Plattsmouth weekly journal. (Plattsmouth, Neb.) 1881-1901, February 07, 1895, Image 2

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    The Plattsniouth Journal
DAILY AND WEEKI.T.
C. W. SHERMAN, Editor.
TERMS FOR-DAILY.
One copy one year. In advance, ty mall.. .13 ft
One copy alx month. In advance, ty mall, 2 f
one copy one month, in advance, ty mall, W
One copy, by carrier, per week 10
Puhhsbed every aftemoou except Sunday.
WEKKLT JOURNAL.
Single cpj, one year II 00
Single copy, alx months W
Published every Thuraday. Payable In advance
Entered at the postofflce at Plattsraouta, Ne
braska, aa tccond cla matter.
Official County Paper.
Eyjery Saturday afternoon Is illegal
holiday in New York, New Jersey,
Pennsylvania and Maryland.
With all kinds of property dropping
out of sight in value il is very lilting
that men of business should stop and
ask why !
A new $100,000,000 loan is now on
the program of white house finance,
and it is said that Kuropeans are
anxious to take it.
A man in Kansas City broke a plate
glass in a bank window in order to be
sent to jail to keep from starving.
Glorious civilization this.
Dr.. Talmaue condenses wisdom
when he says: "What we want is less
croaking owls of the "night and more
morning larks with spread wings ready
to meet the advancing day."
The democratic rarty has always
stood for gold and silver from Jeffer
son's time, until now when Cleveland
wants to lead it into the camp of the
golden-calf. The party must rally to
its old standard or it will fall to pieces.
Omaha has a policeman to every
ljrtOO inhabitants and Chief Seavey
wants more. Tlattsmouth is satisfied
with one policeman to every ,500
people, and can hardly find work
enough for them to keep their hands
in. But then Plattsmouth cannot com
pare in cuss-dness with Omaha.
The insurance lobby has established
headquarters in the Windsor hotel, in
charge of II. B. Coryell, the Omaha
representative of the Phoenix. The
insurance sharks are working quietly,
but earnestly, and if they fail to se
cure the repeal of the valued policy
law it will not be for lack of schem
ing. lion. IMgar Howard inPapillion
Times.
Ir there is a cemocract in Cass
county who is in favor of the latest
proposal of Mr. Cleveland that of is
suing five hundred millions in 5 per
cent, gold bonds to retire the green
backs and treasury notes and recoup
the gold reserve, thus fastening the
gold standard on the country let him
speak up. We should like to see the
color of his hair. It must be very
flossy.
The thanks of TnE Journal i3 due
and hereby tendered to the Nebraska
City News for its kindly mention of
the editor hereof. Unfortunately east
ern newspapers in general are edited
from the counting-room, and not after
the honest judgment of the sinctum.
The counting-room probably likewise
got in its work on the News, judging
by its continued support and pufliing
of John C. Watson.
The president ha3 a great head for
finance. His wisdom needs no other
demonstration than the proposal to
substitute gold interest-bearing bonds
in place of non-interest-bearing green
backs and treasury notes ! A man who
would voluntarily do that in his pri
vate business would be esteemed an
idiot. But, of course, the president is
not an idiot. He is simply over-pur-suaded
by his financial advisers in
Wall street.
"Money is plenty enough,7' said a
gold advocate recently, "you can get
all the money you want if you've got
the security to put up for it." Ah,
there's the rub. "I don't think there'
any use of foreclosing on that mort
gage now," said a lawyer to his part
ner in oar hearing, "because the prop
erty has depreciated In value eo much
that it won't nearly pay out. Better
wait a while till money gets to be plen
tier." If the latter remark does not an
swer the first we are willing to wait
for a better.
TnE American people Lave an af
fection for the greenback, and right-"
folly so, because it was the greenback
which carried the government success
fully through the war. That affec
tion Is a fentiment akin to patriotism,
and to crush that or disregard it is an
offense which the American people
will punish at the ballot-box. Tho
iolitIcIan who favors destroying the
greenback, no matter what party he
call himself by, will go
into retlre-
ment Ju3t as soon as the people get a
. '
chance at him.
WHY GOLD GOr.S OCT.
Atlanta Constitution.
When President Clwveland took
charge in March, ISC?, it was hoped
that the necessity for exercising tho
government's option of payment either
in gold or silver wou'd govern our
treasury policy, but Mr. Cleveland an
nounced in the most emphatic manner
hisdetermlnatlon to pay out gold in any
amount and for any purpose. The con
sequence has been that from then until
now tho gold reserve has been at tho
mercy of speculators in gold every
where, and has bee a twice restored
for their accomodation. It is tho only
gold fund on the face of the earth free
to everybody, and this is solely the ef
fect of an executive policy in evasion,
if not in defiance, of tho law of the
land.
In the thirteen years ami setreu
mouths prior to Ilehlelbach, Ikelhei
mer & Co's. first attack on tho reserve
in August, 1S1J, tho total redemptions
of greenbacks and coin notes were less
than $40,000,000. They hav been
51 1,000 ,000 in the lat eight weeks,
half of which is lying In the New York
banks. In a single one of those years
only (1ST9, first year of redemption),
did the redemptions g;o as high as $T,
000,000. They were S7AX,000 on last
Friday alone. In the nine years of 1SSC,
1S-1, 1SS, PnSTJ, ISSi, 1SS5,
and ISiH), there were altogether only
5Uao,OOOt but they were overSl3.0o,-
000 on Thursday and Friday last.
Another bornt issue is called for, but
as we have a stock of money redeem
able in coin amounting to over f 417,-
000,000, of which $:31G.081,COO is in
greenbacks and $130,00,000 in coin
notes, all of which roust be re-issued,
Lt is obvious to any sort of a wayfaring
man that a bond issu? is no remedy at
all, that the persona who can draw out
?7,iVk,0 of gold in a day can easily
acquire ?1.000)00,Mo in twelve
months and at the end of the year
have both the coin and bonds.
There is but one policy which can
protect the treasury and at the same
time bo acceptable to the people, and
that is the exercise by the government
of its option to pay silver as well as
gold in the redemption of greenbacks
; and coin notes. It is the recovery of
a false step which ought never to have
been taken, but which was taken, first
by President Harrison and then by
President Cleveland. It is never too
late to do right, and the present ad
ministration will never have a better
opportunity than now.
The Pacific railroad robbers got a
black eye in the house Saturday. The
Ileilly refunding bill was referredhaek
to the committee without instruction
which is equivalent of killing it.
This was a complete surprise, as it was
believed that the lobby had bought or
bribed its way through the house, but
the vote was so emphatic as to leave
no doubt that the fcheme to refund
the debt for fifty 3 ears by the pi tn
favored by the railways has failed
for this congress, at leant. It is signi
ficant that the majority of the republi
cans voted for the billor against re
ferring it back. Mr. Thurston, it is
said, wa3 on the lloor of the house
lobbying for tho bill, using his privi
lege as a senator-el'jct for that pur
pose. Of the three republicans in tho
house from Nebraska, however. Mer
cer was the only one he could Inlluence
Hainerand Meiklejohn voting with
Bryan, McKeigban and Kern against
the measure. Tom Heed and Bourk
Cockran were paixed and nobody
knew how either one would have
voted. It was one of the few cases in
which Tom Iteed wanted to dodge a
record vote. The defeat of this bill is
a big white feather in the cap of the
Fifty-third congrens-
An accurate compilation shows that
the average price of 2.10 articles that
may be considered necessaries of life
was lower on Jan. 1st, 105, than it has
been at any time during the last thirty
four years. January 1st, 1SC0, is taken
as the standard of comparison, because
all business and industry was at that
time in a normal condition. Prices
were very much inflated because of
unnatural causes during the subsequent
years of the war and reached high tide
in 1305 and 1037. Then they began
gradually to come down until on Jan.
1st, 1803, they had reached 73 per cent
of the average of 1BC0. But the great
est fall has occurred during the last
two years, when they dropped 5 per
cent and the average retail value of tho
same markets was only OS per cent of
the price of ISM. These articles In
clude ordinary food, clothing, hard
ware, china, glassware, furniture and
other household equipments, school
books, drugs, medicines, building ma
terials, etc. It shoald also bo taken
into account that the quality of such
articles now fumfe-hed is much super
ior to what It wan thirty-four years
ago. They aro much more durable
and convenient and have Improved In
rtpafpn And finish. Chtcacro llernrd.
A Correct i:atlmt Of Uill.
Wrt'lilnston CorrojHndent Chicago Time.
That great practical statesman, Da
vid Bennett Hill, gave an exhibition of
rhetoric in New York last night. It
is exciting some comment, more be
cause of the man than the substance.
It tho speech is neither deep nor
strong and could not add to tho repu
tation of a school boy if tho teacher
had permitted him to render it. To tho
student who reads it Hill will bo dis
played in tho usual role of a critic, uf
a fault-finder, of a philosopher of that
deep, valuable, l-told-you-so school.
Tho speech proposes nothing, sug
gests nothiug, contain!) nothing but
what has been printed and said a score
of times. Hill is a destructor, an ob
structor, but never a constructor.
Therefore tho paucity of suggestion
chronicled excites no surprise. No
one looks for anything new or original
from Hill and they aro wise by the
light of that aphorism whieh says:
"Blessed is ho who expects nothing.
because ho shall not bo disappointed."
Of course, no one is misled by the fact
of Hlir.H last night's loquacity. It had
no public purpose; no broader purpose,
indeed, than mere Hill. It was not
meant to promote tho general welfare,
but tho Hill welfare. It bhould be
ever borne in mind, to be used as the
key to tho cipher of all Hill does and
all Hill sas, that Hill is white-house
in id. His one ambition which eats his
heart liko a canker is t become presi
dent. Ho will say anything, do any
thing, bo anything to bo finally presi
dent. Bear that ever in mind as you
bend to tho soiled lesson leaf of Hill in
politics. No Biaine, no Clay, no Web
ster, dying of disappointment with
their faces to the wall, ever felt that
aching. ultra hanker for the presidency
which feeds ou II ill.
Ttt l ira Mioultt It t'trrlor.t
Nt w Y-fk Herat !
The bill prepared by lit preventative
Maguire f California, looks to a fere
closure by tho government on the
Pnlon Pacific and Central Pacific
roads, and their maintenance a a pub
lie highway across tho continent, just
as the Brie canal is now maintained by
the sVte of New York, Its facilities to
be free to all who comply with com
mon regulations. In this way the gov
ernment lino would serve to keep all
other transcontinental routes in check
in tho matter of rate, and the ques
tion as to whether railroad lines can
bo successfully managed ur.dT our
form of government would 1h? put to a
practical test. It would seem impos
sible that public c Ulcers could be guilty
of any such rascalities as have been
perpetrated on these and other linos
under ordinary corporate control. Tho
stock waterings and "deals" of all
sorts, ending in the accumulation of
vast fortune-; by the manipulators, and
the hopeless bankruptcy of tho reads,
ave imposed enormous losses upon in
nocent investors, and have brought all
of our railway securities into discrf dit
at home and abroad. In cas cf the
roads now under discussion "coruiess
should refuse th insulting ortVr of
settlement made by scheming c r,or
ato ofiicials and their representatives in
the senate and hou.? Iot tho govern
roent foreclose on its liens an I take
over the properties and operate thern
for the benefit alike of the tecurity
holders and the people. It would bo
impossible to have more Incompetent
managements than these that have
wrecked the properties. Bet us have a
test of government control of railway
lines?
On White Miffi In Itlark t'lrk.
Kdltor n jsvar 1 in I'apinion Tlmc.
State Auditor Moore is a man who
needs the prayers and sympathy of
every good citizen in Nebraska, lie
stands alone with Governor Holcomb
among the state oiTicers as a champion
of the interests of the people, and his
position Is very trying. Tho "gang"
irlluence never loses an opportunity to
make trouble for the auditor, and so
strong is the lobby now seeking to
throw Moore oil the path of duty that
it may succeed. I believo in I'uge&e
Moore's honesty, yet, I also believo
that man is mortal. That man, and es
pecially republican, who has the man
hood and the hardihood to stand up in
the state house at Lincoln and fight
the organized gang of state house
thieves to a finish is a man entitled to
all honor. Having satisfied mynelf
that Auditor Moore li sincere in his
efforts for reform it will bo my pleas
ure to In every way aid him in his
good work, and in future, should he bo
come a candidate for public place, I
should find it hard work to keep from
vrting for him.
The act of July M, lS'o, under the
authority of which recent bond issues
have been made, provides that "on and
after January 1, 1870, tho secretary of
the treasury shall redeem in coin the
United States legal tender notes then
outstanding and to enable the secre
tary to prepare and provide for tho re
demption in thU act authorized or re
quired, ho is authorized to use any sur
plus revenues from time to time in the
treasury, not otherwise appropriated,
I and to issoe, cell and dispose of, at
not less than par, in coin, any bonds
authorized by the act of July , !S70,
to the extent necessary to carry this
act into full effect, and to use tho pro
ceeds thereof for tho purpose afore
said." It is no wonder that there Is
talk of impeachment in case the presi
dent, should make the now issuo of
bonds, which he Is soon to put out,
payable in gol 1. Tho above law only
authorizes "coin" houds.
A KKrt'iiLU.'AN exchange makes the
brilliant remark that the enforcement
of the income tax will canst eve ry man
affected by it to rebel against the dem
ocratic party. As a matter of fact 'at
least two-thirds of those who aro sub
ject to taxation under its provisions
wero always politically opposed to
democracy, and If it wore true that any
considerable number of tho remaining
third would bo unpatriotic enough to
jump the party on this account, it is
reasonable to suppose that their de
fection would be far outweighed by
acc essions from tho great ranks f tho
laboring people of tho land, tho bur
den of whoso taxation is thereby
vastly lightened. The proportion of
voters who will be affected ry tho tax,
to those who will be benefited through
tho revenue it provides for, is loss than
I to lo, Tecuruseh Journal.
The elTetoMr.Breckenridgo assumed
tho rolo f th pugilist in tho house of
congress yesterday, and attacked Mr
Heard of Missouri. Of course, tho
two wore not allowed tocorne together,
and both apologized to tho house for
their language. Public sentiment will
doubtUss go with Mr. Heard, who is
neither too talkative nor belligerent,
but Is a plain, common sense sort of
man, who is content to da his duty,
while Breckenridtte is conceited, high
tempered ami given to m-iklng displays
of hi oratory at the expense of tho
time of tho house. In early years Mr.
Heard was a resident of Plattrnouth,
and for a time made his home with the
father of Henry and J.C. Kikenbary.
When Mr. Cleveland took cilice he
was looked upon as the master mind of
the nation, and all democrats did him
tho reverence duo an acknowledged
leader . Since then, how ever, how has
the mighty fallen ! But for the ctliceu
he controls ami the position he holds,
there is scarcely a man in all tho broad
land who would respect him. Ho has
simply become the catspaw of Wall
street, and every genuine democrat
looks upon hltn w ith contempt, and if
his supercilious secretary were to per
mit him to seo what the democratic
press all over tho hind is say ing of him.
he wou'd kick hime!i clear out of ihe
white houfe.
IU:Ki:i:iNi to tho discussion now
going on among lepublicar.s on the sub
ject of tho opposition of some of its
prominent men to MeKtnley i.m. the
St. Imis i!oo Democrat (rep.) says
"Tho Globe Democrat and other re
publican pipers, while tho McKinley
bill was und?r discussion, pointed out
tho criminal foilv cf the advances
whch it made and predicted the over
whelming defeat which came to tho
party. Tho lesson of ISOO and can
never bo repeated, f- r no republican
congress will ever again frame a law
on tho McKinley lines." Thurston
favors MrKinleylsm.
"I am not unfriendly to silver," says
Mr. Cleveland, while ho holds in one
h md his siguature to the bill repeal
ing tho purchasing clause of the
Sherman act, and with tho other holds
silver by tho throat with his declara
tion favoring gId bonds. "Why did
you muddy tho spring V said the wolf
to tho lamb. O, no, ke is not "nn
friendly" to silver, after he destroyed
its further purchase for use as money,
ami now proposes practically to declare
that it Is not good enough to pay bonds
in ! For shame on such a false pre
tense. One of the results of tho Pullman
strike was the exposure of the enor
mous profits made by the Pullman
company. The public discovered that
millions in excess of a fair return on
tho Investment had been made out of
tho public pocket thro' excessive over
charves for sleeping car service. This
service has becomo an essential part of
tho railroad transportation service of
the country, and tho regulation of Its
charges is universally recognized to be
as just a protection of public interests
as tho regulation of ordinary railroad
rates. A bill placing fair limits on the
rates should be passed in Nebraska.
Rents havo gone down in thi'j town
(ami in nearly every other town in the
country) fully and often more than o0
per cent. Yet, they say tho adop
tion of tho gold standard has not made
money more valuable or harder to get !
The fact is, as a measure of value the
gold dollar is worth $1.60 or more in
every other species of property com
pared with its value a few yean ago.
A Shot t EikHtornri .
. Congressman Bryan has lost none of
his powers of repartee. In tho ionise
of the debate on the Ueilly Pacific rail
road refunding bill in the house Bow
ers humorously suggested, in allusion
to Mr. Bryan of Nebraska, thtit New
Buglaud sent itssurplus wiodom to tho
west, tho gentleman himself bt ing an
example. "Judging from some of the
legislation originating In the east," re
plied Mr. Bryan, "I t hink you had bet
ter pay a bounty and ret an some of
your intelligence at homo. New Bug
land is tho spawning ground of the eels
who havo been guilty of th. groat vil
lainies perpetrated in the management
of these roads and who prove so slip
pery when the government undei tnkes
to make them answer therefor."
B-s Reei has blossomed out into a
legislator on finance with a bill to per
mit the president to issue :i per cent
coin bonds. Ho presented tho bill yes
terday in the house as a substitute for
the president's gold-bond-retire-the-greeuback
proposition. It must bo
conceded that Reed's bill is a big im
provement over that of the adminis
tration. Of course, ho has no idea of
its passing, but presented it as a plan
to pave tho way for his presidential
boom .
The spectacle of members cf the
legislature cheerfully waltzing up to
tho state treasury and drawing mile
age at the rate of ten cents per mile to
and from their hemes, while at tho
same time there peacefully repest in
their InsMe pecket a l unch of passes is
something the honest man should garo
upon twice. The provision for mileage
into cover the expeuses of members,
but if they do not incur any expenses
wo fail to understand w hy they should
put a bill in for fictitious amounts.
Lincoln News.
1 Hi: cause of edver is growing. A
few short months ago il did not have a
single advocate among the great new
papers of tho nation. Now it has the
great Cincinnati lnquirr, the reju
venated and rehabilitated Chicaco
Times, the enterprisingand aggressive
New York Press, the ever ready advo
cate of the people, tho Caiaha World
Herald, and a number of others. Sil
ver has an up hill tipht. I ut the white
metal has nearly reach d thetumtr.it.
Fremont Herald.
Paktv spirit always was the bane cf
republics. It was party spirit w'lich
largely caused the rebellion of l)!
and it gave it most of Us vitality. It
was party spirit that made Jchn M.
Thurston senator, and it is party spirit
such aA he possesses that Will make a
ram stand by his party when it i-
wrong rather than desert il for a parly
w hich is right, and he knows i' .
NurwITH-TANMMi th fact that the
tte is in debt to the full limit of al
lowar.ce. that times are of the gold
standard order, and that people have
little money with which to pay taxes,
the legish.ture is likely to pass n Migar
bounty bill, giving the Oxr aids a
bonus f r raising ;igar beets. It Is a
shame that such legislation should !-
considered, much less become laws.
Tin: Japanese troops captured Wei-Hal-Wei,
the last of the cons! defenses
of the Chinese, Thursday, and with tt
will have free access to ihe interior.
Twenty thousand Chinese troops fought
much more bravely than usual, but the
charge of the Japs could not be resisted.
Many years ago Lord Bacon wrote a
homely truth when he said: "Money
is like muck; of no use unless it is
spread." The hoarding of money in
tho New York banks aud the coffers ol
the rich is a positive injury to all the
people.
This Kearney Now Bra says: "In
Schuyler (Colfax) county the board ol
sjpervisors awarded the county adver
tising to two populist nevspapers and
one republican newspaper, pay ing each
one-third legal rate, or full legal rate
to all."
Tim: now constitution of New York
prohibits convict labor except tho em
ployment of convicts on public works
or making material for use in state in
stitutions. This Is a victory for labor.
t'rrehteiit T the ttonncy 1.1 v- Stock Com
ptny Wrltra :
Magnet Chemical Co.
Gentlemen: I have for months been
a sufferer from Itching Piles, and tried
uumerous so-called remedies which
aid me no good. 1 procured a box of
Maonkt Pilk KiLLisn, and I confess
ho first application gave me great re
lief, anil whit" I feel 1 am not entirely
cured. 1 beliovo that before I have the
entiro box used I w ill bo well.
To every one simering with this un-
pleasantdlsease I sincerely recommend
MAO NET 1'ILE IvILI.lCU.
Yours Truly, 8am (Uwney,
South Omaha, Neb.
Pres. Gosnev Bive Stock Company.
Nino days later Mr. Gosney writes:
"I am entirely cured of the Piles and
Maonkt Pilk Killisu did It."
For sale by Gerlng & Co.
First National Bank
vi. r rsMtJi Tif, m:u.
Capital, paid up $50,000
OFFICE If S:
(Jtrtitor K. Idivn . ..I'rei.!fctit
K. H. White Vice prMeit
M. Wa( t'AMiR-r
II. N. I)-vet AisWlnnt CAfthler
IHii.CTOi::
-oro K. Dovcy, F. E. Whit, I. I!nvrkwi.rth
WrmKh an 1 II. N iMvcf.
Cr-fn: tt tul'Mi Klrt'ii i'i ihe iritertut of
eii-toriuT. CoMcti'MM mn'lp j-roi'ij.tij
resume I fur. Highest jntrket pric rnl.l for
county vrrntit h.ti-1 n'nui m l count? hon!
Zuchweiler 8c Lutz
Tlio Grocow,
Cor. Sixth and Pearl Sts.,
KLKl IIVKKYTHING IN Tllllllt LINE.
Sell Cheap, .
Give Good Weight,
Deliver Promptly.
YOUK CCsTOVI ! S1U.ICITKO
First Premium
at the
Columbian E xposition
The SiDgefldj'f'g Co.
itxacj i ;i vi:i
54: First Awards,
Htlzg the iiiiy-t nutlfr of award oMSncl
t-y nuy txhlt:t.r an l rn trc than double the
juin?.t-r ro-'-elvcl ly nil oifi?r Sewing Marhine
couisnlr. AwaM ri- e!v l oa ibc following:
F-tiiUIy vmlnir Vlachlne-. V. S. No.
I. r. 1. 11. u I -Inuie Threa I Aui'maUo
( h!i ilyti M'-!!:!. S-win Ma hliie
CaMnets Art i:c:broi'irie. L-. Cur
tain. LhSt?rj-. Ari!tli Furnlhlne,
vlr;fanl UtuUrwl lery. T;-siry la
rhiiif? r ic .
A li -13 wra. c.;ve:!n rr.arhinc
for matj'ifausr in tTt-ry l!i:e ulu-re
Sewing Machine ninte ui-l on Wxl
Cotton an 1 Mlk Clwth. Knit ;oc:
L-th-r. etc . for Ornamental lilch Ins
li sttoti hul a. iy-U"."!, Hnrrlng. orer
ratal!. s, Maj In,;, nc
AG K NTS WANTED.
The Singer M'fp- Co
"All Ovortho World.
ttrancli llfHc 13tO If.aUglH St.. (Imalia
F. S. WHITE,
.Halo Street, riattsmonth.
Ct Hi O TTi TH! Hi T? THiFv.
A X A I 1 1 I : 1 1 .
Teas and offees Unexcelled,
urtiff Ilro. lelfhratrd
OANNFD GOODS.
.Ot.F. A OUST IOK
Pillsbury's
!t MINNESOTA FLOUR.
The lu the World.
he "VXXX" jtu-: 'lU-si" Pranda
t y 8
I 7
23 H H L
ir. E. C. VU-"s Ken tr.? C -1 T-;
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.SU:!it I. -- ; i; I ;-:: ; ;,Jt i C.;.:; ! :.n ;
Nfrrou-iii'-; l .in 1,-; Prn '..; lxs t f lvfrvf
of Ihn Oi li'-U'tip t.r-r.:: s"i e.lfciT f , f .u-oi l j
otritttiu; V::Uftil I.irr-ror Kxo-ivt l"-oc
T'-rvac Oj lunj r UyJ- r. htr. nva 1
Mlv-r, Vmur tii-r. lv.-or.i'j- ai. I IV.-.:li. Vx r.al
II a !; H f.r t : ii ' rrt u (cos'snt' t "ur o
rrfan.l jns;rj-. WI s rs OM Uii H YKl I. c rtaia
dim t r t I A -tar.m, llron klfi-, Cmep,
Wfcrtoj.Sr. Vturh. S"- T't ,. '. ! ?-.-?:t to tfthf.
Hrwail lr n--c,i:' n:;- ; I .jv. pi. i w "'.; oij
Il uiw V"c. or Ai;NXi:f:s i-.u-.i oi;!j Ur
F. Frlckf & fo, drusslsts
These tiny Capsules aro superior
!r YJto Balsam al Copaiba,
' jCuleb3 and Injections. frjJJJ
fti fThey cure in 40 hours UicV J
TA sanro diseases without anyinooa
Qvenlencc SOLD B Y ALL DRUGGISTS
WTien Baby tra.s e!ck. we card tier CastorU.
WLea was a Chil J, ho crloj for Castor!,
When sho Ixvamo MUs, t.Iis clung to Cast or !x
Wfccn tho had ChUJrcn, she g ave them Castorli.
8L AOSSS DO XOU KNOW
DR. FELIX LE DRUM'S
STEEL BHD PEUHYROYftL PlllS
tho oritrinal r.nd only FRENCH. aafcnnJ ra
;i.aM'. rnrrt vi th market. I'rico l.LS.; Best bf
mail, (jciiuhie aoUi only ty
Fricko & Co., DriifiTfirists.
A
jlrnoiil's Hfomo-BeiEry.-
Pplnillil cirnttt r?fnt fr Kcrwm cr Siik
lltw.laclio, llinin l.it.'itian, til.'i)-!':it.
imotiil or Kfiitrnl Ncirali,-iMj hIo lor i.lit-u
nintiru, 0n, Kiilnfjr 1 'wiucin, A:U1 l
4.itt, An:vmia. .AntiJoM for A)x)hitu
'nl other extwK. J luv, 1J, SiJUccn:!,
iJturwsrent.
THE ARNOLD CHEMICAt. CO.
161 S.WtEternfnufr. CHIC'SX