NERVOUS DEBILITY cured by the use of AVER’S Sarsaparilla Tones the system, makes the weak strong. Cures Others will cure you. MNQER 5IQML5 SET MEN THINKING. Head-ache, Loss of Appetite, Wakefulness, Nervousness. Back-ache, Drawing-down-ach ing Pains in the Small of the Back, Wraken ing Eyesight, Dropsical Swellings, Shortness of Breath, Frequent Desire to Urinate, Con stipation, Hot Dry Skin, are DANGER SIGNALS and KIDNEY DISEASE. BE WARNED IN TIME . . . ... IT IS NOT TOO LATE OREGON KIDNEY TEA WILL RESTORE YOU TO PERFECT HEHLTH. TRY IT. THE MILD POWER CURES. HUMPHREYS’ 1 1 — 1 I>r. Humphrey*' Specific* are scientifically and carefully prepared Remedies, used for years In private practice and for over thirty years by the people with entire success. Every single Specific u special cure for the disease named. Tneycure without drugging, purging or reducing the system, and are In fact and deed the Sovereign Remedies of the World. LIST OF NUMBERS. CURES. PRICES. 1— Fevers, Congestions, Inflammations. .25 2— Worms, Worm Fever, Worm Colic... .25 3— Teething; Colic, Crying, Wakefulness .25 4— Diarrhea, of Children or Adults.25 5— Dysentery, Griping, Bilious Colic.25 6— Cholera Morbus, Vomiting.25 7— Coughs, Colds, Bronchitis..25 8— Neuralgia, Toothache, Faceaclie.25 9— Headaches, Sick Headache, Vertigo. .25 10— Dyspepsia, Biliousness, Constipation .25 11— Suppressed or Painful Periods- .25 12— Whites, Too Profuse Periods.25 13— Croup, Laryngitis, Hoarseness.25 14— Salt Rheum, Erysipelas, Eruptions. .25 15— Rheumatism, or Rheumatic Pains .25 16— Malaria, Chills, Fever and Ague... .25 17— Piles, Blind or Bleeding.25 IS—Ophthalmy, Sore or Weak Eyc3. .25 19— Catarrh, Influenza, Cold In the Head .25 20— Whooping Cough.25 21— Asthma, Oppressed Breathing.25 22— Ear Discharges, Impaired Hearing .25 23— Scrofula, Enlarged Glands, Swelling .25 24— General Debility, Physical Weakness .25 25— Dropsy, and Scanty Secretions.25 26— Sea-Sickness, Sickness from Riding .25 27— Kidney Diseases.25 29— Sore Month, or Canker.25 30— Urinary Weakness, Wetting Bed.. .25 31— Painful Periods.25 34— Diphtheria, Ulcerated Sore Throat.. .25 35— Chronic Congestions & Eruptions. .25 EXTRA NUMBERS: 28— Nervous Debility, Seminal Weak ness, or Involuntary Discharges.1.00 32— Diseases of the Heart, Palpitation 1.00 33— Epilepsy, Spasms, St. Vitus’ Dance... 1.00 Sold by Druggists, or sent post-puid on receipt of price. Dr. Humphreys’ Manual (M4 pages,) mailed free. IIU31PHKKYS* MED. CO.,1 II &113 William St., New York. SPECIFICS, HUMPHREYS’ WITCH HAZEL OIL “THE PILE OINTMENT.” For Piles—External or Internal. Blind or Bleeding; Fistula In Ano; Itching or Bleeding of the Rectum. The relief la immediate—the cure certain. PRICE, 50 OTS. TRIAL SIZE, 25 OTS. Gold by Druggists, or sent post-paid ou receipt of price. bcbfubeys- BED.ro., ilia 11s n.. sc, sew yobe Auction of 159 lbs., and I feel to much better that I would not take $1,000 and be put back where I was. I am both surprised and proud cf the chance. I recommend your treatment to all sufferers from obesity. Will answer all inquiries If stamp is inclosed for reply." PATIENTS TREATED BY MAIL. CONFIDENTIAL. Harmless, and with ua starring, inconvenience, or bad oflbeta. For particulars address, with 6 cents in stamps, il o. a. r. siydei, incurs mmi, ciicmb, iiu 6UARANTEED PREVENTIVE AND CURATIVE FOR -U\DIES OHM. SAFI HARMLF50-ARD-/"FAluBU AO-STOMACH -0RI/66/HG,- HO ■ 'ROTRUHCHY -ORLY- ARTICLF -/A ■ THF ■ WORLD -LMF-/T •PJlCf «• SENT-raf- -MOItH -ClflWN ClifMICALCa- 15.TK BEEAMan DO YOU TAKE PATENT MEDICINE? Can you Answer .-fe&a “wha- For?' Consult Ff3e, G. W. WILLIAMSON, M. D., SPECIALIST A\'D Of that Malignant Blood I>is RP ease. So Mercury, but new, successful remedies. A cure QUICKLY guaranteed. Men made strong CURED Female weaknesses perman ently cured. Piles and Rectal TJlcers cured, no knife or caustics. Patients successfully treated by mail. Address, with stamp, NEW ERA medical AND SurgTcal DISPENSARY^ MAIN ENTRANGE'iSlTclw^srBMAHA.J t' photographsokTI ► RA6B SILK HANDKERCHIEF. y Kail it a |Md Photo, a whlto ( bow or old; Silk Haad*^ L kerchief, with a P. 0. or Bxpreeo Iwey Order for SI, 4 L aad wo will Photofraph iko pletaro oa tho ellk. Heaatl-J r fai effocU PHRMASKST platarr. WILL HOT FADE or] r WISH oat, InU forever, oi-rybodj] t PHOTO j t . y~?7T. aTUQioj'j-Si;1? S.i5th,OMM4AJ THE 8HIPMAN’S TALE. ■ ■ i Listen, my masters. I speak naughtbut truth. From dawn to dawn they drifted on and on. Not knowing whither or to what dark end. Now the north froze them, now the hot south scorched. Some called to God and found great comfort so; Some gnashed their teeth with curses, and some laughed An empty laughter seeing that they lived. So sweet was breath between their foolish lips. Day after day the same relentless sun; Night after night the same unpitying stars. At intervals ilerce lightnings tore the clouds. Showing vast, hollow spaces, and the sleet Hissed, and the torrents of tho sky wero loosed. From time to time a hand relaxed its grip, And some pale wretch slid down into the dark With stifled moan, and transient horror seized The rest who waited, knowing what must be. At every turn strange shapes reached up and clutched The whirling wreck, held on uwhile, and then Slipt back again into that blackness wbenoe they came. Ah, hapless folk, to bo so tost and torn. So racked by hunger, fever, lire and wave. And swept at last into the nameless void— Frail girls, strong men and mothers with their babes! And were none saved? My masters, not a soull Oh, shipman, woeful, woeful is thy talc! Our heartsare heavy, and our eyes are dimmed. What ship is this that suffered such ill fats? What ship, my masters? Know ye not?—the World. —Thomas Bailey Aldrich in Harper's. Patents and What They Protect. A business man in this city who is up to his ears in the work necessary to gather capital to float an enterprise, and at the same time to keep information of the nature of it away from busy rivals, found time last week to say: “Did you ever think that a patent does not patent in this country? Well, it's a fact. All that the patent office does is to give you a paper with some writing on it, but if another man steals your idea and goes to manufacturing your invention the patent office will not lift a Anger to pro tect you or to stand by its own decision. The fact that you’ve got a patent is a point in your favor, but you've got to hire lawyers and fight the thief in the courts, and if he can stand it to hire lawyers longer than you can that settles you, and yon might as well make him a present of your invention. There are lots of men in the country who are getting rich on the discoveries of other people. All they had to do was to take ’em and fight the real discoverers into poverty. The patent office, to be respected and to be of any use, ought to have the power to cause the stealer of a patent to be sent to prison.”—New York Sun. Scotch Reticence. A Scotch laborer was dying. He had four little children. After lying silent for awhile he said he would like to see them, and the poor wife brought them to the bedside. All he did was to take each of the three elder children by the hand and to say, “Gude day.” Then he said to the youngest, a wee thing 3 years old. “Will ye gie me a bit kiss?” The mother, lifting up the wondering child, said, “Say ta-ta to your father.” “Ta-ta,” said the little boy in a loud, cheerful voice, and then ran out of the cottage to play. Tho poor father closed his eyes; the tears ran down his cheeks, but he said no more. The abun dance of his heart choked his utterance. Ho was weary, too, and so gude day was his only word of parting.—“Twen ty-five Years of St. Andrew’s.” About Talking Cattle. You know the superstition which claims that cattle have the gift of speech at midnight Christmas eve. A Schles wig story warns us to take such asser tions by faith rather than crave for knowledge by sight. An unbelieving farmer once hid himself in his bam and heard one of his horses say to the other, “Dit Jaer waet wy noch unser Buer lijs” (We shall be rid of our master this ye^r). The prophecy so frightened the man tqat he fell ill and died, and the soothsaying horse drew him to his grave.—Harper’s Bazar. About Ignorance. One speaker, referring to the prevalent ignorance about common things, said that he once saw a laborer digging flints in the chalk and asked him if he thought they grew. “No,” was the reply. “I don’t think about it; I knows they do.” “Then place a flint on your chimney piece and see how much it grows in a twelvemonth.” “All right, sir, and do you do the same with a tater and see how much that grows.”—Youth’s Companion. The Linen Month. January is known in Chicago as the linen month. A newspaper of that city states that this is because the housewife then does most of her purchases for the year, and not, as has been alleged, be cause the annual washing takes place in that month.—Exchange. A company has been organized at San Antonio, Tex., to utilize the mesquite bean. The chief object is to prepare the bean so tlbit-'a-beverage resembling coffee can be made from its decoction or infusion. The temple of the Sim, at Palmyra, covered a square of 22 yards on each side. It was approached by a magnifi cent avenue over half a mile long, in closed by rows of columns and statues. The ordinary folding fan is said to have been invented in Japan, in the sev enth %entury, by a native artist, who derived the idea from the way in which the bat closes its wings. JJ1 persons whose occupations axe entary should make it a matter of duty to counteract the unwholesome tendency of their daily employment by some form of exercise. Boston ha3 established a co-operative home for young women students. There are accomodations for 150, and the prices of board range from $1.50 to $3.50 per week. We love only partially till we knew thoroughly. Grant that a closer ac quaintance reveals weakness; it will also disclose stremth.—Bouca. Cures Consumption, Coughs, Croup, Bore Throat, Sold by all Druggists on a Guarantee. For a Lame Side, Back or Cnest Shiloh's Porous Plaster will give great satisfaction.—ag cents. SHILOH’S VITALIZER. Mrs. T. S. Hawkins, Chattanooga, Tenn., says: “ Shiloh's Vitallzer • SA VED MY LIFE.' I consider it the beet remedy for a debUitatcd system l ever used." For Dyspepsia, Liver or Kidney trouble It excels. Price 75 eta. CHJLOH’SWCATARRH REMEDY. Have you Catarrh? Try this Remedy. It will relieve and Cure you. Price GO cts. This In jector for Its successful treatment is furnished free. Shiloh’s Remedies are sold by us on a guarantee to give satisfaction. ^93SOTfor a case it will not cur^1^ It is an agreeable Laxative for the Bowels; can be made into a Tea for use in one minute. Price25c., fiOc. and Jl.iOper package. -Ail Elegant roiLET POWDER JrV4J< for the Teeth and Breath—25c. Scientific American j Agency for^^ For Information and free Handbook write to MUNN & CO., 361 Broadway, New York. Oldest bureau for securing patents in America. Every patent taken out by us is brought before the publie by a notice given free of charge in the .ffieutific JUtiMiicati Largest circulation of any scientific paper In the world. Splendidly illustrated. No intelligent man should be without it. Weekly, $3.00 a year; $1.50 six months. Address MUNN A CO., Publishers, 361 Broadway, New York City. C. M. NOBLE, LEADING GROCER, McCOOK, - NEB. SOLE AGENT. WOOD'S PHOSPHODINE, The Great Endlsii Remedy. Prompt It and permanent t ly cures all forms of Nervous m Weakness, Amissions, Sperm• fat or rhea. Jmpotenoy and all effects of Abuse or Excesses. Been prescribed orer 85 years In thousands of cases; is the only Reliable and Hon* eat Medicine knoicn. Ask Idrugglst for Wood’s Pros Before and After* pkodixk; If ho offers some J •/* worthless medicine In place • f this, leave hi** f’lshonest store, inclose price In tetter, and we will send by return mail. Price, one . knwe. Pi; six. J5.Y. One triH please, six trill cure, ••nirdilet la l "In **'*•* * ■ * "r'^lonn. « f’nnirg, The Wood Chemical Co. 131 Wo dward Ave . Detroit. Mich. For sale by L. W. McConnell & Co., G. M Chenery, Albert McMillen in McCook and by druggists everywhere. CURTIS & BATES For a Clean Shave or^ -S-s^An Artistic Flair Cut. Rear of Citizens Bank. We are printing the date to which each subscriber has paid his subscrip tion to The Tribune along with the address. Watch the date and you will know if you are in arrears. If you are please come and see us. To Trade. A quarter section of land adjoining Keota, Colorado, to trade for McCook residence or vacant property. E. C. Burkett, Tribune Office. J. A. Cordial, Attorney. NOTICE. Ed Drain will take notice, that on the 8th day of February. 1803. J. K. Iveliey. a Justice ef the peace of Willow Grove precinct. Ked Willow county. Nebraska, issued an order of attachment lor the sum of $15 and costs of this action, and lias caused the Burlington Voluntary Belief Department of the Chicago. Burlington and Quincy Railroad Company to be duly served with attachment and gar nishee. as having monies and credits in its possession tielonging to the said Ed Drain, in an action pending before him. wherein Frank H. Sonarman is plaint iff. and Ed Drain is de fendant; t hat property of the defendant con sisting of the said monies in the hands of the said Burlington Voluntary Relief Department •of the Chicago. Burlington and Quincy Rail road. has been attached and garnished under said order. Said cause was continued to the JiJid day of March, 1803. at 10 o’clock a. m. J. A. Cor deal. Attorney for plaiutitf. McCook. Nebraska. February 17,1803. SHERIFF’S SALE. By virtue of hii order of sale directed to ine from the District Court of Ked Willow county. Nebraska, on a judgment obtained before Hon. D. T. Welly. Judge of the District Court of Ked Willow oounty, Nebraska, on the J9th day of December, 1892, in favor of Minnie C. Ballard as plaintiff, and against John Green etal. as defendants, for the sum of six hundred and nine dollars and twenty-live cents ($009 25), and costs taxed at $50.23. and accruing costs; and co-defendant Western Loan and Invest ment Co., on the same day obtained a decree for the sum of $67.25. I have levied upon the following real estate taken as the property of said defendants to satisfy said judgments, to-wit: the west half of the north-west quar ter, and the west half of the south-west quar ter of section thirty-two (32), in township three north, in range thirty (30), west of the 6th P. M., in Ked Willow county, Nebraska. And will offer the same for sale to the highest bidder, for cash in hand, on the 27th day of March. A. I)., 1893, In front of the south door of the court house, in Indianola, Nebraska, that being the building wherein the last term of court was held, at the hour of 1 o'clock i*. M. of said day. when and where due attend ance will he given by the undersigned. Dated February 21st. 1893. R. It. Banks, Sheriff of said counry. First day of publication February 24. NOTHING ELSE LIKE IT. When the publishers decided to issue The Journal twice a week at the same price of the old week lies, §1.00 per year, they stiuck just what the public wanted— something between the old-fash ioned weekly aud the high-priced daily. The success of The Semi AVeekly Journal has been imme diate and continued. It has dis tanced every one of its once-a-week rivals. It doesn’t take long to convince people that a good live paper every Tuesday and Friday is better than only one a week, especially when you appeal to their pocket books, and give it to them at the same price. Readers will testify that it is almost as good as a daily. The markets twice a week are worth the money. Four complete novels each year by ‘‘The Duchess,” Miss Braddon, and other Avidely knoAvn authors, are Avorth the dollar. Its legisla tive news is its strong point just now. It is wide-aAvade, spends money for news, and is always in the lead. Yon can see its supe riority over the old-fashioned Aveekly. Everyone Avho subscribes noAv gets a Seaside Library free. This offer Avon’t hold good al Avays. One of our big offers is The Semi-Weekly Journal and AVeekly New York Tribune, both one year for §1.25. Our great premium, History of the United States, Stanley’s Book, or Life of Spurgeon, prepaid, and The Jour nal, §1.40. Either book is worth §1.50 alone. Your choice of these books and the AYeekly NeAv York Tribune and Journal a year for only §1.65. What a combination of reading matter! If you send us your own and another new name, we will send you either of the above books free. Subscribe now and get 104 papers a year, which is less than one cent per copy. Address Nebraska State Journal, Lincoln, Nebraska. For Sale or Trade. Two lots with improvements as fol lows: a house, kitchen, cellar, well, stable, fruit and forest trees. Will trade for a good team. Enquire at this office. 34-tf. No matter what daily paper you read at other times, the Daily State Journal, published at the state capital, is the paper for Ne braskans during the legislature. Eighty-five cents a month. Try it. THE. SUNDAY SUN. The Greatest Sundy Newspa per in the World. « Price 5c a copy. By mail $2 a year. Daily by mail - - - - 6 “ Daily and Sundy by mail -8 “ ADDRESS THE SUN, NEW YORK. CANCER Subjects need fear no longer from this King of Terrors, for by a most wonderful discovery in medicine, cancer on any part of the body can be permanently cured without the use of the hnlfe. HRS. n. D. Colby, 2307 Indiana Are., Chicago, lays : ** Was cared of cancer of the breast in six weeks by your method of treatment.'’ Bend for treatise. Br. U. C. Bale, 365 34th St., Chicago; SHE TURNED THE TABLES. How a Little Homely Knowledge Saved • Young Lady Much Discomfort. A young lady througli her knowledge of housewifery rather turned the tables upon a would l>e jester one day and let that individual, who was of tho male persuasion, into u little secret of con siderable importance to those who have occasion to work in tho kitchen as ama teurs. The two were members of a party vis iting an Adirondack camp in the Sara nac lake region. Every one was well acquainted, und the days passed merrily away until a heavy rainstorm drove the ladies and the less enthusiastic fish ermen indoors and compelled them to seek other forms of amusement. The rain continued to fall almost without intermission for several days, and as a means to relieve the monotony the gen tleman already referred to proposed that the various members of the party try their hand at cooking the next meal. Permission was obtained from the host, the members of the party laughingly agreed to the proposition, and tho guide, whose duty it was to act as cook, was for the time sent about other business. The gentleman acted as chef, ar.d -with a knowledge obtained from serving on the house committee of a prominent New York club proceeded to assign various work to his aids and appointed the young lady first vegetable cook for the express purpose of making her peel onions, the odor of which she loathed. When the party adjourned to the kitch en to begin preparations, a large supply of strong odored red onions was brought to the lady, and she was requested to remove the outer cuticle. The acting chef and the others who had been let into the secret made merry over the supposed discomfi ture of the first vegetable cook, but the lat ter smiled sweetly and uttered no protest. “Bring me a deep pan,” she said tohei helper, and when this was produced sh filled it to the brim with water. Then she tucked up her sleeves to the elbow showing just the prettiest pair of arms in the world, and removing her rings set to work peita-ig the onions under watei with a deft;«% s that showed how famil iar she was with the work and depriv ing it of all its offensiveness. It was a revelation to the man, who had looked either for a vigorous protest, or had expected to see the eyes of the vegetable cook water from the effects of the onion juice. Tho amateur dinnei was in every way a success, but none of the cooks achieved a greater triumph than the one whose practical experience showed to the others the common sense method of peeling onions.—New York Herald. A Life Work. Mr. Sutherland, got hold of a prodig ious Clarendon and Bumet and made it the richest and most extensive pictorial history in existence or ever likely to be in existence. He found nearly 19,00C prints and drawings for it and no less than 731 portraits of Charles I, 518 of Charles II, 352 of Cromwell, 273 of James II and 420 of William III. If, remarks Mr. Percy Fitzgerald, we only think how few are the portaits of Charles I, and these mostly copies after Vandyke, we shall have an idea of the labor and exploration necessary to gather up the 731. Think also of the pains and cost in cleaning, “laying down,” “insetting,” and “inlaying” these portraits, the bind ing, arranging, etc., and we shall not be surprised to learn that this folly occu pied the fanatical Sutherland such a lengthy portion of hri life. When finished, it filled 67 huge vol umes and had cost £12,000! We may conceive all the visitings of print shops, the turning over boxes of prints, the groveling among winds and lanes, the correspondence and the endless paying of mon«iy! To give a finish to his labors a catalogue was prepared of all the en gravings. This filled two great quartos. At Sutherland’s death the work was car ried on by his widow, who is reported to have given as much as £80 for a single plate!—Temple Bar. Peculiarities About Tramps. “A fact about your professional vagrant or tramp is that they never want to go back to the place from where they were sent,” says a penitentiary superintendent. “For instance, if one i.s sent in from along the Susquehanna road, on his discharge he usually requests to be sent north, east of south, of any direction that will take him away from that in which he was ap prehended. “Only the other day a tramp sent from Otsego begged to be sent to Hudson. He begged so hard that I gave him a ticket to Hudson. The next day he was back again. ‘They pulled me as soon as I stepped from the train,’ he said. County officers, you see, are always on the lookout for tramps because of the mileage received for bring ing them here. Work? No, they wouldn’t show any inclination or desire for work if they had to lay in the penitentiary for months. But we compel them to earn their keep, very much to their disgust. Usually I set them to work cane seating chairs.”—Albany Journal. Sirs. Mossman Was Petrified. In June, 1884, Mrs. Abigail Mossman was interred at the Hazelwood cemetery in Poweshiek county, la. Not long since relatives determined to remove the re mains to another cemetery. The work men engaged to perform the job found the coffin filled to overflowing with red colored mineral water. This was drained off, whereupon it was found that the corpse, with the exception of the fingers and toes, was perfectly petrified. The hair was perfectly natural, as was also a bouquet of roses that lay on her breast. After a thorough examination by rela tives and friends the coffin was again closed and covered in.—St. Louis Re public. A Kind Mistress. It was raining in torrents. “Julie!” said madam to her maid, “be quick and run across to the milliners and tell her not to forget my hat.” “Css I taka Azor out with me, mad am?” “Are you mad, Julie? Can’t you see for yourself that the weather is not fit to turn a dog out of doors?”—Evenement. If Your Cistern Is Out of Order or Soft Water is scarce, don’t worry yourself for a moment— go right ahead and use hard water with KIRK’S WHITE RUSSIAN SOAP and you’ll never know the difference. The clothes will be just as white, .iean and sweet-smelling, because the “White Russian” is specially adapted for use in hard water. JAS. S. KIRK & CO., Chicago. Jusky Diamond Tar Soap. "“* nl^?F tht WONDERFUL, I The cures which are being effected bv Drs Starkey & J’alen, 1529 Arch St., Philadelphia Pa., in Consumption, Catarrh. Neuralgia' Bronchitis, Rheumatism,, and all chronic dis eases, by their compound Oxygen Treatment, are indeed marvelous... ■ . If you are a sufferer from any disease which your physician has failed tit cure, write for in formation about this treatment, and their book of two hundred pages, giving a history of Compound Oxygen, its nature and effects with numerous testimonials from patients, to whom you may refer for still further information, will be promptly sent, without charge. This book aside from its great merit as a medical work, giving, as it does;-the result of years of study and experience, you will find a very interesting one. Drs. STARKEY & PAI EN, 1529 Arch Street, Philladeiphia. Pa. 120 Suiter St., San Francisco, Cal. Please mention this paper. Buck/en's Arnica Salve. The best salve in the world tor culs, sores, bruises, ulcers, salt rheum, fever sores, tetter, chapped hands, chilblains, corns, and all skin eruptions, ami positively cures piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed' to give perfect satisfaction or money refunded. 1'rice 25c. a oox. For sale by A McMilleit. May'23-iyr. injection! 95 _ THEGENTLEMAiYS FHIENQ.^J^ IvT PERFECTION STRINGS free vlth evnrv bottla. - CLEAN. Does not STAIN. PREVENTS STRICTURE, Cores GONORRHOEA and GLEET iq Own to Fouii day*. A qUICK CURE for LEUCORRHCEA or WHITES. Sold by all DRUGGISTS. Seat to any Address for fl.00.' fiULYDOft MANUFACTURING C0„ LANCASTER, OHIO, DO TOU WANT TO ADOPT A 15 AIM* Maybe you think this is a new l>ti. It.: s«, sending out babies on sipplicutinu ; i; ! cn dune before, however, h:n never hi \ . ?hr*e furnished been so near the or.tf.n »i m.ii ;>»ea.; this one. Everyone will cxebniii. " \\« :i 1 that’s the sweeiest baby I ever fi.-.v! ’ 'fl ^ little black-and-white eng.ruv;iny can * i\. youbuta faint idea of the exquisite m nine*. “ I’M A DAISY.!’ which we propose to send to you, transpor tation paid. The little darling rests against a pillow, and is in the act of drawing off its pink sock, the mate of which has been pulled off and iiung aside with a triumphant coo. The flesh tints are perfect, and the eyes follow you, no matter where you stand. Theexqui sitereproductions of this greatest pointing of Ida Waugh (the most celebrated of modern painters of baby life) are to be given to those who subscribe to Hemorest’s Family Maga zine for 1893. The reproductions cannot be told from the original, which cost $400, and are the 6ame size 117x22 inches!. The baby is life size, and absolutely lifelike. . We have also in preparation, to present to our sub scribers during 1893, other great pictures by such artists as Percy Moran,Maud Humphrey, Louis Deschamps, and others of world-wide renown. Take only two examples of wbet we did during the past year, ” A Yard of Pan sies.” and “A White House Orchid” by the wife of President Harrison, and you will see what our promises mean. Those who subscribe f or Demorest’s Family Magazine for 1893 will possess a gallery of ex quisite works of art ot great value, besides a Magazine that cannot be equaled l>y any in the world for its beautiful- illustrations and subject matter, that will keep everyone post ed on all the topics of the daj*, and all the fads and different items of interest about the household, besides furnishing interesting reading matter, both grave and gay. for the whole family: and whilcDemon. t*s is not u fashion Magazine, its fashion pages are per fect, and we give you, o/cost, all the pat terns you w&h during tho' year, and in any size you choose. Send in your sub scription at once, only $2, and you will really get over $25 in value. Address the publisher. W. Jenning3 Domorest. 15 East 14th St.. >'ew York. If you are unacquainted with the Magazine, send 10 cenis fo- a specimen coi»v 'Sala^andexrfcnseapaid weekly from st Permanent position. Good chancefor^^^^WI [advancement. Exclusive territory. ^ Ml Largest growers of Nursery atock^^j^Bk /Clean, hardy stock, true [name. Fair treatmentguar^^K /' 'anteod. Liberal com-Wei mission to local iQ.|| .part time ^^^B te-rest anyil agent*. one not earn-11 V-7 ing *75 per month 11 I x and expenses. l>on t \ toes. Continental Nurseries Chicago, m.Y ^P^ie bouse is reliable. Name this paper.-Ed-) ] SETUOF TEETH rSbBER$5.00 Work Guaranteed. Teeth extracted In the morning, new ones inserted evening oz same day. Teeth tilled without p3in, latest method. Finest parlors in the west. Paxton g&SWE DR. R. W. BAILEY, trance.OMAHA. - - - - NEB. -