The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, August 10, 1893, Image 7

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    knowledge
,fls comfort and improvement and
to personal enjoyment when
r usX The many, who live bet
n others and enjoy life more, with
inenditure, by more promptly
ng*the world’s best product* to
of physical being, will attest
ue to health of the pure liquid
re principles embraced in the
v Svrup of Figs.
jcollence is due to its presenting
form most acceptable and pleas
the taste, the refreshing and truly
1,1 properties of a perfect lax
e (factually cleansing the system,
in„ colds, headaches and fevers
xrmanently curing constipation,
given satisfaction to millions and
it], the approval of the medical
1 __ «/ito nn flm Tftrl.
kion, becauss it acts an the Kid
Liver and Bowels without weak
LlVcl - . - »
them and it is perfectly free from
objectionable substance.
p of Figs is for sale by all dru~
,50c and $1 bottles, but it is man
,recl bv the California Fig Syrup
,1 v whose name is printed on every
w’also the name, Syrup of Figs,
iing well informed,>ou will not
any substitute if offered.
Lugust
7lower”
iad been troubled five months
Dyspepsia. I had a fullness
eating, and a heavy load in the
if tny stomach. Sometimes a
ly sickness would overtake
I was working for Thomas
enry,Druggist, Allegheny City,
n whose employ I had been for
years. I used August Flower
vo weeks. I was relieved of all
le. I can now eat things I
not touch before. I have
d twenty pounds since my re
ry. J. D. Cox,Allegheny, Pa. S>
ft# bbk*®
This Trade Mark la on the teat
iterprqof coat
Zt In the World I
A. J. TOWER, BOSTON. MASSt
educational.
omaha"
Term open* Pept. 1. Bonn) for 3 hoars work. Bond
utaiyg. Address ttubrbouah lire*., Omaha, Mob.
«Ll HALiMjUSf
in o'ir01*001 ls now in its twouleUj!yeiu-?ndei
lMAy frtiw-iP*1- lpaH torn
^0r catalogue and particulars
hum i< t Doh ekty , S.T.Ii., Kecu>r,Ou*h»,Net
Clara’s Academy.
kWICMrm. -
“wwo Bv Dominican sisters.
. instr^ction carried out in this lnstitu
' «*veiy advantage which can contribute to
as a health resort.
Tn e p1 e,s from Dubuque, In., ten miles from
W^rn n!!r,tller particular* addrea*
“ c St. Clara'g Convent#
Stnslnawa, Grant Gouoty. Wls.
aha bush® houses.
yUTE & ROOFING CO.,
L'lwc KnonnB, flato Blackboards, Ktc.
Awnings, Flags
WOLF BROS.
* CO.. 708-5 S.
lCth. Tel. 604.
(by prw
si . i vny rrw
phjnWan'I. NoiUrviug.
?fraedy ioT Catarrh is the
to Lee, and Cheapest.
Soid by Bruggisu or Brnt by maIL
T- Hazeltlue, Warren, Pa.
®is. Trade-Marks.
<*nqf(iF- M, to Patentability of
PA7EI-T* or How to Get
__ C FA223IA, WASHBJOIOtf, C. C.
hot weather
a * c d anH”; the ®ystcm ls re
wUvr.:"” nature
11 foul '„ ■ I,r>VO
ut of the h^Uption
•'■fcouraeof y “°W
^ickapoo <
Indian
Saewa. >
N Herbrm{*y «/ ^ooT,,
,c?“ fr.d fl(00lj p® bes* iirer, Stom-1
u,\ h Z, R,en°*at*T. All Drug- '
Bottle* for *Zol. |
^ ^ u Omaha. 32 1893
‘-v ■■ > ■ *'
LEMONADE.
Lemonade! I sib/ tuy praises!
When It pets m hot os blazes
Then thy cooltn t virtues shin*
When June comes with torrid breeio*.
Thou thine acid sweetness pleases.
More refreshing far than win*
Then thy flavor so delicious,
Titillates the taste capricious
Of the vorlnst epicure,
And the clinking In the glasses
Of the broken ice surpasses
Music of the spheres, I'm sura
Lemonade! I sing thy praises.
Not with long, huirli-sounding phrase*
But with zeal no less intense.
And to think that he who'd try thee
Almost any day can buy thee , \
•For the small sum of five cents!
A JBUKUEil LEAD.
There were only three people In
the room besides the whist players;
the old gentleman who sat in the cor
ner of the room and was always read
ing, and Julia McCullough and young
Stevens, who were in another corner,
half shielded by the Japanese screen.
Of the card players one was old
Mr. McCullough, to whom whist was
the business of life. A second was
old Mrs. McCullough, who played
excellently, but never could be utterly
deaf to the claims of the outside
world. The third was Mr. Richmond,
a successful lawyer, sdmething over
50, with closely-cut, iron-gray hair,
quick, keen eyes, a manner which
very likely had been nervous, but
was now only incisive, and an utterly
absorbed attention to the matter in
hand. People said Richmond had
had a disappointment in love, which
had kept him a bachelor and perhaps
encouraged the habit of absorption—
a fact wHlch caused Julia McCullough
and young Steveus to regard him with
deep and respectful sympathy. Tho
fourth player was old Mr. McCul
lough’s partner, and just at present
she groped under such a cloud of
disapproval that it would have been
a relief to have escaped notice alto
gether. She was a silent, smooth,
unassertive, unmarried woman, whose ,
game Mr. McCullough had trained,
trimmed and pruned in season and
out of season until, as a matter of
self-preservation, she had learned to
play better than ho.
Rut it was owihg to her that Mr.
McCullough now fidgeted in his chair
and glared at a nine-spot as if each
club on its surface were a weapon of
assassination. It was but 8 o'clock
In the evening, and she was playing
only till the stage came to take her
to the train on which she was to
leave—break up'the game and leave.
No wonder Mr. McCullough was
almost speechless with rage. No
wonder that Mrs. McCullough fatally
wandered, so that she mistook a
knave for a king and pulled in her
opponent’s trick. Even Mr. Rich
mond, who scarcely knew how Miss
Selwyn looked, so rarely he raised
his eyes from the table, felt that her
conduct was injurious.
“May I be permitted to inquire,
Charlotte,” asked Mr. McCullough
in an awful voice, “since when a
knave has been advanced to the dis
tinction of taking a king of the same
suit?”
“Gracious!” admitted Mrs. Mo
Cullough, pushing the card to Miss
Welwyn, who was so crowded by the
universal disapproval that she re
ceived them as a free gift.
“Of eourse it is impossible to be
even decently attentive in the midst
of such willful disturbance,” re
marked Mr. McCullough.
“If it were not a case of illness,’*—
began Miss Selwyn, agologetically.
“People have no business to be
ill,” snapped Mr. McCullougb.
“Do you suppose Susan will be able
to get there, too?” asked Mrs. Mc
Cullough.
“I hopo so,” returned Miss Selwyn.
“Come, come, Charlotte!” ex
claimed Mr. McCullough; “for heav
en’s sake, let us play while we can!”
Julia McCullough and young Ste
vens were talking in low tones be
hind the screen.
“Did you really pin it up?” asked
Julia, with apprehensive pleasure.
“I really did,” returned young
Stevens, “in the hall. I knew how
strained the situation would be to
night, and as it is my last evening I
wanted it to be peaceful. They
might have asked one of us to take a
Viunrl
“I wouldn’t have done it,” said
Julia, firmly.
‘•Yes you would, you poor lamb, or
I would have taken your place and
lost my temper. lean get along
with your uncle anywhere but at the
whist-table.”
One of the hotel servants came to
the door—the stage was leaving.
Miss Selwyn rose, looking ready to
cry. The cards had just been dealt
“I am very sorry,” she said.
“Sorry!” growled Mr. McCullough;
••wemuy have to play withadummy!”
“There isn’t a soul in the house
that can play,” sighed Mrs. McCul
lough. Richmond rose to go with
Miss Welwyn to the door.
He put her in the carriage and re
turned, Not a word had been spoken.
He walked restlessly to a -bookcase
and read the titles. The old man in
the corner buried himself deeper in
his'pages; the young girl and her
companion became more involved in
winding worsted. Mrs. McCullough
sorted her hfind mechanically. Mr.
McCullough drummed 'on the table
and looked ready to burst with raga
It was as if nature were preparing
for a cataclysm.
Suddenly they all, except the
reader, looked up. A woman stood
In the doorway—fine-looking, though
not a young woman. Her gray hair
rose straight from her handsome
forehead; her clear complexion was
a little flushed, but she spoke with
perfect self-possession.
“I saw the notice pinned up in the
hall,” Bhe said. “I am a good whist
player. Would you like to have me
make up the hand?”
Young Stevhens rose with a side
glance at Julia, who looked a little
scared.
••Pinned up In the hall?” repeated
old Mr. McCullough, doubtfully.
“Yos," she said distinctly, with a
swift glance that took in all tho
occupants of tho room; “tho notice
saying that there were three whist
players in the ea9t card-room who
wanted a fourth at a quarter past
eight Only good players need
apply.”
Richmond glanced at the young
man with a certain severity, behind
which was a gleam of amusement,
and came toward the card table.
“1”—began young Stevens; but it
was old .Mra McCollough who settled
the matter.
“Well,” she interrupted, "do come
and sit down. I'm sure I don't know
how you got here, but we're glad
enough to see you. I’ll play with
Mr. McCullough because I am used
to him. You can play with my part
ner.”
“We’re wasting a lot of precious
time," said Mr. MoCullough, and tho
handsome woman eame forward from
the doorway and picked up tho cards
that lay at hor place.
Richmond seatod himself opposite,
and for ten minutes not a word was
spoken. She did play well —one of
those intelligent, pliable games which
show science, memory and compre
hension. Richmond was delighted
with her. If at a critical point he
planned a brilliant stroke, she caught
his intention Instantly and co-oper
ated. He was not curious about her
personally; he had barely looked at
her; she was simply his skillful com
rade. It was her deal, and as she
picked up the cards she shuffled them
once. Richmond’s eyes wore on her
fingers, and he started a little. Sho
mixed the cards by an odd bit of
manipulation. He had never seen
but one other person do it The next
time he watchod her; then he glanced
from her fingers to hor face in sudden,
sharp inquiry. Her eyes were on his;
they wore a look that might have
been triumph. Tho game went on.
The low tones of the young people
were almost whispers.
“If you had that ace you were a
long time playing it, Charlotte,” said
Mr. McCullough, at the endof a hand.
“One doesn’t win by being in a
hurry,” she answered, easily.
“No," said the stranger, speaking
for almost the first time, ‘“one does
not”
The words were simple,' but to
Richmond’s ear they were emphatic.
He looked at hor with a certain air
of suspense, and again she met his
look. Another hand was played.
“You did it that time.” said Rich
mond, at the end of it, as he scored
throe tricks.
“Yes,” said she,smiling, “I thought
it was time I took matters into my
own hands.”
He turned a little pale, and dealt
the cards with his eyes on her face.
The evening slipped on; the game
was close and interesting.
“That play of yours was an unusual
one,” said Richmond, “but success
ful.”.
“Yes,” she answered, slowly; “I
broke all the rules to do it It was a
forced lead,, but there seomed nothing
else to do.”
There were bright red spots in her
cheeks and she held her handsome
head very high as she spoke. He
laid down the cards as if to stop
playinsr; then—
" “It saved the game,” he said con
cisely, as he picked them up again.
“I thought you had that queen,
Charlotte,” said Mr. McCullough m
ireful reproach, “from the way you
played before.”
“It is dangerous to draw infer
ences,” said Richmond quickly, look
ing across the table.
“Not usually,” she answered light
ly, “if one knows one’s partner.”
At 10 o’clock Richmond, instead
of taking up the hand she had just
dealt him, put both his arms on the
table and leaned across it Mrs. Mc
Cullough looked as if the skies would
fall, and Mr. McCullough said:
“Come! Como!” Richmond heeded
neither of them.
“Will you tell me why you played
as you did!”’ he asked with sudden
sternness. His partner looked at
him and her eyes fell for a moment
Then, with her first full composure,
she answered:
‘tit has taken 'me a Ion? time to
return your lead; but I found, soon
enough, that it is from what is my
strongest suit as well ”
“Come, come!1’ said Mr. Mc
Cullough; “a great deal of talk
about a hand that is past and gone.
Tick up your cards, man!”
Instead of doing bo Richmond stood
up. The young people stopped talk
ing. and even the reading old man
laid down his book.
“Is your name still Frances Effing
ham!" be asked.
“Yes,” 6he said, rising toa
“Hove you come back to mo!"
“Yos,” she (aid again.
“I have waited a long time,” he
went on.
“Yes.” There was a pause.
“Will you come with me into the
parlor across the hall and let me
speak to you?”
She bowed, and tossing down her
cards she passed but of the room and
he followed her.
If Mrs. McCullough had ever al
lowed profanity in her presence she
might have had to listen to it then.
For several moments Mr. McCul
lough found nothing appropriate in
his volcabulary.
“Are we never going to have a de
cent game of whist!” hb thundered
at last.—Storiettes.
A Not Able limtiauee.
Professor in Natural History to Ilia
upil—Can you cite me an example
of the higher order of animals,
showing the absence of teeth?
“Yes, sir; first, there is my grand
• mother—”
^ftAKlN^Pi
•• • ' .,;v V-?J
L»
SaKin^PoWde^
Absolutely Pirn
vS: -V :.7
\
If you wish
the lightest, sweetest,
finest cake,
biscuit and bread,
Royal Daking Powder I
is indispensable
in their
preparation.
THE ROYAL Baking Powder surpasses all
others in leavening power, in purity and
wholesomeness, and is used generally in families,
exclusively in the most celebrated hotels and res
taurants, by the United States Army and Navy,
and wherever the best and finest food is required.
All teachers of cooking schools and lecturers upon
culinary matters use and recommend the Royal.
Chicago Health Authorities Certify.
"I find the Royal Baking Powder superior
to all the others in every respect. It is purest and '
strongest.
“WALTER S. HAINES, M. D.
"Prof. Chemistry, Rush Medical College,
“Consulting Chemist, Chicago Board of Health," etc.
4
Made from pure grape cream of tartar, and the
only Baking Powder containing neither ammonia nor alum.
Woman Everywhere*
I have found among- all nations, says
Ledyard, that the women adorn them
selves more than the merj; that, wher
ever found, the same kind, civil, oblig
ing, humane, tender beings, that they
are inclined to be gay and cheerful,
timorous and modest. They do not
hesitate, like man. to perform a hos
pitable, generous action; nor are they
haughty, arrogant or supercilious; but
full of courtesy and fond of society; in
dustrious, economical, ingenious; more
liable in general to err than man, but
in general more virtuous and perform
ing more good actions than he. I never
addressed myself in the language of de
cency and friendship to a woman,
whether civilized or savage, without
receiving a decent and friendly answer.
With man it has often been otherwise.
In wandering over the barren plains of
Denmark, through honest Sweden,
frozen Lapland and churlish Finland,
unprincipled Russia and the wide
spread regions of the wondering Tartar
—if hungry, dry, cold, wet or sick,
woman has ever been friendly to me,
uniformly so; and to add to this virtue,
so worthy of the appellation of benevo
lence, these actions have been per
formed in so free and kind a manner
that if 1 was dry 1 drank the sweet
draught, and if hungry ate the coarse
morsel, with double relish.
A Typical Englishman.
A Mr. Klrkbell who had never been
out of England until he went to Vienna,
seems to have been a typical Briton
and stubbornly insular to the extent of
refusing to alter the time of his watch
as he traveled eastward from England.
No argument would induce him to
budge, and when at Vienna he had
risen at unearthly hours and perambu
lated about the city alone, having per
sisted intbeing guided by his watch,
stoutly asserted that thed-d foreign
clocks were all wrong. Kirkbell was
very anxious, also, to keep a record of
all the places he visited, and was
always jotting down in his pocketbook
the names of the various stations where
he had stopped or passed. “How curi
ous it is that there are so many stations
of the same name,” he once remarked
to a fellow passenger, who replied that
he had not observed it Kirkbell then
showed his record to prove that he was
right; and, sure enough, over and over
airain occurred the word “Ausgang,”
which he had confidently entered as
the name of many stations on the
route.—Argonaut
Mot to be Improved*.
This pretty story is told of a distin
guished lawyer. He and his wife were
at a social gathering, where the ques
tion was discussed: “Who would you
rather be if you were not yourself?”
His wife asked him for his reply to
the question. j ,.r
He answered promptly. “Tbur sec
ond husband, dear.”
Stats or Ohio, Citt or Toledo, 1
Lucas County. j
Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he Is
the senior partner of the firm of F. J. Chsxet
& Co., doing business In the City of Toledo
County and State aforesaid, and that said firm
will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOL
i LARS for each and every case of Catarrh that
cannot be cured by the use of Hall's Catabjui
Cues.
FRANK J. CHENEY.
Strom to before me and subscribed In my
presence, this 6 day of December, A. D. 1886.
i I
A. W. GLEASON,
Notary PubUe.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally and
acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces
of the system. Send for testimonials, free.
. . „ ,, F J. ClIENEY A CO., Toledo, a
by Druggists, Tie.
:■ 'VS •
V:;
Properties of Pineapple.
A housewife who is fond of experi
menting made one day a delicous snow
pudding, flavored with preserved pine
apple. It was served with a custard
sauce, also flavored with the pineapple,
the solid part of the preserves being
used for the pudding and the syrup for
the sauce. The pudding wns a great
success; and, thinking to make it more
delicious, the next time the pudding
was made, fresh, uncooked pineapple
was used, and the pudding, which is a
preparation of gelatine, whites of eggs,
and sugar, well beaten until stiff und
set away in a mould to harden. The
housewife, feeling sure of a dainty des
sert, waited with pride for the sweet
course of her dinner, liut alas, when
it came to her table it was a thin wa
tery liquid, with bits of pineapple float
ing in it; pleasant enough to the taste,
but hardly a delight to the eye. Noone
could explain the mystery of the disap
pearance of the gelatine until a scien
tific cook explained that chemists had
recently discovered that pineapple had
a wonderful digestive power, and that
it had probably consumed the gelatine.
The principle discovered has lately
been applied to a new preparation of
beef extract to be used for beef tea,
sauces, and soup3. Its superiority to
other extracts is based on the fact that
not only the extract of beef, but the
solid meat fiber are a part of it, being
made soluble by a pineapple ferment
A Granite Camel.
One of the most curious rock forma
tions in the world is to be seen in Ari
zona. It is a short distance east of the
stage road between Tucson and Oracle
and stands on a knoll several feet above
the surrounding sand hills. It is a
most perfect representation of a camel
and is formed of one piece of granite.
It is about sixty feet high and is very
white and smooth. There are very few
fissures on the surface, and they
strangely are in the proper place to
form features. The only real projec
tion from the surface is exactly placed
for an eyebrow. The two bumps are
plainly to be seen, and the neck is
curved beautifully.
Mature Demand* a Tonic.
We ought never to forget, even those of us
who possess vigorous health, that we are
wearing out—that the vital clock work, so to
speak, must eventually run down. This, of
course, we cannot prevent, because It Is In
the ordinary course of nature, but we may
retard the too speedy arrival of decay by the
use of an lnvigorant which tukes rank of
every other—namely, Hostetler’s Htomach
Bitters. This century has not Witnessed a
parallel In success to tills famous medicine,
which not only sustains health by promoting
vigor, but overcomes const i pat foil, dyspep*
sla, chills and fever, nervousness, rheuma
tism and other disordered conditions of the
system fostered by weakness and an impov
erished Condition of tile blood The feehlc,
persons convalescing after exhausting dis
ease, and the aged, derive infinite benefit
from the use of this helpful and efficient
tonic.
Redrafting Wild rium Tree*.
There are thousands of wild plum j
trees as well as the wildings of cultiva- '
ted sorts that are no use what ever as !
they are. These should be redrafted
with the best and most productive cul- i
tivated varieties. There is a. common '
idea that plum trees must be grafted
very early in order to succeed. The
buds start very early, and it is little
use to try to make a swollen bud grow.
But if the bud has been held lad that
is to be set, the swelling of buds on
the tree will not affect it.
Fob sick headache, dixziness or swim
ming in the head, t ain In tho hack, tody, or
rheumatism, take Beechnut's Fills.
The man w ho makes no mistakes is not !
loved by many people. |
Aluminum Cooking Voiaela.
One of the latent uses of aluminum Is
for cooking utinsils. An expert of the
metallurgical laboratory of Lehigh
University snys, after two years of
actual experience. that in point of
lightness, cleanliness, durability and
all-round adaptability, vessels of ullunu
inum are tlie perfection of cooking
utensils. lie instances two boilers
which have been in daily use for cook
ing all sorts of food, for preserving,
stewing fruits, and like for two years,
and are today ns bright ns new, and
have not lost a fraction of weight. One
weighs one pound twelve and one-half
ounces and the other one pound eleven
ounces.
Muffle Corn HmIvo."
Winnnthi tj nut*, or money ilIu tided. Ail
drufgim (urit. Vi itc xi> tint*.
I Car* Dyepeputn and fonatlpntlon.
Dr. Hhoop * luniomtlve Nerve Mil* w?ut fnwwlta
ftfedlrul book 10 prore norm, for Ic alamo. Drug*
•tow. 26c. Da. fcuoor. box W.. Kacln#, Wix
There are sermon < iu stone* only for the
man w;ho knows how to break them up.
There are four circles of Moslem trothor
hood iu the United fctates.
Home people work themselves almost to
death in trying to find rent.
rITS-AH fit* rurpod fret* by ML iMRirv URRiT
nKVk HKSTOfcKH. No fit aft*r flrst day> nut Mar
vslouu niivr. TrratlM* mb<1 U OOtiloJ Uottla free to Kit
Hand to Ur KHaa.Wn Ardifit., MiiJadeipbla,
Rome people ta!k most about what tboy
know leant.
If the null]- I* Cutll»| Teeth,
Be rare and use that old tod well-tried remedy, Mm.
Wikslow's Sootriru Fruur for Children Teething.
V;v
The devil never wastes any powder os a
corpse. _ * -l
The devil loves the man who lives only to
make others unhappy.
TUB WEAKEST SPOT
______ in your whole fV)
is tbo liver. *3
that doesn't do
r its work of puri
fying the blood,
t inoro troubles
kcomo from it
than you can re
member.
Dr. Fierce a Golden Medical Discovery acts
upon this weak spot as nothing else con. It
rouses it up to healthy, natural action. By
thoroughly purifying the blood, it reaches,
builds up, and invigorates every part of the
system.
For all diseases that depend on tho liver
or the blood—Uyepejwia, Indigestion, Bilious
ness ; every form of Scrofula, even Con
sumption (or Lung-scrofula) in its earlier
stages: and the most stubborn 8kin and
(scalp Diseases, the " Discovery " is the only
remedy so unfailing and effective that it can
be miaranteed.
If it doesn't benefit or cure, yon have your
money back.
On these terms, it’s an insult to your In
telligence to have something else offered aa
“just as good.”
MEND YOU ft OWN JARNESS
fUriTH
THOMSON’S
SLOTTED
CLINCH RIVETS.
No tool* required. Only a hammer needed
to drive ami clinch them easily ami quickly;
leaving the clinch absolutely smooth. Requiring
Oo hole to be made in the leather nor burr fbr the
Rivets. They are S»K0KG. T0U6H and MUMBIC.
Millions now in use. All lengths, uniform or
assorted, put up in boxes.
Ask your ririthr for them, or send 40a
In stamps for a box of 100; assorted sizes.
M ANl'FACTl’RKD BT
JUD80N L. THOMSON MFC. CO*.
Waltham* Mass.
IN8URI m lb# Firm*** mad Merehaut* Insurant**
« ontfs iiy of Line- in. Capital »n4 ftuiplu* ovsr *!#*.•
SOS- L4i* ifiMs paid to NaSruta p»<jpt« slat* t«li
Jf afflicted with
tore eyes, use
{Thompson's Eyo Water.
t i
- ■ - ,/■:* ?'i
i - > • if l