Plattsmouth weekly herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1882-1892, June 09, 1892, Image 6

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    ANOTHER LOST BONANZA.
riftitv of Kvldence In Arizona to Kbow
Wlierr ;oM Was Unri Found.
Tho leireml ut lout minus of fabulous
wealth in Pima county are almost
ihiuiIhtIiss, ami it wight s trutli
fully milled, generally mythical. The
ohl timers can ti ll of them by tho hour,
anil a few iK-nuum have lx-en shown
glittering evulences in cotitirmation of
tho wouiierful tales reluotuutly reciU'il
with miiiersUtiou dread of the coiise
imences of their perl'iily by almost bu
H'rannuatuil ImliniiH and MeiicaiiH.
That the iireeious metaltt were wined
tin a giKantiu M'ulu in the dim uiHt tho
many renmitiini; evidences already dis
covered fully verify, yet tho investiga
tion of tbnso that chance has revealed
luad Kcldom proved financially Buccess
ful. Old umpires covered with the de
i'ny of centiuies, aud crude smelting
furnaces Unit have almost retunied it
the dusty destiny of ull matter, upeak of
industries once in ai-tive oiteration that
history and even alxirigiiml tradition
fail to mention.
Koine of the traditions told sound like
fairy tales, and one, however skeptical,
cannot but Ix-como deeply interested in
their rwcital. As 11 sample of the highly
plausible, well authenticated and ex
tremely fteduutivo narratives, one re
lated by Charles O. Brown, of this city,
nmy be received with interest.
"Speaking of old mines," said Mr.
Brown, "I havo RjH'iit A good deal of
time and money in hunting; up clews,
and one initio was actually found, and
I can go to it any time. Out in tho
Hilver Boll country I can take yon to a
mountain no full of tunnels and shafts
that, if they wore in good condition,
yon could travel through all day long
and not reach the end.
"A number of old timers have visited
it, and, judging from tho vast work
done thoro bo long ugo, thoy concluded
that a great mine of some kind had ex
itui there, which had likely been work
d out. Many times has it been located,
and though its wulls, roof and floor we;e
carefully scanned and sampled, the re
sult, while showing some gold, was dis
couraging, assays showing from a trace
up to several dollars per ton.
"Many years ago I talked with an old
Papago Indian, with whom I was en
very friendly terms, having often ex
tended him little favors, about tho gold
and Hilver mines. In a burst of confi
dence he told me that a great many
years ago, when he was a very small
boy, the Indiana at San Navier del Buc
made weekly trips to a very rich gold
mine. On Saturday night they returned
with the products of their toil. The
priest in charge of the mission kept a
email table in front of the altar, covered
with a white cloth, upon which tho
pious toilers placed their metallic offer
ings to the church.
"This table was often covered with
golden nuggets, varying in size from a
pea to one's fist, and it was a rich sight.
After tho usual service the priest would
descend, and as he picked up each
precious pioeo ho would proclaim tho
name of tho donor and afterward would
call them forward to receive tho special
blessing of heaven. On the following
Monday they would again take up their
march in a northwesterly direction for
tho mines, and for a very long time this
was repeated, until the priests were
driven out of the country, when they
abandoned mining entirely.
"Tho old Indian had one timo gone
with the miners, who followed a well
beaten trail toward the Silver Bell coun
try, and ho saw them take out the gold.
Ho agreed to show mo tho place, Hnd
out of curiosity 1 sent a man with him
one day. They went out to the old
mino I havo spoken of in tho Silver Bell
country, and when they reached n cer
tain gulch tho Indian glinted to the top
of tho mountain and said ho would, find
a shaft there, covered with cat claw
bushes, out of which the most gold was
token. Tho man found everything just
as tho old Indian told him, but long lis
nso had filled up tho shaft until it was
nearly full.
"On returning! the old Indian could
not lie found. He luul gone ahead and
was not met for several days. Ho then
said he did not dare to show tho mine to
tho white people, and protested that
ho did not show it for fear the Great
Spirit would take his life. He said the
white man had found it, but he did not
show it.
"I visited the mine afterward, but
the work necessary to clean out the
shaft was too great and too expensive
to undertake, and it has never Ixn ji
touched." Arizona Enterprise.
True Coiirtrny.
On one occasion Iloliert Browning's
son had lured a room in a neighlKiring
house, in order to exhibit his pictures
there, and during the temporary absence
of tho artist, Mr. Browning was doing
the honors to a room full of fashionable
friends.
lie was standing near the door when
an unannounced visitor made her ap
pearance, and of course he shook hands'
with her, greeting her a ho had the
other arrivals.
"Oh, I beg your pardon," she exclaim
ed, "but, please, sir, I'm the cook. Mr.
Barrett asked me to come and see his
pictures."
"And 1 am very glad to see you," re
turned Mr. Browning, with ready
courtesy. "Take my arm, and I will
show you round." Temple Bar.
A hint-He Ctrl' Kail.
On Nov. is,so, a schoolgirl named
2fg A Soo fell from the roof of a four
storied house, a distance of sixty or ev
enly feet. Her skull was fractured in
several places and the right parietal em
inence was deeply impressed. Enough
to kill anylxxly, one would say, or at the
Ivt-st, to induce lifelong idiocy! Not .1
bit of it! In exactly six weeks Ng A Soo
left the hospital, "seemingly" says tlm
clinical report, "in no way the worse for
her f ractured skull." London Hospital.
Oc'-asionally the English viper will
attempt tc engulf too largo nn animal,
and Mr. ii: il found one on Poole heath
the skm of whose neck had thus been
bursted in nereral places.
HC KNEW.
Hiram Was Mot at All Spared fey the
Motaee Down Dtatra.
It was 8 o'clock in the morning when
Mrs. Higinhotham shook her husband.
"Ugh," heresjHinded unconsciou.-dy.
"Hiram! Hiram!" she exclaimed in a
whisjier.
"ll-ugh," he obserTed.
She gave him another shake.
"Hiram," she whispered, "there's rob
bers down stairs."
"Ugh?" he ventured again, this time .
with a rising inflect ion indicating that ho '
was gradually absorbing the idea tli.it
something was wrong.
She gave him a tremendous shake.
"Ugh," he almost shouted, sitting
straight np, "what in thunder's the row,
Maria?"
She clapped her hand over his mouth.
"Sh sh!" she whispered, "there's
burglars down stairs."
"Aw," he growled, "we ought to be
thankful they are not up stairs. Oo to
Bleep!" and he fell back to the pillow.
"Hiram, I tell you, ' she insisted, with
another shake, "there's burglars down
stairs. I heard them. You go down
and see what they want."
"Maria," he protested, "I'll do noth
ing of the sort. If they don't see what
they want they can ask for it. Thai's
business."
"But yon shall go down, Hiram, and
see," she urged and pleaded at the same
time.
"1 won't, I tell yon, Maria. Because
your father owns a dry goods store is no
sign that 1 believe it is no trouble to
show goods, anil I repeat, madam, ii
those burglars winit anything tln- 'vi
got to wait on themselves. It's af. i
business hours anyway. Yon i. ,m
think we run an all night pl;:'.'o. Co u
sleep, I tell you."
Mrs. Higinhotham gave a suddr-i,
clutch at his arm.
"There," she nearly screamed, "1 heai
them coming up stairs now."
"Well, dear," ho said soothingly,
"you'd letter jump tip and put on a
dress. It will never do in tho world for
you to receive strange gentlemen in your
present attire."
"We'll be murdered in our 1ki1s," she
wailed.
"Do you really think you will," he in
quired with some interest.
"I'm sure of it, Hiram," she sobbed.
"Suppose yon get out and lie on tho
floor, Maria, and then you won't lie," he
suggested heartlessly. "I'm willing to
take mine right here in bed, where it's
warm."
Mrs. II. began to cry,
"What's the matter, Maria'" Mr. n.
asked, as if he had just that moment
discovered her grief.
You're a mean, horrid man, Hiram
Diginbotham," she said in her natural
voice, and she began to get out of bed.
"Where are you going, Maria'" he in
quirwd uneasily,
"Down stairs," she answered heroical
ly. "As between you upstairs and the
burglars down stairs, 1 prefer the bnr
glars." and down stairs she went, and the
black cat in the preserve closet upset
four jars of her finest quinces in its mad
effort to escajie.
She screamed, but niratn niginbotham
made no sign; he knew he had forgotten
to put the cat in the cellar when he shin
the house up for the night and remitted
to his wife that everything was all right.
Detroit Free Press.
Home of the Sea Serpent.
The question of the "great sea ser
pent" has of late come before us with an
episcopal sanction; but whatever may
bo the explanation of the various appear
ances which have given a certain cur
rency to a belief in the existence of nu
unknown marine monster of some kind,
that small sea scrixmtfl exist is most cer
tain. They are all marine, and with tho
exception of one or two species never quit
the water. As might he expected under
such circumstances they bring forth
their young alive, aud theso can swim us
soon as they are born.
Mr. Boulenger tells us that their home
is essentially the coasts of tho Indian
ocean and tho tropical parts of the west
era Pacific, from tho Persian gulf to
New Guinea ami North Australia. One
species, however, ranges from west nnd
south Africa to the western coast of
tropical America and extends northward
to J apnu and southward to New Zeiv
land. Quarterly Iteview.
Two Guilty Condolences.
A Danbury youth went trout fishing
ami ventured to drop a sly line into a
posted brook. Soon the approaching
figure of the owner loomed tipin the dis
tance, and the Danbury youth knew he
had liven seen. He took incontinently
to the bu.ihes, where he sjiont a very
miserable two hours iu hiding and
caught a cold that kept him two days in
bed.
Meanwhile the terrible owner, who
was not the owner at all, had sought a
similar refuge ut sight of the original
culprit, and not until his teeth chattered
like a typewriter did he venture to leave
the friendly but damp shelter and slink
away from the scene. He was an elder
ly man, and his -liaro in the day's sport
resulted in a four days' rheumatic limp.
Boston Transcript.
Ancient Sacrifices to the Sea.
The navigators of antiquity, to whose
imaginative ignorance the ocean seemed
IK-'opled and beset with chimeras dire
and supernatural agencies of all sorts,
used oiicnto sacrifice human lives to
the mysterious water gods. It is regard
ed by tradition thnt Idomeneus, king of
Crete, vowed to sacrifice to Neptune the
first living thing ho met after escaping
from a storm, and this happening to lie
his son, he fulfilled his vow religiously.
Medea nearly became a sacrifice during
tho return voyage of tho Argonauts.
Washington Star.
No Hcilectlon on lilt Character.
"That stylish looking gentleman was
under police supervision iu his younger
days."
"Nonsense! You must bo joking."
"Not a bit of it; his father was a con
stable." Dorfbarbier.
A MEXICAN LEGEND.
A M)tl-tvi Hi.rjr if an Illmlve Valla;
if Cold In KuKlrrn Arlzuua.
The story of tho famous treasure of
the "M.nlre ii't)io" is an old otic It
comes f ii.iit the Aztecsof Mexico. Some
where in southeastern Arizona there is
a small vaU 'y, about five miles long
and two miles wide, walled in by tower
ing mountains. The sides are so precip
itous that il is impossible to climb down
them, and there is only one entrance,
through a cave, which is carefully hid
den by Imlht-K, who guard the treasure
for the M coud coming of Montezuma.
It is said that even among them the
entrance is miiv known to the three most
aged men, an I is never communicated
except when, on the death of one, it is
necessary to give the knowledge into
the keeping of another.
Tho valley itself, though surrounded
by inhospitable rocks, is a paradise.
Watered by tho stream which flows
through it, its soil is covered with flowers
and beautiful trees, through the branches
of which Hit bright hued birds. The only
reptiles seen are the gold snakes, with
their glittering greenish yellow scales.
St retelling across the valley from one
side to the other is a ledge of pure gold,
its masses of virgin metal gleeining and
glistening in the sunlight. It is said to
1)0 five feet, H n feet, fifty feet, 100 feet
wide. The gold lies in it in great veins
and nuggets, imbedded in clear quartz,
tho sharp angles of which glitter in the
sunlight like gigantic diamonds. Across
tho lodge tho stream flows, forming a
little waterfall, below which the nug
gt tsof gold can lie Been in the water
and out. Gold in the ledge, gold in the
scales i if snakes, gold in the stream, gold
in the birds gold, gold, gold, gold is
the refrain of tho golden story.
The fearful precipice which surround
tho place, the strange ceremonies iwid
horrid banquets which have served to
keep tho secret safe, the tribe of Aztecs,
living only to preserve for their mys
terious ruler this treasure house of na
ture, have all aided in giving to tho
story its strange interest. Small won
der is it that tho pulse should quicken
and the eyo grow bright as you hear the
tale from the lips of weu who more than
half believe it. The lonely desert sur
rounding yon, with the tall cacti look
ing like ghosts in the half moonlight;
the long drawn melancholy of the coy
ote's howl, the prospector's fire of grease
wood, the men with their rough cloth
ing and quaint language, all vanish as
you listen, aud in imagination you are
transported to the wonderful valley in
which is the "Madre d'Oro," the "Moth
er of Gold."
Nor are they content to tell the story
ns an Indian legend. They cite instances
of white men who have Been tho place,
who have descended into tho valley in
some way and returned with all the gold
they could carry. The location of the
spot is always in a dangerous Indian
country. I have lieen told twice that i
was in the Chircahua mountains. It is
always said to have been found merely
by accident by men who were either
hunting or prospecting for ledges, about
tho only two occupations which will
make unscieutifio men climb the moun
tains. It can only lie seen from the up
per end after the morning mists in the
valley have cleared away. Then, as one
stands on tho rugged peaks and looks
down, ho sees the great ledgo spanning
the valley below him, tho virgin meta!
glittering in tho sunlight, and he knows
that he has before him the place of
which he has heard so much aud dreamed
so of ten. Interview in Washington Star.
American I'erfiiinrs.
"It does not follow nowadays," said
the druggist, "that because a toilet per
fume is made in France it is superior in
quality to ono of American preparation.
Such was formerly the case, but the urt
of making fine perfumes lias lieen car
ried to such perfection of late years it.
our own count ry that not more than one
eighth as much of the French prepara
tions is sold in the United States todav
as was sold a few years ngo. Nearly
(.MHI,X0 worth of home distilled inr
fumes are made in New Y'ork alone ev
ery year. Chicago manufacturers put
one-half as much on tho market, ntni
there are extensive perfumery manufac
tories in Boston, Philadelphia, San Fran
cisco, St. Lonis and other large places.
New xork Evening Sun.
Modern Wlti-limift.
In divers villages in Pennsvlvnnia
I soino of them in tho Dunkard settle
ments, tire women who are supposed to
bewitches. Some are shrewd enough
not to apply their arts for strangers, but
to those whom thev know, as stated in a
j newspaper article some vears ago, they
will sell charms toward off lightning
from buildings, dry np the wells of the
enemies of applicants, force cows to
give bloody milk, cause sickness in the
family, destroy beauty, separate man
and wife and reunite estranged lovers.
Dr. Buckley in Century.
'A Kciniirkulile drouth.
Wonderful things happen in Ireliim
as well as elsewhere, if tho followinj
can Im vouched for, which is not likely
It is related that a gentleman in Irel;:ml
on cutting open a potato at dinner
found m the center a half soveretg
around which the vegetable had grow
Though discolored, it wan i'l a go
state of preservation, and is now a iiret
ii.
ornament to a watch chain. Piiihnu j
phia Ledger.
A Hard Uiii-,1 im .
Doctor My goodnesM This won't d' .
You don't eat enough.
Sick Boy You don't want mo to e u.
do you?
Doctor Indeed I do.
Sick Boy (angrily) Then why in th'
name o' sense did you tell me to take a
big dose o' cod liver oil before every
meal? Gixsl News.
Had lieen There.
Maiden (listening to Mendelssohn's
"Wedding March") I don't see why they
have the clashing of the cymbals.
Young Mrs. Benedict Why, as a sym
Ixd of the flashings which are to follow,
of course. Kate Field's Washington,
A Hawk Killed by a Railway Engine.
To railway officials it is a well knowu
fact that the engines of high speed ex
presses kill small and large heavy flying
birds, such as partridges and grouse, in
great quantities, sometimes carryin'.'
their bodies long distances. A few
months ago the writer was bhown by a
locomotive snjierintenileiit of oue of the
principal northern lines a dead bird
which, strange to say, though a very
rapid flier, had met its doom through
the agency of the iron horse. This bird
was a sparrow hawk, and it is now
stuffed and may be Keen in the Carlton
road board school museum. Kentish
Town.
The driver of the train relates that he
was traveling lietween sixty and seventy
miles an hour near Melton, when just
on the point of entering a long tunnel
he observed fluttering in front of the en
gine some object which heat first mis
took for a rag, but when on leaving the
tunnel he went forward he discovered,
to his astonishment, that it was a spar
row hawk which had become entangled
between the handrail and smoke box of
tho engine, and was held there firmly
by the pressure of the wind. It was
not quite dead when taken ont of tin.
curious deathtrap, though one eyo had
been destroyed. There is nodoubht that
it met its death accidentally, as a hawk
can fly quicker than the fastest trains
travel so the drivers say, who offer
observe them flying low down in the
hedgerow and keeping up with the train
till some unwary small bird, frightened
by the noise, flies out of the fence, when
the hawk pounces on it and devours it.
Strand Magazine.
Why Birds Migrate.
Why some birds which could pick up
food among us all the year around
should leave when food is plentiful,
while others with similar ways ' life
remain, is still a mystery. It is easy to
understand that a species which preys
on fresh water fish and on frogs should
seek other quarters when tho ponds are
frozen and the frogs buried in the clay.
But it is not quite so clear why the
swallow and the flycatcher leave a re
gion where there is perpetual summer
and winged food in abundance, ris.;
a long journey over sea and land, only
to find a great scarcity of the same
kind of food. And it is equally puz
zling that the seed and fruit eaters who
since October have been fattening
umong the gardens of Algeria and
Egypt, should suddenly, in March or
April, be seized with such an inordinate
craving for a change of diet as to fly
8.U0U miles on the chance of picking tq
the short commons of an English spring.
Perhaps it wiH be found that immi
gration is natural to all birds, and is
greater or less as circumstances may
determine. Every animal shifts its quar
ters according to the plentifulness or
scarcity of food. Even our resident
move up and down the country at dif
ferent periods of the year, living in the
lowlands in the winter and in the up
lands in the summer, and it is wel!
known that all winter there is a con
tinual drifting of the birds from the Con
titient to our islands, according to tin
weather. London Standard.
Two Narrow Kcape.
Twice in his experience has John P..
Obermeyer, of Chicago, owed his life to
the practice of carrying papers in his in
side pocket. The first time was on :
battlefield in the war of the rebellion.
Then the muster roll of his company of
the Eleventh Pennsylvania volunteer,
stopped a musket ball fired at randon
from the enemy's lines. The secotn.
time was on Monday, when a bulle
from a HS-caliber revolver, fired only six
feet distant, and aimed deliberately ir
his breast, failed to penetrate an en
velope filled with bank bills and a paFs
book in his inside vest pocket.
After this second event Mr. Ober
meyer, it is said, looked coolly at tin
would bo assassin, and called hiin a
coward, and invited him to shoot a sec
ond time, but the latter stood for
moment irresolute, then, with his hand
trembling, laid his revolver on the desk
and surrendered to tho police, Phila
delphia Ledger.
Soda Water Not So Much In Demiind.
An tip town dry goods store last sum
mer tried tiie experiment of giving soda
water to iis patrons free. An enormous
fountain, well equipped for service, was
placed in the back part of the store and
on each hot day half a dozen attendants
were kept busy serving a clamorous,
thirsty and never diminishing crowd.
One day upward of 7.UUU glasses of soda
water were drawn from that free foun
tain. This year the firm charges three
cents a glass for iis soda water, and as
a result the patronage has fallen off to
a remarkable extent. On two verv lmt
days a fortnight ago, although the larre
store was well tilled with customers, the
soda fountain was at no time overworked.
New York Times.
The Trencher' lmliiHtrioim Hen.
The Congregational minister in New
ingtou thinks he has the champion hen
of the place. She began laying in Feb
ruary, immediately after he first owned
her. She kept this up until she went to
sitting and Imteueil out a bnxxl the first
part of April. Alxmt a week airo she
whs allowed to run at large with her
hrood, ltut returned to the coop during
the day and laid an egg, brooding her
chickens at ni 'lit. This she continues
! to do. la vim; her eirir dailv and still car.
j ing for her chicks. Hartford (Conu.)
limes.
The coffoo crop of Brazil has bcr-.i so
large that the railroads of one of the
provinces have for weeks been blocked,
every available car being in service,
freight depots being crowded nnd fur
ther receipts of colic e being declined.
Miijor Renard is constantly improv
ing his diii; ible balloon, and he has
now announced that he has invented a
motor of seventy horse power weighing
only 400 kilograms.
Melbourne i.; j-. r enivrging front the
; overwhelming em i ts of a land Ixiom.
' All trades are stagnant and tho unem
ployed are clamoring for work.
t). II. Jtaliou of Omaha is in the
city to-day.
Daniel Thrtimb of Weeping; Water :
is in the city to-day. j
The L. L. A. will meet at the home
of King' Wi-e MMid;ty (vi-niiii. ;
Dan Sweeney of South Iteml '
brought in nine wolf sculps to tl:e '
, , , i
county clerk to-d:iy.
W.C. Showaltcr. J. M. Ley. la audi
Lew Giblier.-oii passed satisfactory ,
examinations list rwniiig; .old lire '
now entitled to practice their pro-ft's-don
law.
The Kvening- News is constantly
viiil.i iag- the United Slates portal
law. The mail edition was tlno .n ,
out last night on at count of publishing-objectionable
matter. j
Mr. Wright's oration was a grand
effort. l!y irs pathetic influence :
many a sympathetic heart lici t with j
coiiiini.-eratioii. and front tile well-j
spring; of the soul, front out which
speak the hidden rocrets of the
heart, flowed many a tear.-Mc! in.
The address delivered liy A. C.
Wright was the most able ever list
ened to by the eo'ple of Klmwood,
and many c es were wet with tears
while lie told of the part liis father
took in the g-re.it eoniliet for the
preservation of the union. Echo.
I'olkVeveuing; paper madea great
stir last night about c s,.,, ,t(,r
Taggart' getting; into trouble. It
hasn't been very long-since the ex
senator oi Cass county was very
red-headed because TliK IlKk'Ar.D
published tin account of someof Ins
doings. Ex-Senator Taggart was a
member of tl e sen:te at the time
when M. D Polk represented (r) Cass
county.
JOHN A DA VIES,
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Correspondence Sol cited.
Office in I'uion Itlook
PI.ATTSMOITII, - - N'KHKASKA
dually Indicate a disorder or the Kidneys,
and ijromjit mraMirc bbould be taken to
provint iterlouj trouble.
RF fh F M RF R VIhmm can be cured
IlLMlUslDbll in their incipiency,
wliloti if in gleoicd, may become UanKerous.
DR. J. H. MCLEAN'S
LIVER iU2 KIDNEY BALM
Is whfit yon need. It will cure T.lver Dtsor
d: ri. Iwitupy V'wiUein, ItrlBht's DIxeaKA
Mid Di:ilii-r. 1'rlee 81 per bottle. Send
cent stamp for loob of hints, liow to live
and ci.ru ilu-se distressing- complaints.
TH5 DR. J. H. MCLEAN MED. CO
ST. LOUIS, MO.
D rs. B ETTS & Betts
PHYSICI&SS, SOUS and SPECIALISTS,
1409 DOUGLAS ST.,
OMAHA, NEBRASKA.
mm
Otfioe hours from 9 a. in. to 8 p. in, Huuilaj
from 11) a. ni. to 1 p. m.
HpM-inliata in Chronic, Nervou,Skin and Blood
DlKI'IlM.
fy Coranltntinn at office or by mail fiw
MiHlirinBn aunt by mnil or cipress, mcnrly
purkpit, frpa from ohiration. (iuurautuod to
euro ipiickly, nafuly and permanently.
Tho moot widely and favorably known iooinl.
ist in tli UniUxl Htntnu. Their Ions p xiwrionrn.
remarkable nkill and nniviTtnil Microns iu the
treatment and cure of Nitvohh, Chronic and Hnr
niral DiHeamw, entitlo these eminent phyHioiana
io uio run coniuinnco ot me aillicUM ovurywtier.
They guarantee: Mr
A CERTAIN AND POSITIVE CORE for the
awful pllttcia of early vice anil the nuuiurotu evila
mill loilow in it train.
PRIVATE, BLOOD AND 8KIN DISEASES
(leeiiiiy, completely anil twrmaiioutly cured.
NFRVuTJS IIEBIT.TTY ART) 8FTTTAT. TITS.
ORDERS yield readily to their ekiilfiU trout.
menu
PILES, FISTULA AHD RECTAL ULCERS
pnarunlixwl cured without puiu or uYUtuuon
irom DUKiuem.
HYDROCELE AND VARICOCELE perma.
wnny ami nuccefwiniiy enrcu in every cnee.
SYPHILIS, (lONOKItlKF.A. GLEET. Hiorma
torrhira. Seminal Weakness, Iai Manhood,
Niltht Emissions, Decayed racnltics, Female
Weakness nnd all delicate disorders iwrnlinrta
either sex pnnitively cured, ns well as all func
tional disorders that result from youthful folliej
or uio uxcose oi maturo jours.
CfpirfiiHA Onaranteed permanently enred,
uuiciu.c rpnnivai complete, without cnU
tinu, cnustic or dilatation, t'nre elTei'ted at
Home py pntiont without a momenta pain of
annoyauco.
TO YOUNG AND MIDDLE-AGED MEN
A fll'ro The awful effects of early
M OUI C IrUI G vi, W,i,.n ,,rilll-, wini,
weakness, ditroyinr both mind anil IkkIj, with
all its dre.uled ills, permanently cured.
DrS FjPft Address thoso who have impnr
Jl Oi UOllo o.l themselves bv improper in
dulgence and wilitiiry hiibits. which ruin Imlh
mind nnd !dy, unfitting them for business,
study or nun ri-ic.v
MAltltlEI) MEN, or those entering on thnt
happy lilo, aware of physical debility, quickly
HuMnUxl.
f "Send 8 cents pnetiwe for celebrated works
on i'hrouic, Nervous and Delicate Diseases
Thousunils rami. itf.K frienilly letter or oili
may save you future suffering Bn, shame, niu1
add itoldeu years to life. it-No letter answer'1
unliA ncoompanied by 4 ceuts in stmmw.
Address, cr call on
DRS. BETTS & BETTS.
I 19 Soturt U.tr; S
N. '. Cor 1 4th and Dmr-'Ms sts
OMAHA, - NEERASK
fAl .iiHtt
III
ijs&iyOoiichti;
incFEAsON Sfi
. UMFRFDF i J
. - - kWl
)-. I WILL TELL! .
: - -
IT l NOT BE.CAU5E OF HER BEAuTIFUUTl
tfuTS' TO COOK on THOje'L
sS CHARTER OAK TOVE'A.
Hhatj how she became J ; !
.iu a npi 1 s'l
4'
T
AKD ALL
MEATS ROASTED IN THEIR CWN
JU1CE3, BY USING THE
I'JIRE G5UZE OVEN COQli
FOUND EXCLUSIVELY ON TUB
1
CHAPTER OA5C
1
THE VERY BEST.
VMM
0
fi. itn llanre t urea. Vlli
San Andreas, Cat Co., Cal., Feb. 1889.
My boy, 13 years old, was so a (Tec ted by Bt.
Vitus Dance that be could not go to school for
2 years. Two bottbs of Pastor Koenig's Nerve
Touio restored bis health, and he Is now at
tending school again.
MICHAEL 0 C0NNEL.
Could Hafe Naved .tliiterjr.
Ban Franoisoo, Cal.. January, 'St.
I was treated by several physicians since 7
years to get eared of epilepsy, bat the attack be
came more vloiout and oftoner ; since I take Pas
tor Koenig's Nerve Tonio I feel delighted at my
Improvement. Had I known of this remedy
years ago, Ieould have saved macn misery and
worrlment of mind and body.
MBS. W. PETE EH.
FREE
A VarnaM Bonk a KerwiwJS
inwsiw. Bent iree 10 sny saorMa
ana pour patients can also oMaM
this medicine free of etutrre.
This remedy has been prepared by the BeverSfJ
Pastor KoeniK. of Fort Wayne. Ind. since Ufls. aftt
w now prvpareaonaeruu amotion oywe 0
KOENIC MED. 70., Chicago,
Terrors, for by a nxwb wnudtrful Uim-ovM-y fa
medicine, enncaron nny pnrt4.f tho b djr c.-vn bo
pc rmtttrf ally enred without the dm of
the UnU'o.
31 HM M. i).CoMiT,2Wrinrtlanri Ava., Chloaeo,
9?v: Vaftcuru1 of oanorr of the broa.u in ilz
pre i;i by your nicthort vt trcfiftn'Mt." Nnr for
trc&uso. JLr. 1. C Dulu, teu J4 :u SL, Chicago.
mP'urw nwn inrnn luutror inim uip ninir mr
PURE RYE.
as Decome a nousetioia word because
its ausoiuie purity, nutritive vmue, smor
usinanfi (if.iir-iriiis nriumifir ir icniir.irt
wcaa iuiis uuu a sumuiani lor impaireu
constitutions. Unlike inferior whiskies, it
rWo nnl racr. r.r ih. -.,,-1
-' - " - ' v . v. iuiu.1 C1UVJ
stomach, nor cause nausea, dizziness anc
headache. You may know it by the abovv.
qualities and the proprietary bottles in
which it is served. Call for "Crtam Purt
Rye" and take no other. For sale at all
first-class drinking places and drug stores
13 DALLEMAND k CO.. Chicago
For Sale by J OS. J. McVKY.
QUIOKLY. TH0R0DCMLY, FOREVER CUrA
tv a "ew porfei'i.-d
I scientific ructlind th ii
Vtt'kTX einnot f.-ill unloan tr'j
fty-i. Vi Voii fee I improved
p T ttKiEiniUaT.fonlabem--
vniirself a kina anions
mo.i iu body, niln.f an.'
Ii.nrt. IM-ilnaan.ili'iaf c-
oa.UMi. r,very oiut.
r.' veil. Norve 1.
T. hull f.liniiKer hutl
rmitiiren hy tiila trn.t
wm.it. All Hmnlliinilo-ii
l.lti.:U 11 ttl3tllle.
:o.i:Di'. ar.d atrenrillitinc.L
Melimisof nhut.i nm!
r-U'ry-.M-n, rerlrutu y.mr
t'u.nliiKMt! NutTenmfn-ni
t.iily.ovirwork.llllieiillli,
n-Kuln ymirvmur! Uon't
rt. spair.even If In thlaKt
atiiryca. bon't laj itinheart
eniKl if gumAu hnverof
bed you. l.otuAL.WT"ii
tlmt uitH'.leal di'iic.nil
.pimai nnimr mill ensij iipre get imnl In hV.n.
ritiur our Kouh wlthcxplanauunsa pnf .i
lualleilaenleil free. Over refereaea.
gilS K3SICAL CO. , UTTFALO, TT. 7,
- . v'!
kTiJ'i.-ei r. .mijii iwaw wa-t. lis'
.inri lltM ifBtiuiiri.diil;rll 'ill HCv:r.
iyeura by a nilrnclc of moil. i r
MnM. ('nil riP VTIIA. Al 111) IN! I .f 'l. J
eaee fully and irot a trial ireaunent uiul advi . i
ot a regular aieeinllst of many youri' ox.rtrlciii v).
Arlrlra.. TMEDIEFFCNBACH DISPENEAfV,
138 WIS. Street, MILWAUKEE, WIS.,
Thwo tiny Cpsulcs aro supcrl
Culieba nml Injectiona, (jp-TM
They euro in 43 hours tho V3
sumo discaica without anyincon,
TCWcnce. 5ULD STALL DRUGGIST
r
i
mm.
.X Or
it
I
mm?
U V.I CO