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About The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 29, 1904)
MRS. HENRIETTA MARSH. A VICTIM OF LA GRIPPE. Mrs. Henrietta A. S. Marsh. 769 W. 16th St., Los Angeles, Cal., President Woman's Benevolent Ass n, writes: “/ suffered with la grippe for seven weeks, and nothing l could do or take helped me until 1 tried Peruna. "I felt at once that I had at last secured the right medicine and I kept steadily improving. Within three weeks I was fully restored, and I am glad that I gave that truly great rem edy a trial. I will never be without it again.” In a letter dated August 31, 1904, Mrs. Marsh says: “I have never yet heard the efficacy of Peruna question ed. We still use it. I traveled through Kentucky and Tennessee three years ago, where I found Peruna doing its good work. Much of k is being used here, also.”—Henrietta A. S. Marsh. Address Dr. Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, Ohio. 4slr your Druggist for a free Peruna Almanac for 1905. UNITED STATES Importing Canadian wheat is now a fact. Get 8 Free Homestead in Western Canada, or bn> •ome of the best wheat lands on the continent, and become a producer. The average vieidof wheat this year will be about twenty bushels' to ihe acre. The oat and barley croj will also yield abundantly. Splendid climate, got* •chools and churches, excellent marketing facilities Apply for Information to Superintendent of Imml frratiou, Ottawa. Canada, or to authorized Canadlar Government Azent—W. V. Bennett, 801 New Yuri Life Building, Omaha, Nebraska. Please say where you saw this advertisement. SEND US A HORSE. or a cow. calf. colt, goat, or any other kind of hide or skin to be tanned for Robes. Coats, Rugs. Mittens, Harness and Lace Leather. The oldest, largest and only KKLIABLE In the West. Custom work a specialty. Tanners and manufac turers of hides for anything YOU want. Write fot shipping tags and descriptive circular. BAYER TANNING COMPANY. West Ninth St., Dept. M, Des Moines, la. DR. McGREW For 30 years has made a specialty of DISEASES OF MEN. Eight een years In Omaha. His Home Treatment has permanently cured thousands at small cost. Save time and money by describ ing your case, and write for Free book and terms of treatment. Med icine sent in plain package. Box TUB. Office ils South 11th Street, Omaha. Nebraska. Elevating One’s Life. I know of no more encouraging fact than the unquestionable ability of a man to elevate his life by a conscious endeavor. It is something to be able to paint a particular picture or to carve a statue, and so make a few objects beautiful; but it is far more glorious to carve and paint the very atmosphere and medium through •which we look, which morally we can do.—Thoreau. SPECIAL NOTICE. UNDOMA Hair Tonic will lend to your hair that soft fluffy appearance appreciated by people of good taste and refinement. Ask Your Barber. Send us your name for free treat ment. THE UNDOMA COMPANY, Omaha A stingy man’s gifts always have strings on them. When You Buy Starch _ buy Defiance and get the best, 16 oz for 10 cents. Once used, always used It often takes a great hurricane it blow us a little way toward Heaven. Mr*. Wlntlow* Soothing Syrup. For children teething, .iften* the «urn», redoes* t» anmmnUoD, nilny ■ pain, corea wind cullb. asc * bottle. A woman is always willing to ac knowledge a man’s superority whei she has a lead pencil to sharpen. Some men fear they are losing their religion because they are growing out of their small clothes. You cannot flee from the wrath to come until you forsake the sin you love.—Ram's Horn. Many a society woman who is a chronic invalid prides herself on her lovely indisposition. YTou can make a man real weary by j mentioning the weather every time S you meet him. The work of God’s Word proves it to be His work. A man’s prospects do not depend on his pretentions. The preacher’s life is the life of this preaching. Divine favor makes a feast of a ren board. The lightB of men never tblnfc light of men. T Foreign Born Population • Are Foreign born of each nationality at each census 1850 to 1900. CARNEGIE BUYS FINE ESTATE Whitaker Wright Mansion to Ee Na tional Convalescent Home. Andrew Carnegie’s latest purchase, i Lea Park, in the south of England, i is the place on which the late Whit i aker Wright squandered millions when j he was in his speculative glory. It was his hobby during his years of opulence and is regarded as one of the most ! magnificent modern houses in the j world. This may b> credited when it ! is remembered that the purchase price | to Mr. Carnegie is $3,750,000. The house has many suktas of reception rooms. a splendid palm garden and a | ballroom capable of accommodating several hundred persons. At the top of the house is an observatory con taining one of the largest telescopes in England. The gardens cost even more money than the house and are adorned with statues, pagodas, sum mer-houses and every device of the landscape gardener's art. It is Mr. Carnegie’s intention to turn the place j into a national convalescent home, for which purpose it is admirably fitted BATHES DAILY IN OCEAN. Cc 1 Weather No Bar to Plunge of New York Woman. ong Island has a young sea nymph nr ned Molly Canning who has been ! tasing a plunge in the surf daily for the last two months. Even the bliz zard did not deter her. and when she emerged the cold wind almost con verted her into a pillar of salt, like Lot’s wife. t“I never was so healthy in my life.” said Miss Canning after | her dip and run on the beach, “as I | I have been since I have been taking baths in the open air. I have become so accustomed to the coldness of the water that I enjoy it and never feel the slightest ill effects. Water that is exposed to the air and is not stag- j nant is filled with a magnetism which , I is impossible to duplicate anywhere I else, and a bath in such water, if I rightly taken, imparts vigor and j strength to tired nerves and muscles.” j TVWdlWI II ■ Rl lllbl LCdl limy r i win Just at present authorities in the ! east are urging the people to learn the j lesson of successful farming from the west. Think of it, the states which have been tilling the soil for over two centuries learning from the states in which two decades comprehend both ancient and modern history. Farming has been revolutionized in the trans Mississippi west within the last dec ade. Farming machinery and the training of the brains of the farmers have been responsible for this. The days of the one-horse plow are well nigh over. In the far west steam plows, threshers and harvesters are in daily operation during the season; in the Dakota wheat fields twenty-horse teams are to be seen on almost every farm. — Des Moines Register and Leader. Campaign on Business Principles. During his three campaigns for the governorship of Massachusetts Sena tor Crane did not make a political speech nor write a political document. His first inaugural address was the shortest ever penned in the bay state —at any rate in recent years—and, like succeeding ones, was absolutely devoid of rhetoric or any attempt at literary quality, except utmost sim plicity and directness of statement. It was a business man's straightforward presentation of the financial condition of the state, which the new governor conceived to be such as to call loudly for retrenchment, and a call for cer tain long-needed reforms. Hard on the Drummers. Once upon a time a litter of kittens came to the home of little six-year-old Susie. As is usual at such times, the old mother cat was very much in evi- | dence. One day, after the kittens > were old enough to run around the house, little Susie was playing with one of them and was overheard say ing as she fondled it: ‘‘Kitty, I knows who your mother is, an’ I knows who your brothers and sisters is. but, kitty, I don’t know who your father is—I spect your father must be a traveling man.”—Lippincott’s. Makeup of Kansas Legislature. The Kansas legislature this winter will be composed of fifty farmers, thirty-eight business men. twenty-sev en lawyers, nineteen bankers, ten doctors, five editors, two capitalists, two mechanics, one school-teacher, one miner tnd one auctioneer. The fanners are strong in the house, hav ing fifty-five members, but they are weak in the senate, having only four. Some of the bankers in the senate are also farmers, or, rather, agriculturists, but banking is their chief business. New York Citizens Resent Oil King's Attempt to “Preserve.” William Rockefeller's game keepers on his vast forest preserves in the neighborhood of Saranac. \\ Y„ are earning their pay these days. The natives thereabout resent the appear ance of these guards, several of whom have becn fired upon recently. One of them resigned after having a bul let pass through his coat sleeve as he was patrolling his lonely beat in the forest. The ■■snipers'’ use smokeless powder and ail efforts to locate them have failed. Mr. Rocekeller owns 53,000 acres of fine forest land in the vicinity named, but the natives can not be made to see that with the real estate he bought the deer. Nor can they understand how he owns the fish which were put into the streams at public expense. They have shot and ished on the land as far back as the oldest inhabitant can remember and see no reason why the arrival of Mr. Rockefeller among them should change their custom. Hence the placing of the guards, of whom there is a small army. CHANGE IN FINANCIAL CENTER. United States to Take Lead in World's Events. It takes ages to change the commer cial ard financial center of the world. When one is once established it shifts tardily and only long after it has ceased to be the most convenient place for the greatest number of peo ple. There have been but a compara tively few such centers in the history of commerce. For centuries their lo cation was on the Mediterranean sea or its tributaries. Carthage, Rome, Constantinople. Vienna followed one another at long intervals. With the growth of the Anglo-Saxon and Ger manic races and the development of ocean traffic the location shifted to northern Europe. Then came Bruges, Antwerp. Amsterdam, and finally Lon don, where it still remains. But the signs of the times now point to an other change. The United States holds one-fourth of the world’s stock of gold and controls over one-third of the world's banking power.—Kansas City Journal. Studied Law in Secret. Alderman Francis J. Stiglbauer. a prominent member of the Milwaukee city council, has been admitted to the bar. This case is noteworthy in that he never attended a law school. Al though now engaged in the real estate and insurance business, he formerly was a mail carrier. He then began the study of law without intention of practicing. Three years ago last spring he was elected to the council. He at once began a serious study of law with the object of taking the state bar examination. For over three years he studied eight hours each day, unknown to his associates in the coun cil or to any except his closest friends. Duties of Private Secretary. Several young men think they would like to be secretary to Senator Fairbanks after he is sworn in as vice president. There was a question as to what are the duties of a secretary to a vice president. ‘Til tell you,” said a man who has been in the capitol for many years. “The secretary of the vice president is required to sit in the vice president's gorgeous room and when a party of ‘Rube’ sightseers stick their heads in the door say to them: Come right in and I’ll show you the mirror John Quincy Adams bought for |30.’ ” Oklahoma Soil Produces Wealth. S. M. McHarg, a Grant county farm er, found his wheat so short that he cut it with a header. Wishing to con serve the soil moisture for wheat sow- i ing in the fall, he planted the land to < corn. To his surprise the corn ma- < tured and yielded about thirty-five ! bushels an acre. His wheat averaged i about $18.25 an acre and his corn ] $10.50, a total of $28.7o an acre, or 1 $915 for his thirty-acre field. This is a ] convincing example of the resources of Oklahoma's soil and climate.—Kan- I sa» City Times. ; Not for the Judge. Lord Erskine, when chief justice of England, presided once at the Chelms- < ford assizes, when a case of breach of < promise of marriage was tried before him in which a Miss Tickell was plaintiff. The counsel was a pompous young man named Stanton, who open ed the case with solemn emphasis thus: “Tickell, the plaintiff, my lord.” Erskine dryly interrupted him with: “Oh, tickle her yourself, Mr. Stanton. It would be unbecoming to my position." 1 I c r i ; t t c <3 f TEACH VALUE OF FORESTS. Practical Lesson Coming Congress li Mea-nt to Inculcate. ! It is the greatest single effort yet planned in this country to instill in j our people the lesson that certain European nations took to heart sev eral centuries ago in connection with their forests, which they turned from threatened destruction into a national j asset, while still older countries failed j to heed a like warning of disappear- | ing forests and became arid and fruit- j less, writes H. M. Suter in the Review j of Reviews concerning an American i forestry congress. Tt is to teach the people to take I home to themselves the part that the forest plays in their daily lives that this and previous forest meetings of a national character have been ar ranged—to point out to them that reckless lumbering and the denuding of steep hillsides have much to do with bringing disastrous floods of re cent years, such as the one in the southern Appalachian mountains, where $16,000,000 worth of property was destroyed in two weeks. FEDERAL JUDGE IN TROUBLE. Charles Swayne Impeached by the House of Representatives. Judge Charles Swayne, whom the House of Representatives voted to impeach, is on the federal bench in • Florida. He is accused of inattention | to duty and to charging the limit of j / ^ expenses allowed for services in dis tricts other than his own. when he did not serve for the time alleged. He will be tried by the Senate. JUDGE LOST HIS OVERCOAT. Fellcw Jurists Have Fun With Un* fortunate Brother. Judge John F. Phillips of Kansas City came in for a good deal of chaff ing in St. Louis while attending the court of appeals there recently. Some one stole his handsome new overcoat j from an outer room. Other legal dig- ! nitaries joked unmercifully at his ex- I pense and even suggested that the [ hat be passed to make up $75 which : the purloined garment had cost. It i was suggested that from the judicial standpoint it might appear that a man who has no overcoat and feels pressed ] to take another man's would better ! be provided for in a place where he will be kept comfortably warm for six 1 months without one. The judge re marked good-naturedly that judicial ermine was a poor substitute for the missing article, and thought that per haps the thief w ould feel just as com-! fortable in the stolen coat as the right ful owner. Trend Toward Arbitration. The old monarchies are not disband ing the armies of Europe, though they : groan under the burden of them. Na- i tions are not dismantling battle ships, but building more of them. Neverthe less. enlightened opinion and the aim from which civilization refuses to be diverted is kept forever in sight. The dream of the poet is ever in view. The powder is kept dry, but the effort to use it as seldom as possible is un abated. Members of t e family of na tions have fallen over one another in their eager haste to help the cause of arbitration by making treaties for the peaceable settlement of controversies.' Not only this, but they have hailed with delight the opportunity to share another peace congress in the making of regulations governing belligerents and neutrals in warfare.—Omaha Bee. New Head of British Fleet. Sir Edward H. Seymour who has been appointed admiral of the fleet to succeed Admiral Salmon on the lat ter's retirement in February, is of Irish descent and comes of a family which has contributed several noted fighters to the British navy. It was Sir Edward who led the allied forces in their unsuccessful endeavor to reach Pekin in time to relieve the legation there a few years ago. He is 64 years old and has been in the navy for over half,a century. He served with distinction in the Crimean war, in the China war. 1857-60, was present at the opening of Carton in 1857, was wounded on the coast of Africa in 1870, commanded the Isis in the Egyp tion war. receiving a medal, and was superintendent of the naval reserve* in 1894-97. Historical Society Passes Century. The New York Historical society was 100 years old on Nov. 20. and an anonymous gift of $20O.000, just re ceived. places it in a position where it j can progress in its work in a more satisfactory manner than before. Few people know that this society possesses one of the finest art gal leries in America, and a collection of ] Egyptian antiquities which Miss * Amelia B. Edwards pronounced as the fineEt outside of Egypt and surpass ing them in some lines. To Explore the Pacific. I It is stated in London that the steamer Veronique. of 3.264 tons, pur- \ chased by Lord Fitzwilliam, has sailed from Southampton on an exploring ex pedition in the Pacific, via the Straits of Magellan. Lord Fitzwilliam and party embarked in the eteamer, which is under the command of Capt. E. Morrison, with a crew of fifty-eight hands. It is said that the ship's des tination is the Solomon islands, where coal mines arc reported to hare been discovered. i i Tha Middle Ages. In the middle ages at certain epochs the density of population was at times quite as great as in modern times. Ie spite of the density of population, ol urban concentration, witness those ages as conspicuous instances*of bar barity and insecurity. Uncle Allen. “A good many men,” said Uncle Al len Sparks, “are like one of these county fair balloons. They’re regular swells, but there isn’t anything in them but hot *ir.” Queer Names. Freemantle, West Australia, has some queer names. The mayor is a Cadd, the chief printer is Cant, a contractor Thick has just sued a local soup-preserving company, and a man named Ofi'sprirg Webb was fined re cently for keeping an unlicensed dog Street Beggars Are Frauds. “I have never known a deserving case of street begging,” was the re markable statement Sir Eric A. Bu chanan. secretary of the London Men dicity Society. How’s This? We offer One Hundred iv-llsra Rew-srd for *r>y ease of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Ha;i n Catarrh Cure. F. J CHENEY 4 CO.. Toledo, O. We, the undersigned. have known F. J. Cheney for theUst 13 year*. and beileTe him perfectly hon orable In all business Iran-actions and financially able to carry out any ofc'lgati ns made by his firm. WaLusxo. Ki.nxax & Makvix, Wholesale Druggist*. Toledo, O. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken luiemaily. acting directly upon the b!<*>d and mucous surfaces of the system. Testimonial* sent free. l‘rice 15 cents pax bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Take Hail’s Family Fills for constIpatloo. Railroad Through Cemetery. The Chinese of An-Sang recently sold to the East China railroad the franchise for running a branch of their railroad through the city cemetery, an almost unheard-of thing, as the Chi nese have believed it the worst sacri lege to permit a railroad near tfe burying places of their dead. Sensible Housekeepers will have Defiance Starch, not alone because they get one-third more fer the same money, but also because of superior quality. Emerson’s Belief. I believe in a spade and an acre of good ground. Whoso cuts a straight path to his own living by the help of God, in the sun and rain and sprout ing grain, seems to me a universal working man. He solves the problem of life, not for one but for all men of sound body.—Emerson. The Best Results In Starching can be obtained only by using De fiance Starch, besi ies getting 4 nz. more for the same money—no cooking required. Have Smaller Faces. The chief difference in the heads o! men and of the lower animals is in the size of the face. Man has a very large head and a very small face, and animals are more fierce and brutal ex actlv as the face is found large and the rest of the head small. TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAT Tate Laxative Brotno quinine Tablets. Vli ilruz g!*i* refund the m »ney If It fails to cure. L. W. Grove's signature !• on each box. ioc. So the Poor Dog Was Gone. Old Mother Hubbard went to the cupboard and rubbered. The cupboard was bare. She looked mournfully at her poor dog. Then an idea struck her. And she had sausage for supper. —Cleveland Plain Dealer. Can This Be True? A girl does not wear many rings at her wedding, because they might in terfere with her crossing her fingers hurriedly when she promises to obey him always.—Exchange. The things that are carried highest on gusts of popularity often weigh the least. BALSAM THE It Cures Colds, Coughs, Sore Throat, Croup, Influenza, Whooping Cough, Bronchitis and Asthma. A oertain cure for Consumption in first stages, and a sure relief in advanced stages. Use *t once. You will see the excellent effect after taking the first dose. Sold by dealers every where. Large bottles 25 cents and 50 cents. ..Grand Island Route.. ..Double Daily Service.. with new 80-foot Acetylene Gas lighted Pullman Chair cars (seats free) on night trains and Pullman high-back seat Coaches on day trains, between Kansas City and St. Joseph, Mo.; Hia watha, Seneca, Marysville, Kan.; Fairbury, Fairfield, Hastings and Grand Island, Neb. Connections made at Kansas City for all points East. South and West. At Grand Island direct con nections are made with Union Pacific fast trains for Califor nia and the Pacific Northwest. S. M. ADSIT General Passenger Agent, St. Joseph, Mo. DID YOU KNOW lut you can get more light for lew money with a MONARCH CARBIDE FEED ACETYLENE GENERATOR ban from anything else in the world-except the lumt Bend for Catalogue D. IONARCH ACETYLENE GAS CO„ 1012 Famatn St.. Omaha, Neb. V. N. U.f Omaha. No. 52—1904 If You Understand This, Blush. “I alius knew Reub would turn out a kind-hearted boy,” said the old lady, wiping away a tear with the corner of her apron. “In this here letter he sez» ‘Please send me another $25. The other all went feedin’ the kitty.’ Cincinnati Commercial Tribune. Had One Friend Left. “Don't give up,” said Brother Wil liams to a despondent orother of his j fold. "“De worl’ has left you, but you j ain't all fergot. Satan is lonesome1 fer you!”—Atlantic Constitution. Advantage of Radium Clock. London has a radium clock that re quires winding only once in 2,000 years. That'll be a good thing to think of when, on a cold winter night, after you are snugly tucked in bed, voui , wife says: “John, did you wind the’ clock?” Sure Sign of Cld Age. A man may know that he is ap proaching old age when he ceases to struggle to be among the first to leave , a railroad car when he is in no par- ' titular hurry.—Philadelphia Ledger. No Money in Apples. This is the way a North Norway corresponded figures: Most of the j farmers have sold their apples for one dollar, which really means ex charging one dollar for another: Thir tv-eight cents for barrels. 12 cents for picking. 12 cents for packing. 12 cents for hauling to market and board of the help.—Lewiston (Me.) Journal. Try One Package. If “Defiance Starch" does not please you, return it to your dealer. If it does you getone-third more for the i same money. It will give you satis j faction, and will not stick to the iron. Woman Is Home EcJy. "Mrs. Jason Gause, a demure little Quaker lady of Lyon county,” says the i Kansas City Journal, “certainly is un rivaled in her record for staying at home. She has just returned from a I visit to a daughter in Texas. It was her first ride on a railroad train. It was the first time in nearly fifty years she had been outside of Lyon county. For twenty-three years she had passed but one night away from home. She is the mother of Prof. Gause. of the State Normal school." Some Dents for You. Do not be afraid of giviDg some ; thing of yourself, or letting yourself i | out a little; and do net fear that your I heart will run away with your head. Do not confound sentiment with sen , timentalism, and do not hesitate to I praise a thing or an act if it is really worth it. You need to do this for your own sake as well as for the sake of making others happy.—Exchange. Marriage of Birds. _ It cannot really be doubted that there are various species of birds j whose marriages extend over a far greater period than that merely of the j nesting season. Long before the nest- i Ing season begins one sees the gold finches in pairs; long after it has end-1 ed one sees the blue titmice in pairs. —Land and Water. President Arthur Extravagant. The most extravagant president was ; Arthur, who not infrequently gave dinners costing as much as $5,000. j When he went into the white house i he was worth nrobably half a million. ! Kis predecessor. Garfield, died a poor man. The people raised $300,000 for Mrs. Garfield and congress voted her a pension of $5,000 annually. i i — Troubles of Columbus. Columbus had just discovered that the earth was not flat. "I’m onto your curves,” he chuckled, But ia had trouble making people believe that they-were not on the level,-— Philadelphia Record. “Viso” Gold Coins. All the Queen Anne gold coins &f 1703 bear the wcrd "Vigo.” That Is because they are made from gold bul lion captured when a British fleet feated the combined Dutch and Spua ish fleets in Vigo bay in 1702. There will always be a hungry world until the church get3 through arguing over the bill of fare and be gins to get the dinner.—Chicago Tt in line. Seme people with smart clothes ^111 look worse off than the veriest beg gar when they have to s?and out la the clothes of character. The weather is more likely to ag tn with other people than with the gov ernment weather forecaster.—Chicago News. ■ Many women are denied the* happiness of children through derangement of the generative organs. Mrs. Beyer advises women to use Lydia E. Pink ham’s Vegetable Compound. “Dear Mrs. Fixkham: — I suffered with stomach complaint for years. I pot so bad that I could not carry my children but five months, then wouli have a miscarriage. The last time I became pregnant, my husband pot ra« to take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound. After taking the first bottle I was relieved of the sick ness of Etomach, and began to feel bet ter in every way. I continued its use and was enabled to carry my baby to maturity. I now have a nice baby pirl, and can work better than I ever could before. I am like a new woman." — Mbs. Fbaxk Eeyer, 22 S. Second St, Meriden, Conn. — $5000 forfeit 'f original of above letter proving genuineness cannot be produced. FREE MEDICAL ADVICE TO WOMAN. Don’t hesitate to write to Mrs. Pinkham. She will understand your ease perfectly, and will treat you with kindness. Her advice Is free, and the address is Lynn, Mass. No woman ever regretted having written her, and she has helped thousands. uj Save OJ a u. f -- 2 UH Drugs write for our ICO-page catalogue, showing 10.C00 article* at cut prices. PATENT MEDICINES, RUBBER GOODS. TRUSSES. SHERMAN & MCCONNELL DRIK (0. Cor. 16th and Dodge. Omaha. Net I i I Don’t forget when you order starch to get the best. Get DEFIANCE. No more “yellow” looking clothes. no more cracking or breaking. It doesn't stick to the iron. It gives satis faction or you get your money back. The cost is 10 cents for 16 ounces of tne best starch made. Of other starches you get but 12 ounces. Now don't forget. It’s el your grocers. nANUFACTURED BY THE DEFIANCE STARCH CO.t OMAHA. NEB. HAVE YOU A HORSE? WOULD YOU LIKE US TO Q A n 01 F O SEND YOU A BEAUTIFUL OWI/UliC , FOR THE MOST WONDERFUL SADDLE OFFER EVER HEARD OF. an after by which an ran* can have the nlceat caddie in hie neighborhood, cat this ad out and aend it to as end vou will rw-clve our New. Rig and Beautiful Special Saddle Catalogue, large, handsome photographic Illustrations of all kinds of Men’s, Women’s, Boys’ tntf Girls’ Saddles, Stock Saddles, Ranch and Range Saddles, SMALL. MEDIUM AND LARGE. FLAIN AND FANCY SADDLES EVERY IMAGINE ILE KINO AND STYLE AND SHARE OF SAODLC! OUR PRICES WILL ASTOHISH ARD PLEASE YOU. ja owner ahould hare at once. If too own a hone, don't fall to cut thla ad oat and aend to u, today andaea what all you get by retom mall, tree, postpaid. ADDRESS, SEARS, ROEBUCK 0 CO.. CXKAGO. ItoyvMfiraeriysaMNfatmMSMb LEWIS'SIHGLE 1INHI STRAIGHT S* CIGAR ttm Jobber or Alroct tnm Foctorr. Poorie, UL When Answering Advertisements Kindly Mention This Paper. BEGGS' CHERRY COUGH SYRUP cures coughs and o>My,