The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, January 24, 1895, Image 7

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    'HIGAN^S BENEFACTOR.
jpT REPEATED STORY OP
TRUE philanthropy.
,„arle. II. I'“rk,*y DOM
for Western Michigan*
:ibl
,-and Rapids (Mioh.) Evening
Press. 1
beautiful spot in all this city is
v assoeiateii with the name of
, Vlias M. Hackley lias Iwen in
business here continuously since
,1 that time lias amassed “fortune
,v!.s him a rating among the wealthy
,',l,e nation. Hut with wealth there
: that tigliteningof the purse
,s „ Ilirh is generally a marked oharae
' of wealthy men.
wonder then that the name Of
11 Ilai’klcv is known at home and
i i iis uimiilieenee to Muskegon alone
'1 nt< an outlay of nearly half a million.
..... oast twenty years he has been a
,„t sufferer from neuralgia and rheu
■i also numbness of the lower limbs,
ti so that it has seriously interfered
Ids pleasure in life. Kor some time
i s friends hare noticed that he has
t„ grow young again and to have
Vied the health which he had in
, reporter for the News Mr. Hackley
;„,.d the secret of this transformation.
u, suffered for over ‘20 years,” ho said
pains in mv lower limbs so severely
ll ,. only relief 1 could get at night was
eold water compresses on my
I 1 was bothered more at night than
j. .lav time. The neuralgic and rheu
. pains in my limbs, which had been
i,V in intensity for years, finally be
.■iinmic. I made three trips to tne
Sprint's witli only partial relief and
fill bark to my original state. I
i, i sit still ami my sufferings began to
life lnok very bluo. Two years ago
, ,t, hiImt 1 noticed an account of Dr.
i:' s rink l’ills for Pale People and
they had done for others, and some
s„ licarlv resembled mine that I was
-i, a. so l wrote to one who had given
in:,,uial. an eminent professor of music
i. a.ln. The reply I received was even
irr than the printed testimonial and it
me faith in the medicine. j
j, ::in taking the pills and found them
a’, that the professor had told me they
I ina it was two or three months be
, sjirrieneed any perceptible bet ‘er
df uiv condition.' My disease was, of
long standing that I did not cxflcct
v lvroverv and was thankful even jto
irvnl. I progressed, rapidly, however,
<1 nrnvcry and for the last six monfths
Mi myself a perfectly well man/ X
iivimmondcd the pills to many people
an only too glad to assist othens to
i through the medium of this wonuer
' la inr. I ran not say too muclifor
it has done for me.” j
Williams’ l’ink Pills contain all r,he
tits neressjtry to give new life apd
w to the blood and restore shattered
s. They tire for sale by all druggists,
the had by mail from Dr. Williams’
inecompany, Schenectady, N. Y., for
is i>er box. or six boxes for t2.50.
A Vigorous Swordfish.
; Norwegian bark Lorenzo, which
tly arrived at Pensacola, Fla., had
iple of the strength of a swordfish,
ngh the metal sheathing of her
then through six inches of plank
ml penetrating the inner ceiling
. three inches the fish had driven
out. or "sword.” the result being
k which kept the crew at the
* for six hours a day. The sword
ibout tf 1 j inches in circumference
: point and 5 inches at the end
p it had broken off, the piece be
tiout HO inches long.
How's This!
offer One Hundred Dollars Rewan
i) case of Catarrh that can not b.
ball's Catarrh Curel
HENEY & CO., Props., Toledo, Ohio
tbe undersigned, have known F. J
■ ,rthe fast 15 years, and believi
perfectly honorable in all businea
lotions and financially able to earn
b obligations made by their firm,
t Ohu> CAI’ Wholesale Druggists,
* Mabtin> Wholesalf
;|»ts, Toledo, Ohio.
Catarrh Cure is taken Internally
; reofly upon the blood and muconi
Holdby^^i^twS;
I > Family PiUs, 25c.
4 B°nunieiit of llankruptcy.
' great tower at Wembley pari
of Condon. which is intended t
101 ugher than the Eiffel towe:
(ses become a monument <
''['toy. The company has spei
■ and the first platform has n(
on reached.
•300 FOR A NAME.
’I’’the sum we hear the Salw
u„n i f,or a su'table name ft
-, ' eliful new °ats- The Unite
• ' Partmcnt of agriculture sat
■ ,ats ls the best of 300 varietii
many farmers repoi
and ir°f J00 *lushels per acre la!
Mare sure this can be grow
more during 1805. OneV*
i- p, J lat ls that Salzer is tl
,,sra^d ^ro'ver ™ the’worl
ll; potatoes t s,5° per barre
the SLV‘at do weH in Texl
r,es at South. Thirty-fit
° ’ arhfcsl vegetables, «1 poi
lflWl",Cut This 0ut and Send It
John A- Salz<
B'mnoth cataln'lb'’ }'OU, ffet trf
«above.^lTe aUd a Pacl
*J00 Trite Oats, W.N. I
e "ho think
k wrong wifi te sure
10KS FREE
Ordpr :_x
to
' to lntr°duce our line of
""el, to the public we will,
,lme' one or all of the
2 books FREE on recejpt
cov?PS 3CCePted) <or each
r Postage, packing, etc.
rint Gl?2aperjMds()1B| Coverj
c°ok Book .
Tom’» Cabin .
: 01 a Bachelor *
‘y*01 pompeii
the City t
home . ' 1
an<Yami
s Secret ” -• "■»
v«*t- Pocket dim* ’ M' f# Hoti
,haks,°,nb^c:
--^r:srie
• W. 0. Stow
• /A Mane
• • Buhuer L/tto
• 0. Conan Doyi
• • . Bertha Cla
Bill Nye.J. iy. fl//e
* -
|OVV, Baker, what
I do you think about
the horse?”
"Evidently it is
all right, sir,"
answered the
trainer, curtly,
with true English
impudence.
Whe reuponM.
de Loyaumont
looked as if he
thought "Fortune
knows what she
uwcs uie.
Still, any ono that was well ac
quainted with him would see that he
was nervous from the way his fingers
tortured his eyeglass. It was the day
before the Grand Prix, and, notwith
standing Baker's confidence,our noble
sportsman felt anxious. True, Jaguar
was a splendid animal,and had shown
such splendid speed at Chantilly that
M. de Loyaumont was justified in ex
pecting that to-morrow his horse
would take the lead from the start,
and keep to it, too. Still, the race
track holds so unexpected surprises
that he could not help feeling just
the least bit uneasy. His aristocratic
eyebrows drew themselves nervously
together as he heard a slight knock
at the door of the smoking room.
“What is it, Firmin?”
“Madame sends word to monsieur
le comte that M. Berard was very ill
last night”
M. de Lo3’aumont’s noble eyebrows
contracted entirely as he drawled:
“I must see the horse first After
that I will go to M. Berard before
breakfast
He did not utter another word, for
he was too much put out to trust him
self. When he had married M.
Berard's niece it was on condition
that her uncle should be ignored;
and now the tradesman, with the
impertinence of a millionaire, dared
to be ill in his house—whom, very
impudently, he persisted in calling
“son-in-iaw.” Nothing less than
Jaguar's excellent condition could
have put M. de Loyaumont in good
humor again.
As he entered the dimly lighted
stall Jaguar turned his head toward
the door and stretched out his muz
zled nose, as though he were going
to bite. His master lovingly passed
his hands over the animal’s satiny
neck. The two resembled each other.
Both unmistakably showed race and
high breeding in their muscular ten
derness, grace of motion, and deli
cate firmness of limb. M. de Loyau
mont passed the remainder of the
morning talking to the stableman,
and listening to the gossip of the
jockeys about the rumors which
Jaguar’s adversaries were spreading.
He had so completely forgotten Uncle
Berard’s illness that he was fairly
startled when, without warning, Fir
min said to him, on his entering the
house.
“M. le comte, it is a stroke of apo
plexy.”
Sure enough, when the count en
tered the sick room, he found the in
valid stretched motionless on the
large canopied bed. His silvery hair,
cut close to his perfectly round head,
and the whiteness of the sheets,made
the naturally red face look purple.
His shirt was open at the throat re
.. • (i ii i M
“WHAT DO TOtr THINK ABOUT THE
HORSE?”
vealing a massive neck. The fat
body raised the blankets till they re
sembled a huge eiderdown cushion,
while the sufferer’s hands lay inert
on the satin counterpane. The dying
plebeian business man seemed sadly
out of place in the gorgeous bed, and
his agony seemed to be watched with
disgust by the powdered, wigged and
scarlet-coated gentlemen whose por
traits looked down from the high
walls upon the moribund stranger.
Disgust, also, was plainly written on
M. de Loyaumont’s face when he
coldly asked the physician:
“Only an indigestion, is it not?”
But the doctor shook his head.
None of the remedies had helped. M.
Berard’s case was hopeless. M. de
Loyaumont seized the physician's
arm.
“Impossible! My horse runs to
morrow, and I can’t withdraw him.”
The man of science made an impa
tient gesture. But M. de Loyaumont
was not in a mood to be contradicted,
and saying decidedly: “Your patient
must not die, doctor,” he went to find
the countess. She was in consulta
tion with her dressmaker. But the
count was so exasperated that he
took no notice of the .presence of a
stranger.
“Do you know what a trick your
uncle is trying to play me?”
Mme. do Loyaumont was as an
noyed as her husband, aud replied
sharply:
“Am I not as vexed as you about
it? I have just received my dress for
the races—a perfect beauty!”
Her selfishness, which surpassed
even his own, increased M. de Loyau
mont’s irritation. He said:
“I believe your toilette is all you
care for.” J
“Well, what do yon want me to do?"
"I should at least expect you to
evince some concern at your relative's
want of tact,’’ and murmuring some
thing about “low-bred vulgarians,”
he went out, slamming tho door.
Poor Uncle Bcrard died alone that
evening at C o'clock, without having
regained consciousness. The heirs
felt no fear about the will. The good
man had adopted his niece almost
from her cradle, had had her educa
ted at a convent with the daughters
of tho nobility, and all his life had
worked to amass an immense dot for
her. He had hardly suffered from
her ingratitude. He was content to
be tho lowest step in the monumen
tal staircase up which “his Helen”
had mounted to her grand social posi
tion.
In coming home to dinner and find
ing Barker in the ante-room M. de
Loyaumout was startled.
B“Haa anything happened to Jags
uar?"
“No, monsieur le comte.”
“What then?”
“Madame's uncle has died.”
Notwithstanding his usual self-pos
session, M. de Loyaumont rushed like
a whirlwind into his wife’s apart
ment
“Well,” said he, "he has done it.”
Mme. de Loyaumont wiped her eyes
with a little lace rag.
uiiuv jiitnui juui iiuiac
from running1,” said she. “Uncle
Brerard never would permit such a
sacrifice.”
Loyaumont shrugged his shoulders.
“I do not care for his permission and
I have never asked him for lessons on
etiquette”—he came near saying,
“nor you either,” but a remnant oi
good breeding kept him silent
Mme. de Loyaumont did so wish tc
find a way out of the difficulty.
“Look here,” said she, “My uncle
never went out—none of our friends
know him. Would it not be sufficient
if you and I kept away from the race
course, Sunday?”
Loyaumont sneered. “And let my
jockey wear crepe on his cap? I dare
say you would consider that good
form!”
And as the lady asserted that young
de Teramont went to the hunt last
year shortly after his mother's death,
her husband completely lost his tem
per.
"Hunting is permissible during
mourning, and those are customs you
would oblige me by learning. By
Jove! I really thought you were bet
ter brought up.”
“Well, what do you propose doing?”
Without replying, M. de Loyau
mont pressed the electric bell and
said to the butler who answered it'
“Send me the cook at once.”
“When the chef appeared M. de
Loyaumont asked: “Casimir, can you
preserve a largo piece of game on
ice?"
“A large piece, M. lo oomte?”
“Yes, a boor—a bear!”
The cooft hesitated. “Last week,"
said he, “I lost some fine game. True,
the weather is cooler now. W«
might try, M. le comte.”
The master gave a satisfied nod,
and explained:—
“This is the case:—M. le comtcssc’E
uncle has suddenly died. If it were
known before Sunday night, my horse
could not run. Build an ice chest in
the old carriage house and try to pre
serve the body. You understand?
And now, one word more. You know
I am liberal. I count upon youi
silence and that of all my employes. ’’
A complacent smile passed over the
face of the chef as with becoming
deference he answered:—
“M. le comte may feel perfectly
easy. Everybody in the house has
bet on the horse.”
Jaguar ran, won the stakes, and
appearance were preserved.
WHERE DIALECT RUNS WILD.
Specimen of tbe Argot In Use Among
Australian Sheep Shearer*.
If the specimen of Australian dia
lect which Gilbert Parker gives in the
Idler is a fair sample of what wo may
expect when dialect writers begin to
work up that country, we have not
yet seen the worst. Here is a little
story which reads like a missing word
puzzle or a cipher telegram: “Tell ye
’ow it was. I toddles off to the shed,
pulls down me tongs, ’auls out a
bloomin’ papillion, and was goin’ down
the whippin’ side, both blades ’oavily
loaded, w’en the boss drops and shot
me dead. I takes a ’op skip an’ a
jump back to the ’ut, put two folds in
the ol’ shirallee, slings the ’og ’ide on
the tall crocodile, goes up the river
like a frog, sits down along sleepy
Jim’s muster and strips a hundred and
forty by 4 o’clock next.” And here is
the interpretation which Mr. Parker
is kind enough to furnish us:
"This is how it happened: I walked
off to the shearing shed, took down
my shears, hauled out a sheep, and I
was clipping down the right-hand side
with all my might, when the manager
came and discharged me. I went
back to the hut, folded up uiy blanket,
put the saddle on my horse, and gal
loped up the river, stopped at Sleepy
Jim’s sheep pen and shore a hundred
and forty by 4 o’clock next day.”
Solving: the Problem.
George—Women are still pushing
their w#y into all the industries.
Jack—That's so. I have just been
discharged, to make way for a woman.
George—You have? Well! well!
What are you going to do now?
Jack—1 am trying to marry the
woman.
Alotherlv Love.
•‘Isn't it horrid,-’ said the Circas
sian Beauty, “to think of the Fat Lady
wedding the Ossified Man so soon
after her first husband's demise?”
“Yes, I know,” replied the Two
headed Girl, “but she says the baby
has taken a fancy to cutting its teeth
on him.”
I
Highest of all in Leavening Power.—Latest U. S. Gov't Report
Absolutely pure
A Primary Hnttnry.
According to the Glasgow newspa
pers, two young Scottish workmen,
sons of a mechanic employed in the
Singer sewing machine works on the
Clyde have invented a battery which,
it is asserted, will revolutionize elec
trical work, and a grent man of science
like Lord Kelvin thinks so much of it
that he offered to buy the patent rights
for 950,000. The inventors, aged ai
and 18 years, have, it is said, made a
primary battery ‘‘in which, while the
decomposition of the zinc plates is ren
dered enormously slower and the chem
icals used are of trivial value, the
strength of the battery thus formed is
very greatly increased." The battery
has been put to some severe tcBts and
is said to have stood them triumph
antly. It is evident that these lads
have made some sort of a discovery
which is likely to bring them fortune,
but general export opinion discredits
the idea of an electrical revolution.
The Nicaragua ('anal.
The project of the Nicaragua Canal
has been debated in the U. S. senate
very vigorously. One thing should be
remembered about that climate, it is
death to almost every foreigner who
goes there, and laborers especially suc
cumb. It is said the 1‘annma railroad
cost a life for every tie. Wlipt an idea
of pains nnd aches is in this sentence.
It is mostly due to carelessness. Every
laborer provided with Ht. Jacobs Oil
would be armed against these troubles.
Men’s muscles there are cramped with
rheumatic pain and they ache all over.
That’s just the condition where this
sovereign remedy can do its best work.
The fearful malady is very much lilco
the break-bone fever in certain parts
of America.
Selecting Wheat for Seed.
II. L. iiolley in a bulletin from the
North Dakota station gives the per
centage of germination and the yield of
wheat from normal seed and from seed
frosted, winter bleached, immature
and healed in the bin. The yield from
normal seed was much larger than that
from seed injured in any way. Normal
seed and injured seed gave practically
the same weights for the same volume
of grain. Smutted wheat, however,
weighed slightly less for a given vol
ume than sound wheat. The author
recommends selection by means of a
fanning mill of large grans for seed.
Before a Fall Head of Steam
Is gathered by that tremendously destructive
engine, mularla, put on tho brakes with Hos
tetler's Stomach Bitters, which will check Its
progress and avert disaster. Chills and fever,
bilious remittent, dumb ague and ague cake
arc promptly relieved and ultimately cured by
this genial -speclhc, which Is ulno a compre
hensive familv medicine, speedily useful In
eases of dyspepsia, biliousness, constipation,
sick headache, nervousness, rheumatism and
neuralgia. Agulnst the hurtful effects of sud
den changes of temperature, exposure in wet
weather, close application to laborious mental
pursuits, and other Influences prejudicial to
health, it is a most trustworthy safeguard. It
fortifies the system against disease, promotes
appetite and sleep, and hastens convalescence’
after debilitating and flesh wasting diseases.
As soon os gold was discovered somebody
invented brass.
True hospitality is never a temptress in
her own pari or.
Piso's Cure cured me of a Throat and
Lung trouble of three years’ standing.—E.
Cady, Huntington, Ind., Nov. 12, 1HD4.
A good word is an easy obligation, utb
not to speak ill requires only our silence.
If the Baby Is Catting Teeth.
Be sure and u*e that old and well-tried remedy, Mrs.
Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children Teethlng*
Every lie has a truth on its track that
will some das kill it stone dead.
C«>efa Cough llalsam
Is the oldest ami best. It, will break up a Cold quick
er loan anything else. It h> always reliable. Try it.
People who really want to do good will
sooner or later find out how.
Billiard Table, second-hand. For sale
cheap. Apply to or address, H. C. Akin,
511 8. 12th St.. Omaha, Neb.
The chains of a habit are too small to be
felt, until they are too strong to be broken.
Down Went the l.lglit.
“John,** said Mrs. lirmsmun, “it is
the light down, the first thin? you
know the baby will be awake."
“Pshaw," said Mr. llossnian, “the
light won't walco him."
“No, but I’ll walco him myself."
Tho prospect was too appalling, lie
meekly did as he was bid. — Kxchange.
Worms in Horses.
Tlie only sure euro for pin worms In horses
known is Hteketcc's lies? Cholera Cure.
Never falls to destroy worms In horses, Imas,
sheep, (lusts or eats; an excellent remedy for
sick fowls. Send sixty cnnls In United
flutes nostniie stamps ami I will send by
mall Cut this out, take It to driiKStlsi and
pay him fifty cents. Three packastes for$l..W
express paid. 0. U. NTKKKTKK,
„ • tiraml Itaplds, Mich.
Mention name of paper.
Warned.
Wo know a certain judgo who took
occasion recently to warn his people
from coming into the courtroom drunk
in these words; “I wish to put every
body on notice that if they come into
this courtroom while I am sitting on
this bench drunk they had better look
out”—Hamilton (da.) Journal. __
In OHItiii Time*
People overlooked tlio importance of
permanently lieneileial effects'and were
satisfied with transient action; but now
that it is generally known that Nyrup
of Kifjs will permanently enro habitual
constipation, well-informed peoplo will
not buy other laxatives, which act for
a time, but finally injure the system.
In kind words some people are very
stingy.
A Gentle Corrective
is wlmt you need when your
liver becomes inactive. It's
what you get when you take
I)r. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets ;
they’re free from the violence
and the griping that
come with the ordinary
pill. The best medical
• authorities agree that
in rrgulatingthe bowels
mild methods are pref
erable. For every de
rangement of the liver,
stomach and bowels,
these tiny, sugar coated
pills are most effective.
They go about their
work in an easy and
natural way, anil their
good lasts. Once used,
they are always in 111"
vor. Being composed
of the choicest, concen
trated vegetable ex
tracts, they cost much
more than other pills
found in the market,
yet from forty to forty
four are pul up in each
sealed glass vial, as
sold through druggists, at the price ot the
cheaper made pills.
“ I’leasant Pellets ” cure biliousness, sick
and bilious headache, dizziness, cosllve
ness, or constipation, sour stomach, loss of
appetite, coated longue, indigestion, ordyn
pepsia, windy belchings, “lieart-bnm,”
pain and distress after eating, and kindred
derangements of the liver, stomuch and
bowels. Put up in sealed glass vials, there
fore always fresh and reliable. Whether
as a laxative, or in larger doses, as a gently
acting but searching cathartic, these little
“Pellets’’are iiuequaled.
As a “dinnerpill,” to promote digestion,
take one each day after dinner. To relieve
the distress arising from over-eating, noth
ing equals one of these little “Pellet*.”
They are tiny, sugar-coated, auti-bilious
granules. Any child readily takes them.
Accept no substitute that may be recom
mended to be “just as good.” It maybe
better for the dealer, because of paying
him a better profit, but he is not the one
who needs help.
A free sample (4 to 7 doses) on trial, is
mailed to any address, post-paid, on receipt
of name and address on postal card.
Address Woki.p’s Dispensary Medical
Association, Buffalo, N. Y.
Bottles Double Size
AT OLD PRICE.
DAW PAIN-KILLER
T*Y IT FOR DYSPEPSIA.
IF
THOSE WHO IIAVE i
againM, the Government I
CLAIMS
■ ■ Will write to HATH AM W ■"■HIV
BICKFORD, Pension A Patent A try, 914 F Kt.,
Washington, I>.C..they will receive a prompt reply
Other remedies may
ST. JACOBS OIL
Will cure Sprains, Bruises, and a Backache
35 Gent Patterns
tor to Gents.
These pattern* retail In fashion bazaars ana
•tores for twenty-live to forty cents ouch. but
in order to Increase the domund among strung'
ers we offer them to the lu«ly readers of this
paper for the rcmurkuhly low price of only 10
vents Bach. 1’ostu^o one cent extra.
The patterns nro all of the very latest Now
York stylos, and are uncquulod for style acou*
racy of tit, (simplicity and economy. For twenty*
four years these patterns have noon used tbs
country over. Full descriptions and directions
—as the number of yards of material required,
the number amt mimes of the different pieces in
the pattern, how to rut anil tit amt put the gar
ment together- are sent with each pattern,
with a picture of the garment to go by. These
rat terns are complete In every particular, there
being a separate pattern for every single piece
of the dress. Your order will be tilled the same
day it is received.
Order patterns by number and give slxe In
inches.
Kvery patternjrunranteed to be perfect.
*HSY ABB OX.OVS PXTTXBO.
To get get MUST and IIUKAST measure, put
the tupe measure AIX of the way around tho
body, over the dress dose under the arms.
Prica of aaoh pattern, XO oenta, whou
ordered on coupon printed below.
Postage one cent extru on EACH pattern.
him, h iMiKRfl. ruttern no. rcjuu is cut m three
sizes, viz.: H, 10 and 12 yours.
Murine blue velvet und fancy French plaid
serge Is hero stylishly combined. A simulated
y»Uo of velvet covers the upper portions of tho
tilted body, buck und front. The full front and
buck is shirred und placed on in pointed out*
line. Stylish hretolles are graduated to points,
and full trrueofuly from the shoulders to the
waist line, trout und buck. A studding collar of
velvet finishes tho neck and the dosing Is In
center buck. Double puffs are stylishly ar
ranged over fitted sleeves fuced to the elbow
with velvet. The full round skirt Is gathered
nt the top und sewed to the lower edge of waist.
The mode is desirable for dresses either of silk
or woolen fabric und cun bo suitably developed
In vurlous combinations of colors or material.
< me material alone cun be used, variety being
given by decorutton of bruid, gimp, ribbon, ver
vet, Insertion or luce.
The retuil price of pattern Is 23 cents.
1
Ladies' Norfolk Basque. Pattern No. 0»2
to cut In five sizes, viz.: IK. 34, 30, 38 and 40
inches bust measure.
The Norfolk jacket is ns popular to
day as it was in its first season. It
bus the merits of being very generally
becoming, easily adjusted, comfortable and
stylish looking, besides belug available for
nearly all sorts of fabric. As here repre
sented made of vicuna in a sort of heather mix
ture, it forms part of a dressy toilet for general
wear, shopping or visiting, etc. The box plaits
are formed in the fronts and back, the under
sides being stitched together to a few inches
below the waist lino. Under arm gores fit the
sides smoothly and the basque can be mude
over the body lining fitted with double darts, or
that portion can be omitted if so preferred.
The closing is invisible in center front under
the middle plait, but buttons and button holes
can be used if desired. The fashionable turn
over collar is in latest mode and the belt of
cloth fastens with a dull gilt buckle. Any of
the seasonable woolen materials will make up
stylishly by the mode. Sergo, cheviot, in plain
or mixed varieties, homespun ladiescloth, or
iine flannel. A plain llnish Is all that is neces
sary.
The retail price of this pattern is 23 cents.
COUPON-**^
In ordering, give No.of patterns
wanted Bust.and Waist.meas
ure. Either of these patterns will be sent
to any address upon receipt of 10 cents in
silver or stamps when this coupon is en
closed with order and one tent for postage,
with vour address.
Address COUPON PATTERN CO.(
xx4 Lock Box 747, New York.
For rale in Fertile Belt of
Manitoba A Northweatern Hallway
Co. at 12. M) per acre; ea*y terms; it
)<■*«*’ lime; 6 per cent interest.
Recent aitlea. .10,000 acres.
Selected 20,000 In the YorktOB
district, famous for mixed farm I ns
Ktf.-pomlme lanu guide gratis. Apply H. REKMAlf,
Winnipeg. Man.
WALTER BAKER & CO.
1I1C .UlUlUlUL'UilCIS Ui
PURE, HICH CRADE
COCOAS AND CHOCOLATES
aftOn this Continent, here received
HIGHEST AWARD8
from tho great
% Industrial and Fund
W
EXPOSITIONS
V' ln Europe and America.
F I’nlike the Dutch ProctM, no Alke
|lie* or other Chemical* or Dyti ere
napd in inr of ihair nrninration*.
Theirdelicious BREAKFAST COCOA la absolutely
pure and soluble, and coot* less than one cent a cup.
BOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE.
WALTER BAKERS CO. DORCHESTER, MA88.
takes inuMur
USED
LOCAUY
Insufflator.
SR. SYKES' SURE CURE 00., H. CAXTOR RttO., CHICAGO
_ fold b/ all Druggists
1% II II, Omuliu-4, 1NB5
m Auswerlu; Adverliaeuieuts Kiuaiy
Mcutlon tliU Paper.
90 Ceqtst
FOR A WHOLE YEAR.
NewYorkTribune
-AND
The 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
other single weekly paper in the country. The Omaha.
Weekly Bek is the leading paper in the western country
and is too well known to need a special description.
THE NEW YORK WEEKLY TRIBUNE isa 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 has no supe
rior. Its “ Market Reports” are recognized author
ity. Separate departments for “The Family Circle,” '
“Our Young Folks,” and “Science and Me- >
chanics.” its “Home and 8ociety” columns
command the admiration of wives and daughters. Its gen
eral political news, editorials and discussions are compre- t
hensive, brilliant and exhaustive.
Send 90 Cents tor both papers to
THE OMAHA WEEKLY BEE,
_ OMAHA, NEB,
To any Subscriber
of this paper we
will mail an 8-page
weekly paper one
Full of latest tel
PUB. COL, Omaha.
HOMESTEAD FREE!
year (52 weeks) FBEE on receipt of 25c to/pay postage,
graph and farm newa Write at once. HOMESTEAD