The Columbus journal. (Columbus, Neb.) 1874-1911, February 20, 1907, Image 2

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Columbus Journal
. JU G. ftTROTHER, Editor.
F. K. STROTHER, Manaesr.
COLUMBU8,
NEBRASKA.
Experts.
One of the dangers of democratism
which this country has not wholly es
caped -Is .a consequence of the wide
spread assumption that 'the natural
eauality between men signifies that
all' men are equally able to do all
things. This view, it is true, has
been often borne out by the amazing
saccess of Americans, with no evi
dent special training, In the discharge
of public duties. Much good7 work
has been done by men who have
been elected or appointed to positions
requiring great special skill, not be
cause they had shown that skill, but
because they were eminent citizens
or useful party men or men of assert
ive genius who forged ahead to- the
work that their instincts rightly bade
them seek. As the nation grows and
the work of officials becomes more
complex, there is increasing demand
in all departments for experts. In
response to this demand have come
the reorganization of the consular
service, the assemblage at Washing
ton of a great number of scientific ex
perts, the tendency in the post office
and other departments to leave com
petent servants undisturbed by shifts
of party power, and the recognition
everywhere that men in public occu
pations like those in private business
must be engaged and paid according
to their ability. To have this ability
they must be trained in their work.
Pepartment heads in Washington are
calling for experts, and asking In
creased pay for those who have
proved themselves expert, says
Youth's Companion. Friends of good
government in large cities are pro
testing against the conduct of city
business by unbusinesslike men,
against accounting departments under
men who do not understand book
keeping, sewer departments under
men who know nothing of sewers.
The improvement of all units of
American government nation, state
and town depends on the training
and adequate payment of men who
can do the public work.
$
Hands Across the Sea.
The only good result of the amaz
fng blunder of the governor of Jamai
ca in rejecting the very practical
offers of American assistance in re
lieving the results of the earthquake
in that island is the opportunity given
for renewed expression of friendship
from the people of Great Britain. The
British are much more severe upon
Gov. Swettenham than are the Ameri
cans, the latter being disposed to
laugh off the affair as a cranky ebul
lition of an overwrought adminstra
tor. But in London and throughout
the British empire the humiliation of
the governor's act and of the as
tounding manner in which it was
committed is keenly felt, and there
is haste to assure the people of the
United States that the sentiment of
the Jamaican governor does not rep
resent the feeling of the people of
Britain, who admire and appreciate
the generous offers of American as
sistance and who deprecate any inter
ruption of the good feeling between
the countries. With Secretary Root
fraternizing with the Canadian au
thorities and with England raising a
great cry of protest against the Ja
maican governor's churlishness, re
marks the Troy Times, the unneces
sary question. What effect has the
English-Japanese alliance upon the
British attitude toward the United
States? answers itself. The hands
across the sea seem still to be
clasped, and with no knife up the
sleeve. Blood is still thicker than
Jamaica spirits, particularly when the
'latter are sour.
It is probable that the oldest and
most compact book of reference in
the world certainly the one most
consulted by the great ones of the
earth is the "Almanach de Gotha,"
of which the publishers have just is
sued the one hundred and forty
fourth annual edition, consisting of
just 1,200 closely packed pages. Its
pictorial honors are this time accord
ed to the kings and queens of Den
mark and Norway, and admirable por
traits they are. Prom this authentic
publication we learn, says the London
Chronicle, that the British people are
living not under a Guelph dynasty,
but a "maison de Saxe-Coburg-Gotha,"
wfiich is a delicate question for the
genealogists. But the editor of the
omniscient red-bound "Almanach"
rarely makes a mistake.
The Chinese on the Rand were al
lowed so much opium, the maximum
month being two pounds. This
would suffice to stock an ordinary
Chemist's shop for a year. Two
pounds of opium represents 27,968
average medicinal doses.
It Is said that the new shah of
Persia has determined to remove a
few heads in osder to bring about re
form. The Persian method of remov
ing heads is a little more unpleasant
than the Andrew Jackson way.
,A comment on the way In which
modern enterprise has brought the
improvements of civilization within
the reach of nearly everyone is the
fact that a woman who died lately
in Jersey City in her nineties won
Came as a remarkable person because
she never in her life had ridden on a
trolley or a railroad car.
Aeronauts have .been prohibited
from passing over Holland by the au
thorities of that country. Nothing
ftianty about the Dutch.
jttfiintttttytttttttmtttt,mtttttfttttttttftttttt
T awa. b a . m ,b saw
UUK LIINvULrlN LC I I CK
itsstt frta tie State Capital, Lepsiathre ail ftfterwitt
yttOssftaoliseeei
' The house has made the 2-cent rate
bill and the anti-pass biR a special
order for Tuesday afternoon, and the
action of the republicans on this mea
sure will be fully determined by a rul
ing before the time. That the repub
licans have got themselves into aa
embarrassing position over this 2-cent
rate' bill no one denies. Each member
of the joint committee which drafted
the bill agreed to support it. and to
fight any and all amendments to it
When the amendment to permit the
railroads to go before the railroad
commission on the matter was offered,
few of the majority knew it was com
ing and hence it was lost Now some
of the republicans believe to carry the
amendment will be to place in jeop
ardy all the other joint committee
bills, for the reason if one committee
bill is amended opponents of the plat
form measures will have an excuse to
attempt to amend the other committee
bills. A big fight will be the result,
and it might terminate in the state
wide primary bill being seriously dam
aged and it might hurt the terminal
taxation bill.
Professor Howard of the state uni
versity, head of the department of in
stitutional history and sociology,, was
one of the speakers before the senate
committee on judiciary, in favor of
the passage of H. R. No. 9 or S. F. No.
50. the child labor bills. Senator King
of Polk presided as chairman of the
committee. Many men and women,
some of the latter club women of Lin
coln, were present to favor the bill.
A large number of members of the
senate and some of the houseTlistened
to the addresses. The speech of Pro
fessor -Howard made a profound im
pression. He reviewed the history of
legislation in favor of children, be
ginning in 1802, in England, to the
last bill of the kind, one that was
passed in 1903. He told of the condi
tions that once existed, told hair-raising
stories of abuse and torture, and
narrated the changes that had been
brought about by public sentiment and
laws, some of the latter having been in
force in Massachusetts, New York and
Illinois for many years with marked
success.
Governor Sheldon's scheme for the
local taxation of mortgages, either do
mestic or foreign, scored a signal vic
tory in the house, when it was re
ported by the committee of the whole
for third reading by a decided major
ity. The bill provides for the taxation
of all real estate mortgages in the
county where the land on which the
mortgage is held lies. At the present
time mortgages are taxed as personal
property so long as they are recorded
In Nebraska and not assigned to some
one outside the state.
Repairs on the capitol building and
grounds are to be the subject of in
quiry by the house committee on pub
lic lands and buildings. A resolution
by Dodge of Douglas condemning the
way the building is being kept up, was
passed and authority was given the
committee to ascertain the cost of
needed repairs. Mr. Dodge said the
capitol was a disgrace to the state in
its present condition. He was not in
favor of building anew until the struc
ture fell down, but he said he was in
favor of doing some repairing.
A movement to revive the county
option bill, killed in the senate, has
come to light and is being aided and
abetted by some senators who voted
against the measure. The plan is to
have the house amend the measure
providing for election once every four
or five years instead of every two
years and providing that the county
election shall govern the entire coun
ty until the next election. As tne bill
was drawn it allowed cities and vil
lages to vote no license even after the
county had gone wet
A bill of importance to the 6chool
districts of that section of the state in
which the revenues do not permit of
a seven months' school a year was in
troduced in the house by Doran,
Henry, Hill, Metzger and Wilson. The
bill provides that the state shall come
to the financial assistance of those
school districts which, though levying
the maximum rate of taxes, cannot
maintain a seven months' school, so
that every school district in the state
may have school each year for that
length of time.
A measure important to all the peo
ple of the state was introduced in the
house by Wilson of Custer county.
This bill provides the state board of
assessment shall use the unit system
:n assesing railroad property and the
asessment hall be distributed accord
ing to mileage without regard' to main
lines or branch lines. Should the "bill
be signed by the governor after the
terminal taxation bill is signed, it is
thought by some the measure would
nullify that measure.
The railroads had their innings he
fore the house committee on railroads
on the 12th on the prposed 2-cent pas
senger rate bill, and of the four cor
porations represented, each argued
that the rate would not be compensa
tory and each said not only would
inch a rate be detrimental to the rev
enues of the roads, but harmful to the
state in general, while P. S. Eustis,
passenger traffic manager of the Bur
lington, told the committee the first
step his road would take should the
bill become a law would be a test in
the courts.
The senate passed the bill increas-j
ing the salary of the commandant of
the Milford home for soldiers and
providing that such officer shall be an
ex-union soldier and that he may be
removed from office at the pleasure
of the governor.
Bailiffs of the district court of Doug
las county want more monejr They
are bow paid $75 a month and several
tt them were at the capitol to get the
Douglas delegation interested ia a
bill which will increase the salary to
$87.50 a month.
ABk. W b? VMs'nT'lB'VVt ar'Bnv
The state wide primary law pledged
to the people by the republican, demo
cratic and populist state conventions,
will be introduced into the legislature
the first of this week. The hill has
been blocked out by the subcommittees
and sent to the joint committee. The
bill gs prepared in the rough provides
that the general election officers shall
be the officers of the primary, the
same machinery being used at both
elections. It has been decided that in
stead of electing the precinct and
county committees that task will fall
to the lot of the nominees, it having
been agreed that under the latter plan
people will be selected for those im
portant places who will have some in
terest in the election and who will not
leave all of the work to the chairman H
and secretary.
Senator Gibson's employers lia
bility bill and Senator Thomas' biU al
lowing street railway companies to
own securities in and own, operate and
lease interurban companies and inter
urban lines passed the senate without
debate. The Gibson bill did not re
ceive a negative vote. It relates only,
to tlB3 more hazardous occupations on
railroads and provides negligence by
a fellow servant shall not be a bar to
recovery by an injured employe or by
relatives of an employe killed, by ac
cident. Contributory negligence ont
the part of the Injured is left to the
Jury, which is allowed to scale the
damages in the verdict according to
the proportion of negligence. It also
provides the acceptance of insurance
money or relief department policy
hereafter taken out .shall not be a bar
to recovery from the company.
The child labor bill was reported
back favorably to the senate, but a
fight is scheduled in favor of the farm-,
era. Tne bill was amended in tne com
mittee changing the hours during
which children will be permitted to
work, from 7 o'clock in the morning
until 7 at night, to 6 o'clock in the
morning until 8 at night This was
done to permit the milking of cows
and to do the chores on the farms.
Mr. Fries of Howard, a member of
the minority party, succeeded in get
ting recommended for passage his
bill providing a tax of. $3 to be levied
against persons entitled to vote who
do not avail themselves of the oppor
tunity. The bill was amended to ex
empt from the law those who are kept
away from the polls by unavoidable
circumstances, though a statement to
this effect must be filed with the
county treasurer or the tax will be
levied.
The senate on the 12th spent three
quarters of an hour listening to a spe
cial program in commemoration of
Lincoln's birthday and then adjourned!
out of respect for the -day. Rev. I. F.
Roach of Lincoln delivered the ad
dress before the senate and eloquently
eulogized the life and influence of the
martyred president. The Oberlin quar
tet sang the "Battle Hymn of the Re
public" and responded to an encore
with "America." The services were
impressive, though brief.
The joint committee appointed to
draft a statewide primary law has
concluded its work and the bill will be
introduced the first of the week. Pat
rick, the fusion member of the com
mittee, objected to the filing fee and
may make a fight to have it stricken
out by the legislature. The committee
generally is pleased with the measure.
It is a compilation of the Brown-Dodge-McMulIen
bills.
Senator King's free high school bill
was recommended for passage by the
senate. Itallows any child living in a;
district which does not provide a full
high school course to take the missing
grades at some high school in the
state. The tuition, which is fixed at
75 cents a week, is raised by taxation
in his district
The senate displayed a disposition
to push the railway commission bill
through as rapidly as possible when it
voted to take the bill from the stand
ing committee on railroads, to which
it had been referred, and place it di
rectly on general file. This will ad
vance it more rapidly than the regular
course.
8. F. 227, by Goodrich of Fillmore,
providing that persons convicted of
murder in the first degree shall be
placed in the penitentiary and not put
to death except by order of the gov
ernor, and in any event not less than
one year after date of conviction, was
indefinitely-postponed by the senate.
The three uniform divorce bills rec
ommended last fall by a meeting of
divorce experts were introduced into
the senate. The main bill changes the
general divorce law, making it more
stringent
Sentiment for the most stringent
anti-pass law possible has developed
to such an extent in the house that
the exceedingly stringent bill drawn
by the joint committee is likely to
prove inadequate to meet present
ideas. In its place a substitute bill
will be offered that has been prepared
by Representatives McMulleri, Jenni
son, Hamer, Cone and Quackenbush.
It cuts off everyone from the free list
save railroad employes, caretakers. of
live stock and railroad attorneys and
physicians, who are on an nnnpi sal
ary of at least $1,000 each.
One of the first bills to receive the
approval of Governor Sheldon, aside
from the appropriation bills, was S. F.
No. 28, by Root of Cass. It is said by
some to be unconstitutional because it
amends a section of the Cobbey stat
ute that is' believed to be unconstitu
tional: The Kearney Normal school people
have started a letter writing lobby
and many letters have been received
by legislators boosting for the appro
priation to double the capacity of the
normal school at Kearney.
CIRC
KEEP THE DOLLARS MOVING IN
YOUR OWN COMMUNITY.
IT MAKES WEALTH F0I ALL
Buy sf the Man Whs Will
of You and Your Dsllar
Will Come Back
Again.,
Buy
(Copyrisht by Alfred C. Clark.)
As on the western prairies in
pioneer days, the trapper's camp fire,
kindled to prepare his frugal meal or
to warm him from the biting wind,
fanned into renewed vigor, spread,
first on the tiny blade of grass to
neighboring blades, and thence to the
tangled masses all around until the
broad plains were one vast sea of
seathing flame destroying all before
it so the mail order business, started
in the eastern cities on a small scale,
fanned by the breeze of judicious ad
vertising, has spread until it now cov
ers the length and breadth of our land
and threatens disaster to the smaller
dealers everywhere. The note of
warning has been sounded, the light
is visible in the sky, and yet, appar
ently oblivious to it all, the ones
whose safety is being endangered,
heed not the alarm nor the signal of
disaster. The country merchant and
the farmer, whose combined efforts
can stem the tide of destruction that
threatens to engulf them, are alone
unconscious of the approaching devas
tation, that like a great sea of con
suming flame, Is threatening to engulf
them.
The country merchant and the farm- j
er the simple, honest dwellers in the
rural districts, are the victims this
gigantic peril is reaching out for to
fill its rapacious maw. Each year its
grasp becomes firmer, its power
greater. Only a few short years ago
the catalogue house was a thing un
neard of, today it stands as one of
America's greatest Institutions. And
with great fortune comes great pow
er, so now the mail order business
may well be classed among the powers
of the nation. Its efforts are already
being felt at the national capital,
The Endless Chain It Keeps the
where our laws are made, and unless
a check is administered the passage
of the parcels post bill will mark one
of its greatest triumphs.
But let us look at a few of the
simple reasons why the farmer should
patronize the home dealer. In the
first place their interests are cen
tered in each other. Every season of
plenty on the farm means a prosper
ous year to the country merchant. So
In the prosperity of the farmer does
the. country merchant expect to gain.
The farmer finds, therefore, in the
country dealer, a staunch and loyal
friend and a defender of his rights.
They pay taxes together, live side by
side, their children play and go to
school together. When the crops are
poor or misfortune comes, to whom
does the farmer look? Not to the
mail order magnate, but to his neigh
bor, the country merchant How
often does the mall order concern
take any Interest in the political ques
tions or legal measures beneficial to
the farmer? Yet with their bright
hued catalogue of pictured "bargains"
they reach out an open hand for the
farmer's hard earned dollar. And
does he get value received? Not
often. The first order he may, but
that Is only a bait The business is
not founded on principles, it is not
builded on honorable methods, its
mighty walls are erected on graft
The goods are shop-worn or shoddy,
or perhaps many kinds of goods have
defects so cunningly concealed that
the naked eye can scarcely see a dif
ference between these articles and
those of a much higher grade. You
are expected to send cash with the
order or have It ready when the
goods arrive with the big C. O. D.
mark on the package. Your crop fail
ure, or shortage of money doesn't In
terest the mail order house, your
credit with them is good only so long
as your pocket book is filled. Your
order Is made out and you pay for
goods you never saw, put up and se
lected by men you do not know. If
these goods do not prove to be worth
the money, 4f the shoes do not wear
well, or the suit Is shoddy goods, will
the mail order firm make them good?
Not often. Yet the local dealer will
do this. He knows his honesty is his
best drawing card. So much for the
advantage of dealing with honest men,
and not with grafters.
Still other issues present them
aess sub-stations or branch houses
selves in this connection. With the
rapid growth of the mail order bus!
are being established. These large
firms are dally reaching out for new
sections of trade. What wiU be the
result along this line? With the
growth of the catalogue house comes
the death of. the rural mercantile
trade. Let them once destroy the
country merchant and the markets
of the world will he in the hands of a
few wealthy capitalists. Their branch
Besses will appear la all the country
towss aad the farmer will no longer
be Independent. His friend, the conn-
AROUND THE
(Pvx-i cite)
h. rnBsssKJMKKOT W?J
453 wtS! if,, iMMWL
try dealer, who through competition
was forced to pay the value of the'
butter, eggs, etc, will be a thing-of
the past, and la his place will appear
I the fat, gloating face of the capitalist.
in whose benumbed conscience there
is no thought of pity, whose ''breast
contains Instead of a heart a great
lump of cold stony gold, whose one
ufiibitlon is to build up a greater for
tune than the world has ever seen,
and who cares naught for the tears or
trials, woes or -weeping of his victims
so long as die can squeeze a little more
of the coveted glittering treasure from
him.
Again, the dollar spent with the
local dealer stays In the community
where it blesses the spender over and
over again. The merchant pays it to
the butcher for meat the butcher gets
his,bread of the baker and therefore
drops the dollar into the baker's till,
the baker pays it to the miller for
flour, and the latter buys his grain
from the farmer, so the dollar once
more jingles merrily in the farmer's
trousers pocket .But spend it with
the mail order house and it is gone
never to return. It goes to build up
the great commercial interests of New
York or Chicago. Does it pay the
farmer to send his money to help
beautify and build up these great
cities? Has he not more interest in
beautifying and building up his own
section of the country? If not be
should. If a place is good enough for
a man to live in and to make his
money in. it is good enough for him to
spend his money in. Who helps build
the churches, school houses, streets,
bridges, etc.?' Does the mail order
house help? Will they give a dollar
to educate the farmer's children, or
donate anything to support the farm
er's widow or orphans? Do they help
to. pay the taxes, or add anything to
bring comfort or necessary improve
ments in the country places? Then
why should the farmer patronize
them? By actual test it has been
found that the same goods can be pro
cured as cheaply, if not -at more rea
sonable prices, at home. Trade with
your neighbor, whose interests are
your interests, whose hand is always
ready to assist you in time of trouble.
Patronize those who patronize you.
Use the flashy catalogue of the mail
order house to help kindle the kitchen
fire, and keep your money at home
where it will benefit you and yosr
Dollar at Home Where It Belongs.
neighbors over and over again. The
farmer's dollar, earned by honest toil,
should not be added to the blood
money of these great mail order cor
porations. The farmer must join the
local merchant and the country editor
in battling this great peril that is
creeping, creeping onward with great
rapidity, and unless these forces are
combined and their efforts prove in
creasing, the day is not far distant
when the chance will be gone forever
the power will be too great to con
quer. IVER H. SMITH.
Snakes Reared for Their Skins.
The idea that snakes are useless
creatures and should be exterminated
wherever found, will have to pass
away, says the Shoe Trade Journal,
as in Australia they are now being
systematically reared for the sake of
their skins, which have a considera
ble commercial value in London,
Paris and New York. Snakeskin is
the fashionable material for slippers,
belts, bags, purses, jewel boxes, card
cases, dressing-table accessories, etc.
Rabbit trappers supplement their
means considerably by catching young
snakes and extracting their polnson
ous fangs. The blacks are also ex
pert snake catchers. To them the
snake is an agreeable article of diet
Artistic Building Saved.
At Arezzo, the little Tosco-Romac
city, famous for the birth of the
musician monk Guido and of the poet
Petrarch, the very modern savings
bank has moved into the old Alber
gotti Bacci palace, after having neatly
and scrupulously restored it at no lit
tle expense and with a great deal of
artistic taste and discrimination, so
that haply what might have been a
disaster is this time a most felicitous
revival of ancient glory and a model
oi reconstruction.
Bone Turned Into Opal.
At a meeting of the Geological soci
ety of London there was exhibited by
Prof. Seely the upper bone of the leg,
or paddle, of a plesiosaurus which
had been almost turned into opal, the
mineral having replaced the substance
of the bone. The fossil was found in
an opal mine in New South Wales.
The plesiosaurus was a long-necked
Inhabitant of the sea in the age of
the great reptiles, or Jurassic time
and sometimes attained a length of
30 feet.
The Fortune Tempted.
A wen known British nobleman was
actually engaged to Miss Coutts, but
on her challenging him one day wheth
er it was her personality or her great
fortune which appealed to him he
frankly acknowledged that although
he was much attached to her, her vast
property had been his special induce
ment in betrothing himself.
Her reply was. characteristic: "Let
us then remain the. bett of friends in
stead of being the potoest of lovers."
have to call for Lewis' Single
ir to set it. Your dealer er
Lewis Factory, Peoria. 111.
tt isn't always the people who joBy
that are
Garfield Tea insures 'a normal action of
the fiver, overcones constipation, and
keeps the bloed pure. Drink before retir
ed, beyond what we
Write for catalog aad circular No. f.
N. W. Hide Far CMJaaeapobe, Una.
He ha a gnat man It is accessary
to tan to account all opportunities.
RochefoacaaM.
aninn"
That Is LaXATTTB BBOMO QaJaiaa. Slarilerly
ssaive. na ststaaa
SflgiaalCsM Tasist to a WHITB FACKAOB wlih
tomans-- -
"b your husband up yet?" asked
the sour-faced woman at the door. "I
expect he Is," was the reply. Td
like to see him for a few
"So would I. He hasn't come
yet" Milwaukee SeatiaeL
By following the directions, which
are plaialy printed on each package of
Defiance Starch, Mea's Collars aad
Caffs can be made just as stiff as de
sired, with either gloss or domestic
finish. Try it IS oz. for 10c, sold by
all good grocers.
Natural Washing Preparatls.
Near Ashcroft ia British Columbia,
are a number of small lakes, whose
shores and bottoms are covered with
a crust containing borax and soda ia
such quantities aad proportions that
whea cut it serves as a washing com
pound. The crust is cut into blocks
and handled in the same manner as ice,
'and it is estimated that one of the
lakes contains 20,t00 tons of this ma
terial. 1847107.
CO years ago Allcock's Plasters were
first introduced to the public They are
to-day the world's standard plasters.
This invention has been one of the
greatest blessings imaginable -and af
fords the quickest cheapest and best
means ever discovered for healing
and relief of certain ailments.
Allcock's are the original and gen
nine porous plasters and are sold by
Druggists all over the world.
Radyard Kipling, who dislikes the
winter climate ia England, will here
after blot out the chilly months from
his calendar by a visit to South Af
rica where he has a beautiful house
near Cape Town, givea him by Cecil
Rhodes.
DO YOU SMOKE A
WHAT KIND OF TOBACCO DO YOU SMOKE
IF YOU HAVE NOT TRIED OBOID
Yon have never gotten that
"pipe smoae "
QBOID WDM WOT BITE THE TOWGPE
IT IS THE ORIGINAL OF THIS STYLE TOBACCO
i It has an elegant Aroma whieh no other pipe tobacco possesses, aad
its smooth, delightful flavor and free smoking; qualities ate the results
of yean of careful study and experimenting.
iJfJatBat
'If w I
'postage paid,
box, 10c.; 3 oz. tin box, 20c.; 8'os.
dux, vuc money reiuuueu w any uisBmusnea purensser.
Cut oat this advertisement and send with money order or tfrnrrs
Write your name and address plainly, and address to
URUS A BR0. CO., fc.friw. Richmond Va.
Dortt
fell night font? from toothoxhe.
neureJiec or, rheumatism
Sloivrcs
LiiYinveivt
kills ihe pjxia quiets the
nerves tMid induces sleep
At JI dealers. Bice 25c 50c oHDO
Dt? Earl S.SfodJ, Bosor,M.ssAJl&A,
NO MORE MUSTARD PLASTERS TO BUSTER.
THE SCIENTIFIC AND MODERN EXTERNAL COUNTER-IRRITANT.
CAPISICUM
VASELINE
EXTRACT OF THE CAYENNE PEPPER PLANT
A OUICK. SURE. SAFE AND ALWAYS READY CURE FOR PAIN. PRaCE
ISeT-lN COLLAPSIBLE TUBES-AT ALL DRUGGISTS AND DEALERsToR
BY MAIL ON RECEIPT OF 15c IN POSTAGE STAMPS. 90tCTyAWT
TILL THE PAIN COMES-KEEF A TUBS HANV.
A substitute for and superior to mustard or any other plaster, and wiU net
blister the most delicate skin. The pain-allaying and curative quaMaes ef
the article are wonderful. It will stop the toothache at once, and laasve
Headache and Sciatica. We recommend it as the best and safest external
counter-irritant known, also as an external remedy for pains In the casst
aad stomach and all Rheumatic. Neuralgic and Gouty complahMa. A trial
will prove what we claim for tt, and it
nuueshriM f nr rnnirrrn uncsuseanoiamuywuioewitnoutit.
people say "it is the best of all your preparations." Accept no pie
of vaseline unless the same carries our label, as otherwise it isaeti
SEND YOUR ADDRESS AND
LINE PAMPHLET WHIL.I1 WILL iniEKCCT IUU.
CHESEBROUGH MFC CO.
17 STATE STREET. NEW YORK CITY
MUSCULAR
AILMENTS
vgkfAHHHL.
saaSSaMBaW
The Old-Moak-Care will
sanifhaiB out a eonoactsi
muscle in a jiffy.
ST.
JACOBS
OIL
Doa't play poaaum with
bat 'leads strictly to
nice 39c aacl
FilrMS TUT UMW
HARD" WHEAT
(Sixty-three Poaad to
taeBasbel). Are Mta-
atcd ia .the Caaadiaa
West where Boaw-
steads of MO acres csa
i be obtaiaed free by
every settler wilUsg
aad able to ceatplv
I with the Hossesteatl
Keaalatioas. Satis-
the preseat year a large aortioa of
IHW WIM olwVssf llnlfsfy
HAS BEEN MADE ACCESSIBLE TO 1IAK
KETS BY THE RAILWAY CONSTBUCTION
that has heea passed forward so Tigoro ly by
the three great railway coataaaies.
Ar Ikeratare and partkalars address SUPER
INTENDENT OP IMMIGRATION. Ottawa,
Canada, or the following aathorised Caaadtoa
Goverasaeat Ageat :
V. V. aOHETT. SM Htw Tarn Us I
Meatioa this paper.
SEED1P
TrarnatMt
JLJ.B.I
Unexcelled forseaeral fa
inc. stork, d&irrinv. frulta. trnek-
tc : ronrenient to the very bent markvia aad traiMpor-
KHjon lacilltl-. riienereioaMroriiMBMsab
llcationiu H. V.Riehanl.Lan aad Indaxtrial Amt,
Sontarrn Kt . and Mobile A Milo R. R WarttaottanV C
C& Chaw. West. Afft..ZIChiaKal BUc-.Stloals.Mo.
iauadiy work a pleasure. jSsx.
AS SALI
oana
ivx cmr.
PIPE?.
solid comfort whieh a good
snouki give a
"MO. I
mi
WgagH
IthBaWwaaaa
s Bwssnmnm
sitt roe aBBZsaaa
gage. .-gBsBsBam
SPECIAL OFFER
QBOID S"5?-KS
everywhere, and hundreds of thous
andsof boxes were eoaeamed
last year, and it is oar naw
poseiopiaceyiiusuiaieaen
of every pipe smoker in this
country, and to that end we
make the following offer s
If your dealer does aot
handle QBOID Tobacco, we
will send yow any size box,
r Bflce via: Pricaav It oav lis
tin box, 45c and 16 oc Jaaey tin
Suffer
will be found to be invalansls tame
WE WILL MAIL OUR VASE-.
y
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