THE NOKTH ELATTE SMI-WEEKLY XRIBOB1: ITESDAY EYENJ1TG, SEPTEMBER 15, 1896, ' - DEATH. To a thecscphist. C t . t - - . - aiMiL, mercaiB uoaies 01 ine acaa, yon B&y, na, loiienag; wait mmj- evidence. Jingling and ciphering to a mortal 3echanic mummers oa parlor play. 2foI To our life, as to a holy day Of godly wisdom, and of penitence, 13 given no sight of the Supreme. Lut thenca Shine symbols manifest and. as she may Faith builds in emblem true and miracle Mysteries, where the soul itself doth glass, Whore art, stem eyed, and visa red duty -well Discourse of things eternal, until death Kings for the veil to fall, the shew ta pass Disci to et discedite, he Faith. George C W. Warr in Academy, j TTlTTTTi nTJAOm AH TT7 A T7'rt 1 m h IX.OLUQJL U-D ii. JL IMh As the small sailing yacht drifted slowly past the bluff at the entrance of Presque Isle bay the two men sailing her stood breathlessly watching the strange lights -which seemed to rise and fall at intervals on the spot -where the old blockhouse stood in the days -when ilad Anthony Wayne, with his troops, was stationed at the fort and -where he, was buried in 1796. As the boat drew close to the shore Herbert Manning, the younger of the men who had been, striv ing in the semidarkness to make out what the unusual lights were, grasped his companion by the arm, exclaiming excitedly: "Look I Look quick, captain! There are three persons on the ground where the old blockhouse was burned down. How queer they look. You can almost see through them. I move we get away from here; it makes my flesh creep." Captain Boss, who had a most profound contempt for the superstitions most of the sailors are imbued with, : looked long and earnestly at the group before he spoke. At first he thought per- j haps some hot headed feud was being settled with firearms at an hour of the night when they could best elude the vigilance of the authorities; but, no I The figures whicir could be distinctly ' seen through the mist were unlike the people of the present day. The military man, standing with head erect and one hand extended as if issuing a command, looked wonderfully like the old por traits of General Wayne. Standing be fore him, with folded arms, was a young man in the dress of a lieutenant. His face expressed defiance and despair. Kneeling" bore the general was a slight I girlish figure, with clasped hands raised in supplication to the stern man whose face looked hard and merciless in the blue ghastly light which made the scene so weird that the captain as well as his young friend began to have a weak feeling-about the knees as they gazed spellbound through the mist at the uncanny pan torn ine. The woman, who seemingly had pleaded in vain, suddenly springing to her feet, threw her arms around the young lieutenant, and in that instant all three figures dis appeared No vestige of the scene enact ed remained, although the yachtsmen, straining their eyes to trace a shadow of what they had seen, could distinctly see the ground upon which the ghastly trio had stood A moment later the mocn, Lursting through a cloud, Ehone clear and cold, showing the bleak spot where Mad An thony "Wayne had once been buried. "Who on earth were they, captain?" again asked the younger man with a glance at the bluff they were fast leaving- behind as their sail, answering to a stiff bieeze, carried them toward the lower piers. "1 do net know, Bert," replied the captain with a short laugh, trying to conceal the nervous feeling he could not shake off. 4 I doubt whether it was any one 'on earth.' If the old story told by some of the sailors bo true about the bluff being haunted by the spirits of 'Mad Anthony Wayne1 and he young lieutenant he had shot as a deserter, I imagine we have seen the Epooks tonight. I have never believed fh ghosts, but this beats ine.' It is a trifle too supernatural to suit my taste. ''I will tell you the story of General Wayne and his favorite lieutenant as it was told to me by an old resident of Erie, who moved there from Pittsburg at the time Anthony Wayne died and was personally acquainted utii the facts. "We all know from history that Gen eral Wayne was one of the bravest and most daring soldiers of the Revolution, and as an Indian fighter had scarce his equal. He did not know the meaning of the word fear, and as a disciplinarian he was a terror to nil who were under him. Among the young officers on his staff the one he liked best was a fair haired youth of 24 years, to whom he had given leave of absence to visit his bride, to whom he had been married but a few days when he received march ing. orders. 4 'He was a great favorite wi th G enerai Wayne, who sent him away Buoyantly happy with the permission to remain 4S hours with the object of his affection. -At the expiration of that time he was tg report promptly for duty. . He started on his short journey with hearty geed wishes and congratulations of the other less favored officers, who, although they might envy him,, did not grudge him the 48 hours freedom from duty, nor the happiness before him. It seemed a long time, but, alas, how short it was! The bride, a dainty little wcrr.an un used to discipline of any kind, with loving imperiousness so bewitched the heart and brain of the young husband that the hours flew on uncounted and the general's command to return in 43 hours was unheeded was actually forgotten until four hours over the allotted time. They had passed before the lieutenant realized he had disobeyed orders, and he was about to return and sue for par don, trusting to bis gocd standing with the general to influence his granting it. It was a hope that showed how little he knew Anthony Wayne. There was net .upon record a time when mercy was shown by him to one who set at naught one of his commands. Were his nearest, dearest friend to offend In that way, while under military regulations, he rpuld mete out the full measure of pun ishment without flinching. No matter how palliating the circumstances nor how strongly his own. heart plead for the offender, the offense must be met T' the penalty laid down by the law. 3Y .ally ignorant of this, our young hero was hopefuL fie sincerely regretted bis thoughtless act of disobedience, but his only fear of punishment was that he might be put under arrest for a few nays. "As he was bidding the little wife goodby and trying to reassure her that all would be well with, him, two Etal wsrt soldiers entered the door unan nounced and, without further warning, arrested him as a deserter. 'As a de serter L Merciful heavens V exclaimed the lieutenant, realizing in aa instant tha Kar-ror nf that meant " I am not a deserter I Who has dared to accuse me as such?' " 'Our orders are from headquarters, sir,. replied the sergeant, showing him a paper, the warrant signed by An thony Wayne. The doomed man, crazed with the thought of what his fate would be, looked about wildly for some chance of escape, but the soldiers of General Wayne were too well trained to neglect their duty "or to even show the piry they felc for the young man, whose offense, seemingly so slight, must yet pay the . penalty cf a base deserter. "The few brief hours of happinesshad cost them dear. What a sad aye, ter rible ending of that short honeymoon I The girlish bride, white with terror, yet not realizing the awful sorrow be fore her, was sure that she could save her husband from punishment were she to plead for him with the general, who had been so gracious to her when they met that she could not believe him crueL Hastily saddling her own horse, j sue naa ioiiowea ciose Denina tne sol diers guarding her husband, determined that nothing should prevent her having an interview with General Wayne. ' 'Arriving at the fort, Ehe dismountedi and, slipping past the guard before they could prevent her, had forced her way into the presence of the general. It was said of 'Mad Anthony' that, however stern and unbending he might be with his men, with woman he was ten der, deferential and yielding. They could not believe the stories abGut his cruelty, and the little woman who stood before him was not prepared for the stern order given to the sentinel to 'es cort this lady to the outpost and then report for lack of duty at once' who has dared to let her through the guards. 'This is no place for you, madam,' he said more gently, but throwing herself on her knees before him she pleaded as only a loving woman can plead for the man whose life is dearer to her than her own. " She might as well have appealed to a rock as to Anthony Wayne, for, although every word she uttered stabbed him to the heart because he was fond of the young lieutenant whose future had seemed so full of well earned hope, yet no thought of granting the pardon in his power entered the stern command er's mind In his estimation there,could be no reprieve for a soldier who willful ly or through careless disregard of orders had placed himself in the light of a de serter. "Lieutenant G. stood before the man whose power was unlimited with folded arms awaiting his sentence. Without a plea for his life and horior, without tho usual court martial, or, in fact, any chance of escape, he was condemned to be shot at sunrise as a deserter. Not a sign cf agony felt was shown by the doomed man, whose bright young life was to pay the penalty of a few hours of happy forgetf ulness of time, but as his wife, springing to herfeet, threw her arms around him as. if to save him and "with a shriek of terror fell at his feet unconscious tiio lieutenant turned and looked at Anthony Wayne. It is said that General Wayne never forgot that look while he lived, and that when the report of the muskets reached his ears at sunrise that fatal morning he dropped his head on his hands and groaned aloud, and it was not well for the hap less soldiers who had business with him that day. ' ' One word from him migh t have saved that life, which" lay like a gift in the palm of his hand not only one, but two lives, for the girl bride never re covered from the shock of that day. Dying, she cursed the hard hearted sol dier who telk from her all that made life dear to her. For that reason, and because when, the bones of General Wayne were taken, frcru the grave on the bluff at Presque isle and carried to their present resting place among his kin, the scalp and particles cf flesh which had resisted decay being replaced in the old coffin fnd grave by the block house, the superstitious sailors say that 'Mad Anthony' cannot rest, but that at intervals he comes to the old headquar ters where that terrible tragedy was en acted so long ago. It is believed that he regretted that act of cruelty which fce at the time thought imperative duty demanded in order that military obedi ence be enforced upon the soldiers whose hearts were filled with horror at the punishment meted out to the young offi cer whom they all loved. ' 'Begret comes too late when the coffin lid is closed "I don't know why we have been chosen as witnesses to the ghastly reap pearance of the trio tonight, but I am glad to find myself ence more among living creatures," added the captain as the boat touched the pier. "Whatever mistakes were mads by 'Mad Anthc ny Wayne,' ho at least was a brave, dauntless soldier, and I for ere say, 'Rcquiescat in pace. ' " Phila delphia Times. Per Secret, An old lady died not long ago who during her lifetime had under all cir cumstances managed to maintain an ap pearance of composure and placidity and who had been the admiration, of all who knew her. When her life was al most over, her family physician stood at her bedside one day and said : "Mrs. Brown, I wish you could tell me the secret of your happy disposition. ' The old lady looked up at him with an attempt at a smile and murmured, "I always had patience with fools." Boston Woman's Journal Social Inequalities. "Say," snapped the busy man, "my time is worth a dollar a minute a dol lar a minute. Do you hear?" "That jist shows the difference in folks, " said the gentleman with the shoe laces to selL "Once I done a whole year's time for only 3.45." Indianap olis Journal. A Eaine Eoniface "Please,- sir, do you. need any cham bermaids? - 'Chambermaids I What do we want of chambermaids? Dis is a hotel, not & lodgin houses" Truth. Buokleas Arnica Salve The best salve in the world for cuts, bruises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fever sores, teter, chapped hands, chilblains corns and aiLskin erupttocs, and posi tively cures piles, or no pay required, It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfac tion or money refunded. Price 25 cents per bos-. For sale by AJ5. Sfreitz Bile. thia. btoodlsss piiplasiiralil uo Dr. Sisr jar's TJJaiuae. Iris the greatest reiaedyls tie -trorld for rsaidag the weak stroagi Tor mis by T K. Irfngty. THE OLD CELLO'S THANKSGIVING. On fceinjr recovered from a Gencvese garret. Thank heaven, the age of my shelving is past. This dust hidden page . Of my history drear With a melodist's tear Is -written at laat- That long, bitter sSlitude netbenvard cast! A. century Coxra I A hundred years long On my dim attic throne, Likj a Theban of old, la my sepulcher cold I ruled, xrhile the song: - s On my heart kept a vigil unfading and strong. Gone, gona arc the ladies- in pearls and in laces. Those lo rulings from Cadiz And Venice and Come, AH. all gathered home, finite a thousand new fares Appland my love sighings and sibylline graces I The love I once bore in my tremulous measure Is dead, and tho rear Of tho battle is gone. Tho curtain is drawn On the dolor and pleasure All sealed in my boficm, mysterious treasure I So I sigh, and I purr, and I moan as If now The glories that Tvcro Slept not en my heart. Bet by a new art They spring to tha brow Of the master who rules me, he half wonders how. Vogue. COUSIN HM. "Young ladies, this is your cousin Linn, : caid cur father, coming in. ta dinner one day and presenting "a tall young man. Helen and I giggled. Cousin Linn was tall, as I Eaid, and he did not know what to do with his tallness. His em barrassment at sight of two grown and, I may say, handsome young ladies was plain. "What a gawk I" we thought. Dinner did rot much improve our opinion of our relative, and it was with dismay that we heard, as we left the dining room : "Girls, I leave your cousin Linn to your devices this afternoon. I have no doubt you "can entertain him." Then father strode out of the door and back to business. The wretch I mean, cur new relative, of coarse. That very afternoon we were to have paid a number of neglected calls that could not longer be put off. Entertain him! Oh, yes, we would entertain him. And we did. "Just wait, ' ' said my sister Helen be tween set teeth. "He shall show us how himself." So when Cousin Linn had finished his cigar he seemed to linger over it an unreasonably long time and entered the parlor, his rather shceyish gaze met a batting cf fcur light brown eyes, whese owners were prepaied to make out whatever mischief he invited The first few moments passed tamely enough. Cqusin Linn was a twig of a branch of the family tree that flourished in a neighboring state, too far away for us to know more than that we there boasted also an Aunt Lucy and a Cousin Kate. We put Cousin Linn down as an ordinary farmer bey, with a little more thfTi his share of the farm and of the boy about him. Just as wo expected, Cousin Linn himself gavo us tho first hint of how he was best to be held up to the proper ridicule and scorn. In despair at our brief replies to. his well meant conversa tional efforts, his eye fell upon the piano, and he, in gratitude of spirit, fell upon its neck. He asked us to play. Poor man 1 Sister Helen began. Now, if there Was one thing we girls prided ourselves upon, it was our musical talent and ed ucation, pr, rather, we were proud of the talents and father of the education, which he had paid for with mingled feelings of satisfied duty and outraged pocket. But that day Sister Helen ajH peared possessed. She played nothing but the simplest tunes, Jigs and reels and even had tha audacity to pick out several good old hymns with one hand I followed her leadr and our pcor old piano wa3 made to bring forth sounds that no self respecting cow would have died to. "Can'tycu play, Cousin Linn?" asked Sister Helen. Law, that girl's smile was as innccent as a baby's, but it meant mischief for our cousin. That in dividual, who had applauded us loudly, looked at his shoes and said yes, he could play a little. He would try, even after our brilliant performance. Cousin Linn's musical education had evidently been on the lines laid down in our programme. He reeled off country dances with the ease of a cow walking a railroad trestle. If our selections were rum-te-tumty, Cousin Linn's were rum-te-tumtier. And to watch, him picking out the tune, using one, two pr three, fingers of each hand, his long hair bobi bing about his. ears as he ducked his head at every note, set us in a fit of si- Baby doesn't always 2nd this world an inviting place to come to. It is a world of struggle, at the best. Prospective- mothers 'ought to make it as hopeful a world as pos sible for the little stranger. It is herdutv at least to confer on her baby as strong and healthy a constitution as possible, by keep- ihg her own physical and mental condition at its best during the expectant time. The best promoter of health and cheer fulness a prospective mother can have is Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. It tones up- the whole system and. gives special strength and elastic power to the .delicate organism concerned in parturition. It makes the mother stronger and brighter in body and mind; it shortens confinement, makes" delivery easy and entirely free from, danger; gives the mother recuperative en ergy and power, and promotes an abundant supply of nourishment for the child. Delicate women, shouldbe extremely care ful not to imperil their health by resorting to any preparation; put up by unskilled, un educated persons, or niere nurses. Dr. Pierce'u Favorite Prescription is the only preparation of its Had invented by a regu larly graduated physician, an eminent spe cialist of thirty years' experience. The Ecost trainable- knowledge for women, and especially for- prospective mothers, is contained is Dr. Pierce's great iccS-page free book. "The People's Cosmos Sense Medical Adviser." Several chapters are devoted to womea's- repro ductive, pbysioloey. There are over 300 iHnstra tioas acd colored, plates. A. paper-bound copy will beseaf ahsolstely free on receipt of sr cce ceat stamps to pay the cost of maSixtfc only- Ad ires World's Dispensary Medical Association, Bcf&lov X. XI It a French cloth -bound, ea bossed, iaad. bewitifiilly stamped, binding- is pre .ferred. scad lea cents extra. 31 cents in all. to pay the extticoet cf this mere haadsoEiebincarjr. lent laughter. "Let's take him with s," whispered Helen, as he n eared the end of a "num ber. " And of course I jumped at the idea of more fun with Cousin Linn. "I'm agreeable," said, that young man when we asked him. He spake better than he knew. So off we set To every girl of bur ac quaintance we paid a visit, and at every house we made new sport of Cousin TiiTTTi and his piano playing. First, we would play when asked, and always the same rum-te-tum tunes. Of course, the girls took the cue from a wink and did the same, while Cousin. Linn, sat there, his great eyes staring at his shoes, and saying never a word ex cept "Fes'm'r and "NoTm." Then, "Cousin Linn can play," one of us would demurely say, and Cousin T-irm always toed the mark and the pedals. So it went on. We left one household after another in convulsions of laughter, t until we came to Miss Matilda Craig's. It happenejlifchat Miss Craig played first and we"wre unable to give her the cue. Poor, good Christian souL She played the piano as she did everything else, as her conscience bade her, just the best she knew how. So after Miss Matilda had given us the "Turkish Retreat," the ' ' Wellington Boots Quickstep, " and other carefully rendered selections, Helen and I could do no less. We thun dered at Bach and trilled at Chopin in ! the best conservatory style we had been taught and snickered in our sleeves (they were wide then, too, my dears, but at the bottom and not the top). How Cousin Linn gaped I actually thought the man's eyes would pop out of his head Then we made him play. He had to be almost dragged to the piano this time, but we were eager and curious to see him go through with, his little jigs and reels again after our old masters. So Cousin Linn took his seat at the instrument. Somehow, as he sat there idly fingering the keys for a moment, the stoop went out of his back and the dull look faded from his eyes, and he seemed almost handsome. Suddenly he threw his head back like a warhorse and struck a chord. I never heard a like sound come from Miss Craig's old piano or any other. Grand and full and sweet, it sounded in the ears of our guilty consciences like the trump of doom. Again he struck the keys, and we felt that if it had not been for the expense and trouble to poor Miss Craig we would have liked then and there to sink through her best parlor carpet. Then our cousin flung back his long hair and started off in earnest. What it was he played I have never known, but if it be possible to crowd more runs, cadenzas, shakes, arpeggios and other tests of technique into one piece of mu sic I have never heard that piece. The music seemed to flow from him like a river, and it was a pleasure to watch the swift and easy movements of his fingers. With hardly a pause and never a leck from the player at his two shamefaced auditors', the tones of the piano drifted from the grand to the light and airy, from the classic to the modern, and finally into a soft and dreamy adagio that brought tears to the eyes, that had just now before beamed with the laugh ter of mischief. And all the while poor little Miss Craig looked on, with folded hands, and never dreamed what a tempest-of re morse she had stirred up In two hearts. Well, remorse meant repentance-,' and repentance meant reparation. "We must take him back everywhere and show what he can really do, " said Sister Helen as she lingered behind with me at Craig's gate, pretending to fasten my sash. So back we went. Our faces, long as the shadows of the falling even ing, told every girl friend that something was wrong, and when we had played and they had played and Cousin Linn had played they knew what it was. And when we had closed the last gate and turned homeward we were two sad and conscience stricken girls and one silent and solemn man. But as we neared the house Cousin Linn's downcast eyes began slowly to turn, toward us, and as they fell upon our woebegone countenances the pre terna rurally grave lines went out of his face like a dissolving view in a stereop ticon, and he fell down the man actu ally fell flat down in a fit. And we solemnly nicked up our skirts and left him there groveling in a con? vulslonof laughter that scared the birds from every tree in. the block Cousin Linn came again to the house many times afterward. He often played for us, but the painful subject was never referred to. We did not con sider him awkward any more. In fact, I was beginning to think him quite handsome when one day I came unobserved into the garden, where he and Helen sat, and heard her ask for the first time his f orgivenness for the trick that had recoiled so shamefully upon us. I thought tho man would fall into one of his hateful fits and turned to go, but he only bent over her and whis pered his reply, while I Etole back through the trees to the house. So the end of it all was that I had a new cousin, and, though she is three or four times removed, to this day I love her well, for she is my sister Helen. Cincinnati Pest. Pollcemea as Models Phil May seldom lets slip a ehanee to play a practical joke. Not long ago he needed a policeman for a model. He went out into the street and accosted the first one he met, saying who he was and what he wanted. "Come to my house at neon tomorrow," said Phil May, and he gave the man his address. Then, he walked on a. couple of streets farther until he met another bobby. This one was also willing to pose, and he was likewise told to appear at noon, of the following day. The artist wan dered about London for several hours making appointments with policemen. The next day at noon, there was an. entire platoon of police in front of Phil May's residence. A crowd collected, and the reason for such an. array was freely discussed. Some asserted that a den. of anarchists had been discovered and was about to be raided. Others hinted at a murder or at some other mystery. A few minutes after 12 o'clock Phil May came to the door and invited all the policemen into his garden. There he lined them up and inspected them. He picked oat the mast most suitable for his purpose, then, handed to each of. the others an. envelope containing the regulation fee for a sitting arid, dis Buseed theaL Pearson's Weekly. A Scotch. Pearl. With much preparation' an old man, half gypsy, half soldier, produced from his peckef a twist of very dirty news paper. Unfolding this, appeared a sec ond twist of grocer's "white brown," and when this was unrolled with due ceremony he displayed a pearl. It was not a bad one and was about the size of a sweet pea seed, with fair gloss and radiancy. He proceeded to enlarge on. It. "Now, sir, this is a very fine pearl whateffer. It is really worth 20 guineas. I have Just sold the like of it to the Duchess of 2L Yen admire it, sir? No wonder. Well, I happen to he cut of gold today, and you shall have it for a trifle. I will takf 2 for it. Beckon, it by the cost of seven, weeks of work, for it took so long to find so gocd a pearL Put down my clay's work at so much, " eta 1 admired, but declined Not so'long before I had bought a Tay pearl at a Perth 5ewekrTs for exactly 5 shillings. It was quite as lustrous and nearly as large as the one offered by the old soldier. Indeed it was so fine that I hadit set as. a ring in a broad band of gold' After seeirg the pearls offered at Perth, unfortunately for the gypsy gath erer, was I enabled to criticise his prices. We parted gocd friends, however, and he went off toLcchEanncch. As a gocd many brides and bridegrooms were stay ing in that district, the probability is that one of the former now wears the pearl whose fellow adorns the Duchess of M. Gentleman's Magazine. A Bujr Six Inches In Xcngth. The island of Dominica is the home and natural habitat of the hercules beetle (Dynastes hercules), the very largest known species of the coleoptera or beetle family. Full grown specimens of this gigantic representative of the hard winged bug family average six inches in length from the tip of their pinchers to the termination of the wing covers. The specimen I have before me as I write is slightly smaller than the average Dynastes hercules. It has a long, black horn growing out of a head which is even darker than the horn it self. On its lower surface the horn is covered with a thick setting of gold col ored bristles, which the entomologists say are used by the insect in capturing its prey. Another and shorter but more powerful horn grows out from beneath, the two forming a powerful pair of pinchers. The creature has six powerful legs, each armed with claws. The elytra or wing covers are of a dapple gray color and the under parts of the body black. Taken, all together, it is a for midable creature, with strength suffi cient to catch and hold a bird of the size of the English sparrow. St. Louis Republic Pope's Pay For His Iliad. Pope made o,320 by his ' 'Iliad,' 1 on which he worked alone. By his ' ' Odys sey, " after paying Broome and Fenton, his assistants, he made about 3,500. To Broome and Fenton he paid 50 for each book. Broome did eight books, Fenton did four. I would be pleased to translate the "Odyssey" at the rate of 50 a book that is, for 1,200 alto gether. A better price is not likely to be got today, and I have known a much smaller price offered. Pope got far more 3, 500 for IS books but that was because of his name. Broome and Fen ton. were not likely to get more than they did in open market, -and no pub lisher would offer so much to ordinary men of letters today. If the poet lau reate, even, produced a translation of Homer tomorrow, I doubt if he would be offered 3,500. PerhapsLord Tenny son might have secured that sum, for his name and fame were justly great in the land, Longman's Magazine. Mr. E. D. 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Our hooka on blood and skin diseases mailed free to any address. Swift Specific Co., Atlanta, Ga. HUMPHREY'S7 Nothing- has ever been produced to equal or compare with SSiripflTgy "Witch Hazsl Oil as a cusA-rrvEand hzaijxg application". It has been used 40 years and always affords relief rrfr-AC cnHcfri rtinrt I It Cures Piles or Hemorrhoids, External t or Internal, Blind or Bleeding Itching and Burning; Cracks or Fissures and fistulas. Relief immediate cure certain. It Cures Burns, Scalds and Ulceration and Contraction from. Burns. Relief instant. It Cures Torx, Cut and Lacerated Wounds and Bruises. It Cares Boris, Hot Tumors, Ulcers, Old Sores, Itching Eruptions, Scurfy or Scald Head. It is InMlible. It Cures Inflamed or Caiced Breasts It Cures Salt Rheum, Tetters, Scurfy Eruptions, Chapped Hands, Fever Blisters, I Sore Lips or Nostrils, Corns and Bunions, ' Sore and Chafed Feet, Stings of Insects- Three Sizes, 25c 50c and $E-co. Sold by Druggists, or sea pos-pid oa receij to f price KCKHKETrK. 111 A 1XX WBBut SC, 5nr Tfc. .WiTfii U17CI fill If II vli ItftfrkL tilL Eczema All Her Life. Thehighest tobaccos is "Just as good as Durham.' Every old smoker knows there is as good V Biaekwe Smoking You will find oae each two ouncebag.and two cou puiis msiue cacn oag or iacweJi s Durham Buy a bag of this cele brated tobacco and read the cannon which nvr n Ttcf of valuable presents and how to get A. F. STREITZ Drugs, Medicines, Paints, Oil's, IVOGSTTEBS' STT:P:PIiI"ES, . WINDOW GLASS, -:- . MACHINE OILS, ZDIa-'marLta, Specta.ole.s- Corner of Spruce and Sixth-sts. C. F. IDDINGS. AND GRAIN. Order by telephone from NOBTH : PLATTE-: PHAKMACY, Dr. N. McCABE, Prop., J. E. BUSH, Manager. NORTS PLATTE, - - lEBIASEZA . We aim to liandle tlie Best G-rades of G-oods, sell them at Reasonable Fixires, and W arrant JbCveryf.h ing . as Represented.. Orders from the country and along the line of the Union Pacific railway respectf ally solicited. 'FVTTTTTTtI'TTTTTVTTTVt I SMOKERS J In search, of a good cigar -will always find itatj. F. Schmalzried's. Try them and judge. . F. J. BKOEKEE, Merchant Tailor A well assorted stock of foreign and domestic piece goods in stock from which, to select. .Perfect Fit. Ijovu' Prices. SPRUCE STREET. GEO. NAUMAN'S SIXTH STREET IMHT. r Meats at wholesale and re tail. Fish and- Game in Season. fcaUSage at alienee 25 and 50 cents. Made by Fcsfer lz n n-J .times. Gash paid for Hides, claim fbrother none Just as Tobacco coupon inside locr ounce them. iewton's Book Store. J. F. PILLION, j General Repairer, i i Special attention given to mil nil WHEELS TO RENT A C&re for Piles, We can assure all who suffer with In ternal Piles that in Hemorrhoidine we have a positive cure. The treatment is unlike any thing heretofore used and its application so perfect that every ves tige of the disease is eradicated. Hem orrhoidine is a harmless compound, can be used for an eye ointment, yet posess ea such healing- power that when ap Slied to the diseased parts, it at once re eves and a. cure ia the sure result of its continued use. All who suffer with piles suffer from Constipation also and Hem orrhoidine cures both. Price $1 0. For Sale by Druggists. Will be sent from the factory on receipt of price. Send to The Foster Lvn'f'h 0. Council Btuffe, Iowa, for testimonials asu information. Sold Toy . HF. Sffcroxfcz- Wanted-Hn idea of some simple r rL uaacojiens Protecs ytmr ideas: ther may- bring- yon -sreaaiL S nays. Washington. I. CUtor their ttSXi crjse offer I ai list of two fcmuireU. tarsnttocs wanted. Maccaliae will cure any case of itching piles. It has neverfafled. It affords Manufacturing Co. and sold by A. F. streitz. J r tamler Twork