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About The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917 | View Entire Issue (July 13, 1911)
TUL SULPUEBD - or THE, - Black Step moreucy. sot of one of Pi'tsburg s steel king*. had l'-*t his SM’tl of M.W*c> .c a Forty-third street gambling house. He bad also g:r« t. cotes for *- M<® store. To make matter* worse. Sit** Ta:tkS« "oe* of the chorus tm£ swiM Lie that unless he pave t»r »: 4m she *ot!d sue him for * ■ for breach of promise of mar rsate .md c *i - pub!.c his lore letters “Old Van” Kuu*mc rency learned of t.s safe j/red. aBftt through hit •ife s *j :«a! for more motley for their boy "Reggie s in trouble!” pleaded the st flier ir» must help him.” V•» we must h^lp him.” mid the *■•• . tie We nest teed for Roper OKarn ” So Roper- OMara was sect for The •Raatio* was explained to him The •am* ft; t he let* for Xew S'orb. A week 1: -er Be glim Id Montn orency «*• ba-b st Sale The notes he had s;sued, as well as *he fervid lore let tees, wer- a Roper O' Mura s posse* aiort Sf.se Ih:«> Tw.nkietoe# vis derm r* all her -la* to a Chicago r*'”b packer a: was t-rece la the Kora-tscy household. Roger ° Star*. * work was done, writes Karl K Er -hea. in the World Perhaps rot hare guessed It. Roger ‘ ' Wan u the shepherd of the black Sbeep When the sous at rich pitts bs.-pers pet into trouble Roger O’Mara U -ailed ; oe to gey them out. For 41 ; earn J'Stara has bee* a deteetire ia Rr-aburg Thirty-four years were •peat ob the police force, where be »»s i e*d of the deteetire bureau for the greater part of the time. While hr a* Eatara^j *aken aa actire pan ia all 'he tig criminal cases that hare *• • ” :-rd it tb* raokr city, the most if et eg pan of his work has been •a w the gilded youths of Pitts burg out of di Acuities. E—gicyee in Thaw Case. New tpaper reader* will recall how 1 am K 7i.ii summoned him -o Xew Sork - cr > afvrtbe Madison Square *traae^y Nobody worked hard er to extriraie the young Pittsburg r. : 'Air. from his diAculries than O Mara. btr of courw. his efforts were hopeless Today OMara is Thaws '"r" !’d hi* most valued adviser Le*» - an taro month# ago O'Mara »»«• -- ; tig young Griscorn -be son of Cc rge Gns-om of Pi-aburg. out of fcts d.»eal-!ea Young Griacom. it will b -emembered. tfce dance of Dor *rry Arnold, the Xew York heiress, •hose disappearance was and is a great mystery Two mark money is the ruination of most of tie rich young men In Pitts burg. he declares. With an endless supply of money it is only natural ‘1 at they fall into all sorts of disst I ' m. Drinking. gambling and wom n sooner or later involve them one way or another. and exposure and dis c-ice are inevitable. And the sons of r parents in Pittsburg, he declares, are typical of the rich young men in every large American city. "The first thing I do when 1 am all-, d upon to help get a young man out of trouble is to make his parents promise to cut off his supply of cash." j said O'Mara to the writer, who found tt in his office in the Oliver building in Pi—sburg the other day. “The rea son the so-called gilded youth of this • c-'-intry are continually getting Into | trouble is that their parents give them tea times as much money as they need. If they were put to work and forced to earn thenr own money they would be far better off—and I should probably have much less to do. “Cut Off Supply of Cash.” “Of course there is another side to •:..s There are schemers who make a business of preying on the sons of rich men. They try to involve them in all sons of difficulties. And of course there are adventuresses who seek to trap the gilded youth. A young man sometimes becomes involved quite innocently, but no matter bow it has happened or what difficulties he may be in. the first thing to do is to u' oS his supply of cash. That will bnr.g him to his senses more quickly than anything else, and unless he has ■ nir.mitted a felony he can then be ex •r.-a’ed from his difficulties and put on his feet. ‘: blackmailers are to be found every where. and every year they get scores of rich young men into their clutches Especially if the rich young man is married he is threatened with ex posure Our rich young men have a habit of being indiscreet—especially when they go to New York—and black mi..!crs are always in readiness to ‘get something on them.' My advice to them is never to pay a cent of black mail no matter bow badly they may be .nvolved. It is better to risk exposure first as last, for If blackmail be paid once the payment has to be repeated as often as the blackmailers wish Blackmailers can frequently be bluffed. Typical Case Quoted. "Just the other day," O’Mara con tinued. “a well-known Pittsburg man called me up and said a woman was in town who was making trouble for his son. It seems »be young man had met her in New York, given her a few costly presents and perhaps been a lit tle too carelessly free with his terms of endearment. At any rate here she was in Pittsburg demanding that he marry her. A 6candal seemed immi nent. Well, I -went over to her hotel and had a talk with her. She was a beauty—there was no mistake about that I asked her if the young man owed her any money. She said he did not. So 1 told her there were two trains out of Pittsburg which she could take, and 1 would let her choose be tween them. One was the 9:40 train for New York, the other the 11 o’clock train for the workhouse. She said she would not take either and hurried off to the office of a prominent lawyer Half an hour later she emerged from his office, went to the hotel and packed her belongings. One of my men re ported that she had taken the 9:40 train for the east. So the next day I dropped around at the lawyer's office and asked him about his fair client. He laughed and told me she wanted him to bring suit against me for or dering her to take her choice between the two trains. ‘What did you toll her?' I asked. ‘I told her she had bet ter choose the 9:40 for New York,' said the lawyer, ‘for I knew you’d see that she'd take the 11 o’clock for the workhouse if she stayed.’ The Old and the New Rich. “Thirty and forty years ago. when I was a young man in Pittsburg, a man who had $100,000 was accounted rich. The young men of those days, even those who had the richest parents, had comparatively little money to spend. And, what is more, most of them were put to work by their parents. Nowadays the sens of our very rich men not only receive enormous sums to spend, but are not required to do any rtal work. It is no wonder they cause their parents so cany heart aches. Of course there are many ex ceptions to what 1 have said. No generalization is wholly true—not even this one. But the rich young men of this country would be far and away better off—mentally, physically and morally—if their parents made them go to work and earn their own spend ing money. The hard-working young man rarelv has bad companions. "Sometimes a father realizes these things and cuts off the son's allowance But mothers always take their sons’ part. They will continue to send them money without their husband's knowl edge. In fact, the more dissipated the son the more money the mother will send him _ „ji~ y* Lure of Broadway. “Broadway is the Mecca of the gild ed youth. A young man can get into more trouble in New York in a day than he can in Pittsburg in a month. But it takes money to get into trou ble—don’t forget that.” “What precisely was your connec tion with the Thaw case?" was asked. "Well, I knew Harry Thaw ever since he was a little boy. I knew his father well, too. So when he got into trouble it was only natural that he should send for me. I did what 1 could for him, but his lawyers spoiled all his chances of freedom. He's as sane as anyone in America today. The trouble with Harry is that his parents gave him too much money and always allowed him to have his own waf. He was a spoiled boy from the time of his birth! ” Record Is a Distinguished One. Few detectives have had so many adventures and been connected with so many celebrated cases as Roger O’Mara. He became a detective the first year he joined the Pittsburg po lice force, back in 1867. In order to round up a gang of crooks O'Mara, then only nineteen years of age, had himself publicly discharged from the police force. He then Joined the crooks and when he had obtained all the evidence he needed he placed them all under arrest. He was the detective who attested Alexander Berkman. who shot Henry C. Frick, and it was large ly through his efforts that Laura Big gar, the actress, was prevented from getting the Bennett millions. It will be remembered that Laura Biggar of "A Trip to Chinatown” fame, claimed she was Millionaire Bennett's widow and the mother of his child, who had died. O'Mara, retained by the Ben nett heirs, succeeded In finding evi dence which prevented Laura Biggar from establishing her claim. Back in the eighties he captured "Shoe Box” Miller, the famous crook who escaped from a Pennsylvania pen itentiary in a shoe box. Miller had robbed a family named Connors, liv ing at Catfish, near Pittsburg, of $21, 00C. By torturing Connors’ wife Miller succeeded in learning the hiding place of the money, and with it he fled to Canada. O’Mara tracked him all over the country and finally brought him back after one of the most remarkable man-hunts in recent times. These are only a few of the cases in which O’Mara has figured. Since he resigned from the Pittsburg detective force nine years ago he has been in business for himself. The greater part of his time has been spent In getting the rich young men of Pittsburg and other cities out of trouble. This is his specialty. “Boys will be boys,” he says, but he adds that they will be better boyB if their parents give them less money. A fine, kindly old man Is Roger O’Mara, the shepherd of the black sheep. FOUND BEAUTY A HINDRANCE * Manosom# Fact tcrtswljr H.ix«r«a On* M* 3«r From FmO >«* Empttymmt A lew >«-r» ago there <u a belief tt*t the pretty stenographer found mor* places open to her than the one mt only mediocre st tram fences Hut *a employer srbo has a large office iOTr* bek of act and young women said tbe other day: "ErjrfTknre has taught me that It 1* t*« in to hire aa utrrartv attractive atewognpher I And that she soon be comes the renter at ad a.! ration for the men rhrk* Considerable time u spen ta 'Joliytag.' sad if ihe ha;;>. ra to drop a tend pencil or wants to put on bee Jacket, every mas on the force jumps to help her. This take* too much time, and. beside*. 1 bare r<-:.soc to think that the pretty girl takes more time from office hours for primp ing than the others.'* If It so happened that you were an extremely pretty girt, but la other ways sere last Ilk* other girls and .» wasted to earn your Uring in a dlgnl- ; fled way. and could only do it by j stenography; if it also happened that you especially wanted to earn money ; by office work for a couple of years be cause at the end of that time you ex pected to marry and wanted to get your trousseau and help along the folks at borne beside, what would you say at being turned down because you were pretty? That is what happened to a girl who tried to get stenographic work in ! Washington. Her name was Miss Marj- Todd and she came from a little country town with its freshness still upon her. She was taken into an office where there were 17 girls, and at the end of a few weeks she was embar rassed by frequent offers of company and of flowers from different men in the office. It made the other girls her enemies, even though she declined all such attentions, and she finally left and began to look for another Job where she could work In peace. The same experience, in so far as having the girls in the office become Jealous of her, happened to a girl in . Chicago. Being a sensible girl an^ caring for the approbation erf her com panions. she dressed plainly and re moved herself as far as possible from any appearance of “showiness.” This was not hard, as she had a quiet taste naturally. But the next thing she did required courage. She smoothed back her light brown hair straight from her forehead in a way that was hopelessly old-fashioned. But. as it happened, she was of so unusual a type that this only gave her distinction. Her brow was low and well shaped and the hair line so good that this only served to draw attention to it Her eyes were a won derful blue and her teeth perfect as they were disclosed by the sweetest and most womanly of smiles. Her little ruse did not hide these things from the more discriminating but fortunately, it worked with th* girls in the office, who no longer con sidered her a rival. Precise. Mrs Hoyle—Who was the best at your wedding? Mrs. Doyie—Then were only two in the wedding party, and so it is proper to call one the better man. I® HERE Is a short cut to power: It Is the discipline of doing uungs mai are nara. suppose we maxe It the rule of our lives to choose the hard things first, the hard things then will al ways be behind, finished, done away with. SOMETHING FOR DESSERT. This is a recipe which won a prize of twenty-five dollars as the best one in a maple sugar contest: Maple Surprise Balls.—Core and pare six apples that will cook tender without losing their form. When cool have some rice that has been cooked in milk until tender, flavored and sweetened to taste. Cover each apple with a coating of rice, using butter on the hands. Now set away to become ; thoroughly chilled. When the time comes to serve them, have a pint of maple sirup boiled to a waxy stage, and insert a fork in the center and dip in the sirup, dripping it from a spoon all over until the rice is cov ered. It hardens as soon as it covers the cold balls. It is better to beat the sirup until it is quite creamy before dipping the apples. Set on individual plates, fill the core with chopped nuts and sirup, after rolling the apple in 1 browned cooccanut. This dish may be ! prepared by using pears or fine fla- I vored quinces. Of course this is not a j dessert one would care to prepare tor j threshers in the busy market time. Cccoanut Pie.—Line a plate with plain paste: fill with the following mixture: Two cups of milk, three egg yolks, one-half cup of sugar, one cup of grated coccanut. a fourth of a tea- j spoonful of salt, the grated rind and i juice of a lemon and a tatle^poonful i of butter Hake carefully until the custard Is thick. Chocalate Cream Pie.—Melt two squares of chocolate or a half cup of cocoa; add four tablespoonfuls of cornstarch, three egg yolks, a little salt and a pint of milk. Cook in a double boiler until thick, stirring con stantly. Flavor with vanilla. Pour Into a baked piecrust shell, cover with a meringue made with the whites and three or four tablespoonfuls of sugar, and brown in the oven. Serve ice , cold. V'GMIKS are pygmies still though perched on Alps: Each man makes his own stature, builds himself. —Young — LUNCHEON OR SUPPER MEATS. For dishes of this sort It Is tetter that they should be not too heavy. Cutlets, chops, sweetbreads and meats of that kind are appropriate. Escalloped Veal.—Mince cold cooked veal very fine. Butter a baking dish and put a thin layer of veal in the bottom, with a sprinkling of onion on top. Then add a layer of finely-pow dered bread crumbs. Dot with butter and chopped parsley, then add anoth er layer of veal, and so on until the dish is full, having buttered crumbs oa top. Pour milk into the pan until the dish seems moist, and bake slow ly until it is done, with an inverted pan over it to keep in the steam. Ke move the pan ten minutes before serv ing. and let the top brown. Sprinkle with grated cheese or parsley. Ham Croquettes.—Mince cold boiled ham very fine. Mix with an equal quantity of crumbs, cold boiled rice or mashed potato. Add a little thick cream sauce to bind; roll in egg. crumbs and fry in deep fat. Fried Sweetbreads.—Wash and drain and dry on a cloth. Lard witn strips of salt pork and cook in a but tered frying pan until the pork is crisp. Serve with tomato sauce. Scalloped Chicken. — Take the meat left over from boiled chicken, put in a buttered bak ing dish a layer of the chicken then a layer of toasted bread crumbs and hot boiled potato; moisten well with the broth thickened with flour and seasoned with salt, pepper and butter. Bake three-quarters of an hour. Veal Chops.—Wipe the chops and make an incision and put in a few drops of onion juice and lemon juice. Dip in egg and crumbs and fry in a little butter or pork fat. SciYe after seasoning well with salt and pepper ESPISE not small things. Tne soul that longs for winir> 11> to Home great neigr.r or iacnn«, too oft Forgets the dally round Where dal**- cares abound. And shakes off little duties, while she looks aloft. SAVORY DISHES. During the summer months dishes with smaller amounts Of meat are more appealing to the average appe tite. This is the time to use eggs, sauces and cheese, and let roast pork and such heavy meats have a vaca tion. Cream toast makes a very nice luncheon dish and one that is suffi cient in nourishment The up-to-date housewife plans her meals so that there will be plenty of food to repair waste and build tissue. Rarebit Cream Toast.—Trim off the crust from six slices of bread. Toast delicately and dip quickly into toil ing salted water. Spread with but ter, cover in a tureen and keep hot. Put two tablespoonfuls of butter in a saucepan, add two tablespoonfuls of fiour or one of flour and one of corn starch, stir and cool until smooth. Season with salt and pepper and two tablespoonfuls of cheese after adding a pint of hot milk. Just before serv ing add a tcaspoonful of Worcester shire sauce. Pour over the toast and serve hot. Mock Terrapin.—Cook together two tablespoonfuls of cornstarch and one of flour with two tablespoonfuls of butter, salt, mace, cayenne and a half a cup of cream. When smooth add a half a cup of cooked rice, a half cup of cooked calf's liver, chopped, half a cup of cold cooked veal, two hard eggs and a teaspoonful of finely chopped parsley. Mix well together and add a teaspoonful of lemon juice, simmer and serve in ramekins. Delicious Creamed Potatoes.—Cook new potatoes with the skins on in boiling salted water. Let 6tand until the next day before using. Peel, cut In small cubes, sprinkle with salt and pepper. In a double boiler put two tablespoonful6 of butter, add the same amount of cornstarch and cook until smooth, gradually add two cups of thin cream and cook until the raw taste has left the starch. Turn in the potatoes, add a few drops of onion juice and a dash of grated cheese and serve. tfERE are plenty good fish in the sea that never were caught. It Is not so much what a woman has that makes her happy, as it is what she does not want. DAINTY DISHES OF FISH. Baked Codfish.—Cover one cupful of shredded salt codfish with toiling water and set aside. Beat together two capfuls of cold mashed potatoes, two cupfuls of milk, two eggs beaten and half a cup of melted butter. Sea son with pepper. Drain the codfish, mix with the potato, put into a but tered baking dish and bake half an hour. Half this recipe is sufficient for a small family. Cuban Codfish.—Chop an cnion fine and fry light brown in butter. Add a cupful of canned tomatoes and a cup of freshened codfish. Cook ten min utes, stirring constantly. Serve on buttered toast. Line a baking dish with seasoned mashed potatoes, fill with creamed codfish, and cover with the potato. Bake and serve in slices. Fish a la Vinaigrette.—Use any cold fish that has been baked or boiled, free from skin, fat and bene, and pile in the center of a platter. Make a ring of sliced hard-cooked eggs around the base of the fish. Make a sauce of three tablespoon fuls of olive oil. one tablespoonful of vinegar, a pinch of salt, a dash of paprika and a tablespoonful of chopped pickle. Pour over the fish and gar nish with lemon and parsley. Jellied Fish.—Soak a package of gelatine in cold water to cover, then add enough more water to make a cupful and dissolve by gentle heat until the liquid is transparent. Have ready four cupfuls of flaked, cooked fish, stir untfl it begins to thicken. Pack into an earthen jar or mold that has been rinsed with cold water, and set away to harden. Salmon Croquettes.—Mix a cupful of canned salmon with an equal quan tity of cold mashed potatoes. Bind with beaten egg or very thick cream sauce. Shape into croquettes, dip in egg and fry in a wire basket in deep fat. Deep Mourning. The manager of the theater racked his brain in vain. ,rWe must do some thing," he repeated, bitterly. “Peo ple will expect us to do something to show respect to the proprietor, now that he is dead.” ‘•Shall we close for ve night of the funeral 7" suggested the assistant stage man ager. “With this business? You’re a fool, laddie, a fool. No; put the chorus in black stockings." And it was even so. Looked Easy to Him. Graydon's father is dead, and the child, hearing other children talk of their fathers, began to importune his mother for “another papa." Mamma tried to explain that she couldn’t con veniently grant this wish, at the mo ment. but Graydon didn't consider any of the suggested reasons adequate. "It ought to be easy enough, mamma, with so many loose men all around!" Stupefy the Snake. Snake charmers takr snakeroot and put it into an earthenware pot with a snake, and he toon becomes stupefied and seems torpid and too weak tv fight or bite. They put the snake un der the influence of the root before pulling bis fangs. Youth and Age. "Things are never just right in this world.' complained old Si Chestnut to the Sedgwick Pantagraph. "When I was a young man I never could buy a buggy with a seat that was narrow enough. Now that 1 am an old mar ried man I can't find a buggy with a seat that is wide enough to suit me." One Estimate of Philosopher. A philosopher is s fool who tor ments himself during life, to be spoken of when dead.—D'Alembert. Still the Open Kettle. One very seldom sees a washing machine in use In the south, says Frank P. Fogg in the National Maga zine. The old-fashioned way of wash ing In the open air at the side of a brook or at the well and boiling the clothes in an iron Kettle over a smok ing open fire is still in vogue. A Real Improvement. “How do you like your new house?” “Great! There’s a place in it for me to hang my razor strop." toYearGeod Health ui Pleasure Come—follow the arrow ’til you join the merry throng of palate pleased men and women who have quit seeking for the one best beverage because they’ve found it— Real satisfaction in every glass—snap and sparkle—vim and go. Quenches the thirst—coois like a breeze L Delicious—Refreshing—Wholesome Send for our interest ing booklet. **The Troth About Coca-Cola'* Sc Everywhere THE COCA-COLA CO. A:iarta, Ca. 53 Whenever you sec an Arrow think of Coca - Cola > “My beau he is particular. About the way I'm dressed. So Maggie uses Faultless Starch, So I can look my best” FREE with E*J> Me Podufe—As luntsuif Sock lor ChiMrca The Girl's Handicap. Ir. her pretty uew frock sister Mabel j felt quite proud as she sat on the front step and watched some boys playing on the sidewalk. After a time one little boy came up to talk to her and to admire, in his rough little way. her bright shiny shoes and pink sash. "See my nice square-cut waist.” ex claimed the girlie, "and my nice coral beads! Don't you wish you wuz a girl?” “No sire-ee,” replied the boy. “1 wouldn't want to be any girl at all. because lookie how much more neck you haf to wash.” PITIFUL SIGHT WITH ECZEMA "A few days after birth we noticed an inflamed spot on our baby's hip which soon began spreading until baby was completely covered even in his eyes, ears and scalp. For eight weeks he was bandaged from head to foot. He could not have a stitch of clothing on. Our regular physician pronounced it chronic eczema. He is a very able physician and ranks with the best in this locality, nevertheless, the disease began spreading until baby was completely covered. He was losing flesh so rapidly that we be came alarmed and decided to try Cuti cura Soap and Ointment. “Not until 1 commenced using Cuti cura Soap and Ointment could we tell what he looked like, as we dared not wash him. and I had been putting one application after another on him. On removing the scale from his head the hair came off. and left him entirely bald, but since we have been using Cuticura Soap and Ointment he has as much hair as ever. Four weeks after we began to use the Cuticura Soap and Ointment he was entirely cured. I don't believe anyone could have eczema worse than our baby. “Before we used the Cuticura Rem edies we could hardly look at him, he was such a pitiful sight. He would fuss until I would treat him, they semed to relieve him so much. Cuti cura Soap and Ointment stand by themselves and the result they quick ly and surely bring is their own rec ommendation." (Signed) Mrs. T. B. Rosser. Mill Hail. Pa., Feb. 20, 1911. Although Cuticura Soap and Oint ment are sold by druggists and deal ers everywhere, a sample of each, with 32-page book, will be mailed free on application to “Cuticura,” Dept. 29 K, Boston. A man can't always depend upon a grass widow to see that his grave is kept green. There r.re imitations, don't he fooled, j Ask for Lewis' single Binder cigar, 5c. Watch the hobble girl trying to skip over the cobbles. , ' : .. -. . Instead of Liquid Antiseptics or Peroxide 100,000 people last year used Paxtine Toilet Antiseptic The new toilet germicide powder to b# dissolved in water as needed. For all toilet and hygienic uses it is better and more economical. To save and beautify the teeth, remove tartar and prevent decay. To disinfect the mouth, de stroy disease perms, and purify the breath. To keep artificial teeth and bridpework clean, odorless To remove nicotine from the teeth and purify the breath after smoking. To eradicate perspiration and body ■ odors by sponge bathing. The best antiseptic wash known. Relieves and strengthens tired, weak, inflamedeyes. Heals sore throat, wounds and cuts. 23 and 50 cts. a box. druggists or bv mail postpaid. Sample Free. THE PAXTON TOILET CO.,Boston.Mass. Don’t Persecute Your Bowels Cut out cathartics and pur brutal, harsh, unnecessary. atives. They art LAKltKS LI 11 LL UVER PILLS A Purely vegetable. Act WWiflv nn th* 1iv»»r A eliminate bile, and soothe the dehcatej membrane ot thej bowel. Curej Biliousness. Sick Hea4* CARTERS ITTLE IVER PILLS. ■che ud Indigestion, as millions know. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE. Genuine must bear Signature r*—- - ■ ■ mms LIVE STOCK AND MISCELLANEOUS Electrotypes IN GREAT VARIETY FORj SALE cAT THE LOWEST PRICES BY WESTERN NEWSPAPER UNION 521-531 W. Adams St, Chichgo fc———————I DAISY FLY KIU.ER AlM*d OBTWh»r*. it | ornamental, cocveo |ient.cneap. Lt>l»tll Can'tspili or I tip over, will not soil lor injure anything. | Guaranteed ef ret ire. Of all ftahnoc at prepaid lor 20c. I HAROLD BOHERS ISO Dr Salb An, Braafclyn, R-L DEFIANCE STIRCH— J mother starcbea only 12 ounce**—tame price and '‘DEFIANCE” 18 SUPERIOR QUALITY. ALCOHOL-3 PER CENT /Vegetable Preparation for As similating the Food and Regula ting the Stomachs and Bowels of lNTVN'Ib ( H1LDRLN Promotes Di^sbon,Cheerful ness and Rest.Contains neither Opium Morphine nor Mineral 1 Mot Narcotic *rj» •f/Hd BrSAffOUffTOBt A perfect Remedy for Constipa tion. Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea, Worms .Convulsions .Feverish ness and LOSS OF SLEEP* Tac Simile Signature of' The Centaur Company. NEW YORK. Atb monthi old ^5 UOMS J5C F >T?> mm For Infanta and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Thirty Years