The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, December 03, 1896, Image 7
■ Mark of a Gentleman. In one of Lovell's letters to Briggs, the former mentions Thackery’s visit to Uos ton, and says that during the meeting of Thackery with Ticknor, the latter said: "one mark of a gentleman is to be well-looking—for good blood shows itself in good features. ” *‘A pretty speech,” replied Thackery, “for one broken-nosed man to make to another,” and in the letter Lowell added: “All Boston has been secretly tickled about it” The Dickerson Tree Blown Down. During1 the storm recently a large red elm tree in Adairville, Ky., was blown down. This elm was perhaps the most historic tree in the country, and was known as the “Dickerson tree.” It was situated on the grounds whereon the famed Jackson-Dickerson duel was fought, years ago, and under its spread ing branches Dickerson reclined, await ing medical attention, being mortally wounded by Gen. Jackson. I Forty Fears a Teacher. Professor R L. Gildersleeve, of the John Hopkins University, who recent* ly celebrated the fortieth year of his service as a teacher of Greek Litera ture, lately returned from a long visit to Greece, and he will contribute to the Atlantic Monthly during the coming season his impressions aud reflections, written in his exceedingly graceful way and with his unfailing enthusiasm. Air. Locke, the philosopher said: “If a well could be dug to the depth of 4G miles, the density at the air at the bot tom would be as great as that of quick silver. By the same law a cubic inch of air taken 4,000feet above the earth’s surface would expand sufficiently to All a space not less than 2,000,000,000 miles in diameter. Deafness Cannot Be Bnred. by local applications as they canuot reach the diseased portion of t he ear. There Is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by constitutional remedies. Deafness is caused by an inflamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is inflamed you have a rumbling sound, or imperfect hearing, and when It is entirely closed deafness is the result, and unless the lnflamatlon can be taken out arid this tube restored to its normal condition, hearing will be de stroyed forever; nine cases out of ten are caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an Inflamed condition of the mucous sur faces. We will give Ono Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hulls Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free. K J. CHENEY & CD., Toledo, O. Sold by druggists. 75c. Hall's r urally Pills are the best Absent Ones Remembered. A well known young lawyer is cred ited with making a harmless bull at a banquet given by a locai organization not long ago. Toasts were called for, and to the young man fell the honor of suitably remembering the absent ones. This is the way he announced it: “Our absent friends—how soon we would show them the depth of our re gret at their absence if they were only here with us tonight.” And the funniest part of it was that no one caught onto it until some time afterward.—Cleveland Plaindealer. Why Don’t They Hang Him? It is more than two years since twe young women were found to have been foully murdered in a church in San Francisco, and a young man named Durrant, who was an officer in the Sun day school, was convicted of the mur ders more than a year ago. And yet he has not paid the penalty of his crime, and the execution of the sentence has been repeatedly postponed on techni cal grounds. There wus a time when a vigilance committee would have at tended to the case before this.—Boston Herald/ Hereman'iCamphor Ice wflli Glycerine. The original and only genuine. Cures Chapped Hands *nd Face, Cold Sores, <ko. C.G. Clark & Co.,N.Haven,Ct, To Preserve Kggs. Take one pound of fresh unslacked lime, one pound of coarse roett salt and three gallons of hot water. Fill the vessel in which the eggs are to be stored and stir the liquid daily for a fortnight. If this is not done, the heat caused by the slacking of t he lime will harden the yolks of the eggs. When properly prepared, there should be a thin crust on the top of the lime. Put the eggs into the jars as newly laid as possible. Tie the jars over with blad der and the eggs will keep perfectly. No coughs so bad that Dr. Kay’s Lung Balm will not cure it. See advt, Genteel Sadnceeism In Boston. This reminds us of the existence in Boston of genteel Saducccism. Go to any club where the talk ever drifts from horses, curds or women, where there is at least a brave show of inter change of tnought, and seven out of ten pretend to disbelieve or really dis believe in the immortality of the soul. They are apparently content to “walk pleasantly and wcllsuited toward anni hilation.”—Boston Journal. Persons yon meet every day, WILL DIE OF BRIGHT’S DISEASE or some trouble of the kidneys, urinary or female organs. WHAT CAN BE DONE? In suck a serious condition you must secure the best remedy you can in the market AT ONCE. , There is only one absolutely sure cure for these troubles, and that is MIt has stood the test of time,” DAIRY AND POULTRY. INTERESTING CHAPTERS FOR OUR RURAL READERS. How Successful Farmers Operate This Department' of the Farm—A Few Bints as to the Care of Lire Stock and Poultry. HERE is a desire in the Principality to obtain a greater share than it* has had hitherto of the dairying business of the country, saya London Dairyman. If the people go to work in the right way they may oe it hut thev will have to change, some of their present practices. According to the reading of a paper at the British Dairy Farmers’ Association conference, Welsh butter is a fearful compound. Montgomeryshire was pointedly re ferred to. In that county the hold ings are mostly small, and only a few cows are kept on each; consequently the butter is sent to market in small quantities of very variable quality. “The butter so brought," we are told, “is purchased by higglers, who, with dirty hands, pack It in a rough and ready fashion into still dirtier boxes and hampers—the good, bad, and indif ferent lots altogether—and consign it to consumers in the large towns, where it is brought into competition with the clean and neatly packed foreign but ter." It is not to be wondered at that Welsh butter has a bad name, and that the price made for it is so low. There is no doubt that in some parts of Wales it is difficult to get butter and produce to market, owing to the great distance from a railway or large towns, but that need not affect the quality or cleanliness of the butter. It does appear to do so, however. We have heard this summer of English but ter makers sitting in the markets, un able to sell it at 8d. per pound, whilst in the shops in those towns Brittany and Danish was being retailed at from Is. to Is. 2d. There is something dreadfully wrong when this is the case. Either quality is bad, or people’s tastes have grown into a preference for the blended and mild Brittany butter, or the retailer will not trouble himself to sell the English when the foreign causes him less trouble in purchasing and greater regularity of sup ply to customers. There is said to be a lack of enter prise on the part of the Welsh produc ers in not sufficiently realizing the necessity of making a better article. But as a matter of fact, they are be ginning to realize it. Only recently Welsh farmers’ wives were lamenting that they could not sell their butter even at 8d. per ib., and that a gen tleman who is making this article on the best and most approved principle is spoiling the trade by making il dif ficult to sell good, and impossible to sell bad, butter at any price—the standard of quality being that of the Welsh dairy folks, though good might not be considered so by an experi enced buyer or judge. Quality and preparation for marketing is what Wales is deficient in, and it is the case’ unfortunately in all parts of the king dom. The difficulty might be got over by the establishment of blending fac tories,. which could be put up for very little money, and from them could be sent butter of unvarying quality in quantities sufficient to induce the re tailer to undertake its distribution as readily as he now does the foreign ar ticle. _ Milk for Condensing:. From the Mirror and Farmer is taken the following on rules of the New York Condensed Milk company: The conditions require the stables and sheds to be thoroughly ventilated, well lighted, cleaned every day, and the walls, ceiling and stanchions must be neatly whitewashed. The feeding of turnips, wet or dry barley sprouts, brewery or distillery grains, linseed meal, glucose and starch, refuse, dam aged feed, ensilage, rancid oil cake or gluten meal is prohibited. No cow’s milk is furnished from sixty days be fore to six days after calving. Pails and strainers must be kept thoroughly clean and scalded in boiling water-and dried night and morning. The com pany washes and steams the inside of the cans, but farmers are expected to keep the outside bright and clean. Milking must be done in a cleanly manner. Milk must be strained through a wire cloth of at least 100 meshes to the inch. It is to be thor oughly cooled immediately, the animal heat being removed by frequent stir ring, and the temperature must be re duced to 58 degrees within 45 misutes after milking, and must not exceed 60 degrees when delivered. Cooling is to be accomplished by placing the cans in a vat of cold water, which water shall be renewed daily. Freezing must be prevented in winter. The '#iilk is to be kept in the water until delivered, then drawn in suitable spring wagons, and shall have clean canvas covers on the cans. Poultry In Missouri. From an official map, prepared by the department of labor for the state of Missouri, showing the surplus com modities shipped from euch county during 1894, we compile the following (five counties without railroads not re ported) which shows the relative Im portance of the poultry industry, says Midland Poultry Journal: Pounds of Poultry.44,160,662 Dozens of eggs.23,765,835 Pounds of feathers. 20,383 Buehels of apples. 1,406,048 Pounds of butter.2,810,880 Cattle—number of head. 864,823 Hogs—number of head. 2,596,077 Sheep—number of head. 294,109 1 Pounds of wool.2.503.660 Bushels corn and corn meal. .10,973,101 Bushels of wheat.12,203,502 Barrels of flour. 2,676,277 At the low price of 10 cents a dozen for eggs, 10 cents a pound for poultry, and twenty-five cents a pound for feathers we obtain the following valu ations for the poultry products: 44,160,662 lbs at 10c.24,416,066.20 22,765,835 doz eggs at 10c.. 2,376,683.50 230,383 lbs feathers at 25c.. 67,545.76 Total ..26,850,245.45 These figures tell their own story, although they seem almost beyond be lief. Add to this the value of poultry and eggs consumed by the producer, and that sold to dealers for loeal con sumption (undoubtedly greater than that of any other product) and we have a sum that would unsettle the ordinary bank cashier. Poultry raising .Is not simply a “hobby” in Missouri, pnd the Great West. . . , 1 a, . Tuberculosis In litre*. - < Poultry people are evidently to have their share in the tuberculosis sensa tion. At a recent meeting of the U. S. Veterinary Medical Association at Buffalo,. N. Y., there was a paper by Dr, D. E. Salmon of the U. S. Bureau of Animal Industry which treated prin cipally on Tuberculosis in Birds, and was pronounced one of the most com plete and interesting ever prepared on the subject. He quoted many foreign' authorities and said the disease was transmissable from bird to man and vice versa. The identity of avian and human tuberculosis is weli demonstrat ed by Koch and other eminent investi gators. Parrots are very prone to con tract the disease, and it early affects Polly’s speech. Parrots are easily af fected with human tuberculosis, and a parrot so affected is a constant men ace to the people in the same house. He said the proper treatment is to annihilate all diseased birds, chickens, etc., the disinfection of yards, feeding and drinking places, etc., and advised that human consumptives be kept away from poultry yards. Dr. Knowles said that the poultry business in Amer ica is greater in value than the beef and pork trade. Dr. R. P. Lyman of Hartford, Conn., thought the' paper should be promptly circulated among veterinarians and poulterers. Fat Variation*. -Denver Field and Farm:—In natural milk a small amount of albumen is present, but in colostrum the amount of albumen often exceeds the amount of casein, and these two constituents may form over 15 per cent of the milk. The percentage of sugar in colostrum is usually low; the fat is normal. Tho composition of colostrum changes rap idly, and within a few days after tho birth of the calf natural milk is given. After this the percentage of fat in the milk of any cow varies more or less from day to day, even if her feed, care and general treatment are always alike. Th9 causes of the sudden changes are not always known; in fact, the fat often seems to increase or de crease without any cause. Sometimes the fat content changes over 30 per cent within twenty-four hours. As the period of lactation progresses there it a tendency to gradually increase in the' total solids, and the physical condition of the milk is so altered that tho cream rises less easily. A Remarkable lien. I have in my poultry yard a Plym outh Rock pullet which was hatched April 1st; commenced laying the mid dle of August, and after laying thirteen eggs went to sitting the first week in September on her own eggs, and in due time her chicks were hatched, but lived only a short time. And now, Oct. 18th, she" is again laying. Who can beat this? Mrs. Jas, Davis. She should be kept for a breeder; her eggs may next year produce chicks that will live and reach maturity earlier than usual. A process of breed ing up may give fowls of great value as winter layers.—Ed. Farmers’ Re view. Mr. McFetridge, in his book on poul try, says: “Much talk is indulged In about imitating the delicious flavor of canvasback ducks by feeding the fat tening ducks celery. The breeder who can manage to raise celery and have It in quantities sufficient for this purpose will be the man to capture the prize.” On the Atlantic farm. Long Island, the ducks are put in the fattening pens when about six weeks of age and fed two-thirds meal and the remainder one-third middlings and greens. About one-seventh or one-eighth the amount of meat scraps are added. When five pounds in weight the ducks are mar keted. A Stolen Crop.—It is said that pump kins are “a stolen crop.” Some farmers think there is nothing gained by rais ing pumpkins among corn, because they appropriate a part of the fertility of the soil, and thereby lessen the value of the corn more than the worth of the pumpkins. This may be the case where the land is too poor to supply nourish ment enough for the corn, and where the ^pumpkins, if planted among it, would be smaller than a man’s head; but such land should never be planted with corn, east or west, for no matter how thorough the tillage may be a pay ing crop cannot be raised.—Ohio Farm er. Value of Bran.—While recognizing the value of bran for feeding growing animals, iet us not be skeptical as to Its value for fattening stock. The finest beef can be made at moderate cost with no other grain food than bran. Pork will be made faster and more cheaply if fed bran all through the fat tening period, though a little oil meal should be added.—Ex. Money put into a comfortable poul try house is well invested. Fix the nests so the hens cannot roost on them at night. Give the family the best the poultry yard produces. POPULARITY OF SARATOGA. Attraction of American Ifatrrlnt Placo I feting in bonoon l'ttpera. £ara;oga Springs will always be pop* alar. You have here the best of Amer ican society, less exclusive than New port or Lenox, leas mixed than Long Branch and Manhattan Beach and vast ly more representative than either, says a letter In the London Telegraph. This is mainly due, serhaps, to the enormous hotels, with their huge verandas or piazzas in front and vast garden court yards In the rear, which is the special feature of Saratoga. Those gigantic structures are among Che biggest hos telries in the world. Two of the larg est provide something like 2,000 beds each and their lofty and spacious halls, drawing, dining and reception rooms are all on a scale of corresponding magnitude. Hero all classes melt and blend. Round the Inclosed garden courts are built tiers of elegant apart ments, each with its veranda, while every set of rooms on the same floor is technically a cottage. Julian Haw thorne says a walk round the circuit of these verandas takes long enough for a young man, and woman to become acquainted, to get engaged and break It off again. This estimate Is so defi nite that I hesitate almost to repeat the cruder statement fhat one of the courtyards measures seven acres. It Is marvelous, however, how attractive the inclosures of these two great hotels are. In the hottest afternoons the branch ing elms and the sugar maples throw their shadows acrosB the green sward and, In the cool, delicious evenings, when the bands are playing, the foun tains flowing and ladies in gauzy toil ettes promenading, the scene Is charm ing. Besides Its agreeable society, let me say that Saratoga has many natural attractions. From New York you ap proach it as far as Albany by the Hud son—the Rhine of America. Up this river the blue tidal waters of the At lantic flow as far aB Poughkeepsie. On both sides of the stream the banks are lofty and well wooded, and all the way along are dotted with villages and country residences standing in pictur esque inclosures, sloping down very of . ten to the water’s edge. Oh the north ern side of Saratoga are Lakes George and Champlain, two of the prettiest of transatlantic inland waters. - In former days also the village, like Tun bridge-wells, owed its reputation to the springs. There are any number of them. They come bubbling up from great depths, charged with carbonic acid, sodium, potassium, lithium and calcium in varied combinations. There was a time when people came here to repair shattered constitutions by drink ing at the geysers, or Washington spring, or the Saratoga Vichy or Carls bad. A Prediction About Railways. The following prediction, made by the Royal College of Physicians of Ba varia In 1835, is now on record in the archives of the Nuremberg and Furth Railway, In that country. When It was proposed to build this line, the phy sicians of the country met and for mally protested against it. "Locomo tion, by the aid of any kind of steam machines whatever,” the Bavarian physicians declared, “should he pro hibited in the Interest of the public health. The rapid movements cannot fail to produce In the passengers the mental ailment called delirium furlos um. Even admitting,” the protest went on, “that travelers will consent to run the risk, the state can do no lesB than protect the bystanders. The sight alone cf a locomotive passing at full speed suffices to produce this frightful malady of the brain. It is, at any rate, indis pensable that a barrier at least six feet high, should be erected on both sides of the track.” Freak of Lightning. All the doors in John Kipp’s house at Cedar Bayou, Harris County, Texas, were opened and a lid of the kitchen range was blown off by a bolt of lightning. MISSIONS. The annual report of the Moravian church gives 150 mission stations, 400 missionaries and 93,000 converts in heathen lands. The native Christians in heathen lands last year gave $559,000. more than one-ninth the amount raised in the United States. The last of the heathen on Efate Island are being gathered into the church as the result of twenty-three years' faithful labor. One hundred and fifty Chinese con verts were baptized during the last twenty months by Rev. Hopkin Rees at Tientsin, north China. As the American Baptist Home Mis sion society is heavily burdened with debt, the board of managers of that society, at a meeting held Sept. 14, de "cided to make no appropriations for missionaries salaries for the present for a period extending beyond Dec. 31, 1896, unless the current receipts mean time shall be very considerably in creased. Tho vast possibilities open to an in dividual society of Christian Endeavor are shown in a report that comes from Geelong, Australia. The Yarra Street Wesleyan society, which contains five divisions and 550 members, haB organ ized a boys’ club, a men’s club, a birth day league for missionary purposes and a Sunday school home department. During the year it held 208 cottage prayer meetings, besides seventy-eight open air services; 4,251 visits were paid and 2,488 loaves of bread distributed. The Juniors provided an outing for one hundred slum children, distributed 150 bouquets of flowers and made more than 500 visits. The other labors of the society were on a proportionate scale. Trias. In the agricultural line, Texas leads all other states in the variety of its products.. Cotton, corn, and the,cereals grow and are raised in every section of the state and in the central and south ern portions sugar cane and sorghum cane are profitably cultivated. On the Gulf Coast two or three crops Of veg etables are raised each year. Berries are shipped six weeks in advance of the home crop in the northv Pears; peaches, plums, oranges, figs, olives, and nuts all grow abundantly on'd can be marketed from two to three weeks in advance of the California crops Large quantities of rice are now grown. If the land seeker, the home seeker, and the settler desires to secure a farm larger than the one he occupies, on vastly more reasonable terms; if he wants more land to cultivate, a greater variety of crops to harvest, with pro portionately increased remuneration, at a less outlay for cost of production; if he wants an earlier season, With'1 correspondingly higher prices; if ho wants milder winter, all the year pas turage for his stock, improved hetutM,-; increased bodily comforts and. wealth and prosperity he should go to Texas Send for pamphlet descriptive of /the resources of this great state (mailed" free). Low rate home seekers' excur sions via the Missouri, Kansas & Texas railway on December 16th, 180*1. H. A.Cherrier, Northei’n Passenger agent, 330 Marquette Building, Chicago, lit. Two Novel Parachute*. An Italian aeronaut, named Cam panza, has invented two baloon at tachments which are are said to have fully realized the expectations formed of them. The one is an enormous par achute, stretched over it baloon, and the other a folded, Inverted parachute, which immediately acta as a huge air brake and effectually retards progress. On the other hand, should tho air vessel explode through expansion, fire, or other cause, the top parachute comes into action and a descent may be made without the slightest inconvenience. live Man Wanted To assist local druggists in working up trade on the three great family reme dies:—Dr. Kay’s Renovator, Dr. Kay’s Lung Balm and ICidneykura An excep tional chance for the right man. Ad dress Dr. ltJ.Kay Med. Co.,Omaha,Xetx Royalty’* Tastes In Typewriter*. The queen objeots to typewritten documents, and none are to be sent out typewritten which are supposed to em anate from the sovereign. The czar ina, on the other hand, is having made a machine with tvpebars of gold and frame set with pearlB.—T.Ady’a Pic torial. __ ,, Piso's Cure for CouBumptiou ha* been a God send to me.-Wm. B. McClellan, Ches ter, Fla., Bept. 17, 1895. , Dm* StoelcluK*. Dress stockings are such dainty ac cessories of the wardrobe of the woman of to-day that they have reached the dignity of a sachet. Stocking sachets are quilted, perfumed, lace-trim medaf faira, tied shut with bows not dissimi lar to those in which long gloves are kept.__. Mr*. Wlmlow’B Mootbln* a,rap For children teethinjf.Bof ten* the srnms. reduce* inflam mation, allay* pain, cure* tviml colic. 25cent* c.bottle. When a man slip*, he always stops and looks at the place where he slipped. — ' aa ,*■ 8tid;ta( Womankind. , Miss de C.raffenreid, who as the a great of the United States Department of Labor, has made investigatiomfr-into the work of women in all the principal Eu ropean wwpufacuiring centres as well as in our own • country, will write for the Allahtio Monthly about the results of hef Special studies. Even twenty- ' 'dee years ago wohien played a compar atively small part in industry. Since then the’, most notable and significant Social fact has hepn the incredibly rap id increase in their number as wage- : earners. The social significance of thia change is one of the remarkable phe nomena of onr time. It is ‘ this im portant change which wilt be explained and interpreted by Jdiss detiraffenrekL The Hlval Cycle Racers. - Raid's defeatist' Fredonia. N. Y., while it may have been due to ^unfortunate circumstances rather than .lack of tpeed, in the min da of n good many qhow that last Syeaf’a king of the cir cuit is not yet in as fine fettle as he should be. Cooper, .apparently, is in fare"fbrpv and Mis demonstrated con vincingly that he deserves tbe close watching he ia receiving. Cooper, liald and, Sanger compose the trium Virata of >apcea -merchants who, it.ia ; thought, will furnish the best sport . thronghouv the -season, and, judging from recent developments, they rank, up to the present, in the order named. Blood Pure? Is it? Then take Ayer’a Sar saparilla and keep it so. Isn’t it? Then take Ayer’s Sarsa parilla and make it so. One fact ia positively established and that is that Ayer’s Sarsa parilla will purify the blood more perfectly, more economi cally and more speedily than any other remedy ia the mar ket. There are fifty years of cures behind this statement; a record no other remedy can < show. You waste time and'* money when you take anything to purify the blood except Ayer’s Sarsaparilla. Webster’s International Dictionary . In valuable In Office, School, ted noaic. A thorough revision cflho 'WEBSTER’S iUTTERK/TONALj , DICTIONARY Unabridged, tins purpose of “ “ .’- tUlHiAay,! i»Au*riflT) ...y oth crtii nient, bnt llio tine, judicious. which ha* lHH*n lujtdisiAusr.aor Uio provision of uiau*r“ { iRtuslful ami showy •eholnrly, thorough perfect ing of a work which in t*U the stapes of tw grow th bus of.-1' talned in an equal degree lt>« favor nut coMndoneo of at-rnJJ*' ■raar.il of tin? fefterr 1 public. The Choicest of Gifts for Christmas. Is Various Svti.i::* or Ilreoncc. |^*Spcdmen pagea cent on application fo G, <t* C, MEMtlAM CO., PahlisbcrB, Spr/nrf/ir/rf, Mass,, U,S.A, RHEUMATISM, NEURALGIA, , CATARRH, ASTHMA, HEADACHE J ■■■■: a^d th»Jr : y-\ ■— marvelous ours. . Scicasc ,c{ the llrth • tern, ry looks on with ■ ndiazmtent at thentoej reiuurkpMc record or /cures khown In th» ' World's E.sfory.r OVER 200.000 PEOPLE CURED in the last year without a single failure by “5 Drops.” •#. " Aft a positive cure for lth«uanntlMnsv Hrlnllm, \Kiirutola. •lit. Uiickiichr, Aalhinu, May Fever, «.'<tt%rt* k, »i€'e».I*;*•«, and .\eutalcW1 Hertdnr li*», Heart Wealui-*», vonmmi ^frvonn lHm --- -- - - - - s • Toulliiehe Karnrhr, Croup, MweUii>K« In CJrtppe, Mnlarl** Urreplnc Sfambne**, etc., etc. Drops ’I ttH ni*Ver titefi equaled or Creeping 1_ __ , surpatleu. and is a pleasant, prompt and permanent euro. Though free from opiates and perfectly harmless. ••5 Drops ’ Inchon ost coavontrated uncj powerful specific known. *‘6 Drops’* can fall it* no tfruy short if what weclaim, for no diataao is too deeply'rco’od or pa-nfnl to 'yield to this wonderful meuitine. and relief is ustntUy felt I ho v« _irv first night. Wha| it hue already done to relieve spljerin/f, humanity is. «olu in Ihttt r»' of grateful praise from thousands ot hearts once sickened and heavy withr pain, now painless and happy. „ * ; .:V.4 O. K. UILLIKOHAM, Prop of Clinton House, Clinton, N. Y.. writes: 'ft hav* boonualn* ”5,l$iw»pi(” for. mattsm for three weeks, haring been troubled five years. Tu-Jay l urn a* w« II a« ever fn my Uf«, and gladly ^ recommend It to all sufferers from that terrible dl»ea«*\ for it is a positive cure.” ' ’t-r** \'y^. J. J. Jokes, of Pougla*. Kansas, says: “You hat* tliu best nerve remedy on the1 fare of pod’s grwe* * eartfa. 1 want the agency without tail. ’ Elijah Davis, of Butlervvllle, lndM writos: “My wife was tn bed ri\ months with acme nvuralgU. She ? tried every kind of medicine and several doctors, but all to no effect. Tlta.iit it** i your wonderful *‘A Drope” ^ cured her, for in three weeks after she commenced using it, she wa* out of bod and Kwlr.| about.” Pete* Lovbeuo. of I.indstrom, Minn., wrltos; “Within two months 1 U ivo eohl over 400 bottles, which were used in ev-ry kind of disease, but bavo received no complaints. It Is the greatest luushold remedy i* h the world, and gives wonderful satisfaction.” ' , If you have not confidence enough after reading tho nbovo letters to send for a fl.CO bot tle, send for a sample, wttich contains ample modioino to convinco you o' its merit. *B Crops” taken but once a day is the dose or thts great remedy, and to xuoro quickly intro duce it, we will send. forsSI days, prepaid by matt, our accent sample Lottie for H> cents* If suffering. don’t delay, but wriie today. Larzo bottle i«k>j uuhcsj «l.uO, 0 battles for 45.0ft. Not sold by druggists, omy by us and our agents. Agents wanted. SWANSON RHEUMATIC CURE C3., 167-169 Dnai-born-st., Chicago. 111. STOP! Don’t Lot Constipation Kill You! Bill Bill ^ANDY CATHARTIC reifecoA CURE CONSTIPATION io* ^Maaami.(Ljja.jiu«f7^fig^ all 25* 50* DRUGGISTS THE MOST WONDERFUL, RELIABLE wo EFFECTIVE MEDICINE @ EVER • DISCOVERED. : ABSOLUTELY GUARANTEED ft™",BT *«*<»*• u,,i i-« . . never grip or aripc.hnt ccqko easy natural result!. Sam ple and booklet free. Ad. STEUUNfl KENEDY €0., Chicago, Montreal, Can., or New York. sio. FOR THE NEXT 10 RATS we will Bend by mail, prepaid, one box I)r. Kay’s Lung halm (-5c. size) *nd a valuable receipt book for SIX2 CENT STAMPS. We know it to be the best medicine yet discovered for coughs, colds, hoarseness and la grippe and we want you to know thiB fact. The following testimonial is a sample of what all skv of It wlso give it a trial. 13 3 Dr. Kay’s Lung Balm <j COUGHS, COLDS, LA GRIPPE and THROAT TROUBLES SPEEDILY CURED. Miss Nelllo Venoycr, 1536 So. Tenth St., Omaha, Neb.,- writes: “Have used vour Dr. Cay*s Lung Balm for u severe ease of La Grippe 'i*wo doses gave relief. Kay's Lung Balm for u severe ease of La Grippe Two doses gave relief. My lungs were very sore and in the Dr. Kay's Luug Jsalm I found that it stoppod any de sire to tough at once. The soreness on my lungs r.tul in my head soon disappeared. It is very pleasant and easy to take and while it doo* not cause sickness at tho stomach, like many cough remedies It cures quicker than any X have ever tiled. It cures every kind ol cough. Sold by druggists or sent by mail for 35 cts. It Is perfectly safe for all nites and a sure euro for all lurg troubles. • end address for booklet. It has'many valuable receipts and gives symptoms and treatment for nearly all diseases and many have said they tvoul' not take !'■ IH» for it if they oo"UI not get another. Address i Western office) Dr. U. J. KAY MfcDlCAi. Co , Omaha. Neb. SOLD BY. DRUGGISTS.