The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, April 18, 1901, Image 2

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    THE FRONTIER
I’a hi lib ml Every Thnredey by
THE FRONTIER FBUITIMU CoMPANT.
Q»NEnX[ - - NEBRASKA
BRIEF TELEGRAMS.
! '»*■» I .!■ ■!■ »-M.♦•I-M 4-111♦ >
Advices were received at Berlin an*
nounring the opening of the railroad
from Klao Chau to Tsln Tau, China.
The Northwestern Iowa Odd Fel
Iowa have announced their convention
,for Dubuque. Ia., April 2#. It will be
the eighty-second anniversary of the
founding of the order.
The election of democrats as alder*
'men In the Third, Fourth and Fifth
■wards of Denver is contested by the
republican candidates on the ground
of corruption and fraud.
Andrew Carnegie has offered to give
$100,000 to Portland, Ore., for a free
public library, provided the city will
guarantee a site and sufficient annual
Income for Its maintenance.
The Amalgamated Association of
Sheet Metal Workers will take the in
itiative In having designers and archi
tects sign contracts with builders to
employ only union men on their con
tracts.
A great many carloads of young
stock are being received at Webster,
S. D., for the settlers who have lo
cated on the land formerly embraced
within the Slsseton and Wahpeton In
dian reservation.
Mathilda Henderson, colored, died
at Qnincy, 111., aged 105 years. 8he
was recognised as the oldest person
of her race in that vicinity, and her
relatives have records showing that
her age, 105, was authentic.
The navy department has awarded
the contract for the building of the
twenty-three knot protected cruiser
Milwaukee to the Union Iron Works
of San Fr-n^isco. The contract price
is $2,825,000.
Secretary of the Treasury Gags re
ceived an offer for a million dollars
short term bonds from New York.
The price was higher than he was
willing to pay and he, therefore, re
jected the offer.
About 400 union carpenters d'd not
report for work at Indianapolis, Ind„
owing to the failure of the contrac
tor* to sign the scale. Seme of the
members of the union are at work for
contractors who have signed. The
old scale of 30 cents expired Mon
day.
The Minnesota house passed Sena
tor Chilton’s bill prohibiting the mar
riage of imbeciles, feeble-minded epi
leptics or insane persons, with an
amendment striking out the require
ment for a physician’s certificate be
fore any license to marry shall be ls
sued.
Victor R. Schults, the mail car
rier who shot and killed his wife and
sent two bullets through the breast
of W. H. Elkenberry, at Marion, Ind.,
and then cut his own throat, is liv
ing. His windpipe, which was sev
ered, was sewed together by the phy
sicians at the hospital.
The board of trustees of the West
ern Illinois Normal school at Macomb
awarded the contract for b ,tiding the
school to the Tri-City contracting
company of Davenport, la., Moline
and Rock Island. The building is to
be of Berea stone and will cost in the
neighborhood of $175,000.
A crowd of about fifty Ponca, Neb.,
men seised Alva Smith while he was
on his way from the theater, and tar
red and feathered him. He was giv
en twenty-four hours to leave town.
Smith ia accused of ruining Minnie
Ellum, a girl of 18, who died in an
Omaha hospital two weeks ago.
* The Teheran correspondent of the
Cologne Gasette, under date of Mon
day, April $, telegraphs that the Per
sian government has ordered the im
position of a duty of 5 per cent on all
Russian goods Imported instead of 3
to 4 per cent, as hitherto enforced.
The Minnesota house reconsidered
the vote which killed the hill to per
mit the parole of the notorious Youn
ger brothers, now serving life sen
tences in the state prison, and sent
the hill to the governor for annroval
or ntteUNT''
'The famous Oke'enokee swamp* in
South Georgia have been sold to
Charles Hebard it Sons of Michigan.
The consideration, it la understood. Is
1175,000. The swamp contains 364,
000 acre* and Its circumference is 137
mile*.
Samuel N. Ferris shct and killed
himself at Baker City, Ore. He was
about 33 years of age, was secretary
of a prominent mining company, and
is said to have been worth more than
1100,000 in mining property. The
cause of the suicide is unknown.
The latest statement of exports pub
lished by the bureau of statistics
shows that during the eight months
ending with February the total
amounted to 995,000,000 more than
the exports for the corresponding pe
riod ending in February, 1900.
* D. B. Robinson, formerly first vlc j
president of the Santa Fe, is reported
to be dying in a Chicago hospital.
* i The strike of the journeymen paint
ers of East Liverpool, O., secllcn,
which has lasted for the past ten
days, has been settled.
A CALL FOR EMPEROR
The Japaneee Formally Ask for Kwang
Su'a Eeturn to Pekia.
CHINO AND CHANG BOTH URGED
Are Instructed to Here Their Ruler
Promise Sometblsf Definite—Usd Bet
ter Bring All Soldiers so M to Quell
Disorders In Ruse In.
PEKIN, April 15.—Komurs Yuta.ro,
the Japanese minister, accompanied
by General Yamaguchi, the Japanese
commander, recently called upon
Prince Ching and notified him that
the return of Emperor Kwang Su to
Pekin was urgently desired. Prince
Chlng was informed that the emper
or's wishes would be respected by the
foreign troops and that every courtesy
would be shown him.
It was pointed out to the Chinese
plenipotentiary that the 'emperor’s
return was of the highest possible im
portance, as affecting the maintenance
of the integrity of the Chinese empire,
and that he should come, accompanied
by every available soldier—by at
least 20,000 men if possible. These
troops, it was further contended by
the Japanese minister, must be seat
into Manchuria, as the Russians re
ported great disturbances there and it
was not right that the task of quelling
the trouble should be thrown upon the
shoulders of one nation.
Finally Prince Ching was assured
that if the 20,000 Chinese troops could
not suppress the disorders in Manchu
ria other powers would send an inter
national force to co-operate with
China, which the powers regarded as
a friendly power.
No reply having been received to
this communication Li Hung Chang
was today notified to the same effect
and told that Emperor Kwang must
give an Immediate answer.
The preparations which the Jap
anese here are making for an early
start indicate that they expect war
between Russia and Japan. Vessels
arriving at Taku from Nagasaki report
the mobilization of the Japanese fleet
and the continuance of preparations
on board ship for the anticipated
struggle.
Prince Ching says all his reports go
to show that the missionary state
ments regarding a rebellion in Mon
golia are not supported by the facts.
Neither does he believe that the re
bellion of General Tung Fu Sian
amounts to much.
“It is the object of certain ele
ments,” he asserts, “to make it seem
that China is in a condition of con
stant broil, rendering it unsafe for the
foreign troops to be withdrawn. Those
who have this in view will magnify
a village riot into a big rebellion. The
Chinese ministers, naturally timid,
take these reports in good faith."
! BEHEAD RIM FOR TREASON.
Coreas Government Disposes of Kim
Yana Chun.
TACOMA, Wash., April 15.—A sen
sational political crisis exists in Seoul,
capital of Corea. The news is brought
tonight by the steamship Duke of Fife
that the government has beheaded
Kim Yang Chun for planning to make
the son of the emperor’s favorite mis
tress, Lady Om, heir to the throne, dis
placing the prince imperial, son of the
murdered uqeen.
The decapitated official was the lead
er of the Kim faction, which has been
engaged for months in deadly rivalry
with the Min faction, led by Min Kong
sik, for the domination of Corean poli
tics. The Min faction learned of the
plot against the prince imperial and
a street fight between the factions re
sulted.
MRS. NATION AGAIN ARRESTED.
mw Town urowa untnera About tno
Hatcher*.
KANSAS CITY, April 15.—Mrs. Car
rip Nation was arrested in this city
tonight on the charge of obstructing
the street and hauled to the police
station in a patrol wagon. She was re
leased on a cash bond of $6, and will
be tried In the police court tomorrow
morning.
• Mrs. Nation lectured in Kansas City
Kan., laBt night and came over to the
Missouri side this morning. She start
ed on a tour of investigation among
the downtown saloons this evening. A
thousand men and boys followed her,
and at Twelfth and Walnut streets,
where there are saloons on three cor
ners, she was arrested because the
crowd following her blockaded the
street She roundly lectured the sa
loon men whom she aisited.
Memorial Dfty in Pekin.
PEKIN, April 15.—Memorial serv
ices will be held by order of the court
In honor of Ysu Chien Sing, Li Sien
and Hsu Sung Yi, the members of the
tsung li yamen who were executed be
cause of their pro-foreign sentiment.
The staff of the United States legation
has been invited to attend. Hsu Chien
Sing held the post of Chinese minister
to Russia, director of the Russo-Chi
ne3e bank and president of the Chinese
Eastern railway.
ADMITS THE PLAGUE,
Ur. Victor Vanglm Reports oo Cbm of
Charlee B. Bare.
CHICAGO, April 15.—A dispatch to
the Record-Herald from Ann Arbor,
Mich., says Dr. Victor Vaughn, .direc
tor of the medical department, ap
peared before the state board of
health yesterday and practically ac
knowledged that the case of Student
Charles Benjamin Hare of Pawnee
City is one of bubonic plague. He as
sured the board there would be no
spread of the disease, as all precau
tions had been taken to prevent it,
and that the student would recover.
Dr. Novy, who attends Hare, weara
a germproof rubber garment that cov
ers him from head to foot, with two
little eyeholes for sight, whenever he
goes Into the contagious ward, and he
also injects preventative doses of se
rum into himself.
Dr. Vaughn told the board that Hare
contracted the disease by an accident
almost identical with that which oc
curred in Vienna in 1898. Prof. Noth
najle and his assistant, Barlach, were
conducting bacteriological experiments
on bubonic plague bacilli. Barisch
caught the disease and died, as did
also Dr. Muller, who attended him.
ATTEMPTS LIFE OF KROGER.
Reported That Someone Tried to Stab
the Aged President.
PARIS, April 15.—L’Estafette pub
lishes a report that an attempt was
made to stab Mr. Kruger.
LONDON, April 15.—According to a
dispatch to the London Daily Express
form Amsterdam, cabled to the Asso
ciated Press Saturday last, the Dutch
police recently got wind of contem
plated attempts upon the life of Mr.
Kruger. It is Quite likely that the
report to which L’Estafette gives cur
rency is traceable to a similar source.
Kot Dangerously Insane.
DENVER, April 15.—Albert S.
Oowan who was arrested on February
25 last on a charge of murder, which
was subsequently dismissed for lack of
sufficient etvdence to justify his in
dictment, has been released from cus
tody, a jury before which he was tried
on a charge of insanity having decided
that he was not so distracted in his
mind as to endanger his own life and
property or the lives and property of
others. It was believed for a time
that Cowan was the thug who knocked
down many women on Capital hill dur
ing the fall and winter. Several of
the assailant’s victims died.
Border Ruffian Slain.
SILVER CITY, N. M., April 15.—
Red Weaver, a well known border char
acter and a reputed member of the fa
mous "Black Jack” gang of bandits,
has been killed at Alma, a little min
ing camp seventy two miles northwest
of here.
Weaver had threatened to kill Tod
Holliman, who had previously called
him to account foY certain remarks
against a young woman’s character.
Later, they met again and iired at
each other simultaneously.' Weaver
fell dead with a bullet through his
heart. Holliman was exonerated.
Farmers Fight tha Combino.
SALINA, Kan., April 15.—Farmers
of Saline county have completed the
perliminary organization of their as
sociation to light the grain combine
by building or leasing their own ele
vators, and a charter will be applied
for at once.
The board of directoi-3 chosen is
made up of J. A. Reser, W. A. Mur
phy, C. L. Stone, J. E. Runquist, Wil
liam Muir, A. C. Hillman and John S.
Bean, all of whom are prominent far
mers.
Fourteen State* Represented.
CINCINNATI, O., April 15.—Four
teen states were represented here to
day at the meeting of the Keaher Shel
Barzel, a Jewish beneficiary organiza
tion. The annual message of the presi
dent and the reports of the other offi
cers were submitted and discussed to
day. The society will be in session
several days.
Health Broken.
BLOEMFONTEIN. April 15.—It Is
reported that the health of former
President Steyn has broken down. It
Is also said he has advised all the
Boers on commandoes to surrender
immediately.
EmlUa Kempln Dead.
BERLIN. April 15.—Emilia Kempin,
doctor of laws, and one of the foremost
leaders of the woman’s movement in
Germany, has just died in an insane
asylum at Basle, Switzerland.
Chairman Walker** Funeral,
NEW YORK, April 15—Funeral ser
vices ever the body of Aldace F. Walk
er, president of the Atchison, Topeka
& Sante Fe railroad, were held today
at the West End Collesiate church.
The pallbearers were John G. McCul
lough of the Erie railroad; General H.
L. Burnett, United States district at
torney; General E. H. Ripley, presi
dent; Charles M. Hays of the Scu:h
ern Pacific, Victor Morawetz, George j
H. Haven, and R. Summer Hays. I
! DESTRUCTION Of GRASSHOPPERS.
_
Prof. Brtauf Ihbm • Bulletin Regard
ing the Matter.
LINCOLN. Neb., April 15.—Prof.
Lawrence Bruner, entomologist at the
University of Nebraska, has Issued a
bulletin in which he discusses vari
ous plans for destroying grasshoppers.
It begins with a general description
of the insects, this outline Includes
a statement of their life history, habits
and relations to other insect forms,
as well as the effects of climate, lati
tude, altitude and diseases in keeping
them within certain limits. Much
stress is laid on the past carelessness
in the efforts of farmers of the state
for permitting native locusts to be
come sufficiently numerous to cause
trouble.
Among the artificial remedies which
are suggested and described in this
bulletin the most important is that
of “discing” in early spring alfalfa
fields and other grounds containing
the eggs of these insects. This disc
ing can be done at any time after
the frost is out of the ground, but
the best time seems to be early in
April. Instead of injuring the alfalfa
numerous experiments in Kansas and
Nebraska have shown that by running
the disc over the fields the yield is
greatly increased. This stirring of
the soil breaks up the egg masses and
exposes them to the drying influences
of the air and the-keen eyes of the
birds.
NEW FISH AND GAME IAW.
Wo Effort to Enforea It Until After the
First of faly>
LINCOLN, Neb., April 15.—It is of
ficially announced at the state house
that no attempt will be made by state
officers to enforce the new fish and
game law before July 1, that being the
time when all laws passed without
an emergency clause by the last legis
lature will become effective. An
emergency clause was attached to the
enrolled copy of the bill through er
ror and without authority, but, al
though it was signed by the presiding
officers of the legislature and by the
governor, it canot be enforced, for the
reason that' it was defeated in the
house of representatives. The official
journal of the house shows that the
bill was ordered for third reading on
March 13 and that on roll call it fail
ed to receive the constitutional two
thirds vote necessary for an emer
gency clause thus leaving it subject
to a motion to strike out the clause.
Such a motion was made by Coppoc
of Holt county and adopted, as the
record shows. The roll was then call
ed on the bill without the emergency
clause and as it received the requisite
number of votes it was declared pass
ed.
Senator Hillard’s Private Secretary.
OMAHA, Neb., April 15.—Senator
Millard has selected James B. Haynes
as his private secretary and has sent
the name to Washington. Mr. Haynes,
the new secretary, has been a resident
of Omaha for many years. In 1881
he did his first newspaper work in
this city, reporting the session of the
legislature for the Bee. From 1882 to
1885 he was stenographer in the office
of the general passenger agent of the
Union Pacific railroad and in 1887 was
stenographer in Judge Hopewell’s
court.
Will Move For Acquittal.
FRANKFORT, Ky., April 13.—The
prosecution in the Ripley conspiracy
case will conclude its testimony to
morrow. The defense will move for
instructions for a verdict of acquittal.
Lawyers for the prosecution do not
beliove this will be sustained in view
of the ruling of the court permitting
the introduction of evidence as to the
conspiracy. They assert that the evi
dence of ex-Governor Bradley and
Judge Yost connects Ripley with the
case.
Barn* Horaclf to Death.
PLATTSMOUTH, Neb., April 15.—
Mrs. Klnkead, 82 years of age, who
had been living with her son, went
into the cow house of Mrs. Seiden
striker, a neighbor, and after partially
disrobing, set fire to her underclothing
and started for the house. A phy
sician was called, but she died. She
said she was tired of living and beg
ged the doctor to give her chloro
form. She had been in poor health.
Fixe* Date of R« anion.
PLAINVIEW, Neb., April 15.—The
Grand Army of the Republic commit
tee of northeast Nebraska met to lo
cate the next reunion. Neligh was
chosen as the place, the reunion to be
gin the second week in July. A
campfire was held at the opera house.
Lieutenant Mapes’ Friend* Active,
NEBRASKA CITY, Neb., April 15.—
Lieutenant William Mapes of the
Twenty-third United States infantry,
who has won such honors by captur
ing insurgent officers et Manila and
some $40,000 of their funds, was born
and raised in this county. He was
formerly major of the Second regiment
of the Nebraska National Guards. His
friends here will ask for his advance
ment as a reward for his services in
the Philippines.
TO BE HANGED AUGUST 2.
Judge Grlmlaon Put*> Sentence Upon
Herman Zahn'e Murderer.
FREMONT, April 13.—William
Rhea, who was convicted of the mur
der of Herman Zahn, was sentenced
by Judge Grimison to be hanged with
in the walls of the penitentiary at Lin
coln August 2. The defendant was
brought Into the court room hand
cuffed, in charge of Sheriff Kreader.
He wore the same dark suit as during
the trial, starched white shirt, white
high collar and small, black band neck
tie. His face was white with the pal
lor of close confinement, but looked a
little fuller than during the trial. The
hold reckless look In his eyes has soft
ened little. During the half hour
which he spent in the room he showed
no emotion whatever, but appeared a
little restless. He fingered the band
of his black slouch hat, changed his
position frequently and looked around
the room In a careless unconcerned
way.
Mr. Gray filed a motion for a new
trial and stated to the court that the
grounds were statutory and the same
points were raised as were passed up
on during the progress of the trial.
“I haven't seen any reason to change
the opinions formed during the trial
of the case,” said the judge, “and the
motion will be overruled.”
In a slow, solemn voice the judge
tueu x rau me BC'iieuce wiiicu, iu me
words of the statute, substantially
was that the defendant be taken to
the penitentiary at Lincoln, delivered
into the custody of the warden, kept
in solitary confinement and on the 2d
day of Auugst, 1901, between the hours
of 9 and 11 a. m., be taken to some
place designated within the walls of
the penitentiary and there hanged by
the neck until dead. As the judge read
the latter part of the sentence the
tones of his voice grew lower and more
impressive, and the word “dead’’ was
spoken scarcely above a whisper.
The defendant was wholly unmoved.
He took his Beat ani looked around as
unconcerned as before. Not a muscle
of his face changed, and he scarcely
moved an eye while the sentence was
being read.
NEBRASKA’S PLAGUE VICTIM.
Father of C. B. Haro Intends to Vlilt the
Patient at Ann Arbor.
PAWNEE CITY, Neb., April 13.—It
has been definitely ascertained that
the Ann Arbor bubonic plague patient
is Charles Benjamin Hare, whose home
is in this city. His parents and a
number of other relatives reside here.
The parents were informed of the son’s
sickness by a reporter for The Bee and
a telegram was immediately sent to
Ann Arbor for information in regard
to the young man’s condition. Dr.
Novy answered that Mr. Hare was
resting easily and would probably re
cover.
Hare is 26 years old and a student
in the medical department of the Ann
Arbor unversity. He is taking a spe
cial course in bacteriology and is as
sistant to Dr. Novy, the celebrated
specialist, who has for several years
been interested in an effort to develop
an effective serum for bubonic inocu
lation.
THE LEGISLATIVE APPROPRIATIONS
!• H ten than the Estimate of the Senate
Committee.
LINCOLN, April 13.—A report com
piled in the auditor’s office shows that
the total of legislative appropriations
was $292,000 less than the estimate of
the senate committee on finance, ways
and means. Exclusive of the endow
ment and trust money for the univer
sity and the appropriation for the dis
trict court, the-amount is $2,645,433,
which, including all the extraordinary
appropriations, is only $54,059.92 more
than the total of two years ago. These
figures are taken from an official com
pilation, but are substantially the
same as those printed at the close of
the legislative session.
Quit* Ll(* In • Fearful Way.
YORK, Neb., April 13.—Quy Ander
son, a young man 26 years old, com
mitted suicide in a horrible manner at
his home south of Waco. The body
was found lying beside a pile of burn
ing rubbish in a field near the barn,
blackened and burned almost beyond
recognition. In order to make his des
perate work more certain he first tied
hia legs toegther with wire and then
fastened the wire to a fence post near
a pile of rubbish. He then must have
set fire to this rubbish and thereafter
cut his throat with his pocket knife,
severing both the windpipe and the
jugular vein. He was perhaps deac
before the fire had any effect upon hit
body.
Miuiog Man Writes Home.
PLATTSMOUTH, Neb., April 13.—
Walter Grim, a young man who de
serted his wife at Nehawka, in this
county, recently, without giving any
cause therefor, has turned up at Avo
ca, la. He sent money to his wife
to pay her expenses to go to him, but
offered no explanation. Since his de
parture his wife has been prostrated
with grief, but it is not thought that
she will leave Nebraska to join him.
They were married three months ago.
Practical Civic* In Schools*
Superintendent Howell, of the
Scranton, Pa., schools, has proposed
a plan for instructing the pupils as
to the manner in which a president of
the United States is elected. The dem
onstration is to be a practical one.
Each school is to constitute a conven
tion and each pupil is to write an es
say giving the history of a presidential
campaign from the beginning to the
ina 'guratton. After these are com
pleted a platform committee will be
appointed in each school to prepare
resolutions or declarations of party
principles after which the election will
be held, each pupil voting for his
candidate for president. The election
is expected to take place in March.
Many advantages are to be had from
practice of this kind and there is no
reason why it should be confined to
presidential elections.
B«(»a a* a Backstop.
Congressman Wadsworth’s hands -
are battered out of shape nearly as
much as were those of the late “Sil
ver** Flint and from the same cause.
The New York man was in his day a
crack baseball player and at one time
held down first base in the Yale nine. .n
He has a son who filled the Bame posi
tion for Yale and was as good a player
as his father.
MOTHER AND DAUGHTER.
Tbo Wife and Mother-In-Law of Mr*
Chari** Key*.
CLARISSA, Minn., April 15, (Spe
cial.)—No family in this vicinity is
better known or more universally re
Byectea, man mr. unarms iveys, toe
local School Teacher, and his estima
ble wife, and mother-in-law. For a
long time, Mrs. Keys has been in 111
health. Recently, however, she has
found a cure for her ailments in Dodd’s
Kidney Pills.
“I cannot speak too highly of
Dodd’s Kidney Pills, or of what they
have done for me,” said Mrs. Keya
"My life was miserable, my back
always ached, also my head. I was
troubled with Neuralgia in the head
and face and suffered extreme pain,
but thanks to Dodd’s Kidney Pills, all
those aches and pains have vanished
like the morning dew, and it now
seems that life is worth living. I con
sider Dodd’s Kidney Pills a God-send
to suffering humanity. They may,
rightly be named the Elixir of Youth.'
“While speaking of my own case
and the wonderful benefit I have re
ceived, I might also add, that my
mother, who is now an old lady of
74 years and who lives with me, has
been troubled more or less, with aches
and pains, as is natural with one of
her advanced age. When she saw
what Dodd’s Kidney Pills had done for
me, she commenced to use them her
self, and she Bays that they have done
her more good than any other medi
cine she has ever tried.
“This testimony is given in the
hope that others who may be af
flicted as we were, may see and read
it, and be benefited by it.”
What Mrs. Keys states in her letter
can be verified by reference to any of
her many friends in this neighbor
hood. Dodd’s Kidney Pills have al
ready a wonderful'reputation in Todd
County.
Nothing has ever cured Bright’s
Disease, Diabetes or Dropsy but Dodd’s
Kidney Pills.
Bret Hart® Coming Home.
Bret Harte will probable return to
America next year, but only for a
visit, as he merely intends to make a
tour of the West to brush up his mem
ories of that section of the country
and see its development.
What Pa the Children Drink?
Don’t give them tea or coffee. Have you
tried the new food drink called UKAIN-Ot
It is delicious and nourishing, and takes the
place of coffee. The more Grain-O you give
the children the more health you distribute
through tbeir systems. Grain-O is made of
pure grains, and when properly prepared
tastes like the choice grades of coffee, but
costs about as much. All grocers sell it.
lfio and 25c.
The world is like a piano—full of
sharps and fiats.
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES do not
stain the hands or spot the kettle.
The prosperity of fools Ehall destroy
them.—Solomon.
Ask your grocer for DEFIANCE
STARCH, the only 16 oz. package for
10 cents. All other 10-cent starch con
tains only 12 oz. Satisfaction guaran
teed or money refunded.
Platonic love is a dinner at which
nothing hut soup is served.
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup,
for children teething, softens the dams, reduces lr
asmBksUon, alleys psis.euieswindceHc. Kc a bottle.
A perfect woman, nobly planned, to *
warn, to comfort and command.
Ask your grocer for DEFIANCE
STARCH, the only 16 oz. package for
10 cents. All other 10-cent starch con
tains only 12 oz. Satisfaction guaran
teed or money refunded.
All I am or can be I owe to my an
gel mother.—Abraham Lincoln.
Piso's Cure is the best medic: ne we ever used
for all affections of the throat and lungs.—Wa
O. Endsust, Vanburen, Ind., Feb. 10, 1900.
Toasts are often drunk, yet they are
never intoxicated.
•too Reward 8100.
The readers of this paper will be pleased to
learn that there is at least one dreaded disease
that sr’encc has been able to cure in all its
stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall’s Catarrh
Cure is the only positive cure now known to the
medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitu
tional disease, requires a constitutional treat
ment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally,
acting directly upon the blood ami mucous sur
faces c[ the system, thereby destroying the
foundation of the disease, arid giving the patient
strength by building up the constitution and
assisting nature in doing its work. The pro
prietors have so much faith in its curative
powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars for
any caso that it fails to cure. Send for list of
Testimonials.
Address K. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, a
Sold hy druggists 7.V.
t-all's Family Fills are the best.
Youth may stray afar, yet return at
last