Plattsmouth weekly journal. (Plattsmouth, Neb.) 1881-1901, June 27, 1895, Image 7

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

    He DM Ht Beat.
Arizona Fete had been called upon in
the absence of all the deacons and
other qualified church officers, to pass
the contribution basket.
In a 6eat half way down the middle
aisle sat the wealthiest man in the con
gregation, fast asleep. Arizona Fete
stopped when near him, held the bas
ket under his nose and waited.
A soft snore was the only contribution-He
touched him on th shoulder.
Another snore
Then he shook him.
Fuddleston," he said, "you can't
make a sneak out of this fame. Fun
gle up or I'll throw you out of the
window!"
It is recorded that Mr. Fuddleston at
once pungled up to the extent of $5 for
the first and only time in his religious
career. Chicago Tribune.
I'm All UDttrnogr,
Is the remark of many a nervous individ
ual. He or she will soon cease to talk that
way after beginning and persisting In a
course of llostetter's Stomach "Hitters.
Nothing like it to renew strength and appe
tite and pood digestion. It checks the In
roads of malaria- and remedies liver com
plaint, constipation, dyspepsia, rheumatism
and kidney disorder. It is in every iene a
great household remedy.
Cleaning Farm.
Ermine and sealskin are best cleaned
with soft flannel. Hub the fur deli
cately against the grain, and when it
has been thoroughly lifted and reversed,
so to speak, dip the flannel into com
mon liour and rub lightly any spots
that look dark or dirty. Shake the
Hour well and rub with a clean dry
flannel until the flour is all removed.
Sable, chinchilla, squirrel and monkey
skin may be very nicely cleaned with
hot bran. Get a small quantity of bran
meal and heat it in the oven until it is
quite warm. Hub stiffly into the fur
and leave for a few minutes before
shaking to free it from the bran. Mink
may be cleaned and freshened with
warm corn meal, and, like the other
short-haired furs, may be done without
removing the lining. But the long
haired furs are best ripped apart and
freed from stuffing and lining. Those
who may not care to go to the trouble
of taking fur garments apart will find
that the simple remedies described will
go a long way toward making the
jackets and capes look clean, even if
not ripped apart. Good Housekeeping.
s. K. tt)BUK.N, Mgr., ciarie cott, wniw
"I find Hall's Catarrh Cure a valuable remedy.
Drccclsu sell it. 75c.
Pronunciation of "Bicycle.
The constantly growing bicycle fad
calls attention to the large number of
cases of mispronunciation of the word
"bicycle." There is a certain class of
people, particularly New York's fash
ionable set, who insist upon giving the
"y" a long sound, as in "cycle," for
getting that a prefix or suffix often
changes the sound of the vowel "v."
Still others go to the other extreme
and give the y" the sound of 'ee," but
the best usage makes the y" short
and pronounces the word "bi-sik-L"
But even among those who give the
y" the 6hort sound there is a disposi
tion to place the accent on the second
sylable instead of the first, where it
belongs. When a word comes into such
common use as "bicycle," it is well to
learn to pronounce it correctly. Troy
Times.
Coea Coaffto. BUaa
Is the otdt axxl burnt. It wUl break op a Cold qateav
er than anything el. I Is sJ ways reliable. Try few
China silk crepon is era fed like mourning
crape and printed with small, bright Sew
ers. . . . -
n OTHERS
recovering from
the illness at
tending child
birth, or who suf-
'fer from the ef
fects of disorders,
derangements
and displace
ments of the wo
manly organs,
will find relief
and a permanent cure in Dr. Pierce's
Favorite Prescription. Taken during
pregnancy, the " Prescription "
HAKES CHILDBIRTH EASY
by preparing the system for parturition,
thus assisting Nature and shortening
labor." The painful ordeal of child
birth is robbed of its terrors, and the
dangers thereof greatly lessened, to both
mother and child. The period of con
finement is also greatly shortened, the
mother strengthened and built up, and
an abundant secretion of nourishment
for the child promoted.
DtDlRAIW
Swapper sa
llounlajn, lake
FULL"
pfbrnvafio
"i . w rs kVB-A IY ES.M-
PIY FOR KASANT WORK easily secured thrch
s n early upphcation lor Ixx-al Agevrj to Bell lie
DAVIS CREAM SEPARATORS
to zariners aci Umrjmea. One ttyle u shown In
last number of this Journal. Another win soon be
pictured out. MtanwhUe, writ lor Handsome Illus
trated Book Free. iavis t ramus y.isxi asi
Mi'ti. CO., Sola Manufacturers. 140 W. Lke St . CUlcugo.
JEWELRY
Store tor Sale.
ftore in the Mark
rv
Hills, ttock about 5,000 to .00. Watch
work averages tt50 per month. Will jrlve
time on secured notes, or will trade for cat
tle. Address JEWELER,,
Box 377, l)fdwnod, l.
IV. 1. U. Umaba'iO, IteOS.
Wbcn answering: advertisement kindly
mention this paper.
Me
it in i iiitriH' n
1?504
mm a . . w u - j-m m m m
FREE SILVER WANTED
NEBRASKA BANKER SEES SAL
VATION'S LIGHT.
R. G. Horr's Defense of the Single Gold
Standard Punctured by a Man Wi.o
Knows AT bat's Right Irons Ex
perience. Recently my attention was attracted
to a letter from Mr. Edwin G. Phipps
of Bartlett, Ohio, addressed to the edi
tor of the New York Tribune, and given
space in the weekly edition of that
paper.
Mr. Phipps asked to have explained
some things about finance. "Why Is a
gold dollar worth more than a silver
dollar?" he asked, meaning, in the light
of what went before. Why is the bul
lion worth of a gold dollar worth more
than the bullion worth of a silver dol
ar? The reply to the letter was over the
signature of R. G. Horr, and occupied
as much as three columns of the pa
per. This Mr. Horr was one time a con
gressman from Michigan and after
ward hired to the Tribune as an au
thority on the tariff question. In sup
plying the Republicans of the rural
districts stock arguments for high tariff
Mr. Horr met with some measure of
success. The few profiting directly
during the period of high protection
have been materially grateful to Mr.
Horr, we may suppose, for the influence
he exerted in maintaining the system
But now the displacement of the tariff
question by the finance issue seriously
threatens the place of Mr. Horr as an
adviser of hayseed ignorance.
Many who piped to his piping while
the tariff was the issue of issues are
now mute or protestant over his oracu
lar utterances respecting finance. They
see, or think they do, which is of the
same effect upon Mr. Horr's reputation
among them, that he is powerless to
grasp the underlying truths of finance;
and many are pained at seeing him on
this issue distort himself to exude mat
ter poisonous to their interests, as they
believe.
I wonder did the conclusions aimed
at by Mr. Horr in answering Mr. Phipps
seem the same to others as to me? Did
he purpose to instruct Mr. Phipps and
other readers that the bullion price of
gold under a free-coinage system would
fluctuate as fluctuates the price of com
modities goods which allay the natur
al periodic wants of man that gold
and silver bullion, when gold and sil
ver have free entrance to the mints for
coinage into legal tender money, are
obedient to the law of supply and de
mand; In other words, that parity can
be attained and maintained only so long
as the consumable supply of silver was
to the supply of gold, and the demand
for the one as to the demand for the
one as to the demand for the other,
is and continues as the monetary ratio?
Moreover, would he have us believe that
cost of production affected, and with
supply and demand established, the bul
lion price of gold and silver under a
free coinage system?.
I extract some passages from Mr.
Horr's reply:
"The people who believe in maintain
ing a gold standard assert that the
present low price of silver is largely
owing to the enormous increase in pro
duction, which has thus largely in
creased the supply, and also to the
much cheaper methods of mining and
smelting silver, which have resulted in
an ounce of silver representing so much
less human labor than it did in former
years, when its value was so much
greater as compared with gold than at
the present time. I have not the least
doubt that the present low price of sil
ver is much owing to the causes just
stated.
"When the amount of pure gold was
fixed of which our present gold dollar
should consist, that amount of gold was
then worth almost exactly the same as
the amount of pure silver which con
stituted then and which now is con
tained in each so-called silver dollar In
this country. The intention of the law
at that time was to make gold dollars
and silver dollars of exactly the same
intrinsic value, because a double stand
ard is impossible unless the value of
the two units is the same.
"The laws of this country require
our financial affairs to be managed so
as to keep cur silver and gold at equal
exchangeable value, without regard to
their actual or intrinsic value. That
is what is meant by 'parity of value.'
This can only be done by the govern
ment paying all obligations in gold."
These passages are fairly illustrative
of the arguments promulgated in sup
port of the single gold standard; and,
doubtless, the correctness of the con
clusions I have drawn from them will
be freely admitted.
Mr. Horr is worthy of commendation,
in that, in handling the issue, he makes
use of argument, such as it is, rather
than denunciation. Therein he dis
tinguishes himself from the greater
number of gold standard advocates. I
instance as one of the majority Mr.
Edward Atkinson, and cite his article
in the Record of April 26.
I wish to answer Mr. Phipps ques
tion: Why is the bullion worth of a
gold dollar more than the bullion worth
of a silver dollar?
At the outset I think it necessary to
clear away some of the confusion of
thought in relation to money.
A clear understanding of the finan
cial issue whether silver properly
should or should not be upon an equal
footing with gold, a bearer of the money
function, cannot be attained through
an analysis of the subject in which
the terms, value, fluctuation, demand
and supply, scarcity and abundance
are applied to gold and silver while
unlimitedly coined. Those terms have
definite meaning when applied to com
modities, to goods desirable for con
sumption, and which are destroyed or
retained by the person using them.
Money is of a different nature, and
with like significance those terms are
not applicable to money to gold and
silver when freely minted.
Money is not desired for consumption
or retention. Unlike commodity, it
does not expect a final purchaser, nor
do successive changes lessen or increase
its desirability; to part with it Is to im
mediately reseek it.
Gold and silver, under a free-coinage
system are desirable in the same man
ner, to the same extent and for the
same purposes that money is. The bul
lion is convertible at the possessor's
will into equal weights of coin, and
hence becomes equally desirable with
money.
Gold and silver under a free-coinage
system are not desirable mainly for
use in the arts and for ornamentation.
The demand for such purposes cannot
add price to the uncoined bullion. Why
exchange more goods for bullion when
less goods will obtain an equal quan
tity of the desired metal in the form
of coin? With wheat supplies in ex
cess of consumption are in effect a de
ficiency of demand; the price lowers.
But deficient demand for gold and sil
ver for use in the arts, when gold and
silver are free to enter the mints, can
not lessen the price as measured by the
unit of value. Why exchange in the
market the bullion for less goods when
by having it coined the coin will pur
chase more goods?
The persons now likening gold and
silver in allegiance to the law of sup
ply and demand unto wheat, pig-iron,
etc., crowd their range of vision with
the service performed by the metal in
bygone ages, and do not discern the
superseding attribute of legal tender.
Gold and silver were first used for
ornament. Later they came to be used
as a standard of value, passing in busi
ness transactions by weight. A man
possessing goods not needed for his
own Immediate consumption, and not
conveniently retained unimpaired,
traded them for gold and silver if he
could. In time, with the advance of
civilization, came order, protection of
the individual in hi3 property rights
and enforcement .of contracts. Units
of value were enacted, and fixed quan
tities of gold and silver were made to
bear the unite of value. Then gradu
ally the people ceased registering their
commercial transactions, their debts
and dues, in commodities such as cat
tie, rice, wheat, or gold and silver by
weight, and reckoned in the common
unit of value, the coin of the realm
Subjects were forced to take, In buy
ing or selling, or other payment, any
money lawfully made.
Now that which is made to discharge
debt is the equivalent of all objects
which are desirable and which require
labor to reduce to possession objects
cdnsumed, objects existing for con
sumption and objects of future produc
tion. Obviously, desire (demand). In
th abstract is constant. Hence the
demand for money is constant. The
intensity of demand can not relax.
To fully comprehend the equivalence
of money is to apprehend clearly the
constant, never relaxing demandabil
ity of money. It settles the score of
past indulgence, commands present en
joyment and Insures against future
want. These three human prevalences
can not all rise together or fall togeth
er. One may rise while the other falls.
The present may disregard the obliga
tions of the past and neglect the
future, but in that event it will revel
to-day; It may deny itself to-day in
penance of the past or mindful of future
condition will affect the demand for
commodities, but the demand for
money will be unaffected. If not
wanted to liquidate the past or to pro
vision the future it is wanted none the
j less intensely for indulging the pres
ent. And for the present to forego it
is to have either the past or the future
grasp to possess it.
Certainly there never has been a
supply sufficient to relax the intensity
demand, and just as certainly there
never can be. As the division of labor
attends on advancing civilization the
universality and intensity of demand
will increase.
Admitted then, that the demand for
money legal-tender money is con
stant. Good bullion and silver
bullion, under a free-coinage system.
are money, are equivalent in equal
weights with money. Therefore the
demand for gold and silver bullion is
constant.
Commodities, wheat, silk, any or all
of the many objects desired by man,
limited in quantity and produced for
and destroyed by consumption, fluctuate
in value under the influence of the law
of supply and demand, and
of the law of substitution; a sufficient
suRply predicates a deficient demand,
a deficient supply an increased demand,
while beyond a certain measure of sac
rifice use declines and substitutes less
exacting fill the want.
It is not so with the bullion under a
free-coinage system. The uncoined
metal has the constant and universally
present demandibility of money. Im
perative are the laws of the market,
and supply and demand as to it. Flue
tuation of value, together with' scarcity
and redundancy of supply,' as well &a
deficiency and sufficiency of demand,
are not of it. Value it loses, and in itu
stead a property distinct from and
superior to value i3 acquired. Fluctua
tion of demand is lost and universality
and constancy of demand Is gained;
and losing the possibility of excessive
supply it acquires the impossibility of
sufficient supply.
If it be allowed that I am right so
far in the reasoning there can be no
disputing the proposition that the price
of bullion, when gold and silver are
freely minted, is the mintage price, and
can be none other. If 371.25 grains of
pure silver, and 23.22 grains of pure
gold are each made the bearer of the
unit of value, then the price in the
market of the respective quantities of
metal will be the unit of value, no
more, no less. In the market the quan
tity of one is the equivalent of the
quantity of the other; 11.61 grains gold
cannot equal 371.25 grains silver. One
half is not equal to the whole.
The conclusions so far reached have
been evolved from an analysis of bul-
ion price under a free-coinage system.
For further argument, let us suppose
the free coinage of both gold and silver.
as prior to 1873; follow that with de
monetization of either metal, and brief
ly examine the effect on the price of
the demonetized metal.
We have seen as to commodities that
an excessive supply is. in effect a de
ficient demand, the price lowers.
Mr. Morton, the secretary of agri
culture, has time and again lectured
the country on prices. He has told
how the law of supply and demand
is inexorable; how it exacted obedience
from gold and silver as truly as of the
products of the farm. Granted, if gold
and silver be demonetized.
Recently an editor of the leading
Democratic paper of New York city in
disputing the proposition that gold and
silver under a free-coinage system are
desirable chiefly to perform the func
tion of money said: "The truth is that
gold and silver perform the function
of money solely because they are desir
able as commodities. Three-quarters
of all the gold annually produced, and
a large amount of silver, are consumed
for manufacturing and artistic pur
poses, and their power to fulfill these
purposes is what makes them valuable.
not their use as money."
If his asertion respecting the quan
tity of gold annually consumed
in the arts Is true, is it not
likewise true that the demand
for such purposes is no greater
than three-fourths of the supply? Then
how about the other one-fourth? Sup
pose gold be demonetized. What will
be the effect of a 25 per cent supply
In excess of the prevailing demand?
Will the honorable gentleman tell us
the effect on the price of our country
men farmers' wheat should the United !
.. n 1 1 n .1 .. n. Kfifi AAA AAA I
bushels, against an annual consump
tion of only 375.000,000 bushels, with
no outlet for the 125.000.000 bushels
surplus? Wheat would become a drug,
would it not?
We hardly need the honorable secre
tary's advice on this or other like agri
cultural quandaries. Yet, if not, of
what use is the honorable secretary in
his honorable place?
The task the president has set him is
much too big for him. Not but what
we value highly the merits of the sec
retary. Out here we think Morton a
bigger man than Cleveland, figurative
ly; mortal, however, we may presume
he is. And, therefore, quite unequal to
ridding the farms of the country of
what he technically terms heresy, finan
cial heresy, the vulgar name being 16
to 1.
Had gold suffered demonetization to
the same extent silver has, the price
of gold bullion would have been sensibly
lessened. That conclusion is forced
upon us. We believe it, we must believe
it the honorable" secretary to the con
trary notwithstanding.
Silver was demonetized. The annual
production of silver exceeded the de
mand for manufacturing and artistic
purposes. The mints no longer supplied
an unvarying demand for the excess.
Universality and constant demand was
lost. Nothing remained but the bare
commodity demand. The price of sil
ver fell.
Such, I take it, is the true answer
to Mr. Phipps question: Why is the
bullion worth of a gold dollar more
than the bullion worth of a silver dol
lar? W. G. SEWARD.
HERE'S ROSES FOR YOU.
The IinpaUe to He Generous Came
from the Flower.
A prosperous-looking man was rid
ing westward on a Taylor street car.
In his hand he held a large bunch of
cut roses, covered with tissue paper. It
was the first communion Sunday, and
as the man looked out he saw young
girls in white dresses and veiling
hurrying along, says the Chicago Rec
ord. The Nineteenth ward man looked
at the cheerful girls. After they were
past his eye wandered again to the red
advertisement in the car; then he
looked at the roses, and at last noticed
a little girl on the opposite seat. She
was poorly clad and had on a dark
shawl and was gazing intently at the
flowers. He noted her poor appear
ance and longing look and he suddenly
opened the tissue paper and took out
two large roses and said: "Here, little
girl." Her eyes opened wider and she
said, "Oh, thank you, mister!" It was
a very small happening in Chicago and
probably contains no moral. When he
got off with another man at May 6treet
and they went into a saloon for a
drink and the roses were laid on the
bar he seemed to meditate and said:
"God bless her little soul! I wish I'd
given her all of them."
The Serpent's Trick.
The power of continuing motionless
with the uplifted head projecting for
ward for an indefinite period is one of
the most wonderful of the serpent's
muscular feats and is one of the high
est importance to the animal, both
when fascinating its victim and when
mimicking some inanimate object, as,
for instance, the stem and bud of an
aquatic plant; here it is only referred
to on account of the effect it produces
on the human mind, as enhancing the
serpent's strangeness. In this attitude,
with the round, unwinking eyes fixed
en the beholder's face, the effect may
b very curious and uncanny.
Two Hundred Tons of Feathers.
It is estimated that 200 tons of os
trich feathers have been exported
from Cape Colony during the last thir
ty years, valued at $50,000,000.
A man who will wear made over tie
will let his wife cut his hair for him.
$ $
COOK BOOK FREE.
Every housekeeper wants to know the best
things to eat, and how to prepare them.
"The Royal Baker and Pastry Cook'
Contains One thousand useful recipes for
every kind of cooking. Edited by Prof.
Rudmani, New-York Cooking School.
Free by mail. Address (writing plainly),
mentioning this paper,
ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO.
$r
Confederate Postage Stamp.
Persons who have kept any of the
old letters they received in the south :
during the war might do well to look i
them over. The Confederate govern-!
ment authorized the issue and use of
local postage stamps, and nearly every
city in the t.outh at one time had its
own stamp Many thousands of these
were used, but so rare are they now
that they bring high prices. There is
among collectors a keen demand for
them, and an idea of what they will
bring may be gathered from the report
of a sale which occurred recently at
the rooms of the Philatelist society.
New York. Local Confederate stamps
sold as follows: Athens. (Ja,, S40: four
varieties of the Ha ton Kouge (La.)
cent, 41, 77 and 30 respectively; Ma
con, two varieties, for and $171;
Lenoir, N. C, 8'J, and Mobile-' cent,
black, S410. As time goes on these
curiosities will probably increase in
value. They are already beyond the
reach of everybody but wealthy col
lectors. Atlanta .Journal.
Tobacco-Stinkirg Breath.
Not pleasant to always carry around, but it
don t compare with tLe nerve-de?troymj power
that tobacco keeps at work night and day to
make vou weak aud impotent. Dull eves, loss
of interest in sweet words and look tell the
story. Brace up quit- o-To Bac is a sure,
quick cum Guaranteed by Druggists every
where. Book, titled "Don t Tobacco Spit or
Smoke Your Life Away." free. Address ter
injf Remedy Co., New York city or Chicago.
Telegraphic Mistake.
The telegraph has indulged in many
witticisms at the expense of the mem
bers of both houses of parliament. It
has transformed a classical allusion to
Cato and Brutus' into "cats and
brutes;" the celebrated phrase used by
the late Mr. W. Forster in a speech on
his Irish policy, "mauvais subjects and
village ruffians" into ''wandering sav
ages and village ruffians;" "tried in the
balance and found wanting' into "tried
in the balance and found panting;"
"the cow was cut in halves" into "the
cow was cut into calves," and "the
militia is a great constitutional force"
into "the militia is a great constitu
tional farce." Macmlllan's Magazine.
The Ladle.
The pleasant effect and perfect safety
with which ladles may use the Cali
fornia liquid laxative. Syrup of Figs,
under all conditions, makes it their
favorite remedy. To get the true and
genuine article, look for the name of the
California Fig Syrup Co., printed near
the bottom of the package.
The man who would lead others, must
first learn bow to stand alone.
A novelty tailor button is made with a
metal rim and sew-s through and through.
See
u,at
It's LORILLARD'S.
1 w ? wvs-vx
iiiiiinin'iniiniininiiiiiTiniiiiiiiiiinminniinnnniTniinniiniTimnminmtnTiiig
Very Latest
SS Cent Fattens far lO Onto, When the Oopn Belew Mm Meat. AIM One
Cmt A4.41tliMal fer Peataa-e.
t '
E 6345.
6323.
No. 6
E so.
IMS-FlTe sizes; tU.; 31, 34, 3$, 38 and 40
inrb Burt maaatrre.
Z2S-i ire aizes: U : M, 24. 28, 28 and SO
laches waist measure.
o o TEJ IP o IT.
fftus OOTJPOK seat with aa order for on or a;y of tho aboTe IS cent patters la credited
Vi as t cents on each pattern ordered, maklny each pattern cost only 1 0 rents.
Oom cetrt extra for postage for each pattern. Giro number of laches wairt measure for
aklrts and a amber of laches bast measure for waists, address,
COUPON PATTERN COMPANY,
Xsock Box 747. JTEW TOUT. X. T.
5tummMiil.Mmiiu.iM.tr.nfn"..M
$
106 Wall Street, N. Y.
$r
The Little Glrl Trayer.
A little girl in a Pennsylvania town,
in saying her prayers the other niyht,
was told to pray for her father and
mother, who were both very ill, and
for one of the servants, who had lost
her husband. She faithfully did as she
was told, and then, impressed with the
dreary condition of things, added on
her her own account: "And now, (
God, take good care of yourself, for if
anything" should happen to you we
should all go to pieces. Amen." Nevr
York Times.
Make Yoor Own Bitters!
On receipt of 30 cents In U. S. stamps, I
will send to anv address one package b'te
ketee'e Dry Bitters. One package make
one gallon Le tonic known. Cures stom
ach, kidnev disease?, and is a gTeat apji
tizer and blood purifier. Just the medicin
needed for spring and summer. "Joe. at
your drug store. Address Geo. G. Ste
kxTEX, Grand Ratids. Mich.
A Good Fencer.
Mr. Hardtack (who has just dis
charged Mr. Jackson) You want a
recommendation, eh? You are abso
lutely good for nothing. How can I
conscientiously recommend you?
Mr. Jackson Well. sah. you might
jes' say dat ye tink Mr. Jackson would
prove invaluable in any position dat.
he's capable of fillin". cri-uer"s.
If the Baby ts Cutting: leeth.
3e aure and use that old and ell tried remedy, Ku.
ITxxsLOw's txiraus Stkcp for Children Teetoioz-
The trouble with culture is that it has to
stop at the surface.
Hanson's Magic Corn Salva."
Warranted to cure or money refunded. Ak ye at
Crag-girt for it frice IS cent.
Coarse linen in ecru shades is much used
for boating gowns.
Borrowed troubles are the heaviest.
Ef try aulhrr ikoold al wa; ke mt kaat
a b U of t arker'ft G n.er Tonic Nothing el-e so
gool for piJn. weakness colds, and sleeilefcrjeas.
Armure crepon, or armure with crape
markings, is fashionable and durable.
What part of a house is the darkest? The
part near the eaves.
Xevr la the tlaae to en re yoor Ceraa
with H Intercom. It take tiiem o t rfectly giTe
GOifort U the fiet. Ask your dragist for iu Ibc
Velvet capes are fashionable lined with
cloth and cloth ones with silk.
I cannot speak too high!v of Piso's Cure
for Consumption. Mas. Frank Mqbbs, 215
W. 22d St., Sew York, Oct. 29, 194.
The flesh is an enemy to suffering, be
cause suffering is an enemy to the flesh.
Billiard table, second-hand, for
sac
cheap. Apply to or address, H. C. Akiv,
nil S. 12th St.. Omaha. Ne')
that round red tin tag?
s Climax
Plug.
It's much the best!
Styles May Manton I
a-
3
69 - Five M?es;
niche waist measure.
No. 6S75Fonr sires; Tlx: 6. , 10 awl 12 rears.
Mo. Si FlTe sizes: Tix.i fri, 34, M, Si mod
laches bust measure.
uitiiiniiiiiHiiiiliilltiJUllltMlllllrIMIlUJiM!a
etC3 CCT5 6355 J
. -3
viz : 52. 2t. -C. -S an I 3" 3