The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, February 28, 1895, Image 7

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    COT A BABY BOY NOW..
tppln0M In » Southern Men’. Boa*
—Tell'* About tho Bed Fin* of
Dancer at tho Railroad Croee
In*—Warnlo* to America’!
Hen.
• For twenty-six years I nave u»™
il acco In great quantities and of late
rare took to cigarette smoking,’ writes
Ir. W. K. Simpson of Lepompte, La.
I want to go on record that tobacco
as robbed me of many years of life and
great deal of happiness. I realize It
[,,w as I compare my feelings and my
• nditlon with that of a year ago,when
was a tobacco saturated cigarette
l,.na. Many and many a time did I
i v to quit smoking myself Into etem
(v. but I could not put through a day
uthout suffering extreme nervous tor
,1,v, which would Increase hour by
,„ur till finally, to save myBelf as It
h i mod, from almost flying to pieces, I
,;„i to light the little, white pipe stick
ind swallow the smoke. One day I
vml in my paper "Don’t Tobacco Spit
ind Smoke You* Life Away,” Just what
; was doing. It came to me like the
turning of the man who waves the red
lag of danger at the railroad crossing,
,nil said that No-To-Bac was an abso
utidy guaranteed relief from tobacco
liivery. I did not believe It, but like a
frowning man grasping at a straw I
lommenced taking No-To-Bac. The ef
fects were magical, it destroyed the
nerve craving, and desire for cigarettes.
Two boxes, would you believe It, made
me well and strong. I have gained
mentally, physically, in vigor and man
in,ml, and with the brain free from the
nicotine and a breath no longer be
fouled with tobacco smoke I am so hap
. to-day to write No-To-Bac did It all
i year ago, so the cure Is time tested
,nd tried, not only In my own case, but
icycral of my friends who have been
ilso cured.
“We have a baby boy now. My wife
uni I feel that all this happiness start
nl from the time when I first used No
fo-Hac, and In evidence of our appre
ciation and in order that the memory of
tlic happiness may be perpetuated in a
living form, we want to name our baby
buy after the man who wrote the line
“I'on't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Your
Life Away.”
“No-To-Bac Is popular here and all our
druggists sell it. Hardly a day passes
but somebody asks me about No-To
Lno, so 1 don't want you to hesitate to
use these lines In any way that you
think will make known to suffering hu
manity the happiness that there Is In
store for the many men with nlcotin
lied hralns and weakened resolutions.
If they will only make up their mind to
rave the waste of vital power—to say
nothing of the money—now going up in
smoke and out in tobacco spit.”
The first screw steamer to cross the
Atlantic, the Great Britain, was com
menced in 1839, and floated in 1845.
Her length over all was 323 feet, her
depth 32 feet, and her displacement at
& load draft of 18 feet, 3,618 tons. Her
first voyage from Liverpool to New
York began July 26, 1845, and occupied
nearly fifteen days, the average speed
during the run being nine knots an
hour, says the Chicago Inter-Ocean.
After remaining on view about a fort
night in New York harbor, the return
passage to Liverpool was successfully
accomplished. Voyages back and forth
were made with satisfactory results
until the autumn of 1846, when, on a
very dirty night, in the month of Sep
tember, she was stranded off the coast
of Ireland. There she remained for
eleven months, through a tempestuous
winter, until she was finally floated in
the following autumn and taken to
Liverpool for repaira
A SURGEON’S KNIFE
gives you a feeling of horror and dread.
There is no longer necessity for its use
in many diseases formerly regarded as
incurable without cutting. The
Triumph of Conservative Surgery
is well illustrated by the fact that
RIIPTURF or Breach is now radi
“\yr 1 UI\Li catty cured without the
knife and without pain. Clumsy, chaf
ing trusses can be thrown away ! They
never cure but often induce inflamma
tion, strangulation and death.
TUMORS °var»an. Fibroid (Uterine)
ivm\o aud many others, are now
removed without the perils of cutting
operations.
PILE TUMORS however large.
I.I 1. IT1VR3* Fistula aud
other diseases of the lower bowel, are
permanently cured without pain or re
sort to the knife.
STftNF in the Bladder, no matter
UIV/, how large, is crushed, pul
verized, washed out and perfectly re
moved without cuttiug.
STRICTURE Passage is
... ,v , also removed without
cutting in hundreds of cases. For pam
phlet, references and all particulars,
send 10 cents (in stamps) to World’s Dis
pensary Medical Association, 663 Main
btreet, Buffalo, N. Y.
I MOTHERS
*"a those soon to be
conie mothers,
slmuld know that Dr
free's Favorite
V.“''r,P‘i°n robs
childbirth of its tor
terrors aiid
“ansrers to both
mmiitr and child, by
*ld,.nS nature in pre
?ar,ng the system
Parturition.
ard'rnby "labor ”
“da,e period of
confinement are'
secretion of u Jl a1so Proinotes tin
f'jr the child3" abundanee of nourishment
T%?:. w"^. Co..
Wo<>>. . ^ • when T <-.1.2_»v.'
•••■.. writeR *. HTu • J V wetton c tf.,
tree's Favorite pr^^n 1 taking- Dr.
stand on mv feet withS?tptl<ff ‘ 1 was not able to
I do all nVh«i22i uferin? almost death.
sAS&ffiffS; r~SS5 S2B-*
»w.n»aad " ?'y,|,'Pus™'Ork. washing, cooking'
?!" stouter no*7thL"g >°.r my family of eight. I
if*
«^ln^^hSoS’„Ky“ofW^
^and ^ gated ,ands ^ Idatu
®?d will find them tlv
m, .r6rt' the be»t and thi
Migrate t® S a«*ssible to markets
babIdaho and you will b
trv ~;.. ^8 a new coun
anri tv.18 *°r the Poor mai
frnit1^ sma,ler farmer am
tVu,t grower.
havs^8 °f *dabo and yoi
fruit 8uretT of crops ant
Of11 ,n abundance.
Vend°?rse you wlut thei
e. r. &. Ttli%“atatr-Id£0 u™
Th06ew.5^^maba!Neb. ^ “
*Te» for thl»b0fe ^ “o other life art deac
IP‘RIGate
<0GITate>
GRAND OLD PARTY;
. .. i
THE ROYAL ROAD TO WEALTH
BY SUBSIDIES.
Playing the People for Snokera to tha
Tone of Million*—Labor Arbitration—
Under Mighty Heavy Bond*—What
Cleveland Can Do.
-_ ■ (k if,■
Tli* Spawn of the Derll-Flih. ' k
It is most instructive to notice the
fact that a bill has boon introduced in
congress to charter the Maritime can
al company’ of North America. The
purpose of this company is to con
struct navigable canals through the
United States between the great lakes
and the St. Lawrence river, and
between that and tidewater at
the mouth of the Hudson. The
capital stock of the company is to be
$10,000,000, and its authorized in
debtedness $200,000,000; and it is to
have power and authority to con
struct the great public works enumer
ated. That is all harmless enough,
isn’t it? It is even cheering to see
that the minds of our capitalistic
citizens are turned toward the great
enterprise which, more than any
other that we know of, would add to
the wealth, the productive power, the
commercial importance of this nation.
Yet it needs no extraordinary vision
to see in this apparently praiso worthy
bill the spawn of the devil-fish that
has already thrown its tentacles about
the treasury of the United States, and
is surely forcing its way within.
Let us note that this bill was intro
duced within- three days of the date
when the Nicaragua canal bill passed
the senate, and then recall a little
history. When the Nicaragua scheme
first appeared, it was in exactly this
shape. Application was made to con
gress for a charter; an entirely un
necessary proceeding. It was made
by the men who have carried through
the deal and who are to receive the
boodle. But they then and there
pledged their honor that in no way
and at no future time would
application be made to the
government for financial assistance.
All that they wanted was to
be able to say to the government of
Nicaragua, and to the investors as
sociated with them, that they had the
sanction of the government; so that
no fear of future disowning, or of
government competition could arise.
So they got their charter, and we
know the rest. They created their
construction company, they got all the
subscriptions that they could, they
failed, and now they have a fair pros
pect of receiving an outright gift of
$70,000,000 taken from people, of the
United States, with probably twice as
much more to be voted in the future,
under penalty of losing all that has
already been put in.
The American promoter would be a
less shrewd individual than ho is if
this example were lost upon him, says
the St. Paul Pioneer Press. Here is
an opening for the future that makes
the speculator fairly dizzy with joy.
The project of a deep waterway from
the head of the lakes to the ocean
commands universal approval. If we
were to spend hundreds of millions in
Nicaragua for the advancement of the
world’s commerce, who shall prevent
us from spending as much within our
own boundaries to facilitate and en
large our domestic trade? Who can
dare oppose this great undertaking,
which asks nothing now from con
gress but a charter? It will probably
get it. Then there will come stock
subscriptions, real or bogus. Then
there will be a little work, and a big
failure. And then ' an application
to congress to guarantee the
bonds of the concern to an amount as
big as the limit of indebtedness.
After the Nicaragua scheme has been
I indorsed, this cannot he denied.
Shall we do more for other people
than for our own? Shall the great
West and Northwest be taxed to pro
vide an ocean highway for the com
merce of the Eastern seaboard, and
the people of the two coasts not
reciprocate by helping pay for the
creation of an inland waterway? The
resemblance is too apparent. The
plans are identical. The Maritime
canal company of North America is
the child of the Maritime canal com
pany of Nicaragua; and both are of
that race that intends to fasten on
the country and feed on subsidies un
til its life is exhausted or its anger
roused to throw them off.
Mr*. Castle’* Mistake.
The wife of James B. Castle, solic
itor general of the new government
of Hawaii, in a private letter to an
American friend,which recently found
its way into print, ventured to ex
press the opinion entertained by her
from childhood, that American-born
persons, whether in Hawaii or any
other country, had some sort of
claim to the consideration, if not the
protection, of the American govern
ment. That idea is very old. It
seems to be out of date—at least for
the present. Other native Ameri
cans abroad, as well as the millions
at home, have all along assumed
that American nativity or citizenship
was a recommendation for anyone,
no matter where his lot was cast
or under what circumstances he was
placed, who might have occasion to
solicit the favor of the American gov
ernment. This notion is now fnayed
at the edges, if not totally worn out.
It has received rough treatment at the
hands of the Cleveland administration.
The lesson taught by our Denso
cratic government in the Hawaiian
affair is that the United States cares
no more for our kith and kin in for
eign parts than for anybody else, that
it is highly improper for anyone oear
ing the name American to aid in
upsetting a heathen monarchy
and establishing a republican
form of government. Whoever is
guilty of so atrocious an act forfeits
the slightest claim for countepgnce or
protection from the United States.
Whether this would be the case if he
lent aid to upset a republic and eatab
lish a pagan throne is a matter for
conjecture, though the ardent effort
of Mr. Cleveland to reinstate the ex
queen of Hawaii tends to warrant tiie
opinion that an American-born per
son who wont about the world smash
ing republican institutions and sotting
up queens and kings, would receive
the highest consideration from the
present regime at Washington and the
protection of a warship if necessary.
Mrs. Castle seems to be far behind
the times—these Democratic times.
She should know that even if there
were any disposition to proteot or
favor porsons of American birth in
Hawaii or elsewhere, the administra
tion is entirely too busy borrowing
money, sacrificing American interests
abroad and destroying American in
dustries to give attention to any
merely sentimental matter.—Cincin
nati Times-Star.
Labor Arbitration.
Whether the plan tor compulsory
arbitration suggested by Attorney
General Olnoy or some other one of a
similar character be adopted, it is evi
dent that there should be legislation
on the subject. The interests of the
public as well as those of laboring
men and corporations demand that a
method of speedily settling laoor dis
putes bo adopted.
Apart from the financial question
there is no problem with which states
men have to deal which is of moro
importance than that which concerns
the relation of employes to their em
ployers. This is the great problem
of the conflict between labor and cap
ital. It has for years demanded so
lution. It cannot be ignored, and it
would be unjust to all classes inter
ested if it were to be ignored.
One of the evil effects of labor dis
putes is that wherein they effect the
public, says the Denver Republican.
It is demanded therefore in the in
terest of the public that a plan of some
sort be devieed that would prevent de
lays in the operation of railroads and
street cars pending the settlement of
a dispute between employers and em
ployes. This could be accomplished
by a system of compulsory arbitration.
Under such a system the rights of both
employers and employes would be
protected and those of the public also.
Traffic would continue, and the arbi
tration board would settle the dispute
in the duo course of time.
It always should be borne in mind,
however, that there can be no satis
factory adjustment of the labor ques
tion as long as economic conditions
prohibit the earning of enough money
to admit of the payment of good
wages. Under present conditions in
dustries are rendered unprofitable by
declining prices, and capital seeks to
sustain itself by reducing the wageB
paid to employes. This is a result of
appreciation in the monetary stand
ard of value. Gold monometallists in
their eagerness to sustain their theory
of finance refuse to admit that this is
true, but the facts are so well estab
lished that they cannot be successfully
contradicted.
Under Mighty Heavy Bauds.
Is this here country still the land we used to
call "the free”?
Now, that s the leadin' question that's a
botherin' o' me!
We're fond o’ talkin' freedom from the ocean
to the ponds.
But they're puttin' of this country under
mighty heavy bond!!
Is this here country solid still? Ain't some
thin' goln' wront?
The people—they've stopped stagin' of the
hallelujah son js:
An’ they're mournin' in the meadows fer the
money that absconds,
Fer the old country, brotherin’s,under mighty
heavy bonds!
Is this here country goln' right? Ain’t oon
gress upside down ?
It’s hard to hear a Jingle in this country or
the town
An' there's mighty little freedom from the
ooean to the ponds,
An' the reason is. this country's under mi.-hty
heavy bonds! —Atlanta Constitution
At the Mercy of England.
There is a plethora of money in
London and a great scarcity in this
country. It is a natural result of the
policy which makes the whole world
pay tribute to Great Britain. England
is the creditor nation of the world,and
when business is stagnant and enter
prises are unprofitable money accumu
lates in London because it is afraid tc
venture out. Debtors must pay, and
since creditors are afraid tc re-invest,
the money accumulates and lies idle.
It may be though that in a short time
the ability of debtors to pay will corns
to an end, and then the creditors will
find that in the long run at is better
to adopt a policy that gives tne
debtor classes a chance than to crush
them closer and closer to the ground.
The Faming or the Solid South.
The St. Louis Globe-Democrat says
truthfully that “more cotton mills in
the South will insure more Repub- ■
lican congressmen from that section.”
Increasing Southern interest in manu
facturing will strengthen the protec
tion sentiment in that part of the
Union, already much stronger than
the free-trade Democrats like. It is
through the propagation of the doc
trine ,of protection that the solid
South can most easily be broken.
“'■ijr Doxy.”
Mr. Cleveland is a firm believer that
orthodoxy is “my doxy.” When the
people Appealed to his patriotism to
protect their industries against the
Wilson tariff bill he turned a deaf ear
to their entreaties, but this does not
prevent him from appealing to the
patriotism of the Republicans to help
him out of the financial “hole” which
he has dug for himself—New York
Advertiser.
U lUon Crow Will Be Served Id 1890.
England will shortly insist on Pres
ident Cleveland going across and eat
ing a Wilson dinner. We learn that
he is “wise and statesmanlike”—in
London town, however, you know.
Revival of the Curfew Bell.
There le to be a revival of the curfew
in Canada, and if it prove successful in
the eities and towns of that dominion
it is not unlikely that it may he used
in some parts of the United States,
writes John (lilraer Speed in a short
history of that historio hell in the
February Ladies' Home Journal. The
law which has been enacted by the
legislatures of Quebec and Ontario was
drafted by the Society for the Protec
tion of Women and Children, and pro
vides that the municipal councils in
cities, towns and incorporated villages
shall have power to pass by-laws for
tho regulation of the time after which
children shall not be in the streets at
nightfall without proper guardianship.
The law provides that these councils
shall cause a bell to bo rung at or near
the time appointed, as a warning, to
be called curfew bell, after which tho
children so required to bo at their
homes or off the streets shall be liable
to be warned by any constable or police
officer to go home.
The Origin of the Whl|S
It was in February, 1834, that James
Watson Webb, of the New York Cour
ier and Enquirer, hit upon tho title of
Whig for the national Republican
party brought Into existence by the ad
ministration of John Quincy Adams
and led by Henry Clay. The name*was
suggested, as Webb averred, writes
Noah 11 rooks in the February Scrib
ner's, by the fact that the party was
pledged to resist arbitrary government,
as the English Whigs resisted royal
tyranny. It was sought, though, un
successfully, to brand tho Dcmoeratio
Republic&ns with the odious name of
Tories "The Tories,” said Clay, "were
the supporters of the executive power,
of royal prerogative, of tho maxim that
the king can do no wrong;” tho Whigs,
he added, "were the champions of lib
erty, tho friends of the people." What
more appropriate distinction than this
could be made between the JaekBon
men and the followers of the great
commoner?
■mall Beginning*
Make great endings sometime*. Ailments that
no are apt to consider trivial often grow,
through neglect, Into atrocious maladies, dan
gerous In themselves and productive of other n.
It ts the disregard o( the earlier indications of
111 health which loads to the establishment of
all sorts of maladies on a chronic basis. More
over, there are oertaln disorders Incident to the
season, such as malaria and rhoumatlsm,
ugalnst which It Is always desirable to fortify
the systom after exposure to the conditions
which produce them. Cold, damp and miasma
are surely counteracted by Hostotter's Stomach
llltturs. After you have Incurred risk from
those Influences, a wlnoglussful of iHostetter'*
Stomach Bitters directly afterward should be
swallowed. For malaria, dyspepsia, liver com
plaint, kidney and bluddcr trouble, nervousness
and debility It Is thu most deservedly popular
of remedies and preventives. A wineglass ful
before meals promotes uptietlto.
About Ferdinand Ward.
Haiti more Nows: Ferdinand Ward,
who robbed and ruined General IT. 8.
Grant, and landed behind thu bars at
Sing Sing for a term of seven years, is
now dragging out the remaining years
of his ruined life ut Geneseo, N. Y., in
the homestead of his father nnd
mother, long sinco dead. Although
some people suppose that Ward has a
comfortable fortune laid aside to keep
the wolf away from the door, tlio com
mon belief is that ho is all but penni
less, and that his great desire to gain
possession of his son arises from the
fact that the boy will be heir to consid
erable wealth when he becomes of age.
Ward's present apparent income is 8(1 a
week, which he receives us assistant to
the surrogate's clerk in Oenesco.
Warms In Jlorses,
The only sure cure for pin worms In horses
known Is Hteketee's Hog Cholera Cure,
Never falls to destroy worms In horses, hogs,
sheep, dogs or rata; un excellent remedy for
sick fowls. Head sixty coins In United
mutes postage stamps and I will send by
mull Cut.this out, lake It to druggist ana
pay him flfty cents. Three pnekages for J1.5U
express paid. O. U. HT K K KT HE,
(Iraud Kaplds, Mich.
Mention nnme of papor._
The tithes of England amount to 8:10,T160,
a year. _
The “Napoleon ernxe” will be illustrated
in spring and summer fashions.
Accept None of the
Pretended Substitutes for
Royal
Baking
Powder
||ECAUSE inferior and cheaper made baking
preparations are bought at wholesale at a price
so much lower than Royal, some grocers are
urging consumers to use them in place of the Royal at
the same retail price.
If you desire to try any oi the pretended substitutes
for Royal Baking Powder bear in mind that they are
all made from cheaper and inferior ingredients, and are
not so great in leavening strength nor of equal money
value. Pay the price of the Royal Bakino Powder
for the Royal only.
It is still more important, however, that Royal Baking
Powder is purer and more wholesome, and makes better,
finer, and more healthful food than any other baking
powder or preparation.
ROYAL BAKINO POWDER CO., 10S WALL ST., NEW-YORK.
The Typical American Face.
Century: It may be worth while to
add that once when I said, “How un
like each other are our American faces,
yet how quickly we recognize any one
of them among European faces—wish
I knew why.” A foreign friend replied
that she coaid tell me why. "The
typical American mouth,” she said, “is
more sensitive than that of other races
and the chin is slenderer; but the main
peculiarities are the shape and setting
of the eyes, and especially the modeling
of the cheek bones. You have high
cheek bones, but they are narrow,
while when they are high in other
races they arc broad and flat, as with
the Japanese, or squre, as with the
Scandinavians.” I am afraid she
thought we all looked a little foxy: but
a fox’s face has beauty, and shows a
keen sense of humor as well as its own
sort of cleverness; and besides, every
one knows that it is merely a mask.
Deafness Can Not be Cored
by local applications, as they can not reach
the diseased portion of the ear. There is
only one way to cure Deafness, and that is
by constitutional remedies. Deafness is
caused by an inflamed condition of the
mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube.
When this tube is inflamed you have a
rumbling sound or imperfect bearing, and
when it is entirely closed, Deafness is the
result, anil unless the inflammation can be
taken out and this tnbe restored to its nor
mal condition, hearing will be destroyed
forever;nine cases out of ten are caused
by catarrh, which is nothing but an in
flamed condition of the mucous surfaces.
We will give One Hundred Dollars for
any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh)
that can not be cured by Hall’s Catarrh
Cure. Send for circulars, free.
F. J. CHENEY, Toledo, O.
E3T*Sold by Druggists, 75c.
Hall’s Family Puls, 35c.
The first attempt to regulate the price of
gas by municipal enactment was In 1848.
liegemen’s (,'smphor Ice wlih Glycerine,
Cun* dumped Hands and Face, Tender or Sore Feet,
Chilblains, Piles. Ac. C.G. Clark Co , New Haven, Cl.
Only the golden rule can bring the golden
age. _
Hot Springs Special
Leaves St. Louis daily at 8:30 P. M., via
Iron Mountain Route, arriving at the
Springs next day at noon. Write H. C.
Townsend, G. P. & T. A., Bt. Louis, for
pamphlet.
Almost five-eighths of the steamers in
the world ore under the British flag.
The lint’s Neat Exploded.
Bozeman (Mont.) Chronicle: Rats
the cause of a great deal of annoyance
to those who live in the mountains, and
many stories could be told of their
deviltry. The latest comes to us by
letter from Red lodge. John Andrews,
of Dilworth, accompanied by a cowboy,
on their way to the mines of theCldrk's
Fork, stop at a cabin owned and for
merly used by Shelby Eli Dillard, the
journalistic miner. In the fireplace
was a mountain rat’s nest. Fire was
applied to this and in a moment a ter
rific explosion took place. Both men
were knocked down, and when assist
ance came soon after from a man fol
lowing them they were unable to move.
It seems that the rats had procured
from some source or other a number of
explosive caps such as are used by
miners, and deposited them in the nest
as they are want to do with everything
bright
DROUGHT PROOF FIELD CORN.
Here is something new. Despite 110
days without a drop of rain, Salzer's
new Yellow Dent corn yielded on a
large acreage over sixty-eight bushels
per acre, while the department of
agriculture reports the average yield
on corn but a trifle over twenty
bushels pcr acre in the United States.
Now think of the possibilities of this
com in a good corn season! It will
go double this yield then or 136 bus.
It You Will Cat This Oat and Send It
with 14c postage to the John A. Salzer
Seed company, I.aCrosse, VVis., you will
get free a package of this Drouth Proof
Com and their mammoth catalog wnu
You cannot make a bad egg good by mix
ing it with good ones._ «■
Perfectly at Home.
The irrigated lands of Idaho possess that
peculiar qualification which is perfectly
adapted to the raising of apples, apricots,
peaches, cherries, pears, plums, grapes,
prunes, hops, alfalfa, corn and potatoes,
which always find a ready market and bring
a good price.
You can't overstock the United States
with the-e commodities.
We'll send our advertising matter on ap
Slication. E. L. Lomax, G. P. &. T. A.,
maha. Nob. _
Billiard Table, second-hand. For sale
cheap. Apply to or address, H. C. Akin.
Ill 8. 12th St.. Omaha. Neb.
< MH
If It’s a Sprain, Strain, or Bruise
31 St. Jacobs Oil
Will Cure It
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 nenlthof the pure liquid 1
laxative principles embraced in thfr
remedy, Syrup of Figs.
Its excellence is due to its presenting
in tho form most acceptable and plena* -
ant to the taste, the refreshing and truly
beneficial properties of n perfect lax
ative ; effectually cleansing tho system,,
dispelling colds, headaches and fevero- ,,
ana permanently curing constipation.
It has given satisfaction to millions and
met witli tho approvnl of the modical
profession, because it acts on tho Kid
neys, Liver and 1 towels without weak
ening them nnd it is perfectly free from,
every objectionable Bubstiuice.
Syrup of Figs is for sale by all drug
gists in fiOc and $1 bottles, but it is man
ufactured by tho California Fig Syrup
Co. only, whose name is printed on every
package, also the name, Syrup of Figs,
uml wing well informed, you will noi
accept any substitute if offered.
L. Douclas
$3 SHOE
IS THE BEST.
PIT FOB A KINO.
.4?
P. l/Ulc DUVANf
FRENCH AENAMCLLCD CALF.
|4.*3» Fine ZhuMmim.
I ♦3.VP0UCE,ssoles*
[•2>I.VBOYS'SCHOOLSHOE1
LADIC3*
Ra?
KBsmexm,
■ROCKTON,MA,«.
urir one million People wear tin
W. L. Doug'as $3 & $4 Shoes
All our shoes are equally satisfactory
They give the beet value for the money.
They equal cuetoni ehoee In aty la and fit.
Their wearing qualltlea are uneurpaeeed.
The prices ara uniform,•••stamped on sole.
Prom $i to $.t aaved over other makes.
If your dealer cannot supply you we can.
"COLCHESTER”!
SPADING
BOOT. '
•1ST IN MARK IT*.
bust in kit
BEST IN WEAIUHG •
QUALITY. '
Tbe outer or tap aole ex
tends tbe adioie looftla
down to life heel, pro
teotlnir tbe boot In die
pine and In otber bant
Work
ABE TOUR DEALER 1
POK THEM
and don't bn put off
wttb Interior goods.
COLCHESTER RUBBER CO.
m.'SCALPER
24 pagex, 2c. All about making money In Grata
ami Stock* by ''ucalplng the market" on margin* ot
•20 to 11,000. B*«t method yet. All neat pen inak*
money. Lamsinu St Co., 112 Quincy St., Chicago.
P
Is
rMCIAIIJOHN W.IWOHKML
tndlUH WMbliiuton, D.cl
* Successfully Prosecuti
LateFrlnolpal Bxamlner U.B. Pe
3 y re ill hut war, lftu*iJudk&Uugclu
es Claims*.
mi!ou Buroau...
Id uUJ udkatiug claim*, ally einoa.
Cole’s New Domestia
Coffee Berry, ‘
Better Then a Gold Mine.
Raise your own coffee at less than one cent •>
pound. Let high tariff store coffee go, Th*
roor man's friend and rich man a delight. Ma
tures north or south iu four months. Plant any*
time up to the 20th of June; 20,000 farmers sup
plied and every one praises it. Has produced!
over ft) bushels per acre. Some prefer It ub
store coffee. Produces two crops a year trw
the south. Large packet postpaid EOcts; on
enough to plant 300 hills. 50 cts or stamps. Will
make 200 pots of most delicious coffee, good!
enough for a king. Is superseding store coffee*
as fast as its merits become known, Large!
catalogue of 50 new varieties of seeds and test!-)
monials from patrons all over tho Union send
lrec with each order by
€. E. COJLE. Nffdaman,
Buchner. Mo.
WELL MACHINERY
catalogue showing WELL
augers, rook drills, u ydrauli
AKD JETTING MACHINERY, etc.
Bsiit Fti**. liare been tested and
«U warranted.
Sioux City KnLine A Iron Works,
Suoeeasor* to Pech Mfg. Co.. ,
MIvmx illy. Iowa.
1117 Union Are.. Kansas City, Ua
ICPIITQ WANTED in e^rry Locality to kandln
NDLlllO our Aluminum Notions Can mufc« t oaa
•80 to S30 p**r we*k Srnd stamp fur engraved * heeW
XLl'MLNXM NOTION CO.. SB S. *4:h st., Omaha. NeST^
W S IT, Omaha—a. 189S
hu«u Auvarincmaqu oMUir
Aleutian this faysc. t