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About The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 5, 1897)
Tint to ISc rxpccUU* Tourist Mow long will It take me to reach the ferry, me good man? Policeman I ain't no mind render. I'm a policeman. There Is more Cnluirli In till* serilon of > lie country limn all other iIIm - nut together, tint! until the last few years was supposed to lie Incurable. I'nr a great many years doctors pronounced |i a local disease and prescribed local remedies, and by constantly falling to cine will, local trealmcntsproriounccd It Incuinblc Science bus proven cetniTli t • be a cotistltluttniial disease, and therefore, reiptlns constitu tional treatment. Hall's 1'utauh i me, manufactured by T. .1. t nnney X < o . To ledo, <>., Is the only constitutional cure on Hie market li Is taken inte r niilly In doses from In drops to a Kaspoonful. It aets directly on the blood and mucous sur faces of tlic system. 'I bey offer tine Hun dred Hollars for unyeas.e It falls to cure. Send fur circulars and testimonials. Ad dress, T. .1. <11 KM.V \ CO.. 'I'oletlo, <». Sold by Druggists 7Ac Hall's family Tills are lire best J lie “Mule-Shearer" Spider. Yucatan is tins home of an uncanny species of spider, known all over t cn tral America ns flic ‘‘mule-shearer." Thin queer representative of the My* gale family lias a hatiit of creeping up the legs of in tile* and horses and shearing off the hair that surrounds the hoof, especially the fetlock. The hair gained in this curious operation is used by thefnsect as a nest-building material, and is removed from the leg of the mule or horse by a strong pair of mandibles, which resemble those of a “pinching" bug. Animals bitten by tiie “mule-shearer” always lose their hoofs. No Moro font ranting Doriiccft* To be absolutely in style your bodice must bear some little relationship to tiie rest of the gown, writes nn observ ing young woman, who is ‘'doing" the Taris shops. Tor example, a black or white chiffon waist is the proper tiling ...itk. .. ...kit- -,_-.1 ,.u skirt, and if u white chiffon bodice is worn with a black satin skirt il should have a wide corselet belt of jet to es biisli a connecting link between the black skirt and the white waist. The latest styles are decidedly atrainst the waist which is distinctly in contrast to the skirt. THAT HI’I.KMilll tori'KIC. Mr. Goodman, Williams County, HI., writes us: "From one package Sulzcr'a German Coffee Uerry 1 grew 300 pounds of better coffee than 1 can buy in stores at 30 cents a pound." A package of this and big seed cata logue is sen*, you by John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse, Wla., upon receipt of 15 cents stamps and this notice, w.n. T l’urtiul IVaif. The due tie Choiscul, who was ro inarkaoiy thin, went to London to negotiate a peace. “Have they sent the preliminaries of a treaty?” asked one Englishman of another. "I don’t know,” was the reply; “but they havo sent the outline of an embassador.” ('lit f’rim on I’lnnot .lr. Good*. , We are the only needsmen daring to «• ut the price* on th<* Flanot lr Tools. Wr sell ilie 1’lanet .1 r. (*oni hi in'll Drill, that other mm?(Isnil'll must ask fW.OO for, we -ell same for ‘.to. Ulg catalogue, hcnd c for postage. .loflN A. KAI.ZKH SKkl) CO. Latri-Mc. WIs Strictly KiiHincss. Old Gent—I understand—in fact, I know—that you and my daughter are edging very rapidly toward matri mony. Penniless Suitor—It is true, sir; and although 1 am obliged to con fess that it will have to be a case id love in a cottage, 1 hope- “Say no more. Love in a cottage is the true ideal of happiness. You havo my consent-” “Oh. thank you!” “Pro vided you can show me the deed for the cottage. Uood-dwv ” Jrtrr try a ltk-to* of Cas< arets. <andy j cathartic! the tlne-t liver aud towel re^u , lator made Difficulty add to achievement. a- the rammln* of the to.drr and* Wo bullet further People alto practice charity hut. little time to preach. r THE ADVANCE AGENT OF HEALTH % | A PAIR OF Oil FA MS. T ' IS a strange story; but perhaps the less strange be cause there Is not a thread of Action In the entire in brie. 1 am thus positive, because 1 am Mar cia Clomas and telling on'/ what happened to my self. I did not need the evidence of a mirror to convince me that 1 was hand some. Friends and strangers told me so till I was weary of it. even ns the monotony of a song bird may make one weary. That I was young, had affirmation in the thick family Hlblo with its brazen clasps and well thumbed leaves. That I was not dull was attested in a diploma from Vassar, a knowledge of French that did not puzzle Frenchmen, music that musi cians liked to hear and a literary abili ty that never brought back more than one out of four of my contributions. In social life I had the rare luck of success without envy, save as those who are less fortunate long to Join those who are more so. Hut one quick move of fate changed tills life of sunshine and brightness. Father failed, and when millionaires fail It seems as though otic never could fathom tlie depths of disaster. To me the one great tragedy of the wre< k was the impoverishment of Charley. Of course It is necessary to explain that I mean Charley Truman, for the famil iarity of our set docs not extend to the reading public. Charley was ruined with ills eyes open, but to me that only meant that there was suspense as well as actual suffering without the buoy tint, influence of hope. lie had insisted upon coming to the help of rny father | uiougii i no great risa 111 cu11 • u vwi.< uni fie plain as day. How like physical torture this was to me can he Inferred when It Is known that Charley and 1 were engaged. It was not a matter of expediency, hut an old-fashioned love match. He made light of the calamity In which we were ail Involved. But to mo It was | the saddest reality that could have I come Into my life. That may account for all that follows, but I have thought over it much more than egy one else will do, and am Inclined to doubt. My one thought was to restore the fortune that Charley had so generously sac riflccd. 1 Invented a score of quixotic schemes, but had the good sense to abandon them because they were quix otic. But I can only plead the perver sion of human nature In admitting that I adopted what seemed the most quix otic of them all. I dreamed that I went to Monte Car lo with a mint of money and lost It all. I had only read of the place, hut It was spread out before me as a vivid picture. I saw the esplanade, the cafes, the clean asphalt pavements, the palm trees, the grass plats, the arcade, the Hotel Metropole, the haggard faces of thoso who wander up the hillside to disappear forever among the foliage, the false cheerfulness of the electric lights, the bright ted and black of the tables, even the many-colored metal discs over which tho hall of fate danced and skipped as though it brought noth ing but happiness Into the world. No less graphic were the details of my losing. Bet after bet was swept Into the omnivorous maw of the great gam bling Mecca, and the mechanical move ment of the insatiable rake seemed to barrow my vitals. If I had any superstition It was the result of heredity. No old nurse or Ll WOULD 1 NOT STOP! foolish school companion ever sought to tiuprsas me with the mysteries that i loud reasou until It seeks explanation In the supernatural. I do uni m» re* call ever hearing that dreams gu by contraries. Yu I had not thought over that dream for a day before I had an unalterable desire to visit Monte Carlo (or the purpose of restoring what ! my Ranee had lull. I would not ap ply to hint or to nv father. This was mu because of their tmpalied fortune, j but because I could not defend the re solva I had a lumt.'y physician to whim I went for funds sud who was wtlltng to respond without ashing any c| .»di.ms that wuu'd hate emharraaagd . me. Its went faith*r and aseomed the professional responsibility of sending rue abroad, though he esuhl never et plain why he thus compromised his ■ cun sc I* nee When I reach*-! what seen** t« me one of hell s prim ipaitttea. I fett a* one going into battle Ml my surrawnd l*|t were familiar I pa mail through tho gliiteitag *»»* ; uns as though, they had beoa a pan af my whato life I could n<N have dcU-el ta scan tie* ‘ daily pager* of te avail m**aM d the j Rn« dtikani that suggested a dot? , to those left behind the fewt of tbs gsmlsfey was agon me sad ve» I hne* walking af gambling Uniertng the fateful roams I passed the ir«n»e-at •to grant* table It migbt he mie* bo I* eea siaa«r «ad I bad t«ad as mueh j V baht tii id l* t be it' « . •ha *«b» af Nagahan assigned tg lb* I bank i | After confidently seating myself j played with an abandon to astonl > erea the stiocal feedfrs of the tiger, j had no system. No color, no numbei j no combination was tried as th< restil of a.iy previous thought or suggtv tion. I was an automaton with eye; placing my money as the divinity seat tors the scented blossoms. When i goodly heap of gold was In front 6 me an old Prussian officer made ai elaborate apology for addressing th handsome young American, but he hat seen so many give bach a fortune afte winning It. The devilish fascination o the game was the chief dependence o its backers. Aside from chances It their favor. Infatuation was their chic reliance. Would I not stop whlh Dame Fortune was so generous? Hut I played day and night with th' regularity of planetary movement, won and won till the corps of regular were following my plays and sharim in my prosperity. When 1 appeared t seat was given me as though I had i proprietary right, while the poo wretch who hail given the place hie al was ruthlessly put aside. At thi wheel or at the (aide I seemi d to die tate the course of fortune, and I hat more than enough to re-establish tli< two men I loved best. One morning 1 awoke with a vlvb Impression of a dream that gave me . clear title to the little principality ant all its belongings. Straightway I ennu home as nearly as the crow flies ns thi facilities of steam will permit. I an no more superstitious than before al this happened, and there is nothini • . v.stm n <1. .. Illtl,. AMfiu P!l! Charley ‘‘papa." J only know wha happened. A ItiiltriMil Vlittle. Between the forty-nine and tifty-liv' mile pouts on the Carolina Centra railway there la a piece of track for i distance of nearly six miles that pre rents a singular condition that so fa; amounts to an inexplicable mystery All trains going and coming go t< grinding and start a terrible rqueakinf when they get on tills six miles o track. The noise comes from not onlj one car, but every locomotive, every coach, and every car of whatever kitn sels up a grinding as if turning i curve. It is something like the M'r< ech Ing of an ox curt that has no grease or it, and it Is made by every truck on * train. The track' Is perfectly sir,light and as there is no curve at ail, the cause of tluj grlndjhg end Mju'.akinfi has mystified the railway people. Ev ery effort has been made to ascertain the cause of the difficulty. The loco motives have been scrutinized, t very crosstlc and every rail has be n In spected. every joint has been looked at and every fool of th“ track has keen rogauged, but no explanation could be found. It Is one of the rat!w,ay puzzle* of the age, and has been going on fot twenty years. During that timi tilt crossties and rails have Iteen replaced several times with new ones, hut with out effect. Tlie Sultan's Trade. According to u writer in the Contem porary, ihe sultan of Turkey never sleeps before dawn for fear of assas sins; but sits up reading dete.tlvt stories. A good French translation of Sherlock Holmes would Ijp quite a boon to him. Of the sultan * Intel lectual capacity, this Illustration i? given: "Abdul Hamid is impatient and of a hasty disposition; ho cannot brook any hindrance to his intentions or ca prices; when he has given an order he does not admit that events can develop otherwise than in conformity with his Bade. A grotesque instance of this and one of very frequent occurrence may be cited. When a Are breaks out at Constantinople or in the environs the sultan sends an aide-de-camp with or ders to the commandant of the fire brigade to extinglulsh it at once. When the- fire battles the efforts of the fix - tnen and spreads, which happens more usually than not, other aides-de-camp arrive in quick succession to announce mm uieuuiuiii is angry to nnu ill* order is not yet obeyed, and there is an irade that the Are should cease im mediately.’ ” Allen* ami I lie llallnl. The number of mates in which a'.i ns are permit.ed to vote at elections after having simply declared their inten tion of becoming dtuens has been diminished by one. At a recent ele> - lion the voters of Minnesota appioved a constitutional amendment Wfhieh re peals the provision conditioning the vote of persons of foreign birth upon a declaration of intention. Hereafter no alien can vote in that stale who has not been a rraldent of the t'nited States for at leaat live years, and ad nutted to full rlil*»a»hiii at |ra>l three month* prior to the vlectjgg. It is es timated that more than one hundred thousand voter* in Minnesota have never been fully naturalised. •MB» t«l vh*,uu *t Mutt*. five Herman editor* have been ran* vleted at Merlin uf libelling dtaua gutahed ugM'ial*. and have been eea lanced tu hn« and Imprisonment. Thee* •a*tear** and the *rr»et for perjury of the chief of the political pollen nave a • aalonrvl a atlv I* the Herman . «iu a bavauae the evidence goe* to ids that .•rial* m«mb*re of the E*p'mt'r of drtal household have eouayorsd is tr* iu*e and d**tr«> wiser dMlstt ef * ie* * *■ % Jgmso t ab** It. vone* * pi* »Uh ib«ptkmtpes di** bsMi, lb** trial* hiv* 4fb*r| a painful imto**uon a< to dm hu i t of odM’bsl rmtttode In Hermann I.. nig, * v • M I* 4 Ut* b «**»•«* t’ < « I k Id >|«|^ 41 RMKM In (Mi III »*% MfllHf M M ifif* of I i \u gtti. «h«» «||| hi ff g#it ftMdffaif, #hMNlfVfl II tft» IttfHMNl gb«^# t«t l‘ * 4*inM |‘li| » ii I | SUPREME JUSTICES' COWNS. I I Our ! .rly Task in Nelerting ;r Cotirl I l Ex-President Harrison tells of the . contention created over the question of an appropriate eotirL dress for the „ justice* cf the Federal supreme court i in the January Ladies' Home Jotir j nal. "When the constitutional or , ganization of the court had been set , tied and the high duty of selecting the I justices had been performed by Wasti • Inpton." he says, "the smaller, but not [ wholly unimportant question of a court [ dress loomed up, and much ugitated i and divided the minds of our public f men. Shall the Justices wear gowns? And if yea, the gown of the- scholar, of the Roman senator, or of the priest? ■ Shall they wear the wig of thp English I Judges? Jefferson and Hamilton, who , had differed so widely In their views as ; to the frame of the constitution, were , again in opposition upon those ques i lions relating to millinery and hair dressing. Jefferson was against any I needier* ofllelal apparel, but if the , gown was to carry, he said: "For , heaven's rake discard the monstrous I wig whirl) makes the English Judge look like rats peeping through hunchrs of oakum,' Hamilton was for the Eng I llsh wig with the Kigllsh gown. Httrr ! was for the English gown, lint against i the 'inverted woolsack termed a wig.' The English gown was taken and the w!g left, and I am nitre that tin (low ing black silk gown still worn by thr Jus I til ts helps to preserve In the court* room that dignity and sense of so • lemnltj which should alwav.; charac terize ; he place of Judgment.” In tlie Wrung limn. She looked like a woman from a re mote tier of townships and the way In which she was dressed tended to con firm that Impression. She seemed in a world of trouble and approached tin floor-walker. "See here, mister,” she said nervous ly, “I've been robbed in this here store. Josh 'lowed me to come down here to do my shoppin’ ’cause It would be a savin'. I had $.’10 five minutes ugo, an' now 1 hain’t got a cent. 0, dear! I'm more'll a hundred miles from hum w ith no way to get hack an' nothin’ to eat;” and the woman burled her face In a handkerchief, while threatening to collapse. "You'd better report the; matter to the police at once. Or I’ll attend to that for you.” "Not oh your tin-type,” she respond ed quickly. "I’m nojlubc.” Then she gathered herself and TudwoeU IfrTiw 151ally executed sobs asked that she he lent enough to keep her over night and take her back to Josh. I-tit she hud tipped her hand. The floor-walker led her back to the office and In the long bag within her dress skirt was found a choices collection of dry goods. She made the air sul phurous and at the police station pro claimed herself a "jay” for leaving Chicago, where there seems to be a sp'i lal immunity for the transgressor Value of ICvidrni i* in Tiirl<«*y. A few years ago an English traveller in Turkey reported a ease of stealing as it wus tried in the courts of that country. The Armenian newspapers ol that time, commenting upon the ease, said that It proved that tlie testimony of a calf was worth more than that of two Christians. A Turk, couveting a cow belonging to a Christian, succeed ed in stealing it. The owner com plained of the theft to the nearest judge, bringing a frlcn.l to corroborate his story, and he demanded the resto ration of his property. The judge de clined to believe either tlie injured man or his fnend. On this the injured man said. "I have the calf of this cow at a place very near tlie court, and if your honor will have the cow brought to the calf and will observe the two togeth er, he will immediately perceive by their affection for each other that the cow must be the mother of the calf, and this will prove that slip belongs to ■vw. ” A ..aa.AIm.I., . I. l.. i. .. ..uniri'-ti the cow to be brought to the culf, and went hinnclf to see the two. No soon er had the calf set eyes on the cow than It claimed her aa mother. The judge w:u> convinced, and ordered the cow to he given up to the Christian. Monkey nail Kitten. Herr Hrebm. the great German nat urailst, relate* the following droll an ecdote of u monkey: “A female baboon which I brought up In my family got hold of a kitten with the Intention of making a pet of It and motherlug tt. hut wua acratched *\r the terrified foundling The moil key carefully ex amined the kitten's (taws. prexred the elnwa forward, looked nt them from above, from laneuih. and from the able, and then bit them off to xecute it»e,{ against further aeran he* " JwMtMikle. "Have you anything to *»*•" in pilled the »b> nt Only .ute thing,'' *abl the con demned uMn, a* he ImorwI th ntor* w that he could speak With |k< . <4< • I want *«u to >a«ch that ui.n wl'h th - snapwhot camera and throw him e*r I du Mot • ill 10 be disgraced by au> amateur phoiogmphvr*.‘ Truth. ’ "" 1 *"> -e~» • m IwMa t »»« I tan* V keif %•*»*• John lawsu.i and Howard Mu* ' ; were rnsair I *1 Hmruh, ruea.lt> fwi I the lot •' al farmer J*ka liiu a | I of milittgl *** tt;> < They had tMcwnte kadi t'..*o il.w* wu the bam.-et* tf 'retght earn wad applied |l the hwapltol tor relief %ram~n. ■ - ----■ . 14* • Ilk* '’4 I* * dM|»*» * % I III \«* % iMlf •! > l| ill*" *n|:-5*4 * #U»i In h*| ■ dttn.f 1*1 ' * * I li 4 |W9 tf• 4*t# «tk<| I ItilllMlM 4 |*4*4* a? #2Nfty 41 «M40 nil* I in*. /i DWttno4t<»u* Mrs. Skinner ( wonder why some grocers arc Called green grocers? Mr. Skinner I don't know, unless It’s to distinguish them from cusli grocers. NO-TO-HAC FOR FIFTY CENTS. Over 4(M,notl cured. Why not let No To-Mix regu nte or remove j our desire (or tobacco Saves money, makes lienlth mid manhood ( ure guaranteed, title and H.no. all druggists THE WATCH WAS LOADED. And no Wan tlm I'roft'stor Whrii lit* II id ICxxitilneil It* The examinations at a certain “prep." school were in progress. 'J'he boys were working busily over their papers, and the grim old professor was watching sharply from his desk. Presently he noticed that one of the students, a prominent ne'er-do well, was consulting his watch with con sidcratile frc«|ueney. The professor studied him. In five minutes he hud looked nt the timepiece three times This was enough for the guardian, lie called the student to his desk anil demanded the watch. Jt was given him and he opened it. Across the face was a piece of paper bearing the legend ’ Pooled " Hut the worthy professor was not to be ho easily deceived, lie gave the student a sharp knowing glance, turned the timepiece over and opened the back cover. It opened with con siderable difficulty, and, behold, there wits nnoiili r slip ot paper milling l lie Information, "Fooled again, old fogy.” Tin* M rungml Kortlflcatlon A gainst dlsOMm*. one which cnublas us In undergo ufist'utbed risks from hnilfnl i'll- | mull'' InHiii'iiri", exposure. overwork nnd fm liruc. Is I Ini vigor l lint o Imparted to n debilitated |ihysU|un liy the peerless tneill I'trinl -ii fug nurd. I'Oslelter's Stomach I It tin- Vim may tins e . this vigor In u higher degree Ihnn tun tralneil athlete, although your imisculur development may he far Inferior to his. Vigor Implies sound, good digestion ii ml sound ri*|n)se, two bless ings conferred hy the Hitters, which rem edies mulurlul. rheumatic nml nervous trouble. football Accidents. A return of the football accidents for the last season in Great Britain has been male. The deaths number twenty-six, (four more tint it in the previous season), ilte broken legs thirty-six (a decrease of thirteen), the broken arms twelve, (the same ns in 18U1-UI1), the collar hones broken twen ty-five (an increase of seven), and the other injuries seventy-five tun increase of nineteen). The chronicler makes tfie grand total for the past three sea sons of “deaths and damages” to bo 437. Mrs. M IiikIow'« Hunt lilnic Wtnip Tor rhildn‘nt«,<‘tlilnK.’uift<>nM the (turn*. Hiit'i'n Jnilam iimliufi, |»mIn. fUrM wIimI collf. 85 rcnlllft bottle. Tlitiy .tow 'tvrmttf. , A couple of New Jersey men were wandering ulong the Midway i’lai sance anti by ohance they got into the ostrich farm. Neither of them had ever seen such u "critter,” atul they stopped in amazement. "(lush. Kill,” exclaimed one, "them’s bigger milsketers than we’ve got in New Jersey,” and Kill nodded his head in emphatic assent. TO IT’KK A COLO IN ONK DAT. Take Laxative Hromu Quinine Tablets. All Druggists refund the money if it lads to cure. g5c I’erfiimea Guard Against Microbes. To guard against infectious diseases it is advisable to surround ourselves, as far us possible, by an antiseptic | atmosphere. We accomplish this in a general way by the use of disinfec tants, but as many people find these very disugreeable it is useful to know that perfumes answer the purpose, nnd tire almost as destructive to mi crobes as the strongest chemical I preparations now in use. ALICE MITCHELL'3 LIFEf. Tli© Mijtr of Fretfia Ward « Man# Worker In n Term emeu Arytnm. It is sain by one of Alice Mitchell's attendants in tlio insane asylum at Ilolivar, Tenn., that she is one of tho most useful women in the nbylum; that slie works harder than any at tendant in the wards. She scrubs tho floors, washes the dishes and assist* in every w.-.y in keeping things in order; that she shows the greatest interest in the patients, especially tlie ol<l women, to whom she is tenderly kind. She has never been heard to call Freda Ward’s name or speak of that horrible murder, which from its cold-bloodedness has caused the whole world to resound her name. She occupies a ceil just exactly like those of other patients, without one comfort more, hut she Is allowed to eat lit the attendants’ table, where every delicacy is provided for her by her family. She is a good mu sician, and when slie ia not at work passes her time by singing and play ing. Her father and mother visit her very often, and always take her out diiving. Much time slie appears on tiie streets of Holivar the people seem eager to catch a glimpse of her. Slie has never shown any symptoms of in sanity except in (Its of anger, which nrc very seldom, lint, said tho attend _ .. s * i... — it_a _11 * gleam of insanity at those times. She Is one of the most vlolnnt-tcmpered women in tlx* world, and the attend ants eonsider her dangerous outside of the asylum. When asked how of ten she had seen her in these moods, tlie hesitating reply was: “Only once." Tlie attendant appeared to be very fond other, and says she doe# not believe siie remembers anything about tlie killing of I'redu Ward. f'oe'a 4 ougii Hnlaiim In flu* nidi <» mi<l In *<f ll v III break up * cold q>)l"k*f I litui an > I lit it if Min'*. it l* ulway* r« liable. Try it. There U no fault that doea not briir/ It* hroth«*i* and Mistier* ami routliiM to Uvn with it. Cahhakktm ntimulato liver, kidney* ami bowel*. Never sdekeu. weaken or grli>e, )ik*. Application 1m the ability to do wnrkj treriliiH In the ability not to. It iHiiJnays it good Idea to recognize the hi length of your enemy. A Little Child With a Little Cold. That’s all f What of it? Little cold* when neglected grow to large diseases and Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral CURES COLDS. 01 kUCC» BUSINESS ANDSH0RTHSNDC01LEGE □ LnlVLO Acti ai. Huhinkhh I'iiom Tiib 8takt TeaclifH l>UHl,ir-» Uy ilolirg bu.lnc*., A No thorough IiihI nii’l Ion In all braui'ln*. by mall. Life M'hular.hlp i4'i. n'\ rrnm'h* rou me SllU. Corner Kith antU apl lAwnue, Omiilia, Nebra.ka. PATENTS, TRADE MARKS Examination nnd.Advl.** a* t > I'atmitAblllty of In vention. firnd for “Inventor*’ fluid*. i»r How toilet & Patent.” O’KAltltKI.L A WIN’. VVahhiiitfton. D. C. SWEET potitoes^^ ” ww — ™ ■ on ahare*. No fXpWlm * re quired. Dfreetlonw for win-outing free wlthord^r. Add mm T. .1. NKIIIAKK. Colombo.. itu. OPIUM^MJM (mb DR. J.L. STEPHENS. ucBAJioiWBol®. Dr. Kay’s Lung Balm SfatSS? nDiim u< whisky fc*1'"* *»'+ UrlUIS I’MRR. Ilr. R. M. ffOOl.I.RV, ATM Mi. «A. PATPMTC 20y»»ai %' eipvriem o. Rand sketrh for *4 rAlLlllO* vke. il, I >••.<««*, into nmi. exanoner U.d» Pal.Otli. e) Ik-uiie & Weaver, Metiill lilUR^Wa*h.i?.C. 'Ln'SZVuX > Thompson'sEjo Wotw. W. N. U. OMAHA. No- 0.-1897. " Imn writing to ndi.rtNer*, kindly m«i» tlori lliN paper._ 1 tu,aYhbtbialof ^t. Jacobs Oil , RHEYindTlSn Jolt'. In a tent tliut proven u SURE CURE. .... TSWDYCAfilARTic 1 Cci,»ca\cto. j! CUMCOHSTIPATIOH^^ IS*? so «^^®^^EEBBGn®5^0RwSisTS ABSOLUTELY CUlRJTEEOir.^r^rlXtl^^.oo^'^: ►!* ««4 MiliH fw* 14 MMtlt lMifni« (m. , »»l«t Ini •»» • *- ttimut * - -m W»v\HO\H low rsi.Mi Walter Baker Sc Co.’s Breakfast Cocoa. . i * i 1 ‘ I . * f'f* %*** w* *w «* *e» • W*. v| |, i ill uiS^k «*»,»«• I .«•*»* «*»,.»■.» ♦in—mimii iii .. immniinmwiwi