The Plattsmouth daily herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1883-19??, October 13, 1891, Image 3

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    C. MAYE?
COUNTY
S.URVIl
YOR
AMP
CIVIL ENGINEER
county clerk will be
a
uttnnded to.
rrrrprit-
OFFICE IX COURT HOUSE,
.-tr
, 1
Plattsmouth,
- - Nebraska
WW
J
ULIUS PEPPEKBEKG.
MAMUrACIUUK OF ANI
UHDLE5ILE flND RET MIL
IlKALIK IN THK
CHOICEST BRANDS OF CKIAKS
rcia. i.iw it or
TOBA&X) .AND SMOKE.-v's ARTICLES
always iu stock
Pl.iatsnioutli,
Nebrassa
IRST : NATIONAL'. HANK
OK PLATTSMOUTH. NEBRASKA
Paid up capital
But pi uh
.$.KI.OHO.II0
. lo.ouo.ou
Offers toe very bel facilities for the promp
transaction of ligltimate
Banking Business
HtocltK, bonds, Rold. government and local se
curities bought and sold. Ueposlw receive,
and interest allowed on the certllicite
Drafts drawn, available In any part of the
United State and all the principal twn o
Europe .
OOU.KCTION M ADR AND PKOMPTLY BKMIT
TatU. Highest market price paid lor County War
rants, State an County bonds.
DI KECTOKS
John Fitzgerald 1. Hawkaworth
Bam Waugh. F. K. White
oeorge K. Dovey
John Fitzgerald. Waugb.
Prerident Car fee,
JHE CITIZENS HANK.
PLATTSMOUTH - NEBRASKA
Uayltal stock paid In V 0 t
Authorized Capital, SIOO.OOO.
OFFICBKS
FRANK CARKUTH. JOS. A. CONNOi:.
President. vice-PresMeet
W. H- CUSeiSO. C8hier.
DIKKCTOB8
Frank Carruth J. A. Connor, F. R. Guthwu
J. W. Johnson. Henry Bcbck. Jonn u".n.eeie
V. D. Mtrriam. Wni. Wetencamp. W.
' H. Cusblng.
TRANSACTS!! GENERAL BANKING BDSiNES
sues cSJtiflcates of deposits bearing interest
Buvs and sell exchange, couuty ana
city !
B
ANK OF CASS COUNTY
Cor Main and Fifth street.
Paid up capital
mrniua.... .... --
fl. H. Paraele President
Fred Oorder Vice President
J. M. Patterson Casheir
T. M. Patterson. Ast Caobier
DIRECTORS
A. n. Smith. K K. Windbam. B. 8. Kamey and
T. M. Patterson
L GENERAL BAHK1NC BUS LB ESS
TRAHSATED
Accounts solicited. Interest allowed on time
deposit and prompt attentioniven to all bus
iness entrusted to its care.
When you jr to a shoe store youi
object isnot onl-to buy shoes but
to procure for what you spend the
best that your money will buy.
Less than this will not content you;
more than this you cannot, in rea
son, ask. Our methods are as
simple as j our desires. We do not
lift your expectations to the clouds,
but we realize them whatever they
are. We will never sacrifice your
interests to ours and nowhere else
can you et a fuller and fairer
equivalent for your money. An
especially profitable purchase for
you is our etc.
SOOES, SH O E S O 3rt
RUBBERS
R SHERWOOD.
J501 Main Street.
HILIP THEIROLF
Hm OpndupTha
Finest. Cleanest, Cosiest-
S-A-HLiOOisr
IN THE CITY
Wh
ere
may be loiind choice which
liquors and cigars.
ANIIEtTSER BLJSCII BEER.
AMI
BASS' ALE WHITE LABEL
always on hand.
-o-
COKNKK OF MAIN AND FOURTH ST.
TX. PFcTElSEjST
THK LE.AD1NQ
GROC ER
HAS THE MOST
COMPLETE
STOCK IN THE CITY.
raTHING FRESH - AND - IN - SEASON
ATTENTION FARMERS
I want your Poultry, Eggs, But-
ter ami your farm produce of all
kind. I will nay vou the lnVheHt
i-Hsii price as i am uuymg lor a
urn in Lincoln.
B. PETERSEN,
THE LEADING GROCER
I'laltsmouth - - Nebraska
J. n:A:N:S:E:N
OEAI.KK IN
STAPLE AND FANCY
GROCERIES.
GLASS AJL
QUEEN SWA UE
Flip sjui Feed a Specialty
i jitronaw i tii; Fuble Solicited
JOHNSON BUILDINGN SiXttl .St
TEW HARDWARE STORE
S. E. HALL & SON
Keep all kinds of builders hardware on hand
and will supply contractors on most fav
orable terms
TIK" ROOFING
Spouting
and all kinds of tin work promptly
. Orders from the country Solicited
616 Peasl St.
PLATT3MOUTH. NEB.
Lumber Yard
THE OLD RELIABLE.
II. A. WATEBHAN & SON
Shingles, Lath, Sash,
Doors, Blinds
Can supply everw demand of the city.
Call and get terms. Fourth street
in rear of opera house.
Chamberlain's Bye and Skin
Ointment.
A certain cure for Chronic Sore Eyes,
Tetter,' Salt Bhenm, Scald Head, Old
Chronic Sores, Fever Sores, Eczema,
Itch, Prairie Scratches, Soro Nipples
and Piles. It is cooling and soothing.
Hundreds of cases have been cured by
it after all other treatment . had failed.
It is put up ia 85 and CO cent boxea.
V
LUMBER
Wally. A catboat is propelled by driving
nil only; the sloop baa both driving wiil
and f alling nail, for she carries, in addi
tion in the mainsail of the catboat. a
headsail called the "jib." Themainsail.
a ymi know, tends to "luff the ImmU'h
nose into the wind, but the jib has the
reverse effect and tends to force t he bnw
off and away from the wind. Tliesn
sails, if proerly proportioned, cause the
yacht to keep a straight cour.se. to steer
easily and to tail without burying her
head; for the jib lift the bow, and the
mainsail, being set back near the middle
of the bout, d'les uot drive her "down by
the eyes." at does the nail of a cat boat.
In nailing a sloop, however, great care
must le exercised, for this little jib in a
treacherous sail and will lead you into
trouble if you do not understand its
wayward tricks.
The rules for sloop Bailing are briefly
these; Before "going about" cast off the
jib, before coming to anchor or rounding
optoa mooring lower the jib, when a
squall Btrikes cast off the jib. in tine,
get rid of the jib first and work your
boat with mainsail alone in all emer
gencies that occur when sailing to wind
ward. In running before a strong wind
a reeled mainsail and a fall jib give the
best results, and sloops are better than
catboats when running free, because the
jih counteract the tendency to luff, to
steer hard and to roll, all of which traits
are ever present in the frisky catboat.
Observe one rule at all times when
sailing a sloop: Never fasten the jib so
that it cannot instantly be cast off. Fas
tened jib sheets cause nearly all the cap
sizes which occur in sloop sailing. F.
W. Paugborn in St. Nicholas.
Spectacle or Tongs.
They tell a good story of Chief Justic
Peters, of the supreme court of Maiue.
one or tne urigniest ana wittiest orna
ments of the bench in that state or any
other.
While the judge was still a practicing
lawyer he had for a client a farmer
uamed Hanscom. who. thouirh he was
well past middle age. had the notion not
uncommon among Maine farmers of his
age that he was as 3roung as ever and
could hold his own in a mowing field with
the best of them.
One day the farmer came into the
judge's office to look at some papers
which had been drawn up for his signa
ture, ana as ne picKea up tne first one
he began to Adjust it in the manner
sometimes spoken of by those who use
glasses and mislay them as "telescoping.
The judge noticed the action and, see
ing that the farmer was holding the
paper pretty well at arm's length, re
marked pleasantly:
"Your eyesight seems to be failing c
little, Mr. Hanscom. "You will have tc
get a pair of spectacles."
"Not a bit of it." growled the old
farmer; "not a bit of it. My sight's as
good as it ever was. I shan't want 'spet-
tacles' for a good many years yet."
"All right," said the judge; "you'll
have to get a pair of tongs then." De
troit Free Press.
A Spoiled Child.
"English children are so much more
childish than ours." said an Ameiican
mother once. "I wonder why it is."
It is undoubtedly because they are
kept in the nursery and do not come into
prominence at so early an age as ours do.
The other day in a hotel rotunda stood a
round eyed darling with her- short,
golden hair fluffed around her winsome
face; her short waisted, long skirted
frock added to her picturesque appear
ance. Almost all the men passing by
stopped to speak to her. She was the
delighted recipient of nickels, cards and
bonbons, while she coquetted with all
the airs of a society girl. My heart
ached, for she was getting all the sweet,
downy freshness of childhood rubbed off
bo early.
Her father, standing near, enconrged
her and laughed at her naive questions
and replies. By and by the white capped
nurse came on the scene and bore her
child away; and she, loath to leave the
scene of her conquests, made her exit,
biting, kicking and scratching her nurse,
while the men laughed heartily at this
edifying spectacle.
There are some wise mothers who dis
courage and endeavor to suppress this
precocity, but they are lamentably few
in number. L. E. Chittenden in House
wife.
Tta Manfaced Crab.
One of the most singular looking crea
tures that ever walked the earth or
swam the waters under the earth" is
the world famous manfaced crab of
Japan. Its body is hardly an inch in
length, yet the head is fitted with a face
which is the perfect counterpart of that
of a Chinese coolie; a veritable missing
link, with eyes, nose and mouth all
clearly defined. This curious and un
canny creature, besides the great like
ness it bears to a human being in the
matter of facial features, is provided
with two legs, which seem to grow from
the top of its head and hang down over
the sides of its face. Besides these legs,
two "feelers," each about an inch in
length, grow from the "chin" of the ani
mal, looking for all the world like a
colonel's forked beard. These manfaced
. rabs fairly swarm in the inland seas of
Japan. St. Louis Republic.
Prawtie Acid and Instant Death.
Prussio acid, it ia suggested, causes a
painless and immediate death, and ia
therefore preferable to electricity in clos
ing the career of criminals. First make
the condemned man unconscious with
tin anaesthetic, then a few drops of prus
sic acid injected into the jugular vein
with a hypodermic 83-riuge will cause in
stantaneous death. Yankee Blade.
Not a Ca for Treatment.
A stout, middle aged woman fell on a
rreet in New Ycrk. nd when some one
attempted to raise her to her feet she de
clared, with tears and groans, that her
leg was broken. An ambulance was
hastily summoned, the woman lifted ten
derly in a,nd taken to a hospital, when it
was found that the bruueu limb was ar
tificial. Philadelphia Ledger.
HE HEARS A STOftY OF HOW H En
MIT MOUNTAIN WAS NAMED.
An
American Coiuuinrelal Traveler Tells
Mriie V;n, . bunt the lonely,
Lovrtlck Slinrr of (lie Selkirk The
Mountain Vi'i Named for llim.
The tr.-.in had stopped near the heart
of the S -ikirks. under the shadow of a
great bare crag, which the guide book
said was the Hermit mountain. The
rock ros-.e almost precipitously, culminat
ing in a i-rct extending tor hundreds of
feet to tiie north, and the top of the crest
seemed almost as sharp as a razor. With
RTms akimbo on the rail of the observa
tion car was an English tourist, who
wore a monocle and a stare, and seemed
very much bored by the scenery. Near
him stood a comuier'.ial traveler of To
ronto, who was explaining how the
mountain got its name.
"Follow the edge of the mountaiu
from its front to the rear," he said.
"Kight where the edge breaks off you
Bee a solitary pyramid. From here it
seems to be tfnly about six feet tall,
though in reality it is about thirty feet
high. Don't you seo it bears some re
semblance to a man? That is the hermit,
and it is this solitary pillar that gave
name to the mountain."
The English tourist suddenly showed
indications of interest. He edged a little
nearer, and remarked:
"Beg pardon, did I hear you say some
thing about a hermit?"
The commercial traveler gave his com
rade a dig in the ribs. "Why, yes," he
aid to the tourist; "didn't you ever hear
the remarkable facts about the hermit
here?"
"No," said the tourist.
a drummer's story.
"Well, I'll tell you the story," said the
drummer. "It's a remarkable one, and
every traveler ought to know it. You
Bee, about the time of the gold excite
ment in the Frazer river country 'way
back in I80G a man came here to make
his fortune. One of the miners had
brought into this wild region his little
family, and among them was his daugh
ter, a very pretty girl, with whom this
other fellow fell madly in love. lie had
a hated rival, of course, and in a few
m'onths this rival carried off the prize,
and life became a hollow mockery to the
disappointed lover. He became not only
a woman hater, but a hater of his kind,
And he made up his mind he would spend
the rest of his life as a hermit,
"So he came to this mountain, and
he clambered up that brush that you see
alongside, and he built him a hut of
stones and branches, and there he began
bis new life. He had a gun and lived on
what he could shoot, a little flour he got
from the settlement and the berries and
roots he gathered. He lived that way a
good many years, bringing down from
the mountain an occasional fur or bear
skin, which he sold for provisions. For
years now he has been old and unable to
hunt well, but nothing has ever induced
him to give up his queer life."
By this time the English tourist was
all eyes and ears. "You don't mean to
tell me," he said. "How on earth does
he live now?"
"Well, once a week the people who
iive in this little hamlet you see here fill
a basket with provisions and one of them
takes it up to the top of the mountain.
When the hermit hears anybody coming
he leaves his hut and retreats into the
woods. The man with the supplies
leaves the basket at the door, and the
next fellow who comes up with provis
ions leaves another basket and takes
back the empty one.
THK TOURIST BELIEVED IT.
The hermit never speaks to anybody.
Early in the winter, before there is dan
ger of a big fall of snow, a lot of pro
visions is taken up to him, for fear that
a heavy snowfall will prevent any one
from reaching the top."
Why, doesn't he get sick and need a
doctor sometimes?" asked the tourist.
"Nobody knows that he ever had a
sick day. He is old, but he's well. You
see the air up there is magnificent, and
there's no reason he should be sick.
There he is now," continued the drum
mer, in a state of wild excitement.
"There he is; near the edge of that rock.
Don't you see him?"
The Englishman looked, but could see
nothing. He borrowed a field glass and
was adjusting tbe focus wnen tne man
exclaimed:
"There, he's gone. I just caught a
glimpse of him. He's np so high he
didn't look bigger'n a speck, any way."
"Remarkable," said the Englishman,
as he lapsed into a seat. He rolled it all
over in his mind for a couple of hours.
Meanwhile the story of the Englishman's
interest in the hermit had been told to
number of choice spirits, and there had
been much hilarity. One of the men
who shared the fun was standing neai
the Toronto drummer, when the English
tourist sidled up to him again.
"Now, look a-here," he said, "honest, is
that really all true about the hermit?"
"Certainly, it's true," said the com
mercial traveler. "Most all tourists
know it, and any one who lives in this
conntry can tell you all about it. Ask
this man here." .
The Englishman turned to the other
man, who told 'the story of the hermit
over again, with some graphic and cir
cumstantial additions. The Englishman
will probabl3' prepare an account of the
wonderful hermit for the British press.
New ork Sun.
V'ncle Sam's Carpets.
Strangers who come to Washington
discover things of the existence of which
residents know nothing. How many
people know there is a large room in the
treasury building in which every yard
ff carpet used in government buildings
all over the CTuited States is cut and
Fewed? The work is done by contract
a'nd carpus are fitted from the architect's
plans. Washington Post.
Stealing
a March.
you a piece of ad-
waut to give
nce.
"All riht, let me give you one first
follow itT New York Epoch.
an for a long time to come, the situation
of France and Germany forms the great
subject of anxiety which Is imposed
upon the meditation of all European
statesmen. At no other point is it fore
seen thut war can breakout. Russia lias
great ambitious and Italy has strong de
sires, but Russia is for years doomed
merely to cherish ambitions, for she run
not realize tlieiu single handed, and it
does not dejnd ujkjii her to provoke a
general war, which would be one result
jf her combined action with France;
while as for Italy, she will never venture
to give Hih signal of war, for if she did
wt,,dd
be left to herself and would
be speedily crushed, it could be solely
as the ri-suit of a general war that Italy
could obtain her share, anil in the pretv
ent state of her alliances she could take
tbat share only from France, so that
general war alone could procure it for
her, inasmuch as, if she were left single
handed, she. would uot be able to over
come France.
Neither Austria nor Eugland dreams
of war. It is therefore still, as twenty
years ago, France and Germany who
could occasion war; because, whatever
ma' le alleged, whatever may be pro
claimed or whatever may be concealed
these two nations desire war war, first
for its own sake, and next for the rest
and if, in order to have done with this
everlasting Franco-German nightmare
Europe could now promise to fold her
arms, and afterward to intervene merely
as arbiter, war would break out to-in or
row between France and Germany, for
the fatality of war haunts and overrides
both nations. Do Blowitz iu Harper's
I're-evolutloimry Errors.
Most of the shortcomings of the old
method of historical writing resulted
from the fact that the world was looked
at from a statical point of view, or as if a
picture nf the world were a series of d
tached y .ctures of things at rest. The
human race and its terrestrial habitat
were tacitly assumed to have been al
ways very much the same as at present
One age was treated much like another.
and when comparisons were made it was
after a manner as different from the
modern comparative method as alchemy
was different from chemistry.
As men's studies had not yet been
turned in such a direction as to enable
them to appreciate the immensity of
the results that are wrought by the
cumulative action of minute causes,
they were disposed to attach too much
importance to the catastrophic and mar
velous; and the agency of powerful in
dividuals which upon any sound theory
must be regarded as of great importance
they not only magnified unduly but
rendered it unintelligible when they
sought to transform human heroes into
demi-gods.
It thus appears tbat the way in which
our forefathers treated history was part
and parcel of the way in which they re
garded the world. Whether in history
or in the physical sciences, they found
themselves confronted by a seemingly
chaotic mass of facts with which they
could deal only in a vague and groping
manner and in small detached groups.
Professor John Fiske in Popular Science
Monthly.
"Onions Rolled In Molasses."
George Washington; while attending
a swell reception at .Newport, noticed
that the daughter of his host. Miss
Ellery, was suffering from a severe sore
throat and could not speak above a
whisper. General Washington, observ
ing this embarrassment of his youthful
hostess, said to her:
"Miss Ellery, you seem to be suffering
very much; what is the matter?"
Miss Ellery told him the cause of her
trouble, upon which the general said to
her:
"I suffer very frequently from a sore
throat and take a remedy which I find
very useful, and which I would recom
mend to you were I not sure you would
not take it."
"But I am sure," replied Miss Ellery,
that I would take any remedy that
General Washington would propose."
"Well, then," said the general, "it is
this onions boiled in molasses. It has
cured me often."
Miss Ellery took the remedy and, of
course, was cured.
-Exchange.
Some Bare Old China Pitchers.
The naval battles and heroes of the
war of 1812 furnished many subjects for
use in decorating pitchers, and some
bear inscriptions far from flattering to
English vanity. With the portraits of
Perry are tbe words of his famous dis
patch, "We have met the enemy and
they are ours." With Lawrence, his
dying words, "Don't give up the ship."
With the likeness of Decatur, who cap
tured the Macedonian, "Free Trade.
Sailors' Rights."
Then quickly met our nation's syes
Tbe noblest sight in nature.
A first class frigate as a prize
Brought back by brave Decatur.
With Commodore Bainbride, of
Constitution (Old Ironsides), are
words, "Avast, boys, she's struck."
the
his
The
old ballad says:
On Brazil's coast she ruled tbe roast
When Bainbridge was her captain
Neat hammocks gave, made of the wave.
Dead Britons to be wrapped in.
Alice Morse Earle in Scribner's
Queen Mary's Lspdog.
Mary Queen of Scots had a favorite
lapdog, which is said to have been present
at the execution of its poor mistress in
Fotheringay castle. After the royal
lady had been beheaded the faithful
creature refused to leave her dead body
and had to be carried out of the hall by
force. At that period lapdogs were the
lets of men a3 well as of women. Dr.
Boleyn, a relation of the unhappy Queen
Anne Boleyn, owned one "which," as it
is written, "he doted on." Anne once
asked him to grant her one wish and in
return he should have whatever he might
desire. Knowing his affection for the
dog, 6he begged it of him and of course
the doctor had nothing to' do but to give
it to her. "And now, madam," he said,
"you promised to grant my request."
"I will," quoth the queen. "Then. I
pray you, give me my dog again." Exchange.
Ayor'o Carcapariiia
Is an SecUre remedy, as numerous testimo
nials .conclusively prove, "for two years
I was a constaut sufferer from dyNiwpnia
anu liver complaint. 1 doetored a long
time and Uie niedlciuu ren:rlled. In nearly
every cano, only aKKravaud Urn dUt-aso.
Au aM)tln;cary advised mn to unn Ayer's
HitritaiMirllla. I did so, and was cured
at a cost of fb. HIiK-a that time It tuts
been my family medicine, und slcknens tut
Income S alraiiKer to our household. 1
belluve It to lie Uie beit inedlclun 011 earth.
P. V. McKulty, lluckniiui, a Bummer iL,
Lowell, Ma.1.1.
FOR DEBILITY.
Ayer's Sarsaparilla
It a certain cure, when the complaint ordi
nate in i!nHveriHhed blood. ' 1 whs a
preut sufferer from a low condition of the
blood ami Kueral debility, ttecomlnic Dually,
no reduced that I was unfit fr work. Noth
ing that I did for the complaint hclcd mn
so much as Ayer's HursaparllUt, a few bottles
of which restored me to health and strength.
I take every opportunity to reconuuend this
medicine in similar cases." C Evlck, If K.
lain L. ChlUicoUie, Oliio.
FOR ERUPTIONS
And all disorders oriKtualiiiK in Impurity of
the blood, such as IhII., carbuncles, pimples,
blotches, salt-rheum, scald-head, scrofulous
sores, and the like, take only
Ayer's Sarsaparilla
ritaesBEn nr
DR. J. O. AYEB A CO.. Lowell, Mass.
Price 91 ; six bottle, i. Worth t s bottle.
(!hA TE I'L COM R ) h'T I G
rniv'KAKFAST
I'.
vh 1 lior uirli ki'wlcl'e of tlx natural
law s winch jjokm 11 1 lie oe- i jo. m ft illcxt'oti
a"il niitrif Ion slid l v can-fnl a.( li-; lion of
I lie flue propeM ie of well scii-c. -.i Co oh Mr.
Kpiis lifts pioviiteil our lir-ui last table with a
dehea-eivft vmi'd licvciiL'i' which may
us many hsiv" octor' M is. It Is bv.tlie juitlo-
lons ns of hiicIi article" c it id Dial a eoti-
"itutli'ii may be i;iadiially built up until Mronjj
eiiouvh to resist every t- ndcucv to disease.
Hundreds of subtle n eladies are floalln ir
around us read1 to attack w heiever herein a
week lioiiif. V e mav eseape iiiimv a fsttnl
shaft, bv keepliijf ouretveit well for Hied w lUi
pure hi 00"- mnl a properly nourished mine. -
Civil M-rviie Oaetle. adosi simply with
boilini; w ater or in!k. Sold omy III liall -(Miiilid
til''. ! LTocerl- s laheded Ihiir:
IAMFs KIM'S . HO . lion .eoinUlilc chemist
i ondoii. Kniflaud
BrTGrosvenor'r
Bell-cap-sic
Jrompatm. .
- mmUl Dlrarinsad Inmhscol
HKirad atones. lor ma iif til unminu.
PARKER'S
HAIR BALSAM
CImuim and U-auliflaa Uia hsk.
PrvmutM S kliioitnt uruwth.
Sfovor Vails to JlMtors Oru
Hair to its Touthfal Color
Civm xalp dimm a hair laUiu.
mtt, anl I to at Hrgl
M Parkara aiar Toala. It nm tka aaM Caaah.
Wak baafw, Dcbil. Iadifaatiof, Faia, Tak la Uaaa. J eta.
HINDERCORNS. Tk. oalr rar. rr for Cora,
fttvsa all (wis. Qa. at DrsagifU, or UisCOX a CO., K. V.
Bucklen's Arnica Salve.
Tun Ukst 8at.vk in the world for Cut
Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Halt Kheum. Fever
Sores, Tetter. Chapped Hands, Chilblains,
Corns, and all Skin Eruption, and posi
tively cures Piles, or no pay required.
It is guaranteed to give satisfaction, or
money refunded. Price 2-1 eenU per Ikix.
For sale by F. G. Fricke & Co.
How to Succeed.
This is the reat problem of life
which few natiHiactorily Holvt.
Some fail because of ill health, oth
ers want of luck, but the majority
from insufficient ";rit want ofjnerve.
Theyare nervous, irresolute, change
able, easily gfet the blues and "take
the spirits down to keep the spirit
up," thus wasting money, time, op
portunity and nerve force. There is
nothing like the Kestorative Ner
vine, discovered by the freat spe
cialist. Dr. Miles, to cure all nervoun
diseases, as headache, the blues,
nervous prostration, sleeplessness,
neuralgia, St. Vitus dance, fits and
hysteria. Trial bottles and line
book of testimonials free at H. (1.
Fricke & Co.'s.
For manjr years Mr. li. K. Thouip
eon, of Des Moines, Iowa, was se
-erel3- afflicted with chr onic diarr
hoea. He says: "At times it was
very severe; so much so, that I
feaerd it would end my life. About
seven j-ears ago I chanced to pro
cure a bottle .of Chamberlain'
Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea
Remedy. It gave me prompt relief
and I believe cured me permanent
ly, as I now eat or drink without
harm anything I please. I have
also used it in my family, with the
best results. For sale by F. fi.
Frickie & Co.
Wonderful Success.
Two years ago the Haller Prop.
Co.' ordered their bottles by the box
now they buy by the carload.
Among the popular and succeseful
remedies they prepare is Haller
Sarsaparilla & Hurdock which is
the most wonderful blood purifier
known. No druggist hesitates to
recommend this remedy.
For sale by druggist.
Cood Looks.
Good looks are more than skin
deep, deqending upon a healthy
condition of all the vital organs.
If the Liver be inactive' you have
a liilious Look, if your stomach
be affected you have a Dyspeptic
Look aud if hour Kidneys be effected
yov will have a Pinched Look. Se
curs good health and you will have '
good looks, Electric Bitters is the '
great alterctive and Tonic acts
directly on those vital organs.
Cures Pimples, Blotches. Boils anol't
gives a good complexion. Sold at.'
!. G. Fricke A: Co'h Drugstore, 50c
per bottle:
m$ CoG-oa
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