The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, October 18, 1894, Image 7

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    The Potato.
so-called oognao which ia
England from France is
the potato. Throughout
some uses are common,
the manufacture of spirits
otato ia a most extensive
ittin brandy," well known
tie largely imported into
is sent from thence to
foreign possessions as the
te grape, and is placed on
of England as the same,
idies perfume themselves
it of potato, under the
de Cologne. But there
which this esculent is
After extracting the
is manufactured into or
es, suoh as picture frames,
1 several descriptions of
ater that runs from it in
>f manufacture is a moat
r. For perfectly deans
id such hke articles it is
s panacea, and if the
happens to have ohilblaina
lured by the operation.
Sara Tear Children*
In Worm Destroyer is the
known that effectually de
worm, the most troublesome
It also destroys all other
Is. There is no remedy that
worms from the stomach or
nes Steketee’s Pin Worm De
‘b by all druggist.: ant by mall os
U. 8. puotatr*. Addrou GEO. 0,
Id
f. 8. jiuktaM.
Rapids. Mich.
the earth is controlled by
:on race.
go.d depends on weight, not
[OWLEDGE
ifort and improvement and
' sonal enjoyment when
The many, who live bet*
i and enjoy life more, with
■ure, by more promptly
[world's beat products to
hysical being, will attest
ealth of the pure liquid
tiples embraced in the
jiof Figs.
> is due to its presenting
_ st acceptable and pleas*
e, the refreshing and truly
Ope r ties of a perfect lax*
tally cleansing the system,
ilda, headaches and fevers
ently curing constipation.
I satisfaction to millions and
he approval of the medical
{because it acts on the Kid
and Bowels without weak*
i and it is perfectly free hom
ctionable substance.
_ Figs is for sale by all dm j
j and $1 bottles, but it is man*
[by the California Fig Syrup
those name is printed on every
Vo the name, Syrup of Figs,
E well informed, you will not
t substitute if offered.
IWt WILL MAIL POSTPAID
| • Sna Panel Picture, entitled
“MEDITATION "
I In exchange for It I«rge Lion
I Heeds, cat from Lion Coffee
I wrappers, and ft 2-cent stamp to
I par postage. Write for Hat of
I oar otter fine premiums, Indad*
| lug books, a knife, game, etc.
Woolsom Isiet Co..
450 Huron St., Toledo, Ohio.
' have been a
from catarrh.
f Cream Balm,
arances am
ble headachee
I had lone «tf
-W.J.mteh
Major United
ten and A. A.
falo, N. T.
CREAM BALM
ebanses the Nu&l Passages, Alleys Pain
Ration. Heals the Sores. Protects the
>in Golds, Bestores the Senses of Taste
be Balm is quickly absorbed and gives
• applied Into each nostril and la agree*
0 cents, at druggists or by mall.
S, M Warren Street, New York.
’s Emulsion in consump
ofula and other forms of
ry disease is due to its
il food properties.
Marked Success
tfs Emulsion
creates healthy flesh—
weight. Hereditary
develop only* when the
becomes weakened.
'thing in the world
medicine has been
successful in dis
ies that are most
macing to life. Phy
ians
escribe it.
I by Seott k Bo tree, H. Y. All dromrlato.
RUN
Model 1893
MO ,nd 83-55 calibre*. Tto onlr repeater
rket' ——
fleet tor there «rtrldge*.
REPEATING
RIFLES
Side ejection. Hade In **T&*e Down.”
aento 1
huertuf Auv«aiMmeau r
1 HeuUvu title Xvypt,
THE TRAVELING CALF.
It was a festive little salt
That left his home behind.
And went a-travellnr to Improve
Ula aomewhat bovine mind.
Be walked Into his master’d home,
And took a glanoe about:
But not a thing did he see there
That he could quite make out.
And when he felt his appetite
Beginning tor to grow,
Be tried to eat the bud* that on
The papered wall did blow. .
But finding that this diet was
A disappointment sore,
Be tried to taste the carpet greens
Upon the parlor floor.
But these he found were quite as vain:
And so it oame to pass
Be saw twas better far for him
To go again to gross,
And leave to other creatures, quite
Distinct from his own kind.
The task of traveling to Improve
A somewhat bovine mind
—Harper's Young People,
A Passive Crime
DI ••THE DEC HESS.”
CHAPTER II—Continued.
Penruddook, sitting in the oriel
window of the library that looks out
upon the garden, watches the chil
dren at their play with moody brow
and lips compressed. Upon Hilda
more especially his gaze is fixed.
What a frail life—a more breath, as
it were—to stand between his and
(what is far more to him) the boy's
^advancement!
That this baby should inherit
what, but for her unwelcome birth,
would by law have been his. embit
ters and makes wretched every mo
ment of his life. What a little, fra
gile thing she looks, flitting about
in the sunshine, in spite of her mer
ry laugh and joyous disposition—a
thread that might be easily snapped!
At this moment he sees the children
leaning over the bank (perpendicu
lar and utterly unprotected), at the
base of whioh the water runs so
rapidly. The boy’s warning to stand
back comes to him upon the air.
What if the child, stooping too
far, should overbalance herself, and
sink into the foaming depths be
neath—swollen with last night's
rain—and be carried onward to the
cruel ocean P Whose fault would it
be? Who would be to blame? Sucb
accidents happen very frequently.
Idly the awful thought presents
itself, bearing with it a fascination
hard to combat Heart and brain it
fills, to the exclusion of all other
thoughta Meantime, Hilda has
stopped short, and in her shrill,
sweet treble has ordered Dick to go
in-doors and bring her out the dolly
that shall represent another unhappy
captive to his powerful and daring
arm.
Dick, engrossed in the reality of
his game, departs for the fresh
prey, nothing loath, leaving her
alone in the quiet garden, with no
eye upon her save his who watches
with disfavor her every movement.
At first, when left alone, she stands,
her little finger in her mouth, as
though uncertain what next to da
Then a butterfly, blue as the skies
above her, crossing her path,* she
gives chase, and runs until it is beyond
her reach, and she herself is once
more close to the fatal bank before
described.
one is singing softly a little gay
song all about that silly Bo-peep of
ancient memory, and the song is
borne inward, even to the ears of
Penruddock. as he sits behind the
curtains, cold and motionless, wait
ing forjhe hardly knows what. Hilda,
with all the youthful longing
for forbidden fruit, gazes eagerly
down -upon the water-lilies that
are rocking two and fro on the dis
turbed breast of the agitated river.
Scooping over she examines them
minutely, longingly, her eyes in
tense, a faint smile of pleasure on
her lips. Presently, kneeling down,
she suspends half her small body
over the sloping bank, as though to
gain a nearer knowledge of the cov
eted flowers. Penruddock, shrink
ing back, with one hand grasps the
curtains, and trembles violently,
whilst great drops of dew lie thick
upon his forehead, that already in
anticipation seems red with the
cursed brand of Cain.
Eagerly he gazes on the little one.
She is barely balanced; the slightest
touch, the faintest motion, may send
her over into the river. Prompted,
it may be, by his good angel, he
makes a step forward, as though to
stay the catastrophe so imminent
Then he suddenly stops. A wretched
memory that but belongs to his vile
desire, comes to him and crushes all
good within him. Has he not heard
somewhere that to speak, or call or
cry aloud to a child when in a dan
gerous position is but a swift and
sure means to cause its sudden de
struction? Therefore will he not
speak. a
And, as though virtuous feeling
alone prompts him, he holds his
peace, and tries to believe that his
noninterference may yet save the
child. The little heiress creeps still
nearer to the brink, always with her
soft and tender song upon her lips.
She sways suddenly, seeks to recover
herself, and then the poor baby_
filled with her childish longing for
the unattainable, and with all her
little soul rapt in admiration of the
fata! lilies—falls forward. For a
moment she clings convulsively to
the slippery bank, then with a sharp
and bitter scream, rolls downward
and is instantly snatched to the
bosom of the greedy rivpr as it
rushes onward to the sea. The
whole awful tragedy has occupied
scarcely more than one short minute.
Penruddock, rousing himself when
it is too late, springs through the
window, out into the garden, past
the roses—that still smile and
tremble coquettishly beneath the
touch of the fickle breeze, as thougn
. 1
.no. horrible thing bed juft been
done—and ('aim the fatal apot.
Gazing with wild and too late re
morse into the river, he fails to see
sign of white frock, or whiter limbs,
or small face, pale with terror. The
river has caught tho little body
and hurried it along, past the curve
of the rook, through the meadow
perhaps already—so deadly swift it
is—out into the open sea No tiny,
struggling mass, still instinct with
life, can be seen —nothing but the
turbid waters. Penruddock, .with a
groan, sinks upon his knees, and
falling each second lower, soop lies
prone, an inert and unconscious heap
upon the grass. How long he re
mains there, prostrate and merciful
ly lost to time, he never knows, but
a voice sweet and loving, rouses him
to life again.
“What is it, papa?" says Diok,
bending over him. “Are you iUPn
You will catoh cold. Nurse is al
ways saying that Hilda and 1 are
sure to catch sore throats if we lie
on the grass. ”
As the little one’s name passes
his boy’s lips, Penruddock starts
and shivers, and after a few seconds
by a supreme effort, raises himself
to his feet. Never shall the boy
know how evil has been this deed he
has committed, lie moves feebly
indeed toward the house; but Dick
follows him. ,
••Where is Hilda?” he asks, stand
ing on tiptoe to bring his faoe nearer
his father’s. “I oan’t find her any
where, and I left her just here. She
is a little imp, and is always hiding
from me; but she will come back
when I want her. Hilda," raising
his voice to a shout, “I shall pick
the eyes out of Miss Maud (the doll)
if you don’t come soon. One would
think she was dead, she is so silent
Why, papa, how pale you are! and
how ill you look! Has any one been
vexing you?”
“No,” says Penruddock, harshly;
and pushing the boy, for the first
time, roughly from him, goes indoors.
Many years afterward Dick Pen
ruddock remembered how that day
his father, for the only time in all
his life, treated him harshly, and
without the aocustomed tenderness.
CHAPTER IIL
At the Opera
It Is the height of the London sea
son. Ail the world Is alive and
eager in search of amusement, and
to-night, as Patti is to sing, each
box and stall in the Italian house is
filled — oversowing, indeed. One
boa alone on the second tier is
empty, and toward it numerous
lorgnettes from the stalls beneath
and boxes opposite are anxiously
directed. The diva has appeared,
she has sung her first solo, has been
rapturously received and applauded
to the echo, and the house is now
listlessly paying attention to a some
what overdone tenor, when the door
of the empty box opens, and a wo
man, pretty and with a charming
expression, if slightly passe, comes
slowly within the light of tho lamps.
She is followed by a girl, who,
coming to her side, etqqds for a
moment motionless, gazing down
and around with a careless calm
upon the fashionable multitude with
which the vast building is crowded.
So standing together, the elder wo
man sinks into insignificance, whilst
the younger becomes the center of
attraction. She is of medium hight,
with a clear, oolorless skin, and
large, blue, expressive eyes. Her
hair is not golden, but light brown,
through which a touch of gold runs
brightly. She is aristocratic, almost
haughty, in appearance; yet every
feature, and, indeed, her whole
bearing, is marked with a melan
choly that seems to check even a
smile that on rare occasions seeks to
dissipate the sadness of her lovely
countenance.
one is dressed in a somewhat
strange fashion for so young a girl
Her gown is of black satin, relieved
by some heavy gold chains about
her neck; she wears black gloves to
the elbow, and an enormous black
fan flecked with gold. Upon her fair
hair a tiny Indian cap of black satin,
embroidered with gold, and hung
sequins, rests lightly. -
“What a success you are, Maud!”
j says the elder woman, fondly. “Even
royalty has taken notice of your
entrance! Did you observe that?”
“Royalty, as a rule, is rude!” says
Maud, slowly, after which they both
fall into line and turn their attention
to the divine Adelina
Two young men in the stalls be
neath, who. up to this have been en
grossed with the new beauty, at this
moment turn to each other.
“Who is sheP” asks the younger,
eagerly. “I have been in town some
time—quite three weeks—but any
thing like that has not—”
“Dear child, don’t—don't say it!"
interrupts his companion, sadly. “It
isn’t like you. Not to know her,
argues yourself unknown! I thought
better of you! She is our beauty'
par excellence, our modern Venus,
and licks every one else into fits!
She is the very cream of the cream, ,
where beauty is concerned, though
somewhat shady, I am reluctantly
I compelled to admit, in the matter of
I birth. ”
| “Birth!” repeats the young man
a start. “But look at her—look at
| her hands, her prolile! Who can
. dispute the question of birth?”
| "No one! It is indisputable! That
I charming girl up there, with the
most irreproachable nose and the
! haughtiest mouth in Christendom,
| was picked off the street by her
chaperon, Mra Neville.when a baby,
and is probably—at least, so I hear—
the daughter of a woman, poor, but
strictly honest—they are always
strictly honest—who lives by infus
ing starch into limp linen! I really
don’t like to say coarsely that she
was a washerwoman, it sounds so
vulgar.”.
"It sounds as horrible as it Is Im
possible,” says the, younger man.
still gazing dreamily at the box that
holds his harmony in black and gold.
"Most impossible things are hor
rible,’’ says his companion, lightly.
"They grate; thoy are out of the
common. Perhaps that Is their
charm. Miss Neville charma Yes,
that is her name; her adopted mother
wishes her to be so called, Pon’t
look so excessively shocked, my
do^r Penruddook; it is rather a
romance, if it is anything at all, and
should create in your mind interest
rather than disgust.'1
"It is not disgust I feel, it is
merely a difficulty of belief,*’ says
Penruddook. vaguely. "Is that her
adopted mother?” shifting his glasses
for just a moment from the balm and
beautiful blue eyes that have so be
witched him, to the faded pretty
woman who sits near them. ....
"Yes. She is all right, you know
—quite correct. She is George
Neville’s widow, son to Lord Dun
more, who broke his neck or his
head, or something you may remem
ber—I don’t know exactly what—
when out hunting. ’’
"Yes, I remember. He was a
friend of my father’s. By tne by.
'that Mrs. Neville must bo a sort of
connection of ours—at least her
sister married iny uncle. But all
friendship there ceased with my
aunt's doath. I don't recolleot any
thing about it myself, but I believe
a coldness arose after my poor little
X uu
o uuuopj/ji UVUJUCIU.
heard all about that, of course?”
••A very fortunate accident for
you, all thing’s considered. Other
fellows' cousins don’t drop off like
that," says Mr. Wilding, in an
aggrieved tone.
••My father was awfully cut up
about it,” says Penruddock; "he
has never been the same man since.
Moody, you know, and that; and
goes about for days together without
speaking a word. It preyed upon
him. And the Wynters—my aunt's
people—say ugly things about it;
that sufficient care hadn’t been
taken of the poor little thing, and
all the rest of it. Hut of course it
was nobody’s fault."
“Of course not! Some people—
especially law relations—are never
happy except when making
themselves disagreeable. That’s
their speoial forte. The . faot
that your father minds them be*
trays in him a charming amount of
freshness.”
"And so she adopted that beauti*
ful girl!” says Penruddock, present
ly. returning to his contemplation
of Beauty’s box, and referring to
Mrs. Neville.
"There isn’t much of it. It is a
romantic story, certainly, and a very
Quixotic one, but it can be told in a
word or two. Brevity is the soul of
wit To begin with you must try to
master the fact that Mrs. Neville
adores dogs, and driving in the park
one day about fifteen years ago, she
drew np her carriage at the railing
and proceeded to gratify the appe
tite of her Pomeranian by bestow
ing upon him a cracknel. . -
“ECen as she broke It a faint cry
from the world outside her carriage
attracted her attention, and glancing
up she saw a lovely child in the
arms of a tall, rather peculiar-look
ing woman. The child was gazing
at her imploringly, its little hand
extended as though desirous of the
biscuit the dog was devouring.
Mrs. Neville is tender hearted.
The child, as I said, was beautiful;
a perfect model for an angel or a
love. Mrs. Neville, who even now
is nothing if not emotional, gazed
entranced; the pretty baby pouted,
and cried again for the biscuit. The
cry went to her listener’s heart
” ‘She is hungry,’ ” she said to the
woman, who leaned against the rail
ings in a picturesque attitude.
•• ‘She is often hungry, madam,’
returned the woman, stolidly, yet
far from brutally; indeed, the appar
ent hopeless resignation in her tone
must have been very perfectly done
from all I have heard.
[TO BE CONTINUED.]
Paper Horseshoes.
When paper horseshoes were first
introduced into the cavalry service
of the Get man army a few years ago
they excited a good deal of interest.
Several cavalry horses were first
shod with the paper shoes and the
effect observed. It was found that
not. only did the lightness and elas
ticity of the shoe help the horse on
the march, making it possible for
him to travel faster and farther
without fatigue than horses shod
with iron, but - that the paper shoe
had the property of being unaffected
by water and other liquids. These
new sheets of paper are pressed
closely together, one above another,
and rendered impervious to the
moisture by the application of oil of
turpentine. The sheets are glued
together by a sort ot paste composed
of turpentine, whiting, gum and lin
seed oil, and then submitted to a
powerful hydraulic pressure. Paper
horseshoes are also male by grind
ing up the paper into a mass, corn
bin. ng it with turpentine, sand, gum,
litharge and certain other sub
stances, pressing it and afterward
drying it. But these shoes are less
tough and elastic than those made
of thin sheets of paper laid one upon
another. These shoes are fastened
to the horse's feet either by means
of nails or with a kind of glue made
of coal tar and caoutchouc.
Iho Fill geometer*
The latest thing out is a pulseo
meter, by which the life insurance
examiners can tell to a fraction the
exact condition of an applicant’s
heart beat. An electric pen traces
on prepared paper the ongoings,
baitings, and precise peregrinations
of the blood, showing with the fidel
ity of science the strength or weak
ness of the telltalo pulse. , .,
! Vr ■J.' ... -V •
Officially reported,
'■ after elaborate com
petitive tests made
under authority of
Congress by the
Chief Chemist of the
United States Agri
cultural Department,
Superior to all
other Baking Pow
ders In Leaven
ing Strength.
,-4:S
1 ne most careful Housewife
will use no other. t ; -
ROYAL BAKING POWDER 00., 106 WALL ST., NEW-VORK.
The Eskimo Bad the Walras.
To the Eskimo the walrus is the some
all-in-all that the buffalo was to the
Indian, that the camel Is to the Arab,
and the reindeer to the Koralc. Its
flesh feeds him; its tough hide covers
his boats, his shell-like kayak, and his
big, clumsy bidarrah, and cut into
strips it makes his harpoon lines and
dog-harness; its oil furnishes him light
and Are, its ivory tusks nre legal ten
der for all sorts of civilized luxuries,
such as iron end steel for spear-heads,
knives, and even guns; certain tissues
make good mackintoshes for Mr. and
Mrs. Innjiit, and the flipper-bottoms of
the walrus make good sole-leather for
the hunter also— St. Nicholas.
The infra no Hone.
Of the roses grown for cut flowers in
the open air on the Kiviera nine out of
ten are safranos, although this variety
is rarely grown under gluss.
The capital merits of the safrano is
that it 'will bloom and develop buds at
a temperature which is too low for any
other tea rose. We have seen old plants
of this rose grown out of doors in the
latitude of New York which have pass
ed through several of our severe win
ters unharmed, with no protection be
yond a thin covering of straw, bound
about them. —Garden and forest
An Ample Fond of Pleasure and Health
May be derived from an ocean voyage and for
eign travel. But before one gets one's “sea
legs" on, as the sailor says, the abominable
qualms, begotten of sea sickness, have usually
to be gotten over. Delicate people suffer, of
course, more than the robust from this ailment,
but few sea travelers escape it. Against the
frightful nausea it produces, Hostetter's Stom
ach Bitters is s reliable defense, and is so
esteemed by tourists, commercial travelers,
yachtsmen and mariners. An ailment akin to
sea sickness often afflicts land travelers with
weak stomachs. This is often brought on by
the jarring of a railway train. Disquietude In
the gastrlo region from this cause Is always
remedied by the Bitters, which also prevents
and cures chills and fever, rheumatism, nerv
ous and kidney trouble, Constipation and bil
iousness. _
Grand Army Statistics.
At the rate at which the Grand Army
lost members last year, it would take
only about ten years to disband the or
ganization. Tne gross loss in member
ship was 07,801, which is reduced by
accessions of 30,601 to a net loss of 28,
150. There were practically as many
members dismissed on delinquent re
ports as were mustered in, and more
than twice as many suspended as were
reinstated. Taking suspensions, delin
quincies and discharges, honorable and
dishonorable, together, and nearly 53, -
000 out of the 67,000 lost members are
aosounted for. Only 7,283, or less than
2 per cent of the total membership, died
during the last year. The total mem
bership is now only 360,683, as against
397,223 a year ago. This is the smallest
membership reported for many years,
but it is quite likely to be as large as
it will ever be again. In the nature of
things the death rate will increase, and
the causes which have led to so many
delinquincies and suspensions are very
probably permanent—Springfield Re
publican.
State of Ohio, City of Toledo, »„
Lucas County. (“•
Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he la
the senior partner of the firm,of P. J. Che
ney & Co., doing business in the City of
Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and
that said firm will pay the sum of ONB
HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every
case of Catarrh that can not be cured by
the use of Hall’s Catabbh Cube.
FRANK J. CHENEY.
| SEAL |
A. W. GLEASON,
Notary Public.
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally and
acts directly on the blood and mucous sur
faces of the system. Send for testimon
ials, free. F. J. CHENEY & CO.,
Toledo, O.
Sola by Druggists, 75c.
s Family
Depression In Wall Street.
A cigar dealer on Wall street,
whose customers are mainly stook
brokers and other money men. says
he does not sell half as many high
priced cigars this year as he has
sold in former years. Until recent
times he had never kept five-cent
cigars in his place, but now they are
smoked by hundreds of people, who
often ask if they can get six for a
quarter. Several other oigar dealers
in that part of the city tell stories
of the same kind.
A Reasonable plea.
Judge—Why doyou wish to be re
lieved from jury duty?
Citizen—I wear a gold watch, and
I don't like the looks of three or
fbur of the fellows you have already
accepted.'
Partial Insomnia.
It has been noted that sleep la at first
heavy and gradually becomes lighter
us the usual hour of waking is ap*
proached. Now in some cases of in
somnia refreshing sleep is obtained for
a brief period, which is followed by
most wearisome wakefulness. This
condition may sometimes be overcome
by talcing1 a light meal after the first
sleep, the blood supply being drawn
from the bruin to the stomach, and at
the same time the blood is replenished
by substances formed in the process of
digestion which have a sporltlc effect.
That this is probably the case is illus
trated by the ease with which animals :
and human beings fall asleep after a
heavy rnoal.—National Review. V
«_ _Karl's CloTcr Root To*.
Tn« Wood pui'iditt-rKlveft rm>hn«*m< anil (HrnMft
to U>*> UomplMiuu anti uurtm Coiifitipatlou. JBo.sflOo
A Universal Falling.
••What’s old Swizzlos, the million
aire, looking so pleased about I* Ho
just lost #10,003 in stocks."
“Yob, but aftorward he managed
to get a free tlokat to a seventy-fi ve
cent show."—Chicago Record. •
Coe’s Cos|h Balsam
Is the oldest and best. It will break sp a cold aulolt-.
tr then any tfalag else. It to always reliable. Try It,
The Way It (Jena ly Is.
••I soe by the papers that the pres
ident and his wife are expected to be 1
In attendance at the Swellheddes*
wedding."
“Yea They’re expected to be
there by everybody except them
solvea"—Chicago Record.
It the Baby is Catting Tooth.
Bo sort andnsotbstold and well-tried rsmsdy, Has.
Wuslow’s Sooraisa Srnur (or Chililrsn Teething.
Amblgaons.
He—Wasn’t that an absurd rumot
they started, that I was losing my
miudP
She—Well. I should say sa ' i
" Hanson's Slagle Cara Halva.**
Warranted to cum or money refunded. Ask your
druggist for It. l-riue IS uenl*.
The deepest wounds are those Inflicted by
a friend. _■
There is more heavenly music In one good
a?t than in 100 hymns.
TAW and PRICKLES warranted to bo
removed by Wo. 877,840. Bent by mall
with Instructions, on receipt of price, 90c,
by SNOW, LUND * CO, Omaha, Neb.
No amount of cultivation can make a
thistle bear fruit.
Billiard Table, second-hand. For sale
cheap Apply to or address, H. C. Am,
fill 8. 13th St., Omaha, Neb.
How ready some people are to sell theit
souls for spot cash.
ASSIST NATURE
a little now aud then
in removing; offend
ing matter from tlie
stomach and bowels
and you thereby
avoid a multitude
of distressing de
rangements and dis
eases, and will have
less frequent need
> of your doctor's
i \ service. •
\ \ Of all known
Magenta for this pur
I Vpose, Dr. Pierce’s
Pleasant Pellets are
the best. Once
used, they ate at*
ways la favor>
Their secondary ef
fect is to keep the
bowels open and
regular, not to far
ther constipate, as
is the case with
uiucr pins, nence, uieir great popularity •
with sufferers from habitual constipation,
piles and their attendant discomfort and
manifold derangements. The ‘'Pellets"
are purely vegetable and perfectly harmless
In any condition of the system. No care is
required while using them; they do not
interfere with the diet, habits or occupa
tion, and produce no pain, griping or shock
to the system. They act in a mild, easy and
natural way and there is no reaction after
ward. Their help lasts.
The Pellets cure biliousness^ sick and
bilious headache, dizziness, costiveness, or
constipation, sour stomach, loss of appetite,
coated tongue, indigestion, or dyspepsia,
windy belchings, “heartburn,’' pam and
distress after eating, and kindred derange
ments of the liver, stomach and bowels.
In proof of their superior excellence, it can
be truthfully said, that they are always
adopted as a household remedy after the
first trial. Put up in sealed, glass vials,
therefore always fresh and reliable. One
little “Pellet” is a laxative, two are tnildy
cathartic. As a “dinner pill,” to promote
digestion, or to relieve distress from over
eating, take one after dinner. They are
tiny, sugar-coated granules; any child will
readily take them.
Accept no substitute that may be' recoin- ■/
mended to he “just as good.” It may be
better for the dealer, because of paying him
a better profit, but he is not the one who .
needs help.
If It’s a Sprain, Strain, or Braise
St. Jacobs Oil
Will Cure It