The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, January 17, 1895, Image 7

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    55 cent Patterns
tor to Gents.
„„ „„-!t'T!!S retail fn fashion', bazaars and
T1" ' lrntv live to forty cents each, but
*'"r' ' ! ' the demand amonp strong
i (II I lie C”’” *’vn
.. i;...'and are unequaled for style necu
'"r“ , i , s.midieiiv and economy. Fortwenty
mmie rs loose patterns tiuvo been used the
1 ; ,‘v nver Full descriptions and directions
COa, he number of yards of material required,
me number and names of the different pieces in
", iern boa to cut and lit and put the pur
‘" ,'.1.,'thcr arc sent with each pattern,
„ picture of the garment to po by. These
" ' . ,m. complete In every particular, there
.,•! sene,-ate lantern for every ample piece
t he dress! Your order will be tilled the same
girder*patterns by number and give size In
tac"crv pal tern guaranteed to be perfect.
THEY AEE GLOVE FITTING.
Tueoi pet lll'sTuml 11 It FAST meusure, put
t,,,«i measure ALL of the way around the
LA.lv over the dress close under tho arms.
price of each pattorn, 10 cents, when
unbred on coupon printed below.
Postage one cent extra on EACH pattern.
Ladies' House Gown. Pattern No. 6109 is cut
In five sizes, viz: 32,34, 36, 38 and 40 inches bust
measure.
Lavender wool challie having a clover leaf
design in olive green is here stylishly trimmed
with olive satin.
The rovers, sleeves, collar and sach are of
satin, lined with the challie. while the sleeve
cans are of the t hn'Iie lined with the satin.
The sash is ttnished with a loop silk knotted
fringe in a combination of the two colors. The
gown is in ‘ Princess” shape, fitting the figure
smoothly ami falling in ripple-like folds around
the skirt.
Made in walking length this model is a favor
ite for a street dress with ladies '.who like the
weight of their gowns to depend from the shoul
ders. The style is also desirable lor dresses of
silk or woolen fabrics.
Gimp, braid, insertion, etc, can be used for
trimming.
The retail price of pattern is 35 cents.
ladies' Puffed Waist. Pattern No. 6189 Is
fut in five sizes, viz: 32, 31, 36, 38 and 40 inches
bust measure.
Lavender organdie over silk lining of the
same shade, made this dainty waist, which is
oue of the latest importations.
Tho upper frouts and back are shirred in up
right puffs to square yoke depth each row of
jmrnng being covered with pearl braid. The
u ness in front and back is prettily gathered
“i™11 space at the waist line, where it is
1 W by the belt. Ample puffs are gracefully
sposep over fitted sleeve linings, the lower
P»mons 1being arranged around the arm in puffs
rniu?1 • simuiated yoke. The standing
canifA8 k 3 covered with a Puff of the or
5JS0, S?rdered on each edge with the pearl
A hp'tt n»e c^°!T*og is invisible in center front,
thp vn.4 * ,corded lavender silk is worn at
BtviM A#*’i1^asfened wilh a pearl buckle. All
ch,ni,of f .Jj ln fashionable weaves, crepon,
and «.J'Cllin- 1;vndsdown and novelty silk
moueenu mixturcs.lace, net, grenadine, Swiss
able f iv 2e de Soie antl vari°us other season
Th« '*areaI1 used t0 develop themode.
gre-it Z?, 0nH can be selected from the
ual taste Cly now fusbtonable, to suit individr
Thc rclail l>ricc of this pattern is 25 cents.
COUPON*
wanted Bive ;;;•** of Patterns
ure. Kithpr nf ts " ani1 WalRt.meas
'0 any a 11 ‘"f ,^cse Patterns will be sent
»«ver or stann^SS? ot 10 ce.nts to
— en
postage,
silver Or St , “‘T“eceipiot it) cenl
Olosea witlinr r "he,U Itm OOUpon is
"hi.your across °UC CC1U fo*'post
COUPOIT PATTEBB CO.,
-foy.Bo* 747, Bew York
Great Rock Island Route
Ir Playing Cards.
SKiustaTVV™'iSiin sta™Ps Orcoin to JNC
R y, Chi.5!s«’ , 1 ?ass- ALrent, C..R.I.&I
slickest pack o/nhHn 1 reVeive postpaid th
Bf autifui steel nnft. 5a£|? ^ou ever bandlec
them free Whist RuIpb onnnn
Beware of Ointment* for Catarrh that
Contain Mercury,
as mercury will surely destroy the sense of
smell and completely derange the whole
system when entering it through the mu
cous surfaces. Such articles should never
be used except on prescriptions from repu
table physicians, as the damage they will
do is ten fold to the good you can possibly
derive from them. Hall's Catarrh Cure,
manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co.,
Toledo, O., contains no mercury, and is
taken internally, acting directly upon the
blood and mucous surfaces of the system.
In buying Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure you
get the genuine. It is taken internally,and
made in Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Cheney &
Co. Testimonials free.
IS?* Sold by Druggists, price 75c. per bottle.
Hall's Family Pills, ‘Joe.
Experiments With Oats*
Of seven varieties grown at tho Indi
ana station from one to seven years
White Bonanza gave the largest yield.
In an experiment on thickness of seed
ing 4, 5, 0, 7. 8, 9, 10, 11 and 12 pecks of
seed per acre wore used. Eight pecks
gave the highest average yield for
eight years, but ten pecks are recom
mended when oats are sown among
cornstalks.
WHO WANTS $65.00?
Men, women and children can earn one of the fol
lowing prizes for telling me where the word Physician
first occurs in the New Testament. To the first person
tending correct answer before March 1ft, 1893, I will
pax 125; 2d, 910; 3d, •&, and to the noxt 2ft, $1 each
lii cash. I will send prizes as offered in regular order.
1 will send the prizes SI arch 20, 1893. If two or more
oorrect answers should be first received bearing the
tame postmark date, the first one opened will receive
the flr.st prize, and so on with the smaller prizes.
Wishing to introduce my valuable medicine, I take
this way of placing It before the people. Each answer
must contain 13 2c postage stamps, for which the
writer will promptly receive one bottle of Steketce’s
Neuralgia, Headache and Rheumatism Cure, ac
knowledged to be the best medicine on the face of the
earth by every one who has used it. As this will ap
pear but one time, cut it out, show It to your friends,
search your Testament and gain one of these prizes.
No questions will be answered without an extra 2o
stamp. This is no fraud; the moucy will surely be
paid. Mention this paper.
Address, GEO. G. STEKETEE,
Grand Rapids, Mich.
A mote in the eye makes the whole world
look wrong.
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, Syrup 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 60c and $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.
FREE
IT COSTS YOU WQTHHIBMIg
~~^fcNoBeeh Opportunity has!
ever before he wo Here d |
id# Qftr. No Bla-i
r5w5e553553lo8dw«ae.
|So l>uc option. e
an jast^Wtat
irfev
^ Thia machine
| Warranted 10 Yean
FREI
. OXFOR
is. m'dept. ’
We all all. Continue I
these liberal term»|
FOB ONLY A SHORTg
TIEE, Cut tLl»~jut |
write today.
75,000 In Uso,
IFRES
WELL MAGHINERY
Illustrated catalogue shoving WELL
AUGERS, BOCK PRILLS. HYDRAULIC
AND JETTING MACHINERY, etc.
8bht Fan. Have been tested and
•11 warranted.
Sioux City Engine ft Iron Works,
Successors to Reck Mfg. Co., Jj
Sioux C'ltjr. low*.]]
HIT Union Aye., Kansas City, Mo.
TAKEN INTEINALIV
USED
LOCALLY
Insufflator.
IA. SYKES' SURE CURE CO., H. CAXTON SLUG., CNICAOl
MJld b/ all Druggists.
n i mn«THin Thomas P. Simpson, Washington,
W h I l.lf IK D.C. Moattv’s fee until Patent ot>
A A111111II tained* Write forInveutor’aOuide,
»« .s t, OaAiitliii— 3, iMitff
Uiatoai Ajmv%eruig ^luvertueiueuui axiudlj
Msutioj thU Paper.
promotes the making I of solid
flesh, enriches the blood and toneB up
the whole system.
For OoughB, Ooldsi Sore Throat, Bronchitis,
Weak lungs, Consumption, Scrofula, Anmmia,
Loss of Flesh, Thin Belies, Weak Children, and
all conditions of Wasting.
Buy only the genuine! It has our trade*
mark on salmon-colored inrne,*,*-.
BoottVo'"■ Snuifor pamphlet oh Scott'
'- °wne, N. Y, All Druggists. BO cents and SI.
IT WAS DICK.
H« Rad Taken ller Advlee and Oane
to Work.
The blinds were carefully lowered,
as she lay on a couch with the smell
ing salts in her hand. Whon her
dearest friend came into the room she
exclaimed:
"Morey, does your head acho or
hasn't your now gown come horaoP”
“Dyspepsia, evidently, dear; you
should tako—”
"Oh, don’t; I want sympathy but
not prescriptions. It's about lliek.”
"Of courso. But I can't really
sympathize until I know what it’s
about.’’
“Well, it was Dick and—and my
tooth. ”
“Mercy, I hope you didn’t bito him!
Thore, don't bo angry; I’m grave,
grave as a family tomb. Don’t keop
mo in suspense.”
"Well then, you know I have a
tooth that I cut in the dentist's
“I thought so because you always
said that chewing gum was vulgar.”
“Yes; and of courso I’d rather havo
died than let Dick know it. Hut the
other evening he was here and I was
eating candy when it broko right oft.”
"Good gracious, what on earth—”
“I managed to conceal it, but I
didn’t daro to smile again lest ho
notice its absence—so I just picked a
quarrel with him.”
“Naturally it rolioved your feelings
too. But what did you quarrel about.”
“Just tho same old thing.”
“The fact that he doesn't work?
But then ho has plenty of money
without."
“I know, but there's no telling when
ho will call and it is ruining my hair
to keep it curlod all tho time.”
“Was ho very angry?”
□ “Awfully—loft in half an hour.
The next day I had such a cold I
couldn’t go to the dentist's—besides
ho always stays angry at least three
days. But tho following morning I
had a note saying that he had taken
my advice, had secured a position,
and would bo up in tho evening to
tell me all about it. As soon as I
answered it I started for the dentist's
and—oh, Dora!”
“Did you meet him on the street?”
“No! No! I told tho dentist that I
must have my tooth by 7 o’clock that
evening. He said that ho was very
busy, but would send for his new as
sistant and see if he could repdUr it.
I sat in the chair, with Dr. Nippers
holding tho tooth, whon who should
walk into the room but—”
“Not Dick!”
“Dick and nobody else! He was
the new assistant— and, Dora, he
laughed, actually laughed! O, I’ll
never speak to him again until my
dying day—but I don’t think that will
be very long.” And she buried her
head in the pillows while Dora poured
vords of sympathy into deaf ears.
The South African 1 Icture Stone.
An account of a strange lapidarian
freak comes all the way from Kimber
ley, South Africa. Workmen in the
diamond mines at that place discov
ered a stone, dark brown in color and
about the size of a pigeon’s egg, which,
viewed in a dark place with a candle
or other light behind it, exhibits a
perfect profile picture of a man from
the waist up. Turning tho pebble par
tially around, the image of the man
vanishes and the features of a wo
man’s face, clearly-cut and partly con
cealed by heavy tresses, comes into
view. The British museum offers £50
'or the curiosity.—St. Louis Bepublio.
An Act of Providence.
Uncle Pete, entering with some
thing under his coat—What wud you
say, A’nt Dinah, ef do good Lawd wuz
teh send us some'n mighty pow’ful
good fo’ suppah?”
Aunt Dinah—I shud say dat wuz a
miracle.
Uncle Pete, producing a pair of
chickens—Dat’s right, a’nt; dat’s just
what it wuz, a miracle. Nothin’
short ob a miracle wud have made de
colonel fo'git teh lock de hennery
do’.”—New York Herald.
The Deepest Mine in Frunce.
The deepest coal mine in France (by
some authorities said to be the deep
est in the world) is at Andre du Poirier.
The mine is worked with two shafts,
one 2,952 feet deep and tho other
3,083. The latter shaft is now being
deepened, and will reach the 4,000
foot level by July, 1895. The yearly
product of this mine is 400,000 tons of
coal. The remarkable feature of the
mine is the comparatively low tem
porature—seldom rising above 75 de
grees Fahr.
Shintoism.
There are no idols in the Shinto
temples. Shintoism consists of the
worship of ancestors and the powers
of nature, the sun especially. 'Ihe
only objects in tho temples are a
small mirror, emblematic of light,
and some strips of white paper.
Pilgrimages to various places form a
feature of this religion.
In Greater »w York.
New Yorker, on board the Atlantia
liner—What longitude are wo in,
captain?
Captain—Sixty-five degrees west of
Greenwich, latitudo 39.
New Yorker, with enthusiasm—
Hurrah! we're home again!—Chicago
Kecord.
Medical Advice.
Patient—Doctor, what’s good for
dyspepsia?
Doctor—Irregular eating and ill
cooked food. Two dollars, please.
1 a miliar.
Visitor—Will you tell your master
that I called?
Servant—Yes, sir, if you will please
tell me your name.
Visitor—That is unnecessary. He
kuows me quite well.—Wanderer.
Runaway Stan.
There are a certain class of stars
which fly through space with a velocity
so enormous ss to baffle every attempt
to account for them. They are known
to the investigators ns "runaway stars”
and aro no longer reckoned as being
among the phenomena of extreme rari
ty. One of these in the constellation of
the Great Hear known as "lloombridgo,
1830,” long led the van of stellar speed,
sweeping over at least £00 miles of
space each second. Trofessor l’riehard
has prov ed that the inconspicuous ob
ject called Cassiopeia is a sun 40 times
more luminous than our own, and that
it is traveling at the prodigious rate of
300 miles per second. Dr. Klklns has
found something more wonderful in the
speed line in Arcturus, which is jog
ging along at 400 miles a second ns a
steady pace, but having strange bursts
of speed, during which time its velocity
is increased by about one-fourth.
Home of the runaways fly along in
pairs and are therefore supposed to be
connected by some invisible "bond of
union.” This presumption wus ilrst
advanced some twenty-tlvo years ago
and is even now being investigated by
the leaders in astronomical work.
Uow to Retain Beauty.
Lady Londonderry, whose exquisite
.ose and white loveliness time has not,
tho heart to despoil, attributes her
youthful freshness to the practice of
spending one out of every ten days in
bed. She sleeps until she wakens natu
rally, takes a warm bath and goes back
to bed again, where she partakes of a
light breakfast, remaining in bed rest
ing until Bix o'clock in the evening,
while her maid reads to her a light
novel. At six o'clock she puts on her
dressing robe and has her dinner served
in her room, and reclines on her sofa
until ten o’clock.
II. L. Holley in a bulletin from the
North Dakota station gives tho percent
age of germination and the yield of
wheat from normal seed and from seed
frosted, winter bleached, immature
and heated in the bin. The seed from
normal seed was much larger than that
from seed injured in any way. Normal
seed and injured Bced guve practically
the same weights for the same volume
of grain. Smutted wheat, however,
weighed slightly less for a given vol
ume than sound wheat. Tho author
recommends selection by means of a
fanning mill of large grains for seed.
Vary Mach Off Colo*
Arc people who are troubled with ohronlo liter
complaint. Bile In the blood tluget the outlolo
and oven the eyeballs, and alio manifest! Ill
presence by unetuduoss In the right ilda and
beneath the right shoulder blade,furrod longue,
nausea, etch hendnohe and un unploueuut
breath. It Is usually accompanied by costive
ness and dyspepsia. l‘"or tho ailment Itself,
and Its vurlous manifestations, Hostetler's
Stomach Hitters Is a speedy and eomplelo
remedy. This stundard medicine also prevents
and cures ohlllN and fever, rheumatism, nerv
ousness and tho Infirmities Incident to declin
ing years. It builds up uu enfeebled physbiuo
and fortltles It against disease. Appetite and
nightly slumber uro promoted by It, and It Is a
protector against tho effects of a wetting, of
overwork, osposuro and uuwholesomo food or
water. _
A raises for Ills Hogs.
Baron Franchottl, tho fnther of tho
composer, hits hntl a doff kennel built
in hisjpalaeo at Venice, made through
out of marble. The coiling in deco
rated with a splendid monnic entitled:
“The Chase of Diana." Thu eating and j
drinking vessels of tho dogs are said to.
bo of embossed silver. Of course, tho
kennel is lighted liy electricity.
MARRKT GARDENERS GROW RlCIIt
There is lots of money made in early
vegetables. Everybody admits that
tho very earliest vegetables uro pro
duced from Nnlzer’s Northern drown
seeds. Think of having radishes in
fourteen days; lettuce in twenty days;
potatoes ill forty days; peas in forty
six days, and splendid cabbage In flfty
11 vc days from day of sowing seedl
If You Will Cut This Out and Send It
with )M money order to the John A.
Salzer Seed company, l-a('rosso, Wls.,
you will get free thirty-live packages
earliest vegetable seeds and their great
seed catalogue, or for six cents postage
a package of Fourteen Hay Paris Radish
seed and their seed catalogue. W.N.U
A New Substance Discovered.
A German chemist is reported to have
discovered a new substance which lias
the remarkable and unh|uo property of
solidifying when heated and remaining
liquid at temperatures below zero. It.
has been named ‘‘cryestate," and is ob
tained by mixing together equal parts
of phenol, camphor and saponine, and
adding a somewhat smallur proportion
of essence of turpentine. Certain sub
stances, like the albumens, harden on
heating, but this is the only product
that again liquefies on heating.
LEAVES ITS MARK
—every one of tlie painful irregularities
ami weaknesses llmt prey upon women.
They fade the face, waste the figure, ruin
the temper, wither you up, make you old
before your time.
Get well: That'a the way to look well.
Cure the disorders and ailments that beset
you, with I)r. Pierce's Favorite Prescrip
tion.
It regulates and promotes all the proper
functions, improves digestion, enriches the
blood, dispels aches and pains, melancholy
and nervousness, brings refreshing sleep,
and restores health and strength. It's a
powerful general, as well ns uterine, tonle
and nervine, imparting vigor and strength
to the entire system.
Mrs. ANNS Ui.aicn, of rim Creek, Buffalo Co.,
_ /TsKlrv. Nek.. writes: I eiilov
good health thank* to
Dr. Pierce’* Favorite Pre
scription and '(•olden
Medical Dincovery.' X
i was under doctor*' care
Tot two yearn with womb
I dineane, and gradually
I wanting lit ntrength all
J}tlu* time. I wan no weak
jlthnt I could nit up in bed
j only n few moment*, for
'two year*. I commenced
taking Dr. Pierce’* Fa
vorite Prencripllon and
bin * (loldeu Medical Dl*
covery,' and by the time
# I had taken one-hair do*
fj en hottlen I wnn up and
f going wherever I pleased.
Mrs. ui.rich.
nun nnvc nun goon neniin
ntul hern very fttrouflf
ever aiuce—that was two years and a half ago."
A book of 168 pngfes on " Wonmti mid Her
Diseases '* mailed sealed, on receipt of xo
cetitfi in stamps far postage. Address*
World’s Dispknsary Mkdical Associa*
TION, 663 Main Street, Bufralo, N. Y.
SPEAKING OF COUGHS A COLDS
HAVE YOU TRIED
LUNG BALSAM
IX CURES._
The Rise of the
Buckwheat Cake
The leaven of yesterday ruins the cake of to-day.
Don’t spoil good buckwheat with dying raising
batter— fresh cakes want Royal Baking Powder.
Grandma used to raise to-day’s buckwheats
with the souring left over of yesterday 1 Dear
old lady, she was up to the good old times. But
these are days of Royal Baking Powder—fresh
ness into freshness raises freshness.
And this is the way the buckwheat cake of
to-day is made : Two cups of Buckwheat, one
cup of wheat flour, two tablespoons of Royal
Baking Powder, one half teaspoonful of salt,
all sifted well together. Mix with milk into a
thin batter and bake at once on a hot griddle.
Do not forget that no baking powder can be sub
stituted for the “ Royal ” in making pure,
sweet, delicious, wholesome food.
ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., 106 WALL 8T., NEW-YORK.
How to Handle Poultry.
The Kansas Farmer says: Never
seize a fowl by the tail, is a fine one,
nor touch the back, but grasp both
legs at once with a firm, tight, quick
hold, and then raise free from the
ground or perch and hang the body
down clear of any obstacle. This
method does not ruftle the plumage or
turn a feather, which in a fine birtl
must be avoided. When the web ol
the feathers is once broken it car
never be united again, and where mucli
handled this often occurs, giving the
bird a ragged appearance.
Worms in Horses.
The only sure cure for pin worms In horse*
known Is Steketee’s Hog Cholera Cure
Never falls to destroy worms In horses, hogs,
sheep, dogs or cats; an excellent remedy for
sick fowls. Send sixty cents In United
States postage stamps and 1 will send by
mall Cut this out, take it to druggist ami
pay him fifty cents. Three packages for $1.51
express paid. G. G. STKKETI.K,
Grand Kapids, Mich.
Mention name of paper.
It is said that the children of ex-Senator
James G. Fair will contest his will.
The first step toward being a happy old
man is to be a useful young one.
After physicians had given me up, T was
saved by Fiso‘s Cure.—Ralph Euieg,
Williamsport Fa., Nov. 22, 1893.
Hot Springs, Ark., council refuses to
license poolrooms and they will close.
It the Ilaby is Cutting Teeth.
Be sure and use that old and well tried remedy, Mrs.
Winslow’s Booth ixo Strip for Children Teething*
•‘Whatsoever a man sowetb, that shall
he also reap.”
90 Cei)ls;
FOR A WHOLE YEAR.
jNewYorkTribune
> -AND
iThe Weekly Bee
A special contract enables us to offer THE NEW YORK
WEEKLY TRIBUNE, the leading family weekly of
the United States, with the OMAHA WEEKLY BEE
for only 90 Cents, less money than is charged for any
l other single weekly paper in the country. The Omaha
j Weekly Bee is the leading paper in the western country
and is too well known to need a special description.
THE NEW YORK WEEKLY TRIBUNE i»a Na
tional Family Paper and gives the general news of
the United States. It gives the events of foreign lands in a
nutshell. Its “Agricultural ” department lias no supe
rior. Its “ Market Reports” are recognized author
ity. Separate departments for “The Family Circle,”
“Cur Young Folks,” and “Science anti Me
chanics.” its “Home and Society” columns
command the admiration of wives and daughters Its gent
eral political news, editorials and discussions are compre
hensive, brilliant and exhaustive.
Send 90 Cents tor both papers to
THE OMAHA WEEKLY BEE,
OM-A.HLA., NER
nENSION^K^g.%
■ Ip* Successfully Prosccutos Claims.
j U Lr.tuPrincipal Hx&rrtiunr U 8. Pension Hurmvu.
B 3>i Jtuittat war, ISatIjudiculUjgchuma, att> siace.
ACRE APPLES, $1,493 X& JJSKEKS!
Lout iaua. Mo . for rrfi* sample copy telling about It.
A practical Fruit and Farm paper, publhhed by
Stark Broa., 40c a year; circulation. 4«0.c<0 ooplea.
The “(’ream of the Cieaui’’—gives the busy Fruit
Ort^vcr or Farmer, who hasn't the time or the money
to buy and read a (treat mass of papers, what is beat
from them all. what he want a to know,
what would take bint days to taarch out for hiiutelf.
n PI SO VS’ CURE FOR
, CUBtS WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS. „
[ Boat Cough Syrup. Taatea Good. Us©
In time. Hold by drugglsta.
MaiaiaiiBTgfEgg