Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 4, 1904)
WINNIPEG EXHIBITION. A PRIZE LIST OF ONE HUNDRED THOUSAND DOLLARS. Everything Promises to Be Most Suc cessful—A Number of Distinguished Statesmen Will Be Among the Visi tors. Winnipeg, July 7.—The Dominiou ot Canada exhibition, to be held in Win nipeg front July 25 to Aug. 0, this year, promises to be one of tile best ever held in the Dominion. One hundred thousand dollars will be expended in prizes and attractions. This of itself will give an idea of the magnitude of the undertaking. Winnipeg believes in doing every thing on a big scale. There is nothing half-hearted about it Since it held J* its first exhibition in 1S01 it has learn {JT ed the lesson of •‘push.” Every year • bus added to the interest, the prize money and an important factor, the gate. The prize list comprises about 120 pages, a story of the wonderful de velopment of the province tersely told. The exhibits will include everything, grown, bred, painted or manufactured in Canada, from the flue art to the motherly sow. The speed program will undoubtedly be a great attraction. It will include boys’ and men’s races, horse races, trottiDg, speeding, etc., etc. The prizes in this class alone will amount to $19,760, the highest being $2,500 for a “free-for-all,” others rang ing from $1,200 down to $150. Among the entries so far received are the speediest horses on the continent. The Canadian Manufacturers’ Asso ciation have secured control of two buildings, and the Secretary, Mr. Young, says there will he such a dis play of Canadian manufactures as has never been shown before in the Do minion. Would Have Kept It Otherwise. He—Yes, he must be very absent minded. She—How do you know? He—I lent hint an umbrella this morning and lie returned it to me in nil hour. Mrs. Winston 's soothing srnre tar ChtMran teething: Bofttms the gums, reduces indauimauon til aya pain, cures wind colic. 25 cent: a bottle A Fatal Season. “Yes, you may go today. But 1 want you boys to understand that your grandmothers will have to quit dying until after the baseball season closes. Have used Piso’s Cure for Consump tion nearly two years, and find nothing to compare with it.—Mrs. Morgan, Berke ley, Cal., Sept. 2, 1901. Hogs at Large. New York Herald: Most of the annoy ances of our street cars—apart from the Inevitable crowding—are caused by the in considerateness and gross discourtesy ot passengers. A stranger who would judge people by the experience upon transit lines would set us down for a community of boors. As anyone who has a nickel may ride, one must expect to occasionally encounter persons of rough manners and from whom no amenity is expected. But these are few. The most numerous and chief offenders are well dressed men—and women, too—who look as if they should know' how to behave in civilized society and wTho would resent the suggestion that fjt their conduct is an offense to decent peo Y Pie. The spitter, thank heaven, has been nearly suppressed. Now let us get after the well '‘dressed hobo who rests his dirty boots upon a seat, which Is presently to be occupied by some daintily attired wom an in a summer gown, or crosses his legs, leaving his feet projecting across the nar row floor for all who pass to step over or stumble over. Abolish the fellow who takes the crowded street car for a mani cure parlor and relieves the tedium of travel by paring his nails. Bet the fat man who spreads out his legs Into the aisie like a big V be reminded that “there are others" in the oar. Give a gentle tap to the “gentleman" wiio plants himself sideways on a crowded seat, and, looking out of the window or reading his paper, forgets that he is occupying space for tw’o while others stand, and that his back is squarely presented to the lady sitting next to him. And while we are about it let us take In hand the men who, when they enter a | cloned car, stand just inside the door and compel later comers, including women, to light their way through the dense group to reach unoccupied space in the middle of the car. These'be the ; :ne inconsiderate fellows who, getting into the narrow seat of an open car, do not move to the oppo site end, but plant themselves barely in side the bar and force other passengers to drag past as best they may to reach the Inner seats. Women-well dressed, well to do looking women -are among the most inconsiderate and discourteous of our street car travelers. For instance, the conductor is inside when one of these women boards a car; a gentleman stand ing on the platform opens the dor to per mit her to enter; not once in ten times is jhe attention acknowledged by a nod, and j when a passenger relinquishes a seat to , one of th*‘se women she flounces Into it j without the slightest recognition of the j courtesy. One of these women will keep | a child—for which she has paid no fare— occupying a seat and standing with soiled shoes upon it to look out of the window, while an aged and feeble woman directly in front of her is left to stand and totter. If the selfish and the ill behaved men and women above noted could be taught by reflection or compulsion to have a little kindly consideration for the rigrfts and feelings of others, more than half the discomforts and annoyances of travel upon our street cars would disappear. We may have forbearance with a con ductor who has been battered and banged and wrought up by forcing his way through crowded Interiors all day or climbing along a footboard, struggling with drunken men and insulted by irrita ble passengers of both sexes, but there is no excuse for the deliberate and brutal lack of courtesy among such passengers as are above described. -- His Business. She—Does your brother keep a dairy? He—He kept 20 of them last year. I She—Must have kept him busy. He—Not necessarily so. He’s in the ; stationery business. Paris offers prizes for window gar dening. GREATEST MONEY MAKER ON EARTH our new 25c noyelty—selling like wildfire. Every housekeeper must have one—big profits for agents. Sample 25c. .Stamp for price list. JERSEY CITY EOVELTY C<J.. *b Montgomery St., Jersey City,N.J. I firfjpcf Sen<i for literature of our Texol Remedies. LauivdJ Cures ail forms of female diseases and weak ness. Texol Medicine Co* Lock Box 822, Peoria. 1U. How tho Korean* Dream. Harper's "Weekly: It Is only the tower classes of Koreans whose gar ments are dirty. The better class Kor ean wears an attire the Immaculate cleanliness of which Is probably un excelled anywhere on earth. It Is cer tainly the quaintest In the orient, and as Us owner Invariably swings along with a supercilious swagger, as If he and he alone were the owner of the street and all he surveyed besides, the Incongiuity of his manly gait con trasted with his exceeding effeminate dress Is a thing which must be seen to be thoroughly appreciated. He Is I clothed In white from head to foot, the white being sometimes varied by cream-colored silk, every garment be ing of spotless cleanliness. He wears the baggiest of baggy breeches, tight ened just above the ankles, and his padded white socks are partially In closed in white and black cloth sandals. He wears—In summer—a silk or grass cloth coat of gauzy texture, which is tightened under the armpits and spreads loosely from there downward, and, being stiffly laundered, sticks out In a ridiculous manner all round his legs like the starched frock of a little child. On his head he wears a hat aot unlike that formerly worn by Welsh flsherwomen, only the crown Is not so high. The hat Is black and glossy, and a close Inspection of that of a yang-ban (aristocratic) showed that It Was made of line woven silk and bamboo In an open mesh that resem bled crinoline, while those worn by the less prosperous are made of horsehair. The truncated cone docs not lit the head, but perches Jauntily on top of it. At its base is a round brim about four inches wide, and the whole is kept in place by a black cord or band tied un der the chin. The office of this pecu liar capillary attire is not alone to pro tect the head from the weather, but to form a receptacle for an equally cur iously shaped skull cap, which in turn contains the topknot. This hat is worn on all occasions, both on the street and in the house, and its gauzy construc tion enables the topknot to be plainly seen within its airy walls. Arriving at a Verdict. Kushequa, Pa.. Aug. 1.—(Special.)— In this section of Pennsylvania there Is a growing belief that for such Kidney Diseases as Rheumatism and Lame Hack there Is only one sure cure and that is Dodd's Kidney Pills. This be lief grows from such cases as that of Mrs. M. L. Davison of this place. She tolls the story hprself ns follows: ”1 have suffered from Rheumatism for thirty years and find that Dodd’s Kidney Pills have done me more good than any medicine 1 have ever taken. I ,mis also bothered with Lame Back and I can only say that my back hasn’t bothered me since I took Dodd’s Kid ney Pills.” Considering that Mrs. Davison only took two boxes of Dodd’s Kidney Pills, the result would he considered wonder ful if it were not that others are re porting siniilat results daily. Kushe qua is fust arriving at a verdict thnt “Dodd's Kidney Pills are the one sure cure for Rliemiuitl” Babel of Races, Tongues and Religions, Booklovors Magazine: The Russian pop ulation is perhaps the most mixed of all nations, and is made up in large measure of conquered people who still remembered their overthrow with bitterness. Probably not far from one-third of the whole—from forty to fifty millions—aro true Muscov ites. Around the central Muscovites are grouped Lapps, Finns, Germans, Lithuan ians, Poles, Little Russians, Ruthenians, Roumanians, Greeks, Georgians and Tar tars, with Jews and Gypsies scattered through the south and west. These are all In European Russia, and this Is noth ing to the medley In Asiatic Russia, where there is an almost endless variety of races. Each of the races mentioned speaks a different tongue and there are at least six different religions among them, without counting sectaries, such as the .Doukhobors. Bitter political hatred of Russia burns fiercely among the Finns, Poles and Ar menians, while symptoms of active revolt are reported among Georgians and Turco mans along the Asiatic frontier. Chief of Police Saved. Newberry, 8. C.—W. H. Harris. Chief of Police, of Newberry, says: "I suffered for a number of years with kidney complaint. There was a dull aching across the small of my back that was worse at night and made me feel miserable all the time. The kid uey secretions were dark and full of sediment, and lack of control compell ed me to rise a number of times during the night. Between this annoyance and the backache it was impossible for me to get much sleep and my health was being undermined. 1 tried a num ber of remedies, but nothing helped me until I got Doan's Kidney Pills. The use of this remedy according to direc tions promptly brought about a change for the better. After using two boxes the backache all left mo, the kidney secretions cleared up and the action of the kidneys became normal.” A FREE TRIAL of tills great kid ney medicine which cured Chief Harris will be mailed to any part of the Unit ed States. Address Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo. N. Y. Sold by all dealers; price fifty ceuts per box. Mustaches and Crime. Cornhill Magazine: Of all the greav criminals of our day, I can recall none who dared to practice with a naked lac-. Drs. Lainson and Neill Cream judiciously concealed as much of their physiognomy us might be. Fowler, who murdered by night at Muswell Hill, and Jabez Balfour were bearded men. Wainwright wore the “mus tachios" of his period. James Can hum Read and Deeming, and Bennett of the "boot lace” murder, were pos sessed of mouths that prudence com pelled them to conceal. The blue burglarious jowl is a fan tasy of the novelist. No burglar goes about with a face that in itself amounts to a previous conviction. When he is in j; il matters are differ ent. for our prison authorities wisely decree that the convict’s face shall be shaven and his head be shorn. They at least insist: oil seeing the man as he is. They’d All Suffer. Mr. Wise—My brother particularly requested that you should sing at his funeral. Miss Screeclier—Why did he want me to sing? Mr. Wise—So everybody would feel sorry he was dead, I guess. Ask Your Dealer for Allen's Foot Eai», A powder to shake Into your shoes. It rests the feet. Cures Corns, Bunions, Swollen, Sore, Hot, Cailoue, Aching, Sweating Feet and Ingrowing Nail*. Allen's Foot-Ease makes new or tight shoes easv. Sold by all druggists and shoe stores, 25e. Bninpls mailed FREE. Address Allen 8. Olmsted. Le Roy. N. Y. Carpenters at Havana, Cuba, am ; vicinity receive $2.50 to $3.50 a day. They are paid in Spanish gold and the day's work consists of ten hour*. I j ONE-LEGGED MAN WHO MADE A GREAT RUN But He Had a Sweetheart and Sixteen Other Pretty Girls to Cheer Him. ■ RUBE OGLESBY’S VICTORS Former Brakeman Wins by Just One Vote in the Missouri Convention— Great Excitement When the Last County Voted. Jefferson City, Mo., special: Sixteen , happiest girls in the world left Jelfer j son City for their home in Warre'hs i burg after the democratic state con | vention. They came to aid in nominat j ing their townsman. ‘ Rube” Oglesby, | for railway commissioner of Missouri. I And the name of the former railway 1 brakeman who lost a leg in attending to his duty is going on the ticket. It was a most interesting race, for it had all the elements of human interest. On the one side, lighting for their townsman were men and women from Johnson county. They were there be cause of human affection. On the oth er side were practical railway Influences linked to the stute machine, fighting Oglesby because they fear him as a member of the board. In the thickest of the fight was Miss Elizabeth Houts, to whom Oglesby Is engaged. The Fight of the Day. When the nomination of railroad commissioner was reached there was a feeling that the fight of the day was fit hand. At the east end of the hall, perched on chairs, dressed in white, were the sixteen girls from Warrens burg who had been working for Rube. The ballot began. From the first it was seen that Oglesby's friends, dele gates and spectators were in the ma jority, the cheers for him being loudest and most genuine. Mixed with the men's voices was the shrill, soprano of the girls. The first ballot gave Winter i 261, Oglesby 192, Bronaugh 218 and | Hurt 39. i Then began the reul work. The floor of the convention was swarming with delegates. Among them, first on one side of the room and then on the oth er, was seen the smiling, happy fuce of Miss Houts. Other feathered hats and j a glimpse here and there of white showed that the other sixteen girls j were at work. The Second Ballot, The delegates were preparing the second ballot. The chairman pounded for m-der. Agnin the monotonous drawl of the secretary’s voice was heard call ing the re 11 of the counties. On this ■ ballot as the roll call proceeded the excitement increased. The girls had gone back to their chair perches, but Miss Houts was very busy. She even went among the St. Louis ’’Indians" who were almost to a man voting against her candidate. The second ballot showed this result: Winters, 293: Oglesby, 224; Bronaugh, 180; Hurt, 13. The railroad attorneys were smiling with confidence. The machine repre sentatives laughed. They felt that suc cess was assured. It looked blue for Oglesby. Among the girls here and there a chin trembled. Tears were kept back by an effort. But there was one wAose face did not show the slight est s%n of worry. It was the ever smiling Mis9 Houts. There was no re sisting her cheerful presence. Many a delegate said “Yes” who had made up his mind to vote for another candi date. Then the unexpected happened. Mr. Bronaugh mounted the platform and I withdrew. “And," he said, "1 ask all I my friends to vote for ‘Rube’ Oglesby.” I The scene that followed was almost a j frenzy. Delegates surged ubout the i front part of the hall. Suddenly "Rube” Oglesby appeared on one of the press tables. His friends had placed him 1 there. The sight of the candidate caused a fresh outburst of cheers. The girls were cheering, too. Down the cheeks of two of them were rolling un noticed tears. Miss Houts’ face was as white as snow. Nevertheless, she was laughing. The third roll call began. This was to be the finish. There were only two in the race. Winters or Oglesby must be nominated. Oglesby took the lead. The railroad representatives began pleading for Winters. Miss Houts was active. She kept among the farmers. The early counties on the roll call had placed Oglesby about fifty votes ahead Jackson Gave Wint>rs Forty. Jackson county was reached. As is often the case, its leaders had traded its vote. The greater part of the dele gates had talked loudly against cor porate influences. These leaders have foamed at the mouth against the state house ring, and yet they saw to it thal forty votes went to Winters and only seven to Oglesby. Once more the girls’ chins trembled. Miss Houts appeared stunned as the Winters cheers now drowned the Ogles by voices. It was only for a second or two, however. Hurriedly she passed from delegation to delegation. Ogles by’s friends saw her confident manner and pulled themselves together. The girls again got busy. Then came Jas per county with its solid nineteen votes. As was expected they went to Winters. Again the Winters cheers broke forth. This was expected and had no effect. Jackson county was not expected. County by county was called and the farmers rallied to Oglesby. Probably fifty men were keeping tab. When St. Louis was reached Oglesby was nearly 100 ahead. Those wards went solidly against Oglesby except the few where there were Folk delegates, and these gave votes to the Warrensburg man. After St. Louis Winters was five votes ahead. Then came Saline county. Saline county had scattered its votes before, but this time It gave a solid ten to Oglesby. Counties with small votes Increased Oglesby to 348. The number required to nominate was 366. Saved by Vernon County. The convention was noisy. Everybody was noisy and excited. The corporation men and the friends of the crippled brakeman swarmed around the dele gates who had y£t to vote. "V-e-r-n-o-n c-o-u-n-t-y," drawled the clerk. It had nine votes. The conven tion was still in an instant. Nearly everybody realized that with these nine votes Oglesby’s nomination was as sured. There was a short hesitancy on the part of Vernon’s chairman. It was scarcely twenty seconds. It seemed minutes. Then came a voice out of the densely crowded room. It said: “Vernon county casts her nine votes for ‘Rube’ Oglesby." Oh, oh, for a word to express the noise, confusion or enthusiasm. Ogles by had 357 votes, one more than a ma jority. It seemed that every delegate was standing on his chair. The small flags that were draped over the chair man's desk were torn down and waved frantically. The standards, with signs on them Indicating the congressional district*, were torn from their fasten ln(a and held aa high aa arm* could hold them and waved to and fro. Oft to the east end a shrill, acream-llke noiee could be heard above all the tumult. It came from the Warrena burg girls. Their handkerchiefs were waving frantically. Some of them Jumped up and down. Now the tears were flowing. They were hysterical tears, or. If you please, tears of Joy. A railroad representative whose blood never runs any faster thun norma) kept his head among the machine workers. The Twenty-eighth ward ot St. Louis had flong since voted for "Rube." Morton Jourdan hurried to the men of that delegation. .He plead ed that the ward's vote had changed. Those who were watching waited anx iously. The Folk men shook their heads. Oglesby Had Won! Bang, bang, bang sounded the gavel in the hands of Chairman Graves. He showed no signs of anger, however, for | it was he who had placed “Rube" 111 nomination. A partial quiet was final ly restored and the roll call was fin ished. Oglesby had 368 votes. Winter 342. Oglesby had won! Once more the convention became a frenzy. Excited men crowded about Oglesby, who was still near the press table. They seized his hands and arms and shook violently. Up he went on their shoulders. The foot of his artifi cial leg rested on a man's head. Nei ther "Rube" nor the man noticed that. ' About Miss Houts Just as many crowd ed. "Put her up too,” some one shout ed. Protesttngly she was sent on high, while even the Winters men cheered. One of the sixteen girls sobbed. "Why are you crying.” she was asked. "Oh, I'm so happy," she said. CHILE’S MINERAL WEALTH. Great Resouroe* of Thla 8outh Ameri can Country. Engineering Magazine: The famous coul mines of Lota and Coronel have an annual yield of 1,000,000 tons und employ some 0,000 laborers. Tills not only supplies Chile's needs, but also coals nearly all the Euro pean Bteamers touching the borders. The coal Is what Is termed "soft,” but It Is of good quality. Tho country Imports some hard coal. The most Important mineral Industry Is, of course, tho nltruto of soda. Chile at present has over 100 nitrate workn. Tho erudo material (called caliche) ts found under a conglomerate, In beds vary ing from a few Inches to 12 feet in thick ness. The process of extraction Is one of leaching and refining by crystallization. About 1,400.000 metric tons of 2,204 pounds each are annually produced, estimated to be worth 154,000,000 In Europe. About four fifths of all the nitrate expovted goes to England and the continent, Great Britain alone taking one-third and Germany a lit tle less. A large amount of Brlt'sh capi tal is Invested In the nitrate Helds, sixteen of the larger companies alone rerpesentlng a capitalization of more than 540,000,000. Tho Chilean government exacts a duty of 511.52 a ton on all nitrate exported. In metal mining, copper comes first both as to present output and further oppor tunity. The country needs modern metal lurgical methods of handling low grade ores. The present production Is about 30. 000 tons of copper annually. Manganese Is also an Important industry. Silver, once very highly profitable, lias declined; 74, 000 kilogrammes of silver were exported In 1900. Promising gold deposits exist, espe cially in southern Chile: 530,000,000 in gold, gold ores and matte have been exported In the past ten years. Flogged England’s Prbnate. Dondon Telegraph: An amusing reminiscence of a (logging he once gave the archbishop of Canterbury was re called by the Rev. Canon Bury, rector of Harleston, at Northampton yester day. Commending a recent speech of the primate's on missionary work, he Incidentally observed that he was at school with the archbishop. Randall Davidson was one of the pupils of hlB (Canon Bury’s) father, and he could not recall that the future archbishop was remarkable for anything save his Inordinate Impudence. Though him self conspicuous for his exceptional forbearance, on one occasion young Davidson provoked him beyond all patience, and he therefore turned on him and gave him a severe thrashing. The future archbishop did not take It “lying down.” On the contrary, he at once complained, and so got him into trouble, and, not content with that, he complained to his own parents, and got Canon Bury's father Into trouble. Thus It was that their mutual reminiscences were not altogether pleasing. But Can on Bury firmly believed—If he were an archbishop he would say he was pro foundly convinced—that the thrashing did the archbishop a power of good. XL was the foundation of the character he afterward displayed of tact and caution and reverence for his superi ors which had led in a great meusure to his elevation to the primacy. I "A lady gave me a* good riddle to day.” "What was it?” "She asked me why I didn't go to work ?” 1 "They put a womu..'s head on the silver dollar." “And now she's not satisfied unless she has her hands on It." ✓ ' \\ \ \0 i1 II 8 Women who work, whether in the house,| store, office or factory, very rarely have the ability to stand the strain. The case of Miss' Frankie Orser, of Boston, Mass., is interesting to all women, and adds further proof that woman’s great friend in need is Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound* “Dear Mrs. Pinkham:—I Buffered misery for several years. My back •ched and l had hearing down pains, and frequent headaches. I would often wake from a reatful alcep in such pain and misery that it would be hours before 1 could close my eyes again. I dreaded the long nights aBd weary days. I r >:dd do no work. 1 consulted different physicians hoping to get relief, but, tinding that their medicines did not cure me, I tried Lydia E. Pinkham’* Vegetable Compound, as it was highly recomendcd to me. I am glad that 1 did so, for 1 soon found that it was the medicine for my case. Very soon 1 was rid of every ache and pain and restored to perfect health. I feel splendid; have a fine appetite, and have gained in weight a lot.” — Miss Fkahxu Orsxb. 14 Warreuton St., Boston, Mass. ■Surely you cannot wish to remain weak, siek and discouraged, micl exhausted with eaeh day’s work. Some derangement of the feminine organs is reponsiblo for this exhaustion, following any kind of work or effort. Lydia E. Pinkliam’s Vegetable Compound, will help you just as it has thousands of other women. The case of Hrs. Lennox, which follows, proves this. “ Dear Mrs. Pinkham: — Last winter I broke down suddenly and bad to seek the advice of a doctor. 1 felt sore all over, with a pounding in my head, and a dlzzireaa which. I had never experienced before. I had a miserable appetite, nothing tasted good, and gradually my health broke down completely. The doctor said 1 had female weakness, but, although I took his medicine faithfully, I found no relief. “ After two montha I decided to try what a change would do for me, and aa Lydia E. Pink ham’s Vegetable Compound was strongly recommended to me 1 decided to try it. Within three days I felt better, my appetite returned, and I could sleep. Its another week I was able to sit up part or the day, and In ten days mors 1 was well ’ ” My strength had returned, I gained fourteen* 'v - ' pounds, and felt better and stronger than I had for years. I gratefully acknowledge its merits. Very sincerely yours, Mrs. Bkht E. Lennox, 130 East 4th St., Dixon, IlL” Ap AAA FORFEIT If wo cannot forthwith produce the original latter, and signatures ot VAIIIIIi abov. testimonials, which will pr.se their abaolnte genuineness. uklUUU Lidia K. Pinkham Had. Co., Lynn, Haas. MR Now Published Weekly Have you seen The Farmer and Breeder, the leadlar a* rl cultural aad pare*fared a tech paper, recently? It haa been changed from a semi-monthly to a weekly paper and la a better paper than erer before- No up-to-date farmer er atock raiser caa afford t* be without It. Send for a free sample The Farmer and Breeder ; -304-306 Plato* Street. Slows City, Iswa Free to Twenty-Five Ladies. The Defiance Starch Co. will give 25 ladles a round trip ticket to the St. Louis Exposition, to five ladles In each of the following states: Illi nois, Iovra, Nebraska, Kansas and Missouri who will Bend In the largest number of trade marks cut from a ten cent, 16-ounce package of I.'eflance cold water laundry starch. This means from your own home, any where In the above named states. These nude marks must be mailed to | and received by the Dellunce Starch Co.. Omaha, Nebr., before September 1st, 1SU4. October and November will be the best months to visit the Exposition. Itemeraber that Defiance is the only starch put up in 16 oz. ta full pound! to the package. You get one-third more starch for the same money than of any other kind, and Deliance never sticks to the Iron. The tickets to the Exposition will be sent by registered mail September 5th. Starch for sale by all dealers. Both at Bonn and at Breslau new colleges for girls ha\ e been opened, offering a six-year course after grad uation fioin the high school. . ^:ri& IldlOl Win WashiiiKDD. D.O* ■PSuccessf ully Prosecutes 01 alma. ■ Lata Principal Kxdm1n*».* U S. Pauf-on buraaOw civil wav* 15adlndto+taffclaio *. ntr.v alnofe FOR SALE—Chautauqua hand > jrn plant. era; all metal; the beat there -ire; guar* united. Every corn grower n* -da one or more. Special price of 75 com... Address The Tribune Co.. Sioux City. U AGENTS—Either aex; light won., quick seller; good money; 2-cent stu . p for particulars; write now. Odo-Ma .n Co.. 316 West 68th St.. New York. UID SCRIP Otmnamt SIOUX CITY P’T'G CO., 1,045—32, 1904 PLEASE MENTION THIS PAPER. BEGGS’ CHERRY COUGH SYRUP cures coughs and colds. _sm_ Til CURES WHERE ALL tlSE FAILS. M Bast Cough tijrwp. Tastes Good. Vm gl ia time. 8old by druggists._A94