The weekly independent. (Lincoln, Nebraska) 1893-1895, September 20, 1895, Image 2
fthc WMg Jmtqmulcnt BY H.HUCKINS. LINCOLN, NIBBASKA. The women are good looking In spite of the fashions. Has any inventor ever tried to evolve a smokeless parlor lamp? A cat farm has been established In Cincinnati. Its purr-pusa is to raise fur. The busiest men now are those who run the thrashing machines. We all have our busy days. Whenever you see fi woman wearing suspenders yoc can safely wager a nickel her husband has borrowed her belt. The bloomer shows how much there was in the skirt to admire; but no ah, no not in the caw of the bow-legged girl. Ex-Rcverend and Ex-Mayor Stark weather of Superior, Wis., Is now plan ning for the stage. lie ought to take a few rounds in the ring. A private bank in Tacoma "busted" 'ast week, with $380,000 liabilities and $444 in cash. Just figure out how mucn the creditora will got if they are real lucky. Rev. Mr. Wilson of Terre Haute de clares that he will not recognize a wom an in bloomers, And still the Terrt Haute ladies are wearing them. They evidently don't care. As the smoke of Wtle gradually clears away the public discerns that the smilipg figure sitting on the top of the heap, with the spoils of war clustered around him, is that of Matt Quay. St Louis papers are discussing the question why women will not treat one another. They have a first-rate rea son. After they have bought material for their drees sleeves they have no money loft. Some of the people In Pontlac, Mich., have actually gone mad on the Sunday closing craze. They even went so far as to try to keep the postofflce closed, but when Postmaster Plorson informed the leaders that he would see that every one of them were Indicted in the United States court If they didn't let up they wisely concluded to allow Uncle Sam to continue to accommodate the people. There are a great many people in Pontlac with wheels concealed in their upper storie3. "Women are no better than men said Mrs. Almy, Jn addressing the women's parliament at Point of Woods recently. This is not true. Women are better than men. There Is no man worth his salt who doesn't believe so. Women are the elect of the earth. If they did not supply men with Ideals, furnish them with objects for devotion, give them lessons in unselfishness, the whole structure of civilization would come down like a card house. No man would have made such a statement. Mrs. Almy owes an apology to ber brothers for attacking the foremost ar ticle of their social creed. The Louisville Courier-Journal prints a sensational article about the Czar of Russia mistreating his wife, in the course of which it says: "Three times the Czarina burst into tear3 at the breakfast table and hurried away, leav ing the drapot of Russia to think how cleverly he was taming her." This Is a gross injustice to the Czarina, who Is a woman of spirit. As a matter of fact the young people have had but one difficulty. One Monday the Czar made sneering remarks about "a washday dinner," and the Czarina informed him that he could eat down town or hire a cook, just as he chose. Since that he has not had a captious word to utter. ' how to build a good road Is a very Important r.ubject to the people of a great nation that la just becoming fully aroused to the Importance of maintain ing a better system of public highways. In his new book, Gen. Roy Stoue, spe cial agent of the United States Depart ment of Road Inquiry, says that the perfection of roads Is a fine dry smooth dirt track, for the reason that such a surface is easy on horse .and vehicle, while free from Jar and noise. He ad vocates narrow stone roads beside the dirt track for the reason that in wet or frosty weather dirt roads are often im passable. A dirt road In good condi tion is preferable to a furface of stone for driving and wheeling purposes and would save much wear on the latter which is the more expensive of the two. As a matter of course this general sug gestion is to be modified to suit differ ent localities, but on the whole, Gen. Stone's report, made after the examina tion and a careful survey and study of recently built roads in all parts of the country is a safe and scientific guide for the correct building of logical and last tng highway"?. The Sun, expressing Its surprise that men with such names as Dink Botts, Pod Distnuke, Hoke Smith, etc., have attained prominence among their fellow citizens, seems to have lost sight of the fact that Hon. Button Gwinnett signed the Declaration of Independence, It Is now more than seme weeks since W. W. Taylor, the ex-cash-handler of South Dakota, was sentenced to five years at hard Unor. He hasn't done a stroke of work yet, and It begins to look as If it wasn't intended that he should kill himself laboring. rOPULAU SCIENCE. EXPERIMENTS AND INVENTIONS INTERESTING TO ALL. Soma Mnrvftloai Stride Rirently Made In I'lin Mflmnlil World Chemical and Electrical Wonder Worker lie veallng Hidden Treasure. CIENTISTS of En gland have been giving a great deal of serious con sideration to the study of a mere toy which they are still unable to satisfac torily explain. It is a top called the "artificial spectrum top," in which mere tracings of black and white are made to assume colors when in motion. The top as now constructed consists of a revolving disc, half black and half white. On the white half are short, concentric arcs of black. When the top revolves close under a bright lamp these arcs appear, not as gray lines, as might be expected, but as lines of color. To most eyes the effect Is as follows: ' (1) When the revolution is such that the black line is preceded by the black half of the disc and followed by the re mainder of the white, it appears red; (2) when the direction of rotation is re versed it appears blue; (3) when the lines are on the central portion of the white (so as to have equal white imme diately on each side) the color is green; (4) intermediate positions give approxi mately the Intermediate colors of the spectrum. A few people see the colors differently, and one or two people, by no means color blind, can see no color at all. Curiously enough, a few people who are somewhat color blind can see the colors on the top very well. MobmnpH Parcment. Perhaps the oddest pavement ever laid is one Just completed at Chino, Cal. It is made mostly of molasses, and if it proves all of the success claimed for it, it may point a way for the sugar planters of the South to profitably dispose of the millions of gallons of useless molasses which they are said to have on hand. The head chemist of a sugar factory at Chino, Mr. E. Turke, was led to make certain experiments, of wtichthe new side walk, a thousand feet long, from the factory to the main street, is the re sult. The molasses used Is a refuse product, hitherto believed to be of no value. It Is simply mixed with a cer tain kind of sand to about the consis tency of asphalt and laid like an asphalt pavement. The composition dries quickly and becomes quite hard, and remains so. The peculiar point of It is that the sun only makes It drier and harder, instead of softening it, as might be expected. A block of the composition, two feet long, a foot wide, and one inch thick, was submitted to severe tests and stood them well. Laid with an inch or so of Its edges resting on supports, it withstood repeated blows of a machine hammer without showing any effects' of cracking or binding. St'.lmrlne Photography. Mr. Louis Boutan has made some in teresting experiments in submarine photography. He is an ardent student of zoology, and during the investiga tions ho made on the shores of the Mediterranean ho was so impressed with the beauty of the sights offered that he concluded to make some effort to represent them by pictures as well as words. Ills first experiments were made at a slight distance under the surface of the water, where the inten sity of the light is still sufficient for the production of photographs; be cou struetul a camera and an instantaneous shutter especially adapted for use in water. Finding it desirable to take pictures at greater depths, Mr. Boutan resorted to the employment of artifi cial light, and employed an apparatus whose construction is shown in the cut. The apparatus comprises a barrel, T, containing oxygen and carrying a glass globe, C, in which is placed a lamp, A, having a wick impregnated with alco- ;2 ' '-L. i hoi. The operator, by pressing the bulb, P, at the end of the tube, II, may throw some magnesium powder Into the flaio, or otherwise produce a flash light with in the globe, C. The operator puts on a diving suit provided with the usual air supply pipe, S, and places his camera, M, which is watertight, In proximity to the oxygen barrel, T, so that he can readily actuate the shutter and the flash light apparatus. Battlefield Cremation. In view of the terrific slaughter by means of the latest Improved munitions of war, It has been suggested that some steps must be taken toward providing for the removal of the dead which would so encumber the ground ns to make action and locomotion extremely dlfllcuK. It has been propowd thac crematories be started tot the purpose of disposing of th dew While It 1 clearly apparent tli.X fJmethlnir tniHt li d"iH In thU dlre.vw. it ret-r.: an eAds.ier.iUu orm of briXvUty tc d:i:n; , i Yi--i,if rat izt : : -.; (lh the dead into crematory furnace In this way. Ther I" lo the very gravest danger that careless anl unfeeling em ployes may pick up men who are only stunned or who may have fainted and plunge them into "the fiery vortex. It is a well-understood fact that men have lain for hours on the battlefield dead to all appearances, and such might easily be gathered up by Ignorant or unobservlng attendants and consigned to the flames. It would be very much better to prepare temporary receiving hospitals, where all men not absolutely shot to pieces could be removed and ex amined. Then the crematory might do good work. There is, however, a' mel ancholy satisfaction' to surviving friends in the Idea that the bodies of their loved ones who have fallen in battle may be brought home to them and buried in the family vault. Battle field crematories are not likely to como into general favor among people of delicate sensibilities. Triplet Glage. T9 perform this pretty experiment you need three old-fashioned cham pagne glasses and two wooden Btlcks, say the ordinary pen-holders. The position of the glasses shown in the illustration almost explains Itself. You will have to try It tentatively, so as to get the exact point Inside the glasses, where the stick will serve the purpose desired, but it may be done by careful handling. Having succeeded in doing this, see whether you cannot place three glasses upon a fourth in the same way. The Velrating Conntltuent of Croton OH In a communication made to the Royal society, Mr. Wyndham R. Duns tan, M.A., PR.S., and Miss L. E. Boole, lecturer on chemistry In the London School of Medicine for Women, record the results of an experimental Inquiry Into the nature of the vesicating con stituent of croton oil. According to the research of Buchheim, and more re cently of Robert and Hirscheydt, the vesicating action of croton oil is due to an acid closely allied to oleic acid, which has been given the name of crotonoleic acid, and which is now pre pared for nedical purposes on a large scale in Germany. The process con slsts.broadly, in the formation first of barirUn crotonoleate, and the subse quent decomposition of this with dilute sulphuric acid, and extraction of the liberated crotonoleic acid as a viscid oil with ether. By a process of frac tional precipitation, using lead salts, 'the above investigators were able to separate from this so-called crotonoleic acid a large proportion of Inactive oiiy acids, till at last they were successful in obtaining, by a series of operations' In which alcoholic extraction and sep aration by means of lead oxide were made use of, a resinous substance hav ing extraordinary power as a vesicant. The composition of this resin is ex pressed by the empirical formula C13H1804. All attempts to crystallize or to obtain crystalline derivatives failed. It is a hard, pale yellow, brit tle resin, nearly insoluble in water, light petroleum, and benzene, but readily dissolved in alcohol, ether, and chloroform. In regard to its constitu tion it Is concluded that the vesicat ing constituent of croton oil is a lac tone or an anhydride of complicated structure. Klectxldtjr on .Japanese War VcmeN. The firing of great guns and the ex plosion of shells appears to have the effect of disarranging some of the elec trical devices on war ships. The Japanese legation in Paris has for warded to the Trench government a report relating to the recent naval com bats, in which It is stated, with re gard to the electric installations on board th-a mikado's warships, that the interruptions of current which took place were not caused, as has been said, by the recoil of the guns, but by the bursting of Chinese shells. The work ing of the ordnance maneuvered by electricity was not Interfered with. The electric wires used for iginlting charges were, however, broken by the vibration set up by the firing of the heavy guns. Electrical Note. It is said that electric lamps run by storage batteries last twice as long as lamps operated directly from dy namos. Any galvanometer having a resist ance which Is large In proportion to the current to be measured can be used as a voltmeter after calibration. In an arc lamp, supplied with a di rect current, the consumption of the positive carbon is In round numbers one inch per hour, and of the negative carbon one-half that amount. Aluminum has the least electrical re sistance for a given leugth and weight asd mercury has the greatest; but for a given length and sectional area, an nealed silver has the least resistance and bismuth the greatest. Before beginning to charge a storage battery. It should be gone over care fuly, and any cell that is not up to the stavJard should be taken out of the circuit, and put in working condition before being replaced. S. P. Thompson says: "You will get the given amount of magnetism and traction, with the least amount of mag netizing force, when you have the area (of '.he magnet) as great as possible and the length as small as possible." Catherine tie MeJIci paid about i shillings for a pair of gloves. A Paralytic Cured. Ilia Grandfather, Kerolntlonary Bol dier, and III Father, lloth Died of larulyili. Yet the Third Gener ation I Cured The Method. fFrom the Herald, Boston, Mass.) Like a thunderbolt from a clear sky, a stroke of paralysis came to Mr. Frank T. Ware, the well known Boston auc tioneer and appraiser, at 235 Washing ton street. He went to bed one night about six years ago seemingly in robust health. When he awoke his left side was stiffened by the deadening of the nerves. The Interviewer sought out Mr. Ware to get the facts. He gave the in teresting particulars In his own way: "The first shock came very suddenly while I was asleep, but It was not last ing in Its effects, and In a few weeks I was able to be about. A few months after, when exhausted by work and drenched with rain I went home In a very nervous state. The result was a second and more severe shock, after which my left arm and leg were prac tically helpless, "My grandfather, who was a soldier in the Revolutionary War, and lost an arm In the struggle for American inde pendence, died finally of paralysis. My father also died of paralysis, although It was complicated with other troubles, and so I had some knowledge of the fa tal character of the disease which Is he reditary in our family. After the sec ond shock I took warning, for, in all probability, a third would carry me oft. "Almost everything under the sun was recommended to me and I tried all the remedies that seemed likely to do any good, electricity, massage and special ists, but to no effect. "The only thing I found that helped me was Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, and I verily believe that if it hadn't been for those pills I would have been dead years ago. "Yes, I still have a slight reminder of the last attack six years ago. My left arm Is not as strong as the other and my left foot drags a little, as the paralysis had the effect of deadening the nerves. But I can still walk a good distance, talk as easily as ever, and my general health is splendid. I am really over sev enty years old, although I am generally taken to be twentV years younger. "The Pink Pills keep my blood in good condition, and I bellei e that Is why I am so well. Mr. Ware has every appearance of a perfectly healthy man, and arrives at his office promptly at eight o'clock ev ery morning, although he has reached an age when many men retire from active life. He says that In his opinion both his father and grandfather could have been saved If Pink Pills had been" obtainable at that time. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale Peo ple contain all the elements necessary to give new life and richness to the blood and restore shattered nerves. They may be had of all druggists or direct by mail from the Dr. Williams' Medicine -Co., Schenectady, N. Y., at CO cents per box, or six boxes for $2.50. SHE WAS THE ONLY WOMAN. The Belle of lUttleaimke Hills Ha l Great Buih of Lovers. Annie Thomas is the only woman In Kamania county, Wash. She is a squatter and lives in Rattlesnake Hills. There has of late been a great strife for her hand in marriage among the rough settlers of that region. Hank Monley and Jerry Woods seemed to be the highest in her favor and so it was finally agreed that these two men should settle the question be tween them by a duel with bowie knives. After a desperate fight, in which both were wounded, tha battle was declared a draw. It was then agreed that the matrimonial question should be settled by a game of seven up. The fortune of cards favored Monley and he was declared the win ner of the squatter bride. A parson was called in to assure him his prize. The fickle Annie had a long talk with tha parson, and, though she had never seen him before she at last announced her intention of marrying the parson himself and not Monley. In vain did the hero of the bowie knife duel and the victor in the game of 6even-up object to this proceeding. The woman was firm in her intentions and the upshot was that the parson cot tho woman. ' nut of Sight of Land on a Iilver. Were it not for a decided difference in the color of the water you would never know when the Atlantic is left and the Rio do la Plata entered. The high-rolling, white-capped billows are the same, and no land i3 visible, for the great river which James Diaz de Salis discovered is 123 miles wido at its mouth, though with an average depth of only fifty feet. Sebastian Cabot, who arrived in the year 1530, soon after the natives had murdered poor Don Salis, dubbed it River of Sil ver, not on account of its color, which might have won for it the more anpro priate name of Golden river or River of Chocolate, but because he had wrested quantities of silver from the Indians who swarmed its banks, and naturally imagined that an abund ance of precious metal remained in the vicinitv. When Does the Tear Bella? The countries and nations of the world with a few exceptions, begin the year with January 1, but that this system is arbitrary and based upon nothing in particular does not even need to be proven. The ancient Egyptians, Chaldeans, Persians, .Syr ians, Phoenicians and Carthaginians each began their year with the au tumnal equinox, or about September 23. Among the Greeks the beginning of the year was at the time of the winter solstice down to 433 B. C, when the "Menton Cycle" was intro duced, after which the new year be gan on Juno 23. In England from the time of the fourteenth century until 1753 the legal and ecclesiastical year bea-an on March 25. Women to Study Our School. English educators have done a good thing for the cause in that country by Bending five women to the United States for the purpose of examining the American system of public educa tion in order to ascertain If there be any of its features that can be advan tageously adopted in England or can be incorporated iu a new school bill which Is in course of preparation for introduction to parliament. This is a compliment to tlu American school system and to womiu. THE REWARD OF HONESTY. It 1 Not AIitut Hn free and Generous a to He Very Encouraging. "The case presented in last night's paper of a reward of 10 being paid fof the return of $30 reminds me of a simi lar anecdote only different," said tha ancient New England member of the club to a Utlca reporter. "It happened in Providence (R. I.) forty years ago. when the city contained but one mil lionaire, who was an old Scotchman named Alexander Duncan. One day Mr. Duncan, in leaving his office, dropped a large roll of bank notes in the street. They escaped his eye, but not that of the small boy, who is around everywhere, and who pounced upon the bills immediately. The roll contained $500. When Mr. Duncan received it hi eagerly counted the money and, finding it correct, he turned to the boy and said: 'I thank ye, my little man.' Then, noticing the look of dismay in the poor lad's countenance, he felt in his trousers pocket and fished out a coin, which he handed to the finder of his wealth. And the coin represented what do you think?" "Five dollars?" "A dollar?" "A half dollar?" 1 "A quarter of a dollar?" "Just half of that. It vas an old Spanish coin that we used to call a ninepence in New England and that you would call a shilling in New York. In other words, it was twelve and a half cents whicl? Alexander Duncan, the millionaire of Providence, paid to the honest boy who found and returned to him $500." A POET'S LICENSE. Squeezed the Hand of an Kmpres in, tlie Fervor of Recitation. G. W. Smalley, in "Studies of Men," relates the following incident: "Tenny son was one of the party invited some years since by Sir Donald Currie on a yachting trip, the yacht provided being an ocean steamer of the South Africa line, known as the Pembroke Castle. Mr. Gladstone was another guest, I think certainly he was on one of the two or three trips then taken. There was on board a young English girl, since married and dead, whose beauty and intelligence and charm were all remarkable. Tennyson attached him self to this brilliant and sympathetic creature. He was often asked to read, and it became his habit to read holding her hand, which, in the fervor of recita tion, he often pressed. The ship put in at Copenhagen, and the Princess of Wales and the Empress of Russia, then on a visit to her old home, came on board. There was luncheon, and after luncheon Tennyson was asked to read; and did, sitting between the Empress on one side and the English girl on the other. When it was over and they had gone up on deck, he asked the girl whether she thought the Empress liked It. 'Well,' answered she, 'her Majesty must have thought It a little unusual.' 'What do you mean?' 'I mean that I don't think the Empress is in the habit of having her hand squeezed In publlo even by poets.' It seemed proper to Tennyson to offer to the Empress hia most humble apologies for his mistake. The Empress laughed, and told him she had enjoyed the reading extremely." IIhh Oray Whiskers and a Terrier. A bicycle seems to call out a man's latent peculiarities with unfailing cer tainty, and there are always interest ing examples of such development to be seen among the riders in the park or on the roads. A gray whiskered man rides on the boulevard almost every day with a small Skye terrier in a wire basket fastened to the front of the bi cycle just below the handle bars. He ha3 been riding this way for several months, and is never seen without tha dog. The animal's expression is a cu rious combination of terror and ennui, and there is an alertness in his look which might be understood to Indicate that he would jump out at the first op portunity. Other similar riders are to be seen on the road every day, but un fortunately all of them are not so harm less. New York Sun. I'lnnt Hourded for 50 Cent a Month. Boarding houses for plants are a nov el institution, designed for the housing of planta for families who close up their city houses for several months during the summer. Every woman who lovea flowers Is at her wits' end to devise a means of having her plants cared for while she is away. In the case of a large and valuable collection this be comes a serious matter. Often In tha spring and summer anyone passing a florist's may see in his window a strip of painted glass or, some other sign, bearing the words: "Boarding House for Plants, 50 Cents Apiece." A few of , the establishments offer accommoda tions for 25 cents. This price covers a month's board and lodging for a singh? potted plant. C'tevrltnil' Flat;. Just at the pnstwnrd of flrnv r.nhltm j ( stands a flagpole, which towers 50 feet high toward the clear blue of the sum-1 mer sky. The moment he leaves the place an American flag, which waves from the apex of the flagstaff, is low- j ereu, wnuii it'ua uu umuoKers urni mo president is not at home, for when he Is at home the glorious star-spangled banner Is always whipping about tho j sighing wind. Many a marine glass sweeps the flagstaff from cottages and hamlets miles around, and many glass owners smile when they see the flag is ! not flying and mutter to themselves "Cleveland has gone fishing again." Maurile'a lluajr Wrrk. Following is a society item from Co dar Point, Kan.: "Maud Hastings was pretty busy while here last week. She broke John Sayre's colt to ride, raked alfalfa, pitched wheat and killed a snake. Corns again, Maudle." AWAY WITH THB TAG. n I an Inaalt fo a Slilrl and a KuUaoo to Its Wearer. As warm weather continues, swelter ing mankind with one indignant voice demands the abolition of the senseless little tag which makers attach to the bottom of the modern shirt front At best this pesky tag is a useless fixture and two often it is an unsightly nui sance. When it is concealed by the waistband of the wearer's trousers ii, frequently causes a lumpy wrinkle, and when it rises above that line if has an uncanny way of thrusting itself into view between the button holes of one's vest On the shirt of a man who goes vestless in hot weather the little tag is a fluttering badge of vulgarity, an audacious insult to good tasto and a starchy affront to social order and progress. The tag is the one useless, witless and exasperating part which evolution has not yet eliminated from tho nineteenth century shirt. It is a survival of the unfittest, a relic of the dark ages when a stranger desirous of cashing a check at the bank pointed to the initials on the tag of his shirt front as a ifleans of identifying him self; wherefore the offensive and os tentatious tag must go. Suffering man has pulled the tag and evolution will do the rest. In This Work-a-Day World Brain and nervo" systems often give way under the pressure nnd anxieties of business. Paresis, wasting of tlie nervous tissues, a sudden and untorewi ni collapse of the mental and physical faculties are fnlly occurrences, as the columns of the duily press show. Fortify the system wl:n exhausted asainsl such untoward events with Hosteller's Stom ach Hitters, that most helpful medicine of ths weak, worn out and in linn. Use it in rheu matism, dyspepsia, constipation and malaria. A Year of Odd Nuroe. It is a year of odd ti.unes for men ol sudden fame. Here U a list that sug gests itself at a second's thought: Zimri Dwiggin?, banker; Dahomey Dodds, warrior; Hoke Smith, journal ist and statesman; Sylvester Pcnnoyer, who told the president "to mind his own business;" Stanhope Sams, poet and statesman; Colonel Pod Dismuke, statesman; Colonel Dink P.otts, office seeker. And the year is not over. I J. C. SIMPSON, Marquess, W. Va.. says. "Hall's Catarrh Cure cured me of a very bad case of catarrh." Druggists sell it, 75c. A properly constituted summer engage ment is taken with a grain of salt and a pound of sugar. Truth. It is a Fact That Hood's Sarsaparilla has an unequalled record of cures, the largest sales iu th i world, and cures when all others fail. I Hood's Sarsaparilla I Is the Only iTrue Blood Purifier ! Prominently In the public eye today. $lj six for $o. Be sure to get Hood's. I I4-.r.H'o Dille ' harmoniously wlti j llUUU 53 "Ilia Hoou't SarsaparllU. Walter Ma i Co. Mil Tha Largest Minufacturtn of PURE, HICH CRADE Cocoas and Chocolates On thtt Conusant, hve rtcef d HIGHEST AWARDS from tha frcal Industrial and Food EXPOSITIONS ' IN EUROPE AND AMERICA., i I . man? Imltiuoni ' of th Ubrlf and wrut'P'rs on-ou? Isnodft, eonaumeri should maVeior 1 ithat our place of nitniifartura, 'namely, Iturrheater, Mas. U printad on tacJl packaga. SOLO BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE. WALTER BAKER 4 CO. LTD. DORCHESTER, MASS, L nun! no a lire CMId UO A LIE P0WSEE2D AUS PiEFTOED (I'ATE.MEU) Tho ttrcmittt p.nl mirrat f.ve a line powdor bihI purkud'lii a viu iitu remnvftble lid, tlie coi.urt nnH. ITnliba ...l.u 1 vn , hi.m. are alwus iviuly lor ime. vv:il make tho brut perfumed Hard roop In'.Unilmitoa Without boiiimj. It is the bit foreieanslttg waaiepipe. dianitn'tiim alnks, clusi.'lo, wuiilaf bottk. patoU, trees, etc. . PEN NA. SALT M'F'G CO, Gen. A tents.. Fhtla.. Pa. PARKERS " HAIR BAi-SAIVI Clntnm and tannliui lh hair. U- - t.......n ma,h H, " ajfcf ver Fall to llcatora Gray .&). A Ilnlr to iu Yenttatul Color. 1-lt il Ourea aralp ilwawa haT la.iaij. rV r,nUl.''at Dtni.-gl.'a Omaha STOVE REPAIR Works at . . i ... a.. J at aa a i r vKT-at-i Hints nOLRt AIL liSfc MILS. Bart loatrb Syrup, f aatva Ua4. a in t"n P"l! nf-iiMiata. L. N. U. No. 38. (895. HKindlf Mention This Paper When Yo Writs to An Adrtiter. M 1! V III 11 ItiHW i i .in an iii la mil mm mm . aia aaa a, m m k. -J Hew SHORT Lsiic TO mm mm mmm r. n aa m I Elm L El Miii , B " J I J Bl R' GWir?i MM n r r m mj ii ri ii ra as h ifctf flrT 1 1 I. rnHKvm, . nyem, uuinntt, recall a r-r i A i naaaua a : r rv torn tsr 173