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About The Wickes Pioneer (Wickes, Mont.) 1895-1896 | View This Issue
The Wickes Pioneer (Wickes, Mont.), 26 Oct. 1895, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053310/1895-10-26/ed-1/seq-2/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
%ht Vid ionter. By ROBERT C. BAILEY. MONTANA. The Utica Press thinks that interna- tional yachting races \are calculated to promote patriotic/1e\ So they are—if you win. China has a big lot of money to raise, and cannot very well economize pn her methods of living. She is on \a diet of rice\ now. \What's in a na ?\ Only' this: An Ohio woman recently presented her husband with his sixteenth child, and her name is Mpore. It must be admitted that the cattle crop is also pretty good when we read that 200,000 head in Texas will soon be ready for shipment. Mrs. Noe was arrested in Little Rock for wearing bloomers. Judge Wilson dismissed the case, and handed down a decision that \bloomerseare just the thing.\ Miss Marie Millard, a Boston acti l ess, announces her engagement to Count Raoul De Brabant of France. Miss Mil- lard has scored in the game of love. She won a count. In places oast mischievous persons have purposely placed glass, tacks, and nails on the highways used by the bi- cyclers for the purpose of wrecking the tires of the wheels. At Chicopee, Mass:, an ordinance has been passed making such an offense finable, the penalty being from $2 ,to „no for every such offense. Such an act is mean enough to richly deserve a much heavier punish- ment. Two gentlemen of Newport, Ky., while engaged in painting that town a vivid scarlet, gave offense to a sensi- tive cow, which chased them into a convenient church. The Louisville Courier -Journal says that a crowd speedily came to the scene and rescued the gentlemen \from their perilous position.\ The phrase shows the pe- culiar esteem in which the church is held in Kentucky. Dr. Heine Marks of St. Louis says bicycle riders form a great suicide club that threatens to depopulate the world. All the functional and constitutional disorders to which the race is subject are ascribed by the doctor to bicycle riding. On some fateful day in the course of his lifetime Dr. Marks prob- ably thought he could ride a wheel, and found that he could not. That would explain his extreme hostility. So much grave robbing has been going on in the small cemeteries around Indianapolis recently that owners of the cemeteries have adopted the plan of placing nitroglycerin in graves. An old man was buried at Greenwood the other day and three sticks of nitro- glycerin aere placed on the coffin. Some day a carelessly dropped clod will produce a premature resurrection that will not only raise the, dead but the living. The new woman\ has broken out in another way in Georgia. This time she comes to the front as a distiller. A woman in Jasper county and another in Cherokee have been granted the neces- sary government license to enable them to establish registered distilleries from which to make peach brandy. These are the first cases of women distillers who appear on the books of the revenue department. There have been isolated cases of women who were alleged to dr own illicit distilleries. but those have been Spartan women who took the blame on themselves in the hope that the eourts would be lenient with them. Now let women acquire the habit of drinking the stuff and going home with jags like men and beating their hus- bands next and their tremph will Iv complete. The abandoned telegraph line which the Western Union Telegraph company set about establishing through Alaska about thirty years ago is to be revived, the company deciding that there is sufficient business to warrant its con- struction.' The line will be built to Forty Mile Creek on the Yukon, and branches will run to Sitka and Juneau, thus. putting Aliska In touch with the world The plan tlefrty years ago was to construct a line /through Alaska by way of BehrIng Straits to Siberia, and thence et 43t. Petersburg. Before the line had been Mashed to Alaska, the success of the Atlantic cable made the trans -Siberian line unnecolssary. One • d the principal difficulties the tele- graph encountered was from bears, which took the telegraph poles for bee trees and the humming of the wires as the Found of disturbed bees, They tere down many poles in their active search for the honey supposed to be concealed in them. Bears are still numerous in that region, and the enterprise of carry- ing the telegraph to that far region may be found more difficult to accom. plish than is now thought. The Roosevelt regime in New York Is imprisoning milkmen for. watering the milk they sell, but is not doing any- thing to the, men who water the whis- key they sell during the nix days of the week, if tree/ will only refrain herrn selling on the seventh. With water full of mud, and milk full of water, anti no whiskey nor beer on Sundays, Nee York Is having a dreadfully hard time ---- • It is said that 1,1 {lung mg ig the risietit man in the world We trust the hirlOPI. government will refrain trete salting him where he got It. AN AFRICAN SCHOLAR. THE REV. EDWARD w. BLYDEN OF LIBERIA. A Yull-IlloodsO Negro W114, It.,. Woo L1011 — Here and tinguiatiefl lib. Iriendn - Now With Es. HE 'Rev. Edward 'Wilmot Blyden of Liberia, who is !low paying a visit to America, is one of the most emi- nent scholars of the negro race. He is now 63 years of age, but though nis life has been busy and wearing the only evidenLe of his age is found in his hair, which is beginning to turn gray. His form is still erect and his move- ments vigorous. He has a large head, with a full forehead. His color pro- claims him a full-blooded negro. He is an interesting speaker, haying a deep, rich voice and an easy conversational manner. Dr. Blyden was horn in the Danish island of St. Thomas, in the West Indies, on Aug. L. 1832. His parents, who were of pure negro stock, be- longed to the Dutch Reformed Church, and the boy was baptized as a member of this denomination. His pastor, the Rev. John P. Knox, formerly of Newton, L. I., early picked the boy out as show- ing exceptional promise, and advised him to come to the United States and enter an American college. According- ly, at the age of 18, with the assistance of his pastor. Mr. Blyden came to New York. This was in 1850, just after the passage of the fugitive slave law, ane in the height of the excitement over the slavery question. The yourg negro made application for admission to sev- eral colleges, but all of them retitled to receive him. It had been his intention 'to go to Africa as soon as he had ob- tained an education, and when he found the doors of American colleges closed against him he decided to go thither at once. In the fall of 1850 he sailed for Liberia and two years later he en- tered the Alexander high school at Monrovia, named after Dr. Archibald Alexander of Princeton. At that time the colony of Liberia had been in ex- istence about thirty years. but the re - DR. BLYDEN. public was less than five years old. In the Alexander school he took a course in classics and mathematics, and in 1858 he became a teacher in the school. In 1861 he was appointed professor of languages in the newly -founded Libe- ria college. After five years' service he reeeived a leave of absence, and oc- upled it in a trip to Egypt and Pales- tine. He also visited the Protestant college at Beirut as the guest of Dr. Jessup, who is now in this country. Here he took occasion to improve the knowledge of Arabic, which he had be- gun to acquire in Arabia. On his return to Liberia, Dr. Blyden continued his work of teaching until 1871. when he resigned, and went on a trip through Europe. lie was then ap- pointed le the British government as diplomatic agent to make treaties with the powerful Mohammedan and pagan chiefs of the interior tribes of Africa. After three years of this work he again took charge of the Alexander high school, which ha4 meantime been removed from Monrovia to the interior twenty-five miles tip St. Paul's river. In 1877 Dr. Blyden was appointed min- ister plenipotentiary to Great Britain, and served in this capacity for three years. On his return to Monrovia be was elected president of Liberia col- lege. He resigned in 1884. and took up independent educational work among the Mohammedans at Sierra Leone. In 1892 he was again appointed Libe- rian representative at the Court of St. James, which office he still holds. - Swapped Away His Wife. The very unusual story of swapping a daughter for a wife is reported from Toledo, Wash. A farmer named Thompson Reit his wife a short time ago. The ehild be took to a neighbor by the name of Putnam to be cared for. Of coura frequent e viitits were made to see how the baby was getting along. Mrs. Putnam was . quite a comely per- son, and very soon attracted the at- tention of the widowed farmer. Then he soon learned to love her, but worse of all his love was reciprocated. The husband discovered the situation. The lovers naturally expected a scene. hut there were none. Instead of making the neighboring hills resound with jealous rage Putnam called upon Thompson, and they discussed the mat- ter in a businesslike manner. Putnam professed to be iired of his wife, and mid he would AR lief that some other felin.v would take her away as not, but he wanted something 4n return. He wanted sonic one around his house to minister to his wants; some one he could learn to love. Thompson had a daughter who suited him very well, and if it was just the same he was willing to trade his wife for her. That suited Thompson and the girl, too. So a bargain was struck and the exchange made. Thompson and Mrs. Putnam went to Aberdeen and the girl to Castle Rock. WILL WED A COUNT. Etna Yznaga Expects to Ile Divorced by That Time. 4 If is now announced that the wedding of Mrs. Yznaga, the beautiful member of the \400 whose relationship to the Vanderbilts by marriage has been further complicated by divorce, to the fame.1 Count Bela Ziehy, of Hungary, will be celebrated at an early day, by which date the lady anticipates that she will no longer he the wife of her present husband. She continues to MRS. YZNAGA. dwell In South Dakota. This compara- tively young woman was originally a Miss Mabel Wright, daughter of George Curtis Wight, who made a large for- tune out of carpet designing. She met Mr. Yznaga, a Cuban -American, at Newport in 1890 and married him in the same year. He had already been mar- ried and divorced. It is, of course, quite possible that the divorce will be delayed, in which case the wedding will be delayed also. HYPNOTIZED INTO SICKNESS. Girt Who Acts Like a Paraiatle at a word from the Doctor. The most astounding instance of hypnotism by \suggestion\ comes in a report furnished to the French Society of Hypnology and Psychology by M. Gorflichze, an expert in mesmerism, says the New York World. The story he has to tell is of a little girl of eleven in one of the French provinces who used to accompany a cousin, who was a country doctor, on his rounds, and in this i 7 ey got to understand a good many medical expressions. One day she fell ill. The illness was light and she was on the high road to recovery when her cousin, the doctor, happened to say un- thinkingly and smilingly in her pres- ence, \Oh good heavens! She is par- alyzed\ At once the child exhibited every symptom of paralysis, and she remedied in that state at the will of the doctor. Afterward he asked her if she was not becoming consumptive, and im- mediately she began to suffer from the dreadful coughing and blood -spitting that consumptive patients have. She seemed so extraordinarily open to every sort of mesmeric , \suggestion\ that the doctor tried her with half the diseases known in the medical annals, and one by one she responded to them all. He needed only to remark that she was cured to have her perfectly well a moment later. Perhaps the strangest of the experiences she went through was when one of her schoolmates got a pape ri pellet in her eye. From pure gym thy the child imagined that she had the same trouble, too, and she rubbed her eye to such an extent that she felt the pain of It for nearly a year. tlneworth R. Spofford. ‘Ainsworth R. Spofford, whose portrait is herewith presented, has had charge of the literary branch of the govern- ment for twenty-five yers. .He is con - A. R. SPOFFORD: • aioeren the greatest living authority on American literature so -far ai4 concerns its technical and legal aspects. lie is now charged with irregularities in handling government funds. Cork Leg Carom for DI•oree. A Connecticut woman has sued for a divoree'from her husband ilfteRlItte he has a cork leg, although when she learned that he had lost his leg in a duel she was an infatuated with his bravery that she separated from the man who was then her husband to merle, the defendant In the present case Most of the Connecticut (Ake are persons of steady habits, bud there are others The Last Chance. fsil-Za JOHNSON HAD ONLY ONE ( - HANCE TO SAVE HEK LIFE Now Dors the Work of Three Average Women. rorn the Ledger, Mexico Mo, Mrs Lueiuda Johnson lives in Mexico, Mo. The Ledger has j ist succeeded in ob- taining an interview with her This is the 5,1(.16[91We Of her story . In the winter of - ee and . VE Mrs. Johnson was, like many of her friends, attacked with la grippe. Yes, we've most of on had it and know its wrecking power's, whets it gets in its work on a good constitution. Well. Mrs. Johnsoje, aiong about Chrietinas, wen prcstreitet,t 1811 the inedieal aid here In the I • ity only \brought her around,\ as an - heree and roots\ female Nyin- expeessed it, and she w•us left in a debilitated and exhausted condi- tion, anti cxperieneed a constant pain in her left side. She was wholly unfit for hett domestic duties and was un- able to do any work ataut the house, even after the la grippe fever and its character- istic sickness had left her. She is a con- sistent member of the church, and one Sun- day, between the Sunday school and church services, being barely able to be conveyed there, she beard of a miracle that hr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People had performed, and she resolved to try them. It was like the drowning man grattbiug at the last straw. It was her last and only i•haute to save her life. She procured One box of these pills from the south side drug- gists. French et Garrett, in this city, and by the time she had used half the box she and her watchful friends noticed a marked improvement in her condition. Taking the rest of the box of pills and one more box she recovered remarkably in an exceedingly short time Before she had used the first box she resumed her household duties, and has been steadily at work for the last eighteen months. It tcok only stew boxes, perhaps five or six, to entirely cure her. Since then she was attacked by rheuma- tism, caused from careless exposure, but by at ogee taking the Punk Pills for Pale Peo- ple she drove that painful and dreadful malady away. She told the reporter that whenever she felt that she Was going to be ill, she took one or two of the pills, and she here r got seek. Mrs. Johnson is perfectly healthy now and promises to live to a ripe old age. Her friends have never ceased to talk about her almost miraculous recovery and are loud in their praise of the Pink Pills for Pale People, and all who have tried them say they would not be without them under any conditions. Dr. Williams Pink Pills are not loeked upon ass patent medicine. An analysis of their properties shows that they contain, in condensed form, all the elements neces- sary to give new life and richness to the blood and restore shattered nerves. They are an unfailing 'specific for such diseases as locomotor ataxia, partial paralysis, St. Vi- tus' dance, sciatica, neuralgia, rheumatism, nervous neadache, the after effects of la grippe, palpitation of the heart, pale and sallow complexions, and the tired feeling resulting from nervous proetration, all tits - oases resulting from vitiated humors in the blood. such as scrofula, chronic erysipelas, etc. They build up the blood and restore the glow of health to pale an/ 'tallow cheeks. 'They are for sale by all druggists, or may be had by mail from Dr. Williams' Med. Co., Sehetectedy, N. Y.,•for 50c per box, or six Witte for 1.2.50. The Kangaroo at Hay. When pursued, the kangaroo, if possible. direats his flight toward the river. If he reaches it he enters, and, thanks to his great height, is able to go on foot to a depth where the dogs are obliged to swim. There he plants himself on his two hind legs and his tail, and up to his shoulders in the water he awaits the attack of the dogs. With his forepaws he seizes by the head the first doer that approaches him, and as he is more solidly balanced than his assailant he holds the dog's nose under the water as long as he can. Unless a second dog speedily comes to the rescue the first one is sure to be drowned. If a companion arrives and by his attacks on the kangaroo manages to set the captive free the half -drowned brute is glad to regain the shore as quiekly as possible. In this way a strong and courageous male kangaroo will hold its own against twenty or thirty dogs, drowning some and frightening others, and the hunter is obliged to intervene with a bullet. --St. Louis Globe -Dem- ocrat. _ How's This! We offer Vane Hundred Dollars reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. CH ENF1Y & CO.. Toledo, 0 We. the undersigned, have known F. J. rheney for the last 15 years, and be- lies,' lilm perfectly honorable In all business' trans, - 1. - Gene, and financially able to carry out any obligations made by their firm. WALDINC., KINNAN & MARVIN, Wholesale Druggists. Toledo. Ohio. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken internal- ly, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Testi- monials sent free. Price. 75c per bottle. Sold by all druggists. e Hall's Family Pills, 25c. The 'states Granary at Herniae. The wonderful East Indian statues and temples cut from the solid bowl - tiers and stratified rock are duplicated if not excelled, by the Afghans. Pro- fessor .J. A. Gay, in one of his recent lectures on the far East, tells of a Stone statue of a god which he saw at Bamian, near the Russian frontier. This particular statue was one of a score, but was the giant of the lot, beitig 173 feet in height and large in proportion. It was used as a store- house for grain, and at that time con- tained over 2.000 bushels. \AMONG THE OZARKS.\ • 'rite 1.111(i of' Illg Red A Nitre:, Is so attractive and intere•ling n.h. handsomely illuatr led with sews of 4th M e a to ue scenery. including the famous 0 drift fruit Ruin of UK* 111 , If 0 4 1,u I1ow-11 eeunty. It vertu Inc to fruit r 'icing Ii, that grent fruit belt f,1 A melees. the -southern slope ef the (herds. find will prove of great 'slue, no, only to fruit grewcr., but to every fritinei and honteeeeker looking for II farm and home. Mailed fret', Addrese, .1. E. Lorswoon. Kansas City, Me 1 ninitirrs. It i s a What ClIFIOUS COM' mentary liven I lie principles; which govern heed icraft procedures that one of the hemmer -heals of the Rohl- bssater is heavier than' the siuugli handed sledge hamtner of the forge mein and smith, wbieh weigh only ten pounds The ithaviest hammer of the gold beater' weighs seventeen pounds. TRAMP IN MAYOR'S CHAIR. 'anted Fiant• and Heard Mg Howse Was Dispeneing Thews.. A tramp, the most miserable -looking tramp that could be picked out In a day's travel, played Mayor of New York the other morning, says the New York Sun. His clothing was in tatters and was in danger of falling off. His face was out, and he was three years away from a bath. Janitor Larkin went into the mayor's office at 6 o'clock in the morning and just missed having a fit when he spied the specimen sitting in the mayor's big chair. As the jani- tor came in the tramp stood up and leaned against the desk. \What!\ exclaimed Larkin. \Sir?\ said the tramp. \What the blazes are you doing here?\ demanded Larkin. \I only want a pair of pants,\ said the tramp with a tremulous voice. \Think this is Baxter street?\ de- manded Larkin. \Think we run a pants factory? Think this is the head- quarters of the Hebrew Pants Makers' Amalgamated Reform Union? Well, it ain't, and how in blazes did you get here?\ 71 came in through the window,\ said thh tramp softly. \The door was locked.\ He looked at Larkin and Larkin looked at him. For a • moment neither spoke: Then the tramp said: \I un- derstand the mayor distributes pants every morning, and that a great crowd gathers to receive them. I merely wanted to be on hand in time, and so I climbed up and came through the window.\ \Well you'll come out of the door : \ said Larkin. \Certainly said the tramp. Larkin held him in the hall until a policeman came and took him to the Oak street station, where he said he was Andrew Bradley and had a home in Brooklyn. Later he was arraigned in the Tombs court and was sent to the workhouse. Nothing in the mayor's of - fin had been disturbed. IT MAKES SOME MEN TIRED. Hot Jennie' s Brand New Husband De- nted That He Was at All Fatigued. They were from some locality up north and on their wedding tour. In taking in the sights of Detroit they boarded a Woodward avenue car foe a ride to the terminus and back. As te ey sat beside each other, her hand in his hand and his straw hat fanning them both, a grumpy old codger on the next seat sneeringly observed: \ 'Nother case of love's young dream, I see!\ _ The newly wedded looked around at him, but made no reply, and pretty soon he said: - There ought to be a law against this spooning business! It just makes me tired!\ \Oh it does!\ retorted the young man as his cheeks began to redden. \Meb- be you never spooned when you was a young man?\ \If s did it was not in such a public pla \What's the place to do with it? Can't everybody tell right off the handle that men Jennie are just married\ \I should say they could \And that we _ are on our bridle tow . : y er es ?' . : , \And that we are just honey and peaches?\ \That's what tires me.\ \It does, eh? Well, It don't tire us. She dotes on me and I'd die for her, and we are going to kiss anti hug and squeeze hands and vat gum -drops as long as our $17 holds out, anti you and all the rest of the old moesbacks in this town can lick your chops and go to grass!\ And he sat down and put one arm around his turtle dove and hugged her till the grumpy old man 'am,' to his corner and dropped off with a grunt of disgust. NEWSY MORSELS. England has decided to increase the pay of the native Indian soldiers by GI cents a month. Basrelief memorial medallions of Oliver Wendell Holmes are being worn by Boston people. Saco, MP., is bragging of a 2,005 - pound cow that it declares is the largest one in the world. The Japanese grow dwarf oak and pine trees that are only eighteen inches high when 200 years old. A scholarship has been founded in memory of Jay Gould in the college of the University of New York. The maximum age assigned to the pine is 700 years; to the red beach, 245: to the oak, 410, and to :lie ash. 145 years. A car containing 5,000 ehi, teem, val- ued at 11,400, was shipped from Clay Center. Mo., billed to San Francisco, lain week, It is said that more visitore to Mount Auburn cemetery, near Cambridge, tarry at the tomb of Edwin Booth than at any other. Erie will celebrate the one hundredth anniversary of its founding September 10 and II. A century ago the mare v.eie called Presque Isle A Hartford manufactory has jIlat mode a four ply leather belt 118 feet long and 78 inehes wide. Tee hides of 100 steer.; were meet Among every 1,000 Inhabitants In tisp United States there IS an average of 211I who are under 16; in Prance there are only 200 pitch to the 1.1100 Rhode inland has some seventy large and small lakes of suMeltint Rise cur In t ' , reef RR to appear by neme on the map. Block island has its Cr 7100 peat ponds Paris has : given up the idea of in- structing its school children in military drill. The menicIpal council has dis- banded the battalions and ordered the , gone and equipments to be sold at aw- 1 lion. Fall Medicine Is fully as important and as beneficial as epring Medicine, for et this seatioe there is great danger to health in the varying temperature, Cold storms, ma- larial germs., prevalence of fevers and other diseases. All these may be avoided If the blood is kept pure, the digestion good, and bodily health vigorous by taking Hood's Sarsaparilla The One True Blood Pu • rider. Hood's Pills cure all livernn i bill° fleas, headaches': Sac. \' Go to California in a J. FRANCIS, G. P. A., Omaha, Neb. Tourist Sleeper. It is the RIGHT way. Pay more and you are ex- travagant. Pay less and you are uncomfortable. The newest, brightest, cleanest and easiest rid- ing Tourist Sleepers are used for our Buffington Pia*, Personally Conducted Excursions to California, which leave Omaha every Thursday morning reach- ing San Francisco Sunday evening, and Los Angeles Monday noon. You can join them at any intermediate point. Ask nearest ticket agent for full information, or write to Meta Wheel for your Wagon Any PIM you went, 20 to 56 inches h I g h. Tire, Ito 8 In. rhe• w I d - boa to et any sale Raves Cost rn • n y times In a serw son to have set of low wheels Iv It your w ag on frrhaultng grain,forider, man urn, lungs, itit No. resetting of tires Catl'ff free. Addreeis !gm pi re Mfg. tie.. I'. u. Rut 13, Quincy Lit• Walter Baker 1 CO. 1.111111011. The Carpet Itsoulacttnirs of PURE, HIGH GRADE COCOA8 and CHOCOLATES On this Unn Orient, hare nolo.] HIGHE8T AWARDS front the greet Industrial and Food EXPOSITIONS 111 EUROPE AND AMERICA. Caution: I° t h. many imitation• of the lebeis and wrappers on our goofs, consumers should ask. are Ilhat our, place of m anufacture, nanoly. Dorchester. Mass. O printed on .0. h pectins. SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE. WALTER BAKER & CO. LTD. DORCHESTER, MASS. SOUTH MISSOURI, WEST The best fruit secti..n In the West No drouth• • failure of crops ncs yr rIcks• u Mild climate. ProductOe soft Abundance of good pure n•Ifer For Map, and (Incise, Frit leg full description of the aleh Mineral, Fruit and s t mt.-Mtn/al lands us Routh M est Missouri, cruet., JOHN H. PURDY, Marmite, nf Missouri land ant i.ir. Mock ▪ y , s, ) spo, t N11-•••Wi_ ttil The strongest and purest Lye . a n a lir e . powder 1 ./I 1 i I A e a, l i la i i i i: . l i gi c t i r t , a be e ing Are always resit' , ' for use ' Will melte the beet perfumed Hard Boole In Ygrilinutonledihour hog,,9, le a Ile beet for gleillielng wan. 'sloes. d sinteei ins sinks, o eliet .1. washln, trot t lee, wain! 0. tree. our. LEWIS' til z Lir PEN NA. SALT M'F'G CO. Gen. /tenets.. Phila.. FREE! FREE! FREE! To iush the eireulation of the leading home pnper In the wei.t the Neltraeka State Cepital- -we Will give fifteen eheice tuil• a end the Capital one :veer for on• doller These bull s int - dude Ii a dohs, lianas tits, freesias, ehirsoditeee, double snered lily, t ulIlce. iris a dins, ixia. giant ..T1 , 1W drop. etc Special terms to twenty. Address. Capital Publishing Co., Lineoln, Nett HAIR SAM es net two • tics hely a Itourant growth. Ni e to, Falls tg Beetore Ortay Hair to Its Youthful Color, ettrea essip Monomeric hair falling. We snit IMO Do Omaha STOVE REPAIR Works Rite•o rep, ieli e rr trig , * t itteve• sod raise.. I • D sr • at., Omaha. Nab PATEN T, Ilst t 0wirtle. Poor f... rsi tot \ >A s s' Taer & Cen s us, 11....lway,5.1 L L U. No, 40. 1895 -- Mr-Kindly Mention This Paper When You Write to An Advertiser. L fic of so bo t. t. ti ha a ini an ha wi ex hue hi' bij I j a , •, , 1 0 11; •