The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, May 30, 1895, Image 7

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    L„< of Prlceles Value
L tions of fans may reach a
L., iv writes Aletho Lowber
i ndies' Home Jour
Siiiv Ladies’ Home Jour
nal New York women of
„,r wealth possess very valn
>0lions of fans, both antique
fni varieties, while the Dueb
mipht furnish an entire ex
■w;th the TOO beauties she re
, wedding gifts. The one pre
J her by the children of Lng
esnecially beautiful. It is of
hu e, and the mother-of-pearl
inlaid with gold. The late
(einidof, of San Donato, Flor
id an original collection of
huy were only twenty-two in
hut for twenty-five years the
iml interested himself in having
ctions of the principal pictures
nllery executed bv Prosdociml
.cse funs One of the subjects
Trumpeter,” by Wouvermsnn,
bther “The Prodigal son,” by
leniers.
IlMPSON. Marquess, W. Va-, says:
Ic Liurrh Cure cured me of a very baa
V'urrh.” Druggists sell it, 76o.
i is an indispensable adjunct
|{by:
,, ,-si clans had given me up, I —
piso's Cure.—Ralph Dkiso, Will
l’a., Nov. 22, 1893.
±ip that has to sail among rocks
fpuod pilot.
lontli Among the Mountains.
and their friends, too, for that
«ho want information about the
folutely the test, way to reach Den
la, limeof theNatioual Educational
tiou meeting next July should write
Tnnois. Omaha, Neb., for a copy
tie t ook recently issued liy the Pas
Itciartmeut of the Burlington
R It M. R. R.)
ititled "To Denver via the Burlington
i,mi contains 32 pages oi interesting
it ion about the meeting, the city of
. the state of Colorado, special
tickets, rates, hotels, side trips,
ervice, etc
ook is froe. Send for it.
rh (airs are devices to make the
ay lor the pasturage of the sheep.
Yon Going East This Summer?
t forget that the great summer
route is the Michigan Central.
Niagara Falls Route,” a flrst
ne for first-class travel, the popu
ie to Niagara Falls, Mackinac
, the Thousand Islands of the St.
nee, the White Mountains, the
clacks, Portland by the Sea, Bos
nd New England points. New
tnd the seashore,
ten cents postage for “A Sum
lote Book." It will tell you all
these places and how to reach
O. W. RUGGLES,
1 Pass'r and Tkt. Agt., Chicago.
,nke Shore Makes Some Changes,
i the inauguration of the summer
le on the Lake Shore & Michigan
ru railway, taking effect Sunday,
h. train No. 14. now leaving at 3:35
"ill leave at 3 p. m. The Elkhart
mndation at 4:15 p. m. will be dis
ue:l. Train formerly leaving at 11:3J
ii.: leave at 2:45 a. m. Sleeper will
:«i in depot ready for occupancy at
All other trains remain as hereto
F M. Byron, city passenger and
agent, ISO Clark street. C. K. Wil
tetern passenger agent, Chicago.
Important change of Time,
new service on the Nickel Plate road
>to effect on Sunday, May 111th. Three
"ill le run in each direction, leaving
u going east at K;U5 a, m. daily ex
e: iny, 1:3o and K:20 p. m. dai>y. No
of ears between Chicago and New
In either direction. Also through
's | etween Chicago and Boston,
i dining ears are a feature of the
ervice. Rates always the lowest. City
oltice, 111 Adams street. Telephone
Almost Cheaper Than Walking
le low rates offered by the Burlingto:
cC.B. & Q. R. R.) Tuesday, Jun
"hen round trip tickets to points i:
Kansas. Colorado, Wyomins
, akota and Utah will be on sale a
■he regular tariff.
k of it—Half the regular tariff.
|To!"s t0 whom economy is an objec
, “®ans everybody—will take ad
Jge of this money-saving opportunity
® ‘‘“e-table of the Burlingto
ell as for full information atou
r ‘raln\ aPP*y to the neares
agent or write to
r, . Francis,
Uen I Pass r Agent, Omaha, Neb.
■'.OSE AMI THAT IN JUL]
excursion to Colorado.
t'[Sn?™,hl9l“nd Rou,e Will s<
an? P J°.r,'h'e excurslon to Deny
i;f. A0st?.1h(',Jrd letter to Jno. Sebs
issued by a beautiful so
It v, ca uX 'reat Rock Island & 1
“11 aStdth^..,£ou,r si.T.e?«her.” )1
* OUT FOR BREAKERS AHEAD
when pimples,
eruptions, boils,
and like manifes
»f •_
—— maiiucs
tations of impure
Dmnr1 onno-.» They
blood appear. They
wouldn’t appear if
your blood were
pure and your sys
tem in the right
condition. They
show you what you
need a good blood
punfer; that’s what
you get when you
take Dr. Pierce’s
V )'akt Areltc
^//Golden Medict
DlS^'—-—
tv uun ^teclica
discovery.
carries healtl
S'.h «•, AH Blood
“,n and Scalp Dis
— “viiun. in or?an ii
s Cream Balm
I, ®LY t int s
[IDihHEAD
A PATHETIC SCENE.
A TRAMP .DECORATES A PAU
PERS GRAVE.
"One Flower for 8eren Oaks and One
for Malvern Hill, a Hunch for Old
Antletam and Tear* for a Nameless
Tomb.”
HE LITTLE
country churchyard
at - was filled
with the good-heart
ed villagers who
had gathered there
to do reverence to
the dead heroes.
Upon the mounds,
marked by little
flags, whose stars
and stripes fluttered
in the soft breezes
flowers and wreaths were laid in pro
fusion, commemorative of the love the
living bore for the dead, sleeping so
peacefully below. Kind words had been
uttered by the good old preacher, whose
long, white hair swept about his head
as he lifted his face toward the blue,
cloud-fleeced sky and asked Ood to
bless the loved ones who gave up life
for the cause of right, and for all the
dead who had taken part In the great
struggle of war. And when the flow
ers were laid upon two graves lying
close side by side, the tears gathered
in the gentle old man's eyes as he re
called the pair of handsome sons who
had gone from the quiet parsonage
years ago to dye with their heart’s
blood the vernal sod of the sunny south.
And now all was over and done, and
the good people departed, leaving be
hind a few scattering ones walking
among the narrow paths of the quiet
churchyard, whose silence was broken
alone by the twittering of birds among
the rustling leaves. A man with wild,
unkempt hair straggling about his
bronzed, weather-beaten face, stood
upon the outside, leaning with crossed
arms upon the white picket fence. His
clothes were ragged and dirt-stained:
BLUB AND GRAY.
Their Only Rivalry Now Is In Ilouorlng
Dead Heroes.
Memorial day preserves Its holy and
sacred associations because it mingles
Into one, the highest, noblest and most
grateful feelings of which mind and
heart and memory are capable. The
gleam of Joy Is seen through the mist
of tears. Flowers bloom and birds are
highest up In the nlr, yet the funereal
dirge is heard and the flowers are
placed on tombs and over mounds
where lie the dead sleeping death's
reconciling embrace. This rain upon the
river and sunshine on the hill are a
salutary mingling. For it Is good for us
to sorrow, and yet to sorrow with hope
chasing away our tears. We cannot for
get the past. What Ingrates should we
be even If we could. Nor can we be
blind to the present. To perceive it is
our duty. The tear for the past is in
the eye, the Joy for the present lights
up the very tear with a radiance born
of heaven. Memorial day is to be ob
served by Americans in all time be
cause It commemorates our dead. It
matters not now on which side they
fell. They sleep together; and when
summoned by the angel will awake to
gether and be brothers for evermore.
A reverent silence prevails as we put on
every mound Its garland. Who asks
whether they wore the blue or the
gray? We do not know, nor do we
want to know, as we traverse the bat
tlefields from whose verdant faces na
ture has wiped the track and stain of
bloody conflict. Some boy, precious to
woman, mother, wife, sweetheart, wait
ed and waited and waited. He never
came, so she went to him. The south
and the north weep together. Their
only rivalry Is that of loving duty to
the heroes gone. Let not a word of
faction disturb the solemn tasks of
mutual grief on a day which is a day
of God. Although the graves of our
revolutionary soldiers, of those of 1812,
and of Jackson's warriors at New Or
leans, may be difficult to discover, one
could wish they should all share the
honors of the day. And many a gallant
sailor boy is buried fathoms deep In
ocean caves, and on the lakes where
Perry swept to victory, and around the
coasts of our southern clime. But
“HERE'S A ELOSSOM."
his shoes were battered, out at the toes,
down at the heels. He was a dilapidat
ed specimen of humanity, a voyager
upon life’s troubled stream, drifting
from point to point as purposeless as
a bubble upon the crest of a wave. His
eyes were fixed intently upon one cor
ner of the churchyard where briars
and bushes covered in tangled masses
a few mounds. "Forgotten again. Poor
old pard! They mean well, but they
don't finish the work." The words fell
from the lips of the strange man in
soft, low whispers. From a pocket of
the ragged coat he drew a bit of red
cloth and wiped away the tears that
rolled down the seamed face. He walked
around to the entrance and passed
through the little turnstile. No one no
ticed the poor, ragged fellow who slow
ly wended his way along the narrow
pathways toward the tangled corner of
the churchyard. When he reached the
spot he took off his hat and Btood there
with bowed head, gazing mournfully
oeiore mm. jnen ne reacnea out ms 1
hand and pulled the briars and bushes
aside and bent forward.
"Just as I thought. Forgotten. They
didn't know you, old pard. They didn’t
know how brave you was In time of
war. There Is no flag to mark your
grave. They didn’t know how proudly
you carried the stars and stripes above
you at Malvern Hill.” The birds In the
bushes were not disturbed by the 1
stranger’s whispered tones. There was
something so quieting in the softened
tones that the little birds hopped about
among the brances so near that his
trembling hands could have touched
them. The man gathered a bunch of
violets from the grass near the fence,
and then went back to the brambles
and pulled them aside.
"Here’s a pretty blossom, pard, for
the sake of Seven Oaks; here’s another
for Lookout Mountain, where you was
great; here’s four or five for Malvern
Hill, where you was a hero a nation
could be proud of; and here are all
the others for Antietam and other
places, where you moved with the front
line and never backed from your duty.
And my tears are for your long days
and longer nights spent In the career
of a tramp who died a pauper sol
dier.”
The stranger turned away and walked
with bent head out of the graveyard.
He passed on down the village street,
looking neither to right nor left; and
when he reached the brow of the hill
beyond he turned toward the peaceful
town, waved his hand, whispered "For
gotten,” and then he disappeared. When
the straggling ones in the churchyard
drew near the pauper’s corner they won
dered whose grave there had been
strewn with violets, and they wondered
who had placed them there; but the
little birds among the brambles knew,
and they kept the secret to them
selves.
To attack a man with any weapon is
a serious matter in Madagascar. It ia
punishable by death.
though burled beyond our reach of
kind, they are none of them beyond our
hearts’ affections. And every wreath
on every American soldier’s or sailor's
grave Is our tribute to one and all and
all In one.
Decoration Day.
Shoulder to shoulder, heart to heart,
eyes to the front, the men in blue
marched together thirty years ago. The
shoulders bore muskets; the hearts were
like those of lions in their bravery; the
eyes looked forward without flinching
to the chance of suffering and death.
And shoulder to shoulder, heart to
heart, eyes to the front, the men In blue
will march together May 30. The
shoulders will again bear muskets, but
their harmless muzzles will hold bou
quets instead of bullets; the hearts,
still brave, will be filled with the ten
derness of weeping women rather than
the fury of fight; the eyes will look for
ward through a film of tears to the
graves where He the men who fell In
those long past battles; to the last rest
ing places of comrades who, escaping
the dangers of war, have since dropped
by the wayside at the call of peaceful
death. Heroes all! All honor to them!
Make way!
Remember the Soldier*.
Remember the soldiers, children,
Remember them all with flowers!
Theirs was the battle and theirs the
pain,
Ours is the peace and ours the gain;
Theirs was the sowing, the harvest
ours—
And all we can give them today is
flowers!
Decoration Day,
A china decorator May is named.
And pretty cups she paints, though all
unfamed.
Asked little Flo: “What shall you paint
today?”
“Nothing at all, my darling," answered
May;
"I thought you'd paint a lot today,”
said Flo.
“Because it is Memorial day, you
know!”
That this nation, under God, shall
have a new birth of freedom, and that '
government of the people, by the peo- I
pie, for the people, shall not perish from j
the earth.—Abraham Lincoln.
COLO POUND IN GEORGIA.
Rnldnl of White County Declares That
Territory Loads the World,
A representative of the Progress had
a long and Interesting talk a few days
ago with J. R. Lumsden, one of the
most successful gold miners In the
country. The talk brought back mem
ories of days wuen big "finds” were
made In this country, says Cleveland
(Oa.) Progress. It was In 1880 that Mr.
Lumsden was working for gold on a
branch on his place, seven miles above
here. One afternoon ho had two men at
work when they discovered some small
nuggets three feet under the ground.
Mr. Lumsden had the dirt removed
from a small place and had struck a
layer of gravel. In two hours after he
had struck it he had taken out 900 pen
nyweights of the precious metal. He
mined on the same lot for two months,
In a space not larger than 50x100, and
In that time took out $3,500 In nug
gets. In one place, about 10x12, he got
1,200 pennyweights.' Two big nuggett
were found on this lot One weighed
341 pennyweights and the other
weighed 307. Talking of big nuggets,
it waa about five years ago that John
Thurmond, while at work on what Is
known as the White & McOee prop
erty, dug up a nugget which weighed
604 pennyweights. “There are thous
ands of pennyweights In White county
yet,” said Mr. Lumsden, "and all that Is
needed Is money to develop our gold
property. Money Is still to be made by
placer mining, but the best gold and
the most of it is In veins. People can
brag, but I can tell you there Is more
gold in the ground In White county to
day than In any other county in the
worm.
HE WAS VERY POLITE
And Showed It Even When the Home
Wat Burning Down.
“The coolest man I ever saw,” said a
veteran fireman, to a New York Sun re
porter, "I met at a Are in a dwelling
house. We found him in an upstairs
front room dressing to go out. The
Are by this time was b’illn’ up through
the house at a great rate.
“ ‘Hello, there!’ we hollered to him
•when we looked In at the door, ‘the
house is aAre!’
“ ‘Would It disturb you If I should
remain while you are putting It out?’
he said, lifting the comb from his hair
and looking around at us. He had on a
low waistcoat, and his dress coat lay
across a chair.
“Seeing us staring at him he dropped
his comb into his hair again and went
on combing. But as a matter of fact
he was about ready. He put down the
comb, put on his coat and hat, and
picked up his overcoat.
“ ‘Now I'm ready, gentlemen,’ ho
said.
“We started, but the stairway had
now been closed up by Are. We turned
to the windows, The boys had got a
ladder up on the front of the house.
" ‘Now, then.’ we said to him, when
he came to the window.
“ ‘After you, gentlemen,’ he said,
standing back, and I’m darned if we
didn’t have to go down the ladder Arst
and let him come last.”
DIDN’T WANT ANY OF THEM.
A Virginia Father Led Ills Sentimental
Daughter Ont of the Ilouee Gallery.
A thrifty old farmer from Loudoun
county, Va., came down to Washing
ton during the session of the last con
gress accompanied by his daughter, an
extremely attractive young woman. It
was to be a day of sight-seeing, and
father and daughter had a Jolly time
getting around from place to place. It
was practically new to both of them,
for they didn't get to the capital often,
and very much less often for a holiday
entirely to themselves.
X 4AV> 1UOv |JUIUb tU L/C own TV
capitol, and the couple, after a hurried
visit to the other points of Interest
about the great pile of marble, found
themselves in the house gallery. The
old farmer had been reading the papers
pretty closely, and he knew what he
was looking at as he cast his eyes over
the aggregation on the floor, but the
girl was thinking about something else.
At last she nudged her father.
“Well,” honey,” he responded in a
whisper, turning to her.
“How would you like to have a con
gressman for a son-in-law, dad?” she
asked, after the manner of daughters
on good terms with their fathers.
He looked at her a moment and then
at the crowd below.
“What? One of them?” he said,
scathingly, and taking her by the arm
he walked out of the gallery in a
hurry.
Germany's Imperial Train.
The German emperor’s imperial
train cost $750,000 and took three
years to construct. There are alto
gether twelve cars, including two nur
sery carriage. The reception saloon
contains several pieces of statuary and
each of the sleeping-cars 13 fitted with
a bath.
Unexpected Corroboration.
Mrs. De Flatte—Dr. Knowall says
milk should not be used in large quan
tities, because it makes the hair fall
out. Do you believe that? Mrs. Sub
urb-Dear me! It might be. Our cow
sheds its coat dreadfully.—New York
Weekly.
Begin at the Top.
The Japanese begin building their
houses at the top. The roof is first
built and elevated on a skeleton frame.
Then it affords shelter to the work
men from storms.
A Feeos River Spring,
There is a spring on Pecos river, In
San Miguel county, New Mexico, which
throws out a stream fifteen feet wide
and- three feet deep.
_______ J - I illM—i_
Take no Substitute for
Royal Baking Powder.
It is Absolutely Pure.
All others contain alum or ammonia.
Rale* far Sunshiny Girl*.
When she was quite a little girl she
wrote them out one New Year's day on
a clear white slate, and hung it on her
dressing-case where it could always he
seen, writes Ruth Ashmore in a very
delightful description of “A Sunshiny
liirl,” in the May Ladies' Home Jour
nal. She had found them in an old
book. John Wesley had laid these
rules out for his life, and though she
felt she might never keep them all, she
tried to live up to them os far as possi
ble. And when she made that resolve
half the battle was fought. Written
out in rather a shaky hand were these
rules: "Do all the good you can; by
all the means you can; in all the ways
you can; in all the places you can; at1
all the times you can; to all the people I
you can: as lomr as ever vou can.’’
Why She Smiles Sweetly.
Sparkling eyes, quick boating heart, and the
roa.v blush of pleasure on tho cheeks makes the
strong mun liuppy when he meets his lady love.
That's the klnu of a mun whose very touch
thrills because It Is full of energy, vigorous
nerve power and vitality. Tobacco makes strong
men Impotent, weak, and skinny. No-'l o-Unc
cold by Druggists evervwhcro. Guaranteed to
cure. Book, titled "Don't Tobacco »plt or
Smoke Your Life Away." free. Address Ster-1
ling Remedy Co., Now York or Cblougo.
The Danger of It.
Detroit Free Press: “I can't (five you
anythin? to eat on the Premises," said
the hatchet-faced woman to the tramp
ut the kitchen door, “but Pll give you
a pie if you will put it under your coat
and carry it away with you."
“1 beg your pardon, ma’am,” replied
the tramp, "but I can’t accept it."
“Why not?” she snapped so Bharply
that it frightened him.
“I mean on those conditions, ma’am,"
he explained.
“What's the matter with the condi
tions?"
“I’m afraid, ma’am, I’d be arrested
for carrying concealed weopons,” and
the way he disappeared without tho
pie was astonishing to a casual ob
server.
"Sanson’s Magic Corn Salve.”
Warranted to cure or money refunded. Ask your
druggist for it. Price 15 cents.
For a man to exert his power in doing
good so lar as he can is a glorious task.
If the Haby is Cutting Teeth.
Be enre and use that old and wcll-trtod remedy, Mrs,
tVa*u>w*» Soothing Syrup for Children Teething.
Temperance is the moderating of one's
desires in obedience to reason.
No good endeavor is in vain; its reward
is in the doing.
X«»r Do It.
Tit-Rite: Mr* Scribbler (Impressive
ly)—"Whatever you do, never, Lever
marry a newspaper man. ”
School chum—"Why?"
I married one, and I know. Every
night my husband brings home a big
bundle of newspapers from all over the
country, and they' drive me crazy."
"The newspapers?”
"Indeed they do. They are just
crammed with the moat astonishing
bargains in shops a hundred miles
away.”
Make Your Own Bitters I
On receipt of ao cents in U. S. stamps, 1
will send to any address one package Sts
ketee s Dry Bitters. One package makes
one gallon mg tonic known. Cures stom
ach. kidney diseases, and is a great appe
tiser and blood purlfler. Just the medicine
needed for spring and summer. 86c. at
your drug store. Address Geo. G. 8*n>
kites, Grand Itapldx. Mich.
Him of denial.
Washington Star: *'I am sure that
baby is going to be a great artist," said
the. fond mother. .
"Isn't he rather young toevlncoany
talent?”
“That's just where he shows his ga
nlus. I left him where he could get
some red ink on his Ungers, and before
I knew what he was doing he decorated
the library wall with ono of the lore*
liest magazine posters you ever saw."
The UdlM.
The pleasant effect and perfect safety
with which ladles may use the Call*
fornla liquid laxative, Syrup of Flga,
under all conditions, makes It their
favorite remedy. To get the true and
genuine article, look for the name of the
California Fig Syrup Co., printed near
the bottom of the package.
If “cleanliness is the next thing to godli
ness," soap Is sacramental.
Low Hate
Harvest Excursions will lie run from alt
stations on the Wabash railroad on May
illst and June 11th, to the south and south
east.
For full particulars apply to the nearest
ticket agent of the Wabash or connecting
lines, or to U. N. Clayton,
N. W. Passenger Agent, 1416 Farnam St., .
_Omaha, Neb
Homeseekers Excursions.
On May 21st and June 11th, 1H05, the
Union PacilTc System will sell tickets from
Missouri ltiver points and stations in Kan
sas and Nebraska, to points south and
west in Nebraska and Kansas, also to Col
orado, Wyoming, Utah and Idaho, east of
Welser and south of Heaver Canon, at rata
of one first class standard fare lor the
round trip. Minimum rate $7.00.
For Cure o! Sprains, Bruises, ?t. Jacobs oil on the
.. BASE BALL..
Field is lust wnat all plauers call It, “the best.**
See that
Lump?
That’s Lorillard’s I
CLIMAX
PLUG.«
r _
It's Much the Best
Sold everywhere. Made only hy the P. Lout
lard Company. The oldest tobacco manufac
turer* In America, and the largest In the world.
■•"ALL ABOUT THE SILVER QUESTION/**
COIN’S-^.,
FINANCIAL
e——.SCHOOL
Do you want to understand the Science
of Money? It is plainly told in.
COIN’S FINANCIAL SERIES.
This is a glorious opportunity to secure one copy
or the entire scries. SENT POSTPAID. *
ometallism. by Archbishop Walsh of Dublin,
Ireland, seventy-eight pages. An able docu
ment; 25 cents.
No 2. Coin’s Hand Book, by W. H. Har
vey. Deals with the elementary principles of
naqngy and statistic*. Forty six pages; 10
No. a Coin’s Financial School, by W.
H. Harvey. Illustrated—150 pages and <H illus
trations. It simplifies the financial subject so
anord.nary schoolboy can understand it. It is
the textbook of the masses, absolutely reliable
as to facts and figures, and the most interest
ing and entertaining book on the subject of
money published. Price, best edition, paper,
seved. cover two colors, 60 cents. Popular edi
j tion. 25 cents. Cloth, II.00.
No. 4. A Tale or Two Nations, bv W. H.
Harvey. A novel of 802 pages. A love story
that gives the hMory of demonetization and
depicts the evil spirit and influences that have
worked the destruction of American prosperity.
A fascinating and instructive book. It holds
the reader with wonderful interest from begin
ning to end. Popular edition. 26 tents; extra
quality paper, 50 cents; in cloth. ti.uo.
No. 6. CHAPTERS on SILVER, by Judge
Henry (». Miller of Chicago 110 pages. A
look suitable for all thoughtful readers of the
money questlou. Paper only, 25 cents
No 6. Up to Date. Coin s Financial
School Continued, by W. H. Harvey. Illus
trated, 200 pages and 50 illustrations. It is a
history of Coin, the little financier, since de
livering his lectures In Chlbago It Is dedi
--ui vmn is r II* A If Cl AI*
School, and should only bn read by those who
irat?.!7u! *he ^chool.” Every voter In the
Untied States should read it. Popular edition.
» ^nts; better paper edition, 60 cents; cloth!
_After May 1,1895, all persons ordering ‘'Coin'*
Financial School” or "Up to Date, coin s Fi
nancial School Continued," In cloth, will ret
the two books printed together and bound in
cloth for 11.00, aent postpaid. The two books
together make the most complete treatise on
the subject of money ever printed.
Oar Special offer.
, We send the following four books postpaid
for 11 U0. Bimetallism and Monometallism ,2o
cents), Coin's Hand Book (10 cents), Coin's Fi
nancial School (SO cent edition), and A Tale of
Two Nations (50 cent edition) 11.35 for 11.00.
Ill ordering these, say "Set No. 1, of « books ”
We also furnish for II00 Bimetallism amt
Monometallism ,25 cents). Coin's liuud Book.
(10 cents). Coin's Financial School ,25 cent edt
tioni. A Tale of TwoNutions (25 cent editionl
Chupters cn Silver (25cent edition), and Unto
Ifate. Coin's Financial School Continued ,25
cent edition), *1 35 tor II 00. In orderln* the
books contained In this last offer, say "set No.
2. of 6 books. **
For any of the foregoing books or offers remit
fn stamps postofflee money order, express or
der, registered let tor. bank draft or currency
but DO SOT use personal checks, as the banks
charge us for collecting them. We are thesis*,
thorixed agents. Address
^urcnmif, General A4ent.
194 ft. Clinton gt., Chicago, III, f