The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, May 13, 1897, Image 7

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    A Fortune In Store Tor Someone.
No chemical black ink has yet bees
, tuado which will write black immedi.
Y ntoly on exposure. The common black
ink is made of nut spills, ami is by all
odds the best ink ever made. Matiu
scripts written in this black ink 600
or 000 years ago are "just as legible to
day as when first written. The chem
ical inks of the present are of too ro
cent invention to determine whether
they will last, but it is quite probable
that most of them will be as legible at
thp end of fifty or seventy-five years
Jts they aro to-cay. There is, however,
a fortune in storo for the man who will
invent chemical black ink which
will write black at the first and re
main so. —Glob“-Dcmocrat.
A 1>Ijst -l'ious star.
Algol, tho variable star in Pereus,
has long been a myslery. Its light re
mains constant for two and a half days.
It then begins 1o fade, and in less than
four hour:: diminishes to an insignifi
cant star, remaining thus for about
twenty minutes, when it regains its
former brilliancy. It has long been
suspected that a dark body revolved
about Algol, and which, coming be
tween 1 us and that star, intercepted
more or less of its light.
Hocked on the Crete of the Waves,
The landsman, tourist or commercial traveler,
speedily begins, and not only begins, but con
tinues. to feel the extreme of human misery
during the transit across the tempestuous
Atlantic. But if, with wise prescience, he
lias provided himself with a supply of Hos
tetler’s Stomach Bitters, Ids pangs are
prompt ly mitigated, and then cease ere the
good ship again drops her anchor. This is
worth knowing, and thousands of our yachts
man, summer voyagers, tourists and busi
ness men do know it. *
Ho Has licoti Doing ft.
George,” said Mrs. Gargoyle, plead
ing with her husband to overlook his
son’s extravagance.
•‘I do,” replied Mr. Gargoyle, “and
I think an allowance- of $1,000 a year
is amply sufficient’’ -Detroit Free
Press.
Itl a a Very Chtap Trip.
Chicago to Nashville via Big Four Route
to Louisville and a stop at Mammoth Cave.
For full particulars address J. C. Tucker,
U. N. A., or H. W. Sparks, T. P. A., Big
Four Route, 234. Clark St., Chicago.
Slxiy Ml o* or So'.i 1 iron.
A railway which ’tho Germans have
built in Asia Minor, extending from
Ismid, a harbor about sixty miles east
of Constantinople east by south to
Angora, has as littlo wood in it per
haps as any in the world. Not only
the rails and bridges, but the ties and
telegraph poles arc of iron.
Mo-To-Bao for Fifty Cents.
Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, cakes weak
men strong, blood pure. 60c. SI. AU druggists.
Doesn’t Have to Have.
Marie—‘ I’ve got no use for that
young Cadderlcigh."
llelle—“He’s got no use for him
self. He’s rich.”
Hctrrman’n Camphor lea with Glyrerlne. j
Cures Chapped Hands and Face. Tender or Sore Feet,
Chilblains, Piles, Ac. C. O. Chirk Co., New Haven, Ct.
Xiao JUiiftk Antelope.
The musk antelope can send forth
such a powerful odor ol musk that
even at the distance of 100 yards ho
can smother his enemy to death.
A milkman is the custodian of as
many family secrets as a doctor.
Chance for Another Ruth.
Another strip of Indian land9, the
northern part of the Colville reserva.
tion, will probably be thrown open to
settlement next fall. Government
surveyors completed their survey of
the strip about a wecK ago. The res
ervation is bounded on the north by
the British Columbia boundary line,
on the west by tho Okanouga river.
and on the south and east by the
Columbia river. The portion to' be
thrown open for settlement extend;,
the whole width of the reservation,
and from the British Columbia boun
dary to about thirty-six miles south
It has an approximate area of 2,500
square miles. There are a few In •
dians on the strip, who will receive
each 160 acres before tho land is
thrown open to the whites.
The Following: tetter.
My Dear Sir:—Your letter, asking my im
pressions ns a physician, of the Black Hills
country as a health resort is liefore me.
1 made a personal investigation of tho Ho*
Springs in South Dakota, and believe they
are of great valuo to invalids. Water, free
from organic compounds or chemical im
purities. and a delightfully pure, dry atmos
phere with plenty of sunshine, are essential
for the repair of diseased tissues, and suck
conditions obtain at Hot Springs. S. I). But i
am specially interested in tho study ant*
treatment of nervous diseases, and it was for
the purpose of informing myself of the bene
lie I ul effects to be derived to that class o.'
“suffering humanity” that i directed my in
vestigations. For such ailments I find tha
atmospheric conditions especially commend
able. being light and wholly free from that*
humidity so prevalent in this and lower
altitudes. The clear, pure springs are coiv
stantly issuing out of t lie rocks at a temper,
ature about equal to the normal body heal!
and potent in therapeutic properties tnat are
very superior in beneflttfng nervous affect
tions.
The high altitude provides a pure, dry aVi
not possible in other health resorts, however
artificially beaut ified. To the nleasure seeker.
who Is desirous of rest nnd recuperation from
the daily duties of routine business or pro
fessional life, there Is no better locality'
Hotels are inviting and moderate In rates
while a tramp over the hills, or ride in the
stage coach, or on horse-hack to the numer
ous resorts is inexpensive, and lie who visits
Niagara Falls to view its majesty may see a
grander work of nature in the great Wind
Oave of Hot Springs, S. D.
DID YOU BEAD IT?
If you wish to know the name of the
prominent Omaha physician that wrote
the letter, I will tell you' and at same
time mail you a map and time card
showing that the “North-Western Line”
i3 the most dirict to these springs.
J. K. Buchanan, .
G. P. A., P. E. & M. V. R. R.,
Omaha, Neb.
Where Peat Finds Many IIki.
Dr. Leo Pribyl says that the Gor
mans and Swedes are utilizing their
peat bogs in tne manufacture of naph
tha, tar, solar oil, paraffine, acetic
acid and gas, and the peat yields an
clastic fiber which, freed from dust,
is employed for weaving into carpets.
Good peat also, furnishes a cellulose
which is valuable to papermakers.
Besides serving as a whoisome litter for
live stock, it is also used to preserve
perishable goods. Meat and fish aro
now packed in peat litter for trans
port between Trieste and Copenhagen.
lira. Wlnlaw’i Soothing Sjrnp
For children tcethinpr.softenH the ((Dins, reduces inflam
mation, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25 cents a bottle.
From Germany we get the custom of
celebrating gold and silver weddings.
To Core Constipation Forever*
Tnlic Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10c or 25c.
If C. C. C. fall to cure. druceists refund money.
Xo woman ever lacks self-confidence
when she is arguing* about religion.
‘ I lost
lay v.ifo ami
children from the ef
fects ot hereditary )
scrofula. My nurd
clnlil was dangerously nf-1
fretcil with scrofula. He)
1 was utiahh! t > wall;, liis left 1
1 fast being covered with ran-\
1 Mill'' sores. I’liysieiaits liav-1
in;; fail ■ 1 to rclirvethe others)
of lay faaiily, I decided to try)
Ayer's .Sarsaparilla. I sml
pi rise.I to any the trial was sue,-)
ceasful, aatl lay boy was restored)
to health. I am confident that, lay)
child would have died laid lie not)
used Ayer's Sarsaparilla."—J.\w. M.
Dye, Jlintoiiville, Ky., Aug. 5,1833.1
i
WEISHTY WORDS
FOR
Ayer’s Sarsaparilla.
$100 To Any Man.
WILL PAY $lOO FOR ANY CASE
Of Weakness In Hen They Treat and
Fall to Cure.
All Omaha Company places for the first,
time before the public a Magicai. Tiieat
ment for the cure of Lost Vitality, Nervous
and Sexual Weakness, nod Restoration of
Life Force in old aud young men. No
worn-out French remedy; contains no
Phosphorous or other harmful drugs. It is
« Wonderful Treatment -magical in its
effects—positive in its cure. All readers,
who are suffering from a weakness that
blights their life, causing that mental and
physical suffering peculiar to Lost Man
hood. should write to the STATE MEDICAL
COMPANY, Omaha, Neb., and they will
send you absolutely FREE, a valuable
jmper on these diseases, and positive proofs
of their truly Magical Treatment. Thous
ands of men, who have lost all hone of a
<*u re, are being restored by them to a per
fect condition.
This Magical Treatment may bo taken
at home under their directions, or they will
pay railroad fare and hotel bills to all who
prefer to go there for treatment, if they
fail to cure. They are ]>erfoctly reliable;
have no Free Prescriptions. Free Cure.
Free Nampk\ or (’. O. 1). fake. They have
9250,000 capital, and guarantee to cure
every case thoy treat or refund every dollar;
of their charges may l>e de|M>sitcd in a
!*ank to be paid to them when a cure is
'effected. Write ti. i today.
RI*TTTI?lf Hull “teSe for Mininon up zo '2^
^ I ■ rjlb uv u lifii t ami \vrapp*M{; dnlry |
UK* 15c; rjors. frc*h. 8c; |(nm. ;c; voiiiik rttoM«•»**«, ;
**: iurkeys. »c: Morin* chicken**.' |«t l^per
veal, choice,He; hhlc*. No. I. Write
for lavr* anil pricer*. ISoitr !,rirvi*«.'roiiinil**!o»t Miy* •
chant. i:*tah|Uhctl isjo. lith and Uow«.«d aia^ .
•Rushs, Neb.
How Mr. Trullinger Cured Dyspepsia.
FARHAiU T. Iowa, April S, 1HH7.
Gentlemen Twenty years ago I bad sonic
trouble with my stomach. As I grew older
the trouble became worse, and for the last
few years I have not been able to work the
g eater part of the time. I have taken
treatment from several doctors, some of
specialists, but without benefit. Last winter
the pain in my stomach became so intense
that I had to resort to opiates for relief.
For six weeks JLwas not able to leave my
bed. My stomach would not retain food,
it being so weak. Morphine and laudanum
were the only medicines that gave me any
relief, and that only a little while at a
time. My brother, seeing your advertise
ment in an Omaha paper, ordered n pack
age of l)r. Kay’s Renovator, which I began
taking. After the first dose 1 quit taking
morphine, and 1 have not had any pain in
my sioumch since. My appetite is good and
I eat any tiling,and now feel like a new man.
I can cheerfully recommend Dr. Kav’s
Renovator to all who are suffering with
stomach trouble. Grateful y yours.
H. R. Thum.inokk.
[Ail extensive poultry breeder. J
The* aliove is a sample of thousands of
letters received, telling of wonderful euros
by Dr. Kay’s Renovator. It is the best
blood purifier and alterative known. Dr.
Kay's Home Treatment and Valuable
Recipes, a new ftS-page book, worth fo.(M) to
any one, sent free for 2 stamps to pay post
age, by Dr. M. J. Kay Medical Go., Omaha,
CURE YOURSELF!
I'm* Hit; fur unnatural
ain<‘har«t*«, inllaiiiinatioti*,
| irritation* or tilccruliotni
Ip...... . .— ii* ucouk iii4*uiliruii«-(i.
JPktmu wutmoo 1‘aiulow,. and nut antrin
^TheEvansChemicuCo. or poisonous
Wold by Draffglata,
"or wnt in plain wrapper,
ty expreM, prepaid. for
•l.no. or iKittlfM, |'j.7a.
— Circular scut ou request*
DAIRY AND POULTRY.
INTERESTING CHAPTERS FOR
OUR RURAL READERS.
Dow gurcrmfnl Firairn Operate This
Department of the Farm—A Few
Hint* a* to the Care ot Live Stock
and Poultry.
EW ideas are con
stantly springing
up in dairying, and
this is also true of
milking, which is
an important
branch of the in
dustry, says a writ
er in Live Stock
Indicator. I have
paid some atten
tention to dairy
ing, and And that good milking
is a very important factor in.
successful work. We may have the
best of surroundings, the best of feed,
the best of cows, and give them the
best of care, and yet if we do not milk
well, the profits will be very considera
bly curtailed. With your permission I
will give my ideas of what constitutes
good milking and a good milker, for
there is more science connected with it
than many suppose. If you have a herd
of twenty cows, for instancee, it is
likely that you do not find any 'two
of precisely the same disposition, with
the same kind of udder and the same
kind of teats. Some are hard to milk,
others milk very easily, some let the
milk down willingly and rapidly, oth
ers are indifferent, and still others are
inclined to refuse entirely. The good
milker must be able to adapt himself
to every one of these natural condi
tions of the cow. Assuming that the
hour for milking has come, each milker
should milk the same cows at the same
time of day, and milk them in the
same order. He should have a good
substantial stool, and not merely a
piece of board on the top of a stick of
stove wood, for with this make-shift
neither the milker nor the milk is
safe. Let the cow know that she is to
be milked by a gentle word or two, sitch
as "So, boss.” Sit down quietly by
her side, have a damp doth and wipe
off the udder and all parts liable to har
bor anything offensive to the milk. I
ao not nice tne idea advocated oy some
dairymen of washing off a number of
cows* udder without milking them im
mediately. With easy milkers it is
always sure to cause a leakage and thlB
is then likely to become a habit, and
no one can tell where it will end. Af
ter the udder is cleansed, and the good
will of the cow gained, press a few
drops from each teat separately and
moisten or gently rub the teat with the
finger of the other hand. This will aid
greatly in drawing the milk, especially
with a hard milking cow. While going
through with this process, the pail
should stand to one side. Do not wet
the teat with milk. Take hold of it
with the whole hand if possible, but
when it is too short use as many fin
gers as you can. Never milk with tho
finger and thumb if it can possibly be
avoided. Milk the two front teats first,
as they can be milked evenly. It is
claimed by some that if the front quar
ters give less milk than the hind quar
ters the front can be brought UP to the
hind ones by milking one of each to
gether. I think, however, that the re
verse of this is true. Let the milker
raise the hand high enough to fill the
teat with milk, bold it with the fore
finger and thumb, press firmly on the
teat with the other fingers in their or
der, and be sure to have the finger
nails short. Let the milk be drawn
as quickly as possible for if not a loss
will follow, and always be sure to get
the last drop. Keep all sores from the
teat by judicious treatment. Prevent
any excitement of any kind, unduly
loud talking, unnecessary changes of
position or anything unusual that may
distract the cow. Let everything be
done quietly and in order. I believe
in stabling the cows to milk them, and
in darkening the stable, and if need be
covering the cows with a light cover
ing to keep the flies off. And finally,
treat “boss” as an esteemed and val
ued friend.
Mrs. Kabelac on Fowl language.
Man with all bis superior Intelligence
and inventive genius must now take
a back seat in the matter of language
to the common barnyard fowl of the
world, says Southern Fancier. For
centuries this noble lord of creation
has tried to found a universal lan
guage without success, the nearest ap
proach being Volapuk, the invention
of that accomplished linguistic student.
Rev. Dr. Johan Schleyer, of Baden,
Germany. Fowls have long since mas
tered the knotty subject for as Mrs.
Kabelac boldly asserts they possess a
general language. Says she: “Take
a fowl from Japan and one from Eng
land, and then one from France, one
from America. Set all these, suppos
ing them to be hens. When the chicks
hatch you will hear them calling to
the Tlnies in the self-same notes, the
same punctuation, well, the same
words. Throw some egg crumbs down
when these chicks are, twenty-four
hours old. you will hear a simultane
ously and exactly similar call from all
four hens to their chicks. It is an
other cry, another punctuation, an
other series of notes, another sen
tence which they will pronounce. If
they have not been fed on too much
egg they will accentuate the call in an
excited shrill way. This evidently
means that the food is extraordinarily
nice, for the chicks rush in a great
hurry when they hear this peculiar
tall, even if fed a few minutes before.
A hawk sails over, the four hens utter
an exactly similar note, supposing they
have all seen it. if not one lakes the
alarm for the other. What is the re
sult? The chicles fully comprehending
| this peculiar cry, never heard at other
I times, but only evoked by the presence
of a hawk, rush away from their
mother, hiding under brush or In
some place where the hawk cannot
catch them in its swoop* Should the
hawk shcceed In carrying one ot them
off you will hear a most despairing
scream, perfectly unique, from the
mother of the victim. The other un
bereaved mothers do not utter the
same cry. Unless a chicken is carried
off you will not hear this cry. la not
this language? The same sound, oc
casionally differently accented to de
note Intensity or the reverse, always
used to convey the same idea by differ
ent Individuals and understood by all.”
Abolish the Feed-Trough.—The feed
trough, or, rather, the feed hopper, that
Is kept full of food, is the lazy man’s
method of feeding, and it is not only
expensive, because it induces the hens
to eat at all hours of the day, but it
causes them to fatten and become sub
ject to disease, thus diminishing the
supply of eggs. When feeding the hens
with grain, let It be scattered wide,
which not only prevents the greedy
hens from securing more than their
share, but compels all to hunt for it,
thereby taking exercise and remaining
In better condition for laying.—Ex.
What Alla the lien?
This is a question that is often asked,
and I am sure can not always be cor
rectly answered. For Instance this
last week I had a hen that was sick.
The symptoms were these. She was
much Inclined to stay on the roost and
refuse food. The feathers on her head
would stand up almost straight, giving
the idea that the fowl was being sub
ject to some sharp, thrilling pain. Her
eyes also seemed to Indicate internal
pain. But her comb was red, and she
showed no Bign of indigestion. When
out of doors she would stand nearly
straight. Altogether her look was that
of a healthy but. uncomfortable hen.
Now what would our doctors have de
clared to be the matter with the fowl?
I said indigestion—constipation. But
I was wrong. I killed the hen and
dressed her. Then the mystery was
uncovered. I found two lumps of hard
material; they proved to be cysts that
had formed over two sharp wires that
had been eaten by the hen at some time,
evidently far in the past. One of these
cysts was in the external portion of
the gizzard, out of which the wire had
worked. The elzzard had crown un
under the wire, and the latter was
pushing its way through the flesh of the
hen. The sharp point of the wire on
the outside of the gizzard was not
covered by the cyst, but was left bare
to act as a probe in cutting away a pas
sage for itself. The cyst was formed
around and behind the wire. It was
one of those admirable provisions of
nature for the casting oft of undesir
able foreign matter. Another wire and
cyst were found Just under the breast
bone, Just under the skin, and there is
no doubt that in a little while it would
have been able to get through and out.
The cyst was nearly half an Inch In
diameter.
The moral is that we should be care
ful that our fowls can not get at such
things as sharp nails, wire, pins or
tacks. I am.glad I killed the fowl, and
I am sure that no fowl doctor could
have diagnosed the trouble.
Mary Ann.
Hatter at a Lori.
Think of a man making butter that
costs him 12 to 14 cents per pound and
swapping it at 8 and 10 centB per
pound for groceries at the country
store. Think of him selling cream to
the creamery, and never stopping to
think, study or read an hour in a
month as to the kind of cows he ought
to have for the business, or the proper
way to care for them in order to get
the most cream. Think of a man
blindly plunging along in these old
ruts of farm practice for years, never
caring to read what other men are
doing who are successful and making
money in the dairy business. Think of
a man doing all these things, as thous
ands are doing, and not caring enough
for his own profit to invest 100 cents a
year in a dairy paper that is wide
awake to his best interests all the
time, and worth every week ten times
Jts cost.—H. C. Carpenter, before Min
nesota Dairv Association.
A Hog Cholera Outbreak.—A recent
outbreak of hog cholera near the Twin
Cities, when there were no diseased
herds known to lie within a hundred
miles or more, may prove a valuable
lesson if properly understood and util
ized. The outbreak referred to was in
a herd that was in fine condition; it.
was housed, fed and cared for in every
way in a first-class manner, and the
health of the animals was excellent. In
a manner that we have not space to de
tail it was learned thut the disease
was communicated to the herd by a
man who came to the place from a dis
tant infected district, who had been
among diseased hogs, and without
change of clothes or other precautions
went among this healthy herd and left
the germs of disease there that will
probably destroy it. There is no ques
tion about real hog cholera' being in
fectious, and that it may be easily and
unsuspectingly transmitted, as in this
case. The moral of this is:.Allow no
stranger to visit the pens of healthy
hogs; or still better, do not let him
come on the place unless he can give
ample assurance that he could not by
any possibility have been in contact
with cholera hogs. Hogs must be pro
tected rrom this contagion as the mem
bers of the family would be protected
from smallpox. Up to date this is all
that can lie done to stay the dread
plague, and therefore every possible
precaution against its spread should he
taken.—Kami. Stock and Home.
New varieties of apples are con
stantly coming to the front, but few"
of them are proving of any value. We
have to try a great many to get one
new variety that will stand all the
tests.
Too much soft cooked food is not
good for fowls. They need some em
ployment for the gizzard.
The Bne*» Hard hny'« Work.
Every head of clover consists of
sixty flower tubes, each oi which con
tain an infinitesimal quantity of sugar.
MeeB will often visit 1 > > different
heads of clover before retiring to tho
hive, and in order to obtain tho sugar
necessary for a load must, thoroforjo,
thrust their tonguos into about 6,bi)0
different flowers. A ben will make
twenty trips a day. wbou tho clover
pateli is convenient to the hive, and
thus will draw the sugar from 12>,
000 different flowers in the course of
a single day's work. Men think they
have hard work to make a living,
but their employment, however
arduous, is an oasy and pleasant
task compared to that of a working
beo.—St. Louis Globe-Democrat.
Hall's Catarrh Core
Is taken internally. Price, 75c.
A Man With an <iw '« Vision.
Branford, Conn., has a curiosity in
the person of a man who can see like
an owl. in the daytime his vision is
poor, but in the night he has no
difficulty in distinguishing objects.
It is said that prior to his birth his
mother became fr ghtenod of an owL
Don't Tobacco Spit and Sm-ke Your Lifo Away.
To quit tobucco easily nntl forever, lie man
net le. full of life, nerve anil vigor, takoNo-To
Bar, the wonder-worker, that makes weak
men strong. All druggists. 50e or fl. Core
guaranteed. Booklet and sample free. Address
Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York.
A OTlsundcrataiidliic
Cumso (after Ills return from the
parlor)—Ixni, wlmt made you say
Cere was a gentleman and his littlo
son In tho parlor?
Miss Cumso—Tho maid said there
was a man there with a little bill, and
1 thought slio moant a boy named
William. —Epoch._
Drunk for Twenty Years,
A correspondent writes: “I was drunk
on and off for over twenty years, drunk
when I had money, sober when I had none.
Many dear friends I lost, and numbers
gave me good advice to no purpose; but,
thank Uod, an angel hand come at last in
the form of my poor wife, who adraidis
tered your marvellous remedy, “Anti-Jag,”
to me without my knowledge or consent.
I am now saved and completely trans
formed from a worthless fellow to a sober
and respected citiren.”
If "Anti-Jag" cannot be had at your
druggist, it will be mailed in plain wrapper
with full directions how to give secretly,
on receipt of One Dollar, by tho Henova
Chemical Co.. 6(1 Broadway, New York, or
they will gladly mail full particulars free
to you. _
miss ileum uay, uaugnter 01 uoi.
John Hay, ambassador of the United
States to the Court of St. James, will
contribute to the May Century a sonnet
entitled “Days to Come.” Den. Horace
Porter, the new ambassador to France,
will continue his “Campaigning With
(•rant.” his special topics'being Grant's
equanimity and his treatment of his
generals, together with a minute ac
count of Grant's experiences in the
field at the time of the explosion of the
Petersburg mine.
FILES CURED, FREE.
Trial box ot Pii.e-Bai.m. Cubes itching, blind
nnd bleeding Piles. Write today, with stamp.
Dr. H. Whittier, low. Oth St.. Kansas City, Mo. |
He who tries to show himself deep,
proves himself shallow.
TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAT.
Take Laxative Urotno Quinino Tablets. All i
Druggists refund tbe money If It falls to cure, mil
Tobolsk, Russia, is the oldest in
habited place in the world.
Tlic (llltlne: Tie.
Miss Bostonno — Rcnlly. Mr. Y.ila I
can not love you. Tboivi seems to be
nothing in common between Us.
Mr. Yale (of the football team)—
You forget that wo :ii'i both Blue
Stockings..—Hurviirrl l.ivrnnoon.■
THOUGHT
THAT KILLED
A MAN!
He thought that he could trifle
*u with disease. He was run
down in health, felt tired and
worn out, complained of dizzi
ness, biliousness, backaches
and headaches. His liver and
kidneys were out of order.
He thought to get well by
dosing himself with cheap
remedies. And then came
the ending. He fell a victim’
to Bright’s disease I The
money he ought to have in
vested In a safe, reliable
remedy went for a tombstone.
Is the only standard remedy
In the world for kidney and
liver complaints. It is the
only remedy which physicians
universally prescribe. It is
the only remedy that is back
ed by the testimony of thou
sands whom it has relieved
and cured.
THERE 18 HOTHINC ELBE
THAT OAH TAKE ITS PLA _
1
and health making
jr arc included in the
' making of HIRES
Rootbeer. The prepa
id ration of this great tern*
perancc drink u an event
of importance ina million
well regulated homes.
HIRES
1 Rootbeer
is full of good health.
Invigorating, appetiz
ing, satisfying. Put
some up to-day and
have it ready to put
down whenever you’re
thirsty.
Made only by The
Charles E. Hires Co.,
Philadelphia, A pack
age makes 5 gallons.
Sold everywhere.
’:S
. . *
-■'•V
piTCUTC 20yenr*' experience. Send sketch Tor ait
rAIUIIO* vice. (Ij. iXHine, late nrm. exn miner O.S
Pal.OlIlce) Deane* Weaver. McGillUklf.,Wa»li.D.Q
Thompson’s Eys Watwv
“■ ■ ■ ' ——-- --* A
W. N. U. OMAHA. NO. 20.-1897.
When writing to advertiser*. kindly men.,
tlon this paper..
10
THESE FIGURES ARE YEARS, YEARS IN WHICH, IN
SINGLE INSTANCES, PAINS AND ACHES
15
Rheumatic, Neuralgic, Sciatic, Lumbagic,
20|
HAVE RAVAGED THE HUMAN FRAME. ST. JACOBS
OIL CURED THEM. NO BOAST: THEY ARB
SOLID FACTS HELD IN PROOF.
30
♦VffVrvwvv
REASONS FOR USING
Walter Baker & Co.’s
Breakfast Cocoa.
11. Because it is absolutely pure.
2. Because it is not made by the so-called Dutch Process in
which chemicals are used.
3. Because beans of the finest quality are used.
4. Because it is made by a method which preserves unimpaired
the exquisite natural flavor and odor of the beans.
5. Because it is the most economical, costing less than one cent
a cup.
Be sure that you get the genuine article made by WALTER
BAKER & CO. Ltd., Dorchester, Mast. Established 1780.
iseesseo**—■■ •
^iiuiuumuiuiinmmutmuumiuiimiiiiiimiimiiumiiiiii
Strength
Wheel.
IN THE
i ne delicate
woman is un
fashionable—the
woman of to-day
is seeking health
and strength—
Spring cycling
is open to every
one—tne most
delightful and in
vigorating of all exercises.
Thoughtful purchasers reap a
rich reward in
Columbia Bicycles
STANDARD OF THE WORLD.
$100 to all alike.
f Hertford Bicycles, teo.tss.sso. Sc5
3 Catalogue free from DflDC IIER Pfl
3 ■iny Columbia dealer; . lllrC Hlrtl. tlUr.
3 liy mail ior one a-c. ..tamp. Hartford, Ccnn.
75
R/OEA
S 50
B/CYCLi _
Western Wheel 'Works
t^MAKERS^
m — /IC/A/OtS
' CATAL9GVE FREE
Holds Uie world* record for
long-distance fast running.
Christian
Endeavorers!
Bend me your name and
address and I will mail you,
as soon as received from
the printers, a booklet giv
ing lull information about
the special rates and train
service to California offered
by the Burlington Route,
at the time of the Chris
tian Endeavor Convention
to be held at San Fran
cisco next July.
The booklet will enlight
en you on every point in
connection with the '97 f
Convention—the cost of the
trip—how to make it most
cheaply and. comfortably—
what there is to see en
route—why you will find
it to your advantage to
ask for tickets via the
Burlington Route.
J. FRANCIS, General Passenger Agent,
Omaha. Neb.
nOODCV NEW DISCOVERY; dm,
l/lw Vl W I quick relief and cures worat
cmm. Bend f<»r book of testimonials and lO days*
its. Ua.
treatment Free. t»r. iLH.UKLkii’s&OFiw, Atlanta, c
PATENTS. TRADE MARKS
Examination und.Advice as t > ratentahi it.v of In
vention. Send for “Inventors' Cnirte. < r l!«,w totlet*.
fa tent.” O'KAKRELL & SON. Washington. 1>. C.
M PISO'S CURE FO
Ml (JURE
Best t uu
CcJ in ti
■f—
UURLS WHERE ALL ELSE fAILS.
'ouiih Syrup. Tastes Good. Use
time. Sold by druggists.
laHiiaigarag