Nebraska advertiser. (Brownville, Nemaha County, N.T. [Neb.]) 1856-1882, March 31, 1881, Image 3

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MY NEIGHBOURS BABY.
Across in my neighbor's window,
VVith its drapin? of satin and lace,
I see, 'neath Lis flowing ringlets,
A baby's innocent face.
Bis feet in crimson slippsrs,
Are tapping the polished glass,
Andlhe crowd In the street look upward,
And nod and smile as they pB.
Just here in my cott3ge window,
Catching flies in the sun,
Vith a paU'hed and faded aproa,
Stands my own Httle one,
Hw face is s pure and handsome
As the baby's over the wny,
And he keeps my heart from breaking
At my toiling every day.
Sometimes when the day is ended,
And I lt in the dusk to rest,
With the face of my sleeping darling
Hugged close to my lonely breast,
I pray that my neighbor's baby
May not catch hcaven'6 roses all,
But that some mav crown the forehead
Of my loved one as they falL
And when I draw the stockings
Prom his little weary feet,
And kiss the rosy dimples
In his limbs, so round and sweet,
1 thinV - the dainty garments
Son- Lit'.e children wear,
And that niy God withholds them
Prom mine so pure and fair.
llay God forgive my envy - '
I know not what I said;
Jiy heart is crushed and troubled'
My neighbor's boy Is dead 1
I saw the little coffin
As they carried him out to-day;
A mother's Jieart is breaking
In the mansion over the way.
The light is fair in my window,
The flowers bloom at my door;
My loy is chasinir sunbeams
ThU dance on the cottage floor,
The joscs of hcal'h are blooming
On my darling's cheek to-day,
But the baby is gone from the window
Of the mansion over the way.
An Adventure rt'Itli Wolves.
By Tier. W. II. WKhrow.
In .the month of March, in the year
18, when the snow lay deep upon the
ground, Lawrence Temple, a clerk at a
lumber-camp on the headwaters of the
Ottawa river, in Canada, was dispatch
ed by the "boss" lumbern.an to Ottawa
Cit a distance of some two hundred
miles, to report to the agent of the com
pany the quantity of timber that had
I een got out, and to bring back from
the bank a sum of money to pay off a
number of the lurrbermen. f
Several of these were about to take
up land in the new townships which
had been recently laid out on the Upper
Ottawa, and as Lawrence had won the
confidence of the company, he was com
missioned to bring back the money re
quired for making the payments.
Owing to a preuuuice on tne part or
the men ajrainst paper money, he y
directed to procure gold and silvef
'He was to ride as far ns thts tow
Pembroke about haj-vay and, leav
ing his horse thereto rest, was to j6 on
to Ottawa in the stage.
-He selected for the journey J&e best
:inimal in the stable a taia gaunt,
sinewy mare of rather unganjjy figure,
but with an immense amount of go in
her. ' f
He reached Ottawa snjely and trans
acted Ins business sariyfactonly.
Hav
mir drawn
uie monev
from the bank
chiellv in Englislgovereigns and Mexi
can dollai-s LavenCC set out on his
1 V
return journey
At PembrGrfr,
e he mounted
ajram
his
rld for his ride
of
over a
hundred miles toianip.
The silver he carM'd in two leathern
bags in the bolster V his saddle, and
the gold in a belt aroubd his waist. He
jilso'carried, for ;elf-dfence. one of the
newly-invented .Colt's revolvers.
The weather was Utterly cold, but
the exercise of ridirg kept him quite
warm. The entire vmter had been one
of unprecedented severity. The snow
fell early and deep and remained all the
season. '
Deer were exceedingly numerous,
even near the settlements, and at the
camp furnished no inconsiderable por
tion of the food of the men, varied by an
oc 'sional relish of bear's meat
J oward the close of the second day,
he was approaching the end of his jour
ney and indulging in a pleasant antici
pation of the feast of venison he should
enjoy and of the refreshing slumber on
the fragrant pine-boughs, earned by con
tinuous exercise in the open air.
The moon was near the full, but par
tially obscured by the light of fleecy
clouds. .
He was approaching a slight clearing
when he observed two long, lithe ani
mals spring out of the woods toward his
horse.
He thought they were a couple of
those large shaggy deer-hounds which
vm somfitimes emnloved near the lum
ber camps for hunting .cariboogreat
powerful animals, with immense length
of limb and breadth of chest-and look
ed around for the appearanee of the
hunter, who, he thought, could not be
far off.
He was surprised, however, not to
hear the deep-mouthed bay characteris
tic of these hounds; but instead, a gut
tural snarl, which, nevertheless, appear
ed to affect the mare in a most unac
countable manner.
A shiver seemed to convulse her frame,
and shaking herself together she start
od off on a long swinging trot, which
soon broke iriio a gallop, that got over
the ground amazingly fast.
But her best speed could not outstrip
that of the creatures which bounded in
inno- leans at her side, occasionally
springing at her hams, their white tectn
listening in the moonlight and snap-n-
when they closed like a steel-trap.
When he caught the first glimpse of
the fiery flashing of their eyes there
came the blood-curdling revelation that
thee were no hounds, but hungry wolves
that bore nim such sinister company.
All the dread hunters' tales of lone
trappers lost in the woods, and their
gnawed bones discovered in the spring
Besides their steel-traps, flashed
through his mind liko a thought of hor
ror. His only safety, he knew, was in the
speed of his mare, and she was handi
capped in this race for life with about
five-and-twenty pounds of silver in each
holster.
Seein"-that she was evidently flag-oiii"-
under this tremendous pace, he
resolved to abandon the mone
"Skin for skin, yea, all that a man
hath will he for Ms life," s6 he dropped
both bags on the road.
To his sarprise, the animals stopped
as if they had been highwaymen, seek
ing only his money and not his life.
He could hear them snarling over the
stout leather bags, but lightened to her
load, the mare sprang forward in a
splendid hand-gallop, that eov.reci the
rround in gallant style.
He was beginning te hope that hehad
fiirlv distanced the brutes, when their
i Izi ,-i?n- nnd melancholv, lonjr
drawn howl grew stronger on the wind;
and soon they were abreast of the mare.
' -He now threw down his thick leather
gauntlets, with the hope of delaying
S bt it only caused a de
Son of a few minutes while they
m-eedUy devoured them.
S? was rapidly nearing the camp; if
, ME? keen them at bay for twentyor
he , could eep in J d b(J gafe
thirty ut he drew his revolver.
.. T7ai
3!Kt
hit the bounding, leaping objects at his
side.
Moreover, they had botli kept on the
loft side of the horse which lessened Ills
chance as a marksman.
The mare, too, who .vs exceedingly
nervous, could never itand lire, and, if
he should miss, and in the movement
be dismounted, he knew the maw of
tho?e ravenous beasts would be his
grave.
One of the brutes now made a spring
for the mare's throat, but failing to
grasp it fell on the right side of the ani
mal. Gathering himself up he bounded
in front of her. and made a dash at the
the rider, catchmz and clinging to the
marc's right shoulder.
The white foam
fell from his mouth and ileckea ins
dark and shasrgv breast
Lawrence could feel his hot breath
on his naked hand. The fiendish glare
of those eyes he never in all his life for
got. It haunted him for years in mid
night slumbers, from which he awoke
trembling, and bathed in the cold per
spiration of teiTor.
He could easily have believed the
weird storie0 of lyeanthropy, in which
satanie agci ies was feigned to have
changed mei 'or their csimcs in uere
wolves ravenous creatures, who added
human or fiendish passion and malign
ancy of hate to the bestial appetite for
human flesh.
If ever there was murder in a glance,
it was in that of those demon eyes that
glared into those of Lawrence, and
which seemed actually to blaza with a
baleful, greenish light a flame of inex
tinguishable rage.
Lawrence felt that the supreme mo
ment had come. One or the other of
them must die. In five minutes moie
he would be safe in camp, or else,
and he shuddored.
He lifted up his heart in prayer to
God and then felt strangely calm and
collected.
The muzzle of his revolver almost
touched the brute's nose. He pulled
the trigger. A Hash, a crash! The
green eyes blazed with ten-fold fury,
the huge form fell heavily to the ground,
and in the same moment the mare rear
ed almost upright, nearly unseating her
rider, and shaking his pistol from his
hand, and then plunging fovar!, rap
idly cohered the road in "her flight.
As Lawrence had expected, the othTJr
famishing 'beast remained to devour its
fellow.
He galloped into the cantp, almost
fell from his mare, which stood with a
look of almost human gladness in her
eyes, and staggered to the rude log
shanty, where the blazing fire and song
and story beguiled the winter night,
scarce able te narrate his peril, and es
cape. After light refreshment for he had
lost all relish for food he went to bed,
to start up often through the night, un
der the glare of tkse terrible eyes and
to reneicthe ho'.or he Lad undergone.-
In tW Vjtioi ding, returning with a
numK f the men to look for the mon-
Iie IOU,,I ,,, font, rnil mii's.7.1n nncl
slain wolf in the midst of a
of gory snow; also the skull and
ft of the larger bones, out gnawed
and split, in order to get at the mar
row. They found also, some distance back,
the straps and buckles of the mone'
bags, and the silver coins scattered on
the ground and partially covered w:th
snow.
Story of a Colorado Robber.
Of a noted robber in Colorado named
Leaper the Denver Tribune tells this
story: It was getting- late in the fall
when just at evening one day there
came a pale looking man, riding a fine
mule, and halted at Paper's cabin to
inquire if he was on the right road to
Denver. He was informed that he was
not, and that there was no other house
within twenty miles; but if he would
dismount he was welcome to stay dur
ing the night, and in the morning Leap
er would take him across a mountain
and put him upon tho road. The trav
eler accepted the invitation, unsaddled
his mule, picketed him by the roadside
and entered the cabin. Injudiciously
he boasted that he had a thousands-dollars
in nuggets he had washed from the
earth that season, little thinking ne was
setting a trap to lose his own life. This
was about the last chance of the season
for Leaper. A long winter would soon
set in, and there would be nobody to rob.
Men seldom traveled the mountains in
winter in those days, and it was neces
sary that the robber should be prepared
to den up like the grizzly bear for an
other spring. When morning came the
traveler saddled his mule, and Leaper
his horse, and they started across the
mountain to find the road to Denver.
After traveling some distadce, they dis
mounted in a gulch, when Leaper seized
his victim by the throat, and demanded
his money and his pistol. He then or
dered him back in his saddle, and, tak
ing a long lariat, lashed his feet firmly
beneath the mule's belly and his hands
behind him. This done, the fiend pulled
the bridle from the ammai's head and
turned him loose, at the same time put
spurs to his own horse and rede rapidly
away. The grass was fine in the moun
tains at this time, and the mule paid
more attention to this than he did to the
prisoner upon his back. Mild words
unaccompanied by rein or cudgel, had
no influence on the long eared hybrid.
He ate and drank until filled, then lay
down for the night He, however, lay
upon his bell' and knees, and indicated
by his position that he would do the best
he could for his unfortunate bed f ello .v.
When morning came the beast arose
and determined to leave forother fields.
Over rocks and through tangled woods
he went often nearly tearing to pieces
his rider until he halted at a rippling
stream to take a drink. At this moment
thfi rider heard the sound of an axe. He
halloed loudly for help. In a moment
his call was answered, and a man
dressed in a red shirt and bukskin
breeches came in sight with an axe on
his shoulder. As lie approached the
muli became alarmed at his appearanee
and started off on a brisk trot, but not
until the axeman had got near enough
to learn from the rider his sad condi
tion. The woodman now lay down his
axe and started in pursuit For hours
he followed the mule and its lone rider
in vain. At times he would almost la'
his hands upon the creature, when, pe
culiar to a mule, with a snort lie would
bound away with increassd speed. Night
was fast approaching, and darkness
would end the pursuit The case was
getting desperate. The pursuer had a
Distol in his belt. He availed himself
of the best opportunity be could get and
sent a bullet whizzing through the ani
mal's head. A moment and the rider
was released, but too much exhausted
to travel. A fire was kindled and the
two strangers who had met by chance
this unusual way camped for the night
amonjrthe rocks with the wolves all
around . them. In the morning they
succeeded in reaching a cabin a few
miles away. After resting a few days
and partlyregainingtheuse of his limbs,
which were nearly paralyzed, the man of
fate departed for Denver. Here he
made known the robbery, and described
the robber so minutely that he was
easily traced as the mysterious occupant
of the lone cabin at the foot of "Ward
er's Hill," as it was called by the pil
grims of that da'. Officers were sent
for him and he was captured after a
desperate struggle and died in prison of
his wound.
When you visit or leave New York City
save Baggage Expressfure and Carriage HJr'
and stop at Grand ITuion Hotel. l5r
lv opposite Grand Central Depot. 350e
mn.ii.- .pdnpprt t.i SI nml rmwnnlR FV ."'
.educed to ?l and upwards. .f?r ,ai
r Bn! ?mi.r cimfl.V.1 "th best
E ev ttor.
nil
jcaip of
I'SaSh
Horse Cats, Sa s and
all Depots,
ElevuteJ ro31 to
Self-Torture of the Heathen.
The facts below are gleaned from Dr.
Duff's work on India, and from the or
gans of missionary societies.
Many of the pilgrim3 of Juggernaut,
from the most distant parts of India,
measure the whole distance of their
weary pilgrimage with their bodies on
the ground. Some remain all day with
their heads on the ground, and their
feet in the air; some cram thei- eyes
with mud, and their mouths with straw.
One man ma be seen with his foot
tied to his neck, another with a pot of
fire on his breast, and a third envelop
ed in a-net of i opes. At the festival of
cliarack pujah, -so called, because there
is endured the torture of hook swing
ing, so well known, many of the devo
tees throw themselves down from the
top of a high wall, or a sctffold twenty
feet high, on iron spikes or kuives,
that are thickly stuck in a bag of straw.
At night a number of the devotees sit
down in the open air, pierce the skin of
their foreheads, insert a small rod of
iron, to which is suspended a lamp,
which is kept burning until the morn
ing dawn. Some have their arms and
breast stuck full of pins, about the
thickress of packing needles. Others
tie themselves to wheels, thirty feet in
diameter, and raised considerably from
the ground when the wheel turns
round their heads point alternately to
the zenith and the nadir others cover
their under lip with a lair of mud and
deposit upon it some small giain, usu
ally mustard seed, then stretch them
selves flat on their backs, exposed to
the dripping dews by night and the
blazing sun by day. Their vow is
that they will not stirfrom that position,
nor turn, nor move, nor eat nor drink,
till the seed planted begin to sprout;
this gradually takes place on the third
or fourth day. On the day of the great
charak festival, several blacksmiths are
stationed in the court of the temple,
with sharp instruments in their hands.
When the procession reaches the tem
ple, a class of devotees, holding in their
hands rods, cane3, iron spits, or tubes
approach the blacksmiths. One ex
tends" his side, it is immediately pierced
through, and in parses one of his rods
or canes; another extends his arm, this
is perforated, and in passes his iron spit,
a third protrudes hitv. tongue, and gofr-ting-it
bored through, he passes in a"
card or serpent! These devotees may
be seen, in the midst of loud, discordant;
sounds, and frantic dances, pulling
backward and forward, through their
wounded members, the rods 'and. canes
the spits and the tubes, the cards ana
the writhing serpents,, till th'ii'bodies
seem streaming with blood! Arvin?s
cyclopedia. Such is the bliuanbss of
heathenism. Do not such 'people nerd
the gospel of .lie Son of God, that they
may learn that salvation is not secured,
by bodily torture? Reader, are- you
helping to "hold forth the word of life"
to those blinded and ignorant worship
pers of Juggernaut.
Animal Reasoning.
A lady, a friend of mine, was at one
time matron of a hospital for poor chil
dren and women which was maintained
by subscription. One of the inmates
was a blind girl who was not there as a
patient, but temporarily till a home
could -be found for her. She had learned
to feed herself, and at meal times a tray
containing her dinner was placed on her
knees as she sal in a comfortable chair
for her special convenience in feeding
herself. One day while she was eating,
the pet eat of the establishment placed
herself before the girl and looked long
and earnestly at her, so earnestly that
the matron, fearing the animal meditat
ed some mischief to the girl, took her
out of the room. Again the next day,
at the same hour, the cat entered the
room, but this time walked quietly to
the girl's side, reared herself on her
hind legs, and noiselessly, stealthily
reached out her paw to the plate, seized
a morsel that pleased her, ami, suently
as she came, departed to enjoy her stolen
meal. The girl never noticed her loss,
and when told of it by her companions
laughed very heartily. It is evident
that the cat from observation had en
tirely satisfied herself that the girl could
not "see, and by a process of reasoning
decided she could steal a good dinuer by
this practical use of her knowledge.
Cruelty to Cattle on Shipboard.
London Telegraph.
If certain rumors respecting the
m-
tolerable sufferings to which horned
cattle are subjected during their trans
port from America to this country be
tounded on fact, it is high time that the
board of trade should turn its serious
attention to the subject. In all proba
bility strenuous efforts will be, if they
have not already been, made by the
society for the prevention of cruelty to
animals to obtain official protection for
the unfortunate creatures doomed to
endure the horrors of a long sea voyage
with the shambles as its goal, in order
that English tables may be plentifully
supplied with fresh be.f. Under favor
able weather conditions a bullock passes
its time on board ship in a chronic con
dition of fear wid misery; but "when
the stormy winds do blow," aud the
vessel rolls heavily, the agonies it suffers
are such that their mere contemplation
for a few seconds mig'it melt a heart of
stone. That willful torture should be
permitted to aggravate the already un
bearable torments to which a severe
gale condemns these wretched beasts,
appears incredible; yet we have been
assured that expedients of such dire
cruelty that we forbear from shocking
the public by describing them are mer
cilessly put in practice to compel oxen,
maddened bv sheer physical pain, to
leap over-board when the movement of
the vessel is so violent as to preclude
the possibility of their being dealt with
oy IIIO Uicw. ibis a aiguiuu.Mii iiivi iuai,
within the last few days, a vessel which
left the shores of America with a cargo
of 59-i live bullocks should have arrived
in the port of London with only forty
five of its horned passengers, the other
549 having perished during the voyage
"in consequence of heavy weather.'1
Protestant Work in Italy.
Rome Correspondent c
All our mission agencies are busy at
work, and meet with some measure of
success. Protestant principles are
spreading, and sometimes manifest
themselves all at once in the most un
expected waj At the beginning of this
year the papers startled us one morning
by announcing that a whole village of
2,000 people near Turin had suddenly
become Protestant. We are not accus
tomed to such wholesale conversions,
and were they to happen we should be
inclined to look upon them with a criti
cal eye. However, there is something
true in the piece of news given by 'ue
papers. Bertolla is a village an hour
distant from Turin, on the shore ot Uie
Stura. Its inhabitants wash linen for
the Turin people, and it h:is been ascer
tained that in many a Mmble home
there were already bibl and new testa
ments. Several of i3 inhabitants had
also been brought into close relation,
on account of heir trade- with g(1
Protestant fam1163 iQ Turin. Yet even
all these tb'"?3 might not have been
sufficient induce a change, if an old
ecelesis-""0 sclliabWe had not been re
oK' revived there. Bertolla is not a
h, bat a chaplaincy dependent
par
from the neisrhborinp: parish of Abbadia
de Stura. The vicar of this last place,
to increase his fees, wanted to oblige
the inhabitants of Bertolla to go all the
way to his church for baptisms, mar
riages, burials. The archbishop was
gained over to his sidv, and 011 New
Year's morning the inhabitants of Ber-
tolla awoke to find their church shut
and their priest deprived of the power
of saying mass. It is impossible to un
derstand what a stir a thing of the kind
can do jn a little Roman Catholic
village. The inhabitants of Bertolla
immediately drew up a petition to our
ministei s of Turin to go and preach to
them, and on the following Sunday the
gospel was preached on the public
square of Bertolla, to several hundreds
of hearers, and listened to with the
greatest attention. Our friends have
gone back from Sunday to Sunday, and
although the right of saying mass has
been at once restored to the priest , and
ever effort used to win back the people
of Bertolla, they have always found good
and attentive audiences. No doubt the
first origin of the movement is not of a
very spiritual order, yet there is good
reason to hojpe that several of the peo
ple will be converted in the end.
"A. Hawk and a Rattlesnake.
My musing on the ages of change
that" it must have taken to mould the
scene to its present aspect were broken
in upon by a large rattlesnake gliding
on a bare rock within fifty feet of the
point where I was sitting. He seemed
to search around like a dog for a place
to suit his snakeship, and then stretched
himself out to enjoy the warmth. I was
thinking if it was worth while to heave
a stone at the monster, when a big
shadow swept down and a hawk nearly
caught him napping, but not qnite.
The snake sprang his rattle and coiled
himself ready for attack, while tiie hawk
hovered around, making a dash, now
on the right anil now on the left It
was quite an interesting skirmish, but
at last the snake made a spring and ap
parently failed to strike and before he
could recoil himself the hawk seized him
with both talons close behind the head.
In fact, he had him on the neck, and
swept into the air, while the snake
struggled and twisted, away up into the
blue in wide circling sweeps, until the
reptile hung limp and lifeless, when rh(j
hawk came down to.eaith again, and,
alighting on a neighboring tree, made,
a meal on the snake.
An Ornithological Jamboree.
f Iu Kingston, N. Y., Freeman, telb
the following curious story, the fac ts for
wh' h are furnished by a recent occur
rence in that city:
local entomologist havmir on ins
hands geveral bottles of iusectepreserv-
ri ;?, tiMi fnr win-Mi hn Wl nn fnrthnr
ed in spirits for which he had no further
Use, emptied them upon the ash heap in
his back'yard. No sooner had he empti
ed the bugs than the sparrows" lit all
over the heap in a perfect cloud, swal-
LhJwed Ihe -bugs, arjdjin about ten miu-
xites were aruuk-flrunk as men get
and cut up the . same idiotio capers.
Thov fought in free -fights of half a dozen.
-:wlozonTaiut jn". fifties, and suddenly
"half of one party. Would break oil Irom
their fight and dash into some of the
other quarrels. Almost all the nests
were pulled down and the whole colony
was in a state of anarchy and the direst
confusiqn. -The whole drunk was over
in. half an hour, but that time served to
allow the cats to slaughter over fifty of
tlie sparrows, whose combative qualities
and forgetfulness had brought them too
near to the ground Not a sparrow has
been seen in that neighborhood since.
Tyrolese Superstitious. .
TIip Tyrolese peasant, says the author,
of Tyrol and Vie Tyrolese, connects
every elementary visitation, such as
hail storms, lightning, earthquakes,
heavy rains, or long droughts, with the
evil 'disposition of the unholy one, or
sees in it the punishment for some un
righteous act. Rpfore he sows his field
he sprinkles it with small bits of char-,
coal cousecrated by the priest. When
he drives his cattle to the mountains,
his Alp-hut receives the blessing of the
holy man. When his cow calves, she is
besprinkled with holy water; before he
enters an untenanted house he goes over
his rosarv. When a thunderstorm is
approaching, the village bells a-e rung, .
and if he has a bell on his house well-
to-do peasants in the fertile valleys very
often hang a bell on top of their house
to call to their meals, their men and
woman servants from their work in the
fields it is set tolling with might and
main. The object of the ringing is to
keep of or charm the dreaded lightning.
The peasant population have in this
safeguard a staunch belief, which is not
shaken even if the lightning strikes that
or any adjacent house. "The bell has
been "bewitched," they argue, "and re
quires to be re-eonsecrateu." As a rule
t lie older the bell of chapel aud church
the more efficacious it is considered,
and one or two in different parts of the
country have a wide-spread repute as
"welterqloclcs," or storm-bells. You
est repute as a
lierhtninjr
throughout Tyrol.
Expanding the Lungs.
Step out into the pure air,,stand per
fectly erect, with the head and should
ers thrown back, and then fixing the
lips as though you were going to whis
tle, draw the air through the nostrils
into the lungs. When the chest is about
full, raise the arms, keeping them ex
tended with the palms of the hands
down, as you suck in the air, so as to
bi-iuj? them over the head iust as the
lungs aro quite full. Then drop the
thumbs inward, aud aftergenlly forcing
the arms backward and tlie chest open,
reverse the process by which you
draw your breath until the lungs are
entirely -inptj. This process should be
repeated tlrree or four times a day. It
is Impossible to describe, to one who
has never tried it, the glorious sense of
vigor which follows the exercise. Wc
know a gentleman, the measure of
whose chest has been increased some
three inches ouring as ma ay months.
Feliiie Ingenuity.
The ingenuity shown by cats in open
ing doors is sometimes remarkable. A
large cat in the country was in the hab
it of opening the door for himself in the
following manner: Tlie handle of the
door was one of the old-fashioned
hooped kind, which required to be
rasped and the latch pressed with the
thumb. "He leaped on to the window
sill which was near the door, spran
from there and caught the hoop wiln
his forepaw, and hunsr on until
pressed down the latch with the other
this operation requiring considerable
force when the door swung-open, puss
dropped to the floor, and quietly walked
in." In a like ingenious manner a cat
has been known to open a kitchen dres
ser by working the bar which acted as
a fastener around from a horizontal to
a perpendicular position, and thus gain
ing ingress
Trotect Your Ilcallli.
Cold and moisture combined have a torpor
ising effect upon the bodily organs, and the
digestive and secretive processes are apt to be
more tardily performed in winter than In the
fall. The same is true, also, of the excretory
functioiw.-ji-TheJbowels are often sluggish, and
the poree f the skin throw off but litfle waste
matter atthis season. The system, there
fore, requires opening up a little, and also
purifjlngand regulating, and the safest, surest
aud most thorough tonic and alterative that
canb' used for these purposes is Hostetter'a
Stomach Bitters. Persons who wish to escape
the rheumatic twinges, the dyspeptic agonies
the painful disturbances of the bowels, the
billious attacks, and the nervous visitations,
o common at this time of the year, will do
well to reinforce their systems with this re
nowned vegetable stomachic an I Invlgorant.
It improves tLe appetite, it angthen the
stomach, cheers lao spirits, acd renoratee the
wisis pnyuqne.
will often hear a peasant express reerret I.U nil others are bat imitations and
that his village possesses a bell much ueits. Price 25 cents.
CnfronVii. n tlinr. n1 rlio nn-rr. -eill'io-n nn. ITl KKMW OXlGEATEI
"i.i ,.AX. i"tT ..."' i .i" "i'ii H11TERS
auii, "vuf imu e ouij u. uuu i . d begt fffl. D
Rodenegg!" a bell enjoying the high- I,,,,,..... Malaria. inHs&stton. all
uimrmur
DISEASED TORK.
What Secretary Blaine Has to Say ou
tlio Subject.
Ministers of the United States at the court
of St James and at the French capital have
been instructed to lay before the respective
governments to which they are accredited the
Eenseof this government, that injustice is
shown towards the citizens and food products
of this country by the attitude which is being
aesumed in Europe on this question. Positive
instructions have bn sent to Lowell at Lon
don to meet Crump's statements and expose
i.i .-. Vnvps at Paris, has been
telegraphed in the following terms, directing
him to lay the facta before the French govern
ment:
To Xcyes, Jflnister, Tarls.
Your course respecting the pork decree of
the French government is approved, me
statement of Crump, acting British consul at
Philadelphia, occasioned excitement and wide
spread comment here, leading to correspon
dence with the British legation and boards oi
trade. Hoj? cholera is confounded with trichi
nosis, wh!ch is an entirely distinct disease.
But the representation regarding hog cholera
is greatly exaggerated. The most searching
investigation falls to show basis for the pub
lished statemen'J Themortalitvamoneyoung
swiHe from cholera has been less this year
than for several years oast, and the condition
of full grown hogs, which alone are used for
packinir and export, is this year exceptionally
good. "British representatives at Philadelphia
apparently have been misled by soeculators to
the great injury of ligitimate trade. Deny in
the strongest terms the report ot the British
consul, should the French ministers appeal to
it as justifying the interdiction restricting
the American pork trade. Instructions fol
low. Signed. Blaete.
Divers for Clams.
In some of the islands of the south
Pacific where the clam attains a great
size; diving for clams is one of the occu
pations of the natives. The diver
thrusts a sharp iron rod into the month
of the clam, which closes its shell with
such tenacity that it can be puiled out
of its bed. Occasionally divers who
have carelessly let themselves be caught
in the grip of too 'powerful a clam, have
only saved their Iive by cutting off their
fingers and leaving them at the bottom
of ihe sea.
Vp&n
nti (Mlcb.) Commercial.
U$I
r representative Jatelv learned the
follov.in from Mr. Curl Siegmund, cor.
Congress and Washington s're-ts: My
dfirfghter suffered fioni Ituetiiuaiism tb
such an extent that it crippled her, ren
dering her unable to walk at all. We
consulted many physicians and used .;11
i kinds of mediciues, but in vain. At
Wast St. Jacobs Oil effected the happi t
Results. It cured my daughter.
The world
has not vet learned the
rjehes of frugality.
(To be a great man one must know
how to profit by the whole of one's for
tiine. '.How many people would remain
dam b were it forbidden them to speak
gijod of themselves and ill of others
Pll sburpli C mmerclal Gazct'i.
The Rt. Kev. Bishop Gilmour, Cleve
land, Ohio; Chas. S Strickland, Esq.,
9 Soylston street, Boston, Mass; "ai t
Paul Boyton, the World Renowned
Swimmer"; Prof. C. O Duplessis, Man
ager Chicago Gymnasium, Chicago, 111;
Wm. H. Wareing, Esq., Asst Gen
eral Superintendent, New York Post
Office; Hon. Thomas L. James, Post
master, New York; Stacey Hill, Esq.,
Itli. Auburn Inclined Plane Railroad,
Cincinnati, Ohio, are among the myr
iads who have experienced-the benefi
cial effects of that mest remarkable
remedy, St. Jacobs Oil, and who have
fcutifie'd'to its efileaoy in unqualified
terms.
Every man, coining to'an obscure old
age. thinkshe would have achieved
wealth and distinction if
A sLady Correspondent.
Mr. Editor: .
fc I n,ru recent issue of your paper "Dai
sv B." writes to know what to do when
she has the "blues." Now, I have
been troubed with that very unpleasant
and essentially feminine complaint in
the past, and I am quite ure my expe
rience will help her. I don't believe
those indigo feelings come because
things don't go right around us, butbe
qiuse matters don't go right within us.
Every lady understands this and knows
trie cause. For years I suffered terribly,
and f now see that I might have avoir. -,efl
it .all had I known what I do to-day.
tried taking Warner's Safe Kidney and
Siver Cure as an experiment, and it did
fbr me more than I could ever have
dreamed it possible to do for any wo
man. I would not be without it for the
world, and I earnestly advise Dai.sy B.
or any lady troubled as she was to use
tlie means which I did and I am sure it
wilt have the same effect.
EIEXRY'? CA2SKI,iC SAB-FE.
J The BE3r SALVE hi the vrnia fr Cats,
Bruises, "0'cs, Ulcers, Salt Ktieuai, letter
Chapped Hunils. Chilblain, Corns and all
kinds of Skin Eruptio-is. Freckles and Pimples.
e aare vou cet HENRY'S CARBOLIC SALVE,
countar-
pepsia,
d'sor-
dcrs of the stomach, nd all diseases indicat
ing an impure conditiou of iheBlojJ,Kianejs,
Liver, Kdn, etc
DDRNO'S CATARRH SNUr'lf cures all dis
eases of. the mucous membrane of tho head
and throat.
DR. ilOTPS LIVER
PULLS arc the
beet
Carthartic Regulators.
Keep on hand Reading's Russia Salve.
A Farmer's Opinion.
A Michigan farmer writes that be was
completely cured of a very bad case of
Piles by one box of Buckleu's Am'ca
Salve. Nothing on earth is so rG a
cure. Sold by all druggists at & cents.
r I E
ft d
ScitE
Cure FouNf
AT LiAST.
One Neep Suffer.
A-3.ire enre for the mm Bkedlrjfc ItcWnc anl CT
,.f.ii viip. hi 1.. ea dlrcovtr Ly Dr AVlIlIams
fan Indian remedv). called Dr. Williams' Indian OInt
m?nt A sine leliSc has cured the worst chronic cases
orSandMvSr. standing. No onen ed suffer nvs
mlivutM after aPPlvlnK this wonderful soothing medl
cln" WlllliniVOlntinenf absorbs the tumors, allays
tht'intenJe Itching (particularly at night after getting
wrm In bed), acts as a poultice, gives instant and
nalnkss relief, and Is prepan d only t it PIIcj, Itching
of the private parts, and nothing else.
Real what the Hon J II Cofflnberry. of Cleveland,
saVs about Dr Williams' Indian Pile Oln'ment: I
haveused scores of pile cures, and I have never found
nnvthlng which gave such Immedlat? and permanent
relief as Dr WHHanis' Indian Pile Ointment,
For sale by all druggists, or mailed on receipt ot
nrlee.tlOO. Menry d: Davles Prop's.,
pnc CLEVELAND. O,
KOU21 OZN JttATS."
The thinp desired fo ind at last. Ask drug
gists for Rough on Rats. It clears out rats,
mice, roaches, bed bugs, et. 15c boxes.
Painles" 3SetIil oi Curing: Piifs
:iutl 1'if.tulu.
Dr. Stark during his receut visi to Guv's
Hospital, London, vas specially pleased with
the new painl es method that was there em
ployed in curing this class of disease. Suffer
ers from piles and fi3tu a can now be relieved
1 .1.. T...W ootTnrnt. nt thp TTfincfl Pitt
V, I Ov tula utn .. wM...v-. .w A&uUUw v.-j
J Surgical Institute of Dr. Dickerson fc Stark.
One pair 01 boots or shoes saved every vear by
usid"- Lyon's Patent Metallic Heel stiffenr.
Motheks "Who Have Cuixdren, who are
subject to Croup, read this. Alley's Lung
tut 4M should always bo kept in your house,
I a ad be given immediately when the first symp
toms appear, wuicu ui remove iuc mucus
collected in the throat, and save the life of
your dear child;
Children are extrbmelt liable, under
ni-dinarv circumstances, to contract obnoxious
diseases of the skin at school. Glenn's Scx
phtr Soap both cures and protects them from
such complaints. Parents may rely upon its
efficacy.
Warranted to do you good If you have a
cough Piso's Cure for Consumption.
One Remedy for One Dollar there is but
one way to cure baldness, and that Is by using
CAEBOEifE, a deodorized extract of petroleum,
the natural petroleum hair renewer. It will
positively do the work and It Is.thelonly article
that-wlll.
For Sale.
A six horse power portable steam en
gine and boiler, in first-class order; only
six months in use. Price low and terms
easy. Reason for selling, more power
wanted. Address
Wf.sti.rn $E SrAFEK Uxion,
4-u. A. Joslin, Mgf..
OmuliH. Nebraska
BUe! P
gilds riltLvdji
A
.NO
pricing
sofa once belonged to Xafitte; it' is full
ot historical reminiscence." "T),r to
w- jmm iiu jiii Tinorir vnn.
This
scence." "TiierR u
one
back,
now, pa, crawlino- rio-ht !.
observed the, ,1Ui .i-..
boy. -That's a fact; it's alivowith his
torical reminiscences," said the gen
tleman, punching in the corner with his
cane.
The good housewife, when she is givinc: her
house its spring renovating, -hould bear to
mind that the dear inmates of her house ar
more precious than many houses, and that
their systems need cleansing ov puriWngthe
blood, regulating the stomach-and bowflsto
prevent and cure the diseases arising from
briD. w luna xand m'asma, and ahe must
know that there is nothing that will do it so
perfectly and surely as Hop Bitters, the purest
Prtrtol medidnes. -Conrord, JE,
FOR ALJIOST XOTIUXG.
On receipt of 9c in postage stamps I will
maU to any address, postage paid, oc e Fifteen
Puzzle Hard Wood Blocks, nicely finl- hed and
put up in a neat box. Address G. B. Fox.
Thuteenth street, Omaha, Neb.
There is no earthly boon more precious than
good health, and it behooves Ita possessor to
endeavor to retain it If you are assailed with
such provoking ills as sick headaches, torpid
liver, sour stomach aud a general feeling of
weariness and dtssrust, don't co and commit
suicide but take Eilert's Daylight Liver Pills
and be cured.
Uncle Sam's Harness Oil fills aud closes the
pores of leather, effectually preventing the en
trance of dampness, dust, &c., and rendering
the harness Eoft and pliable, while at the
same time increasing its durability.
Distempers, Coughs, Cold, Feve;s, and
most of the diseases which Horses, Cattle,
Sheep, Hos, and Poultry are subject to ire
readily overcome and cured by using Uncle
Sam's Condition Powder according to the
plain directions. Sold t-y all Druggists.
Rheumatism, neuralgia, strains and bruises
will be relieved ny Uncle Sam's Nerve and
Bone Liniment, sold by all druggists.
Mothers will find Dr. Winchell's Teething
Syrup just the medl Ine t-i have In the house
for the children, it will cure colds, coughs,
sore throat and regulate the bowel j, try it
Disease and death, when they reach our rwn
households, are too sorious for jesting, we use
our best endeavors to drive oil the dread mes
sengers, and are only happy when we feel t'at
thev are at a di.-tance. At the first approach
of that fell destroyer, Consumption, m ihe '
shape of a cough of slight cold as welt . s more
severe Bronchijl or Catarrhal C.mp.ainto, we
should at oi.oe list Eilert's Extract of Tar and
Wi d Cherry It his no superior in such caees. i
Every bottle wamnted to give satisfaction. '
Sold ly all DniggH
"WOMAN'S
HILPtiUUi.PFLyKN.&USS.,
9F
?Wt-AA
v?seS
m
vu
DtSCOVEHEIt OT
LYDIA E. PSiSKHAM'S
VEGETABLE COMPOUND.
The Positive Core
for nil those Painful Complaints and "Weaknesses
so common toourusii.niaicpuinuii.iu
Itvrfllcure entirely tho worst form of Female Com
plaints, aUomriaa troubles, Infiaaanattoa and Cicero
tion, Falling and Displacements, and the consequent
Spinal Weakness, and la particularly adapted to tho
Change of life. ....
It wUl dUsorre ani expel tumors from tha tterus In
an early stage of development. Tho tendency to can
cerous humors there U checked very speedOr by Its use.
It remoTesfaintness, flatulency, destroys aUeraTing
forsCmulants, and relieves weakness otthastomacb.
It cures Bloatln?, Headaches, Nervous Prostration,
General Debility, Slceplenees, Depression and InUl-
Thatreellng of bearinBdown,eaurins pain, weight
and backache, la alwav3 pennanenUy cured by Us use.
It wOl at all times and under aU circumstances act In
harmony with tho laws that govern the f emalo system.
Tortbecuroof Eldney Complaints of either sex thU
Compound 13 tmsurpasred. ..
LYDIA E. rnSKHAJTS VEGETABLE COM
P0C2Ois prepared at 3 and 235 Western Avenue,
LTra,yxS3 PricoU Six bottles for SI Sent by mad
m-theform of pills, alio In tho fom of lorencti, on
receipt of price, SI Pr box for either. Mrs. Pinkham
fresly answers aU letters of Inquiry. Snd for pamph
let. Address as above. Mention UU PJrA.o
No family ehould be without LTDIAE. nSDUaTS
OVER PHiS. Thoy rare constipation, biliousness.
ad torpidity of the liver. 25 cents per box.
tniTi TiV
AT rDTMaSSi"0 '
THIS OHLY WEDsCiWE
That lets at the srae Tlmo on
the Liver, hc Bowels,
and tlie Kidneys.
These great organs arc P1!
of tho system. H they work TrelLheaWiwOl bo
perfect; if ty bocomo clogsed dreadful dis
eases are sn to follow vita
TER 1BLE SUFFERIHC
Omttiva n. Files, Kidney Complaints,
Gravj ites, Hheumalic Fains or Aches.
S3SS353 tstoeuTnay."1
KIQHE1 10BT WILL RESTOss
V
he healthy
...HriTi nnd all
esa dest-nj x
X them and
wilu win ne
bomsnea; Eegi
xsMrae-j ftritp-a
' add rue more w " "- '--V; It
hi liwiU once more gladden your he .irt.
Why satfcr I.Sr fro- tb. t.mt S J;?1
WnybtirraelnlIttrrMfromCor' ,
KnXKT-WoETwmcureyoti. Trjiws3soos
once and be satlsfled. - H. Tarsu In
ronSkaoTwlnS'nesKarts
oTmllHre
ceatratea ioriaow ; "J.'rr" iVJther form.
WEILS, nlABD? &VU.,rrop-v
AVmsendthedryr-vt-p X) BrruSGTO.T T.
A SKIH OP BEADT7 IS A JOT F0RE7EE
T.O m rPMY nnrU.ATTTVS
DR. T. FELIX GOUKAUirb
Oriental Cream or Magical
, ie 1 1 n nn
UtlSf
Tipmoves Tsn. Pta plea,
Freckles, Stoth-Patche.
and every b!emlsh on
beauty. It has stood Mm
test ot thirty
s.asdUso
nless we
taste It to be
sure ttoe pre
pararlon Is
properly maa.
Accept no
countcrfel-t ct
'sSjnDar name.
The distin
guished Di L.
A. Sayre, fcdd
to a lady of tht
haut ton (a pa
tient:) '
lOUiAttMMfll
we tlem, I recommend 'Govrcvd't Cream' aiV U,t
harmful of au me tan prrnaram. .c""-:ri
Subale removes superCnous halrwithout Injury to the
an. Miot. M. a. T. OOCB AUD. Sole Prop, 48 Bond
t.K.T. For sale by all dmgzlsti snd Fancy Gonai
TMicTt throrehont the United States. Canadai and
Europe. tarBeware of base Imitations which are
ioroadT We offer tlflW Reward Hr the arrest and
proof ot anr one selllcz the same.
ALL PAPER -
WINDOW SHADafc
IThoIessle and realL
atveston gentleman was
iHHFfm HOLWIAN'S
iti'tliln I &DS
7&2SSSffy2iSS?3EB?cpS! J 1
S-is-T .2 & nivJ riy! LJ& E
sttLi r&A ts a va wjs KSifcCT rfc.stresiN r i
rsnr u Di t cg'TP js- c
jisvjt.iij.LU-a. j. j.
TI1IW. fall
-j
m
51 i
Esse
m
7eB
1 B-ESm
- ; s w i
5ii4r m
w
H-ESRY LEHMAHH, OMAHA, MHB.
iSi .Jamalrs cf Tf aU Paper sas
Ac ttt KtrloUiatiit.3et
r iat a sppUextlpa
A ttats iCtrloUi
tallla Ceu i !
Piece.
The minuter stopped at a house last
week, and sought to improve the time
by giving an eight-year-old an instruc
tive lesson in morality. "My boy,"
said the minister, "I have lived forty
five years, and have never used tobac
co in any form, nor told a lie, nor utter
ed an oath, nor played truant nor "
"Gimminy crickets," interrupted the
lad, "yer ain't had any fun at all, have
ye
p
THE
GREAT GERMAN
REMEDY
FOR
RHEUMATISM,
S,J8 NEURALGIA.
iwrsaaraiti ft i
tfwtf iSftS1 A 1
SCIATiCA,
LUMBAGO,
BACKACHE,
ssHpii
$$ W5Sr-J-JaJL
! Kii fc. iiihwimi
'-!:
SORENESS
ortai
CHEST, .
a'.
unHncKfiKtaHunajnfililii! CnDCTUDn ST
iHiwr-i si
QUINSY,
" !1U. 1 m. S i3:
!!i" f'l-'V.
1 "..!
SPELLINGS
SPRAINS,
FROSTEDEET
EARS,
GeseralMflyPam
TOOTH, EAR
HEADACHE,
L. OTBEH WHS
u
So Prepamtija on ejth eaiU St Japosj Oil sir
SCRX. jixrLEtnJcatirEiMrnalKeaifri'' .lra v.
but th e mpiWiTely tn ' BRr ,tU of H'Cxh-r or
i04jirrins T'ih ji. .al'- oi ra'-r:; e '
lUdaimi. DiKICTIOXS IS ELSTKX USOVAGrS.
SOLD BT AIL DIUGQISTS AXS DEALERS IS MI9i:!kt
A. VOGELER & CO.
Jialtimort, XI., V. 8. A
J3
T
WJMUAiX.
w ?"1-. o. ortfasffa
EolmmVB ARB. Wr? IIV .7
3ad, V?r J'r,, -"" "
s special Pa. Adapted u
ie cases. PRICE, 93
Tf fi1a
, Bnln melt. For bfcon
AVilAH
alarseaSpJeaasdtmYieldlBy Lives
1 .P. ii.. rTrr'P 41v.aa-
C3&coia
r. j.nfLCfciia irouoics. v. 4s--
For Kidney Coranlili ,-ojt -JB&SJ
Holman'8 Absorjrtive JtirciwM
Body XMaster. ThcrbeS'tajternu'JeJ
rorous on Rubber basis. PIUCE, sge M
Blolninn'a Absorptive Medicinal
Foot Xlaster9, For Numb Feet anc
Sluggish Circulation. PW'E (per pair) 25c
Absorption Salt 2IC lcatel Foo:
BatllS. For Colds, Obstructions and ai.
cases where a Foot C A is needed. PRICE
(per H lb. package) '. 4c.
FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS,
Or sent bv mail, po aid.on receipt of price. The
ABSORPTION SALT is not "mailable" anc
must be sent by Express at purchaser's expease.
The success of HOLM AX'S PADS has Inspirec
Jnvtators who offer Pads similar in form and
OtSor to thetrne UOLMAN'S, saying, "Thej
are just the sarae,'2-etc.
Reware of all bojrns Pads only ado to seH
on the reputation of the genuine.
See that each Pad bears the Private Rev.
Clttie Stamp of the IIOLMAN PAD COM.
PAN Y, with above Trade Mark printed in greea.
Dr. UOLMAN'S advice is free. Full treaU
ent free on application. Address,
HOLPAN PAD CO.,
P. 0. Mo tilt. 93 TWIUllaBX St.. K1?.
.. ... f.,.r.. !; itirei-Hnn fnr evlltrrtuon on
irhnnrlcant. "Allscd tcarranted to be bothfretK
an 1 true to name; so far, that hould 1 provp uttrr
Ise. will refill the order gratis The original In
" trr.-.uc n' th-H"b. ard Sfjuasb. PhUn'-y's M-Ion.
t Murb.ch. ad CHtsgio. Mrxlcan Corn, ao-isco'esi f
' li rt geublrs. f Irvlte tVe pafronag otattKh
are anxious to hare their ste-i dir'ctlv from the
' nr rtr fresh true, and of the tervbet strain
KlAs vJaSXAlII. A SPECIALTY.
' j VMES J n. GKEOOB T. Marll-Wd. Mats
t Nebraska' State Pair
Awarded a Diploma for the best .Iti-plsy of
Surgical Instrurpents.
Champion Trusses.
Abdominal Supporters,
Dental Instruments, &c
t TO
r
C, F, SoOufflaB, Wholesale DruiglsL
OMAHA, NEB
r?r-A full line always kept In
stocJc and orJen
prompt 'y O.leil by mall or express
Cne Cent
will buy a postal card oa which te send ) uar addreii
and rcc free postage prepaid; a 10) page book on
'The I.ver, Ita llUensen nd their Tr
' ment," including Malarial troubles.
AHrtV...- nR Kavvoed. im .'.roadway. Xew Tork.
r..Tuirrmn KMF.V AM) rjLKJlJSKS.
Vo matter who tn de our Thresher, before yoa
turn a whee en 35 ents lnponap" s snips toths
iultmanit Taylor Company. Jfqnsjleld, Ohio, tar
c t.y o. til " hre.h rra Bolt-Kp-
ins." TnJV."r.TrK',n..
S,m ItwlU be worth tB year to aay farmer
Yif ann rnakLi k eiivut ufco " .-
t coti a cents. If not satlsiacto y,
f
return tht
book, an your o
t- will lr rrf undt d
1 'nU
tofctX aVhlcue t prtce,. Scad fr circular wljifad
TlLe.n's ukais
rnuil cures Nervous Dbll
PrtlcuIrB. K. C BoceBTox.
5 Howard St.. K. T.
mLM m
nmssLsmm
i: 5!l iVM.' .flTITt
ram ,;
m-aiv;!"!".-! imiit immib v
iS-ljifii: c-'-i,,;f.rn Ul I
S . iM' Qd.-iisB is 3
9 !:-, in1. Jit A
Imp!
pkjBxAtt
! a dffiS&y 'fi' ft
is i J si I i
vr
troubles.
Bolmanl
tXA flirv)Tl
- M
u A...ni rntA'ncae of "Veiretab' nnd
FloiTerpr.irorl8l. rich In ercrsv'-yr from
pao 1 graphs of tho rlR'nait. will br son' F RE K to al'
wlo apply- 1 offer one of the latest coUrr'ions of
vesetable ever sent out by any wed Hone I
.?. .... 1 tawr. nnrtlnn nf wMrh WPr 2TOWH fD IDT
KIDNEY diseas
, - -j .irni Trrrtiie-cMof KTDirET-'WORT. Tala new and wonderfnl remeiy vraicoij
kndtoiioto the daeaaed organs, and tnronsn. taem cleanses xne sysxe
r""1. iu.u..fihifTntnitUii7liiiT) been cured, also P!
Humors. J""S-f,-yZT'
JftElVrZ
i.whlcnbavacastrewTOov-j,
rower.
rmfiav.
(Wlusencpos-
HAMLIN'S
?i7"XSilsD
THE GREAT MEDICAL VORDER.
Certificate of a Prominent citizen of Adrian, MIcli., had not
talked without crutches for two years, lie threw them
m,v in 24- hours alter the first application ot TizaruUU.
Dr. Hamlw. When I met your
and the next morning arte? the use of one bottle, I left my catches at hoe and
walked down town without them for the first time twor. I was red need to a
mere skeleton, and most of the time when I moved upon crutc toed to stana
without them, I could not raise either foot from the floor. I u L J"""
and I now feel as well as ever I did in my life, and have g1.?
flesh. It seems almost like a dream. Yaa wn refer to neat ?fta m y , ?a
hAeH of the citizens of Adrian w testify to tha rfV ? Mko,
Yours respcctfalty, John W. FaiisNks, Adnan, Mxh.
A Good Family Remedy.
Harmless to Hie Most Delicate.
BAXjlfAM
(ThlinzrsYtng rfpretrati i5ftics tn nealtar
itato.)
What the Doctors Say!
ISAAC B- DOHAX. M. D.. of Logan Co., Ohio,
writes t hut "Alitu'n Lunar Uulaani jrtrrs prrfeoC
satisfaction In eTT cae within m Itaowtedre. Hv
in;r confidence In ft, I rrwly use It la in r dsi j prac
tice, and irUo. unbounded uccet
DR. FLETCHER, of Lestnstoa. Uiitonri. syt
"I rcooairaeud joar'UfiUnm' In priftrence to nj
Otbcr medicine for conzns and coldi."
DR. A. C JOHNSON; of Mt. Vernon, Ills., wrltej
of kme wonderful cures of Contumpttoa In hi
place br tbe Ue Of A.lIea' X.untt Ui !."
D8.J.B TURXER. BIountsTtlle.
Ala. a Drtietl-
oino niirttr.tsn of twentv-flvp Tears.
wrttea- "itH
the ovit preparation for consumption In th world.
For all Disease of the Tlirout, X.anirs aud
rmmonnrv Oratiins. It will be lound a
mo4t exccllentllemedy.
As an expectorant it has no equal.
It contains no opium in any form
J. N. Harris & Co., Proprietors,
cixcixvatl o .
For ale bv tt Dkcggists.
PsteaWd, Jaly, 1STS.
Deere Cultivator
THE BEST 0TILT1YATQB 31DE.
It Success la Every Market -where Int
duced bear out this claim.
. n 1m twn nrrpa Tnnrfe com T)r ua'
hk n hn with the ordinary Cultivator. Caado
the work much better and eaaier than -with
Ita merits understood, you cannot afford to Taar
any other of the manf'Sprine CidUwtort, wUA
the success of this Cultivator We brought out In
the past year or two.
Send fcr Diary, FREE.
DEERE 4. CO., MOUNE, lU-
g52S83
K - V
ti.xvh.iin. s-3u.K
. --.-mmn i
U MlU10:i3 VHTW
RA1,M FOIi 1. . EUV i
SIAK A T KEA-l
KTUCiiSnhST&HhSl Lift if. tW
LZ - mn. m rw llllllr)!
ts - - -- -
EVER HAI :U AXKrA.
H RA-LTELASGrE TEASE71
7
AiO tti. W . .- " " -" . . . .
: u..la .. .. - t I .
lrnnv-n f. .r oro J'l ' ninv
rears Mt." t v" r l ' "
3 Man a w-a' - i;
llarjrr t ir rvr
!QM.orsr-i , J"
Ic.i 1 muciC, 1 t
e rywiitra-
Bg
fltyouarna
man of irU
nf hninHta.lveiLlC:- '
rf -mn ftraamas t
er.ed Uy the strain of
your duties avoid
stimulants and use
Hod Bitters.
tntouiurovermu
night work, to m
tnn brain nerve and
waste, us HOP
tw, itrAToiiitrsDd
suffering from any in
trotlon or diwlpa
tion. If
if vou are mar
rled or slwile. old or
poor health or languish
ness. rely on Hop
7 ounir. sneering iroii
dcTou a bed of sick.
.goffering trom
nitnnt.
Whoever you are.
whenavar TOO el
noallyirom some
form of Kidney
'Xnouzasoa iuv .'
that yoar system
needs elaansmir, jon-
disaso that mia-t
have been prevented
I by a timely u of
without intoxicating,
take HOP
Bitters.
IIODBinOlI
nave you d-
o. 1. c.
or nri nary com
plaint, disease
la an absolute
Ol XU9 lioimiwh
botctlB. blood,
livtr or turve J
toi will be
cured If yoause
Hop Bitters
EOP
and irrasista
blocnre for
drunkenness,
use of ODium.
tobaoco, or
nareoucs.
If you are slnv
Soldbydrnsr-
iy wen ""
NEVER
rUU. Seodfor
lowsplnteo,wy
it 1 It may
Circular.
FAIL
ser Linus
saveyour
life. It has
saved hun
HTfl co
Ktktrr,M.X,
dreds.
ATor.ntp.Ont.
Omicli & School Bells.
stzxsADrairas
Dtam f Wgtxcith CostQ
StU yoke it Sell at
fra 6 Hang's.
X. ft, 85 In. .23. lbs.. .250O
Xo.6k.27In .SWlbs .. 3600
ify.-;. JOia .4901 s. . WOO
Ko 8. 54 in TWlbs. .75 00
No 9. S81 925lbs. . 13006
Riimafr tt Co., Seneca
Falls, . TC V. 8. JL.
Pure Water
B
WELL BORING AMJ vniuuiw.
. ...... t -n-A i-mA rtrit Usesta t taa
-w:m f- nnRlVG a.KI DBlLLlu ntu- 'I
rnrA for D
Horse or dteam Ppwi-r
Cstalotae frr Ar-ss.
I.OOMIS & HTM AX. TIJTIkoaUi!
TEA AGENTS ??S.3?SE
I tels anr lnse o ns mfn-urmu ""--' ?.Z"vz;Z.
!fy . qnaU'y and tennn thebrst. country storekeeprr
I rboufd calf er write THE -PTELLSrEA. COMrAiT
t an Fnltoa St.. T P )- Box 454
w . N. V.. Oiuaha.
43 li
When writing to advertisers please ay you
.,..-- Va olvirt?mint In thl uaDr
or iu . . . ..w,-- -
CONSTIPATION
c aum esai rre
' AiiU rii.&oi ,
-Whve volnmeof teatteony of ita wonderful curative
ray.a.,r,7r,TnntUaiS!aB7
- ---- "-- ---, nr Atz,
agent here, in September, I had been two years
m dUfliU-" nVs!MsisissssilssK2t
Wm T)9fP-tel y 1 ftJsisssWWMBFsshal
TRADE dP MrSr MR
k.
.irssgj
jVlVJfcgB
t
isL
'iiialoifieFittesilrv
liy Tjfl w.-vusm "
25 iteuijk m
tew' 3i
1 Vi
TS '
fe
tticSM '
wLen a'lSp
, ,'eii'lr'nF
OIL
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.-A
3 Lssssssi
1
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inui
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