The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, December 28, 1893, Image 7

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    knowledge
Brines comfort and improvement and
• ereonal enjoyment when
. <. to personal enjoyment when
ltiv uscdT The many, who lien bet*
2 than others and enjoy life more, with
w, expenditure, by more promptly
Noting the world’s best products to
fteels of Phy«Pdfb““S’ wUl «««*
T: yaiUe to health of the pure liquid
JJltive principles embnoed in the
_medy, Syrup of Figs.
Its excellence Is due to its presenting
iothe form most acceptable and pleas
int to the taste, the refreshing and truly
beneficial propertiea of a perfect lax
Itjvc • effectually cleansing the system,
dispelling colds, headaches and teyers
md permanently curing constipation.
It has given satisfaction to millions and
„et with the- approval <t the medical
profession, because «t acts «n the Kid
ievs Liver and Bowels without weak
ening them and $t w [perfectly free Iron
every objectionhble substance.
jsvrUp of Figs is for sale by all dru>
eiste in 50c and $1 bottles, but it k man
ufactured by the California Fig Syrup
Co only, whose name k printed on every
package, also the name, Syrup of Figs,
and being well informed, you will not
accept any substitute if offered.
Miss C. G. MCClayb, School*
teacher, 753 Park Place, Elmira, Hi.
Y. “This Spring while away from
home teaching my first term in a
country school I was perfectly
wretched with; that human agony
called dyspepsia. After <dieting for
two weeks and getting mo better, .a
friend wrote me, suggesting that I
take August Flower. The very next
day I purchased a bottle. 1 am de
lighted to say that August Flower
helped me so that I have quite re
covered from my indisposition.” £
The NEXT MORNING I FEEL BRIGHT AND
NEW AND MY COMPLEXION IS BETTER.
X7 doctor says It acta gently on the stomach, liver
•na kidneys, and is a piaaaaot laxative. This
drink Is made from berta, aad laipreparad for oM
a* easily as tea. It la called
LAKE’S MEDICIHE
All druggists rail It at Mo. And 91 a puckagu. If
Jou cannot get It, (end rour address for « free
!“£['• *'»««’> Fanjlf Hedld» nOTM
UalwnclaoMh.Ajr. Addrom
f ORATOR a. WOODWARD JjlB0X.lt. X
s
wifts specific
• •
For renoTutlng tho entire system,
eliminating All Foisans from the
_ ,- Blood, whether of scrofulous of
■“anal origin, this preparatiombas no egual.
"For eighteen months I had an
1 eating sore on my tongue. I was
i_, | . treated by best local physicians,
mi obtained no relief; the sore gradually grew
I Anally took 8. 8.8., and was entirely
*"e<i after using a few bottles."
C. B. MoLsaoRB, Henderson, Tex.
Treatise on Blood and .Skin Dis
eases mailed free.
Tna&wisr Specific Go.,
Atlanta, (M
w
; rWE CANNOT
' SPARE/ In
healthy flesh — nature never
burdens the body with too
“>uch sound flesh. Loss of
flesh usually indicates poor as
similation, which causes the
loss of the best that's in food,
the fat-forming element. \
Scott’s Emulsion
ofpure cod liver oil withhypo
Phosphites contains the very
essence of all foods. In -Booth
*r form can so much nutrition
be taken and assimilated. Its
range of usefulness has no Imita
tion where weakness exists.
2?*,*0°u * Bows*. Okmlato. 4k
IHsssi
JCKAPOO !
_ INDIAN l' •
sacwa!
The greatest Lirer, Z
• — laiulj
Stomach, Blood f
Kidney Bemetly- m
Made of Boole,2
Berko anil Herbs, Z
and Is Absolutely Z
Free I ron Z
(VV All Minerals
' ' f\ or OtberZ
. 1 \ Harmful In-ss
lAureillents.Z
S GwSffirVf
jj** ■<I»Uw, l/^U^lUw* HaVei, Ct.f
APPJLE&WITH HltfPQRK.
A BLACK BEAR THAT APPRI.
& Cl ATE D CO O D POOD; :i h’
f»ow Farmer ilarena Klllam Saflfcred
rrB“ the Depredation* of a Fnur-rnot
O.utton and How He Had HI. Ite
On the Wallen- Faopack.
The Wallen-Paupack river run#
through a Wild but beautiful valley
of rennsylvahia and New Jersey and
and 1# oftei^skirted by dense swamps,
and where the big hemlocks, birch
apd oak trees still stand, bruin finds
his congenial haunts and 'plays wild
havoc among the sometime fertile
farms of the Paupack valley, carrying
away young calves, but occasionally
loses his life by reason of being too
fond of climbing apple tiees.
Marcus Killam is a "logger” and a
farmer and has 1,00) acres under 3ul»
tivatlon in Palmyra township, *
It was in the autumn that
he found a pig missing, whose dying
squeal had not aroused the honest
old farmer from his sleep of the
just; and what enraged him most, a
(favorite apple tree was scratched up
and down the trunk, the Uinbs were
broken and the tree was absolutely
denuded of apples. Bears had been
there as old Marcus well knew.
Summoning his nephew, Volney Ben
nett, a lad only sixteen, but ready tp
shoot anything from a woodpecker
to a white Rocky Mountain goat, he
put the boy out on the trail, to diag
nose the situation.
Young Pennett sought the neigh •
boring village on the Wallen-Pau
pabk river and there found three
travel-stained hunters who had
trailed the pig-stealing bear all the
way from within three miles of
Binghamton, New York, across the
river and in among the big hemlocks
and oaks of Palmyra township. . The
New York sportsmen were down ■ in
Mie mouth, because after a tramp of
ten miles they had lost all traces of
. the bear. Young Volnejr was cute
enough, while "pumping” the foreign'
bear hunters not to say anything
about Old Ephraim’s fondness for
raw apples and his Uncle Kil lam’s
uncooked shoats, says the Philadel-*
phla Times.
There was an “early to supper”
and au ••early to bed” at the Killam
farm boute that night and long be
fore break of day a breakfast of
fried trout, flapjacks and wild honey
and buttermilk antedated the hun
iters’ departure in search of bear
meat. A casual glance at the pig
pen revealed the blood of another
lost pig a year old, bodily lifted by
bruin over the palings of the pig pen;
.another apple tree stripped. Then
old Marcus breathed firebrands and
death against that particular black
bear. Marcus had old Betsy, a rifle
with which he had brought down a
bounding buck in the Paupack valley
•"sixty years ago come next Christ
mas.” Young Bennett had a double
barreled shotgun loaded with buck
,sbot. All day they tracked that bear
through the hemlock swamps and
through the laurel aud wild black
berry bushes.
Night eame on and the old farmer
ashed hi* nephew if he could stand a
night in the woods. “Sure,” said
the boy. and producing a box of
matches and a fish-line, he handed
the matches to old man Killam and
with the trout line found a trout
stream emptying into the river, and
every hole in that stream knew him
and he knew it.
Farmer Killam soon had the fire
ready, Dut not too soon, for Volnjy
returned' in half an hour lauen
with a dozen beautiful trout, which
wrapped in a moist newspaper, after
being washed and cleaned, made a
supper** fit for the gods on high'
Olympus* and the old man produced
a flask of generous size from the side
pockqt of bis hunting-coat, hut
whether it contained buttermilk or
the spirit of -“O’ he joyful" young
Volney did not disclose. The hun
ters had tramped fifteen miles in a
hot August day and they slept with
out dreaming and only Gabriel's final
••horn” or a catamount’s yell could
have broken their slumbers.
A council oi war was neia at *
o'clock in the morning1 and Farmer
Killam decided that the hear would
try .another pig that morning, as he1
had swallowed undisturbed the best
yearlings in the pen already. Water
•was brought up in the now empty
flask and the wood-fire extin
guished, for everything was as dry
as a tinder box. A straight walk
was made for the apple orchard and
just as the bridegroom of the morn
ing left his kisses of purple and gold
on the edge <jf a flossy eastern cloud
the anxious hunters reached the
dense oak woods fringing the apple
orchard on the west side. a
•Farmer Killam. who has an eye
Hite a falcon, and don’t wear -glasses
for all he is 75, peered out from be
hind a big Oak tree.
-My God,” he said, and he is a
good Methodist, gasping for breath.
-My God, boy! there’s old Ephraim
a ruinin’ my pippin apple tree!"
The wind was right and the bear
was full of fresh pork, and uncon
scious of danger, he munched pippin
apples while the stealthy hunters
sought a coign of vantage in a
fence corner. By the dim and misty
light Killam drew a bead with his
trusty “Betsy” on the' too confiding
bruin.'
The rifle-ball went home and down
dropped a 800-pound black bear;both
hunters ran to the bleeding bear,
and as Killain, flushed with success,
i'cached with his bowie for Ephraim’s
jugular, the bear, the blood gushing
from his right shoulder, hit Killam
with his left paw, knocking him six
feet out from under.the pippin tree
and leaving bare three inches of the
farmer’s scalp, which will star bare
till he dies.
While the old men wm temporal*- I
ily hors du combat the youtlitul Vol
ney gave the beer a coup do grace at
ten paces and sent a load of buck
shot crushing Into his brain. Ephraim i
quivered and died. Old man KiUara
soon revived and the hunters , exe
cuted a srar dance around the pon
dorous bear. *-(. ts
END OF A FRENCH BULLY. ,
nu IhjrtP HlianIM With Admiration
hy Hit Rntlro Oonmnltgr.
, A rather odd affair occurred in the
French provinces the other day. It
seems that in a certain small peasant
community there existed a njan who
! was the terror of the place. He ex-.
acted tribute from ail the small;
farmers in the shape of provisions
and wine, while the poorer peasants
lie let off with a few days of labor in
his fields. He was a perfect Her
cules in* size and strength, and had
been a soldier, but left the army to
lead this most easy-going existence.
No one dared to refuse his exactions,
for if they did they were roundly
thrashed. The rural policeman,
when complained to, went to remon
strate with Murat, which was the
name of this pleasant person, and
was so severely beaten that he was
in bed for a week.
No one dared to invoke the aid of
the law, for Murat threatened terri
ble 1 reprisals. The victims wrote
anonymous denunciations, it is true,
but when the court ordered invest!
| {rations no one would consent' to
testify against their tyrant This
fin-de-siecle lord of the manor seemed
destined to rule for years over the
serfs who had got used to his domi
nation and called him Priuce Murat,
and endured him as one endures the
hail and the phylloxera, because they
did not seo how they could do otherj
wise. Unfortunately for the Her
cules in question, however, be fell
foul of one of his serfs, a rather lazy
old man, and left him for dead by
the wayside.
Naturally the victim refused to
prosecute, whereupon his son, who
was a sturdy man and a great
poacher, sought out Prince Murat,
and expressed his adverse opinion of
the princely personage’s conduct.
He, objecting to criticism, struck
the insulting creature with his heavy
club, whereupon the poachor, whose
name was Court placidly shot him
through the head with the gun, which
was a necessary tool of his trade.
The assassin then walked calmly
off and meeting the rural policeman
asked him politely to arrest him, as
he had killed the “prince.” Where
upon the policeman fell upon his
neck and embraced him with tears of
joy. The assassin was escorted to
the jail by a species of triumphal
procession of all the inhabitants of
the village, and being promptly ac
quitted on the ground of having
acted in self-defense, the grateful
neighbors clubbed together and pre
sented him with a handsome sum of
money as a small token of their
gratitude.
MEN AND THINGS.
Lire queen bees are shipped from
this country to Japan.
The government pays fifteen cents a
(1,000 for the shipment of currency by
express.
Toronto capitalists intend building
a steel bridge across the Niagara
gorge near the old railway suspension
bridge.
At Evergreen, Ala., a man who sent
a challenge to one who had offended
him,has been sentenced to two years’
imprisonment. *
The family with tho longest known
pedigree is that of Confucius which
forms the aristocracy of China. Con
fucius lived 550 years B. C.
By the force of a wave at Bishop’s
Rock lighthouse, the bell was torn
from its fastenings, although situated
100 feet above high water mark. At
Unst, in the Shetland islands, a door
was burst in at a height of 105 feet
above the level of the sea.
I
SMIRKS AND SMILES.
I “How do yon know that is Hanson?*
| He has hn umbrella oyer him.”
“Know him! Don't I see that it is
Simpson's umbrella?"
Pedestrian—You shcftild be in better
business than begging'. A great,
strong fellow like you ought to look
for work. Beggar—What! Throw up
a sure thing for an uncertainty?
First Villager, returning after long
absence—What has become of old Mr.
Simpson? Second Villager, solemnly
—He is in heaven. First Villager—
i Oh, dear, I am sorry to hear that!
j “I wish.” said a forgetful man to
his friend, “that you would ask me to
! lend you my umbrella the next time it
rains?” “Why?” asked the friend.
“So that I can remember who bor
rowed it last.”
“Why do thoso children over the
way get such a terrible thrashing
every morning?” “Ah! a genre paintdr
lives there whose specialty is weeping
children. So every morning he whips
his models into shape.”
Teacher—Parse the sentence "Yu
catan is a peninsula.” Pupil, who
never could understand grammar,any
how—Yucatan is a proper noun, nom'- ..
tive case, second person, singular—
“How do you make that out?" “First
person Icatan,second person Yucatan,
third person Heeatan; plural, first {
person Wecatan, second per—” “Go
to your seat!”
His Honor—You were found drunk
and singing on the street last night.
Prisoner—I know it, your honor. Let
me off as cheap as you c.in. His
Honor—What was he singing.offlcer?”
No. 41,144—“A Hundred Fathoms
Deep.” His Honor—Humph! I’ll make
It ten cents a fathom, and it isn't a
bargain day in this court, either. Just
hand the (14 to the clerk. Next pris
oner. »'
The AbMat-MIndvd Mm.
Texas Sifting*: A German professor
was remarkably absent-minded. When
ever he was very busily engaged in his
studio, solving some abtruse problem,
his wife was in the habit of bringing
him his dinner. His favorite dish was
pancakes and molasses. One day his
wife brought him a largo pancake and
a jug of molasses, and went down to
the kitchen. Pretty soon she heard the
professor ring the bell.
“Why is it, Gretchen, that yon bring
me nothing to eat except molasses?
why have yon brought me' n« pan
cake?” asked the absent-minded profes-.
sor.
t ”Ach, himmel!” exclaimed his wife.
**you have tucked the pancake around
^our neck, thinking that it was a nap
A New Year’s am Heralded.
The measureless popularity of Iloatetter’s.
Stomach Bitters lias been the growth of
moie ti.aii n third of a century. As in the
past, tbs coming uow year will be ushered
In by the appearance of afresh Almanac,
clearly setting forth th i nature, uses and
• perailon of this medic.ns of world wide
fame. 11 Is.well worth perusal. Abolu e
accuracy In the astionomlcnl calculations'
and calendar will, as brlore, be valuab e
characteristics, while the read lug matter
wbl lncluati statistic t, hum ir and g-neral
Information, accampan ed by admirably
executed Illustrations. The Almanac Is
1-sued from the publishing department of
The Hostetter > omuuny at Pittsburgh, and
will be printed • n tbrlrgiresses In English,
Uerman. i leuch, Welsh, Norwegian. swed
Ism, Holland, H hemtan and Spanish All
druggist* and couutry ueulert furnish It
without cost.
A Burled Perfume.,
A box was recently found amidst the
ruins of Tompeil. The box was of
marble or alabaster, about two inches
square, and closely sealed. When
opened it was found to be full of a sort
of pomatum or grease, hard, but very
fragrant The smell resembled that of
roses, but was much more fragrant
What the perfume was made of cannot
be conjectured now, but it is singular
that men of the nintoenth century
should be able to regale their noses
• witji perfumes prepared in the.flrst
Tbs rscAi, treatment of catarrh is very
unsatisfactory, ha thousands can testify.
Proper local treatment is positively neces
sary to success, but many, if not most, of
the remedies iu general use afford but tem
porary beneBt. A cure certainly cannot be
expected from snuffs, powders, douches and
washes. Ely's Cream Balm, which is so
highly commended, is a remedy which com
bines the important requisites of quick ac
tion. specific curative power with perfect
safety and pleasantness tp the patient.
Europeans every year eat 0,470,000 tons
of beef, mutton and pork.
The world's sugar plantations produce
every year 6,000,000 tons of sugar. s
How’s This!
We offer One Hundred Dollars reward for
any ease of Catarrh that cannot be cured by
Hall’s Catarrh Cure.
F. J. CHENEY * CO., Toledo, O.
We, the undersigned, have known F. J.
Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him
perfectly honorable in all business transac
tions and financially able to carry out any ob
ligations made by their firm.
West A Trcax, Wholesale Druggists,
Toledo, O.; Wai.dino, KinnaM A Uarvix,
Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act
ing directly upon tho blood and mucous sur
faces of the system. Testimonials sent free,
Price 75e. per bottle. Bold by all Druggists,
He Was Disappointed.
A tenant went to see his landlord
about a house he had just rented, and
about which be had some fault tp find.
He'mentioned several drawbacks, and
then said: •
“And furthermore Mr. Oppenhelmer,
the cellar is full of water."
Mr. Oppenhelmer, the landlord, eyed
him with reproach, and then exclaimed:
“Vull of v alter?1 Veil, vat you ex
pect? Vull of champagne?"—Harper’s
Bazar,
ST. JACOBS OIL CURES MOICALLY
SPRAINS.
Chronic Cases of Many Years Cured Easily.
F.B.C.
IS^Cm till, out, last insertion.
Finest, Best and Cheapest BUSINGS* COLLEOE In the
West. Short Method. and Business Principles a Speci
alty, Actual Business Department unenualed.
Tuition. Seventeen (IT) weeks, - •1(100.
_ . “ Thlrty-slx <S8) weeks, - 30.00.
students can enter at any time. Bend tor Circular and
particu- FRtMONT BUSINESS COLLEGE,
FRBKONT, HEBRA8K*.
lars to
Especially for Fanners, Miners, R. R. Hands and others. Double sole ex
tending down to the heel. EXTRA WEARING QUALITY,
t housands of Rubber Boot wearers testify this is the best they ever had.
W» yWf dllllf fpf tilMH and don’t bo persuaded into an inferior article.
S ouvenir Coin for Eighty Cents
NEVER OFFERED BEFORE FOR LESS THAN ONE DOLLAR.
Father or Mother; „ -
Sister or Brother; '
%s
Sweetheart or Isover
Would b« ploasod to
recolvt as a
Christa #r New Year’s Prfsent
Something they could always keep as s reminder of the Co
lumbian year. What more appropriate than a
WORLD S f FAIR ? SOUVENIR » HALF » DOLLAR?
Sent Post-Paid to any address for 80 cents in t or 2-cent stamps.
Only a limited number left. Order quick from V. G. BROWN. 88-02. Went
auwac. Chicago, I1L
t ....
S. Gov’t Report.
Ifs;
Baking
ABSOLUTELY PURE
CkrtalnMI la Ilw fWrU WkMli
One of the iMt occurrences on the
Kerris wheel was the christening, of
two children of Mr. C. R. Rhodes of
Chicago on-the last day of the fair. It
was done without the knowledge of the
company, which steadfastly protested
against such notoriety. The mother
carried a christening bowl wrapped in
paper and her 3-year-old boy. A young
woman took up a bottle of water In a
shopping bag and bore the 3-munth-old
girl In her arms, and the officiating
reverned gentlemun. Dr. D. F. Fox of
Chlcage, for once disoreetly concealed
his blble in his overcoat pooket Thus
they passed the unsuspecting guard.
The small boy was christened Harold
Wheeler Rhodes as the car reached the
top on her first trip. The name Ferris
Rhodes was bestowed upon the girl as
the wheel reached the turn on the
second trip.—Chicago Letter.
Sick Headache, lassitude, weakness and
loss of appetite caused by malaria can be
immediately cured by Beecham's Fills.
Disappointing,
"Slater,” said thl -little boy, "will
you please make me a lot of biscuit like
those you gave us for breakfast the
other day'.1"
Sister was touched. They were the
first cheering words Johnny bad spoken
to her in a long time.
‘‘Certaltaly,*’ she answered. "Are
you going to have a party?"
"No; I wanted to try them in my new
slungshot,"
IMtabk Cemomptton Cat*
J» sold on a guarantee. It rum Jnrlpleet I'onnimn.
turn. It a tbu best Dough Cura. Siu.,a«u,*tuE
One county in "New Jersey sends to New
York ten carloads of lettuie a day. „
An Extended Popularity. Brown’s
Bronchial ThoCbes have for many years
been the most popular article in use for re
lieving Coughs and Throat troubles.
The average man uses twenty-nine
pounds of sugar per annum.
Bee Cole lie* ter Spading Uootti adv, Id other cut u mo.
The hog packers of this country last year
killed ana packed-SO,OI2,UOO hogs.
Coe's Cauls Balsam
I* the oldest and best. It will break up aColdoulak.
er Ilian anything else. It 1s always reliable. Try It.
The dove in a native of the Malacca isl
ands, as also is the nutmeg.
I-ane's Medicine Moves the Bowels Baeh
Day. In order to be heulthy this is neces
sary. Cures constipation, headache, kidney
and liver troubles and regulates tbs stom
ach and bowels.
The estimated yield of pecans in this
i country is b,WM,UOO bushels.
* “ Hanson's Magic earn naive."
Warranted t« cure or money rufunded. Ask your
druggist for It. Price II cents.
The first glass has the most poison In it.
Ely’s Cream Balm
- VILL CL'KB
CATARRH
fFHcefloSnSI
Rit-BflED^ntoen^jvoretrn.
' Orsngn O rowing lb Pslentlae. J
Planter** Gazette: It is only of late* ^
year* that Jaffa oranges hare obtained*
a world-wide reputation, for but someV
eighteen years since they were acaireMy*
known save at Hey rout, Alexandria Iff
and Constantinople. A special feature. V
of the Jaffa orange is that it will keep*.
thirty or forty days, and if properly re
packed for two and sometimes eveis :i v,
three months. The port of Jaffa is sur
rounded on the land side by orangbj v
groves, covering an area of 1,780 acres, ' »
New orange groves are constantly be* ?’
ing planted, and there are now double / 'S,
as many as there were llfteen years
ago. Koch orange garden contains'
about 8,000 square feet of planted area, i
equal to about 1,800 trees to two and J\u
one-half acrea The trees begin to
bear the fourth year after planting, .
but it is estimated that it takes seven' '
and sometimes eight years before an ,,
orange orchard yields a paying crojx
During all this time and even after*' «
ward the orchards have to be watered’ ':>i
continually, and this irrigation is the*
most difficult and laborious part of the ;
work, the water having to be drawn by .
means of primitive water wheels from
,wells dug in the garden, ninety feet •
and even 100 feet deep. ■ ,
- q
If ths Hohy I, Cstllse TvslS, ’ <J
>• sure and iim that aid and wtlUrlrd ronkady, Mas.
ViMtWi Saaniaa Rrnor for Children Tutting. i ,
In 1801 830,580 tons of iron ore were lm-* y
ported into the United States.
A fPAlK FAOW >
Dome* from poor
blood. Tour Hood
nimbi to he enriched.
and vitatlibd. Vor' '■
tbii t horo'o nothing in
the world w taor- •
ougbljr effeotiio a*
Dr. Herce’o Guided
Medical Diacoverjr.
Cblldren who ara
weak, thin, pale, and .
puny ara node;
strung, |iiumu, ns;,
" It's I
and robust by the " Discovery.”
dally adapted to them, too, from its pleas
ant taste. It's an appetising, restorative ton
ic which build* up needed flesh and strength.
In every blood-taint or disorder, If it
doesn’t benefit or cure, you have your
money back.
Dr. R. V. Pi men: Dear Sir-I wilt ssy
that I used the "Medical Discovery" tor my
little girl, and she la entirely well, I cannot,
nr*i«« your medlclnee too highly. You may
lured that you will always have my
support.
Postmaster of Aldon, Fany CO* Itmv
FARMERS!
RWFCT POTATOES;:
U WW Lb ■ be sprouted «a tka that
w m Nn pmorlAnon ranuln
THE JUDGES .S'.
WORLD'S COLUMBIAN EXPOSITIIMr
Have made the
NIGHE8T AWARD8
(Medals and Diplomas) to
WALTER BAKER k CO.
On each of the following named article** *
M
■"-'yi:
$t
■;sv
If
ft New Wau to Sell Your Grain*
Writ* sv fur full Information aliout how to amr*.
moromenoT fory ,ur era's lh*n hy thsold war. am*
a ire the ml Idlouion'o profit. Theie In “millions Is it'*’
w the farmers of the northwest. Aildrsm,
. M HCAlWd CO..
04 Hoard of Trade, CHICAGO.
•m
dent
Kt to
ran.
No rznerlence required..
Directions for sprouitog tree. Address,
T. J.» KIN HER, Columbus. Kfinf*
PROGRESSIVE EUCHRE.
| Send at once to Johx BuuanAX, Q« T. A. C» R, I.
A P. It. Rs, Chicago, and receive, portaMkpald. tba
slick** t dock of card* you aver hROdM/TlS^bin
yw pock, pontage stamps, for one or many.
;sS.
m.
-m
■WM
BREAKFAST COCOA, .
f‘ki.
Premium No. 1, Chocolate, . *
Vanilla Chocolate,
German Sweet Chocolate,
■ ■: ’<■:>
Pi
■
>• >■*
: ‘tKi
'll
Cocoa Batter.
For "purity of material,” “excellent flavor,*
and "uniform even composition."
?!
WALTER BAKER A CO.. DORCHESTER. HARR.
MEND YOUR OWN HARNESS y
WITH
THOMSON’S
SLOTTED
CLINCH RIVETS.
No tool* required. Only a hammer needed
to drive and clinch them easily and onlckly;
leaving the clinch absolutely smooth. Requirfaur
no hole to he made In the leather nor berr lor tha
ttlreU. They are SIRONQ. TOUGH and OURmC.
Millions now in use. All lengths, anifons w
assorted, pat np In boxes.
Ask nsr Sralrr for them, or send 4k
aa stamps tor n box of 100; snorted sixes,
_ asxDrscTiiasD sr
JUMOp L. THOMSON MFC.OO..
Wsllkssi, Moss.
Map of the United States.
A Urge, handsome map ol the United States
mounted, and suited for home use. is issued by thw
Burlington Route. Copies will be mailed to any
address, on receipt of fifteen cents in postage, be
P. S. KUSTIS, Gen’l Pass. Agent, £7 B. A t£
R. R., Chicago, Ul. an. —
Patents. Trade-Marks.
At -4- Price
MARRIABE PAPER
ODhReU' MONTHLY, TOLE1H). tmiOb
'XU'KE In Ute timen A Mt'Ctianii Imannfn
Co. of Lincoln. Capital and burp in* over
663 Iomm paid to Nebnuka people
If afflicted with j
■or* eyM, bn I
Thaapiaa's Eye
Examination and Advice aa to Patentability ot
Invention. Bend for " Inventor*' Cnidr. or How tatiefc
aPateut " PitSZCX 0TA&&ZI.L, WAfiUJfWW, D. 0.
I
tun At»o utiu <a^
W. H. U, Omaha—52. 18,