The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, June 24, 1897, Image 7

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    How I7e AToi Retired.
Landlady—I do think Mr. Star lfl
the moat careless man I ever taw. He
leaves his things lying around his
_* room in such confusion.
Maid—I’ve noticed it, mem. 1
guess he must have been raised a
married man, mem.
Try Graln-O.
Ask your grocer today to show yon
a package of GRAIN-O, the new food
drink that takes the place of coffee.
The children may drink it without
Injury as well as the adult All who
try it like it. GRAIN-0 has that rich
seal brown of Mocha or Java, but it is
made from pure grains, and the most
delicate stomach receives it without
distress. % the price of coffee.
15 cents and 25 cents per package.
8old by all grocers. Tastes like cof
fee. Looks like coffee.
Don’t Bn n Clam.
"Ob I” cried the clam with sadness,
Aa he slowly closed his eyes,
"I'm well known aa a stick-ln-the mud,*
For I never advertise ”
—Printer’s Inlb
The development of a school from emell beginnings
Into a great educational Institution, la directly trace
able to a careful eelectlon of the boat ability and
minute attention to the details of administration. No
natltunon is so favorably known in this respect as tho
Ksw England CoNssavATonr or Music In Boston.
With nearly a million dollars Invested In lte magntd
«ent buildings, and with conrsos In music and elocu
tion and practical instruction In piano and organ
toning, the advantages offered are unparalloled, and
prove beyond question that tho student ran maka no
mistake who selects this school in preference to nor
other, at home or abroad.
A New Definition.
Inquisitive Tommy—Say, pa, what
is sic transit?
Intelligent Parent — Sic transit?
Why, an ambulance wagon, of course.
-—Texas Siftings.
Dropsy treated free by Dr. H. H. Green's
Sons, of Atlanta, Ga. The greatest dropsy
specialists in the world. Read their adver
tisement in another column of this paper.
1 lie 4 I*u»e to Find it.
Mr. Cawker, after his wife has read
several pages—Is there any sews in
your mother's letter, dear?
Mrs. Cawker—I haven't come to tho
postscript yet.—Truth.
Hall’s Catarrh Core
Is taken internally. Price, 75c.
To Caro Constipation Torevar.
Take Cascarets Candy Cathartlo. 10c or Bo.
If C. C. C. fall to cure, druggists refund money.
God never made a cow that gave
milk punch.
Imported ChMiM*
American cheeses used to be sent
abroad by the thousand pounds twenty
years ago and returned by the same
steamship line properly labeled as
English. It is perfectly well known
that most of the popular foreign
cheeses are mere or loss successfully
counterfeited in this country and it
would be interesting to know what
proportion of the large exportations
of American cheeses return as for*
eign.
"A Randle of Nerves.**
This leru Is often applied to people whose
nerves are abnormally sensitive. They
should strengthen them with Hostetler's
Stomach Bitters. After a course of that be
nign tonic, they will cease to be conscious
that they have nervous systems, excent
through agreeable sensations. It will enable
them to eat. sleep and digest well, the three
media for increasing tone and vigor In the
nerves, in common with the rest of the
system. The mental worry begotten by ner
vous dyspepsia will also disappear.
Removing a Bone.
A gargle of vinegar will dissolve
•mull bones quickly. Where a large
bone happens to lie across the wind
pipe or throat a dexterous use of the
finger will dislodge it when other
means are lacking, provided both the
operator and patient keep calm.
Bdn—te Ton Bowels With Cas carets.
Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever.
Ivo. UO.C.C, tali, druggists refund money.
A Monntnln of Silver.
The greatest sum of coin that was
ever collected in one spot was in the
national treasury of the United States
in the silver crisis, when no less than
$500,000,000 was contained there.
FAHBEI.L S RED STAR EXTRACT IS
The best; all grocers will refund you* money if
you are not satisfied with It.
Attempt to make reform a paying
business and it ceases to be reform.
Heienan's Camphor leo with Glycerine.
Cures Chapped Hands and Face. Tender or Sore Feet^
Chilblains, Pile#, Ac. C..G. Clark Co., New Haven, OL
A ball player does not object to be
ing called fast.
Two bottles of Piso's Cure for Consump
tion cured me of a bad lung trouble.—Mrs.
J. Nichols, Princeton, Ind. March 30, 1895.
The best preaching is not always
done in the pulpit.
EEra. Winslow1! Swathing Syrnp
For children teething,softens the gums, reduces inflam
mation, allays pain, cures wind colic. 26 cents a bo ttl*
Others see our faults as plainly as
we see theirs.
Drs. Maybe and Mustbe.
Yqp choose the old doctor before the young: one. Why?
Because you don’t want to entrust your life in inexperienced
hands. True, the young: doctor may be experienced. But
the old doctor must be. Tou take no chances with Dr. Maybe,
when Dr. Mustbe is In reach. Same with medicines as with
medicine makers — the long;-tried remedy has your confidence.
You prefer experience to experiment—when you are concerned.
The new remedy may be g:ood — but let somebody else prove
It. The old remedy muat be g:ood — judged on its record of
cures. Just one more reason for choosing: AYEH’fl Sarsa
parilla in preference to any other. It has been the standard
household sarsaparilla for half a century. Its record inspires
confidence — 50 years of cures. If others may be g:ood,
Ayer’s Sarsaparilla mnat be. You take no chances when yon
take AYER’S Sarsaparilla.
FLUSH JOINT STRENGTH
Our Columbia 5 per cent. Nickel Steel Tubing shows
a tensile strength of over 100,000 pounds to the
square inch; 50.carbon tubing used in Hartford
bicycles shows about 75,000 pounds to the square
inch, and 25 carbon tubing—ordinarily used in
bicycles—shows about 55,000 pounds to the
square inch. Yet Columbia Patent Flush Joint
Frame Connections are very much stronger
even than our celebrated 5 per cent. Nickel
Steel Tubing—
f a convincing
proof of the
|| extraordinary
f strength of
SC o 1 u m b ia
Flush Joints
DR. KAY’S RENOVATOR.
COLUMBIA BICYCLES $100
STANDARD OF THE WORLD.
1896 Columbias, 575. Hartfords, 560, 555, 550, 540.
POPE MFG. CO., Hartford, Conn.
82
• PR. KAY’S RENOVATOR. O DR. KAY’S RENOVATOR. »
REV. J. B. WADE, <=™d of CONSTIPATION.
w ‘‘JiIIL??tf>ni8hed the and yet the efficiency of Dr. Kay's Reno
yovin* constipnted bowels, an«l in producing a regular natural die
WadJ Mo^rtion ColorSJa**"1 W“h cons,1*,at,0° Ior *> J. B.
Dr. Kay’s Renovator
Sat iTStulIbY** DBUftUBtk!?/0 many of the wont caaea of constipation
that It certainly REMOVES headache, biliouhneaa. indication. aaweltaa
every other troub.e which tinda lta cauae in conatipatlon It atrikes to the
very root of the trouble and curee THE very worat caaea which aaemtoba
obacure and In which phjskiana and al! "her remedlei 2“to cure 5? Sva JSI
lief. It U the beat medicine for Impose blooitS CAUSE of which mavbS
1‘!ol r.hlch *« ‘“"Id in our new book?
Dr. Kay • Homs Treatment, a CS-pege treatise on diseases wtrfch will bo aont
to address for stamp. Dr. Kay's Renovator at druggists or bv mall for 2fio
and A. Addreaa: Dr B. J. Kay Medical Co., WcaurS ^cS ctoaha Nebrt.k^
PR. KAY’S RENOVATOR.
O SOLO BY PRUOOIST8.
i
4
1
J
J
J
daiijy and poultry,
INTERESTING) CHAPTERS FOR
JOUR RURAL READERS.
Bouf laemnfil Farmer* Operate Thla
Department of the Farm—A Pew
R/late aa to the Care of Live Stock
aa4 Poultry.
(Condensed from Farmers* Review
stenographic report of Wisconsin
Round-up Institute.)
C. TAYLOR spoke
on how to get good
cows. There are
three things that
enter into success
ful dairying: First,
the dairy tendency
of the cows; sec
ond, the fertility of
the farm and its
ability to provide
food for the cows.
The third thing to be taken into con
sideration is the dairyman. Then it is
necessary that there be the ability to
apply modern dairy methods. If he be
not a dairyman he will never succeel.
Q.—Should a dairyman raise his own
cows?
A.—Yes, sir; if he can, and as much
as possible.
Q.—Can you Increase the percentage
of fat In the milk of cows?
A.—That can be done only by good
breeding.
Charles Thorp spoke on handy things
on the dairy farm. He said that every
man should have a dairy house on his
farm. His dairy house is located near
the well, where every dairy nouse
should be located for the purpose of
having the water handy. The house is
30 by 14, the first twelve feet being
used for the dairy room proper. Then
there is the cream vat, which is a
great saving of labor, and should be a
part of every outfit. By its use we
have to churn only once a week. It
used to be necessary to churn every
day or every other day. Now the craam
can be held sweet by the means of ic t
for a long time. The next six feet of
' ' * n;—;—,
more practical fowl for the farmer, or
thoao who keep poultry for market.
The Butt Wyandotte la In color a rich,
deep, clear butt, uniform In ehade
throughout, except the tall, which le
of a deeper butt or copperlsh-bronze
color. The Blacka are of a rich, gloe*
ay black, with greenish sheen, except
ing breast primaries, secondaries, tall
and fluff, which ars pure black. The
standard weight of cocks Is 8V4
pounds; hens, 6V4 pounds; cockerels
7% pounds; and pullets, 5% pounds.
Developing Layer*.
The early hatched pullets are now
large enough to permit of Intelligent
selection. The culls should be disposed
of, and the best reserved tor laying and
breeding, says Farm Journal. If the
cockerels have become sufficiently ma
tured to be troublesome, they should be
separated from the pullets and fattened
for market. Although the price may
be low now, It seldom payB to keep
early hatched birds for fall and winter
sales. To develop the pullets into good
laying hens, an exclusive diet of corn
must be avoided. They need bone and
muscle, but to get enough of this out
of corn they must eat an excessive
quantity of It and this will produce too
much fat. This caution must be heed
ed when the pullets have only a limited
run and but little pasture. In these cir
cumstances with the corn ration, green
Brass, clover, green fodder and some
vegetables, with milk and cut bone,
or meat meal must be supplied to se
cure a healthy development. The farm
er’s flock that has the range of the
fields, and access to a great variety of
food, may thrive on a ration of corn
because it is not their exclusive
diet We have, however, often seen
farmers’ premises where for two or
three hundred yards from the buildings
the poultry had eaten every green
thing except weeds that was not en
closed by chicken proof fences. Such
runs become polluted and the fowls
suffer for the lack of Insects and gteen
food. The owner feeds the cuBtom
ary corn ration and wonders why his'
flock do not thrive and the pullets do
not lay. The development of pullets
for laying Is very much like that of
FEATHERS OF SILVER-LACED WYANDOTTES.
the building is used for a storage
room. The rest of the building Is used
tor an ice room, which every man
should have.
Mr. Thorp then showed his system
of making artificial ice by natural cold.
He had on exhibition a model of a long
box In which the ice is frozen. The
box in which he freezes his ice Is 14
feet long, 2 feet wide and 1 foot deep.
The inside of the box is waxed with
paraffine wax, which makes it easy to
remove the ice when it is frozen. The
waxing must be done during a warm
day, and the wax should be used boil
ing hot, so the wax will stick to the
box. In freezing he puts in only three
inches of water at a time and lets that
freeze before putting in more. He has
been using three of these boxes for
the last few years. With three of these
boxes you can fill an Ice house very
quickly. When you loosen the ice
from one of these boxes you have a
single cake of ice 14x2x1, which is saw
ed into cakes the size desired.
A feed cutter comes very handy cn
a farm, if it be not in such shape that
it has to be set up every time it is to
be used.
Q.—How do you build an Ice housv
and how do you pack the ice?
A.—I would build it about as I would
any common building, but I would
make the walls double, with lath and
plaster on the inside, and then I
would paint the walls. I pack the Ice
with dry snow, and the cracks between
the cakes I pack with dry snow also.
I do not put the ice against the out
side wall, but leave a six-inch space
which I fill with saw-dust.
John W. Decker spoke on chiese
making. The cheese industry Is in bet
ter shape than it has been before for
many years, due largely to the pass
age of laws against filled cheese. New
York and Wisconsin are the great
cheesemaking states. At the South
and in some parts of the North dairy
ing is not carried on to any great ex
tent. So the states that make cheese
will have to supply not only them
selves but the others. Canada has
been supplying the English trade. That
is the trade that we are trying to sup
ply with our product, and that trade
requires a very firm article in the way
of cheese.
Standard Varieties of Chickens.
The Golden Wyandotte Is marked
like the Silver, excepting that the col
or is golden-bay and black Instead of
white and black. The White variety
Is, perhaps, the favorite of the Wyan
dotte classes, from the fact that it is
not so difficult to breed to feather the
plumage being pure white through
out They are for this reason the
heifers for giving milk. Concentrated
grain diet overtaxes the digestive or
gans and produces fat. Bulky succu
lent food, that which contains the
bone and muscle making material, is
necessary to secure the healthy diges
tion and thrifty growth.
Wind Power.—Not nearly enough use
is made of wind power. Most of the
wind mills we see are used wholly tj
pump water from wells. Though th s
as a steady job probably saves as much
labor as any one thing the wind power
could be set to doing, there are many
other back-aching jobs that are on
many farms done by hand power
which might quite as well be given
over to wind power. Turning grind
stones and churning are among these
When young we knew some farmer
boys who put up a light windmill which
turned a lathe in a shop. Here th»y
spent many hours making all kinds of
wooden articles. All of these boys
kept up their love of farm life because
their windmill was set to do tasks that
on other farms the boys had to ner
form by what sailors call “main
strength and stupidness, in Holland
there can be no use of water power
for the land is too level. Nowhere in
the world is wind power used to so
much advantage or for so great a va
riety of purposes.—Ex.
Intelligent Dairying.—Dairying re
quires constant study and Intelligent
thought, it requires years in which to
build up a profitable herd of cows and
to learn how to feed and care for
them an to handle the product.
The man who can successfully breed
and feed a dairy cow has a mind above
the average. He is a student, a keen
bright business man, and you will not
find this class of men dissatisfied with
their business. It is the class of men
who are constantly changing from one
branch to another—men who do not do
much figuring and cannot tell how
much their cows earned individually or
collectively—who have intense hatred
for the Babcock test and for all cream
ery men.—Kansas Farmer.
Gingering Horses.—Gingering horses
at the horse shows, especially the sad
dle horse to make them carry their tail
high up and to present an unusual
amount of animation and appear smart
is a disgusting and deceptive jockey
trick that should be prohibited by the
rules of horse shows in this country
as it doubtless will in England, since
the Humane society prosecuted and
fined a number of the grooms at the
London shows. The veterinarians con
demned the practice as painful to the
animal and a fraud upon the judge
“OLD HICKORY'S" INAUGURAL?
A Mob Followed 111m from tho Capitol
mod Iovodod the Whit* House.
Mr. Bishop says of President Jick
son's Inauguration In the Century:
An eye witness who took a somewhat
Jocose view of the day’s events wrote
that the most remarkable feature about
Jackson as he marched down the aisle
of the senate with a Quick, large step,
as though he proposed to storm the
capitol, was his double pair of spec
tacles. He habitually wore two pairs,
one for reading and the other for see
ing at a distance, the pair not in use
being placed across the top of his head.
On this occasion, says the eye witness,
tho pair on his head reflected the light,
and some of the rural admirers of the
old hero were firmly persuaded that
they were two plates of metal let into
his head to close up holes made by
British bullets. When be appeared on
the portico we are told that the shout
which arose rent the air and seemed to
shako the very ground. The cere
mony ended, the general mountod his
horse to proceed to the white house,
and the whole crowd followed him.
"The president,” says a contempor
ary writer, "was literally pursued by a
motley concourse of people, riding,
running helter skelter, striving who
should first gain admittance Into the
executive mansion, where It was un
derstood that refreshments were to be
distributed.”
An abundance of refreshments had
been provided, including many barrels
of orange punch. As the waiters
opened the doors to bring out the
punch in pails the crowd rushed upon
them, upsetting the pails and breaking
the glasses. Inside the house the
crush was so great that distribution of
refreshments was Impossible, ;md tubs
of orange punch were set out in the
grounds to entice people from the
rooms. Jackson himself was so
pressed against the wall of the recep
tion room that he was In danger of in
jury and was protected by a number of
men linking arms and forming a bar
rier against the crowd. Men with boots
heavy with mud stood on the satin cov
ered chairs and sofas In their eagerness
to get a view of the hero. Judge Story
wrote that the crowd contained all
sorts of people, from the highest and
most polished down to the most vulgar
and gross In the nation. "I never saw
such a mixture,” he added. “The reign
of King Mob seemed triumphant. I
was glad to escape from the scene as
soon as possible."
GATHERING RUBBER.
Bow tho Native! or the French Congo
Work.
The natives of the French Congo
•cut rubber” In March and April. The
rubber of Congo Is not a tree, but a
vine, often three or four Inches In di
ameter, and Is found In the Jungle,
sayB an exchange. Natives who scorn
to be industrious at all other times of
the year work hard during the season
of rubber gathering. Before the cut
ters start out the whole village in
which they live indulges In a tremen
dous debauch, after which the men
strike out boldly Into the jungle, well
laden with food, for there are few
edibles In The rubber districts. The
vines climb up the trees, and as only
the upper and smaller portions of the
vine produce desirable sap the men
have to climb to the height of the first
branches, often as much as fifty feet,
to do their work. After the pieces are
thrown to the ground they are cut
again Into lengths of three or four feet
and are then held over pots bo that
the juice will run out. When a pot
Is nearly full the juice Is boiled down
for several hours, during which time
!lt Is mixed with Juices of several other
Tines, which renders the mixture
sticky and more easily formed Into
balls. When it Is cooled sufficiently
to be handled it is shaped by winding
it first around a stick. After a while
the stick Is pulled out and the ball
rewound. In some cases these balls
weigh three or four pounds; in some
others It takes five or six to make one
pound.
The best and purest rubber Is ob
tained in the shape of bracelets, which
are made by the natives catching the
juice as it runs out around the wrists,
where It Is allowed to dry. When per
fectly Bet It comes oft easily and
would be transparent if the negroes'
arms and hands were not dirty.
Our School Books.
The great fuss made by the O. A.
R. over school histories will accomplish
much good if sectional bitterness is
avoided. As the matter stands now,
the publishers are entirely to blame!
There are firms in the school-book pub
lishing business who employ a man in
each state to write the history of that
state, and he is expected to glorify
things within its borders. He is gen
erally a partisan. Whatever of preju
dice he may have against national in
stitutions is eliminated, but a great
deal of unhistorlc expartelsm is jam
med through the completed work.
Dacheu and Queen.
Our little Duchess of Marlborough
has been a guest of the queen. Good.
The dispatches from London say:
“Eighteen months ago Consuelo Van
derbilt was a plain American girl.”
Not so! She never was “plain." Con
suelo was distinguee at the age of 10,
and, as Miss Vanderbilt, was regarded
as a queenly young woman. And why J
should she not dine with the queen? j
Where is the wonder?
Never Full.
“Yes, sir,” said the sallow man,
proudly, “I can truthfully say I was
never intoxicated in my life.”
"Well, suh,” remarked Col. Koin
tuck, after a pause, “that strikes me as
a very empty honor."—Cleveland
Plain Dealer
CtMprnWIliln. ’ ‘ * » '
D. V. Tallent, mall carrier between
Rutherford ton aui Columbus. N. C.,
walks twenty-seven miles each day,
carryingthe mail bag on his shoulders.
Ills compensation is <600 a year.
Sheep are sometimes taken over
bad road to a good pasture.
$100 To Any Man.
WILL PAY 9100 FOR ANY CASE
Of WnklHi Id Man Tbs/ Treat and
Fall to Oars.
paper on these diseases, and positive proofs
of their truly Magical Treatment. Thous
Onlu (ins via .
Cutter IkUtlelkML
that. Into Your 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
cdro for sweating, callous and hot.
tired, aching feet Try It to-day. Sold
by all druggists and shoe stores. By
mail for 26c in stamps. Trial package
FREE. Address Allen* S. Olmsted. Le
Roy, N. Y. _.. ,.,.f:
w!,;f
Freak of Lightning.
All the doors in John Kipp's house’
at Cedar Bayou, Harris County, tTraha;
were opened and a lid of the kitchen
range was blown off by & bait ST
lightning.
Deaf lessees Ceil as4 Smoke leer LHe Awaj.
To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag
netic, full of life, norve and vigor, takaNo-To
Bac, the wonder-worker, that makes weak
men strong. All druggists, 50c or ft. Cure
guaranteed. Booklet and turn pie free. Address
Sterling Remedy Co.. Chicago or New York.
■m
An Omaha Company places for the first
time before the public a Magical Trhat
m ent for the cure of Lost Vitality, Nervous
and Sexual Weakness, and Restoration of
Life Force in old and young men. No
worn-out French remedy: contains no
Phosphorous or other harmful drugs. It Is
a Wonderful Treatment—magical in its
offsets—positive in its enre. All readers,
who ore 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
ands of men, who have lost all hope of a
cure, are being restored by them to a per
fect condition.
This Magical TasATMEXy may be 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 have
1260,000 capital, and guarantee to cure
every case they treot or refund every dollar;
or their charges may be deposited in a
bank to be paid to them when a enre la
effected. Write them todav.
Through Yellowstone
Park on a Bicycle.
(Buffington
feB*;..,
The Passenger Depart*
meat of tbs Burlington
i has Issued-and will
Route 1 ..
gladly mail to any one who
will aak for it-a little
infor
booklet
full
matlon about the beet wayr
J. FRANCIS, General Passenger Agent,
Omaha, Neb.
SUMMER TOURS
to make the tour of _
lowstone Park on a bi
cycle. There Is nothing
experimental abont the
idea. The trip has been
made again and again—to
the supreme satisfaction (ft
every one of the dozens of
riders who have been bold
enough to undertalce.it. .
The booklet contains a
good map of the Park, aa
well ae full Information
about the cost of the trip,
what the roads are like,
what to take, etc. Writs
for a copy.
• . ^
VIA
BIG FOUR
TO TBK
MOUNTAINS, LAKES ai_
Special Low Rates will be in effect to
Put-in-Bay, Islands of Lake Erie, Lake
Chautauqua, Niagara Falls, Thousand
Islands, St. Lawrence River, Adirondack!,
Lake George, New England Resorts, New
York and Boston. To the Great Lakes,
Cleveland, Sandusky, Toledo, Detroit. Ben
ton Harbor. Mt. Clemens, Mackinac and
Michigan Resorts. To the Northwest and
West via St. Lonis and Chicago. For
rates, routes, time of trains and full par
ticulars apply to any agent l,Bio Botin
Holts,” or address _ • \;
E. 0. NcCORMICK, 1 ^ ‘
Passenger Traffic Managar
“Big Four.” Cincinnati. 0.
All DlMMMOf
i
m
MEN
Cured or uo Faj.
Private Ceniultatio* Free.
Valuable advice to Man
Free. A guarantee to cure
every cage or refund every
dollar. Treatment by ma
ana see us* or write uw
w tm it u ^ 1&te.
Omaha Medical and Surgical Institute.
Southwest Cor. 16th and Dodge Sts., Omaha.
CURE YOURSELF!
Us* Big <1 for unnatural
dischargee, Inflammations,
| Irritations or ulcerations
of nueotti membranes,
i cuujton. rainless, and not astria*
ATHEEvaNSChEMICALOO. S«nt or poisonous.
or sent in plain wrapper,
by express, prepaid, for
•1.00, or I bottles, fi.75.
Circular sent on nqwrts
DiTEMTC 20 vear*' experience. Bend sketch for ad.
nilUIIOi vice. (L. Deane,latejprm. examiner (Ml
Pat. Office) Deane * Weaver. McGill Bldg^WaatUXU
fVtERLY repairs smjms
LO I k II le I Minneapolis, Minnesota.
’^l££'£?}ThenpsoB’sEyeW*ter.
—..... . _ • >
W. N. U. OMAHA. No. 26.-1897.
Whan writing to advertisers, kindly men