Valentine Democrat. (Valentine, Neb.) 1900-1930, January 22, 1903, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    THE VALENTINE DEMOCRAT
I. SO. KICK , J'ub
YALENTINE , NEBRASKA.
Jii ovder to bu a gentleman uiauy a.
tn.-m has to forget himself.
Real worth will crop out , but some
body else is likely to cut the crop.
' iive-thousand-dol-
You-can't fasten a -
Jar education upon a fifty-cent boy.
In Denver some of the lovely women
pro now referred to as "beautiful re
peaters. "
All men may be made of dust , but
some men have a lot more of the dust
than others.
The hardest misfortunes we have to
bear are those we anticipate but which
never happen.
Let us give Adam credit for ouo
thing. lie didn't tip the 'waiter who
handed that apple to Eve.
The3r are forming a milliners' trust
In New York. The time for men to
get their guns is fast approaching.
If those anarchists really wish to
make away with King Leopold they
might try hiding dynamite bombs in
bis whiskers.
In saying that coeducation results in
{ ove and eventually in marriage for-
Jner Minister Wu has given segrega
tion another black 'eve.
A Brooklyn woman has sued a Pull
man porter for breach of promise. No
tvonder she deems that she should have
compensation for losing such a prize.
We note with pleasure that after a
lapse of 2.JJ03 years Greece and Persia
have patched up their ancient quarrel.
Thus is another war cloud in ihe East
happily dissipated.
King" Leopold says the anarchists
can't scare him out , but it is repurtod
that he turns pale whenever he hears
the cook making the steak render with
the potato masher.
A Chicago man who was asked u >
name the things which had contributed
most to his success mentioned 4 J
luck as one of them. This is ason -
Berful admission , coming from one w'v.
Is up.
Recently Emperor William shot
Eighty rabbits in twenty minutes , or
it the rate of one every fifteen seconds.
We are beginning to suspect that the
Kaiser is not much of a true sports
man , after all. and that he goes hunt-
Ing with a gatling gun.
There is talk in Austria of establish-
Bg a newspaper especially for nervous
jersons , in which accounts of catastro
phes will be treated in a soothing style.
This will give a new color name to jour
nalism. If it is "yellow" to jar sensitive
nerves , it may be considered "gray" to
leave them undisturbed.
Many faults have been found , both
by practical men and theorists , with the
governments of American cities. Fun
damental defects have been observed ,
their existence has been admitted , but
acknowledgment is tempered , in nearly
every case , with proper extenuating ex
planations. The trouble seems to be
that American cities have not com
pletely mastered local situations and
irranged their system's of management
; o conform exactly to their character-
sties.
One of the natural beauties of the
town of Eustis , in Franklin County ,
Maine , is a noble grove of pines border-
Ing the highway. A lumberman want
ed the trees , and offered ? 3OOU for them
enough to pay the debt of Eustis
but at a specirl town meeting it Avas
voted , 47 to 4 , not to accept the offer.
Thus the little town set an example to
larger places. Evidently the people
realize that even if a community could
afford to sacrifice its beauties , it would
have no moral right to do so : for a nat
ural adornment like the Eustis grove
"belongs" not only to the persons now
living In the town , but to future genera
tions of residents , and in a deeper spir
itual sense to every human being who
lhall draw rest and refreshment from
: he trees.
That day Is a suggestion of Siberian
; liruate when womanhood does not
fecore a fresh triumph in the irrepressi-
ile conflict of the sexes. Since this gov
ernment began a woman's head has
dever decorated a postage stamp , but
at last the outrage of a hundred years
has been recognized , and the mother of
her country , Martha Washington , will
be honored , with her sex , by the appear
ance of her profile on an eight-cent
fctamp. This , while a decided victory ,
Is not an unalloyed joy , for an inquiry
would demonstrate that not more than
Pj"ty-five women in the United States
tver saw an eight-cent stamp , or know
lhat a stamp of that denomination is is-
lued. However , It is the principle true
womanhood Is after , not stamps , and
ihe knowledge that somewhere in the
ttorld the representative of woman is
Imltten on her fair brow by a canceling
taachme brings balm to the bruised
teart At least It cannot be said of
tfartha , as of George , that she looks
Ike two cents.
Ridiculous stories about the young
filing of Spain are matched , now and
} gain , by equally unflattering remarks
b print about his kingdom , and the
leader .needs to remember that there
must be "another side" * f more agree
able purport. Speaking of Alfonso'
subjects , a Bost' n clergyman who speri
the summer in Spain has recently writ
ten : "When I am told hereafter of th
lazy , unenterprising Spaniard , I shal
remember the man with tiu. hoe seei
every whenthrough the Bsisque prov
inces ; 1 shall remember tbe side hilli
cultivated , where in Colorado only tin
best plain lands are utilized ; I pluill rn
call the magnificent improvement !
along the San Sebastian riverways :
shall tliink of the modern electric slnv
cars and lights , and the excellent waj
in which new Madrid is being built
and I shall put them and the manj
workers in field and city alongside ol
the indolent loafers around the Puert ;
del Sol and say , 'Yes. the one oxists. bu
so does the other. Forces are makii : ;
for decay , but more potent ones an
talcing for new life. ' "
The report that Northwestern Univer
sity. at Evanston. 111. , has all the s.u
dents that it can possibly care , " > r will
its present accommodations. : : ul ih '
the enrollment has reach , d the Ian-
figure of 3.COU , invites attention am w i
the remarkable general increasel \ :
is noticeable in collegiate attendant ,
throughout the country. Twenty yeai :
ago there was not a college or univer
sity in the United States which coal , !
boast 3,01)0 ) students. Harvard , thi
largest of them all , was considerably
below that mark , and did not pass I
until some ten years later. Last year
however , there were six institution1
having more than : > . ( ) ( ) ( ) students each
and two others which were so close \
the mark that they must have pass. .
it handsomely by this time. And it' tlit
rate of increase at Northwestern. wlri < .1
'
had ii , < 500 in the fall of 1001. has been ; .
all comm n the list must now be cons'u
erably enlarged. Turning from tin
growth of the greater universities to ;
general consideration of the subject , ii
appears to the CMiicago Record-Hera. ,
that there has been a tremendous gah
all along the line. A report of the bu
reau of education for the year 1SS2 pui
the attendance at colleges and universi
ties then at 04.00(5. ( The estimates fo :
11)1)2 ) ) came to 101,221. Possibly SOUK
allowances should be made in a compar
ison of these two figures because of th
results of affiliation and consolidation
University means much more than il
did , and includes schools that were n. I
formerly classified along * with collegia ! * !
institutions. But when due weight ii
given to this fact it will be seen thai
the number of students at the collegi
and universities has increased mud ;
more rapidlythan the population
which went from fifty millions in 18-
to seventy-six millions in 1000. Ilela
tively speaking , the percentage of gaL
in the latter case was so small as to IKJ
completely outclassed.
THE LEOPARD-SLAYER.
Modest Soldier Who Braved theWratl
of a Local Mairiiate.
A recent writer in Chambers's Jour
nal gives an interesting reminiscence
of his official experience in India. At-
he sat outside his U-ut one day he
heard wild cries , and an orderly dash
ed up , crying excitedly that a wild
leopard had invaded the cavalry lines.
It had killed one horse and stampeded
a hundred , and the sahib must come
at once. Hastening to the spot , he
found the leopard dead on the ground ,
surrounded by a crowd of men , six or
seven of whom were standing close
beside the body with naked swords in
their hands , and the swaggering air ol !
victors.
Only one of the men did not swag
ger , and his sword was the only one
which had blood upon it. This man
stood aside while the others rushed
up claiming to have slain the creature ,
and only after they had finished speak
ing stated quietly that he had killed
it , as it had killed his horse , and that
they had only come up after it was
dead. They wished to share the re
ward offered by the government for
killing dangerous Avild beasts. lie ask
ed respectfully for an investigation ,
which was promised.
But In conversation at the dinner
table that night it appeared that tin
leopard was probably not a wild beasl
at all , but an escaped chetah , or traim.il
hunting leopard , belonging to the loca.
judge. The next morning its owner ac
companied the colonel to the lines
where he immediately identified th :
carcass in the presence of the regiment
which stood drawn up waiting for th ?
award of the government bounty to be
decided. Then he turned to the colonel
and said in an angry and accusing voice ,
"Please order the men who killed th ?
leopard to fall out. "
Only one man , Ilazara Sing , came for
ward , out of all the previous claimant.11
to the honor.
"Are you the man who killed my leop
ard ? " asked the judge.
"Yes , " answered he , steadily. "The
leopard came into the lines , leaped on
my horse's back , and began tearing its
throat open. I drew my sword and cm
it down with one blow. My horse died
last night , and I am now a beggar ,
having no money to purchase another
horse , which would cost me three hun
dred rupees. " ( The native cavalry pro
vided their own mounts. )
"Well done , my man ! " said the judge ,
to the amazement of the listeners , whd
had expected an outburst of wrath.
"Come up. to my house and 1 will make
you a present of the amount youwill
need to buy another horse. I "will do
this because I consider you to be a
brave and truthful man. "
The braggarts of the bloodless swords
got only the ridicule of the regiment ,
both for their hasty claim and Its hast
ier withdrawal , while Hazara Sing
bore afterward the nickname of thii
Leopard Slayer. He was later , for gal
lantry in battle , promoted to the rank
ot L native officer.
it' t-Mfr > > &S Vi" ' 5SS5jSLi !
INGE Lord Curzon has been Viceroy of India he has become a great
sportsman , or shikari , as the term is in the East. At first he contiued
himself to the popular and comparatively riskless sport of snipe-shoot
ing. That proved too tame , however , and soon His Excellency sought to
establish a reputation of a killer of big game. Toward this the fates and
the special advantages which the ( Jovernor General can command have
favorably contributed , and Lord Curzon can now boast of having bagged as
many tigers as some of the best sportsmen who have spent years in the
pursuit of big game in India.
Lady Curzou , loo. has all the instincts of a sportswoman. She has ac
companied her husband on several of his shooting expeditious , but it was
only on a recent visit of Their Excellencies to Hyderabad that she actually
took part in a "kill. " True , she did not handle a gun , but she ascended the
machan , or shooting-ledge , and awaited ihe arrival of Mr. Stripes. -
Usually the machan is used by solitary sportsmen who have had khubber
( news ) of a tiger who has been causing havoc among the cattle , and. possibly ,
among the natives in a district. A kid is tied to the foot of the tree to
which the machan is affixed , and the j-porlsmau sits over it until the bleat-
ings of the animal attracts the tiger. On the hitter's approach the sports
man , of course , has him at a distinct advantage , and only a bungler can
fail to kill. In the case of the Viceroy's shoot the beaters did all that was
necessary in driving the tiger within range.
One of the accompanying illustrations depicts the method of conveyance
by which Lord and Lady Curzou traversed the jungle. A number of streams
abouud in the Nizam's big game preserves , and the negotiations of these
with befitting dignity necessitated the carrying of Their Excellencies in the
elaborate chair arrangement. It also minimized the risk of either coming to
grief through the worst of Indian pests snakes. This method of progres
sion is made as comfortable as it can possibly be by reason of the remark
ably well-balanced stride which generations of practice have taught the car
riers to adopt.
A sensational incident was reported in the Indian papers as occurring in
connection with a recent shoot. A gun which was being handed to Lord
Curzou accidentally exploded in both barrels. Luckily no one was hurt , but
how narrow was the Viceroy's escape may be judged from the fact that a
hole was blown in his helmet. An inch or so lower and the bullet would
have pierced his brain.
Apart from this incident the shoot was eminently successful. Four tigers
fell to Lord Curzon's gun or. to be correct , three tigers and a tigress. Our
first illustration reveals the vanquishing Viceroy. Lady Curzon , and the
largest of th1 ' The tiirer measimd " " > ' ' -or and the tigress S feet.
CARRYING LORD AND LADY CURZON THROUGH THE JUNGLE.
HE PROVED HIS HONESTY.
Thonsrh His Fraud "Was but Fourteen
Cents , He Paid for It.
The Great Northern passenger depart-
'ment received another contribution to
the conscience fund yesterday , but the
earnings will show an increase of only
14 cents and that amount will be deb
ited to stamps. However , the 14 cents
quiets the teasing , nagging conscience
of a North Dakota-farmer and stock
man , which will , compensate the pas
senger department for the trouble of
making out and cancelling a ticket and
auditing the 14-cent account.
It was last May that a farmer living
at Rugby Junction , Pierce county , N.
D. , decided to go to Leeds , twenty-
seven miles east , to look at a bunch of
yearlings that he knew were for sale ,
lie had planned to make the trip in a
buggy , but it happened that when he j
was ready to go there was some work
on the farm that needed to be done ,
so h6 set his hired man at it and de
cided to go on the railroad.
He paid 81 cents for a ticket from
the junction to Leeds , intending to
walk from there to the farm where the
cattle were pastured. But on the train
he met an acquaintance , who told him
that it would be nearer to go to Niles
and walk back from there. So when
the train reached Leeds he stayed in
his sent.
This farmer really had no intention
of beating the railroad out of the 14-
cent fare for the four and two-thirds
miles of ride between Leeds and Niles.
The railroad beat itself. The conductor
of the train got off on the station plat
form at Leeds , yelled "all aboard , " and
gave the signal to go ahead. Nobody
got aboard and the conductor did not
think of going through the train again
to collect fares. So the Rugby Junction
man rode on to Niles without paying
for his ride.
He found the bunch of yearlings and
bought them ( cost him something like
$205) ) , and then made arrangements for
driving them home. It happened , there
fore , that he did not have a chance to
square himself with the road on his
return trip. He dismissed the matter
from his mind for a time , but every
now and then It would occur to him
that he was a poor class leader in tlu >
chuch if he took an underhand advant
age of "Jim Hill. "
It took him four months to arrive-at
the conclusion that the only way out
of the difficulty was to repay the com-
pany for the ride , and that is why ( Jen- j
eral Passenger Agent Whitney received ,
14 cents in stamps. St. Paul Pioneerj j
Press.
Straining the Language.
An amusing liberty which a native of
Muscle Shoals took with a word in ( ail-
language comes out in a story told in
'
the New York Times. A man borrowed
the native's horse without stopping t <
: isk permission. In the course of a fe
days the animal was returned , but th
native did not take a kindly view ol
the matter , and conclnded to have legi ; !
redress. He announced his intentior
of having the offender arrested.
"What will you have him arrested
for ? " he was asked.
"For horse-stealing , of course. "
"How can you maid ? horse-stealing
out of it. when he returned the horse ? '
"Ain't it stealing if he brought 'iis
back ? "
"I'm not a lawyer , but I don't see ho
it can be. "
"All right , then ; I'll have "im arrested
for usury. " .
"I don't see how you can make usurj
out of it. either. "
"Why , hang it all ! he used 'im , didn'J
he ? Yes. sir. he used 'im three or foui
days , an' used 'im mighty hard , too , bj
the looks of 'im. "
No Need to Adiourn.
A story that suggests Sydney Smith'i
mot , that the British army ought nevei
to leave England except in case oJ
actual invasion , comes from a South
crn State. The legislature of that Statt
were tardy in adjourning last year
although there seemed to be no im
portant business under consideration.
"Judge" Jones , one of the legislators
was met bj' a friend in the street on
hot morning , and the two stopped ta
talk under the shade of an awning.
"Goin' to clear out pretty soon ,
jedge ? "
"I suppose so , " answered the states
man , mopping his brow.
"Anything much goin' on down aJ
the capital ? "
"No. "
"Why don't they wind up , then ? "
"Well , that's just the trouble
There's nothing but a lot of petty bus
iness to bother us , and we don't mind
that. I wish something important
would come up , and then the motion
to adjourn would be in order. "
Just as His Mother Used to Do.
lie criticised her puddings , and he didn'l
like her cake ;
He wished she'd make the biscuit thai
his mother used to make ;
She didn't wash the dishes , and she
didn't make a stew ,
And she didn't mend his stockings as his
mother used to do.
All. well , she wasn't perfect , though she
tried to do her best ,
L'util at length she thought her time had
come to have a rest ;
So. when one day he went the same old
rigmarole all through ,
She turned and boxed his ears , just as
his mother used to do.
New York News.
When a motber calls her boys to get
up in the morning , she has so much
sympathy for them that she never call ?
good and loud till the sixth time.
cience
Tattooing the cornea with sterilized
India ink is recommended by Dr. .1. L
Borsch for lessening the uusightliiwss
5f opaque spots on the eye. When the-
opacity is slight the treatment ma ; ,
considerable restoration of
even give a
iight.
The breathing or blowing of wells
driven on the plains of Nebraska has
been lately shown to coincide with
changes of barometric pressure , but it
is thought that low pressure can hard
ly account for the force with which
the air is expelled from some of the
wells.
Few persons would guess that th-
smallest things visible to the eye are
the stars. Yet Dr. Edward Divers wa <
no doubt correct in declaring such to
Ve the case in his address before the
-hemical section of the British Asso
i-iation at Belfast. Great as many of
Ihe stars are in actual magnitude , their
listarice is so immense that their angu
lar diameter becomes insensible , and
they approach the condition of geomet
rical points. The minute disks that
they appear to have are spurious , an
effect of irradiation.
The world's greatest monument ,
prized as a marvel of antiquity , seems
to have been made with tools we class
as modern. From evidence collected
at Gizeh. W. M. Flindcrs-Petrie con
cludes that the pyramid builders used
-solid and tubular drills , straight and
circular saws and lathe tools , all of
which were set with cutting stones ,
and they did work that would puzzle
the artisan of to-day. Some granite
cores show that the drill sunk one-
tenth of an inch at each revolution ,
while the cut was clean and uniform
through soft sandstone and the hardest
granite. As diamonds were very
scarce , it is supposed that the cutting
material was corundum.
Associative memory , says Prof. E.
G. Conklin of the University of Penn
sylvania is the fused impressions of
processes which occur together , so that
when one is recalled the other comes
with it. Then he adds. "There is no
luestion whatever that a bee leaving
" ; s hive and flying for half a mile finds
is way back by associative memory.
! t must travel by landmarks : it can
not travel by any scent of itself in the
atmosphere. That is out of the ques
tion. " Among other creatures giving
evidence of the possession of associa
tive memory , which is the first stage
in the development of psychic life. Pro
fessor Conklin mentions ants and
wasps , as well as cuttlefish , squids and
the higher mollusks. Birds and many
mammals show a high degree of asso
ciative memory.
The Rev. John M. Bacon , who for
several years , with the aid of a bal
loon , has industirously explored the
atmosphere over London , givei , a
strange picture of the sky ware ? * : te
sion of the world's greatest city , jme-
what fancifully , and yet with a cer
tain degree of truth , London might be
said to be (5,000 feet high , or deep , for
up to about that level the air over the
vast town is unmistakably London air.
Between ,000 and 5,000 feet above the
housetops is a region where dust re
sembling chaff , filaments and woolen
fiber , such as would arise from thor
oughfares and from the sweeping of
houses , seems especially to accumu
late. At least there is more there than
nearer the ground. In calm weather
aerial London becomes to a certain
extent stratified. From above (5,000
feet one can often look down upon the
surface of the haze , as if it had a defi
nite limit.
A. Complicated. Case.
A country "squire" is often called
upon to settle questions which tax both
his knowledge and his ingenuity. One
such matter was presented to Squire
Prescott of Banbury not long ago.
"Square , " said a solemn-faced man ,
stopping the lawyer one day as he was
leaving the postofiice , "there's a point
1 want you should settle , and whatever
you say I'll abide by it , whether you
think as 1 expect you will or not. "
"Well. let's hear what it is , " said
Squire Prescott , good-naturedly.
"It's just like this , " said the man ,
stepping closer and speaking in a lower
tone. "Hen Rogers wants to trade
farms with me , but we can't quite
agree on terms. His cow pasture is bet
ter than mine , but I've got twice as
many blueberry bushes as he has ; his
corn is all started and mine isn't , but
I've got screens to five windows and
two doors. There's less stones in his
meadow land than there is in mine , but
there's more bog.
"Now , I won't tell you which is
which , but one of us thinks Hen's collie
dog had ought to be throwed into the
barter , and the other one thinks that
my heifer would just about even up.
Now what should you say was the fair
: hing ? "
He Fulfilled the Requirements.
Johnnie had been told to write a
; hort composition in which he should
say something about all the days of
the week.
The little fellow thought a few min
utes and then triumphantly produced
this :
"Monday , father and I killed a bear ;
md there was meat enough to last over
Tuesday , Wednesday , Thursday , Frl-
3ay. Saturday and Sunday. "
Our experience has been when a man
goes off on a "trip , " the good effects
only last about a week ; at the end of
lhat time he is as cross as ever , and
his liver in the same condition it was
before he went away.
When Backs Are Bad. j
Rnd imeks are-
caused by
kidneys.
Most b a c k"
ache pains are-
kidney pains.
Backache I *
the first symp
tom of kidney
disorders.
Neglect the-
warning of the-
back , serious ,
troubles lollow.
It's only a
step to urinary
derangements-
' disease.
diabetes , dropsy , Bright's .
to be cured :
Read how .
CASE NO. 24 13.rr. . Joseph
Barter milLs.
of the
foreman
Calmes ,
" as : i lent-
Postorla. O. . says : "I Just
to
' Kidney Pilk
recommend Doan's
ly
Octobeu
of
and it is the mouth
day ,
of ISJb ,
1SOO , as I did in the summer
of the
when , after taking a course
cured me of kiuncjr
treatment , they
complaint and backache , winches
often so acute that 1 was
d.lhculty m
and had
sleep at night
remaining on my feet all day. I nni
or an } an-
still free from the lumbago
and unhesi
novance from my kidneys ,
tatingly declare that 1 am only'too-
or
pleased to re-endoyse my opinions
Doan's Kidney Pills. "
A FIJEE Till A L of this great kidney-
medicine which cured Mr. Calmes ivill
to any part of
be mailed on application
" . Address i-ostei-
the "United States.
Milburn Co. . Buffalo , N. Y. ! or sale-
50 cents per box.
by all dniggldts , price
Eat only fo id that is easy of di
gestion , avoiding indigestible dishes ,
and taking but one to thiee kinds afc
a meal.
Wages of the working people of the
United Kingdom , according to oBl-
cial statistics , showed a decrease of
$7.920,000 last year as compared with
the preceding year.
The commission of United States
senators in Hawaii accepted an invi
tation to a native banquet. The
principal disli was tooked doe , which
the ITawaiians have long considered
one ol the greatest delicacies. The-
senators thought they were eating-
uast pig.
ELT'8 LIU CfO CREAM Bsl
is prepared for sutferers fron
rasal caturrh who use an
atomizer in spraying the dis
eased membranes. All th <
healiiiK and soothing proper
ties of Cream Ilaini are retain
ed in the new preparation. It
doesnotdryup thesecretions {
pricc.inclyjjing sprannu tube
75c. Atdru TfristsorEly liros. ,
50 Warreu St. , N. Y. , mail it
SHOES
UNION MADE
W. L. Douglas makes and sells more
men's S3.5O and S3.CO shoeo than any othor
*
ttwo manufacturers In the world , which
'proves their superiority }
they are worn by more
people In all stations of
life than any other make.
Because "W" . L. Douglas
lathe largest manufacturer
he can buy cheaper uud
produce his shoes at
lower cost than other co
corns , which enables him'
to sell shoes for . ' 3.50 and
S3.00 equal in every
i way to those sold else
where for $4 and § 5.00. ?
AV. L.Douglas S3.501
land § 3 shoes are worn by thousamlsof men who
'have been paying.4 and SS.notbelievincthey
could get a first-class shoo for $3.50 or S3.CO.
He has convinced them tliat the style , fit ,
and wear of his 53.50 and § 3.00 slices is juat
as good. Placed side by side it is impossible
to we any difference. A trial will convince.
KTotlre Increase/1S03 Sales : i 3tJSOj,8Haai
in Iuin < - : ( .1002 S.V.f * : .S.1O ; 4i4OO
A gain of SS.Sao.-lSO.-JO in Four Years.
W. L. DOUGLAS S4.OO GILT EDGE LINE ,
Worth SS.OO Compared with Other Makes.
The best imported anJ American ( pothers. Heijl't
Patent Calf. Enimel. BJX Calf , Calf. Vlcl Kid. Corona
Colt , and National Kangaroo. Fast Co/or Eytvts.
Tne srenuine have "W. L. DOUGjLA3
name and Rrlc Btanrped on bottom.
en bv mail. 25c. extra. Hint , ata'og frtr.
\V. i. . i > oucsr.As , iijcocjc.1'o.v , MASS.
I
Put Up In Collapsible Tubes.
A Substitute for and Supericc to Mustard or any
other plaster , and will not blister the noataelicaw
ikin. The pain allaying and curative qualities of
this article are wonderful. It will stop the tooth
ache at once , and relieve headache and sciatica.
We recommend it as the best and safest external
counter-irritant known , also as an erternal rem >
dy for pains in the chest and stomach and ill
rheumatic , neuralgic and gouty complaints.
A trial will prove what we claim for it , and 14
Trill be focnd to be Invaluable in the household.
Many people say "It is the best of all your prepir
rations , "
Price 15 cents , at all druggists , or other dealers ,
orbysendins this amount to'us in postage stamp * ,
we will send"you a tube by mail.
No article should be accepted by the public un
less the same carries our label , as otherwise It la
not genuine.
CHESEGROUGH MANUFACTURING CO.
17 State St. , New York City.
Salzer's Rape
Kieen Kivea liich , (1 (
food
SEEDS JTEVER FAH !
f 1,000,000 Gissfssnsrs
ffj Proudest record of any seedsman on cart *
and yet we are reaclJnc out for more.
BE YOU SATISFIED ?
Are you entirely satisfiedwith
the goods you buy and with the
prices that you pay ?
Over 2.000.000 people are tradine with
us and getting their goods -wholesale
frices.
Our 1,000-page catalogue will be sent
on receipt of 15 cents , it tells the story.
CHICAGO
The house that tells the truth.