Plattsmouth weekly herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1882-1892, June 30, 1892, Image 6

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    m.
Ii..i:.rous I'lirniiiiim''! by 1t
r.md work in making a piv-i'l'iit.
his a-'.iin tunu'il Ji.t ;i1l'-ii1ion to
Hour .iii.l l.iM iv.rli -''in -Ml. WO
barivls. Tlii i- tin' l.nur-t output
on ri'innl fur a sin.uh' 'i i-k.
TIm di-mui'i at" rai-c ,i limvl in tin
platform auain.-t tin' M Iv i 1 1 1 1 y tar
itf law ami ili ntaii'l it-1 rtpi'al W'liy
don't tin y M'..-al it'.- Tiny haw a
i majority in I'linn'ri'ss 1,111 iircnlraid
tn lai-klf i'.
Till; democrat ic platform on tin--tilwr
ipiistion as was predicted
sttaililli's the itt-.-t i It lust 1 - -clans
lor fii i- coiiiat;!' and tlnn in
lhi' fa'iii" breatli denounces tlu'iluj
lar unit of t-i I er to !. cipial in in-
trinsic ami rxi
1 1 ; 1 1 1 :.
value as
liKLk'
one oft
llll.l. ami Khmer remind
le ojil ti'i V of the two col-
lied brethren who we'll out In hunt
hears. They Ion ml I he hole where
the hear Kept house. One ol lh. nl
crawled in while the other kept
jftiard. Suddenly Mr. Hear came
home, and as he entered hi - den was
seized hy tie.' tail hy the outside
man. Then came the voice from the
inside," What that darkens de holer'
From outside the answer: "You'll
see what dai kens de hole if tail hold
hreaks." (iovcnior blower is a prac
ticed nyninast, hut his "tail hold" i.s
precarious and uncertain and the
ha Id-he, ii led old hacllelur is doomed
meat fur the hear- Inter Ocean.
DEMOCRACY AND BUSINESS IN
TERESTS. KVspondinj; In the toast "The
Repuhliean Party on Guard," at i lit?
Ann Arhnr hampiet, Gen. K'usseil
A. Aliror nrniiirncd the democratic
party not only as a destructive,
anti-national organization, hut as
('(pially oppoHed to the economic
welfare and prosperity of the
country. Gen. Aljrer is a jjood wit
ness: to prove either proposition.
As a gallant I'nioii soldier he had
many opportunities durum- 1''
prolonged army nervier to size up
.southern democracy under its true
colors, and arrayed in the proper
uniform. Since the war, and in the
course of an extended and success
ful business experience, Gen. Alvr
has often heen called on to study
the ellect of democratic policies on
tlie industries of the country, and
he finds that party ahout asdaner-
oiis in one capacity as the other.
1 lie democratic party lias never
succeeded in subslit lit in a low
revenue tarill lor a protective one
Hid maintainine' the same (or ten
years without inoi'iiioiisly reihici
1!ie w ayes ol la I mr, para I v zuii;' rea t
industries and involving the conn
tr in terrible distress. Oil each
and every occasion where it lu,.
lieen able to carry out its tradition
jl policy of "lariif leforni " thecoun
try lias been made to suller dread
fully.
No intelligent democrat, familiar
with history and with a decent re-
spec! for truth, w ill claim that tin
business interests of the north and
west have ever been able to with
stand ten years of democratic
'tariff reform."
.nierican wurkmirmi'ii ol no
class have been able to preservi
their waes and employment uniiii
paired through so much as a single
decade ot a democratic tarill lor
revenue only. Such tarill's when
permitted to stand ho as to work
nit their legitimate results have
proved indeed that tney were lor
"l e' cinie (.'illy ," and w ith nothing to
maintain waes or protect tb
rights of labor. In no case has the
country prospered for ten years
miller a democratic taritT. Disaster
has been the invariable result.
In strict justice it should be aW
that there were two excepted class
es on whom the heavy hand ot the
democratic taritT reformers was not
liiil in the way ot affliction. They
we,re the old slave-holders of the
south and the northern importers
of foreign jj'oods two classes that
lekl together in firm alliance, and
thrived under a low taritT just as all
others suffered. Their chief into
rest was in foreign, not in domestic
markets. As the northern farmers
manufacturers, business men am
waji'e-workcrs were damaged by
low taritt, the planters who rew
cotton for foreign markets, and tlie
importers who wanted to brin
back foreign iomds in exchange tor
the ifrcat southern product,
chuckled to themselves and de
clared it an ill wind that Mew no
body any -cuo.!. l iis.istrows as it
was to all others the low taritf pol
icy was desired by cotton growers
and importers for the express pur
pose of incrcasinn their profits at
the expense of other interests, par
ticularly those of the north. And
is the planters and importers ruled
the democratic party it was com-
pelled to persist in its low tarill
policy and look complacently on
the ruin it wrought.
Tills is a republican year
there is no mistake ahout it.
n nd
Kverv il 1 1 sohlirr ami republican
. . ' . I ... I 1 . . . I . . Tin.-!
in l ass county sinmm i ov
lIi:u'At.D thi- yvar.
Mli. II K'KI-'iN nut only
ioml In tin' (il'l eohlirr. hut In
been ti t i 1 1 1 1 1 1 of all cla-sr-" of
en.
icii
lias
citi-
KVI-'K'Y old soldier should ln'ill
it oner to work lor tin- election m
Harrison. No more clfiTlivo w irk
in In- performed than seciirine;
Hiibscrilii is to piod republican
nipers.
It is estimated that the per capita
I'alth of the country in 1VI was
hmit !fl,tn. In li'id the amount was
all, in 17U f7, and in lssi) nTU.
Thisis a hiyhly prosperous con lit ry.
iml the longer the repuhliean party
is kept in power tin" greater will he
the prosperity.
; V. I i,i iu i:k says he knows ('lev
1 1 it 1 can t he elected. 1 line nut ol
vers lour intelligent and coii.-mt va-
ve. !'';::;:'ra'.s in this part of the
nliiiti v hold the same view ot tlie
it il.it i 1 1 that .New York's executive
of, yet weiielieve. leveianu is me
trimmest man in his party. The fact
is no democrat could win in the
(lining canvass.
RE TLIATION AGAINST CANADA
I'he message sent by the jiresi-
ent to congress urin retaliation
gainst Canada for her violation
f the terms of the treaty
f Washington will command the
serious attention ot the people.
That compact provides, aiming oth-
r things, that the Welland and
other canals on or near the boundry
line between the two countries shall
i! open to the citizens of the United
States on the same terms as to resi-
enls of the Dominion. On this tin-
OHtandiiitf the United States made
ertain importriit concessions to the
Dominion, which have been strictly
regarded in letter and spirit. The
proof that Canada has violated her
art of the agreement seems to be
lear and conclusive. There has
leeu a discrimination airainst our
itizens in the matter of toils for
transportation through these water-
wavs which are injurious to our
i.nin.erce, and which have indicted
-.-;, m ,1:. m..ri.-:o. eo,.
tuners as well as shippers. The at
I'lition of the Canadian government
was called to the injustice long ago,
uit the wrong lias not yet lieen
hted. In fact the Dominion has
ipparently taken the view tli.it no
wronir is hemg done at all, and
iliile this idea of tlie case is enter
ained it is hopeless to look lor any
hiniije in the Mtuation on Canada's
own i nit uit ion. Such being the con
lit ion s t he prcsiden t has acted wise
ly in Mibiniltiuij- the whole matter
o congress, so that that body, after
hie deliberation, may take such
measures as it deems proper to pro-
ect the interests of American citi
zens.
The United States, of course, dis-
likes to have unpleasantness with
Canada on this or any other ones-
tinn, but that country must be
aimht that it can not keen on vio-
itinir its idedm-s to us with im-
punity. Ye have had, in the past
live or six years, many evidences of
Canada's unfairness, if not nil
friendliness, toward us, and there is
i general impression in this coun
try that the time has come to call a
halt to such conduct. The inte
rests of our citizens and the nation
al honor and dignity demand that
our rights in this matter be scrupu
lously and zealously defended.
The considerations which prompt
us to such a course are too import
ant and too pressing to be disre
garded or overlooked any longer.
This country has always endea
vored to live on terms of the closest
frieiidshm with its northern neioh -
hors. We have been anxious to ex-
"
tend and strengthen the comtner-
cial ties existing between us and
them, and there have been occa-
sional and sporadic manifestations of New York, has presented the
on Canada's part that this feeling wn with which he signed thisl .i
has been reciprocated. Hut below l''l's lull to the president of the
all this surface show of Canadian
friendship there has always been a
substratum of prejudice, jealousy
and i.ettishness which excited dis-
tru.-t here and which has thus far
rendered all the attempts ;o lower
the taritf barriers betwicti the two
countries vain. I'eihaps Canada's
double dealing towai d us i. partly
due to the fact that she i.s not en
tirel her own master in her foreign
relations, and that, in this respect.
she has, in some degree, to conform
to the desires of the Kritish govern
ment; but this consideration, while
it may explain her vacillation on
the que.-tion of reciprocity, can not
justify the violation by her of
pledges which she freely made and
thoroughly understood. St. I.ouis
Globe Democrat.
I tch on hn man and horses animals
cured in III) minutes hy Wool lord's
sanitary lotion. This' never fails.
Sold K. G. I't ii ke
A Co. druggist,
l'lattsinoiith.
'n-
com a i i n ev i in: w.c.t. t
i
The V. C. T. T. ob
erved l .wer
Mi.-sion day last Tiii'Mlay bjj dis
tribiiting boiiipnts d lld.vers,
adoriied wiih white ribboin and
texts, to the inmates of the canity
institutions and t Fit- invalid.H and
sick in town.
The women's clubs, of which thi-
l
coin t ry lias t wo mind rc I , are rt'iuu
on the (pieslion of in m-alcu" ml ic
stimulation and brain poisons) gen
erally. The .Nineteenth Cerlury
club of Memphis. Tenn., with one
hundred members, elegant ro uus,
and all that goes to iniike a :ir.-t-
rate institution ol tlie sort, recently
entertained Joe Jelferson, the u tor,
mil Joel t. handler Harris, tlie dia
lectician in a new sense. Some
thought there should be punch,
but Mrs. Watson, the president, said
Mi, and the club stood by her.
Indianapolis has a council of
women including the representa
tives of forty-nine local organiza
tions. They work for better sanita
tion, cleaner streets and education
al improvement. hie of their rep
resentatives is president Of the
Laundry Girl.-' union, and it is
interest ing to see this bright woman
hiibnobbiiij.' with the president of
the Art institute in the common
interest of the council.
The Itaptist Union Theological
Seminary at Morgan Park, III., has
made the study of the temperance
question a subdivision of the re
quired work in the department of
ethics. The students are now study
ing the relation of the christian to
politic-si. This is a new departure,
and the temperance people have ex
pressed their wish that it might be
come universal in all theological
schools.
Some of our honored leaders ask
What would become of the prohi
bition party if it should head its
ticket with the name that stands
first on the ticket of the people's
party in the pending presidential
campaign?" The answer is not far
to seek: The prohibition (home
protection, reform, independent,
whig, Columbian, or some better
name) party would remain in full
for;e, with its autonomy complete,
,N Pl'Otorin, its committees, nation-
i i i i t .1 i : i : . .
ni.siaic ami local, ami us consiiiu
eney, as we believe largely to be in
creased th is year. Hut if the other
reform party should nominate, in
Omaha July 1 1 li , as there is reason
to believe it will, a man thoroughly
coin in it ted to our principles of pro
hibition and woman's enfranchise
ment, why not put his name on our
ticket and thus mass the reform
vote of the country? Meanwhile at
our own convention, we shall, as a
matter of course, nominate a
complete ticket, bill the lackof lead
ing candidates this year renders it
practicable to have an understand
ing that if such a cimdidate would
give place to linn rattier than retain
ac empty honor of holding on,
with a divided vote among reform-
i'- " the question is asked: "U ny
not let the people's party take our
candidate instead ot we theirs
Our answer is. "because that party
would not do this ," and if the ques
"u" "u u occur, wu womu n mu.
we must in all candor reply,
He-
cause it is not so well schooled as
ours; it is younger and less way-
wise; it is not made up of veterans.
like' ours, and is less skilled in pa
triotic strategy than ours is or
ought to be."
All of which is humbly offered for
wdiat it may be worth; with unal
terable loyalty to what our clans
mil chieftains may see lit to do in
Cincinnati June 'JVUh.
The new excise law in the state of
New York practically gives more
privileges to the saloon business
than it has ever before enjoyed. 1 lie
1 liquor capitalist is given absolute
i i . ..... . . ... i,
- "
censes and open as many saloons
ashe rm, employing men to
nlu tlu'm- It is said that Gov. How
.mu uqnor iii-mi : is
'fijtitin as a trophy. The Natimi
1,1 Temperance Advocate expresses
,lu' "'"'"'t of all right thinking
people when it says: "If it lad
been dipped in the hottomltt-s I it
it would haw been still H ere ip
uropriate." ;
l-'i'i 1 1 1 1 .c. i . rtla Il;nl.
b Maibiuk, a trlenwoui 1 attor
nev, was in the city yesterd i
Mr. and Mrs. W.J. I lesser 111 t his
morning lor Lincoln to spep Sim.
day with their daughter,
Cha. Keltner has moved h f uni
ly from Louisville and will lereaf
ter make this city his home.
J.Tighe, Mrs. Patrick Mur!t and
Mr. and Mrs. Kd Tighe of ivoca,
came last night to attend St.John's
graduating exercises.
The school board is lookng over
the plans and specilieatiotisW the
new school building this afiinoon
as presented by the architet from
Lincoln. i
THE NEWS CONDENSED
Galena, Illinois, Visited by a
Tri-rifir. Rnin Stnrm.
MAY YOitK M'N ON ( l.l.YHAI.M.
The Record of Stevenson, Candidate
for Vice President on the Dem
ocratic Ticket not so Br II
liant as has Been
Claimed
The following dispatch from Ga
lena. 111., says that the terrific rain
fall ol Wednesd ay night and Thurs
day proved the most disastrous ever
experienced in that locality. The
Galena river rose at the rate of an
inch per minute Thursday. Hy S
o'clock the in tin streets were Hood
ed. K'owboats were the only means
of crossing and obtaining entrance
to some of the buildings. The base
ments and lower lloors of every
business house in the town are
Hooded. At the Lawrence hotel the
water stood seven feet deep on the
dining room llnor. At the Kuro
pean hotel the parlor lloor was sev
eral feet under water. Husiness
men attempting to sa e their hooks
and papers waded in water
up to their necks in their
own offices. The custom house
floor was flooded two feet
deep, also the Merchants' bank in
which the Western Union telegragh
office is located, ciittingolf all com
munication with the outside world
for a time. The Illinois Central
bridge, though heavily ballasted
with stone laden freight cars, was
swept away, and the heavy iron
bridge at Green street met the same
fate. Landslides obstruct the rail
roads. The track of the Hurlington
iV Northern is so covered at twenty
points below Galena and at Galena
J Junction, a distance of three miles,
seven mifes of the Northwestern
track was washed away. The pub
lie and private losses are very
heavy.
No one appears to know any
thing about Judge Gresham's reply
to the Knights of Labor as to his
candidacy before the convention at
( huaha for president.
H was a bitter do.-e that Tam
many was forced to swallow at vl e
Chicago convention.
V
The Otoe county democrats feel
terribly sore over the speech of
Hilly O'Hryan at Nebraska City
Monday. His position on thesilwr
lill does not accord with the rank
and file of those ('eiiiocrals. The
lemocrats of Otoe county arc san
guine of his defeat.
V
The New York Sun idem), in com
menting on the I hieago nomina
tion, says:
There is one question depending
on the election of the next presi
dent, which in its momentous im
portance and vital iinportiwncss
must seem to every philosophical
observer to exceed every other
political question that the people
are now called upon to determine.
"We mean the question whether
these southern states which have
inherited a negro population sur
passing the number of their white
citizens, shall be liyfj federal
law anil by federal mili
tary force subjected to the political
domination of the negroes. The
republican party is, by its nature
and tradition, under the necessity
of enacting and executing an
election law whose purpose and ef
fect will be to put the negroes
in control of several of the southern
states. On the other hand, and by
the nature and necessity of the
ideas involved, the success of the
democracy is death to the force bill
project Killed in the election it can
never be revived. In this view of
the contest, what conscientious
democrat can hesitate about his
duty? IJetter vote for the liberty
and the white government of the
southern stales, even if the
candidate were the devil himself
rather than consent to the election
of respectable Henjamin Harrison
with a force b'll in his pocket."
The Oinalia lice's Waslunyton
cori'i'sjioiidfiit liastliisto say con
it'iiiini;' tlie noniinafitin for vice
pri sidi'iit on the democratic ticket:
"There was considerable discus
sion in Washington yesterday with
regard to the record of Mr. Adlai
Stevenson, who was selected to lc
Grovcr C'leveland'i miming mate
on the democratic presidential
ticket. There seems to have heen a
very 'General impression that Mr.
Stevenson was an old soldier, and
that for that reason he would he
particularly acceptable to the sol
dier element. This view was
shared by a lare number of demo
cratic congressmen, and it was with
considerable surprise that they
learned that Mr. Stevenson had no
arm v
ii
d and that during the
T 1 1 :( 1 i ! i tin' peaceful
war h
id u pit
oil o
f a lawvcr at his home
in II!; -.
"At th oiiibri :ik of the war and
not. I Mr. Stevenson was master in
chancery of Woodford county. Illi
nois, from 1 s. ; io m; hi was the
staled attorney Wthe Twenty-third
judicial district. There has also
been a raking o l h is pol it ical rcci n il,
as there has been an impression
that Im was not an mil and out dem
ocrat in the war.-immediately sue-
ceei ling t lie war and inai lie uau ai i
, - . i i . , . , . i . i ...
ime green back alii I i it ion-. !
. 1
"Mr. Stevenson s tir-t appearance j
in national pol it ics was in r.l.wln'ii
' 111 de a siiccessllll contest tor
the position of congressman troin
the old thirteenth di-triel of Illinois.
At that time he ran is a candidate
fthe 'independent relonn party.
President Hayes appointed him ill
ls.7',1 a member of the board of v's
itors to West Point. II 'again id ide
the race lor congress mul by a com
bination between th" ua t ioual green
back and democrat ic pari ic- le- was
elected to the forty-sixth congress
by a majority ol I.NHt voles over the
republican candidate. Mr. Meven
son's gratuitous title ol 'general'
conn -;4 'loin his having been Cleve
land's first 'assistant postmaster
general. It was reported in Grand
Army ol the K'cpublic circles here
to-day that Mr. Stevenson during
the war was a copperhea 1 and a
shining light in the order of the
Knights of the Golden Circle, and
also that his sympathies were con
stantly with the south. It is also
stated by clerks in the postol'lice de
partment who served there while
Stevenson was President Cleve
land's headman of fourth class
postmasters, that it was he who ap
pointed so many jail birds to hand
out the mails to unsophisticated
citizens.
r-iiiilly in'tii'Mi' B ilNnrili-rorthn KMnpy,
unit i ruiin'l ini-n-.v,ri-s r-liuuM lie Uiknu to
l-i'Vt llt .v'.-'nlt-i Iriuililil.
rJC l! r lit) KD bi.-ea-es cm Tip riin-l
Ktr.MiJijU i'i tlu-lr ii'i.'..'ii.'y.
v,,: i'l I! II 'iiTl. ll, lhllV ln-i-iim ill'lur-TilUs.
DS. J. H. MCLEAN'S
LIVEH 1S2 KIDNEY EALM
l-i '!;'.! veil ni'i-il, T! v.-ill cure I.lvi-r Pi-ni--
ili l -. iv ;
in:. I Pi.
j-i.-'"ii -:
hi.. I , i.r.
T!-"' '.
ir-v i-m'or'-. P.ru-.lit ili-i-a-i'
mi.'-. J'vii'i' .1 i'"f I'i'Ulii. N-ii'l
:iiiiir' ',i ni' liini-. Ii aw to live
'. 1 1 -. -i' di-i r Hi : i-"ii.; t:;int-i.
T. J.H. C".:!.EAN MED. CO
st. LOUi -s, rvio.
D rs. B ETTS 0 ETTS
PKYSIMHS, SURGECH3 and SPEC!LISTS,
1409 DOUGLAS ST.,
OMAHA, NEBRASKA.
Sv.'v-i'tf.i.v!'' c
Ollicw himrs f rum 9 a. ni. to p. m. Bumlnj
from 10 n. ni. to 1 p. in.
Hporinlists in Chronic, Norvorut, Skin anil Hlood
Dibi'amie.
tyOiitwnlttion at nfEce or by nmil frne
Mixllrincn sent by mail or exprnes, wcuri'ly
PHi kiil, fne from olxu.rvntion. (insmntues to
cure quirkly, safely and pnmianeutly.
The iiioct widely and favorably known siierinL
iete in the United Htatne, Their lonR exierinnr,
reninrkulile skill and universal Mirnvut in tlie
treatment and cure of Nervous. I'hmnic and Sur.
Kirnl Diseases, entitle these eminent physicians
to tlie run eonhilence ol tbo alllicted everywnere
They KiiaranUie:
A CERTAIN AND P0SIT1V1 CUBE forUie
awful ellKcU of early vice and the nuiiierons evils
Hint follow in its train.
PRIVATE, BLOOD AND BKIX DISEASES
speedily, completely and iierniauaully enreu.
NERVOUS DEBILITY AHD SEXUAL DIS
ORDERS yield rawiily to Uisir skillful treut-
nwvnu
FILES, FISTULA AHD RECTAL ULCER8
miamnteed enrwi without pain or detention
from business.
HTDROCELE AKD VARICOCELE pemia.
rx'iitly and succeeefully cured in every ease.
SYPHILIS, OONORUHfFA, GLEET. Hiwma
tnrrhirn. Seminal Weakness, Lrnst Maiihixni,
NiKlit Emissions, Decayed Families, Female
wenKnsse ami all delicate disorders iecnlinrtn
either sex positively cured, as well as nil funr.
U i nuil disiirilers that result from yonLhful follies
or tlie excess ol mature years.
CtrlrTlll"fl tiuamnteeil iiermanently cured,
gtiibiuio nMiiiival complete, witliont cut
tint, oanstir- or ililstntinn. Cure effectetl nt
Inline by patient williinit a iiioiiients pain of
aiiiiiiyni.ee.
TO YOUNG AND MIDDLE-AGED MEN
A QllfO PtirO T'1" nwfnl I'lTnetH of early
" ou c UI c vii-e which linn.-. ..mimic
weriktii'ss, ilis-'msini! huth iiuiul nml IhkIj-. with
all lis dri'.iilid His, pHrm-ineiitly cureil. !
rifl RfitC Addw-H llinse wl.olii.ve in.par. i
Ul O. UlllO ,., th,.mi.!.lvi' I ,y improier in- j
iliilwi'iH'e and si'litnrv Imluts, which ruin hoth
luiuil mul hi'ily, iiiililliu; llicm fur liiih.ini-s, i
study or nuuriiUTii. t
MAIlltlEI) MEN, or those eiiti'rimr i.ii tl.at
hni'py lite, nwrue ot physical d. Liiiiy, ijuickly
as"isleil.
i "Senil it cents iiontrurs for cel. hnite l works
on Chrunic, Nervous iirul Ilelicate lli.,!-..
TliouKiuiils curixl. t"A friendly l.-tter or rali
may snr.. jnii fnturi. sutr.-ii,i: ami shame, ami '
a. Id ifnlili n years to life. Nn letter answnityt 1
unless ai'l'i.ni.ailieil hy 4 centB , Hliunt
A'lllli'st, ;r vim mi
DRS. BETTS & BETTS.
I 10 fotuh I4th S
N. r'.. Cor 14th and Douglas Sts
OMAHA, - NEBRASKA
vff IpALNS
mm
J MADE IN S J
Sizes and styles
TO SUIT THE :
Requirements of Everybody. .
THEY ARE T!!E VERY DEST.
1 i
M . if.
M. t itni I:tnce nrotl. Mil
SN Ani)HEh, CuL Co., Col., Feb. 1HS).
My boy, 13 yars old, wng eo affuctod by St.
Vitus Maiioe that be could cot Kd to Hcbool for
2 years. Two bnttlos of Pastor Kooulg'a Nerve
Tonic restored bis hoaltb, aud be is now at
teudiug school agaiu.
MICELVEL O'CONNEI
Could Hare Saved Miwory.
84N Fbanoiikm, Cal.. January, '89.
1 was treated by several pbyskiaus since 7
yours to Ret eared of eillopsy, but tbo attack be
came more violent and oftener ; since I take Pas
tor Koelilg's Nerve Tonic I feel doligbted at my
Improvement. Had I known ot this remedy
years ago, I could bave saved ffiucb misery And
worrlment ol mind and body.
MR& W. PETERS.
FREE
-A TalnaMe Hook on !frvrnl
DlMMMeH n( iree io any auicrma
nd mmm- patients can alM obtail
tikis iiieiliouio free of cliance.
Tills rcmeiiThas txwn prepared by the Ilevnrerjr ,
Pactor Kiwuik. of Fort Wuviie, Ind, (iiuooiBfcaf
lauuw umparud unuur lus uiruouoD Dy Uio
f.'CFNtC t!SFV, "0., Chicago, I'I.
CANCER"
QiO.lorle nrwl fo.ir no look-er frnm tlita Klni? o
1'iTni,f"r I'V it must xnnilirtul ilmrovary lt
l:n in,', r.".Timr "n ni.f tm-i "i mo i"-u- rauu-pi-ruin
hi ly ruied without tlio ue o,
111- t II iv.
" i; ii r! nv. ?T 'ii.l'nnii Av., Culmcc,
, r tl i' l.i v.iM iii iix
i-' s tvI f..r
:!i si Oiu.'-uiv't.
'. J
-ztmi RYE
has become a household word because TTt
its absolute purity, nutritive value, smooth
taste and tlulicmus bouijuot. It is ooil .ir
weak lnni;s and ri stimulant for imt'airtNy
constitutions. Unlike inferior whiskies, ii
does not rasp or scald the throat and
stomach, nor cause nausea, dizziness ant
headache. You may know it by the abov
qualities and the proprietary bottles in
which it is served. Call tor "(rim J ure
A'iv" and take no other. Tor sale at all
first-class drinking places and drug stores-
ii DALLEMANP & CO., Chicago
ForSnlo liy JOS. J. Mt'YKY.
QUICKLY. THOROUGHLY, POREVtR COR'-'. .
i v h iihw i.er'c.,.
sclenliltc nietlioil tlctt
rl,W. cvti.Ti.it. fall unless tlio
"n.'A c vA) Is bey. mil liunian
V-i? 1.7 aid. Vou f.sd Imiiriivini
t hulirsi .lay, feel a t'.'rie
l!t evurv day : H'h.Jhi'hv
v.Kirself a k i im ,,r.vi
7.Vi 'Uv-vc-tr lnrf.. lr:i!ns.iil
.MIK; un.ted. Kverv ,,hi
. J. . '.tal..-. ".1 ... , . . . ,
iiMi'vy uii.rrie(j m.
ninv.id. Nertu f..
wilherenty, hralilt""V
whun tailni ,r Inn1
tsMti.reil ny this f
ineiit. All smnllnnil wea
iH.rl i.me of the body en
Uruixl and streiiKtlieno.1.
Victims nf nlnises nnd
oxcenKes, riH-lsun your
niunluiiHt' SiilTenirsfmiii
fi.lly.overwiirk.lllheiillh,
rt'Ksin ynurviKiir! ISm't
di-iiair.even if in the last
stiwxs. Um't tiedisliesrl
onwl if quacks have "
Nd you. Ituss!ny '
inst meuical svieufl..;, '.'.m
tmslness honor still exists here iro himl In In. f V?
Wriursrsnr Bosk with exiilstiaUiinsk Dm
mailed sealed free. Over ji.OOO referen '
ZEIS KESICAL CO. , EUTFALO,
rvyie, n is., ssys: R?for Aflir W
The accompanying statement Wdriitti lbs' juibi thk
of my nht and nieasiire-.Hnit.... ln. win. loin,
nn nts will rIiuw the ri'hultsof.w lit.. 4. in. si in. II in.
live nmntlis' treatment. 'lli.t.... ui. 4iin. in.'
PATIENTS TI1CAIE0 BY MAIL. CONFIDENT!'
HirmUu, kn.l w;th a ilArtlnf, ti i-orvfntincv, or bmi H
t' t t'Vtini ' ir- . with ti ri"it in itvnpi,
U. 0. W. f. SMGiR. M iiCUt S THkATER. CKICtCO ,
. r
V
r,
Tnnrilcrto Ir.iri.iluco .mr TtAVrt iuii.J
a , V!'' """ '-" "."' '
( a .met I'll fir... ph,, i, .-r.i.ili. -i'i. .i .. A' iiitr.it
..r iiiuiier.,!y.e1.r y , . 1 1 r-.-l f . . r ii i . y mem! i rul ittm
liuiiil),livipir,,r.l,.il. !h,.i will make f ,7
I iHv.m I'nrtriill Frivm Imvire. (,.,'
yinieiliii.it it t.i y.air rr:ei,.sss-.mi.1'i ?
wurk, and iim mnr hitliienee in ni'ciir'in: us i,.
i.rilerr.. I'lace nnine mul miiirensini Im. .,! pi, k
mid it will lie relumed In perfect Older. We imi
nay chance in pirinre y,.n e-ih, m.t Inierlci mi!
II h Ilk ss. Keler In mi v III.. ill In lil..,i:.
A iI.Iik.m .. 1 1 ... . i ... cri ioci; rarv-iT r r
...... .... .j,..., , i. b m -J r . ni , .
iv t.isi rrnnaoipn bt., CHICAGO,! I ' V
(i. n. win inrTeii. yrn to sin prtv
ri.llntt .ih chntf, niel not rncnivlnit cr.'Ti.
picture 3-"ll l-l n i r thli cilliM-, 1IIIS '
OHKlt IS biUlCTLV liLMA. UlilJ
ff
A
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