The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, May 23, 1895, Image 5
STATE. .Silas Holoomb . ..R, E. Moore ernor. j. a. Piper —.‘"’..J- 8. Bartley Eugene Moore r , ...A. 8. Churchill I" <TATE UNIVERSITY. -;v|-l^0lAimLa?EttpBBona rMH&Keaarney;M.J.Hull. \0\GRESSIONAL. ,HS Manderson, of Omaha! Madison. ives—First District. J.B Strode “Mercer; Third, aeo- D. Mlkel 1, - Mainer; Fifth, W. E. Ana O. M. Kem. JUDICIARY. ..Samuel Maxwell ""judftePost andT.L.Norval i NTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT. 1 ...M. P- Klnkald,of O’Neill . .. J. J. King of O Neill .A. L. Bartow of Ohadron ’... A. L. Warrlok. of O’Neill LAND OVFICBS. O’NIUX. COUNTY. John A. Harmon. Elmer Williams. ...vjtr.u iuwui^uouu . .f. P. Mullen .. Sam Howard . BUI Bethea ■..Mike MoCarthy 1. Chas Hamilton . Chas O’Neill .W. K. Jackson Mrs. W. B. Jackson • Dr. Trueblood . M.F. Norton .H. E. Murphy SUPERVISORS. .Frank Moore . Wilson Brodle ..W. F. Elsele . George Eckley . .li. B. Maben . A. S. Eby . A. C. Purnell .;.D. G. Boll . John Dlckau . H. B. Kelly . H. J. Hayes i.,v... .B. Slavmaker lty. B. H. Murray ..S. L. Conger .John Houge .Wm. Dell E. J. Mack lew. .George Kennedy .John Alfs .James Gregg „..F. W. Phillips . A. Oberle .Hugh O’Neill n it l ,le. .,.D. C. Blondln _-.John Wertz .H. 0. Wine .T. E. Doolittle .. J. B. Donohoe ... G. H. Phelps .J. E. White .A. C. Mohr CUT OF O'NEILL. siir. E. J. Mack; Justtoes, E. H. iimlS.M. Wagors; Constables, Ed. nid Perkins Brooks. HOCNCILMEN—FIBST WARD. ) years.—D. II. Cronin. For one J. MeEvony. SECOND WARD. d years—Alexander Marlow. For r-Jako l’fund. THIRD WARD. d years—Charles Davis. For one mer Merrlman. i CITY OFFICERS. 0. F. Biglin; Clerk, N. Martin: , John McHugh; City Engineer risky; Police Judge, H. Kautzman; Police, Charlie Hall; Attorney, Ion; Weighmaster, Joe Miller. GIUTTAN TOWNSHIP. ►isor, li. J. Hayes; Trearurer. Barney Clerk, J. Sullivan; Assessor, Ben ; Justices, M. Castello and Chas. i Constables, John HorrlBky and Ed. &; Road overseer dist. 3B, Allen Brown l 4, John Enright. Huts’ RELIEF COMNISSION. ,r meeting first Monday in Febru »eh year, and at such other times as Bil necessary. Bobt. Gallagher, Page, |n; Wm. llowen, O’Neill, secretary; lark Atkinson. ITltlCK’S CATHODIC CHUHCH. rices every Sabbath at 10:80 o’clock, ev. Cassidy, Postor. Sabbath school ately following services. UOD1ST CHURCH. Sunday irvices—Preaching 10:30 A. m. and 7:80 lass No. 1 9:30 A. M. Class No. 2 (Ep jeague) 0:30 p. m. Class No. 3 (Child p. m. Mind-week services—General meeting Thursday 7:30 p. m. All will e welcome, especially strangers. E. E. HOSMAN, Pastor. POST, no. 86. The Gen. John Neill Post, No. 80, Department of Ne u. A. K will meet the first and third tr evening of each month In Masonio 'tlu 8. J. Smith. Com. m]1EI2U CHAPTER, b. a. m ‘h*VtUrd Thur8daj’ of each Couua Sec. J. c. Harnish, H, P VALLEY LODGE, I. O. O. .11,'^J8. every Wednesday evening In j lo attend1’ ’Siting brothers oordlally T11, N- 0. L. Bright, Sec. ^•.---helmet lodge, u. d. 'odd wi?in ev,or? Mond«y at 8 o’olook p. Hl mvked?Wa fiaU’ Vl8itln* brethern McCAHT‘.K.of^aVndGSOI,“H’aC' *,<<* encampment no ao r "a ot ea?hUt8 BVur7 8econd and fourth ch month In Odd Fellows’ Hall, hcrlbe. Chas. Bright. f BAUOHTBB8 01 each “Onth In OddVFeUows’ HaU,84 N. G. .sec, E. H. Benedict, W. M. u- H. Cronin, Clerk ,4M four'll Tutteda3*5.9' M?ets seoonc ••sonic hail. usuay of each month li li,'iouT. iteCi T. V. Golden, M. W. ....... _EN 3 °* each month. erl Ursl ttud workmen V UPV flrct «_i -"lull uli , - ^_^AG1!R8, Sec.EO' 1IcL’t'TCBAN, G. M. P08T0FF1CED1RCET0RY Arrival of Mail. r>F<i*):.S?^yR-,«--«OM(TH, ,A8, . ‘““".and Sat.'a Tue-lay,Thn^ridaya 0. ' ur»and Sat. a se&SaSw ADVENTURES OF A PHYSICIAN Why H* Found Blauolf Bmwdii • Porlah on » Strut Car. “I had a rather grewsome adven ture the other day,” said a well known Washington physiolan to a writer for the Star. “I had been up all night with a patient on whom I had performed a critical surgical operation. It was a question whether he would recover from the shock. In fact, it was touch and go, Bo that I could not take a minute's sleep. About 5 a m. I got away and started for home so exhausted that it never occurred to me to think of my appear ance. “The horse car I boarded quickly filled up with laborers on their way to work. Though very sleepy, I was somewhat surprised to notice that several of them eyed me strangely. Those of them who sat down near mo quickly moved away, and one man who took a seat next to me—I was in one of the front corners—looked at me, got up hastily and held on to the strap. Nobody else took the vacant place, though the vehicle by that time was crowded. “Not being used to being regarded as a pariah I was considerably puz zled. I observed the faces of two or three men who sat onnonitn to mo and I thought that they gazed at me with an expression of horror and dis gust. What could it mean! I be gan to feel alarmed. “Just then I chanced to glance down at one of my cuffs. It was sat urated with blood. The other ouff I noticed for the first time was bloody also. My trousers were spotted with blood and there were fresh stains of it on my coat sleeves. My anxiety about the patient and subsequent ex haustion had prevented me from thinking of the matter, and I had not done more than wash my hands before starting for home. At once I saw what the trouble was. The peo ple in the car could find no other way of accounting for my condition than to suppose that I had just killed Bomebody. They sized me up for a murderer. UnBhaven as I was, and wearing an old hat, I must have looked rather tough. Not a word was said as I got off the car and made a sprint for my house, glad to get safe baok and to remove the traces of imagined crime from my person. ” TEN MILLIONS IN GOLD. A. Families* Man Barns Fifty Cents hjr Handling It. A man strolled Into the office of the United States express company on Sherman street early one morning and asked for work, says the Chicago Inter Ocean. He said he had not eaten for several days. He wore a clean shirt and looked bright, so the depot agent put him to work sorting freight. The man hadn’t a cent He borrowed a dime from a tender hearted co-worker and got his break fast therewith. After the frugal meal he went hack to the freight shed. Pretty soon a train rolled in from the West, and the express cars were shunted onto the platform. “Hop in there and help transfer that freight,” shouted the agent. In the new man hopped. He hadn’t a cent The car appeared to be an ord inary one from the outside. The sliding door was pushed open, and seven men were seated conveniently around the interior. Over the axles and trucks in each end of the car were heaps of canvas bags. “Catch hold and hustle,” was the next order. TTo tKa nanniloiin mn» hold. He tossed the bag’s to another man a few paces off, who In turn passed them along. As each bag flew from hand to hand an ominous rattle and clink was heard. It sounded like the beating of tom-toms to the penniless helper. Still he toiled on. An hour passed, and the last bag went the way of its predecessors, its canvas sides muf fling in a measure the ringing sound as coin crashed against coin. It was done. The agent handed the new man fifty cents. “Come around again,” said he. Away went the man and filled him self with food. The agent went into the little office where the messenger was checking up. “That’s the biggest run we’ve had in a long time,” said he; “$10,000,000 | in gold. Whew!” Th® Itarro. Donkey is in Spanish burra In Texas, New Mexico, Colorado and in Arizona, where the donkey is as well known as the horse, he is always called by his Spanish name, on ac count of the fact that this section of the United States so recently be longed to the Mexicans, who as every body knows, speak thatl anguage. The Spaniards and Mexicans also apply the term “burro” to a stupid or ignorant person, just as English speaking races use the word “donkey." Ho Haa Struck Gold. A contractor sinking a ten-inch driven well at Dover. Del., has hit upon the plan of substituting a ro tary motion for the direct blow of the pile driver in sinking his pipes. After a pipe had been driven more than 100 feet by the pile driver the other method was applied and the pipe was sunk three feet in twenty minutes. The contractor is going to patent the invention if nobody ha9 anticipated it Murder Does Not ••Out.” The maxim “murder will out” is disproved by statistics. In the ten years ending with 1886 there were 1.766 murders committed in England and Wales, and in 1,094 of these cases no trace of the criminal was ever found that led to his apprehen sion. ■ - -.Yr-ffiUv . -V:.. -i!: THE COCK LANE GHOST. Extraordinary KaalfMtatloaa In tha Arc tlo Refloat Thirty Toara Ago. Apropos of the recent revival of Interest in the Cook Lane ghost and the possible verity of its manifes tations it may be worth while, says the New York Evening Post, to put on record certain events which took place in the early ’60’s at Fort Yukon, the outermost post of the Hudson Bay company in Alaska, north of the Arctic circle. At this lonely fort half a dozen from the northern isles of Scotland traded for furs under the command of Strachan Jones, post trader of the company. Once a year a party ascended the Hat river and crossed to La Pierre's house, at the head of navigation on the Porcupine river, bringing a sup ply of trading goods, one sack of flour, and a little tea and sugar for the commander, with the mail of the last six months, and receiving in 'ex change the bales of furs which had been purchased during the previous twelve montha The bateaux from the fort then returned down stream with the goods. In midwinter a courier on snowshoes brought the half-yearly instructions from the chief factor at York factory. At other times the little community vegetated among the tundra, or was busied with the hunting and trade which supplied the business and subsistence .of the post. About a year after Jones relieved his pre decessor strange rumors prevailed among the residents at the fort. Sin guiar noises wore neara during me still arctic night Raps on the door were responded to, but, the door being opened, there was no one there. Utensils hung on the walls ol the log huts in which the com pany’s servants lived fell down or were moved when nobody was near them. Jones had a house to him self us commander, and around this house the uncanny doings seemed to concentrate. Jones himself preserv ed a dignified silence, or professed ignorance of anything out of the common. But in Bpite of this the noise and turmoil continued, and were experienced by every one at the post, even by visiting Indians. When spring came the bateaux started as usual for La Pierre's house with the bales of furs, Jones com manding the party. At the nightly bivouac, to the astonishment of the voyagers, the noises continued. The man who slept in the boat as a sort of guide reported that he heard raps and a curious scratching on the mast. Men who slept around the campfire ashore declared that they heard Jones talking in the night to some one who* answered in a voice unknown to any of the party. On meeting the party from Fort McPherson at the portage the voyagers naturally compared notes, and the doings of Jones’ fa miliar were soon discussed by every campfire and at every trading post throughout the Northwest territory. A visitor at the fort in 1866 was as sured of the reality of these manifes tations, which remained without explanation, as Jones has retired from the post and carried his secret with him. The same visitor, while waiting the return of the officer then commanding, had the curiosity to look through a little library which in the course of years had accumu lated in the commander’s quarters. Among the worn novels and less dilapidated volumes of Scotch theol ogy of which the collection was made up was a copy of Dr. Johnson’s ac count of the extraordinary history of the Cock Lane ghost. IT WASN’T HOGS. was not Foolish £noa|h to Overtax Hlmaelf aa a Sprinter. An old colored man had brought out a pail of water for my horse, and we were talking about the weather and the crops, when a young negro about 18 years old broke out of the woods on the other side of the road. He was bareheaded, barefooted, and had on a torn shirt and ragged pair ot dungarees, says the Detroit Free Press writer. The minute the old man saw him he called out: "Boy! I like to know what dis yere fussin’ is all ’bout!” “What fussin’ ?” replied the young man. “Doan’ you ax me what fussin’, sah! I knows yo, boy! You is a nigger who done works fur Majah Gamble!” "What if I does?” “What it you does? Why, sah, Ize gwine to tell Jedge Smith dat yo’ has bin chasin’ one of his hogs!” "Shoo! Nebber did it!” “Doan’ yo’ lie to me, boy! Can’t 1 dun see yo’ is all out o’ breef wid chasin’ dat hog! If de jedge doan’t have yo’ in jail befo’ two days Ize a ’possum!” “Look-a-here, Uncle Ben,” said the young man as he came across the road, “does yo’ ’member dat time de jedge's hogs dun got on de railroad track down dar?” “Of co’se, sah—ot co’se’I does.” "An’ when de train cum along what did dem hogs do? Didn’t dey run right down de track?” “Of co’se dey did.” “An’ did dem kivered kyars cotch up to ’em? Didn’t dey run two miles an’ den jump into de swamp?” “Yes, sah, dey did.” “Well, den, was you big 'nuff fule to reckon I’d be fussin’ wid hogs dat could run faster’n de builgine? Beckon Ize got wings to fly wid? Does I look like a bird?” Ho went off up the road, turning to look back occasionally, and when he had proceeded out of sight around a bend the old man shook his head in a solemn way and said to me: “I reckon I dun made a powerful j mistake wid dat nigger. I said hogs, I but Izo dead suah he was arter a i calf!” . BOOMER PHILOSOPHY. Thoaghti IiiimM br Ik* Cherokee ■trip Land Chaaa. A philosopher ap in a balloon over the Cherokee strip opening dny would have seen a significance in the movo ing picture beyond the mere event, writes Hinda Burke in the Washing* ton Post * In that mad rush to grab lots, men trampling one another in their florae eagerness, he would have seen a picture of the ago. What are we all but “boomers," hustling for what we get, and to keep it after we have got it This is an age of “hustlers" when a man succeeds not so much through his brains and worth as through his ability to “get there." A race horse, rampant, and the motto “Never be backward in coming forward,” is the coat of arms for the arlstocraoy of push instituted in this country. From the Atlantic to the Pacific, from Wall street to the Cherokee strip we see the ‘same ex cited throng racing, elbowing, push ing, trampling along the dusty high way. And woe to the dreamer who stops to pluck a flower by the way side. He is left behind to starve with the withered flower clutched in his grasp. Significant, too, of the epooh stands outlined against the sky the solitary figure of an Indian, the last of his race, perhaps on a knoll overlooking the scene. To his mind he sees his ancestors avenged as he beholds the pale faced throng fighting one an other for the land they fought his race to obtain. As ho watches the "sooners" taking possession of the best lots in advance of the law, a look of derision breaks up the im luuuiUKj ut 1IIO 1UHUUIDO UO uu Djauu* lotos, “White man, biff fool! horse beat train, and white man who come sneak beat horse. ’’ The philosopher in the balloon would have recognized a brother in the savage as he uttered this sage remark. For the untutored red man has recognized the one genius who can always beat even the hustler— the Bneak. The sneak Is no product of this age and country alone. He is a time honored institution, and it will take a better invention than the express train to beat him. When Edison in vents a contrivance that will come in ahead of the sneak, then he will have arrived at the summit of success in ingenuity. Another significant element in the picture were the enterprising females who donned pant sand bestrode their fiery steeds to enter the race. Ham pered by the petticoat not one of them could have snatched a potato patch, and this we see exemplified in the every-day race of life. The question is. Where was Dr. Mary Walker on this auspicious occasionP Pathetic Origin of a Hymn. Dr. Fawcett, author of the hymn, “Blest be the Tie that Binds,” was the pastor of a small Baptist church in Yorkshire, from which he received only a meager salary. Being invited to London to succeed the dis tinguished Dr. Gill he accepted, preached his farewell sermon, and began to load his furniture wagons for transportation. When the time for departure arrived, his Yorkshire parishioners and neighbors clung to him and his family with an affection which was beyond expression. The agony of separation was almost heart breaking. The pastor and his wife, completely overcome by the evidence of attachments they witnessed, sat down to weep. Looking into his face, while tears flowed like rain down the cheeks of both, Mrs. Faw cett exclaimed, “Oh John, John, I can’t bear this. I know not how to go!’ “Nor I either,” said he; “nor will we go; unload the wagons, and put everything in the place where it was before!” The people who bad cried with grief now began to cry with joy. He wrote to the London cougregation that his coming was impossible; and so he buckled on his armor for renewed toils in Yorkshire on a salary less by £40 a year than that which he declined. To com memorate this incident in his history. Doctor Fawcett wrote that hymn. — Christian Herald. Greek Magistrates. Tbe chief magistrates of Athens were called archons. At first the office was life-long and hereditary; afterward for ten years, finally annual and elective. There were nine an nual archons, and none were eligible but citizens who could prove three generations of free ancestors. Every candidate must also prove that he had no physical defect; that he had been dutiful to his parents, had served in the army and possessed property to support the dignity of the office. Bribery was punished by compelling the one bribed to dedicate to the gods a statue of gold equal in weight to his own body. The Union Colors In the Wrong: Country. A flower lately discovered in the isthmus of Tehuantepec is white in the morning, red at noon and blue at night, and is called the chameleon flower in default of any botanical name. It is probably a species of the hibiscus mutabilis. The colors do not pass abruptly from one shade to the other, but change gradually from the whtto in the morning to the pink and red and thence to the blue at night The Tehuantepec tree grows to the size of a guava tree and gives out a slight perfume when the flower is of a red color. An Automatic Gas Lighter. A New England firm is introducing an automatic gas lighter for street lamps, which works on the principle of an eight-day clock. It is explained that the only attention the lighter requires is a weekly winding of the clock movement, and that it lights the lamp at the required time and extinguishes it at daybreak. ADDITIONS TO ALPHABET. Latter* J and w Unknown to th* Bag* ll*h Ton ffoe Until IMS, It is a fact not so well known but that It may be aala to be curious that the letters j and w are modern additions to the alphabet, says a writer In the St. Louis Republic. * The use of the j may bo said to have become general during the time of the commonwealth, say between 1649 and 166a From 1660 to 1616 Its use is exceedingly rare. In tho contury immediately preceding tho seven* teonth It booamo tho fashion to tail the last 1 when Roman numerals wore used as In this oxamplo: vllj. for 8, or xij. In place of 12. This fashion still lingers, but only In physicians' prescriptions, I believe. When the French use j it has the power of s as we use it in the word "vision." What nation was first to use it as a new letter is an interest ing but perhaps unansworablo query. In a like manner the printers and language makers of tho latter part of the sixteenth century began to recognize tho fact that there was a sound in spoken Knglish which was without a representative in the shape of an alphabetical sign or character, as the first sound in the word wet. Prior to that time it had always been spelled as vet, the v having the long sound of u or of two u’s together. In order to convey an idea of the new sound they began to spoil such words as wet, weather, web, otc., with two u’s, and as tho u of that date was a typioal v, the three words abovo looked like this: wet, weather, web. After awhile the type founders recognized the fact that the double u had come to stay, so they joined the two v’s together and made the character now so well known as the w. There is one book in which three forms of the w are given. The first is the old double v, (vv), the next is one in which tho last Btroke of the first v crosses tho first stroke of the second, and tho third is the common w as used to day. Bengal*!* InpmtltloM. Among the Bengaleso it Is said that shouting the name of the king of birds (garunda) drives away snakes. Shouting “Ram! Ram!” drives away ghosts. Cholera that attacks on Monday or Saturday always proves fatal; oholera that at tacks on Thursday never ends fatally. The flowering of the bamboo means famine. In fanning, if the fan Btrikos the body it should be instantly knooked three times agalnBt tho ground. When giving alms tho giver and receiver should both bo on the same side of the threshold. It is bad to pick one’s teeth with tho nails. If a snake be killed it should immediately be burned, for all ser pents that are so unwise as to per mit of having their lives taken are Inhabited by the souls of Brahmans, which hope thus to escape and work mischief. The words “snake” and “tiger” Bhould never be used after nightfall. Call them “creepers” and “insects.” Never awaken a sleeping physician. Morning dreams always come true. 8oltaat«, Hmi. Residents of the town of Scituate, Mass., show with pride the very well in which hung the old oaken bucket that Inspired Samuel Woodworth’s famous poem. Some of them even contend that the self-same, iron bound, moss-covered bucket still hangs there, in spite of the lapse of nearly a hundred years. The name Scituate is said to be a corruption of the Indian “Satnit,” or “cold brook,” from a little stream hardly a inilo long which the first settlers of Scit uate found refreshing, as had the savages before them. Purified by Fire* There is no more effective sanitary agent than fire. The ancient who made his napkin of asbestos, had but to throw it into the fire when soiled, and it could not be made cleaner. And if we could but build our houses of incombustible materials the spring cleaning might be efficiently accom plished by incendiarism. London, indeed, was purified from a plague by a general conflagration. And al most the one thing which that inde structible disease germ, the bacillus, can not'stand is heat. The Shako of the French Army* David, the painter, drew the de sign for the shako worn in the French army. The soldiers never liked it, but Bonaparte insisted on its being worn. It is something like a cylin der, with a visor in front, and trimmed with a plume or pompon. The design has been gradually modi fied, until now it is to be abolished in favor of the kepi, which has a fiat circular top and a straight visor. He Wm Answered. “What did the United States sen ate meet to do?” he asked of the au dience In the corner grocery store, while a wave of wrath rushed into his face. “What did they meet to do?” “To chin,” said a little lame man who sat away back on a soap box. And there was no more said. The Island of Crete. Crete, or Caldna, is a very fertile island covered with an abundant growth of aromatic herbs, myrtle, orange, lemon, almond and pome granate trees. Not long ago the peo ple of Crete made a desperate effort to secure their independence from Turkey, but they were not successful. MANHOOD guaranteed to cure nil n Power, Ueadacbe, Wak< ness.all drains and loss br over exertion, youth ulants, which lead to Inf ▼est pocket. Ill per bo Stwe a wrUtcs iruors russists. Ask for it, ta in plain wrapper. Addin For Mile la O’Neill* Neb., b raipiiaiionoftbe nean Shortness ot Breath, Swelling of Legs and Feet. '•For about four years I was troub-' lea with palpitation of the heart.' Bhortnoss of breath and swelling of the legs and feet. At times I would faint. I was treated by the best phy sicians In Sayannnh, Oil. with no re lief. I then tried various Springs without benefit. Finally, I tried Dr. Miles’ Heart Cure also his Nerve and LI ver Pills. After beginning to taka them I felt better I 1 continued taking them and I am now In hotter health than for many years. Since my recovery I havo gained fifty poundH In weight. I hope this state ment may be of valuo to some poor sufferer.” B. B. BUTTON, Way* Station, Ga. AildrnsgMts wii itatll, o bottles for 18,.or For Sal. by all Druggists. READ THE TRIBUNE For Telegraph, Local, % General, State and Foreign News. Market complete -THE SIOUX CITY DAILY TRIBUNE $6 Par Year. 60 Cents Per Month. QUICKEST AND BEST MAIL SERVICE Address: THE TRIBUNE,. Sub. Dept. Sioux City, Iowa. 0 10 Purchase Tlokete and Consign . your Freight via the F.E.&M.V.andS.C.&P RAILROADS. , ^ TRAINS DEPART! OOINO EAST. Passenger east, - 0:20 a. x Freight east, • 10:80 a. X Freight east, - - • 2:10 p. x. OOIKO WEST* Freight west, 2:10 P. x Passenger west, • 9:27 P. X Freight, - 2:10 p. x, The Elkhorn Line Is now running Becllning Chair Cara dally, between Omaha and Dead wood, jree to holders of flnt-claas transpor tatlon. Per any Information oall on WA J. DOBBS, Aot. O’NEILL. NEB. PATENTS ] | Careati, and Trade-Marks obtained, and all Pat-; ”ent business conducted for modenatc Pics, i Our Orncc is Opposite U. S. patent Omer and we can secure patent in less time than those] remote from Washington. Send model, drawing or photo., with descrip-' don. We adrise, if patentable or not, free of], charge. Our fee not due till patent is secured. , ] A pamphlet, “How to Obtain Patents,” with < cost of same in the U. S. and foreign countries], sent free. Address, C.A.SNOW&CO. Opp. Patent Orncc, Washington. D. C. RESTORED! firvouH diseases, such as Weak Memory, Loss of Brain fulness. Lost Manhood, Nishtly Emission*, N«rrsu> i>f power In Generative Organs of either sex caused fill errors, excessive use of tobacco,opium erettm iroilty. Consumption or Insanity. Can d« carried In L.efor$.», by mail prepaid. WtthaBS order we ntee to cure or reftind the Money. Sold by all te no other. Write for free Medical Book sent sealed m KEitVX»££B CO., Masonic TetUpie, CUCAOO. r MOUIU8 * CO., Drugs leu.