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About The Plattsmouth daily herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1883-19?? | View Entire Issue (Oct. 10, 1891)
J be ,braska .$150.0110.00 . 10.0U0.09 )f beat facilities' for the protup vneactlou of ilgltimate (iking Busiuess Vnds. gold, government and local se ,ht and sold. Deposits recelveo droit allowed on the certificate .....llahla in anv nart of tot: mill. BT Cllui' .u - tatea and all the principal tewns ot . A llfl (7 " TD. St market price paid for County War- rants. State ana County bonds. DIRECTOKS (.hn Fltarald D. Hawki-wortn :.m wauirh. r. K. wane ieon;e E. Uovey Jn Fitzgerald. 8. Waugb. Carl ten-, President IJ 14 C I X.t. I l IV. -, t i.vri n VI" PLATT3MOUTH. - NEBRASKA Oayital stock paid In iy 0 Authorized Capital, 9100,000. J -i .orwicxHB rtHANK. CAUKUTH. JOS. A. COKNOK, T President. Vice-President W. H. CU8HINO. Cabier. DIKJCCTOKS Vrauk Carrutb J. A. Connor, K. R. Gutbinani J. W. Johnson. Henry Boeck, Jobn O'Keefe W. D. Jflerriam, Win. Wetencamp. W. H. Cusblng. Diveirwi P.r-MPDIT. BiI7IIR Rt1SiNT!S tfuuttmuiuaa uiinjjxiiiu vunmv sues ceatiflcates of deposits bearing interest Buys and sell exchange, county and city i B ANK OK CASS COUNTY Cor Main and Fifth street. Paid up capital Surplus 26.000 OFFICERS O. H. Parnele President Fred Gorder Vice President J. M. Patterson t'aslieir X. M. Patterson. Ast Caxhier DIRECTORS O. H. Panr.ele, J. M. Patterson, Fred Gorder. A, B. Smith, R. B. Windham. B. 8. Ramey and T. M.Patterson A. GENERAL BAflXlUC BUS IB ESS TRANSATED Aecounts solicited. Interest allowed on time deposits and prompt attentionglven to all bus iness entrusted to its care. When you go to a shoe store your object isnot only to buy shoes bui to procure for what you spend the best that your money will buy. Less than this will not content you; more than this you cannot, in rea son, ask. Our methods are as simple as your desires. We do not lift your expectations to the clouds, but we realize them whatever they are; We will never sacrifice your interests to ours and nowhere else can you get a fuller and . fairer uivalent for your money. An specially . profitable purchase for ft isour etc. KepT.s ltt r- s. t or ; NRUBERS AID RETAIL as OF CIGARS pr Jea's ARTICLES Vtock - . Nebrassa iQNAL : BANK XTBMOUTH, NEBRASKA r . HILIP THEIROLF Haa Opened up The) Finest. Cleanest, Cosiest- -J: A.LOOIT IN THE CITY Where may be found choice wines . liquors and cigars. ANHKUS1SR HUSCH BKKR. AND BASS' ALK WHITK LAI3KL, always on hand. CORNER OF MAIN ANI KOUKTH-ST. PRPPR THE LEADING GROC ER HAS THE MOST COMPLETE STOCK IN THE CITY. EVERFTHING FRESH - AND - IN - SEASON- attention favmeks I want your Poultry, Kirers. But ter and your farm produce of all kinds, I will pay you the highest cash price as I am buying for a firn in Lincoln. R. PETERSEN, THE LEADING GROCER Plaltsmouth- -1 Nebraska p J. 1I:A:N:S:E:N DEALER IN STAPLE AND FANCY GKOCERLES, GLASS AMD QUEEN SWA RE Floor m Feed a Specialty iriiHir' ! the Puble Solicited. JOHNSON BUILD1NGN SiltbiiSt EW HARDWARE STORE S. E. HALL it SON Keep all kinds of builders hardware on hand and will supply contract rs on most fav orable terms I TIN ROOFING Spouting and all kinds of tin work promptly one. Orders from the country Solicited. 616 i'easl St. PL ATTS MOUTH, NEB. Lumber Yard THE OLD RELIABLE. if. A. MEMA1I & SOU PiNF LUMBER ! Shingles, Lath, Sash, Doors, Blinds Can supply everw demand of the city. Call and get terms. Fourth street in rear of opera house. Chamberlain's Ey and Skin Ointment. A certain cure for Chroric Sore Eyes, Tetter. Salt Khenm, Scald Head, OM Chronic Sores, Fever Sores, Eczema, Itch, Prairie Scratches, Sore Nipples and Piles. It i3 cooling and soothing. Hundreds of cases have been cored by it after all other treatment had failed, It is put up in 25 and 60 cent boxes. . -t-l't-aajteja. A THE LEAD MINES OF Iff. 1 ' TRADITIONS CONCERNING 'THEM IN PENNSYLVANIA, j 5 i n -;.): rt j -. 1 : t A IMarkaniith of Former Dhj-i Vln ltu Into Hullela Ore Supplied by lndlii I'olutera That ln Not levrlop Itr.l Men'a I'lpea itnd Wrapoii. Where, if anywhere, are the le::d mines of northwestern Pennsylvania? In connection with attempts to answer tlm question the writer hereof, in boyhood harvested many stone brnises by day and treasure dreams by night, toetlu i with numerous traditions of the days of practically ' unbroken forests, bears grease and primeval economy. This section, comprising parts of uortheni Venango and southern Craw ford counties, is about forty miles south of Corry, sixteen miles north of Oil City, ten miles west of Titnsville and eight een miles east of Meadville. There is nc doubt in the minds of plenty of entirely rational people that somewhere within, or contiguously without, the region of country which these towns bound, there is a locality where an exceptionally good quality of lead ore may be obtained, or. at least, the locality where ore of such quality was obtained formerly by the Indians, both for their own use and to sell or trade to the white settlers. At the source of this supply was carefully kept a secret by the Indians mainly of Chief Cornplanter's tribe and has never been discovered, it is regarded as rea sonable to infer that it may yet be a source of profit as to believe that it wa? exhausted. A PIONEER'S EXPERIENCE. At what is now Dradleytown, a vil lage three imles southwest of here, on one or me orancnes or sugar creeK, a pioneer named Jacob Jennings lived 1C(J years ago and had near his" pioneei house a small blacksmith shop. From Mrs. Samuel Matson, of Chapmanville. and John Jennings, or bunvuie. some interesting reminiscences were obtained as related by their father, who was a son of Jacqb Jennings. The latter, at his blacksmith shop, frequently smelted and run into bullets rich lead ore sup plied by the Indians. They made peri odical trips to this place for that pur pose. Coming up from the Allegheny river they made it a point to reach his home in the evening, there being usually several in the party. They would be allowed to stay and would sleep around the fireplaces in the house and shop. At daybreak they would strike northward up the creek and would return a few hours later with a stock of the lead product to be melted. No amount of persuasion, of barter or of purchase price would cause them to disclose the whereabouts of the lead deposits. Fifty years ago. according to a mem ber of the family, Mrs. Robert Gillespie arid a daughter, then a little girl, were lost in the woods, and during their wan derings found along ' a ravine an out cropping of lead-filled rock, a piece of which they took with them. After find ing their way home they were unable to find their way back with older members of the family to the point where they had found the lead. Various and con tinuous searches have been made since along the ravines in that section, one enthusiast devoting a considerable por tion of a year to the search; but aside from a fragment weighing about four pounds, and found in a field in Randolph township, Crawford county, where it had apparently been dropped, no lead ore has been discovered. MATERIAL FOR PROSPECTORS. The prospector able to develop point ers from Indian relics may find consid erable material in that line in this sec tion. At Wallaceville, three miles south east of here, he may find a whole field of yet well defined mounds and excava tions. A mile north of here, just across the line in Crawford county, he may find remnants of several large stone piles constructed of stones having nota ble uniformity in size and piled up by the Indians for some unknown purpose before the time of the earliest settlers. If he will follow the plow for a season in the southwestern part of this town ship Plum township, Venango county --or the northerly adjoining township of Troy, in Crawford county, his labors will probably be rewarded with a fresh stock of pipes, weapons and other relics of the noble and ignoble Lo. If he will further follow the plow in a field along the Sugar Creek flats, about two miles north of the Jacob Jennings homestead, and will fail to lift the point of his plow when he reaches a certain point in that field, his plow handles will smite him hip and thigh and put him to rout. The cause thereof will be that the plow point will strike the edge of a circu lar bed of burned and pounded stone It is about ten feet in diameter; projects to the top of the ground where efforts have not been made to get down to the bot tom of it, and is known to have been there fully 150 year9 how much longer no man knows, as it was then, accord ing to pioneer traditioa. as much a mat ter of mystery and antiquity as at pres ent. If the lead prospector chooses to con sider it of no value to him, he may re gard it as one of the places where the Norsemen, poking out this way from Newport and the vicinity of Boston, paused to bake beans. If he is inclined to be less skeptical he may do as tradi tion says the early settlers did regard it as the foundation of a sort of Indian crucible or furnace which served in part as a smelter for lead previous to the in troduction of firearms on this continent, and for purposes unknown. Plum (Pa.) Cor. Philadelphia Press. Ho Had Change. , Tramp Have you change for half a dollar? Gentleman Yes. Where's the half dollar? - ' Tramp I haven't any, but I thort if you had change for a half dollar you might have a dime er two fer a poor man wot's seen better days. All the genia I have asked fer help said they hadnt any change. Good News. 1 ! :1. 7 1j I Making An advertisViiient for a wife brought several answers tV the advertiser, a young yenuetuau, i . mh-i: mm. ,ra Amond them wa oueined 'Cora" of Spring dalf, 'The viairr's M-nUiiienfs ari'chi-1 . rography seemed to unlit-ale a young lad);, of . reliueiiieui. regu.ur. correspondence followed, and then the young man agreed to go to Spruiciale and meet his ideal. They met at the railroad station and started off together Then a procession of 2(Mi wags of the place followed the couple, and paralyzed the young Lo thario by tttepping up in turu and in quiring a!o!il the health of the bewitch ing Cora.' It nhonid nere tie stated that C.ra Wiis erMuattd by a smooth faced youni; man, arrayed in his mothers toggery Lothario soou realized that he was the victim of a practical joke, and deserting the giggling "Cora ' he hurried to t lie train and started homeward. A tele graph operator bad prepared for hi re ception in Tarentuin by sending a tele gram thither, and when Lothario arrived there the whole town had turned out in a body to make exasperating inquiries about his conquest of "Cora." Yankee Blade. -That la Love." In a small watering place in western Prussia a neb lady with her daughter, nineteen years old, hired a cottage for the whole summer season. But the two ladies had not been six weeks in the place when they suddenly departed The reason for this abrupt ending of their pleasure trip was a 'ove affair between the young lady nil h spruce fisherman, which the r -other ciushed in the bud. With this, bow ever, the story does not end. The inhabitants of the place, fearing that some more young ladies might fall in love with the nice fisherman, which would consequently lead to more abrupt departures, resolved to prevent such oc currences in future. They held a meeting and decided tha.t the fisherman should be punished se verely for his imprudence in allowing himself to be the object of love for young ladies. A committee took the culprit to an open place and flogged him so unmercifully that the poor fellow had to lie in bed for several days. Boston Globe. The Price of Coal. A gentleman who has given much thought to the price of coal said to me: 'The owners of anthracite coal hope that when Auseholders return to town in Oc tober they will lay in their full supply of coal for the winter. Now, if household ers do this, they will 6imply play into the hands of the coal barons and make the price of coal higher.' The sensible thing to do is to purchase from hand to mouth instead of filling their cellars, "That would result in the large com panies being compelled to carry along great quantities of coal and would gradu ally reduce the price of this much needed article. The earnings and the income 01 people nowadays are on the decrease, and an excellent way to curtail house hold expenses is to force down the price of coal to the level it ought to reach." New York Epoch. A Long Island Ghoat. A house on Long Island that long pos sessed the reputation of being haunted was rented by a man who had no fear of ghosts, and who was determined if any existed there to meet them. He suc ceeded, but the ghosts weren't of the kind we see represented in pictures. He heard a strange noise late one night and located it on the roof. Accordingly he armed himself with clubs and repaired to the roof. His coming did not cause the mysterious sounds to cease, and so he gradually crept along until he came down on the "ghost." It was a large vase that was being rocked by the high winds, causing the unearthly noises. He pitched the ghost to the ground, smash ing it into a thousand pieces and then returned to bed. New York Letter. The Tronble an Umbrella Caused. "An overturned umbrella blown from a room in the Hotel Ryan, at St. Paul, caused a peculiar flood recently," said H. C. Calkins. "The umbrella blew so as to obstruct the corner catchbasin during a terrific rain. Down came the flood, and the gutters became swelled into young creeks. Slowly the water in the ditches increased, until it ran over and flooded the basements of the neighboring mer chants, who found gallons of water in their cellars, and hundreds of dollars' worth of goods were destroyed, all be-, cause of an upturned umbrella." Chi cago News. Hla Bat Saved the Trestle. Saturday evening Ben Rivers, of Jack sonville, Fla., while walking the West ern railroad track discovered that the trestle over Highland branch was on fire.' ' He sent in an alarm to the officials, and remained to fight the fire as best he could. The only water to be obtained was from the branch, and Rivers carried it fcteadily in his hat for hours until as sistance arrived from town in the shape of a locomotive loaded with employees. The opportune aid of Rivers undoubted ly saved the trestle from destruction. Exchange. The show of lotus in the lake on the west side of Central park near One Hun dredth street. New York, continues, and there are thousands of seed vessels, full blown blossoms and buds. A young woman has been sketching the scene daily for some time past. The impish lads that infest the park stand upon the edge of the lake and lasso the blossoms. Including approaches, the new London Tower bridge will be more than half a mile long, and 80,000 tons of stone, 20,000 tons of cement, 15,000 tons of steel and iron and 31.000 tons of brick will enter into its composition. Eight thousand Jewish residents of Odessa are under notice of expulsion. The majority of the-e people own real estate in and about the city, and nearlj all are engaged in business. avyM-n aastaaftataatBaaaaaJsaBafeli mtaUi is .cuaa.li - v . .i. nil 1. o i .-11: Jme..V)erle. A ,W Clarlev, MeU-ale,, was telling 'arArn . fnbulH.tloliL: ; V'lf.v. It-' ivvreu't tot onf -peAple'rf ;d1rry: 'tfcuiriW.; said Ue.-J M'd !... I .....I . .1.. ...alU! ..lt form ' J dim t 'pntdn inuch time fn 'the box office, tmt the few minutes 1 am there is enough for a lifetime The average ticket buyer asks enough mane questions but what do you think of a man who slicks Iiih head through the window and wants to know the name of a Wig steairer he saw going down tli ll.ift river oay leloje yesterday? Weli my loy. that's what happened this verv tnorning. mid that's not a 'marker' t the questions some ieople ask either "There'" the man who knows even thing and wants you to recognize tt. I he man who knows nothing and proves it and the woman who is nothing more or less than a jerietually animated iuter rogation mark. Why. two days ago a man cauie tn and Udd tue all about the piece then being played in the house After getting rid of him I had to choice off a long breath to inform a fellow that the theater was neither a hotel m.r a lodging house. He said he was sorry that he liked the location first rate. Be fore I hud recovered- from the fit he gave me, a man with three baskets, four chil dren and a woman walked into the lobby. , ' 'Be they a-actin or anything inside? asked the man. 'No, sir.' said L 'IVr form ante at 8:15. Then what do you suppose that man wanted? He actually had the stupendous gall to ask me if he and his family couldn't go inside and 6it down for an hour or so while they ate their luncheon!" New York World Women and Mice. "I wish somelnxly would Cud some thing to take the place of the exceed ingly, stale and silly 'women and mice paragraph which has been going the rounds of the papers, with divers and sundry changes rung on it, ever since 1 can remember, and goodness knows how much longer." said a charming little woman as she opened the mousetrap and let two or three of its occupants out into the jaws of a uumber of hungry kit tens. "1 wonder who started it any way? Of course there are women who are afraid of mice, no doubt, but I never saw a woman make herself more ridicu lous over a mouse than a certain man did , when one of these harmless little creatures scooted up the leg of his trou sers. "I don't imagine any one would feel especially comfortable with any "such foreign element meandering around one's preserves: but why 'women and mice' in particular, is what I don't understand. 1 think there are very few housekeepers but what have frequent occasions to come in .contact with rats as well as mice, and. as far as 1 can see. they seem to survive at all events, 1 never heard of anybody dying from fear of them. I suppose that the mouse paragraph must be near akin to that of the mother-in-law. ' Be that as it may, both are so threadbare and faded and frayed out and bleached with time and hard serv ice that it would be a work of mercy for some benevolent and intelligent para grapher to get up a new supply of am- I munition. New York Ledger. An Army of "Poor" Employee. To I00I1 af teij the city's standing army of dependents and delinquents requires a big official force. There are three com missioners with $5,000 a year each, a secretary who gets $2,300 and a staff of eleven at the central office, lesides the superintendent of the outdoor poor and six assistants. There are 45 employees at the Tombs, including 4 physicians and 4 matrons. There are SI employees in the district prisons (Jefferson Market, Essex Market, Yorkville and Harlem). 72 employees at the Bellevue hospital, besides 54 trained female nurses, a chemist and 3 assist ants, and 6(3 male nurses and employees. There is a staff of 13 at the Gouverneur hospital, of 10 at the Harlem hospital, of 130 at the Charity hospital on Black well's island, of 82 at the penitentiary, of 42 in tne almshouse, of 45 in the work house, of 250 in the city insane asylum, of 50 in the Ward's island hospital, of 800 on Randall's and Ward's islands, of 22 at the Hart's island workhouse, of 150 at the Hart's island asylum, of 75 at the Islip asylum and of 18 in the store house department on Blackwell's island. New 'York Sun. Remarkable Feat of Strength. E. P. Kendall gave a remarkable ex hibition of his skill and strength with a ten-pound dumbbell at noontime. He matched himself against eight strong men employed upon the grade work about the county court house, and agreed to put up from shoulder to arm's length a ten-pound dumbbell more times than the eight men could. Kendall has a limb which makes it necessary for him to use crutches, and as he is of very slight build the result of the contest ap peared to be a foregone conclusion. One after another the eight men took their places, Kendall keeping time with each one, and after the eighth had dropped hi3 arm from sheer exhaustion Kendall smiled pleasantly and ran up his score of consecutive lifts to an even 1 ,000. His best score with a twelve-pound bell is 2,600 lifts, and he has a brother who holds the world's championship. Seattle Press-Times. LlTing on Elft-hty-foar Cents a Week. While on the subject of abstinence in food, may I be pardoned for mentioning that many years ago, when a schoolboy, I tried bow cheaply 1 cowid live, and found that I was able to get, in summer, everything 1 required in the shape of good, wholesome food for three shillings six and a half pence a weeic Of course 1 had little meat, and kept principally to fruit and vegetables, which 1 could buy cheap. 3 I was near a large town. National Review. The phrase, "castles ' in the air," has been attributed to Sir Philip Sydney, Swift, Fielding, Churchill and Shen stoue. It was first used more than 250 years ago by Robert Burton in his "Anatomy or Melancholy." si t s rr 1 h n't 1 1 i ji it T rjJUL " :; FOIT'qYCPCP'CIA. f 7 ft av allJ J-lYUr i4ai04JLCl 11144 , 4slV$JIuvMr'Wdr'W.PlWfr9U testing tii'ttts ittMiiulvMi v uri-iVM. " tor two tiiir " rr alii a 'l!aH v.. ..:..:: 1 was a OOlLHiai't uurn r nuui iyH-Kti;i 'n-t-1lrV 'iMhilalt7''T "dorUfred a Ionic time and the niudicUioa prescribed. In nmrly every ca.se, .only UKKruv&utd the dlHuiute. Au apoUiuc-u'ry advised me to u.10 Ayt-r'a barsHiiarilla. I did ho, and a cured at a tout of 85. HIik-o that time it lia lift-n my family medic'.iit), and sickness lia Ihtoiiiu a ttUaiiKcr to our household. I Ih-Ucvh It to tm the le.st ltii-tiiclnn 011 earth.' i F. McNully, llackiuau, ZJ buiinucr St., , Low tall, Mm FOR DEBILITY, Ayer's Sarsaparilla Is a certain cure, when the complaint orljd Dutei in hnM)V-rlshed Mood. " I was a great suffi-rer from a low condition of the Mood and Ri-ueral ilfhility, becomhiK finally, so reduced that I was unlit for work. ' Noth ing that I did tor tlx! comilaiut helixul me no much as Ayer's Harsa-arilla, a few bottles of which restored nie to health and streiiKtli. I take every opportunity to recommend this mcdia-p-avlii similar -an-i."C. livlck, 14 K. Mala U, Cutlltcotho, Oliio. FOR ERUPTIONS And all disorders nriKinallnir I" Impurity of the blood, such as boils, carbuncles, pimples, blotches, salt-rheum, scald-head, scrofulous ores, and the like, uVe only Ayer's Sarsaparilla fKEI-AKEn BT DR. J. C. AYEB St CO., Lowell, Mas. Trice 1 ; vis boUlea,t5. Worth i a boltle. G ATKUIv COM FORT! XG Epps Cocoa JUKKA K FAST Hva tlioroiitrli knowledge of t lie natural laus which kovciii the opeixiloi H of digest-on it- (l nutrition and !y a r:uvfii'MP lioiilloii of I lie tine pr"periM of well neeeeil "-oh Mr. Kppt Ims provided our break l;ist table' with a deliciilely flavored beveiHue which may oive i s many heavy doctor' bilN. It m bvMhe'Judio Ioiih use of fiieli article" of l1et that a rain titutimi may be graduxlly built up until KtrotiK enoiiL'h to resist every tendency to disease. Jluiidrede of subtle ipelmlies are IIohIIm K rouinl us readv lo attaek wherever here i a wek point.. We may encap uiuny a fatal shaft bv keeiitnit ourcelveM well fortified with pure liloo mid a properly nourished frame." Civil Service tiaette. v adosl simply with boiling WHler o- milk. Hold only In hall-pound tr. lit L-roeerles labelled tbur: .I.AMKs KITS .V DO., MoiiKeonathlc I'hemlst London. Finland Dr. Grosvenoi'r ' Bell-cap-sic m Uk retUS from vim. PLASTER. ' naarahrfa. ntadrfcnrsiMl lunbaM miMMonw, mmn.i tot w ny an unnri PARKER'8 ' HAIR BALSAM Clsam and U-amine th hair. Promote a luxuriant growth. Kr Paila to Beator Oray Hair to if Youthful Color. Cwh taip dlwsurt ft hair talliu. .1. I .1 1 u l . n : - Ckvand SI OUat Dn w Weak Lunga, Debility, Indigeation, Paia,Taaa in lua.uca. HINDERCORNS. The onlr rure core for Coma. Lm nrkari Giilffr Tonio. it cure tac voral Couirh. Mop ail tiaui. idc. at Uruggisu, or Ulbi ugfc-iats, or UXBCOX. ft CO., N. Y. Bucklen's Arnica Salve. Tuk Beht Salvk in the world for Cutuawaf BtuiaeF, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum. Fever S'ren'Tetter. Chapped Hands, Chillilaina, Corns, and all Skin Eruptions, and poni tively cures Piles, or no pay required. It in guaranteed to give satisfaction, or moi.ey refunded. Price 2" cents per box. For sale by F. O. Fricke & Co. A National Event. The holding of the World's Fair in a city scarcely lifty yearn old will he a rvtnarkahle event, hut whether it will really henefit thin nation as much as llur iliscovery of the Kestorative Nervine hy& Dr. Franklin Miles is doubtful.. TIiih i jut what the American people need to cure their excessive nervousnesH, dyspepsia, headache, dizzinesH, sleeplessnes, neuralgia, nervous de bility, dullness, confusion of mind, etc. It acts like a charm. Trial bottle and fine book on "NervoiiH and Heart Diseases," with une qualed testimonials free at F. G Fricke & Co. It is warranted to con tain no opium, morphine or danger oils druy-s. 1 For maii3- years Mr. li. F Thomp son, of Dea Moines, Iowa, was se verely afflicted with chronic diarr hoea. He says: "At times it was very severe; so much so, that I feaerd it would end rny life. About seven years a;o I chanced to pro cure a bottle of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. It gave me prompt relief and I believe cured ine permanent ly, as I now eat or drink without harm anything I please- I have also used it in my family with the best results. For sale by F. G. Frickie & Co. ; Wonderful Success Two years ao th? Ilaller Prop. Co.' ordered their bottles hy the box now they buy by the carload. Amonp; the popular and succeseful remedies they prepare is nailer's Sarsaparilla Sc Ilurdock which is the most wonderful blood purifier known. No drugfist hesitates to recommend this remedy. For sale hy dru";;ist. Remarkable Facts. Heart disease is usually supposed to be incurable, but when properly treated a lar;e portion ol cases can he cured. Thu.s Mrs. Klmira Hatch, of Klkhart, Ind., and Mrs. Mary 1. Baker, of Ovid. Mich., were cured after sufferino; iJfJ years. S. C. Lin burger, druggist at San Jose, III., saytat Dr. Miles' New Heart Cure wln cured the former, "worked wonders for his wife." Ievi Logan of Buchanan, Mich., who had heart disease for 30 years, says two bottle-: made him "feel like a new man."' Dr. Mile' New Heart Cure is aold and truaraueed by F. G. Prick" c "". I look of wonderful testini'; .i;i!- . free. 1 lit ic bo-- a I