The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, November 18, 1897, Image 1

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■V VOLUME XVIII.
igfe’ ._■
O’NEILL, HOLT COUNTY, NEBRASKA, NOVEMBER 18. 1897.
NUMBER 20.
p' ■
fflfS SAKS WHISKERS
Item* of Interest Told Ai They Are
Told to Us.
WH» m> HOW IT EAPPmrHD
■( . I
SfW
r,p' ■
i®»
_ Fertrayed for
Mldaattsn aai lawawt
ThoaktglTiny ball at the rink.
H. A. Allen wu in the city Tuesday.
John Cut wu up from Stafford laat
Sunday. __
C.P. Bayba, of Heligh. waa In O’Neill
• Sunday. ________
W. J. Hahn waa down from Stuart
last Saturday.
*\ ■ - ■ —
jfv Bail ties and wire always on hand at
: t j Nell Brennan’s. lft-tf
O. W. Hamilton transacted business at
J I
t>fr Hwl»K Tuesday.
Vj'-'y
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^ .
Sff
*
,t- -n
5
5
Theo. Kellog, of Norfolk, waa in
O’Neill Tuesday,
M. P. Harrington went down the
Short Line Tuesday.
Elmer Merriman waa up from Ewing
the first of the week.
, D. W. Rosenkrans, of Dorsey, waa in
9’Neill Met Tuesday.
O. L. Rouson, of Norfolk, was in
O’Neill last Saturday.
Rate King is now in the employ of
the O’Neill Grocery Co.
Editor Eves and wife, of Atkinson,
were in the city Tuesday.
N. 8. Harding, of Nebraska City, was
at the Evans last Tuesday.
J. P. Bacon, ot Naligh, was registered
at the Evans last Saturday.
Sanford Parker was over from Boyd
eoppty the first of the week.
Ex-Supervisor H. B. Kelley, of Inex,
was in O’Neill last Tuesday.
Patrick Brennan, of Sioux City, is
visiting in O’Neill this week.
R. P. Hall, of Chicago, was a guest at
« Hotel Evans last Sunday.
Warther and L. Hilslnger, of
toman, were in O’Neill last Sunday.
,.Kh Rent—House of six rooms, rent
reasonable. Enquire of Mr. Doyle, lfitf
Special bargains in clothing, overcoats
and winter goods at Sullivan Mercan
tile Co’s. _ 17-4
W. H. Hill, of Blair, was taking in
the sights in this beautiful city last
Sunday. _
Jas. Tracy and Rob Bitney were
Atkinson people who were in the city
last Friday. _
M. H. Bheeley, of the Sioux City,
O’Neill and Western, was in the city
Monday evening.
Mrs. Laura Cress and family have
returned from Premont and are again
residents of O’Neill.
Joe McDonald was down from Atkin
son Priday seeing the sights in the
Emeraln tinted city.
Use H and G remedy for black leg
As a preventative it has no equal. Sold
by Hershtser A Gilligan. 15 tf
Several of the local sports have beer
out after ducks and geese the past week
meeting with fair success.
Do not let the black leg into youi
herd. Prevent it by using H and G
8old by Hershiser A Gilligan. 15-tf
Miss Gertie Fort and Miss Berthi
Wise, of Stuart, were in the city tbi
first of the week visiting friends.
*#
't:'
r;$
Andrew Just, a former resident of
Holt but now of Boyd, was transacting
business in this city last Monday.
Miss Bee O’Donnell enjoyed a short
Visit from her friend, Mrs. Pinnigan, of
Chadron, the first of the week.
Por teeth or photos, go to Dr. Cor
bett’s parlors, 28rd to 80th of each
month. Photographs 81 per doxen.
POR BALE—Thirty head of white
face Hereford young bulls.
lftf Jacob Kbaft, Stuart, Neb.
"• Ed Grady will leave
tomorrow morning for Waterloo. Iowa,
to apend Thanksgiving with relatives.
William Fagan, tile gentlemanly dis
pencer of egbuaratlng beverages at
Atkinson, was' in O’Neill last Friday.
Patrick O'Donnell, of Cbadron, came
down Sunday morning and visited
friends and relatives here until Tuesday.
Geo. H. Lamoureux, of Springview,
was in O’Neill the first of the week
renewing old acquaintances and visiting
relatives.
<
If black leg gets a start in your herd
it is hard to check it. The best remedy
known is B and G. For sale by Her*
| ahiser AGilligan. lff-tf
J. A. Doremna, a former Holt county
bor but who now hanga out nt Nellgb,
wan In O’Neill Tueidey.
Smell pill, aefe pill, beet pill.:
DeWltt’e Little Barty Bleera cure bilioua*
neee, conetlpation, sick headache.
Herahiaer ft Gilligan.
Hr*. C. B. Hall returned laet Friday
evening from Sioux City, where ahe baa
been receiving medical treatment. Her
health la greatly improved.
If you want to aave money get our
prlcea on clothing, underwear, eapa,
glovee, mlttena and all winter gooda.
Sullivan Mercantile Co. 17-4
On account of a wreck on the .Elk
horn near Ghadron laat Monday, the
train due here at 10 o’clock a. m. did
not arrive until about 8 p. m.
The Spencer orcheatra will furniah
the muaic for a grand ball to be given
next Thureday night. A flrat-claae time
la guaranteed to all who attend.
F. If. Wade, of Lebanon, Mo., arrived
la tbe county last week and settled
upon the Norris farm, east of this city,
which he purchased a short time ago.
Ton can’t cure consumption but you
can avoid It and cure every other form
of throat or lung trouble by the use of
One Minute Gough Cure. Hershiser ft
Gilligan. ,
Married, at the M. E. parsonage in
O’Neill, Wednesday, November 17,
Rev. John Crews officiating, Mr. J. Y.
Ashton and Mias Myrtle Eisele, both of
Chambers. _ j
D. W. Forbes was over from Butte
last Monday. Oave does not have
much to say about Boyd county politics
since the last election. Reason: Post
carried the county.
Will Hogan was in the city the first of
the week. He is the same genial and
smiling Will that he was several years
ago when he was chief clerk in O’Nelll's
leading general store.
Disfigurement for life by burns or
scalds may be avoided by using DeWitt’s
Witch Hazel Salve, the great remedy for
piles and for all kinds of sores and skin
troubles. Hershiser ft Gilligan.
There is no need of little children
being tortured ~by scald head, eczema
and skin eruptions. DeWitt’s Witch
Hazel Salve gives instant relief and
cures permanently. Hershiser ft Gifli
gan. _
You can’t afford to risk your life by
allowing a cold to develop into pneu
monia or consumption. Instant relief
and a certain cure are afforded by One
Minute Cough Cure. Hershiser ft Gil-'
ligan. _'
Go to Sullivan Mercantile Co’a. for
bargains in clothing, gloves, mittens,
caps, underwear, boots, shoes, over
costs and all kinds of winter goods, at a
bargain at Sullivan Mercantile Co’s.
O’Neill, Neb. 17-4
Mr. and Mrs. John O’Neill and family
desire us to thank the many friends who
so kindly assisted them in their late
bereavement, and to assure them that
their sympathy and kind attention
greatly assisted them in their trying
hour. _
Dr. Owen S. O’Neill, of Plattsburg,
N. Y., arrived in the city last week and
is now a resident of O’Neill. The doc
tor has bad rooms over the First
National bank fitted up for an office.
Your attention is called to his card in
another column.
Sheriff-elect, John Stewart was in
O’Neill Tuesday. We understood
that tbe deputyship was to be decided
that day, but dame rumor says the mat
ter is still unsettled. It is reported that
the contest is between John A. Golden
and S. F. McNichols.
The members of the syndicate have
been perspiring very freeley the past
week and all because one of the county
officers elect evinces a disposition to pay
some of his own political debts without
their aid or consent. But mark this:
The syndicate will win.
B. K. Valentine, of West Point, was
in the city Wednesday. B. K. looks as
young and spry as he did ten years ago
when he represented this, then the big
Third district, in the halls of congress.
He has many friends here and while in
the city renewed many old acquaintances.
Warring—Persons who suffer from
coughs and colds should heed the warn
ings of danger and save themselves
suffering and fatal results by using One
Minute Cough Cure. It is an infallible
remedy for coughs, colds, croup and all
throat and lung troubles. Hershiser ft
Gllligan. __
Chas. B. Verity, a former north
Nebraska quill pusher, was in O'Neill
last Saturday in the interests of the
Chicago Newspaper Union, of Sioux
City. Charlie is making a success of his
new vocation, which fact his many
friends throughout the state will be
pleased to learn. I
J. M. Thirswend, of Groabeck, Tex.,
•ava that when he haa a bad spell of
indigestion, and feela bad and aluggish,
he takea two of DeWiU’a Little Early
Riaera at night, and he is all right the
next morning. Many thousands of
others do the aame thing. Do youf
Herahiaer * Gilllgan.
J. C. Berry, one of the best known;
eitisens of Spencer, Mo., testifies that
he cured himself of the worst kind of
pilea by using a few boxes of DeWitt’a
Witch Hazel Salve. He had been
troubled with pilea for over thirty years
and had used many difierent kinds of
so-called curea; but DeWitt’s was the
one that did the work and he will verify
this statement if anyone wishes to write
him. Herahiaer ft Gijligan.
ouuiu v/iubua oua. newipsp«r uion
of Nebraska after year* of broken
promises are being rewarded for their
faithful support of the men and meas
ures that go to make up the republican
party. It ia a source of gratification to
see such hard working colonels as
Editors Hammond/Raker, Jenness and
others, catching the political fruit of
their labors—that should have fallen to
them years ago. Senator Thurston
could have devised no surer method of
rehabilitating the party in the state than
by rewarding the faithful moulders of
public opinion, who make it possible
for those wbp dispense auch patronage
to be elected.
f; From the Lone Star state comes the
following letter, written by W. F. Gass,
editor of the Mt. Vernon, (Tex.) Herald:
“I have used Chamberlain’s Colic.
Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy in my
family for the put year, and find it the
but remedy for colic and diarrhoea that
I have ever tried. Its effects are instan
taneous and satisfactory, and I cheer
fully recommend <t, especially for cramp
coiio and diarrhoea. Indeed, we shall
try end keep a bottle of it on our
medicine shelf u long u we keep
house." For sale by P. ~C. Corrigan,
druggist. ___
Walt Muon: The other day u we
were out driving down town behind our
family rhinoceros, we came upon an
aged man tearing a bridge to pieces and
placing it upon a wagon. As the bridge
wu one we needed in our businus, we
Uked the ancient mariner what he wu
doing with it, and in which case,'why
so, or words to that effect. He replied:
“My eyesight is poor and I have not my
spectacles with me; I have been told i
that many advertuements are printed on
this bridge, and I am taking it borne in
order that I may read them and find out
where to get bargains. The long win-1
ter evenings are coming, and I want to
lay in a supply of board fences, bun
doors and bridges so that 1 may ait by
my fireside and read what the merchants
have to say.” We told him that the
newspapers contained more advertise
ments than the bridges, and better onu
too, but he uid the print in newspapers
is to fine. We drove away, glad that
the bridge and fence advertisers have at
leut one regular reader.
Sioux City Times: Rev. Dr. Geo. W.
Pepper, of Cleveland, O., who wu a
famous chaplain in Sherman’s army,
will deliver a lecture at O’Neill, Neb.,
on the evening of November 30, and
will return eut by way of Sioux City,
arriving here the afternoon of Novem
ber 27. His personal friend, John
Brennan, editor of the Northwestern
Catholic, is arranging to give him a
reception. In speaking of Dr. Pepper,
Mr. Brennan said he was the idol of
Irishmen. “Dr. Pepper," said Mr.
Brennan, “is a Methodist minister and
an able exponent of that faith. An
American by choice and by adoption,
he hu yet been faithful to his Island
birthland. A Protutant of the Protest
ants, he has always entertained an
ardent affection for his Catholic fellow
countrymen, and a hearty admiration
for all that is Just, manly and virtuous
in their character. Nor hu his love
been unwisely butowed. There is
probably no other Irish born man on
any continent so universally beloved by
bis compatriots. They call him ‘Father
Pepper,’ and, knowing the purity of his
life and character, his devotion to lib-’
erty and his world embracing love of
humanity, they would deem it a harsh
theology that would forbid them the
hope of meeting him in heaven."
sometnug to Know.
It may be worth something to know
that the very beet medicine for reatoring
the tired out nervoua syitem to a
healthy vigor ia Electric Bittera. This
medicine ia purely vegetable, acta by
giving tone to the nerve centera it the
atomacb, gently atimulatea the liver and
kidneya, and aida theae organa in
throwing off impuritiea in the blood.
Electric Bittera improvea the appetite,
aida digestion, and ia pronounced by
thoae who have tried it aa the very beat
blood purifier and nerve tonic. Try it.
Sold for 60 centa or II per bottle at P.
C. Corrigan’s drug atora.
State Journal: Attorney-General C.
J. Smyth baa been requested by the
supreme court to aubmit a brief in- the
Barrett Scott case. The court requested
him to cover two points not submitted
by the county attorney of Holt county.
The approval of the bond out of time
and the estoppel of auretlee are the two
questions which the supreme court
desires the attorney.general to argue.
| The Scott case la considered of great
importance by the legal fraternity and
| the public, because it involves the same
points trhich will come before the court
in the case of ex-State Treasurer Bart
ley and hlsbOndamen. The Scott case
is famous to Nebraska, tor the reason
that tbe vigtlantea hanged the ex-county
treasurer.when his political friends, it is
said, kept him from going to the peni
tentiary. Official bonds in both cases
were approved out of time. The Bart
ley bond was approved January 9,
Instead o& January 8, and the Scott
-bond, instead of having been approved
by the county board on January 7, was
not approved until March. In both
cases additional bondsmen signed and
the question of estoppel of sureties is
involved in each. It is rumored that
the supreme court could have decided
the Scott ease on other points, and the
request made to the attorney-general is
■taken as an indication that the court
desires to go to the bottom of vtbe ease. I
The following ia a story of a Nebraska
pumpkin: L. M. Copaland. of Mloden,
la the man who raiaad the big pumpkin
a few yean ago. Seer hear about that
pumpkin? ‘‘Cope" planted a pumpkin
aeed in the back of hla lot one apring.
He watched over the growing vine with
the tendereat care, fondly thinking of
the plea he would have during the win*
ter. When the pumpkin was about
two-thlrda grown, Cope turned hia cow
into the lot one evening. When he
went out to milk next morning the cow
waa gone. Search for the animal waa
vain, and after a week or two he gave
her np for loet. The time came when
that pumpkin ahntild be harveated and
Cope went out to bring it in. He
rigged up a derrick and prepared to
hoiat up the yellow fellow on the wagon,
when he heard a rattling aound inaide
of it. Cope ia not auperatitloua, but he
admits that that noise atartledhim. He
waitedafew momenta and approached
the’ pumpkin again; Once more-'he
heard that peculiar noiae and hia hair
atood on end. He backed off a few
yards and wailed until hia nerve grew
ateady, and then with an air of one
prepared to do or die, he approached
the pumpkin. “I never waa so sur
prised in my life,” said Cope, when he
told the story. "I walked around to
the lee side of that pumpkin and saw a
big hole. Looking in I aaw my long
loat cow. She had eaten a hole in the
pumpkin, walked in and made herself
at home. She waa ao well satisfied that
she remained in until the growing
pumpkin almost closed the hole, and
she did not try to get out. She just
stayed in there and lived high, and
when I cut her out she had increased
her weight 827 pounds and gave the
best milk I ever drank. It waa ao rich
that Instead of skimming the cream off,
we turned it upside down and skimmed
off the milk." If anyone doubts thla
atory Cope Is willing to prove It by
showing some of the seeds from the
pumpkin. The cow died a few montha
ago, and Cope aays the cause of death
was indigestion.—Ex.
BUTTXKICH’ PATTXUri.
About November 22 we will receive a
complete stock of all staple patterns,
and keep a full supply on hand there
after, receiving the patterns monthly as
ahown in the Delineator.
Grand Album of Fashion, Delineator
and Hirror of Fashion on sale at 25,15
and 5 cente per copy. J. P. MANN.
XHAXKMIYI*(I.
Appropriate Thanksgiving services
will be held in the M. E. church of this
place on the 25th Inst. The Thanks
giving sermon will be preached at 10 SO
a. m. by Rev. J. Crews, the pastor, and
a most cordial invitation ia extended to
everybody to come and Join in this
annual expression to God for hia bless
ings through the year.
Household Goda.
The ancient Greeks believed that the
Penates were the gods who attended to
the welfare and prosperity of the family.
They were worshiped at household gods
In every home. The household god of
today is Dr. King’s New Discovery.
For consumption, coughs, colds, and for
all affections of throat chest and lungs
it is invaluable. It has been tried for a
quarter of a centuary and is guaranteed
to cure or money returned. No house
hold should be without this good angel.
It is pleasant to take and a safe and
sure remedy for old and young. Free
trial bottles at P. C. Corrigan’s drug
; store. Regular size SO.cents and II.
V.u. ; . .. ...* . • '
•SCUTA** P0XTBX1 ACM.
Lincoln. Neb., Oct. 18,1887.—8pecf*l
Correapondence: Another election out
rage. The aecretary of etete, In open
defiance of lev, ie opening the aeeled
return* without welting for the boerd of
canvaaera.
The public underatende thet the re
turna of thia eleotlon ere made up br
the varioua county clerka. forwarded to
the aecretary of atete, to be kept by him
aeeled end unopened juat ee he receive*
them, to be opened, examined end
declared by the cenveaaing boerd end
by no one elae. The cenveaaing boerd
conalata of the governor, eecretrry of
atete, auditor, treeaurer end attorney
general. It ia the duty of thia board to
meet on the third Monday after election
for the purpose of opening theae returna
end the law aeya theae returna "ahall be
kept In the office of the aecretary of
the aecretary of atete end ahall be
opened only in the preaenee of auch
boerd at the time provided.** It ia
important that no one men ahall be
wtuweu tu u|wu wen rciuroa, dwiuw
Id ran of a clonly contested election
there might be eome dispute u to
whether the returns were genuine or
spurious, end so the stetutee provide
explicitly that the return shell be
opened only before the board at Its
designated sitting for that purpose so
that the public if it eo deeiree may wlt
neee the opening and may see that no
one is fraudulently counted in or out.
Now In the face of thia plain and
unmietakable law, in the face of all the
scandal that gathered around the re
count frauds of lut winter, in the face
of the present concocted fusion majority
by which there is now no political
necessity such as existed last year when
the reformera were trying to count in
fusion Judges, in the face of all the
recent agitation and discussion of the
rights of the ballot, Secretary Porter is
opening and examining these returns as
fast as they come, making of himself
and his deputy the canvassing board;
acting before the time, acting In aecret,
defying the law, and answering to those
who inquire aa to his unuaual proceed
ings "that he haln’t goln' to commit no
fraud on the ballot and that that are law
don’t amount to nuthin* nohow."
The newspaper reporters, astonished
that the secretary should have the nerve
to do this—it bad never been done
before by any secretary of state—asking
Porter for an explanation, were
answered, "That law is obsolete. It is
obsolete like many other laws. _ It is no
good. We can’t have reform unlese we
have reform."
Ed R. Sizer, secretary of the republi
can state committee, with a view to
ascertaining just what was being done
and to protest against Porter’s unlawful
tampering with the returns, called at the
secretary of state’s office on Thursday
afternoon.
"Where Is the secretary of state?”
asked Mr. Sizer. "Across the hall,"
answered the deputy. "Will you call
him in a moment? I want to protest
against your opening and tampering
with these sealed election returns," said
Sizer. At this Deputy Weisner flew
into a fit of bad tamper, awkward man
ners and answered, "If you want to see
Porter you can hunt him up yourself,
but we’ll go on doin’this business our
way all the same."
"But don’t you know the law prohib
its you from opening, or tampering with
these returns In this way?" asked Sizer
coolly.
“By the way they are rollin' up!
majorities guess the people is pucty well
satisfied with the way we are doin’
things," answered the deputy. "Ton
fellers needn’t come round here shOotin’
off about this. Guess we had to open
’em up to see if they was correct, didn’t
we? Guess the people’s done with you
fellers anyway. Your steelin' settled
settled you. You ran kick and shoot
off but the people don’t pay no attention
to you. Y’er beat in the election an’
tb.t .All »
It happens this year that the fusion
majority is so large that no contest will
be Hied, but if there were contests and
legal complications which called these
returns in question, the action of Secre
tary Porter would be very serious.
The secretary has no more right to open
these sealed returns than has the mail
clerk at the postofflce or the janitor at
the state house.
But the secretary simply brushes the
law aside with a ware of his long arm
and bis loud voice and says, "The law is
absolete. It is no good.”
While this is going on the governor,
his private secretary and W. J. Bryan
are off on a jack rabbit junkett to the
northwest. They will read about it in
the daily papers, but they will psy no
attention to it Maret will regard it as a
good joke. Biyan will regard it as too
small a thing to command the attention
of a great man. Holcomb will regard It
with the same complaisant acquiescence
with which he regarded the recount
frand, and with the same stolid indiffsr
«am wlili which he regard* MeaerreV
•traw bond which ia atUl knocking at
the door. It mar team like a waate of
time and apace to puMlah aucb facta aa
theae, but I feel aore there will come a
time when the fuaion rotera will raaliae
that the introduction of aoathern
methoda into our election syatem ia a
aeriona matter on which they cannot
afford to doae their eyea and eara.
\ 4, W. Jonnn
f.
vonea to txachxu
The regular meeting of the teaohere'
reading drde, of the O’Neill diatriot,
haa been poatponed to Saturday. Decem
ber 4,1897, at 1 o’dock p. m.
B. H. Wrblax, Manager. «
v’i -
. ■
Baeklea’i Aralea Salve.
The beet salve in the world for cute,
bruiaea, aorea, ulcera, aalt rheum, ferer
•orea, tatter, chapped handa, chilblaina,
corn a, and all akin eruptiona, and pod
tirely cures piles, or no pay required.
It la guaranteed to give perfect aaliafao
tion or money refunded. Prioe 85 cento
per box. For ide by P. C. Corrigan
‘ife
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V ■>'
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'i' ’ey*
moths.
To WHOM IT1CAT OORCWUC
Tha natal aadsaieof all properties
io Holt county, Neb., owned or con
trolled by ua, kite bean placed for the
preaant la charge of Mr. M. Lyoaa, of I;
Emmet, Nab., and ao other resident of
Holt county la authoriaed to represent
ne la inch matten. The properties we
control an principally each as hare
been acquired nader mortgagee negoti
ated by the Lombard Investment com* > ■
peny and others, either by foreclosnn
or voluntary deed from the borrower.
We npresent a large majority of the
holden of Lombard mortgages and of
the lands aoquired under them In Holt
county. All tenants upon such lands t if,
or anyone who may dasin to become
tenanta or purchasers may correspond
or confer with Mr. Lyons in nfenaco -
thento.
Kansas City, October 1.1897.
Cohcobdu Loam amd TrunAr Cote*
FAHT. _ 90*8
ooiAiaiOM om m xlkhomm. S
Ohadbom, Neb., Nov. 1&—8podal to
Slate Journal: In a bead-end collision
between a fnight and passenger train
seven miles east of here this morning ,1 -r
tha passengers narrowly escaped instant
death. The wreck occurred only a few
feet beyond i feep cut, on either side of
which were walls of stone towenag to a
height of fifty feet. The cool behavior
of Engineer Cooley of the passenger
train is what avoided one of the most /
disastrous accidents in the history of the
Elkhorn railroad. With rare presence . ^
of mind the engineer, before leaving his,
cab, reversed his engine a«d set the air _
brakes on his train, deserting his engine
when the incoming train was within a V
few feet of his locomotive.
The accident was due to the engineer
of the through freight, No. 97, miscon
struing his instructions, which were to , *', -'
meet the passenger train at Bordeaux,
seven miles east of here. Connors left
his engine as soon os he saw the other
train coming, and when the crash »t
his train was going at a speed ot not
less than twenty miles an hour. Engi
neer Cooley of the passenger train had
his train under control, and the fact
that it was at a standstill, with all .
brakes set, is all that saved the lives of
the half hundred passengers.
▲ half dozen box cars loaded with ' v
merchandise and three cars of mules,
consigned to Ft. Robinson, wore piled
up in a heap, engines and contents of
the cars being a total loos. No one was
killed or Injured, though Mail Clerk ;
Rowe, who was lying on a cot in his
car had a narrow escape. The tank of
the engine cut off the entire side of the Iff
ear opposite where he was lying and ;
deluged him with water, but he eacaped
uninjured. The mail not contained in
the pouches is greatly damaged, some of
it being antirely ruined. /
It often happens that the doctor ia out
of town when moat needed. The two
year old daughter of J. T. Schenck, of
Caddo, Ind. Ter., wu threatened with
croup. He write*: “My wife insisted
that I go for the doctor at once, but aa
he waa out of town, I purchaaed a bottle
of Chamberlnin'a Cough Bemedy, which
relieved the child immediately.” A
bottle of that remedy in the houae will
often *ave the expense of a doctor** bill,
besides the anxiety always occasioned
by serious sickness. When it is giyen
as soon as the croupy cough appears, it
will prevent the attack. Thousands of
mothers always keep it in their homes.
The 26 and 50 cent bottles for sale by P.
C. Corrigan, druggist. ,
FREE,: a
To our customers, a beautiful
$100 Music Box, January 1, 1898.
V. P. MANN.
W.
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