The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923, February 17, 1888, Image 7

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RED CLOUD CHIEF
A. C. HOSMER, Proprietor.
BED CLOUD.
- NEBRASKA-
FIRELIGHT.
Not summer's noontide glory
Infolding mountain hoary.
A breadth o? woven jroM,
For moonbeams as thej quiver
At midnight on the river:
Xor starlight pare and cold;
Nor plare of lamps revealing
The r-tMy mazes wheeling.
Of feet that net er tire
da rival in their splendor
That mystic charm and tender,
A trembling, Htful fire.
Tor while the say liht dances
"Upon the wall, what rancies
Come dam-ins over the roul
Come quicker yet and quicker.
The more the bright tongues Kicker
In lishtmnps from the coaL
Then palaces are builded,
.And days unborn are jrilded
With visionary pleam:
Ti then the memory passes
.Beneath the churchyard grasses
In retrospective dream.
Ah. Firelight, weird, enchantin?.
Knzht hopes ad dra-us implontinj;
Mot -weet of liqhts and blest.
Beneath th benediction.
Hearts weary with life's frictioa
Caa find a moment's rest.
CJiav&n' Journal.
GIGANTIC BEABS.
The Grizzly and the Silver Tip,
tho Black, the Brows, Etc
rienty or Them in the Xnrtliirestern Tcr-
ritorie A litre Encounter Where
31an and Rrar Itoth Went
Over the Precipice.
The 1)1;: grizzly bears found all
through the canons of the Rocky
Mountain? ami purs of the great range
seldom descends from lofty altitudes,
where thry manage ear in ami year
out to eke out a subsistence near the
perpetual snow line. An ohl anil ex
perience! hunter has s:;id that "any
man- a fool to go in arter bear alone."
The bruins of the East ami the bruins
of the West are almost totally different
animal. The "Ursa Majors' of this
latitude are monstrous in size. endowed
with ugly dispositions and prodigious
strength, and as for grit, they dispute
and very of. en successfully, too the
sovereignty of the mountains and
fore-ts with the king of American
Least?. he mountain lion. Hunters
dingroe upon tiie point of how many
different species of the bear tribe we
have in the Northwest. There are at
least three distinct types of the family
:n Montana, namely, the grizzly,
brown and black bear, lieside the-c.
then" are aln gray boars, cinnamon
"bears, and the Rocky Mountain gray
back. The true gi"ay is seldom, if ever,
seen now a high as the forty-tifth
parallel, and a far east as the main
-jjvide: the cinnamon is simply a cro-s
betiveeh tin brown and black liears.
ind the mighty silver tip is neither
more or less than a mongrel of the
brown and grizzK. partaking strongly
of the nature of the two. particularly
of the latter. In fact. I think I am
justified in asserting that all the mem
bers of the species intermarry, and
that the silver tip is the king of the
family. This big fellow, springing
from the grizzly and the brown, com
bines all the ferocity and tough strength
of the former with the agility and stub
bornness of the latter, each distinctive
trait iK'ing more prominent in him. and
possessed to a greater degree than by
the very animais from which he bor
tows them. The silver tip is unques
tionably the ruler of the family, hv
Traon of his great size and belligerent
disposition. Lewis and Clarke, in their
narrative of their journey through tins
region nearly one hundred years ago.
speak ot meeting not only brown and
black bears, bat al-o numerous white
"bears, w ho made it perilous traveling
at times fi.r various members of that
"bold pioneer party. There are no
white bears in Montana. D.ikota. Idaho,
or the bordering pos-i.-sion.inf the Can
adian Northwest. Probably the albi
nos referred to were cinnamon bears,
-who. early in the spring after coming
out of :t winter's sleep, take upon
thein-elves a dirty, jellowi-h-brown
color, which, at a di-tance and in a
snow-"overed country, might readily
be mistaken for white bears whose coat
of fur badly needed a bath. In one
-place, sfier cominir noon a so-called
white bear, the journal describe him
as po-es-iner small black eyes (almost
like jet beads), a hide of bright yellow
ish brown, the front of the fore-legs
near the feet being quite black, and
the animal itself of a ferocious and
-warlike nature. Thi- description of
the white bear of 1801-5 tallies with
the cinnamon bear of 1S37. which
makes him about the same uirly cu
tomer that he was a. hundred years
ago. There are few black bears in
this immediate vicinity, most of them
inhabiting the western slope of the
Itocky Mountains and the forests that
thence continue to trie Pacific Ocean.
The woods of Oregon and Washing
ton are overrun with black bear-.
The largest black ieiiow I ever saw in
my life was in the wood- of Washing
ton Territorv. near Mount Kainicr.
The black bears of Monta::::, as wett.a
ihe cinnamon, as a rule inhabit 1
places. sti-h as creek and river bottom
willow marshes, and umo-red spot
but grizzlies and sihT tips stick t
LSirh nltitU'Se.-. from vhich even hiiiisv
pressure seldom driv5 them. Grizzlie
are generally credit 1 with highly-eiilj-
iated appetite : carnivorous food.
CiHip-f:re stories .citod,y tell of rh
b'(l:hir-lv uiViJl-c monsters habi-
tiu'dv thrive '1. !- were all tl
buid- inilliti y-H'US aired around tin,
cheerful bU'- carefully sifted dow
for facts I am afraid that fully ninety
per cent, of the grizzly stories would
turn out to e lictiou. I do not think
agrizzly is carnivorous from choice.
He seldom descends from his mountain
home to the creeks and rivers in search
of wild plums and chokebcrries (the
favorite diet of brown, cinnamon, and
black lears). but prefers to remain
aloft ami feast upon the stores laid up
for winter use bj- his industrious
neighbors, the gophers and mountain
squirrels. Pine nuts arc plentiful high
up, and then the grubs and worms
found beneath old stones and moss
overgrown boulders are good enough
for King Bruin while they last. hen
the nut, ljerry and plum supply run
short, none of the family hesitate to
fall back upon a diet of pork. beef,
mutton or venison. A recent l'eport
from the Highwoods, in the neighbor
hood of Arrow and Wolf creeks, say
that more bears have been seen thts
year than for ten years past, and that
quite a number of cattle have been
killed by them of late. A few months
ago. at Mullery's i-anch. near Gorhaai.
a big silver tip came down out of the
mountains one nirht. invaded the hog
pasture of that industrious ranchman,
and in a very short time laid out no
less than thirty line porkers. The hogs
squealed, made a great fuss, of course,
and as long a 5 there was a show of resist
ance the bear never stopped boxing their
ears. One blow of his mighty paw was
enough to kill a hog. and there is no
telling where he would have stopped
had he not been interrupted in this
pleasant pastime.
The graybaek of the Rockies is rather
a dillerent brute from his cousin of the
Adirondacks and the Pennsylvania
hills. Perhaps the Eastern members
of this interesting family never weigh
more than four hundred or live hun
dred pounds, but out this way many of
the grizzlies and silver tip caught
have touched the beam at one thousand
and twelve hundred pounds and even
greater. Mr. Charle Soper. of Boze
nian. a thriving city a short distance
west of here, is said to have shot one of
the largest graybaek:; ever seen in the
West. The hide was something tre
mendous. The beast having been
killed late in the fall, at a time when
he was plentifully supplied with -bear's
grease." it would not be wide of the
mark to estimate his weight when alive
at sixteen hundred pounds. Certainly
the enormous hide justified these lig
ures. and the claws and head preserved
would justly entitle him to the credit
of being the father of the family.
A a proof of the widom of the old
hunter's warning about "going in arter
bear alone.' the following narrative ,
will best illustrate hs truthfulness:
"A party of gold hunters started out
from Deadwood some years ago to
prospect the country to tiie north and
west of that mining camp. The men
in the party were old timers.' with
one or two exceptions, and among the
latter was a Swede, full of grit, who
-tood nearly seven feet in his stockings.
j The Swede, however, whoc familv
name was Franck. was by no means a
tenderfoot. having dwelt some time in
the Leadville mining camp and boasted
that he had killed 'bar in hi- day.' and
was afraid of no four-footed critter
that roamed the mountains. The
party of twelve were climbing a sleep
mountain, darkness was coming on.
and prospects of a supperles night were
in view, when the seven-foot Scandina
vian volunteered to push on ahead in
the hopes of securing an elk. deer, or
mountain sheep. The foreigner was a
good shot with his rifle, had plenty of
grit and courage, and his immense
strength and powerful physique ren
dei'ed it extremely improbable that he
would find his match in the timber
ahead. The hunter disappeared, and
the others. toiled on behind, climbing
the steep ascent wearily and footsore.
At one place the road wound around a
steep precipice, the sheer descent of the
cut basaltic walls on the left being
something like a thousand feet. Far
below the tops of giant pines could be
discerned, but in the awful depth they
appeared like stunted shrubs .and
bu-hes. Near the summit and to the
right the free land broadened or
widened out. and this wa covered
with a dense growth of willows and
stunted pine, from which proceeded
the inu-t awful grwn tilings and howls
imaginable. Just as the part appeared
on the top all at once out from the
stubble came retreating the big Swede,
followed by an enormous silver tip,
who was driving him slowlv backward
toward the edge of the precipice. The
man was bleeding badly, nearly all of
one side of his face being torn away,
the result of a wicked blow from the
huge paw of the vicious monster. The
bear, on the other hand, was quits as
badly wounded as his antagonist. His
head was a mass of gore, the lower jaw
was simply hanging by a few shteds.
and one of his hind legs was
broken. The Swede was backing sloiv
Iy. holding in his light hand n large
hunting knife, which every second lie
would plunge to the hilt in the shoulder
of his shaggy foe. At one thrust of the
Swede the bar caught him fairly witb
a return whack of his monstrous paw
that must have broken the man's arm,
for he quickly transferred the blade to
his left hand, and gave back blow for
blow as best he could. The denoue
ment came so suddenly that the horror
stricken comrade could render no pos
sible assistance. Even had they started
on a run. they could not have reached
their friend in time, and to risk a shot
with a ritle would have been just as
dangerous to the Swede as to the bear. ,
Step b- step the man was forced back.
intil he hung almost upon the edge of
he precipice. There seemed no hope
,r him unless he could assume the ag-
ressive in turn, and this could not be
one, as the man was doing his utmost, '
and still the silver tip was getting the
better of the fight. All at once the des
perate animal raised his huge paw and
brought it down with a territic force
ujxm the head of the man. The scalp
was torn away by this lat stroke and
the poor feilow was blinded by his own
blood. Again the bear struck him,
and the Swede tottered on the brink
with nothing in reach to lay his hands
on by which he might save himself.
Evidently with the desperation of death
staring him in the face Franck did the
only thing possible under the circum
stances. As he was swaying backward
and ready to go over he threw from him
the useless knife, and, in despair of all
hope, madly clutched the beast around
the neck with both arms. The force of
the last onslaught carried the animal
too far. for the next moment both the
silver tip and the man. in that awful
embrace of death, went rolling over
the frightful precipice together and
were dashed into an unrecognizable
mass on the rocks and pines hundreds
of feet below. Franek's rille was found
in a bunch of quaking uspens, broken
short off at the stock. There were no
cartridges in the chamber, which
proved that the seven-footer had
certainly exhausted his magazine be
fore drawing his knife, and that after
he had shot all his shells the silver tip
had insisted upon lighting at close
quarters, which accounts for the broken
stock aud verifies the probability of the
man clubbing his gua when the mad
dened beast rushed upon him. It was
late in the fall when the encounter
occurred, probably at a time when the
nionster was heavily equipped with fat,
and, of course, the long keen knife
vould have to pass through a thick
layer of "blubber" before encounter
ing a vital part. Fort Keogh (J. 2'.)
Cor. X. Y. 7'imc.
THRILLING ADVENTURE.
S. Fuwui Sptirtatitairs Narrow Escape
from an Enrased Panther.
How it feels to find one's self in the
jaws of a panther is that kind of knowl
edge which most people are well con
tent to acquire at second-hand. Prol
ably all men would not have tiie same
sensations, but this is the account which
Odonel Barras gives of such an ex
p?rience. He was a born sportsman,
ami, of course, could enjoy many
things which to ordinary persons would
Stem any thing but pleasant:
The panther came for me with light
ning bound. I could see nothing, ow
ing to it tremendous speed, but a
-hadowy-looking form with two large,
bright, round eye fixed upon me with
an unmeaning stare, as it literally flew
toward me. Such was the vision of a
moment! My presence ot mind did
not desert me. I raised my gun and
tired with all the care I could at such
short notice. But I missed, and the
panther landed, light as a feather, with
its arn round 1113- shoulders. Thus
we stood for a few seconds, and I dis
tinctly felt the animal sniffing for my
throat. Mechanically I turned my
head so as to keep the thick, wadded
curtain of my helmet-cover in front of
the creature's muzzle: but still I could
hear and feel plainly the rapid yet
cautious efforts it was making to find an
opening, so an to tear open the jugular
vein.
I was helpless, and so stood perfectly
still, well knowing that Saudford would
liberate me. if possible. At the first
onslaught we were so placed that he
could have hit the panther only by
tiring through me, which would have
been injudicious, at least. As may
easily be supposed, the animal did not
spend much time in investigating the
nature of a wadded hat-cover, and. be
fore my friend could take aim without
jeopardizing my own life, the beast
pounced on my left elbow, taking a
piece out. and buried its long, sharp
fangs in the joint till they met. At the
same time I was hurled to the earth
with such force that I knew not how I
got there nor what became of my gun.
Still, throughout, I maintained a clear
impression of what was going on.
I knew that I was lying on the ground
with the panther on top of me, and I
could feel my elbow-joint wabbling in
and out as the brute ground its jaw3,
with a movement imperceptible to the
bystanders, but which felt to me as
though I was being violently shaken
all over. Nov.-1 listened anxiously for
the report of Sandford's shot, which I
knew would be heard immediately, and
carefully refrained from making the
slightest sound or movement, lest his
aim should be disturbed thereby. In a
few seconds the loud and welcome de
tonation, which from its proximity al
most deafened me, struck upon my ear.
I sat up. I was free! the panther
gone! I looked round and found that
I wa some distance from the place
where I had fallen, so that the beast
must have dragged me some little way.
Sandford. ns soon as he had got thti
chance, had placed the muzzle of his
rille to the side of my antagonist and
tired a large bullet right through it.
which had caused it to dart back hastily
to its lair. Youth's Companion.
a m
Plantation Philosophy.
I knows some pussons dat I likes ter
talk ter, not becaze 1 think so much o'
'cm. b:t becaze w'en 1 'verses wid 'eiu
I alius thinks mo' o' merse'f.
Natur', it 'pear like, takes ersort o
pleasure in llingin' cold water on de
bright promises dat she hab made. De
blaekest ha'r is nearly alius de soones'
ter turn gray.
D:r is many things wus den de lie
dat is used fur ter kiver up er bad
truth: not dat kine dat hides er crime,
but de kini! dat makes us b'lelie dat
suthin' good has been said erbont it,
when de fi:ck is, dat suthin' bad has
been said. Ar&amate Traveler.
'-Spanish" onions, which are really
Sicilian anil Italian onions, are largely
supplanting the American onion froui
the markets 'of this country.
I
LONDON'S PET GOHIiLA.
"The Baby from the Tropics Prore to Be a
4.1'nmjr Little tVlIow.
The unpleasant idea that must arise
in the mind of a visitot-to the gorilla
which has been comfortably housed in
the Zoological Society's gardens.
Regent's Park, will probably be that
he ought to be spoken of as our young
relation. The missing link, it is true,
may yet be wanting, but it is humiliat
ing to be forced, fter watching the
newcomer, and the Chimpanzee Sally,
in the next cage, to the conclusion that
the hairy creatures behind the bars
and the nineteenth-century people in
front of them have much in common.
Our young gorilla is, of course, at
present, the curiosity par excellence at
the Zoo. This is his indisputable right,
because of his rarity.
The successful prolongation of Chim
panzee Sally's life to the fourth year
gives hope that the gorilla may abo be
kept in the laud of the living to be
petted, admired, argued about and to
be called (to its face) a great troglo
dyte and an anthropomorphous ape.
Our young gorilla does not. so far, im
press us as being of a happy or con
tented disposition. Small wonder, in
deed, is there for hi melancholy. He
voyaged from the Gaboon in a wretched
box with scarce room to move, and
arrived from Liverpool at the Zoologi
cal Gardens terribly knocked about,
and, of course suffering from a cold
that it was feared would be the fore
runner of that pulmonary disease
which so generally proves fatal to the
tropic-born anthropoids. The chim
panzee, coming also from gorilla land,
hail been very good practice for Mr.
Bartlett, who accordingly nursed the
gorilla with almost parental care, and
has had the satisfaction of seeing him
recover health aud in some measure
become reconciled to his captivity. The
auiiv.al has all the characteristic marks
of the true gorilla, aud it is a great
advantage to the natural-history
student to have the importunity of
making comparison between him and
the chimpanzee. Which of the two is
most human in appearance will
probably be a matter of opinion.
Sally is tame, and even playful. She un
derstands what her keeper says to her,
and has been taught by him to count
straw's up to live. She is fond of being
noticed and will thrust out her paw,
with its long filbert naiK to grasp the
hand of a stranger. The gorilla as
yet will make friends with none, but
he will occasionally be tempted at the
sight of a bunch of grapes to come
forward and sulkily pick up and eat
the fruit thrown in among the straw. By
and by he may emerge from his sullen
tit and permit himself to be handled
like his distant relative next door.
After all. he is, being three years of
age, but a baby, and there is ample
time for tho ameliorating influences of
kind treatment (not to mention the
courses of bananas, grapes, and an
occasional pineapple to which he is
meanwhile treated) to soothe his savage
and remarkably broad breast. Sally is
more human, at least in her diet, than
the gorilla,, for she has no objection to
meat, and will tear to pieces and make
very short work with a pigeon. The
gorilla's appetite has naturally to be a
good deal humored in these early days,
when the luscious fruits and berries of
his native forests have not been qnite
forgotten. The atmosphere of the
house in which these large apes reside,
which is 011 the north side of the
gardens (opposite the kangaroos), is
kept at about seventy degrees, and the
cages of both gorilla and chimpanzee
are roomy apartments, furnished as
appropriately as can be expected
under the circumstances. The gorilla
will mostly be found crouched upon
the straw at the remote end of his
house, with his arms clasped behind
his head, and the stolid expression of
his flat face and dark eyes expressive
of a settled gloom. There i in his
demeanor at such times a real touch
of nature that makes him kin with all
who have been unhappy. The young
naturalist who studies this young
specimen should supplement his visit
to the gardens by another to the
Natural If i story Museum, where a
stuffed adidt .specimen will be found.
London Daily S'etcs.
Who Strtck Billy Patterson.
AlKmt fort years ago, at one of the
medical colleges of this country, the
students had a trick of hazing every
new man who entered the institution.
They would secure him hand aud foot,
carry him before a mock tribunal, and
there try him for some high crime with
which they charged him. He would be
convicted, of course and sentenced to
be led to the block and decapitated.
A student named William Patter
came along in time, and was put
through the court and sentcm-cd in
the usual solemn and impressive man
ner. He was blindfolded and led to
the block, and his neck placed in po-i-liim.
The executioner swung his axe
and buried it in the block, allowing it,
to be sure, to go nowhere near Patter
son's head. The students laughed
when the trick was at an end, but Pat
terson wa dead. He had died from
what medical men call shock. All the
students were put under arrest, and
tire question arose, "Who struck Billy
Patterson?" On the trial it was shown
that nobody struck him, but the medi
cal students retained the cxpres-ion,
and it h:u? come down through them to
the present day. SL Louis Globc-Pem-ocraL
A good place to study human na
ture is in a horse car; but you are apt
to thin"c that human nature isn't worth
studying before you get through.
Homerville JounicL
PUNGENT PARAGRAPHS.
Scientists say that the potato rot
romes once in ten years every de
cayed, as it were. Tid-DtU.
A ton of diamonds is worth $30,
000.000. Don't let the dealers come
the 1.S00 pound dodge on you." Fuck.
Too cold for ice cream and no
sleighing. The young man who can't
save money now never can. Albany
Journal.
For thirty-two years Mrs. Catherine
Murdock has kept the light in the
Rondout (N. Y.) lighthouse burning
brightly.
One Robert Hickman has lately
patented a calf weauer. P-rhaps he
can invent a device to wean a dude
from nursing his cane.
There is nothing under the face of
the sky that can be quite so stuck up as
, a sheet of stamp, when it tries to.
I Detroit Free Press.
Some of the men who are anxion3
I for a revolution as to theater hats
might do good work toward a reform
in theater breaths. Merchant Traveler.
It is all well enough to say that
thirteen is an unlucky number. But this
country started in business with thir
teen States, aud seems to be holding
her own.
"Papa," asked little Bobby Mc
Swilligeti, "what is a railroad pool?"
"A railroad pool. Johnny?" replied Mc
Swilligen, "is where they water the
stock."
What this country needs is a so
ciety to protect the innocent seals from
slaughter. At least that is what the
average impecunious husband thinks.
Somcrville Journal.
A match vender entered a butcher
shop, when the following brief dialogue
was heard: Vender "Hello, Chops!
How's your liver to-day?" Chops
"Three cents a pound. How's vour
lights?" Lo'ccll Citizen.
A new cab company just started in
New York, bases it claim for patron
age on a patent hansom with a top that
lowers to suit the occupant. A cab
with a price that lowers to suit the oc
cupant would fill a long-felt want.
"What is your spL-cialty. my
friend? " inquired the visitor of a
dime-museum freak. "Phenomenal
intelligence." "In what direction does
it lie?" "I'm the man who always
shuts the door.' " Harper's Bazar.
People who have studied into the
origin of phrases all agree that the say
ing, "I acknowledge the corn," was
invented by a man. A woman never
acknowledges a corn no matter in what
condition a husband may find his pet
razor. Somerville Journal.
An article in a newspaper the other
day was called "A Novel Railroad."
We have traveled on it. It is tfie rail
road on which a train-boy drops forty
seven soiled novels of the Suicide Li
brary series on the passenger's lap be
fore he travels ten miles. Drake's Mag
azine. Smith "That fellow. Jones, whom
you introduced me to lastevening, seems
to be busines to his finger tips."
Brown "Ye., I can tell you he is a
cleaner. In his way." S. "What does
he do?" B. O. he runs a carpet reno
yatingestablishment." Boston Budget.
Tramp " Could yon furnish me
lodgings of some kind to-night?" "Why
don't yon work and earn money to pay
your way?" "I did work until a month
ago." "What business were you in?"
"I was pastor of one of the werdthiest
congregations in Connecticut." "Is
that so? Then what reduced you to
this condition?" "Seven donation par
ties in six months." Omah- World.
THE PATENT FIEND.
H InTeaU a Safety ho Which Laads Iliam
la a Sato Rmnrc
"Want to make $50,000 this winter?"
queried a hawk-eyed man with a lap
shoulder to a shoe-dealer on Michigan
avenue yesterday.
"Of course.'
"Then buy my patent."
He uurolled a packajre and brought
to light a shoe, a tic funnel and a quart
of wood ashes.
"What 0:1 earth is it?" asked tho
dealer.
It is Bronson's Patent Safety Shoe.
Here's the idea: In winter our side
wfilks are dangerous from ice. By
sprinkling ashes on ice you produce
dccompisitiou and render travel safe.
Do vou follow?"
..ij.It ?"
"Of course yoa don't, but 111 ex
plain. This is a double-soled shoe.
There is a. space between the two soles,
and the toe and heel ends are open.
You till this space with ashes and as
vou walk it dips out in advance of
you."
"The idea!"
"Yes, I worked twenty-two years on
the idea. The funnel fits into the heel
of the shoe, and is used to load up
with."
But the ashe-?"
"O. yon hire a boy to follow you with
a pail of them. When .he sh-..e is
empty you whistle and he Iu.uls it up
again. There's nothing like it. I can
walk twenty miles a day over a perfect
glare of ice. Will vou give me an
order?"
"No. sir. It's the most ridiculous
thing I ever hoard of."
"It is. eh! You'll see whether it is
or not before the winter is over! I'll
sell enough to buy you out aud throw
your stock into the river!"
An hour later he was arreslel for be
ing drunk and hilarious, and as lie
went down in the wagon he was ex
plaining to the officer:
You puz on 'er shoe, you know, an'
you pus in 'er ashes, you, know, an'
you walk on cr ice an' 'er patrol "wagon
comes 'long an' gives you alcigh-rida."
Detroit Free Pfcss.
JACOBS OH
LUMBAGO.
Carriage. Why so many deviate from a
graceful carriage may be accounted for in as
many ways u there are misshapen beings.
MUSCULAR WEAKNESS.
LtM Back. The spinal column is the main
stay of the body, which stiffens up the
straicht man or woman, and nature has
provided muscular supports to hold it erect.
TWISTED OUT OF SHAPE.
DiltortiOIS. Men and women recklessly
twist themselves out of shape, and the re
sult is the few standing straight and the
many bending down.
SYMPTOMS.
Pains. Those which afflict the back are the
most insidious or subtile. They come at
times without warning; we rise "from a ait
tin? posture to iind the back so crippled ox
strained as to cause acute suffering.
TREATMENT.
Care. Rub the parts afflicted freely with
St. Jacobs Oil; rub hard and vigorously,
producing warmth, and if the pain is slow
in yielding, wrap the parts in tlaunel steeped
in hot water and wrung out.
Sold by DruggUU and Dtalert Errnfletere.
THE CHARLES JL VOCEIEH CO.. BaMtawa. M4.
18 TEARS AGO.
For IS yean I have intended writing yon.
1 rot my back hurt when about 10 yeara.
old. When about 20 I took severe cold i
my back, so that for 10 or 12 years I suffer
death twice over, after almost giving up 1
was induced to try MerrelTs Peaetratinr.
Oil. My wife applied it to my back freely
and halt a bottle cured me, and now 13
yeara hare passed and my back still re
mains good. I have recommeaded Mer
rell's Penetrating Oil to all like sufferers
since As long at I live I cannot m
enough for it. Fklix Miixeb,
To Merchant, Hico, Ark.
J. S. Mxrrxzx. Dbcg Co., St. Louis, Mo.
rrica a iiDrtvwrrstrrABi r oornaaiTiiil
).cBW "nisl
MPRIASH!
5ENNA-MANDRAKE-BUCHU
uo omci iqnAisytnTODJT AonMS
IthasBteod the Test of Ytara.
ui Caring all aea a or tat
L00S.iaVK. BXOJK-
ACS. "CD5ZYS,B0W
ELS.fts. ItPorifieatha
Blood, Invigorates and
Cleanse tho iy stem.
BITTERS
BYSPEPS1A.C0HSTI.
CURES
PATIO. JAUVDICE.
ALLBSOSESI
SICKHEADACHE.HL-
LIVER
I0USC0MPLAIKT3,e
r'iiTin t trmraTtnrltiT
SKIDNEY5
its bsuefldal inflocoM.
STOMACH
AND
It ! nnnh a Vsdiein
u its cathartic prtpar
tia forbids ill ua as a
BO
strange. Itisplaas-
Tr;
aat to tM taste, ana as
aaailv takaa by chili-
JLLDRUGGISti
ruasadalts.
PltOaTAMEITTClSCf
iPHICQDOLLAJa
I 8olPTopritoT.
t BrXomaud Saxsm Cut
YMwusm catarrh
Ttaif
hit,
Traublt,
AJrownx craa
CATARRH
BTCSDfO
ELY'S
CREAM BALM. I
-ttVER
A Mitld !a aasHcd Into aea aoatrU and to acrvcobla.
Prtc Meant at drsnlrta; by nail, ngiatare!, ( et
SXT BKOTBXBS. SSOiwawlca SL.BwTork.
rOK AIL DISORDEKS OF TBX
Stomach, Liver
DaWjndJowels
PACIFIC
7rr.""4xc-TX."ir veoetable.
Crai; CossnPATiojf.IXDiQcsnox.DTsrrTszA.
flLXS.SlCK HSADACHX.LITKK COMPLAINTS. LlSS
or Appsnn. Biuocsyxss. X EaTocsxEsa. Jacs
oick. Etc pkice, ss cccto.
raCIFIC AWACTCMHB CO.. ST. IQtS.f.
THE GREAT ENGLISH BEHEST
For liver. Ell. Inattention. t. Tree from Merrnryj
contains only Vun Vegetable Inirrrdieni. Aarnt-.
METER Bite. CK. ST. Wg. W.
TO THE LADIES!
1 raoa thi witwml uskal Manssoo cannst.
We with to eail the attention of every married lady
la the land to the new and roeceufnl treatment of Dr.
Spragae for Womaa. We dadra the co-operation ot
very married lady. Send for oar circular. a it rocta
but a poatal card to obtain It. and from' it learn vatae.
thine ealnable. NATIONAL MEBICAL WPE.!
lStt CwMlMS Y. tX IN ar teem at, Caieac. 1M1
Mexican
Mustang
Liniment
elate.
f Seratdu
Zws&ags.
Sfxaias,
Mm Tim
wnuatj
StiteTuaj
StuTJoi,
Svrsfi
HosfAa,
tacav
an
adaaaji
Salk,
farm
taaria
I lilAilisWiiw1! In
lam-H "IUfl"iJi
Toques
,- BILIOUS a-J
For MAN or BEAST, M it k
VK0I0O8LY ! !
1
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