The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, May 24, 1894, Image 6

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    MOTHER'S GIRL. ^ .
Sleeve* to the dimpled elbow.
fhin lu the sweet blue eyes,
To end fro upon errand* -<V3Vttr
The little maiden hie*.
Maw. ahe is washing dishes.
Now. she U feeding the chlelcsk
Mow, she Is playing with pussy
Or teaching Rover tricks.
Wrapped In a big white apron,
Pinned in a cite drered shawl, -
-Hanging clothes in tho garden.
Oh, wero she only lall!
Bushing the fretful baby,
Coaxing his hair to curl.
Stepping around so briskly,
Because she is mother a girl
Hunting for eggs in the havmov,
Petting old ilrindle’s calf,
Hiding Don to pasture,
With many a ringing laugh.
■Comini whene'er yon call her,
Running wherever sent.
Mother's >iri is a bless In r.
Aud motbor is wed content
BLIND JUSTICE.
BV DBKEN B. MATIIEKS
CHAPTER VJI—Coxtini ki).
Then ensued adisplay of Histrionic
power, for which I was not in the
least prepared, for snatching up a
piece of cord lying near, ho rapidly
'wound it round his arms, simulating
m man who is securely bound, then
threw himself on the ground,
stretched himself stiffly out and simu
lated death.
The Styrian watched him closely,
but without visible comprehension,
till Jake by a series of jerks that
sthowed considerable muscular on
ergy. but still preserving in Ills
features a eorpse-llke rigidity
brought himself to the opon mouth
of tho cellar and mado a feint' of
£oing through it head foremost.
This. I need scarcely say. he was
most careful not to do, and having
opened his eyes and sat up, he point
ed downward with much vigor, re
peating: “Seth Troloar down there!’’
till the sudden ilash of comprehen
sion on tho Styrian’s face convinced
bim that he was understood.
Then he replaced the trap-door,
tossed the cord back to whore ho
found it, brushed some of tho dust
-from his jersey, und wita aconlirma
tory nod meant to convoy "its all
true,” mado trucks for tho door.
But the Styrian’s strong hand
caught him back.
“Murdered!” burst from his lips in
. .Austrian, and in defiance,of common
sense, but strange to say, whether it
be that tim thought of murder, or
wnther its image, is able to convoy
ftscif in one flash from eyo to eye,
being by its human horror as well
understood of the deaf as the aumb,
Jake distinctly understood tho Styr
ian’s question and nodded vehe
mently. For a few moments the
stranger stood motionless, all his
energies concentrated in thought,
then ho made a gesture of inquiry,
Skat said as plain as possible.
! •'llow!'’’
Jake was equal to the occasion,
*n3 performed his part so well that
I wan not surprised to hear later
that he had often rehearsed the
whole drama in the tap room of tho
"Chough and Crow. ”
tie crossed the room, threw himself
into a chair, the chair in which Seth
Ttadoar had sat on the night of his
■return. In this ho leaned back, af
fecting to sit up shortly, and look
auilingly at some one who ap
proached him. He thon pretended
to take some vessel from tho invisible
person, to swallow its contents, to
be seized at onco with violent pain
and sickness (it was droll to sec him,
fa tho paroxyisms of agony, still
beeping a weather eye on tho door,
fa ease of my return), to roll on the
pround In convulsions, biting and
bieking like a rabid dog. and finally
to stretch himself out stiff and stark,
sen if the last office he required would
be at the hands of the undertaker.
The Styrian had , watched with
bent brows .the first part of tho pan
tomime, fully perceiving its signifl
-cance, however grotesquely ex
pressed. yet I saw in a moment that
it neither surprised nor convinced
bim, and I said to myself, “This
man listens to a circumstantial talo
toat is entirely vitiated by some
aecret knowledge that ho possesses. ”
Jake, out of breath, and disap- !
pointed with the effect of his sim- j
dilated death, came nearor the im- !
passive man, who looked up sud- \
-steniy, and began • a pantomime of i
Jus own.
I caught his meaning before Jake I
-43U1. ■••Did Seth Treloar die of poison I
"before be was pushed into the cel
lar, or after?”
But v/hen Jake had made him un
-derstand, an expression of in
credulity, quickly followed by aston
ishment, crossed his face, he turned
-•side, threw out his hands vehe
'Baently. and his thundered out Aus
trian, “No! No! Impossible!” reached
'me clearly where l stood.
< Jake shrugged his shoulders and
•lipped away, he knew he had stayed
,foo long already.
For some moments after he had
-gMM the Styrian stood motionless,
revolving many things clearly not
pleasant in his mind. Then he
smiled evilly, and half drew from a
fold in his sash a pistol of curious
-workmanship, and it neoded not his
significant v look at the stair-case
leading to my sleeping quarters to
■convince me that here was a man
•only to be fooled at serious personal
ertak to the fooler.
He put back the pistol, produced
*be little horn box. shook out some
of its contents into the palni of his
Sum J, and swallowed it.
I saw the color distinctly—white.
Involuntarily I thought of another
anau whom 1 had seen tqking a pinch
?■ of white powder out of a box, but
. with very different results.
> Over the Styrian's face stole the
«eaae expression of voluptuous satis
■ Caution that I had noticed on the pre
visus night then be turned to the
teblc as though hi*', appetite were
freshly whetted, and. without wait
ing for me, sat down and fell to.
The aot oonvlnccd mo of his utter
contempt and indiffcronce to me. 1
counted for nothing: ho had come to
fullill a purpose, and meant to do it:
my prosonco here could noithor
hinder nor advance him one jot. So
he thought—but through my brain
had just darted an idea so wild, so
inspired, that I felt absolutely giddy
as 1 left my loop-hole and regained
the frosh morning air.
CHAPTER VIII.
The Styrian had tho graco to rise
as 1 entered the room, but in the
very tono of his greeting I observed
a change, and know that ho al
ready distrusted mo.
His appetite, however, was in no
way affected, for he put away vast
quantities of butter, choose and milk,
looking ut me with a kind of pity as
I made my moderate meal of coffee
and broad. When he had finished,
ho leaned across the table ana looked
mo full in tho face, a tough, resoiute
oyed fellow, who might have passed
for a brigand whoso only law was
his own will.
•‘Seth Troloar was murdered,” he
said. “Who murdered him?”
I neither turned my eyes away
from him, nor answered savo by
shrugging my shouldors. and shak
ing my head.
••He was killed first, then thrown
down that trap-door.” (Ho pointed
to it)., “Why was ho killed** I re
peat, who killed him?"
“That is what I am trying to find
Mill ** T anil]
Tho .Styrian looked at mo with
eyes that searched my very soul.
“You do not know?” ho said.
“I do not know."
“Does any one know?" said the
Styrian.
“Seth Troloar."
The Styrian laughed harshly, “Of
course—but the man who killed
Seth Troloar?"
“I believe Seth Troloar killed him
self.”
“And who throw him down tho
trap-door?"
“Another person—for reasons
wholly unconnected with his death."
Tho Styrian sat rigid, and con
centrated in thought.
“It is u strange story,” ho said.
“A man dibs, is thrust into a cellar.
If he had died by his own hand why
not bury him? To whoso advantage
was it to hide him? Whoever did so
must surely have come under sus
picion?"
I said nothing, the filling of my
pipe ocoupied me.
“Ycu are playing the fool with
me," said the Styrian in a hoase gut
tural voice," “but the truth I will
have, even if it cost your life."
I laughed contemptuously at his
molodraraatic tone.
“It is not my life that is in ques
tion," I said, “but that of, as I be
lieve, an ontirely innocent person.
The manner of Seth Treloar’s death
did arouse suspicion, and the person
accused is now in prison.” I paused.
“Found guilty?” said tho Styrian.
“Under sentence of death,” I con
tinued, "but that person no more
murdered him than you or I did.”
“Who was the person?" said the
Styrian.
“The woman," I said, “with whoso
portrait you fell in love, and whom
you have come all the way to seek;
the woman,’! added slowly, •• who
was his wife."
The Styrian thrust back his chair,
leaped to his feet, and turned on mo
with the ferocity of a mai bull.
"His wife—ms wife! You are
mad, and a liar! She was his sister,
he would not have dared to fool me
so!"
He literally towered over mo. his
great stature rooming to rise higher
with tho wrath and fury that swelled
him; his clenched fist involuntarily
moved to fall with crushing force on
my head, but I did not stir, and with
an oath he dropped it by his side,
though his features remained dark
ttuu uuavuiseu wnn passion.
‘ Ho lied to you.” I said quietly;
“he was always a liar and a rogue.
And he wanted to make hor some
thing worse than himself. So far he
meant honestly by you, that he
would have taken her to you, and
sold her as his sister—if she would
have let him. ”
“And she killed him when he told
her of his intention.” said the
Styrian more calmly, “and hid him
yonder? She must be a strong wo
man and her will must be as strong
as her heart" He snatched ■ at a
slender gold chain hanging round his
throat and drew out a locket which
he opened, and looked at with a
frown that gradually softened into
extraordinary tenderness and love.
“She did right,” he said suddenly
and passionately. “The man was a
hound and liar, it was not her fault
that he deceived mo, and he deserved
all he got; she must have been a good
woman to bo so angry; and he is'
dead, she is free now—free—” He
stopped suddenly as one palsied by a
sudden thought; for some moments
he did not speak, then striding over
to me ho seized my arm and, shaking
me violently, said.
“Where is she? Speak! O! God!
She is in prison. She is to die—to
die for killing that scoundrel?"
••Sho did not kill him,” I said. “I
told you that before. But she will
be banged all the same.”
As I spoke I released myself with
a sudden exercise of strongth that
sont him reeling backwards, and
seemed to astonish him.
“Tell me the truth,” he said, with
; more respect in his tone than he had
hitherto 'shown me. “You do not
believe her guilty, and I forgive her
if she is.”
i I could have smiled at his sultan
like assumption that Judith was ab
solutely at his disposal, but the
granaeur of bis simplicity impressed
mo. and 1 l>egan my story without
loss of tlmo.
Ho hoard the account of Treloir'a
married life without much emotion,
though he occasionally gave vent to
an expression of disgust; but when I
brought .Stephen upon the scene, he
became transformed into an enraged
man who sees snatched from bis
lips the morsel he hungrily covets.
"And she loves him, she adores
him, this miserable fisherman,’’ he
cried.
1 shrugged ray shoulders.
"Who can answer for a woman?”
I said. "All women love comfort,
and, as you say. he is poor. And she
is not his wife,” I added, narrowly
watching his working faco; "if by
any miracle you could save her, who
knows but that-’’ 1 did not com
plete the sentence, but I saw ho
understood mo.
“Wife to one man. mistress to an
other,” ho said, the words dropping
harshly and slowly from his lips,
"so that is the woman I’ve come all
this wuy to find—but go on with the
I story, there will bo more surprise
VAt ’•
I I described Seth Treloar’s return
to Smuggler’s Hole, his disappear
ance, the departure of Stephen and
Judith next morning, her return to
tho hut for a few moments, and her
strange conduct in the train, where
I was eye-witness to the incident of
tho box of arsenic and the effect
produced on Stephen when he
tasted it.
(At this point the Styrian laughed
contemptuously, as a iire-eater
might at one who dreaded firo.) I
went on to relate how I recovered
the box that Judith had thrown out
of tho window, how I traced her as
the woman who had left a man
hidden away at Smuggler's Hole,
how I had caused her to be brought
back to England and put on her
i trial, how b1iq had been condemned,
on circumstantial evidence, to death,
and how only a short time now
would elapse before the carrying out
of the sentence. I then gave him a
succinct account of the events of
that night, as related by Judith
herself.
The Styrian had not asked a single
question during the recital, but I
had read first scorn and then flat
denial in his face when I described
tho dose of arsenic found in the
dead man's stomach; he even waved
his hand impatiently as if to motion
away an absurdity, but when I had
ceased to speak, he began a very
vivid cross-examination of me.
“You are sure that the potion
she gave him was harmless, beyond
keeping him asleep for twenty-four
hours?”
“Quito sure.”
"Ihere was no trace of poison
found in the stomach besides
arsenic?"
“None.”
“She did not bruise or injure him
when she hid him in the cellar?”
“There was not a mark or bruise
of any kind on him.”
“It would be dark when he came
to his senses, there would be no
light by which he could see the trap
door above, and his arms were bound;
did the rope hang in such a manner
that in the dark he would strike
against it or touch it?”
“No. By lifting his hands he
could touch it—not unless."
“How could abound man do that?”
“He could have shifted the cord
easily—as any other man of half his
muscular strength could have done.”
“Always supposing that he had
not swallowed enough arsenic to kill
a dozen men,” said the Styrian,
whose oxcitomerit increased each
moment, though he made visible
efforts to subdue it.
“Arsenic that was never adminis
tered by his wife,” I said boldly,
“but by—himself. God knows by
what devilish agency a man is able
to take a life-destroying drug and
thrive on. it. but you at least should
know, since you carry a box with
similar contents to the one he
carried, and without which, and
possibly for lack of it, he died.”
[TO BE CONT1NUEIX J
The Commander of a Big Cruiser.
The commander of the big cruiser
New York is an extremely exclusive
man when his ship is in action.
High above her spar deck is a con
ning tower made of metal so thick
that it seems to the layman who
looks at it that no missle could pene
trate it Where the roof of the
tower comes down there is a narrow
slit around the tower through which
the commander peers. The slanting
roof hangs over this slit far enough
to prevent even a minie ball from en
tering the .crack. Should the big
cruiser go into action the commander
would ascend into the tower and
from there steer'and fight his ship.
The quarters are so cramped that a
tall man can barely stand erect.
There is room only lor the com
mander and one other to assist him.
It is a little bit of a metal box on a
floating fortress of iron and steel,
but in there could be done the most
destructive and deadly work.
A'Woman’s Heart.
I She, gently—I am afraid I do not
lovo you enough to be your wife, but
I shall always be your friend, and
sincerely wish for your happiness.
He, moodily- I know what I’ll do.
She, anxiously—You surely will
not do yourself an injury?
He. calmly--No; I will find hap
piness. I will marry some one else.
She—Horrors! Give me another
dayTe consider, dear.
Carried Oat.
Miss Passe still makes a valliaru
struggle to carry out the Illusions of
youth. ”
“Yes, and she succeeds pretty
well, .too.”
••Do you think so?”
• 'Certainly. There’s nothing left
of it.’’—Texas Siftings. ...
REPUBLICAN DOCTRINE.
Reciprocity vs. Free Trade.
There have been many explanations
of the difference between reciprocity
and free trade. Some have declared
thev were identical. Let us see.
Suppose a young1 woman comes up to
you with her apron full of nice, red,
juicy apples and with a smile pours
them at your feet. That, my friend, is
free trade, pure and simple. Ilut sup
pose that this young woman holds onto
her appleB and says coyly, . “What will
you give me for this fruit?’’ Suppose
she is level-headed and drives a good
bargain, getting quid pro quo or, in
good English, “her money's worth.”
That, my friend, is reciprocity with a
capital li. That's just what it is, and
that makes the plain difference between
the two. Let us see what these demo
cratic friends of ours propose to do with
Canada.
ItKCIPROCITY WITH CANADA.
Putting iron ore, 'coal, lumber and
the principal agricultural products on
the free list, will be especially disas
trous to the belt of agricultural, lum
bering and 'mining states along the
Canadian border. Under the house
bill, if it should become a law, we
would have free trade in these articles
with Canada. Extending from the At
lantic to the Pacific, the United States
and Canada lie side by side, divided
only by an imaginary line, with similar
forests and mines, with the same char
acter of soil, but with cheaper lands,
cheaper labor and undeveloped re
—• — - mv/ vuuuuiau aiuc. n ia
proposed to throw down the barrier
which had protected agriculture in the
United States and compelled the Cana
dians to contribute largely to our treas
ury, and to admit the products of the
cheaper soil and cheaper labor of Can
ada into the United States free. It is
proposed that we shall make an ex
ceedingly foolish bargain with Canada,
and give her the markets of sixty-seven
millions of people for the privilege of
sending free certain agricultural pro
ducts into a country having five mill
ions of people.
This is reciprocity with a vengeance.
There is but one handle to a jug and
we won’t be able to get hold of it at all
as regards our Canadian brethren.
This disproportion between the pop
ulation of the two countries is not the
worst feature of the proposed reciproc
ity. The raw products of Canada and
those of the United States are substan
tially the same. Keciprocity with Can
ada would mean a very different thing
from reciprocity with Mexico or South
American countries, from which, with
reciprocity, we might get, in exchange
for our products, products of those
countries which we do not produce; but
with the duty removed or reduced upon
the products of the forests, the mines
and the soil of Canada, the only result
will be to make' farming profitable in
Canada, to increase the amount of Can
adian products annually exported to
the United States, to crowd out of our
home markets a like amount of our
own products. The amount of Cana
dian imports will not greatly affect
prices in the United States, but will
affect domestic production, and relieve
the Canadian producers from the bur
den of paying duties at our ports- It
will result in benefiting the Canadian
producer, in loss to our treasury, and
to American farmers exposed to Cana
dian competition.
Our tariff upon agricultural products
has made farming unprofitable in Can
ada, has protected farmers on our
northern frontier from undue competi
tion with Canadian products, has added
greatly to our revenues, contributed,
as every one admits, by the Canadian
producer, has caused such a difference
in the prosperity of the two countries
as to induce a very large immigration
of the most industrious, enterprising
citizens of the Dominion to the United
States. All these advantages are to be
absolutely thrown away, without any
compensating benefits; and only to
carry out an unsound theory concern
ing free trade in raw materials- Our
people are to be further taxed; new
schemes of taxation are to be devised
to make them contribute to the reve
nues the amount which, under existing
laws, is now contributed by Canadians
They won’t have to come to the
United States any more, and those who
have come and make good money over
here can now return home and pick un
the apples we pour down at their feetl
Why We Do Not Leach—Why Basinets
Is Depressed.
The democratic party has come into
power again, and, wedded to free trade,
unwilling to be convinced by- the great
object lesson our present industrial con
dition affords that its tariff theories are
wrong, denies that the democratic suc
cess and the threat of free trade has
stricken dowli our great industrial fa
bric, and deprived millions of our citi
zens of that employment necessary to
secure their daily bread; and blind and
obtuse as they ever have been when
dealing with financial questions, our
democratic friends ransack history, and
draw on their imaginations for causes
to account for existing conditions But
the fact will go down in history to fu
ture generations that at the time of the
last annual message of President Har
rison the country enjoyed a wonderful
degree of prosperity. Every depart
ment of human industry flourished.
Every forge and loom and spindle was
in operation, labor everywhere was em
ployed. and the country was advancing
with unabated rapidity in its grand
march of civilization and of individual
and national prosperity.
As time advanced the extent of the
calamity which had overtaken the cause
of protection became apparent; it was '
found that not only had the democratic
party elected a president and secured
the control of the house of representa
tives, but that the senate, which under
the previous administration of Presi
dent Cleveland, being republican, had
prevented the passage of the Mills bill,
would be controlled by the democrats,
and that there was nothing in the way
of the democratic party carrying into
execution the threat and promise con
tained in its platform to destroy the
protective system. When this startling
fact was fully realized the wheels of .
progress were immediately stopped.
The mills, the furnaces, and the facto
ries were closed. Every business in
dustry began to prepare for the coming :
storm. Business operations were cur
tailed. Collections were forced. Con- I i
fidence was shaken. Labor was thrown
out of employment, banks failed, and
bankruptcy and ruin everywhere pre
vailed.
The contrast between the general
prosperity prevailing under the Harri
son administration and the business
and financial distress which followed
the succession of the democratic part;
in November last, is admirably show's
by the following extracts from Presi
dent Harrison's message in Deceinbei
last, and the message of President
Cleveland transmitted to congress, con
vened in extraordinary session on the
8th of August last.
Opening of President Harrison's mes
sage to congress, December, 1892:
In submitting my annual message tc
congress 1 have great satisfaction in
being able to say that the general con
ditions affecting the commercial and in
dustrial interests of the United States
are in the highest degree favorable. A
comparison of the existing conditions
with those of the most favored period
in the history of the country will, 1 be
lieve, show that so high a degree ol
prosperity and so general a diffusion ol
the comforts of life were never before
enjoyed by our people.
Opening of President Cleveland's mes
sage to congress, eight months later,
August, 1893:
The existence of an alarming and ex
traordinary business situation, involv
ing the welfare and prosperity of all
our people, has constrained me to call
together in extra session the people’s
representatives in congress, to the end
that, through a wise and -patriotic ex
ercise of the legislative duty wiyi
which tliqy are solely charged, present
evils may be mitigated and dangers
threatening the future may be averted.
What the Father* Thought About Pro
tection.
President Washington, in his eighth
message said:
Congress have repeatedly and
not without success, directed their
action to the recignition of manufac
tures. The object is of too much con
sequence not to secure a continuance
of their effort in every way which shall
appear eligible.
THE TARIFF OF 181C.
From the time the first tariff act for
the protection of American industries
was passed by the first congress to the
passage of the tariff of 1816, a number
of acts were passed imposing duties
upon imports, and designed for the
protection of domestic industries, all of
them affording encouragement to such
industries.
President Madison, in his message to
congress, December 1, 1815, recom
mended encouragement to the manu
facturing interests. 1 He said:
Under circumstances giving a power
ful impulse to manufacturing industry,
it has made among us a progress and
exhibited an efficiency which justify
the belief that with protection not more
than is due to the enterprising citizens
whose interests are now at stake, it
will become at an early day -not only
safe against occasional competition
from abroad, but a source of domestic
wealth and of external commerce.
At the Fourteenth cbngress, which
assembled December 4, 1815, and was
in session until the 30th of April, 1816,
a new tariff law, imposing increased
duties upon imports, was enacted. The
intention of those who favored the new
law was to establish a system of pro
tection to American manufactures
Mr. Calhoun opened a speech in the
house of representatives on April 4,
1816, by saying:
The debate heretofore on this subject
has been on the degree of protection
which ought to be afforded to our cot
ton and woolen manufactures, all pro
fessing to be friendly to those infant
establishments and to be willing to ex
tend to them adequate encouragement.
Again, in the same speech, he said:
Coming, as he did, from the south,
having in common with his constitu
ents no interests but in the cultivation
of the soil, in selling its products high
and buying cheap the wants and con
veniencies of life, no motive could be
attributed to him but such as were dis
interested.
Again, discussing the necessity for
protection to our manufacturing indus
triee, he said:
It [protection] is to put them beyond
the reach of contingency. 'Besides
capital is not yet and can not be for
some time adjusted to the new state of
things There is, in fact, from the
operation of temporary causes a great
pressure upon these establishments
They had extended so rapidly during
the late war that many, he feared,were
without requisite surplus capital or
skill to meet the present crisis Should
such prove the fact it would give a set
back and might, to a great extent, en
danger their ultimate success. Should
the present owners be ruined and work
man dispersed and turned to other pur
suits the country would sustain a great
toss Such would, no doubt, be the fact
bo a considerable extent if not pro
tected.
Mr. Clay, in the same debate in the
house on the 35th of March, said:
We all know that now is the time for
encouragement, and that the domestic
manufacturer has to struggle more at.
the end of a war, and at that moment
the greater aid is necessary to support,
home against foreign competition.
And—
That the object of protecting manu
factures was that we might eventually
?et articles of necessity made as cheap
it home as they could be imported, and
thereby to produce an independence of
foreign countries
Mr. Lownds said in the same de
bate—
That be believed the manufacture of
woolens and particularly of blankets,
required a decided present encourage
ment.
Information Wanted by a Ionn( Voter.
We are anxious to know what are
the true definitions of the following
ihrases. A democratic congressman, a
member of the labor eommittee of the
lower house, has sent no answers,
which we append,' but we are not sure
that they are correct definition. Who
tvill answer?
The “sons of toil” is defined as men
nrho have nothing to do.
The “workless man” is defined as a
man who does not expect a job until af
ter the next presidential election.
The “over-worked man” is defined
is a man who walked from California
to Boston in search of a job.
A “hard-pressed laborer” is defined
is a man who lives between soup hpuses.
Which Should be Paid?
Only seven pension bills have been
reported to the house by the invalid
pension committee, Mr. Martin, of In
liana, chairman, and not all of those
!avorabl\’t but 263 southern war claims,
ince rejected by a commission, and in
volving millions, have been favorably
reported and placed on the calendar,
rhe confederate house is looking after
its friends. ' Yankee soldiers, “vau hint11
in it'.”
Father andj)augbter
Itajolea In tha Merit of Mood'a.
Fairview, Kan.
"I hare been taking Hood-, Sarsaparilla fow
montha, and have realized wonderful heln r
bad not enjoyed a well day for sixteen
Troubled With Dyspepsia
so that I conld eat but little. Several doctor*
attended and gave me temporary relief r gent
up my courage and looked for help which . J
to me eventually in Hood’s SarsaparUla.
n» more good tian all the doctoftng during tb2
past years. I have a good appetite, 1 sleep web
And Am Now Able to Work.
My daughter has also been troubled for the past
rheumatism and distress In the
stomach. Four months ago she commenced to'
Sarsa
parilla
Hood’s
%%!%%%%%%%%%%%
Cures
^%%%%»%%»»»
take Hood’s Sarsaparilla and today is well and
hehrty. B. F. O. Kokk, Falrview, Kansas.
Hood’s Pills cure Constipation. 29c.
“HOTHER’S
\ FRIEND”.
Is a scientifically prepared Liniment
and harmless; every ingredient is of
recognized value and in constant use
by the medical profession. It short
ens Labor, Lessens Pain, Diminishes
Danger to life of Mother and Child.
Book ‘’To Mothers” mailed free, con
taining valuable information and
voluntary testimonials.
f pSS&trossr preFald•on rece,p*
BRAOHELO REGULATOR CO., Atlanta, 6a.
Bold by all druggists
Unlike flu Dutch Process
JMo AlKalles
— OR —
Other Chemicals
g£|> are used in tbs
PV preparation of
W. BAKER & CO.’S
IreakfastCocoa
which la absolutely
pure and soluble.
1 It has morcthan three times
J the strength of Cocoa mixed
I with Starch, Arrowroot or
somlcal, costing leas than one cent a cup.
It to delicious, nourishing, and easily
OIOE8TED. _
Sold ‘by Grocers everywhere.
W. BAKER & CO., Dorchester, Haas.
is a .
H1 f ^
a 8 £ .
a -■o m
5sS<S .
a
•gl" ."Oo
«s S' ® IS
tt
?«Sfs
J g’O §5 .
-■fi ® it o
§g2«=S
i5!s« is
8.=5a«
■fi “^<8
5 e»« 5“
N33>
sl§o
2 <2-3
PI SO'S CURE FOR
Consumptive* and people
who have weak lungs or Asth
ma. should use Piso’s Cure for
Consumption. It has cured
thousands, ft has not injur
ed one. It Is not bad to take.
It Is the best cough syrup.
Sold eTerrwhere. 5.*c.
ffltETrWI,
, Bavs car f drawer walnut or oak »
. - - srared High Arm Wngeraeevln*;m«hiss
flaely tinlahad, nickel plated .adapted to li*kt
id heavy .work; guaranteed for 10 Tear*?|*jU
itleBebMa Winder, BelMkreadlaf CjUa
der Shaltle. Helf.Seltlng Needle and a complete
isetef Steel AUaebmeatai ablpped any
SO Day’e Trial. No money required in adv»nc#.
fS,000 now Id nee. World’s Fair Medal awarded machine and attaca
tnenta. Buy from factory and aave dealer’s and afent» prottu.
KDCC Cot This Oat and send to-day for machine or lanre me
S Ktt catalogue, testimonial* and Glimnaea of ,,
OXFORD BF8. BO. M8 Wrtuh An. CHICA60.ILU
WELL MAGHINERY
tti ■ lQJ*i
AUGERS, ROCK DRILLS. HYDna^u
AND JETTING MACHINERY, etc.
Sent Free. Have been tested and
all warranted,
Sioux City Engine A Iron .Works,
Successors to Peoh Mf*. Co.,
Mloiix 4'lly. Iowa.
1I1T TTnion Are.. Kansas City. Mo.
WORN NIGHT AND DAY.
- Holds the worst nip
Holds the worst nip
tun* with ease under “i
ciroumstuncea- * •"•5
I Adjustment. Coinfor*
LndCure NewP*tenUJ
(Improvement* u‘“2
*Sntv cnoSf
IS/SS
We WILL SSIU POSTMID
« flu* Panel Picture. antltlea
, “MEDITATION ‘
Jnanbonge forU Law
acMds* cut irom l«io»
[wrapper*. and « 2«n*'f“PS
pay postnee. " rlf inda*
our other flne P*TniUlf*^' ftt0
1 b00km a knife, gauus eW,
Woolson V,c^J5°6iuo.
! 450 Huron St., Toledo, ohm*
w. n. iJ.. <>w»iia-n.
Vi «w aiii
UUW» UiS 4AW«*Ur.
„ LmUwi U»U -