The McCook tribune. (McCook, Neb.) 1886-1936, January 13, 1893, Image 3

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    Children CryTor Pitcners Castoria.
When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoria.
When &he was a Child, she cried for Coctoria,
When she became Misti, she clung to Castoria,
When she had Children, she gave them Castoria.
Chamberlain's Eye & Skin Ointment.
A cert alii cure for < 'hroulc Sore Ky ew. Teller,
Salt Kheiiin. Scald Head. Old Chronic Sores.
Fever Sores. Eczema, Itch, Prairie Scratches.
Sore Nipples and Elies. It is cooling and
SOOthinc. II Mildreds of cases have been cured
by it after all other trcHii'ietif jtad tailed. It
ia pot lip in 25 and 50 celt! boxes. For sale by
George M. Clicnery. Nov.SO-lyoar.
A. J. KITTENHOUSE. C. II. BOYLE.
IUTTBSIIOIJSB & 1J0YLK,
ATTOItNKYS - AT - LAW
McCOOK. NEIL
J. B. KKIiLBY,
ATTOKXKY AT LAW,
AGENT LINCOLN LAND CO.
MCCOOK. - - . NEBRASKA.
Okkick: in rear of First National Bunk.
HUGH W. COLB, Lawyer.
McCOOK, NEBRASKA.
\>tf"Will practice in all courts, t'oinmercih.
and corporal imi law u Pjieciulty. Money to
loan. Looms 4 am! 5 old First Na! imml bld't,
B. H. DAVIS,
PHYSICIAN AM) SURCEON
McCOOK, NKIIKASKA.
5»“Okkicik Hotius: St to 11. a. rn.. .2 to 5 ami |
7 to D, p. m Rooinw ov*-r F*rsi National bank j
A. T. RICE, M. D.,
PHYSICIAN AM) SURGEON.
I have located permanently in McCook,
Neb. All calls answered pi omptly by day or
night, in ihe city or county. Special attention
given to diseases of children. Office over
Cowman’s store, south of Conimeicial Hotel.
Office hours from 8 a. m. to 8 p. m. Residence
2 doors south of brick school house.
CHASE CO. LAND & LIVE STOCK CO.
Cone* branded on left hip or left anouldor.
r. \j. acarees, imperial
I Chase County, and Beat
rice. Neb. Range, Stink
ing Water and French
man creeks. Chase Co,
Nebraska.
Brand as out on side of
some animals, onhlpatul
k sides of some, or any
•There on the animal.
i. S. McBRUYER,
loose Hover ai Draju
McCOOK, NEBRASKA.
J^*House and Safe Moving a
Specialty. Orders for Draying left
at the Huddleston Lumber \ard
will receive prompt attention.
R. A. COLE,
-LEADING——
MERCHANT - TAILOR
OF MCCOOK,
has n fine stock of Cloths, Bind
ings, and other trimmings always
on hand.
, THE KANSAS CITY
If For the treatment of all Chronic and
jj] Snrgieal Diseases and Diseases of the
9 Eje and Ear. The etyect of this Sanita
a rium is to tarnish board, rooms and
J medical attention to those suffering with
e|m of tke Urinary and 8exnal Organa. Diseases of the Nervous
System. Long and Throat Diseases, Piles. Cancers, Tumors. Etc.,
TBfi. Surgical Operations performed with skill. Hooks free to
Me amd woman. For further Information call on or address
OR. C. M. COE, Kansas City, Mo.
l^snCKXI ‘X1 K' JSK X'X* OVER,
A Will Avoid noatKii
Frauds and Bogns Medical
Institutes by going to the
Old, Sellable
DR, HENDERSON,
102 A 104 «. IIRTH SHEET,
KAH3A8 CITY, MO.
A Regular Graduate in
Medicine. Over 26 yearj
practice—12 in Chicago.
EttabliMhed 1865.
Tf kil ^ THE OLDEST IS AWE,
and LONGEST LOCATED,
Authorized by the State to treat Chronic, Nervous
and “ Special Diseases,’* Seminal WeaknesMNiGHT
losses). Sexual Debility <loss of sexual powerV
Nervous Debility. Poisoned Blood, Ulcers and Swell
logs of every kind. Urinary andKldney Disease# etc.
Cures Guaranteed or Money Me funded,
Ohsrtea I*ow. Thousands of cases cured
ATerr vear. Experience is important. No mer
cury or Injurious medicine used. NoWme lost
from business. Patients at a distance treated by
mall and express. Medicines sent everywhere free
from gaze or breakage. Bute your case and send
forterms. Consultation free and confidential, per
n AiA I#1F«* jSSu Fax*
BOOK
«Ump«. IS B-r-qfcMJxx*
ISLVKTJ4
ssf.rsusz'S.-ErsK:
—ni rmi triinnnn rtnri »nif —iiTiniwiiinii miai wnn
SHERIFF’S SaLE.
By Vii Him nf km ni'tlsr i-i sab on decree of
foreclosure «.i imnij-sK'* issued out ot the
district court t.'i Red Willow. county Nee ran
k»t. and lo mix d i <•*• i*••!. I win, mi t in- pit U day
of Jit Mint vy. it •> IKW3 tit •>n>-n't-b c 1\ m«
the from •.ui’i- «»t tin- i:i:hoiiH< In 1 ndiMimla.
Red Willow «• Hint n . ,\* l-r.isto-. I tint. being I hi*
building in tvlnfii in - ..!-»• i i i h«* district
court whk Ji.-in. pmli »*i public miction to iIp
highest bidder fur « the »• •»• I estate des
cribed m said order ot sale ns follows, luwti:
The tiortliwi-Ht quariMr nf section twenty-six.
(28) in township i tvo. (2) north of range iDirty.
(5ft); west of theft P. ,V. . in K»-d Wj||ow count \,
Nebraska. Said properly tr. be sold to satisfy
J. Lowell Moore the sum nt nine hundred
seventy dollars and forty-two cents judg
ment. with Interest thereon from June ftth.'A.
I).. l892;to smHsI t the Globe Investment com
pany. co-defendants, to thesutn of iiinty-three
dollars and forty cents judgment, with inter
est thereon from the fttli day of June. A l>.
1892 and twenty-nine dollars and seventy
eight rents costs with unerest. thereon from
June IIPh, 1892. until paid, together with se
eming trusts, according to n judgment render
ed by the district court of sit'd Red Willow
county nr its June term. A. I>.. 1892 in an
net ion therein peiiditur wherein .1. ho" i
Moore wniH p!>sintitf and Joseph A. brewer.
Anna G itrewer and others were defendetos.
Dated this 14th ‘lay of December a. i>., 1892.
15 R Hanks,
Sherilf of Red Wlilow conntv. Nebraska
J. K. Kkui.ky, Attorney.
First publication December 23, 1892.
SHERIFF’S SALE.
Fly virtue of an order nf sale directed to me
from the district cmirtof Red Willow county,
Nebr&sku, on a judgment obtained before
Hon. D.T. Weliy, judge of the district court
of Red Willow county, Nebraska, on the 2Uth
day of October, 1892, in favor of Mary J. Cole,
a- pinimin'. and tnniitist Stephen Tuttle el al.
as defendants, tor He- sum of six hundtvo
ami liftv-five ($855) dollars, and 5l cents, and
costs taxed at $36 73 and ucctitiug costs, and
i'. Wilde, receiver, on his cross petition ob
t. lined n decree for $55 34. I have levied upon
the following real estate taken as the prop
erty of said defendant to satisfy said judg
ment, lo-wit: **outh half of the northeast
quarter and north half soul beast quarter of
section t wo(2,) township one (I.) nort h of range
thirty (30.) west of the ftih P. M.. in Red wu
low county. Nebraska. And will offer the
»»nio for sale to the higlu st bidder, for cash
in hand, on the i.3d day of January. A. 1)..
189-?. in front of the south door of the court
house, in Indianola. Nebraska, that being the
building wherein the last term of court was
held, at the hour of one o’clock P. M.. of said
day. when and where due attendance will be
Viven by the undersigned.
Dated December 21. 1892.
15 R. Ranks.
Sheriff of said county.
First publication December 23 1892.
SHERIFF’S SALE.
Ry virtue of an order of sale directed tome
from the district court of Red Willow county,
Nebraska, on a judgment obtained before
Hon. D.T. Welly, judge of the district court
of Red WRiow county, Nebraska, on the 2Cth
day of October. 1892, in favor of L. M. Leach
as plaintiff, and against George Letand et al,
as defendants, for the sum of live hundred
and ttfry-eight ($558,) dollars, and 40 cents, and
trusts taxed at $28.18 and accruing costs, i
have levied upon the following real estate
taken as the property of said defendants to
satisry said judgment, to-wir: Commencing
at the southeas* corner of lot 7, block 19.origi
nal-town of McCook, thence t.ortli 8 f'e«-t.
thence west 25 feet, thence south 80 feet,
thence east 25 feet to place of beginning, and
being a part of lots seven and eight in said
block nineteen. And will offer tin* same for
sale to tlie highest bidder, for cash in hand,
on the 23d day of January, A. D., 1893, in front
of the south door d the court house, in In*
dmnoia. Nebraska, that being the building
w herein the last term of court was held, at
the hour of one o’clock P. M . of said day.
when and w here due attendance will be given
by the undersigned.
Dated December 21. 1892.
E. R. Ranks,
Sherilf of said county.
Publication Notice.
Ed ward Minster, Dora Kuester, George >V
Burton, and Andrew E. Harvey, partners do
ing business under the tlrra name of Burton
& Harvey, and George Hocknell. defendants,
will take notice that J. Abbott Thompson,
plaintiff herein, filed his petition in the district
court of Bed Willow county, Nebraska, against
said defendants, the object and prayer of
which are to foreclose a certain mortgage ex
ecuted July 20th, 1886. by the defendants Ed
ward Kuester and Dora Kuester to plaintiff,
upon the east half of the southwest quarter
and lots three (3) and four (4) in section
eighteen (18). township two 12], north of range
twenty-eight [28J. west of the 6th P. M.. in
Red Willow county, Nebraska, to secure the
payment of eleven promissorj* notes of the
said Edward Kuester and Dora Kuester, one
for$800 due July 19th. 1891. and ten notes for
$32 each, due respectively. January 1st and
July 1st, 1887. 1888. 1889, 1890 and 1891; that
there is now due upon said notes and mort
gage. including taxes paid by plaintiff, the
sum of $1,236.16. with interest thereon at the
rate of ten per cent per annum from the 20th
day of November, 1892, for which sum with
interest and cost of suit, plaintiff prays for a
decree that the defendants be required to pay
the same, or that said premises may be 60ld to
satisfy the amount found due.
You are required to answer said petition on
or before Monday. February sixth, 1893.
Dated this ffith day of December, 1892.
32 4ts. J. Abbott Thompson, Plaintiff.
By W. S. Morlan, his attorney.
Land Office at McCook. Neb., i
January 3, 1893. f
Notice is hereby given that the S. W. 14 of
the N. W. *4 of section 8 township 4, N. of
range 29, west, will be offered at public sale at
this office at not less than $1.25 per acre, on
Saturday February 11. 1893, at 9 o’clock, A. M.
Central Standard time. J. P. Lindsay,
33-6ts. Register.
First publication December 30. 1892.
Land Office at McCook. Nebraska, 1
December 29,1892. I
Notice is hereby given that the following
named settler has filed notice of his intention
to make final five year proof in suppirt of
his claim, and that said proof will be made
before Register or Receiver at McCook, Neb.,
on Saturday, February 4th, 1893, viz:
SANTFORD T. GODDARD,
who made H. E. No. 7991 for the south $4
of northwest H. and lots 3 and 4 of section
1. in town. 5, north of range 29, west of the
6 P. M. He names the following witnesses
to prove bis continuous residence upon, and
cultivation of, said land, viz: John F. Garlick.
Quick, Neb.. James Arnold, John Knepp,
Jacob Zeider. all of McCook. Neb.
J. P. Lindsay. Register.
W. S. Mori.an'. Attorney.
NOTICE.
In the matter of the estate of Frank H.
Fowler, deceased.
Notice is hereby given that in pursuance of
an order issued out of the district court of
Ked Willow county, state of Nebraska, made
on the 3d day of December. 1893. for the sale
of the real estate hereinafter described, there
will besold at the front door of the store of J.
A. Wilcox & Son. situated on lot eight, block
twenty-two, original town of McCook, Ked
Willow county, state of Nebraska on the 30th
day of January. 1893. at the hour of 10 o’c'ock,
a. m., at public vendue to the highest bidder
for cash, or part cash and the balance, not to
exceed three-fourths of the purchase money,
on a credit of not more than three years: said
money for which credit is given to be Beet red
by bond of the purchaser and by mortgage on
the premises sold: tbe following described
rea! estate, or a sufficient amount of tbe same
to bring tile sum of fl.503.04 to-wit:
First:—The undivided one-half interest in
tbe east half of the northwest quarter, and
the west half of the northeast quarter of sec
tion twenty-nine, township four, range twen
ty-nine. Ked Willow county.state of Nebraska.
Second:—The undivided one-haif interest in
lot thirteen, block eleven, We6t McCook, Ne
braska.
Third:—The undivided one-half interest in
lot nine, block six. third addition to McCook,
Nebraska.
Fourth:—The undivided one-balf Interest in
lot eight, block twenty-two, original town of
McCook, Nebraska.
Said sale will remain open one hour.
Dated December 13. IS92.
Henrietta Fowler, Administratrix of
the estate of Frank H. Fowler, deceased.
[First publication January 13tb, 1893.]
Christmas Dinners
With over indulgence in nch foods and wines,
derange the stomach, causing dyspepsia, indi
gestion and all bilious complaints. These
conditions are cured by Humphreys' Specific
Number Ten, price 25 cents at all drag stores.
■*exva**u -jru^ajsxj-—--- —
A PROFESSIONAL “WEEPER.”
A Young Scaiup Who Finds Begging Mora
Profitable Tliun Working.
“Jack the Weeper’ is well known
abo-.u the lower part of the town. He
has been exploited in the newspapers in
connection with arrest and incarcera
tion, has been interviewed and had his
picture taken, and on various occcasions
j has sworn-off from professional weep
i ing. “Jack the Weeper” is a diminu
tive looking, specimen of a seven-year
old boy with a twenty-year-old face and
a stock of experience and cunning rarely
accumulated by mankind this side of
fiity. He is ostensibly a newsboy, but
the fraternity hold him in great con
tempt or know him only to thump him.
His “racket” has been to get a bundle of
j papers together late in the evening and
weep at the foot of the elevated ntairs
down town.
Sympathetic people cast ljira pennies
and nickels and dimes, and sometimes
an occasional quarter or half dollar
found an abiding place in the weeper’s
inside pocket—all on the supposition
that he was an honest lad who had been
“stuck.” Thus the weeper found that
tears could be coined into cash more
easily and profitably than by tlie ordi
nary course of the news trade. But just
as Jack had worked up a fairly regular
trade in came a policeman, a cold and
calculating man of the world, with a
club, and broke up business by arrest,
examination and consequent publicity.
At tlie foot of a down town stairway
of a Sixth avenue elevated station in the
most fashionable part of New York re
cently occurred a scene which demon
strated that “Jack the Weeper” had not
only not gone out of business, but had
vastly improved upon former metheds.
It was about the fashionable shopping
hour and the swell women and dilettante
young men were flocking to the down
town trains. A delicate lad, with a con
sumptive cough and a bundle of castoff
morni> » newspapers, stood shivering at
the foot of the stairs, two great big
homemade tears plowing their way
through the dirt on his cheeks as the
muddy waters of the Missouri seek the
sea. Several of us stopped out of sym
pathy and began to question the boy.
At the same time nearly every hand
in the crowd instinctively sought for
change. An exceedingly sharp eyed lady
impulsively Hilled out a bill and pushed
it into his trembling fingers, accompany
ing the act with an appealing look
around upon the rest of us. It worked.
Everybody in sight gave silver, and an
old lady who came in later on the scene
pressed a two dollar note upon the child.
I missed two trains to note the goodly
sight, and ’ felt proud of my fellow
creatures ar 1 the beautiful sympathy ol
my kind, ’he boy never said a word.
Ho merely coughed and wept and scooped
in the coin. In the excitement of the
moment I forgot an errand I had at the
next station and went past it. Then I
got out, went up the other side and rode
back.
There was a little mob gathered on
the down town side at the foot of the
stairs. So nearly like the ether mob
was it that at first I thought I had made
another mistake and gone back to my
starting point. But no; it was the next
station.
wen, "strver my timbers! as the old
salt says, if -iere wasn’t the same boy
with the s 'ie graveyard cough, the
same weep, 'he same old papers, and,
what was more astonishing, here was the
same sharp wed, benevolent lady in the
midst of a group of sympathetic women,
just starting a liberal subscription.
My first impulse was to jump in and
grab her an l yell for the police, but l
conquered it and walked away, wonder
ing how much money there was in this
new snap of the woman and the weeper.
—New York Herald.
Are Scott and Dickens Obsolete?
Who reads Scott and Dickens now?
To that question what is the true an
swer? The implied answer of course is
that no one reads them or that their
readers are getting yearly fewer. Tt
may be said at once, and it may be said
flatly, that it is not the case. They are
not only still read by many people, b, t
they are read by more people today than
they ever were before. This fact is sub
stantiated by the copies of their works
that are sold; indeed it stares us in the
face at every railway book store.
Scott and Dickens, if measured by the
number of their readers, are growing in
popularity, not declining. I should cer
tainly say that, so far as my own ob
servation can inform me, no two writers
are more universally familiar at this mo
ment than Scott and Dickens. The old
have read them; the young are reading
them, nor need any one doubt the fact
because they are not discussed like nov
elties.—W. H. Mallock in Forum.
A Famous Expression.
“There’s many a slip ’twixt the cup
and the lip” is a very old saying, and
was first uttered to the king of Samos,
an island in the Grecian archipelago.
This king, Ancaeus by name, planted a
vineyard and treated the slaves who cul
tivated it so badly that one of them told
him he would never live to taste the
wine made from it. When the wine was
ready and a cup of it poured out for the
king he sent for the slave who had
prophesied his death, and asked him
what he thought of his prophecy now.
The slave replied, “There’s many a
slip’twixt the cup'and the lip,” and just
as he had spoken the words Ancseus re
ceived warning that a wild boar had
broken into his vineyard and was ruin
ing it. Putting down the wine untasted,
he rushed out to attack the boar and
was killed.—Harper’s Young People.
Athletic* and Corset*.
Miss Homans, the head of the Normal
School of Gymnastics in Boston, gives
in a recent interview these statistics con
cerning the influence of athletics upon
drees. “Two years ago,” she says, “out
of • class of thirty-seven there were but
two of the young women at the end of
the school year who continued to wear
corsets, and no one continued to wear
French heels. Last year out of a class
of seventy-one seven-eighths gave up
wearing comb.”
The Citizens Bank ot McCook.
| Incorporated under State Laws.
| Paid Up Capital, $50,000
-DOES A
General Banking Business.
Collections made en all accessible points. Drafts drams
directly on principal cities in Europe. Taxes
paid for non-residents.
Tickets For Sale to and from Europe
OFFICERS:
V. FRANKLIN, President. JOHN R. CLARK, Vice Pres.
A. C. EBERT, Cashier.
CORRESPONDENTS:
The First National Bank, Lincoln Nebrska.
The Chemical National Bank, New York City.
He first JVatioual iBattf*.
AUTHORIZED CAPITAL
$100,000.
CAPITAL AND SURPLUS,
$60,000.
OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS.
GEORGE HOCK NELL, President. B. M. FREES, Vice President. W. F. LAWSON, Cashier
A. CAMPBELL. FRANK HARRIS.
THE McCOOK ROLLER MILLS,
E. H. DOAN. Proprietor, ,
Is Now Open and Ready for Business.
q
t^-I am prepared to handle all business in my
line promptly and with the most approved machinery.
—o— i
DOAN & HART 1
are also prepared to handle wheat for which they are
paying the highest market price. p|
Mills and Elevator on East Railroad street
A GREAT COMBINATION.
The Omaha Weekly Bee with The Amehi
can Farmer or Womankind for
ONE DOLLAR PER YEAR.
The Omaha Weekly Bee is acknowledged
to lie the lies! and largest newspaper in the
west, publishing more weEtern and general
news than any other paper in the country.
The usual price is one dollar per year.
The American Farmer is published at
Springfield, Ohio, is a 16 page monthly paper
devoted to agriculture, horticulture, the
dairy, poultry and general interesting stories
and other matter for the borne. The usual
price is one dollar per year.
Womankind is also published at Springfield,
Ohio. It is 16 page monthly publication, de
voted to everything that interests the wife,
mother and maiden. It is full of useful in
formation and Interesting talks and stories
that are instructive as well as entertaining
both to young and old.
One dollar pays fora year's subscription to
the Bee and either one of these journals.
Address all orders to
The Bee Publishing Co..
Omaha, Neb.
-1 .. ..
A Mammoth Competition.
$6,500 in prizes for the best seven stories
was what the Youth’s Companion offered:
$5,000 for the best Serials, and $1,500 for the
best Folk-lore tales. The successful stories
are just announced to appear in the Compan
ion during 1893.
By sending $1.75 at once you will obtain
the paper free to January and for a full year,
to January, ’94. Address The Youth’s Com
panion, Boston, Mass
Mrs. Ina Potts on Tuesday retired
from the management of the Benkel
man House and in company with her
idolized hotel clerk, A1 Dean, and wait
er girl, Maud Bell, skipped by the light
of the waning moon for McCook, leav
ing a number of creditors in Benkelman
to mourn over her departure. One of
her creditors John Smith, the propriet
or of the Eagle Grocery, did not relish
being the victim of her unscrupulous
business methods and he secured author
ity as deputy sheriff and left on the
passenger Wednesday noon for McCook
for the purpose of bluffing the recreant
landlady into a settlement of the bill
he held against her. But she had
seen bluffing before and John’s best
bluffing efforts failed tohave the desired
effect upon her. John then arrested
her and also took Dean and Miss Bell
in custody and brought the outfit back
to Benkelman on the flyer yesterday
noon. Mrs. Potts was arranged before
Judge Israel on the charge of attempt
ing to defraud her creditors, but she
was acquitted. She and her dear Dean
left together this morning on the east
bound passenger. They are a pair of
bad character and Benkelman is grate
ful tor being rid of them. —Benkelman
Bee.
Legal Notice,
JUSTIN A. WILCOX & SON )
vs. V
G. B. MARVIN. i
In justice’s court before H. II.Berry. Justice
of the Peace.
G. B. Marvin will take notice that on the
15th day of December, 1892, H. H. Berry, a Jus
tice of the Peace of Bed Willow county. Neb.,
issued an order of attachment for the sum of
$22.55 in an action pending before him where
in Justin A. Wilcox & Son are plaintiffs and
G. B. Marvin, defendant, consisting in monev
due and owing in the band of the C., B. & Q
B. B. Co., garnishee as wages for work and
labor performed by said defendant for said
railroad company in said Bed Willow county.
Nebraska, has been attached under said order, '
said case has been continued to the 28th day of
January, 1893 at 9 o’clock. A. M.
33-3t8. Justin A. Wilcox & Son.
The Call Leads the Procession.
We call the attention of our readers
to the advertisement of The Call in
another column. Since its reduction
in price The Call is the cheapest
daily in Nebraska, and its spicy and
independent policy is too well known
to need comment from us. In reduc
ing the price of Th# Call so as to put
it within the reach of everybody, the
management have placed themselves a
decided step in advance of all other
publishers in the state. This is an era
of popular prices |pr the newspaper,
and The Call is, as usual, at the head
of the procession.
Estray Notice.
Taken un by the subscriber on his
enclosed lands in Willow Grove pre
cinct, Red Willow county Nebraska, on
the 29th day of November, 1892, one
black gelding, horse supposed to be 14
years of age, weight about 1,300; no
other marks or brands.
Dated Dec. 17, 1892.
John Gerboth.
B3F*Noble, Purveyor to tne Great
Common People, is now exhibiting
about the handsomest and largest as
sortment of plain and fancy lamps to be
seen in Southwestern Nebraska.
THE SUNDAY SUN.
The Greatest Sundy Newspa
• per in the World.
Price Sc a copy. By mail $2 a year.
Daily by mail - ... 6 “
Daily and Sundy by mail -8 “
ADDRESS THE SUN, HEW YORK.
Dr, Hathaway,
(Regular Graduate.)
The Leading Specialist of the United State*
in His Line.
Private, Blood, Skin and Nervous Diseases.
xoung ami
Middle Aged
Men: Remark
able results hav#
followed my
treatment. Many
YEARS of var
ied and success
ful EXPERI
ENCE in the use
of curative meth
Iods that I alone
own and control
for all disorders
of MEN, who
have weak or un
developed or dis
eased organs, or
who are suffering
from errors of
youth and excess
or who are nerv
ous and IMPO
ini'll, uio auuru ui cueir lcuuna a:m me con
tempt of friends and companions, leads me to
GUARANTEE to all patients, if they can pos
sibly be RESTORED, MY OWN EXCLUSIVE
TREATMENT will AFFORD A CURE
{^“REMEMBER, that there is hope for
YOU. Consult no other, as you may WASTE
VALUABLE TIME. Obtain my treatment at
once.
Female Diseases cured at home without In
struments; a wonderful treatment
Catarrh, and Diseases of the Skin, Blood,
Heart, Liver and Kidneys.
Syphilis. The most rapid, safe and effective
treatment A complete care guaranteed.
Skin Diseases of all kinds cured where many
Others have failed.
Unnatural Discharges promptly cured In a
few days. Quick, sure and safe. This includes
Gleet and Gonorrhoea.
MY METHODS.
1. Free consultation at the office or by mall.
2 Thorough examination and careful diagnosis.
3. That each patient treated gets the advantage
of special study and experience, and a
specialty Is made of his or her disease.
A Moderate charges and easy terms of payment.
A home treatment can be given in a majority
of cases
Send for Symptom Blank No. 1 for Men
No.-2 for Women.
No. 3 for Skin Disease*.
Send 10c for 64-page Reference Book for Men
*nd Women.
All correspondence answered promptly. Bus
iness strictly confidential. Entire treatment
sent free from observation. Refer to banks In St.
Joseph and business men. Address or call on
* J. N. HATHAWAY, M. D.,
Corner 6th and Edmond Sts., St Joseph, Mo
WE TELL YOU
nothing new when we state that it pays to engage
in a permanent, most healthy and pleasant busi
ness, that returns a profit for every day’s work.
Such is the business we offer the working class.
We teach them how to make money rapidly, and
guarantee every one who follows our instructions
faithfully the making of 8300.00 a month.
Every one who takes hold now and works will
surely aud speedily increase their earnings; there
can be no question about it; others now at work
are doing it, and you, reader, can do the same
This is tne best paying business that vou have
ever had the chance to secure. You wifi make a
frave mistake if you fail to give it a trial at once.
f you grasp the situation, and act quickly, you
will directly find yourself in a most prosperous
business, at which you can surely make and save
large sums of money. The results of only a few
hours* work will often equal a week’s wages.
Whether you are old or young, man or woman, it
makes no difference, — cfo as we tell you, and suc
cess will meet you at the very start. Neither
experience or capital necessary. Those who work
for us are rewarded. Why not write to-day for
full particulars, free ? E. C. ALLEN A CO.,
Box No. 440, Augusta, Me.
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