The McCook tribune. (McCook, Neb.) 1886-1936, September 22, 1893, Image 6

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    THE BICYCLE GIRL.
The bicycle gin la plump and round,
Her cheeks are rosy, her skin Is browned.
Her eyes are bright with health.
In her modeet gown of navy blue.
She gets all the admiration due
To a woman's greatest Wealth.
Her flesh is firm and her muscles strong.
Her rounded limbs might well belong
To a goddess of olden time.
As she glides along on her silent wheel
All men admire, for all men feel
That her vigor Is sublime.
Then half to the bicycle girl, and long
May she live and grow more strong.
As a woman ought to do.
Till her weaker sisters also try
With her in her health and her strength to vie.
And get them bicycles too.
—Toronto Mail.
GOODBY.
The two friends had finished their din
ner. From tho windows of the cafe they
overlooked the boulevard, which at this
hour was crowded with people. Tht
soft breezes that sweep through the
streets of Paris on warm summer nights
fanned their cheeks, inviting them to go
down among the trees, somewhere, any
where, to dream of moonlit streams, in
spired poems and chanting nightingales.
One of them. Henri Simon, said to his
companion, with a profound sigh:
“I feel that I am growing old, my
friend. On such a night as this in days
gone by I was keenly alive to the pleas
ures of existence. Tonight I have noth
ing hut regrets. Life is short at best.”
He was a man about 45 years old, a
little stout and quite bald.
Tho other, Pierre Gamier, not his sen
ior in appearance by any means, bnt
more slender and vivacious, replied:
“J, my friend, have grown old with
out noticing it. I was always gay and
jolly, vigorous and all that. For, wnen
one looks at himself in tho glass every
day in the year, the ravages of age are
not apparent. They are slow and regu
lar and work such gradual changes that
the transition is not noticeable. We can
hardly perceive it. To see it plainly, one
should not look into a mirror for six
months at least, and then—ah, what a
shock!
“And the women, old fellow—how I
pity them! All their happiness, their
power, their life, is in their beauty, and
that lasts but 10 years at best.
“As for myself, I grew old without
suspecting it! I thought myself still
youth when I was near DO years of age.
Free from infirmities of any kind, I was
going my way, happy and content. But
the revelation of my decline came upon
me in such a simple yet startling man
ner that I felt the effects of the shock
six months afterward. Then I accepted
my fate gracefully.
“I have often been in love, like all
men, bnt once in my life I was quite
hard hit.
"i met ner at tne seasnore—r,tretat~
about 12 years ago, not long after the
war. There is nothing more delightful
than that beach in early morning at the
bathing hour. It is not very extensive,
is curved like a horseshoe and encircled
by tall, white cliffs, pierced with singu
lar holes called ‘The Gates.’ One of these
cliffs is enormous and stretches its gi
gantic length to the water’s edge. The
other is round and flat. The women
swarm ove: this narrow strip, with its
pebbled walks, and transform it into a
brilliant garden of summer toilets with
in walls of rock. The sun shines full
npon the coast, over parasols of every
imaginable color, and over the sea of to
paz blue. It is a jolly picture, enchant
ing to the eye. Close by the water's
edge the people lounge in the sand,
watching the bathers as they come trip
ping down in their flannel bath robes,
which they discard with a pretty move
ment as soon as the white fringed waves
play around their feet. Then they run
in with swift little steps, while the water
sends thrills of a delicious chill through
their veins.
“Few women are made to endure the
crucible test of the bath. Their figure
stands revealed from ankle to throat.
As they emerge from the embrace of the
briny waters, either their shortcomings
are made plain to the eye or the rounded
contours of form and limb are enhanced
by the clinging, dripping garments.
“The first time I saw the young wom
an of whom I have spoken I was carried
away by her charms. Few wtunen pos
sess the beauty of form that is startling
and overpowering at the first glance—
that seems to a man as if he had sudden
ly met the creature he was born to love.
I experienced that sensation and that
•hock.
was introaucea to ner ana was more
deeply smitten than ever in my life. She
made me her slave, and it was both ter
rible and delicious to submit thus to the
reign of a woman. It is torture and in
describable felicity at once. Her look,
her smile, the little tendrils of hair
round her neck ruffled by the breeze,
every line in her face, her slightest
movement, captivated my senses and en
snared and drove me to distraction. She
took complete possession of me. It
grieved me to see her veil lying on a
chair or her gloves thrown carelessly on
the sofa. Her toilets seemed matchless ,
in my eyes, and no other woman had >
ever worn hats more becoming than hers. '
“She was married. Her husband came j
every Saturday and departed again on
Monday. I was not in the least con
cerned about him nor jealous of his re
lation to her. No living creature ever
seemed of less consequence to me than
this man.
“Ah, how I loved her—she who was
so gay, so pretty and so graceful! She
was youth, elegance and freshness per
sonified. I never felt more keenly than
I did then that a woman is a sweet,
lovely and delicate being made of charms
and graces. Never before had I discov
ered the beauty that lay in the rounded
contour of a cheek, the movement of a
lip, the curves and creases of a little ear,
the shape even of that stupid feature,
the nose.
“This lasted three months, when I was
called to America, whither I went with
% crushed and broken heart. Even away
from her I was her slave stilL Tears
went by. I could not forget her. Her
charms were constantly before my eyes1
\
l
and in my heart. I cherished her mem
ory with a tenderness that had grown
calm, and I loved her as one loves a
dream of a most beautiful and enchant
ing thing.
“Twelve years do not mean much in
the life of a man. They pass almost un
noticed. One follows upon the other,
slowly yet swiftly. Each is long, yet
soon at an end. Although they multiply
rapidly, they leave few traces behind
and vanish so completely that when one
looks back upon them there is nothing
left to remind us of their flight, and age
creeps on without warning.
“It seemed to me that only a few years
separated me from that delightful season
on the beach at Etretat.
“One day last spring I went to dine
with friends at Maissons-Lafitte. Just
as the train was about to start a portly
matron entered the coach 1 occupied ac
companied by four little girls. 1 could
not help looking curiously at this large,
rotund, motherly creature, whose face
was like the full moon under a berib
boned hat. She puffed and panted from
the exertion of her hurried walk. The
children began to babble, and I unfolded
my newspaper and commenced to read.
As we passed Asuieres my neighbor sud
denly accosted me:
“ ‘I beg your pardon, sir. Are you not
M. Carnier?"
“ ‘Yes, madame.’
“She laughed with the contented laugh
of a cheerful woman, but there was just
a tinge of sadness in her voice.
“ ‘Do you not recognize me?1
“I hesitated. It seemed to me that 1
had seen her face before, but I could not
tell when and where. I answered:
“ ‘Yes—and.no—I certainly know you.
but I cannot recollect your name.’ She
blushed a little.
“ ‘Mme. Julie Lefevre.'
“I was startled out of my wits. For a
moment the earth seemed to reel around
me, and a veil was rudely torn from my
eyes which made me see things with ter
rible, heartrending clearness.
“It was she! This stout, common
woman, the mother of these four girls!
I eyed the little creatures with as much
astonishment as I did their mother. They
had followed her; they had taken their
places in life, already half women, and
she counted for nothing—she, who had
once been such a marvel of delicate and
coquettish charms!
“It seemed to me that I had known
her hut yesterday, and to find her thus
again! It was impossible! A violent
pang wrung my heart. I rebelled
against nature and her brutal, infamous
work of destruction! I looked at her
with frightened eyes. When I took her
hand in mine, tears dimmed my vision.
I wept for her youth; I wept for her
death. This stout woman was a stranger
to me.
■•one, too, was toucnea, and she fal
tered: ‘I am much changed, I know, but
it is only natural. I am a mother now—
nothing but a mother—a good mother.
Farewell to everything else that is
passed. I did not think that you would
recognize me or that we. should ever
meet again. You yourself are not as
you used to be. It took me some time
to decide whether I was mistaken in my
surmise. Your hair has grown quite
gray. Think of it—13 years is a long
time. My oldest daughter is nearly 10
years old.’
‘ ‘I looked at the child and discovered in
her some of the old charms of her moth
er, undefinable as yet, unformed and in
the bud, and life seemed to me nothing
more than a rapidly passing train. We
arrived at Maissons-Lafitte. I kissed
my old friend’s hand and parted from her
with a few trivial phrases. I was too
deeply moved to speak.
“In the evening when I was alone I ex
amined my face a long time in the mir
ror and ended by recalling to my mind
the picture of myself as I had been in
bygone days, with brown mustache and
black hair and a young, fresh face. But
now I was old. Farewelll”—Guy De
Maupassant.
Bine Jeans at the Fair.
Two World’s fair visitors, in hickory
shirts, jeans pantaloons and immense
straw hats, stalked into the Missouri
state building the other day, and were
at once the center of a curious crowd.
The visitors were brothers named Hart,
and they had taken a novel way of reach
ing the World’s fair. They left their
home in Camden county, Mo., abont the
middle of June and came up through
the Illinois bottoms by easy stages in
camping wagons.
camuen county, ino., 13 wnere tney
raise good harvest hands. The Hart
brothers are typical members of this
profession. Along about early harvest
in June they allowed it to be a good plan
to work their passage to Chicago and the
World’s fair via the harvest fields.
Camping outfits were stowed away in
wagons and the pair started northward.
When they found a farmer who needed
extra help in making hay or harvesting
early crops they hired out for a few
days. They not only paid their travel
ing expenses in this way, but laid by a
snug sum with which to see the fair at
their leisure.
When the Hart brothers reached Chi
cago they selected a grove about four
miles west of the fair grounds and pitch
ed camp for a four weeks’ stay. World’s
fair hotels had no allurements for them.
Their first visit in the fair grounds was
to the Missouri building, and it took
them some hours to get accustomed to
their new fangled surroundings. The
piano in the parlor pleased them im
mensely, but the typewriter machines in
operation simply astounded them.—
Pittsburg Dispatch.
A Criticism by Disraeli.
Bernal Osborne was for a long time
bribed to silence by his political op
ponents by appointment to office. When
the trammels were eventually removed,
he celebrated his liberation by a rattling
speech. “The voice of the honorable
member has not been heard in this house
for some years past,” thereupon observed
Disraeli. “Throughout that period he
has felt the irksomeness of restraint, and
we now hear the wild shriek of freedom.”
—Ban Francisco Argonaut
R. A. COLt,
-LEADING
MERCHANT - TAILOR
CF MCCOOK,
ITus just received his full and win -
ter stock of Cloths and Trimmings i
which will be made up as reason- j
able as possible. Shop first door j
west of Barnett Lumber Co.’s of- ^
lice, on Dennison ftreet.
Republican Precinct Primaries.
GRANT’ PRECINCT—T lm primary
for Grant precinct will he held at the
Ranksville school house, Wednesday,
September 27th, 1893, at 7 o’clock p.
in., tor the purpose of electing dele
gates to the county convention, and ro
do such other business as may properly
coiue before the primary.
W. II. Benjamin.
Committeeman for Grant precinct..
VALLEY GRANGE PRECINCT—
The primary election for this pre
cinct will lie held in the Pickens school
house on Wednesday afternoon. Sep
tember 211 h, .at. three o clock, lo- the
election of four delegates to the county
convention.
K. N. Uenjamin, Coin mm ceuia o.
COLEMAN PRECINCT—The Re
publican electors of Coleman precinct
will meet m the Coleman school house,
Wednesday afternoon, Sept. 27th, at
4 o’clock, to elect four delegates to the
county convention.
J N. Smith, Committeeman.
PERRY PRECINCT—The Repub
lican primary for Perry precinct will
he held in the Real school house. Wed
nesday afternoon, September 27th, at
4 o’clock, for the purpose of electing
four delegates lor the county conven
tion.
Uenry Smith, Committeeman.
Dill FT W OOD PIlECUS CT—The
primary for Driftwood precinct wili he
held at the Frederick school house, Wed
nesday evening, September 27th, 1893,
at 8 o'clock, for the purpose of elect
ing four delegates t“ the county con
vention to be held in McCook, Neb.,
Sept. 30th, and for the transaction of
such business as may properly come
before the meeting. A full attendance
is earnestly desired.
Ed. F. Duffey, Committeeman.
A woman complains that while boy
ishness in a man who has arrived at
middle age is considered a wholesome
trait, the woman who exhibits the same
characteristic is called flighty. Youth
fulness in a man is taken for e\idence
of a fresh, buoyant nature, and so far
unspotted from the world. Correspond
ing playfulness in a woman of the same
age is looked upon as a futile effort at
rejuvenating and is hopelessly classified
as “kittenish.” The moral force of an
adjective can scarcely go farther. The
man who wears a jaunty air, a straw hat,
a cummerbund, a cheerful tie and light
raiment makes sunshine in a shady
place. A woman of his years in a sailor
hat, Eton jacket and a sash excites only
the smile of ridicule. This same woman
says she would often love to join in a
game of romps with her children, but
knows that she would be regarded as an
elderly idiot. But when the father
enters into a game with his youngsters
it is supposed to be a fine and inspiring
sight.
Park’s Cough Syrup.
Has been so highly recommended to
us that we have taken up the agency
for it and now ask our suffering friends
who are suffering with a cold to give it
a trial and if it does not give satisfac
tion your money will be refunded.
Every bottle is sold on a positive
guaranttee. Price 50 cents and $1.00.
Sold by A. McMillen.
The gratitude of place to expectants
is a lively sense of future favors.—
Walpole.
Morris’ English Stable Powder
Not only cures but prevents dissase.
and when fed two or three times a week
will keep your stock in fine condition,
will make them fat, sleek and glossy.
Changes the entire system, gives new
blood, new life, and puts them in good
condition for spring work. Full pound
packages 85 cents. Sold by McConnell
& Co. Sept. 8—3 mos.
Giotto, the artist, was a peasant's
son.
As a general rule, it is best not to
correct costiveness by the use of saline
ordrastic medicines. When a purgative
is heeded, the most prompt, effective,
and beneficial is Ayer's Pills. Their
tendency is to restore, and not weaken
the normal action of the bowels.
Distemper Among Horses
Safely and quickly cured by the use
of Craft's Distemper ami Cough Cure,
[t not only cures distemper but when !
administered in time prevents its spread j
among horses and colts that have, been j
exposed to the contagion. It is net,
expensive and is easily administered.
Send for book distemper, free. Ad
dress Weils Medicine Co.-, i,aF>iyetlo.
Indiana, or ask McConnell & Co.
Sept. S—3 ni"S. :
WANTED—Sale-men, to wll our
■
choice and handy nursery stock. Many |
special varieties to offer both in fruits |
atoi ornamentals, and controlled oiny t«_v
ns. We pay commission or salary, give
exclusive territory and HIV Weckli.
Write ns at once and secure choice of j
territory.
May Brothers, Nurserymen.
9-20is. Rochester, N. \ .
The Fall.
The fail season with its cold winds
and damp days brings coughs and colds,
which can be cured by taking a lew
pellets of Humphrey's Specific No. 7.
For sale by all druggists from Canada
to Cape Horn.
We are printing the date to which
each subscriber has paid bis subscrip
tion to The Tribune along with the
address. Watch the date, and you will
know if you arc in arrears. If you arc
idease come and see us.
Will Buy Stock of AH Kinds.
We will buy cattle and bogs at the
highest market pi ice. Call at Harris
Hardware. E. W. Harris.
E. L. Casey.
Shiloh’s Cure, the great cough and
croup cure, is for sale by us. Pocket
size contains twenty-five doses, only 25
stilts. Children love it.
A. McMillen.
J3^"Noble, Purveyor to the Great
Common People, is now exhibiting
about the handsomest and largest as
sortment of plain ami fancy lamps to be
seen in Southwestern Nebraska.
Wall Paper lor 5 cents a roll at L.
W. McConnell & Co.’s.
Don’t build a fence around your
property until you have seen and priced
that woven wire fencing at S. M.
Cochran & Co.’s. Nothing cheaper,
neater or better.
Noble is the only exclusive grocer in
the city. His stock is the largest and
his prices correspond with the times.
S. M. Cochran & Co. carry a large
line of buggies in stock. See them if
you want a good vehicle cheap.
Don't eat tainted meats. Buy them
from Acme Cooler. Ice cold and sweet
as in winter at F. S. Wilcox’s.
Noble, the leading grocer, makes a
specialty of fresh, clean family grocei
ies. He will treat you right.
Waysou & Penny can fix you up com
fortably and stylishly in any thing you
may desire in the livery line.
Kalstedt, the Leading Merchant Tail
or, is making specially low prices on
clothing, these quiet times.
You can get anything in queensware
at cost at Knipple’g.
Remember that Perry Stone will
bring fresh meats of all kinds, right to
your door, every day.
Noble is also strictly in it when it
comes to selling fresh vegetables at a
reasonable price.
McMillen Bros, are selling fly nets
and dusters at greatly reduced prices.
Call and get one.
Do you know that Knipple pays the
highest market price for butter and
eggs.
—
Prestoliue, The Wonder Metal
Burnisher, for sale by Electric Light
Co. _
A fine line of stationery at popular
prices at Chenery’s City Drug Store.
Freshest fruits the market affords are
to be purchased at Knipple's grocery
Paints, Oils, Glass and Putty at
Chenery's City Drug Store.
Wall Paper tor 5 cents a roll at L.
W. McConnell & Co’s.
School tablets in great variety at
Chenery’s City Drug Store.
Queensware at cost at Knipple's.
This is your opportunity.
Knipple makes a specialty of fruits
of all kinds.
Ice cold meats at B. & M. Meat
Market.
|^”Groceries at Nobles'.
Hair Death
inStHllliv »• MIOVI'H HlHl fl*l» VI T d»*H* !'*»> *
ot»j»*oi i-uirtii)i* hair. wiu‘'l»*r upon tin?
bunds. Inir-e. aniiH or neck, without •Hk
colonit ion or injury In 11*4• «{«-:»
c:Oc hkin. I* was f* r fll’iv vchcm tin*
h«i.*r»-l h i miotl Oi iuksillitfS '» ;l-im Nti
know Ic.lycii ». • jilivNiosHits ;m flu* high
est Hiiliion’v *i'i i Mn* n;oit * inimuil
4li*r;tn»ro|ot is1. hmI lour Unit
I'coolu :mii.uc the I'obllitt
no ! itrisfoc* »:cy o| (>ni{»e he h'w h.vs
liresoribed tins reiufM* JVb •• >-'1 l»>
Mini' P»*etir»-l\ rnokeil. •ur»*
ei.nflil.-nrim Mole hl'imi'p lor A in«*rb*ii
The Skokum Root Hair Grower
n Company,
m 1>P|.(. 1C. 57 Soul li I'iiili Av , y-'W Vork.
aoBs^ssciu^^simuzxsa
THE- MILD POWER CURES.
HAWKEYS’
That tho diseases of domestic aul
mals, Horses, Cattle, Sheep, Dogs,
IIoqs, and Poultry, are cured by
Humphreys’ Veterinary Speci
fics, Is as true as that people ride on railroads,
send messages by telegraph, or bcw with sewing
machines. It Is as Irrational to bottle, ball and
bleed animals In order to cure them, as it Is to j
take passage In a sloop from New York to Albany. \
Used In the best stables and recommended by I
the U. S. Army Cavalry Officers.
—
B37“500 PAGE BOOK on treatment andcareol
Domestic Animals, and stable chart
mounted on rollers, sent free.
VETERINARY
cures j Fevers, Congestions, Inflammation.
A. A. 1 Spinal Meningitis, Milk Fever*
B. B.—Strains, Lameness, Rheumatism
C. C.—Distemper, Nasal Discharges.
D. D.—Bots or Grubs, Worms.
E. E.—Coughs, Heaves, Pneumonia.
F. F.—Colic or Gripes, Bellyache.
G. G.—Miscarriage, Hemorrhages.
H. H.—Urinary and Kidney Diseases.
I. I. —Eruptive Diseases, Mange*
J. K.— Diseases of Digestion.
Stable Case, with Specifics, Manual,
Vet. Cure Oil and Medicator, $7.00
Price, Single Bottle (over GO doses), • *60
specifics:
Sold by Druggists; or Sent Prepaid anywhero
and in any quantity on Receipt of Price.
HUMPHREYS’ MEDICINE CO.,
Oorner William and John Sts., New York.
In use 30 years. The only successful remedy for
Nervous Debility, Vital Weakness,
and Prostration, from over-work or other causes.
^1 per vial, or 5 vials and largo vial powder, for $5.
Sold by UriimristH, or gent postpaid on rerelpt of price.
HUMPHREYS’ MEDICINE CO.,
Corner William and John Sts.. New York.
Subjects need fear no longer from this King of
Tenors, fur by a most wonderful discovery in
medicine, cancer on tiny part of the body cun bo
periimnvntly cured without the use a€
the knife.
MRS. II. D. Corby. 2307 Indiana Ave., Chicago,
Jays 44 Was cured of cancer of the breast in six
weeks by your method of treatment.” Hond for
treatise. Dr. 11. C. Dale, 305 &ith St., Chicago
Morris’ English Stable Liniment
Leads the procession. The wonder lin
iment of the age. Cures after all oth
ers have failed. Has stood the test of
twenty years of constant use by one of
the leading veterinary surgeons of the
English profession, and is now sold in
this country upon a positive guarantee.
Good tor man or best. Price 50c and $1.
Sold by McConnell & Co. Sept. 8—3m.
The lungs of the average man con
tain five rjurrts of air.
A High Liver
Usually has a bad liver. He is bil
ious, constipated, lias indigestion and
dyspepsia. If there is no organic
trouble a few doses of Parks’ Sure
Cure will tune him up. Parks’ Sure
Cure is the only liver and kidney cure
we sell on a positive guarantee. Price
$1.00. Sold by McMillen.
Subtlety may deceive you. Integ
rity never will.—Cromwell.
When you desire a pleasant physic,
one that will cleanse your system and
give you the clear headedness and
buoyancy of youth, try St. Patrick’s
Pills. They are the most pleasant ca
thartic and liver pills in use, and after
having once tried them we are confident
that you will never be satisfied with any
other kind. 25 cents per box. For sale
by McConnell jfe Co.
To find fault with our government is
to blame ourselves.
Rheumatism.
It is a symptom of disease of the
kidneys. It will certainly be relieved
by Parks’ Sure Cure. That headache,
backache and tired feeling come from
the same cause. Ask for Parks' Sure
Cure for the liver and kidneys, p.ice
$1.00 per bottle. Sold by A. McMillen.
“Nebraska,” says an exchange, “as
compared with her sister states, will fly
with the geese, this fall, with her splen
did crop of corn. An agricultural state
in time of panic is the place to abide in.
It is headquarters for provisions and in
times when men get hungry it is a
good idea to keep close to the proven
der. ” _
Rather Steep.
Than take it in any other form is
what many people think and Parks'
Tea is made for just those folks. It
cures consumption and though not a
cathartic moves the bowls every day.
Sold by A. McMillen.
Dr. Hathaway,
(Regular Graduate.)
lending SpecialUt of the United States
In Ilia Line.
Private, Blood, Skin and Nervous Diseases.
s ouri/r ana
Middle Aged
Men: Remark
able results bare
followed my
treatment Many
YEARS of var
ied and success
ful EXPERI
ENCE In the use
of curative meth
ods that I alone
|own and control
■for all disorders
Hof M E N. who
■have weak or un
■developed or dls
■eased organs, or
■who are suffering
■from errors of
iP’youth and exocss
or who are nerv
ous ana lMl'd
TENT, tho scorn of their fellows aiwl the cen
i -apt of friends and companions, leads me to
GUARANTEE to all patients, If they can pos
sibly be RESTORED, MY OWN EXCLUSIVE
TREATMENT will AFFORD A CURE
PtyKEMKMHKK, that there Is hope for
Y jU. Consult no other, as you may WASTE
VALUABLE TIME. Obtain my treatment at
once.
Female Diseases cured at home without In
al.uraents; a wonderful treatment.
Catarrh, and Diseases of the Skin, Blood,
Heart, IAvor and Kidneys
syphilis. The most rapid, safe and effective
treatment A complete cure guaranteed.
hi: In Diseases of all kinds cured where many
Others have failed.
l/unatural Discharges promptly cured In a
few days. Quick, sure and safe. This includes
Cluet and Gonorrhoea.
MY METHODS.
.". Free consultation at the office or by mall.
1 Thorough examination and careful diagnosis.
T That each patient treated gets the advantage
of special study and experience, and a
specialty is made of his or her disease.
i. Moderate charges and easy terms of payment
A home treatment can be given in a majorlty
of cases.
.Scud for Symptom Blank No. 1 for Men.
No. '£ for Women.
No. 8 for Skin Diseases.
Sen l >0c for 61-page Reference Book for Men
and Women.
AH correspondence answered promptly. Bus
ir strictly confidential. Entire treatment
sent free from observation. Refer to banks In Si.
Sojf oh and business men. Address or call on
• N. HATHAWAY, M. D.f
Corner 6th and F.dmond Sts.. St Joseph. Wt* .
KipansTabules. j
Ripans Tabules are com- i
pounded from a prescription j
widely used by the best medi- j
cal authorities and are pre- j
sented in a form that is be- :
coming the fashion every- j
where.
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Ripans Tabules act gently •
-t promptly upon the liver, :
' : • :iach and intestines; cure !
. u . pepsia, habitual constipa
■- ;i' U, offensive breath and head- :
: a he. One tabule taken at the t
• first symptom of indigestion, •
: biliousness, dizziness, distress :
• after eating, or depression of :
; spirits, will surely and quickly 1
• remove the whole difficulty. :
f - |
l RipartsTabules may be ob- i
j tained of nearest druggist. i
| |
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. . . .*4«« »»♦»• »>♦♦»«♦♦+♦•»»»«•> * »»* *•*♦» •
WE TELL YOU
nothing new when we state that it pays to engage
in a permanent, most healthy and pleasant busi
ness, that returns a profit for every day’s work.
Such is the business we offer the working class.
We teach them how to make money rapidiy, and
guarantee every one who follows our instructions
faithfully the making of 8300.00 a month.
livery one who takes hold now and works will
surely and speedily increase their earnings; there
can be no question about it; others now at work
are doing it, and you, reader, can do the 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, and act quickly, you
will directly find yourself in a most prosperous
business, at which'you can surely make and save
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, — (To us we tell you, and suc
cess will meet you at the very start. Neither
experience or capital necessary. Those who work
for us are rewarded. Why not write to day for
full particulars, l'ree ? E. C. ALLEN & CO.,
liox No. 4‘JO, Augusta, Me.
It is an agreeable Laxative for the Bowels;
can be made into a Tea for use in one minute.
Price 25c.. 50c. and J1.00 per package.
Va U ft An Elcaant toilet Powder
A U 15. W for the Teeth and Breath—28c.
For sale by MoMillen, Druggist.
► all PHOTOGRAPHS^
silk handkerchief.
K,!l • S"04* pb«*tr, A wh tp ( aetr or aid; Silk H.adJ
► Li-rr» i " '. .1 I'. ». or Kipr^M Jlanrj OrUfrftr || j
► **• curaph the pi«li»ra na I he »llk. Baaatlll
l ful fffoct. PICKKA.Mi.XT ploiarr. WILL SOT P«nv
^ // WASH out, I.1U r«rmr, everybody4
t —-i
k . . yrrr. STUDIO 313-51-17 S-15tt.Q|HAHitj