The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, November 14, 1895, Image 7

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    LIVING PICTUBES
in Abroad dayliqht.
One Real Living Picture Meets
Another.
What She Took Far e Spirit Wes
"Har Friend. '
Ghosts don’t walk in broad daylight,
and yet when a woman finds herself
suddenly confronted by the friend she
has mourned as dead she is apt to ex
perience a creepy sensation that isn’t
down in the dictionary.
In a case like this no amount of pres
ence of mind or self-possession can
ward off the mingled feelings of aston
ishment, fear, joy and curiosity that
will render a woman temporarily
tongue-tied. It is only after seeing the
cherished smile of greeting, after again
i
1
$
K
TWO MVISB PICTURES MEET,
feeling that there is throbbing life be
neath the dainty glove, and after again
hearing her own name spoken in the
ever familiar voice, that this strange
sensation vanishes.
THE STRANGE MEETING.
The meeting of the two women whose
pictures are here given, shows that
everyday life furnishes experiences as
thrilling as those that coino to us only
in our wildest dreams. And the fact
that such meetings occur every day
points a moral that every woman in the
land should take to heart Here was a
woman in the prime of life, pursued by
that sentinel which seeks its victim,
among her sex alone.
From a living picture she became, in
less than a year, a wreck of human
wretchedness. From despondency to
despair seemed but the remaining step,
the last step,
HER LAST FAREWELL.
Overcome by the presentiment that
precedes a lingering death, she asked
to be removed to her old home in the
West, and spoke what to all seemed to
be her last farewell. In the very pa
per that chronicled her departure the
doomed invalid found letters written
by Mrs. Belle Dement, of Iroquois,
111., Mrs. Minnie Smith, of Lowell, Ore
gon, and others. Some of these letters
are printed below. They told how cures
had been found for cases like her own
—shattered health that had almost
sapped life away. With no more hope
than that which prompts the drowning
man to catch at a straw—for she firmly
believed herself incurable, just as tens
of thousands of women believe them
selves incurable—she followed the ad
vice contained in these letters. The
result is best told in the woman’s own
words: “In less than five months,”
she writes, “I returned to my friends
in the East, as well and strong in body
and mind and as happy and free from
pain as any woman in the world. I
had gained nearly thirty pounds in
weight and was so changed in face and
form that when one of my dearest
friends met me in broad daylight she
almost fainted, for
SHE BELIEVED ME DEAD.”
She adds. “I owe my whole life and
happiness to Doctor I'ierce’s Favorite
Prescription, which cured me after doc
tors, travel, baths, massage, electricity,
had failed to even benefit!”
This woman’s case, remarkable as it
may seem, is not an exceptional one.
Thousands and thousands of just such
cures have keen made in every State by
this same special remedy for women’s
peculiar disorders and diseases. This
world-famed remedy is not recommend
ed as a “cure-all” but as a most perfect
specific for women's peculiar ailments
As
A POWERFUL, INVIGORATING TONIC,
it imparts strength to the whole system
and to the organs distinctly feminine
in particular. For overworked, “worn
out,” “run-down,” debilitated teachers,
milliners, dressmakers, seamstresses,
“shop-girls,” housekeepers, nursing
mothers, and feeble women generally,
l)r. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription is the
greatest earthly boon, being unequaled
as an appetising cordial and invigorat
ing tonic. As a
«
s
.m i: vi mu,
“Favorite Prescription” is unequaled in
subduing' nervous excitability, irrita
bility, Dervous exhaustion, nervous
prostration, neuralgia. hysteria,
spasms, chorea, or St. Vitus’s dance,
and other distressing, nervous symp
toms commonly attendant upon func
tional and organic diseases of the gen
erative organs of women. It induces
refreshing sleep and relieves mental
anxiety and despondency.
In complicated cases, or when the
kidneys or liver are affeeted, or the
blood impure. Ur. Pierce’s Golden Medi
cal Discovery should be taken conjoint
ly with the use of the “Favorite Pres
cription,” according to directions,
around each bottle.
A GBKAT BOOK FRKK.
When Dr. Pierce published the first
edition of his work. The People’s Com
mon Sense Medical Ad
viser, he announced
that after 680.000
copies had been sold at
the regular price. 81.50
per copy, the profit on
which would repay
him for the great
J JtlJ amount of labor and
B money expended in
producing it, he would
__ distribute the next
halt million free. As this number of
copies has already been sold, he is now
distributing, absolutely free, 500,000
copies of this most complete, interest
ing and valuable common sense medi
cal work eveT published—the recipient
only being required to mail to him. or
the World's Dispensary Medical Asso
ciation, of iiuffalo, K. Y., of which he
akA'i :<
is president, »-» this little
COUPON NUM- 1 COUPON | BKR With
twenty-one I No. 1#1 1(21) one
rant stamps*-* to cover cost
of mailing only, and the book will be
sentpost-paid. It is a veritable medical
library, complete in one volume. It
contains over 1000 pages and more than
300 illustrations Several finely illus
trated chapters are devoted to the care
ful consideration in plain language, of
diseases peculiar to women and their
successful home-treatment without the
aid of a physician and without having
to submit to dreaded “examinations”
and the stereotyped “local applica
tions,” so repulsive to the modestly sens
itive woman. The Free Edition is pre
cisely the same as that sold at $1.50 ex
cept only that the books are bound in
strong manilla paper covers instead of
cloth. Send sow before all are given
away. They are going off rapidly,
therefore, do not delay sending imme
diately if in want of one.
Whitest City in the World.
There cannot possibly be a whitei
city than Cadiz, unless it be built of
snow. The best way to approach the
port is to take a trip in one of the small
steamers which ply between the ports
of Morocco and Spain. As you near
the coast you see in front of you a
whjte mass which appears to bo float
ing upon the water, just as you are.
The first thought of a foreigner is that
he is in sight of an iceberg. The white
mass glittering in the sun, and ren
dered more dazzling by the blue sea
and sky, looks exactly like a monster
ice mountain partly melted, so that the
outlines of castles and hills appear
upon it; but only for a second does the
illusion last, for you know there are no
.icebergs in that part, and you arequick
ly informed that yon are looking at
Cadiz. No other town in the world
presents such a magic appearances
When Wrinkle* Beam the Brow,
And the lochs grow scant and silvery, in
firmities of age come on apace. To retard
and ameliorate these is one of the benign
effects of Hostetter's Stomach Hitters, a
medicine to which the agdd and infirm can
resort ns a safe solace and invizorant,. It
counteracts a tendency to rheumatism and
neuralgia, improves digestion, lectlfles bil
iousness and overcomes malaria A wine
glass before retiring promotes slumber.
llogs and Their Friend*.
It was Dr. John Brown of Edinboro.
I think, who spoke in sincere sympa
thy of the man who “led a dog-less
life.” It was Mr. “Josh Billings,” I
know, who said that in the whole his
tory of the world there is but one thing
that money cannot buy, to-wit: the
wag of a dog’s tail. And it was Prof.
John C. Van Dyke who declared the
other day, in reviewing the artistic
career of Landseer, that he made his
dogs too .human. It was the great
Creator himself who made dogs too hu
man—so human that sometimes they
put humanity to shame.
I have been the friend and confident
of three dogs, who helped to humanize
me for the space of a quarter of a cen
tury, and who had souls to be saved, I
am sure; and when I cross the Stygian
river I expect to find on the other shore
a trio of dogs wagging their tails al
most off in their joy at my coming, and
with honest tongues hanging out to
lick my hands and my feet And then
I am going, with these faithful, de
voted dogs at my heels, to talk dogs
over with Dr. John Brown, Sir Edwin
Landseer and Mr. Josh Billings.—
“Three Dogs,” by Laurence Hutton, in
November St Nicholas.
There is more Catarrh In this section
of the country than all other diseases
put together, and until the last few
years was supposed to be Incurable.
For a great many years doctors pro
nounced It a local disease, and pre
scribed local remedies, and by constant
ly falling to cure with local treatment,
pronounced It Incurable. Science has
proven Catarrh to be a constitutional
disease, and therefore requires consti
tutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh
Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney &
Co., Toledo, Ohio, Is the only constitu
tional cure on the market. It Is taken
Internally, in doses from ten drops to a
leaspoonful. It acts directly on the
blood and mucous surfaces or the sys
tem. They offer One Hundred Dollars
for any case it fails to cure. Send for
circulars and testimonials. Address
F. J. CHENEY & CO.. Toledo, O.
Sold by druggists; 76c.
HaU'B Family Pills, 25c.
The Tiniest Married Couple.
Westminster Gazette: On Septembei
22 the wife of a dwarf by the name of
Morris gave birth to twins at Blaena
von, North Wales. Morris is only
thirty-five inches in height, while his
wife is even smaller in stature. They
were married at Barthomley church
last Christinas, and have since been
traveling through the country as Gen
eral and Mrs. Small, being the smallest
married couple in the world. The
mother and infants are doing well.
Coo’* Cough Balaam
Is tbe oldest and best. It will break up a Coldoukt
*r man anything else. It Is always reliable. Try la
■Aggravating Days.
Aren’t there some times in your life
when everything seems to go wrong,
no matter how hard you try to have
them go right? Those are the trying
days when you want to blame all the
trouble on the way you get out of bed
in the morning.
Another woman says she can make
more enemies on one of these days than
friends during the other 304.
Words may be forgiven, but they are
not so easily forgotten. The unkind
speech that is forced from you because
you are not feeling quite well, or the
pettish, annoying action that you in
dulge in simply because you are nervous
or worried doesn’t do you one bit of
good and makes everybody around you
uncomfortable, and long after the
words have been uttered or the deed
done the memory will rankle and burn
and you will wish you had held on to
your tongue and your temper before
you got into such a scrape.
The Atlantic Monthly for November
will contain among other features three
short stories of exceptional quality: In
Harvest Time, by A. M. Ewell; The
Apparition of Gran'ther Hill, by Row
land E. Robinson; and The Face of
Death, by L. Dougall. No recent se
ries of papers in the Atlantic has at
tracted more wide attention than
George Birkbeclt Hill’s A Talk over Au
tographs. The fifth and last of the
series appears in this issue Lafcadio
Hearn’s contribution bears the sug
i gestive title After the War, and isquite
as readable as his other delightful
studies of Japan. Poems, exhaustive
Hook Reviews, and the usual depart
ments complete the issue.
The house is cold when love goes out.
' TARIFF FOR ENGLAND.
SHODDY FACTORIES RUNNING
DAY AND NIGHT IN YORKSHIRE.
I ' . -
Hop* for “Blissful Ignorance'* Haro
WhBe Selling li Their Rage—Clothes
that Won’t Wear gent Here by Whole
sale,
I
Bradford, Eng., Oct. 12. 1895.
Ever since I took cognizance of tho
dally public life of Bradford and its
surrounding manufacturing districts, I
must frankly admit that I never saw
Yorkshire in such “fettle” as she is
today. Talk about the people being
morbid and walking about with their
hearts in their pockets. All that senti
mental feeling and “funerallsm” was
buried last December 31, when the (sup
posed) last of McKlnleyism was con
signed to its long resting place.
Ever since January 1 dawned the bar
ometer has commenced to rise, and to
day, throughout the manufacturing dis
trict of Yorkshire, the trade mercury
stands at the maximum heat. Nobody
knows this more than our daily press,
and a thought of two on what has been
sent forth this week cannot prove
The Klse and Fall of Wism,
; iod%~l890lJJeje
90% of 1690 Wage
80% of 1890 UJoge
70% oj* l89Q0JQjO
60% of l890lDage
50% of 1690 Wage
i
amiss. One of our own town dallies de
votes its leader to “Our Freshening
Trade,” while the Leeds Mercury of the
same day waxes eloquent over the “de
cidedly increased activity” of the trade
of Dewsbury and Batley.
It Is acknowledged by everyone in
trade that Bradford, Huddersfield,
Dewsbury and Batley have not been
so busy for this last quarter of a cen
tury. From morn till night the rattle
of the shuttle is to be heard, and in
many of the factories of the two lat
ter towns work is being continued all
through the night. The repeal of the
McKinley tariff and the substitution of
a lower scale of import duties have
opened your markets properly to the
heavy shoddy made goods of Bentley
and Dewsbury. The Mercury admits
that “it is to this almost entirely that
the Improvement in the woolen trade of
Bentley is due,” and it also admits the
same in regard to the trade of Dews
bury.
For me to here Bet forth what is the
staple product for these two districts
Free Trade, No Home.
would be reckoning too fast upon the
Ignorance of your up-to-date readers,
but I’m in place In saying that presi
dents and low worsteds are being
shipped to your side ,in very large
quantities, and unless I'm mistaken
will add no dignity to the person or
the wearers, and yet the margin of
profit on these sales is said to be ex
tremely small, and Judging by the fall
ing to pieces of one or two Bradford
manufacturers, who have made entlre
. ly for your market, but who have called
, their creditors together this last fort
i • . * 5; .
night, there isn’t much “fat” being got
out of this big trade.
Still this volume of trade is furnish
ing additional employment for our fac
tory workers, who sadly needed it. Al
though the. Leeds Mercury is very ex
plicit, yet it only voices the same sen
timents cherished by thousands on this
side, but which sentiment, I think,
should become the personal property of
all true-hearted Americans. Let this
paragraph be soberly read and pon
dered :
“As to whether the makers of heavy
woolens will for any length of time be
able to maintain their present hold in
the American markets, there prevails
some difference of opinion amongst
Dewsbury manufacturers. The head of
one large firm does not take an optim
istic view of the situation. The fact
that the Americans have for years been
manufacturing a large proportion of the
cloth they require shows that they
have no small producing power, and
that they may soon be able to adapt
their factories to the production of the
particular class of goods now being so
extensively imported by their country.
It is, of course, very desirable, in the
interests of the British manufacturer,
that our cousins across the mill pond
Bhould continue to remain in blissful
ignorance. Knowing as we do Brother
Jonathan’s go ahead, never-to-be-beat
en temperament, however, this seems
highly improbable. There is also the
Important fact to be taken into consid
eration that, whilst in England raw ma
terial, owing to the increased demand
for it, is advancing, in America the ten
dency is for it to decline, because the
home manufacturers are using less of
it. The cost of carriage and the high
duties which yet remain upon British
heavy woolens demand that we should
produce more cheaply than the Ameri
cans themselves.
“This being so,” says the large Dews
The Upa and Downs of Labor.
1090
90,000
Hands Employed
WK
_ ,80,000
Hands Employed
.. 70,000
Hands Employed
60,000
Honds Employed
50,000
Hands Employed
i m
bury manufacturer referred to, “how
are we to continue to do so if the cost
of our raw material is greater than
theirs?” On the other hand there are
manufacturers in the district who be
lieve that some years must elapse be
fore the Americans can produce low
worsteds and mantlings of such a quali
ty and such a price as to shut English
goods out of their markets, and in the
meantime other markets may be opened
to this country.”
Blissful ignorance! I should think
so. But there cannot be much true soul
blissfulness when these very manufac
turers rejoice to know that the domes
tic makers are much chagrined by not
being able to meet them fully on their
own ground. But for my own part I
am glad to know that domestic makers
have a higher ideal than the shoddy
makers of Batley and Dewsbury. If
the sheep and wool industry had no bet
ter friends than, these manufacturers of
“cotton and shoddy” our farmer friends
would fare very badly. But while say
ing keep out of such an ignominious
blending of materials altogether, I
would ask: How long Is this to con
tinue?
But, do you ask, what is the real
actual difference in the value of man
ufactured textiles which are today
landed In New York as compared with
the days of the McKinley tariff? Let
me definitely state. Presidents and
beavers from this district had, even be
fore the McKinley bill was passed, to
pay a duty of nearly 200 per cent. A
president cloth weighing 28 ounces to
the yard, which could be sold in this
country by the manufacturer at 3G
cents a yard, would have to realize over
|1.14 a yard in New York to pay the
producer. In the first place there would
be 35 cents a pound specific duty to
pay upon it equal to 2s. 2d., or 52 cents
a yard. In addition there would be a
50 per cent, ad valorem duty, or 18 cents
a yard. In addition there would he 5 j
to 10 per cent, for commission and car
riage, thus bringing the price up to the
prohibitive figure mentioned.—Ameri
can Economist._
The Coward's Cry.
There is a striking resemblance bo
tween the attacks ofoldontheabolltion
tsts and those of today on the upholders
of protection. “Leave well enough ■
alone; don’t disturb the country by agl- |
tation; the people need repose," etc., I
were the cries then as now. I
Highest of all in Leavening Power.—Latest U. S. Gov’t Report
-sm.
' '$0
Absolutely pure
Arranging the Dinner Table.
The table should be placed with due
regard to the shape and sizo of the
room and also with proper relation to
light air and warmth. No laws are laid
down for breakfast, tea and the ordi
nary luncheon. These are informal
occasions, and much latitude is allowed
for the expression of individual taste;
but the wise woman, she who "looketh
well to the ways of her household," al
• ways sees that the best results, both in
comfort and appearance, are obtained
from the means at hand. Neither the
size of the family purse nor the quality
of the service atcominnnd, will prevent
her from seeing that the family board
is tastfully arranged and that the fur
nishings and accessories are so disposed
as to yield the greatest possible amount
of comfort and convenience under the
circumstances.
A 50-CT CALENDAR FREE. |
The publishers of The Youth’s Companion ;
offer to send free to ovury new subscriber n
hnndsome four-pupe calendar ixlO in., !
lithographed In nine bright colors. The re- ,
tall price of this calemlur Is 80 cents.
Those who subscribe at once, sending
H.7S. will also receive the paper free every
week from the timo the subscription Is re
ceived to January-1, l.flW. Also tno Thanks
giving, Christmas and New Year's liouble
Numbers free, and the Companion a full
year, 8; woeks, to Jan. 1. 1117. Address The
Youth's companion, 181) Columbus Ave.,
lloston.
The Potato's Genesis Unsolved,
The early naturalists differed greatly
ns to the origin of the potato, writes
John Gilmer Speed in November La
dle's Home Journal. In England it
was held to be a native of Virginia,
and in Spain it was said to have orig
inated in Peru. Modern opinion holds
that it is indigenous to the elevated
table lands of Chili, Peru, Bolivia,
Costa Rica, Mexico and southwestern
United States. It probably got to Vir
ginia by the hands of some early Span
ish explorers. It is certain, however,
that it was not cultivated in Virginia
till far into the eighteenth century,
and then it was introduced in the
American Colonies on account of the
esteem in which it was held in Europe.
Currant Up a Tree.
. Quite a freak of nature can be seen
in a big elm tree in Waterville, Me.
’In the fork of the tree, up a dozen feet
from the ground, a large currant bush
has taken root, and was recentlyloaded
with currants.
Plso's Cure is a wonderful Cough medi
cine—Mas. W. Pickebt, Van Bielen and
Blake Aves., Brooklyn, N. Y., Oct. 'JO, '94.
It isn't the biggest horn that makes the
best music.
The man with the heaviest mustache
often has the baldest bead.
l>o You Speculate?
Then send for our book, “How to Specu
late Successfully on Limited Margins in
Grain and Stock Markets." Mailed free.
Comstock, Hu?bes & Company, Rialto
Building, Chicago, 111.
Many a supposed giant has turned out to
be only a shadow.
An Enigmatical Bill of Fare
For a dinner served on the dining cars
of the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul
Railway will be sent to any address on
receipt of a two-cent postage stamp.
Apply to George H. Ileaford, general
passenger agent. Old Colony building,
Chicago, 111.
The bearer of good news always has a
sweet voice.
Billiard table, second-hand, for sale
cheap Apply to or address, H. C. A kit,
*11 8. ISth St., Omaha, Neh.
A Prolific Cereal.
In India, rice is realty cultivated
over but a small portion of the
country; but from the fact that it is a
very prolific cereal, ami that where
Brown it almost monopolizes the field,
if forms, as already understood, one of
the most important crops of tire entire
country. In British ltnrmah the rice
crop occupies about ilO per cent of the
ground under cultivation, nnd iu addi
tion to wlmt is consumed by the popu
lation, the nnnnal exportation reaches
some "‘>,000,000 bushels. While the
principal growth is in the lowlands bor
dering the great rivers, another variety
is cultivated which grows well upon
dry ground, and as far up ns the river
valleys of the Himalayas. The Kurmah
rice is of rather inferior quality, and
but one crop a year is grown.
A Child Enjoy*
Tho pleasant flavor, gentle action and
soothing effects of Syrup of Figs, when in
need of a laxative, and if the father or '
mother be costive or bilious, the most
gratifying results follow its use; so that it
is the best family remedy known, and every
family should have a bottle on hand.
Health once Impaired Is not easily «r«*stained, :
jretl'drter'sillrg r Tonic miauttnirtetf rjcuita
in many caso«. <iood forevory «re.ikaes6 nnu a «tnMUl
One of the Lest helps toward heaven is n
good mother.
-' -i -5
It I* Kara than wonderful
hoar pa'Jo .tly people luflerwlth ixirut. Oot pesos
uml th.iufcrt by reuiuvlng l;>eni with mntli'rcorns.
JFIT8—AIIFIt«»tonpert freeby Dr. K Ilne'sQma,
{Serve Kestoror. No yityuTtertim [JIM 1 lay'X i/he.
Marv.louactirea. TreallMnnilKtrlnWiottlrrreetd
t itcsMia. bead to Ur. Klmc^Ul Ai oU al., 1-ktUk, fa.
Denver was named for Cov. James W.
Denver, of Kansas.
"Hanson's tUflo Corn Halve.”
Warranted to cure or money refunded. Aek jroet
drueslrt for IS Price IS cento,
Brooklyn is cal od the City of Churches.
There are more than 300.
11 the Babjr Is Catting Teetn.
8e sure and urn that old and well-tiled remedy, IlSS.
(VlMtoWo SooTUnro Svnir for Children Teething,
Snow, at n very low temperature at sorb*
moisture.
Wisdom can live on what fools trample
underfoot.
The Greatest fledical Discovery ,
of the Age.
KENNEDY’S
MEDICAL DISCOVERY.
DONALD. KENNEDY, OF ROXBUAY, MASS.,
Has discovered in one of our common
pasture weeds a remedy that cures every
kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula
down to a common Pimple.
He has tried it in <5ver eleven hundred
cases, and never failed except in two cases
(both thunder humor). He has now in his
possession over two hundred tertilicates
of its value, all within twenty miles of
Boston. Send postal card for book.
A benefit is always experienced from
the first bottle, and a perfect cure is war
ranted when the right quantity is taken.
When the lungs are affected it causes
shooting pains, like needles passing
through them; the same with the Liver .
or Bowels. This is caused by the ducts
being stopped, and always disappears in a
week after taking it. Read the label.
If the stomach is foul or bilious it will,
cause squeamish feelings at first.
No change of diet ever necessary. Eat
the best you ca.i get, and enough of it
Dose, one tablespoonful in water at bed
time. Sold by all Druggists.
Queer Names.
; St. Jacobs Oil.
“ A Crick " A Stitch" .
Twist"—“A. Jam" I
“A. Halt"—"Baw Spots” r
" Blue Spots “ Dead Aches
are all well known of flesh, bone, __
f andmuscle, and easilycnred by VJaesA**VW*y VUi {jH
Timely Warning.
The great euccees of the chocolate preparations of
the house of Walter Baker & Co. (established
^ ^ in 1780) has led to the placing on the market
flpVmany misleading and unscrupulous imitations
‘‘^of their name, labels, and wrappers. Walter
Baker & Co. are the oldest and largest manu*
facturers of pure and high-grade Cocoas and
Chocolates on this continent. No chemicals are
used in their manufactures.
Consumers should ask for, and be sure that
they get, the genuine Walter Baker k Co.'s goods.
WALTER BAKER & CO., Limited,
DORCHESTER. MASS.
oealth
%LSNAt
a health signal.
The baby’s mission, its
work in life, is growth. To
Lthat little bundle cf love,
half trick, half dream, every
added ounce of flesh means
added happiness and com*
fort. Fat is the signal of
perfect health, comfort, good-nature, baby-beauty.
Scott’s Emulsion is the best fat-food baby can have, in
the easiest form. It supplies what he cannot get in his , |
ordinary food, and helps him over the weak places to perfect
growth, For the growing child it is growth. For the full*
grown, new life.
St turtyeu get SetH't Emultitn wAnytu want it andntt a cheat tulstituU.
Scott & Bov/ne, New York. All Druggist*. 50c. and 9* 0
. -■ I .. . 'v . •. i ,LV.: h i