The Norfolk weekly news-journal. (Norfolk, Neb.) 1900-19??, February 12, 1904, Page 7, Image 8

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

    THIi ) NORFOLK N10WS : I-'HIDAV. - I'MOIWrAKY ' IB. JDO-J
Interesting History of Madison
County Pioneer.
HI8 LETTER FURNISHED A CLUE
Man With Fictitious Name Long Evad
ed Canadian Officers Who Wanted
Him for Embezzlement Also Was
Charged With Insurance Fraud.
Every community has Its unwritten
history , nnd , as in other parts of the
' west , there are episodes in the history
. of Madison county rivaling the most
H lurid fiction , which cannot be found
in the county records or the archives
of the state historical society and
which have never appeared before In
print. Among them is the following
> . / . remarkable story of the career of an
I f early settler :
Many years ago , ere the advent of
the knocker nnd gossip , nnd before
the Inquisitive newspaper correspon
dent had searched out every hidden
thing under the sun , when the stren
uous life of the pioneer furnished him
with troubles enough of his own with-
j. ' out his borrowing those of his neighbor -
bor , people had plenty of elbow room
t and the settler was unmolested behind
unbolted doors nnd uncurtained win
dows. At this period Madison county
had largo areas of unoccupied wild
land the abandoned homesteads of
settlers who had sold out to speculat
ors , school lands or railroad grants ,
and to inspect , purchase or Improve
these lands settlers began to arrive
by wagon and railroad , singly or In
colonies. Among these land seekers
was a man named Tully. This was
not his name. It Is not even the name
which he gave as his own , and which
latter was proved afterwards to have
been an alias , but It will answer for
the purposes of this narrative. Men
with aliases and sealed antecedents
were not uncommon In those days ,
and when the country was new and
all were comparative strangers to
each other no questions were asked ,
but no one suspected the reticent and
unassuming Mr. Tully of having had
an unenviable past. And yet there
was something about the man whicti
marked him as being different from
those around him. It was not that
he was evidently a city bred man nnd
was refined and educated , for there
were many of this class among those
seeking homes , but the solitariness
of the man , his moodlness , and
shunning of strangers were re
marked by his neighbors. Ho selected -
! ed a farm away from all towns and
in a sparsely settled neighborhood ,
making his homo with a neighbor nnd
improving from year to year his land.
Ho seldom went to town nnd received
no letters. IIo bought stock , built a
house on his farm nnd married a
neighbor's daughter and established
. a home. He lived in the neighbor-
j\ hood about ten years , respected by
| neighbors and loved by his wife , when
one day a small , plain looking old
man , with the steadiest eyes that ever
looked out of a man's face , dropped
quietly off the train at Madison ,
walked unobserved uptown nnd with
out revealing his business hired the
sheriff to drive him Into the country.
Giving only the general direction of
his route , when passing the Tully
farm , the stranger , as If from some
momentary impulse , asked the sheriff
to drive into Tully's yard. Mr. Tully
was In the yard and the stranger
spoke a few words to him in an un
dertone. The latter replied by re
questing that ho speak with his wife
a moment. In a short time Tully
came out of the house , got In the
buggy and accompanied the other men
to Madison when shortly after thch
arrival there ho and the stranger
boarded a train nnd wont south ant
that was the last time Mr. Tully was
seen in Madison county , and the above
is all that Is known today by his
neighbors of his story.
The Relentless Pursuit.
In an unimportant city of Canada
Tully had held a responsible position
with an express company. IIo was
married , lived In considerable style
and he and his wife moved In the most ,
exclusive society. In an evil hour
ho mbezzled funds entrusted to his
care and lied to the United States.
In Kansas City , where ho sought n'
temporary asylum , ho fell in with n
stranger who was living In a shack
in the outskirts of the city , or , at
least , ho and this unknown companion
lived In the shack tor some time and
until tno ueain or the latter. Tno
only evidence regarding this man's
death comes from a physician In
Kansas City who furnished medicine
and a burial permit for the deceased ,
yet strangely enough had not seen
his patient. Ho explained that a
messenger came to him in haste stat
ing that a man was dying of typhoid
fever In n hovel and for him to send
medicine and go as soon as possible
to see him. IIo gave the messenger
medicine hut before the doctor could
visit the invalid the messenger re
turned and reported that the man had
died and begged for a burial permit ,
which the doctor filled out In the name
of Tully. Who this man was and how
ho met his death , whether n crime
had been committed or If ho died a
natural death or was it a body that
had been bought or snatched from
some morgue or graveyard are QUCS
tlons only ono man could answer and
ho has been silent. Tally coffined and
shipped the corpse of his companion
o his wife in Canada who received
\ml burled It as that of her late hits-
mud. Tully , however , had carried
lollcloa In various llfo Insurance com-
mulct ) and these his wlfu tried to
collect. The Insurance companies
vroto to the doctor whoso certificate
accompanied tlio corpse for the usual
> roof9 of death nnd received the reply
hat ho Imtl never soon the deceased.
This aroused suspicion and they dls-
ntorred the body of the supposed
fully nnd discovered the fraud. The
express company which follows the
mictlco of never giving up Its quest
'or n defaulter until ho is caught or
lead , joined issue with the Insurance
companies and the detectives who had
teen recalled wore sent out again upon
Tully's trail with Instructions to spare
10 effort or expense to apprehend the
'ugltlvo. Naturally they picked up
ho trail at Kansas City and through
tatlon agents , railroad conductors
ind others traced their man through
olorndo , California to Washington
ind back through the mountains.
Vhcthcr Tully discovered that ho was
being pursued or not ho effected n
nastcrly stroke of deception , llav-
ng bought a ticket to Denver ho
Iroppod off at some watering tank in
ho mountains and the conductor , who
ifterwards recalled that such n man
vas on his train could not tell where
10 had missed him. Here was a gap
> f a thousand miles of mountains with
only watering tanks , sheep corrals and
nlncrs' cabins in which to look for
ho refugee nnd his pursuers gave It
ip. Tully was finally discovered
( trough a letter he had written. Ilav-
nfj outwitted discovery ho became
careless and for a number of years
md been taking regularly n paper
rom his homo town. The subscrlp-
lon having expired ho wrote to the
mbllshcrs , enclosing a draft and re
questing them to continue sending
ho paper. The detectives who had
) cen watching the postofflco nnd
newspaper offices were aware that a
copy of a newspaper was being sent
regularly to a man named Tully In
Nebraska and when they obtained his
otter nnd compared the handwriting
with specimens of his writing already
n their possession the Identification
was complete and they were sure of
.heir man. They sent a man who had
tnown Tully before ho had absconded
and In the guise of n peddler ho vis-
ted Tully's neighborhood , saw and
recognized him and shortly afterward
10 was apprehended.
Tully's downfall was due to his Ca
nadian wife who was ambitious and
extravagant and to maintain the style
of living she demanded , Tully little
by little indulged in speculation until
10 became hopelessly Involved and be
coming desperate and disgusted one
night when a lump sum came into his
possession ho appropriated it and
lied. He sent the corpse back hoping
to deceive the company and probably
Ills wife likewise.
The company dealt very leniently
with him after all and his Nebraska
wife proved his savior. All the prop
erty which ho owned and which had
become quite valuable was in her
name and she offered to release it to
the company in consideration of their
clemency to her husband. They ac
cepted the proposition and the trans *
for was made and Tully was given a
light sentence of n few brief years
and has long years ago been a free
man. His Canadian wife had secured
a divorce from him nnd today some
where In the world ho Is living with
the Nebraska woman , happy no doubt
to have removed from his heart the
burden of his crime. All of which
goes to provo that the courts can be
juggled and the vengeance of corpor
ations appeased with a handful of
gold but that the most precious treas
ure In life is the devotion of a woman.
J. II. Mackay.
Notice for Publication.
Department of the Interior , land office
fico at O'Neill , Nebraska , Dec. 2C :
1903 : Notice Is hereby given that the
following-named settler has filed no
tico of his intention to make Una !
proof in support of his claim , nnd that
said proof will be made before W. II
Field , clerk district court , at Madi.son
Nebraska , on February C , 1901 , viz :
George A. Dean , II. K. No. 17723. for
the noV ; soV , , Sec. 13 , T. 23 N. , H. 1
IIo names the following witnesses
to provo his continuous residence
upon and cultivation of said land , viz :
n'Hugh D. Smith , of Norfolk , Neb. ; Fred
Terry of Wnrnorville , Nob. ; Joslah
Daniel of Norfolk , Nob. ; Christ Getter -
ter of Norfolk , Neb.
S. J. Weekes ,
Register.
In our advertising columns appears
the card of the "Now York-Honduras
Commercial Co. , presenting an invest
ment that at first sight appears to
yield extraordinary results , but when
the wonderful returns of plantations
In tropical countries are taken Into
consideration , and the known fact that
Mexican companies in similar lines
are doing oven better , it warrants the
investigation of the man with idle
money , or who can put a few dollars
asldo for the future.
People Believe In It.
It has been cynically said that any
thing can bo sold by advertising now-
n-days. This is not so. Many lini
ments have been advertised but only
one Perry Davis' Painkiller has
htood the test of sixty years' use. To
day Its popularity is greater than
over nnd is based not upon what any
body says but upon what the remedy
does , There is but ono Painkiller ,
Perry Davis' .
Frank Collins , an All-Rouncl
Crook , is Convicted ,
TOOK OVERCOAT FROM CRAFT
Having Taken the Garment Ho Hid It
on South Fifth Street and Was
Later Arrested at n Hotel First
Denies Then Confesses Quilt.
{ From Hntnnlny'H Unllv.1
For stealing an overcoat from Con-
uctor Robert traft , of the North-
t'CHtorn , Frank Collins , n one-time
irlntcr and at present alleged by the
ollco to bo an all-round crook and a
> iul ono at that , was yesterday after-
,0011 , found guilty of petty larceny In
ollco court and sentenced by Judgu
layes to ton days Imprisonment In
ho county Jail at Madison.
The prisoner was taken to the coun-
.y seat on the afternoon freight by
3hlof Kane , who returned last night
n the passenger train.
The story of Collins' theft , the mys-
cry of lits case and the arrest within
few hours after the deed , together
r'lth a full confession forced from
Im in the sweatbox at the city Jail ,
s thrilling to a degree.
When the Hlack Hills passenger
rain No. 11 pulled In at the station In
outh Norfolk , bound for the west , the
assengers left the cars and the train-
: ion left the cars to get supper in the
atlng house. They were absent about
wenty minutes and while they wore
; ono , Conductor Craft's flno overcoat
Isappearcd. Ho looked through the
rain for it but there was no sign of
ho missing garment. The police wore
lotlllcd nnd began working on the
aso without a clow.
For several days the officers have
icon watching Collins on general prln-
Iples because ho was a bad looking
nark. Ho Is well known to the Nor-
'oik police , having had experience
vith them before. At about midnight ,
Officer Pllger heard from some source
hat this man Collins had been seen
n the switching yards at the North
western tracks earlier In the evening.
That was enough for him. IIo was
; > retty sure of his man from that bit
of evidence , alone.
Toward morning Collins registered
it tuo Queen City hotel. Hero ho was
arrested a few hours later and was
anded behind the bars In a cell at the
city Jail. Asked as to the overcoat ,
which ho did not have with him , ho
: lonlcd that he had over seen or heard
of such a thing. Absolutely and with
out quallllcatlon ho declared that ho
md been arrested wrongfully.
Story of Arrest.
But Collins' identity was his undo
ne. Ills looks wore against him.
Having once seen that face , a train
man at the Northwestern yards did
lot forget It and It was proven that
the thief had been In the vicinity of
ho station. Then Chief Kane ran a
; oed stiff sandy. It was a bold bluff
and it worked. Without a sign of ov
donee that could convict , and with
out any absolute knowledge , ho put
Ills prisoner through a course of cross *
questioning that broke down oven the
hardened Jail bird and ho finally
owned up that he had stolen the coat
and that It was concealed in a build
ing on South Fifth street.
With the understanding that his
penalty would not bo the maximum If
ho told , the overcoat thief walked
down to Fifth street and dug out the
property that ho had taken from Con
ductor Craft. Then ho went up Into
police court and was given the sen
tence of ten days in the county Jail
Without his confession no conviction
would have been possible , and It was
.shrewd work on the part of the police
that brought out the confession.
Bowling at Spencer.
Spencer , Neb. , Fob. C. Special leThe
The News : Following Is the He-ore o
the bowling contest , between Spencer
and nutto , held in Spencer , Wcdno.i
day , February 1 :
Spencer.
C. R. Tinsley inn 108 128
Fred Fox 95 132 1C5
Fred Matoushek 109 95 13
Chas. Foltz 1-10 118 11 3
John Foley 131 110 13 1
Mart Johnson 121 130 171
Untie.
Hen Wolbum 152 133 135
John Welbum 151 105 10' {
Ed Adkins ; 131 171 ICC
John Adkins 101 135 143
Tip McMillan 10 i 107 110
Geo. Durko 9o 128 142
Result of the contest Spencer won
by luu points. This was a very in-
leresling conlesl. Arrangements are
being made for a conlcst with Fair -
fax and Boncstccl.
Why suffer with your kidneys ?
The discovery of Kldnoy-Elles has
proved a blessing lo thousands of
kidney sufferers who have been re
stored to perfect health. These tablets -
lets drive the diserBCd germs out of
the system , and wo urge all sufferers
to give this scientific and successful
kidney remedy a trial. Price 25
cents. Klesau Drug Co.
Pure Bred Duroc-Jerseys.
I have a few head of gilts for sale.
All bred to a registered boar ( also for
sale. ) These are flno gilts. All eli
gible to record. M. Mlhllls.
1211 Phillip avenue ,
Norfolk , Nob.
Perhaps You Wonder
If the tormenting cold that made last
winter ono long misery will bo as bad
thlH year. Certainly not , If you take
Allou'H l.ung llnlfliun when tickling
nnd rnwnoHH In the Ihroat anuoiinco
the prcHcnco of the old onoiuy. Do
not oxpoot the cold to wear Itoolf out.
Take the right remedy In time. Al
len's hung HiilHiuit IH free from opium.
The Illinois Homo Co. can nupply
GO pedigreed draft Rtalllona ; HO of
them Imported ; 5 broods I'orchorou ,
French Draft , English Bhlro , Ilolglan
Clyde ; R colors black , brow.n , bay ,
roan , gray ; rich blood , extra ohlro
breedorn U to R yearn old , Homo will
inakn 2100 pound horuofl. Easy pay
ments. Tha general manager will bo
In Sioux City for a week. 22 llnlton
block. Permanent addrosu , Dos
MolnoM , Iowa.
AT THE AUDITORIUM THEATER
[ Front Tticmlny'n Dully 1
"Dorothy. "
It was a very poor IIOUHK that groot-
CM ! the comic opera , "Dorothy , at the
Auditorium last night. Norfolk people
generally wore In no mood for comic
opera and Dorothy did not make a hit.
The company WIIH not. altogether de
void of merit , however , and put on
their piece Jn u way that was not half
bad In some respects.
SPECIALIST ( REPUTATION ,
Years of Special Practice Affording
Excellent Opportunities.
FACTS WORTH" MENTIONING
By Dr. Caldwell.
Sovornl years ago. while In private
pra'jtlco , I thought it wrong to adver
tise , simply bccauso I had boon told
so and had not had experience enough
to know better. After a while I din-
covered a valuable plan of treatment
In certain cases , and fortunately ob
tained n largo number of patients ,
enough lo fully teat my plan and
provo Us success. 1 thereupon prepared -
pared a lengthy paper upon the sub
ject and read It before the state med
ical society. What wan the result ?
A half a do7.on mombern took the
floor to say what the treatment had
boon for a hundred years back , and
to claim that the old treatment ,
though unsuccessful , should bo con
tinued , notwithstanding that the new
treatment had boon successful. I
thought differently and continued to
use the now method , and made remarkable -
markablo cures of cases that had
been pronounced Incurable. My bus
iness Increased rapidly as each per
son that I cured told sorno friend ,
who came In turn and was cured.
Each patient advertised mo a little.
What then ? In that largo city there
were not more than 400 cases of the
kind. I cured every case that came
to mo and then had nothing to do
except the ordinary business of a
local physician. I know there wore
hundreds and thousands of others
elsewhere , who might bo cured If
they only know ; and I advertised.
Cured hundreds of others and I have
advertised over since. I have re
lieved moro suffering , cured moro pa
tients , made moro people happy , and
done moro good generally because I
have told the people what I can do ,
and I shall go on with the good work
as long as my strength will permit.
I advertise because I have some
thing worth advertising. I have made
myself competent by years of speo
lal study and experience , and by the
expenditure of largo sums of money.
IJy advertising I place before the people
plo the facts which enable them lo
know what I can do. I thereby reap' '
thousands , who , given up by local
physicians or unsucccssfuly treated ,
give thomsoves up as Incurable. . I
cure them and thereby enlarge my
Held of usefulness. IJy no other way
than advertising could these people
have known that they could bo cured.
Every thrifty and prosperous busl
ness In life , save those of law anil
medicine , advertise freely. Lawyers
do not , for they only use In business
what others have made for them
years betore. They only do what ha ?
been written. "Regular" doctors dc
not advertise for the same reason
They have nothing now , nothing
which someone ol&o has not wrlttei
or told them of , they get their knowledge
lodge from the books. A man ma >
read medicine until ho in blind run
then know nothing of it. To bo sue
cossful he muHt apply his own mind
Make his own rcbearclieH , and to dc
that ho must have room and oppor
timll > . He must have cases , hun
dreds of them , and compare results.
If ho does not do this ho is a ma-
chine without novelty , skill or in
genuity , still plowing with a wooden
plow , still traveling on fwt or horse
back , and ignoring the advantages of
steam , living but not learning. The
same Is true of a lady doctor.
Holow you will find published the
names and addresses of some of the
recent cures that I have made. These
people's aflllctlons were , under the
ordinary physician's care , considered
hopeless , and no prospects for a
euro :
Mrs. Kato Schall of Albion , Nob. ,
cured of calarrh of head and stomach.
Mrs. William Zuerg of Blue
Vale , Nob. , cured of nervous heart
and female disease.
Mrs. J. E. Connolloy of Akron ,
Nob. , cured of cancer of long stand
ing
Mrs. Augusta Soydon of Ponder ,
Nob. , cured of nervous liver and
stomach disease.
Mrs. Ella Scochman of Wayne ,
Nob. , cured of rheumatism , female
disease and skin disease.
John Ilarpor of Columbus , Neb. ,
cured of heart disease , stomach and
liver disease.
Emma Stalko of Clarks , Nob. , cured
of skin disease , heart trouble and
dropsy.
Do you fool broken down and does
your system need nourishment ? Just
take Man-Er-Vino tablets , the world's
greatest remedy for the nerves , brain
and blood , and watch results. Kle
sau Drug Co.
Wo will give a
25c Box of " Elmo
CACTARINE 99 FREE
To all who suffer from Stomach ,
Heart or Nerve Trouble
Incmlor to quickly Introduce " Klmof'iictarlm' " to thosn uho mifTnr from Stom-
null TroulihiH , I ml IKON ! Ion , Ferment nllou , D.VHpcpsln , Hour .Stomach ; from Heart
DlMoitHi' , Palpitation , KliortiiosHof Drouth , Irro ularl'iilHo , Fainting and ll//.y
HpnllH , Hinotliiu'lnj' HpcllH , KluMiiinitlHiii or Neuralgia of thu Heart ; front
NorvoiiH DlnoiiHOH , Weak or Irritiililo NorvoM , Sick Ncrvotm lli'iidachcH , Norv-
otm l'roHtratliiand ( to | . 'lv ( * all NiHTorm'H ati onportuully of ( ( sllnn tliln rcuuirk-
ahloiiH'dlcliidIn their own Individual cnmi wlllioiitany cxpt'iiHC , wo will /Ivo (
rv 25c box of " Elmo Cnclnrlne " FHKE lo nil. lloro IH our plnn , rend :
CUT OUT COUPON
'III In the blniilc linen nml Nciitl It to I. Inn ) COVI'ON NO. 1100
llimuli'nl Cniiiimnv. Hi'N Mnlnci , Inun. nml
nil nvi'hc liy ii'tnrii nmll nn nnlcr fur u U > x ICInilly Ni'iul nnlrr
" ' . " mo mi mi niv ilruiridst
if "IMino C'ni'luilnn. Tul > Mils nriliT to Jour fin l-'Uii : : r " "
n - > o Uiof "Kliiio CncUrlnu"
InwkMst mill ho ulll iflvt * JIHI frcii of cimiui1 a MI Unit I aim trj ll ,
lmof "iiiiio : "
* \ Cnrtnrlmi We imj tint
IriiKtflst for lln > Im of " Klnui r.v tnrliii' " MI Tor . Nnino
of DIsttiiBO
luil von will not olilltfiilK MHir.HcIf In inn wn\ .
I \\lllriMt notliliitf to tomrc'iit IliN frrii oltrr. Vour Niuiiti . . .
f you hnvn frloiulN who nin nfftlultitl
wllli niiyof tlio nlinva naiiioil Illn lull tlti'iii
if Ililtt UniMMTiT Tlitiv run nlw > n ! MIof
' I'lino Cni'lnrlno" free liy Illllntr ( lilt the
Kill out COIIIKIII nnd m'lid It to
mill ' ,
OUIHIII hl'llllllIK Nlllmi ( II US
Lnrtlo boxes of " Elmo Cnctnrlno " KI.MO ( HinMlOAt , COMI'ANV
I his MolnrN , town
conlnlnlnU 100 IONOH. Price $1.00.
SPECIAL. NOTICE. Hvcry ( Iriik'irlHl H nutliorlml to Mill lam' IKIXO.H of " Dtnu
Cnrtnrlmi" coiilnlnliii ? KX ) closes forll.UU mill lo INSIIII u written k'unrnnti'i ) to the imroliaNur to
refund Iliu numcy If not Ixjmilltixl.
Sold by Asa K. Leonard , and all leading druggists
YOU MUST NOT FORGET
That , wo nro constantly fjrowiiiK in Mio art of
making Kino Photos , and our products will al
ways bo found to embrace the
and Nowo.st Styles in Cards and Finish Wo also
carry a line line of Moldings suitable for all
kinds of framing.
THE NORFOLK BUSINESS COLLEGE
THIRD YEAR.
Conservative Management ,
Thorough Equipment ,
Commodious Rooms ,
Superior Instruction.
Fvill Business Coxirses.
It will pay you to attend this School. No va-
cations. Enter any time.
Address ,
C. H. BRAKE , Norfolk , Neb.
Dealers Lay in Big Supply of
Sentimental Paper.
LEAP YEAR MOOD IS ABUNDANT
Bashful Young Women Who Want to
Wnke up Diffident Bachelors , Will
Have n Large Assortment to Choose
From Lots of Comics.
The day IH drawing nigh when the
comic Valentino will 1111 the mischief
making youngster full of glee , and
sentimental youths and maidens will
have their heart strings tugged at
by the armed Cupid depleted amid
thp lacy splendor of the day's artistic
greeting.
Local dealers arc already beginning
to receive largo consignments , both
of the cartoon variety and of the
dainty , lacy , Huffy hort. While the
designs arc about the same as umial ,
the leap year feature has not been
forgotten. Thofio who have loft their
girlhood days far behind them will
have their hopes once moro revived.
"Leap for the year cndoth , " "The old
maid's last chance , " and a number < > '
other consoling mottoes adorn this
year's effusions. Then , too , there are
tasteful designs especially adapted
for melting the heart ol the dlllldont
bachelor. Of theao the dealers have
laid In a big supply. They realize that
1901 Is the women's year to got Into
the Valentino game In earnust , and
propose to bo well supplied to meet
the demand.
Hut the old standbys will not bo
missing. This year there are a num
ber of pretly celulold designs and litHo -
Ho booklets with approprlalo Inscrlp-
lions , which breathe out the languish
ing condition of the heart of the send
er. There are Iho "Just too sweet for
any use" kind , dainty lltllo cards fit
tingly decorated , with Cupid Just in
the act of discharging his potent
shafts.
I An ibfolut * tpeclflf nd ntl > * rptlc fttf
ration for all kind * of
SORE THROAT.
filMPLY A OAHQLB. PERFECTLY HARMLESS.
A nire cur * for MonrJtnrf f , TontllltU , Qulnif ,
In 'imed , Ulcinted nd Citarrliil SoraTliroit.
A preventive of Croup , Whooping Cough n4
I Diphtheria.
rimiFYixa iiKAraNQ SOOTIIINO
KDdorwd btha Mo t Ktnlnent Throat 8p ol l-
liti In tbooouDtry.
Ibonld t * kept In crerj homo. Trice t5 Cent * .
ecllcluo Co. , Ue ( Mutual. Iowa
KIRSAU DUUQ COMPANY.
Dr. Weaver's Syrup anil Cerate.
Succeasful treatment for blood &ud elcln dlgcuea.
The Average Net Yearly Profit
PUR Al'1115 OK
CORN IS $10.09
WHEAT IS 10.65
VS.
$75.00 FROM BANANAS
$200.00 FROM RUBBER
WHICH PAYS BEST ?
An Investment In the New York-
Honduras Commercial Company , bring-
In tj your money Into co-operation
with that of others In n Bnnann and
Rubber Plantation NETS you 50 per
cent on your capital for five years and
100 per cent after that time
$10.00 per month for one year gives
you an Investment worth $1,000.00 at
the end of that time at ruling rate of
Interest.
The above is borne out by actual
official figures , which can be proven
to the entire satisfaction of the pros
pective Investor.
New York-Honduras Commercial Go ,
20 Broadway ,
NEW YORK CITY.
We want a live representative In
this locality
JURIES A GOLD IN ONE
CURES GRIP m TWO DAYS
MUST Al'I'tAll
ON EVERY BOX OF THE GENUINE
Write This Down
in the book of memory : There Is no
such thing as a harmless cough.
Every cough is a warning of a confi
dence that goes from had to worse
unless it is remedied right away.
Opium-laden medicine Is n delusion.
Allen's Lung Balsam cures the worst
of colds. It clears the bronchial pas
sages , so that the lungs got plenty of
air. Why not got a bottle loday ?