The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, June 13, 1895, Image 5

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    fflCIAL DIRECTORY
i-rnor..
Into.
ST AT is.
. .Silas Holoomb
. K. E. Moore
..'.'...J. A. l'lpor
. ..J. S. Bartley
.."..Eugene Moore
' A S' Churchill
fp-i'-TATB UNIVEK8ITY.
ft,, laicu. Kcarneyi M.J. Hull.
3.V OliESSIONAL.
ltlJi j,', Mandurson. of Omaha;
' ,.f Madison.
k,]-s—First,D!StHct,J.B Strode
Mercer: Third. 3o^ O. Mikel
llaincr; Fifth, W. E. Ana
i>. M. Kcm.
JUDICIARY.
...Samuel Maxwell
■" judge Post and T. h.Noryal
.•nuumdATDisTKi^^
.“• j! J. King of O'Neill
.A. I,. Itartow of Chadron
A. I.' Warrick, of O'Neill
AND OFFICES.
O'NEILL.
...John A. Harmon.
. .Elmer Williams.
COUNTY.
f!nn
■1)istrictCourt;.:..J0h,M8klrving
. I. P. Mullen
. Sum Howard
. Bill Bethea
. Mike McCarthy
.. ....Cbas Hamilton
. Chas O'Neill
1,119. .Mrs. W. It. Jackson
. Dr. Trueblood
. M.F. Norton
.H. E. Murphy
SUPERVISORS.
.Frank Moore
. .Wilson Brodle
. W. F. F.isele
. George Eckley
. L. B. Maben
...A. 8. Eby
. A. C. Purnell
. D. G. Koll
. John Dlckau
. .H. B. Kelly
. K. J. Hayes
.,...B. Slaymaker
ty. K. H. Murray
.8. L. Conger
.John Houge
..\Vm. Lell
.E. J. Mack
...George Kennedy
. .John Alts
. James Gregg
.F. W. Phillips
. .A. Oberle
. Hugh O’Neill
..D. C. Blondln
.John Wertz
..U. O. Wine
.T. K. Doolittle
_J. B. Donohoe
.”,.G. H. Phelps
.J. E. White
.A. O.Mohr
CITY OF Of NEILL.
nr, E. J. Mack; Justices, E. H.
,ml S. M. Wagers; Constables, Ed.
nil Perkins Brooks.
OUNCILMBN—FIRST WARD.
years.—D. H. Cronin. For one
. MeEvony.
8RCOHD WARD.
years—Alexander Marlow. For
-Jake l’fund.
THIRD WARD.
years—Charles Davis. For- one
ler Merriinan.*)
CITY OFFICERS.
O. F. Biglin; Clerk, N. Martin,*
, John McHugh; City Engineer
risky; Police Judge, H. Ivautzman;
Police, Charlie Hall; Attorney,
lou; Weighma8ter, Joe Miller.
RATTAN TOWNSHIP.
sor, U. J. Hayes; Trearurer. Barney
K; Clerk, J. Sullivan; Assessor, Ben
Justices, M. Costello and Chas.
Jonstahles, John Horrlsky and Ed.
Road overseer dist. JMS, Allen Brown
l, John Enright.
IRS' RELIEF COMNISSION.
meeting first Monday in Febru
ch year, and at such other times as
necessary, liobt. Gallagher^ Page,
Win. Bowen, O’Neill, secretary;
rk Atkinson.
1'1UCK*8 CATHOLIC CHURCH,
ces every Sabbath at 10:30 o’clock,
r. Cassidy, Postor. Sabbath sohool
*ly following services.
[ODIST CHURCH. Bund
viues-Preachlng 10:30 A. M. and 7:
tssNo. 19:30 a. m. Class No. 2 (E
•ague) 6:30 f.m. Class No. 3 (Chil
iss
’ague) 6.... a.w. o
11*. m. Mind-week services—Genei
met mg Thursday 7:30 P. m. Ail w
welcome, especially strangers.
I E. E. HOSMAN, Pastor
80. The Gen. John
lull Post, No. 88, Department of Ne
t- A. it., will meet the lirBt and third
r evening of each month in Masonic
S. J. Smith, Com.
fw X VALLEY LODGE, I. 0
5“e58, every Wednesday evenln
E attend'' Visiting brothers cord;
?’ N‘0. L. Bright, Si
chapter, r. A. I
»Ma8or“eahall dThUI'Bda7 °f eac
Hours Sec. J. c. Habnish, H, P
{SivLvin ev?r? Mond»y at 8 o'clock p.
r tavftodT fiaU‘ Vl8itln» brethem
""'■•Tv.K.otKTaIda8OLDEN' C'C’
S-y^1 SLo" to
-— ’ 'U U. Ckonin, Clerk,
W' KKCAMPMMT no 30 I
« 'SMleC
Sprl he Pinn Ik.,
j' r, i ciiuwH tiau
beribe, Chas. Bright.
i'eUEK fl?0- 41» UAUOHTEBS
Adams, SAeS^VID80N-N-0'
-— ’ 0> H. Benedict, W. M,
W»ourX'Tud?dM?ets seconi
b0I1u; linn. u aay 0( each mouth ir
"'ini. Kec.
T'V. Golden, M.W.
I'l^T
^,:a.
'V*0EI1S, Sec.150' SlcCt'TCHAN, G. M.
ssESrawsw «s
Arrival ofMail.
dsi:.S?May'i^luded“ar,l KASrT
,i„_ _ rnoM . ..
'laJ'. 3'anda0i!nT,fE west.
11,1 included at..
i. TACIkip o.,,..
l^f-kwe*».S,bH* Mke.
*xcm.vS*U:W'p £'*' ^rriv«s
hl.humjaj.' M Arrives1;
s ^“n’dayl tvoi*® ™<ni.REA.
•'~4:«8tfSS\g
o’nh. uu sat. a
1 Mon<iayIL^ and paddock
Tue8d'*y,Thur8n^r»1ayat.
GW. , nabftt-at.
^TMon^y wtrtD Ni°bhara
B, 2 "tlLL AND to ^ &ttt- at..
w*d. and Friday*^ -
A Surprising Sequence In the Urn of
Oar First Sit Presidents.
Coincidence, which is simply mys
terious law of series which works in
an undiscovered groove, is most
wonderfully interwoven with the
lives, administrations and deaths of
our first half-dozen presidents.
Washington, we are told, “died on the
last day of the week, the last hour
of the day, the last month of the
year, and in the last year of the cen
tury.” All this series of coincident
tacts needs to make it truly marvel
ous is for the day of his death to
have ocourred on the thirty-firBt day
of December instead of the four
teenth.
The “coincidence of eight" which
follows in the lives of the next five
presidents is even more remarkable:
Born. Retired.
John Adams.. 1741 1801
Thomas Jeflerson..1743 1808
James Madison.1751 1817
James Monroe.1759 1825
J. Q Adams.1797 1829
From this table it will be seen that
each of these distinguished Ameri
cans was born eight years after his
predecessor, and that each (with the
exception of J. Q. Adams) went out
of office eight years after his prede
cessor. John Adams, Thomas Jeffer
son, James Madison and James Mon
roe each retired in the sixty-sixth
year of their ages, and three out of the
four died on the fourth of July, our
anniversary of independence.
George Vanderbilt’* Neighbor.
George Vanderbilt has a country
villa and a tract of 9,000 aores near
Asheville, N. C. There are fourteen
acres ih the southwestern portion of
this estate the young millionaire
does not and cannot own, though he
has made effort after effort to do sa
The fourteen acres belong to a negro
man named Collins, who, when Mr.
Vanderbilt bought the large tract,
asked him $600 more for this small
tract than he was willing to give. A
few weeks later Mr. Vanderbilt went
to Collins and agreed to his terms,
but Collins now added a couple of
thousand to the first price, and as
often as Mr. Vanderbilt got in the
notion to pay Collins his price Col
lins went up a safe distance, and has
just announced that he will not sell
the land at any price so long as he
can have Mr. Vanderbilt for his
neighbor. He tells Mr. Vanderbilt
that the value of a good neighbor in
this world cannot be estimated by all
, the money of the Vanderbilt family.
—New York Press.
Getting Australian Bear Into Germany.
John GedHes. of Sidney, N. S. W.t
has been visiting Berlin, at the ex
pense of the government of the col
ony, trying to introduce frozen beef
and mutton from Australia. One of
his objects was to induce the com
missariat department of the German
army to order supplies for provision
ing the army. The French authori
ties have already given orders with
the view of trying the feasibility of
the plan upon a considerable scale.
The importation of frozen meat from
Australia for the army would, it is
argued, greatly relieve German tax
payers. It is claimed that if Paris
and Metz had been provided with re
frigerators in 1870-71 the latter town
could have held out for at least a
year and the former for no less than
five years. Refrigerators and every
device for keeping meat are now
found in all the chief French fort
resses and cities. It is understood
that the German war department is
willing to entertain any practical
proposal laid before it.—New York
Evening Post..
A Delay.
Featherstone—Willie, is your sister
in?
Willie—Yes. She's trying on a
new gown, and I guess you can’t see
her before to-morrow,
Featherstone—Why it ought not to
take her very long to try on a new
gown.
Willie—No; but the dressmaker is
trying to collect the money for it. —
Church Review.
Worn by Good Quel Beis.
At Hatfield house, the residence of
Lord Salisbury, in the James IL pic
ture gallery there is preserved the
garden hat worn by Queen Elizabeth
and a pair of her majesty’s silken
hose. The room is also remarkable
for beautiful alabaster sculptures,
and it is the rule for every royal vis
itor to leave behind a photograph,
to which is added an autograph of
the donor.
The Slowest Yet*
It was a very slow train indeed,
and the traveling man remarked to
the conductor:
“Would there be any objection to
my getting off thi-> ar right nowP”
“Why, my dear sir, it’s in motion.”
“I don’t doubt it, but I thought
I’d like to look at it from the outside
and see if I can't tell which way it
is going—Washington Star.
Tho (ireateat of Plea.
The largest pie ever made was
baked at Denley Dale, England, for
the queen’s jubilee. It spoiled, how
ever, so that when it was opened the
stench was awful. The next week
another was -made, of 672 pounds of
flou*, 1,300 pounds of potatoes, one
heifer, two calves and two sheep.
Couldn’t Buy It. '
Guest—What a magnificent' resi
dence that is opposite.
Mr. Pompous—Grand! A veritable
palace! I have been trying to buy
that place for years.
Guest—They won’t sell, eh?
Infant Terrible—Yes, but they
want cash.
Near Enough.
She—You say that you have never
been in love. How near have you
come to it?
He—I was married once.—Life’s
Calendar.
Tk* Aeqnlr*m*aita of a
Omni Barolitlonllt of 1840.
An old man with long white hair
and beard and an anxious look was
seen by a Pittsburg Dispatch reporter
poring over a directory. When he
was asked what he was hunting for
he said: “I’m trying to find the only
man who I can count on as a friend.
Ho was living here forty years ago,
but his name 4s not in the directory
now.”
As he was talking a lady approached
to ask a question The old man
stopped suddenly and with a “beg
your pardon" doffed his hat and stood
aside at a respectful distance in a
Chestorfiold manner. Continuing,
after the lady had left, he said: “You
are correct in thinking that 1 have
seen better days. My name is Carl
Maier, and I was ono of the revolu
tionists in Germany in 1849, being
secretary of the Democratic party
and civil commissary at fiuchen in
the grand duchy of Baden. I am an
examplo of a shattered ambition, it
being my ono aim in life to do some
thing for the good of the public.
After the failure of our cause I was
forced to flee to America, and went
to the house of Frederio Hecker,
chief of the German revolution, who
had also come to America and located
in Illinois. Here I resumed my old
calling as a professor and taught his
children. When I look back upon
my seventy years oi uie x can say
that the only friend I have in the
world is myself.”
Did you ever see a person begin
writing a letter at the last period
and then write backwards and finish
up at the beginning P That’s what
Carl Maier can do without the least
exertion. It seems just as easy for
him to remember the words and let
ters of a sentence in reversed order
as it is for the ordinary person to re
member them in their regular order.
It is an easy matter for him to think <
backward, and, what is more aston
ishing, he writes upside down. The
letters are all inverted as he looks
at them when writing. And, again,
performing this feat, whieh one
thinks would require all the power
and attention of his brain, he is not
disturbed by carrying on a conversa
tion with you, no matter how foreign
the subject may be. Maier’s per
formance would almost make one
believe the theory promulgated by a
scientist that we have “double-bar
reled brains. ” If you repeat a sen
tence to Maier, no matter how long
it may be, after hearing it once be
will commence and write the sentence
verbatim, starting at the last letter
of the last word and finishing it
through the first letter of the first
word.
It seems to be natural to him to*
invert his mind in his work, for he
never falters or stops to think, but
writes as rapidly as a person writing
in an ordinary way. “I acquired
this in a peculiar manner,” said
Maier. “While I was clerk in a
grocery store in Saxony I was an
ambitious sort of a boy and always
wanted to do everything differently
from every person else. When the
customers came to me for their bill
I would place the bill head in an
inverted position in front of mo
and make the bill out backward, as I
have written for you.
“I came very nearly being prose
cuted for practicing witchcraft.
Many people assigned this power to
the witches. Then the Spiritualists
came to me and told me I was con
trolled by a wonderful mind.
Although I couldn’t explain it by
any other theory than that it was a
concentration of my mind. I at last
persuaded them that there was
nothing supernatural in it I am
not able to perform the feats I used
to when I was younger. I am get
ting old and my memory is not as
it used to be. My eyesight is pretty
near gone. I can't see very much.
In looking at you I see that it is a
form and know that you are a human
being, because you speak to me, but
I could not see my writing if I did
not use a blue pencil. It seems to be
the only color I can see,
True to the letter*
<3as Officer—You say you are used
to taking meters. But we want a
man who can do the work expedi
tiously.
Applicant—Oh, I understand that.
I just take the meter for a few quar
ters, and after that I strike an av
erage without taking the trouble to
consult the meter.
Gas Officer—That's all right as far
as it goes, but it doesn’t go far
enough. Instead of striking an av
erage, we find it more business-like
to strike the consumer for all he
will stand.
He'd Been Backed.
Horseman—That is a remarkably
fine animal you are driving, madame.
Lady—Oh, I wouldn’t part with
this horse for the world. He's just
as gentle as can be, and real fast, too.
“So I should judge. Has he ever
been backed against any noted trot
ters?"
“Well, I don’t know, but it seems
to me we back against pretty much
everything in the street every time I
attempt to turn ’round. ”—New York
Weekly.
Material for *■ leaven.
“See how the sun gilds the west
ern sky!” he said as they emerged
from a leaf-embowered avenue. “See
what a soft, rich color the blending
tints produce. How delicate it is,
and yet how glorious.”
And she, raising her soulful eyes
to the sky, replied:
“Uh-liuh; it ’ud make an awful
pretty dress, wouldn’t it?”
Good or Had, Not Explained.
Jones—I say. Miss Brown, how is
it that you are always out when I
call?
She—Oh, just luck.—Life.
SUPERSTITIOUS RAILROADERS.
Th« COM Which AocldcaM Hun Upon
and fireman.
Of the superstition of sailors, Ash'
erfolk and others we have all heard,
but that such a distinguishing char
acteristic should have attached itself
to railway men does not appear to be
generally known. It savors some
what of the anomalous that tuoh a
pre-eminently praotioal class of men
should be the victims of oredulity re
garding the supernatural; such, how
ever is the case.
I recently had ocoaslon to inter
view a prominent railway official, and
in the course of the conversation
that ensued that gentleman incident
ally alluded to two collisions which
had lately occurred in the neighbor
hood, following up his remarks with
the announcement that the local men
would be in a state of subdued ox
cltement and <aflurry" till a third
mishap took place. Suoh is the
superstition of the railway man.
Upon expressing considerable aston
ishment 1 was assured that this kind
of thing was notorious among rail
road men in general, and in this par
ticular instanoo it was known that
the clroumstances of the two pre
vious accidents were the chief topios
among the workingmen in all depart
ments, who were also oounting on
the possibilities of a third disaster.
Curiously enough, a touch of
realism was lent to the information
just imparted by the explanation
that the second of the two collisions
referred to was due >o the drlvor of
one of the engines, a reliable servant,
noted for his alertness and precision,
with an honorable record of some
forty years’ servioe, who being, it
was believed, so disturbed over the
“omens" of the first occurrence and
so engrossed with what he felt would
be two other catastrophes, that he
committed the slight error of judg
ment which caused his locomotive to
crash into another coming in an op
posite direction. The statement is
given as the conviction of one who
has spent upward of a quarter
of a century among railway
men of all classes, and who has
known the driver alluded to for a
long period of years. So came about
a second collision. Surely supersti
tion could go no further than this.
But here is a tragic sequel—a se
quel which, unfortunately, will in all
probability do much to strengthen
the reprehensible beliefs of these
men. Two days after the interview
above mentioned, within fifteen min
utes' drive from the scene of the
second collision, an express mall
failed to take the points, a portion
of the train with the tender of the
engine was violently thrown across
the rails and one poor stoker killed.
This is what the railway men will
term the "third mishap." “There’s
the third,’’ they say; and now per
haps they will breathe freely for a
season.
A Qaanr Klaotrlo Cloak.
T. F. Hudson, a convict in the
Maryland penitentiary.has construct
ed a real horologioal oddity in the
lhape of an electric clock. The dial
la a semicircle of white marble with
twelve marked at each corner, the
other numerals for the hours being
figured along the arc. It has one
hour hand and two minute hands,
the last two set opposite to each
other, and in such a manner that
one is seen at noon and the other at
midnight, and at no other time. The
seconds are marked on a dial that
turns from right to left, while the
pointer or second hand is stationary.
Hudson is a born genius, and nearly
ivery room in the prison is adorned
with a specimen of his ingenuity.
What Will tha Cook Da?
Specialists on throat diseases are
beginning to take unusual interest
in culinary methods. They advise a
kitchen quarantine on wash days
and boiled dinner days, giving as a
reason that the steam from boiling
clothes and pickled meats that re
quire much heat produces many
illnesses of the respiratory Organs
aggravates slight or chronic diseases
of tne nose, throat and lungs.
Patients are advised to vacate apart
ments having dark or ill ventilated
kitchens and to keep all babies and
ailing children out of the kltohen
when cooking is going on.
It itemtnded Him.
Before the night session began,
the senate had adjourned, snys Kate
Foote, " and several senators were
getting their hats in the cloak-room,
Mr. Stewart among them, when one
of his fellow senators said: "Stewart,
you remind me of a clergyman. ” Mr.
Stewart naturally stared, then
laughed and said: “How,pray?” “Yes,
you are like a certain minister who
was telling a friend that he had
preached two hours and a half. ‘Were
you not tired,’ said the friend, sym
pathetically. *No, no, I was as fresh
as a rose; but you should have seen
the congregation. ’ ”
Expected Him.
Young Yardlie—I understand that
there is a vacancy in your establish
ment, sir, and I havo come to apply
for the position.
Senior Partner, dryly—I havo been
expecting you. ”
"Expecting mo?”
“Yes. I heard you ask one of the
ilerks if it was true that odf Satur
day half-holidays were to be continued
a month longer.”
This Hoy a philosopher.
Tommy—Are you going to whip
me, mamma?
Mamma—Yes, I am. Tommy.
Tommy—You said the Other day
that whipping never did me any
good, didn't you?
Mamma—I believe I did.
Tommy—Then what's tbs use of
whipping me again?—New Orleans
Picayune.
Tkar War* too Full or right to tail
Hli Quiet Spirit.
It was s curious olroumstanoe, sad
everybody in the smoking-car seemed
to oatch on at the same moment. On
the right-hand side sat a man with a
cowboy's hat, woolen shirt, red neck
tie, pants in his bootlegs, and a gen
eral air of toughness. Opposite him
sat another man similarly attired,
but with the addition of a grizzly
bear’s claw for a scarf-pin. Ono had
boon with us for over an hour—the
last had just boarded the train.
Those two men bogan to size each
othor up and snoor and look sarcas
tic. Finally the man on the right
meanly observed:
••I reckon your bag of Injun soalps
is in the baggage car, eh)”’
••Yes, but my guns aru yero!”
promptly responded the othor.
••What’s the use of guns onless ye
know how to shoot P"
"What’s the use of gab if you
don’t back it upP”
They were now hot and ready for
more, and it soon oamo.
••Out on our ranch wo size sioh
fellers as you up fur wolf bait," said
the right-hand man.
••Is that soP Wall, out on our
ranch we don't wait to size up ohapB
like you. We knows ’em a mile away
fur duffers. ’’
"Take that back I"
"Never!"
-Luujr uuui up, ctuu, ui
course, we rushed forward to stop
the fight Near by was a man who
had been trying to get to sleep to
cure a headache. He sprang up,
peeled off his ooat, threw down his
hat and shouted at the two terrors:
“Both of you sit down!” as if death
wasn't five feet away.
They dropped back on the seats
like bags of sand, and he stood over
them and demanded of the one on the
right:
“Where do you camp when you're
at home?"
"In Ohio,” was the meek reply.
“And you?’’
"In Indiana.”
“I guess that’s right. That’s about
the way I sized you up. Just a word
to you. Shut right up. Don’t peep
another peep about b’ars, injuns or
ranches or shootln’. You have made
me tired and if there’s any more of it
I’ll drop both of you off this car into
the ditch!”
He went back to his seat to nurse
his headache, and the two terrors
sat so quietly for the next hour that
some of us wondered if they hadn't
been scared to death. Later on one
of them fondly caressed his b’ar
olaws and the other read a dime
novel, and they were at peace with
all the world.
Lord Crom*.r
Lord Cromer, the British diplo
matic a gent at Cairo and the real
ruler of Kgypt, is a very interesting
Englishman. It is his habit to read
Homer in the original Greek for half
an hour after breakfast every morn
ing. and his afternoons are given up to
lawn tennis. At the time of the recent
"crisis”In Egyptian affairs ho ordered
the khedive to dismiss his prime
minister within twenty-four hours,
sent to Malta and to Aden for troops
to support him in case of emergency,
and went out and played tennis until
sunset Richard Harding Davis, who
has sent to Harper’s Weekly an en
tertaining account of this and other
of his lordship's performances, thinks
that a diplomat who can snub a king
and set 8,0(X) soldiers in motion in
the morning and spend the afternoon
calmly calling out “forty love,"
“forty-fifteen,” etc., is a very re
markable man; and most people will
agree that he is.—New York World.
Her View of It.
City Girl, to farmer boy—Do you
like living on the farmP
Farmer Boy—Yes, I like it very
much.
City Girl—1 suppose it is very nice
in summer; but to go out in the cold
and snow to gather winter apples
and harvest winter wheat must be
anything but pleasant. Let me read
you a little poem I have written
about the farmer’s pleasant life.—
Texas Siftings.
Ground* for Divorce.
Mrs. Thompson—So you have de
cided to obtain a divorce from your
husband, Mrs. Arnold P
Mrs. Arnold—Yes, it's the only
means of settling matters.
‘•lipon what grounds will you sue?”
“Too frequent change in hired girl
and typewriter.”—Arkansaw Trav
eler.
Partial Information.
Little Boy—Every time I tie my
shoelaces, they slip. I wish you’d
tie them in a pine knot for me.
Grandpa—What sort of a knot is
that?
Little Boy—I don’t know, but I’ve
heard it’s tough_Street & Smith’s
Good News.
Proof Positive.
Mr. Beenthero Yale—Well, I guess
John has settled down to study for
his examination at last.
Mrs. Yale—Why do you think soP
Mr. Beenthore Yale—He doosn’t
write home for money to buy books
as often as ho did earlier in the sea
son. —Puck.
war Op.
Dillaway—Talk about your aris
tocracy descent; why, my father had
ofteu 1 i,000 men directly under him.
Caraway—Ah, a general?
“Well, not exactly. ”
“A wholesale contractor P”
“No, an aeronaut”—N.Y.Dispatch.
Heart Disease JO Yrs!
Short Breath, Palpitation.
Mr. G. W. McKInsey, postmaster of
Kokomo, Ind., and a brave ex-soldier,
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 side, and had pain
around my heart. I beoamo so ill
that I was much alarmed, and for* '
tunately my attention was called to
Dr. Miles’ Heart Cure
I decided to try It The first bottle
made a decided Improvement in my
condition, and five bottles have com
pletely cured me.”
G. W. McKINSEY, P. M., Kokomo, Ind
Dr. Hllea Heart Core la Mid on a pnltlm
guarantee that the firatbottle will benefit.
AUdruRglataaeflltatiU S bottle, forth or
Por Bale br all Druggi.u,
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guaranteed tocuren.l nervous diseases, suen as Weak Memory, Low of Urmia
Power. Headache1, Wakefulness, Host Manhood, NiKhtlj Emissions, Nsrveus*
ness,at! drains ami loss of power In Generative Organs of either sex cause#
bjr overexertion, youthful errors, excessive use of tobacco, opium er stim
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in plain wrapper. Address N £KV£ CO.» Ma&ouic Temple,CSIGAQO.
or said in O’Neill. Neb., by MOUK1S & CO., Druggists.
''•vtning at Your Own Price for the Next 30 Days at SULUVAN MERCANTILE COMPANY.
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