The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, June 04, 1896, Image 3

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    LET OUB FLAG FLY.
1 EFFORT TO PROTECT AMERICAN
. MERCHANT MARINE.
Old Discriminating Duty to Be Revived
Against Foreign Imports—Policy That
Covered Oceans with the Stars an**
Stripes. _'
'Senator Elkins, or West Virginia,
'Who, by the way, is one among the real
friends of Protection in the Senate who
has repeatedly expressed a desire to see
some legislation enacted by the present
Congress in the interests of the falling
industries of the country, is also mak
ing a good fight for the enactment of a
shipping law that shall discriminate in
favor of the shipping interests of the
United States. Senator Elkins is a
Stalwart Protectionist, anil he- is ready
'to support. any measure that will be
- beneficial to American interests,
whether of the factory, the farm or of
commerce. In reply to the question re
cently propounded by us to the Senators
respecting their duty toward the Ding
ley Revenue bill, Senator Elkins
replied promptly, and with great earn
estness, that he favored pressing the
bill to a vote at every opportunity, and
that he had been of that opinion from
the beginning.
The West Virginia Senator is equally
in earnest with respect to the bill which
he introduced early in the session, the
object of which was to restore the dis
criminating policy as enacted by former
legislation of Congress, by which Amer
ican ships carrying goods imported
from foreign ports are to be given an
advantage over ships owned and sailed
for foreigners. This policy is in line
with the best Protection to American
shipping, which is certainly entitled to
-every fair advantage that can be given
by the laws of an American Congress.
1 Senator Elkins’ bill is still quietly
sleeping in the pigeon-holes of the
•Committee on Commerce, and although
that committee is presided over by so
good a friend of American shipping as
is Senator Frye, of Maine, there does
not appear to be any prospect of the
bill being reported and favorably con
sidered during the remaining few days
of this session. Like the Revenue bill,
•and similar measures that are designed
to give more and better Protection to
American interests from the tre
mendous competition to which they are
IT subjected by the cheap labor and low
standard of living in the old world, the
Shipping-bill must wait until the Sena
tors become awakened to a realizing
sense of the duty of the hour.
It is creditable to Senator Elkins,
however, that in the face of the dis
couragements of the times he con
tinues bis fight for all Protective meas
ures, aud that h,e promises to stir up
the Senate before the present session is
■ended with some vigorous talk and
work for the Shipping bill and dis
criminating duties in favor of our ship
ping.
The history of such discriminating
duties, the levying of a 10 per cent,
•additional duty on goods imported from
foreign countries when they are
brought in here in foreign ships, gives
so much evidence of the beneficial ef
fects of that policy upon our shipping
that it would seem that a mere refer
ence to it should arouse even the Re
publican members of the United States
senate. Every time that policy was
tried it resulted in splendidly stimu
lating the American merchant marine.
During the periods when the discrimi
. nating duties were enforced our ship
ping interests were materially revived,
and the abandonment of the policy was
promptly followed by a corresponding
deciine in our shipping interests.
A ftor mtli on n 1V n ^ ^_ . » _i _
nothing policy, and the competition of
the heavily subsidized shipping lines
of foreign countries that are aggres
sive in their contests for trade, the re
sult has been that American ships are
carrying only11 per cent of our foreign
trade. Under the policy of Protection
to our manufacturing industries, and in
spite of the vicious and unrelenting op
position of the Free Trade party, our
Industries have thrived and. prospered
until the present blight of the Free
Trade administration. But, even dur
ing those years of- continuous Protec
tion to domestic industries, the Ameri
can shipping interests were denied one
of the simplest and safest means of se
curing to it Protective advantages by
the adoption of a policy that would also
afford additional Protection to Ameri
can industries, and put more money in
the Treasury, where it is now so great
ly needed.
We wish Senator Elkin3 success in
his battle for more Protection to Ameri
can shipping. He is so true a triend to
Protection to all our industries that his
laborE in behalf of our shipping inter
ests cannot but result in good fruits at
no distant day. And the sooner the
better. The policy he advocates is
distinctly American in Idea and spirit, j
In results, also, it would be distinctly
of American advantage. Therefore we
need it. And the more legislation of a
similar character that we can place
upon our statute books the better it will
be for the United States.
Try to give pleasure and you will re
ceive more than vou give.
ARTISTS ARE IDLE,
“Tariff Reform" Increases Import*
Cheap Foreign Reproductions.
of
Art Works—Imports,
—Calendar years—
1894. 1895
Free .$2,411,053 $4,580,010
Dutiable . 730,887 .
Total .$3,141,940
From 1894.
United Kingdom.. $788,178
France . 1,135,231
Germany. 98,129
Italy . 128,584
Other European
countries. 72,912
British North
America . 184,051
Other countries... 3,968
$4,580,010
-Free.
1895.
$1,199,643
2,613,376
266,334
274,650
173,788
130,396
21,823
Total .$2,411,053 $4,580,010
1893.—Protection.
_ n
1800—“Tariff Reform."
Fiscal Dutiable
years. imports.
1890 _$1,796,372
1891 _2,014,510
1892 _ 2,030,599
1893 _ 2,366,765
1894 _ 1,484,184
Calendar years:
1894 .... 730,887
1895 .
Free 1
imports. Duties,
. $ 91,550
. 287,807
. 241,612
. 339,265
. 162,918
$2,411,053 .
4,580,010 *12,140
■"Fiscal year
It is mostly the cheap reproductions
that are now imported for publication
in American magazines. These can b«
secured at a trifling cost. Considering
that the imports of foreign art works
have so largely increased during the
business depression in this country, it
is evident that the quantity of foreign
art works must have seriously inter
fered with the business of American
artists.
Art Work*—Exports.
Fiscal
year. Value.
1887 .$221,372
1888 . 271,010
1889 . 694,413
1890 . 228,082
1891 . 406,374
Fiscal
year. Value.
1892 . $422,238
1893 . 210,892
1894 . 391,763
1895 . 471,104
1895*. 554,175
♦Calendar year.
This is what England predicted when
the Gorman law was awaiting the
president’s pleasure:
Painters and sculptors may fairly
rejoice, since oil paintings and water
color drawings, and statuary, which
are at present subject to a duty of fif
teen per cent., will in future be ad
mitted into the United States free of
duty. We cannot doubt that the with
drawal of the duty will tend to bright
en the prospects of English and French
artists in their relations with the
States.—The Builder, London, August
25, 1894.
Senator Mitchell's Opposition.
This bill (the Wilson bill), In so far
as it deals with the sheep and wool
industry is arbitrary, invidious, and
unjust. It places this great Industry
cn the sacrificial altar and offers its
ashes as a sacrifice to the avarice of
the foreign wool grower and to some
extent the greed of the eastern manu
facturer, and transfers finally by oper
ation of law to their coffers the great
bulk of the $500,000,000 invested in it,
and turns out of employment the 500,
000 men employed in carrying it on.
A bill which vouchsafes protection to
the manufacturer and refuses to ex
tend it to those engaged in the other
industry, which favors the foreign pro
ducer, is one which discriminates un
justly, unnecessarily, mercilessly and
cruelly against the agriculturist and in
favor of the manufacturer, against the
American and in favor of the for
eigner.—Hon. J. H. Mitchell, United
States Senator, of Oregon.
Study til. Difference.
Under protection we derive a large
revenue upon a comparatively small
volume of imports of wool. Under
Democratic tariff we derive no revenue
from a very large volume. Under pro
tection the farmer commanded a good
price for his wool, and consequently
was a large buyer of goods; under
Democratic tariff he gets a low price. '
and therefore is a small purchaser.—
Chicago Inter Ocean. i
DAIRY AND POULTRY.
INTERESTING CHAPTERS FOR
OUR RURAL READERS.
Bow Screenful Farmer* Operate Thl*
Department of the Farm—A Few
Hint* a* to the Care of Live Stock and
Poultry. _
ON. Jonathan F.
Dollivcr, of Iowa,
delivered a ringing
address in behalf
of the filled , cheese
bill In the house of
r e p r e sentatlres.
Below are some ex
tracts from it:
I support the bill
because it offers an
appropriate legal
protection against the adulteration ot
the people’s food. In the process ot
taxation it Identifies a fraud and es
corts a notorious swindle into the light
of day. You have read the pre
cept of Scripture which exhorts
you to take no thought of what ye shall
eat or what ye shall drink or where
withal ye shall be clothed. That Scrip
ture will need a new Interpretation un
less we can in some way manage to
rescue the food and drink and clothing
of the people of the United States from
the hands of the counterfeiters. As
the cas » now stands, neither the clothes
'on our backs nor the food on our tables
nor the common weapons for fighting
thirst between meals have escaped sus
picion. In this carnival of deceit the
rich and the poor alike suffer. I under
take to say that this world in which we
live will not go on permanently under
a system like that. It will not go on
forever buying coffee grains delicately
molded out of blue mud. It will not go
on buying tea that has been generously
commingled with the dried leaves of
the forest. It will not go on drinking
wine that has been manufactured in a
cellar without the intervention of
grapes, nor those other and more pene
trating beverages that have entered
into partnership with such a fatal as
sortment of explosive chemicals as to
greatly facilitate the descent of our
fellow-citizens, as the old negro preach
er expressed it, do-wn the lubricated
steeps to the opaque profundity of dam
nation.
* * *
I do not say that all the manufac
turers in the present stage of the in
dustry are guilty of fraud. I will not
even go so far as to say that all the
wholesalers habitually perpetrate a
fraud. But I do say that the evidence
is sufficient to show that the business
itself is a fraud, and for one I am here
for the purpose of looking a little to the
rights of the man who orders “Iowa
full cream cheese” and is furnished by
the wholesale dealer with a spurious
and inferior article. I am here looking
to the rights of the citizens of this
country who go into a store for the pur
pose of buying cheese and take home
with them an objectionable admixture
of skimmed milk and soap grease. I
am speaking here for the victims of the
American boarding-house system who
eat cheese for the purpose of promoting
the digestion of pie, and then have to
take another pie in order to secure the
digestion of the cheese. The American
dairymen understand this question
! thoroughly. Every profound student of
human affairs teaches us that agricul
ture is the basis of civilization itself,
and that.no possible prosperity can ex
ist in this world under conditions that
do not yield to the cultivators of the
soil a fair return. So that if a new
business, begotten in the laboratory of
the chemist, by false pretenses, threat
ens to narrow the opportunities of the
American farm by occupying its mar
ket place at home or by destroying its
reputation abroad, as my friend from
Minnesota indicated, and the law comes
in and levies a tax on that new busi
ness, it does not alarm, me that the tax
may operate in some measure, at least,
to promote the welfare of the most
ancient and honorable occupation of
the human race.
* • • •
One-half the American people llvo
on the farm; and nearly all the rest of
them that are worth mentioning were
born there. The general welfare, to
provide for which our Institutions were
established, requires that the food-pro
ducing millions should be secure in
their pursuits; nor should any adroit
imposition, however backed by money,
be allowed to take from the farm any
portion of its legitimate earnings. Give
the American cow a fair chance. She
has been the faithful servant of man.
She landed with our ancestors at Ply
mouth Rock; and, tied behind the old
weather-beaten emigrant wagon, she
has marched, with the household goods
of the pioneers who have taken posses
sion of this country, from ocean to
ocean. She has increased and multi
plied and replenished the earth, until
today the industries which she has
made possible contribute annually to
the wealth of the world more money
than the great combinations of modern
capital—more than iron and steel, more
than lumber and coal, more than cot
ton and wheat, more than all the looms
of New England, more than all the mys
terious riches of gold and of silver.
Black I.angdmns.
I notice in the Farmers’ Review some
inquiry as to the value of Black Lang
shans, and conclude to give my views
of them. 1 have been raising them for
eleven years, and for the last seven
years have not kept any other breed.
They are all-round good fowls, being
of good size and hardy, and most excel
lent winter layers. They make good
mothers, and are quick to mature.
Their fldfeh is nicely marbled, and hence
they make a good table fowl. For the
month of December I sold from a flock
of eighty hens fifty-four dozen of eggs,
and did not keep account of the eggs
used in a family of nine. For the month
of January I sold sixty-two dozen. As
the two months named are not very
good months tor egg production, I think
the record a good one.
Mrs. Jennie Roberts.
Johnson County, Nebraska.
Competitive Laying.
I see you asking for the egg records,
and. as I have not sent you a letter for
a long time I thought I would send you
a few lines now. I do not know your
object in asking for these records,
whether to compare this year with last
or to see what we are doing this sea
son. At any rate, I will give you the
straight of it as it Is with me. My
ben parks are fifty feet square, that Is,
fifty feet each way. Each park contains
a cockerel and six or eight pullets. I
have always stuck up for the Leghorns
and Hamburgs, still, I must say that
this spring my White Wyandottes have
kept in the lead, at least until they
wanted to sit. Yet there may be a
reason for them doing so well, for my
Wyandottes are all pullets, while my
Leghorns and Hamburgs are mostly
old hens. I keep the old hens because
I think they give better and stronger
chicks, even it they do not lay so many
eggs. I had to use pullets in my Wy
andotte pens, as I had no old Wyan
dottes. I have averaged in these pens
four or five eggs a day, and that, too,
all the spring. For about two weeks
straight every pullet of my Wyandottes
laid six eggs for eight hens. My Brown
Leghorns did about the same. My Ham
burgs are a little behind, laying about
50 per cent of a possible hundred, that
is, three or four eggs for a pen of six
hens. For some reason unknown,
poultry are not laying so well this sea
son as for some years back. ThlB is
true of other poultry as well as of
chickens. Also the new chicks are not
showing up very fast. What -are
hatched out seem very strong and
healthy. The old hens are not so in
clined to sit as formerly. Perhaps they
have been reading Foster’s weather
reports, and are putting off business
for settled weather. But there is plenty*
of time yet, especially with the small
breeds. I raised my best chicks last
year in June, and some were even
hatched in September. They were
hachted in an Incubator, and are now
laying just as well as the chicks
hatched earlier. The best laying my
birds ever did for me was three years
ago. Six pullets in April of that year
gave me 152 eggs, and then one of the
pullets was out seven days.
H. C. Hunt
Tazewell County, Illinois.
Dlhlnfacting Turkey Quarters.
The Bureau of Animal Industry has
been investigating “black-head” in tur
keys. Incidentally it gives the follow
ing instructions as to disinfection:
From our present knowledge of the
transmission of this disease it is sug
gested that farmers and poultry raisers
who have recently had this disease in
their flocks should dispose of their old
turkeys and start by hatching turkey
eggs under hens or with turkeys ob
tained from non-infected districts,
preferably from the south, as this dis
ease is not known to exist there. As a
precautionary measure, the turkey
roosts, especially the accumulated
droppings, should be disinfected early
in the spring before the young turkeys
are hatched or old ones Introduced. The
liberal use of slacked lime in the yards
most frequently occupied by the dis
eased turkeys is recommended. A ser
viceable disinfectant for buildings and
places containing the feces of diseased
turkeys is the following:
Crude carbolic acid_one-half gallon
Crude sulphuric acid.. .one-half gallon
These two substances should be
mixed in tubs or glass vessels. The
sulphuric acid is very slowly added to
the carbolic acid. During the mixing
a large amount of heat is developed.
The disinfecting power of the mixture
is heightened if the amount of heat is
kept down by placing the tub or glass
demijohn containing the carbolic acid
in Cold water while the sulphuric acid
is being added. The resulting mixture
is added to water in the ratio of 1 to
20. One gallon of mixed acids will
thus furnish twenty gallons of a strong
disinfecting solution, having a slightly
milky appearrjice. It is quite corro
sive, and care should be taken to pro
tect the eyes from accidental splashing.
Requires Experience.
Stock raising is not a business that
can be engaged in without experience
as all those who have ventured can
testify to. It requires time to grade
up a herd to a high standard, such as
every ambitious breeder should
aspire to. But even if it does re
quire time, that should not be a
stumbling block. It is far better to
take a little more time and have t'
high grade than economize time and
raise inferior stock. The time has
gone by when scrub production is
tolerated; every progressive farmer
has his eyes opened to the advantage
of thoroughbreds, and those who get
out of the old rust first will be bene
fited. Where one is able to invest suf
ficient capital to secure superior ani
mals at the start there will be a saving
of time, and profit will come in sooner,
but ordinary stock can only be lm
proved by allowing a sufficient period
of time for so doing.
Moreover, stock breeding is not
much more than in its infancy, and
an opening on the ground floor yet
remains.—Among Live Stock.
llrowrn Leghorn Krz Record.
The following is my record for
March. The report is of the eggs laid
by nineteen Brown Leghorn hens. To
tal eggs received 407, an average of
about twenty-one and a half eggs per
hen. My chickens keep in good health,
and eggs are hatching well.
E. Scott Hatch.
Rock County, Wisconsin,
The soberest one—Well, let’s have
just one more, and then we’ll both go
home. The other one—Shorry, ol’
man, devilish shorry, but—c-a-n’t do
both, dou’t y’ shee?—Detroit News.
The Smioh'i Gloves.
With evening gowns the suede gloves
are worn. They come in all the deli
cate shades and match the costume In
color, or form a pretty contrast. As to
length, they are marvels. A novelty
for holding them in place is the new
glove fastener. It is a tiny jeweled
butterfly, concealing a convenient little
clasp, which is attached to the glove
l'rom this is a ribbon, the same shade
as the glove, arranged that it may be
sewed to the sleeve and thus hold the
glove securely in place.
Gloves for calling are in glace kid,
and are given a distinguished air by an
embroidery in silver or gold. Pearl
gray gloves have silver stitching and
silver buttons, and canary colored
gloves are embroidered with gold
threads.
Hall’s Catarrh Cara
la a constitutional cure. Price, 75c.
Rhubarb and Orange Jam.
As soon as rhubarb is a little lower
in price and before oranges are rone,
every housewife who is fond of either
fruit should make a few pots of the
delicious jam that combines them both.
Wipe the rhubarb until clean and dry,
and cut it into tine pieces without
peeling. Peel half a dozen oranges,
cut away all the white undersUin, take
out the seeds, and divide the oranges
into quartern. Open each carpel that
holds the pulp and take that out, be
ing careful to save all the juice. Put
the rhubarb, orange pulp and juice
with a pound and a half of granulated
sugar, stir until the sugar is melted,
then cook slowly until a fine mass.
When it begins to thicken cool a little
in a saucer. Put away in tumblers
and cover with waxed or oiled paper.
A very good jam of the rhubarb is also
made without the oranges. Use one
pound of sugar to each pound of the
fruit, and flavor each pound with the
grated yellow rind of half a large
lemon. Stir and skim frequently while
cooking.—New York Post.
Rutabaga* for Fodder.
It is gratifying to Bee so many Amer
ican farmers putting their waste places
or spare pieces of land into rutabagas
and turnips for early fall or long win
ter feeding. They are getting the Eu
ropean idea of root crops. Thete the tur
nips and rutabagas are sown broadcast
as are almost all grains, and If not de
sired as roots, the foliage then Is used
for green food. Just imagine the results
of a twenty-acre oatpatch treated in
this way! Think of the tremendous
amount of green fodder, magnificent
fodder too, coming Into full play dur
ing hot August and September. Why,
a field of rutabagas and turnips, there,
for cattle food Is worth almost as much
as the oats gathered therefrom! An
other good plan is to sow rutabaga
seed, especially the variety known aa
Saizer’s LaCrosse, WIs„ Mammoth Rus
sian variety, or his Milk Qlobe turnip
sort, at the rate of one-half pound per
acre, into the cornfield, just before the
last cultivation. This will give you
two good crops—one of corn, the ither
of roots from the same land! One ad
vantage of the rutabaga Is that It can
be sown at any time of the summer for
green food, while a sowing the latter
part of July Is the best In northern
states for big, sweet, juicy roots for
winter storage and use.
All About Wmtern Farm Lands
The “Corn Belt” is the name of an
illustrated monthly newspaper pub
lished by the Chicago, Burlington &
Quincy K. K. It aims to give informa
tion in an interesting way about tiie
farm lands of the west. Send 25 cents
in postage stamps to the Corn Belt, 20!)
Adams St, Chicago, and the paper will
be sent to your address for one year.
Gladness Comes j
With a better understanding of the
transient nature of the many phys
ical ills, which vanish before proper ef
forts—gentle efforts—pleasant efforts—
rightly directed. There is comfort in
the knowledge, that so many forms of
sickness are not due to any actual d is
case, but simply to a constipated condi
tion of the system, which the pleasant
family laxative, Syrup of Figs, prompt
ly removes. That is why it is the only
remedy with millions of families, and is
everywhere esteemed so highly by ail
who value good health. Its beneficial
effects arc due to the fact, that it is the
one remedy which promotes internal
cleanliness without debilitating the
organs on which it acts. It is therefore
all important, in order to get its bene
ficial effects, to note when you pur
chase, that you have the genuine arti
cle, which is manufactured by the Cali
fornia Fig Syrup Co. only and sold by
all reputable druggists.
If in the enjoyment of good health,
and the system is regular, laxatives or
other remedies are then not needed. If
afflicted with any actual disease, one
may be commended to the most skillful
physicians, but if in need of a laxative,
one should have the best, and with the
well-informed everywhere. Syrup of
Figs stands highest and is most largely
used and gives most general satisfaction.
Ice with OlnwlM.
^n»PP«l Hands and Face, Tender or Sere Fed
Ollblalns. Piles. t«. C. a. Clark Co„ New Haven, OS
It ia s sign of ago for a women to rare
about the good looks of a boy.
Piso’s Cure for Consumption has been a
God-send to me. Wm. B. McClellan. Ches
ter, Florida, Sept. 17, 1895.
Irrigated land Excursions.
Every week, cheap homos, your own terms,
sure crops, good markets. Join one of our
colonies. 100 new houses building, new town,
goon business openings. Illustrated adver
tising matter free. Colorado Colony Co..
309 New York Life Building, Omaha, Nebr.
We all expect too much be'p from
others.
two invested in our Investment system
' pays fi&OO per day; 1500 pays $50.00 per day.
Our plan Is plain and practical. Address
tor particulars.
Chandlkr & Co.,
Koaota Block, Minneapolis Minn.
Be careful where yon step, and the man
who follows you will not stumble so much.
As people grow old, their ideal women
becomes one who Is a good nurse.
X- Rays
Of test and trial prove Hood’s Sarsapaqilla to be
unequalled for purifying the blood becatiso
Hoods
Sarsaparilla
Is the One True Blood Purifier. All druggists, fit.
Hood’s Pills cure all Liver Ills, so bents.
Findings
“The best, of course,"you
tell your dressmaker,
and trust to her
using the
Tk
&
BIAS
VELVETEEN
SKIRT BINDINQ
Why don’t you tell her to use it or,
better still, buy it yourself?
If your dealer will not supply you we
will.
Sample* showing labels and materials mailed free.
‘ Home Dressmaking,'* a new book by Miss
Emma M. Hooper, of the Ladles' Home Journal,
telling how to put on Bias Velveteen Skirt Bind
ings sent for 25c., postage paid.
s. H. * M. Co., P. O. Box 69*. N. V. City.
icUMLASifi
SMOKING Tv BACCO,
2 oz. for S Cents.
_ i
CUT-SLASH!
CHEROOTS—3 for 0 Coats,
Give a Good, Mellow, Healthy,
Pleaaant Smoke. Try Them.
LTOB * CO. TOBACCO WORK, Dsrtsa, 1 C.
If you accept a substitute,
you must not fuss because
its not as good as genuine
HIRES Rootbeer.
Made only by The Charlee K. Rlree Ce., Philadelphia.
A lie. package makes * fallow, field everywhere.
for rheumatics—con
sumptives—invalids of all
kinds.
For everyone who is
weak and wants. to get
strong.
Hot Springs, So. Da
kota.
Book about it free if you write to J.
Francis. Gen'l Pass'r Agent, Burlington
Route, Omaha, Neb.
BU66IES SJSWttS
100 styles. Good eaHety of
I second-hand Carriages and
Wagons. Nobody sei.s on
clos r margins. __
DRUMMOND CARRIAGE CO.
ISth utid Harney 8U, Omaha
PI
I
.
Nsiorr.v"zx&~2.'s
. SwsasS'i'aj.Eywfss!, S'fSss:
iyru a teat wu, 15 adjudicating claims. ally imu&
Baker’s Lice Exterminator smil* inV e&
The t hicken-. I Hand. „“r, “£
eus. Horses, Calves, C.ttlc and on House Plants.
Circulars free. Agents wanted. Manufactured by
Hit, t). P. BAKEK, • . ■ EXETER. NKBR.
Urf««t ■•Hers In the world.
9am pi or a prices free; write
lORTMIlEKT WlKUtll).,
in tv lie eitMw» ATH«*lwi»
LINDSEY*OMAHA* RUBBERS!
OPIIIH "* WHISKY ».Mt. nos. Bask M
VriUH rm. Dr. B. a. wooluy. ATU.TA, a.
w7n. U., OMAHA—23-1896
When writing to Advertisers, kindly
_ mention this paper.
PISO'5 CURE FOR
CUB£S WHERE JU1 ELSE JPAUST
Best Cough Syrup. Testes Good.
In time, gold by d-ugglete.
CONSUM P TION
A POSiTFVfc CXfRfc CUA^^NTTor the \vor«nrMeswo7l)yspei»{B^ £TiT
liousnrNS, C'onstlputioTi, Liver and Kidney Diseases, Nervousness, Headache etc. Mr i
Ihdward Wood of Primghar Iowa, who formally lived near La Porte and who
lis widely and very favorably known in northern Iowa writes on March 8th ’96. **
■have) takeni Dr.Kay’s Renovator and it has cured me of dyspepsia of about ten yean
■standing. I was so bad off that everything I ate soured on my stomach. lean now eatl
■most anything. I am seventy one years old and I shall recommend it to others fori
he good it has done me. ” It renovates and invigorates the whole system and purities andl
Dr. Kay's Renovator
edies have. Sold b'
STAMP.
rases and hi
i»fhrr. Address oiir Western Office.
nrirtfls thohl«Kl Klvlnr new life and rigor to the whole body. It is the VERY BE8
VERVE TONIC known. Very pleasant and easy to take. It la made from pure eon
ent ruled extracts, In tablet form and has 2 to 4 times the dotos that liquid rem
druggists or sent by mull on receipt of price 25c. and |l. SEME
i SAMPLE AND OUR BOOKELT it treats nearly all di?
Many value it worthif they could not get an
B. J- Kay Medical Co.. Omaha. Neb.
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