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About The Columbus journal. (Columbus, Neb.) 1874-1911 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 4, 1891)
"" sr '" v-v- A, ,- - -'. $sfVv" a . I f y o f 3 ;:. f- - jL- Sx? . rk - SSi-V vCSr--. , mrmr" -.' -r " , caaMae la healthy, nay tsaababy eon-ftrt tat la bealta. There Is ao baby scanty bat la health. All au comfort as from tot, aaA not of his beauty. Fat la almost eYerythlas; to his. That la why babies an tot. It U baby's wealth. Us earBlas laid by. What fee does aot aeed for Immediate ase he tacks aader hi velvet skla to cashloa hist oat aaa keea the hard world from touching This aiakes carres aad dbaales. Natare is feat of taralac ase lato beauty. AllUfelasldet all tot outside Ha has aeChlak to do hat to sleep aad grow. Yob know all this at least you feel It. Wheahabyls plump you are as happy as he ts. Keep him so. ' Sat what If the tot Is aot there? Poor babyl we mast get It there. To be thla for a baby Is to lose what belongs to him. Why Soald the little mortal begin his life with ferlag! Oo to yoar doctor. Don't be dosing your baby when all be needs Is a little manage- sawtCsslw A little book on cabstox. umo, of lnln Ite Taloe. will be seat free It you write for K to Scott Bowae. Chemists, 13S South Fifth Avenue, New York, Bctnii b avuunn in iwi-i wu, w mmj , 1. aafsaa ta a QMaaa4 w hma wy lee-res d jme Ov?ef la tae astasia. Mated Maty tas asBsss re aM0W ; ftfl itt matter la tae 4 ef two color wf a laat wcoaiafaat sal Ufa. WBamah see MlHI Wkaataa so law II taw satema. aad the hataral mwtk af law ties Man, eslestJea ef ae aSw takes slaes. Uadar esrtata oatfeaaa ft Ukes oa a yellow Vrowa east. Way see ef two trees growlaf aide tar side, af the ease age, aad aav- ataa tame exposal, skoal take a h llaat red li the aatama and the etaer aaeaM tan fellow, ar wky eae brhaeh ef a tree akeald be kifkly eetorei aad the rati ot tka tree kare ealy a yel- Jew tlat, are faafUaM that are at tev peeetble to aJMwar at wky one member ef a family theajd he aerf ectly kealtky had aaetker sickly. "I feel constrained to tell yon, Fred, that I have been engaged before this," 6be whispered. "Don't mention it," he said gently. "I too have been jilted." I i CTTgu-siias)wa urn ay Pr.n3a.ee wheal an sTunisi. noYtts aasr M day's am. star ssllMHSiwrnaMto aad SUS total hatafewa A good a new ibafs the condition of liver, stom ach and bowels, when Br. Fierce Pleasant Pellets hare done their work. It's a work that isn't- fin cure. all done so mildly and gently I .There's none of the violence that ,went with the old-time pilL One tiny, sugar-coated Pellet's a gentle .laxative three to four act as a cathartic. Sick Headache, Bilious 'Headache, Constipation, lndiges-' Ition, Bilious Attacks, aad all de )rangements of the stomach and jbowcls, are prevented, relieved and (cured. As a liver PU1, they're un 'equaled. They're purely vegetable, perfectly harmless the smallest, 'cheapest, and easiest to take. They're the cheapest pill you can bny, because they're guaranteed to! igive satisfaction, or your money is rctnrned. . You only pay for the good you -.get. Can yon ask: more? That the peculiar plan all Dr. Pierce's medicines are sold on, It is an old-fashion notion that medicine has to taste bad to do any good. Scott's Emulsion is cod liver oil with its fish-fat taste lost nothing is lost but the taste. This is more than a mat ter of comfort Agreeable taste is always a help to di gestion. A sickening taste is always a hindrance. There is only harm in taking cod-liver oil unless you digest it. Avoid the taste. tjs! JA MJWYsrk. Ye "..CATARRH OnUMIALM n S5QO AKTMAX. r CUM CATARRH T a uajvio rasrur irr. I rtiilnli.-MiSI.il i II nil we.rvica owm s umasiMB or or mau. . i r-"-"r. m. - - r - v. sxv wnew Tors. ft. awaUiawT MU. IN TIC TTJTT'S TEM if Common Soap Rots Clothes and . Chaps Hands. IVORY SOAP DOES NOT. ished when yonVe stopped taking them, either. It's lasting. They as well as relieve. And it's sassTCaWrtftaa asaw s Jft isasa sasassr- SvT pQ raaaajlianj, jpWl1in1WlKaJTk.ga, naaataiillaTllhajhsiaasA jto a aymdaasnnsswsayiiMinjvijhr THE AFTER TIME. IinUKIL BTAXTDH. There comctb a time for laughter. And joy for the davs ana years ; Bat ever there cometh after A time and apteee for tears. Weary of revel and riot. Sick of the worldly strife. Cometh the peace the qoiet That quicken the foaats of life And the spirit Is disenchanted w 1th joys that are bltter-nreeti And the sonl which Ut teat hath panted Fall down at the If aster's feet ; The world and its ways seem lonely And lore at the bett seems loss What help Is there then bnt only To cling to the crimson cross T To cling to the cross that blot soma With blood for the erring shed; On the tenderest of tender bosoms To pillow the wear head ; To feel the lore that is glowing From the heart that is quick to be9 With even the harsh nails going In the beaatUnl scarred white feet O, bird by the storm-winds driven. Where never a sweet bird tings. From the wild and the angry Heavea Fly homeward with weary wings 1 And ye that are worn and weary Who taint by the way and fall, Fly fast from the darkness dreary To the rock that was cleft ft all 1 WHAT THE GABLE DID. MT UtKKY OXCART. - Charlie Templeton hurried along the crowded street with the crowd. Just as he reached the crossing he was thinking: "This Is Thursday. To-morrow I shall leave Chicago and in six hours shall be in Green Valley with dearie, bless her heart. I have news to tell her, too. I have proved my claim." "Dearie" was Charlie's betrothed. Her real name was Mattie, but he used the other just as much. At the intersection of the streets there were three tracks for cable cars, two of them going into the tunnel. The crossing is always a dangerous one and the passers-by are accus tomed to look sharply for trains. Charlie had no thought of this. He simply hurried on as rapidly and as happily as he could. Suddenly there was a shout rather a dozen shouTs, "Jump." A car was coming around the cor ner to go into the tunnel. The ground was slippery for there had been a freeze after a rain. Charlie tried to jump out of the way but, his foot slipped, he fell, was struck by the car and thrown bleeding from the track. A crowd gathered at once. The injured man lay there in the gutter. Blood was flowing from a wound in his head. His arm was broken. A few moments sufficed for a patrol wagon and an ambulance to arrive. Charlie was put into the latter and hurried away to the hospital. The crowd dispersed and immediately for got all about it. Charlie had been struck a terrible blow. I was many days before he re turned to consciousness. When he finally sat up and looked around him it was with a very stupid look. "Tell us who you arc," said the nurse who sat by him. He did not answer, only persisting in stuped silence "You sec we do not know who you are," the nurse continued. "Your valise was picked up in the street after you were hurt, but there" was nothing in it or in your pocket by which we could tell who you arc No one has inquired for you. Your friends arc no doubt wondering what has become of you. Tell me your name and ad dress." Charlie only rubbed his head and looked around. He did not under stand. He could not quite tell who he was and what he was doing in that long room filled with cots. The nurse had spoke of his being hurt, but he did not remember of anything that had befallen him. He realized that something had happened, for he could scarcely think. He tried hard, but everything he wanted to recall was just beyond his mental grasp. So he only looked at the nurse ver stupidly and stared around the room. Charlie's case was a peculiar one. The blow he had received on the head had destroyed his memory. Cases of this kind are occasionally known to the physicians. The patient forgets his name and his former history. Most that he has learned must be learned again. It is extremely un likely that the memory of his former life will return to him. Only some powerful shock which brings up before him vividly something that he knew before can restore him to his former self. The medical attendants at the hos pital were not long in discovering Charlie's condition. They knew that If he had friends who wanted to find him they would be heard from sooner or later. When his wounds had healed one of the physicians gave him employment as man of all work at his own home. So Charlie began his new life as a servant There were good reasons for Charlie's "friends not hunting him up. He had just established his claim to a small fortune in an eastern State. His rela tives who were then in posession were more than pleased when the months went by and they heard nothing from him. He had no immediate relatives. Mattie was the only one in the world who was dear to him. She was an orphan too, a clerk in -a dry goods store in their native town, Green Valley. When his time to return came and he did not reappear she was alarmed. There was some talk among the citizens of investivating his case but nothing was done. Mattie did what she could to find out what had become of him, but inexperience and modesty prevented her from making the search she would have made had she been his wife. However, she did not give up. She had a clew merely an account in a newspaper of an un known man who had met with an ac cident and had been taken to a hos pital. She left Green Valley. Charlie Templeton was slowly be coming accustomed to the new world J in which he found himself, for it was a new world to him. His position was a lowly one but i t was all he was suited for. He has but one joy in life. Some time, after he came to work doctor there came a young for the lady to Doara next door, bncwasa clerk m a down town store and seemed to take a marked interest in the stupid looking fellow whom she frequently saw sprinkling the grass on the doc tor's lawn with the hose or cutting it with the mower. She asked him strange questions. "Think hard now," she would say. "Do you not remember Green Valley and Mat tie?" In answer he would shake bis head. Then the girl would look sad and walk away while he would follow her dreamily with his eyes. He ' sent to prbon for life. A soldier, a adored her. She was a vision. She kinsman of one of the political lead was as high above him as the stars ers, killed a man in a drunken brawl above the earth, and he worshiped i and was acquitted. With these op her as he woula a celestial being. j pressions and the interpretation ol The winter with its coating of ice the laws, it will not surprise anybody on the streets came again. Charlie I to hear that another revolution has or rattier Jim, as the doctor called ' Mas. aot knowing his real name, was able to find his way around the city aad was occasionally sent out on cr One day he was again walking down the street, where lie was first hurt. It was nearly 6 o'clock and dark, and thcvtrcct was filled with men and women hurrying along from their work. Chailic was thinking of his goddess in his vague, misty way. She was enveloped in a cloud in his mind. He did not eve know her name. He knew that aha worked somewhere in that part of thi city, but he did not know where. He wished she would come along so that he could stand by and look at her. Suddenly there was a shout rather a dozen shouts, "Jump." Strange things happen sometimes. Charley was struck by a car just as he had been a year before and was thrown I violently from the track. There was Jan ugly wound on his head from which blood flowed, making his hair a dark red clot. For a time he knew nothing. Then there came faint gleams of returning consciousness like the streaks of dawn on a Dccember morning. He felt himself sitting there in the cold street, held in someone's arms.He was thinking: $P f "This ft Thursday. To-morrow I shall leave Chicago and in six hours I shall be in Green Valley with dearie, bless her heart. I have news to tell her too. I have proved mv claim." Charlie," said a sweet voice be hind him. Charlie opened, his eyes. There was a crowd around him and an am bulance was kicking up to the curb stone. It was a woman's voice that spoke and her arms were around him. -A stray lock: of her hair brushed hia check He looked into her anxious face. Who was she? Gleams of remembrance from his two lives came into his mind. " The shaded street ol Green Valley and the girl he loved arose before him. They were far away, but she- was there by him, her arms around him. Yet she was an angel, his vision, who asked him strange questions. He put his hand to his head. Then to his limbs. They were unbroken. A great joy had arisen within him and he grew stronger. With her help he arose. He looked at the am bulance, at the crowd. Then he put his arm half around her to help her through the throng. 'Come, dearie," he said. "Let us go home." German Soldiers a tae asnren. A British officer describing the Ger man army maneuvers says: "The method of infantry attack called 'swarming' differs from the En glish style of advancing in extended lines. The method of the German is simpler. They advance line upon line, and shoulder to shoulder. This formationgivesgreatstrcngth, though there is a heavy expense in life, which shows that infantry Is still held cheaply and that victory goes to the biggest battalions." In describing a flank attack on a strong position in the village of Simmershauscn, the same officer says that the defenders were strongly in trenched in grainflclds, and that line after line of the attacking party seemed to spring out of the ground suddenly, and in most unexpected positions, and in crowded masses were halted fifty yards distant from the defenders. The officer thinks, however, that in the face of heavy rillc lire few of these attackers would have survived to cross bayonets with the defenders. Instead of the English style of voi le' firing the Germans practiced in dependent firing, the officers judging the distances during the stages of the enemy's advance. Each man was sup plied with 150 rounds of Mauser small bore cartridges. The recoil was ex ceedingly light. The expenditure of ammunition was large, and the officer thinks it would be difficult to keep the men supplicd.with cartridges with such incessant individual firing. Cer tainly, in an open country, the ad vantage would be on the side of the rifle defenders. Speaking of the three days' forced march from Cassel to Erfurt the offl cer expresses the strongest admiration for the wonderful 'endurance of the infantry, the men lieing deep-chested, sturdy, ensily fed, and contented. In spite of sultry Weather, clouds of dust, and heavy accouterment, weighing fifty German pounds, each man main tained a swinging pace of four miles an hour, for eight-hour spells, on hilly ground. On arriving at the end of the march they were bathed in sweat and dirt, but ready for a spirited performance of their exercise. At the end of the day's work they were still cheerful, singing in chorus. The daily ration is composed of a handful of coffee beans, two pounds of black bread, half a pound of meat, and a quarter of a pound of rice. . .' PlwajTi raa Caaa. Advices frgrli Cuba' showy that the island's future grows darker. With banditti ' on oneband, 'robberies by Government offickfts ajt another and enormous taxes" for Appropriations, the burdens of the people are becom ing greater than they can bear. The banditti have reached a stato similar to that of the banditti of Italy years ago. No traveler is safe on the roads or in the country villas. Of late depredations have begun even in the province of Puerto Principe. Soldiers and police are in league with the banditti. Bobber bands have been formed with startling rapidity, each having its exclusive territory. The Home Rule party is dead and the Revolutionary party is daiiy grow ing stronger. It is not to be won dered at, when men sec their homes plundered, their property stolen, their daughters and wives assaulted and their lives in danger, that they should come together and make an effort to rid the; ".selves of the scourge which is daily making their lives more mis erable. Merchants are loud in protestation because the Government has not en tered into negotiations with .the United States looking towards a treaty for the tobacco industry. ? So bitter is the feeling that the Gown-ho m'ent has to have soldiers statidpeaf h at the election booths. Daily deflcitsare found in the Treas ury and Custom-House. Money paid for revenues disappears as if by magic. The part of the general appropria tion which Cuba has to pay is more than $27,000,000 over two-thirds of the general appropriation by the Gov ernment. " ft As an example of law violation this will serve. A Cuban killed a man who had wronged his sister. He was broken out in Cuba. A milkman's bills should be made out on a Quart-o size, cream-laid Dv ' nsT, not blue-tinW or water marked. REAL RURAL READING WILL BE FOUND IN THIS PARTMENT. DE- AkT'-eattar taw Basis aaa Fwaatls mt All Wealth A Haataosnaas) Car af Farsa Animals U na Garden, B. Dignity ef Asjrlealftai RGRICULTURB is the basis, the foundation of all wealth, and the othcrpursuits arc so closely con nected with it mat tneir pros perity depends upon the success of farming. There is not only n o antagonism between them, but they arc mutually bene ficial to each other and the ut most good feel inir should exist, and they should en deavor to promote each other's inter- Lest. No portion of the cummunitv needs higher Intellectual advance ment and more refined culture than the cultivators of the soil. They oc cupy a proud, high, and honorable position and they should make it greatly sought after. The youths of the country, instead of abandoning agricultural pursuits, should seek them and endeave to make them a source of profit and give them high improvement. In this way they will have culture and refinement as well as health and pleasure. Let the Intelligent, progressive, and practical farmers in every neighbor hood meet on some Saturday after noon in every month to consult and advise with each other. Let them give in public meetings the results of their experience, show how to in crease the fertility of the soil; to cause greater productions and to im prove their live stock. These meet ings will become schools of instruc tion. They will be pleasant and agreeable, as well as instructive, and will enable the farmers to get the benefit of each other's experience. I know of no better method the farmers can have of Improving the agri culture of the country and of making it profitable as well as agreeable, now could time, be better or more de lightfully spent than at these meet ings? They are not held for the pur pose of advancing the political inter ests of the men engaged in them, and enabling them to get some office by creating antagonism between the different classes of the community, but their object is to advance the in terests of the whole community and to improve agriculture. None but intelligent, progressive and thrifty farmers can be expected to take an interest in these meetings. All such, by uniting together and acting in concert, will exert an influence, the happy effects of which will be felt throughout the whole region in which they exist If they need any pe cuniary assistance to keep up the as sociation, it can be obtained by volun tary contributions made by the mem bers at such times as not to feel them. Exchange. Home-made Cora Harrow. This, for effective work, cannot be beaten. Take four pieces of good plank, 2x6 inches, and ten feet long; soak. In water thoroughly; then drive Pi ' M IT 3ji two rows of 20-pcnny wire spikes into each plank, about two inches apart each way; now bolt three pieces across these; as shown in cut; attach an evener with three chains and you have the harrow made. Corn can be harrowed till two or three inches high with this harrow, without injur ing it, and, therefore, is superior to the common harrow for that purpose. J. W. Armstrong, in Practical Farmer. Farm FroTarba. Use diligence, integrity and proper improvement of time to make farm ing pay. Do not have more live stock than you can keep well. House all things as much as possible ani mals, utensils ana crops, wncn you are offered a fair price for your pro duce do not store it for rats and spec ulators. The more comfortable you can keep your animals the more they will thrive. A good cow is a valua ble machine; the more food she can properly digest the greater the profit. A few roots daily to all the stock are as welcome as apples to boys and girls. Iron shoes on sleds last a life time and arc cheaper in the end than wooden ones. Replace the bars where you often pass by strong gates, and then wonder that you did not do so before. Although in draining land thoroughly your purse may be drained, yet the full crops that follow will soon fill it again. Always give the soil the first meal: if it is well fed with manure it will feed all else plants, animals and men. A bor rowed tool- if broken should be re placed by a new one. A sense of honor in such matters is much to be commended. ttewXaea a Silo Mina'd Cess. In reply to a question how much a silo should cost, it is told in a bulletin issued from the New Hampshire Station that the day of costly silos is past, and it is this fact alone which enables the rapid extension of this system of storage. A wooden 6ilo keeps Its contents with less loss than a stone or cement one, chiefly because Uof the penetration of air through mortar and cement. A silo built in dependent of the barn, having its own frame, roof, etc., can be built for tl per ton of capacity, if above seventy-five tons capacity. If built In the corner of the barn the cost of material and labor will be about one half that sum, but on most farms where there is lumber, and where much of the work can be done by the farm help, this cost can be reduced almost, if not quite, to an actual cash outlay of $25. LIVE-STOCK. When to sell hogs is a mooted ques tion" among farmers. One writer advises to sell hogs when the most money can be got for the least outlay. The ups and downs of prices we cannot control, but by careful atten tion to the feeding ami ilc of scales we can tell closely whether we are iw FOMM-tflll avJ J$tl wJ'SSansnwaja?' f L ' " " ;.-,LTTayi 4rT-rV4iFfa making corn into pork: at a profit or not. If not, there ought to be a change of ration or an immediate sale of marketable stock. It doesn't pay to hold beyond the time of profitable growth and fattening. Most successful feeders believe it pays best one year with another to sell the pork when the highest point in gain has been reached, letting the question of probable higher prices alone. Corn nsed in keeping over fat- tening hogs will make twice as much pork if given to other animals. It is a losing game to hold for in increase of price as a rule. Make all the pork you can out of your corn in just as little time as pos sible and then market to the best ad vantage, is the advice of the Cincin nati Commercial. Car as Faras Animals, The most practical and valuable in formation that can be brought to the intelligently practical farmer is that which relates to the care and man agement of farm animals. But few farmers have any solid data of facts to draw upon derived from their own experience. To know Just exactly which costs the most to produce, a pound of mutton or a pound of beef or a pound of pork is something not more than one farmer in a thousand can tell, for the 999 never keep ex act records. All of them can guess at it, may be, quite closely, but it is guess work after all. To be sure they put their money up on their guess work, and embackin mutton feeding, beef feeding, or pork feeding, and many say they ought to know all about it as long as they are in the business. It is true they ought and they would know if they did not have such an universal contempt for keep ing exact records. Here is where the English and Scotch farmer excclls his American cousin. He is trained in the art of keeping books and records, ne Is not consid ered a good safe farmer unless he can show what a thing costs. That is just as great an advantage to the earnest thinking farmer as it is to the manufacturer. The dollars the farmer is to earn runs the gauntlet of ill-luck and accident to as great an extent as the manufacturer's dollars. He should not be loaded down with an extra per cent, of carlcssness and in difference to sound rules of business proceed urc. Mast Berne ta Sell. The American Agriculturist 6tates that horses to be sold in the New York market for "general purpose" will bring the best prices when they conform as nearly as possible to the following standard: A good sized, bony head, full, kind eye, pricked ears, good crest, oblique shoulders, short on back, long on belly, somewhat arched at coupling, well ribbed up, heavy boned, short, flat legs, com pact, active, block, good tempered and a good walker. He should weigh from 1,000 pounds upward. THE DAIRY. Fay a Tea Ce. The crcameryman who goes into a community and pays the- cash for his milk just as fast as it is delivered at his door, the same as any other busi ness does or ought to do will es tablish himself on a firm basis of es teem among the farmers, and will be supplied with the best the dairy af fords, besides insuring the eternal good of all the people of his neighbor hood. The farmer and dairyman has to wait too long for returns. A cash basis would benefit all concerned. It is easy to deride this idea, and say that it is impracticable, chimer ical, etc, but this docs not make it so, nor will it convince us that it is so. Every line of business is hanging too much on the farmer's capacity (now nearly exhausted) for indulg ence, and it is high time for a radical change. Pay as you go. Dairy Ketea. Still another milk-testing appar atus is announced, called the Hutton. Trie United Kingdom of Great Britain has 9.2 people to one cow. We have one for every 4.3 poisons. Niagara is the name given a butter cooler exhibited at the show at Bath, Eng. It consists of a water-tight chamber around which cold water is made to flow. A condensed milk plant is to be put in at Newport, Me., at a cost of $50,000 to consume the milk of 4,000 cows. Several others are to follow if this one succeeds. Filled cheese is still In the market in Chicago and the Farmer's Review of Chicago and a correspondent of the Wisconsin Farmer both advocate a national law against all such frauds. Milk drawn from an inflamed ud der will almost invariably, if made into butter, develop an offensive odor, resembling decaying meat. Such milk is unfit for use. Do not feed it even to pigs. Pour it on the manure pile. Some complaint is heard that the dairymen who have had the milk feature of the Columbian Exposition in charge have dubbed four breeds dairy breeds and shut out the rest. Guernseys, Jerseys, Holsteins and Ayrshire are the lucky breeds. They must be rather exasperating to the Shorthorn men if to no others, in view of the position the breed has oc cupied in this country. ORCHARD AND GARDEN. A Good marker. To make a neat soil marker, says Popular Garden, take a piece of board an inch thick and two inches wide, and of any desired length; draw a line down the center of each side and one edge, and with a plane or sharp knife pare it down to a sharp edge; fasten a handle of convenient size and length at center of strip on the upper edFe and the device is com plete. Grasp the handle firmly, press the sharp edge into the earth, and you have a straight, even drill of uniform depth for sowing. By marking and cross-marking, as in corn planting, yon have even spacing for pricking or transplanting. To mark off tha distance to next row you might also put on a runner at one side, fastened to rod of iron passing through the marker, as shown in lower figure. This tunncr can be adjusted any dis tance and do perfect work. Of coarse handle and marking strips canT he made any length from a-few inches to several feet. After trying one you will probably make several of differ ent sises. Crr "'""""""nnnaWBasaaBaaasmaf CTsm a It. ' Tkay taftfo the eVse la ama T the paalle eraoe's aowadaya i the rail meats f elvll go f-ra-aaat at a T-ry early age. aad it seems that the yoaag people awl, oi the ah K a a.a ty cor rect Jaca af the way we ara coreiaed. A teacher, who, I y the war, is rather fond af Krfllsh thing, was orally iBStractia p class the other day la the foaaaatlons f Bolltlca! science She bad given her mplls a very Interesting lectara shout he Brit ah system of Koverasseat And then she asked the hoy at the head or the' claw: "And bow. Johnny, what are the mea railed who govern or r le over as la this country?" -Klnss"" fM John rromptly. -Oh no! Tell me, the next aaa, by whom wearj governed ! VJneens!" -No! ext toy." . Jacks!" ssld the next boy. An-I h was cot promoted to the fcaad ef the class. Cease tat Slay. Tae terribly eenraretad farm at fnflv-nsa, which physicians on the continent of Karo-w dM'piteM'Ms-rirs.set-msto heTecS-jctel a permanent lodgment Ibis skle the Atlantic. It makes ita rraprraranee as sooa aa tae cool wea'BT se's in. aad net Infraqaeatly darlag the st-tomer months. la the spring It Is rampant. Nothing checks Its Srst attaak. er an effactaally enaaterae a Ita aahssoaant ramme, aa Hoetct ter's St-maeh Bitters. The fortifying. Inrlgor. aXing luflaeaee of that henefloent Km fc protects the syseni against tbodeat-ars wbtohhesst a feebl physloae and a weakly eonstftntion eon ssoneat npon ahrapt transitions ef temper atare. It 'gases a genial warmth shroagh tae diaphragm, wbleh la thi boat eorrestire ar pre reatlfeof a cam. aad la ameaaaof aentraaa. inn the effect of exposure la damper rlgeroaa wealaer. In dyspepsia, liver ceaiplaiat. aost iTenrss. rawnmatlam, malarial aad kidney troabUs H la nerar resorted te wltaeat gsed resaUs. She Flew. "My dear." said Mrs. Poppermsa to her husband, "I was looking over a bun dle of old letters to-day, and fooad this one which yoa wrote to me before we were married, when yoa were yoaag and sentimental" What do. It say?" I'll read It" "Sweet Idol of my lonely heart If thou wilt place thy hand la mine, and ar, dear love, I'll bo thy bride, wall iy away to some far realm we'll fly to sunny Italy, and 'nesth soft, ceruleaa skies we'll bak and sing and dream of naught but lore Rich snd eestly paint ings by olJ masters shall adorn the walls of the castle I'll give thee. Thy bath shall ba of ml k. A box at the opera shall bo at thy command, aad royalty hall bo thy dally visitor. Sweet strains of music shall loll thee at eventide, and wsrbllng birds shall wake thee from thy morning slumber. Say yes, and fly, o fly w th me!' "And I Hew," said Mrs. Pbppermnn. "But if I had been as fly as I am now, I wouldn't have f.owa "Boston Herald. The Only Oaa Ever Frlated Can Tea Find the WerdT There Is a 3-Inch display advertisement In this paper this week, which has no two words alike except one word. The same Is true of each new one appearing each week from The Dr. Harter Medicine Co. This house places a "Crescent" oa everything they make and publish. Look for It, send them the name of the word, and they will return you book, BKAimroi. uxhoobapbs, or samtum nun It Is a well-established principle of economics that the young man who would get up with the sun should not stay up la tor than 10 o'clock with the daughter. When Baby was sick, we f When ahe was a Chue1, she cried forCaatoria, When she became Miss, she dung to Castorla, ahadCblMfaaatmsa-mtln-mCaat4-rm, Curm, the god of love, is represented as being blind. This probably has re sulted from his doing so much business with the lamp turned low. It rIvcs us pleasure to refer to the ad vertisement of Dr. Vf. II. Tutt which ap pears in our columns. For over twenty-Sve years Tutt a l'llls have been before the public, and each succeeding year their val uable properties become better appreci ated. They now stand second to none for the relief of that much abused and over taxed organ, the liver, and for the removal of that cause of so many Ills, constipation. They are used In every rivilized country, and carry with them voluminous testimo nials of their safety and efficacy. Tutt'a Liver Pills should have a place In every household. "I kkvkk pays no attention tor do nan dat talks loud and boisterous in an oflicc," remarked the new office boy. "lie only acks dat way down town cause he dasn't at home.' TOURISTS, Whether on pleasure bent or buiness, should take on every trip a bottle of Syrup of Figs, as It acts most pleasantly aad ef fectually on the kidneys, liver and bowels, preventing fevers, headaches and other forms of sickness. For sale la 50c and S1.0S bottles by all leading druggist. The man who knows all the dates from Adam down to President Harrison makes you very tired rehearsing them. We will give f 100 reward for any case of catarrh that cannot be curred with Hall's Catarrh Cure. Taken Internally. F. J. CHENEY A CO., Props.. Toledo. O. Into each life some rain must fall, sad yon are sure to be caught out'in it without an umbrella. LABORING MEN! Santas, lUftssi, SnOaVaw C About seven years ago I had Bronchitis, which finally drifted into Consumption, so the doctors said, and they had about given me up. I was confined to my bed. One day my husband went for the doctor, but he was not in his office. The druggist sent me a bottle of Piso's Cure for Consumption. I took two doses of it, and was greatly relieved before the doctor came. He told me to continue its use as long as it helped me. I did so, and the result is I am now sound and well entirely cured of Consumption. Mrs. P. E Baker, Harrisburg, Illinois, February ao, 1891. I have had Catarrh for many years, but never found, anything that did me any good until I con cluded to try Piso's Remedy for Catarrh. After using" it a few times I found great relief, and would not be without it now. Miss Belle Woodruff, Lawler, Iowa, July 2x, 1S91. A Health asrfetm metr fnaiHi aa la wgalar and eaTataat asaaaer: aad a ismeva aw ikiwaiiUia e sash ilsasantoM HOOd'S MlwfePwMllle. HOOD'S PILLS-Beet Mver farlgenaar and cathartic a-MshlaJsahcave.snaaH. Price Se. PwS9? ia te) sm Iw-rdU XII Br. Paws Mbul, October, 18S8. I recently had the enperta-aUy af testing the esM-rated Paster Keealg'a Kerve Toale in a very severe aeee. A near widow to whom I have freqneatly gtvea aid aad aselstaaes la my capacity aa City Iflisiimary. ata-t her 12-year-old dasghter to me ana evening to prceare asms aery aid; while she was relating her deeUtnUon aad stating that her mother was now nearly to tally blind, the poor chMd saMsely fcU lato aa enUeptie fit. I gave her two bottles of yoar msdjeiar. aad the gs?l la now weU aad happy, aad the aepport of her aged mother. The Lord setaaakeal I tarns that each a ease aa this reaonada to year hoaor aadte the glory ef Haa saeh a blessing far eaJerlag hamaaity. B. X. UOUCmUL Mlsetoaa-ry. a-io FREEST This reaa-dynss hasaj-na A Ti ililie can alae oMala ireeef Bharga. bs-fhaXwvemnd f Fort .ware. lad, dace 1831 and ay me KOINIO MIO. CO- CMaww, M. SHILOH'S CONSUMPTION CURE. lae geteem of this Grsat Caaa Cass ttid-eax a parallel in the hssatyaf iiirisi AleYnggatsareanihxaisedtosel hrregaa--aalee.atestuatfaulhai tsittsasas eessmlly stand. That it may become kao the Proprietors, at an eaormoas expense, sanaas: a Sample Bottle Free iato every hi to tk United Sunes and Caasda. Ifyoahaaa aCoagKSoreThneorBroecIaHaaaeil.a it wDl care yoa. If yoar child has the Cream. arWIsooptng Coagh, ase k promptly, and whaf is asm. If yoa dread that magjfias awasse ttoa, ase U. Ask SHILOH'S CURE, Price lode., ce cts. i g.eo. If yoar Langs are nose or Pack 1 eaw awaWk Fo DONALD UNNEOT WRwiatyfosSeSij: Kennedy's Medical Discovery cures Horrid Old Sores, Deep Seated Ulcers of 40 years' standing, Inward Tumors, and every disease of the skin, ex cept Thunder Humor, and Cancer that has taken root Price i.5o. Sold by every Druggist in .the U. S. and Canada. A Dog WitlWwl a Tail fei-otbalf as aboard aaaFaranv with ao(cale. Run your farm ca bnsbtrm priaciplrs bny and sell by weight, and when yoa hay a Scale bay the best, which is always the cheapest. For Ch-cnlan free address only JONES OF aWraHAttTON, H.Y. VARICOCELE Ssssss inniw-i-iH jjh aelanra,Be--aa.na ne ha Memo nr MBi or. a. a. wood, mi AAFATFOLISIENCEl PILES AWAKKSMsiTta-fiaa rU(. aad la an IHTAlXfr BLS I DBS for FlUa. rnee.Si: at drnasusi oe bv mail. na-iifia-SSf bus sua. Haw Toan Cm FREE Ifaibo er describe yrmrfuse anaiwiit sen - Ft Prttcriptlon. TonnUcn-et l a. X. AObtW awwi. inn mm !.. .aw TAK1 CARE! daw tat aft wai. r sasmaah aad hews-, aad la-asaratug w Menem sad lrar. Taere'eie, at yea are la poor Ih-eah, Use needs flirt i-ntlrft. '" e b 2Sg BsM iftimn ilHmV MR 7 3amanaaasma'Mi-aw.ea.-u.saiiM GARFIELD TEA :: Maa,watlaVawg,C IIwataMllyf ST. JACOBS OIL, THE GREAT REMEDY FOR PAIN, RHEUMATISM, Braisss, Cass, Wswawa, IwiWIbss. Bssmawas, Nsa ralfia, avtaUsa, "August Flower' BIllotisJMOT, "rdwitkbuMoaneaw , . Md coastipatjoa ConaJpatlon,for j, years; Stomach i.thJr5 Sans, PaiM. "lion was suggested " tome and tried but " to no jwrpose. At last a friend " recomasended August Flower. Z " took it according to directions aad ' its elects were womderful, rcliev "ing ate of those disagreeable " stomach paias which I had bees "troubled with so long. Words "cannot describe the admiration in which I hold your August " Flower it has gven me a new ' lease of life, which before was a ' burden. Such a medicine is a ben " efaction to humanity, aud its good "qualities and "wonderful mer- Josso Barker, "its should be "made known to "everyone suffer " ing with dyspep "siaor biliousness Printer, Humboldt, Kansas. G. G. GREEN, Sole Mia'fr.Wobarj.N.J. DR. N. E. WOOD, The wslUaowa fonndar of the Sioax Citv flanitarinm and Sarsical Institnta an J for tea Tears the leading an J moot aacceaafal spesiallsft of the west, now President and chief ef the madifal fatally of the CHICAGO le-ical ?! Sorscal Inslitnte Bum retaraed. to Slonz City, and maybe coasaltrd at hie old oiHre. 4 13 FiftU Street, where be is still trr.it lax wlta bis creat skill and sacceaeall CAronic & Surgical Diseases Dafarmltles and Weaknesses af Hon and Women, Aatfated by a fnU staff of Einico-it Spec!alsa. Kidney and Bladder Diseases, nricht'sdiataw. I5 iht-- .! kiTt'n-.l i,ili.!ip tr-atn.l and corps otTrcktl in Iih-il-hiuU uf case that Lad bora pro-ioiutc. J Ut u1 "io;.. MenfoUS Diseases. Taricv'w, Hjrdro esle. Irnie of BXxcnl IVcr anl nil !i-r-t-o-at Ili3 Ronitoxartsnry omn. s-xwlily a:iljeSrni n.at'y cnrsl. KorisxincniToil. 3Ieincin-nt f roo f rota obserraUua to all parts ot the UnitaJ States. Female Diseases pos'tirely -rei ty nTc failia.T method. A home treatment sa tire! harmles anil wrilr applied. Cuiuulistiua free cad strictly confidential.. Dr. Wood, after twontr Tears experience has iwr'eoted tha most infallible method or carina Vital Dtiia in Urine. Noctnrual Lnsto-, Im paired Momory.Wcak Back, Mclancholv. Wantef Energy. Premature D-cIineof tlieManljPowria itoaaalL-l before Idiocy, inwinitjr. f tilling fitn ortotil ia-potency rc-nlt. Thew terrible die onieraarisina; from ruinous prnctinea of jonth. Mich-ins the most railiant hopes, cntitting ratientsfor business, at adj. toeiotyor z-tarriag. ninuiUy sweeping; to an untimohr ni t'lon-anils of young moa af exalted talent and brilliant intellect. Piles Cured withoat pain, kairecrreentery- Manrlase Married persona oryoanamea eonte-nplatine marriaea, aware of physical weak noes, loss of procreemo powers, impoteary ar any othe. disqualifications, speedily restored. which will reesiveacarafalChrimlnalaHd Micro- aoopical examination. Wonderful Cures Perfected Ijj isM eare wtuch haTebeen neclectetl or nnakillrnlly treated. No esperimenta or failures. Parties treated by mail and express, bnt where Dpeaiblo a personal consultation is preferred. Curable cacoagnarsatesdi foresees aad CorrespondVnoa confidential. Treatment sent CO.D. toany part of th U. H. l.it of questions end C4PAGS BOOK. Irea. Address with 4 cents pot taga. Dr. M. E. WOOD, 413 Fifth St , SIOUX CITY, IOWA. THE ONLY TRUE IRON ?-a-mmenev i uraiu Will nwrtrr arEjOnn. fMiiia KWllETft, remove 1X1sm eiseruer. balltl strange-, renew vpeiiie. restore aeaiia aaa Aforofyoata. Btyeaeesla, lagaeaoiaMiyeraaKaieil. tea- erlgMenea. kassa w newer laereased. aw bonae. narvea. ana. eles. receive new force. i snaertag from coraplalata ne. cellar to their ess, nsuur It, led rose bloom oa cheeks, bcaauSes Cesnalez loa. . Seld ererwhere. Atl geaulae goerf? bvar "Crrsrent.'- Bead MSI ceMst-unaror 3--Bage eamphlcs. . Mania Etaiewi Ce.. St, laals. aW arOlsD MBDAI, PARIS, lET. . W.BAKER & CO. ' Breakfast Cocoa from which the excess ef aM has been reao-red, Im aleefwfefy ywre aaat is U sef wefe. t No Chemicals are eard la Ita prrparatlea. Is has star Man tfirtt ttmtt Me ttrtngth ef Cocoa mixed with Starch, Arrowroot er eager i aad la therefore far mora eas- slcal, tetting If Mea eae rentacip. Itiadc'fcloss.aear. 'Uhf-tg. strengthening. tuafXV NSSTBn, and admirably sdapted far i as watt aa for nersona In health. Seld hy Craters CTer-rwaora. W.BAXXR dcCO.Dorchester. GrtATEFUL-COMFORTINO. EPPSS COCOA BREAKFAST. "By a thotonah tnowiedn of the nareral laws wa'eh severn th operatl aa ofdlge Una and nwtrV M a. and by a rare- ul application f the Sae rrernr OX of !- iertffl Cocoa. Mr. Ep- has pro-rtdvd ear breekraat tables wtia a deUcataly flavoured be. erase waloa r sava as auay eeevr daotors bills. ltlsrLiaj4Jki-tt use of sue article of thataooaxiiaUji nr ar ilalr nuilt apaattl atfoazeaizaio rettet every tendency totilreaea UandreJ of aabtle maladies ar Soatiax areoad aa fady auaoc wherever taers I a weak poat. aaMyessspemaararaUIhaft by kestacen stives well r.iruielwui:are Mood daernnstly a- nrlseed tow." "Ctvii -tmrfra BonU" Imply wttl boMar water r mitt, tela aly as nu-tf 1 ttn . y One r. labrltad saasn an V Ul . iio-naopaaue JUP-oos. aoLA-r. AIEITS WAS.TED 01 SUA IT ar.rm-xial n to bsnlI-tUe iw Patent CbeaVcal k-axs lrg Ira-1. iCi t- k-rg vita rerw.lt. V'-rioe ir-r .Vtr f. if"n . V . Hot A3l. fa aei.iAMi Af'siiicirMj tut . ii.a- i MU.lilxton.D.C. PILES imaTAfrr RELIEF. CaretaMenia Never rrtunm. -topuiec No Salve, aa j.kiuaVaj-oa-anctw iofkcurAY. RAHIUIa to- a loo nouiB aad rxue-wT bTliM-:-- ITKLLIX-TOX. Maesse Wm. 8. C N. V. da-t BBSssnnnVV- vffa aSafSBaJsaEMtt. aMaVMMff U annnnVMBaaaaaaaaaafl& A -isssssssFsaaV a saMEwEwEwEwEwEwEwm afciSS- MMaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaVaafc -v ismamamammVEwBwS annnnnnnnnnnnnnnM MaaaaaawEwasav assMaaaawF A?MMMMMMMMMk annnnnnnnnnnaBaaaaaaCr llm I flaHc aicrte a ru vssnsaxask l i1U'ilaxton.D.c:. f 11 A ( J Aoj Jexla 'Haf . Tt &e rZ . tcs3isrrjtW3Js!-i-aifesi rc