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About The Wickes Pioneer (Wickes, Mont.) 1895-1896 | View This Issue
The Wickes Pioneer (Wickes, Mont.), 28 Dec. 1895, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053310/1895-12-28/ed-1/seq-2/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
Lu atichro Nioyetr. , By ROBERT G. BAILEY. WICKES, MONTANA. The Canadians who seized the A mere can tug Telephone would better ririg off. Since tee %massacres in China the lives of vegetarians are not so long as Drake of meat eaters. It is reported that the Comte de Cas- tellarse le losing his millions on the bourae. Who said poetic justice was a myth? The blending of Blenheim with the honee that Vamlerbilt makes a bit of architecture of which no American is proud. Russia is evidently bent uponestrik- ing out at England. even though it has to be done over the shoulder of Japan or Venezuela. \Holmes can only be hanged pneee says Chicago Tribune. But is thOre not some punishment ear thus murdering the language? Adrian Constantine Anson. the here of many a home run, is yew appearing in a drama especially built for himself. Clear the way for Capt. Anse. _ Corbett announces with a flourigh t he has fought his last fight. He r• -t t l it/1 now go right on delivering upper- cuts and cross -counters to the Ameri- can eleeema. A struggle between Russia and Eng land for supremacy in China would mean a big boom to the publishers. Such a war would be bound t,o make many changes in the map world, When a Pennsylvania married man and a Pennsylvania married woman, each nearly 'three-score and with large families of children, elope, let us hear no more of the follies of lovers young. Undoubted :y American children will have to look more after their parents. The indiseretions of age are becoming painfully numerous in all parts of the ceuntry. No one could ,have more cleie or specifically shown the deplorable condi- tion of affairs in Cuba than (lid Capt. 7. B. Graham In the address which he read before the Loyal Legion. It would be a weak and degenerate people indeed who did not rebel against such grind- ing tyranny, and the spirit of true Americanism would be dead did it not sympathize with those struggling to terow off the Spanish yoke. Miss Annie Redman claims that John Sehug, of Berne, Ill., courted her for two and a half years, made her many resents of value, and wrote numerous letters in which he promised to make Ler his wife, but in July his ardor reeled and in September he wrote her teat their relations were at an end. She remonstrated. but to no purpose, and now she ha; sued him for $5,000. Queer' Isn't it, how some love affairs turn out? In New York there are 'cooking sehools for men and in several parts of Pennsylvania the former heads of the families are compelled to remain at home and keep the children in line while the mothers attend church. If the new woman keeps right straight - on and the lords of creation do nothing but whine their discontent she will soon be !poking after es erything - except, the babies and. Ae rest of- the honschold drudgery. A man in Ohio. who had a grudge against the postmaster in his town. drank whisk t end ate onions and then asked for his meil. The postmaster refusecl to wait on the breathing cen- eer and the man complained to the powers that be. After a careful inves- tigation the inspector decided that the mute/aster was justified in his stand. Much interest is now felt as to what action e the postal authoritlea would ad- vise riogarding a eustomer wine, takes ens onions *Itraight. From Leeds. England. COMP samples of a specie.; of cloth. and also a sort of cotton, made wholly out of wood fibre, these two woven pieces having all the appearance of attractive articles of their own kind, says an exchange. Both these novel textile fabrics are the re- eult of prolonging experiments with eine wood and spruce, which have been i•genteusly torn to pieces in the first 'Attune° and bleached by an elaborate - hernial! process. After chemical treatment in many ways the wood be - (nines a soft white pulp, which is run through perforated plates, the result - illy threads being dried by a steaming procees. These threads can be woyen, Ind the material is susceptible of fak- ing readily any sort. or dye. The fab- ric eau be made at an astonishin heap cent: It looks well, and has a cer- tain amount of strength (experiments In leis connection are now being carried a), and its appearance on the market, eginer cr later. Is absolutely certain, aTectelly in the form of imitation ye/t- em. A Ceicago oi-eanleation boasts (et a feerilized beer is heir cheers but dies not inebriate. The distinction as here made sppears suggestive of few gales and small profits. The average beer winker hankers for the extreme' ne. tion and will depend upon the cunning ainherny of time to do, the sterilizing. The indignation of a New Yorker on 1 ;tying to pay duty on antiques made eethin the past ten years le peculiarly jostlflable. Such a duty hurts the foreign antique makers and it damage, :he feelings of the American virtuoso, Talma g e in Vv7.illin g ton. tItI lativrested In New York Affairs— Revell Hundred Thousand Hollers for Charitins—What Ilia Thinks of Certain Books. • Everybody knows that the illustrious divine, who made the Brooklyn Taber- naele famous throughout the world, has recently been called to a pastorate ia, Washington. His church is the First Presbyterian church of that city, and while in former years a very prom- inent insti- tution, it latterly had been favored with but small aueli- ences, com- posed prin- _,. 4 .7 cipally of . ,men and feare... 7,7,e4,,a,e a , women who remained loyal to the old church even though now surrounded largely by business houses. A marvelous change, however, has suddenly come over this time-honored landmark, and to -day the First Presbyterian church of Washing- ton, owing to the wondrous eloquence of Its newly installed pastor, is every Sun- day besieged by multitudes, many of whom stand there frequently hours in advance of tile opening of the servace in hopes of tieing able to wedge their way in somehow or other, and to listen to the matchless eloquence of Ameri- ca's foremost pulpit orator. People all over the country are won- dering whether Dr. Talmage, in mov- ing to the National Capital, and in ex- changing his Brooklyn residence for a house in Washington, has actually di- vorced himself from all connection with the east. Dr. Talmage was recently in- terviewed on this subject by a reporter of this paper, and the reverend gentle- man said that as long as his editorial chair had two legs in New York and two legs in Washington he could never be considered as having severed all his Connections with the metropolis. \The Christian Herald,\ he said, \with its wide circulation, is a tremendous power for good,\ and as long as the Lord gave him health and strength hawould write for that paper -In fact, he would be in his editorial chair at the Bible House more frequently now than ever. Con- tinuing, the genial preacher said: \There is no paper in America that wields a more potential influence for good than The Christian Herald, with a circulation of nearly two hundred thou- sand copies weekly. Nothing but death shall separate me from it. Dr. Klopsch, its proprietor, is a man of extraordinary enterprise. This year besides printing The Christian Herald every week in beautiful colors, a veritable enchant- ment for the eye, he offers as a premium a complete library, consisting of , ten splendid volumes, full of interest and full of entertainment, with an elegant bookcase, delivered free of all expense, together with the paper itself, fifty-two times, for the moderate sum of $3. Hereafter let no home in America be without a library. 1 asked Dr. Talmage whether he could recommend the library to people who contemplated securing it, and he said unhesitatingly, \I know every book. They were carefully and thoughtfully prepared, either specially written or compiled by most eminent literary men, Sad there is not a weakling among them.\ \flow are the people to secure this great library, and this wonderful paper of yours?\ \Simply by sending $3 to The Chris- tian Rapid at 888 to 895 Bible House, New York City, and by return mall they will be delighted with the result. Ever since my boyhood, I've had a passion for books; I love them still -couldn't live unless surrounded by them. So I'm sometking of a judge of good litera- ture. And in my whole life I have never seen a better selection in small compass than these ten books which Dr. Klopsch has had prepared for his subscribers. It's a perfect library of information, entertainment and amusement, and is the climax of the wonderfully enter- prising and far-seeing Management that has placed The Christian Herald ahead of all competitars as a Christian home journal. Do you know,\ con- tinued Dr. Talmage, that this paper has in less than six years expended nearly $700.000 in various beneficences at home and abroad?\ Just then Miss Talmage came in to call her distinguished father to dinner, and the interview ended. Remember the address. 883 to 805 Bible house, New York City. Deserve I It. \Died %emote the editor of the Spiketown Blizzar I. as a sudden in- spiration came over him, \in our sanctum, between the hours of 7 a. In. and 3 p. iti. last Toes lay, of sticky fly paper, 1.217 flies.- Their death has caused a iluc'em over the whole community. ' The next day thirteen of the must reputable citizni s of Spiketown went tathe Blizzard office awl ordered their papers stopped. A WOMAN OF SIXTY. AT THIS AGE FASHION FAILS TO PROVIDE FOR HER. Alt oou a ss,.o otil it,, tittles Are Ke,st-I.,-,1 al111 1 ' 4..11 ' 111011 lb - 0AM. makers hellion to Modify Current Cats. P TO SIXTY A well preserved wo- man can manage pretty well, says Mrs. Lynn Linton in the London Queen. She is still in the running, though at the tail of the race; and she makes herself ridlc- -7\ etiae ---- I ous if h tries t u s o keep up with the leaders. But, unless she be distressingly stout -when she is not well preserved -she Is catered for by the manufacturers of woven goods, and she has her share in the prettiness of fashion and the charms of society. Her troubles begin when she is past 60, and the first miseries of old age are making themselves felt. Then she is forced to acknowledge that society is closing its ranks against her, and that her place is narrowing daily. She is gradually falling out of the running al- together; and, like the stragglers of an army, is left to solitude and desolation by the wayside. No fashions are made ,with reference to her; and milliners and dressmakers refuse to modify the current cut for her convenience or well being. When young, fresh faces bedeck themselves like fuzzy-wuzzys On the warpath, and pile a very mountain of strong colored ornamentation on the top of their heads, the milliner insists on it that the faded carnations and iron gray locks of the woman past 60 shall be surmounted in the same style. If she pleads for something less outrageous she is met with the smile of superior wisdom should she go to a really fash- ionable and \up-to-date\ establishment; and her modest request is either loftily Ignored or answered by a concoction so dowdy, so ungraceful, as to be in essen- tial part a rebuke in ribbons and an act of vindictiveness in lace and straw. She has to make her choice between some- thing wholly unsuitable to her age or something wholly unbecoming to her face and figure. Again, another sorrow in the life of 60 odd and over. Past 60 Ms often as not develops a leaning toward bronchitis and a tendency to gout, rheumatism, and sciatica, which healthy youth neither knows nor can comprehend. Healthy youth wants the windows open in all weathers. e t can sit in a cross draft and luxuriate in the freghness thereby created. It goes out in the evening with the wind blowing from the north to the east, and its curly locks are grandly independent of cover- ing, while a slight -little mantle is all it condescends to cast about Its comely shoulders. Healthy youth declares lt \suffocates\ when the windows are shut, but past 60 knows that it will be down with bronchitis if they are left open. Hence it requests them to be closed, and healthy youth flounces, re- volts, complains, is indignant.. \This sweet, mild air give cold! -this delicious breeze dangerous !-what nonsense! and what selfishness to want them shut when everyone else wants them open!\ Poor past 60 feels like an outcast brand- ed with the scorn of all who are still below that :atal line. But what a to be done? It must dine and have its food like healthy youth or vigorous tnaturity, and a *smart attack of bronchitis is too big a.fine to pay for peace or pow:II:city. Hence it has to ask for those tensed windows, which dig its grave in public estimation, and cause it to be qualified with epithets like \horrid \tiresome 'II -natured,\ \detestable.\ ORIGIN OF PNEUMATIC TIRES, An Irbil' Doctor intented Them to plat - verve Ilia Son • Health. Very few of the hundreds of tarn - sands of cyclists who now enjoy the pastime of an up-to-date ststety *hod with pneumatic tires have an hira from what a crude contrivance those tame air cushions on wheels have len evolved. Pneumatic tires were in- vented in 1889 by J. P. Dlinlop, a horse doctor of Belfast, Ireland. lie htd a son who rode a tricycle and who, Ig his indulgence, haul developed a nervoue trouble. The veterinary conceirled that the boy's silty/Her was due solely h the jolting of the wheels, and. plannitg to do away with the objections, so Out the lad might continue his exercise, le hit upon the idea of putting air. cumione on the wheels. With only such ma meal as he had at hand fcr use In dot:tering equine invalids, he set to wort (sing a broomstick as a mandrel, he wrapped It spirally with linen bantlages. Next he took some rubber sheets am so- lutionec them around the linen. The ends also he fastenerl with rubbe. so- :ution He Inserted a valves little bet- ter than a plus and putting it ot the whee'e started his son away on the first pneumatic tires. It was quickly An Indiana man has fallen heir to found thet the rough and ready stele of $10,000,000. It is feared that this will fabric world not hold air, 10 an fio boom the gold brick industry as to inner sheath of pure rubber was fled. put the priee beyond the reach of the averse' hoosier. _ tune Cractlee In That Lino. A Chicage man in Le,xl ngton, soon after Gartie:e's death, was talk ine of the bungling of the surgeons, when one of the Kentuckians present re- mumetrated against the terrible treat\ inent and ite restulte. \Well. a Ken- tucky surgeon would have done me bett:ffee' said the Chicagoan. \You me right, Rah.\ replied the other; \Kentucky surgeons know nothine about treating wounes in the back, an h.\ Pra(esnor Newcomb of the United Statee naval •ubservatory at Washing- to- has for his assistant a woman. Mae; Bennet* F. Mam at the present timeee.a graduate of Vassar. ••• The VR1VP wee; vulcanized to this nner tube in suet; a way that in the evast of any trouble with the valve an enirely new air sheath was the only teitedy. Flat rims were In use at the tim: and the tires were faetened to the rin by a strip of muslin wiach came out with the free edges from the under ale of the tires. These ends were wteppeil around the eim and vulcanized to A. The linen completely covered th , rim. effectually concea!Ing tt mews''. Tires such as these were used for a couple of years. They weighed from twelve to fifteen pounds a pair, 'ad a puncture in one of them was abtut as serious a matter as a broken frane Is I . I FOR U FURL: CAMPAIGNS. Effective VI ay f or 5o1110,1 to Keel, Per. aottaiitie. 4)01 of Colltics. - To what am 1 indebted for the honor of this call?\ It was Mrs. Mary Ellen Itickette who spoke. She held in her hand the card of Mrs. Samantha Jenkinson, which had just been laid on her desk by the office girl, for the card was followed almost Instantly by the entrance of the person whose name it bore. There was really no necessity for the use of the card, either, for the two had frequently met. Mrs. Ricketts was the candidate for Congress on the Republican ticket, while Mrs. Jenkinson was the Demo- cratic nominee. Under the circum- stances it was natural for her to be surprised at receiving a call from her opponent. \I came to see you on a small matter of business,\ replied the visitor. \Pray proceed.\ \I have learned from good authority that your managers are bent upon a campaign of personalities, and that they intend to give to the press certain slan- derous gossip about me intended to in- jure my candidacy.\ The speaker paused, and Mrs. Rick- etts said interrogatively:* \Well?\ \Well echoed Mrs. Jenkinson, \we must kep personalities out of the cam- paign.\ \We must, must we?\ \We must.\ Mrs. Ricketts sneered. Mr. Jenkinson waxed wroth. \Look here, Mary Ellen Ricketts,\ she exclaimed, \don't you dare to turn up your snub nose at me, now.\ \Samantha Jenkinson,\ retorted Mrs. Ricketts, \my nose is not a snub, and don't you dare to presume to dictate what my managers shall or shall not do in this campaign.\ \We'll see about that. Mary Ellen Ricketts, you were engaged to my hus- band In your younger days, a good many years ago.\ \I'm not nearly as old as you, I'd have you know.\ \You are!\ \I'm not, you insulting thing!\ \You are!\ \I'm not!\ \We will pass that point, but I want to say that when I married my husband all your love -letters were still in his possession, and I have them now.\ \You spiteful, thing!\ \Many a good laugh I've had eyed them. What a perfect goose you were!\ \I just hate you, so there!\ \And I merely wish to add that on the very first publication of a personal- ity about me in your newspaper organs I shall print in the Daily Bugle every single one of your mushy, lackadaisical epistles. Do you understand?\ The twe women glared at each other a half minute, and then Mrs. Samantha Jenkinson withdrew, leaving Mrs. Mary Ellen Ricketts deep in thought. The campaign was condueted without any personalities.-Harper's Bazar. THREE GREAT ACTRESSES, They Are Sarils Hermit:snit, Helen yodjeskts nod 1:leonora Duse. There are perhaps only three living actresses now in active life to whom the title \great - would be applied by common consent. These are Sarah Bernhardt, Helena Modjcska and Ele- onora Duse. Janauschek, alas! a e l i though still upon the stage, belongs IP the past, while E:len Terry, with all her dainty skill and radiant charm, has not yet reached those heights to which genius alone can aspire. Each of them excels in ways peculiar tc herself. Bernhardt, after carrying off all the laurels offered re the artificial and de- clamatory school of French tragedy, has devoted her maturest powers to the il- lustration of the most violent passions conceivab'e by morbid imagination, tier achievemehts in this direction have been extraordinary, and her dramatic genius cannot be disputed. but some of her latest triumpbs have been won in defiance of most of the laws of nature and many of the rules of true art. Mod- jeska, if less potent in the interpreta- tion of the fiercest emotions than her French rival, need fear no comparison with her in poetic tragedy; while in the field of poetic comedy she is unrivaled. Her performance of Juliet, Rosalind and Ophelia are almost ideally beauti- ful. Eleonora Duse, whose fame has blazed up with meteoric suddenness. its pre-eminent above al actresses of her time for versatility, that rare gift of Impersonation still rarer among women than among men, which can conceal the real beneath the assumed identity with- out resorting to the common expedients of theatrical disguise. The phrase that retch or such a part VIILR asp:tined by this or that actor is heard every day. It is a convenient, conventional and meaninglees expression. In the case of Dusc it is used correctly anti signifies juet what has happened. About the American Wheelwornan. Ella Hepworth Dixon. an English writer, Informs the English readers of the Lattice' Pictorial that in bicycling \the American ladies would appear to affect a partictilarly manly costume with tight breeches and flynway coat. For what the American young woman pleases to do she does. and there ift no one -at least of the other sex - who is audacious enough to say her nay. lie may geumble and sniff In his offices and chars, but the American father and hus- band is too well brought up to permit himself an opinion ht home on any- thing which coneerneu15Ww11 inkind.\ Rung tier Life Song 'Didn't you think that the fmprann sung 'The Mistakes of My Life Wore Been Many' with a good deal of feeling this morning?\ - There is no reason wh)sb i shouldn't; she's been married three times. - -Truth ANTARCTIC MYSTERIES. A fleglort Where Mummer sever hosilos and no F xolurer (ions. The Antarctic is it region of eternal winter and unnaelting snow, where— so far as is known --not a single plant finds life within the ciiele and where never a living creature roams. The zoologist is not drawn to the south- ern circle as he is to the northern, and yet the syttraetions for him are great, because they have all thu charms of the unknown. It is be- lieved that only a few of \the hardiest birds build in a few of the 'sheltered corners of the Antarctic, 'but who knows? eVho can nary that deep within those nwful solitudes may not be revealed the mystery of the life of the fur seal when he vanishes from the waters of the North Pecitic? Or that on some Antarctec continent or island may not be found the priceless remnant of the great tunic tribe? We know not, at any rate, what riches or poverty may be there until we go to see. And no- body has yet gone to see -beyond the fringe. It is a curious fact that no one has ever wintered within the Antarotic, many as have been the expeditions and ships' companies which, compul- sorily or voluntarily, have wintered in the Arctic. There has been no need to do 80 for: there has been no , possible goal beyond, such as India, which fleet led our mariners into the Arctic; noscientifle romance such as has characterized the quest for the northern pole. And yet another thing differenti- ates the Arctic from the Antarctic. In the North there is -unless Dr. Nansen in grieviously mistaken -a pole sur- rounded by water. In the South there is a pole surrounded by land --a polar basin as opposed to a polar con- tinent. While tho books and essays, the theories and journals, which have been published concerning the Arctic region, would fill a library, a handful tee volumes contains all that has ever been printed of records in the •Antare- THE PROFESSOR'S CHICKENS, Ills Knowledge of !Poultry Farming Was Rat her limited. This may not be new, but it was new to. the reporter who overheard it on a Boston car, so , it is likely that there are others who have never heard it The young man who told it was evidently :a collegian, as was his companion: \I heard a good one on Professor —, of Andover,\ lie said. \What was it?\ queried thaother. \Well you know lie was married during the winter and went to house- keeping just outside the village. Last spring he thought he would add a few hens to his stock; he already had a dog. Ile set a couple of hens, and in time had two large broods of chickens. lie was very proud of them, but in a week or so the chickens began to die. Ile called in a neigh- • her to look at the chickens and offer advice. They were eertainle a- pretty scaly lot of chickens that the neigh- bor yiewed. They were skinny leak- ing and apparently without ambition. 'What did yen feed them?\ asked the neighbor, after a brief survey. \'Feed themte responded the pro- fessor, as though be didn't hear aright: 'Why. I don't feed them anything. I thought the old hens had milk enough for them.'\ 110w They Got Skulls. In one of his introductory lectures, in a recent semestetethe late Professor Ilyrti addressed his hearers as fol- lows: \Gentlemen you must get pos- session of skulls. It is impossible to study anatomy unless you have skulls. Each of you must find means, ant' means, to get a skull.\ On the f lowing. morning he entered his au : torium with a sorrowful face. - Gen- tlemen,\ he began, \I fear some of you misunderstood Inc. Yon certain- ty have left no means untried to se- cure skulls. I noticed that my hand- some collection was almost depleted this morning.\ The students hal taken him at his word and indite:el the sereante to divide out the skulls of Ilyrtl, which formed one of the chief attractions to medical mol in th famous, teacher's house. RIngleall Curtain role. In the ringless curtain pole made by an English firm there is an under- cut groove in the under side of the pole, in which work a set of metal eyes, which hang out of the opening of the groove, and roll in it on small rollers working in the undercut por- tion of groove. It is ingenioua and simple, and certainly seems like- ly to work inure snmethly than the ordinary curtain ring Take Care Of your physical health. Build up your systeni tone your stomach, increase your appets ,e, enrich your blood, and prevent Manage by taking ood's Sarsaparilla The One True Blood Purities, 11; 6 fort& Hood's Mx are mild and efferttve. erc. aelefe•••••••••••enelen.n4440111•44.1100.4111.111114 Go to I California in a 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 Personally Conducted Excursions to California, yvhich 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 J. FRANCIS, (.% 1'. A., Omaha, Neb. sass. •• • %• • • _40 • 0 . 0 • • R o ll • • • _a • • le • • I • • % • •• • I 0 0 1 00 4 • • • •••.••• ••• • 4 1; • • ••• 0 -4 70 _in, • • 0:0 0 . • • • • • • e go s • • • • • • • • 111' •-• • S. • et e. •-• • • • Nis eSes of•Vd• • • ••• ••• •••$•' ••••••••- iv • • • • •••,• Pains in your Back, your Mus- cles, your Joints, your Head, and all diseases of Impure Blood, are caused by sick kidneys. . Sick kidneys can be cared, strengthened, re- vitalized by Ditllobb's para • s 4 • .44 4 , o lf • • • • \4 0 • • • • SO • • • • • II • _de • 0 • ••• • • • ••• -• 0 • s II • • 1 1 : - 11 ••• •-•• • • 0 • _•_ They relieve the pains, purify the blood, cure' all diseases of which sick kid- neys are the cause. At all drug - gists, for Sec. per box, er mailed postpaid on re- eeipt of price. Write for pamphlet. eiOBB'S MEDICINE CO., CHICAGO. SAN FRANCISCO. • • • Tflr: .4ERNIO'CM2 CO, does half the world's buninesa,lweanse It hat reduced the met ol wind power to I II what It wee. It has many bratu-h nuusss. and supplies RA gYKKIII and repairs at ur 1,0, It can and duos furnish a better article for Iron :none, than others. It malice Putnping and wooed. Oxlvantsed-after rotripletIon WItidnuila Tiltilk and Flied Steel I ossers, Steel Bias Sa• Frames, Stowl Seed cutters and Feud , ,ronlhe 1. 1111 applleathai It will lien. whe cuose artl , les that It will furnish until 01 try 141 Si I t the tyntal Innen. It 1190 make* I auks and emote of all kluds Send tor ratelugue. Factory: 1215. Rockwell nal Fillmore Streets. r.ttiCalw SOUTH J!cQflhID1 WEST T1Ih)UU11I. I t - Ion , t f • r t • • • In he ,V 4,4 5.1 tho• • taller* of never known. Mill , :tu ars sul tii,ndanr, of g no.l enre ante' for tuti.. an • 11, oll•r4 giving fnd deserhpll the Rich Muir -\1 • rift entl A gt lentlioral Len , 16 s o uth wa Ut,./hono, welt• to J1(1111iN 7 PIURDIV • of th• Missouri Land and 1.II • StoCk Comp. any. Newt n t-0,5rI. WHY DON'T YOU BUY CORN? I ' • • , n4 •thl elite in Int for • • , , log ninney orb Ti,. pro• ohn.e. , , • • ••11 tnamtne. Informa- tion ehrl .n11E. C. Y. WintLi 1 14441.• file440. Wta L AILS. liesst c‘rtsgb Syrup. 'Curter. t,•.1. Und In (tine 0,1 t , rouglate. L. II. U. Ito. 49. iti95. CM - Kindly Mention This Paper When iNz.te to an Advertser Y iL 11•0011111111110001000110000 0111 • 0 • 041001114110 Bubbles or Medals. \Best sarsaparillas.\ WEen yeti the* of it hew contradictory that term is. For there can be only on beat in anything -one be -,t sarsaparilla, as there is one highest motwtain, one longest river, one deepest ocean. And that best sarsaparilla is—? .. There's the rub I You can measure mountain height and ocean rh•ptli, but how test sarsaparilla? You could, if you were chemiets. But then, do you need to test it? The World's Fair Committee tested it, -and thoroughly. They went behind the label on the bottle. What did this sa , siparilla test result in? Every malze of sarsaparilla shut out of the Fair, exCept. Ayer's. So it was that Ayer's was the only sarsaparilla admitted to the World's Fair. The committee found it the ,best. They had no room for anything that was not the best. And as the best, Ayer's Sarsaparilla received the medal and awards due its merits. Remember the word \ best \ is a bubble aity breath ( an blow ; Intl there are pins to prick such bubbles. Those others are blowing more \best sarsaparilla\ bubbles since the World's Fair pricked the old ones. True, but Aycr's Sarsaparilla has the medal. The pin that scratches the medal proves it gold. The pin that pricks the bubble proves it wind. We point to medals, not bub- bles, when we say : The best sarsaparilla is Ayer's. i t • a - eee'