The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, February 07, 1895, Image 7

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    WOMAN'S
NEBVES.
story of a woman to
whom noise was
torture.
By tb. B—t Excitement
l !;, >i, hiin Baffled By Her Cm*
the Cato City, Keokuk, Iowa 1
Helen Movers, whose homeisatS615
u venue. Chicago, and whose visit to
»u a veilin'. 1 imago, aim
V. la Will long be remembered, was
afflicted with a nervous malady
... Huns drove her nearly to distrao
' I lu.se terriblo headaches are a
f the past," she said the other day
te City representative, “and there
i story in connection with It, too.
' .-vims sv'stcm sustained a great shock
Keen years ago,brought on, I believe,
h too’ much worrying over family
mil then allowing my love for my
... t the better of my discretion
im” health was concerned. Why,
.....: ,„v affairs at liome did not go
as i expected, I would invariably
. prostrated from the excitement and
,I consider mvself fortunate indeed if
is of the attack would not remain
1 was obliged to give up our
home not far from tlio Cake Shore
; i.pvause 1 could not stand the noise
locality. 1 could Hud no place in tlio
Vhivli 1 deemed suitable to one whose
is system was always on the point of
To add to my misfortunes my
underwent a change and I looked
.uv and sallow that 1 was ashamed
;; IV lrom the house at all.
' slain,'said my doctor to mo soon
•i unusually severe attack of the
V ‘unless you leave tlio eityand seek
'S’ccof quiet, von will never recover.’
..is-Usli d 1 would visit my uncle, who
m Pallas county, Iowa, and whoso
siirelv be a good place for one
l iiuiblo condition. I picked up the
i Uv one day and happened to come
. ,u,’interesting recital of the recovery
ivoman ill Now York state who was
,i as 1 had been. This woman had
•1.1,1 by Mr. Williams’Fink Fills for
v'.iplc.’ 1 thought that if Fink Pills
(hat woman they might do the same
• 1 lip .an to take the pills according
.vtionsaml I began to feel better from
ilia. After I had taken several boxes
■n 1 was ready to go back to Chicago,
•rvousness was gone and my cotnplex
as as fresh as that of any 10-year-old
; l.ova, and l’ink Fills is what put the
in my checks. No wonder I am in
high spirits and feel liko a prize
.■ Ami no wonder I like to come to
• n. for if it had not been for Fink Fills
, from a Keokuk linn I would not
ivo now," langhiiigly concluded the
Williams' Pink Pills contain all the
ruts necessary to pive new life and
.,-ss to the blood and restore shattered
is;. They an'for sale by all druggists,
:iv be had by mail from Dr. Williams’
i.'ine company, Schenectady, N. Y., for
els |ier box, or six boxes fort3.50.
A Delightful Change.
Well. Jennie,'’ said ona actress to
I.it, "how do you like your new
"Oh, for goodness’ sake,”
aimed Jennie, “don’t let us talk
i." "All right,” said the other,
t us talk shopping.”—New York
A Pertinent I’arugrapli.
[>ur country, if right, should be kept
t: i{ wrong should be put right,” is
iiiti;*al maxim which paraphrased
ies to other conditions of life, thus:
health, if right, should be kept
t. if wrong should be put right,
“lily in bodily ailments, such as
is and aches, which St. Jacob’s Oil
nP’dy cures. Many out of work
i d hoed to give it a chance to cure
it will give them a chance to go to
14 pnre 1. Another adage is: *‘he
li best who doeth well.” Well, of
s,\ you want to be well from all
> of aches, and the best thing to do
use the great remedy, lie who
so is doing well indeed.
For » urposo of Comparison.
Urdy rising is a groat thing,,l
the enthusiastic man; 4‘a great
^1 s» responded the sluggard. *4It
^ you appreciate the chance for
P in the morning when you get it.11
10 the New York street car
s now runs smoking cars.
v «J
Worms in Horses.
“i1/ '“T. ,or. pi" worms In horse!
hll,'.'„ei",.cc s "os Pbolcra Cure,
j „ f«.v worms In horses, hogs,
■-> nr i-a s; :in excellent remedy for
slx|y vents in United
f i t i f „’’l'1!"?" »n<l I will send bv
i,f,J*''.S, 11 to druggist and
"tniil l”' 1 packages for SUC
p'lld' U. ti. stkketee;
Dtlonnameof pa£jrai,d Kapids‘ Mlch*
;it: ’thnt f themselves
*•> nat laziness is poor health.
A Modern Invalid
^medicinally, in ke(
f"«n,i XUr‘eS' A retnPdy
.)' noeeptable in form, pi
: ine m composition, truly 1
tbeetauu entirely free
’ jectionable quality. Jf r
h h“nsul,s a Physician; if cc
"f'mpo’f ngs.Bentle family ■
nut keep.
I ^ DA*i'ERS VKI.LOW ONIONS
a«-°"f°by John L- Rath, East
tr„ )In pound of seed,
f bushels n!'.r yU.1<;1' l1} the rate of
rn!.v po^lil,leaw’ Mr'i Kath sa-vs
... he cause he used 8al
r-'Weds'iJ,nf',iurstantl that Mr.
[ especially p® ,earliust in the
cucumW' hlS carrots,
fh.-<, t0n1.., Jers’ oai°ns, peas,corn,
[u> market [rani etc'’ antl that he
h- «asgrsr* "mo"
ITT t UtTh,»««t and Send I,
X-';‘l (ret free ,P. f^a Crosse. Wis.,
I stable sehe(K a'ndtiha-CkageS
hoh eolo”1"® ?' < ol«rs.
h spring and ^are Ju&t appearing1
l^'-es tviUoon ?i°rm us that thl
I or -Magenta r U,ein favor. The
'••though inrt reds will be re
anown is refnef nrenCe’ the Palest
I ■ P nk, win nro'v *?re a strong1
rr„ia i'ebruarv , I, • ’ Writes hrama
l If*** in ?ri!;a^es HomeJour
s Well as millinoln“ an<* dress
h, as much in th» y, promises to
I'^thew^^^asithw
r..P^ item5 It0™' al?° golden
r aiV bro"'ns, and ^ aU medium
j navy blue,’ * coup*, the
I
■ETHICS OP TRAVELING.
I n«t I'auaiiBars Certain Rights Which
Should Bn RnapnctndT
•‘I should very much like to know,"
said a plain citizen to a New York Sun
reporter, "whether there nro any eth
ics of traveling, 1 moan of railroad
traveling in this country. Now, I
went out on tho 9:40 train on the Now
York Central tho other morning and
as I got on tho train a littlo lato, I
found somo difficulty in gotting a soat.
Not because tho cars were crowded,
for they wero just about half filled.
That is tho twelve or fifteen seats on
each sido hold each one person instead
of the two that should find accommo
dation. The other halvos of the seats
wero occupied by coats or valises,
children or other impediments of tho
preemptors.
"I walked up and down three
coaches all filled in tho same way, and
not one person offered to mako room
for me. Finally, and after the train
had started, I asked permission to
take the place of a hand-satchel and
luncheon bag, and was sourly allowod
to do so. Other desperate pcoplo
crowded in. and tho coach was pretty
well fillod by tho time we got to
Poughkeepsie, but I failod to see a
single instance in which half of the
seat was voluntarily left opon, or in
which it was graciously givon up.
"Right across from whoro I sat was
an aggravated case of this usurpation.
In one seat tho furthest from me, sat
a lady with a milliner’s box, taking
up tho space betwoon her and tho
window. In the next seat behind was
a gentleman who I found was the
husband, and who had his half of tho
seat, littered with a dozon parcels..
behind him sat a young lady, the
daughter, guarding the aisle half of
tho seat with a rampart of canvas
traveling bag. All three stolidly hold
their own against every comer, and
kept tho six seats until they got off at.
Hudson.
“liio point I wish to mako is that
while every passenger has the right
to all the comforts and conveniences
for which ho has paid and which are
therefore his by right of purchase,
ho has no right whatever to occupy,
or oven attempt to occupy, that part
of a seat for which ho has not paid.
I know this preemption of the doublo
seat is an offenso of such everyday
commission that it is accepted as one i
of the commonplaces of railroad travel
nowadays, but it seems to mo to merit
a little official attention, not with a
view of limiting the comforts of
travel, but of preserving tho rights
of all travelers.
FUNERALS AT NIGHT.
TSiey Are Increasing ln Cities—Few
J unoruls With Pallbearers Nowadays.
The custom of holding funeral ser
vices at night is, according to an un
dertaker, growing steadily in this
city, says the Now York Sun. Its
growth dates from about five years
ago. There were night funerals in
Now York before that, but they wero
comparatively few. The growth of
tho custom is due to several causes:
Ihe night funeral is less expensive
and it meets tho convenience of a
much greater number of friends of
the dead. With the increase of so
cieties and their growth of member
ship the loss of a day or half a day in
attendance at the funeral of a member
has come to be a serious tax, and in
this respect tho night funeral makes a
saving of time. In lino with this
ceremony of time is a decided change,
within five or six years, in the cus
tom with regard to pallbearers. There
are now perhaps twenty funerals
without pallbearers to one with them.
Some of the night funerals are held
at home, some at church. If at
church, the body is taken after tho
services to the undertakers, and
there kept until the burial. If at the
house the body may be taken to the
undertaker’s or it may remain in tho
house over night. The morning ser
vice, a prayer by tho clergyman,
would be attended by only the imme
diate members of the family, who
would take leave of the dead alone.
The interment would be without fur
thjr service at the cemetery.
The number of funeral services held
at the undertakers’ is also increasing.
No chargo is made for the use of tho
shop for this purpose. It is in some
respects more economical than a
funeral at home or church, and with
larger space than in a house it brings
all attending together instead of
separating them in various rooms.
Gambling In Europe.
There is much more of public gam
bling in Europe than is commonly
supposed. Besides Monte Carlo,
which still does a big business, the
following list of gambling places with
their winnings last year is given:
Oztend Kursaal and clubs, 8,000,000
francs; Dunkirk Casino,300,000 francs;
Boulogne Casino, 800,000; Trouville,
450,000 in the Casino, and at the Hotel
Eden, 150,000; Dioppe, 200,000; Co
burg, 380,000; Havre, Frasgate, 150,
000; LaTrepot, 50,000; Biarritz, 1,001,
000; Aix les Bains,1,000,000; Besancon,
120,000; Vichy, 1,000,000.
The Kinetoscope.
Numerous correspondents have re
cently been writing to tho London
Times, pointing out that no originality
should be claimed for the kinetoseopo,
as it is only an improved zoetropc.
and one writes to say that he saw a
similar toy seventy years ago. Edi
son’s representative in London has
finished tho discussion by acknowl
edging that tho fundamental principle
is.tho same.
Feminine Amenities.
“How does it feel to have a man all
to yourself for fifteen minutes?” asked
Miss Kosamund, bitterly, as she ap
proached her deadly rival in a corner
of the ballroom.
“Why," said the rival, smiling
sweetly, “why don’t you try it and
find out. —Chicago Record.
There is more Catarrh in this section of
the country than all other diseases put to
gether* ana until the last few years waa
supposed to he incurable. For a great
many years doctors pronounced it a local
disease, and prescribed local remedies, and
by constantly failing to cure with local
treatment, pronounced it incurable. Sci
ence has proven catarrh to be a constitu
tional disease, and therefore requires con
stitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh
Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co.,
Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional
cure on the markot. It is taken internally
in doses from 10 drops to a teaspoonful. ft
nctH directly on the blow! and mucous sur
faces of tlie system. They olfer one hun
dred dollars for any case it fails to cure.
Send tor circulars iiud testimonials. Ad
dress F. J. CHUNKY & CO., Toledo, O.
EfTSold by Druggist*. 75c.
Hall's Family Fills, li'ic.
Whippoorwill Coivpena.
From Oklahoma comes a report of
the analyses of whippoorwill cowpeas
at five different stages anil of prairie
grass, “composed almost wholly of bine
stem and joint grass,’’at three differ
ent cuttings. With reference to the
cowpeas, results indicate that for a
good hay the peas, including vines,
leaves and pods, should be harvested as
the peas have matured in the pods
Should tlie prop be late it is better to
cut boforo complete maturity than to
delay the harvesting until a heavy frost
has killed the vines and leaves.
MECCA COMPOVNI) should bo In every house
Stops t ie pain of a bum instantly Prevent* scar
1,nv. Heals all kinds of *uie«. DihskIsi-* »-®l- It.
Sent bv mail on r. oelpt of price. To roe ounce Jar
25 cents send for pamphlet..
TUK FOSTiieUMAMJFACTURlNG TO,
C ouncil Hhills. Iowa.
Tho man who looks through cobwebs will
see spiders everywhere.
More than one man is generally killed
when a toy goes wrong.
Farmers nud other Leopie located along
the line of the B. and M. and U. P. roads in
Nel raslia, who w ant Colorado coals, should
write to J. J. rJ bourns Co., 10117th
•Street, Denver, for j rices and other infor
mation.
For Fattening ling*,
Professor .1. H. Shepperd is accred
ited with saying:
From all published data I regard
wheat about equal in value to corn, liar
ley seems to be worth about 8 per cent
less than corn. The real value of wheat
us a feed can be learned only by com
parin';' its price with that of other
grains. If barley, corn and shorts are
cheap enough to produce 100 pounds of
pork at less cost than wheat, it is folly
to feed wheat. However, with wheat
at its present low price and other grains
high, it will in very many eases pay to
feed.wheat, and especially that which
is “off” in grade. The value at the
farm of wheat, corn or other foods
should determine which to use.
Snow TU'gUterg Wanted.
Up in tlie cold north a weather ob
server wants to find a man who will In
vent an instrument to measure the
depth of snow correctly. All sorts of
mechanical devices have been devised
to measure rain and fog and sunshine,
but nothing smaller than a level ten
acre lot has been produced to show the
correct depth of snow, and even that
device, if the wind happens to be out
of “time” isn’t of much use for scien
tific purposes. If any one has an idea
for a machine of this kind he will re
ceive the grateful thanks of the obser
ver by communicating with him. He
wants to issue a snowdrift bulletin that
will average up the depth of snow in
fence corners and open fields.
If you have
Rheumatism
Or any other
years aro it
Dain, you don’t take chances with St. Jaeo
>egan to kill pain, and it’s been pain-'
90 Ceijts lj
FOR A WHOLE TEAR.
NewY orkTribune
-AND
The Weekly Bee
A special contract enables us to oiler THE NEW YORK
WEEKLY TRIBUNE, the leading family weekly of
the United States, with the OMAHA WEEKLY BEE
for only 90 Cents, less money than is charged for any
other single weekly paper in the country. The Omaha
Weekly Hue is the leading paper in the western country
and is too well known to need a special description.
THE NEW YORK WEEKLY TRIBUNE isa Na
tional Family Paper and gives the general news of
the United States. It gives the events of foreign lands in a
nutshell. Its “Agricultural ” department has no supe
rior. Its “ Market Reports ” are recognized author
ity. Separate departments for “ The Family Circle,”
“Cur Young Folks,” and “Science and Me
chanics.” its “Home and Society” columns
command the admiration of wives and daughters. Its gen
eral political news, editorials and discussions are compre
hensive, brilliant and exhaustive
Send 90 Cents for both papers to
THE OMAHA WEEKLY BEE,
OMAHA, 3STE3B.
The P. Lorillard Company
has been for many years the largest manufacturer of
tobacco in the World—Chew
and the reason why will be as clear to you as the
noonday sun.
IT’S MUCH THE BEST.
taken inteinaiiy
USED
LOCALLY
WITH
Insufflator,
M. SYKES' SURE CURE 00.. „ H. CAXTON SEN.. 0NI0A0I
hold by all Druggist*.
AGENTS
WANTED.
One earned $23,000 la live ye
Many over $1000 Inl8$4. Outfll tr**,
JP. O. Box 1371, Mew Ysrt.
i* .t I , Onialin «
»»ut»i iiiiaH«riu|; Auvemotmieau nmaii
Mention tlii«
COLORADO
Irrigated land* cheap.
Agrtw. wan ted, good pay.
W. K. Altiudcr, Dearer.
^ FISO'S CURE FOR M
, CURtaWHERt ALL ELSE FAILS. _
I Best Cou*h Syrup. Tsatea Good. U*0 I
In time. Sold by druggist*.
—iSEnmaaisPi
Just Like Any Other Woman.
Mrs. Mary Livermore. who, it was
announced a few days ago, will retire
t to private life after a publio career of
i thirty years ns lecturer, temperance ad
; vocate and woman suffragist, will go
down to posterity ns a pioneer of wo
man's progress who did not wear blue
goggles, and one of the most pictur
esque figures in tho world of women
workers for the public good. Mrs. Liv
ermore is a tine-looking old lady, tall,
stately, with noble features and silver
hair rippling in the now fashionable
manner, over a broad, high torehoad.
she was an orator of no mean ability,
and her lecture tours were always pro
ductive of much rebellion among the
men and great results in the way of in
dependence among the women. Mrs.
Livermore was interested in charitable
institutions and prison reform, as well
, as suffrage. She never, during her
l thirty years’ carcor, lost any of the
i small vanities which strong-tninded
} women are supposed to be without. On
i one occasion, when Mrs. I.ivermoro was
i lost in New York, during the constitu
tional convention furor, a newspaper
woman interviewed her, and was about
to leave, carrying a portrait of the suf
fragist with her, when Mrs. I.ivermoro
run after her to the door, and blushing
like a school-girl, said in a faltering
way: “I wish you would tell the artist
that that picture is not very good, and
- and to make it a little prettier, won’t
you?” That was tho chief interest in
tho interview.
| “I recall the story of a sultan," said
| Dean Hole, “who had a very pompous
vizier, and desiring to rid himself of
tho vizier, sold him in tho open market
| for a slave. The market was not brisk
! that day, and the vizidr brought only
oightpence. The sultan bought him in
at this price, and thereafter whenever
the vizier became pompous the sultan
had only to mention 'cightpence,’ or
draw a figure ‘S’ in tho air, when tho
pompous minister immediately sub
sided.”
A Terrible Visitant.
Tain Is always » terrible visitant, and often
dominion itself with one for life. This lntllo
tlon Is preventable, In easen of rheumatism, by
a timely resort to Hostellers * Stomach Hitters,
which chocks the encroachments of this obsti
nate and danuerous malady at the outset, l'lio
term "danuerous" Is used advisedly, lor rheu
matism Is ulways liable to attack Iho vital
organs aud terminate life. No testimony Is
more conclusive aud concurrent than that of
physicians who testily to the excellent effect of
the Hitters In this disease. Persons Incur a
wotting In rainy or snowy wonthor, and who are
exposed to draughts, should use the Hitters as
a preventive of ill effects. Malaria, dyspepsia,
liver and kidney trouble, nervousness and
debility ant ulso among the ailments to which
this popular medlelno Is adapted. l’’or the In
firmities. soreness and stiffness of tho aged It U
highly bonotlclul.
Tho best way for a man to get out of a
lowly position is to bo conspicuously effec
tive in It.
It tha Uabjr la Gutting Tenth.
Be aura and use that old and wi'll tried romody, Mu.
WissLow’a Sountisa Stiiur tor Chlldran Toothing.
Gratltuito ran sing sougs of pratso with
an empty porket.
“Kanaon'a Kaglo Corn Halva."
Warranted to rure or money ratundud. Aak your
dnigglNt tor It. Prloo ID uento.
The faith that moves mountains began
ou dust.
1,000 mis. POTATOES TEH AGUE.
Wonderful yields In potatoes, ontB,
corn, farm and vegetable seeds. Cui
this out and send So postago to the
John A. Hulzer Heed (.'o., La Crosse,
Wls., for their grent seed book and
sample of Giant Spurry. wuu
Love never Duels a burden that it does
not try to lift.
Coe’s Gough Hal earn
la thn ami bcist. It will hrtnik uit a Colt) nuloka
er tiiaiti any tiling elan. 1th always rullabln. Try It.
How quirk the word that provokes turns
tile devil louse.
For Whooping Cough, l’lso'n Curo is a sue
ressful remedy.—M. P. Distich, (17 Throop
Ave., lirooklyn, N. Y., Nov. II, ItttM.
Life is too short to nurse one's misery
ON THE ROAD
to recovery, the
young woman
. who 1* taking
' Doctor Pierce'*
l'avorltc Pre
script I on, In
niniueuliuod, wo
lf manhood, wife
• ', hood ami moth
^ « erhood tlic " I're
J scriptiou ” is a
J supnoiling tonic
and nervine
that's peculiarly
adapted to her
needs, regulating,
strengthening and cur
ing the derangements
of the sex. Why is it
HO imuiy womrii uwr uiui m iimv in m.
Pierce's 1'avorite Prescription? Because
beauty of form anti face radiulc from llie
common center -health. The best bodily
condition results from pood food, fresh air
and exercise coupled with the Judicious use
of the “ Prescription.”
If there be headache, pain in the back,
bearing-down sensation*, or general de
bility, or If there be nervous disturbance,
nervous prostration, and sleeplessness, the
" Prescription ” reaches the origin of the
trouble and corrects it. It dispels aches
and pains, correct* displacements and cures
catarrhal inflammation of the lining mem
branes, falling of the womb, ulceration, Ir
regularities uml kindred maladies.
•• FALLING OF WOMB.’*
Mrs. Frank Cam
FlltLtr, of Hast Dickin
son, Franklin Co., N.
y., writes : " I deem it
ltiy tliity to express my
deep, heartfelt gratf
tttde to you for having
been tile menus, under
Providence, of restor
ing me to lieiiltli, for I
have been by spells un
able to walk. My
troubles were of the
womb — inflammatory
ami bearing-down sen
sations and the doctors
nil said, they could not
Twelve bottled of Dr. Mrs' Cammkld.
Pierce's wonderful Favorite Prescription
has cured me.”
Speaking from her Experience,
After years of practical use and a trial of many brands of baking pow
der (some of which she recommended before becoming acquainted
with the great qualities of the Royal), Marion Harland finds the
Royal Baking Powder to be greatly superior to all similar prepara
tions, and states that she uses it exclusively, and deems it an act of
justice and a pleasure to recommend it unqualifiedly to
American Housewives.
The testimony of this gifted authority upon Household Economy
coincides with that of millions of housekeepers, many of whom speak
from knowledge obtained from a continuous use of Royal Baking
Powder for a third of a century.
ROYAL BAKINS POWDER CO., 10« WALL 8T., NEW-YORK.
WORD BUILDING 60NTEST
1st Prize—A Kimball Piano, vai.uk $350.00
2d Prize—A Bridgeport Organ, 100.00
3d Prize—A Fine Bicycle, - 75.00
4th Prize—A Diamond Pin or
Ring, - - - 60.00
5th Prize—A Wheeler & Wilson
Sewing Machine, 50.00
6th Prize—A Trip Ticket, Omaha
to Denver and kktukn< 25.00
7th Prize—Cash, - 10.00
8th Prize—Cash, - 7.00
9th Prize—Cash, - - - 5.00
10th Prize—Cash, - 3.00
|0Prizes^TotalValueji^^685;00i
The above prizes are offered to
those who construct or form the
largest number of words out of the
letters found in the prize word
EDUCATION
UXDKK THE FOLLOWING
RHSOULATIONS AND CONDITIONS.
First-The first prize will *be won by the
larges; list, the second nrlze by the next
largest list and so on to tne tenth.
Second—Each person must send In his or
her list before the end of February, 189).
Third—The list of words must be written
In Ink plainly, and must, bo signed by the
contestant and witnessed by two neighbors
or friends.
Fourth—Any English word found In the
dictionary can be used if it is comp sed of
letters that are contained in the word edu
cation, but there must be no duplicates, ab
breviations, exclamations nor names of peo
ple or places,
Fifth—The same letter must not be used
t wire in one word, but of course may be used
in other words.
Sixth—Each contestant must be or be
come n subscriber to the Omaha Weekly
\\ orld-Herald for one year, and must send
his dollar to pay for his subscription with
Ids list of words.
Seventh-Every contestant whose list
I contains as many as ton correct words will
'receive a portfolio containing hand onto
; photo engraved copies of sixteen famous
paintings—sire of each picture 10.M2 inches
I with history of the painting.
‘ Eighth In case twoor more prize winning
, lists contain the same number of words the
one that la first received will be given pref
I erence.
The Omaha Weekly World-Herald is edited by Congressman W. J. Bryan,
the leading advocate of free silver coinage in the west. It has an agricultural
department, especially edited by G. W. Ilervey, and of great value to farmers.
It is issued every week in two sections—eight pages every Tuesday and four
more pages every Friday—thus giving the news twice a week, which is almost
as good as good as a daily paper. The price is $1.00 per year. The contest
closes February 28. Address.
WORLD-HERALD, mb.