| Mothers ! - _ _ THKdiscom- 't/M/ _ _ , dangers of \ * * > v k H child-birth can ] fef J B HH * bs almost en/fSSwj / J * ' HH tirely avoided.io sjV KBj WineofCardaPs7riaK mam 1 relieves ex * f jft Hf puts them in * condition to do their work perfectly. That makes preg nancy less painful , shortens labor and hastens recovery after child-birth. It helps a woman bear strong healthy children. lllW&pfo1 has also brought happiness to H thousands of homes barren for N I years. A few doses often brings H joy to loving hearts that long I for a darling baby. No woman I should neglect to try it for this trouble. It cures nine cases out I of ten. All druggists sell Wine of Cardui. $1.00 per bottle. 9 For advice In cases requiring special B directions , address , giving1 symptoms , M the "Ladies' Advisory Department , " PS The Chattanooga Medicine Co. , Chatta9 nooga , Tenn. Mrs. LOUISA HALE , I of JelTbrson , Ga. , says : " When I first took Wine or Cardui I we had been married three years , but could not have any children. Nine months later I had a fine girl baby. " Hi | j | California Excursions BfjH Via Burlington Route. Cheap ; quick ; Blj | comfortable. Leave Omaha 4:35 p m. , B | | | Lincoln 6:10 : p. in. , Hastings 8:50 p. m. ill and McCook. at 11:40 p. m. , ev- B1 ' ery Thursday , in clean , modern , not Hj | | n cruwdecl tourist sleepers. No transfers ; Hj | ' • ( cars run right through to San Francisco Hj'j i I and Los Angeles over the Scenic Route Hfj \ through Denver and Salt -Lake Citj- . Kljj ] Oars are carpeted ; upholstered in ratan ; PJIj , I _ lavc spring beats and hacks and are Bffi ! provided with curtains , bedding , towels , 1 ] soap , etc. Uniformed porters and ex- peiienced conductors accompany each jljjjf excursion , relieving passengers of all 9 ! ! boi her about baggage , pointing out ob- Knl ! jects of interesfaud in many other ways MlH he'tiiug to make the overland trip a de- HS-P lightful experience. Second class tickets HR | are honored. Berths $5. For folder giv- Hif ing full information , call at nearest Bur- B | | Hngtou Route ticket office , or write to J. Hf ? Francis , General Passenger Agent , Oma- Bj | | ha , Nebiabka. 4-25-9S. Hii = = = = = HIv A full Jiiie of bill H | books and purses at H | | the Bee Hive. H | J ) I McCook Markets. Hff Corrected Friday morning. Hl Cor" $ 13 R | | Wheat 65 Hif Oats 13 KII R > e 31 HHlj Barley 18 HI Hogs. ' . $2.75 @ 2.90 HH Potatoes 50 Kfh Eggs . . ' 18 @ .20 HK Butler 15 @ .18 HH 13us your gloves at Hgf1 the Bee Hive. Hfi ' To Cure a Cold in One Day. 0' < HlS ; 1 Take Laxative Brome Quinine Tablets. HB 'Ail druggists refund the money if it fails HS3i to cure. 25c. Baby Mine ! feels an i n d e - scribable dread of the pain and ant upon the t most critical pe- Becoming a mother should be a source of joy hh suffering and H | danger of the ordeal make H its anticipation one of misery. MOTHER'S FRIEND HH is the remedy which relieves Bflg women of the great pain and suf- BH fering incident to maternity ; this HH hour which is dreaded as woman's Kflf severest trial is not only made HH painless , but all the danger is re- Hf moved by its use. Those who use | R this remedy are no longer deB - B spondent or gloomy ; nervousness H nausea and other distressing con- j H ditions are avoided , the system is • H made ready for the coming event , Hj and the serious accidents so com- Hj mon to the critical hour are ' H obviated by the use of Mother's ! H Friend. / / is a blessing to woman. , HB 91.00 PEBBOTTIiE at all Drugstores , 1 H or sent by express on receipt of price.J H RMlkQ Containing : invaluable information of Ht rnrr interest to all women , -will be sent j rntt to any address , upon application , by i J ThoBBlDFIELDBEGUIlTOECO.ithuit , ea. j ' m ' W WIWWM > WW MIW .11-1 , . -ii OUTPUT OF TWO FORESTS. The Almost Inconceivable Amount of Lum ber Cut In WUconnln anil Minnesota. "Tho Story of a Pine Board" is the title of an article by W. S. Harwood in St. Nicholas. Mr. Harwood says of the lumbering in Wisconsin and Minnesota ; About 4,160,000,000 feet of logs were cut in the season of 1895 that is to say , what is equivalent to 4,160,000- 000 pieces of board 12 inches square and 1 inch think. I wonder if even the lum ber men themselves , and the log cutters , and the manufacturers of lumber in the great mills , realize what an enormous amount of lumber this is. Why , it would build a house around the globe , with a main room ten feet high and a largo attic , ceiling up the inside walls and roof with sweet , fragrant pino. It would put down a matched floor , and then , when the house was all com pleted , there would bo left euougli lum ber to build tight board fences on either side of the house 53 > feet high the whole distance around the globe. Besides all this there would be shingles enough for a good portion of the house , and then , if the mighty builder of such a globe girdling house wanted to fit it up a lit tle more neatly , there would bo a large supply of laths , and , I suppose , the plasterers could furnish him enough stucco and lime. Or if he wanted to construct a roof shelter for all the people on the globe our mighty builder could accommodate them all , allowing to each man , womau and child a clear space of two square feet in which to stand , and still have room left over for 500,000,000 men with the same room in which to stand. And , to look at it in still another way , this same builder would have material to construct a bicycle path of pine , a lit tle over two feet wide , from the earth to the moon , for there would bo nearly 800,000 miles of board a foot wide and an inch thick. In sawing this lumber up into the required length and thickness there was a great waste in sawdust so great , indeed , that the sawdust pile would stand 112 feet high on a city square and 500 feet square at the base , and this is saying nothing about the vast amount of pieces of slabs which are split up into kindlings. This enormous quantity of lumber represents merely the output of two forests one in the northwestern part of the state of Wisconsin , and the other in the northern part of the state of Minnesota seta , and at the rate the logs are being cut up there will not be a piece of pine forest standing in all this vast region at the end of ten years unless something is done by the government to put a stop to the ravages. MR. LAMAR PAID TWICE. General Lee Tells a Story of the Justice's Absentmindedness. General Lee tells this story of ex-Sen ator Lamar , while the latter was a member of the United States supreme court. "He was in a herdic one day , " said General Lee , "and , as was not unusual with him when not actively employed , was almost entirely oblivious of his sur roundings. He was a deep thinker , you know. Well , he forgot to nay his fare. The driver rang his bell , and finally an other passenger called his attention to it. " 'They're ringing for your fare , 1 think , ' said the man to Judge Lamar , touching him on the knee. " 'Is that so ? ' asked the judge , start ing up. 'I had forgotten all about it. ' He then pulled some silver pieces from his pocket and selecting a dime dropped it into the box. "The passenger who had observed his action , said to the judge as he re sumed his seat : 'Didn't you make a mistake ? The fare is 5 cents. ' " 'Why , so it is. Excuse me , ' replied the jurist , and again making his way to the cash box he put in a nickel , after which he took his seat , confident that he had discharged all his obligations , as he had , indeed , and more. "And so far as I know , " continued General Lee , "he never realized his mistake. The best part of the story is that it is true. Goodby I get off here. " Washington Star. A Quaint Scotch Wedding Custom. A quaint wedding custom still pre vails in many of the little country towns and mining villages in Scotland. When a wedding is held , the contract ing parties make their guests pay in full for the eating , drinking and danc ing facilities which are usually provid ed on such occasions. The practice still seems to survive even in Glasgow. A correspondent observed a notice posted up in the Cowcaddens a low class Glasgow thoroughfare informing the public that a soldier would shortly en ter into the bonds of wedlock , and that twopence would be charged for admis sion to the ceremony and an additional sixpence imposed for attendance at the wedding feast. The practice seems to be peculiarly Scotch , but sixpence certainly seems moderate enough for a marriage supper. Westminster Gazette. The Useless Men. "Married life isn't what it is cracked up to be , " remarked Mrs. Grimesleigh. "When I married Daniel , I thought it would be so handy to have a man about the house ; but , Lor' , that's all it amount ed to. He's never at home when he's Wanted for anything , and if he is he's tired : or busy or something or other , and so 1 have to go to work and do the thing myself. ' 'S far as I can see , men are only in the way when they are in the house and out of the way when they're wanted. " Boston Transcript. The sciara , a wormlike insect of for ests of Hungary and Norway , is only a tenth of an inch long , yet in migrating , in July or early August , the creatures are said to stick themselves together in a serpentlike mass often 40 to 50 feet long and several inches thick. In Derbyshire county , England , there is a subterranean road seven miles long. It connects two mines. IMBBBBBMBBwmwbbiwmi iiMtoM wMiii . 1 1 1 1 1 ) i 1 11111 pi on. 11 1 ' ' U. I I' ' I 1 .lit WW XP ! irnnri r * * ft * BW8 STRIKING INCIDENTS. SCENES THAT WERE PHOTOGRAPHED ON THE MEMORY. The Profeuor Heard Gorernor Brough Make His Iaat Speech With Head Bared. General Bnell and the Serjeant Crazed With Thirst at the Spring. "Somoof you youngsters , " said the professor , "wonder how we old fellows remember the prominent men of 20 or 80 or 40 years ago so well. Because we associate them with some particular event , not necessarily of any impor tance , but serving to bring the men as sociated with it vividly before the mind. For example , I saw old Govern or Brough of Ohio scores of times , but whenever I think of him I do not see him as he walked in his unwieldy way along the streets nor as he sat in his office , a dominating presence , nor as he appeared on state occasions , nor when he raged in controversy with the stron gest men in the nation over the conduct of the war , but I see him as he stood one night on a pile of bricks , just out side Capitol square in Columbus. "The fall of Richmond had been an nounced. The people were wild with excitement and enthusiasm. The under standing was that the governor would speak to them that night , and , standing on a pile of bricks at the corner of High and State streets , ho talked to the people ple of the great news and what it meant to the nation. While he was speaking it began to rain , and still he spoke on. Those in the crowd who had umbrellas raised them , and there was a general shout for the governor to put on his hat. As he stood there that minute , with the raindrops pattering down on his bald head and splattering and sparkling in the light of the street lamp ' near , Gov ernor Brough always comes to me. "He paid no heed to the rain , and in his deep , resonant voice he said to the calls of the crowd : 'I will not put on my hat. A man must stand uncovered in the presence of an event that means so much to this people. ' And he talked on , the people standing in the rain and glorying in every word ho said. That was the last speech made by Governor Brough , because the cold that resulted from the exposure took him down to death. "Brough was ono of the very strong est men of that period in public life , but do you know that I heard one of the most prominent ladies in Ohio urge that he be not renominated because he was so reckless in his use of tobacco ? She forgot the ability , honesty , earnest ness and zeal of the man who had re ceived the largest majority ever given a candidate for any office in Ohio and made a violent campaign against him because he had a rough way and because he was such an inveterate tobacco chewer. " "I. remember General Buell , " said the sergeant , "not as he appearaed in the battle of Shiloh , not as he appeared in full uniform at grand review , but as I saw him on a forced march , when he wore the negligee or fatigue dress. Our company had come , with dry throats and empty canteens , to a large spring that burse from the earth with force enough to turn the wheels of a mill. The men proceeded to fill their canteens and drink their fill. An orderly sat on his horse near and advised the men to be very careful in filling their canteens so as to leave the water clear for those who came after. A little apart from him on a splendid horse sat an officer in a straw hat. The man and the horse , even though the man was in so simple a dress , made a fine picture , but the boys did not look carefully enough at either to recognize the officer or the horse. "One of the sergeants , crazed by thirst , plunging forward to the spring , intent only on getting the clear water to his parched throat , put one foot into the shallow edge of the spring. Instant ly there came from the man in the straw hat the quiet and imperious order , 'Take your foot out. * The sergeant , irritated beyond endurance by what he regarded a trifling matter , turned and said inso lently : 'Mind your own business , sir. I will have no quartermaster's clerk giving orders to me. * "As though he had been a part of the man the splendid horse made one jump toward the spring and toward the ser geant , and the man in the straw hat said , with increased emphasis and imperiousness - periousness , 'Take your foot out , ' and the bewildered sergeant recognized the commander in chief of the army. He stepped back and saluted , and then Gen eral Buell said quietly , looking down with a sort of sympathy into the dis mayed face : 'Fill your canteens , but be careful. Thirty thousand men must take water from this spring before night. ' "Those who remembered what a mudhole a thousand men make of a . spring understood why General Buell stood guard on that day. " Chicago Inter Ocean. A Use For It. "And now , " said the banker , when they had entered the private office and closed the door , "what can I do for you ? " The sinister looking stranger drew from his pocket a glass vessel securely corked , containing a yellowish liquid. " 1 want money , " he said , "and 1 must have it. If I were to drop this glass on the floor and break it , both of us would be blown into a thousand pieces. " The banker scribbled an address upon a card. "Take that thing up to my house , " he said , "and turn it over to our new servant girl , and then name your price. " Strand Magazine. Theater Chat. He In China a play is six months long. She Dear me , what a lot of good hue leather you save in not being there is j , * o out between acts ! Exchange. icMiliNNMiHMJi ! . , in mi l l maMMW.1 1 nww iWWW WHMWWWII9I LOOK ON THE BRIGHT SIDE. We Hare Many Causes to Be Thankful if We Try to See Them. Another Thanksgiving day has dawn ed , and" we are perhaps questioning our selves as to whether wo have any cause for gratitude in the way our lives have been ordered. The pessimist , looking al ways on the dark side , say ? . , "Well , I may be fairly happy today , but that doesn't argue that I may not be utterly miserable tomorrow , " and in consequence quence he or she , instead of being thank ful for the present good , frets over the future evil which perhaps who knows ? may never come. Every one of us has something for which to give thanks today. Now begin - gin and analyze our possessions and see if the blessings do not outweigh the miseries. If we have health , wo should rejoice ; that is a rare gift that cannot be too warmly appreciated. If a dear one who has been at death's door is re stored to us , that is another cause for jubilation. Even if wo are pressed hard financially , there are compensating sides to that situation. Nothing is so bad but it could bo worse , and though wo may not feel privileged to shout over a posi tive good we can bo happy in the fact that it is not a positive evil. Every one of us has the power to make sunshine in our own and in the lives of others. Burdens there are to bear for every pair of shoulders , but in helping others , in self sacrifice , in a desire to bo sweet , womanly and lovable , our own trials slip away and when Thanksgiving day comes around we can , with a joyous heart , declare that wo have much to bo grateful for. All holidays have their sorrowful side ; they are reminiscent of other oc casions when the family in perfect , un broken numbers Kit iiround the table and reveled in the spirit of the occasion. Now they are scattered hero and there. Death , perhaps , has claimed some , and the feast of today is but a mere shadow of the functions of other seasons long gone by. But if you are left entirely alone and are obliged to sit down to your solitary meal with no companions 6ave your own thoughts , you still have cause for thankfulness , and you will find it if you only make it your busi ness to look for it instead of moping and repining over what cannot be helped and what is only made worse by brood ing upon. Awake in touch with the spirit of the day , and you will find that , despite all past troubles or present annoyances , you can cause the 24 hours to brim over with gratefulness that may do much to make other ones equally joyous. Thanksgiving Brinfta Reunions. No other gala season of the year , not even Christmas , sets in motion so many forces , sees cars and boats so packed with children and grandchildren going back to the old home , sees old people so forgetting their age and young people ple so honoring the old , and altogether witnesses such beautiful reunions as we find at Thanksgiving. Men immersed in business cares take time now to run up to the rocky farm in Massachusetts , or the prairie home in Wisconsin , or the wheatfield of Dakota , to be boys again beside their parents. "I'm growing to be quite an old gentleman , " said my friend , whose 88 years are his crown of glory , "but I tell you when Thanksgiv ing comes I'm a boy again , for my chil dren and their families all come back to keep the day with me. ' ' Christian Her ald. Maine's First Thanksgiving. The first Thanksgiving day in Amer ica was appointed not by the pilgrims , as many persons mistakenly believe , but by members of the church of England. It was celebrated at Monhegan , off the Maine coast , near the mouth of the Kennebec river , as far back as 1607 13 years prior to the arrival of the May flower in Plymouth harbor and Chap lain Seymour preached a sermon "gyv ing God thanks for our happy metynge and saffe aryvail into the country. " Selected. Time For Thanksgiving. The end of harvest time is universal ly set apart for thaukbgiving. Whether in the form of the American Thanksgiv ing day , the English harvest home , the Scotch Halloween , the Hebrew Feast of Tabernacles , the Roman festi val in honor of the goddess Ceres or the Greek festival in honor of Demeter , the instinct prompting it is the same. Since men first became tillers of the ground their two greatest annual events have been seedtime and harvest. New York Sun. A Homo Bay. Thanksgiving is the home day. It is the day for the heart and its affections. It is a day for the dreams and the ideals of youth and maiden. It is a day for youth away from home to freshen their hopes and kindle anew their aspirations. Chicago Tribune. The Farmer's Thanksgiving. The earth is brown and skies are gray , And tlie "windy woods are bare , And the first white flakes of the coming snow Are afloat in the frosty air , But the sparks fly up from the hickory log On the homestead's broad stone hearth , And the windows shake , and the rafters ring , To the lads' and. the lasies' mirth. The farmer's face is furrowed and worn , And his locks are thin and white , But his hand is steady , his voice is clear , And his eye is blue and bright As ho turns to look at his sweet old wife , Who sits in her gown of gray , With the cobweb kerchief and creamy frills She were on her wedding day. He bows his head to the laden board And the guests they are silent all. "Thanksgiving , Lord , for the sun and rain , And the fruit on the orchard wall. For the silver wheat , and the golden corn , And the crown of a peaceful life The greatest blessing that thou canst give A true and a loving wife ! " This white haired lover he bends to kiss Her hand in its frill of lace And the faded rose on her wrinkled cheek With a proud and a courtly grace , And the snowflakes click on the window pane. And the rafters ring above. And the angels sing at the gates of God The words of the farmer's love. Independent. I gW"i ' i . i , . . , . inn 1 1 1,11 | KOYALWILD TUBKEY HOW THE TRUE SPORTSMAN HUNTS THIS NOBLE GAME. Glorious Sport Seeking Him In His Wild Mountain GladcM HU Flesh Far Superior to Ills Domestic Brother Old Gobblers Are Very Knowing Birds. Taking him "by and kr'ge , " an old turkey gobbler is the quickest , swiftest , shiest and most knowing animal with wings or without. Ho can run like a greyhound , smell like a doer , see like an eagle and fly like a wild turkey. You may have spent two hours in crawling on your hands and knees over a mountain open or in moving with noiseless footsteps , each ono of which is considered with careful deliberation , and a single , sudden turn of your head , snap of a twig or gleam of sunshine on your gun will send a whole gang a milo away and up the mountain. Upward it always is. When a wild turkey does not like the looks of things , ho wants the rockiest and roughest summit of the particularly highest headland of the topmost ridge of a whole range , and he generally gets it. If it is steep , he runs , and ho can run up faster than you can fall down. If it is a gentle rise , he thrashes the air with his mighty wings clear up obstructing tree tops , and then away ho sails with a velocity that belongs to a 20 pound feathered cannon ball. Take a dog along , if you will , and when the gang is busy feeding your cur may surprise them so quickly as to make a flush. Off they will fly , scatter ing in every direction , no two birds to gether. If it is afternoon , they will want to get together for the night , and in a few hours you hear far off a plain tive qu-urck , qu-urck , qn-urck , qu-urck , qu-urck , qu-urck seven notes , the last three coming shorter and sharper. Now , if you arc one of the rare individuals who can make and manipulate a turkey call , take from your pocket the well worn hollow bones of a wild gobbler's wings , bo still as death and imitate that queer invitation. You will- probably bo conscious that it is answered and have some delicious hensatious. Nay , it may even come nearer and lead you to mad ly strain your eye nerves trying to see through entirely opaque underbrush. But unless those turkeys are very young and foolish or are hens this will bo all. An old gobbler will have thought it all out long before he stops within range and silently fly away , leaving you to wonder why the answer doesn't keep on coming. The thoroughbred and glorious way to kill a turkey is to go out alouo in the mountains with your Winchester and a half dozen cartridges and just look for the noble old fellow. Not that just looking will do. To make much of a success you must listen for him , feel for him , taste for him and smell for him , too , and above everything else wait for him. Get into just the wildest and most se cluded glade you can climb to , where the only harvesters of the chestnuts and hickory nuts are the squirrels , where the tea berries , huckleberries and wild grapes grow only for the pheasants and turkeys , where the wildcat screams at night , the fox pounces on the rabbit , the black bear hunts for bee trees and the big homed owl is the villain in many nocturnal tragedies. Keep in the underbrush , but look out into every open glade. Take note of what there is for a turkey to eat and see if the dry leaves are scratched up. Walk about a mile an hour and don't put your foot down unless you know what kind of a noise it is going to make. Don't be sure it is a squirrel you hear scampering over the leaves until you see him or hear his chatter. See every thing that your eyes can take in and keep them looking steadily on points in distant leaf colored slopes until they see many things that did not appear at first. Stop sometimes and don't move anything but your eyeballs for five full , silent minutes. Never make any sudden move , consider whether the last night's frost has fallen on this area of ruffled and torn up leaves , where plainly strong toes have been laying there the rich , dark earth or the sweet remains of the chestnut crop. When you decide that the scratching has been done this morning , see where it began and remember what ground lies in the direction to which it tends. Then follow , moving more slowly and carefully. Come to a steep mountain side , sheering to the sycamore fringed river. Do not dare to go directly down. Sidle quickly off on a better grade and then , having circled over a swift , breath less half mile , work back to where the trail should meet the river meadow. Take care. Drop at full length , a little cautious because of the haste. There they are , strutting forth from the un dergrowth by the stream after washing down the chestnut breakfast with cold , clear mountain water. Thev come un the hill toward you , and you lie like a stricken man , with your rifle follow ing every movement of a great black gobbler , father of the flock , though he is still 300 yards away. Motherly , mild mannered hens and young gobblers are in his train , sipping dewdrops from the grass , picking at ragweed , chasing a grasshopper with half open wings or ruffling into make believe combats. But uev-ir for a mo ment are all off their guard. One , two or three of their tall necks are always stretched aloft , full of eyes and ears , in statuesque suspicion. Now the old gob bler straightens up his head , poised four feet from the ground , trim , graceful , powerful , the sun glinting on the dark iridescent feathers of his back and low er neck. Now you decide he is in range. Your 38 caliber bullet strikes his noble breast with a muffled thump , and the iiant ; wings wildly beat down the dry tagweed , while your magazine is emp tied vainly at the dark forms shooting Dff toward the wooded mountain side. He is a royal creature , this wild tur key , and you may hope to see an old gobbler tip the scales at 20 or 25 pounds. Washington Star. v - , nr „ lf.i.iWBeram * l m BACKACHE 1 makes the young feel old. and the old feel M that life is not worth the living. It's a danger - - | H ger signal of Kidney Disease the unerring H evidence of weak , inactive and sore Kidneys. H Any person cured of Kidney weakness will , H tell you that when the back ceased to ache , M all troubles ended. Neither liniments , no * M plasters , nor electricity can cure it. The H seat of the trouble isnot in the skin , flesh or M muscles. It's In the KWmjj. M It can be H CURED "Hobba Sparagus Kidney Pllla relieved my M wife of a great pain In her back , and alleviated j H a severe trouble in her kidneys. " H Patrick Murray , j H 1839 N. 17th St. , Omaha , Neb. M "I atnjrlad to Bay that Dr. Hobba Sparatf us H Kidney Pills have had a satisfactory effect In H my case. They havedouc.ill that I could ex- H poet and what you claim they do. They cured H me of a terrible backache which I had for. H several months , and after I had used two boxes B I waa H August Steyaert , Cedar Rapids , Neb. H . Hobbs , H PARAGUS I Kidney Pills. M It often happens that the doctor is nut of | town when most needed. 1 lie two vear old | daughter of J. V. Sclienck , of Caddo ' , Indian H Territory , was threatened uifh croup. He < 1 writes : "My wife insisted that I go for the > | doctor at once , but as lie was nut nf town , i | purchased a bottle of Chamberlain's Cough M Kemedy. which relieved the child immediate- H ly. " A bottle of that remedy in the house / | will often save the expense nf a doctor's bill , ' * * ! N | besides the anxiety always occasioned by serious - \ | rious illness. When it is given as soon as the * y | croupy cough appears , it will prevent the at- u H tack. Thousands of mothers always keep it { , H in their house. The 25 and 50 cent bottles for | H sale by L. YV. McCounell. H From the Lone StarState comes the follow- H intj lettei , written byV. . K. Gass , editor of the 1 H Mount Vernon ( Tex. ) Herald : "I have ised ' H ' Chamberlain's Colic. .Cholera and Di.i rrliwa H Remedy in my fanfily for the past year , and M find it the best remedy for colic and diarrhoea . H that I have ever tried. Its effects are instan- J H taneous and satisfactory , and I cheerfully rec H ommend it , especially for cramp colic and di H arrhrea. Indeed , we shall try and keep a bet H tie of it on our medicine shelf as long as we | keep house. " For sale by L. W. McConndl. M A little child of J. R. I lays , living near Col • f l quitt , Oeorgia , overturned a pot of boiling H water , scalding itself so severely that the skin M came oft its breast and limbs. The distressed H parents sent to Mr. Hush , a merchant of Col H quitt , for a remedy , and he promptly forward 1 ed Chamberlain's Tain Halm. ' 1 he child was H suffering intensely , but was relieved by a I H single application of Pain HaJm. Another H application or two made it sound and well. H I'or sale by L.V. . McConnell. H J.C. Berry , one of the best known citizens H of Spencer , Mo. , testifies that lie cured himself H ° l c , &mi of , 1)V M of , worlt Pies ) usintf a few boxeb DeWitt's Witch Ifazel Salve. He had bsen troubled with piles for over thirty years and H had used many different kinds of so-called M cures ; but DeWitt's was the one that did th * B work and he will verify this statement if any M one wishes to write him. A. McMillen. M Warning Persons who suffer from coughs fl and colds should heed the warnings of danger fl and save themselves suffering and fatal results fl - W ? ? 0ne Nnutc CouKh CureIt an S infallible remedy for coughs , colds , croup and all throat and lung troubles. A. McMillen. M .z = r IU I J. M. I hirsivend of Grosbeck.Tex. , says that ( S l when he has a spell of indigestion and feels * H bad and sluggish , he takes two of DeWitt's 1 Little Early Risers at night , and he is all right - the next morning. May thousands nf others do the same thing. Do you ? A. McMillen. . You can't afford to risk your life by aJIort mg a cold to develop into pneumonia or oft sumption Instajit relief and a certain cure McMHknf by J" " MinUte Cou h Cure- . , Disfigurement for life by burns or scalds , j | may be avoided by usintf DeWitt's Witch fl Ilaze halve , the great remedy for piles and ! r " ' . 'kinds of sores and skin troubles. A 1 McMillen. M There is no need of little children being tortured - | tured by scald head , eczema and skin erun- ' kH lions. DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve gives in- statu relief and cures permanently. A. Mc H Millen. - * H You can't cure | consumption but you can avoid it and cure every other form of throat or lung trouble by the use of One Minute Cough Cure. A. McMillen. Small pill safe pill , best pill. DeWitt's H little fcarly Risers cure biliousness , constina- sH tion , sick headache. A. McMillen. H TIMBER CULTURE FINAL PROOF- H . NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. Lnited States Land Office , McCook , Neb. , October 14th , 1897. Notice is hereby given that Abraham Peters has filed notice of inten- M turn to make final proof before Register or M Receiver at his office in McCook , Nebraska , M on Saturday , the 27th day of November. 1807 , M on timber culture application No. 5,283 , Tor J H the southeast quarter of section No. 2r , in M township No. 1 , north of range No. to west H He names as witnesses : William H. Benja- 1 , M mm Albert Weeks August Wesch , Charles } M t. Elliott , all of Banksviile , Nebraska. " H io-i5-6t. A. S. Campbell , Register. H Jujlius JCtintert , 1 Carpet Laying \H \ Carpet Cleaning. H ZSTl am still doing H carpet laying , carpet cleaning lawn cutting and similar work. See ' H or write me before giving such work. Mv H la r fare er > 'reasonable- Leave orders at M Tribune office. JULIUS KL'NERT. j H ? | • its1.o11goDxasao AT3rjx > au 1 : H ? - irttpcBSMfjrtjojirBS333 - 9HI * . iTt n • " . - - H -irBS333 aoU8ouaLia < li-i H i H