" Butplua clerk will be id to. ( wt'RT HOUSE, - Nebraska X.IUS I'KI'PKKUKKO. HANDrAITlHK OK ANI J 1UHDLE5HLE IIKAL1HINTHK CIIOICKST HKANDS OF CIGARS f- CI. I. LINK OK TOBACCO AND SMOKERS ARTICLES always in stock Plattsmouth, Nebraska IKST : NATIONAL : HANK OK FI.ATTSMOUTH. NKJ1KASKA .i i .... ..i, i ..$!.! 10,00 .. 10.oo0.09 Oilers the verv best facilities for the promp tr;niHHCtini of laminate Banking Business 8tocki, bonds, KflU. government and local e juritie bought and solil. Heposhs recHiv-.i and interest allowed on the certilicau- Drafts drawn, available lit any lart of the United Slate and all the principal twwn ot Europe. OOLLKCTION MAIIH. AND PKOMPTLY KKMIT TKD. Highest marker price p:dl for County Wai rants, ttat ana County bonds. DIKKCTOKS John Kit.,'.;ral.1 I) IlawkHWortb ' Sam Wauuh. K. K. Whl.e tieoru-e K. Hovey Jobn Fit afraid. w'!'-'h.-t. I'reMileiit Carter. t m: en i.kns hank. I N K A OayitiU !; -i"k paid in ' A u i 1 j o r i z c d C p i t n 1 , 3 1 C 0 , C C C . :: : : ". ; - . JO'".. . ' ' 'r '"o. .II!' .1 v." : i." . . ... ! ' .;. t-.'ilf. K. -.u-s ceil i' ' l .1 il lei .S- i ' - 1 i .'t.aty 'and b r,.r .v.dn and Fifth v.reei. J ,l t .... ,.'T .1 vi o" orioj.";: V. H. I'.inii-'M Kri-i ."ill-." r Ir,,s; :.j.j ViC- ! i -a.-a .1 M. IV. .T--ir, T. M. I'.iltiMs hi. As-si t .i-iiier dipj:c r o O. M. (:.-..!. M !:::.'..... r--l 5or1ir A. It. S i:. !;. Wi-.'.li.u.i. 1'.. S. Kam-ey and T.' 51. 1'atiti - tii GESSK'tL DAMZIITC STJ3i5SS rfcA?;5A.TED Aco.iants soli, .;. l:: -r.-s! al'owvd r, time Ifpos!;- :in,i in::ii !;.!?! ioinfiv-n ail bus lues entrusted to its c.re. When von j; to a shoe store y our object isnot only to buy shoes but to procure for what you spend the best that vour money will buy. Less than this will not content you; more than this you cannot, in rea son, ask. Our methods are as simple a vour 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 von ijet a fuller and fairer equivalent for your money. An especially profitable purchase for you is our etc. . BOOES, SHOES OS. RUBBERS R SHERWOOD. ."VM Maiu Street. -tit 7 -pHILIP THEIROLF Haai Opened up Tlie Fineat. Cleanest, OosieBt- IN THM CITY Where may be found choice wines liquors and ciartt. ANIIKUSKK 1ILTSCII II KICK. AND HASS A US WHITK LAHKL, always on hand. COKNKK K MAIN AND FOURTH ST. PRPPR Tx. PETERSEN THE LEADINQ GROC ER HAS THE MOST COMPLETE STOCK IN THE CITY. FRESH - AND - IN - SEASI ATTENTION FAKHEKS I want 3-our I'onltrj-, Kis, Hut ter and your farm produce of all kinds, I will pay you the lu'hest cash price as I am buying for a urn in Lincoln. R PETERSEN, THK LIC A DING GROCKK I'lattsmouth - - Nebraska p J. H:A:N:S:K:N DHALKll IN STAPLE AND FANCY (.KOCEUIKS. GI.A S-S AM) QUE LNSWAliE I !!.( i tin; i'uble Solicited JOB5S03 IWMWH Hllli Si TEW HARDVArtE STORE S. 1C. J I ALL & SON Ki'i ii Minis Iuiil."ii'rs li;ii;vv;ir on li.iaJ aiid f nply i'ontia,t r ou most fav orable ter ns TIIST ROOFING Spouting and all kinds I tin work irniu"tly one. Order!1 irtun t lie cimniry Soiiciled 610 Veasl St. rLATTSMOUril. NEB. 7? h umoer tar THE OLD R2L5ABLC. 11. A. in 0UI1 PIMF LUMBER ! Sliinles, Lath, Sash, Doors, Blinds Can supply everw demand ot thji city Call and get terms. Fourth street in rur of opera house. Chamberlain's Eya and Skin Ointment. A certain care for Chronic Sore Eyes; Tetter, Salt Eheum, Scald Head, Old Chronic Sore3, Fever Sores, Eczema, Itch, Prairie Scratches, Sore Nipples and Files. It is cooling and soothing. Hundreds of cases have been cured by ,it after all other treatment had failed, It la pat up in 25 and CO cent Loses. 8 HI IdMl'a Photograph. Apropos of boarded doors and win dows, there is a romance attached to one in Philadelphia. It neeins that after reaching liar Harbor, Madame remem bered something which had been left be hind iu that darkened house. She wanted it, liut her husband was traveling, no Bhe could not ank him t ffo to the house for it. She had a nephew from the Kouth visiting her lie off-red to no to her hou.se and et it for her. IliHunnt lived iu one of the rows in which every house in like its neighbor lie iiad always mobilized her'a by its double row of black tiling across the house, and took but little notice of the uuiuber Ala.-it wbeii tin readied Philadelphia ho had forgotten the number, anil tin-re were two houses with painted bricks and next but one to each other. Which was the ou for which he had the keyb? He finally decided on one his keys 6tted. so he felt safe, tie entered and went immediately to the second floor. He now discovered that he was not in the right house it being furnished in a style entirely different from that which stain ied hia aunt's apartments. Aa he looked around hia eyes rested upon a portrait of a girL He gazed fas cinated: it was the face of his ideal realized. He took it up, studied it, held it off at arm's length, drew it near and at last took his unknown from the dainty frame and swore he would fiud the orig inal. Luckily, he got out of the house and no one saw him. lie returned to Bar Harbor; he could get no information there; his aunt's neighbors were travel ing in Europe but they had no daughter. He sought for her at all the summer re sorts; at last he found her, and well, the engagement is announced. Phila delphia Music and Drama. A Villu:il!o iOH)'ision. We can have ... more valuable posses sion than a good heredity an inherit ance of longevity, and if this has not de scended to us. it is generally because ancestors, more or less remote have iiquandered it. Such an inheritance gives constitu tional vigor, keeps its possessor safe amid almost every form of microbic disease, secures the needed recuperative energy in case of attack, makes life worth liv ing up to the uonnal end, renders old age green and sunny and keeps up intel lectual activity to the last. Mr. Glad stone, in his ninth decade, is more than a match for most men of lifty at their best. No one would guess from the late.-t products of Doctor Holmes' pen. or from his genial spirit, that he had been for two years an ociogen.".ri".n. Alter U, care is luves.- ry to the pro longation of life; not anxious care, but caro to avoid hariulul transgression. Mr. Gladstone rill keeps up vigorous e..-rci. s;:;d Dr. Uo!m,-.s uses his great J.u.Avlede of ,? l,(ws oi" hcilth and life t l:;vj hmi. sell not m reiy alive, but in g )' 1 working condition. Vouth's Com panion. Men's l;t!ri. Ill thi fine tailoring tr.ide there is not nearly the demand for enormous lines of fabrics that there once w.-is. Given a few good things in a moderate range of l-cally lino colorings and live times the number of people sa in to be satisfied with them as was tin e;;,o. a few ye.'irs ago. A leading Hanover Mivet tailor said to me the otiier day. "It ns.-d to seem as if every customer we served ex pected we would have a special piece of ciolh woven for his p. it . lone i::d th? pattern destroyed at ierv.v.rd." This ma nia for exclu.-i veness is now far more cliarjicteristic of cheap trads tinai it is of the best. True swells fi in for M'.-.!:ly ;:r.d fine-? ncss which tiie cnieap trade can lot touch, and there is now nothing abov t the pat terns in vogue which the ci'.e,':) tr.ele can easily imitate, it is tY- same i i neckwear fabrics. London Uor. Clothier and Furnisher. A Cat Ilais- SiiiiTeIs. Our fellow townsman, .lames II. Gal loway, tells of a very peculiar way of raising pijuirrtls. About three weeks e.go Mr. Galloway's son, while out hunt ing, found a nest of young squirrels, which were only a day or two old. They were brought to town, but as they were too young to be raised by hand it was necessary to find them a mother. Mr. Galloway had an old house cat, which had j-ouug kittens, and as aa experi ment all the kittens were killed except one, and the squirrels were pnt in their places, and strange as it may seem the oltlinother cat did not seem Jo no tioe the difference, but seemed to be very fond of her adopted family, and is raising them with the most motherly care. Osceola (Mo.) Sun. Horn and Married in I'rNon. The body of ltobert Western, who was drowned at St. Louis, was buried in Evergreen cemetery. In one respect Robert Western was remarkable. He was born in jail, was married in prison and sjient eleven years in the peniten tiary, yet he and his parents were emi nently respectable people. Robert's fa ther was keeper of the counry jail here at his birth. For eleven years he drove the prisou carriage, and. was tendered a reception at his marriage, which tool: place at tbe ieniteutiary- Chester (Ills.) Cor. St. Louis Globe-Democrat A Cirtrat Comfort. Friend 1 see jour little boys have their hair clipped close to their heads. Mr. Baldhead Yes: I find the fashion a great comfor. "They are certainly cooler." "1 was not referring to them, but to myself. When the boys are aronnd the Cies sort o' divide themselves np and give me some peace." Good News. A His Output of Float-. The mills rolled np a big output for the week ending Sept. 12, making 29,693 barrels daily. The aggregate amount of flour made was 173.100 barrels, against 130,565 barrels the preceding week, 172. 000 barrels for the o rescinding time in 1S90. and Itl.SUO Utrieis in 1SS9. Miller. t - 1 fch tiny In &UtZTS?mm----i t-- jtestJay- wan Peach Day at . ; Ijhnction It wan Inn first fasti vi ( f) or ine Kinu ever oitserveii in tinn (jr or perhaps in any ottter Colnraty 1 deed, seeniH to i;ave et the example of setting a pari day for the viuuieniora tion of p-ial resources and special priMlucts First lincky Ford n.ul its Watermelon day. then Monument on the divide established Its Potato Bake Day. and now tirand .1 unction lias fol lowed with us Peach Day The governor and his staff graced he occasion Kepresentatives of every city, town and section of the st.ite were pres ent. The arrangements for the enter tainment of the great throng were ample ami rerlect and worked admirably The teeu!iar!y significant thing about the celebration wax the illustration fur iushed of the marvelous growth of the new west, a growth that would be jiossi ble only in a region of wonderful fertili ty of soil. Five tyns of leaches were put up iu tempting pyramids and terraces, to be gratuitously distributed to the at tending crowd Yet only six short years ago the country about the spot where the city of Grand Junction is now situ ated was reported in disgust by one of the leading newspaper men of eastern Colorado js dreary, dismal waste of aand and cactus and sage brush. Since then irrigating ditches have ben built. The gladdening water has been made flow over the sand, and it has developed a wondrous fertility. On no ordinary soil could richly learing fruit orchards be developed witiiin six years or less. Rockv Mountain News. I.o king for Morse'a Fimt Mensage. The Western Union Telegraph com pany is trying to get hold of .the first message that was successfully sent over the wires, in order that it may be placed in tue exhibit that the company will make at the World's fair in Chicago. Major Stephen Johnston, of Piqna, O.. to whom Professor Morse handed the slip, with the message in cipher, in 18-14, has mislaid it somewhere among his pa pers, but it is thought that it will be found. J W Kirk, the veteran telegrapher, tells an interesting story of the way the slip happened to come into the posses sion of Major Johnston. In 1844 Pro fessor Morse was experimenting with his telegraph line from Washington to Annapolis, and Mr. Kirk took Major Johnston to his room in the Capitol. Professor Morse said that he had sent a man to Annapolis to see if he could send a message over the wire, and while Major Johnston was there a message be gan to come in. Professor Morse cut off the slip of paper and handed it to Major Johnston, who carefully put it away in his poc) The next day Professor Morse astuui. . tl Washington by announcing an hour be fore the news arrived by train the can didates nonnn.1 ted at the Whig conven tion in Laltiiiii'ie. New York Times. I nncn I;:l ion lor Ii I in' ria. Among the linropau medical cases recently report t d are three of severe diphtheria, winch innckly alter they were attacked v. ivco red ipe- las This led tho physician to experi ment with th" treatment of diphtheri.i by inoculations with the. cultures of ery- mierobes, fourteen patients being' treated t.iy tin Hons were lea; ti i'js in th- n under t iie jaw. sipelas siio ,ve 1 method. The inocula by means of scarilica at the side, dirci- !y The symptoms of ery- e 1 themselves in from foil- twelve hoars, a::d as this iu.-e;;se grossed the diphtheric membrane pr trraduaiiv iJi-;i;v:reii irom t.ie tnro.'il, tin daixlul.'r enlargements went down r:d oilier associate symptoms disap peared In twoca-.es only was this treat ment mehVetnaJ, i.ud in these death oc curred before the erysipelas developed. Noi.duii'.otial I reatineiit was resorted to. -New York Tribune, Tm ISojh I'isli for an IZicc-tric Oiirn-iit. Walter Fitze and Vetener Bailey, boys ot Houston, procured a piece of fine wire which t h'.y threw over tiie wire supporting t he trolley w ire on Fanning street for the purpose of getting a shock. The wire came in contact with the trolley wire, and no sooner had the boys each s'-i.d an end of their wire, when the d -adly current began to burn them, caus ing them to fall to the ground, the Kmoke issuing from their clothing and causing tiie victims to emit piteous screams for help. Young Bailey was badly burned, and young Fitze had hia right hand eo fearfully burned that he will probably lose alJ the fingers and part of the palm of the hand mentioned. San Antonio Express. Explorers Helpers Scarce. It is not generally known that most African explorers entering the continent from Zanzibar have been compelled to fit out chiefly with slaves hired from their Zanzibar masters. A few weeks ago the British Antislavery .society issued a protest agaidst this practice and called attention to the fact that the ex pedition which H. H. Johnston had just led into the country was made np of slaves. The sultan of Zanzibar has now issued a decree forbidding the enlisting of slaves on these expeditious. There is. accordingly, a great scarcity of labor, and explorers - and the German East Africa company cannot get all the men they ueed. London Letter. Hard Times for fiorgi Alligators. Lake Iamouia is fast drying np. Thir ty years ago the lake dried up and one could walk over auy portion. Hundreds came with wagons and hauled thousands of pounds of fish away. Alligators were as plentiful as logs. No cause for the strange disappearance of the water cm be assigned. Dozens of alligators are crowded together, and parties are al ready seining the holes for fish. Cor, Atlanta Constitution. Business in the Loudon fashionable marriage market seems to be unusually active. One leading confectioner re ceived in one day no fewer than thirty eight orders for brides' cakes, to be de livered during the month. "-"e" -J."" WW-'' ' i wii "i i iii i i i i ii i t. . ii 1 1 ! j . T I "J " ii ifl ntWiaur TWilpii.'--V7"'.'""' 1. ' ,. ' - flu dogs wer k Bergen, a farmer.. L. training. They werj) quic being of nnnsnal iucTlligence, and developed a sag:;city that is probably not equaled ty any other pack in th south. A test of their scenting owers wa given a few days ago in the presence ol the board of county commissioners. The dogs were fastened in their kennels and a man was started off from Mr. Bergen' house. He skirted the fence, and reach ing the railroad track climlied upon 11 freight car. walked along the roof ol that and other cars attached, coming to the ground again at a distance of 2bC yards. He then took two long planks and walked along them, carrying each oi them alternately and walking on tin? other, so that for a distance of 300 yards his feet nor bauds never touched the ground. He then continued his course, carefully covering up his tracks in the dusty roadway by means of a stick foi a distance of half a mile. He continued his course for two more miles, nsing various devices to destroy the trail, an 1 finally took refuge in a tree. About three hours after the man had reached the tree the dogs were brought out. As soon aa they had caught the scent they started off on a run, finding their first difficulty at the railroad cars They began to circle around in widening circles until the scent was picked up again at the point where the man had left the cars. The animals had but little difliculty iu following the trail from there to the tree, where they came to a standstill, bellowing savagely when they discovered the object of their search. San Antonio Cor. Philadelphia Times. A Counting; Chimpanzee. The zoological gardens have sustained a serious bereavement in the death of Sally, the black faced chimpanzee from the west coast of Gaboon, who foi eight years has entertained many thou sands of folk of all ages and of both sexes at the popular gardens in Regent's park. The intelligent JSally has been the sub ject of comment among men of science, of sages and philosophers, and possibly theologians. Perhaps the most remark able of her feats was that of counting. Sally, iu the presence of a crowded room, when called upon, say for bits of straw in her cage, would give you the exact number you named up to ten, and the keeper has found her, when alone, count in this way up to twenty If one of the public asked for five, six or nine straws, or whatever quantity up to ten she would pick each deliberately up. without any mistake, put one by one in her mouth until all were got together, and then give tnciu into your hand. If asked for a "bu:tonhoie,"slie would take a straw, break o!F part ol the stalk and put the ear into the buttonhole of tiie keeper's co.t. tliie knew right 1 rom i -it. would use a spoon and stp with it until the cup wa empty She was I yea is old wiien lir.-t brought to this country, and was tiief' !or- 1 years of ig wir.-.i s!ie thej. London Tit-Bits. On 3!-eit'rt Loss A not tier's C:ii.i. Wi: ! v r there m a lire v.'t can b? stiro that v.-i::l it i iay hn"" !.j.-s to some o;:e it brings gal.i to ot hers." said .1 Harry tS.ilteiiie, ot a mg importing ii(iti". be .-tood in ins of.ii e under the big lo"k!vn s.ridg'1 "Tl!-iv was that warehouse tire down near Wall .-i reet, where so mucii chemi cals were iiurn-'d. Nearly. If not quite all. cf the shellac in lulii now in this count ly. except lifty bales we had here, was d si T03 ed. That meant, th.it we con trolled the market the second day alter the fiie.- The price jumped over WAt per cent, and is stiil climbing It was about twenty-two cenls a pon.nd the day he fore the tire We have iii'iy bales, with about v." pounds to the oa!e. Shellac comes from Calcutta, lnd;;-, and before rtiiy moru can come we shall probably be sold out. So you sew Unit fi. e meant gam to us if loss to some otiic-r .eaicr.'" New York World. AVbat tiie Dude e;,rs. Perhaps yon haven't heard flint the entirely correct and unexceptionable dude at present has the flower for hi3 buttonhole cut with a long stem, which must be permitted to stick out care lessly from under the lapel of the coat. It seems a trifle, but of course it is just such matters of no apparent moment that distinguish the really, truly well dressed man from the mere imitator. The latter is aJ ways somewhat behind the mode and never up with it. For in stance, just now he keeps on wearing a sash instead of a leather belt, which is the proper caper. By next season he will have caught on, and by that time the swill will have adopted further touches. Interview in Washington Star. Cprising Against tlte Winchenter Kifle. Owing to the numerous murders which have been committed in Effingham county, steps outside of law have been taken to preserve the peace. At a public meeting of citizens held at Guiton, Ga.. the following resolution was adopted: Any person hereafter visiting this town armed with a repeating rifle &liall be waited upon by a standing commit tee and required to show good cause for carrying such rifle, it being the unani mous opinion of tbe meeting that one armed with a Winchester is prima facie in quest of gore. Cor. New Orleans Times-Democrat. Tlie Lougtt Coal Traiu. A train of 225 loaded four wheel coal cars passed over the Lehigh Valley rail road a few days ago. It was the longest and heaviest train ever carried over any road in thjj country, and that mean3 in the world. Naturally this train suggests a comparison with the trains of Conesto gn teams which sixty years ago toiled between eastern Pennsylvania and Pitts burg. The teamster of that period never, in his wildest conceptions, imagined uch an event as the one related above. Scrauton (Pa.) Truth. every AU AKt. hitraauarlUa. at a cost of fo. , been ray family moth. ; tt-coiiin a, ktrnriirer to i believe It to Imi Um bent medl s ' 1 F. MeNully, llatkuuui, i Lowell, Mass. FOR DEBILITY. Avfir'R Snrcnnnrillr V I It a certain cum, when Ui complaint oiIkW nates In ImiHiverbdiod blood. " I was a pruiit stifTcrer from a low condition of the blood and general debility, IxTomtiiK finally, ho reduced that I was unlit for work. Noth ing that I did for (lie complaint helped ma no much as Ayer's Hnrsaparllla, a few bottiea of which restored ine to health and strength. I take every opixirttinlty to recommend this medicine In similar case.i." C Evlck, U K. Miu si., ChllhcoUie, OlUo. FOR ERUPTIONS And all disorders oiiitinaUiiK In impurity of the Mood, such as bolls, carbuncles, phnplos, blotches, salt-rheum, scald-hoad, scrofulous sores, and Die like, take only Ayer's Sarsaparilla pkbpakep nr DR. J. O. AYEB & CO., Lowell, Mas. Price fl ; six bottle, i. Worth ( a bottle. GKAThl'L C )1I KT!; JHKMCA K FAST !lv ii Hioi-ML'h U eowleib'e it tlw natural law w llich jtovel n I lie ne ;;. ie S of lllk'it.nil :r i nutrition mid by caoMiil iii li.'lliin ot I lie fine rnM" I ic ef ell M-lee'eil ifl Mr. h iiw Iih n nviileil our til. aklie-l titble with a i'e :c:i elv tl vored bevonje liili m;iy h.iv i.s ma ii v leav d net or' hi :N. 1 1 i bv'lhe Judio bais use of Hiieli aitieli ot diet lliat a roii-i-iMili' ii may lie mad unlly luiilr up until Ntroli eiioieli to renis! f eiv t l'dene to disease. iliiiidieilH of Ktitilie e ehiiljeK are lloutiu n .iron i il us lends lo :ii lack w heiever herein a ii'ik poi-t. i e may ec;ie ihhiiv ;l fatwl ;liiitt liv keeob. it euie; ve !! fiinilied Yiith nine bioo inl a properly nourished frame." Civil si Mi'e i;aeite. aiiosi simply with lu.lliiiK i ;:ter o- milk. Sold ni.it In liali-poiiud lii". Ii L'loi eri"H hi helled thin: Mrs KITS X DO . Hon ieoi.;lhte I'lieinlst I oliiloli. l-ni'land Dt. Grosvsnor'f Bell-cap-sic Givr quirk rHi'f J rom pain. FLASTER. Klwumtim. nuril("'. pleun-ysnrt liimli e.rf, t. nnrH. f:titii. forni'M ir all I Inli'R it. 8,a.:j.'-..-;'- -:?' V'. f I !' ' ..... . liuir. " 1 ((,.. ". Ii: ; . i fit - . ..v r fi. ..(- -:"v'-f - -ri i" i i i? re tiruy i'.:,.r 1- I ; Yr.uO.lel C-MOr. , lin - nn ft I. ii ii I ... . r ,., - .1'. . 1 ... - ii'--' , -:.r?'.' ifj. ' .. r'H O ;:, - i'. I . i.i. . C.i' w..r t I '.Hit Ii, ... I . - o.-i 1 . .', I 'i' I . 1 . . il i, J '.1 . 1 1 .1 1. ; i u t i nil. .Vl flA. ! ', ?1 ).-" r O j"- V: 'r:-o .. "in r- l.r Cm., u.i ic u. li u, or JlJ.-.CoX 4 CO., ti. y. i ' l Cr-. ; 1 ':S S.rniC.ij 1 v-. ' IO iii -I .MA 1 , I 1 . .1 ot lor Cute iii n. . .: i- -. I'i. ; -. .-.I' !"" mi. (Vver - .'! " : ' . " , i i !...!-.( 'Ih! f liniiis. ' . -. 1 - I . ;.! ' 11 , ! 11 ii.s. Ji nd posi I i . 1 1 - P l or ; p. 1 eq uired. Ii 1- u 10 r;i 1 . 1 1 1 1 to ;!.!- s. i ' .1 1 ion, or I ot ' ' ! 1 -id. i ' 1 h". III - i r box. 1". h- ' i'. ii. i lilrl'l'h 'it. I'.vj'o H u r c . tl. '1 i- the .V.S";-.it ;n'oidelil of lift" v. iih-h :.:!:.-l.:eO,;-i i v Kihf. s-'i -i . .' I . . . I . I ' I r e Hi i i ! I ' ' ; i 1 1 ! I , Ot ll- ers v.uoi i !o( i... but tii-- inn jority 1 '"on 1 i 1 1 -1 1 i . if iei 1 1 ;:. 1 i l w.i 1 1 i 1 1 1 nerve. 1 i ... . : ! e i . v 1". 1 U i ! f'e -1 i 1 . 1 1 , cllJIIIC- u-il'. ;:'ei lln-biiH s aul"l;ike th.e spirits liov.n 10 Keep t'tie spiritw Up." tiliis A u .-'. i . 1 n ' 1 1 ie , t i mi', p portimily nuil ner.ve Inrce. 'I bcreis iio-liing" hi.'- the K'esli r;i t i ve Ner-vio'-. discovered by 1 1 trrenl spe chii i.-!, 1 -';". M ib's. t c 1 re .ill iutvouh li.i';ie.-, ;is benibifbe. flic blues, ii'-i" hi - ,:'isi rut ion, sleeplcssiieMS, lieu r;ilo-i;i. St. V i 1 11 s d;-nee, f it s mill liystcri.i. Trial bullies ;uil line ! i li!-: of t f -o i.'iion in I.s free :it I'. G. IVickc S: Co.'s. For many yiars Mr. IJ. F. Thomp1 son. ol Ies Moines, Iowa, was e verely afllicted with chronic diarr hoca. He says: "At times it wai very severe; so much so, that I feaerd it would end my life. ..About seven years ato I chanced to pro cure a bottle of Chamberlaiu'B. Colic. Cholera and Diarrhoea Kenicdy. It gave me prompt relief and I believe cured me permanent ly, as I now eat or drink without harm anything 1 please. I have . also used it in my lankily with the best results. For sale by P G. I-rickic Ac Co. Wonderful Success. Two years ago the Ilaller Prop. Co." ordered their bottles by the box now they buy by the carload. Among the popularand nuccesef ul remedies they prepare is Ilaller' Sarsaparilla & Hurdock which i the most wonderful blood purifier known. No druggist hesitates to recommend this remedy. For sale by druggist. Cood Looks. Good looks arc more tlian nkiu deep, rleqendirio; upon healthy condition of all tbe vital organs. If tbe Liver be inactive' you have a Hilious JOok, if your stoinac" be affected yoi have a Dyttpef' Liokaud if hour Kidney a be ef? " yov will have a Pinched Ixk cuts' jgood health and you S g-ootl look.-. Electric Hi' N reat- alterctive and directlv on tliofe Cures Pimple. Ulot fur botHi-: -1 Fpps mm w ii ilm ry.Pectoral iaan; xi esivro xbslbj a i Ke? in the hoc: 7V : : ' . v ' '