The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, August 05, 1897, Image 7

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    Less Than Half Fare
To Buffalo and return via the Wa
bash R. R. For the B. A. R. reunion
' the W’abash will sell tickets on Aug. 31
and 33, 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 at
returning. The only line running re
clining chair cars (Scats free) from
Omaha or Chicago to Buffalo. All
trains run via Niagara Falls. For
tickets and further information call
on Agent connecting line or at Wabash
Ticket office. 14I."> Farnam Street (Pax
ton Hotel block), or write
Geo. N. Ci.aytox, N. W. Pass. Agt.,
_■ Omaha, Neb.
A Lady.
A lady is civil, puts the awkward man
at his ease, turns away the wrath of
an angry one, does not run over you in
the street, or scold in a loud voice, or
descend to angry repartee, or turn
people out of her pew m church.—
Boston Post.
Shake Into Tour Shoes.
Allen’s Foot-Ease, a powder for tin
feet. It cures painful, swollen, smart
ing feet and instantly takes the stini
out of corns and bunions. It is th<
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
mail for 25c in stamps. Trial package
FREE. Address Allen S. Olmsted Le
Work tot Others.
There are farmers in the northern
and eastern states who work for their
neighbors a good deal more than for
themselves. Their own holdings are
small, but they have patent reapers,
binders and threshers that they rent,
together with their own services and
the use of their horses, if necessary,
therefor a fixed sum or a percentage
of the product.
The Dresa Suit*
The dress suit is after all the badge
of the gentleman. The breeding of a
man is brought out in it, as no other
medium will disclose. At the coach
man's ball recently those few tine
looking specimens that, in gorgeous
livery, grace the box seat that wore
dress suits were the most out-of-place
and ill-at-ease looking personages in
the hull. You cannot put a cad in a
dress suit and have him look like any
thing but a cad. This is a peculiarity
of tho dress suit, and to its adaptability
alone, to the anatomy and gentility of
the men of the higher grade, does it
use its sway and impregnability—
Clothier and Furnisher.
WAHIIIXO A FINE AlfT.
“Ever since spinning was a type ol
womanly industry from age to age, ft has
been expected that beautiful apparel should
clothe women. From the classic robes of
Aspasia to the rioh dresses of Elisabeth,
and thence to tho wedding gown of Pur
itan Priscella we see the attractiveness of
dress.” But at this time only has it be
come possible for ail women to be becom
ingly attired at a small cost, the supply of
beautiful inexpensive dress fabrics now to
be had, making it aa easy matter. Yet
there are women who insist that the ex
pense of having summer gowns laundered
is greater than the original cost, and that
in the end light woolens or summer silks
are moro economical. This is a mistaken
idea, as washing pretty belongings is a fine
art, which is very easy to learn. Any girl
no matter how delicately reared can wash
I her own summer gown. A bright day,
[ plenty of water, ana a little pure soap are
the necessary aids in the work. To do it,
fill a tnb two-thirds full of warm water,
dissolve a fourth of a cake of Ivory Soap,
(which will not fade the most delicate
colors), add it to the water, wash the gar
ments carefully through it, rinse first in
clear water, then in blue water, wring,
dip in thin starch, hand on the line in the
shade. When dry, sprinkle, and iron on
wrong side. Eliza R. Parker.
What Defendant*! Counsel Said.
••And, your honor, when we reflect
od the very strong safe, the bad tools,
the poor light, cramped quarters and
my client’s natural weakness, am I not
right in claiming he earned the stolen
twenty thousand marks • by the sweat
Of his brow*”—Fliegende Blaetter.
Financial Statistics.
Jeremy Diddler—You called me a
dead beat. You must take it back, sir,
or sutler the consequences.
Col. Percy Yerger—I never take any- ,
thing back.
“You don’t?”
“Never, sir, do I take anything back!”
“All right! You are the man I’ve
been looking for. Lend me a half
dollar." _
CORED IN THREE MONTH*.
Knoxville, Tioga Co., Pa.,
Or. J, C. Hoffman, Isabella Bldg., Chi
cago, 111.:
Dear Sir:—Your medicine has cured
me of the Morphine Habit in J months.
I have no desire for the drug. I had
taken opiates for more than thirty
(30) years. I am now most 81 years old,
and feel very grateful for your kind
ness to me.
GARDNER MATTESON,
Care of Mrs. Ben Boom.
___
Perilous Amusement. i
Jeweler—Your watch is magne
tized. Have you been near a dynamo
or riding on the electric cars recently.
Jim Hickey—No, but I’ve been—er
—calling a good deal on a very at
tractive vounc ladv.— Puck.
Don’t Tobacco Spit and Smoko Your Lile Away.
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, SOc or SI. Cure
guaranteed. Booklet and sample free. Address
Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York.
Strawberry Shortcake.
In the far north they require con
siderable grease. The. Indians in
Alaska eat strawberries soaked in seal
oil.
Un. Winslow’* Soothing Syrup
Per children teeth ini?. sof ten s the gums, reduces inflam
mation, allays pain, cures wind colic. Sficentsabottla.
To turn one's coat is sometimes an
evidence of courage.
Thera la a Clan of reopie
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 tell 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
GRAJN-O._
Burled for Two ('euturie*.
t~i the heart of a large pine tree,
three and one-half feet in diameter,
James Miller of Marinette, Wis., found
a knife that was about a foot long and
one and one-half inches wide. The
age of the tree is estimated to be over
200 years, and the knife was buried in
it when the tree was in its infancy,
for it is right near the heart and only
about six feet from the base.
Rrad 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.
lie llud Skated.
Maude—--Did you over try your hand
at .skating, Mr. Blinkers?” Mr. Blink
ers— • ‘Yes—well—er—that is, my hand
and several other parts-”—New York
Herald. ___
MRRKWK RED STAR EXTRACT IB
The best; all procera will refund youi money If
you are not fattened with it.
A good man is one who never gets in
anybody’s way.
Heirenan'a Camphor Ice with Glycerine.
Cures Chapped Hands and Face. Tender or Sore Feet,
Chilblains, Piles, &c. C. G. Clark Co., New Haven, CL
You cannot make wise a fool by
feeding him on fish.
Educate Your Howols With Cascarctn.
Candy Cathartic, cure cousiipation forever.
10a. If C. C. C. fail, dnur^ists refund money.
Most mortals never practice econo
my until they have to.
Pill Clothes.
The good pill has a good coat. The pill coat
serves two purposes; it protects the pill, en
abling it to retain all its remedial value, and it
disguises the taste for the palate. Some pAl
coats are too heavy; they will not dissolve iSi
the stomach, and the pills they cover pass
through the system as harmless as a bread
pellet. Other coats are too light, and permit the
speedy deterioration of tho pill. After 30 years
exposure, Ayer's Sugar Coated Pills have been
found as effective as if just fresh from the labor
atory. It’s a good pill with a good coat. A«lr
your druggist for
Ayer’s Cathartic Pills.
More pill particulars in Ayer’s Curebook, 100 pages*
Sent free. . J. C. Ayer Co., Lowell, Mass.
CURE YOURSELF!
line Big €J for unnatural
discharges, indumnjatiung,
irritations or ulcerations
of mucous membrane#.
Painless, and not aetrin
I _ _ - - ' “imnte, auu noi
[THttVANS Ch£U1CALCo. gent or poisonous.
by Drogflito,
or sent in plain wrapper,
prepaid, for
#1 .no, or 3 hAttloa, $2is.
Circular seat on reqaeit
Send us 0 Mats
and a two cent
stampamlwewill
mail loyou, Free.
PIANO FREE
» 40 cent eooy of our popular and beautiful son '
entitled ‘The Old Fashioned Bonnet Mother
Wore," with printti I insiruc'iuns how 10 obtain j
ft new upright piano, or music box or bicycle, '
from us Tree of cost. Send vour name, P. O., j
County and State—plainly written to the J
White City Music Co., 418 26th St., Chicago, 111
*0*
^SB
W«»»
POMMEL
The Best
Saddle Coat.
Keeps both rider and saddle per
fectly dry In the hardest storms.
Substitutes will disappoint. Ask for
>897 Fish Brand Pommel Slicker—
It is entirely new. If not for sale In
your town, write for catalogue to
A. J. TOWDR, Bioston, Mass.
PENSIONS!
Get your Pension
DOUBLE QUICK
Writ* CAPT. O'PARRELL, Pension A*ent,
1420 New York Avcnua, WASHINGTON, D.C. t
A WRESTLING MATCH.
HE village had
awakened from its
long winter’s sleep.
It had shaken off
its lethargy and
stepped forth into
the light and sun
shine to take up
again life in the
free air u ntll
the months should
speed around
and the harsh winds and the
snows drive it back to a close
kitchen and a stifling stove. The an
tiquated saw-mill down by the creek
buzzed away with a vim that plainly
told that the stream was swollen with
the melted snows of the winter just
past. The big grist-mill bumped and
thumped in deep, melodious tones, as
though it were making an effort to
drown the rasping, discordant music
of Its small but noisy neighbor.
The double doors of the store were
wide open. Had all the other signs
of spring been missing, this fact alone
would have indicated to the know
ing, if the snow had not melted and
the birds not come come back it was
high time they did, for those doors
never stood open until the patriarch
felt it In his bones that the winter
was gone and he could with safety
leave the side of the stove within and
migrate to the long wooden bench on
the porch to bask in the sunshine.
“Boys,” he said at length, “it’s
time we’re glttln’ out ag’ln. Spring
has come.”
With that be hobbled toward the
door.
uooa, uran pap, gala tne cnronic
Loafer, rolling off the counter and fol
lowing.
Then the old Storekeeper opened
both doors.
The old oak bench that had stood
neglected through the long winter, ex
posed to wind and warping rain, gave
a Joyous creak as it felt again on its
broad and knife-hacked back the
weight of the Patriarch and his
friends, and kicked up its one short
. hickory leg with such vehemence as
to cause the Storekeeper to throw out
his hands as though the world had
dropped from under him and he was
grasping at a cloud for support.
“Mighty souls!’’ he cried when he
had recovered his composure and equi
librium.
“My, oh, my!” murmured the old
man, his chlld-like face beaming with
contentment as he sat basking in the
sun. "Don’t the old bench feel good
ag’In. Me an’ this oak board has ben
buddies fer nigh onter sixty year.”
The season seemed to have infused
new life into the Chronic Loafer as
it had into all nature, for he sudden
ly tossed off his coat, with one leap
cleared the s’.eps, and then began
dancing up and down in the road.
“It Jist makes a feller feel like wres
tlin’, Gran-pap.” he shouted, waving
his arms deflnaily at the quartet on
the bench. “Come on.”
At this indisposition of these four
to take up the gauntlet he had thrown
down, the Loafer became still more
brave and defiant.
“’Hedgins!” he sneered. “You uns
is afraid, eh?"
“Nawthin* to be afraid of,-” snap
ped the Miller. “Simply ‘ because
“HE WENT FLYIN7*
spring's come ez It's ben cornin’ ever
since I kin remember, I haln’t a-goin’
to waller ’round In a muddy road.”
"Nur I, nuther,” growled the Shoe
makei.
“Well, I bantered yer, an’ you uns’s
all skeert ter westle, dead skeert,"
cried the Loafer, drawing on bis coat
and grinning triumph through his
bushy whiskers.
“Come, come,” said the Patriarch,
beating his stick on the floor to call
the boaster to order. “Ef I was five
years younger I’d take your banter;
I’d druv your head inter the mud tell
you'd be afeared of showin’ up at the
store fei a year fer fear some un’d
shovel yer inter the road. Thet’s
what I’d do. I hates blowln’, I do—I
hates -blowln’. Fur be it from me ter
blow, particular as I was somethin' of
a wrestler when I was a young un.”
“I bet I could ’a’ th’owed you in
less time ’an it takes me ter set down,”
the Loafer said, as he seated himself
on the steps and got out his pipe.
“Th’owed me, eh!” retorted the
old man. “You’d ’a’ th’owed me, would
you. Well, I’d a’ liked to hev seen
you a th’owln’ me.” He shook his
stick at the braggart. “Why, didn’t
you know thet ’hen I was young I
was the be3t wrastler in the valley;
didn’t you ever hear of the great
wrastlln’ me and Simon Cruller done
up to Swamp Holler schoolhouse?”
“Did Noar act as empire?" asked the
Loafer.
“What does you mean be talkin’ of
Noar an’ sech like when I’m tellin’ of
wraatlin’? Try in’ to change the sub
jec’, I s’pose, eh?” cried the Patriarch
“Me an’ Slme Cruller was buddies,”
he began at length. “Thet was tell
we both kind of set our minds on get
tin* Becky Stump. You uns never seen
her, eh? Well, mebbe you never seen
her grave-stun. It stands be the al
derberry bushes In the buryln'-groun’,
an' ef you hain’t seen It yer otter, fer
then ye might get an idee what sorter
a woman she was. Pretty? Why,
she was n model, she was—a perfect
mcdel. Hair! You uas don’t often
see slch hair nowadays e* Becky
•Stump hed—soft and black like.
Eyes! Why, they sparkled Jest like
they was filled with new buggy paint,
an' was all watery like. An’, mighty
souls, but she could plough! fer she
wasn't none of your modern girls as
Is too j roud to plough. Many a day
I set over on the porch at our place an’
looked down across the walley an'
seen her a-steppin’ along th’oo’ the
fiel’, an’ I thot how I’d like ter hev
one faan’le while she'd hev the other,
an’ we’d go trampin’ along life’s fur
row togethei.
“The whole thing came to a p’lnt at
a spellin' bee up to Swampy Holler
school,” continued the Patriarch, un
mindful of the Interruption. “Becky
Stump was there an’ looked onusual
pretty, fer It was cold outside an’ the
wind had made her face all red on
the drive over from home. Slme was
there, too, togged out In store clothes.
“It didn't take me five minutes to
see thet Slme Cruller was tryln’ to
show off afore Becky Stump; was try
ing to prove to her that he was a
smarter lad than me.
“When Intermission come Slme he
gits off In one corner an’ begins blow
in’ to a lot of the boys. I heard him
talkin’ loud about me, so I steps over.
He sayd It was all a mistake; that he
could beat me at anything—spellin’,
wrastlin,’ or flshln’. He was showln’
off agin, for he talked loud like Becky
Stump could hear, an’ I makes up me
mind I wouldn’t stand his blowln'.
*' ‘See here, Slme Cruller,’ I sals, sals
I. ‘you uns Is nawthln’ but a blow
horn,’ I sals. ‘You claims you kin
wrastle. Why, I kin th’ow you In less
time ’an It takes to tell It, an’ If you
step out-slde I’ll prove me wordB.’
“ ‘You th’ow me!’ he sals. Then he
begin to laugh like he'd die at the
werry wee.
"With that we went outside, foller
ed by the rest of the boys. They was
a quarter moon overhead, an’ the girls
put two candles In the schoolhouse
winder, so with the snow we could see
pretty well.
“At It we went. Boys, you otter ’a’
ben there! You otter ’a’ seen It!
That was wrastlin’l When Sime an*
me clinched I ketched him ’roun’ the
waist with me right arm an’ gits
hold of the strap of his right boot
with the forefinger of me left hand.
He gits his left arm. aroun' my neck
an’ down my back somehow, an’ with
his right hand tears the buttons off
me coat an’ grabs me In the arm
hole cf me waist-coat. Over we goes,
like two dogs, snarlin’ an’ snappln’,
while the boys In a ring aroun’ us
cheered an’ the girls crowdin’ the
schoolhouse porch trembled an’
«tt*amed with fright. "We twisted, we
turned, we rolled oyer an’ over'tell
we looked like livin’ snowballs. Sime
got off the boot I’d a holt, on, an’
gives me a sudden turn thet almost
sent me on me back. But I was quick.
Mighty souls, but I was quick! I ups
with me foot an’ landed me heel right
on his chlst an’ he went flyin’ ten
feet Inter a snow bank, keryin’ me
coat-sleeve with him. He was lookin’
up at the moon when I run up to him,
an’ I’d ’a’ hed him down, but he turn
ed over.
“But I was quick. Mighty souls, but
I was quick! I kep’ me feet an’ gits
one han’ inter his waistcoat pocket an’
hung to him. Whenever you wrastles
git your man by the bootstrap or the
pocket, an’ you has the best they is.
Ef I hedn’t ’a’ done thet, I might ndt
’a’ ben here today. But I done it, an’
fer a full hour me an’ Sime Cruller
rolled roun’, even matched. Time
an’ agin I got sight of Becky Stump
standin’ on the porch, her hands
gripped together, her face pale, her
eyes almost poppln’ outen her head,
she was watchin’ us so hard, an’ the
wery sight of her urged me on to in
human efforts. It seemed to have the
same effect on Sime. The blood be
gin to run outen both me nose-holes
an’ yit I kep’ at it. Me heart beat so
hard it made me buttons rattle. Still
I kep’ at it. Sime was so hot it was
fer me Jest like wrastlln’ with a stove,
an’ still we kep’ at It. Then all of a
sudden—it was two hours after hed
fust clinched—everything seemed to
swim—I couldn’t feel no earth beneath
—I only know’d that I was still hold
in’ on to Sime—then I know’d naw
tfcln’.
“When I came to I was layin’ be the
tchcolhouse stove, an’ Becky Stump
vs as leaning over me rubbln’ a snow
ball acrosst me forehead. The other
folks was standin’ back like, fer they
seemed to think thet after slch an ex
hibition It was settled an’ they didn’t
want to disturb us.
“ ‘Becky,’ X whispers, ‘did I win?’
“ ‘You did,’ she sals. ’You both
fainted et oncet, but you fainted on
top.’
“ ‘An’ now, I s’pose you’ll hev me,’
I sals, fer it seemed like there was
somethin’ in her eyes thet kinder
urged me on.
“She was quiet a pice, an’ then she
leans down an' answers: ‘Do you think
I wants to marry a flen’? No, sir, I’ll
merry no man I can’t lick.’ ’’
“Well?" cried the loafer.
"Well?” retorted the old man.
“Did she ever merry?"
The Patriarch shook his head.
“Go look at the grave stun." he
Faid, “an on it you’ll see wrote: ‘ ’Ere
lies Becky Stump. Her peaceful soul's
at reet.’”
Food for Reflection*
Rev. Mr. Lionglipp (anxiously)—How
ilid you like my substitute’s sermon
last Sunday, Deacon? Deacon Blunt
leigh—It was a treat.
A Queer Profession.
••Window-gazing” la a profession in
London. .A couple of stylishly dressed
ladies pause before the window of a
merchant, remain about five minutes
and audibly praiso the goods displayed
inside. Then they pass on to another
store on their lanjr list of natrons j
Visitors to Lincoln Pnrlc In Chicago
Will be delighted with the souvenir book
of this beautiful spot now being distributed
by the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul
Kailway Company. It is a magnificent
publicat'on of DO pages full to overflowing
with delicious half tone pictures of one of
Creation's most charming places of resort
for citizens of the Ureat Republic.
No stranger visiting Chicago should be
without a copy of the ‘"Souvenir of Lincoln
Park." It cun onlv be procured by enclos
ing twenty-flve '25) cents, in coin or post
age stamps, to Oeo. H. Healtord. general
passenger agent, 410 Old Colony Building,
Chicago, III.
Where ••Kip’* Was Born.
Another change has taken place in
the old house on Sixth and Spruce
streets, Philadelphia, in which Joseph
Jefferson was born, and now the very
dwellers in tho house are ignorant of
his existence or of his glory. Until
recently tho house was occupied by a
dealer in Florentine casts—which is at
least one form of art. But now there
is a barber’s pole at the side window
and a Russian peddler’s stand at the
door, and the dwolling is a tenemont
house given over to tire lower doss of
Poles. _
Arou»e to Action
t dormant liver, or you will suffer all tho
tortures Incident to a prolonged bilious at
tack. Constipation, headaches, dyspepsia,
furred tongue, sour bruuth. pain In the right
ddo. will admonish you of neglect. Disci
pline the recalcitrant organ at once with
llostettcr’s Stomach Hitters, and expect
orompt relief. Malaria, rheumatism, kidney
nmiplulnt, nervousness and debility are
thoroughly removed by the Bitters.
Not in It.
She—Who do you think is the pret
tiest girl in the roomP
Ho—Oh, I don’t know. That little
brunette ovor on the sofa, I guess.
And then the stupid fellow wondered
all the rest of the evening why her
manner toward him suddenly grew BO
cold.—Somerville Journal.
•10.00 Alven Away.
Andy P. Whitmer of East Chicago, Ind.,
writes: “I would not take $10.00 for your
oook, ‘Dr. Kay's .Howe Treatment,’ if I
ould not get another.” It baa 08 pages
and SO valuable recipes. For ten days we
will send one free. Address Dr. B. J.
Kay Medical Co.. Omaha, Neb.
lies*.
One species of bee more determined
to secure safety and privacy fashions
a neat tubular gallery of clay outside
its doorway, and at the entrance to
these galleries a number of the pigmy
owners are always stationed, appar
ently acting the part of sentinels.
Hall's Catarrh Cora
Is taken internally. Price, 75c.
A Moonshlnlng Minister.
A preacher who has hod charge of a
congregation in Lincoln county, Tenn.,
was arrested for “moonshlnlng,” but
assured a United States commissioner
that he distilled supplies only for his
own family and not for illicit trade.
To Core Constipation Forever.
Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. lOo or Be,
It C. C. C. full to cure, druggists refund money.
A tempest in a teapot sometimes
turns out to be a disastrous storm.
I shall reconimend Piso's cure for Con
sumption far and wide.—Mrs. Mulligan,
Plumstead, Kent, England, Nov. 8, 1865.
Probably the Lord made Eve to
show Adam what he escaped.
Dr. Kay’s Renovator, renovates and re
stores as good as new the whole system.
Trial size, 35c. Bee advt.
Strive with all your might to come
up to your own standard.
Xfo-To-Bae fog Fifty Cents.
Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak
men strong, blood pure. 60c, $1. All druggists
Every man has a streak of genius,
but in most men it is all streak.
Our Agents
Sell
•Khar till* Suit of
Overcoat for
$4.00
We wart a bright hustling
man In yuur locality to repre
sent us. Complete outfit Iren.
Two departments, ’
Ready to wear:
•4. to •13.*'*
Made to measure;
• 12. to *28.
Write for terms to agent*.
Wtlllfc VIIT 1AILUK5, ZH-7W AOamt bt..ChiCMfiah
SI00 Tojny Man.
WILU PAY SlOO FOR ANY CASE
Of VnkMif Id Men They Treat and
Fall to Cara.
An Omaha Company place* for the first
time before the public a Magic At. Theat
mekt for the cure of LostVitality, Nervous
and Sexual Weakness, and Restoration of
Iiife Force in old and young men. Mo
worn-out French remedy; contain* no
Phosphorous or other harmful drugs. It ie
a WoNUEunn, Treatment—magical in its
effects—positive in it* cure. All readers,
who are suffering from a weakness that
blights their life, causing that meutat and
physical suffering peculiar to lout Man
hood, should write to the 8'1'ATK MKDICAX.
COMPANY, Omaha, Neb., and tkn will
send you absolutely FKKK. a valuable
paper on these diseases, and positive proofs
of their truly Mauicai. Treatment. Thous
ands of men, who have lost all hope of a
cure, are being restored by them to a per
fect condition.
Thl* Magical Treatment may be'taken
at home under their direction*, 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 8ample, or C. O. I), fake. They have
1280,000 capital, and guarantee to cure
every case they treat or refund every dollar;
or their charges may be deposited in a
bank to be paid to them when a cur* ia
effected. Write them today.
UNIVERSITY of NOTRE DAME.
Notre Dame, Indiana.
Claulei, Letter*, Neleuee, Law. Civil, Me*
ehanlcai and Electrical Engineering.
Thorough Preparatory ami Commercial
Coarse*. Ecele*ifiKtL*l ■tinlrnU at aj eclal rates.
Koomi free. Junior or Heiilnr Yrar, Collsglate
Con rue*. 8t. EdwHri('f) Hall, for boy* under IS.
The 10?th Term will open Keptemher 7th,
1897. Catalogue w*nt I rre on application to
Hev. A. Murrlsaey, C. 8. C., 1’resident.
$1? Tf| tlCCtn be made working form
1V <KW Parties preferred who ran giro their
n ,, trim/ whole time to the Imrineisi. Spare
Pfif* WFFK boar*, though, may be profitably «dp
ployed. Good opauing* for townand
city work a* well u country district*. _
J.LflUTOKII, lUk A Mala Bta., KUkmaa*,Ta.
Wt
PAY
CASH
ti..uj vitth to udii alt over L-. S. to sell
Stark Trees—cheapest,best. Outfit free
—takes no m-msy to tut the work. Alse
ws a 1 cltj a m a k cits-get their trees (red
Drtp us postal: name references.
Stsrk lim-rr. Un iiut, Ia. ,r faekwrl A
ROOFING:
The b«*t Rod Bop* Roofing for
lc. per aq. ft., cap* and nails In*
'•’odert Rub*t tiitea for Pla«t#r
gamplaa free, twvat maxilla aooncu ifc,c-d»Mi»
HDODCY^ DISCOVERY;
0 f quick relief and cure* worst
rase*. Bend for book of testimonial* mid lO days*
treatment Free. Da M.K.<UUKS*BBO!tB. AU**l*.tta.
CANCER S&MSOBI
OPIUM
IThompsos’sEys Watar.
MORPHINE and WHISKY HABITS.
HOKK I'AUK. Book KJIKK. Bs. J. «.
BOrkSAS, Iub.ll.BM,.,CHHAbO,ILL.
W. N. U. OMAHA. No. 32.-1807.
When writing to advertisers, kindly men
tion this paper.
STANDARD OF
THE WORLD. d»
$75.00
Closest Detailed Inspection.
Every single one of the many parts of a Columbia bicycle is
passed several times through the hands of skilled workmen
who examine it in the utmost detail. Such an elaborate sys
tem of inspection is expensive, but no expense is spared in
building Columbias. They are as near perfection in adjust-'
ment and finish as human ingenuity can make them. ; y •
1806 COLUMBIAS, $60.
HARTFORD BICYCLES, $50, $45, $40, $30,
E|Ml fo aurly nay attar hicyda axoft tta Maalto
POPE MFG. CO., Hartford, Conn.
Catalogaa fraa Iran any CahiMbla daalrr; by mall from na for one T rrnt atanir
WRITE FOR_— S
helpful Hints
A Catalogue of Dry Goods, Cloaks, Clothing, Millinery, Coots 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
PALL AND WINTER.
ETTENSON, WOOLFE & CO., Leavenworth, Kansas.
TEACHERS WAHTED!
Send for list of 4,000 vacancies—we have several times as many vacancies as members.
Most have more members. Several plans-; two plans give free registration: one plan GUARAN
TEES posltfons. 10 cents pays for book, corns ning plans and a 1500.14) love story of Collect
days. Blanks and circulars free. No charge to employers for recommending teachers
SOUTHERN TEACHERS’ BUREAU. i REV. DR 0. N. SUTTbN. A. M.. ) SUTTON TEACHERS' BUREAU.
P.W.for.Mttin* tdSt«.,Loi!l«rille,Ky.f PrfeKUnt ud Manager. 1 89-71 Dearborn St., Chtongo, 111
vcancU* Chttmgo qfic*, Soutkwn vea**cim LsvitWIi VJU*- Om§ /« rtyitten 4s both sPMS