The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, April 26, 1894, Image 7

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

    REPUBLICANDOCTRINE.
THE SL'OAK ISDUSHIY.
Shall that of Louisiana, Which I* the
Third I argent SujrurtProdacInjj Coon*
try In the World, be Destroyed?
Over 5100,COO, 000 invested in the sugar
industry.
Supporting 60fl,000 people in Louisi
ana. r*
V ioldmg $35,000,000 annually in sugar
products. >
Interstate trade given $50,000,000
annually.
The sugar industry of Louisiana is
not a lo.-ftl or provincial industry. Leav
ing the price of sugar out of the ques
tion entirely, the enterprise incident
to its cultivation is as far-reaching in
its effects and results as the great do
main of our government. The follow
ing statement will give some idea of
how the sugar industry of Louisiana
affords a great diversity of employment,
of invested capital, of agricultural pro
ducts, finding a ready sale and an im
mense trade for manufactured goods,
a market for raw materials, the con
sumption of which is in no wise under
stood by the people who reside in terri
tory outside of the state of’ Louisiana.
How can the people of the United
States be made to understand that
more than $29,000,000 worth of goods
is consumed in the sugar district of
Louisiana, all of which is purchased
from territory scattered throughout the
United States, affording employment
to more than 7%,000 laborers. In proof
of the foregoing statement let us call
attention, first, to $1,200,000 worth of
coal, shipped from the fields of Penn
sylvania and Alabama. Let him who
reads this statement estimate for him
self the number of men who thus find
employment, the interstate commerce
produced thereby and the value which
thus attaches to the slumbering ore, i
which is taken from the mountain I
sides and thus made to pay tribute to j
commercial enterprise and add value to
the wealth of the citizens of three
great cominonwealths.
Kentucky, lennessee, Indiana and
Missouri annually find sale in this
sugar district of Louisiana for $2,400,-.
ooo worth of mules and horses If the
market in Louisiana for this vast
product of the farm is to be closed,
where shall these states look for a
market for their horses and mules?
Minnesota, Missouri and Kansas are
never done loading cars with, the
product of the field and farm. Every
day in the year they send forth their
stuffs into these great sugar fields,
which annually amounts to $4,300,000.
What foreign market is so sure a pur
chaser of wheat and flour as the sugar
planter or sugar producer of Louisiana?
The meat product consumed by the
people of this sugar-producing territory,
amounts annually to $3,600,000. In
this one item of commerce, the farmers
of Ohio, Illinois, Kansas, Nebraskaand
Texas have long since learned that they
can depend upon Louisiana gold or ex
change.in payment for this vast product
of meat, which if not sold in Louisiana
must necessarily be added to the great
supply already on hand before another
market can be discovered.
The farmers of four great states,
Kansas, Missouri,. Illinois and Iowa,
little dream, or seldom consider, while
sweetning their coffee, pastry and
fruits, that they who produce this su
gar are the best customers, possibly, of
all those who purchase of the products
of the field, for each year the Louisiana
sugar planter buys from these ‘states
$-1,800,000 worth of corn, oats and hay.
Who, among the thousands of work
men who daily toil at the bench, or of
the sturdy woodmen who changes the
forest into cultivated fields, realizes
that the product of his hands yearly
finds a market in one item of cooperage
aloue, for$l,200,000 worth, taken large
ly from the states of Ohio and Michi
gan?
A mong the busy toilers of the Bunny
fields of the Carolinas, Georgia and Ten
nessee, the producers of cow peas alone
receive annually from the sugar grower
of Louisiana, $310,000 for this one item
of agriculture, being a sure and a safe
market.
$300,000 passes from these sugar fields
annually to the mountains of Pennsyl
vania or the hills of Alabama, paid in
exchange for oils, paints and lime, all
of which is a gain or profit from a com
modity which must remain worthless
without a readv market.
The hissing1 of steam, the ponderous
hum of mighty wheels in a thousand
factories, stretching from Missouri
across the fields of Illinois, Ohio, Penn
sylvania, even to the centers of New
England, where thousands of frugal
artisans are daily making the machin
ery and implements which annually
shipped into these sugar fields of Louis
iana produce an annual return in
money of 86,000,000. Does the owner
of the mill or the mechanic at the
bench thoroughly understand the
great advantage that this industry of
sugar raising affords him by the pur
cease of the product of the shop?
The boots and shoes that cover the j
feet of the million or more people who
find immediate employment in these
sugar fieldsot Louisiana, are taken in
exchange from the operatives of the
great shops of Massachusetts, Illinois
and Missouri for the products of the
rich fields. For these boots and shoes
the sugar planter pays annually 81,800,
000.
What shall be said of the 82,400,000
worth of clothing purchased by the
sugar people of Louisiana from the \
great centers of trade, stretching from ;
New England to the great manufactur- i
ing cities of the lakes and the Missouri
valley? Thousands of operatives,
fingers tired with pewing, are here
furnished a market for the product of
their toil, which some people are will
ing to destroy that these humble toilers,
instead of receiving annually ready
payment for their labor, are otherwise
to become beggars in the streets.
Added to all the foregoing array of
figures, which represent absolute items
of trade, there must be adde4 81,500,000
for sundry articles that go into this
sugar producing territory from the
orchards, the fields, the shops and the
factories all over this great, broad con
tinent of ours, so that when we come
to look at the resume of all this inter
course or this network of trade which
centers in this one productive field, we
ask, who is the American who would
thus destroy so fair and promising an
industry with all its beneficent effects
as contributing to the great interstate
prosperity which marks the closing of
that decade from 1862 to 1802 inclusive?
Let the sugar industry of Louisiana
be protected in the future as in the
past ami let the wealth going out to all
the states of the union, as a result of
the sugar enterprise of the United
t\ i'.if.V-TjV- * ."
States, be continued and enlarged until
we shall not stand third in the sugar
producing countries of the world, bqt
nrst—able to produce all that wa con
sume.
A Heterogeneous Mass.
The democratic party, unlike any oth
®r political organization which has ever
had an existence in a free and civilized
country, is made up of such a heteroge
neous mass of all sorts and conditions
of people that it can with perfect im
punity put at defiance conditions and
surroundings which would ordinarily
blight and destroy any Other party
making a pretense to half the virtue
that democracy does. There are two
things which never give the leaders of
democracy a minute's thought or bother
them in the least. One is the plain rule
of a consistent, honest policy. The
other is the record the party has made
in the past and is making to day.
From as far back as most men can
remember, the democratic party has
been everlastingly wrong, in respect of
its attitude upon every great question
of national policy, and time has always
furnished the proof of this fact. In
the early days, the cardinal points of
democratic faith were, first, the doc
trine of state rights; and second, in
connection therewith, the “Divine” in
stitution of slavery. The two consti
tuted the corner stone and foundation
of the democratic structure.
So sure was demooracy of the cor
rectness of its position upon these ques
tions, thatrather than recede it adopted
a general policy resulting in civil war,
carried on for years, until it was finally
demonstrated that the union of the
states was indissoluble and constituted
a compact federal union which we call
a nation.
And now there are none so poor as
to do reverence to the doctrine of state
rights as proclaimed in the ante-bellum
times or apologize for the system of
human slavery.
Again, during the war for the pres
ervation of the union, every measure
calculated to strengthen the position of
the government and give courage and
comfort to the soldier at the front, was
met with the cry of “unconstitutional”
from the northern democrats, and when
in 1864 our soldiers were girding them
selves up for the last, long struggle,
which finally resulted in victory, the
northern democratic party, in national
convention assembled, declared the
war a failure, and all further attempts
to coerce the states and preserve the in
tegrity of the union a gross violation of
the constitution. The truth is that
modern democracy is simply an “or
ganized appetite" for spoils. There is
nothing of honesty, consistency or
patriotism in its make-up. It never
had a well defined, consistent, patriotic
policy in relation to public affairs in all
its existence. Its rule has been, as in
New York, the rule of thugs, bummers
and robbers. Wherever democracy is
in full sway, there you will find an
utter disregard of the rights of the peo
ple and of the laws passed for their
protection.
However, all this counts for nothing,
because the rank and file of that party
have supreme contempt for the rights
of persons as well as laws, and the
more nearly a system of anarchy is
reached, there will be, for them, less
restraint and more freedom to plunder.
Hence, it follows that the party in pow
er today is like the man without a con
science, paying no heed to cousistency
or the record of the past. Its rank and
file care nothing for principle and have
no conception of the meaning of the
word. "To the victor belongs the
spoils,” is their watchword, and wher
ever the banner bearing that motto
leads, they will follow.
On the “Stars and Bars” Were “Slavery
and Free Trade/* on the “Stars and
Stripes/* “Liberty and Protection/*
The war for the union was waged,
on one side, for the preservation and
extension of slavery, for free trade, for
servile labor, for a system which de
graded labor and lowered the standard
of manoood; on the other, for freedom,
the Union and protection to free, well
paid labor, for the Bystem which digni
fies labor and ennobles the laborer.
Between the “Stars and Bars” was read
“Slavery and Free Trade.” Between
the “Stars and Stripes,” borne by the
boys in blue to victory, “Liberty and
Protection. ” „
“Liberty and Protection” triumphed,
but the latter is now to be overthrown
by the installation of the democratic
party, the same democratic party as of
old, in complete subjection to the South,
dictating the tariff policy, administer
ing the beneficence of the goverment,
and measuring out the gratitude of the
nation to the men who risked their
lives and imperiled their health to put
down the rebellion.
The republican party came into
power with an empty treasury, with an
impoverished country, under a revenue
system which neither protected Ameri
can industries nor furnished sufficient
revenue for the economical conduct of
the government; when the government
was” without credit and .our bonds,
drawing 12 per cent interest, sold in
the markets of the world at 17 per cent
discount. It raised immense armies, it
provided a navy, it raised the funds
necessary to carry on the war, it sub
dued the rebellion, and preserved the
Union.
Hut it did more than all this. It
started the wheels of industry. It gave
employment to labor. It established
the credit of the government. It paid
immense sums in the reduction of the
■ public debt It brought about a period
of prosperity which, with slight inter
ruptions consequent upon the inflation
of the currency and the return to
specie payment, continued for nearly a
third of a century; a period of progress
in all that makes a nation great and
powerful and its people prosperous and
happy, such as was never before wit
nessed in any country.
JESTS AND JOKELETS.
Maud—Why do you call that ring a
war relic? Ethel—I won it in my first
engagement.
Little Dot—I just hate compositions.
Mamma—You like to write letters?
Little Dot—Yes; but when I get a blot
on my composition, I can’t draw a
ring around it and say it's a kiss.
Little Dick—Does wishing with a
wish-bone ever come true? Little
Dot—I wished ten different times and
It came true every time. “Did it?'*
“Yes, I always got the short end of
the bone, and everybody said I
wouldn’t get what I wished for, and I
never did.”
iti jlfcjfajfa /y, t-fa A jfa /fa ffl jfc a ,ti
OTxTTTTTTTTTaTTTXTTXXXTTTTTSt
Housekeepers
Should Remember.
The Government Chemists, after having analyzed
all tlic principal brands of baking powder in the
market, in their reports placed the “Royal” at the
head of the list for strength, purity and wholesome
ness; and thousands of tests all over the country
have further demonstrated the fact that its qualities
are, in every respect, unrivaled.
Avoid all baking powders sold with a gift or
prize, or at a lower price than the Royal, as they in
variably contain alum, lime or sulphuric acid, and
render the food unwholesome.
A Forest of Lightning.
The “St. Elmo’s Fire,” or electricity
seen playing on the bayonets of muret
ing armies, oml around the spars and
masts of ships, comes from the presenoe
of a “ charged " cloud in the air, from
■which the pointed objects draw the
lightning.
A splendid instance of this same
phenomenon was witnessed in the Jura
at St. Cergues, where a whole forest of
})ine trees was seen to l>e aglow with
ight, like a phosphorescent sea in the
tropics. A thunder-storm was raging at
the time, and at every flash of lightning
the illumination entirely disappeared,
but soon shone forth again until the
next flash came.
Before the appearance of this St.
Elmo's fire, heavy rains had fallen and
soaked the forest, so ns to render it con
ductive of electricity, and the thunder
cloud overhead, heavily charged with
electricity, had induced an opposite
charge on the ground below, which dis
charged itself into the air by the point
ed boughs and needles of the pine trees.
The Evolution
Of medicinal agents is gradually rele
gating the old-time herbs, pills,
draughts and vegetable extracts to the
rear and bringing into general use the
pleasant and effective liquid laxative,
Syrup of Figs. To get the true remedy
see that it is manufactured by the Cal
ifornia Fig Syrup Co. only. For sale
by all leading druggists.
Transplanting in the Night. — A
gentleman, anxious to ascertain the
effect of transplanting at night, instead
of by day. made an experiment with the
following results : He transplanted ten
cherry- trees while in bloom, commencing
at 4 o’clock in the afternoon. Those
transplanted during the daylight shed
their blossoms, producing little or no
fruit, while those transplanted in the
dark maintained theii condition fully.
He did the same with ten dwarf trees,
after the fruit was one-third grown.
Those transplanted during the day shed
their fruit; those transplanted during
the night perfected the crop and showed
no injury from having been removed
With each of these trees he removed
some earth with the roots. The inci
dent is fully vouched for, and, if a few
similar experiments produce a like re
sult, it will be strong argument to hor
ticulturists, etc., to do such work at
night.—Floral Cabinet.
SIOO Reward S100-.
The readers of this paper will be pleased to
learn that there is at least one dreaded disease
that science has been able to cure in all its
stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall’s Catarrh
Cure is the only positive care known to the
medical fraternity. Catarrh being a con
stitutional disease, requires a constitutional
treatment. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken in
ternally, acting directly upon the blood and
mucous surfaces of the system, thereby de
stroying the foundation of the disease, and
giving the patient strength by building up the
constitution and assisting nature in doing its
work. The proprietors have so much faith
in its curative powers, that they offer One
Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to
cure. Send for list of testimonials.
Address. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O.
IQPSold by Druggists, 75c.
The European sportsman, mighty
hunter though ho be, is completely up
to tho blush when comparing his meager
account of a day's shooting with the re
giil bags made by the Indian Rajahs and
Princes, or oven by the Feriugliees, in
British India. There may be less phys
ical exertion, and consequently less
physical improvement, in the monster
battues of the East than in our more
homely and rigorous sports, but the to
tal is something very magnificent in
deed. Six tigers, thirty-six buffaloes,
140 pigs and 3,200 deer is the sum of a
Hindoo gentleman’s shooting.
Go South tin the Wabash.
Tourists’ tickets now on sale to all points.
Homeseekers’ tickets at half fare on ex- i
cnrsion dates, April 1. th and May Sth. For
rates or folders giving full description of
lands, climate, &c., cad at IVabash Ticket
office, No. 1502 Farnam Street, or write
Oeo. N. Clayton, N. \V. P. Agt.,
Omaha, Neb.
Several agricultural journals are rec
ommending bitter aloes ns a lice ex
terminator on cattle. It is to lie applied
in powdered form by dusting it into the
Vair on the animal
Young Wives-*
Who Are for the First Time to Undergo
Woman’s Severest Trial, we offer
“nothers’ Friend”
A remedy which, if used as directed a few weeks before con
finement, robs it of its Pain, Horror and Risk to Life of both
mother and child, as thousands who have used it testify.
“ I used two bottles of ‘Mothers’ Friend’ with marvelous results,
and wish every woman who has to pass through the ordeal of child-birth
to know if they use ‘Mothers’ Friend’ for a few weeks it will rob con
finement of pain and suffering and insure safety to life of mother and
child—Mrs. Sam Hamilton, Eureka Springs, Ark.
Book to Mothers mailed free containing voluntary testimonials.
Sent by express, charges prepaid on receipt of price. SI GO per bottle.
Sold by all Druggists. BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO., A:
Atlanta, Oa.
A Voting Lady’s Heart Misplaced.
A curious cate of malposition of the
heart _ was discovered by a physician
of this city in a patient who was con
sulting him for some spinal trouble.
The young woman is about 20 years old,
of good form, handsc-mo face and pleas
ing disposition. A careful study of the
precise locality and form of the heart
shows it to be transferred to the right
side of the chest, and, instead of
the apex beating just below the breast,
it strikes upward against the right col
lar-bone, near its outer third. In this
case there must be a double curve to the
large vessels of the heart, and the base
of the heart is downward. In other
words this heart is on the wrong side of
the body, and is upside down. This un
natural condition of things does not
rise to any serious inconvenience, ex
cept when moving too quickly or going
up-stairs, the organ beats with painful
violenoe against the collar-bone, where
its motion is plainly visible.—Indian
apolin Journal._
For Strengthening and Clearing the
Voice use Bhown’s Buonchial Tuociies.
“I havo commended them to friends who
were public speakers, and they have
proved extremely serviceable."—lice. Hen
ri/ Ward needier.
A Russian Baptism.
The baptism of a child belonging
to the royal family of Prussia is
thus described: 'The Czar bore him
to the font, where his little Highness
was taken out of all his clothes, and
plunged into the water, head first, three
times. The priest closed his nose and
eyes with his fingers, but the “ august
new-born,” as he is styled in large capi
tals in the programme of the duy,
screamed like any ordinary baby, and
evidently did not like it. He was then
given to his godmother, wrapped up in
blankets, and he dozed quietly while
another prayer was said. He was only
left in peace for a few moments. The
Eriest anointed his eyes, ears, mouth,
onds and feet with holy oil, that none
of those members should do any harm
in life. When the little fellow had re
covered from this interruption and just
begun to quiet down, he was again dis
turbed and all his hair cut off.”
llamnn's ftlugiu ( um Knlv«.*v
Warrant**! to cure nr money refunded. A»k your
drug^i&i for It. Trie** 15 rents.
“1 know I’m losing ground, sir,”
tearfully murmured the pale-faced
Freshman, “but it is not my fault, sir.
If I were to study on Sunday, as the
others do, I could keep up with my
class, sir—indeed, I could; but I prom
ised mother ne-ne-never to work on the
Sabbath, and I can’t, sir, ne-ne-never,”
and as his emotions overpowered him
he pulled out his handkerchief with
such vigor that he brought out with it a
small flaBk, three faro chips and a
euchre deck, and somehow or other the
professor took no more stock in that
Freshman’s eloquence than if he had
been a graven image.—Acta Columbi
ana.
Ilrgrmmn'a Camphor It* with Glycerine.
The original and only genuine. Cures Chapped Hands
and Face, Cold Sores, Ac. c. O. Clark Co.,N.Haven.ct
Vead Hash.—Take a teacup ol Doll
ing water in a sauce-pan, stir in an even
teaspoon flour wet in a tabfe-spoon cold
water, and let it boil five minutes; add
one-half teaspoon block pepper, as much
salt? and two table-spoons butter, and
let it keep hot, but not boil. Chop the
veal fine, and mix with it half as much
stale bread crumbs. Put it in a pan and
pour the gravy on it, then let it sim
mer ten minutes. Serve this on buttered
toast. _
Billiard Table, second-hand. For sale
cheap. Apply to or address, H. C. Akin,
511 8. ISth St., Omaha, Neb.
A lie in business is as block as it is any
where else.
Most of the telegrams sent by Queen Vic
ctoria are in cipher.
extreme,
Chronic,
Torturin
NEURALGIA
ABE CUBED BY ST. JACOBS OIL. PROMPT AND SUBE.
Cases o
f
The FemlnlAe Month.
A person who haa made the feminine
mouth the aubject of muoh study vol
unteers hia oouoluaiona to males with
sweethearts. They are os follows: If
her mouth is very small there ia not
much mind, but overmuch shallow sen*
tirnent. If she has a very large mouth
she will possess a good brain, but the
trouble ia in kissing it. Large mouths
put a man to an artistic teat; he will be
driven to hia wit’s end whether to begin
at one corner and conclude on the
other, or to moke a heroic daah at the
middle and endeavor to reach both
oorners. Hut if you are a kissing art
ist it can bo covered nicely enough.
If your sweetheart has a coarsely
formed mouth, she will be sensual and
full of strong, coarse points of char
acter, and will raise a row in the fam-'
ily. If she haa a delicately-formed
mouth, with rounded lips and of a
velvety color, she will have muoh sensi
bility and perfection of character, but
not astonish by her brilliancy of oon
oeption or execution. It is a good
mouth, because it is kissable and sub
missive. Shun blue-lipped or thin
lipped women; they will.bore you to
death with literature or woman’s rights,
theorize while you want your dinner,
or spoil your temper by their red-hot,'
scolding tongues.
There are 80,000 barmaids In England.
m
froioi-Thu gn rinl
Like the application of Ice to tlie am all at
your back, I* the sensation produced by the
chill that propones the fever of malaria
Then comes the roast Inn staife, when every
' “ 1 ‘ --a
vein tlliohN and In scorched u» If with llouf
lire. Then yon well nlith dissolve In ex
haustion perspiration tout Icavo* yaa
limp aa a wet dish ran. There nltornntlng
toiinmits tire not remediable permanentiy
wlih iiiilnlnc, which Is, moreover, a ino't
tmnmaliiK cumulative poison. Iloatetter'a
Stomach lllttcrs drive* out the foe mid re
pels IIn further attack*. 11 Is the leading
medicinal safcKuaid nualnst main-la all
over the continent* of North nml Umin
America, (Inuieninlii, the Isthmus of I’aa
aniii, Mexico end Australia. It reKulatea
the liver, stomach, b .wel* and kidney , en
riches tlm blood, mid prone tos *ppot I to.
sleep nml illuestlou. It Is not only n modi'
cine, lint mi effective cordial welcome lothe
most delicate pillule. Khonmullc tendency
la counteracted by It.
Cinnamon Roiah anii Ittmx.—line
rank, take alonf of bread af the last knead
ing, work in a lump of butter and a lit
tle sugar. Let line; make into litU»
cakes ; again let it rise, then bake. For
cinnamon rolls, roll the dough into •
slieet half an inch thick, spread with but
ter, sugar anil cinnamon. Commence it
ono side nud roll up; then with a sharp
knife cut into cakes half an inch thick,
and let rise and hake.
Bbccham's Pima area certain cure for
weak *t<miarh<nud disordered liver, and ara
famous the world over. X'li cents a box.
The candidates for ancient athletic
games were dieted on cheese, dried Ag%
boiled grain with warm water, and ao
meat
The subject of tho above portrait ie a
prominent and much respected citizen, Mr.
Uobert Manson, of West Rye, N. H. Where
Mr. Manson is known “ his word is as good
is his bond." In a recent letter to Dr. R. V.
i'ierco. Chief Consulting Physician to the
Invalids’ Hotel and Surgical Institute, Buf
falo,N. Y., Mr. Manson says:
“ Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets are the
liest pills I ever took tor tho liver. AU my
friends say they do them the most good.”
This opinion is shared by every one who
inee tries these tiny, little, sugar-coated pills,
which are to be found in all medicine ztorsB.
rhe U. S. Inspector of Immigration at Buf
falo, N. Y., writes of them as follows:
“ From early childhood I havo suffered
from a sluggish liver, with all the disorders
accompanying such a condition. Doctors’
prescriptions and patent medicines I have
lsed in abundance ; they only afforded tem
porary relief. I was recommended to try
Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. I did so, tak
ing two at night and one after dinner every
lay for two weeks. I have reduced the dose
to one ‘ Pellet ’ every day for two months.
[ have in six months increased in solid flesh
twenty-two pounds. I am in better health
than I have been since childhood. Drowsi
ness and unpleasant feelingBafter meals have
ximpletel vilisappeared. ”
Assist nature a little now and then with a
gentle laxative, or, if need be, with a more
aearching and cleansing cathartic, thereby
removing offending matter from the stom
ach and bowels, and toning up and invigo
rating the liver and quickening its tardy
action, and you thereby remove the cause
of a multitude of distressing diseases, such
as headaches, indigestion, biliousness, skin
discuses, boils, carbuncles, piles, fevers and
maladies too numerous to mention.
If people would pay more attention to
properly regulating the action of their bow
sis, they would have less frequent occasion
to (sill for their doctors’ services to subdue
attacks of dangerous diapsapa.
That, of all known agent* to amomplMa
this purpose, Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets am
unequaled, is proven by the fact that one*
iiited, thru are always tn favor. Their sao*
omlary effect is to keep the bowels open and
regular, not to further constipate, as is tint
case with other pills. Hence, their ireot
popularity with sufferers from habitual oo*-1
stipation, piles, and indigestion. Jf
The “ Pleasant Pellets ” are far more effec
tive in arousing tho liver to action than “blew
pills,” colomol, or other mercurial prepara-1
tions, and havo the further merit of being
purely vegetable, and perfectly harmless in'
any condition of ‘ the system ; no particular’
cure is required while using them. 1
Composed of the choicest, concentrate!
vegetable extracts, their cost is much mom
than is that of other pills found in the snr
ket, yet from forty to forty-fonr “PeUeta'V
are put up in each sealed glass vial, as sold
through druggists,and can be bod at the prim
of the more ordinary and cheaper made pjlh
Dr. Pierce prides himself on having been.
first to introduce a Little Liver Pill to the
American people. Many have imitated theta,
but none have approached his “ Pleasant Pal
lets ” in excellence. - >
For all laxative and cathartic purpomm.
the “Pleasant Pellets” are infinitely supe
rior to all “mineral waters," sedlits pow
ders, “ salts.” castor oil, fruit syrups (so
called). laxative “ teas,” and the many other
purgative compounds sold in various forma.)
Put up in glass vials, scaled, therefor*
always fresh and reliable. One little " Pel
let ” is laxative, two gently cathartic. t
Ass “ dinner pill,” to promote digestion,
take one each day after dinner. To relieve
distress from over-oating, nothing equals
them. They are tiny, sugar-coated. antt»
bilious granules, scarcely larger than mat
tard seeds. Every child wants them.
Then, after they are taken, instead of dis
turbing and shocking the system, they act ha
a mild) and natural way. There is no re
action afterward. Their help lasts.
Accept no substitute recommended to b*
“ just as good.” They may be better /or tie
dealer, because of paying him a better pnAL
but be is not the one who needs help.
Ely's Cream Balm
Cleanses the Nasal
Passages, Allays Tain
and Inflammation,
Restores the Sense of
Taste and Smell.
Heals the Sores.
Apply Balm lute each nostril.
LY BKOS.. 6C Warren St., N Y.
Davis International Hand Cream Sepo
Hi6
8“
UlB-g-oS
gS * £ S>
iif-ss
«3*esS
%Scli
ei ** >
sliQ
* ^—
hQQ U
pfu
jwnmsusgssssi
.i > i » i u iaat war, Id aUj utUculUijf chuui», utty aiuog
DEAF
MESS AND HEAD ..
• !*««.* • liv ». i<|» h*r «;«•»!hi
CURED
1 ***r" *>» r*iu*«ilr# Ull.
.. «rpr»>v4*r
*i P.Miscvx.Saa U'« .y,K Y.Wrlt* faifcx* c
WELL MAGHIWEBY
Illustrated catalogue showing WELL,
AUGEBS.BOCK DRILLS. HYDRAULIC J
AND J JETTING MACHINERY, etc. *
8s»i Fee*. Haw been tested and
all warranted.
Sioux City Engine A Iron Works,
BucccH-sotn to Poch Mr*. Co.,
IImx City. Iowa.
1S17 Union Are., Kansas CHj. Mo.
," COLCHESTER**
SPADING
BOOT.
■K«T III MARKET.
BEST IN FIT.
, best in WKAuura
QUALITY.
The outer or tap Hole ex
tend* the whole length
down to the heel. pro.
tenting the boot In dig
ging and In other hard
work.
ASK TOUR DKALES
FOR THEM
and don't he pot off
with Inferior good*.
COLCHESTER Kl’BBIGR. CO.
W. L. DOUGLAS <3 SHOE
equals custom work, costing; fma
$4 to $-\ best value lor the money
in the world. Name and prkt
stamped on the bottom. Kvety
lir warranted. Take no substi
tute. See lc»cal papers for full
description of our complete
for ladies and gen-.
\a/l~7v^T~—-Cl * - TVllom-n or send for //.
w uou LuUtogm*
giving in
struct incus
how to or
der by mail, pnstape free. You can get the bcag
bargains of dealers who push our shoes.
W. I*. U., Omni in—I 7. I WE.
Hltttu AiuHerkug Auvertbeiueuu
Meuttuu tkli f«v«r, <7