The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, July 29, 1897, Image 7

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Coleman on the Cat. I
„ Mr. R. Lindray Coleman, ex-president at
the National Cyole Board of Trade, and
i ffesident of the Western Wheel Works, in
Vkneaking on the cut in bicycles, says:
■TThis cut in the price of S100 wheels has
^occasioned no surprise. We expressed the
opinion five years ago that other makers
would fully realize their error in endeav
oring to maintain a fictitious value on
their product, and that the prices we had
fixed on Crescents would become the
standard price for other high grade wheels.
‘‘One of the secrets of the success of the
Western Wheel Works is, that we not
only guarsn to uur wheels, butweguaran
tee our j r.cts us well, and the purchaser
of a Crescent in Febrvary has the ratissac
tion of knowing that his neighbor who
purchased a Crescent in July paid the
same price as he did.
“I do not anticipate that a still further
reduction in the price of bicycles will be
made this year.”
Ihe Southerns!"* Hat.
Slouch hats are numerous in al
most all communities south of Mason
and Dixon’s line, and conservative old
southerners.still demand the best felt
in such hats. A really good broad
brim felt hat such as a fastidious
southerner wears will cost almost as
much as a respectable high silk hat,
but will last longer because it never
goes out of fashion.
Dancer Signal.
Tbo stomach and whole digestive system
are apt to be deranged at this time of year.
The result is you have a poor appetite and
are weak and drowsy and have a feeling
of general indisposition. There is danger
ahead, you are liable to have a run of
fever and other dangerous diseases if you
do not guard against it. If you will reno
r vate your system you will prevent fevers
or other diseases. If you will take Dr.
| Kay’s Renovator in time we will gcaban
I tee you will not have lot ei\ It strikes to
the root of the matter and removes the
cause. It regulates the stomach, bowels
and '.jer so gently and pleasantly and
yet effectually that it cures a larger per
cent, of cases than any other remedy ever
discovered. It cures the worst cases of
indigestion, constipation and chronic dis
eases. It is pleasant and easy to take.
Price by mail, poslago prepaid, 25 cts. and
. el. If your druggist does not have it.don’t
take f OHIO inferior article which he may
say !s-juRt as good.” but send to us for
the medicine and “Dr. Kay’s Home Treat
ment,” a valuable 68-page free book with
56 recipes. Address Dr. B. J. Kay Medical
Co., Omaha, Neb.
'I oo Much Enterprise*
The romantic gorge of Trenton
falls has suffered a great injury, from
the scenic point of view, in the quar
rying of limestone at the brink of the
cliffs and the casting ot the debris,
thousands of tons »f rock, into the
ravine.
Shake Into Your Shoes..
Allen’s Foot-Ease, a powder for the
feet, it cures painful, swollen, smart
ing feet and instantly takes the uting
out of corns and bunions. It is the
greatest comfort discovery of the age.
Allen's Foot-Ease makes tight-flttlhg
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.
Blacklisted.
People who live beyond their means
and are very tardy in paying their
£(lebts have been blacklisted in V ienna
I by a daring publisher. A book con
staining their names has met with a
bis: sale.
There fa a Clan of People
Who are injured by the use of coffee.
Recently there has been placed in all
the grocery stores a new preparation
called GRAIN-O, made of pure grains,
that takes the place of coffee. The
most delicate stomach receives it with
out distress, and but few can fell It
from coffee. It does not cost over %
as much. Children may drink it with
great benefit. 15' cents and 25 cents
per package. Try it Ask for
GRAIN-O._
Careful parents who are planning to send
their daughters to the city for study, wish
them to be placed in surroundings as nearly
like home as poasible. In this respeot the New
England Conservatory of Music Boston, Mass ,
with its admirably equipped Home Depart
ment, meets a widely felt need and oilers an
absolutely safe and delightful home life for
young women students of music. Add to this
the curriculum of courses leaving nothing un
done to secure broad and musiclanly training,
and it Is easy to see why parents prefer this
school to any other, and particularly to those
which make no provision for pleasant and shel
tered dormitory life.
In a Box.
Old Friend—Seems to me you are
paying your cook pretty stiff wages.
Jimson—Have to. If I don't she’ll
leave, and then my wife will do the
cooking herself. —New York Weekly.
Read the Advertisements.
You will enjoy this publication much
better if you will get into the habit of
' reading the advertisements; they will
afford a most interesting study and
will put you in the way of getting
some excellent bargains. Our adver
tisers are reliable, they send what
they advertise.
In Arctic Seas.
The Danish government has under
taken, during the year 1895 and 1896,
a deep sea exploration in the Green
land and Iceland waters. The expedi
tion will be accompanied bv a botanist.
• 1O.S0 TO HEFFALO AND RETl’RTf
Via Michigan Central, “The Niagara
Falls Route,” from Chicago, good go
ing August 21-23. A rare opportunity
to go East at very low rates over “A
First-class Line for First-class Trav
el.” Reserve your sleeping car accom
modations early by writing to L. D.
Heusner, Gen’l Western Pass’r Ag’t,
119 Adams Street, Chicago.
$10.60 to Buffalo and return.
A Bridegroom's Black Eye.
A Newark bridegroom started on
his wedding tour with a black eye.
His sister-in-law caused it by vigor
ously throwing a weighty slipper after
- him to give luck to the young couple.
•10.00 Given Away.
Andy P. Whitmer of East Chicago, Ind.,
writes: “I would not take $10.00 for your
book, ' Dr. Kay's Home Treatment,’ if I
could not get another.” It has 08 pages
and 56 valuable recipes. For ten days we
will send one free. Address Dr. B. J.
Kay Medical Co.. Omaha. Neb.
Our idea of a thoroughbred is a man
who has two pairs of good puntaloons,
with suspenders for esoh pair.
Mrs. Wlaslow'o Ssotfclsg Sms
For children teething..often, the gumi reduces inflam
asstlon, ollojs pain, cures wind colic. *6 centss bottle.
An outraged friend is worse than a
dozen enemies.
AN ADVENTURE STOKY
N March 22d, 1892,
this engine saved
the life of her en
gineer, James Rus
sell.”
These words, en
graved on a silver
plate fastened to
the cylinder of a
large Corliss en
gine in a quartz
mill In the moun
talnous region of northwestern Neva
da, commemorate a really remarkable
occurrence.
The engine stands In a space cut off
from the rest of the mill by a tight
partition. The room Is made to can
form nearly to the shape of the en
gine, the wall being about eight feet
from it on all sides, except where the
belt runs down into the fly-wheel pit.
There the partition is at least twenty
feet from the rim of the fly-wheel, and
the great belt or band which carries
the power Into the mill comes In
through a hole six feet up in the wall,
and slants down to the bottom of the
fly-wheel about the same distance be
low the floor.
Thus In order to pass from one side
of the room to the other at this end
it Is necessary either to jump over the
belt next to the fly-wheel, or to crawl
under it next to the wall. The fly
wheel is an immense affair sixteen feet
in diameter, weighing twelve tons, and
wide enough on the face for the thirty
elx-lnch belt to run. The engine makes
more than a hundred revolutions per
minute, and this belt whizzes down
through the floor toward the fly-wheel
in a way to make one dizzy. The en
gine itself is kept in a highly-polished
condition by the unremitting atten
tions of the engineer, who speaks of It
as "Old Alice,” and who has painted
this name in gilt letters on her var
nished frame In memory of a little
daughter who died.
There Is no direct means of commu
nication between the mill and the en
gine room, as the latter has only one
door, and that opens from the outside.
At the time of the occurrence I am
about to relate, this door had on it a
very complicated spring lock, and
every time the door slammed the lock
eaught and, according to the engineer,
“it took ten minutes’ work and the
key to get it open again.” The mill
runs continuously, being lighted at
night by a small electric-plant in the
building, and two big arc lamps hang
directly over the engine.
About ten o’clock on the night of the
22nd day of March, 1692, James Rus
sell (the night engineer) was sitting in
a chair at one side of the room read
ing an old newspaper, while his train
ed ear followed every stroke of the
engine, and Instantly detected the al
tered sound when an oiler stopped
feeding or a screw worked loose. “Old
Alice” ran as moothly and regularly
as a watch, and the engineer grew so
absorbed in his paper that he did not
at first look up when he heard the
door swing open and then shut with
a snap. Soon, however, the indescrib
able feeling that something alive is
near caused him to lift his head and
look about the room. There, just in
front of the door, blinking like an owl
in the glare of the electric lights, and
ROUND THEY RAN.
dazed by the fast running machinery,
stood a great, dingy browny-black
beast that looked to the excited en
gineer as big as a cow. The engineer
knew at once that his visitor was a
bear, and a grizzly at that, and was
correspondingly scared. The miners
had told him many tales of the cun
ning and ferocity of these animals, and
he knew that a few savage old fellows
still lingered in the mountains near
by.
This particular bear had just waked
up from his long winter's sleep, and
was hungry, or he would not have
been so bold. It Is probable that in
prowling about in search of food he
had come close to the mill, and had
smelt the oil in the engine-room, and,
finding the door open a-crack, had
pushed it open wider, and stepped in.
When he saw the lights and the en
gine. he had tried to back out. but had
run against the door, causing it to
slam and the springlock to catch.
Failing in his attempt to get out of
this dangerous trap, the bear turned
around in great wrath, determined to
take summary vengeance on the first
thing he couid get at. Unfortunately
the first object that caught his eye
was the engineer cowering against the
wall, and ne started for that individ
ual withe ut delay. As he lunged
across the floor he gave a tremendous
growl, and lifted his lips like a spite
ful dog, showing some terribly long
and sharp teeth. The engineer lost no
time in getting away from there, and
ran around the cylinder end of the en
gine like a college sprinter, while the
bear demolished the chair with one
6troke of his paw, and tore the paper
Into shreds. ^jter conscientiously
completing tbis Aferuction, the griz
zly looked around T6r more worlds to
conquer, and seeing the engineer,
thought he would do, and started for
him again. As the bear rushed around
the cylinder, the engineer ran toward
the fly-wheel, and as the bear raced
down that side of the engine, the man
jumped the belt and started up the
other side. The bear paused only an
Instant when he came to the flying
belt, then over he went, and chased the
man on around the cylinder end.
Round and round the engine they
ran, Jumping the belt, slipping and
sliding on the slick, oily floor, but get
ting faster and faster all the time.
There was nothing In the room that
di> would for a weapon, and Russell
could form no plan of escape, his great
est desire for the moment being to
keep the engine between him and the
grizzly. Even this became impossible,
as the bear gained on him, and the
distance between them gradually les
sened till they were running only a
few feet apart
The engineer shouted again and
again, but he had very little hope of
any one's hearing him because of the
great noise made by the machinery;
and even if they did hear, they could
not get in to help him, for the door
was locked, and he could not spare
time to fool with that lock Just then.
It was simply maddening to him to
think tha‘ there were twenty men in
the mill only a few feet away, all ready
““ wimug to neip nim ir ne couia
only let them know of his plight, and
yet to have that relentless brute chas
ing him around like a rat in a trap.
A few minutes of this wild running
exhausted the engineer, and he would
have stopped and let the grlzsly do his
worst had It not been for the dread
ful blood-curdling noise made by the
animal’s claws as he scuttled over the
slippery floor. The bear lunged and
plunged along like a great awkward
calf, growling prodigiously the while,
but he made astonishing speed for such
an unxkieldly-looking beast, and was
fast overhauling the man In spite of
his utmost efforts.
Once, as tha exhausted engineer
leaped over the belt, he thought that
to drop on it and be crushed by the fly
wheel would be an easier death than
to be torn to pieces by the bear, and
he almost decided to end the dread
ful chase the next time he came
around. But when he saw the belt
running so swiftly to certain death his
heart failed him, and he waited till
next time. Not so the bear. Almost
as the man's feet touched the floor af
ter the leap he heard an awful roar,
and the next instant a badly mashed
bear struck the celling and dropped
like a shot.
That timely event is easily explain
ed. As the man and bear ran round,
centrifugal force caused them to swing
cut farther and farther from their cen
ter of motion, the engine; and the
bear, being heavier than the man, flew
farther out till he came to a place On
the slanting belt where it was too £igh
for him to Jump. Then he put his
forepaws on it, intending to climb
over, and that was the last of him.
The belt, running at that high speed,
Jerked him In like a feather, and ran
him through between It and the fly
wheel. When the fly-wheel got done
with him, it threw him oft at the top,
as dead aB a herring and not much
thicker than one.
The engineer, however, firmly be
lieves that the spirit of his little
daughter influenced the engine to save
his life by killing the bear; and who
can say it Is only a fancy? The next
week he sent to Chicago and had the
silver plate made and put it on “Old
Alice,” and he declares that she Is
quite proud of it.
A BASHFUL BACHELOR.
Reasons Enough for' Falling to Win a
Wife.
“Faite made me what I am,” growled
a gouty gachelor. “I was Intended by
nature to love and be loved and to have
the joys of old age in a bright family
circle instead of being shut up in a
decorated dungeon like this. The
fickle jade has played me a mighty
mean trick.”
“Why didn’t you marry like a sen
sible fellow?” asked the old friend who
was making a duty call, says the De
troit Free Press.
"Fate, I tell you; predestination,
hard luck or some of those other agen
cies to which we charge our misfor
tunes. When a young man I was smit
ten a score of times and hit so hard
that it dazed me. It made an awkward
sort of an idiot of me. I could neither
think, talk nor properly control my
motions. The only thing on earth I
was afraid of was a pretty woman, and
-“ Jr • J uvu im.
“Pshaw; nothing but bashfulness,
and you could have overcame it.”
“You don't know what you are talk
ing about. It Wasn't anything of the
kind. When in love I was cantrolled
absolutely by seme ulterior force. If I
attempted to cross a room to address a
young lady my feet would walk me out
of the dear. When I bowed I would
fail to straighten up till some one
broke the spall by a word or laugh.
I’d start tp say something and the re
was afraid of was a pretty woman and
she simply paralyzed me.”
“Why didn’t you make one grand
effort and throw off the strange con
trol?"
“That’s what I did when I was visit
ing in Tennessee and fell in love with
the grandeest woman that ever lived.
One day in the garden I set my teeth
and determined to propose. Then I
passed out of myself. I walked through
a flower bed, fell over a baby carriage
into a barbed-wire fence, swore like a
pirate and came up with a face like a
cranberry pattch. The sweet creature
ran. So did I. That was my last love
affair, and now there Is nothing left
but to sit in solitude and nurse the
gout.”
Eustis, Me., News U filled with re
ports that bears are thicker than
■htep ■ .•
MIKACULOUS MUD.
, POUND AT THE INDIANA MIN”
ERAL SPRINGS. IND.
. Cora* RhfnnitUm, Kidney, Bladder,
Blood, Sklu sod Nenoo. UiiniM—
Bl* Hotel Hm Boon Erected
and People Are Journeying
There from All Orev the
Coontry to Bathe
In the Hud.
A deposit of most remarkable mud
discovered in Indiana, has of recent
years been attracting wide-spread at
tention. It is located at the Indiana
Mineral Springs, Warren county, and
has been formed by the action of the
water from the famous Magno-Lithla
springs. Through countless ages the
foliage of magnificent oaks on the hill
side has annually fallen into a basin,
and has been reduced by nature into
a pure black earth unmixed with roots,
stones or sand. The water from the
big spring for thousands of years has
been soaking this deposit and saturat
ing it with mineral salts, until now
there is a layer of medicated mud
abcut two acres in extent and from
ten to twenty feet in thickness.
The strange medicinal value of this
peculiar, black, porous substance was
accidentally discovered by an old sol
dier, Sam Stor>, who had brought
rheumatism home from the war and
suffered with it for years. He was at
tempting to dig a drainage ditch
through the mud deposit, and after in
dulging In this useless experiment far
a week or more, gave up the idea, bu:
meanwhile had been cured of his rheu
matism.
The fame of the mud began to spread
and afflicted congregated at the Springs
from everywhere. The method of us
ing the mud was at first very primi
tive, the patient merely sitting down
In the deposit where nature had laid
it. But since then improvements have
been made, a beautiful hotel erected,
and the mud bath developed into a
luxurious experience. The accompany
ing cut shows how it’s done.
After all, Nature ts the greatest of
all chemists, and Beems here to have
prepared in a gigantic receptacle an
enormous maBS of medicine for poultic
ing sore humanity. When all else had
failed. Nature’s treatment, the Magno
Mud cure, as it is now called, has in
hundreds of cases brought back health
and happiness.
It Was a uiffmest Case.
One of the local justices of the
peace identified the prisoner at the
bar as an old offender.
Justice—What is your name?
Prisoner—Sam Jackson.
“Three years ago, when you were
up before me your name was John
Smith.”
"Yes, but that was an entirely
different case.”—Texas Siftings.
ten Than Half Fare
To Buffalo and return via the Wa
bash E. R. For the O. A. R. reunion
the Wabash will sell tickets on Aug. 81
and 22, at less than Half Fare, with
choice of routes via all rail from
Omaha or Chicago to Buffalo or by
steamer from Detroit, either going or
returning. The only line running re
clining chair cars (Seats free) from
Omaha or Chicago to Buffalo. All
trains run via Niagara Falls. For
tickets aDd further information call
on Agent connecting line or at Wabash
Ticket rffice, 1415 Farnam Street (Pax
ton Hotel block), or write
Ueo. N. Clayton, N. W. Pass. Agt.,
__Omaha, Neb.
Medical Advice.
Patient—Doctor, what’s good for
dyspepsia?
Doctor—Irregular eating and ill
cooked food. Two dollars, please.
Not Over-Sensitive.
Wiilie—An’ what did Clawence do
when Bob Slugard kicked him?
—He simply said, “Gweat men
are not sensitive to cwiticism,” and
walked swiftly away. —Judge.
Don't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Yaur Lila Sarny.
To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag
net ic, full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To
Bac. the wonder-worker, that makes weak
men strong. All druggists, 80c or SI. Cure
guaranteed. Booklet and sample free. Address
Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York.
Why He Uiilu't (Jo.
“Why didn’t you come to my con
cert? You're very fohd of music.”
"Very. ”
“Theft why didn’t you come?"
“Because I’m fond of music.”
FARRSC!.!.** OAHinU rOWDSR IS
The beet, at half the price; all grocers will re
fund your money If you arc not aatlided.
Reason helps the wise and cudgels
the foolish.
Ciarktr lee with Glycerine.
The original end only genuine. Cure* chapped Bands
and Face. Cold Sore*, Ac. C.U.Clerk ACo-.N.llaren.Ct.
One bad example destroys the effect
of many years of fine precept.
Hall’* Catarrh Core
Is a constitutional cure. Price, 75c.
No one pretends to hate a wrong as
much as he who offers it.
FITS FarmansntlyCured. Xofltsornerfonflnensaftei
first day's use of Or. Kline's Orest Serve Restorer.
Send lor FREE 84.00 trial bottle and treatise.
Oh. R. H. Klim, I.td..»m Arch Kt.. Philadelphia, Pa
Silence overcometh all things save
time, even life itself at last.
Dr. Kay's Kenovator is a positive cure
for nervous disorders and of the stomach,
bowels and liver. Hee advt.
Boasting always means one or two
things, ignorance or cowardice.
To Core Constipation Forever.
Take Casrarets Candy Cathartic. 10c or Be.
if C. C. C. fail to cure, druggiute refund money’.
Self-reliance, t elf-restraint and self
discipline, constitute an educated will.
Ha Wu IlMd to It.
Friend—Try to hang on for an
other couple of minutes. The guide
will soon be here with ropes to res
cue you.
Jarley, who has fallen over a dlft
In the Alps, and is hanging on to a
little ledge with one hand—All right
old boy. I nan stand it I haven’t
traveled from King street to Park
dale hanging on the trolley straps a
year for nothing. (Resumes reading
his paper.)
Vli Gentleness.
Be gentle In stimulating the kidneys,other*
wise you will excite ana weaken them. The
happiest results follow the use of Hostotter's
stomach Bitter* to overcome renal inactivity.
Avoid the unmedtcated, liery stimulants of
commerce. The kidneys have a delicate
membrane, easily Irritated, and upon this the
action of such excitants Is pernicious. Ma
larial complaint*. Indigestion, rheumatism,
neuralgia and biliousness succumb to the
corrective Influence of the Bitters.
Forgiven bjr Her Victim’s Ghost.
Old Mrs. Nobles, in jail at Macon,
Ga.,‘for killing her “old man” for
"pestering” her, says his ghost has
been to see her and she Is forgiven the
murder. Efforts are being made to se
cure commutation of sentence, but shs
“Jes liev’e hang’s not.”—Ex.
To Colorado Springs and Pueblo.
Burlington Routs via Denver.
,,A. through Sleeping car to Colorado
■-.prings and Pueblo via Denver is attached
;o Burlington Uoute daily train leaving
h'-ago 10;::0 p. m. Oltlce, 311 Clark 8t.
tlullty Conscience.
. Mistress—Why don't you ever pro
vide any new dishes P’
Cook—1 never break any, mam—
Detroit Tribune.
IOWA FARMS For Sale on cron payment,
SI per acre cash, balance *4 erop yearly until
paid for. J. V.ULHALL, Waukegan, 111.
Write your injuries in dust, your
blessings in marble.
Educate Tour Dowels With Casco re to.
Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever.
10c. If C. C.C. fall, druggists refund money.
Of all the virtues, gratitude has the
shortest memory.
Piso's Cure for Consumption has saved
me large doctor bills-.—C. L. Baker, 42.98 Re
gent Sq., Phi odelphia, Pa., Dec. 8, 1835.
Envy a blind man, leading unhappi
ness by the hand.
=g=BBBB
; i *
Try Grain-Of
Try Grain-0! j
. ■ ' > <* (i
•-,t I
Ask your Grocer to-day to,}
•how yen a package of
ORA0-O, the new food
drink that takes the place
of coffee.
The children may drink 1:
without injury as well as the 1
■V3.j adult. All who try it, like
it. GRAIN-O has that rich •'.?*
seal brown of Mocha or Java, j
but it is made from pure
grains, and the most delicate
stomach receives it without *
distress. 14 the price of : <■,
« V' coffee. . ;’V
IS cents and 35 cents per , »•. *
package. Sold by all grocera
* ’.»••• "r/ ••• ■
Tastes like Coffee
M'l -j
Looks like Coffee
' •*
UNIVERSITY op NOTRE DAME,
Notre Dame, Indiana.
CUuilM, Letter*. Science, Law, CIvU, Me
chnnlcnl »n.i Klrrt rival Kngineertiur.
Thorough Preparatory and Commercial
(ouriri. KccIebUotkcRl student* at special rates.
Room* Free, Junior or Senior Year, Collegiate
four***, fit. Kdwartri Hall* for boys under IS.
_ The 107th Term will open Neptember 7th,
1897. Catalogue sent Free on appllration to
Rev. A. Morrlaaey, C. 8. C., 1‘realdunt.
The beat Red Rope Rooflne for
le. per *q. Ik, eape and Dalle In.
rinded Huh.I nite* for Planter
Bamplaa free. Tk< rtv umuji hooiuh o.iwbaU
nOADfiV NEW DISCOVERY; *w
■ quirk rt-lirf and cun* worst
raiei. Hr ml for book of teuttmonlaln and lO tluya’
treatment Free. Pa u.u.auupaaon.Mlaata.ea.
CiNQER fsrsL^MATa:
UMIl Ulill Pika Building, Cincinnati, Ohio.
HITPilTAH' ■.WILLSON AOO..Waalv
DA | KM W JCiniton, D. C. Mo fee till patent
1 M I blv I Devoured. 4t.p«ffe book INo.
W. N. U. OMAHA. No. 31.-1807.
When writing to advertisers, kindly men
tion this paper.
AN OPEN LETTER
To MOTHERS. §5
WE ABB ASSERTING IN THE COURTS OUR RIGHT TO THE
EXCLUSIVE USE OP THE WORD “CASTORIA." AND
“ PITCHER’S CASTORIA," as OUR TRADE MARK. :
I, DR. SAMUEL PITCHER, of Byannia, Massachusetts,
waa tha originator of “PITCHER'S CASTORIA," the aama
that haa borno and does now >7^ yon awry
bear the fao-aimile signature of (-4uaf^^/•cldcJ&U wrapper.
This is the original "PITCHER'S CASTORIA," which has been
used in the homes of the mothers of America for over thirty
years. LOOK CAREFULLY at the wrapper and see that it is
the kind you have always bought s/V* , JT^onthe
and has the signature o f' wrap^
per Jfo one has authority from me to use my name except
The Centaur Company of which Chas. H. Fletcher is
President. * .......
March 8, 18971 / 1
Do Not Be Deceived.
not endanger the life of your child by accepting a cheap substitute
which some druggist may offer you (because he makes a few more pennies
on it), the ingredients of which even he does not know.
“The Kind You Have Always Bought” '
BEARS THE FAC-8IMILE SIGNATURE OF ‘
Insist, on Having
The Kind That Never Failed You?
Buy Your Bicycle^.
of a concern that will be in business as
long as you live, and whose guarantee is
the best security that can be given.
1897 COLUMBIAS, . .
STANDARD OP THE WORLD.
1896 COLUMBIAS, . .
1897 HARTFORDS, . .
HARTFORDS Pat. 2, .
HARTFORDS Pat. I, ,
HARTFORDS Pat. 5 and 6,
$75
60
50
45
40
30
POPE MFC. CO., Hartford, Conn.
Come end visit onr factories, covering 17 acres of floorage, and see how
a first-class bicycle is made. Catalogue free from Columbia dealers; by
mail from us for one two-oent stamp. II Columbias. are not properly
represented in your vicinity, let us know.
WRITE FOR— — ]
HELPFUL HINTS
A Catalogue of Dry Goods, Cloaks, Clothing, Millinery, Boots and Shoes,
Furniture, Carpets, Curtains, Crockery, Glassware, Toys,
Dolls and General House-furnishing Goods.
IT COSTS YOU NOTHING
AND WILL HELP YOU SAVE MANY A DIME THIS
FALL AND WINTER.
ETTENSON, WOOLFE dt CO., Leavenworth, Kansas.
mmmwfmmNmwtmmwmNmmNtmmmmmmwmmNmm*
TEACHERS WAITED!
Send for list of 4,000 vacancies- we have several times as many vacancies as members.
Must have more members. Several plant-; two plans give free registration: one plan GUARAN
TEES positions. 10 cents pays for nook, cent a nlng plans and a Idoo.uo love story ol College
day*. Blanks and circulars tree. No charge to employers for recommending teachers.
SOUTHERN TEACHERS' BUREAU. ( REV. OR 0. M. SUTTON. A.IJ SUTTON TEACHERS’ BUREAU.
H.W.t'or.Maiii* 3d Mta.,Loul»vlli«,Kjr. ( President and Manager. \ M 71 Dearborn St„ ChtqaffO, 111
Marthem infancies Chicago oJU*. Southern vacancies LeuisuiUe OJtee- One fee registera *i both e0m