The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, August 15, 1895, Image 7

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    A r.li»«tly Spectre
vl.r but in no foim Is It more to
i d than In that of the formidable
[ whii-li attack the kidneys and
' isriirht's disease, dlaoctes, and
. ;.. v alike be prevented, If Inactivity
t Is reciilled In time with Hos
rueli Kilters, sovereign also In
ei niiillsiii. dyspepsia, constlpa
, ", hillioiisiiess and nervousness.
The Voice of Animals*
ro .r of the lion can be heard
than the sound of any other
creature. Next comes the cry of
cna and then the hoot of an owL
these the panther and the jackal.
fc„nhev can be heard fifty times
• tlnin the horse, and the cat^ten
farther than the dog. Strange
a,,."- seem, the cry of the hare can
;i,d farther than that of either
lot,' or cat
"Hanson’s Ifagio Corn ■alee.” ,
t..l to cure or money refunded. A»K
Lt lor it. Price 1ft cento.
■ t rf^nt czar of Hussiftj lik6 his fftth*
a great novel reader.
It the Baby Is Catting Teeth.
■ ml use that old snd wslUtrlsd remedy, X
soothing Siaur for Children Teething.
Papa Mtseed the Blessing,
ttle .lack prays every night for
y member of the family. His fath
ail been away at one time for a
t journey, and that night Jack was
jug for him as usual. “Bless papa,
take care of him,” he was begin
as usual, when suddenly he raised
icail and listened. “Never mind
ii it now, Lord," ended the little
)iv. “1 hear him down in the
."—Albany State.
lib once Impaired la not easily regained,
it ini; r Tonic has attained tlipso results
my ra>e>. Good forevery weakness amid stress
•tinus speak nnd persuade, while mere
iN without kindly deeds are but vain.
It la more than wonderful
pipit* oil* people sulTerwittl corns. Get pcnoi
.1 r! by removing tneni with Hlnderoorns,
cnn telegraphic cables cost about 11,000
mile.
Ilomeseekerfl*
e desire to direct your attention to the
I toast of Alatama. Our motto: “If
anti< ii ate a chungo in location or for
iMincnt, why not get the test! We have
nml iu order to verify our statement
are making extremely low rates to
in-seekers and investors that they may
kea personal investigation. For par
ilnrs nnd low railroad rates address The
ion Land Co., Motile, Ala., or Maior T.
l.urkson, Northwestern Agent, Omaha,
ir.
let raska has thirty-three daily papers.
The Latest Sensation.
IV surprisingly low rates offered by
f Nickel Plate road to Boston and re
rn account Knights Templar con
ive and a choice of forty routes,
rkets on sale Aug. 19th to 25th indu
'd longest return limit; service strict
first-class. bleeping car space re
-v-1 in advance. For further infor
ition address J. T. Calahan, General
:ent. Ill Adams street, Chicago.
Fair Sailing through life for the person
I;-) keeps in health. With a torpid liver
,(‘ die impure blood that follows it, you
J- a” easy prey to all sorts of ailments,
nat used-up ” feeling is the first warning
at vour liver isn’t doing its work.
That is the time to take Dr. Pierce’s Gold
i Medical Discovery. As an appetizing,
^torative tonic, to repel disease and build
P the needed flesh and strength, there’9
(thing to equal it. It rouses every organ
no healthful action, purifies and enriches
ie Wood, braces up the whole system, and
^tores health and vigor.
S/A
Judgment!
fro;
m CVC Mto»lCC° ch.ewer «'wanted
83 to the merits of
LORILLARD’S
o{ chewing
it &•«*■•*■ pr°
deheious in flL quality, the
^^Aia**-1***
I 1N6ER NATIONAL PRESS AbS'N J
W_ Tk
CHAPTER X.—(Continued.)
Did the advice of the master act like
trine on the flagging spirits of the
singer? Did her own natural energy
assert sway over timidity before the
nnknown? Melita reappeared in the
opera as a true, dramatic butterfly
escaped from the cold and neutral
chrysalis of the shy debutante.
Vivacious, coquettish, and winning,
by turns, she kept her gaze steadfast
ly fixed on Dolores, until the girl’s
face became detached from the rest
of the theater, a magnetic point, and
all else sank into a cloud of vague ob
scurity The naivete of interest, the
unfeigned admiration, blended with
anxiety, to be read in this human
mirror, the warm and thrilling sym
pathy of bearing, furnished the re
quisite chord of intelligence and sensi
bility. The girl on the stage made the
girl in the gallery laugh at pleasure;
she could have as readily made her
weep. The singer touched the fibre of
emotion in a solitary spectator, in the
inexperience of her talent, but with a
new-born sense of power to sway and
mould a larger public later. Kay,
were mere noi moments wnen, uorne
up by the strains of melody gathering
in chorus and instruments about her
on the stage, Melita sang for her art
alone, seeing beyond the dilating eyes
of Dolores that long vista of renown
and triumph on the difficult path she
had chosen? A fresh Bosina had ap
peared.
Possibly the most impassive specta
tor of the entire audience was Jacob
Dealtry. His coat was shabby and
old-fashioned, and he shrank into the
shadow of the year of the box as much
as possible, although his de^.anor
was more abstracted than diffident.
His pale, gray eye dwelt with an ex
pression of drv disapproval on his
granddaughter and Lieut Curzon.
Capt. Fillingham turned to him
after a time.
“The chorus is out of tune,” confi
dentially.
“Ah!” laconically.
“I believe your name is Dealtry.”
“Yes,” with uneasiness.
“I have heard that name be
fore somewhere,” continued the
Ancient Mariner, taking a glass
from his wife, wherewith to decide on
the personal charms of the debutante,
as a connoisseur of female beauty.
“The name is not an uncommon
one,” said Jacob Dealtry, with a cer
tain stolidity of aspect, and yet a close
observer might have detected that he
was put on his guard by the casual re
mark of his companion.
“Dealtry is strangely familiar to my
ear,” pursued the captain, in a rumin
ating tone.
“Eh!” with a slight cough.
The grandparent of Dolores stiffened
to an upright posture in his corner,
his features twitched nervously, and
he folded his arms, as if to control a
sudden trembling of all his members.
“Were you ever at Jamaica?” ques
tioned CapL Fillingham, still striving
to cc^lect his souvenirs.
“I have traveled much,” was the
evasive response, given after a pause.
“Yes, she is very pretty,” the An
cient Mariner decided, scanning the
singer through the glass. “Bless me!
how many heads she will turn in her
day with those neat ankles!”
“No doubt she would easily turn
your head,” said Mrs. Fillingham,
tartly, whose matronly ankles were of
a serviceable solidity
The captain chuckled silently, then
claimed her attention for a new-comer
on the other side of the house. He
proffered the glass to Jacob Dealtry,
in turn.
“All painted actresses look alike,”
said the old man, returning the glass
with sullen indifference.
When the third act was terminated
| Melita was called before the curtain
amid a shower of flowers and an ova
| tion of applause. Huge bouquets were
presented to her by gallant officers of
the garrison, and one of unusual size
and richness, supposed to have ema
| nated from the grand ducal box.
1
“WI1L I DO?”
Graceful in acknowledgment of these
marks of approbation, she sang, with
a sweetness, pathos and finish, for
which she was destined to become
famous, the “Last Bose o&Summer.”
A
I “I like thatl” exclaimed the Ancient
Mariner, clapping his hands with en
> thusiasm.
i lie turned to his unsympathetic
I companion. Jacob Deal try had disap
peared.
| “Most extraordinary!" mused Capt
Fillingham.
Capt Blake had taken a seat with
Mra Griffith and Miss Symtha
“The Diva of to-night aspires to
: speedily becoming a Patti or a Neil
son," he said, briskly.
“She will never soar as a nightin
gale,” replied Miss Symthe, languidly.
“Her voice lacks timbre, and her
head notes quite set one’s teeth on
edge.”
“If not a nightingale, then a lark,”
suggested the gentleman with unim
paired cheerfulness, and glancing
about him. “She is awfully pretty,
the little American. The Russian ofj
fleer over yonder is quite wild about
her. Ah! There is Lieut Curzon
with the Fillimrhams and Miss Dealtry.
Decidedly our friend the sailor is in
luck.”
“The grand duke sails for Egypt
on Thursday,” said Mra Griffith,
coldly.
Miss Symthe turned a snowy should
er to the intruder, ' and became ab
sorbed in the music.
The social wasp twirled his red
mustache, smiled, and repeated,
mentally, with his eyes fixed on the
young woman before him—
“Faultily faultless, icily regular, splendid
ly null.
Dead perfection, no more."
Behind the scenes the dobutante
made a sweeping1 courtesy to Mr.
Brown. She was flushed, smiling',
triumphant, and held a boquet
“Will 1 do?” she demanded fever
ishly.
“Yes; you will do,” replied the man
ager with deliberation.
She laughed wildly, and threw her
self on a couch, suffering the boquet
to drop from her fingers.
“I found my little Maltese in the
audience, and she brought me good
luck,” she murmured, passing her
hand across her brow.
“The role might have been better
sustained, even a great deal better,
mind you,” said Mr. Brown, senten
tiously. “We must return to Paris for
six months more of conscientious
study, my dear. It would never do to
face the critics of the most provincial
Italian town now.”
Melita lay in a little heap on the
sofa; she had fainted.
The opera terminated, Jacob Deal
try waited at the door of the theater.
The heat made his head ache, he briefly
explained.
A tall man approached Dolores,
bowed, and ceremoniously begged her
acceptance of a package from the
grand duke. •
Arthur Curzon compressed his lips
in silence. Dolores laughed.
CHAPTER XL
THE BROKEN FAN.
HE FULL MOON
shone on Malta. A
tiny rock, set in
the midst of a wide
expanse of waters,
the island held
within its bosom
all the conflicting
elements of life
joy, hope, and pain, and the manifold
cruelties of brutality and crime.
The warm and fragrant night
wrought magic with the town.
Flights of steps became purest marble,
balconies cast delicate arabesque pat*
terns of shadow on adjacent walls,
towers and domes gained the fantastic
semblance of minarets and mosques.
The massive bastions of the fortifica
tions acquired majestic proportions,
guarding the harbor, where the ships
at anchor seemed to dream above their
own images reflected in the waves.
Lieut Curzon quitted II. M. S.
Sparrow, and a small boat
be (. him swiftly to the shore.
Tlu Drow of the light craft, propelled
by the stalwart arms of half-a-dozen
man-of-war's men, cut through the
water, like a wedge of steel, with mar
vellous rapidity of motion, yet the
progress could not keep pace with the
impatience of the yonng officer to gain
the quay.
He wished to see Dolores again, after
the opera, and to question her about
the mysterious, package she had re
ceived at the door of the theater.
What right had the grand duke to send
her a parcel at all?
No thought of his cousin. Mrs. Grif
fith, dwelling in the old palazzo above,
crossed his mind. Miss Symthe had
ceased to exist for him, banished by a
novel passion He was in love. Those
about him would soon discover his
secret, with the covert pleasantries
and open chaff of the unscathed. As
well attempt to hide the head in the
sand, ostrich-fashion, as to hope to de
lude sharp-sighted comrades in all
matters of the tender passion Self
consciousness did not, as yet, annoy
] him. Love, had come to him with a
smile and aj song. He wore his colors
i of the prenx chevalier with gaiety.
{.Who would dare to gainsay him?
In good timo lie Intended to
make Dolores his own. 8he should
learn to rely npon his strength and
wisdom, to look uo to him. In the
meanwhile, soft dalliance and deli
cious wooing would be his portion.
□ The full moon held domain over the
open country, bathing road and field
in an Incomparable, dazzling white
ness. Clusters of Oriental mansions,
sparkling with the luster of polished
stones, and framed by black depths of
garden, seemed to invite the intruder
to cross the threshold, and share in
mysterious rovelries: they were modest
villages by day. The sky was of an
intensity of blue that appeared dark,
as the moon, gathering effulgence
from the transparent purity of atmos
phere, dimmed the stars to mere glim
mering points of flame. Light and
air became blended in one. The quiv
ering moonbeams were fragrant of
orange, nespoli and oleander from the
parterres, and the breeze luminous,
permeated with little rays of phos
phorescent gleamings. Was it this
union of the elements in the southern
night that awakened eelestial musio
in the soul of the pedestrian?
The sea was visible, a Crystal shield
stretching to the horizon. A milky
sail loomed with a ghostly distinct
ness in the track of light. The waters
heaved and whispered as if some
marine monster of fabulous propor
tions and terrible strength were about
to rise to the surface, menace man, and
sink once more to sullen depths.
Gradually the vague sadness insep
arable to such a scene of perfect love
liness at this hour oppressed Lieut.
Curzon, like a haze of mist brooding
over some invisible marsh on the bor
ders of a forest, lie ceased to hum a
strain from II Itarbiore. The silence
was only broken by the barking of a
dog, or the tinkling of a musical in
strument, strummed by a desultory
touch. He extended his hand and
grdsped emptiness. A moment before,
spurred forward by ardent anticipa
tion, he now dreaded to reach his des
tination and reap the fulfilment of
some unforeseen disappointment
At a turn of the road he met a man.
Capt Blake, with his cap tilted over
one ear, a cigar between his lips, and
bearing evidence of having dined well,
accosted him with airy mockery.
“Good evening. What! Are you
moonstruck?"
"As you seem to be," retorted the
sailor, curtly.
"You are right I have been far
afield to seek some violets in a certain
garden for Miss Ethel Symthe. I have
bought them, mind you. Would you
believe a man could be such an idiot?”
“A pretty woman is sufficient excuse
for any folly,” retorted Lieut Curzon,
indifferently.
“On dit cela! Pnt not your faith in
princes, nor any daughter of Eve,"
warned the gallant soldier.
"Good night,” said Lieut Curzon.
"Good night”
“You have been seeking the watch
tower,” thought the former, grimly.
"You have a rendezvous at the
watch tower, my friend,” reflected
Capt Blake, in turn. "I have a mind
to spoil your little game in that quar
ter. I fancy I could do it ”
The trifling incident of a disagreea
ble meeting aroused suspicion and
alarm in the breast of the lover. In the
seeker after country violets, cigar in
mouth, and cap set jauntily at.lt on
the head, he discerned a uird of prey,
tracking the light footsteps of Jacob
Dealtry’s grandchild. IIow gladly he
would have welcomed an excuse to
knock down by a well directed blow,
this tacit adversary! Heavens! Had
Capt. Blake already seen her? What a
fool he had been to take her to the
ball and the theater! He must warn
her against the enemy of her sex. How
could he warn her in her innocence?
The Watch Tower rose before him
suddenly, almost unexpectedly, in the
midst of perplexing meditations as if
conjured up by some magic spell, even
as the little church is reputed to have
sunk through the earth and vanished
on a spot not far distant The place
was glorified by moonlight A tower
of silver, with the projecting points on
the parapet resembling hoarfrost,
mute, and apparently deserted, set in
the margin of trees of silver, each leaf
and twig sparkling as if with metallic
reflections, was enclosed in a boundary
of sheeny radiance. An aspect of un
reality, as of flickering moonbeams
gathered to the semblance of a picture
only to shift and dissolve with the
next cloud overspreading the heavens,
gave the Watch Tower a remoteness
from life and human sympathies.
It might have been a fairy mansion
set in a wilderness of enchanted wood
or plain, and Lieut. Curzon the prince,
clad in the cloak of Fortunatus, in
quest of adventures.
(to be continued.)
Who Will the Chaperon Be?
The college women of ten or a dozen
years ago, who were constantly being
reminded that upon their behavior de
pended the success of co-education or
the opening wide the doors of the con
servative men's colleges, will be es
speciallv interested in the fact that a
Harvard student only is years old has
been engaged to coach the skillful
oarswomen who comprise the crews at
Wellesley college. Each one of the
three upper classes has a crew, and
the freshman class, which has 240
members, has two. The applicants
are selected according to their health
and efficiency in the gymnastic exer
cises.
For a Warm Morning.
A nice breakfast dish is made by
slicing three or four ripe bananas in a
dish and squeezing over them the juice ,
of a good sized lemon. Then put over |
this a gill of ice water aud half a cup of
granulated sugar. Stand where it!
will got good and cold, and after half
an hour it will be ready to serve. The ■
lemons take away the naturally in- j
aipid taste and are healthy. j
e,; .
Highest of all in Leavening Power.—Latest U. S. Gov’t Report
*i
abmuiteev pure
A Moan Mean.
A French pnpor tolls of a man who
ought to be set down as the meanest
man of the time. Ills name Is Itnpl
neau, and he la the lmppy fnther of
three children. Ills chief claim to
meanness lies in the fact that he has
lately discovered a plan to reduce his
weekly expenditure, Kvery morning,
when sitting down at table, he makes
the following proposal: “Those who
will go without breakfast shall havo
twopence.” "Me—me!" exclaim the
youngsters in chorus. Rapineau glues
them the money and suppresses the
breakfast. In the afternoon when the
children were anxiously expecting their
first meal, Rapineau calls out, "Those
who want their dinner must give two
pence;” and they all pay back what
they received in the morning for going
without their breakfast, and in that
way Rapineau saves a meal a day.—
Harpers' Round Table.
REV. H P. CARSON, Scotland, Dale., says;
"Two bottles of flail's Catarrh Cure completely
cured my little girl." Sold by Druggists, 75u.
The Retort.
“Where," inquired tho tourist, “if I
may ask, does your majesty get your
taste for good living?'1
"In our neck." retorted the barbaric
monarch promptly.
Of the courtiers, those who laughed
with conspicuous zeal were at once
raised to knightly rank and adorned
with the Cross of tho Shirt Waist,
while those who. to the number of
three or four, hud to be pounded on
tlie back to save them from choking to
death wore ennobled.—Detroit Tri
bune.
Yfpgrmnn’s Camphor Ir^wllh Glymin^,
Curt'N L'imppwl HmikImiikI Kac«*, Tender or Sort* F«»*t,
CUilblaiiiH, t'lk’A, *«t. c\ u. dark Co., New iluvmu CL
The Horne Canning Factory.
The building being erected just be
low Linnton by the Western Packing
company for a horse abattoir is rap
idly approaching completion. Trie
foundations for the-engines and boilers
are all in, and the machinery is on the
ground and should be in place in a few
days. The building and plant are on
an extensive scale, and will probably
bo ready for operation soon. The first
shriek of the whistle will sound the
death knell of 5,000 cayuses now roam
ing the plains of eastern Oregon and
eating good grass, which might better
be turned into beef and mutton. Mr.
Switzler, who raised these horses, as
he has many thousands before them,
will now retire from the business, and
has expressed his determination of
buying a bicycle, and, if he likes it,
will perhaps start a bicycle factory.
He suys that the bicycles have driven
the horse to the slaughter house; but
when something newer has run out the
bicycle it cannot be utilized for can
ning, as the horse now is.—Portland
Oregonian.
For Knight* Templar.
Low-rate excursion to Boston via
Nickel Plate road. Tickets on sale Aug.
39th to 25th Inclusive. Lowest rdtes;
through trains; palace sleeping-cars; I
unexcelled service, Including dining- I
cars and colored porters in charge of !
day coaches. For particulars address I
J. T. Calahan, General Agent, lit !
Adams street, Chicago, 111.
Sympathetic.
When Judge Buxton of North Caro
lina as a young lawyer made his first
appearance at the bar. the solicitor, as
is customary in that state, asked him
to take charge of a case for him. The
young lawyer did his best, and the jury
found the defendant, who was charged
with some petty misdemeanor, guilty.
Soon after one of the jurors, coming
round the bar, tapped him on the
shoulder. “Buxton.” said he, “the
jury did not think that man guilty,
but we did not like to discourage a
young man.”—Green Bag.
■/miint Alter tne Trifles.
"It Is only by looking closely after
the trifles that a profit can be made In
these days of close competition,” said
the grocer to his new assistant.
“Yes, sir, I understand,” replied the
boy.
“For example,” continued his employ
er, “when you pick the flies out of the
sugar, don’t throw them away. Put
them among the currants."
Neatness and Health.
Cleanliness is the safeguard of health.
People who are not clean catch all man
ner of unpleasant things. The history
of plagues is the history of unsanitary
conditions. When the cholera shows its
hideous claws the authorities, begin at
once to' clean up the foul neighbor
hoods. Mortality Is frail, but lts pre
servation is neatness.
Married at Last.
Thirty years ago, August M. Merrlke
of Laporte, Ind., asked a lady of 20
to be his bride. She refused him. He
continued his attentions to her, and the
other day he won her consent. She Is
now 50, and he is 91.
Choice of Iloates.
To Knights Templar conclave, Boston, via
tbe Nickel Plate road, ombraclng Chautau
qua Lake, Niagara Fats, 'thousand is.ands,
Rapids of the Bt. Lawrence, Saratoga, Pal
isades of the Hudson, Hoosac 'funnel, and
ride through the Berkshire Hills by day
light. Tickets on sale Aug. 19th to 35th in
clusive. Lowest rates, quick time and
service unex< elied, including palace sleep
ing and dining cars. Address J. Y. Cala
han, General Agent, 111 Adams street,
Chicago, for further information.
Our total-product of sine in 1890 was 63,
683 short tons.
It is not enough to know, one must also
be able to impart.
Sneezing was once thought to be a sign
of good luck._
The only joys w hich live and grow are
those we share with others.
Billiard table, second-hand, for sale
cheap. Apply to or address, H. C. Axis,
fill B. 12th St., Omaha, Neb.
lift Fulr
• The 4-year-old eon of a well known
naval officer was tho other day enlight
ened, on the death of a friend, as to
whut constituted tho real eriro, which ,
was indestructible, ns contrasted with J
the perishable body. It was evident
that this lesson stink deeply Into hie
mind, as appeured soon after, when his
muma had occasion to spank the small
man for some offense or other. Look
ing up through his tears he stammered
out, "Mama, you can’t hurt my skin.
And under my skin is mel" The llttlo
fellow did not know what a tremend
ous truth he had stumbled on.
Tobacco's Triumph,
i3veJ?I af!X w®'?<!Dt ”?en who httv» apparently
lost ail Interest In Ule, but they obew soa
smoke all the time und wonder wltv the
■')™* “ "ot bright and the sweet bird's a
sounds discordsnt. Tobins o tutes awav
pleusnres of life sud leaves irritated nerve oen
lers In return Nu-To-Hae is the easy wav out,
Uuarnnteed to euro and niuUe you well and
strong, by Druggists everywhere.
Hunting the Antelope,
On the prairie successful antelope
hunting is no child's play. The game ,
nearly always sees you first, and re
tires In good order, but on double .
quick, to some high knoll a long mile A.
away, from which safe distance you V
are carefully surveyed by the keenest ^
eyes. As you try to steul up within
long rifle range, tho band suddenly ■
glides down the aide of tho knoll, seem
ingly without effort, scurries across the
next flat, and presently halts on an
other high point at the end of another
mile.
The time was when antelope had so £
much curiosity and bo little sense they
could be brought up within gunshot by
waving a rag on a ramrod or wriggling
a No. 10 foot in the air; but that pe
riod has gone by, at least in Montane,
We tried It repeatedly, but found the
pronghorn was not half the fool he had
been represented. In the broken bad
lands, where coulees are deep and
sharp ridges numerous, it is an eaay
matter to stalk antelope, and to shoot ' ‘
them also—provided ^ou are a good
shot, don’t get the buck ague and can
judge distance reasonably well.—Aw
gust St. Nicholas.
WINTER WHEAT. 80 BlItUEU FEB
, ACRE!
Did you ever hear of that? Well thero
are thousand* of farmer* who think
they will reach this yield with Balaer’a
new hardy Red Cro»* Wheat. Rye M -
bushel* per acre! Crimson Clover At .»
13.00 per bushel. Lots and lots of grass
and clover for fall seeding. Cut this out
and aend to John A. Salzer Seed cb..
La Crosse, Wis., for fall catalogue and
sample of above wheat free. (W.N.U.)
Spain has extended the privilege of copy
right to foreign authors.
Pisa's Cure for Consumption has ne s
oc|unl as a cough medicine—F. M. Abbott,
«S>I1 Heueca Bt. Buffalo. N. Y.. May 0, 1WH.
Over >100,000 was spent in improving the ,
upper Mississippi river last yenr.
,.>ITI.-AII Fits stopped free by Pr. Kline's Orest
Nerve Restorer, nn Kluafivr tim bmiinyv uaa
Murvelouacurrs. TreatiseundSUtrlal not lief ns-Sc
t it cases. Scud to Ur. Kllne.IWi arch bt.,PbUa.,t'fc
He—I've a good mind to kiss you. She—
You'd letter mind what you're about.
Special Excursion to It os ton. ■ i.—
The Knights Templar conclave wW
be held In Boston from Aug. 26th to 30th
inclusive. Tickets will be on sale via
the Nickel Plate road from Aug. 19th
to 25th Inclusive. Rates always tha '
lowest; through trains; drawing-room
site plng-cars; unexcelled dining-cars;
side trips to Chautauqua Lake, Niag
ara Falls, and Saratoga without addl- >
tional expense. For additional Infor-' f,
matlon call on or address J. Y. Cala
han, General Agent, 111 Adams street
Chicago, IU._ 3ft
M. I.ouit Fasteur has refused a tiermaa
decoration. sic;
KNOWLEDGE
Brings comfort and improvement and
tends to personal enjoyment when.
rightly used. The many, who live bet- .
ter than others and enjoy life more, with
less expenditure, by more promptly
adapting the world’s best products to
the needs of physical being, will attest
the value to health of the pure liquid
laxative principles embraced in the
remedy, Syrup of Figs.
Its excellence is due to its presenting
in the form most acceptable and pleas
ant to the taste, the refreshing and truly
beneficial properties of a perfect lax
ative ; effectually cleansing the system,
dispelling colds, headaches and fevers
ana 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 80c and91 bottles, but it ia man
ufactured by the California Fig Syrup
Co. only, whose name is printed on every
package, also the name, Syrup of Figk
and being well informed,jrou will nos
accept any subetitate if offered. ;;
PARKER’8
m HAIR BALSAM
ClMDMf ami bcAUtiftM the IH
Promote# s lozuriaat growth.
Tails to B actor* Oner
-"Taafas^1
W. H. U., Oi5h«-l», I8M. ■
When uuitrlni advertisements UuUf
mention this paper.
: .■* . 'w'U/ V