The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, November 30, 1893, Image 7

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    knowledge
nv,.
Tirino comfort and improvement and
A, to personal enjoyment when
• htlv uscdl. The many, who live bet
zthan others and enjoy life more, with
L expenditure, by more promptly
Entitle the world’s best products to
Sefs of Physical being, will attest
l value to health of the pure hqmd
krative principles embraced in the
r»medv, Svrup of Figs.
It, excellence is due to its presenting
In the form most acceptable and pleaa
,nt to the taste, the refreshing and truly
beneficial properties of a perfect lax
rtivc- effectually cleansing the system,
wiling colds, headaches and fevers
inf permanently curing constipation.
It has given satisfaction to millions and
Lt with the approval of the medical
nrofession, because it acts on the Kid
ievs Liver and Bowels without wenk
jnjQff them and it is perfectly free from
irery objectionable substance.
Strop of Figs is for sale by all drog
pstsin 50c and $1 bottles, but it is man
ufactured by the California Fig Syrup
Co only, whose name is printed on every
Mcksge, also the name, Syrup of Figs,
[nd being well informed,jrou will not
accept any substitute if offered.
—---4—a
‘August
Flower
99
" For two years I suffered terribly
nth stomach trouble, and was ,for
ill that time under treatment by a
physician. He finally, after trying
■verything, said my stomach was
lorn out, and that I would have to
rase eating solid food. On the rec
unmendation of a friend I procured
ibottle of August Flower. It seem
id to do me good at once. I gained
strength and flesh rapidly. I feel
tow like a new man, and consider
hat August Flower has cjiredme.”
|as. E. Dederick, Saugerties, N.Y.®
Itake
VT/1fV)tAViniTfl I* -A* - * - * *' - —
•’‘■(•niii/mi wmrLLAIUn 19 OC I ■ Ui ■
My doctor §ays ft aets gently on the stomach, liver
JMkdneyg, and Is a pleasant laxative. This
WBE Is mafia f mm hariw awl la-■ #
took ts made from prapand Horluil
• easily as tea. IttecaM
LANE’S MEDICINE
ar-j««it, ^‘sTnur^rirfurT’frS
iucaicinc ■ovra
L-Hfk dar. Addix-n .
ORATOR H. WOODWARD). IaAoT. V. I
Nil8??* jny SOU, suffered very much from canoet
KS RFHnVFQ SssasS
l J 'emt'dies In vain, I commenced to give him
y“fter *w bottles had been taken
p? BIRCHES??
» £d!Lbe,ieJre !haJ h«i» pennaneatl/ cured. His
“eisdue exclusively to sTs. S.
, J* R. Murdock, Huntsville, Alsu
00 BIood ar»<l Skin Diseases Mailed Free.
__SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., AOanti, Sa
Best
Christmas Gift
*.a^*t*on to one'* own library ia
\srier*....- ' w «« i own udhjt u
USTER s MTERHAHOUU. DICTIONARY
,_The Jfew
“Unabridged.”
Ten years spent
revising,100 editors
e^glgjed, and over
> expended.
A Oread Educator
Abreact cl the Tlercc
A Library la Need
terataable tnthe
household, and to
the teacher, profes
sional man, or self
educator.
q Co. / ta?
wekteits
ipringfitld' M
Mau.
of *®c**»t vounnir j
g^torfreeprpstoetaa ^_^
it i Price
UUt'ASOSCALKtO.,CUM**,UL
*••••«
SAC WAS
The greatest Liver, 2
Stomach, Blood and S
Kidney Remedy. Z
Made of Boots, S
Barks and Herbs, 5
and is Absolutely S
tv Free Prom2
All Mineral
or Otiter
Harmful In*
*3£i,v WBnnKta.'i S
—V nbyrt. per bottle. 6 2
THEY HAD A TAB ON Hlk.
NO MISTAKE POSSIBLE ABOUT
THE BUCCY. '
They Didn’t Search tlie Seat of the Barn.
Thing* Were Not *o Very Bad—A
TVrf.or’. Odd Adrentar. In the
lamely Slerroe-Tlie Hog Honey.
We had finished our game of whist
on the train when one of the players,
a red-headed man, said: "Your speak
ing of narrow escapee reminds me of
one I had years ago in the Sierras.
Buckeye house,” he continued, “is a
public tavern amid the* mountains of
southern Plumas county, California,
and is a lonely spot, being surrounded
by dense forests of spruce and pine.
On the night of June 4, 187-, I stop
ped there and was told by the pro
prietor that a highway robbery had
D6en committed in the vicinity during*
the preceding day. This made me
exceedingly uneasy, for I was carry
ing $12,50 J in greenbacks into the
mountains to invest in a quartz mine.
The money was wrapped up in my
horse blankets and stowed away
under the seat of the buggy, while I
had about $100 in gold and silver in
.my pockets, which 1 Carried to pay
tny expenses.
‘(Shortly after leaving Buckeye the
road ascends a deep declivity and
then crosses a narrow, rocky, brush
covered plateau. Three miles fur
ther on I passed Palmeto ranch, an
abandoned stopping place, where I
again entered the dense forest that
grew close to the highway. I exam
ined my revolver carefully, placed
fresh caps on it and laid it on the
seat ready for instant use. .Nothin?
occurred till I reached Frenchmans
Hill, when I was suddenly stopped_
jo suddenly, in fact, that I had no
‘.hance to defend myself.' A man
,:prang into the road and caught my
jorses by the bridles, while a second
robber appeared frqm behind a tree
holding in his hands a shotgun at
full cock. . The man with the gun
was a tall fellow with a squint eye
and red moustache, while the other
man was short and stdut.
“ ‘Throw up your handsP eried the
squint-eyed man in a harsh voice. I
glanced at the muzzle of the gun and
then at the revolver on my seat
‘Up with your hands, or I’ll give it to
you.’and the lootc on the robber’s
face indicated that he meant what he
said; so I reluctantly gave up all my
ideas of defense and slowly and me
chanically raised my hands above my
head, at the same time cursing my
ill luck, for robbery at that time
meant ruin to me. *Git out and keep
your hands up,’ cried the tall man.
•till Jim takes yer money and yer
popgun.’ 1 got out and walked to
the head of the horses as commanded
and there stood with my hands raised
w^iile the short robber deftly ex
amined my pockets and took what
gold and silver I had, saying as he
rattled the coins, ‘It pays to tdrive
hogs. ’
••‘Hogs?’ I exclaimed, ‘What Ndo
you mean by hogs?’
•‘ ‘Oh, that’s all right. He told us
you were coming, and wo laid in the
brush for you,’ was the response.
“ -Yes,’ criea the squint-eyed fel
low, ‘slide right out and sell your
hogs for enough to make up for what
wc took. ’
“I had supposed, of course, that
they would search my buggy, and
now that I was about to escape with
my precious greenbacks, my heart
beat furiously and the blood rushed
to my face as though I had just un
dergone great exertion. I hastily
obeyed the injunctions of the robbers
to ‘drive on and keep a-goin.’ and as
soon as I was out of gunshot I
whipped up and drove at full speed
until I overtook a little old man,
shabbily dressed, driving a lot of fat
hogs with the aid of a small dog.
•■The old man looked at .mu wi*h
some astonishment as I drove rapid
ly up and cried: 'Say, did some
fellers stop yer back thar?’
•• ‘Yes,’ was my reply. ‘Did they
I rob your
| “The old man laughed and slapped
his leg., and then laughed again ere
he replied: ‘Kinder curious how it
turned out,’ he replied; ‘but hanged
if I knew anyone was a-corning in a
two-hoss buggy. ’
“ ‘What do you mean?11 asked, for
I saw nothing funny in the whole
matter.
“ ‘Why, you see, them fellers
stepped out in the road, right in
front of njy hogs and cried for me to
stop. This scared the hogs and they
broke out in the brush. I pretended
not to understand what they meant,
and. sending Boze out on one side, I
took the other, at the same time a
cussing them chaps right lively for
scaring my bogs. When I got ’em
all back again I turned around and
said: “Now, what do you want?”
“ ‘Money,1 cried the tall fellow;
‘all you’ve got.1
“ ‘Money?1 and I roared eo you
could have heard me half way back
to Buckeye. ‘You don’t reckon that
a chap that has got to go afoot and
drive hogs for a living has any mon
ey? If you want that just stop the
boss wbo is coming along in a two
hoss buggy and you will get some.1
‘“Get right on. then.1 said the tall
chap, ‘and we’ll lay for the boss'
*• ‘And they got you?1 continued the
hog drover. ‘I hope you did not
lose much.1
“ *A hundred dollars,” said I, ‘but
-I got off lucky at that.
“ ‘So did I,1 said the old drover,
with a grin, ‘for I sold a part of my
hogs on the road and had the money
with me. It was a case of sheer
bluff on my part.1
“ ‘And of luck upon mine.1 I
answered. ‘It was a narrow escape
for both of us.111
In China all arrangements for a
wedding are made by a go-between,
who also does the courting and makes
he proposal.
SALVINI AND BOOTH.
WhM One Greet Actor Thought of An*
other •« Greet.
The celebrated actor Kdwin Booth
was at this time In Baltimore, a city
distant two hours from the capital.
I hud heard so much about this • su
perior artist that I was anxious to
see him, and on one of my off nights
I wont to Baltimore with my impres
ario's agent, says Tomasso Salvinl in
the Century. A box hod boon re
served for me without my knowledge,
and was draped with the Italian
colors. I regretted to bo made so
conspicuous, but I could not fail to
appreciate the courteous and com
plimentary desire to do me honor
shown by the American artist.
It was only natural that I should
be most kindly influenced toward
him, but without the courtesy which
predisposed me in his favor he would
equally have won my sympathy by
his attractive and artistio lineaments,
and his graceful and well-pro
portioned figure. The play was
“Hamlet.” This part brought him
great fame, and justly; for in addition
to the high artistio worth with which
he adorned it. his elegant personality
was admirably adapted to it His
long and wavy hair, his large and
expressive eyes, his youthful and
flexible movements, accorded perfectly
with'the ideal of the young prince of
Denmark which now obtains every
where. His splendid delivery, and
the penetrating philosophy with
which be informed his phrases, were
his most remarkable Qualities.
1 was so fortunate as to see him
also us Richelieu and lago, and in all
three of these parts, so diverse in
their character, I found him abso
lutely admirable. I cannot say so
much for his Macbeth, which I saw
one night when passing through
Philadelphia. The part seemed to
me not adapted to his nature, Mac
beth was an ambitious man, and
Booth was not. Macbeth had bar
barous and ferocious instincts, and
Booth was agreeable, urbane, and
courteous. Macbeth destroyed his
enemies traitorously—did this even
to gain possession of their goods—
while Booth was noble, lofty-minded
| and generous of his wealth. It is
thus plain that however much art he
might expend, his nature rebelled
against his portrayal of that person
age and he could never hope to trans
form himself into the ambitious, ve
nal, and sanguinary Scottish king.
Knicliah «» she Is Spoke.
If an old woman “axes your par
don,” she is speaking as the most
careful English scholars spoke for
hundreds of years, down almost to
the end of the sixteenth century.
Thus in Wycliffe’s New Testament—
about 1380—we read: “What man of
you is, that if his sone axe hym
breed, whethir he wole take hym a
stoon?” and Coverdale’s translation
of the gospel according to St. Mat
thew published in 1535, has “Axe
and it shall be given you.”
ODD WHIMS AND CUSTOMS.
—
Persian newspapers are written by
expert penmen and then lithographed.
A couple of hundred years ago En
glish and German people, in order to
secure the greatest publicity, were
married in the church door.
A Seaville, N. J., woman uses a
rooster instead of an alarm clock. At
night, before retiring, the woman
brings the rooster indoors and places
it in her bedroom on the back of a
chair, and at the break of day he
crows lustily.
A former Delawarean, now living in
Chicago, wears a necktie made of
a rattlesnake's skin. He slew the
reptile in Florida, just as it was about
to spring from its coil and strike him.
A taxidermist cured its skin in such a
fashion that it should serve for a tie,
and made up part of the rattles into a
scarf pin. This the owner wears as
an ornament to his remarkable tie.
SHORT TALKS.
Old Lady — What's the matter
now? Steamboat Captain—We’ve
run on a sandbar. Old Lady—Well,
why don’t you go over it? What’s
your walking-beam for. I’d like to
know?
Little Ethel—It’s awfal impAlite to
ask for things. Little Johnny—Course
it is. What of it? Little Ethel—
Nothing, only I’m getting hungry for
some candy I’ve got in my pocket, and
there isn’t enough for two.
Fond Parent—Yes, Bobby, the
angel of death passed over the houses
and smote the first born of each
Egyptian family. Bobby, after a
moment’s silence—Pop, what did
the angel do when it was twins?
A little girl says she is not going to
.be an old maid, for, si|jrs she: “When
a niee little growa-np boy conies to
ask me to get married, I’ll be so happy
I won’t wait to run downstairs to meet
him; Til just slide down the banisters.”
“It was so bad,” she said to her
husband, as they left the theater,
“that that woman with the high hat
shonld have spoiled the performance
foryou.” “Yes. I had some satisfac
tion, though.” “How?” “Watching the
man who sat behind yon, dear?”
“Now, dear,” she said, as she stop
ped at the depot gate, “yon will see
that everything goes right about tfte
house, won’t you?” “Yes, indeed,”
he answered, “You will do every
thing just as if I were there?” “I
will,” he replied earnestly, “i’ll dis
charge the servant girl every morning
before I go down town.
“So. Mr. Hankinson, yon are going
on a tour of the world?” “Yes, Miss
White,” and yon'll promise to write to
me from every country you 'might
visit?” “Promise! Ah, you know not
bow I value the privilege. And will
you geally care to hear from me?’
“Yet. I am collecting the postage
■tamps at all countries.”
Photography.
A recent improvement in photogra
phy enables the artist to overoomo to a
considerable extent the difficulty of |
preserving the natural expression of
the sitter (luring the necessary period
of exposure.. It seems that, notwith
standing this period has been greatly
shortened in various ways, particularly
by the adoption to suuh au extent of |
the magnesium light, with its unique
advantages, nervousness is so prevalent
among those who sit before the camera
that tiie operator has still found the in
terval too prolonged for the perfect ac
complishment of Ids worlc. Herr Haug
of Stuttgart claims to meet and over
come the trouble iw question by means
of a change in tlto management of the
magneaiuin light, making, for this pur
pose, what are called lightning cart
ridges, which esnse a tremendous devel
opment of luminosity, and are set
alight in one-tenth of a second by
means of electricity. The so-called
natural photographs taken by this pro
cess are said to preserve the menial ex
pression and momentary play of the
features with extraordinary clearness
and exactitude, hut the operation re
quires so much skill and practice that
It is said to bo carried on by only a
single photographer In Berlin.
A Safa Hank.
The Emperor Duc-Tn, of Cochin
China protects his treasures by placing
them in hollow trunks of trees, which
float about a huge tank situated in the
center of the royal palace. There arc
twenty crocodiles in the tank as well.
When he wishes to draw upon his bank
all the reptiles are killed; but this can
not take plaee without the joint consent
of the emperor and his minister of
fl nance.
Washington'* Troes*.
Washington city contain* la It* streets
attd squares over seventy thousand
trees, although the work of systematic
planting was not begun until 1873.
There are 330 little parks at the inter
sections of the streetp and aveuues, be
sides the great consolidated govern
ment reservation extending westward
from the capitol to the Washington
monument, two miles away. About
•?«,00p annually is expended by the
government and the District of Colum
bia in planting and earing for trees
Tried and Approved by the Billions,
For over a third of a century a great spe
cific has been on trial by a national Jury
of tbe bilious. Although a verdict In Its fa
vor was rendered long since, It is still on
trial. Never when it aus been "weighed In
the balance” has It been found wanting,
Tbe nncnq of this medicine is lips tetter's
Stomach Bitters, which more spocdlly than
any other terminates those vllllanous sen
sations which attend disorder of the liver.
It expels lille from the blood and secretions,
remedies chronic costlvenoss und reinforces
the prgun of digestion und assimilation.
Sick headache, yellowness of the skin and
eyeballs; furred tongue, und other Indica
tions that the liver has knocked off work
and gone on the strike, disappear when it Is
used. It Isa most efficient safeguard ugalnst
malaria, rheumatism and kidney trouble,
and fortittes a nervous und enfeebled invalid
effectually.
Grandiloquent Titles.
Oriental titles during the middle
ages were sometimes very grandilo
quent. The king of Arraehan was
known as "Emperor of Arrchan Posses
sor Of the White Elephant, Owner of
the Two Ear-Kings, Legitimate Heir of
Pegu and Urahina, Lord of the Twelve
Provinces of Bengal, Master of the
Twelve Kings who Place Their Heads
Under His Feet
IF you wish the lightest, sweet
est, finest cake, biscuit, bread
and rolls, Royal Baking Powder is
indispensable in their making.
/
For Ventilating Sowers.
Some of the English towns and cities
have introduced a device for ventilating
sewers—a liunsen gas burner operating
to heat to a high temperaturo a series
of east iron cones over the surfaces of
which the sewer gasses have to pass
on their way out to tho atmosphere,
which by such contact are entirely de
stroyed. In order to obviate all dan
ger of explosion caused by leakage,
this new safety furnace Consists of a
scries of cylindrical rings or segments,
each mechanically fitted; an intermedi
ate ring divides the combustion cham
ber from the vertical air passages form
ed between the inner and outer rifigs
of the furnace; the iieat of the furnace
is conveyed to the outer ring by means
of thick cast iron webs that fdrm tiers
of air channels through which the up1
rising sewer air passes, and the burned
is supplied with air taken from the out
side of the ‘‘destructor column.”
How’s This I
Wc offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for
any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by
Hall’s Catarrh Cure.
F. J. CHENEY <fe CO., Props., Toledo, 0.
We the undersigned, have known F. J.
Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him
lierfectly honorable In all business transactions
and financially able to carry out any obliga
tlons made by tbelr firm.
West & Trunx, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo,
O. Waldlng Rinnan & Marvin, Wholesale
Druggists, Toledo, Ohio.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken Internally, act
ing directly upon the blood and mucous sur
faces of the system. Price, 75c. per bottle.
Sold by all Druggists. Testimonials free.
The (Hortons Climate.
Eastern Man—Is that climate of yours
all that is claimed to be?
California Man—Healthiest climate in
the world. r
‘•Well, I’ve heard of a good many peo
ple who went there and came back
worse than before.”
"The climate is all right, but you
see, as quick us their health returns
they get interested in the land boom
and buy.”
"Yes.”
“Well, after that they worry them
selves sick, trying to sell it ”
Shiloh's ('onlampoon Cara
hiddm a guarantee* It cures Incipient ('onsiiims
taw. Is albs best Cough Cure. aiicls. a SljUQ.
In a Back Sent.
Mr. Dc Style—W hat’s wrong, my love?
Mrs. De Style—All my work and
worry go for nothing. I am no longer
the first lady in our set. J have become
a mere nobony since that Mrs. Oldfam
came back.
Mr. De Style—Why should that be?
She had noble ancestors, but so had
you. She had valuable heirlooms, but
so have you.
Mrs. De Style—A11 of no use now.
Her husband was killed on the Matter
horn, and yon never even climbed it
Maori* Idea*.
A Maori whose requests for blankets
had at last elicited a decided refusal
from the missionary, exclaimed “Kapal;
(good) no more blankets no morehalle*
lujas,” and thereupon he returned to
tj>e faith of his fathers. No less humor*
oua, though in another way., was the
plea of a Maori in litigation for a piece
of land. Being called on to tell the
conrt on what proof he relied for his
title, he pointed to the rival claimant
and said simply: “I ate his father."—
Argonaut.
Dps and Downs of Kings*
Louis Phillipe and Queen Victoria
were once walking in the garden at
Eu, when he offered her a peach. The
queen seemed rather embarrassed how
to skin it, when Louis Phillippe took a
large clasp knife from his poqket
“When a man has been a poor devil
like myself,” he said, “obliged to live
on fifty sous a day, he always carries a
knife. 1 might have dispensed with it
for the past few years.. Still I do not
wish to lose the habit—one does not
know what may happen.”—Argonaut.
Language of the Umbrella.
An American, after lengthened study
of the subject, gives the following
definition of the language of the um
brella; “To place one In a rack at a
club indicates that it will shortly
change owners; if a cotton one be sub
stituted for a sttk, it means that ‘ex
change is no robbery,’ ” writes Angel la
C. Boyce in the Ladles' Home Journal.
“A man getting all the raindrops from
the points of an umbrella which he
holds over a lady signifies courtship,
but when a man keeps the lion's share
of the article, giving the lady the rain
drops, it denotes marriage. To carry
un umbrella under the arm at an angle
indicates that the individual following
will lose an eye, while to hold it just
high enough to injnre passers' ayes and
men's hats, signifies ‘am a woman.’
Lastly, the loun of an umbrella is syn
onomous with an act of egregious
folly.”
Bkecham's Piles are a painless and effect
ual remedy for all bilious disorders. 116
cents a box. For sale by all druggists.
Could be of Assistance.
Jim—Say, Fred, old boy, I’m looking
for some friend who will loan me ten
dollars. Come, now, can’t you be of
assistance?
Fred—Certainly..
“Thank you ever so much.”
“Yes, it's going to rain, and if you'll
step over to my office I’ll lend yon one
of your umbrellas so you won’t get wet
while your looking.”
If tbo Baby ■< Milts Tfclh,
Be mre and 41® that old and well-tried remedy, Mai.
WinLoWe Sootbiso Brace fpr Children Teethinc.
Knowledge of the World.
Mrs. De Style—I wish you wouldn’t
play with those strange little girls. I
don't know who or what they are, and
their mothers may have the impudence
to call on me next.
Small Laughter—Oh, no, their moth
ers will never bother na They lives in
better houses than we do.
Coo's Cough Balsam
la th* oldoat and boat. It will break up a Cold qntak
er than auy tiling eiso. It la always reliable. Try lb
What to Do With a Had Dog.
By thrift he had become a million
aire, and he had a splendid St Bernard
dog which he was very proud of. One
day the servant came to him horror
stricken. “Master, master, Cajsar is
-” “Is what?” “Mad! He won’t
touch water and he has all the symp
toms of going mad.” "Great heavens!
It is lucky you discovered it in time.
You must not lose a minute. Take the
animal away before he has bitten any
one-” “Yes, sir.” “And sell him.”
—Texas Siftings.
Confidence. —There U no ar
ticle which so richly deserves the con
fidence of the community as Brown’s
Bronchial Troches. These suffering
from Ashmatic and Bronchial Diseases,
Coughs and Colds, should try them. Price
2.) eta. __
Debts are the silent partners of experi
ence.
Lane's Medlelno Moves the Bewels Each
Day. In order to be healthy this la neces
sary. Cures constipation, headache, kidney
and liver troubles and regulates the stom
ach and bowels.
Some men who start out to set the world
on fire give up at the first thunder clap.
•• Hanson's Magic Corn Halve.”
warranted to cure or money reluuded. Ask your
druggist lor It. l'rnc 15 cuts.
Three helping one another bear the bur
den of six.
MONET CAN BE SAVED
By buying coal by the carload. Write to
J. J. Thomas & Co., 1018 17th street, Den
ver, Colo., for prices on Colorado Coal, be
fore purchasing elsewhere.
The Austrian navy has ships, 411 guns
and 8,740 men. -
See Colchester Spading Boots adv. in ether column.
Italy has flity ships of
guns and 19,S3* man.
war, 171 heavy
ST. JACOBS OIL
-PERMANENTLY RMlHIOtlSH).
it-. y V V.. ( / ; •. . , • .
A FAITHFUL SENTINEL
n ouAiunira on* or Vttcvm Ban's roilmh
MUMM 11 IS Bjtruuiwoa.
Trtatury IkpaHmmt^V.
World's Dispsksart Medical Associahori
Aar Sin—From early childhood I have suf
fered from a sluggish liver with all the dis
orders accompanying such a companion.
Doctor*' prescriptions and patent mndldnss
PIERCE •SK"»CURE
THE JUDGES &
WORLD’S COLUMBIAN EXPOSITION
Have made the
HIGNE8T AWARDS
(Medals and Diplomas) to
WALTER BAKER ft CO.
On each of the following named arttolesi
BREAKFAST COCOA, .
Premium No. 1, Chocolate, * .
■
I havo used In uhuudunao; they only afforded
temporary relief. I was recommended to try
Dr. Fleroe's Pleasant relicts, I did so, tsktaff
at nllVnt im,l tmj, nl'iju, .IIhmam —.
three at night und two after dinner ovary
day for two weeks. I then reduced the doee to
ono “Pellet' every day and eontlnuedtlds
OB MONEY returned.
praettoo for two months. 1 have iu six months
tnorcasod In solid flesh, twenty-six pounds,
I sm In better health tmui I have been sis
Ohlldliood, Drowsiness end unpleasant "
lugs after meals havo completely disspp
Hespeotfully yours,
^ U. 8. Inspector of Immigration.'
m
Vanilla Chocolate,
Berman Sweet Chocolate,
Cocoa Butter.
For “purity of material," “excellent flavor,"
and “uniform even ooin|ioslUon.''
WALTER BAKER *C0„ DORCHESTER, MARS.
, COLCHESTER"
SPADING
BOOT.
M;
m
BUT IN (HAMIT*
BEST IN KIT.
best in wraiuRq
QUALITY.
The outer or tap sole ex
tend* the whole luJfth
down to the heel, pro
teailnx the boot In die
pine and In other hard
ASK TOUR DKAUOt
FOR TURN
end don’t lie put off
with Inferior food*.
CObOHK»TBR niTBBHR CO.
A Natural Food*
Conditions of
the system arise
when ordinary
foods cease to
build flesh—
there is urgent '
need of arrest
ing waste—assistance must ,
come quickly, from natural
food source.
Scott’s Emulsion
is a condensation of the life
of all foods—it is cod-liver
oil reinforced, made easy of
digestion, and almost as.
palatable as milk.
Prepared far Scott A Boirnc. 1C. 7. All OnmWl,
Ely's Cream Baku
(ti'iciuv anu
COLO IN HEAD
MENU YUUR OWN HARNESS
WITH
THOMSON’S
SLOTTED
CLINCH RIVET8.
Vo )poi> required. Only • hammer needed
to drive and clinch them essUr and anlekln
leaving the clinch absolutely smooth. Requiring
no hole to be made in the leather nor burrYortba
Klvetg. Tkoo arn CtMitA VMemu" .
They arc STRORG. TOUGH and DURABLE.
Millions now iu om. All lengths. uniform or
assorted, put up In boxes. * ’ "
Ask your dealer for them, or Mad 40k
■ stamps tea box of 100; assorted rises.
nasnrACToaxn nr
JUDSOM L. THOMSON MFC.OO.,
Walihan, Hmi«
MARLIN
® ■ ■ almnlMl most arc
simplest, most accurate, moat compact,
Biost modern.
Made In ail styles
u*s. Lightest, strongest,
easiest • working, safost|
sizes. Lightest, i
Catalogues
mailed Free,
>HE MARLIN FIRE ARMS CO.. forlavtOkCtf*
M
i £
Model 1891 in 82 cal. uses short and Iona rim and cen
ter-fir* cartridges In the same rifle. Saves AO per cent
an cost of ammunition over any other 82 csU repeats*
mode. Model lftfl now ready (n 82-40 and 8S-5& —■
> icno now rewj in ww »u« ob-oi. ^
REPEATERS
a ct:ro lli® m »t«. li
atiuate caae la M MM
day*. I«t him vr U for
| particulars ami tnn»tt~
rate our rellab )Uy. OUr
financial backing in
—--— ttotooo. When mercury,
loilde po tamtam, wrup •rill* or Hot Spring* fall, w*
-— r ■ —I ■ »“■ —— ■■ IB1I) *_
innrautee a cure—and our M*?l® typhllvno to (ha omij
thinpr that will cure permanently. Positive proof Mfli
r
•A"
•riled, trot, coos Rnun Co.. Chloeao, 111.
Patents. Trade-Marks.
‘JST.y’S! SI? f Thompson's Efe Water.
W. 0. i/. Omaha-48. 1893.
\F
Examination and Adrien aa to Patentability of
Invention. Scud for •• lurentnra’ Guide, or How to Get
• latent ■' ItXBBL OTUBKA, WASk&TOTON, & l
J
To Introduce our Eight
____ W1. w I*aj?e. illustrated farm aad
^ ; w literary paner we giveaway
40 Books, postage pula, to all new sub
scriber* Sample copy and List
of books Free Write this week
Homestead co.. 511 So. 12th St.,
^tuaba, }«eb. #1.(0 per year.
$
all newnufe
FREE
rXBV'RK In the Karmen A kleiditnis Innuranou
Co. of Lincoln. Capital and Surp.ns over fcUO.ML
5 2 loMoa paid to Set ra&ka people oluce 18K>.