The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, June 06, 1895, Image 5

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    DIRECTORY.
\sTATE.
* .SilM Holcomb
. r. E. Moore
.. j. A. Piper
■" .J. S. Bartley
iXchSu
f1" ■ i'! off8 .. li. H. Corbett
KP vri; UNIVERSITY.
' .olu; Leavitt, Burnham,
Alma- E P. llolmee,
M l, Ainitl, ||
« ... Kearney; M. J. huh,
HI.iieu«
aUESSIONAL.
, I’. Mtmdcrson, ot Omabai
Madison.
.... l irst District, J-B Strode
Third, Goo. f>. Mikel
'iialn’er; Fifth, W. E. And
H. Kcm.
auciart.
..Samuel Maxwell
j udeij Post and T. L. Norral
J.J. King of O’Neill
.A. I- Bartow of Chadron
•” 1 A. L. Warrick, of O Nelli
YR OFFICES.
O’NEIIili,
_Elinor Williams.
COUNTY.
.Goo McCutcheon
Itrict Court.Johu 8klrvlng
.O. M. Collin*
’.J. P. Mullen
.Sum Howard
".Bill Bethea
'....Mike McCarthy
.Chas Hamilton
.. ..Chas O'Neill
..W. K. Jackson
' Mrs. W. It. Jackson
.Dr. Trueblood
.M. F. Norton
. . H. B. Murphy
UI'IiR VISORS.
.Frank Moore
.Wilson Brodle
. .W. F. Elsele
. ...George Eckley
.L. B. Maben
.A. S. Eby
. A. C. Purnell
. .D. G. Koll
.John Dlckau
. H. B. Kelly
. K. J. Hayes
.....R. Slaymnker
. R. H. Murray
8. L. Conger
John Hodj^B
.Wm.
.E. J. Mack
.George Kennedy
.John Airs
.James Gregg
.p. W. Phillips
.A. Oborle
.Huj^h O'Neill
D..C. Blondln
_John Wert*
.... H. O. Wine
T. E. Doolittle
.J. B. Donohoe
,. G. H. Phelps
....J. E.White
....A. C.Mohr
Y OF O’ NEILL.
E. J. Maek; Justices, E. H.
.1. M. Wagors: Constables, Ed.
Perkins Brooks.
ICILMBN—FIRST WARD.
ire.—I). II. Cronin. For one
cEvouy.
SBCOND WARD.
rs—Alexander Marlow.
;o l’fund.
For
THIRD WARD.
rs—Charles Davis. For one
ilerrimsn.'
cur officers.
K. Biglin; Clerk, N. Martin;
ol>n McHugh; City Engineer
y; Police Judge. H. Kautztnan;
lice, Charlie Hall; Attorney,
; Weighmaster, Joe Miller.
IT AN TOWNSHIP.
K. J. Hayes; Trearurer. Barney
lerk, J. Sullivan; Assessor, Ben
itices, M. Castello and Ghas,
tables, John Horrlsky and Ed.
ad overseer dlst. HU, Allen Brown
liu Enright.
)' RELIEF C0MNI88I0N.
eeting first Monday In Febru
car, and at aueh other times as
icssary. ltobt. Gallagher, Page,
I'm. Bowen, O'Neill, secretary;
Atkinson.
ICK’8 CATHOLIC CHGBCH.
, every Sabbath at 10:30 o'clock,
.assidy, Postor. Sabbath school
tollowing services.
)IST CHUBCH. Sunday
-Preaching 10:30 a. m. and 7:«)
So. 1 9:30 a. m. Class’No. 2 (Ep
10)0:30 p, m. Class No. 3 (Child
Mind-week services—General;
mg lhursday 7:30 P. M. All will,
burnt1, especially strangers,
E. E, HOSMAtf, Pastor.
POST, NO. 86. The Gen. John
1 ost, No. ad, Department of Ne
■ will meet the first and third
ening of each month in Masonic
S. J. Smiih, Com.
IN VALLEY LODGE, I. O. O.
m Wednesday evening in
tend' ’'8it'n8 brothers cordially
u- O. L. Bright, Sec.
LD CHAPTEB, B. A. N
t»!mu,ahaVhirdThUraday °f e8cl
“8 See. j. c. Harnish, H. P
■HELMET LODGE, U. 1
® every Monday at 8 o'clock
fellows' hall. Vi/itlng brethei
jartv v m v- Golden, C. C,
,ART*- K. of K. and 8. ’
NO 30
second and four
each month in Odd Fellows’fiS
scribe, Chas. Bright
DAUGHTE]
h/.h A”’ meet8 every 1st ami
month in Odd Feflows’ Ball
__ • E- ** Benedict. W. ]
a vvV t\ rBHOWS Hal
A[jams, Hocretary.VIDaON’
iSsSaS'sss
h*. B. Cronin, Cl<
P“rthTudsiiav M?ets sc«
^ ball. ^ each montl
“t. Uec.
each moutl
T- V. Golden, m.
month. er* ttU(^ i
Dikiis, See.E0' ^ccctchan, g.
t *rriv»l Of M»u,
l^u^as «AST
1 .
I'lwwStS'OW MR*.
LmsS,J:^e Arr!v®8 »:<
r^i^Unday. Arrive *.n
'**• * vt*8
0.„-—*y. Arrives 1
[|'ln(iayJ vve^SD bHEi.ssA
P^y.Thur^/gaay at 7;
L O Jig]. . at..l;
1 s*ili and Sat. at!'‘
■on., ai>d Friday, S**
M- *nd Prid/y “ -11
PROM AN OLD MAID’S DIARY.
An Involuntary High ter • Husband, Boon
If Ho Did Koop Data Hoars.
Sept 32.—Ten palls on the taste
to-night and even kittie’s purring
isn’t comforting. It is plain as day,
Jennie Martin, that you have the
bluea I didn’t know what I would
do if there was a man around—*
scratch his eyes out, I guess. Yes, I
know I should, for there was Mra
Smith’s husband who came home at
2 o’clock this morning. I was awak
ened by hearing him whistling out
under the lamp post and trying hie
various keys on the front door. I
am pertain he started on the watch
key and went right through the list
Whon I said to Mrs. Smith, "Your
husband was <a little late last night,
wasn’t he. Mra Smith P” she just
laughed and said, "O, Tom is grand
panjandrum of the Ancient Azteokian
Order of Spoopemjays and his duties
keep him out late on Saturdaya But
tw o ou guuu uatui nu tunb x
never can scold. ” I’d like to
see a man pull the wool ovor my eyes
that way. Deacon Jones called to
see me again yesterday. It is plain
that the deacon Is far gone on me.
But I declare, though I wouldn’t say
it, I’d rather have somebody who
had a little more pepper in his make
up than the deacon has, even if he
did stay out until 2 o’clock Saturday
night and hold the office of holy bo
jum or some such awfulness. When
I was calling on Mrs. Smith the other
night what did that Tom Smith do
but put his arm right around my
waist—and Mra Smith right there,
too, and a-laughing. I just screamed.
And Tom says, kind of saucy like,
“Deacon Jones has got something
rich, rare and racy growing up for
him, hasn't he Jennie?’’ I declare,
but the slap I gave him tingles my
hand yet Tom is a dreadful tease.
Well, I must clear away the dishes
and go over to the literary society.
It meets at Mrs. Johnson’s this even
ing.—Minneapolis Journal.
The I.lon Sermon.
Among the many quaint customs
which are gradually disappearing in
England is the so-called “Lion Ser
mon,” which, after having been an
nually preached in the church of St
Catharine, in the city of London, for
nearly three centuries, has just been
abolished. It owes its origin to an
adventure which befell a medieval
lord mayor of London, Sir Richard
Guyer. According to the legend,
being attacked by a lion while he
was traveling with a caravan in
Arabia, he fell upon his knees and
vowed to devote his life to charity if
spared from the lion’s jaws. The
animal is stated to have thereupon
turned tail; and in pursuance of the
vow thus made the “Lion Sermon”
has been regularly preached ever
since. The fund bequeathed by Sir
, Richard for the purpose will in
future be devoted to other charita
ble uses.
John Howard Payne*! Claim.
When John Howard Payne, the au
thor of ‘'Hohie, Sweet Home," died
in Tunis, in 1852, the government
owed him $205.92 salary as consul at
that place. It has been owing it
ever since. Payne’s heirs are now
trying to get congress to make an
appropriation to discharge the obli
gation. If compound interest should
be reckoned on the sum for the for
ty-one years that have elapsed the
heirs of the poet would receive a
comfortable fortune. However, the
bill that has been introduced for
their relief only appropriates the
amount of the original claim, $205.92,
whloh is not enough to fight over.
The government does' not allow in
terest on unclaimed money left in its
possession.
A mean Han.
Old' Judge Peterby is a very close
man even to his young wife. She
was going out shopping and hinted
that she would like a blue silk dress.
‘‘Nonsense! blue doesn’t suit your
complexion at all,” he replied.
‘‘Then I’ll take a green dress."
“Do you want to poison yourself?
Don't you know that all these green
dresses are poisonous?”
“Then you pick me out a dress.”
“That’s the trouble. I don’t like
to see you in any other colors except
blue and green. ”—Texas Siftings.
Star Photography.
Star photography is one of the
most tedious operations known. In
some cases the exposure of the plate
must last for several hours. During
all this time both the plate and tele
scope must be moved so that the
image of the star will be stationary
on the plate. The exposure for a
star of the sixteenth magnitude is
two hours, and only the image of
one at a time can be secured unless
those adjoining happen to be of the
same size.
No Doubt About the Verdict*
“You are the defendant in this
case, are you not?” asked the prose
cuting attorney.
“Yes, sir,” replied the man in the
witness-box.
“May I ask your occupation?”
“I am a manufacturer of calliope
whistles. ”
"That’s all,” replied the attorney.
“So far as we are concerned, your
honor, the case is ready to go to the
jury. ”
Currency in Africa.
The wife of a missionary to Africa
gives some amusing details of the
mercantile value of certain articles
among the natives, needles and cloth
ranking highest. They are abso
lutely current coins. Three needles
will purchase one chicken, one needle
two eggs. Old tin and empty bottles
are also much in request, old oans
taking the place of drinking cups.
A fowl can be had for two yards of
ootton or a small-piece of doth.
Rival donkbys.
fcfcqr Were lk« Cause of iJanallt
Tndaa Caloa..
A bl* clothing' store decided that,
as an advertisement it would give
away donkeys to its youthful patrons,
the boy or girl who guessed the
nearest to the donkey’s weight get
ting the animal
Accordingly a donkey was put on
exhibition in one of the show win
dows. It was not thought safe to
leave him there alone, so one of the
crowd of small boys who clamored
for the privilege was allowed to sit
in the window with him to watoh
him.
The fortunate lad was the envy of
all his companions and his joy was
complete when the clothiers told him
that he should be furnished with
meals from a restaurant at their ex
pense.
For two or three days the boy was
in love with his work. Then its
monotony began to develop and he
absented himself one day to attend a
Sunday school picnic, a substitute
watcher being easily found.
On his return the next day the
original donkey-minder was full of
complaints of the unsatisfactory and
unworkmanlike way in which the
substitute had performed his duties.
He took no pain's to conceal his be
lief that experience as well as native
auiiiby were nooueu 10 mate a suc
cessful donkey-minder. Being: really
a faithful boy and the donkey scheme
proving a good advertisement, the
firm presently allowed him a small
salary.
The donkey idea was taken up by
other clothing stores and lads who
had acted as substitutes for the first
boy, who was now recognized as the
head of the profession, were drafted
into the service.
Those boys, who had studied, so to
speak, under the first master of their
profession, soon got to regard them
selves as an especially privileged
class, into whose hands had been
committed the cult of donkey-mind
ing.
One day a new olothlng firm came
to town and brought a stock of don
keys. The son of one of the proprie
tors was set to watch them in the
store windows. The news spread
and fired the old established donkey
minders with indignation. They de
nounced the new-comer as a scab and
declared that only the old original
donkey-minders should be recognized
as such by any true friend of organ
ized labor.
MENTAL DI3EASES IN FRANCE,
Their Growth Attributed to IuereMed
Consumption of Aleohol.
Dr. Charles Fere, a well-known
authority on nervous and mental di
seases, says that these disorders are
increasing at a terrible rate m
France, and attributes the fact to the
increase of beer drinking, absinthe
drinking and bars, says the New
York Evening Post. There was
scarcely such a thing as a bar twen
ty-three years ago, he says, but now
they are all over the town, and al
ways crowded. Bars and low eating
houses where alcoholic drink is sold
with or without food are the centers
of resort for small tradesmen, cab
men, cooks, artisans and so on, who
want to get tips for sporting specula
tions. Dr. Fere studied this in con
nection with the increase of spine
and brain diseases iu young children
which he attributes to drink. It is
well known that drunkenness in the
long run leads to depopulation. The
children of drunkards are deformed,
or idiots or violently impulsive, and
are destined to swell the ranks of
the army of crime. Dr Fere noticed
the number of infants thus suffering
from the sins of their parents in the
north of France, which has a large
percentage of drunken women. To
show the effect ot alcohol on embry
onic life, he exposed hens' eggs
during the period of incubation to
the fumes of alcohol. Some were
thus treated during twenty-six and
some during forty-eight hours He
observed that this delayed the
growth of the chick in the shell and
occasioned many monstrosities. One
batch of eggs was kept under alcobolic
fumes for a hundred hours.. At
the end of that time the germs were
not as much developed as it would
at the end of twenty hours of hatch
ing under the ordinary conditions.
The doctor concludes from this that
the children of drunken parents are
at the time of birth less developed
than those of Bober parents, and that
there are positive arrests of develop
ment in many directions.
IIow 1I« Cuu^utl It.
A Devonshire farmer went to Lon
don to see the sights. While walk
ing down the Strand he saw a card
in a tavern window bearing the in
scription, "Devonshire cider sold
here." The old man’s heart warm
ing toward his native beverago, he
entered . the public house and*
called for a “pint ’o aider. ” The
liquor being drawn, he placed it to
his lips and half emptied the meas
ure. putting it on tho counter With
the remark that it was “very poor
stuff.” A cockney standing by,
thinking to raise a joke at the farm
er’s expense, said: *T say. mister,
do you know how that cider was
made?” "No,” said the farmer.
“Well, I’ll toll you. They stuck up
a barrel of water at one end of a shed
and stood back at the other end and
threw apples at it.” “Did they?"
said,the farmer, slowly sipping the
cider. “Then they didn’t hit that
barrel more’n once.”—London Tid
Bits. __
Sympathetic. *
“What are you reading, Johnny P”
inquired the boy’s father.
“A sea story, about a man who
was wreoked on a cape.”
“Bead it aloud, Johnny, I can sym
pathize with him. I have been
wrecked on a sealskin cape myself.”
1*01301* At PBUq 3TORCS.
Moat Deadly ■abatanem May Be Ok>
talaad la tka Original Peelcege.
If there Is one thing just a little
more absurd than another it is the
way poisons are sold in New York.
A physician taken with a toothaohe
in a part of the town out of his usual
heat went into a drug store on Lex*
ington avenue to get a little bella
donna, says the ReoorUer. The olerk
would not sell it to him. He referred
to the dirootory. and produced his
visiting oards to show who he was.
The olerk was adamant—-he would
sell a small dose of belladonna to no
one he did not know. The doctor
offered to write a prescription for
himself, but his proposal was scorned.
Then the doctor said he would take a
bottle of elixir of opium, and though
the clerk was "riled” there was noth
ing for him to do but to sell It. Of
course there was enough of it to kill a
dozen people. A day or two after
that a woman who is now in an in
sane asylum, and who even then had
the light of madness in her eyes,
went into another apothecary shop
and with no difficulty at all bought
an ounce bottle of morphine. Of
course she went home and tried to
kill herself. After she had taken
the morphine she was taken to a hos
pital and a dozen people made a
night of it whipping her, walking
her, electrioising her and finally sav
ing her life. Anything in the orig
inal package can be got anywhere.
Small doses there is a lot ,of fuss
about A woman who is a confirmed
victim of opium buys an "olixer” as
her regular standby, and her family
are helpless, because anyone will sell
it to her. Another gets an arsenical
pill in boxes as it comes from the
maker. A man, not being subjeot to
the searches usually practiced on
the feminine victim by her family,
constantly gets his morphine in the
original eunoe bottles and says he
has never had his right to do< so
questioned.
A Urlok Baking Machine.
A new brick baking' machine is to
be noted among the reoent mechan
ical noveltiea It is a simple con
trivance consisting of a table cov
ered with iron brick moldB, to whioh
an electrio ourrent is applied, the
table being eight by fourteen feet
and holding 1,000 molds, joined to
gether like pigeonholea Each mold
is the size of a brick which has been
pressed but not baked, and each has
a cover so fitted as to follow the
brick as it shrinks. The bricks are
taken from the presses and placed in
the molds, the cover adjusted and
the current turned on. The iron
sides of the mold form the “resist
ance,” and the bricks are virtually in
closed by walls of fire. The brloks
having shrunk to the proper size the
sinking covers of the molds automat
ically turn off the current, jthe bak
ing is done and the bricks are
dumped.
A* a Ballef Measure.
Count d’Orsay, on his first visit to
England, chanced to be seated at din
ner next to Lady Holland. That re
markable and many-sided woman was
in one of her imperious moods. She
dropped her napkin; the oount picked
it up gallantly; then her fan, then
her fork, then her glass, and, as often,
her neighbor stooped and restored
the lost article. At last, however,
the patience of the youth gave way,
and, on her dropping her napkin
again, he turned and called one of
the footmen behind him. “Put my
plate on the floor,” said he; “I will
finish my dinner there; it will be so
much more convenient to Lady Hol
land. ”—Argonaut.
A False Frophet la Jamaica.
A false prophet has arisen on the
island of Jamaica. He teaches that
God has given him power to make a
new BetheBda of a small river on the
island. Every Wednesday he stands
on a rock in the stream and blesses
the waters, which are then supposed
to have the power of healing any
disease. The natives are crazy in
the fanatic belief in the new prophet
and 20,000 pilgrims a day bathe in
the waters. It is feared that a pes
tilence will thus be spread, but the
government is unable to oontrol the
converts.
A Boston Bkbf.
Boston Ma—What does baby want P
Is it this pencil?
Boston Baby—Ahgoo, agoo!
“Of course that’s it And does
baby want paper I”
“Ma! ma! me! ma!”
“Yes, mamma cognises correctly,
I wonder what baby wants of pencil
and paper?”
“Me! mo! ne! mo! me! mo!”
“Bless his heart! He wants to be
gin to write his memoirs, ”
A Wook of Well Doing.
Sunday School Teacher—I told you
last Sunday that I wished each of
you would try to make at least one
person happy during the week. Did
you?
Boy—Yes’m I made grandma
happy.
“That is noble. How did you do
it?"
“I went to visit her, and she’s
always happy when she sees I’ve got
a good appetite.”
A Museum of Royal Garters.
A museum founded in Berlin by
William I. is intended solely for the
reception of royal garters. Garters
from the limbs of all the princesses
that have been married in Europe
since 1817 have been found in this
unique collection.
■
Hone Hide Leather.
Twenty years ago there were but
two or three manufacturers of horse
hide leather in this country. The
consumption of this leather 1* large
and rapidly increasing. ’ .
HE *HD AN ELEPHANT. 8
Kxpetlsnoo Wm loo KxoHln* to Make
Him Desire Any Mom of Ik
"No, I wasn’t born this way,” re*
plied the man, as he booked up to a
chair, got his crutches from undor
his arms and foil Into the seat "Thla
came on me very suddenly one day,
about lifteon years ago. ”
"What do the dootors oall it?”
asked the Detroit Free Press man.
"Damphoollsm, 1 believe. .That's
what it is, anyway.”
"Get a fall from a balloon?”
"Rather worse. I don’t mind say
ing that about fifteen years ago I
used to think I knew it all. You've
heard of the town of Chllliootho,
Ohio, maybe?"
“Well, I ornamented that town
with my preienee and I flattered my*
■ell the people couldn’t possibly (pare
me over a day at a time. I was at
the apex ot my conceit when aolrcus
came along. There was a drove ot
eight elephants in the menagerie
and as I stood beforo them 1 wanted
to do something awfully smart One
of the beasts was reaching out with
his trunk for cakes, and I determined
to give him a lighted cigar. An old
gray-haired farmer who stood by and
twigged my game uttered a word of
oautlon, but I wasn't taking advice
from hayseeds at that epoch."
“And you carried out your plans,
eh?"
“I did. I puffed on the weed until
it had lots of fire, hid it behind mo
for a minute and when the elephant
reached again I let him have it, fire
end first Something happened of
course. I had just commenced to
grin and look around for applause
when that proboscis suddenly picked
me up, whirled me high in the air,
and then 1 was (lung dean across
the tent and landed under a cage of
serpents. I knew when the fun
began, but I didn’t see the end of it
I was unoonsoious for two days and
when 1 came to I was so knooked
out ot my plumb that the doctors
couldn’t do any better than this for
me. 1 shall be a cripple to the end
of my day a’’
“But"—
“Oh, certainly 11 know more than
I did and T shall never have the
swell head again. It seems that the
elephant’s trainer had his eye on me
all the time and I’ve often felt that
it was too bad he didn’t feel inclined
to kick me all pver town and back
and thus enable me to learn wisdom
and keep in shape at the same time."
FOR THE TBBTH.
■oms Good Bales to Follow In the Cere
of Them.
One of the most skillful dental sur
geons in New York gives these rules
for the care of the teeth: *
“Uso a soft brush and water the
temperature of the mouth. Brush
the teeth up and down in the morn
ing, before going to bed and after
eating, whether it is three or six
times a day, Use a good tooth pow
der twice a week, not oftener, ex
oept in case of sickness when the
acids from a disordered Btomach are
apt to have an unwholesome effect
upon the dentine.
“Avoid all tooth pastes and denti
frices that foam in the mouth; the
lather is a sure sign of soap, and
soap injures the gums, without in
any way cleansing the teeth.
“The very best powder is of precipi
tated chalk; it is absolutely harmless
and will clean the enamel without
affecting the gums. Orris root ora
little wintergroen added gives a
pleasant flavor, but in no way im
proves the chalk.
“At least a quart of tepid water
should be used in rinsing the mouth.
A teaspoonful of listerlne in half a
glass of w^ter, used as a gargle aftor
meals, is excellent; it is good for
sore or loose gums; it sweetens the
mouth and is a valuable antiseptic.
“Coarse, hard brushes and soapy
dentifrices oause the gums to reoede,
leaving the dentine exposed.
“Use a quill pick it necessary after
eating, but a piece of wax floss is
better."
These rules are worth heeding.
Contracts Aw irdnd bjr Toss-Up.
There are times when the post
office department pitches penniea
It is not very often that this sport is
indulged in, but nevertheless it is a
recognized part of the official pro
gram. It is in connection with the
star routes. When there is a new
route established,at the regular four
yearly letting of the contracts, say,
there is nearly always competition
between would-be contractors. It
sometimes happens that there are two
lowest bidders. If these two men
both live on the route, or live at an
equal distance from it, the depart
ment tosses a penny. Mr. Stono
does the tossing. He is the chief
clerk in the second assistant post- •
master-general’s office and the con
tracts go through him. Mr. Stone
has the contractors take seats in his
handsomely upholstered office. He
feels in his pocket for a penny. If
he has nothing but large bills in his
pocket, which is apt to be the case,
he borrows a nickel from the young
man who writes shorthand for him.
Then ho pitches up the nickel While
it is away near the ceiling he says to
his young man: “Which shall it beP”
And the young man answers: “Heads
for Smith." And if heads come up
Smith gets the contract. If tails,
Brown gets it.—Wasningtou Capital
Dr. Price’s Cream Baking Powder
World's Fair Highest Medal end Diploma.
Heart Disease 30 YrsI
Short Breath, Palpitation.
Mr. O. W. McKInsoy, postmaster of
Kokomo, Ind., and a bravo ex-soldler,
says: “I had been severely troubled
with heart disease ever since leaving
the army at the close of the late war.
I was troubled with palpitation and
shortness of breath. I could not
sleep on my left sldo, and had pain
around my heart I became so ill'
that I was much alarmed, and for* v
tunately my attention was called to
Dr. Miles’ Heart Cure
I decided to try it The first bottle
mado a decided Improvement in my
condition, and flvo bottles have com
pletely cured me.”
Q. W. McKINSEY, p. M., Kokomo, Ind
Dr. Miles ft
that tl
firt Onrala sold on n posltlm
rantee that the flint bottle will hepeflt,
druggists sell it at U, 8 bottles form, or
For Sale by all Druggists.
READ.
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PATENTS
Caveats, and Trtde-Harks obtained, and alt Fat
ant business conducted for Moocratc rets.
Oua Ornct is Oofositc U. S. ParcnrOrnec
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j
MANHOOD RESTORED! ffiEHRSfSBS
guaranteed to euro a! 1 nervous diseases, such as Weak Memory, Loso of Brain
Power. Headache, Wakefuluess. Lost Manhood, Nightly Emissions, Nirvtoa
ness,all drains and lo** of power In Generative Organs of either sex caused
by over exertion, you thfat errors, excessive use of tobacco, opium ar stim
ulants, which Ir'ad to Infirmity, Consumption or Insanity. Can be carried in
.rest pocket. SI per box. O for S3, by mall prepaid. WithaSS order we
Lflvs » written ruamnlco lo cure or re fttml the money. Sold by all
tfdruxutsts. Ask for it. take no other. Write for free Medical Book sent sealed
in plain wrapper. Address NKK V® SKJLD CO.» Masonic Temple. CaiCAao.
tor sale in O’Neill. Neb., by MOKUM SCO., l>ru**lstt.
^loxmng at Your Own Price for the Next 90 Days at SULLIVAN MERCANTILE COMPANY.
. ’ v # ; •' , •’