro was beam ing. "I found Marshal Rhynders a most interesting and entertaining man," he said. "I am glad to havo hRd the opportunity to meet and chat with him." Then ho went away, and as ho did so Marshal Rhynders stepped Into the anteroom. "Garrison Is a great man and a good man," ho said, earnestly, sincere ly "We became friends. I shall al ways remember the conversaUon i have just had with him, and I am glad to think that he may havo obtained a different Impression of mo than he had In the days when slavery was a great Usue." (Copyright, 1911, by B. J. Edwards. Al nights Itcserved.) thing paid? It there Is, I'll give you a dollar, and uso the other halt o' that two-dollar bill to get back to where I camo from, this very night" Youth's Companion, Their Lost Darling. "Oh, our darling la lost again I "she cried, as soon as be got Into the house. "What little darling?" "You unfeeling mosterl Our little darling." "Oh, the scroot?" "Yes, If you must talk like a brute, tho scroot tho mutt anything you wish. And I want you to advertise for him." Ho promised to do it, and this is the ad., as It appeared: "Lost A sausage shaped dog, an swering, when hungry, to tho name ot Baby. A reward will bo paid for his return to 38 Dob, avonua, dead or alive." J WnmflOllSOawSOPWOBJSjnflPnJgf5K3iM Patronize Home Industry buy your meata Wn LORENZ, City Meat Fresh rind Salt Meats always on hand Cash paid for Hides and Pelts Agent for Seymoui's White Laundry. Basket goes oil Tuesdays and comes back Saturdays Dakota City, Nebraska UlWrfG-KW00:M0M WANJEB-A RIDER AGENT- IN BACH TOWN and district to rids and exhibit a samples Latett Model "aAnArMilntfftA ftirnlchArl tiv na Dili nirontamrnrrwhpril ftrfl tnfllfln O Dinner faxt. Wrlu fir MljnliuUri nl tutltltfir aitmn. NO B40NKY REQUIRKD until you receive and approve of bicycle. We ship to anyone snywhore In the v. H. uiihtut s imt dtfu In advance, fnfrfr.l, , and allow TIN PAYS' PnUU TRIAL durin wulch Ume you mar ride Uie bicycle and put it to any teit you wlah. If you aro then not perfectly satisfied or do not wish to keep the btcyclo ahlp 1 1 back to u j at pur expanse and m ulit m (. FACTORY PUCES Wo furnish Uio klchest grade bicycles It is . .' r",'M pcotlbla to main t on small profit-above actual factory coat. You aavetlO to asaslddleaieB's profits by buy Jwr director us and havo the manufacturer's g-nirantco behind your blcycin. DO NOT SUV a. ninvfar a. hl At Umm tmm ftfc wfflWml fif until you receive our W I'lfiM s7y W VWIiala Hw I WBIJHsytW sjgJatMy0rsWMrtroa1sTlilttlt1ftMiTrT" ult low inW wa train naavVst wnts klai eaa aail tha -- vruU hlmpUs faa ii Ju--ri.i-" - irr.rr-': ' OftJerflfflledlhedajri-MMiTtxl. avvni nunu butclh. w aa tina UpYCLKff), W 4 pot mmfwjfrtra a ntiuDeron liana tAkealitrtda by ovr CblcazonUlJ bnln IliU i othii, 10 M af0 0 HtrJrtthnr poMwt vtaii Self-healiRgTires Th ritulmrrits It trltt tttfittt Hr $10.00 r lr hut a ImtnJata u. WUISHlfu unfit fsirfrf1.80UiH utt rdrS4.3S ROMOKETROVBLEFROMPMNCTttlES , HAILS, Tiekt.erafiMwm net U hlrv. A hundred thousand pairs sold last rear. kiroininrutu. Mado In all aitM. Tt Hwvninivm j, nreiy .nd essV riding-, very durable and lined Inside with, a siiecial duality of rubber, which never be comes porous and which closes up small punctures wunout siiowinff the air to VVa hare hundreds of letters from satlafled ita tins' that their tires have only been pump or twlco 1 n a whole season. They welsh no aa oidlnLiTtlro, the puncture rcslstlnir dual Latins' qualities given Dy several layers or thin, special! fabric on the tread . The regular price of ivon by several layers of thin, specially abrleon the tread. The, rtvrular nrlea nf t! Is JIO.CO per pair, bnt for advertising- purposes is ziv.iv Der pair. nntToraarertisinr nnrmMn an making a special factoryprice to the rider ot only Si.SOpt day Mi-r Id rocolvwl,. vva ahlp O. O. D. oa a peroral, xi havo examined and found thtm strictly as represented. i w will allow UmuM ot 6 vt emit (thtnby Bullae Mm trUatMUM iwr utri If van ad PULLfiaaMI WITH oapssi and eaelow this adrtnmint. f oa raa ruE lT 5i S rUw M t m?rl rtturoM.tOUH.ip.nt. ( foranrrt.tontb.Tara bo utla&utorr axaaTtaatEi. wS an ArfMtlT nUaMe u. u.wu ou. w u i.m ma. Hiut uaii.. u jou ora.r m pair oc faaaa ft aaltr. run (attar, wrar better, latt loaf eraad loth flotr taan ur tiro Ton w. know that 700 wlllbaaow.il vleuod that waaa tob want blncwyoa ron to tend qi a trial order at enca. hnnoathl.nniark.hia tfmnir.p. IF YOU NEED TinELQronrklndatanrvrloanaUl -- -- - luBcwit rnwr price Quoted aoore : or writ, for our bl r Tiro and Sundry kinds ottlres at about baltthentaat orlcM. uO NOT WAIT??twilta,'kv'touUT. rr tiru. iron! K nnlj ootU a liotUI to learn .Terrthlnr. H.L.'MEaDCYCLEOQMPaNY,CHICAaO,ILL. Now Open nhe Dakota City Am here to Wines, serve you with Wctern Brew I Conrteous Treatment FRED G. Zhe Herald: Abstracts of. Title A $10,000 Surety Bond Guarantees the aoouraoy of every Abstraot I make -- ---"---- -. SBaaSSSSi v sasasaass awsasasv aavaaa mmmmm m sasssaaw it asawasaw ssstjaa m HARNE II) ia Z This JK-in. Coucord Harness No. 76 no collars , . $31 Our No. 179, 1-in. Concord, with flat backs, a better job $35 Stizrges ttAFR - 44" 4-- aH bK !y aV i? " Prize Offers from.Leading Manufacturers Book on patents. "Hints tolnventors." "Inventions needad; "Why soma Inventors fall." Send rough sketch or model for search of Patent Office records. OurJKr;. Greeley was formerly. Acting Commissioner of Patents, and' as such had full chargejof the U. S. Patent Office. GREELEY&MclNTIR WASHINGTON,. D. C. WtAMMttlmjJma of I Proprietor of 1 Market I 1 I 1 TOOT oataiocucs sad team our unheard off stmt n:Tr"n-'- t. -rrr rr ."v.ttt "t tmiti rtfnlaflv band I k&4 MuhIm. tnt smally bar w ir tat nmnifitlT&t tuitaa naltad (M. iniHriM tir aana aSM. fnt, npun aaa Pmmrim.PrMS Kiaoaiw yfrejwwrwMijpepCT. 4 A MAMPtE PAtm rpalr. All osiers shipped staw on do not pay a cent until yoa tlrat. yo wttl Sad Ibat tkay will ride m kTS"T" wwoqataayarlea. ron. will (ire o roar ora.r. vre wail r vrio nnUI ron aaod ter a pair of Bdthoni approval aadjnal at tleapocU) iitrodaetorr u. which. datarlDMaaa a.uott all maXH aM wrwrn on ap Cataloffua DO NOT THINK BUY) Naa Morel or a pair o( Tmmwmmmmmm.r 'afiMjHBflHBBBMRiaBsB. custoaer. fcS lfttlll!!Jkikn!ttfrfna1l beta -BM WBMtitt1rt Tina preparea v :"T"'iUB,,ai tMZlmI lm Una m WHMB-WOWT ! ASJTHI ausa auasv siui Bail. .VlSthS,? SJS?!.K.,!i.Z,(a know' a endwnd.niloewvaropailo. I for Business I 1 I Liquors, Cigars Ka and Bolt lad Beet STANNARD Dakota City Nobraska only $1 a yV a I I Successor to Dakota County Abstract Co; Bonded Abstracter J. J. EIMERS Bros. Pearl St Slouz City 1M ESS ,...., aiiafcsaiaiaV aN 4 aa4 s. snfmmf 2 j Mi aja&BaaaaaMsl T t i Jl 1 s g-n&j&su&amB&i ltt!mr1SftJBLf''m .. u -.,