The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, February 23, 1893, Image 7

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    ENJOYS
i th« method sad results wh
ip of Figs is Ukea; it is pleasaal
-^freshing to the taste, aad sets
j» wet promptly on the Kidneys
,r sod Bowels, cleanses the sy»>
effectually, dispels colds, head*
8 and fevers and cures habitual
ti nation. Syrup of Figs is the
remedy of its kind ever pro
d, pleasing to the taste and
,Me to the stomach, prompt ia
-iction and truly beneficial mill •
u, prepared only from the moat
thy and agreeable substances,
Dany excellent qualities oosa
i it to all aod nave mad* II
neat popular remedy known,
piyrnp of Figs is for sale in 50o
|l bottles by all leading drug
Any reliable druggist who
not hare it on hand will pro*
it promptly for any ona who
im to try it Da not aooept
rabetituta.
JFORNIA m SYRUP COL
uk numutoo, o*u
mu. a. Kt» rasa. a*
99
August
7lower
wife suffered with indigestion
dyspepsia for years. Life be
a burden to her. Physicians
d to give relief. After reading
of your books, I purchased a
le of August Flower. It worked
a charm. My wife received im
iate relief after taking the first
She was completely cured—
weighs 165 pounds, and can eat
thing she desires without any
terious results as was formerly
case. C. H. Dear, Prop’r Wash
on House, Washington, Va. 0)
LExiobTOTAI®
Ily doctor say* It acts gently on the stomach, live*
1 kidneyb, and Is a pleasant laxative. This
r.k is made from herbe, and Is -prepared for ON
easily as tea. It Is called
ANE’S MEDICINE
.11 druggists sell It at 58o. and tl a package. If
E1n?Jm<«t K0t l1' sen(1 7our address for a free
Fa**1»|y Medicine moves
■"bowels each day. Address
1 OKATOR H. WOODWARD. LxROY, N. Y.
OUR HEALTH
May depend upon the way you treat t he warn
inn which nature gives. A few bottles of
in. taken at the proper time may insure good
p for a year or two. Therefore act at once, far it
/s IMPORTANT
tjfiyV* assisted at the right time J
► fails to relieve the system of 1ml
pcs, and is an excellent tonic also.
He Wants to Add His Name.
jjynit me to add my name to your many other
tofesm commendation of the greet curative
«« contained in Bwift’fcSpeciffcfB. 8. S.) It
op® the best tonics I ever used.
John W. Daniel, Anderaon, S. C."
tone on blood and skin diseases mailed free.
SWIFT SPECIFIC CO.. Atlanta. Ga.
SSHasKSMaanH
aSSSS«i*”ssssaanB
win receive free by express ten packs. j
Bided with
*J«*s use
1 Thompson's Eyo Valor.
Pimples
Blotches
Scrofula
1
::
::
are all caused by
Impure
-'fl
ihr jr*oB ;he p015®"*- For
N«n,&„e..nP‘h,ne can equal *
's own assistant
KICKAPOO i:
INDIAN
SAGWA
‘i^!fB2kTtanbd1R^POUn‘’ 0'
na,^;°'mine'“1 poisons. ‘
I S.'uta‘‘?2,taw“»•,«£» "f *&**■
Contains
»■ GraidEA« „
cr»lNew Haven, Conn.
$
0 •
*
* . * - •’ * ‘ ,<• * ' /
' "Ht-iw ? ‘nr^'” s’< i e
ABOUT NIGHTMARES.
A Man Who Found That a Rather
Too Solid One Was After Him.
“Hava you ever had a nightmare in
which some fearful danger threatened
you aud you can't move or get out of
the way?” asked Hermann Solomon
of • crowd of peripatetic story-tellers
at the Richelieu Hotel, says the St.
Louis Globe-Democrat. “Of course
you have, and so have I. Several
years ago I had several of these noc
turnal visitors every night for a week,
and grew weary of them, for, in spite
of my determination not to let them
bully me out of my equanimity, I
would nearly expire each night, and
awake with the oold prespiration
breaking out all over me.
“Toward the last of that interesting
week I stopped with a country land
lord in Northern Arkansas, and re
solved as I went to sleep that, come
what would, 1 would positively refuse
to give in in the least to my imagina
tion.
“Some time past midnight the
neual scare came. This time it was a
tall and angular woman in white,
with a long butcher knife. Mentally
I was congratulating myself that at
last I was learning to overcome the
foolish fears of nightmares, and won
dering how it would pass off. I saw
the demoniac grin, as she flourished
the knife in front of my face, almost
without a tremor, and when she
laughed a wild, unearthly laugh, I
gave a start and found it all real and
that I was actually awake.
"Scared? That word can’t express
it. 1 dropped down on the other side
of thqbed as she made a slash at me,
and assheranaroundthebed. crawled
under, reached the door and went
down the steps about three at a time
•head of her. By the time we gained
‘the big road’ Ithink Ihad gained sever
al feet, as she had more clothing to
interfere with progress than I had
just then. I had imagined that a
man really scared can’t move. Well,
I will give any odds desired on the
proposition that I moved down that
road, and I don’t think I would need
any corroborative testimony to con
vince any one who saw me that 1 was
scared.
“About a mile down the road I ran
into the arms of her husband and
sons, who were out looking for her.
She was a little ‘outen tier head* at
times, they said, and she had evident
ly entered the open door at my land
lord’s and reached my room without
any one knowing it. As her relatives
took her home I sadly retraced my
steps and found the whole family
aroused. The explanation was satis
factory, and the adventure cured me
of nightmare.”
Straw Shelter.
It is not every farmer that can have
a covered barn-yard, but nearly every
one can have a good, cheap substi
tute. If the farmer has his grain in or
stacked near the barn all that is nec
essary for him to do is at threshing
time to set in a few forks or posts and
place long poles on top of tliese, with
other poles or rails crosswise on them,
then let the straw stack extend over
and cover all. This makes an excel
lent place to shelter cattle when turn
ed out in the winter to exercise or to
wheel the manure from the stables
when the ground is not fit to haul di
rectly to the field. When there is
plenty of room excellent pig pens can
be made by partitioning part of it off.
The body of the straw stack should
always be built to protect the north
and west sides.—National Stockman
. and Farmer. .
Escaped in a Cloud of Mud.
One ol the most perilous occupa
tions, next to the manufacture of
dynamite, is diving for pearls. The
successful direr must be courageous
of mind. A diver engaged in the pearl
fisheries of the Gulf of California tells
the story of one of his experiences.
He had tilled a bag with oysters and
was about to ascend, when looking
up, he saw a big shark watching him.
To rise to the surface would be fatal.
The man moved quickly to the op
posite side of a rock, stirred up agreat
cloud of mud, rose in the darkness,
and reached the side of the boat just
in time to escape the jaws of the big
man-eater. Had the divftr hesitated
an instant to conceal his movements
in the only manner possible his life
would have paid the penalty,
Crows That Divide The Spoils.
As a rule, female birds do most of
the work which the little feathered
creatures find necessary to their wel
fare; but Sir John Lubbock, the nat
uralist, tells of a New Zealand crow with
which the case is different. The male
bird has a strong bill adapted to cut
ting and digging into decayed trees,
but he is deficient in that horny-point
ed tongue which would permit him to
pierce the grub and draw Ml out. The
he* bird has, however, an elongated
and straight bill, “and when the cock |
has dug down to the burrow, the hen
inserts her long bill and draws out the j
grub, which they divide between i
them.’’
What Delayed the Party.
"Wasn’t it awful that Sue and her
husband missed the train after their
wedding?”
“Just perfectly dreadful! They
didn’t get away from town till the
next morning, d'il they?”
“No, they didn’tl Do you know
how it happened?”
“No; how was it?”
“Well, there were only five hours
after tne conclusion of the ceremony
until the train started, and Sue did
her best but she declared that she’d
die sooner than leave before she got
her gloves on,”
. I . . - .
Best rwciedy for^praia* atul pains. Mr. J.
M. Springs, Benniags, D. C., writes: "I have
t*« wstng Salvation Oil and have obtained
great relief. Among so many remedies
tried. Salvation Oil is the beat for sprains
and pains in the leek." It kills all pain.
The condition of the sponge crop is of ale
sorbing interest.
Never be without it. Mr. Chas. Visscher,
14 Lincoln Ave., Bprinfie'.d. O., writes:
"Five doses of Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup cored
me of a severe cough. 1 shall always keep
A Strange Experience
In the course of his long light against
slavery General Hawley and his old
friend, John Hooker, had one experi
ence which is probably unique among
New England citizens. Hawley bought
and Hooker owned a doctor of divinity.
A scholarly colored man, James Pen
nington, who had received at Heidel
berg the degree of D. D;, was settled
over the Talcott street church in Hart
ford, Conn. It came out that he ran
.away from slavery when a boy. He
was “owned” at the South, and when
the fugitive slave law was passed there
was danger of his capture and servi
tude. So Lawyer Joe Hawley went to
his owners, for Mr. Hooker, bought this
doctor of divinity and brought Mr.
Hooker back the bill of sale. Mr.
Hooker tried for a day the feeling, of
owning a minister and then put on re
cord in the town clerk's office a deed
giving the Rev. Dr. James Pennington
the ownership of himself.
An Inatructlve Fable.
• A swarm of flies had been feeding all
summer on the blood of a thrifty oow.
The feed was good early in the season,
and the cow gave a large amount of
milk and gained in flesh at the same
time. But when the grass dried up and
the weather was cold the flies were
driven off. Then the leader of the
swarm, named Benjamin, sat on a rock
and made a speech, in which he said:
“Now let us see if the cow will do as
.well without us as she did while we
Were sucking her blood.”—Manchester
Union.
Mum of rbiUkdslphla Streets. '
Philadelphia Is noted for its odd street
names. The various trees and plants
have long afro been exhausted, and the
vocabularies of the board of surveyors
are not of sufficient volume to keep pace
with the number of new streets Deing
placed on the city plans. In its dilem
ma the board has Riven some streets a
name and a half, such as Forty-two and
a Half street. And now it purposes to
make the fractions still smaller. A
plan of the lines and grades of Fifty
four and Three-Quarters street from
Westminster avenue to Haverford street
is being made.
■•cognised Old Friesds.
Voltaire was one day reading a trag
edy of his own which contained many
verses borrowed from other authors.
Whenever one of these bits eame from
his lips, Piron, the poet, made a bow,
with great seriousness. “Why are you
doing that?" Voltaire exclaimed at
length, with extreme irritation. “ Keep
on monsieur," said Piron; “don't mind
me. It is merely my habit to salute my I
acquaintances." I
■ow We Omw 014.
Ths tkrwd that binds us to Ufa ta moat fre
quently severed era the meridian of Ufa ta
leaebed ta the oaae of persons who neglect ob
vloke nieaae to renew felling etrength. Vigor,
no lean thu aouroe of hepplneaa then the ion
dttton of lung life, ran be creeled end per
petuated where it does not ex lot. Thousands
who have experienced or are eognlxant—Includ
ing many physicians of eminence—of the at
tecta of Homelter'e .Stomach Bittern, bear tea
timony to lu wondroua effieeey ea a creator of
etrength la feeble constitutions, and debili
tated and ahatteied ayatema. A eleady per
formance of the bodily funottona, renewed ap
petite, fleah and nightly repose attend the uaa
of thla thorough and atandard renovant. Una
no local tonic represented to be nkin to or ro
■embte It In sSsota In ita plnea. Demand the
rieuutne, wmun ta on aeknowledeed remedy lor
ndlgeatlon, malaria, nsrvousueas, cons Ups
Uon. liver and kidney eomplalnta and rhaib
matlim. __________
The Beat Way to Learn,
Rogers, the poat, won a reputation
for caustic speech; but he had a great
distaste for the “small beer” of per
sonal gossip. “I wonder how the*
Blanks are able to keep a carriage,” a
lady once said, to him, In his own house,
and the poet at once turned to a servant
to say: “Go to Blank Square with
Mrs. Proctor’s and my compliments,
and ask how the family contrive to pay
for their carriage.
The Royal Baking Powder is in
dispensable to progress in cookery
and to the comfort and conve
nience of modern housekeeping.
Royal is undoubtedly the purest and most reliable baking
powder offered to the public.— 1/. +S. Gov’t Chemists Rtport.
For finest food 1 can use none but Royal.—A. Fortin,
Che/, While House, for Presidents Cleveland and Arthur.
At every International, Industrial
or State Fair, American or Foreign,
where it has been placed in competition.
ST. JACOBS OIL
has carried off The Highest Awards as
THE BEST PAIN CURE.
NEW ZEALAND EXHIBITION-1882.
CALCUTTA INT. EXHIBITION-1883-4.
CINCINNATI IND. EXPOSITION-1884.
CALIFORNIA STATE FAIR-1884.
LOUISVILLE SO. EXPOSITION-1884.
MARYLAND STATE A OR. ASSO.-1884._
THE ONTJ^ST OZbTE
Proprietary Medicine that ever received such distinction. TherefofS
what all the World knows of its Curative Qualities, what impartial
Judges have awarded, entitles it to the claim of THK BEST.
‘i
A copy of the " Official Portfolio of (he World’s Colombian Exposition,” descriptive of
Buildings and Grounds, beautifully illustrated, in water rotor effects, will be sent to any
address upon receipt of 10c. in Pontage stamps by THE CHARLES A. VOGELRR Cffi,
t uobv Un
3352322?
Cures Consumption, Coughs, Croup, Soro
Throat. Sold by all Druggists on a Guarantee.
For a Lame Side, Back or Chest Shiloh's Porous
Plaster will give great satisfaction.—95 cents.
Valued Indorsement
OI bcott s
Emulsion
is contain
ed in let- *
ters from
the medi
cal profes
sion speaking of its gratify*
ing results in their practice.
Scott’s Emulsion
of cod-liver oil with Hypo
phosphites can be adminis
tered when plain oil is out of
the question. - It is almost
as palatable as milk—easier
to digest than milk.
HiHWibyhoWiBwnKT. AlUmiliU
DO YOU
COUCH
DONT DELAY
TAK6; „
KEMPS
BALSAM
U -tree edit. S:ifkc. 8... Uroet, Cnn. Mum,
WkmtwOn|k. IraoUtUudiithai Aocnitacm
hr Cunapliu t> Irei itacee, tad i m relief b U
rani mcm. In it b» l« tUm* the ooetat
eftet liter uifef the Int In*- Mitotiihim*,
•here. UtpiMlH SO rate ui li fe p
nuts s. wumJS&B&ext
B r. Johnson. >o. 3 bo. iiiL bt., Richmond, V*.
W
ANTED FARMERS-w"our*“""
• «rtadr«» at home and
to caartnsmaJl *crr»fcorv. Biepav for winter's
’ ... x“TW.Vifc
work. U UT( Itnrut * iCSS* Wtfc»4erClly, Una.
R3£ . lX ..
PKETTIEBT BOOK
KVKB PK1NTBIK “ IfCB A
cccn%^ I
m. L..t t nnA nnn«»ni '
yt»ap, rar«, bat. 1,000.000 extru.
Beaattfal IllnutraUd OxUloffae free.,,
K. IL SHDMfflT, lUckferd, 1IL 1
Plso’a Remedy for Catarrh la the
Rest. Rosiest to Use, and-Cheapest.
C/VTA R R hH
Sold by druggists or sent by mail.
SCc. E. T. Haseltlne, Warren, Pa.
■■■Mf1*' .pIlFroialltottlbi
■i TrOute*'* moolS. Ham
i^/C n*1*" “w tmtomt (by prae
"J * * * ' *'>alamiig.>^^
"“iX OipfT
TO&s
dHag phj-ildaa). KoitarTinf^
*• Tboamnd* ram. 9«iul He '
«• w. F. 8NYDKR, M. f»M Mall ftepfri*."
McVIcker’m Theater, Chicairo, 111.
CROUP REMEDY!
The only medicine known that will cure Bffem
©rwn*. In a private practice of twenty
^ *»“• »«ter nailed to fare nay kind of
Crwwp. Triai parbtge by nio</, lO Bo*. 50*.
D*. Brldrk Protrietart Co . Jamaica, N. Y.
Early Risers
■■D* Witt's UtttolRlKlrJUMn,
a* Union Little PtlU ferConnlp.tloa.81ck Head*
take, Df epepel&Mo Mnnaen Jf o Palau Ter, Snail
Patents! Pensions
Brad for lnTrator’i Onida or How to Obtain a Patent.
Bend for Digest of PKMAION and UBDNTT LAWS.
rAnacy o voull, .• viuoraiov, *>. a
■yt—SEID &rjr
tKKKffliS
i 1000.00
Kiterkreek Ac Ce.
Paid In primes for Poenu
on Vatorbraak’a Pens.
Band portal for circulars to
t 26 John 8t„ New York.
DEAFaaftBMW
..■feiwhaa ell mil- fell. 8*14 ran
hrf.Sixooa. MS V*u*k£«rtfie tm bask e* pseafc t UK
SOUTH OMAHA HOUSES.
TWIN CITY STEAM
DYE
DYEING and CLEANING of Ewy r*escriptin^
1S21 Farnam St., Omaha. Cor. AY*. A t 28th 8t.
Counoil Bluffs. Bend for circular and price lUt.
UVE STOCK
WOOD BROS.iwnw^i
MAX, " ALTIK E. WOOD. Men. So. OMU. HA. i KL
«•». Ill- Market raporta fwalahau apoa applloattom.
1? L * *•**• »•«" aM frrapa. Jatliaa,
■ »* M»*k Omaha
Ca. Maaatae'la. Oo .Caaa aad npaarat.A Tlawar.
F
w
HOLER ALE HARNESS and SADDLERY HARD
WARE. C. D. WOODWORTH A CO., 1*16
Farnam Street. Omaha, Nebraska.
SALOON
Hi lures. Billiard Tables, Bar Qlaaa
ware. Beer Pump-, ate GATE CITY
BILLIARD TABLE CO.. Ills Farnam.
OMAHA BUSINESS HOOSES.
WALLPAPER
Wholesale. Good
Paper 3^ eta rcr
roll. Gold Parlor
Paper «H eia and
up. Witie for sam
ples, Free HENRY LEHMAN. Omaha. Neb. A^entf
bample Books, over ASS different style#, ft.#).
B
VIW BROS A CO., Live Stock (ommission
Merchants, Union Mock Yards, Fouth Omaha and
i bieaflro. Coire»poudem« aad your trade solicited.
IV N U Omaha, 6Ql-~y
* ' •’.i * . U(. >.
- - v. / • * ■’ • • ■ ' -"V
ALASKA
STOVE LIFTERS.
POKERS& KNOBS
X1CKIL PLATED AMD BCBABLE.
Vor Ml* by all Itov* and lUrdnrt DmIah, MmU on) j to j
fjjg KICK Hi WORKS, TROT, If. T.
Is
JXS&LrauR M£Ar wrrH
QBS EXTHACThSMBK^
I«eu lar.E.KRMIIEIUBM.MIIT0N1K.
Garfield Tea
fipP* H*yUcfa.KHor—pompl>ilon.i*y»l>o»ti
BUta. hoplitiH. OABrau>TuOo„<uw74MhMT|b.i.
Cures Constipation
If my ono doubts that,
wo can euro tbe moot ob
stinate case In M to SO
days, let him write for
particulars and Inroetl
vate our reliability. Our
financial backing to
$600,000. When mercury,
Iodide potassium, oaroapsrilla or Hot Springe fall, we
guarantee a cure—and our Mario Cyphllene ie the only
thing that will our* permanently. Post tire proof neat
sealed, free. Coos tumanr Co., Chios go, 111.
POULTRY Wr,t# to ° E- skinner, coi*
umbui, Kansaa, for bla fine
BREEDERS lllnetrated Catnlogne.
RUPTURE
PERMANENTLY CURED ar NO MY.
Wa rater job to *.600 patlanta. rinanatal
Bateranea: NATIONAL BANK OP
COMMERCE, Omaha.
InTMt£»f« oormathod. Written guarantee to absolutely cnro all kiadt of
RUPTURE of both sexee. without tba uae of kolte or syrlnga, do mattar of
how long standing. KXifllNATION PBBB. Band for circular. Address
THE O. E. MILLER COMPANY,
i. 307-308 Now York Ufa Itnlldlug. O.HAH.%. NEIL
‘i
:,';V
HIOATMANX
, 5ALZERS 5EED5 /IRE MJT:
hglorlona yl«Ma yon may harp by ntaaMna UUKK1* BEEPS. They
r * WTUffm, MRMmt fir a rawUt, roataaM for
turn drain Sample- -c: wth cata. lOo. II Oram A clow SampM JOo'VuUi t»ULMa
__... • Helil(k>rB8ampl»alle!Wlthoataioto**o: . "
Oar mammoth lead Cataloguo coat# orar IdUno. It la mallad main mb
le poataaa. Ita a ralnabls work, worth tea Ui..aa Ita coat to too.
All cannot possess t
$10,000 Souvenir
■7.':
■ ' %k
■ ■.'.‘g.
(This *um m paid for Um first World’* Fair Soownir Cote miatod.)
in the shape of a coin, but many can have tec-similes of this valuable work ^
am
~ —- r-Ui UIU VMIHUK wont
of art—only special com ever issued by the U.S. Government—for $t «'•*»,
United States Government y:%
World’s Fair fU
Souvenir Coins
'Z£&:k
V\
■
The Official Souvenir
of the Great Exposition—*
5,000,000of which were donated to the World’s Columbian Exposition by the
Government, are being rapidly taken by an enthusiastically patriotic people.
As there early promised to be a demand for these Souvenirs that
would render them very valuable in the hands of speculators, theExpositioo
Authorities decided to place the price at
am
$T.OO for £ach Coin
and sen them direct to the people/thus realizing #5,000,000. and using the
additional money for the further development of the Fair. * f
Considering the fact that there were but5,000,000 of these coins to be
distributed amomg 6s,000,900 people, in this country alone (to say nothing
of the foreign demand,) and that many have already been taken, those wish
ing to purchase these mementoes of our Country’s Discovery and of the
*Tandest Exposition ever held, should secure as many as they desire at once.
w-51 « Realizing that every patriotic American
rOr will. want one or more of these .coins,
and in order to make it convenient for
PxrAmmrkaMA hira to get them*we have made a*r»nge
cverywnere ments to have them sold throughout
the country by all the leading Merchants
and Banks. If not for sale in your ‘own, send $l .00 each for not less than
five coins, by Post-office or Express Money-order, Registered Letter or Bank
Draft, with instructions bow to send them to you, all charges prepaid, to
Treasurer World's Columbian Exposition, Chicago, 111,
is s§
fi
v’ \ v jt, ' ,._a\ v .'t *. W- -* > v->^' ' - .1 $ tv
FUR ELY VEGETABLE— , V
feat FalUtta. Tbsy'ra *
Is a compound at r*. ■
X fined and <»ncen>
• jtratad botanical n- i.
• /tracts. The* tiny,
/sugar-coated pallets .■:1
/ —the smallest and
A tba easiest to taka
f •*-absolutely and '■'$
| permanently eur*
vuuiupnuuii! luur
gsstion, Hick and Bilious IleatlooluiH, Diad
nees, Bilious Attacks, and all derangameats
of tha liver, stomach, and bowsls, s
They cure permanently, because they ad
naturally. Thsy don’t shock and wsaksu
tha system, Ilka ths hugs, old-fouhlimed
Ellis. And they’re more offeotivo. On*
ttls pallet for a corrective or laxative
three for a cathartic.
They're the ehtapmt pills you,can buy, for
they're guaranteed to give satisfaction, or
your money is returned.
Yon pay only for the good you got
* 'i*
. J
BEN BUTLER.
Xl;
ft |||
Ben Butler started to Washington
from Philadelphia in perfect health.
1'fM
He took cold in the car and it de
veloped into pneumonia, and when
the train reached Washington, he
was beyond all help. Reid's Ger
man Cough and Kidney Cure wilt
relieve the worst case of pneumonia.
If your druggist does not keep this
great remedy, send your address to
the Sylvan Remedy Co., Peoria,
111., mention the name of this pa
per, and we will send you a trial
bottle free of charge. You will find
it to be just what you need.
$
Hi!
V'!1
-
s
itWf
-
a
1 ■
■ 1
MEND YOUR OWN HARNESS
t«r with
1] THOMSON’S
II SLOTTED
CLINCH RIVETS.
No .tool* nquired. Only n hammer needed
to drive nnd clinch them tmllr and quickly:
leaving the clinch nbeolntely amooth. Requiring
ho hole to be Bade in the leather nor burr for the
Kl’cU They an STRONG. TOUGH ml OUMBLlT
In uae. All Iengtha, uniform or
Million) now
■morted, put up in boxea.
. Ante year denier for then*, or aond iOa
In etempe for e box of 100; eaaorted alee*.
nanoraoTonnn nr
JUDSON L. THOMSON MFQ.CO.,
Wallkaa, Maaae.
SWEET HHW,
w ■■ ■ No axnerlrnon me
Seal
outt.
,-eharea.
No exparlenoo required.
Dlreetlone for aprouttng free. AddreM
T. J. SKINNER, Columbus, Kansas.
INSURS In the Parman and Kerehanta lamran'e
Company of Lincoln. Capitol and Sucplna otw f. f» •
«•«. 1.IM Ioemb paid to Nabruka people nine** DUU.
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