The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, October 01, 1896, Image 6

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    TO THE FABMEBS.
AENRY CABOT LODGE APPEALS
'their- good sense.
i '■ . V »'•.**•«——_ Jg
lOOn. u--.lt. i.-i ■ . t*
JUT- Mi* Pn«P*o* of
:P«Kiwi ' Var(a* That friio of Cltf
^’dciGood., Which Thcj Kocdt Wilt
- ia . i . • fcfe
A* a clasa, the farmers are hottest,
Intelligent, and patriotic. We cannot
bel^eve that aftei; they have, examined
Into the sllverqueatlon they will vote
tpr./ree. coinage. Certainly they have
>o Wish to injure either themselves or
their country.; Some of thy;, reasons
'wtrp'they should not support Mr, J»ry*
«h arqjmt forth, in the following state
ment prepared at our request, by the
Hotn 'Henry Cabot Lodge, one of the I
ablWeenatora from Massachusetts:
1*0 |he Editor of The Post Express: >
'"Ttaf wage earners of the United
Steps, whether employed in the fac-1
tor/W* on the farm, would suffer more
severely from the free coinage of sll
ver than any other class in the com-1
'puqlty. They might receive the same
number of dollars that they do now,
but the value of those dollars would he
^ufcdb halves by reduction of their pur
chasing power. The wage earners, the
CMi‘ who are paid at the end' of each
y. .or each weefc.or each th6nth, arc
'the great creditor class In the country,
^hnd It is upon them that the free coin
age of silver would fall with the .great
let eeverlty. •* ■* •
1 The farmers are the claas to whom
we^fiSSh silver advocates appeal most
nets
deliver.: This is no doubt true, but they
*da tut tell them that the price of
jfovorything ttejr have MWould
l**so tlae. so that they woUldThe ho
3- 4 £--••• ■ sU;.*,?,,
pension*. He has taken an active part
in the debate* on tariff and finance,
and la regarded aa one of the ableet
men in public life. We are aure that
what he_says to the.faptgra jfljyi. have
very great weight wirh them.—Roch
ester (N, T.) Post and Express. . ^
____ ■ ■ ■
, ' I' * '< !'n ' ■'« y
Wntaru M».p»pm. %
- Whatever the viewing popocrata
may: say about i "everybody” being
“against ua except' the people,” the
newspapers of this'country "no doubt
reflect public opinion as faithfully ha
they always have done. The absurd
charge that the public press of the
Unltjed States is con trolled by a syn
dicate of banker* .hat secured Mr,
Cleveland’s bond issue, Is too absurd
to uebd refuting. Nobody except s
few Tlllihans aqd Watsons believe it.
if there were , any large ‘number of
voters in the, republican,r party who
had determined to forsake it and fol
low after sack strange godeas Altgeld
add Peffer, there would be a eorre
spondingr change lit the-jWM atthe're
publican press. On the contrary,' the
fact la notorious that the changing has
been almost entity , in the opposite
direction, with the exception of a small
handful of papers such as the Bali
Lake Tribune, seated In the yiry
midst ..of the ellvir mining dlpdtfct.
Jhe (iftfgctlon from the fepuhUban cbl
"ua|h bns heen tie mlnuti'to be worth
noticing... .
A young business man of Dayton,
'^"having w desire to ate , bow the
newspapers in the west were Inclined,
jnyalled postpl cards to dHTerent newsv
’papers', in -the western’'states Wnme
diately after the Chicago convention,
and secured from-each a copy. One
hundred ,an<V' slaty-one answers weje ,
received. Ninety-tour wers republican,,
forty-one democratic, eighteen inde
pendent and eighCf opullsU Nlnety
(lv» jof tl»smj he lotted to bp JbS'koid ’
'ana nfxty-ll* for silver. InXaltfornla'T
where the silver movement is said to
have ‘ been making great strides; thir
ty-six of the thirty-nine republican pa
pers declared for gold and three of the
f&irtien democratic papers likewise,
fypbl Nebraska he secured three re
‘’pubilimir newspapers”'and they - were
unanimous for gold. One of the three
democratic jtewsp§psrs he .received was
•••VW' te •&- "Rta eight -republican
tewOpapera 'from* Kan«a% ike three
from North Dakota and the eleven
from Missouri declared for the honest
evidenoewtae straw
! vbtd whlchthe young man of Dayton
-‘i’- * —x.^'„
f
■W;
QUERY,
Wt*ri)Oo<Ml Would “Mors Money”Bs\o<!a Man In His Position?—Chl
k
•t nj
oago Intsr Oosan.
*ffl i-'' ■ n .-*ioli tafe#C
If.!'.{
tetter «|f-than they were before. On
the otter hand, ~ tarmera would he in*
lured directly-In other "ware, apart
fkwm m Question of the price of what
they poll and bay. Any farmer .wjpb
had laM up.money In the saving? pant;
““ elsewhere would hare it c% W
two. <( he happeneflto’be ;a
ted drawing a pension, he-would loee
- tee-halt his pension. If he has 10
' pared hla life for the tenant lot' Ms
telly he hsa paid hta premium In
RoM, but under free silver coinage the
Insurance would .be paid In silver apg
teduoed one-ha^
But there Is a
ftaken than [this
‘ Btelllgent farmer top*
view,
a|> which
In
every
rt^fo tal^ej The
rmetp pre a part of -the-gTest'coaf
unltr whlefa we call the pteplw dt
!he United lutes. One portion of the
latlea oannot prosper,.ifallthe
^reat suffer -The farmer wltt-not make
.Money It the people* fifer buy „ttelr
^products are Injured -and ruined by a
«4jpad flnancfel. pollay. The election of
,.ifiry*n would mean the- most terrible
fpawic that fhlf couiitt-yvhas ever seep.
;**•. It would mean- the wholeeale redac
tion of' Wapss' ahd the temporary* W
s permanent destruction of tnany indus
tries. The, pro!*. , < *40 , earning and
teslness ciaapM on .whom this disaster,
wwould eulogy fail are those 'who, buy
the fsnier’am make Vis prosperi
ty. and when they'suffer he wlli suf
l;ter. tool;. »
’ S There is no class in-ihe oammunMy
f 'po profoundly interested, in the tnalh
f tenance of, eoupd curvepey,; which is
lone of thp esaentipl^patedpaa of popd
teMdweaa.s# the faransr. --I oaauotb*
,T' lieve that the farmers of the United
ir States, who are an intelligent and pa
<fe)trtotlc claps M men, eft tepport* pol
“““Sfeiu
V$fcy or>
would.aoi
only rain '-them ’
tedfteSStfhSwf3???^'
h
= Ir • jpsn Lodge was elected three times
T tte hopse of representative?, and
Ianuary,189S, was sent to the Fed
k tel oeaaie, m the successor to
Henry L Dawes.
the
.He Is hh*tr
k.% of tte committee on tmmtgration
te«iitei i puwbpr of the committees on
iSr , -civlt’ service. foreign • “
rl ;• f%t UW* ** .... -J V
4tfv
y,:, W
|V* S-' ™ . "
relations. and
r-i w
secured la not conclusive, for a great
many reasons. Blit If gives'k fair In
dication 01 fb* stale'of things and it
five* good reasons nr . the hope and
WW U»Al the else of the stiver boom
In tUf. wof^ Is mgstljr ii thef eye of the
popocratlg, party.—8yractHf;' (N. ft
tv'l .
' ' ’***> Jf • • --t j- -J
h **•* panne oirssis'UM^r^
*Hv
‘in*
This counW> IMS a per capita circii’
lation of $9 In hold, $9.08 in iilver and
$6.10 tp paper; total, $$4.18. This state,
meat, which Is made, on th« Authority
of .the director <4 tne-mint,- takes no
pCcoiiht of thy larger insolation. In the
norm of tfttnk credits and comment g)
paper. Adding onr '"credit’ to our
money, We: have the lafgiest’per capita
circulation sf say nation onj the globe;
'except England. Do .«< want to ty>pr
tract the circulation hr,means of the
destruction of credit? Is not; our credit
wprth morp to pa, many times over,
than all our gold, sliver and paper? The
(»nw*ttlng>y. perhaps)
to desIrOy’ ohf 'credit, the republics®
party is'htfIvlhg to maintain it, Free
cetnagt at 16 to 1 means contraction
whatever tth Advocates tnay say or be*'
ilevAi «-iU l.i > ♦..« v -i ,W
Here.
S t*/i *U h
L'
. V. ... ’• —r*y , ,
, fed* W“*, |h« Dtmspd. *
Talk about making an' ‘•uhllmttnj
demand for‘tflftpi* by free^ coinage. pi
16 to 1 is tolly. The amount of 'sthrsi
iiofte>'',,ithi«!h ian bh forctil into eiy
,$udttoH la atf Wtljr, limited by the neodi
of business. Free stlrer or, <09 free sli
ver, the people w|U not use more «
tha,
thoi.AU how,____ ______
With free coinage of silvsr at the ra.
tip of 10te 1 every mine In the world
jWpuld be worked to its fullest capacity
fnd the entire output dumped at our
mints. Why? -Because for every $9.94
of caver MilMon onr government wonlf
give the’owner $18.60—a net profit of
$8.6$ upon 16 ounces. Who wonlf
blame the millionaires pdjo owif silver
mines tor making this money T Omul
men people will be forced to take from
the rich mine owner a dollar at 100
ceifn whose intrinsic value la about 63
tpedta and whose purchasing value I*
never higher than its intrinsic value.—
tUQtunpndvme. (N. TO Pbeenl'
DAIRY AND POULTRY.
INTERESTING CHAPTERS FOR
‘V OUR RURAL RtADHth nl
I'n*; ;8ae«M«fal Fir«»w OpmM This
itoMrtwii of tko Wmrm—A Tmm
MifU h to tfc. Can of Uvo Block
■ Mat Pooltir. V’
... . .. r—--- i<".
fklllwata Hollar ^
A dan Francisco correspondent of
the Chicago Record writes to that Jour-.
nal as' follows: “We were traveling lit ]
Biskiyou county, that northern part of
tiie state which geographical!/ Is
part of California, but commercially is
a part of Oregon. It is a wild, and
sparsely settled region, with only here
a. d there a hay-cultivated ranch and
an occasional mining camp.
"It was one of the latter we reached,
about nightfall. We were' directed to
the principal hotel In the place, ' a
roughly hoarded, two-stofy building, of
which the moat prominent feature of Its,
internal- arrangement was the bar
room, which was also the office, and,
contained in one corner's Wooden sink
provided with a paper bucket* "Ailed
viih 'water,' two or three- tlh- wash-*
basins andt a < couple - of,; -community.
toweis.uung 09 rollers.-. y,v tin,
*r8WWP. ;W ready ,T«|b£ft ,wo Afcrfte^
and we were directed at once to a Ion*
eAMw' 'n »a111' t(ta' i
room with a low celling—the dining-'
#»®om—In which About tArehty roughly
dressed men, most of them in thel#
ihlrt -sleeve* and •apparently miners,:,
' Ratherjaen and teamsters, were seated,
three or four long tables. The tobies
fete covered Alth oil cloth. The table- ‘
are wa*1 Very thick' arid' hdAvy1 Irdh-1
Stone china, much cracked ang chfpped.'
The knives and forksweresteel4,wlth
handles discolored, and ,erack%$ .front '
rough, usage and hot dishwater* , Xaax/
.gach end of the table was a setofeas- '
iers, originally, doubtless, qultd showy
hr 1th silver'plating, hut at this' ptMed*'
much the worse for the wear of the
fitting.
<S: ‘‘The lilpfog-tcipm girl who c&gaq, tp
wait oA tm raWM off'th# but
room girls ‘do In ten' thousand
hotels all oyer .this broad larid.
She received our orders she gi
butter dish from its place/t
middle of.th# ta£le gtpr wwrfd'ud
Saying: ‘Here’s your subistMM*' but
ter,’ at, the same Ijmbjakirarfi«tocnc,;
of, the pasters, whorethey wwrWpt,!
like the bills of fare ih ch rlaiau'
rants, pieces of cardboard about the
else and shape of the ordinary restau
raht blll df taW. '-She laAd onAoftheie
down on the table beside each of us
Slid started for the kitchen. ' Wonder
ing .slightly at this, we each picked up
the&rAbOaTd; laid'before us, And this/
J;IS Vrlitftt-Wa reSdWl t.i \ 5 Ij V
i The butter served here Is "hut- :'
Percentage of- ingredients :
follows:f ft \ £ 1 :
lery hi***"*" ’ , '-9K •
i> Neutral ....
Creamery butterifi.»......,.,‘j,.I^25
Neutral
gutter oil . ,'10
Oleo.Pl^,>4-i A.135 :
Cream, and pflU, iv| 10 :
: Total ......;. f,. r. . .^’.. ./.ioo
“By the time we jiad finished read
ing this the girl returned with our sup
per. When she hid arranged the va
rious dishes In front of us we asked her
what she had given us this chemical
analysis of our butter product for.
W|lthottt a word, -but with a gesture of
.Impatience, she turned the cardboards
over, and we read:.
“‘This notlce ls gtvpa ln pqnformlty
witA! (acilansS and <X of .aft act of the
legislature of California; approved'
March 9, 1895, entitled an-^Act to pre
vent ,d^£eptlon In the ^manufacture arid'
sale of butter and of‘cheese, to Secure'
Its enforcement and "to appropriate
money therefor.”
“ ‘Sec. '3.* Eac^ person Who, by Alin
flf or another,' lawfully manufactures
shy substance designed to ha used> a»
a substitute for butter or cheese, shall
prepare a statement, printed in plain
Rpman type of a sise not smaller than
pled, *htktltig lathe English language>
Its name and the name and address of
the manufacttrt'eV', 'the name of the
place where manufactured or put up,
apd nlsp th* names, apd actual pvQARV,
ages of the various Ingredients used in
the manufacture of such Imitation but
ter^ or* imitatioiiriheefsei ■!***• eoy .
“ ‘Sec. 7. No keeper or proprietor of
any bakery, hotel. bOardlng-house, res
taurant aajoop^ Juqpb coitnter. or ottgr
place ol public entertainment,, pr aigr,
person- baying charge thereof or em
ployed thereat; or any person fuAleft-'
ing board for other persons than mem
bers oft bis own-family, w Ua:s any
ployes where such board is furnished
as the compensation or as a part of’the
ploye, for use as food, ghy substance,
designed to-be, naad'aa A,RUbatUpte for'
butter or, ehjppiAjj Iytlees the i*ph .be,
accompanied by a copy df the state
ment described in Aeetlonlfof this act
i and-jhy, a verbal .nojtlflcatlpn to sa|d.
.trim wat iwch siibstancei* ’a Bubsu-t
pat
| tute for butter or. cheese.’,
“The proprietor, having now com
plied with -gll Aha, requirements of .the
law, haai
""May good digestion wait on appetite
And health on both.’'” '
Agricultural" Exports.—The , high
water mark of the exportation ot agri
cultural pfoddcte from the United
.States was reached in, 1892, when they
Reached the enormous value of $799,
329,289. In 1896 they had fallen to
3683,215,317. This Is' enough ''to make
> auhetaptial difference with our farm
ers, for $240,000,000 don’t grow on
tevery bush, and most of the bushes
‘have been picked.—Ex. .■* •. :
J ■ i '-LLl- ... - 'j.x- fc
’ ▲ bad temper in the. owner wlU beget
-a bad one, In the cow, and when they
4olh get tk» nroflt is baa. *r 1 1 ■ '*4
Tabarro Dnt A* .InmllrMa
Hr. T. Greiner, one of America's load*
ISC authorities, says: "For some years
I bare been uslnc and recommending
tobacco dust as an ail-round Insect de
stroyer. I use it in the greeftbouie fnf ’
lice (aphis), la the open ground for the
cucumber hettle, plant lice, and for
worms of all kinds, and sometimes in
the hen-houso for lice, etc. It is surely
on* of the swiftest of all insecticides
we can apply, almost or fully equal to
bufhath..^lf.alfted or scattered over cur
rant bushes the currant worms win curl
ip add die,- and the bushes will be freb
from the pest within an hour or less,:
and fall from them-for some time. If
s-Vtoww iBto tho ^eartjof cabbage plants
it means the,«n4of. the green worm.
Applied lp; the as®,a w*y> i® the nests,
•of the caterplUara (and, the tiepin all'
around us,at thlytlmeare full of .thetq)
especially in the morning or eypning,
when the worms are all athnqie, it will
clear them out for, foqd.lp lespt^aaan
hour. In short, I .hardly knovf whet
worta . or other soft-bodied lnpecf .jthe
contact with tobacco dust would hot
speedily kill, I believe It win even
put an end to the potato bug. It is dis
tasteful to many hard shell beetles also,
as may be, seen by the fact that with
neavy applications we can a rive away
the cucumber beetle (and perhaps the
squash bus)- .The flea beetle, unfortu
nately, Is not sd easily conquered, even
If it does not like tobacco smell. Surely,’
tobacco dust must be considered a most
Excellent Insecticide, and'as It is not ex
pensive (In some cases, perhaps, the
sweepings 'of cigar'factories, etc.,-’will
do and can he had for the'hauilnff). f„
think every soil tiller should keep if
| on hand. I have Usually applied tobac
, co .dubt With tbe bare bauds, scattering,
it rathef*tre«ly over the bushes and '
1 ‘plantar, ahd ’fefoiihd cucumbers, ■ melon :
,fan<i sdflaitk wines, evon an inch’ deep bn
I the ground/;The stuff is worth nearly
the full price asked for it ($3 per barrel,
"or so) as a fertilizer, and I have not felt
' thf necessity, of using it In a particular
ly 1 economical manner*., For cabbage
and caterpillar neats, however, hand
rbellows of some kind are almost neces- ;
r lary.as we want to blow the dust well
yjmongat the leaves and the webs. The
ordinary cheap hand bellows, as of
fered for sale by seedsmen and hard
ware storea.will do very well for cab
» Wlidl ?•!■««« Trees to Pfemt.
~ fhe question aylsps, what shall we
plant? There are so many general
kindq of trees and varieties of each
that* thd' matter is very much simpli
fied’when 'we know that the number
of {species'adapted toany solland lo
cality- is: comparatively . few. Prof<
Brewer, # Yale.. college,. ty, Walter's
Statistical Atlas,’ says that In the
"faulted States we have only 300 in-'
.{Hgeddde species that In full growth
fetch thirty feet In height* and in the
Vegion including our own state we have
blit sixty to sixty-five species that
reach fifty feet in height. Different
species are found on different, geolog
ical strata, so that in connection with
the.question "what to plant?" we may
profitably consult our geology and orig
inal forest'growth. Other species may'
do well, but wo must prove.them be
fore trying them extensively. Our
original forests have furnished excel-,
lent timber of white, burr, red and yel
low, oak, two or three species of ash,
black walnut, chestnut, etc., etc., each
of which, if planted well and cared for
would, in & comparatively short time,
furnish timber for many purposes.
Then, we have several species, of conl
ferae, as pines, spruces and larches,
each of which has been tried in other
countries, and somewhat in this, and
have (done well. These, could be tried
on soils not too fertile, and will suc
ceed. vl-erches, especially will grow al
most'anywheie. One man in Nantucket
planted d0,000: in 1877. The locust has
b*op tTled.iUJjd doep, welllbut best of
all; perhaps ip .the Catalpa speciosa, or
hardy cata.lpa.as l^ts (knbwn and dis
tinguished i^pm .jjigpijiuloldW,' Which is
'touch less hardy, and of which' It is a
variety. IriYeWeirgrbunds elms,'and'
oven. w)llows, might be planted with
profit—Pref, Ci lv. ingerBoll. |
| ‘ ’’ ‘ Qatlllr in finbii' ■,'r* ’
The' liuropban' countries' prefer to
improve. the quality more vigorously
'than td increase the number of their
horses. .England has only 1,529,000,
,< while we haye in the United States
16,000,000 horses, a ypry small per cent
of which are suitable for city market
and export Russia has 30,000,000
horses of a Still more inferior quality,
unfit for any market and too small for
'farm work. The Russian trotter has
had the encouragement of the govern
ment. Now the peasants are urging
the government to furnish them with
draft horses suitable for their farm
work, to haul the heavy farm machines.
i<r^maH horses in large numbers will
"impoverish any country and it is well
f6r America that the ranch horse and
the .little trotter no longer pay for
l their f4ed, while there is such great
demand for htgh-Class draft and coach
horses at high priceB because they are
so scarce*—Uve- Stock Journal. :
Irrigating rrult Trees.—In a recent
paper Professor B. W. migard, of Oali
fornia,, said that much, water mokes
fruit too aciduous and of poor quality,
says an exchange. If there is teo little .
water the fruit will be dry and small.
The thing to he avoided is to not irri
gate too much. If the ground is soaked
all the tfeason, the roots run near to
the surface, .and a drought would .
probably kill the tree. Irrigation has
much to do with the flavor of fruit.
Fruit men should study the nature of
' the soil, and Irrigate accordingly. As
soon as fruit is fully formed, irriga
tion should he decreased, as the tree
needs reel as well aa everything else.
[ ■ 'I ■:!* If..- ’ . '•«- > •
l People will not psy K oents for Ih
* osat butter.
The October Atlantic.
The Atlantic Monthly for October la
one of the most important issnes of the
year. There la the usual fine literary
flavor to the contents, and this is sup
plemented by timely papers on politi
cal, scientific and 'Industrial subjects.
The leading article of the month, by
President Eliot, of Harvard, is on “Five
American Contributions to Civiliza
tion,” viz., the practice of arbitration
instead of war, the increase of wide re
ligious toleration, the safe develop
ment of manhood suffrage, the proof
that people of a great variety of na
tions are fit for political fredom, and,
fifth, the dffusion of well-being among
the population in general
Pro. John Trowbridge sounds a note
of warning in the vigorous article en
titled “The Imperiled Dignity of Sci
ence and law.”
Exhaustive book. reviews and The
Contributors’ Club complete the issue.
Trips Undertaken for Health’s Sake
WUl.be rendered more beneficial, and the
fatigues of travel counteracted, if the voy
ifeerwlil take alon r with him Hostetter'a
w■ ass iiiuu nustetiBr 8
i stomach Bitters, and u&e that protective
,*PU enabling tonic, nerve Invtgoraht and
appetiser regularly Impwrltiee.ia *lr and
-water, are neutralized ny.lt, and it is a
matchless tranquilizer anti ’regulator of the
stomach, liver and bowels; "{t counteracts
mlarla, rheumatism, and a tendency to
ney and bladder troubles. ,V,
i.ij .A, Draw Before* Cmtade.
Mile Payer, a Swiss lady, wiito has
recently taken the degree of doctor of
medicine, has instituted a crusade
against the faults in woman’s dress, es
pecially inveighing against tight gloves
and hoots, corsets and long skirts. Her
lectures are said to be so effective that
mere than 100 ladies at the end of one
dfiher discourses pledged themselves to
,iiepdunce corsets, to only wear gloves
on special occasions and to have dresses
at'least ten inehes from the ground.
' '«-■ ; '■ ’ij_:__ .
Rev. D. H. Rohrabaugh of Osceola, Iowa,
writes Sept. 1, 1896: ‘‘Your letter received,
, I have taken all of the sample box of Or.
■ Kay’s Renovator, and have found it an ex
cellent laxative and renovator, and 1 be
lieve it has strong nervine powers.”
i *. ———‘--—
i Man-Haters.
A woman who died recently boasted
Hint she had not spoken to a man for
over thirty years, and another was
equally jubilant over the foot that she
had lived twenty-five years in one
house without a man crossing thresh
.pld* But probably the bitterest man
hater of modern times was an Austrian
woman, who at the time of her death
was engaged in developing a plan for
the ultimate extinction of the whole
male population.
■ Cascarets stimulate liver,kidneys and
bowels Never sicken, weaken or gripe.
The refining of. sugar was invented in
Antwerp, hi the sixteenth century.
Warner’s Safe Con
tH LARGE
OR SMALL.
BOTTLES.
fWARNERjfl
SAFE
CURB:
WDWYAWUV01
| Ccnoui. DtMUTvJg
■ MALARIA. I
E?gTign«zn
Owing to the |
many requests
from its patrons,
Warner’s Safe j
Cure Co. have put
on the market
smaller size
bottle of Safe 1
Cure which can
now be obtained
at all druggists at1
half the price of ,
the large bottle.
is not only a scientific vegetable ,
preparation and does all that Is
claimed for It, but It Is the only
Kidney and Liver medicine used
by the best people of four conti
nents. A medicine that bears i
the stamp of the world’s ap
proval, and maintains Its posi
tion for a fifth of a century,
must necessarily possess p«
culler merit.
Fall
lfedlctno i» fully aa Important and beneflolal aa
Sprint Bedlolue, and the boat Fall Medldna la
Hood’s^
Sarsaparilla
The Beat—In hot tbe One True Blood Potter.
-*♦_ t>ia|_ cure Liver Ills; eaay to
flood 9 r'l I IS take, ea«y to operate. IBu.
Pullman Navar Built .
Better Tourlat Sleepers
Than thou uaed for
the Burlington
Route’s personally
conducted onoe-a
week excursions to
California.
That' is one rea
son why yon should
patronize them when you to wont. '•
Other reason* are: The time is fast—
cars an* not crpwdedr-excurstyp. con
ductors and uniforined porters accom
pany each party—the scenery eWfont*
is. far and away Ihe'fTwilJt oh1 the globe.
TI ’ ' ' " *
he excursions' leave"Omaha every
Thursday-morning and ipathra’- to Baa
Francesco and Los Angeles without
change. ■ 1
For full information about, rates,etc.,
write to J. Fiwfjfcih,
. Oen. Agt. Burlington Reuter
Omaha,liebi
The best fruit section In the West. No .
drouths. A fsllure of crops never known.
Ulld climate. Productive soil. Abundance of "
good pure water.
For Maps and Circulars giving full descrip
tion Of the Rich Mineral. Fruit and Agricultu
ral Lands in South West Missouri, write to
JOBN M. PURDY. Manager ol the Missouri
Land and Live Stock Company, Neosho, New
ton Co., Missouri. '
BUCKET SHOPS!
TRAPS WITH A
RESPONSIBLE FIRM,
B. 8. MURRAY A CO..
BANKERS AND BROKERS,
18, 123 ud 124 Kisita Building, Otioge, 11L ’
Member* el the Chicago Boirt) ol Trade In good
(landing, who will furnish you with their Latest
Book on statistics and reliable Information re
tarding the markets. Writs lOr it and their Dally
Market Latter, both FREE. References: AM. Bx.
nation at. Bark, Chicago. . .
1,200 BO.
CRIB,
$9.50.
♦. H. Bldbi/EK. •
Council Bluff*,
1»w. . .
HwMiNwfBi i fas cart And
r*ASCARETS,
W CAMV OATNARTIL
OATNARTIB,
the Ideal laxative
and guaranteed consti
pation cure, sent FREE
on receipt SI five 2-cent
stamps. Address
_ STklftlSS BsesDT'CMPSXT,
CktaMM ■irtnl. Cm. tin Tsais
STEADY
WORK
WE PAT CASH WEEKLY and
want men everywhere to SELL
STARK TREES r”mo”t*“‘
_ ed, proven
“absolutely best. "Superb outfits,
hew system. 8TARK BROTHERS,
Louisiana, Mo.( Rockiest, 111
PATENTS, TRADEMARKS^
Examination and,Advice as to Patentability of Iȣ
Examination and,Advice as to Patentability of In
vention. Send for “Inventora* Qu Ide, or How to Get a
Patent.'* O’FARRELL <k SON, Washington, D. a
OMAHA STOVE REPAIR WORKS
Rot Hapeti* hr aay hind at Hte mIa ■
l»OT dovolas §t„ dsaha. hi
PITPKIT^ 20year*' experience. Send sketch forad
iniknitfi vice. (L.Leane,late pnii. examinerU.8.
Pat.Office) Deane * Weaver, McQill Bldg,,Waah.D.C»
nmilM “4 WHI8KY Wl seat
UrlUH tUL Dr.l.1.1
. WOOLLEY, ATLANTA, «A.
« ^cted w^ThampwMi’tEya water.
•ore eyes, use I
Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. UN |
In time. Bold by drnggista.
SSSEBCSEuBd
W. N. U.. OMAHA—40-1896
When writing to advertisers, kindly
mention this paper. ■ «»«« a
' The pleasantest, safest and most efficient remedy known for every 1
| kind Of cough, laprippe, influenza, etc. Safe, for all agree.- Does i
Dr;. Kay’s Lung
Mrs Hannah chepard, 301 N ldth St. Omaha, Neb., writes: Four years ago 1 had
Lagrlppe und coughed almost continually ever since. IJ tried Several doi tor# Sad '
various cOugb medicines but could get no relief. One package of Dr Kav'e Wing
I Balm cured nde entlr. It." Sold by druggists or sent by mall for 25c. Send xd 'resa |
tor very valuable free bobklet. (Western Office) Dr. B. J. Kay MsnioAi. Co«rt»A*r.
'W' o ldth'ireet Omaha. Neb.
Tires
We have udt a study of tjres—pounded them
year in ‘and year .out fey thounnds on our
wheefetesting machine, Kited them for elasticity,
far speed, for durability—had reports from
riders and agents everywhere. Result is the
wonderfully elastic ard durable Hartford Single
Tube Tim used on
.»fi <:
/• t!
■•■i f* i
STANDARD OF THE WORLD
Hartford Tires are easiest to repair in caxe of puncture, strongest, safest, belt.
Columbia Art Catalogue, telling fully of all Columbia*, and of Hartford Bicycles, trustworthy
machlnaa of lower price, is free from any Columbia agent; by mail for two 2-cent stamp*.
POPE MFG. CO., Hartford, Conn.
Branch Stores and Agencies In almost every city and town. If Columbia* are not property
•* represented in your vicinity, let us know.
1