The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, December 02, 1897, Image 7

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    Of the candidates for the British
army who fall to pass the tests four
out of five are rejected because of de
. fective vision. The “eyesight’* test
[consists of being able to count cor
y-"Tectly with both eyes, as well as each
'€ eye separately, a number of small
\ black dots exhibited on a card ten
feet from the candidate.
Try Grala-O.
Ask your grocer today to show yo*t
a package of GRAIN-0, 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.
Sold by all grocers. Tastes like cof
fee. Looks like coffee.
Mr. Younglove—“What do you do
when your baby gets sick at night?”
Mr. Ooldpop—“I generally lie still
and wait to see if my wife isn’t going
to get up and attend to it.”
Educate Tour Bowels With Cos carets.
.Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever.
10c. 25o. If C. C. C. fail, druggists refund money.
A good guide will not be rejected
because he is bow legged.
Star Tobacco is the leading brand of
the world, because it is the best.
People who are all tongue have no
ears.
? Great Distress
A Combination of Troubles Causes
Much Suffering.
BIRD ISLAND, MINN.—“I was trou
bled with my stomach. Nearly everything
I ate would sour and I would belch it up.
At times my stomach gave me great dis
trras. My back was lame on account of
kidney difficulty. I bought six bottles of
Hood s Sarsaparilla; when I had taken four
bottles I was cured.” Norman Higkok.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Is the best—intact the One True Blood Purifier.
Hood’s Pills are the favorite cathartic. 23c.
HALL’S
Vegetable Sicilian
IHAIR RENEWERJ
It doesn't cost much, yet it
adds wonderfully to the
looks. It is youth for a few
cents. No,gray
hair. No dandruff. I
SiflVE PROFITS. BUY DIRECT.
‘Our Leader”R.azor, postpaid,
*100. “True Vermonter” a
Blade Knife, 60c. Our
goodsare hand
forged and
warrant
ed*
CHAMPLAIN CUTLLRY CO. Burlington,Vt.
( CURES RHEUMATISM. ETC.
A Recent Discovery That Is Working
Wonders.
The most prevailing afflictions that
for a century have been engaging the
most scientific skill of the medical
world are' rheumatism, neuralgia, ca
tarrh, asthma, la grippe and their kin
dred ailments. The country is full of
sufferers from these complaints. Al
though the most learned experts of the
medical profession have labored for a
century to produce a curative, until
quite recently no positive results were
effected. To the Swanson Rheumatic
Cure Co., 167-69 Dearborn street, Chi
cago, belongs the credit tor having
produced the new remedy. It is being
extensively advertised under the
trade mark of “Five Drops." The
trade mark is self-explantory. Five
drops make a dose. The effect is mag
ical. In days gone by other alleged
cures have been marketed with the
promise to take effect in thirty days
or more. Five Drops begins to cure
at once. Immediate relief is felt. In
order to more effectively advertise its
merits the company will for the next
thirty days send out 100,000 of their
sample bottles of this positive
cure for 25 cents a bottle by mall pre
paid. Large bottle, 300 doses, |1 (for
thirty days 3 bottles $2.50.) Those suf
fering should take immediate advant
age of this generous offer and write
them to-day.
' In a recently patented horseshoe
the calks are removed and are held In
place by a sliding block set In a recess
In the shoe, with a screw to press the
block tightly against the calk and
clamp It in position.
When yon visit Omaba yon should call at
C. 8. Raymond Co.’s jewelry store, corner
Fifteenth and Douglas streets, and ex
amine their jewelry and art goods for
wedding, birthday and Christmas presents,
also steel engraved wedding stationery, in
vitations and visiting cards. It is the only
Brst class, up-to-date Jewelry, art and cut
glass store west of Cbioago and St. Louis,
f-ograving and printing 100 visiting cards
11.10 by mail.
Holdbacks for harnesses are now
made of a curved cross-bar, with rear
wardly projecting ends, which fit in
pockets on both sides of the thills,
thus doing away with a portion of the
harness.
Holiday Excursions.
On Decern ber 7 and 21 the Big Four Route
and Chesapeake and Ohio Ry. will sell ex
cursion tickets from points northwest, both
one way and round trip, at greatly reduced
rates to points in Virginia, North and South
Carolina and other southern states. Round
trip tickets will be good twenty-one days
returning. Write for particulars and
pamphlet descriptive of climate and Vir
ginia farm lands. U. L. Trutt, North
western Passenger Agent, 234 Clark St
Chicago.
Always give your wife her own way;
it will save her the trouble of taking
nosn Tobacco Spit ssd Smoke Tosr Life 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, tOo or SI. Cure guaran
teed. Booklet and sample free. Address
Sterling Remedy do, Chicago or New York
Hope and happiness are so clumsy
that when one dieB the other commitB
suicide.
AN OPEN LETTER
To MOTHERS.
WE ARE ASSERTING IN THE COURTS OUR RIGHT TO THE
EXCLUSIVE USE OR THE WORD “CASTORIA" AND
“PITCHER’S CASTORIA." AS OUR TRADE’mark.
I, DR. SAMUEL PITCHER, of Ryannis, Massachusetts,
was the originator of "PITCHER’S CASTORIA,” the same
that has borne and does now y/fT/i o» every
bear the facsimile signature of 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 Xlj? s/9/> , on the
and has the signature of^**ed6/x fGcdc&tt wrap
Ver one has authority from me to use my name except
The Centaur Company of which Chas. H. Fletcher it
President. .
March 8. 1897: 0.
n * Do Not Be Deceived.
Do not endanger the hfe 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.
"I1 COMWtHT. TT MU.MV aTMrT. ....
$100 To Any Man.
WILL PAY 9100 FOR ANY CASE
Of
VMknHi In Men They Treat and
Fall to Core.
An Omaha Company places for the first
time before the public a Magical Trbat
mekt 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
Phosphorus or other harmful drugs. It is
a Wonderful Treatment—magical in its
effects—positive in its cure. All readers,
who are suffering from a weakness that
blights their life, causing that mental and
physical suffering peculiar to Lost Man
hood,should write to the STATE MEDIC A I,
COMPANY, Omaha, Neb., and they will
•end you absolutely FREE, a valuable
paper on these diseases, and positive proofs
of their truly Magical Treatment. Thous
ands of men, who have lost all hope of a
cure, are being restored by them to a per
fect condition.
This Magical Treatment may be taken
at home under their directions, or they will
pay railroad fare and hotel bills to all who
prefer to go to 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
•260,000 capital, and guarantee to oure
•very case they treat or refund every dol
lar; or their charges may be deposited in
• bank to be paid to them when a care is
•Sooted. Write them today.
idHft
SLICKER
WILL KEEP YOU DRY.
Don’t be fooled with a mackintosh
or rubber coat. If you want a coat
that will keep you dry In the hard
est storm buy the Fish Brand
Slicker. If not for sale in your
town, write for catalogue to
A. J. TOWER. Boston, Mass.
nDnDQV NEW DISCOVERY; ikw
|\I | quick relief and cures worst
eases. Send for book of testimonials and lO days*
treatment Free. Dr. ii.il.(uluutbsous, ausbu, us.
(IQE flfl A UIUITU I 80S orders In 3 weeks.
iUU.UU A mUn I II I Be ns every where. Outfit
— ,"IU 1II * BOcts. Money refunded.
JAS. M. EARLE, PUBLISHER, BOSTON, MASS.
astes Good. Use]
Bold by druggtsts.
AN OLD MAID’S SONG.
HE boarders used
to took across the
boarding bouse ta
ble at the Old
Maid with a keen,
psychological sort
of interest.
"Wh^ should she
look so happy?”
the elder, who was
something of a
belle would d e -
mand. “She can’t have any admir
ers.”
"Why should she look so happyT”
the younger, who spoke of Art and
Missions with capitals in her voice,
would ask. “She can’t regard being
secretary to that lawyer as a noble
calling.”
And the wives of the boarding
house used also to puzzle over the Old
Maid’s Joyousnees, “for she has no
huBband,” they said, “and at her age
can hardly hope to get one.”
But I never marveled at the gentle
spinster’s radiant face after we had
heard the Singer, not because hear
ing his voice was enough to provide
his hearers with a fund of inner joy
for the remainder of their days, but
because of the song he sang.
Now, the Old Maid had lived so long
in the boarding-house on the square
that it had become second nature for
her to choose the less tarnished spoons
in the holder and to avoid instinctive
ly the top slices of bread on the bread
plate. She was familiar with all va
rieties of boarding-house servants,
and she knew that all alike despised
her as "the fourth floor front.” She
knew by heart the landlady's stories
of pressing present need and of past
affluence. She had nothing to learn
in the matter of substituted gas Jets,
and her feet were trained to skip the
torn spots in the stair carpet. Alto
gether there was nothing in the Old
Maid’s position in her boarding-house
to account for her serenity.
Down-town the Old Maid was a ste
nographer in a law offlee, where pret
tiness was at a discount as a hindrance
to unremitting toil. She did not real
ize that her chief attraction to her
employers was the lack of distracting
features and complexion. Long as she
had lived in the sordid but educating
boarding-house, she had not learned
everything that was to be learned
about motives, and she believed that
her father’s old friendship with the
lawyer had much to do with her po
sition.
Before the remote day when the Old
Maid first came to the law offlee and
the boarding-house she had lived in
the country. Even yet when the
spring rains came down and drenched
the grim pavements she had a Bwift,
fleeting sense of late snows melting
by the rim of the brooks and of timid
"IT’S MINE! IT’S MINE."
flowers pushing through the soft earth.
trsAnd whenever there was the fresh
odor of new-growing grass, and new
sprouting leaves in the city parks her
•mind turned toward peaceful, pastoral
ways, and her eyes were filled with
visions of billowy, blossoming trees,
of plowmen moving across upland
fields, of the waking up of life and
Industry. In short, the Old Maid was
a poet, although the crude little ex
pressions of her emotions never met
the keen eyes of critics or even the
kindly eyes of her friends.
Well, once upon a time the Singer
came to the boadlng-housre on the
square. He was young and his au
diences—they were largely feminine—
declared that nowhere else was there
a singer who carroled out songs and
sobbed out ballads so movingly.
Whether or not he was peerless is a
question, but at any rate he had made
a great success, and people wondered
that he should come to the dingy
abode of the boarders and the Old
Maid. Some said that it was because
he had lived there in the days before
he was known to fashion, and some
whispered knowingly that the lady to
whom the Singer sang lived over the
way in the stone house with the bal
conl'is at the window and the guard
ing lions at the door. Be that as it
may, it is a fact that when the Singer
came to the city for his series of con
certs and recitals he sanctified the
abode of the Old Maid with his pres
ence for a whole week. And the Old
Maid was agitated mysteriously by
his presence, though it is doubtful if
he even saw her shabby little figure.
One night she crept down the stair
way when the house was still and
slipped a paper beneath the Singer’s
door sill. The paper bore a set of
verses written in the fine hand of a
woman who was educated a quarter
of a century ago, and a little note that
"If you should sometimes find this
worthy to sing I would be the happiest
woman on earth.”
Now, the Singer felt a brutal indif
ference about all happiness save his
own, which had been sorely tried that
night by the lady of his songs. So he
merely muttered: “Confound imbecile
women!” Then he looked at the verses
and then he went gloomily to bed. But
through the night, as he reflected upon
his blighted hopes and the hardness of I
his rate, some of the Old Maid’s lines
sang themselves through his mind:
I’ll see thee in each flower that grows;
Thou art not lost while lives the rose,
Not lost while lives the rose,
the foolish refrain Insisted. •
In the morning the silly rhymes
would not be banished. He found him
self humming them to an air, and by
and by—so weak was he, owing to the
cruel lady—he sat down at the plant)
and played the air softly.
It was the same week that he gave
his great concert at the hall up-town.
With indifferent generosity he offered
the landlady tickets to be distributed
and so It happened that the. Old Maid
and I went together.
The Old Maid waB very pink and
very tremulous, and, not being in her
confidence, I could not understand her
state. After all there was nothing in
a successful singer of 33 to excite a
spinster stenographer of 50. ;
The Singer had sung grand opera
arias and the music from masses. He
had sung Scotch ballads and German
love songs. But he could not sing
enough to satisfy his audience. After
each properly numbered selection ho
was recalled again and again. Finally
he came out and said:
“I wish I could tell you the author
of the words I am going to sing. They
were sent to me anonymously In man
uscript, and I have no means of giving
credit to whom it is due.”
The Old Maid's figure quivered. She
breathed sobbingly and drew closer
to me, and I wondered, if she were go
f nor nenm*
Then the Singer sang the simple
verses. They may have been very bad
as verses, but as a song they were a
success. The audience listened in
tently, the women looking up, as wo
men look when lowered eyelids would
let the tearB brim over. And when the
last verse rang out, plaintively and
proudly:
And though thou hast banished me,
I touch thee in each nodding flower;
I see thee, dear one, every hour,
In sky, or Btar, or sea.
All beauty holds some hint of thee,
And so thou canst not banish me,
Thou canst not banish me,
the hall forgot to applaud for fully
three seconds, when It caught its
breath and surreptitiously wiped its
eyes. That is, all but the Old Maid.
She wept quite openly, turning her ra
diant, tear-stained face toward me.
"It’s mine! It’s mine!" she half sob
bed. “O, it’s mine and I am so happy!”
And then Bhe told me the whole
story. But neither prayers nor en
treaties could prevail upon her to let
me tell her secret. And the boarders
still wonder why it 1b that a colorless
little lady like the Old Maid sometimes
wears a look of pride.
FREAK OP NATURE IN FLORIDA
Btreteh of Land, 50,000 Acre* in Extent,
Covered with Sink-Holes,
Payne’s prairie, three miles south ol
Gainesville, Fla., covers an area of 50,
000 acres. A large proportion of the
prairie is now covered with water, but
there are thousands of acres around the
borders of the lake which has been
formed on which horses and other cat
tle graze. There is no way of estimat
ing the number of cattle, but there are
many thousands, and they are in fine
condition. The prairie, or savanna,
which it really Is, occasionally goes
dry, the water passing out through a
subterranean passage called the- sink.
Where the water goes has never been
determined. When the sink is open
the lake goes dry, and when the outlet
becomes gorged or choked a lake from
five to seven miles wide and about
eighteen miles long is formed. When
the waters of the lake suddenly leave
it thousands of alligators, snakes, fish
and turtles are left with nothing but
mud for their places of abode. The fish
and turtles perish, but the saurlans
and reptiles seek and find other quar
ters. For miles along the northern
border of the lake there is a succes
sion of sinks, averaging in depth all
the way from twenty-five to 100 feet.
Subterranean passages run in every di
rection, leaving the ground in the
shape of a honeycomb. The ground Is
liable to give way at any time, creat
ing a new sink. Scenery around the
lake, especially on the north side, is
unique and grand, and is an attractive
feature to strangers who visit Gaines
ville. The sink has long been popular
as a resort for citizens of Gainesville,
who go there to fish, boat ride and
in other ways enjoy themselves. It is
said that this vast area of land could
be drained at trifling expense, and
were it drained it would be the largest
aB well as the richest tract of produc
tive land in Florida. It is for the most
part a bed of muck. The land is owned
by various Individuals.
Too Little R expect tor four lx.
Kansas City Star: The repeated ap
peals which conservative writers and
speakers feel called upon to make to
the people to persuade them to main
tain respect for the courts Show, forth
a necessity which ought not to exist
in this country. They simply prove
that the courts are not worthy of the
honor and confidence which the public
would like to yield them.
Venice and the Hone,
' It is said that some of the Vene
tians—those who have never been to
the mainland—have never seen a horse
In all their lives. A showman once
brought one to a fair and called it a
monster, and the factory hands paid a
shilling each to see the marvel.
Hades.—If there is a heaven there Is
naturally a hell. One could not exlBt
without the other, but the Bible does
not teach of a brimstone hell, but
merely by implication.—Rev. John W.
Westlock, Christian Church, Omaha,
Neb.
ftewltrhliiff Not.« Paper. |
Even the most negligent of corre
spondents would find inspiration in
some of the new boxes of note paper.
The boxes are in the form of little
desks, although made of card board,
and are divided into four or five com
partments. The cover is fastened to
the box and cannot very easily be lost
or mislaid. There aro five different
sizes of pajftr and envelopes. The larg
est letter sheets are square, the enve
lops long and narrow. The smallest
note sheets are scarcely larger than!
correspondence cards. In one corner of
the box is a space for sticks of sealing i
wax and a taper. Truly these conven
ient, orderly and complete escretolres:
must have been devised for the bad
correspondent .who snatches at any ex
cuse—lack of time, place, paper or
what not—for not meeting her eplsto
lar g obligations.
-—
J. IS. Galbraith, who has been ap
pointed traffic manager of the Cleve
land Terminal and Valley Railroad
Company, with headquarters at Cleve
land, will also be the general agent
of the B. and O. at that point. These
two positions were formerly held by U
Rush Brockenbrough, who Is now gen
eral freight agent of the B. and O. lines
west of the Ohio river, with headquar
ters at Pittsburg.
Fifty years ago Mr. and Mrs. Jar^
rett Haynes, who were the pioneers
of Paducah, Ky„ and each of whom
is more than ninety year of afe, plant
ed a walnut In the yard, from which
sprung a tree. It grew to be a large
tree, and a year or two ago was cut
down and sawed into lumber. The
lumber is now at the Haynes home,
and is being sawed to make the cof
fins of the eccentric couple when they
die.
Dnlum Cannot Be Corea
by local applications as they cannot
reach the diseased portion ot the car.
There Is only one way. to cure deafness,
and that Is by constitutional remedies.
Deufness Is caused by an Inhumed condi
tion of the mucous lining of the lflus
tachlan Tube. When this tube Is In
flamed you have a rumbling sound or Im
perfect hearing, and when It Is entlrily
oloscd, Deafness Is the result, and un
less the Inflammation can be taken out
and this tube restored to Its normal con
dition. hearing will be destroyed forever;
nine cases out of ten are caused by ca
tarrh, which la nothing but an Inflamed
condition of the mucous surfaces.
We will give One Hundred Dollars for
any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh)
that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh
Cure. Send for circulars, free.
F. J. CHENEY ft CO.. Toledo O.
Sold by Druggists, 76c.
Hall's Family Pills are the best.
In the book, "Love Affairs ot Some
Famous Men,” the story Is recalled of
Dr. Johnson and the widow whom he
made his wife. He believed in the
exchange of prematrlmonlal conlld
ence In regard to disagreeable mat
ters, so he told her plainly that he
was of a humble extraction, that he
had no money, and that one of his
uncles had been hanged. The sensible
woman responded cleverly that she
had no more money than he, and that,
though none of her relatives had been
hanged, she had several who ought to
be!
HUery by the Wholeaale*
I* what chronic inactivity of the liver gives
rise to. Bile gets into the blood And imparts
a yellow tint, the tongue fouls and so does
the breath, sick head-aches, pain beneath
the right ribs and shoulder blade are felt, the
bowels become constipated and the stomach
disordered. The proven remedy for this cat
alogue of evils is Hostettor’s h tom itch Bitters,
a medicine long and professionally recom
mended, and sovereign also for chills aucl
fever, nervousness and rheumatism.
"Is your son making any headway
In college?"
"Any headway? I should say he was.
Tou ought to see him bucking the
center.”
Beauty U Blood Deep,
Clean blood means a clean skin. No
beauty without! t. Cascarets, Candy Cathar
tic cleans your b'ood and keeps it clean, by
stirring up the lazy liver and driving all im
purities from the body. Begin to-day to
banish pimples, boils, blotches,blackheads,
and that sickly bilious co ■ plexion by taking
Cascarets,—beauty for ten cents. All drug
gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25o, 60c.
The worlcl that the bird flies over is
, not the same that the snail crawls on.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrnp
Porehlldren teething.softens the Kume,reaucea Inflam,
motion,allays paln.cures wind colls. U ssnts a bsttls.
No good comes of blaming others
for our misfortunes.
FITS PermanentlyCnred. No fits or nervousness after
Brat day'a ana of Dr. Klioe'a Great Nerve Restorer
Bead for FREE SS.OO trial bottla and treatise
Da. R. H. KuSE.Ltd .S31 Arch St.. Philadelphia, Pa
A grain of prudence is worth a
pound of craft.
TO CURB A COLD IN ONE DAT.
Take Lmtlig Bromo Quinine Tablet*. All
Druggists refund the money If it falls to ours. Me
It costs more to revenge wrongs than
to suffer them.
1 never used so quick a cure as Piso's Cure
for Consumption.—J. B. Palmer, box 1171.
Seattle, Wash., Nov. 85, 1695.
Learning makes a man fit company
for himself.
No-To-Bae for Fifty Gents.
Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak
men strong, blood pure. 50c. tl. All druggists.
Wise men make more opportunities
than they find.
w-vv
‘ , l ,
; r.
The Burlington Route—California
The new model Remington Type*
writer enjoya a larger sale than any
other typewriter ever had, because It
la the. beat. Send for catalogue. 1710
Parnam street. Omaha, Neb.
* “ r- i " i
11
ms
eurelonih
Cheap, ynlrk. Comfortable,
heave Omaha 4:35 p. m.. Lincoln 8:10 p. in.
and Hustings 8:f.O p. m. every Thursday la
clean, modern. not crowded tourist steepen.
No transfers; cars run Halit through to Baa
Francisco and Los Angeles over the Scenic
Route—through Denver and Salt Lake City.1
Oars are carpeted; upholstered In rattant
have spring scats nnd backs and are pro
vided with curtains, bedding, towels, soap,
•tc. Uniformed porters and experienced ex
cursion conductors accompany each excur
sion, relieving passengers of all bother about
baggage, pointing out objects of Inurvst and
In many other ways helping to make the
overland trip a delightful experience. Second
class t ickets are honored. Berths $*•
For folder giving full Information, call at
nearest Burlington Route ticket office, or
write to J. Francis, General Passenger Agenk
Omaha, Neb.
,, t
' V'f
m
Urn
M
MM
mi
At Luchow, In (Germany, 120 fathers
have been fined 1 mark apiece for al
lowing their children tinder 10 years of
age to dance at the .harvest festival of
a village near by. The village pastor
objected to the dancing, and reported
the case to the police, it was discov
eerd, however, that his children had
danced, too, and he was fined with tha
rest.
■ .■
, & „
: i 1C'1
Feminine Logie,
Mrs. Wlckwlre—"Did you read about
that man who found $50,000 while dig
ging worms to go fishing with?”
Mr. Wlckwlre—“Yes, dear.”
“Well, I was Just thinking what
maybe you have missed by always
fishing with files,”
j
. r-;
.. •
The Champlain Cutlery Co. of Burling
ton, Vt., makers of the “True Ver
monter” Razors and Knives whose ad
vertisement appears in this paper, are
a reliable concern and will gladly send
their catalogue free on application.
‘
lli?
' mm
Never make a mistake, is the biggest
mistake any man can make.
Coe's Coach Baiun.
If the oldest and beat. It will break up ft cold qftlckf
than ftnjrtUlnsr ®lf«. It ta always reliable. Try it.
Envy shoots at others and wounds
herself.
To Care Constipation forme
Take Cascaret. Candy Cathartic. 10a or So.
If C. C. C. tall to cure. aruKsiats refund^pumey.
Not to hear eonselenee is the way to
silence it. . ' • ■
Smoke Sledge Cigarettes, 90 for S eta
Modesty is a guard to virtue.
There is a *
Class of People
Who are injured by the use
of coffee. Recently there
has been placed in all tbe
grocery stores a new pre
paration called GRAIN-O,
made of pure grains, that
takes the place of coffee.
The most delicate stomaeh
receives it without distress,
and but few can tell it from
coffee. It does not cost over
it as much. Children may
drink it with great benefit.
15 cents and 35 cents per
package. Try it Ask for
GRAIN-a
Try Grain-O!
M
m
CURE YOURSELF!
Use Bis ® (or uuoatnrnl
dinchargea, inflammations,
irritations or ulcerations
of tu ucoun membranes.
runleM, and not utril*
LtheEvams OhemioriOo. *ent or poisonous.
or sent in plain wrapper,
CircaUr mu od nnaU
SOUTHERN
Homeseekers’Guide
Every htmeucker should address either J. F.
MERRY, A. a. P. A., Manchester, Iowa: W. A.
KEI.LOND, A. O. P. A., Louisville, Kj., or LO.
HATCH, D, P. A., Cincinnati O., for a free eon of
the ILLINOIS CENTRAL RAILROAD'S
SOUTHERN HOMESEEKEBS* GUIDE.
SCALES
WEEKS
Self-adding, pat combi nation beam.
Ho 1 ooee weights. V. 8. standard.
Beat and cheapest. Send for prieea
SCALE WORKS, BUFFALO, N. Y.
FRFIfiUT Pi|||on order* of SOSO aq. ft of
I a Half Roofing or Wall and Ceiling
Manilla. Write for samples and price*. The WmT
Manilla Roofing Company, Uamden. H. J.
OPIUM
MORPHINE Mini WHISKY HABITS.
HOMK CURE. Book FREE. DK. J. C.
aonran, iuwi.ua,., chick, o, tu.
W. N. U. OMAHA. NO. 49.-1897.
When writing to advertisers, kindly mention
this paper.
■QMXi
■P
'■ '
Wl
y.
TtwmlMryof It Is awful. USE ST. JACOBS OIL
SCIATICA
TO
OURE
VouMI feel it la worth Its weight in gold.i
CANDY
r V ^ CATHARTIC J
CURE CONSTIPATION
the.
ALL
DRUGGISTS
V :’
1
if
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Mf.y
' 0$
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