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About The McCook tribune. (McCook, Neb.) 1886-1936 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 26, 1900)
IIo'H a Horn Notr. If Winston Churchill gets back to England his political future is assured. His exploits have caught the fancy of the whole country. Ho was defeated for parliament just before the war , but now he can have almost any place , regardless of politics. Hope for Consumptive- ! . The percentage of "arrested cases" of pulmonary disease in the Massa chusetts Hospital for Consumptives in the last year was 30.97 ; percentage of cases of improved , 46.10 , and percent age of cases not improved , 21.23. Two bottles of Piso'B Cure for Consump tion cured 1110 of a bad lung trouble. Mrs. J. Nichols , Princeton , Ind. , Mar. 26,1895. A man's ideal figure usually has a dollar mark in front of it "I had a bad cough for six weeks and could not fnd any relief -whatever. I read what a wonderful remedy Aycr's Cherry Pectoral was for coughs and I bought a bottle. Before I had taken a quarter of it my cough had entirely left me. " L.Hawn , Newington , Ont , May 3,1899. Quickly Cures Colds Neglected colds always lead to something serious. They run into chronic bronchitis which pulls down your general health and deprives you of sleep : or they end in genuine consump tion with all its uncertain results. Don't wait , but take Aycr's Cherry Pectoral just as soon as 1 you begin to cough. A few doses willjrc you then. But it cures old colds , too , only it takes a little more time. We refer to such diseases as bron chitis , asthma , whooping-cough , consumption , and hard winter coughs. If you've just taken cold a 25 cent bottle tle is all you'll need. For harder ca cs a 50 cons "bottlo is better. For chronic troubles , and to Iceep oa hand , the § 1.00 bottle is most economical. REQUIRES NO COOKI MIKES COU.MS AND curre ONE POM OF IMS J ITST .rtBCEAS WHEN IwUCaASFARiSAPDl'VD FIRST BSUCrTT NEW I MB J Hl'J CF ANY OTHER. PK B\BED FCRLAUMORY PURPOSES OKLY. * MANUFACTURED ONLY BY SANTA CLARAJtJANlFACTURING CO. ' OMAH/C'NEB. The WONDER of the AGE , No Boiling No Cooking It Stiffens the Goods St Whitens the Gees Et Polishes the Goods It makes all garments fresh aud crisp as when first bought new. TRY A SAMPLE PACKAGE. You'll like it it > ou try it. You'll buy it if you try it. You'll use it if you try It , Try it. Sold by all Grocers. W. X. U. OMAHA. Ko 4 1 JOO O Via O O Going cast remember the famous nental Limited X For rates and- full m" formation in regard to above Excursion or any point cast. Call on or write * vv * v G. IN. Clayton , N. W. Agt. , Room 506 Karbach Blk. , Omaha , Neb. Highest Caih Price Paid for Poultry , Game , Butter , Eggs. Omaba. Neb. SPENT A MILLION. tVHAT JOHN L. SULLIVAN DID FOR OTHERS. 4ml Corbctr , too , llus Squandered a Ilanclnomo Fortune The Champion of Champions Tells How Ho Got arutod front Ills Lucre. John L. Sullivan Is a bankrupt un able to pay bis debts. In his career as a pugilist for 18 years he has spent a million dollars or rather loaned a good part of it to men who , in all like lihood , will never pay him a dollar. This makes John feel sad and lonaly these holiday afternoons. He paid-out ? 98,000 to the Richburg ( Mississippi ) authorities to get rid of imprisonment after his fight with Jake Kilrain. He loaned ? 200,000 and never took a man's note for any sum thus negotiated. He spent $200,000 for dinners and wine and lost $80,000 at the gaming table In unfortunate business ventures $200- 000 more disappeared. His legitimate living expenses were $200,000. In train ing for battles another § 100,000 has been expended. One year John L. took in $400,000 as the result of his shows and his box ing victories. He always wagered big amounts on his besting an opponent and this alone amounted to a large income. In 1882 , after his scrap wit ! : Paddy Ryan , be made $29,400 by the mill and on exhibitions in the big cities. From this time on until his discomfiture with Corbett he made big money. In his Boston saloon venture he made $50,000. In his tour with Pat Sheedy he made $60,000. His tour in England enriched him $28,000. In hi three plays he made $210,000. John L. says : "With a fighter money comes easy , and it goes the same way 1 spent $5,000 training for my battle with Corbett , and lost $20,000 betting on myself. I always kept a stable of trainers following me , and they were a heavy expense. But it was being a good fellow that broke me. I was the great and only 'John L. ' That title cost me enough money to last an or dinary man a lifetime. I was too easy. When someone would say that I was the only one , it meant another basket of wine. When another would say that I never refused a friend a dollar , and afterward asked me to lend him $50 , he got a hundred. "Then , too , I was slow in getting to the box office. The others got their first , and the first count of the receipts was the largest. Was I robbed ? Yes , I was robbed. If I had what they took from me I would be satisfied. How ever , I don't regret it. I had my fling , and I paid for it. I haven't touched a drop of liquor for six months , and am not going to drink again. I feel as well as ever , and if I could lose a bit of fat I would have another try in the ring. But that is out of the question. I am going to try and make my busi ness a success , and if I ever get another fortune they will have to break the United States to break me. My money will go into bonds. " "Jim" Corbett , who wrested the championship from Sullivan , has also known the tips and downs of life. He spent $8,500 getting himself into shape to be defeated by Fitzsimmons , and lost $16,000 which he bet on himself in that fight. He received $20,000 from the purse and $50,000 as his share of the picture money. He says that his money , like Sullivan's had gone in riotous living and in staking his friends. Unlike "John L. , " however , he has never gone the limit. He still owns his house , which he values at $70,000 , and has money otherwise in vested. "A pugilist , " said Corbett , "is a good thing for every borrower in the land. We have to give up. Sullivan has given away a fortune , no doubt. If I had what is due me I could buy a brick block with the money. We are all spendthrifts. A man with one good trainer can fit himself sufficiently well for any battle. But nowadays we must have five or six trainers and sparring partners. They are costly luxuries. Managers , too , are necessary , but ex pensive. I have divided half a mil lion dollars with my manager , while a man in any other business would have been able to have kept it all himself. It is the unnecessary expenses which keep a pugilist broke. " , TOO MANY EUROPEANS COMING The Majority from tun Southern Fart of That Continent. Secretary Taylor of the United States treasury says immigrants from Europe are flocking into this country too fast and something ought to be done to stop the flood of immigration. Last month 33,000 immigrants landed in New York , or at the rate of nearly 400,000 in a year. The immigrants from the southern European countries are those we fear most. Those from the north , the English , Irish , Scandina vians , Danes , Dutch , Germans , all make desirable citizens. But those from Italy , Hungary , Turkey and Spain are coming over faster than they can be assimilated. The immigrants from the north usually hasten through T'ew York bound for the west and the northwest , where they become farm laborers , and gradually rise to be farm owners. They add to the productive ness of the country. The others lin ger about the large cities , New York , Chicago and St. Louis. They go into sweat shops and sleep twenty in a room , or they become fruit peddlers or organ grinders , and never get away from the cities. A few are employed in the coal or iron mines. As a rule , however , they are most undesirable. We do not need so many of this class of immigrants , and -something should be done to check the tide. Trolley T.lncn for IJomlmy. one city , Madras. Consul Fee , of Bam- bay , reports that permission has been asked to introduce electric , traction in that.city. Horses are used at present , but the consul remarks that they are well cared for and never abused , and that all animals receive human treatment - j ment in India. More Indiana than In Mayflower Day. That there are more Indians in the United States now than there were the day the Pilgrims landed cannot he proved , hut is generally helieved and stoutly affirmed hy statisticians. New InventloiiH. In order to prevent bottles being re filled a Connecticut Inventor provides the bottle with an _ , j , extension within / Tj V T which the cork is J777 \ \ S sealed , and from Mf- . which the cork can * T not be removed. In order to open the bottle the extension is broken off by means of a specially constructed tool which serves the neck extension. A clever pneumatic tire , which pre sents three thicknesses of material upon the tread , has been invented by a New York inventor , who provides a doubly folded tube with a detachable inner tube , the whole being , when in flated , fixed with a crescent-shaped rim. rim.A A peculiar invention in the form of a water massage apparatus has been pat ented to a Chicago inventor who pro vides a reservoir with a return pipe provided with a pump and in front of the return pipe the part to be treat ed is placed so that the fluid is thrown with force against the affected part. Inventors desiring free information as to the best method of protecting or selling their inventions may obtain free advice in addressing Sues Co. , Attorneys at Law and Patent Exports. Bee Bldg. , Omaha , Neb. The I-iind oT IIread ani } 1titter. s the title of a new illustrated pamph let just issued by the Chicago , Mil waukee & St. Paul Railway , relating more especially to the land along the j new line it is now building through j Ecu Plomme aud Charles Mix counties iu South Dakota. It will be found very interesting reading. A copy will be mailed free en receipt of 2-cent stamp ! for postage. Address Geo. H. Heafford , General Passenger Agent , Chicago , 111. I'm denyin' the women arp foolish : God Almighty made 'em to match the men. George Eliol. Mrs. TVInslow's Soothing Syrup. For children teething , toftcas the Rums , reduces In flammation , allays pala , cures wind colic. 25c a bottle. Ask some men now they fell and they will entertain you for an hour with their woes. The scholar who cherishes the love of comfort is not to be deemed a scholar. The Health ami 1'leasure Kcsorts Of Texas , Mexico , Arizona and Cali fornia are quickly and comfortably reached via the Southern Pacific Com pany's Sunset Route. Daily through service from New Orleans to San Francisco via Houston , San Antonio , El Paso and Los Angeles. Special semi-weekly service , Sunset Limited from New Orleans Mondays and Thursdays , composed of Buffet Smok ing Car , containing Bath Room and Barber Shop , Drawing Room Compart ment Car , regular Pullman Sleepers , and Dining Car ( meals a la carte ) , all of the latest design and most luxuri ously appointed. Direct connections made at New Orleans from all points North and East. Detailed informa tion cheerfully furnished by "W. G. Neimycr , G. W. A. , So. Pac. Co. , 238 Clark St. , Chicago ; W. H. Connor , Com'l Agt. , Chamber Commerce Bldg. , Cincinnati , O. , W. J. Berg , Trav. Pass. Agt. , 220 Ellicott Square , Buffalo N. Y. The more fault a man looks for the more he finds. lllf Rates rjouth via Omaha ami St I.ouis and AVahasli Routes. On the 1st and 3rd Tuesday of each month the above lines will sell home- seekers tickets to southern points for one fare ( plus $2.00) ) round trip. ! WINTER TOJRIoi RATES now on sale to Hot Springs , Ark. , and all the winter resorts at greatly RE DUCED RATES. Remember the 0. & St. u. and Wabash - bash , the shortest and quickest route to St. Louis. Remember the O. & St. L. and 0. , K. C. & E. is the shortest route to Quincy. Unexcelled service to Kansas City and the south. For rates , sleeping car accommoda tion and all information ca.i at the QUINCY ROUTE OFFICE. 1415 Far- nam St. ( Paxton Hotel block ) or write Harry E. Moores , City Passenger and Ticket Agent. Omaha , Neb. The twentieth century which will begin on Tuesday , January 1 , 1901 , will have twenty-four leap years , the greatest number possible. Reliable Help Wanted ( Either ser. ) The Humanitarian Home and Sanitar ium for Invalids and Health Seekers. Incorporated. Send 12c In stamps for full Information. Address J. H. Teitlcbauni , Treasurer , East I.as Veens , N. M. To be prepared for emergencies , many of the European monarchs have large amounts of money on deposit in the Bank of England. Napoleon III. , when he saw that his star was on tue wane , contrived to send a vast sum to England's great bank. This ueposit has enabled Empress Eugenie to live in dignity and luxury. Use Magnetic Starcli 1C hac no equal. On the gate of the cemtery in Rio Janeiro is a notice in Spanish , French and English that no dogs are admitted unless led by the owner. This is how the announcement is made in "Eng lish : " "Noble mesdames and gentle man who may desire a dog to follow in this tombs yard will not be permis sion unless him drawn by a cable roiind him throttle. " Magnetic Starch is the very best laundry starch in the world. Russian photographers hang the pic tures of the delinquents upside dowu at the entrance of their studios. Have no friends not equal to your self. "William B. Gage , the Boston lawyer who died the other day , was a lifelong friend of General Butler , and was pre paring material for a life of Butler at the time of his death. Mr. Gage represented the defense in more mur der trials and was more often success ful in such cases than almost any law yer practicing In Massachusetts. The business of college education is one of the greatest in the country. The 426 colleges and universities in which are enrolled 175,000 students , repre sent an invested capital of $250,000,000 and give employment to 25,000 persons as teachers and officers. A MINNESOTA FARMER Does Well In Western Canada. Virden , Man. , Nov. 18 , 1899. Hon. Clifford Sifton , Minister of the Interior , Ottawa , Canada Sir : Think ing that my experience in Manitoba might be both useful and interesting to my fellow-countrymen in the United States who may be looking to Mani toba and the northwest with the in tention of settling there , I have much pleasure in stating that through in formation received from Mr. W. F. McCreary , immigration commissioner at Winnipeg , I was induced to visit Manitoba in February , 1898. When I called- upon Mr. McCreary he spared no pains to give me all the information , etc. , in his possession , the result of which was that I came here with a letter of introduction from him to the secretary of the Virden Board of Trade. That gentleman provided me with a competent land guide , and , although there was considerable snow on the ground , I had no difficulty in selecting three homesteads for myself and sons. Having made the necessary homestead entries at the land office in Brandon , I returned to my home in Lyon county , Minnesotaand came back here in May following , accompanied by one of my boys , bringing with us two teams of horses , implements , etc. Our first work was to erect a temp > - rary shanty and stable , after which we broke arid leveled seventy-five acres and put up thirty tons of hay. I went back to Minnesota about July 20 , leaving my son here. I returned in October , bringing my family with me. I found that the land we had acquired was of good quality , being a strong clay loam with clay subsoil. Last spring I sowed 100 acres in wheat and fifty acres in oats and barley. ( Seventy-five acres of this grain was sowed on "go-back" plowed last spring. ) My crop was thrashed in October , the result being over 2,700 bushels of grain in all. Wheat aver aged fifteen bushels psr acre and graded No. 1 hard , but that which was sown on land other than sod ( "go- back" ) went twenty four and one-half bushels per acre. To say that I am well pleased with the result of my first year's farming operations in Manitoba does not ade quately express my feelings , and I have no hesitation in advising those who are living in districts where land is high in price to come out here , if they are willing tolo a fair amount of work. I am ten miles from Virden , which is a good market town , and nine miles from Hargrave , where there are two elevators. This summer I erected a dwelling house of native stone and bought a half-section of land adjoin ing our homesteads , for which I paid a very moderate price. There are still some homesteads in this district , and land of fine quality can be purchased from the Canadian Pacific Railway company at $3.50 per acre on liberal terms. Good water is generally found at a depth of from fifteen to twenty I feet. I have 175 acres ready for crop j next year. The cost of living here is about the ! same as in southern Minnesota. Some j commodities are higher and others j lower in price , but the average is j about the same. I remain , your obe- j dient servant. ( Signed. ) j JACOB REICHERT. I Between friends frequent reproof makes the friendship distant. Try Magnetic Starch it will last longer than any other. When you have faults , do not fear to abandon them. TO COKE A COLD IN ONE DAY , Pake Laxative Brome Quinine Tablets. All Iruggists refund the money it it fails to cure. 5c. E.V. . Grove's signature oa each box. If a man take no thought about what s distant he will find sorrow in store. First the medicine that holds the record for the largest number of abso lute Qesres of female Ills fe Lytiia E. Psnkham's Vegetable can show by her letter files in ILynn that a mil lion women have been restores ? to health by her medicine and advice * Third -All letters to Mrs * PSnkham are received ? opened read and an swered by women only , This fact as certified to by the mayor and postmas ter of Lynn and others of Mrs * Pinkhasnys own city , Write for free book con taining these certificates * Every ailsng woman Is invited to writeto Mrs * Plnkham and get her ad vice free of charge * LVdla E. Pinkham liedCo. . , Lynn , Mas * . Odd Coincidence. One of the most remarkable coin cidences on record has come to light in Lynchburg , Va.f and Augusta , Ga. In each city there is a Walter Clark whose father was named Samuel and whose"mother's maiden name was Walker. Both Walker Clarks have brothers named Samuel and William , uncles named Charjes and John and an aunt named Elizabeth. Yet the men can not trace any relationship between the two families. What can one put into a mind which is filled and filled with itself ? Knorknd Ont anil In A street car struck Guiseppo Marntc , i sailor , In Philadelphia , Chrlstnma day , knocked him down and dislocat ed his shoulder , lie was put into n wagon and hurried off toward the Pennsylvania hospital. The wagon IJi jumped over a rut In the pavement and the jar reset his houlder. When he got to the hospital the surgconn found the shoulder all right , band aged It and sent him back to his ves sel. Gravity is only the bark of the tree of wisdom ; but it preserves It. WOMEN OF THE UNITED Regard Peruna as Their Shield Against Catarrh , Coughs , Colds , Grip and Catarrha ! Diseases. MRS. BELVA A. LOCKWOOD , LATE CANDIDATE FOR THE PRESIDENCY. Mrs. Uelva Lockwood , the eminent barrister , of Washington , I ) . ( ' . . is the only woman who has ever been a candidate for the Presidency of the United States. She is the best lcno\vn woman in America. As the pioneer of her .sec in the legal profession sbe has gathered fame and fortune. In a letter to The Peruna Medicine Company , she says : " / have used your Peruna both for myself anil my mother , Mrs. i Hannah J. Bennett , now in her 88th year , and I find it an invaluable remedy for cold , catarrh , hay fever and kindred diseases ; also a good \ tonic for feeble and old people , or those run down and with nerves ' unstrung. " Yours truly , Bclva A. Lockwood. Catarrh may attack any organ of the body. Women are especially liable to catarrh of the pelvic organs. There are one hundred cases of catarrh of the pelvic organs to one of catarrh of the her.d. Most people think , because they have no catarrh of the head , they have no catarrh at all. This is a great mistake , and is the cause of many cases of sick ness : md death. "Health : * nd I5eauty''sent free to women only , by The Pernna Medicine Co. . Columbus. Ohio. If so'peculate Fticressf'illy. We can make you In rnc month more Intcmtt on your money tha-i any bank will pay > ou In a jr.-r s.i ) will hitl 'XX ) bushels of wheat or c-orn an-1 inarcln th - same "i rent Send for our lie jk on Hpeculatlon. JT IS KlKK. All prnlltH pnxal.lc on lieuunil. J. K. CO5V1STQCK & . CO. , Room 23 , Traders' Chicago. Nature , after making man , found 1 she had some material left , so she made a dude. Deafness Cannot Bo Cnrcu by local applications , as thry cannot reach tan diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness , and that is by consti tutional remedies. Deafness is caused by at inllamcd condition of the mucus lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this lube is inflamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hear ing , and when it is entirely closed dfafn'-ss i - the result , and unless the'inflammation can be taken out and this tube restored to its normal condition , hearinjr will be destroyed forever ; nine cases out of ten are caused by catarrh , which is nothing but an inflamed condition of the mucus surfaces. We will Rive One Hundred Dollars for any cape of Deafness ( caused by catarrh ) that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for 3irculars , free. free.F. J. CHENTnY & CO. , Toledo , O. So'd by DrtiKKists. 7. > e. Hall's Family Pills arc the best. Contentment may be better than wealth , but they ought to go together. For More Than a Century Baker * " Chocolate has been tlie Mantlarel. Made only by Walter Uaker& Co. Ltd. , Dorchester , Mas" . If you have not tried Magnetic- Starch I try it now. You will then use no other. Beauty may be only skin deep , but it is nearly always effective. FITS Permanently Cumi. first day's me of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Uebtnier. i Sen.l for FREE SS.OO tilal bottle and treatir-e. j DB. R. II , KLINE , Ltd. , 931 Arch St. , I hilaileJphlu , I'a. A man can enlarge the priciples ' which he follows ; those principles do ' ' j not enlarge the man. : Your clothes will not crack if you use Mr-3netic Starch. A leading feature of The Atlantic' ' during the first six months of 1900 will I be "The Autobiography of W. J. Still- ' man. " Mr. Stillman's career as artist - i ist , editor , and newspaper correspondent - j ent in various foreign countries has brought him into touch with many of the most striking personages and , ' j events of the last fifty years. The i" early papers of tne series give singu ' | larly interesting characterizations o' ] ' Dr. Nott , the famous President of Union - - ion College , of Ruskin , Turner , and other English and American artists of Kossuth , whom Mr. bcillman served as secret agent , of Emerson , Holmes. Lowell , Agassiz , and other members of' the Adirondack Club. i For starching fine linen use Magnetic Starch. The rumor that England is prepar ing the island of St. Helena for the possible reception of President Kruger' ' lends special timeliness to an article which will appear in the February Century the first of the hitherto unreported - reported "Talks with Napoleon , " from ' I the diary of Dr. B. E. O'Meara , nis j ! physician at St. Helena. The ex-1. tracts printed in this number are pre-1 faced an account of the writer's relations - | lations with the ex-Emperor and the j story of the manuscript's discovery by ( the editor of The Century. A portrait - , . trait of O'Meara and a map of the | island are among the lustrations in s I this instalment i { Situa'fd at the head of ( ilvt ton I'ay is cU s- l.ne.1 ti. ! ) Hit HOST PROSPEROUS U PY t-n the Gtifof Mi-xii-o. It poserses utifiualrd natural aelvanta i's.f.'ci cripti"illy and from cverj pi-mt Of view , it- , future as a f.'i ( at citv ! - iissiire-d The U. S. ( iovi-rnmi'iit is ROXV siM-ndmtra larxv amount of tronov in Harbrr nnpio'.oir.ents. J.a I' < rie is the natural --f.tj ort for tinpro - cucts of the cntiie Middle Xoitnurnaiid West ern Mates and for Houston , the j'roat railroad tenter of Texas. Kxc-urM'o'is at i educed rates w ill lie run twice a month. U'rite for PRKG HAPS , W-SCR1PTIVE LI IERATLRO acd full particulars lo AMER5CAH LAND CO. , 188 Madison St. . - - CHICAGO. Salzcr'fc Kapo Speltz gives KIch , Vi'batisitl srcen Catclog food at , FARJV3 tells. Sailer's Sefls are Warranted ti Prcdcw. ahlon Luther , K.Troy Pa. a onlnhf.ltli orM ' cro iu 2 0bnbels ItlgKourOaii , J Hrf JlinMcott , WIs. , 173 bin Lurl'j ni.d 1 ! I . RedWinpMinn..byRrowinz320bush hazer' c > fn P'r acre. If joa doubt , write them. Wolih la gain 200,000new customers , hence wlllMt.il on trial IO DOLLARS /ORTH FOR lOc. 10 pki of rare farm tmdt , Hilt Ecsh , tr.e 3ared ( Torn Speltz , producing H ) baxh. ftxM an44 ton * rimj per acre boteoai8an < i barter. Hrnmua Intrrals the greatest grain on tarth ; S&lier zy < to. Bape , Hpring U hrat , ic. . including our niarn * moth Flint rrultnndStcd I'aul-.c ulilniall abont Salzer Creut Million Itollnr 1'otnfo , all n.iil-il r r lOc. p Iage tirtly north JIO to rcta ' rt red Polatcr * * I.il ) n fcbl. and c Please " . (1.00. 'end this" Catalog stir , nlth alone , < > c , lOc. to Salzcr. wr.u : of acres or choic cultural LANDS now opened for settlement * ° Western Canadi. uc.etstro.vn the cel eb rat pel NO. 1 HARD WHEAT which brings the highest price m the markets of the world thousands of cattle are fattened for market .v thout bcin feu trr.iin , ind without a Jay's she Iter. Send f.r informa tion and sec'ire a free home in Western Canada. Write the Superintendent of Iminit'nition. Ot tawa , oraildtt-ss the undersurw-d. v.ho viill mail FOU atlases p-impiilcts. ef freeofco-t. W V. Bennett 801 X v Life H.iildintr. Omih i .Vcb. I-ocomotor Alaila ccn- nuereil at ! ? * t. Doctor * puzzled. Specialist * imazed at recovery rf patient * tlnni ht 'npurabe.l ! y OK.CJIASF. ' IJM > OI > AND NKKVi : FOOD. IVrite me aticiut yoiircass. Advice anil proof oi cure" FRFE. IU.uasK,224 N.IOthSt.rillMllrLPHUl-A Meat smoked in a few hears with K3AUSERS * LIQUID EXTRACT Or SMOKE. Made from hic.ory wood. Cheapx-r , Cleaner. , and mrir than the oM way S < nl for circular. KUALSElt A lili'J. , MUtoji , 1' * . 3URES COUGHS AND COLDS. 'REVENTS CONSUMPTION. AH Just as cheap a : > r cor ick 'NEW DISCOVERY , 0 B tt vj r B f , qickrcIefanliure3wor ! ! > t aCBook of textlmnnlale snd 10 luiv tie.itmeiu DR. IU I ! . CUEKS'S SO5S. Hot E , llln.U , Ca.