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About Plattsmouth weekly journal. (Plattsmouth, Neb.) 1881-1901 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 17, 1895)
The Last Chance. MRS JOHNSON HAD ONLY CHANCE TO SAVE HER LIFE. ONE flfow Does tbo Work or Three Average Women. From the I-edger. Mexico, Mo. Mr. Lucinda Johnson lives In Mexico, Mo. The Ledger has j;iet succeeded in ob taining an interview -with her. This is the u betance of her story ; In the winter of '92 and '98 Mrs. Johnson was, like many of her friends, attacked with la grippe. Yes. we're most of us had It and know its wrecking powers, when it gets in its work on a good constitution. Well. Mrs. Johnson, along about Christmas, was illustrated. All the medical aid here in the city only "brought her around." as an '-heros and roots" female sym- at hirer expressed it, and she was left i a debilitated and exhausted condi tion, and experienced a constant pain in her left side. She was wholly unfit for her domestic duties and waa un able to do any work abcut the house, even after the la grippe fever and its character istic sickness had left her. She is a con sistent member of the church, and one Sun day, between the Sunday school and church services, being barely able to be conveyed there, she heard of a miracle that Dr. Williams' Fink Pills for Pale People had performed, and she resolved to try them, it was like the drowning man grabbing at the last straw. It was her last and only chance to save her life. She procured one box of these pills from the south side drug- fists. French & Garrett, in this city, and y the time 6he had used half the box she and her watchful friends noticed a marked improvement in her condition. Taking the rest ol the box or p ills and one more box she recovered remarkably in an exceedingly short time. Before she had used the first box she resumed her household duties, and has been steadily at work for the last eighteen months. It took only a lew boxes, perhaps five or six, to entirely cure her. Since then she was attacked by rheuma tism, caused from careless exposure, but by at once taking the Fink Fills for Pale Peo ple she drove that painful and dreadful malady away. She told the reporter that" whenever she felt that she was going to be ill, she took one or two of the pills, and she sever got sick. Mrs. Johnson is perfectly healthy now and promises to live to a ripe old age. Her friends have never ceased to talk about her almost miraculous recovery and are loud in their praise of the Pink Pills for Pale People, and all who have tried them say they would not be without them under any conditions. Dr. Williams" Pink Pills are not looked uj on as a patent medicine. An analysis of their properties shows that they contain, in condensed form, all the elements neces sary to give new life and richness to the blood and restore shattered nerves. They are an unfailing specific for such diseases as locomotor ataxia, partial paralysis, St. Vi tas' dance, sciatica, neuralgia, rheumatism, nervous headache, the after effects of la grippe, palpitation of the heart, pale and allow complexions, and the tired feeling resulting from nervous prostration, all dis eases resulting from vitiated humors in the blood, such as scrofula, chronic erysipelas, etc. They build up the blood and restore the glow of health to pale ana sallow cheeks. They are for sale by all druggists, or may be had by mail from Dr. Williams' Med. Co., Schenectady, N. VT., for 50c per box, or six boxes for $2.50. Doubtful Arrangement. In his desire to use fine language the darkey sometimes allows his ideas and statements to become a trifle confused, as well as confusing. Some years agx a handbill announc ing a "colored picnic' to be held in a prove near a southern city was freely circulated. After various highly entic ing announcements relative to the de lights in store for the partakers in this entertainment the bill concluded with the following puzzling note printed in italics: "Good behavior will be strictly and reservedly enjoined upon all present, and nothing will be left undone which will tend to mar the pleasure of the company." Youth's Company. Kate Field in Denver. Denver, Sept. 10. My journey from Chicago was over the Chicago, Burling ton & Quincy railroad, one of the best managed systems in the country, I should say, judging by the civility of the emploj-es. the comfort I experi enced, the excellence of its roadbed, and the punctuality of arrival. I ac tually reached Denver ahead of time. The Jlurlington Koute is also the best to St. Paul, Minneapolis, Omaha and Kansas City. Witty and Clever. Chicago Times-Herald: "When Prof. Aytoun was wooing Mi6s "Wilson, the daughter of "Christopher North." edi tor of Blackwood's Magazine, he ob tained the lady's consent conditionally on that of her father being gained. This Aytoun was too shy to ask, and he prevailed upon the young lady to ask for it herself. "We must deal ten derly with his feelings," said hearty old Christopher; "I'll write my reply on a slip of paper and pin it on your back." "Papa's answer is on the back of my dress," said Miss Jane, as she entered the drawing room. Turning her round, the delighted suitor read th ese words: "With the author's com pliments." ' Tung sinner, reckolect one thing whatever yu git dishonestly yu hav got to devide with the devil, and he allwuss takes the lion's share. I cum akrost lots ov humble and re signed partys in this world, only let them hav their own way in all things -A2T0XG THE OZAEKS." The Land of Big Red Apples, is an attrsctiTe and interesting book, handsomely illustr ted with views of South Missouri scenery, including the famous O.den fruit farm of 3.000 acre in Howell county. It pertains to fruit raising in that gret fruit belt of America, the southern slope of the Ozards, and will prove of great value, not enly to fruit-growers, but to every farmer and horoeteeker looking for a farm and s home. Mailed free. Address, J. E. Locxwood, Kansas City, Ma FACTS FROM ALL LANDS. There are eleven daily newspapers in China nine printed in Chinese, one In English and one in French. Norway and Sweden have been under one king since 1814, but at present there are demands for a separation. The cellar In the bank of France re sembles a large warehouse. Silver coin is stored there in 800 large barrels. Twenty-five miles of the Congo rail road are already completed. The road will be ninety-three miles in total lsngth. TALMAGES SEKMON. A point-blank' question to NON-BELIEVERS. All Who Have Not Yet Accepted the Faith of Jesus Christ Aake.d the Bmiuii Why "Is Thin Heart Rlsntr I Kings x:lS. ITH mettled horses at full speed, for he was celebrated for fast driving, Jehu, the warrior and king, returns from battle. But seeing Jehonadab, an acquaintance, by the wayside, he -.1- m m w m a UT snouts, "wooai NssJ whoa!" to the lath ered span. Then leaning over to Jeho nadab, Jehu salutes him in the words of the te'xt words not more appropriate for that hour and that place, than for this hour and place: "Is thine heart right?" I should like to hear of your physical health. Well myself, I like to have everybody else well; and so might ask, Is your eyesight right, your hearing right, your nerves right, your lung3 right, your entire body right? But I am busy to-day taking diagnosis of the more Important spiritual conditions. I should like to hear of your financial wel fare. I want everybody to have plenty of money, ample apparel, large store house, and comfortable residence; and I might ask, Is your business right, your Income right, your worldly surround ings right? But what are these financial Questions compared with the inquiry as to whether you have been able to pay your debts to God; as to whether you are Insured for eternity; as to whether you are ruining yourself by the long-credit system of the soul? I have known men to have no more than one loaf of bread at a time, and, yet to own a government bond of heaven worth more than the whole material universe. The question I ask you to-day is not In regard to your habits. I make no Inquiry about your integrity, or your chastity, or your sobriety. I do not mean to stand on the outside of the gate and ring the bell; but coming up the steps, I open the door and come to the private apartment of the soul; and with the earnestness of a man that must give an account -for this day's work, I cry out, O man, O woman, im mortal. Is thine heart right? I will not insult you by an argument to prove that we are by nature all wrong. If there be a factory explosion and the smokestack be upset, and the wheels be broken in two, and the en gine unjolnted, and the ponderous bars be twisted, and a man should look in and say that nothing was the matter. you would pronounce him a fool. Well, It needs no acumen to discover that our nature is all atwist and askew and unjointed. The thing doesn't work right. The biggest trouble we have in the world Is with our souls. Men some times say that, though their lives may not be just right, their heart Is all right. Impossible. A farmer never puts the poorest apples on top of his barrel; nor does the merchant place the mean est goods in his show window. The best part of us Is our outward life. I do not stop to discuss whether we all fell in Adam, for we have been our own Adam, and have all eaten of the forbidden fruit, and have been turned out of the paradise of holiness and peace; and though the flaming sword that stood at the gate to keep us out has changed position and comes behind to drive us In, we will not go. The Bible account of us is not ex aggerated when it says that we are poor and wretched and miserable and blind and naked. Poor: the wretch that stands shivering on our doorstep on a cold day is not so much in need of bread as we are of spiritual help. Blind; why, the man whose eyes perished in the powder blast, and who for these ten years has gone feeling his way from street to street, is not in such utter darkness as we. Naked: why, there is not one rag of holiness left to hide the Bhame of our sin. Sick: why, the lep rosy has eaten into the head and the heart and the hands and the feet; and the marasmus of an everlasting wasting away has aleady seized on some of us. But the meanest thing for a man to do Is to discourse about an evil without pointing a way to have it remedied. I speak of the thirst of your hot tongue, only that I may show you the living Etreara that drops crystalline and spark ling from the Rock of Ages, and pous a river of gladness at your feet. If I Bhow you the rents in your coat, it is only because the door of God's ward robe now swings open, and here is a robe, white with the fleece of the Lamb of God, and of a cut and make that an angel would not be ashamed to wear. If I snatch from you the black, mouldy bread that you are munching, it is only to give you the bread made out of the finest wheat that, grows on the celestial hills, and baked ,'n the fires of the Cross; and one crumb of which would be j enough to make all heaven a banquet. Hear It, one and all, and tell it to your ; friends when you go home, that the Lord Jesus Christ can make the heart right. First we need a repenting heart. If for the last ten, twenty, or forty years of life, we have been going on In the wrong way, it is time that we turned around and started in the opposite di rection. If we offend our friends we are glad to apologize. God is our best friend, and yet how many of us have never apologized for the wrongs we have done him! There is nothing that we so much need to get rid of as sin. It is a horri ble black monster. It polluted Eden. It killed Christ. It has blasted the world. Men keep dogs in kennels, and rabbits in a warren, and cattle In a pen. What a man that would be who would shut them up in his parlor? But this foul dog of sin, and these herds of trans gression, we have entertained for many a long year in our heart, which should be the cleanest, brightest room in all our nature. Out with the vile herd! Begone, ye befoulers of an immortal nature! Turn out the beasts and let Christ come in! A heathen came to an early Christian, who had the reputation of curing diseases. The Christian Bald, "You must have all your idols de stroyed." The heathen gave to the Christian the key to his house, that he might go in and destroy the idols. He battered to pieces all he saw, but still the man did not get well. The Chris tian said to him, "There must be some idol In your house not yet destroyed." The heathen confessed that there was one Idol of. beaten gold that he could not bear to give up. After awhile, when that was destroyed, in answer to the prayer of the Christian, the sick man got well. Many a man has awakened in hi3 dying hour to find his sins all about I fclm. They clambered up on the right j side of the bed, and on the left side, j and over the head-board, and over the foot-board, and horribly devoured the I soul. Repent! the voice celestial cries, Nor longer dare delay; The wretch that scorns the mandate dies, And meet3 a fiery day. Again, we need a believing heart. A good many years ago a weary one went up one of the hills of Asia Minor, and with two logs on his back cried out to all the world, offering to carry their sins and sorrows. They pursued him. They slapped him in the face. They mocked him. When he groaned they groaned. They shook their fists at him. They spat on him. They hound ed him as though he were a wild beast. His healing of the sick, his sight-giving to the blind, his mercy to the out- i cast, silenced not the revenge of the j world. His prayers and benedictions were lost in that whirlwind of execra tion: "Away with him! Away with him!" Ah! it was not merely the two pieces of wood that he carried; it was the transgressions of the race, the anguish of the ages, the wrath of God, the sor rows of hell, the stupendous interests of an unending eternity. No wonder his back bent. No wonder the blood started from every pore. No wonder that he crouched under a torture that made the sun faint, and the everlasting hills tremble, and the dead rush up In their winding-sheets as he cried: "If it be possible, let this cup pass from me." But the cup did not pass. None to comfort. There he hangs! What has that hand done that it should be thus crushed in the palm? It has been heal ing the lame and wiping away tears. What has that foot been doing that it should be eo lacerated? It has been going about doing good. Of what has the victim been guilty? Guilty of sav ing a world. Tell me, ye heavens and earth, was there ever such another criminal? Was there ever such a crime? On that hill of carnage, that sunless day, amid those howling riot ers, may not your sins and mine have perished? I believe it. Oh. the ran som has been paid. Those arms of Je sus were stretched out so wide, that when he brought them together again they might embrace the world. Oh, that I might, out of the blossoms of the spring, or the flaming foliage of the autumn, make one wreath for my Lord! Oh, that all the triumphal arches of the world could be swung in one gateway, where the King of Glory might come in! Oh, that all the harps and trum pets ana organs or eartniy music might, in one anthem, speak his praise! But what were earthly flowers to him who walketh amid the snow of the white lilies of heaven? What were arches of early masonary to him who hath about his throne a rainbow spun out of everlasting sunshine? What were all earthly music to him when the hundred and forty and four thousand on one side, and cherubim and sera phim and archangels stand on the other side, and all the space between is filled with the doxologie3 of eternal jubilee the hosanna of a redeemed earth, the hallelujah of unfallen angels, song af ter song rising about the throne of God and of the Lamb? In that pure, high place, let him hear us. Stop! harps of heaven, that our poor cry may be heard. Db, my Lord Jesus! it will not hurt thee Tcr one hour to step out from the shin ing throne. Th--.- will i?al;e it all up when thou goest back again. Come hither, O blessed One, that we may kiss thy feet. Our hearts, too long with held, we now surrender into thy keep ing. Wrhen thou goest back tell it to all the immortals that the lost are found, and let the Father's house ring with the music and the dance. They have some old wine in heaven, not used except in rare festivities. In this world, those who are accustomed to use wine on great occasions bring out the beverage and say, "This wine is thirty years old," or "forty years old." But the wine of heaven is more than eighteen centuries old. It was pre- j pared at the time when Christ trod the wine press alone. When such i grievous sinners as we come back, me thinks the chamberlain of heaven cries out to the servants, "This is unusual Joy! Bring up from the vaults of heav ; en that old wine. Fill all the tankards. ' Let all the white-robed guests drink to the immortal health of those new-born sons and daughters of the Lord Al mighty." "There is Joy in heaven among the angels of God over one sin I ner that repenteth; and God grant that that one may be you! Again, to have a right heart it must be a forgiving heart. An old writer says, "To return good for evil is God like; good for good is man-like; evil for good devil-like." Which of these na tures have we? Christ will have noth ing to do with us as long as wo keep any old grudpr?. We tnve all been cheated and lieJ about. There are peo ple who dislike us so much that if we should come down to poverty and dis grace, they would say, "Good for him! Didn't I tell you so?" They do not un derstand us. Unsanctlfied human na ture says, "Wait till you get a good crack at him, and when at last you find him in a tight place, give it to him. Flay him alive. No quarter. Leave not a rag of reputation. Jump on him with both feet Pay him in his own coin sarcasm for sarcasm, scorn for scorn, abuse for abuse." But, my friends, that it not the right kind of heart. No man ever did so mean a thing toward us we have done toward God. And if we cannot forgive others, how can we expect God to forgive us? Thousands of men have been kept out of heaven by an unforgiving heart. Here Is some cne who says, "I will for give that man the wrong he did me about that house and lot; I will forgive that man who overreached me in a bargain; I will forgive that man who sold me a shoddy overcoat; I forgive them all but one. That man I cannot forgive. The villain I can hardly keep my hands off him. If my going to heaven depends on my forgiving him, then I will stay out." Wrong feel ing. If a man He to me once, I am not called to trust him again. If a man be tray me once, I am not called to put confidence in him again t would have no rest if 1 could not offer a sin cere prayer for the temporal and ever lasting welfare of all men. whatever meanness and outrage they have in flicted upon me. If you want to get your heart right, strike a match and burn up all your old grudges, and blow the ashes away. "If you forgive not men their trespasses, neither will your heavenly Father forgive you your tres passes." An old Christian black woman was going along the streets of New York with a basket of apples that she had for sale. A rough sailor ran against her and upset the basket, and stood back expecting to hear her scold fright fully, but she stooped down and picked up the apples, and said, "God forgive you, my son, as I do." The sailor saw the meanness of what he had done, and felt in his pocket for his money, and Insisted that she should take it ail. Though she was black, he called her mother, and said, "Forgive me, mother, I will never do anything so mean again." Ah! there is a power in a for giving spirit to overcome all hardness. There is no way of conquering men like that of bestowing upon them your par don, whether they will accept it or not. Again, a right heart Is an expectant heart. It is a poor business to be build ing castles in the air. Enjoy what you have now. Don't spoil your comfort in the small house because you expect a larger one. Don't fret about. your in come when it Is three or four dollars per day because you expect to have, af ter awhile, ten dollars per day; or ten thousand a year because you expect it to be twenty thousand a year. But about heavenly things, the more we think the better. Those castles are not ..... , . , ... m rtftAI r r (horn In M , rrccnr-crn T 1 - . a uccu v A wu jjujotojjuu. x iitvc to see a man all full of heaven. He talks heaven. He sings heaven. He prays heaven. He dreams heaven. Some of us in our sleep have had the good place open to us. We saw the pinnacles in the sky. We heard the click of the hoofs of the white horses on which victors rode, and the clapping of the cymbals of eternal triumph. And while in our sleep we were glad that all our sorrows were over, and burdens done with, the throne of God grew whiter and whiter, till we opened our eyes and saw that it was only the sun of earthly morning shining on our pil low. To have a right heart, you need to be filled with this expectancy. It would make j-our privations and annoy ances more bearable. Is thj- heart right? What question can compare with this in importance? It is a business question. Do you not realize that you will soon have to go out of that store, that you will soon have to resign that partnership, that soon among all the millions of dollars worth of goods that are sold, you will not have the handling of a yard of cloth, or a pound of sugar, or a penny worth of anything; that soon, if a con flagration should start at Central Park and sweep everything to the Battery, it would not disturb you; that soon, if every c.ichier should abscond, and every insurance company should fail, it would not affect you? What are the questions that stop this sid-j the grave, compared with the questions that roach beyond it? Are you making losses that are to be everlasting? Are you making purchases for eternity? Are you jobbing for time when you might be wholesaling for eternity? What question of the store is so broad at the base, and so altitudinous, and so overwhelming as the question, "Is thy heart right?" A Chinese Presbyterian. The first Chinaman to enter the min istry in New York state is Hui Kin, who was ordained recently at Univerity Place Presbyterian Church. He has been educated under the care of the Presbytery, and has been very success ful in mission work among his country men. He will hold Chinese services In New York, and hopes eventually to or ganize a church of converted Chinamen. Faith and Generoalty. When one thinks that nobody cares for him, and that he is alone in a cold ) and selfish world, he would do well to : ask himself this question: "What have i I done to make anyone care for me, and j to warm the world vith faith and gen erosity?" It is generally the case that those who complain the most have done the leaft. Highest of all in Leavening xiv ATBSQUMlTBUm PURE She Va Tf-nderlv Rained. There is a pretty little girl of 5 years in Northwest Baltimore, says the Sun of that city, who lias been tenderly raised. Her mother has guarded her j ajjainst witnessing acts of vielence or cruelty, and she is in ignorance of the i methods employed in killing fowls fori the table. Several days ago, unknown to the careful parent, the little girl strayed into the rear yard of her home, j where a servant was killing a number ; of chickens by wringing their necks. : The child watched the proceedings with great interest for several minutes, and j then in a glow of excitement ran toher mother. '"Mama:" she cried, "justj come and see the fun. Marv is wind-! ing the chickens up." Btate of Ohio, City of Toledo. Lucas County ss. Frank J. Cheney mas oath that he Is the senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney & Co.. doiner business In the City of Toledo. County and St.ite afore said, and that said firm will pay the sum of One Hundred Dollars for each and every case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of Hall's Catarrh Cure. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed In my presence this 6th day of December. A. D. 18S6. A. W. GLEASON. fSeal.1 Notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Oire Is taken internal- t ly and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of th- system. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. Sold by druffgits: 75c. Hall s Family Pills. 25c No Iust. The disposition to see a pleasant side to everything- is often commented upon as a most desirable possession, but it is possible to exarg"crate and imagine a benefit which does not exist. A party of tourists were detained at a hotel near a lake by a severe rain storm. Finally it was decided to cross the lake, and one lady of the party agreed to the plan cheerfully. "Oh, it will be much better to take the boat even if it does, rain," she said, '"and one thing, we shan't have any dust on the boat this morning-"' Youth's Companion. Coe'a Cough Balsam and best. It will break tin er tban anytLinc else. It is always reliable. ry 1U VtVre I.lue Illoomer. Washington Post: Miss Coleman, the Ohio irirl who is said to have gone to church wearing a pair of red bloomers, has denied the story. They were blue bloomers. Well, a couple of stacks of blues only make it a little more costly for any person who desires to call her down. Starve was once to die any manner of death. Wycliffe's sermons tell how "Christ starved on the cross for the re demption of men." I have tried rarkfr'i Cilncer Tonic and be he re Id i'."8 y a mother, acd owl 1 you say wbeo familiar wiib lis revitalixir g properties. As the flower is tefore fruit, so is faith lf ere good works. Iut how It does It la not the qnratlan. It In enough to km-w that Hindercorns takes out the cot ns. and a very plea-inx relief It is. 15c, at druggists We can do more good bv being good than I . ' - o o m anv other wav Pipo"s Cure cured me of a Throat and Lun trouble of three years7 standin?. E. Cait, Huntington. Ind., Nov. 12, IbiM. An honest man is able to speak for him self, when a rorue is not. FITS All Fltsstopped free by Dr. Kline's Great rs Kestorer. iio Fitsaftf r tiie Iinaoav's use. 31 arvelous c u res. Tneat ise an I fZ I rial bot 1 1 f re-1 incases, bead tolr. KUneGl Arcliit.,l'luia.,l'a. If it don t clear up at 11 or 3, it won't ?!ear up all day. e black, or blue, is a I I1U SPOTS Use ST. JACOBS OIL tL.l OUT. IT IS MACICAL. Timely Warning'. The great success of the chocolate preparations of the house of Valter Baker & Co. (established in 1780) has led many misleading of their name, labels, and wrappers. Walter Baker & Co. are the oldest and largest manu facturers of pure and high-grade Cocoas and Chocolates on this continent. No chemicals are used in their manufactures. Consumers should ask for, and be sure that they get, the genuine Walter Baker Zc Co.'s goods. WALTER BAKER & CO., Limited, DORCHESTER, MASS. borrowing The sign af this borrowing is thinness ; the result, nerve waste. You need fat to keep the blood in health unless you want to live with no reserve force live from hand to mouth. Scott's Emulsion of Cod-liver Oil is more than a medicine. It is a food. The Hypophosphites make it a nerve food, too. It comes as near perfection as good things ever come in this world. . He turf yru gtt Scott's Emulsion tuktn yen tuamt it mna' net m tkeaf suistituJt. SCC'tt & Bowne, New York. All Druggists. 50c. and $1. Pcver. - Latest U. S. Gov't Export The IJe-t Sort of Trunk. Expressmen and those who move a great deal of bairjrafre sir that by nc means the best shape in trunks is yet found, although the prevailing style ol flat top is so far an improvement over the older fashion of swelling t-aratojra top. They say that one the shape of a cylinder would be far and away the best, both for its owner and its mover, and they wonder that more of thmare not on the market. One verv rarely sees a trunk of that sort. alrhou?h it has been so much used for values That Jojful reeling With the exhilarating-sens of renewed health and strength and Internal elean- liness which follows the use of Syrup of Figs Is unknown to the few who have not progres5-,cd beyond the old time medicines and the cheap substitutes sometimes offered but never accepted by the well informed. The Hons Arc ISaek Boas have tome back, not oniy it. fur, but iu chiffon, ribbous and feath ers. The lst named a.re now :uite short in some cases, and have for a fastening a little fur head such as a j mink to hold them close to he throat. ! Even the chiffon boas hjive tm-se little beads as a nnn. wnen iinnon coi- j a huge chou on each side of the throat, j from winch lonr en.ls stream liown to i the waist, even to the knees. j Jt the ISaby is Cutting: Tee: ii. ! Be sure and use that old and well-tried rem1r, 14m. ! WuiSLoWs Soothing Entry for CtilJraa Teetliinj- It is r nt tl.o nintir nmhe tVnt m."ilo th truu' i ut the Dlain'sinele vow that ii tow- ed true. "Hanson's 2agio Corn Salve." Warran ted to cure or money refundad. Aak yoir drugiiit for it- rice 15 cents. ilusi?- washes away dust of everv-dav life. troui the r.oul the Eiliiard tab.e. e-ond-han I. for f-ae cheap. Ap-plv to or address, H. C Akiv, '.oil S. l-.th St., Omaha. Ne .. Talent is a cistern; genius, a fountain. The Greatest Helical Discovery of the Aje. KENNEDY'S MEDICAL .DISCOVERY. DONALD KENNEDY, CF R3X3URY, MASS., Has discovered in one of our common pasture weeds a remedy that cures every kind of U umor, from the worst Scrofula down to a common Pimple. He has tried it in over eleven hundred cases, and never failed except in two cases (both thunder humor). He his now in his possession over two hundred lertiticates of its value, all within twenty miles of Boston. Send postal card for b k. A benetit is always experienced from the first bottle, and a perfect cure is war ranted when the right quantity is taken. When the lungs are atlected it causes shooting pains, like need!es passing through them; the same uiih the Liver or Bowels. This is caused by the ducts being stopped, and always disappears in a week after taking it. Read the label. If the stomach is foul or bilious it wfl cause squeamish feelings at tlrst. No change of diet ever necessary. Eat the best you ca.i get, and enough of it Dose, one tablespoonful in witcr at bed time. Sold by all Druggists. W. 2. I'., Omaha-4J. 195. hen auswerlr.s advertisements kladly n.eution this paper to ltl O iMr bej fctfjfc. Mfir u tmr to the placing on the market and unscrupulous imitations from health. If you have borrowed from health to satisfy the demands of business, if your blood is not getting that constant supply of fat from your food it should have, you must pay back from somewhere, and the somewhere will be from the fat stored up in the body. D3