I The Harrisoa Press-Joarnil C.C BCKKE. Psorsisros. HAREISOX, - NEBRASKA- .-m ,erk.it iou. "I iu ;" j;t ail Lrp:.sd to jjut tlii loe!u lack," remarked the luughiiLred gentleman a be extracted Uie inunu ecript from it envelop.-. "Why aren't you -surprised? asked his other half. "lie- use." he explained, "it was the thirtoeutu time 1 eut it out" Fdcts iu tbe Case. "What is your mum?'!" asked the lo auiaitive wuuiau, "Hungry Ha v. kins, ma'am, replied the half -starved hobo. "I that your r-'ai name'" she aked- "Well, ma'am," answered the au derer. "I uiul admit that it's what you might rail an empty title at Ike present writing." HOKE DAGERS THREATEN Mrs De Style "What are yea Studying so deeply?" 1 Daughter "I have become ao anarchist, and I'm trying to learn bow to make bombs" "O-oo! llorrors!" "Must do It, Civilisation is all WfODg" "Mercy! Of what do jou com plaio?" "By the time a mao is able to sup port a girl io tbe style to which sne has been accustomed, be is as old as her father" A stfeet pedlar in London, known U "Jack the Pointer," tblity years ago bought a sitradivarlus violin (or twenty-five shillings This same violin was recently sold at auction In London, and brought iTOO (1:3,500) Rheumatism is very common in Munich This is attribute-! to tbe fact that so much beer is drank there Tbe average daily consuma Uon of beei io that city is one and a halt quarts for each resident, count lag adults and children Mrs. Rosa Adams, niece of the late General Roger Hanson, C. S. A., wants every woman to know of the wonders accomplished by Lydia E. Pmkham's Vegetable Compound. w Dbab Mr. PnnrHAM : I cannot tell yon with pen and ink what good 5yd Ia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound did for me, suffering from m ilia peculiar to the sex, extreme lassitude and that all gone feeling I would rise from my bed in the morning feeling more tired than when I went ,to bed, but before I had used two bottles of Lydia E. Pinkliam's Vejce- health, It ia indeed a boon to sick women and I heartily recommend it Tow vary truly. Mat. Boa. Adams, 818 12th St, Louisville, Ky." "Tr.A T1 I CfiMm every weak, for I And that it tones up the system and keeps tee stsnsia. and I never have that tired out feeling any more. -l eetwaly think that every woman ought to try thla graud medieine, '-r t fi weU paws ftfc worth. Teen very truly, Mas Xtsn DAJrroan, tot . , Lt U, XyeeiMa, T a." ' r3 UElIOAXi ADVTC3 TO WOM33T. I mrwmm mm Within a year more flan 'Ji.J skill ed woiktn.'Q have left tbe French kiik lactones of Roubaix and l tr- Icoiog for tbe United "state. Round shoulders and a stooping fi.-ure are defects ttut can te over , c Uie eveo n elderly women although 1 l Kb nmiiLv 1 nnii'h Li r iiur an1 mnia tedii.ua than in correcting tbe same fault io a young chi'd High and 1-rge pi 11 j mt a should be abandoned the peis n sleeping flit and without the pillow. Practice all exercises for chest expansion also exercises for the shoulders alone raising the should ers up and down foiward and hick and in a circle Carry the head high and practice tbe exercises persistent ly This Is the only remedy Old Man's Secret. Alpna, Mich.. Sept 5. (Special.) Seventy -ne years of age, hut hale and hearty is Air. Jerome K. Fournier of this place, and to those who a-sk tbe secret of bis splendid health be give the good advice, "Lae LoUJ Kidney Pills.-' When asked for his reason for so' strongly rei-o m mending the Great. American Kidney Remedy. Mr. Pour nier related the following experience: "I ncomoieud Iodd's Kidney I'illa because they cured me of Diabetes. 1 suffered with my kidneys for a long time and suffered terribly from thone Urinary Troubles that are so geueral among iged people. Then I started to nse Dodd's Kld npy Pills and eight boxen of them cured my kidneys, regulated my water and-made me feel like a beany young man." Dodd's Kidney Pills make the old feel young because they make sound kidneys. Sound kidneys mean health and health is the other name for youth. It will take five years to rebuild tbe Campanile of Venice Tbe new tower will probably have an elevator The following Is recommended cure for falling bair and baldness: Solution of corrosive sublimate (5 per cent) 5 ounces; Day rum 1 ounces; glycerine "f ouDce Especially during tbe summer months see that the sleeping apart ments have good ventilation dur,4. tbe night also that tbe bedding Is thoroughly aired every morning rs return had ever in nerfect AnT women who are troubled with ir regular or painful menstruation, weak neaa, lencorrhosa, displacement or ulcer ation of the womb, that bearing-down feeling, inflammation of tbe ovaries, back ache, general debility, and nervous pros tration, should know there is one tried and true remedy, Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Ho other medicine for women has received such wide-spread and unqualified indorsement. To other medicine has such a record of female cures. VMM. PrrxiUM: I am verr cleaned to recommend Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound for womb and ovarian difficul ties from w Inch I have Men a sufferer for years. It was the only medicine which was at all beneficial, and within a week after I started to use it, there was a great change in my feelings and looks. 1 meed it for a little over three months, and at the end of that time I suffered no pain at the menstrual period, nor was I troubled with those distressing paina which compelled me to go to bed, and I have not had a headache since. This la nearly a year aoo. I always keen a bottle on band, and take a uer aaviee v WWsasssBSHBS WWW gs e wsieiae SOLDIERS AT HOME. THE V TELL SOME INTERESTING ANECDOTES OF THE WAR. How tbe Boy of Bth Arraie Whilst Am j Life la Camp Koraeioit E perieacv, Tireotne Mrche Thril liaa Sccaea oa the Battlefield. "I have nevt-r Ihmmi ali'e." aid 'Is" Serjeant, "to Kaiiiai t.-r.iy ai--oi:..t for thf alil- in Sheridan'x ar.ny n;: the uiornitit; of , t. lv'.l. at tVilar (Wt. I take account of all ihit h;i le"U id lmi t!ie fo that prevails! on tliat uioniiiii; and f the mld-u-Pess of the utiM't when n :i were asleep or only half awake, but 1 rf meni! er that the ailvance brigade wnt eonoKed of ulil soidier, ciimniaioltsl by one of the most alert tmTiU of ll:e army, and that the iin-n on picket were veteran in the Tii'-e a'id ;: niZMiit of the oM Kfttion restilji; np4.11 tt.em. The mystery of the panic oh ii on the iii ket line. My own recoil,-. -tiou U that not a (.'"ii was fired by phketn. and I know the rel ru-ln'l on u without warning, opi-iiinj; with artillery a well a rifle fir.1. "Then- id no more appalling xpe. tacle than a panic ia battle. Let the bravest and l.eit t mined w.ldlera th.'ir grip at a critical moment and they are like frightened horses itin ni'ij; away. 1 know. tni Miise 1 I ;ip lMjcd to be in two of the j:reatejt piiiiics of tlie war. In luith case I was knocked down and run over by our uien. and the i-r thlnx about it Is, 1 never could talk with any of the Imivs who joined in eltlMT Htninpe'lc. Vou can't fjet the men who were n the advance line at t'edar Creek on the moruln of tlie lltth of ()e;ot r to talk alniut that affair itiherently now. 'I hcy were -imply overh luiid by the tunnlntr f.icf that tlie rein U nie oyt ot the fo4 und by the tuipn-ssiou that their own men were firing at t!i' 111. Therefore, they acted like men s'ltick by a hurricane, oi- like men on a unking- vessel at "No ofli. er in that army had nny lii clitiation to report In detail the uper tioriH of that tnoniini;. The i'overn rneiit had to compel every biiipidier general and colonel to write a report of the KTations of lo command. The p.en themselveH. an they s;it about the camp fire two or three days Inter re garded the whole transaction aa a my tery. They honestly Udievefl that Karly'n men itni)ers!nated tneiulii rs of one of our own cavalry regiments and tjok the places of our own picket, opening the way for the charxe of the relel column that had Ix-en concen trated only a few hundred yards fiotn our picket line. This question was un der discussion as long as our regiment remained In the service, but 1 never heard the testimony of any one of the pickets wild to have been relieved. "It Is significant that there wni the same disinclination on tlie Confederal.? side to write of this battle of Cednr Creek as there was on the I'nlon side, because In the afternoon the panic in tlie rebel army was more appalllnt? and more disastrous, ten times over, than the panic of the morning. . loners 1 Enrly. in his report, took the same at titude as General Hrftj.'K did In his re port of the battle of Missionary ItldK". KrnKtr contended that his troops, ji stationed on Missionary Kiilge, could have held their trround against any force that could have been Itroiudit against tlietn, but. instead of making a fight, they ran away like frightened deer. Enrly talks in the same way alxmt his army at Cedar Creek, saying that if only rrflO men could have been held together he could have slopped the Union charge. "There was in both armlet a disin clination to talk or panics, because, as rule, some of the best regiments in the service were Involved. No one could account for them. No man who Joined In a wild stampede ever tried to explain his conduct. Panics were catalogued ss the mysteries of army life; as the seismic disturbances In which organization and discipline counted for absolutely nothing.'- 1 he only thing that could quiet a panic was the presence of a magnetic, dashing man like Sheridan, or. for that mat ter. like Koseorans. But In the face of the panic at Chlckamauga Hose crans was as helpless as Korly was at Cedar Creek." "Speaking of army mysteries,'" ,H,j the Captain, "1 know of one that still remains a mystery so far as the public are concerned. After Pembcrton's sur render at Vlcksburg his army, Hl.'XX) wrong, was sent Into a parole camp near Waok river, ten miles from tbe city. Pemtxrtou was in command, and his idea was to hold the pn ruled men together in camp, drill them, keep up their discipline, so that when ' tiny were exchanged they would be ready for Immediate service In the Confed erate orrny. Put In a few days hun dreds of men diKnppeured from the camp. In two weeks the desi r: rs were numbered by the thousand, and Pemlierton appealed to Craut for guards, complaining that the l iiion soldiers were enlacing his men from camp and assisting them to pH away. "The truth was that Ihe I'nlon men on guard at Vlcksburg heard, through the people of tbe city, that fully one half of Pembcrton's men were very much dissatisfied, and that In th'lr talk with tlielr friends In Vlcksburg they had said that If they could get across the Mlsslsnlppl river they would go so far Into the Northwest that no Confederate officer would ever find them. Tbe boys of the Union regi ments reasoned that every paroled prisoner who escaped was so much gain to the Union cause, and It was soon understood In tbe parole ramp thai if the Johnnies wanted to ml grnte the Yank could give them In formation as to boat and provlMous. " V .i;ol of rcte-K wou!J escap.4 fro 11 ihe parole carno, would prowl ro"ii 1 lie- .-."J!:!-- between the camp :mi I !-! org. would come across a I of our I oy in charge of a Im :iL and tiny would be taken aero. the r .er. e tier Oucral iJrant nor any of Li- oil.oniiiiale .ifjeer knew anv tliiitg or this, and they were at ai"ss : o.j.iiiin how it w;!s Hint I'ember ton's command dwindled down finally t.i it? out !. men. Some people iu tli" North, among them General Hac le.-k. l-:ievd that the men had -s ci:pe by Pembcrton's connivance and b id returned to the Confederate m-rv-i--e. in violation of their parole. Hut tli- truth is that nit of them went 1 into the North wft-t territories, and thnt ( they were given a god send off by the . l'u. .hi troop. Ye.rs afterward 1 met I s.-ores of these men in M mtana. Idah i ! mid I'tah. some of them employed In I ihe mines, o'hers su'i-Wiil In general ' business, and not a few of the:n In servh-e as cowboys and mule drivers on the plains. "As evidence thai the olficer of the I'nlon army knew little of the fads a to the disappearance of men from Pe:iil r:on's camp no definite mention l. made of the camp in any of th" oflii-Ui 1 reports. Cem ral lirHiit speaks of T'K of Pciiils-rton's men who re fused to be paroled and were sent North as prisoners, anil of the desert ers from Pomberton's force, but no one sw'tus to have had information as to the part played by the I'nlon troop as emigrant agents for the Northwest terrltnrii-s. There was Ihe best of feeling between the men who sur-render-d at Vlcksburg and the men wlio captured them, and there were many long talks as to the future. Some of our ltoys were familiar with conditions in tlie Northwest, and the rebels, knowing that they could not return home without lieing sub.oct to arrest or return to srvlce, acted 011 the advice of Western men. burned their bridges behind them, went be yond the range of Confederate Intltl efice anil never returned South." Chi cago Inter Ocean. The Army Haversack. Last niglit I dreamed the slioutu came hack: "What have you in your haversack?" "I'm hungry, comrade, as can he. Have yon some hardtack left for me'f" "It looks as though we boys at last Must keep our forty days of fast!" I wakened, and my thoughts went hack. To rummage through my haversack. A weary march, a hopeless fight, A ad retreat at dead of night. And then we all, at dawn of day, I. ay down, like cattle, by the way; The pangs of hunger and of thirst Were rending us like things accursed; A comrade shouted at my hack, "Come, open up your haversack." Kach spread his treasure at his feet, In liu of something there to eat: A story hook, a testament, A housewife hy his mothpr sent; And one 1 picture fair to see, A bahy on ita mother's knee; And so sweet scenes of homes came back Around the empty haversack. A comrade broke into s song 'Twin "Home, Sweet Home" and soon a throng Had gathered around us where we sat. Of home and home delights to chat; Of tables laid with royal fare. And served with wnraau's loving care. "Zip, xip!" a volley swept our track. And each man grabbed bit haverxack. A stricken comrade strove to rife, Tlie film of death was in his eyes. "My haversack take there's some bread, A letter home," was all he said. We caught him er he sank to rest, We crossed his bands sliove his breast, His mother's picture, some hard tack, We found within his haversack. We broke the bread, and as I live It seemed the Iord was there to give, The iiinrsela were so magnified Hy love of him who just had died; Whose spirit lingered around ub there, To solace us in our despair; And fling a ray of splendor back To rest on memory's haversack. O gla 1 am I for a dream that brings So many half forgotten things T-ie comradeship that closer grows When sorrow darkest shadow thrown; The comradeship that until death Is breathed with every soldier's breath And shares Its crust. In joy or wrack. From that old army haversack. Kate Rrownlee Sherwood. "Stonewall" Jackson. In "The Life of Margaret J. Pros Ion," the author tells us much about that lady's brother-in-law, "Stonewall" Jackson. His at'temion to minor points of conduct Is shown in his manner of taking his Sunday nap. Jackson was at the time In command of a military school. His long-continued suffering from dyspepsia had Induced a predifquitiltion to drowsiness, which he was very likely to yield to when sitting for a length of time quiet or unoccupied. Kt Iteci.'iliy in church would this Infirmity Ix-Hic, him. although most strf tmously and conscientiously resisted. Stiil he could not lie penniaded to relax his mil itary habit of sitting In a perfectly erect posture, thus rendering the un willing nod all tlie inoro apparent. Some one playfully pleaded with him to lean back in the pew, so thnt he would bf less conspicuous, and the ca dets opposite him In the gallery would, tie In le danger of bajng Injured by his example; at lesmt. that be would cense to be a source of amusement to them. His rfdy to tills badinage was, "I will do nothing to superinduce slctp by putting myself at ease or making my.' self more corn forte ble; If, however, In spite of ray resistance I yield to my In firmity, then 1 deserve te be laughed at, and accept ss punishment tbt mor tification I feel." - aitii lfl!!S? Ff J3 nr. " - - ' J " w stn i t asu k MaJ k . ns. n- ; uTl !,,a U?i r ,,,-"o Hi , -. CL C3 THIS B33RW:U.SfliT , IMi " 16 PiaES-YDUR PAGES se-ftwr f W u is e4s. H" " ffeu-Kig- o!bv-ruemJ to us A fcltehence fe amekina aaeae esaet la eversen. Th g,r MtU.lk' avge As stfUrti 'H 'aayM QUICKER SHIPKEHTEr3i S. ...KM .. K cl.o.. ""','' ., . imaw. miriHi.l .rt. ! "L ." jm --! m ' k ' f-r r?t i.H I. (url I" .r.. un.a u.mi -. fl ttM t.( u ltm ... Main .! "r ' mvf I wmU b. L. ... If I m '-""' OUR FREE BIG Ko. I!4 CmLCGUEjrvv, WWII s ttt-m him SEKO FCS OUR FREE SO. 114 CATALOGUE. auto u,-Ug-b.o;wlt, go I y-u- ra-Uim mali (-M"l '''VL ITJT sa.uu.ae ku.a JI ai'tl trMU eere mmU. LaM7 Mrkbei has-.eil art It e lev tr reiere IU rsta're. ItM eetr l.Ue. t au DON'T BUY A CATALOGUE. tiHsee m much te ae -At-r ji-osrrwl a-i t a le. 114 fa fa eve. 1eU eetr '"-'' "-t- mm if im. rmtt sit n. 1 1 c.ti... 'j- i. r.. a.. 1 -1,. i.. 1 , P.m. P -1 SEARS, ROEBUCK .Since 1H10 tbe oild's production of meat bas increased 67 per cent anr) grain 40 p;r cent. Farm laborers in !cxico 'nay be employed at from J to 2u cents a lay, tlnougb In many parts f the countty they are scarce and unte nable Almond nie'il cornmeal anrl oat meal will large with some skins bet ter than any s iap and is both clean dt.i; and softening If the skin chaps jt roughens when soap Is U'.edtrf 3ne of tbe above meals A uood wash for Inflamed ees or when the eyes bue been exp s-d to i strong wind Is composed f borax una camphor water In tlie propor tion of two eralns of borax to tu ounces of camphor stpr. ON K lIUl'K LEFT Man,"Ket "I bate to s-iy It, but fie p ibllf seems to have 1st Inter est In you" O.d Ac. or " 'lis true; too true But I can easily disguise myself, and If you will kindly announce me as an ex-burglar green-goods man, or pugilist, we'll lake the town" A CHILLI A NT I UFA Clerk "Mr Muldoon, we have an order for bard wood kindlings, but tbe bard wood Is all gone." Mr Multdoon (dcalsr)-"Slod 'etn saft wood" "The will notice the difference because solf wood burns too fast" "iiejabers. Ihnt's so Wet it" Absolute sincerity may exist, but rul trade with human nator baz taught ue to be satisfied If I kan rind sincerity tba will pan 45 cenls on the dollar lo I'arls there Is a rat piund. where the rodents are purposely kc t for removing flesh from the cares t of dead animuls A horse thrown iu overnight ii quite stripped by mott log, and It Is tbe regular work nt men In chatge to rerucve the polish ed bones. BUILDING FOOO TO Hrlnit the Untiles Arnnnd. When a little human imichlne (or a Inrge one) goes wrong, nothing is so important as the selection of food which will always bring It around again. j "My Utile boy fifteen months old had pneumonia, then came brain fever, and no sooner had he got over the! than he began to ctit teeth and, Wing so weak, he wss frequently thrown Into convulsions," says a Colorado mother. "I decided a change might help, so toek hlrn to Kansas City for a visit. When we got there he wss so very! weak when he would cry he would sink away and seemed like he would die. 'When I reached my sister's home she ssid Immediately tliAt we must feed blm Grape Nuts and, slthough 1 bsd never used the food, we got sonic, and for a few days gave him Just the Juice of Grape Nuts and milk. He got stronger so quickly we were soon feed lng him the Onipe-Nnts Itself, and In a wonderfully short time he fattened right up and became strong and well. "Thnt showed me something worth knowing and, when later on my girl came, I raised her on Grape-Nuts, mid she Is a strong, hesltiiy laiby and has been. You will see from the little photograph I send you what a strong, chubby youngster the boy Is now, but he didn't look anything like that be. fore we found this nourishing food. Grape-Nuts nourished him back to strength when be was so weak he couldn't keep any other food on hlx stomach." Narue given by Postutn Co.. Battle Creek, MIcb. All cblldrea can be built to a more stnrdy and healthy condition upos Grape-Nuts and eresm. The food con tains the elements eat ore demands, from which te make tbe soft gray nil lag la the sarvs ceaters and brain. A well-fed brain and strong, sturdy serves abesluUly laturs s healthy see ; leek la each ps far the faraees 'in .r'' ..ei r Fi I 4 I i. ";..., ..mi8 iw.r t.aa W-mM m e rww- aw 4 tu.4i-;' TO fOU X'i"" ' - Tl rI.. s-.fr t lt w V K It!, w - . ,. -.-- ia ie tup I INGEST MAIL ' ' , 0B3U HOUSE W THE WMLJj. THECSLTWIlWOEjniJME ... . s.- '""T " ' ioc-""."- , rart ass rri t .T1a.m a .r-r. ssrsv -1 - - I" m TZ .J mm tw, lr r Is. IU I . 14l i,- cta Vi' J"1 " .4 I. J . ... , .uw. & CO., Chicago, 111. - - - . In New Orients Is a nu'inerj, all the tnuiitcs of which are colored At present silxy ight nuns are sheltered there Mm. U'.U,w " I II ! " -VR' r tor hi; dien trttiinr. ef:n iim- H.l s rostl-n ,'ri-i" U"i r IT! - 1 --' Tlie Japanese Pare nu'-ovfn'i a met bod of prodding ai i ' :i 1 pearls which no one cau tell from the geuuine article fiiG r tiji t dt-i:. r-Vio. rtr rtfcls. A l;r.rMl Ii -i( Hftf lb-m !. bn. fi V d ifi t'.l toilet iB ft tt: . . r. I". n 1 1 j li, k-sfi'.iifn, i- tr-slh. di.ii- kftt. 11 i.M UiTut and ... r ' .0i.r lllne-t srttif ff-fn t ni'Mr-4 llolusrh nr. f.i"U i-m,r. i I T l.iit-ni ltiic Ot) l!J t rsi. !"f -llhli BtlbaW It., fj.prrnt viwr w .suucS fr ontintrr idcm. A't 1-u.f iu e-ii Imul The meat nc lv.d Into .'mltbflcrl nnrket every year for the feeding of Lonton ecxeeds 4i),t tons. C. V.. It tf. of Trp. pi. Ira.. Nw M.e1.). tlir-eiifh kihitue. ph.iiAn the Apii'he Iii 'uti". It ie.-.e. in ur liig their sf. ri f.,r ir.'.-r ine tin. hair. , Ore out of ee ry four per' ns who die in London dies "on public char ity." A C. Oso. K. M , LI. tl . PrM , 0ihs I'tutt A.J.Loaar, rrtno j K.ail'.rwl t.y Flrt Nl l lioic sod busit.4K n.a. $10 OOOIn K'lllTi-p Iteslm Hr,k Dit'ires snd ht Tyji.wiitrrs. SttMlMiurma worn fur trl, SfDii f'ir f-ee et!(,c.n.. b.jiiiiJ la i!i.aior, flnf.M evrr pjbi;h.l t'jr s Hu.!tu". (.Urgs. liead il, uid jou will ftiUDd tb .N B. C Where there Is Indigestion or the food does not ptopetly asslmsllate live minutes exercise In till er free hand or with light dumbbells should be taken before each meal A torpid liver U worth a fortune,, if it chances to be the liver of a whale From this organ comes am-' hcrgrls, a costly perfume It Ii es timated that the ambergris ftotn a single wr.ale Is worth 50 (), pro vided It happens to be aflilcted wltn a lazv liver WORLDS' TaTiTnT; W S N O T K S To unique and historic snuff hours, one of which was once the. peisonal property 0f Marie Aotolo etle .a eOiii.i.-j i. . , ,u u, iienmart section or tne I'alace of Vailed In-, dustriesat tbe World's Fair. The other, whlrn Is (he mote elaborate' formerly belonged to King Frede.nlcg. A section of ir,,i,., .,. L- ,, - "..-.p. iium oaiis- bury Cathedral. England, Is exhibi ted In the British section of the' Falace of Liberal Arts at the World's Fair. Tbe window was of leaded glass of various colors, ar ranged In a conventional h,-i,. j "i'KII, UUIl tbe fragment shown Is In a fair state Of preservation, wits ... . ----- .i.ut, UI I.UO- original colors still dls.;ernjble. cnanng dish of Japsnese coin silver, representing, the continuous work for nine mn-ith .f .,.. i. one of Japan's most noted silver- -iuj a is exnitiiie l in tbe Kan Francisco bulldnig on the Mol.-I Street at tbe World's Fair. It is aiueu at SjUU. I csnn.it prU, Pi.o's Cur. ei,xa u,t -1L TT l1? wotVn ' ' Unls. M,, April 15.180.:" L For a buro try tin? r1.fI-u wtta,t' a follows: One ounce each of olive oil - K'Tcetlne to which Is added a. dracbm of boraclc acid '.iiThompson'sEyeWatsr BEGGS' BLOOD PORIFIEB CtJBES caUrrh el the stomach. I -a Urns. M isy Orwrw. " I V. . U. 840 YORK NEB iTai i as4. 6s. larna, aaxek W sea. Te Bead U Wellville."