The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, May 17, 1894, Image 7

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    1 Carlow Story.
Thera la a tale told of * m rw.,>
who, in a distant corner of the southern
seas, Tisited an undiacoveral or unex
plored group of beautiful island*. After
landing and trading with the gentle
natives, he waa astonished by the visit of
a white man, evidently a person of nn»n«
and consequence, who, after maUnc
himself very agreeable, implored the
Captain to give him e story-book, if he
had such a thing in his possession. Hie
Captain had, and, deeply touched by the
pigs and cocoanuts which the white
exile had given him, bestowed on him a
copy of the “Arabian Nights Entertain
ments.” Overcome by the present, the
exile burst into tears, and cried, “Ton
have saved my life, and given me rank
and wealth.” On explanation, he <»i<l
“I should long ago have been eaten, but
while they were fattening me I learned
enough of their language to tell a child
the story of ‘Little Bed Biding Hood.’
The child repeated it, and the whole
population were mad with joy. They
had never heard a story before. From
that day I became a great and honored
man. When they had a national festival
I sat on top of a hill, and thousands
wept (while some elderly relative was
being cooked for a feast) at the cruel
death of the grandmother as caused by
the wicked wolf. I had with me a vol
ume of‘Fairy Tales,’and I soon began
to set a price on my performances. ‘Bed
Biding Hood’ is rather worn; I only get
a hundred cocoanuts for her now; but
‘Cinderella’ is still good for four pigs and
a turtle, and ‘Beauty and the Beast’
brings six or seven, according to the
quality. But with the ‘Arabian Nights’
I shall be able to go on accumulating
pork to the end of my days,”
Arabel&a (on her toes in a chair,
clutching convulsive!,* at her skirts)—
“ Oh 1 Bridget 1 A mouse 1 a mouse 1
Come and catch it, quick!” Bridget—
“ Shure, mum, there’s no hurry. If thja
one gets away, I can catch plenty more
loryer, mum.”
. Tonlat on tho “Briny”
Is very far Trom amusing, untraveled reader.
If *o be you are one. A rebellion fomented
by each mountainous wave that smites the
vessel's hull threatens absolutely todislodge
your very vitals from their natural resting
place,and a nausea so frightful that It woul0
reconcile you to a termination of yoursuf
ferlngs by shipwreck harrass you. Well for
you then. oi rather before this crisis, If you
are provided with Hostetter’s Stomach Bit
ters, a-swlft remedy for and preventive of
the nausea of travelers by sea or land, ner
vousness caused by the vlt rations of the
screwof a steamer or the Jarring of a rail
way train, and an antidote to bowel, liver,
and stomachic troubles caused by impure
water and unaccustomed food. The Bitters
also counteracts tin effects of f&ttgue and
exposure, and Is a safeguard against mal
aria, rheumatism and kidney trouble.
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
leas expenditure,-by more promptly
adapting -the world’s best -products to
the.neeas'Of physical being, will attest
the value to nealth 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 hos-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.
-gyrup of Figs is for sale by all drug
gists in 60c and 91 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 hot
•acceptjiny .substitute if offered.
bad ■
BLOOK
•Is a source of-much
suffering. The system
should be thoroughly
cleansed of all impur->
Iltles, and the Blood
kept in a healthy con*
dition. 8. 8s S. re
moves all taint of
’Whatsoevet'origin, and. builds. i|p the gen
lFor three-years I was so troubled with-malarial
■poison that life lost all its diarm* : I tried mercurial
had Potash -remedies, but could get no relief: A
few bottles of| "
made • com.
pietc and per
s s s.
J. A. RICH* Ottawa, Kan.
.'Our'Book on ‘Bleed and SkU.
.Disease* mailed free.
&y.iFjrsp&ciFrc co..
Cm
MADE
PURE
Signs iif Ml .
You don’t have to look
twice todetect them—bright
eyes, height color, blight
smiles,
bright in
every ac
tion.
Disease is
overcome
only when
weak tissue
is replaced by the healthy
kind. Scott’s Emulsion of
cod liver oil effects cure by
building up sound flesh* It
is agreeable io taste and
easy of assimilation.
THirr
SCOTTs"
emulsion.
rrnrf
1
; REPUBLICAN DOCTRINE.
Hair a Loaf I* No Bread.
Vre have been treated recently to t
curious spectacle by certain democratic
senators who have subscribed with
much unction, to the forcible declara
tions of the Chicago platform of that
party in 18U2, that a tariff for protec
tion is unconstitutional.
1 he gentlemen have suddenly found 1
that there were certain local interests
whose very existence and capacity to
furnish labor to their communities de
pended upon modification of the Wilson
bill as it came from the house. 1
In spite of their repeated and vocifer
ous professions of allegiance to all the
principles a tax being a robbery, and
un import tax for protecting our home
industries being worst of all, they have
been compelled by cold, hard facts to
go before their caucus committee hav
ing the bill in chnrire and v
threaten to defeat it pn the senate floor
if they are not taken care of. This is
extremely juicy democratic docline, and
seems to .an impartial outside observer—
a republican, for instance, and one of
those who have not been brought up
to think protection a sin and an offence
against the constitution, as a danger
ous breaking away from the guiding
strings of the Honorable Larry Neal.
There are, however, two other phazes
of this matter. One is that it bids fair
to make an entering wedge into a crack
in the center of that article so often re
ferred to as democratic harmony and
split that venerable fossil clear up the
back, to the shirt collar, so to speak.
This is to be depreciated. For as all
must know, democratic opposition to a
tariff is no high moral grounds, because,
don’t you know, its wrong. To allow
any question of mere local, . personal,
state election, etc., questions of expe
diency to be brought in would be des
ecration—for a democrat.
They must by force of all their logic
stand to their guns until they are ready
to flop clear over and go squarely and
honestly and maintain, as did Mr. Ran
dall, that there are such things in the
democratic party as protectionists. At
presen tt here is the best of authority
for stating that no legitimate, lawful
democratic protectionists are in exist
ence. They are all dead. They were
formally decapitated at Chicago when
Mr. Neal got in his work and there has
been no legal, from a party standpoint,
resurrection since. Some one should
throw cold water down the backs of
their necks or turn on a shower bath
so they could see just where “they are
at,” when they attempt to graft on, or
bud into, an alleged free trade revenue
bill special protection for their own
localities, because they have‘‘a pull,”
and are ready and determined to use it
or defeat the bill.
Some of the more docile, the more
easily satisfied, or who have had their
pie from other plates, may also get res
tive and do likewise. Some of them
may feel that they have risked their
senatorial necks for too small a return
in patronage and may go on a strike.
There is another phase of this question
which these hustling democrats seem
to forget. They have played hard be
fore the star chamber sub-committee ]
for a little, for a small duty, or a small
increase, so as to appease their constit
uencies and save them from ruin. They
have overlooked one fact. In matters
of tariff it is cheaper to pay a good
price and get a good article
than to buy shoddy at half
price. For instance a duty that is
high enough on any article, say calico,
will encourage, all over this broad land,
in New England and in the south and
west, the erection of many factories to
supply our vast home market. With
an assured duty they have only,to de
vote their time and energies to perfect
ing machinery, reducing cost of opera
tion, freights, commissions, etc., so as
to bring the cost down to the people, to
the vast mass who use this article, year
by year until, as now, the price is lower
than ever known, lower than ever ex
pected, lower in New York and at the
mills than the dreaded import duty
wmcn, oy aemoerauc iree trade rules,
should raise the price to consumers so
that they and not the foreigner should
pay the tax. Behind the protection of
a reasonable and sufficient duty our
people have let themselves loose, have
gone into it on a large and more di
versified scale, and have pushed it with
so much enthusiasm and skill that to
day the wholesale price is not a frac
tion of a mill higher than the import
duty on foreign calicos. That is what
a reasonable protective tariff has done.
Let us look at sugar. It is an article
which enters into the daily life of every
one, is an important item of expense in
every household, poor or rich. No
other question is of more frequent ask
ing than that of the farmer's wife:
‘‘Uow many pounds of sugar can we
get for a dollar?” Of course the farmer
and his wife ask each other ques
tions quite as vital in household
economy as do the dwellers in
and workers in villages and towns
They will ask these questions of
our esteemed democratic reformers
next summer and fall. But to return
to the sugar matter. In an article at
universal use and necessity a fairly in
telligent public spirit would favor any
reasonable action which would at oncer
make it cheap to the masses and at the
same time foster and build up our pro
duct so as in time we might become
wholly, or in part at least, independent
of Cuba, Germany and other foreign
countries for our sugar supply. It Is
not good national principles to remain
supinely dependent on a foreign market
when we could by proper legislation
become reasonably independent within
our own border by the development at
our own resources.
This is the result obtained by the
,present sugar schedule and bounty.
Sugar is free on importation, it is cheap
to .the masses and, what is much more
to our national advantage, we are us
ing the resources of sky and sail and
arms,and skill which God has given us
to.increase our product in this house
hold necessity.
We of the north do not begrudge Lou
isiana and Texas the bounty paid on
their sugar, nor that for once m four
decades they are making fair returns
on their investment and increasing
their output. Nor will he who sees the
vast plains of Kausas and Nebraska,
tot to mention others, regret that by a
bounty these sections may now produce
sorghum and beet sugar so as to revolu
tionize in a decade if let alone the su
gar product of the world. Now' these
senators have got a little help—just a
little—all they dare ask for and could
squeeze at the point of a threat
of a hostile vote from the l commit
tee and they hug the delusion to
themselves that half a loaf is better
than no bread and that these In*
dustriea will "get along” some way
and bot be entirely ruined. They tor
get that a duty not large enough to in
sure a good start or lair play will not
be sufficient inducement lor enough to
enter or continue it to keep prices
down or the lorelgn article out. There
will be no healthy home competition
to cut prices ever lower and lower each
successive year. On the contrary it
will enable a lew—a lavored lew—to
hold on by their eyelids, while the bal
ance is made up by imports. Trices in
the meantime cannot be reduced and
that healthy home competition which
has so revolutionized prices and busi
ness will be conspicuously wanting.
It may not be certain death but it
will be certain destruction to most in
the long run. When these senatorial
democratic trimmers get hold ol (he
whole situation and when their constit
uents arrive at the same point in the
study and operation ol this mill tor
there will be a grand lulling out and
the truth ol the heading* “A Hall Loaf
is No Bread.” will be made so plain
that they will have to go clear over to
republican protection or stultily them
selves in the minds ol all thinking pec
plo.
Protection Which Do**# Not Protect.
The democrats of the senate commit
tee have been compelled by the insis
tent pressure of certain southern indus
tries, and other industries which could
command democratic votes in the sen
ate, as coal and iron ore and coke in
West Virginia and Alabama, lead ore
in Missouri, collars and cuffs in New
York and pottery in New Jersey, to
either restore these to the duitable list
or increase the duty Used by the house.
Much of this will make a fool’s para
dise for those trusting constituents who
return home thinking they have saved
something at least out of the general
wreck and ruin planed for the rest of
the country.
These gentlemen will, however, find
that there is a sort of protection-so
called, which does not protect. The
fundamental idea of imposing a duty
for any purpose other than for produc
ing a revenue is to lay such duty so as
to enable home manufacturers to build
up home production. As a general
rule, it may be stated that only a high
duty offers sufficient inducement to
enough people so as to obtain a healthy
and active home campetition and to re
duce the home selling price so as to en
able our own buyers to get the advan
tage.
If the duty is just about the differ
ence between the original home cost
and the foreign cost only a few special
ly favored will go into the manufacture.
If, however, it be ample and have prom
ise of stability, many, and in different
sections, will eageraly embrace the op
portunity and in a short space of time
the fierce domestic competition will put
the price away below what it sold for
before the imposition of the duty.
The obvious point of the above is that
a tariff to protect must afford sufficient
margin to tempt many to embark in
the enterprise so as to, by stimulating
inventions of labor-saving machinery
and more economical processes of man
ufacture, enable our people to produce
these goods at a reduced price and still
gain a fair return from their invest
ment. In the new tariff bill, frantic
democratic senators have insisted on
some, even if slight, duties or increases
on certain articles such as coal and
coke, iron ore, lead ore, etc., hoping
that thus they could retain their local
support, save these industries and be
returned to congress. They may get
south; a few may from the north, but
before this is definitely settled, they
will have to face a few awkward facts.
Whenever the. duty is reduced to,
or nearly to, the danger point, the sur
plus. stock now held abroad will be
dumped on our shores .under the facile
interpretation of the ad valorum duties
in such a way as to put the usual fair
home profit out of sight. These indus
tries may Survive for awhile, may run
for a time at a loss, but not always.
The day of balances will soon come and
when these are struck and show a posi
tive and prospective loss, a halt will be
called; production will be stopped;
hands will be turned out from work
shops, and we will all get sick purchas
ing cheaper foreign shoddy goods and
sending out wheat and raw cotton and
gold abroad to pay for them.
While our operatives are idle, the
mills will deteriorate and after a year
or more of this fool's paradise, we will
wake to find that prices of our beloved
foreign goods are stiffening; not at
once, nor in all lines, nor in all places,
but little by little as the traffic will ad
mit. if in one section longer purses
or more hopeful owners keep up the
struggle, these will lower prices and
increased imports consigned to order,
swamp our home products.
To illustrate—Sugar is now a profit
able industry in Louisiana and its
future full of hope if the present bounty
was to be retained. All through the
northwest sorghum is making rapid
strides and beet root production bade
fair to make us wholly independent of
Cuba and Germany for our immense
sugar supply. The Louisiana senators
have put a small duty on imported
sugar, thinking, perhaps, that this may
save their planters from ruin, while
the sorghum and beet root producers
of the west may shuffle for themselves
Their expectations will be found vain
nod the result of the small duty will
simply be aa aggravation. It will be
. too much hair for good soap, and not
enough for plaster. The small revenue
will not help the government much.
Jit will be of uo value at all to th«
sugar industry. They will find a loss
not so great as with no duty, but
enough to curtail their output and force
them to abandon their costly planta
tions with machinery, etc., and let the
American people look wholly to the
outside world for their future sugar
supply.
No one can defend such a proposition.
It is not enough tariff to protect; it is
just enough to produce a small revenue
to the government and bring to our
sugar industry, lingering instead of
speedy death. The ultimate result
will be the same in either event.
If free trade is right and is demo
cratic doctrine, jet them stand by their
guns. If protection is needed, then do
it so it will protect and not damn with
faint praise.
A Georgia undertaker has adopted a
novel method for increasing his busi
ness. His advertisement reads: “Fu
nerals on the installment plan, Two
dollars a week will bury your beat
friend.”
Don’t Blame the Cook
If a baking powder is not uniform in strength,
so that the same quantity will always do the same
work, no one can know how to use it, and uni
formly good, light food cannot be produced with it.
All baking powders except Royal,' because
improperly compounded and made from inferior
materials, lose their strength quickly when the can
is opened for use. Atxubscquent bakings there
will be noticed a falling off in strength. The food „
is heavy, and the Hour, eggs and butter wasted.
It is always the case tjiat the consumer suffers
in pocket, if not in health, by accepting any sub
stitute for the Royal Baking Powder. The Royal
is the embodiment of all the excellence that it is
possible to attain in an absolutely pure powder.
It is always strictly reliable. It is not only more
economical because of its greater strength, but
will retain its full leavening power, which no
other powder will, until used, and make more
wholesome food.
Language of the Mouth.
Some wiseacre proposes to rend worn*
«n’s character by tier mouth. Here are
the rules to be observed : If her month
is very small there is not much mind,
but overmuch shallow sentiment. If
she has a very large month she will pos
sess a good brain, but the trouble is in
kissing it. Large mouths put a man to
an artistic test; he will be driven to his
wits’ end whether to begin at one corner
and conclude on the other, or to make a
heroic dash at the middle and endeavor
to reach both corners. But if you are a
kissing ortiBt it con be covered nicely
enough. If your sweetheart has a
coarsely formed mouth she will be sens
ual and full of strong, coarse points of
character, and will raise a row in the
familv. if she has a delicately formed
mouth, with rounded lips and of a vel
vety color, she will have much sensibil
ity and perfection of character, but will
not astonish by her brilliancy of concep
tion or execution. It is a good mouth
because it is kissable and submissive.
Shun blue-lipped or thin-lipped women;
they will bore you to death with litera
ture or woman's rights, theorize while
you want your dinner, or spoil your tem
per by their red-hot scolding tonguea.
E. A. ROOD, Toledo, Ohio, says: “Hall’s
Catarrh Cure cm ed my wife of catarrh fifteen
years ago and she has had no return of it. It’s
a sure cure.’’ Bold by Druggists, 76c.
Hardly Prepared.
«• Are you prepared for death ?” the
clergyman asked, with a tremor of emo
tion in his voice, as he took the sick
woman’s hand in his own. A shade of
patient thought crossed the invalid’s
face, and by-and-by she said she didn’t
hardly believe she was ; there was the
little bedroom carpet to be taken up
yet, and the point up stairs had hardly
been touched, and she did want to put
up new curtains in the dining room, but
she thought if she didn’t die until next
Monday she would be about as near
ready os a woman with a big family and
no girl ever expected to be. P. 8.—
That woman got well.
sniloh'i CoBsumptloM Cara
y«*old on a puarant#**. It cure* Ini’Ipk-nt. rorwimp*
Uou. It m U*t Oouffti Cure. Bcta.flOcU. & |UU
A Hard lies* on.
One of the hardest lessons to leant
in life is that the man who differs with
you, not only in opinions, but in prin
ciples, may be aa honest and sincere as
vnnvaalf
Beech*m's Pnxs have a pleasant coating
disguising the taste of the pill, without im
pairing its efficacy. 25 cents a box.
Soft soap, mixed with a solution of
potash or eaustio soda, or pearl ash
mixed with sufficient water to form a
paste, if laid on with a brash or rag
and left for some hoars, will easily re
move old putty and paint.
-PfT no fulsome compliments on my
tombstone,* said a wag. “Don’t give
me any epi-taffy.”
Coe'a VM|h Balaam
Is t be ©Ideal and beat, It will break up a Cold fiQlefe*
er than »□> tbin* else. It la always reliable. Try Ik
Why is man's chin the most nnincfcj
part of his body ? Becaue it is constant
ly getting into scrapes.
** Hanson's Single Corn Salve.**
WsrranlsU to cure or tuuii.y i-efaeSeu. Ask your
ln|Ki.t for it. 1 rti *■ 15 rest...
Von can always be happy if you are wil
ling to rejci: e with others.
Billiard Table, second-hand. For sale
cheap. Apply to or address, H. C. Asm,
5*11 8. 12th St.. Omaha, Neb.
Either I will find a way or 1 will make
one.—Bir P. Sidney.
Western American Scenery.
[ The Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul R'y
has now ready ior distribution a sixteen
page portfolio of scenes along its line, hall
tones, of the size of the World's Fair port
folios lately issued. They are only ten cents
| each and can be ootainea without delay by
remitting the amount to Geo. H. Hssrroau,
! General Pass. Agent, Chicago, 111.
I -
! If poverty makes a man groan, he yawns
i in opulence.—Rivarol.
To maxi canvas waterproof, prepare
three hatha, aa follow*: The flrsb by
dissolving one part of neutral sulphate
of alumina (concentrated alum-cake) In
ten parte of oold water. For the seo*
ond, boil one part of light reain, one
part of soda crystals, and ten part* of
water, nntil the soda is dissolved; add
one-third part of common salt, to sep
arate the water and eolleot the soap:
dissolve this soap with with an equal
amount of good palm-oil aoap in thirty
parts of water. This soap bath must
be used hob The third bath consists
of water only. Soak the fabric thor
oughly in the flrat, or alum bath; next
pass it through the soap bath; and,
lastly, rinse in the water.
Crown Diamond*.
V. Tnrquet )im laid the following
project before tko Miniaterot Finance
and the Budget Committee relative to
the rich collection of precious atone*
known under the official title of “ Div o
mant* do la Oouron»e, ’’ The Under Sec- ^
retary for the Fine Art* propose* to divide
tine treasure into three parte. The first
part will comprine the historic jewels and
stone*, and will be tilaaed iii the Louvre. ■
The second part will contain stonea hav- '
iug a luinevnlogical value, and will be
Slaced in the museum of the £eolc dan ■
tinea. The tiiinl part, composed ol
royal and imperial jewelry, anu having
only a raateiial value, will be put up M
auction and aold to the. highest bidder,
and the proceeds wiU go to form e state ,
fine-art fund. M. Turque the* had
an inventory made of thia prince
ly treasure. One of the most famous
of thediomonda la the ono called Regent.
It weighs 130 carats, is of an extreme
whiteness and brilliancy, is square in
form, and was estimated at 12,000,000 V
franca in 1701. Another remarkable ob- .,
ject is a round pearl, weighing ovi-f ■'
twenty-seven carats and valued at
200.000 francs; and still another ia the
necklace of pearls, styled Collier de 1*
Reine, composed of twenty-five peiirle
and worth 006,700 franos. None of our :
lady rentiers would, we sre sure, disdain
the large, long, clear ruby in this ool- >
lection, weighing fifty-six carats and
valued at 60,000 francs; nor the ame
thyst of moro that thirteen carats, esti
mated at 6,000 francs, nor the sapphire
of 132 carats, worth 100,000 franos. By
selling the jewels of the third class, If.
Tnrquet expects to realize the sum of
3,000,000 francs, and with it he will pur
chase works of art and enrich the na
tional museums.—Parirtan.
Her “Cousin.” - £
A telegram came to the Weelejran Fe
male Seminary at Cincinnati for Mian '
Mary Beach, daughter of a State Sene
tor, saying that her father had died sud
denly of apoplexy. The aohool officials
gave a ready assent to her speedy de
parture. and did all they could to soothe .
and assist the seemingly grief-stricken
girl. She was joined at the depot bv a
yonng man, whom she introduced as net
cousin. He really woe her sweetheart,
and had sent the message according to s
previous understanding with her—not
because her father was dead, for he was
not, but to enable her to get out of the
seminary and elope with him. They
were married before the fraud was dia
covered.
From away up In British North America
comes the following greeting to Dr. R V.
Fierce, Chief Consulting Physician to the
Invalids’ Hotel and Surgical Institute, at
Buffalo, N. T. Mrs. Alien Bharrard, of
Hartney, Selkirk Co., Manitoba, whose
portrait, with that of her little boy,
needs this article, writes as follows:
“I take gnat pleasure in recommending Dr.
Pierce's Favorite Prescription for ‘ falling of
the womb.’ I was troubled with bearing
down pains and pains in my back whenever
I would be on my feet any length of time. I
was recommended to try Dr. Pierce's Favorite
Prescription, which I aid with happy results.
I feel like a new person after taking three
bottles of it”
As we have just heard from the frigid
North, we will now introduce a letter
received from the Sunny South. The follow
ing is from Mrs. J. T. Smith, of Ookfuskee,
Cleburne Co., Ala. Bbe writes: “I was
afflicted and suffered untold pains and
misery, such as no pen can describe, for six
years. 1 was confined to bed most of the
time. I expected the cold hand of death
every day. I was afflicted with leucorrhea—
with excessive flowing—falling of the womb
—bearing down sensation—pain in the small
of my back—my bowels costive smarting,
itching and burning in the vagina, also pal
pitation of the heart. When I began taking
your medicine I could not sit up, only a few
minutes at a time, I was so weak. I took
Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription three
times per day, I also took his' Golden Medical
Discovery’ three times per day and one of
Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets every night. I
have taken seven bottles of the ‘ Discovery,’
seven bottles of the 1 Prescription ’ and five
bottles of the ‘ Pellets.’ I took those medi
cines seven months, regularly, never missed
a day. These medicines cured me. I feel as
well as I ever did in my life. Four of the
hot doctors in the land treated my case four
years. They all gave me up as hopeless—
they said I could not be cured, and could not
live. Through the will of God, and your
medicines, Ihave been restored to the best
of health” Yours truly,
Mrs. W. O. Ounekel, of No. 1461 Booth
Seventh Street, Terra Haute, Indiana, wrlteet ■
“ I boil been suffering from womb trouble fop
eight rear* baying doctored with the mod .
skillful physicians, but finding only tempo
rary relief from medicinoa preecribed by -
them. I wo» advised by a friend to taka
Or. Fierce's Favorite Prescription, which I
did, and found, in taking six bottles of the
'Prescription' and two of the ‘Golden
Medical Discovery,’ that it bos effected a
positive cure, for which words cannot ex
press my gratitude for the relief from the
great suffering that I so long endured.”
Tours truly,
As a powerful, invigorating, restorative
tonic "Favorite Prescription” improves
digestion and nutrition thereby building up
sond, wholesome flesh, and Increasing the
strength of the whole system. As a soothing
and strengthening nervine “Favorite Pre
scription ” is unequaled and is invaluable in
allaying and subduing nervous excitability,
irritability, nervous exhaustion, nervous
prostration, neuralgia, hysteria, spasm*
Chorea, or St Vitus’s Dance, and other dis
tressing, nervous symptoms commonly atten
dant upon functional and organic disease at
the womb. It induces refreshing sleep and
relieves mental anxiety and despondency.
Even insanity, when dependent upon womb
disease, is cured by it
Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription is a
scientific medicine, carefully compounded by
on experienced and skillful physician, and.
adapted to woman’s delicate organization. It
is purely vegetable in its composition and
perfectly haralem in tie effects in any condi■
Won of the system. For morning sickness, or
names, due to pregnancy, weak stomach, in
digestion, dyspepsia ana kindred symptoms,
its use will prove very beneficial.
Dr. Fierce’s Book (163 pages, illustrated)
on "Woman and Her Diseases,” giving suc
cessful means of Home Treatment, will be
mailed «n plain envelops, securely sealed
from observation on receipt of tea cento
to pay postage, See the Doctor's addrea
near the bead of this attid*
T. JACOBS OIL tasr
PAINS AND ACHES.
IelVS CREAM BALM CURES
CATARRH
P«ICE 50CENTS, ALL PRUCGISTS
fl
2KSSS:S:E
:CANNOT HEAR
ivlTi write luNATHAN
CLAIMANTS WHO j
from their Attorney** I
or ttieCommn-'H loiter, will write to MATHAN
ension A Patent Att’y. T»14 F Si"
tb#y wiliraoeiVw a prompt reply.
! FREESd
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*
l Mine. A. RU
=*. FACE BLEACH
A ppree latte* tW f nr ii hat i fcouut.d* of I *di«s
of the I'.R. kivt act uw«l my Far* IN*»< h.to
I Ktwil of r»*«, wkh b i« t8 p.r boil!*, *ad
la order that *14. mv r’*« H a fair trial, 1
* will **o4 a Rample Boitle.iafrly parked, all
* char*** prepaid, ea r*>*M>i of tk. FACS
I BLE ACH remote* and cure* al«olalrlv all
I freckle*, ptaplea, molb. blatkbeads, a* I low.
* new, ante. enema, wrinkle*, or re*|hBeaa of
akle. and beanttf re tbe rempleataa. Addraa*
peeaT.e s.14th at.,N.v.oit*
" TRACTION JWdtIjrTaSI
NGINES.
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pf_
■Threshers and Horse Powers.'
^^^“Write for IllustnOedGatuIogue, mulled Ftml
M. RUM ELY CO.. La PORTE. INfei
Patents. Trade-Marks.
Examination and Advi> e l* to Pafpuuhllitv of
Invention. s**nd for '* lnv» nu>ri»* Guide, or llo*v loUet
at'Mcnt" ?i.T2TC2 OTiSWJIJL. WiSSafOTCS, 8. GL
W. N. IT., Vmnlan-so l«M.
\%UtM AubtivHaii A«.t*.-ib«iu<>ui» uutUif
till*
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