The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, June 06, 1895, Image 7

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    Kiatlnn Stone of Success.
Lri. ,t rule of business is that
■at nucv* -
11 solute and unqualified
111 the rules of business are
■ ti,ov are not founded on
L] OI1fy foundation stone to
criial success. Honesty is
■ best policy in business; it
Tand only policy. Upon it,
alone, can a {rood reputa
fill and a man in business
mutation for honesty might
|l stop. Any deviation from
' honesty in business may
nrarv gain, but it invariably
Imanentloss. On the other
riet adherence to an honest
mean a temporary loss, but
i result in permanent gain.
i, Cheaper Than Walking
rates offered by the Burlington
B & Q. R. R ) Tuesday, June
round trip tickeU to points in
Kansas. Colorado, Wyoming:,
Ota and Utah will be on sale at
pilar tariff.
it—Half the regular tariff,
s to whom economy is an object
means everybody—will take ad
this money-saving opportunity,
time-table of the Burlington
;ell as for full information about
trains, apply to the nearest
it or write to
J. Francis,
>n l Pass'r Agent, Omaha, Neb.
he Atlantic contains install*
I the two leading serials by
I<1 and Gilbert Parker, also a
tv of frontier garrison life, by
Ickubin, entitled Ro&ita. An
[ of fiction of unusual charac
Interest is, Through the Win
L 0 Glimpses of a Man’s Life.
I Hearn contributes a delight
L entitled In the Twilight of
I wliich, with Mary Stockton
1 poem, A Japanese Sword
Ls this issue a distinct flavor
Orient, l’ercival Lowell con
Is readable papers upon Mars,
Eg in this issue the Water Prob
bughton, Mifflin & Co., Boston.
Nickel Plate's Hew Trains.
Lw train service of the Nickel
bd, which went into effect Sun
C 19th, has met the approval of
[ding public. On all sides are
ipressions of universal satisfac
farding the efforts which this
| road Is making In the inter
its patrons. Three fast trains
L run in each direction dally,
[dining car service; no change
for any class of passengers be
■hicago, New York and Boston,
ket office, 111 Adams Btreet. Tel.
|9. Depot, Twelfth and Clark
Tel. Harrison 200.
I* Highest Type of Hunting.
\ estimation, the pursuit of the
lin sheep is the highest type of
r our continent affords. To
[” an old ram requires good legs,
ngs, good judgment and good
g. In the doing of it you are
lo rise in the world, to expand
ly. morally and physically, and
! under the spell that nature
lays upon the hunter who once
it upon her crags and peaks. I
the disappearance of the moun
eep even more than the passing
auffalo and elk, for it is an ani
finer mould and stronger and
iteresting character every way.
leh more alert than the moun
at, and therefore more difficult
at—so say the men who have
both.—W. T. Hornaday in St.
is.
ton Going East This Summer?
forget that the great summer
route is the Michigan Central.
Niagara Falls Route,” a flrst
n‘ for first-class travel, the popu
'■ to Niagara Falls, Mackinac
I O. W. RUGGLES,
1 pass'r and Tkt. Agt., Chicago.
Mentnry Company has issued a
foster by Kugcne Grasset for the
Puraber of The Century Magazine.
Istrates I'rof. Sloane's Life of Na
h- and is no less striking in its
than Grasset’s famous “Sun of
Twtz, which has already become
L the Thousand Islands of the St.
luce, the White Mountains, the
I'iacks, Portland by the Sea, Bos
New England points. New
;,f,n cents postage for “A Sutn
'te Book." It will tell you all
these places and how to reach
nd the seashore.
Among the Mountains.
r. «honwnuhtei[n<riends’- ,00’ for that
» ^olutn the iT“at'°n about the
'^timeof ?vay to reach Den
iation meetingnp«?"ial ““rational
Francis ()mL5e**wU y should write
:iiti“ t ook Vo h^’ Neb- a copy
>- Uc artmentnUyfIS m®*1 hy the
► B. & M. H. k , f tlle Burlington
pt'1»«.:r‘ontainsnf>err;ia the Borlington
Ination about th'o' ,aKeR 01 interesting
w. the S“Lth„e.m"et,,nl?.the cityo?
nation aboutth pase.s oi interest!
w. «»e state ofmrttmg’Jthe eity »
■ 't"kets, rates w^rado.’, 8P«cial
■ tfrvice, etc ’ bote-s> side trips,
e *-°ok is free. Send for it.
<r°m Uing’8""6 “d U
ky
iraied a nX, ^Ic.kel Plate road In
tmr schedule In ” ®ervlce- The new
k trains ^8,the 8ame nu“
btsrh service hctef0re’ lncludlnK
Wand, Buffalo between Chicago,
Th« imnro, ’ NeW York and Bos
eborteviing fe™*“u ®!so embrace
"'“'loftheaL, i ot tralna he
's. HI Adam, ° C,tles- Clty Ticket
»t. Twelfth andrpit- 3e,‘ Mal“ 389
bison 20*. and Clark etreeta. T«L
“Vest pT ®-ow Rate
on the*■v?8 vt© ran fron
i,a<1 June thBrai:road 0,1
brr„o f*1’ f° the south and sc
toe PartionU— .
•: f',
GRAND OLD PARTY.
WHY IT 18 BEINQ CALLED TO
POWER AGAIN.
Living Truth. That Can Hot Be Denied
—Bren the Children Are Tired of
Cleveland!.m—Contrasted Condition.—
Few Job., Hanjr Applicant*
One evening recently, when out weit,
I stopped at the house of a friend who
read from a Louisville paper that Gov*
ernor McKinley was going there to
speak, and then on to Nashville. He
added: “Hurrah for McKinley!”
His wife asked: “Why do you think
McKinley will be the next president of
the United States?”
“Because he Is the foremost, man In
the nation at this time,” was the hus
band’s reply.
"Is he a Democrat, papa?” asked his
little 10-year-old Effle.
. "No. Why do you ask that Question,
my daughter?”
“Because I don’t want any more
Democrats In mine.”
‘Why,’” said the father, “don’t you
get as much to eat and wear as you
used to get?”
“No,” she said, "we don’t get as much
to eat We used to have plenty of beef
steak.”
Her little 8-year-old brother chipped
In with, “Yes, and we used to have
oysters when we wanted th*>m. and now
we never see any."
“Yes,” said Effle, “and we used to
have cheese, and I have not seen any
cheese for so lone I wouldn’t know any
If I met it on the road. We used to have
lots of things when papa was making
plenty of money that we don’t have
now.” ■
“Well, my children,” the father re
plied, with moisture in his eyes, “I had
nothing to do with stopping you from
having all the food and things you
wanted nor' causing the hard times
that have been upon us, but the good
people of the United States will not
stand this sort of thing longer than
they can help.” B. Thlnken.
Contrasted Conditions.
I have not been able to get more than
nine weeks’ work this year, and have a
family of seven to support. This is also
the condition of thousands of other la
borers. Heretofore there has been a
large demand for labor in this state,
men being brought here during the lat
ter part of the summer from other
states in order to supply the demand.
Farm laborers used to receive from
31.60 to $2 per day; mechanics, $3 to
84.50 per day; miners, from $3 to 34 per
day; sheep herders, from 340 to 345 per
month, including board, which is also
included in wages given for farm la
borers. This was our condition be
fore the Democrats came into power.
Since then all Industries have been
paralyzed and wages are from 50 to 60
per cent less, and very little work is to
be had even at this price. There
were thousands of men who were do
ing well two years ago, but were sot
satisfied with the wages above men
tioned. They wanted “tariff reform,”
voted the democratic ticket, and wore
the democratic badge, the rooster,
pinned upon their hats. Today they
wear the democratic badge in the seat
of their pants, and they are going
around looking for a Job. The present
administration has been a disgrace to
this nation and a laughing stock to
the civilized world. It has driven
honest men to theft and caused many
Innocent children to lie in their beds
at night without even a crust of bread
to satisfy their hunger. I nan assure
you this is no exaggeration.
James H. Evans.
Malad City, Idaho.
Pew Jobs, Knr Appllnnti,
An examination of the advertising
columns of a recent Sunday issue of
one of the New York dailies gave a
fair idea of the condition of male and
female labor in this city. There were
twelve columns of advertisements that
had been Inserted by females who
wanted work, but only three columns
of advertisements inserted by people
who wanted female help. There was
an average of thirty-five advertise
ments to each column, making 420 fe
male applicants for work with only 105
opportunities for them to secure it In
other words, there were four females
to every vacant position.
In the case of males there was the
same space, three columns, devoted to
advertisers who wanted help, but it
took eight columns to specify the wants
of those who were out of work. There
were 280 male applicants for 105 jobs.
Combining the advertisements of the
male and female applicants, there were
700 who sought work, but they found
only 210 opportunities tor them to se
cure positions, or three and one-half
people waiting for every job. It must
be remembered, too, that there are not
so many idle people now as there were
six months ago, also that there are
■hundreds of applicants for work who
,cannot afford to pay for the cost of ad
vertising even in those free-trade or
gans that helped to bring about the
oeople’8 ruin.
Lauona In Prices.
The total export of breadstuffa from
the United States during the lgst ten
months has been less by $53,700,000
than during the previous ten corre
sponding months. The decrease In ex
ports of provisions during the same
period Is $5,700,000. Compared with
the famous years of the McKinley tar
iff, 1801-2-3, the volume of our exports
of farm produce shows a lamentable
shrinkage, says Chicago Inter Ocean.
All this is in straight refutation of the
promise of the free traders, who as
sured us an Increased exportation of
farm stuffs In exchange for our in
creased importations of manufactures.
Congressman Bynum, It may be re
marked. promised the farmers “dollar
wheat” aa a result ot "tariff reform."
We are in the fool’s paradise, to whtoh
a majority of the voters drove us, lured
by the false promises of the free trad*
erd. By all laws of nature wheat
should be dearer In 1895 than In 1892,
when the crop reached the unprecedent
ed magnitude of 611,780,000 bushels,
but by reason of the operation 'of the
unnatural law that has removed a large
measure ot protection from home man
ufactures the price Is lower for a small
output of grain than for a large one.
The purchasing power of the home
market is curtailed, and, therefore, the
price has fallen. The farmers of
America, who were deluded in ‘90 and
’92 by the free trader's cry, “Liverpool
Uses the price of wheat,” now have
painful leisure In which to discern that
Liverpool fixes the price In accord with
the American demand. When our fac
tories are running full time, and when
wages are high, the price of wheat Is
high in Chicago, and consequently In
Liverpool. When our factories are not
busy, and when wages are low, the
price of wheat Is low in Chicago, and
consequently In Liverpool. "The buy
er fixes the price,” Is the rule of trade.
NO one can sell at a higher price than
another Is able to give. Chicago Is the
greatest wheat buyer. It buys for 65,
000,000 American people. Liverpool is
a lesser buyer; it buys for 35,000,000
of Englishmen. Therefore Liverpool
does not fix the price. The price Is
determined In the greater market. Pro
tection makes 'the greater market
brisk; low tariff makes It dull.
von Quixote Dickinson.
The only Don Dickinson has come
to the front again. It seems that his
recent tail-twisting speech at Detroit
was delivered immediately after an
other of his confidential talks with
President Cleveland. Is it possible
that the phlegmatic patriotism of the
chief executive of the United States haa
been aroused to a vigorous assertion
of American rights as against British
encroachments? Certain it is that the
Don of Michigan shows much the same
zeal for compelling the British lion to
stop the roaring and lashing of his tall
on the Venezuelan border that the Don
of la Mancha did 'in redressing the
wrongs that appealed to his chlvalrlc
sympathy. What coming event casts
its shadow before in that fierce on
slaught? Some surmise that it por
tends a change in the Secretaryship of
State, but this seems hardly probable;:
tor it will be remembered that not
long ago, while the president was gun
ning for ducks in the Carollnas, Sec
retary Oresham gave that same tall a
most vigorous twist, followed, almost
as soon as our Nimrod returned, by a
reversal of policy. Secretary Gresham
has the spirit of that old campaign
cry “54.40 or fight,” which, by the way,
culminated in 49 and no fight. But let
ns hope that the United States will, if
necessary, insist that the question of
boundary between Venezuela and Brit
ish Guiana will be submitted to the
umpirage of fair and impartial arbi
tration. If there is one thing in the
record of the Democratic party of
which it may be proud it is the stal
wart Americanism of Andrew Jacksji
and later of William L. Marcy.—Inter
Ocean.
The Greet Conspiracy.
It Is about as necessary for Assistant
Secretary Curtis and Logan Carlisle to
go to London to deliver United States
bonds taken by the foreign syndicate
as it is for a Chicago millionaire to go
to Washington to pay his income tax.
The bond syndicate had its agents so
near to the President and Secretary of
the Treasury that they were suspected
of mare influence than the cabinet. The
same agents who held Uncle Sam up by
the throat until he issued the bonds
can certainly be intrusted to take chre
of these and lock them up in their Eng
lish vaults. The contemplated trip of
Messrs. Curtis and Carlisle is simply a
junket at the expense of the govern
ment. But It is rather rough on the
people to be compelled to stand and
deliver and then pay for a picnic party
for the formal surrender of the plun
J der.—Inter Ocean. .
i _: . -
Cartier Hu Had Enough.
Eugene D. Carter, of North Carolina,
is another prominent Southern Demo
crat who has grown tired of the old
slave method of using the bogy man to
keep white men in the Democratic
party. "We have at last reached that
point in the south,” says he, “where
honest, thinking men can no longer be
dragooned into silly inconsistencies in
national politics by any fear of that
worn-out bugbear of negro domina
tion.” Mr. Carter is not an exception
In the South. He is representative of
many thousands of Intelligent white
men who have become disgusted with
the use of this once great bogy of the
South to prevent them from breaking
away from the Democratic machines
that enable little rings of corrupt pol
iticians to rule several Southern states,
—Ex.
How to Be a Good Mugwump.
To bow before a foreign throne
And toady to a queen or king;
For every country but your own
To lift your voice and praises sing.
To take all insults to our land
With humble heart and manner meek
And when slapped by a foreign hand I
To offer it your other cheek!
To humbly kiss the rod that licks you.
And pocket every vicious whack;
And if the British lion kicks you,
By no means think of kicking back]
—C. F. in New York Sun.
England la Benefited.
The imports of woolen dress goods at
New York were 750,000 square yards
larger during the first half year’s oper
ation of the new tariff, than during the
corresponding months a year earlier. 1
Of woolen cloths the Increase was 6,200«>
000 pounds. t
■ , - ' •. n •-* - ■ ■..*».
*' ■ "7 'if- v mb'. Jv?'.#.
■■!'. >*i>, •> ■"•: v ,. .i ' 5;,:«;■“ JwV&'fi , ■
>* ■":t fp * ‘ ** * •'■■■■' v * ,-sf
All other powders
are cheaper made
and inferior, and ||
v. .Vv
leave either acid or
alkali in the food, v
-•••*- fcOVAL iAKINQ POWSH CO., 10* WALL *T., NtW-VMK..
TR
WA'WI
Leap* of a Mountain Sheep,
No; the mountain sheep does not leap
from great heights, and land either
upon his horns or his feet. He knows
the strength of his materials too well
to try it. His horns and skull might
successfully withstand the shock, but
the weight of his body would break his
spinnl column in two or three places, to
say the least of it. It is true that when
liurd pressed a herd of them will some
times plunge down a terribly steep in
cline, sliding and bounding from point
to point, until they plow into the “slide
rock” below; but as to leaping over a
sheer precipice, I never saw any one
who even claimed to have witnessed
such a thing. The old rams often fight
by butting each other terrifically, and
often splinter, or sometimes break off,
the ends of their horns in that way.
We will give tlCO reward for any case of
catarrh that can not he cured with Hall's
Catarrh Cure. Taken Internally.
F. J. CHENEY & CO., Proprs.. Toledo, O.
i ne woman wno never taxes any inter
est in the ads needs medicine.
It the Baby it Cutting Teeth.
Resin* and use that old and well-tried remedy, Use.
Winslow’s Soothing Synur tor Children Teething
A Standisb, Maine, man has nearly fin
ished a robe made wholly of cats' skins.
“Sanson's Waffle Corn ■alve.”
Warranted to caiw or money refunded. Ask year
druggist for It. Files IS cents.
The Order of the Templars was founded
in 1119.
Fiso's Cure cured me of a Throat and
Lung trouble of three years’ standing—
E. Cady, Huntington, lnd., Nov. 19, 1894.
Bilk is so cheap in Madagascar that the
poorest people wear clothing made of it.
llolneseekers Excursions.
On May 91st and June 11th, 1895, the
Union Pacific System will sell tickets from
Missouri River 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
Weiser and south of Beaver Canon, at rate
of one first class standard fare lor the
round trip. Minimum rate *7.90.
Facilities for Travelers.
The Nickel Plate road now offers
greater facilities to the traveling pub
lic than ever, the improved service hav
ing been inaugurated May 19th. No
change of cars between Chicago, New
York and Boston in either direction.
Superb dining' cars between Chicago
and Buffalo in both directions. Trains
leave Chicago 8:05 a. m. daily, except
Sunday; 1:30 and 9:20 p. m. daily for
Fort Wayne, Foetoria, Cleveland, Erie,
Buffalo, New York and Boston: 1:30 p.
m. train arrives New York 6:30 and
Boston 9 o’clock the following evening.
City ticket office. 111 Adams street.
Tel. Main 389. Depot, Twelfth and Clark
streets. Tel. Harrison 200.
Fashionable Stationery.
The paper most used in social corres
pondence is white parchment finish,
and the preferred sues are the well
known octavo and billet; the envel
opes are square with pointed flaps.
Square note sheets with oblong envel
opes in tints or colors are simply fads
for the moment. Good taste dictates
plain white paper aud envelopes for
feminine notea
A man was photographed in Georgia
whi'e daneling at the end ot a rope.
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
lesg 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 50c and 91 bottles, but it is man- •
ufactured by the California Fig Syrup
Co. only, whose name is printed on every
package, also the name, 8yrup of Figs,
and being well in formed, "you will not .
accept any substitute if offered. „ 1 (
. '-'ft■ ’ f . ‘4
Mean far Country Luncheon.
Veal loaf, pressed chicken or salad,
sandwiches and cake, make delicious
luncheon dishes, and a substitute for
Ices can be made by preparing thick,
sweet cream in this way: One pint of
cream, one-half cup of white sugar,
one teaspoonful of vanilla, one table
spoonful of gelatine dissolved in a little
milk; whip with Dover egg-beater until
it can be cut with a knife. The gela
tine prevents it from falling, so the
hostess can prepare it some hours be
fore her gueBts arrive, demtine clover
honey is always a treat, especially to
townspeople, and may be substituted
for the cream. It is more easily served
if placed on a flat dish or platter and
passed with a knife and spoon so that
each guest may help himself. This ar
rangement obviates the necessity for
small dishea
He Lacked the Nerve.
Upon receipt of your address we will mall free
a puckuiie of beautifully illUHtrated transparent
cards, picturing and explaining lust bow and
wby men frequently suffer from nervous trou
bles that prevent their doing the right thing
at the itiuHT timb Edition limited. Address,
mentioning this puper. Sterling Remedy Co.,
New York City or Chicago.
The Mountain Uant a Stupid Animal,
Although the mountain goat la a very
sure-footed and level-headed animal,
he is said by those who have hunted
him (of whom 1 confess I am not one)
to be a very stupid animal, and easily
killed when once the hunter reaches
his haunts. In actual weight he Is
about the Btze of the Virginia deer, but
in bulk he seems to be larger because
of his shaggy fleece of wool and hair.
The horns are small, smooth and jet
black, and the hoof is a strange com
bination of rubber pad on the inside
and knife-edge on the outside, to hold
the owner on snow, ice. or bare rock
without slipping.—W. T. Hornady in
St. Nicholas.
Experience lends many mother* to sny.
“l.'se Purser’s Utn-erToritc,'* lomtuse H Especially
fiooii for colds, puln auJ almost every weakness.
The weight of the earth is calculated by
Prof. Boys at 5,S3!f,bW,UOO,OUU,OUO,OUO,OUO
tons.
Those distressing tlornst
nod as they are. Hind.‘rooms wi 1 remove them and
then yon cun wuIk and run and jump as yon like.
The secret of success used to be industry,
now it's fjrintern’ ink.
PROSPECTIVE MOTHERS
ana tuose soon to
become mothers,
should know that Dr,
Pierce’s Favorite Pre
scription robs child
birth of its tortures
and terrors, as well as
of its dangers to both
mother and child, by
aiding nature in pre
paring the system for
Earturition. There
y "labor” and the
period of confine
— uicui uic ^itruuy
shortened. It also promotes the secre
tion of an abundance of nourishment for
the child.
Mrs. Dora A. Guthrie, of Oakley, Overton Co.,
Term., writes: “ When I 1>egau taking Doctor
Pierce's Favorite Prescription. I was not able to
stand on my feet without suffering almost death.
Now I do all my housework, washing, cooking,
sewing and everything for my family of eight. I
am stouter now than I have l>ccn in si* years.
Your 4 Favorite Prescription ’ is the best to take
before confinement, or at least it proved so with
me. I never suffered so little with any of my
children as I did with tny last."
nENSIONWiSSSBfSX
|S*«aaMaaaiiH!BSi*SBs
JBJjt. ulust war, Ija^jiuIic.Uiif claim,. utly
D i TPVTQ 7?™* »*• Slojpoon, Washington^
rAltJUS t^neu.°Write fer'lnrento’.QmUfo
IV. K. I,'., Omaha—aa, IMS.
'Vtion answering advertisements kindly
mention this paper
Vim of the Lltkn.
| The lichen's most important function
seems to be to beautify the landscape*
though some tiny ones are used oy
mother hummingbird to cover the out*
side of her nest, in order to conceal It
as much as possible. In Iceland the
lichen called Iceland moss is gathered
every year by the boys and glrla It ih
boiled in milk and eaten. Fanny Her*
gen, in her little book "Plant Life "
tells us that the Indiana guided them
selves through the trackless forest by ,
observing on which sides of the trees
the lichens grew thickest, those being
the northern sides.
Maks Tear Own- Bitters!
On receipt of SO cents in U. 8. stamps, X
will send to any address one package 8te- -
ketee's Dry Bitters. One package makes
one gallon MS tonic known. Cures stom
ach, kidney diseases, and is a great appe
tlser and blood purifier. Just the medicine
needed for spring and summer. 25c. at
your drug store. Address Gao. G. 8*1
utss. Grand Raoids. Mich.
Most of the black pearls in existence
come from the dark-tipped oysters of lower
California.
ONLY OMB AMD THAT IM JULY.
Excursion to Colorado,
The Great Rock Island Route will sell
tickets cheap for this excursion to Denver
In July, and you should post yourself at
once as to rates and routes.
Pend by postal card or letter to Jno. Bebaa- 1
tluu, U.P. A.. Chicago, for a beautiful sou- .
venlr Issued by the Great Rock Island A Pa
cific lt'y, called the “Tourist Teacher," that
tells all about the trip. It will be sent free.
It Is a item, and you should not delay In ask
ing for It. Jno. Skbastiam.O. P. A„ Chicago,
It is claimed that there are fifty-five doge ,
In the United Kingdom to every l,ooo In
habitants.
Wai MACHINERY
. Illoetrated catakxruo showing VOX
ATJGEB8, ROCK DRILLS). HYDRAOLIO i
AND JETTING MACHINERY, eta
8 but Van. Have been Meted and
all warrant**.
Slona City Engine & Iron Works,
Successors to Pecb Mfg. Co.,
_ Mom City, lawa.
TllE KOWKI.L A CffAsR Ma«iiinkhy Co,,
ill! V.'t-t Eleventh Street, Kansas City, Ma
r—TOfnirr—
„ HAIR BALSAM
Clean*## ana bcaatifl## thi bdL
.Promote# n Inxuriant (rcnrth.
! Rarer Rails to Restore "
Ra*r to Us Youthful Or
Curs aralp diaeaaee a hair fau;
_^JCCjandJlaoe^niMjjl*
WANTED—LADY AEENIS
In every town to rail our Safety Medicine; <ued tea
years in physician,' private practice. Addreea, etna
ing experience, Box 1S4, A. KP1SBSLAM.,
Topeka, Kaniti
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j Very Latest Styles m,^. :
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M Cut rtttttM for 1* Oats Wbn iko Coaaaa Itlnr b ■„. ....
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««* tan 64is
Patti** Jo. UK-Cut In Are dies ri«; 84, 94,16, 99 ul M inch bast ——
pISSU No i,".V I1***; ’I,L, "• **•«. »««1 «lMhburt
6445—Ml**.’ Heifer, four Oim, t!*i to, if, 14 and 14 nun.
PoniM NO. 6400—jn*se*’ Skirt*, tkn* dm, It. 11 **d lip**?*.
to
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UPON.
n^HIS COUPON Mitt with an order for one or any of the above U eenfe pattern! It credited
aa 25 cent®, making «afh pattern cost only It eeata.
One cent extra for postage for each pattern. Olve number of inchea waist etimri foe
■klrte and number of inches bust measure for waists. Address,
COUPON PATTERN COMPANY,
saw you. k 1.
S Ml Box T4V.
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