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About The Columbus journal. (Columbus, Neb.) 1874-1911 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 20, 1909)
COULD NOT SHAKE IT OFF. . t OTiS ASSISTS ATA When Pa told us that tie had lo cated a place where we could get all the wild African buffalo that we anted, I thought of the pictures. I .had seen of the killing of buffalos in Amer ica, where all the buffalo hunter had to do was to ride a horse' after a herd of the animals, that couldn't run faster than a yoke of oxen, pick out a big bull and ride long side of him and fire bullets into bis vital parts at about ten feet range, until his liver was filled full of holes, and he had the nose bleed, and when he fell down from loss of blood, dismount and skin him for a lap robe. The American buf falo would always run away and the hunter could kill him ir he had cart ridges enough, and never be in any more danger than a farmer milking a cow. I thought we would have about the same kind of experience with African buffalo, only we intended to lasso them, and bring them to camp alive for the show business, but instead of the African buffaio running away from you, he runs at you on sight, and tries o gouge out your inside works with his horns, and paws you with his hoofs, and when he gets you down he kneels down on you, and runs horns all through your system, and rolls over on your body like a setter dog rolling on an old dead fish. The African buffalo has a grouch, sis though he had indigestion, from eat ing cactus thorns, and when he sees a man his eyes blaze with fire, and he gets as crazy as an anarchist, and seems to combine in hip makeup the habits of the hyena, the tiger, the man-eating shark and the Texas rattle-snake. I wouldn't want such an animal for $? - lLr ''fyPfl ltyfvws!&i!(sS Pa Had to Put His Fcot on Their Necks and Acknowledge Himself Their King and Protector. a pet, but Pa said the way to get buf "falo was to go after them, and never let up until you had them under your control. So we started out under Pa's lead to capture African buffalo, and while the returns are not all in of the "lead and wounded, we know that our expedition is pretty near used up. 'The African buffalos live in a marsh, where the grass and cane grow high above them, and the only way you can tell where they are is to watch the birds Hying around and alighting on tlie backs of the animals to eat wood ticks and gnats. The marsh is so thick with weeds that a man cannot go into it, so we planned to start the airship on the windward side of the marsh, after lining up the whole force of helpers, negroes and white men, and building a corral of timber on the lee side of the marsh. Pa and the cowboy and I went in the airship, with these honk-honk horns they have on automobiles, and these megaphones that are used at football games, and Pa had a bunch of Roman candles to scare the buffalos. When the fence was done, which 50 men had worked on for a week, it run in the shape of a triangle, or a fish net, with a big corral at the middle. Sir. Hagenbach sent up a rocket to COULDN'T Once a denizen of "the up-state re gions, where whiskers growlin plenty and umbrellas bulge at will, decided to visit New York. But he decid ed to visit the bewildering metrop olis quite as a man of-the world not to be taken in by the wicked men, who, as Jie understood, made a busi ness of -deceiving the guileless up stater. Hence he arrived at the Grand Central looking very;''-very wise, and Spooning by Wire. "Do they -let you talk like that over the t4ephone?"she asked, when he had LJished speaking in the language of the infant, the tootsy-wootsy, who is popsy-wopsy's tweetest ittle fing? style of thing to his Jatest offspring, who was about one year old. "Why, certainly" said he as he tiung up the 'phone. "'They let you talk any old way over the telephone, so long as you don't swear at Central. t wish you could hear some of the sweethearts billing and cooing some- BUFFALO HUNT notify Pa that he was ready to. have him scare the buffalos out of the marsh and down the fence into the corral. Pa had the gas bag all full, a mile across the marsh, tied to a tree with a slip noose, so when we all got set he could pull a string and untie the slip noose. Well, everything worked bully, and when Pa tied her loose we went up into the air- about 50 feet, and Pa steered the thing up and down the marsh like a pointer dog ranging a field for chickens. it was the greatest sight I ever witnessed, seeing more than 200 buf falo heads raise up out of the tall grass and watch the airship, looking as savage as liens eating raw meat. First they never moved at all, but we began to blow the honk horns, and then we yelled through the mega phones to "get out of there, you sawed off short horns," and then they began to move away from the airship across the marsh, and we .followed until they began to get into a herd, nearly on the other side of the marsh, but they only walked fast, splashing through the mud. When we got almost acros3 the marsh Pa said now was the time to fire the Roman candles, so we each lit our candle, and the fire and smoke and the fire balls fairly scorched the hair of the buffalos in the rear of the herd, and in a jiffy the whole herd stampeded out of the marsh right to ward the fence, bellowing in African language, scared half to death, the first instance on record that an Af rican buffalo was afraid of anything on earth. We followed them until they got to the fence, but only about 100 got into the corral, the others going around the fence and chasing the keepers into the jungle and hooking the negroes in the pants, and some of the negroes are running yet, and will no doubt come out at Cairo, Egypt. Mr. Hagenbach and the white men got up in trees, and watched Pa and the airship, and when we got where the fence narrowed up at the corral Pa let the airship come down to the ground, and anchored it to a stump and yelled for the boss of the expedi tion and the men to come down out of the trees and help capture some of the best specimens, so they came down and tore out the wings of the fence and placed them across so we had the buffalos in a pen, and then Mr. Hagenbach, who had been getting a little jealous of Pa. came up to him and shook his hand and told him he was a wonder in the capturing of wild animals, and Pa said don't mention it, and Pa took the makings and made himself a cigarette and smoked up, and Mr. Hagenbach asked Pa how we were going to get the buffalos out of the cor ral, 'cause they were fighting each other in the far end of the pen, and Pa said you just wait, and he sent for the cages, enough to hold about ten FOOL HIM proceeded, first of all, to visit the col lection of wax figures at the Eden musee. He was engaged in looking critically at one of the most life-like groups on exhibition there, when a po liceman suddenly plucked him by the sleeve. The up-stater turned. "You mustn't smoke in here," said the police man, severely. A look of wisdom be yond the power of words to describe came over that up-stater's face. Con- times when the wires cross, just the same as if they were on a divan in the corner of an old-fashioned parlor, with the lights turned down." Valuable Potato. In the bidding in of a monster "pota to auctioned off daring the interna tional fair, at San Antonio, Tex., Ollie Murphy, a soldier of Fort Sam Hous ton, paid what was probably the high est pries ever paid for a single potato in Texas. The vegetable cost Murphy $1180. It was the principal item of of the buffalos, and we let the gas out of the airship, and went into camp, right there, and Pa bossed things for about two days, until the buffalos got good and hungry, and then we backed the cages up to an opening in the fence and put hay in the far end of the cages, and the herd began to take notice. We wanted the big bulls and some cows, and nature helped us on the bulls, 'cause they fought the weaker ones away from the cages, and walked right up the incline into the cages, and Pa went in and locked the doors, and Seme of Those Negroes Are Running Yet, and Will No Doubt Come Out at Cairo, Egypt. when we got the cages full of bulls and started to haul the cages to camp by the aid of some of the negroes who had returned alive, by jingo, the cows followed the cages with the bulls in, and you couldn't drive them away. We loaded the gas bag on to a sort of stone boat, and Pa rigged up a couple of ox yokes and in some way hypnotized a few cow buffalos, so he could drive them, and they hauled the stone boat with the airship to camp and we got there almost as soon as the cages did, ' and Pa was smoking as contented as though he was walking on Broadway, and with an ox gad he would larrup the oxen and say: '"Haw, Buck," like a farmer driving oxen to plow a field. Pa got his wild oxen so tame be fore we got to camp that they would eat hay out of his hand, and when we rounded up in our permanent camp, and looked over our stock, and killed some of the buffalos that had followed the cages, for meat for the negroes, and lit some sky rockets and fired them at the balance of the herd to drive them away from camp, the ne groes, who had always had a horror cf meeting wild buffalos, thought Pa was a. superior being, to be able to tame a whole herd of the most savage animals, and they got down on their knees and placed their faces in the dust in front of Pa and worshiped him, and they wouldn't get up off the ground until Pa had gone around and put his feet on the necks of all the negroes in token that he acknowl edged himself to be their king and pro tector, and the wives of the negroes all threw their arms around Pa and hugged him until he got tired, and he said he had rather fight buffalos than be hugged by half-naked negro wom en that hadn't had a bath since Stan ley discovered them, but Pa appre ciated the honor, and Mr. Hagenbach said Pa was the greatest man in the world. The next day we shipped the buffa los to the coast, and had them sent to Berlin, and when we got the mail from headquarters there was an order for a lot more tigers, so I suppose we will be tigering as soon as the open season is on. The idea is that we must get all the animals we can this year, for it is rumoied that Roosevelt is coming to Africa next year to shoot big game, and all of us feel that wild animals will be scarce after he has devastated Africa. We got short of salt pork and some time ago Pa salted down some sides of rhinoceros, and yesterday was the day to open the barrel. Pa showed the cooks how to fry rhinoceros pork, and I tell you it made you hungry to smell rhinoceros frying, and with boiled potatoes, and ostrich eggs, and milk gravy, made from elephant's milk, we lived high, but the next day an epidemic broke out, and they laid it to Pa's rhinoceros pork dinner, but Pa says any man who eats eight or nine fried ostrich eggs is liable to indi gestion. Gee, but this is a great country to enjoy an outing in! (Copyright. IMS. by "W. G. Chapman.) (.Copyright in Great Britain.) But Not Many. Some men are so attentive to their wives that you might think, they were not married. Exchange. tinuing brazenly to smoke, he re marked: "Tut, tut Go awaj Don't you think I know that you're made of wax?" Good Record of Punch. Many world-famous poems, some light bright and witty, such as W. S. Gilbert's "Bab Ballads," others serious, dignified and sad, such as Tom Tay lor's magnificent tribute to- the mem ory of Abraham Lincoln and Hood's "Song of the Shirt," first -saw the light in Punch, or The London Chara vari. menu of a dinner served by Murph7 to his comrades at the post on the fol lowing day. The Limit Ranter Hamm The craze for rai. ism in make-up and properties will kill me. Booth Garrick What is the trouble now? ' Ranter Hamm The manager .insists that in the Whitecapping scene I ?ear a real coat of .tcr and feathers!- Cleveland Leader, , , , Em on KLGVNQES WHAT WILL. ETNA, AND 7&KAG MOVJfG PICTURES AT ME Ever since the terrible earthquake in Italy, the eyes of the world have been watching the volcanoes in the immediate vicinity to see what they would do as a result of the violent dis turbances of the earth's crust Would Etna and Stromboli get into violent eruption and complete the work of devastation? And with the question came absorbing interest in the past and present history of these volcanoes and the study of their peculiarities. Perhaps no one is better qualified to speak on this point than Mr. Frank A. Perret of Naples, Italy, who is a vol cano expert and was with Mateucci on Vesuvius throughout the violent erup tion of 1900. Mr. Perret is an American, but since 1903 he has made a special study of volcanic phenomena, taking up his res idence at Naples that he might ob serve Vesuvius. He has also studied Etna and Stromboli. There is a marked difference be tween Vesuvius and Etna, which is now in eruption. Vesuvius is a true cone, with one central crater from which it erupts, although its lava flow3 are from crevices that open In the mountain flank below the crater. Etna, with a height of 11,000 feet and a mass so tremendous that its base measures 90 -miles in circumference, is flat-topped. So ifs great eruptions, as a rule, are not from the central crater, but break out on all sides of the mountain, wherever the wall is the weakest at the time. To-day there may be seen, scattered here and there, more than 200 different cones, each of which marks the site of an eruption. Some of these cones are more than 200 feet high; being almost as large as Vesuvius, and all have been formed by lateral eruptions. Mr. Perret spends most of his time visiting the several volcanoes of Italy when in activity, as some of them continually are. He makes his obser vations on the spot. Of course, he en joys all the risks there are to be had. During the eruptions of Vesuvius, he was with 50 others, mostly carbiniers, on the mountain opposite to where the ash fell and the lava flowed. Sudden ly, the wind changed, carrying ash, dust and dense smoke toward the men. It became so dark that holding the hand "before the face, it could not be seen. The dtist was so dense that its friction caused the lips to bleed and eyes, ears, clothing, all were filled with fine ash. The gases at the same time were stifling. The people were several hundred yards from the ob servatory and had no way to get to it for safety. It was finally decided the guide should take the end of a rope and seek a landmark leading towards the observatory where the rest would follow along the rope; he then sought another landmark, etc., finally, all were safely gathered at the observa tory, but the darkness, dust, ash and gas were as bad as ever and it was only a question of time when all would succumb to the baneful influence of the vapor. This awful condition last ed from early afternoon to midnight when the wind changed again and re lief was instantaneous. Had condi tions remained as they were until morning there is no doubt that all would have perished. A remarkable occurrence, seldom if ever before seen by man, was wit nessed by Mr. Perret on Vesuvius. jy K-z?W i-sw-' Vv '-7BBBBBBBBBBBBBH jsSsfiBt i BBBBBBBBr Jfw 'CJ JjftiT .BBBBBirTs'fBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBB bIBbBbwBHSbt i k ibbbbbbbHbmbbkx1' abbbVb1bbbbbbbw x ETW t MONARCH CE THE VDLCAffOE OF EUROPE. SJHTK Wr FOUGHT TO THE LAST GASP Fusillade of Exploding Bullets Needed i to Kill Monster Bear. In Everybody's Rex Beach tells this incident of his adventurous "Chro matic Bear Hunt" in Alaska: "As I dashed across a snow-field I saw our guide suddenly appear on the ridge above me like a phantom, silhouetted against the evening sky. He was bare headed it took us three days to find his hat his rubber boots were strad dling at a ridiculous distance from each other, and he was hitting it off at the rate of 100 yards in nothing and three-fifths seconds. He. was look ing backward over his shoulder, fum bling at his hip pocket for shells, and yet he coursed over these loose bowl ders with the sureness of foot of a mountain goat- He dipped out of sight' as suddenly as he had appeared, and I heard him cracking away agcln, then the loudei- yeort of Fred's rlfisu "An instant later I reached .fcG top. and, glimpsing a huge .brown body rushing toward us in prodigious leaps, j y JWO1BOU DOffEXT? CRATER OE nSTROMBOU While conversing with a friend, stand ing upon lava of some remote previous eruption, their feet seemed to be get ting warm; gradually they moved away as the heat grew more notice able, and watched for the source. They noticed the rock change color, and finally grow white hot, then melt. Then a stream of lava burst out through the rock where they had been standing and flowed down the moun tain. It was a rare sight. The molten lava under the rock lava gradually heated, melted it, and burst through by its tremendous heat. Mr. Perret has the distinction of be ing the only volcanlogist in the world to-day and his work is of profound scientific importance. His predictions have been so accurate that he did not hesitate to recommend the return of the warships sent to Stromboli to re move the 4,000 residents living on that island mountain because he said the worst of the eruption had passed. The admiral took his word for it and left the islanders at home, to the great consternation of the mayor, who had sent repeated telegrams to the govern ment to send the ships. There was cause for alarm, of course, for the ex plosions were so great that every win dow in the city was broken from the concussion. Such confidence as Mr. Perret has in his predictions can only come of profound study of volcanoes, and accurate deductions. Much will be learned in the near future by this en thusiastic volcanologist. The three mountains lie quite close together and, of course, all are under Italian domination. Etna is in Sicily, while Stromboli is but 40 miles from there. Therefore, Mr. Perret has it within his reach to observe all three mountains when in activity. Mr. Perret had the follo.wing to say, when asked what was the basis for his belief that it would soon be pos sible to predict accurately the time of volcanic activity in any given case: "Volcanoes are of periodic activity and each one has its own individual characteristics, which must be taken into account. There are several things to be considered, when one attempts to predict what any volcano will do. The past history of the volcano must be considered carefully to learn its periodicity, although the length of the period of eruption may be variable, the order of events is virtually the same in each case; so if the observer knows what is taking place at any given time, he can get a line on what has been happening during the elapsed eruptive period and know what will probably happen. There are indica tions to be observed on the spot, such as determining the character of the gases given off by the fumaroles, or smoke funnels on the mountain sides, and their temperatures, and also by microphonic examinations of the sub terranean sounds, the drying up of wells in the immediate vicinity or their fouling by sulphurous gases, the rising of the shore line at the base of the mountain and the frequency and in tensity of the earthquake shocks in the vicinity. Last, but not least, much may be learned by the careful study of plotted curves, showing the astro nomical and gravitation influences the gravitational influences exerted by sun and moon in their various phases, as they pull more or less strongly together in the same direc tion. -.,x..... . .... . onniuiruuwu I joined In the fusillade. The mon ster's great weight bore him deeply into the snow, which he flung behind him at every plunge, and yet, shocked and torn by those exploding bullets, he stm came on and on, a tremendous, ungainly figure of rage and determina tion. "Even when he was down to his haunches and deathly sick he red dened the snow in a futile endeavor to continue that charge. It was a magnificent exhibit of courage, and he died Tacing us as befits a monarch, the red glare of rage still in his eye. " 'Whew! I certainly stepped around a bit that time,' said Joe, wiping the sweat out of Tils eyes. 'My first four shots never feazed him, so I thought I'd sort of withdrawand reload on the run, but I couldn't seem to locate you fellers nowhere.' " Locks Like Prperity. Ney York cTty Imported $3,500,000 Tvorth cf nrppJnns ctmmt .',t..u ic last month. --' ' VISITS WITH UllMLEBY Under the Mistletoe. . "Ain't it awful," said Mame. "the way some girls hang around under the mistletoe?" rible," agreed Sal ly, shifting her gum. "Did you see the w,a y Amy Briggs acted at the party last night?" "Scandalous!" "One would think she had never been kissed before." "I don't believe she ever had," echoed Sally. "Just as soon as that Mr. More house was an nounced, she moved her chair right over by the chandelier and when she got up to be introduced to him, she had to stand under the mistletoe and " "Wasn't that good? He never kissed her a' tall!" "And when Henry came in, she was right in the way. Of course I wouldn't go under that mis tletoe a-purpose," explained Mame, "but I was a-standin' right there and Henry ain't no quitter on a game like that. He" "Yes, I guess he kissed" most every girl there, be" "Why, Sally Potts, he did NOT!" "He did, too! He kissed me and Mary Hopper and Sue White and I seen him trying to catch Miss Hor ton, but she dodged, and he " "Well, what do you know about that? The trifler to" "But ain't that what the mistletoe is there for?" "Yes, but they ain't no use of a man makin' a hog of himself just be cause girls like Amy Briggs don't have no more womanly modesty than f put themselves intheir way all th' time. That new Mr. Morehouse didn't like it, either. I could tell he was ashamed of Amy, the way he acted. He's coming up to call this afternoon. I'll fix Henry for Mercy, there he is now and Well, what do you think of that? Amy Briggs is with him!" "You see," said Mr. Morehouse, look ing fondly at Miss Briggs, as they were about to depart, "Amy and I used to be warm fr er, that is we were engaged once, and had a quarrel you know. I didn't expect to meet her at the party and she didn't know she was standing right under the mistle toe waiting for me." 'The idea!" scoffed Mame, when the door closed upon them. "Didn't know she was under the mistletoe!" echoed Sally, scornfully. "Ain't men the easiest, though?" o o o Same Here. Oh, have you strutted down the street, all dressed up in your best a long-tailed coat, a stovepipe hat. a silken fancy vest to find when by a glass you go, your heart is pained and sore from learning that the hat you wear Is on wrong-side-before? So have I! Oh, have you dressed up fit to kill and called upon a maid whose heart you seek to subtly win by calling Cupid's aid, to learn, alas! when 'tis too late and made up is her mind, you might have won her but for this: Your necktie's up behind? So have I! Oh, have you tried to get a ten by borrowing from friends and learned that every one has joined the New Year's "Never Lends?" And have you eaten lunch at nocn where beer is five a glass? Oh, well, of course if you refuse, we'll let this question pass. So have I! Let it pass, I mean. Oh, have you told your darling wife, when crawling into bed, that business kept you very late and covered up your head to find next morning when you woke, a world of woe and care, be cause the sweetheart of your life has found an auburn hair? So have I! Oh, have you tried to write a piece to make a nation laugh a ticklish nothing as it were, chock full of joy and chaff to find when all is written rot and it is cold in type that you have picked a lemon that is very far from ripe? So have I! o o o Poor Setter Dog. A Battle Creek (Mich.) man had a set ter dog upon which his heart was set. The dog set on the electric line and the motorman failed to set the brake soon enough, with the result that the car set tled the setter. The company refused to settle for the loss of the setter, where upon the owner set the law on It and re covered $100 and costs, which the com pany settled for the dear little setter. The man better setter again. o o o Married Man Fixed. A citizen was overhead to make an un gallant remark on the street the other day. He said his neighbor was speaking to him about the heavy expense connected with keeping a family, and asked: "Don't you find It so?" "No, I use my wife's temper for a furnace, her feet for a re frigerator, her company manners for su gar, and then we have tongue all the year round, so you see my expenses are very light." Improved Pumping System. In California, -vhere many wells yield both natural gas and water, it is etated that a system has been tried whereby the gas is separated and utilized in an engine to pump the water. Wisdom. Wisdom dees not show itself so much in precept as in life in a firm ness of mind and mastery or appetite. It teaches us te do, as well as to talk; and to make onractions and words all of a color.? Seneca. t - r - Wfir v . Kidney Trouble Contracted by ThOtti sand in the Civil War. James W. Clay, 6G6 W. Fayette St, Baltimore, Md., says: "I was trou- .bled .Kith .kidney complaint from th time of the Civil war, I There was constant pain in the back and Bead: and the kid ney gecreU0Bs..were painful and showed a sediment The first remedy to help me was Doan's Kidney Pills. Three boxes made a complete curerand dafrrhg five years past'l hare had no"returuof the trouble.", ' ;J a " ; ' Sold by al! dealers! 50c a 'boxl Foa ter-Milburn Co!. 'Buffalo, rfT Y." ..I, i . . i i NO TEMPTATION. ,. ' . Wag (referring to Miss Oldbird) Urn, I should think it would be more suitable if she were standing under "elderberries" instead of mistletoe berries. Mice on the Pillow. i Tm not so much afraid of mice as some women." said she, "but I don't like them in my hair. The other night I finished a biscuit I was, eating after I went to bed and naturally left some crumbs about, not meaning to, never thinking of mice. "Well, about the middle of the night I heard scampering, and there were the mice all over my hair,, trying to get at those crumbs. "I tell you, I gave one shriek, sprang up, lighted all the gas in the room and sat up the rest of the night watch ing that pillow." Important to Mothers. Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA a safe and sure remedy for Infants and children, and see that it Bears the Signature of In Use For Over SO Years. The Kind You Have Always Bought Teacher's Orders. "Here, ma!" requested the boy. hur rying in from school before time; "hang my jacket up behind the stove." "Is it wet?" "No; but teacher sent me home to tell you to warm my jacket for me!" Judge. The New Way. He Darling, all is over between us. She Oh, George, this is so AbruzzL Punch. ril.ES CURED IX 6 TO 14 DAYS. PAZO OINTVKNT i s (rnanuitced to core anr caw if ltcblntf. Ullr.d. IHrwlliig or fnurndlng Piles in 6 to 11 days or money refunded. 50c. The average woman Is" fond of pets, but her husband is not in that class. CATARRH IN HEAD. Pe-ru-na Pe-ni-na. :,:.VV:,r::-.4i:-J .11: :. ::!: i.i-Vjrd &$JMfo a-yjnC:-4gj MR. WM. A. PRES8ER. - MR. WILLIAM A. I'RESSER. 1723 Third Ave., Moline, 111., writes: "I havebeen suffering' from catarrh in the head for the past txvo months and tried innumerable so-called reme dies without avail. No one knows how I have suffered not only from the dis ease itself, but from mortification when in company of friends or strangers. "I have used two bottles of your med icine for a short time only, and it effected a complete mcdical'cure, and what is better yet, the disease has not returned. "I can most emphatically recommend Peruna. to all sufferers from this dis ease." Read This Experience. Mr. A. Thompson, Box 63, R. R. 1, Martel, Ohio, writes: ''When I began your treatment my eyes were inflamed, nose wns stopped up half of the- time, and was sore and scabby. 1 could nof. rest at night on account of continual hawkiogand spitting. 'I had tried several remedies and was about to give up, but thought I would try Peruna. ''After I had taken about one-third of bottle I noticed' a difference. I am now completely cured, after suffering with catarrh for eighteen years. 'I think if those "who are afflicted with catarrh would try Peruna they would never regret it." Peruna is manufactured by the Peruna Drug1 Mfg. Co., Columbus, Ohio, Ask your Druggist for a Free Permma Almanac for 1909. A Safe and Sure Cough Cure. 1 Kemp's Balsam 1 Does r.ot centals Opko, ' Korphiac or any otter rsreatfe or kabit-foncisg drag. Nothing- of a poisonous or harm- ful character enters into its com- '1 position. This clean and pure cough cure cures coughs that cannot be cured 1 by any other medicine. , It has saved thousands from con- , sumption. It has saved thousands of lives: A 25c. bottle contains 40 doses. At all druggists', 25c., 50c. and 1. 2 Doat accept aayhilag else. M . mm' Jtki fl r I li. H9 L (JLsi&iMlZfiie fW :-; ;: TSRraH&.:i::i2C&SS--yf-; Pi-WjM u &srmamamm?&$JMYA fW i':":,-yiawHKalHSf S ."