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About The Norfolk weekly news-journal. (Norfolk, Neb.) 1900-19?? | View Entire Issue (July 11, 1902)
. TUMNORKPLIC.ISTE\Y > S : FRIDAY , JULY 11,1003. f ' ' ' - " * < i | | f n 1 nl / ' , ThJpolled Hereford IB a new typo o the Improved breeds. No class of men arc so thoroughly enthusiastic In their specialty as are the bee men. > The pork , mutton and beef which nro made out of grass are the most cheap ly made meat. ' When a fat , hog vrlll bring , as _ much in the market as a good cow , It Is rather discouraging to the cow. Count not that time lost which la devoted to an old fashioned' family picnic , even If you could make $4 or $5 plowing corn. ' It Is a great comfort to be well enough Used financially BO as to be able at sixty to enjoy the rheumatism { without a vision of the poorhouse ahead. 1 The May receipts of beef cattle at Chicago were 83,009,093 pounds Bl ort , .which docs more to explain the high cost of beef than all the talk abouh meat trusts. . , i " The southern mocking bird is this jj ason noted in many places far north "orit's usual habitat This bird Would prove one of the most welcome things that the south could send the north , for no bird In America sings like this one. One of the worst combinations of .which we know Is that of a friend who dearly loves strawberries , but who Is prevented from eating them because they produce a skin eruption some thing akin to the Itch , llcre surely Is a subject for pity. A pair of wrens with a nestful of ten little wrens are the busiest indi viduals about oar homo grounds , About one fat grub orworm a minute from daylight until darlrseerns to be needed forthat crowd-and it keeps the old birds on the fly all the time to provide them. The sympathy which exists in bird life Is confined almost wholly to those of their own kind. We notice that when a cat or hawk or snake menaces a brood of young robins none save robins comes In response to the call for help ; it is the same way with catbirds , bluejays , crows and sparrows. The vary best thing In the world to do with a town boy as soon as the long summer vacation begins is to get him out on some farm. It will be good for his health , his manners and morals. He will get a lot of valuable experience and be removed from much temptation. Got him out in the coun try and let him work and play any how , work. XMany men have made the mistake this seaVon''in ' trying a rape crop , sowIng - Ing the seed -with oats , wheat and bar- leyt of sowing too many acres. They cannot possibly use all the feed which .will , be produced. This factshquld be " remembered about rape it needs to be" fed down close"tlion the' ' young , arid new growth is "always tender ami op"- pettzlrik 1fj"not fed down , It 8"oon be * comes too coarse and rank for a palata ble ration. w. Abundant moisture during the sea son when _ the crops are growing and maturing brings trouble for the farmer Just as docs a lack of it , cyclonic wind , cloudbursts , so called , hail and interference with the work of cultiva tion this Just when the corn needs constant work'and the clover needs cutting for hay. Then during such tunes the ; , weeds have things about their own" way and a "war upon them becomes Impossible. Now complaint Is coming to us that fields of barley and oats sown in the spring on which a pound or two of rape seed were sown with the grain are likely to be crop failures for the rea son that favorable conditions of weath er have induced too rank a growth of the rape and it will bo impossible to cut bind and save the crop of grain. This condition might have been obvi ated by delaying the sowing of the rape until the email grain was. up. t The first mowing machine which we over tried to operate was an old HUB- Bey , along in 1855. This was before tbo guard for the cutter bar was invented - vented , and the cutting arrangement , was made up of two sickle bars work ing ono over the other Just exactly like a pair of shears. These by striking ob structions would become spread , and then you can guess the rest As a di version later in the season we had the old typo of the AlcUormlck reaper , band rake , four horses' and all the old fellows will recall what a promoter that was of youthful piety. T.he state of Now Yotk bids fair to Imru'st n splendid Crop of apples tlila year. ' _ In 1SG2 we sold a load of wool for $1 per pound. Those were the days when It paid to keep sheep. The first car of new wheat from Tex as was on sale at Chicago May UO. It brought 85 cents per bushel. If you buy any butter after July 1 , there Is ono comfort you will know for sure whether a cow or a steer made It. The good brood mare should never be sold from the farm. Properly cared for she can bo made the most ptojU- abU animal on the farm. If-a mail wishes to change the typo of cattle kept upon his farm , it Is bet ter to sell out clean nnd start with the kind wanted rather than to attempt to cross breed into it. There are plenty of counties In near ly every state where the number of dogs kept exceeds the number of sheep , and it Is largely because of the dogs that so few sheep are kept Said a farmer to us the other day : "I don't have to pay $1.60 per day for a hand to plow corn. My wife takes the team and cultivator and docs as much work and docs It as well as any hired man. " There are being prepared for ship ment to South Africa 00,000 Texas cat tle wherewith to restock the war raid ed plains. Cuba is also prepared to take a large number of the same class of cattle. A friend of ours finds a very effective Btump puller In his twenty horsepower * traction engine On all stumps partial ly decayed and llvo ones up to ten inch es' ' In diameter the engine docs good and rapid work. The northern range pasture land has never been better than this summer and that of the south seldom worse. Feeders are being moved by the hun dred thousand from Texas to Montana and the Dakotas. Given Immunity from late spring frosts , good cultivation and sufficient moisture during the blooming and fruiting season , we find the strawberry by all odds the most certain cron pro ducer of any of the long list of fruits commonly raised. The general introduction of the rura ! mail route Is working a great change in the status of the American farmer Ho is writing .more letters , reading more papers nud is brought thus more closely In touch with the busy world outside , which to him before has been little save a market A man who planted the locust for a windbreak and timber belt has this to say of the tree : "It never makes a de cent tree , suckers terribly , breaks down badly , Its black pods look horrible , It leaves out In the spring tardily and parts with Its leaves prematurely. I hate It thoroughly. " We have drilled all of our corn this year. Those who have tried It claim that BO planted the yield will be in creased from six to ten bushels per acre over the old way of planting in hills. It looks reasonable that stalks of corn growing one foot apart in the row should produce larger and more uniform ears than if grown in hills. Altogether there arc about 250 buf faloes left in the whole of the United States. While these , which are nearly all In captivity and partially domesti cated , will breed to some extent , the greatest care will have to be exercised or the bovine which once could be counted by millions will become utter ly extinct , ns In the case of the passen ger plge9n. 'A drove of 100 two-year-old steers running on a good clover-and timothy thy pasture and on full corn , feed dur ing the last halfl of May and the first half of J/une'made / the remarkable gain In weight of 110 pounds ejich in the thirty days ) or nearly fo'urrpounds per day. * This " happened ; nearWe writer's home , where he saw the cattle and the certified weights. , Thousands of farmers during the past four -years have changed from farmers into bankers that Is , they have their savings ( no small sums either ) invested in the stocks of their homo banks and they are now able to'ECO the worid from the standpoint of the capitalist ns well as Ihe producer , and thus they are more conservative than they wer'd'when corn sold for 10 cents a bushel. A part of the casein which contains the protein elements of the milk should be In some way worked Into the daily ration of the family instead of letting the hogs and the calves have all of it The iced separator milk makes a dell- clous summer beverage. It may bo worked into the. bread ration or John- nycakc , eaten as cottage cheese and In various ways enter into the daily rations of the family. The Improvements In the manner of distribution of the products of the farm have been fully as marked and of as great Importance as have the Im provements In the line of producing them. The modern elevator system for the handling of grain , the modern packing house foi ; the slaughter and curlug of meats , the cold storage sys tem , which prevents any glut of the markets and equalizes prices on perIshable - Ishablo products throughout tlie year , nnd the refrigerator car , which makes possible the transportation of meats and fruits anywhere and everywhere , are marked instances in this line. SU.T I'Oll r.\TTI,13. T.V hriiiHlvcd how It comes that II null In such a necessity for the well be ing of domestic cattle thu millions of buffaloes which once roamed the prni- ties of the west managed to gut ulong without It. A partial explanation may porhupH be found In ( he fact ( hat through much of the territory ranged over by the buffalo there were salt and alkaline lakes furnlBhlng enough of the desired element to satisfy their needs. The salt licks of the Umbered regions of the country were all well known to the early settlers as favorite resorts of the deer and elk , Then It Is moro than probable that where an ani mal has unrestricted range of a vast territory furnishing n great variety of food there would bo less need of salt than to ono confined to a pasture ot ono or two sorts of herbage. HIAI > YOUII r This man had bulU a big barn nnd prudently had Insured It In his local fanners' Insurance company. He failed , hbwovcr , to read the conditions of his pbllcy over very closely. Ho violated those conditions by fitting up n feed cooker In the barn , Lightning hit the barn , nnd It burned , up , and the com pany refused to pay because ot the feed cooker buslncsq. When you buy a policy of Insurance , take flvo min utes nnd corofiilly road over nil the provisos whereby you may be prevent ed from recovering your Insurance In case of a loss. It Is always better to find these things out before the fire than afterward. UGI1TMNO nODS. The old query of whether it pays to put lightning rods on the fnrnihouso and barn Is up again , as it always is at this Season of the year. Theoretical ly a building properly roddcd and the rods given a perfect earth connection should bo immune from damage by lightning , but the work is so often poorly done and the earth connection allowed to become so imperfect that such rods become a source ot danger rather than protection. Of the two wo would prefer reliable lightning insur ance rather than the ordinary system of rodding. DRAINAGE : SOMETIMES NECESSARY. The rainfall has been unusually heavy and the resulting floods very destructive through a largo section of the west nnd northwest this summer. Tempted by the series oC dry years , largo areas of bottom or slough land have been Grought under cultivation without other than a surface system of drainage. During such a flood sea son as the present these lauds have been so much of the time submerged that a crop Is impossible this year. The same sort of soils where tile drained are all right and will produce fine crops. THREE TIMES FAKED. We know of one man , a pretty sub stantial sort of farmer , who has been caught three different times by fake schemes -one a grocery deal , ono a cloth peddler's fake and the other n lightning rod experience. Ordinarily , If a man would turn BUch propositions over to his wife , ho would not get caught , but In this case the wife got him Into the deal In groceries nnd the cloth business , and we mistrust that this couple have quite a time reviewIng - Ing their experiences when there is no company in the house. THE MAN WHO LAUGHS. l We know of one man who had the enterprise to invest in three registered Shorthorn heifers five years ago. They cost him $100 apiece. He took good care of them , and he today has n > herd of fine Shorthorns , which are not only pleasing to look at , but arc very prof itable to him. The man on the next I farm , who kept scrub cattle nnd laughed at our friend for fooling hid money away , as he termed the buying of these heifers' , still has his herd of scrubs , but is not laughing at his neighbor any more. i 3IRD STUDY CLUBS. One x > f the most commendable nnd useful organizations which wo have come across is that of a bird study club , a | ocal association made , up of all those , , both old and young , wto love the birds. The .Bering nnd cum mer weekly meetings of the club be come rambles over field and forest bird hunting with & flcldglass and camera , while the winter meetings review the summer's work and include readings from the many choice works on bird life. There should be moro of such as sociations. DON'T KNOW \VIIEN TO LET GO. Wo all like a stayer when there's , sense in hanging on , but thcro Is rea son in all things , for here in almost every community there are a few stay ers who , having straw , hay and pota toes to sell , would not let go at the al most famlno prices which these com modities brought the past winter and spring , and just as new potatoes and new bay are becoming abundant and cheap nro seeking buyers in vain for their old stock. Some men never know .when to let go. ESSENTIALS IN DAIRYING. There are two fundamental essen tials in any sort of dairy business , which apply with Just as much force to the small ono cow dairy as to the large ones , and thcso are cleanliness in milking and the immediate cooling of the milk BO ns to extract the animal heat from it With cither ono of thcso factors in dairying missing , it matters not ho.w well all the other details maybe bo looked after , thcro will bo failure to secure the best results. Handlers on All Railroads in Go Out. NEW MEN JOIN STRIKERS' RANKS Teamsters Threaten to Go Out In Sympathy Effect of a Prolonged Struggle Is Feared by Business Men , Little Freight Can Bo Moved. Chicago , July 8. Hopes of a Bpoody settlement of the strike of the freight handlers' union , which was declared Monday , are entoitalnod by otllelalu of the union and by members of thu Bfato board of arbitration. The olll- cluls of the union at a conference last night told dial t man Job of the board of arbitration that they were willing to permit employes ot the dif ferent companies to meet officials of the same to discuss the waga BcaU1 , providing a joint conference should be hold at which ofllclals of tlio union would be permitted to act as advisors to the men. The arbitration board Is how working on the matter In an ef fort to bring about a. conference bo twocn the railway managers and com mlttcoB representing the men. As the railroad officials have favored tliln DLUy ItyUA LiiU IJUtjIIIUIIIl , UL IAIU V.UII- trovorsy thcro Is little- doubt that the Btrlko can bo settled satisfactorily to both Bldos , If the conference shall bo arranged. Federation of Labor Ignored. Lack of unanimity already per meates the strike. The Chicago Fed eration of Labor was Ignored when the order was Issued to the men to quit world and Its oxccutlvo officers are somewhat offendqd nnd are In clined to let the freight handlers flgut out their battle In their own way. There are 12,000 freight handlers In and about the various freight houses of the twenty-four railroads centering In Chicago. Of this number moro than 9,000 are now Involved In the strike. Some of the men who quit work did BO under protest. The sudden suspension of cus tomary operations by the freight handlers occasioned considerable ; trouble In and about the various rail road warehouses and depots , but the inconvenience and dclav were but a drop In the bucket to what will hap pen later In the week If the Btrlko ehall not be settled Boonor. Teamsters Threaten to Strike. To add to the present difficulties of the railroads , the teamsters and truck drivers' union threatens to join I In a sympathetic strike. If this fliiall occur It will affect all Incoming and outgoing freight of every kind. Every railroad In Chicago accepted all freight offered. While It was con fessed by several railroad officials that freight was not lielng mdved as ex- pedltlouBly as heretofore , yet It was Bald the largest part of It was being handled reasonably well. The various freight houses and yards , however , disclosed a considerable accumttli- tlon of unmoved freight and cars loaded with freight , a portion of It , marked "perishable , " filled the side tracks of all the railroads. * New Men Join Strikers. I There was no trouble or disorder In or about any freight house. Antic ipating the possibilities of such a strike , the railroad companies had brought to Chicago a considerable number of men to take the places of the strikers. These men wpro Inter cepted by pickets of the strikers and most of them were Induced to Join the freight handlers' union. CAR BUILDERS NOT TO STRIKE. Accept-Piecework With Premium to Most Rapid Workmen. Omaha , July 8. The car bulldeia over the Union Pacific system w/1) / ) not strike If those of the Omaha shops' ' can iprevent them. The local car men decided yesterday afternoon to accept the company's proposition and cqa- tlnue at work under its provisions for one yearc The prpposltlon which thy car builders agree to Is the same nt > , that entered Into , with the ofljcjals two I weeks ago , except that It contains p piecework proviso. The company guarantees that every man shall make at least" as much as ho did under the old dally wage- scale and will get a premium for all over $3 a day. The striking machinists , boilermakers - makers and blacksmiths , while disap pointed at the action of the car build ers , are still hopeful for success. Ofllclals of the company express satisfaction with the situation and Bay operations are going on as usual. Force at Armstrong Increasing * Kansas City , July 8. Two hundre.1 and elghty-threo men are working In the Union Pacific shops at Armstrong. The force has been gradually In creased day by day since Wednesday , when 263 men were employed Insldo the fence. All the gates to the big yard are guarded and watchmen BCD all who enter or leave. The union men have an equally strong picket system. These pickets watch the gates as closely as the railway's guards , and If a nonunion man Is seen ho Is at once approached and asked to join the strikers. Thus far there has been no threats of violence at Armstrong. Revolution In Nicaragua. Panama , July 8. Government ad vices received hero from Nicaragua are to the effect that a revolutionary expedition of over 1,000 men had landed near Dlucfields , Nicaragua , nnd has been joined by a largo num ber of conservatives. The landing ot this expedition Is said to bo the be ginning of a strong movement against the government of President Zelayu , DATE GET POR CORONATION , Klnj ( Edward Will Do Crooned DC. twocn Auj ( , 11 nnd ID , London , July 8.The following bul letin on King lOdwaid'H condition wuu posted at llucklnghiim palace : , "Tho king had nlno hours' ' nntinal Bleep * und his prtroBHr ( ) ; ( > ntlnm > u to bo un- Inlenupted , The wound In dlHcharg- Ing freely und ID lunn painful to dt'CHB. " King Utlward will bo crowned bo- twocn Aug. 11 and 15. Hln recovery has been HO rapid und satisfactory that the above * decision wan arrived at today. The pageant through the BtrootB and the ceremony at West minster Abbey will be much curtailed from the original plan. Tliolr maj * cntlen will drive fiom Uuckltifthu'm paluco to the abbey through the Mall to the white house , and theneo to the abbey , the BIUIIO route as taken at the opening of parliament , CHAMBERLAIN IN ACCIDENT , Falls Through Glass Front of a Cab and IB Badly Lacerated. London , July 8. The colonial sec retary , Joseph Chamberlain , win Bomuwhat Hoverely cut on ibo head yesterday afternoon as the losult of a cab accident In Whitehall. The secretary's hansom was paanlng through the Canadian arch when the horse slipped nnd Mr. Chamberlain was precipitated forward with great violence. Ills head struck and shut torcd the glass front of the cab. When extricated It wan soon that Mr. Chamberlain's head was badly lacerated and bleeding profuuojy. A policeman helped the socrotaiy Into it cab and accompanied him to a tiur gcon'a office. Mr. Chamberlain's Injuries , nl though not dangerous , are likely to detain him In the hospital for the ie < malndor of the week. Death of William Clark. Newark , N. J. , July 8. Word was received hero that William Clark , the thread manufacturer , died yesterday In England. Mr. Clark was ono of the largoBt manufacturers of thread In the world. Ho was born at Pals- ley , Scotland , In 1841. Ho came to thin country In 1801 with his brother George , and In a small way began the manufacture of cotton thread In a little building on the hanks of the Passalc rlvor , In the upper part of this city. From that beginning thcro grow the great works , having a branch In Paisley , Scotland , and cov ering with Immense buildings many acres on both Bides of the Paflsalc In this city. Found Dead on Track. Carbondale , 111. , July 8. Two sons of Stanley Beggs , a prominent farmer of Johnson county , aged respectively ten and fourteen years , and a cousin were found yesterday near the tracks of the Illinois Central railroad , the two former dead and the last In m dy ing condition. The boys ran away from homo on July 4. It Is supposed they had gone to some Fourth of July celebration and were returning home and becoming weary , lay down on the railroad trades to rest. Botha , Dewet and Delarey Coming. London , July 8. Tlio Daily Mails Plotormnrltzburg correspondent says : Louis Botha , In the course of a con versation , said after a visit to Kuropo that , ho , Dcwct nnd Delaioy Intended going to America , but their precise tour would have to bo determined by circumstances. Their object was to collect funds for the rpllef of Boers ruined In the war. Ho Is arranging for an official history of the war from the Boer side , written by himself , DJ- wet and other leaders. Agulnaldo Is to Lecture. Boston , July 8. According to an announcement made here , Agulnaldo Is comlnp to the United States , and his departure from Manila for San Francisco Is expected , U Is said , , at any time. He will come direct jto Boston ' to join his former secretary , S'lxto Lopez , and will then start pn a tour , delivering a aeries of lectures on the conditions In the Islands and making a plea for the Independence of his countrymen. Unknown Man Is Shot Dead. , Connellsville , Pa. ' , July S.-r-Durtng the night an unknown man entered the house of Lud Prltts , a mountain eer living near Rockweed , Pa. , and proceeded ( o the apartments of Prlta' young wife , evidently supposing hey to be alone. Her screams aroused her , husband , who was In another ropm , and hastily grasping his Winchester , ho shot the intruder dead as ho start ed to run from the house. " ' i % Kills Wife , Friend and Self. New York , July 8. Karl von Boeck- mann shot and killed his wife , fatally wounded 0. F. Farrell , a friend of his family , and then sent a bullet through his own head. The shooting occurred at the homo of Mrs. von Boeckmann , in the upper part of Manhattan. Six Killed In a Wreck. Lisbon , July 8. The Madrid or. press was derailed yesterday owing to some unknown cause near Guarda , Portugal. Nearly all the cars were wrecked. Six persons were killed and twenty-seven were Injured. Ninth Week of Coal Strike. Wllkesbarre , Pa. , July 8. The ninth week of the suspension ot anthraclto coal mining shows no change In the situation , there not being the slight est Indication that either party to the controversy la ready to quit. Freeman Lowers Record. Pittsburgh , July 8. At the Coliseum Howard Freeman broke the world's bicycle record last night for twenty miles , by going the distance in 29:084-5 : , as against Harry Elko * ' titno of 29:19. : /I / Tracks Washed Out In Nebras ka by Destructive Floods. KANSAS HARVESTS DELAYED , Republican Rlvor Dreako All Flood Records nnd Honvy LOOOCD Renult to. Crops Storm Damage In Western New York la Great. Lincoln , July 8. NoliniBUa rail- roiulH lu.vo . boon lilt hard by llood . South of Falrbury the Hock Inland hna Hovoral brcttktt In llti Mucks nlontr the Hliio rlvor bottoms ? . Tlio HL Jo- nopli und Grand iHlnnd luitd liiui oov- nral mniilt wauhoutB near tlio Btuta line , not fur from ISndlrott. The IJur- HtiKton Is troubled wl'.h mlluH of noft track and nil traliuj nru latu , Thn Union Puclllc han n half inllu of track under water near Hoatilco , while Uia NorthwoHtorn roportu hgh | water nloni ; Itn Ulnulc Iltlls lino. Gage county was vlnltcd by a cloud- burnt , yoatorday morning. The Dluo river and Itn tributaries rene rapldl/ nnd BOOH ( loodod the bottom Inndn. The rlvor IB it til I rising and fears an ; entertained of another disastrous flood In that locality. Crops will bo badly damaged aa a result of the Btortn. TopoUa , Kan. , July 8-rTha Hopub- Ilcan rlvor , near Concordla , has broken all flood records , and much ot the surrounding country Is under wator. ImmotiHo damng'o to the cropn In being dono. The Missouri Pacific track Is under water for aovoral miles. Many farmers have been com pelled to abandon tliolr bornon. Ncnr Yuma , Nob. , 600 foot of MlBiioiirl Pa cific track was washed'out. A heavy rainfall In Ballno county has dolayqd the harvest. FLOOD HAVOC IN NEW YORK. Further Details of Storm In Western Portion of State. Rochester , N. Y. , July 8. NOWH from the llood-dovuBtatcd districts in this section of the state are corning In slowly. Reports from Medina show that a cloudburst Htruek that place , doing greai damage. Today there are evidences of a great flood and wreckage Is piled up along water ways which have been dried up for a month. Mount Morris roportB the Qcncsca broke through Its bunks cast of the village and has ml ami thousands ot dollars' worth of crops on the fertile flats below hero. Many flue farina have been entirely ruined. Nunda reports the greatest flood In the history of that filiation. Largo fields of growing crops have been washed away , ground and all. Daltan has also suffered greatly. Portage- vlllo , Pike , Lament , nosoborg. Flit , moro and many more towns have been under water since Sunday mornlnjr. The farms all about Portage vlllo aru laid waste and no field crops can bo saved. Houses , barns and Jive stock are being swept down the rlvor. The trnrks of the Pennsylvania are washed , oiway and a new road will have to Ixs laid at many places before trains can be moved. Pike reports the Joss of a large Iron bridge , the postofllce build- ' Inc and onora IIOIIRC. Every Iron bridge between Bliss nnd Pike , eight In number. Is down , almost every small bridge and Blulce Is gonu and highways are torn up , making travel Impossible. Five Killed by Lightning. Offcrman , Ga. , July 8. Three white men and two negroes wore killed and one wnite man and a negro injured m a Bcvoro thunder nnd Jlghtnlng storm , hero yesterday. The white men killed .are : M. C. Hawkins. F. B. Studor arid A. II. Rymor of Alexander , N. C. The men were employed" In * the construction department of the Southern Boll Telephone company and were stretching wires. They were working In two sections , about five miles apart , but one lightning bolt killed the flvo ami Injured the two. Rocks Boat and Both Drown. Peorla , July 8. While four boys wore boating on the river heVo yes- { ord'ay Frank Case rocked the boat to frighten Frank Cannon , who couM. not swim. The boat capsized and an- the boys sprang Into the water Can non locked his arms about Case's neck and they went to the bottom. When found three hours Jator Can. non's arms were still locked about Case's neck. The other two boys swam to the shore. , * " > _ . Patrick of the United States circuit court yesterday appointed George D. Hallock receiver of the Bay State Gas .company of New Jersey and Henr ? L. Holmes and E. J. Patterson 5 receivers for the Atlantic A'-xtch com 5d pany of Caniden. Kodol f d n d' e , 'o Cure 'ox Dyspepsia io to Digests what you eat. 1- This preparation contains all of the 18 dlgestants and digests all kinds ol to food. It gives Instant relief and never toO falls to cure. It allows you to eat all l" the food you want. The most sensltlva 'ia stomachs can take it. By Us use many to thousands of dyspeptics have been cured after every thing else failed. la unequalled for the stomach. Child ren with weak stomachs'thrive on It. Cures all stomach troubles Preoarcd 6nly l > y E. 0. DuWi rr & Co. Chicago o l.twufocontalns8 times tbeBto. oUet.