The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, April 19, 1894, Image 7

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    In t4»cntuade iu^mM ittrit half » j
century (lotasbw trm
»a«<■» tWiiHwlnit of B«tUdu, Hwtn
wr s Sesart «m»n wasastandard Wvc
It* ''k-toriesoeerd&eases. ■knikv^Ui
ttn>«M aKW>c *- j*_ __j _w
.nwe bow. which Ui«t iowa m<
tn Iterahie rates Mood Ittiigi, violent put
ratlua. the vae of emetic* ut the empioy
•utni v( .wrwltv uhI ctaittUElTt ponson*
is '-.mpte rases of lieer u4 malarial ctxn
f iaint. waste fact the worst of uaphiioatmby.
..*>at rary alike to tiro laws of true medicinal
of hyytene and of omudoa sense.
BUiocsness. constipation and chills and
fever. as now treated by the Bitter*,
i.remptiy yield where before they obstt
ctwij resisted old fashioned medication,
s* do dyspepsia, rheumatism and kidney
jo a; plaint—ail surely conquerable by this
safe and really philosophic remedy.
What ship contains more people than the
Great East era’ Courtship.
KNOWLEDGE
Brings comfort and improvement and i
tends to personal enjoyment when 1
rightly «a The many,'who live bet* j
ter than others and enjoy life more, with '
lees expenditure, by more promptly i
adapting the world’s best products to'
the needs of physical being, trill attest
the value to health of the pare liquid j
laxative principles embraced in the1
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- |
a tire: effectually cleansing the system, j
dispelling colds, headaches and fevers'
ana permanently coring constipation.!
It has given satisfaction to millions and >
met with the approval of the medical |
profession, because it acts on the Kid-t
neys, Liver and Bowels without weak-1
ening them and it is perfectly free from t
every objectionable substance. j
Syrup of Figs is for sale by all drc^;
gists in 50c and $i bottles, bat it is man
ufactured by the California Fig Syrup -
Co. only, whose name is printed on every
package, also the name, Svrap of Figs, f
and being well informed, you will not j
accept any substitute if offered. j
*Ks s£
=> . “.r i
£ xJ""
.<a
I f s -
e5H*eO
g e«cc«
- «~5
> -gi?
d 1; - Sq
>cffi
' kZ U
mol*.
I Tfie Housawites
BEST FRIEND.
MHKM»f UC1
CAN LABEL
t« rat r»i.
WASHING RECEIPT
an* it Jtwj ——
BUY XT
AMD BE SURPRISE!! |
W.L.DOUGLA3 83 SHOB
I equais custom neri, costing from
1 $4 to Ji, best value tor the money
in the world. Name and price
stamped on the bottom. Every
^pair warranted. Take no substi
tute local papers for fell
■scription of our complete
.tines for ladies and gen
■ ' rV i!cmw or «cnd for //
^ W'*«lastrated Catalogue
““. giving in
structions
how tOMOr
derbym2it. postage free. You can get the beat
bargains of dealers who push ©cr shoes.
Ely's craam Balm
will cim
CATARRH
I Price
co Cents.
]
.AM v Balm into each txKtrfL
S£r8toc*,r ~ * -
,63 Wvreo Buh.Y.
RUMELY
' TRACTION AND PORTABLE I
F'
Ei
mThreshers and Horse Powers.
^^■Wrte for IBmastcdCSUIocse, milhd FMe.
•ft. RUMELY CO. LA PORTE. IN b
NGINES.
: i :: J MPTION
A of position in gaeoftl* Loa*
*» book booses Sells me t>>«« the tkf
ikk^Kohman katto; os iatertst
• tine bidding for Bismarck's utr
toyrmphy u they bod for Stanley's
"Through Darkest Africa." Cnwisely.
perhaps, the (ivu bosu statesmaa
f»™ o®* the fact that be eras working
at bis tntohiapiplir. aad since that
tine be has been practically Hooded
with offers. One anthoritaiive offer
consisted of a payneot of S1QC.0CO for
the complete rights for England aad
America. Bat ruts to this, which is
bettered to be the nest gene roes offer
made, the great Bismarck has mate so
response. The fact of the matter b, as
my friend who has Just returned from
a eisit to Bismarck as an emissary of a
I-ondon booh boose writes me. the auto
biography is not yet eren completed.
For that matter, it is scareelr written.
During bis recovery Bismarck gave some
attention to the work, aad wrote
dictated several pages per day—as much
as bis returning strength would reruns.
The prince is not ready with the pen.
TteM In VuM
“"Yes. sir: — ——♦ —-|—111 n m
of Srst-ciass (kanctK tod ability to rtftt
scat ns. imotj oar npantunn at*
many of the noblest and test awn in
Aama and parties of that stamp can al
tars End a splendid opfcrtmutT at oar es
tabtehment. " That is the eat Hr B. F
Johnson, of the Ena of B. F. Johnson A CO..
Richmond. Vs. stated thecas* in reference
to their adrertismeat in this paper.
See Teo SIS
la a certain part of West Virginia
some years ago there seas a local coart
presided orer by an honest odd farmer,
who in his earlier years, had been aa
attemer at be. The judge was a
quick tempered, impatient mas. but by
ao means ungenerous, and possessed at
a keen sense of humor. One day while
on the bench he saw in the audience aa
old negro whom he had engaged to
haul some timber from his sawmill near
by. bat who had been afterward per
suaded to do the same kind of tabor for
another person to the neglect of the
judiciary. As soon as he caught sight
of his recreant toiler the judge sus
pended the trial, quitted the wool sack
and approaching the old African, said,
with great indignation and a very red
face:
“You old rascal! Why didn’t yon
haul timber for me, as yoo promised to
do? You'll hare to be taught a lesson?*
The old negro gare one look at the
indignant judge, then squared oft and
throwing his coat to a bystander said,
cheerfully:
‘tomeon. massa! Disole chile use
to spank yo’ when yo's a triflin' boy.
an' I reckon he can jis do it again if it's
necessitous!''
The judge's motion was overruled an
that occasion, as the court resounded
with merriment, in which he was
obliged to join.
Hov'i tkial
We offer One Hundred Doliare Revsrd Cor
»ny case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by
Hall's Catarrh Cure.
F. i. CHENEY ft CO.. Prop*.. Toledo, a
We, the undersigned, hare known F. J.
Chen.y for the rast 15 rears, and br lie re him
perfectly honorable in all business transactions
and financially able to carry cat any obliga
tion made by their firm.
West ft Tnrax, Wholesale Druggist*. Toledo,
O. \Vildi56, rvisNAX ft Kitrm, Wholesale
Druggists, Toledo, O.
Hall’s Catarrh Cere is taken internally,
acting directly upon the blood and mucous
surfaces of the system. Price T5e. per bottle.
Sold by all Druggists, Testimonials freet
A series of unpublished letters of the
first Napoleon appeared in Paris recent
ly. In one characteristic epistle the
autocrat tells the minister of police to
arrest Mr. Kahn, the American consul
at Genoa, as a wearer of the cross of
Malta, given by an agent of the British
government. The emperor adds: "This
individual, having received a foreign
decoration, is no longer an American.
I am sorry, however, that you commu
nicated with the United States embas
sies. I am master ehez moi, and when
1 suspect a man 1 cause him to be ar
rested. I would even cause the embas
sador of Austria to be arrested if he
plotted against the state.”
A MOTHER’S OPINION.
Mrs. L. A. Lyford, Proprietress of
“The Hollywood” 116 Turk street. San
Francisco, says: “I am absolutely
amazed at the great good Calderwood's
Rheumatism Cure did my daughter
Fannie. She was afflicted in her feet
and ankles with inflammatory rheuma
tism and had to use cratches to get
about My family physician treated
her for several weeks but the girl grew
worse and so I sent $5 to the office of
Calderwood's Rheumatism Cure, on the
corner of Market and Fourth streets,
San Francisco, and soon a messenger
came back with three bottles of the
remedy which she began using, and
before' the medicine was gone she had
thrown away her crutches and is now
sound and well.
Hurry and worry are both great enemies
to health. _
“ HaaaM'a Magic < arm JCIt*,"
Warrantee to cure or imott rrfunoro. yocr
dressal lor it 1T(,r 13 real, |
The man who can’t control himself gen
erally wants to toss the most.
Go South Vim tbo Wabash.
Tourists' tickets now on sale to all points.
Homeeeekers’ tickets at half fare on ex
cursion dates. April l .th and May Sth. For
rates or folders giving full description of
lands, climate. &c., call at Wabash Ticket
office, Ho. 15u2 Farnam Street, or write
Ono. S. Clxttox, 5. W. P. lit,
Omaha, Neb.
The young mouse feels complimented
when it sees a trap
>9S
Your
Hearts
Is the most important part of your organism. Three*
fourths of the complaints to which the system is subject
are due to impurities in the blood. You can therefore
realize how vital it is to Keep ,4 pure
For which nothing equals S. S. S. It effectually
removes all Impurities, cleanses the blood thor
oughly and builds up the general health.
^ SW,FT SPEC,FIC kmi’
s.s.s.
►V
HAND.WHITING EXPERTS.
Begarding the methods •» yrp
of to determine authorship special
ists are naturally rettceak Some of
sEwm have admitted. toww, the
nature at tie leading principles
wliicfe. guide theta. Tm philosophy
of the matter rests mainly os the
fact that it is very care far two par
sons to wrtte hands similar enough
to deceive a eareful observer. unless
one is imitating tie other. HPwfcs."
faces, hare ail sms special
idv'eynerasy. and the imitator has
not merely to copy that ©f someone
: else, hat to disguise his ovs
By careful and frequent practice
he mar succeed well enough to de
ceiTe the ordinary man. hat is rarely
successful m onttissr the expert.
Even the most skillful culprit cannot
wholly hide his individuality, as he
is sure to relapse into his ordinary
method occasionally. Then, again,
great care has to he used, and this
can_ be detected by the traces of
hesitancy, the substitution of carves
for angles, and vice versa, which
: come oat very plainly when the writ
ing is examined under the taicro
scope, as it usually is by the expert.
A plan of detection which t««
I been adopted with great success is to
i cat out each letter in a doubtful
piece of writing, and paste ait the
A's, B’s. 4e., on separate sheets of
paper. The process is also gone
through with a genuine bit of calli
graphy of the imitator or the imi
tated. as the case may be. Compari
son almost invariably shows that the
letters are less uniform if imitation
| has been attempted, the writer being
! occasionally betrayed into some ap
; proach to his ordinary caiigraphy.
I or into momentary forgetfulness of
| some special point in the handwrit
I ing he is simulating.
| Xo point is too small to escape an
-Xpert's attention, says Chamber's
Journal. The dotting of i's, the
| crossing of t’s» the carts and flour
ishes. the intervals between the
words, the thinness of the upstroke
; and the thickness of the downstroke.
| are all noted and carefully compared.
Where only a signature has been
: forged, and that by means of trac
ings from the original, the resest
blanee is often so exact as to deceive
1 even the supposed author, bat In
those cases the microscope is gen
erally effective in determining not
merely the forgery bat the method
by which it was accomplished. It is
some comfort to know that the can
ning of the forger is overmatched by
the scientific skill of the trained ex
pert.
The title of prince in Russia is so
common that it has little signifi
cance. The bearers oi the distinc
tion. says a foreign journal, are more
numerous than “the wearers of the
legion of honor in a French cafe, or
colonels in the Southern states of
America.” The truth of this state
ment is illustrated in a report in the
last edition of the military gazette.
Rusk! Invalid- It records the ueath
of thirteen officers of the militia, of
whom nine were princes. “In the
Caucasus.” says the journal above
referred to, “every owner of a large
dock of sheep calls himself a ‘prince.’
All of these sheep princes are ad
dressed as ‘highness.’ the same as
the sons of the oldest princely fami
lies.
“When one of these sheep owners
goes to foreign countries he places
the title of ‘prince’ on his card, and
play3 a certain part in uninitiated
circles. The same thing is true of
the many representatives in Russia
of the Tartar ‘princely’ families.
Many ancient families, such as the
Naryschkin, Wajewoloshki. etc., en
titled to the prefix, prinee. before
their names.decline to use it for fear
of being confounded with these ap
parent princes. Representatives of
these families are content with the
use of the coat-of-arms.
Nest-Ball dins Fish.
One of the queerest denizens of
the deep and one which would very
properly be called an ichthyological
wonder, is the gouramis. the famous
nest-building fish of tne Oriental
seas. These fish are very plentiful
in the waters of Cochin China. Java,
Sumatra and Borneo. At the breed
ing they pair off like birds and. se
lecting a favorite spot in the grasses,
build large spherical nests of floating
weeds and plaster them over witn
mad. The broad, fiat fins used in
this last operation are attached to
the abdomen and arc wholly ditferent
from anything in the fin line known
to naturalists. The full-grown fe
male gouramis is six feet long and
weighs impounds. The eggs of this
queer fish, which are deposited in
the mud-plastered nest, number from
SUO to 1,00 A
His Daily Bread.
When the boarder came down to
breakfast he was as ugly as if he
had been having a beautiful time ail
night, and he found fault with every
thing, but particularly the bread.
He scolded about that to such an ex
tent that at last the landlady re
sented it.
„ dpn’t care to hear.anything
more about* thatr bread, ” she said. ^
"and f want you to drop^it ”
He glowered at her.
“It will knock a hole in the floor
if I do.” he retorted, and she left the
table.
Something Surprising. j
Manager—Yes. I want a new play,
but I want something novel, some
thing startling, something never
seen or heard of before.”
Author—I’ve got it: just the thing.
The plot leads up to a train robbery.”
••Mothing new about that”
“Yes, there is. The passengers
rise as one man and smash the
robbers.”
MYSTERY Or THE PYRAMIDS*
-
TTkir the pyramid* mn Wilt Ws
: always prueed to to a perplexing
, Eoestion. For woe reason the build- j
♦« of the (wnuaats of Egypt appear
1 to Wt» concealed th« objoot of these ;
stracswre*. and this to aaccessfally j
! a*>t «rai a tnlttioa has nae!t«4
» »kiek purports to Wn> W*a i
■ WaW down froa the date of Cheer
construction- laelwdiag ancient and
i modern theories we dad a wide range
! of choice. Some hare thought that
j; these buildings were associated wlth:
l the religion of the early Egyptians.}
i others ha»e suggested that thee were
; tombs; others that they combined the t
purpose of tombs and temples, that
!: they were ul rvnomicat observatories. f
defenses against the sands of the'
great desert, granaries like those;
made nnder Joseph's direction, ori
places of resort daring excess ire oeer>!
flows of the Nile, while Aristotle says:
that the work was set on foot to keep!
; the common people well employed »~I j’
Wsr in earning' their daily bread so |
that they should have no leisure tor
conspiring against their rulers. Ac
cording to the late Professor Proctor, I
none of these ideas is found on close !
examination to be tenable as repre- j
, seating the sole purpose of the pyr*- f
mids. and he suggested that they must1
have been intended to serve some use- '
fnl purpose during the lifetime of the [
builder, and that they were built by!
. each different king in order that as- £
tronomical observations might be con-1
tinned throughout his life, to de- j
wrmiM bis future, to ascertain what
epochs were dan^ron or propitious
for him and to note such unusual phe*
; nomena among the eelestial bodies as
seemed to bode him good or eril for
tune- Astrology is in fact the key
i note of his theory, which is perhaps,
on the whole, the most satisfactory
that has been evolved. It has been
stated by experts that the great pyra
mid could not bow be built at a less
cost than Slt5.300i.0Qa.
-Brava'i BnwkW Ttwhw" are widely
known as an admirable remedy for Bron
chitis, Hoarseness, Coughs and Threat
troubles. Su&l ta tuna
Pnehsss ud Viceroy.
I heard a rather amusing story in
which Lord Houghton, the viceroy of
Ireland and the Dncheas of Manchester
played a part, says a writer in the
Philadelphia Press:
They met the other day on the steam
er running from Kingston to Holyhead.
Houghton imagined, uo doubt, that he
was stitl among the gloomy magnifi
cence of his vice-regal court, most gra
ciously beckoned to the duchess to take
a seat, and was even affable enough to
indicate the right chair adjacent to
him. where he was pleased to permit
ker to sit by a vice-regal pat with two
fingers. The duchess was a little taken
bock by the condescending manner of
the young viceroy, whom she had
known from babyhood. She. however,
complied with the signal, and during
the voyage across exerted herself to be
pleasant. But the moment she set her
foot on Holyhead she considered her
duty fulfilled, for his excellency the
viceroy in Ireland is nothing but plain
Lord Houghton in England- It was
with the most imperative ring in her
voice that she turned to him and ex
claimed: "Here. Bobby, Bobby, bring
me my dressing bag. please, and now
run ahead and find me a good compart
ment.” _
Sri* op the liver, remove disease, promote
good cheer and good health, by the use of
Beechnut's Pills. ,
The Horse*' Food.
The horse's natural food is grass.
There is nothing else upon which he
will do so well or live so long. His in
ternal economy can accommodate itself
to the dried, seedless stalks of winter,
the luxuriant foliage of spring or the
highly nutritious seed pods of summer.
The stalks preserve his health, the
green foliage fattens him and the seed
pods invigorate and strengthen him.
No horse, however lightly worked,
should be fed on hay alone. The ra
tion should include grass or roots and
when the work is hard enough a suita
ble quantity of grain. No horse that
is lightly worked should be lightly fed
or grain. It is a common and costly
practice which causes many a horse to
be discarded long before his time
Can’s VMfk Babul
btbnabkm ud best, h >111 bnai ap aCoU«bk>
truss aurthiecalKk II b ilwan ratiablr. Try a
Small Frail Dbciwcd.
R. J. Coe of Fort Atkinson, a practi
cal fruit grower, had for his theme
“Strawberry Culture,” at the Wiscon
ain horticultural meeting and made the
following points:
Never plant strawberries after straw
berries, for if rotation is good practice
everywhere, it surely is for the straw
berry bed. Don't use plants from an
old bed, nor small, inferior specimens
from a new one, but always choose
good, strong plants from new beds.
Prepare the ground the year before
by having it well manured. Sow rye
in the fall and turn it under earlv in
the spring. Dig the plants a few days
before setting and keep in a moderately
cool, shady place until the roots begin
to start. Mark rows perfectly straight
and cultivate once a week through the
season. Pick off all plossoms and treat
the first runners as weeds. Trim up
the rows to eighteen or twenty-four
inches. Cover in autumn with marshy
hay or other litter which is free from
weed seeds. Mow the bed as soon as
picked and, when dry, burn mulch and
all. Never keep a bed over two crops.
Mr. Woodward of New York would use
commercial fertilizers at the rate of
Billiard Table, second-hand. For sale
cheap. Apply to or address, H. C. Akin,
511 8. 12th St., Omaha, Neb.
To keep a closet or pantry dry and sweet,
{dace a box of lime upon one of the shelves.
Truth never touches a nun and leaves
him as it found him.
All other powders are
cheaper made and in
ferior, and leave either *
acid or alkali in the food
cevAi. tAAmis romec* co. >«• waul. st.
nawBMtktniM.
C. H. HtaUtm of WUcoatia un on
this tobjtcl:
Tb»j would grow anywhere, but
would choose level ground. atUdruMd,
and toil made rich with a liberal dress'
in* of well-rotted barnyard atanara
riant In rows seven feet apart and
three feet in the row. Some low-grow
tag crop can be raised the first year be
tween the rows Give the plants win
ter protection by laying down and cot- i
cr.ag with earth 1 use wire to protect j
! the plants and set posts or stakes, !
! about twenty feet apart, on which to .
| fasten the wirea Match with (ntn
clover and pinch off the young eaucs as !
| soon as they get to be twenty Inches or |
\ two feet high. The same plantation I
j can be kept twenty years. 1 have one j
! fifteen years old which is apparently ns !
i it ever was. 1 usually let all the plants
| which come up in the hiil remain until i
: the following spring, then reduce to
; four or five, and treat all other plants i
| between hills and rows as weeds !
CMMIIi Mi
M Mtdni. «mm (iw i|a t value- ^
W» lion, having irautioailf allowed
hi* tail to stray into an adjoining ca(*.
tk» tail was stored hr aa rtililttpavd
leopard, close to the lion's body. when,
as the lion attempted to escape, almost
the whole of the akin of his tail waa -v
stripped off. This was followed by
such aa amount of ip Ha in motion that
the lion's life was in danger. Surgeon
Major Miller, brother of the tale IVof.
Miller of Edinburg, the surgeon to tha <
governor of Madras, volunteered to
perform amputation. The lion wan
seised In his cage and his head covered
with a cap containing a eoaiiderabia i;
quantity of chloroform He was then
dragged to the edge of the cage sad the
tail passed through the bars, where
Dr. Miller cleverly performed his oper
ation. The animal made a good re- *'*
co very. _
Send paper will whitee ivory tatfe han
dles which have become yellow from age
and constant use.
It wfl^pvtapa, require • little stretch of
tbe imagination oo the part of the reader to
recognize tbe fact that tbe two portrait* at
the head of thie article are of tbe same in
dividual ; and yet the y are truthinl sketches
marie from photographs, taken only a few
monthe apart, of a very much esteemed citi
aea of Illinois—Ur. C. H_ Harris, whose ad
dons. 1,*M Beeood Avenue, Rock
Island, I1L Tbe following extract from a let
; ter written by Ur. Harris explains tbe mar
vekmscbaium in his personal appearance. He
writes: *' Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Dis
covery sared my life and has made me a
; man. Uy home physician says I am gocd for
forty yetrs yet sou will remanber that I
was just between life and death, and all of
my friends were sure it wss a case of death,
until I commenced taking a second bottle of
■ Golden Medical Discovery,’ when I became
able to sit op and tbe cougn was very much
better, and <*» bltsding from w«y hays
stopped, and before I bad taken six bottles of
the ’ Golden Medical Discovery1 my cough
i ceased and I waa a new man and ready for
I now feel that it is a duty that I owa to
mj fellow-meu to recommend to them the
* Golden Medical Discovery * which saved my
life when doctors and all other nnotirinaa
failed to do me any good.
I send to yon with this letter two of mr
photonnphs: one taken a few weeks before!
was taken down sick in bed, and the other
was taken after I wee waU.’’ These two pho
tographs are faithfully rw-prodoced at the
bead of Ihfes article.
Mr. Harris's experience in the use of “ Gold
en Medical Discovery” is not an exceptional
one. Thousands of eminent people in all
ports of the world testify, in just as emphatic
i language, to its marvelous curative powers
01W all chronic bronchial, throat snii lung
dlwasee, chronic nasal catarrh, sett. ^
kindred discs ess
Eminent physicians prescribe “Golden
; Medical Discovery” when any of their dear
ones* lives are imperilled by that dread dto
ease. Consumption. Under such circum
stances only the Beast reliable remedy would
) be depended upon. The following letter is to
; the point. It Is from an eminent phe^dan of
> Stamps, Lafayette Oo. Ark. He ears:
i “ Consumption is hereditary in my wifek
family : some have already died with the dis
!«o»u Mr wife has a sister, Mrs. B. A.
Cleary, that was taken with consumption.
She need Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discov
ery, and, to the surprise of her manv friends,
she got well. My wife has also bad hem
orrhages from the lungs, and her sister in
sisted on her using the ‘ Golden Medical Die
-I consented to her wfegit. and M
cored her. Elbe has had no symptoms of con
pm* si* year*. hoph
ha Ting this disease can take no bettor into*
«J.“ Yours very truty,
From the Buckeye State comes the follow
ing: “ I was pronounced to hare ecaauam
**°° .•?•?> °* our best doctors. I spent
nearly #300. and Has no better. I concluded
—v ”*y» »nai » ieet joss at aw
to-day as 1 did at twenty-fire, and aan do fast
f* F*** •.‘‘•y’* WOT't on the farm, although!
bed not dune any work for several yean?*
Truly, your friend,
Mr. Dulaney's address is Campbell, Ohio.
“I bad catarrh in the bead for years and
trauhle srith my left long at the a™ time
You put so much faith in your remedies that
I concluded to try one bottle or two, and 1
derived much benefit therefrom. 1 and un
Uiree bottles of Dr. Sere's Catarrh Remedy,
fire bottles of your “ Gulden Medical Discov
ery,” and in four moo the 1 wasmyealf again.
I could not deep on my Idl aids, and noar I
can sleep and eat heartily. So lean as I has*
your medicines on band 1 bare no need of a
doctor; I do not think my boom to ctdr
without them. Yours truly,
Harlow, Baldwin Co., Ala,
B It would be any more convincing, era
could eattly fill the columns of tbit paper with
letters testifying to the cure of the severest
diseases of the throat, bronchia and lungs,
by the use of “Golden Medical Discovery?
To build up solid jtvsh and strength after the
grip, pneumonia, lung fever’*), —
fevers, and other proatratiiw djemew, it hto
It does itot make/at like cod Hvsr
oil and ite natty compounds, W asHd, sU»
tom* jlesk.
A complete treaties on Throat, Bronchial,
and Lung Disco sea ; aim including *«**»—
and Chronic Nasal Catarrh, and pointing out
mocessful means of home treatment for theea
maladies, will be mailed to any address by the
World's Dispensary Medical Association of
Buffalo, N. Y., on receipt of sis cants to
stamps, to pay postage.
T. JACOBS OILp.^^
BURNS, BRUISES, SCALDS,
CUTS AND WOUNDS.
Patents. Trade-Marks.
Kxau>in«t)<Mk and Adv»m to Patrnrabittty of
[cvfDtiob. Sv4id (or ** *r Haw to Get
tm«*«( •• Ur2i2C :TiJlSU. VASECWm a a.
W. !V. 17.* OiNfllm-l* 1W.
llbtHt AiuwnltiK AyvvrtUrtiMaU AkiUy
AleutUm Mil* k'aper.