The Columbus journal. (Columbus, Neb.) 1874-1911, October 13, 1886, Image 4

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Before Sailing.
. iAam ia.ii... 1a ih ttiilAt fcpn
Beat agaiBst ralae that aches withheary
Drop thy quick wobu'i tears, to soothe thy
smart.
Ah, mo! that I could ease my sorrows so!
But men must work, sweetheart, and women
weep, . .... ..
So says the song, so runs the world s be
hest; Tet time will pass and tender comfort creep
With hope in company unto thy breast.
Now ere we part, while yet on lip and cheek
Close kisses linger, clinginj;. passionate.
There is a farewell word love fain would
speak, , .
A tender thought love labors to translate
In earnest words, whose memory through thy
years
Shall calm thy soul, and dry the dropping
tears.
If in thy garden when the roses blow.
Or by the shelter of thine evening fire.
In any winter gloom or summer glow.
Thy soul floats seaward with a fond de
sire (Fonder and stronger, than thy tender use)
Thiuk thou, "One longs for me across the
foam;"
And if, sweet-falling like the evening dews.
A special peace enfolds thy heart and home.
Then say thou, dear, with softly bated breath,
ln some lone wilderness beyond the sea,
Whether in light, of life, or gloom of death.
Sly lover's spirit speaks to God for me!
Kiss me, beloved, without doubt or dread.
We are not sundered, though farewell be
said.
All the Vcar Round.
CLAY TOBACCO-PIPES.
A Description or the Way In Which They
Are Manufactured and Various
Dmlgns.
It will surprise nearly every Brook
lynite, saya the Eagle, to know that
nine-tenths of all the tobacco clay pipes
manufactured in the United States are
made in Brooklyn, and yet such is the
fact Over fifteen thousand gross of
clay pipes are annually produced by the
three factories located in this city, which
together employ thirty hands, or an
average of ten each. A visit was made
to the largest of these factories, which
is situated on Kosciusko street, near
Broadway, and which is run on the co
operative system, being the result of a
combination of several small manufac
turers, who found that the profit on the
goods was too small to allow of much
competition. Probably less than one
person in a thousand knows how the
clay pipe is made.
The clay used in the manufacture of
the common pipe is obtained from
Woodbridge, N. J., and costs at the pit
$3 per ton. With freight and carting
added, the raw material costs delivered
at the factory 5 per ton. The clay
obtained at Wood bridge is said to be
superior for ninc-makinz to that ob
tained in Dorsetshire and Devonshire in
England, as it is more absorbent and
therefore more healthy to the smoker.
A fine bed of clay is also workod to
some extent at Glen Cove, L. I. The
clav after being delivered at the factory
is allowed to stand in the sun for a few
days to become seasoned. After beim
exposed sufficiently long it is mixed
with water and "milled." the process
consisting of running it through a mill
which crushes it ami removes all grit
and foreign substantias. After coming
from the mill it is worked and kneaded
by band, much in the same mauner as
bread, and whatever grit remains is
carefully removed. Great care is taken
to have the clay of the same consistency
throughout as otherwise the pipe would
crack and become spoiled under the test
of the kiln. When the clay has been
worked sufficiently it is given to tho
roller," as tho man who fashions it is
called. His tools are of the simplest, a
wooden bench, a stool, a rolling-board,
and his hands constituting his "kit."
The clay is placed on the right hand of
the bench, in easy reaching distance to
the workman, and then the second pro
cess of pijKi-making is gone through.
Grasping a handful of clay the work
man .separates it in halves, and, placing
them on the board, rolls them, one with
each hand, until they have reached the
length desired, one end, of which the
bowl is made, resembling a small-sized
pear. When il is remembered that
only about one ounce of extra clay is
allowed for each dozen pipes rolled, it
will be seen how dillicult it is to grasp
just the exact amount necessary for each
pipe from the pile of clay without call
ing into requisition the aid of scales.
After being rolled the partly-formed
pipe is laid on a board just the length
of the pipe desired, when if the stem is
too loug it is broken off at the required
length.
After one dozen pipes have been roll
ed in tlis fashion they are bunched and
passed over to the helper, who sits on
the opposite side of the bench, on one
end of Which is the machine with which
the pipe is made, it consists of a lever,
at the lower eud of which is a plunger,
the size of the bowl of the pipe to be
made. Below the plunger is a slat in
which the jrou mold is placed, the slat
allowing the mold to enter until the bowl
of the pipe is directly underneath the
E lunger. When the half-made pipes are
anded to the man at the machine he
picks up the bunch in one hand, dip
ping the othei in oil, with which he
oils the clay, separating the bunch as
he does so. After oiling the clay he
picks up the iron mold, which is double,
separating at the center, and opening
it lie dips his linger in the oil and with
a quick movement oils the inside of the
mold, which from constant use shines
like burnished bteel. The mold is the
exact size and shaiie of the pipe. After
the mold is oiled the workman picks up
a long steel wire and, oiling it, pro
ceeds "to insert il in the stem of the
pipe, pulling the clay on in about the
same maimer as a glove is put on the
hand. After the wire has been inserted
nearly to the bowl portion of the pipe,
the clay is placed in a mold, which is
then closed and placed in the slot of
the machine, care being taken that the
wire in the stem does not reach to the
bowl, as if it did the plunger which
forms the bowl would break it The
mold is pushed as far as possible into
the slot, and while being held there
with one hand the workman turns a
screw at the side of the machine, with
the other hand, forcing an iron plate
against the mold, the pressure forcing
out all superfluous clay and forming the
pipe. The lever to which the plunger
is attached is then lowered, the plunger
entering the bowl portion of the mold
forcing out the clay and making the
bowl. The mold is then withdrawn
from the machine, the wire -in the stem
being forced into the bowl of the pipe,
making the hole through which the
smoke is drawn. The clay which has
been forced out of the mold is then cut
away with a knife and the pipe re
moved from the mold and placed upon
a tray. In some of the machines used
a knife is attached to the lever, the
superfluous clay being cut from the
mold as it is removed from the ma
chine. It is an American invention,
but owing to the fact that it docs not
always work smoothly it is only used
upon the more common pipes. The
wooden trays when full are placed in
the sun to allow the clay to dry moder
ately. They are then taken by a girl,
and each pipe is carefully polished with
a piece of hard wood. A "rinitner," a
block of hard wood, is placed in the
bowl and turntd around to smooth the
bowL while a piece of iron attached to
the "riuimer" cuts the wreath on the
outside of the bowl. The stamp that is
seen on the front of the bowl is then put
on by means of a hand stamp, and the
pipe is ready for the "potter," another
girl, who places the pipes, bowl down,
into an earthen pot called a "sagger,"
which,-after being filled with pipes, is
covered with a Hat earthen cover and
Dlaced in the kiln. The clay before be
ing fired is of a slaty blue. The various
decorations, such as wreaths, fern j
leaves, figures, eta, seen on the pipes
are formed by the mold. After the kiln
has been filled with the "Baggers" con
taining the pipes the door is closed and
the fire built The fuel used is charcoal
and coke, and the tire is kept at a white
beat for twentv hoars, the heat entering
tne lam Dy means of flues. Great care
is taken not to allow the flames to reach
the white clay piinss, as the slightest
touch of tire would blacken them. After
remaining in the kiln the required time
the pipes, which by that time have be
come perfectly white and hard, are re
moved and allowed to cool, and are
then carefully examined and placed in
the boxes and barrels ready for ship
ment The clay pipes, the bowls of
which are colored in imitation of smoked
meerschaum, are made in the same
manner, excepting that the "lire is al
lowed to reach them in the kiln the
color being obtained from it. The
white clay pipes which look like new
meerschaum are made so by being
varnished.
The factory visited makes about fifty
different styles of pipes at present, and
can make as many as the ingenuity ot
man can suggest by means of molds.
One style of pipe was of red clay ob
tained from Maryland, in the form of a
head, and that head representing the
famous Brooklyn divine, Kkv. Dr. Tal
mage. Tho mouth is used for the bowl
of tne pipe, the neck being utilized for
the stem. The demand for' this style of
pype was very large for a time, but none
are manufactured now. Various other
curious styles were seen, one a bust of
Garfield, which proved a total failure
on the market
MISSING LINKS.
Sir Charles Tupper still goes fishing
with much of his boyish zest
"Cat-tails" boiled for ten minutes
won't drop off, says a florist
A school history of Ohio will be com
piled by a Columbus' professor.
Mary Howett, the well-known En
glish religious writer, has entered the
Roman Catholic Church.
The Itssnberinen of Fairfield, Me., are
preparing to cut upward of 25,000,000
feet of lumber next winter.
Lieutenant Henn, the owner of the
British yacht Galatea, is an Irishman of
a distinguished old Ulster family.
A Canadian great-grandfather recent
ly was present at the christening of his
one hundred and seveuteenth descend
ant Miss Jessie Watson, of Australia, was
recently naturalized in California, so
that she might take up a homestead in
that State.
A Fresno, Cal., horticulturist recently
picked 1,149 pounds of apricots from a
single tree, grown on land that live
years ago was a desert.
Henry Bircher. of Duck's Prairie, 111.,
owns a mule which eats ducks, chick
ens, fish, cheese, meat and bread, pre
ferring the latter when thickly spread
with jelly.
Ward Lamoif s life of Lincoln is said
to owe much of its literary finish to the
facile and eloquent pen of Chauncey F.
Black, democratic candidate for gover
nor of Pennsylvania.
The queen of Spain is said to be suf
fering from pulmonary disease, which
is making alarming progress. The af
fection is similar to that which caused
the death of King Alfonso.
Mrs. Gen..W. S. Hancock has been
engaged during the summer in writing
a volume of reminiscences of her late
husband. It is now about completed,
and will be published this winter.
Charles Monckey. inventor of the
Monckey wrench (ignorantly called the
monkey-wrench), is living in poverty in
Brooklyn. He sold the patent for -J,-000,
and now millions are made annual
ly out of the invention.
Mr. Webb, of the Loudon & North
western Railway. England, Muted in a
recent speech in London that a new lo
comotive is plated on that road on the
average every live days, to repair the
loss caused by ordinary depreciation.
Indian belles of Alaska wear a thick
coaling of oil and Mot on their faces
when not in full toilet. This is said to
preserve the complexion, which, after a
thorough scrubbing, looks as fair and
smooth as a good article of soft soap.
There are a good many queer people
in this world. Just at present Balti
more contains as odd a personage as
Charles Dickens' Mr. Dick. He "is a
bookkeeper who runs his house by
rules, which lie has printed and liuiir
in the rooms and halls.
The Indians of Morelos, Mexico, are
said to be quite original in the art of
exchanging wives. When one of the
bartered females is considered more
valuable than the other by the contract
ing parties, a cat, a dog, or a couple of
pigeons are given to equalize the bar
gain. The extinction of "starlight" in the
daylight is not due to the vapors in the
atmosphere, but to the "stronger" vi
brations of sunlight which prevent our
eyes perceiving the weaker vibrations
of starlight, exactly as a stronger sound
sa' a cannon shot prevents us from
hearing a smaller noise.
Mr. David McWilliam, a merchant
of Dwight, 111., has an origiual photo
graph of Abraham Lincoln, which was
taken at Spriugtield six weeks before his
nomination for president, in lStJO. It
is a perfect representation. It looks
precisely as Mr. Lincoln appeared at
that period, as those ot his old friends
who have seen it testify.
The Worcester (Mats.) Spy pleads
for a change of Thanksgiving Day
from the cold and discomfort of the last
Thursday in November to an earliet
date. "It ought to be," says the Spy,
"in the splendid days of October, when
the world is brilliant, when out-door
games are aluuiry, and there is a moon
to make the nisht almost as light as
day."
A mammoth well is being dug on
Breaker Island, near Albany, N. Y. It
is over twenty feet in diameter and will
be sunk below the bed of the river a
distance of several hundred feet so that
the water will be of the purest quality
that can be secured. About four mill
ion gallons will be consumed on the
island every day when the blast fur
naces arc in operation.
A Bostonian, seeking to be free-and-easv
and to keep cool, thrust his cellu
loid cuffs into his coat pocket and
6pread the coat upon a bench that the
coat might serve as a cushion. But in
thus sitting he rubbed a match that
happened to .be in the same pocket
against . the cuffs, which took tire.
When he got up he got up in a hurry.
It was his best coat, aud now he is
without so much as a scrap of a best
coat
Ambrose Dawson, of Washington
township, Indiana, has two grown sons
and a daughter. He also had on his
farm one lot in which were a number of
stumps. "I'll give you a thousand dol
lars apiece if you'll have a family re
union at home, and bring along some
dynamite and blow up them stumps,"
he said to his children. The reunion
was held, the slumps were blown up,
and each offspring got a check for
$1,000. h
Daniel McCann, of West Middle
town, Pa., is a veteran of three wars,
having served in the Florida war, the
Mexican war, and the war of the re
bellion. He has been an object ol
charity ever since the late war. He is
now blind, and sits in his log cabin and
talks of trying to get a pension. His
friends have been trying to get a peu
sion for him for years, but Iiis papers
are worn out and many of them are lost,
and their efforts have thus far been un
successful. An old rat-catcher says it's a regular
thing for a swarm of ship rats to "climb
up the hawsers an1 riggin' an1 get on to
the docks. There they'll bunch them
selves together, and by squeakin' or
some other moans draw out all the
neicuborin' land and dock rata onto the
dock an' go for 'em. It don't matter
how many or how few there are, you'll
alwavs lind the dead bodies of the land
rats left on the field after the fight"
Shij) rats will not live on land. When
driven from one ship they immediately
seek another.'
Mrs. Hcnn. wife of the master of Gal
atea, is a little dark-haired woman, who
dresses only to suit herself. She is apt
to appear in the morning with a little
worsted toque on her head, a black
waist, and a red skirt. Her jewels are
beautiful, and utterly unlike any worn
by any other lady in the city. Those
who know her have the impression that
if her husband should say to her, "My
dear, how soon can you get ready to go
to Iceland?"' she would reply: "l.et me
get my hat and I'll be all ready." The
lieutenant and his wife are just as fond
of one another as if they had but just
got married.
On the farm of Mr. W. C. Marrow, in
the county of Warwick, there lives an
old "war horse" that seems to yet re
member the days when the shot and
shell flew thick and fast The horse
was the property of Maj. Marrow, son
of the above-named gentleman, who was
an aid on Gen. Iam & staff. The horse
was in a number of battles, and was at
the surrender at Appomattox. Late in
the year of 1865 he was carried to the
above farm, he being at that time 12
years of age. There he has remained
up to the present time. Some few days
ago a boy with a drum passed by the
house, ami some one asked him to beat
the "long roll." The old horse was
grazing fifty yards away. As soon as
the boy commenced to roll the drum the
old charger raised bis head, and then,
with ears an. I tail erect aud nostrils
distended, he cantered proudly up to the
drummer, signifying his appreciation by
repeated neighing, aud remained until
the boy stopped. Richmond Dispatch.
UNION .JACK IIISTOKY.
Carious Point About tli Vanner of Great
Krltalu anil Ireland.
We are all familiar with the white,
blue, and red ensigns, and with the
union jack which occupies the upper
quarter nearest the flagstaff. The white
ensign has the red cross of St George
in addition to the union jack. Without
the jack this white ensign with a red
cross represents our old national flag as
it existed from the time of Richard I.
until the death of Elizabeth. This red
cross flag, the banner of St. George ap
pears to have been chosen by the Sol
dier King in honor of the saint who was
the patron of soldiers. It remained for
more than four hundred years the flag
under which the English warriors fought
on land and on sea. When James VI.
of Scotland succeeded Elizabeth the
Scotch had a national flag. That also
was a cross, but it was shaped different
ly from that of St. George and was
known as the Cross of St. Andrew. The
ground of the Scotch flag was blue, and
its cross was white. To mark the union
of the two kingdoms under one sov
ereign the national banner underwent
a change, although Scotland still re
tained its separate Parliament In the
new flag (he two banners of England
and Scotland were united. There ap
jieared in it the oblique white cross of
St. Andrew on a blue ground, and the
red cross of St. George on a white mar
gin, worked in the blue field. The king
was accustomed to sign his name in the
French form of .lames, "Jacques." He
was, in fact, the Union Jacques, or, as
we improperly pronounce il. Jack. For
local purposes the Scotch still continued
to use the white St Andrew's cross on
the blue field and the English the red
cross on the white field. It was stated
by royal proclamation in 1G0G that
"whereas some difference hath arisen
between our subjects of South and
North Britain, traveling by was. about
the bearing of their flags. For the
avoiding ofall such contentions here
after we have, with the advice of our
council, ordered that from henceforth
all our subjects of this Isle and king
dom of Great Britain and the members
thereof shall bear in their maintop the
Red Cross, commonly called St. George's
Cross, and the White Cross, commouly
called St. Andrew's Cross, joined to
gether," "and in their foretop our sub
jects of South Britain shall wear the
Red Cross only, as they were wont; and
our subjects of North Britain in their
foretop the White Cross only, as they
i were accustomed." In 1707, when the
Scotch aud English Legislatures were
united, the distinctive dags ceased to be
used, aud the united dags as arranged
in 1G0G became the single ensign for the
United Kingdom. It was the sovereign
that made the union and established
the national Hag. aud an estaolishmeut
of distinct Legislatures again would not
alter the Hag. Ireland would take pre
sumably for its local ensign the red
cross of St Patrick. This Irish banner
ought to have appeared in the Union
flag of 1G0G, but it did uot Ireland had
no distinct recognition in the union flag
until 1801, when the Irish and British
Legislatures were united. At that date
the union jack underwent a further
change, ami the red diagonal cross of
St. Patrick on a white held was intro
duced. Since that date the union jack
has shown the red cross and white mar
gin, recalling the banner of St. George;
the white diagonal and blue field of St.
Aud lew's banner, and the red diagonal
cross of St. Patrick showing over the
white diagonal cross of the Scotch ban
ner. The blue ground of the jack is,
therefore, due to Scotland, and- the red
and white as crosses aud margins to
England and to Ireland. Loudon Daily
A'eivs.
ai
THE TALI-: OF A TAB.
Which Show that Young Mea Shoald
Read tli I.HbeU on Their Coats.
Several weeks ago. says tiie Pittsburg
Dispatch, a gentleman, known in this
transaction as Eugene Reading, bought
a dark gray Norfolk summer coat while
making a flying trip to Boston. jOn
the inside of the collar of tho coat was
fastened the manufacturer's tab bear
ing the insignificant characters: "Lot
21.7.13. B. 58." When Reading tore tha
tag off his eye caught some writing on
the side which had been next to the
coat He read: "Melissa Polley, West
Bowdoin. Maine.1' He put the tab into
his pocket, transacted his business, and
a couple of weeks after his return to
Pittsburg decided to make a test of this
gentle hint to mankind in general. He
wrote a letter to Miss Polley, in which
he told her that he had discovered her
name upon the tab and congratulated
her upon her excellent workmanship,
saying that one who could sew so neat
ly must, indeed, be a young lady of
other commendable and lovable quali
ties. He emphasized his sincerity by
calling her a "pretty tailoress," and
professed the strange 'awakening with
in his heart of something akin to genu
ine regard, if not affection, for the ladv
who had made the rarnieut.
The letter carrietTsafely, and in due
. . '
time came the
following
frank, yet
modest reply: -
West Bowdoin. Me.. Aujr. 13. 1888. Dear
Friend: I received your letter of congratula
tions, and thought 1 wnuM toankyou for it:
and I Iwpo the coat is niBde nice. But I
nhnuld like to know what kind of a coat it is'
ir it is a Norfolk. As to the '-pretty tailoress."
there is n such wont in the book: but 1 do
not know what tbo male sex would do if it
were not for the old maids to do their tailoring-
So I will close vith many thanks and
tola of good wishes. Yours Irulr,
MELISSA 8. POLLKV.
P. S. You say you purchased your coat
some lime ago. Have you been thinking- it
over all this time' Excuse zae for being so
saucy, but 1 hope you have got it settled.
MELISSA.
Mr, Reading had evidently "got it
settled," and, if any doubt had remain
ed in his mind, the gentle hint in the
postscript had wiped it away, for the
return mail carried a letter full of burn
ing words and such other nonsense as
a lover, or one ambitious for that posi-
' tton, is apt to use. A correspondence
followed, and letters passed each other,
1 going and coming between them, at an
j average of twice and then three times a
' week.
The conclusion finally reached by the
young Pittsburger. who had received
ample encouragement in his suit was
that life would be burdensome without
his "pretty tailoress," for sho has
proven to "be such from her picture,
which he got one day recently; and af
ter all, the term "old maid," which she
had applied to herself, was a ruso to
test the interest of her Pittsburg ad
mirer. She has his picture, aud from
the dissertation she wrote upon it has
certainly concluded that her strangely
captured lover is a man of handsome
face and kindly features, for she writes:
"If you are just half as good as yon
look.l am proud of your professed ad
miration and interest in tne."
That sentence is what clinched the
matter as far as Readiug was concern
ed. He immediately wrote a proposal
of marriage aud asked that her accept
ance or refusal be sent by telegram. He
received the following:
Eugene Heading; Yes. with plenaiire.
MELISSA.
The overjoyed lover almost hugged
the district boy who delivered the mes
sage to him, and, after reading it over
aud over, wrote tho following with
trembling hand:
Good. 1 am coining as soon as 1 can get a
leave of absence.
And just now there is a clerk about
the City Hall who is fretting uudcr re
siraint and every day he prays his chief
of department for a vacation of two
weeks to go to Maine.
A WOMAN'S PERSISTENCE.
How It Has Bean Devoted to Tracing- Up
hu Katate.
Mrs. M. R Cody, who some time since
identified herself with the great Euclid
aveuue inheritance in Cleveland, ,i).,
has returned from that city, firm in the
belief that she has got a taugible case,
and that riches are in store for her and
hers. She has made a thorough investi
gation of the subject, and returns jubi
lant over her hoped-for success.
The Euclid avenue property of Cleve
land, O., valued at $15,000,000, now
claimed by the Cody heirs, has associat
ed with it many interesting facts, some
of which are given below. 'I he rights
of the Cody heirs were made public by
Mrs. M. E. Cody of this city. She is the
wife of Elijah Cody, the third son of
Philip Cody, to whom the property
formerly belonged. At an early day
Elijah Cody and family emigrated to
Colorado from Weston, Mo., where Mr.
Cody had been engaged in the mer
cantile business for nineteen vears.
Isaac Cody, the father of W. F. Cody
(Buffalo Bill), emigrated with his family
to Weston in 184, ami remained there
as a guest of his brother Elijah until the
whites settled in Kansas. At Salt Creek
Valley he took up a farm, and during
tho Kansas war took a very active part
in politics.
.loseph Cody, the youngest son of
Philip Cody, isthe'one who, it is alleged,
perpetrated the fraud by getting his
father, who was demented, to deed the
property over to him. A short time be
fore his death he is said to have con
fessed to William Cody that he had rob
bed the Cody heirs and had a presenti
ment that he was uot going to live
long and wanted the heirs to claim tne
property. He left a wife ami daughter
in Cleveland, where they are at the
present time.
William Cody visited his aunt, Mrs.
M. K. Cody, at Virginia City, Nev.,
where she then resided, and told the
story of how his Uncle Joseph had de
frauded the heirs. Mrs. Cody immedi
ately wrote to the law firm of Teller &
Orahood, this city, for advice. Mrs.
Cody came to Denver and from here
went to Cleveland, where she began her
search. She iiist examined the records,
where the forged deeds, she says, were
found.
The next movement was lo find the
heirs. She traveled north, south, ea?t,
ami west, including Canada, .searching
not only among the wealthy, but mak
ing inquiries in the alms-houses as well.
She visited the Society of (.Junkers, weut
lo the stone-quarries' ano gtaveyards,
where she had to kneel down, in some
cases, aud scrape the .snow aud earth
front old moss-covered tombstones to
gel names and dates.
As an instance of her euergy, she
heard one evening of a witness who
lived somewhere in a remote part of
Michigan, and left on the earliest train
for that point. She has spent almost
two years in just such hard work as
this, because she firmly believes that she
has a good case.
Her attorneys frequently remarked
that her services were worth over $10 a
day to the Cody heirs, which it has
f i roved, as the heirs have gained the
awsuit in tho Court of Common PJeat.
the four, hundred aud odd defendants
setting up the statutes of limitation. The
court held that the statute could not
apply as a bar to judgment when crime
was shown. The case was then taken
into the Uuited States Court, where it is
now. Den ver Tribune.
What to Do In Sickness.
A person who is ailing should be kept
In bed in a well-ventilated room where
plenty of fresh air is admitted from
open windows. If in winter, the tem-
Eerature can be regulated by artificial
eat from an open fire, or otherwise as
most convenient, and the window low
ered from the top. In summer, the
blinds or awnings should be arranged
to exclude the direct rays of tho sun.
The patient should be encouraged to
sleep as much as possible and never
awakoned on any pretence. If there
are children in he house they should
be kept out of the room. When there
is headache or pain in the eyes reading
must be prohibited and very few visit
ors admitted. A warm sponge bath
should be given in the morning, and a
very light breakfast: oatmeal gruel,
and milk, a cup of coca, or tea, with a
soda biscuit. If there is no improve
ment as the day goes on the food must
be very simple and given in small.
Jiuantities. The difficulty may arise
rom an over-burdened stomach which
requires rest before it can recover tone.
When there is nausea, fasting for some
hours should be tried and then a few
spoonfuls of cold milk and lime water
given cautiously. When the head is hot
relief can be "obtained by wringing a
strip of linen out of ice water and lay
ing a single thickness on the forehead.
In this case the feet will probably be
cold and should have bottles of hot
water wrapped in flannel put to them.
If the throat is sore a strip of flannel
may be wrung out of cold water and
bound around it covered with a cotton
bandage. If there is only slight inflam
mation this will relieve it When there
is constipation a simple enema of warm
water may be given as safer than any
purgative medicine. No one should
,re. flowed to sleep in the same bed
With rmranti arlir to nvon clinrtiMtr in.
disposed. ihe invalid will rest more
quietly alone, and it is not fair to ex
.... . ... ... - .
pose anyone to the chance of possible
infection. If there is no improvement
in a few days a physician should be
sent for as the case is beyond home
treatment. It is better to call in a doc
tor ten times unnecessarily than once
10 delay summoning him until it is too :
late for him to be of use. Iu China a j
nliraiAiMn a ru !a . nAit a 7nta .!
hia iiaiinnfa . .. !. nr;n:niA
uiivoiLiiuii n aarw-j is :ia i-i:iiu r. wiii. zxiiaa ;
cure no pay. Medical
! -i ' i-
au vice is more r
expensive with us and the cost deters
some prudent people from having it
for what they consider insufficient
causes. The prescription of a compe
tent, trustworthy doctor in the early
stsgesof adweasemsy betheuietnsof
nntnlinff u urinn. Illno.a .rl ia '
preventing a serious illness and is .
worth far more than is ev.r asked lor I
it When a physician ix called in, his
directions should' ln implicitly followed, j
There is not the .slightest ui in entrust- !
ing the case to him and thun acting up- j
carry out his orders or not It is unfair
both to him and to" I ho .sufferer as the
success ot the treatment depends upon
its being faithfully administered. Every
doctor can call to mind .scores of cases
in'which recovery has been retarded, ot
rendered impossible, by disobedience
to his orders. ihsnbcth Robinson Sco
vil, in Good Housekeeping.
To Marry a King.
Down in Hanover county. Virginia,
not many miles from this city, is an Af
rican girl who is destined to marry a
king. At the present time she is a mem
ber of the family of the Rev. Curtis
Grubb. an Episcopal clergyman, who
many years ago went out from Loudoun
couutv. Virginia, as a missionary to
western Africa. While there he and
his wife became much attached to a lit
tle girl, a princess of the nation among
whom they were prosecuting their mis
sionary work, and when it came time
for them to return to their home in
America they asked permission that the
child should accompany them. She was
then uot more than 8 or 9 years of age.
Her father, when first requested to al
low bis daughter to come to America,
gave his consent, it may be not think
ing that the missionary and his wife
were serious in their intention of taking
the child home with them, but when it
came time for the departure he did not
waut her to go. He was told that he
had promised that she might be taken
by the missionary. It is a cardinal
principle among the tribe- that a prom
ise once made cannot be broken, if it is
insisted upon, so the father reluctantly
gave his couseut that the child might
go. The missionary named it Nettie,
after his own wife, and treated it more
as a plaything and curiosity than as a
servant. Though baviug children of
their own, the littlo Africau girl was
treated us though of the same kith and
kin. und looked up to the missionary
and his wife as though they were ner t
own parents. She made progress in
education, und learned the ways of
Americans with amazing rapidity.
Greater jioliteness could not be expected
of a Pariiiuu than she always displays.
Never can she be induced to pass in
front of any one, aud whenever she
hands anything to a person it is her in
variable custom to fall upon her knees
in an exaggerated courtesy. She is now
14 years old. she has arrived at the
age when she would be eligible to mar
riage if still among her own people.
Ever since she came to America a cor
respondence has been kept up between
Mr. Grubb and his successors in Africa,
aud thus her friends have heard from
her and she from them. In a letter re
cently received Mr. Grubb was request
ed to give his consent tiiat little Nettie
might return to her native land that the
king of her country might marry her.
This request will probably be complied
with if the child herself cau be induced
to give nit her American friend.), to
whom she is very much attached. She
is well educated for one of her years,
and fully uuderMaiids the manner and
customs of civil iz.;d life, and should she
become the wife of the king there is no
tell.ng hut .-.In: would have a powerful
iullueiice in iiplmin iier people from
their present degradation. Wnshtnglon
Litter.
A Woll-Trained Actress.
ivi . i... i I.... 4 :i . u.
it lieu : .-un:i Kiai piu i ner
M:ijostvs theater the difference between
tiie S:irali lieiuhnrdt of to-day and the
Sarah Bernhardt of ten years ago were
scarfi greater than ilie. mere lapse of
time must hate e.-tucd even had she
M-iUuluiilv hiithauded her resource.
If lie i no longer tin: Mlvcr-tongiien
svlph ivlinse ii.-tinek.ss elinrin of speech
ami movement si ill iiuiiuts us at the
iiieniitHi of "he Sphinx'" or "La Kille de
Roland.'1 ihal is merely because of the
most perfect of conservatoires can not
inipiii-L I lie. secret of eieinul youth. All
the essentials of her talent she retains
well-nili unimpaired. It she puts them
to less exquisite use than heretofore,
sacrificing nobility of pose to restless
vividness of gesture, purity of diction to
ingenious elocutionary effect-?eeking.
that is the fault of the plays in which
she. appear.-.. She has the old means al
column nd. and she Uses them with her
old mastery, though sometimes to less
worthy ends. What, then, has given
her this power of passing undegraded
through all the influences that make
for degradation? What talisman tias
saved her voice from becoming coarse,
her plustik from hardening into mechan
ism, ami her passion from habitually
rushing into runti' Simply, I believe,
ihe talisman of a thorough training, au
early and systematic mastery of the
methods of her craft. It is one of the
churitcteri&tics of physical accomplish
ment aud tiie qualities which can be
acquired by training arc mainly physi
cal - that it is even more dillicult to uu
learu than to learn. A good swimmer,
a good .sl;:iter, a good cricketer may by
sheer disuse, decline in actual power,
but he will never loe his form aud
s wiin, suate. or bowl like one untrained
or ill-ti aiued iu these exercises. Sim
ilarly an actress who has onee learned
lo move gracefully and speak beautiful
ly will retain these distinctions in spite
of star parts aud long ruus and boule
vard audiences and England and Amer
icain -piie of all the circumstauces.
in short, that tend to produce crudity
and commonness. The National Re
t'fttt.
Netlson and a St. Louis Maiden.
Willie Winter, the dramatic critic, U
about to ismiu a life of Adelaide Neil
son. He would have done well had he
sought in St. Louis for some interesting
incidents ol her social life, for not only
was the beautiful and talented actress
much admired and courted us a queen
of the stage, but as a soc ial star when
she visited this cilv. She had manv
warm friends and intimate associate
among the best-known aud highest-bred
women in St. LouR In one old French
family there are threo sisters who al
ways make a visit on the anniversary ot
her death to the mulberry tree planted
in her memory near the monument to
Snakspe.ire at Tower Grove park, and
on one of its boughs they hang a gar
land of flowers, whose groundwork of
immortelles remains until another an- j
niversary brings fresh flowers as an of
fering. Her pictures are always for
.sale in the book and art stores, and in
many private homes tliey are framed
and bung in conspicuous places. The
writer once accompanied Nellie Hazel
tine in a visit to Adelaide Neilson. who
was found surrounded by a bevy of call
ers. She received the S"t. Louis beauty,
who was already personally known to
her. most warmly, and, holding out her
hand, said, in a low tone: 'Stay until
these people are gone, please,1 and the
belle staid. Hardly had Neilson bowed
the last caller out of the reception-room
before she bounded to tho sofa, where
our home beauty was seated, and, seiz
ing both hands, she said: I want to
look deep into your eyes, for men tell
me here that mine are like yours, and
you know men read us through our
eyes.1 And those two sat half laugh
ing and gazed for a minute into each
other's eyes, such glorious eyes as both
proved, with looks that had all the
earnest innocence of two children, who
seek for 'wells1 in each other's eves. 'I
. w
onlv IM that innn am I in nuut haanlL
ful orbs I ever looked into said Nellie
at the close of a minute. 'And I un
derstand wby.men think mine beautiful
. - . . r :. - -". -?r""
if tbey look like yours,' answered NeUV
son, and they relaxed their Tegards,' as
luerrencu would say. but seemed to
"8ncn woul
0 - TO lOUIld 6SCB
"V" UUUI emcB IU " w eource
ol K" inUrest BL Loui Bcpubli-
Have If ail Their Share.
"When Ben Hill. Jr.. came here last
year a a candidate for tho United
States Dintnct Attorneyship of North
ern iicorgia. says a Washington writer
in the Philadelphia Rccnd. "he called
ou Senator Jno Brown of Georgia aud
asjked him for his supitort. Thereupon
it is recorded that Oh: Joe' assumed
his judicial attitude, softly caressed one
hand with the other, stroked his long
wiiite beard, drew its two longest white
hairs through his knotty fingers, and
said: Well. now. Mr. Hill, to bo frank
with you. and 1 alwavs like to be frank
with gentlemen. 1 think the Hill family
has had its share of the Georgia offices.
Your father was. a United States Sen
ator, you have been Solicitor General
of the Atlanta Circuit for seven years,
you've got your brother into that, and
now you want the District Attorneyship
at $0000 a year. 1 would not feol justi
fied iu aiding you, for I think your
f.imily has had all it deserves from the
Slate" of Georgia.' Nevertheless, Hill
was appointed District Attorney for the
Northern District of Georgia. Now
there is a vacancy in the District Judge
ship of this same Northern District,
aud Joe Browu's brother Jim is a can
didate for it Ben Hill, Jr.. has been
here this week to see that another man
gets it. Hu said the other day that he
had some idea of going to see 01e Joe'
and saying to him: 'To be perfectly
frank with yon. Senator, aud I always
like to be frank with geutleineu, I think
the Brown family has had its share of
the Georgia offices. You have been
Governor and are Uuited States Sen
ator; your brother has been a State
Judge; your son is a manager of the
Statu railroad; and the rest of your
f.tiuily are equally well provided for. I
would uot feel justified in supporting
your brother Jim for the District Judge
ship, for 1 think the Brown family has
had all it deserves from the State of
Georgia.' "
Ideal Women.
The women of fiction form, perhaps,
the most delightful ideal possession of
the civilized races of the world. Inven
tion, based upon imitation, has produc
ed true and lovely images of the fairest
and sweetest creatures that make the
earth divine. To few men it is given to
know and meet in actual life' women
who rise to the altitude of worth and
charm of the women of the poets, and
it is pre-eminently the happy task of the
poet to embody for us. in suggestions of
deathless loveliness, beings who answer
to the highest conceptions that man
can form of beauty, of tenderness, of
purity and of nobleness. In the magic
mirror of the poet's imagination are fix
ed to permanence the images of the
fairest and dearest of God feminine
creatures. He who, professing a high
ideal of womanhood can yet never Gnd
an ideal love, may in imagination be
wedded to Imogen or Di Vernon. The
greatest poet, who "wears the crown of
the world." Shakspeare. is the greatest
creator of ideal women. The trite ideal
is always based upon the real; and
Shakspeare's women are so ideal be
cause his idea is always based upon liv
ing types ol abstract truth. His women
are what they are. because womanhood
is, at its best, what it is. Imogen. Des
deraona, Rosalind, Portia are loftiest
creatures, ami yet are all possible wo
men. Another mighty poet has given
us Gretchen and Clarchen. Impossible,
in such limited space as we can here
command, to enumerate or even allude
to nil til A fair trnmntt naintoil lip nnhla
. .... . -- j ww.w
, poets. J he large and lovely constella-
tion of sweet, good women shines
majestically before our enraptured vis
ions, stirs our ceaseless gratitude and
awakens our wondering admiration.
They excite the fancy and touch the
heart. They animate us to noble life
and they move us with the high delight
of fair images of honorable love. Gen
tleman's Magazine.
A Bee in a Telephone.
The experience of telegraph operators,
inspectors, and linemen brings them in
to close acquaintance with all sorts and
conditions of faults in connection with
their work; the variety of these faults is
wonderful, mauy stranger than fiction.
One of the most curious in connection
with telephony which we have ever
known has just happened within the
last few days at a place called Moss
Bay. The lineman's attention was
called to the circuit in question as hear
ing was difficult; on listening at the
telephone he heard a "sort of Dooming
which came ou intermittently, very
much resembling the distant roll of the
tide, and which rendered speaking and
transmission of work almost impractica
ble." Having satisfied himself by the
usual methods that the instrument was
right and the line free from induction,
and that it was not picking up vibra
tions, the conclusion was arrived at
that the fault must be iu the general
otlice, at Moss Bay. An examination of
the telephone apparatus disclosed a
novelty. A huze bee was inside the
telephone, and.ln trying to make good
its escape, it had become fixed between
the souuding bourd and the microphone,
and it bad hummed to the extent of in
terfering with the human organs of the
circuit. How the bee came there the
linemau cannot say, whether by acci
dent or design he knows not. Hut the
bee was the cause of the fault. In con
cluding his report the lineman candid
ly states: "I have met some very tedi
ous and techuieal faults iu various tele
phone apparatus, but I never was done
with a bee before." Mechanical World.
Homing Instinct of Dog.
A correspondent of tne Country Gen
tleman writes as follows from Eastville,
Va.: "In leaving my bachelor home in
Westmoreland county, Virginia, soon
after the late war. to practice medicine
in Washington. 13. C, 1 was at a loss to
know what to do with a fine setter dog
that hail been presented to me and one
I prized highly. 1 was anxious to leave
him in the hands of some friend who
would appreciate his many qualities, so
taking liim to Smith's Wuarf, on the
Rappahannock river, ten miles from my
home, I put him on board the steamer
with card aud address to a gentleman
in Fredericks burg. The dog was duly
delivered, as they told me when the
steamer passed on her return trip. Three
days after this occurrence, while seated
in tlio bIiiiIo of tlm l-ir(r Ikm ihif tlion
clustered about the old ancestral man
sion. I was suddenly startled by the
rapid approach of a joyful whine of a
dog, and lo, Scinio was at my feet
Kxr, sore-tooled ana utterly worn out!
e bad traveled by land from Freder
icksburg to Chatham (my home on the
Potomac), a distance of about seventy
live miles. Scipio was brought to me a
puppy, ami was then two years old,
never having been off the farm except
when taken to the steamer by myself.
I afterward took him up the Potomac
with me, and presented him to General
Fitzhugh Lee, our present Governor of
irginia.
"I think there ought to be a law,"
said Mrs. Swell, "compelling mosquitoes
to wear muzzles at this season of the
vcar. It's just too bad," "What's too
bad?'' asked Mr. Gush. "The horrid
mosquitoes, of course." "What have
they done now?" "Why, they have
prevented Matilda from "going to the
uext geruian." "Mosquitoes prevented
"Yes, mosquitoes prevented her
from going. The horrid little things
bit her in the small of the back and
raised a red welt. We've tried camphor
and everytninfir, but cannot make it
disappear. With that unsfcbtlj blotch
tnere she cannot wear a low-necked
dress, and so she has decided to stay at I
come, isn't it too oaar at. rata
OUhrn.
thi:
CHICAGO SHORT LINE
OK THK
Clago, Milwaukee and
SlPaol Raihw.
THE BEST ROUTE
From OMAHA and COUNCIL BLUFFS
TO THE EAST.
Twj Tula: Duly
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Chicago,
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ANI-
Milwaukee,
Minneapolis, Cedar Rapids,
Dubuaue. Davennr.rt
Clinton,
nee isiana.rreeport,
Elgin, Madison,
eloit, Winona,
--.. . r- . ' : ---,----,
Hock ford.
Janeville,
La Crosse.
And
all other linpoii.tut Point- K.i-',
Norttieiifl Hint Somlu-ujt
Fcr through ticket ll on the Ticket
Agent al Coliimbtl-, Xehiuik.i.
1'Ul.LMAN Sl.ICH-KH.-S Ull'l the Kl Kaf
IMNIM; I AHS IN niic W'ohl.i. -He lull on
the main line ol the Chicuo, i.
Wkf Ml. IHUI iC'v, I.I..I riri v
atteutiou i p.ml t.i nvu:vi t . om
leoua employe- r.l the t'oinp'iiM
M. Miller. .. H 'r-it,
General .Man je. . iioi.'i l.-,. Aj;'i.
Jf. 1 i'Kfker, CJeo. II. M.-;t li'orri.
Adi'l Gen'1 Mali. Aa-'t I'.,,. A.-'l.
J.'l
Pel.. I M
Clark, Ucii'l riiip'i.
LOUIS SCHREIBKR,
liMaKei'.
All kinds of Hrpaitiit; dour on
Skttit Ntttii-r. hunt's, Vac-
18, etc., wadf to order,
aid all work tiuar-
autertl.
Also sell the world-famous Walter A
Wood Mowers. Keauera, Combin
ed Machines, Harvest! s,
and Self-binders the
best made.
EVHhnp opposite the " Tatters.!!." on
Olive St.. COLUMBUS, -.f.-in
TRASH'S
SELECTED SHORE
li'sUMH-f
,Hl THIS DHL
my
i jo- nsa- ai-
HCI
Cheapest Eating on Xfertii;
ASXYOini GS0CE& FOE THEM.
TRASK'S':
ARK THeORICINAl. asl
ONLY CENU!K
lea no other Brand
PATENTS
CAVFATS. TKAUK H.UKS AND 10PVRIUHTS
Ohtaiued, ami all other Imsiuc.. in the
l'. S. Patent Otti.e attemle.l to for Mill).
KltATK FEES.
Our office ia opposite the P..-S. Patent
Otiii-e, unit wo can obtain Patents in In?
lime tbau those remote from W A SHI Nfl
TON. Sentt MODEL OU DKAWIXli. We
advise as to pateutuhititv free ot ehanre:
and we inakeNOrHAUGK UNLESS WE
OBTAIN PATENT.
We refer here to the Postmaster, the
Stipt. of Money Order Div., and to ottii
cials of the IL S. Patent Office. For cir
culars, advice, ternia und references to
actual clients in your own Mule or
county, write to
A. MKWW ac t'O.,
Opposite Patent Office, Wa-hinlnn, ..
THE
Chicago Herald
ANI
COLUMBUS JOURNAL.
The COI.IJMRIJM JOIIKftAI...
onee a week, aud the Chicago Herald,
ouce a day, for one vear, .. The
lOIIMNAtL. and the HWkh Herald,
one year, S4.75.
Addruih,
M. K.Tmknkic.v Co.,
l'iiuayMUv t'idiiiiilius, Nehr.
TIlT TV
itor workiux people
Send 10
rl il, I ,r eeuti postage, and we
will
u m m - ,i
mail vf.ii rep. a inval. val-
uahle naiuple hox ofooil.i that will put
you in the wav of makiii'' more money in
a few days than you ever thought pos
aihle at any uitiei. Capital not re.
iiired. You can live at hotm: and work
in apare time only, or all the time. All
of both ae.vet, of all ajie, grandly sue.
cesaful. rU cents to $." eanily earned
every evening. That all who want work
may "text the litiNiiie.s-), we make thi- un
paralleled otter: To all vho .ire not well
satisfied we will lend $1 to pay for the
trouhle of writing il-. Full purtietilarM,
dicectioo, etc , ent free. Immense pay
absolutely Mire Tor at I who -.tart at onee
Dou't delay. Addre MiNhoN A. Co..
Portland. Maine.
WEEKLY REPUBLICAN
CM'BBIXG KATES.
H
ERKAI'TEK wc will furnish to
the Omaha Weekly Republican and .lotm
JUI. at the cry low rate of '..73 per
year, thus placing within the reach of all
the hett state and count cl;ien pul
lihhed, gi ilig the reader the coudeiied,
general and foreign telegraphic and tate
news of the week. Try for a yem- and
be satistied. " ina.VNUt f
WeWspafSR
A book of 100 pages.
lie ix-sl ixxtic lorau
tlvertiser to con
JrftraVtitTIIWB
sult, be he experi
enced or otherwise.
ItcoiituiualisiiornewsuaiH'isniKlcstimatca
of the cost of advert l8liijf.Theadvcrii-erwho
wants to spend one dollar. Amis mi it the in
formation ho requires, while fm him who will
Invest one hundred thousand dollar in ad
vertlsing. u hcheme la indicated which will
Iiic-el his everv requirement, nr run t matte
to doio bg iliijhtilutuptatasUy urrirfil itt by cor
rtspoHiltnrr. U'J editions have been issued.
Sent, post-paid, to any address for lucent.
Write to tJKO. K ROW ELL & CO..
NEWSPAPER ADVERTISING UUKKAU.
(lOSpruoeSt.r'rluUngUouiteSq.), New York.
Uoaflleln!kl!a4el
HianiiD m ra
tUt&VsNsCtV
me aewsDaoer Adver-
rain Agency of Hewn.
UNION PACIFIC
LAND OFFICE,
SAML. C. SMITH, Ag't.
AND
General Real Esiale Dealer.
i
3GTI have a fare iiumlier of improved
l-aiui r.r sale cheap. A!., unimproved
l mm- unit grjtui; i;,,,, ,olu , to,r
pel :iere.
i-lTSprcial attention plj, t,
liii.it proof on HomeMead and
Claim.
making
TimheY
HT"; " having land lo sell u j
i f" l'"'r advmt.-i-tr to ieve them in
U'M,,U ,or -Mouey to ..., ,, i,,
lind it
my
lila.
K- II. Marty, llt-rk. peak, (Seriirm.
"" " folnml.u-. Ncl.i:
t'Ua.
FREE LAND!
KUK
FARMERS & STOCKMEN
tltist loyoiiil
.Wl.ia-U
tie i;ic-r
lints on the
The
Country is Wonderfully
Productive.
Hie ap Lamb for sal- in the viciHitv
mi the !iel-
town of Sterling.
Grand Openings for alt kiuda of Buii
ness. Present population of
Town 500.
Of Jciiil tor eiit iilar- ti
PACKARD & KINO,
Nilm;., u i.i , ., roliirmto.
ESTABLISHED IN I860.
Tllr:
N
illU
WASHINGTON, !. ('
P.iily, eveej.t Sun. I iv. Price, W iu per
V4-ai- in uitvaiiee. poM-iire tree.
-II IK
Mm IATI0IAL lEfOiUCJll.
Ieiiteil in ft. r.l news anil on-inal
matli r !! lined lnve the lCi.:rt nietit ..(
Airrieliilure Hint ntner 1-eji.n ttuelila ot
theCuVertiiiieiit, lel.itni!? In the firiuiiu;
.lint I'l.Ullil.;- interest.
Au Ailvoa.ite of Ueiiililiean triiHipt-,
n-ieiux I, ail.-N-.lv ami fairly- thr aets
"I oiireH ami the Nation if 'Adminis
tration. I'riee, pl.tMi per year in ail van. e,
Mitae tree.
K. W. FOX.
President ami .Manager.
The National ICkix'hi.ican anil ihe
oi.l .mums .loimXAi., I j ear, fl ... ::. -
Cures Guaranteed!
DR. WAHN'S SPECIFIC No. 1.
A erf am t lire l"r Nervous Delulitv.
Semitrtl Weakness, Involuntary Kuiis--iti!.
Spermatorrhea, ami all diieasea o
the ueiuto-lirinary orj,'an.i eaiinedtiy setf
altllre or over illdllleliec.
Price, fl ini per hov, tiv hoxea f.l.no.
DR. WARNS SPECIFIC No. 2.
For Epileptic Fits, Mental Anxiety,
Loss of Memory, Softening ol" the Brain,
ami all those deaaen of the drain. PrUe
$!.imi per Imiy, hi.v boxes f.".(NI.
DR. WARNS SPECIFIC No. 3.
For Impotence, Sterility in either set,
Loss of Power, premature old age, and all
those diseases retpiiriug a thorough iu
vigorating of the sevual organs. Pries
i-.)0 per hox, six boxes $I0.1M.
DR. WARNS SPECIFIC No. 4.
For Headache, Nervous Neuralgia, and
all acute diseases of the nervous sutelU.
Pi ice f.i)c per lv, six hove $ifn). "
DR. WARNS SPECIFIC No. 5.
For all diseases caused ty the over use
of i.-.liacco or liiiior. This iciuedy is par
ticularly enVacious in averting palsy and
delirium tremens. Price I.OO per 'iox,
six hoxes $.r.M.
We tiuarautee a Cure, or agree to re
fund douhle the money paid. Certiticate
in each hov. This guarantee applies to
each of our he :pfcitic;. ijeut by malt
to any address, secure from observation,
ou receipt or pi ice. He careful to mention
the number of Speciuc wanted. Uur
Specifies are only lecommeiided for spe
cific diseases, lieu ai e ol" remedies war
ranted to cure all these diseases with oou
medicine. To moid counterfeits aud al
w.s 'ecuie tue genuine, order only from
"own a cm.
DRUGGISTS,
Collliuhll.
I'M
Neb
Health is Weahhl
IS. CAVest'3 NxnTr jisd Bkaci Tbi4T-
MX3T, a guaranteed specific for Hysteria. Dizzi
ness, Coavukions, rits, Nonrou. Neuralgia.
Headache. Nervous Prostration caused by tho usu
of alcohol or tobacco. Wakefulness, Mental Im
pression. Boftening of the J train resulting in in
sanity and leading to misery, decay and death.
Premature Old Ag. Barrenness. .Loss of power
in either eor. Involuntary Losses andBpennat
orrhcea caused byovcr-exertion of thobrain.aelf
obusaor over-indulgence. ICach box contains
one month's treatment. $1.00n box, or sir boxes
Cor$5J0.bentbyiaail prcpaidou receiptor price.
WE GUAKAXTEn HVX. BOXES
To rare any case. With each order received byns
for six boxes, accompanied with $MM w will
sod tha purchaser our written guarantee to re
fund the money if the treatmentdueeootetfsct
euro. Guarantees issued only by
JOHN O. WEST & CO.,
862 W. MADISON ST., CHICAGO, ILLS.,
Sole Prop's West's liver Pilla.
in presents given away.
Send us ;1 cents postage.
juuu and by mail you will get
free a package of goods of large value,
that win start you in work that will at
once bring you in money faster than any
thing He iu America. All about the
$-200.immi in presents with each box.
Agents vva-Uril everywhere, or either
m or all a-e, for all'the time, or spar
time only, to work Tor u at their own
homes. Fortune! for all workers ab
inliitelr aMired. Don't delav. II. Hal
I.HT.I Co.. Portland. .Maine."
S50Q REWARD!
"U rr the iter -twtrj IrurnHo( Ur.r Comphfet1
T'WK fck Jb. loli.Uk o.Coaiulkm o? CII,b.
..Mtu.r,uh W..t', YrgttabLLlnr Ml.. ta Um du
Ucn.mT.iuLU tumplki nui. tUju put;lr TeitLM J
MTUltoCiMKtk.a. 8W Ctatol. Uru....eo
WINE
e money than at any t hint:
e by taknii! an airem-v for
best sclllli' hunk nut H
Kinuers succeed urandlv. None fell.
Teruis free. Ualuut Uc'oK Co , fort,
land, Haioe. 4-3-J-y
HUull
FsMs"JsBtssfoTMitrrjHP
Uk
$200
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