The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, December 24, 1896, Image 7

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    TOLD BY THE PLANETS
FAMOUS ASTROLOGER GIVES
SOMli FREE READINGS.
Low the Lives of Men and Women Aro
Influenced by the Signs of the Zodiac
-^-Revival of the Ancient Art of tho
Egyptians.
STROLOGY: This
art or science en
ables the astrolo
ger to read from
the horoscope, or
map of the heav
ens at the time of
a person’s birth,
many useful, curi
ous and important
things relating to
one’s life, charac
teristics, health, wealth, business, mar
riage, etc. The facts and evidence will
justify at all times and to all persons
the conclusion that some are natural
ly fortunate while others are just tho
opposite and some just an average.
The astrologer always finds a marvel
ous sympathy existing between the in
dications of horoscope and the life of
the person born at any particular time.
For the benefit of the readers of this
paper we will publish FREE in these
columns: The zodiacal sign rising at
' your birth Including your ruling planet
and a brief character reading by As
trology. Those wishing readings
should send the following data written
plainly in ink: Sex, race or national
ity, place of birth including state,
county and city, year, month, date,
hour and minute of birth, A. M. or P.
M. as near as possible; also give name
or initials and address under which
you wish your reading published. If
you know the date but do not know the
time of bifth and wish a reading send
two 2-cent stamps for further instruc
tions. Letters will be numbered as re
ceived and the readings published in
regular order so those wishing to take
advantage of this liberal offer should
write at once for we can only allow one
column in each issue for this depart
ment. Address Prof. G. W. Cunning
ham, Dept. 4, No. 194 South Clinton St.,
Chicago, 111.
Note:—The following readings are
given according to data furnished. The
description may vary slightly in some
points in accordance with which sign
the ruling planet may be found. It al
ways partakes of the indications of the
sign in which it is placed at birth, also
the planets in configuration with it:
MUs Mary, Detroit,
You have the zodiacal sign Sagit
tarius, whica Jupiter rules, rising at
your birth, and therefore Jupiter is
your ruling planet or signiflcator. Sag
ittarius usually denotes a person above
medium height; a well proportioned
7 and commanding figure; the complex
ly ion clear and healthy; the hair near a
i chestnut color growing thin and form
ing a notch above the temples; the
forehead is full and broad; the eyes ex
pressive; the laugh is loud, merry and
cheerful; you are jovial, happy, gener
ous and charitable; you are kind to an
imals and fond of a fine horse; you are
not as conservative as you should be
and are liable to get into too large
deals; you are' a natural leader and
have plenty of courage to carry any
scheme through that you know is legit
imate; you always have a certain kind
of good luck that does not seem to
come to others; you may apparently be
on the brink of a financial precipice
and just ready t.o tumble over, yet
something will turn in your favor and
puli you through all right.
l’aul G., Chicago.
You have the zodiacal sign Taurus,
which Venus rules, rising at your birth,
and therefore Venus is your ruling
planet or signiflcator. The sign Taurus
usually denotes a person with short,
but full, strong and well-set stature;
broad forehead; dark, curly hair; dark
complexion; broad full chest and
shoulders; short thick neck; wide nose;
full, pouting lips; you will have a
habit of shaking your head sideways
when talking earnestly. You are very
quiet, peaceable and patient in your
disposition, have great love for the
beautiful in art and nature; you are
very fond of the fine arts, such as
music, painting, drawing, sketching,
etc. You are fond of good living and
generally manage to get it; you are
subject to attacks of the blues without
any apparent good cause. You seldom
lose control of your temper, yet when
you do you become furious. You dis
like to change your business or loca
tion and have great love for home and
its pleasant surroundings.
He Found Out.
A good East Winthrop, Maine, deacon
got into a discussion the other day
with a newspaper man relative to the
size of a hole a horse could go through.
The solution came quicker than he an
ticipated. Going to his stable, he
found that his horse, weighing over
1,000 pounds, had fallen through a
Scuttle Into the cellar, ten feet below,,
without receiving a scratch, although"
the dimensions of the scuttle were
fifty-four inches one way by 18% the
other.—Ex.
AN ODD COLLECTION.
A letter was received recently at the
Chicago postoffice addressed to “Lame
Water.” It was sent to Cripple Creek.
At Mycenae the number of silver
coins discovered during the latest re
> searches amounts to 3,500; they belong
to SicyoQ, Corinth, Argos and other
towns of Argolis.
Dr. A. B. Hamilton, of Laramie, Wyo.,
hiked into a herd of wild cattle. They
resented the insult and chased the doc
tor, who got oft with a broken shoulder
blade and a smashed wheel.
In Tartary, onions, leeks and garlic
are regarded as perfume.
A BAKIERmXIFE.
l^^^gY^An'gN
INTERNATIONAL -PRESS ASSOCIATION
CHAPTER IX.—rCoNTJKCBD.) ,
Opposition was futile, but Constance's
countenance was so downcast at the
prospect of the excursion, that Edward
made a pretext, before going out, to
call her into the adjoining sitting
room. “How have I forfeited my place
in your good graces?” he began, in
playfulness, that was lost in earnest
ness before he finished his speech. “I
have tried to persuade myself that your
cold avoidance of me for weeks past,
and your reject'oa of my services when,
ever it is possible for you to dispense
with them, was, in part, an unfounded
fancy of my own, and partly the re
sult of your absorption in the dear
duty that has demanded your time
and thoughts. I have begun lately to
have other fears—dreads lest I had un
wittingly wounded or displeased you.
Do me the justice to believe that, if
this be so, .the offense was unconsci
ous.”
“You have offered none—none what
ever!” interposed Constance, with cold
emphasis. “I am sorry my manner has
given rise to such apprehensions.”
"That is not spoken like the frank
sister of a month ago,” Eaid Edward,
retaining the hand she would have
withdrawn. “I will not release you
until you tell me what is the shadow
upon the affection that was to mo more
dear than any other friendship, and
which I dared hope was much to you.
Be, for one instant, yourself, and tell
me all.”
She was very pale, but, in despera
tion, she tried to laugh. “You must
not call me to account for my looks
and actions nowadays, Edward. I think
sometimes that I am not quite sane.
I have gone through much suffering;
been the prey of imaginings that al
most deprived me of reason, besides
enduring the real and present trial.
And heaven knows how unready I wao
for it all!”
“One word, my dear girl, and my in
quisition is over. Assure me honestly
and without fear of wounding me, have
you ever, in your most secret thought,
blamed me for the casualty which so
nearly widowed you? I did try, as you
LttU ucur UIC WUUCOO, iv* uioouam; uiui
whom we both love from the experi
ment that cost him so dear. The Idea
that you may have doubted this has
pained me inexpressibly."
“Dismiss the suspicion at once and
forever!” Constance looked steadily
into his face and spoke calmly. “The
thought has never entered my mind.
I blame no one for my trouble—except
ing myself!”
Before .she could divine his purpose,
Edward had put his arm over her
shoulder and pressed his lips to hers.
“Let bygones be bygones!” he said,
brightly and fondly. “We have too
much to live and to hope for to waste
time in nursing unhealthy surmises
and fears.”
“Oh!” The sharp little interjection
came from the threshold of the door
leading into the hall, where Miss Field
was dicovered in a fine attitude of bash
ful apology, faintly flavored with prud
ish consternation. “I did not .dream
you were here. I was on my way to
my cousin’s room!” she continuedv: in
a prodigious flutter of ringlets and
shoulders. “I beg a million pardons,'
I am sure.” ''
“You need not beg one!” said the'
undaunted Edward, without releasing
Constance. “Connie and I have been
settling a trivial misunderstanding In
good boy-and-girl style—have just
‘kissed and made up,’ and we now mean
to be better friends than ever.”
“He! he! you are excessively candid,
to be sure!” tittered Harriet. “But”
—shaking her black curls—“Mrs. With
ers knows men and human nature too
well to believe quite all you say. We
must not forget, my dear madam,
that men were deceivers ever.”
“You speak feelingly,” said Edward,
carelessly,following Constance with his
eye, as she moved silently toward her
husband’s chamber. “I shall cautfon
ihe lady of my love—should the gods
ever bestow one upon me—not to sip of
the bitter waters of your wisdom.”
Had he seen the glitter of the round,
black orbs that pursued his retiring
figure, he might have made a more
thoughtful exit, his run down the stairs
been less swift, the air he hummed, as
he went, less gay.
He had a pleasant drive; Constance
an hour of mingled sweet and bitter
ness. It was difficult to bear her part
In the apparent renewal of the familiar
intercourse of other days, without re
laxing the severe guard she had set
upon herself from the moment she dis
covered the true nature of the senti
ment she entertained for her husband’s
brother. She could not help delight
ing in his society, in the manifold
proofs of loving concern for her com
fort and happiness of which she was the
recipient. Yet, underlying this secret
and fleeting joy, was the ever-present
shame that marked her remembrance
of her guilty weakness, and the despair
ing knowledge that remorse. du*>/ and
resolve had thus far availed nothing
to conquer it.
She looked jaded rather than rV»esh
cd upon her return, although Bhe had
curtailed the ride in opposition to Ed
ward’s advice. Wild, rebellious
thoughts fought for mastery within her
all the while she was with him, the
promptings of an Insane familiarity she
could not cast out. “If I had met him
two years ago instead of his brother,
and he had wooed me, the love which
is now my disgrace would have been
my glory,” she was tempted to repeat,
again and again. “Yet my fitness to
receive his affection and my need of
him are the same to-day as they were
then. Is he the less my companion
soul, the mate God meant for me,'be
cause, led by other’s counsels, I blun
dered Into a loveless connection with
another! Which Is the criminal bond—
that ordained by my Maker, or the com
pact which has had no blessing save
the approval of cold-hearted and mer
cenary mortals? Outwardly we must
remain as we are; but who Is defrauded
if I dream of what might have been? If
I love him for what he is in himself,
not for what he is to me?”
Then, shaking off the spell, she would
loathe herself for the vile suggestions,
and pray, in a blind, heathenish way,
to Him who had sent her pain, to sus
tain her under it, to keep her from
falling Into the fouler mire of open de
fiance of her husband’s claims upon
her realty in word and act, to hold
her fast to the semblance of right and
honor.
Parting from Edward at the outer
entrance with a brief phrase of thanks
for his kindness in accompanying her,
she ran up to her husband's room and
opened the door without knocking, A
gentleman,, whom she recognized as a
prominent city lawyer, stood by the
lounge with a paper in his hand. Two
ycung men, apparently clerks, were
withdrawn a little into the background
and a table' bearing writing materials
was between them and the others.
“You acknowledge this instrument to
be your latest will and testament, and
In token thereof, have set hereto your
signature and seal?” the lawyer was
saying as the door swung noiselessly
ajar, and Constance stopped, unable to
advance or retreat.
Mr. Withers glanced around when he
had given his assent. "Como in, my
dear,” he said, quietly. “We shall soon
be through this little matter.”
CHAPTER X.
HE dropped into a
chair near the door,
her heart palpitat
ing with force that
beat every drop of
blood from her
cheeks. Some sud
den and awful
change must have
taken place while
she was out to call
fur the presence of
these men. Her frame was chill as
with the shadow of death, but the one
overpowering thought that smote her
was that her husband’s approaching de
cease was the direct answer of an angry
Judge to her wicked outcry against her
fate and longings to escape it. In this
grisly shape was the freedom to appear
for which she had panted. But she
knew that when the cage was torn
down she would feel like a murderess.
She never forgot the short-lived horror
of that moment.
Mr. Withers dismissed bis visitors5
when the witnesses had affixed their
names to the will, and they bowed
themselves out, pach noting, more or
less furtively, as he passed, the dilated
eyes and colorless face of the wife, and
drawing his own conclusions there
from.
She got up and walked totteringly
forward at her husband's gesture. He
was no paler than when she left him,
and smiled more easily than was his
habit, when he noticed the signs of her
extreme alarm. "I was afraid you
would be frightened if I talked in your
hearing of making my will,” he said,
encouragingly. “To avoid this, I ar
ranged that Mr. Hall should wait upon
me while you were driving. He was be
hind his time, and your are back earlier
than I anticipated. I regret the meet
ing only for your sake. Perhaps it is
as well, however, that I should acquaint
you with sbroe of the provisions of the
instrument you saw in Mr. Hall's
hand."
“Please do not! I cannot bear to
hear or speak of it!” protested Con
stance, the tears starting to her eyes.
“It all seems so dreadful.”
“It will not hasten my death one
hour.” Mr. Withers was not quite ready
to pass over without rebuke an absurd
superstition he considered unworthy a
rational being, even though the of
fender was his wife. ■ “You shall know
this. I made another will two years
since, but circumstances have led me
j to regard it as injudicious, if not un
fair. We busine8 men are superior to
tho dread of looking forward to the
one certain event of mortality. We
calculate the probable effect of our
demise, as we do other changes in the
mercantile and Bocial world. By the
terms of this will, as I was about to
remark, my property, with the excep
tion of a legacy to Harriet Field, is di
vided equally between yourself and Ed
ward. And he is appointed sole ex
ecutor. In the event of my death he
will be your nearest connection and saf
est adviser. I wish you to remember
this. It is hardly to be expected that
you, although a fair judge of character,
should be as conversant with the qual
j ities that tit him to assume these re
sponsibilities as I am, who have been
| his business partner ever since he was
twenty-one.”
| He was astonished that his wife, in
stead of rendering a submissive '.erbal
acquiescence to his spoken and writ
ten decree, began to weep so violently
as to hinder herself from listening or
replying to his speech. She had never
conducted herself in this irrational
fashion before in his sight, and he was
naturally exceedingly perplexed. Aware
that any attempt to soothe her would
be awkward work to him, he lay quiet
for a minute, hoping the emotion would
expend Itself without his Interference.
Finally, he adjudged it to be but reas
onable that she should set the bounds
of her grief' at a point somewhat short
c- hysterics or convulsions. and ad
dressed her with the most stringent ap
peal he could think of.
“Really, Constance, your agitation is
exciting me most unpleasantly. I fear
I shall be feverish when the doctor
calls. If this sort of thing la kept up.”
He did not mean to be unkind or sel
fish. He believed his health to be of
supreme importance In her esteem, and
that the recollection of this would set
her to rights. The experiment succeed
ed to a charm. The sobbing flow of
briny drops was stanched on the In
stant.
“I beg your pardon,” stammered Con
stance, straightening herself up. “I will
control myself better hereafter. It is
time for your cardial. May I pour it
out for you?”
It was inevitable that the confession
she had meditated, while fie told her of
his arrangements for her future, be
traying with a child's artlessness the
perfectness of his trust in his brother
and in hersfelf, the full outflow of pen
itence, and depreciation, and entreaty
for pardon, of which the tears were
but the type and premonition, should
be checked by the querulous reference
to his personal discomfort. But the sud
den and disagreeable reaction Induced
by it was hardly an excuse for the hard
ening of her heart and dulling of the
sensibilities, just now so tender, which
filled her mind with sullen resentment
against him who had repelled her con
fidence. '‘He will never understand
me. We are as antagonistic as oil and
water,” she excused this by thinking.
"The more closely I Imitate his icy pro
priety the better matched we shall be,
I was a fool to imagine anything else.”
And thus slipped by the fairest chance
of reconciliation and real union that
was ever offered the ill-assorted pair.
With Mr. Withers’ returning strength
everything seemed to fall back Into the
old train. Except that Invitations were
less frequent as the season waned, and
that Edward and Constance passed
fewer evenings abroad and more at
home, that Mr. Withers rode to his
office every morning and returned at
noon, to spend the rest of the day upon
the sofa in the library exchanging his
after dinner for an easy chair In the
parlor, the mode of life In the house
hold varied in no important respect
from what it had been prior to his acci
dent.
tvo as COXTIXCBD.I
IT WAS A WOMAN’S PRIVILEGE.
Even to a Bank Official She Would Not
Tell Her Age.
It was a busy scene at a great bank,
says the New York Herald. Long rows
of women, some anxious and de
pressed looking, all of them with an
unmistakable air of weariness, were
waiting their turn with books to be pre
sented for the semi-annual Interest. A
pompous and many buttoned official
paced back and forth with a look of
determination to keep order or die on
hie grim visage. The woman at the
window was a new depositor and there
was a longer wait than usual, while
she answered all the questions relative
,to, her genealogy and that of her sis
ters and her cousins and her aunts—
information which one must always
give to a great bank before it will
condescend to receive and sometimes
lose one’s money.
At last came the fateful question
“What's your age?”
A faint blush, stole over the faded
cheeks, the antiquated and corkscrew
curls quivered with agitation 88 she
murmured: "I’d rather not tell, please.”
The bank clerk meant business. He
bad no sympathy with the maiden mod
esty of the trembling aspirant to finan
cial dignity. “Oh, but you must tell,”
he replied, somewhat brusquely.
'The blushes grew painful but there
was still a loophole of escape. At least
all the world should not know her age
and raising herself on tiptoe so as to.
bring her face close to the window—
for she was short of stature—she said:
“May I whisper it, please?” and the
woman behind her will never know
how old she was.
j'-ii Most Remarkable Canal.
The most remarkable canal In the
world is the one between Worsley and
St. Helens, in the North of England.
It is sixteen miles long and under
ground from end to end. In Lancashire
the coal mines are very extensive, half
the country being undermined. Many
years ago the managers of the Duke ot
Bridgewater’s estates thought they
could save money by transporting the
coal underground instead of on the sur
face; therefore the canal was construct
ed and the mines conhected and drain
ed at the same time. Ordinary canal
boats are used, the power being fur
nished by men. The tunnel arch over
the canal is provided with cross pieces,
and the men who do the work of pro
pulsion lie on their backs on the loads
of coal, and push with their feet
against the cross bars of the roof.
Ireland ! Rif Cavern. j
It has remained lor a Frenchman to
make the first complete exploration of
the largest cavern in the British Isl
ands, that at Mitchelstown, Ireland.
The explorer is Monsieur Martel, who
has recently become famous for his
discoveries in the caverns of France.
The Mitchelstown cavern is formed in
limestone, and is remarkable for the
number and extent of its connected pas
sages which, when plotted upon a
chart, resemble the streets of a city.
The length of the cave Is about a mile
and a quarter, and it contains some
animal inhabitants, including a species
of spider, which are peculiar to it and
which have their entire existence with
in its recesses.
A Frenchman estimates that in a
life of fifty years a man sleeps, away
6,000 days, walks 800 days, and the
rest of the time feeds and fuseea.'
Bench*! In (lid t rinity's Aisles.
People sometimes wonder why the
small benches are placed in the aisles
of Trinity church. They are for strang
ers. The four back pews in the church
all the way across are free, but they
arc not as satisfactory as seats further
front Unless the Sexton is notified in
advance that pew holders will not oc
cupy their seats, he holds them until
the read in tr of the second lesson. Alt
seats are then free.—New York Times.
Thniplmtn for Clover.
Whenever phosphate is sown with
(Train, a part of the fertiliser is always
appropriated by the clover seed sown
with it Clover is a lime plant, and it
also needs the phosphorio acid that is
so helpful to the wheat Tho phos
phate is valuable when applied • to
clover that is to produce n seed crop.
Potash is also needed to make clover
seed well, and should be applied in
iiww ■ mill
We offer One Hundred Dollars reward
for any case of mtnrrh that cannot be
cured by Hall s Catarrh Cure.
R .1. CIIICNKYA CO., Toledo, Ohio,
Wo, the undersigned, havo known R J,
Cheney for the last J.i years, and believe
him perfectly honorable In all business
transactions and llnttnclally able to enrry
out any obligations made by their Urm,
West & Truax, Wholesale Druggists, To
ledo, O.
Wnldlng. Kinnan A Marvin. Wholesale
Druggists, Toledo, Ohio
Hall's Catarrh Curo Is taken internally,
acting directly upon the blood and mu
cous surfaces of the system. Testimo
nials sent free. Price 75c per bottle. Sold
by all druggists.
Hall’s Family Pills arc the best.
Apple* or UOIO.
Dr. James O. Mackenzie, before a
distinguished educational association
in Philadelphia, asked American em
ployers to remember that "a man in
order to be of any use to civilization
must earn money enough to pay his
board.” This remark deserves to be
booked as a fundamental canon of po
litical economy. — Boston Globe.
Merchants Hotel, Omaha.
CORN HR FIFTEENTH AND FAUN AM STS.
Street cars pass tbe door to and from
both depots; in business center of city.
Headquarters for state and local trade.
Rates S3 and S3 per day. *
PA X TON & DA V BN PORT. Prop s
A BUelit Distinction.
At a recent introduction of an Eng
lish bishop to bis see somebody noticed
a Dublin graduate wearing an Oxford
hood. He pointed it out to the bishop
and said that the person stood there
with a lie on his back. “Well,” re
plied his lordship, “you can hardly call
it a lie, bat it is certainly a false
hood.”
For Lung and chest diseases, Piso's Cure
Is the best medicine we have used.—Mrs. J.
L. Northcott, Windsor, Oq£., Canada.
The football beauty cobles in with tbe
crysanthemum.
Coe'* Crash Salaam
I* Ita oMnt and belt. It will limk up a Bold quicker
than any tiling alee. It la alwaya reliable. Try It.
One can make a show of himself, but be
cannot collect any admission fee.
MU ENEti
STOLE
An ene
my stole'
into youA
house one1
day last week!
end touchci
you lightly in1
passing. J* You
thought little of the'
matter at the limeJ
for the enemy wasl
only a vagrant cur-1
rent of air, Butl
now you are begin-1
ning to learn what
mischief the littlel
intruder did, for
your back isstiff and
paint uL Your head
aches, and at times|
you feel dizzy.
IN
. THut
has hap
pened ?.
• Simply
hist the ccdd
as settled on
[your kidneys.
They are over
r barged with blood
and Inflamed. In
stead of passing the
waste matter out of
the body they are
damming it up in
the blood. Every
minute, yes. every
heart beat adds to
the poison in you.
Normal action
of the • kidneys
will purify the
blood. Nothing
else will.
Is the friend In need, it will reduce ititv Inflam
motion, *o that the grip on the tisfiiirj ot the
blood-vessels is relaxed, and the arte acid is
sent on its way out oi the hody.
Large buttle, or new style, :..i.alier wne at your • irungiats
, iV
Etel,S
How to Keep Wrinkles Away,
A simple preventive against me ap*
pen ranee of wrinkles is this: Saturate
a soft towel in very hot water, wring
it and apply it to the face, keeping it
there for at least twenty minutes.
Then dry the face very gently, This
must be dono just before coins' to bed.
When travolinc, it the skin is sensi
tive, do not bathe the face except at
night and in the ‘ morninc. and then
throw a few drops of tincture of ben
zoin into the water, so that it may be
made soft and agreeable to the skip.—*
Ladies’ Home Journal. .
ff|
if?
f-S
L-ff
Horn* Down With In firm a tie*.
Arc finds Its surest solace In the benignant
tonic aid afforded by Hostetler's Stomach
Bitters which counteracts rheumatic and
malarial tendencies, relieves growing inac
tivity of the kidneys, and is the finest rem
edy extant for disorders of the stomach,
liver and bowels. Nervousness, too, with
which old people are very ant to be afflicted.
Is promptly relieved by it. ■
Colt Hung In ao Apple Tree. #■
Mr. Thornily, who resides east of
the city, last week lost a fine Oudan
colt in a peculiar manner. An apple
tree which alood in tit'd" orchard to
which the colt had access hM a fork,
just above which waffda large knot.
The colt got its neck caught and was
unable to extricate itself on account of
the knot. In Us struggle to7(gct ire*
it hung itself.—Marietta Tipes.
&
' Pranlnc Potato VHms.
Acting on the notion thal>as pruning'
was good for fruit trees it would bene
fit potato vines, a citizen of Portland,
Ore.. clipped off the vip^s in,a patch
close to the ground, as? soon as they
were well up, and some of the potatoes
grown there were, it is said, among
the largest and finest fdtmdr
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Strap . '
For rhlldron tMlhlnff.Moftcm* thpffumii.rpdiicpit inftaot
imtlon, allayn pain, enres wind colic: Staeot* :• bottl*.
The man who is waiting for a
will likely have a hard time. 0U?
soft
snap
Holes in Your
What does that mean ? ,,Sup»
pose you are taking irupouey
all day, and djop . it iuto,a
pocket with holes; you. will
find yourself a loaerinsteaQof
a gainer by the day’s bqsincss.
Same with your health., You
eat and drink and Sleep, yet
lose instead of gain strength.
There's a hole h your health.
Some blood diseases probably,
sapping your vitality. * You
can’t beg* < too soon, to take
the great blood ptuifier, ■:
i » - t av.
Ayer’s Sarsaparilla.
Comfort tp ^
California.
:-X
a
•P
F.veryThursday afternoon
a tourist sleeping ear for
Denver. Hait i nks City. Baa
Ir.atieftwitA n h/1 I , . _ A — 1
Buflmgton
; RduIE !
K
Denver. ___
Kraitclsco.und X.os Angeles
leaves Omaha and Lincoln
vis tlie Burlington Haute.
It Is carpeted, upholstered
iu rattan, has spring seats
and backs and U provtaed
wlth curtains, bedding, tow*.
els.sohp.etc. An experienced
sior -■ -
excursion conductor and a
uniformed • ullman porter
accompany It through to the
Pacific Coast. \j
While neither as expen
sively hnlahed nor as ll. e to
look at as a puluce sleeper,It'd
Is .lust as good to ride in. tec- f#
ond class tickets are honored 3&i
and the price of a bcrth.wide .v/,1
enough and big enough for
two, is only *v.
For a folder1 giving full
particulars write to ■
J. Francis, Gen’l Pass'r Ageut.OmahaXeii.
ROBT PURVIS
Commlftifon Met*
chant. Omaha.
%va*tkju:
Butter. Kgga, Poul
try, Game. Veal,
Hides Ktc«
Having been In tht product
bustnea* C6 years, am well ac
quainted with the wants ofth?
trade; eoadoq uen tljr cau obtain
the 111 ghost pritu-R. Am prompt
In making return*, ami respon
sible. References: Any hank
in the state.
Rl Alf CO* BUSINESS AND SHORTHAND COLLEGE
ULnlkLi) Actcai. Business From Thb
Start Teaches business by doing business.
Also thorough Instruction In all branches
by mall. Life scholarship *4>. six months
course $10. Corner lUth and Capitol A venue,
Omaha, Nebraska. . - )
PATENTS, TRADE MARKS
Examination and.Advle* a» t•> I’etcnt&bftlty of In
▼citiii,n. Send for “InventorB’ f..»iiae» cr liow toQ«ta
latent.** O'FARRELL Sc tJON. Wqwbln^ton, V, Ce
Dr. Kay’s Lung Bal$
for coughs,, colds,
aud throat disease
T—
Shows you did not take a tablet al .Gaseareu
Candy Cathartic last evening:. Cascarets
l prevent sour stomach, tone up the intestines.
| stimulate the liver, leave no chance for sick hcad
I aches in the morning;. You eat them like candy,
and they leave your breath sweet and fragrant.
Better send out for a box rig;ht now, M)c«, 25c*
50c* any drug; store, or mailed for price* Write
for booklet and free sample. J* ■&■■ ■ jt.
CANDY
'CATHARTIC
Cure Constipation.
ADORSSI
STEMJN6 REMEDY COMMIT
OHIOAOtfc
MONTREAL, OAK.;
NEW YORK, ns
Important Notice! j
TPUOfMA'K.
1 he only genuine “Baker’s Chocolate,” <
jcelebrated for more than a century as a de- J
licious, nutritious, and flesh-forming bever- J
age, is put up in Blue Wrappers and Yel- i
low Labels. Be sure that the Yellow J
Label and our Trade-Mark are on every
package. ■
WALTER BAKER & CO. Ltd., Dorchester, Hass.