The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current, December 31, 1903, Image 7

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    '
SJIUS 0P CHARITY
; SKETCH FROM LiFE OF THE
WORLD'S WEALTHIEST CITIZEN
t
TRAIN WRECK ON BALTIMORE AND OHIO
RAILROAD THE WORST IN MANY YEARS
Use Pe-ru-na for Coughs, Colds, Grip and
Catarrh A .Congressman's Letter.
CP
i
Tli- awful llnar to the liiiiwn;
flyT on tin- Italtlrnon- ami Ohio rail
nnd m-iir l)nwn.ri. I'm.. I iff. 11. nmkH
n nail l'hrlHtmn:4 for many famlllH.
It I nnt niily tins (irl railroail calam
ity this year lnt lh wornt In many
rnr. Then have li--fi thirty li-rall-nienfs
ami collision during the y:ir
hcrc th Io:ih of llf Una f-n excep
tlon:illy larn-. ' ' collision on the
IJI tour railroad of Nv I!, v.h n
thirty one rri' kllleil ami M'venteen
J njiir-l. hail lnn the wornt up to the
ir s nf horror. In thU one tieu as
many wire kilt l and live times an
many injureil. It m.i be litt-r-t i lie:
In i-onn etiori with thrHe thirty disas
ters to know that twenty of them r-r.i'is-il
tiy 'ollilonn ami ten by le-railm-rit.i.
wlilch would M--tn to iiidi
iufi' that more attention Is paid lo the
oinlitlon of the roa-lheil than to the
il't.ills of ruining trains.
if thre ran b; any t-oiisolalion In
i.'u-U an ao Lb nt. by whieh o.-r three
M-nre persons wire K 1 1 1 - I outright arid
rrumy other wen- lnj'ir d. soino of
whom will di'. it li in the faet that It
lo.- fiof n'.-:ir to have been th" re
Milt or ear l. ssn k.; or im-V'.'.crry A
irtiht train loa.b d with timbers i .vl
jie-f n d -l lh' ins.'eru'r train, ai.d
orri- of ll. ties had fallen iipo'i I he
tra'-k. The lniiMiM;' llj i r. i iiruiiii.;
nt print m I. roi'inh-d a rtne, and.
b fi.n- lh- niri c-r onl. !;u 5i n
: i-fd. the entire train. em-pr a
I .-r ar.d tlininv: ear. ib-raib-d.
Tli 'injurs wit" properly lo:nU-il. but
lb- bnuKin:' of a ;;(: a ontiimeary
nl.lih hardly eoiild hive been I'dii'-
e.i ! t s'.i'ii' r.f lini'i do.vn. The
vv ;?r w "v:s3imi$&imm "
-v ill I iifiiniiiHi !
Dr. T , It. Mehflrd of Connell?
ville, no assisted In rescue work
and ..dcd many of the injured in
tlu ifroad wreck near that city
Dec. IX. has given a scientific medical
version vt the cause of the deaths.
He said:
"Many persons have been mistaken
as to what caused the deaths of the
wreck ictims. believing they were
due to scalds and burns. Aside from
the engineer and fireman, who died
from crushing iolcnce, the d.atli of
all the others was duo to the iahala-
tlon of superheated steni. thus cans- j
ing an enema oi me iarjn ana in- ;
vrew of the freight train were cot iu
a, position to know it.
It was a horrible disaster. Men
were crushed to death, scalded to
death, burned to death. Cars were
telescoped, smashed, burned. l'very
detail of horror and of suffering possi
ble in a railroad wreck characterized
thin one. It is not creditable to skill
in construction thai cars should be
built of material wMch I made all
th more inflammable by paint and
varnish put on In profusion, an t that
they should be built so lightly ami go
to pieces as easily as a cardboard
home. The old wooden vessels have
largely jsiven place to steel vessels.
Why should not the old wooden cars
b succeeded by steel cars, which will
ofTer some resistance in case of acci
dent and reduce the risks of death and
Injury to crew and passengers?
CAUSE Or THE WRECK.
Information Seems to Show Disaster
Was Unavoidable.
The wreck was caused by the break
ing of the castings on a carload of
bridge timber on a westbound freight
train which had passed Laur I Run no:
more than fifteen minutes before the
passenger train. The wreck occurred
on a curve, and It was impossible for
Engineer Thorrley to see far enough
ahead to detect the obstruction en tLe
tracko.
The big Atlantic type engine plung
ed into the timbers at a velocity of
r.lxty miles an
hour. The
engine j
plowed into the embankment, and the
Offers American Army Nurses.
Ir. Anita Newcomb McGee. the
noted daughter of a noted father (the
astronomer) and the only woman ever
appointed assistant surgeon in the
United States army, recently offered
to the Japanese minister at Washing
ton the services of American ex-army
nurses in case war should break out
between Japan and Russia to care
for the Japanese soldiers. It was Dr.
McGee's work in the war with Spain
to organize the army nurse corps, now
a permanent part of the army: she
rsignei three years ago. having got
the corps into working order. Mr.
Takahira answered with due apprecia
tion of the affair, but doubted whether
the occasion would arise for its ac
eei tance.
Fortune Left to Poor Man.
John Snyder, a baiter in the United
States navy and stationed at Mare is
land on the Pacific coast, has come
into a fortune of $2".' h il by hi.
father. Snyder, who has received hon
orable disctarge, had been four years
in the navy. The forttrne is in bonds,
real estate and cah.
bua'- and e press ears w I brown
into I'k- oir-.'iiioJiiii-y riv r. The
i.moker lolloped i he I'in- i:ru! land
ed :pi.-ire!y on lo of it. Till allowed
flu- esea'dii ".-.team Ironi ll:1 limine
to lilt the car. Th mtmoI.it v.as pack
ed to Its nt iiost i-:ipait. and all the
pas-'cners were c:ml e aim-.
Most of the killed V. T foreiy.ll'TS
wiio win- iilerally ma-ted In death,
I he ba -tv.'' -'" and smoker I eb"eiiplii;c
ll.e 'iiillie and iiiimeii:.. y r;;Iehin:;
fire. .i a nin;;le pas.seiii.-er in Ih- e:r
reaped wllii hi lib-, and it is e.-ti-r.iaU-1
tbi't at ! t l u 'y of the d a J
V.-e hi liie .':.lol-.. T.
Aii operator at "V It" !ov. -. on the
I'ilf ib.irjr ami l.al.- Ili ie railroi I.
across the Voii;-.i.i.uii.-iiy river, was
the firs! tn .-e;ii word f tin- accident
and lo M-nd for relief. He was watc'i
i i '-C tin- liniti Mie JiaiiN-il a-; if was
: the
ll,,-
-ar;.
ialt i:
:ore and Ohio
ir.i'-ks aero.-;.;
lb
aw the
pile hiii in the air
mai".i2HF
r
' A
terferinp with respiration, death re
sultins Iniin lite want of oxygen. Iu
other words, the victims died of air
starvation.
"The word edema practically means
an escape of the watery element of
th blood in the surrounding tissues,
ths: causing pressure- on the opening
from the lungs to the throat, in the
place where the vocal cord are at
tached. This change in the vocal
cords and larynx, practically a scald
ing or rooking. rau?ed the alteration
in voice sounds emitted by those who
inhaled the deadlv steam. This death
is one of the most horrible known to
mea;cal scionce. I
j
and then sink back on the tracks. The !
streams of the injured and dying were
plainly heard. In another second he
wa.-- sen-.i!iig word to the railroad of-
ilcial at Dawson and C'onnellsville.
Kor more than r.uu tVet both the
east and we--i bound tracks were torn
up. The t nie.e w as completely de
niuHshed and the leg 7.o'.n-ga!loa tank
on the tendt r was thrown lod feet
a ;iea I from the wreckage. The bag
gage car was thrown into the river,
but was only slightly wrecked.
Ali the cars wen- derailed and the
trucks of all except the diner were
j torn onipletciy from underneath the
cars.
Few people were injured ia the Pull
I man cars and the diners, although few
escaped without at least some slight
injuries.
Hardly had the bodies of the dead
been removed from the coaches until
thieves began robbing the dead of
jev. elry and money. Special oncers
i were deputized, and with the aid of
the Haiti more and Ohio police force
ar.d Corncllsville officers the work of
the ghouls was Stopped.
It is charged that the foreigners who
escaped serious injury in tiie wreck
immediately s.f about robbing their
more unfortunate countrymen, and the
dea-1 as well as injured were robbed of
tr.otr money and other valuables.
Minister Admitted to the Bar.
For years Rev. .1. E. Herman of Mil
ford. N. IL. has been studying law, and
now he has been admitted to the bar.
t r.ae done ait this study, he says.
The Jefferson Memorial.
The OxTicers of the Jefferson Memo
rial association, which organization is
to erect a memorial building in Wash
ington, are considering a proposition
to enlarge the scope of their project
so that the proposed Structure shall
commemorate all the signers of the
declaration of independence instead of
its author only. The building is to
have four corner stones, conspicuous
ly placed above the foundation lines.
One is to symbolize the patriotic
achievements of Jefferson, another his
educational work, the third is to typi
fy his part in the enactment of the
Virginia statute for religious freedom
ar.d the fourth will represent his ad
vocacy of the freedom of the press.
Wife of Senator Reed Smoot.
Mrs. Reed Smoot. the wife of Utah's
besieged senator, is an attractive.
yoM'hfuMooklrg woman, much pleased
with her lot. She has know n her hus
bare. sir.-e Lis boyhood. Though a
devoted iainiiy woman, she takes a
keea interest in po'i"rs and has been
i president of the V.'osic-n's Renublican
club in Trovo.
in any way .slight in my
preacher of tJio oki.i-1. I-'or
Monday, buti-ad d Ix-ii. the
'b'ne Mondiiv,
w i
devoted
by me lo I lie st lid v of
some branch of
! law. The I- now leiltre of luw ks hclp
j fu! lo all p roles:; ion m am! as m'i !i to
I 1 1 - minii-tiy as anv other. Is not your
con-.re;;ai Ion the jury and w ill not a
coiivincin?; arpnineuT any v.i lght in
matter rciigiomi as iu matters of
k:w ? '
THREE GOOD ' FISH" STORIES.
Sea Serpent, Monster Oytter and Man
Eating Lobster Arrive.
While ret in-run to bis home late
yesterday, says a dispatch from At
.'antie City. x. illiam Hlackman
saw a loriK, dark object bein tossed
by the restless aic:t b-atini; on the
beach at. Vent nor. At last one bit;
comber left il stranded high on the
sands.
ia.iifailniTapai
kman approached. Ilcfore him
lay a sea serpent eighteen feet loiifi
and with a head twelve inches from
ear to car. Its mouth was the same
size. The next morning it could not
be found. Residents are greatly
Almut the same time Richard Bur
base of I'leasantvllle went oyster
limiting in Lake's bay. After a mighty
strnssle he landed a bivalve, he says,
whieh measured two feet in length,
fourteen inches across the back,
twelve inches ia depth, and the meat
in it weighed twenty-four pounds. All
I'leasantville can bear witness that
no oyster ever cnught was its equal.
Then John Winder proved the rule
of three ami made the cycle complete.
Winder is mate of the yacht Pitts
burg, and he pulled a lobster up on
a codfish line, wJiile fishing twenty
miles off shore. It weighed, Winder
siys. forty -five pounds.
"It was either a man-eater or the
original lobster," says Winder.
All Atlantic City is aghast at these
hapf.eiiinga.
JOKE ON HENRY IRVING.
Famous Actor Not as Well Known as
He Thought.
Henry Irving tells with glee of an
incident which occurred shortly after
he had made his name ranious the
world over by a series of successes in
t.ie Lyceum theater. London. He was
! standing in the portico of the theater
! one day when he saw passing an old
friend with whom he had played in
his days of struggle. Stepping for
ward Irving grasped the old actor by
the hand, saying: "Smith, my dear
fellow. I'm glad to see you. How are
you getting on?" "Oh. so ?o," was
I he reply. ' I've been over the coun
try with a rather poor fit-out for the
past year, and how about you. old
man? Are you doing anything?"
Change in German Embassy.
L'nder the hand of its new mistress,
the American wife of Itaron Von Stern
burg, the German embassy in Wash
ington has emerged from the char
acter of a somewhat nondescript bach
elor abode it has presented of recent
years and begins now to have" a cab
inet of its own and to rellect some
thing of the taste and individuality of
the woman to whom for the time be
ing it is home. The baroness was
Miss Iaughlin before her marriage.
Justice Brown Kis Own Bootblsck.
Though a very stout man, Justice
Brown cf the United States supreme
court blacks his own shoes nearly
every morning. The justice says he
feels proud to imitate Abraham Lin
crdn even to that extent. On getting
out of bed he dons his underwear and
socks, puts on his shoes and then
plies the brush. When fully dressed
the distinguished jurist finds it some
what difficult to catch sight of his foot
covering.
Electricity as a Medicine.
Dr. D'Arsonval. lecturing in Paris
on the effects of electricity upon hu
man beings, expressed the belief that
the world is on the eve of a therapeu
tical revolution, electricity being the
medicine of the future. He demon
strated the utility of electrical treat
ment in skin diseases and said that
under anaesthesia produced by elec
tricity a patient could be subjected to
light surgical operations without nar
cotics. Coined New Phrase.
Sir John See, the premier of New
South Wales, has added a new phrase
: to the political vocabulary. Urged to
br.'r.g pressure to bear upon the cora
I nionwealth government in a certain
j cause, he replied with a worried and
j irritated air that he might just as well
"sneeze against thunder."
Satisfied Their Constituents.
Thcr? are twenty-Sve men who be
gan their service in the hou?e of rep
resentatives in the fifty-third con
cress who have served continuously
since and who have row entered upon"
their ixth term5.
"w it hour
!uifen as
in.1- lance,
si ea ! Jed
AT
JOHN D. ROCKEFELLER.
A Sketch from Life, by George Vtrian, in Cleveland, October, 10C2.
John 1). Rockefeller-;; illness of pry- ; rot :-.een I.i chie! bu'-'iiies.-j :; ;: for
i-.-.il ya r:-- si go bit him wholly bald. a j c.ar or ?i;ie, i -n hi. miked with
The skin of l.-i.i he;I is like pnrch- him only by t e!; j;i ';'.;.. 1; is a very
t.ient. iio i-ot been to bis office ' lonely life lead;: at lea U for other
in the Si ; ndyrd Oil !iui!Ii;ig in Now r.i.-;i il. would Ic lorely. lie liver in
Vol k for six or seve.i years. While ' ('.i;;irs. exempt when he p.'uys e.lf fol
ia ths! city he si'i tiis very j-::-hi.m to his health. He reads nich. iii- r.-i-go
d.iwn lown. He dees not often j is il!. Special Corre. pondcuec of the
even go to board ne vtkigs. He has Ronton Globe.
KOREA AWAITING KER FATE
Not the least curious feature of the
r-riticai situation rapidly developing in
the far east is the attitude of Korea
and the apparent apathy of the Ko
reans themselves in the face of the
threat, of national extinction. Their
country forms the bone of contention
and may yet be the fighting ground
upon which Russia and Japan arc- to
settle the question of supremacy in
the Orient, but their possible prefer
ences and their future position are
-it ill a myst-ry.
I'refumably some light might be
thrown upon the question of Koreas
ullimate destiny and upon the prob
able tendencies of its people by an
examination of their racial character
istics, but even here the student
meets with difficulties which defy
analysis. The Korean is an indubit
able Asiatic in his modes of thought,
his conservatism, his distaste for civ
ilization and his preference for the
lower forms of Buddhistic worship,
but he is sharply differentiated from
other Asiatics. He is neither Chinese
nor Japanese r.or yet, as some ethnol
ogists would have it, an offshoot from
remote Caucasian ancestry. The ef
fort to trace a Caucasian origin
through the singular tribe of Ainos,
the light colored people of northern
Japan, on the ground that the latter
came from a Caucasian race cf great
antiquity, has been rejected as un
tenable. Several theories have been
advanced identifying the Koreans var
iously with Mongolic, Japanese and
Malay sources, but perhaps the most
authentic and satisfactory is that
which regards them as a distinct type
intermediate between the Mongolian
Tartar and the Japanese. Whatever
their origin, the distinction is too
marked to admit of confounding them
with the Chinese, while the contrast
between the tall, robust, large-limbed
Korean and the diminutive, swarthy
and active Japanese is even more
marked. The difference in the spoken
language cf the country, both in ge
nius and in structure, is but another
evidence of the fact that the Korean
is a type by himself.
Queen of the Iron Trade.
J. Pierpont Morgan's great rival in
the iron world is Miss Antoinette Ber
tha Krupp, heiress to the great Krupp
gun and iron works in Germany. Miss
Krupp is probably the richest young
woman in Europe. She is the elder
of the two daughters of th late Barcn
Alfred Krupp. His last will and testa
ment made her heiress to all his mil
lions, including the gun works at Es
sen, the ship works and wharves at
Kiel and all his iron ore and coal
mines in Westphalia and in Spain.
Conservative estimates make the
value of this great property at leatt
$75,000,000. When Miss Krupp be
comes of age all this wealth becomes
hers absolutely. She is 19 years old.
Diaz Partial to Americans.
Though a very busy man President
Diaz of Mexico rarely if ever refuses
an audience to American visitors. Usu
ally a letter sent a day cr iwo ahead
;r. suQcient to secure an interview.
The general's knowledge cf English
is hardly more than rudimentary, eo
ae always has an interpreter at hand
on such occasions.
J u. - - T7
Willi a population variously esti
ated at from lO.on.oiM) to l.'i.iiO'i.i.no.
and a territory about us large a:; t he
area of Great Rritain, Korea awaits
the decree of fate and apparently has
less voice in the matter than any of
the other nations concerned. The
official classes-, by turns have paid
deference to China, to Japan, and to
Russia. Korea's dependency in one
way or another upon the two former
powers having lasted for centuries.
The people themselves, docile, tract
able and indifferent, are too unenlight
ened to care, though since Japan's ag
gressions in Korea in 189 1 they have
been credited with a deep-seated dis
like of the Japanese. Russia alone,
with its slow-moving policy of gradual
encroachment and adroit intrigue,
t- if K.-y c TF7
U J
Y EL LOVJ
SEA
Where Korea and Manchuria Meet.
seems to have gained ground with
out arousing antagonism.
Indirn Frir.ce in New York.
A prince of India has arrived in Xev.
York, tall, handsome, rich, a law stu
dent in England and a ward of the
British foreign office. He is the
Sahebzada Nasir Ali Khan, brother of
his highness the Nawab Hamid Ali
Khan of Rampur. He has come on a
visit of observation, not in search of
an American wife, and at present the
suest of Mrs. Henry Duveen of Xevv
York, where he will spend a few
weeks. In talk and manner he is a
typical yousg Englishman, except for
his very dark complexion.
Is Great-Great-Grest-Grandmcther.
Mrs. Nancy G. Bond of Warren
county, Illinois, is a great great-great-grandmother.
possibly the only one in
the United States. The grandson cf
the sixth generation is David Ross
Chambers, a sturdy chap of 2 years,
child of Mr. and Mrs. Milton Cham
bers of B;:shnell. Mrs. Bond is in her
ninety-seventh year, though she looks
to be twccty-five years younger. She
is never happier than when remeru
bering her numerous relatives or ac
quaintances with seme little trinket
or article of wearing aprare! on their
birthdays. She has a wonderfully re
tentive memory and keeps the various
birthdays well in mind.
Tskes Monirl Position to Learn.
Baron Kuno Freitherr Von Eitz. a
member of the German nobility, about
years of age. is employed as c
"scraner" in the locomotive depart
ment of the Mich5.in Central raiiroad
at Jackson Junction, Mich. He is con
Dected with the railway department of
the German gcvernsirnt as a special
apprentice to learn whet he can of the
American methods of railroading.
I
i
J
A
9L m wmm
i h
mm
mm
i
In every crv.iiiii y ol Ibrt i iviiieil wditI
Sisters of t"i';i:ity am l:e n. Not or.r,
do ths v niini:-t-r t' t f ; ;ii iiu.d and iiip 1
h '.:tiial ne!-!:; rt 1 1; leii';;es !. '.i it t 1 to
their ca;-e, but th-y al::o mini .t.r t.j tb-::-
b.'jdilv needs.
Wilh :.o mar.v chilli'-n to t.i':(; .it - ' '
nnd to ii ,?-. t itoni lni'.itc and ih-e.i -.
ti ; -a:- f a'ld l I ii. ! -:i t S::.i- . , J. im; ion
IV i:ia a n v-r l.ui.i": a!- :.!: !.
J;r. i (art men je e:e-- I i .m.- l Me.s rro-T
Caliiolic Sisters b. in ail ever the I 'i.ie-d
St.-.t'-s. A rci cm!:!' nd irn :i:!i ii iei-.erj
frri;i a atli'ih: i;r.ti.i:lio.-i ij iJetroil,
Mich., reads n.; f( Hows :
Dr. S. fi UartMan, C;ur.ibvi, Ohio:
Dzzr Sir: - 'Tficj'oungf.lrl win used
the Petvnn was sufLTluj fmn Ir.rynh
tis, nnd loss of voice. The rcr..ilt of
the treatment ws3 t:n::-i sr.tisfccUtry,
Si:c found great relief, and after
further use of tl.e medicine we hope to
be able t'j say she is entirely cured. "
Sisters of Charity.
The young girl was under the care ef the
Sisters of Charity nrd used riiir..i for
catarrh of the throat with f;Kl results as
the alxjve letter testifies.
Send to the Perura Mftdi- in'; Co., Co
lumbus, Ohio, for a free look written by
Dr. Hartmao.
Ask Your Druggist for a free
J
I '
9
!
RIFLE a PISTOL CARTRIDGES.
" It's the shots that hit that count. " Winchester
Rifle and Pistol Cartridges in all calibers hit, that is,
they shoot accurately and strike a good, hr.rd, iicnc
troinw Mr. T'nic: 11 the kind of cartridges VOU will Rtt.
. m bA Mb w w w m
M if you insist on having
ALL. DEALERS SELL. W IN
VPS
35
'Tiff' W USSJl M.rjl'JH
Imkmg for a Hems 7
Thn whv not keeD in view the
fact that tne farming Innd3 of
c
F.re sCficicr.t to ftipport a por"i!ation cf SO.ft'iO.COO
or o--r? 'i'lii; in:inii;ration for liie pait i-ix years
hut 'jeen f.henoni':naI.
FREE Homestead Lands
OF-ily nrcessibln. while othsr lands may Le pur
chased from Knihvay and Land Coii:pnni':s. 'J lie
crain and crazing laiuls cf We'fin Cai.ia fcre tin;
lirit en the continent, pioduriiii; the l-;:.t Kiain.
and r.ttle (fc-d on ras:, alone) ready for miiet
Markets, Si-iinolt, IlalHvajs anil sill itl-r
-tnllt Ions nialcn Hnt-m ( ana'ta an tiivl
abie p:t for tl .-tllT.
Wr'.te to Si;perint!;nder. Irarai;mt!'in. Ottawa. Can
ada, for a desryimive Alias, and ether infoiiiiali-n.
or to the authorised Car adian Government Anent i
V. V. l.enneu, 01 Mev York Life UuilMag.
Omaha. NeL. !
GAY
LIFE
FREE
ifnW Ai .ant f j i a j ii i. .t.
mid aflfJren o? t w or :i.rr lrf -ritii
v ht are miTr'ntr f ri:i atrrti
J. C RICKEY & CO.
FOR WOMEN
A Boston physician's dis-'
roverv which cleanses and
heals' all inflammaiion of the mucous
membrane wherever located.
In local treatment of female ills I'ax
tine is invaluable. Used as a doii'.lie it
is a revelation in cb.-ani-ing and heaJin
power; it Kills all disease gerrr.s wLkh
cau 0 inflammation end ci.s'jharg'is.
Thousands of if-ttTt; from uomrn
Isrovc tliat it is in- s;r-atfst curt v,r
lettrorrhoea over lico-. t-;:!.
ra.:ine r.cvcr fails t' cure pr!-.it
cftrrh. niFl catarrh, so:.- t!.; ra, foro
:-.TCt:th T.v. l rc-ro c-ve. :r '? l';-s'-oisczse.i
are ail caused .y i. ;.... iiiir.ii-.:on
of iho ir!'jr.rn:s niemlirar-f.
I-'or 'lan-.i:s:. v I.It-::in-T n;i'l jro
fiorvlii'i tho t--th v."o -li!i!!cM.'s;o the
tvorlrl to prwlucr its oqcistl.
I hysicians and specialists everywhere
prescribe and endorse I'axtine, and thou
sandscf testimonial letters prove its value.
At druggists, or sent postpaid 50 cts.
A lar;e trial paolcaroanl Look of
instructions absolutely free. Write
TVT? T)o ln TIa K Ti--A-n tfon
V. N. U., Omaha.
No. 11904
BEGGS' CHERRY COUGH
5YRUP cures coughs and colds. .
ZOttFSJ
Or 11 Mm
vtmm Caned
Mi'! il.
Ma
1
4'M
Tl-i- b-llowiiiij 1' iter i-. Irniii ('oiikm-.mii;id
Mi-el.r.oii, ol N.i;- l'-o,i,
Ti--; I'lMira Me j, In.- ;..., ('i.lu'.-il.iw, ).;
I ( e-ntti "ien: I li4r4"M4
I l-.ttl.- ...i IV.a-a
( ,'nt n -n-n :
: ' ;:ivl
i t a i i
i el j;.-atlv
!.:i(l tUie
1 1 :m iii v ( ,i
!i -.1 IV; l-e.el,
f fi;r,A 4i&4 9
a,,d ic 1 -n- . r- 9 Tk '.r;v'
i It a i , t c o ., - f -fr'r-?JjH ? 9
tinned ii ..; uill J i ; V
J : i 1 v e
dr.e.l-..-
r.ioieal' .1
ol tiiiil
..'MS
Dr.
tandi:iK." D.-vid Mod iva.
Ilariui.-in, f r.- ol tbi In t l-nown
4i.s liild Eiiieeoii'l ill (lie l!nild
ph);
States, van thu In r.t man to loiiiiUlaie
I ei una. It w; s tbronjjh bi'i fM-niii-i mid
persi.-veranre that it wan inlidu :d to iba
medi' al pro'es .ion of thi i l ountiy.
If yen do not derive pruuipt and f;alis
f.u tory results from tb; lis: t l'-run.t,
write nt owe to Dr. Ilaitmnn, Riving a
full tt.-it mnt of yourca-w and bo will 15
pleased to give you bis valuable adviia
gratis.
Address Dr. Hartinsn, President of 1 b
Ilartnian Sanitarium, Columbus, (J.
PerunaAlmznac for VJ04.
5 7
- J ' '
the time-tried Winchester malcc.
CHESTER MAKIi OF C.KT!L)CKS.
A' J
mzJUnff-JJ.
j jThcafipca Er wat
jTHRIFTY FARPffiERS
: rft In I'r.'l I i m ' : i: t t t-f aw tit M .iry i-tinl. win rn
i til': 7 v.l .1 lillrt :i 1 .'..if f : A', I I j -: : i T ,'iy ll II i! '-. I. rn
f'.nH inarl.irs e.r Hiir ir'i.l::-.n ;n; l pI'T.iy -f Inml
nt r -:t"i:i:ilj: i !. M-iji i f i ii-ti !ti c J ali'l'li
I Ji'ii will I-: i-oiii lr.-oi ii.- Ii-hM'Ti t j
H. BAPCNHOOP.
fcc'Cts!e Board of lmriiio-!tn. BALTi.'.-iORE. M0.
Hex.
Every, housewife g!onls
over finely st a relied
linen and .white goods.
Conceit is justifiable
after using Defiance
Starch. It gives a
stiff, glossy white-'
n ess to the clothes
'and does not rot
.them. It is abso
lutely pure. It Is
the most economical
because It goes
fart .est, does 'more
end costs less than
others. To be had of all
Vl
grocers at 16 oz. S
for loc.
TH3 DEFIANCE STARCH CO
OMAHA. NEB."
When Answering Advertisements
Kindly Mention This Paper.
1
Bt-st Xnwrb h ran. Vur.; L-a. CM rj
it imn. ii Br "rnririM. '
t 11, R
i
J
Charlfead
A.