The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, March 16, 1893, Image 7

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    lerman
lyrup
.f *1ii» PpJlPP. CrfOI
99
U-eofthe Peace George Wil
, of Lowville, Murray Co.,
’ makes a deposition concem
s^vere cold. Listen to it. “In
knrinjr of 1888, through ex
re 1 contracted a very severe
I that settled on my lungs. This
accompanied by excessivenight
Ls one bottle of Boschee’s
[S. One bottle of Boschee’s
jan Syrup broke up the cold,
n sweats, and all and left me
|£ood, healthy condition. I can
German Syrup my most earnest
lendation.” _®
k t* m»ue liwo aeruy. ——
^ir as tea I* is called _
kHE'S MEDICI HE
mrualiUMlI It et Me. and (B a HjtaW.. U
mtmot get it, und your addreeo fur u tim
ssrss w^*essm«
Htn esm- ""
I druggist* sail it at Ne.iMUft pMUft ir
maot gat it, send your addiym far a fr«*
«i«. (.Rif’s Family Medicine mvaa
r *'* "oltaTofc ■* WoOPWABD. LuKOT.». T.
URES RISING
BREAST .*.
to the pattW
bleating «T«r
I ton bee* u
.. cbl!<M*er1ng__
wiffl for many yean, and In aaeh cun
ir Matber’aFrlcud" badbeenaeed it baa
■pliihed wonder* and relieved much
wing. It la the beet remedy for rtolag af
bttaat known, and worth tbe price for that
Mu. to. M. Bnuemn,
Montgomery, Ala.
it^u|im^ckugH prepaid, on reoelpt
RADFIELD REGULATOR CO.,
i. »u dniuiat*. Anana, Oa,
I DO YOU
.artiJoli:, Cjnriti. 3i,i Ttroat, Cron. ledMasa.
Wa? 3on|b. BreicMtli isi laUai- A eiddi m
^waptiaii fint ittia, tad & am r«Utf fe «4
T«'“•to.®?
Zrf*”- ww « wwa- znwMttin
RUPTURED ?
«)’• HirG Robber Trauea have bean naad in 100,400
^ treatment of Rapture mailed free.
P-SEELEY & CO.,85
roof From The Plains.
tory of a Government Scout
and Interpreter.
kkapoo Indian Sagwa, a Valuable Kenr
niy Known to the Indians .for Yeara
and Highly Priaed.
SS^SSSKttsw*
if fwmtii.ui ’ 1 “ cose ezpious on
latumtKP mvf siven blm a national rep
Sumon?Sny °? 8uch * man vho h*s
ria™™o&lle rK1’ ?ien 18 Incontrovertible
medv'fn *b|“ absolute genuineness ofthli
K no Si t18 ‘“at race
ho*nniZ x ,.fpuTe among that rac«
fen!hl?i!»e health—whatever may have
their faults—has always been utmous
~—y. ^RANK D. Tate*, Gordon, Neb.
no!.’ it U still further
*ri'esasfoUow"!2 lveneM- CaP*- Y,te*
' lake err,. ^ebrsaks, Jnt* SI.
kl"ka|)ooBR,,,«Jjr“ur* recommending tlie
the IiKUani^’ a^. **aTe known of them
*«* western tetulJ hVe 1,ved on the cx
“■ *t prrlVkS" for the past 80 years and
Sioux In<lian Interpreter for
Lilian tonkupf^pcrIen,‘e w^th Sagwa—-which in
“THE BEST’-has been
5™ptf hum peiiktS u OI ,,he most wonderful
*»M is n..., t^^ona! knowledge in mv
trora’npln^l of ,,h* most wonderful
J**1 the curlniTof rui ^*Jowi*dl* in my own case
{?■»•«£& ow& c Cftorrh With which I
'hecpuntry^- oHlor to the rreat al
Jj.*d not a? . been Twine.
.“«<* not at firs” had been Ii vine.
»Mwa foMhu?ir *?,“* to t«ke Kickapoo
SAM vuuM trouble; and it was not un
l&Jn relipf and Ti.JhI SPrln*«» »nd .1 failed to
that i "':«'***** ,UMl become so very
of njp. , * wns afraid it would act tlie
J^beludr^j, into consumption that I
Sis* ""Me *»tone ‘bottle of It
r^k' 1 that I tnun.L.i ^ ,011- The effect was so
“•each, and noi'mili’fi!5' Srd*r*d twclae bottles
J?''r"-d •" nil fnrV' d*y t,mt th* Oiourht
ka»rccai,iV ^L1 JS™ •'ntlrely cured of that
J*“ aatl.f,dlstmslng of all diseases.
I" sidcl,*" owing ,° the perfect
Ii Ji* 01 H'at Purlffes tlie blood: and
kjHan On. aji| isken In connection with
i “rr; ever k!Klrrl, .T' l.1rurt‘the worst cases of
loJ^'nno ludlan 2' 60 tar as the use of
SJl’ines arc ,™"t,ne5les “ general family
there is nothing oa
Hivk“r.in?> them.
’ 1 ATEfr. Indian Interpreter.
tU» 'krf ,IND,AN SACWA.
"i or $5.0C. Sold by all Druggists
ON A CURIOUS ISLAND.
A Native of Tasmania Tails of tha
Kangaroos and Tin Minas.'
T. W. Reynolds, a native of Tas
mania'. son of the mayor of Hobart,
the capital, and builder and owner of
an important coast railioad,is at the
palace. He has been in England on
business and has just crossed the At
lantic on the Teutonic.
Mr. Reynolds tells an interesting
story of the growth of the remote is
land on which he was born, and which
he had never left till during this trip.
"The kangaroos and other curious
game which were so many years ago
so thick in Tasmania,” he said, "are
getting pretty well thinned out now.
So many have been hunting them that
they could not last. Our island is
now mostly devoted to mining,
though a good deal of grain and fruit
are raised. We sent about 200,000
tons of soit fruits, that is, apples,
pears, prunes, and things of that kind,
to England last year. The minerals
are various, and are found in directly
opposite dirertions, so that we get
tin in one part, gold in another, and
silver yet m another. The tin mines
are very good and are a scource of
large income. They were never more
prosperous than now. They are
even netter than the world supposes
them to be. None of the mountains
are over 5,000 feet high.
“The island now has a population
of a little over 150,000, and Hobart
has a population of 36,000. It is a
solid, substantial town, and is grow
ing steadily. When the early gold
excitement occurred in California a
good many pioneers of Tasmania
cyme here, and many of them are
here yet. Among them was an uncle
-of. mine, now living-on the^Sacramen
to, pnd I will go up to see him in a
few days.”—San Francisco Ex*
arainer.
How to Keep Up the Farm.
Samuel Johnson* Dow&gi&c, Mich.,
writes Orange Judd Farmer: 'Intel*
ligent observers of agricultural prac
tice and needs have always urged that
success is largely dependent upon the
care and kind of live stock keptontbe
Farm. The low price of animal pro
duct in recent years, however, has
discouraged many farmers so that in
too many localities live stock has
been neglected and consequently has
greatly deteriorated in qualities and
value. This class of farmers need to
be aroused to the necessity of a
change in this particular, or they will
find themselves illy fitted to take ad
vantage of the better markets, which
the producers will find in the near
future—indeed they are already there.
It is surprising how little of strict ad
herence to well defined principles Ob
tains in the practice of many farmers.
They are continually changing their
methods, and as a rule to their det
riment financially. There is no lack
of evidence of this statement in most
localities. On the other hand we can
usually find the successful farmers
among those who follow some well de
fined plan of operations for a
term of years. Stability, per
serverance continuance in. well
doing on the farm as elsewhere, ultim
ately bring a harvest. These qualities
are to be commended and cultivated
as essentials to prosperity. The shift
ing, changing, policy too often ends in
financial loss, if not ruin. There are
exceptions, but the rule of the best
practice we have, in no unmistakable
way teaches that the fertility of our
farm is largely dependent upon our
live stock. When the roughage of the
farm, straw, corn fodder, hay, oats
and corn, supplemented perhaps with
oil meal or wheat bran are all con
sumed on the farm. ' and only the
ripe products of the animals are sold,
the residue still remains to enrich the
land. With a proper rotation of
crops, the farm will increase in pro
ductiveness from year to year. More
animals can be kept, more manure
made to enrich the fields, thus insur
ing continued improvement. Not so
when the crops grown are mainly
hauled off the farm. Such practice
robs the soil, and its returns will be
lessened. Commercial fertilizers may
in a measure take the place cf a barn
yard manure, but a much
greater cost, with no compen
sating advantages. Is not the most
profit for that farmer in buying com
mercial foods rather than commercial
fertilizers? These foods,, wheat bran,
oil and cotton seed meals have a high
manurial value and fed in combina
tion with the straw and corn fodder
utilize to the best advantage these
one sided foods. A double return is
thus secured from the commercial
foods; first in the increased produc
tion of dairy or meat products, and
in the increased value of the manure.
The writer has frequently heard farm
ers eay they could not afford to buy
wheat bran. At the same time they
were feeding timothy hay freely and
allowing straw and corn stalks to
waste through neglect or careless way
of feeding. In such timothy hay sold
and the proceeds invested in bran,
etc., to supplement the cheap straw,
would he a decided advantage. Can
not the readers of the Orange Judd
Farmer, at the beginning of this new
year, give earnest thought and study
to the improvement and management
of their flock and herds with great ad
vantage?
As to whether one will succeed best
in farming with a specialty, or in
general farming, depends mainly up
on the man. It requires a faculty for
closer application and study along a
single line, to make a specialty go,
but when it does go it usually pays
best.
If the farms in general throughout
any given section were well culti
vated as are the few exceptional
ones, we should have a much higher
standard of agriculture. These ex
ceptional farms should be noted,
visited and their methods studied.
' The Rule or the Schoolgirl.
In our Anglo-Saxon social system the
young girl is everywhere, end. if the
sharteRof Sterne will allow me to wy no.
we temper the wind of owr realism to
the sensitive innocence of the ubiquitous
lambs. We like to believe that our wo
men are better than those of foreign
nations. We owe it to them to put more
faith in them because they arc our own
—our dear mothers, and wives, and
sisters, and daughters—for whom, if we
be men. we mean to do all that men
can do. But we are ull men and women,
nevertheless, and human, and we have
the thoughts and the understanding of
men and women, and not of school
girls. And yet the schoolgirl practi
cally decides what we are to hear at
the theater and, so far^as our own lan
guage is concerned, • determines to a
great extent what we are to read.—
Marion Crawford in Forum.
He Bead the Paper.
First Sportsman—Is your gun loaded?
Second Sportsman—No.
First Sportsman—Then, for heaven's
sake, load it! Do you want it to go off
accidentally and kill somebody?—Truth.
Street-oar driver* end other* who ere con
stantly exposed to ell kind* of weather, and
cannot And time to lay by, should ever baar
ju mind thi* plain fact that. Dr. Bull'* Cough
Syrup cures coughs and rokt*. It to une
qualed
Two great foe* of the church—the golden
calf and the leathery oy*ter.
Kansas to the only state in the Union that
produces reeled silk.
The Fire Department in every city could
not do better than to keep a doxen of Salva
tion Oil at each station. It instantly re
lieves all burns, scalds and bruises, and in a
few days makes an effectual cure of the
wound. 35 cts.
A Grave Matter to Jake About.
“I should call death an excellent
mimic.”
‘•Why so?”
‘‘Because it takes so many people off.”
Cenghlng l«ads to Coheunp*
tio*. TCe-J-- - ■
emps Balsam will stop the cough
at once. Go to your druggist today and gat
a sample bottle free. Largs bottles 50 cent*
andlUlO.
The man who has no friends to either
phenomenally' tight or amasingly loose.
The New Bread.
. v; . • , • • • • •• •-•’ $
V • - v ' ' ; . ' ‘ "‘v ” : • - . ’ . . ; 1
TDOYAL unfermented bread, made without
yeast, avoiding the decomposition produced
in the flour by yeast or other baking powder;
peptic, palatable and most healthful; may be n
eaten warm and freshr without discomfort, which
is not true of bread made in any other way.
Can be made only with Royal Baking Powder.
Receipt for Making One Loaf. ’
|NE quart flour, i teaspoonful
salt, half a teaspoonful sugar,
2 heaping teaspoonfuls Royal Baking
Powder, half medium-sized -cold
boiled potato, and water. Sift to
gether thoroughly flour, salt, sugar,
and baking powder ; rub in the
potato; add sufficient water to mix
smoothly and rapidly into a stiff
batter, about as soft as for pound
cake; about a pint of water to a
quart of flour will .be required—
v
more or less according to the brand
.and quality of the flour used. Do
not make a stiff dough, like yeast
bread. Pour the batter into a
greased pan, 4*{x8 inches, and 4
inches deep, filling about half full.
The loaf will rise to All the pan
when baked. Bake in very hot
oven 4$ minutes, placing paper "
over first is minutes baking, to pre
vent crusting too soon on top. Baka
at once. Don't mix with milk. • '
* ★ ★ ‘
City of Toledo,)
Lucas Co., [S, S.
State of Ohio. )
Frank J. Cheney makes oath that lie is the senior partner
of the firm of F. J. Cheney & Co., doing business in the
City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that said
firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and
every case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of
HALL’S CATARRH CURE. . t
Sworn to before me, and subscribed in my presence,
this 6th day of December, A. D. 1889.
: NOTARIAL SEAL :
: LUCAS CO., O.
e.9
HALL’S
CATARRH CURE
IS TAKEN
INTERNALLY,
and acts directly
upon the Blood and
mucous surfaces.
A. W. GLEASON, Notary Public.
CATARRH
TU STTAlOKriAliB :
' jc,. d. v^AijxnAiji- a x.v., wruggisis, worse
Cave, Ky., say: 'Hall's Catarrh Cure cures
every one that takes it.”
CONDUCTOR E. D. LOOMIS, Detroit, Mich.,
Cays: "The effect of Hall's.Catarih Cure is
Wonderful.” Write him about It.
HBV. it. r. cakso.v, Scotland, Dak., says:
“ Two bottles of Hall's Catarrh Cure complete
ly cured my little girl.”
J. C. SIMPSON, Marquess, W. Va., says;
“Hall's Catarrh Cure cured me of a very ba4
case of catarrh.'’
■all’s Catarrh Core Is Sold by all Dealers In Patent Medicines.
PRICE 75 CENTS A BOTTLE.
THE ONLY GENUINE HALL S CATARHH CURE IS
manufactured by
F. J. CHENEY & CO,
Testimonials sent free on application.
BEWARE OF IMITATIONS*
The Best
Waterproof
'Coat
In the
WORLD!
SUCKER
The FISH BXAKD SLICKER Is warranted water
proof; and will keep you dry In tbo hardest storm. The
new POMMEL SLICKER is a perfect rldfn* coat, and
covers the entire saddle. Beware of Imitation*. Don't
bay a coat If the ** Fish Brabd" Is not on it. Illustra
ted Cataifrue tVee. A’. .1. TOW Fit. Boston, Mass.
Curo. Couaumptl Coagha, Croup, Sot*
Throat* Sold by all Druonata on a Guarantae.
Farm Laaw Sadc, Back or Cheat Shiloh'a Porous
Plaatar will give great aatiffactloo.—a$ cauta.
| » . ’
! Bnlra into r'och n<»trfL
i Cl V RUCK Wr»rr#»n Kl N Y.
i CLV.BKO??..W Warren St\ NT
Ely’s Cream Balm
IVice 50 Cents.
WWWWWWVWWVVWWWWVMyMWI
ROOT, BARK « BLOSSOM
Tb* R«M«tomch, Liver, Kidney m4BIm4 KmHj.
™ Liver, KM*rr iMBImI Bm«4j.
rains jn Back and Limbs, Tired, Oraned Out, Nervous
Feelinr, Debility and Low Vitality Quickly Cared aa
well M Dyspepsia, Constipation, Bicepn-ataesa, Dicai
Baetmatism or Catarrh. “-*-'L - -* —
AliENTb PAID
■tipalion, 6I*-«pn nnesa,
Irh.Ham pie Trv« far a
WfiRKLV SALARY.
$1 Isi two months’ supply { l Seat by atll *r st aat ti ■■
*•*. “ ohe month's anpplyj J jMs. Try It and Be Wsfl.
ROOT, BARR * BLOSSOM, Newark, N. J.
"5uce°rar.—
j Pe*#ia» treatmest (by prac
O-W.K HNYJDKR, M. I)., MstlDiptrU
McVloker*a Theater, Chicago, II
_ ticbig- pbYikisaV Ns B»ar*iiig.^>7W
Tfcoa»srijd» Send fc is ttaaipaf 1..
AGENTS
Sample Smshlock (Pm. IK)fM
by mall for 3c. Stamp. Iminenee.
, , - VM-lralled. Only rood oueerei
Invented. Beam weight* Kale.unparalleled. SIS,
.»>■ nwwyui’c*. Brobard .VeyeHy OfePUIa.
At+Price
flea*, Bantes, Nirwa.
IsHriae^ Oryaas, Nmla
- ' rtifcBS.
>k Safrs, ete,
im-aleCo.,
Jt
Cbteays, Itt,
d®f„GRINDS.5S
nENSION%^K'?S.%
Ite?saSffiJKsrn!5;^l*j!as
m 3>isiu last war, liiM^utlicaiiugcUmua, ally ttuaa
INSURS io the Fanners sad Merchant* Insurance
Couip <ny uf lanccia. I'epltal and Surplus over |9k.
—0- l.MS losses paid to Nebraska people since ISM,
YOUNG MEN l'4'*1" Tei^rrsphy and Railroad
I Vtf HV INkn Agents’ Bujxne?* here and amure
«°°u situations. Write J. Q. BROWN, bedalla, Ms.
ifa*,.,.h Thompswi’s Eys Watsr.
•ore eyes, use
W N U Omah \ 11 lb93
1RKX0VIAR1TT.
la that what troub
les you? Then It's
easily and promptly
remedied bv Doctor
Pierce’s rleasant
Pellets. They regti.
late the system per
fectly. Take one
for a gentle laxa
tive or corrective;
three for u cathartic.
If you suffer from
Constioatloii. ludt
Creation, Bilious At
tacks, Blok or Bilious Headache*, or any
derangement of the liver, stomach, or
bowels, try these little Pellet*. They
| bring a permanent cure. Instead of
I allocking and weakening the ay stem
i with violence, like the ordinary pill*,
they act in a perfectly easy and natural
way. They’re the smallest, the easleat
to take—and the cheapest, for they're
guaranteed to give satisfaction, or your
money is returned. You pay only tor
the food you get.
COLUMBIA Morblo Shooter. Worm's
l<’ulr Souvenir for boys. One
can plump, roll up, lag .shoot /
Hwlftoreusy,faror nearas /,
desired, ana with practice f SB
KUUt'KM out. AHVUJ8
wanted. Boy* here's your#
oh Alice. Largo comm is- I
Mona. Mull lOo for sample
anrt circulars or Ifa for<;^KI
beautiful taw*. The 1’at-flEg
ent Hpcelalt? Co., western
ugeuojr.box 47 Lincoln, Neb N
No More Round Bhouldkbb; tlw
KNICKERBOCKER U the only reliable Should**
Braci and Ht'BPRNDnn combined;
Also ft perfect Skirt Supporter for
rotnen uud girls.
Bold by Druggist* end (lenerel Mores,
r sent postt«fd on receipt of S1JI#
pwrpftir, silk-fee td, or 91 plain. Rend
chest mcftsur*. Address
Knickerhacker Brace Ce. Batten, Pa.
WELL MACHINERY.
If any one doubts tU«
wi au cun lbs m>*tcU
•Hunts mn tu to to M
days. 1st kill wrta foi
particulars aad lnva*tt
tats oar reliability. Our
Cos acini basking it
#2.00.000. Whan mercury,
Iodide potomlnm, sarsaparilla or Hoi Sprints fail, ws
pu .rants# a ears—snd our Undo i ypbllene Is theony
Itainp that will cars permanently. Posit Its proof sent
srstsd, frss. 4'ook KUIBPT Co., Chlcsgo, III.
QWFFT POTATOES SB
all tL B beiproutedoatkciham.
^ No experience required.
Directions for sprouting free. Address
T. J. SKINNER, Columbus, Kansas.
EARLY RISERS
■■id* Witt’s Uttlo| n BarlyKben,
tbs Famous Uttlo Pills for Constipation.Sick Hood
•oho, Dfipopolo-No N*noo*.No Palo. Terr Small
OMAHA BUSINESS HOUSES.
WALLPAPER
WholesaJs. Good
Taper cts per
roll. Gold Parlor
Paper 4% eia aad
ap. Writs for sam
ples, Pros HEKRT LFHMAN. Omaba. »*b. Apent’s
Maospls Books, over 4#0 dlffsrant styles. I1.W.
L^STEAM BYE WORKS
CITY
Dyking and Ci.cakino of every Description, I
1521 Farnam St.,Omaha. Cor Ave.A.4 26th St.,1
Council Bluffs. Bend for circular t price list. I
AND SADDLERY HABDWARB, I
l). B. WOOSWOkTHAlO.,
ISIS Parana. St., Omaha. I
HARNESS
HUNS
Bale Ball, Bleyela and Oeaoral
Srartlac Saadi. Catalogue PRES.
Cross Gun Co., 1511 Douglas St., Omaha.
Farrii.l a oo., ffiple Sogir aad Imp, Jsllisa,
Pieserrsa, Jama Apple Bmtiir, Eta Pram Omaha
Caa Maaefac’la* Co..0aaa aad Deeoratad Tlnwara.
WAGONS,CiBBIiSES
W.T.IUMAN
Omaha’s Lnrg
eet Variety. ••
SOUTH OMAHA HOUSES.
WOOD BROS.!
UVE STOCK
COMMISSION
J JOES D. t>ADIO
II AN, w ALTER E. WOOD. Mgrs. Bo. Omaha, Nak., t,hi
rago. III. Earkst raparta fonlakad opoa aoplloatlss.
Braid Coaklaatlaa Sale ar Trattlag Brad
Horae. April 5tb and llth at tha Valaa Stack
Tarda Harae Market. South Omaha. Neb.,
will be the greatest sale or tbe kind over bold in
■ be west. Some of tbe beat blooded atoek ever
oSered will bo sold to tbs bigbeat bidder with
out reserve. Send for catalogue.
B
VIM BROS A CO., Lire Stork Commission
herckaats. Union block Yards, South Omaha aad
‘ hleapo. Correspondence and ysur trade solid ted.
NOW IS THE TIME
TO TRY * SaMIM.H PAIR OR
KIBKSNDiLU J0M1S & CO.’S
OWN MAKE
They are warranted and made
by Skilled Workmen, of the beet
Selected Stock.
ASK VOOS DBAE.SK IKS
goods manutaetured by un and
take no others. It will pay you
to investigate by a trial.
KIBKSMDALU JOKES ft CO..
OMAHA. NRBBARKA.
* WEBSTER'S
INTERNA TIONAL
DICTIONARY
i Hacc*M«r uf Witt ' .
“Unabrldawl." . i ' Mg
Ten year* spent In
revising, 100 ddltor* |
employed, inure Uuta
0000,000 expended.
A Grand Edumtor
Abroad of tbn Timas |
A library in lUsir
Invaluable in the
household, and to the 1
teacher, professional
man, selr-eduuator.
Auk your Book filer to ukow U toyom.
TvhUdM by
n.* CMF.miiAii ro.,*Min<o?i»i»Jn*iw..TJ.»A.
4JGX
[. d for froe promrtw oontalalnf «pocim<m
lluairationa. UfttmtonlAl*. He.
F“Do not buy reprint* of anettnt mUMcmm.
nun Ida Mck Prams
Ho Alkalies
Other Chemicals
are mart ia tba
IS preparation at
W. BIKER*CO.’S
'-m
%
BreakfastGocoa
I trfcfolb 4a ataolwtatp
Q jrera wm4 aaInMo.
■ It baa maratbaw (hraaMmat
■ (haalranptbof Coeoaiaisart
■ with March, Arrowroot ar
■-v
^ ouurt ana ib »r wira
■wIciL totting lii$ Mm mm cant « o»».
It It <H)lclou«, nourlthlng, ud imut
aiowren.
■eld by Mrerore everywhere.
■ Bma*Oa,Dofohotoc,MMi.
MEND YOUR OWN HARNESS
f THOMSON S
U SLOTTED
CLINCH RIVETS.
So tool! malrtd. Only t hearnm needed
to drive end clinch them eerily end quickly;
leaving the clinch tbmletely emoath. Requiring
no hole to be mede In the leather nor burr for the
HlveU. They ere STRONG. T0U8H end OURtRLC.
millont now In iw All lOutho. nnlform or
etmrted, pnt up In bourn.
. Aek your dealer for them, or tend Me.
m riampe lbr n box of 100; amorted ricm.
unoicrruii nr
JUDSON L. THOMSON MFO. OO..
Wallhaae. Meee.
Wormy Fran and Leaf of Applet, Pram,
Cherries and Plums prevented; alsoGrapeand
Potato Rot-by sprayinf with HtabPo Double
Acting F.xcelster Mpraying Outfits. Bast In tho
market. Thousands is use. Catalogue, deenrt*ri«c
all Insects Injurious to fruit, mailed Free. Address
VM. STAHL. QUINCY, ILL.
Garfield Tea
Cures Constipation, H—toi— Complexion,
Mils Sample tret. Ga*n»f£Tp<Ml»w ttthdc.K.T.
Cu res Sick Headache
results of
bad settee.
uiu.L*v« Doctors*
itehac.K.T.
W. L. DOUGLAS 83.“ SHOE.
A aewad ahoe that Will not rip | Calf, (camlets, raooth land*,
more comfortable, •tyllih and durable than any other shoe ever Bold at the
price. Every style. Equals custom-made shoes costing from $4 to
Other Specialties ae fellows i
*4.00**5.00
Pirn Sawe4 Htw.
$4 Eft *•«*»•.
W>WVruwn,M(,
*2.50, *2.25,
*2.00
Far Warkla* :
*2.00**1.75
Far Btyi ill Yaatka.
*3.00 rr
*2.50**2.00S
Far l.aitaa. I
► *1.75-— i
ItwImrM kir.'
TAKB MO SUBSTITUTE.
m
LIGHTNING
‘The 60 Day Cabbage.
(olntelr tha aarlfcH nkhait in Ihi mrii ft
TfcU la abaolntelr tha __
FM-. ISe.i ya a*.. S6e.; !U lb.. 62. ■
PISEH
_ltl_ , THE EARLIEST VCGKTABI.il
WU1U j« great deaiaad this spriaa and will fetch tx| priasa.
Ta Save <U earliest. |.laat Salter • seeds. ^ r
^Fl* brlmt Vegetable NoftltiM, f l, portpiij.
FOR 14c. (WITH CATALOGUE. ISo.)
ntulurn*** °ur ****** crtrrlrll*r*> *'• aa*4,puatp4i<t.upaa
la ilVPabwa,
- packifi Sis Waki' Radish, 10n.'
I '* Silver Stat- Lftibce, )&c.
1 ** Giant PraMSe Tomato. JOe.
I “ Leas Giant Cue umber, 19c,
• ** Brilliant Flower Seed*, 91a.
•AUCR'I SEED CATALOGUE
!• the finest published. C'stt ws ever 930,009! lu is x'.aulr
mailed uj*>a rtrv*ipc of 8c. |>o«ragv. * ■
ALL FOR 14c.
JOHN A. SAL2EB SEED CO., La Crowe. Wi..