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About The Wickes Pioneer (Wickes, Mont.) 1895-1896 | View This Issue
The Wickes Pioneer (Wickes, Mont.), 02 Nov. 1895, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053310/1895-11-02/ed-1/seq-7/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
, ( reS- FAMOUS* RIVER MIN. ATTRACTIVE TO SPORTSMAN AND LOVER OF NATURE. Only Small lionts Pass Foochow, but the ‘, Three Hundred Mlles Beyond the Soenery Is More and More Attrate- tive. EAR1NG the mouth of the River Min, from the sea, there appears to be no entrance through the wall of moun- tains which guard the coast. The gateway is there, however, and pass- ing through It one leaves Sharp Peak Island On the right and proceeds up the etream. Sharp Peak is a conical hill. about 300 feet high, on which are built the mis- sionary sanitariums and the cable sta- tion. The slopes of the hill are beauti- fully terraced from the summit to the water's edge, as indeed are most of the hills in the immediate vicinity of Foo- chow. This is done to enable the farmers to grow on them rice, which must be planted under water. Between Sharp Peak and Pagoda an- chorage, seventeen miles up the river, the mountains twice again close in and threaten to bar approach, thus forming the Kim -Pal and the Min-Ngan passes. These passes are hardly half a mile wide, and formidable forts frown down on passers through. These forts, if properly manned and equipped, would be impregnable. In going up the river from Pagoda anchorage to Foochow one passes Ku- shan (Drum Mountain), 3,200 feet high, on which is situated a famous Buddhist monastery. Foochow is thirty miles from the river's mouth, and is the head of navi- gation, even for Chinese junks, and all European steamers and sailing vessels stop at Pagoda anchorage, thirteen miles below. 11 0 Above Foochow the traveler must proceed by small boat and can follow A STRANGE EXPERIENCE. Tr termite, History of a Grandson of a Redoeht Chief. In a cottage at 7637 Ellis avenue Asa Haddex, over eighty years old, grand- son of a Bedouin chief whose descend- ants were probably the only family ot Bedouins ever held as American stav , ., whiles away the hours of his declining years by tainking of the Presidents whose personal friendship he has en- joyed, for he ham known all the Presi- dents since Andrew Jackson, and wast once a servant in the family of James K. Polk. The old man is a genuine Bedouin in appearance. He Is almost black, hut his white hair and heavy beard are perfectly straight. His eyes aestesinall and keen, his nose is clear cut and he has all the peculiarities com- mon to the sons of the desert, except that he has alwaya led a quiet, Indus- trioue life. Three timer; he has mar- ried and three times he was sold when a slave. He is the father of four chil- dren, but supposes them to be all dead except a son, front whom he never hears. For the last thirteen years the old man has been a laborer at Pullman, but was hurt by falling from g a car last May, and has not since worked, says San Francisco Post. Haddex was born in Tennessee. He does not know his exact age, but says that he was a young man when Andrew Jackson was first elected to the presidency, sixty-seven years ago. Jack- son's plantation was not far from Had- dex's master's. mei Haddex, who knew Jackson well, tells an amusing anecdote . about \Old Hickory.\ \General Jackson,\ said Hackles, \was a mighty fine man, and treated s gsg t JaSa-Sga''• t • — \as - o- • - 1 „,e' ...ssess_ s ese. • -.. •,- : • - - as • .• s ea s , s - este. s. • • - .l.d . .s.'sgesa -stY;;:asis7. 7r essm.t.;17F'‘''''fituThlelgt' gltiree lftql_ s'•ar:es*fs' -•• f ; ,6 1 mb (Dq TiTIN atfun L'AM. THE CHINESE STREAM THAT FLOWS THROUGH FOO-CHOW. THE SCENE OF' THE ANTI -CHRIS- . TI A N RIOTS. the river for something like 300 miles, the scenery growing grander and . grander. Sheer cliffs, hundreds of feet high, rise in places front the water's edge, Rocks of unique formation stand alit from 50 to flO feet high, while on the other hank will be seen a gentle slope. covered with feathery bamboos, wt ish wave gracefully In the breeze, anti look like giant green ostrich plumes. Still further up the river the moun- t.ens are covered with dense forests, it ho.re game of all kinds abound, rang- ing in size front the royal Bengal tiger anti wild boar to timid little deer and monkeyg. the latter being found in great numbers. In fact, the attractions offered by this Tnaill Ifni country are equal for the sportsman and lover of nature in her grander moods, and, haying seen it. one has something to remember for the rest of his life. An Pt g•hitoge 111111.1eem Prnyer. Some little time ago the minister from Scariest-rt. Me , exchanged millets with the minister from Sacarappa, in the same state. When the Sacarappa minister arrived at Scarhorn he Was mot by a deacon, who said to him: \Mr. Jonee. I do hope to -day that In your prayer you will make an especial effort for rain. Our crops are being destroyed anti I can see nothing but desolati on here.\ So when the minister was about making his petition, he said: \Oh Lord. I pray Thee that Thou wouldst send ropione rains upon the soil of S'eariego, that It may bring tooth a bountiful harvest, and that t ha pecede will he made glad. and Oh, herd' they wet bless you for It. I desire, Oh, Tense to elate that I make this petition In the name of the good people of Scarhoro, for Oh. Moroi. I know that Thou, in ThS. divine wisdom, Will say It IS not rain that the soil of Ste:Arbor° needs. It is more top &egging.\ The old. Old. Just as t ircuittt Ion Was about to cea...m. she inipillidvek nestled upon the other knee \Edward \Darling \Tell me the old, old Stilt. Eta ard Fre a moment he ii. as silent lir was rapidly reviewing the silica tion, and trying to decide wh {ea Was the older, the small hey -anti -the -green - appl e story, or the story of the tramp and the home-made pie. 7 everybody, even the slaves, with com- mon courtesy. I knew the General well and he always spoke to me. One day as I was going along the road In Tennes- see I met General Jackson, who was riding out with another white gentle- man. As was customary for slaves, I took off my hat as the carriage passed. General Jackson returned the compli- ment and spoke to me very pleasantly. 'What. General,' cried his companion, 'do you speak and take off your hat to nigger?\Why of course.' replied Jackson, 'I can't al/ow a colored man to have more rnannera than I.' Poor old General Jackson,\ continued the old man, \I rememeber when they bur- led him down yonder in old Tennessee, and this here hickory cane of mine was cut front a tree above his grave.\ For many years James K. Polk lived just across the ?bad from sHaddex'a master's in Columbia, Tenn. Haddex's elder brother, who Is still living in Co- lumbia, was Polk's body servant, and served hie master in the White House during Polk' presidency. Later on Asa himself became a servant in the Polk family. Among the Presidents whom Hatidex has known intimately are: Jackson, Van Buren, Wiliam Henry Harrison. Palk. Tyler anti Fill more. He has had coprersations with Lincoln, Grant, Pleree. Buchanan and Andrew Johnson. and has shaken hands with Hayes, Garfield, Cleveland and Herta-- eon, anti also with the late Secretary James G. Blaine anti other presidential candidates. Haddex has been a man of herculean strength and build. In hie prime he could carry a hale of cotton on his back. How his ancestors were cap- tured he does not know, but he always knew that he came front a different tribe then other slaves. Ills father, he says, was a peculiar man, and, even though a slave, managed to secure a large stint of silver money, with which he intended to purchase his family's freedom, hut this privilege was refused hint. Haddex lives all alone with his third wife, a earnely old lady, who Is sc‘eral years his Junior. Ills mind Is perfectly clear, and he hears up remark- ably well under his burden of years. - — Long Service hy Employee. A remarkable case of long service by empinyee appears in a deseription of a brass factory in Ilaydenville. Mass, Out of arta men In the employ of the com- pany 155 have been In Its service for t en y e a rs or longer Among these are twenty-seven men whose terms of em- ployment range front twenty to thirty years; ten have hen in the same works for thirty or forty years, ana six have been there for forty yeast; or longer. The longest continuous service WAR forty-three rears, with hardly a ilay of Interruption. Stull facts tire creditable to both Rides. The Joker bolt ed. practical Joker has lust re , Hved hi is deserts at Babylon. N V lie thought It a droll Idea to !mince a friend to drink hertahorn on the rep- reeentation that It WAS gin. The vic- tim hail different vlewa on the subject He also had a horsewhip and he lashed the joker vigorously ANOTHER LIQUID HORROR. *gime le a New Mixed Drink IT bleb Chivas.° Has Just Perpetrated. A new drink has come to town. It Is not a drink for the club man, the con- noisseer of intoxicants or the woman who, in tile sanctisy of big apartments, totes to sip the sweet juices of the grape or the honeyed cordials of Cu- racoa or Paris. It appeals to one class of persons, and one only, and that is the host of impecunious drunkards, says Chicago Times -Herald. \Zim\ it is called, and its users are known by the euphonioUs designation of zim-zams. It is thus explained by a eoneocter of mixed drinks: \There copes a zlin-zatn,\ remarked the head bartender of a down -town hotel as he slipped a stick into a lemon- ade, for which a bell -boy was waiting to carry to a tippling crowd up g:airs. The solitary bystander turned in the direction Indicated by the bartender, only to have his eyes rest on a young man of apparent weak character. There was te'pallid look on his Nee and a shifting glance in his eyes, and, summed up, there was not an idea of decision in his entire make-up. \Don't know what a zim-zain is?\ said the bartender, lifting his voice in surprise In answer to a query. \Just watch that fellow and see the drink for which he calls and you may understand. He will call for a gins A zirn is a mix- ture of brandy, beer, Rhine wine and absinthe In equal parts. The whole mattes only one-half of a whisky glass. What commends it to its users is its power, for one dose, or half a glassful, is guaranteed to intoxicate. Most of the fiends are not well provided with money. They want to reaen - the condi- tion that comes to the drinker who uses only straight drinks after the absorp- tion of many glasses. Witnout money. were it not for the zirn, this would be an impossibility. Some one working on the theory that niixed drinks intoxicate sooner than straight &Oaks invented the new tipple and it caught on im- mediately. Do many use it? ' Well. I guess that there are not less than 10,000 devotees in this city, and they are as much slaves to it as the smokers of opium are to the drug that brings them at first delight and later c ijeath, for the habit presents not only an opportunity for getting a cheap drunk, but it has a fascination from which its users ap- parently cannot escape.\ • THE BICYCLE FACE. A Chicago Geol... Disrovereil the Source of It. \I have discovered the secret of the bicycle face,\ said the man who spent most of his time loafing at the club window. \I know the cause of it and I know how to cure it. I'll bet I can cure the worst case of bicycle face that was ever seen on the streets of Chicago.\ \Going to begin the manufacture of patent medicine?\ asked one of the other loungers. \Medicine nothing! It isn't a case for medicine at all! it's a case for a little investigation and the application of common sense. A blacksmith could cure It better than a doctor, and the bicycle manufacturer better than a blacksmith. I made a study of the question during a short trip out of town. I was in a lit- tle place up In Wisconsin, and I noticed that while nearly every one rode a wheel there was hardly a single hag- gard, woe -begone bicycle face to be seen. The riders looked as 'if they were enjoying themselves, and that is something you seldom see in Chicago. \Of course, I wondered why it was, and in the end I find the matter settled —at least to my own satisfaction. The secret of the bicycle face lies in the handle bar of the bicycle. The most, horrible and ghastly faces to be seen on the streets of Chicago to -day can be changed by a slight operation per- formed upon the handle bar of the wheel. The bent handle bar is the cause of the bicycle hack or curved spine, and the bicycle 'neck is what makes the bicycle face. The people that I saw while I was awas, who looked as if they were enjoying the ride, sat upright on their wheels, the people I see in Chicago, who look as they hadn't a frienct on earth, have to bend over to reach their handle bars and then throw their heads bark in the most extraordinary and uncom- fortable angle In order to see what is In the road ahead of them. That gives them the bicycle face, that and nothing else. If you will watch them you will agree with me. You will never see that Ii aggard, worrlea expression on the face of one who Is Rifting upright on his or her wheel. You will never see It absent from the face of one who is trying to make a semi -circle of his or her spinal colunan.\-- Chicago Post. PERSONALS. --- Ira D. Sankey. the evangelist stinger. is now writing a history of the ghetto! hymns. Another king who finds It truster hard up RI the ruler of the Belgisne. who ia trying to dist:tete of some of his real estate to a rash pnrchaser Prof. Sehmoller, a favorite with runny American students at the (WA:Pretty of Berlin. Is mentioned as the probable luiecessor of the late Heinrich von Sybel as the head of the bureau In charge of the Prussian state archiv.s. George Moore l/f one of Cgs most MOdeltt of eontemporar‘ writers Ile does not think that ever , thing he has written Is great After finishing - Mike Fleisher,\ however, he wrote, \At l as t hate written a really great book \ lilt Norton, who is 93 Nears old hag lived all his life la him house near centsounee Lake. Conneetli iit, and al though he has been In sight of both the Northampton Division of the Con aolidated and of the New England mil- t - toga he never rode In a car of stay kind until recently. A LONG CHANCE. _ Rot th• Gold Pleas t..Yame Beek to the Rightful Owner. The Chicago Record otters this story and vouches for its absolute treth. The people coneerned in the story have told it to their friends and have offersel to bas•k it up With attidut its. NO tle•re is no good reason lee having any doubts. A man boarded a street \Sr to go to his home on the South aidt• He had in his pocket two stive-detletr gdid pieces and several nickels. In pa, bug his fare he was guided by the sense of touch, rather than that of sight. and 80 he gave a live -dollar gold piecedn- stead of a nickel to the conductor. He did not learn of the mistake until he had reached his home. Then he went to the car barns to timid the con- ductor to whom he had given the gold piece, but be did not remember the number of the car. Neither could he exactly remember the appearance of the conductor. On the following day his wife went shopping with a woman who lived in the same neighborhood. They made some purchases at a department store and the neighbor in making payment handed the salesman a $5 gold piece. -Oh. those dreadful gold pieces.\ remarked the wife of the man who had been unfortunate. -Don't say that.\ said the neigh- bor; \my husband received this in change last evening on a street ear. He gave the conductor a quarter and received, as he supposed, four nickles in change- After he came home he discovered that one nickel was this gold piece.\ - Isn't that remarkable? My hus- band paid one by mistake to a con- ductor last evening.\ \I wonder if my husband received your husband's gold piece?\ \Impossible.\ But it was possible just the same. The two husbands came together and compared notes. \It was the second trailer\ said One. -Yes, and it left Madison street at just about 5:30.\ \At Sixteenth street we stopped to allow a train to pass.\ \That's right. The conductor was a small man with red whiskers.\ \Sure enough. I remember now. I was on the back platform.\ ••I Wael in front.' '['lucre seemed to be no possible doubt that they had come home on the same ear, the conductor had' taken the coin for a nickel and given it out for a nickel, and that the coin re- ceived by the second man belonged to the first. The money was returned to its rightful owner. Wouldn't it be a problem in mathematics to calculate the chances of such a thing happening again? HOW Ii WAS. Papa Found the Bargain Was illra Too Heavily. The rich old gentleman didn't want the poor young man to come to seo 'sit, daughter, and he tried various pians to stop it without avail, because it happened that the daughter didn't think of the poor young man as the father did. Finally the father hit on an apparent SUCet.:248 and the young man got no further than the front doer, jags the Detroit Free Press. This continued until the gossips got hold of it. and one day one of them met the daughter on the street. \How are you and Fred getting along now?\ she asked, after skir- mishing awhile. \Beautifully:\ smiled the girl. \Why. I thought your father wouldn't let him come to see you \ ''He wouldn't for awhile, but it's all right now.\ ••How did you fix it?\ - Well, you see, papa told me if I would refuse to see Fred when he called he would give me $10 every lime. Fred had been only coming wiee a week, but after 1 declined to see him, poor Fred got so worried and anxious that he came every night. Of course, I wouldn't see him. and of volirt3e padet had to put up ten every time. At the end of two vveelcs papa began it, (Tao:esti on his propo- , ition and I told Friel how it was, and then he began to come in the afternoon-. anti it, wasn't any time until papa backed clear out, anti we nitule a com- promise to -day „by .w !deli Fred is to come whenever he pleases, but we eie not to think of getting married for two years.\ - Then she tripped along merrily. and the gossip told everybody else how it etas. anti -0 it got into the news- Date.rts A ••ii 011101171•nt \ Fact schoolfellewe met tie. , n years after their graduation, and fell, figur- atisely, upon each Other's necks \Well well. dear old Smith!\ said Green. \Hew eirvi I Win to taw) yott' What days tho , ti NOW . /112 . ha! Smith, you were the stupidest fellow in the class.\ \Yes I seippose I Ayes.\ \And here you are now' Wh,\ (leek i trg him over) haven't particle!\- Youth's Companion. The quiet separation of F'rancer iiedgeon Burnett and her husband, Dr. Iliirnett, has ed118241 ;/ 2400(1 deal of stir- erke. Is Malr11110nv really a failure among literary and eelentifle people' Muer we at last go to commottplaeo peo- ple for our Intle Lord Fatuttleroys? DR. poor to pay, .fie4 ''to hello the hoy fe j,, T ig Truth. Good reasons why1; she H e nlil use indr- 4 roma. It tekv• out 1 er , •rne. •nd 'ht.') you Woo I peace silo romfort. surely • gi.\ rvIlIsnite• 15, at druggists. The nein who has the reputation of I eing • Kren , e•mied 1, , enertilly finds its Inver. slide I,, nruuse the baby - Truth lEyeryd.,Ilar opent In Parker's G loser Tonle !s, voted it ,odelle•o pen. mni 1,1,5* better digt,( Ion, twttr r ntrenallt end brtter silti Every MAD wilo , e wife has oil oiled hint, Is a bore to ..ther a \MP') 1 hey prefer man whose a Ire liOn. \Eanson'• Marto Corn Salve.'• i Ut rUll. I If toon.s, At.' n it alet for It. too eontn Highest of all in Leavening Power.— Latest U.S. Gov ' t Report BLddng Powder ABSOLUTELY PURE RAISINS AS FOOD. They Caistaln Four Time. e.s Much Si;\ triment as Does Meat. It has been the mitten until very recently to consider raisins as an article of luxury, and to deem them only suited to the tables of those who are able to Indulge themselves In such things as serve merely to please the palate. In ciiinsequenee, however, of the marvelous growth of the raisin industry , in California and the cheap- ness of the product to the vonsumer, the question has been raised whether the raisin does not possess an intrinsic food value, independent of its use as a luxury, and the argument seemed to favor the affirmative of the propo- sition. It is asserted by these who have studied the question from a scientific and hygienic'etandpoint that the nu- tritive power of raisins as compared to meat is as four to one, we imagine, may . oe taken with some grains of allowance, but, nevertheless, it is susceptible of demonstration that raisins, like other dried fruits, are genuine food, contain elements which are fully as necessary to good health as fibrine, dextrine and all the rest of the things which anaytical ehemista have discovered in 11 shmaking and strongthmaking food;. Those who have studied the ques- tion of raisins as food profess to have something like 100 receipts for the preparation of the raisin, and each of these, it is asserted. has an economic value. Whether this estimate he ex- cessive or not, one thing is very cer- tain, and that is that the world would be better off, from a hygienie point of view, if we were to eat more fruit and less meat. _ The raisin, which is only the grape dried 'In the snit, shell/ft be a natural food, if there be any each thing. Sugar. which the dried grape con- tains in its natural state., has long been recognized as a genuine food, so much so that manufactured sugar— that is,stigar extracted from the sugar cane, sugar beets, sorghum. the me- ttle tree, or what not—is no longer re- garded as an article of luxury, but as a household necessity. We leave to physiologists t hcechnical ex planation of this, but the fact is as well known as that water is needed to quench thirst. This being so, it would 'teem that dried grapes or raisins should furnish the sugar which the system needs in its purest and most concrete form, for nature's laboratory sur- passes all the skill of the chemists and outdoes all the triumph of analysis, quantitative and qualitative. It is sincerely to be hoped that the subject of raisins as food may be thoroughly investigated and exploited, for, while raisins may not take the place of beefsteak or mutton chop, they may well stand up high in the second rank of food products. Steam's 17p1 The Moorings bast OfT. Majestically the great ocean grey hound leaves the dock and steams down the river outward hound tint are you, my dear sir, prepared for the sea sickness almost alwaya incident to a trans Atlantic trip. with the in- fallible stomachic. Houetter's Stomach Bit- ters. If nun expect to nutter without aid. The Bitters is the staunch friend of all who travel toy sea tor land, emigrants, tourists, commercial travelers. mariners. It com- pleti: remedics imusets. billousnciub fiTs - 1)411,1:1 rheumatic 1 a Juges and Inactivity of the kid,i W a man In3linge fin ftMeitela . , 110W or hat' ii t shy at his boa..., he says, ''Well, it's the last one ' t'oat. Coal is made lip of the menial is of trees and plants whish gr. w on the earth before man or any other mam- mal had appeared. ( 'banged by pres- sure, heat and dampness, this Mass of vegetable matter has become a kind of carbon, mixed with bitunoes or the tarry substantete which are al' ways made by sitiw uii'tav of such matter. Anthracite or stone coal, sometimes ealled glance coal on ac- count of its shine, has the least bitu- men in it: cannel veal has in it much more bitumen than either of these. 10100 Reward, 5100. The readers of this paper Will be pleased to learn that there Is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure In all 128 stages, and that is Catarrh Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease 1 - quIregt a con- stitutional treat:tient. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease and giving the patient strength by building up the con- stitution and assisting nature in doing Its work. The proprietors have so much faith In its curative powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any ease that it falls to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Ad tress F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, 0, Sold by druggists; Vic. Hail's Family Pals, 26c. Jefferson Was asked to be president for a third term by the legislatures of Maksachusetts, Vermont, Rhode Island, New York, Pennsylvania, Maryland, New Jersey, and North ('arolina.. But Jefferson followed the example of Washington. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Mattleby desire to extend their heartfelt thanks to curious friends w/w attended the funeral of their daughter, and hope their curiosity was fully satisfied. _FITS -AllIntsstopped freeby Dr. it ilee's Ores% nerve Restorer. No kltsatier the Uri.. day 's Line, The ttPd e f r (tI ttd r a gt ' ; ) ::.717et ( i! b aLtr . have !snit to scratch for a living. --Truth., After grhys , /,[ . iagis haft giver' me tittl was saved by I leo s Williamsport, Pa., Nov. 2'4, ISS/B. As a man gets older, it takes him longer tO warm up for a good time and longer to cool eir in getting over it. Deog u ernan.•('nmphor Ilrevelt. h Glycerine. lfr u The Lord likes • Man who says what be thinks. but the people don't. KNOWLEDGE Bringa comfort and improvement and tends to personal eamyment when rightly :teed. The many, who live bet- ter than tlt hers antl enjoy life more, with less expenditure, by more promptly it the Dab, is cutting Teeth. adapting the world's best products to Deem< and %lee that old and cell tried remcdy. inw. tile needs of pli; . sical being, will attest IlltosLew'.Soorilivatlystr fir Children I - ensue s - the value to health ef the pure liquid voting Inwyer is to bring hint a client too hrelnedY s , S''YruP of F gm. laxative principles embraced in the The only favor any holy ever ohm m a Its excellence is due to its presenting in the form most areeptahle and plea* , ant to the taste, the refreshing amyl truly beneficial properties of a perfect lax- ative; effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headachea and levers and permanently curing constipation. It has riv, , n sst.isf tion tat millions and met with the 01)w - oval of the medical profension, becatiee it acne on the Kid- neys, Liver and Bowels without weak- ening them anti it is perfectly free from every objectionable substance. Syrup of Figs is for sale by all drug- gists in 5 4 Ie and $1 bottles, but it is MOP ufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, whose name in printed on every package, also the name, Syrup of Figs, There ss tIl be nothing good t • eat from and being well informed, you will 10 now toad the I tieltAlient calif R ,,-rise. • accept any substitute if offered. •....“....0•00.4••••-••••••-•••••-•.4 THE KING CURE OVER ALL FOR ErtrAtIE .ELTISIIVE ..4fL. \WINDSOR HOUSE BOQUET 1\ rrrainicaznas Lan TZ1 2.0) cat CMG , . 416.1 1 1... \ BURLINGTON! 99 LEADING 5 CENT CIGAR. Kn ' a a' & 1 7 . F 'I V:4j H . 1. CLARKE DRUG CO.. t IN COkti ci nER ItM ts. C. AYER'S Highest Awards CHERRY PECTORAL At the World's Fair. The for and remedy coughs colds. I ts record : Ft fty years of cores. OR. MCCREW TN Taw ONLY SPECIA LIST WHO SItt•Te PRIVATE PISEASES Waken,' se/ Sweet Utemdersot MEN ONLY livery /WI irlokeilltes I Oh years' experiesse Steers In tYlesin, Tree .11 A A, WWII._ Omaho STOVE REPAIR Wilts 1111••• rep, tee nor +Ate resets. 501010 Iltessallats 441111=aseal=