The McCook tribune. (McCook, Neb.) 1886-1936, April 20, 1894, Image 6

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    for Infants and Children.
** Castoria 2s so well adapted to children that
T recommend it as superior to any prescription
known to me.” H. A. Archer, M. D.,
Ill So. Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
« -
4‘The use of ‘Castoria is so universal and
its merits so well known that it seems a work
of supererogation to endorse it. Few are the
intelligent families who do not keep Castoria
within easy reach.”
Carlos Martyn, D. D.,
New York City.
Castoria cures Colic, Constipation,
Sour Stomach, DiarrhcBa, Eructation,
Kills Worms, gives sleep, and promotes tli
gestion,
Without injurious medication.
“For several years I have recommended
your ' Castoria,' and shall always continue to
do so as it has invariably produced beneficial
results.”
Enwra F. Pakdik, M. D.,
185th Street and 7th Ave., New York City.
Thk Centaur Company, 77 Hurray Street, New York Crrr.
DO YQy KEEP iT »W THE HOUSE?
PERRY DAVIS'
PAIN-KILLER
9 Mb 1^™gMB!l——imbb
Will Ctire Cramps, Colic, Cholera
Morbus and all Bowel Complaints..
PRICE. 25c, r.:o„ and 31.00 A BOTTLE.
W. C. BULLARD & CO.
-to:
RED CEDAR. AND OAK POSTS,
aru. J. WARREN, Manager.
i
B. Sc M. Meat Market.
FRESH AND SALT 1
MEATS,
BACON. BOLOGNA.
CHICKENS,
TURKEYS. AC., AC.
1 --
F. S. WILCOX, Prop.
F. D. BURGESS,
PLUMBERS STEAM FITTER
NOETH MAIN AYE.. McCOOK NEB.
Stock of Iron, Lead and Sewer Pipe, Brass Goods,
Pumps, and Boiler Trimmings. Agent for Halliday,
Eolipse and Waupun Wind Mills.
CABLED FIELD and HOG FENCING, 24 inches to 38 inches high; the best
all-purpose fence made. Also STEEL WEB PICKET FENCE for yards and lawns,
and STEEL WIRE FENCE BOARD and ORNAMENTAL STRIP for horses and cattle.
The most complete line of wire fencing of any factory in the country.
Write for circulars. P '
DE KALB FENCE CO., De Kalb, III.
urmi ^TWbuT " •.
MANHOOD RESTORED! This wonderful remedy
guaranteed to cure ail nervous diseases, such as Weak Memory, Loss of Brain
Power. Headache, Wakeful Dess, Lost Manhood, Nightly Emissions, Nervous
ness, all d rain sand loss of power in Generative Organs of either sex caused
by overexertion, youthful errors, excessive use of tobacco, opium or stim
ulants, which loaa to) -’tjrmi: y. Consumption or Insanity. Can be carried In
vest pocket. by mail prepaid. WlthaD£ order we
Slvcar/rltten rear mtee to rare or refund the money. Bold by all
WrcKFiJts. .A sklent, take no other. V/rite for free Medical Book sent sealed |
in plain vrrapr.er- Ai 'ref*- 3.FHVE8EED CO.. Masonic Temple. CHICAGO.
Forsa;« In McCook. i>eL- . •■y ... \V. McConnell k Co,, Druggist*,
HAND IN HAND.
When spring was young and life was new.
Lore was oar only friend and guide.
Sweet were the bowers be led us through
And sweet our going side by side.
Then summer came, a golden flood.
And Btill we followed band in hand.
Love was the music in our blood
And love the glory of the land.
Rich autumn fell, and winter drove
The fruity ripeness from the air.
But wrapped in warm, soft robes of love.
What recked we if the world was bare?
So round again we come to spring.
Strong for another year's emprise.
The birds are whist to hear us sing.
The sun is dazzled by our eyes.
For hand in hand, where’er we go.
Earth under foot and heaven above.
Love is the only life we know.
And every breath we breathe is love.
—New York Advertiser.
PART OF A LIFE.
“So you want my little girl for yonr
wife, do yon?” t
The speaker, from a glance at his
snowy hair and mustache and sorrowful
dark eyes, one wonld suppose to have
been a man well along in years, but on
looking more closely at the well knit,
supple form reclining at ease in the
study chair it was discovered to be an
“old head on young shoulders. ”
His deep, musical voice was half sad,
half tender as he continued to address
the young man, who, standing before
him, was nervously toying with a book
that lay on the table at his right
“Perhaps I’m not quite as surprised
as you thought I would be. You have
played together as little children, as
boy and girl you were companions, and
now that you are a man and Maud is a
woman your hearts naturally turn to
each other, and I will see my dearest
wish realized. The friendship that has
existed between your father and myself
for 16 years will be augmented by the
union of our only children. You are a
good, manly fellow, Hugh, but a trifle
hot headed and impulsive. Learn to con
trol yourself, boy; learn to control your
self.
“You have much of my disposition,
and I wonld save you from the rocks
on which my happiness was wrecked—
you and my little girl.
“Sit down, Hugh, here, near me, and
I will tell you a story—an answer to
the question yon have so often had on
the tip of your tongue to ask me, ‘What
was it that turned the hair of such a
comparatively young man white?’ Tnsli,
boy, don’t look confused—you couldn’t
help wondeii ng.
“Well, to begin with, 20 years ago 1
married one of .the fairest, sweetest lit
tle women ti» f,t ever won the love of
man. I was a reporter on an evening
paper, ambitions and struggling to rise
in my profession. We rented a little
house in tin, suburbs, and although we
had not muck of this world’s goods our
home was a very happy one for the first
six or eight months. Then little bicker
ings and fault finding began. Bitter
quarrels finally grew out of the most
trivial things, and scarcely a day passed
that there had not been angry words
spoken by one or the other.
“We loved each other dearly, and we
tried hard to avoid all this. We had re
solved again and again m our moments
of repentance that we would treat each
other with more consideration, he more
forbearing, hut it seemed useless—on
troubles increased
“So it went on for several months. I
had become morose and gloomy, and
Nora’s poor little face had grown so
pale and sad that the sight of it made
my heart ache.
“One lovely morning in early sum
mer, when the roses that clambered over
our cottage walls were in bloom and
nodding their pretty heads at us through
the windows, when the birds, newly
mated, were singing their joy and the
air was heavy with the perfume of flow
ers and breathed only lore and peace,
the crisis came.
“While I was hurriedly getting ready
to go to the office something occurred to
detain me. I was annoyed and spoke
sharply to Nora. She answered me in
an insolent, taunting manner that al
ways enraged me. Our words grew hot
ter and hotter and more extravagant. In
my anger I applied a shameful epithet
to her.
“ ‘Coward!’ she almost shrieked as
she sprang toward me, her face distort
ed with rage and defiance.
“What devil possessed me I do not
know, but quick as a flash I raised my
hand and struck her in the face with all
the force I could summon.
“She was such a slender little woman
that she had not the strength to with
stand my powerful blow. With a low,
heartrending cry she sank to the floor.
Almost before she fell my senses re
turned. I realized what I had done, and
falling on my knees beside her took her
in my arms, kissed the poor bleeding
lips I had so brutally lacerated, and with
my tears dropping on her face implored
her forgiveness. She seemed completely
broken. Her anger was all gone, and
there was a 6tartled, grieved look in
h,er eyes that cut me to the heart.
“She lay motionless in my arms while
I begged her to forgive me. Then she
said softly:
“ ‘It doesn’t matter, dear. It was my
fault as much as yours. We will never
let it happen again. Now go to work—
you are late already. ’
“She said it so strangely, with such
a queer look in her eyes, that I would
not consent to leave her. But she in
sisted, and when she bade me goodby
she said, taking my face between her
hands and drawing it toward her: ‘I
love you with all my heart, my darling
husband I will love you for ever and
ever. Now goodby. ’
“What a long, long day that was! It
seemed as if my work never would be
finished. My heart was so full of love
for Nora.
“I bought a bunch of Jack roses on
my way home to remind her of our :
courtship, when they were the flowers I |
always brought her. I did not enter the
house by the front door, as usual, be- ,
cause 1 wanted to slip up behind her |
where she was at work getting dinner
and surprise her with the flowers and a
kiss.
“Softly I opened the kitchen door
There was no sign of any preparation
for dinner—everything was in order.
‘Perhaps Nora has cried herself sick, ’ I
Baid to reassure myself. I went to the
bedroom—everything in order there, bnt
the room was empty. Nervously I hur
ried through every room, looked into
every closet, went down cellar, out to
the coal shed, up to the attic. I didn’t
expect to find her in any of these places.
I was sure she had gone away, but I
must look for her somewhere.
“I went back to the bedroom again
and there found the note she had left
for me pinned to my pillow.
“Poor little tear stained letter! Here
it is, worn in the folds and yellow with
age—this is what she wrote:
“Don’t think it is because I am angry at
what you did this morning that 1 go. 1 cannot
stay, because 1 cannot make you happy. You
/will at least live in peace without me. I love
you, my husband, and I always will. Think of
me sometimes and of how much 1 loved you.
But, no; if it makes you sad to think of me, for
get me. God bless you. 1 love you. Nora.
“That was all. It gave no cle\v. Was
she living or dead?
“If living, I was determined to find
her. I searched for her everywhere, ad
vertised, traveled—all in vain. Nearly
three years passed, and not a word had I
heard from her. I had almost come to
the conclusion that she was dead Dur
ing that time it was that my hair turned
white.
“I was working as a reporter on a
New York morning paper, gathering
news and searching for my wife.
“One bitter cold night the last week
in January I was sent to report a fire
that had broken out in a large tenement
house in one of the poorest quarters of
the city. The greater part of the build
ing was in flames when I arrived The
firemen saw that it would be useless to
try to save it and were directing their
efforts to getting out the frightened in
mates. I did what I could to assist them
in rescuing the poor wretches.
“At last, when we thought they were
all out the smoke cleared away from a
part of the building, and by the light of
the flames that leaped up we saw the
figures of two women in a window. Ono
of them had a bundle in her arms and
was preparing to leap to the ground I
motioned her back. In a moment a fire
man moved a ladder to the place ascend
ed and returned with one of the women,
a little hunchback. The other, the one
with the bundle, clasped it convulsive
ly, tottered and would have fallen to the
ground but for the fireman who had
just reached her. Quickly he descended,
bearing her unconscious form.
“ ‘Guess she’s about gone. Get a
place ready for her, quick! Let me lay
her down!’ he shouted
“Off came my overcoat, and the fire
man laid her on it
“I stooped to see if she was badly
burned, and also to see what was in the
bundle. A little child about 2 years old
round eyed and frightened looked at me
from the wet, steaming blanket that
was wrapped around it A pretty little
tiling, I thought as I disengaged it from
the blistered arms that clasped it. The
woman was badly burned about the
body. I chew away the towel that she
had around her head and saw—my wife!
pale and worn, but still the same fea
tures, the same clustering brown curls on
her forehead My wife, given back to
me like this! Frantically I called for
help, for a doctor. There happened to be
one in the crowd
“He looked at Nora’s burns and shook
his head There was no hope. She
would probably never open her eyes
again, but she did. The great dark eyes
looked up at me, and the lips murmured:
“ ‘Maudie—baby.”
‘ ‘ I held the baby over her. She smiled
faintly and said:
“ ‘Maudie—perhaps—papa—will—
Tell him—I always—loved—I’
“But her eyes closed, and her-head
fell against my breast. She was dead
“Did she recognize mo in those few
moments? God only knows. I could not
telL
“The crippled girl who was with her
in the window, and whom she insisted
on the fireman rescuing first, told me
how she had met Nora in the hospital
over two years before, when Maudie
was bom, of Nora’s kindness to her and
of her weary struggle for bread, and she
it was who found and gave to me her
wedding ring and a tiny locket with my
picture in it that was fastened around
her neck when she died. She had never
parted with them, no matter how great
her poverty was.’’—New York Adver
tiser.
A False Maxim.
The loungers around the only store in
a little New England village were great
ly amused at something that happened
one warm afternoon. A tall, lank, bare
footed man came into the store with a
gallon pail filled with blackberries,
which he exchanged for three quarts of
molasses.
He carried a stout hickory walking
stick in one hand, and when he departed
he put the pail on One eud of the stick
and threw the stick across his shoulder.
He reached the platform in front of the
store when a shining new pin at his feet
caught his eye.
"See a pin and pick it up.
All the day yon’ll have good lack.”
he drawled out and stooped over to pick 1
up the pin, when the molasses crawled 1
out all over his back and neck.
Straightening himself hurriedly, the
man said:
"Waal, 1 never thought much of that
air proverb, an I think less on it neow
than I ever did."—Youth’s Companion. 1
■ —
Turkish Women’s Progress.
Turkish women having obtained per
mission to practice as physicians in
their own country, they are now begin
ning to study medicine at various Euro
pean universities. Three young Turkish
ladies, one a daughter of a pasha, have
recently arrived in France in order to
go through a regular course of medical
training at French universities.—Paris
Journal.
QUEENS OF HAWAII.
PLAYED PROMINENT PARTS IN THE
ISLAND KINGDOM.
How Qnacu Kaalmmanu Established
“Woman’s Rights”—Royal Processions,
In One of Which a Dowager Wore Sev
enty-two Yards of Cashmere.
When the missionaries arrived at Ha
waii, March 30, 1820, the condition of
woman was that of a slave. She could
not eat cocoanuts, bananas, oranges or
fish, and one of the curious tabus, or in
terdictions, forbade her eating any kind
of food with men.
Queen Kaalmmanu sent for the new
king, Liholiho, who was engaged in a
drunken orgie out on the ocean in a
canoe, and urged him to throw down the
idols in the heaiaus, or temples, and to
clinch the matter by eating in public
with a group of women who were feast
ing by themselves at a little distance
from the royal abode. Staggering over
to them, Liholiho, who was a very dif
ferent character from his famous father,
sat down and publicly ate some of their
food. The cry went up, “The tabu is
broken.”
The torch was applied to the idols, and
woman’s emancipation began. Queen
Kaahumanu was a huge, heavy mortal,
and like all the chiefs she was proud and
cruel. At first she treated the mission
aries with disdain, offering only the tip
of her little finger in salutation, but she
became a zealous convert and remained
to the time of her death, in 1832, at the
age of 58, a firm and conscientious Chris
tian, beloved by those who intimately
knew her and universally respected for
her abilities. She had ruled as consort
of the great conqueror, as joint sovereign
with his son, Liholiho, and as regent dur
ing the minority of Kauikeouli.
Kamainalu, the queen of pleasure lov
ing Liholiho, was fond of display. On a
state occasion in 1823 she was carried in
procession, seated in a whaleboat on a
frame of wickerwork borne on the shoul
ders of 70 men.
The boat and platform, 30 feet long by
12 feet wide, were covered with costly
broadcloth relieved by beautiful colored
tapas (native bark cloth). The queen’s
dress was a scarlet silk mantle and a
feather coronet. An immense Chinese
umbrella, richly gilded and decorated
with tassels and fringes of the same
gaudy color, supported by a chief wear
ing a helmet, screened her from the sun.
Chiefs held aloft kahilis, or royal
staffs, 30 feet high, the handles sur
rounded by alternate ivory and tortoise
shell rings, beautifully wrought and
highly7 polished, the upper part being ar
ranged so as to form a column or plume
of scarlet feathers of 14 feet in diameter
and from 12 to 14 feet long. A more
magnificent insignia of rank, conveying
at once the ideas of grandeur, state and
beauty, as they towered and gracefully
nodded above the multitude, was never
devised by barbarians.
Another royal lady, Kinau, who after
ward shared authority with Kamehame
ha III (Kauikeouli), her title being Kaa
humanu II, appeared in a scarlet pan, a
long piece of silk wound round the body
and limbs, with two lcng streamers. The
pan is a very graceful costume, especial
ly7 when worn by7 a wahiue (native wo
man) on horseback, with the gayly col
ored streamers afloat in the wind. The
two dowager queens appeared in this
procession. One of them wore 72 yards
of cashmere of double width, one-half
being orange and the other half scarlet.
This was wrapped about her figure till
her arms were supported by the mass in
a horizontal position, while the remain
der, forming an extensive train, was sup
ported by a retinue selected for that pur
pose.
The richness and variety of the dresses
and colors, and the exhibition of the
wealth and power of the chiefs, their
hereditary symbols of rank, the stately
kahilis, splendid cloaks and helmets, and
necklaces of feathers, intermingled with
the brilliant hues and deep green of the
flowers and wreaths from their native
forests, rendered the spectacle at once
unique and attractive. Groups of sing
ers and dancers, to the number of many
hundred, ever and anon met the proces
sion, enthusiastically shouting their adu
lation in the willing ears of the chiefs.
Queen Kamamalu and Liholiho made
a voyage to London in 1823. Before the
ship weighed anchor at Honolulu the
queen chanted a farewell:
“O heaven! O earth! O mountains!
0 sea! O my counselors and my sub
jects, farewell I”
The royal travelers created a sensa
tion in London. Queen Kamamalu ex
hibited herself in loose trousers and a
long bed gown of colored velveteen, but
Parisian modistes soon clothed the ladies
in all the gear of fashion. Corsets for
the first time encircled their ample
waists, and the ! rndon ladies, in their
rage for the new lions, sought patterns of
the turban that graced the brow of the
queen.
But, alas, the royal pair caught the
measles and died in London, poor chil
dren of nature that they were, far from
the palm groves and bosky bowers of
their native isles! The bodies, in lead
coffins framed in wood and covered with
crimson velvet, were sent to Honolulu
in the frigate Blonde in charge of Lord
Byron, a cousin of the poet.—Godey’s
Magazine.
Took the Train.
Employer—You are late again. Didn’t
1 tell you to take the train because it
would bring you much faster than you
could walk the distance?
Boy—Yes, sir, and I did.
Employer—Then how do you explain
your lateness?
Boy—I had to loaf around the station
for half an hour waiting for the train,
which was away behind time.—Phila
delphia Times.
Great Feat.
Mr. Grogan (telling the story of the
argument)—An I had to sthand there
lukin at him, shmoilin th’ best Oi cud,
an all the toime I was so mad Oi was
grittin me teeth behind me boick.—In
dianapolis Journal.
' TX-kCE TABLE.
GOING BAST—CENTRAL TIME—LEAVES.
No. 2, through passenger—. fi:40A. M.
No. 4. local passenger.9:10 P.M.
No. 76, freight. «:45 A. M.
No. #4. freight. 4:00 A.M.
No. DO, freight .10:00 A.M.
No. 148. freight, made up here. f»:U0 A. M.
GOINO WEST—MOUNTAIN TIME—LEAVES.
No. 0,through passenger.11:85P.M.
No. 5, local passscnger.0:25 P.M.
No. BO. freight.5:00 P. M.
No. 77. freight.4:21 P-M
No. 149, freight. mf*de up here. 8:00 A.M.
IMPERIAL LINE.—MOUNTAIN TIME.
No. 175, leaves at.8:00 A. M.
No. 178, arrives at.:. 5:40 P. M.
t3ff“NoTE:—No. 60 carr^s passengers for
Stratton, llenkelinan and Haigler.
All trains run daily excepting 148, 149 and
178. which run dully except Sunday.
No. 0 slops at lienkelnian and Wray.
No. 2 stops at Indlanola, Cambridge and Ar
apahoe.
No. 80 will carry passengers for Indlanola,
Cambridge and Arapahoe.
Nos. 4. 5.148, 149 and 178carry passengers for
all stations.
You can purchase at this office tickets to all
principal points In the United States and Can
ada and baggage cheeked through to destlna
tlon without extra charge of transfer. For
information regarding rates, etc. call on or
address C. E. MAONEK, Agent.
midwinter fair rates are down.
The Burlington Route is now selling round
trip tickets to San Francisco at $35-5°- ()ne
way $20. "
Think of it! Four thousand miles for less
than forty dollars. (•>.
See the company’s local agent and get full
information, or write to J. Francis, General
Passenger agent, Omaha, Neb.
Sheriff’s Sale.
By \ irtue of an order of sale directed to me
from the district court of Red Willow county,
Nebraska, on a judgment obtained before
Hon. D. T. Welty, judge of the district court
of Red Willow county, Nebraska, on the
eighth day of May 1893, in
favor of John P. Ekstedl, as plaintiff, and
against Ollie M. Waterman as defendant, for
the sum of Eighty-Three ($83.13) dollars, and
thirteen cents, and costs taxed at $20.38 and
accruing costs. 1 have levied upon ihe fol
lowing real estate taken, as the property of
said defendant, to satisfy said judgment, to
wit:
Lot Five in block Nine, Second addition to
McCook, Red Willow county, Nebraska. And
will offer the same for sale to the highest bid
der, for cash in hand, on the 30th day of April,
A. I). 1894, in front of the south door of the
court house, in Indianola, Nebraska, that be
ing the building wherein the last term of disl
rict court was held, at the hour of I o’clock p.
m., of said day, when and where due attend
ance will be given by the undersigned.
Dated March 28, 1894. E. R. Banks,
\V. S. Mori.an, Sheriff of said county.
Attorney. 45-5
Order of Hearing on Petition for
Appointment of Administratrix.
STATE OF NEBRASKA, )
Red Willow County, j ss
At a County Court, held at the county court
room, in and for said county, April 2d, A. D.
1894. Present, Charles W. Beck, county judge.
J11 the matter of the estate of F'rank Al
brecht, deceased.
On reading and filing the petition of Eliza
belli Albrecht, praying that administration of
said estate may be granted to her as adminis
tratrix.
Ordered, that April 23, A. D. 1894, at 1 o’
clock p. m., is assigned for hearing said peti
tion, when all persons interested in said mat
ter may appear at a county court to be held in
and for said county, and show cause why the
prayer of petitioner should notbegrantedjand
that notice of the pendency of said petition
and the hearing thereof, be given to all per
sons interested in said matter by publishing a
copy of this order in the McCook Tribune,a
weekly newspaper printed in said county, for
three successive weeks, prior to said day of
hearing. Charles W. Beck,
(A true copy.) County Judge.
Notice.
0. R. Deusenberry will take notice that on
the 12th day of March, 1894, H. If. Berry, a
Justice of the Peace of Willow Grove precinct,
Red Willow county, Nebraska, issued an or
der of attachment and garnishee for the sum
of $52.00, in an action pending before him,
wherein G. L. Deusenberry is plaintiff and G.
R. Deusenberry is defendant, that the prop
erty of the defendant, consisting of the sum of
$52.00 in cash has been attached under the
said order. Said cause was continued until
the 2f>th day of April, 1894, at ten o’clock, a.
il G. R. DeusenberrV.
By P. A. Wells, Atty. 46-3.
LODGE MEETINGS.
K. O. T. M.—Second and fourth Thursday
evenings of each month. J. H. Dwyer, Com.
.1. H. Yarger, Record Keeper.
L O. T. M.—FirBt and third Thursday even
ings of each month. Mrs. J. F.Gansebow
Mrs. Nellie Johnson, Com.
Record Keeper.
Sheriff’s Sale.
By virtue of an order of sale directed to me
from the district court of Red Willow county.
Nebraska, on a judgment obtained before
Hon. D. T. Welty. judge of the district court
of Red Willow county. Nebraska, on tbe I8tb
day of December. 1893. in favor of George A.
Dewey as plaintiff, and against Elbert J. Hen
derson etal.. as defendants, for the sum of
five hundred sixty-eight (*568.00) dollars and
ninety-eight (98) cents, and costs taxed at
*2218 and accruing costs, and Burton &
Harvey on t he same day on their cross- petition
having obtained a decree for tbe sum of *33 25.
1 have levied upon the following described
real estate taken ns the property of said de
fendants to satisfy said judgment, to-wit: The
east half of the north west quarter and the west
hair of the northeast quarter of section twen
ty-uine, in township two, north of range
rwenty-nine. west of the 6th P. M.. in Red
Willow county. Nebraska. And will offer tbe
same for sale to t he highest bidder, for cash
ill hand, on the 12th day of March. A. D.. 1894,
in front of the south door of the court bouse
in Indianola. Nebraska, that being the build
ing wherein tbe 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 given
by the undersigned. Dated February 1. 1894.
E R- BANKS. Sheriff of said couuty.
W. S. Moroan, Attorney. 38-5ts.
The above sale was continued thirty days
for lack of bidders. E R Banks
Dated March 18th. 1894. ' ' Sheriff.
HOW’S THIS!
We offer Oue Hundred Dollars Re
ward for any ease of Catarrh that can
not be eared by Hall’s Catarrh Cure.
Y. .) Cheney&Co.. props.,Toledo,O.
We, the undersigned, have known F.
•I. Cheney for the last 15 years, and <
believe him perfectly honorable in all
business transactions and finacially able
to cairy out any obligation made by the
firm. West & Truax, Wholesale Drue- ' A
gists, Toledo, Ohio. 6
Waiding, Kinnan & Marvin, Whole
sale Druggists, Toledo, Ohio.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken intern
ally, acting directly upon the blood and
raucous surfaces of the system. Pnice
75 cents per bottle. Sold bv all drug
gists. Testimonials free.