The McCook tribune. (McCook, Neb.) 1886-1936, July 29, 1898, Image 7

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    Nothing makes a v/oman eo mad as
having something to say and no one
to listen.
Wlmt Will ISrcomc of chlnn ?
"None c.'in forefice the outcome of
the quarrel between foreign powers
over the division of China. It Is In
teresting to watch the going to pieces
of this race. Many people are also
going to pieces because of dyspepsia ,
constipation r.nd Btomach diseases.
Good health can be retained if we use
Hosteller's Stomach Bitters.
Wounded prfdc uses dignity fcr a
salvo.
loxrit t'alcnt onire Itc [ > ort.
DES MOINES , July 14 , ' 98.
Seven U. S. Patents were issued to
Iowa Inventors this week , viz. : To
J. H. Ayrhart , of Dcdham , for a riding
und foluing harrow ; to Thos. Caswcil ,
of Cliorokee. for a combined hay-rake
nnd balling press ; to J. A. Cooper and.
A. C. Savage , of Adalr , for a gun-sigm ;
to Wm. W. Dodge , of Burlington , for
a game apparatus ; to R. Harris , of
Cedar Falls , for a rod-guide for dow
el-machines ; to N. Kauffman , of Dubuque -
buque , for a catch-basket for lawnmowers -
mowers ; to F. A. Thoas , of Cellar Rap
ids , for a belaying hook.
F. K. H. , Oskaloosa , Iowa : Your let
ter Is received and v.e answer this
publicly for the benefit of others. For
the first fee according to our terms
( $20) ) we will make one fcheet of draw
I ings and specifications and gat the
commissioners' receipt therefor and
fcuch record evidence will be provls'on-
al protection for one year without pay-
ying more If you want to delay comple
tion of the application and official ex
amination at Washington For each
additional sheet we charge $ u. When
Use second fee ( $20) ) is paid us $13 of
it will be forwarded to the commis
sioner and the oilier ? n applied for
prosecuting the claims , and after the
patent is allowed the third $20 fee
must be paid within six months from
date of allowance before the patent
will be printed and delivered.
All questions relating to the secur
ing of patents cheerfully answered
r.nd valuable information in circulars
sent free ! THOMAS G. ORWIG & CO.
What will the fault-finding Chris
tian do in heaven ?
J-Ifo nnd the Liver.
" Success in life depends upon tbe liver "
Is the way Chun. Lamb , the poet and pun
ster put it. Jtocjfcal science bos proreu ,
that nine-tenths of the ailments of livinc
have their origin in the liver , nnd in con-
ftjpation caused bv its derangements.
Keep the liver lively and it will bo Avell.
.Modern science points out Cascarets ns the
only perfect , gentle , positive liver regula
tor fit to be used in the delicate human
organism. All druggists sell Cascarcts lOc ,
&c , 50c , and AVO recommend them most
heartily.
Santiago hombardment pov.'der cost
$1,000,000.
Shnlco Into Tour Shoes.
Allen's Foot-Ease , a powder for the
feet. It cures painful , swollen , smart
ing feet and instantly takes "the sting
out of corns and bunions. It's the
greatest comfort discovery of the age.
Allen's Foot-Ease makes tight-fitting
or new shoes feel easy. It is a certain
cure for sweating , callous and hot ,
tired , nervous , aching feet. Try it to
day. Sold by all druggists and shoe
slorea. By mall for 25e in stamps.
Trial package FREE. Address , Allen
S. Olmsted , Le Roy , N. Y.
The effort to make sugar from beets
dates back as far as the year 17-17.
Within the past month the first iron
bridge erected In the state of Ohio has
been removed. This bridge Avas over
Salt Creek , on the Central Ohio di
vision of the Baltimore and Ohio rail-
read , in Muskingum county , and was
lult ! in 1851. It was a single span , 71
feet in length , nnd Avas known as a
"Bollman deck truss bridge with plate
girders. " Bellman Avas at that time
chief engineer of construction of the
Baltimore and Ohio Railroad.
When you let go the good Avork the
devil takes hold.
I'lso's Cure lor Coubumj.tiou is tne ony
ronph medicine used in my house. D. C.
Albright , MiHlinlnirp , 1'a. , Dee. 11 , HK > .
If your harvest is a failure , remeiu
her you selected the seed.
Coc'o Consrn "Halcnra
Ir the oldest and beetIt will brtaw up a cold quicker
loan anythlus : else. It is alwajs reliable. Try it.
If a man makes a Tool of himself
twice in the same Avay his case is
hopeless.
The Standard Dictionary.
The Independent , New York : "It is
a noble example in which the modern
tendency to popularize knowledge has
risen to the highest level yet reached. "
The Boston Daily Herald : "It is a
monument of the highest character
which the publishers of this work have
reared in honor of the English lan
guage. "
See display advertisement of how to
obtain the Standard Dictionary by
nakins a small payment down , the re
mainder in installments.
If a man doesn't lie after returning
from a fishing trip his word is as good
as his bond.
The Automatic Grip Neck Yoke Co. ,
of Indianapolis , Ind. , whose ad. ay-
pears elsewhere in this paper , have
invented what is without doubt tha
best and safest neck yoke on the mar
ket. It is simple in construction , does
not rattle , and the pole cannot pos
sibly get away from it.
They offer very liberal terms to
agents and as it is a good seller we
urge our readers to write them at once
regarding it.
Profanity is forbidden by both the
army and navy regulations of the
United States.
f
A bath with COSMO BUTTERMILK
SOAP , cxquisitelv scented , is teething and
beneficial. Sold everywhere.
A captain in the navy ranks with
a colonel in the army.
JTiInate tour Uoiveis TTItli Cascarcts.
Candy Cathartic cure constipation forevc" .
10c , S6c. II C. C. C. fail , druggists refund money.
The ascent of man comes through
the descent of Christ.
G-BANDPA'SCOUETSHTP
"So you youngsters want a war
story , " sighed Grundpa Sawyer , glanc
ing fondly over the merry group of
children and grandchildren that had as-
eembled to celebrate his sixtieth birth
day ; and wondering what he could pos
sibly say on this august occasion that
had not been repeated at least a score
of times.
"You might tell them about the time
you fainted dead away , " suggested
grandma , with her tender pensive
smile , as she bent caressingly over his
latest namesake fast asleep Su her
arms.
Yielding to the clamorous entreaties
of more than a dozen young voices , the
veteran slowly proceeded : "You see , I
wag ju&t out of Amlersonville , and a
little shaky even on an ordinary occa
sion , and this was a most extraordinary
occasion , being the day your grandma
graduated at Holyokc.
"I first enlisted for three months , full
of fight and sure of victory , and I look
ed so fine and tall in my blue uniform ,
I thought I'd go and say good-bye to
Dr. Miller's daughter. I was only a
common farmer , and she had another
beau , a student at Amherst , but I re
membered once at a party , when she
had to choose a partner she selected
me Instead of Jim ; so I thought I'd
go and tell her I was off for Dixie
In * he morning. I thought maybe
she'd cry a little as iny mother did , or
say something fine about my laying
down my precious life for the dear old
flag ; but she didn' . say much , and I
didn't stay long , for Jim was there.
"Martha went with me out to the
gate. I reached out my big sun
burned hand , end she took It in both
her own and held it quite a bit , and
she said : 'Bennie , I'm sorry you're
going to the war ; you're too young a
man , and too good a man to stand irp
and be shot at. ' Then Jim appeared
on the scene , and I went away half
cursing my honest hand for being so
brown , while Jim's was as white as
a lily with a great flashing diamond
on the smallest of his slender fingers.
"Talk about standing up as a target
for bullets ; that's nothing nothing at
all compared with lying down to starve
In a foul prison. As the days passed
into weeks , and the weeks so long
Into months so much longer that I
lost all count , how many and many
a time I looked at my white bony
hands and wished they were as big
and as tanned as they used to be , and
when I would have prayed for an end-
lug of my misery , how well I remem
bered that Martha had said I was too
young to die , and the way she had
held my hand still thrilled me , and
kept me alive and out of the clutch
of old Giant Despair , and I said over
and over to myself a thousand tim ° s ,
with grim determination , what Dr.
Miller had so often repeated , 'While
there is life there is hope , ' and at
last I was exchanged and discharged.
Oh. 3-ow happy I was to be set frea !
I did not 'rcgcin my freedom with a
BENNIE , OH , BENNIE !
sigh , ' like that poor prisoner 01 Chil-
lon , but with a great joy that buoyed
me up for the long , weary journey
home , and enabled me to assist others
who were still weaker.
"When at last the stage set me
down in the familiar village poslof-
fice , I was so weary and wasted no one
seemed to recognize me , but looked
at me in a pitying way I could not un
derstand , and so I did not speak to
any one , but staggered down the hill
to the old farmhouse , trying in vain
to scent the supper , or the clove pinks.
I did not know my precious mother
had been dead for almost a year , but
when I reached the gate I felt the
change. It hung by one hinge , and
swayed and creaked with a dismal
sound that seemed to me like the
groaning of a ghost. It weakened me
so that I had to rest awhile before
going down the long walk still lined
by my mother's flowerbeds ; but oh ,
how neglected they looked ! As I
neared the porch I saw a red calf tied
to a lilac bush , one that my mother
had herself planted on the very day
she Was a bride , and then I seemed
to know that she was gone. War kills
women as well as men. She thought
her only boy was dead , and she had
nothing to live for nothing but an
empty home.
"That was too good a house to be
long unoccupied , and Dr. Millar had
rented it to a needy family of for
eigners , requesting that my room
should be left just as my mother had
last arranged it.
"Oh ! how I had cheered myself with
a picture of that waiting tea-table ! but
I didn't drop down into my accus
tomed place , for even the table had
been moved into the little , over
crowded kitchen , and the robust wo
man who did her best to serve me
could not understand my simple lan
guage , but she did comprehend my
sorrow and weariness and bitter dis
appointment , and after I had taken a
glass of milk she allowed me to go
right up to my own airy chamber ,
where everything was sacredly famili-
iar. How deliciousiy soft and clean the
bed seemed , and I cried myself to
sleep like a tired , homesick baby.
"The first thing I heard on the
morning was , not the chirping of the
robins , as In the olden time , but the
loud bawling of that steer calf undrr
my window. I covered my head with
the bedclothes and was the p ° or. weak
baby over again. When I , woke later
in the day , good Dr. Miller was sit
ting by my bedside. lie helped me
dress , and took me home to breakfast ,
where the talking , as well as the cookIng -
Ing , was all United States ; but some
how I wasn't hungry , and longed to
ask what bad become of Martha.
"I soon found out. Her father was
going to Holyoke the very next clay
to hear her valedictory , and he took
me along with him. It was a long
drive , but we look it slovr and easy ,
and I had my fill of fresh air , and re
covered my appetite. We were a little
late to the exhibition , and we found
the chapel already crowded ; but the
good doctor finally succeeded in get
ting r. scat well up in front , and there ,
right before us , was Amherst Jim , just
as slim and white as ever. He fin
gered his watch chain and petted his
mustache and made his diamond
glisten and devoured the platform witli
his eyes , just as he used to in the old
red school house when Martha was
going to speak her piece. Now he was
a full-fledged physician , and Dr. Mil
ler's partner. We had a long time to
wait. The essays were lengthy and
learned , and Martha's was the very
last. The other graduates wore white ,
but she was all in black with a crape
collar. I looked questioningly Into her
father's face. He put his arm around
me , and whispered : 'She wears mourn
ing for your mother and for you. '
"For my mother and for me oh !
the pain of it ! oh , the joy of It ! and
whether it was the pain or the joy , or
the crowded room , or the way Jim
looked at Martha , I cannot tell , but
somehow everything slipped away into
nothingness.
"When I came back to conscious
ness , the folks were all gone , all but
Dr. Miller and his daughter , an.l
Martha was holding me as handy as
she is holding'that blessed baby now ,
and I was just as quiet and submis
sive.
"I didn't know much of anything
but submission for a long time after
that. I didn't know I was helpless
in bed in the Miller mansion with Jim
fcr night watch , mixing the medicine
to suit himself , and always telling
Martha I was slowly improving , and
I could not see the noiseless hand that
was stretching a pontoon bridge over
the last river , but when my hand was
wet with the cold surf , I reached it
feebly toward Martha's , and she took
it firmly just as she did when I was
going away to the war , and she said :
'Bennie , oh Bennie ! you are too young
to die ; If only you will live , my mother
shall be your mother , ' and then she
laid her warm cheek down on that
cold hand and it thrilled me back to
life again , and the good old doctor
whispered , 'While there's life , there's
hope , ' and after that he was the night
watch , and Martha was the day watch ,
and Jim dropped out , and Martha's
mother was my mother.
"Martha's children are my children ;
her grandchildren are all mine , too ,
and poor Jim never had any. I have
outlived him by a quarter of a cen
tury , and I'm good for twenty-five
years more , but I want you youngsters
distinctly to understand this is my last
war story positively the last. "
Two chubby arms were wound
around grandpa's neck , and a reprov
ing little kiss was dropped upon the
veteran's forehead. Little Mattie welt
remembered that he had said those
very words , "positively the last , " on
his very last birthday , and so her
grateful caress must needs be a little
reproving , for had he not often coun
seled her "Tell the truth , the whole
truth , and nothing but the truth , " and
did not grandma sometimes says , "Con
sistency is a jewel ? "
Possibly the tender rebuke was
quite lost upon grandpa , but the others
all appreciated it , and truly , a little
child shall lead them. New York
Ledger.
The Oldest Metallic Objects
Dr. J. H. Gladstone , discussing at
the Royal Institution the question of
the metals used by the great nations
of antiquity , said recently that gold
was probably the first metal known to
man , because it is generally found na
tive. The old metallic objects
to which we can assign a probable
date were found in a royal tomb at
Nagada in Egypt , supposed to have
been that of King Menes. In one of
the chambers were some bits of gold
and a bead , a button and a fine wire
of nearly pure copper. If the tomb has
been properly identified , these objects
are at least 6,300 years old. Nearly all
the ancient gold that has been exam
ined contains enough silver to give it
a light color. It was gathered by the
ancients in the bed of the Pactolus and
other streams of Asia Minor.
Power Required to Drive a Bicycle.
The driving of a bicycle at ten miles
an hour has been ascertained to re
quire about one-twenty-third o * a
horsepower. An expert rider for a
short time may exert one-third of a
horsepower. For rapid work , not
scorching , one-seventh horsepower is
needed. These figures are the result of
scientific investigation.
I.I PC Kelt of Rubber.
A new life belt is made of sheet rub
ber which passes round the neck , across
the chest and round the waist , and can
be inflated in one minute by the mouth.
Its weight is about one pound , and is
alike flexible , light and easily placed
in position.
George A. Fowler of Kansas City
has given 521,000 to rebuild the ag
ricultural shops of the university of
Kansas , recently destroyed by fire.
V IIIFIOWK soot tilus : Srrwp
For rl.IMren te < 'tlilr..n > ftrns the { 'iiiur.rriiui e i P m-
malica , alcy | > a.lii , cures. wii.dcoM. : . Slientt a Settle.
The railroad mileage in Cuba is
1,105 miles , owned by seventeen rail
road companies.
Hull's Catarrli Cure
Is a constitutional cure. Price , Tac.
A map of Jerusalem in mosaic , over
1,500 years old , has been found in Pal
estine.
For a perfect complexion KUU a clear ,
healthy s-kiu , use COSMO BUTTEKlilLK
SOAP. Sold eve'-ywhcro.
Ninety reporters are employed in
the zallery of the house of commons.
FITIJ rrmaneittlyi.iircC. rioCts oracrsnunnessafte.
< ir t du > ' v.fo of llr. Klines Great Nervu Torturer
i'eml I.ii F.UKE V-4.OO Irml bottle nnd IrcaiiM *
Uu. E. II. KLiSK.Z.ti.S31 ! Arch M. . PtHBdolpr.ia. f * .
Fallinc on your knees is one way
to prevent falling from grace.
Iteauty Is itl o < ! Ueep.
Clean blood incms a clean sKIn. No beauty
without It. C'itM-aro-'s. Cituy ! < % utliirtlc
clean * your blood : incl kerns 11 rlGiui. by rtir-
tinc up MIL-l.-ts-y liver nncl driving a'.l Impu-
riiii * from tlte boily. Bezln totlav to banish
jilmlrs. 1 oils blotches , b acUheuus. and that
Bti-lJly bilious complexion by taking Ca.Ma-
i ts beauty fcr ten cents. All riruggUts.
satisfaction guaranteed , inc. 5-j. 50c.
If you would obtain information
from a woman , i-retend indifference.
Hay Fever.
Mrs. J. C. Smith of Aledo , III. , writes :
"I have been troubled v.-ith hay fever and
asthma every fall for twelve or fourteen
years , and a cough that gees with it , that
nothing has ever done much to relieve un
til I took your Dr. Kay's Lung Balm. LaFt
year my brother-in-law had been away
and brought a box home with him , nnd
when my cough was at Its worst he want
ed me to try it and I did and AVAS RE
LIEVED AI-MOST INSTANT ! Y. So this
fall when I pot so bad my husband went
to all the drug stores here and couldn't
find it , so we sent to you , and this fall
my cough got better ns coon as I began
to take it. I am all right now , but sup
pose of course I will have hay fever again
nrxt fall and will try and get the Dr.
Kay's 1-ung Balm before I get so bad. "
Send two stamps for "Dr. Kay's Home
Treatment. " a 114-page illustrated book , or
Bond 25 cents for "Kendall's Perfected Ile-
ceipt Book , " 210 pages. Five hundred of
the best receipts for everything : 120 cuts.
AGENTS WANTED. Dr. B. J. Kay Medi
cal Co. , Omaha , Neb.
The army of Germany boasts eight
women colonels.
Ko-To-Bac for Fifty Cents.
GuaranVMil tobacco habit cure , makes -weal ,
men strong , olood pure. 50c. $1. All druggists.
If you bet ? 13 and lost , it's unlucky.
PEBIODS OF PAIN.
Menstruation , the balance wheel oi
woman's life , is also the bane of exist
ence to many because it means a time of
great suffering1.
While no woman is entirely free from
perioclicalpain.it does not seem to have
been na
ture's plan V
that women \l
otherwise \
healthy
should suffer
so severely.
LydiaE. Pink-
ham's Vege
table Com
pound is
the most
thorough fe
male regnla-
tor known to
medical sci
ence. " It relieves the condition that pro
duces so much discomfort and robs men
struation of its terrors. Here is proof :
DEAU Mns. PIXKIIASI : How can 1
thank you enough fcr what you have
done for me ? When I wrote to you I
was suffering" untold pain at time of
menstruation ; was nervous , had head
ache r.ll the time , no appetite , that tired
feeliug- , and did not care for anything- .
I have taken three bottles of Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound , one
cf Blood Purifier , two boxes of Liver
Pills , and to-day I am a well person. I
would like to have those who suffer
know that I am one of the many who
have been cured of female complaints
by your wonderful medicine and advice.
Miss JEXXIE R. MILES. Leon , Wis.
If you are suffering- this way , write
as Miss Miles did to Mrs. Pinkham at
Lynn , Mass. , for the advice which she
offers free of charge to all women.
* IZyvlfo Isad pimples on her face , but
she has be < m tnklnu CASCARETS and they
have all disappeared. I had been troubled
with constipation for some time , but after tak-
IUK the first Cascaret I have had no trouble
with this aliment. We cannot speals too high
ly of Cascarets. " FRED WARTMAN ,
670S Gcrmontown Ave. . Philadelphia , Pa.
CANDY
CATHARTIC
TrlADE MAOM RZCISTERCD
Pleasnnt. Palatable. I'otent. Taste Good. Do
Gccd , Never Slcicn , Weaken , or Grlie. lOe. sCc.Mto.
. . . CURE CONSTIPATION. . . .
Bfrln ! ; Uristdtonpaaj , CMeofO , Montreal , Keir Yort. 514
Tfl BAI * Bold and guaranteed by nil drujf-
I U-UflU cists to CTFKE Tobacco Habit.
CANfiFRS ' TIIMflFtt ' Mzrah ! Canccr Remedy.
ltAriUr.no lUBWnd ,
ivrfi-ct
cure nt yosr
Homo Never lost n cnzli' ! Cns-u : AV rile for cir
cular * ! 3Il2paliMortlclnefo..3Zoi > ey , N.Y.
NEW DISCOVERY ;
_ _ _ _ _ quick lellcf ami cum worst
. Bend Tor book o testimonials and 1O days *
treatment Sice. Dr. U.H.C K.
' rcr coughs , colds.
Or , Kay's Lung Balm Sa
s CURLS WHERE ALL ELSE FAILSl i
S Best Couch Syrup. Vaites Gocxl. DEO
Intlmo. Sold by t '
SKILL OF DOCTORS TESTEi
Fifteen Years of Suffering
'
" I thought 1 should surely die/
n the Etomach begins to fail ia
II * duties , ot'icr orpocs speedily become
nflcctcd in sympathy , and life is simply a
burden almost unbearable. Indigestion
bui dyspcpj > ia nrc to common that only
the sufferer from thc e diseai-cs knows
the possibilities of inircry that inhere in
them. A typicr.i example of the Miflcrmgs
cl the vicim of indigestion is Itiruisiifil
ia the cr.se of John C. 1'ritchard. lie \vcut
on lor f.ilccti years , from bad tovor > e.
In spite of doctors he grew constantly
v.-enker , aid thought he would die. lie
} ; ot well , however , and thus leiutcs his
experience :
" Vor fifteen years I was a great sufferer
from indirection in its v.-orst lornih. 1
tested the skill of many electors , but grew
v/orf-e nad- erse , until I bccntnc so weak
I could not walk fifty yards v.-ithont having
to sit down end rest. Mv Momnch , liver ,
nnd heart became affected , and J thought 1
would surely die. 1 tried Ur. J. C. Aycr's
I'ills nnd they helped me light away. I
continued their v. e end aii now entirely
well. I don't know cf anything that will
FO quickly relieve and cure tlic terrible
sufferings of dyspepsia r.s Dr. Aycr's
I'illi. . " C. Urodie
IOIIN raiTCiiAKi ) , , War-
ten Co. , 14. C.
This care is not extraordinary , cither in
the severity of the disease or the prompt
and perfect cure performed by lr. Ayer'j *
I'ills. Similar results occur in every cus
where Dr. Aycr's I'ills nrc used. "They
helped me right away" IH the common
expression of tnot > e who have u ctl llietu-
Herc IK another testimony to the truth cf
this statement :
"I formerly Miffcrcd from imligC5tiort
end wenkueos ol the Monmcli , but Mnre X
began the u ? > e of Dr. J. C. Aycr's rills ,
1 ha\c the appetite ol the lanr.cr's bov. 1
nm 46 years of age , utul iccommcnil nit
wno v.-i-h to he Irce liqm dyspepsia to
take or.e of Di. Ayer's Pills alter dinner ,
till their digestive organs arc in goooi
order. " V/ti. STIIINKT , Grant , Neb.
Dr. Ayer's Tills offer the surest zr.il
BwilU-it relief from constipation and nil
its attendant ills. They cure di/zines.t ,
niiMa , heartburn , palpitation , bad breath ,
coated tongue , uetvoiisucsssleeplcssncjs ,
biliousness , anil a score of other aflcctiou * ?
that are , alter all , only the signs of a ir.otcr
deep rooted disease. You can find more
information about Dr. Ayrr's I'ills. nnd the
diseases they have cured , in Aycr's Curc-
liook , a story o ( cures told by the cured.
This book of ice pages is sent free , OH
request , by the I.e. Aver Co. , Lowell.Sass. ;
RON ING- MADE
EASY.
HAS MAHY IMITATORS , BUT NO EQUAL
is PrePared on
Hlb O lalUl scientific princl-
m pies , by men who have hail years of
, . experience la fancy laundering1. It
fidr.-f
"vl restores old linen and summer dresses
. -wj- J ; to their natural whiteness and imparts
HX.1S CCLUI3 KO COT S STIFF WO KICE
,1 beautiful and lasting1 finish. The
only starch that is perfectly harmless.
CHZ FOUND Or THIS STARCH WILL 00 Contains no arsenic , alum or other injurious
AS FArt AS A POSIKC UiC A HALF
GPAKY CTIIEI'.SIARCri. jurious substance. Can be used even
IBER ERDS'CO for a baby pow.ier.
KEWKAVEH.QWS./
ASK YOUR GROCER FOR IT AND TAKE NO OTHER.
UA BRIGHT HOME MAKES A MERRY
HEART. " JOY TRAVELS ALONG WITH
Lv. CHICAGO I2OO Noow.
An. Kiw YORK lNl..f _ _ , . 3:3O P. Wl.
AR. ECSTON.- . . ) E'1 DA % 1 5:5O P. WJ.
For further in'crmalirn snd a handsome illustrated fccoket ! sddrcss C. S. CRANE. G. P. & T. A. . St. Louis.
3-
Book. |
Icn't that sol Of course it is. Every .
sensible person admits it. But
Why Not Get That Book ? |
We have it. It is full o ! THINGS YOU DON'T KNOW
tut OUGHT TO KNOW. It doesn't matter on what
subject you need information , this took wiH supply it. $
i $
vl/ \ &
\i >
vltt &
Is the latest and best work published. It is just what its
name indicates-THE STANDARD OF THE WORLD.
To educate the people , we have arranged to send this work
to anyone sending us 51 CO cash and 51.00 per month
thereafter for eleven months. In this way you will never
miss the money and your library will be enriched by the
addition of the greatest work of the century.
STANDARD DICTIONARY AGENCY ,
509-511 South 12th Street ,
LET US HEAR FROM YOU. OMAHA , NEB.
EDUCATIONAL.
THE UNIVERSITY OF KOIRE DAME ,
NOTRE DAHE , INDIANA.
FULL COURSES IN Classics , Letters , Science.
Law , Civil , Mechanical and Electrical Engi
neering1.
Thorough Preparatory and Commercial
Course.i.
Rooms Free to all Students v.-lio hnvo com
pleted the studies required for admission Into
the Jnnioror Senior Year , of aay of the Col-
k'idnte Courses.
A limited number or Cccdidatcs for the Ecclc-
slai-lic.ilstute bere.Mi.-cd atpedalratt-.1 ; .
St. Edwcrd's Mall , for boya under 13 jrars. Is
unique in ccmplctcr.e-vs of its equipments.
The logthlerm op'n September 61n ,
1898. Catalogue sent Free on siprlieajslon to
REV. A. nORRl&SCY. C. SC. . .
Dr Kavrs Renovator Guaranteed
Ul aoy & UUiU UHl5 to
cure dyspep
sia , constipation , liver and khlwy jKheo-Jt.s.b- !
I.CUSKCSS , teailache , etc. At druggists > ; : ti Si.
\V. 1 > J. U.OMAHA. NO. 31 1SOQ
Answering Rfiverilsenicata
Kcudca This Faser.
FURNITURE.
$50OOO Stock of all srrades of
Furniture recently bought at the
very lowest ea.sh price will be of-
ferecl during- the next few months
at special prices.
Customers visiting- Omaha will
find this the largest and oldest
furniture store here , and we will
make ewry effort to please botb
in goods and prices.
Chas. Shiverick & Co. ,
FURNITURE ,
12O6 Douglas St. , Omaha.
Next to Millixnl Hotel.
KOTE To patlsfy ouwelvos a < to whrthor
ftilvrrllM-inrnl N rVul wiwl.l uiaXi- llxonitit of
I IHT rout mi tin' t > ur > IIISFC < if any eiiMonirr who
will ti II iittuj" wtro Uirrcif J t < > us > tiy It ni ! UM
t'iry will rn-OMiKUMi ! us to tlu-lr Irltmtc II lt
* tlicy l-iij me tat.Kfa tory.
ls ! to Lnuics : V/c ci e Trsdina CUi
BBANKS