The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, December 21, 1893, Image 7

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    Family hntlM.
• nhvsioians are not Inclined to recom«
self iUth®
vTt there is one need, says the Ameri
«u> Analyst, which they are almost
!^able to supply. We refer to the
!familvl«*ative.” The familv phy
■‘•an is able to prescribe for the most
•r:sn is ailue vcv,* me uiobL
L,mnlicate<l and obscure of maladies
•nd vet is often puzzled to know just
«h»’t to give when ask^l for a remedy
which can be kept in the house for
Jlmilc nse as a laxative, that shall be
Itfectm>,free from danger, and notun*
sleasant to take. When absent on our
Lniner vacation we were asked by four
different parties, representing as many
♦.milks what we thought of the
“Syrup of FigsNot one word did we
•oiunteer on the subject, and we were
-omen-hat surprised to find that there
was this small token of the very gen
eral use of that preparation. These
Mrties said they derived more benefit
Jj0m it and found it more pleasant to
tnke than anything of the kind they
lad ever used. _ The simple question
with them was, is it a dangerous com
1 .. VS' — 4Ua*m . Ai — A * A
unm me*** ” win
pound.’ We informed them that ita
active ingredient was a preparation of
aenna, and that it was entirely free
from danger. With_ this assurance
UiLU&V** IV ava* •'****» BMUIftUUH
they volunteered the information that
they should continue to keep it in the
house. .
The therapeutical properties of senna
are so well known that comment on
this seems unnecessary. It might be
well to notice, however, that Bartho
]0tv says it is “a very safe and service
able cathartic,” and that it is ‘-highly
Srized as a remedy for constipation.”
e also makes the important observa
tion that its use “is not followed by in
testinal torpor and constipation.”
The simple truth of the matter is, we
have altogether too few preparations
which we can recommend to our families
as effective laxatives. But the Cali
fornia Fig Syrup company has one of
the most desirable combinations for
this purpose with which we are famil
iar The Fig Svrup company gives to
the profession the composition of this
preparation, therefore there is no secret
about it; the persons who use this laxa
tive speak in the highest terms about
it; and we are pleased to notice that a
large number of physicians are pre
scribing it.
Viewed from the narrowest and most
•elfish standpoint the physician will
lose nothing by recommending such a
preparation as Syrup of Figs to his pa
tients: fvhile viewed from the highest
standpoint of doing the best possible
by those who place themselves in our
care, we would say the profession can
not do better than give their indorse
ment to such a preparation. .
“German
Syrup”
My niece, Emeline Hawley, was,
taken with spitting blood, and she
became very much alarmed, fearing
that dreaded disease, Consumption.
She tried nearly all kinds of medi
cine but nothing did her any good.
Finally she took German Syrup and
she told me it did her more good;
than anything she ever tried. It
stopped the blood, gave her strength
and ease, and a good appetite. I
had it from her own lips. Mrs.
Mary A. Stacey, Trumbull, Conn.
Honor to German Syrup. @
YOU
.tflc. uKgk. Si.t Tkmt, Cmp. hStaatk,
.Juft Broaihitti u4 aitkaa. ao-TtibctIf
■■nnapUBta lit it utf. ulim mUrf b H
2"1 *•■»*»£ Dm It no*. Tn -will im tit ncollnt
•ftJtifcwtatbgthf flretiote. Sola trdubntMn
Urjo bottloo SO cna uaS |1. CO. P
DelicateWomeh
Or Debilitated Women, ebotdd i
UFItlD’S FEMALE REGULATOR.
Every ingredient possesses superb Tonie
properties and exerts a wonderful influ
^ce in toning up and strengthening her
system, by driving through the proper
channels all impurities. Health and
•trength guaranteed to result from its use.
PHy nib, who nraa btdrlMea'ftr el|h>
*?*a month*, eftor nalu Brm&fMa’u
Regulator tor two **
l*Wb»S Well.”
lUu Is
s. J. M. Inmai. Malvern, U.
“«»D»in,D RnacLATon Co.. Atlanta, Go.
w*i ty Druggist* at (LOO per bottle.
■ PISO'S CUBE FOR
poni«»»UTM AIKS people
who hare weak lung* or Asth
ma, should dm Plso’sCure for
Consumption. It boa cored
thonwadi. It baa not Injur*
??i0n?* Hit not bad 10 taka,
it is the beat cough syrup.
Sold everywhere). S3c.
[*i5r*R ,n l*M» f armers A Merchants insurance
&.2 lrl.;lncw!n- Capital and hurpius over I300,01A
^_^*«ea paid iq Nebraska people since 1885.
highly endorsed.
. P'J’fessor of Physiological Chem- {
r mtrJ && ^ ale College says: *l 1 find A *ck- ^
I^qq /arfiqn Samoa to be an extract of J
) ^°^J^rka Herts of Valuable Rem- r
without aup mineral or other (
r WlrmAiJ — —■ -
I„dl^
m;„1; ter' BuhmcIi. 1
’ r00'1 *ud Karve
| H'-meri y Known. !
Purt*«
every
°t Hie liuman !
[•***. All Drug- 1
If1’1*- *1 > botUei
tor tS.
reCKETSF ULL OF GiEMS.
5'V; Ft> - T
MEN THAT Carry FORTUNES
ABOUT THE COUNTRY.
l eadline Diamond* a Cation* and Not
Wy Lncomm“n Trade-Ko Knelt Thine
" * Barealn—dome Hay hot to Wear
i ®ut *° Admir# and Enjoy.
One of the most surprising Hues of
business that a man can go into_
surprising, that is, until you have
time to think about It, and then isn’t
surprising at all—is the peddling of
diamonds.
Men go about the country with
from *10,000 to *40.000 worth of the
Costly, tiny trHles in their clothes,
hunting for customers in all sorts of
places where they are likely to And
customers, and. they make, at least
some of them make, a good living
out of it *
A nrl
—----J VM“w«o tmujr nuuiu
it is that very lew of them own the
Roods they carry. They do not. in
some, cases, even give bonds, or put
up any BOrt of security, excepting
that of their own personal character.
They are known or believed to be
thoroughly honest and reliable, and
the merchants who really have money
invested in the goods, trust them
fully and freely.
A New York man, who travels
almost continually, met one of these
peddlers in the reading-room of a
hotel m Hartford some time ago. and
told the New York Sun writer after
ward how astonished ho was when
the stranger approached him and be
gan showing his goods.
“He was a tall, good-looking young
fellow,” said the New Yorker, “and
was dressed very quietly and taste
fully. I noticed that there wasn't a
single article of jewelry visible on
his person, not even a gold button or
a watch-chain.
“The only thing that looked like
jewelry was a key-chain, and I ob
served afterward that that was made
very strongly and appeared to be, as
I presumed it was, made of the very
finest steel.
“He sat down beside me, and pull
ing at his chair drew out of his
pocket a chamois-leather bag or
purse. Out of this he took what
looked like a handful of small pack
ages, each wrapped up in fine white
tissue paper. These he unwrapped
one after another and showed me
the contents.
“In each one was a gem. There
were diamonds, rubies and emeralds,
and two or three pearls, but nearly
all of them were diamonds, and only
three or four were what 1 wonld call
unusually large stones; They wore
without settings, and as he unfolded
the papers he rubbed each stone
gently and deftly with a small piece
of flannel.
“Naturally, he was talking while
he did all this, and 1 soon gbt very
much interested,” the speaker con
tinued. “He began by asking me if
he could not sell me a diamond, and
I told him I thought not, but I said
it hesitatingly, because I wanted to
hear what -he had to say.
“. ‘I have them here,’ said the
peddler, ‘all the way from 150 up to
$3,50), but I can sell you one that
any gentleman would ba pleased to
wear for $20) to $801. Most persons,
even those who can afford it do not
care to wear very large ones, though
I have some customers who won't
look at a small stone.’
“You have regular customers,
then?” asked the man from New York,
and he answered: “Oh, yes; my trade
is mostly among actors and hotel
men, and I know nea:-ly all the promi
nent ones east of the Mississippi.”
And then he took out a powerful
glass and asked the New Yorker to
look at a beautiful brilliant he had
just unwrapped. •
“1 looked at it and admired it, but
I told him that I was no judge of
diamonds,” the New Yorker went on.
“All stones of the same size looked
pretty much alike to me, though I
could see that some seemed to be more
brilliant than others. He laughed a
little and said that he found that
comparatively few people were
judges, but that a great many were
reluctant to own it, and either be
lieved, or pretended to believe, that
they could tell a genuine diamond
from the best possible imitation and
a good stone from a bad one.
“ ‘Such people,’ he said, ‘buy dia
monds whenever they can be made to
that, t.hev are peltin'? bar
gains, but, as a rule, they pay more
than they need ta Strictly speaking,
there is no. such thing as a 'bargain’
in diamonds, except in buying one
from some one who is ignorant or
careless of the true value of what he
has, because a diamond has an in
trinsic value as well defined as that
of gold.
*• ‘However,’ he continued, *1 am
always glad to meet anybody who is
on the look-out for bargains, because
1 I generally manage to 6ell them
something at a good price. ’
••Then he went on to tell me that
he only carried the other stones as a
sort of side-show. Once in a great
while he would sell a pearl or a ruby,
but nearly all his business consisted
of sales of diamonds and watches.
••He kept on chatting, even after
I had satisfied him that I didn’t in
tend to buy anything, and he kept
some of hi*;parcels open for a con
siderable time while he was slowly
wrapping up the others.
••I thought at first that he seemed
to be careless about it but as I
watched him I noticed that he never
looked anywhere excepting either at
his goods or straight in my eye, and
1 could see that his vigilance was
never relaxed for an instant. ’.
The description affords a very fair
notion of the business these peddlers
do. and there are more of them going
around the world than most people
bare any idea of.
The staff they teka with them, too,
la of e kind th»t it would bo practtg*.
ally impossible to trace, for dlft*
monda. even good-sized onos, are
hard to identify, as a rule. There
are cases, of course, in which some
peculiarity of cutting Or the' accl
dent of great size renders identiflca
tion possible, but the stones that
could be positively sworn to are very
rare.
POVERTY IN INDIA. n
A Journey Among tlio Hot. Where the
Poorer Clone* Lin.
Poverty is the most striking (act
in India. In the streets of the oitles
the rleh are rarer than in the streets
of Kast London. In the oountry the
villages consist of huts of almost
uniform smallness, and the Helds are
w orked by farmers, most of whom
are too poor to do anything but
soratch tho land.
In one city we went from house to
house among the poor. A common
friend gained us a welcome, and we
were everywhere received with
courtesy. One house which we
visited was entered directly from the
street. There was neither flooring,
fire-place, windows nor furniture. A
few embers were burning on the mud
floor, on which only is it lawful for
a pious person to eat, and a few pots
were standing against the walls,
with, if 1 remember rightly, one
chest.
It was a holiday morning, and the
i family which in India may include
| grandfather, sons, daughters-in-law
| and grandchildren was gathered.
I The men had Blept in the open
I warm air, and had come in
to be served by the" women
with the morning meal of a few
ounces of grain and butter. They
wore no clothes but rose to bow us
our welcome. After the usual cour
tesies, and when we had told them
about ourselves, the talk went thus:
“What is your trade?”
“Shoemakers.”
••What can each worker earn?”
“About five rupees a month.”
“What rent do you payP” _ :
“Eight rupees a month. ”
From which answer we gathered
that not even a paternal government
nor system cf land nationalized can
prevent tho growth of landlordism.
The land in this case probably be
longed to the state, and had been let
to some individual at a yearly rent,
subject to revision after thirty years;
but. the land had been let and sublet
till the rent paid by the tenants far
exceeded that received by the
government.
In another house, or rather shed,
lived a mill-hand and his family. He,
j too. was preparing to enjoy the holi
day in “singing” and “seeing the
lights;” which on that night, in
honor of the new year, would be
placed in every window in the city.
His earnings were ten rupees a
month. Out of the margin, that is,
out of three shillings a week, he
would have to support a large fami
ly and save enough to enable him in
a few years to return and get land
in his own village.
_
Killing; a Horse by Tlir iw hr.
There is a certain way that exper
ienced stockmen know of throwing a
horse down so as to break his neck
and kill him at once. An ordinary
halter is put on the horse, the lead
strap from it passed between the
horse’s front legs, a turn being taken
around the far one near the fetlock.
The executioner then hits the horse
a sharp cut .Jfith a whip, and when
he jumps up pulls sharply and,
strongly on the halter strap. The
horse strikes head first, with the en
tire weight on his neck. The fall is
invariably fatal.
READY READING.
In Spain water in which a wedding
ring has been dipped is good for sore
eyes.
The United States has 11.1 medical
schools, regular, eclectic and homeo
pathic.
In China a boy begins his schooling
at five years of age and is at his study
nearly twelve hours a day.
One of the prized relics belonging
to the New York historical society is
the tail of King George III.’s horse.
Recent statistics show that England
contains over a million widows, while
the widowers number only half that
many.
Among1 the Kondeh people, who
live on Lake Nya<sa in Africa, the
favorite form of suicide is to enter the
water and allow one's self to be de
voured by a crocodile.
Thomas Nobis, a new York letter
carrier, has got himself in trouble by
his passion for collecting stamps. He
was caught in the act of tearing the
stamp from a letter from Copenhagen.
A lioston man who has acquired and
kept riches says that one of his rules
of life has been never to lend any
money on personal promises to pay
that he was not willing to give away
and able to lose.
A suit in the New York courts over
the possession of a child has been de
cided satisfactorily to both parties.
The mother will have possession of
the boy during the summer, and in
winter he will live with his father.
Probably the richest town in the
i country, in point of population, is
Brookline, a suburb of Boston. The
inhabitants number less than 13,000,
and own property valued at #62,000,
000. Its wealth increased 114 perj cent
last year.
Dr. and Mrs. Jordan Kinyan of
Perry, Ga , were married for the sec
ond time recently. Several years ago
they were married, but later it
was learned that the bride's former
husband was still living. Things
were amicably settled, by the first
husband getting divorced from Mrs.
1 Kinyan and the latter again marrying
Dr. Kinyan.
' * - ‘
•100 Reward, OlOO.
TOereadersof tbh paper will bejpleaaed
to learn that tbara ia at least one
disease that science has been able to cure in
all lta stages, and that ie Catarrh. Halt's
Catarrh Cure ia the only positive cure now
known to the medical fraternity Catarrh
being a constitutional disease, requires a
constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh
Cure is taken internally, acting dlreutlv
upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the
system, thereby destroying the foundation
of the disease, and giving strength to the
patient by building up the constitution and
assisting nature in doing its work. The
proprietors have so much faith in its cura
tive powers, that they offer One Hundred
Dollars for any case that it tails to cure.
Send for list of testimonials.
Address, K. J. CHENEY *CO.,Toledo..O.
HT Sold hy Druggists, Tflo. ’ ’
miiueura ui nBnciieiior tiuai.
A London correspondent says: It is
evident that . the Manchester Ship
canal, which wili open on January],
will obtain a large share of its business
from cotton carrying steamers.. The
management of the .canal say that
several steamers have already engaged
to bring cotton from New Orleans and
Galveston to Manchester direct, and
333 spinners, owning more than 20,
000,000 spindles and consuming about
350,000 tons of raw cotton yearly, have
signed a statement booming the new
route. They pledge themselves to give
preference, when buying to arrive, to
cotton shipped direut, and when buying
on spot to cotton imported direct and
stored in Manchester._
A Timely Bit of Advice.
In these times of grip and pneumonia it
is of great importance that we should know
where to look for a safe and sure remedy.
A slight cold may become a serious one, the
scarcely noticeable pain in the chest is too
often the forerunner of pneumonia. The
first cough may lead to consumption (a
cough is always dangerous.) Never neglect
a cold or cough for even one day, but get at
once, as a safe and sure remedy, Kemp's
Balsam, the best cough cure, which is re
commended on all sides. It should lie kept
in the house regularly to avoid delay when
needed. It is sold at all the drug stores.
Mrs. Yonngma Explains.
Good News: Little son—"What is
bricks made of ?”
Mrs. Youngma—“Brioks are made of
day. **
"But clay is soft, ma.” . •
"After the clay is shaped, the bricks
are baked.’’
"Oh, yes, I know now. Like your
biscuits. - • •
Iryoonre troubled with malaria take
Beechnut's Bills. A positive specific, nuth
: ing like it. 35 cents a box.
A Fatal Scare.
Sunday, while a young man, aged 17,
and hiB mother, named l’eters, residing
ten miles east of Macon, were on their
way to church, they overtook Miss Mag
gie Pierce, aged 16, who was also going
to church. When Miss Pierce heard
them coming, she stepped to one side of
the road. As Peters and his mother
passed she jumped out to scare them.
Young Peters drew his revolver and
fired at the young woman The ball
took effect in her head on the side of
her nose. Her wound is considered fatal.
The boy asserted that he fired before
he knew who Miss Pierce was.—Macon
(Ma) Dispatch.
THE MODERN MOTHER
Has found that her little ones are im
proved more by the pleasant laxative,
Syrup of Figs, when in need of the lax
ative effect of a gentle remedy than by
any other, and that it is more accepta
ble to them. Children enjoy it and it
benefits them. The true remedy, Syrup
of Figs, is manufactured by the Cali
fornia Fig Syrup Ca only.
Why Bird Egg* Are Long,
Dr. Nicalsky of St. Petersburg at
tributes the form of birds' eggs to
graity. He thinks that every egg not
yet coated with a solid shell departs
from the spherical form and elongates
simply because of pressure on it by the
walls of the ovary. In birds which
keep a vertical position when at rest
(such as the falcon and owl), the soft
egg becomes short through the bird’s
weight acting against the ovarian pres
sure. In birds which, like the grebe,
are nearly always swimming, the egg
lengthens, because the weight of the
body acts in the same direction as the
ovarian compression.
When you want a friend don't choose a
man whose children are afraid of him.
Borne little lions have a very big roar.
If the Babjr I. Catting Teeth,
Be Hire and use that old and well-tried remedy, Mna.
Wisslow’s Sootbino trier for Children Teething.
There is no sharper sword than that In
the hand of truth._
Conrhing Leads to CeBianip.
lion. Kemp's Balsam will stop the cough
at once. Go to your druggist today and get
a sample bottle free. Largo bottles 50 cants
and $1.00. _._
A rose measured by its fragrance makes
a cabbage head look little,
11 Hanson'* Single tern Halve.'*
Warranted to cure nr muney refunded. Aek your
druggist for It. 1-rieo 15 rent-.
Many people fail to accomplish anything
because they try to do too much.
liegeman’s Camphor lee with Glycerine
Cu re* Chapped Bands and knee. Tender or Sole keel
Chilblain*.Files, Sc. C.Q. Clark Co., New Haven, Cl
Tomorrow is the fool’s seed time. Todaj
is the time to do.
See Colchester Spudlng Boots ad v. In other column.
Letting the boys run the streets at nighl
is a good way to help the barkeeper.
Don't Conch.
Tb nil bronchiclal affection* the par
oxysms of the edugh should bo plieed
na far as'possible under control of the
will.
The old Idea that disagreeable sensa
tion* In the throat indicate the pres
ence thereof "Something which ought
to cornu up" has been displaced by the
more rational view that the continued
and prolonged effort to expel that
"something" are often productive of,
more mischief than would result from
its being allowed to remain.
There is attendant upon every disease
of the bronchial tubes a greater or lese
amount of mucus, which exudes from
the membranous lining of the tube. Of
course there are the accompanying signs
of inflammation which is for the most
part responsible for the disagreeable
sensations which we instinctively at
tempt to alleviate by eouglng.
Now it is certain thnt. Fn a great ma
jority of instances, where the general
health of the patent is not attacked,
this exudation undergoes what is called
resolution; that is, it is re-absorbed
through the fine network of blood
vessels about the tubes into the blood,
where it is taken care of, and complete
recovery is effected.
wmm wakefulness Has It* Birth.
Intelligent physicians are re urdlug Willi
■it eye less und les- favorable the uitof nar
cotic'. While theno are u ed In extreme
ca-es to afford >.reatly needed temporary
relief, professional efforts are far more *en
erally directed, now-days th n formerly, to
means of tiulld ng up ilie nervous system us
the basis of Its healthful quietude. This Is
one reason why H< Metier'- tomach Hitters
has received toe sanction of plivslclaus us a
u rvlne tonic Indigos Ion unrelieved Is
the fruitful father of lusomulu. und the re
lief of the parent malady by .lie llltters Is
usually followe i by a icturn to tranquil
sloeii. Overwork, mcntul anxiety, sedont ry
habits Impair olgestlo i and weaken the
nerves. The llltters siren aliens them by
renewing the utility to digest and assim
ilate the food. Besides tills, It liualthfully
stimulates the liver und kidneys llllllpus
ness. c nstlputlon, rheuniutlsm and debility
uru remedied by this sterling medicine.
They're "On."
Amateur photography has taught
many thousands the truth as to the
cost of photographic process and made
it more difficult than it once was for
professional photographists to charge
exorbitant rates for so-called "extras.”
It sometimes happens that SI per doz
en extra is added to the price of photo
graphs for processes that consume little
or no time and require the use of ma
terials that are almost valueless.
Shiloh** CoMomptlao Coro
In told on a puarantpo. It cum Incipient rontnimt*
Uou, It m Um beat Uouffh Cura. BoU..00vU,fc|lAUb
A Slight Confanion.
Washington Star: She tripped down
the stair and answered »the postman's
knock, for she was expecting, letters
far too precious to be intrusted to foot
man or maid.
"What have we here,” she enquired
smilingly, as she took the missives,
"Billets doux?”
"Not exactly. Miss.” replied the new
letter carrier with ablush, "my name's
Billy Dooley."
Have You Asthma?
Dr. R. Schlffmann.st. Paul. Minn., will mall
a trial package of "Schlffmaun's Asthma Cure”
free to any sufferer. He udvertUes Dy giving
It away. Never fulls to give Instant relief m
worst cases and cures where others full. Name
this paper und send address fur a tree trial
package. _
To Suit tbe Season.
Young People: Harry (at the all
year-round hotel in the Rockarondle
mountains)—"Papa, does the landlord
charge you 84 a day now, Bame as in
summer?”
Mr. Brown—"Yes, Harry, and why
not?”
Harry—"1 think he might charge
less. The days are much shorter, you
know.”
Throat Diseases commence with a
Cough, Cold or Sore Throat. "Brown's
Bronchial Trochee" give immediate relief.
Sold only In boxes. Price 25 els.
It is a risky thing to get mad and stay
that way until after sunset. .
As a permanent Investment nothing pays
like doing good.
GOOD SPIRITS
■V '
&
ioiiow gooo iic&it a
while low aplrlta,
melancholia. Impair
ed memory, morose,
. or irritable temper,
i tear of impend
y
f In t
ing calamity and
D thuueand and
one derange
menta of body
It
and mind, reault
from pernicious,
solitary prac
tices, often indulged
in by tho young,
through Ignorance ui
their ruinous conae
uuenccs. Nervous debil
ity, and loss of manly
result from such unnatural habits.
To reach, reclaim and restore such unfortu
nates to health and happiness, is the aim of an
association of medical gentlemen, who have
prepared a treatise, written In plain but chaste
language and treating of the nature, symp
toms and curability, by home treatment, of
such diseases.
A copy of this useful book will, on receipt
of this notice, with 10 cents In stamps, for
postage, he mailed securely sealed in a plain
envelope. Address, World’s Dibpeksam
Medical Association, Buffalo, N. Y.
HCIiOinUJ°HN W.JHORUI8,
__Waahluglon, D,C,
■^Successfully Prosecutes Claims.
■ L*t«PrtnctpsJ Bzimtner V B. Pension Bureau,
■ 3yrsluliMt war, iuljutllcaliugcbtitus, utty •iuoek
At 4* Price
m 4 11 IUM LUlt'AMIMCsLEiO.fCfctasgs,III.
B9 ST. JACOBS OIL
PAINS
»«* mil tho World Kdoois tbo CURB ia SURB.
S ouvenir CoinforEighty Cents
NEVER OFFERED BEFORE FOR LESS THAN ONE DOLLAR.
’ Father or Mother; '■«
Sister or Brother;
Sweetheart or L*over
Would b« pleased to
receive as a
Mimas or New years Present
Something they could always keep as a reminder of the Co
lumbian year. What more appropriate than a
WORLD’S » FAIR t SOUVENIR ♦ HALF » DOLLAR?
Sent Post-Paid to any address for 80 cents in t or 2-cent stamps.
<Wj • United number left. Order qulok from F. O. BROWN, 88-03. Wees Jnckeon
Street, Chicago, III.
NOW, conies the
seasoir when
dainty and delicious
cake and pastry are V
required. Royal
Baking; Pow
deris indispensable
in their preparation.
>For finest food I can use •
none but Royal.—A. Fortin,
Chtf, fVbiU How, fir Prn•
idtntt CUvtland and Arthur,
*0*»t RAKIM SOWOIA to,. IN WALL ST.. K. ».
A Baa's Manor?.
Every farmer knows how troubled » >.
hen will be when set to hatch a setting f
of ducks' extra when the young listen v
and take to the water, as young ducks
naturally will. Perhaps the rule works ^
the other wav as well. A hen that la ’
set to hatch ducks' eggs when she Is n 1
pullet cannot know any better about X?
the Instinctive liking or disliking of ’■'B
her young for the water. A corral
nondent of the New York Sun tells of n->":
hen that when a pullet hatched u set*
ting of ducks'eggs Ever after when t:
hens' eggs ware given her she hastened v'
with the young chicks to the water's
edge, and lifted them into the water,
when she could not get them In other
wise. The hen finally become old and
a confirmed sitter. A setting of ducks*
eggs was given her. As soon as they :
hatched she hastened to the water's ,
edge. The ducks took to the water. >
The hen's satisfaction with this was too V’
great, as she died a few hours after, •
returning from the lake. The difficulty? :
in getting a pullet to hatch ducks' eggs
IKS.
is, to induce them to set the four week.,
which ducks’ eggs require. Most young
fowls are apt to be impatient and* leave
the nest before the three weeks needed
to hatch hens' eggs have expired. b
HAVE YOU COT A DOLLARS
DO YOU WANT A JOB? ' 'X
The railroads are ruin a to employ C.W.Ofe
young men and women—they have to do so.
If you want u lob we can help youi whether V
you are experienced or not. Clerks, Train*1”
men and Mechunles uro constantly needed
Our Uuide to Kali road Employment gives all
necessary Information. Thousands have oh- ■
talncd situations In the sumo way. Jtts
complied l>y a prominent railroad man. If
not as represented money refunded. They'
are selling fast, and only a limited number
to be sold. 1 ou cHn make more money In a
your by railroading tlinn cun bo made any* ’
wbore Vi** in IIvo. I'rloe II. poMturo frw»f v
send order* to THK KAII.WaY lit'lUK
run. t'U., Iia No. jstli Ht.. Omaha. Nrn
^ uuLumaitH
SPADING
BOOT
1$
.*rM
*
■B8T 1/1 MAKKtfT.
Bir8Ti\FiT.
, besiw v we a kino
QUALITY. ,*
% The nuterortep pole**.*
i J -■$
! Jj tend* tho whole* jmljftU'
pro.
(down to tlm heel, p,w
I tecliu* the boot ill difr*
I trios and in other hem
1 work.
ASK YOUR nRAUat
FOR THEM
and don't lie put off
’ with inferior coodn
un.tmivrir.H H('BDKH CO.
ELY’S CATA RI
CREAM BALMf
Cleanse* tbo
Nasal Passages,
Allays Pain and
Inflammation,
Heals the Sores.
Restores the
Senses of Taste
and Smell.
TRY THE CURE.
A partlcl© U apn]icd”into ouch nostril and Is
|*ricp Iv.j cents nt Driictfi-ts, or by nttt
ELY BROTH M Warron At.. Nevr Yoi*^ (
PLAYING CARDS
You can obtain a pack of best quality playing
card* by sending fifteen cents in postage to 1*. *v
KUSTfS?, Gen'l Pass. Agent C., tt *Q. It. ’
Chicago, HI. ^
MEKD YOUROWN HARNESS
fWITH
THOMSON’S
8LOTTED
CLINCH RIVETS.
No toola required. Only a hammer needs*
to drive and clinch them easily and quickly;
'leaving the clinch abeolutely smooth. Requiring
no hole to be made In the leather nor burr lor the
Nivels. They ere S1K0NG, TOUGH and I U*.BtE.
Millions now in use. All lengths, uniform or
assorted, put up in boxei
.Ault your itralrr for fbem. or send 40&.
ftn stamps for a box of 100; assorted sizes.
MANUPACTUKEV »T "
JUD80N L. THOMSON MFO.OOv
Waltkea, Maes. , “
WELL MACHINERY
mutated catekxnw tbotriu WKL1
APOEB8. BOCK DRILLS. HYDRAULIC
AND JETTING MACHINERY, etc.
B««» Van. Hava been te«ted i *
all wrnmtol
THE PECH nra.
Nan City’,
18 8. Canal St., Chicago.
8. HYDRAULIC
IINKRY, etc. j
i teatod and /
3. CO. JL
tl. lava ft i \
JUSL:
WORN NIGHT AND _
Hold* tba WPOfL_... .
turn will* caaaundar ail
clreunuttancea. Petfa«
VIA VX Ad^Mtment. Comfort
a Cure Hew Patented
t re ted ceUloi,_ __
rale* for salfsww—drw
mant rent ooct
teeled. O. V HO
nm. oo., „
TCI, fee* Yorfc City. %
DEAF"*” AWJfeASJMmSMBr
V bm ♦‘err. Mfel wlwn Mil i*nw«1»m i»ii. HoidfTCTCTC
“ 'TB'w»jr,N.Y. Wt|i«(i<rbnukurpri>iiirf nKK '
Map of the United States.
A large, handsome imp of the United States ~
mount el, and suited for home use. is issued by tht i
Burlington Route. Copies will he mailed to any
address, on receipt of hfteen cents in postage, by
P. S. KUSTIS, Gen*l Pass. Agent, C., B. A (1
R. R., Chicago, Hi. V.f
MARRIAGE PAPER ZSSkJi^^
OllMNKl^ MONTHLY, TOLEOO,OHUk
If afflicted with
sore«j«a, usa
_iThompsM’s Ejs Watsr.
W. N. U. Omaha—51. 1593,