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About The McCook tribune. (McCook, Neb.) 1886-1936 | View Entire Issue (March 31, 1893)
THE BEST COUCH-CURE and anodyne expectorant, AYER’S > Cherry Pectoral soothes the inflamed membrane and induces sleep. Prompt to Act sure to cure. DO YOU WANT AH WANT TO INTERE/T ENJ2T LIFE IN AT SHALL THE WORLD? EXFENJE? READ THIS! A great many people suffer the aches and pains caused by diseased kidneys, and do not realize their danger- until it is too late. Hack-ache, Constipation, Nervousness, Loss of Appetite, Failing Lyesiglit, Rheumatic and Neuralgic pains in the Back and Limbs indicate Kidney Disease, which, if neglected, result in death. Oregon Kidney Jea WILL CURE THESE TROUBLES. TRY IT. THE EXPENSE IS SMALL. You can not enjoy life when you suffer You will take more interest in tile world when vou are well. J THE MILD POWER CURES. HUMPHREYS* Speemc £5S^dBss& Remedies of the \\ orld» - — ~~~ —~ , . r„ KRICBB. list ok huubf.bs. cubes. _ »>* 1-Fnvers. Congestions, Inflammations, • -£*> alworms. Worm Fever, Worm Co lc .45 3—TeetMni; CoMc, Crying. Wakefulness .45 A Diarrhea, of Children or Adults .45 £zRl?Ime£r. Griping, BlMous Colic. .. .45 ^Ch^^MorbnSfVomiting. . - -45 8—NenrafgltD^Tootbache. Faceachc . .45 ifi&rSfsi !rSfSx5.iSs;sfc: ;§ \ fLltheam a tlsm, or Rheumatic Faina .45 ib««s“dEAv" i . . .Z .45 |b"o”nlaC,hEn&1 Glands!Swelling .45 Si^oneral DeMm?, F^}™8*”688 ?,% SssaaistraKsssa-i 27—Kidney Diseases ■••. SO—rrlaMy^eakness, Wetting Red- ■ ‘.45 ? 1 Zo^phtherlaVcicerated Sore Throat .45 33—Chronic Congestions ft ErupUona. .45 EXTRA NUMBERS: «s«5sss» aggSva HISIMIHKYS- UKD.tO.,111 *113 Wllll.a St., Sew Tort. SPECIFICS. HUMPHREYS’ WITCH HAZEL OIL “THE PILE OINTMENT." Tto relief i immSdlSte-the cure certain. ^ PRICE, SO CTS. TRIAL SIZE. 25 CTS_. Sold by Druggists, or sent post-paid on receipt of price. B?*pnm:Ys' U. n.,'o., uu m will,™ sc, sew yoke Chamberlain’s Eye & Skin Ointment a oertain cure for Chronic Sore Eyes. Tetter, George M. Cbenery. H ' C5F=- T»-ie\ Oentvhy GUARANTEED PREVENTIVE -AND-CURATIVE FOR • LADIES • ORLY. «•npp HARMLESS '/WO • /REAll/OLE' J jm/cH DRUGGING; «9 ■ HtsntlMEi>t ZaZmJiR-rMO -u^ •PRlCf SZ • SEN* T • FREE * -ADuREjj •CIOBN-CHEHIGA.L'CO- 15.Til- BEEHMAN 51; M* G.W. Williamson, M.D. SPECIALIST CAN TREAT You BY niaiL MOW? ^whfe^rem^drnV^en^: to us to-day. mmrnrn AilBP private* Nervous, Chronic ljjf F CURE diseases, Female Weak n«.V«l,Men"uil,iVonien made strong by a n£?S» of their particular trouble. .That mSllgnanUdood disease permanently cured without the use of Mercury. We always guarantee a cure* NEW ERA MEDICAL AND CiipGi c al DIS P ENSARY Mfl!i?rMTR ANCE 'sTi't1? f-VfffS'rOM AH A.^ all PHOTOGRAPHS OH A RA6B SILK HANDKERCHIEF. lailmgMd Photo, awhlto (bow or old; Bilk Hood* kerchief, with • P. O. or Bxprooa looey Order for §1, •ad wo will Photograph thoplotaro oo thoollk. Beautl* fal aBhcU PEBIASEXT pie to re. WILL KOT FADE or . y WASH oat, loo to forovor, everybody Sr£4W photo yTTT. ■TUPto3H-5i-t7 S.i5».0M*HA MY SOMETIME SWEETHEART. do not know what her name may be. Hut sure as the skies are blue above, Somewhere in the world she waits for me She who will one day ho my love. Now’, this moment perhaps she wonders Who Is hem in the lonesome lands. On the other side of the sea that sunders Our eyes, and our lips, ami our hearts, and our bauds. But there is a place where the waters narrow: There is a point where the margins meet: And in the morning of some glad morrow We shall press the isthmus with fated feet. Though she be w ith a thousand 1 w ill know' her. How can I fail to find her v. hen Today my heart to my thought can show her. As she must ho now—as she will be then? And she is as fair as the fairest fair: She is os true as the truest truth: Pure as purity—holy as prayer— Her heart kept fresh in the faith of youth. With a sunny gayety ever sheening In eyes that can sparkle with w ildest fun— Or sober to tears and earnest meaning When tears are timely and laughter done. 1 pray to meet her with soul unsullied As hers will bo—with a heart untorn Like a fallow tteld, all gashed and gullied, Where passion’s torrents their ways have w'orn. Can I falter and fall beyond retrieval, With the thought of my lady to deter. When all that is base and impure and evil Goes out of my heart when I think of her? My dream sweetheart! for in dreams I see her And hear the sweep of her dainty dress. While a fair arm falls with a furtive fear Around my neck in a soft caress. I feel her breath as she bends above me; I catch the gleam of her dark, sweet eyes. And I long for the time when, with her to love me. Earth will be fairer than paradise! —Chicago Inter Ocean, j ONE WAS LOADED. During the reign of Louis XVIII a young English nobleman, George Lord Hardinge, visited Paris for pleasure, tak ing with him his sister and a few serv ants. He took lodgings at one of the principal hotels, and being a gay, ex travagant young bachelor soon entered into a whirl of giddy dissipations. Lady Emily, his sister, was only 18 pretty, amiable and inexperienced—and should have been under the care of a very different person from her brother, who for weeks gave little heed to anything except his own follies, leaving her much of the time alone or to such company as chance threw in her way. Among other reprehensible things Lord Hardinge had become passionately fond of the gaming table. Of course the young lord soon became an object of special regard to the habitues of the place, who fancied they saw in him one of the means or chances of in creasing their fortunes. Among others who would have needed an influential voucher to have brought him into first class society in England was one Jean Vauldemar, who claimed to have been a cavalry officer under Na poleon and was generally known by the title of “monsieur the captain.” The gay and thoughtless Englishman permitted the cunning fellow to worm himself into his good graces—to play, drink and carouse with him—and occa sionally go home and spend the night with him at his hotel. In this way monsieur the captain first got a glimpseof Lady Emily, and shortly after, at his request, an introduction to her by the careless brother. This was exactly what the gamester wanted, and he at once set all his wits to work to win the unoccupied heart of the lady, and if possible make his for tune out of the affair. The captain was in reality a married man. He did not go too far at once, for the gamester, as all professional gamesters are, was an adej3t in human nature. For the first he sought only to excite a cer tain degree of interest, then sympathy and then compassion, well knowing that if he could succeed to this extent thefcn experienced girl would soon be in his power, like clay in the hands of the pot ter, to be molded to whatever evil pur pose he might desire. At last the critical moment came. By degrees he had won her regard, her sym pathy and her affections, and one even ing, when he believed the brother at the gaming table, as usual, he took occasion, as if by an irresistible impulse, to pour into her willing ear his false love. Lady Emily listened as one bewildered if not entranced. He saw his power over her, and his dark soul exulted in the fact. He took her hand with trem bling eagerness, pressed it, kissed it, rose gradually from his knees, glided his arm around her slender waist, drew her fondly to him and put his foul lips to hers. At this moment the door of the apart ment was dashed open, and white with rage Lord Hardinge was seen advancing with long and rapid strides. The in stant he reached the gamester he seized him by the throat, hnrled him back and struck him to the ground. Vanldemar slowly rose to his feet, his now blanched features expressing the most malignant hate, and for a few mo ments as he gazed upon the young no bleman, who was now giving his whole attention to his unconscious sister, he appeared to be debating with himself whether he should kill him on the spot or not. “No,” he muttered at length. “Why make a felon of myself for a revenge that will he equally sure a few hours later and leave me untainted with crime?” And with this he quitted the apartment without a word to Lord Hardinge. It was at least half an hour before Lady Emily was so far restored as to re member what had taken place, and then, in great trepidation, she demanded the meaning of the fearful scene. Lord Hardinge thrust a crumpled note into the hand of Lady Emily, which read as follows: Scion of a noble house, beware! Go less to the gaming table and look more at home. A designing villain known as monsieur the cap tain is now secretly paying court to your inno cent sister, while his own wife is pining in soli tude for want of the necessities and courtesies of life. Make duo inquiries and set a watch, and you will prove the truth of this statement, penned by An Unknown Friend. “His wife!” almost shrieked Lady Em ily. “We must leave Paris at once!” said her brother. “Yes, yes; at once!” cried Lady Emily in great excitement; “before this villain, i t.s 1 now believe tua to be, can do you j personal harm.” At this moment the valet of the noble man appeared aud whispered something in his ear. “I will be down directly,” was the an swer of the master, turning a shade paUr. “\Vhat is it. George?” eagerly demand ! ed his sister. “Only a gentleman to see me on some private burliness.” “Oh, yon must not fight with that bast man!” cried Lady Emily, at once divin : ing tho fearful secret, “for you will be j killed, and I shall be left without a pro I tector!” i “Have no fear!” was the evasive an swer of Lord Hardinge as he hurriedly quitted the apartment. As he expected, he received a formal challenge from M. Vauldemar, deman 1 ing satisfaction for the insult of a blow, the note explicitly stating that no apol ogy would be received. The nobleman at onco declared hit readiness to meet his adversary', but nol in the ordinary way. He immediately sent for an English officer of his ac quaintance, Major Bassett, of the —tb light infantry, and their conference re sulted in the decision to give the French man a meeting, provided he should ac cede to the terms and conditions w'hicli the challenged party claimed tho right tc propose. As monsieur the captain was known tc be a dead shot who had already killed ; several antagonists, and as Lord Har i dingo had never fired a pistol a hall I dozen times in his life, these terms and conditions accordingly were that the par ties should meet on the following morn ing at 8 o’clock at a place designated in the Eois du Boulogne; that two dueling pistols should he then and there selected by the seconds, and one, and only one, oi these be loaded; that these pistols should then be effectually concealed under a handkerchief and be drawn byr the prin cipals according to lot, and that when so drawn each should be jilaced to tho breast of the other and both triggers pulled at the word. “We shall see,” said Major Bassett, with a grim smile, “if this redoubtable hero will have the courage to fight with au equal chance against him.” Somewhat contrary to his expectations, however, the captain consented to the arrangement, and Lord Hardingc spent most of the night in making his will and giving hiS friend instructions to be car ried out in case of his fall. At the appointed time all the different parties appeared upon the ground, the nobleman with the solemnity due to an occasion involving lifo and death, but Vauldemar with the nonchalance, either real or assumed, of one who believed himself the favored son of fate. The lot fell to monsieur the captain to draw the first pistol, and as he weighed them both with his hand before deter mining his choice he remarked with a sar castic smile: “If I can't tell by the weight which has the ball for the heart of this accursed Englishman, I deserve to die.” Immedi ately after he drew his pistol and added, “I have it now—all right!” “God shall judge between us,” said Lord Hardinge solemnly as he lifted the remaining weapon. The principals were now placed face to face only three feet apart, and the seconds took leave of them with tremu lous agitation. Immediately after came the dreadful words: “Are yon read}-, gentlemen? Fire!” Both triggers were pulled together. There was only one explosion, and mon sieur the captain fell dead without a word, shot through the heart. This singular duel is no fiction. Only the names of the parties have been changed.—Exchange. The Influence of the Press. Probably the time is coming in the halcyon future when everything that everybody does will be open and above board, when there is nothing hidden that shall not be known, when that which is spoken in the ear shall be proclaimed upon the housetops, and we rather think that the impertinent press is helping to bring about that day. The fear of pub licity deters many a man from doing wrong or delivers him from the tempta tion to go astray. Men who seek to take unfair advantage of their fellow men be cause of their pover% or ignorance or weakness or for any other reason find an obstacle in the light which the press throws upon their actions and motions. Individual newspapers have their idiosyn crasies and other faults, but as a whole the press believes in right living, honest dealing, truth telling and doing as you would be done by.—Springfield Union. The Phenomena of Weeping Trees. In the forests of Oregon, Washington, Montana and British Columbia there is a species of tree that has a continuous and copious dripping of pure, clear water from the ends of its leaves and branches. This extraordinary sight may be wit nessed at all seasons when the leaves are on, and seems equally plentiful on clear, bright days as on damp, cloudy nights. The tree is a species of fir, and the “weeping” phenomenon is attrib uted to a remarkable power of condensa tion peculiar to the leaves and bark of this species of evergreen. In the island of Ferro there are many species of “weeping trees,” but in this latter case the “tears" appear to be most abundant when the relative humidity is near the dew point.—St. Louis Republic. An Old, Old Hunting Story. Baron Munchausen, when hunting for deer upon one occasion, encountered a magnificent animal, but found himself without shot. Speedily gathering to gether a handful of cherry stones, he loaded his gun with them and fired at the deer, hitting him squarely between the eyes, not killing him, however. The deer managed to escape, but some time later the baron encountered him again and was surprised to see a beautiful cherry tree growing out of the animal's forehead, covered with blossoms and fruit. It is suspected that the Baron Munchausen’s story is not true.—Har per's Young People. AN UNCLEAN PEOPLE. THE GREAT MASS OF HUMANITY LACKS CLEANLINESS. Several Useful anti Beneficial Ways In Which One Writer Would Spend $1,000, OOO, Providing She Had Then*—Careless nehrt of Nice l-'olkn. There is no immediate danger of my filling a millionaire's grave, and yet stranger things have happened. Either you or I may fall heir to a colossal for tune. I don't lose sleep over the pros pect myself, nor need you, my dear, but in this world of ups and downs who can tell what a day may bring forth? Shall I tell you a fewr of the things I propose to do with iny possible millions? In the first place, I shall build bath houses and stock them with soap, per fumes and towels for humanity at large. Next to saving the soul comes the care of the body, and most people are fully as heedless of the one as the other. In deed to my manner of thinking a sancti fied soul in an unwholesome body would be hardly worth the keeping. I declare unto you, and if I do not speak the truth come forth and dispute me, ye who can, that the masses of man kind know less about cleanliness than animals do. Watch the old cat sitting in the sun or by the corner of the kitchen fire washing her face and cleaning her paws. She enters into the thing with a complete understanding that cleanliness makes her a more welcome fireside com panion, as well as a healthier cat and a more self respecting member of society. A bird delights in its morning bath more ostentatiously than in its breakfast. I have seen horses at the seashore who rev eled in a “dip” far more than any human ever did. A dog will not enter your pres ence if there is any soil upon liis person which his own limited ingenuity can re move, and the most beatific experience of a pampered poodle is its perfumed bath and careful shampoo. Mow, take the case ot humans. There is not a day of my life that business dealings do not force me into companion ship with people who are both unwhole some and repulsive by reason of lack of personal cleanliness. I ride with them. I walk by their side, I sit next them. They dress well, their clothes are of ex pensive material and carefully made, but they bear about with them an aroma of stale cuticle and closed pores. From week’s end to week’s end these men and women do no more than dip their hands in a little water and rub off their faces with inadequate wash cloths. If the natural smoke of Chicago settles upon such portions of their anatomy as are exposed, they dab it off with hard water and cheap soap, or they counteract it with filthy powder rags. They go for weeks at a time without a change of un derwear to save laundry bills, and they sleep in the same flannels that they wear by day. A good, thorough bath is as unknown to them as God’s grace to a lost soul, and for my part I would rather encounter a thug with a club. You can dodge a club, but you can’t escape an odor. Ride for an hour in one of our cars, either cable, horse or steam; could anything be worse, without it was a stock transit? And yet all these unwashed and unwholesome people pride themselves, and often most justly, of being good citizens, well edu cated and circumspect. They would re sent the idea of being classed outside the circle of “gentlemen and ladies.” They never sneeze in your presence without begging pardon, nor commit any breach of the proprieties without the keenest anguish of remorse for the misdeed. Their crime against society, then, is not an active one. It is merely the result of a neglected education. Their parents believed in making them obedient, no doubt, and polite and well behaved. They had them taught to dance and play the piano and speak French, but they forgot to teach them cleanliness. The poor and uncared for we expect to take as we find them, and by means of prayer, faith and good works raise them to higher levels. But what shall be done for the folks who ought to know enough of the laws of hygiene and beauty to keep clean, but who in fact know as lit tle as the totally ignorant and the very poor? When I get my millions, then I shall erect 1,000 bathhouses right here in Chicago, and I shall legislate laws that shall make cleanliness compulsory. Women shall find it more profitable to go to the bathhouse than to the club, and men shall find more attraction in the physical laundry than in the saloon. There shall be no possible entree for the careless keeper of the beautiful body into either saloon, street car or public assem blage of any sort. He shall be shunned like a leper, and when his case is pro nounced hopeless there shall be a mod ern Molakai fitted up for his habitation, that he may trouble the olfactories of the sons and daughters of earth no more for ever. Another thing that I shall do with my money will be to prosecute cruel team sters by means of its powerful potency. The policeman who stands at the corner of Lake street and Fifth avenue tells me that since occupying that post he has lost the little faith he ever had in man’s boasted humanity. Another thing I will do with my money will be to provide for the patient, un complaining poor. When I get my money, I shall establish homes for the poor, not charity halls nor houses of correction, but sweet, pure homes, where happiness and plenty shall join hands, and peace and rest shall sing together like mated birds.—“Amber” in Chicago Herald. Immobility In a Child's Life. We believe a large part of the unfavor able influence of school life upon the child’s health is due to the prolonged immobility which the ordinary system requires, and the necessary confinement of a young child to a chair or bench without some intervening muscular ac tivity or recreation. Immobility is op posed to growth, it is opposed to all the instincts of the healthy lower animals, and to those of all vigorous children.— Harper’s Bazar. SWEETER -rHAN a BEST GIRL. lugur, Mc>la«n«t and Honey Are Nowhere In Comparison With Saccharine. Au industry still young, but unques tionably with a great mercantile future, is that of saccharine, a product of coal tar. It is a substitute for sugar, has none of its bulk and is so powerful that it is 300 times sweeter. The history of its discovery is interesting. In 1879 Dr. Constantine Fahlberg, a Russian by birth, but who had been ed ucated in Germany, became connected with the Johns Hopkins university in Baltimore. There he conducted a series of experiments on the toluene snlphn mides, in order to investigate their oxi dation products. The outgrowth of this investigation was the discovery of saccharine. By oxidizing pure orthotoluene sulphamide it was found that it would yield a re markably sweet compound. The amount obtained, however, was too small to be of any practical value for manufactur ing pnrposeG. The problem thenceforth was to find other reactions which would give a better yield of the sweet body. A long and exhaustive series of laboratory experiments extending through several years were necessary for the satisfac tory development of the chemical proc ess of production. As might be expected, a discovery of such practical utility had to run the gantlet of much hostile criticism. It formed a fruitful subject for discussion in various scientific societies and jour nals. Attempts were made to show that it was not only deleterious, but danger ous. It is only fair to say, however, that these arguments seem to have been suc cessfully controverted. An overwhelm ing mass of expert testimony is recorded in favor of saccharine. Eminent profess ors, like Sir H. E. Roscoe in London, Leyden in Berlin, Paul in Pans, Von Barth in Vienna, and a host of others, after thorough tests, have certified that the effects of saccharine upon the phys ical and psychical functions of the brute and human systems are entirely harm less. Saccharine in its pure condition is a white powder. Various exclusive ad vantages are claimed for its use in the arts, household and medicine. To enu merate a few: It is so small in bulk that the saving in storage and freight is of course very great: its valuable antiseptic qualities make it especially available in preserving as well as sweetening articles of food, such as jellies, fruits, etc. In the distilling of brandies and liquors and in the brewing of beer saccharine has been used with signal success. Mixed with glucose, saccharine lias a sweetness equal to the finest refined sugar. Further, saccharine serves a distinctly medical purpose. It is employed to disguise the unpleasant taste of medicine and in the preparation of medicated wanes and oth er cordials. It has also been highly in dorsed as a substitute for sugar for those suffering from diabetes and from fat ness. Unlike sugar, it does not go to form surplus nourishment. Finally it may be added that this highly concen trated sweetening substance requires only a little intelligence to be successful ly used in the household.—Washington Star. The Most Despicable Man. The man whom I thoroughly and pos itively hate, and against whom as a type I would warn young women, as the board of health officers warn the public against infection with a scarlet fever card, is the domestic tyrant, the man who is a bull}’ in his own family, the man w’ho is a hero at home and a coward among bigger men than he. When he was a boy, he loved to torture kittens, trap rabbits and tease birds by breaking up their nests and cracking their eggs. But a yearling calf or a sitting hen would always make him run. Now he is a man, he swears at his wife and nags her life away. He sends the cold chills down the children's spines whenever his steps draw nigh and is as pompous and big feeling among the women folks and the helpless boys and girls as a fussy old turkey gobbler w’ith his hens. Fun can no more thrive where he is than pansies can live in coal gas. He is civil to the black man who gives him his dinner, to the boy—provided he is full sized—who blacks his boots and to who ever is richer and stronger than he, but politeness for his wife was laid away with his wedding garments, and he curses his daughters and his sons for every trifling misdemeanor in a way that would rouse a newsboy to thrash him if he spoke to the lad with equal insolence.— Chicago Herald. A Western Tragedy. The Saunterer has a friend on the staff of a western newspaper with whom he often exchanges interesting clippings. The latest bit received at this office was the following, cut from a small paper published in North Dakota: “The many friends of Mrs. E-will be pleased to learn that she is not in serious danger, as the shock is not so severe as at first sup posed. The particulars of the unfortu nate affair are interesting. It seems that Mrs. E-while going up stairs saw a mouse run behind a barrel. Her cries were heard by the hired ipan, who has tened to the scene, armed with his gun and followed by his faithful bulldog. Mrs. E-then took courage and poked the barrel with her broom. The mouse ran ont, the dog started in pursuit, the hired man fired, the dog dropped dead, Mrs. E-fainted, and the hired man, thinking he had killed her, and that he would be arrested for murder, took to his heels and has not been heard of since. The mouse escaped.”—Boston Budget. New Use For a Linen Cuff. •‘Look here,” said a well known man the other day, “this is a letter from a friend who is now in Pittsburg.” The speaker produced a soiled cuff on which a message had been written. The cnff bore the stamp of the Pittsburg postoffice, as well aB a canceled postage stamp. The message read: “I haven’t any paper at hand, but Uncle Sam will transmit this cuff, for which I have no further use. Linen is of no use to a man who is dead flat busted. Send me $100,”— Philadelphia Record. I Women Will Vote as usual at the next school election— but for many candidates. They give day in the WHITE RUSSIAN SOAP because they know it has no equal as a labor and temffer saver on wash-day. The “White Russian” is a great soap to use in hard or alkali water. Does not roughen or injure the hands—is per fectly safe to use on the finest fabrics. JAS. S. KIRK & CO., Chicago. Dusky Diamond Tar Soap, “•‘‘."a 5s.*«h.B°n The Greatest on Sea and Land Send 2-cent postage 8 tamp for ii 100 page COOK BOOK FREE. , v Prices ' x [low. ■ Faro {sumptuous [Sales every ££• fMjL .voiir / / 1 ykjJTK dealer. I/Mr U<Mirfitei for prices Take no other. •_ V •''CfC ?.: ~ - Adilreja, •_—" S7/WT%^.' W• Cm LaiOUlsc.: j E, Agfnt. McCook,of i BVlajesticBflfg. Co.,St. Louis.; | * WE TELL YOU nothing new when we state that it pays to c?ngage in a permanent, most healthy and pleasant busi ness, that return* a profit for every day’s work. Such is the business we offer the working class. We teach them how to make money rapidly, and guarantee every one who follows our instructions faithfully the making of $.‘{00.00 a month. Every one who takes hold now and works wiU surely and speedily increase their earnings; then can be no question about it; others now at work are doiri" it, ami you, reader, can do tile same This is the best paying business that you have ever had the chance to secure. You will make a grave mistake if you fail to give it. a trial at once. If you grasp the situation, ami act quickly, you will directly find yourself in a most prosperous business, at which you can surely make ami suvi large sums of money. The results of only a few hours’ work will often equal a week’s wages. Whether you are old or young, man or woman, it makes no difference,— do as we tell you, and sue ! cess will meet you at the very start. Neither experience or capital necessary. Those who work for ns are rewarded. Why not write to-day for full particulars, free ? K. C. ALU'IN & CO., Box No. Augusta, Me. ■/Salary and expenses paid weekly from start. ■l Permanent position. Good t hance fur H advancement. Exclusive territory-J^jk y 10y<4 ■jClean, ^fardy stock, tnio^to V^'ii; ■/name. Fair treat moat ‘{a ■fanteod. Liberal com- "We'ir ■I in-|^ J/ because of pro- Jj rlotis failures in this or ctn - r it, lines. Outflt^iTO^Addro®, jj| Continental Nurseries, Chicago! Tj t■% Oar PEBFECTrON SYRINGZ fee with ever? bottle. -J CLEAN. Does Dot STAIN. PREVENTS STRICT FEN. Careo GONORRHOEA and GLEET ia Os« to Foor dai'S JL QUICK CURE for LF.UCORRHCEA or WHITES. Soldbyall DRUGGISTS. Secttoany Add*-essfbr|i.0Q.' SULYDOft MANUFACTURING C0„ LANCASIKIt, OHUfc. A FULLT5CTU ON . . . FO« ^ SET OF 1 CEL I II RUBBER$*jaG3 Work Guaranteed. Teetli extracted in tlii morning, new ones inserted evening of same day. Teeth filled without pain, latent method. Finest parlors in the west. Paxton OR. R. W. BAILEY, trance. OMAHA. - - - - neb. 1 THE KANSAS CITY MEDICAL AND mmi SHiW.ilB S, tt. Cor. llthau'l Broad».:y. For the treatment of all Chroui* and Surgical Diseases and Diseases of the Kye and Ear. The object r,f thu r.anita ri’um is to furnish board, rooms and medical attention to those suffering •-.•il,< Deformities, Di-* u .es of Women. Dti case3 oi me urinary ana oexuai urgzni. ui>« m mi* System. Lung and Throat Di.ifnse*, Piles. C?ic-r '. Tiimo. •. Etc . Etc. Surgical Operations performed with kill. Books free t> Men amd Women. For further information call on or addrt *■* OR. C. Pfl. COE, Kansas City, ftio. Subjects need fear no longer from tb:< King of j Terrors,for by ti most w«.iul«*r!iil di-covery in I medicine, cancer on any p:irr of the body can be permannitly cured without thu uuo («' the knife. MBS. II. D. Coeby.2307 Inainr.a Avr*.. Cblcn/o. Jays “ Was cared of cancer of the breast in .-j k weeks by yonr method of treatment. ’ Send for treatise. J*r. 11. C. hale, bo, -Aih riL, Chicago. PI ^9 1 ftuKS Yr m t remedies that do not in-» ‘ hi I ) jure the health or interfere with one’s business or pleasure. It builds up and improves the genera! health, clears the skin and beautifies the completion No wrinkles or flabbiness follow this treatment Endorsed by physicians and leading society ladies PATIENTS TREATED BY MAIL. CONFIDENTIAL. liana lew. So Starring. Sand 6 cents in itampt for Mrtkulin t 18. 0. W. F. SNYDER. rilCKtl ITHMI. CIIUEO, M. -- Xo matter what <bii; \ paper voi read at other turns, the L)ail\ State Journal. published at tbe state capital, is the paj>er for Ne braskaus during the legislature. Eighty-five ceuts a mouth. Try it.