The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, December 10, 1896, Image 7

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    Perm'* Be rearm.
Several bentra in Pera own a lu|e
amount ol property. One well known
s' man haa homes worth ten thousand
J|ras, and yet is to be seen begging in
filthy rigs. A poor governess, who waa
• very eharitable, used to give him a pi*
astro twice a Week. One day aha missed
a lira (pound) and thought she must
have given it to the beggar by mistake.
He had gone home for the day, so she
followed him to his house on the Tax*
ime. He received her graciously, look*
ing like a pasha at least in his magnifl*
cent robes “I never like to lose a good
client,” he said, and sent for his bag of
takings; “If there is a lira here We
shall find it ” Sure enough, the lira
was there. “Take It," he continued,
and the poor girl, full of thanks, was
burry ing away when the beggar stopped
her. “Wait a moment; yon haven’t
i ’ given me the piastre.” ’ s |
Rev. P. J. Berg, pastor of the Swed
ish M. E. Church, Des Moines, la., on
March 4th, 1896 writes: “Last year I
was troubled with a bad cough for
about five months. I got medicine from
my family physician and I tried other
remedies without relief. When I first
saw Dr. Kay’s Lung Balm advertised I
'thought I would try it and I'am glad
I did. 1 bought a box and took a tab
let now and then without any regu
larity and after a few days to my great
surprise the cough was gone. Ten days
ago 1 had sore throat, I was out of
tablets and could not get them in Pes
Moines, and I sent to the Western office
of Dr. B. J. Kay Medical Ca, Omaha,
Neb., for six boxes and as soon as 1
took it a few times that soreness and
hoarseness all passed away in one
night I believe it is also good for sore 1
throat” Kr. Kay’s Lung Balm does
not cause sickness at the stomach like
many remedies and is more effectual
than any other we know of.' Sold by
druggists at 25cts or sent by mail, five
for SI. 00. Why not send your orders at
once and have this valuable medicine
On hand? It may save your life, you
certainly will need it before spring.* A
dose in time will save nine, and may
save your life. Order now. Address
Dr. B. J. Kay Medical Co, (Western
office) Omaha, Neb. Send address for
valuable receipt book.
His Ready Answer.
The German emperor, while recently
inspecting a body of naval redrafts,1 no
ticed an unusually stalwart man in the
ranks, and asked him where he hailed
from. The recruit, in broad Bavarian
dialect, replied: “Prom Wiesbach, your
majesty.”
“Did you understand whom I meant,”
the emperor'asf.ed, “in addressing you
sailors about the foreign foe?”
Becruit—“Yes, Russians.”
The emperor—“And enemies at
home?” ,r
Recruit—“Prussians, your majesty.”
BTATE OF OHIO CITY OF TOLEDO.
LUCAS COUNTY, ss.
trank J. Cheney makes oath that he is
the senior partner of the firm of F. J.
» SPVj* C° - doing business In tho City
of loledo. County and State aforesaid,
and that said Arm will pay the sum of
gNE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each
and every case of catarrh that cannot be
cured by the use of Hull's Catarrh Cure.
. - , ' FRANK J. CHENEY.
swrrif to before me and subscribed In
.^yrPr*s®nce. this feth day of December.
A. JJ, looo.
(Seal,) A. W. GLEASON.
. » ,,, n . . _ . Notary Public.
Hall s Catarrh Cure is taken Internally
and acts directly on the blood and mucus
surfaces of the system. Send for testi
monials, free.
bus lV' CHEflEY & CO, Toledo, O.
Sold by druggists, 75c.
Hull's Family Pills are the best
... Edison’s new telephone, a sample of
which he had given to Li Hung Chang,
does away with the receiver, and per
mits a business man to carry on a con
versation at a distance of a few feet
from the instrument, which is placed
against the wall of a room, without
leaving his desk or touching the in
strument, which works automatically.
The Modern Mother
Has found that her little ones are im
proved more by the pleasant Syrup of
Figs, when In need of the laxative effect
of a gentle remedy than by any other,
and that It is more acceptable to them.
Children enjoy it and It benefits them.
The true remedy. Syrup of Figs, Is man
ufactured by the California Fig Syrup
Company only.
It was once told to a certain king of
England that Lord Blank was his po
litest subject. “I, will \est him,” said
the king, and showed Lord Blank to
. the carriage, holding the door for him
to enter first, which he did. “You are
right,” said the king, “a lesser person
would have troubled me with cere
mony.”
Merchants Hotel, Omaha.
COBNRR FIFTEENTH AND FARNAM STS.
Street cars pass the door to and from
, both depots; in business center of city.
Headquarters for state and local trade
Bates $2 and S3 per day.
PAXTON & DAVENPORT, Prop’a
We always admire a man who works
much and talks little.
!• » disease which afflicts over 75 per
LiiLJlio'Z, di*e,tlo“. nervouaneee, bad
JJJS21 ®»|J' «»pl«iioD and low
■ ■ * V/V I.--»»'I«*1WU HU low
aplrita. It will aventually briar on
IZ" dlee.se in nma iSeu,
5"!e . *°,rn- But eufferera from thia
dreaded malady ara apaadily
X»Rer»i.i8AP.E S?re \nd Warner’a
“J? Pul»- Leading phyatciana the
world over, have acknowledged thia
‘.•c_tl,and thouaanda of people through,
out the land have tcatined to It. *
v
BAFB Cure puu a atop to backachea,
headachea, conatipation, loaa of appe
tite, dyapepala. tired feelinga and aleep
leaaneaa. It builda up the exhausted
aretera. It la a sure cure for liver and
kidney complaint in any form, and the
only remedy that haa ever been able to
cure Bright’a diaeaae.
If you are feeling the need of auch a
remedy, you cannot do better than try
thia king of rtmediea, the great
1
“NEIGHBOR JIM.”
There are some ththga about my
Neighbor Jim that I want to tell. Not
. that I like to talk about my neigh*
bora, but Jim should be talked about.
Jim started In. so far as onr street
Is concerned, unfortunately. He was
out of business and had to take a rest
accordingly. He moved Into that fa
mous “board-fence house,” that la,
the richest and meanest man In our
village put up a board fence directly
on the line between his land and the
next dwelling, so that he shut out the
view from the windows across his
own fair lawns and flower-beds. Near
ly every village, alas! has sooner or
later such a spectacle of bad neighbor
and spleen. Jim took that house with
Its side windows all blank view. It
was empty most of the time and fin
ally the owner put the rent so low
that Jim could take It. We all won
dered who he could be, a stranger to
us, and what sort of a head of a fam
ily to subject his pretty wife and chil
dren to that darkened dwelling. But
Inside, of six weeks that board fence
was down! Tea, actually down! Jim
had really knocked it down with his
smile. Neighbor Jim always wears a
cheerful, genial smile.. Everybody
likes to meet him in the morning as
he starts down the street. People like
to hear him say “Good-morning.”,
. There Is so much cheer In the tone.
.He always asks after your friends and
family, and he knows them by name
after he has once beard them. No
living man of us ever heard Neighbor
Jim telling any of his own troubles.
He never complains of the hard times,
< nor the weather. He never got off a
yarn about why he lost his situation,
nor how he got down. We found out
what little we ever knew from other
sources than from him. Neighbor
Jim never looked on the shady side of
any man’s character. Tou could sit in
the car seat with him on the way to
New Tork, and you would hear no un
kind word from him of anybody. I
asked him, one day. If he never en
• tertained an adverse judgment of any
man or thing. He said, “Often. But
I keep all that stuff to myself. And I
try to forget the evil that 1 hear of a
man—simply £>rget. it.”
neignnor Jim listens wnen you
to him. He seems interested. That
pleases. Few are wise enough to
know that even one grunt of indiffer
' ence from a neighbor whom you ac
cost and begin to talk to in a store,
will dull the edge of neighborly
feeling. To seem abstracted, deaf
and dumb and rude, even once, is to
be’voted a boar by the man to whom
you show it You may be tired, may
be oppressed with care; but when
your neighbor begins to Joke and chat,
you must listen. It helps you, too,, to
forget your cares. Neighbor Jim is a
famous listener. He makes you feel
that he takes an Interest in you. I
believe half the men in our village
have at one time or another confided
their troubles to him. He has, how
ever, burdened no man with any of his
own troubles. .
Neighbor Jim is popular with the
small boy. He always Bpeaks to a boy,
not top familiarly, but in a gentle,
courteous way. He never told any
boy’s father unpleasant complaints.
“I’ll tell your father” has made more
trouble between neighbors than any
other one thing. Our neighbor never
turns round at the Academy of Mu
sic to stare reproof at a young fellow
who is whispering too loudly, or gig
gling with his sweetheart. Jim just
lets them go on. Jim lets some one
else do the frowning. Some one else
always will, if you wait a little, and
you, like Neighbor Jim, will escape
being disliked by the young things.
Nor did I ever hear that Jim was free
with his opinions as to the desirabil
ity of any match between young peo
ple, He always seems to think that, if
LISTENS WHILE YOU TALK,
the two principals are pleased. It U
none of his business.
Neighbor Jim la popular with the
women, because he is always cordial,
but never gets off compliments. To'
say very complimentary or pretty
thlngB to one woman puts a man in
a dangerous plight .with all the others.
You cannot say the same of all, or you
are counted insincere. But you can
look pleased with all. Jim seems to
look delighted when ladies talk with
him. He exerts himself to entertain
them. But no one can go away and
quote a burning compliment to make
all the other women green with Jeal
ousy and incipient dislike. It Is not
generally much considered, but the
complimenting neighbor does not, as
a rule, get along well for any length
of time.
Neighbor Jim has a way of draw
ing out men who have heretofore been
In a hole. He gets hold of unpopular
fellows, helps them to show up their
good sides, somehow puts them on ex
hibition to advantage, and gives them
recognition among us. He pulls men
into a social game, on the morning
.train—men that none of us ever hard
ly spoke to before. He and his wife
make calls together, and the next
morning, on the cars, the man oa
whom he called shows a bright, spark
ling front that Is transforming. The
rest of us are surprised at the people
whom Jim has dug out.
Neighbor Jim respects all men’s
opinions, especially their religious
opinions. I never heard him joke nor
laugh at any man’s beliefs. And yet I
we have some of the queerest cranks
In our Tillage, men with all aorta oC
wheels In their heads. Sneers and
Jokes at another's expense are danger
ous among neighbors. It will not
mend It to say, "I was only fooling.*^
K*«P blear of practical Joking If you
would be valued as a neighbor. Some
men may do It, and escape being dis
liked; but they, are few. Neighbor Jim
respects all men, so far as by any
stretch of charity he ora see anything
to respect £,
My neighbor, contrary to what you
might expect of so popular a man,
rarely does expensive kindnesses. He
cannot for he is a sick man: snd not
hnvlng strength to spare he has not
purchased our love by striking acta of
service. His unusual peculiarities I
have hinted at. We have alt d$nd him
services. That is another reason why
ws like him, for he ne^er forgets a
kindness, nor shows himself ungrate
SUBSTITUTE FOR GLASS,.. , ,
New Translucent Fabric (or Cm at Sky
lights and Vault Coitra
The translucent frabrlc irecentlfr
brought out by a New England firm to
take tbe place of glkts skylights has,
after a continuous experimental service
of seven years been pronounced to be in
as good condition as when first putnn
place. The material has many adfan
tages claimed for it, c»Ief of which Is
that by its employment In train sheds,
freighthouses and similar buildings
having skylights of large areas, the
light weight of the material permits
of a simple, Inexpensive and light form
of skylight construction. The Joints
are made water-tight by a special form
of construction employed with this ma
terial. The fabric is said to have
marked advantages over glass in being
practically unbreakable, and for this
reason leaks on account of breakage
or cracking are not experienced. The
translucent fabric consists of a trans
parent material spread over steel wire
cloth, with twelve meshes per inch,
which gives the panels a flexible and
elastic property, permitting adjust
ment to any shape that the roof struct
ure may take owing to the expansion
and contraction of the framework. The
manufacturers state the the skylights
mentioned as having been in use for
over seven years have never leaked
during that time, nor have they cast
anything for repairs. Several large
industrial establishments have been
fitted up with this material, among oth
ers the General Electric Co.’s new shops
at Schenectady, N. Y., and the new
forge shops of the Berlin Iron Bridge
Co., of Connecticut. The' fabric is
strong and in panels 18x36 Inches tit
size, has carried a weight of over 400
poundB per square foot. The amount of
tight transmitted is equal in that o;
ribbed glass one-quarter of an inch in
thickness. The material will not burn
unless set five to at the edges, When
it will burn very slowly. Brands or
coals dropped upon it will not set lire
to it. Its cost is much less—20 to 30
per cent—than that of ordinary glass
skylights.—Philadelphia Inquirer.
ROOMS PULL OF CLOTHES.
Wal<% Pays S40 Apiece for Lounge
Suite and SIS.SO for Troueere.
The Prince of Wales is by no means
the small, stout man which most of, bis
pictures seem to indicate It Is not
every man turned 60 with a forty-five
inch chest who can boast of a waist
of not more than forty inches. If he
occasionally appears stouter It Is be
cause he likes his clothes to be loose
and easy. This is especially the case
with those particular suits known as
“lounge suits.” For these he never un
der any circumstances pays more than
140. A few years ago Sir Francis
Knollys, his private secretary, finding
that his tailors were overcharging him,
fixed upon a uniform price for each
suit. They are ordered in half dozens
at a time. There is likewise a regular
and fixed price of $12.60 for his trous
ers, which under no pretext whatsoever,
save in the case of uniforms, is ex
ceeded. The prince has a horror of
evening dress, which he considers hid
eous. He prefers evening dress to uni
forms, however, and uses twelve suits
of these a year at a fixed price of $80
a suit. Ttie prince never wears any
pair of trousers more than four times,
and as the discarded clothes of roy
alty are not allowed to be appropriated
by the valets, but are air preserved,
there is a stock of thousands of them
at Marlborough house. This need sur
prise no one, for when King George IV.
died his clothes were sold by public
auction, wnicn lasted over three weeks,
there being no less than BOO fur-lined
coats alone. All the prince’s clothes,
old and new, are kept at Marlborough
house In what are known as the
"brushing rooms," several men being
employed tp kmk after them. All his
hats, especially the old ones, are for
some reason or other kept at Sand
ringham. He abominates the high
silk hat, his favorite headgear being
that which is known as the “bowler."
—Odds and Binds.
A Postal Card Magnet.
No doubt you’ve all made a rubber
comb pick up bits of paper by first rub
j blng It briskly on a rough coat-sleeve,
but did you ever hear of a postal card
that could be turned Into a magnet?
Balance a walking-stick on the back
of a ohalr and tell the spectators that
you are going to make It fall without
touching It or the chair. Having thor
oughly dried a postal card, preferably
before an open fire, rub it briskly on
your sleeve and then hold it near one
end of the stick. The stick will at
onco be attraced to the card and will
follow It as if It were a magnet As it
moves It will eoon lose Its equilibrium
and fall from the chair. Of course you
understand the principle of the experi
ment. By rubbing the card you waken
electricity In it, and It thus becomes a
sort of magnet, with the power to at
tract Ught bodies. Do not try the ex
periment in damp weather.—Exchange.
ARTIFICIAL 8PONOE CULTURE.
A Proposition to Increase the Bappl|
Greatly.
Several causes have recently combin
ed to reduce the supply of sponges in
the American market, says the New
York Tribune. The paralysis of all In
dustry In Cuba in consequence of the
civil war now prevailing there is one
of them. The West Indies, Bahamas
and Florida are the principal centers of
production la this part of the world.
Reckless fishing,which threatens to ex
terminate the sponges, much as simi
lar proceedings do the seals off the
coast of Alaska, is another factor in the
situation. These facts lend peculiar,
Interest to the proposition lately made
to the United States government,
through its consular agent at.Mitylene,
by a Greek named Charalampoe Chor
phios, to establish the business of ar
tificially cultivating sponges .some
where on the Florida coast. If he can
get a concession. A great deal has been
dope) in the past, under the auspices of
tbe national and state Bribery commis
sions, toward restocking American
lakes and rivers with trout, bass, shad
l and salmon, with small fry hatched and
nurtured under human management.
Artificial means, too, have muoh to do
with culture of the oyster and the
maintenance of the supply of that bi
valve. But the reasonableness of the
project of Mr. Chorphios does not rest
alone on these precedents. Ichthyolog
ical experts in Washington are said to
have shown confidence in its practica
bility. They say that by taking prop
er measures the Florida sponge fisher
ies could be brought to a high state of
productiveness in a few years. The
men already engaged In the Industry
might not, however, relish this Inter
ference in behalf of the public. The
tough, soft, elastic, fibrous inoss, which
is to be had at the druggist’s, under the
name of sponge, is really the skeleton
which once supported a whole colony
of jelly-like creatures which have built
up that structure. These propagate, na
turally, in two ways, by means of
spores or eggs and by the formation of
buds which eventually split oft from
the mature polyp'. The scientific sponge
eulturist proceeds on a plan which util
izes both of those methods, but is like a
common practice In horticulture. Me
simply cuts up the tenement house of
a colony Into a number of pieces, em
ploying a sharp knife or razor for the
purpose and conducting the operation
while the pulpy mass is still under
water. He Is also careful to leave a
portion of the original outer surface on
each fragment. Bach bit may then be
loaded with a email atone or other link
er to take it to the bottom again. A
few of these sections fail to revive; but
the great majority, after an interval of
two or three months begin to thrive and
eventually grow to a considerable size.
There are hundreds of distinct spe
cies of sponges, but scarcely a dozen
are suited to man’s use. It 1b asserted
that those which are obtained from
Mediterranean waters are the finest in
the world; yet the delicate “sheep's
wool” and “velvet” sponges of Florida
are wonders of softness and beauty.
And if a system of artificial culture
should .come into vogue these choice
varieties could be produced almost as
abundantly as the coarser grades are
now.
Bottled Tears.
The Persians are the only people In
the world who Still adhere to the old
custom of bottling tears. In that coun
try it constitutes an important part in
the funeral ceremonies performed over
the dead.
Each of the mourners is presented
with a sponge, with which to mop the
face and eyes, and after the burial
these are taken by a priest, who
squeezes the tears into bottles.
Mourners' tears are believed to be
the most efficacious remedy that can be
supplied in several forms of Persian
diseases. The custom of bottllg tears
'is mentioned in the Bible.
INVENTIONS OF WOMEN.
A bicycle skirt.
,< Nonrefillable bottle.
,An improved dustpan.
Improved window sash.
An Improved medicine glass.
An adjustable quilting frame.
Fastener for bottles, jugs, etc.
An Improved duplex dress shield.
Abdominal supporter and bandage.
An improved self-heating sad iron.
A telescopic-shaped miner’s lantern.
An improved device to aid the hear
ing.
A table implement for holding green
corn.
A protecting pocket or screen for
ranges.
An ingenious machine for hanging
wall paper.
A device for supporting flexible gas
pipes or tubes.
A shoe upper made of one piece of
material and joined by one seam only.
An Improved refrigerator wherein
the shelves revolve, giving ready ac
cess to the contents.
A scissors holder consisting of a
mejtal loop, with ends bent backward
and safety-pin attachment.
Ah Ingenious work table provided
with handy little pockets and drawers
which pull out ju3t where wanted.
A combination of curling tongs and
stove or heater for same, with fuel,
and all combined in a pocket case.
A lapboard which, instead of being
made in the ordinary shape is made
round, and prevents any possible loose
ness in the outside material, as the
board has practically the curve of the
body.
Teddy—I tell you it’s so. Nellie—I
say it is net. Teddy—Well, mamma
says it’s so; and if mamma says it’s so,
it’s so even if It isn’t so.—Harper's
Bound Table.
Excellent Farming Lands
A Qood Prutt and Farming Region
Now Bain* Settled, r
Tbla tract of land 11m In tho Aiitcrn part
ot Colormio County and Northern part of
Wharton County, Texan, about fifty mllea
west of Houston, the greet commercial oen*
ter of the state. The soil is a rich* produce
tire candy loam. This dUtrlot in Texas
has plenty of rainfall for crops, and one of
the necessities in order to secure a stood
farm is to have land that laps smoothly
mid has high enough altitude for perfect
drainage, which can be secured m this
traot, as it U a smooth rolling prairie, lying
on divide between the San Bernardo
and Colorado Rivers.
This district has a .mild, delightful
climate, enabling you to produce some
thing almost each month in the year. An
other great advantage is that through this
tr*9t, there are two lines of railroads, and
within the limits of this tract, which is
twelve miles North and South, and eight
’ —w ""w vv eae, DHCtW ItWv ewwul
located, one on each road, which gives spe
cial advantages to any farmer locating
there.
We anticipate that you desire to Invest
in lands for a farm and hoihe, where the
prices are low, the terms easy, and where
you can purchase and pay for the land in
three or four years, as cheaply as you are
now paying rent
We run excursions to the lands over the
C., R. I. & P. to Pt Worth, and from there
over the Hants Fe to Wallis, Texas. We
secure you. the lowest rates end will ac
company you. Write to us for our book,
Fertile Farm Lauda,” excursion rates,
dates and how to get
PRCS PARS TO TBXAB,
■OCTHERX TEXAS COLONIZATION CO.
John Lindbbholm, Mgr.,
110 Rialto Bldg., Chicsoo.
On* Job Not Enoughs
When Du Maurier made an engage
ment with Harper Brothera to oontrib
ute a full page drawing ench month, he
received a protest from Punch, whose
officials thought themselves exclusively
entitled to his services. His reply war
as follows: Dear -: “Man cannot
live by Punch alone.”
. . Css’s Caagh Balsam
la ths eldest and beat It will break np a eoldl quicker
than anythin* aba. It la always reliable. Try it.
A well trained wife is one who always
laughs at her husband’s jokes, no matter
how often she has heard them.
The first horses In this country were
brought here in the year 1818. '
PITS (topped tree and parraanaallr cured. No flta
tfiar flrai dar e use of Dr. Kilns1* Unat Mows
Hestorer. Vrea SI trial botUa and Irasiiae.
band to Pa. Kuna. Mi Arch Ht.. Philadelphia, Pa
If a sick man is patient his woman folks
have every reason for believing that he
will die.
. . Mrs, ’Wlnalew’a •eathlag Strap
Tor children teathlns.aoftena tksfuma, radoesa Inflam,
euttioa, allays pain, cares wlad nolle. M cants a bottle.
s
Looking a difficulty square in the face will
often kill It dead.
"Wliat a Uim txAmmtiVk .
A man .aannot do bw® things at a
time A wontn can tmfl iritnE* and
■ee that the uoffae doe*, not bdU ores,
and watch the cat tbit the does not
steal Use remnant of neat on the kit
chen table, and fitfemtba youngest boyi
and pat the table, and'sea to the toaatt
and vtfr the’oatriiead, And give the or-.
derstothe butcher, and she can do it
itll at dnee ant) hot Ifklf viy.
Man haa
done wondera alnce he came before the
public. He haa navigated the oceaatii,
no haa penetrated the mystarleanf tha-j
a tarry lieavena, ha haa harnaaacd the ,
lightning nnd made it poll atreet cars,.
and light the great cities of .the,World
lint ha can’t find a a pool of lad' thread'
in hia wife'a workbaskett he can't dia-'-K
somebody he hatea He can't ait in up
rocking chair without, .banging tha t
rWkefi into the' baae-bdhrda , He can’,td
pat tha tidy on the aofa pillptp right,
aide out In ahort, he, fan not do a
i He Didn't Wut Theta.
. Agaea * fitiicltlaud j ogee urged Mr.
Donne to introdnee her to George Bor
row, author at “The, Bpmaqy Rye.”
.Borrow, who waa in the room at the
time, offered some objection, but waa
at length prevailed upon to accept the
introduction. The authoress com
menced the conveTaation by aa enthu
aiaatie eulogy of hia works and con
cluded by asking hia permission to sand
him a copy of her “Queens of Eng
land. ” “For God's sake, don’t madam,
I should not know what to do with
them,” exclaimed Borrow.
“Mend it
or £nd it,”
baa been the rallying cry of
reform, directed against abuses
municipal or social.
. Bor the man who lets him
•elf be abused by a cough ifee
cry should be modified to:
Mend it, or itll end you. Yon
can metfd any cdofcli4itjl
i >*•>.! f’H*
Ayer’s
ifJvii
Pectoral
iMiinmimiiimHHunHHim
Mind this. It makes no difference,
Chronic,
Acute, or
Inflammatory
of the Muscles, Joints, and Bones is cifted by
...I.
none
Important Notice!
'r aivjf
’ JK- •
The only genuine "Baker’s Chocolate, *
I celebrated for more than a century M /de- { ;
licious, nutritious, and flesh-forming bever-! !
age, is put up in Blije Wrappers and Yel-;;
low Labels. Be sure that the Yellow!!
Label and our Trade-Mark are on. every! ! ,
package. T’-v ■ --i. >
WALTER BAKER & CO. LttL, Dorchester, Mass.; j
BRYAN’S BOOK
AND THE
to new and old subscribers better than any ever made before. . ij„‘
Bryan’s New Book, describing his great campaign in h1s>;dwb
language, giving his leading speeches and containing a short biographi
cal sketch of him by his wife as well as a discussion of the great money
question by himself, is now on the press and will be ready for delivery
jus£ after Christmas. It will be bound in cloth, printed in clear type
on good paper and contains about 000 pages, handsomely illustrated; -
OUR GREAT OFFER,
We will send the Omaha Weekly World-Herald one year and: a1 Copy
of Bryan's Book for $2.00, Postage prepaid. The Weekly - World
Herald alone is $1.00. Mr. Bryan's connection with the World*Herald1
has made it the leading silver paper. It is published in two section
each week, eight pages Tuesday and four pages Friday. -Wn wilk seq4
the book alone, postage prepaid for $1.00. '■
Bryan's Book has been eagerly expected add the first edition wilM
no doubt be quickly exhausted. The first five thousand orders will be1'
promptly filled from the flrct edition. ; , J
Addrerw,