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About The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923 | View Entire Issue (April 1, 1892)
-a .'LWWJ & s. or i ITjJ i H THE BED CLOUD CHIEF. A. C. HOSMER, Publisher. RED CLOUD. .--- NEBRASKA CURRENT COMMENT. The February earnings of the New York Central were the largest in the history of that road over S100.000 a day. A Rosa Uoxheur painting, "Les Chamois," that was smuggled into New York, was sold by the customs officials for 51, 050. CnABLES L. Hublbukt, of New York, lias made a clock of 320 kinds of wood, in 341,000 pieces. It took over sixteen years to build. A bili. prohibiting to private individ uals in Italy the sale and export of rare old paintings to foreigners abroad was passed by the Italian parliament the other day. Gejt. WiSTOR,of Philadelphia, has just piven 5100,000 to the university there, with the understanding that his name should not be known, but one of the trustees incautiously divulged it The Patagonian lights his pipe, throws himself down with his face to ward the ground and swallows several mouthfuls of smoke in a manner which produces a kind of intoxication lasting several minutes. During the last forty years in which Lord Tennyson has drawn a pension lie has devoted the whole of it each year toward the relief of authors or the families of authors in distress. lie has, in fact, constituted himself the almoner of a fund of 51,000 a year for the relief of the necessities of authors. Two little islands furnish four-Gfths of the cloves consumed by the world. The islands are Zanzibar and Pemba, and a little while ago Arabs found it very proQtable to bring slaves from the African lake region to the coast and smuggle them in the night over to Pemba to work on the clove planta tions. Some Swiss artists at Geneva arc painting a large panorama of the IJernese Alp?, with the intention of bringing it to Chicago for the world's fair. The panorama will measure 51x345 feet and cost 5300,000. The sketches for the panorama were taken from the summit cf the Mannlichen, e.OOO feet high. TnE French crown jewels arc said to have once included among their num ber a perfect dragon, two inches in length, carved from a ruby of the first water. When the Summer Palace at I'ekin was sacked a head of Buddha, carved from a magnificent ruby, fell to the duke of Brunswick as his share of the spoils. After his death it sold for 0.000. , Tun king of Italy has a perfect fancy for attending fires. The other evening he was due at the German embassv, where Count Solms gave a balL Her Majesty Queen Margaret, radiant in a toilet of pale yellow silk, and dazzling with superb diamonds, came alone, and stated that his majesty the king had gone to a fire which had broken out at a manufactory of maccaroni and Italian paste, and he remained at the scene until the flames were subdued. A laege meteor fell on the prairie in the Choctaw nation, Indian territory, recently. It was imbedded at least twenty feet in the earth and protruded twelve feet in the air. The meteor when seen appeared in the air like a monster ball of fire. When the earth was struck it fairly trembled, and there was a spluttering and sizzing like unto a piece of hot iron dipped in to cold water. The meteoric stone was as hot as a furnace several hours after it descended to the earth. SECKETAnr Foster, who recently re turned from a trip to London says he found that the silver question is one of the principal topics of conversation in London. He also noticed that there is an increasing sentiment in favor of bi metallism. This sentiment, however, found but slow growth among the bankers and brokers of Lombard street which corresponds with our Wall street They are generally opposed to a change. He hoped that an international confer ence in silver would be arranged. A remarkaiii.e family lives in Morris county, New Jersey. It is composed of the children of L. Sliker and Mehita bel Swavne, who were married in 1793 at Pleasant Grove, Morris county. Fifteen children were born to this union and of these the survivors are: Anna, 00 years and 9 months; James, 85 years and 8 months; Delilah, S3 years and 9 months; Isaac, 77 years and 11 months; Catharina. 73 years and 8 months; Loisa, CO years and 7 months; Matthew. 07 years and 0 months; Me hitabel, 05 years and 0 months. This is an aggregate of over 70 years and 0 months for eight living brothers and sisters. Mas Strakosch, who died recently, came to America in 1S53 in response to an invitation from his brother Maurice, who was then conducting musical en terprises in the United States. In 1855 he managed his first season of Italian opera at the old Academy of Music in New York. Teresa Parodi was then his prima donna and his brother Mau rice was the musical conductor. In 1859 he became the agent of Adelina Patti, accompanying her on her tour to New Orleans and Havana. In 1SG1 the young manager brought out Carlotta 1'attL His concert troupe then com prised 6uch artists as Mile. Cordier, llrignoli. Carlo Patti, a brother of Ade lina Patti, the great pianist Gottschalk Rntl others. Four years later, after parting from Jacob Grau, Max formed hi first Italian opera company. Ghioni, Cantssa, Errani, Maccaferri, Parepa Uosu and Brignoli were members of tho troupe. Franceses Jlosa was the conductor. In 1SSS ho introduced Clara jioub Kellogg to the American public. NEWS OF THE WEEK. Gleaned By Telegraph and MaiL FERSOXAI. AND rOUTICAI- The Jacksonian club, of Omaha, has engased rooms for 1.003 members dur ing the Chicago convention. The Kentucky democratic convention to elect delegates to the Chicago con vention will be held in Louisville, May 25. Queex Victoria has gone to southern France on a visit Lord Dufferix, the new British am bassador to France, has presented his credentials to President Carnot The ceremony was conducted with great pomp. Geo. Trevixo denies the report that he is a candidate for the presidency of Mexico. He says he regarJs the elec tion of Senor Diaz as necessary to the welfare and prosperity of the country. It is reported that the Russian am bassador at Viennahasbecn instructed to give the Austrian government assur ance that the movement of Russian troops in Poland arises from the neces sity of facilitating the provisioning of forces and has no hostile meaning. Brazilian Minister Mexdoxea de clares that Brazil is preparing a grand world's fair exhibit and Caliz Gomez. the Brazilian composer, proposes to write an anthem. Hox. J. S. Clarksox, ex-postmaster general, nrrived at Hot Springs, Ark., on the 22d accompanied by his wife and C. F. Meek and Charles Mc Atler, of New York. Hox. Roger Q. Mills was elected a senator of the United States from Texas, almost unauimouslv on the 22d. Dr. Agnkw. who attended President Garfield, at Elberon, N. J., is dead. British troops have been repulsed in Scncgambia. The local option bill has been de feated in the Iowa legislature. The Wisconsin supreme court has de clared the reapportionment bill un constitutional Couxt Zedi.itz has refused to with draw his resignation from the German cabinet Chancellor von Caprivi has not resigned. Col. J. IL Estell has resigned his membership in the national democratic executive committee in which body he represented thi state of Georgia. M. Ribot, minister of foreign affairs, and M. Ricard, minister of justice, have submitted to the French cabinet the text of an extradition treaty with the United States. President Harrison on the 23d sent Lord Salisbury's refusal to renew the modus vivendi to the senate, which held an executive session on the mat ter. Mr. Gordon, of British Columbia, has given notice of his intention of in troducing a bill amending the Chinese immigration act by increasing the poll tax on Chinese immigrants from 550 to 5100 per head. Hero Bauer, editor of the Leipsic Tagesanscr, has been expelled from that country by order of the Saxon ministry for slandering Minister Schel linn. Bauer is a Russian. The Bishop of Rimouski, Canada, has cited three priests from the county of Rimouski to appear before him to answer to charges of undue influence in the recent provincial elections. The chairman of the state executive committee of the people's party of Tex as has issued a call for conventions to be held in every county throughout the state to elect delegates to the state convention at Waco, May 8. It is announced that Premier Abbott of Canada, will be knighted shortly by Queen Victoria. Minister Reid made a farewell speech at a banquet tendered him in Paris on the 24th. The Behring sea matter was dis cussed by the senate committee on for eign relations on the 24th at" a special meeting and it was decided to recom mend the ratification of the treaty. The president on the 24th sent to tho senate tho following nominations: Stanton J. Peele, of Indiana, judge of the court of claims, vice Glenn V. Sco field, retired; United States district judges, William K. Townsend, for the district of Connecticut; John B. Rector, northern district of Texas; John II. Baker, district of Indiana; Ellery P. Ingham, United States attorney, and Alexander P. Colesberry, marshal for the eastern district of Pennsylvania. MISCELLANEOUS. Seven Chicago aldermen were in dicted on the 21st for corruption in ollice. Visitors to the national republican convention at Minneapolis will be treated to a novelt. At a meeting of the executive committee it was decided to establish a lumbermen's camp near the exposition and serve pork and beans and other foid in lumbermen's style. It is also proposed to establish tents in which cots will be placed. This will be done to accommodate the over flow. Warren Watson, clerk of the United States circuit court at Kansas City, Mo., was run over on the evening of the 22.1 in that city by a Santa Fe freight train and fatally injured. His right hand was torn off and his right leg severed at the knee. Thirteen boys, all under 15 years of age, were arrested in a Chicago bucket shop and pool room recently. The association of the bar of New York city tried Isaac Maynard, judge of the court of appeals, on the 22d and brought in a. verdict of guilty. The judge was found guilty of reprehensi ble conduct in the Dutchess county election frauds. The senators and rep resentatives in Albany will be called on by the bar to remove him from the high judicial office to which he was re cently elected. Seventeen passengers were serious ly injured in a collision on the Ohio & Mississippi railroad on the 23d. Joseph Joyce, a supporter of the Parnellite section of the Irish parlia mentary party, was, at Cork on the 23d, sentenced to be hanged for the murder of Patrick O'Leary, an anti-Parnellite. The only motive for the crime was the ill feeling Joyce entertained for O'Leary because of his different political views. Mrs. Sarah Althea Terry, since her incarceration in the asvlum, has been very violent and leads her attendants a life of misery. Refusing to conform to tho asylum rules and discipline, it was recently necessary to use lome force with her, and she became so re fractory that she has since been put in a straight jacket The sundry civil appropriation bill of last year carried an aggregate ap propriation of about 538,000,000, while the bill this year amounts to a little more than 525,000.000, being in the neighborhood of 513,000,000 less than the act for the current fiscal year. Tho largest cut made is in the items making appropriation for public buildings. Judge Van Brunt signed an order directing that Edward M. Field, in dicted for forgery, be committed to an insane asylum where he will be watched to see if he is shamming. Sarah Price, a colored woman liv ing near Arcania, La., locked her thrco children in her house and left them for a few hours. The house caught fire and the children were burned to death. The offer of silver to the treasury de partment on the 23d aggregated GS2.000 ounces. The amount purchased was 150,000 ounces at figures ranging from 50.S90S to 50.8915. A passenger car on the Utah Cen tral railroad was wrecked on a curve near Park City, U. T., the other day, and six persons were severely injured. Rollin White, who claimed to be the inventor of the Smith & Wesson re volver, died on the 23d at Lowell, Mass. He once petitioned congress to give him possession of the invention, and a bill to that effect passed congress, but was vetood by President Grant TnE Texas stato encampment of the G. A. R. assembled at El Paso on the 24th formally. The blue and the gray were camped together on the court house lawn. Pleuro-pneumonia is declared ex tinct in Great Britain and there have been only a few sporadic outbreaks of the foot and mouth disease. Charles Quesenrerry, of Carroll ton, Mo., has been found guilty of per jury in a land contest case in Guthrie, OIc, and sentenced to five years ia tho penitentiary. There has been a severe drouth in South Australia. Sheep died by the thousands. The Chilian fiscai's report on the Carlssen case in Valparaiso, says the evidence fails entirely to show that the police had any hand in his death. However, as Consul McCrcary claims they had, the fiscal directs the judge of crimes to order the police to continue the investigation. E. M. Willard, the English actor, at present on a tour in the west, has sent a check for 5500 to the New York actors' fund committee. The new law of Denmark imposing a penalty of 250 ore per 100 kilograms on wheat meal and rye meal and of 125 ore on whole wheat and rye has gone into effect Dr. Edmund J. James, of the Whar ton school of finance and economy, has decided to refuse the offer of Dr. Will iam Harper t? organize in the new Chicago university a department sim ilar to the Wharton school. The Kalmia branch of the Philadel phia & Reading road extending to Clarksrille, Pa., which was closed by last week's storm is only now being opened. The tracks were covered for the long distance with from three to six feet of snow and ice. The committee of the German reichs rath to which was referred the bill making an extra grant of 2,500,000 marks for the German exhibit at the Chicago exhibition has unanimously approved the credit asked for. ADDITIONAL DISPATCHES. Twenty-three bodies of the victims of the Hill Farm, Dunbar, Pa., mine horror were buried on the 25th. The president of the St Louis city council has been charged with running a pool room in disguise. English liberals have assailed Lord Salisbury's policy in the Behring sea matter. German hankers express a disap proval of free coinage of silver. An imperial decree has been issued forbidding Russian Jews to cross Ger man territory. The house committee on agriculture have authorized a favorable report to be made on the Paddock pure food bill which passed tho senate. Representative Geary, of Cali fornia, has introduced in the house a bill to prevent the use of substitutes for hops or pure extract of hops in the making of ale or beer. Ex-Secretary of State Bayard proposes to visit ex-President Cleveland in New York in a few days. It is un derstood the conference will be of a political nature. Tim nnvr dfnnrtment has received information nf thr arrival of the United! - -------- --- ------ - States steamship Newark at La Guayara. She was ordered there to look after Amcricnn interests during' the revolution said to be in progress, but in the dispatch no reference is made to any trouble. The Dockery world's fair investigat- mir subcommittee of the house com' mittee on appropriations will not leave Washington for Chicago until after the silver question is disposed of in the house. Mrs. Fanxie Schade committed suicide at Cedar Rapids, la., on the 25th. She shot herself five times with a single-barreled 22-caliber revolver, three times in the right breast, once in the abdomen and the last time in the right temple. The offer of silver to the treasury department on the 25th aggregated 939,000 ounces. The amount purchased was 170,000 ounces, ranging from 50.8S30 to 0.SS34. The director of the mint announced that the government having purchased its quota of silver re quired by law for the present month, no further offers will be considered un til Friday, April 1. In the senate on the 25th there was an executive session after which there was some unimportant business done and then eulogies were delivered on the late Senator Hearst In the house there was nothing of general interest. the private bill calendar having been J taken un. ' NEBRASKA STATE KEWS. Jonx Hart was recently killed by the cars at Grand Island. His father Uves at O'NeilL By a large majority tho people of Beemer recently voted 50,000 to build a new schoolhouse. A chapter of the Eastern Star has been organized at Juniata with twenty five charter members. The camp of Sons of Veterans at Lyons is the largest in the state. It has sixty-six members. James Devore, sixteen years old, was recently accidentally shot and killed by a companion while hunting geese near Aurora. FirrY-SEVEN girls who had been in mates at the industrial school at Kear ney, were lately taken to the industrial school for girls at Geneva. The residence of David Condon at Brayton was recently entirely de stroyed by fire with all is contents, and Mrs. Condon barely escaped from tho building with her life. While Ida Jackson, daughter of Thomas Jackson, was rf contly burning trash in the yard at Dunbar her clothes caught fire and burned off to the waist. She was terribly burned. The state convention of the people's independent party will be held at Kear ney August 3. The convention to select delegates to the national convention meets in Lincoln June 30. Sneak thieves made a wholesale raid of buggy robes and horse blankets from carriages and other vehicles in front of the several churches at Bea trice some evenings since. The acreage of sweet corn and peas for the canning factory at Grand Isl and will be greatly increased this year. There will be raised 2,500 acres of sweet corn and 500 acres of peas. It is expected that it will take 300 hands in the canning factory to work up the crop. WAnoo is figuring on securing the location of a private insane asylum, which is to be established by Dr. Knapp, late superintendent of the state institution at Lincoln. The proposed asylum will accommodate eighty pa tients and the building will cost about 5100,000. A beet sugar convention was held in Lincoln the other day, with dele gates from every precinct of Lancaster county. An organization in conform ity with the plans suggested by the state beet sugar association was ef fected, and the work of spreading in formation on the subject will be imme diately begun. Richard Childs was sent to the pen itentiary from Gage county nearly a year and a-half ago on a charge of stealing a quantity of flax seed. The case was taken to the supreme court on appeal and has just been reversed by the supreme court and a new trial or dered. Childs was released, but he only had two days to serve when the decision was made. The supreme court the other morn ing called up the case of the state ex rel. Thayer against James E. Boyd, and on motion of Gov. Boyd's counsel sustained judgment and dismissed the case at Thayer's costs. This practically ends the case. The court might allow it to be reinstated, but no steps have been taken in the matter of applying for such a procedure. Some night since three tramps called at the farmhouse of D. E. Starr, near Sutton, and after some parleying suc ceeded ia getting permission to stay all night Before leaving in the morn ing they appropriated some underwear belonging to the family, to which Mr. Starr objected. The tramps then drew their revolvers on him and demanded his money. To avoid the shots he dodged behind a door. The tramps thought he was after his gun and fled. The young rascals were captured at Carlyle. Judge Joseph II. Blair, of Omaha, counsel for Gen. Thayer in the guber natorial wrangle, has addressed a letter to Attorney-General Hastings calling his attention to the fact that no mandate from tho United States su preme court has yet been issued revers ing the holdings of the state court that Gen. Thayer is the legal governor, that the voluntary withdrawal of Thayer does not establish Boyd's title to the seat and virtually suggesting that the attorney-general bring action against Boyd to test his right to the seat The records in the office of the sec retary of state show that fifty-six irri gating and canal companies have been incorporated within the past three years. With but a single exception these companies are Nebraska enter prises. The total capitalization is 510, 000.000, the larger proportion of which will be invested in irrigating improve ments covering an area greater in ex tent than most of the eastern states. These companies will draw their sup- ! plies of water from the riaue, ijoup, ' Niobrara and numberless smaller rivers - . , . and streams. TlrraxTM- there was a fritrantic at tempt to capture 20,000 acres of land in j Holt county. One hundred ana twenty men under the leadership of J. H. Stewart emigration commissioner of the Pacific Short line.arrivedat O'Neill one nijiht and next morning they ap peared at the United States land office and attempted to file contests on 120 quarter sections of the finest land in the county. The land is nearly all oc cupied by settlers, and there was much excitement among the people, and threats were freely made against the jumpers. Later, however, the "colony" decided to choose a more hospitable locality in Boyd county. William Winegar, a young man with Mormonistic tendencies, ran away from Lincoln the other day with Laura Meecham. Lillie and Minnie Lobaugh, girls of fifteen and sixteen. He also stele a neighbor's horse, bought a prairie schooner and when overtaken was peacefully enjoying his new posi tion as head of a harem, ten miles from the nearest town. When taken back thii Lobaugh girls' father tried to shoot Winegar, but was prevonted by the office rr. The family of G. M. Uein, editor of the Grand Island Herald, camo near being asphyxiated the other night A :i uan. nt , ., A Promising Situation. Xew York Dally Investigator. Good judges say that one of the next lo calities to achieve distinction by jumping from a substantial town to a turiviug me tropolis in a few years will bo tho city of Superior, Wisconsin, and this, too, without tho effort mid struggle through which In terior towns have passed while etfecting the same result Lntila year or two ago the avenure man did not stop to think that Superior as a monopolist of tho water and rail termini at ono end of the hikes is In the same position as Buffalo at tfco other end. Figures aro uninteresting unless given briefly, but comparison aro always impor tant. Tliislittio Superior, credited by its last census witli only 22,000 people, handled moro coal last year than did Chicago; of grain, It shipped nineteen million bushels; of flour, sixteen hundred thousand barrels: I ?t wool, four million pounds; of merchan- disc, to ihc value of thirteen million dol lars. Of all lake cities this business was second only to Chicago in magnitude. There is an economical reason for this con dition of things. It is that tho rail rate on freight sent west of Lake Michigan is one cent per ton per mile, while tho water rate is one-tenth of one riit per ton per mile. This position at the extreme western end of Lake Superior is what gives the city of Su perior its prestige, and is making it grow faster than Chicago ever did. Besides one hundred and one smaller industrial con cerns, Superior has located twenty-eight largo mauufacturingenterprises in tho past eighteen months, including tho American Steel Bargo Company, tho builders of tho famous "whalebiick" vessel, which is revo lutionizing tho lako nnd ocean freipht car rying trade. '1 he twenty eight institutions ahovo mentioned, include iron and nteel plants, flour mills, stovo foundries, wagon factories, pump makers, shipbuilders and saw and shingle mills. The most conserva tive business men in tho Northwest believo that Superior will grow faster in tho next ten years than any other city in that pros perous section of the country, nnd many of them claim that Chicago, St Paul, Minne apolis and Milwaukee have never seen vie rapid growth that will como to the head 'of the great chain of lakes and tho city of Su perior. Wnnx you borrow money you borrow trouble, but at the sauiotime you sometimes increase the trouble of the fellow who leuds it to you. Soniervillo Journal. SlOO Reward ClOO. The readers of this paper will bo pleased to learu that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, ucting directly upon tho blood and mucous surfaces of the ej'Btera, thereby desti oyiug tho foundation of the disease, and giving tho patient strength bv building ui tho coustltution I aud nsisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its cura tive powers, tnat tney oner unc uuuureu Dollars for any case that it fails u cure. Send for list, of testimonial. Address, F. J. CHENEYS Co., Toledo, O. t2TSo!d by Druggists, 75c. Trie truth of the saying "To be fore warned Is to bo forearmed" often resolves itself into a question of speed. Columbus Post Open for BuqlneM. The popular Louisville & St. Louis Air Line, after having the misfortuno to sus pend through traffic for GO days on account of the burning out and caving in of a tun nel, is again open for business. The Air Line is 53 miles the shortest between St.Louis and Louisville, and tho only line running eolid vestibulod trains with parlor and din ing cars daily between the two cities. Our popular agents are at their usual places, ready to serve tne puniic. F. A. Willard, R. A. CAMPBELL, Dist Passenger Ag't, 103 21. Broadway, St Louis. Mo. Gen.PnssengerAg't, Evansville, Ind. A coxTEMrorcAijT's headline, ''Corn is Safe," should be qualified by the Important addition, "except in a liquid form." Ofothinjr Xow Under the San." STo? not even through cars to Denver, Ogden. Salt Lake City, San Francisco and Portland. This is simply written to remind you that tho Union Pacific is tho Pioneer in rmnjng through cars to tho above men tioned points, and that tho present through car arrangement is unexcelled. Wo also mako iue time. For details address any agent of tho company, call on your nearest ticket agent, or wrlto to E. L LOMAX, G. P. & T. A. U. P. System, Omaha, Neb. It is always proper to call upon the su perintendent of streets to"mcad his ways." Boston Commercial. Recommends Itself. The Garrett Fence Machine, manufac-tcr-jd by S. H. Garrett Mansfield, O., is in successful operation in every Stato and Terr itorv in the United States. No farmer should be without one of these machines as tho fence built by it is ono of tho best and cheapest fences that can be built Write to tho above address for wholesale prico of fencing material direct from tho factory to the farmer. Be sure to name this paper- If it be true that tho man who is his own lawyer has a fool for a client then there are" cases where it is not expedient to keep cue's own counsel. Boston Transcript The Only One Kver Printed Can Toa Find the Word? There is a 3 inch display advertisement in this paper, this week, which has no two words alike except one word. The same is true of each new one appearing each week, from Tho Dr. Hartcr Mediciuo Co. This house places a "Crescent" on everything they make and publish. Look for it, send them the name of tho word aud they will return you book, beautiful lithographs or samples free. Man wants but little here below, and as a general thing he's gutting it. Bmghamton Reader. On the Billow or tho Rail, Hostetter's Stomach Bitters arc a most de sirable companion for the traveler. They arc an excellent remedy for the nausea and fatigue which many persons suffer who travel by water or land. Visitors to malar ious lociilities should have it with them as a safeguard. Incomparable for biliousness, dyspepsia and bowel complaint, and as a means of checking la grippe and rheumatic twinges. Natural Histort. Teacher "Hans, name three beasts of prey." Hans "Two lions and a tiger." Texas Sif tings. "I have been afflicted withan affection of the Throat from childhood, caused by diphtheria, and have used various remedies, but have never found anything equal to Brown's Bronchial Troches " Rev. G. .V. F. Hampton, PSuton, Ku- Sold only in boxes. A man's deeds live after him. So do his mortgages. Columbus Post Mb. a D. PATxn, publisher ""of tho Union Signal, Chicago, HL, writes: I never saw anything that would cure hcadacho like yourBradycrotice. All druggists. 50c. WnEN the funny man Is at his wit's end he waats a period. Galveston News. WnisKT fires the blood. "Tho A. B. C. Bohemian Bottled Beer" of St Louis cools it aad make meat Try it There is no more faithful friend than 8 well-fed dog. Dallas News. 9 The pleasant coating of Beecham's Pills completely disguises the taite without im pairing their efficiency. 25 cents a box. Hale's Honey of Horehound and Tar re lieves whooping cough. Pike'f Toothache Drops Cure In one minute. JfrtRSfi Both tho method and results when Syrup of Figs is taken; it i3 pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acts gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses tho sys tem efiectually, dispels colds, head aches and fevers aad cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is tho only remedy of its kind ever pro duced, pleasing to the taste and ac ceptable to tho stomach, prompt ia its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities commend it to all and havo made it tho most popular remedy known. Syrup of Figs is for sale in oOo and $1 bottles by all leading drug gists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will pr cure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it. Do not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FRAfJClSCO. CAU LOVISVllLE. KY. NEW YORK. K.Y. August Flower" I have been troubled with dyspep sia, but after a fair trial of August Flower, am freed from the vexatious trouble J. B. Young, Daughters College, Harrodsburg, Ky. I had headache one year steady. One bottle of August Flower cured rue. It was positively worth one hundred dollars to me J . W. Smith, P.M. and Gen. Merchant, Townsend, Ont. I have used it myself for constipation and dyspepsia and it cured me, It is the best seller I ever handled C. Rugh, Druggist, Mechanicsburg, Pa. . LITTLE I lUCDtt mmm V w PILLS DO KOT GEIPE HOIt SICKEX- 8nre eun for SICK HEAD- ACnc.imcalrrd ciircrtlou.coiisU- pation.torpiilglnndi. Thrrsromc ti&i uraus, xciaoTc nausrx. uiz -ilrt. Slarical effect on Kid neys and bladder. CoaijE bilious lit-rvout di.- order. J-.itabii-h noi- uralIAILT ACTIO. Beautify complexion by puriljinjt bloml. 1'Lcrt.T Vegetable. The doe It r Irelr adjusted to salt rsj. a one pill c3 Enrrbtoomuctu Each vial contain! 42,c;rnrtl iavett pocket, like lc-xl pencil. Iiiinr4 nian'H pni eonrenienee. Taken !er than tujar. soUererj where. All genuine poodi bear"Crocent. SsadS-cent tUmp.Tor set 22 psje book ith fample. OH. HA1TER MEDICINE CO.. St. Louis. Ma. Ely's Cream Balm QCICKLY Ct'RES COLD IN HEAD ItPrice JOCk-mrr ApplT Ralmintocacb no?trlI. ELY BIlOS-uJ Warren St..A".T. VQ GOV ;Tuffs Tiny Pis; elsshonld be avoided; it wculcen-tthcir P power of motion. A gentlo aperleutB effect is only required. Tutt's Tiny w OUver Pills are prepared with special views to the permanent core of V CCST1VENESS and HEADACHE. They aro mild and remain In tho ys- A tern until tliey act on the- liver, cauo -v a natural flow of bile and their tonic Improperties impart power to tho bow-J els to remove unhealthy cccnmida Ations. Good appetite and digestion a 0 renlt from the use of these litt lo pills. 3v l'ricc,25c OtHce.3J Park Place, A". 1". Salvation Oil iSL Common Soap Rots Clothes and - Chaps Hands. IVORY SOAP DOES NOT- II II i In LVi lllJ D .. t4--A. .- UBW au Vttui. jjii wish wnw mc ku