The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, September 20, 1894, Image 7

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    TWO LITTLE GIRLS.
klo girl is ver; poor:
| troubles, she Unds, she con scares en
re:
, my dear, she has playthings plenty—
i many as two and-lwenty,
■and arks and picture-books.
Tin i pretty wherever she looks.
I the time she's puzzled to know
i do with the wonderful show,
| dollies twoundtwenty,
bd with her various toys aplenty.
lie cirl is very rich.
|ol(l doll like a perfect witch.
Tl chair and a bit of delf,
IB tracked cup on the closet shelf.
(lay with only a row of pins;
d gardens arks and Inns,
a with her i hubby fingers small,
aver asks for a toy at all
bund her the fair! s stray.
[bright thoughts overy day.
_ i lrl and rich little rirl.
|t would be if In time's swift whirl
-perhaps not change your places,
■ a gitmpie of each other's faces;
i-> the other could somethin t give,
lulu make the child life sweeter to
(could k Ive and both oould share
gg the other had to spare
et E Sangster in Harper’s Young
MERCHANT’S CRIME.
IY II OK AT to ALGER, JR,
APTER XIX—Continued.
will be inconvenient,” said
ell, “and probably a pecuniary
ut I feel it to be my duty, and
is a secondary consideration.”
baps Mr. Raymond may ap
the course of the forenoon,"
ted the landlady. “It may be
boy’s adventure.”
pe you may be right.” said
11, “but I hardly think it
vo so.”
id not eat much breakfast
[ought of Robert Raymond.ly
tlie bottom of the pond kept
ally recurring to him. He
Ired whether he would be found
hen. He would like to have
t for New York at once; but if
iatoly after his departure the
hould be found, it would look
nd possibly excite suspicion,
ought it would be better for
wait two or three days, and
e would feel at liberty to start
k journey.
luring that time he attended to
lusiness as usual, there would be
tance for suspecting him of hav
|ad anything to do with Robert’s
‘ earance. This course, then,
olved to adopt, but in spite of
j could do, he was tormented by
'[tant, nervous anxiety. Every
t he thought of the liability
bbert’s body might be discov
d he braced himself to stand
k. He thought it best, how
write a letter at once to
orton announcing the mys
disappearance of Robert
letter ran thus:
Morton. Esq :
ir Sir—It Is with greit regret that 1
iy pen. having only bad news to commu
p. lour ward, Robert Raymond, whom
laced in my charge, has mysteriously
Speared. I have seen nothing of him
f yesterday at supper He went out after
and did not return to pass the night at
oardin r house. Ido not know what to
t, whether he has met with any accident,
aps of a fatal nature, or has only run
If the latter, I suppose he would make
ray to New York and present himself be
ar ou I shall take every means of ascer
ng which of these is the true explanation
s mysterious disappearance I think of
ling for New York in a couole of days, In
t to see you personally, and let you know
iat I can learn about this unfortunate at
las I know that you will be deeply intsr
I in all that concerns your ward.
“Your obedient servant,
“Jambs Cromwell ”
[ think that will do,” said Crom
i after reading his letter over
p finished. “It tells nothing to
rdinary reader, but Mr. Morton
understand it well enough, es
lly when he reads the words
h I have underlined. On the
e, I don’t know but it will be
5 that the body should be found
re I go, as he may need absolute
pf of the boy’s death before he is
ing to pay me the promised $10,
I wish it were well over, and
boy was buried. I can’t bear to
at him; I am afraid I should get
vous, and so excite susDicion.
|1 it might be attributed*to my
row for his loss.”
viuiutYon, iur a Li mu, we
1 follow the course of Robert Ray
nd, who after receiving directions '
rn Cato, had shaped his course for
Ohio river. Madison, as has i
eady been stated, was situated in <
) southern part of Indiana. The
tance between it and the Ohio 1
er, which separates that state 1
m IientucKy, was about fifty miles,
was Robert’s intention to reach <
d river and then get on board a <
at, and proceed as far east as his
oited funds would admit. The ex- i
at of these was but $10, and $10
)uld not go a great way, unless ex- '
sine economy was practiced. Rob- I
t was willing to be economical, i
id when he learned that the river
ts but fifty miles distant, he de
rmined to walk the whole way. 1
On the first day Robert walked i
nut twenty miles, resting in the 1
iddle of the day. He was unac- i
istomed to walking and it made i
in footsore and weary. At 4 o’clock
the afternoon, he desisted and
snt up to a farm-house, for he was I
the time passing through a 1
iarsely settled town; he asked for I
commodaticns for the night. For- i i
inately the occupant of the farm- j i
Buso was a hospitable and kind- •
:arted farmer, who did not, as ' ■
»me might have done, view him ! 1
ith suspicion.
••So you want to be took care of- i i
lo night, youngster,” he said. : i
••Yes. sir,” said Robert. | ;
“Well, I guess the old woman can ] ]
icommodate you. Our house is big ! i
lough, and you won’t take up much ; i
om. Are you a travelin’ far?” i
"Yes, I am going to New York.” ! i
“lo dork? Thut’s a pretty long 1 <
limey for a lud like you. It’s over . i
ihousand iniies.” * j ]
■‘Yes. it’s a good wavs, but I guess i ]
an get there.” ’ j1
•Where are you travelin’ from?” I
s the next question. ) ^
’•1 came from the North,’' said 1
'"oert, evading a direct answer. J
«*I understand," said the farmer,
shrewdly, “you don’t want to telL
Well, maybe you’ve a good reason,
and maybe not. That's not my busi
ness, only if you’re running away
from your father or mother, I advise
you to go back again. It isn't a
good thing to run away from home.”
••If I had a father or mother." said
Robert, earnestly, “I should be the
last one to run away from them. I
have neither father nor mother
living."
••Havoyou no sisters nor brothers?"
••No.”
“And you’ve got to make your
own way in the world?" said the
sympathizing farmer, “Well I’m
sorry for you.”.
“If you mean that I am poor, that
is not the case,” Robert answered.
••I have been unfortunate in other
ways, but my father left me a for
tune. and 1 am going to my guardian
who is in New York. ”
••Then how comes it that you are
out here all alone?"
“I would rather not tell you just
now,” said Robert, frankly. “The
time may come when I shall return
this way. and shall feel at liberty to
tell you all."
“Well, well, my lad, I won’t pry
into your secrets. I shall be glad to
have you stay with me to-night and
to morrow you can go on your
way, and no questions asked."
“Thank you,” said Robert.
“Now we’ll be goin’ into the house,
and see if supper Isn’t most ready.
If you’ve been travelin’ it’s likely
you’re hungry, and I reckon the old
woman will give us something wo
can relish."
CHAPTER XX.
Major Woodley and His Daughter.
On tbe third day Robert reached
the Ohio river, and was fortunate
enough to intercept a steamer bound
East. He went to the office and
found that his money would about
suffice to pay his fare to Wheeling,
but would leave him nothing. • This
did not trouble him much. He had
the sanguine and elastic temperament
of youth, and he did not doubt that
something would turn up,
“If I can’t do any better,” he re
Bolved, I will obtain work of some
kind till I, have laid by enough
money to pay my passage for the re
mainder of the way. Or I can
write to my guardian, and ask him
to send me money enough to bring
me to New York.”
Among the passengers his atten
tion was drawn to a tall gentleman
of bronzed complexion, who had as
a companion a young girl of about
thirteen, whom he addrossed as
Edith. The young lady had a very
sweet face, and Robert caught him
self more than once wishing he had
such a sister. Had he been older
that is perhaps the last thing he
would have desired. But he was
only a boy of fourteen, and was of
course too young to experience the
sensation of being in love. The
gentleman’s name he learned was
Major Woodley, and the young lady’s
Edith Woodley.
Robert wished that he might have
m opportunity of making the ac
quaintance of Major Woodley and his
laughter, but while on their trip up
the river chance did not favor him.
The opportunity, however, was only
leferred. It came at the end of the
voyage. At length they reached
Wheeling, and the passengers gener
ally disembarked. Major Woodley
ind'his daughter were among these.
Arrived on the pier, while Major
Woodley was looking out for his bag
rage, a horse maddened by a blow
!rom his brutal driver, started sud
lenly forward, and in an instant
would have trampled Edith Woodley
inder his feet had not Robert sprung
orward, and clasping her rouna the
waist, drawn her quickly out of dan
jer.
Her father was at some distance,
le happened to look up just in time
10 see his child’s danger, but not in
;ime to rescue her. To his great re
ief ne saw Robert’s prompt action,
ind he realized that but for this his
laughter would probably have lost
ler life. Filled with gratitude he
lurriedly advanced, and seized Rob
irt by the hand.
“Well done, my brave boy! You
lave probably saved my daughter’s
ife. From my heart, I thank you. ”
“1 am glad it was in my power to
lo her a service,” said Robert, mod
istly.
“You exposed your own life to dan
:er,” said the major.
••I am very glad, indeed, that I
ras standing by," said Kobert. “but
think.anyone would have done the
ame. ”
Major Woodley shook his head.
“I know men better than you, my
ad.” he said, “and I know that cool
less and self-possession in the hour
»f danger are not so common as they
night be. Let me know the name of
ny daughter’s preserver. ”
“Kobert Kaymoud. ”
“Are you going further east?”
“Yes, sir, as soon as I can. I am
>ound for New York. ”
“So am L But I shall stop at the
lotel till to-morrow. Why won’t you
.top over also and go on with us?”
This was an embarrassing ques
,ion for Robert. The fact is, that
lis entire worldly wealth, so far as
te carried it with him, consisted of
,wenty-iive cents, and this, so far
rora enabling him from going on to
'few York, would not even pay for ]
lis breakfast, unless he confined
limself to a very frugal one. He
elt a little shame at confessing this
o Major Woodley, who had the air
>f a man of large means, yet he
iould not help confessing to himself i
hat it would be very agreeable for
lim to pursue his journey in com
mny with the major and his daugh
er to New York. Of course he 1
rould become very well acquainted <
rith the daughter, and this he
hougbt he should like very much. 1
le had never had a sister, and he 1 1
felt that sho would be one to him.
So he hosltated, and did not Immodl'
ately answer tho question asked.
••If this would interfere with any
of your arrangements, or if you have
other friends to travel with,’’ pro
ceeded Major Woodley, observing
his hesitation, ••don’t hesitate to
say so.’’
••It is not that,’’ said Robert, "I
am traveling alone.”
‘•So I supposed, as I saw no ono
with you on the boat. Why then
will you not join us?”
“1 will tell you." said Robert,
making up his mind to tell tho
truth. “I find myself out of money,
and 1 shall bo obliged to wait hero
until I cun reoeive money onough
from mv guardian to pay my fare to
New York.”
••Does.your guardian, then, livo in
New York?” asked the major.
••Yes, sir.”
“May 1 ask his name? I have
some considerable aoquaintanee in
New York, and perhaps I may know
him?”
“His name is Paul Morton. He
is a merchant, I bellevq. ’’
“Paul Morton!" repeated Major
Woodley, in surprise. “Is he the
guardian?”
“Yes, sir.”
“How long has he been so?”
“Only a few weeks. My father
was an early friend of his and died
in his house. He loft me to the
charge of Mr. Morton.”
••What was your father's namoP1'
asked Mujor Woodley quickly.
“Ralph Raymond.”
“Was he an Indian merchant?"
“Yes, sir. Did you know him?”
asked Robert, eagerly.
••Intimately. ’ I passed some time
in India, and there I made your
father’s acquaintance. I valued him
for his high honor and excellent
qualities, and I am truly glad to have
met his son. I did not know of his
death. Rut of that and other things
you must inform me at the hotel.
You need not trouble yourself about
want of money. Go with mo and I
will see you safely in New York.”
Major Wood-ley ordered a carriage,
and the party at once proceeded to
the best hotel in the place. Break
fast was ordered, for the boat had
arrived in the morning. After this
meal was over. Major Woodley said:
“Now, my young friend, tell me
about your father’s death.”
[TO BB CONTINUED.]
He'd Got Him Sure.
Who has seen the Washington mon
ament in Baltimore, with the crouch
ing bronze lion of Bay re near its
base, will appreciate the story they
tell about the rustic huntsman on
his first visit to town. He was shown
all the objects of interest in Balti
more one by one, but gave each only
a passing glance and not even so
much as a word of comment When
he came in sight of the Washington
monument, however, a new light
shot from his eye. At last it was
obvious that something had been
found to interest him. He scanned
the shaft for some minutes, running
his eye from the base to the point on
which the statue stood and back
again, then fastened bis gaze on the
crouching lion as if fascinated. His
lips parted, and his city friends
irew near to hoar his criticisms of
the sculptor’s art At last out came
the words:
“B’gad, he’s got the old man
treed, ain't he!”
Would Make a Good Combination.
“I saw an item in a morning paper
about a plain soda geyser in Ken
tucky,” said Hollis Anderson, of An
aconda yesterday. "We have a little
spring out in Montana that throws
cut a chemical compound that smells
and tastes like a good grade of bran
iy. _ When I heard of the Kentucky
spring of plain soda I wondered if it
would pay to pipe the two into the
?reat hotels of the country. All a
?uest would need to do would be to
turn on the brandv-and-soda faucet
at 10 a m. and then he would not be
sompelled to listen for ‘the clink of
ice in the pitcher as the boy comes
ap the halL ’ In the boom days,
four or five years ago, such a plan
would have received encouragement,
cut now the American people are
retting sick of booming. All they
leed is good rest. St. Louis Re
public.
A Matter or Cost.
Business-like Young Man--Is this
vhere you issue licenses?
Official—It is.
"How much will I have to pay tot
i peddler’s license?"
••Five dollars."
("Seems to me that is pretty steep.
iVhat does a marriage license cost.'”
"Two dollars."
"That’s more like it. Give me a
narriage license.”
Under Them CircuntHtancos.
The tramp got away from the dog
Dut the dog got half of his wearing
ipparel as he cleared the gata
"Why didn't you run when you
seen him comin’r” inquired his part
ler, when they had reached a safe
place.
"Bun nothin’.” he said indignantly.
‘Under them circumstances what a
nan needs is wings. ’’—Uetroit Free
?ress.
Nothing Uut the Truth.
“Were you discharged from youi
ast place?”
"Yes. sir.”
“What for?”
"Good behavior.”
"How’s that?’’
“Well, sir. it took two years and
ii* months off my term.”
Impossible.
Spatts—I’m very sorry for that
toy. Your scolding cut him to the
[uick.
Bloobumper ■
le has no quiclt
•oy.—{Truth.
That’s impossible.
He’s a messenger 1
THE END OP THE BRIDE.
A 8ml Picture of the Child-Wife System
Tolerated In Italy.
A little girl in India wont to the
missionary school; she was a pretty,
clover little thing, and so attraotod
the teacher that aho ventured to
visit her In her homo. She found
the child overshadowed by the hor
ror of her upproaching marriage.
As a baby she hatl boon betrothed,
but, according to custom, sho lived
in her father's house till she was
12; then sho was to be taken from
her own poople and given over to
her husband, a hideous littlo man,
deformed, his faoe scarred with dis
ease,of bad churactor and notoriously
given to drink.
The child was terrified of him, and
he derived u ghoul-like pleusure
from her terror; used to jump at her
in the dark, make faoes at her, and
tola her that once really married to
him, and in his home, he and his old
mother would make short work of
her beauty with a red-hot fork, so
that it would soon be difHoult to
choose between their two faces.
At lost the fatal day arrived. The
missionary’s heart ached for the lit
tle friend she was unable to help,
and as sho went about her work she
prayed that God might save his hap
less creatue.
At noon the child’s mother burst
into the house. “Nahornl is dead,”
she cried, and the two women hur
ried to her home. There wrs Naho
mi, lying stiff and cold on the floor,
looking very slim and childish in
her bridal dress and smooth, flower
crowned head.
,t appeared she had spent the
morning in restless agony of antici
pation, that, to quiet hor, her miser
able mother had beaten her, and
that afterward she had fallen into an
apathy of dispa'.r.
.She had washed her little person
and her hair, had braided it neatly,
had put on her bridal gown, had
decorated herself with flowers and
jewelry, and then had gone quietly
into the yard behind the house,
whore a datura tree hung its great
white trumpets against the blue sky,
dug up and ate a little of its poison
ous root, and then crept back into
her home, whero she now lay, cold,
stark—free.
MEANT THE SAME THING.
Old Complaint finite the Same* Even
When Given lu Boftoneep,
The man had groaned so often and
coughed so loud that every one in
the car was interested, and one gym*
pathetic passenger inquired:
“Got the grip?"
“No; bronchitis.”
“Bron which P"
“Bronchitis- ”
••Oh!"
There was a spell of silence. The
sufferer was from Boston—that was
evidont because he emphasized
the “i" in bronchitis in a way that
left no doubt. No one among the
passengers dared tackle the com
plaint until a series of deeper groans
and coughs aroused them to a sense
of their duty.
“I’ve had browncreeters myself,
but I s'pose them is different," said
the man with the carpet-bag; “hed
’em bad, but I took yarb tea for
mine, and it cured me all-fired
quick.”
"Brongetus ain’t a circumstanoe
to rheumatism," began another man,
but he was interrupted.
“Are you talking about bronkee
tus?” If it’s anything like what I
had when I was—’•
"Try mustard inside," suggested
another. “I’ve had broncheatus till
you couldn’t rest and it always cured
me. ”
“’Tain’t our kind of bronchotus
the gentleman’s got at all, is it pard ?”
“No,” said the Boston man weari
ly, as he closed his eyes and wished
ho was dead.
“There, I told you so, didn’t I?
Poor man. There ain’t any help for
bronkytus on this yearth,” and the
sympathetic passenger wound up
bis watch to hide his feelings.
Wooden Food.
“Did you ever hear of wood being
ased for food?” inquired Amlon L.
Vanderquate of Pensacola, Fla. “I
traveled rather extensively through
Siberia a few years ago and found
that among the natives along the
Northern coast wood in a certain
form is a most common and constant
article of diet. The natives eat it
because they like it. Even when
iish are plentiful it usually forms a
part of the evening meal, as many
cleanly stripped arch logs near every
hut testify. These people know by
experience that the fact of their
eating wood arouses the sympathy
of strangers, and shrewdly use -it to
excite pity and obtain gifts of tea
and tobacco. They scrape off thick
layers immediately uuder ‘ the bark
of the log, and chopping it fine mix
it with snow. It is then boiled in a
kettle. Sometimes a little fish, roe
milk, or butter is mixed with it —
St Louis Globe-Democrat.
T 1»« Wav It struck Him.
A young fellow having been asked
by one of the recruiting sergeants
who haunt the precincts of the Na
tional gallery whether he wished to
enlist in a Scottish regiment replied:
••Not I. I’d rather go into a luna
tic asylum than enlist in a Highland
regiment,”
••Well.” said the sergeant, “Fve
nae doubt ye’d feel mair at home
there.’’
Brentliiug.
In health and during exercise the
average man has about twenty res
pirations a minute and forty cubic
inches are inhaled at each respira
tion; in an hour 48.030 cubic inches
)f air will be inspired; in twenty
'our hours 1,152,000 cubic inches cr
ibout the contents of seventy-eight
logsheads.
.id?, if.* . .
THE U. S. Government Chemists have
reported, after an examination of the
different brands, that the ROYAL Bak
ing Powder I3 absolutely pure, greatest
in strength, and superior to ail others.
ROYAL DAKINQ POWDER COMPANY. IOC WALL ST. NEW-YORK.
The Planet Man.
Professor Lockyer is of the opinion
that human life on the planet Mara may
be very much like human life on tli'o
earth; the light cannot be so bright, but
th# organs of sight may be so much
more susoeptiblo os to make the vision
quite as good. The heat is probably'
less, os the polar snows certainly extend
further, but by no means loss in propor
tion to the lessoned power of the solar
rays. The professor agrees with others,
that several remarkable seas—including
inland seas, some of them connected and
some not connected by straits with still
larger seas—ore now definable in the
southern hemisphere, in which, as is the
case also with the earth, water seems to
be much more widely spread than in the
northern hemisphere. There is, for ex
ample, a southern sea exceedingly like
the Baltic in shape ; and there is another
and still more remarkable Ben, now de
fined by the observations of manv as
tronomers-~ono near the equator, a long
straggling arm, twisting almost in the
shape of an 8 laid on its back, from cast
to west, at lenat 1,000 miles in length
and 400 in breadth.
Hlitclc •• Ink
Are the prejudices which some people cher
ish against what Is good for them. They
reason, ns our old friend Artemus Ward
says, thusly, "Ho and so has been taking
medicine for a long time and Isn’t any hot
ter.’’ They only know of Individual cases.
Many could be cited, to their astonishment,
In which Hostotter’s Stomach Hitters lias
brought about a complete change In the
physical condition of persons suffering from
general 111 health. This thorough stomachic,
besides having the decided recommenda
tion of the medical profession, Is voiced by
the general public as the possessor of i|uull
tles as an lnvlgorant and restorative of
health not found any wliero else. 1 n bodily
troubles caused by the liver, stomach auu
bowels, In Instances where rheumatic ten
dencies aro experienced, and when the kid
neys are weak, It Is tho true resort.
Billiards on Board the Ironsides.
The gunners on the Ironsides at
Morris Island had a neat way of ex
ploding their projectiles within the
boat. It was impossible to drive them
the sand and cotton of which the work
was made, nor could the guns be so
elevated as to toss them In as from a
mortar. So the pieces were depressed,
and the shot, striking the water about
fifty yardB from the beach jumped in.
In nearly every instance this manner of
making the missils effective was suc
cessful. “Those are what I call bil
liards,’’ said the captain watching the
firing, “they carom on the bay and
pocket the ball in the fort every time!”
nail's Catarrh Cora
la a Constitutional cure. Price, 78.
The Cradle of Liberty Unsafe.
Boston is uneasy because the superin
tendent of public buildings has pro
nounced Faneuil hall unsafe. The room
used as a kitchen when public dinners
are given is dangerously exposed to
fire from the ranges, besides which the
public market in the ground floor of
the building has saturated that part of
it with grease, making it particularly
inflammable. The tower, too, leans
twelve degrees from the perpendicular.
The city council has been impelled to
consider steps to make the historio
“cradle of liberty” safe.
Coa>. Crash Balaam
la tba oldest and beat. It will break up a Cold quloh
•r than anything elae. It la always reliable. Try 1W
“Fullness under the eye denotes
language,” we are told. Ho it does,
and, we fear, bad language, too, at times.
In a recent instance a fullness under
the eve denoted that the possessor had
called a man a liar.
Billiard Table, second-hand. For sale
cheap. Apply to or address, If. C. Am,
511 8. 12th 8t.. Omaha, Neb
Americans send $125,000 interest annually
to England.
KNOWLEDGE
Brings comfort and improvement and
tends to personal enjoyment when
rightly used. The many, who live bet
ter than others and enjoy life more, with
less expenditure, by more promptly
adapting the world's best products to
the needs of physical being, will attest
the value to health of the pure liquid
laxative principles embraced in the
remedy, Svrup of Figs.
Its excellence is due to its presenting
in the form most acceptable and pleas
ant to the taste, the refreshing and truly
beneficial properties of a perfect lax
ative ; effectually cleansing the system,
dispelling colds, headaches and fevers
and permanently curing constipation.
It has given satisfaction to millions and
met with the approval of the medical
profession, because it acts on the Kid
neys, Liver and Bowels without weak
ening them and it is perfectly free from
every objectionable substance.
Syrup of Figs is for sale by all drug
gists in 50c ana $1 bottles, but it is man
ufactured by the California Fig Syrup
Co. only, whose name is printed on every
package, also the name, Syrup of Figs,
and being well informed, you will not
accept any substitute if offered
Anchor*.
Some ascribe the invention of an
chors to the Tyrrhenians; others to
Midas, the son of (iordtns. The most
ancient are said to have been of stone,
and sometimes of wood, to which a
(front quantity of lead was usually
fixed. In some places baskets full of
stones, and sucks filled with sand,
were employed for the same use. Alt
these were let down by cords into the
sea, and by their weight stayed the
course of the ship. Afterward, anchofa
were made of Iron, at first with only
one fluke, but in a short time a second
was udded by Kupalamus, or AuachariSr
the Scythian philosopher.
Mothers, Save Your Children*
Stekctce's Pin Worm Destroyer is the
only sure cure known tlmt effectually de
stroys the pin worm, the most troublesome
worm known. It also destroys all other
kinds of worms. Thero is no remedy that
can ex pal tho worms from the stomach or
rrotum as does Ktoketoo's Pin Worm De>
■truyer. Fur uli> by All ilrtiiotl.ku nut by mill as.
receipt of gita., 0. H. poatain. Adilreu UEO. 8. .
STmUTKE, Urend lOpld., Midi. , 1
When to Take a Hath.
There is no practice more objectiona
ble than to go to bed closely wrapped
up in tlie dust and dirt that accumulate,
on the surface of the body during the
day ; por is thero any tiling so conducive
to sound sleep as a tepid douche just be- '
fore gettiug into bed. Many bad sleep
ers become the best of sleepers from the
adoption of this simple rale.
- Ksrl'e Clover Hoot Tee,
The Brest niood pursier,give, ri-.wlin.-uiandrlMniM*
tv tbv Cumplexiun and u ut'„ Cuu.tt putU>u. 23u.*90c.,SU
True practice is the object lesson to an In
nntrinir world. ' ?
“ Hanson's Magic I nrn Kiiln,"
Warranted to cure or munry refunded. Auk your
druggist fur It. Price 1# cents.
It la a algo of rain when ante are onus* *
ually busy._
If the Baby la Cutting Teeth*
Be sure end are that old end well-tried remedy, Kao.
WuiLow’a Southing gvnvr for Children Teething
Beeswax and turpentine make a good
polish for floors. .
S Homeaeekera Kxcoralons Snath Via the
Wabash Railroad.
On Sept. 11th, 26th and Oct. 9th the
Walioab will sell tickets at half fare plus fg. '
to atl points in Tennessee, (except Memphis).
Mississippi, Alabama and Loulsana, (except
New Orleans) Arkansas and Texas. For
rates, tickets or a homeseekers' guide giv
ing full description of lands, climate, mc.~
or for steamship tickets to or from an
parts of Europe, call at Wabash office, ISOS
Farnatn street, or write
O. N. Clayton,
N. W. P. Agt, Omaha, Neb,
One-half of the wealth of England Is held
by 1,000.
IT’S A MILLSTONE
addiii a Toaac
man’a neck »b* a
•offerer from ner
rous exhaustion, no<
▼oua debility, Impair*'
ed memory, loir
spirits, Irritable tm
per, and the thousand
and one derangement*
of mind ana bodf ■
that result from,
unnatural, pernicious
habits, contracted
through ignorance,
Such habits result In
loss of manly power,
duce softening of tbe brain, epilepsy, pa
ralysis, and even dread insanity. >
To reach, rp-claim and rSStOre lucb ww :
fortunate* to health and happiness, 1* the
aim of the publishers of a book written In
plain but chaste language, on the nature,,
symptoms and curability, by home treat
ment, of such diseases This book will be
sent sealed, in plain envelope, on reoeipt of
ten cents in stamps, for postage. Adams,.
World’s Dispensary Medical Association,,
608 Main St. Buirafo, N. Y.
Pt. Band,
Iron Hoop
OAK BASKET.
A Bukil Ton Cm Water Toar Bona With. OwAA
ao Mora Thu Any Otter Kinds, but Will ■ ; >
STAK'D AMTTTOg,
IB
EXCURSIONS
SEPT. Iltli. SEPT. 25th, OCT. 9th
On these dates Round-Trip Tickets will be sold
from Chicago, Peoria, st. Louis, and other sta
tions on the C. B. & Q. It. K.. to the princinal
cities and farming regions of the
Northwest, West and Southwest
.r LOW RATES
Many connecting railways wilt also sell Harvest .
Excursion tickets, on same terms, over this
route. The undersigned or anv agent of the
Burlington Route, and most ticket agents of con
necting railways east of the Mississippi River,
will supply applicants with Harvest Excursion
folders giving full particulars.
P. S. EUSTIS, Sml Pur sad Ticket Iga*"
SCMSO. ■«> CHICAGO, IU.
Patents. Trade-Marks.
Examination and Advice as ta Patentability oC
Invention. Bend for “ Inventors’ Guide, or How to Gat
* Patent ’ FATSXCZ 0TAS2XLL. WASEZSfflTCN, D. <L
i /ITIVira WANTED. One earned 94000.mmnr
Alvr.Nl X over $11)00in 1890. Hnudaomeptoutfit.
AUlill A U extant, free to live men. P.O.1071.N.Y.
CONSUMrTlON
W N IT. Omaha—S8, IBM
w umu Au.wuig AsvtniMMSU - —“f
ASUUUS Ulle CStlSA