The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, November 21, 1895, Image 7

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    FREE FARE TO TEXAS
Go With Linderholm'i Personally Con*
.ducted Excursions to Chesterville,
Texas, Over the Great Bock
Island Route.
V«a Will See the Finest Fruit and Farm*
las Country In the World—Mow Open
tor Settlement.
Especial advantages are that the land
lies higher than any other similar tract af
fording superior drainage, so necessary
with rainfall in that district. Land will
■cost you no more than the rent you are now
paying. Rich and productive soil; noirri*
Eatiou needed; mild and delight ful climate.
<and sells ox sieuT. Two towns and two
railroads on the tract; others near by.
boil unequalled for the production of Corn,
Cotton, bugar Cone, Alfalfa and every
kind of fruit and vegetable. We have
thousands of acres of land near Houston,
Texas, in this tract to select from now
which will soon be taken up. This means
a home and comfortoblo fortune to the
reader if he will investigate. WVite to us.
Send us the name of yourlriends who want
n home of their own. Leave the blizzards,
taxes and high rents of the north. Locate
in tbo choicest district of the Gulf Coast
country and you will repeat the success of
your more prosperous neighbors.
Send for our pamphlet, entitled “Fer
tile Farm Lands,’’ plats, maps, etc. Low
price. Easy terms. Low rate excursions
constantly running. Don’t you want 10 got
"When you write give our address iu full,
Address Southern Texas Coloniza.
tion Co., John Linderholiu, Mgr., 119
UialtoUIdg., Cbicugo.
MISSING LINKS.
The expenditure of England for
drinks is estimated at $900,000,000 a
year.
At Buluwayo a company has been
formed to explore the ancient ruins
in Mashonaland for treasure.
The system of canals contemplated
by Russia will have a total length of
1,000 miles and will unite the Baltic
and Black seas.
A petrified frog found In an Elmira
N, Y., stone quarry in 1883 was two.
feet eight inches in length and weighed
over 100 pounds.
A technical congress at Zurich is try
ing to secure agreement in the meth
ods of testing building materials
throughout Europe and the United
States.
Episcopal assistant rectors in New
York are to be called curates hereafter,
and in the large city churches the title
vicar instead of rector is to be permit
ted.
It is said that 300,000 cubic feet of
water plunge 150 feet downward over
the Niagara escarpment every second,
thus w'asting 10,000,000 horse power of
energy to the second.
Pins, from their extensive use, are
Important articles of manufacture. It
is stated that there are made in Eng
land, for home UEe, and exportation,
more than 20,000,000 pins daily.
A complete skeleton of a moa or
dinornis, the gigantic, ostrich-like, ex
tinct bird of the New Zealand and the
Connecticut sandstone, has Just been
discovered in a New Zealand cave.
GEMS OF THOUGHT.
Modesty ,or rather fear, is one of the
first virtues of love—Balzac.
It many times falls out that we deem
ourselves much'deceived in others, be
cause we first deceived ourselves.—Sir
Philip Sidney.
Oh, what a curious place the world
is, and what a number of things are
found out a fresh in it! What faded old
facts stand forth in startling colors as
wonderful and new when youthful gen
ius gets a chance of sitting still while
- ;lt passes, and making unnoticed studies
of it.—Jean Ingeiow.
There is this difference between those
two temporal blessings, health and
money: Money is the most envied, but
the least enjoyed; health is the most en
joyed, but the least envied; and this
superiority of the latter is still more
obvious when we reflect that the poor
est man would not part with health for
money , but that the richest would glad
ly part with all their money for health.
—Colton..
How easily, if fate would suffer it, we
might keep forever these beautiful
limits, and adjust ourselves, once for
all, to the perfect calculation of the
kingdom of known cause and effect. In
the street, and in the newspapers, life
appears so plain a business, that manly
resolution and adherence to the multi
plication table through all weathers
will insure success. But, ah! presently
comes a day, or is it only a half hour,
with its angel whispering—which dis
comfits the conclusions of nations and
•of years.—Emerson.
.RAM’S HORNS.
'The thing that damns.a sinner is hia
love for sin.
The only thing about some churches
that seems to point toward heaven is
the steeple.
The world needs people who will do
right without first stopping to find out
what others are going to do.
The man who lives only for himself
Is helping to carry on me devil’s busi
ness.
Knowing the name of a sin some
times opens a door for it.
Boil down the religion of some peo
ple and you will find that there is noth
ing worth having in it.
Dreams of wealth don't come true as
often as work for it does.
The highest price paid for a modern
painting was $110,600 tor Millet’s "An
geius."
The largest bronze statue is that of
Peter the Great at St. Petersburg.
Weight. 1,000 tons.
In India every resident must, under
pen a’ tv of fine, J»ave me name written
up at the entrance of his house.
Australia has a population of less
‘than 5,000,000, but economists declare
It could support 100,000,000 with ease.
The largest bell In Japan, that in the
temple at Kioto is twenty-four feet
high and sixteen feet in diameter
acrors the rim. —
DAIRY AND POULTRY,
INTERESTING CHAPTERS FOR
OUR RURAL READERS.
How Fvece*«fal Farmers Operate This
Department ot the Farm—A Few
Hints as fo the Care of Live Stock
and Poultry.
DAIRY farmer of
our acquaintance Is
a wise old man, and
says many good
things. He uses a
silo and makes
money in all his
farm operations He
has a neighbor who
baTely makes both
ends meet, who is
bitterly opposed to
the silo, because, he says, it is too ex
pensive. Speaking of this neighbor to
our old friend one day, we expressed our
surprise that he could not see the dif
ference in profit between his poor meth
ods and Uncle John’s good methods.
“He ought to see,” we said, “with half
an eye thajt he is wrong and you are
right. What is the matter with him?”
Uncle John took an extra hitch in the
slack of his breeches, and replied: “Oh,
nothing much, except he is so dead
stuck on himself, and the little he
knows, that he can’t see over his own
little ant hill. He has got more pride
and conceit than sense, and I never
knew a farmer to make a cent on his
conceit. Such men will straddle'clear
over a dollar to pick up a dime. He
commenced talking against the silo
when I first built one,and now he thinks
folks would laugh at him if he should
let up. My cows are my guide in this
silo business. I can’t afford to kick
against facts; he can, and so I keep still
and let him go on. He was over to bor
row some money of me the other day,
and I suppose I will have to let him
have it. If it wasn’t for such men mort
gages would be mighty scarce.”—
! Hoard’s Dairyman.
i . .-;
Cooling Milk.
A fact of Importance which has been
emphasized is the value of cooling the,
milk as thoroughly as possible as soon
as milked. When drawn from the coW,
milk is at a high, temperature, and, in
deed, at just the temperature at which
the majority of bacteria will grow the
most rapidly. Under the influence of
the atmospheric temperature, especial
ly in .the summer, the milk will become
cool very slowly, but never becomes
cooler than the ah. The bacteria which
have gotten into the milk will there
fore have the very best opportunity for
rapid multiplication and the milk will
sour very rapidly. If, however, the
milk is cooled to a low temperature im
mediately after it is drawn, the bacteria
growth is checked at once and will not
begin again with much rapidity until
the milk has become warmed once more.
This warming will take place slowly,
and therefore the cooled milk will re
main sweet many hours longer than
that which is not cooled. A practical
knowledge of this fact will be of great
value to every person handling milk.
Early cooling to as low a temperature
as is practicable is the best remedy for
too rapid souring of milk.—Department
of Agriculture.
Tainted Milk.
It is well to notice that certain ab
normal odors and tastes in'milk may be
produced directly by the food eaten by
the cow. If a cow eats garlic or turnip
the flavor of the milk is directly af
fected. Various other foods may, in a
| similar manner, affect the taste of milk,
but this class of taints may be readily
distinguished from those due to bacter
ial growth. The odors and taints due to
the direct influence of the food are at
their maximum as soon as the milk is
drawn, never increasing afterward.
But the taints due to bacterial growth
do not appear at all in the fresh milk,
beginning to be noticeable only after
the bacteria have had a chance to grow.
If, therefore, a dairyman has trouble
in his milk, which appears immediately
after the milking, he may look for the
cause in something the cow has eaten.
But if the trouble appears after a few
hours, and then grows rapidly worse
| until it reaches a maximum, he may be
assured that the remedy is to be sought,
not in changing the food of the cow, but
in greater care in the management of
the dairy or barn.—Agricultural Re
Farming Under Glass—It seems cer
tain that the growing of many of our
field crops, such as potatoes, cabbage,
etc., will be largely under glass in the
future. It is expensive, but there are so
many things that compensate for the
outlay that it is one of the reliable in
vestments. Even when a cheaper
transportation for southern-grown pro
ducts shall have been secured, there
will yet be reasons for forcing houses in
the north. Such houses will be not only
fitted with glass roofs, but also with
wire screens, so that in the summer the
glass may be dispensed with, the
screens being used to keep out bugs
and birds. The one item of crop de
struction by insects is a costly one, and
the saving in this alone will pay a fair
per cent on the investment. The pro
tection from frost is also worth looking
after. •
At the Instance of Dairy Commission
er Adams, the Wisconsin law prohibit
ing the sale of oleomargarine, colored
to resemble butter, has been tested,
and sustained in h test case tried at
Madison, Wls.
An eastern dairyman says: The man
who Is too aristocratic to mingle freely
with his calves, and his cows alsp, will
never succeed as a breeder of dairy
stock. There is a social side to a cow’s
nature as well as to a man’s. It is
from her social nature that comes not
only the milk but the fat as well, given
from a spirit of pure motherly ben
eficence. •
DUmhi of Fowl*.
Cholera.—A good remedy la hyposul
phite of soda. Dissolve as much of it In
& pint of water as possible; then mix
up some corn meal or wheat bran with
the water and feed to the sick fowls.
Dissolve some In their drinking water
also. Feed this till every trace of the
disease disappears. If they are too sick
to eat, force it down their throats.
Roup.—Take sulphate of sine; wet
the finger, then dip it in the sine and
rub into the fowl’s mouth; repeat twice,
applying three times a day. Or inject
a solution of copperas water into the
nostrils and down the throat. The fowls |
should be kept in a warm, dry place. |
Scaly Legs.—This disease can be j
cured by applying a mixture of coal oil
and sulphur, with a few drops of car
bolic acid added; apply twice a week.
Sore Head.—Droopiness and loss of
appetite are sure, indications of lice.
Examine the head and neck; if they
are found apply insect powder. ■ i
Gapes.—To every pint of meal add !
one teaspoonful of turpentine; see that !
every chick gets some. j
Diarrhea.—Place the fowl in a warm, i
dry place, and give it a good dose of j
castor oil twice or three times a day. j
Canker.—Scrape off the scabs and ap
ply blue vitriol; wash the head and
mouth with a solution of alum and
vinegar.
To prevent the laying of soft-shell
eggs, feed wheat and oats and supply
the hens with ground oyster shell and
plenty of time.—Ex.
Good Advice.—The paper at Plain
view, Minn., says: Now that our cream
ery is at a standstill why not the farm
ers take hold of the business in a co
operative plan, organizing a stock com- I
pany and realize all the profit there is j
In butter. In other places where
creameries have failed the farmers
have in every instance taken hold, of
the matter and have in every instance
made a paying institution of it. A
creamery is a good thing. Better but
ter can be made there than at your i
home's, for there would be every con- ■
renience which at least many farmers j
are unable to secure. In this way the !
butter of the community would be made i
in one grade, in large quantities and |
would give them a better advantage j
to dispose of this product. From the
experience of other communities we
believe it would be a profitable invest
ment. We have a class of farmers on
Greenwood Prairie who would surely
make a success of anything of this
kind if they can any where and we
believe the matter should be agitated.
—Ex.
Scalding the Mites.—The brood-coop&
should be carefully watched for lice
during the summer and fall, as young
chickens cannot thrive if nightly sapped
of their life blood. Whatever scalding
is done in these, however, must be done
in the morning, so that they will get
dry by night. If your coops are in a
damp location and you have tiny chicks
it will be a good plan to get some dry
sand occasionally for the floor. In this
land of ditches I never feel safe with
little chicks unless the coops are
floored; it is not safe unless one’s land
is "above water,” and not then if it be
on the side hill, with a water shed
above. Whenever we have a very hard
rain and the ditches overflow, one of |
our coops is always in danger, so I
know whereof I speak when I advise
you to select a spot that is high and dry
for brood coops, or else provide them
with board floors.—Mrs. Mellette in
Colorado Farmer.
Poultry in the Orchard.—One of tht
best places for the poultry house is the
orchard. The fowls are away from the
garden and have a range where they
can secure plenty of green food, bugs,
worms, and other insects, in destroying
which they benefit the trees and fruit.
The site for the house should be
chosen with a view to insuring good
drainage, as it Is most essential that
poultry have dry quarters in which
they may roost, or take refuge when it
storms. On a farm it is no easy mat
ter to give the fowl a good range and
at the same time to keep them away
from the garden, the hog pen, and the
stables. In many cases, the orchard
is the only good plac§ for the poultry
house. The fowl do better there, with
the variety of food they secure, than
if they were kept in more restricted
quarters. If the poultry house is to be
built during the summer, it will pay
to put it in the orchard.—Ex.
Make Improvements.—Why not teai
out all the permanent fixtures in tho
hen house and destroy the mites hidden
behind and under them? Then make
arrangements to put the roosts back
and the nests in such shape that they
can be readily taken out and coal oiled.
See that the roosts are all on one level
and not too high. Bumble foot becomes
very frequent ..among flocks of heavy
hens where they roost on high perches.
A few loads of sand or gravel to fill
in the low places around the hen house
will prevent dampness, and when the
land is clayey enable you to get rid of
much mud. Mud should never be al
lowed around the hen house. Sand,
gravel, coal ashes or sod should prevent
such a nuisance from ever existing.—
Ex.
Leghorns are Wild—Leghorns art
naturally wild, but the wild nature can
be somewhat subdued if care is taken. I
Now the winter months are near, and ■
we have so many days when it is unlit I
for the fowls to be outdoors, and if !
your scratching shed is so arranged |
that they can go from their roosting •
pen to it, you can facilitate matters j
considerably by haring a muslin front I
put to the shed, so that the fowls can- '
not go out. Then at feeding time '
quietly move among them, and thus ‘
gradually have them become accus
tomed to you.—Ex.
One thing is more foolish than to
feed poor food to good stock, and that i
is to feed good food to poor stock.— \
Massachusetts Plowman. '
Highest of all in Leavening Power.—-Latest U. S. Gov’t Report
Absolutely pure
The Chicago Ua|n>te
The teacher said: “Now I will read
this from this little book, and any of
you who wish can repeat it to the class
in your own words. Don't try to say it
as 1 read it, but jn$t as you would say
it” Jimmie's eyes grew big, and he
was all attention. The teacher read
this short lesson from the first reader:
“See the cow! Is it not a pretty cow?
Con the cow run? Yes, the cow can
ruu? Can the cow run aB fast as the
horse? No, the cow cannot run as fast
as the horse?”
“Criminy!” thought Jimmie, “is’at
all. ’At’s dead easy.” His hand was
up in a twinkling in imitation of sev
eral others. His interested face caught
the teacher's eye, and she said: “Well,
James, you may try it, but be carefnl
and get it right. You may stand up by
your seat. ”
Jamesy arose. Ordinarily he was
not bashful, but now his fuce was
flushed as ho said; “Get onto de cow.
Ain’t she a beaut? C’n she get a move
on? Sure. C’n she hump herself as
fast ns de horse? Naw, she ain't in it
wid de horse, see!”
The teacher was overcome, but nev
ertheless, “Jamesy” was a favorite
from that moment.—Chicago Record.
■too Reward, •too.
The readers of this paper will be
pleased to learn that there is at least
one dreaded disease that science has
been able to cure In ah its stages, and
that 1b Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is
the only positive cure now known to
the medical fraternity. Catarrh being
a constitutional disease requires a con
stitutional treat.!.ent. Hall's Catarrh
Cure is taken internally, acting directly
upon the blood and mucous surfaces of
the system, thereby destroying the
foundation of the disease and giving the
patient strength by building up the con
stitution and assisting nature in doing
Us work. The proprietors have so much
faith in Its curative powers that they
offer One Hundred Dollars for any case
that it falls to cure. Send for list of
testimonials. Ad’ress
P. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, a
Sold by druggists; 76c.
Hall's Family Pills, 25c.
The Cow Got Dp.
A young1 man, who says he is 'Will
iam Ortman of Columbus, O., met with
a serious and most remarkable railroad
accident a mile from this city this morn
ing. He was riding on the steps of a
passenger coach, when a cow rose up
from where she had been sleeping in a
ditch and collided with the steps, break
ing them loose from the train. Ortman
was thrown to the ground with great
violence and sustained serious injuries
about the head, in addition to having a
leg broken, lie was not found for sev
eral hours, and was unconscious. It is
not to be doubted that he was beating
his way on the train, as he had no
money. He was taken to the poor
farm, and his injuries are very serious,
to say the least.—St. Louis Republic.
From Now Until Spring
Overcoats and winter wraps will be in
fashion. They can be discarded, tem
porarily, while traveling in the steam
heated trains of the Chicago, Milwau
kee & 8t Paul Railway. For solid
comfort, for speed and for safety, no
other line can compare with this great
railway of the West.
Inequality In tbe World.
There is, and there always has been,
inequality in the world, in spite of the
striving of generous hearts and enlight
ened minds for equality. Although
equality has never ceased to show it
self, and elfect itself, within the differ
ent orders, and in modern times to
characterize at least superficially that
large composite order which we call
good society, civilization is still era
bruited and endangered by inequality.
One need not allege instances; they are
abundant in every one's experience and
observation: and thoso who dread or
effect to dread the dead level cf equal
ity are quite right in saying that even
in a political democracy there is as
much inequality as anywhere. But
this does not prove that they nre right
in admiring it. that it is not offensive
and stupid. Inequality still persists,
but so does theft, so does murder, so
does chastity, so do almost all the sins
and shames that ever were. Inequality
is, in fact, the sum of them; in the body
of this death they fester and corrupt
forever. As long as we have inequality
we shall have these sins and shames,
which spring from it, and which live
on from inferior to superior. Few vices
live from equal to equal; but the virtues
flourish. _
The Lord likes a man who says what he
thinks, hut tbe people don't.
A handsome female photozraphor ought
to do a good business with her winning
ways.
Dinner Table I Inen.
The linen for all meals should be ir
reproachable. She is a wise mistress
vrho economises the labor of house
keeping in other ways rather than in
the laundering of table linen. Many
prefer the bare table for luncheons and
teas, using embroidered doilies under
every plate and dish; but this practice
is to be commended only when the
table is of fine old mahogony or some
other .beautiful wood, polished to per
fection.
Only white damask is permitted at
dinners, and white china is preferable
to the decorated ware, inasmuch as one
does not tire so soon of the white as of
the other; also, it permits a greater
variety of table decorations, and the
needed touch of color can be given by
delicate embroideries, tinted lights,
the. sheen of silver and cut glass and
artistic color harmonies of fruits and
flowers.—Good Housekeeping.
A Heart? Welcome
To returning pcnco by day and tranquility
at night Is extended by the rheumatic pu
1 lent who owes these blessings to tlostetter's
Stomach hitters. Don't delay the nso of
this Due anodyne for pain and purifier of
the blood un instant beyond the point when
the disease manifests Itself. Kidney trouble,
dyspepsia, liver complaint, la grippe and
It'regularity of the bowels are relieved and
cured by tho Hitters.
Something Had Got to He Don*.
“What is all that row?” asked the
exchange fiend.
“That," explained tho office boy, “la
the foreman and tho business manager
[ trying to explain to the secretary of
the 1. O. G. T. how the notice he tele
phoned to the office got Into the paper
as the I. O. D. T. lie Bays that when
a Good Templars’ notice gets into the
paper as the Independent Order of De
lirium Tremens something has got to
be did. ”—Indianapolis Journal.
Mother* who hove a«ed Parker's (i Inner Tonic
f«»r yours lusi.st that it beu^fl smorj than other medi
dluos; every form of distress and weakness > laid to It
The Smtllnt Watch.
The smallest perfect watch ever
made is owned by a Russian princess.
It was first placed in an exquisite gold
case, covered with the most minute,
but literally perfect, Watteau scenes in
enamel; then, at the princess* desire,
the works were removed and placed in
side a splendid diamond scarce two
fifths of an inch in diameter.
Hlidemnu u a simple remedy,
but It takA out the corns, ami what a console* ton It
It! Makes walking a pleasure. Xtc, at druggists.
To Prevent Tardiness.
“How do you avoid tardiness?” asked
one first A teacher of another, the other
day. “You only had one in all last
month,” observed the questioner.
“^’his is my plan,” exclaimed Miss 8.,
and it works well. Each morning we
give mottoes. IJjow we have about
fifteen and at the opening exercise
each child recites as many of our mot
toes as lie can. The children are in
terested, and come early to engage in
this part of the program. All our mot
toes are short ‘Doing nothing is doing
| ill’ is the longest one I now think of.
My one tardiness was caused by sick
ness. The little chap came in 'at 10
o’clock.
Science la the Primary.
“Yes, John, that is a queer buff and
a very interesting one, too. I'm glad
you found it. All bugs are interesting
when we know just how to look at
them.
“Floyd,” turning to another little
fellow, “did you ever find a bug like
j this one?”
j "No, Miss L—, but I found a bug
i last night on my bed.”
“So do I sometimes,” chimes an en
thusiastic disciple, and “1” and “1”
chimes the iuevitable primary choriiB.
"Oh,” cries one ambitious for high dis
tinction, “1 find lots of bed bugs every
night.” This incident being literally
true proves that some Omaha schools
are dot in need of certain collections.
Do You Speculate?
Then send for our book, “How to Specu
late Successfully on Limited Margins in
drain and Stock Markets.” Mailed free.
Comstock, Huzhes '& Company, Ria.to
Building, Chicago, 111.
As a man gets older it takes him longer
to warm up for a good time and longer to
cool off in getting ovor it.
sm
Vlram ChMototti
Mix three heaping tablespoonfnfa of
grated chocolate with enough water to
beat it to a smooth paste, talcing care
that no lumps remain. Put it into a
chocolate pot and set it into a kettle of
boiling water. Pour in one pint of new
milk and op a pint of cream or a quart
of new milk, with the whites of one or
two eggs, well beaten. Stir the choco
late paste into the scalding mill: and
and let it boil two or three minutes,
then stir In the beaten whites and
serve it hot.
Hogeman’e Camphor Irm wtl h Glycerin*.
Cun-* Chapped it Hilda and Pace, Tender or Sore Keek
Chilblain*, l’lltn. Jt,'. n. 0. Clark Co, Mew Haven, CL.
In 1807 Canada wilt octet rate the tilth
anniversary of the landing of Bobastinn
Cabot.
The especial attention of our readers* is
railed to the notice in this paper, "Free
Fare' to Texan,'' It offers a grand opor-.
tunity to secure a home in the garden ot
prosperous Texas. Read it lor farther in-:
formation. *, ■'
The average passenger train weighs two
hundred tons.
-.FITB—All Fit* stopped free bjr Dr. Kline's
Kerve Haatorar. No Pita alter the hr*, day m ua
Harvelouseumi. Treatise amt SStrial hbttln Im ti
» Hearts. Scad to Dr. Kllat-,9ol Ai’t>USt.li'uda.,lw»
The Hnhertuan who lies in wait for a trout
and Anally gets it, is apt to lie in weight tor
many moons.
I could not get along without Piso's Cur*
for Consumption. It always cures,—Mrs.’
E. C. Moulton, Needham, Mass.,Oot.33,1H.
Society is continually surging with the
conflict of dollars and sense.
If the Uaby Is Cutting Teein.
Berate and um that old and well-tried remedy, Had.
Wwolow's Sootukk) Stair for Children Teething,
Fishermen will dream of Ash lying about
them, but in reality its the other way.
“Kaneon's Hagle Corn Itlvs.”
Warranted to care or money refunded. 4*k year
druggist for it, Price IS uentn
There is one consolation with the new
woman crate—the coming chaperon vrillbe
a man.
Billiard table, second-hand, for sola
cheap. Apply to or address, H. C. Akin, ■
fill B. lSth 8t.. Omaha, Neb,
Romance has been elegantly defined i
the offspring of fiction and love.
V
;3Ki
KNOWLEDGE
Brings comfort and improvement and
tends to personal enjoyment when
: S
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 tho,
remedy, Syrup of Tigs.
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 medieal
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 00c ana $1 bottles, but it is man
ufactured by the California Fig Syrup
Co. only, whose name is printed on every
package, also the name, Syrup of Figs,
and being well informed, you will not
accept any substitute if one red.
MAXERS*(@BDWBU HU»
BUNTING FLAGS.
rut
I HUHIHUnTWHIIU JU.
STBtfKiTH er MAUMUJrll"r””,c'ltimauV.
ftgK)U*SHirV~ MSI nSMUlO«t
IUHUFUTIRY
■john w.isoKnra.
I Waahls|ten.D.C,
*roewpMtoa C^ilma.
fyn Ji Uat war, 15 aQ ml tralim claim ».Btt* **“«»
: -t:
■aHI Female Frail Fill* PMltlTalr remora
ail InoffuUritl®*, from whtMver o®u«®. Priot,
W.W. Card Hediodi Cu, It Diarbom Stmt, Cblctfo.
.......
Loss of opportunity is life's greatest loss. Think of suffering with
NEURALGIA Yet™ y£„ y£.
When the opportunity lies in a bottle of ST. JACOBS r>nr, it cures.
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WWW ...
f¥m
as
rilla Sense.
Any sarsaparilla is sarsaparilla. True. So any ©*
tea is tea. So any flour is flour. But grades differ.
You want the best. It’s so with sarsaparilla. There
are grades. You want the best. If you understood
sarsaparilla as well as you do tea and flour it
would be easy to determine. But you don’t. How
should you ?
When you are going to buy a commodity
whose value'you don’t know, you pick out an old
established house to trade with, and trust their
experience and reputation. Do so when buying
sarsaparilla.
Ayer’s Sarsaparilla has been on the market
fifty years. Your grandfather used Ayer’s. It is a
reputable medicine. There are many sarsaparillas.
But only one Ayer’s. IT CURES.
THE LAND OV THE
BIG RED APPLE
Tk* Lmi 6m4 Uad (• hm M Is Ui >«C*n BeU**
>4 leePriM
For INFORMATION rei'trJIog land in Harry Co,.
•• W. MISSOURI, write to
Pv»»y. Pioroe City, Mo.; J. G. Mabjott, Purdy, Mo.;
T. K. J-rost, ('nsutvilie, Mo., or L. a 8xdway £ Co ,
HOS Monodnock Bldg., Chicago, UL
: w‘;,
Zachary T. Lindsey,
■SU RUBBER GOODS
Dealer* send for Catalogues, Omaha, Neb.
AkaTfOVE REPAIR Works
stovf Repair* for 40,000 different etovee
Udrsain, ls*»g*sj|lMkl.,OiMka,a<k
Vi
W. N. U., OMAHA. 47, 1805.
When writing to advertisers mention
this paper.
y*. Pl'SO.:S'GL>RE FOR
£
GURtS WHUife AIL uot MILS.
Best Cough Syrup. Tnates Good* 030
in tliue. S<>!(5 by druggists.
CONSUMPTION
4
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$
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;4
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