Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About Plattsmouth herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1892-1894 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 12, 1893)
THE WEEKLY HERALD: PLATTSMOUTH, NEP.KASKA. .JAM' AHY 12. 1S92. 6 STUBBORN SENATORS. Cannot Argree on Permanent Organization. TEMPORARY , SECRETARY. The House Awaitlntf on The Oran Izatlon of The Senate -The Speaker ;Makes Several Api'0lntmt-nt3. Si:.ATi: STIl.t, DlvAM.Ot Klill. I.I.M'ol.x.Nel)., .'an. .". The senate cliamher caught the crowds this orenoon and lont; before the sena tors were in their places the broad encircling gallery was packed to overflowing, iiml every foot tJ f f landing; room on the floor was oc cupied by a pushincrowding, and pi.p!n mass of men. The Crowd was h ureal that even Congress, man liryan, Tube, Castor, Paul Vandervooi t and other industrious members of the idlers lobby had no little dillicully in tfcttiiitf hold of the ears of the senators whom they were working so industriously. Lieutenant (Jovernor Majors brought down his gavel at 1(:U(), und after roll call Kev II. T. Davis, presiding elder of the Heatrioe dis trict offered prayer. The chair then introduced a pleasant diversion by requesting the tempoiary clerk to read the journal. The reading was listened to with an attention tlittis not likely to last as the novelty wearsaway. It was only interrtip ted by the appearance in the main aisle of a committee from the house 1 lowe, Casjier, and Porter who an nounced that they had been dele gated to inform the senate that the house has been organized and was reaily for the transaction of busi ness. After the reading of the journal the chair ordered the roll call on the election of president protein. The ballot, which was the second of the' series, resulted as yesterday Dysart, 13; Correll, 1H; Matters, 3 I' pon the annouiiecmen Vof the re Hiilt Thomsen of Dodge moved a recess until :i o'clock, which was voted down. Moore of Lancaster said that as the senate had been informed that the house was fully organized and ready for business, he moved the appointment of a committee, of three to confer with a like commit tee from the house in regard to fix ing a time for the canvessing of the votes on state officers. Darner of Dawson wanted the motion laid on the table, and Moore stated his position at length. His object was to assist the house in ex pediting its business. Senator Mattes asked for infor mation. He wanted to know if the nenate was in position to transact business of any nature until coin- pletely organized, The lieutenant governor was of the opinion that it was perfectly proper for the senate to appoint the committees suggested by the sena tor from Lancaster. Then on motion of McDonald the siiate took a recess. At 1U;10 the senate again convened Pope of Saline moved a recess until 4 o'clock. After sitting a moment, Pope walked over to the chair of Senator Moore and the two were joined by Clarke. A whispered cousulatin was helil and Correll, who sat near by, was in. Moore then renewed Ins motion for the appointment of a cointnitteeof three to confer with a like committee of the house in re- gard to canvassing the vote on ntate officers. The motion was seconded by Darner, who before the recess opposed it, and the sen ate acquiesced unanimously. The chair appointed asthat com mittee Senators Moore, Darner and Habcock. Clarke then moved a recess until 4 o'clock and there being no dis. f entiiig votes the senate adjouned It was some minutes before 4 o'olock when the lieutenant gover nor took his seat and rapped the senate to order. The clerk Called the roll ami the chair announced that another vote would be taken for president protein. There was toine noticeable changes in the vote as compared with those that had preceded it. Clark of Douglas voted for Dysart the independent candidate, and the galleries rose from their seats in breathless expectation. Correll excused himself and the vote1 proceeded without unusual feature until Dysart was reached. This time he declined to follow the example set by his republican competitor and voted for himself. Kverett voted for Correll. Thin was something of a surprise, as it had been freely whispered in the lobby that he was one of the quar tet that had pried himself loose from the republican caucus. To a man in the galleries it was evident that something hail happened. Lo beck and McDonald excused them selves from voting and Mattes, the demoiTt tic Ciiii'liilute did likewise. , Aftrrroll call C lark changed liis vote t i (it n l ami Everett I.oticck and Mcl'onald did tilt s line. Citr-j rell took a place in the aisle and with a glance at the independent Hide of the chamber said; ".Mr. 'resident, lollowin;; tlie ex-: ample set by Ir. Ih sart, I v. ish to vote fur 1115 self." j The vote was announced II for Iysart, 11 for Correll and 4 for Mattes. .n adjournment was tlien taken until 10 o'clock. I.lT I I.i; Ik )K I.N THE liot'SH. Lincoln, .Neb., Jan. .". The house was a half hour late in .assuming this morning, hut the loss of time was not particularly felt, as the body will have very little business on its hands until after theHena'e is organized, A request froti Squatter Governor Pearman to allow the use of repre sentative halljoii the eveningof the 2:ith inst for a meeting of the third house, was granted on motion of an independent. On motion of Jensen, the speaker was given power to appoint a clerk for himself and a messenger to run his errands. On motion of Howe, the speaker w is instructed to 1111 the minor va cancies in order that the organiza tion might Jbe completed, and the following appointments were made: Doorkeeper, Charles Dockhorn; as sistant doorkeeper, K. L Simmons; custodian of the cloak room, O. N. Sullivan. The house adjourned until 2:lt) o'clock. On reconveneing in the afternoon a committee of three to confer with like committee from the senate with reference to a canvas of the returns, and the speaker appointed on the committee Howe, Casper and Porter. The speakear appointed V. Stead- well assistant custodian of the cloak room. An adjournment was taken until 4 o'clock. The members availed themselves of the opportunity to take in the short session of the sen ate. When the gavel fell Chairman Howe announced that an agree ment had been entered into with a committee from the senate to can vass the returns. WITH BULLS AND BEARS The Fluctations of Wheat For The Past Twenty-four Years in Chicago. Prices of Wheat Since I 807. Thorstein H Veblen, in an inter esting inquiry into the changes in wheat prices from lstli to 101, which appears in the Journal of Political Economy for December, finds that the price movement and the devel opment of the forces which deter mined the movement fall into three more or less clearly defined periods in these twenty-four years. These periods are from 1S7 to lS":i from lS7:ito 1SS2, and from 1SK2 to 1U. The annual average price for wheat in 11)7 'reached the highest point ever touched since the time when the I'nited States first went into the business of wheat production on a large scale for the Foreign market. In that year N'o. 2 spring wheat av eraged $1.4.1 in gold in the Chicago market. Then wheat started down ward, reaching an average of about SOe in gold in 1S70, and rose again to about $1.05 in 1S72, and dropped once more in H7H, the average in that year going below $1. The line of prices of wdteat. in its variations did not run parallel with that of the other farm products in lSO-72, al though it had done so previously, and did so in TX In 1S7U, which forms the begin ningof the second period, a period which extended to 1 HSU, wheat prices declined. The commercial crash of lS7;t, however, was not the cause, for the decline began before the panic really set in. The drop continued until 17."), when the average for the year in Chicago was SV. in gold. after which, except in 1S77, the an nual average advanced until 1'.', when it was ?1.1S. Acreage had been increasing all this time, ami. on the whole, the domestic crop had been expanding; but exportation. on the average, had been rapidly growing. Hetween and IS'.il, when the record closes, the lluctua Hons in wheat prices hav been less violent than they were in the ear ner periods named, and there has been a closer parallelism between the prices of wheat and of the oilier farm products. Since ISiCJ wheat prices have been on the whole, on a lower level than they touched pre viously. In August, IS'2, the price, which had ranged from fl.Jil at the beginning of the year to about fl.'JO a few months later, suddenly drop ped to $1.05, and in the latter month of the year it went below $1. The sag, with some ' fluctuations, con tinued, and in lSS:j a permanently lower level was reached. In the latter months of 1SSS and the ear- Her mouths of l"vi, however, local speculation sent wheat considera bly above tl'.e "dollar mark" in Chi cago. A drop ensued, followed in l-i'.ll and IVil by a slight increase in price. The writer of the article whose figures are siiiiiinerued here finds thattIleCoiir.se of wheat prices ill the past five years has been attes ted by the cheaper methods of pro duction and transportation which have come into vogue in this as in other avenues of labor, says the (ilobe Democrat and which tend to keep prices down, the growth in competition by other counties for the European market, and the in crease in import duties on wileat by France, Germany, Italy and Spain. Hut prices in the local markets have not declined in the past few years in quite the degree that they have done in the general markets. That is, the farmer is in a position to get somewhat more for his wheat now, in comparison with Chicago and New York quo tations, than he was formally. As the cost of production is generally less cm the new lands than on the older ones, for far 'ft'estern states are in a better position for wheat raising under the existing condi tions than are those of the Eastern or of the Ohio Valley group. In the average run of seasons, as the the writer before mentioned views the situation, wheat production on the newer Western lands still con tinues to be fairly profitable. He thinks indeed, that wheat is almost the only crop, that, under the pres ent conditions and by the present class of farmers, can be raised by a profit in that locality. A SLUMBER SONG. Sleep, nil, mi, my lambs a-wearyl Shinlni: Minue:ini nil are. o'er. Tin thy time when little children Sail nway to Slumber Bhore. Glldini;, eliding to I bo muslo or n trti'lrr Inlliiby, Gently drift the Utile children When tliu stuis come out ou nlgk. Oh, the lovely flower Hint open Klulit across the Slumber sen! Flont sway, my birds that twitter, For the dreaiutihip waits for ye. Softly to the swaying grasses Kail the gracious drop t dew, Yet mure softly at the gloaming Close the hairuiu's eyes of blue. The I I rut Sleeping Car. No single thins has contributed more to the comfort of modern life than the Pullman car. Its inventor, George M. Pullman, worked out the details of his invention while a merchant in Colorado in 1839. In 1801 he carried his idea to Chicago and employed a master car builder of the Alton road at a salary of $100 a month to superintend the con struction of a model car. The inventor was determined that it should be the handsomest car in all respects that had ever been made in the country. He came on to New York and here hap pened to meet the artist who had just decorated the house of Samuel J. Til den. He at once closed with this artist, took him west and set him at work dec orating the car. When the Pioneer was finished it had cost the extraordinary sum of $19,000, a large price even now for a sleeping car. It was a wonder to everylxidy. It was just as Mr. Pullman had expected. The beauty of the finish and the marvelotu Innovation he had made were advertised far and near by the newspapers and by railroad men, and some of the latter be gan to believe that the ideas of the in ventor after all were practicable. New York Herald. A Salt of Wllkie (olliln' Clothe. The tweed unit that Wilkie Collins purchased in Philadelphia as he passed through the city so many years ago is. still here. The novelist by accident ruined one that he brought over with him by spilling broth over it and stepped across Chestnut street to invest in a new one before returning to his hotel. Collins instructed the tailor to send the spoiled one to his rooms, and when he gave his name the clothier said, "Ar( you the author of 'No Name' and 'Arma dale?' " Wilkie had to own up, and Hit tailor was overcome with pleasure, an nouncing that he was tha most sincere admirer of Collins in America. Un fortunately the suit was not a good tit, but the novelist had too much delicacy to acquaint his sincere admirer with the fact. So the garments were relegated to George H. linker's attic, where they remained over a generation. Philadel phia Press. Oulle a ltrllef. Husband What do you do when you. hit your thumb with a hammer' You can't swear." Wife No, but I can think with al! my might and main what a perfectly horrid, mean, inconsiderate, selfish brute yon are not to drive the nails yourself. New York Weekly. mlnin onlmrlne. Old Rooster hat have you stopped laying for? Old' Hen It's too cold. Old Rooster Huh! Just like you fo males. Quick as it gets cool enough for me to crow without getting into a per spiration you quit laying. flood JJews. Ilnngrra of Bathing In a nig Rlrar. Few people are aware of the danger of bathing in the Mississippi. Aside from the perils of the treacherous currents and eddies, wkich will draw a mm un der before he knows he is in any danger, there are fu,h in the river big enoagh to bits off a man's leg at one snv. SU Louis Globe-Democrat. MULLEIN. ) mullein, irrowinis on the road's rough eMe With yo'ir wv.rm mitteui Vmt the earth's brow n fuee, ilnlilin,' them flatly ami as if yuu tried To pat Lit i lurks n n h nil an itifuul's grnc. The raindrops Minul like jewels on ymir Ie3fj li-i runt of wool feel.- not tluir ttenlle ki.n I H. l.li I tor fairies ul I In- fi aI, how brief. Nor would your lelied Hour their foot:-lep Uli.SH. Hold mi i.ur ci'iioles to the traveler's eye! Your el.ow Momns Mi.iul I iuiiil!) apart; 'or peei liiKiity i hey may inver Iry, Vet Iiml a levlntt place w itliin the heart, 1'he ej e that 1 ln vv them in the lorn; a-.-o. Win u riiildhood't feel for luscious burden roved, tVutili! iir.-a 'dor,,; the hills thy candle's glow, bi'iiliin: tlio wo'ni;,.iid paihn so know laud lme.1. I . J 1 J u I,. A. Very in UoMou Transcript. "Your rrlcn.l Itoky I'oky." Wa.sliiniiui living having been iiji pointcil seen titry of letiim to London, while lie iirrived in October, received a hearty welcome from nil bis old friends anil many new ones, .liucd by his writ inns. The llnyiil Society of Literature uave him one of their niiiioal i ld iiiedals (lliillam had tlit! nt her) iiml Oxford made him a LL. D. Tim s-'. luh-iits nt course did Hot lo--u so nihilirable a ch.'tncn for shoiu in.tr, iiinl be was e'.cd with nlTcction;itc yells of "Kicdrich Knickerbocker.," ' Jet h I'cxi Crime," "Kip Yon Winkle," "Coluni-l-ii"," etc. Irvinn was miiili amused at the "rcllick inu" Komi humor wit li which William IV bewail lils reiejn, and he once t ried to tfivea lesson in dignity to the Duke of Sussex. He bail to nocomiiany i ah eccentric friend of tneaer and liiiiiiii fiiture, who persisted in wearing an extraordinary nondescript irarli instead of the prescribed court iln ss to St. .fames', The ulieis demurred; the foreign ministers smiled. The Duke of Sussex mopped Irvine; as lie passed and whispered, moving his thumb jerkingly up and down, "Who's your friend lioky l'okyf" "That, sir," replied Irving em phatically, "Is John Randolph, United States minister to Russia, and one of the most distiiiejuiMied orators of America." It was all in vain! Some time afterward IrviiiK was iliniuir wit li the duke, whose first laui;hini iniiiiry was, "And how is our friend lioky I'oky f" Temple liar. Tim I'hysleat Strain of foot hull. Few except t hose who have been through the experience are aware what exertion and strain und exhaustion a hotly contest ed football match involves. It is all a Hreat deal more than appears on the sur face, mid the self control required in the midst of (,'reat excitement adds to the nerv ous tension besides the physical fatigue. This of itself is enoiii,'li to try an average man, hut when to it is added the struggles, the falls, the grappling, the blows (for there are blowsonce in awhile), it requires stamina and real endurance as well as strength to stand it. lieeanse the men on the opposite sides in the field are not seen squaring oil and striking at each other in regular Sulllvan Corbett style it does not follow that there are not scientific ways in which in the tus sles a team can be, materially weakened or some particularly aggressive member oi it disabled. 1-ct, any man In fair condition be suddenly thrown to the ground and then have one or two heavy men, or It may lie seven or eight, or even more, fall and throw their weight on him. Possibly his hand may he under one of their feet, or in the fall one of their fore' nrms may have choked him across the neck. How much wind and energy will un nverage niaii have after one such an ex perience as that f And yet it is a common football experienre. Philadelphia Times. Itrnve Men. Persians in general are not supposed to he the bravest people in the world, but even in Persia the inhabitants of Kashan, a mercantile city, arc notorious for their lack of a warlike spirit. Their pusillanimity has passed Into a proverb and niven rise to many stories. One of the best of these is that when Nadir Shah disbanded his army on its re turn from India, the : 110,0(10 men belonging to Kashan and its sister city of Ispahan ap plied for an escort of 100 musketeers to see them safely home. Youth's Companion. llurin as a Tux Collector. Ill the olden days candles were taxed ar ticles, and it was the duty of Burns, as an excise officer, to see that the tax was not evaded. He generally looked the other way, however, as when passing through the kitchen one night at William Lori mer's, of Kennishall, where the gudewife was busy making candles, he merely re marked, "Faith, madam, ye're thrang the nicht," and passed into the parlor. Black wood's Magazine. ih1 l)ilnircnieii!i forever. In view of the oft threatened exhaustion of coal deposits the opinion of Dr. Men deleilT, tlieliussiancheinist, that petroleum is probably inexhaustible, is somewhat re assuring. He attributes the format ion of petroleum to the constantly renewed action of water on the metallic deposits of the hot central portion of the earth, and believe that the rapidity of its formation keeps pace with theextraction.-New York Press. Very Trailiy Verse. Magazine Kditor Yes. I printed one of your poems last month, but I don't want any more such trash. Poet -Trash? Magazine Kditor-Ye, trash; that's what It was. Why, I saw peciple reading it. New York Weekly. A Thoughtless I ellow. A man in Brooklyn of the name of Con slu r tried to shoot his wife recently, al when arraigned in court said he did it be cause he would be arrested for abusing her. When .ked how he expected to es cape If he had killed her, he said he hadn't really thought of that at all. Xew York Times. In India and South America there is said to be a small tree, known as the "sorrow ful tree," which bears sweet scented flow er that "bloom only in the nighttime and fall oft at the break of day." Official statistics show that In the United Kingdom the number of horses increased from l.W,iV.l in lsr-3 to l.mn.yiTIn I'-', and to,iir..Vr.i in 1V.0. The Normans who conquered Knsland shaved the face and the back of the head, so that Harold's spies declared they were an army of priests. In these tinie I here are no unappreciated Ifeniuses; but there are many overappre ciated mediocrities. In all Knropean cholera epidemics the disease reached this country in Sfss than two years. Ho lrl-tl to Interview Tonn.vou. "1 Interviewed Lord Tennson once." said K. M. T.tvl ir, formerly an attai ho of The Pull .Mall (Jii:etie, but now representing Hritisli caoitulKts in America and ninkiiiij temporary headquarters at the Southern, "ft was two years ago. I had lung hot fl au admirer of the treat poet, and ehanciug to be in the neighborhood of his residence one lay I thought I would look in on him. I tiLT the bell and sent in my card. " The servant returned with the messaeg that Lord Tennyson whs busy mid cuild not receive visitors that day. I had worked en a Xew Vork paper before (toing to 'Lun lion town' and of course I was not to be headed off that way. I slippul a few shil lings into the hand of the servant and pu.iiped him. I learned that his lordship was extremely busy sitting in front of a sea coal lire reading a newspaper. I also learned that he was in the habit of of tak fnu a long walk between li and 1, and I de cided to waylay him. Shortly after M he rallied forth in a great coat, with n pon derous staff in his hand. I overtook him a couple of hundred yards from his door and introduced myself. Me looked at me, grunted and walked on. "I kept at his side and told l.lm how I had enjoyed his latest production, inquired after his health, t urned up the collar of his great coat for him, helped him over a rou-li place in the walk and made myself, as I thought, generally agreeable. I soon discovered that 1 wasdoingall the talking. Not a word could I get out of the great man. lie didn't even appear to hear me. I was vexed, chagrined and felt like telling liim that, his last production was insuffer able rot, but I restrained myself. I learned afterward that he would not speak to strangers that my experience with the author of '.Knone' was by no means an exceptional one. It was the only time in all my newspaper experience that I ever run my game to earth and failed to get an interview of some kind." St. Louis (jlobe Dcmocrafc. At H Dinner in Koine. Upon the three wooden couches which formed three sidesof a square in thecenter of the room there reclined nine Romans, for the giver of the feast had borne in mind the saying of Varro that those invited should never he more in number than the muses nor less than the graces. The guests wore wreaths of roses upon their oiled locks most of them, I'lthough one, whose white tunic boro the single dark stripe of a senator, hud pre ferred the crown of Ivy leaves. The couches whereon they reclined were of wood thickly incrusted with ivory, and made easier by many cushions covered with light silks. The guests leaned on their left elbows, and ate with their right bands only. At the end of the course silent servants brought waterinsilverbowlsand proffered linen napkins that the lingers might he washed, while another attendant wiped the low wooden table with a thick cloth. In the open space before the table and the couches other slaves were casting down saffroned dyed sawdust, that it might absorb the blood which lay in little pools upon the pale pavement. There the gladiators had been fighting but a mo ment before, to 'entertain the guests at the banquet, and having given strong proofs of their skill and of their courage they had been dismissed, and were now behind the house, out of sight, one trying to stanch his wounds, the other stiff in death and carried by his comrades, Bran der Matthews in Harper's. The Origin of "Itrotlier Jonathan." It seems st range to speak of the United States as "Brother Jonathan," and the wonder is how It ever began; but on in quiring into the matter we find that the custom arose from an ordinary remark made by General Washington at the be ginning of the Revolutionary war. On going to Massachusetts to organize the army he found it scant of ammunition and all means of defense, and no one could suggest nuy way out of the difficulty. Something must be done at once for the public safety, and General Washington, who had great confidence In the judgment of Governor Jonathan Trumbull, of Con necticut, said in his dilemma, "We must consult Brother Jonathan on the subject." "Brother Jonat ban" was equal to the oc casion, and supplied many of the lacking necessities, and afterward during the war it became the custom in any emergency to say, "We must consult Brother Jonathan." In time the name became applied to the whole country, and it is pleasant to know that the great Washington himself was the originator of it. Harper's Voting People. Onnlel l!ojer' Lonely Life. The finding of the body of Daniel Boyer in Kxeter township has brought to light the story of this aged hermit. Boyer was seventy-seven years old, and for forty-eight years had lived alone in a little stone hut, eight feet wide and ten feet long, sur rounded by a swamp. His sole companion was a dog. He did his own cooking. The principal part of his food consisted of wild game that he shot iu the woods. For half a century his only occupation was the making of ax handles, which he carried to town on his hack and sold. He rarely wore shoes, even in the roldest weather, a".d when his body was found in the path lead ing to the spring from which he gut water the feet were entirely naked. He, slept on a plank lied. His death was caused by heart disease. A brother of the dead man was also exceedingly eccentric. Neither of them married. The brot her always climbed intoatree every dayaiid sat there for hours and played his violin ami sang scngs. Philadelphia Record. Cold nn:l Silver m Legal Temlert. In our present Knglisli currency there Is a discrimination against silver, for sums exceeding forty shlllihgs, gold or paper backed by gold is the only legal tender. In India the discrimination is the other way. Gold is unknown for currency purposes, and all debts must be discharged in silver or paper backed by silver. In France, be fore l!o), both metals were used indiffer entlythat Is to say, the French mint was always prepared to roin as much silver and as much gold as any one chose to bring to it, and the debtor, having obtained his coins of either color, might discharge his debt with thove which suited him liest. Loudon Tit-tlits. Napoleon anil 111 Mother. Soon after Napoleon's assumption of the imperial purple he chanced to meet his mother in the gardens of St. Cloud. He was surrounded by courtiers, and half playfully held out his hand for her to kiss. "Not so, my son," she gravely replied, at the same time presenting her hand in re turn; "it Is your duty to kiss the hand of her who gave you life.'' Chambers' Jour nal. TorebliKhi. In ( hlim. When Chinese boys have a torchlight procession they carry fish skins for tan terns. The skins are dried and lieautifully painted. Inside of them there is placed a candle or a small oil lamp. These lanterns ire pret tier than ours, Kansas City Time. n J VII 1 Ml Skin blemishes like foul teeth, are the more offensive because they ave mostly voluntary. The pores are closed. One cannot open them in .. minute; he may in aV month. Try plenty of soap, ;.;;ve it plenty of time, :;;k1 often; excess of good icap will do no harm. Use Pears' no alkali in . it; nothing but soap. All sorts of stores sell it, especially druggists; all sorts of people arc using it Going to Buy a Watch? If so, buy one that cannot be stolen. The only thief-proof Watches are those with BOWS Here's the Idea: The bow hat a groove on each end. A collar runa down inside the pendent Istem) and nts into the grooves, firmly locking the bow to the pendent, to that it cannot be pulled or twisted off. To be sure of getting a Non-pull-out, see that the case is stamped with this trade mark. ""C" It cannot be had with any other kind. jl Ask your jeweler for pamphlet, or send for one to the famous lloss Filled Case makers. Keystone Watch Case Co., PHILADELPHIA. HAVE SUFFERKD from the Irregularities peculiar tu their sex and found prompt and permanent relief in DR. J. H. MCLEAN'S LIVER AND KIDNEY BALM. It CURES AT.Ij Diseases of thn Kidneys, J.lver and Urinary Organs, as !trl(fht'S Disease, Inflammation of the Kidneys, Torpid Liver, Irrerulnr Menses, Lciiwr rh or Whites and Kidney Weakuesn in Children. Trice 1.U0 per buttle. FREPARED BY THE DR. j. H. McLEAN MEDICINE CO. ST. LOUIS, MO. PURE RYE. '.m become a household word beoaiiFi . f its aoiiiilute purity, nutritive value, smi.i ih ta -tea'iii (Ui'icions bouquet. It iskchI vim': 1. 1 ,;s and ;i stimulant for iiiipiii:ii canstitunons. Unlike inferior whiskies it dues not rasp or scald the thrum and stomach, nnr cause nausen, dizziness am" hoadiichi!. You may know it by the nbuv., qualities and the proprietary bulil s i v;iii li it !! servt-d. ChII for "C.-.tim rare -Viv" tuicl tak'! no other For su'.o at all firsl-i:i,isi drinkint; pl irc; nn 1 dru j sturuj. i DAM.I'VWP,' '"O.. rhiraKO For s;ili by Joe McYVy. mmm PACKAGE PRORHARRIS' PASTILLES FOR THE CURE OF" WALT MEN 'V!TALLV WEAK). M.l. fcT f .... ilCH men KiHuxiiiis, wiMmewiutVkL! iJ $$r.H WE SAY CURE .riSV;;;,; i T P 1 4 L ' "bl irl.l A leioui m lit is 1 1 " " " iultnlnt from th' '' liiii4iHtlrt4ilitii. w.eiiitiirolii 1 . . '! ' ty'V ,"'" lr.mpl ,r " Mam ..r!5M-i. Aiit. n ia B-emmim nl iyt"iM.i,, oi w-ll tl w-itt .i-.-O f m.irH hHr th.l I wnt.U ... .A. j ,v . r snrpritvn ma pfnu I" C h"."- 1 "Wr.M y.lf l-.lnnl !0 .11 .U(,rnym obnlly. W ,n mw , ,,,( i, lttu,p u ucoi.4 fnr ftply PATIENTS TREATED BY KiL CONFIDENTIAL. lot pvilciilm num., .Ill, H mm. li. .uo.p, I. I. . f. SNYDER. K-VICKEI't T.TI. CRIC1C0. IIU lilliff MaWtoafclalaaZl - - 9