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About Plattsmouth weekly journal. (Plattsmouth, Neb.) 1881-1901 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 5, 1895)
r r 1 Talmaee in Washington. V tlll Interested In New York Affairs V Seven Hundred Thouaod Dollar for J C harities What He Thinks of Certain -, r,ook5. LIverytody knows that the illustrious iivine, who made the Brooklyn Taber nacle famous throughout the world, ha3 recently been called to a pastorate iu Washington. His church is the First Presbyterian, church of that city, and while in form er years & very prominent institu tion, it latterly had been favored with but small audi ences, composed principally of men T. I) e Witt Talmage. and women who re rnained loyal to the old church even though now surrounded largely by business houses. A marvelous change, however, has suddenly come over this time-honored landmark, and to-day the First Presbyterian church of Washing ton, owing to the wondrous eloquence of it- newly installed pastor, is every Sun cay besieged by multitudes, many of hom stand there frequently hours in '-ivance cf the opening of the service in hopes of being able to wedge their wav in snmphnnr nr nthpr and to listen the matchless eloquence of Ameri ?6 foremost pulpit orator. People all over the country are won j'ring whether Dr. Talmage, in mov ing to the National Capital, and In ex changing his Brooklyn residence for a Louse in Washington, has actually di vorced' himself from all connection with the east. Dr. Talmage was recently in terviewed on this subject by a reporter cf this paper, and the reverend gentle man said that as long as his editorial chair had two legs in New York and two legs in Washington he could never Le considered as having severed all his 'onnections with the metropolis. "The -risuan Herald, ne saiu, wun us ! circulation, is a tremendous power Vood." r.cd as long as the Lord gave yiealth and strength he would write n'aat pnper m fact, he would be in auditorial chair at the Bible House frequently now than ever. Con- rV 1 1 rryiJKZg,, the genial preacher said: "There is no paper in America that wields a more potential influence for r-nnA tlion TV, a r'Virictinn TIeral.'? with a circulation of nearly two hundred thou sand copies weekly. Nothing but death shall separate me from it. Dr. Klopsch, lis proprietor, is a man of extraordinary ntrprise. This year besides printing "he Christian Herald every week in beautiful colors, a veritable enchant ment for the eye, he offers as a premium a. complete library, consisting of ten eplendid volumes, full of interest and f ullof entertainment, with an elegant bookcase, delivered free of all expense, together with the paper itself, fifty-two times, for the moderate sum of. $3. 5 Hereafter let no home in America be Mthnnt a lihrnrv. I asked Dr. Talmage whether he could recommend the library to people who contemplated securing it, and he said unhesitatingly, "I know every book. They were carefully and thoughtfully prepared, either specially written or compiled by most eminent literary men, end there is not a weakling among them." "How are the people to secure this great library, and this wonderful paper of yours?' "Simply by sending $3 to The Chris tian Herald at SSS to S95 Bible House, New York City, and by return mail they Ill UVT v - L r Li n ALU LUC U W Cfc nee my boyhood, I've had a passion r books; I love them still couldn't ;,e unless surrounaea Dy mem. to I'm something of a judge of good litera ture. And in my whole life I have never peen a better selection in small compass than these ten books which Dr. Klopsch has had prepare! for his subscribers. It's a perfect library of information, entertainment and amusement, and is the climax of the wonderfully enter prising and far-seeing management that has placed The Christian Herald ahead of all competitors as a Christian home journal. Do you know," con- Stinued Dr. Talmage, "that this paper has In less than six years expended nearly $700,000 in various beneficences Just then Miss Talmage came In to call her distinguished father to dinner, and ihe interview ended. (Remember the address, 888 to 895 Bible House, New York City. GREAT THOUGHTS. Mentally only, man is the superioi animal. ji Economy is half the battle of life; it is not so hard to earn money as to f spend it well. Spurgeon. 1. Every good and commanding move- "Vut in the annals of the world is the juimph of enthusiasm. Emerson. f) To endure is the first thing a child pught to learn, and that which he will 'nave most need to know. Rousseau. I wonder many times that ever a child of God should have a sad heart, considering what the Lord is preparing for him. S. Rutherford. Where Christ brings his cross, he brings hia presence; and where he is, knone are aesoiate, ana tnere is no room for despair. Mrs. Browning. ODD, QUEER. CURIOUS. Flying frogs are numerous in Borneo. Sunflower stocks are now converted Into paper. The cultivation of tobacco is prohib- 5 fled in Egypt. Blotting paper is made of cotton rags boiled in soda. Edison's laboratory costs $20,000 a y year to maintain. i Thy.pay of an admiral in the Brit- 1 bL avy is $9,123 a year. 'rueen Maria Pia of Portugal is a j clever billiard player. WHAT IS THE MATTEE EX - CONGRESSMAN BARTINE MAKES A LUCID PLEA. Ths Demonetization of Silver In 1873 Has Reduced Yalaes Just One-i:U If Good Times Return to Us It Will Be Through Bimetallism. He who does not appreciate the fact that the industrial and business situa tion is unnatural and unsatisfactory, must be a careless observer indeed. Everybody knows that in 1893 this country was struck by a financial cy clone that hac never been equaled in its history. Money vanished from 6ight,' and credit utterly collapsed. Factories closed, mines suspended, mil lions of honest workmen were turned idle into the streets. Business was completely paralyzed, and everything was at a standstill except the produc tion of the bare necessities of life.' Even these were sold at prices ruinou3 to the producer, and the hardest kind of hard times held the nation and its people in a grasp of iron. With its se verity only slightly abated, this condi tion has lasted until the present time. What was the cause? The republican protectionist general ly claimed that it was the advent of the democratic party to power upon a free trade platform. Some of them inti mated that the "Sherman law" may have been a very slight factor in de stroying public confidence, but all in sisted that the main cause was the threat of free trade. Mr. Cleveland and the gold wing of the democratic party took the position broadly that while high protection was In a degree responsible, the chief cause was that "infamous measure" known as the "Sherman law." The United States government was adding about $4,000,000 a month to the currency in treasury notes based upon silver bullion, and this addition to the money supply was actually (so it was Baid) producing a money famine. These notes were of full par value, sometimes even commanding a small premium, and yet it was seriously urged that the people had no confidence in them; which lack of confidence had plunged us Into financial convulsions. We were told in the most dogmatic way that the repeal of that law would immediately restore confidence, stop the exports of gold, and send a flood tide of prosperity rolling over the land. The whole power of the administration was brought to bear to force the repeal. The democratic party broke in two un der the pressure. The republicans voted strongly with the gold wing of the democracy, and the last vestige of legislation sustaining and upholding silver as a money metal was swept from the statutes of the United States. Two years have passed since then, and still the flood-tide of prosperity lags on its way. It is not pretended by anybody at this time that the repeal of the "Sherman law" restored pros perity. But it is loudly proclaimed that good times are now coming by leaps and bounds. This, however, is merely a prediction, and it may be laid tenderly away with many others com ing from the same source, for future consideration. The question recurs, then, What was the cause of the great panic of 1893? The trouble with the reasoning of the gold sophists was that they took too narrow a view of the situation. The financiers and business men of New York, oppressed by the difficulties which surrounded them, looked only at the immediate present, forgetting that during the previous four or five years almost every civilized country on earth had passed through the same ordeal. For years the storms of financial dis aster had been sweeping over Europe, shaking the Bank of England to its foundations, and carrying desolation even Into far-off Australia. Finally it burst in all its fury upon us. The shock was heavier here than in any other country, because of the enormous magnitude of our productive enter prises and the extent to which they are conducted upon the basis of credit. The United States is in fact the great est of all debtor nations. Our gold went abroad, not because we were purchasing silver, but because other nations, driven to extremity, had to have the gold. It is commonly assumed by the oppo nents of silver that everything was all right In a monetary way until about the beginning of 1893. This shows a very superficial understanding of the real situation. The truth is, and it is recognized by every leading economist on both sides of the Atlantic and upon both sides of the silver question, that the entire period from 1873 down to 1893, with only temporary spurts of ap parent prosperity, had been one of ex traordinary business depression. In 1886 the Queen of England appointed a commission to investigate the situa tion, and after the most exhaustive re search the commission made its report, in which It was shown that nearly every Industry in the United Kingdom was In a most grievously depressed and un healthy condition; that vast numbers of workmen were unemployed, and that the prices of nearly all the staple prod urls of the country had so fallen that there was almost no profit in business. It was also observed as significant facts Is a a. x v.? that this depression had set in about the year 1873 and that it existed in all the leading commercial nations, differ ing only in degree. The United States commissioner of labor in his annual re port ifor that year (1886) adverted to the same state of facts, and laid stress upon the circumstance that while Eng land had been the greatest sufferer, this country stood second on the list in the order and extent of the depression. The most conspicuous feature of this strange condition was the circumstance (denied by nobody) that nearly all of the great staples of commerce had lost about one-third of their money value. This decline has continued until now the wholesale prices of commodities in general are from 40 to 50 per cent be low those of 1873. It surely requires no argument to show that business de pression must inevitably follow a steady and general fall of prices. The orists may talk airily about the beauty I of cheapness, but no practical business man ever yet gathered comfort from a fall in the price of the goods in his hands. Nor has any producer ever been benefited by a cheapening of his product A fall of prices means re duced profits. Reduced profits mean,a curtailing of expenses. This in turn means a discharge of employes, a cut ting of wages, and retrenchment in every possible way. Discharged em ployes and those who have suffered f i eduction of wages, must themselves economize, and in some cases they be came an actual burden upon others. So the effects sDread from one individ- j ual to another and from one industry to another until the whole community feels the blight. Sooner or later con stantly falling prices are ce-tain to pro duce a financial crash. All debts must be ultimately paid out of products, and if the prices fall too much the debts simply cannot be paid. When the crash does come it is bound to be a severe one, because It strikes people at a time when their ability to pay has already been crippled by the low prices of what they have to sell. When the storm finally clears away it is found that mul titudes of struggling debtors have been ruined, that tens of thousands of small estates have been wrecked, while a few gigantic fortunes have been built up at the money centers, which always protect themselves at the expense of everybody else: It is worthy of note in this connection that the period from 1850 to 1870 was one of almost universal progress and prosperity. During that period prices, upon an average, rose about 20 per cent. But since then the whole aspect of af fairs has been changed. Instead of continuing to rise, or even remaining stationary, the trend has been ever downward, the fall amounting to more than 40 per cent. Now, it is clear that about the year 1873 something took place that affected values and business in an extraor dinary way. It is equally clear that it must have been something of a very general char acter to affect so many different na tions and peoples so far removed from each other. What was It? Was the industrial system of the world revolu tionized by the invention of machin ery? Certainly not. Everybody who can read ought to know that inventions and improvements in machinery had been going on with great activity for more than half a century before that date, and that the improvements have been no greater since. Were methods of transportation so changed as to produce any marked ef fect? The answer must again be. No! Even then we had nearly 80,000 miles of railroad in the country, and the ocean was bridged by lines of steamers. The most rigid scrutiny will bring to light just one thing that occurred 'in 1873 which was calculated to materially affect the general business and finances of the world. The standard of value was changed by the demonetization of silver. No amount of fine-spun theories, spe cial pleading, or juggling with words will dispose of the cold historic fact that in 1873 the United States and Ger many both demonetized silver and adopted the gold standard. That such action on the part of these two nations largely increased the demand for gold and correspondingly enhanced its value must be obvious to any person who does not blindly close his eyes to the .great economic law of "supply and demand." Gold being made the standard, and its value rising under the increased de mand, other values which were meas ured in gold fell in exact proportion. Other nations followed the example of the United States and Germany, gold rising higher and higher with the ever- j increasing demand, and prices falling lower and lower as gold went up. j In 1878 the Bland-Allison act was ; passed, under which 2,000,000 silver j dollars were coined each month.' For a time the fall in prices was checked, j but other elements of currency con traction were at work and the decline soon began again. In 1890 the "Sher- j man law" was passed, by which some- j thing over $4,000,000 was added to the currency each month, and again came : a slight advance of prices. But finan- ; cial troubles were abroad. The great house of Baring had just failed, the Bank of England was in imminent dan ger, and nearly every monetary center of Europe was struggling for gold. As before stated, the United States was the greatest debtor nation in the world. It also had a larger stock of gold than any other except France. England, in her distress, unloaded great blocks of American securities and took away from $75,000,000 to $100,000,000 of our gold. Thus the storms from other countries converged upon us, ana we were compelled to withstand their com bined shock. Wall street was in dis tress, and was appealing to the United States treasury for help. Such was the monetary stringency that for a time that great money cen ter nearly forgot its opposition to sil- i ver. Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report Bedroom Rags. A pretty little amateur artist has made for herself a pair of charming" bedroom rugs. The material is bur laps, lined with old carpets, to give it body- The design is taken from the motif of the wall paper, and represents timothy grass, redtop and clovers, painted in shades of olives, tans, browns and old pink, the colors greatly diluted, so as to give a printed, rather than a painted effect. Golden and brown but terflies are poised here and there, and a busy bumble bee almost buzzes, head down, m a great clover bloom. The rugs are edged with a flax fringe, in the shade of the burlap. In painting grasses and leaves a mistake frequently made by amateurs is to have them all too much of a color. i?hade effects should be introduced by having those at the back in faint grays, and in much lighter tones of all the colors used. " The Fashionable Magpie Contrast. ' The magpie contrast, which is the name given to the effect when black and white are brought together, is well displayed in a bonnet intended for even ins1 wear at concert or opera dur ing the season. The small, rather low i crown is of white satin felt, the tiny strips being braided in basket fashion. The narrow brim is of softly -twisted black velvet, cut out at the baek so that the hair shows below, while there are falling over it two of the long, hornlike-shaped rosettes so much fan cied, daintily made of fine duchesse lace. A narrow twist of white satin is just above the velvet at the edge of the crown, and on one side there stands up a ten-inch white pompon, while on the other is a star-shaped buckle of Rhine stones. Velvet ties come with this bon net. I Deafness Can Not Be Curea By local applications, as they cannot ; reach the diseased portion or tne ear. There Is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by constitutional remedies. Deafness Is caused by an inflamed con dition of the mucous lining of the Eus ! tachian Tube. When the tube is In flamed you have a rumbling sound or Imperfect hearing, and when it is en tirely closed Deafness is the result, and nnlAs thA tnflimiriatifln ran bf taken out and this tube restored to Its normal j condition, hearing will be destroyed for ever; nine cases out of ten are caused by Catarrh, which Is nothing but an In flamed condition of the mucous sur faces. 1 We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Dearness (caused by Ca tarrh) that cannjt be cured by Hall's ' Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free. ' F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. ' Sold by drug-gists; 75c. ; Hall's Family Pills, 25c j How to Set Up a Christmas Tree. i As generally set up the Christmas tree is a rather shaky affair, top-heavy, and in constant danger of being tipped over when it is touched. If yon want a substantial base for it, but one that will allow of its being moved easily without any danger of its being upset, go to some hardware store and borrow a set of stove trucks. Cover them with boards fastened securely to their frames. In the center make a hole large enoug to admit the base of your tree. Fasten strips of wood from each corner of the trucks to the tree, in such a manner as to brace it firmly in place. i The casters under the frame will allow ; you to move the tree easily and safely. J Gloves. Gloves must fit welL They may not lie in loose folds or 'bag" in the fin gers. Neither may they fit so tightly as to cause the buttons to burst, the seams to rip, the palm to split, the blood to congeal and other unpleasant things to happen. A tight glove is to the hand what a tight shoe is to the foot. It enlarges the knuckles, makes the hand misshapen and gives it a mot tled, purplish hue. I Chocolate is still used in the interior of South America for coeoanuts and e?gs. a currency, as are 66 Wo TArfl OlOnAJUO WORK ON PAIN IT OFF' FROM RETURNING. THAT'S BUSINESS. When Selecting Your Reading Matter THE COMING YEAR, yon will, no donbt, decide on securing the best, especially if the best costs less than something' inferior, both in quality and quantity. The Omaha Bee, altvays to the front of the newspapers in the west, has lonjr been recognized as one of the leading- publications in the country. It has done more, and is now doing1 more, toward upbuilding- the great west, than any other p: oer. About two years ag-o its publishers, determined to bring- The Weekly Bee into every farmhouse in the west, especially in its own state and the states immediately adjoining- Nebraska, put the price down 10 65 Cents Ver year an unheard of fipure for a 12-pajre weekly publication. This pr;ce still prevails. Not content with this, the publishers of The Bee cast about for some additional first class publication of national reputation, to offer with The Bee at a price that would not exceed the figure usually charged for a single weekly paper. Last year the New York Tribune, (Horace Greeley's paper) was secured, and this paper was offered with the Weekly Bee for 90 CenlS per year. A similar arrangement has been made this year. In addition, & similar contract has been made with the Cincinnati Enquirer, a paper that ranks as high among the Democratic publications of this country as the New York Tribune does among- the Reputlican newspapers. To sum up we make the following- four offers for this season, confident that they are equalled nowhere, either in the quality of matter published, nor in the quantity of good, up-to-date, reliable news. The Omaha Weekly Bee, 1 1hs Weekly Bes..0 I The Weekly Bee . I If Weekly Bee, i9P.mFH.Mik The Weekly New York The Weekl, Cincinnati '"a". u rages tacn new, tribune, enquirer, Tfie WEEKLY CINCINNAT. 65 Cents Per Year. ,m 90c. Botl " Vw " 90c. ?jyF" Sl.15 All orders must be accompanied by the cash, in the shape of Postoffice money order, Express money order or blank draft. II currency or silver be &ent, it is saier to reg-isier tne letter. 2o stamps of larger de nomination than 2 cents are accepted. Sample copies are sent free on Address all orders to Easjr CtrrutnRtanres. A young man inherited $50,000 from an aunt, and by a course of extrava gance and speculation was pretty soon at the end of his fortune. ''However," said one of his friends, "Bill isn't with out resources. He has two more aunts." Like this, but different was the case of a colored man, concerning whom, ac cording to the Yankee Blade, a neigh bor of his own race was called to testify in court. "Witness," said the opposing lawyer, "you speak of Mr. Smith as 'well off.' Just what do you mean? Is he worth S5,000? "No, sah?" "Two thousand?" "No, 6ah; he ain't worth 25 cents." . . "Then how is he well off ?" ''Got a wife who is a washerwoman, sah, and s' ports de hull family, sah." Youth's Companion. Confinement and Hard Work Indoors, particularly in the sitting posture, are far more prejudicial to health than ex cessive muscular exerton in the open air. Hard sedentary workei 8 are far too weary after orhce hours to take much needful ex ercise in the open air. They often need a tonic. Where can they seek invijroration more certainly and thoroughly than from llostetter's Momach Hitters, a renovunt Earticularly adapted to recruit the ex austed force of nature.- Use also for dys pepsia, kidney, liver and rheumatic ailments. First to Rnter a College. Miss Hypatia Boyd is of the first deaf and dumb girl to enter a college in this country. She passed the Wisconsin university entrance examination with honor and began the regular course this falL Miss Boyd lost her hearing when she was a year old, and the pow er of speech soon after. tbe was one of the fir6t pupils at the Milwaukee school for the deaf and dumb, where the oral method is used exclu sively. So effective did this method prove in Miss Boyd's case that when she was graduated from the school in 1S91 she was able to enter the regular high school and to understand her teachers by following the movement of their lips. A FAMOUS .PAPER. The Youth's Companion has become fa mous because there is hardly a famous man or woman in tireat Britain or the L'nited states who does not contribute to the paper each year. The writers ensaped for J-Hi promise to make the paper more attractive than ever before. To those who subscribe at once, sending fl.75, the Publishers make an extraordinary offer, to end free a handsome four-pae calendar, 7x1) in., lithographed in nine bripht colors, retail price of which is 50 cents. The Companion free every week to .lan. 1, 1896, the Thanksgivins, i hrismas and New Year's Double Numbers free, and The t'OMPASios a full year. 52 weeks, to Jan. 1. 1897. Address The Youth's Companion. 1D9 Columbus Ave, Hoston. There is a new disease known as "poker ain." A man who plays cards all night gets it. Hgmn'i Camphor lee with G lyeerl ne. Tbe original and only freauiDe. Cures Chapped Hands aod Face, Cold Sores, Ac CG. Clark CoK.Haven.Ct- A man is usually tick twice a year; when his wife cleans house. Experience Ieds many anothera aay "IJse ParersGins.erTouic." because it is especially good for eoids. pain and almost every weakness. Ever since the Lord made the world be has heard nothing but fault found with it. Those distressing; Corns! Bad as they are, llindercorns mi l remove tbem and then you can wals aud run and jump as you like. The women are good looking in spite of the fashions. We think Pisos Cure for consumption is the only medicine for Coughs Jennie PiCKAno, Springfield, Ills., Oct. 1, lS'M. A man can't take a woman's word for anything he must take a dozen or more. "Hanson's SXagle Corn Salve. Warranted to cure or money refunded. t Ask year drug-gist for it. Price IS cents. EiHiard tabe, swond-hani, for t-u.e cheap. Apply to or address, H. C. Akix, 11 S. l'-th St., Omaha, Nex It you cant break an apple you'll die an old maid. )OOOOOOOOOCOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO loollinu' 8 flTT IH)ES NOT "FOOL 'ROUND"; 8 ULLttt GOES straight to AND DRIVES IT OUT AND "SHUTS O application. Commissions allowed on ooooooooooooooooooo THE WEEKLY BEE, And the Band Played On. "Home,"' announced the imperial messenger, "is burning". " The I'mperor Nero evinced interest. "The eonflcTa tion is general," continued the ofUeer; whereat the monarch raised nimself on his elbow.' There was a period of si- ! lence. "The populace," ventured the herald, hnaily, "is making for the open country." The master of the world rose to his feet. "In that event,"' he said, "you may bring me my fiddle. I will practice the concerto for the E string, which came near getting me :m- j peached, you remember." j "Brown's Bron hial Troches" re iev ; Throat Irritation taused by Cold cr ue of j the voice. Ihe genuine so'd onTy in loxes. , The more worthless a man. the more : "visitin?"' he does. FITS ATI Kits stepped free by Jr. K line's Ores ficrve Kesl-orer. u h itsafter tin- I.rst i-;iy a u.-e. ! llari'elouscures. Treatise an. 1 $2 trial bott ifre V i iuciists. fctui toLr.t;iiiif,3olAiciisU,l'Uiiit,li. I Has any inventor ever tried to evolve a ' smoke es jaror lamp? It the Eaby is Cutting Teetn. Be sure and use that old and Tv eU-tried remedy, 5Vd.slow' Sooth is a Srnrr lor Children Teethinc- A cat farm Lss t een estaLiish -d in Cin cinnati. Its purr-j uss is to raise fur. . KNOWLEDGE Brings comfort and improvement and tends to personal enjoyment when rigMly usea. The many, who live bet ter than others and enjoy life more, with les3 expenditure, by more promptly adapting the world's best products to the needs of physical being, will attest the value to health of the pure liquid laxative principles embraced in the remedy, Syrup of Figs. It3 excellence is due to its presenting in the form most acceptable and pleas ant to the taste, the refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a perfect lax ative ; effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers and permanently curing constipation. It has given satisfaction to millions and met with the approval of. the medical profession, because it acts on the Kid neys, Liver and Bowels without weak ening them and it is perfectly free from every objectionable substance. Syrup of Figs is for sale by all drug gists in 50c and $1 bottles, but it is man ufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, whose name is printed on every package, also the name, Syrup of Figs and being well informed, you will not accept any substitute if offered. THE LAND OF THE The Last Gm4 Laad Is to had ta tas "Con Belt" at Law rrirea. For IXFORMATION retrardine land in Barry Co., S. TV. MI&SOUIX1, write to Capt. Oku. a. l'VBDT, Ilerce City, Mo.; J G. Mahiott, I'urdy, Mo. ; T. s. Frost, (asfvilie, Mo., or L. B. biiwir & i.X 0'-i Houadno:k Bldg., Chicago, 111. ZacharyT. Liniisey, V'S' RUBBER GOO Dealers send for Catalogues, Omaha, "eb. Si If you want a F K EE FA It M in MAX I TO II A , AfcSIMMOIA, ALI.KUTA or the SIS KATIIIEWAX, ap. J? for particulars to L. A. HAMILTON, Land Commissioner. WINNIPEG. WBTfflftCHINEBY Illastxatftd eataloene ebowing VEL AUGERS. ROCK VTillAJ1, HYDKATJUO X-T 11-TTTVfl XT A O HIVVKV t Sent Fmx. Have been tested ana ail tcarrantedm Sioux City Engine and Iron Worts, Successors to Peon M fr. Co. Minus City. laws. Tbe Rowell A Chask Machinery Co., 1114 Wet Elevent'i RrvC, Kan?a Vil , .11 Female Fruit Pills Positively rcinovf U4 1 1 all irregularities, from whatever cau.-e rrm, S1.00. Gavi Medical Co.. 81 Oearlorn Street, Ctlca-j clubs of three or more subscriptions. Cp Omaha, Neb v".. iSaWf -viC-. .; l 7 U IIS RED APPLE 6j 1st' IV; M