The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, July 03, 1896, Image 7

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    ■L/. Horn* •'
A healthy infant sleeps moat of the
' time ilurlng the first few weeks, and in ,
the early years people are disposed to j
let children sleep as they will. Hut
from six or seven years old. when
t school begins, this sensible policy
If comes to an end, and sleep is put off
! persistently through all the years up
to manhood and womanhood At the
age of ten or eleven the child is ullow
cd to sleep only eight or nine hours,
when its parents should insist upon its
having wiiat it absolutely needs,
winch is ten or eleven, at least I'p to
twenty a youth <n«eds nine hours'
sleep, and an adult should have eight
Insufficient sleep is one of the crying
evns of the day. The want of proper
iest nnd normal conditions of the ner
I vows system, and especially of the
brum, produces a lamentable condi
* Ui'ii deterioration in both body and
exuaiislion, excitability, and intellect
ual disorders are gredually taking the
place of the love of work, general well
being and the spirit of initiative.—
hew York State Medical Journal.
Hall's Catarrh I lire
2a a constitutional cure. Price, 71c.
strawberry Souffle.
Put half a pint of the pulp of fresh
strawberries passed through a sieve in
an enameled saucepan with an ounce
nnd a half of butter, seven ounces of
sugar, half a gill of cream, and a little
more than a gill of milk mixed with an
ounce of flour and half an ounce of
. arrowroot. Htir till the Hour is cooked;
beet, in the yolks of three eggs and let
them thicken. When the mixture Is
‘ / J cool stir in the whiles of five eggs pre
,1 viously beaten to a stiff froth, a tea
i spoonful of lemon juice, a teaspoonful
II of maraschino, and sis ounces of straw
, berries cut into dice. Color with car
’ mine and bake in a quick oven for half
an hour. When done dredge with
castor sugar, herve quickly with a
4 good sauce.—Nt James <iu/.ette.
I'ure for Consumption has saved
Bnt la rye doctor bills ('. I.. linker, 4 712k
ties'id Sq., l‘hha<iul| Ida Pa., 1 lec, s, |s(|f>
too high for litm to k hmi.
it Is of more profit to have a conteii ted
apirtt than a (at I auk account
If the limit/ la Cutting Teem.
k mire anil ua that old and wall triad ramedr, Mas
Wiaaixiw'a Nootmjhi Hr sir for Chlldrau iMthlu*.
‘ Marriage is a lottery.” wbeu it i* a cor
ner lot-ery._
There is not only an art hut an eloquence
in silence. ( h ero,
FITS -iiiiiiieil Ires and eerm insnt^v I'urd# No
1 hrsl ilj •- . #••"! Hr. Klllia’aoiral arae
IF# Kesuircr. Fn «*? iris'i«tHe and irs*t»*. Marv.
ML elouacurca Ph.KU»*,ii31 An u»t. Phli*ceiph.a,»'*
KflBk, those who levor revolutions only dig a
tomb lor themselves.
line Thousand Farmers Wanted
KZp£, To settle on one thousand choice farms
1 Mf on the line of the Chicago, Milwaukee
B A St. Paul Kail way in Dakota.
These lands are located in twenty
| different counties, and are to tie bad
now at prices ranging from (7 to 81ft
■fe per acre; a few monlba hence their
i|V value will tie doubled,
is For a home or for investment no
iucaier chance in the West has ever
before been offered. Now is the time
to invest. No better farming land ex
%jjk ists anywhere. No greater results can
igfp t>e obtained anywhere.
Sctinol* and ehurches abound every
where. Nearby markets for ail farm
ML products Mouth and North Dakota
W arc the banner diversified farming and
Bp;, stock-raising states of the West
Everything grows in Dakota except ig
’ norsnee and intemperance. A new
boom ia on. Take advantage of the
tide which leads to Dakota and to for
m tune.
For further information address or
'ttl* upon W. E. Powell, (ieneral lm
f migration Agent, 410 Old Colony Build
1 ing. Chicago. Ills.
(iive your neighlsirs rope enough and
i/ they will eventually attempt to hang you.
KOK THE NATIONAL CONVENTION
\ PEOPLES PAKTY
AT HT. LOUIS JUI.Y 2-ND.
The VVahash, the shortest and quickest
route has leen selected as the line troin
Ne! ranks for de egates and their IrieudH to
Mb irave1. All trains are equipped with He
^B dining Chair Cam, Free, and Pullman
Kleei lug cars. Connecting Line- whl sell
tickets over the W aliaah at HAI.r-FAHK.
Partie, desiring through car* or M eeping
B iar accommodation can arrange same by
'ailing at the Wahahii ticket ollice. No.
:41ft Farnam Ht., (Paxton Hotel Block i, or
write 0. N. Ci.av ion,
N. W. V, A., Omaha. Nebr.
Statistic* show that the Fren h live
longer than the tiermaus.
Gladness Comes
With a better uiMtorataudlug uf th#
tr anatom ttature of th# many pin *
Iral ilia, wkloh vattlah before itroiwi ef
fort* gentle effort* (ilraaMtivnorh
rightly dire* ted There to Comfort In
the kimo ledge, that w many forma uf
atehneaa are i*4 >lua n> an> actual ilia
raw, but aim ply bi a eonalinaledrottdi
tarn >>f the ayateui. whtoh the |ilaaaant
family laaatlva. Nyrnpuf fig* prompt
i.t remove**. That to why it to the only
remedy with .aillhmaul lentil to* ami i»
everywhere eateemed m> highly l*y all
who value lual health Ita k iwi igl
eft#* I* are <lue to Urn tael, that It to the
owe remedy whtoh promote* tntarnal
i Iraaltuaaa without debilitating th*
organa u* whtoh It wla It to therefore
»ll In.I».rtank. In order to get it* hem'
to- *1 rffeete. to uote when |on fm
.•»**» that you have the genuine arti
i to, ahtoh la maanfaetured by th* t alt
f> rato T»g dyrttf to, only and auto! hy
all refutable druggtai*
II in the rupi meut of gtaal health
and th* ayatem to regular la«atiy*« or
i t tier reutedtea are 'tea not m-eded It
afllteted with any aatual d >»***# Ope
may be eom me ruled to th# moat ahltlfni
Hota laio but it in need uf a laaaliv*
owe aluaiM have th* beat ami wit* th*
evil lahwuaed a Very where, tty mf of
I tga *1*0-1* hlghrat tM to m**t tore* ty
aw > aiwlgm i»«»l general -all-fa, A*, a
I
JOHNNY’S FOURTH.
It Tama m I.IHIa tat* hot Ha Maria
Thing* Hum .)u*l tha *ama.
F I LIVE TO BE A
hundred year* old,
I'll never forget
that Fourth of
July! You see It
happened like this;
My big brother Alf.
went off to Uncle
Ben’s to spend his
summer vacation
an' 'bout tv. weeks
fore the Fourth,
ma went up there too, for Uncle Ben *
her only brother. She took along the
baby, the sweetest little sister that ever
lived- an’ father, who'd been away a
spell, was agoln’ to meet her, an" visit
to Uncle Ben's. So you see there
wasn’t anybody to home hut me, gran'
ma an’ Ihe hired glr). An’ ma laid her
’afore she left, tbet. she might go to
the Fourth o’ July, an’ she got her an
alflred purty dress, sky blue, '(was, to
wear, ho’ It bed beads sewed all over
It; my, It was a stunner! I don’t see
why mu’ber ran’t wear sech dre*-e*
stead of the gray an’ black one* she
alius wears!
Well, the hoys, on our street, lolled
on a splendiferous time. We didn’t
care 'bout the doin'* at the center: our
celebration was goln' to he held In the
hack alley, But what should come the
night 'lorn the Fourth, but a letter to
gran'tria from father an’ O, my! didn't
she feel big over It, she wouldn’t let
ma tech It. an’ hadn’t !’*« good a right
to read a letter from my own father an’
he nothin but a boy o’ hern!
Well, I got up purty early an’ gran'
WE HAD A JOLLY TIME,
mu was up too. an' will you believe It.
she wouldn't let me go out the door,
an’ all the boys were a hootin' an’
yellin’ an’ flrln’ off arnernltlon like
sixty!
I thought sure she’d let me go after
breakfast, but she looked at me stern
like, an’ said: "Johnny, you must slay
In door* fur your father said fur me lo
keep you right to home, an’ I’m goln’
to do my duty by you an’ keep you right
under my eye.”
Perhaps you don’t know my gran'ma
Is one o’ them sort thet never re mem
bers bein’ young! Yes, she forgot long
ago that Fourth o’ July was made for
pleulcs an’ good times. She’s also one
o’ the kind thet never goes back on
their word, »o cryln’, kickin’ nor noth
in’ would do no good, an' make her
change her mind one bit, but I sot
down and cried, first an orful mad sort
of a cry, then an’ orful sorry cry, an’
then I got to sleep an' woke up most
starved, an’ gran'ma give me a big
howl o' bread an’ milk, fur the girl was
gone. Well, when night come 1 was
the gladdest boy; fur ’twns the very
longest day I'd ever 'sperienred!
When ma come home, the next week.
I Jest told her all about It, an' she felt
ho bad fur me thet she almost cried,
then she went right to the buttery an'
brought me a big lot o' fire crackers an'
things she got a fore sbe'went away
you know mothers never forglt a fel
ler’s wants. She told gran'ma all about
'em; but she forgot she's got such a
good forgettery.
Of course, 'twa'nt best to let me
know 'bout 'em fur I'd likely used 'em
up 'afore time. Hut 1 went an' got tht
neighbor boys over, If 'twas the 13th of
July, an' we bed a jolly time; fur
mother mude lemonade an' cake an'
lee cream tell you 1 'preriate mothers
now!
xt.. ........ r..„ i_
keep me to home, meuulu' I mustn't
go off to no celebration, an' lie would
n't cared, but sprcled I'd go out In
the alley Ith the boys, an mother told
him to Jog gran tna a memo! y bout the
Fourth of July ameuiltlon up in ihe
buttery! but hi lorgut to nay anything
about It.
Hub! I g>i»»» thone old torefather*
knew what they was about when they
plnted a day lui hoy a to make a big
uolae! pert we boy* couldn't Maud it
tf we cuuldu t yell all w>- wanted to out
day In tlie year, gn Fourth of July is
Young A merit a * u ay, till a tact. So
a hut in my Fourth i'U iw thirteenth, j
waa like ratin’ t<« cream tbout no Ice
in It or drink in st*u« water when the
loam an A*»lt> la gone Sol I lit* it
be a huadteu, I ll hot target thet j
Fourth o July ik*t t waa . beaten i
plum out cl!' JOHNNY.
* »*•«• I««4 .tuft.
out ol tut ana utii OIUI Fear Ik u.
July atautag »asailata.ueaia ) tor I
• Itaeaeed waa gtcea by yuuag people J
In aa ordinaly back lard, and tun
• Wtad at tableau* taieiaperaed with
ute*l« aad re.Halloa* A platform ha t
been erected at Ike ead of a grape
arbor The l*a-« p«*uU> 4tep*d. j
formed Ike bath ground, aad loot ligat. j
•tit arraaged lb Iron) of iba aiage. a<
oaa a law a eliding certain If* each \
•Ida aa utdibary tlotn** itee eaterad •
auk abawla **r»*4 aa 4ttm»>ag room
aad Iba abdicate »m eeated dt»aa lh<
• elite length of ike at bar, A earn#
aad teat* t-aald be utilised far ib«*ae
purpaaei. buoeear i glared lignu
• kith are *e •••elite m ablaae* »tr>
*•>• uaed aad beta* ta up*a atr did aw
prota w dtgagraeab'e lo thorn yitwel |
*• ia iba «*m a boa aatpivy ad Ikdawr*
m
I koa | I ate glee that la became laiagl
. aied add* ia •« aaiie at dlgaii>
THE HEROES OF 70.
What true Ameri
can to-day
Keel a not the
blood leap In
hl« vein*
Ah atlrrlng wenea
of 76
Are brought to
mind, though
'peaee now
reign*
Where o’er a hun
dred year* ago
The Briton came In tierce array,
And atrove thl* land of our* to hold
'Neath England’* hard, relentlea*
•way.
Hut Ritrely ’twa* not thu* to be:
A higher Power ruled over all:
And out of war’* grim, wrinkled front
We merged, deaplte It* gloomy pall,
A* gallant freemen fought for right,
And WI*dom* all far-aeeing eye
Beheld a future for our land
for which the patriot dared to die.
Their preefou* blond wa* freely given
t’pon their country’* altar shed;
And now we glory In the deed*
Of our departed, honored dead.
To Washington. the great and true,
And all hi* brave, vletorlou* ho*1,
We homage pay with glad arelalm,
And In their memory make our boaat
Thu* on thl* day of all the yerfr
Columbia’* brightest afar* may shine
To tell of Independence won,
While low we how at Freedom’*
shrine.
And a* the rolling year* go by.
And added glory crown* our land,
Htlll brighter may tbelr memory grow
Who first led Freedom'* holy band.
A GENTLEMAN OF '70.
Me cut a gallant figure
In bonnle buff and blue;
A goodly sight bis buckles bright,
And primly powdered queue!
A more courageous t| lies ter
Ne’er served Sultan nor Shah
Than he, my biave ancestor,
My great -great-grandpapa!
And then In hi* elation
Did my forefather gay
Speak out the word he'd long deferred
For fear she'd say him "Nay;"
And when he saw how tender
Within her eye* the light,
He cried.—"In your surrender
I read we win the fight!"
And when the freedom-paean
Swept, surgellke, through the dells—
A mighty clang whose echoes rang
From Philadelphia bell*
Loud from a stern old steeple
He hurled the proud hurrah,
The Joy-peal to the people,
My great-great-grandpapa.
He held the brutal Briton
A "thing” beneath his acorn;
A tory he conceived to be
The basest caitiff born;
And not a neighbor wondered
He looked upon them ao—
Forsooth, that was one hundred
And twenty years ago!
How true the happy presage!
In faith, how leal and true
Thy whole long life of love and strife,
Thou aatnt In huff and blue!
Beyond all touch of travail.
With great-great-grandmamma.
Now flooding time, slips by In rhyme
for great-gloat-grandpapa'
CLINTON 8COLLABD
Wff lt«UMMUl»tUI<«|.
(Iraudpa tlooklug upi What ta it, my
Wiy? freddie tat window! gland out
a Utile fart ben on the aide walk I bava
a package of torpedoes, and I want ta
drop them dowa oa your bald head -
Judge
tlelie freest
sii anger tour orator baa a loud
vote*, hut be ta murdering tbe (Jueea't
Kagtlsh In tbe muat barrthle manner.
Native Mbs shouldn't he an the
fourth at July l*uvh
Usage*'*** tease , '
Juki* abl b ln< tude the evptwdiag
near people of the largest sue eanaon
era* beta are of tb* kind that It la bat
ter not ta dwelt upon, I'bttadelpbta
Newa,
IINII H*( S|Na
fo tbe pat noil* email boy the *uurib
of July ta a game lhai U alwaya waetb
tbe N»a*«n and!* l*u- b
dame leave the «itk on the fourth far
•tout, while iiheia pillow tag tb* ftra
IM|< evamptv *» .»• to* a IIS*Ik »•
I kiladr Iphia TI area
Tb* hrapnes* »f heewoth* m Itaaly
i» give young vwiH* an exaggerated
Idea af tbe raise ef damn* rail* referm
trass** City Timet
Klrclrlrrfl l.«inlpittrni of I.oiih Trunk
Mnri
Dr. Duncan. who has paid much at
iFtillon to the subject of the appllcatioti
of electricity ns a motive power on ex
isting steam lilies, says It Is a mistake
to suppose that electric traction is lilt
In au experimental stage. Almost e\
cry question connected with the sub
ject has heon already settled, and the
results have, In every «a*e. been favor j
, able to electricity, so far as it has Itecn
, fried. The experimental Intramural
| road gave results so far beyond the
! most sanguine expectations, that with
in a few inonlhs one of the longest ele
fitted systems In Chicago was similarly
• equipped. The latest striking sucres*
; In electric traction has been achieved
, In lh(> operation of the special locomo
tives made for hauling trains through .
the Itnltlmore tunnel. The locomotive
proved so powerful that no known
method of testing Is sufficient hi Its ;
scope to determine tlielr clttclcncy, |>r.
Duncan lielleves these lis'omotlves will |
| pull any train that will hold Itself to i
| gether. The only obstacle existing tie
' day In the cqiilpiuciil of long trunk
I lines economically is Hie ir.ilismlsslon
of (lower. The fad Ilia I power gener
ated at Niagara l ulls Is now hclng do
llvered In New York, -Ioil miles off.
with a loss of only half Its efficiency, is
of the utmost significance, urn! It Ims
probably done more tluin any recent
event to strengthen the belief that the
problem of cheap transmission of (h>w
er will s<siii lie worki d out. Dr. Dun
can laeoBtident that the next few years
will see trains run from Itulfnlo east
ward to New York, and westward to
Chicago, by electricity, and Hint the
vast culm piles of I’cni.sylwtnlu used
ns the source of power for the I’ennsyl
van la Hallway system between Hits
burg and New York.
VI bln It Ha III u it Ships (in Klltlrr
I'lie slnieuieui of mi llallan sea cap
laln that he had proved by experience
that a ship goes faster when her snii
are perforated w ith a number of boles
than when they are ipiltc sound, was
at first looked upon as too ridiculous
for consideration. Unbelievers, how
ever, now 11 ltd that the llallan has
gone a long way toward proving his
ease. Ills theory is thill the force of
the wind can not fairly take effect on
utt Inflated sail, because of the eush
loi of Immovable air that tills up the
hollow. To prevent this cushion col
lecting he bored a Dumber of holes In
the sail, which let part of the wind
blow right through It and allowed the
remainder to strike against the can
vas and exercise Its full effect. Hev
eml trials have been made, and It
look* a* If till* I* another of those
paradoxical truths which appear so
impossible on the surface. 'Hie expert
mil.Is were made In all weathers. In
a light wind a Imat with ordinary sails
made four knots, while with the per
forated sails she covered live and a
({uarter knots; in a fresh breeze she
did seven knots with ordinary sails,
and eight and three-i|uarters knots
with ilie Improved sails; In a strong
wind she did eight knots and ten
knots reaped I vely. If this augmented
speed were sustained throughout a
long voyage It would Increase the
value of the ship one-fifth, ns she
would make the same trip In four
we<ks that she did before in live
weeks.
* Hnnsus Chnrrh ill Sod
The Methodists of German town
ship. Smith county. Kansas, worship
n a sod church. As Its name Intllt ales,
its walls are built of sod tnken front
the prairie which surrounds It The
neighbors, regardless of denomination
al 1m lief, met, decided that there ought
to be a church In (lie neighborhood, and
with their own hands laid up the walls,
mid from their own pockets took the
iiioucv to tlnlsh. furnish and light tin*
building. The building Is JOx.'tn feet
and ilie walls are eight feet high. It Is
covered with board* and rootling pa
per; the Interior supports are made of
neatly-smoothed posts .and the Inside
walls are plastered as neatly as any
walls could lie. Comfortable, home
made seats are fur-11st ed for pews, tile
pulpit is covered with velvet, and the
platform is carpeted. It is said that
vv hell one is on the Inside everything is
as neat and tidy as the lincst church
i-oukl lie. When the building was ded
icated there was .lot a dollar of In
debtedness upon the church, or on uny
of the furniture or fixture*.- South
Center Pioneer.
Hittnrl the Prodtio
lu one of the peaceful art*, we have
the astonishing example of the Austri
an musician aud composer, Mozart.
This lull was what we call a prodigy.
He was the son of the buudnutater to
the Archbishop of the city of Salz
burg. At four years of age-aud you
mill admit that is truly young lie
|da>ed the violin with the greatest
*sse, with au expression really won
deiftd lie also eoni|aised those old
fa-li mied dances. *» quaint and sweet,
millil iiituuets. besides other simple
plis-es. At seveu. lie made a tour of
Korope. giving coucerta. playing !«•
r, , wings and quango, aud evirpri*
lug the wliole miisleal world. Theu,
w lieu he was abotll twelve, ho la-gall
to write iqn-ras. sod so original ami
ib tlghiful were these that lie uia> I*
said to have foutuleil a sclnml or imiiu
in r of w riling musical compositions
ul a dramatic nature. After having
d- ue the Work of twu lllfclliiies, be
di d at <he early age of thirty nine
•Add Iliads on V«un« Shoulders.'’ hy
Arthur Ho*her lu Si Nicholas
l.iml ISiIm *•**•• a Mealbea
\ little w ale hfultM** over nttrselvva
wdl save ns a great ileal of watchful '
gcwa •«vf others ami will permit It*
A ullit si of relit tons to drop her iu< -*n
« nii'Si ami »k« mill lull of enndiy
and atr*fv bc*i**ipl*l** aid vmrasas-o.
bailie* and cvn rui>m»»h*ua To pro !
dm* as much iwppines* as w* - an ami
t<. pit tint as mm h wSri), la ihe pmp
v .mo and end of Ifs* nous III) and
in* i-hgn-u (mly give thing* lhatr
• g hi dnwtmn them la r«w. ih» but
place ami uni* them watt Kphteta*
It la better to put a stiver dollar >-n
i it«e -»>U«tins plat* thag a hi i«id
I pics v. aw hi lth«»m»iW to Itellueld
Ho# do ton ague 1 ha I out’'
l V|, At# no t* *‘-ts* I'lttsbarg
i tm<ab li 1 etcgiMi i
Wetter Than I fl », •
A person went to the po»Wtf!lee ‘he
other day and asked what a mot. jy
order for f'J.50 would cost. The deputy
said three cents He said he would
t.ike one. Writing it out and i.’itui.' it
to him he hutidrd over the three cel t*.
"You otve me Mi. please," said ihe
oilier "Why. you said it was three
cents An explanation set iri He
pave up the order, but wilt always
wonder why the man changed Ins
mind That happened in Itoanoke.
and dates and names can be given, as
several were standing by. — Armstrong
(,Wa ) Herald.
If llrnmt* from Medical Help,
ftouhly essential Is II that you should he
provided with some reliable family medi
cine Hostetler's etoniaeii ttliiets ■ * the
tie s i of its class, remedy In 1/ I hrouirhoilt as It
docs Miii'li common ailments as Indlgest on,
constipation anti hlllouanrss and i 'tnroliiu
safe and speedy help In malarial ease,,
rheumatism and Inactivity of the kidneys.
The self 11 pi cited man I.listen- to Ids
enemy to he enten. W nkntniil i
I Ml you ever see anything ns f|tieer
a robin trylnr to feed its own reflec
tion on n window glass'.' That signt
lias l ei'it going on at iny house in I tor
cheater for a day or two. The poor
deceived bird gets a worm <n its bill
nnd then runs np to a basement w in
dow, Where it has seen its r* lie linn,
nnd there tups, laps, taps, at the gins-,
trying lo feed |is shadaw I hed heard
slruttge noises in tlic bnseitient. and
hati begun to think the house was
haunted, as at first I con'd not ascer
tain the cause of tin- sharp sounds,
like tapping on mctul. lint finally dis
covered tim robin at its puzzling at
tempts to feed a ghost, fioslou I runs
erinl
Thought That ought to flettl* Tlieiii.
Old Nejfro Woman .pnurintf coal oil
anionsr a neet of cockroach**)—1 jl».
reckon I’a (T“in to hx you di* time. l'*e
tried lime, insert poodah and hot wtt.
tub, an bain t done no (rood; bu' now
you'd jit*’ he well gtb up. fer you can't
buck op Maiiard Oil company. - Troth
VIctfMioni'* « mmpAor Ire wllh liijrr»•*#>.
I.'uowt H .tIMl* hurt Khre, Tffttlrr nr Hu* • leH,
CbllbhMMv, Pllo‘. *< < u(i»rki ..,New II i -f.' L.
The world t» fall of (eoj.iu with t«.tn
hand* extended to wei-ome any t.*ni|th
tlon that l» out of a job.
I nderewfkl. eweet «• ie hi* mn*ir, cannot
•ootlie hlrn*elf with It
FREE HOMES From Uncle Sam.
Nearly 2,000,000 Acres of Government L nds
Now Open to Settlement——
IN NORTHERN ARKANSAS.
Tb#y fftfUla, w«U*wtil#r«l, bwns'lljr tlrubefMl, a mI nrudin- irtain* * as-* fmiia aw l *'■*"'»*, * ,r.
abunrJariM- N'ortli Arkansas a|>f>i«*a an r»o|*4 Thr • liman I* dHItrOifni winter until m i rh r» : . ♦
lan<)» an-autrjx t to hnm«»t«*<J anir; of IW» a< r»a mm h mow (ft flflt f IMa TO ».»'l a MOlfc. F<-i f*n ir m
formaiInn addraa*
irimw i» »n„,. E. V. M. POWELL, Immigration Agent, Harriion Ark.
IMT lufrr* to bank of Mauler n and Ho'>n*< Count; bank IIamIm n, Ark
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I STOP! You have run up agatntt a Good Thing.
1 9
i i
= =
g§ The best reason in the world why s
g some things sell so well is because they g
S are good. That is one reason for the ■
| great sales of “ BATTLE AX."
g§ But good auality is only half the story.
H The other halt is the size of a 5 cent piece,
EE It is as big almost as a 10 cent piece of =
g other and poorer kinds.
H Facts are facts. You can buy and see for
H yourself. Five cents isn't much to invest.
19 Years Experience I
Just think of the wealth of wisdom and experience, it
accumulated during 19 years of building good S
bicycles, that comes to you for the $100 you pay for I
STANDARD OF the world. I
Th« buyer ol a Columbia hat no uncertainty. Hr knows its V
quality and workmanship are right the Columbia tcisaUht B
method* make them to. if
*100 TO ALL ALIKE I
Ih.um an i •***■••• .«»*a Hm**m4 w...**. m *»« 4 **» mS »*mm **» H
C*>«n»m iftml kt tnwti towns «• m$ k*« $ %**» IJj;.
POPF. MFC. CO.. Hartford. Conn. I
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