The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, June 10, 1897, Image 7

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    Wlien Women Writer* Write.
Conan Doyle says he has always ob
served that whether a woman's style
of writing be plain er florid. It is always
clear and comprehensible. “No woman
that I can recollect,” he says, "has
ever been tempted into the heresy of
preciosity. The word style, which In
France has always been synonymous
with lucidity, has in England become
more and more identified with obscur
ity, so that if you learn a new writer
Is a stylist you nearly always find a
difficulty in understanding what he
means. The best style, like the best
glass, Is that which is so clear that
you do not observe it. Some of our
critics are fond of talking of purple
patches, but purple patches were never
a sign of health. Now, in this respect,
1 think the ladies have always been on
the side of sanity and t do not think
that any one could have a better model
of prose romance than such writers as
Olive Schreiner or Miss Wilkins.”—
New York Commercial Advertiser.
A GREAT SAVING.
By using the Flag Brand Chicory, manu
factured By the American Chicory Com
pany, of Omaha, Nebraska, you can cut
down your coffee bill 25 per cent, besides
improving the drink. You will find it
economical, wholesome and agreeable.
Ask your grocer for Flag Brand Chicory
put up in pound packages. If he does not
keep it, write the factory, Samples mailed
free on application.
Veruacular.
"He is mad!"
The new footman heard the words
^ mnd trembled in his shoes.
1 Into what kind of a family had the
fates at last thrust him? he thought
Upstanrs he heard a loud voice re
, sounding through the hall ,and occa
sionally a tremendous bang, as if gome
article of furniture were being hurled
• from one end of the room to another.
“He is mad!”
The servants clustered together and
the expression on their faces showed
that they were decidedly uncomfort
able. _
Burlington Route—Only *22.50 to San
Francesco.
June 20 to July 3, account notional
convention Christian Kndeavorers*
Special trains. Through tourist' and
palace sleepers. Stop-overs allowed at
and west of Denver. Return via Port
lond, Yellowstone Park and Black
Hills if desired.
Endeavorers and their friends who
take the Burlington Route are guar
anteed a quick, cool and comfortable
journey, fine scenery (by daylight) and
first class equipment.
_ Berths are reserved and descriptive
literature furnished on request.' See
nearest B. & M. R. R. ticket agent or
write to J. Francis, G. P. A., Burling
ton Route, Omaha, Neb.
Of All Sort* and Condition*.
English papers report a phenomenal
marriage which took place at South
Shields. The bridegroom was she feet
two inches tall; the bride three feet
two and one-half inches. The three
witnesses were a man without arms
who signed the marriage contract with
a pen the stock of which he held be
tween his teeth, a woman who weighed
350 pounds and a man seven feet six
inches tall.
I believe mv prompt use of Piso's Cure
prevented quick consumption.—Mrs. Lucy
Wallace, Marquet, Kan., Dec. 12, ’05.
Apples to Burn.
Five hundred and eighty barrels of
apples have been washed ashore at Co
chester, on Lake Michigan, and as the
fruit is on a sand beach many miles
from a railroad the underwriters of
Chicago telegraphed the Cochester peo
ple to eat the apples.
FAKRKLL'S USD STAR K XT It ACT If!
The best; all grocers will refund yom money If
you are not satisfied with It.
-The first thing a man does when .he
gets drunk is to say that he is a gentle
man.
■ducat* Four Bowola With Caacarets.
Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever.
Uo. If C. O. C. fail, druggists refund money.
A girl should never marry a man
whose mother was a good cook. .
A Prediction About Railway*.
The following prediction, made 07
tbe Royal College of Phyalclana of Ba
varia in 4935, le now on record in tbe
archives of tho Nuremberg and Furth
Railway, In that country. When It was
proposed to build this line, the phy
sicians of the country met and for
mally protested against It “Locomo
tion, by the aid of any kind of steam
machines whatever,’’ the Bavarian
physicians declared, “should be pro
hibited In the interest of the public
health. The rapid movements cannot
fall to produce In the passengers the
mental aliment called delirium furlos
um. Even admitting," the protest went
on, "that travelers will consent to run
the risk, the state can do no less than
protect the bystanders. The sight alone
of a locomotive passing at full speed
sufflees to produce this frightful malady
of the brain. It is. at any rate. Indis
pensable that a barrier at least six
feet blgb, should be erected on both
sides of the track.”
A Tell of Mist
Rising at morning or evening from some low
land, often carries In Its folds tbe seeds of
malaria. Where malarial fever prevail no
one Is safe, unless protected by some efficient
medicinal safeguard. Hostetter’s Stomach
Bitters Is both a protection and a remedy.
No person who Inhabits, or sojourns In a
miasmatic region of country, should omit to
procure this fortifying agent, which Is also
the finest known remedy for dyspepsia, con
stipation, kidney trouble and rheumatism.
a ranidox.
"Man," said the corner evangelist,
"is made of clay."
. “Aw, git out,” retorted Mr. Perry
Patettic, who chose to assume that the
remark was directed to himself. "Ef
man is made of dirt, why is it that the
dryer he is the more his name Is
mud?”
Sommer Excursions via the Wabash Rail*
road.
Vacation tours for the summer will
soon be placed on sale. Half Rates 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-tables, sailing
lists and' cabin plans for steamers or
other information, call at Wabash
Ticket office, 1415 Farnam street (Pax
ton Hotel Block) or write Geo. N.
Claytoy, N. W. Pass. Agt., Omaha,Neb.
A Good Guess.
"Tommy, who was Joan of Arc?"
asked the teacher. “Noah’s wife,” said
Tommy, who is considered great at
guessing.—Philadelphia American.
Shake Into Tour Shoes.
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-flttlng
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
mail for 25c in stamps. Trial package
FREE. Address Allen S. Olmsted. Le
Roy. N. Y.
Some people like a bad thing so well
that they make shortcake out of goose
berries.
w hat you need is something to cure you.
Get Dr. Kay’s Renovator. See ad.
....
Our idea of a good base ball game is
where the home team wins.
Deal Tsbecce Spit and Smoke Your Life teaj.
To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag
netic, full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To
Bac. the wonder-worker, that makes weak
men strong. All druggists, 50c or |1. Cure
guaranteed. Booklet and sample free. Address
Sterling Bcmedy Co.. Chicago or New York.
Gann of Lone Range.
Twenty-seven foreign ships carry
guns having a range of ten miles each.
■n. ’Winslow’s Soothing Mjrnp
For children teethtng,soften* the gums, reduces inflam
mation, allays pain, cures wind colic. 26 cents a bottle*
Engaged people always think every
one is talking about them.
«tv
V H
• k'y;
The Pill that Will.
“The pill that ’will,'' implies the pills that
won’t. Their name is legion. The name of “the
pill that will" is Ayer's Cathartio Pill. It is a
pill to rely on. Properly used it will cure con*
stipation, biliousness, sick headache, and the
other ills that result from torpid liver. Ayer's
pills are not designed to spur the liver into a
momentary activity, leaving it in yet more
incapable condition after the immediate effect
is past. They are compounded with the pur
pose of toning up the entire system, removing
the obstructing conditions, and putting the
liver into proper relations with the rest of the
organs for natural co-operation. The record of
Ayer's Pills during the half centui'y they have
been in public use establishes their great and
permanent value in all liver affections.
Ayer’s Cathartic Pills.
WORTH ITS WEIGHT IN 60L0.
*• I have been troubled for tlie
__ _ pa<it twentv years with CON*
STIPATION, INDIGESTION and SLEEPLESS NICHTS,
but since taking Dr. 1C ay’s Kenovator 1 can sleep like a child and am
not troubled in the least with the above named diseases. Yonr
Dr. Kay’s Renovator
IS WORTH ITS WEICHT IN COLD. I am an old lady c?
years old." 1 ours. MUS. U A. McCOY, 711 Mo. 27th St.. Omaha.
9Eo.5il}fi’?.wENOVaTOR fins cured so many of tbe worst cases
DYSPEPSIA that we consider it e specific for this disease und for proof we
refer all lo ilie testimonials of wonderful cures reported in our hook. It lias cured
n anv had cases of HEADACHE, and when caused hv constipation or dvspep~
sia it is sure to cure every case, m fact, we believe it has no equal for headache
from whatever cau.e. 11 always cures BILIOUSNESS and all folios of liver and
kidney complaints, ner*.ou«n“t»s. neiiraima. impure ulood, scrofula skin diseases,
film riles, IkhJs blotches., irlttnuoliir t‘iiiary*»mp|itx. dronxv RHEUMATISM and
piles, it Is so il liv di-uiorsls nr sent hy mail at iac and *l! Sena stairn lor Hr It
Kay’s - Home Trealnriil and Valmble Recipes," alWpage book in atfnu all ills
rases. Add.css Dr. II. 1. Kay Medical Co.. Western Offlce. Omaha Ncbri^ki
IOLD BY DRUGGISTS.4
ii ’iv. A* I,. iVvv.V.
DAIRY AND POULTRY.
INTERESTING CHAPTERS FOR
OUR RURAL READERS.
How (nn«Hfal Former* Operate This
Deportment of l ho Form—A Few
Hints ns to tUo Caro of Lira ■took
and Poultry.
1’mclMKM for the Foreign Market.
N eastern mer
chant who ships a
great deal of but
ter to the London
market described
at the1 recent Iowa
dairy convention
the kind of pack
ages that give the
best satisfaction to
foreign dealers and
buyers, and urged
the importance of proper atten
tion to this matter, says Dairy
World. In the first place, dairy
men catering to foreign sup
ply need one ounce of salt to one pound
of butter, with parchment paper on top
instead of a cloth. Then, too, the tubs
should be well soaked and a coat of
salt rubbed on the inside before pack
ing the butter. This will prevent the
butter from moulding. This is a very
Important part of the work of prepar
ing butter for market. There have
been several thousand boxes of butter
shipped from our market, which have
been received there with great favor.
These boxes hold fifty-six pounds' of
butter net. They are made of white
wood and lined with parchment paper.
This butter Bel 1b for better prices than
when packed in tubs, and we would ad
vise all creameries to give the matter
of packing butter for foreign shipment
careful attention, and be ready to use
them at any time the foreign market
is in shape to pay us as much as our
own market, so that we can dispose of
our surplus butter. If our surplus but
ter had been packed in boxes this sea
son, it would have sold in the foreign
market for more money than it will
ever sell for here, after losing the stor
age and interest, and, at the same time,
we should have gained some favor with
the foreign market by letting them
know that we have fine butter here as
well as Australia. It has been our
practice to ship the poorest butter. In
.this way we have hurt our credit as a
butter producing country. Now that
we have established so many creamer
ies there is less of the low grades of
butter and more of the high grades
than we can consume at home. It is
very plain to be seen that it la our
duty to cater to the wishes of the peo
ple upon whom we are dependent to
ubo our surplus butter, and in order to
do this we must give them the style
of package they require, as well as salt
ing and coloring to their wants. One
of our neighbors has Just returned from
Liverpool, and he tells me he has seen
the retailer try to sell tub butter and
tho buyer would not look at it, but
must have his butter from the square
box. The same butter would sell at
retail for two cents a pound more cut
from the box than from the tub. Now,
with these facts in view, is it not worth
our careful attention to try and build
up a trade for our surplus butter, which
the writer is satisfied is going to be
increased year by year, as the dairy
business is still in its infancy in this
country.
Standard Variety of Chickens.
The Barred Plymouth Rock Is of a
grayish-white color, regularly crossed
with parallel bars of blue-black run
ning in straight, distinct lines
throughout the entire length of the
feather, and showing on the
down or under color of the
feathers. The barring is somewhat
smaller on the hackle and saddle
feathers than on other portions of the
body. The bird is of medium size,
with broad neck, flat at the shoulders,
the breast is full, and the body broad
and compact; medium-sized wings,
that fold gracefully, the points being
well covered with breast and saddle
feathers. A medium-sized head, orna
mented with upright, bright-red comb
and wattles; a large, bright eye, and
yellow beak, legs, and toes, places the
picture before ub In its entirety. The
difference between the Barred and the
Pea-comb Barred is that the latter has
a small, firm, and even pea-comb, in
stead of a single comb.
For the farmer or market poultry
man they are favorites, being a medi
um size, well proportioned, with a
deep, full breast, making a most ad
mirable bird for market purposes.
They are hardy, mature early, and
make excellent broilers from eight to
twelve weeks old. They are good lay
ers the year round, and in winter they
lay exceptionally well. Their eggs
are brown in color and average eight
to a pound. They are good sitters
and excellent mothers.
The Barred Plymouth Rock, besides
being a practical fowl, 1b also one of
the most sought after by fanciers. No
class Is better filled at the average
poultry show of the country than u
theirs. Their graceful figure, upright
carriage, and active natures endear
them to all as a farmer's fowl. There
is a fascination in breeding them for
plumage, the more regular and even
their barring the better. It re
quires much skill to breed them for
color, and two matings are generally
used for breeding. An established
rule for mating for cockerels Is to use
a standard color male with medium
dark females, and for pullets, use light
male and dark females. The double
mating is resorted to by many, yet the
writer has seen rare specimens pro
duced from single matings. The char
acteristics of the Barred Plymouth
Rock are noticeable in the other
Plymouth Rock classes, excepting
that of color. The size, shape, general
outlines, and qualities are the same
in the other varieties as in the Barred.
The White Plymouth Rock is pure
white in plumage throughout, and the
buff variety is a clear buff, uniform in
shade except the tall, which Is deep
buff or copperlsh*yollow brown. The
buff color should extend to the under
color as much as tioasible; the deeper
the better. The standard weight of
cocks Is 9^4 pounds; bens, 7% pounds;
cockerels, 8 pounds; and pullets, GV4
pounds.
Tapeworm* of Poultry.
It has been known for years that
tapeworms infest domesticated poultry,
end that In some cases they cause seri
ous epizootics among fowls. The out
breaks thus far recorded have occurred
chiefly in Europe, and as a natural out
come almost the entire work which has
been published on these parasites is the
result of European Investigations. The
literature upon the subject la accord
ingly in Latin, German, French,Danish,
Italian, etc., while In the English lan
guage we have only a few short no
tices concerning these worms. Generlo
and specific diagnoses of the parasites
of this group are almost unknown ar
ticles In the English language, while
as yet we have absolutely no reliable
data as to how many species of tape
worms are found In American poultry.
Several outbreaks of tapeworm dis
ease have been noticed In fowls in dif
ferent parts of the country, and upon
various occasions specimens have been
sent to the bureau for identification.
From a table showing 33 recorded
species it was noted that 6 different
tapeworms have been recorded from
pigeons, 2 from turkeys, 11 from chick
ens, 2 from swans, 7 from geese, 16
from ducks and 1 from an ostrich. One
form has been recorded as common to
pigeons, chickens and ducks, 6 forms
as common to ducks and geese. 1 form
as common to geese and swans, 1 as
common to pigeons and ducks, and 1
as common to pigeons and chtekens.
The treatment of tapeworm disease
In the domesticated fowls must for the
present be more or less experimental,
as the records In'this line are extreme
ly limited. The first rule to be carried
out in all cases of diseased animals,
whether chickens, turkeys, geese, ducks
or others, Is to isolate them from the
rest of the flock and keep them con
fined until they have recovered. The
second rule is jo destroy the dropping*
of all animals known to be infected
with parasites, or it the manure Is
needed as a fertilizer it should be treat
ed In such a manner as to kill the ova.
These two rules can be easily carried
out, and if a poultry raiser or a stock
raiser is not willing to set aside a
small yard for the Isolation of the sick
animals, Where their droppings can be
easily collected and taken care of ev
ery day, it Is almost useless for him to
administer anthelmintics to his fowls
or other animals. The chief "drugs
ased against tapeworms are; Extract
of male fern, turpentine, powdered
kamala, areca nut, pomegranate root
bark, pumpkin seeds and sulphate of
copper (bluestone).
f •. • •— '* 1
Breeding Dairy Com.
{" A writer In Dakota Farmer gives this
advice:
1. Select tbe best cows In your herd,
or that you can buy, to keep, and dis
pose of the others.
2. The best cow for the dairy Is the
one that produces the greatest amount
of butter fat in a year (for food con
sumed) when being rightly fed.
5. To renew or increase your herd
raise the heifer calves from your best
cows.
4. Test your cows by weighing the
milk of each cow for a year and testing
it occasionally with the Babcock milk
tester, and know how much bntter tat
each one does produce.
6. Use the best dairy bred sire you
con get; one, if possible, that ban a
long line of ancestors that have been
first-claBs dairy animals.
6. Keep a record of the time when
the cows are bred and have no guess
work about the time of calving.
7. It is neither profitable nor neces
sary for a cow to go dry more than
four to bIx weeks.
8. The udder should receive prompt
attention. An obstacle may be re
moved from the teat the first hour, that
might baffle science later.
9. After separating the calf from its
mother, feed the natural milk as soon
as drawn, for a week or ten days.
10. Don’t milk the udder out clean
until the fourth day after calving.
This will often prevent a chill, which
often produces milk fever.
Long Rows.—The possible gain In
time of cultivation due to the length
ening of rows is greater than any sup
pose who have not tested the matter.
By the watch I find that when rows are
eighty rods long an acre is cultivated
in three-fourths of the time required
for cultivating in rows thirty rods long.
Long rows make work easier tor man
and . team. It we would compete with
the west we must plan for long, nar
row fields Instead of the little square
ones usually seen. The tilling of open
ditches and abandonment of useless
fences makes this possible on a major
ity of farms. Experience has taught
me that the saving of money due to re
moval of fences was truly not needed,
the gain from cultivation of fence-rows
and the gain in rapidity of cultivation
where rows are long, amount in the ag
gregate to a nice sum of money—a sum
that would materially increase Incomes
for thousands if the plan suggested
were adopted.—Ex.
Profitable Cows.—Which is the most
profitable cow to keep? It is the cow
that produces the most at the least
cost. In the ninety days' test at the
world’s fair the best cow cleared a
profit of over $73 and the poorest a
profit of only $24. Turning now to the
food account, we find that the cost of
food in both cases was practically the
same, yet one cow had the ability to
make three times the profit upon prac
tically the same food. There are cows
in every herd that have this ability;
find them out. In these days of keen
competition we must reduce the cost
of production, and this aspect of the
question should always be taken into
consideration.—Ex.
THE AGE OP THE WORLD.
It It Much Greater Than Baa B«aa
Hoppoiod. ' S1>:
One of the questions considered by
Prof. E. B. Poulton In hie presidential
address before the geological section
of the British association related to
the length of time required for the
development of animal life on the earth
to its present condition, says Popular
Science Monthly;, “whether the pres
ent state of paleontological and soolog
ical knowledge diminishes or increases
the weight of the opinion of Darwin,
Huxley and Spencer, that the time
during which the geologlBta concluded
that the fossiliferous rocks had been
formed was utterly insufficient for or
ganic evolution.” The arguments of
the physicists, derived from the sup
posed effect of tidal action upon the
length of the day, and from the esti
mated length of time occupied by the
earth in cooling from an assumed tem
perature to its present condition, are
shown to have been proved invalid as
bases for calculating the probable age
of the earth as. a life-bearing body.
The argument derived from the sup
posed life of the sun has not yet been
ruled out and that gives a maximum of
500.000. 000 years. The computation of
the time required for depositing the
geological strata gives a minimum of
73.000. 000 and a maximum of 680,000,
000 years—possibly 400,000,000 years.
The author’s Inquiry as to how much
of the whole scheme of organic evolu
tion has been worked out in the time
during which the fossiliferous rocks
were formed does not deal with the
time required for the origin of life or
for the development of the lowest be
ings with which we are acquainted
from the first formed beings of which
wo know nothing; but only with so
much of the process of evolution as
we can infer from the structure of liv
ing and fossil forms.
vjuipaiiDuu in uittuv iiuiu a
study of the evolution of the phyla. All
available evidenoe points to the ex
treme slowness of progressive evolu
tionary changes in the coeienterate
phyla, although the protozoa are even
more conservative. When we consider
further on the five coeienterate phyla
that occur fossil we Bhall find that the
progressive changes were slower and
Indeed hardly appreciable In the echl
noderms and gephyrea, as compared
wltht the mollusca, appendlculata antf
vertebrata. Within these latter phyla
ere have evidence for the evolution of
higher groups, presenting a more or
less marked advance in organization.
As a whole, the comparison Is, quite
enough to necessitate a very large in
crease in the time estimated by the
geologist. We can hardly escape the
conclusion that, for the development
of the arthropod branches from a com
mon chetopodlike ancestor and for the
further development of the classes of
each branch, a period many times the
length of the fossillferous series is re
quired. The evolution of the ancestor
of each of the higher animal phyla
probably occupied as long a period os
that required for the evolution which
subsequently occurred within the phy
lum. But the consideration of the
higher phyla which occur fossil, except:
the vertebrate, leads to the irresistible
conclusion that the whole period in
which the fossillferous rocks were laid
down must be multiplied several times
for this later history alone. The period
thus obtained requires to be again in
creased and perhaps doubled for the
earlier history.
Vi i i I '■ ■ '
■ Ik< Vtlu of m CUm.
There is nothing like a climax to
make a good story. It is always sure
to delight the listeners and the more
unexpected it is the better it takes.
The stories of an Allegheny hunter
have of late lost their interest by rea
son of a surfeit of the Improbable and
he has at last assumed his former
method of holding his hearers’ atten
tion. The other day he was relating
one of his adventures In long-distance
shooting. It happened while he was
making his way along a sandy bar
on a recent hunting trip. After a
search of several minutes for some
thing to shoot at he descried a large,
lean-looking crane standing on a lit
tle hillock about three-quarters' of a
mile distant. He was afraid to ap
proach nearer, as there were no ob
jects behind which he could advance,
and the crane would probably take
flight. The only thing to be done was
to try to bring down the bird from
where he was standing. Arranging
the sight of his rifle for what he
thought was the proper distance be
took careful aim and fired. The crane
never moved, for the bullet plowed
into the sand about half way up to it.
Again the sight was adjusted, and this
time the bullet came a little nearer the
mark, but still the bird refused to
move. The hunter would not give up.
The sight was again raised, and this
time he aimed about a foot over the
crane’s head. “I fired,” said the Nim
rod, and then, as everybody was ex
pecting him to tell how he brought the
bird down, he concluded: ’’And then,
looking toward the mark, I saw the
bullet fall at the crane’s feet. It got
up, shook Itself and flew away." And
one of the listeners was unkind
enough to ask if it carried the bullet
away in its mouth.—Pittsburg Chron
icle-Telegraph.
Downfall of an Old Tree.
One of the largest and oldest trees
in Delaware was chopped down re
cently at Muddy Run. on the farm of
Philip R. Clark, near New Castle. The
tree was a lofty oak, 157 years old.
For sixty-three feet up the trunk there
Is a piece of timber twenty-two Inches
square. The man who bought it claims
that he can get $280 out of it.—Phila
delphia Inquirer.
' 'V * . •: -c.', ■ \V
Ari.tooratlr VorkUfm
The discovery Chat a French nohle
man has been working as. a “docker*
in London recalls other cases of aristo
crat* of long lineage who have been in
duced to similar straits. The Marquis
de Beaumanolr is a laborer In a floor
mill near Nantes; the Coaste de SC
Pol is a gas-bill collector, and the VI
comte de 8L Magfln drives a cab la
Parla
is tee winy cooes
Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, main*
sea strong, blood pure. Me,St. All *
Wfi
i
i§
. &
Fewer potatoes are now raised ia
New England than fifty years ago. }5||
ITbt
cf dcatfci boot .. - t
s :
r E
Heart
Failure
IHI'i I.-IllIII
the but fail* to act /"*
. trim t out dk% '
but *? Heart Failure," ao called,
times out oi tea is caused b y Uric
Addin the blood which the Kidneys
fail to remove, and which corrodes
the heart until it becomes math to
perform its functions.
Mi
. .
Health Officers fat many dries very
properly refuse to accept“ Heart FaS
ure/' as a cause of death. It ia fre
quently s'dgn of ignorance In the
physician, or may be given to cover
up the real cause.
A Mntelnr, with 20 Ycaes of
. . Success behind it . .
will remove the poisonous Uric Add
fay putting the Kidneys fa» a healthy
condition «o that they will naturally
eftnfaait ft.
$100 To Any Man.
WILL PAY 9100 FOR ANY CASK
s;;AH
ft,
Of
NSU Thj (dm
NttoCm
An Omahe Company places (or (ho Ink
time boforo the public a Xtaiou Tmur
asjrr for the cure of Lost Vitality, Natron*
and Sexual Weakness, and Restoration off
Life Force in old and young men. No.
worn-out French remedy; contains no
Phosphorous or other harmful drugs. It in- <■
a Wo.toEnroL Tukatmsnt—magical in it*,
effects—poeitiya in its cure. All readers.,
who are suffering from a weakness that,
blights their life, causing that mental and.
lie
ftis
uunrsni, umana, ntli,, and they will,
send you absolutely FREE, a. raluahio
paper on these diseases, and positive proofs
of their truly Magical. Treatmmy. Tboas
ends of men, who have lost all hope of n
cure, are being-restored by them to a per- .
feet condition. ’ ■
.‘VaS
" ■ '
’ft
This Mahical Tbbatmknt 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 perfectly reliable;,
have no Free Prescriptions, Free Cure.
Free Sample, or C. O. D. fake. They hat*
•200,000 capital, and guarantee to core.
Sense they treat or refund every dollar;:
eir chargee may be deposited in a.
bank to be paid to them when a cure is
effected. Writeth ..today.
"t:
Shmtttt tint j
Omaha to Kommu dig.
1025 miles, • ; ftgj
1047 minutes- -
' ftft
■f
i
f
the world’s record fbr tonif
distaace fast runnug-heAd
by the Burlington .
■V ■
February 16th a
train over its Un<
special
s made
the run from Chicago to
ofl086
B'jihngtor
, Rdute
Denver—e di dance
miles—in the unprecedent
ed time of 18 hoars and
63 minutes. Allowing for
stops, the actual running.
---and 87
V f
time was 17 hours i
minutes, and the
rate of speed 68111
hoar. •
Write for booklet telling,
how run was made. Writes
also for Information about
rules and train service via
the Burlington Route to
Denver, Salt Lake City,
Deadwood, Relearn Butte,
Spokane, Seattle. Taooma,
Portland, San Francisco,
or any other western city. ■
J. FRANCIS, General
Omaha, Neb.
Passenger Agents,
3
MEN
\ N
K Currd or no Psjr.
■ Print* CentelMlan Free.
K Valuable advice to Me
K free. A guarantee to cure
■torn
Hemoiii
Call
fore.lt is too late.
■?«
[every case or refund every
•dollar. Treatment by raalL
I Call and stares or write be-..
onau Helical in surgical ustnan.
Soutliweot Oor. 18th and Dodo Sta* Omaha.
CURE YOURSELF!
Use lHr 41 for rmNuiI
I dlacharittit, InllomnioHo—,
| Irrlutiuni or ulcamtiaaat
of nietai mombraaaa
. . _ Poiuleoi, and not aatria
|TUeEhM0HUMM.0a r-nt or poiaonona
■aM *~T ~
*pr lent in plain wrapper.
- tjd.tar
Circular i
wntkm. Bead .___
PotonU" O’FA&RKLL Jt BON. Wushinctoo. D» G>
If afllctod wltlaM
a«M. m ) I
W. N. U. OMAHA. No. 24.-1
Whan writing to advertiser*. kindly
lion thin paper.
>u:
PATENTS. TRADE MARKS
•alldvlw as to I’tteutAbilltj of bk
for*I«T*ntow’ (luhle, or How toUtifc
DIICMTC Brinin'experience. Send afcenah frrad>
nULMIdi vice. (LUdone,litej)rii. runnerUX
FokOttce) DaaMftWMver. McGill Bld*.WMAUM3L.
1 ’ %
JRWI
••t