The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, February 08, 1894, Image 7

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    When War la Declared
, -inst a roan's happiness by Ills stomach,
k enemy may be pacified and brought
lie
di]y and easily to terms. That potent
,p ulator of digestion, Hostetter’s Stomach
”Lrs disciplines the rebellious organ
a roii-ldy. indigestion arises from weak
tfi/tb'1 stomach, and the food In it, for
" nt of tiie power todlge-t, decomposes and
giving llse to heartburn, flatulence
I pftjU, besides a multitude of symptoms
ID t changeful and perplexing. But peaee
toll'
gw"
rfign- when the great stomachic is re
nted to
and used with persistence. Dyg
gives rise to morbid discomposure of
rV, d and even sleplessness and hypo
miria in chronic eases, lo the complete
n,i«.al of lliese Ibo bitters Is fully ade
ie.niissal eft
11 j.iver c omplalnt
constipation, de
biiity
, rlieiiniatism and malaria, are com
pkteiy
su wined by this genial medicine.
Cautious.
•Hre .von the proprietor of this res
tanrant?'' said the man who had waited
tor his enter until he became sleepy.
• Yes, sir,. What can I do for you?”
• You can give me some information.
I want to know whether you have told
,l,e waiter to stay away so that you can
brin? in a bill for lodging against me.”
..Washington Star.
ghlloli's Consumption Cnre
noid on ft guarantee. It cures Incipient donnas
cjn B the beet Cough Cure. Bcls., SOcU. a Sian.
Chinese Savings Bank.
The Emperor Duc-Tu of Cochin,
China, protects his treasures by placing
them in hollowed trunks of trees,
which float about in a hnge tank situ
ated in the center of the royal palace.
There are twenty crocodiles in the tank
as well. When he wishes to draw
upon this bank all of the reptiles are
killed; hot this cannot take place with
out the joint consent of the emperor
and his minister of finance.
KNOWLEDGE
Brings comfort and improvement and
tends to personal enjoyment when
rightly used. The many, who live bet
ter than others and enjoy life more, with
less expenditure, by more promptly
adapting the world’s best products to
the needs of physical being, will attest
the value to health of the pure liquid
laxative principles embraced in the
remedy, Syrup of Figs.
Its excellence is due to its presenting
in the form most acceptable and pleas
ant to the taste, the refreshing and truly
beneficial properties of a perfect lax
ative ; effectually cleansing the system,
dispelling colds, headaches and fevers
ana permanently curing constipation.
It has given satisfaction to millions and
met with the approval of the medical
profession, because it acts on the Kid
neys, Liver and Bowels without weak
ening them and it is perfectly free from
every objectionable substance.
Syrup of Figs is for sale by all drug
gists in 50c and $1 bottles, but it is man
ufactured by the California Fig Syrup
Co. only, whose name is printed on every
package, also the name, Syrup of Figs,
and being well informed, you will not
accent any substitute if ouered.
W. I,. DOUGLAS <3 SHOW
[equals custom work, costing from
to $5, best value lor the money
the world. Name and price
stamped on the bottom. Every
pair warranted. Take no substi
te. See local papers for full
description of our complete
ncs for ladies and gen
tlemen or send for Il
lustrated Catalogue
giving in
structions
- - how to or
der by mail. Postage free. You can get the best
bargains ol dealers who push our shoes.
Increased Appetite
is one of the first good effects
felt by users of Scott’s Emulsion
of cod-liver oil with Hypophos
phites. Good appetite begets
good health.
Scott’s Emulsion
is a fat food that provides its
own tonic. Instead of a tax up*
on appetite and digestion it is a
wonderful help to both.
Scott's Emulsion ar
rests the progress of
Consumption, Bron
chitis, Scrofula, and
other wasting diseases
by raising a barrier of
healthy desk, strength
and nerve.
jWrtd bj Scott * Bowna, H. Y. All <inig»i.»
Patents. Trade-Marks.
Inv™ S *,10D AilTlc* u to PoteiitoMttty ot
iiw '®1?; Send for “ inventor*’ Gutde. or How to Got
Intent. ’ PA7SICS O'fAXBILL, WA8HW0IW, S, C.
FROM foreign lands.
Ttao Socialist associations of Sicilv
count 300,000 members. *
The population of Italy la verv
dense, there being 2T0 people to every
aquare mile of territory. 3
yeaf 760 A- D- PaP® Paul I.
world « ° y °lOCk th8 k“ow»
France?* a Pl'eSent 40 Pepln’ kin* °*
The name Brazil means “red wood"
or “land of the red wood." The orig
|nal discoverer called it "the land of
the holy cross.”
Yarrow is building a torpedo boat
for the French navy made out of alu
minum, which will be hoisted In and
out with great ease.
One variety of the India rubber
tree (ficus elastics) has leaves of the
deepest green each provided with a
narrow border of very bright red.
t r*medy sprains and pains. Mr.
J. M. Spring, Bennings, D. C., writes: “1
have been using Salvation Oil and have ob
tamed great relief. Among so many rem
edies tried. Salvation Oil is the but for
sprains and pains in the back." It kills all
Elder Ellis of Stanford, Ky., re
cently "talked right out” in meeting
and surprised his hearers by telling
them that he saw in the audience peo
ple who hadn’t paid their grocery bills
for a year, their doctors for two years
or their pew rent for five.
Reyer be without it. Mr. Chan. Visscher,
44 Lincoln Ave., Springfield, O., writes:
Five doses of Dr. Bull’s Cough Svruu
cured me of a severe cough. 1 shall always
keepit.”
Molasses.
Old-fashioned molassesi the genuine,
dark-brown, saccharine, delicious ad
junct of the corn pone and the slap
jack, has become a scarce article of late
years, and is likely to become Bcarcer
still. In fact, the old-time molasses is
scarcely produced nowadays, for, as
sugar-making machinery is improved
and the production of sugar increases,
the quality and quantity of molasses
decreases. Many planters ctn remem
ber the day when, to separate the
sugar from the molasses, the boiled
cane juice was placed in barrels bored
full of holes; the molasses drained out
and the sugar remained in the barrel.
The centrifugal machinery now in use
separates the sugar so thoroughly that
but little molasses, and that of poor
quality, is left.
State of Ohio, City of Toledo, I
Lucas County. ('•
Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he it
Ihe senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney
<fc Co., doing business in the City of Toledo
County and State aforesaid, and that said firm
will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOL
LARS for each and every case of Catarrh that
cannot be cured by the use of Hall’s Oatabkh
Cube.
FRANK J. CHENEY.
Bwjgn to before me and subscribed in my
presence, this 6 day of December, A. D. 1888.
A. W. GLEASON,
Notary Publlo.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure Is taken internally and
acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces
of the system. Send for testimonials, free.
F. J. CHENEY A CO., Toledo. O.
|y Sold by Druggists, 75c.
Jlmpson Weed.
If ‘‘jimpson weed” were not weed,
but a costly exotic, how it would be
treasured for lawns and greenhouses!
The weed, or stramonium, to give it
the botanical name, when in flower its
fragrant, lily like blossoms are the
whiter against the vigorous looking
leaves of dark green. A rare variety
has a flower of pale purple. The popu
lar name of the plant is said to be de
rived from “Jamestown weed,” and the
tradition is that after the destruction
of Jamestown the English found its
ruins filled with thickets of this stram
onium.
EAKtl CORN OVKK 1 FOOT LONG.
Salzer illustrates in a colored plate a
new early corn, a giant of its kind, and
offers $300 in gold for the largest ear
in 1804. In addition to this early Giant
corn, which yielded in 1893110 bushels
per acre, he has over twenty other pro
lific field corns. He has the best fodder
corn in the world. He is the largest
grower of farm seeds, such as oats,
barley, wheat, millet, potatoes, etc., in
America. Fifty kinds of grasses and
clovers.
ir You Will Cut Thli Out and Bend It
With 15c to the John A. Salzer Seed Co., La
Croese, Wis., you will receive a large pack
age of above Giant corn and his mammoth
catalogue._w
A Mach Married Man.
A strang arrival lately took place at
Barcelona. An old man of 90, who had
left the town in his youth to seek his
fortune in America, reappeared with a
suite of over 200 persons—a very large
family. He had been married three
times, and brought with him to Barce
lona sixteen daughters, of whom six
were widowsand nine married; twenty
three sons, some of whom were widow
ers and others married, thirty-four
granddaughters, some of whom were
married, and forty-seven grandsons,
i and among the rest three great grand
! sons. These, with their wives and
husbands and children; made up a
large family.
«< Huawn'i M»fi« Cora tfalva.”
Warranted to cure »»• money refunded. A»k your
druggist for it. Price 15 cent*.
A London hatter who has been ob
servant says that men’s heads may
grow appreciably up to the time tbeir
ownjers are 65 years old.
Those.
Pimples
Are tell-tale symptoms that your blood is not right—full of im
purities, causing a sluggish and unsightly complexion. A tew
bottles of S. S. S. will remove all foreign and impure matter,
cleanse the blood thoroughly and give a clear and rosy com
plexion. It is most effectual, and entirely harmless.
Cha. Heaton, 73 Laurel St. Phila., have had humor In
my blood which made me dread to shave, as small boils or pimples would be cut
thus causing shaving to be a great annoyance. After takingA
- mv face is all clear and smooth as it should be—appetite
splendid, sleep well and feel like running a foot race, all
from the use of S. S. S. SDCRIFIR M a> J
Jwdfcr TiwttM mi BliMd and tti* Di§«w SWIM SrtBiflj ™
IA CHAT ABOUT HAWKS.
WHAT A NATURALIST HAS TO
SAY FOR THEM.
Boma A re Robin dinner* and Chicken
Tlilavan.Rut Many of Tham Are Frlanita
of the Farmer—Tlielr Hardihood,
Conraga and Rapnulty.*
[ A hawk pounces upon a poultry
yard and bears away the most promis
I ing pullet. From that time on at
| least one chicken farmer denounces
the entire hawk family, root and
branch, when, in reality, out of fif
teen or more species of hawks which
have been credited to Maine by dili
gent collectors, there are very few
which • are not mainly or wholly
beneficial to the*farmer.
Most authorities agree in placing
the hawks, together with the owls,
in the order Kaptores, says a Maine
writer. To quote from a well-known
author: ••The birds of prey are noted
for their strength, the rapidity, grace,
or ease of their flight, and, in many
cases, for their extraordinary power
of sailing. With the exception of
the vultures, they are famous for
their spirit, variously displayed in
energy, boldness, or courage, and for
their carnivorous taste. They are
hardy, being furnished with a thick
feathering and an encasement of fat
which enables them to withstand the
cold and to live without food much
longer than human beings can.”
Consequently they are, to a large
extent, all the year round residents,
! though more common during winter
| in the vicinity of the seaboard than
in the interior, their migrations, such
as they are, being doubtless more
controlled by the movements of their
prey than by any desire to escape
the severity of our winter weather.
During the fall they become more
common than at other seasons, fre
quently associating in large flocks,
and at these times may often be seen
for hours indulging in a series of
most graceful aerial evolutions, soar
ing in bewildering soit-als higher and
higher into the blue ether.
Beyond placing the hawks in the
order above mentioned, there is
slight difference between authors as
to their further classification, and. in
fact, one authority goes so far as to
create a new order,that of falconi,for
their special benefit,based on the wide
difference between hawks and owls
in internal characteristics. Following
this author's classification, the first
family that is brought to our atten
tion is that of the kites, the only
New England representative of which
is the marsh-hawk, marsh Harriet
or bog-hawk. This species presents
more of the external features of the
owls than any other. It has a well
defined facial disk or ruff, as well as
large ear cavities and noticeably
downy plumage.
1 have most often seen the marsh
hawk, near the twilight hour, cruis
ing about the lower lying farm lands
in irregular and leisurely flight,
daintily beating to the right an:l left
in quest’of snakes, frogs or mice, or
airily rising and falling with the
contour of the landscape, their iden
tity being easily established by their
white rump, bluish-gray upper parts
and length of wing. The favorite
breeding place for these hawks is
some secluded meadow, where in
May they place their rude nests of
sticks and grasses, unlike any other
hawk, upon the ground. Their com
plement of eggs is usually four in
number, bluish white, often showing
brown markings.
The next family is that of Falconi
dae, or that of the falcons. Four
members, or rather species of this
family are to be credited to Maine,
but two of them, the ger-falcon and
the Peregrine falcon, have never
come under my personal observation.
The other two are the pigeon-hawk,
or American merlin, and the spright-.
ly sparrow hawk, the former being in
my own locality much the more com
mon of the two. In size they are
small, measuring about twelve inches
in length (the common robin meas
ures nine and ten inches in compari
l son). The male bird is of a dark,
bluish slate above, but ashy brown
in the female and young, feathers
having a central, longitudinal line of
black. The . tail is banded, ashy
white and black, its maincolor being
bluish ash; forehead and throat
white, or nearly so; under parts
white huffish on the breast and red
dish behind marked with dark brown.
They are an alert, nervous bird,
rapid in flight, yet rarely observed
sailing. They seem to prefer the
open fields and pastures as hunting
grounds, where they may quite fre
quently be observed perched in some
sentinel tree watching for their prey,
on which they pounce with inde
scribable speed. This handsome
species is described as usually choos
ing some tall pme for a nesting place,
where its domicile is built of sticks,
grasses, strips of bark and bits of
moss.
In Maine I have found the more
striking sparrow-hawk quite rare,
but in Florida they are abundant,
and it is there that I have had my
best opportunities for studying them.
They are a little smaller than the
preceding species, and more lively in
coloration. The top of the head Is
ashy blue, with a chestnut-colored
patch, otherwise the head is “white,
with usually seven large black mark
ings, including one on the nape.”
The tail is often surrounded by white
and broadly tipped with black.
Back, rump and upper tail coverts,
bright crimson; under parts white,
, overwashed to quite an extent with
cinnamon. The female is similar,
but plainer. The sparrow-hawks de
light to feed on small birds, mice,
grasshoppers, and a few other insects.
In Florida 1 have found them social
little fellows, showing little fear of
man.
Of the next family, the short*
winded hawks, we olatm three repre
sontatlves. The sharp-shinned hawk
is probably in most localities our
most common species. In size it is
about equal to the pigeon-hawk, but
can be readily distinguished' from it
by its generally lighter plumage, its
longer leg and its erratlo flight,
which consists of quick, irregular
flapping, punctuated by hasty periods
of sailing. Their general color is a
brownish ash above, with now and
then a few white spots, on the heads
and wings. The tail is lighter
colored than the back, tipped with
black, and barred with dark brown.
Beneath, white; breast closely bar
red with yellowish brown, and throat
• ‘penciled” with the same. Despite
their irregular flight, the little
“sharp-shins” can travel with won
derful rapidity.
They seem to enjoy overtaking
their prey In the air, and, when in
pursuit of it, are oblivious to all
danger, and I have more than once
shot them when they were blindly
pursuing robins, against whom they
seem to wage an incessant warfare.
1 do not know what report the agri
cultural bureau has made regarding
this hawk from the farmer's stand
point, I should unhesitatingly, from
my observation, pronounce it an
unmitigated nuisance; it is the
chicken-hawic par excellence, and if
it once enters your flock you may
confidently look for its return, and,
barring accidents, it will levy
tribute on them all. Their nests are
most often built In the “crotch” of a
pine tree, twenty feet from the
ground. The usual number of eggs
is four, white, sometimes unmarked,
but most often with a few con
spicuous markings of umber near the
larger end.
Ttie Form or Hlr »•* Kggi
Dr. Niealsky of St. Petersburg, at
tributes the form of bird’s eggs to
gravity. He thinks that every egg
not yet coated with a solid shell de
parts from the spherical form and
elongates, simply because of pres
sure on it by the walls of the ovary.
In birds which keep a vertical posi
tion when at rest, such as the falcon
and owl, the soft egg becomes short
through the bird’s weight acting
against the ovarian pressure. I n
birds which, like the grebe, are
nearly always swimming, the egg
lengthens„beeause the weight of the
body acts in the same direction as
the ovarian compression.
A. Woitnn Breeze.
Easterner—Do you do any yachting
out West?
Westerner—Oh, yes. On our lakes
and rivers. I had a yacht, but it
blew away. ♦
“Why didn’t you follow and get it
back?”
‘•Hadn’t any balloon.”
Mill Worm).
Wife, bitterly—You docsived me
when you married mo.
Husband--I did more than that. I
deceived myself.
AS3QRTEP NONSENSE.
.Tolinnie—So you were really in the
war. Colonel .Tenks—Yes, Johnnie;
why, one bullet grazed my arm.
Johnnie—Couldn't you find a wider
tree.
She—So you've really made up your
mind to go to Scotland next week?
He—Rather. She — None of your
larks with the Highland lassies. He—
No; only grouse and partridges—no
larks!
“I think your figures are pretty
high.” said the lady who was pricing
featherbeds and pillows. “Madame,”
said the clerk, with a scarcely percep
tible twinkle in his eye, “all our best
goods are marked down.”
“I hope you will be lenicDt with me,
your lordship,” said the thief, as he
stood to be sentenced; “I have a good
many dependent on me for their sup
port.” “Children?” saied the judge.
“No. Police detectives.”
“Your daughter has a remarkably
pretty foot, Mrs. Snagg,” said Mrs.
Bloomfield to her friend. “Indeed,
sholias,” replied the grateful mother,
‘'and I have decided to let some good
sculptor make a bust of it.”
The marquis de Calinaux is angry
with his old friend Tampin and wishes
to annoy him in some way. After
long thought he goes to the postoflice
and says to a clerk. “Kindly let me
have a defamatory postal card.”
“Can’t you wait upon me?” said the
impatient customer. “Two pounds of
liver; I’m in a hurry.” “Sorry,” said
the butcher; “but there are two or
three ahead of you. Surely, you
would not have your liver out of
order.
Husband—Let us go to the concert,
my dear; I understand that there are
some beautiful love songs on the pro
gram. Wife—All right. If you wish
to refresh your memory by listening
to love songs I certainly have no ob
jection.
The Young Housewife—You have
some potatoes, Nora? Nora, the cook
—Yes, mum. The Young Housewife
—And there's plenty of sugar in the
house? Nora—Yes, mum. The Young
Housewife—Well, then, let us have a
dish of sweet potatoes at dinner. *
Friend—What a perfectly lovely
dress you wore last evening—the very
latest Parisian style, too, only re
ceived two days ago. Your dress
makers must be wonderfully quick.
Where did you get it made? Miss
Bangupp—My grandmother found it
in my greatgrandmother’s old trunk.
Mrs. Parvenu—Here are Mrs. Du
Monde’s cards, left this afternoon.
What does she mean by *P. P. C.’
down in the corner. I wonder? Her
Daughter—Only that she is about to
go away—to travel, I fancy. Mrs. P.
—Oh! I suppose she wants people to
know that she's going on a Pullman
palace car. Stuck-up thing.
Vi|
Highest of all in Leavening Power.—-Latest U. S. Gov’t Report.
W
ABSOLUTELY PURE
Electric Girl* and Wild Men.
"Fake" freaks often draw better
than genuine ones, but they do not
last so long. A recent Instance of this
kind was an "electric girl.” It was
asserted that she was so charged with
electricity that one received a shock
upon shaitlng hands with her. This
delusion, was really produced by the
girl standing on a wet mat charged
with electricity from a hidden battery
and large enough for the visitor to
stand on also. Another fake of the
same class, which 1 came across not
long ago, was a "wild man of the
woods" who was crouched in a dark
earner of what appeared to be a heav
ily-bgrred cage, clanking the heavy
chains that were attached to his limbs.
A strong railing was placed in front, so
as not to allow visitors to approach too
close to the man. The lecturer told
the audience how this remarkable crea
ture had been found running wild by
a party of hunters on the west coast of
Africa, and that he had been in cap
tivity only a few months, and was very
dangerous, so much so that his ment,
which he would eat only in a raw state,
had to be placed in the cage with a
long iron fork. After the museum was
closed every night this wild man doffed
liis chains and suit of hair and took the
car to his home, where he was ac
counted one of the mildest and most
henpecked of men.— Lippincott's Mag
azine.
Man's Fall.
Since the original fall of man we hare
had some signal examples of great falls—
not to Include Niagara or the immense fall
in values which the times have brought
about—in the nature of accidents which
waylay men at all times. One such is that
of Mr. Ueorge W. Lord, Olantu. l'a., who
says he fell down stairs and suffered four
weeks with a sprained back. The use of
lit. Jacobs Oil completely cured him. Mr.
U. Howler, 600 H. 17th Kt., Omaha, Neb.,
relates that ho jumped from his engine in
collision and sustained a very bad sprain
to his ankle; he bad to use a cane for weeks,
but was finally cured by St. Jacobs Oil.
Never fall out with so good a thing. ,
Oldest Lodge of Masons.
The oldest lodge of Free Masons in
America, St. John's lodge of Boston,
recently held its 160th annual meeting,
at which new officers were installed by
Wyzetnnn Marshall, who was master of
the lodge in 18.18, 185!) and I860. The
lodge possesses two bunches of grapes
that are the original tavern sign adorn
ing the front of the Hunch of drapes
inn, in lioston, where the first lodge of
Free Masons in America was establish
ed in 1733.___
As a Simple Vet Kfl'eutlve Jtemedy for
Throat Affections. Buown’s Bhoxchiai,
Timeiiks stand first in public favor. They
are ubsolutely unrivalled for the allevia
tion of all Tbrout irritations caused by
Colds or uso of the voice.
A New Scheme.
A French engineer has built an elec
tric locomotive which carries a 500
horso power stationary steam engine.
This runs a dynamo electric uiuchine,
which generates the current applied to
the electric motors mounted on driving
axles. That is to say, instead of using
the mechanical energy directly, it is
converted into electrical, and then into
mechanical energy. There must per
force be some loss in each conversion,
but whether it is greater than the loss
incidental to the direct use of steam in
an ordinary locomotive has vet to be
proved. _
Wai.tsh IUkek & Co., the largest Cocoa
and Chocalate Manufacturers on this conti
nent, have carried off the highest honors
atthe World's Columbian Exposition. They
received from the Board of J udges the high
est awards ‘medals and diplomas) on all
the articles contained in their exhibit;
namely, breakfast cocoa, premium No. 1
chocalate, German sweet chocolate, vanilla
chocolate, cocoa butter.
The judges state in their report that these
Sroducts are characterized by "excellent
avor,” '‘purity of material employed," and
"uniform, even composition, indicating
great care in point of mechanical prepara
tion.”
A copy of Miss Parloa's “Choice Re
ceipts" wiil tie sent free to any housekeeper,
on application, by mail or otherwise, to
Walter Baker & Co., Dorchester,-Mass.
Jessie Logan of Gilmer county,
West Virginia, H years of age lias
•loped with James Bishop, who is 64.
Coe’s Cough Balsam
Is the oM«t and best. It will break up a Cold quick
er than anything elaet It Is ulways reliable. Try it.
A desire to resist oppression is implanted
in the nature of man.
Ill Wlndi.
The most pernicious winds are the
samiele, or hot winds of Egypt. They
come from the deeerta to the southwest,
and bring with them infinite quantities
of fine dust, which penetrates even the
minutest crevice. The thermometer
often rises to 135 during their continu
ance, and thousands of human beings
have been known to suffer from suffo
cation in the tlery blast It was one of
these samiels that destroyed the army
of Sennacherib. Alexander the Great
nearly lost his whole force in another
and the amy of Cambyses was utterly
annihilated._ _
Max's system is like a town, it must be
well drained, and nothing is so efficient as
Beecbam's Mils. For sale by all druggists.
/. -T;
» *
If
S'-iiS
v U
, • p;
1
y.l:
i \f.
is love like a Hcutch plaidt
stuff and often crossed.
Because
What you (Unlike in Mother take cere to
correct iu yourself.
Dnorsr is a dread disease, bat it has lost
its terrors to those who know that H. H.
Green <fc Hons, the Dropsy Specialists of
| Atlautu, Georgia, treat it with such great
success. Write them for pamphlet giving
full information.
The country is both the philosopher's gar
den and his library.
■« to California.
This is our Bleeping Car Rate on the
Phillips-Rock Island Tourist Excursions
from Chicago to Los Angeles or Han Fran
cisco, via the Hoenio Route and Ogden.!
You cm go with Phillips, the best of all
Excursion Managers, for he has each party,
accompanied by a special agent who goes
the entire trip with patrons. These per
sonally conducted Excursions leave Chica
go twice a week, Tuesday and Thursday, j
We have also a dally tourist car service,'
via our Southern Route, through the beau
tiful Indian Territory and Ft. Worth to
Los Angeles and Ban Francisco. The
Tourist car rate via this route, the same.)
Apply at Rock Island ticket viHce, 104
Clark Street. JNO. HEBABTIAN, O. P. A .J
C. R. L & P. R’y, Chicago.
Contentment is natural wealth, luxury is
artlflcial poverty. ,
Carbuncles Largs ua Hen’s Eggs I
Mrs. Nannib Goui.uman, of Ueulahvitt*.
Kino William Co., Va„ writes as follows:
_" For-nbout eight or ten years my father.
Col. T. U. Fogg, of Wnt Point, Va„ waa laid
up with carbunt'lm, tlio wonit that I ever mw.
He tried everything’ be beard of, bit doctor
couiu uo noming ror
him. Had six or
■even carbuncle* at a
time, as largo os hen's
egg*. Ho got so weak
and suffered so much
lie could not walk a
Step. In 1873 he Usd
his bed put in the
middle of his room
and got on It to die.
No ono expected him
to got wall. He saw
Dr. Pierce's Golden
Medical Discovery
advised for all blood
1
. '
aiaoruor*. ueiore n»
- bad taken balf-a
Col, T. U. Food. bottle of • Dlaeov
_ cry* they began to
So away. Two bottle* entirely cured him. He
i now 78 yeure old. and enjoys good health.”
PIERCE—-CURE
_OB nONETJU REFUNDED. __
ELY’S CataddU
CREAM BALM
Cleanses the
Nasal fautgei,
Allays Pain and
Inflammation,
Heals the Sores.
Restores the
Senses of Taste
and Smell.
TRY THE OuRE. H AY*FEVER
A purtlclo !• applied into each nostril nnu la
ligceable. Prtce fiO cents at Drueffists. or by mall
ELY BitOTHBRM. !* WarrenSL. Xtw tort
HA^U A
' INI YOU WANT TO SELL IT ?
Write me full deicription with very loireit prle«.
LLOYD EBERHART, WittdWftO
If afflicted
•ore e yea,
ZliNThomptea's lye Water.
W. hi. U. Omaha-6. 1894.
I8ENTS MIKE.151 Du <*«“«■» h'**"
<4l
luiiyuaMMmBa' UteoalllnTentert.
Retails35 cla. 2 to Oaoul in nhouaft. 8amole pock
paid,11 vecents.FORHHEE A M AKIN Cincinaa«U>
At -4- Pricesbssssb
fit 4 I I IUU IHKAUOSiALBCP.,ittaeffe,Ul.
m
ST. JACOBS OIL IS THE KING-CURE OYER A EL
^SCIATICA
IT HAS NO EQUAL, NO SUPERIOR. ALONE THE BEST.