The Nebraska advertiser. (Nemaha City, Neb.) 18??-1909, September 11, 1903, Image 5

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TIME "f ABLE
jftemulm, 'ubr.
JLiinooln
Oinhu
St. Jouoph
Denver
I-Ielona
liutte
Salt JOnke City
Itrtnmm City
IPovtltmd
St. Louin ami all San ITrnnolHoo
Volnts JSant And Ami all lJoinlB
South. Wesl
TUAINH LKAVK AS FOLLOWS;
I, v, for Tpoinnseli, Hontvlee,
IlolIlrcKe nntl nil points west 0:40 a in
No. P8-PHSWiror. ilnlly except Sim-
uny.for Nebrnitfcn City. Chicago
nml nil point norlh nml enst 4:00p in
No. 110-Locnl (rolalil, unlly except
Himdiiv, 'or Atnlilfeun mid Inter.
mmllnte. Mntlons 7:30 p in
No. U2-Lociil (rntylit, dully -except
Momlny. forfsenrnHltn Cliy nuil
Intermediate stations 2:00 n in
Slpoplnu. rtluhiR nml reclining nlinlr cars
fneiits neclmi thrnugli trains. Tlokels sold
nml bniwwn checked to nny point In tno
United Suites or Canada.
For Information, mnps, tlmo tnbles and
llckoU enl on or wrltti to W. E. Wheeldon,
ngent, or .T. Francis, Uoueral Passenger
Auent, Omnbn, Nob.
for children aafv, urc, No cplatma
For Bale, by M. T. Hill.
fMEY&KlDMYCBEE
Mnkos Kidnoys and Bladder Right
For sale, by M.T. 11111.
FOIEYSHOMMM
Cures Colds; Prevents Pneumonia
For mile by M. T. Hill.
MmMlMAS
top tlxn cou(hand gealo lungs
Over-Work Weakens
Your Kidneys.
Unhealthy Kidneys Make Impure Blood.
All the blood In your body passes through
your kidnoys once every three minutes.
l he kidneys are your
blood purifiers, they fil
ter out the waste or
impurities in the blood.
If they arc sick or out
of order, they fail to do
their work.
. Pains, achesandrheu
matism come from ex
cess of uric acid In the
blood, due to netrlected
kidney trouble.
Kidney trouble causes quick or unsteady
heart beats, and makes one feel as though
they had heart trouble, because the heart is
over-working In pumping thick, kidney
poisoned blood through veins and arteries.
It used to be considered that only urinary
troubles were to be traced to the kidneys,
but now modern science proves that nearly
all constitutional diseases have their begin
ning in kidney trouble.
If you are sick you can make no mistake
by first doctoring your kidneys. The mild
and the extraordinary effect of Dr. Kilmer's
Swamp-Root, the great kidney remedy is
soon realized. It stands the highest- for its
vonderful cures of the most distressing cases
tnd is sold on its merits PCyAL
ty all druggists in fifty- rffPm!JSSifei
.ent and one-dcllar siz-KS!F?iliiJ
es.t You may have agygigi?
sample bottle by mail noma of swamp-Koot.
free, also pamphlet telling you how to find
out if you have kidney or bladder trouble.
Mention this paper when writing Dr. Kilmer
fit Co., BInghamton. N. Y.
LACK-
DRAU6HT
STOCK and
POULTRY
MEDICINE
Stock and poultry havo few
troubles which are not bowel and
liver irregularities. Black
Ttranrrht. Stock and Poultrv Medi
cine ia a bowel and liver remedy
for stock. It puts tho organs of
digestion in a perfect condition.
Prominent American broedora and
I armors keep their herds and flocka
healthy by giving them an occa
sional do3e or Black-Draught Stock
and Poultry Medicine in their
food. Any stock raiser may buy a
25-cont half-pound air-tight can
of this medicine from his dealer
and keep his stock in vigorous
health for weeks. Dealers gener
ally keep Black-Draught Stock andj
Poultry Medicino. If yours does
not, send 25 cents for a sample
can to the manufacturers, Tho
Chattanooga Medicino Co., Chat
tanooga, Tenn.
Boohbixb, Oa., Jan. 30, 1902.
Blaolc-Draugbt Stock and Poultry
Medicine la tho bast I ever tried. Oar
stock was looking bad when you aent
me the medicine and now they are
getting bo fine. They are looking 30
per cent, better.
D. IT. UAUUIUHUlUlli
Hm. ,, , rail rt
m mm wiMKiWwiirtii wKr tfywia'trvi.awfiTVf r
rh-i brsk Advertiser
XV. XV. tfnmlera V. l SmufciM
V. W. Sanders & Son, Prop's.
FRIDAY, SEPT. 11, 11)03.
SINCE TEE RAILROAD CAME.
Growth of Comfort nnd Increnc of
Luxuries lit the Ancient Iiauil
of Mexico.
Since railway connection with the
United States was inudc, some 13
years ago, the growth of comfort in
middle-class families here has been
very noticeable, says tho Mexican
Herald. In the first place it began
with the better furnishing of houses;
foreign, and especially American
styles, enme into vogue, und the com
fortable rattan furniture began to
find its way into homes where for
merly Austrian bentwood was con
sidered the acme of good taste. Not
that some of the finer forms of the
Austrian furniture are Hot comfort
able but surely one cannot say this
of tho stiff and formal sofas and '
chairs. The Austrian rocking chairs
were comfortable, but clumsy. Those
of us who can recollect tho middle
class houscfurnishings of the early
railway days have a mental picture
of the 'comfortless chairs and sofas,
of the tables made of pine nnd stained
black, of the tasteless carpets, when
there were uny, and of the conven
tional arrangement of tho chairs and
Bofa, the "estrado," which was a sur
vival of Spanish colonial etiquette,
the sofa being the place of honor and
assigned to the guest. In some old
fanhioned houses this arrangement
still holds good, and yet one may ex
pect to find furniture that does not
demand rigidity of spine during tho
long hours of a ceremonial call.
Wealthy families who could bring
their furniture from Trance or Eng
land were in very distinct case, but
we arc not considering them; they
had their great mirrors, their pianos
und all that, when the only means
of getting them here was over the i
stoen mountain roada from Vera .
Cruz, just as to-day all the house
hold furniture of the people of Bo
gota has to make a mule-back jour
ney over trails from coast and river
An old Mexican lady, well on into tho
nineties, speaks of the "great houses
here" during her early youth, "with
numberless servants, kept to indicate
one's state and grandeur, who ranged
themselves in the patio to receive the
visitor; of the great hula, or parlor,
with its huge mirrors, its rug on the
tiled floor in front of the sofa and of
the lonely candle lighted at dusk!"
In the old days there was, among
the rich, a certain stateliness of life,
and but little real comfort. The mid
dle class, then much less numerous
than now, lived in houses furnished
with a simplicity that to-dny can only
be paralleled in some of the interior
towns where things kuve changed but
little. It was nil very plain hero at
tho cnpital, save among the socially
eminent. French cooking was un
known, and chicken and punchero
were staple articles of daily diet. A
whole world of culinary discoveries
awaited the palate of the frugal liv
ing upper class. Somewhere about
the fifties a famous foreign banker,
of Scotch or Irish blood, electrified
high-class society by bringing here
a French chef, whose achievements
set ull the "altn sociedad" a talking,
and soon caused them to import good
cooks.
People went to their country
houses as they do now, but the sub
urbs were unsafe, and the furniture
used in them was so simple that thosu
of our readers who were not here to
see it would be amazed could wo pre
sent a photographic reproduction of
the interiors of the "casus do cainpo"
about the city. Plain deal tables, set
tles of the old sort, rough chairs,
primitive bedsteads, all as rustic as
could be. Nobody thought of furnish
ing a suburban house as is done to
day, often daintily and sometimes lux.
! urlously.
What is Foley's Kidney Cure?
Answer: It is made from a preserips
tion of a leading Chicago physiciun,
and ono of tho most eminent in the
country. Tho ingredients are the
purest that money can buy, and are
scientifically combined to get the best
results. M T Hill.
What Thin Folks Nood
Is ft greater power of digesting and
assimilating food. For thom Dr
Klng'sNew Life Pills work wonderB
They tone and regulate tho digestive
organs, gently expel all poison from
tho system, enrich the blood, improve
appetite make healthy flesh. Only 25c
at Keeling
Take the wagonette when in Au
burn If you want to go to any part of
tho city. John McElbaney, prop,
DEAF MUTES WIN SUCCESS.
Men Lncklntr Tito of the More Impor
tant FnoultlcH Who Have Won
Fume mid Fortune.
Without speech and hearing it
would seem imposRtblu for a man or
woman to achieve any positive buc-
loess iu tho world. That It is possi
ble for a certain amount of enjoy
ment to bo brought Into tho life of
a person tints uilllcted la well known.
It Is generally understood that Hiieh
a person can overcome these natural
obstacles nnd live a lifo of reason
able contentment.
But that men thus handicapped
have been able to enter the struggle
for renown and riches nnd win with
out these all-important powers is
not generally realised. The records
of various institutions for tho deaf
and dumb throughout the country
reveal tho fact many persons so nf
flieted are forging ahead and becom
ing prominent iu different walks of
life, says the Chicago Tribune
They are finding success in many
occupations und professions even In
the law. Thoy have their churches,
their fraternities, and their old peo
ple's homes, all maintained by their
own efforts. The record of the deaf
and dumb in this country bus been
duplicated In Europe.
The arts have appealed naturally
to the deaf and dumb us offering op
portunities for success, nnd many of
the men who have won renown in
spite of their handicaps have devoted
themselves either to sculpture or
painUng.
In enumerating tho distinguished
artists who are deaf and dumb one
would mention the French sculptor,
Ferdinand Ilomiir, whoso work, the
Kochambeau Btntue, was recently
erected In a park opposite the white
house in Washington. Felix Martin,
sculptor, who has attained a member
ship in the Legion of Honor; Paul
Choppln, the sculptor and gold
medalist of the Pnris exposition, and
Ernest Durngeau, professor and
member of the Legion of Honor, are
others who have made reputations.
American artists have found equal
Biiccess. II. H. Moore, who has taken
up his residence in Paris, is one
Douglas Tilden, the California sculp
tor, Is another. Olof Hanson is an
other ilenf mute who has become
prominont. In architecture, he being
one of the most prominent in his
profession in Minneapolis.
Douglas Tilden's career is notable.
At an early ago lie showed such an
aptitude for art thnt his natural dis
advantages would not be serious ob
stacles to his progress. He was sent
to Paris to study, and there he
worked under the direction of Paul
Choppin, himself deaf and dumb.
Returning to California, ho began his
work, and now evidences of his abil
ity are found in all quarters of San
Francisco. His first work, "The Ball
Player," stands in Golden Gate park.
The Native Sons' monument and tho
Donohue Memorial fountain, recent
ly erected, are by him. For many
years he was an instructor in the
Hopkins art gallery, and later he be
came a member of the jury of the
Columbian exposition.
Another deaf mute of California
has been successful in business. L.
C. Williams is the bond of one of
the largest contracting firms in thnt
state. Hei startud in th business
world with an excellent education,
despite the fact that all his informa
tion had been acquired with no other
communication than pencil nnd pa
per. He started in the contracting
business modestly, but with industry
and utility became bend of o.ne of
the great" contracting companies,
which now handles work nil over
California and hns just been awarded
a lasge contract in Honolulu.
, Another San Francisco deaf mute
is a politician, real estate agent, and
notary public. Being energetic, he
did a thriving business as a real es
tate man in his native city. Going
into politics, he succeeded in landing
a position in tho city government.
When he lost his position through a
change of parties ho was made a
notary public by Gov. Gnge, being
the only deaf muto man in America
t,o hold such rights.
San Francisco seems to be a favor
ite field of work for the deaf mute.
Anthoro remarkable instance of suc
cess in spite of defects is afforded by
tho ease of another of tho citizens of
that city. This mun is a lawyer. A
lawyer who cannot tnlk seeniH an
anomaly, but this one has been a suo
cess. Ho talks in the finger alphabet
and his eight-year-old son interprets
for tho court. Recently ho won a
breach of promise case in ,which
bbih the litigants were deaf und
dumb, defeating a skilled lawyer who
had tho powor of speoch and winning
tho admiration of tho court by his
method of conducting his cose.
Tho Nebraska Mercantile Mutua
Insurance company of Lincoln, Ne
braska, haB over $0,000,000 insurance
in force with tho leading business men
of the Btate. Ask to see n, list of them
W. W.' SanderB, agent.
nriuiwfni
REPUBLICAN CONVENTION.
Tlio lepublleuns In Nemaha count)
Nebraska, are hereby called to meet li.
convention, In the club room of tin
court Iioubo In the city of Auburn, oi.
Monday, Sept 28, 1003 at 12 o'clock
noon, for tho purpose of placing li.
nomination a treasurer, clerk, ahcriff
judgo, superintendent of public Iu
struction, assessor, coroner, surveyor
clerk of district court, one cotnmis
sionor for full term, one commlsslono)
for short torm, nil for Nornalm county.
Nobruskn, nnd for tho transaction of
nny other business that may properly
come before the convention.
The basis of representation of the
several precincts of tho county in said
convention Bhnll be tho vote cast for
Hon. J. II. Mickey for governor, nt
tbo regular election held on Novembot
lth, 1002, giving one delognto for each
fifteen votes or mnjor fraction thereof,
so cast for the said J. II. Mickoy.
Said apportionment entitles tho sev
eral precincts to tho following repro
seiitation in suid county convention:
Island 2
First Glen Hock. 4
Peru l
2nd Glen Bock.. .'1
First Lnfayotto. ft
HI Washington. 2
First Douglas . . 8
2nd Lafayette. . 3
2nd Washington. 8
2nd DouglaB....ll
Third Douglas . . 8
Ikownvllle ... . (1
London t
Nemaha 7
Bedford! 0
East Benton.... ,1
Asplnwall ft
West Benton. i.. 4
St. Deroln 1
Tho date for holding tho primaries
in the several precincts is fixed at Sat
urday, Sept. 2(1, 100.1, nnd the hour
for holding the same is llxod as follows:
Island, First Lafayette, First nnd
Second Washington, Nemaha, Aspln
wall, anil St. Deroln 4 tod. Peru and
PiratlGlen Itock; 4 to 7. Bedford
Second Glen Bock and London: ft to
7. Second Lafayette; 4 to 5. East
and West Benton; ft to 0.J
It is recommended by tho committee
that no proxies bo allowed in said con
vontion, and that tho delegates present
cast tho entire vote of tho precinct
thoy represent.
By order or tho Republican Comity
Central Committee of Nemaha county,
Nebraska. it. F. Nkal,
W. Ii. Stowbll, Chairman.
Secretary.
Will Cure Consumption
A A Ilorren of Finch, Ark.
writes, "Foley's Honey and Tar is the
best preparation for coughs, colds and
lung trouble. I know that it has cur
ed consumption in tho first stage.
MTIIill.
A Surgical Operation
is always dangerousdo not submit to
the Burgeon's knife until you have
tried DoWitt's Witch Hazel Salve. It
will cure you when everything else
fails it has done this in thousands of
cases. Hero is ono of them. I Buffered
from bleeding and protruding piles for
twenty years. Was treated by differi
ent specialists nnd used many remedies
but obtained no relief until I used De
Witt's Witch Wizel Salve. Two boxes
of this salvo cured me eighteen mouths
ago and I have not had n touch of the
piles since. II. A. Tisdnle, Summer
ton, S. C. For Blind, Bleeding, Itch
ing nud Protruding Piles no remedy
equnlB DoWitt's Witch Hazel Salve
Sold by W. W. Keeling.
For Those Who Live on Farms
Dr, Bergin, Pana, 111., writes: "I
have used Ballards Snow Liniment;
always recommend lt to my friends
and I am confident thnt there is no
better made. It is a dandy for
burns. Those who live on farms
are especially Uablo to many accidental
cuts, burns and bruises, which heal
rapidly when Ballard's Snow Lini
ment is applied. It should always be
kept in the house for enses of emer
gency . 25c, 50, and SI .00 at Hill's.
Catarrh of tbo Stomach.
When tho stomach Is overloaded;
whon food is taken into it that falls to
digest, it decays and Inflames tho in us
coub membrane, exposing the nerves,
and causes the glands to secrote mucin
Instead ot the natural juices of digest
ion. This is called catarrh of the
stomach, caused by indigestion. Doc
tors and medicines failed to benefit me
until I used Kodol DyspepBla Cure.
J. R. Rhea, Coppell, Tex. Sold by W.
W. Keeling.
You never heard any one using Fos
ley's Honey and Tar nd not being
BatieUed.--MT Hill.
r vkrfMt bw
8tan(l Liko a Stono Wall
Between your children und the lor-,
.tures of itching und burning eczem i
scaldhead or other diseases. IlowV
why by using Bucklen's Arnica Salv,
eat th's groatPBt healer. Quickest cure
for Ulcers, Fever Sores, Salt Itheinn
Cuts, Burns, or Bruises. Infallible
-for Piles. 2fic at Keeling'o drug stoin
Spring AMmonts
Thero is an aching und tired feeling,
tho liver, bowels, and kidneys become
sluggish and inactive, the digestion
Impaired, with little or no nppetite no
ambition for anything and a feeling
that tho whplo body and mind needs
toning up. The trouble is, that dur
ing tho winter, there has been an over
accumulation of wasto matter in tho
ByBtem. Uerbino will removo It, se
cure to tho secretions a right exit, and
give strength in place of weakness.
ftOc at Hill's.
To Improve tho appetite andstrongi
then the digestion, try a fow doses of
Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tab
lets. Mr.K.H. Soltz of Detolt, Mlcl,
saya, "Thoy restored my appetite when
impaired, relieved mo of a bloated fooln
lug audcaused'n pleasant and satisfac
tory movement of tho bowels."
Tuoro nrti peoplo In this community
who need jutt audi a medlolne. For
Balo by WW Keeling, druggist Every
box warranted.
Holds Up a Congressman
"At the end of the campaign"
wrlteB Champ Clark, Missouri's brilli
ant congressman, "irom overwoik
nervous tension, loss or sleep and con
stant speaking I had utuun utterly col
lapsed. It seemed that all of my
organs were out of order, but threw
bottloB of Electric Bitters made me all
right. It's the best all-round meills
cine over sold over a druggist's count
er." Over-worked run-down men and
weak, sickly womon gain Bpleudld
vitality from Electric Bitters. Try
thftin. Only 50c. Guaranteed by
Keeling.
"' Bottor Than a Plastor.
A piece of flannel dampened with
Chamberlain's Pain Balm and bound
on the affected i'rtf., is better than a
plaster for a lao buck and for pains
iuthe sidM and cheat. Pain Balmlnu
no superior as allniment for tho re
lief of deepseated,mu30Ular, andrhou-.
matic pains. For sale by W. W.
Keeling. Druggist.
Travoling iB Dangorous
Constant motion jars the kidneys
which are kept in place iu the body by
delicate attachments. This is the rea
son that travelers, trainmen, street car
men, teamsters and all who drlvo very
much, suffer from kidney disease iu
eomo form. Foley's Kidney Cure
strengthens tho kidnoys and, cures ull
forma of kidney and bladder disease.
Geo. EUausan locomotive englneor,
Lima, O., writes, "Constant vibration
of the ongine caused me a great deal of
trouble with n?y kidneys, and I got no
relief until I used Foloy's Kidney Cure.
M T Hill.
"World-Wide Beputation
White's Creum Vermifuge has ac
hieved a world wide reputation as be
ing the best of worm destroyers, and
for its tonic Influence on weak and tins
thrifty children, as it neutralizes the
aoldlty or sourness of the stomach,
improves the digestion and assimila
tion of fod, strenghtens tho nervous
system and restores them to tho health
vigor and olastlcity of spirits natural
to childhood. 25c at Hill's.
Foley's Hrtnoy nndjTar contains no
opiates and can safely bo given to
children M. T. Hill
In tho Interest of Humanity.
Chris Miller of Fremont, Nebr.
writes: "I suffered from dyspepsin for
more than 10 years. I was under the
enre of a number of dootors, made three
trips away.'and still uo relief. Kodol
Dyspepsia Cure being recommended to
me by sevoral who had used it, and as
tho last straw, I concluded to try it.
After the first two or three doses I be
gan to improve and have taken several
bottles nnd feel liko a new man. I
write you this In the Interest of hu
manity, hoping it may fall into the
handaof some sufferer, and my prayer
is that thoy may secure the same bene
fit that I havo." Sold by W. W. KeoW
log.
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