The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, May 27, 1897, Image 7

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    %%, , An* Equal to tbe Eaufcicjr,
A patent has been asked for a device
to take passengers on the cable cars
while the train is in full motion. So
► far as the device can be understood
• from the description it is a sort of
platform on wheels. The passenger
stands on. it. the cable car comes
along and automatic hooks catch hold
of the platform and whirl it along to
the next corner. By that time the
passenger has taken his seat, and the
platform is released and dropped for
the use of the next man. It may be a
great scheme, but most men would
about as soon be fired out of a cannon
as to be jerked up bodilyby a car go
ing at a twelve-mile gait. But it
shows that inventors are equal to any
emergency that may arise.—St. Louis
Globe-Democrat.
Tho Following: Letter.
My Dear Sir:—Your letter, asking my Im
pressions as a physician, of the Black Hills
country as a health resort is before uie.
1 made it personal investigation of the Hot
Springs in .South Dakota, and believe they
are of great value to invalids. Water, free
from organic compounds or chemical im
purities. and a delightfully pure, dry atmos
phere with plenty of sunshine, are essential
lor the repair of diseased tissues, and such
conditions obtain at Hot Springs, 8. 1). But f
am specially interested in the study and
treatment of nervous diseases, and it was for
the purpose of informing myself of the bene
ficial effects to bo derived to that class of
“suffering humanity’* that C directed my in
vestigations. For such ailments L find the
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 con
stantly issuing out of the rocks at a temper
atnrc aliout einiftl to the normal l>ody heat
and potent in therapeutic properties tnat are
very suporior in benefitting nervous affec
tions.
The high altitude provides a pure, dry air
not possible in other health resorts, however
artificially beautified. To the pleasure seeker*
who is desirous of rest and recuperation from
tbe 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 tho
stage coach, or on horse-back to the numer
ous resorts is inexpensive, and he who visits
Magara Falls to view its majesty may see a
grander work of nature in tue great Wind
4J:ivn of Hi it. Snvtmfa S T1
DID TOU 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 yon a map and time card
showing-that the “North-Western Line*'
is the most dirict to these springs.
J. U. ilUCHANAX,
G. P. A., P. E. & M. V. It. R.,
' _Omaha, Neb.
Indications of Short Life.
The loss of the masticating teeth
before the thirtieth year means a
shortening of the life of the individ
ual of from two* to live years. To
know the extent to which many of
these teeth are Joist, even before the
fifteenth year, one has only to turn to
the recently published reports of the
examination of the teeth of children
in the schools and orphan homes of
London and elsewhere. If some
effective measures are not adopted for
combating the ravages of dental decay
it looks very much as though another
half century would find the poorer
classes of English people practically
edentulous before the twentieth year.
We will forfeit $1,000 if any of our pub
lished testimonials are proven to be not
.genuine. 'ins Piso Co., Warren, Fa.
riie Coreana.
The Corcan wears his hair braided
down his back, it Doing considered un
holy to cut it or even wear it loosely
around the neck and shoulders. After
he is married, and not before, the law
permits him to wear it curled up on
top of ills head.
TO CUBE A COLD IN ONB DAT.
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine .Tablets. All
Druggists refund the money if it fails to cure. 250
The teachers in the public sahools of
France number 136,800.
How to Address Royalties.
Much amused comment was caused
during: the cross-examination of the
prince of Wales in the baccarat case
by the number of times that Solicitor
General Sir Edward Clarke made use
of the words “your royal highness, ”
thereby demonstrating ids ignorance
of the usages of court life, i'he prefix
of “your majesty” and of “your royal
highness” are rarely if ever used by
the people in the swim, except in offi
cial verbal and written communica
tions. Itoth the prince of Wales and
a’.l the other male members of his fam
ily are addressed merely as “air” and
•you;” while not only die princesses,
both young and old, but also the queen
herself-are addressed as “ma’am.”
Nothing is more amusing to those un
accustomed to this peculiarity than to
listen to somo old and stately ambassa
dress or duchess deferentially address
ing a little 3-yearK)ld piiiicess as
“ma'am,” and I confess' that 1 myself®
on the first occasion after my arrival in
England on which I was honored with
a. few words by her majesty, found it
very difficult to habituate myself, when
replying to the somewhat common
place word • •ma’am.”
cord or.
-New York Rq
JL
nail’s Catarrh Cure
Is taken internally. Price, 75c.
About Quill Pena.
A quill pen maker says that no pen
will do as fine writing as the crow
quill. It requires the assistance of a
microscope to make a proper pen out
of such a quill, but when hiade it is
of wonderful delicacy. The microscopic
writing told of in books of literary
curiosities was all due with a crow
quill. The steel pens of the present
have very fine points, but somehow a
finer point can be given to a quill
than has ever been put on a steel pen,
and for delicacy nothing can equal it,
IOWA FARMS For Sale on Drop payment,
11 per acre cash, balance U crop yearly until
paid for. J. MULHALL, Waukegan, 111.
men mre noi nanonai.
Herbert Spencer, writing to Dr.
Janes, of the Brooklyn Ethical society,
observes: ! ‘-In my earlier days I con
stantly made the foolish supposition
that conclusive proofs would change
belief. But experience has long since
dissipated my faith in men’s ration
ality." ‘ ^_
, Shake Into Tour Shoe*.
: Allen’s Foot-Ease, a powder for the
feet It cures painful, swollen, smart
ing feet and instantly takes the sting
out of corns and bunions. It Is the
greatest comfort discovery of the age.
Allen’s Foot-Ease makes tight-fitting
or new shoes feel easy. It Is a certain
cure for sweating, callous and hot,
tired, aching feet Try it to-day. Sold
by all druggists and shoe stores. By
mall for 25c' in stamps. Trial package
FREE. Address Allen S. Olmsted, Le
Roy, N. Y._
The Longest Way Bound.
A woman in Hancock county, Maine,
who was afraid to drive her horse
across a railroad track, was bitterly
disappointed in attempting to go.
around it
Huccuui'i CUaptw lee with AlyeerlM.
The original and only genuine. Cures Chapped Hands
and Face, Cold Sores, &c. O.G.Clark & Co.,N.Haven,Ct.
-—11 no ■
There is some valuable experience
for the man in the hole.
Ur*. Wlnalow’l Seething Sirup
For children tooth ing.rottens Uie (ran*, reduce, inflaro.
motion, alloy* pain, cures wind colic, ?li cents a bottle*'
The only people who know much
they don’t tell are editors and milkmen.
! .
“I
cannot refrain
' from writing to let you
' know wluit your sunut
f parilla lias (tone for my
I wife amt others. My w ife
' was so bad with liver com*
r plaint, neuralgia andca*
1 tan'll, that 1 had to call a
I doctor. Receiving little good
II Induced lier to try Ayrr'a
f Sarsaparilla and rills. Afte*
1 taking one bottle, she could do
1 lie:-own work. My wife’s mother
tlientriod Ayer’s Sarsaparilla, for
stomach trouble. Klie says tt did
her more good than any medicine
she ever used.”—,1 .orris Y. Hi hies,
Gatewood, W. Va., feb, M, 1636.
t
WEIGHTY WORDS
FOR
Ayer’s Sarsaparilla.
You can save fifty or sixty
dollars a year—by using a
Columbia bicycle—perhaps i
ipore—have fun doing it and ;
grow strong and lusty at the
same lime.
Columbia Bicycles
Stindtrd of the Wof 14. • ,
»IOO t» nil
HARTFORDS, Sfg- gg
POPE MFG. COMPANY,
HAHTFORD, CONN.
Catalogue free from any Columbia dealer;
by mail for one 2-ceni stamp.
Ti'tiiia iht, wor a * vecora joy
long-distance fast running.
Here’s your - ? ' ^
Denver train
Burlington
Route
the Burlington's “Denver
Limited” leaves Omaha
at 4:35 p. m. daily, reach
ins Denver at 7:15 next
morning, ' j , ,, ,.
Fastest and most com
fortable train between the
Missouri River and the
Rocky Mountains.
Sleepers, chair cars,
diners.
iri‘i
Tickets and full informa
tion on application to the
local agent or by address
ing
3- FRANCIS, General Passenger Agent,
Omaha, Neb.
»DAIRY AND POULTRY.
I - /
INTERESTING CHAPTERS FOR
OUR RURAL READERS.
Oow SavMMfnl Farm or* Oporata TbI.
Dipartmu of I ho Farm'—A Few
Hints aa to til. Caro of Lin Stock
anil Poultry.
ANY cows are com
ing fresh now and
they should have
considerable care.
The want of care at
this time Is often
the cause of sick
ness and loss, Bays
Dorothy Tucker in
Farm Journal.
Exposure will
cause all sorts of
inflammatory diseases.
It is cruel and senseless not to da
all that is in our potter to mako them
comfortable. Put each cow in a box
stall by herself as calving time ap
proaches. Avoid all noise and excite
ment, and. insist that the same person
cares for her every day.
A few days before, calving each cow
should be given a moderate dose ol
epsom salts, molasses and ginger. Af
ter the calf is dropped she should have
another dose.
It is wonderfully beneficial In every
case and should never be omitted.
Never neglect the warm bran mash
immediately after the calf is- dropped,
and never fall to take the chill oil the
water for at least ten days.
If the weather is at all cold put a
blanket on the calf, a little flannel
blanket is just the thing. Sew strings
to tie around the neck and under the
belly. As the calf grows the blanket
can be let out to fit. Our calves have
often worn these little blankets, and
gTow so that they little more than
covered their backs—and oh. how
i*i*-«.v,y ouu bicca luojr iwncu.
We do not think tt best for calf or
cow to leave the calf by the mother
more than ten days at the longest.
If the udder Is Inclined to he Inflam
ed, bathe with hot water and rub
thoroughly dry, reduce the food and
nature will help.
The man who cannot be especially
gentle and tender with his cows at
this time, should not be a dairyman or
stock breeder, and will never succeed.
He should immediately go into other
business. Ts.
If the fodder begins to get low, don’t
scrimp the cattle, better buy some
clover hay and some grain.
Better sell something and Invest the
proceeds in feed than let stock run
down and get thin, tor that will be •
dead loss. ; 3 %
How much money has the farmer
made this winter, who has kept his
cows out In the barn yard with
hunched backs and water running out
of their eyes?
How much rich manure has he sav
ed and applied to his fields?
How much poorer is he this year
than he was last year?
This isn’t luck. It is lack of braina
i :■
t t * I -- jjFi
A Shortage of Cattle.
One peculiarity of the past winter's
cattle trade haB been the disposition of
feeders to sell their stock as soon as
It was in any kind of shape for mar
ket, says National Stockman. Compar
atively few have kept cattle In the feed
lot until they were fully finished. This
was entirely unexpected in view of the
abundance of feed and the difficulty
of marketing it in any other way. It
has, however, prevented any accumu
lation of cattle to flood the market dur
ing the latter part of the season, as
was the case last year. There is no
over-supply of cattle in sight. Feed
lots are not as full as they were a year
ago, either east or west. Distilleries
hold comparatively few, many of these
establishments having been shut down.
Therft ifi. too. ft shortage nf hntfihur a Miff
on 'farms, which is pushing local
slaughterers into market for cattle, or
to the use of dressed beef. Cows and
heifers are unusually scarce at market
po'nts, affording an outlet for more
butcher steers. On the whole there
does not seem to be anything to inter
fere with a good market for heavy
steers during the remainder of what
may be called their season, and for
handy and medium weights thereafter.
If the advancing tendency In other live
stock Is continued it would not lie sur
prising to see cattle selling higher
within the next sixty days. There is
aothing in sight to justify any boom,
but an advance of 50 cts. per 100 lbs.
is considered within the bounds of pos
sibility by a good many cattle men.
Time alone will tell whether their fore
casts are correct
Starting a Flock.
This la the season of the year when
many are thinking of either starting
a laying flock of hens or reinvigorating
an old flock by the introduction of new
blood, says a writer in Southern. Plant
er. It is a good time to do this, as the
spring-hatched chickens are of suffi
cient size and so fully feathered as to
show clearly what kind of bens they
are likely to make, and breeders are
now anxious to sell before cold weath
er and the heavier requirements of
winter feeding comes upon them. If
you have no hens, or only a few “old
scrubs'* which you have .decided to kill
off, then the question naturally first
arises, what breed should lie bought?
If the object is eggs and eggs alone,
then you cannot go wrong in buying
Leghorns, either white or brown. With
these you will never be troubled with
sitting hens, but you must make up
your mind to fenco your garden not
merely with a four-foot fence, but with
ono at least six feet high, if you in
tend to keep the bens out of it, or you
must have your hen house so far away
from the garden that they will sel
dom come near it. They are the most
active breed of fowls, and are ever
on the alert. As a. consequence of this,
It the range Is large, they will pro*
vide themselves during the great part
of the year with very much of the
food they require, and soldom become
too fat to lay. Their close plumage
and compact form also conduces to
hardiness, and they seldom suffer from
cold. Their weak point Is their small
alxe It wanted for the table. As egg
producers, however, they are probably
unequalled, and their eggs, though not
so large as those of some of the other
breeds, are yet large enough io sell
readily on the market for a full price.
If the object be eggs and broilers, then
we would say buy Plymouth Hocks,
Brahmas or Wyandottes. These breeds
are all large, heavy ones. They are of
a contented, restful disposition, and re*
quire only a very low fence to confine
them. They are good layers and good
sitters, but their sitting propensities
somewhat interfere with the quantity
of eggs they will produce, but this, of
course. Is compensated for it chick
ens are wanted by the fact that with
any of these breeds you may have
chickens almost at any time of the
year, for we have known them to sit
in the fall of the same year they were
hatched, and to have chickens running
with them at Christmas. Whilst har
dy, they are not so little affected by
cold as Leghorns, as their quiet dispo
sition leads them to neglect that exer
cise which wards off the effects of cold.
They should have warm quarters in
winter, and they will then lay when
most other breeds are resting.
If you have already a flock of good
hens, then all you need Is the intro
duction of new male blood. In mak
ing a selection of a rooster, never buy
anything but a purc-bred bird of what
ever breed you fancy. In this way, 11
you do not buy of the same breed as
the hens, you will, nevertheless, get
good blood, and not breed scrubs, but
merely cross bred birds. Many of these
cross-bred fowls are amongst the best
layers that can be kept. A cross be
tween the Plymouth Rocks and Leg
horns makes excellent layers and tabic
fowls. The cross should be made by
running a Leghorn rooBter with the
* nuuk UlU, A cruea Ol
games and Leghorns is a good one.
They are good layers, the hens Will
sit, and the chickens make good broil*
era. The rooster should be u large
game bird.
Poultry Notes.
Do not feed geese much grain.
Use milk for mixing up soft feeds.
Fully one*halt of early maturity it
in the feeding.
A little salt In the food is beneficial
too much is detrimental.
Inbreeding is breeding within a fixed
line without outside blood. :
Young poultry should never be al
lowed to run in the. wet grass.
With extra large size fowls comet
tbe increased danger of bumble foot.
Inbred stock is that which will tract
,, on both sides to a common parentage-.
In breeding more depends upon the
female than the mole, if size is at
object.
If you raise ducks, do not allow tht
little ones to go into the water till
they are feathered out.
Under, ordinary conditions. if a lay
ing hen averages an egg a week it will
pay the expense of feeding her.
Cooked meat chopped reasonably
fine can be fed to chicks confined in t
brooder once a week, profitably.
As a general rule, it will be best tc
have all surplus fowls of every kinc
marketed by the middle of this month
Keep the little chicks warm and dry
and do not allow them to-get hungry,
and you will have but little trouble
with disease. , , j . , .
Roup may be, generally traced tc
want of cleanliness, Improper ventila
tion or undue exposure, and guardinf
against these will usually prevent it
While the Brahmas are good sltten
they are so large that care must be
taken in the construction of their nesti
or they will break a good many of theii
eggs.
Home poultry nieu claim mat DJ
feeding bone dust to poultry an abun
dance of bone and shell making ma
terial is supplied, and In feeding witt
ground feed the tendency to diarrhoet
le checked.
Buttermilk Cheese.—A much valued
friend up in Minnesota, who did not
wish her identity disclosed at thal
time, wife of one of the men promi
nent in dairy affairs there, wrote uf
some three years ago that she learned
to make buttermilk cheese from a deai
old Swiss lady, who knew how to dc
most things well. And this is the pro
cess as she described it: “We pour out
buttermilk in an ordinary milk can
and set It In the reservoir until the
curd begins to separate and rise to the
top, stirring often; do not let it get toe
not or the curd will be tough. Put
cheese cloth over a colander set In a
pan and put the curd in. After a few
minutes draw the cheese cloth together
and tie loosely and hang up to drain
say, six hours, when it will be found a
compact mass. Break it with a potato
masher, until smooth; add a little salt
and cream sufficient to hold it togeth
er; press in small cups or molda- It
'.s very like cottage cheese, only finer
m flavor.”—Correspondent Hoard’!
Dairyman.
From an exceptionally clean dairy in
New York milk was sent in bottler
across the Atlantic. Some of them were
not emptied and were found to contain
milk still sweet when the steamer
reached New York. The milk was kept
in the ship ice-chest, of course, but
even then it shows the great value ol
cleanliness.
Never use a male Dird unless he if
pure bred. No matter what the breed
ing of the bens, there is no way to im
prove a flock that Is better than to us«
pure bred males. They transmit tc
their progeny the good qualities that
have been bred into them and mak<
the flock more profitable each year.
Dairy science Is growing.
ITha Palay.
People suffering from palsy aro non
said to derive benefit from railway
| journeys, end, on the principle of like
( curing like, the greater the shaking
. the more complete thr. ourjc. For the
use of patients a certniu doctor has in
I rented un oscillating chair in which
those afflicted with the terrible disease
! may be rocked and racked in a most
j alarming manner. Another health
| giving apparatus H a vibrating helmet,
applied to the head by a number of
metallic strips, to which a trembling
motion is Imparted by an electrio
motor in the crown of the helmet, and
we arc assured that it gives relief to
sufferers from nervous headaches by
inducing lassitude and sleepiness.
Summer Excursions via tb« Wabash Kail*
read.
Vacation tours for the summer will
soon be placed on sale. Half Bates to
Toronto in July. Half Rates to Buf
falo in August. Reduced Rates to
Nashville Exposition now on sale.
Special rates for tours of the Great
Lakes. General western agency for
all Trans-Atlantic steamship lines.
Send 4 cents in stamps for handsome
book, “To the Lake Resorts and Be
yond.” For rates, time-tableB, sailing
lists and cabin plans for steamers or
other information, call at Wabash
Ticket office, 141S Farnam street (Pax
ton Hotel Block) or write Geo. N.
Clayton, N. W. Pass. Agt.. Omaha,Neb.
Vhsra Was » sound or ftevelrjr.
To justly describe the most brilliant
of aU brilliant events, the Columbian
bail in Vicksburg, one’s pen should be
dinrwii In llmitr! r»rv1rl nr%A wilnkn...
tints. The gayly decked ballroom, the
soft strains of music, the kaleidoscopic
blending of color in velvet, silk, satin
and gauze, the gleam of jewels, the
fairy flitting forms, the courtly cav
aliers, all combined to make a scene
like unto the night when! “Belgium'!
caoital had gathered then her beanty
and her chivalry.”
DRCNK TOR TWENTY YEARS. .
A correspondent writes: “I was drunk
on and off for over twenty yean, drunk
when I had money, sober when I had none.
Many dear friends I lost, and numbers
gave me (rood advice to no purpose; but,
thank God, an angel hand came at last in
the form of my poor wife, who administer
ed your marvelous 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 citizen.”
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 the Renova
Chemical Co., 66 Broadway, New York, or
they wlU gladly mall full particulars tree.
About all some people want reputa
tion for is to make their rivals envious,
Ha-To-Bae for Titty Cants,
Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makaa weak
men strong, blood pure. (Oo. II. Alldruggiata
Holland is small in geographical
area, bat has 18,870 teachers.
«:■
Liquid Dinn. , _ ■*
A Polish chemist has discovered that
liquid oxygen is not colorless. la » i
layer of it thirty millimeters thick he '.
finds that it has a bright sky-bine color.
PI1.K8 CURED. F«JtB
Trial box of Pu.a-Hiut Omn UlliillM
and MMdlw Plica. Write today. —
Dr. H. Whittier, lUW.eth8L,I~
Bdacata Toaf Bowels With
Candy Cathartic, ears ceeatlaaitoe
Me. If C ac.fall. drusxiso nfaaS
It is more important to beer good
fruit than much fruit.
Persons you
OF BRIGHTS DISEfiSE
or some trouble of the
or female organs.
ri
The child is the brightest ray ia the f
sunshine of the parent's heart. ' "
■iffi
WHAT GAN BE DONE*
la such a eerioue condWton yniaM
•ectrre the be* lamcdy you cam hi j
the market n .
AT ONCE. T„.
There h only omt rirefiitff 1
cure for there troublre, end that fa
^ YvjAuO^t / '->
axv
“It has stood th« test of time.*
*73
/9/Ot A
sao
Cl
B/CYCti
‘Western‘Wheel Works
' v^MAKCRS^
PATENTS
M. (.WIIUONAOO.'
Dl('. K*ha«ll|
mmmL ee-mfli
DITTMTC Bywwwiiwlww.tMieaaienwe.
raicnidi vh*. ll Irrenr liii jriii rnun TII
Fat,Oflh:«) Dwmoa W«a»«r. ■iiOlll MMg .Wnali am,
W. N. U. OMAHA. NO. 22.—1807.
When writing to idrwtlaen, kindly Mo
tion tbla pap»r.
' Whoever chooaea to uoe St. J&CObs Oil for
urts°r Bruises.
twill reel a is uk a mo »ukk, way-mometlmee It mmaaea-M.
>» ^l>» <IM» <MI> <ll» <4
REASONS FOR USING
Walter Baker & Co.’s
KMMMMI'
Breakfast Cocoa.
i « M a i - , ‘
«>
Because it is absolutely pure. > wf > > -# A
X Because- it is not made by the, so-cailed 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 rare that yea get the geoalae article BMMle by W4UEK
BAKER a CO. Ltd., Dercheeter, Maaa. IJetahllehed I7M.
?ttM»e»eeet«tteeettM»iMM»
PROMINENT UMAHA MEN.
People Who Are Known in Every Stitc
of the Union Strongly Endorse
Dr. Kay’s Renovator and Dr.
Kay’s Long Balm.
To whom this comes, greeting: We take
pleasure iu commending the virtues of the
remedies prepared by the Ur. B. J. Kay
Medical Co. Having known of some re
markable cures of Omaha people effected
by the use of Ur. Kay's Renovator and Ur.
Kay’s Lung Balm, we believe that these
great remeuies are worthy of the confidence
of the public.
Hox. W. A. Paxtox, ex-State Senator,
and capitalist. Omaha. Neb.
Hon. A. 17. Wyman. ex-Trcnsurer of the
United States, Omaha, Neb.
Hon. Ueo. P. Hants. nx-Mayor of thecity
of Omaba, Omaha, Neb.
Ekasti;* A. Benson, President of Omaba
Real Estate Exchange, < tninha. Neb.
Hon. A. S. Ciirtieniu., ex-Attorney Gen
eral of Neb., Omaha, Neb,
Hon. W. .1. Conn ex-Congressman,
and present City Attorney, Oinaba,
Neb.
.Iodn McUoXAi.n, Sheriff, Omaha, Neh.
IIon. OaoKr.a Hjsimkop, County Treav
urer. Omaha, Neb.
John Westbeuo, City Comptroller,
Omaha, Neb.
BEECbKK Hiobi,City Clerk. Omaba, Neb.
A. U. Kpwahds, City Treasurer. Omaha,
Neb.
Hon. C. J. Smvtb, Attorney General of
Nebraska. Omaba, Neb.
The aliove statement was personally
signed by each of the men whose names
are thereto affixed.
For lO days we will send Dr. Kay's
Homo Treatment, a valuable G8-page treat
in' on all d soa*e3, with SO very valuable
recipes. Sent for 2 stamps for postage.
Regular price 26 ets. Special pamphlet on
female diseases free. Address Ur. B. J.
Kay MediculCo., Omaha, Nob.
Til ITT IT ft Roll 7a8c for common up to 1M
A't J. A EJlb 13c when sweet and wrapped; dairy
iStol.V; enca. fresh, 8c: heoa, 7cj young roosters,
c. turkeys. 9r; spring chlrtcns. I@14*. tsatoc pel
a ; veal, choice, sc; hides. No. 1.TM; No.2. *4. Write
fortn/s and prices. UoutPobvis, Commission Mer
eliaot. Ksiahllsbcd 1870. lltli and Howard Sts.,
Omaha, Neh.
PATENTS, TRADE MARKS
Examination and.AdwIoe aa to Patentability of I»»
i vriiilon. Bend for “luvantoiV Guide, or How toQ«tA
Patent.” O l’AKHEIX & SON. Wakbln*ton. D. a
i ASKEWSSUmmpsoh’sEy« Watin
$100 To Any Man.
WILL PAY 9100 FOR ANY CASS
Of WrakMM la Tktf THal and
Fall to Cara.
core ravssan
Mutot ar atwaiiiiaa
af .util aal
Fatalea. aa4 m i
fsatori '
taMIgrl
ar Mat la thl. <
Circular mt w mrmi
WU AT HlpMtUH—lyl
■ ■ ^ 1 (rated brochure. wttA
■ 94'FlptHOa of tk
I I J Oateuial and la ten
■ a* ■ Eipolitico, to te
IS I Ka»li.Mlle,Teaa^Kajriat to I
Oct. 3®ll*. tt>9 MU—1
Kf«at of IM7. Cm bo obtalotA bgr i ►
Hmilif «lfht conta poattfi to C. L Srun, f
•ral PuwB|«r aad Tk-kat Agent, C.4 K. L A K.,, .
365 Omi born 8L, Chkftfu, 111. ( ,
■ " i
An Omaha Company pi area for tha lint
time liefore the public a Macicaa Ttur
ment for the cure of Lost Vitality, War, uaa
and Hexuol WeatM«, and Iter tnratten of
Life Forcp in old and touni; aaa Ke
worn-out French remedy; lautito at
Phosphorous or other harmful drags. It a
a Wonpuupci, THBiruRNTraagical to ita
effects—positive in its cure. All readers,
who are suffering from a weak Ben that
blights their life, causing that tueaital tot
physical suffering peculinr to lawt Ban
hood. should write to the OTATPUKBIC ii .
COMPANY, Omaha, Neb., ami they will
send you absolutely KKKK, a* valuable
paper on these diseases, and poslti.ro proofs
Of their truly Maoical Thbavucnt. Thous
ands of men, who hare tost all bona of a
cure, are being restored by thwpi to a per
fect condition.
This M Attic At. Tmcatmekt mhy ba taken
at home under their directions, nr1 they will
pay railroad fare and hotel bills to all who
prefer to go there for treatment. If they
fail to cure They are perfectly reliable;
hare ho Free Prescriptions, Kiw Chirr.
Pjj bsmple, or C. O. I). fakes They hero •
1260,000 capital, and guarantee to core
erery casethey treat or refund trvrrv dollar; ,
or their charges may- he deposited to a
bank to be paid te them when a earn to ’
effected. Write tl. .. today.