The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, January 04, 1894, Image 7

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    ■German
99
i!«ris Leblanc is a branch Cana
^ store keeper at Notre Dame de
.hridtre. Quebec, Can., who was
!?dof a severe attack of Congest
, 0f the Lungs by Boschee’s Ger
' Svrup. He has sold many a
de of German Syrup on hisper
l recommendation. If you drop
®. a line he’ll give you the full
#tts of the case direct, as he did Us,
j that Boschee’s German Syrup
jaebt him through nicely. It
tavs will. It is a good medicine
1 thorough in its work. «
DO YOU
ii '-ii :dd:. Jrseiis- Si.i ftrett. Crap. Triune
nmtr 0n»s. SroacUtU ul iithMl. A eitteh cm
hliiiuattlcain Jftt item ltd i nn nite! b 14
-jti r.tjes. Un it net- Tot «D1 cm tkc —tUtb
*ti!»uHtgtkitatmc. UUtTlMbncw
bn. Urso bottle* SO cut! ud SI.00._P
” Mothers*
Priend**
UKES CHILD BfHTH BIST.
Colvin, La, Deo. 8,1888.—Kj wife mod
IOTHEB’8 FHIJEND bofbm her third
nfinement, and *070 she would not b«
ittiout it tor hundreds of dollars.
- DOCK XILU.
BHAOFIKLO ItMOULMTOH PO,
■MiiuiMumn. atuuita. sa.
Ely's Cream Balm
Cleanses the Nasal
Passages, Allays Fain
ami InIIanimation,
Restores the Sense of
Taste and Smell.
Heals the Sore s.
Apply Balm Into each nostril.
IYBR0S..5I> Wanen St.,N.Y.
THE JUDGES &
WORLD’S COilMBIAN EXPOSITION
Hava mada4ho
HIGHEST AWARDS
(Medals find Diplomas) to
; WALTER BAKER & CO. *
On each of the following named articles;
BREAKFAST COCOA,. . . .
Premium No. 1, Chocolate, . .
Vanilla Chocolate, . . . . .
German Sweet Chocolate, . .
i j Cocoa Butter. .......
: Tor “purity of material,” “excellent flavor,"
and “uniform even composition.”
; nHIHIMEBtCO, MSS.
“COLCHESTER”
Spading Boot
«S/"L"er5.MIner».K.H.H»iwhi*nul
jfcflfflaggagaaagfc_
MEKD your own harness
WITH
THOMSON’S
SLOTTED ■
VUNGH rivets.
to hoi! i?!® Be? »b«0>“«**r —rill dUqulHn*
*h"tL ^be“*de -~ '^-ir-Tr'—--—«
Sfe It7 ?n* SJ°"Ai?2SSMI2£5l&
iXV"“ up in boxec
fcitoZ1?' {•»*« »>r (k«..Mrtto
for a box of MO; noiMtot
Jbx1AU nxxnrxoTDuu nr
■*••0*1 L. THOMSON MFC. CO.,
; Wtiu—. mm.__
™EPECH hfo. CO.
'JW/C£ YOUR MEAT WITH „
U*IUID EXTRACfiT«B^
A Profitable Dairy Cow.
Profit*bl® dairy cow is one that
yields not less than 600 gallons of milk
the ®U»c containing not leas
than 4 per cent of butter fat A cow
yielding 600 gallons a year ought to
pro during the twenty-eight earlier
weeks of her milk-flow about 470 gal
*®n8’ w“*ch at the rate of one pound of
cheese to each gallon of milk, would
amount, after allowing for shringage.
to four hundred pounds of cheese. And
ii tno milk is for the butter dairv, the
produce of ttOO gallons containing ! per
cent of fat ought to be 240 pounds of
butter. 1 he best means of developing
and improving the milking capacity of
cows is selection and breeding. The
lives of good milkers should be pre
served as long as possible. Statistics
show that of all the animals sub
jected during the last eight or nine
years to public test at milking trials
those which were over six years old
gave from 20 to 35 per cent more milk
and from 20 to 25 per cent richer milk
than those under that age.
The testimonials which the mall brings
to every day run thus : “Dr. Bun's Cough
Bynro cured the baby of croup” -It
cured me of a most distressing cough ;” or
it cured my little boy of sore throat ”
We could not do without it.”
f A Good FertlllKer.
A very cheap and easy way to pre
pare bones to supply as fertilizer is by
the use of ashes. Break the bones as
small as possible. Then cover the bot
tom of a barrel or box with a few inches
of ashes, then put in a layer of bones,
and so on until the receptacle is tilled.
The time required for the decomposi
tion of the bones depends upon the
'strength of the ashes, the size of the
bones, and the amount of moisture in
the mixture. The mixture should be
made quite damp by pouring water on
it, but not enough water should be
used as to cause it to drain. Hardwood
ashe^ which have not been exposed to
the weather are best for reducing
bones. ^_
Should be kept at Btables and stockyards
—Salvation Oil is the best friend not only
of man, but of dumb beasts as well. For
swelled joints, strained tendons, old sores,
saddle-galls, and wounds of all kinds there
is no remedy like Salvation Oil. Price 35
cents per bottle.
Disease In False Hair. *
Eight cars loaded with human hair
arrived in Paris recently, consigned to
dealers in that merchandise. The hair
i came from India and China, whence
| thousands of pounds are annually sent
to England and France. This traffic, a
foreign medical journal says, is the
I canse of the introduction of many dis
eases to Europe. The hair is cut from
persons after death in China, and al
though it is disinfected upon arrival in
France, it often carries the germs df
disease. Asiatic hair, owing in part to
its coarseness, can be purchased cheap
ly, it selling often us low as a franc a
kilogram. The hair of Europeans,
however, averaging about 100 francs
for the same amount. ,
Looking Before Tasting.
“Look before you leap,” and also be
fore you eat or drink.
It is wonderful how people will rise
in the night, lay hold of a bottle in the
dark and quaff the contents, too often
to realize by taste or feeling that they
have swallowed carbolic acid or some
other deadly draught.
A friend had an experience the other
night which she thinks will teach her
to light the gas before she partakes of
refreshments in the night. She had a
brown stone bottle of imported seltzer
water left in the bath room, in case
she wanted a drink, and, feeling
thirsty, she rose, fumbled about, found
the bottle which she knew by its shape
and the fact that it was not glass,
turned out a gobletful, got a mouthful
of something so nauseous that the gob
let fell from her hand, its contents
saturating her night dress. After a
good deal of spluttering and some delay
she struck a light near the wash basin,
over which hung a mirror; she saw her
self and gave a shriek which roused the
house as she did so, and no wonder.
Her face, teeth, hands, feet and gar
ments were covered with ink.—Kansas
City Star.
Deafness Cannot Bo Cored
By local application! as they cannot reach the
diseased portion of the ear. There is only
one nay to cure deafness, and that is by con
stitutional remedies. Deafness Is caused by
an inflamed condition of the mucous lining
of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is
inflamed you have a rumbling sound or Im
perfect hearing, and when it is entirely closed,
Deafness is the result, and unless the inflam
mation can be taken out and this tube re
stored to its normal condition, hearing will
be destroyed forever; nine cases out of ten
are caused by catarrh, which is nothing but
an inflamed condition of the ninoous sur
faces.
We will give One Hundred Dollars for any
case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that
cannot be cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure. Send
for circulars; free. _ _
F. J. CHENEY 6 CO., Toledo, a
CT-Sold by Druggists, 75c.
Hops.
The cause of prohibition may be
spreading and prospering, as its advo
cates assert, but the business of _ hop
growing is doing both to a certainty,
as the statistics show. One county
alone in Oregon. Lane county, will in
crease its hop area by 1,000 acres by
next season, the growers being encour
aged thereto by the plentiful and pro
fitable harvest this year. The Metho
dist ministers of Washington- held a
conference in Tacoma recently and de
cided to “wage a relentless war’’ on
hops, though it was developed that
quite a number of church members in
that denomination own hop ranches,
while many more find employment in
the hop business.__
m iuumo rj
Functional disturb
ance through sym
pathy. Dyspepsia,
or Indigestion, often
cause* it to palpi
tate in a distressing
way. Nervous Pros
tration, Debility and
Impoverished Blood,
also cause its too
rapid pulsations.
Many times, Spinal
1 Auecuons, i»uoo
to labor nnduly. Sufferer* frora such Nerv
ous Affections often imagine themselves the
victims ot organic heart disease.
ALL HEHVOITS DISEASES, as ft
nlnia, Isooomotor Ataxia, Epilepsy, or
Fite, Bt Vitus’s Danoe,
ous Prostration, Neryous Debility, Neural
gta, 2S£cholia andi Kindnsd-Aitaeuteare
Krtrf‘Xr^edAltT, with mrt euc«£
by the Staff of the Wu<to^ Hotel. For
pLn&tetTBeferenc», “d >^uUre’
dose10 cents, in stamps for portage.
Address, Wobld’s DnruBABT IfKDICAl.
AaaocunoK, Buffalo, V. T.
PLAYING WITH A TIGER.
EVEN LIONS SOMETIMES WANT
TO ROMP WITH MEN.
ImtkMu When TLoy Actnd l,lk« limit,
Frulicium* Klttena—Tlia I.luu slowi to
Mo Dreaded than tile Tiger When Ku
rageil—Strange Freak*.
The idea with almost every one Is
that a lion or tiger is always bent on
attack, and that to meet one is to
bring on an encounter. This is far
from being tiue. When infuriatoci
by wound or pressed by hunger al*
most any wild beast is dangerous to
man, but t'nero are occasions when
the most ferocious of them desire
peace at any price.
At Nellur, on the west shore of the
gulf of Bengal, I went out • with a
party of British officers to search for
a man-eater who had created great
devastation to the west, lie had, in
deed, driven most of the natives out
of a section live miles square, and
the number of people it was said he
had eaten was above twenty. The
tiger’s lair was in a large thicket
which backed against the coast
range of mountains, in the midst of
this thicket was an old ruin, and the
beast probably had his bed there.
There were ten of us in the party,
including natives, and wo had begun
to beat up the thicket when 1 stopped
into a hole and wrenched iny ankle.
That settled mo for the day at least;
and I was assisted back to camp,
which was about half a mile from the
thicket. A sort of easy chair was
made for me at the foot of a tree,
and one of the natives was left to
attend to my wants. I hoard the
hunters beating up the game, but
the pain took away my interest in
the hunt. I had my boot off, and
the man was softly rubbing my ankle
with brandy, when all of a sudden
he fastened his eyes on something
behind me and his face became
terror-stricken.
••What is it—a snake?” I whispered.
“No—the tiger!" ho grasped in
reply.
•T* he close at hand?"
“Not fifty feet away, sahib, and
looking right at us.”
My gun was ten feet away and we
were perfectly helpless. Overhead
was safety, but before 1 could rea6h
my feet and pull myself up by a
branch the tiger would have me.
••Can you catch the branch over
your head?" I asked the native.
“Yes, sahib, but I cannot leave
you. ”
v vuiomi 11 J U V, tv IJ , U. \V c
shall both be knocked over. If you
spring Into the tree the tiger may be
frightened oil by your action.”
The man straightened up nn'd
made a spring, and the next instant
was safe in the branches. Ho was
hardly quiet before 1 heard the tread
of the tiger in the dry grass a few
yards away, and the native whis
pered:
“Say your prayers, sahib; he is
here'.” *
In a few seconds the tiger came
up. I was lying at full length, my
hehd considerably higher than my
^et, and so I saw his every move.
He looked me full in the face and ut
tered a low growl, but it was not
one of anger. I saw that the beast
was full of curiosity and wonder, and
hope sprang up in my heart.
He sniffed at my right hand which
lay beside me, passed his noie down
to my injured foot, and the fumes of
the brandy seemed to delight him.
He lay fiat down and began to lick
my foot and ankle. His tongue was
hot as fire and as rough us a cow’s,
and I winced now and then, in spite
of my efforts not to. It was some
thing new for the man-eater, and he
was delighted. He licked away un
til I thought he had takep *ail the
skin off, and then he rolledover and
over on the blanket as you have seen
a cat do after feeding.
The hunters and beaters had been
quiet ail this time, having come to
gether for counsel, but now they be
gan to shout and tom-tom, and the
noise came down to us very distinct
ly. The tiger sat up and sniffed the
air and growled. A gun was fired
and he growled again, looked up at
the native in the tree, around the
camp and down at me, and then de
liberately walked off into the woods.
Next day he was routed out of his
lair by the beaters, and, without be
ing wounded or unduly angered, he
charged among them with gr?at fe
roeity and killed two and wounded s
third.
A native related his queer ex
perience with a lion. He was re
turning to his village one afternooi
when a snake bit him. He >vai
obliged to stop and find certain root:
and make a poultice, and thus go'
belated. As he hurried along in the
twilight a lion suddenly leaped inti
the path before him and barred hi!
further progress. Had the mat
turned to ttee he would have beet
struck down. He stood there, gasp
ing with fright and ready to collapse
when it saddanly flashed upon bin
that the lion appeared in playfu
mood. The beast lay down anc
rolled over, pawed at the eaflth, am
when the natire advanced a step i'
became certain that the lion was it
for a lark
“While, I was frightened almost tj
>death.” said the ^jnan, mJ had sens*
enough to humor him. I jumped a
him and he frisked and bounded liki
a puppy. Then I retreated and hi
ran after me. It was two miles ti
the village, and we kept up the pla*
until within a few rods of the firs
hut I bad my hand on him twent.;
times, and when I entered the villagi
1 had some of the hairs of his man*
to prove the particulars of my ad
venture.”
While the tiger has moro natura
ferocity than the lion, be is not ti
be dreaded as much when enraged
In charging Among the beaters the
tiger is generally satisfied with
knocking a single person down, and
after this feat he will invariably
make a bolt The lion, on the con
trary, if onoe aroused to tight for his
life, means to die right thero after
doing all the harm he can.
nip vi*nr or it,
“Very well, madam,” said the
tramp, assuming an air of dignified
self-respect **If you do not wish to
assist mo tliut is your own affair. I
am well aware that our profession is
not respected as it should be, and
yet there are ihany people occupying
high positions In life who are worse
than we-” "Indeed?” interrupted
the woman. "Certainly, my dear
madam. Did you ever hear of a man
of my class embezzling church funds
or botraylng the trust of widows and
orphans? 1 venture to say that you
cannot ' recall such an instance!
I Cook backward. If you please, over
the great frauds of the last decade!
Were they committed by members of
j our brotherhood? Notone of them.”
And the lady was so impressed with
j his statement of the case that she
j forgot to watch him closely as ho
| passed the chicken house—an over
| sight whioh she subsequently ro
| grotted.—Detroit Tribune.
A loathful Finanolei*.
He was a small boy, whoso head
was about on a level with the grocery
counter. He swung a tin pail.In one
hand and tightly clasped four pen
nies in the other.
"I'leathe. thir, how much ith n
pint of milk?”
••Four cents.”
"Then pleathe give mo three tbent’
worth and a peppermint stick. My
mother thald I could have the change,
if there wath any, for candy, and she
muth hare known there wouldn't be
any. It wathn’t fair. ”
And the young financier walked
gayly off with a largo striped stick
of candy and a very little milk
splashing in the bottom of the pail
—Wisconsin.
l : «rc:mic sixer*
*•1 wonder how Europeans come to
persist in that Idea that bands of
savages frequent New York," asked
the athletic young man.
“Possibly.” replied the sir-tor, “be
cause some of the visitors to this
country have heard a foot-ball team
giving the college yoll.”
THOUGHTS. * m.1 -
Vain people are p-ople of little
knowledge.
The prayer of faith always holds
out both hands to receive the answer.
Growth in grace is not made by
watching to see how other people
walk.
There is plenty of employment for
those who want to male others
happy.
Every thought which genius and.
piety throw into the world alters tho
world.
No man can do good as he has op
portunity without enjoying the occu
pation.
Call the day lost on which you luve
not been anxious to make somebody
happy.
Men are never so likely to sottle a
question rightly as when they discuss
it freely. " .
' Curiosity is one of the permanent
and certnin characteristics of a vigor
ous intellect.
We can all leave something behind
us that will increase the powers of
those who follow us.
One reason why some people are not
as wicked as other people, is because
they do not have the same chance.
Confide your vessel to the mercy of
the winds and waves, but not your
heart to that of a woman, for the
i ocean is less perfidious than the prom
ise of a woman.
DAUGHTERS OP EVE.
Manv a girl who marries for leisure
repents in haste.
A good way to keep all the bovs on
■ the farms would bo to keep all the
girls there.
Experience has proved that the
longer an engagement the moro liable
it is to be broken off.
"Has man a perfect organ of
speech?’’ "Yes.” “Has woman also?”
"No; hers is made without stops.”
The electric lamp indastry of New
York gives employment to between
2,00 > and 3.00J girls. It is piece work,
and pays about 99 a week.
Hunk—What prompted you to ask
t Miss Giddey to be your wife? Green
—I think Miss Giddey herself prompted
I me more than anybody else.
Relative—Has your son developed
talent in anv special direction? Fond
Mother—No, he doesn’t seem to have
any talents. He must be a genius.
He—She’s the most uninteresting
girl I ever met, though, she is r.ch.
She can’t say anything but Yes and
No. She—Which did she say to you?
The ladies have taken to wearing
combs in their hair, and with a knowl
edge of this fact we venture to sug -
gest that the sweetest thing tn combs
is honey.
Mrs. Brooks—I often wonder why
; some folks go to church. Mrs. Stream
! —So do I. Now, there’s Mrs. Short.
| Why, she hasn't had a new bonnet in
j twelve months. .. ,,...
Materfamilias—Another cup broken!
Really, children. I shall have to get
yon some enamel mugs. Big Brother,
with a grin—Why not, mother? All
the girls have ’em.
There is only one Esther In history
—the beautiful Jewess for whose sake
Abasuerus gave Haman to the gal
lows and saved the Jews from mas
sacre. To this day the orthodox Jews
celebrate the event in the feaftt of
Purim. Even in fiction the name is
I I unusual. The best known Esther of
• story is the gentle heroine of Dickon s’
I Bleak House.
A Financial Transaction. I
“Say. mister," said a boy, who had
just overtaken a market wagon after
pursuing it four or five blocks, “do
you wunt to know who hit yon In the
neck with that hard snow bull?”
"You bet 1 do." replied the man,
slackening his spued. '
“Will ye gimme a quarter ef f ketch
him and bring him here?"
“Yiept" • ■ l i -
“Uimme 50 cents?"
“Yes,” suid the driver, lifting his
whip from the socket, “but I won't
give any more than that."
“Well, get the money ready."
“You haven't got the boy yet that
threw the snow ball."
"Yes, 1 have. That boy Is me. Pad's
sick and me mother can't ger work, i
The twins Is too little to earn any
thing, an’ if 1 don't hnstle there won’t
be any Christmas tree atour house. I’ll
take a lickin’ any day fur SO cents.”
“Sonny," said the market man, In a j
voice that was remarkably husky, I
“here's yer SO cents. I’m In a hurry
now—you need’t bother about deliv
erin’ the goods. We’ll call It square,”
—Washing Star.
New I'm for Klectrloltjr.
Trcos are felled by electricity In the
great forests of (lalicta. For cutting
comparatively soft wood the tool is In
the form of an auger, which isinqunted
on a carriage, and is moved to and fro
and revolved at the samo time by a
small electric motor. As the cut deep
ens, wedges are inserted to prevent the
rift from closing, and when the tree is
nearly cut through an ax or hand saw
is used to finish the work. In this way
trees are felled very rapidly and with
very little labor.
In Torment.
HUrely, It them Bin unhappy sufferer* on
eat lb upon whom the angola look down (A
pity, H Ik p< opto ugoiil* d w.th rheumatism.
They ur t In tormeut the ye r hound, with!
little or no re plto. .'ow, thorn li no art*
uenc■> to which pu' IIcity hue been given In
behalf of llostltttcr's Ntuniiich Bitters more
concurrent und convincing than that In be
half of iim efficacy In Incipient i he urn attain,
dnd k nee rht umntl m ami rheum«t(e and;
simple K'Kit urn I.mo >g the most obstinate
compla tits to which th * udmlrahle remedy
Is a upted. und since they all haye * fata*
tendency to nttocK the vital organs! the ad
visability of un early use of tho Hltteis,
when they manifest thorn-elves, mu* Imap
parent, RlHca.Ious, and tnosi signally so,
arc the Miter*. too. In malnrlat disease*,
kidney and hlad er Inactlvlty.constlpatloir,
> yspepsls, liver complaint and nervous all-'
moms. _____ _
Woman'* Way*.
’ An interesting1 case for the student
of the ways of a woman's eeart to
ponder, Is that of an Oakland, Cal.,
woman who, a-few months ago, brought
suit for divorce, shot her husband in
her jealouB rage while the case was
pending, nursed him through the ill
ness that ensued, fell in love with him
all over again, and ia now living with
him, happy as a dova
NERvnre and billhms disorders,slek head,
ache, indigestion, loss of appetite and con
stipation removed by Heecnam'a Fills.
1*
Only 10 per cent of the lugar wa consume
grown lu this country.
The French army is three times a* large'
as it was in IHfO.
If the Bskr l« CmiIsc Teeth,
Bern* and us* that old Ud well-tried remedy, Use
Winslow's SotiTNisu Svsur far Children Teethihf.
Asparagus was originally a wild sea coast
nlatti ff Ui'iiut Mrituln •:
I
N EVERY Re
ceipt that calls
for baking powder
use the “Royal.” It will make the
food lighter, sweeter, of finer flavor,
more digestible and
wholesome.
“We recommend the Royal
Baking Powder as superior to
all others.”—United Cooks
and Paltry Cooks' Associ- ; ^
at ion of the United States. ^
Eating Oranges.
Those who take an orange every
morning may like to try the manner of
eating them that prevails in the land of
oranges. Take a thin-skinned, heavy
orange, thrust a fork through it from
the stem end, and with a sharp knife
cut the rind away, beginning at the
fork and cutting downward, l’laee the
orange on ice for a half hour and bring
it to the table with the fork still in it.
If oranges are good they can be eaten
from the pulp with perfect ease and
with much more satisfaction than will
be experienced in any other way of
serving. _
grhlfhnann's Asthma Care
Instantly relieves the most violent attack,
facilitates free expectoration and insures rest
to those otherwise unable to sleep except In a
chair, as a single trial will prove. Send for a
free trial package to Dr. H. SchUTmann, St.
Paul, Minn., but ask your druggist first.
Eat, Then Write.
The Hospital advises "literary work
ers” to rise early, take a cup of coffee
with toast at 3:30, write for a while,
take breakfast at 8, write till noon,
take lunch at 1 o'clock, smoke a pipe
after it, take a gup of black coffee at 3,
write a couple of hours, take a cup of
tea at 4, write till 0:30, take dinner at
7, winding it up with a cup of black
coffee, take things easy until 10:45, i
then take a small cup of cocoa and be j
ready for bead at 11. The Hospital
takes for granted literary workers all
like to ‘‘take tea” and "take coffee”
and "take things easy.” i
Shiloh's I'oniBmpllos Car*
I* «okl on a puaranter. It «*ur«>s Imrlptent ('onffiimr*
Urn. It m the Cough Cure. aScu.,Qttet*. ft f Lift
Happiness is a roadside flower, growing
on the highways of usefulness,
In Olden Timm
People overlooked the importance of
permanently beneficial effects and were
satisfied with transient action; but now
that it is generally known that Syrup
of Fins will permanently cure habitual
constipation, well-informed people will
not buy other laxatives, which act for
a time, but finally injure the system.
The man who agrees with us doesn't come
around near often enough.
Even Solomon, with all his wisdom, made
some foolish mistakes.
The Pnssle Solved.
Perhaps no local disease has puzzled and
baffled the medical profession more than
nasal catarrh. While not immediately
fatal, it is among the most nauseous and
disgusting alls the flesh is heir to, and the
records show very few or no cases of radi
cal cure of chronic catarrh by any of the
many modes of treatment until the intro
duction of Eli's Cream Balm a few yearn
ago. The success of this preparation has
been most gratifying and surprising.
It costs about as much to be proud da it
does to be sting}'.
Ceaghiag l.radc ta Csnsemp
tioa. Kemps Balsam win stop the cough
atones, Uo to your druggist today and get
a sample bottle free. Large bottles 50 cents
end 91.00. »_
A female codfish will lay 45,000,000 eggs
in a single season.
llegemaa'aCampher lee with Glycerine.
The original and only genuine. Cures Chapped Hands
and race. Cold Sores, fc. c. O. Clark Co^N.Haven.Ci .
Buy what thou hast need of, and, ere
long, thou shalt sell thy necessaries.
FOR SORENESS OR STIFFNESS FROM COU). USE
ST. JACOBS OIL ;
IT RELAXES, SOOTHES, HEALS, CURES. !
'JUh for Him.
A meek little man, who was answer
Inf? in the Rochelle, (la., police court
last week to a charge of beating bis
wife, explained that he had been hen
pecked for many years. Whether
from lock of pluck or excess of chival
ry he did not venture to assert his dig
nity and resent her abuse,until, in des
peration, he got drunk, which gave
him courage, and then he went too far
and thrashed her.
A Cough, Cold or Sore Throat should
not be neglected. Brown's Bbonchisu
Troches are a simple remedy and give
prompt relief. S3 cts. a box.
There must be love hack of the bond
that is reached out to save another.
A craving for sympathy is the common
boundary line between joy and sorrow.
A white penny of 1857, If in good condi
tion, is worth $1.
See ColcbeMer Spedtnf Boots aUv. in other column.
The best education in the world Is that
got^fcy^strurehugtogetalivlng^^^^^
Are You a Catholic ?
Are yon unemployed ? Will yon
work fbr $18 per week ? Wriie .to
me at once.
J. R, SAY. 96 Fiflh I*., Chicago.
E~sh«ruub
NGINES.
r * * - “
tVi
Threshers and Hone Poteen.
Write fbr IllnannicdCntakicue, mailed From
M. RUMELY CO-s LA PORTE. INa
WORM NIGHT AND DAY.
Holds the wont rug*
tare with «mw under All
r« • j* dreamUBCM- Perfect
• Jk& Vvlfl ^■AdjQntmwit. Comfort
“ — end Cure New Paten test
Improremeuta, ilia*,
tnted cetalm
.. _ rule# for —If-we—urn
* •S.-VTSSSI
■ftlTn and psopla
Vbo bsva weak lungs or Aith>
■boald bm Ptso'sCura for
Consumption. It has aarad
hnasaads. It has not ln)nr»
Ml on#. It Is not had to taka.
X Is tbs bosieosfb syrup,
gold STsrrwbsrs. lla.
' O N - l MP’ICN
I**®** to *00 Tlrmmn * Vtnktnu linnw
Co. of Uocoln. Capitol u>« ettrpiai over MOM
MI low* paM to Ooknaka poopla •loco IMS. ■
MIBMIMIliwFMI. MO ixumuo
rPrtfl pent, waatcorrmpnrtup
OOMiKU' MONTHLY, TOLKIMJ.OHIO.
'J^o^^ifhsapsM’sEisWalsr.
1 W. N.u7 Omaha-l. 1894.