Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, February 6, 1893, Page 5

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- North Dakota, the Sissetons and Wahpetc THE AFRICAN OF OWYHEE Now York Experts Expose the Bogns Idaho Diamonds. WITH KIMBERLEY SPRINKLED BORTZ Reducing Indian Man asn Wage bla—-Wa Gold Reservatl Lar Ocean Sands for Western News. Efforts are now being @lamond fieids made to exploit the of Tdaho, notwithstanding the conclusive evidence furnished terested partics that the alleged are quartz crystals. Idaho dropped Owhee, but the b endeavoring to work the other lot of the alleged eelved in New York r ntly According to the Sun “they were diamonds, sure enough They are not big diamonds of the sort that are cut and mounted in gold still they are diamonds. That w encouraging were it not for experts in New York City say mot come originally from Idaho art of this country. The bo the unmistakable produ berley mines in Afri There ave four dia ere sent 1o J. D. Y by disin diamonds newspapers have mers are quietly cred An diamonds were re 18, ones did nds in the I errington Broadwa of have Yerringt accurate eral mont which the [ 's, who lared projeptars n thfe diamond basin near B diamond was shown to New Y who said it was a Kimberle mot shake the faith of Mr. Ye responaents, who thought there might have been some mistake about the finding of that particular stone. So two or three days ago they sent on four more, which they were sure had been found in the bed of the Snake river, in the diamond basin They ¢ Mr. Yoerr t to Herman 1 expert in ro them with real diamor known dian; b said b xperts This did st rrin e from Africa. rned these st y of 21 John sfre stones, Mr. Levy rewurned report that they the fragmentary tz, but that they could n the bed of any river, and that stakable evidence of having ¥ in South Africa. f nes over the 1 of Bortz is and is u It is worth “How do y found in Afr stones were ain," said Mr. Levy never make a mistake a Kimber stone beyond v doubt. 1am willing to stake my professional reputation that those stones d at Kimberley. Mr. Yerrington's o told him that they we in the bed of the Suake rive statement s ridiculous. Diamonds found in the beds of rivers and in the soil along their banks invariably show smooth faces and a more lar crystallization. The aiamonds submitted by Mr. Yerrington had shattered faces and little crystallization They bore positive marks of having been blasted from the rocks. Here, I can_show you hundreds like them in this box of Kim berley bortz. Mr. Y gton's diamonds were just as rough and irregular as any of these.” “How, then, did they Boise City?" hondents und The come to be found at Salted Section. “You will have for yourself,’ ‘won’t undertake diamond basin that ' have to answer that question aid Mr. Levy, smiling to say that the Boise C is saltc Al T will say n and examined every sione which hus reached town from tk egion, and I have yettosec a genuine diamond which could have ¢ ted there. Four Jots have come K The first which arrived five or six months ago, contained one stone which was as certainly a Kimberley diamond as those whic this box. The next lot ftones, all of which quartz Then ca which Mr. Fox examined These w arrivals which were made public vere soft quartz crys. tals. Lastcame these frag of Kim- berley bortz. Those alleged diamond fields have been known for several months. If they have any genuine s why don’t we sec them? 1 was to have gone out to examine the fields, but 1 thouzht 1 would ‘wait developments. in them now The general belief in Maiden lane the ficlds have been “salte Kimberley bortz. Euough of this bought for §10,000 to ate th is that could be a substantial diamond boom if judiciously distributed in | laces to which dia: irected. T nond hunters could be e usual object-of such a scheme 1s to sell the lands at high figures. s sales of lands in the Idaho basin have be reported recently In Maiden lane the dealers also think it significant that the company which has been formed to exploit the alleged sell its stock at §10 a sh The; if the discoveries were g the would be held at #100 or #1,000 a share, and The company is send- ing circulars all over the co its stock. It is capitalized say that 1 §1,000,000. INDIAN PROGRE: rvations ‘Wage Worker. With the passage of a pending bill in con gress ratifying the purchase of the Cheroke: outlet, the government will have completed an extraordinary s of Indian tlon reductions and added millions 1o the public domain During the last four years great tracts have been bought by the government of the Sioux in Dakota, the Chippewas in Minne sota, the-Crows in Montana, the Colvilles in Washington, the Fort Berthold Reducing R st Indians in in South Dakota, and the Idaho. In Indian other acquired from th E E s, the Cheyern and Arapahoes, the Cherokees. the Choctaws and Chickasaws, and the Kiowas, Comauches and Apaches, be sides smallor ones from the Wichitas, t Jowas, the Kickapoos, the Tonkawas, the Sacs and Foxes, the Pottawatomies and th, Absentee Shawnees. The land already finally par the Inc g apparently 25,000,000 acre: exocuted, und only awaliting congress, will apparentl more than 3,000,000 square miles. First o loases of rights possessed of Indians, these sales may the rod men §30,000,000 Land in Severaity. During the Commissioner ) livered to 1¢ Covur d'A tory snes in with by the approval the total or fully includi by vari have bro res ught to last y reported upon by an patents have been de Poncas, 108 Towas, 42 Wyan Ottawas, 68 Modocs, 25 Papu mde Indians, and one its. Patents were pre 5,321 Cheyennes and Ara. , 1,805 Pottawatomies und 561 Abs tee Shawnees, making mor anents also had been finishe 879 Sioux at Crow Creek and 404 elsewhere; for 70° Toukaw and pewas, and perhaps others g b upon the Warm Spring, Ykawma, loqui, PPottawatomi Kickapoo, lowa Umatilla aid Siletz, Nez Perce, and Devil's Lake rescrvati Finally, allotments had been approved and patents were preparing for 1,530 Oneidas, 76 Sucs and Foxes, 1338 Sissetons and Wahpetons, 115 of the Prairie Band, 45 Eastern Snawnees, and 302 Senecas To these should be ad allotments in Californla and Oregou 0 non-reservatiou In dians We find, therefore, W that within a period of four years chiefly withia less than half that time, 3 ullotnents in severalty have Sctually beeu wade 0 ludiaus, and 7,248 pat- | lice privates, commar fact that | | passed it by i I have lost all my faith | with cheap | stock | ntry advertising | The Red Man asa | | Yac | veyed runs from Salt Lake meanwhile, | as tribes | | and allow it ents delivered to them, while many others are in course of preparation. Indians as Wage Workers. The development of the severalty ment system. with its accompanying ¢ ship, makes it well 1o know how far the red men can live by their work. They bave now. and will long have, their income fr funds, with governme uts to it in ¥ W » kinds. ¥ capacity of Indian to earn b under the cond ms of civili lon be a question of growis por On this point the inte ¢ statemen that duriy ar th ns were aid for s plies furnished by the rly one-half more than for 1800, For pr hay and her sup bought from they r ved $250.000; for hauling supplies, $105,000; for cuting and b ng logs, $145,000; for serv i empl it ugencies, $I38.000: as [ o £100,000: as additional farmers, 12,000 vation police, #118 000 as interpreters, 0. The amount 030,000, £042,000 in 1590 The variety of rnished at the agencies is als here are 850 po ers ; there 123 judges, 63 erks, 2 ists, 2 physicians, 2 assistant physi 3 blacksmith arpenters, 74 farm 1 herders,and wheelwrights akers, ox drivers and so'on. In all s which m eir 1, e duce et 18 rese & ainst noti Ar cop; cians, various numbers of saw butchers, tinners, wagon m teamsters, stable men © are 1,500 plas filled by India £40.000 1 ON THE COLUMBIA, ercial nee. and comm Aspects of its ercial as- » Columbia river d mbia commerce nportant tha ter in the ( is an f the all o alifor the sums to passable for the deer the m that prevent from the to the broad im portant strean = cifi comt Il st —mo 1, savs a w t has which ha: gov itrance dray tions fart continu: produc The river nward s, and t obstr its mouth an ¢ it has n river, wi the bay-like its dis: rgetic who e Purposc of as: y did exist the conviuced that such :eta, & Spanish_explorer » and named it “Es nada de Asunci ssumption inlet.) Although wde no attempt 1o enter it, he gave it as his opinion that a river existed there, and Spanish maps thereafter marked the mouth ver there and called it “Encenada de Heceta” and the 2 A few days after Va u disag pointme: in th American_ship Columbia, on the 11th day of May, crossed the bar and chored in the broad estuary ten miles above mained in the river nine days, ascend it twenty-five miles. bestowed upon it the name of his vessel, gave the two ca names they bear. fur trading voy belongs the ho: visited rtaining and ay firmly was not the case. He Robe to an American Details of the Enterprise italists. have organized 1from the sz of Tacoma Cap- ma capi pany to extract g a com- nds of the an along the coast of Washington The e has bought from Judge Briscoe of Oy , Pacific county, the right to extract gold from the sand in Beard's Hc low, near Ilwaco, and has secured similar rights on other parts of the Pacific coast, Gold has been found in the sand of the ocean beach at many places from the Straits an de F to southern California, but only in occas ches is it in sufficient quantities to make it pay for working. 1t is d to come not from the land, but to be up from some hidden reef in the bed ¥or many years the Indians have u in the habit of washing gold from the id spitat the entrance of Port Angeles harbor he beach om the side of Washin, *n thor was f v therc a, one below the surface and nine fuches th the other thirty inches below M\!u'u'uh hes thick, Platin ) found in’ paying contracts to give gold extr: where i 10 be two un pan operation wre be fornia, wi exclusive r hern shis have L been of miles long: of Sea s at the na bay, Or and of th rsous Point at th entrance of beach Pete | harbor. Striking at a Coal Monopoly. Salt Lakers have taken looking to securing per: t relief from exactions of th al monopoly rporation of t tailro decisive a the Articles of in & Northeaster mpany have been filed. The purpose of the pany is to build a road to Coalville. The rout directly s towns of Franklin local o Lake as sur the smeltin, then swir canon to to Coalyi creck where and ast Bench up M wn Sily will s to th | is reached down which road will r its terminus, is reached he road, in itse while of local nada > t pr what its reall Salt Lake Trit sclares | forerunner of her trausce and will, inciden rout the coul which is now flourishing in that give th ata price v reach of ithin the Y the | Chi ready hasar is now enzaged ix Denver fc which nston in the y thro our agh that « lsome consideratic city, which is de i upon as the iinus of the Northwestern, From h t is expected the Salt Lake & Los Angeles road will be built to Los Augeles. Cal’, thus adding another trauscontinental w0 the railroad systems of the country for a the use of it pfinite Nebraska and Superior's new Nebraskans. starch factory is about ready to start up. Eight new school buildings in Sheridau county last year. Tom Ebright, printer, gambler and burg- lar, escaped from jail at Gen ud no trace of him can be foun A Cus cou t year from were erac mer's wife cleared 8254 gzs and poultry, ba- hold work < was fined $100 at liquor to minors serve out his sen #3 a da) says that a being This lirumn Bow without a lice tence in jail at the rate The Superior Journal amount of shelled corn is the city for shipment now vast hauled inte last year the yield was abuadant, and of tne finess | he leaped over the back railing, n Chalk | % uality. Tt has boen remarked many at the corn is the most perfact and largest | and bost formed and fullest ears ever seen | in any county Prarie firos have done considerable dam age in Holt county, southwest of O*Neill. It s reported that the Frank Anderson ranch = southwest of O'Neill, was burned ) cattlo driven into town nty commiss s of ympromised the suit ex-county cl for shortage dis by amount received from than half the amount found snty from them, Ex-Clerk Ham mond Clap pays the sum of #400.77, ex-( J. N, Thomp i #425.68 and the b | men of J. N. Thom £1,000 an' she hollers W' gots out, an a woman who is de pardner o' the villain puta de wife's cloak omy and de villain he squeezos her, and, do stonecutter | thought it was his wife, and hully ge what a racket he rafsdd with the villain! Dey had a serap and'e villain shot de old man, and de vilin'e wife cha de pistols soze dey'd tink ‘twas de sto cutter what did de killin', and den de 80, ad de itter off ter jug But before dey goes ¢ necutter pints his finger at de vi [ innercent. Dere assas tion!" ferson nst thre overy of the Hale The Mlicinls is {ue the ¢ rks ston, it an e stands de ve say the at all man that was taken to 1 feller what did ¢ r see him an’ tells him he runs away wid his wife an' money, an' ¢ stonecutter he shakes his b in de other feller's face an’ sez he will kill him when he gets An' purty soon dere is is an exple de hull prison blows up and takes but dat was gro W, was some love-makin’ in de me a pain. Den a feller b money from de villain an’ goes out an' it all, an' he was ins when de stonc did n Nuggets of Western News. Wyoming's fish hatchery is nu half-a-million young Saratoga, Wy., is looking | the Chicago & Norihwest road Speaking of local pride Sun emulates our own “Stand by ‘er, U'ys. The Green Mountain Monarch Mining com pany, capital §1,000,000, has been incorporated in Wyoming. The company will operate in Crook count Three or four million sunk in the E as if it will ure of the San Fr gant styl panies bined rec y toward branch nxi for a out in Cheyenne, the n an o elder and shouts, o ive rows a loses his b run in de stoneco dressed up o dey won't kn he h game of cards wid an’ de \l‘f n cheats an' de grabs de stakes an' keeps ‘em Dinny ‘Och, but sh dot these furrin th' like An Dinny De er wl dollars have been k Hills tin mines. 1t looks stay there, awaiting the pl Welsh tin syndica iciscans are being held up in ele by the electric light and gas com Two ele light companies com ntly and signalized the union by doubling rates. The \ny is keep- ing well up with the pi Charley Rainey scout affd inte scou command and v did vali nock war He leave and Hully gc Frank of Dou las, Wy nds with dispatched with an ax me out of the melee with a disable and much torn cuti Drov lions are ing sheep h sction wor d child who has once Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup, h in its pr i tiin s at the Theater. The boys who had witnessed shows from the gallery of the wds chuckied over the paradoxical fact that in coming down one story they had risen a dozen rungs in the social ladder. and the girls, well, they laid their wraps of the front railing of the balcony with an air that ing hat they had been sitting in those ver, ts all the of their youn In one thing they did set an examy for their older sisters who freq the theater a hat that the smallest boy could not see | over The way into the s} They shed wror f a wife conspira ey of an hurled ' out villain, stonecutter e it's s do what ) be to eng sreed Indian they he fort ha time a famous died at was at one a red-headed had his head ht ter see n anothe er asked him if ke pork. Den de itter a his wife dey went on de deck, an’ she she's all right an’ never away the villain, De stonecutter he don't no sto 1 what she vi woman comes_alon s de snap away. Den de stonecutter hugs his wife like as her bor uld crack. Den de ship was hauled up to de roof an’ dere was another ship wid a feller in fr wid a dark lantern what dey call a searchl An' dere A man an'a woman down in de Hully gee! how de kids whoo! ) when dey see dat I tought sure Humpy Casey'd jur de railin “We beootif s a ship a s seasick an | run wid take ain’s whole an e s W tried th | cannot say enc t Bo Hartfc o1 p over sh lookin' it's at three t and the sord an’ falls dov wants to ma swears he out, nu; stonecutter comes in and the s ded, every of them entered rit of the play was a caution. f sympathy over the who was the victim of shared tl ufferings y" accused husband; they denunciatory hiss the vil- lains: th roared awthe or less | funny remarks of the comedian, threw kisses at the ingenue and got excited over the startling scenic transforma- tions, The burning of the prison in the second act was t0o much for young Frank But- ler. The moment Frank w the blaze of red fire, followed by a collapsing wall, seized arm and am anarkists wife al ays de e 10 save ) save tears goe T8 ¢ an'd t > r's what 1 ter to an'de nun she d his life w she sk he **Och, th’ poor crayt} ale nun, Dinny aw wor the anyhow. Well an' den de villain was * thing come out all r an’ his wife de more " soul t his life ' wor she She lain, play actin’ Was more scraj killed_an' fer de stonec When we was goin’ out his smal brother candy an’ an or had a good time. i age yez had a fine time, Dinn) me boy. Bring in an arm o' wood now, an’ don't forget to say yer prayers afore ye go to bed by the quick, George, de house is Frank from and it was only and the boys began | youngste: mbed hauled his little A policeman prevented rushing out of the house, when the curtain fell to cheer that the back into his seat and brother in after him. Dinny McFadden kept tabs on the play from beginning uumi and it was at the an n fireside 1 night that he gave d mother an account of what USRI Disordered liver set right with Beecham's Pills e Colonization. The Jewish Colonization association’s first report of the progress thus far made in settling Jewish refugces, efly from Russia, in hospitavle lands, shows { that up to the 20th of last Septembe e 0,000 of the original capital of ,000,000 had been expended, half of it in the purchase of land and the other half in the settlement of families on tk land. The colonies have chiefly hees established in the Argentine republi One has been formed in Canada. In all nt of the play could convey in a half | 330,000 acres of land have been purchased | hour’s talk. ‘De Mirror of Ireland’ ye ' and about 1,000 families have bee tuk me ter see last year wasn't in it wid | t The council of the de play we see dis afternoon.” tion believes th, undertaking “What war the name o' the thing, made self-supporting and Dinny?” asked Mrs. McFadden, as she ablished on a financially sound i a plate and d it on the sink. Five hundred families will henceforth be De Vindette said Dinny, after a | settled eve year, and it moment's thought that when the success of the **Och, an’ shure that must be Frinch,” | clear there will be a large emigration of ventured the widow self-supporting famil Each of the ‘Naw. said Dinny, with | families settled by association re- |'u air of a person who spoke positively: | ceives 100 acres and £160 for “but T wuz n' ter tell ye uv the time | plant, ete., which they 2 ) we had. ht ter sec de gang in | repay in ten years, ( mment is de Times “Dey filled up de hull | that. while all this i nt, place, an’ every one got a green ticket." | Hirsch's noble scheme can make sc n' yez } cen tickets, Dinny a perceptible impression on_the ‘We did. Jewish distress in Rus: It w “Oh, but it's proud -ye'd it is urged, an emigration of : avick to be a year mun]y to keep down the natural n ticket increment of population, if cale Y1s, an' what's more. only at 1 per cent per annum. band marchin’ forninst us all de way ‘round de postoffice, up Main strect and down Church street to de opry house. An’ ye'd ought ter see de people on de walks, an’ dey lookin' at us, an' we | n' all de time." Praises be t oodness Dinn it's proud yer ould mother'd be to | ye marching in’ to the chune o' music. An’ ye tell me th’ Eyetalian play do be better nor the wan wt Dublin Dan | w Will yez tell me about it?" ell, ther war a chap what was a 20, an' he made his pile a-cuttin' atoos out o' stone. An' he give the mey to his father-in-law, who put it in safe. Den it was stole by the villain, A girl kissed a chap she thought was her wd, and then k d herself because she made a mistake an’ let on she didn't like it, whe the time she wanted ter do it again, n' the fe ller what she kissed said had a cinch hurt him, d'ye think , yer bet he liked it what stole de mo scutt Jewish . me boy."” said Mrs, McFadden d a kettle of boiling water | into the dishpan after supp an’ what kind uv a time did yez be havin' at the theayter the afternoo: “Out o' sight,” said Dinny with an air that expressed more than the advance be is ted to made ely mass of uld tak: ought to be, ing into the theayter wid a we had a Cc a mule that ¢ u[ a luh at the breake 1n\ mine, the men, says a Scr but | minute or s0 before the \\hhll. WS at stamp, but does not refuse to cars. The instant the whistle however, Mame comes to a dead stop, and no matter in what part of the yard is working she cannot be coaxed ed to pull a pound until after has had her dinner. Then she works as faithfully as an ox until just before whistle is going to sound the time blast, when she brays again does not paw or stamp as at noon She won't stir a peg after the first of the am whistle, and the < better than 1o try waul the trip of cars by The n k S S time that to bray a whistle pull the sounds, D. but time toot driver boy to e het whipping her e track of the 1in two ye two beforé or night Dinny? Den’ de tr > has not fail mi or blows noon ute the She Sympa— Bah! A woman doesn't deserve any sympathy, when the knowing better 1s 5o easy and the doing better is so cheap. Think of inhaling this steam and these odors from a tub of dirty clothing; perhaps from the sick room, perhaps much soiled from honest labor. Think of the weak lungs, and throat, the germs of disease, etc, etc. It'sall so unneces. sary and so ineffective. The clothes are not as clean (surely not as pure) as they ought to be, when the work is done. Boil your clothes in Pearline and water—directions on each package—every grocer has it—and germs cannot live, dirt cannot stay, and the hard work, the drudgery, is done away with. this is as g--ml as" or ‘‘the same as Pearline.” IT'S JOu an imitation, be honest—send if back, £ JAMES PYLE, New York. //‘/ Pzdllers and some unscrupulous grocers will tell you ' | but lot o' | >’ de teayter every one of us got & box o' | nge an’ ye kin bet we all | basis. | believed | scheme is | buildings, | Baron | 0,000 Jews | coal | A | noon Mame begins to bray and paw and | the | quitting | 'nt'\r\r brays, the workmen say, oxcopt | when she thinks it {s nearly time to quit work for her dinner or supper Mame also knows when comes, as the workmen ascertained three times last yoar came nec y one Sunday | to do s extra work in and the was hitche in the h ad to put mday morning particle in her ‘n’. 1 on & Sunday she wouldn’t even stra nees worked all right day. On a July Sunday morning the men hitched her to a trip again, but she couldn’t be conxed to pull an ounce, and they came to the conclusion that Mame was a s pbatarian. Since then they haven't attempted to make the mule vork on Sun I knew May said the foreman, | never hitch 1 One day he and she went ahead heard the third link | been used to hearing i und she came toa heard the t n't budge an inch the wked the hind car ight along as though s the 1 to n trit wouldn't take a st hor in the barn \l mne went On lnim' ing They tried her morning ' ) 18U, she ht her, told the boy more than three itched her to four all v till she click. She only two dead stop the ird click, rad links | she was RS- al— Knights of 'wo Grips, wager an oyster said one of a g upon I said thre of the one it was easy distance ing tally Here said the depor dey retired comes fir our the cial om mmer nr apitallists and pri at the | entrance ““Look sharp, now, " said the man p ly three, will y »d away from the 1 wrote the t ¢ ored with the | ciety men.” patronage — That Was Diffe A furnace able arming thorou house such as you hu! to give one, suit- 4 ton-room e and Satisfe will cost you guaran- | an't be done | fori e’ Customer dwelling. 1 occupied by a tenant. Dealer—Yes, sir. { cellent one I can sell | Chicago Tribune. THE FACT That AYER'S Sarsaparilla CURES OTHERS of rofulous Diseases, ruptions, Boils, Eczema, Liver and Kidney Diseases, Dyspepsia, Rheu- matism, and Catarrh should be con- vincing that the same course of treatment WILL CURE you. All that has been said of the wonderful cures effected by the use of AYER'S Sarsaparilla during the past 50 years, truthfully applies to-day. Itis, inevery sense, The Superior Medicine. Its cur tive properties, strength, effect, and flavor are always the same ; and for whatever blood diseases AYER'S Sarsaparilla is taken, they yield to this treatment. When you ask for AYER'S - Sarsaparilla don’t be induced to purchase any of the worthless substitutes, which are mostly mixtures of the cheapest in- gredients, contain no sarsaparilla, have no uniform standard of ap- pearance, flavor, or effect, are blood- purifiers in name only, and are of- fered to you because there is more profit in selling them. Take AYER'S Sarsaparilla AyerkCo. [ ; Price §1; Curesothers willcure you I don't want it for n aw—want it for a house Here is a most ¢ you for 897.5 lnjw. by Dr. . C. well, Mnu . ' IR R W, BAILEY | h Filled Wita b7 vas toa Teeth Extracted Without Pain or Danger. i A Full Sel of Teels oo Ruhber for $3.9) Perfoct 8t caarantsed. Teeth extractsd moriIng, Now 0nes jaserted i the sveaing o e tee specimens of Flexible Kl Platy Allwork warranted us represented Office Third FloorPaxton 2o i Telephono 1085, 16tk ana Faraim Sty Take elcvator or stairway from 16 What Brand is on gour Calr? 1817 THE (S e 2] It ought to be, if you wear a 25 cent collar; for this brand of col- lars is the very best value that can be had fur 25 cents. | 50.— | Keen buyers want our Dress Goods Sunday | ), and™| 3 e we are handlers of the finest qual- ities but because our bar- gains are known to be gen- uine. We have too many dress goods and you will find a splendid assortment on our 50¢ counter, all wool st 50¢, 54 in sh cheviot at worth $1 within | an experiment. It passes the Rheu One or two sw Bince standard prepar the market. the mails, on. ndling ¢ the introduction of to cure rheumat ne of t1 5108 is not a ma X offered to the Lx.\h for t for R umatic diathesis r its present pr b Jonger ti tioner who for many Lat he had cowe to 1t is absolutely hur bination. It does oue thing aud one and sciatica and all the pretense Valuable Treatise on Rhen stamps, A Afl.\lc'phum: c It has be un prietorship, th am e regard aless, both as to i cure. mati Ne Haven, Conn, atic remedies of more or le iatica a n befor 1t is the strictly s 1 as havi Bov 150c 50c © or class of diseases is never ze of experiment in becoming an acknowledged or 1o merit are on are offered encakingly through valuable specific remedy other pre- and ne Much utes" irulgia have a red. ll, & counter-irri cific remedy ced from the welve 1 all discases which pro 1 for more than linm ation of & m t us o specialist in rhe years ice for cal practi- umatic troubles power over them. ts and as t iraculo diex —it “knocks out” rheumatism, neuralgia g almost m al ing: o their com- m and Nouralgia to any address for . b-lo-pho-ros sold by all druggists at $1 per ottle ; 6 for &G LIKE A GOOD TEMPER SHEDS A BRIGHTNESS EVERY'WHERE. BEWARF OF FRAUD. fusist upon having i Wi nnl GLAS SHOES. None gens uine withour W, L. D\ name aud price stampod o5 bottoms Look {orit wiion yau buy, \ Sold everywhere, sW. L, DOUGLAS A sewed shoe th:\t will not rip; Calf, seamless, smooth it ish and sold atthe price. s ide, more comfortable, y other shoe ever I (,udsuuatom- dur; iverys l\l made shoes costing from §4q w The following are of the same lug,h standard of merit: $3.50 Police, ¥ 4 Letter-Carriers, $2.50, $2.25 and $2.00 for Working Mez, $2.00 and $1.75 for, Youths and Boys. e | LSS, $2.50 and 2.00 Dongola, $1.75 for Misses. IT IS A DUTY yon owe yourselt to get the best value a money. Boconomize in your footwear by purchasing A L. Douglas Shoes, Toprosent the bedt valas &t the prices advertised es thousands can tes- Willelve exclusive sale to shoe dealers nnd genernl me te for catniog y, Stiger & Oo. HAHHOO sen gnarantee to Tain Fower, 11 Nervousness, Lassitude. all dr: har sex c PR s of tobAGeD. opin %l nand | ¥ Fy: Salain Oul‘;n by 313rmun &McConnell, 1515 Dol 5 m e G. W. Williamson, M. D. SPECIALIST CAN TREAT 'You BY mailL Row? Rend us a two-cent stamp for full parti lars, which are mailed in a plain envelo All ¢ co done in Uhe utmost p vacy ice free. Don't delay, to us to-day. & Lut write vat WE GURE i Fomalo Weak 3 1V aimen mada strony Him use of Mercury, We ulways "NEW ERA MEDICAL AND SurcicaL DISPENSARY VIATN ENTRANFF is-1e 01575 1inot for sulo ize and width wanted,” Postngo Frec. pemsesiianngt IPA el e the best mdicine Kis $80 4 WONTH BARARY, ‘v. A vigor quickly re he groat H e o indge Rafsedy Medical Con, 88" Flymonth Flace, ur place ne t 10 Factor, Doug 5, Brociiton, Sase. ' “oHoE Oarlson, Ellas Svensou;:E. RES?@REH cure all nervo dnch: W. Cre: E Korve Secds,” tac wondarfui y s0ld with & we uch 1= Weak Memory, W i 1t od, Night { ihe Generatl . o BIu1 $7r0 b OF exceusive d 10 Infrmity, Consan i e vack ntee L cur Chieago, Mie 33 Stra, | DEFORMITY BRACES Elastic Stocking Trusses, Crutches, Batteries, Water Bottles, Syringes, Atomizers, Medical Supplies ALOE & PENFOLD, 14 845003, Next to Postofica HIRSCHBERG'S H.HIRSCHEERGS The Cele- NO| A rate is }s,zc;‘;g;jgg o~/ brated Dia . mond and e < XJ& 9 \)‘{\mulmng;. s =@ EYE GLAS sts 0 PATENTED Jupy 2167889 Max Meyer & Bro.,Co., Sole Awents for On usel by over exertion, yo which 800D I to earry | rder we m AdAvons N e able Specta- elesand Eye Glasses for sale in Ome aha by abn NERVOUSDISORDERS EVILS, WEAKNESSES, DEBILIIY, ETC,, that a0 compaoy Them 1o men QUICKLY' and PERMA- NENTLY CURED. Full’ STRENGTH and tons Eiven 10 every partof ¢ iy, 1 will. send (ser curely paceed) FIRER to auy sufferer the hrescripe 1o that cured me of Lhose Lroublss AQIress, ta A BRADLEY BATILE CREEK. MiCH

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